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Ohio Lottery

Eagles
roll over
Cowboys

Pick 3:
·
570 . Pick 4:
3493

Page4

(

Tips on growing wildflowers
.

You needn't tame your long: merely decayed vegetation such best and easiest plants to grow
. ing for a wildflower garden any as compost or peat moss. If the . and how to maintain your garden
longer. According to a new bocik soil is slippery and dense it may once you have planted it.
by Donald and Lillia_n S'tokes, be full of clay. Clay soils do not Whether you're planning a meadyou can creare one right on your l!rai•'l out moisture quickly and ow of sweeping color, or an
own property.
most meadow wildflowers like a enchanted woodland garden, or
just :want to add wildflowers to
- Their new .guide, The Wild'· ·well-drBined soil:
'flower Book-An l'!asy Guide to
The S10keses reach you how 10 exiStirig plantings, The WildfloWGrowing and Identifying Wild- choose, plan and prepare the right er Book elm help·you. surround
flowers (Little Brown &amp; Co. , site on your property, from a yourself with the natural beiluty
$10.95) points out the frrst slep in small bed \O a large meadow; of wildflowers.
It's available at local hookcreating :Your wildflower meadow what 10 consider in buying plants
is choosing a location. There arc or seed mixes; how to select the stores or by calling 1-800-7590190. .
'
four things to check for when
seeking a spot: the amount of sun
it gets, the 8IDOUDt of moiswre in
Purple coneflower Ia a premlerB pralr!e flower and a welcome the soil, and the condition and
IICidltlon to wllcllknflf llllllldow8.
acidity of the soil. '
The Stokcses, authors of The
JOHNSON'S SUPERMARKEt
Bluebird Book, The Hummingbird Book, The Bird Feeder Boot
. SENIOR ,£RIZEN'S DAY ,
and others, point out that the
main condition needed is sun, at
-EVERt TUESDAY ·
least six to eight hours a day. The
m&lt;rt sun the betlcr the plants wilt
grow.
Accordin~ ·to the book, you
It can make you feel good all should also dig up a shovelful of
735 2od Ave.
Jackson Ave,85 VIne St.
day.
soil. If it's gritty or sandy and
While nuclear power, tlfermal light• in color, it should be
Gallipolis,
Gallipolis,
Polnt Pleasant,
power and automotive power are. ·enriched by what is commonly
Ohio
Ohio
widely known, millions are dis- called "organic matter." This is
~-;;;;;;;;.;;._ _ _;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"' covering that the most dependable "fuel" is the divine power of
love, which can do three things:

.

'

1 Section, 10 Pegee 25 cenla

Vol. 43, No. 115

Copyrlghtocl1902

Pomeroy·Council hears -progress
reports on three grant proje·cts .
- water ' main on West Main Sb'eet
By BRIAN J. REED
(from the Middleport line to MonSentinel Nelli'S Starr
Pro~ on tliree gnint projects key Run) will be ready for bid on
was discussed when Pomeroy Vil- November 15, Anderson said. Conlage Council met in regular session struction is set to begin in early
1993 at a cost of $240,000.
on Monday night
Anderson also said that the viiVillage Administrator John !age's
new sewage treabnent plant
Anderson reported that a Commu- is "about
90 percent complete",
nity Development Block Grant . with most of
the major consttuction
Fund project for asbestos removal now completed.
That project cost is
ftom abandoned houses and demo- estimated at $1.18 million.
lition of the structures is ready for
w.a i granted permisbid, and that he expects action on sionAnderson
to seek estimates for construethat step at this week' s meeting of tion of a pole buildin~ at the plant
the couniy commissioners. That site to be used for additiOnal sludge
project will cost approximau;ty storage. He said that the plant ilself
$31,000, wid) the CDBG program allows for storage of 35 days worth
paying $16,800,
of sludge.
Plans and specifications for a
Council President Larry
sewer line extension project on Wehrung advised against approvWest Main Street are now_com- ing the purchase of the building in
plete, That project will provide favor of economy, and suggested
sewer service to the new Riverside that the village do the construction
FOod Mart. The county will_admin-_ to save money in the event the
ister that Ohio Department of building is required. Anderson said
Development grant in the amount that the village could construct the
. of $30,000.
· A grant project to replace a building if time allows. Council-

:The power
·- oflo_ve

wv.

