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Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Community calendar

•.

sion. This will be a·public meeting bien. 'eost is $5 per c:Ouple, $3 per
and publie input and comments single, SI for chii!Jren under 12 and
POMEROY - Pomeroy group of wiU be taken. Anyone interested in free for children lhrce and under.
AA and AI Anon wiU meet 7 p.m. the zoning issue is encouraged to
at Sacred Heart Catholic Church. · attend.
CHESTER - There ytill be a
hymn sing at the Chester United
For information call992-5763 .
POMEROY - There will be a Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers speghetti dinner with the Meigs
·
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars High School Football team from - POMEROY - Star Gmnge #778
Post 9053 will meet at 7:30 p.m. at 5:15 - 6:15 p.m. in the high school and Star Junior Grange #878 will
post home. All members encour- cafeteria. A small donation is hold their annual halloween party
required for all you can eaL
and fun night at 6:30 p.m. at the
aged to attend.
Grange Hall. The event will begin
RUTLAND - Heath United
CHESTER- Shade River Lodge with costwne judging at 6:30 p.m.
Methodist Church Eleanor Circle #453 F &amp; AM will meet at 8 p.m. followed by poduck supper at 6:45
will meet at 7:30p.m. at the home All master masons are invited 'to p.m. and fun and !lliJileS. All memof Margaret Hiber.
att end . Refre shments will be bers and interested persons ar~
invited to attend.
served.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
POMEROY - Royal Oak Dance
Beta will meet in th e hom e of
REEDSVll.LE -' There wiD be a
Charlotte Elberfield at 6:30 p.m. free immunization clinic at the Club presents an even ing of enterWord session on craft project. Reedsville Fire Department from I tainment from 8 to II p.m . a t
Hostesses will be Clarice Krautter to · 3 p.m. for children ages 2 Royal Oak Park. Music will be by
·•
and Reva Vaughn.
months to kindergarteh age. Par- George Hall.
ents are ,asked to bring the child 's
'tUPPERS PLAINS - The TupROCK SPRINGS - Rock shot record.
pers Plains School Carnival wil be
Springs Grange will meet at 8 p.m.
held from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Prior to
in the haU.
FRIDAY
the carnival there will be a soup
POMEROY - There will be a
LONG BOTTOM - Faithful supper from 4 10 6 p.m. At the cardinner at the Senior Citizens Center Gospel Church will have a hymn nival there will be gannes, food and
with serving from 5 to 6 p.m. Cost sing at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed a special raffie of a Lloyd Middlefor the meal is $4 per person, with invites the public. FeUowship will ton Royal Vienna Collection
Christmas Edition Doll. E~er.yon e
a menu of chicken and noodles, follow.
is invited.
·
mashed potatoeS, green beans and
corn, roll, beverage and Mexican
ANTIQUITY'- Faith Fellowship
HARRISONVILLE - Scipio
fruit cake. Following the dinner Crusade for Christ Church will
there will be music by The Clas- have a songfest at 7 p.m. featuring Township Volunteer Fire Departsics. The first Classics Friends The Conley Family and !,he United ment will have a hog roast starting
award will be presented to Bob and Gospel Singers. The congregation at 11 a.m. The menu will consist of
Charlene Hoeflich at 6:15 p.m. The encourages the public to come out roast porlc, baked beans, cole slaw,
public is invited to attend.
a roll and drink. Cost is $4 for
and enjoy the singing.
adults and $2 for children. Local
POMEROY - The Meigs Councalls for carry-out and delivery will
· sATURDAY
ty Regional Planning Com.mission
be accepted from 9 to 11 a.m. Call
will meet in special session at 1:30
LONG BOTTOM - Long Bot- 742-2110.
p.m. at the Meigs County Prosecut- tom Community Association will
ing Attorney's Office at 117 West sponsor a round and square dance
SUNDAY
Second Street to consider the zon- at the Long Bottom Comm.unity
ing ordinance proposed by the Center frQm 8 to II p.m. with
TUPPERS PLAINS - Saint Paul
Olive Township Zoning Commis- music by .the True Country Ram- United Methodist Church will
'
THURSDAY

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

note: October
is
Nla~:~~·~Osteopath
ic Medicine

Week. This column is our way of
adding to the i:elebnllion.]
Question: I've noticed lite lette~
"D.O." after your name in my local
paper and that you work at an
osteopathic medical school. Could
you explain the meahing of these
tenns?
Answer. Osteopathic medicine
is a distinct discipline within the
healing arts. Doctors of osteopathy,
or D.O.s, are licensed to practice
medicine and surgery in all 50
states. There are 32,000 D.O.s
nationwide. They use all accepted
methods of treatment and diagnosis
- including surgery, drugs and
radiation.
Andrew Taylor Still, a surgeon
in the Union army during the Civil
War, founded the osteopathic profession. He beJian the f'trst osteopathic college m Kirksville, Mo.
just over one hundred years ago_in 1892. Today, there are 16 osteopathic colleges in the United States.
Many of these are state s~.
including schools at Michigan
State, North Texas and Oklahoma
State universities and here at Ohio
University.
· Question: What kind of training
do doctors of osteopathy have?
Answer: Before being admitted
to a college of osteo(lathic
medicine, students are required to
complete a four year bachelor's
degree. .Their undergraduate work
must have included uaining in bioiogy, chemistty, physics and behavioral sciences. OnCe in osteopathic
medical school, it takes four more
years of intensive study to obtain a
D.O. degree.
In our program at Ohio University, students spend their fust two
years in basic science courses such
as microbiology, pharmacology,
immunology, biochemistry and
endocrinology. During this time
students also take courses in the
various body systems, study hwnan
anatomy and have their fust patient
· contacts under close faculty supervision. Then students devote their
final two lieademic years to clinical
training in hospitals and doctors'
offices where they refine their
skills in dia~oses and treatment of
a wide vanety of medical problems.
After rece1vmg his or her
degree, the D.O. will complete a
one-year internship. The new doctor can !hen legally "hang Qui his
or her shingle," but most take two
to five more years of residency
training - most often in a primary
care specialty. However, D.O.s can
be found in all medical fields · fr-om pediatiics and internal

medicine to psychiatry and neurosurg_ery.
Question: Are there any differences between what you ·do and
what an M.D. would do?
Answer: M.D.s and D.O.s are
similar in many ways. but there are
some important differences. The
osteopathic philosophy says that
the doctor is not a healer, but a
facilitaior, augmenting the body's
natural ability to heal•tself. ~­
pathic medicine is based on the
philosophy that the body is an
rnterrelated whole, that no one part
of the body can become diseased
without disturbing other parts. The
D.O. feels it's necessary to treat the
person as a whole, not just the specific organ that may be malfunctioning at the time.
One of the differences between
M.D.s and D.O.s is that an osteopathic physician's training puts
more emphasis on the interrelationships between different body systerns. The muscles and bones
together are known as the museuloskeletal system, and the role it
plays in health and illness underscore osteopathic precepts. D.O.s
use osteopathic manipulative treatment, or OMT, as a means of
improving the functioning of the
musculoskeletal system and, indin;cUy, other body systems. It is the
osteopath's use of manipulative
treatments that is the most conspicuous difference between M.D.s and
D.O.s.
Acc6rding to recen t fij!:ure s
from the American OsteopathiC
Association; 53 percent of D.O.s
are family physicians, and the
remainder are in other specialties.
Among M.D.s the situation is
reversed. The vast majority are
practicing in specialties other than
family medicine. The best statistics
avaitilble- from the American
Academy of Family Physiciansshow that only 12 percent of M.D.s
are now in family practice. So,
there are some differences between
M.D.s and D.O.s, but we also have
much in common.
.
'
''Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions
write to John C. Wolr, D.o.'
Ohio Univeristy College ot Ost~
pathic Medicine, Grosvenor HaD
Athens, Ollfo 45701;'
'

observe their annual homecoming:
starting with worship at 9 a.m. fol-•
lowed by a special service at ,10:
a.m. b.y "God'•S lCid:S" puppets, a.
carry in dinner at 12:30 p.m. and an•
afternoon service featuring The.
Shoit Fannily, Joe Rader ancj JoAnn:
and Susie Francis at 2 p.m. R~v ·:
Sharon Hausman extends a cordial.
invill\ion to everyone. .
·

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you want it ...
you·ve got it. ..

POMEROY - Carleton Church
will observe th eir homecoming:
starting with Sunday schoQIII! 9:30:
a.m. folfowed by preaching at 11 a.m .. a basket lunch at noon and an·
afternoon service at 1:3P p.m. with
a special .perfonnance by Jan and
Kathy. Pastor Clyde Henderson'
invites everyone to auend.

HARRISONVILLE - The Scipio Township Volunteer Fire
Departrilent will sponsor a tractor
pull. Wei~h in will start at noon . .
Pulling w11l· start at I p:m. Usual .
weight classes will be observed.
There will be a 50 percent payback.

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-Page4

at
v..t. 44, NO. 121
llullmecla Inc.

Zoning foes square· off
at Thursday's planning
commission meeti~g
:
• ·LOOKING 1'0 HALLOWEEN , Picking
· .• out just the right pumpkin ror a jack-o-laDtern
; ;,,w,a~n.'t easy for two-year-old Dawn Bissell,

daughter or Mike and ratricill Bissell of Rut·
land. Tbls year's bumper crop provides lots of
pumpkins from which to select.

•Work to begin on Rutland's
·. water line replacementproject

water
the Vt~e except for
the two streets which ·are to handied under block grant monies of
$37,800._The b1ds on that ph&amp;S\1 of
the project have not yet been
awarded. .
.
.
Council adopted the sohd waste

management plan for the Gallia,
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton DistricL
Trick or treat night was set for
Thursday, OcL 28 from 6 10 7 p.m.
and plans were made to increase
activities at the Civic Center.
Beginning in November teen
d~nces will be held every Fri'!&amp;Y
mght. Arrangements. are also bemg
made to ~ume sk!ilulg at the Cente~. Th~ vlll~ge Signed a C&lt;!"tract
.~•.til El.tl!a qtrcus..for... a &lt;;b!'istmas
· Cl,fCUS t9~be hel\1, ar the CiviC Cen-

the census teport which shows the
official figure at 469. It was reported by the clerk-treasurer that
because of the decline in the officia! figlires, the village will be
required to reimburse to the state
$3,167.
Also discussed was the 2.9 mill
levy for current expenses which
will be on the ballot on Nov. 2. The
village is operating on two mills
now, .it was reported. Some of the
lights .in the village ha.v.e been
turned off dUe .to .Ia&lt;;~ .of.money.

to put mto effect a $25 fee for
putting up political posters. The
annount will be refundable when all
of the posters have beel) taken
down.
.
,._
A second reading was g1ven to
the underpitming ordinance.
Discussed at the meeting was

O
S UP re·me

Attendmg the meeting were
Acting Mayor Jerry Black, Council
members, Steve Jenkins, Randy
Hayes, Dick Fetty, Duane Weber
and. Jo Ani! Eads,_Clerk-Treasurer
Sm1th, pohce officer Ben Dav1dson, and maintenance persons, Dale
Hart and David Davis.

c 0:urt gets

·
S.c.h. 00I money cas·e

1993 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE 4 DR.
YourBankfo-t~...

Commu~ty investment,

Farmers ...

Tilt, cruise, caSHtta, bright blua paint.

s.tarts.here. ·

»-~1

1993 lUlCK SKYLARK CUSTOM 4 DR.

.DaliA
9? North Second Avenue • Middleport, OH • 611-992..6661
·
. '

SH~RP

12,495·

&amp; Savings Company ,
2• 1 Wesl Second Streel
P.O . &amp;o• 626

Roule :1 ;;··· ·
P 0 . l01 339
luppera Plolns. OH 45783
6\4166J.J161

Pome1oy. OH 457b9
614IW2·~1J6

Well.equipp.c:l, ve·,nglllll, power locka, atarao.

Prtotm sUPPORTERS oF
MEIGS COUNTY
•

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'~11:

Whatever it takeS.
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Bank One, Athens, NA
Member
. .' FDIC .
.,

·-

rural systems.
He questioned if a lone district
has the·ability to win.
"As you know, we have a
precedent in this state of Cincinnati
v. Walter in 1979 where we had
one district that brought forward a
major school finance case. They
los~" Phillis said at a news conference.
He said a coalition has a better
chance Qf winning and of providing
a comprehensive solution to the
problem.
The problem is disparity in the
amount of per-student spending by
the state's poorest and richest districts. In 1990-91, the amounts
ranged from $2,800 to $12,000
statewide.
Superintendent Fred Blosser of
Canton schools said. tbe coalition
lawsuit is an attempt to improve
educational opportunities for all
children.
"State officials must begin to
realize that the diverse needs of
Ohio's school districts cannot be
served best by the interests of just
~me schoQI district," Blosser said.
Joel Taylor, lawyer for the state,
said the coalition's filing with the
Su~reme Court was being
l'CVleWed.

, .COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A state's 1) million school children
battle over the state system of who, day after day, must return to
financing schools wound up in the overcrowded classrooms, facilities
Ohio Suprenie Coijtl a little sooner in desperate need of ~ and outdated textbooks and equipment,"
than most people expected.
Justices are not being asked just said William Phillis, coalition
10 decide if the fundin$ method is · direciOr.
There was no indication when
unconstitutional, as most school
justices might act on the group's
systems contend.
Instead, a group of 500 school request
districts wants the high court to
· Nicholas Pittner, coalition
ovmum a Cuyahoga County com- lawyer, said Corrigan incorrccdy
mon pleas juj)ge's ruling that concluded that the Perry and CQya•
blocks a trial of their lawsuit sched- hoga county cases were identical.
uled for Monda:,: in Perry County.
?iuner also took issue with CorThe Ohio Coalition for Equity rigan's claim that he had exclusive
&amp;. AdequacY. asked justices Thurs- jurisdiction over the matter because
day to prolubit Judge Daniel Corri- the Cleveland case was filed four
' gan from i:nf,;&gt;rcing an order that months j)efore the one in Perry
halts the soutliCastem Ohio case in Coomy.
favor of a similar suit filed by
Phillis said the coalition of 500
Cleveland schools.
districts does oot want to be part of
Trial of the Cleveland suit is not the class-action Cleveland case
scheduled until next June.
because interests of the state's sin•'The potential for delay of eight gle-largest disuict differ from
months puts at harm many of the diverse needs of other urban and

,...-----.Local briefs---Racine ~:equiring sign deposit
Racine village officials reported today that a village ordinance
requires a $25 depasit from political candidates placing political
signs in the viUage.
.
·
The $25 will be deposited if tilesigns are removed after the election within the time limiL The $25 deposit must be made with
Cleric-Treasurer Carolyn PoweU or'Mayor Jeff Thornton:

Man cited on petty thej( charge
. A ~8-year-old Pomeroy man was cited to, Meig~ Cou~ty Coun
on a charge of petty theft Btter allege&lt;Uy.s!eallng a.ri,fle s~tvel from
.the-Big 'Wheel store near Pomeroy, rel\(Jtted Meigs County Sheriff
•James•M. Souls!'&gt;'.
.
·
·
Marvin L. Fnend, Flatwoods Road, is scheduled to appear in
'COUI'f W~esdily. ·

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· .ACINE
,49~2210
.J_ • ' •

.•.

'I '

·Member FDIC

SYUCUSE
''2·6333 ~ '

1 Soctlon.IO ....... M-11
AMutlmldlalno. NcSJplfiF

Pomeroy·Midc;lleport, Ohio, Friday, October 15, 1993

·

ONLY

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1

power locka.

· LOw- lallllbt Ia 501, clooocl,.
Satunl.oJ, bleb ID low-7Go

3-5·22-27-33

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Starr
Proponents and opponents of
zoning along the Ohio River
between Reedsville and Long Bottom expressed their views Thursday afternoon at a meeting of the
Meigs County Planning Commission which assembled to make its
recommendations concerning the
proposed zonin~ resolution.
The resolution may appear on
the February ballot in part or all of
Olive Township depending on the
Olive Township Board of Trustees'
reaction to lite planning commission's recommendation.
The commission, represented by
Jon Jacobs, Robert Ea son, Lin
Coleman, Susan Oliver and John R.
Lentes recommended an unrestricted zoned area be created covering
the remainder of Olive Township
!hereby allowing all township voters to participate in the election.
However, the recommendation
of the commission is not binding
and may be disregarded by the
Olive Township Zonin~ Committee
or the Olive Townsh1p Board of

!»otari·
\ ·.
· .ans
M
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'., ·-t.:'c:'t:f~lines'ID
~'~!f~~=r;:~rc~...er:~- ~~·tho:·~~~~ ~~Wl~-~~~·it··'· --:.ti ybu ·~~~i ~;;,.f o~f~ili~

braku, powar wlndowa,

5

Pick 4;
Buckeye 5:

RUTLAND - WoTk on Rutland's $500,000 water line repll!ce· ment p ~oject is expected to get
underway before the end of this
. month.
At a meeting of Rudand Village
: Council this week the paper work
on the proJect was completed and
Sandy Sm•'!'· cle~-tneasurer, ~d
. contracts will be Signed sometime
: next _week.
. . Bids ac.CeJ!ted wer~ tho_se of
.F1elds Exc.a~. anng of Kitls.J¥1 Jor
$344~. 1 1 and Rose EX&lt;;avJlUrig «if

13,995

... .

Rams

RACINE - Racine Volunteer :
Fire Department wil have a.chicken .
BBQ starting at 11 a.m. at the sta- ..
lion.
~

5

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106

REEDS VILLE - The Eastern
Concen Band will present its flfSt
concen of the school year at 3 p.m.
in the high · school gym. The free
program is being billed as a .
"Homecoming Concert" since it'
will be ·the last event of Eastern's
Homeeoming Weekend.

1993 PONTIAC .GiliiD PRIX LE 4 DR. ·

.

, Pick 3:

"·

The parlmutuels
NEW YORK (A?)
Parimutuel wagering is used at
American mce D'8Cks, having long
taken over from bookmaking for
turf bettors.
The parimutuels came into
being in France more than 125
ago. The term Parimutuel
;~~to "among ourselves" in

antl-loc~

defeat

.

PROIUMCAII

V&amp;, tilt, cruise, cauetta,

Falcons

POMEROY - Bruce Stone will
be in concert at !he Trinity Church.
of Pomeroy at 7:30p.m. Stone, formerly of Pomeroy, will present a~
program suited for the whole fami -'
ly. A fr ee will offering will be;·
taken. Light refreshments will be
served following the program.
·

'

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Ohio Lottery

Charges fll~d in theft ofcash·

Chatges lilive been filed .against '2l-year-old pavid A. B!'Ow~. ·
RavensWood. W.Va., for the theft of $91!! ftoin • tnJCk 8l the Rani$ ·
Farm in PonJIInd,JCj)CIItid Meip COWit)' Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
The theft occurred on Tuesday ·evening and was reporte.d
'jVednesday, Most.of the lllQilCY wal recovered, Sou!Sby said.
• '
• Browp reported!~ indicated t!l officers he would appear for a

. hcaliilg.

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property, it is to have some control
Trustees, Lentes said. .
over what comes into the lllt8, she
Defends zonln1
Zoning board representative said.
Shelburne said the sitll8tion conEllen Shelburne defended the proposed ordinance by saying it would cerning the Letan Corporation,
give residents control of the area which would have been exempted
along the Ohio River.
from the zoni11g due to a grandfaThe area along the river is a spe- ther clause, has been resolved.
cial place... it is ldnd of unique, she
"We have decided we could
said. The area has experienced · work together," she said.
growth in the form of tourism and
"It is our understanding that
recreation, she pointed ouL
zoning would not applr to the
A proposed medical waste Letart Corporation m this
incinerator in the nearby Athens instance," said attorney Bernard
County community -of Coolville Fultz, representing the Letart Coralarmed some residents of the poration.
Reedsville area . In addition, a
Oppose zoaing
planned gravel operation by th.e
Zoning opponents asked that all
Letart C01pomtion near Reedsville
Olive Township voters be allowed
drew some Qpposition, fueling the
to VGte on· the ordinance, not just
drive for zoning.
those who live or own propeny
''The situation in Coolville realwithin the affected areils.
ly opened our eyes," Shelburne
Planning Commission President
said. "It's literally right next door."
John R. Lentes said the ordinance
In addition, southeastern Ohio
may represent a township zoning
has not been ruled out as a site for
plan because it affects the entire
a ·low level radioactive waste site,
township either through inclusion
she said.
'
or exclusion in the proposed zonThe main thrust of zoning is not
ing .
to tell people what to do with their
Continued on page 3

updated on S
~oo&lt;r ~ odicr'coultte~."

~

• ·· ' •
good things about Meigs County
The event opens at noon on Fricome to the Showcase Meig~ day, at 10 a.m. Saturday and noon
County Oct. 15, 16 and 17 at the on Sunday. The event closes at 6
Meigs County Fairgrounds," said p.m. Friday and 8 p.m. Saturday
Meigs County Extension Agent Hal and Sunday.
Kneen while addressing the MidBesides, the whole thing is free
dleponJPomeroy Rotary Club at it according to Kneen. The Rotary
Monday night meeting at the Heath Club was one of the sponsors for
Methodist Church in Pomeroy.
advertising in the Ohio magazine
showcase
has old
something
was published
in AugusL
for"The
everyone
... young,
and in which
Throughout
the entire
11rogram
between," Kneen said.
on the three days is mus1c, craft
"Widespread publicity has been shows, contests and door prizes.
given to the event, but possibly the President Eugene Triplett was in
greatest good may come from charge of the meet!ng. Bill Knight
Meigs County citizens realizing of Point Pleasant, W.Va .. was a
that we have something just as gues t of the club.

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

HALKNEEN

Guard's widow arzgry at lack
·of information from prison
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (A?) The widow of a guard kiUed during
a riot at the Lucasville prison said
she was angry at the way corrcctiens officials handled infonnation
about the uprising.
Peggy Vallandingham said
Thursday her family heard about
her husband Roberr' s death from
reporters, not prison officials.
"We were the.last to lcnow anything," she said.

