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                  <text>- - - -.Community calendar

Shakespeare
reviewed at
club meeting

Commualty Caleadar Items
appear two da,s before au eveut
. aad tile day ot tllat eveut. Items
must be re~lv~d Ia advauce to
assure publk:atioa Ia the calea. dar.
THURSDAY

"Shakespeare of London" by
Mln:hette Chuie was reviewed by
Faye Wallaec when the Middleport
Litaary Club held its fmt meeting
of the new prognim year recently at
the home of Phyllis Hackett
'the book brin~s lhe great play·
wright into the hght of common
day, according to the reviewer.
Born in 1564. Shakespeare was
described as an easy going individual who prefened not to take a
place in the literary circles of the
day. The author of forty plays,
which were published after his
dealh, made his living as an actor
on the London stage. He was one
of a group of actors who built and
OJ)CI'8ted the Globe Playhouse, one
ot the most famous theaters of it's
time.
Mrs. Wallace also gave a review
of "Othello" one of Shakespeare's
tragedies. The Moorish general
overlooks !ago in favor of Cassio
for the position of Chief Lieutenant To avenge himself for the
slight and out of sheer malice, Iago
devises a scheme to undo both Othello and Cassio. He suggests that
Othello's wife Desdemona and
Cassio are having an illicit affair .
Othello dismisses Cassio, strangles
Desdemona, and after realizing his
terrible mistake takes his own life.
Iaeo is condemned to torture for his
crunes.
Four new members were welcomed into membership. President
Betsy Parsons presented green carnations to Jeanne Bowen, Sister
Fidclis Bell, Pauline Horton and
Emmaline Pratt, The hostess gave
'each member a bookmark from
Beijing, China. The club went on
record as being in suppon of the
upcoming levy ror the Meigs
County Council on Aging.

Elhel E. Adkins, Nursing Assistant on the 2 West Unit of the
Holzer Medical Center, was named
September Employee of the Monlh,
according.
Born in East Liverpool, Ohio.
Adkins is a resident of Racine. She
graduated from Racine High
School and is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Ours. also of
Racine.
Adkins joined the nursing staff
at Holzer Medical Center on Sept
16, 1978. She has experience as a
nursing assistant at Mt. Carmel
Hospital in Columbus, St. Mary's
Hospital in Huntin,ton, and was at
Veterans Memonal Hospital in
Meigs County for eight years

-_..t;~igs

County Court news

HMC employee of
the month selected

The rollowing cases were ing, 30 days jail suspended to five
resolved recently in the ~eigs days,one ~ear probation plus cos~;
County Coon of Judge Patnck H. Paul E. Wilson, Shade, assault, stx
O'Brien.
months jail suspended to 30 days,
Fined were: Bill Parsons, one year probation plus costs; L.
Racine disorderly conduct, $25 Michael Bauer, Long Bottom, displus coSts, three days jail suspend- orderly conduct. 10 days jail sused; Myrtle McClish, Long Bottom, pended, one year probation, $25
drivina under the ~fl!l~nce, $500 plus costs; Don~ld ~teinmet~,
plus costs, 10 days m Jatl suspend- Pomeroy, ·domesuc vtolence, SIX
ed to three days, 90-day operator's months jail suspended to 20 .days,
license suspension, $250 of fine two years probation, restrammg
and jail suspended if school option order issued, costs; intimidation of
completed, one year probation; crime victim/witness. same as
railure to drive in .marked. lanes, domestic violence sentence;
$15 p\.. U"i3~JU!p~J • l'Dl!~ W~~ '~•
Rutland, failure to control, Slw seat belt, $25pJiis cosTs;James
plus costs; Martha Lane, Athens, Payne, Proctorville, speed, $30
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Daniel plus costs; Jason Barnhart, Geneva,
Lewis Jr. Langsville. speed, $30 speed, $30 plus costs; Gregory
plus costs:
Myers, Hinsboro, no headlights at
John L: Ridenour, Cbester, DUI, ni$;ht, $20 plus costs; Paul Lauder- .
$500 plus costs, 10 days jail sus- milt Jr., Wellston, seat belt. $25
pended to three days, 180 day OL plus costs; David Delacruz,
suspension, $250 of ~ne 8f!d ~ Reedsvil!e. stop sig~. $20 plus
days jail suspended tf rcstdenllal costs· Bnan Peck, Btdwell, seat
ueaunent program completed; left belt, SIS plus costs; Carol Icenof center, costs only; ~bel~. $25 bower, Ravenswood, W.Va., speed,
plus costs; Scou Frazter, Mtddle- $30pluscosts;
pon. DUI $500 plus,costs, 30 days
Christine Cozad, Columbus,
Jail suspeNled to 10 days, one ~ear speed, $30 plus costs; Gloria
OL suspension, !!DC YC~!f.~bation, McCauley, Columbus, seat belt,
90 day vehicle tmrnoblbzabQn; no $15 plus costs; Roger Thompson,
OL, 10 days jail conc~ent with Toledo, driving under financial
DUI, one year prob~uon •. costs; responsibility action suspensi~~·
Edward Chapman, Ptckenngton, $200 plus costs, six months Jatl
speed,$30pluscosts;
suspended to 10 days, one _year
, Rex Gibbs, Letart. W.Va:• $30 ·probation and forfeiture of vehtcle1
plus costs; Helen Stack, MtddleSteven Shuler, Pomeroy, $250
pOn. speed, $30 plus costs; Harry plus costs, six months jail suspendYarbrough, Rutland, seat belt, $25 ed to 10 days, two years probation,
plus costs; M.J. Lebil, Rittman, three years hunting license suspenseat belt, $15 plus costs; Shelly sion; taking a deer with a rille dursauerfield, Middlepon. seat belt, ing closed season, $250 plus costs,
$2S plus costs· Nellie Perin, Clen- six months in jail SUSJ?Cnded to 10
denio, W. va:, speed, $30 plus days, two years probauon and three
costs; James Goss. Columbus, .years hunting license suspension;
. speed, $30 plus costs; James Patter- knowingly transponing a loaded
· son. Racine, stop sign. $20 plus firearm in a motor vehicle •. $250
costs; Tommy Basim, Long Bot- plus costs, six months in jail sustom aeat belt, $15 plus costs; Eric pendcd to 10 days, two years proR-ll, Fostoria, speed. $30 plus bation and three yeau hunting
-costa: Doneta Walton, Corey, licenae suspensioo;
.
sptC!d, $30 plus~;
Mich~el Shuler, Langsville,
Charlotte SmJth, Wellston, seat spotlighung, $100 plus costs, 10
. belt, $1S plus costs; Jeffrey Camp- days jail suspehded, one year probell Racine, seat belt, $25 plus bation; aidins another in the poscoata: lames Cisco, Meadow, seasion of an illegally~- deer,
w.va.,IPCed. $30 pi';!S costs;. J~rry $100 plus costs, 10 days miail .susVan Kirk, Langsvtlle, dnvmg pended, !'nc year probation;
under suspension, $100 plus costs, Mauhew Pierte, Rutland,~~!10 days in jail suspe!Jded to three ing, $100 plus costs, 10 days ~~ail
days one year probabOil, must pro- suspended, one year probauon;
. vide 'valid OL within 90 days; fail- Shawn Garner, Langsville, spoture ro disp~ valid _Plates, $20 plus li$!1ting, $100 plus costs, 10 ~ys
costs; Wilham Rtce, Syracuse, j&amp;l suspended, one year probatiOn;
DUI SSOO plus costs, 10 days jail
. Soma Keams. Guysville, passSuspeaded to three days. 180 d;&amp;YS ing bad checks, $25 .r,lus costs and
OL suspensioo, one year~- restitution; Day e Brooks,
$250 of fine and~ days jail sus- Pomeroy, ·driving under suspenpended If residential treatment pro- sion, $200 plus costs, 30 days jail
pwil c:ompJe!ed; lefi of center, 530 suspended to three days, one year
plus costs; .
.
probation, 60 day immobilization
JohMy Ltule, Mid dlepon, eedscat of vehicle; failure to display valid
.belt, $1S plus costs; 0 regory R • plates, $20 p,lu' costs; failure to
PoliiCIOy, SPCCd. costs .~ly;underBrad control•.$30 ~~-c~sts;
RobintOII. Pomeroy, drivmg
Dawn Sh:~RJ!cJne, speed,
suspension, $200 plusthrcostsda,·30 $30 plus costs; rank Johnson·,
; days jail sUIJlCI!ded to ~ ys, Hamden, seal belt, $20 plus costs;
' one year probation; stop Sign, $20 Keith Niles, Huqtington~ W.Va.,
' plus ~; Dallny Dal~. Rutland, seat belt, S2q plus ~ts; Stcphanie
1peec1, $28 plus costs; Timothy D. Conley, )tacme, failure to control,
Wolle. R.tteiDe, JMS8ing bad checks, $20 plus, costs; Anne $liten,
$25 pltD COlli and restitution: Dean Albany, speed, $30 ~osts;
Mays. CJ!e«er, obllructing official Deborah Basim, Long 1
, seat
~. 30 days !II WI suspended bel~ $20 plus costs; WilliB!". Fetty,
· to 10 ·d ays, $1QO plus co.sts; Pomeroy, DUI, 30 days Jill sus: s~epha.nie Connolly, · Ractn~. pended to 10 days,~ plus c011ts,
assaah ' two cblrae•. $100 plus one year OL suspenston, two years
COlli eKb, 90 day1 jljl auspended probation, vehicle immobllizJtion;
·. ·10 two dayl limo lerVed. two y.-a ~ drivillg imder suspension, 30 days
• ~on and restraining. order · jail suspended to 10 days concur,
, rent with DUI, $100 plus oosts, two
• ·•
·
ur Gray, Racine, mcnac- years probation;

w.

t

Rtm..AND -'the Meigs County
R blican Part will have a fall
raley:':f &amp;it 6 :30 p.~. at the Rutland
Civtc Center. There will be food
and entertainment F&lt;r man: informalion call Coun3'l Chairman Paul
c"
Gerard at 992oV
I
•
o

POMEROY • Meigs Local
POMEROY • Meigs County School District will hold its annual
Democratic Party Executive Com- parent meeting from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
. mittcc meeting 7:30 p.m. at Car- at Salisbury Elementary. 'the meetpenters. Hall.
ing will include·an overview of the
Chapter I program by the director
ROCK SPRINGS - The Middle- Wendy Halar and the teachers from
port Child Conservation League the individual buildings will have
annual Halloween party for chil- presentations by their sllidents.
dren and grandchildren or the
members at Rock Springs United
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
Methodist Church at 6:30p.m.
Springs Better Health Club will
RACINE - Racine American meet at I p.m. at lhe beirne or PhyLegion Auxiliary will meet at 7 llis Skinner.
p.m. at the post home. There will
FRIDAY
be a guest speaker.
Cbld
EMPLOYEE OF THE MONTH • Charles J. Adklus,
Executive Officer of the Holzer Medical Center, congratulates
Ethel E. Adkins, N.A., as the Hospital's Employee ot the Month for
September.

before coming to Holzer fifteen
years ago.
She was nominaJed as Employee of the Month by one of her coworkers on 2 West, Sharon Galliamore, L.P.N.
Adkins has four grandchildren
who reside with her. Grandson
Michael Joseph is 10; her grand·
daughters are Brenda Kay. 7; Nikki
Nicole, 6, and Bobbi Lee, 4.
As Employee of the Month,
Adkins received a $50 U.S. Savings Bond, a special parking place,
her name engraved on a permanent
plaque in the Hospital's Main
Lobby and her picture hanging
beside the GREAT plaque.

-

Stephen Schartiger, MiddleP?rt,
DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 days Jail
suspended 10 three days, 90 day OL
suspoos~on, $250 of qne IU)d Uu:ee
days J8ll suspended tf restdenual
treatment l'rogram completed;
u~safe vehtcle, Ct?Sts only; Ray
Riggs, Coolville, trnproper turn,
$20 plus costs; Kenneth Holley,
Charleston, W.Va., speed, $21 plus
costs; Gregory George, Rtpley:
W.Va.• seat belt, $25 plus costs.
Rhonda Snider, P'?meroy, speed,
$30 plus costs; Bnan Pero, Con:way, S.C., s~. $50 plus costs;
1111~2!!!'~· f20Pius "CQ§!i' ,
vtrgtma Jennns;-l'O~eroy; seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Rtta D. Ashburn, Hebron, seat belt, $25 pl.us
costs; Danny Dalton, Rulland, atding and assisting in the taking of a
deer with a gun during closed season,. ~150. plus cost.s; aiding and .
asstsung tn the taktng of a deer
fr.om a publ.ic ~igh~ay; Mary
Ritchhart, SmtthvtUe, drivmg under
suspension, $100 plus costs, five
da~s jail suspended, one year pr_oballOn; James HoUy, Pomeroy,_discard trash from a motor vehtcle,
$200 plus costs•. five days in jail,
$100 or ~nc a_ndJ&amp;l suspended; .
Denms R1ffle, Pomeroy, discarding trash from a motor y~icle,
$200 plus costs, five days J8il, Jatl
and $1.00 of fme suspended;
~tephante Hoschar.,Po!Def!&gt;Y· passmg bad checks, reslltutto~ plus
costs; Kenny Lunsford. Mtd~leport, dnvmg under suspet:~s•o~.
$500 plus costs, one year m Jatl
suspen~ to 30 days, five ycar.OL
susi'C'nston, .two yel!"s probatt&lt;?n•
vehicle forfetted to vtllage of Middleport; Robert L. Young,
Reedsville, .O.Ul. $500 plus costs,
10 days m J&amp;l suspended .to three
days, 180 ~Y OL suspens1on, one
year probau~n. $250 or fine an_d
thr~ days Jatl suspemjed 1f restdenual treaunent program completed; left.of center, costs onl~;
. Daron Yeauger, Cheshtre, stop
stgn, $30, plus costs; seat belt, $25
plus costs; Steven Banthun, Vincent, driving under DUI suspen·
sion, $100 plus costs, 10 days jail
suspended, one year probation;
Oifford Smith Jr., Racme, rcceiving stolen ~,operty, six moilthsjail
suspended, one year probation;
Gale Wolfe, Mason, DUI, $750
plus costs, 60 days jail, three years
OL suspension, two years pmba·
tion, rorfeiture of vehicle to
Pomeroy village; William Em.·ott,
Pomeroy, speed, $50 plus costs.
Forfeiting bonds were: Clititon
Bailey, Long Bouom, passing bad
checks, $76.98; Linda Marcini,
Ravenswood, 'speed, $90; Christopher Lance, Pomeroy, stop sign,
$45; Nathan Baloy, Pomeroy.
speed, $90; Tim Roach, Pomeroy,
speed, $60; Rex Gibbs, ·Letart,
W.Va., seat'belt.$45; Terri l:Jouser.
Pomeroy, pusing bad checks,
$70.88.

Meigs competes
Meigs High School will Jll!llicipate in "Ashland·Oii's H1gh Q"
which kicked off its 15th sea.ilon
Oct2.
The competition features 32
teams from the region in CClllteSt
of knowledge and 'quick recall.
Each teim features four players,
and the questions COVered' include
current events, matll, science and
spelling.
.
"Ashland ·High Q" is hosaed by
Ernie Anderson.

a

•

ThuredJy,October21,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. PIIGI . 12-The Dally Sentinel

TIJPPERS PLAINS • The TupRACINE - Racine American
pers
Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary
Legion Post #602 will have supper
ts
sponsoring
a square dance with
at 6:30 foUowed by a meeting.
music by C.J. and the Country
TIJPPERS PLAINS ·The TUP.· Gentlemen. Callers will be Red
pers Plains VFW and ladies auxil- Carr and Melvin Cross. Everyone
iary will have lheir monlhly dinner is welcome.
at 6:30 p.m. Members are asked to
MIDDLEPORT - Rejoicing Life
bring a dessert
Church will have a Harvest CeleCHESIRE · Gallia-Meigs Com- bration from 7 p.m. to midnight.
munity Action Agency will hold a Preschool thru fifth ~ from 7 to
free clothing day from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and grades SIX thru 12 from
noon at the old high school in I0 p.m. to midnight Everything is
free. The public is invited.
Chesire.
LONG BOITOM - Faith Full
RACINE - Racine Grange will
Gospel
Church will have preaching
meet at 7 p.m. at the hall.
by Evangelist Dave Dailey and
POMEROY - There will be a local singers a1 7 p.m. Pastor Steve
spagheui dinner with the Meigs Reed invites the public. Fellowship
High School Football team from will follow.
5:15 to 6:15p.m. in the high school
cafeteria . A small donation is
required for all you can eat
The Ohio State University has
POMEROY • The Pomeroy issued a list or seniors and graduate
Group of AA and AI Anon will students who received degrees at
meet at 7 p.m. at Sacred Heart summer quarter commencement
Church. For more information call exercises on Sept. 2 in Saint John
Arena.
992-5763.
Local residents receiving
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town - degrees were Mark A. Cline,
ship Trustees will meet at 6:30p.m. Pomeroy, Bachelor of Science in
at the Shade River State Forestry Business Administration and DouBuilding for the purpose of adopt- glas S. McPhail, Syracuse, Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy.
ing the solid waste plan.

Graduates named

•

·

Ohio Lott~ry

Phillies
shut out
Blue Jays

REEDSVn.LE • ~last day of
the revival at Reedsville Unit;e&lt;J
Meihodist Cburch at 7 p.m. w1th
Rev. Barry Wyent.
SATilRDAY

Pick 3:

010
Pick 4:

1772

MIDDLEPORT· There will be
a roun d an d square dance at oL
uoe
Old Legion Hall from 8 • 11:30
p.m. Music will be by CJ. and the
Country Gentlemen. Admission ·is
free. Children are welcomed with
adult supervision. Children 12 and .
under can wear costumes as they ·
wish. No alcohol will be allowed.

Buckeye 5:
6-14-15-33-36

-Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 121
llullll'MillltllC.

GALLIPOLIS . • Gallipolis
Women's Bowling Association
will have its Fall Open Meeting at
4:30p.m. at Skyline Lanes.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Some familiar corporate riamcs
provided most of the $4211,000
raised so rar to campaian for a
$200 million state and local parks
bond issue on the Nov. 2 ballot.
Ohioans fir Our Parts and Natural Resources, a bipartisan com·
mittee backing the constitutional
amendment, filed a pre-election
fmancial report with Secretary of
State Bob Taft showing contributions of $391,762.
That was the amount collected
. as of the Oct 13 cutoff dale for the
report

SALEM CENTER • Salem Center Elementary will have its Fall
Festival from 4 to 8 p.m. There will
be games, raffles. cow droppin!l• an
auction and food. The public is
invited.
SUNDAY
POMEROY ··Saint Paul Lutheran Church will host The Blessings
from East Alhens Church of Christ
at their 11 a.m. worship service.
The public is welcome.

But the committee said amounts rize the stale to borrow $50 million
raised between then and Wednes- a year to maintain and improve
day brought the total to just over state and local parks and natural
$428,000. Money collected after resources. No more than $200 milOct. 13 will be contained rn a lion in ~bt could be outstanding at
repon filed with Taft after lhe elec- any onewnc.
tion.
Steiner said at a news conferThe single-largest contributor so ence Thursday the liiggest fundfar: the Ohio Cable Television raising problem has been convincAssociation at $30,000,
ing potential contributors the
"This is an economic develop- money is needed.
ment issue and we picked up a lot
"We've had an awful lot of
of business money," said Curt people say no to us on the basis
Steiner, campaign managing con- that they lhought we were going to
·
sultant
win without the money," Steiner
The amendment would autho- said. "We know we do need it"

Reunion held

GOLD "S" BAR

DIAMOND BUCELET
REG.$299

.

1 Carat Only

$499
Swirls of Diamonds

%CARATt.w.

t:·:o.ly 299
5

1 DIAMOND MARQUISE

DIAMOND PENDANT

ANNIVERSARY BAND
se• 1. 1u Gol•

7 Dlamo.-.ds Sat In Gokf

%carat

REG. s -

$699
$379

Closing remarks start in trial

Grand jury indicts three
REG. $168

ONLY

Three indictments were recently ftled in the Meigs County Coun
of Common Pleas rollowing a meeting of the Meigs County Grand
JuryTuesda~
.
Kelly Spaulding of Vinton was indicted on a charge or vandalism under $5,000. ·
Robert Kuhn of Middle~n was indicted on a charge of relonious 8ssault with gun specifications. The indicunent stems from an
incident on Sept. 23 in whieh Kuhn aUegedly shot Jimmy Hayes
with a 12-gauge shotpn.
Ronald Davis ot Pomeroy was indicted on a charge of rape. He is
accused in tbe alleged rape of a 19-year-old woman on OcL 10

$89

Hundreds of Beautiful .Christmas Ideas -AU On Sale!

Post offtces plan open·house
LAYAWAY FOR (HRISTMAS-ONLY

The Pomeroy and .Middleport post offices will hold an open
house Wednesday ·from 8:30 to noon to coincide with the swearing
in of new postmasters.
Middleport Postmaster Rick Butcher will be swum in at 9 a.m.
and Pomeroy Posunaster Charlie Gfi!nm ~I be sworn in at 10 a.m .

10% DOWN!

Deputies inve.stigate wrecks

'From Mfg. Sugg. Rmll

No .injuries were fCI)Orted in two sin&amp;le-vehicle accidents investigated by deputies ol the Meigs County Sheriff's Department
Wednesday morning, said Sberiff lameit M. Soulsby.
'the first accident occurred at 11:05 on U.S. 33 near Pomeroy.
Roy Manhal, Racine, was westbound and struck .water on the madW~Y. causing him to lose control of. the 1987. Dodge truck he was
drivmg.
·, .
.
The truck, owned by Banks Construedon, Pomeroy, went off the
roadway on the left coming to rest on its side in the ditch. Moderate

.9Lcquisitions ~irte· Jewe{ry.
TWO LOCATIONS

151 Second Ave., Glllllpolla
AND

91 Mill Street, Middleport

FREE PARKING
FREE GIFT
WRAPPING

•Diamonds
-Gold Chains .
•Selko .Watches

eliminate most barriers to free trading among the United States, Mexi·
co and Canada, would lose about
$500 million a year by dropping
tariffs on imports from Mexico.
To make up that revenue, the
administration proposed to double
the $5 customs ree now collected
from arriying international air and
· Continued on Page 3

Repu licans.
A retired hardware merchant
who became involved in state poli·
tics ill 1979, Snyder said he went
into politics as a partnership
involving his wife, Dorolhy.
"One vote is important," he
CLARENCE MILLER
said. "It is important to be sure our
voice is one of prudence and to several awards by 18Xpayer watchstand fast against taxes."
dog groups.
"When we raise taxes in Ohio,
"I understand the needs of busibusiness goes across the river," ness and entrepreneurship," he
commented Snyder, a recipient of added. "My purpose in being here

'

datuie was re)Obid.

&lt;roes Pens
•RireColns .

iill

•

·

··

· '

,-_.ty minulel liter, atlhe same location, deputiea reported that
Shawn Hawley, ¥.Jc!dlcjlon, was westboUnd in a 1985 Font Eacort
and - t orr ibe ri&amp;ht s!de of the road and ltl'UCk a guide wire and
powei' pole:
HiJ ychiC101 also hit the Wiler along the roadway, Soulsby said.

Lishttlamqc was~
·'
I

.

SEN. COOPER SNYDER
is to reassure you I represent the
philosophy you represenL"
Following Snyder's remarks
Meigs County Republican Chair:
Continued on Page 3

Wyoming complains of coal 'protectionism'

WASHINGTON (AP)
high -sulfur coal - responded to
Wyoming is complaining on Capi- changes in the federal Clean Air
tol Hill about the way state govern- Act by passing laws that make it
ments rallied around local coal harder for Western states to sell
industries in Indiana, Illinois, Ohio their low -sulfur coal, said
and Pennsylvania.
Wyoming Deputy Attorney Gener'Those states - all produceJS of al Mary Guthrie.
''Congress must address the
problems created by these discriminatory laws," Guthrie told a Senate
subcornmiuee Thursday.
"These states should not be permitted 10 erecl barriers to interstate
A Rutland man's truck sustained heavy damage Thursday morncommerce ." she said. " They
ing after being struck by a falling tree.
should not be allowed to obstruct
According to a report rrom the Meigs County Sherirrs Departand dilute the e&lt;press purposes of
ment, Richard L. Bolin was eastbound on State Route 124 near Rut·
lhe Clean Air Act Amendments of
·Jand when the tree fell striking the top of his 1988 Ford truck.

- - - - - - - L o c a l briefs------....,
Closing arguments were Qlldaway this morning in lhe rape trial
of George William MiUer Jr., 52, of Middleport
.
Miller is charged with three counts of rape wh1ch allegedly
occurred between June 1Md Aug. 31, 1988.
Judge Dan W. FaVI'\lllu or McConnelsville is hearing the case by
assignment in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court The trial
started Tuesday with jury selection.

lf4ct.tw
:=Itt,__ _ _ _.......

REG.

higher fee on international rravelers, Sen. Slade Gorton, R-Wash.,
cautioned.
"I fmd this troublesome," Sen.
Richard Bryan, D-Nev ., added
Thursday as Mickey Kantor, President Clinton's trade ambassador,
testified before the Senate Commerce Committee.
NAFTA, which graduaU y would

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
growing number of lawmakers are
callilig on the Clinton administration to find somelhing olher than a
tax increase - no matter how
small - to pay for the North
American Free Trade Agreement.
"You are in the process of losing supporters without converting
any opponents" by advocating a

Reg. $699

BRIDAL SET

In addition to cash, lhe committee collected contribution• of
polling and olher services wonh
$82,869, including $40,000 for
billboarda from the Outdoor Adver-·
tising Association of Ohio.
Ohioans for Responsible Gov·
emment. a small group headed by
Richard Sheir or Columbus, is providing the only orP!!ized opposition to the proposat.1The group did
not ftle a repon by a 4 p.m. deadline, and was not required to do so
unless it raised more than $1,000.
There was no listing for Sheir in
the Columbus telephone directory.