·QNE-STOP

FOR

• help the unfortun~
• bring happiness into the lives
of those who help
.
• set a fme example for others.
One proven way to activate
the power-o f love is br volunteering with The Salvation Army's
worldwide League· of Mercy
(LOM). In the U.S. today more
than 28,000 LOM members reach
out to over five millioo people in
more than 15,000 institutions.
These volijmtecrs visit the sick,
the incan:eraled and the forgotten
of our society. In hospitals, nursing homes, correctional institutions and children's homes, LOM
members hug, tatk, laugh, pray
and lhten. They often bring
music to those they visit They
also distribute more than a mil• .
lion $ifts throughout the year,
especially at holidays. These dedicated men and women take as
their mono the words of Jesus:
"Whalevcr you did for one of the
lwt of these brothers of mine;
you di4 for me. • (Matthew
25:40).

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fiE MEDICAL SHOPPE

Peoples Cho~ce Presents. ••

,. ,•

Great Weekend Get-awaYs!

...'
.

~

locludes: .
'
o Performance of 'NW\SeliSe' at the L.aC.ornedla Dlrmer Theatre
o Ovemlght accommodaUons at the Manchesier Inn In Middletown
Plus \IJ.slt5 To:
c
•
.o Carillon Palk In Dayton
o Historic South Main Street and the canal Museum In Middletown
o 1he Golden TurUe OlOCOiate Factory
o 1he Golden Lamb 1nn • Ohio's oldest Inn
'
_ o Trader's World Flea ~t - over.300 vendors

.

Ed Johnson, President and Farm
Director of ABN Radio and TV
will be the speaker for the Meigs
Soil and Waler Conservation IJistrict baiiquet and an~ual meeliog to
be held Oct 20 at 7:10p.m. at Rutland Elementary.
·
A baked steak dinner will ·be
served by the .Rutland Fire Depanment Ladies Auxiliary' Tickets for
the dinner meeting are $7 each and
will be available from supervisors
Tom Theiss, Joe Bolin, Charles
Yost, David Gloeckner and Marco
Jeffers. Tickets will also be available from office staff Blair Windon, Mike Duhl and Opal Dyer.

~

Ohio flights are
canceled by ·strike
By The Associated Press
A strike by machinists sent
USAir iicket holders scrambling to
find other arrangements at Ohio
airports, where more than half of
the airline's flights were CBIICeled.
Fifty-one of 99 USAir flights
serving 'Cincinnati, Cleveland,
Columbus, Dayton and Toledo
were canceled Monday, the first
day of the walkout, and a similar
number was likely to be canceled
today, an airline spokesman said.
People with US Air tickets for
flights today should call the airport
in advance"to check on the stlitus of
their flights, the airline said.
" We hope 10 incroase the level
of service in many of the markets
as time goes on" but improvements probably will not_be made
until We(lnesday, said USAir
spokesrnan Bill Kress.
"We'll just continue evalualiog,
what we can do to better meet
tlfe demand ," he said Monday
nighL " The schedule is changing.
It's coostantly fluid."
.
' Kress s1nd no one had been
stranded although some passengers
have t&gt;ee'n delayed.
.
Members of the International
Association of Machinists struck at
airports around the country serVed
by the ilirline, the nation's sixth
largest The union represents about
8,300 US Air workers.
1
had h·
Karl Lao ge, a sa esml!!l, .
IS

_The Wheeling festival of Ughts
Sunday, NotoemberB - Monday, November9, 1992
'
·Only $145.Doullle Occupancy• (

locludes:
o Guided bus tour of the Dght diSplays
o Welcome receptiOn, pre-tour buffet, ovemlght accommoclaUons ..
and breakfast at Wilson Lodge In Oglebay Pari&lt;
o VIsits to the Mansloo, Oulstmas Shop and Gan:len Center at Oglebay
o Shopping at the St. Oairsvllle Mall

to address
Meigs S&amp;WCD fete

ON mE GROuND • USAir personnel examlne ·the engine of
one or the Jets'at New York's La Guardia Airport as another taxies
for the active runway Mondll}', machinists lor the air cllrrier went
,_.,..
oa. !!trike, CaWiinl dela.Jll and cancellations. (AP) ......--~
·-·
.....,, ...