"The news of Bob's death was
aired, it was on the radio. before
myself and a lot of my family
membe~ were notified," she said.
" I went home to take a shower that
morning, and I watched them bring
Bob's body out."
Vallandingham, 40\ was the
only gull'd killed during the 11-day
uprising in April at the Southern
Ohio Correctional Facility. Nine
prisoners also died.
Mrs. Vallandingham had
refused tl&gt; talk to the media until
Thursday, when she appeared
before the Lucasville Media Task
Force. Gov. George ·vOinovich aeProbe continues
a!Cid the group, made up of It
ATllENS, ·Ohio (AP)
media repesentatives, to help omAuthorities contin!Jed 10 investig~ cials form guidelines on giving
·the death of a retired eastern Oh•o information 10 reporters.
man found drowned in his car.
l;&gt;uring the riot, there were
· Richard Phillips, 57, of Stewart, reportS Vallandingham was killed
was discovered Thursday in his · by prisoners . after a prison
submerged car in the Hocking spolcesy;oman allegedly made light
River.
of threals 10 kill hostages.
. The State Highway Patrol said
"We 'all ro1ent tlic statement
the accident probably ~appened w~ s made," Vallandingham's
Saturday. ?hilUpf apparently lost · mother, Wanda, tOld the taSk fQtCC.
conti'Ol of his car on a curve while ·'I regret her statement tl)al this
driving north ·on Ohio 144, said was 'just negotiation Ialit and don't
patrol Sgt. Ed Waldron. The car pay an~ attention to it.' ·This ¥las a
went dqwn an embankment and high pnce pay."
rolled onto its top in the river.
, Warden Afthur Tate Jr. told tho
· A•man saw the car in the river · taSk Corco that, "At this point in
near Ste--:jll'l; aboUt 15 miles nonh- time, in al~ honesty, I can't tell you
east of Athens.
· why thoy murdered Bob Vllland-

ingham.i'

Tate said he thinks the system of
passing along accurate information
to the media in a timely fashion in
crisis situations needs to be
improved.
.
Also Thursday, the director of
the !Uinois Department of Conections told correction officers from
around the country that Ohio was
not prepared for the riOL
Ohio did not have a clear plan
of action when the riot erupted, IUinois prisons director Howard Peters
said.
" For the first two hours, no one
was in charge. I was really taken
aback by that." Peters said.
Pete~ was part of a discussion
panel at the founding congress of
AFSCME Corrections United of

the American Fedemtion of State
County and Municipal Employees.
More than 600 officers from 28
SUiteS attended the two-day conference in Columbus.
Peters also said that the leadership at Lucasville was " dysfunctional."
Reginald A. WilJcinson, director
of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, disagreed.
''There was miscommunication
at times. Warden Tate felt some
frustration with how some of his
staff responded to some parts of the
riot," WilJcinson said. "(But) those
are some well-qualified, capable
people."
Tate declined to comment on
Peters' remarks.

Suspect in rape case
to face gran~~ry

to

RONALD G. DA. VIS ·

A Pomeroy man charged in the
alleged rape of a 19-year-old
woman Sunday will go before a
Meigs County Grand Jury Tuesday.
Ronald G. Davis, SO, 1614 Uncoln Heights, was charged with
rape Thursday morning in the
· Meigs County Court of Judge
Patrick H. O' Brien.
If found guilty, Davis faces a
possible maximum ·25-year prisOn
tenn and a fine of$10,000.
According to Meigs County
Prosecuting .Attorney John R.
Lentes, Davis 'W8I earlier convicted
on a charge of.gtoss sexual miscon. duct.
Addition c!A:ges may be peading; Lentes commented.
.. .Davis remains in the custody of
tho Meigs County Sheri!r s DcPMtment in lieu of $250,000 bond.

�.
•

Friday, October 15, 1993

•

.
111 Court Sbeet
.

I'OIIlei'OJ, Oblo

DEVOTED TO 'l'tiE JNTERBSTS OF THB JO:IG8-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager
LETTERS OF OPINION

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

are ""'komo. They aboulcl be leas than 300

words. All !etten are aubject to ediling lllcl must be signed wilb name,
addreos lllld telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publilbed.l..etten
soould be in good taste, addteuing ilsues, not pmonolitieo.

· Deadline for publication
of electiot;IIetters Oct. 27
!

•

The Daily Senlil_lel we!comes lette~ regarding the Nov. 2 genei-al
etecuon. However, m the tnterest of f81111e8s, no election leuers will be
accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday,Oct 27.
Individuals should address issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing 'candidates will not be used.
Letters should be 300 words or less, preferably typed. Allleuers are
subJect 10 editing and and must be si~ed with name, address.and tele·
phone number. Telephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned
letters will be published. Letters should be in gOod taste.

.

aDd
MICH .

'

Death of African leader poses some questions
WASHINGTON - If the
Kremlin ftles have not already been
desuoyed, key information may
soon be found that eould indicate
that hard-line Communists of the
Gorbachev regime conspired to
assassinate a charismatic African
leader seven years ago.
This stOry of international Cold
War inttigue comes from lOp aides
to Boris Yeltsin, who have been
poring over secret KGB and Cen·
ua1 Committee documents trying 10
find discrediting infonaation about
the Gorbachev govenvnent.
Yeltsin's aides have wid us that
the more proof they fmd of Com·
munist m1sdeeds, the more effec·
tively Yeltsin can consolidate his
power by painting lhe fooncr Sovi·
et leaders as a corrupt and in'espon·
sible alternative to his rule.
·
This latest chapter in Yeltsiri' s
battle ID revise hisiOry involves the
speculation !bat Soviet Moscow
leaders may have murdered
Mozambiquan President Samora
Machel in October 1986- by
plane crash.
·
The downed plane, which kiUed
33 others besides Machel, has long
been a mystery to international
investigawrs. Some have looked at

the facis and conclu(led it was an
accident, while Olhers still believe
darker forces were at wort.
Mll!'hel became Mozambique's

By Jack Anderson

and

•

Michael Binstein
fust president after it won indepeft.
dericc from Ponugal in 1975. A
committed Marxist, Machel was
the guerrilla leader of the libelation
movement who quickly purged his
government of all anti-Marltist eJe.
ments, and !brew thousands of
Mozamblquans into "re-education" camps to learn the new way,
Thousands of Soviet bloc soldiers
and advisers came in and virtually
took over portions of !be new governmenL
The Soviets believed - mistalc·
enly, it turns out - that Machel
was fmnly in their sphere of influe!K;C:. Machel gave plenty of warn·
ing that he wasn't about 10 turn his
new nation into a Soviet puppet.
U.S. intelliJ!ence picked up these
signals, wh1ch it noted in a classi-

Images from abroad
help shape U.S. policy

lied Sljlte Department report from
the late 1970s: This 1ep0r1 noted an
instance where Mozambique's
then-foreign minister, Joaquim
Chissano, privately warned a Sovi·
et official that "bilateral relations
are based on friendship, DOt depen·
· dence. and he wuned lhe Soviets ·
against meddling in the internal
affairs o{ Mommbique.' •
Machel echoed these sentiments
himself on sevc:ral occasions. Con·
fidants say that he would some·
times shout to a Soviet official that
''I did not fight the war of independence just to get a new master in
Moscow.''
'
Th!l Soviets considered this
· prideful bluster ·until Mllchel began
10 thaw relatjons with !be United
States in 1982. Relalions between
this ·"Marxist" president and
Ronald Reapn soon became sur·
pt~Si!l~Y wann, with Reagan call·
tng htm ·· •amigo" io ooe Oval
Office meeting. Also in Machel's
comer was Maureen Reapn, the
president's daughter, who as a rov·
mg ambassador 10 Africa became ·
convinced that Mozambique was
ready to tilt to the West.
By the time his plane cmsbed,
M.!!f\!e_l was irretrievably heac!ed

,,,,,

toward full Western feflowship. ;
The Soviets were increasingly
alarmed by Machel's overtures w
the West, and the peacemaking
gestures ~e was making, to t~c :
rebels who had been fighung hiS , ·
government. U Machel made peace ,
with his domestic enemies, he !
might not need all the weaponry '
the Soviets had been supplying for :
years.
!
Those who believe the Soviets ·
played a role in Machel's dealh :
point ID the "decoY beacon" theo- ·
ry, The evidence shows !bat :
Machel's plane, which was heading I
back w the Mozamliiquan .upon ·
in Mapuw for a night landing, sud· :
denly turned right. Some experts :
believe that a aopbislicaled ~ble ·
eommunieations unit had 6een set
up a5 a decOy to throw the plane off
course by emitting a false Signal.
The Soviets hll!l ample motive
10 rid themselves of. Machel. The
hope would have been that the l'!lo.
2 man in his gnvemmeat, Marceli·
no dos Santos, .would assume
power and
warm ~elaliOIIS
wi.th the Communists. Ins~ead,
Macliel was succeeded as pJeSideat ·:
by Chissano. the foreign minister .
and architect of Mozambique's •
Western tilt:
Y eltsin' s · researchers arc ·
intrigued by the possibility of a
.Communist conspiracy behind
Machel's death. Since gaining
power, Yeltsin has spared oo
expense or effm:t to uncover and
defrock the Communist legac)'.
J.,ast year, we reported, Yeltsm ,
hired a top-flight U.S. investigative :.
agency. Krolf Associates, 10 help ·
locate the billions in hard clll'lmCy
he believes the former leaders stole
from Russia's treasury.
But at least one prominent Rus· ·
sian believes that Yeltsin's Corn- ·
monist witch hunt may eveatually .
do more harm than good. "This
uend is no . longer productive ··
because it creates an inferiority
complex for the people,'•• said ·
Boris Notldn, one of the deans of
broadcast journalism in Russia and c·
a Yeltsin confidant "It tells !be ·
people that their lives should be ·
flushed down the toileL"
,
,
Jack Andersoa and Michael
Blastela are writers lor United '
Feature Syndicate, lac.

,

,,,,,

_..

•

•

,

.

thOrolilh Hllroll Jly ..

In 1860,' 11-year-old· Grace.. lndiK• tMf too.- •.•
Bedell of Westifteld N Y. wrote a .oheek on the AUIIIDr o
.,
'· ' I• •
'IGIIIpi!lor ~ no ..,....
IeUII{ ·10 pre,tdeoUII
candtdate . lllfefillotlel'l oli thlio4i
Abrabam Llnc;oln, suggestins llC dolonfntt;...,.. IPOb to
would imJI!'OVe his ~ by 1111-.11a11 of 1M panot, lllil
_growing a beard. .
.......,... ....,._-.

.,

'c ·

•r•.

.
1

1111.
I~ oaee

""· QOtolullf

11, ! '
'

o! your failure to ' : ·
~"·w•r or olherlrl•• u·
Nliloncl•• ,.nultlad bV' the \
Ohlo · Auloa ol C.lvll '
Prooodure wllhln the limo
•Iliad, Judgmont'by _,.ull
·(C!Itlllllued ...... .,
I·"':

0,

Pomeroy Court news .

---- Area death s -.----

I

-- .l. .cle

gets oearer 10 the state. The wet
Br The A8IOdated l'ml
MoiSt fi!'will move east Ulllight weather will likely hang OYe6 inro
Some of ,.US moiscure may make it Sunday as the front moves east
into nMIIwest pans of Ohio as fo!in across the state.
Temperatures over the nen cou·
later tonight ahead of a cold front.
pie
of days will be fairly stable and
Rain will be more likely over all of
mild.
Daytime highs will range
Ohio on Saturday as the cold front
from !be mid 60s iniO !be lower
70s. Ovemiglu lows will generally
Tedrow pleads innocent be in the low and midSOs.
The record high on this date in
JACKSON, Ohio (AP)- A
Columbus
was 90 in 1897 . The
former municipal coun clerk has teCOrd low_,
24 in 1939.
pleaded innocent to charges related
Sunset
IOIIight
at 6:52 p.m. ~on­
10 missing coon money.
rise
Saturday
at
7:43a.m.
A grand jury indicted Patricia
Aroulld the aatioD
Tedrow, 36 , of Wellston, last
Showers
continued across the
month on charges of theft in office,
cenual
Plains
IOday, but the hcavi·
tampering with official documents
est
rainclouds
gathered in east
and dereliction of duty, Jaclcson
County Prosecutor Mark Ochsen· Florida and !be upper Mississippi
Valley in what promised 10 be a
bein said.
"She was the municipal clcrt in gray day for milCh of the counl!y.
Considerable cloudiness inter·
charge of court funds, and som~ of
those funds have come up puss· spersed with some sunshine was
ing," Ochsenbein said. "We are expected throughout most of the
sliU wailing on an auditor's report, East and moist air from the l'lll:ific
so we can't disclose how much is prQIJlise.d to produce clouds over
some western peaks.
missing."
The heaviest rain was expected
Sources haye said at least
around tropical thunderstorms near
$145,000 is missing.
Ms. Tedrow and her attorney, the east coast of Rorida. Another
Jeff Benson of Chillicothe , storm system threatened 10 dump
more rain in the southern part of
declined 10 comment

Exteaded forecast:
Sunday tbrouah Tuesday:
Nine were fmed and one forfeit·
Rain lilcely on Sunday. Lows in
the low and mid-50s. Highs in mid· ed a bond in this week's cliun of
60s 10 low 70s. Chance of showers Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed.
Fined were Charles Ohlinger,
Monday and Tuesday. Lows 40· 50.
Pomeroy, disorderly conduct, $200
Highs 60-70.
and costs; Serena Robinson,
Pomeroy, permitting an unlicensed
driver 10 drive her vehicle, $63 and
costs; Rodney Clonch, Middleport,
operating a motor vehicle under
Jacob Armstrong
Josephine Blevins
$63 and costs; Milce
suspension,
Jacob Isaac Armstrong, three
Josephine Blevins, 71, of Mid·
Pierce,
Middlepon,
possession of
months. WiUs Hill Road, Pomeroy. dlepon, died Thursday, Oct. 14,
drug
paraphernalia,
$100
and costs;
died Wednesday, October 13, 1993 1993, at her residence following an
Wilham
Woods,
Pomeroy,
open
at his residence.
extended iUness;
container,
$63
and
costs;
'I:erry
Born June 16, 1993 in GallipoBorn in. Huntington, W. Va. on
lis, he was the son of Charlton K. May 9, 1922, she was the daughter Nelson, Nelsonville , disorderly
Armstrong of Gallipolis and of tile late Byron Francis and
HealberR. Armstrong of Pomeroy. Wilma A, Meadows Pannalee. She
Survivors inclu4e his parents; was a homemaker, a Middleport
one brother, Christopher K. Arm· High School graduate and a memstrong; maternal grandparents, ber of the Middleport First Baptist Alzheimer's snpport group to
meet
Michael and Phyllis Custer of Church.
Alzheimer's and related disor·
Pomeroy; paternal grandparents,
She is survived by a daughter
ders
support group will meet
Robert and Pauy Armstrong of and friend, Joann Blevins and
Wednesday
from 'IIO 3 p.m. at the
Crown City; one aunt, Kewana D. Terry Garten of Middleport; a son
Seaquist of Lake Havasu, Ariz.. and friend, Richard Blevins and Meigs Senior Ceater. Hugh Mcl'hil
and two uncles, Wiltiam J. Jenne of Evelyne Ross, of Houston, Texas; from Fruth Pharmacy will be guest
GuysviUe and James D. Armstrong and a son and daughter-in-law, speaker.
of Gallipolis.
Dallas, Jr. and Emilia Blevins of
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and Denver, Colo.; a granddaughter, Special presentation
7 10 9 p.m. Saturday at the Waughc Jennifer Blevins of Denver.
The United Presbytarian Min·
Halley-Wood Funeral Home where
Besides ~~arcnts, she was istry in Meigs County invites the
services will be held 2 p.m. Sunday preceded in
by her husband, public to special presentati.ons by
with Elder Sherman Johnson offiCI· Dallas (Chief) Blevins in 1992, and speakers from. Westmmster·
ating. Bur\1!1 will follow in Beach an infant si51er. .
Thurbq' Commun1ty, Cplll;lllbUS on
Grove"&lt;7eme.:etY in~· •' · ·· · Funeral -services "wlll be"'held . ·· Tueaf:iiY'llli? .p.mr~'tlle FntPrea·
In lieu of flowers, contnbulions Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Fisher by.ten~n C~urch tn ¥1ddl~port.
may be made to the Jacob Isaac Funeral Home on Middleport with C':JS G1Uespte and ~ou ¥itchell
Armsuong Fund, care of Waugh- AI Hartson officiating. Burial will w1ll speak on relat1onsh1ps and
Halley-Wood Funeral Home, 810 be at Riverview Cerncwy, Middle- needs of older adults.
Second Ave., Gallipolis, OH, port Friends may call at the funeral
45631.
·
home Saturday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 American Legion Post to meet
American Legion Post 39 will
Group to meet Monday p.m.
hold a special dinner at 7 p.m.
The Meigs County market live- Ty W. Elliott
Tuesday followed by a meeting at8
siOCk sale and show committee has
Graveside services forTy Wes· p.m. The Post will honor two
Scheduled a Specl.al meett'ng "•or 1ey Ell'10tt, fi1ve mon th. old son o f World War I veterans.
Monday at 7:30 P.M. in the Meigs Mark D. Ellioll and Nikki Whit· Olive Towaship Trustees to meet
High School Cafeteria.
IIIICh, Pomeroy. were held a1 2 p.m.
The Olive Township Trustees
This meeting will be preceded Friday afternoon at the Riverview
will
on Thursday at 6:30p.m.
by a brief open forum from 7:00 10 Cemetery in Middleport. The Rev. at themeet
Shade River Forestry Build·
7:30pm.. in which livesiOCk mem· David Bryan, ~lOr of Hope Bap- ing. for the purpose of adopting the
bers, ~nts, advisors, buyers, etc. list Church, Middlepon, officiated.
may share suggestions, concerns or
The relationship of the late J. J. solid waste plan.
recommendations with their and Laoma Cremeans and Cleona Literary Club to meet
The Middleport Literary Club
respective livesiOCk species repre· and George Baria was incorrectly
sentatives.
reported to The Daily Sentinel.
All members, parents, advisors, They are great-grandparents.
and buyers are welcome and invil·
Continued from page 1
ed to attend.
· Also, some res1dents expressed
concern they would not be able to
VETERANS MEMORIAL
vote in the elcx:tion although elec·
Thursday admissions - Mae tion and zonin$ costs would be
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two Ketchka, Pomeroy, and Byron paid by the enure township, not
Ohio Lottery tickets show the right Haskins, Shade.
just the zoned areas.
ftve-number combination in BuckThursday discharges - Ocel
Opponents also accused the zoneye 5, arid each entitles the owner Sears, Middleport.
ing committee of omitting areas
to claim a $100,000 prize, the lot·
from the zoning plan where resi·
Holzer Medical Center
tery announced today.
dents and property owners were
Oct. 14 discharges: Danette lilcely to vote against the plan.
The winning tickets were sold in
See,
Brittany Barneu, Theresa
Canton and Cincinnati.
The proposed plan divides land
Slater,
Justin Justis, Mrs. Greg into two categories: industrial and
Here are Thursday night's Ohio
Miller and daughter, Mrs. Tia non-industrial. A third category,
Lottery selections:
Johnson and daughter, Mrs. James unrestricted, would have included
Lockhart and daughter, Helen Rus· the remainder of Olive Township
Buckeye 5: 3-5·22·27-33
sell, Juanita Milfer, Wilma Hoff. but was omitted from the plan.
Pick 3 Numbers: 1~-6
man, Patricia Mossman, John
Pick 4 Numbers: 0.5·9·8
The plan includes the communi·
Harper. Homer Adkins, Evelyn ty of R'eedsviUe and.extends down·
Blake, Joseph Hoover, Kayla Cur!· river along both sides of State
man,
Bridget Trisch and Kelley Route 124 ending near Long Bot·
The Daily Sentinel
Turley.
tom.
·:
(USPS ZIJ.MOl

Soutb-Ceatral Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low in
the mid-50s. Chance of rain is 20
percent. Saturday, cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms . High in the low 70s.
Chance of rain is 50 percent.

l

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-----Weather-----

.

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Joseph Spear

Todal: in .history :

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W.VA .

resume

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.
Columbus!7o-

•I

Health care ·a nd lower deficit' allin·· on·e

Berry's World

!68• I•

IND.