.~iQ~~~=~,'r,:t ~e Js

Congress objects to tax
hike to pay for NAFTA
.

American Financial Corp., Cincinnati, $25,000; Ohio Bell, Colum·
bus, $15,000; Laidlaw Waste Systems Inc ., Dublin, $12,000; and
$10,000 each from The Ohio Company, Columbus; Meijer Inc.,
Grand Rapids, Mich.; American
Waste Services, Warren; Prudential
Securities Inc., New York; BP
America; and Bane One Capital
Corp., Columbus.
Companies contributing $5,000
each included Kemper Securities,
Chicago; Columbus Southern
Power; Ohio Power ; Columbia
Gas; and Bob Evans Farms.

ISSUe

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
''To be successful and grow, we
have to link together.•
That was the message delivered
by State Senator Cooper Snyder
(R-Hillsboro) at the Meigs county
Republican Party Rally held Thurs- ·
day night at the Rutland Civic Center.
Snyder, a Republican candidate
for the Sixth Congressional District
seat currently occupied by Congressman Ted Strickland (DLucasville), told the approximately

r

. '·

Steiner said SIIPfll?rlers are staning their fli'St telcvt.Sion advertising
of the campaign with $230,000
worth of commercials in Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo and Youngstown.
About $59,000 came from sev·
era! companies in the waste dispos·
al business, including $20,000 from
Browning-Ferris Industries of Tennessee.
"We felt that it was ouly natural
... that we would approach compa·
nics that do business cleaning up
the environment,'' Steiner said.
Other large donations included

•

Snyder, Miller address GOP
at Thursday evening rally

The 21st annual Hayrnan-Polk
reunion was held at Clarence Hayman's residence in Antiquity with
45 persons attending.
The youngest was Shelby Johnson at one week old. The oldest
was Clarence Hayman, Sr. The
mother with the most children
attending was Violet Hunnell.
Games were played tl]roughout the
day . Plans were made ror next
year's reunion.
·

$199·

A llu111n olio Inc. IMwapopor

Corporations funding bulk of parks ballot

GALLIPOU~IDDLEPORT

Total
Weight

fa mld.fOL

2'•""--12.._ 3 5 -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 22, 1993

.9l.CQV.ISPTI09{S :!19\['E JrE/WEL1?/Y

%Ct.

blp

•

BASHAN · Red Brush Church
of Christ will have preaching services at 7 p.m. and atiO a.m. and 6
p.m. on Sunday. Denver Hi.'ll will
be the speaker. Everyone is invited.
RACINE • The Racine PTO will
be staging a haunted house from ·
6:30 to 9 p.m. There will be games
and refreshments. The haunted
house will be open for ·children
ages kindergtirlen to sixth grade.
Admission is $1 and proceeds will
go toward the purchase of a ~w
TV for the school.

Roo-Holiday
Savings

' 1..- ...lptla 30o. Clear,
I'1'Git POIIIbte. Sahtrdoy lllllny,

Toppling tree strikes truck

Vandalism, theft probed
Deputies or the Meigs County Sherirf's Department recently
invesugated the rouowing complaints:
Kalhaleen Ward, Portland, reported Wednesday that around 8
p.m. Tuesday she heard a noise outside her home. Upon further
mvestigation Thursday morning she discovered her mailbox and
post had been removed and thrown into a tree.
Deputies retrieved and replaced the box.
Elmer Pickens reported Thunday that the nag staff markers at
the veterans' graves at Bethleham Church Cemetery had been
stolen. An investigation is continuing.

S.R. 7 crash injures one
A Coolville man was injllllld in a one-vehicle accident on State
Route 7 in OranJe Township Thursday morning, the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Palmi reported
Todd M. Jackson, 18, Route 2, was taken by the Meigs County
ERICJicncy Medical Service to C.Uden Clark Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va., where he was 1reated and released.
Jackson was southbound on S.R. 7 when be went off the left side
of the mad, down an eritbanlanent and stnlck a ditch.
His vehicle sustained heavy damage and was towed fonn the
scene. No citations were reported.

Woman injured in crash
A Rutland woman was injured in a crash on State Route 124 in
Rutland Township Thursday evening, the Gallia-Meigs Post or the
Stato Highway Patrol1epocted,
Ruby D. King, 33, 3)9110; Hi&amp;lcy Road, was taken by an
acquaintance to Vetcran's Memorial Hospital where she was treated
. and released.
King was westbound on S.R. 124 and had stopped to turn left
when a Clr .-ssed bJ! the other lane. Rober1 B. Gilker,. 16, 31853
1eroy, was behind Kina and failed to stop,
Deadman's Curve,
striking her in the rear. He was cited for fatlure to maintain an
assured clear distance ahead.
King's vehicle sus~ IIIOikl'lte dam~ and was driven from
the scene.:Gilley's vehicle sustained heavy damage and was driven
from the scene.

1990...

She told the Senate Clean Air
and Nuclear Regulation Subcommittee that her state won a U.S.
Supreme Court case challenging
Oklahoma's effort to give its coal a
preference over out-of-stare coal.
But Wyoming's court victory
"has not deterred other states from
interfering with the nadonal coal
market,'.' she testified.
David Phelps, a state representative from Illinois , defended his
state's law.
" Nearly all or IUinois' coal is
high-sulrur," Phelps told the senaContinued on Page 3

Duhl addresses Rotarians
Milce Duhl, ccnservalionist with
the Soil Conservation Service of
the United States Department of
Agriculture told the MiddleponPomeroy Rotarians at their Monday
night mtlllting that his office and
the office of the Meigs County Soil
and Water Conservation District
will assist any landowner in the
county with any of their conservation problems.
The Soil Conservation Service
is in Meigs County at the invitation
of the Meigs County Soil and
Water Conservation District
Both the service and the district
became available to Meigs County
residents in 1943 when Meigs
became the II th district in the state
to organize. Duhl pointed out that
the agency is primarily a service
agency.
Both SCS and the Soil and
Water Conservation District work
closely with the technical aspects
of the Sisler agency, the Asricultural Stabilization and Conservation
Services. 'they also cooperate with
the Co-operative Extension Service, the Ohio Department or Natural Resources and the OITJCC of the
Soil and Water Conservation Districts.
There are many other )J'Ograms
which ~d on the SCS for tech·
nical asststance. Including Rural
Areas Mining Reclamation Program and Rural.Community Development
Duhl also show the Rotarians

slides of many practices with
which they assist in the development. Included in the slides were
spring development. grass waterways •. animal waste units, water
diverston structures. rotations that
reduce soil erosion, minimum
tillage, landfill reclamation and
others.
Recently, Duhl and the district
were involved with an in-service
day ror twenty -five teachers at
Forlced Run on non-point pollution.
No one is COJDj!CUed to use the ser.
vices of lhe Soil and Water Conservation District, but assistance is
available on request subject to time
limitation.
.

�..
Friday, October 22, 1993

.

Commentary
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Stleet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 11IE INTERESTS OF THE MElOS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words. All letters an: subject to editing and musl be signed witb name,

address and t&lt;lepbone number. No unsigned letters will be publisbed. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues 1 not personalities.

Deadline for publication
·of election letters Oct. 27
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 2 general
election. However, in the interest of fairness, 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. All letters are
subject to editing and and mus1 be signed with name, address and telephone number. Telephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned
letters will be published. Leucrs should be in good taste.

WASHINGTON - Tho letters
look like any other constituent mail
that streams into Rep. Ron
Wyden' s, D-Ore., .offiCt each day.
Only in these letters, the prepared
text is crossed out and replaced
with a more personalized message:
"This junk mail came to me l'rom
these drug companies. Prett;· phony
and self-serving. You should be
aware of the source if you receive
any."
Sometimes the most sophisticated lobbying efforts end with the
most WISOphisticatcd results.
This time, the drug companies
stirred up a mini-rebellion among
Wyden's constituents. The "junk
mail" bV:Jden was warned about
was ac ly pan of a growing phenomenon in influence-peddling:
using direct mail 10 generate grass·
roots pressure on a single issue.
The grass-roots approach has
been popular since the 1980s when
lobbyists discovered that many
members of Congress care far more
about what their constituents think
than the opinions of high-paid lob-

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum: nlst ror Tbe Associated Press, has reported on Washington and
: natlooal polidcs for more than 30 years.

Berry's

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime COnditions ··• "' ··"

byists. But in this case, "grass
roots" meant ghostwritten.
Wyden became a target owing
to his influence on the prescription

By Jack Anderson
and

Michael Binstein
drug issue. In recent years, drug
companies have been deluged with
criucism for hiking prices and
malcing record profits in a time of
exploding health-care costs. Wyden
has been one of the phannaceutical
industry's chief provocateurs.
Thus Wyden began receiving
letters signed by constituents,
which were actually authored by
pharmaceutical interests. The letters were sent to constituents,
already addressed to Wyden, with
their names at the botiOm: All they
needed was a signauue and a post·
mark, and Wyden would rece1ve a
letter asking him to go easy on the
pharmaceutical industry.

on drug makers

To ihrow members of Congress
off the scent, each of the letters
were made 10 look a little diffmnt
Whet! members get a form letter,
it's not taken as seriously as a personal letter. So the anonymous·
authors varied the exact .wording,
the letter font, and even the color of
the.f!lper, Nobody was fooled.
I resent the fact that the pharmaceutical lobby thinks we are this
stupid ... of course these folks need
regulating. They have proved most
unable to regulate themselves,"
one constituent wrote at the bouom
of his letter. Drawn across the text
of the letter was a large circle with
a slash through it, along with the
word ''Not'~ in capital letters.
"Unless American drug companies can curb their immense profits
and, at least, provide some
accountability on research, I feel
our only recourse is for government control," wrote anot)ler.
"This, in my opinion, is the biggest
piece of (profanitr,) I bave ever
been asked 10 hack, ' wrote a third.
Wyden received dozens of similar
responses.

Congress won't
let the draft die
By WALTER R, MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- Now it turns out that Uncle Sam might want you
afrer all. Not that anybody is going 10 be drafted - that ended 20 years
ago. But just in case, Congress is keeping what's left of the Select've Ser·
vice System.
'For the generations of men whose lives wm influenced and altered by
the draft, that's no surprise. Selective Service was 10o pervasive and persistent to be eaSily erased, even now, when only the vestiges remain.
Reversing an earlier decision to scrap the whole thing, the House has
approved a $25 miUion appropriation for Selective Service operations for
another year, 10 keep collecting names and data on young men as they
tum 18.
There are about 14 million names on the lists of 18- 10 25-year-olds a milital}' insurance policy according 10 advocates of the system, an
anachrontsm 10 its opponents.
"This is a dinosaur in the post-Soviet world," Sen. BiU Bradley, DNJ., had said in a losing cffon to block the appropriation in the Senate.
The House, which voted four months ago 10 cut the funds and so end
Selective Servic:e, registration for the draft -that doesn:t_elist, turn~
-aronnd Tuesday tai4 ~to teep It PI·, ,
·
'
""'
One day, said Rep. G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery, D-Miss., "we may
again neecj the draft and need it quickly." With re~1stration, his side said,
the draft could be cranked up again .in 13 days; w1thout, it would take up
to a year.
The opposition case: Pentagon projections show no need for a draft
unless Russia somehow reclaims superpower military might; there's no
place io train a flood of inducrees; and besides, the volunteer anny has
handled every crisis for 20 years. including the Persian Gulf war buildup
of 500,000 troops.
What's more, military leaders wouldn't want the draft back. The vol·
unleer military works better.
But they do want the Selective Service process continued. Rep. Gerald
.Solomon of New York, Republican sponsor of the push 10 keep it going,
said it produces a roster of prospects for military recruiters.
"Many times the only place we can make these names available to
· recruiters is l'rom Selective Service lists," he said
It's a system of mail-in registration at age 18; Selec~ve Service says 97
percent of young Americans comply. That's been the process since 1980,
when registration was revived afrer a five-year lapse. President Caner ~ot
it renewed following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, in part as a Signal of U.S. will.
The modern draft began in 1940 and continued until 1973, with one
year out after World War II, before Cold War pressures brought hack the
draft. It has come under fll'C before - . from the congressional struggle
that led 10 renewal by the margin of a single vote in the House in 1941 to
the draft card burnings of the Vietnam War era.
It was the shared experience of American men coming of age through
all those years; drafted or not they were eligible, classified, sometimes
ilefened, always subjecliO the summons of Selective Service.
· The name didn't change when the system did, in 1970, 10 a lottery that
eliminated the selectivity of draft deferments.
President Clinton had to cope with campaign criticism for avoiding the
• Vietnam draft before a high lottery number spared him anyhow.
. It still comes up; in lhe fust House debate, Republican Solomon said it
. - would be "awkward and embarrassin~" for Clin10n 10 effectively pardon
- people who have violated the registrallon law by signing a repeal.
That long reach notwithstanding, it hasn't been an issue lately. Mont·
gomery said there's been no clamor among the people who have 10 register to do away with it ·
. · "It seems that the House of Representatives is really the only group
: that wants 10 eliminate the Selective Service System," he said in urging 11
· notto.
.
: But that calm wouldn't hold if it were dropped and had 10 be revived,
· Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., said when the Senate debated it. "Starting over
: bn Selective Service is n01 possible politically," he said. Try it, he said,
: ~ there would be protests all over the country.

IMansfield Iss• I•

"I think the message here is that
some of these slick and fancy campaigns, particularly on the health·
care issue, are starting to backfire," Wvden lOki our associate Jan
Moller. But, he added, "I haven't
found many canlpaigns that have
backfired like this.''
Drug companies have made no
secret of their stand in the healthcare debate. Since Bill Clinton
announced Jhe fo,mation of his
health-care task force last winter,
relations between the administra·
lion and the phannai:eutical indus·
try have ranged l'rom open warfare
to an uneasy detente.
When the administration came
out fuin~ last spring, drug companies w•liatHI with a series of large
newspaper ads al)d editorials
defending their pricing policies and
stressing their record of developing
new drugs. It's not that the drug
companies hate the entire Clinton
plan: They like th\1 fact that prescription drugs arc covered under
Clinton's "swidard benefits rutolr.
age." It's the "price conuol'rr;_
uue that makes them fume'.
Fearing trouble early this year,
some drug companies even brol&lt;e
off l'rom the industry's chief lobbying ann, the Phannaceutical ManufacturerS Association, and fanned
their own coalition to fi~ht the
expected price controls. W1th a Sl
million budget, RX Partners
employs some of the heaviest hit·
ters in the Washington influence
ame, including former President
immy Carter's press sec~etary,
Jody Powell.
That sliU leaves unanswered the
question of who's been sending
mail to Wyden's office. An unscientifiC survey of several drug com·
panics and lobbyists found no one
eager to take responsibility. "I am
absolutely certain that it's not our
work," a PMA spokesman told us.
The fust person we reached at
RX
wasn't sure, but added
that "everyone involved in the pre·
scription drug industry is involved
in something· like this .... Part of ·
our program is or course working
on the grass roots." Shor1ly thereafter, another representative from
RX Panners called 10 assure us that
his group had absolutely nothing'IO
do with any direct mail form let-

• lcolumbusf62"

W. VA .

-~

------Weather
South-Central Obio
Tonight: Clear with scattered
frost possible. Lows in the mid30s. Calm winds.
SBIW'day: Sunny. Highs near 65.
Extended forecast:
It will he fair Sunday and Mon- -

.

Not bad for a Wellesley girl. In
a few years, with luck, she may
even stumble onto God. For the
moment, however, good liberal that
she is, her solution is straightforwardly political: "We need· a new
politics of meaning."
Note that she doea not meet Professor Carter's objection, though
she may satisfy Professor West.
Her pmpose is not 10 take reli$ion
seriously, or even 10 ~ reli&amp;ioiiS
insights to bear on pohtics. she
simply wants 10 hijack a ~on of
the moral content of religion and
incorporate it in a "new" politics.
Thus she joins the long soccession
of political leaders from MarX tp
Mao, who ever since the Enlighten-

Snyder...

ment have been offering their own
versions of the truth as substitutes
for the outdated prescriptions of
reli ·
effort wiU fail, of course, as
all of its many predecessors have
failed. But it IS Wl)rth keetiinJI. an
eye at, because something flke It is
quite likely to be the libe.r als'
answer 10 the fundamental questions that are being raised in the
great ongoing struggle for Ameri·
ca' s soul that is called •' the cultural

!fi:"

war."
Can the liberals pull it off, even

temporarily? Can they infuse their
notoriously eclectic politics with a
modicum of 11enuine moral significance while (for example) continuing to insist that a crucifix
immmed in a glass of urine is not
only an but entitled to a federal
subsidy? It seems unlikely. Liberalism is ~tially just the American
version of the great secuhir tide that
in the past two centuries has flooded the globe; Like any flood, it can
only recede.
William Rusber Ia 1 syndicated writer ror Newspaper Enterprist Assoc:latioll.

·Open door session
set Wednesday

Public good vs. private rights
Fred Garhani owns 1,136 acres
of land 30 miles east of San Diego.
He wanted to build ramily homes
on his ranch but, predictably, he
faced resistance from environmc;ntal types who presumed to teD him
what he could and could not do
with his P~Y.
.
.Garbani 1s one of a num~ of
pnva~ l~down~ whose holdi~gs
fall Within the arbitrary boWidaries
of the Clevelaod National Forest.
The tree-buggers oppose develoP."
ment within the forest's half-mtllion acres. Pri vatc property be
damned.. _
..
As m1ght be expected, .the env1ronmental brigade haS ~isted the
aid of the go~etnment 10 ab~gate
the property nshts of Garbam and
other land~!'"~· The_most b~
affront on satd ngbts 1s a propo$iuon on the local ballot next month
that will make it unil\wfulto bqild
more th8J! o~e dweUing on 40 acres
of land )Yithin the _forest area. . .
That s the equtvalent of forbtd·
ding construction of !f~Ore lhah one

minded folks when they bend to
overzealousness.
Like when New York State's
Department of Environmental Con-

pay you for iL
This is an eminently reasonable
compromise when the public good
clashes with private property
ripts. Indeed, if the environmental
inrerests of San Diego or California
I:'
or the United States are best served
by curbin&amp; future developinent in
servation threatened to slap a Cleveland National F~ tben the
S 10,000 fine on a VFW post in private landowners simply should
Broad Channel for building a be boushtout by the sovernment
wheelchair access ranlp for disSend Fred Garblni a check and
abled vererans that supposedly vio- no one getS hurt ·
latcd wetlands regulations.
But the government wants 10
Or when a Wisconsin man was have it both ways. It wants 10 stop
taken to task by government ~evelopmenl on private lands, but
authorities for building a birdhouse it doesn't waiit to compensate
in his l'tQnt lawn. He WflJ said to propeny owners. The rationale is
have violated a state environmental that, ~ the property remains 'in
law that banned any new suuctures private fiitids (even though·ao~­
within si~ttof the JlCQICCted Lower ment regulation destroys its ~oe),
WiscSuconshmabWsurdi~saym·• the name of it is·not a "taking" per se. Thele·
. ""
fore government doem 't have 10
the en~lronment are rather com- pay '
·
monplace. .B~tt 'ltcY do not o~cnd
The u.s~ Supreme Col!J1·does
• nearly as much as t)te conspncy not see it qulte that way, however.
be!Weefl environmen~ ~and In a hiiiOric •tuling last year the
government reau]ators to ~pie ju~ declared that ploperty ~wn-

Jose•nh P,er.kinS

ers arc entitled to compensation
when government regulations
deprive them of all economicaU y
viable usc of their land.
The landmark case mvol ved a
South Carolina man, David Lucas;
who purchased two beachfront lots,
only 10 have the State subsequendr.
ban coasllit)c development By a&amp;:
3' nl$rity, the high Court said that
South Carolina's law amounted 10
a "regula10ry '*~( the lega1
equivalent of physi · y seizing or
occupying land. l,ucas was owed
compensation.
The majority opinion, drafted by
Justice Antonin Scalia, was unambiguous: '·~ the owner of real'
pro~ny has bee" called upon to
sacrifice all economically ·beneficial uses in the name of the public
goo~,. be must be paid ~or hiS:

loss.

SINGLE COPY
Pill Cit

Dally.......... ~ .................

.

!~at pnvate pr~~ty may not. be

ta1cen for public usc without Juat
compen~n," In other wordS, if
the 11oyemme~t, dec,ldes that '!'e
· public mtcrest 11 aerWd by depivmg you·of full use ~your property, the government ts supposed 10

N . . . . . . .. .. .

_ l S Ceata

Subla'lbetl IIOt delhi q to pay the cmta 1111)'
rtmit il ldYIIICCI di'ect to 1be Dlily St!llliAel
oa alhtM. ei1 or ll moelh bllil. Credl.t wW be

JOHpk Perkbu ~ a columnist
for Tbe San'. Dieao Unlon·Trlbune.
·'

c• !Ji.veacorrloroodlweelt.

:' ' No 1Ub1Crlptlo11 by mail Pormitted Ia .-eu
Whwehomecmilrllt'lk:e iaavalllble.

·~, 1

~:~~~!iS:~ ~~;::=en::~;~: Today in -history

privately owned la~ds wtthin the
forest.
One can empathize with the
desire of environmental types 10
preserve the integrity of a forest
here, a wetland there. But they lose
a lot of support from reasonable-

~:._.. .,.... '...__
8'l· ,....~
.
. .
•- .....,. 11,_ ~ ....
. Todayts Fnday, Oct.~ the!29Sth day 111993. There are 70 days left
m the year. .
.
.
, . . ,
In 1746, PrinceiOn Unlvemty in New Jmey ~tved Its charter •
In 1797, French ~loonist Altclre-Jac!lue. Garnerin made the rust
parachute delcent, Iandin&amp; aafely from a height Qf about3,000 feet

Phillip Scarberry Invites ihe public.

Open sqtiare dance
Belles and Beaus Wesrem Style
Square Dance Club will sponsor an
open dance at the Meigs Senior
Center on Saturday, Oct 30 l'rom 8
to 11 p.m. Caller will )e Bill
Baumgarner. All western style
Continued from Page 1
square
dancers are cordially invitman Paul Gerard introduced former ed.
Congressman Clarence Miller.
"If you look in a Meigs County
· dictionary and look Wider 'friend', Senior club to meet
The Harrisonville Senior Citiyou'll find a picture of Clarence
zens
Club will hold its regular
. MiUer," Gerard remarked, opening
on Tu~sday at 7 p.m. at
meeting
. a standing reception for the long· town house.
All members are
time congressman whose appear- encouraged 10 attend.
Snacks wiU
ance fueled speculation that he be served.
would once again ~lc a congressional seat.
musk nlgbt
"I came to say 'thank you' for Country
Lottridge Community Center
your suppou and to say we must will host country music night on
have this district back in Republi- Saturday l'rom 7 p.m. 10 midnighl
can hands," MiUer expressed.
All bands arc welcome. RefreshI'm concer~ed " that our tax ments win be available.
money wow't-go to pay ·off tbe
deficit but will be used 10 add more Meigs EMS squads
progrnms, adding to more debt, he
respond to seven calls
added.
"We don't need tax and spend,
Units of the Meigs (:ounty
we need to reduce spending."
Earlier, Gerard introduced local Emergency Medical Services
elected ,pfficials in auendance responded to seven calls for assis.
includin'g Common Pleas Court tance Thursday.
Units
responding
were:
8:23
Judge Fred W. Crow III (introa.m.
Tuppers
Plains
squad
and
fue
duced as Will Craw's dad), Clerk
of Couns Larry Spencer, Recorder department and Syracu'se and
Emmogene Hamilton, Treasurer Pomeroy squads 10 State Route 7
Howard Frank, Auditor Nancy for a motor vehicle accident. TransCampbell, Engineer Bob Eason, ported ,were Todd Jacks, Lena
Commission President Robert Knotts, Ben Putnam and Annie
Hartenbach, Commissioner Fred King, all 10 Camden-Clark MemoHoffman and former candidale for rial Hospital; 10:09 a.m. Middlestate repres-entative Frank Cre- port to Main Street for Walter
Green who was transported to
means.
Pleasant Valley Hospital; 11:20
a.m. Reedsville 10 State Route' 124
for Foster Nighday who was transporled 10 Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital; 1:52 p:m. Middleport 10
A representative from the office North Second Street for Dorothy
of Congressman Ted Strickland (D- Jenlcins who was transported to
Lucasville) will hold open door Veterans Memorial Hospital; 4:34
sessions in Meigs and Jackson p.m. Syracuse 10 Fourth Street for
Counties on Wednesday.
Ernest Triplett who was uansponed
Molly Varner, a Strickland dis- to VMH; 5:48. p.m. Racine and
trict representative, will be at the Syracuse Fire Departments for a
Rutland Civic Center on Main structure fire at Roy Marshall's
Street. Rutland, rrom 10:30 am. to property on Bashan Road, Racine
12:30 p.m. From 2to 4 p.m. Varner squad uansponed Roy Marshall 10
will be at the WellsiOn City Build· VMH; 7:13p.m. Pomeroy 10Meigs
ing Conference Room in WellsiOn. lnfUTDary for Herman Moore who
The pui}!Ose of open door ses- was uansponed 10 VMH.
sions is 10 allow 6th District constituents easy access to their con- Completes training
gressional office 10 air opinions or
Elaine Corsi of The. Peoples
discuss problems related 10 the fedBanking &amp;. Trust Company recent.cral government: __ -·
ly completed the tra·ining and
passed a state licensing e~am to
The Daily Sentinel
qualify 10 sell fixed rate· annuities.
(IJSpS 11.3-Ht)
Corsi, an employee at tile MiddlePubllahed every .Ct.eroOOD, Monday tbtou&amp;h
port offtee, completed the 40-hour
Friday, ill CowtSt.• Pomeroy, Obto by the
training
course covering regulaOhio Valle) P\lblilhiDJ Co~y/Multimedla
tic!ns,
licensing
and policies:
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 4S169. Ph. 992·2U6 .
SeooDd clul paltlp paid It PometOy, Ohio.
Tax-dcfemd fixed annuities are
interest-bearing supplemental savMembef: lbe AaliOd.tBI Prta. and the Ohio
ings programs and may be regarded
Newap.per Alloctatlou, Natioul Ad'flrllllq
RepreteDtllhe, Druham Newtpiplll' Sale~,
as an alternative 10 certificates of
733 Third At'enue, New York, New York
deposit which arc held for long
10017 .
ltrnts. They are not FDIC insured.
POSTMASTER:
Sead
"
'
dw&amp;"
tolbe
Corsi and . Peoples Bank
Daily Sc'lDilDd. Ill Court SL, Pometoy, Ohlo
employees
from other 'offices who
'-1769.
·
completed
the licensing program
SUBSCIII'110N RAlU
By c.m .. w Motor Rout•
were honored with a 'dinner at the
Ooo Wee.k ......................:........... ............... Jl .60
Point of View, Paltersb!lfg,
0. MODth............................................... J6.9S
o.o v............................................. .:_ ..$1120

Are liberals really discovering God?

ing."

