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                  <text>1992

_OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

·Annual Farm~CityDay big success
'
Gallili County Farm Bureau at the Roach a'nd Brad Ray, but -wne'
Issue 5 Labeling l,aw stop and Or. glad ro have them tl!ere j11$1. in ~- ,'
Allan Boster and Fred Dee! at the · The GallipoliJ Daily Tribune :
and WJI;H-WGTR Radio Station
beef and conswner quality stop
The exhibitors· and demonstra- did ~~fine i9b of co~g the event,.
Coastance Whtlt Is with the&gt;
IOfS niade for a festive atmosphere.
Gallla
County Soli and Water .
'We wish to thank Jividen' s Farm
Conaervatlon
District.
·
Equipment, and Dean Annstrong
Farm Equipment for providing
equipment and staff to show vari. '
ous pieces of farming and gardening equipment.
·
The children attending were
entertained by Kristi Eblin of
Samual Boss¢ Memorial Library
doing the story telling.
.
The rescue demonstration put on
by the Gallia County EMS Rescue
SQ.W!d showed various tecbniques
usmg air bags to simulatJ: the raising of a tractor off of' a person
trapped qiuler a tire. They also used
FROM s4.50 TO ~0.00
the 'Jaws of Life" in connection
ANY SIZE • ANY COLOR
with the air bags to demonstrate
how a person could be rescued .
•Yesterday's Chevro~t
from a com picker. Those demon'
strations remmded those of u5 who
•Che¥y Truck •Bow T11
work with farm equipment and any
•Yrmdshield Logos •
heavy equi~ment that safety is
essential. This is especially imporany vehide
tant to know as we enter the hm:·
vest ~n and concerns for farm
eSpray .Mask for custom
safety increase at this time of year.
paint jobs ·
·
Rescue members Tim Miller)eff
Roach. Brad Ray and Steve Shqrt
•Air Brushed Heartbeat ·
are all EMTs and Roy Jones is a
paramedic.
'·
Items·
Our thanks to the Ohio Valley
Visitors Center Director Kim
•Ford Logos
Sheets and the Gallia County
•Custom l:icense Plates
Chamber of Commerce Executive
Secretary Sharon Bowman for
assisting with the preview tour on
Thursday and being the grill cooks.
The safety of the wagon tours
•Computer Cut Vinyl
was well supei'vised by Deputies
•Any Type Style •
Pearl Comer and Jimmy Spears of
the Gallia County Sheriffs DepartAny.Color
ment
·we want to recognize thp, new
•Office Yfmdows
River Valley High School· FFA
•Eqlipment
members Ben McGuire and Jason
Shrives that assisted with the park-

By CoDslance S. White
GALLIPOL.I S- The lOth Annu•
al Farm City Day waS a vl:ly successful event.
We are fortunate to have flll'llling families lite"Thelma and Merrill Rose and theil; son Jim who was
host for this major agricultural
event
Many hours of preparation are
spept !)y the host family. Only
through the willingness of the·host
family to show their farm, is this
major undertaking able to become
a ~ity. We th;mk them for all the
16ng hours and hard work they put
, in to make the day such a: success
Without the support of the many
who contribute
time and tal·
ents to the event, it just wouldn't be
possible. Special· ~ go to the
major financial supporters Ohio
Valley Bank; .Star Bank, Unity
Savings &amp;: Loan, and Bank One.
Other contributors were Gallia
County Faim Bureau, Gallia Coun' may win a $5 prlze_trom the · ty Dauy Promotion Committee,
45631, and you
MYSTERY
This week's mystery
Valley Bell, Milk Maroting,Inc.,
Ohio Valley Publishing f;o.l.uve your name,
featured by the Galli&amp; Soil and Water
McDonald's and Brown's !GA.
address and telephone number with yoar card
; District, is located somewhere in
As always, the Gallia County
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. All
Individuals wishing to particiCommissioners and their wives and
coates! entries should -lie, turned ill to the uewseontest may do so by guessing
families did a great job of satisfypaper office by 4 p.m. eac!J Wedntaday. In ease
f•r~m'• oWller. Just mall, or drop orr your
ing eyer.yone's thirst with their
or a tie, the wiuuer will be choaell by lottery.
· Daily Seutinel, 111 Court St.,
lemonade.
Next week, a Mei&amp;s Couaty farm WUI be feaOhio, 45769, or the GaUipolis Daily
Jacki Graham-OCES was instrutured by the Meigs SoU and Water Coilservation.
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
mental in organizing the members
District.
of the Gallia County Homemakers
Extension Club, Gallia County
Farm Bureau Youth and COO{'Cr&amp;·
tive Extension Staff who asststed
with serving the Beef Sandwiches.
Those serving beef sandwiches
were Helena Lear, Annabelle Fellure, Janette Elliott, Edie Duncan,
;Patty Graham, Paul Shoemaker,
diny can result in an unnecessary Inc .• say there are a few procedures Mike Shoemaker, Jacki Gr.aham
loss of efficiency and can damage 'you,can do at the beginrung of eal:h and Debbie Hughes.
the furnace. "Consumers gencrally heating season to ensure ·a !!lOre
Star Bank provided workers
.
don't realize they play a vital role comfortable winter.
Barb Coleman and Elizabeth RumI. BEFORE PERFORMING ley for the day to serve the bean
in making sure their heating sysMIT
MAINTEN:ANCE, BE SURE soup which. was cooked \IY Jim
tems operate at peak performance
TO
TIJRN
OFF THE P0WER TO H9ward, Gallia SWCD Supervisor,
to maximize home comfort and
THE UNIT AND WAIT FOR THE and Vlfgil Carr
money savings," said Yates.
.
Although it's best. if a qualified BLOWER TO STOP!
The beef was processed by Barr
2. Always begin each new heat· Custom Meats and cooked by Galservice technician handles major
maintenance tasks on your furnace ing season with a clean filter in the lia SWCD Supervisors Rob Massie instractors Jim Walker, Tom Pope
or heat pump, service expens at furnace and check filter monthly and Paul Duncan. The ice cream and Bill Holcomb much success
18 BERGER AVENUE
international heating and cooling throlighout the winter. Dirty filters and milk was served by members this year.
.
Luckily, we didn't need the serGAWPOUS, OHIO
manufacturer, Lennox lndustries should be replaced or cleaned of the Gallia County Dairy Promoimmll!liately to prevent equipment tion Committee and Valley Bell vices of the Gallia County Emer446-1968
froril wotking harder, which ~ults staff. Our thanks to Lori Lee gency Medical Service team of Jeff ·
in energy waste and possible. inter- Carmichael Lisa Mills, Ralph
nal damage.
Hutchinson and Dinah Myers
3. Visually inspect the blower
A lot of neighbors and friends
comparUDent before eaeh heating provided additional tractors and
season. Use a vacuum to remove wagon for the tours. Those pm:ticiany dirt or dust, which can result in pating were George Woodward,
imp~oper perrormance and lowDon Pope, Phil Pope, Mike Whit·
Big Bluestem, Little Bluestem, and effictency operallon..
By EDWARD VOLLBORN
taker, Lloyd Wood, Bill Carter;
Indiangrass.
We
saw
strands
of
· GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Agri ~
4. Check the area surrounding Henry Myers, Phil Nisly. Mike
urk~;~,
cultural Statistics Service continues switchgrass capable of producing 4 the furnace for materials that could Hughes and Rob Massie.
.•
au.LU.
.• to rank the Ohio com crop good to tons of hay in one cutting situation . easily burn. Remove boxes, rags,
Businesses and agencies assistWarm-season
grasses
stan
growth
· excellent. As of· this past Monday
furniture, etc. This is a fire hazard!
ing with equipment were: Ball Fur·,an estimated 5 percent of the Ohio about one month later in spring
S. Occasionally check the chim- niture, Skaggs Appliance Service,_
t;em crop was mature. Silage bar~ than our current cool-season ~s­ ney and. flue pipe coooections for
Evans Farms, Inc .. 0. 0.
CAROLL SNOWDEN
··"' ves~ haS began in earnest. There es. As a resul~ spring soil moiSture tightness, bloclcage or loose con- · Bob
Mcintyre
Park
Dislrict,
the
Gallia
342
Second Av..oGalllpolhl .
·••.were even some reports of farmers is conserved and used from June I nections. If you think it needs County Litter Control, Farm Credit
Ph.
448-4290
• Home 446 4518
· cqr~~bining high moisture com in to September I. Warm-season cleaning or repair, ca1l your service
Services
and
Galfipolis
Vault
Comceutral Ohio. Many of the local grasses (Switchgrass, Bluestem, representative.
pany.
-·tobacco farmers are finishing their etc.) establish ·very slowly but if
6. Set t~e thermostat on
-STATE FARM
We are grateful for the particibarvest..
.
handled properly will last for many "HEAT" .and move the setting
Occasionally we get calls from years. Native, grass seed quality is above room temperature. Listen 10 pation of our tour speakers -Thelma Rose and Lawrence Burdell at
· ~le interested in the Wild Horse measured on a "Pure Live Seed"
the fw:nace for any unusual sounds the Farm"History stop, Cindy Jenk·
(PLS)
basis.
PLS
includes
percent
Adoption Program. I just received
and call your service representative
ins-District Forester at the Econotification that some 125 horses germination and percent purity . if you suspect problems.
. .
nomic Development sto~. Patty
·,·will be available at the stockyards Native grasses are being looked at
7. Check into low-co~ preventa· Dyer-District ConservationiSt at the
INSURANC 'E . Like a good neighbor.
,in Ripley, West Virginia on Octo- as a forage to suppon the nutrition live maintenance agreements. Most
®
Pond
and
Spring
Development
needs
of
local
beef
herds
during
the
State Farm is there.
ber 3· and 4. Questions should be
contractors, such as independent stop, Ed Vollbom-Ohio Cooperamid-summer
time
period
when
we
addressed to the Depanment of the
Lennox dealerships, offer some
State Farm Insurance COmpan1es • Home OfllteS B190m1nQ1on. llhnOlS
Interior Offtee in Milwaukee, Wis- have problems with both quantity type of "planned service" agree-· tive Extension Service at the hay
and quality of the grasses we now ments guaranteeing regularly and forage S':9Jl.
leonsin at414-297.,4433.
Janeue Elliott and Edie BosticI was privileged earlier Ibis usc. Both Graham and Ludwig are scheduled, year-round equipment
· week to be a·pan of a small group expected to be present at the Graz- maintenance.
'to tour field size p!antings of native ing Seminar to be held on Satur'
· i!~SIOS in'IOuth-central Ohio. day, November 7 in Wood Hall on
, · ~y of tl)e plantings. are 10-12 the campus of the University of Rio
· -~ old and arc switchgrass of the Grande. Call for details.
~II variety. Mr. David Gra- · A reminder of the 1992 Ohio
, · ' ~ IDd Mr. Gary Ludwig of the Farm Science Review to be held
September 22-24. Advance tickets
' ii11.10 Department of Natural are
available at Ohio County
&lt;Resources have been integrating
Extension
Offices through the close
·, '11ative grasses into their manage ~
1
of
office
on
Monday. September
'ment plan. They have excellent
Edward M. Vollborn is GaUia
records of cultural practices.
County
Extension Agent, AgriWASHINGTON (AP) - The
'Oilier native grasses that we saw
culture.
phrase
"busy as a bee" has
, ~ere Cav~-in·IW,l;J Sw!J~hgrass,
acquired new meaning for agricul~~~~~-=~------~
tural researchers who are putting
LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
the industrious insects to work proMineral .Wells, WV
teCting U.S. crops along with polliSeptember 12, 1992
~................. $21,073
nating them.
SrocK STEERS:
Taking advanta~e of the bee's
Dlscount.....................-2,250
59.00-117.00
.. ., ~under
excellent
worlc habtts, Agricultural
60.00-108.00
,, 300-500
Research Service scientists are
50.00-88.50
S00-700
enlisting it to batd~ fire blight, a
48.00-78.00
800-over
bacterial disease that affects pears
YOUR
STOCK HEIFERS: ·
and
apples,
and
earworms,
which
60.00-98.50
300-under
COST •
auaclc corn and cotton.
55.00-99.00
300-500
"Here's an ideal vehicle that is
50.00-88.00
S00-700
going
right where we want the bio47.50-69.25
800-over
logical
eonuol agent to go," Harry
STQCK BULLS:
R.
Gross,
an ARS entomologist in
300-under
53.00-112.00
.
T
ifton,
Ga.,
said in describing
300-500
51.00-100.00
experiments
using
bees to carry
.500-700
51.00-92.00
into
fielcls
a
natural
virus that
47:50-61.75
auacks earworms.
360.00-940.00
Qross was working with biolog1992 GRiND
38.50-63.50
ical
conuol
agents
against
the
ear310.00-666.00
worm and watching bees busily
lol!ded, anti lock brakel.
forage for nectar in a field of crim45.00-54.50
son clover. It dawned on him that
38.00-45.00
the bees would be ideal couriers of
25.00-37.00
bioconuol agents.
In e~ents with a bee-couri94.50-103.00
QI' techruque deviJed by Gross and
86.75-93.00
his colleagues, 70 percent to 90
78.00-85.00
lJCitent of the earworm larvae died.
That compared to a mortality rate
35.00-50,00
of 10 pen:ens to IS percen{ for lar19.00-25.50
vae put on dOYcr llead.s not visited
45.00-131.50
by viruso(811')'ing bees.
35.00-61.00
Earworms feed on clover and
65.00~130.00
other early season plants before
they move on 10 cotton, com and
'
24.00-36.00
other crops.
.
.
21.00-31.50
Johri B. Vandenberg, a bee
21.00-31.00
expen with ARS in Logan, Utah,
19.00-21.00
and Sherman V. Thomson, a plant ·
29.00-44.00
pathologist at Uta,h Slale Universi- ·
Tact 6 PM; Horses 8 PM.
ty, ~ using ~ in exPeriments ·
for bioconlrol of lire bJiiliL
. . .

Ohio Lottery

Bengals lose
game in final
seconds 24-23

Pick 3:
586

Pick 4:
Super Lotto:
8-14-18-41-46-47
Kicker:
678810

PageS

Low tonight In mld-Ms.
Showel'5. Tuesd•y, high In 70s.

AUTOMOBILE
•:tit_

----

meir

DECALS .

,ARM-

'ps offered for maximizing
orne comfort for winter ·

1 Section, 10 Pageo 25 ..,II .
AMultlmedlo Inc. Newspapet'

SIGNS

~~~~:f:~~:~:~s~g

Auto Trim Center

'------":"""---.....1

Flashes

show Ohio corn crop
good to excellent

FACE PAINTING • Sltlrin Nug&amp;ud oiTered
free race painting to children attending Saturday's Catfish Festival in Middleport. Here,
Jenny Chapman, 7, bas a design or her own

By·JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Starr
In what some see as a conllict of
interest, a commissioner of the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio (PUCO) is also on the board
of directors of an organization
actively opposed to installing
scrubbers at the Gavin plant in
Cheshire.
Ashley Brown's name is listed
as a member of the Washington,
D .C.~based Center for Clean Air
Policy's board of directors, accord~
ing to a press release from the
organization dated August 14.
The press release is titled "AEP
Can't Wait for PUCO to Decide"
and criticizes the decision by
American Electric Power to install
scrubbers at the Gavin plant.
Brown, one of live PUCO com ~
missioners deciding if American
Electric Power can install scrubbers
at the Gavin plant, said Monday

ODEL CLEARANCE
.

The contract between the El\Stern Local School Board and the
district's teachers was extended
when the board met in regular session last week.
The extension between the
board and the Eastern Local Educa·
lion Association was extended
from September I through and
including August 31, 1993.
The board employed the follow·
ing as substitute teachers for the
1992-93 school year on an as-need' ed basis: Ronald Juuon, Ellen
Waught, Kirk Reed, Barry Haynes,
Joanna Weaver and Nancy
Wachter.
· The following were employed
as class advjsors for the 1992-93
school year on a supplemental contract: Nancy Larkins, 9th grade;
Dave Barr, lOth grade; Donna
Wolf, lith graile; and Jim Huff, 12
grade. Scou Wolfe was hired as the
reserve and varsity high school
girls' baslcctball coach, Paul Brannon as junior high girls' basketball
coach, and Tammy Capehart as
junior high cheerleader advisor.

a·o,NNEVILLE

Debates•.••••••••••" ••••••••-1 ,250

$17,573

1992 GRAND

1992 BUICK

AMS

CENTURY

PRII4 DR. -·

'11,900

'11,990

... 3,400

Out-of·Town Price 01 I New Iuick or Pontiac
If Given the Claancel ·

~

__ _.........

-·-'

•

I

Dennis Eichinger was employed,
on a supplemental contract, as
junior G4&amp;gh boys basketball
coach.
Leonard Koenig, Jr ., was
employed as a substitute maintenance custodian. Sandra Needs was
hired as a Chapter I instructor.
The board approved Lori Hens ~
Icy as a volunteer assistant junior
high cheerleader advisor.
A purchase services agreement
was approved between Connie
Rankin and the Eastern Local
Boaro of Education for the purpose
of providing transportation for
Mary Rankin on a twice-weekly
basis to and from Western Hills
Rehabilitation Center at a rate of 25
cents per mile.
The board also:
- Approved the amount of
$930.20 as the tuition rate for the
school year;
- Approved the disposal or sale
of equipment;
- Approved a Worlc Experience
Program Agreement with the Ohio
Depanment of Human Services;

.--Local brief-____,

GUARANTEED lOW PRICES ·We Will Meet Any

.

morning he does not consider his
position with the CCAP as a conflict of interest
Brown was critical of those
bringing up his position wit!\ the
CCAP as an issue. He said he filed
a disclosure concerning his membership on the CCAP board and
does not participate with the CCAP
as far as the scrubbers arc concerned.
Brown said he intends to vote
on the scrubber issue as a member
ofthePUCO.
However, Brown pointed out
that no complaints or protests have
been filed concerning his participation in the scrubber decision.
If somebody protests, I'll consider abstaining from voting, he
added.
State Representative Jerry W.
Krupinski (98th District), chairman
of the House Select Committee on
the Federal Clean Air Act, said

Monday morning there would cct·
lainly appear to be a conflict.
Krupinski said the issue raises
an ethical question because it
would appear as if Brown is plannin~ to vote on his own wilnesses'
testtmony.
"I trust Ashley Brown to act and
react accordingly," Krupinski said.
"He's professional enough to know
what he has to do."
In the past, Brown has been
seen as a "friend of coal," Krupins·
ki said. I feel he is knowledgeable,
objective and will back his decision
with factual information.
"He (Brown) does his homework," Krupinski said.
Krupinski said he is convinced
that AEP has submitted the least~
cost option and added that the
scrubbers will probably be
approved with or wtthout Brown's
support

Eastern board extends teachers' contract

BIA1 tBE 92 PRICI INCRIASII
1992 PONT

QUEEN AMY • Amy Rouse of Middleport,
center, will represent her home community as
1992 Catrtsb Festival Queen in tbe year ahead,
arter being crowned on Saturday. She is pic-

PUCO official a member
of anti-scrubber group

"See me for a11·
J.'D
J
ds ,
msurance nee .

Bees used
in research
project

choosing painted, as ·
youngsters wait in
line to receive tbeir own custom paiot job. (Sentinel photo by Brian J. Reed)

Youth in,serious condition
A Middleport youth remains in serious condition in the intensive
care unit at Grant Medical Center, Columbus, for treatment of a
head injury suffered in a fall Saturday nighL
J. R. Blackwell, whose address was given as 277 Lincoln St.,
Middleport, was taken by Life Flight to Grant at 10:17 p.m. after
first being taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital for emergency
treatmenL
The Middlepon unit of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service was called to the Meigs Junior High School football field at
9:13 p.m. The EMS reponed that Blackwell had fallen from the
bleachers.
- .

·--

- Set the next regular meeting of
the hoard for October 21 at 7 p.m.
at the cafeteria at Riverview
School.
Present were S. Ray Karr, President; Jim Smith, Vice President:
and members Ron Eastman , Bill
Hannum and Mike Martin.

lured with Julianne Buck or Pomeroy, l!rst runner-up and Miss Congeuiality_,.. lert, and
Stephanie Scott, Miss Ohio Rivet Valley, who
assisted in the pageant. (Sentinel photo by Brian
J, Reed)

Amy Rouse

is crowned
festival queen

CRAFT DEMONSTRATIONS • Quilting, tole painting and
chair caning were among tbe cral'ls demonstrated in Dave Diles
Park during Saturday's Catfish Festival in Middleport. Here,
Mary Wise demonstrates chair caning to Mayor Fred HolTman
and his wife,.Pauline. (Sentinel photo by Brian J, Reed)

Recycle Day set Saturday
at Meigs High School
Meigs County will have an
opportunity to participate in an
Environmental Awareness and
Recycle Day at Meigs High School
on Saturday, from 9 am. 10 I p.m.

Residents wiU be able 10 recycle
several difficult items, such as used
motor oil, tires, batteries, glass, No.
2 plastic, and cenain types of major
Continued on page 3

The crowning of Amy Rouse as
Catfish Festival Queen, plenty of
entertainment and other sites and
sounds helped make Middleport's
Catfish Festival a success on Satur' day.
Rouse, 19, was one of six candidates to participate in the festival's
first-ever queen contest Julianne
Buck of Pomeroy was named first
runner-up and Miss Congeniality in
the pageant.
Amy, a Middleport resident, is
the daughter of Chris Rouse. She is
about to enter her sophomore year
at Ohio University, where she is
studying to become a secondary
education teacher. She is about to
audition for the school's glee club.
She attends the Middleport First
Baptist Church.
Buck, 18, is a resident of
Pomeroy, and the daughter of
·Roben Buck and Debra Buck. She
attends the Trinity Congregational
Church in Pomeroy. and is a member of the youth group and teen
choir at Middleport Church of
Christ. She attends the University
of Akron.
Other candidates for ihe ti tic
were Nora Eastman, Angie Searles,
Linda Chapman and Mindy Harris.
A host of performers, including
daggers and other dancers, singers
and instrumentalists, and the
Southern Cheerleaders kept the
Continued on page 3

Quayle denies strings were pulled to avoid draft
CHICAGO (AP) - Bill Clinton
sharpened his attack on President
Bush's handling of the economy as
he hunted votes in the great battle·
ground of the Midwest, calling
Bush afraid to debate over his ''donothing" record.
As the Clinton camp unleashed
the campaign's ili'St auack ad Sunday - a spot using video clips of
Bush to portray him as ~)lind to the
recession - Vice President Dan
Quayle was on the defensive about
his enrollment in the National
Guard in 1969.
Quayle acknowledged that join·
ing the Indiana guard lessened the
risk of being sent to Vietnam. But
he denied strings were pulled on
his behalf and pressed anew his
charge that Clin10n hasn't told all
about how he avoided the military.
Clinton was campaigning in
Chicago today to pick up the back·
ing of business leaders, following a
Sunday night voter registration
rally to a predominantly black
crowd in the !Uinois city.
Fresh polls over the weekend
showed Clinton holding comfortable leads in several battleground
states and running dead even in
Indiana - Quayle's home state
and a place that hasn't fone Democratic in a prcsidentia race since

1964.
Clinton began his Sunday in
Macomb County, Mich., home of
many scxalled Reagan Democrats,
where he pitched populist economic themes and hammered Bush for
not offering an economic plan until
10 days ago.
"Too little too late," Clinton
cracked, noting that Bush served up
the plan some SO days before the
election and more than 1,300 days
after taking office.
"This is a do-nothing adminis·
tration that will do nothing again
for four more years if we're foolish
enough to give it to them," Clinton
said.
He chided Bush for not agreeing
to debates yet. Tonight, Clinton
was heading baclt to Michigan to
be in place for the proposed, and
then canceled, first debate with
Bush that had been set Cor Tuesday.
Michigan has 18 electoral votes:
Illinois 22. To both the largely
white crowd in Michigan and the
black audience in Chicago, Clinton
preached racial harmony.
"They're just like you," Clinton said in Chicago of his earlier
visit ro suburbia. "They're working harder for less money . ... They
don't know if they can send their
kids to college. They're mad when

President Bush vetoes the family
leave law."
Quayle, appearing on NBCTV's "Meet the Press," said "a lot
of factors" went into his decision
to join the Guard upon graduating
from DePauw University in May
1969 and losing his student deferment.
Pressed on whether his main
motivation was to avoid being sent
to fight in Vietnam, Quayle said,
''Wbcn !looked at all the options, I
wanted to join the reserves.''
"'Of course you have much,
much less of a chance to go to
Vietnam" in the Guard, Quayle
added.
"I never asked for any special
treatment," he said . "No rules
were broken, no regulations bro~
ken. There were openings. Thousands of people joined the Indiana
National Guard in the year 1969.
•· just like I did.'.'
The New York Times , in a
lengthy article re-examining how
Quayle got into the G~. t;eported
Sunday there was "a strikmg pattern of favoritism" on how Quayle

and others got into an elite headquarters unit.
But Quayle said his draft status
had been examined in 1988 and
now the issue was "the truthfulness or the lack thereof of Bill
Clinton."
Clinton "has not told the truth.
He has vacillated. He has dodged
this issue," Quayle charged.
President Bush, returning from a
weekend in Camp David, Md., on
Sunday, said Quayle "certainly
has" answered all the questions
about his miliUJry record.
Clinton put up two new ads in
about 20 battleground states,
including one titled "Curtains,"
that shows Bush's 1988 campaign
promise 10 create 30 million new
JObS.
It twice shows Bush offering
rosy talk about the economy,
including a 1991 clip in whi~h
Bush say~, ''I'm not prcpared•to

say we•rc tn a recession.''
:
Each Bush statement is followed
by a narrator pointing out increases
in uncmploymen~ or Bush' veto of
a bill to extend jobless benefits.
.,

�,

Monday, September 21, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

n•

Coart Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DBVOftD TO Till: Dn'UIIII'I1I OP Till: IDIG8-IIASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
..blldMr

PAT WBlTEIIEAD
Asd tl!lt hlllllller/Controlltr

Ij
!

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

I..E1TI!IlS Of OPINION on welcome. They ahould be less thon 300
-.11. Allloum .., oubject to ocliliD&amp; ond must be signed with name,
oddmt llld lllepiloae aumloer. No umi&amp;ned Jeu.rs wiU be published. uttm
mould he ill JDDd tu1o, lddreloillg ;..-, not persollllities.

·oh•10 'draws attentJ•on

in presidential battle

I

!

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 21, 1992

WASHINGTON - Balding ear
' tires, Olympic basketball victories
and used light bulbs have all been
served up as omens of econQmtc
recovery by Treasury Secretary
Nicholas Brady since the start of
the ~dential campaign last winlet. 'I see robins on the lawn in the
economy now," be said recently.
Vice President Dan Quayle
points to a help-wanted sign in the
window of a California Burger
King this summer as proof that
prosperity lies around the comer.
White House Press Secretary
Marlin Fitzwater belatedly
acknowledges last December that
the economy is in trouble, but he
struggles getting out the "r': word
when he says the country ts m a
''rccrssion.like economy.''
Welcome 10 the world of While
Housespin-control - wbererecessions are periods of "sluggish-