By WALTER R. MEARS
.
AP Spedal Corrapoadent
· wASHINGTON - In Ibis television series, every episode is a crisis
-andrea!.
.
Calculated anti-American thuggery in Haiti, a slain soldier dragged
through the streets of Mogadishu, shell fire in Moscow, the agony of Sarajevo; the shared images are instant, their imprint more lasting.
It does have an impact on U.S. policy, said Mack McLarty, the White
House chief of staff.
· Televised images of the starving in Somalia were a facror when lhe
U.S. relief operation there was launched 10 monlhs ago.
That "daily, graphic and bean-rending television footage," said Sen.
Sam Nunn, contributed significantly 10 President Bush's lame-duck deci·
sion. Then, after the Mogadishu saeet battle that killed 18 U.S. soldiers,
the TV images of dead and captured Americans began "fueling calls for
an abrupt and immediate pullout," he said.
"So television is having a very powerful effect," the Georgia Democrat said, but its images cannot be allowed inadvertently 10 dictate whea
or where U.S. forces deploy or withdraw.
"This is one small business that
Clinton Health Care Pli1n ·helps!"
"The latest video shots" can't become the basis for decisions, said
Sen. Chri~her Dodd, D.COnn. Let thai happen and the ouiCOme could
be u.s. miSSions that "simply follow the TV cameras wherever they may
go," Nunn added.
.
Still the images are indelible. Those of Somalis celebrating U.S. casu·
allies a'nd dragging the body of a dead American stirred demands for
.
.
withdrawal from a mission that began, also on television, as a humanilari·
t11ree times directly or to buy down !be debt, . the·national debt to zero by the
Fourscore and a few hundred the interest ~
an effort
·
10 cover the which would free up billions in . year 2009.. The "Tilltpayer Debt ·
hours ago, our fust lady brou~ht more than is n
Clinton said at the ·time that the scene "curdles the siOmach ... really
forlh on this continent a new nouon · health bill, if you use Uncle Sam's interes~ that could go toward health Buy-Dowli ~·would ~ow indi·
makes me angry.'' His response was 10 send reinforcements fa a mission
vidual. laltpayers to desipate as ·
'
for blanket heallb c~R. Now we are figures, more than four ti~es · tltc ~.
he said would be completed and ended by March 31, a deadline that may
- The Concord Coalition, much as 10 pen:ent of t!leir annual .
engaged
in
a
great
debate,
testing
be &amp;4vanced 10 deal wtth ~out~ in Congress.
headed by former 'senators w~ levy I!&gt; debt rediiClion 1111d require whether that notion, or any notion
The resistance of Halb's JDilitary·police powe.:s to the U.N. effort to
Rudman, R·N.H., and Paul Congress 10 inatch their contribu·
so conceived, can be paid for.
foster democracy there was dramatized, and televised, on Monday when
Tsongas, D-Mass., recently lions with spending cuts. It's a ·.
We speak here of a tidy sum,
anned gan~s were allowed 10 prevent the landing of a U.S. tnsining con·
unveiled a plan that would reduce drastic measure, but even the .
$350 billion ova live years.
required amount if you use Joe's,
tingent. CliniOn put off that mission.
the
deficit. by $25 1 billion more respected Congressional Budget '
The ftrstlady said the funds can
Is this possible? Read on:
In these foreign crises, communications technology sends into the liv·
1,
than
lhe one B,PI!roved by Con~. Office a~ it would wort. ·
be found, but she was short on
-In 1991, the Heritage Fauning room the kind of information that would have been beamed back only
Editor-in-Chtef
Charles
Peters
of
In
other
words,
we
eould
pass
specifics. There's some waste in dation carne up wilh a feailble plan
to the White Hoose Situation Room in another era. Now Americans watch
the current system, she said, and called the "4 percent solution" The'Washington Monthly proposed swpgap health~- legislation that •
it along with the people who malce policy.
.
we can cut that out. We. can slow that would have resulted in a bud· a series of savings that would add would bold down COSl8 and provide · .
"We are following events moment by moment," Clinton said Oct 3,
another $114' billion to the reduc· for the unlnsure4.·then pay off the . ·
as CNN broadcast live television of the Moscow attack on hard-line hold· dow'.' ~e growth of Medi?~fC and get surplus by 1995. The ide&amp; was lions Congress came up with. The national.deb!. put the interest sav- ·
Med1catd, We can sl!"' a btg tax on to increase domestic.Spending each
outs in the Russian parliament building. "As you lmow, we have access
smokers.
There won 1 be any otl_ler year by oru y 4 percent, roughly the point is, there are a lot of sman ings in a trust fund and have a fully · .
10 television coverage lbc:re, so )'OU are also pretty current on it''
comprehensive health ~ . ·
taxes, though. You can count on tt. rate of inflation, and let l1lltU1al rev- people who believe we can cut funded,
Anthony Lake, Clinton's nauonal security adviser, said the TV·pictures
paclcage a few years down the road. · ~
more.
These
savin'-s
c9uld
be
A poll of 20 people. turn~ up . enue growth balance the budget. applied 10 the health bill
frOm Somalia "helped malce us recognize that the military situation in
·
A little parsimony could go a
one person, a Tasmamao ~beep· Heritage would have used the ensu·
Mogadishu had deteriorated in a way that we had not frankly recoglong
way.
:
As
I
write
these
words,
Rep.
nized..,
her~r. who sto~ off on hiS way ing surpluses for tax relief; but Robert S. Wallcer, R·Pa., has a bill
Spear
It
a
writer
'or
Joseph
Lake also told USA Today it is frustrating that American foreign poli· · to VISit an a~nl m Engl3:nd, who there is no reason they could not be in the hopper that would balance Newspaper Enterprise Asaocla·
cy "seems 10 be·defined by the crisis or even the photograph of the day"
found herconJCCiures c~ble.
·used to subsidize health costs the budget in six years and reduce lion.
·
'
But there are ways 11 could be
instead of fundamental goals.
done. All it would talce is a great
"This waldwide coverage, the CNN coverage, all of the technology
national belt-tightening 10 pare the
IOday llhink has made an impact," chief of staff McLarty said Wednes·
PubliC Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
deficit
by a1 least &amp;rlOther $350 bil·
day. "!don't think it's controlling foreign policy, but it certainly is an
lion. Or better yet, we could buy
element''
down the national debt and free up Ohio Rwlucl eo. loa- a•iched wilhout IUGCIII.
McLarty was answering viewer questions on C-SPAN, the esble net·
II lo n110.,nry th..rore
$300
billion every single year.
2701.14; 1e&amp;07; -'Civil
work that televises Congress. And that, in turn, has an im~t on policy a1
to gtvo nollce or the f!fng ol
We
all
know
what
the
deficit
is
Aulo
4.4
(A) (Adtlnu
~.
.
the Petition h.,oll! by
- the &lt;lifference between what we
If THE
OF
In a SenaiC speech earlier this month adv\)Catinl! an end to the U.S,
Pu.bltcadon, In ·10110rditn0•
presence in Somalia, Sea. Robert Byrd said he didn t want it "misundc:r· take in and what we spend each COMMON PLEAI, IEIGII with lecllon 270S. 14:
COUNTY, OHIO
183,07; 1nd Civil Rulo
Stood by those viewers who are wiiiChint~, lhrough those television cam· year, The Congress JUst went
through a hellacious fight to shave
Jeny .w ..,
~-~A~ Rl'llo!,d Code.
eras that anybody here is advocating cuttin~ and running.''
And furthor oflllnt elllh
$496 billion off the deficit over the
Di_, of Tr-portotllon
At borne, House Democratic leader Richard Gephardt said, the new
noL
next five Y\lllfS· Why not. ,oin the
• - of Ohio
media technology is testing deliberative democracy. Sound bites, TV
RIJbeco• A.lpllnhowwd
battle,
hack
out
another
$
50
bil·
~till
spocs and fleeting visual images iln multiplying cable :rv channels can
Aallellftt Attomoy GeMntl
lion, pay the health bill with it and
lAo A. s.yJrlod, .a•.
supplant reasoned debate, he said.
lwom to bellore iM Md
Dtf-. d1nt. ·
eubeorlbecl In lilY ,.,.,..
"We must DOt let information overwhelm knowled~c, and pictures and repeat the exercise as necessary?
The national debt is all the
,C.. NO. D-CV-77 thlo 4th diiY ol Oololler,
sound bites masquerade as wisdom," he said. "It ts time, as. pertlaps
1eiiS.
ITA~~IIO
never before, to report, 10 talk and to televise sense to the American peo- deficits added together, whi.ch
amount to $4.3 trillion. We have
COUNTY OF IEIGS sa
ple."
borrowed' the mone)' to cover these
RlltoGGI A. .,.howonl,
accumulated
defictts,
and
we
are
being
filet duly ·•worn,
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mean, vice presideat aDd colum' ·•'
paying
the
lendera
in
excess
of
depGIM
end NY8 ,lllel aho
alst for The Associated Preu, has reported oa Washlactoa aDd
'
aalioaal politics for more thaD 30 yws.
·
. $300 billion a year in interest. le . • duly ':rpotntod,
Those are the groSs numbers. 'lbe ~::AD!"
=~
government doesn't count the oflhe811a;:;thllllhe ,
mone'y it burrows' from itself, so Pl•lnllll· Jerrj ·,Wrrtt.
;
the official, or •'net,'' figure for Dir.otor ~~- T'::t: ..,...._
' •
annual interest is $200 billion. Statio of~=~ hill
l
Obviously, if we di~ not b&amp;ve a Petlllotl, to. "'!''!"'P"" the
...
I I
.
I
national debt, we would be savina
brought thlo ' 1 ·
~~~e~~~e
...
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'Ibday is Friday, OcL IS, the wllll ..........,~ diiiOenoe
1,1111 :
288th da.y .of 1993. There- n ·. =:,;:.~=· Lao A.
. ol lho
IO a.. k I
days left 111 the yesr.
,
Alt• W ~~~
diVOIOO from ... Dohuh,-.,t; ' 1
Today's Higltlislii in Hilkxy: .
w,.
YOu ,
r~llu_l!.ed to , ,
• On Oct. IS, 1964·, it was l.,tlodo Cleni 1.!. CMIO,
1
~that Soviet lc8dciNikiia · Mllil ltitt.lonllllah, I ,a..
- - 1be 011111(i181nt wtlliln " I
'
.
IIMtlnWoh.
"""IY-elaht do~ atter....lbi ~ •
,Khru
• shehe,v ha~ been 1 removed . Tbe lollewlnt •lklno
llat putil!datlon cir lJifa ; 't ,
fiorn offiCe. He was succeeded as 11111n on IMIIIII of the
nollot, w~lo.h will . We ;
Ji~!blllil)illl OIICit ll8lilt "11011 &gt;
pre\aler by Alexei Kos)'gm aDd as P...llllll ,to oooai18lo .trill!
for ••• ou_.............
Commuaist Party secretary · bY ~·I of.rllld•- Of thi
111d lho loot pliliUiftdlon wll '
Lecmid Bfezlmev
·
11nltnWn Dololl. .ll(l)l ~

.

, , , !Mansfield

conduct, $63 and costs; Donna
Long, Gallipolis, failure 10 main·
lain assured clear distance, $43 and
costs; Brian Bass, Racine, failure to
comply with a court order, $63 and •.
costs; Jerry VanKirk, Dexter, fail·
ure to comply with a court order,
$63 and costs; and
Edward Thatcher, Rutland, DUI,
$37 5 and costs and sill months
license suspension, and SSO and
costs, no insurance.
Forfeiting a bond was Victoria
Van Cooney, Racine, open conlainer in motor vehicle, $83.

--Meigs announcementswill met at 2 p.m. WedneSday at
the home of Eileen Buck . Mrs.
Bernard Fultz will give a review of
McGuffey's Readers. For roll call
bring a quotation about a school
teacher.
Conservancy District to meet
Leading Creek Conservancy
District will hold its monthly board
meeting on Wednesday at S p.m. at
the disuict office. The public is
invited 10 attend.

EMS re$po_nds

to nine calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
responded to nine calls for assis·
tance overnight. Units responding
included:
Thursday - 3:38 a.m. Middleport to Race Street for Virginia
Hindy who was transported to
Holzer Medical Ceiuer; 9: 17 a.m.
Pomeroy 10 County Mobile Home
Parle in Darwin for Byron Haskins
who was Urutsjl&lt;lned to Veterans
Memorial Hosp1tal; 9:49 a.m . Mid·
dleport to Bradbury Road for Seth
Baker who was transported to
VMH; I 0:01 a.m. Tuppers Plains
First Responders and Syracuse to
State Route 7 for Ethel Carson who
was transported 10 Camden-Clark;
10:10 a.m. Pomeroy transported
May Ketch a to VMH; II :49 a.m.
Middleport to Lincoln S ueet for
Josephine Blevins who was treated
at the scene; 3:19p.m. Syracuse to
DeWitts Run Road for Ruby van.
Meter who was transported to
VMH; 3:36 p.m Racine uansported
Marsha Stanley 10 VMH; 4:20 p.m.
Middlepon to Race Street for EUen
Lewis who was transported to
VMH.
Friday - 7:01 a.m. Middlepon
to Overbrook Center for Roy
Showalter who was transported to
VMH.

Zoning...

Lottery results

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3

Rain forecast for parts of Ohio this evening

S~\Urday, Oct. 16

Page-2-The Dally.Sentinel
.Pqmeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
Friday, October,15, 1993

The Dally Sentinel-Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

'

,.. .,........................ ,..................SioUd
Do~Moaw.c-cr

1 ! -........................ ..............,........ .$23.4!1
ill Woeki ........................................ .M$.50
, 52 WMI!I···"···'""''"""'""""'"'""''''SIUG

Hospital news

Stocks
Am Ele Power ...................38 l/2
Ashland Oil.....:........... .......34 518
AT&amp;T ................................60 3/4
Bank ()nc ......................... ..42 118
I;lob Evans ................................ 19
Charming Shop.................. l4 3/8
Champion Ind. ...................14 3/4
City Holding .....................:JO 3/4
Federal MoRUI ...................24 S/8
Goodyear nR ..................45 3/4
l..ands End;.... .....................43 318
·Limilled Inc........................23 318
Multimedia Inc ..................38 518
Point BIIIICOIJI .......................... 14
Rlllt Ri:stauranl ..................... ..06
Reliance Electric ................J8 318
Robbins&amp;Myc:rs ...................... 18
Shoney's Inc ......................23 318
Star Bmk .................................36
Wendy Int'l.. .....................16 1}4

WorthiiJ&amp;too.lnd. ...........:...~ Sit

Stock reports are tile 10:30
a.m. quotes pi'OVIded b;y Advat
.al ~allpolls,

.'

the stale.
Increasin~ clouds

were converg·
ing over the cenual and northern
Plains as a jet stream disturbance
moves from western Nebraska to
southern Wisconsin.
Clouds over New England early
today were expected to dissipate in
the south and western parts of the
region, and sprinkles - expected.
especially over the foggy Ea st
Coast
Scattered showers and cloud s

were ex~ 10 linger over most
or the West, particularly alona
mounlain slopca.
Highs today were forecast in the
50s and 60s ID the Northesst, the
upper Great Lakes and the PacifiC
Northwest; and in the 70s and 80s
in the nation's l!lid-seclion and
south . Nineties were forecast for
southern California and Arizona
and the southernmost tip of Texas.
The high temperature for !be
nation Thursday was 97 degrees a1
Imperial, Calif.

Tests reveal no excess lead
NELSONVnl.E, Ohio (AP) -

Testing has revealed no excess lead
in city water samples, official s
said.
The Ohio Environmental Pro·

1ection Agency said in July that
Nelsonville failed to monitor lead
levels in drinking water. The agency threatened to fine !be Athens
County city for water poUulion violations.

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
Ada Morris of Chester will
mark her tOOth birthday next
Thursday, Oct. 21.
Although totally blind and also
having suffered a sttoke, Mrs. Mor·
ris sometimes can recognize peo·
pte. She was a school teacher over
many years teaching back in the
days when the one room schools
were in vogue. She is a charter
member or Chester Council 32. 3,
Daughters of America.
This Sunday, Oct. 17 , at 1:30
p.m. there will be a family get·
together ror Mrs, Morris at the
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita·
tion Center on old Route 33 where
she is confined. Friends are invited
to stop by and pay her a visit as a
part of the get-together.
Karen Smith and Richard Fick
are grandchildren of Mrs. Morris
and she has four great·grandchil·
drcn here.
The Women's Auxiliary of Vet·
crans Memorial Hospital will stage
its annual faU tea for hospital per·
sonnet and the public in the hospi·
1al lobby on Thursday, 'Oct. 21.
You are invited to stop by, say
hello and have some refreshments.
The annual social will go all day, at
least as long as supplies last

Is it too early for us to talk
Christmas? This is a really good
deal so I don' t think so.
The Meigs County Bikers who
really seem to be in there pitching
year-round wilh helpful l'rojecu
purchased hundreds of g1fts last
December for underprivileged
Meigs County children.
These gifts are available through
the Meigs County Department of
Health so if you or someone you
know has a child, from birth 10 15

SPRING VALLEY CINE~A
446·4524
.. .

years of age, who needs a Christ·
mas gift SlOp by the health depan·
ment and fill out an application.
The health depanment is located,
or course, on the second floor of
1he multipurpose building on Mul·
berry Heights in Pomeroy.
All applications for gifts must
be in by Monday, Dec . 6, and the
gifts will NOT be delivered to any·
one. The gifts, however, will be
available for pick up at the depanment but only on Dec. 20 through
Dec. 22. The department will be
closed after the 22nd so lhc gifts
must be picked up in accordance
with the schedule.
Any organizations or service
agencies wbo need applications for
their clients must also pick them up
at the health department well
before the Dec. 6 deadline so appli·
cations can be returned on time.
Applications for the gifts are avail·
able only through the health depanment Bikers will not have applications in any other locations.
"I hope the citizens of Meigs
County realize how fortunate we
are to have a group such as the Bile·
ers who go ID so much effort to see
that our underprivileged children
have a nice Christmas." comments
Norma Torres, RN, health depart·
ment director of nursing.
To be sure we're up ro our ears
in the confusion of Clinton 's health
care plan. I can't help but wonder if
the pharmaceutical companies are
in the picture. Since prescribed
medicines sometimes considerably
10 health care costs, I wonder if
provisions of the plan are going to
ensure that we're DQt paying $3 for
a 10-cent pill. Now that couldn't
be happening, could il? Do keep
smiling.

7

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'

�Friday, October 15, 1993

The Daily Sent~el

Sports

Panthers get first franchise wln while Lightning strikes Pens
By BOB GREENE
AP Sports Writer
Home cooking was just what the
Sunshine State's NHL teams needed - even if it was on ice.
Tampa Bay got its fust victory
of the season, delighting the home
fans at the ThunderDome by edging the Pittsburgh Penguins 3-2
Thursday night.
And in Miami, the Flooda Panthers got a goal from tbe first draft
pick in the history of the franchise
and came away with their very first
home victory, downing the Ottawa
Senators S-4 with a team record
number of goals.
"It's a relief I finally got one,"
said Rob Niedermayer, the fifth
player taken in the I993 draft. "I
- couldn't ask for better circumstances. It was &amp;t home, it gave us
the win and my mom was here"
After Florida and Ottawa ~ombined for six goals in the second
period, Niedermayer ~cored the
lone ~oal m the t!nrd penod.
Ntedermayer s goal came off a
centermg pass fro!D ~a~e Lowry
and beat goahe CraJg Billington.
The de~eat was costly. for
Ottawa, w~•ch lost rookie w1~ger
Pavol Dem1tra for 6-8 weeks w1th a
fractured ankle.
In othe~ games., Hartford
downed Ch1cago 6-2 10 a brawlmarred game, Edmonton and Los
Angeles skated to a 4_-4.tie and Cal-

Atlanta tops L.A. Rams 30-24

i

WINNING CATCH- Atlanta wide receiver
Andre Rison (left) goes airborne to make the
catch for what turued out to be the winning

I

.. I
j

touchdowl) in front of L.A. Rams cornerback
Robert Bailey in the fourth quarter of Thursday
night's NFC West battle in Atlanta, where the
Falcons won 30-24. (AP)

By ED SHEARER
ATLANTA (AP) The
Atlanta Falcons found the motivation they needed to snap a sevengame losing streak.
"He brought a spark," rookie
Darnell Walker of Oklahoma said
of Deion ·sanders. " Just playing
with him is a motivator. I made a
couple of plays, but he encouraged
me, alon~ with everybody else on
the team. '
Walker intercepted two passes
to set up two touchdowns and
forced a fumble that led to a field
goal as the Falcons beat the Los
Angeles Rams 30-24 Thursday
night. Sanders showed up less than
24 hours after his baseball season
with the Atlanla Braves came to an
end.
"I'm so tired I don't know what
to do," &gt;~;d Sanders, who struck
out in a pinch-hitting role in
Philadelphia Wednesday night
when the Phillies captured the NL
title by beating the Braves,
"The Braves have a lot of lead·
ers and guys to lift their team,''
Sanders said. "Over here, I feel a
part of this team inside me. I went
to a practice weeks ago and I
thought everyone had died. Tonight
we livened things up. It was not a

great performance. but just to be
here and get everyone exc ited
made me feel good."
'.' We came in one cornerback
short and Deion showing up
couldn't have happened at a better
time," Falcons coach Jerry
Glanville said. "We want to thank
the crowd because it was the noisiest we've had. Part of the credit for
that goes to Deion. He gets 'em
going."
Billy Joe Tolliver passed for
213 yards and three touchdowns,
21 and 42 yards to Andre Rison
and three yards to rookie David
Mims. The 42-yarder came with
4:40 remaining, a high floater that
Rison went up for in the end zone
to give the Falcons (1-5) a 27-24
lead.
"I wanted to prove a point that I could still win a ballgame,"
Rison said: "It didn 't matter where
Billy Joe threw the ball. I was
determined to catch iL ·'
''That last touchdown was one
of the best I've ever seen," Tolliv·
cr said.
Walker's seven-yard interception return to the Atlanta 41 set up
the go-ahead score, and his interception on the Rams' 23 in the

third quarter set up the touchdown
pass to Mims. .
"I decided in the locker room to
~ive the game ball to a young rookte," Glanville said bf Walker.
"Another rookie who we thought
played well was Mims. It's fun to
see our young people come on and
help us."
Norm Johnson added field goals
of 28, 32 and 34 yards for Atlanta,
the last coming after Walker forced
a fumble on the kickoff after the
Falcons took the lead, Melvin Jenkins recovered the fumble,
Jim Everett passed for 294
yards, much of it coming on a pair
of long scoring plays - 56 yards
to Willie Anderson on the opening
drive of the game and 60 yards to
Cleveland Gary, breaking a 17· 17
tie in the third quarter.
"It was a very tough loss,"
Gary said. "They had a lot of
intensity to win and we just came
up short"
"We moved the ball but did not
get the breaks,· ' said Jerome Bettis,
who scored on a two-yard run in
the second quarter. The Rams also
got the lOth coosecutive field goal
of SO yards or more from Tony
Zendejas, this one a 52-yarder.

Cooper encourages talk of unbeaten Kosar not interested in being traded
campaign in Ohio State's camp
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Some coaches don 't want to hear

Southern golfers
conclude season
The Southern High School golf
team finished a very successful
season Tuesday with their performance in the Division III district
golf championships at Deer Creek
State Park.
Southern, who had claimed the
sectional crown under coach Jim
Anderson, finished lOth.
Columbus Academy claimed the
crown over Granville and thirdplace Bcallwille.
Among Southern's accomplishments this season were a third·
place finish in the Tri-Valley Conference and the Division III sectional championship at Chillicothe.
Southern finished the year with
a fine 67-26 overall record.
Team
members Jeremy
Northup, Mike McKelvey and
Andy Fields each made second
team all-TVC.
Other team members are Brian
Anderson, Mason Fisher, Chris
Ball, Jay McKelvey, Jason Shuler,
Mauhew Bradford, Ryan Williams,
Andy Grueser. Jason Lawrence,
Jacob Davis, C.J. Harris, Rob
Crow, Ryan Norris and Ryan Hill.

any talk from their players about
unbeaten seasons and national
championships.
Not Ohio State's John Cooper.
Cooper, speaking at his weekly
news conference Monday, said he
encourages his team to talk about
going undefeated and to look at the
teams ranked ahead of the No. S
Buckeyes.
"That's not a distraction. I think
it's a positive," he said of the high
rankings. "We 1ry to use that to our
advantage. That'll be one of the
first things I use in my meeting
with them this afternoon. 'Hey', you
moved up another notch. We're
happy for you and proud of you,
Keep it up."'
As for talk of taking the first
national championship since 1968
by Ohio State or a B1g Ten team,
Cooper said he doesn't put a
damper on his players and their
hopes.
"We'll talk about what could
happen to the teams ahead of us,
Alabama's got a tough game_this
week against Tennessee. Florida
and Florida State play later on.
Notre Dame and Florida State
play," Cooper said. "Our attitude
is if you keep winning good things
happen to you. Don't worry about
anything else except winning your
football game. Take care of the
task at hand ...
The task at hand is No .2S

Michigan State (3-1). coming off
one of its biggest wins in years.
The Spartans scored the first 17
points, then held on for a 17-7 victory over ninth-ranked Michigan,
which dropped nine spots in this
week's poll.
During halftime of the 3:30p.m.
game at Ohio S1adium, Ohio State
will honor the 25th anni\rersary of
the 1968 national championship
team.
Cooper said he doesn't sh~lnk
from eomparisoos with the circumstanCes of 1968.
"We talk about that. That's one
of the goals we have every year is
to try to win the natiooal championship. Like some coaches say, I'm
not sure you plan that. I think it just
happens. At least that's what they
say," he said.
, This year's team is wearing
replicas of the jerseys worn by the
1968 team.
"I'm the guy who suggested
wearing their jerseys," he said.
"Maybe it'll help US OUL"
With members of the 1968 team
in town, Cooper was asked if he
would want the old Buckeyes
"pumping your guys full of that

BEREA, Ohio {AP) - Cleve- and I don't plan on that either,"
land Browns quarterback Bernie said Kosar, who recently signed a
Kosar, benched in favor of his seven year, $27 miUioo contract.
backup after several unproductive
Browns owner An Modell said
outings, says he's not interested in Tuesday he had no intention of
being traded.
trading Kosar, "even if (Miami
The Miami Herald r,eported coach Don) Shula called and
Thursday that the Miami Dolphins begged me." However, he had said
had tafked informally with Bernie earlier this week that football was a
Kosar Sr., the Cleveland quarter- "very unpredictable business."
back's father and business agent.
Kosar on Wednesday said he
The newspaper said the elder Kosar was confident he would get the
told the Dolphins his son would starting job back.
consider playing for them, but
"I'm not sure what the time
probably wouldn't take a pay cut.
frame is, but I know I will be
Kosar Sr. said in a telephone back," he said. "I have the desire
Interview today that his comments and competitiveness to play. And I
had been misconstrued. He said he know I can stiU play and make the
had no other comment, stressing plays.
that he was not withholding knowl"I feel good about the way I've
edge but felt it was inappropriate to been throwing the ball. By talking
comment on any issue at thiS point. to the receivers, who are the ultiFor his part, the younger Kosar mate judge of how I throw and my
seemed uninterested in playing arm strength, they know I'm throwanywhere but Cleveland.
ing the haU well, too, and that's the
'.'From growing up in the area, stuff th;lt means a lot to me.'
wanting to be a Cleveland Brown
Kosar wouldn't criticize coach
my whole life, there's no question I Bill Belichick's decision to bench
love this area and I love these him in favor of Vinny Testaverde.
fans," Kosar said at practice
"There's a lot of positioning
Wednesday. "This is where I want going on that I don't want to get
to play ..
into. I've never in my career had to
"I haven't asked to be traded lower myself to those standards,

and I don't feel like I should now,"
Kosar said.
The decision to play Testaverde
in this weekend's game against
Cincinnati came after a 24-14 loss
to the Miami Dolphins on Sunday,
the Browns' second consecutive
loss. Kosar had started the last
three games only to be benched late
in the game in favor of Testaverde.
Belichick has said that lack of
production cost Kosar his job.
Kosar also deflected questions
about whether Belichick reprimanded him for changing plays
that the coach sent in.
"You guys are on top of things,
huh? ,Yeah, it's best not to talk:
about that,'' he said.
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer
today reported that a source close
to the team's offense said Belichick
confronted Kosar about changing
plays during the Miami game.
The newspaper said one of the
plays Kosar changed turned into a
14-yard touchdown pass to Michael
Jackson.
Another was a second straight
deep sideline pass to Jacksoo early
in the fourth quarter thai was
knocked away by a defender.

PinaburJh ......... l 3 0

6 16 111
5 l!i 12
16 14

801ton .............. 2 I I

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Ea•tem Dhillon
Te1m
W L T Pd. PF PA
Buffalo .............. 4 I 0 .100 116 67

Montreal ...........
Quobec,,,, , , ,
Buffalo..............
Ottawa ..............

2
I
1
0

2
2
3
2

s

I
I
0
I

3 t9 22
2 14 \8
1 14 17

MiomL,,,,,.,, 4 I 0 .800 lOt 81
(ndianapol.i.l ...... 2 3 0 .400 68 102
N.Y. Jeta ....... .... 2 3 0 .400 139106

New Ensland .... l 4 0 .alO 74140
Cenlnl Dlvltlon
CLEVELAND.. 3 2 0 .600 93 90
Pitubu:rgh ......... 3 2 0 .600 108 78
Houlton ............ l 4 0 .200 181 14

52106

CINCINNATI , 0 5 0 .000
Wattrn Dlvlllon
Kan111 City ...... 4 1 0 .800
Dcnvc:r ·············· 3 2 0 .600
LA. Raidcn ..... 3 2 0 .600
St.aule............... 3 2 0 .600
SanDicgo ........ 2 3 0 .400

WESTERN CONFERENCE
CentraiiMvbkMI
W L T Pta. GFGA
Toronto ............. 4 . 0 0
II · 21 9

Team

SLI.aud ........... 3 0 0
o.u.................. t i 2
ChiCI.O .... ... ..... I 2 l
Winrupea
... l 2 1
Detroit .............. I 3 0

Cooper said, "Sure. I think
that's great. I don't think that hurts
anything. As a matter of fact, there
are some similarities."

Tum

129 95
90 13
92 73
701 10

Ptullddphi1 ..... . 4 I 0 .BOO 111111
3 2 0 .600 106 75
Ptloenil............. I 4 0 .:00 ~ 99
I 4 0 .XIO 9312:5

Green Bay......... 2 3 0 .400 110 HM
TamPfl Bay ....... I 4 0 .XIO S4 122

74
101
136
176

Atlans;a 30, LA. Ral'l'll24

Sunday's gamfl
CLEVELAND at CINCINNATI, 1

p.m.

Saturday's games
Hartford at Pitu.burth, 7:35p.m.
N.Y. Ranaen 11 Phihdelphla, 7:35
p.m.
Buffalo at WuhinJlOft, 7:35p.m.
OUawa It T1mpa day, 7:35p.m.
Queboe 11 Montteal,II:05 p.m.
Toromo at Detroit. I :OS p.in.
St. .Lcuilat D~a.I :OS p.m.
OUcaao at Wuuupea. 1:05 p.m.
VlfiQOUvc:r at Edmon.lon,I :05 p.m.
Bolton 11 San Jote, 10:3S p.m.
Cal&amp;~ a11Aa Ana&lt;J&lt;o,

Kaftlu City at San Diet~ 01 p.m.
II .DtilM, 4 p.m.

,

-

neaou. Tampa Bay

-*NHL•EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allanlk Dl"'loo '

T Pto. GFGA
0
I 2t 12
0
6 II 13'
0
6 21 17
I 5 15 15

N.Y. Jolandoal .. , • 3 0

-DI-

2 II 17

T....,.Bay ....., • 3 0

2

.................... 0 '

0

0 t4 30

IIulrwl ......,.... 3 2 0

6 II t6

'

the lntcm~tioftal.IM.pa. Announced that
Mario Brito. pitcher, •areed to \cnna wi\h

Ottawa and Lanco Rice, catcher, aiancd
wich Huriabu.q of the Banczn Lcaauc.

I II

RU

B10ketball

National Buketb.U AIJoclaUon
ATLANJ'A HAWKS: Waiv~ Corey
Allen, forwatd, and Byrmt Dinkina,auard.
DA.LLAS MAVERICKS : Siped Jamal Muhbum, forward, to a multiyear

'"'"""'

FootbaU

Natlonalltoclley Lhp
DIITROIT RED WINGS: Sc:na Peter
In&amp;, aoahendcr, to Adirondack of !.he
American Hockey Leaaue. Activated
O.rio 0.10011, Joaltender,
HARtFORD WHALERS: Sifncd
Mui.o Oollclin, aoallcndcr, to I multiyear

""'LOS
""' ANGELES

KINGS : Loaned
David Oovcrde, aoaltendcr, 10 Pan.ltnd of
the American Hockey Leaauc. Sent Rick
Knicklo. aoahaw:lu, to Phoenix of the In·
tanational l.eaauc.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS : Sent
Drake Buehowtky, dcfcnaeman, to St.
John'a of the Amorit;an Hoc;&amp;ey: Lo&amp;I\IC
'

'•

8 8UID

Will Be Published in
The Daily Tribune,
Pt. Pleasant Register and
The Daily Sentinel

NalJonll Foot"-III.Ata~
NFL: Fined Corwin Brown, New Eng·
hnd Patriou aafoty, S3.SOO for hitting
Oc:rck Ware of \he Phoonb. Cardinal•
with the crown of hiJ helmet dwina a Oc1.
9aame..
ATLAN'rA FALCONS: At:tivatcd
Dcion Sandetl, defcmiwc back. Released
Tory Eoot:, dcCanaive tackle.
NEW YORK JETS : Waiwtld 1M McCuUouah. tackle, from \he practice 1q111d.

· ·

Buebau

•

Thursday, November 11
Your Ad Will Reach Over 20,000
Households In The Tri·County Areal
'

ADVERTISING DEADLINE
TUE$DAY, NOVEMBE~R 2
The Daily Sentinel
'

B111terfiald 001cheland Glenn Shcdoct
lNllpen ..Idler.
TEXAS RANOBRS: Placed Nolan
Ryan,
at the voluntary nWod tllt.
AnnouHIIII lhat Mario Diu and Rob
Mai.UV, Wleldtft, la.1l Irian Bohl!laa.
plldt•,lla,. ctou.d wai. . .. ANI .....
Bobleon aM~ 16 Oldahama aty of
1!w Amllloul Al . tiw llll4l .nnowtCOd
Dia Mamot
~ianed Kta

pl-.

_,..v_•·IT.:.\':' ..-,w

Ever MaaaUan-. iafieUer,

1113 FILL

MONTREAL EXPOS: Sent Ch1die
M001oyo. infie.IdCit, outria,ht to Oltawa of

lfwc,U.po.

A-Laoau•

LA. Raidan '' Dca~. 9 p.tn.

CO I 8 SO

they will not rmew lbc contract~ of Bob
Cluck, ll11dy Jaramillo, Ed Ou, Tom
Spencer and Matt Galante, coachca.
GalanIll will bcl'reu.incd for c:onaidenlioN
in ocher palition&amp;. Sa Bob Hunt, pl\Ch·
er, to Thcaon cl dae Pacific Cout Leaauo.

caUccl Byron Dafoe, aoaltender, Steve
Kano,ulchuk, center, and Pat Peake
riohlwlnf,- Ponland ollhe ~

NEW YORK. YANKEI!:S : Named
Wlllie Randolpb, Billy C.,.... and Briut

Monday-'tlamt

L
0
I
2
2

"'"1'""'•·
HOUSTON ASTROS : Announced

on 1 RhabUilaion aaiprnent. ·
WASIIINOTON CAPITALS: Re·

• Transactions • -

()pen "'"' Bullalo, lndionopoU., Mio·
mi, S.Y. Jet~, Chklao, Ott.lt•1· Min·

'.

10:35 p.m.

Sund~,!ames
Tampa Bay at
· , 6:0S p.m.
CaJaatyat Anabeim, IO:OS p.tn.

~altN.Y.GiiiMI.lp.m.

Selaltll Deczoit. I p.m.
Wubinp:wtat ~. 4 p.m.

W
4
-~ ...... 3
N.Y.R.......... 3
.......... ,, 2

COLORADO ROCKIES: Named Jay
O.mcll 1llilt1nt director of acoutin&amp;. and
Paul EP. uaUunt diJcct.or ol player de-

Hockey

New Jeney at N.Y . Iallnden, 7:05

H...- at New EnaJand,t p.m.
Nn Orlolnlat ~ f p.m.

No,.~ .......

8

9 14
7 16

pm.

134
125
101
Ill

Thursday's score

T-

10

2
0

Tonight's ,ames

ll«n&gt;il ,,,, ..,,, 3 2 0 ,1100 88 90
Mmnof&lt;U ......... 3 2 0 ,1100 66 82

San fnncillco

4

15

N.Y. RangenatBuffalo, 7:3S p.m.
Detroit at Toronto. 7:35 p,.m.
Philadelphia at Wuhinaicfn. 8:0:S p.m.
DOltOn at Anaheim, 10:35 p.m.

Centnl Dlv~Mon
ChiCIJO ............ 3 2 0 .600 91 59

-

5 16

T""!':' Boy 3, Plu.bwaJ&gt; 2
FlOI!.da 5, Oaawa4
Hartford 6, OUclao 2
Catauy 2. San Joee 1
Edmonton 4,l.ol AnaeJ- 4 (tie)

I 0 .1100 124 61

Wntern PlvkiOIII
New Odc&amp;nl ..... 5 0 0 1.000
San Fnnciaco ... 3 2 0 .600
LA. R1m1 ........ 2 4 0 .333
ALiant.a .............. I S 0 .167

I IS S
7 2R 19

Thursday's S&lt;ores

Dlvlaktn

o.u..................
W11hinaton

10
16
ll
18
2J

Pulftc DlwtakHI

Calpry
..... 4 0 0
l.ol AnJdel ...... 3 I I
EdmonD!. ......... 2 2 1
vIRC(IllWCI .. ...... l I 0
Anaheim ........... 1 l 0
SanJwe ............ 0 4 0

W L T Pd. PF PA

N.Y.Oiants ....... 4

17
IS
14
16
16

to COftltletl

wilh OOaltatM Cily.

Nlllooolla...
CINCINNA11 UDI: Clalm..t Bri.,
Holmu, phcber, off waiY~n from tbe

•

gary edged San Jose 2-1.
The Shark:s' 0-4 sta~t is the
The Oilers' SC!&gt;U _Pearson ~cd with his second ,goal, of the game, Edrnon.ton ahe8(.-with 6:10 left in
~ightnlng 3, Pengui~ 2
worst in the ,three-year h1story of the score 3-3 earlier m the penod and Zden9 C1ger s goal put reguJaPon,
In 1ts seco~d y~ of eluste~ce, the team, whiCh spent 1ts first two
Tampa Bay JS st~ll undergo tog seasons P!&amp;YID8 at the Cow Palace
many changes, trymg to blend the m Daly City.
,
old ~ith free agents P~ Klima and
Pat Falloon scored San Jose s
Dcms Savard, added •n the offsea- goal.
son.
\'\'lla!ers 6, Blackbawks 2
"We had four days off this
In Ch1cago, Pat V~rbeek had
week and we.went back to basics," three goals and a~ ass1~t as Hartsaid John Tucker, whose scored the ford defeated Ch1cago m a flght~arne-winner with I :40 to play. marred game.
'Terry (Crisp, Lightning coach)
. Verb~ek k~yed a three-goal
keeps telling us if we take care of thud penod w1th two power-play
the puck in our own end. the other scores after the Blackhawks pulled
end will take care of itself.
to 3-2.
,
,
"The new guys are getting used
Chris Chehos set two Ch1ca_go
to our system, and tonight was a team rec~~ for most penalty mmstep in the ri~ht direction. We beat utes, r"':etvmg S~ for lhl: game and
a great team.
37 dunng a thud-penod brawl
After Pittsburgh's Jaromir Jagr when he knocked dow~ Bnan
tied the game at 2-2 with just over ~opp, then beeame the th1rd man
seven minutes to play, Tucker 10 m a ftght between Adam Burt
swept in aloog the boards, outraced and Brian Noo~an, In all~ Chehos
Pittsburgh's Ron Francis to the was assessed e1ght penalties, tymg
puck, and deked goalie Ken a club m~~iers 4, Kinos 4
Wregget out of the net for the
In Inglewood, Calif., defensescore.
man Alex Zhitnik scored his seeTampa Bay goalie Daren Puppa ond oal of the game with 6S sechad 2S saves in the victory.
ondsgleft in the third period to give
Flames 2, SharkS 1
Los Angeles a tie with Edmonton.
San Jose wasn't so lucky as it
The Kings pulled their goalie
lost the fust regular-season game to for an extra skater, giving them a 6be played in the new 17 ,310-seat on-4 advantage. Zhitnik took: a pass
San Jose Arena.
from Jari Kurri in the left circle and
Calgary outshot the Sharks 33- slapped a 2S-footer past Edmooton
13 and got goals from AI Macinnis :
r B'll Ranford
CRUNCH! ~Getting past Tampa Bay's Marc attempt during Thursday ni~;bt's game in St.
and Joe Nieuwendyk.
goa le I
'
Bergevin (lert), Pittsburah's Kevin Stevens (25) Petersburg, Fla., where the L1ghtning won 3-2.
leaves the puck behind as he crashes into Tampa (AP)
Bay goalie Daren Puppa in a rust-period scoring

..

.
·
.
·
:
:
•
:
CONTRACT SIGNED- Dallas Mavericks
owner Don Carter (right) jokes witb No.1 drart
pick Jamal Mashburn durin2 a news conrerence

MEIGS ACS GOLFERS - Members of tbe
Meigs County American Cancer Society golf team
that participated in the ACS state tournament at

Seaulo Mlrinen.

BJ 64

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eut~m

6
4
4
3
2

·

Thursday to announce the former University or
Kentucky star's signing a seven-year, $32 million
contract. (AP)

talk.''

Scot·eboar(l
-•NFL•-

The Dally 5entlne~

In the NHL,

Friday, October 15, 1993

t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St

Pomeroy, OH,

FAll AND WINTER
HOURS
Tuea -Fri. 9:00-5:00
Sat. 9:00-12:00
Closed Monday

I; YU

, 'IIIIILY .
111-IIM ·

'

·992·2156
~~~