Tbe Conquerors to perrorm
The Conquerors and other
singers will perform at the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church Saturday at 7 p.m. Rev,

·

Anderson and Mlcbael
Bi!llttll! are writer~ for United
Feature Syndlcate;lnt:

liberals have at last noticed the
dangerous implications of this
strategy. Professor Cornel West,
director of Afro-American studies
at Princeton, recently spolce out on
The ·New York Times op-ed r,age
against "capitalist materialism ' an objection that dates from Leo
Xlll's Rerum Novarum but is conspicuous only ·by its absence in
recent Democratic platfonns. And
Michael Lerner, the rabbi who edits
Tikkun, a magazine dedicated to
Jewish liberalism, recently declared
that "our economy rewards the
self-cenlered -and the selfish," and
called instead for "a newer
paradigm of caring and concern."
Lerner's remarks caught the
attention of Ms, Rodharn-CiiniOn,
who in April lOok time oul from
her labors on health care 10 lecture
14,000 lisreners at the University of
Texas on "what our real challenges

day. Highs Sunday will be- in the
lower 10 mid-60s. Lows will be 35
10 40. Highs Monday will be in lhe
mid-60s 10 aroWid 70. Lows will be
40 10 45. Chance of Showers Tuesday. Highs wiU be in the upper 50s
to mid-60s. Lows will be in the
upper 30s 10 mid-408.

--Meigs announcements--

Ja~k

William A. Rusher

I

and the mercury was expected to
rucllthe 90s in southwest ArizQna.
The high temperature for the
nation Thursday was 93 at Fort
Myers and Naples, in Florida.

Trustees to meet
The Meigs CoWity Council on
Aging, Bolrd of Trusttes will meet
Tuesday at 3 p.m. in the Meigs
multipurpose room at the Senior
Center. Judith Bradunan, din:ctor
of the Obio Department on Aging,
and Cindy Farson, director of the
Area Agency on Aging will auend.
Refreshments will be served.

Beat of the Bend...

ters.

happen to be." The Arkansas
Pastonaria detected in America
IOday "a sleeping sickness of the
soul,•• a ''sense that somehow economic growth and prosperity, polit~
ical democracy and freedom ue
not enough- that we lack at some
core level meaning in our lives and
meaning collectively.... What do
our lives in today's world mean? ...
We need a new politics of mean-

Congress ...

IND.

Partne"

abortion Republicans, in the hope
of lea vin~ the GOP with only a
rump "religious ri$ht"
. But there are s1gns that certain

Kcnbleky.
High clouds spread from the
West Coast into the nonhero and
·central Rockies. Thunderstorms
threatened pans of Florida today as
the remains of the Canadian cold
front forced ligh"ter tropical air
southward.
Temperatures ioday were fore cast in the 40s and 50s in the Great
Lakes and New England, the 60s
and 70s through the Plains, the
mid-Atlantic states, the Southeast
_!:on~uecl from Pace 1
ship passengers. Now, Kantor is and Texas. California temperatures
advocating a $2.50 increase with were forecast in the 70s and &amp;Os,
the expectation the remainder of
the lost revenue would he made up
by ~g reductiQIIS.
' That's the best option we have
been able 10 come up with," KanIOr said, noting that half the extra
$2.50 per trip would come from
by Bob Hoeflich
foreip1ers. He said the administra·
tic_m ts willing 10 listen 10 any substitutes.
, Rep. Thomas Ewing, R-111.,
Can I mention Christmas again
offered one suggestion, asking the even though we haven't had Hal·
House Agriculture Committee to loween yet?
·
wipe out $2.5 billion of recently
I need 10 do that now because
approved increases in food stamps plans must move forward for the
to make up the difference.
annual Rutland Emergency Medi"If President CliniOn continues cal Services' annual Christmas
10 insist on new taxes, NAFTA is bazaar which has been set for Satdead," Ewing said.
urday, Dec. 4, from 9 a.m . to 5
More than two dozen House p.m. at the Rutland Civic Cenrer.
Republicans, whose suppon is cruCraft people and others with
cialiO NAFrA's approval, protest- merchandise to sell must make
ed the travel fee in a letrer 10 Clin· reservations for tables and space
ton last week.
and they can do that by contacting
Elliott at 742-2233, Marcia
Squads make five runs Marcia
will give you all of the details, The
Units of the Meigs Coonty sooner, the heller, Besides crafts
Emergency Medical Services and other gift items, baked goods
"
responded to five calls for assis- will also be offered.
Marcia
thinks
this
is
about
the
tance Weduesday.
At 1:17 p.m. Tuppers Plains and seventh year that the Rutland group
Syracuse went to Arbaugh Addi- has held the bazaar.
tion for Clirford McCartney who
They said the South would rise
was transponed 10 St Joseph Hosagain,
And it did.
pital in Parkersburg, W. Va.; at
They didn't say, the Big Bend
2:45 p .m. the Middleport Fire
Department 10 Mill Street for a rll'C Minstrel Association would rise
in an automobile owned by again, But with a little bit of luck
Lawrence Shaulis; a: 10:24 p.m. and lots of work, it will.
For the fust time since 1989, the
the Middleport unit went 10 Custer
association
is planning a musical
Street for Mildred Millburn who
production
which
has been set for
was transporled to Veterans MemoSaturday,
Nov
.
27,
the Saturday
rial Hospital; at 10:40 p.m.
after
Thanksgiving,
at the Meigs
Pomeroy to Pomeroy Nursing and
Junior
High
School
Audi10rium
in
Rehabilitation Center for Belly
Middleport,
The
Saturday
after
Morrison who was transponed to
VMH; at 11:34 p.m. Tuppers Thanksgiving has become the uadi·
Plains and Reedsville squads went tiona! date for the organization' s
10 State Route 681 for Bill Hively musicals.
Jennifer Sheets, Pomeroy attar·
who was uansponed 10 VMH.
ney and a really outstanding
accompanist, will be playing for
Middleport Court news
rehearsals and the show.
Two were fined and 11 others Rehearsals for vocalists and other
forfeited bonds in this -week's acts will begin at the law offices of
coun of Middleport Mayor Dewey Poner, Little and Sheets Monday
evenin&amp;. se~eral othef instrqmenHof)Oll,
..
, .
Pineotw= N081 D. Bonecutter, talists will join Jennifer to make up
Jr., Pomeroy, $100 and costs, dis· the orchestra for show night.
Talented Paulette Harrison,
orderly manner, and $60 and costs,
open container; Jeffrey Scou who organized and trained the outStiffler, Letart, W. Va., $50 and standing Shady River Shuffiers and
has presented the group at numer·
costs, expired tags.
Forfeiting bonds were Donna J. ous locations over the years, will
be in charge of training the teen
Bradbury, Middleport, $60, run·
ning a stop sign; Martin L. dance lines, Besides the regular
Woodard, Pomeroy. $60, illegal participants you' ll be also be seetags; Douglas E. Warden, Racine,
$60, expired tags, and $54, speed·
ing; Charles S. Rife, Middlepor:,
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
$60, running a red light; Michele
"'" ., ' •. '
446 ·4524
B. Johnson, Pomeroy, $60, no valid
registration; Nancy K. Ohlinger,
Gallipolis, $50, speeding, and $60,
expired operator's license; Scott
Gheen, Middleport, $50, speeding; '
Paul L. Smith, Jr., Long Bottom,
$60 bond, running a red light; Tim
L. Brehm, Lancaster, $51, speed·
ing; Kenneth R. Koker, Belpre,
$50, speeding; and Wesley M.
Smith, Pomeroy, $460, physical
control of a motor vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol or
drugs, and $225 for carrying or
using a firearm while under the
THE 5000 SON
m .., ._,•• ,.. ,
influence of alcohol or drugs.

wind warning posted for puu of
northern New Hampshue and
Maine.
A bish pressure system behind
the· cold front was expected to
bring cold, clear skies across the
southern Plains into the Ohio Val·
ley . Freeze a4visories were in
effect for Indiana and northeasrem

•
ITole;dof63" I

f

Some of the nation's more per·
ceptive liberals are beginning to
suspect that they missed a bet in
ceding the whole religious aspect
of life 10 the conservatives. Indeed
they did; but can they now reverse ·
themselves and conrest that terrain
successfuUy?
In his recent book, "The Cui·
lure of Disbelier," Yale law professor Stephen Caner calls atten·
tion to the problem, noting that lib·
erals tend to treat "religious beliefs
as arbitrary and unimportant, a
trend supponed by a rhetoric that
implies there is something wrong
with religious devotion." The lib·
eral establishment, Carter com·
plains (though he is a liberal himself) treats reli~ion as "something
quiet, somethmg private, somethin~ trivial" - · rather akin to
"butlding model airplanes." He
even suggests that the Democratic
defeats in the 1980s were due in
::n~ part 10 "the relentlessly mate. · uc chamcter of their campaign
rhetoric.' •
This not only was true but continues to be true - witness the
Democratic eagerness to woo pro-

Frost expected in parts of Ohio tonight

Saturday, Oct. _23
MICH.

Letter campaign backfiring

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. Friday, October 22, 1993

.J

Molls...:.=

:16-.. . . . . . . . . . . . ..c-..,
. . .... . ..
IMW.M....

11 w-...............................................nt.••

.$03.16
S l -....... ...... ....................................$10.76

·

.'

OobUt Mttw

,

13 w.tl"'"'' '""' ''"'" '''''''''" "'" '" "'''"'' .$23.40

aw-.........................................145.!0
52We.................,.................;........JeeAO

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICI;
204 Condor Sl

Pomeloy, OH. ·

.FALl AND WINTER
HoUR$
Tuea ·Fri. 9:00-5:00
Sal. 8:00-12:00
. . Cloaed Mond.y

·a.....
•• ,.
~

IHYIM

Wyoming ...
Continued l'rom Page 1
IOfl\. ''The entire market for Illinois
coal is at riSk."
Illinois' statute requiring instal·
lation of sulfur-removing "scrubbers" applied only 10 two utilities
that buy one quarter of the coal
mined in the state, Phelps said.
.
"We were trying to protect 25
percent or the market within the
state," he said.
But Guthrie argued that it is
unconstitutional for states 10 shield
even a jJortion of their local market
and unfair for her stare, which produces cleaner-burning low-sulfur
coal, to be denied a chance 10 compete for "a tremendous potential
sale."

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL ,
Wednesday admissions: Gerald
Reuter, Middleport
Wednesday discharges: none.
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions: Ernest
Tripplett, Syracuse and Herman
Moore, Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges: Addie
Cummins, Racine and Stanley
Boist, Long Bottom.
'
,.
.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Oct. ll discharges - Rusty Laudermill, ·Artie Rainey 1 Melissa
Burgess, Donald Hardesty, Paula
Garrett, Marie Smith, Mrs. David
DarSt and son, Betty Kobel, Zeldon
West, Nathan Moore, Raymond
Nibert, Breanna Shephard and
Melena Carpenter.
Oct. l l births • Mr. and Mrs.
David Frame, son of Wellington;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mullens, son
of Gallipolis; and Mr. and Mrs.
Ty•one Somerville, daughter of
Point Pleasant.
'

Stocks
Am Ele Power..........................39
Ashland Oil... ..................... 34 7/8
AT&amp;T ................................ 58 3/4
Bank One ......... .................4o 1/4
Bob Evans ................................ l9
Charming Shop .................. l3 5/8
Champion Ind... ................. 14 3/8
City Holding ...................... 30 1/2
Federal Mogul .........................26
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 45 3/8
Lands End ................ ....... .........42
Limited Inc............ ............ 23 1/8
Multimedia Inc ..................37 1/4
Point Bancorp ............. ....... .. .... 14
Rax Restaurant... .....................06
Reliance Eleclric ...................... l7
Robbins&amp;Myers ......... ............. 19
Shoney's Inc ...................... 22 3/4
Star Bank ................................. 36
Wendy lnt'l. ........................... .. l6
Wonhington Ind ......................28
Stock reports are tbe 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
of Gallipolis.

ing some new talent in the show
which will be titled, Meigs County
Talent Showcase.
Sponsoring the show are th e
Middleport Ans Council and the
Meigs Division of the American
Hearl Association , Mary Wise ,
president, will be handling the
details involved for tbe ans council, and Sandy lannarelli , president
of the bean group, will be in charge
of the details for that organization.
Do mark Nov. 27 on your calendar, I hope 10 see you there, The
auditorium seats only 500 which is
less than the seating capacity of
other audi10riums used for past pre·
sentations, Advance tickets will be
offered later so you can pick them
up at a reduced price 10 ensure that
you will have a seat on show night,
David Gaul, new principal of the
Meigs Junior High. has been most
cooperative with the two organizations in initial plans for staging the
show.
By the way, the Big Bend Minstrel Association is 40 years old
this year.
Harold Norton was displaying
an inreresting collector's item the
otherday.
.
It is a souvenir paper napkin
inscribe~ "Meigs County Fair,
Rock Spnngs, Sept II, 12 and 13,
1907", The napkin is in mini condition and has been pres erved
through all these years by Harold's
mother, Della Norton of Pomeroy.
Hamid, tentatively plans to have
it laminated, and on display at the
Meigs County Mu seum in
Pomeroy .
Friends are planning a card
for Leona Myers who willl:fe
observing her 92nd birthday on
October 25, Cards will reach her at
39527 Silver Ridg e Road
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
'

$boW

I'm learnin', I'm beginning to
realize that I can ' t control the
weather OR the price of gasoline.
Do keep smiling.

7

••

0

•

·~ '

.,

110 .. .

':l0,9;JO or.n:t 1M' MT/IUII . ,:lD, l:ZO Ull

IAIIGidN ManNUS SAT . • SUN .
IMGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY
GirT CERTIPICATIS lVAILABLal

COIIllfG 5001111 "rA'r'-1. IIISTl NC"T" l
Tll'l BU1t'ftllll 'S

"ftl IIIG..,....l l!laroflr.: CKIU Snv.&amp;"

COLONY THEATRE
FlU. ntRU THURS.
HULK HOGAN 18

MR. NANNYPG
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION S1.50
ALSO SHOWING AT 1:15

FRI., SAT. l SUN.
PATRICK SWAYli'. lN

FA,THER HOOD PG13
ONE EVENING SHOW 1:15
ADMISSION $1.50

CONSTRIJCTIO
DISCOIJNT

446-01123

~~..~!.~~~. hrjesus?
overwhelming you? Many
people do.

•

The Good news is: THERE IS
HOPE ... His name Is JESUS, and
He can help you overcome the
problems you're facing and bring
peace and happiness back into
your life.

Let Chudf Wingett
ShoW You How 7lJ Save rhousands
In January, ·Februart and March
Purchase Your New Home Now. Take Delivery of Your
New Home Between January 1st and March 31st, 1994
and Receive Your Special Winter Construction Discount.

Ch1ck WlngeH, Builder
Comer of Rt. 50 an!~. Ct!J:OI Ln. •,~ Ohio

If you've lried everylhing, and have
found.no answer, we simply ask:
"ISN'T IT TIME FOR JESUS?"
lbe Ass 11tb&amp;Bs t¥'God

••• • -

' Coll592-4119, 592-3749 or 691-Mo.i .
\

Lt btrty Aaollllbt y of God
Gregory A. Johnoon, Pootor
Dudding L.-..JP .0. loa 467
M11on, Wilt Vlrgtnlo 25260
!k.nday Sorvlce • 11:00•

l

Dnlhllt"Bullder
•H,... Sold Und.,. FmHA Do Not Quoli,&amp;

�•

Sports

'

The Daily ·Sentinel

.'

Division ll volleyball
sectional Saturday
The local Division II volleyball
sectional tournament will host live
teams and be held Saturdar at the
University of Rio Grande s Lyne
Center.
Meigs and Fairland will play at
3 p.m . The winner of that match
will face Gallia Academy at 4:30
p.m. Jackson and River Va!Jey will
decide the lower-bracket championship at 6 p.m.
All times are approximate.
For more information, call tournament manager Robin Lane weekdays at 446-3213.

--Sports briefs:-Basketbali
TRENTON, NJ. (AP)- For.
ward Derrick Coleman will break
off contract negotiations with the
New Jersey Nets immediately and
concenb'ate on guiding the team to
a winning season.
·

Borden' throwing error.
Doubles by Danen Daulton and

Kevin Stocker in the second

accounted for the only other run off

Guzman, who dropped to 5-1 lifetime in the postseason. Guzman
gave up five hits, four walks and
struck out six in seven innings.
Manag11r Cito Gaston could
have walked Stocker, in a 1-for-13
slump, to pitch to Schilling, but ·
was hoping the pitcher would lead
off the next inrung if Guzman got
the rookie.
"They have the same type of
players we. have," Gaston said.
"'They've done it all year and we
have, too."
The Blue Jays had everything in
place' for a victory celebration, but
Schilling just won't let them do it
at Veterans Stadium. He had to
escape a big jam in the eighth,
though.
Borders led off with a single and
rookie Willie Canate pinch tan.
Rob Butler, batting for Guzman,
then singled to send Onate to third
with Rickey Henderson, Devon
White and Roberto Alomar sched·
uied to baL
"I was running out of ~as in:the
seventh inning," Schilling said.
"But it was my game and no one
was warming up. That pumped me

up."

mr,

In the key play of the inning,
Henderson hit a grounder back to
the mound that should haYe put
runners on second and· third with
one out. But Canate made a big
blunder and broke for home.
Schilling picked the ball up and
easily ~ot him 81 th.e plate.
White then struck out and Alemar hit a routine grounder to Sj!Cond. Schilling retired the Side in
ordei to.tinlsh the Ba!ne.

Scoreboard
- * Football.• Su1Ub&amp;?.; U1 p.m.
Atlanla It New

(Opii&lt;_,_ _
,,30

Philadelphia (Mulholland 1-0) It
Toroato(~wll'l

Quu&amp;erbltb
Plapr
AI&amp;.C•· Yell. TDinL
Mon!an•.K.C ..... IOS 63 111 6 I
l!lium, NYL....167 101 1422 9 4
Muioo, Mio ........ l50 91 1211 I 3
10'1
IZS 1460 S 3
El- 1y "-7

O'Donncii,Pi11. .. 149 114 1002

6

2

10

Bmtan. .............. 2 2 3

7

2423
9 T/23
7 33 33
6 25 33

Bu!fllo.............. I 6 0

2 23 33
I

By STEVE WILSTEIN
PHn..ADBLPHIA.(AP) - They
laugh at pressute and everything
else. They ilon ~t.'know the meaning.
Of CBP,itulation .Or Jot .of Other
fancy words. they make baseball
simple, ihe way it was when they
were kids.
Predictab_ility is not the
Philadel~ Phillies' forte, exc,ept
perhaps m producing the unexpected.
.
So Lenny Dykstra takes Curt
Schilling aside Thursday b!lfore
. Game 5 of the World Series and
they joke a .bit, loosen up, talk
about having fun out • · .
T~cy do not ansuisb over the
15-14Ioss ·in Game4. They·do not
dwell on ·the, fact .thilt .Toronto.
needs. on.ly ·~ne victory
wjn a
second stratl!ht champtonship.
They do not discuss the pcssibiJity
that this may be their last game of
the
.
.

much ofiL It'sjust a game."
And that's exactly the ailitude
-Schilling takes out to the mound,
where he blanks the Blue Jays 2-0,
·going the distance and holding
them to five hits the night after
they had 18.
'
"Curt was nothing shon of bril·
liant," Dykstra says after he cr~­
ates the first run without even a hit
and the Phillies cut the Blue Jays'
lead to three games to IWO.
Schilling makes it look easy at
frrst, then he gets by on guts and
guile, pi!Ching even afler the zip on
liis fastball is gone in the middJe of
die s()ye~tl\.
.
".Any time Dutch (catcher Darren Daulton) comes out and says to
'We might have to use some
m:,~rs for the fmal couple outs,' I
lr
my . stuff,"
my velocity,
eighth when
· ~r.~
on· every
got three straight outs
pitch as
that inning after giving up a pair of
singles.
"If I had to point to one inning
in my career that I gave everything
that was inside me to ~ive, that was
the inning: I had·nothing left, but I
kept _going somehow. Darr11n
walked me through that inning.''
Daqlton has to because the

bullpen is spent after !)Je Game 4
pounding. M11nager Jim E'regosi
would be mauled by fans if he calls
in Mitch "Wild Thing" Williams
again. Fregosi doesn't even consider it
"We.had to 'et nine innings
from our starter,' John Kruk says.
"We didn't have anyone else. We
had our Game 6 pitcher (Terry
MulhoUand) warming up in the
eighth. If they had to use him, then
I guess I'd have pitched Game 6.''
Maybe he would on this team.
A C.lliZY reversal of the Game 4
madness? Perhaps. Everyone on
both teams shrugs and says,
"That's baseball." This is the only
major spM where the most important player, the pitcher, changes
from game to game. Cooibine that
with a shift in the weather and it's
not so surprising that the two
games a day apart P!'OIIl!ce scores
as diffeent as footba!J and soccer.
, ADd ~ - into the lliix the mernature ofthe' Phillies ani! the
unexpected is virtua!Jy j!uaranteed.
"It's pretty routme around
here," Daulton says. "We do this
aU the time. It's not by design."
Dykstra runs his fmgers through
his shon, curly hair, trying to figure
it OUt himself.
"With this team, you can't r,edict what's going to happen,' he
says. "We proved that last night.

curui!

Bueball
A........ lAo. .

19

2I

lhrtfont............ 3 S 0

Dollu. ...............