~~~:·'=l~no:~·t=;

renect " cautious consumers."
All administrations are guilty of
gilding. But Brady &amp; Co. are practically Nobellaureales m the spm
sciences.
Before the National Association
of Business Economists, Brady
explained his shopping trip one

with it politically since last
December, when Samuel Skinner
became chief of staff and imposed
glasnost.
Only in August 1991, during a
golf outing in Kennebunkport,
President Bush declared, " I feel all
right about things. There's some
weekend to buy new tires for the statistics up and down, but basicalfamily ear. Lois of families must be ly I think it's doing all right. "
driving on bald tires, he figured, Within months, however. Bush was
and there's all that pent-up demand telling angry primary voters in
ready to be released. Same with New Hampshiie thai the economy
light bulbs. The Dream Team's was in a "free fall. " Fitzwaler said
gold medal would give the U.S. Bush was in "private" communieconomy a big psychological cation with some unemployed
workers to Jearn conditions first
boos~
Such pep talks may be good pol- hand. Sltinner ordered photo-ops
itics. But one high-level govern- showing Bush with the "burgersment economist labels Brady's the- and-beer" folies.
ory "ludicrous."
Congressional Budget Office
"It is uue that Americans have Director Roben Rieschauer, not
been holding onro cars and the referring directly to the Bush
average age of cars has risen very administration, says hisiOricaUy the
subslantially over the last couple of role of executive branch forecasters
years," he said. "But the reason has been 10 serve as ·"part analyst,
they're doing that is because they part forecasJer, pan cheerleader."
'"I'Itere are two ltinds of ways
don't have the money to buy new
tires. They're $Oing to keep run- that politics enters," he told us.
ning on bald ores until they get "One is that any administration,
Republican or Democral, is going
jobs."
Since July 1990, 1.9 million 10 look at the economic outlook in
jobs have vanished. But the White as optimistic a way as possible."
House has only seemed to come to He defines spins as being "faced

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

$1'{e. Wa$ a
DaN6efi'oUS

JermS

•

our or THe

otJ FliRIPIIGH aNYWaY!

with a development. a fact, a piece
of evidence and what you try 10 do
is manipulate how thai piece of evidence will be interpreted by the
American media first and the
American people second.''
But on the recession, Jhe Bush
administration has often crossed
the fine line between spin control
and fudging. Though the first
recession officially began in July
1990, it lOOk the While House six
months before 'it would even utter
the word in public (Bush economist
Michael Baskin prefen:ed to eall it
a "lull" ). So far, the While House
has blamed the recession on,
among other things, the cost of the
Cold War, the end of the Cold War,
the Federal Reserve, Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, and the national
media
Consider the While House reaction last month to the news that
unemployment dropped a mere
one-tenth of a percentage point .
President Bush threw a press conference to brag about how the
economy was "poised for a strong
recovery albeit anemieally."
In fact, the economy lost 83,000
jobs in August, and would have
lost much more had it not been for
the surge in government summer
jobs for youth. Actually, 167,000
jobs were lost, which is dismal
news for an economy that's supposed to be in recovery and should
be petting along at gains of up to
300,000 jobs per month.
A damage control swat team
sprung into action. Bush campaign
manager Robert Teeter tried
explaining away the unemployment
problem by referring euphemistically 10 "restructuring."
"There is a lol of restructuring
going on, probably to our longterm benefit," he said. "That is
very tough and very painful to a lot
of people who are moving from
one job to another." Brady himself
once cited the therapeutic benefits
of recessions because thev had a
way of "cleansing the economy"
of poor performers.
Some economists fear the economy is slipping into its third dip
since July 1990. What does Brady
say?
" I think the years 1993 and
1994 in the United States are going
to be banner years."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syndicated writers
for United Feature Syndicate,
Inc.

Peace dividend receding before us
Hot/ding Carter III

Today in history

women released from military service was that the government and
industry began plaMing for peacetime conversion two years before
the end of the war.) To look at the
nation's public school system, its
physieal infrastructure and cities is
to see inviting prospects for productive use of the billions released
from defense spending.
In an ideal world, that is how
the money would be used. Ours is
not ideal. Projected increases in
entiUcment spending in areas such
as Medicare and Medicaid, for
instanCe, more than equal even the
most dramatic of the projected
defense cuts. To put it directly ,
every penny of the alleged peace
dividend spent on new programs
would be another penny added to
the deficit, and therefore to the
national debL Or to put it another
way , the only course of action
more feckless than the original policy or borrow and spend would be
a new one of divert. spend and borrow.
The bard truth is thai the peace
dividend is no more than a bookkeeping scam. The defense budget
does not stand in splendid isolation
from the total federal budget, no
matter how ardently the Reagan
Jearn ~cd to the contrary or how
much hberals today wish that it
could. So long as the entire budget
shows a horrendous deficit, there is
no " surplus" in any of its components. As the Congressional Budget
Office has warned:
"If the peace dividend is consumed, the economy will sacrifice
the longer-term gains - including

lower real interest rates, higher
capital formation and, ultimately,
higher living standards - thai follow deficit reduction."
That leaves the nation with two
large deficits rather than one big
dividend. The first is budgetary.
The second is in investment. The
only way to overcome both is to
live within our means for the foreseeable future. That means sacrifice across the board, either in the
form of new taxes or deferred
spending on worthwhile projects or both. It also means the end of
wishful thinking about the lastminule arrival of a budgetary eavalry of fiscal Sanla Clall.SCs.
Obviously, the most important
dividend from the end of the Cold
War is peace itself. It is equally
apparent that if we were still faced
with the military requirements of
the East-West confrontation, our
economic crisis would be far deep·
er. But in the end, history will ·
retard that the collapse of the Soviet Union did not so much save the
United Slates' economy from itself
as make it possible for the United
States to save itself. What we are
offered is not a dividend but an
opponunity to make hard choices
in an intelligent way.
Hodding Carter III, former
State Departmeat spokesman
and award-winning reporter, editor and publisher, ~ president of
MainStreet, a Washington, D.C.based television production company and a syndicated writer for
Newspaper Enterprise Association.

Is academic freedom only for profs?
According to the admissions
office of Connecticut College in
New London, it is a campus where
" diffe rences of opinion are
respected and celebrated as legiti·
mate avenues to new understand ·
in g."
Some of the professors on that
campus, however, strongly believe
that differences of opinion - especially in books - can go too far.
Much too far. And their job is to
shield students from such books
that will do them harm .
Each spring, at the suggestion of
Claire Gaudiani, president of the
college, a commiuee of faculty and
students select a list of books for
summer reading by students, professors, parents and alumni. In the
fau and winter, the readers convene
and dissect the books , and each
other.
One of the boolcs this year was
Camille Paglia's "Sexual Person-

•

•

J

1

MCH .

Bush camp paints a rosy economic picture

..

•

Tuesday, Sept. ll

By Nat Hentoff
ae: An and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson" (Vintage).
Paglia sees literature and the rest of
the world as a tournament, and her
mission is to unhorse fashionable
literary and intelleaual ligwes and
theories. A fiCI'CC critic of orthodox
modem feminism, J&gt;aslia believes
attention must be pllld to differences among the genders:
"When I cross the George
Washington BptJge ... I think men
have done th1s . ... If civilization
had been left in female hands, we
would still be living in glliSS huts."
She hetself smites men as mercilessly as she does w~ . And~
can be a very penetraung cnuc:
" Lewis Carroll is the true poet of
childhood. with its mystery, auelty
and blatant aggressions."
When her book was revealed to

'

be one of the summer challenges
for the Connecticut College community, a number of professors
worked very hard to remove it from
the list. There were letters to the
college paper and petitions that
included dread passages from the
book. (Just like the Rev. Donald
Wildmon and Jesse Helms do to
get boolcs banished.)
" Sexual Personae" was labeled
a "hate" book, condoning hatred
of women. Would parents - said
the objectors - really want to send
their children to a college that put
ils imprimatur on such a book?
And there were,professors who
compared Paglia's book to "Mein
Kampf."
Janet Gezari, acting director of
the Women's Studies program,
sounded like a goodly number of
professors elsewhere who wriJe law
review articles calling for suppression of cenain ltinds of speech on

college campuses. "Whenever we
think about freedom of expression," Professor Gezari said, "we
need 10 think also about the damage thai cenain kinds of speech can
do. Let's not be fooled by the packaging into mistaking any hate
speech or sexist or racist doctrine
for ideas."

•

•

IToledo I 68" I
!Mansfield 174•

Robert W. Baldwin, an assistant
professor of history, nOted solemnly, " We wouldn't put a racist book
on a summer readin~ list Thallist
has 10 be more sensiuve."

•

PA.

IND.

Autumn will arrive --Meigs announcements ,
at 2:43p.m. Tuesday
By Tbe Associated Press
It seems kind of appropriate:
Summer will come to a close with
wet weather in Ohio.
The National Weather Service
said Ohio will get intermittent
showers or thunderstorms tonight
and Tuesday, when autumn will
arrive at 2:43 p.m. The rain should

taper off lalel' tuesday.

Temperatures tonight will be on
the mild side with lows in the 60s.
Then , the rest of the week ,
overnight lows will be in the 40s.
On Tuesdar, the mercury probably won't chmb out of the 60s.
More of the same is forecast for
Wednesday and Thursday.

''I

'

Chamber conference to
be held in Southeast Ohio

Local chambers of commerce
and the Ohio Small Business Coun·
cil, a division of the Ohio Chamber
of Commerce, will sponsor the
1992 Southeast Regional Legislative Conference on October 7 from
8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m . at the Ohio University Inn in Athens. The conference is open to the public.
The grassroots-program offers a
forum for small business owners
lc6 . SUrny Pr. Cloudy Cloudy
and executives to discuss the leg011192Accu-'Welllther, Inc.
islative issues that most affect the
operation of their businesses.
At two conference break-out
Chance of rain 70 percent.
sessions, focusing on the issues that
Extended forecast:
most affect small business, atten·
dees will determine key priorities
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair. Highs in the 60s Wednes- in each issue area. Roundtable dis·
day and Thursday and 65-75 Fri- cussions among participants will
day. Lows mostly in the 40s.
help prioritize the concerns of
small businesses in Southeastern
Ohio. .
The results of the conference
will be combined with those from
other conferences around the Slate
Landis Pearson
and will serve as the basis for a
HENDERSON, W.Va.- J.andis statewide small business legislative
W. Pearson, 76, of Hendersoo, died
Saturday, September 19, 1992, at
his residence.
He was born January 6, 1916, in
GaUipolis Ferry, a son of the late
Units of Meigs Emergency SerOden W. Pearsoo and Esther Austin vices
answered 17 ealls for assis·
Pearson.
ranee over the weekend.
A United States Army ve1eran of
At 2:25p.m. on Saturday, Syra·
World War n, he was also a mem- cuse unit went to Carr Road and
ber of the Henderson Church of took Donald Guthrie 10 Camden·
Christ as well as a former river Clark Memorial Hospital. At 3:12
pilot of Stone Towing Company. p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Crew
He also had worked as a deckhand Road. BiD WiUiamsoo was taken to
with O.F. Shearer and retired as a Holzer Medical Center. At 3:31
captain from White Brothers p.m., Rutland squad went to Parker
Towing.
Run and County Road 10, and took
He was preceded in death by one Lisa Proffitt and Janet McDaniel to
sislel', Faye Pearson; two b~. Veterans Memorial Hospital folAlfred L Pearson and Austin lowing a domestic incident. At 4:58
Pearson, both of Henderson; and p.m., Rutland station went to Side
one grandchild, I ustin Childers.
Hill Road for an auto accident. AliSurvivors include his wife, son Snyder was taken 10 Veterans.
Helen Rogers Pearson; one At 8:05 p.m., Chester Wlit went to
daughter, Mr. Doug (Joan) Childers Aatwoods Road for a brush ftre. At
of Point Pleasant; two sons, Monty 9:13 p.m., Middleport squad went
Pearson and Slephen Pearsoo, both to Meigs Junior High football fteld.
of Henderson; seven sisters, Mrs. J.R. Blackwell was taken to VeterGeorge (Helen) Mayes of Hender- ans. At 9:15 p.m., Sryacuse unit
son, Mrs. Roy (Lydia) Tomlinson took Fred Neese from Nease Road
of Ghent. Ky., Mrs. Virgil (Mar- to Veterans. At 10:17 p.m., Life
garet) Noffsinger of Middlcboume, Right took J.R. Blackwell to Grant
W.Va., Mrs. Charles (Dorothy) Medical Center.
·
Clark or Point Pleasant. Mrs. Paul
(Bonnie) Harrison of Gallipolis,
Mrs. Ralph (Ciuistobel) Ferrell of
Richmondale, OH., and Mrs. John
(Lottie) Roush of Gallipolis; and
Applications for 1992- 1993
eight grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conduc- Home Energy Assistance Program
ted Tuesday, 10:30 a.m. , at the have been released by the Stale
Crow-Hassell Funer.tl Home with HEAP office and distributed to
L.H. (Sam) Gwin officiating. Burial many public offices and busin~scs
will follow at Kirkland Mem&lt;l'ial for disDibution to participants.
Among the places where appliGardens.
Friends may call the funeral cations are available are the Comhome Monday (today) from 5 to 9 munity Action offices in Cheshire,
Gallipolis and Pomeroy , the
p.m.
Department .of Human Services,
Senior
Citizens Center, Ohio
James Stover
Bureau of Employment Services,
James Oliver SlOver, 73, of Gal- Social Security offtee, courthouses
lipolis, died Sunday, September 20, in Gallia and Meigs Counties, post
1992, in Holzer Medieal Center.
offices, utility companies and bulk
He was born October 14, 1918, fuel vendOrs.
in Mason County.
Survivors include his wife, Opal
HEAP is a federally funded proBurris SlOver.
gram
designed to help eligible lowFuneral arrangements are incincome
meet the hi$h cost
omplete and will be announctd at a of homeOhioans
heating.
The deadlme for
laJer date by Crow-HusseU Funeral
applications
is
February
26, 1993.
Home.
Total household income is
defined as the gross income of all
household members except earned
income of dependent minors under
Continued from page 1
large crowd entertained at the stage 18. Written verification of the prearea throughout the day. Demon- vious 12 months income is
strations of 10le painting, chair can- required.
ing, quilting and an herb display
took place in Dave Diles Park, and
Income guidelines for 1992children's games like sack races 1993 HEAP are as follows: one in
and a tug of w•IQJile8ted to be real ho\tsehold, $10,215; two, $13,785;
crowd ple~sers. 'Hamburger and three, $17 ,355; four, $20,925; five,
pizza eating ~ were beld on $24,495; six, $28,065. For housethe "'!"' for youngster with heany holds with,more than six members,
add $3,570 for each additional
appetites.
Craft dealers and merchants member .
lined the sidewalks along Second
Eligible households will either
Avenue, and tasty treats like catfish receive a voucher or a credit on
sandwiches, beans and cornbread, their heating bill from the particihot dogs, sausage sandwiches, pop- pating utility company.
COOl and men were available.
Community Action staff are

-----Weather----South-Ceatral Ohio
Tonight, showers and thunderstorms. Low 65-70. Chance of rain
80 percent. Tuesday, showers or
thunderstorms likely, mainly in the
morning . High in the mid-70s.

--Area deaths.-Virgil Hill
Virgil Hill, 50, of State Route
338 in Racine, died on Thursday,
September 17, 1992 at Holzer
Medical Center.
He was born on May 18, 1942
in Racine, son of Harry and Katie
Hensler Hill. He was a farmer,
worked 29 years on the river and
served the past 17 years as a towboat captain. He was employed by
the Crounse Corporation. He was a
member of the United Steelworkers
and Racine Masonic Lodge #164.
He atlended Racine First Baptist
Church.
Besides his parents, he is sur·
vived by his wife of 32 years,
Kathryn Powell Hill of Racine; a
daughter, Mrs. Jay (Tina) Rees,
Albany; two sons, Dwight (Lorna)
Hill of Racine and Jarrod Hill,
Racine; two brothers, Paul
(Crestyln) Hill and Charlie Hill ,
both of Racine; a sister, Mrs. Joe
(Janice) Glenn of Racine; five
grandchildren; and several uncles,
aunts, cousins, nephews, and
nieces.
He was preceded in death by his
grandparents; his m.other and
father· in-law, Morgan and Clara
Powell; and a nephew, Jeremy
Guinther.
Funeral services were
held
Sunday at Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with Rev. Roger Grace
and Pastor Steve Deaver officiating. Burial was in in Letan Falls
CemeterY.

Stocks
Am Ele Power.................... 32 3/4
Ashland Oil.. .................. ....23 1/4
AT&amp;T................................. 43 3/4
Bank One........................... 44 518
Bob Evans ......................... 18 518
Charming Shop.................. 31 1/4
City Holding ...................... J8 1{2
Federal Mogul ................ ...14 3/4
GoodyearT&amp;R .:................ 65 1/8
Key Centurion ................... 20
Lands End ..........................26 318
Limited Inc....................... 22 718
Multimedia Inc .................. 25
Rax ReslauranL .................. J/8
Reliance ElecDic................ 17 1/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 14 3/4
Shooey's Jnc ...................... l7 7/8
S1ar Bank ...........................31 1{2
Wendy lnt'L.. .....................l21/4
Worthington Ind................20 3/4
Stock report5 art tbe 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewl or GaUipolis.

The Daily Seldinel
(UIPIDa..o)

PubUthed "e11 aRemoan, Moaday
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poo1op polo a t - . , , Oblo.

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Ohio Newt~-=~~ cl1tloa, National
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tad .., BN.nham

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New van, New Y'"" tOOt 7.

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n.Jir Statia.tl Oft a th.n., lis. or 12
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bormacanltr
~a·

But, said a Hartford Courant
editorial, "Sexist or racist doctrines are ideas. They may be
repugnant ideas, but that doesn't
stop them from being powerful,
and therefore worthy of the attentioo of people who may not agree
with them.'

I•

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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

::
Racine Legion Auxiliary to

OHIO Weather
Aceu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

By JOHN CHALFANT
Allocillted Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Obioans who complain the s1a1e fails to get enough
auention in presidential primaries ought 10 be happy now thai the general
election is near.
The candidateS. their wives, running males and surrogates seem to be
crisscrossing Ohio more than usual.
.
.
R~ and Demoaats alike always ponray Ohto as unponant to r------"'1'1"-'""":'?'
their chances of victory.
But Republican National Chairman Rich Bond gave the seventhE&gt;i~~ C~iHToN
largest state a greater role last week when he pruclai.m~. "This is our
K~eW
No.I target stile in the country, there's no doubt about tL
.
'
He empbasized "in the country " and predicted appearances by PresiFet~i~T,
dent Bush would average about ~-a-week measured since the Republican convention.
.
.
BUT He LeT HILLa~Y
Bush trails Gov. Bill Clinton ol Arkansas, and the Midwest IS seen as a
particularly important battleground. One rectnt independent poll showed
KiT'~
the race to be a virwal toss-up in Ohio.
Mart Longabauglt, director ol the Clinton campaign in Ohio, said the
state is a priority for Clinton, too.
" It's one of a handful of states that are at the very top of the list in
•
terms of the allocation of candidate time, advenising ume, all of the
'
resources thai a campaign would pul into a slate,'' he said.
Loogabaugh said Bond's designation of Ohio as his top state target is
an indication of panic.
"They're scared they're png to lose i~ and they're coming back in 10
bail it out," Longabau~.
·
Clinton has made
trips into Ohio since the Democratic convention in July, including two-day bus tours through the central and northern
counties. Clinton also was in Cincinnati on Labor Day.
Bush has been in the Slate on two days since the Republican convention in August, making steps in Cincinnali, Fmdlay and Cleveland.
Those ooght to be welcome Dips for partisans dismayed because Ohio
usually winds ~ being igncred in the earlier presidential primary season.
Nominalions often are decided by the time the Ohio primary rolls around roe~
in May or, as was the ease this year, in June.. .
.
.
Bond, campaigning last week for I St~! DIStrict congresstonal candidate
Deborah Pryce, declined an opponumty ·to predtct how Repubhcans ,.,_,
would do in the slale's congressional races Nov. 3.
a;~
"I'm very loathe 10 play the numbers game because I do think to some &amp;,;;;;.;;;:.;;;;.:..;.;.;,;;;:;.:.;.;:.;;;;.:..:;;
degree our faleS are intertwined with the president's here in Ohio," he
said.
"1 do think thai very strong Republicans in suong disDicts like Deborah Pryce will make it in Ohio, even if President Bush narrowly does not.
But on the other hand we've got the prospect to hit the ball out of the
Everyone remembers the peace
park," Bond said.
dividend, that budgetary bonus
from the end of the Cold War that
could be applied to pressing
domestic needs. But then again, $300 billion and the national debt
everyone remembers the nat earth climbing toward $4 trillion, Washtheory, another nice idea thai didn' t ington's priorities are clear. The
By Tbt Associated Press
Today is Monday, SepL 21,the 265th day of 1992. There are 101 days prove out in the real world.
ftrst order of business is to get the
left in the year.
Both shared the same fale. The deficit-debt monslel' under control.
Today's Highlight in History:
closer you thought you were com- Until we can begin pulling investTwo hundred years ago, on Sept. 21 , 1792, the French National Con- ing to the promised "dividend," ment funds into new projects
venlion voted to abolish the monarchy.
the more it receded, like some fis- instead of old debt, the long-term
On this date:
cal horizon on the Great Plains of economy is going to be anemic and
In 1866, English novelist H.G. WeDs was born in Bromley, Kent.
the economy. Washington never its shon-term prospectS emtic.
In 1897, the New Yort Sun ran its " Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa could reach it, for the simple reaBut if everyone gives lip service
Claus" editorial in response 10 a leuer from 8-year-old Virginia O'Han- son that in our deficit-ridden, debt· to that proposition, and virtually
lon.
burdened economy, it never exist- everyone does, the bloated defense
In 1931, Britain went off the gold standard.
budget cow remains a tempting w ed.
• In 1937, "The Hobbit." by J.R.R. Tolkien, was first published.
That is hard fo r liberals to get for immediate consumption.
: In 1938, a hurricane with winds clocked a1 more than 180 miles-an- accept, as I' m the first to admit. The Bush administration bas
hour slrUCk parts .of New York and New England, causing widespread But if conservatives are at last will- promised to cut military spending
damage and claiming more than 600 lives.
ing to admit the obvious, which is from $287 billion in fiscal year
In 1949, the People's Republic of China was proclaimed by its Com- that the great defense buildup of 1991 to some $236 billion in 1995.
munist leaders.
the 1980s was tied directly to That's a $50 billion annual " sav• In 1964. Malia gained independence from Britain.
deficit spending, then liberals ings," as such things ate measured
In 1970, "NFL Monday Night Football" made its debut on ABC-TV should be able to face facts as well. in the nation 's capital. Centrist
as the Cleveland Browns defCaJed the visiting New York leu 3.1-21.
However grudgingly, conservatives think ranks like Broolrings are sugIn 1976, Orlando Letelier, onetime foreign minister to Chilean Presi- are biting the bullet of candor. " In ges ting that the savings figure
dent Salvador Allende, was killed when a bomb exploded in his car in a sense, we financed the military could be closer to $120 billion.
Washington, D.C.
budget on borrowed money," for· Further alonp; the political specIn 1977, after weeks of controversy over pasl business and banking mer Reagan economic advi ser trum, savings as high as $150 bilpractices, Presidem Jimmy Carter' s embattled budget director, Bert Murray Weidenbaum recenUy said. lion a year have been suggested.
Lance, resigned.
Or, to put it another way , as the
That's a lot of money, and it is
In 1981, the Senale unanimously confumed the nomination of Sandra national debt went up by over $2 not hard to think of inleHigent, usetrillion in the 1980s, funds spent on ful ways to spend it for the public
Day O'CoMor to become the ftrst female justice on the Supreme Court.
. In 1989, Hlll'licane Hugo, with wind up to 135 mph, crashed •nto the military simultaneously jumped good. Defense conversion is one.
. by almost $1 trillion above the pro- Helping retrain displaced worters
Charleston, S.C.
jected Carter defense fi gures . for employment in the civilian secInstead of tax and spend, the Rea- tor ought to be high on the list.
gan philosophy was borrow and Helping defense industries retool
spend , and the chief beneficiary for civilian production is another.
was the defense establishment
(One of the reasons that the post
Now, with the ecooomy sputter· World WarD economy was able to
ing, the cWTent budget deficit over absorb the I 0 million men and

•
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

agenda. The Ohio Small ausiness
Council wiD present this agenda 10
the legislature in early 1993, at the
beginning of the !20th Ohio General Assembly, and will continue to
work to keep the small business
messa~e in the spotlight.
"It IS essential for our Slale lawmakers to understand the small
business perspective," said Carol
Ball, OSBC chairman, "Since small
business enterprises create twothirds of new jobs in Ohio, policy
makers need to know how they can
help foster an atmosphere that
encourages small business growth.
The registration fee is $20 per
person for members of a local
chamber of commerce or the Ohio
Chamber and $25 per person for
non-members. The registration
deadline is September 30.
Regisuation and more information are available from Lauren Oetgen at the Ohio Small Business
Council, (800) 622-1893, or Paula
Thacker at the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, 992·5005.