the Firestone Country Club in Akron in Septem·
ber, were (L-R) Jason Ingels, York Ingels, Ray
Redman and MitcheU Roush.

Meigs ACS golf Eastern sextet hands Federal
team takes part Hocking loss in two games
in tournament
The Eastern Eagles varsity vol- in the Divis'ion IV sectional tournament on Saturday, Oct. 23 at Ross·

·The team of Jason Ingels, York
Ingels, Ray Redman and Mitehe~l
Roush from Meigs County. partiCIpating in the American Cancer
Society. Ohio Division Golf Championship, sponsored by Allslate
Insurance. finished with a score of
64 in Handicap Division II.
This event was held at Firestone
Country Club during the last two
weekends of September. The
Meigs team played on Sept. 26,
The team qualified to participate by
winning or placing in the local
American Cancer Society Championship held at Jay Mar Golf Club
in July.
The American Cancer Society
state golf playoff is the largest
amateur tournament in Ohio. Nine
hundfcd forty two golfers, 347
women and S9S men, competed
from across the state. Winning
teams will represent Ohio in the
National Golf Championship to be
held October 29-30 at Walt Disney
World in Orlando, F1a.
The American Cancer Society
Golf Championship program raised
more than $1.2S million net profit
to fund programs of research, education and service to the cancer
patieni. The "Good Hands" people
of Allslate Insurance, the official
sponsor of the state play!lff
increased this total by presentmg
the American Cancer Society with
a cheek for $9S.OOO on September
17.
Ohio ranks first nationally in
dollars raised from tournaments in
the American Cancer Society golf
program, which nets more than $8
million each year.

Sports briefs
Football
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) New Engll!nd Patriots rookie safety
Corwin Brown was fmed $3,500 by
the NFL for, hittin~ Phoenix tight
end Derek Ware w1th the crown of
his helmet: The play occurred early
in the second·quarter of the Patnots' 23·21 victory last ~unday.
ware suffered a concusston and
missed the rest of the game.

leyball team defeated Federal
Hocking 1S- 7. I S-10 in two sets to
boost its season record to 6-13 on
the season.
Freshman Patsy Aeiker led the
Eagles with a IS-for-IS serving
night and ten points, while going 22 spiking with a block. Sophomore
Jessica Karr was 10-13 with two
aces and eight points.
Eagle head coach Don Jackson
said, "The younger girls really
came through for us tonight. A
team effon was another big key. as
everyone scored except for one
person.t'
Penny Aeiker, a senior, went 46 with three points and a 2-3 night
on the line. Jessica Radford was 44 with two points, Jamie Wilson
was S-6 with a point, while other
single digit scorers included Becky
Driggs, Shelly Hendricks, Rebecca
Evans, Kathy Bernard, Brand1
Reeves and Wendy Rach.
Dri~gs was 3-8 on the line with
one kill ancj one block, while
Bernard was 2-3 with ooe kill and
Rach 2-2.
Martesa Barnes led Federal with
six points, Alison Pierson had five,
Carrie Runser three, Tracey Bent·
ley two and Hotly Rader one.
On the reserve squad, Brandi
Reeves went IS-15 with 15 points
to lead Eastern to~ IS-O and 16-14
win in two sets. Reeves scored all
1S points in the fmt game. duP.licating a feat her cousin Lee GiUtlan
had accomplished earlier as an
Eagle.
Jessica Chevalier was 7-8 with
four points, Valerie McGinnis S-7
with four points, Melissa Guess 56 with on ace and three poins.
Crystal Holsinger and Jeanie Cline
4-4 for two points each and Alicia
Walker one poinL
Guess had a 4-7 night on the
front line with one kill, wh.ile
McGinnis was 1-1 with a kill and
Cline 1-1.
,
Amanda BeaslH and Jennifer
Cox led Federal with. six points
each. Erin Ult had two.
Tournament" pairings
Eastern ,and Southern will play

Southeastern High School in Rich·
moodale.
Southern wiU face on Trimble at
4 p.m .. Twenty minutes after that
match, Eastern takes on Fr~nklin
Furnace Green. The two wmners
will decide the sectional championship one half hour after the second match.
Tbe winner advances to the District in Athens, where they will
play in the lower bracket
Earlier at 2 p.m. Miller takes on
Portsmouth East in the upper
bracket game, then that winner
lakes on Ironton SL Joe for the sectional championship and the right
to advance to the district.

Pennsboro Speedway
to host race Saturday
The 13th annual Dirt Track
World Championship for STARS
Super Late Model stock cars will
be Saturday, OcL 16 and Sunday,
OcL 17, at the legendary Pennsboro
Speedway off U.S . 50 in Pennsboro, W.Va.
The world's most prestigious
dirt track race will again pay
$50,000 to the winner and a
$160,000 purse , The event has
drawn NASCAR sial'S Neil Bonnett
and Cale Yarborough in the past
and is the nation's top dirt track
evefiL
,
More than 125 entries have
a!ready been received and a field of
nearly 180 ears is expected, including the top point men in the
STARS circuit and the nations to
independents.
West Virginia Motor Speedway
in Mineral Wells will hold the
$6,000 Dirt National event Saturday night for Super Late: Mpdels in
conjunction with Pennsboro.
That event has drawn 65 preentries and will also feature V8
pro-stocks.
P'ennsboro's gates open at 9
a.m. with warm-ups to follbw at
noon each day. At WVMS, gates
open at 5 p.m. with racing at 7:30
p.m.

DON TATE CHEV.-OLDS.-CAD.-GEO
POMEROY, OHIO
614•992·6614
1·800·837·1 094

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1993 OLDS
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1993 CHEVROLET
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1994 S10 PICKUP

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'TIX" •ncl title f - not Included.

-DON TATE CHEV.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO
'
HOURS: Mon.-Fri.
9:~:00
Sat. 9:G0-4:00; Sun. 1:G0-5:00

OPEN SUNDAY

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

ApostOliC

Church of Chnst

O.rdl el , _
V..a.dudW..t d.
· " - : J_, Miller
Sunday Sehool • IG-.30 a.m.
B...... - 7::10p.m.
WednoldavSemcea 7:30 .m

........., Chllrdl orCJortot
212 w. Main SJ.
Paator. Andaew Mae.
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 pm.
Wodneaday Servicea · 7 p.m.

Cllrlol '\t'"''M'

Assembly of God

Sunday achool • 9:4j a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m. lnd 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Se.W:. - 7 pm.
Free Will BIPIIot Cl1orch
Aah Sbeef.. Middlep 'lit
Pas10r: Mark. Morrow
Saturday Serviee · 7:30p.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.,
Wcdn&lt;Jday Service-7:30p.m.