Only $140 Double Occupaiacy:

.'

man Thomas Werry vo~ against
the motion, which als!l authorizes
advertisement for bids, if necessary.
Field development
Benny Wright, rcprcsenliog the
Pomeroy Youth League, updated
council on his work toward developing baseball fields for the vii!age.
According to Wright, "the
league has been in terrible shape,"
needing two fields to adequately
meet the needs of its players. .
Wright discussed development
of the fields on the property of the
old junior high' school, which the
village has agreed to pwchase from
the Meigs Local School Disuict.
Mayor Bruce Reed reminded
Wright that a condition of the P.~chase is that no permanent fences
or other barriers be installed which
would impair parking during high
school football gantes.
Tlie league would also be interested in applying for grant funds
through the Ohio Department of

.JOhDSOD

· laComedla Dbmer Theatre - Dayton/Middleton Area
Sidurday, October to. s.n~ay, Odober 11, 1991
.... '

A llulllmoclla Inc. Nowapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 6, 1992

Support Your Senior Center

·•

•

b

' RIVER CUitRBNTS FOR SENIOR Cl11Z£NS

PAGE ..-wBJ,VB

'

....

•

Low tonl&amp;bt in mld-30s . ·

Wodnesday, sunny. High In 70s;

"'

call

'
ONLY A .llW-5UJS S1ll.L AVAILUU.
SODONT DELA.YI Please
Mary
Fowler at (304) 675-1 I 2 I for lnrorrnatton or reservauons. Peop~ Claolce
Is a ~on of tile Peoples link of Point Pleasant, Member mrc. .
• Addldanal chiJSe l o r -·

see

PittsbUrgh to Montreal flight canceled, so he drove to Cleveland to
catch an unaffected flight 10 Canada on Monday. "It doesn 't bother
me. I've been through it more than
SPEAKER • Ed Johnson,
once," lie said. •
and.farm director or .
president
Re11ee Ro~nson and ~r I ·
ABN
Radio
and TV will be the .
month-old son were delayed two
guest
speaker
at the ~eigs
hours as they tried 10 return home
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
to Orlando, Fla., from Cleveland.
District
Annual
Meeting and
USAir found them another flight.
Banquet
on.
Oct.
20 at 7:10
They had been visiting her parents
p.m.
at
Rutland
Elementary
in Canton.
School.
"I was, concerned," said Ms.
Robinson, who had been visiting
her parents in Cantoil. But she said
she would not have worried too
much if the strike had given her a
chance to spend more time with her
parents.
·
, Tony Midea, chairman of the
MachinistsLocall73l,saidhis81member local in Cleveland unanimously voted to authorize a walkZURICH, Switzerlaitd (AP) .out. The union is striking over job Boeing Co. warned airlines of possecurity issues.
sible problems with the engine
. At Cl.eveland Hopkins In1ern11· . . mounts of 747 jumbo jets before a
bona! Airport, USAir has the set- cargo version of the plane smashed
ond-largest presence with eight of into a Dutch apartment building, a
53 gates. Fourteen of 30 depanures Swissair official said today.
Monday were canceled.
"We. had. a telex sent out from
At the USAir terminal at the Boeing last week to all 747 operaCincinnatiNorthern Kentucky tors " urging them to check for
International Airport in !'Iebron, cracks in the pins in the pylon conKy., a ~ew pickets held s1~ s an~ · necting the engine to the wing
wa_lll!ld m front of the US Air 1enn1- within 90 days , Swissair
nal.
spokesman Hannes Kummer said
·•
in a telephone interview.
· Dutch authorities have said the

NEW YORK (AP) _ American
'
·
·te d by
eh1ldten ' s 1·1ves are· 1mpen
health threats from a growing lack
of physical fitness to a potential
:;~3;:,'~;1;~~!~ child
: · Children are fatter, weaker,
• more prone to diseases and more
-" likely than in ~ mid-1980s 10 die
' from murder or ;,IDS, according to
;. a study released Monday.
;
"With the state of health C&amp;fe
• today for children, you're sitliog on
a powder keg," S81d Dr. _Robert J.
· .- Ruben, a childhood disease specialist a' fJber.t l!in,tein College of
Mcdicme In N!w York.. .
-·
The American -Health Foundslion report card gave In overall C·
· minus rating to the state of U.S.
children's health, citing increases
in mwles and Other childhood diseases and a trend toward obesity at ·
a younger age.

'

•d
t
I
Oh.
•
·
10
Pres I en• •P ans
f UDd •raiSing events
·

" Our children are fatter, slower
a·nd weaker," sa1'd Dr. Nt' cholas
DiNubile, a special adviser to the
. 1
P~esl.den t' s Councl.1 on Ph YSICa
F•m;~~bile said studies show half
of girls and 25 pe!'canofboys can~
not do one pullup, and 40 percent
of children ages to 8 have at least
one coronary disease risk factor.
The report also noted the rates
of AIDS cases and murders of chi!dren have skYroc~~tedsince 1985.
. Th~ non-pro 11 re~earch and
edUC81lon BfO!!P gave higher.grad~
- but no A s - for declines m
dental problems and s~g. .
Ruben. and other parllc1pants m
a sympo11um where the report was
presenled blamed the worsening
h~th le~il on rising povcny, less
a~bve children ~ lack of extenstve school-bas¢ health programs..

s

.