4 2 2

Wlnnlpes .......... 3 3 I
llclroft .............. 3 5 o
au.., ............. 2 4 2

s s

P1dfk: Dh111on
I 2

9

LooAnplol...... 5
C11pry .: ........... 5
Vancwver ........ S
Anlboim . ......... 2
Edmonc.m ...••...• 2
s.. J............... o

4

Rulltr1
Ydl:. Ayt.LGTD
4.5 3S 2
430 3.5 20 2
416 4.7 25 2
411
4.1 24 2

m

KANSAS CITY ROYALS: N1mod
Johii ldizoroc:lt mini&amp;'" '!!: 1he RoOt!on!
Royllo oflhe MidW..11AiDo anHIIko
Jinchclo manaa• oldie Wlainpan Blue'

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•

By ALAN ROBINSON
. Pfi.TS~URGH (AP) -. For the
ftrSt ume m years, the Pittsburg.h
Steelers have a quart.erbaclt: iln thetr
roster who's won at Cleveland Sta:dium.
There's just one catch. Mike
Tomczak, now Neil O'Donnell's
bac~up, won t~re !ast season but m a Browns uruform. He beat
'the Steelers 17-9.
Of course, it would have been
one of those inexplicahle anomalies
had he .not beaten '!'e S_teelers in
the stadium they can t wmt to hate.
Need,proot'l
.
Heres a look 81 all of the Pittsburgh Steelers' victories in CleveIanci since 1982:
17-7,,1989.
.
Here s a IqQk It all of the ·Steel- ..
cis' IOSSC!S in Cleveland since 1982:
10-9, 1982.
30..17, 1983.
20..10, 1984.
17-7,1985.
37-31 (OT), 1986.
34-10, 1987.
27-7,1988.
13-3, 1990.
17-14, 1991.
17-9, 1992.
The Browns once battled the
infamous Three Rivers Jinx that
· saw them lose their (trSt 16 games
in Three Rivers Stadium until a

Sentinel C011 espondeat
Matt Williams scored three
touchdowns and Justin Seymour
added two more as the Meigs
~ighth-grade football team rolled
over Wellston 36·6 in action
Thursday evening at Bob Roberts
Field .in Pomeroy.
After a scoreless first period,
Williams scaed from 11 yards out
with 7:15 left in the half. He added
the extra points t&lt;i give Meigs a 8-0
lead.
·
With 33 seconds to go in the
first half Williams scored from a
yard out to give the Little Marauders a 14.QJead at the half.
After a WeUston touchdown cut
the Marauder lead to 14-6 early in
the third period, Marauder quarterback Brad Davenport hooked up
. with Seymour on a 25-yard touch.down pass. Williams added the
extra points and with· 4:59 left in
the third period. Meigs held a 22-6
advantage.
·
' Williams struck again with 2:32
left in the third period when he
fielded a punt and raced down the
right sidelines 42 yards for the
1ouchdown to make it a 28-6
Marauder lead.
Meigs closed out the scoring
with S:IS left in the contest when
'Seymour scooped up a Golden
Rocket fumble and raced 31 yards
·for the touchdown. Davenport
hooked up with AJ. Vaughan for
the extra points and give Meigs a
36-6win.
· Williams picked up 120 yards in
19 carries to lead Meigs. Other
Marauder runners were Chad Hanto~t~u. Adam Thomas (6-23)
(2·6). Davenpon
;omple£cd four of 10 in the air for
Seymour caught two for
•a¥ }'altghan IWO fer 17.
Mc:igs ·recovered two Rocket ·

II

brcakthroush 27-24 victory in
1986. Their specinl teams. coach
that season was a _guy named Bill
Cowher. ·
Cowher, of course, now is the
Steelers' coach. And he'd like to
do something abottt a stretch of
losses in Cleveland- 10 in the
l~st 11 years - that's become as
d1smal and dreary to the Steelers ...
as, well, an October afternoon in
Cleveland. Or Cleveland Stadium
itself.
."You walk in there and get a
nail to hang your clothes up on, and
it's so crow~ you're eager to $Cl
out on the fteld," Cowher satd.
"And there's 80,000 people out
there, most of them hoping you'D
lose."
..
.
.
The Steelers usuAlly do. Even
during·the Super Bowl 1970s, a trip.
to ~ev~ didlt't Ill~. !Ill automauc VIctory. They lOSt m Cleveland in 1970, 1971, 1972,1973 and
1976, the Iauer three years as. they
won atleastlO games each season.
Good Steelers teams have lost in
Cleveland, bad Steelers teams have
lost in Cleveland, and it's rarely
mattered if the Browns were bad or
good.
"It's a tough place to play. They
have a very good home record up
there ... and my record there is 0I," Cowher said Tuesday. "I don't

~

off a Wellston pass
It 15 yar!la. Tbo

Mlin~ ;~=·liiliilild Wellston
will close out the

- ·-

OUT OF MY WAY- Chicago's Jocelym
LemleWI (center) gets past Quebec defenseman
Steven Finn (29) and to the pock dnrin!l tbe sec-

Three

By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
Call NFL Week 7 a week for
stars:
-Shining stars: Rod Woodson,
Michael Irvin, Barry Sanders, Neil
Smith.
-Emerging stars: Eric Swann.
-Unsung stars: Mel Gray.
-Unknown stars: Lewis Tillman, Corey Miller and the New
York Giants' offensive line, and ...
-Joe Montana, the biggest star
or a!J.
From the top:
Tbe best in the business
Irvin had 12 catches for 168
yards in the Dallas Cowboys' 2617 win over the San Francisco
49ers in a mistake-ftlled game.
"I don't think in those terms,
that's siUy," Irvin said when asked
if he had surpassed the 49ers' Jerry
Rice as the NFL' s best receiver.
(Anyone heard of Sterling Sharpe?)
Irvin took advantage of backup
Michael
who was play-

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--Sports briefs--

HAlF
1s:oN us
"•

sac~- one of them for a safety:

I got a safety on the SI!De s1de
· of~~ field last year, and I JUSt had
a VISIOn when I saw we were at the
one that i_t woul~ happen again,"
Swann ~d of hiS end zone tackle
of Regg1e Brooks.
.,
":'bo was that guy .
Gray ts 32 and seems to have
been around fore.ver . No one
n_ouces because. he s only on the
field for Detroit when the other
teamk.ik
c s.
. On S1111day, he started by f~mbhng the opemng k1 ckoff, setung
up a Seattle touchdown that gave
the Seahawb a 7-0 lead w1th 1:32
gone m the game.
In the th1rd quarter, Gray
returned a lmko ff95 yards for ,a
touchdow~_~, the Sixth time he s
done that tn his career. Then he
brought a punt back 35 yards to set
up ~.J~n Hanson field g~.
H.~ s the best ever, Mora
s~y s;, I know, because we had
h•m.
Who are those guys?
·
by, lhe: · 11..a• ,!lluh. ..,.,..n In
" The Gutnll ..., S-l. Ask 1011\e1991.
·
-' one out'Si'de 'tb_e megalopolis to
He had his coming-out party name a dozen GUlliJS.
.
.
Sunday in the 36-6 victory over the
Lawrence Taylor ... Phd S1mms
Washington Redsldns. Swann had · .. Rodney Hampton . A,nd that
nine tackles, five assists and two coach, Dan Reeves. Taylor s a suuabon player now. Hampton's hurt.

win."

THE
SECOND

.. ·.

one returned 63 yards for a touchdown as the Pittsburgh Steelers dis·
mantled the New Orleans Saints
37-14
"We were 5-0 and we probably
weren't that good," Saints coach
Jim Mora said. "We got our butts
kicked and we're probably not that
bad "
;,If we're not the NFL's best
defense we're right there" Wood'
SOn~.d' .
Sanders gained I 0 I yards in 22
canies as the Detriot Lions beat the
Seatde Seahawb 30..10.
"You're just getting ready to
wrap him up and ... nothing," said
Cortez Kennedy of SeaUie. "That's
what you get when you try to get
him. Nothing."
Smith blocked two field goals
by John Carney that enabled the
Kansas City Chiefs to give the ball
to Montana with 3 1/2 minutes left
and four points down.
F@ally...
Swann was thought to be a tyPi·
cal bu~led ftrSt-round draft cho1ce

DON TATE CHEY.·OLDS.·CAD.·GEO

year on Thursday, OcL 28 against
Golf
VIRGfNIA
WATER, England
Vinton County in McAI'tbur.
the seventh-grade Marauders (AP) - John Daly made his rrrst
wiD put their 6-0 record on the line appearance at World Match Play
on Tuesday, Oct 26 at 5:SS p.m. at Championship a brief one, losing 5
Bob Roberts Field when they host and 4 to Australian Steve Elking-

·~ - ;

ond period of Thursday night's NHL 1ame ia
Chicago, wbere the Blackhawk! won 3-2 to rollect
tbeir second win ot the season. (AP)

WOOdSOn, Smith, Montana come
through to star in NFL's Week 7

look as it as a jinx, but I don't
remember when we had the
Rivers jinx, we tried flying there,
taki"F, a bus, changing hotels every
year. '
Lately, the Steelers have tried
changing quanerbacb every year.
Amonll the Steelers quarterbacks
who bled, and mostly failed, to win
at the lakeside stadium were Cliff
Stoudt, Mark Malone Bubby Bris·
ter and Neil 0 'Donnell
The only Steelers q-back of
recent vintage to win the ~led
Turnpike Bow I was the Iongdeparted Todd BlackJedge.
Sunday's game is significant
because it matches the AFC Centra1 Division co-leaders with identica14-2 rec&lt;lfds.It's l®.earJy in the
Gri~~an4
seaon to be· a crucial game per·
~&lt;iii
moat
haps, but Cowher categorizes' 11 as
game. .
pivotal.
"We just did what we do,"
When the division champion Irvin said. "We don't worry about
Steelers went 5-1 against the AFC the other team.''
Central last season, .their only loss
. Woodson had .two interceptions,
was in Cleveland
"It'.s a great place to play, the
fans get into it it's dirty and
raunchy ... a pla~e 1 really have
fun," Uoyd said. "I look forward
to playing there. We're tied for first .
place. It will be a tough one to the
end."
And the Steelers jusr wish this
slreak would end, too.
• "I like playing there," Lloyd
said. "I'd liko it better if we'd

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DON TAT·Ecaiv..,~i~s.~~~~.

;~,;!~o~n~c
by Mor:Qs.
Seymour
and
Jeremy
~~

to four fint I
·Meigs

•
·"

r·

'

,N.
:BES~ RECEPriON·
'

four limea !n the 1a1t 10 mil'Uiel to
even, then
won it on Brent Otlebriat'a &amp;lla1 in OYerllme.
Gilclirin ac«ee1 1t I0:01,·Giant LedyU'd added·
~ p126 ranlalaler.and, by the 13:09 mart.
Neal Brote1fllld Mike Craig had tiod the- S-5.
.GUctirist put 1 rebound behind .Ottawa goalie
Craig l!illington 1:561nto the ll'lertime period.
Rookie Alexei Yuhin scored twice, rookie
.~ Dligle 8fll up two g'oals by Bob Kudelsld
and Dave Archibitld ilcored once for Ottawa.
Red Wlnis 6, Jeta 2 - rAt Detroit, the Red
Winp P. !I~ when Steve Yzennan collided with
W~g's Thomas Steeit in the fJFSt period and left
the game witt\ an injitred neck. He was taken to a
hospitlt as:a'prccaudon,but retwned to the arena.
~iih ~u~ who, had two goals and an assist,
gave Detroit a ·1-0lead at· ~:4S of the rust period, and
Darren McCany, playing his eighth career NHL
game, 'made it 2-0 81 4:29 of the second. Primeau
made it 3,1 816:40.
CanuckS ~Flames 3 - Pavel Bure alid Trevor
Linden ~ two gqaiS apiece;, and Geoff Counna!J
and Sergio Mornesso one each for the Canucks, who
had won on)y three times in their last 25 visits to Calgary.
.
Buie put the Canucks ahead 4-2 lit 14:50 of the
second period,,stepping aroun~ Calgary's Ted Drury
at the ·rec~ liile and breaking in on flames goaltender
Mike Vernon. The goalie stopped the fust shot, bot
Bure poked in his own rebound. Bore's goal came 66
seconds·aftct Momess0 gave Vancouver a 3-2 lead
after scoring fn)m a scramble in fran of Vernon.
Blues 5, Sharks 2 - At Sacramento, Kevin
Miller had three goals and two assists, and Craig Janney added a goal and ~ assists.
Miller; whO has scored seven goals in his last six
games, got the Blues' first two of the third period as
SL Louis improved its franchise record over San Jose
to 8-0 before a crowd of 7,144 in the Arco Arena.
The Sharks have only a tie to show for seven games.

.Steelers pushing to .break jinx
·at &lt;;Jeveland Stadium Sunday

HARRIS

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SI!A'I'fU! Sl!AIIi.WU: OAimod l•·
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Sar~ F~49fn.
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O.U.. ~ OU.w•l (01')

a;ce, S.F...............33 430 13.0 :19 3
Shupo. 0.8 .......... 33 ).12 10-4 50 2
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All ............ 32 439 13.7 42 6

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AVOID SURPRISES!

ORLANDO MAOIC: WlivOd Clril '

·
. By TheA"'M'iited Prell ,
.Jeremy Romick owed one to the Cbicago Blackhawks, 1!1" it waa the Qt¥bec N~ques who paW,
Roentek wa~ less than tbrilled wi.th hfs ptar
through two periods TbQnday night. 10 he cranked It
up.a note~ ir1 the last 20 minutea in ~g Cbicago
to I 3-2 VJCIOry QVct the Nordiques. ·
Romick assisted on Michel Goulet's S33rd career
go,al earlY, in the third period 10 tie i,t, then scored
~ ~ S~ seconds lcl't to give Chicago only its
second VICtory 1D eight games.
· ~It was about time .'!Ve did something right in the
third period,'' Rocnick Said·. ·' 'After winning only
one of our fint aeven games (1-4-2), you begin to
wonder w!Jat's going on."
,
Roenick's seventh pi, on .a power play, ·helped
the Blackhawts SDIJ? a three-game losing sll'Cak.
~ is. 1().()..1 agamst Quebec since last losing to
thcNMiiqtieson Oct 19,1989atChicagoStadium.
"I knew .this would be a tough building to win
in," said Quebec goalce~der Jocelyn Thibault, who
was playing his stcon4 NHL game.
Brent Sutter's 55-foot slap shot gave Chicago a 10 lead in the fllSI period, but Quebec went ahead on
goals by Martin Ruclnsky and lain Fraser.
In other games, Toronto tied an NHI.. start-of-season record with its eighth consecutive victory, a 4-3
overtime defeat of Miami; DallaS beat Ottawa 6-S in
overtime; Detroit beat Winnipeg 6-2; Vancouver beat
,Calgary 6-3 and SL Louis beat San Jose S-2.
Ma{lle Leafs 4, Panthers 3 - At Miami, the
Leafs Ued a record set by Toronto at the start of the
1934-35 season and matched by l!uffalo in 1975-76.
Toronto won when Rob Pearson scored his second
goal or thc game off a rebouDd 2:17 into overtime.
Toronto also got goals from Dave Andreychulc
and Kent Manderilille in support of goalie Damian ' .
Rhodes, who had 26 saves m his first start since
Maichi991.
Stars 6, Senaton 5 - At Ottawa, Dallas scored

.E ighth-grade Marauders
hand
Wellston
36-6
defeat
By DAVE

R.Woflhoc...JW~

Tblll'!iday's sc&lt;R"es

I

RO«i..,.
No. \'do. A~LCTD

112 15. 61

- • Transa~ons *- ·

Cenlnl DIYIIIaa
Tum
W L T I'll. GFGA
Tontt~to ............. I 0 0
16 39 t8
SLLoWI ........... 5 l 0
10 26 17

Q~~art.erbldul

rta,....
tmn,DII ..............46

WuJdn&amp;ton •lldnoa!.... ~~p.m.
Sutloec at Vaai:lower, JO:o5 p;m, ·

2 IS 36.

WESTERN CONFERENCE

P11 ytr
AtLCC!Ift. Yda. TDinL
Ail&lt;mon, D•L ......117 t26 1650 S 2
Simma., NYO ..... .l.5-4 94 ll88 9 6
Cham, Phil. ........ 110 76 850

4.7 29

pm.

19

Desp.ite dire straits, Phillies keep
laughing.their way through Series

Dykstra tells Schilling.
game
doesn't change. Maybe the crowd's
bigger and theNIICdia is alJ around,
· but it's the S!UDe game. Just pitch
~ you did when y,ou were a .kid.
~ust so out and get them."
·
· : S..chilli'n' liStens
. to .Dykstra
. and
·knows he s right. It's the S~!l
thin .Schilling's late fathi:r Used to
ten\im: "Don't ever make too

. Suaday~•- · .
l..ol Anaele~ ac N.f'. R.8aor~, 7:35

Game S of the World Series Thursday nl1ht in
Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium, where the
PhUHes won 2..0 to send tbe Fall Ciasslc back to
Toronto. (AP)

Baaketb811

NFCieaders

t24 1409 I
Hcbal, All ...... ... I02 64 ~ 112 6

5

5 3 0
Mooual. ........... 4 3 1

Or.uwa .............. 0 4 I

Bladci, Sca ........ ".31 346 lfl 21 ~
Whitc, Hou. .......... 31 211
. J 10
• Sh•'J"&gt; Den. ......... JO 312 I0.4 Tl I
Willi.arna, Sci ....... 30 220 7.3 2S 0

40l

16 26

Qlleboc .............. 3 4 I

Playrr
No. Ydl. Ava. LG TO
Slauabla'. Hou ...... 37 404 10.9 41 3
A. Mlllo:. s.o.......35 415 11.9 43 2

s..-.

2

p;-.. .

Receiver~

AIL
Do&lt;. ...... 141
lbmp~&lt;»,NYO .. 124
W1tu11,S.F.......... II
Brown.N.O..... ... too
1'\opm. All ......... 15

GF GA
31 IS
25 16
~ ~
II

Norlhout Dlololott

so

PIIJer

AU..llc Dl ...lon
TUia
W L T P'tl.
Now Ieney ....... 6 0 0
ll
Plillldolphil ...... 5 I 0 10
N.Y. Ranp&gt; .... 4 4 ~ ~
FlorlAII .............. 2 3 t
T1m,... B1y ....... 2 4
N.Y."-•·-~ ... 1 "' 0
-•-•
J
Wul!inpll ...... I 6 0

llulhen
Pt.ytr
AIL Yell. AY&amp;,LGTD
4.0 JO S
Poncr.Piu. ........ .119 481
Than.aa, BW....... lll 449
4.0 2S 1
C. Wlll"t.:ft, Sea .. .125 432 3.5 11. 3
CI£V..... 85 360 • .2
1
White, Hou. ........ 103 360
3.5 14 1