EMS units answer 17 calls
At 1:36 p.m. on Sunday, Racine
squad went to State Route 338 in
Lelart for Fred Stewart, who was
treated at the scene. At I:46 p.m.,
Middleport squad went to Laurel
Cliff Road. Sharon Smith was
taken to Veterans. At 3:38p.m..
Racine squad went 10 State Route
338. Fred Stewart was taken to
Veterans. At 6:51 p.m., Tuppers
Plains squad took Jerry West from
Stale Route 12A 10 St. Joseph Hospital. At 8:06 p.m., Pomeroy squad
went 10 Stale Roule 681 West and
took Dwight Logan to O'Bicness
Memorial Hospital. At 8:23 p.m.,
Syracuse squad responded to Vinegar StreeL Cyrus Crislip was taken
to Camden-Clark. At 9:23 p.m.,
Racine squad went 10 State Route
12A for Keith Fitch. He was taken
to Veterans. At 9:29p.m., Pomeroy
squad went to Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Cenlel' forGatha
Alvardo. She was taken to Velerans. At 9:42p.m., Pomeroy squad
went to Pomeroy Cliff Apanments.
Mary Taylor was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

HEAP applications available

Amy...

- - - - -.Hospital news---Veterans Memorial
SA1\JRDAY ADMISSIONS Anne Davia, Middleport. and Cora
DeLong, Pomaoy.
SAnJRDAY DISCHARGES Gladys Taylor.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Christol)her Ra)'bwn, Middle
SUiiiDA Y DISCHAR~ None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
• Discharges, Sept. 18 - Larry
Hunt, Fred Sayre, Grace Sheets,
Amos Wilson.
Births, Sept. 18 - Mr. and Mrs.

Howard Foster, a daughter, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Danny Kuhn,
a daughter, Middleport.
Discharges, Sept. 19 - Mrs .
James Hannon and son.
Bitths, Sept. 19 - Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Springer, twin daughters,
Crown City.
Discharges, Sept. 20 - William
Anderson, Michael Beaver, Mrs.
Jimmie Evans and son, Mrs .
Howard Fisher and daughler,
Leland Greene, Amanda Stumbo.
Births, Sept. 20 - Mr. and Mrs.
Kevin Rippeth, a daughter, Wellston.

Sorority to 1I1UI
The Preceptor Bela Bela Chap- meet
.
.
.
1er Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
The Racme Amencan .Legton.
m~t Thursday at II a.m. ~t the Auxiliary will meet Thursday at :
home of Maida Mora to leave for 7:30p.m. at the post home.
lunch at The Point of View in Park.
Creative Fun Art Classes
,
ersburg, W. Va
A Halloween Art Class for chil- •
dren of all ages will be offered Oct. :
GUmort rtunioa
Family and friends of the lale 17 from 10-11 :30 a.m. by Shirin :
Walter and Edna Oiler Gilmore Nuggud for the Middleport Arts •
will hold their annual reonion at the Council. The cost of the class is $4 . :
Rock Springs Grange Hall on Sun- To register call992-2675.
day. A potluck dinner will begin at
Classes to be offered
,
I p.m. Bring a covered dish and
Janet
Bolin,
an
accredited
judge
•
lable service.
and past state rresident of the Ohio :
·
Associalion o Garden Clubs, will ~
Ballroom dance classes
offer
a variety of classes for the ;
Ballroom dance classes,
Middleport
Arts Council in Octo- ;
instructed by Gerald Powell, will
bcr.
. ;
begin Tuesday a1 7 p.m. for beginOn
Oet.
I
at
7
p.m.
there
will
be ;
ners. An intermedtate class will
a
nora1
an
as
a
design
class
featur;
begin Wednesday at 7:30p.m. with
ing
fresh
nowers;
on
Oct.
8
at
7
~
advanced class Wednesday at 6:30
p.m.
there
will
be
a
pine
cone
·
p.m. Classes meet at the Middleport Arts Council, North Second wreath making class: on 0ct. 15 at :
Avenue in Middleport and the cost 7 p.m. the class "How to Decorate '
is $7 per couple per session. To Wreaths" and a bow making class :
register, or for further infmnation, will be held; and on Oct. 22 at 7
p.m. there will be a class on dried
call Mary Wise at 992-2675.
noraJ design.
All classes arc SIS each with all
Texas style dance classes
supplies
furnished for each class.
Texas style dance classes,
To
register,
or for further informa:
instructed by Gerald Powell, will
tion,
call992-2675
or 742-2095.
begin Tuesday a1 8 p.m. for beginners with an advanced class on
Homecoming
. Wednesday at 8:30p.m. Classes
The
First Church of God in
meet a1 the Middlepon Ans CounS
yracusc
will hold its homecoming ·
cil, North Second Avenue in MidSunday
at
10:30 a.m . A potluck
dleport and the cost is $7 per cou·
dinner
will
begin
at noon followed
pie per session. To rcgiSier or for
by
the
afternoon
service. Pastor
further information, contact Mary
David
Russell
invites
the public.
Wise at 992-2675.
Round and square dance
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Dance Club will sponsor a round
and square dance Friday from 8-11
p.m. at the senior citizens center.
Music will be provided by Kenny
and Millie Reynolds, Long Bonom.
Arthur Connant is the caller, Those
attending bring snacks for the
snack table. Public is invited.
Legion auxiliary to meet
American Legion Auxiliary
Unit No. 39 will meet Tuesday at .l
p.m. at the home of Mary Manin in
Middleport.
Committ.. to meet
The Big Bend Stemwhecl Association will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
at the Carpenlers HaD in Pomeroy.
Plans will be finalized for the festival. Anyone interested in helping is
urged to attend.
Revival
Revival at ML Olive Coonmunity Church in Long Bottom will be
Wednesday through Sunday at 7
p.m. nightly with Evangelist
William Villers, Annamoriah,
W.Va. Pastor Lawrence Bush
invileS the public.

Women 's rellowship to meet
The Church of Christ Women's
Fellowship will meet Thursday at'
7:30 p.m. at the Bradford Churc~
of Christ. Bradbury will have devo-·
lions and Norma Torres will speali:
on Women's Health. All ladies are
urged 10 attend.
HaJman reunion
Descendants of the late H.A.
Fred Hayman and Gamet F. Polk
Hayman will be held Oct. 4 at the
home of their eldest son, C.E. Hayman Sr., at Antiquity. The reunion
will begin a1 10 a.m. There will be
a dinner at noon and a ball game in
the afternoon . All relatives and'
friends of the Hayman family are
invited. C.E. Hayman Sr., president, will conduct the business
meeting.
Riverview Garden Club
Riverview Garden Club will
meet on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the home of Ruth AMe Balderson
in Reedsville. Mrs. Balderson and
Mary Alice Bise will serve as co,
hostesses. Installation of officers is
planned.

LCCD meets
Leading Creek Conservancy
District will hold its regular board .
Meigs OAPSE to meet
meeting on Thursday at 7 p.m. at
Meigs Local OAPSE will meet the board office. The publi c rs
Thursday at 7 p.m. at Meigs Junior invited.
High School
To meet Tuesday
The Meigs County Republican
Homecoming
Women's Club will meet in joint
Eagle Ridge Community session with the Republican ExecuChurch, Racine, will celebrale its tive Committee on Tuesday al 7
homecoming Sunday. Morning ser- p.m.
vices are at 10 a.m. with a carry· in
The meeting and a potluck dindinner at noon and afternoon scr- ncr will be held in the counrooms
vice at I :30 p.m. There will be spe- on the third floor of the Meigs
cial singing. Public invited.
County Coon House, Pomeroy.
All members are invited to bring
family or friends along with a covered dish. Meat and drinks will be ·
furnished.

available to assist individuals with
their applications at the c.entral
office in Cheshire, the Galha outreach office at 220 Jackson Pike,
and the Meigs County outreach
office, at 39350 Union Avenue in
Pomeroy.
Further information is available
by calling Community Action at
367·7341 or 446-0611 in Gallia
County, 992-6629 or 992-5605 in
Meigs County, senior centers at
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
446-7000 or 992 -2161, or the
HEAP hotline at I (800) 282.0880. were no tickets sold naming all six
numbers drawn for Saturday
night 's $8 million Super Lotto
jackpot, so Wednesday 's Super
Lotto drawing is worth $12 million,
Continued from page I
the Ohio Lotlery said
appliances.
Here are Saturday night's win·
Used motor oil must not be ning numbers:
mixed with anything else and in Super Lotto
jugs or buckets. Oil in drums or
8-14-18-41-46-47
barrels wiU not be accepted. Auto(eight. four1eel1, eighteen, fonymobile tires must have rims onc, fony-six, fony-seven)
removed. Glass containers must be Kicker
separated as to color (clear and
6-7-8-8·1-0
green/brown), be rinsed with caps
(six , seven, eight, eight, one,
removed. No. 2 plastic includes zero)
milk and water jugs, and the like, Pick 3 Numbers
and should also be rinsed with caps
5-8·6
removed.
(five, eight, six)
Appliances accepted will Pick 4 Numbers
include washers, dryers, dishwash0-8-1 -9
ers, electric and gas ranges and hot
(zero, eight, one, nine)
water lanks. Because of new regulations, refrigerators, freezers and
air conditioners will not be accept'able.
Newspapers, cardboard and tclevisioos are also unacceptable, but
any dairy farmer interested in using
newspaper for animal bedding can
contact the Meigs County Litter
Control office for information
about reeycling the paper.
Companies actively involved in
marketing the products to be recycled on Saturday are Safety-Klecn
(oil), Interstate (batteries); and
Mid-American Waste Systems
(tires). Items wiD be accepted on a
donation basis only, and items from
commercial businesses or dealers
wiU not be iccepted.
The county-wide event is 5Jl011·
sored by Meigs High School,
VICA clubs, Meigs County Recycling and Liuer Prevention, and th
AGHJMV Solid Waste Management District
At the same location, VICA of
Meigs High School will hold a ear
Everyone Welcome
show. Information regarding the
Pastor Herbert Grate
event is available from the litter
conuol offx:e, 992-6360.

Lottery numbers

Recycle...

REVIVAL
CHESTER
CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE

September 22·27
7:00 pm nightly

6:00 P•. Sunday Evening Service

Evangelist Rev. Bill Crane .

Willie Preaching and Singing Nightly

�Monday, September 21, 1992

Sports

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, September 21, 1992
Page--4

Tennessee, Ohio State win to ascend on Top 25 ladder
By JOHN NICHOLSON
Sunday's poll after heating thenA5sociated Press Writer
No. 4 Florida 31-14 in I&lt;noxville
In the time it took Tennessee Sallirday-for its third victory under
coach John Majors to return to interim coach Phillip Fulmer.
work afrer heart bypass surgery, the
"Phillip is an outstanding
Volunteers climbed from No. 22 to coach," Majors said. "I'm proud
No. 8 in The Associated Press poll. of him , Lhe staff and the entire
Majors, who Ul)derwent surgery squad"
Aug. 25, announced Sunday that he
The 57-year-old Majors said he
would resume his duties today. ex)XlCLed Lo coach from the press
Tennessee advanced six spots in box during Saturday's home game

In the NFL ...

~·.B·hb

Doll&lt;lil3,

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

s-lo6,0oklmd4
Calil'omil '· Mi

Twn

W L T Pet. PFtA.
BW!.to... ... .
J 0 01.000 112 Jl
Miaml . .... ..... l 0 01.000 SJ 33

Ctnlral Dhlllol
Piulbu11.h .......... 3 0 01 .000 19 40
CINClJilNATI... 2 I 0 .MJ7 6&amp; 41

Mil...... 9, Bdim•l

Konou Sl. 71. Mal&amp;wl2
- . ObUo 17, CNCINNATI 14
- . . . . Jl, CltJ&amp;homa SL l

N.lowa49, 1dabo SL II

Noa.Donocl2.Mi..... SL31
5. 1Wnoi1371 AIIIW:I Pay7

" ' " - ' '· c.JilaaDal

OUitM .t, Selalo 2

CL.EVEI.AAU .. I 2 0 .333 S4 f1

Tonlc't's1omes

w..-.DhWoa

Boaton (Oudinc.r 4-10) 11 Deuoit
(llau S-2), 1,35 , ...
Bal!imcn (MullinllW) 11 MUwwkoo (W..,... 12-13). loG! p.m.
OU:Wid (Dulin&amp; 14-9) 11 Chic•ao

2 I 0 .61.7 31 .56
2 I 0 .667 70 40
I 2 0 .333 20 53
0 3 0 .000
69

so

0 3 0 .000 29 61

(F........ I-9), ·~p.m .

Seoule (flallina 13-9) a Koaw Cilr
(Aqoino 2-l). loll p.m.

Tue.!ilday's games

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

Ocuuil (TcndJ. 6-10 lnd Kinl 4-5) ll
New Ycxl (Mili1ello 3-2 1nd S.ndcnon
12-9), 2.4p.m.CIJNElANI) (Emboeo 0.11 ..
(Cianau 11·10). Bl p.m.
TOCCftiO (Stonkmyre 10.11) 11 Blldnae. {Suld.ift'el6-13), 7:lS p.m.
Califomi• {l...ulploll. 12·13) It hlil-

Euttm Dlvilloft

,.

I

Tum

WL T PrL PFPA

l'hiUdclphU ..

3 0 01.00) 76 27
2 1 0 .6674750

O&amp;llas ................ 3 0 01.000 88 58
WuhinJUW~ ....

N.Y. Giant~ .
Phocna ........

Ctatral Dl'll&amp;on
Minnc&amp;ot.a .....
2 1 0 .667
TllTipt. Bay .
2 I 0 .667
ChictJO..... . .. I I 0 .500
Delroit.. . ....
I 2 0 .333
Orccn B1y.
1 2 0 .333
.

a....

0 2 0 .000 4l 6.1
0]0 .000 411'

••"*•
(Nev1rt0 16-11). I:OS p.m.
O•lr.hnd (Wiu 10-13) u Chic•ao

66 71

74
33
6S
47

(llouJI&gt; 6-11), ·~l ~"'

36
52
57
7'1

Seaule(Jolwon ll-13) It Xanui'Ci1y
(Haney 1·1), 8:35p.m.
Minnetola (Snuley t•-9) 11 Teua
(11,..5-9). 8•lS p.m.

Wattm DIYWon

1

New Odwu ....
Sln Francuoo

2 I 0 .667 SI 28
2 I 0 667 93 62

'

Allanw .........
L.A. 1Uma

I 2 0 .333 44 51
I 2 0 .333 31 66

I

AP college
football poll
The Top lS lelrM in lhe Auocined
Preis 1992 colleae foothill poll , wilh

Sunday's scores
(~r-em B•r 24,CINCINNATI

in pamtlbcam, recorda;
2S
pcanta for • filii. place voce ~$.,.1111c
point for a 25th place v&amp;. and
· in
the praeuon poll:
fint-pl~ee vote~~

2l

lhrw&amp;h Sf9L 19, tol.ll pmnta hued m

~· lO,DmvcrO

HOUIIOft 23, Kullu Cit1 :20, OT
New~ 10. Alllnt17
San Franciaco31, N.Y.Jc:u t•

S..W.l~NewEnJlood6

Mlm..... 26. r,....a. 1 20
a..EVELAND 28, LA. Raiden 16

lAol
Teatn
W-L.T h. Weell.
l. MionU (43) ............. 2-0-0 1)28
1

WuhU!pn 13, OdroitlO
Miami 26, LA. Ram. I0

l Wuhin""' (ll) .... ~
3. FloridiSL(2) ......... l-0-0
4. Mid&gt;ipn .............. 1·0.1
!1. TcxuAAM (1) ..... 4-().(1
6. N.,..llonz............ l-0-1

Dallu 31, AIOICIU 20
P\IIOt&gt;o,.h 23, Son

IMJo 6

Buffllo11, l.n4iwpoh• 0

Next week's &amp;ames
SwDCI.ef
All.mt.1al ~
· o, I p.m.
Bllfl'do1tN.,1 p.m.
Denver II
, I p.m.
Minncm.. It CINClNNA I p.m.
San Di.CfO It Houl&amp;on. I p.m.
Tampt Bay at DaroU. I p.m.

u .vupu ................ :J-0..0

n

_,

LA Rlida"'l•tKmsuCity,9p.m.

OPEN DATE: DaUu, lnd11n1polil,
N.Y. Gi1nt1, Phil•delphil, Ph oen11,

· In the majors...
Cl
llS
14
205
21

1!1. Nebruka ............... Z.l-0
16. o........ .............. Ho

602

17. Syna.c: ...... ...... .... l-1-0

574

19. suarcn ............ .... :Z..J-0
20.0kbhom• ............. :Z..I-0
2LSmDicao St.. ........ 1.0.1
2l. sam.:m cu ......... 141
23 N. CaniliN St. .... l-1-0
Z&lt;. Xwu .................. »&gt;
25. Boe1.0n Collqe .... 3-0.0

482
331
314
289
213
Ill
131

12
11
I
19
11
13
23

7.5
12

17.5
23 5
29.5

Onnll

Pet

T

Major college
football scores

51. l...o.til (~flpne 1-0) It Piutbw'Jh
(W.U. 9-6), '~!I;':'
QUc..F _(I
1\l-ll ) atNewYcrt
(llillnun l-&lt;1), 7'4Clp.m.
Sill FrancilcG (Hickmon S-3) u San
Dicao (l)clhaiet4-S), 10:0::5 p.m.
Atllnl.t. (P. Smi1h S-0',1 11 Loa Anadc.
{Jk:nhiler 10-13), I0:35 p.rn.

Boa\011 Collep 21, Na¥)' 0
Colaate 17. t'"ordhlm 7

Eul

O.rvn~nh 36, Pam 17
Ddawm 31, Rhode laltnd 14
Hli'Vud Z7, Columbia 2:0
Howanl U. 7.5, Che)my 6

Lata)'Idle.,, Buffalo 21

- - 7,

Ohiolk.lS,S,......l2

,_ s.. l2, E. MKhi

Comollliii

VqloloTooh26, Tmpl&lt;7

..... .,,.... 34, Motylonol 33
Yde 22. Baotm 17

4,
l.l

Ba~ta ....................67

12 .~0

20

Colll'...,;. ...............67

12

x....u ao, ........... " u

. s..ulo ..................l7

,1(17

.ollO

.439
92 .Jll

UCLA 17, Bri&amp;blm Yeu~ 1 to
UNl.V -40, N. A-....1
w..,._211, Nobrub 14

Ohio high school
football scores
A¥On19, Cohlmtu. 0
Bclloilo28. E&lt;lioal s. 12
Bridfq&gt;oo I, E&lt;tiooo N. 7, Of
c...... "'lGnlcr 71, c.- Colh. 7
C...U...lO,O....lO
Cia. Coionin 31, OWiico1hc 7
Clc. Colhali&lt; 1I. Pod., 6
Clc.IU!odall7, Plnnl 6
CID.. St.lpatWI42. CIIMI.md. Hta. 0
Ce. \JIIIi.vcaily 13, Omnp 7

CGIInCIWXI VaiL 13, Newc:omCDtOWn 0
Dolloil Colh. Cannl20, Tol. SL Fnnois
14
OUmour 42. Ri~t.nmd Hla. 26
In I
i ICC 6., lbwbrl 0
~VIII. 40, TIIICarlwu Vall 14

Jewcu-SQo 14, Wcinon (W,V1,) Ml.dan·

no6

Lab Clth. .52. Punt Holy Name 7
Laneua21, Col. w.ucnon 16
Lo..tmllc42,•

u...mn. Volloy ll,

&amp;rruc
0
14

~W.l7,0ixllift

- .... ll. E. c.n... 2l
MoriGo Coli&gt;. l' honl&lt;ll SL looeph I
"'...,F.., 40. s..-.;u. Colh. 12
McDc:uld l7, Prlnk1in Fu.mace Gret~~ 6
Newuk C..... 71 1Wlnm l..akewood 0

0
0
0
0
1
0
1
0
0
0

St. Henry 35. Liml C.lh. 13

*Q""

Wacan a...c 6

v...,..a...,21,Y-.R•,.., 17
Y...... - 2 1, 0.. VASI6

l..u\IIYill&amp; RCIMCIIIII 31, Ycllow SprinaJ

13

Transactions
BuebaU

AJlllrieM IM:pe
CLEVELAND INDIANS - Namtd
O.a O'o..d lllndM' of bueb.U optr·
adMI aad •iaial I'Mral manaatr ;
Mkk., ~tlalptdal atiiiUI lei tht

,._ •rector
I;,...

CMJt .,.., ....

llll .....
of butllall
llooo;..,..
Cel'llehno dln&lt;t«; Mork
opth·

~ ToRK"Y

ANliEES - R«ollod
J.T. Sn0ow, fint betcrnan; Haul.cy Mculenl, Wid buernln: O.ve SilY011.1i, ahoostop, and Jeff Johnson, pitcher, from
Ccilmlll&amp; rJ the lmanllic:ml l..uJUC-

N.a-..Luaut
ATI.ANTA BRAVES - Plo&lt;Od O..o

011.-a, Cllcher, on r.he 15·da~ diu bled
litt. Recalled P11 Comc.z, pill:he.r, from

Ridwnond orthelntc:m~tiontl. Lctaue.

CHICAGO CUBS - W1lved Jd(
KlMibl,. infiddlf, fur lhe pwpoae &lt;i JIV·

ina bim hil uncond.ilion•l rclcue. Purchu.. die CODtne~ of Jcnie Hollin•,
pitcllcr, fnwn Oarl«tc or lbe Soulhem
l.aa~ RacaiW O.ry Soott. infldder,
hun low• ol &amp;hi Arneril:an. Aaociltion.

-

Basketball

Natloftal laskttball .Wodtlfoll

DENVER N\JOGETS - Sipcd Scan

Hulin.. ,

ronr~rd -ecnt.u,

lO I one-year

FOOibaU

Nadoul footlt.an Lea&amp;•

DALLAS COWBOYS - A~uiRid

Thornla Bvcnu, ufcty, from lhe Pitll·
bwlh SICiclm for •n unditcl01N dr•ft
pick. Siped Evcmt 10 1 Uuee-)~n con·
lnCL

17

g

McGuire rushed for 40 yards on 13
carries in his first game since
undergoing knee surgery last
November.
No.4 Michigan 35
Oklahoma St.11te 3
In Ann Arbor, Mich ., Todd
Collins, replacing injured Elvis
Grbac, completed a shoal-record
29 passes in 42 auempts for 285
yards and two touchdowns for
Michigan (1-0-1). Bob Ptacek set
1he previous record of 24 against
Ohio State in 1958. No. S Texas A&amp;M l6
Missouri 13
In Columbia, Mo., Jeff Granger
threw touchdown passes on his
only two completions in the second
half for the Aggies (4-0).
He hit Tony Harrison for a 73yard touchdown on the third play
of the half and added a 6-yarder to
Greg Hill late in the third quarter.
Hill recorded his eighth career 100yard rushing game with 104 yards
on 20 attempts.
No. 6 Notre Dame 52
MichigaD State 31
In East Lansing, Mich., Riclc
Mirer completed 12 of 24 passes
for 253 yards and three touchdowns in the first half as the Irish
(2-0-1) took a 38-10 lead. He
added a 7-yard completion on his
only auempt in the third quarter
before leaving with the Irish on top
45-10.
No. 7 Alabama 38
Arkansas 11
AI Linlc Rock, Ark., Derrick
Lassie scored on a 33-yard run on
the Crimson Tides' first play from
scrimmage and finished with 112
yards on 18 carries. He rushed for
· 99 yards on 13 carries in the fli'St
half as Alabama (3-0-0) toolc a 280 lead.
No. 9 Penn State 52
Eastern Michigan 7
.
At Stale College, Pa., John
Sacca, whose brother Tony quarterbacked Penn State last year, completed I 0 of 17 passes for 153
yards and two touchdowns. Penn
State (3-0·0) scored 28 points in
the first II minutes.
No. 10 Colorado 21
Minnesota 20
In Minneapolis, Kay Detmer.

LEXINGTON, Va . (AP) Marshall was prepared for VMI's
running offense, but quarterback
Tony Scales swprised the Herd by
throwing for 284 yards while the
Keydets rushed for just 90 yanls.
"Everybody is so overwhelmed
with stopping our running game,"
Scales said. "I hadn't proved
myself as a throwing quarterback,
so why should they respect me?"
Herd coach Jim Donnan said the
team needs to work on defending
against a passing offense, despite
Marshall's 34-16 victory Saturday.
"We had some busts in the first
half when nobody was covering a
guy," Donnan said. "We've got to
get betLer on pass defense, no question about it."
Free safely Roger Johnson said
the Keydets come out a wishbone
La do things that were unconventional for that offense.
"They ran a lot of play action
passes that confused us," Johnson
said. "We picked it up in the second half."
The Herd also had trouble
adjusting to VMI's natural grass
playing field, which Marshall players blamed ~or slowing them down.
Marshall's stadium has artificial

Miami beat Florida A&amp;:M ••

11.s
34

Saturday's scora
Cl.IIVEU.ND l , Chicop4

--

·---~L-

I ••••• I . . . . . . . . . . . . .

ss-o

Washington' beat Nebraska ................. 29-14
Florida State beat N C State .............. 34-13
Florida lost ·t o Tennessee ····~············ .. 14-31
Tens A&amp;:M beat Mluourl ................... 26-13
Michigan beat Oklahoma State ............ 311-3
Notre Dame beat Michigan State ........ 52-31
Syracuse lost to Ohio State ............... 12·35
Alabama be.a t Arkansas •••••••
3&amp;-11
I ...... . .......