·

...

Jet warned
about problem
prior to crash ·

Report: St~te of children's
h Ih. b I
.
: ea t IS . e OW average

Tickets must be purchased by Oct.
13.
During the annual meeting, election of one supervisor for a threeyear term will be held. CandidateS
for elec!Wn are David Gloeckner
and Jobn Rice. Nominations will
alsci be taken at the meeliog.
Awards to be presented during
the meeting include Goodyear
Farmer; Outstanding Cooperator;
Soil Judging; Hay Show; and Affiliate·Membership Cenificates. ·
Further information may be
obtained by calling lhc Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation District
Office 992-6647.
·

Richard Farmer, chairman and
chief executive officer of Cintas
Corp., had been sent before the
debales were scheduled, campaign
officials said.
mD~W~.
Other official hosts for the visit
David Yost, a spokesll)an for
Bush's Ohio campaign, said Mon- are to be Carl H. Lindner Jr., chair·
day that Bush had been "scheduled man and cnief exeeutive officer of
to come to Cincinnati on Oct. 19. American Financial Corp., and
Ilut because. that is one of three Edwin Artzt, chairman and ·chi_e f
dates for him to debate Democratic executive officer of the Procter &amp;
·
presidential nominee Bill Clinton, GainbleCo.
Lindner
has
entertained
Bush
at
the visit is being rescheduled for
Lindner's
Key
Largo,
Fla-.,
home.
later.
Bush last came to the city Aug. ln April, American Financial
pitched in $250,000 for the Presi27 for a rally on Fountain.~quare.
Invitations for the Oct .19 fund· dent's Dinner, a GOP fund-raiser in
raising event at the home of . Washington, D.C.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Plans
are being made for President Bush
to attend a $5,000 pe'r person cocktail {&gt;arty in the city later tll is

its right wing.

..

airlines to inspect the four-inch
pins.tIt was
com-·
b not
B clear
· from the
It ·
men s Y a oemg s p9 esnran
when the warning was issued.
The spokesman, Christopher
Villiers, said in Seatt!e that Boe!ng

~~ ~fn~~dt~ya~~f:n~ 1j~~~

N h 1 ·d ·
· . et e~ an s ~r a ~~~~ 1ar one
mvolvmg a C:h•na Aul,incs plane,
~t re~ed It as_pru_dent for arr1 to
t th
lanes
mes mspec eu P f · . .
, are~i=·~= ~.':.~ ~;~ .
engine fali cleanly from the wing if .
an engine locks up durins flight,
Boeing. spokesman Torn Cole said. _
Thai prevents an engine from twist·
ing and tearin" open the wing. ·
D h 0 f(101·a1
·d th El AI
u~
~ S8l - e

:=::?:Sc~.:~~=

-ver the plane for an emergency
landing . More than 250 people
.were feared dea4 in the disasler.·

overrides
Bush's veto
WASHlNGTON (AP) - President Bush 's perfect string of sustained vetoes came to an end as
Congress, throwing off tour -years
of frustration, voted decisively to
override him on a bill re-regulating
cable TV prices.
Rej)Ublica_ns. in both the Hou~
an~ Senate JOtn~d Democrats ~n
vonng M90day mghtto e!'lact a bill
. des1gned to an~wer pubbc ou,rra!le
over skyroc~etmg rales and lndifferent ~ervtcc from local cable
' compames.
.
"Good for the House, good f~
the Senate, good for the Repubhcans who voted to ~verrid_e,"
. DemocratiC pres1denttal nommee
Bi11Ciin10nsaid.
The bill requires the Federal.
Communications Commission to
set rates for basic cable service in
communities where cable companies operale as monopolies. It also
is designed to enhance competition
from other companies that can
deliver expanded programmin~
similar to cable and allow· television stations to seek payment for "'
cable's use of their signals. '.
The FCC has 180 days to adopt
price-regulation ~edllrCS.
Supporters S81d the new law will
encourage competition in communities that now have cable monopolies and result in lower bills to consumers.
But Bush and other opponents
. said it would just stifle competition
and lead_to higher rates: They
depicted the siruggle as between
differing special interests: broadcasters on. one side; cable companies on the other.