I

Rutland Flnt Blpdll Ch11Kh
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.
Pomero7 Flnt Blpllst
Eaat Maio St.
Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
Flnl s..u.... Baptist
418721'umcroy Pike
Putor: H. Lamar O'Bryanl
Sunday School • 9:30 am.
Wonhip - 10:4j a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnooclay S.rvieea - 700 p.m.
F1nt Bllpllot Churdl
6th and Palmer SL, Midcllepon
PaaU&gt;r: Rev. Jamea A. Seddon
Sunday School - 9: IS o.m.
Wonhip - IO:IS a.m., 7:00p.m.
A.B.Y.- j :30 p.m.
lord"a Supper In Sunday of every month.
.Wedneaday S.mce- 100 p.m.
Raclalo Flnt Baptist
P11tor: s~ FuDet
Sunday School • 9:30 un .
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Woclnooclay S.rvieea • 700p.m.
Sliver R• BopUIIt
Pastor: Bill UUie
Sunday School- IO..m.
Wonhip · lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Savioes- 7:30p.m.
MLU-Bipllst

PallOr: Joe N. Sayre
SW!day Sc:hool-11:45 a.m.
Evenm, -6:30p.m.
Wcd,..day Services -6:30p.m.
--Biptlllt
Paa10f : Rev. llarl Shuler
Sooday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip . 9:30 a.m.
Thuraday Servia:a- 7:30pm.
Old Betltel Froe Will BIJ&gt;Illlt Cllurc~
28601 St Rt 7, Micldleport
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Eveninl-7:30p.m.
Thonday Servic:ea . 7:30
Hllslde Boptl• c•urch
St RL 14] jull ell RL 7

Plltor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

"VIdGrJ Blplilllllll..,..ao&amp;
S2S N. 2nd SJ. Middlepon
Puwr: J..., E. Keesee
Wonhip • lOam., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Fallll Blpllll Church
RoilmadS!.,Mason
Sun~ Sehool - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services - 7 p.m.
F.,..luaBipllst
Pastor: Arius Hun
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
ML Motiah Baptist
Foorlh A: Main SL. Middl"""'
Panor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
SW!day School - 9:30a.m.
Worahip · 10:45 a.m.
AnllqoiiJ Blpllsl
PallOr: Kennedl Smith
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m.
Thunday Servi"" - 7:30 pm.

w•

Blpllsl
Rutlallll Free
Salem St.
Puwr: Rev. Paul Taylo&lt;
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semou - 7 p.m.

Catholtc
-..Hearl C . - Cllurdl
161 Mulbmy Ave.,l'ua-oy, 99l-5898
PaslOr: Rev. Willer B. Heinz
SaL Con. 4:4j-5:15p.m.; !'faaa- 5:30p.m.
SW\. Con . .g;4j-9.1S a.m.,
SWI. Man - 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mus - 8:30 a.m.

Friday, October ·15, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-....,, Wtsl!lde Cluorcll orCbrllt
33226 Olil.dm&gt;'a Home Rd.
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip · lOam., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
Soh and Main
Panor. AI Haruoo
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- B:IS, I0:30a.m., 1 p.m.
Wedneaday Services - 7 p.m.
Keoo Cllurcll or Christ
Wonhip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sdi"ool· 10:30 Lm.
Beannollow Rlqe Cllureh or Christ
Putor. J aclt Colegrove
SundaY School -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednelday Servlccs- 6:30p.m.

Episcopal

Hoi mess

a... ors.......,Hoi-CJourdl

New Limo Rood, Rutland
PaaiOr: Rev. Dowey Kin&amp;
Sunday achool· 9:30a.m.
s...day worahip -7 p.m.
Wedneaday P"Y..- rneelin&amp;· 7 p.m.
Pine Gron Bible Hollnea Church
Ill mile oB lb. 32S
Pas10r: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7:30p.m.
Wellte71n Billie Holln.., Church
15 Pearl SL, Middleport.
PaaU&gt;r. Rev. Jolin Neville ·
Sunday adlool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneadoy Service-7:30p.m.
Hyaell Run Rolin.., Church
Pu10r: Raben Manley
SW!day School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service ·7:30pm.

7Jon Church of Christ
Pomeroy,HarrisonvilleRd. (RLI43)

Pasaor. Racer WaLJon

SW~day

School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.
Tupp"' Plain Church ot Chrliil
Pastor. Bill Winca
Stmday School - 9 a.m.
Worlhip - 9:4S a.m., 6:30p.m.
Bradbur7 Church II Cbrlst

Pallor. Tom Runyon
Sund'J' School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Yoolh Meeting - S:30 p.m.
Evening Serviee - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday, Bible Srudy - 1 p.m.

Rutland Chureh ot Christ
Pu1or: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Br1dford Church or Christ
Comer of SL RL 124 A: Bndhury Rd.
EvanJelill: Den:k Stump
Youth MinUter. Mark Noucr
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Hickory Hills Church or Christ
P.stor: Ja&amp;eph B. Hoskin1
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Latter-Day Samts
Reoraonll&lt;d Churdl or J - Chrlll
In Latter Da7 Salnll
· Portland-Racine Rd.
Poaor: Jerry Collina
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wcckleaday Services - 7:30p.m.

Lutheran
SL J• Lulller1n Church

Pine Grove
Panor: Dawn Spolding
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnuaand Henry Su., Raveruwood, W.Va.
C&lt;&gt;-pauon: R&lt;YI. Ric:hord A:
Patricia Boods-Krua
Sunday~- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.

SL Paul Lulhenn Church
Comer Sycamore A: Second SL, Purneroy
Past.or. Dawn SJ)Ildin&amp;
Sunday School- 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Un1ted Methodist

Wonhip - tO a.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdne&amp;day Services - 1 p.m.

Llberly Chrlsllao Church
Dexter
Pu10r. Woody Call
Sunday Evening - 6:30p.m.
Thursdoy S.mce . 6:30p.m.

GnhiM Uolled Mtlllodlsl
Wonhip- 9:30a.m. (I at A: 2nd Sun),
7:"30p.m. (3nl A: 4th Sun)
Wedneaday Service - 7:30p.m.
M~ Olive

Uoltad Mshodlol
Off 124 behind Wilb:avillo
PaslOr. Owlu Jonea

Lanpvlllo Chrlstl111 c•urm
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service 7:30p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - I0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

Worship · 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Reedsville Church ofChriJI
Panor: Philip Srunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Wonhip S.rvioc: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Srudy, Wednaday, 6:30 P.'1'·

Christian Union
Hlll1ford Church or c•rlsllo
Chrlsllu Union
Hanford, W.Va.
Patt.or. Rev. David McMmia
Sund'l' School- II a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wccklcailoy Servieea · 7:30pm.

Joppa
Pa1tor: Brenda Weber
Wonhip - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday S.rvic:ea- 7:30p.m.
Lon{_B&lt;JUo.
Paator: Rev. Phillip Scarberry
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Wedneaday Service• -7:30p.m.

ML Marlall
otGod
Racine
Puux: Rev. James Sauerf"dd
s..,day School - 9:4S a.m.
Evenin&amp;-7p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Reedsville
Paator: Rev. PhiiiU&gt; Scarberry
Wonhip · 9:10a.m.
111 A: 3nl S~mday · 7:30p.m.
S!Diday School- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Tuppen Plllno St. Paul
Pastor: ShaiUI Hau1man
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Tueaday Services - 7:30p.m.
CentniCI1Uier
Allhurr(SynCUJO)
Pu1or: Deron Newman
Sunday Sc(&gt;ool · 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednesday S.rvioca · 7:30p.m.

Churdl otGod uf Prophecy
0.1. White Rd. c{f St. RL 160

Entorprlae

PUler. P11 Henton
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Puaor: Keilh Rllder
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tuesdly Services - 7 p.m .

Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Thur&amp;day Services - 7 p.m.

New Lifo Church of God
Oener
Putor: Gary Hines
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Servica - 7 p.m.

RuUand
Paa10r: Anhur Crahln:o
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Savi.ces - 7 p.m.
SalemCet11er
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Wonhip • IO:IS a.m.
SIOOWYIIIe
Pu10r: Flormce Smith
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
llethln7

Pastor. Kenneth Baker

SIUiday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wednesday SCrvices - JO a.m.
Carmel
Pu1or: Kemedl Baker
Sunday Scllool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4~ a.m. (2nd A: 4th SWI)

ForaiRun
Putor: Deron NewrniU1
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
. Wonhip - 9 a.m.
· Thunday S.rvioca - 6:30p.m.

.

P -: Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m •
Wonhip · II a.m., 6p.m.
WedneaclsY Services · 7 p.m .

Rut1111d Church or the Nowrene
PaaU&gt;r, Somuel Baaye
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wor:lhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
WedneaclsY Serviceo - 7 pm.
Portlllld Flnl Cllurdl of tile Nuar&lt;ne
Pastor: Willllm Jualis
Sunday Scllool -10:00 a.m.
Wonhip ·6:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Services - 7 p.m.

Eui .L ellrt
Putor: Ken Molter
Sunday Schonl- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Wedneaday • 7 p.m.
Racine
Pastor. Ken Molter
Sunday Schonl - I0 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m. md 7 p.m.

Laurel Cliff Free Melhodllll Church
Paa10r: Peter Taemblay
Sundoy School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servic:cs - 7 p.m.

Bethel Cllurch
Townahip Rd., 46SC
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Stniccs · 19 a.m.
Hoc:kln&amp;porl Cbureh
Grand St..,.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip- II a.m.
Wednesday ~rvices - 8 p.m.
Torch Church
Co. Rd. 63
s"':~';!~ . 9:30a.m.

~-£~~or the Nuorene

LGatea,ll
·9:30a.m.
Worshipa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Middleport Church or the N.....,e

Paa10r: Grqory A. Cundiff
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
w..m.aday Semoes . 7 p.m .
ReaiiYIIIe FellowRip
ChurdloflheNIUrme
Paa10r: Jolin W. Douglaa
S101day Scllool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semce~ • 7 p.m.
SyriCUJO Church ot lhe Nuorone
1\uU&gt;r: Rev. Rick Srur&amp;ill
SIUiday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ·I0:30a.m., 6p.m.
W....._doy Services - 7 p.m.
Pomen&gt;)" Cllur&lt;h ollhe N....-me
P~tor. Rev.

Them as McCluna
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor:lhip - 10:30 o.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Clio

an ad
Call992-2156
To

''
MoN:ihru
FRI. 8A'~M.-5P.M.
,
POLICIES

Evening • 7 p.m.

Re]oldn1 Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave. , Middlepon
Pa1wr. Lawn:ncc Foranan
Sundoy School - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

The Salvalloll Army
115 Bu11emu1 Ave., Purneroy.
SID1day School- 10:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:00 o.m., 7:30p.m.

5trlll !&amp;of.s
13 MHI BlrHI
Mlcllleport, Ohio 417!10

1814111112-U57 - 1111a -OOKSI
. CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

·"~' \

MEIGS
CENTER,

Clif100, W."Vo.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
· Wonhip- 7 p.m. ,
Thunday Service • 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
....lcalllatA-biJ
SL RL 124, Racine
Pa...-: William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Rvening - 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Servicea · 7 p.m.

·~

"'-

~j .

J.,

GRAVELY TRACTOR SAlES

......,
G-~

204

.,,.S.-1
,.,.,
....

992-2975

SNOUFFEI
.filE &amp; SAFETY

IAwUNGS.C:OAn

.FISHER :·
FUNERAL HOME

"SMU I SliYICE

992·7075

172 Nwth .........

·rr·•••• ,, ow.

Condor St.

Pomeroy, OH •

Ph.882-2101
Pom.-oy

I' "~~·
t71 ....

Co.

n

264

992-5141

Sout~

2nd

Middllport

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMta -~
fk
We F iU DOctors'

Prescription\
- .
•n-2tsS
. Pomeroy

·-

'

......,

Mlddlec ~-=_
P11cor: Rev. Clark 'Baker
- )0 a.m.

·•

Rudand CMc Cenler
Satuiday, Oilc11mbar 4, 1993

·:

Table sPace Avollablo

WANJ.AOS GEl
. . RESW$

W~hip - tO~;m.

.

..

-••

' ..~
I 1•-•.

I"

I i'"

' a.m.
Sunday School - 9130
Wonhip -10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servieea -7:30pm.
2 1/l miles north cC !Uedaville

on be Roure 124
Pastor: Rev. Roben M&amp;Jkley
Sunday School - 10 a:m.
Wonhip- 7:30p.m.
Wedbetdoy Sem«:a- 7:30p.m.

N,_ Settlement Chordl
Sunday Wonhip - 2:30p.m. ;
Thunday services - 7:30p.m.

;
. I

.

-

.,•
' ·•

South Bethel New Tolltunent
Silver Ridge
Paator: Duane Sydenslriclter
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

.l
'

.

. I

J.'

'
Carlelon ln..........,.lolll..,al Church
Kin&amp;abuay Road
Paa10r: Clyde W. Hmdenm
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7 p.m.

liKE .
DIAMOMDS

~----·~··~
.~'0~·~·~5=·5~--~
.
W. give Clllptlt and
WV013372
uphollnery the
"SPECIAL CARE"

Mavor, llunlol..., Building. ·
.
Thfrd atr . . t, s~~:u••· · ·
Ohio, until 4 p.m.
•me II ••Nt!W H
on Thurodav, October 21, 1'
omes
' " ' · for, lurnlohlng ell . -Garages
.lllbor, 1uterlale "'nd
oqulpmenl neoelaliry to
oCo"'plete
complete e project nemed
RemQdeling
Syrecu.. VllligWCulvert
Public ftOtlce
Replecoment. end ~t uld
Stop &amp; Compare
time and pleoe, publicly
FREE ESTIMATES
u;~ NOTICE
opened end r..cl eloucl.
The ennilal 1h c•on of.,.
The •U•el8d iioe1 or Itt•
•
Albe"ily
Independent proj..,llo $11,000 (OPWC)
7Jwoo

CONSTRUCTION

985 4473

~;::======~

Project
No. CT715).
· bid ·
Contrecl
doauiHIIIa,
•h•t.. 1111d epaatftileUono
cen .b• obtlllned et lield
ollie• en. OcL 14, 1 - , et
.
$25.00 por aet, which
money will be Nfunct!td 10
Jl1l
tha unouooeeaful bldde1'8
upon tho return of lho
oompl•l• ••I . In good
FREE ESnMATES
concldon no moN than IH
T•k• the pain out ol
(10) deyo eltor bid det•.
painting. Let me do 11
Checko ohall ba mede
loryou.
poyablo to lha VIllage of
VERY RE,\SONABLE
Syn~cu.., Ohio.
HAVE REFERENCES
'Eecll
bldclll""le
required
to
luf!lllh wlltt lla propoaal, a
Bid Guaronty end Contreot
11121113/1
pel
'ci~~;:,~r.CiiW. Bond In eccordMce with l';:::::::::;::mioz.~­
SectiOn 153.54 ol lhe Ohio 11
ilwiHd Code. Bid -urlty
furelohed In Bond form,
. lhlill be luued by. a Surety
........ r.,..I.RMIWIIIJ
'Comjleny or Coi'Doratfon
Elflllltes ·

.AgrleulbtN
loolety
'"I be
Mid ldlrdlll',
November
I,
11M et lhe "A)bln " q,.ng.
twl, ,.......,,
1M houN o~: I:CIO P.l!l end
7:00 P;ll. ~iMide_... for
Dl1801o1'8 muet bll r.ldaftto
"of lhe Altlcendar aohilo!
clllrlot ilnd holder of a tns
m..,berahlp tlo!(at. Leat
dele to puroheH • ttn
mamberahlp tlokel le
Oolober
21,
1113.
Cl!lcldatoe petltloM to be
filed wllh the . .oretery
~ 1" ' ' Til.to. .,.
bll
term

LI.NDA'S
PAINJIU"G

61·4·985•4180

742·2360
. PubliC Notice

Road•

-

S25,000

n..,.•, mor• 1o It the! a drivt bY

th...... 3 becWanl, 2 bathe, a

;

.

PIICED AT$71.000

.
.
:· .
.~
Co. Rd. 10. Approx. 2 ~· 'of _W&amp;UIIful
end electtjc avalleble. A a!Mt home·!lllo
lilt.
.
,,
.....

Veterans

Memorial

992·2121

192-2104

Now·Open with
Classes Now
Available.

Electric, etc.
1O'Yo Dloacount
Senior Citizens

Morning &amp; Evening

Cl._

742-2443

Ple•a c.tl for Detalla

..

BULLDOZE.f! 1_!1ACKHOE
encllllACMUE WORK

AVAJLABu; •.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,

EAGLE

•

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL,. TOPSOIL
&amp; COAL

~~~=~cleaning

I•

24Hour

tnNitment

Emergency Service

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOMESifES
HAULING: Ll-'one,
Dirt, GIIIVel end Coal
Uoeue.t.ndBondld

PH. 61-·992-5591

. HowanLL Wrlflsel

814-7.42·2138

ROOFING

3/41931

mo.

GENEUL
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters

DownspoutS
Gutter Cleaning

Painting

Gravel
992·7878
7nl1mo.

SHRUI .&amp; TREE
TRIMa•d
REMOVAL

Mason,WV
(304) 773·5585

USED RAILROAD nES
12-30-92-tfn

WINTER HOURS .
Sun.·Thurs. 4-10 pm
Fri. a. Sat., 4 pm-?

DAVI.DJON'S

DRIVEWAYS INsTillED
UMESTONE-TRUCKJNG

3rd and Pomeroy Sl11tls

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

r----..........
--rJ
WilLEY'S AUTO
PARIS

PLUMIIH~

l!,.UtJJJl!ng

Md~D!iv

;a·
31t04 ......

Public Notice

1••
Creek ·RHd
Ml.ttl•rt o•Jo
. . po 1

614•992•7144

r

WlNTING
TO BUY
JUNK (A~S .
&amp; TRUCKS
Any Condition

614:"992
7553
. •

Frame Repair
IIW &amp; IAI NIH fOI .

AU IIAIIIIIIOIIU

992·7011 or
9fj.5551

or lOLL flEE

1400.14 I 0070
DARWIN, OHIO

hu Jollied our staff.

A-'allona.

illY or .. blcle.

eiiJ*Ienoe at
Pomeroy Home &amp;
Auto and ClA Auto
Come Ylllt U1.

Yro. IOC!OII Ca.I02*4-lll20.

Giveaway

4
4525.

Booutllul tlgor klllar1, J 01 1
old, limolo, 114-llt2-771t
Flw monlh old pmt Chow/ pa~
Pltbull pup to good homo, 81411112·7123.

F- Oonnon Sl1ephonl Adun
Farnaio Dog • Ono 8 Wool&lt; Old
Gormon Sllophonl /Chow Pup
'

~Y~~:/'.4J!: ~~~~
2CS-61S1.

F~:~~ll1e.-., 3 llontho Old
2.

814-

11

Month

Old

'

Malo

Part BMale, ma.. ,
ehHd,.n, ~1112-27!14.

tov•

0110 ·

1258.

Call
Ralp. At

742·2904
Ml1

Pupp._ mom Ia Boogie, clad Ia
tr11veHng 11a. d~, wormed
114-'7112..22311fiW 7pm.
'
Pupploo: ·~-

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found: - . , !lot. 1111ok lftOrk
on loft jaw taund Bolunloy
Eagle Ridge ~d., 11• 141 lOti. '
Found: Larga Whno 11a1o Dog
Wllh 1 Sldil 01 Foco lruwn
VIcinity:
Shophoad
La.-.'
EwlngtCWI, H Nol Clol- In S
~ Will Coli Pound, 11"14-388-

mo.

Found: llalo

~~~~

Typa Doc

Blue Collar, Found~ 1011319!'
Vk:lnhr: Pet riot Cadmw Area'
114-m-25&amp;8.
'

~ - ~=======~

Rlchanf comea to ua
wltb 12 yrs.

Poychlo 1-IOC).288-4'40, Elt .
45tl'pl$3.111 II« llln. llual 8111

P u - mothor part Chow,
lathOr lAb. 304-67!5-11111 or 875-

'50 per lo•d

Richard IIOOre

t"-~11:::- -Glftad

Taitt Uvo To A Roof

Pol llloa To G'-woy, 114-141-

7/31191nln

CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Blld
$100 Payoft
This ad good lor 1
FREE card. .
Lie. No. 0051-342

Bill'• Tire
of RaventWOOCI
apnoui'ICM

In Chrtol Cllrlollan
Doting a.-. . -~

Elkhound And Collie c._ To

1625 Gallons

7f7 1 mo.

:r.-.::~l
..":.' 3:'11.:~
Fui-EIIOnt.

Ono

EAGLES

Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878

~
1 I~ On - - IAno'o

Tl

Good Homa, 114-31U317.

EVERY THURSDAY

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK

"--·

3 Announcements

I14-2S6-II58.

WATER
HAULING

BINGO

Announcements

1181 Buick Enfllno, 114-141-

3-16-~Un

992-3838

TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING

(Former Mason Lanes)

Clerti·TreM.

BUUDOZING

SAYRE TRUC~ING

FREE ES11MATES

HOME SITES end

LANES

Now....,,..,.,

EICIYITING

12-6-tfn

Reasonable Ratn
Joe N. Sayre

•LIGHT HAULING
ofiREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992·2269

·YI-,:,r..'C

.i

feb riel

Specializing in Cuslom

EXCAVATING

The Vlllagt of lyr10111e
IMIIVH lho right to waive
lrregulerltlee 11nd to reJact

n.....Jtl..l

HAULING

11411-30118

lr---------.. .. .,,

Publlo IMprevamento In
._elga · County end the
VIII=~· lyrlliiUM, Ohio,
•
"lned by the Ohio
DePartMent of lnduatrlal

Ill f. lllon!irlol Or. '

'

RACINE, OHIO

Plumbing,

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

214E.Main
·
992-$130 Pome~ oy ·

BJ

COUNTRYSIDE
CERAMICS

All types of
Carpentry,

nol ....
.. - conbacl
,..... ~
(2%)
of.,.thprime
All contraclore and
oubconlreclora Involved
with IIIIa proJact will, 1o lila
- n t preotlcable uoe Ohio
Producte,
meterlelo,
oarvlcH, and Iebar In lho
lmplemenlallon ot thlo
pro I• ct.
Additionally,
conlr..,lor oompll- wllh
Jhe Equet Employment
orportunlty roqulremenll
o
Ohio Aahlnletrallv•
Coda Chaptlr 123, the
Qov-or·a Exaoulln Order
ot 1172, and Govemor'o
Ex101111W1 Order 14-8 ehall
bel'8i!Uired.
lllctdora m•t OOI!Ipiy wilh

100111, lreplaqe, l!tYigh~ .nd Mexlcen els1y Iii•
Oullide It e Gazebo bar, lncilllllncl pool, end
..t&gt;lch .x~ld ba,giMI tor onttrtainlna pot.

tt:hl

POMEROY
HOME REPAIR

otata
cerUQed
Minority
/2fii/Utftl
Buol~EntorprloM
In on IL,:o:;:::=::i;i~i::i!
ltv 'I aggrageto dollar value of

.