Tennesaee beat Florida ...................... 31-14
UClA beat BYU ................................ ,.17·10
N C S~ate lost to Florida State ........... 13-34
Clemson .........................
Dld not play
Stanford beat Northwestem ....... :••••••• 311-24
Georl(ia beat Fullerton State ................ 56-0
VIrginia beat Georgia Tech ................. 55-24
Ohio State beat Syracuse ................... 311-12
Georgia Tech lost to Vlrglaia ............. 24-515
San Diego State ....................... Did not play
Mississippi State beat Memphis St ..... 2G-16
Mississippi lost to Vanderbilt ............... 9·31
1 11 • • • • • •

21
22

23
24
25

turf.

"It was hard Lo gel fooling,"
Herd tight end Mike Bartrum
(Meigs '88) said. "But iL wol'lcs
both ways."
''The field was a problem, but
we certainly dido 't play our best
either," quarterback Michael Payton said. "We can't come out
relaxed against anybodl,· We prcuy
well proved lhat today. '
The slippery grass did not stop
the Herd from rolling up 237 yards
in rushing and an additional 252
yards in passing.
"Our offense carried us today,"
Donnan said. "Our runnin$ game
continues to be very producbve.''

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Tennis
COLOGNE, Germany (AP) Bernd Karbachcr of Germany,
seeded sevenlh, won his fli'St Grand
Prix tournamenl, defeating Marcos
Ondruslca of Souih Africa 7-6 (74), 6-4 in the final of the $330,000
Cologne Open and won $43,000.

8.l
lO.l
20
Z4

the younger brother of former BYU
star Ty Detmer, completed 11 of 18
auempls for 184 yards and two
touchdowns in the second half as
Colorado (3-0) rallied from a 17point deficit. Minnesota's Aaron
Piepkom missed a 55-yard field
goal with 17 seconds lefl
No. 11 UCLA 17
Brigham Young 10
In Provo, Utah, redshirt fresh man Rob Wallcer comphited 18 of
26 passes for 198 yards and Marvin
Goodwin intercepted a pass in the
end zone with I:13 left for the Bruins (2-0).
No. 18 Georgia 56
Cal Sl.1lte-Fullerton 0
In Athens, Ga., Garrison Hearst
scored four touchdowns and rushed
for 164 yards on 19 carries in linle
more than a half for the Bulldogs
(2-1 ). He's the I Oth player in
school history to score four touchdowns in a game.
No. 19 Stanrord 35
Northwestern 24
In Stanford, Calif., Glyn Milbum rushed for Ill yards on 19
carries and Steve Stenstrom completed 21 of 29 attempts for 297
yards and two touchdowns as Stanford (2-1) gained 513 total yards.
No. 22 Southern
Cal 20, Oklahoma 10
In Norman, Okla., Cunis Conway caught a 51-yard touchdown
pass and Stephan Pace returned a
fumble 19 yards for a touchdown
as the Trojans (1-0-1) scored 20
points in the fourth quarter to rally
from a 10-0 deficit. The Sooners .
(2-1) gained only 56 rushing and
201 total.
No. 24 Kansas 40
Tulsa 7
In Tulsa, Okla., Maurice Douglas -rushed for 74 yards on 13 carries and scored lhree touchdowns
and Chip Hilleary completed 14 of
23 auempts for 180 yards for the
Jay hawks (3-0).
No. 25 Boston
College 28, Navy 0
In Boston , Dwight Shirley
rushed for 149 yards on 26 carries
and Chuckie Dukes added 119 on
14 carries as the Eagles (3-0)
recorded consecutive shutouts for
the fusl Lime since 1956. They beat
Northwestern 49-0 last week.

Marshall beats
VMI 34-16

Tennis
BORbEAUX, France (AP) Andrei Medvedev of Ukraine beat
Sergio·Bruguera of Spain 6-3, 1-6,
6-2 in the final of the $330,000
Bordeaux Passing Shot tournament.
Medvedev, 18, and 33rd in lhe
world, posted his third victory of
th ~ year in beating No.4 Bruguera.

w....... Dirill•

Cbl'"I"· :................ IO
ToaN .................... .'72

N&lt;-1141 ll.Mcl'-cSl. 21
0....,. 16, Tow Tooh 13
Onilaa. SL 14, Arizcm 14.~~e
S..lcu S.. Jl, SW I.auililolll3
- - - 2Q, Now MWco 13
S...CGidll, - : 1 1

Spurrier. The other loss was a 45-3
thrashing in Knoxville two years
ago.
Florida; which dropped 10 No.
13, gained only 278 yards, punted
nine Limes, Look 12 penalties and
didn 't score its second touchdown
until20 seconds remained.
No. 2 Washington (3 ·0)
increased its winning streak 10 17
games wilh a 29-14 victory over
No. 15 Nebraska in Seattle on Saturday nighl
"We're still in the national race
- that's the main thing, " said
quarterback Billy Joe Hoben, who
completed 10 of 19 auempts for
155 yards and a toU~=hdown.
Nebraska has lost 10 consecutive games to teams ranked in the
Top Five and eight scraighL to Top
10 teams.
"it's disappointing, but we'll
get over it and bounce back," said
running back Derek Brown, who
gained 84 yards to Lop the 2,000yard mark for his career.
Syracuse dropped from eighlh to
17111 with a 35-12 loss to visiting
Ohio State, which vauhed from
21st to 12111. The Buckeyes scored
touchdowns on three of !heir fll'sl
four possessions, intercepted Marvin Graves four limes and sacked
him six times.
In other games Saturday involving ranked teams, No. 1 Miami
routed Florida A&amp;M 38-0, No. 4
Michigan beat Oklahoma Stare 353, No. 5 Texas A&amp;M defeated Missouri 26-13, No. 6 Notre Dame
beat Michigan State 52-31, No. 7
Alabama defeated Arkansas 38-11.
No. 9 Penn Stale routed Eastern
Michigan 52-7. and No. 10 Colorado edged Minnesota 21·20.
No. II UCLA beat Brigham
Young 17-10, No. 18 Georgia routed Fullerton State 56-0, No. 19
Stanford defeated Northwestern
35 -24, No. 22 Southern Cal beat
No. 20 Oklahoma 20-10, No. 24
Kansas routed Tulsa 40-7, and No.
25 Boston College blanked Navy
28-0.
No. I Miami 38
Florida A&amp;M 0
In Miami, Gino Torrelta completed 12 of 2i passes for 170
yards and two touchdowns in lhe
first half before leaving with a
strained left shoulder as the Hurri·
canes (2-0) increased the nation's
longest winning streak to 20.
Miami running back Stephen

.;...._Sports shorts--

WLPcLGI
63 .lll
66 ,557
67 J41
79 .470

7

22,
y.,_, SL 24, Butboll Zl
V.U.....l6,1Udlmond ll

AMERICAN LEAGUE

.611
.ll3
.l41

IID}&gt;'J.;' l

New llompollioo 21.
· 14
Nonhouuln 47, Maino 36

' MiJWU;...H,.,.. ,,..J)
Bolllmcn .............. ll
CLI!YELAND ......'10

-..s.. 43. -·Colo. 0

Slljpllo ........ of-lac.. - ·
all•••• ••• J•J Gnta ••uan or

Tonlcht's games

Chluao (Mora111 15·7) al New YOlk
( Atlanl.l
-l'1). '"" • ·"' al La An.,t(Smol21.5·11)
(Cindicai 1().14), 10:lS p.m.

Pnmo SL )2. Cokndo SL 21
ldoho l2, Woi&gt;..SL :II

NotH:CIIIIferatCt

NOII~Ir'HCe

CB-'""'d o. n. , ,35 ""'
SL U.W.. (Cannier 7-10) at Piu.bu.flh
v.won ,.u &gt;. Bs , ....

AriloDI SL I IJ, Lou.iMllc 0
ll&lt;iHS..I7,Podli&lt;U. 7
E. WINhiaalm4S, Sonoma: SL14

......l .......... dlrtd.or rl pi1Jtr

Eu1 Caolina at Bowlin&amp; Green

Houllon (Sc:hM ()..O) It aNCNNATI
(Rijo 13-9), llol5 p.m.
S•n Franciaco (C1net 1-2) at S1n
o;,.. (lkn,. 1 2-13),4~ P·"'
AW~ (Dre1.eQI 2-8) 11.. MonLrUI

Far West
w,.....
1 21

BIll St. I0, Kt.m 6
Cm. MicJri&amp;ln 24. Ohio 0
W. M.ichipn 2A, Akron 20

Toledo 1l CmL Michipn
W. MichiJII\ 1tatio

Tuesday'aaomes

,.

Conr.

Tbls Saturday's eameo

Hownon (K.ilc 4-10) • t CINCINNATI
• (Swindcll12-6), 7:35p.m
Pb.ilacldpbia (Rivera S-4) at MOIUIUI
(N•bhol&amp; 10.10). 7:35p.m.

AU p,..42,

MAC standings

Kent at E. Micbi&amp;an
Miami, Ohio 111Jall St

Alhn1.t. 16, HOo!AGII I
CINCINNATI 6. Son IMso I
S1. Louil 16, Oticlao 4
S111 Francifco 3, Loa Aftade~ 2

S..-

T010a'O '11, Soulh.n a..-.1 I
Tri-Volloy30, W.
12
w..... Komooolr 34,
WCIGd lO
Wbtdin&amp; (W.Va.) Un.1ly 1~. Hudson

Pmn St. S2, E. MiciUpn 7
Toledo 33, Purdue 29
Wiaoonun 39, Bow-lin&amp; Gteen U

run~. York I , Mcalt.x 0

ll
67
61
79

16

Soulln•est
Allbtml31, AJbnN• II
Bayler 45, \Jtah St. I0
Ht:lulu:m 31, Illincill3
lCouu 4Q, 1\&gt;lA 7
l..uMoa 33, PniDc V)ew 0
N. IDinou 31 1 A-zbaw St. 0
New MWco SL 30 1 Teua-FJ. Paso 24
SL 20, AIIJdo 5\. 0
Col20. OkloJoonu 10
~ F.A\lltin 41, Jac:Um St. 26
Yo.~~.pown St. 23, SWTMU S.. 20

ru-l7,McD -NW22
S.....E.l3, SIIIIIllloiySL Mlly' o0
Show49,Cic. Eoa Tooh6

Miltni,Ohio 17, Cincinnlli 14

Piatabuf'Jh 3, Pbiladclpbi• 2, 13 in-

Qoklond .................91
~ ..............13

l27

w L
1000 2 1
1.000 I 2
BGSU......... I 0 0 1.000 l 2
Akron ......... 2 l 0 .M7 2 1
W. Mich .... .! I 0 .lOO I 1
omo .......! I 0 .lOO I 2
Miuni . ..... 0 0 0 .000 1 1
Toledo ...... 0 l 0 .000 2 l
E. Mich ......0 1 0 .000 0 3
Kcm ...........o 2 0 .000 0 3
Saturday's..,.,....

Sunday's ~ores

~;d·:::::::::::::::g ~ ~~

m

SW Millouri St. 35, Nanb Teu~IO
TIIUIAAM26.Miaawi 13
Tolodol~ l'lloluc 211
91. JlliKU 31, w. Kcntuck:r :JO
w. MidrlJon Z4, ...... 20
w-..in !9, Bowline ereea u

29, Ta.u 21 , Vandczbilt 11, Wuhid,atm
Sl. 10, Wcat v· . . 10, Miuiaippi 9,
Jowa 7, Soulhem~iaippi 5, A11bum l,

Tum--W L T
C. Mich. .... I 0 0
8111 St. ....... 1 0 0

Saturday's scores

-""-

4
20

6

CINCINNATI l. Son Di&lt;p&gt; 2
0Ucep6. St. LoW!Ii, l•pme
SL Laiuia 11, CtiaJO 10, 10 ~ .
2nd 1om&amp;
Son Frondo&lt;ol, Lao ........ 0
Pl110bwJI&gt; l, I'IUloddphio 0
New Yoft 7, hlcmlz.) !li
1-1owta1 3, All&amp;nLil, 12 iM:inp

y.....,,._ ....... - ... P

IS
21

C.lifomil :J, HOUlton 3, l.S\J 3, Ccsnl
MidUpn I, HawaiJ 1.

NATIONAL LEAGVE

T.-

9
14
10
11

Others reulvlnJ ,.olea: Milaiuippi
St. 114, No!th Clnilina 61 , o..:.rp T-=h

wuhiiJat.on.

w..... Diwll&amp;on
Atllnta ................... l9 59 .601
CINCNNATI ........ IZ 67 .550
S~n Diep .............. Tl
71 .520
IIOUitOn ................. 72 71 .413
S~n Fran.cilco ........ 66
13 .443
LA~~ An 1ela ........... 60
19 .403

2
3
•
5
7

664

11. Oooqjo ................. 2-1-(i

Miami II Selulc_ 4 p.m.
NY. Jcu •t 1.-A. IUmr., 4 p.m.
Pias!Nflh at em-s.,-,4 p.m.
S ~n francim) 11 New Orlean~, I p.m.

Elltml Dl•idoft
Team
W L Pd.
Pittabur)h ........ ..... 11 61 .591
MOd!Ul ................12 67 .550
SL uw ................7l 7l .ll!l
Chic•so................ .7-C 75 .• 97
New Yott .............. 67 81 ..ci3
Philadelphil .......... 59 18 .-401

1,491
1,411
1,283
1,26S
l.lll

7. Alobomo (l) ........... ~ l.lll
8. Tenn•cc. .............. 3-0.0 1,131
9. Paul SL ................. 3-0-0 1,126
10. Cchndo ............... 3-0-0 924
11 . \JCl..A. .............- .... l..Q.O Ill
12. omo ST ........ - ..... 3-0-0 19!5
13. flarilb. ................... l·I.O 792

Tont;ht'seaml!
NY Gianll11 Chicq.o, 9 p.m.

Ohio u. 0

E. llliiiDia41, Mwn~ SL 9
~DeliMa 5\. 12. 1lllnoia SL 7
Iowa S&amp;. 38, Tu.lafte 14

-~-4
_y,,uo.~CUy4

2 I 0 .667 67 59

241

Colon&lt;lo 21, "'"""""20

Sullday'•-=-

1 2 0 .333 24 61

1~ Konl6

c... Michip_n

Tau1, Taron10S
"
0.X.., 10, C1ZVEtAND I

Denver ...............
Kwu Ci1y ......
Seattle........... . .
L.A. R..Jda;l.
San Dir:go ..... .

BollS..

I

I

Ne• EnJ!and ..... 0 1 o .om 6 l4
N.Y. Jets ............ 0 3 0 .000 41 71

HOUlton ...........

Midwest

2

S..U Cily 7.- Yoot4

Euttm Dhllioft

lnditnlpolis .......

www. a 11111y ll.Boo1ao u.:u

I

T-.l'aT:-'0

with Cincinnati.
"I've ~ot to use common sense
in delamming the amount of work
I should do at this Lime," he said
''The doctors seem very encouraged with my progress. They have
no problems with letting me go to
wort.' '
Florida (1-1) lost for only the
second time in 16 Southeastern
Conference games under. Steve

the Dlvlalon 01 Ullllf Pmondon l

Relo\lkn,

~-·

----

Page-S

On record book day in NL,

Braves' four-h~mer night,
Morandini's triple play top list

Br. The Associated Press
Wh1le it wasn't as rare as Mickey Morandini 's unassisted triple
play, the Atlanta Braves' fourhomer inning was preuy special,
too.
David Justice, Brian Hunter and
Ron Gant hit consecutive home
runs in a seven-run sixth off AI
Osuna, and Mark Lemke homered
one out later off Rich Scheid as the
Braves routed the Houston Astros
16-1 Sunday.
"This team can do unpredictable things like that," Gant
said. 'IL was a cool thing to
watch.''

It was lhe fourth Lime in franchise history the feat was accomplished; the last Lime was on Jane
21, 1971, against Montreal when
Mike Lum, Hal Kin~, Hank Aaron
and Darrell Evans d1d it. The Mil·
waukee Braves also did it twice: on
June 8, 1965, and June 8, 1961.
"We're lucky you don't count
total runs," Houston manager Art
Howe said. "You count wins and
we had two out of three, so we had
a heck of a series."
Atlanta lowered its magic number to seven, maintaining a 7 1/2game lead over Cincinnati in the
NL West
"We need Logo out there and
do something - like win, win,
win," said Terry Pendleton, who
reached 100 RBls for the fust Lime.
"The bottom line is we've got to
do it ourselves. We've got to get
our rear ends in gear and get
going."
Steve Avery (11-10) won for the
fusl Lime in seven stans since Aug.
15 as Atlanta set a season high for
runs and stopped visiting Hous-

Lon's five-game winning streak.
Ryan Bowen (0-6) was tagged ror
seven runs and eight hits in I 1/3
innings.
In other games, Pittsburgh beat
Philadelphia 3-2 in 13 innings.
New York beat Montreal 1-0,
Cincinnati heat San Diego 6-1, Si.
Louis heat Chicago 16-4 and San
Francisco edged Los Angeles 3-2.
Pirates 3, Pbillles 2
Morandini turned Jeff King's
sixth-inning liner into lhe ninth
unassisted triple play in major
league history. but King came baclc
to single home the winning run in
the 13th iMing.
With the score tied at I at Three
Rivers Stadium, Andy Van Slyke
and Barry Bonds singled in the
sixth. The runners were ~ing on a
3-2 pitch and King hit a !mer up the
middle that Morandini leaped 10
catch. He stepped on second, then
tagged Bonds.
It was the fli'St unassissted triple
play in the NL since 1927 and the
fust in the majors since 1968.
Roger Mason (5-6) pitched the
13th as the Pirates won for the
sixth time in seven games and
opened a six-game lead in lhe NL
Easl Keith Shepherd (1-1) was the
loser.
Mels 1, Expos 0
Sid Fernandez (13-10) pitched a
five-hitter and struck out 10 at Shea
Stadium as he be;lt Ken Hill (16-9).
New York scored in the second
when Jeff Kent singled, toolc third
on Dick Schofield's hit-and-run
single and came home on rookie
Ryan Thompson's bloop single Lo
right.
Reds 6, Padres I
Tim Belcher (13-14) sLrUck out

a career-high 13, wallted none and
scattered seven hils in his second
complete game. Dave Martinez hit
a two-run homer and Paul O'Neill
added a solo shot for the lteds.
Greg Harris (2-8) gave up four
tuns and eight hits in 4 1/3 iMings
for visiting San Diego.
Cardinals 16, Cubs 4
Stan Royer hit his first major
league homer and drove in four
runs. Geronimo Pena's three-run
double capped a six-run first for
visiting St. Louis, which got 22
hits.
Ryne Sandberg homered, hitting
his 24th in the seventh inning.
Shawn Boslcie (S-10) faced seven
bauers and retired none in the
shortest start of his major league
career.
Bryn Smith (2-1) allowed one
run and three hits in four innings.
Giants 3, Dodgers 2
Man Williams' bases-loaded
single with two outs in lhe ninth
capped a two-run rally as San Francisco beat Los Angeles in what
could be the final game between
the teams in San Francisco.
Willie McGee tied it with an
infield single and advanced to second on third baseman Mike
Sharperson 's throwing error. Will
Clark was wallced intentionally and
Darren Lewis reached on reliever
Roger McDowell's error to lead the
bases for Williams.
The Dodgers took a 2-1 lead
into the ninth on rookie Billy Ashley's two-out RBI single in lhe seventh. San Francisco opened the
scoring in the fust on Will Clark's
sacrifice fly and Los Angeles Lied it
in the fifth on Mitch Webster's
sixth homer.

Green Bay tops Cincinnati 24-23
ByRICKGANO
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) Mike Holmgren, the Green Bay
Packers rookie coach, and Brei
Favre, his near-rookie quarterback,
were in need of a mutual comfort
zone.
Trailing the Cincinnati Bengals
by six points with just over a
minute left, 92 yards 10 go and no
timeouts available, it was no time
to get nervous or rattled.
"I told Brett we probably had
about five or six plays. I said just
relax and throw," Holmgren
advised his 22-year-old backup,
who threw only five passes last
year with Atlanta before a trade
brought him to Green Bay.
"I just tried to settle him down
and he just tried to setlle me
down."
Favre listened. He took just five
plays to move the Packers in for a
touchdown, hitting Kitrick Taylor
for a 35-yard touchdown pass with
13 seconds to go and sending
Green Bay to an improbable 24-23
victory Sunday.
"It was something Mike kind of
111ade up on the sidelines," Favre
!Bid of the final drive. "It's four
guys going deep.
"We had nothing to lose. We
~ad fou~hl our way back that far.
So we dido 't want to stop there."
: The Packers had already lost
itaning quarterback Don Majkows·
~. who went out early in the game
!ViLh strained left ankle ligaments
lfter he was sacked by Tim Krumie. Majkowski is out for at least a
Neck and maybe a month.
Emer Favre, who took a poundng from the Bengal pass rush that
pad ·six sacks. He 3lso had trouble
polding on to the baU until the final

quarter.
"What you see in Breu is a
strong guy who wants to win. He
drives you crazy sometimes but
he's a talent," said Holmgren, who
got his first NFL coaching victory.
It was a day of firsts. Favre,
who'd earlier in the fourth led an
88-yard drive that ended with a
five-yard touchdown pass to Sterling Sharpe, threw his first two
NFL scoring passes.
Taylor's touchdown catch was
his fusl after five years in the NFL.
And top draft choice Terrell Buckley, in his first game, scored his
first touchdown on a 58-yard punt
return Lo keep the Packers in lhe
game in the final period.
Bengal rookie Carl Pickens
returned a punt 95 yards for his
first touchdown to give Cincinnati
a 10-0 second-quarter lead.
Cincinnati coach Dave Shula
took his fli'St loss after Lwo victories. The Bengals were penalized
nine Limes and oouldn'L hold a 17-3
lead after three quarters.
"We didn't play the type of
football today we had played in our
two previous games,' said Shula.
"We had some penalties, turned
the ball over, had some mi&lt;takr.&lt;on
special teams.
"We were in a defense designed
to keep lhem contained. We
stopped ourselves the entire game.
1 thought for a while we would get
away wilh il But we didn'l
"IL didn't oome down to the last
play of this game that lost it for us.
We all had a part in iL"
The final drive took just 54 seconds and Favre made iL work, even
though the Packers had no Limeouts
left when rookie returner Robert
Brooks ran out of bounds with the

Meigs golf team wins twice
to·remain at TV C summit
with only the sixth man for the
teams on the course. Sophomore
Reggie Pratt in his first varsity
match recorded a 42 which tied lhe
team scores allowing Meigs to
squeak out the win on the fifth
score tiebreaker.
Meigs and Belpre, which carded
16ls, were followed by Alexander
(165), Southern (169), Wellston
(187), Vinton County (189), Nelsonville-York (195), Trimble (199)
and Federal Hocking (221).
Jay Harris was match oo-medalist w1th Belpre's Mark Ohl with a
37,John Bentley added a 39, Pratt
a 42, Cremeans and Krawsczyn a
43 and Chris Knight a 45.
For Southern, Andy Grueser
fll'ed a 41, Bracken McFann a 42,
Meigs finished with a team Michael McKelvey and Andy
core of 11 over ~ 155, followed Field~ a 43, Ryan Williams a 45
tY Alexander {168), Southern and Mark Allen a 47.
173), Belpre (175), Wellston
Meigs and Southern will crave!
191), Vinton County ~199), Nel- Lo Wellston for a TVC match on
onville-York (203), Trunble (212) Monday. Meigs wlill host a match
/KI Federal Hocking (245). · at the Meigs County Golf Course
John Bentley and Adam on Thursday.
f'_awsczyn added a 39 for Meigs,
TVC golr standings
ason Hart 40, Benny Ewing 41
(by team and pobtts)
Meigs-24
nd Jay Harris a 43.
For Southern, Bracken McFann Alexander- 2()
arded a 39, Michael McKelvey a Belpre-18
2 Mark Allen and Andy Fields a Southern• - 16
6' and Andy Grueser aQd R,yan Wellslim .... 12
illiamsa47.
Vintpn County - 8
Last Thursday, Meigs slipped Nelsonville-York -7
ast host Belpre in a tiebreaker to Trimble-3
eep its TVC record perfecL Belpre. Federal Hoclcing - 0
r as leading c~eigs by one stroke • - membez-elect
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs picked up two more TriValley Conference golf victories
last week, and in doing so strengthc_ned its hold on flrsl place in the
1 VC. Meigs now holds a 33-2
fllarlc overall.
In action last Monday at the
hio University course, Jay Creeans continued his hot play firing
one over par 37 to lead Meigs to
13-stroke win over Alexander.
remeans has bee11 the TVC
edalist for two consecutive touraments. He has played these 18
ales at one over par with five
irdies. Cremeans leads all TVC
layers in scoring by five shots.

r
1

DIIWing by Clludlllumy, 411 Grldt,
lll,ddltport

PomP.rov-Middleport, Ohio

l

ldclcoff at Green Bay's eight.
Favre got the Packers out of
trouble with a 42-yard pass to Srerling Sharpe, who hurt his ribs on
the catch. Vince Workman caught
another pass for II yards and then
Favre stopped the clock with an
incorripleuon.
Then he double pumped and
found Taylor behind Lhe defense,
and Chris Jacke kicked the goahead extra poinl
"Breu had great composure. In
the huddle he said, 'We are going
co score,"' Taylor said.
"The safety was supposed to be
there. We sent guys up both side·
lines and that strec:hes the safety. If
he goes Lo the middle, iL leaves a
guy open. The safety (Femandus
Vinson) went for the tight end and
that left me open."
The Bengals took a 23-17 lead
on Jim Breech's 41-yard field goal
- his lhird of the game - with
I:07 to play. Breech missed from
36 yards but gaL a second chance
when the Ben~als were called for a
false start, !hell' ninth penalty of the
game.
Boomer Esiason hit Eric Ball
with a 17-yard touchdown pass that
gave the Bcngals a 17-3 lead with
I:13 to play in the third, a play set
up by a Favre fumble.
But Buckley, just signed nine
days ago, kept the Packers in the
game with h1s punt return, offsetting the earlier 95-yarder by Pickens.
Breech kicked his second field
goal, a 34-yarder with 8:05 remaining, to give the Bengals a 20-10
lead before Favre moved the Packers 88 yards in eight plays for a
touchdown.
A roughing-lhe-kicker penalty
on Alfred Williams in the closing
minutes of the fll'St half helped the
Pac~ers to their only score before
halftime, a 37-yard field goal by
Jaclce with 36 seconds lefl
Breech opened the scoring with
a 20-yard field goal following a
fumble by Favre.