~--~---T~~------~~

~~::~tl:~ ~a~;~S:~n;suf!~
ue,B:~n~o~~~h~i~,;sin~~

Natucil R~urces for development
of lhe fields, especially excavation,
consb'uction of backstops and a'
concession area. Local donations
will also be sough t toward the'development project.
Anderson said that concrete
plans would be required in order 10
submit a "meaningful application"
for ODNR grant monies, although
those fund s are available with a
local match contribution.
Wri~ht said that the league
would like to hav e the fields ready
for use by next spring. ·
Ligllting approved
The village agreed to conven iiS
downtown street lighliog from mercury vapor lights to high pressure
sodium ftxwres, which wilf provide
more light with the same ftxtures.
Ron McDade and Ron
Carmichael from Columbus SQUth·
ern Power outlined the conversion
package, which will also involve
re-engjneering and moving some
fixtures closer to the. street to
~gu;;~Se 3 -_-

'...

DEADLlNE OBSERVED • Monday at 9
p.m. was the deadllne ror new voter reglstralions
ror tbe upeomlacgeneral election. The deadline
ror nllng abse11,tee ballot appllcati~~~~os wltb tbe
board _Is 12 •oon on October 31. Here , Rita

�•

,

·.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
.

-

Lingering conflicts of Vietnam War

The Daily Sentinel

I .

.