Main St ., Pomeroy

614-367..042) "
10111.93

r......

SUPPLY

"F~tt~rlwt K11111e g Ftlei C61du"

FraeEetlmatea

POMERO"l
OHIO
. ~ ·I lf2Mtt

, ·· ~!·. :• f.

contractor purcha....
malorlllla end/or oorvlc•o.
ohell Mull In the ewerd of
procurement oontracto to

RIDENOUR

(row's Famill Restaurant

(614) 992-7474

INTERIOR

l
•I
••
•

Bill QUICKEL

Jacks Installed
Extensions run to
Different Rooms and
Outside Buildings

DAVID ARNOLD

,
...
'"'
..X
'a::&amp;~~
ft'
·
.
r
~
~
1
.
·
~
~~
.. ·."~ i.EQAt N011CI!I~&lt;
l~========~
'l
___ _...._, 1111
· ""'"
I . 8ealed propo11lo wtll be I·
1
will~"""'"\'_~ " ·n •t you - • • 81 the 0111.. of.llle
ROIERT IISSELL

44t-1411 or Toll FrM 1..eoo-m-s861

PHONE
INSTALLAnON

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES

l

FURNITURE&amp;HAROWARE
HOmellte S.l w5. ·

HEATING AND COOLING

ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

(614)
667·6621

••
•

POMIRQY, OHiq-992·6677

can lEHNEn'S MOBILE HOME

ll-'lo-112~ftl

EICAVAT~NG

lor lhe ""'' demanded In
tho comploljlt
.
S
.
· ·Larry E. penClerkoiCourloiCommon
_, Plo.. 'llgo County, Oh)o
(., 10, 17,24
I
(TO) 1, 8,-'1 5; 8TC •
' ·

d111rvell

011Fu$36.00mo.

Pom.-oy,Ohlo

4-1 9--93-lfn

t~

l•d1-.peiy (on alta)

We apeclellmln:
RRE&amp;WATER
DAMAGE
RESTORATJON·
INSUI\IANCE CLAIMS

ESTIM-\TE!I) .

D.L BOSTON

~

i

.

FURNACES
....llllod 00111p1Mo with
I ftMnclng ....loble.

V.C. YQUNG Ill
992·6215

110) .. 15, 210
(

CIIPET &amp; UPHOUTEIY CI.WIIII&amp;

GaJy Barry, Ownormm FUk, Moneger
· Certified lechnlclano on
job.

•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

...

:··oo·······.i
,.
'•., '"' ., .

106 ....ny ht•

446-9515

''/•

ltavtMu~~~~t

Freed,.. Goopol Million
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pastor: Rev. Roeer Willford
Sunday School ' 9:30 un.
Wonhip- 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Semce - 7 p.m.

Established 1913

'

•BA~KHOE

phiO,Y~""

EMn United Brtlhr~ln Cbrlsl

FuR GospellJablhouJe
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Paotor. Roy Hl81ter
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening7:30 p.m.
Tuesday A: Thunday - 7:30p.m.

.-11.u·n,,~
. ..

H-trn

_..,...._

and Plumbing

•.DOZERS

.,...---+-,.,.,----

United Faith Ch•rch
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Paaa
Panor: Rev. Raben E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service -7 p.m.

Sf'FI'kf!

Henclll*'&gt;n, w. "VL .ID4-«75-333t

.....Ill liM~ and VIlA

Galllpolla, Oh.

·I

..... ... . ....
Seve nth-Day Adv en tist

ML Olive Com-niiJ Churdt
Pasror. l.awialce "BWih 1
Sunday Sc:hod - 9:30 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday SeM&lt;o - 7 p.m.

••fJi~flih·
. nn·.d

•t

Work

446-7612
Fu/VQica 446-7612

llme:~

Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subs
·1 ~ree Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
·Drink
with
. .purchase of sub.

Syrocuoe ..,,... Ualltd Presbyterian
Sunday Sehoo1 .,o.a.m.
Wonhip -I! a.m., 4 p:m. ht.t13nl Sun.)

Faith Gospel Church
Loog Bouom
Sunday Schpol - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

MWdleport, Olllo 45760
(614) 143·5264

W. h••• a Iorge alock of - 1 .,..,. brand Uroa and
If we don'l have, wa ....,
IL
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL.
- 304-773-5533
2nd Lacallon ull Lon NMI

CARPENTER' SERVICE
1-R.&gt;Om Addlllono

Contact:Man:la Elllotl614-742-2233

'

Middleport l'rosbJiorlao
Sunday Sc:bool · 9 a.l\&gt;.

M- Clllptl Church
Pastor.: Mike Millon
Sunday adlool-10 a.m.
Wonhip • 1 p.m.

992·5432

lox 189

YOUNG'S

RICHARD ROI~ERTS I
·~J SpeCialtis;" ·
122 JIY Dilw, Glllpollo, 011.

F\U11ana EMS •bMIIIMI Bazaar

II· . Domlnos.Pizza
1s naW,1o118rlng

ChrlsiiM Fel ....... lp Center
Salem SL, Rutland
Putor. Robert E. Muaacr
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip -11:15 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7 p.m.

221 W.

Rocky I. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

."JUIMMI

~

•

J, MarcUI Fldlz

: PBSCIIPnON SHOP

N:::~~~7.i;:ov

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

Mobile and Doublewlde owners...

llJ,..IIIe Community Chureh
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

.

IOOp.m. Thlll9day
Prldoy

1:00

Clifton TabcrnKh Churth

Huel Community Church
Off lb. 124
Pastor: Edael Han
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -!0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

'

AIIEIICII GEIIEUL UFE •1111
ACCIIEII1 INSUUICE COIIPUY

l:LASSD'IEDS
GET RESULTS • FASrt

•!

' Chester, Oh&gt;45720
~85-3406

Days
1
3

I

"~\a
C\\\;ff

U· ~IG3Si8SR 7,

Calla)

· DAYBEFORBPUBLICATION
liOOp.m. Saturiliy
100 p.m. Monday
100 p.m. Tuooday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday

•

1411 Bridgeman SL, SyRICUae
Pu10r: Roy (Mike) Thornpaon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
~!venin&amp; - 6 p.m. .
Wednesday Semce - 7 p.m.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENl

s..-,

RATES

(except ·Chlllifitloe'l Diaplay ,. ~uiDeiu Cud or Lcpl
Notic:ea) willallo ~tppear in i h" Point Pleu...t Repit.er 11.11t!
thll Cal1i~oU..- Daily Trih~~t ruch.ift~ over 18~000 homu

Churc• or Jesuo Christ,
Apostolic: Fallh
1/4 mile past Fort Meias on New Limo Rd .
Pu10r: William Von Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.
Friday-7:00p.m.
•

Middleport Commun111 Church
575 Pearl SL, Middleport
Paa10r. Sam Andenon •
Sunday Schoo!IO a.m.
.l .
Evming- 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeiVice • 7:30p.m.

CLOSED SUNDAY

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
r,.._.yPaper
Wedneoday Paper
Thwoday Paper
Fridoy Paper
Sundoy Paper

Words Rale Over 15 Words
15
$ 4.00
$ .20
15
$ 6.00
$ .30
6
15
$ 9.00
$ .42
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly
15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
C.ar,J d Thank. ; . 1 Happy Ada
charged for each day as separate ads.
!n Momori.am.
. Yard Sale.
Business Card.••.$17.001 inch per momth
• A tl•.nitied ad..1ta,emCD.I placed iD. ~The DaUy Senthul ·
Bulletin Board ....$6.00'1llch per day

Stlvenvtlle Word oiFallh
Pas10r: David Dailc;y
Sunday School9:30 a.m.

Trlnll7 ConJI"epd..at c•urch
PallOr: Rev. Roland Wildman
Church · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

- SAT.S-12-

1 Ada oublde Lho county yo~~ a.d. run1 mUll he prepaid
• Reeelvu di..u:ow1t for ncb paid ia aduuee.
• F.o:te Ad1: Givea,..ay a~d FOUnd adl UDder 15 wonb will be
r~a~.3 ,f,.y• at no charce. ·,· :~
1 Prit-u of ad fol' all eaJ•ital )~tlen i1 double pr"i·=• of ad coat
• 7.poiaL line type .:.aly u•ed .;-!
• ~cri tbaal U not re~pouihie ·f~r errora alter ftral day (elw-elt
i'&gt;i' err *n firdday aJ rwu i:a paper). CaD heforo 2i00 p.m.
tky a!1h puUka.tion lo mal" correCtioa
• A-It thnt tuu:t M raid in ad.n nce a~e :

Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

EndUmt HOUH or Prayer
(at Burlingham c:bun:h off Route 33)
Pastor. Robert Vance
Sunday wonhip- 10 a.m.
Wedne.day service · 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Sunday Schonl- 10 a.m.
Wonhi~ • 9 a.m.
Toeaday Semcea - 7 p.m.

614-992-7643.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapd
Harrisocwille Road
Pastor: Rev . Victor Roush
S~mday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 7:30p.m.

llarrlooooYIIIe eorn-all7 Cburdl
PUior: Theron Duaham
Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneaday - 7 p.m.

s,....... MJ....

RUE ESTIMATES

Faith Fd-lp Crusade for Christ
Pastor: Rev. Fnnklin Dickens
Service: Friday. 1 p.m.

Other Churches

•

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

COMMERCIAL ancl RESIDENTIAL

CalvorJ Bible Churdl
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor. Rev. Black wood
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wcdneaday Service · 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Glendon Suond
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -IG-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodnelday Servi&lt;:oo- 7 p.m.

Salton
Putor: Kemelh Baker
Sunday School , 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:45 a.m. (lot&amp; Jrd Sun)

·
New Homea,• VInyl Siding ·
New Garages • Repll!lcementWindows
Room Additions • Roofing

Fa!,. lew Bible Cllurdl
Lewt, W.Va. RL I
Pallor: James 1..4wil
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servioc - \ 30p.m.

Naw llaYODC.urchGrlhe N,_tne

Falllo Tabernacle Churdl
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. l!mmelt Rawacn
S101day School - 10:00 a.m.
Evenin&amp;7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

IISSILL BUILDERS, INC.

Wbltt'• Chapel Weller••
Coolville Rdad
.
Paslor: Rev. ltillip Ridenour
S~mday Sd&gt;ool • 9:30 a.m.
Wor:lhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wedneaday Service - 1 p.m.

c......-a.rcb orUoe N....-.n•

MorniiJISIIr
Pu10r: Kenneth Baker
s..,day School - 9:4S a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 Lm.
ThundayServicea - 7:30p.m.

Chollter

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Wonhip - 11 a.m.

Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Wcdnea:day Servicet . 6p.m.

Coolville Church
Main A: Fifth St.

Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

Wed,..d'J' Services . 7 p.m.

Rock~op

Pu1or: Kei1h Rader
Sunday School · 9:15a.m.

Coolville UnUed Melhodlll Parflll
PaslOr: Helen Kline

Wonhip - 9 a.m.

Sfn&lt;UH Cllureh or God
Apple and s.-.&lt;1 S...
J!utor. Rev. David Ruaacll
Sunday School and Wcnl&gt;ip- 9:30a.m.
Bvenin&amp; Services- 7 p.m.
Wedneoday SerVices - 7 p.m.

Po....-o7
Pastor: Eunhae (Orac:e) Kee
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services -7:30p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Pastor:: Sharon Hausman

Rutland Church ot God
Paa10r: Jom F. Coroo....
Smclay School - 10 a.m.
Worlhip • 11 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wedneadoy Services •·7 p.m.

r-tCiolpel
Paa10r: Flom!ce Smith
Sunday School - 9 Lm.
Wonhip • I 0 a.m.

Alfred

Church of God

c•-

MI-lle
Pulor: Daron Newman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Rollaod Bible Molllodlst
Pastor. Rev. Ivan Myen
s...day School- 9:30 a.m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneadoy S.rvicea - 7 p.m.

Moll' CooptraiiYe Parish
NorlhOIII Cluller

Hemlock Gron Church
Pastor: Otarles Domi&amp;•
Sunday achool· 10:30 a.m.

HOith (Middleport)
Putor: Fnnk Smith
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 6 p.m.

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY

AT I P.M.
RACINE GUN aua
Factory Clteke,
12pgeotdy.

-

Beginning Od. 3

Loot: Hooring Aid, 114-24Wtso. .
Loot: Vldnny 01 Aovco Cll\
Fnnho. PM011ptlon 0 Wllh Q,_ CoM, II Found Colt

11&lt;1-26-1221.

7

.

Yard Sale

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepo"
&amp; VIcinity
AU Y1rd IIIIM llual 8o Pold In
Adn-. Dooclf ..: 1:00,., lila
doyiMionotholllllelo~~~n,

Sundoy ........ 1:OOpM l'rlday

llondoit
adllon
Bolurdiy.

10:oo..m:

WICK'S HAULING
SERVIa
36970 lal R• RCIId
POMifOJ, Oillo
GRAVEl. SAND,
UMESTONI. TOP SOIL
t. FILL DIRT

992·3470
·•

�Page
7

8 The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel
BEATTIE BLVD.TM by Bruce Beattie

Yard Sale

5I

Friday, Octoberll

HOUHhold
Goode

1993' •
,&lt;

71 Autos for Sale

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

•

TJte Dally s.ntll'•l P.g1 I

NEA• Cro••word Puzzle

Gallipolis
&amp;VICinity

ACROII
t\1. 1'11 frr.o.tl Tlfli'

3 Fomlly CJinOe Silo: Contlf&gt;.
ary ToWnhouM, s.turday, t To
I.
.

Kl-

...... . .,.
·-.·•.~· .e·

Ac.- From
Rlybume - ·
F!i*r.
S.tunllly.

:

Cllrpo&lt;l 8111: 10211 Stoto Routt
14\ Sllurdlf, 10111113, Stbv

...\

~~

'

..........

•,

..

PHILLIP
ALDER

\-WNI'· of -1'140 ·h\oNTH

3 lldroome LatM Mocllm
Kltchan, Lola Ot COblnota, No
Polo,
.,._.
Roq..tod,

c·~o&amp; .

ttema, Olin Clolh-. NB-41,

h$5/llo. ~M-44~....23.

.

lt-IHI

.AQ9 ~

+KU
WEST
II

Iron SloiiiiCo, Blcycll Ex11Ciow,
Toota, labll Chalra. Clothing,
lilac. SWMper.

EAST
• 10

IOVI743

•KQJ

7S

• K862
+QIOB43

765

•s

+AJ
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
Soutb

Wanted to Buy

Antlquu and UMd lwntture, no
hem too '-'il or taa MU~II, will
l&gt;uy one p-.. or complllo

BARNEY

houoohold, coli O.br Mortln,

&amp;14-1112·111011.

Whh Or Whhout Motoro. Coli
Lorry Uvely.l14-318-8303.
Top Prlcoo Pold: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gold Rlnf!! Sliver Colna,

- h St., lllddllport, 1 &amp; 2br.
lumlohod 1portmon1 oloo 1
"""" olflcloncy, utllftlaa pold,
dip. &amp; ref. 304-882-2118.
Filii
Holror
Aportmanta,
Sloond Avanuo, Oolllpolla. 114441-11100 Sonlor, Dllioblod, &amp;

Gold COina. II. .~ Coin Shop,

151 Socond Avonuo, Oolllpllla.

ALABAMA!
ii-IE RIVER
NILE!

EIIT·A,

Or

Paramodlca. Coli ·114 441 4112
Exi.:IIO.

AVON I All Araoo I

SpH,., 304-175-1428.

Shl~oy

o......

Dlachiii!IO ·
Social Sorvk:e ltall, ·~
Complllnco Whh loiiiO Ani!

F-1
Long-T.,..
C...
Rogulollona. Fomlllor Whh AB
Thrrd Portr P - Sou"'"•·
Cllndldlta Will B4i A L.S.W. /Or
R.N. lnt-lod? Sind R-mo
To 311 Suckrtdga Rood, 8-11.
OH 45131. AHontlon Ad·

lc:hool,
Schoataa•,
School, 8~22{;

I&amp;A

tor
have,.,.,_ltlor

Nuralng ualalant wHI carw
oldorly,

1711-15&amp;88

lpm.

W.ntod To Do: - n l n g ,

IS1t 441 3111.

Will Do Stbvalttlng In lly Doytlmo Only, Pralor TCiddlora,
Anytlmo, 114"141-1112. H No
Domlno'a Ia now tolling op- Col
AniWif laave IIHI .... On IllpllcalloM.
chino.
Experlonood Roolar EaJ-Ioca
10 Yoo,. Minimum, Aloo,_ Ex·
Fin&lt;Jncial
por~encod eo...-ntor, 10 ....

mln... ntor. Thank You.

Mlnknum.IS1t 448 4SI4.

21

Business
Opponunlty

Norlb

441 Mao - lllllg
4t Part of Holtltemlroland
11 Callgllt light

,_

15 Hklcleft
.

of -

15- andouta
17 Related on
-thar'allkle
11 8ulldlng lot

53 Go IWIYI
forclllllc)

20 01J112211bkea
aweattr
25 Etornllly

55~:.,,.,.

54 !JIM Of COlt
U Thin IIICI

one. alto

IDMLI

DOWN

25R-rd

Pass
Pass
Pass

3t
4 NT

6t

6DoctriM
1 PQcltlc:Gtlltr

1 IIIII (pre!.)
2Dnco-a

''Othello"
31 Sln..r Cantrall
32 Kind o1 cOllar

Urne

Y•

3Hotos
4
atudont
5 Dog'a n1mo

33- aciiOol

8 lack of neck

IROINnroad

tDFoudlllllwo
l2 Aleddln'a

Eaot

Pass
Pass

Pus

All pass

33 Farms for Sale

122 ..,..... oc- lllobll &amp;
_u.., z bamo, 111111 houoo,

Mobil homo · - lor rant . Cll~lnt, ~ No Hunt304-t?U&amp;fl.
Ing
na. Paint Pluo, Pl.
for ,.,., lllortlng .. Pl-.~.
Ml/mo., 114.et:2·211S7.
1
CIIHaldo Clolf Club Mambor.hlp
Tlolllr Lot For Ront tlilllllonlh. Fer Solo P•ld tt;500, WUI Toko
114-41112-1137 or 814 4411880 a..t ort.r, 114-224-1'117.
oak lor Sholly.
CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS,
11!100 Oollon, $521: Now JET Sol
~ Wanted to Rent

.... _ _ nHdaamollor a-..
placo. lom...tllo AooftJ, 304875-3030 or 31M-1711-M31.
212 act11a, :IIIOml
on
Monflll Ad naor Robortoburg,
oac. IOOaq. ft. oobln, pond1 2
(flo Sond Ah•r Roqubod)
wolla,
- · Fl~~~~~elng
Hlgnly
-l¥111odllya
_ allllr.
Wllnllna to rant- 2 or 3 bedroom $1,485i Ron Evane EnterprtMa.
avall•ble w41S.OOO cbln, .... -.,ln cllon and good COnd~ Jackoon,Ohlo1.-mtl21.
111~21,000. MI. Vomon tlon, pralor prfvato ~offing. 1114AM
broker, Joo Shodo, 304- 1182-2'121, If no Foil Cloo,.ncal 11113 World p100oo Encyclopodll
Ptuo ·2 Volumo
112·
lean n,'
'I' on IMChlne.
Dlctlonarya 1488 Slve: 124111
41.71 Ac-• 2 111!!7 Farm
Eloy Tor... Morgorat Plotce,
- . La. Am, 2 Millo From
304..71-3771.
Merchandise
Mo-vtllio, Tobacco-· -1.
Flrawood For Silo: Plck.Up
0114 Building 135,000, 114-211·
Lood Or OIOIIp Truok ~. Wa
1&amp;71.
Dlll¥14'. .,. ttl 41G7, 114-4415I
Household

lronl•

0811.

"""~mont

=~·

Local Yonclng Roulo: tt.ZOO A

Wook Poloml.iit. Mull Soli. 1 -

03-Yond.

tt2.ooo Could eo Uaod For
Buolnooo. Runl Wllw, No1tnl
au.
teO 4411181.
Nollh, Ken' · M37, 114
1 0 - F - . _ . 0114 Slllo
A - 110, 7. Aona, MIL HouN
Whh
-2 latha,
ltone I~~
Fvll I 1 nent,
Dllachod Oo-. . lulldlilg,
lfi'.OOQ. Coli AllOr I P.M. It+

-0.

'82 OMC 4WD 314 ton, 350

AleC BHgll Pupo. Slloclod
BINding. Q0.00,1 Startod Moll

=~p., ~ng 11000, 114-

1110, 114"-441-4131.

1881 Chovala 311,

lilillotu.. PIIIODhor, 1 - old,
hod IIIII - . _ 1228. 30WJio

otfalnolilnoodo tela! -orollon,

BORN LOSER
"mi'Dlll~au,ti ~~

4op., oil

I2S'OO, .M-24J.4111.

76

2444.

AleC Roglalorod fomalo Coekor

=~Ill, I -

01\ '(EN\HlAAT
tee~CII~
T~TEUKE~

EQlC..\ I !().ER mEO

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

~!ll£C::6. WAAT

the

(tl 1-. .WVAPER ENTEilllftiU AUN.

AIIIntlon 0 - Hunt.,.! Mr.
Brtiii!IJ Sponlal """' ahota I

-lui

SEVERAL J. ACRE .,.RCEL.S:
Molao Count_y, Solem 1Wp.,

tiJII
Kenmore
Bood cond. 304·77.1-

VI.'RA FURNrrURE
114-441-3111 Or 814-4411-4428
'10 DAY SAME AS CASH
OR AEHT-2.0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

11101 ..... Ralll(lla,
FURNISHINGS·
land: - · ·pootu,. and hfll&amp; OUTSIDE
Coli for 1001! . map. 1..14-113- Wrouahl lrvn Table W/4 Cholra:
8145,-.0H.
~- Bock A"""'"" C11a1r •••'

.

~~;Eq~u~l~pm~en~t~__;

-IIIcll,- Couolllon,
Tnno Ant, T-TGood
121~:
Cllmoro 4 Cyll.-, .... o,
HAPPY JACK IIANOE LOTION:

-·
hoollng
holr
growth
lo ony
mango,and
hoi apol,
or lunguo on doao I - w/o
ataroldal Contarna NO ba!RYIAt

SOUTHERN

STATES. 304-t71-2710.
K.K. 'a Polland Now Ho• IMut~
lui Cocllor. Sponlal Pupploa
Aloo Featuring A 2 Fl.
lllck Togu, uy-ya A,. AVIIII.Iblo 1'01' Cfvtailmoo, loll
On Our Entin Of Lof110
Aaua~umo. Mony Now homo,
11-1-317-ot 17.
Mvnoh bird with now oogo,
·IUD, 114-1112-3115.