Metcalf's four TDs lead Browns
to 28-16 win over L.A. Raiders
By JOHN NADEL
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
focus was on the Todds - Philcox
and Marinovich . lL was Eric,
!hough, who stole the show.
Eric Metcalf scored four touchdowns - three on passes from
first-Lime starter Todd Philcox as the Cleveland Browns won their
first game of the season Sunday,
beating the winless Los Angeles
Raiders 28-16.
"Not since high school have I
had a perfonnance like lhis," Met·
calf said. "On offense, we spread
the field ou1 and iL paid off. Every
time I touched lhe ball, I was headed toward the end zone.''
h must have seemed thai way Lo
lhe Raiders. Actually, Metcalf handled the ball nine times from scrimmage, catching five passes for 177
yar:ds and gaining 10 yards on four
carries.
Metcalf scored h'is first two
touchdowns on Cleveland 's first
two possessions following recov ·
ered fumbles deep in Los Angeles
territory.
Then , he broke the Raiders '
hearts by turning shon passes from
Philcox into long-distance touchdowns to tum a precarious 14-13
lead into a healthy 28-13 advantage.
·
On the first scrimmage play
after a 30-yard field goal by Jeff
Jaeger late in the third quarter drew
the Raiders wilhin a poin~ Philcox
and Metcalf clicked on a 69-yard
pass play.
Then, with II :41 left in the
game, the same combination
teamed up for a 63-yard touchdown
to assure lhe Browns of their fusL

season.

win in three tries this
altempted only 10 passes in his
"We just used Metcalf's abili- career.
ty,'' Philcox said. "I was able to
"I spent my time (in the NFL)
get the ball to him and he did the learning and it paid off today,"
rest.''
Philcox said. "I didn't think I had a
The Raiders (0-3) lost decisively great day, but we got a win, and
despite the fact that they had 27 that's what oounts."
fli'St downs to seven for the Browns
Playing their home opener
and 464 yards in total offense Lo before a crowd of 48,102, the .
231 for Cleveland.
Raiders were 12-point favorites ·
Making his first start of the sea- over the Browns. Instead, they lost :
son, Todd Marinovich comple1ed by 12 points.
33 of a team-record 59 passes for
"I am highly disappointed,"
395 yards and one touchdown. But Marinovich said. "We could not
he threw three interceptions, lost a geL it done. I made a lot of mistakes .
fumble which set up a Cleveland today. I made plenty of bad throws ·
touchdown, 81ld was sacked five and some of our guys ran bad ::
Limes.
routes.
Marinovich was promoted to
"I did n01 play well enough :
first-string status over Jay Schroed- today to win. I only hope we get :
er last week, but he couldn't keep our nasty attitude baclc next week. :
the Raiders from losing their sev- This loss is not the end of the .
enth straight game dating back Lo world. I just hope we can all get iL ;
last year.
together. '
:
Philcox, who moved into Cleve"Not a 101 of people gave us a
land's starting lineup because long- chance," Browns coach Bill :
Lime starter Bernie Kosar broke his Belichick said. "They were down ·
right ankle last Monday night, on us and all of thal I thought our :
completed 10 of 20 passes for 200 special teams play was as good as :
yards without being sacked or it has been in a long Lime. And I ·
mtercepted and guided an offense thought Todd Philcox did a great ;
which didn't commit a turnover.
job. Of course, Eric MeiCalf had a :
Before Sunday, Philcox had sensational game."

Rudd captures
Peak 500 flag

By MIKE OWEN
DOVER, Del. (AP) - Ricky
Rudd showed race scrategy is just
as 1mportant tJ a guy salvagmg a
season as iL is to one pursuing a
NASCAR championship.
Rudd ended a 46-race win less
streak with a 0.41-second victory
over Bill Elliott in the Peak
Antifreeze 500 Sunday, Rudd's
team gambling on tires to hold off
the Winston Cup points leader.
Rudd acknowledged he was
concerned about his team, even
though he dido 't feel extra pressure
because of the losing streak.
"You've got Lo be careful
because a team like that can selfdesLrUct," Rudd said "You've got
so many good talented people and
they're used to winning races and
they don't want to go through a
season without a win."
Rudd's 13th career win was
worth $64,965. It was his lhird on
lhe high-banked, one-mile oval at
Dover Downs Inrernational Speed·
way.
Elliott's Ford led by more than
six seconds with 30 laps Lo go
before both Elliott and Rudd made
green-flag pit stops. Elliou stopped
for four tires and fuel on lap 476,
giving Rudd the lead; Rudd
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Ray- stopped five laps later for fuel only
mond Floyd wrote himself into the in his Chevrolel
"I didn't know it was going Lo
record book by winning a Senior
PGA Tour even~ then celebrated be a gas-and-go until I hit pit
by giving away the prize.
road," Rudd said.
Rudd came out 5.9 seconds
Floyd on Sunday became the
first golfer to score victories on ahead of Elliou with the shan stop
bolh the regular and Senior tours in but had to hold off Elliott on worn
tires. Had the race been 502 laps
the same year.
Moments after Floyd claimed instead of 500, he said, Elliott
the GTE North Classic Sunday would have won.
"The longer that I ran, my car
with a lwo-stroke victory over
Mike Hill , the 50-year-old started slipping," Rudd said,
announced he was donating his adding grease on the windshield
$67,500 first-place check to the hindered him.
"I couldn't see real well. I had
PGA Tour's hurricane relief fund.
Floyd, a native of North Caroli- to back off a little bit so I didn 'L
na who now makes his home in wreclc the car."
Kyle Petty finished third in a
North Miami Beach, Fla.; said he
discussed the donation witb his Pontiac. Davey Allison's Ford was
.
wife Maria after Hurricane fourth, a lap down.
"Ricky and them outsmarted us
Andrew:
And ~e made it clear that he there at the end," Elliott said.
isn't ready to consign himself sole- " That's the way il goes sometimes.
We came out of here wilh a good
ly to the senior circuit.
Floyd; who took a lhree-strolce finish, and thai's all that I care."
The finish boosted Elliott's sealead into the final round, found
himself tied wilh brothers Mike son points lead by 20 over Allison,
and Dave Hill at 12-under with who trails by 154 with six races
left.
seven holes to (lla_)'.

Floyd donates
prize to victims
after winning
GTE linkfest

Toay FemBDdez ID the rlfth inning of Sunday's
National League game in Cincinnati, which the
Reds won 6-1. (AP)

BACK TO SECOND - Cincinnati's Barry
Larkin s6des back lo second base ahead or the
throw from the moand to San Diego shortstop

PLAYING FOR THE PIONEERS - Two former local bigh
school rootbaU standouts are aow wearing the blue and white or the
Marietta College football team. Meigs High graduate Jeremy PlloliD
(lert) and North Gallia graduate Casey Staton are part of a mljor
rebuilding program ror the Pioneers that includes S6 freshmen on
the roster. Phalin, who sl.1lrted at quarterback tor MC Saturday at
Ohio Northern, completed 8 or 27 passes ror 164 yards in the Polar
Dears' 21-0 victory.

Phalin, Staton among Pioneer youngbloods
Freshman Jeremy Phalin, a 1992
graduate of Meigs High School.
started his first collegiate game
Saturday afternoon for Marieua
College. The Pioneers were defeated by Ohio Northern 21-0 at Ada
Phalin a 6-foot-0, 200-pounder
completed 8 of 27 passes for 164
yards and no interceptions. including a 66-yard strike to junior tight
end Rhett Snyder. The Pioneers
were held to minus seven yards
rushing in the game.
Phalin, who holds most of the
passing records for Meigs High
School, is pan of a major rebuilding program by second-year head

coach Gene Epley. Curren~y. there :
are four seniors, 16 JUniors, eight :
sophomores and 56 freshmen on
the roster.
Joining Phalin on the roster is
Casey Staton, a 5-fooi-9, 200pound freshman fullback/linebacker from North Gallia. Staton was
coached by Greg Deel, now an
assisLaRl coach al Meigs High
School for Mike Staggs, Phalin 's
high school mentor.
Marietta, 0-1-1 on the season
after opening the year with a 7.7 tie
against Kenyon, will play Moun!
Union next Saturday al Alliance.
Game Lime is 7:30.

LEGAL NOTICE
Notite is given that lntellkall Operator Servites, Int. has filed aa
appliCation wit~ the Publk Utilities Commission of Ohio (Case No.
91·2297-TP-ACE) sttkhtg a certHkate of pubht convenience and
necessity authorizing it to operate on a statewide basis
throug~out Ohio as a rmller of Intrastate interuckange
telecommnkations servkes aiNI provider of altematin operator
servkes lAOS). A1y lateresttll persoa, ftrm, corporation, or e•tity
who can s~ow good cane w•y !•Is apphcatioa should 10t Itt
gra1ted sk011d ftle wltk tke Commlssl01 a wrltte1 stoltllllt
detaihng the reasus 01 or kfore October 9, 1992. U1less tke
Commission rHelves a writte• statement to tkat effHt a1d till
accompanying requeit for oral ktarlng on such Issue, this matter
will be decided on tkt basis of the Information co•talntd IItke
ap~lcatlon and the aHidavhs submitted by the applkant. Furtker
lnformatloa may k obtained by coatactiag the Ptblk Utilities
Commission of Ohio, 180 East Broad Street, Col1m1Ms, Qklo
43266·0573.

..

-.

�The Daily Sentinel
Monday, september 21, 1992
Page-&amp;

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

Should children receive equal
treatment? Readers respond

COOL. The streeiS or Middleport were filled
with the mellow jazz souods or the Ritz Dix·
leland Band durioa the Middleport CatrJSh Fes-

tlval on Saturday. 'fhe ifoup Will 011e or several
to perlorm 011tbe stage durlaathe festival. (Sea·

tine! photo by .Brian J, Reed)

--People in the news-BOZEMAN, Monl (AP)- The
Big Blackfoot River is lovingly
poruayed in Raben Redford's lat·
: • est movie, but the water was so
polluted he had to go elsewhere for
'"' - filming.
:
Redford hosted a screenin~ of
~ "A River Runs Through It' on
· Saturday 10 raise money for river
: , restoration. It's one of his pet pro• IS

~The movie Redford directed is
based on the autobiographical
novel oC the same name by Nonnan
Maclean, who grew up on the Big
Blackf001.
"While a deeply loving family
, was die bean of Norman Maclean's
; •''world, the river was the heanofhis
- -memory," Redford said. "Sadly,
die Blackfoot does not exist IOday
,. .in the form that he so exquisitely
' conveyed - in fact, it is one of

America's most threatened rivers."
The benefit in the Ellen Theater,
a Bozeman landmark, raised several thousand dollars.
Redford began work on the
movie with input from Maclean,
but he died in 1990 before he could
see the finished projecL ·
"The only thing he asked is that
I not screw up his story," Redford
said.
The movie has its national debut
in about a month.
BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) Garfield creator Jim Davis said he
is determined tO raise the $8.8 million his childhood idol, Mon Walker, needs to build the International
Museum of cartoon An.
Davis carne to town Friday, saying no potential benefactor would
go untapped to make a dream come

'
'·'
•{

true for Walker, the creator of Beetle Bailey.
"This is a feel-good cause,"
Davis said. "It's going to take a loc
of effon, but I expeCt suppon on a
national basis. "
More than $2 .million already
has been pledged fiOm car100nists
and national sources, museum offi·
cials said.
Davis and Boca Raton civic
leader Melbl Ulbanek co-chair the
museum's building fund. They plan
to go to newspapers, publishers,
movie studios, art councils and
individuals fiX donations.
The museum is set to open in
l99S in Mizner Part.
"I call it an art fonn," Davis
said of cartoons. ".It's purely
American; we invented il
"And in 1,000 yem when they
. dig up die International Museum of
Cartoon An they will learn more
about society than if they du~ up
die bookstore across die streeL '

'

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Waylon Jennings advises every
young artist he talks with to treat
their work like a business.
"Can you imagine how rich I
would be if I had taken care of
business lilce these guys do now?"
Jennings said in an interview published Saturday in The TenneSsean.
"I tell them 10 get your ducks in
a row financially, 'cause that
money starts coming in so fast and
furious it just gets away from
you," he said.
Jennings acknowledges he used
cocaine for 20 years but said he
kicked the habit on his own in
1984.
"I quit for self-preservation - I
would have died in a ueaunent cenlCI," he said.

-MADRID, Spain (AP) -

. ~' ·...:
. ~~~

·;·:
,.

-' ~··

MR. and MRS. WILUAM (MONICA) HARRINGTON

Jordan-Harrington

: RACINE- Monica Lynn Jordan

f. 'tiecanJe the bride of Willlam Brice
!' ·Harrington on July II at the Rearit ·P!liz,ed Church of Jesus Christ of
t~
~

Lailcr Day Saints in Reynoldsburg

with Stephen K. Weller, uncle of
'• lhc bride. and David D. Harrington,
I IMOther of the groom, officiating.
!•· '7 The bride is the daughter of Mr.
Ql6d Mrs. Leon Jordan, Pa1askala,
t ~Jiid lhc gramldaughter of Mr. and
j -·~s. Clarence Radford, Racine,
l 'lnd Kadlryn Oliver, Reynoldsburg,
\ rcirinerly or Pomeroy.
'The groom is the son of Mr. and
· Mrs. Duane Harrington, Avoca,

•t

II' ~­

~ ~ The bride, escorted by her
G~ wore a floor-length gown of

.. =

~-Jhlte 'lillin, styled witll a wedding
: ': liind neckline, short puffed sleeves
1 '~Jt
with
.
·· · · llld bodice enhanced
ICul
hil"ffi lace.
··
Iiili llkirt eil 10 a semi-catheIM complecely trimn\ed with
CllUiiffi lace. The utin·bUUODed
··tiiict Wll adomCd witll a candy bo,:
bOw. Her veil was a mock tiara
! covered with .slagon lace that had
bMn pearled and sequined, with
'f. ~hed veiling. She cartied a cas, c111e oC white and coral roses with
dllbY't Jiniath and ivy.
.~
l{;r:teaiufer Weller1 Atlanta, Ga.,
ed her cousm as maid-ofIIOt. Bridesmaids were Julie
~e.:·: ~ller, Atlanta, cousin of the

!.

i
.

"'' ·~-

bride, Krista Harrop, Lamoni, Ia.,
and Tanya Pine, Pataskala. Kaleen
Keitch, Pickerington, was flower
girl. Joel Hawkins, Independence,
Mo., nephew of the groom, was
ring bearer.
Noel Sherer, Woodbine. Ia.,
served as best man. Groomsmen
were Matt Jordan, pataskala, brother of the bride, Kirk Bjorland ,
Lamoni, Ia., Tim Marshall, Woodbine, Ia., and Mike Hawkins, Independence, Mo., brother-in-law of
the groom.
Steve Kinzer, Atlanta, Ga .•
served as usher. Guest book attendants were Stacy Hite and Toni
Smith, Lancaster. Sally Hundley ,
Columbus, was coordinator.
Music was provided by Larkin
Powell, Ames, Ia., pianist, Noel
Sherer, soloist, and Jodi Glennie,
Mondamin, Ia., soloist
A reception was held at the
church following the ceremony. On
July 26 a second reception was
held in Walnut, Iowa, for friends
and family there.
The bride and groom are gradu·
ates of Graceland College in Lamoni, Iowa.
Following a honeymoon trip to
Ft. Myers and Orlando, Fla., the
couple resides in Houston, Texas,
where both are elementary teachers
· in the Aldine School District.

Artist
David Hackney inaugurated a ret·
respective exhibit of 76 of his
works ranging from his first paint·
ings as a teen-ager to his latest
computer-generated ters.
The sho orga~~
Juan March Fou
on, pencd
Friday after a stint in B ssels. It
will next go to Barcel a after it
closes here Dec. 13.
Hackney, who lives in Los
Angeles, is best known for his
depictions of the California landscape, especially his images of
pools. He has worked wilh photog·
raphy and opera sets, and his latest
paintings include experimentation
with fax machines, photocopiers,
computers and laser printers.
"I discovered how delightful it
was to use the fax because it is a
telephone for the deaf," he told
reporters Thursday. "Since I am
losing my hearing I found it ideal."

Tracing Native
American states
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
names of 20 of the SO states from Alabama 10 Wyoming - can
be tracCd back 10 American Indian
words.
Ohio, for example, is an Iroquois word meaning "fine river,"
and !Uinois is the Algonquin name
for men or warriors. ·
Kansas comes from a Sioux
word meaning "south wind people," and Utah is a Navajo tem1 for
"higha' up."
Three states use Chippewa tribal
words: Michigan ("great water"),
Missi~si)lpi ("great river") and
Wisconsm ("grassy place").
Alabama iS a Creek word for a
tribal town, and Wyoming in the
Algonquin tongue means "large
prairie place."
Other states whose names have
Indian origins include Connecticut,
Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky,

Dear Ana Landers: You asked,
"Should parents give an equal
amount 10 all children irrespectiVe
of .need?" That question hit .a hot
buuon. I say yes, and here's why:
I am one of six children. My
brother and I are the only 011es
who have bettered ourselves. Our
father, who is wealthy, has told us
that we will m:cive $2,000 at his
death because, "we don't need
anything. • Our {OW' siblings will get
the resL As we see it, we ~R being
penalized for making a suocess of
our lives.
'
No one knows whallilllllmiW will
bring. The winds of fortune have a
way of changing unexpectedly. An
accident or disabling iUness could
wipe us oul This is only ooe reason
parents should treat their children
equally. The other is ~use it's a
.mauer of simple l'aimess. - L.C.,
FLINT, MICH.
DEAR fLINT: There was a great
deal of suppon fiX your position in
the ton of mail I received. Here's
another point of view:
From Eagan, Minn.: It never
ceases to amaze me how some
people think their parents owe
them an inheritance. Don't they
realiu that 811· inheritance is a gift,
not an entitlement? Both my
husband and I are the youngest in
our families, and we have done just
fine on our owri. Our siblings have
not fared so well. It's OK with us if
our folks help them. We don't need
or want anything.
Boston: Ofcou.rsc parents should

Ann
Landers
o\NN lANDERS
•tm, Looo\na.-

'i'liHos,-......,.
Crulon s,.......•

give equally to all their children. Do
you know how it feels 10 wort like
a damned dog just to keep your head
above wattr while your par,:nts shell
out to a brother and a sister who
drink, gamble and can\ hold a job?
It huns.
Denver: If parents want to give
mooey to a child who is in need
of financial help. no one should
be critical. However, wh~ both
parents die, the .bequests should be
equal. In our situation, the widowed
parent had four children. Three were
married and had their own famlties.
The fourth never left home. Mother
cooked his meals, did his laundry
and cleaned his room. For 2S years,
he had a free ride. When Mom
died, she left him everything twanse
he was "alone in the world and didn't
have anyone to look after him." Her
lack of foresight made us all
resentful, and of course, it split up
the family forever.
Lansing, Mich.: Leave all siblings
the same amount? No. My husband
makes a good living for us (we have
four children). Sure, we could use
more money but our needs are met.
On the other hand, my younger

BILL SLACK

992·2269

can help him. 1 hope Mom leaves
everything she has to "Ed." He IS
the one who needs it.
Casper, Wy.: Children should be
treated equally. When one sibling
get.s faVIX'ed treatment, the others
resent iL They take it out on the 1
recipient and those wounds never
heal.
Simi Valley, Calif.: When will
aduli children SlOp whiniJig about
what their parents give them? Those
parents earned their money and
it's their right to do whatever they
please with iL The only riches we
deserve in life are lhc ones we earn
01\fSClves. My advice to whiners:
Forget about an inheritance. Earn
your own money and hope your
parents spend every last penny
doing what .they want to do before
they die. Most of them worked
pretty darned hard for i~
·
Gem of the Day: Benjamin
Franklin said, "If you want to know
thetrucc:haractlerolaperson-share
an inheritance with him."

fat be less than 10 percent of this
number.
By lowering your intake of saturated fats and cholcsWol, you may
reduce your blood cholesterol.
High blood cholesterol can cause a
fatty build up in the Uning of blood
vessels and eventually, blockage.
This buildup and blockage can lead
to a bean attack.
AHA's Food Festival volunu:m
will be helping people learn to trim
the fat and cut the cholesterol in
their diets. By reading food labels
and knowing some basic facts
about what foods are high in fat,
peopl~ will be able 10 select fOods
low in saturated fat and cholesterol.
In Meigs County the Food Festi·
yal will~ cond~tcd at .the followmg locauons: Metgs County Extcn·
sion Office and local groceries
under the leadership of Cynthia
Oliveri; Veterans Memorial Hospital and . ~k!lled Nursing wtth

Dutch balloonists ditch Near Britain
By JEROME SOCOLOVSKY
Associated Press Writer
ROTIERDAM, Netherlands A Belgian team won the fii'St transAtlantic balloon race before dawn
today, then dropped in10 a Spanish
village after nearly five days aloft
and a journey of more than 2,580
miles.
Belgians Wim Verstraeten and
Benrand Picwd prevailed over a
field of five identical nine-story
balloons- tllat left Bangor, Maine,
on Wednesday.
Ice and rain forced a German
team 10 ditch in mid-ocean on Saturday and violent rainSIOnns forced
a DutCh team to ditch off the coast
of Britain IOday.
The Dutchmen, Gerhard
Hoogeslag and Evert Louwman,
were rescued by a Royal Navy fielicoP.ter after going down about 60
mtles southwest of the Cornish
coast. A squall line had pulled
them away from France and back
out toward open sea.
The British team was also in difficulty several hours after the race
was won. Britons Don Cameron
and Rob Bayly had to use an emergency battery after reporting a generator failure.
They were minimizing communication with the center, although
they appeared to be no imminent
danger, offiCials said.
The British were about 100
miles out to sea and shooting for
landfall over the Ponuguese coast.
Americans Richard Abruzzo and
Troy Bradley, meanwhile, were
roughly 350 miles west of Gibraltar
after drifting too far south. They,
however, were traveling in good
weather.

"It's pouring here like nothing
you've ever seen before. The balloon is heavy as lead," the Dutch
team said in an urgent telex to the
Rotterdam Airport tracking center
several hours before ditching.
"They're cold, in shock, and
being taken to a hospital, but other·
wise they're okay," said race
director Alan Noble.
Landfall for tile Belgian team
was achieved at 3:30 a.m., according to officials at the tracking cen·
ter.
"We made it, we made it, we
made it!" the Belgians said in a
telex as they flew over the seaside
town of Viana do Castelo, near the
Spanish border.
The two reponed a "soft land·
ing" in the Spanish village of
Peque, near die Portuguese border,
then being dragged about l,SOO
feet because the deflation vent for
the balloon's helium chamber did
not open.

News notes
The worst disaster in aviation
history occurred id"1977 when a
KLM Boeing 747 crashed into a
Pan Am 747 on a runway on tile
Canary Island of Tcnenfc. The
resulting explosion and fire killed
582 people.
Florida became a U.S. territory
in 1822.
U.S. Secretary of State William
Seward reached agreement with
Russia in 1867 10 purchse die territory of Alaska for $7.2 million. The
deal was roundly ridiculed in the
United States as "Seward's
Folly."

JOHN WADE, M.D., INC.
•EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAt •ALLERGY
•HEARING AIDS
. • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY

c.,.

&amp; UMWA Assignment
SUITE 112 VALLEY DRIVE, PT. PLEASANT

~

MRLEI MUSSEl

INSUWCE
111 S.m.. St. P•ny
YOUR IIDDIIDIIT

IIEIBSER¥111
•lli.COUITY

IIIIa 1161
lEGAL IOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has set for public hearing
Case No. 92·102-EL·EFC. to
rev1ew the fuel proCtJrem~nl practices and policies of COlumbus
Southern Power ComJ)IIny. the
operation of iij EleclriC Fuel Com·
ponent, and related matters. This
haaring is scheduled •to begin al
. the Commission offices at 10:00
a.m. on Seplerhber 22. 1992. ·
All interesled parties wili be given
an opportunity to be heatd. Further
information may be ob~ined by
contacting !he Commission at 180
E~sl Broad Stteel, Columbus, Ohio
43266·0573.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMIS·
SION OF OHIO By: Gary E. Vigorito,.
Secretary

Classified pages cover the
following telephone e:tchanges ...

• Free Ad.: Gileaway and Found ada under 15 wordt will be
rua3 dayt~ at DO cbarp.
• Price of ad for aU capitalletten i• double price of ad cott
• 1 poi11tlitte type only uted
• SenliaeiM aot rmpo•lhle for enotl afaer tar1t day (cheek
for erron f~rtl day ad runt in paper~ CaD before 2:00p.m.
day aflllr publication &amp;o •ake correction
• Act. that mut be piiid in ad¥ance are:

Gallio County Melgo C0 un1y M810n Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446-Go!UpoUt
367-Che.hire
388--VIaton
245-Rlo Graade
256-Guy•n Dltl.
643-Arahia Dill.

Card ot Thuu

Happy Adt
la Memoriam
Yard Sale.
• A elauined advertiteraea.t placed ia the GalllpolU Daily
TribuDO (except Clutil'ted Dioplay, B.. in.., Card or Lop!
Noticea) will alto appear in the Point Pleuaol Repililr ud
the Daily Sentinel, reachiftl o¥er 18,000 home~

Days

Words

1

15
15
15
15
15

3
6

10
Monthly

Rate

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

5-HappyAdt
6- Loot and Fouod
7- Lo.t ud Found

8- Public Sole &amp;
Auction

!I- Wantodto Buy

882-New Hnen

949-Racine

895-IA!t•rt

742-Rull.nd

937-BufTolo

·21- Buaineu Opportunity
22- Money 10 Loan
23- Profe~aional Serwicu

32- Mobile Hornet for Sale

33- Funu for Sale
34- Bwine11 Buildinp
35- Lott &amp; Acre•s•

36- Real E.tate Wantod

HI. \T \1 .:'

GET RESULTS • J'ASr!