My father, an unabashed patriot said that he has been something
Having served in lhe Marines,
f
111 COart Street
of the &gt;Old school, undentood his less tbari tolally forthcoming about however, I had a fii'IR belief lhat
countrymen. When I wu still in lhe record ofthose efforts.
.
limited wars had to be won on the
•
PallleiOJ', Oldo
college, hack in the yean be.tween
The best that can be said for the ground. And it seemed equally
~TO THB INTBRB8TII OP ~ IRIOILIIMOI'f AREA
lhe Korean and Vietnam wars, he ·
·
· obvious that if lhe people for whOm
would return repeatedly to 'the
you were f~t'!,tina would not or
.same theme in family conversacould. not m . a maximum ef£ort
lions. "This is a·nation which has .
to defend themselves, something
never lost a war, whicb makes it
was wrong. When, despite our
unique," he'd say. "The real test latter is that it has been idiotically growing intervention and JohnROBERT L WINGE'IT
of our Jllalurity and durability will self-defeating. It inay even point to son's decision to bomb Nonh VietPubllshr
come after we lose our fll'st one."
serious character flaws, though I nam, things continued to go badly,
Being
a
Southerner
with
a
long
doubt it. But the former is not I reconsidered my, support. The
CILUlLENE HOEFLICH
... PAT WBITFBEAD
.memory,
he
ltncw
lhe
psychologiwonh the attention it has received. basi~ premise of American interGenenl Manqer
·, Assistant Publlsller/Controller
cal effect of being on the losing Unless we are willing to put our venuon no longer seemed to hold
end o_f a ~itter conflict Being an collective memory on hold, no one up. By lhe end_of 19~. ~e. year,
·• •
LETJliRS OP OPINION ~~e welcome. They should be Ieos thon 300 ,
Amcncan m tbe mid·20th·century can honesdy con~nd that Clintoii'S my hometown m M•ss•ss•ppl lost
w.,rdi. All !etten 1IRI subject to editiog and must ·be signed with name,
be did not really expect us to lose~ dodging and weaving to avoid lhe its first son in lhe fighting, "Gun·
address and tekpbone oumba-. No unsigned lelloJW will bo JMlblUbed. Loa.n
' war anytime soon though his mus- draft nwted him off from his time boats'' Car.ter was a dOve.
110_1pe:....no_nal_i_liel_
L--·'..:sbo~ill.d~
· ;;,bo;,;,;;in;;,;good~;;,tas,;;..;te,;.,od,;;..;dre_•'!"llD· ;;,&amp;_il_•""'...;.·_
. ...
• _ _ _ __, ing was the res~lt of the mixed or from many in his #eneration. It
Back to ·Bill Clinton, what is
wasn't heroic, but it wasn't slimy, · mosl striking about his situation is
results in the Korean conflict
Less than 20 years later the either.
·
· the company that he kept. Vice
l.Jnited St8tes WI!$ forced to ~ith· . Given the nature of lhe debate, it ~resid~nt Dan Quayle's case is ·
· draw from Vietnam. Another 20 is probably necessary at this point •llustrauve.. Everyone- everyone
yean later, we have yet uf come to for me to reveal my biases. For - in the late 1960s and ~arly
terms with that defeat. Just as Dad. about four years - from the time 1970s knew th~t the NatiOnal
feared, our maturity has 'been no Jack Kennedy ·upped the ante in Guard was a ~ven for people who
match foo-lhe poisonous acrimony Vietnam to the period in 1966 wanted to avOid the war. Quayle
By WALTER R. MEARS
.
AP Special Correspondent
.
. the fault-fmding and lhe guilt oi:ca: when Lyndon Johnson decided to was as one with his fellows . He
go all-oot - I was an ardent sup- . joined lhe G~d !Jecause he didn't
WASHINGTON .._ For President Bush, the veto $!!'Btegy lhat once sioned by lhe loss. .
The
continuinjl
controversy,
porter
of lhe war. An.editorial wnt- want to fightm ':'•etnam. As for the
hdped oumumbered Republicans ~sa!R on bills has rumed in~ a Cli!Dpaign liability. The Democra!S have lheitllwn veto strategy now, passmg much of it contr•ved, over Bill er in tllose days, I thought we were repeated acaderruc and qther defer•
pplitically popular measures .and daring Bush to say no.
· Clinton ' s attempts to a void· the wimessing outside aggression simi- ments won by Secretary of Defense
· Instead of a bargaining ploy, the veto has becom~ an end game as draft as a young man is an indica- Jar to Hider's takeover of Euro~. Richard Cheney, they ~arne f!'Om
Congress heads for adjournment a monlh before Elecuon Day. B\!Sh has live, !hough minor; example of that We had a duty to go in on the s•de lhe !ID"ay of draft-dt?dgmg options
vetoed 35 bilis and Congress hasn't yet mustered lhe two-thirds votes to national failure. Let it be said for of South Vietnam and help it repel avaliable to the educated. Those
lhe record that I believe ·that he did the aggressor, Some of my ed.itori- who used lhem did so to duck VietQwqride him, ~te !IS Democratic IJl!ljoriti~.
everything
humanly possible to lils were so. strident that I entered nam. All else is sophistry.
.
·· . But even hiS YJCtones have come w1th a pnce. ·
George .Bush was as one With
·: Tile House upheld his veto of a famil~ leave _bill on Wednesday, and avoid active duty .. Let i1 also be. lhenicknalile. "GunboatS.''
Democrats said it proved Bush's camp111gn claim to lhe family values • '
.,.,;.
i$Sue had no credibility. Sen. Chris Dodd of Connecticut said lhe family
11&amp;11•
leave veto would be "a devastating issue" against Bush ~·
· ,· Bush said a law requiring leave would hurt small_ busmesses and cost
jobs. He said it ought to be done by offenng_ tax credits !" employera providing emergency family leave, an altematJve the White House of£ered
w.hen confronted wilh lhe certain passage of the bill he'd vetoed once
before.
·
, "They sent it down just fodine timing in terms of politics," Bush said
lhe morning after his late-night_ veto ~essa~e.
.
.
. . .
.· Bill Clinton, lhe Democrauc presidential candidate, wd Bush .did ~·
"in the late of night, when'lhe newspapers had gone to bed ande.lhe ielevtsion news was over," hoping to avoid aaention since his veto blocked a
benefit 72 other nations guarantee their worlcera.
·_. Another politically risky veto issue is built into a bill to have lhe government ·regulate cable television rates. The president oppo:&lt;~ it in line
with his anti-regulation stand, but bloclqng a measure sponsors say would
hold down cable 1V prices carries campaign hazard warnings.
· The Democrats campaigned ~ that one in advance, Sen. ~ ~~· lhe
vice presidential nominee, saymg a veto would put Bush wtth the
monopilli_es and ~gainst lhe American people. .•. '' Advocates _thillk lhe
cable 'FV bilf is one on which they could finally round up two-thirds votes
tQ override Bush, breaking his sttealc and calling even more attention to

Hodding Carter JJJ

GOP veto strategy: Once
·a boon_,now a boomerang

~

~iU

.;.:epi-es;dent also has vetoed a
barring abortion advice in federally
f111anced family planning ·clinics, and a measure to restrict trade prefer. ences for China unless lhe Beijing government improves iiS perfonnance
on human rights, arms control and free trade. Those also are replays on
·

mflii

oaollulll hu blocted before:

·

•

Tllere's also a veto lhreat out a$ainst lhe Senale version of a l!)ngdelayed biD 10 aid depressed city neighborhoods, bec.ause Democrats tied
it to an extension of upper income tax increases.
Bush has taken firm positions on alllhose veto issues, and couldn't
yield now even if he were willing to risk conservative wrath. To switch
would undercut Bush's ef£ort to depict Clinton aS a candidate willing to
flip-flop who tries 10 be "on aU sides of every question."
·
Since lhe Democrats decide what passes Congress, lhey've been able
to choose lhe topics for late campaign velD confrontations. Bush had tried
to take ch8rge, declaring at the Republican. National Convention that.he
would enforce a spending freeze on his own, and ''if Congress sends me a
,bib spending more than I asked for in my budget, I wiJ! ve~ it fast." But
the DemocraiS decided not to, fight on that front,_ choosmg mstead to concentrate on measures that put Bush on lhe defei)Stve.
·
The Bush veto record compares wilh 78 during Ronald Reagan's two
terms wilh nine overridden, 31 by Jimmy Carter, who was overruled
twice.' and 66 wilh a dozen ovemdes during Oerald Ford's brief presiden..
..........,
~-Ford ~ade lhe ~etoes part of his 1976 campaign, saying he'd used
them to hold down government spending and growlh. "If inflation.was .
goin' to be licked, we hac! to have the courage!" ~w lhe l.ine on spefld·
iitg,' he said j!JSl before his narrow defeat. "I did 1t" . ·
.
. • · Bush's Republican predecessors usually used lhell' vetoes s1mply to
kiD bills they opposed, but he often made it into a bargaining tool. His
peoplt would talk terms wilh lhe DemoCrats, using lhe veto for leverage.
With vetoeS or veto warnings, lhe White House sometimes won_ eompro-

mises.

,

The president called it playing defense.and .said it was lhe only way to

give Republican biDs .achance, . .
, ,
.
Now he's playing defense on ISsues forced by the DemocraiS m lhe
waning weeks of his effort to call:h Clinton and hold lhe White House.
.•. EDITOR'S NOTE- Walli!r R. Mean, vice president and Colum·
nist for The Assoei.a ted Press, has reported on Washington and
national politics for more than·25 years.

Today in .history
By Tb, Associated Press
.
Today is Tuesday, Oct. li, the 280th day of 1992. There are 86 days left
iii the year. The Jewish Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur, begins at sunset
. Today's Highlight in Hisray:
· .
.
·
One hundred years ago, on Oct. 6, 1892, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, lhe
best-known poet of the Victorian age, died in Haslemere, England, ·at age
83.
.
. ·. ' On this date:
.
.
'
: · In 1683, 13. famili~ from Krefeld, Gennany, arrived in present-day .
Pliiladelphia to begin Gennantown, one of Amenca' s oldest setdements. .
; . In 1884, lhe Naval War College was esta~lished in Newport, R.I.

'.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - In unlimited amount of so-called
an already strange election year "soft mon~y." which can be spent
one lhing lhat has shOcked insidetS on general party activities, but not
from both parties is the d.ifficulti~ directly on the presidential camencountered by·the GOP in raising
funds.
'
. For more than ad~ lhe GOP
has been ab.le to ra1se huge
·
amounts of money. In the wt three ·
presidential elections Republicans paign.
.
have had ll tremendous fund-raising
In the past three presidential
advantage over Democrats, The campaigns, the GOP has had the
result: In the final weeks before additional $10 miUion in lhe bank
Election Day - as Democrats long before Labor Day. This year,
were foreed to count every penny though, the GOP's "presidentiw
- the GOP could spend whatever trust" - as they are calling 1992's
was needed for last-minute poDing, . $10 million fund-raising effort phone banks and get-out-lhe-vote had only accumulated $2.4 million
ef£oru.
by Labor Day. This year, in a comThis year, however, as President plete role reversal, lhe Demcicra!S
Bush's popularity ratings have had reached their $10 million goal
plummeted, donors' checkbooks by mid-August
hav,: stayed cl~. According to
Rahm Emanuel, Bill Clinton's
lhe most recllllt filing wilh lhe Fed- finance chairman, says that this ·
eral Election Commission, in July year the DemocraiS have been raislhe GOP collected $7 million and mg large sums tl¥ough relatively
in August anolher $7.4 million. By small donations rrom women, and
comparison, in the same two lhrough m$Ximum personal contrimonths, the Democrats reponed butions from businesses executiYl:S
raising $10.1 miUiQn in July, anil a . and professionals.
staggering $17.3 miDion in August.
H;e points to the success of
The latter ~~IS the best monlh events like an August appearance
iii Boston by Hillary Clinton.- From
of fund-ratSmg m pany history.
Under federal election '!tw, lhe an audience ml!de up of profession. bulk ~f money for a prllSJdent•al al women, the campa1gn raised
campaign comes from the $55 m•l- more than $500 000. At a similar
lion_!n federal matching fu!'ds, In event in Wash'ington, featuring
add•Uon, each pany can I'8ISC and. .both Hillary Clinton and Tipper
~nd ~ ~tional $~0 million on . Gore, so many women wanted to
liS pres~d;ential campaign. ~. on attend they had to substitute a box
top of this, each party can 1'81se an lunch for the planned sit-down