Youna, S.F...... ...171

~~~~~~~~

EASTERN CONFERENCE

AFC leaders

v.ro.u.

0.1), 1:17 p.m.

-*NHL*-

.

.
TIDS WILLIE AIN'T SUCK - As PhUad~l·
phla pltcber Curt ScbiUijaJ.~ his p01lti0n at
home to cove~&lt; durlna ·u "eiJIItb-lnnlnl rundown,
tblrd baseman.Dave Holllu·(rllbt) pula tbe lal on
Toronto pincll-runner Wlllfe Canale during

!o

t.,;~~~.-~~~=;.;~~0~&lt;1~.24r::li!'N,';f/ .,,..~

''Chi""•·

'

Piuobwp ot Bu!fllo, 7:35p.m.
N.Y. Kanpa at Tamp~ B1y, 7:35p.m.
Lot AnJO* It Wuhift&amp;tall.I:OS p.m.
80I&amp;on at Bdmontan, 9:3S p.m..

Saturday's 1ame

Morwby, Oct. 25
PbibddplUI, Wuhinp)9
MiM"""
pm.

, J.I"!!Ol ... ..... .

N.Y. lllmdcn at Philadelphia, 6:05
p.m.

Phil1dolPitit 2, Toronto 0; Toronto
lce.d&amp; aerie. ~2

Buffalo at N.Y. Jcta, 1 p.IJI.
CNONNAU•tHOOIIon, 1 p.m.
oB•y 11 T""P' B•y. 1 p.m.
PittabwJh at Cl.JNELAND, 4 p.m.
J)ol:roic at L.A. R.ama.4 p.m.
New Enpnd 11 Somle. 4 p.m.
Phoenix al San Francilco. 4 p.m.
Ciar i.,A.
lnclilnloolia II Mioni,
pm.
R~ideit, San Dlot~n.Jlu. N.Y .-&lt;bU, . .

...

ToaJebt'•cames

Thursday's score

,

a

I

- • World Series * -

Next week's NFL action

5

goals In,Blackhawks' 3-2 -win
act

Phillies blank Blue Jays 2·_0
for second World Series win
and much more.
Schilling also gave the Philadelphia fans a World Series victory
after a heartbrealcing Joss. He gave
his team some hope and the Blue
Jays a few doubts. He also provided the stat people with a chance to
rest up a liule.
"The fans deserved what they
saw tonight," Schilling said. "We
were disappointed for what they
went through, too.''
It was the 39th time that a
World Series had stood 3-1. Of the
previous 38, the team leading has
won 32 titles. The Phillies plan to
start Terry Mulholland (1-0)
again!l.t Dave Stewart (0·1) in
Game6.
"This is a good note to go to
Toronto on," said Schilling, the
NL playoffs MVP with 16 slrike·
outs on 19 innin$s against Atlanra.
"Our fans are mcredible. They
were really behind us."
But some of those same fans
fiUed the conversation on the loeal
radio talk shows only hours before,
ex~ressing their disbelief that the
Phlllies blew a 14-9 lead against
the Blue Jays in the eighth inning a
night earlier. The city was stunned.
SchiUing, put in the position of
needing a complete game, walked
three and struck out six. He made
148 pitches.
"This is
nine innings,"
Schilling said. 'I always feel if I
don't go nine innings, I didn't do
my job."
Schilling got some early support
when John Kruk scored Lenny
Dykstra from third in the first
inning on a groundout to second off
loser Juan Guzman. Dykstra, who
has scored eight runs in five games,
led off with a walk, stole second
and moved to third on catcher Pat

P..:~t

Roeni~k nail~ tying,- winning

Pushed by Schilling's five-hitter,

By JIM DONAGHY
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Curt
Schilling gave everyone a break except the Toronto Blue Jays.
Schilling pitched a five-hitter
for Philadelphia to beat Toronto 20, sending the World Series back to
th e Sky Dome on Saturday night
with the Blue Jays stiU needing one
win for their second straight cham·
pionship.
Thursday ni ght 's result was
quite a contrast to Game 4, when
the Blue Jays raUied for six runs in
the eighth inning for a 15-14 victory. The teams combined for 32 hits
and all sorts of scoring records.
Manager Jim Fregosi said the
Phillies needed a complete game
from Schilling, the Game I loser,
and the right-hander gave it to them

n. o.tly Sentinel

Ponttf'O)" · Middleport, Ohio

In NHL action,

Friday, October 22, 1993

_

'

Friday, October 22, 1993

..

26111 Street l Jacklon A~ 3031.111W h FIOid 813 W. tMi $treet
Point PIMunl, WV ' .
Qrlllpolll, OH
POniefoy, OH •

Pl'lolla"ii7i539o

~~
Phone992-6426
. b_;;,:::::..::::;._,.:;.::::_""'::-~---=-~~~--=--~~~:...,;:...;;.~.::......I

HOURS: Mon.•Frl. 9:0o-8:00
·Sat. 9:00-4~00; Sun. 1:00.5:00

OPEN
.. SUNDAY

�••
•

•

.,., 8 The Dally Sentinel

Community
calendar

Chemical imbalance may upset teens
Dear Aaa Laaden: Several
weeb qo, I 1'114 a Jeaer Ia JOU!'

and be uked iO ~Y $350 restitucol_. floe a w0111111 witlt a
tion to Rose.
Chagrin Falls Police Chief lS )011'014 ....... wbo out
Lester LaGIIttlllid the squash was cl'*'*ciiDd~IOhudlo
I.Wn by pncipants iD an unsanc- I aw m,.af aild mew I had 1D
.
lioned thalrin
Hip School wrlae.
event caUcdthe ''JIWIIPkin roll,'' In · nat ni *cr ·il 1101 aloDe. I am
which reen-agcrs smash pumpkins well ""4P''tved with the ICftllliin8
on a hillside after Halloween and ........... bitdai and foul
slide around In the goop.
W, I ,My plea Ill lbll !IICllber II
Rose said be would not have the Ilia: " - ' a't reJect tbe g1rt.
youlbful pcrpell'ltOn anested, but oudloa• 11e a cry lor belp.
would press charges if it happens
OUr ......... "Raberta.. eal1ed
again.
lho police
12 • lho lime)

rail•

u.

&lt;• -

wt. I lried.10 COIIIIOI ._ durin&amp;

News policy

ODe flller,...

In an effort tu provide our read·
,...hn. with cum:ot news, the GaJ.
ii-ii; Daily Tribune and Sentinel
not accept weddings after 60
days from the date of the evenL
All club meetings and other
news articles In the society sectioa
must be submitted within 30 days
of oecwrencc. AU birlbdiys must
be submitted within 42 days of the

Jl:

occwence.

.

All material submitted for publi·
Com1D11111ty Calendar Items
cation
is subject to editling.
appear twv days before aa event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received In advance to
auure pu bllcadoa Ia the calendar.
FRIDAY

Friday, October 22, 1893' .

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Grower gets huge squash
returned in two halves
MIDDU!FIELD, Ohio (AP) Police llid reven yoatbJ stole a
fllll*'a priaod SIS-pound aqllllh,
whidl- JeiUmed sliced in ball.
But Jerry ~; or Hunllburg
TOW!IIhlp In ~"P County, said
he - JUSI glad to gel lite seeds
blck. l!ldl is Wll1h $2 to $5.
"Tbere '!'iJII\'be a world-JeCOrd
squub caming out r1 thole aeeds, ••
said Roae, who holds the Ohio
record for growing a 673-pound
squash.
Middlefield police found the
gourd Tuesday evenina. It was
stolen lalt wetnd fJOm a display
outside Fritiqcr Feed Store, llid
Chief David Easlhon.
Easthon llid the seven youths
will get stem lcciUrCI from police

••

..

Paydlotop:al help
and lho lid Wll ill
IIDWnl )'lllrl. bul it elida\
it - dilcovered lhe

wu Clrlltnd.

hpNhnoo,

The mm p II dill: If your child
docl DOt reapoad to mn)treling,
be aware that aatl-paychotic
~ication,

carofully IIO&amp;itored,

ciould be the - · Pl-. Ann,
JCl the word OIIL •• A TEXAS

RBADBR

DBAR TEXAS READER: rve
beeil puUing that word out for

CowiJoy

TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup-

pers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary

Sez •••

sponsoring a square dance wilh
music by C.J. and the Country
Gentlemen. Callers will be Red
Carr and Melvin Cross. Everyone
is welcome.
IS

' ' JOU Wllll to "buy Amerlcaa,. be
Clnlul what )'IIQ loot for. ·
. Allo, • your .IClldela polntai out,
·dley are illclined to buy die
Jll'(ldllcla lhoy fOil will a.ve them
b - wllcCber lhoy 11'0 A.-ic I
made arnot..This Ia lluiC c&gt;+ •nJICI'
dleory - mmumen liuy die belt
· JI"'ICCIICII It the beat price. If all
Amcalcln ptoducll ~ lho belt llld
~everal yean, but 1 wiU do it die bell nlue, we woalda't
lpin. SoDio pclCiplo do well .wi1b bave ....S fl dloiO Dqlcal "Buy
couniCiiq. A lood couaaelor ~· CO!IIIIIeiCials.
will teeogalzo die aipa whoa
UnfOitlm•dy, not all. Alllericaa
m'WIID&amp; II ine"ec:d'le lllld ad procb:ta' lie lho beat In die wmld.
lhllpeaaalilr"cbemicalllclp."O!IIy And there Ia no reaaoa wby
a JIIYCbiatriat · can preacrlbo c:ouumcra should buy iaforior
lllri ll~(llldilmudecarefully producllllimply bec••re ·~are
monitored), bul h hu orvvea made lu lhe USA. 1bla lcada a
enormouly effective wbea me I" 10 our producen tblt tbey
ew=rythiaa elle·hal fJilocL IIIIOD&amp;Iy do Dot need to Improve dleir
P'COIIIIIIDDd iL
Jll'(ldllcla ill order 10 be compeddve
Dear Aaa Laadera: I am a on the 'Mldd miubt bec:anae."'!' wUI
college junior majoring i1 buy them •yway.
economic~, and I dlink IIIIDY fl )'liur
(:ontrary 10 popular belief,
reeder; n milling a few poiD11 buying American hal moreldverse
about buyina Am«ican.
. eftectl on our ecoaomy and World
Firat of all, many of the competitiveness than beneficial
compooent 1&amp;11 ol• Ameli lean car 0111'1. BuYina the belt poduct enIre !lllde in ot11cr COimtrica. So 1ibet1 lhit III IIIICIIIfacturc atay

· CelVeS
• grant
Health d.epa r(men( re

.. ;

'94
II Shadows

SATURDAY
• MIDPLEPOR't..· 'I'bele will be
a round- and squilro ·del:o at tt\e
Old Legion Hall from 8 • 11:30
Jl.m. Music will be by CJ. and the
Couna'y Gentlemen. Admiuion ia
free. Children are welcomed with
adult supervision. Children 12 and
under ~an wear costumes as lbey ·
wish. No alcollol will be allowed.

For Sal•!
A•1owAs

$159.37 MONTH

•, MIJ)[)LI!POilT • Tho OH XAN
't;Oin club will Dieet at B._ '-· .

. . ..,. • ._and llllllnl•
will ~ed'"' a .1116otlftg.
will lie iened. NoW

----mne.
1. J!.lil.
WI
I

....

'"

SALE PRICE
'IN
WINDOWS

*10,600
#48006

live
Relllote

3-6p

•Ill.

...........

~

On Tire

IJl ·ovat40

GALLIPOLIS • Gallipolis
Women's Bowling Association
will have its Fall Open Meeting at
4:30p.m. at Skyline Lanes.

•

All New &amp; Used Cars &amp; Trucks
Will ·se Reduced During ·rl:ls Salel

*Sale Price

RACINE - The Racine PTO will
be staging a haunted house from
6:30 to 9 p.m. There will be games
and refreshments. The haunted
house will be open for children
ages kindergarten to sixth grade.
Admission is $1 and proceedl will
gc;&gt; toward the purchase of a new
TV for the school.

iu.Senice omce.

· A $1,000 gran~ from the West baS&lt;:d training program called
Ohio Conference of the United "Responsible Social Values."
Methodist Churches has been made
The reminder of the money will
to the Meigs County Health be used for purchased educational
Department and the Meigs Cooper- materials.
ative Parish.
The "Responsible ~p&lt;:ial ValIt was decided that the money ues" program includes;adolescent
will be used by the Child Family pregnancy prevention ~ hands-on
Health Services Consortium to uti· teaching experience, ~ urriculum
lize approximately 60 percent of presentaions, at-4isk groups, peer
the monies to brjng in a Columbus groups, and substance abuse.

By Bob Hudak and Cheryl
Crossan
Meigs County School Psychologists

She will select children from
referrals given by teachers, principals, parents or school psychologists. When children have been
referred, she will contact parents
This article will discuss two for consent to provide services. She
new programs being offered this will use a variety of activities with
year. One is the services of Nicole the children to help them feel good
Jennings, a Counselin~ Education about themselves and have· success
Student from Ohio Umversity. She in the school setting. We are thank·
wtll be providing individual and ful for her help as our guidance
group counseling for selected stu- counselors in Meigs Cbunty have
denl!l in Meigs Local Elementary such a high p~pil ratio.
Schools. She will address a variety
Also this year the Children's
of issues (ex. behaviors, expres- Assault Preventiog Se)'vices
sions of feelings, etc.) important to (CAPS) wiD be colla~ting with
children's developmental process.
the school psychologists.

Plans are being made to present
the program in early 1994. It was
reported that although the grant
~ b · · lb
'll
wt pay or nnmg e program 10
i;!e::u~~: :ja;}~~
ual and other written infonnaiOin.

2

Registration
for the workshop
will
be limited
to 100
teachers/other educaators, nurses.
and youlh leaders.

ractoiY

3-.ood

Bit·

Recognition was given to the
longtime
memlii:r"of ihe Meigs Calm!}' Fait
Board, at an appreciation dinner for
fair board members and guests
Wednesday night at the Racine
Unillld Methodist Church.
Mr. Henderson's contributions
to the fair during 28 years on the
board were detailed by Dan Smith,
president, who presented a plaque
with an inscripuon giving recognition for his "faithful service and
steadfast dedication". The plaque
was accepted by another board

A'lenues
•Oyaastys
•lelaton_Sedans
•Sp\t\t~ •
•Actta1ms
•Sbadows

FREE
HOTDOGS

•••
HAMBURGERS .

•2,000

ott

,.,,.,,.
•94

\.
·,

11aa4PII

FREE DRINKS
otSEE SALESMAN FOR DETAILS
REBATES INCLUDED
IN SALE PRICE .
TAX, TITLE &amp; LICENSE EXTRA

Rac!ne Grange will be given a
reading 8l the Ocrober 21 meeting. ·
A membership dr!ve is beinj ·
planned.. The Grange .IS a 12S-~
old family. commumty organtmtton. It c:onducts t!Je largest sewmg
conrestm the Umllld States. It has
programs for. all ~ges including
cdiJC!IhOn, legiSlati~, . community
serv tce, an~ patr.JottSm . Adult
mcmbershtp IS av&amp;lable for those
age 13 1/2 or olde.r, but children
younger arc permitted to attend
with their parents. For information
to join, contact Anita Yost at 949.
2579 or Ketth Ashley at 992-7874 .

Daughters of America hold regular meeting
Faye Kirkhart and Mary K.
Holler were hosresses for the ~nt
meetmg of the Past Cou~c1lors
Club of Chester. Counctl 323,
Daughters of Amenca, al the·hall.
Opal Hollon presided at the
meetmg ~ read the 114th Psalm.
The Lords Prayer and pledge to
the Amencan Flag were gtven m
uniSon.
Mel!'bers answered the roll call
by ~lhng of somethmg tmportant
they ve done smce last September.
Reports were gtven by Charlotte

Jean Frederick, treasurer protem.
It was reporred that Betty Roush
is in Holzer Hospital, Leda Mae
Kraeuter and Octa Ward are in the
Pomeroy Nursing and Rchabilitation Center, and that Alta Ballard
had surgery.
Erma Cleland read a poem ,
"Give Thanks to America."
Refreshments carrying out a Hal·
loween theme were served by the
hostesses. Games were conducted
by lnzy Newell and Ella Osborne.
Goldie Frederick and Ethel Orr

won the door prizes.
The hosresses for the November
meecing will be Charlotte Grant,
Sadie Trussell and Thelma White.
The meeting will sran at 7 p.m.
Attending were Pauline Ride·.
nour. Margaret Amberger. Laura:
Mae Nice, Marcia Keller, Ella
Osborne, Inzy Newell, Elizabeth
Hayes, Ruth Smith, Erma Cleland.
Ethel Orr, Faye Kirkhart, Charlotte
Grant, Opal Hollon , Jean Frederick, Goldie Frederick and Mary K.
Holter.

r::G=ran=t~,~secre~~tary~pro~te~m=·=a=ndr==:::::::=:::=:::==:r==:=:=:=:::====r==:;:=====
Public Notice

Public Notice

The Annual elecdon of the

llolgo County Agtlcullurol
Society Board o! Directors
shall be held al Jhe
Socrelarya Office on tho lair
grounds November the llrol
nlntMn hundred and nlnty·
lhtee. Polls will be open
between 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
the day olthe election.
The aald election shall be
by ballot. Ballots musl be
marked with an X oppoolle
lho nome of each candidate
volod lor: olherwlae the
name will no1 be counlod.
Tho cooling of votes lor
directors by ptoxloo lo nol
to be permhted.

member~ of the aoclety who

ore rooldenlo of Metgo
Counly, al leasl seven (7)
days before the annual
election of Directors Ia held.
Only regularly nomlnalod
Cllndldaloa who have mol
lho flllng requlremenll will
be eligible lor olecllon ao
dlrectot.
(10) 20, 21; 2TC
-------Public Notice
--:=-:-:-::-:-::=:~~-

VILLAGE OFFICIALS
OF THE:
VILLAGE OF POMEROY
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Public Notice

Public Notice

public meetings, wllh no

comml..ion, and • apecial

executive aeaalona and

compiles wtlh Ohio's
Sunshine Low.
SECTION THREE • Thlo
RoootuUon ahatf take effect
11 lhe eortiHltlme ollowed
bylaw.
Oclobor 18, 1993
Larry Wehrung,
Proat~..,t

Attesl:

of Council

Kathy Hyaell, Clerk
Bruce Reed, Mayor

(tO) 21, 22; 2TC .

PubliC Notice

Be It resolved by the

Only residents 18 yro. old ofllclalo of lhlo village u NOTICE OF PUBLIC
and over of Melgo Counly follows:
HEARING AND SPECIAL
holding membership Secllon One · Tho Draft MEETING
certificates, for at leaal 15 Solid Waate Management
Lot the oeoidenta of the
dayo before the dale of Plan oflhe Gallla, Jackson, territory of Olive Township
olactlon, moy vote.
llelgo &amp; VInton Joint Solid take notlco thai tho Boord
llembara of the society Wasta Management District of Truateeo Cor Olive
muol declare their laAPPROVED.
Township will hold a public
candidacy lor the oHlca of Section Two • Thla hearing on tho proposed
Directors olthe Society by Rooolullon hu bun zoning reaolution certified
flt!ng
.with cho Secrotary of adopted lri a regularly to tho Boord by tho Olivo
Addalou Lewis, and Carolyn Jho Society,
a petition scheduled public meeting,
zoning
. Ritchie. Charles Shain and Tim atgned by tan (10) or mora sitar dlocuoolon· only tn Township
Bearhs were unable to littend.
Smith expressed appreciation 10
County Engineer Bob Eason and
Manning Roush of the Meigs
County Highway Department for
assistance during the fair, and to
Commissioner Bob Hartenbach for
some county funding which goes
into the fair.
Entertainment following the
dinner was provided by Fred Mat·
son and Stephanie Sayre, guitaristS.

member, Roger Spencer, who has
worked closely with. him lhrough
the years.
Donna Jean Smith accepted a
plaque for Mrs. Henderson's wife,
Thelma, which noted her "outstanding support and volunteer service".
Recognized by Smith were
board members auending, Mary
Kay Rose, Virgil Windon, Bill
Buckley, Ed Holter, Leonard
Koenig, Jim Sheets, Brent Zirkle,
Jennings Beegle, Roger
. Spencer,

meeting of tho Board of
Truat- loo the pur,a.a of
conoldaringlha adoption of
the propo..d lOnlniJ
r...,lulion. The hewing meeting will be held on tlja
2oth day of Nov..,.ber, 111113
at 0:00 am 11 Shldo Rivor
ForaaCry Bulking an Joppa
Rd. Toxt .,d mop of tho

propoaed r..olutlon may be
•Iamlned 11 the ragul•r

mootlng of tho Oliva
Township
zoning
commluion of October 19

1103, at 1:00 p.m., at th~

Oliva Township VotunFiro Stacion, Raadovilla
Ohio.
'
Ka!Mn Hayman
Clerk
(10) 8, 22 21c

'

HUTTON'S
CAR WASH

0' Bleness to hold foriim on Alzheimer
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
wiD sponsor a free public forum on
Alzheimer's Disease on November
2 at7 p.m. in the hospital's conference room.
Wayne Carlsen, D.O., a member of O'Bleness' medical staff and
head
of . the
Geriatric
Medicine/Gerontology section of
the College of Osteopathic
Medicine, will define Alzheimer's
disease, management and sugges-

Hemlock
grange holds
meeting

·~tb

1M

1·6 ,.
Satwrday,

F,nant.·
.
lllg

Ualts

tpAtWidu},

Fr~ay,

• Spot

This program has been operating in Meigs County Schools for a
long time. It is headed by Monica
Doddrill and has focused on prQ·
viding activities and infonnation to
elementary school children. This
year the program will expand to
mclude Junior High children. The
psychologi~t will assi~t in P':O~!d·
mg appropnate m-servtce acttvtttes
for the upcoming year.
If you desire more infonnation
on these or other school related
topics, please write Bob Hudak or
Cheryl Crossan in care of Meigs
County Board of Education, P.O.
Box 684, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769.

grange master spoke on her efforts
a year ago when she instructed
$"ange officers on the taws regardmg the sale of Grange property.
It was brought out thall!)l members of Racine Grange had not been
notified of the sale or the propeny
and that lhe transfer had not been
published in the paper. The National Grange is now working to
restore me real propeny to Racine
Grange.
Those members listed as ill
were Charles Alkire and Emma
Adams . Geraldine Cross requesllld
a demit from Racine Grange.
Amendments to the by-laws or the

Late Clarence Hend~rson honored
~ ~qe.JJeildcr&amp;on,

BASHAN • Red Brush Chwch
of Christ will have preaching Set·
vices at 7 p.m. and 11 10 Lm. and 6 .
p.m. on Sunday. Denver Hill will
be the spe•ker. Everyone is lnvired.

: POMEROY • Singles' Fellowship meeting (SOLOS) meeting 11
4 p.m. at Pomero_y United
Methodist Chwch. A light supper
will be provided. Call Sharon at
985-4312 for more information.
MONDAY
: POMEROY • Forest Run Bap.tilt Churth will have a revival from
Qct. 25-29 be&amp;inning at 7 p.m.
liiih~Pastor Arius Hurt invires
the
..
REEDSVILLE· Bulem Local
OASPB 448 will meet at 7:30 p.m.
ill the Bulem Hip School cafetc~
: LONG BOI 10M· Lon&amp; Bol•
jom Unlllld Metlwfi• Church wUI .
have a revival frolll Oct. 2S-29
. bejinningaa 7 p.m. niahtly with
Bvinlellat G«&lt;ld Saym. The public ilmviled.
·
; POMI!ltOY • Tho Meip Coun· .
• I)' Vetetau Service Comml11i011
will meet 817:30 p.m. in the Velet·

Pictured with Taonehlll and Nicely are
lei), Connie Little, R. N. preoatal director, and
Kei!aeth Baker, director or the Meigs Cooperative·Parish.

ACCEPTS CHEcK • Carol TaanJhlll, R. N.
or the Child Family Health Servles, Meigs Coun·
ty Healtlvllepartment, accepts a check ror
$1,000 from Paul Nicely of the West Ohio Conrerence or the Uoited Methodist Churches task

You're Invite To Ow

New

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-Z
Friday, October 22, 1993 ·

Grange was held at lhe hall with
Dorothy Smith, master, presiding
over 19 members and &amp;.uesl!l.
Guests for the evcrung· mcludcd
Bernard Shoemaker, master of the
Ohto State Grange; Rober_t Whtte,
Jr., overseer of the Ohto State
Grange; Patty Dyer, Meigs County
Deputy S~ate Master; and Opal
Dyer, Metgs County Jr. Deputy
Slate Master.
.The state master discussed the
problems concermng the recent
sale of the real property of Racine
Grange. The state overseer spoke
of the need of the Grange !0 work
to tmprove the communtly and

Counseling programs offered

REEDSVll.LE • The last day of
the revival at Reedsville Unued
Methodist Church at 7 p.m. with
Rev. Barry WyenL

POMEROY • Saint Paul Lulbcria Churth will host lbo Blelllngs
from I!ut Athens Chwch cl Christ
at their 11 a.m. worship service.
1be' public is welcome.

"••

The Daily Sentinel
Th~C:.r:!£~ of!~~~!f!~~£~qeerty issues .

LONG BOTTOM • Failh Full
Gospel Church will have preaching
by Evanrelist Dave Dailey and
local ~ 8l 7 p.m. Pastor Sreve
Reed invtres the public. Fellowship
wiD follow.

SUNDAY

••

: Ann

MIDDLEPORT ·Rejoicing Ufe
Church will have a Harvest Celebration from 7 p.m. to midnighL
Preschool tbru fifth ~ from 7 to
9 p.m. and grades sa tbru 12 from
10 p.m. to midnipL Everything is
.fne. The public is invited.

SALEM CENTER • Salem Cen·
ter Elementary will have ill Fall
Festival from 4 to 8 p.m. Tbere will
be games, mffles, cow droppinJ. an
auction and food. The pubhc is
· invited.

By The Bend

•

.

'

" October Bounties" was the
lheme of the program.presented by
Jessie White w.hen Hemlock
Grange #2049 met recently at the
hall.
Rosalie Story, master, presided
at the meeting attended by 18
members. Readings in the literary
program included "Where did
.Summer Go?," "October Party ,"
"Halloween", "The Pumpkin Patch
and "October Apple Month." An
apple peeling contest was won by
Edna Clark.
· Standing Committee reports
were given by Muriel Bradford and
Helen Quivey and the legislative
report was given by Zilla Midlciff,
Janitor for next month will be
llilber Quivey and refreshments
.will consist of corn bread and
beans with pie for dessert
"Happ)' Birthday"· was sung to
Sara Cullums and Bernice Hawk.
Bernice was not present but cele·brated her 95th birthday this
month.
Officers were installed by Helen
Quiiey BJ¥1 George White. .
· Members reported sick were
James .Weber, Ocla Ward, Bernice
Hawti, l!elty , . and · David
Mc;Connayhay, Leo Story .and Elizabeth Roberts.
•
To close the §roup sang "Be
'
Failbful 0 Palroll.
R~r~shmen.ts of cider and
doughnuts w«e served by George
and)euie White.

'

lions for the family of Alzheimer's
victims. There will also be time for
a question and answer period at the
end of the p:csentation .
Alzheimer's disease is a degen·
erative brain disease that affects
four million Americans, including
105,000 dia~noscd in Ohio. It is the
fourth leadmg cause of death in
adults following heart disease, cafl· .
cer and stroke. Most Alzheimer's ·

victims are over age 65 but it does
strike people in their 40s and, 50s.
Alzheimer's disease tends to follow
a progressive course that causes
total mental and physical debilitation and ultimately death.
No registration is required for the
forum on Alzheimer's disease pre·
sented as a community health
awareness service of O' Bieness
Hospital.

The Department o£ Defense, origiIn 1951. "The Bridge on the River
nally
designated the National Military
Kwai" won two Academy Awards Establishment.
was created Sept. 18.
one for Best Picture and one for Best
1947

Director.

Generations ofAmerican workers
have depended on three members
of our family for work.

~~~=:~E~U~~::sE~

NEXT TO BRIDGE BESIDE MARATHON

FRI., SAT., SUN.-OCT. 22, 23 &amp; 24

FULL SERVICE
•Exterior &amp; Interior Cleaning
•Undercarriage Wash
•Air &amp; Towel Dried
•Prices Start At $4 for
Exterior Wash &amp; Towel Dry
•We Wash Cars, Pickup
Trucks &amp; Vans

SELF SERVICE

3 TYPES
•OVERSHOES
•I 0 IN. WORK BOOJS

WE
HAVE
SOFT
WATER
4 BAYS· 75c

WE HAVE PRE·SOAK, WHITEWALL &amp;
ENGINE CLEANER, BUBBLE BRUSH,
WASH, WAX &amp; RINSE, 4 VACUUM
CLEANERS, FRAGRANCE DISPENSER

•141H.INEE •oors
SIZES S·IL
WOMEN'S SIZES

,_

IN 10 IN.

WORK lOOTS

&amp; OVERSHOES

. ...

441 W. MAIN ST.- POMEROY, OHIO

lOlA Od·&lt;lll too t4" on OfiCI o~
Sr,lf 15((1
5 M ·!· ll • (j

s......

,.

IN Od

~ ~ ~ &lt;1~¥

S1w1t 1&lt;100
Sl/fi S M ·l·

.......... .........,
•t

on lrlillft
C

~"fiOI'll~ui)IOitlolt
S!o;lt l ~
~ ..., , . ..

$ i l 'l

s1.00 OFF FULL SERVICE

'

· l · ll ll

~ M • 1 -1 I ~ L• t 1'? ·11 l1 · 11 1J (; •IJ I ~

$.mr.'otjf: ID1oi-~W01 11111in

,

, ,

I

(Interior &amp; Exterior Wash)

Grand Opening Speeial
MULIEIIY lVI.

992-2115

POMIIOY
\

�Friday, October 22,

1993

The Dally Sentlnel-rPage--9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel

~emory

IISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Mates -Portraits

Special Occasions

.

Apostolic

Church of Chr1 st

Ep1sc opal

PomeroJ Cban:b of Cbrlll
212 W. Main SL
PallOr: Andlew Miles
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10,30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea · 7 p.m.

Grace=ICburch
326 1!. ' . St., Pomeroy
Rector. Fr. Bill Lyle
Holy Eucharittand Smday SehoolllLm.
Cof!.. hour loll-.

Pomeroy Wesblde Charch of ChriJt
33226 Qilld..,'s Home Rd.
Sunday Sehool · 11 a.m.
Wonhip- IOLm ., 6 p.m.

R... of Sharon Hollo- Chun:b
New Lima Road, Rutland

Holiness

Pasror. Al Haruoo

Wonhip - 11 a.m.

7 p.m.

Youth Miniller. Bill Frazier
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
WoBhip- 8: IS, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Keno Church or Chrlst
Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School-10:30 Lm.

Ash S~reet, MidcDepon

().

Pastor. Mark. Morrow

Satuntay Setvic:e- 7:30p.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Bearwallow Ridge Cburch of Christ

Wonhip - 11 a.m.,

Sunday Sehool -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Wcdnetday Service-7:30p.m.
RuUand First BapUst Church
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 10:45 a.m.
Pmeroy Flrst Baptlst

Flrst South.,.n BaP.tlst
41872 Pomeroy Pike
PUler. B. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday Sehool · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.
First Bapllsl Cllurch
6lb and Palmer SL, Middleport
.,

PulOr: Rev. Jamea A. Seddon

··

· Sunday Sehool - 9:15a.m.
Wonhit&gt; -10:15 Lm., 7:00p.m.
ii..B.Y.- 5:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Tuppers Plain Church of Christ
Pastor: Bill Wines
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Worship-9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Jeny Collins
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Bradbury Church of Christ

Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Evening Service -7 p.m.
Wednesday, Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Steve Fuller

Sunday Sehool • 9:15 a.m.

Youth Minilter: Mark Notter

Run Baptist

S..,day School· 9:30a.m.

SL Paul Lutheran Church

Past"" Bill Lillie
Sunday School · lOa.m.
Woohip - lla.m., 7:30p.m.

Worship-8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicet - 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Hickory HIIIJ Church or Christ

ML Unloo Bapllsl
Sunday School-9:45 a.m.
Evening- 6:30 p.-n.
Wednesday Service~ -6:30p.m.

United Methodist
Graham Unlted'MelhndiJt
Wonhit&gt; - 9:30 Lm. (ln .1: 2nd Sun),
7:)0 p.m. (3rd .1: 4th Sun)
Wednesday Setvice - 7:30p.m.

Dexter

Pas10r. Woody Call
Sunday Evenina- 6:30 P.P'·
Thursday Service - 6:30p.m.

ML ou.. Ulll\oll Mtohudlat
Off 124 behind Wilkeaville

Putor: Olarlc:1Ione•

Langsville Cllrlstlan Church
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Old Bethel Fm Will Baptl!l Church
28601 St. Rl. 7, Middleport
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening--7:30p.m.
Thunday Services · 7:30

Sunday Sehool -9:30a.m.
Wonhio • 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Pastor. Rev. lunaR. Acree, Sr.

~Philip

Sunday gchool · 10 a.m.

Victory BapUst lndepondant
525 N. 2nd SL Middleport
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Forest Run BaptiJt
Panor: Ariu1 Hurt

Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.

Mt. Moriah BapU!I
Fcunh .1: Main SL, Middleport
PU10t: Rev. Gilben Cnda.Jr.
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 Lm.

Pastor: Rev: Phillip Scarberry
Wonh1p - 9:30a.m.

Rutlud Church of God
P11tor: John P. Corooran
s~ School • 10 Lm
Wonhip - 11 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday ServiCe•- 7:30p.m.

Tuppers Plalna St. Paul
Pastor. Sharon Hausman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4S Lm.
Thunday seMct1 · 7:30p.m.
Rudand Free Will BapU!I

Evening Service~ - 7 p.m.

Plllir. Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

Wurship - 10 a.m.
Tucoday Services -7:30p.m.
I

Central CIUiter

Asbury (Syl'll&lt;Uie)

Pastor: De:ron Newman

WedneJday Setvices · 7 p.m.

Sunday Sehool • 9:45 a.m.

Church of God of Prophecy

Wonhip -11 a.m.
WednesdayServicel -7:30 p.m.

0.1. While Rd. of! St. ·RL 160
Pastor: Pat Hen100

B~ . 1p.m.

Wo&lt;li&gt;Oiday Setvicu • 7 p.m.

Ente'l'rlse

SIBiday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

C:atho l1c

Putor: Keith Rader

Sunday Sebool • 10 o.m.