4- GlY61.W&amp;y

247-Lel•rt F.u.

IT\ \\C I\ I.

--------1

2-lnMe-y
l - Aooouocemeu\1

458-Loon
576-Apple Gro"e
773-Muon

41- Houet for Rent
42- Moblle Home~ for Rent
43-- Funu for Rent
44- Apartmenl for Rent
45-- Fumilhed Room•
46- Space for Renl
47- Wan&amp;ed to Rent

TH I \'l'llH I' \'I ill \
71- o\utoo fo• Sole
72- Trucb for Sale
73- Vau &amp; 4 WD'•
74- MoMreyelet
75-- Boatl &amp;: MoLon for Sale
16- Auto Portt &amp; Aee&lt;•tori.,l
77- Auto Repair
7~ Camping Equipmenl

48-- Equipment for Rent
4!1- For Looue

11- Help Wantod
12- Sill&amp;ltloDI Wanted
1:J- IIUiuraace

Public Notice
\I lilt II\ \lli:'E
· County, Ohio lor on order to
51- Houaohold Goode
change tho n•m• ol Witoon
52- Sporting Gooda
Ehran Slade Woolen to
53- Antiquet
Ehren Slade Wlloon.
54- Mi1c. Men:handitt
Said •ppllcatlon wilt be
55- Buildi"' Suppliot
heard In ..lei Court, II 10:00

14- 8U1inet1 Training
15- Sebool1 &amp; ln~truction

16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
11- MitcelloneoUI
Ill,... Wantod To Do

...

-=======::i:=======::""'========-i
.

Bl' LLETI\ BO.\R D
IUWnl BOARD DEIDUIE .
4:30 P. &amp; DIY BEFORE
"BLICinOI

Public Notice

NOnCE OF APPOINTMENT
OFAOUCIARY
On Stptambor 8, 19!12, in
Malgt County Prohto
lcautl. C111 No. 275GB,
l w.."~ Milhoan, 40031 SR
Sh•de, Ohio 45776,
eppolntad Execulor ol
eololo ot Ralph K.

1

( s ~,~~ deceased, lale of

I~

ALZHEIMER'S SUPPORT
GROUP MONTHLY MEETING
THURS .. SEPT. 24-1 :00 p.m.
Film "Meet Daily Challenges•
From Alzheimer's Association
Pleasant VaUey Nursing Care
Center- 675·5236

M•nor Apartmenlo,
303, Mlddlepoll,
OH.45760.
RoiMirt E. Buck, Proboto
Judge
Lone K. Neooolrood,
Clerk
C&amp;) 14, 21, 28 3tc
Public Notice

NOTICE
Nolle• lo htroby given
the unctorolgntd filed In
No. 27562 •ppllcotion
Common Ploao Court,
Dlvlolon of Molgt
PubliC Notice

Public Notice

SHERIFPS SALE OF
PUBUCNOnCE
REAL ESTATE
SOUliERN OHIO
Tho
State of Ohio,
COAL COMPANY • MEIGS
Molge
County
MINE NO. 31
No.
92-CV-67
P.O.BOX410
SOUTHBANK
Alllent, Ohio 45701
Plaintill
Purouonl lo Ohio Coat
lllnlng •nd RltCI•maUon
Rule 1101:13-3'04, Sou-n DWIGHT P. MEDLEY, at at
Dtltnd..ta
Ohio COlli Company, Melge
pultuan.. of en Ordtr
lllne No. 31, P.O. Box 410, of InSlllt
In the above.entidad
AthiM, Ohio 45701, doea
ection,
I
wilt ofttr lor ..t. et
hortby oMk a vorl•••• to public •ucllon,
tho door
pormll • tantii•Uan ah•ll ol the Court atHouoo
In
within 100 IHt of Mtlge Pomoroy, In the ebova
e-ly, Salem Townihlp n•med County, on Mondll)',
Road 110, beginning Septombor
21, 1892, •t
•pproxlmllllly 300' Iouth· 10:00 A.M. the
following
- t of the lntor-Uon ol dtlcrlbed r••l eetata,
B•lem Townohlp Road 110 ettd In Townthlp ollu·
of
and Stetl Route 325 In Cheotar, County of llolgt,
blam Townthlp, Malgo
St•t• of Ohio •nd
C01111ty, Ohio. The propooec! .nd
~cribod u lollowt to wit:
thalt wUI hiYt no elfect on Beginning et tho eoulh·
tilt ro•d. The only dletur· eut corntr of Fr..uon 23,
Hllcolo 1M conducted with- Ronge 12, Town 3, SecUon
In 100 IHI ol Townohlp 23
ol Lol 257 ol tho Ohio
Road 110 wilt be the con- Comp1111y't
atrucUon of tho eoceao lhonco wool Purohue;
road, grading of the eh•ll Blggt' comer IntothoWilli.,.
conter
altt •nd p•rklng •r••· of • brook; thence north to
DltturNnca ol the • • wUI the center of Shade Rl-;
be conduolld Ill the tdp ol thence down center ol
' the
road aurlaoe. Shadt Rl- to -uon line;
In-lad peril• IIIIIJ' oom- thence aouth on ••t• aeo·
llllltt at a ,Ubllo mealfng of tlon line to tht pl••• of
the hltm Townthllp beginning, containing thirty·
Truet•• on ••ptlltllbei thrH (33) ..rea, more or
21,1ttt et •=oo P.ll. to be
hlltl at lit..._ Townthlp Proporty Add,..., Roulo
Hal, llaleta Ctntor, Ohio.
1, Box 184, twp. Rd. t7,
(II 14, 21 21c
R,..lne, Ohio 45n1.
S.ld pltllllHt ...pntltad
al $40,500.00 •nd ••nnot be
told lor tt.. lh•n 213r~ ol
thtl .. ount
Jam• M. Soultby,
Shtrift
Molge County, Ohio
Lomor, S.mpton a
Rothluot, Atlornayt .
Rick D. DIBlaol8, Altornay ·
lor Pl-'ntin

October,
ot ~y
Melgo
A.M., on 1992,
the 22nd
of
County Probale Courl,
Second Floor, Molge County
Courthouae, Melga County,

Ohio.
(9) 21, 1tc

PUBUC AUCTION
Tho Scipio Townehip
TrutiMt wHI be offering lor
aato an older 580 Cue
beckhoe.
Bidt will be received
unlil Oct. 5, 19!12 at 6:00
P.M. Tho Scipio Townohlp
Truoloeo rooorve the right to
reject IllY or all bido.
To view tho C11e beckhoe
or .place a bid contract the
preoldont of Scipio
Townohip Truot-, Herold
D. Graham, 35008 State At.
143, Pomeroy, Ohio 4576D.
Ph. 992-3033.
(9) 21, 22, 23, 3tc

Real Estate General

•loft•

'"'·

Wlf0.0-0-0
can~

you?
CLASSFIED

ADS

(tl 7, 14, 21, 31c

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

NEW LISTING- Donvlll• Mini larm wilh 2·3 acres, frame
home wllh 2 bedrooms, pond, bam, garage, shed, chicken
house, drilled well. on paved roa1. Ouiel eounlry setting.
$22,500

:;;al
38904 Ltading
· CreekRoad
Middleport, Ohio

H WARD
EXCAVATING

614·992·7144

8/31/92 ,,. .

MICROWAVE OVEN
11111 VCR REPAIR
ILL MillS

·

ac..,,,..,... oflce
217E.S.C... St.
POMIIOY, OliO

SPE(;L\L
UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Months of Septe!IIMr
and October

s3soo

CALIFORNIA
TANS
949·2823

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER SERVICE

..floom Addition•
-Guller Work
-Eitc:trlcllllllld Plumbing
..flooflng
-lntarior a Extarlor
P-'nting
(FREE ESnMATES)

KEVIN'S LAWII
MAINTENANCE
949·2398 or
1·800·837-1460
lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrula end Tree
Trimming &amp; Remove!
RHkltrttltl6 Commtn:ltl
FI'MbllmltM
6-26-'12-tln

HUNnNG SEASON IS FAST APPROACHING I Hera's a
hunting cabin 1ttd 20.05 acres localed on Sharon Hollow
Rd. Cabin is 40 x28 and includes woodburning slove. Very
private! $17,000

nets. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! $25,500

CLELAND REALTY· YOUR LOCALlY OWNED
tiOME SHOPPING NETWORK! GIVE US ACALL
TODAY FOR ALL OF YOUR HOME
BUYINISELLINO NEEDS.
HENRY E. CLELAND...........................................992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER............................................948-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL. ..............................................i48-26&amp;0
OFFICE...............................................................992-2259

POMEROY, OH.

8·11·'92·1 mo.:

d.

ROOFING

WI DO
AND EVERHHING UNDERNEATH .
GAUGES • ADDinONS • SIDING

TROMM B LDERS
• A O••lity Assured Coltfr•ctor•
20 Yr. Exp.
Call AI, 614·742·2328

8117/lln

RUTLAND
MINE SUPPLY
Pipe for Water, Sewage
and Gas
Rutland, OH.
742·2656 :

AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOMESITU•nd
TRAILER BITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS tNSTAWD
UMESlONE-TRUCKIIG

992·3838

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Sptdollzlng In Custom
Frame Repair

NEW &amp; USED PARTS FOR
ALL MAKES &amp; MODELS

992·7013 or
992-5553
or TOll FREE
1·800·148·0070

DARWIN, OHIO
7/31f911tfn

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

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 985·3839
llo Sunday Calls)
2/1219Wn

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER
12 Year old ranch type house. 3 :
bedrooms,2 baths, 1'!. car garage;
and breezeway, central air and heat
pump, many extras.
·
On 2 acres of land.
Eastern School District.
Blacktop roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32i
949-2860, 949-2801 or 985-3839 ~

....

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

"Any Size Anllllllle"

,}!~~ PRECISION POST FRAIAE

BUILDERS

uN,J ...,
OFFICE SERVICE
AND SUPPLY

112 w. ..,. StrHI
~·~ 01.45769
16141 h2..376

Olflee; School &amp; Art
Suppll•, Office
Furnlture1 Advertlelng
Specilllll.., Typing,
Laminating, Copy, Fa
&amp; Notary Servli:ee
CHECK OUR SELECTION
AND PRICESS ARST

1-11·'92·1 mo.

9 Year•
Experience

104 Beech Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

"Call U• for All Your Building Ne«&lt;• •

COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
AGRICULTURAL
livestock Buildings· Machine Sheds - HI\'
Barna • Carports
Garages- Storage Buildings- Roofing.
Windows - Sid! ng
-;
WV Lie. tWV 020343
•
•
FREE ESnMATES
'
ROBERT BORING
JEFFSTAMS
(614) 1192-354 t
(304 l rn-s:W&amp;

~JAYMAR

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call 614-992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.
1

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS

IA'TERTIIRtrf.

8£rl£A BY DESIGN

Glahty Hi Effkie1cy

Air Ca•ditiollers, Heat
Ptmps, Ftnaces &amp;
Now Water Heaters.
Bennetts Mobile Home

Z.

County Rd. 111Peechtbrk Rd.
8112·7093

U915all•d School Rd.
Gallpolls, ot.!o
(6141446-9416« 14110-872·5967

... uo lor your hunting
end bock to tchool
nMda. AIN'o t•ru••t
eelecllon ol mllltary
ourpt.. ltarnol 1117 pd.

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
l':'mR TRY OUR IIEW •
Rllllmil STEEL INSUlATED I •
RAISED PANEL GARAGE DOOi'.