Common

Pooclloo- tiny toy pupploo: llchno111or and • 2
fomol•, 11 moo •• AKC Cham-

Gae Cook &amp;love, W_.n T1ble

~Woii!Oil,

pion boekground, · - -·

Aabblta, Young B........ Palro,
a LoPo, 114-

•nd Choltw, Full Bod Colllpllle,
St.., 'End Tab~., l!arnpe,
SWoopor, Couch, Etc. 114"1* You Con Now Lavany A IMut~
lllll2.
lui Cocker S!oo!llol PU]I Or A 2
Ft. C..mon llaoll Togu F«
Golf Clubo For 8111: 114-448- C
h - AI I&lt;K'a PoaoM. And
0417, Aftor 4 ~M.
You
Con Alao Tllko - Hulllltor
zwo clllrance 01 Our Sill On • Lorge ~
n-ee wfth loa. 11o111or, 11n And
w.
Movo llnoycNow .
_LoOII,
I1W8JI.
...... ..
Nf'Mftj ..... ~ Jolntl lrlple
0117.
wall plpo: 11+111241'?1

Gordon Areh Wi;'....$128.00 - :

Musical
Instruments

Rentals

1-,,_:em;

tt.zoo:Condition,
PlytnOutlt
Oocd
24 000- ·•
~~·
114-2181885 C&lt;own VIctoria, 711,000ml.,
II: 811 Cahol Rd., Pl.

Pl-.

E--

Attention Dear Hunt.rel C.~per \

:::0 - · 001111'0!,
I

·~14221.

0

-r

IOidng
'
•

HI9M~.

c•m.-r,

talned
QOOd condHion. I
new cu8hl0na l a.rtaln., 114118--4301.
.•

79

•

Campers &amp;

..
:

Motor Homes

58

J

!!'.~koo, TV omonno, elM~
~.

304-11711-2383.

1181 Oldo- Dolla ...
lraugham. PI, PB, PW, PowW

- . Cll-·

Contral,
Lacko, Etc.
Allft
11C.
_._
Loododl
OM
OW..

Now Cor, To WI
Ellcillanl CcndMionl Loolla
Good.: Aaldna: 84711. 814-44142:1UIIor 1:dll P.M.

Qol'u":'

1181 VW
~oad, AI~
mpg, 1M 1 • Afttr D
P.ll.
1117 821 14 "-he. al~
...liothor 'lntorlor,
40

~~--o·a:r=.4~~0:

dlya or 11U41-2M4 allar "'"'-

1117
- · Whh
Ev.., Corvatta,
Ol&gt;llon.~, Pluo 112,000 In
Extnll.!'leo 10 Bill Qllck, 114:MHei::: Or 114 4411111.

Home

81

llnprove1nants
,
--:.:.:.::;;;,;:~;;:;:..:::.._..
..r
IASEMtiiT
•·
Wollfi""A&lt;XIANQ

Unconditional· llfOIIIjlo

n-

'

'

Th8 Astrp-Graph Matchmaker instantly. · ers to act likewise .

loo. Loco! rolar....Coo lu~ ...
Coli 1-~~ Or 114-23J.
: ' ' A....., Wllorprooflng. &amp;bUahecl1171.

1

ASTRO·GRAPH

v.astablea .

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

So(lllc Tank Puftio!J\G 110 CloiiW ..
Ca. RON EVANS ~""hiSEB
Jackaon, 011 1~SHB21. '
WIU polio ~·
Mftl!l..
roome.
~~ ..ri
vln ·

:~

•
I ·r,, Sr1ppl11 s
'•'( )tuck

lrallor

~'"'""
&amp;

• . •evea ls which signs are romantically per· ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) In compelilive
fe el for you . Marl $2 and a long, self· developmenls today you could have a
addressed ,

o•

Fruita &amp;

~. ~

ITZAJ

CM

JXV«D

v

FBNOON .

Z P K

YIFO,

VKJAVJVZK

CAFX

CO.'

LAVIO

IYVIKV' GJ)

RZBIZP

IOJJVKL

XOIOKO

LNYCIAI.

YIIA1 BAILY
'UULII

0 Rltorronge
letters of
four scramb led worpa
ktw ro fonrt f041r wordl

I
I

VAENLE

·.t--rl-.,-1-.-1:..r:-1...--~r
YOLJL

I

E N y L !·'•

I_

couple hadn't
seen
for a week
L: 1 1 1 I~ after an argument. The girl
. L . . . . _ asked if her beau was still
r--;;-;-:---:--:-:--::--..,upsel. He laughed, "No way.
p I L A rH
'Every time we don't see each
t--,r:-,-T-,..=-..-~olb.er l save ..... t•

I

I

I I I

!"

5
'-·_._
__._
__._
__ .__-I..~-

1

U

Lomplete the . chuckle Quoted

· b y l dl.ng in tke m•U•ng words
vou develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

6

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

envelope

to

~atchmaker, c/o this newspaper, P.O.

stamped

Boll

~li.~ht edge over your adversaries. Your
ace in the ho.le will be the reserve upon

4465. Now York. N.Y. 10163.
which you can d•aw.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You have a TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) Occasionally
commanding presence today thai olhers you can be •alher rigid and inlleaible where
will find attractive. You'll know how to . your views and opinions are concerned .
asse~ yourself without offending anyone in Today. however. you could pleasantly'sur·

the process .
'
prise everyone with your receptiveness and
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc . 21) openmindedness.
Something oul ollhe ordinary might resun GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Take matteJS
today from an unusual chain of even1s . 11 into your· own hands loday regarding a
could. open up a new pipeline lo• you that · wish lor something to change thai has not .
could produce personal gains.
yet been fulfilled . Make lhe irartsfo•ltlllotlpns .J
CAPRICORN (Dac.,22..Jan. 19) TOday you yoursaW.
mlghl sense that something good Is going CANCER (Jun~ 21-.luly 22} The key
· soturdl¥. OCt. 18, 1993
to happen, but~udon't know wliere, · gelling I.Jong with others today is to
. when or why. Thi .because you're on the cooperatlw. II will bo up to you to fiJSt set
In the year ahead you could lind yourself . rim of an exciting
and positive think· !the eaample, then .others will Ireal you as ·
inoolved In endeavors thai will challenge ! lng can !ighllhe fuse .
you treat them.
your imaginalion and creativity. Pressur~ ! AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 18) Vou could LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Take pride in your .
coui&lt;j stimulale your mental processes and · have some brillianl ideas today, bulln work l?&lt;fay regardless of Its significance.
enhance your perlormance.
order for them to be effacllve , lhey musl Pertorming to the oery best of your ability
LIBRA fSopt. 23-0ct. 23) Your aspects 1 nol be executed prematurely. Oon'tlet you• ·will greatly eNianCe your self-esleem.
continue to be exlremely favorable where · impulsiveness disto~ your timing .
: viRGO (Aug. 23-llopl. 22) Smoolh sailing
lhlnge ol a material nature are concemnd. PISCES (Fob. 2D'Merch 20) Treat tOday's - ~ Is lndlcaled ,today, becauH you're not apl
Th.,_'s a possibility financial opp0f1unities ·l hlippenings philosophically and you'll be .to take yourself or evtnla too seriously.
will develop !rom 1wo different areas . .Know able to make molehills from mountains .: .You're lass li~ely to get wounded H you
whare to look for lomance and you'l find 11. , .Your easy going behavior will inooire. QlbJ don1 have to pamper your ego.

8=.

.

.

·.!·

.

'

,.

.

I.
,.

-··-

lOil • t tl

Demise • Leech • Unarm • Locket • TRACKS

First dummy : "Why did !hey put the train station so
far from the town?" Second dummy: "I don't know. But
.·1guess they wanted il close to the·Tf1ACKS."
~

11ft. p·- lir, Oloopo I, Hlf-con- :
tolnod,
- · lllmoca,
watw, rafrlgorotOf,
awning hoi
air '

Fer Solo: Conn onctor Trumpet, Docd Condhlon 1300 CIIH
Evanlngo Aft8r 1 P.M. i14-iij:
0428. .
'
LoveMat, Chair, Twtn Bed,
Compltllo, er-r Nlgllt Stand,
Ent.n.lnmert ·
Cent•,
Mlc,_!.!; T.V. I Dlnllla Sol,
114 441 ...4.

.........._.!__..._

I

)

For Sale or Trad• 21ft. ulf con.

He eA.'te He'e REMel.'aE:Rit-a
WHeRE HE HIDTHE.CII&amp; 6 Re
THE: L.ASl"TIMe HEQLIIT.

MY C!A.D 6A.'t'51HATQI.JITTING6NOKIN6 Hole IMPI&lt;OVED

opoclal, t1200 OBO; 1872 ear. :
ulr 18ft., alii contalnod, pul 1
bohlnd, 114-317-0812.
t

1885 IS Monta -Corio, '--

1111~ion'
Loedidl11t ai 1110.
1885Toyclla 11113, Sip., OXCOIIInt
oondltlon, ......tm •~ ...

('l'•()DAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1582, the Gregorian calendar was introduced.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Virgil 170
B.C ·19 ~ . C .l , poet; Friedrich Niet zsche &lt;1844-1900), philosopher· John
L. Sullivan (1858·1918), boxing 'great;
P.G. Wodehouse (1881-1975), writer·
Arthur Schlesinger (1917-) historian
is 76; Mario Puzo 11920-), ~ovelist, i;
73; Lee Iacocca (1924-l. auto execuis 69; Jim Palmer 0945-l, basestar-broadcaster, is 48; Penny
IB!arsh••ll 11943-) , actress-director, is
50.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Camping

Fl...- P-ra For Wlntw.
Will eo Soooonod - n Cold
A~WT Doll-..::
211·1311, I
-7021 Evo

_,....

I Z K ' J

I

wormei:l, S150. 304-4!J8:.1157.

bem' etet

·v

old1 114-182-

WV.-

Goods

31 Homes for Sale ·

other room, the contract was
by NorUt. East Jed the hear!
course, and
israeli
same problem. Bat when
diamond jack, she didn't
I ar1ytl~in1g. West was never going to
able to see the jack and 10
the dummy. Declarer finessed
fdiamoond jack and went one down.
Off to a flying start, Britain went on
take the title.
pla~ret!

7'i · ~os 'tor Sale
lion. Rop!ocod WRh A t..gor
Tortli $71 010, 114o441-7728.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~ ~~togr..,. . . CHe'-d from queM ltc w bW' fMMN&amp;IMCIIIMI. ~Mid~
~· ltt11if ln 1M c:IP* .wndl tor II'IOthlr. Todl;r'l C!W: Y . . . . . P.
.

I

JIJNFIT\N~J

for,.,.-

2 ar- Uvlng Room Chaltw
And Molchfng Ollomon t25 Foi
All. Call14 ~~ 21182 E¥onlngo.

Real Estate

NOT 0/tl YOU~

..:coRNSR

Transportation

One bedroom
$2211/mc. lnct- utllhllo, $iOO
Fall yonl cllon • up, rolling,
..CurHy depo~H, no pete; S14brvah, traa trimming a r.movil,
1182-221a.
lully lnourod, 114-41112-1377.
Oona..l llalntanonoo, Painting.
45
Furnished
II Oollon Oil Dn11na. $II Each
Yard Work W I - W - 11113 Palm Holbor 21•18
UM M Bum Ban.la Or Qu 011,
Rooms
oua... Clllnod Ughl Houtlng,
Etc, 114 381 1'1'00.
Commartcal, Roaldointlll, Sl...: bo!_~1:aoo:2 Fumlohod Roorno For Ront: In A
' f~oplaoo,
-1 _don·whh
114-441-1118.
83-.1.
Vary Nlco 10 Vlctorfon
Qa atyee Pott•ble S.wrniiiJ don't 1114 Aedrr.n 14x70, 3bdrm., t. '*'!"L Aolarenca,
Dapoalt,
l)oul your loao to tho mtl jull cludoo aklrtlng olopo, blocka, l.ouncry Prlvlloga lnoludod,
1
call 30W71-1tl7.
5yr. warranty, nomaou n1r11 ln- A~bla R.tN. 114488.f721.
Hondyman 12 y..,. Export- aurence, MMI 1 r-ar of frM lot R or month.
With Aeltrwncee, Maintenance, rwnl, all tar oniJ 111711mo., eoll t- ~:7:2' II t1201mo. Oallll Holol.
800.-37-3258.
Houlln~, Etc. Phono 24 Houra,
I
8180.
1~25&amp;1211.
0\Jtlldo clooo to VInton, moblll
ll•epl1 rooma with cooking. Bora, cholno. I _...,. lo Ill
Mlaa Poull'a Doy Co,. Contar homo wflll addRiqn. 21 ocrao Alto lrl I f 1.-oe. AU hook·Upl. aiiiiOIIIIIJ
..,.,__ lldar'o E·
o
r
lou,
ooltorw
wont
oHort
11-F I A.M. _.:30 P.M. OUIIHy
Cal aft• 2:00 p.m., 304-773qul-111,
H
-.
Loving Cora Fer All Chlldron
56SI, ll..on WV.
1175-11121 or1~.
Our ., Goal. Part·T1me, Fun.. rl:£:~~"t"'1~
• Hoortll Rlally, Inc.
TlmoL FOIL - t o nco Avlll-. 1543'
Clllllr ID belt, br.nd ,_,
46 Space tor Rent
Call tOr lnlormatlon Or Vloh. InhUfi,IM-1182-41181.

AVON CHRISTMAS Sllla At
WOik Or Homo. Averago S8 414
Houo1y. Pluo Fontolllc Dlacountal Door-To-Door Optkmol.
1-7'42-4731.
Dlrec:tor 01 Morkotlng /Boclll
SIN!coo A-alblo For:
Malntolnlna
Poohlve
Rala-lpo Whh P-lot
, . . Hoapltllo And Othor
-~~~~ Cora Foalt~IH. ARoo!And Fomlly - ·
~ The Adm1salcn And lint /Toddor &amp;14"1411221 Pro-

Of PAitiTS
wtttN TtiEY''t

·PRANICAND
~ SRNSST
PO'STRY

30 Oollon Crane llllao Unod
Goa Wotor _ , .., Oocd Cond~

••nwnt•

T~AN A NEw P Alit

THS

:,",':' C,

Computer Clorll El A TREE SERVICE. TOIIOing,
_.._ Ellporlonea Roqulrod, Trimming, TrM Aernovill, HildaFrH ElllmoiHI IMSind R-mo To: Controlllr T~mmlng.
P.O. Box :S:U, Oolllpolla, OH 31J.7151 Aftw 4p.m.

WI-lEN S~E WAKES UP AGAIN

51lAKE5PEA~E!

•Hk·

Acoountlna

MA'AM 7 I COULD 'f.ELL 1-!ER

SIJ(TEEN!

&amp;, i:t=

~

WERE ANI{ OF TI40SE RIG~T

MRICA!

Wanted LPN or AN to aallt
W.ntod to buy: UHd mobllo phyalclon In oHk:e p..ctlca, lull
tim-. Hnd Of brlnJil r.IUml to
homoa. 114-441'0175
Modlcol Office Slag Suho 212,
W.ntod: Otlalnal Equl_,, Volloy Dr. PP.
7
Jack And Tolr-. 1888 Dodgo
Ylloo Hooting a Cooling Ia N- R-a, 2 Bl1ha, UIIIHJ Roam,
PU,.IM-141-2071.
AcCOI&gt;IIng Appllco11on0 For A Front 6 Back PDI'CMi, 2 Car tl::~~:g,~d~
Ful~Tlmli Sorvlco Technician
Dotaehod Oorago, LlfiiO Yard, lncomo. Soma Rontol lloolaMull Hove A1 Lonl 3 13 Acroo, l.oColod: Bullvllll tanoo IIIII Avalllbll. FIIIHA
Employment Services Appllcont
Yoora Slrvlco Exporlonea On Plko, (o.lllpolla), $48,000. &amp;1+ Suboldltod, HUD Cllrtlflcoloo
Acoootod. 114o441-1800, Equll
Commercial, RMidlntlal, l A• 441-1724.
Houolng Opportunhln.
taun~nt
~ulprnent.
o.p.n.
11 Help Wanted
dobllly • CIUoiHy Workmonahlp Roducod $5 000 Nlc:a 3 llodA Mutt. Send AMUIM To: Yat• rooma Attacfild Qa,.go, 2 AC, O...:loua living. 1 and 2 bodAVONI All ar..._ Need extra Hooting • Cooling, P.O. Boa MIL NO Aroo - . $117,1100, &amp;14- """" apo~monto 11 Vllllgo
Manor
and
AlveraltJe
money or want 1 carwr, etthltr 354, Rro Grand~1 • Olllo .sa,. Or 3884608.
~partmente In Middleport. From
way-call Marilyn . .304-882-2645 Drop R•ume un AI Our Office,
Stataly
Roaldonca
Or 1202. CoiiiM-41112·1111511. EOH.
or 1.-.&amp;2,.311.
No Phone Call8 Pt.....
Aportmonta, Oorago """rtmont,
FuM lol. M 0 - , O.lllpolla, Modom EHiclen~ ~':'~':nt,
A aklllod nuralng contor lo
12
Situation
.
a oyatomo-orlontod, _..
Auction Nonmber Bth ISM-245- Country Sitting, 8 4
lc lndfvldUIIIor tho Aoalalant
152113.
Wanted
MI. Vernon Ava, very nice email
roctor 'Of Nuralng -'lion on
lumlohod oportmonl In duplox,
our n..rng 111m. "Tha quaiiDed
Will
Do
Sprlng/WHkly
1br., no polo, no HUD, Nf. &amp;
candidate Will ba an RN, llcan- HouHcloonlna
dop, 304475-2151.
DoPondiblo ond 32 Mobile Homes
Hd In Ohio, with u p o - In
R-blo Ratoo. Fer Ell. Coli
for Sale
long tom ca,. oxoollent com- a14-318-821o.
muiilclllon IIIII1Ia, 1nd llodor•
ahlp abllftloo. we olfar •-por~ 18 Wanted to Do
tlva aollly 1nd bonalfta, and ~:-::i::~~~~~::-::::
pol::-m'ar~ CNA Wonting To Toko Cllro 01
quollflootlono ond ootory hllllcry ~ In Tfiolr Homo. In Oollo: 7ho DallY SonHnal, Box 7211P, ~11/o Orondo A-, eM-

lntonnodlolo

1.