Wednesday Service~ - 7 p.m.

Secnd Hart Cadoolk Clnsrch

161 Mulberry A\oo., Paneroy, 992-S898
' , . Pastor. RIIY. Walcer £ Heinz
SilL-Con. 4:4S-5:1Sp.m.; Mass· S:30 p.m.
Sun. C.... -8:45-9:15 a.m.,
SUn. Man - 9:30a.m.
pailey Mao - 8:30 Lm.

'f

Wonhip · 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tuesday Services - 7 p.m.

New Life Church of God
OJ ester
Putor. Gary Hinea
S!Biday Sehool - 9:30 Llll.
Worship • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

1411 Brid&amp;eman St._,_Syi1ICUIC
Putor. Roy (Mike) JnompiOII
Sunday School ·- 10 a.m.
Bvlllliq-6p.m.
Wednesday SeiVico- 7 p.m.

Pastor. Rubert E. Mwaer
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
Wonhip • 11:15 LOi., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service -7 p.m.

Flahrooda
Putor. Keith Rader

Co. Rd. 63

M- Ch~el Church

Wcmhip
Sunday Sehool -9:4S Lm.

Wonhip · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Se-rvioe- 7 p.m.

Middleport Prab)'lerlan
Sunday Sehool - ~ a.m.
Wonltip -10 Lm.

Faltll~­

SyracuR Flnt United Prabyt.-tan
Sunday Sehool -10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m., 4 p.m.·(bl.l: 3rd Sun.)

Sunda~ool -

9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednclday 7:30p.m.
' ...

10:30

Racine Pint
Putor: Mark Skaaao
Sooday School- 9:3lfa.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Mt. OIIYe Com11111nltJ Claurdl
..Putor. Lawn:ncc lluah
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evalina • 7 p.m.
Wcdneday SeiVioe • 7 p.m.

s;~School~ ·9:30a.m.

-

Ham-- Pr&amp;..,~....,,

PliiOr.: Mike Mallon
Sunday JChool · 10 a.m.

Wcnhip • 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - &amp;p.m.

Torch Church

Pentecost al

CltrltUaa Fellowaltlp·Cmr.r
Salom SL, Rattland

o...d Street

Ill &amp; 3rd Sunday - 7:30p.m.
Sunday Sehool - 10:30 a.m.

Clifton Taborn- Church
Ciftat, W.Va.
Sunday Sehool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip-- 7p.m. ·
Thunday Se~ce -7 p.m.

SJ.I'IICIIU Mlaololt

RuUand Bible MethodiJt

Sunday School-9:45a.m
Evenina - 1 p.m.
Wedneaday S.rvict1 -7 p.m.

Syracuae Church of God
Apple and Second Sts.
r 1110r. Rev. David Russell
Sunday Sehool and Wonhip- 9:30a.m.

Salem SL

Wonhip- 9 a.m.

Pastor: Rev. llmCI S.uerfidd

Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednelday-7:00 p.m.
Priday-7:00 p.m.

Pwor. Rev. EnunettRaw1011
Sood&amp;y Sehool· 10:00 a.m.
Ev..... 7p.m.
Thursday Service r 7 p.m.

Wedneaday · 7 p.m.
Rada!e
Paslilf. Ken Molter
Sunday Sehool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Laurel Clllr Free Melhodlot Cburch
P1110r. Peter Tremblay
Sunday Sehool • 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne•day Services - 7 p.m.

,

Putor. William Van Meter

Bailey Run Road

Pa.nor: Ken MoiiCI'

Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.

&amp;.«tom

Lnnll_

Pallor. Rev. PbiUip Scarberry

Church of J-. Chrllt,
Apoololle Faith
l/4 mile put Fon Mei&amp;• on New Lima Rd.

Fallh Ta......._ Church

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Reedsville

Wednc1day Servieet - 7 p.m.

Sunday SehooliO a.in.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service - 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School - 9:30am.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. (ln.!: 3rd Sun)
East Letart

Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Antiquity BapU!I

Putor: keMelh Smilh

Putor. Sam Andenoo

SuUon

Mt. Moriah Cburdl of God
Racine

Wednesday Service•-7:30 p.m.

Reloklna Life Church
SOON. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
. Pa110r. L.twmtce Fon:man
Sunday Sehool - 10' a.m.
Wcdnetday Services • 7 p.m.

Mlddl~ CommuMIJ Cllurch
~1S !'uri St., Middleport

Putor: Kenneth Baker

Sunday Sehool - 9:30am.
Worship - 10:30 ,.m.

DaYid MI:ManiJ
Sunday Sehool- 11 a.m.
Worship· 9:30 Lat., 7:30p.m.
Wecmeaday Servicet · 7:30p.m.
Pli!Or. ROY.

Fahb ·aapllsl Church
Railroad SL, Ma1011
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m., 6 p.m.

Sunday Sehool- 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Thunday Service• - 7:30p.m.

y Service · 7:30p.m.

SUnnvllle Word ofFaltll
PliU&gt;r. David.Dailey
Sunday St:hool9:30 a.m.
Evenin&amp; • 7 p.m.

11!5 But&amp;cmut Ave., Pumeruy.

Main.I:Pi(!hSt.

Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool- 10:30 a.m.

Wedn

The SaiYOIIon A11111

S!Biday School - 9,30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 Lm. ('2nd&amp;. 4lh Sun)
MornlnaStar
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Wonbip- 10:30 Lm.

Church of God

w. v•.

Trinity Conarea&amp;Uonal Cltorch
Pas10r. Rev. Roland Wildman
Church-9:15a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm.

CooiYIIIe United Methotllot Parllh
Pu10r. Helen Kline
Coolville Church

Pastor: Brenda Weber

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Viaor Rouih
Sundoy St:hool9:30 a.m.
Won!t • 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sunday worship· 10 a.m.
Wedncoday service • 6:30 p.nL

Putor: Kenneth. Baker

SIDlday School- 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Theaday Scmces - 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday Sehool -9 a.m.
Wonhi_p • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Sctvicea- 10 a.m.
Hockl ..porl Church

llllt(onl,

Cahary Pllarim Cbapel

Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Thursday Service• · 71'm.
Joppa

Hartford.Cbun:b ol Cllrllll•
Chrlidllliun...

7 p.m.

PallOr. Robert Vanoe

(11 Burlinglt.. chun:lt alfRottte 33)

Chester

Pa1tor. Sharoo Hau~~n~n

Chri st1an Umon

Pastor: Iames E. Keesee

EndUmeHOUMofPrayer

Faith Fellowahlp Cruaade ror ChrtJI
Pu10r. ROY. Fnnldin Dicken•
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Senath·DaJ Ad•lllll•

Mulberry Hu. Rd., Pomeroy

1'.-: Roy Lawinsky
Samnlay Serviecs:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Wonhip- ] ·p.m.

United Faith Church
Rt. 7 on Paneroy By-Pw
Putor. Rev. Robertl!. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30am.
Wonhip- 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wecmeaday Service- 7 p.m.

Middleport Church of the Nuarene
PaslQr. Gn:gory A. Cundiff
Sood&amp;y Sehool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30a.m.,6:30pm.
Wednesday Servioes - 7 p.m.

United Brelhren
ML Hennon United Bnuu-..
In Cbrlst Churdt
Tex11 Communily off CR 82
Pastor. Robert Sanden
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

Ful Gaoptl u p 33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pa-.RoyH....., .
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Bvenin&amp; 7:30p.m.
Tueaday &amp;. 'l'hunday • 7:30p.m.

R.....,llleF-Ip
ehurch Ill the N-rme
·Pai!Dr:!obn.W. Douala•
Smtday Sd!OQI . 9:30 Lm.
Wonltip • 10:4~ a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes • 7 p.m.

Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

W~ne1day Services

Eden United Brelhnn In Chrla
21/2 milco north d Reedaville .

on State Route 124
Pntor. Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday Sehool • 10 a.m.
Wonhip. 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Servicea- 7:30p.m.

N - Slttltm•ICbur&lt;h

Sunday WOnhip - 2:30pm.;
Thursday ael'licu · 7:30p.m.

. ..

Sunday School-10 a.m.
Won1Up - lla.m.,6p.m.
Thunday Services • 7 p.m.

- 7:30p.m.

I

I

I

\. \

1I)

COMMERCIAL and. RESIDENTIAL
M.EE ESTIMATES

614-992·7643

109 High Street

·Daytona Radial &amp;0 and 70·Serlea
Special RIW/l Dayton

Life ·· Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

parfonnance profleo.
• Two olrong fiberglaaa bella
• Aggi'Malve tread dNI"'
• Smoodl riding potyNier cord

Truckload SALE PrieN

Accideni•Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

..,ge

CALL

304-773-5533
Open 6 Day's A Week

Located In Eastern Meigs County.

1

to

5

acre tracts available. Tuppers Plains &amp;
Chester water electric available, on site
septic tanks &amp; roads to each lot
approved. Partially wood with rolling
· From

Loo A. Seyfried, et •L

Defandanta
Coae No. 83-CV-77

Affldltvlt
STATE OF OHIO
COUNTY OF IIEIGS SS
A -.. A. Sp•lnhowlrd,
being flrat duly awa&lt;n,
lhlt aha
depoaaa
11 a duly •:rpolntad,
quollfi•d •n
1ctlng
Aoalatont Attorney Genar•
of th• Stoll of Ohio; th.tthe
Plalnllll, Jerry Wr•y,
Director of Tran~tlon,
Stata of Ohio, aaab, by hie
P•tiUon, to ..,proprtote tha
porperty deacrlbecl therein
uc~· to fix the value u-.ot;
that the raalclence (a) of the
Oafand.ant(a) named below
1r1 unknown and cannot
with reaaonobl• dill_..
be ••corl•lnod: Leo A.
Seyfried, Gladya Seyfried,
AI.,. W. Holllng.worth, Mix
W. Seyfried, Lucille
Seyfried, Clara L. Caato,
llu G. Hartenblch, &amp; Clart1
H•tUnbach.
Tho following acllono
Wlf• llk•n on behalf of tha
Plaintiff to ••certain th•
place(a) of realdanca of lha
unknown Oalend.ant(a): A
thorough aeorah by •n
aganl of PbtlnUif of the dead
lnd.axaa 1W1 to current &amp; •
check on th• Audltor'a
computlf found no rurther
lnform•llon · on theaa
d.afandanlt; ogant opok• to
nalghbora of the parcel, 1111d
lelophont dlrectorlaa wera
.-chad without oucceaa.
It Ia nacaaaary th•relor•
to glv• notice of the filing of
the Petition heraln by
Publication, In .accordance
wllh Section 2703. 14:
163.07; and Civil Rule
4.4(A), Revlaecl Code.
And lurthar affiant aalth
noL
Rebac.. A. Spalnhow•d
AaalallniAttorney Ganarol

Md ••Y•

rot~d;

thMce aoulh 7 clear••
waal 1bout 01 fMt to th•
Ploca of Sagin·nlng,
oonttlnlng 0.551 of an acre,
more or 1-, Md being of
unknown ownarahlp In the
Court of Malgo, State of
Ohio.
•
Ownera rataln rlghl of
lngraaa and egrMa. lo •nd
.
any rlaldual .,.._
Sefd tieraon• noted IIbov•
ohall rurlhor tou notice that
unloaa th•y, or thalr
Attorney, lila In A..wer no
later thin 28 d•r• after tho
completion of lite 8oMco of
Pultllcltlon, they will be
daem•d to have Wllved
lh•lr right to •howar, •nd
th' Pelldon will bo Ilk.. •
tru• and judgment will 1M
r•ndared occordlngly: Civil
Aule12(A)(1).
JonyWroy
Director of Tr111oportalfon
(10) 8, 15, 22, 21, (11) 5, 12

•

' Mili Wo rk .
Cablnel Mak in ~

~n~;~~~

t.·. y,:' l~ t'·l

r'l!L!\Ut,\

: K&amp;C JEWELERS ·
212 E. Main Slreel
992·3785. Pomeroy

FISHER
FUNERAl .HOME

$5,000 up

Call Gene Riggs 985·3594
ARNOLD'S
PLUMBING,
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

•DOZERS
-BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A. BOSTON

EICAVAnNG

992-5141

264 South 2nd

Fatten VOU' lfalet

"Featurtfl(l /CMIUCiry FriMI Chlcbn"

· -wltlla wart ~

228 w. Main St., Pomeroy

. 992-5432

Middleport

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE ---=--; SERV-ICES
214 E. Maii1
992-5130 Pomeroy

s
'

·" "
. m
·

t:i

S,rul Q3...~,
MNIItr"t
''

.

41710 .

204

Condor

St.

Pomeroy, Cll.

992-2975

-~'

. ;·~·!

.'

ot Columbus. 0 .
104

w. M.un

991 ·7311 Pomrrov

Veterans ·

Memorial Hospital

P. J. PAULEY, AGE"T
·

f

(614)

667·6621
.