&lt;•

Mon.-Bun. I . .-a pm

with overttead stora_ge and an extra house to use for rental

MIDDLEPORT· 2 llory frame home wilh 2-3 bedrooms,

~~~zrKIIcl'eA~~E

FREE ESTIMATES

or storage. ASKING $45,000

basemenl, newer gas furnance, firaplaca, some new calli-

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

2·7·92-lfn

POMEROY· Brick ranch sl)'le home wilh 3 badrooms, lull
basemen! and allic space on 21ols includes one car garage

CHESTER-1 ftoorframehomewilh 2bedrooms, unclosed
rear poldl, new vinyl aidina. Gao FA heat TPC water. A
comfortllble home. $20,000

li/11V1121tfn.

985·4473
667·6179

n~~!JllnQ

9·1 0·92 ·tin

NEW USTING- Rad Hill Rd. Salam Twp.· Very n1ce brick
ranch home wilh 3 bedrooms, 2 t/2 balhs, full basement, 2
car anaehed garage, fireplace. barns, pond, exira mobile
home hook-up. ASKING $139,500

992·7553

FIIEE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy,_Ohio

992-2259
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

949·2168

•New Homes

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

.......

$2$.00 Pw H1111r
RWOIIAILI UTU

FREE ESTIMATES

HAVE REFEREIIC(S

~

;

•Garages
•Complete
Rtmodtliag
Stop &amp; Comp•re

P""'ela! S. Bailey '------312..-.,31921tf..;....ln

Public Notice

DILIYEIY SERVICE

S••H Do1., Work

FREE ESTIMATES

12-5-lfn

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

•
"• .
...,...,
•
I

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

LICENSED and BONDED

lrl, It I• Or We
kk UJ!-

roo•

[!]

• N··

NEW- REPAIR

PH. 614·992-5591

65- Seed &amp; Fertilizer

- Lol U•llo II for

"uer

ROOFING

57- MU1ical ln1trumen11
5~ Fruill &amp; Vee:eLable.

q p
62- Wanted to Buy
63- Livc1tock
64- Hay &amp; Grain

•

Wllk"

Howard L Wrltesel

56- Pelt for Sole

F \ll\ 1 ~ ~ 1'1'1 II :-,\ 1.1\ I·.~ TilU,

Tvrn

s- t 4-92·tfn

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;SEWER
UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Limestone,
Dlr1, Gravel and Coal )

59- For Sale or Trade

Of,.,,.,

"Talr•ll• Pu Our

8J281t2/1 mo. peL

•••

R&amp;C EICAVAiiNG
BULLDOZING

SMALL DOZER
WORK.
DRIVEWAY WORK
aad UMESTOitll

&amp; co.

lof«t 6 p.a. Ltavo Message
Ah• 6p.a. 614·915-4180

:

ll/16/lln

CHARLIE'S

PAINTING

• Weedeaters

-•

GngeO.Iy
Storts Sept. 27

\SJ'

INnRIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

••
•

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
GUN CLUB
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.
Fadory Clloke 12

675-Pt. Plea•anl

.667-(ooMUe

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

992-Mlddleporli
Pomeroy
985-Che.ter
843-Porllond

379--Wdnu.l

Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

Box ll562. Chicago, Ill. 60611 0562. (In Canada, send $4.45.)

DOWIIIIC.IILDS

CLOSED SUNDAY

• Arb oullide the eounly you.r ad ru.o1 m\lll be prep•id
• Reeei•e dWtounl for ad. paid in adYance.

Lowdown, c/o Ann Landers. P.O.

Sharon Vickers; Meigs CQunty
Senior Citizens Center with Cynthia McMannis; Meigs Hagh
School with Cathy Reed; SOudlern
HiJ!h School with and Eastern High
School with Janice Weber.
To assist peo~le in a self evalualion of their !Jabtts, the~ is distributing the "Fat·O-Stat," which
includes 20 questions to help determine where people may have hidden fat and cholesterol in their
diets. To check if fat is hidden in
yourdiets,askyourselfdlesequeslions. Do you:
Eat fned foods or deep-fried
foods such ~ Frencb fries?
Eat high-fat cheese such as
cheddat. brick or Monterey J~k?
Use r~gular salad dressmg or
mayonnatse7 .
Eat pastries such as doughnuts,
sweet rolls, pies or croissants?
Eat regular hamburger meat
either in casseroles IX on a bun?
Eat more than 3-4 eggs per
week including those in cooking?
If your answers to these question is "often" you may be eating a
lot of saturated fats. To tum down
your "Fat-0-Stat" change your eating habits to make your diet more
healthful and tip the scales in the
right direction: Eat lean meats in
small servings. Choose I percent or
skimmed milk and low-fat cheeses.
Avoid fried foods. Limit your
intake of eggs to include no more
than 3-4 egg yolks a week including those in cooked IX baked goods
and store boil~ht products.
For more mfonnation on ocher
ways to eat smart and scale down
the fat in your diet, contact the
American Hean Association at 1800-282·0291. Ask for low fat
infll'mation or the brochure "Nutritious Nibbles," which .contains tips
for healthy snacking.

Monday l'aper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Fri&lt;!ay Paper
Sunday Paper

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.·5P.M. ~ So\T.S-12

Drugs au e~rywhere. They're
easy 10 get. easy 10 u.se and even
easier to getlwoud on./fyou have
qutslions oboul drugs, you Mtd Ann
Landers' booklet, 'The Lowdown on
Dope." Send a self-addressed, long,
busiMss-si:e envelope and a check
or 1110ney order for $3.65 (this
inc/JUles postage and handling) 10:

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

~LINDA'S

. PARTS &amp; SERVICE
Mowers • Cllait Sawl

614·949-2804

4·4-92-tln

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156
POLICIES

RAONE,OHIO
(Fomtrly Eap Ridge Smal
E1181ntl

USED RAILROAD TIES

To place an ad

Annual AHA Food Festival underway
How's your "Fat-0-Stat?" If it
registers 30 percent or more of
your total daily intake of calories,
statistics may not be working in
your favor when it comes to a
healthy heart, according to the
American Hean Association.
"There are many hidden sources
of fat and cholesterol in our diets,"
accooling 10 Cynthia Oliveri, Food
Festival commtueelmember of the
Meigs County Division of the
American Hean Association. "Ouring AHA's eighth annual Food
Festival, continuing through Sept.
25, we can help people check their
own fat consumption statistics and
modify their diets to tum down
their · ~at-0-Stats, • using a selfevaluaun$ quiz."
. .
Amen can Heart Assoctatton
guidelines for heart-healthy eating
recommend that total fat intake be
less than 30 percent of calories
eaten each day, and that saturated
·

P.O. Box 894-W..ar Aller

•UGHT HAUUNG •
•FIREWOOD

brother is in poor health and cannot
,worlc
at a steady job so his income
is meager. We~ thankful that fW&gt;m

.

RAONEMOWER
CLINIC

For •P•w•• 01ly
J~u

rr••••

SAM~ ~I.Um·YOUNG

127 Ht. .4, lltw .... wv.

.. ,.......

, •• 304-112•3421
IIIIIW IIRVICI
'~:C: 1-.1

mr~ ~~~~••il &amp;r....

.... tiStllttlk-.
Fr11 Efttalt,..)4t-IS60

NDWDPII

CURIO
B.ARN
45633 ST. Rt 124
RAONE

OPEN MON.·SAT.
9·?? 1117/Pcl.

IIIIAWD PRICES

9•7-$275.00 . 16ll7-$450.00

OPEIEIS lltiSTAUID-Ya HP..$200.00 "
With 2 Trantmlttel'i

Wit• Pure•••• of
Receive FREE

.:

her Plu1 o,.l4r
1M1 Yrl•

�•

Monday, September 21, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. SNAFU® by Bruce ~ttle

32

45

Mobile Homes
tor Sate

Monday, September 21, 1992

Furnished

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WriKhl

Room a

-

71

11811 G10nd Prt1, 110

I _ . . lltt- llttlr

33

Llll44 HollO! Rood, Pomoroy
.Contra! To Clolllpolll Or Alhona.
Slick Buln Codor Homa, 3 Bodrooms, 2 Bit~ Only e 112 YNrt
Old, Thol Sits On AP"
proxlmotoly 40 Acraa, -~~
Woodod. Con Solo I Bloom

F-~~~~ coctl to gl...owoy.
304..'1NW.

FIMIO good homo ~~~~ Qllelltr
doll PM .a Fonalo block !.all.
Bolli good w/lddo. IM-318.flll1

-till.
- . llul Httllr,

~

Wlnlw onion .'!."!'!~- d -

l'~'f ~ ~ADINCI
~C.ONoMIC

IMI'llll
'""illllllt.
Rt.

hoMe ,.,...., l231i
114 . . 21tf

\~Dic.AioR .

Ra-.

34

'The only thing I was ever any good
at in school was juice and cookies.'

Wol'lod To Root: llolo&lt; Homo
For W - T~ To
·~-·· Col Pot .....

tlfM,

-h

~=========-r-=========1
11

18

Help wanted

Wanted to

Bo-Plllo=·

Do

In lly - . FanBabyo'"" Noodocl Afternoon Will
Shift, 2·11:30 114...1-1712.
tid
In
Re-.."•
Avoitobto.
AIH. Col
IM-24WII7.
Chrlttmu Around The World ll
Hiring

Demonstrators.

REAL LOVE ISSTANDING
BE~IND ATREE SO 'fOV
CAN SEE HER WHEN
S~E LEAVES HER ~ME

With .._ lhan 10 ..._...
on

thlm, runt IXCIIIInt, Ill to 1P"

pnc:lola, $31111: . - - .
AUTO IISURANCE
coli
Ooolo-QIIdlol
lnouronco..
1114 ~ Fifth Ava, IIIII, OIC
oond, $2,ll00. 304.f75-41:18.

21

0 fovr
Rt&lt;~rronge letters of
ICrombltd words
law to form four simple

'I

rn U

FLUPUC

LIKE WHEN YOU
DISCOVER 'I'OV'VE BEEN
STANDING ON THE WRONG
SIDE OF THE TREE ..

a

I

.

72 Trucks for Sale

noel Into homo, Rt. 2 Point
Plnll!'~.-~morvlllo Roolly,
304.. 7.....,. or 175-3431.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

ffiStereo.
Desi~ing Women

Cil II Ins de Edition

Q

;;;
"

· c-~r
•.•.• .'h•thechuckle
d
17 I I li I ·0
by loU1ng
mi~ing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.
q .., ••

. ....J.L.-..1.1..-..L.-..L• .....t.
L-L.

•
SCUM LETS ANSWERS
'.,,
. Yonder • Dwell • Vault • Fondly • FALL DoWN

On the day of . her first parachute jump, granny
panrcked and decided not to jump. She radioed her
instructor, "Help! I've goHen up and can't FALL DOWN:

NewsHourQ
Children Q
llll tril Jeopardy! C
liD Ill Star Trek: The Ne11
Generation Q
\121 Ill E'l!frtoonment Tonidht
Stereo. 1.,1
I!) Quantum Leap Ste1eo . Q
@ SportsCentar
Moneyllne
liD Lile Goes On Stereo. Q
7:05 1ll Beve~, Hillbillies
7:30
llll Jeopard,, Q '
III Major League Baseball
.Chicago Cubs at New York
Mets fL)
lil ii Entertainment Tonight
Stereo. Q
(I) Q Mama's Family
llllllil Wheel ol Fortune Q
\121 Ill Famll1 Feud
13 Be a Star Stereo
all Schaap Talk
a!! Crosslire
7:35 1ll Sanford &amp; Son
8:00 (II U llll Fresh Prince of
Bei·Air Will and the Bankses
get invol11ed in helping their
old nei9bborhood. Slereo. t;1
(l) Q (I)Q Young Indiana
Jones Chronicles (Season
Premiere) Indy spies for the
French Intelligence Service .
Stereo. Q
(!) (!) American E1porience
S1ereo. C
\ll)lli) 1121"111 Evening Shade
(Season Premiere) Wood
tries to '.ght lhe Cily Council.
Stereo.
ll]) Ill M IE: American
Fr,erstPG13) (2:00)
I!) Murder, She Wrote Q
® Crook and Chase
@ NFL Monday Night
Match-Up
PrimeNowo Q
liD Young Riders Q
8:05 1ll Contraception: The
Stalled Reoolution A look at
the status o l contraceptive
research , development and
the realities of contraceptive
usage in American society.
Host Linda Ellerbee. 11 :00)
8:30 (II U llll Blossom Joey
fantasizes while trying
overcome writer's block .
Stereo. C
\ll)lli) 1121"I) Hearts Afire
John and Georgie Anne have
a roman~i encounter.
Stereo.
@ NFL onday Night
Magazine 1990 NFC playoff
game, Chicago Bears vs.
New York Goants: 1956·63
G1ants; Bears quanerback
Jim Harbaugh; Bea rs
defensive secondary of the

·BRIDGE

Rentals

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
1113 I&lt;-, olr, - ·.:!;,.PI,
new tlr._ 73,IOOMI.,
or

bill ofttr, IM--112·773!.

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rwommenda tt..l you do buaf.
n... with people you know •nd
NOT to stnd money thro~ the
mall unlll you have lnvfltT9Attcl
lht oHwlng.

........

lluntlw Alto loa, ontr ..od oil

- . $MI. COR l14-w.l-3tt3

V.ndlng Route: Local. Wa HIVe

The Newell MlchlnH, Making A

~ ftg:ibocle $200. &amp;rw.
.,._ Kit 1200 Allor 4:30 P.ll.

Nlco s~'~J Coah lncomo. 1·

Ohio Cooper~tlvt
S.rvk:t hill-time
t;tr:l( tduU tnd woouth txpindtd
Building Manuftclurer
Publl~ Sale
fOod and nutrftlon tducatlon Melli
8
coordinator position. Soloctlng Smoll /Lorgo Bulldor
IDNitr ln iSorM OJ*~ Artaa.
&amp;Aucllon
blo lor ·~ tha Hklh Profit Pottallal. Accepting
EF
program lind tUJ*vl!to Ooil1 Boat O..HIIod. 303·75!1'
Rlc:k PNrton AucUon Camplny, lng
thi"M nutrition tdue~ton In 3200,
tuU tlmt auctlonMr, cctmpMlt
Ext. 2401.
AIMna, Mliat tnd Vinton
tuc:lhx'l
MIVIct.
UciMed oounu...
lifaatn
ct.grM

·-2177:

4 Bedrooms, O.CII, 1 Acre,
Rloortront South St. 7, $490/Mo.

Depotll,

Rell,.nc.. ,
L...... ,..513-8981.

y,.,

Cllrlnlt, 1 Owner, ...........7122.

Conn
now - 1
:nondl,'"""""'
WlciM .&amp;.ll'lli'MMI

Hot•lhotcl ~- 112 ml
Rtl. Pl. P l - . wv,
ooii304-IIS-MIO.

pnflmd, B - d'IIIM ond
Real Estate
tpproprillt academic ll'llnl,.
In ""~tlon ._~roc~. lluot aut&gt;
mit ,...... ContiCC locll Ex·
tona1on offlco In llolgo Count,, 31 Homes for Sale
114-112-tllll to tPllllcallon. Dlodllno Soplombot 28. HouH Fot Solo: 2 Bod.......,,
AAIEEO tmplo~W.
Family Room, Full BaHmant,
With ANP!o&lt;o. 1 -...IHI.
I btdrOCMM brick . rtnc:h

Nutrition Proclucto
footullng AMino Al:ld Bod!

llulldlrtl. wllctltl and lot
bumw fanmla AvaiiiiM exduoiYoly at Rllo Aid Pltonttacy.
Tha-..,. to tlol.

171-3H3-·-·
58

Fruits

1
)1M.

&amp;

Vegatabln
For Ball: -

Ylllow I Rod

Dollclow,l-.

F,,nn Supplies
&amp; L~Vrslock

w/lttlchld Q11'181 1 nicl double
lol, aood nelgtmorhaad In Gtl·
llpolfo Forry, 304-475-5197.

Auloo
Will 0. Without lloloro. Coli
Lorty Uwty. l14 3. 1303.

Business
Training

Top Po1ooo Polcl: All Old U.S.
Colrto, Gold ~ sn- Colno,
Aet111in
Nowti/Southustem
- ·c... II. Coin Shop, lutlnns
Calles-, Spring Y1llay
111 :s..tonc1 Awenu~, O.Uipolla.
Piau~. Call Todliy, 614-446-436711

u.

r:rnployment Se rv1ces

Rot~.tll~t27'1B .

houl lOW ' - to lha mII

0111 304-1'75·1157.

I•••

Read
the . . . . Seller
..
r

dlnl~ room, 2-3 bedroomWogo homily . - , oHico
epace, r-...-nctry roorn, tun

kHchln,

porch, tupptlrMntll woodbur·

n• In

Gaorgn Portable Slwmllli don't

llmontkolorod

bl~t- 2

car

g~rege,

tencld In DK~ylrd. Owner
1nxioua tor qukd• 1111, 114·912·

mo.

Gllllpolil ftfTY, ICl'OII from
SNit School. City WltiJ,
natural ~. unettached garege.

$23,500. 304-ITHIIO.
Home Few Sali In ChMhlre VII·
lago, I R_,a, I both, Lg. flat
L&lt;i1 81 ~-11-3: 30 P.M.
Pttone:
After 3:30
P.M. 114-44NM25.

114-44....-,.

~Mo1collonl condHion, $275,

1

Btdlcom

AHrlment

Grande, ..........

Rio

Pl-....

1"'
350 Mod. Ploo,
Good Condition, Extra Tlroo,

e..

1111
Allor
1:30 12,300. · ·
-AI*,

IIKIIOACI'CLE INSURANCE
Cllll14 112 M7J, Dlwie,O++II

-=

.....nco.
For

1118 Yonat. 500 ""'

814-211·
1110.Rtot0 Good, $550

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
17 Ft Alulnlnul'l loti Trailer
-

5I HP Mwcury 114-446-

1251.

Auto Pans

EEKANDMEEK

NtnOdllld

untum'ed

garago opt. w/ ..ii\g. 1 at ....
Walw lum'od. 1250 month. Oop.
Nq'od.l14-44e-3717.

t-2241.

-

nlOf and siding, bokocl
ond ..... 304-312-2011&amp;

Mlcrowen. Dflhtl,

2bdrm. lpta., ICIIaJ Mc11'._,, IPplllncoo lumiohod, """""'
room lacUitiM doM lo tChoOI
Itt town. Aootlciilono avoltolllo

VI~ · fRSICtm OOPHLE. 1/.J

A ~ AlTA&lt;K "0!:¥\V. ..

O'J(f.

AGAII.J A(((J'SE.D

TH£ D£M0(RAl"i OF f'iiiVG
50fT 00 "OOAL /..t&gt;l.IJY£/C.. .

&amp;

RA~304-

atc.D

3724133 or 1

Campers&amp;

Motor Homes
1fT7 Molor Homo l II A. Pu~

=~·On" Uood 4 Tlmoa,

Ctuthle,

fold hordtop
P
oCl-..1.. olr-contl,

Hlw Holllnd tuper 717 chopper
t knUe, cotn &amp; gr... pick up

$700: 114-112-2717.

Whl~

'

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WHEN MY QA.D WRITE:6 AN

Ltmpe:, And Mix fl""' 107
Claoln St, Rodn~~ II, IM-2455775.
haocl: Now Nollorid

ANSRY LETTEI&lt;1 HE NEVSR
SIEfN'S HIS NANIE . .

64

10 goltonk,
True...: 24 fl. whh 2 fl.
hang $20. 114...1-2515.

IJI-

Fumlahad ~mont 1 loci-

Hay

Home
Improvements

&amp; Grain

IIASEIIEHT

WATERPRIIORIICI

Transportation

$3MS21.

5 hp,
. 304..7!-Sits.

11

Autoa tor Sale

Unco1 dllll IIIII ....liM liJuarMot•. Local'
luri15ahed.

r••nc:•

fiOO oatltnlloo. Col I·
·~ day .. .........
Wotwpr-

"- B_...,.

Stereo. C
II! WWF l&gt;rlme Time

YONDER GOES
ELVINEY
HOME FROM
TH'STORE

SHE SHORE DIDN'T

UPENNY
FRESH
•oSSIPII

·--·
......

PHIL UP

WEST
+KQI08 5
'AQ74

ALDER

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERN£CE
BEDEOSOL

f1,0110, -.o731.

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

Elec:trtc:al &amp;
Refrlglllllon

I!IMI.--·-

--·
.......

Ucu

1 IIIICIMIM.

......... EIMirlcll, ffi000301,

85 G-ral HIUUng

- . . Anlllrrw,
~. No .lob Too llg Or
TOCII Unte. I r :Mill CINnlno.
Clanoral Wortc, Ani Kindt 114·

Wo

--Fioni,Y.f,
1111aftor 4:10.
CoabtiUr. rare oolorl. T1m1,

Y.•h•ll:n P5onul P1~1tt;
: :sC:h lac:od Lava
II.

Wreatllng Big Boss Man vs.
Rock (The Model) Martel.
® Nashville Now
all AWSA Water Skiing U S.
Open from Destin, Fla. (T)
Larry King Llvol
g] ·Fathar Dowling Mys,teries
Stereo. Q
9:05 1ll Science Held Hoslage:
RU486 a Politico of Abortion
Host: Cybill Shepherd. (0:30)
9:35 (I) Whose Choice? Host
Sarah Weddington. {0:30)
10:00~ Voices of the Electorate

a

Do

371-2271ln~tlmt.

~

Upholstery

'"'trl_,
-.y•o

Uphollli!flng HMc•
0100 ·:17 ,..... Tha
-Col 304.f71-4114
In ... -odng.
lot IIOo ...
tlmatoo.

Sopt. 22, 11112
lncreaoed oomlngs are a strong probability lor tho ,eor ahead. Oedlcalo youf·
11011 to your tindeavor, oot occasionally
take time out tQ smell the rooos. Enfoy
lllel
.
VIRGO (Aifl. ZS.Sopt. 22) Your materl·
ai aspects iook encouraging today, but
there are Indications IOU mlghl not
make the most of your opportunlttes.
Don't let good thing• Blip lhroogh your
fingers. Know where to look for ro·
mance and you 'll lind II. The AatroGraph Matchmaker instantly reveals

\

which signs are romantically perfect for mOf'e frustrating and less profitable
you. Mall $2 plus a long; self·&amp;d· than doing business with strangers.
dressed, stamped envelope to Match· Give your pals a ctear deal, but don't let
maker, c/o lhls newspaper, P.O. 801 them take advantage of you .
91428. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
ARIES (March 21·April11) You might
LIBRA (hpl, 23-0ct. 23) Try not to be be drawn Into a situation today thai Inoverly Influenced by the negative opln· eludes someone you dislike. Try not to
Ions of your companions today. To be let your feelings be 100 obvious to your
successful, you must be hopeful and sa· other friends.
cure In doing your own thing.
TAURUS (Aprii20-Mar 20) Yoo'll be InSCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You're apt cllned to be helpful to others today, proto handle yourself wetl In challenging vided the Idea originates with you . lndl·
developments today. provided you~ vidualswhomakedemandsarellkelyto
a quick victory. II tenacity Is required, see another facet ol your personality.
you might not make a strong sl1owlng . GEMINI (Mar 21-Jttne 20) YO&lt;I'II be
SAGITTAAIUI (Nov. 23-Dac. 21) Be aware of the right cou1se of action tosupporu... o!lho ldeas of alrlend today . day, but you mlghllack' the courage of
Instead of axplalnlng what might go your convlctlona and do whalls e1pedi·
w1ong. Remember, nobody likes to ant Instead of what Ia correct.
hear: "I told you so."
.
CANCER (~une 21-Jttlr 22) il IOU presCAPRICORN (Dac. 22-Jon. 11) Com- ently have aome S&lt;Jiplusln 10ur budget,
merciaI,dealings could turn out to be a try 10 pay off an old, -rlsome obllgadlfflcull rl)lllor 10&lt;1loday. In certain 811· lion. Don't prolong lhe agony, b8cauoa
uallons, you lhould do well; bulln oth- II could become more pronO&lt;onced with
era, you ma1 make cosily mistakes.
limo.
AQUARIUS (~n. 20-1'111. 11) Know ex- LEO (~utr 23-Aug. 22) Usually, you're
ICily what you re agreeing to today In reluctant to change your viewS to aclmportant negotlallona. ·Take lime to commodate others. Toda1. hOwever,
study th ings lhorooghly lrom every an- could be &lt;different. YO&lt;I mlghl chango
gle so IOU can spot flaws.
your opinion at the wrong time lor tho
PISj:ES (Fob. 20-Moreh 20) Doing wrong peopfo.
pusiness with friends lqday co..ld be

t98

••

+7 5

SOUTH
t3

The good trade
for declarer

'K ~3

t A Kl
+AQJ963
Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South

By PbUIIp Alder
Stanislaw Lee said that each snow·
Hake in an avalanche pleads not
guilty. Sometimes if a contract di~s•
each trick is in itself innocent. but often one can point the finger and say,
"That was the trick where the deelar·
er committed hara-kiri.·
Declarer won the spade-king lead
with dummy's ace. He drew two
rounds of trumps and continued with
three rounds of diamonds. However, it
wasn't difficult for East to find the
heart-jack switch: one down. II West
had live spades for his vulnerable
overcall, South had to be out of the
suit. So which was the fatal trick?
East's four -spade raise put South
under pressure. As it was, he would
have done better to double four
spades , colleeting 200. But South bid
five clubs as an each-way bet: perhaps
it would make, or it might be a cheap
sacrifice. And if South had played
more carefully , he would have been
plus 400 (duplicate scoring) in five
clubs.
The contract is in danger only if
West has the heart ace. Therefore

Soot~

West
I+
Pass

t+

~·

N.,llo

Eut
4+

2+

Pus

Opening lead:

Pus

+K

East must be kept of! the lead whil~;
the diamonds are being establilltecl ..
This can be accomplished by playlna::;
low from the dummy aL trick ooe. ,
Suppose West continues with aDO!h·."
er spade. Declarer discards his low til:
amond on dummy's spade ace. He then .
draws trumps with two booon In his·
hand, cashes the A·K of diamonds,;
leads a club Ill dummy's tO and ruffs a
diamond. Finally, deelarer returns to.
dummy with a trump to the king and,'
discards two heart losers on theestab-.
lisbed diamond winners.
.•
Fight hard to keep tbe danger baqd,
off the lead.
·

.. .

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle ·:
.
ACROSS
1 Broadcatllng

company

4 Mlntrll tar
8 Brought up
12 lnYintor
Whl\ntl
13 Par111nlng Ia
dewn
14 Function
15 AWII
16 Aol11
17-- lht
llood lor

Lon

18 Rtqulrtt

20 Molt ftlfYOUI

22 W~ggll lloh
24 Codo dol
25Hart
29 Waot Point
lrothmon
33 Enz1m1
34 NtwZtlland
bird

36 Relating to a

lime

37 Large bundlt

Aftlftl IO Prevtoul ,_...

39 Pult
41 Mouth part
42 Dobonolr
44 Frugolltl
48 Fruit d~nk
48 Ttrm of
end11nnent
49 Rtlne
53 Contomptlbla
paroon (ol.)
57 Indian
gomttnt
58- Hathano
60 Vanllloto
61 Tol62 Tennis pllytr
- Naotaot
63 SaultMarie
64ToiTV
65 Long llmtl
66 Oppoolto of
nopa

-t'• ~

Li.IUt!JkJ Li.IUUU ltUU

l.J(!]!Jlj UlJU
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..:Jl!U I.Jl.:JlJl!.l l.JUlJW
~l:lDLJ

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[:)[1[•]

iji;JI .m

IUillo~ty

411ad

50Hr
6 Dlroctlon
7 Put atallolnlo
pol
holr
8
9 Europaen

OOWN
1 Gat lor olgno
2 Azure
3 Quote ao an

eo....

city
10Yalat-la
11Finder

........

19 Actroa Attb1
21 Pinch
·
23 Hila g~~tMt~i
25 ExplflntHt

roor:te

...

26 Joc:all't """ .,
27 Conltolollillt
26 Bird call
30 Tlltreltlt'l
31 Wlzord of Oz
aulltot
32 Ful of tltatfa
trltt
35 Hante~no
38 Not otrllght·
larwa&lt;d
40 Catmo
43 Anglo-saxon· •.
lattar
•.
45 Co111pta pt. •
47 Sca&lt;r
49 Future
LLia.' 111m

IIi) \121 Ill Love and War
(Premiere) A newspaper
columnist provokes .a newly
divorced bar owner. Stereo.

t!il111 Hunter Q ·

® The Hlghwa,men Willie
Nelson. Waylon Jennings,
Johnny Cash and Krls
Kristollerson perform 30 of
country music's well-known
hits, taped in Las Vegas.
(1:00)
@ Four·Man Pro Beech
Volltlbell From St. Paul,
Minn. fA)
Wo~d Nowo
liD 700.Ciub With Pal
Robertton
10:051ll Allin tht Family
10:30 III Newol;l
Ill Mo)Dr League BaiObell
Atlanta Braves at Los
Angeles DodgGfS (l)
11 :00 D Ill !Ill D 1121 II II))
News
liD • Nlghl Court Stereo. 1;1

l·lt-ft

EAST
+J 9 76 2
'Jt096
tQJIO '

Voices of the Electorate

1:111••••

-

DID YOU
FIGGER
THAT?

.

--·zx.•...-.•k

45

HOW

ONr~

dtalri,-.

·sos.

9:00 (II U l!ll MOVIE: 'Miss
America: Behind the Crown'
NBC Monday Night atlhe
Movleo (2:00) Stereo. C
Cil Q (I) 0 ABC Monaay
Night Football New York
Giants at Chicago Bears (L)
Stereo . C
~ tri) 1121"111 Murph' Brown
(Season Premiere} Murphy 's
life is radically changed .

BARNEY

llnj.

Lloo ,_ Soria 11t11no a.- mol·
conttruction
trtolltr,
·
•
bol
lpilnp, 304-175- 10'd0' WI'Window, $150, CIN 81....
4418 Aft• 7p.m.
4014.
Jl2-2101 .... , lpm.
1m Ill~ lajlhor For - .
Fumllhed Ap,~rtment, 11M
Wottr
Hoollr
Solo
112,
40,
30
Go~
oat, Gl - ·
- · UtMIIIoo Pold, Iii! fllllfly ton -~ ond 40 Gallion
..lck Lolobra, ano ..
Fourth, Oolllpolla. lt4-4411-44tl ~
Iron
toblo
...,..,,
' ond
,.......
· - · NIIWII liM. You" c;hakl. 1m
..... offer, caiii'M-1124111 ....,
Ah•r7 P.M.
S11UII Wom1ldorff I Thomas
1988 F1irmont 1o4x70 2 Bed· Comlllttly Fumt.hed, 1br, next
Honlwon. 114-441-0115
roome, WID, CA, ,Dick, Utility to Ubrary, parking, hat~ olr, 52 Sporting Goods
Building, SetUp Ou1ll Creek, roloroncoc" - " rwqulroo. 114$14,VOO 114·245-13".
·
448.0338 ooloro 7p.m.
1988 Hollrparlo, 14&lt;72. 3 BR, 2 Fumlahad EHit:lortt:y $11SIIIo.
blth, tot1 elec. Excellent col1di· Utll~loa Pold Sha10 Both, 1111
tlon. 304-571-~35.
.............. Sloond A - . Oolllpolla, 114- 9oaro12
aoM, AIIIAI L crulll
lt~ . . , ~~ ~lldng $'171.
_ .... I04.f1l.lml....
•••
4:00
441-4.,1 Aftor 7p.m.
C:.tf
5:...:30 p.m. I1C· ..... molorcyc .. boote, llu 12, Pll.
251.fla.
origlnlly $'171. no cond, elll
1110 Unooln TOWM Clr, tolded,
$111. 304.m4121.

S':"W..~Ut~Htlo~~ld~=

EITHER .

~ -21

-It: And llodat C'"•m linch
Thru to Inch In Sloclt. Ron
e...., ~ockoon, Ohio. 1-I00ComprMOot~"'IIO ltlfiO

THe L..ETTER61

Serv1ces

•gon.

tl"'"·

H5 NEM:R 1¥\AIL.e

111\ulwuod Travel Tra"", 11 h.,

Awoy

P1ir end
d11k unM, bug
whicker, 25"' coniOJI color TV,
bMDe couch, lovelut, ch1lr,
W ...71-52n after 4:00PM.

He e.A.'IS nS A GOOD
WAY NOT iO 6ETINTO
TROUI3L5 .

......... 304-175-4t:c..

-llofO..wagon,
- · ·tOBadgw
•••
ton goor,
Cotieot TemGtn trllilage
114-Ms-31111

nllhld, nk:l r*ghborhaod, dep

32

WANT
ADS
WORKt

a

~~~ ,.tanb, onoton
tNcll
ftoor .......

lion, 150,114-1112-21f1.
-ng Solo: Sop! 23rd • Oct
3rd. G.E. Etoc:l~ Rongo, .Sol~
Cllenlng
Own, F~lrt,
Dilhwutwr, Air Ttmp. 10,000
BTU CIHfMI!t Air Condlllnw, 1
Yr. Old. G.E. Spaco llakor

l ahopplng,121C).$271, mo, Hooon, :tf14.112-3711 E.O.H.

Apl for rort1 In PoliO Pto.-,
114-441-2200.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PAICiiS AT ~ACKSON
ESTATES, !131 Jockoon Piko
lrom $112/mo. Walk to ohot&gt; 1
mooln. Collll4 441 25111. EOH.

1625.

'

w-

IllS Suzuld 014 &amp;.- Blko,
Sllorp,$7101--.

Mlcrawave &amp; ltand, good condl·

w.v..,1o30447M042.

a ret .-.quiNd, 304-I75-10DO.

up, ..,.,.. I stopo. 1oll00-837·

f\DS

Motorcycles

S~:t..

2 bed~ CIIJIII(Id, apo
Dllancee hrnlahed, near echool

2 lA

•
-

1 bedroom IPirtment In Pl.

leiYI mllltgl.

1213 Per Month lnclucll~ lot
,.,., Ntw M' wklt mobile home,
lnclucl• dtllvlf'l, compltle PI·

the

74

114-24WI17, IM-fll.2213.

1111101 woohar I dryor, halO)'

44

II : Yllilal ·o,... Al!ll. 141 or
call114.ft:l-m1. EOI1.
~n_
o
.._4_:~~pm_.__________ , 2br, Cl Woahor, OoiW HoolcUp, 111 ftOOi, No Pato, ~oforon.
Two story, g1ra~ or. •era, cet.
8"-446-1071.
tocolod al 41320 ~glo Rldgo,
$25,000; 8M-M,.2358 evenings
3 room 1pt, llove &amp; ret tur-

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

•

Budall Trlneftlllalonl, Uted •
IObuTII, •ortlna at ...i...whMI driVI llirtfna II t119.00

tlouM lor 1111, 3 BR, CA,
centr~Uy laelled. 30WTI-7528

and weeUnde or 614--ii2·36i4,

•

!

Accessories

Syr.cu.. Mlghborhaad. Fully

oqulppod

.

114~0.

76 ·

lmmocllo111. 114-441-220S.

14

:

I

1111 P""'"""' Orond 'lollgor
LE, Q1lr 33,0110 - . $11,300.

BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE

For lUI by owner: 10111 el.c:trlc
opt~
loool homo In nlco

:X.NSPI1 ATION
POINT
,__,
·.

tt.....

7 rooma, 2 full bolha, 112 booomenl. Crib Ct'Mk Ad. 3 hut
Hiltoricll A,.. Corner Lot • 816
SonMone to build new barbed lloln St. Pt. Plouant, W. Vo.
wlte fence, level lind, mutt bt Comploloty Ranooaloo: 2 Full
tXptt'ltnced, 304-675-7713 tfllr Bolha, 3 Largo Boclroomo, Now
HVAC. Hew C.rptt. Av1ll1blt
10:00 PM.
~unll

tiM Fool 414, ... opllono, 1111.
Cfuloo, dull ... . tanllo, tN, ,..._. Mncla 1, loCke a
doarli, new
MUIMm
tnoclc, 304-m-1452.

-Go~ 11 112'- 140 HP
-1.0, WI Trollor 6 eo-, Uko
- · 0 11,100. 114 4413415 loot
leAl 'If llltlole Club.

IOUrc.l. $45,000. 304-e75-55~8.

Wu)lod To luy:

NORTH
+A4
'I 2
t7&amp;&gt;32
+Kl052

rn u

I NOTICE!

,.,OIIIo l Wool Ylrglnlo, 304-

1n

(JJ Q Monied ... With

Business
Opportunity

m-ma,

dentist peered into lhe
We!llthy gents mouth Smiled
and.sard to his assistant,"Caneel next weeks appointments.l'll be going on vacation

(!) (!) MacNeil/Lehrer

Fmanc1 al

Loeot Poy Phono A..... Eom
Exttntlon $1,300 Por Wook. 11 ..1 Soli. 1·
IIIOCiltt 100-l'n-11811.

-·

The

,...~-0--'-A-P_E_L_D_·.:..,I

Wo~dToday

6:05 1l) Three's Campan1
6:30 [I) U lllJ NBC Ntws Q
III Star Search
(l) II (JJ IJABC News C.
(!) Wild Ame~ca Stereo. t;1
(!) Square One TV Q
!lll tril \121 Ill CBS Newo Q
liD Ill Andy G~ffllh
all Up Close
liD Now Zona Q
6:35 1ll And1 G~Hith
7:00 lljU llll Wheel al Fortune

fll'll llvll, full 1 nllhed b.l. .
Commarolol
blolol could
2,400 blluraq ft
mtnt, 1 tcre l1nd,

I

F R0 E F
1---ri--,I~T.~s;_;,r,....-1 ~

a

.

'

..

liD Rln Tin Tin, K·9 Cop Q

No

100.e

''

.•

Cil II (JJ Ill IlliG

\121 Ill \121 News
III Saved bl the Boll
(!) Squore One TV Q
(!) Rtodlng Rolnbow Q
liD Ill Full Hauoe Stereo. Q
· II! MacGyvor C
all Chockored Flag NASCAA
from Dover, Del.

•-•n.

5I

SEPT.

-.

EVENING

• .... bluo, t-topo, -

'

TIIAT DAILY
PUULII

fl li92 T'J L1$1lfllllnc:- Fr W!:nl. Tll

aood -

tlon, 114--5112 altor 7poo.

r.1erch andt se

Business
Buildings

C..-.

7V Oklo

ow"
31M&gt;ITI415I- 4:00 Pll.

MON.,

6:00

Wornd lo rortl Oolllpollo
Ferry .... il or 1 lltf

Athonslt4·512-6213.

I

.wnlngl.

wanted to Rent

1'::1:.....

rnR 1'\\E

Dllloory. No Collocllng. Eam E6 A TREE SERVICE. T - ,
Ttoo -~~. HOdliO
304-f75.. Commlttlon On First Silt. FrM Trlmm!ng,
$300 Kit Of Chrlttrnaalt~~N. No Trlrnmlni. ' " ' Eltiii'IIIIHI lf4.
lnvetlment.
AIIO Booltlng 317-7151"Aiw 4p.m.
Partloa. 114-319-2502.

-lrto " - - .....r ..lNZ.
K!Jtene to glvt a WI)',
43H.

Lata. .. .j

FWTICI~ w.R

The Dally Sentl,al~age--8 .

Television
Viewing

Of TM~ ~s fl6 TilE

v...

Rillton, 401 Rk:hllnd Ave.,

Friendly Kitten. To OIVHWiy.
Utterlraktld. 814 111 3117

Kilian To Good Homo. ~-·
1112.
Pa~ ~~~ T"~" pupploa, 304-

UN., .......
c:our.y
- ,_-

c

Farms tor Sale

OOft!IJ

Jn.nLOSER
[ ~ WClL llE C:.E1TI~ AI.IJ'I-,

111i Oklo Clorra,
AC,
~ THt, liiiFII - . .
4Dr, D1i. ltuo, 114 245-5371 Allof
7:00P.M.
1110-llulmoOIE,Ionl oondlton, an .-.,
-aad. 52,000 ml: 113,100. 114441-'111111
dolO.
-52

I ~OPf flf11

46 Space ~Qr Rent

Nlco 10151 II.H., :i BR~1 both,
AC, new renge &amp; "
., tot11 Trollw lola ... rortl In
otoctr~. $2,000 010. 1~ IM.IUI
72 ...