W.ot

Pus

As the songwriter said: "Wbat a dif·
ference a dummy makes. Just 13 little
cards." But sometimes it can be vital
which hand is the dummy's . Maybe if
North plays the contract, there is an
irpmediate lead through an unprotect~ king; whereas, with South the
clarer, the king - and the contract are safe from attack.
Another possibility is highlighted in
today's deal. It occurred during
first round of the Women's Teams at
the Generali Common Market Championships, held last April in the Algarve region of Portugal.
Sandra Landy, representing .,......
[BriUii' n, received the annoying heart
against six spades. To find a park·
ing place for her heart loser, she could
play West for the diamond king or
East for the club queen. But a wroon•.l
guess would spell instant failure .
After winning with the heart ace
and drawing trumps ending in hand,
advanced the diamond jack.
West played low smoothly,
·ra..anotY judged that West didn't
. If she did, surely sbe would
covered. So Landy called
~~~~:!!a~c:e! and played a club to her

Wantlld To Buy: Junll: Au101

,_And Ohio Cortlllod EIIT-A,

41Waraot
walking

The secret tells
whole story

alao buying JUnk cara I lruckl.
304-773-5343.

AJ&gt;pllcellona Ara Bllng 1&gt;1&gt;
epllod For No11onally Rogla-

42 C111. prow.

Opening lead: • 10

Decorated ltonnara, wall tele~. old llmpol.old thl&lt;- · old
clocu,AnUquea.
oNiquo
fumlh••·
Riverine
lu• Moore, owner. 114-112·
WI.Webuytlt... a.
Don' Junlo hi Soli Uo Your NcnWortdng Mo)or Applllncoo,
Color
TV'a,
Rafitpn~tcn,
FrMzera. VCR'e, MlcrctWIVII,
Air Condit"'--, Wuhoro,
Dfyo,., Etc. 1114-258-1238.
J • o•a Auto Putl and Sllvaga,

41131.

catlllll

11 Claalng

30 Cllaracter In

SOUTH
.AQ9B3
5
• J 10 4

Pomeroy, Ohio 4571t.

5 IIOf1ll AfriCan

aclloft

NORTH
.KJ42
•Az

Slhtrdly 337 F...U. Avonut,

~

31 u- llvlftllr
3t Dlacour,....S

14R-ror

114o441.Q701.

9

a5118bM -

1 Ten1flc

aeclloli
13 , . will!,..

•
••

Otlllr " - · Roln Or Shlno.
Moving Silo: 3 P'- Couch,
l..oHHII, Choir, 2 PI- Couch
And Chair, ExerciM Equipment.

34lellol

•

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
~.
.

•

..... 1.00

\llllfl.ll

•

NC State slips by Marshall24-17

Frl day, October 1 ·1993 -

Page-10.

Meigs County ·
makes strides
in promoting
recycling
-B-1

C-1

1---:--------------r------.,-------.......t
Got an interesting pet? Fred Crow
talks about some he's met- A-6'

James Sand
ks back at football
history related by 'Jaspey'- B-5

Inside

Atorig tbe river ~........ M.Bl-8
BnaJ-m'Farm ~........_~...Dl-8

CLwifted -~-------.... DZ.7
EntertaiDmeut ...........- ..B-8

Dealba .......... - ..................A-2

Edltoral --•. - ............- ..A4

Sports.............................C1·8
Weather................_..•.••.....A.. l

+

tmts
OVER 50 YE:'RS -The foDowing indivldu·
als or corporations were recognized Tuesday
eveninl! for over 50 years of membersbip with
the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation. Sbown are,
·from lert: front row • Leota Massar (45 years),
Grace Furbee, Vivian Humphrey, Sylvia Mid·
kif(, Daisy Blakeslee, Mildred Gaul, Maida

Mora, Wilma Parker and NeiUe Parker; middle
row • John Holliday, Raymond Furbee, C.E.
Humphrey, Ziba Midkiff, C.E. Blakeslee, Jake
Gaul, Donald Mora and Howard Parker; rear
row • Georee Holter, Harry Holter and Bank
One represented by Joann Mayes, Millie Mid·
kiff, Joan Wolfe and Diana Kinder.

Vaughan addresses Salem
Center pupils on patriotism
Salem Center Elementary staff
and students took part in the 1993
National School Celebration on
OcL 8.
This celebration was inspired by
the original held on OcL 21, 1892.
during which the pledge of aile·
giance was written. The 1892 cere• many was endorsed with a proclamation signed by Benjamin
Franklin.
As pan of the celebration, the
students and staff expressed their
appreciation for America and the
nch heritage of the nation.
Some of the events held in conjunction with the celebration were
a assembly on patriotism, a flag
coloring contest and citizenship
awards.
The assembly included veteran
of the Korean War and member of

the American Legion, Franlr.
Vaughan, speakin$ on patriotism
and the students· Singing patriotic
songs ac(ompanied on piano by
Catherine Shenefield.
The winners of the flag coloring
contest were Zackary Bush, first
grade; Devin Erlewine, second
grade; Travies Burnem, third
grade; Erin Bush, fourth grade;
Robert Johnson , fifth grade and
Eric Metheney, sixth grade.
Citizenship awards were given
to Larry Jacks and Amber Handley,
first grade; Aubrie Kopec and
Corey Longstreth, second grade;
Austin Cross and Amanda Pelkey,
third grade; Joshua Napper and
Rebecca Jacks, fourth grade; Carl
Rickard and Bethany McMillan,
fifth grade and Stephanie Kopec
and Orion Barrett, sixth grade.

FRANK VAUGHAN
The Pledge of Allegiance was
recited by all and everyone wore
red, white and blue.

•

District officers attend Pomeroy UMW meet
Seven district officers were
guests of Pomeroy United
Methodist Women at a recent
meeting.
District officers present were
Ester Jean Locky, Evelyn Dean,
Faye Copen, Linda Roach, Lois
Galen tin, Patsy Price and Milly
Sprague. They presenltd ·a humorous skit on "Fixin' Up the Parsonage." They also presented some

ideas for supportive community, dinner were discussed, the least
social concerns and the reading coin was collected and 47 sick and
program.
shut-in calls were reponed. Several
Five star designated giving for · cards were sent 10 the sick.
missions was explained.
Bernice Carpenter of the
Isabelle Wolfe, devotional lead· Pomeroy UMW is district vice
cr, opened with"Joy and Strengtb presidenL
and closed with the Lord's Prayer.
Hostesses were Eunice Jones,
Abbie Stratton, president, con- Abble Stialton, Jean Werry, Artie
ducted the business meeting during Reuter and Margie Reuter.
which ti111e plans for Christmas

Meigs scouts make plans for November event
The Meigs Cadette Troop 1180
met recently at their leaders home
and made plans 10 attend the Super
Sitters Lunch Event in November
and the Rappelling Event next
spring.
· Officers elected were Bonnie
Rutter, president; Jessica Burton,
secretary-treasurer and Andrea
Neutzling, recreation and refresh·
ments.
Girls finished making their

"Shaker Peg" clothes raclr.s that
were started at the last meeting.
This project has taught ihe girls
how 10 use power tools safely. The
projects will be displayed at the
Meigs County Showcase on Oct.
16 and 17. The troop will also be
demonstrating box oven baking at
the showcase on Saturday from I to
2:30p.m.
Bonnie Rutter and Andrea Neut·
ding were in the 5K Rurv'Walk and

were congratulated on their efforts.
The troop covered the parking
meters in downtown Pomeroy for
the Sternwheel Festivpl.
The Troop voted to wwk on the
Audiovisual Production badge. The
troop will he making plans for field
trips toward the badge work in the
near future as well as wwking on
rededication.
.
Attending were Jessica Burton,
Andrea Neutzling, Bonnie Rutter
and leader Brenda Neutzling.

Hysell family reunion held recently
The fourth annual Hysell
Reunion was held recently in the
memory of Denver and Frances
Hysell and their youngest dau~hter
Ruby. The event took place at the
home of Gary and Tammy Hysell,
Pomeroy.
Followinl! lunch, the aftef\loon
was spent visiting, playing games,

'

taking pictures, showing pictures
and reminiscing.
Those attending were Guy and
Ruby Hysell, Donald Hysell and
Stephanie, Ralph and Madeline
Painter, Mike, Diana and Randy
Bind, Bill, Becky, Bethany and
Ryan Amberger.
Ivan and Evelyn Wood, Keith,

Paula, Chelsey and Jordan Wood,
Rodney Wood, Lora Wolfe, Roger,
Jane, Janelle and Bill Hysell, Den·
nis and Rachel Hysell, Gary,
Tammy and Heather Hysell ,
Wendy Daniels, Fred Daniels, Darlene Doerr and Page Bradberry.
. Next year's reunion will be held
on the last Sunday of September at
Rutland Park.

HONORED FOR MEMBERSmP- 30 and
25 year members or tbe Ohio Farm Bureau Fed·
eration were recognized as were new members
at the farm bureau meeting Tuesday evening.
Shown are, from left: front • Helen Quivey and

J, HUber Qulvey (25 years), Norman WID, Aile·
gra Will (30 years) and Diane Windon (new
member); rear • Cathy Crow, boldine Fred W.
Crow IV, and Fred W. Crow W (30 years), Lue
Shenefield and Carl Shenefield (25 years) and
Blair Windon (new member).

CCRN designed to help Appalachian parents
The Child Care Resource Net·
work which opened its doors and
phone lines this week will give
working parents in Appalachian
Ohio's 28 counties a much needed
resource for child care information.
The Child Care Resource Network, CCRN, is a new state funded
resource and referral agency for
both parents and child care
providers. It purpose will be to provide comprehensive child care
information for parents, and techni·
cal assistance and training for child
care providers.
Parents will be able 10 call the
toll free 800 number 1-800-5772276 (CCRN) and get help in finding child care in their community.
Once a parent calls the 800
number the Child Care Resource
Network wiD take down the. infor·
mation regarding the times and
location in which child care is
needed. From their computerized
database CCRN wiD be able to provide the parents with a list of
licensed day care centers, certified
child care homes, and other child
care providers who have registered
with them.
"We'll be able to provide par·
ents with a list of child care
providers in their area who may fit
their needs," states Program DU'CC·
tor Leslie Moss-Pesek. " We will
also advise them on what 10 look
for -..&gt;hen finding a care giver for
their child but we will not recom·
mend a specific provider. We
believe that decision is up to the

parents. We urge parents 10 act on
their own knowledge of what their
child needs."
The Child Care Resource Net·
worlr. is one of nine state funded
resource and referral programs that
were created by the passage of
H.B. 155. About $2.5 million in
federal Child Care and Development Block Grant funds has been
made available for their creation.
Approximately S500,000 was
awarded by the Ohio Department
of Human Services 10 the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development for the creation of the
Child Care Resource Network . ·
Covering ·28 rural Appalachian
counties, CCRN is the largest
resource and referral delivery area
in the state. It is also the only one
to serve a largely rural population.
"This service has been available
for some time in some large
metropolitan areas, but this is the

first time its been done in an area
thi.s large and this rural," MossPesek observes. " With our above
average unemployment rate this
service is critical for many (amilies . Without reliable child care
(Oany find it dirficult 10 hold jobs
and stay off of public assistance."
In addition to information and
referral services for parents CCRN
will also be a resource for care
givers. They will provide ttaining
in child development, developmentally appropriate activities, behavior ·management skills and keep
care givers informed of current
trends in the child care field.
To get information on ,what
child ·care providers are iii your
area, what questions to ask when
interviewing child care providers,
·written information on child development or to talk to an expert about
child development, residentS. may
call the toll free number.

Church group endorses levy
The Racine United Methodist
Women endorsed the one mill, fi:ve
year levy for the Meigs County
Council on Aging which will be on
the Nov. 2 ballot at a recent meeting.

Alice Wolfe, an employee of the
center, discussed the levy with the
group. The group feels that it is
imperative that the levy passes. The
women send $25 a month donation
in support of the Center. The T,Jnit·
ed Methodist Men also donate. '
· ----------::-:--------------Hard as it may be to imagine today,
Texas has th e most counties , with
Martin Van Buren lost the presiden- 254 , of any state. They range from
cy to William Henry Harrison in 1840 Harris County !population 2.8 million I,
because he.refused to spend govern· of which Houston is the county seat,
~ent land revenues.
to Loving County !population t071. ·

NOW
AVAILABLE
IN THE

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received In advance to
assure publication In the calen·
dar.
FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM • Faithful
Gospel Church will have a hymn
sin$ at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed
inv1tes the public. Fellowship will
foDow.

biers. Cost is $5 per couple, $3 per at II a.m. The menu will consist of
single, $1 for children under l.Z and roast pork, baked beans, cole slaw,
rrce for children three and und'cr.
a roll ·and drink. Cost is $4 for
adults and $2 for children. Local
CHESTER • There will be a calls for carry-out and delivery will
hymn sing at the Chester United be accepted £rom 9 to II a.m. Call
Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
742-2110.
POMEROY · Star Grange #778
and Star Junior Grange #878 will
hold their annual halloween party
and fun night at 6:30p.m. at the
Grange Hall. The event will begin
with coswme judging at 6:30 p.m.
followed by potluck supper at 6:45
p.m. and fun and games. A.D members and interested persons are
invi~ to attend.
·

SUNDAY

TUPPERS PLAINS • Saint Paul
United Methodist Church will
observe their annual homecoming
starting with worship at 9 a.m. followed by a special service at 10
ANTIQUITY • Faith Fellowship
a.m. by "God's Kids" puppets, a
Crusade for Christ Church will
carry in dinner at 12:30 p.m. and ap
have a songfest at 7 p.m. featuring
afternoon service .featuring .The
The Conley Family and the United
Short Family, Joe Rader and JoAnn
Gospel Singers. The congregation
POMEROY • Royal Oak Dance and Susie Francis at 2 p.m. Rev.
encoW113es the public to come out Club presents an evening of enter· Sharon Hausman cxlellds a cordlal
and enjoy the singing.
tainment from 8 to II p.m. at invitaion io everyone.
·
Royal Oak Parle. Music will be by
TUPPE1tS PLAINS • Tuppers George Hall.
POMEROY· Bnie Stone wiD
Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary will
.
be in concat at the Trini'Y Cbuidt
spon!Ol' • round and square dance
~ERS PLAINS·. The 'fup- ·ofPomeroy8!7:30p.m.SIIllle,flw·
from 8:30 10 II p.m. Music will be pets Plains School Carntval wil be. merly of Pomeroy will present a
. by the TrueCounuy Ramblecs. Red held (rom ·6:30 to 9 P..m. Prior IQ program sujtcd tor ihe whote'fami·
Carr wUI be caller. Everybody is the carnival there wtlt be a soup ly. A f~ee will offetipg will be
welcome. '
supper from 4 to 6 p.m. At·lhe c:at'· taken. Liglit refrelhmeniS wiD be
nival there will be games, food and served followiDg the proiram.
SATURDAY
a special raffle of a Lloyd Middle··
ton Royal Vienna Collection , • HARRISONVILLE • The S~•
LONG BOTIOM • Long Bot· Christmas Edition DolL Everyone · S iTownshiJ.I
o
Volunteer .Ftrc
tom ·Community Auociati!&gt;n will 'is invited.
'
eat will sponsor a tractor
pun. WelJ.h in will start at 11000.
4JIOllllll' a round and aqua-e dante
at the LonJ Botlom Community
HARRISONVILLE • Scipio Pullins will start at I p.m. Usual
Center from 8 to ll p.m. with · Townshif Volunteer Fire Depatl· · welaht cluaea will be observed.
music by the True Counll)' Ram- meat wil _have a hog J11111t starting 'l'heR: will be a SO ~t payback.
' .
I

CALL
NOW
THIS SPACE

$16.00

THIS SPACE

$s.op

THIS SPACE

$12.00

9:9 :2. ·215~ 6 ·.
FOR MORE lNfORMIIION

Call By 2:00 P.M. Fr.lday .for.Sunday Edition
'

~

Val. 28, No. 34
Copyrlghtocl1893

14 Section 152 Plgeo

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, October 17, 1993

A llulllmoclla Inc. newopaper

Ohio's communitY colle~es up, however

Meigs 'Showcase' ,winds up activities today RGCC joins other
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY . • "Showcase,
Meigs County,"when: visitors can
get a look at the crafts of Appala·
chian artists, enjoy the entertain·
ment of local musicians, and share
the joy of life in a rural community
through numerous displays, is in its
fmal day at the Rock Springs Fair·
grounds.
.
Showcase hours today are noon
to6p.m.
Activities get underway with a
cruise-in sponsored by the Oldies
but Goodies Car Club from nooo 10
2 p.m. Prizes will be awarded 10 the
top 20, best of show, original and
modified cars.
At 1:30 p.m., the Order of the
Arrow Indian dancers will perfonn
KICK-OFF ROUTINE. The Rock Springs fairgrounds came alive Friday afternoon with the sound or e
on the hiD stage. At2 p.m. the Church big band in the Big Bend. tbe Melg!i Marauders. Here the ftag corps moves through a routine to one ohevt ;. I
of Christ youth choir will sing, at 3 selections.
p.m. Crossover Band wiD play, and
at 5 p.m. the Midnight Cloggers will Visitors will have an opportunity to
The showcase, a tourism proting ceremony on the hill stage
close out the Showcase entenain- seetheexhibitsofnearly40organi·
motion program of the Meigs
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs Ex .,, menL
County
Parks
District
and
the
Meigs
zations, businesses, schools, colsion agent, gave the welcome and
At4 p.m. there will be a kiddie
County Extension Service, opened Mary Powell, Parks District direclectors and craftsmen set up in sevuactor puU in the show arena.
Fri\lay afternoon with a ribbon-cuteral buildings on the fairgi'Dunds.
Continued on page A-7

Inebriated Times-Sentinel r~porters
tes't limits,
,. · of Ohio's ·new DUI law

Brandeberry supplied the beer poorly suspects perfonn, they may
and reponer Lisa Peterson acted as be released, driven hom!\ or brought
designated driver, photographer and backtothestationforthebrealhalyzer.
SuS))C(;I!ld drunk drivers are flfSt
note-taker after Long's and Pinson's
asked to lake a number of steps walk·
hands became unsteady.
Beginning around } p.m., the ing heel-to-toe, pivot on the lead foot
subjects drank beers at their own pace and take a number of steps back (the
while Brandeberry recorded when number changes at the officer's dis·
each new can was Opened. After three cretion).
beers, the subjects wailtd 15 minutes
The officer watches not only
and were given three fields tests and suspects' balance and coordination
a breathalyzer.
but also observes whether they take
The field tests consisted of ac- the correct number of steps and foltivities designed to test the suspect's low directions. Other tests involve
balance, reaction time and ability 10 balancing on one foot for 30 seconds
follow insa-uctions - they are used and using one's eyes to follow a pen
to help orficers detennine ifsuspected in the officer's hand.
Of the field tests, the horizontal
· offenders are lilr.ely under the intlu·
gaze exercise is the most accurate in
ence.
predicting level of intoxication, said
De~n()ing on how well or how
Brandeberry.
Pinson passed the heel-to-toe
test, although he staggered slightly
and did not take the correct number
of steps. But Long did not touch his
heel 10 toe consistently during the
first test and was told that he would
probably have been taken into custody for further testing.
He , was in, what Officer Clint
Patterson, called a gray area.
"Every fourth or fifth guy I give
the test to falls into a gray area," he
said. "I put all three tests together and
then decide."
The second test, balancing, also
went smoothly forthereponers.Each
faltered at times while holding one
leg aloft for 30 seconds, but did not
have 10 put the foot down to stay
balanced.
"You're not arresting material,"
Brandeberry said to Pinson.
Ifan error is made, it is usually on
the sjde of the subjec~ Brandeberry
said. '1Ul the tests have a m~in of
error which favor the driver.
But that doesn't mean the police
go easy on suspected drunk drivers,
"It's easy for an officer to feel
FOLLOW THE PEN - Kevin Pinson tak~ a neld I!Obrlety test
guilty (for arresting)," BllUldebcrry
administered by Officer Rolpble Jacks IJt the Galtlpolls Pollee
said, "but it doesn't lake too many
Department in an experiment deslgited to educate young people
times for an officer 10 pull somebody
about the new drlvin1runder tbe'inftueace law. (T-S photo by Lisa
out
of a wreckage to get over the
Peterson)

By USA PETERSON
JAMES LONG and
KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS • Two inebriated
Times-Sentinel reporters were subjected to breathalyzer tests Wednesday night, but no arrests were made
-it was all for the sake of education.
James Long and Kevin Pinson,
at the suggestion of Chief Roger
Brandeberry and SgL Keith Elliot of
the Gallipolis Police Department,
agreed 10 participate in the experi·
ment after Long and Brandeberry
discussed the new driving under the
influence law, which empowers law
ef\l'orcementofficerstomakeon-the·
spot confiscation of the licenses and
even the vehicles of repeat offenders.

state colleges in
enrollment decline
RIO GRANDE • Enrollment at
Ohio's public colleges and universities -including Rio Grande Community College- has declined slightly,
the Ohio Board of Regents said Friday.
A preliminary bead count pegged
the number of students tt.is fall at
435,917, a systemwidedropof6,586,
or 1.5 percent • the flfSt such state·
wide decline in over a decade · the
hoard said.
EnrolbnentatRioGrandeCom·
munity College fell from its falll992
number of 1,362 to a fall1993 count
of I ,340 - a decline of I. 7 percenl
Regents Chancellor Elain e
Hairston said the repon suggests enrollments appear to be leveling off
after a decade of almost continuous,
record-setting growth.
" It is hard to say whether this
year's slight drop in overaD enroll-

EnroUment at Rio Granth
Community College fell from
itsfaH1992numberof1.362to
a 1993 count of 1,340 ·a tkcline of 1.7 percenL
ments is a minor, temporary departure, perhaps reflecting a slight irn·
provement in Ohio's economic conditions, or the first hint of a genuine
change in longer-tenn patterns," Ms.
Hairston said in a news release.
Modestgrowthhadbeenexpected
systemwide. However, several insti·
tutions anticipated declines partly because the number of high school-age
swdents in Ohio declinedsignifiCalltly
in recent years and is approaching a
20-year low.
Continued on page A-7

Meigs students promote
substance-free lifestyles
•• ...,.. ..,

BREATHALYZER TESTJames Long takes tbe breatbalyz.
er test after consuming several
beers in an experiment at tbe
Gallipolis Police Department
Wednesday nigbt.

•

guilt"

Each reporter was then given a
breathalyzertest. Patterson conducted
the test and explained the process.
Subjects are held for 15 to 20
minutes before taking the breathalyzer,
Patterson said, to allow the alcohol in
the mouth to dissipate. This allows for
a more accurate reading.
The subject's name and Social
Security number, as weD as the testing
officer's name are then typed into the
machine. The breathalyzer is then
purged of any air it contains and a
blank test is ran to make sure the
machine is properly calibrated.
Ifthemaehine registers".()()()," it
is ready to test the subject. Pauerson
insa-ucted the reporters to lake a nor·
mal-sized breath and blow into the
mouthpiece as long and hard as they
could.
Pinson blew a .038 and Long
registered at .049.
After the next round - three
more beers in about 45 minutes officers re-administered the field tests.
Although each had increased dirficul·
ties completing the walk and keeping
their balance, the first two tests were
not enough to indicate an impairment.
However, it was more difficult
this time for each to follow the pen.
Orficers explained that while sober
eyes will follow the movement fluidly, an intoxicated person'seyes dis·
play a "choppy" motion, especially in
the peripheral field of vision.
The sooner a subject' seyes begin
Continued on page A· 7

•

-·

By JTM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY - Keeping youngsters £rom using illegal drugs is a
serious matter these days and some
Meigs County students are talr.ing an
active role in promoting drug-free
lifestyles through the practice of peer
prevention.
During Red Ribbon Weelr., October 23·31, a national observance to
promotedrug·free lifestyles and communities, local high school swdents
· will present substance abuse prevention programs they learned at the Red
Ribbon Youth Training workshop
held Wednesday evening at Meigs

'I'

-

•

High School.
A Red Ribbon Week Kick-off
Rally will be held Wednesday from
7-9 ~-m: at the Pomeroy Municipal
Auditonum and will feature DJ .
Rockin' Reggie with his drug-free
rapandneonpinkpalHOOLAHippo.
Russ Fisher, outpatient site manager
for Health Recovery Services Inc.,
will also be on hand.
Rockin ' Reggie, a.k.a. Reggie
Robinson, is the new substance abuse
prevention professional who is coordinating prevention -activities in

Meigs County for fiRS .
"The rally wiD beagoodtime for
Continued on page A-7

TEACHING PEER PREVENTION- Health Recovery Stnrices
volunteer Kris Washington, left, and Dawn Smallcomb demonstrate
puppets that area high school students will use to encourage younger
students to stay away from drugs. Washington and Smallcomb were
leaching a peer prevention workshop to students from area blgb
schools al Meigs High School Wednesday evening.
·

. Prosecutor: Fife rejects former plea arrangement; criminal case to continue
POMEROY · Criminal charges wiD continue against
Raben Fife of Middleport in light \)fFriday's dismdsal of
a forfeiture proceeding itgainst him .
Fife was the subject of a historic search and seizure
operation in July during which thousands of firearms as
well as cash and other ptoperty were seized by c~unty
orficials.
Shonly after the prq~eny was seized, Fif~ entered
into a plea bargain agreement with the prosecuting
atuxney's office. The agreement called for the forfeiture
of all ptopCI'Iy seized in the 18id. In exchange, the state
agreed to file no criminal charges against Fife's wife,
Gladys, orothermembersofFife's family. The prosecutor

J,

.

also aped. to ftle limited criminal charges against Fife
and aped that Fife would not go to prison due to his age
and poor health. '
According to Prosecuting Anorney John R. Lentes,
the stall: then announced its .intention to return items to
their rightful owners.
At the order of the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, .the county mailed notice by certified mail to all
individuals who believed tbat they had a cl.qim 10 the
merchandiSe. Any unclaimed mm:ha!ldisc was to be sold.
Imlnediately before Friday's hearing, Fife, through
his anorney, David Baer of Athens, stated that he would
not comply with the forfeiture agreemenL At that poinl,
~

the forfeiture proceedings were dismissed without preju·
dice and the state decided to proceed with criminal action
against Fife and his family members.
Lentes said Friday that if Fife is convicted on criminal
charges, the forfeiture proceedings would be re-opened
with the intention of returning mm:handise to the rightful
owner. Lentes pointed out that Judge Fred W. Crow m
dismissed the forfeiture case without prejudice, meaning
it can be fded again after the criminal case is completed.
"It appears that Mr. Fife has taken the posi~on that he
was not running a pawn shop and that he made outright
purchases from individuals and that they have no legal
right to those items," Lentes said. "However, based upOn
.1

my investigation and the statements of over 500 people
this morning, I believe that Mr. Fife was operating an
iUegal pawn shop, as well as serving as a handy way to
dispose ofstolen property."
·
Lentes reiterated the procedure for making claims ·
against the seized property. Those individuals who have
made claims previously do not need 10 file new claims.
However, those who have not made a claim may do so by
picking up a claim form, filling it out and returning it 10 the
sheriffs department.
·
Lentes said he is not aware how long the criminal case
will take to complete or when individualsean expect 10 get,
their property rewmed.
..
I
..

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32832">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32831">
              <text>October 15, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="433">
      <name>armstrong</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="974">
      <name>blevins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1441">
      <name>elliott</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6431">
      <name>parmalee</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