Stctlltll
llhltlltperl,

P·amoroy

~~~~! l~i
Prf''tCrtphOn'5.

. ", 19!!

Di/(nil;r· ~,.d Srrr:iet&gt; ~lrt•ny~" .

Established 1913
'
992-2121
106 Mulllorry An. ·

FIRE

&amp; SAFETY

S~LfSo&amp; SERVI.&lt;e

992-7075
172 Norlh Stcond Au.
Middllporl, Ohio

--

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ftnonclng .,.........

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We apecialize in:
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they daaervell
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'fine fabrtca
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$2t.OOmo.

$36.00mo.

Call BENNEn~S

MARINE SERVICES
i

CUSTOM DESIGNED FOR YOU
•Solid Vinyl Insulated
Replacement Windows
sl.iletime Warranty
oGuaranteed Installation in 3
Weeks from Date of Purchase
SAVE UP TO 50·

ON

YOUR H EATIN G R ILL S

446-W18 or Toll FrM 1-eoo-.72-51167

Golllpolla, Oh.

Different Rooms and
Outside Buildings
Free Estimates

614-367-0421

COUNTRYSIDE
CERAMICS
Bisque, Greenware,
Paint Brushes,
Accessories,
Finished Places,
and Day &amp; Evening
Classes available
now.

BUULKUER,BACKHOE
•nd TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC BYBTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARIIIG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAUED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

992-3838

DAN'S
TRANSMISSION
&amp; AUTO REPAIR

and

II::====== :

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMIINJ
.n~~~~lng

. ;;jj·
.

.

~

31904 .....li••
C.... kRHd
Mitldleport, o•io

614·992·7144

":,:at,

'-'•·····

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp; COAL

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS

a.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR

Reasonable Rates
Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614-742-2138
3141931 mo.

GENEUL
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992-7878
7f711mo.

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM ••d
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

Howll'ci.L Writesel

ROOFING

NEW -REPAIR

614·915·4110

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCJION

FREE ESTIMATES

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

WHAlEY'S AUTO
PARTS

FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473

Specializing in Custom
Frame Repair
IIW &amp; IISEUAIU JOI
AU IWIES 't. IIOIIU

7122/93

992·7013 or
992-5553

or TOll FREE
1-100..141-0070
DARWIN, 01110

Announcements
3 Announcemems

a

Abaolutoly HO "-hing .,.

nu

on Hal~ HoWard
y, Hnon Holghta, N-

even, WV.

USED RAILROAD TIES

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

leNAw Homes

3-16-93-tfn

992·2269

BINGO

8/1219311 mo.

949-2168

BILL SLACK

12-30-92·11n

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do It
• for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

AI 01 10.21·13• I Edgar Eota1&gt;1&gt;

WATER
HAULING
1625 Gallons

'50 per load

WUI Nol Be Hesponaible FOr

Any O.bt• Made By Anyone
Oll!et Than Myeott.

Unauthoflad

Property At 1688 G.org" Creek
R01d WUI Ba Prosecuted to The

Fullest Extent.

Frienda

In

Chrl.t

Chri.tlan

lind

Chrlatlan

Dallng Some., "Hotptng CMa-

tlan

Call
Ralph At

Peraon,

Trwpaul~ On Waher Lane'a

SI'31Jiet

Paf1nera. Caii1-800-9:I0.75e&amp;.

742·2904
til 1 mo.

1112~192111n

NaTlCE-NO hunting will bt al·
lowad an tall 91-a~ pn&gt;po~y.
o.nct.nln Dletrict, Rt. :as eouth
of Htncter.on. Anyone tr.apau.
lng will be PfOHCuted. Jimbo

Sttwart.

Talk

u.,.

To A Rut GJttad
1·100-288-644&lt;1, E1&lt;1.
4507, 13.11 Per Min. Must Be 18

Psychic

WANTING
TO BUY
JUNK CARS
&amp; TRUCKS
Any Condition
614-992·7553

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,
Patios,
Sidewalks
992-7878

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
AT 1 P.M.
RACINE GUN CLUB
Factory Cklte,
12 gage o1ly.
Beginning Od. 3
i/30 1te

7nl

Mason,
773 5515

1

HAULING

94&amp;-3086

mEE ESTIMATES

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Adcltiona
-Gutter Work
-Eiolclricef 1nd Plumbing
.
-Roofing
-lnlerlor &amp; Extorior
Painting
(FREE ESTIMATE$)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

MOBILE HOME

IIEAnNG AND COOLING

1019.93

S• .tcln1 aU Makes U Mocle18!

Barry, Ownormm Faulk, Manager
Certified technicians on
job.
SaHalacllon

satisfied

Extensions run to

WINTERIZATION SPECIALS

'

20 years ol

Jacka Installed

1128111n

,,,

=

POMEROY, OHIO

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING

R-

HOME

1 ..

LOHSE

FURNACES

(614) 992-7474

Swom to In
before
mo 1nd6- " ' - - - - - - - aubaerlbad
my pra.nce
thla 41h day at Oolober,
Public Notice
1tv3.
-.,.------Specializing in
Robert L Bchllllllr
Th• Vllhtge of Pom.,oy
Attor~•ll.lw
lad
bldo
I
Automatic
I
No.. ry P..Lo In .nd will acco~t au
""'
the ct•rk a Office, 320 Eoal
Transmissions
for the State of Ohio, u.ln Street, Pomoroy, Ohio
1.7.03 R.C. for
tho
following
368 East Main St.
Ulellme Commlaoion lnouronc":
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ohio R..laad Coda Sacllon
1. Pollee Llllbility
992-6215
2700.14; 163.07; and Civil
2. PubJic Olflclal'a
992-e321
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rula 4.4(A) (Addr...
U.blllly
8-10-e:!~ln
Unknown)
3. R"t Cover~~ga
LEGAL NOTICE FOR
4. Ganerol U.billly
5. HMlthfLit.lnaurenc•
·PUBLICATION (Sill (6)
8peclllcatlona m•y be
lnoartlono)
Leo A. Seyfried, Gladyo picker! up .t the VIllage Hall.
Seyfried, Aim I
W. lllda moy be aubmlttad until
Holllngawort!J, Mn W. 12:00 pm EST on Nov1111ber
Seyfried, Lucille Seyfried, 15 , 1183. Tha· Village
AU types Of
Clara 1.. Caoto, M.x G. rnarv" tha right to rajact
Carpentry,
A.
Hortanb•ohl &amp; Cllra . any or Ml blda.
~
Hartenbacn
whoaa
Bru.. J.RMd
Plumbing,
adcfraaa(n) •• unltn-n to
Mllyor
El t' lc etc
tho Plaintiff will llka notice
Kathy Hyull
ec r •
thlll !hoy MYtl- aued by
ctarlt/Traao.
10% DloiCount
(Former Mason Lanes)
(10)21 , 22, 2&amp;, 26
Senior Citizen.
3rd F..,.Y Stl'ltts
of Ohio, Who h• lnoulllocla --Pu_b_l-lc_N_OI_Ice-742-2443
WV
~ng •ln tha Common
1.._1 mo.
Court of Molga
13041
Counly, Ohio; to AtPProprf*
LEGAL NOTICE
1,
oertain property d•crlbad
Tha aniiUIII tlolllon of the
Public Notice
WINTER HOURS
f!aroaltor for highway Alblnlf
lndapo~~ •;! i. Cltndldltu jlelltlona to 1M Sun.•Thurs. 4-10 pm .
purpoua, namely lha =·=~•~•bar 1, t tllocl with tho aoorotiry
Fri. &amp; SM., 4 pm-?
nt8Jng, 00."1:.'1::!0:0.: !Ia llf tho I 1L1anJ Qnrigo~ Qotober 271 ~-. lh- lfO • , . , . . . . ,. . . . . . . . . . •
~;::
Molga Hill Albftny, Ohio, ht .., lour (41 dlrootore to 1M ; lllfllllltarMIIarpPG~IIIcilr·
c:ounty, Ohio lliiCIIO nx tho the hour• of 1:00 P.ll. and r olootad for the -thrao tom
.,..... of aald property. Tho 7:00 P.ll. C.Rdldatoil lor 11M-1M and one dlreotor
lM ilf1801ora IIIUit bo realdlflta to lM oiOOtod for the OliO
property aought to
of the Alaiondar aOhool yoor,.,. 1114-ltM.
appropriated Ia 111oro chlrlotand 'holdiirofl 1 •
Tha~ylndopondont II 1 1 Trr1 1 1-11
iijtliofftollly cleecrlbad 11 mantberahlp tlcltat. bat
AQIIcuiiiiN Ia alai)
frHE ......os
~ 1U:.,wn awn•, 11 .._ dato to purohuo a 1•,
· Doria 1:t. Mace
111omltorahlp tloltot Ia
Sacrat.ry
~=cr'lo
oolob•r
u. 1111. · (10) 1s, 22,21110
742•2360

J)t•••

Ohlt

Mobile and Doublewlde owners...

PHONE
INSTALLATION

4--19-93-lln

i~:..po=c~,OJ.. at!!

271 llorth (

.SWISHER

. 11 S (. Memorial Dr.

Natidnwide Ins . Co.

'.

992-6669

446-9515
We give c:•rpet end

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOORATES
DAVID ARNOLD

·LANES

Crow's Family Restaurant

Box 189
Middleport, o•io 45760
(614) 843·5264 5/I4I93Jtfn

treatment

E ·GLE

RACINE PLANING MILL

.....

hills.

POMEROY
HOME REPAIR

RAWUNGS·COATS

W. have •
atook of aev•l'lll l\llm• br•nd tirn 1nd
II wa don't haYti, w• can gatiL
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATEO BY CHRIS NEAL.
304-773-$533
2nd LDOatlon aoll Lon Neal
Hencleraon, W.Va. 30Hi75·3331
Moalercard and VI'A llCCef)...,,

HOME SITES

v.

985-3406

• (..ow, wide 60 and 70 · Series

boctf,

Sactlon0.31
Parcel No. 2-WD
(Pogalof1)
AMENDEO
DESCRIPTION OF THE
PARCEL OF LAND AND
ESTATE, INTEREST OR
RIGHT THERIN
APPROPRIATED
Situated In lh• Tolllinahlp
of B•llabury, County of
Melga and Stole of Ohio,
and known aa baing port of
too - · L.o.t No. 383, • p•rt
of T-n 1 North, R•nge 13
Wa•t, •• ahown by the
recorded Malgo Counly Tu
Pl.t, Mop No. 27, Parcol No.
016, and· mora fully
bounded 11rtd dNcrlbed u
folio-:
PARCEL NO. 3-WD
(HIGHWAY) ALL RIGHT,
mLE ANO INTEREST IN
FEE SIMPLE•, EXCLUOING
UIIITATION OF ACCESS, IN
THE FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED PROPERTY
Boglnning In the clinllr of
th• raocl on theoouth 11.. of
100-- Lot·No. 383:
thence weot about 200
fait to tho cliff;
thence In ·a north•rly
direction to tho corner of
tho Silvio Roger and Noncy
Sn~ acluth proparty Nne;
thane• 1111 •!!out Z®
faat to lha cenl•r of tho

Chester, Oh. 45720

AMERICAN GENERAL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

POOR BOYS TIRES

Mon.·Thurs. 7-9 p.m.
Fri. · Sun. 7·1 0:30 p .m.
$2 Admission
Sponsored by:
The Retail Merchants Assn.
French Art Colony

Ohio Revlaed Coda Section
2703.14; 163.07; and Civil
Rule 4.4 (A) (Add,_o
Unltn-nJ
IN TIE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
J..-yWroy
Director ot 'Tr1maportatlon
S-ofOhlo
Plaintiff

SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

2/12192/tfn

Bob and Charlene Hoeflich

Information on anyone who
wants to give a baby up for
. adoption. Call anytime 7421302. Call collect if needed.

~USTOM

36358 SA 7

(No S1nday Callsl

Pomeroy,

530 FIRST AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS,OHIO

Falrvtew Bible Church
l.etan, W.Va. RL I

llarrloonvlllt CommaniiJ Church
p....., Thoroa lludwn
Sunday -9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wedneaday - 7 p.m.

Sunday School- 9:1S a.m.
Wonhip -10:1~ Lm.
SnowYIIIe
Putor: Flolalce Smith
Smday School- 10 am.

llJ'u•llle Commun1t1 Church
Sunday Sehool - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.

Worship - ll a.m., 6:30p.m.

Snmn

Sunday Sehool: 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip Savic:e: 10:30 Lm.
Bible Studjr, Wedneaday, 6:30p.m.

Worship · lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Olh er Churche s

S!Biday School - 9:30 Lm.
Evenin&amp; - 7 p.m. ..
Wednesday Servic:ea -7 p.m.

Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.

OCTOBER 25th-31st

( II

FRENCH ART COLONY

Coolville Road
Putar. Rev. Phillip Ridenour

Calvu-y Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pa110r: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday Sehool -9:30 Lm.
Wcnhip 10:30 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Ivan Myen

Alfred

Pa1tor. Sharm Hausman

While's Cltopel Wtlleyan

Sunday Sehool - 11 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SeiVice ·7:30p.m.

Ha&amp;el Comm•lly Church
OffRL 124
Putor. Edsel Han
SundaySehool -9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m.

Melp CooperaUYe Parish
Northea!l Cluster

H,..lo&lt;k Gro•e Church ,
Pu10r. Charle.l Domiaan
Sunday school- 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Reedl'fllleCb-ofCill'llt

Hillside BapU!I Church
SL RL 143 just of! RL 7

Pa1tor: Dawn Spalding
Worship- II a.m.

Liberty Christian Church

Belhlehem BapUst
· Putor: Rev. Eod S1w1er
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Thunday Servioes- 7:30p.m.

Sycamore&amp;. Secood St, Pomeroy

HAUNTED MANOR

Pallor: James Lewil

Salem Center
Pattor: Rm Fierce

Sunday Sehool -9:45a.m.

Pa1tor: J01eph B. Hoskin1
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

P11tor : Joe N. Sayn:

Co~r

F'reed1111 Goopel Ml•lon
Bald Knob,'"' Co. Rd. 31
P0110r. Rev. Roier Willford
Sunday Sehool- 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip- 10:4~ a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

.

Worship -10:30 a.m.
Thunday Service• -7 p.m.

Betllan1
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday Sehool · 10 am.
Wonhip. 9 a.m.
Wedneoday Services· 10 am.
Carmel

Our Saviour Lutheran Churdl
Walnut and Henry Su., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Co-puton: Rev1. Richud &amp;
Patricia Bond1· Krug
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II a.m.

Kinaobuty Road
Pall&lt;•r: Clyde W. Hendenon
Sunday Sehool -9:30 Lm.
•Evenin&amp; - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

N.,. H..., Cburch oftha Nuaretle
Pastor: Glondoo Stroud
Sunday St:hool -9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
wedneaday Services • 7 p.m.

Putor. Arthur Cnblml

SL John Lulheru Church

RuUand Church or ChriJt

Carleton lltt«detiomlnaUonal Church

Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.

Wonhip- 9 a.m.

Wonhip • 9:30 am.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Sllver Rid&amp;e
Pa110r. Duane SydCilllric:kcr
Sunday Sehool · 9 Lm.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday S.rvioe • 7 p.m.

Portland Plrll Cbun:b of the Nounne
p....., William Junis
Sunday Sehool -10:00 a.m.
WonhiJ&gt; • 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Service•- 7 p.m.

RuUan~

REWARD $2,000
For the arrest and conviction
of person or persons who
burned my mobile home .on
Shady Cove Rd. Also two
area lights and .. pump were
stolen· $100 Reward. Please
notify the Sheriff's Office in
County, Pomeroy,

Souti!Bethel N.,. T-nt

RuUand Church of the Nazarene
Pas10r. Samuel Baoye
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneaday Services- 7 p.m.

Worship • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Service~ · 6p.m.

Lutheran
Pine Grove
Pastor: Dlwn Spalding

Bradford Church of Chrlst
Comer or St. RL 124 .1: Bradbwy Rd.
Evangelill: Derd; SlUmp

Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

•'

Pastor: Keith Rader

Pastor: Tom Runyon

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:40Lm., 7:00p.m.

.

Sunday Sehool - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6p.m.
W~dnesday Services -7:30p.m.
RockSprlnp

Reorganized Cllurch or JtiUI Chri!l
In Latter Day Salilh
PorUand-Racine Rd.

Raclne First BapUst

lO~m.,

Wesleyan Bible Hollnea Church
7S Pearl SL, Middlepon.
Putor. Rev. John Neville

Wednesday Servicet -7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wonhip ·

PomeroJ
Pu tor: Eunhae (Gr~.oc) Kcc

Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Sunday School .- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Youth Meeting · 5:30p.m.

'

Wedne1day Service- 7:30p.m.

Hysell Run Hollnoa Church
Plllor: Robert Manley
S~mday School- 9: 30 LnL
Wo11hip • 10:4S am., 7 p.m.
Th1111day Service-7:30p.m.

Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood

,-

Worship - 10 a.m.

Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Lord's Supper lst Sunday of every month.
Wedneaday Service-7:00p.m.

Sllt~er

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - l0:30o.m., 7:30p.m.

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Wo~&gt;hip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.

Ch....,. Cburdt of the N...,....e
Putor: Rev. Heabort 0101o
Smday St:hool · 9:30 a.m.
\ 1Wonhip- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedneaday Services · 7 p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Panor. Florence Smith
Sunday School - 9 a.m.

Pastor: Jack Cclegrove

Pa11.0r: Roaer Wall DO

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.

Minersville
Putor: Deron NeWman
Sunday School- 9 Lm.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.

.

Pine Grave Bible Hollnes! Church
1/2 mile of! RL 325

Sunday 1chool - 9:30a.m.

Zion Church or ChriJt
Pomeroy, Huriaa!ville Rd. (RL143)

PaslOr: Paul Stinson
East Main St

Pomeroy Church of lht N-reate
· Putor. Rev. Thcmao Mc:Ciuq
Smday School ; 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednelday Servicea · 7 p.m.

Pastor. Rev. O'Dell Manley

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Free Will Bapllsl Church

Healh (Middleport)
Putor: Frank Smith
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 Lm.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Setvicet - 6 p.m.

Sunday wonhip · 7 p.m.
Wednoldaypayermcolina- 7 p.m.

Middleport Church of Christ
Sth and Main

a.m.

Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Thunday Services -6:30p.m.

SyrtO&lt;UN Church of Ute N-reo•
Paslllr. Rev. Rid&lt; SwrJill
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea · 7 p.m.

Pu1.0r. Deron Newman
Sunday Sehool. - 10 a.m.

PallOr. Rev. Dewey Kin&amp;
Slmday 1chool- 9:30a.m.

Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Sunday ~ehool-

ForestRup

THE
PHOTO PLACE

'

I II I II'.! I

New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Gara~ • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

UCINI
MOWER CUNIC
Wlllll ILUY

,... ... S.Ikl
MoWIII • CWt Sews

·w....''"
AuthoriZIICt.
Brtgga a.

Str.tton liTO, Ry'an,
I.D.C. Rapalr Cantor
PICKUP and DEUVERY
Hotlra ... M-F N ~
Cloaacl Sunday

949·2104

Bill's Tire
ofRav-wood
announces
Richard Moore
haa joined
staff.

our

Richard comes to
with 12 yrs.
experience et

Pomeroy Home &amp;
AutO and C&amp;A Auto
Come VIall Ua.

WICK'S HAUUNG
SERVICE
36970 Bal R111 Road

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

992~3470

OWIIEI: JaH Wit.._
611011

Yrt. Proeall Co. I02-954-111120.

last Your Romantle 10!!! Call
Tha Hot
Oulz, 1-1100-786837&amp; Ext. 1156, S2.M /Min
Procall Co. fl02·Q54-7420 . '

·eoo·

4

,8.

Giveaway

2 Wh•• Fem.le Puppln, Smatt
Broad, lovaablo, And A,. Good

Wateh Doga, IM-388-8771.

aOld,Pupp~oo•
V2 a:;~~· o w.....
Ywy t.:.-a, I
8-11816.
·
I

month old male K..hound·

Shlphet'd to country home;·
lmo. r.ma .. kitten, lnalde only ;

114-848-2463.
Cola I khtana. 304-67&gt;-2968.

F,.. Kltt.,1, To GOOd Home
Only! Coli Aft., !:30 P.M. 6t4245-6tsl

Frw pupfll-, mother ba.ck :
Germen .Sheptird, ... at 2501 .
Uncoln Ava. :104~75--2023 1fter
101m.

Mlnlttluno
Poodle,
male,
l*llltld. Fulf.bloodad Baogto,

-

wlehlldron. 304-67&amp;·121$

ar I'IS.1)81.

PtaytulluUy malo dog, ... ,ear
old,IM-1112-2754.

�...

,..

_Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

4

..
Friday, October 22, 1993.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BEATilE 8LVD.r~ by Bruce Beattie

Giveaway

KJT 'N' CARLYLE® tiy Larry Wright

F- Walnuto, 114-36~.

115!12woningl.

Lost&amp;

-

· Found: Malo Grey ~orrltr 1'\Jp,
On Uftlo Ky- Rood, 114-31771-17.

5pm.

~

..,....

Loc:IIO, Etc. -

ltll Rodman tra!lor1 14•70
wni20 expendo, 3 DIG~, 2
botho, taluo ... poymonto or 45
eNd ft.

: 388-i482 Unlll10 P.M.

PHtLLIP
ALDER

c..

·~-

4223 "ltar
S:GD p_.,
Good,
Mklna:
·1117 ToyOta MR2, with oun]'OOI,
amllm, . •llep., block, uldne
l'lotol41 2225.
t8h
Daytona ES, Aulo,
PS, PI~.AC, .AIWII Cole., L&lt;&gt;w

Nd whh whh•

win . Ple•H

NORTH

••a s
.10.

. 111111, ..,...,,,_ _ Altar
8:110 /LIIW llloilago.
11111 Grond P~x X, $4488. 18110
Grond Am, tl488. litO Chevy
llo!-, 14880. tan Chevy II:~,
14110. 1988 Ronal&lt; t31U. liM
Fiero, 112M. 180 Ftftb A....,uo,
$1~5. ·MonJ moro· to e ~ Seoetya UMd Cora.

EAST
tQJf
.KQJHS
• J 10 3

+J

-__

Glldtrl Morel 1832 Clay Tick

Plnecr.tt

care

Center,

170
PlnocrHt Drtvo, Gllllpollo, Ohio

Rood, Out 218, Watch For Signs,
1---------C..II6t4-256-1055.
45631 l14-&lt;146-71t:z.
Business
21
AlL
Y11d Saln Mull So Paid In La.i Claonlna /Roll-lion
Advanca. DEADUNE·. 2·.00 p.m. Buaineee S.kihg Ptl"'on For
Cloanlna
-the dly before IM •d • to run. On
C.lr Bull,
Send Poot-Timo
Reeume:
Sundoy od~lon • 2:00 p.m. SCCS, P.O. Box 482, Golllpolla,
Frldoy. Monday od~lon • 2:00 OH 45631.

__-~~~~~L......,.­

p.m. Saturdly.
.:::;:.::::.::~,----~October 23rd, In Clntonory, =-~T~·20 houkro .~ml
· d :::!k.
B111nd Name Clot hint Home ln.
ml '1
WM en.,.
"T"'·

IIWM bO able to wCH'k bolliloya
and other oblftolf nlldod. Send
y1rd &amp; p h s 11 T··-... 0c re•wn• to Personnel at
ore
a: --.ay ~ PIMNnt Valley Hoapitll, 252(»
tobor 26th, &amp; Wodnndoy 0&lt;1 Valley Drlvo, Pt. P-ont, WV

torlor, Storoo, Rings, loc.

21th, 843 SKond Avenue.

25550

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

AAIEOE

National Publloblng Firm NMdo
"-oppo To Labol Pootexrdo
From Homo. $800/Wk. Sol own
Houro. 1·900-Jit0.7377. C$1.48

Porch Sale: 2217 N. Main St., Frl· Mln/18 Vru), Wrhe: ~AlSE.-338,

Sal·Sun, 10:00-3:00, klng·alze 1&amp;1 S. llncolnw1y, N.Aurora IL
sh111s, girls clalhH size a.-10, 60542.
kitchen lfema.
~;;;di;;b,;;iii;;l;;"jji;iik;;;:

8

On

your

Home

Without Retlnanclng.
889-5808 For Details!

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

773-~85.

9

Fall Cl..,.nctl11183 W- Book
Eneyolopodlo .PI• 2 Volumo
Dletlonoryi $488 Sovo: t2481
&amp;•r Twm1. Marg1r.t Pierce, 10Wic,l:, $125. 3QA.773-5049.
Outoldll elooa to VInton, moblll Small bualniU apace, IXC. 304-471-377~. .
AKC Chow puppln, bom Del.
homo with -ton, 21 ....
-·~
• . po!tdng.. 304~ Fl...,..eo,,.Wood Burning lnoM; 3rd, 10Jdy Nov. -28th. Now taking
morw or •••
•rrt oftert 7673,
8.00..5.00.
114-441-2871•. '
.
deposha, 2 blue main, 2· blue
$28,1100, exit U..lna AGent RUih
femaln, $250, 614-992·5347.
~pac11 for l"lnl ...lrtlng It Flr.wood For Sale: pick-Up
MIUII, 513-372-5531 -or
543·7711•.Hoorth Roany, Inc.
$85/rnq., IM~82·2'16l .
Load Or DLMIIP Truck Load, Wo Mlnlaturo Plnoehor, lomolo,
Doll)rot, 114:4-··
.
f200. 304-576-2444.
TURNDOWN
•
r •
•
• •
•
For Mobil Hoot)o; Loan, 0111 304- lf1 Wa~~ to.'Ran!
F l -: AI Honlwoadll SpiR ·AKC ' Rlolll.,.d Collie Pupo.
]55-71111.
140 Pick-Up Load. 304-476-3~3 ovonlngo.
Wonlilla to rwnt· 2 ~ 3 bedroom Dollv114.21111-1318 Or 114-367-7028
boull;
ln
•
n
anil(loo!l
DDnd~
Boaton Terrl1r puppy, 8wk• old
34
.Buslnese . ·
tlon, ..,..., prlvoto N!IN.·.,., ·E-lnao•
m111, 111 1ho11, · fl1her AKC
882-2421,
:r
no'
_
.
.
.,
jllaro.O
Filhor Prlco AI In Ono Ploy Reg., mothlr-not, $125. 304-lllSBuildings
tMWmtNI,Iille ..... IMDj1lnL .... · KHcloen Cblldron Thr11 To ld3.
. '
,' ~
On. 40'xl0' metll bull41ng, ntW,
SHon For Solo '$30, 814-317·
O.lmotlon Puppy, 11 WHk Old
12' ctidng; ~OIMI 30'110' blbck
l'llt3.
•·
Merchandise
Ftmal•, 614488-8402, 61'-388bulldl~g; ono 2 atory lromo
For Solo: Aolco Wrostii1"Sbon 8422.
home with vinyl .wing; 614-1112·
2151.
'
~-= l2 112 Prlco: I20, 14-446- Drogonwynd Cattery: CFA
·
Siam~:H Kltt1ns. 614-446-3844
5I
Househ~ld
Lots &amp; Acreage
For Sale: L.odln A!ilnor ~ather Aftor7:00 p.m.

1-

•I•

2 1

Iota, -TomiiMon Run
Rd, 1mi. rr- lit. 2, cijy wotor,
additional acrNa• optional.
304-its.3108 altar 5:110.
··
IGSOI , ac:,.. Remote,· blaullfuf

Wanted to Buy

Antlq1.111 and used furniture, no

h1m too 11r,e or too small, will '
buy one piece or complete
hoUiehokl, call O.by Martin,
614-992-lll•t.

lend; Cor
- ·good.
· puturo
and hlllo.
Call
map. 1-41W13U41. Athina,OH.

All real estate &amp;dverttstng In
this newspap&lt;or Is subloa to
the Fedeml Fair Houshg Ar:l
o1 1968 which maims HI legal

to advertise •a,ny preference,
Imitation or clscrtrninallon

'·I

,,.

eo.t Slzt 10, Ukt New $30,
Phone:
814-441-4871 Calor:

SOUTH

Burgundy.
ParakHI:•,
$14.99.
FIM T111111 Vory G- Trood, Young
1'185 75--.. $50; . Sol: Mory'o Hamsters, $2.99 &amp; $4.99.
Martr.lt, 24, Central Avenu1,

(Golllpollo).
·
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Wrought Iron T - W/4 ChaR; Golvlnlzld Wooli Tub -ilo 2 In
Fon laek Rooking Choir Ill; Good Condition, $10; 614-4461129~.
Gonion,.,... Wly'ti $12Q.IIO

.

'"' ~· SeouPI. HSOO, cilllt4.H2,5225.

,

.

Everyd1y IQW pricn.

HEY,

~-t754.

MAW!!

Lot uollnd tbl car you wonl. An-

FIX ME A
SANDWICH

Wo

don't·biJY, 1111, or !IIQOIIOII. WI
only IOCI11 I lnv~lgate. THE

SHERIFF'' TATE .
IS ·COM IN' OVER
TH'
. .. RIDGEll
..

354e.

DllpooH, .

Rar........,

l!uot

614.245-5152, ~II ~nor 1 P.ll.
1883 Chevy C~b, 1 ton,

PEANUTS

·r

i' FIGHT. F16HT, Fi6HT WITH
ALL YOUR MIGHT.AND 60 ON
TO A 1416!-!ER 1-1E16HT! ''

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

MARCIE,THAT'S [HAD HOPED
THE WORST IT WOULD BE
CHEER I'VE
INSPiRATIONAL,
EVER HEARD!
SIR ..

$70110, 114-882·2~.

IT'LL INSPIRE
EVER~ONE

TO 60
HOME ..

Hove

No Pota,lt4-44e-

FRANK AND ERNEST

2 Bedroom, Rontol, Nice Loeatlonl Wolklna Dlataneo To Storo,
Roloroni:o li O.pooft Roqulrod;
114--448-8114.
.

· Al&gt;AM'$ 8'0\JND TO GfT INTO UOU,Lf:

gy t-IIMSft.F ·· wf'P 'fTTE-~ A~llANG~
$OM~ SO/lT OF "BuDl&gt;Y" S'YSnM.

aecept

actvertisemenls tor real eslale
whktlls In Violation ollbo
law. our readers art hereby ·
lnlormoclthal all dwellngl
B&lt;tolertlsed In this no-r
ant avallabte on an equal
• &lt;~·~unrtYlliilli:' ••

Real Estate

2 Bedroom HouM Whh 81...

ment Oft 588, All Chy Ud!ltlee,

$31,500 Firm, Call I.Any, 114«1·1157.

HoUII And a 14170 3
Bodroom Troller· 40148 Cornrnon:lol Building And 2 ,..,.. or
Proport"-.AI: Old 31, Goltlpollo,

3 Bedroom

114-446-7750.

42 Mo~lle Homes
tor .! 'lent

SWAIN

Patio Daorl 5 Ft. Aluminum Slld-

AUCTION I ·R.IRNITURE. 12 1~ ~ or With ScrHn S715, ..Call
8 3934.
Ollvl St, GaiUprillt; - ·· Ulld I
fumilll'l, hMtera, WMtwn 6

WCH'k-I14-44WII8. ,

s..,.

Uonk1y

Bar

Dome;

Ployaehoot .Droam Doll Houoo,
Uu Now, 114-245-5887.
1'- modal eolor TV
rapolrod; ·B1&lt;-8411-2111S

61 Fann Equipment
Now Hotlond 351 grlndlor/ml••·
Now HOillhcr 111. hlyblnd,
Kra•• 12ft. 1111naport disc ln-

tomotlonol 151 lroetor, oltvor
11110 tractor. All good cond. 304-

273-4215.

~

Bfl. full size truck topper. 304773-5838.

.

Budg~ Trt~namlsslonl,

Used &amp;
,.bu,h, all typea, .tartlng at $90;

owner
293!.

614·245-5677,

Eul

z+

Pass
Pass

s+

Pau
Allpau

New 011 tanka, one ton truck
Hoor mat•,
ate. D&amp; RAuto, Rlploy, WV. 304·
372-3933 or 1-800-273'8328.

79

Dltr

Campers&amp;

Huntet'• apaclsl

HI, KeVIN ... Ho'.VC
, . "''CU 6E5N
R06E'&gt;IE'&lt;

OH, Y55 ...
1-1-.14NY TIME 5.

'NOWL.D YOU l.,IKE'ME 1P oesa:116E
HIM ~'t't:X.l~

L.e:re PRE:Tl:ND
rN~~ID

ANY'Tl-1 INS-.

20ttJ

I FRIDAY

Job Too Big Or Small, VNr'l Ex·
Older

~twlir

Home11. Addltlona, Founda11on•,

Roofing, Kftehono /Bstho. InEatlm~tes. 614-367~
0516.
sured, "Fret

. .\STRO·GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Malchmaker inslanlly reveals which signs ; ARIES (M,rch 21 -Aprll 19) You should be
are romanlically perlecl lor you. Mail $2 and able 10 respond effectively 10 Shifting condi·
a long. sell-addressed , slamped envelope 1~s today lhat might drop some benelits in
to Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper. P.O.
Bo• 4465 , New Vorl&lt; . NY. 10163.

your lap. You'll realize speed is ot the

competitive arrangements, the last thing

your t)ands. Focus on mental pursuits and
a~oid manual ones if possible.

essence and acr accordingly.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22i You hava TAURUS (April 20·May 20) Even !hough
rather rema~rkable potential todS.y, but you your mental faculties w ill be worM ing in htgh
might nol express il unless challenged. In gear today, you moght beaM clumsy with
you'll want is second place.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Today

GEMINI (May 21.June 20) This is a good