.-.10W71oJTlQ.
2-

'

&amp;ti_700· ~1132 aftw I:""

11110 Palf&lt;wood, 14170 3 bod·
"""!!!c3!4 oc101ot In cH1 limb,
304.. , ...sos.
1ta2 WlndHr MilO, 2 bedrooms, CIA, total - , undor·
panning, 1120 lrolloo wood
porch, ' hZO •Jumn awning &amp;
railing WIICrotle,' IVWYihlna IXC
~. OM owner, 304-471-5Mt.

Sale

Autos for

Ohio

50~""·
of 1totttt

51

..-.

52 AlOne
54 Simple
55 AIMIIOYI

co,_,

a

5t - ICIIoot

50 EYitiHd

rn

I!)

'TVMNINZY

NY

XFK

UVKW

MecOyvtr C

rl!l Croalt and C'halt
@ BIHbell Tonight

8 ·Spont Tonight

~ Sctrtcrow ond Mrs. Kina

c

11:30III l(ajllk
(!) EuropaTn Jount1l

I R F0

ZVUTMNZFIWI
FMHWKI

TRPYNZY.'

WNOYIWNO.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Port of the
have an audacious attitude." -

Morel

Bob Dylan.

of bolnt a tonQWr!ttr II to

I
... •.
••

"

�\

•

Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 21, 1992:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar
Community Caleadar items
appear two days before an event
aod tbe day or tbat event. Items
must be received well In advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

Cherryholmes, evangel!st. Special
sin~g nightly. Rev. Vtctor Roush
inYites lhe public.

MONDAY
ROCK SPRINGS • Revival,
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church, Monday lhrough Wednes·
day with Rev. Wesley Thatcher.
Rev. Keith Rader invites the pub·
lie.
RACINE • OAPSE, Southern
Local, meets Monday, 7 p.m. at the
high school. All members urged to
auend. ·
POMEROY • Revival, Calvary
Pilgrim Chapel, Route 143, Mon·
day through Sunday. Rev. L.J .

POMEROY • The Meigs Coun· :
ty Re~ublican Women's Club w'!l .
meet 10 joint session the Repubh·
can Executive Committee on Tues··day at 7 p.m. at headquarters on ·
Mulberry Avenue.

RACINE • Racine Village
CouncU wiD meet in recessed ses·
sion Monday at 7 p.m. at the coun·
cil chambers at Sw Mill Park.

RACINE - The Middleport ~
Pomeroy Branch, AAUW, meets.
POMEROY • Big Bend Stem· Tuesday, 7 p.m., Racine United
wheel Association will meet Tues· Methodist Church. All members
day at 7 p.m. at the ~ruers ~I and prospective members may
in Pomeroy. Plans wtll be finaltzcd auend. Tara Grueser will share her
for the festival. Anyone interested camp experiences.
in helping may attend.

J
TWO STEPPIN' • Tim and Edie King of
Middleport seemed to be having a great time
during Saturday's Catnsb Festival. They and
other members ortbe Ohio Valley Two-Steppers

Pick 3:
955
Pick 4:
9795

P:age4

MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port Elementary· PTO will meet
Tueliday at 7 P.·m. at the school. ,
Open house will be observed. All
parents, teachers and interested
people are invited to atlend.

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE • The Gallia Mei~s
Community Action Agency will
have a free clothing day Tuesday
from 9 a.m. to noon at the old high
school building in Cheshire.

Ohio Lottery

Pirates step
nearer NL
East .nag

Vol. 43, No. 105
Copyrighted 1992

Your Social Security

Council OKs school purchase

This year, more than 12 mil~on
people-almost one-third of all
Social Security beneficiaries-will
receive over $5.2 biltion in depen·
dents or survivors benefits based
on the earnings records of workers
who have retired, become disabled,
or died.
Yet, many of these beneficia·
ries, and other potential beneficia·
ries, may not be aware of the full
scope of family protection provided
by the Social Security program.
Still others haven't stopped to con·
sider the impact of such benefits on
their own financial well-being.
Among these 12 miUion benefi.
ciaries are 5 million family mem·
bers whose benefits began when a
family breadwinner retired or
became disabled. Additionally ,
!here are more than 7 million men,
women, and children who receive
monthly Social Security benefits
because a household breadwinner
has died.
Those who may qualify for
dependents or survivors benefits

include children, w·ives and hus·
bands, and widows and widowers
and parents.
'
Children may qualify for depen·
dents or survivors benefits if they
are: under age 18, or 18·19 years
old and full -time high school stu·
dents, or 18 or older and disabled.
The disability must have started
before age 22.
Wives and husbands may quali·
fy for dependents benefits if they
are: 62 or older; any age and caring
for the worker's child(ren) who are
under age 16 or disabled; and
divorced spouses 62 or older are
also eligible if the marriage had
lasted 10 years or more. Benefits
paid to a former spouse do not
reduce the amount payable to the
current spouse and family.
Widows ad widowers may be
eligible for survivors benefits if
they are: 60 or older. or any a~e
and caring for the worker s
child(ren) who are under age 16 or
disabled, or 60 or older and
divorced from the worker, if the
marriage had lasted 10 years or
more, or 50 or older and disabled.
Parents may be eligible for
dependents benefiiS if: they are age
62 or older and were being support·

ed by the worker.
You can get an estimate of your
Social Security benefits and those
of your family by calling Social
Security's toll-free telephone num·
ber and asking for a form SSA7004 (Request for Earnings and
Benefit Estimate Statement). The
estimate will include the benefits
you can expect at retirement or if
you become disabled and unable to
work. Italso shows what your fam·
ily can ellpect if you retire, become
disabled, or die.
If you are a family member
apPlying for Social Security bene·
ftts you will need to provide the
worker's Social Security number
and your own Social Security num·
ber and birth certificate.
Other documents may be
required, depending on the type of
benefit. If rou don't have all the
documents you need, Social Seeu·
rity can help you get them.
To apply for benefits or request
a benefit estimate, call Social Secu·
rity's toll· free number, 1·800. 7721213, business days between 7 a.m.
and 7 p.m., or stop by any Social
Security office. The Athens office
is at 221 1/2 N Columbus Rd.
(phone 5924448).

ACCIDENT SCENE • Kim Taylor had only minor injuries as
the result of this truck accidenL Not wearing a seat belt, she was
thrown out of the truck as It rolled over an embankment Into tbe
creek bed landing on Its top. Rutland firemen, David Davis, leO,
and Todd Snowden put the truck back on its wheels so that tbe
wrecker could pull it back onto the road.

STYLES

ON

SALE

Satltfactlon ~
Guaranteed

---Names in the news--NEW YORK (AP) - Jack
Nicholson's girlfriend of four
years. Rebecca Broussard, has left
the Hollywood lad(s man and
father of her two children, appar·
ently for a younger man, People
magazine says.
The magazine, citing unidenti·
tied sources, said in its latest issue
that Miss Broussard has taken up
with an unidentified actor because
the 55-year-old Nicholson
wouldn't marry her.
Nicholson bought Miss Brous·
sard and their children a house ncar
his Los Angeles home. He had
extolled his happiness with his
young family but never lived with
Miss Broussard.

LOS ANGELES (AP) Whoopi Goldberg, whose movie
"Sarafinal" opened over the week·
end, has put her Malibu home on
the market for $3.25 million.
The ranch-style home, set on a
bluff, has 180-degree views of the
Pacific and is one of two the
actress owns in the area.
She's selling because " she
divides her time between the East
and West coasts," spokesman Brad
CafarciUs said. "She doesn't spend

all or her time in L.A. ..
In "Sarafma!" Miss Goldberg
portrays a teacher in South Africa.
She also has a new late-night syn·
dicatcd talk show.
Miss Goldberg won the 1991
Oscar for best supporting acttess
for her role as a psychic in
"GhosL"

MUNCIE, Ind. (AP) - Dennis
Weaver says he's a vegetarian and
lives in a solar-powered home
because of his commitment to the
environment.
"Someone asked m~ once if I

was an environmentalist and I said,
'Well. of course I am, and so are
you,"' the "McCloud" actor told a
group at Ball State University on
Thursday. "The only question is,
are we a good one or a bad one?''
Weaver built a home in Col·
orado out of used tires and alu·
minumcans.
He likened the Eanh to a "dys·
functionalfamily."
"We see the world is filled with
poverty and disease," he said.
"This is not the way this family is
supposed to be.··

New Miss America thinks 'family
values' are out of place in politics

66Jh Miss America and the first
ByDARLENESUPERVILLE
Miss Aorida to win the title.
Associated Press Writer
The 21-year-old from Jack·
ATLANTIC CITY, NJ. - The
new Miss America says abortion sonville, Fla., a registered Republi·
and talk of "family values" have can, said the GOP emphasis on
"family values" could divide the
no place in the political debate.
" I think the Republican party country. And she said abonion is
needs to choose something else. "not something that should be
somelhing that can include every· po~tical . It's a moral issue."
"I'm a Christian who is pro·
one," Leanza Comeu said Sunday.
choice.
Those two don't go hand·
the morning after becoming the
in-hand all the time," she said.
She said she isn't sure how she
will vote in November.
Cornett, a singer and actress
who sang during the talent portion
or the pageant, is a sophomore at
Rollins College in Winter Park,
Aa., srudying communications. She
succeeds Carolyn Sapp of Honolu·
lu as Miss America.
She said she plans to speak
about AIDS during her reign, and
she wore a red ribbon - a symbol
of solidarity with AIDS sufferers
- daring the competition and on
Sunday.
Comeu said she would like to
form a troupe of theater students
whose performances would "give
AIDS kind of a hopeful message."
"If we can brins some lightness
into it, it would be very motivation·
al and very educational," iihe said.
Some of Cornett•s friends are
infected with the virus, llld she has
cared for children who have died of
AJDS·rolat.ed illnesses. She volun·
teers weekly at AIDS hospices in
Aorida.
Besides a rhinestone tiara, val·
ued at $1,00(1, Cornett won a
POPULAR ACT • Local musk:lan Georee HaD ilaiWI)'S sure
$35,000 scholarship llld a ruby red
to attrlct a bill crowd, as be did on Saturday at Middleport's Cat·
1993 Cllevrolet COrveue. She also
lllb Festival. HIJ unique blend or organ music and vocals wrapped
expects to make more t~an
up the day's entertalllment, which featured uverallocal and area
$200,000 from speaking engage·
lfOUPS. (Sentinel pboto by Brlaa J, Reed)
·
meniS.
'

-I 00% Amoco Continuous Filament Olefin
- 12 Ft. Widths
-24 Colors

SALE
INSTALLED

TRACKLESS CARPET

$

SALE

-24Colors
-Scotchgord
-Continuous Filament Nylon

. $14!.!.

SALE

_7co~rs

-Heotset N~on
-Anli Stalk

$

18sovo

SllE

INSTALLED
W/Pad

SAXONY· CARPET
-Dupont Stainmaster
-IS Colors
-FHA Approved

.
99

13 :k~o

A RuUand woman escaped scri·
ous injury when she lost control of
her vehicle which went over an
embankment landing on its top in a
creek Monday morning around
11:15 a.m.
Kimberly L. Taylor, 23, of State
Rou.te 124, Rutland, was rraveling
east on New Lima Road when she
lost control of the 1986 Ford pick·
up ttuck she was driving. It first
went off the road to the right and
then, as she attempted to bring it
back onto the highway, the truck
skidded to Jhe left and went over
Jhe embankment, the Gallia-Meigs

Post of the State Highway Patrol
reponed.
Taylor was thrown out of the
truck and onto ·Uie left crct.k bank.
She was not wearing a seat belL
The only apparent injury was a
lacerated finger. She was taken by
the Rutland squad of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vice to Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was treated and released.
The Rutland Fire Department was
also on the scene.
Mike Willford is owner of the
truck which was heavily damaged
in the accident

REG. $15.00

INSTALLEI

...witb..PAtl

and Jackson counties. The progrnin
will help inform victims of their
rights. provide suppon and make
referrals to other community agencies.
The Athens County Chemical
Dependency Program will receive
$33,405 10 provide treatment, edu·
cation and counseling to chemical·
ly dependent residents of the
Southeastern Probation Treatment
Alternative Program. Participating
a¥encies are Health Recovery Serv1ces·Athens Region and the Adult
Parole Authority are the paniciJXlt·
ing agencies.
Serenity House will receive
$15,29Jto serve domestic violence
viclims from Gallia. Jackson and
Meigs counties. This project will
provide crisis intervention, safe
shelter, legal advocacy, education
and community referrals.
The Governor's Office ofCrim·
inal Justice Services awards these
grants lhrough the Byrne Memorial
Drug Conuol and System Improve·
ment Act administered by the U.S.
Department ofJustice.

Columbus Southern Power experienced a storm-related power
outage Tuesday morning on one of its distribution circuits which
effected 1,001 customers served by the Coolville Substation.
Areas soulh of Coolville including Tuppers Plains, State Route
681 , Alfred and near Chester were ·without electric service.
The outage began at 3:30a.m. and ended at 5:51 a.m.
Anolher distribution circuit serving Coolville, Hockingpon. and
surrounding areas was out of service at 5:51 a.m. for apil:(iximatcly
one minule in order 10 reswre power to the affected area.

BERBER CARPET

SllE

Grants in the amount of
$354,544 were recently awarded to
several southeast Ohio agencies.
The Southeastern Counties of
Ohio (SECO) Drug Task Force
received $144,443.
The SECO task force is a multi·
jurisdictional drug task force com·
prised of,criminal justice agencies
workin~ together to climinale drug
trafficking and increase the number
of arrests, prosecutions. con vic ·
lions and seuures.
The following law enforcement
agencies participate in the SECO
drug task force: Galli a, Meigs.
Hocking, Jackson, Vinton , and
Athens county sheriff's depart ·
ments, and lhe Logan and Athens
police departments.
The Gallia County TASC
(Treatment Alternatives to Street
Crime) Program will receive $112,
191 to assist in the coordinated
delivery of substance abuse rreat· ·
ment to offenders in the community.
Woodland Centers will receive
$49,214 to provide assistance to
rural crime victims in Gallia, Meigs

By BRIAN J. ·REED
Sentinel News Staff
A civil case by Gary Snouffer
against his ex-wife, Sarah Snouffer
and Danny Zirkle, was dismissed
this morning on a le~al technicality
before deliberations 10 Jhe jury trial

could begin in Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
However, the suit may be rein·
troduced.
The suit, filed November, 1990,
alleged that Zirkle and Sarah

Snouffer attempled to kill Gary · medical buts, lost wages and pain
Snouffer during the period from and suffering.
September to December, 1989, by
Judge William Martin frtim
poisoning him.
Jackson County said he had np
Snouffer claims as a result, he choice but to dismiss the case
accumulated more lhan $137,000 in because Mr. Snouffer's attorney,
John Lavelle, failed to file an
amendment to the complaint speci·
fying a monewy judgment amount
Martin explained that the Tort
Reform Act prohibits a plaintiff
from specifying a dollar amount in
a complaint if it exceeds $25,000.
However, an amendment must be
filed no latcr than seven days prior
to the trial date , specifying that
amount
confined in a hospital; being
Lavelle failed to file that amend·
specifically ill or disabled; con·
ment,
causing the case to be dis·
fined to a public or private institu·
missed.
lion within the county; or being a
Extensive arguments on the pan
former resident entitled to vote for
of Lavelle and the attorneys for the
President and Vice President only.
The postcards provided by the defendants · I. Carson Crow on
N.R.A. do not provide space for bel)alf of Zirkle and Nicolette Diosuch a reason. According to Smith, guardi for Sarah Snouffer • took
the reason can be specified on the place most of the afternoon on
card before it is sent in to the board Monday, after a jury had been
of elections for processing. Better selected, and at the beginning of
yet, those N.R.A. members (or any· the proceedings today.
one interested in voting by absen·
Martin staled that he felt that the
tee ballot) can call the board office case deserved to be tried.
at 992-2697 for an official applica·
"I don't know that the plaintiff
lion. When that procedure is cho· can prove hts case; Martin said
sen, applications can be mailed "but he deserves the chance to
from the board office on the same However, I'm bound by that law. 1
day, addressing the second concern Jhink it's a stupid law."
of timeliness. Compliance wiih the
"Nonetheless, it's the law of the
law can also be assurred. This is of Stale of Ohio and I must abide by
special concern to those who use it," Martin added.
the cards to request voter regiStta·
Manin dismissed the case withtion materials. since the deadline is out prejudice, meaning Mr. SnoufOctober 5.
fer can re-file the complaint allowThe deadline for absentoc voter ing Jhe case to be tried again.
applications is October 31.
Following Martin's dismissal
Smith said that any postcards Lavelle said that he would re-fil~
received will be honored, as long Jhe case before the end of the week.
as they meet those deadlines set
"We 're gone but not forgotten,"
forth by the state.
he said.

NRA voter cards pose
problems for board, voters
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Members of the National Rifle
Association who complete a post·
card absentee ballot arplication
may delay the receipt o their bal·

lng to Smidt.
Firstly , the State of Ohio
requires that anyone requesting an
absentee ballot provide a reason.
Valid reasons for absentee voting
are: being 62 years old or older;
bein~ absent from the county on
elecuon day; religious reasons that
prohibil voting on election day;
being a polling place official, Sec·
retary of State or employee, or a
member or employee of the Board
of Elections; being on active duty
with organized militia; being con·
fined in a jail or workhouse; being

IOL

According to Rita Smidt, Direc·
tor of the Meigs County Board of
Elections, several N.R.A. members
in Meigs County have submitted
postcard applications provided by
the organization, requesting voiCr
registration or absentee ballot
applications. Those posu:ards pose
problems for two reasons. accord·

Mason County man is
killed in tractor accident
A Leon man was killed Monday
afternoon when the farm tractor he
was driving rolled over and crushed
him, according to a spokesman for
the · Mason County . Sheriff's
DeparmenL
Jack Dempsey Han, 65, of Leon ,
was pronounced dead at Pleasant
Valley Hospital following the 2:30
p.m. accident, the sheriff's spokes·
man said. Apparently Han was
driving a Massey Ferguson tractor
when he apparently lost eontol and
rolled over a hill.

Assisting at the scene were
Sheriff Ernie Watterson, Deputy J.
R. McCoy, Point Pleasant Fire
Department, Aatrock Fire Depart·
ment and Point Pleasant EMS.
Han attended Pleasant Valley
Church and was a member of Car·
penters Local I 159 for 38 years.
Funeral service will be Wednesday, September 23, at Crow-Hus·
sell Funeral Home. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 6 p.m.
today (Tuesday).

try:

--Local briefs----. Housing starts jump
Power outage effects 1,001
10.4 percent in August

W/Pad

-Olefin/NYlon Blend
-Xylon-Protection Plus
-18Colors

. $18!.!.
.

INSTALLED
W/Pad

SCULPTURED CARPET

99

REG. $20.00

SALE

SAXONY CARPET

REG. $15.00

2 00
REG. $2 •

-I OO% Ny1an .
-Scotthgard Sta1n Release
-24C.Ion

-Sculptures, Trockless, Level
Loops, Berbers, (ommerciol
(orpets
-Expertlnstollotion
-We use heavy "Life of the
(orpeln worronty podding.
-Free, No Obligation Quotes
-:-Free Removal of old carpet &amp;pDf
REG. $16.00

LEVEL LOOP CARPET

into the downtown business dis· lage for matching revitalization
trict.
funds in 1993.
l'llvlliOD approved
Other business
The Middlepon/POmeroy Lions
.Council approved a liquor per·
Club received permission to stan mit transfer from Carolyn A.
consuuclion of a pavilion over the Smith, doing business as Smitty's
stage on the upper parking lot.
Bar, 10 Ohio River Bar Co. and
Club members met wiih council James R. Ingels, doing business as
earlier this summer to present the Jimmy's Spons Bar. The license
project, and returned last night to transfer was requested for the same
present renderings of the pavilion. location on East Main Street.
The club will completely fund the Council member Beuy Baronick
work, but approached council last voted against the transfer.
night about possible contributions
Council also:
of equipment from the village.
• Approved the purchase of a
Jeff Warner. group spokesman, used snow blade for the village
said C.R. Mash Consrruclion will tractor;
build the structure, and map con·
• Recommended employment of
suuclion will be completed prior to Ellen Rought as a pan-time police
next month's Big Bend Stemwheel dispatcher;
Festival.
• Authorized construction of a
Revitalization
soccer field at the Monkey Run
Reed reported he had conlaeted park area as an Eagle Scout project;
possible business supporters of a
• Discussed areas in Jhe villaee
study relating 10 Pome!1ly's down· in need of weed cutting and main·
town revitalization project, and had tenance.
"serious" but uncommitted pledges
Present were, in addition to
of approximately $5,000 toward the Reed , Baronick , Wehrung and
$10,000 srudy.
Anderson. councibnen Bill Young,
The village approved a contribu· Scott Dillon, John Blaettnar, and
tion of up to $5,000 toward the Thomas Werry.
study, which will qualify the vii·

Rutland woman escapes Civil case against Snouffer dismissed this morning
serious injury in wreck

Agencies receive grants

REG. $11.00

Mayor Bruce Reed reported the
insurance company whtch insures
village properties is unwilling to
insure the suucture due to its poor
physical condition, specifically
because it is now unsecured.
Council President Larry
Wehrung stated he was unwillinl(
to agree to purchase a building
which could not be insured, but
Reed stated the village was in the
process of repairing the roof,
replacing broken windows and
securing door locks on the build·
ing, and said such improvements
will probably malce the building
insurable.
Grant Announced
Village Administrator John
Anderson announced that a
$214,929 Issue 2 ~rant has been
approved for the YIIIage, allowing
for replacement of a water main
and related equipment from the
Middleport corporation limit to
Monkey Run. The viUage wiU provide matching funds of $20,000,
and bid award should take place
prior to the new year.
According to Anderson, another
Issue 2 apptication was submitted
to fund further line replacement

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The Village of Pomeroy came
closer still to owning the old
Pomeroy Junior High School fol·
lowing Monday night's regular
meeting of the Pomeroy Village
Council.
At its last regular meeting, the
Meigs Local Board of Education,
which owns the propeny, approved
the council's offer of $35,000 to
purchase the building and sur·
rounding property. As a condition
or the purchase. the village will
agree to allow access to and use of
the parkin$ area that surrounds Bob
Roberts Fteld, site of Meigs High
School foolball games.
At last night's meeting, the vii·
lage's auomey, Patrick H. O'Brien,
presented a recent survey of the
property and that which surrounds
it. Extensive discussion regarding
specific boundaries of the proposed
purchase followed. Council agreed
to purchase the land for $35,000.
with boundary details to be deter·
mined prior to closing.
The matter of insurance on the
structure was also discussed.

S.S. provides family b.enefits
By ED PETERSON
Social Security
Manager in Athens

1 Secllon, 10 Pages 25 cenla
A Multimedia Inc. Newapeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 22, 1992

FALL
PET
SALE

did the popular dance ~le to
numben,
including "Wild Turkey ', pictured here. (Sen·
tinel photo by Brian J, Reed)

Low tonight in mld·40s.
Showers. Tuesday, high In 60s.

$12!!

Squads ma]ce six runs

INSTALLEr

Six calls for assistance were answered on Monday and early
Tuesday by units of Meigs Emergency Services,
On Monday atl1 :39 a.m., RuUand unit went to New Lima Road
and 1001: Kimberly Taylor to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 7:42
p.m.; Pomeroy squad was sent to Spring Avenue. Patty LaudermUt
was taken to Veterans. Middleport squad, at 7:56 p.m., went to
Ovelbrook Center fill! Oakley Nelson. He refuse4 treatment
At4:49 a.m. on Tuesday, Middleport squad went IQ Second and
Cole for Kalhy Pierce. who was lalcen to Veterans. At 5:53 a.m.,
Middleport unit went to South Third for Kathy Pierce, who was
lalcen to Holzer Medical Center. At8:41 a.m., Middlepon squad
went Ill Story's Run Road. Nina Wyatt wu lalcen to Holzer.

SIOIEHOUIS

un.,uuoo FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOR COVERING
lutl4ar·S.IIrillr · · .
992·3671
9:3o.s:oo .
DOWITOWI POMEIO! 0110
,,

Ill

!Iii'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Hous· percent in July and 4.1 percent in
ing swts jumped 10.4 percent in June.
August, lhe sharpest increase in 18
Analysts said the improvement
months, !he government said today. accompanied the lowest mortgage It was lhe first advance in three rates in 19 years. According to the
months and boosted starts to the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
highest level since March.
Corp .• 30-year, fixed-rate mort·
AU regions of the nation regis- gages averaged about 8 percent in
tered improvements excepc for the August, even dropping to 7.87 per·
Northeast, where starts declined. cent during the week ended Aug.
Even the South, parts of which 21.
were hammered by Hurricane
Economist Michael P. Niemira
Andrew in late August, posted a wrote in Mitsubishi Bank's
gain.
"Weekly Economic Indicator
The Commerce Department said . Report" lhat some of lhe June and
construction of new homes and July decline was caused by wet
• apartments totaled 1.24 million 111a weather. which continued to a less·
seasonally adjusted annual rate, up er exlent in August
from 1.12 million in July.
The wet weather was particularIt wu the largest increase since ly acute in laiC A114us1 in the areas
RIZER RETIRES - Bill Rizer or Minersville retired today after .
starts rose 19 percent. in February o{ Aorida and Louisiana lhat wm
35 years or service witb the Ohio Valley Publlsbin1 Compaay wblt:b ,·
1991 and the farst advance since a suuck by Hurricane Andrew. Ana·
serves Meigs, Gallia and Mason Couatles. Rizer started work with
. 10.1 percent gain last May:
lysts had said the storm probably
the Dally Sentinel in Pomeroy on June 1, 1957, under tbe manaae- ·
Starts in August rose to the had curlled some new construction
meat or Dick Owen. He worked In tbe company's ad composltloa
highest level since a 1.34 million there.
department
his en lire career. (OVP photo by Jim Freeman)
rale in March. They had fallen 2.4
~

......

,. .._.........

-···---

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