y~ur fi nancial ·aspects look very promising , · day to experiment with ~ew systems a'nd

but not necessan~ !rom lhings you'll do or
design. Your biggesl breaks are likely to
come thr~HJgh others. to Whom you 've been

· Se!urdoy, Oct. 23, 1883
.,,
~-o ur ,proba*ililies lo r, doing something
;~lhef ai\raordjna,Y are very srrong in lhe

I

'

Elictrlcal &amp;
, ~efrlga!'$1101'1
•
Anldlntlll or · comm.aiJ,
wiring, ,_ ·or IIPOinil."
Muter. UCIIfllld __ rli:lo~ •
Aldonour Elict~I, · ,WV00030(·
304~17M.

T

. I

..."·

year ahead . What you do could make you
lamous or al leaal bell~ r known by your
. own peers. '
.
P,BAA (Sept. 23-0et. 23) You are presenl· ry in 8 very promlslhg linallfi&amp;l cycle that
~ bOih pea's and troujjhs. Big thingo can
llellelop tor you when you peak on a daY
· likeloday. Know where to lo(&gt;k lor romance
. ' . and you 'll find. il . The Astra-Graph
II

procedures where your wort&lt; is concerned .
There are indicatiOns you' might come up
W~h something ingenious.

.

helpful.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Vou have a
CAPAICOAN '(Dec. 22-Jon. 19) Greater groater Influence over your peer group al
personal.lullinmenl an~ ~uccess Dt)U~ ;be in thiS time thlrr:you may" realq;e ..T~y, f10~1 ..
the offil)g lor you Joday ~ you U&amp;f your 1&amp;1: ' aver, you may 6ee IndicatiOnS' ol tillS \Nhen
enls on "'half of-others today. You 'll gain I. you notice haw eager lrlands are for Y&lt;&gt;ur
by giving.
· ;
·
. 'approval. , · •
,.
'
AQUARIUS (Jill. 20·Fob; It) Your intu· LEO (July. 23·Aug. 22) It's not lm~~Qrtanl
itive perceptions cOuld be ol enO'"lflUS help today how many' lhlngs ,you start. what is
lo you today. especially in siluations where . really ill•significance Is how l)lany th ings
you;re ~trh/lng ro lullill you l ambilious . ,you complelt. You're a high achiever who
expectatoo~s. is bOth a good starter and strong ~~sher. ..
. PISCES (Fob. 20·Morch 20) Somelhtng •. VIAOO (Aug. ~!lep!. 22) If you re going
· e•tremely important lor which you've been \ to take,an)' gaoltbies.tOCiay., do'" on.yourself
hoping has an excellent chance pi being 'and your abllhles irjslellll ol betting on oth·
gralil led In lhis cycle. In /act, your chart era. Actually the real odds areln _your favor,
shows you may also get some· extras : not theirs. ·
you've bean wanting.,
(

tnt croner s1andslor anothiW .. Tod•y·, clue: o t~qu11s c.

RMTAX

FCYRV
TR ' V
R t

T ' B K

T'BK
YKCOOJ

L K

NtRRKA

HIAK
CA

CANYJ

AM K

LKDCZVK
IFFIYRZATAJ

CAH

L C H

s

t

y

AD K . '
UCAK
VTLLKR
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "That rhythm, lhat beat, that groove, that !eel, it

I

just grabs you . I love it!" -

(Latin-jazz drummerl Poncho Sanchez.

'::!:;~' ·s@~4\l\'\-~t.tfs·
Uilo4 ~ CU.Y I . I'OUAN

Ofour
Rearrange lett1n of
terombled words
low to form

fO\It

WOlD
IAMI

the

word1 .

VE R R E E
/

AQOUT
3

11 1~1

N UT I F
~~ j

I

I;

A foreign corresponden! is

2 someonewhofliesaroundfrom

~

country to couniry and thinks
that the most interesting story
~IS the fact that he has arrived to

,;.:,.....,,-.,·c; ·C~,;P;~,e

L,-.1..-.L.-.L--.L.-.L.---1.

-

rhe chuckle quotod

by Mhng . in th' mis.srng word 1
yo u develop from step NO 3 below.

...L-LJ=::c:r '

TODAY'S WEATHER: On this day in
1985, a guest in the top Door of a Seal·
tie hotel was seriously injured while
talking on the telephone when a lightning boll trave led th rough the phone
wiring.

Curtll Home ImprOvement•. No
On

Eaerlletter in

J I TCEN
~-T-,
j _:,TI.:.....;.,6,....=..

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1962, President John F. Kennedy demanded the re moval from Cuba of
Soviet missiles and bombers, and
began a blockade of the island nation.

Services

pertene.

... Celebrity Cipher cryptogram•
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
lite crealed rrom QUOI•IIon. by lamous people. past and pr~ t .

I I

whM~ radlatora,

Hay &amp; Grain

C.lt.,·

-

whelmed

either West or East bas a

Today is the 295th
day of 1993 and the
31 st day offaJJ..

worter•

45 Painful
46 Whale
47 God of love
50 Terminate
51 Trot

;;~E~:ast
hastothe
singleton
a club
dummy's
ace jack.
wins

cam::;,~ condhon. $1,600.•
814.8411-24!53.
614
'
...
•
Mon:b And April Umouoln Bulla
For Soil, 614-448-11081.

H11Ji W-.1: Uno Cool!. ADDIV
In - ·
HoCidlly NoInn.Phoril
'U
. Ultollo.
AbooCUIIIy

z•

1

23 WhHI tracka
24 Slillwl
25 SbiCter lor

27 Having no HI
limite
28 Mlllald
29 Lhllu(dog br-)
31 WWII event.'
-+-1~-t 35 Fruit
37 -a Long
Way 1o
TlppOJary
38 Vulgar
39 More like a
decorative
fabric
42 Entice
43 Drag
44 Over-

614-371-

Motor Homes
POLE" BUILOINQ SPECIAL.
30'a40'8'. Polntod 81111 Sldoo, 11177 Wide Wortd Clmpor, A~
Oalvalume St1et Roof, 15'xl'
And AwnlngJ.~ Ft,
SIMI Slkll• 3' Man 0-. Conditioning
Exeollonl llondllon, ...aso,
U,lll. ERECTED. Iron H0111 090,
Aftor 8 P.M. I14-448·11&amp;3. ,
~ulldoro 1~52·1045.
1987 Fifth Whlll C..mpor, 21 Ft:
63
Livestock
Ukon Wlklom- Extra Nice,:~
Awnlr;&gt;g, HHcb a.-n
SO Roglll. .d AnaUI, ·Chi-An- $7,500, 814-258 &amp;031.
•
guo Cawo, 1800; 2l AoalotoNd
Anguo And Chi-AnaL. llolloro, ·19113 35ft. 5th whool, lullr ..,,_
CA &amp;
hMt '
lllny- P - t a At: UOO. contained,
81ote Run Fuma, Jaekaon, Ohio w.-!eyer. owning, rubbe~
114-281-6388.
"';'1r:;"ry oPtion, $18,500. ~
ill
5.
•
'
Fo..- Hlllon- 3 lhort bomod

and 112 Limoualn, $450 eech,

Norllt

Today's deal is a modification ol the
second in David Bird's article that 'I
mentioned yesterday. His monks are
playing a league match against a team
lrom Oxford University.
Most American players would open
that East band with two hearts, a
weak two-bid. The hand is short ol tbe
requirements for a one-bid.
· '
South's two-club overcall is awlul.
He bas a weak suit and minimum
strength. U you couldn't bring yourself
to pw that band, you should make a
take-out double.
. North's cue-bid showed a good band,
probably with a club fit.
West led his lowest heart, because
he hadn't supported his partner's suit.
Faced with two major-suit losers,
declarer had to pick up the trump suit
without loss .
Professor Barclay won the first
trick and promptly led the club queen
from hand, scooping up East's jack
and making his contract.
The Abbot was thunderstruck. "I
hardly dare ask bow you took such a
good view of the trump suit. Isn't it
better odds to play to drop the king?"
"Ah, no, you're definitely wrong
there. It's an old wives' tale, that business about tbe club king always being
a singleton. rve been keeping li record
•of singleton club honors for more ~an
·three years now. So far the club jack
has been singleton 172 limes and the
club king was a singleton only 1&amp;8
times."
You see the fallacy, of course.
South's line makes tbe contract only

du1Uy, 350 tnglne, good 1ann

This newspaper wll not

Employment Services

Weot

By Phillip Alder

Or 614 441 0076.

&amp; Livestock

lor thort

1m Ford Pickup Truck $500,

1988 Dodge Grand Caravan LE
$8,300 Alf Power 61ot-4-4&amp;-187S.

Farm Supplies

I Instructor,

The professor
kept a record

304-i75-5~.

WANTED: 3 eow bollo, call 814992-2155 boforo Oct. 30th.

11 .,-. Tr..hoart
16 4'ollllclan
Marlo20Poem
22 Conatruction •

Zulu'•

lister
8 Merchant

Opening lead: • 3

CONNECTING UNK, 304 182·
-•2
- .
72 Trucks lor Sale

2 Bod.- .H - . $210111o,

sex famiMal status or nallonal
origin, or any Intention to
ma1&lt;o arry such prelorence,

1

1.

South

TO GO!!

1887 Ford Aorootor von, black,

· 41 •Houses lor Rent
Pluo

knOwingly

,.

BARNEY

For S.le; Futl·llooded HHiar '110 modol Plymouth Voyoo-.
Pupo, Bom Sept 15, 1993, $30 88,000 mlill, _..ry good lhlipo,

E.ach, Phono: 114-371-2838.

6 For~~thumut

tehool
Tran11ctlon
S.Hume
Nam..
Thanks

1-

2
3
· 4
5

10 Photocopy

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: Eaat

11i12 ,Pontloe Orond Prix,
Richerd Potty odhlon, ground
otlaeto, twin auot eama" jpoltor,
ate., 114-&amp;n,-3814 hnHiprn.
1!187 Chevy Z-24 V-4, Engine, 4
Now Tlr• Good . Cori!!.HIG!I,
~.300, OBO, 614-388-112f;'lt4.
tlq•-ctMillo-contompary.

18 Nextlo last
10 Alllco
21 Foot part
22 TV'a
talking horn
2 Wdl.)
24 1
dill noHont
28 Halo
3D Puerlo-

+Q 108 7S

truck: 304-675-7217. ·.
Floh Took. 241if Jookson Avo. 1812 Chevy Sport 4x4, 112 Tan
Point Ploount, 304-li'IS-~3. Pickup, 814.317-0142, IS14-367.
IOgal. tank ut-upo, $19.99. 7881

Rentals

based on race, color, religion,
Hmliatlon or dlscrlmlnalion.'

Goods -·

ac,.

SEVERAL 7· ACRE. ""RCELS:
Molgo County, ·solom lWD.

Rick Purson Auction Company,
lull time aue11on•r, complllte
auction
aarvlc1.
Uc.nud
168,0111o &amp; Woot vlrginlo, 304-

Pets lor Sale
··
Groom ond Sut&gt;Diy st.op Pot
Grooming. All. bo'Ndo, .,.yloo.
Julio Wllib. Calll14 Ul 0231.
2'Aoglatorod Hlrnoloyon klltono,

'
Mercha. n"lse
"

hlfni~Phero

32 Burst
33 ·AclrellOordnor
34 Computer

tasz

54

42 c.pu.1 of
Tibet
45 Cindie
lto4der
48 Llbor org.
49 Retort ·
52Aiflrtt
53 SIHIInoi..
54 WWII11ea
55 OCd age
58 Bordering
tool
57- Molnea

31 Aug. ~me

tAK4
.A2

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410 I'Yythlftlll

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Yard Sale
18 Wanted to. Do
=
=
= = = = = 111
Help Wanted
:
Woukl Hkl to do bookknpo
Gallipolis
lng!-lealwCHkln 1t1J homo lor
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At
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Data.
All
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&amp;
CompOihlvo Wag.., Dllftroiotlol oman bullnno. 30W82·2358.
22nd, 23rd, 8-1, Ovor 700 VHS WHh ExperlencO, Equal OppotMovloo $5.00 E.ach, Now Wood tunlty
Emploror.
COniiiCI
F1nanc ial

.

C81et

15- ~!l•.v•
17 WHiertl

Dodge

"I'm so embarrassed ... even after I've turned ;
into the woHman, I still need a toupee!"

38W-blrd
30 Slow (mtll.)

4 Domeaii-

3 - - Lucy
.1
141Up-.

usoo.

Loot: 0&lt;1. 14,

35Atmylllftl

I Greelllllttor

:....
~~. 11:':d T~=~
ExoOllont Can!ltlonl '--lui

304-37N44S.

Found: Vlnton, Came To Our
. Home._ Small Fem1t., LooU
· Like Port Poodlo, Con Tall Ho
• Someone. PM, HIS Collar, 614-

·-

--,. _
,t=i=
--·
ACIIOII

Pldllmobllo • Delta ...
. Brougham, PS, P,, P~ POWM
So.,.o, Cilmoto COI)trol, Powor

11114 Ct;A\'TON MOBIL HOllE,
14ll70, SIR., 1 112 BATH, 51500.

To ldantlly, atop at tho Dolly

lulclc Pllll • -· sa,soo,

11111

41'74's1ftar
rn-

, 2 both,11W•
au
alr. $1;.,000,

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BRIDGE

·

...... Oltor, Coli o!4!dy 11+311-

~1

mollllo

14lc70 • 1110

Found: pair of men'• gla...a.
Found In tho Pomoror porlllng

lot.

Autos lor Sale •

.1ie5 01111 .. R - .
na,-..., $3100080. ...,.....

114-3114l:!lll.

6

71

SCitAM--I.ITS ANSWERS
Deftly· Joint· Imply· Kennel · MONEY
One nol so smart fellow to another: "I wish I had the
money to buy an elephant. • Second fellow: • What would
you do with an elephant?" First fellow: "Nothing. 1 just
wish I had lhe MONEY "

OCTOBER 22l

�•

-

..

...•'•
••

Ohio

OSU rips Purdue·to stay unbeaten - -c-1 ··
.

Getting into
the 'spirit' of
Halloween
-B-1 .

The.Northup community comes
under James Sands' scrutiny -B-4
Good old days by the creek are
recalled by Kevin _Pinson - B-6

Inside
Aloog tbe river •••••• .Jil-8
Buioess/Farm•.•••--• .Dl-8
Classified ---....-----Dl-7
Eotertalomeot .... .. . . - B-8
Editorai ...............- ... --.....A-4

Suaoy . Hlpurooad 70.

Sports.....- ...........- ..........Cl~
Weather ...........................A-2

+

tmts-

TOYOTA
Vol. 28, No. 35

94 TOYOTA TERCEL

---, ~ a~~~
cassette

Air Conditioning, AMfFM1

•

$13,995

cassette, loaded !

$8495

94 TOYOTA COROLLA

93 OLDS CIERA

•

J

Driver's side air bag, V6 ,
loaded with equipment

Automatic, air, drlyer's side

air bag, power locks , lo ..dedl

$13,995

_$12,995

94 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE

94 TOYOTA CAM RY LE

;;;;_::;;.·.

--

,r:t-I~"'
-

A Mu111medlllnc. -•paper

College probe: lawmaker again proposes investigation

Air Condltiorllng, cruise, aut~matlc,
AM/FM

14 Section 1211 Plgee

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, October 24, 1993

Copyrighted 1113

-·

$9369
94 FORD TAURUS

~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A state representative has .
proposed fora S!lCond time an investigation oflaWI!Iakers
who received illegal campaign conttibutions from presi·
dents ortwo-year coll~ges • including a former president
or Rio Grande Community College.
Rep. Jim Duchy ,R-Greenvine, on Thursday introduced
a bill calling for appointment of an independent prosecullr. The legislators received about $68,000 from some
college presidents through a lobbying group, the Ohio
Technical and Community College Association. .
Duchy introducedasimi\arbillin 1991, but the proposal
died in the House Ethics and Standards Commillee.
Authorities began investigating the campaign conttibu-

qons in November
fmes and $5,100 in
1990.
Authorities began investigating the campaign contri- restitution.
Fourteen college
Buchy said he was
presidents were al- butions in November 1990. Fourteen coUege presidents disturbed by an anlowed to enter a dinouncement this
version program to were allowed to enter a diversion program to ai'Oid week that authorities
avoid prosecution.
prosecution.
recommended ~~~~t
TheOTCCA'slob- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the case be closed. ·
byistandfourcurrent
.
"We had lawmakers
or former conege presidents were indicted on felony reporting contributions from lobbyists but writing thankcharges. They were allowed 10 plead no contest to misde- you notes for the money to college presidents,·' he said.
meanor election violations and ordered to pay $3,600 in '"This kind of corruption is a two-way streeL We have

every reason10 believe that elected officials had knowledge of this scam.••
Edmund A. SargusJr., U.S. attorney for the Southern
Disttict of Ohio, said Tuesday he would ask the Justice
Depamnent to review the decision 10 end the investigation.
The State Highway Patrol and the special prosecutor in
the case said there was no evidence lawmakers knew they
were receiving illegal conttibutions.
Duchy's biD proposes that three judges from Franklin
County be appointed 10 select a special prosecutor from
among candidates suggested by the governor, attorney
general and secretary of state.

Meigs County kicks off
newly organized 1993
United Fund campaign

Corps: no final
decision on
barge fleeting
facility proposal

By CH~RLENE HOEFLICH
Meigs County.
Tlmts-Sntinel StaiT
"At last there is an avenue for our
MIDDLEP()RT ·Kickoff for the MeigsCountyresidentstodirecttheir
fli'St annUlil fund raising campaign of human service dollars to their own
the newly organized Uniled Fund for community through payroll deducMeigs Counr;y has been set(or Nov. I tions as well as other means," said
at Dave Diles Park in Middleport.
Smith.
Thckickoffwintalceplaceat5p.m.
He was referring to employers atwith music by the Meigs Marauder ready into a payroll deduction proBan!l an!l a flag raising ceremony by . gram ~w~•.Jllilll.ey given by Meigs

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - The
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has
not yet made a fmal decision on the
applicationforapropose4barge fleet.
ing facility in Mason County, arqoye
which has drawn opposition from
some Gallia Counr;y residents. :; :
Steve Wright,publicaft'!lirsoffiCcr
for the
HuntingtAJD disa:ici,
PQint Towing
rI .::.~ltful'f~~~ibyPleasant
is cur-

·~!::n·Boy ."A/;~t)tM.re is an aven~;··~'fru:ci~:;: ·
Loaded with equipment.
C~m• Check the New lady Style .

Loaded with equipment

$31,995

"Ovlr 40 Toyotaa Avell1ble"

Dual air bags, V6,
automalic, atr, loaded!

$17,4.95

$15,995

rently in
draft decision stage.
The application to place tile fleetSmith, president, for our Mer.gs County res1- COunty United
ing facilitynearGallipolisFeny drew
will be joined to dents to direct their Iauman FUild programs. '
sharp prorests from Gallia County
residents whose Ohio River pmpetty
speak briefly by servict dDllars to tMir own
Smith pointed
Meigs County Au"ty ,
out that this is hapjust south of the Gallipolis city limits
ditorNancy'Parlcer commum ...
peningintheinduswill face the facility . The opposition
Campben as a rep.
Rev. Frank Smllb, Presklenl tries where many
KICKOFF PLANNED- The kickoff for the United Fund for Meigs County has been sel for S p.m., on No~. was voiced at an April29public hearresentative of govUnited Fund ror Meigs County Meigs residents
ing conducted by the Corps at Point
l,at Dave Diles Park. Pictured at a planning session are, from left, Chloris Gaul, secretary; Emma Paugh;
now work, includ·
Pleasant
High School.
,
ernment, and the
Tom Dooley, treasurer; Frank Smith, president; Srsan Oliver, vice presidenl; and, Vicki Morrow.
Rev. Sharon Hausman on behalf of ing the Meigs Mines and Qavin.
The facility would extend 2,200
community.
One emphasis of the United Fund
feet along the shoreline on the left
organizations from conducting indi- descending bank of the river. It would
As for agencies to benefit from non-discriminatory basis.
The Re.v. Mark Morrow.win give for Meigs Counr;y is 10 get thoSe dol-Be willing to coordinate public vidual annual fund drives. but that consist of two Ocets, each with .15
the invocational and benediction and Iars back to agencies in Meigs County. United Fund of Meigs County, a list is
fund
raising activities during the cooperation on timing so that the barges, three barges wide and five
refreshmentswillbeservedbymem- He did point out, however, that in being compiled.
The criteria for an agency to qualify Meigs County United Fund drive, and drives do not overlap will be requested. barges long. Mooring structures will
bers of the Middlepo~ Ans Council. some instances the agencies now rework cooperatively with other serOfficers of the United Fund are consist of three deadmen maile of
"Together...l" is the theme of the ceiving those dollars provide some includes:
vice-providing
agencies
in
Meigs
Smith,
president; Susan Oliver, vice concrete-fllled caissons.
-ServeresidentsofMeigsCounty.
1993 fund raising campaign.
services to residents here.
County.
president;
Chloris Gaul, secretary ,and
-Be a charitable non-profit serSinceitisthefli'StyearforaUnited
Businesses not how involved in a
The Corps is in the final stages of
It was pointed out by the president. Tom Dooley. treasurer. Others on the coordinating with other agencies on
Fund program in Meigs County, no United Fund program are being en- vice organization that meets IRS rethat participating in the Uniled Fund board of directors are Gary Evans, ~ 8J!Piication, Wright said. The apgOal has been seL The campaign will cOuraged to go into a payroll deduc- quirements (50! C3) as tax exempt.
for
Meigs County does not preclude Jim Tompkins, Ernie Sisson, Vicki plicauon 1s m the draft decision stage,
-Be
governed
by
a
volrun through November and Dtcem- lion plan. Another source for giving
------------~-------Morrow,
Debbie wh1ch IS coordmated with the U.S.
ber.
to be emphasized by the new group unteer board serving withHaptonstall, John Riebel, Fish and Wildlife Service. Alter the
Letters were sent out last week to wiU be one-time annual conttibutions . out monetary compensa·
Steve Story . and Emma draft decision is reviewCii, a final deemployers in the area urging them to from personnel or the corporate level, tion.
Paugh.
-Offer services on a
cision will be issued.
get on board with United Fund for as well as private conttibutions.
The R,ev. fraJ),k

•

• Galha or Athens

'93 fund drive theme: 'Together'

Woman killed
in one-vehicle
crash Saturday

GM·TOYOTA LOCATION .
.WAS

90 Olds 98 Regency Brougllam ...... $13,995
92 Satum SL 2 Sedan ..... .. .. .... $12,995
91 ToyOia Clmry LE, V6 .. .. .. .. . .$11,995
93 hltiK Sullllinls .. .. ....... . ... $10,995
93 Olds Cutllu Supre111e ......•.... $16,995
13 Old&amp; Della 88 ... . . .. ...... ' ' .. $17,995
931'111111c Grand Prix LE'. ...• .. ... .$15,995
93 CldiK Sedan DeVIl .. . .. .. .. . $26,~5
11 Acura L~~tlld LS ....... . .. .. ..$26,995

FORD LINCOLN·MERCURY LOCATION
NOW

St2,998
SU,998
St0,998
59988
5t4,988
St8,988
St4,9811
523,9911
523,9911

WAS

89 PDIIIilc.LeMans SE . . . . . . . . . . . . .
85 MeiCIIry Clpri, one owner . . . . . .
91 Fonl Taurus GL. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .
87 Mercury Gralld Marquis . . . . . . . . . .
87 lllslln Senlla . . . . . .. .. .. .. . . . .

81i IIWs Cullasi Supn~me . . . . . . . . . . .
88 Olds Clera . .. . ... .. . . . ... , . . . .
8Htercury T0p11. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Jl Fard Es~ort Wag"' .. . . . . . . . . . ..
'

NOW

$6995
$119911
$4495
S349S
$9995
$88911
$6995
SS89S
$4995 · S39811
$6995
$888.8
$5995 . . . . .11
$3995 .S299S
$2995. $t8,8S

TRUCKS AND VANS
WAS

NOW

ID GMC Safari Converl.son Van ..... .$12,995 5U,8815
~ C:2D 4l4 Plck~p. . . . . . . . . . $7995
5889,
c•y C-10 Pickup, aulomatic . . . $6995 $8988
Cllevy Blazer, full' size 4x4 ... .. $8995
57898
18 Ftlnl Convenion 'Van . . . . .. . . . . . . $8495 ,74811
I~ Ftid Conven~n Van . . . . . . . . . . . . $6995
SS89S
.·11. ~vy S~10 PICkup, 7000 miles .$10,495 Sta48S
. IHI!'d F·150 4i2 ..... . .. . ..... . $3995 S28815
. •Unlls subjecllO prior SBie and c'redll approval .
All ·pricee Include appllcable-rebjne s and lncenti'II!! S.

WASHINGTON C.H. ·A Tuppers
Plains woman Jiving in ·Cincinnati
died as a result of injuries sustained in
a single-car wreck early Saturday
morning on I-71 near WashingtOn
Court House.
Tamara Kennedy, 23, 1005 Dana
Ave., Cincinnati,-was southbound on
l-7IjustsouthofStateRoute41 when
her 1984 Pontiac Sunbird veered off
the right side of the roadway and
struck an overpass, reported Fayette
County Sheriff's Deputy Roben
Crabtree.
Continued on page A2

Domestic violence ... Suit could affect all Ohio taxpayers
...the physical, emotional,
psycholoiical or sexual
abuse of afamily membermay occur regulllrly in as
many as one out of/our
marriages.
...
A six-part series by Tribune
and Sentinel rt!porters,
begins Monday. Based on
interviews with counselors,
legal offlciJJis and even the
victims, the series will explort! the causes and effects
of domestic violence.

Monday:

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Wriler
COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP) - School
districts that want to change the stale· s
system of financing education begin a
trial in Perry County on Monday that
could wind up affecting every tax·
payer.
The Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp;
Adequacy of School Funding will try
to prove stale government is failing to
-meet its constitutional obtigation to
provide an adequate education for all
stodents.
'"We're just anxious to show the
unconscionable disparities, the unconscionable inadequacies," said
William Phillis. director of the coali ·
lion representing more than 500 districts • including lhe Gallipolis City

An Overview

School DistricL
Phillis, a former assistant stale
school superintendent, said per-pupil
spending ranged from about $2,800
to$12,000, from the poorest to richest
disttict.
Students in one sys,aem may have
access to science labs and swimming
pools, while elsewhere they may lack
modem textbooks or indoor plumbing.
A 1990 survey estimated the cost of
needed school building improvements
at $10 billion.
·' We wouldn' t house prisoners the
way we house kids," said Phillis.
Schools are fmanced throughacombination of local and state tax rev·
enue.

Poor di stricts with lower propeny

values and personal incomes must
charge higher tax rates to raise the
same amount of money that wealthy
distticts produce.
Stale School Superintendent Ted
Sanders, one of the defendants in the
lawsuit, said the Slate will argue that
the system is constitutional.
"We're not going to argue that
there are not disparities," Sanden
said. But he said the differences lie
probably less now tl)an they weR in
1979 when the funding system last
withstood a legal challenge.
:
Sanders said the state has malic
pmgress in recent years.
·•
' 'Obviously the Overall i~
to support education both from state
and local revenues have grown faster
Continued on page A-2

McDade named Gallia County's 'Person of the Year'
on marketing. cus GALLIPOLIS • Ronald G.
"He not only
tomer services and
Me~, rilanager of AEP's Colum ~ served as o.ur cham·
bus Southern Power Co., Gallipolis . ber of commerce
"It is a proud moment to name Ron McDade ourperson public affQirs. • ··•
Before moving to
off'J.Ce, and Ohio Power Company's president during
the Gallipolis office
Pomeroy offi~e, has been named 1991 and 1992," of the yefJ1' to "present Gallia County... We look forward
as manager in 1985,
GalliaCounty's 'Pmoiloflhe'Year.' Caldwell said, "but to his special recognition. .. "
hewasassignedtothe
"It is aproud 1110mentto name Ron has~tedadmin­
Jay
Caldwell,
president
·
Athens division ofMcDade our persm of the yeat 10 isttativerolesfornuGallia
County
Chamber
of
Commerce
ftce.
which includes
represent Oallia County." said Jay merou organiza·
Athens, Wellston and
Caldwell, president or the Gallia tions and projects in
Gallipolis-asadminCountyCiiambetofCornmerce. "We Gallia
County
isttative assistanL
look forward tri his spex;ial recogni- · throughout the past several years."
sity College of Business in 1989.
He served on the board oftheGallia
tiori, along willi the llonlmes from
A native of Letart Falls, McDade is
McDade began his career with Coother counpe~ at the Sputheastem a graduate of Racine/Southern High liunbus Southern Power Company in County Chamber of Commerce for
OhioRegionalCOIIIICil'unnual 'Per· School and Hocking College, where 1959 as aresidential sales representa- six years, and served as president of
son orihc )'ear' awill'Cis banquet."
he earned a businesS management tive in Columbus. Over the course or the Gallia County Improvement Cor·
The banquet' will be, !Jeld _. the degree. He graduated from ·AEP's his 34-year career, he has been as- poralion in 1992 and 1993. He was
Ohio University Inn, Athens, on Management Development Program, silned io six bff'ICCS throughout cen- president ofGallipolisROtary Club in
Thursday evening, Nov. 11.
conducted by the Ohio State Univer- tral and soulll!lm Ohio • with a focus 1990 and 1991. He continues to serve

,,

on the board of directors of the Ro·
tary, where he was recen~y honored
as a Paul Harris Fellow.
McDadepresently servesas amember of the Citizens Advisory Board of
the Gallipolis Developmental Center.
He also sits on the Zoning Appeals
Board for the City of Gallipotis.
He completed a three-year renn as
a member of the board of trustees at
the Grace United Methodist Church.
serving as chairman for two years.
McDade and his wife, Loretta, a
licensed Realtor, are the parents of a
son and daughter; and, have two grand-

sons.
His son, Chris, is a staff member at
Hocking College. Daughter, Mandy,
Continued on page A-2

,.

'!
.~

,,
!

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