Robert}. Wagman

ilie

"To·"'

tide of his book, now available in
r,.-erenn ial ~
owl has never
hiSIIcnseof

Nat Hen.t off
. .
wonder and IIIJer 11 how we abandon vast numben of schoelchlldren, many of whom !l'ill.n~ver
knOVf what ther, could have
bec:ome. T~ey Will never know .
theu ~ntial ~~they ha~e ·
been ""'"'•ted 11 if ~y were m.
an~, very impoverished c.ountry.
·
.
: ·
.These brutal line!! ue d!awn m&lt;»

th1s country not only by race but .
als~ by cl,ass. I have s~n poor
while ldds lD the Appllachilnl who
also will never know how smart
lhey are.
.
Kozol shows the -foundation of

lhese inequalities in this way: Tile

lhe initial funds for lhe operations
stale commands that·~'"''"' be_.._
""m·- o f t he pu bl'IC sc hooI s. " I n a
pulsory education. But !Ill across wealthy district', those fundslhe nallOII, there iS4ll_Cqual funding because -of lhe greater value of the
for tiiC public schOOls. Therefore. homes and ~usin~s- are much
lhe slate is responsible for compul- . higher.
sory inequality ~is at the core of
But what about lhe SllllPlemencompuilory education.
.
tal money from the individual ·
W)ly Is this so in a land where · states? From ~· source, .lhe gheno
the Fourteenth Amendment guaran- schools - wh!te and black.- get
tees "equal protection" of every enough fundt~.&amp; t,o 11rovtde: as
one of us under lhc laws? Unlike Kozol notes, a m1mmum OJ
other Western ~tries tbat ,equal- . baSic education, but not _an ed~ly finance pubbc schools throuah- ti!l" _on ~ level found m lhe nch
out the nation out of central rev· districts.
enuea, we base the funding of
· This means that.~very chll~ .i.n
!!thools on local JlfllPMY taxes the s~~te gets an equal mm•suppl~ented '!De9-~Y by funds mum, bill some get much more,
5upplied by the indi~UII aares.
Very much JI!O!Il· You ~ rell for
-As Kozol. notes 10 "Savage younelf. Visll a ·schoolm whllt is
Inequalities,'' ••A local tax ~ euphemistically called ·~the inner
the value of the homes and bust- city,'' ~ !hen contrast it with a
nesses wilhin a given ~strict raises school m lhe suburbs. This countrv

lunch beCause they had to pull out
the tables to get everyone .into the
largest ballroom in lhe nation's
capital.
"'The single best day of fundraising we have had was the Mon'
day after the GOP convention,''
says Emanuel. "We opened our
mailbox and it coniained almost $1
million, almost all of it in donations of less than $100.''
One effect of the GOP fundraising difficulties is that time formerly spent on lhe stump now has
to be spent raising funds. In early
September, Bush had to schedule a
fund-raising breakfast, lunch or
dinner 115 part of almost every campaign day. This level of personal
involvement in fund-raising may
have to continue fo~ lhe president
through mid-October.
.How POlitical do things get during lhe !mal monlhs of an election
year?
.
How about this: The Justice
Department reeendy tried to back
out of a settlement because the
olher·side was bragging about a
"victory," and this was upsetting
special interests with high-level
GOP ties.
Fourteen years ago, lawyers representinjl people accused of being
illegal •mmigrants filed a class
action lawsuit against lhe federal
government alleging that detainees
•were being den~d their legal
rights. For ·more than a decade lhe
J!-!Stice Department and immigrant
nghts group$ battled over lhe issue.

MICH .

. -

I Toledol68" I

his generation, J\is class and his
nation when he volunteered for
World Warn. When five out ol us
six roommates went into the service after eoDege in 1957, we were
as one wilh out time. And when
BiD Ointon, Dan Quayle and Dick
Clleney, slipped of£ lhe hook when
their numbers came ·up, lhey IYere
as one wilh hundreds of thousands
of their generation . .
The problem, however, is that
millionS more served in the war, or
a! least in lhe military._They_ went
either because they bebeved it was
tlieir duty or because they d_idn 't
have the luxury of academ1c or
olher deferments. In the wake of
the .Arilerican failure; those who
served . were understandably
inclined to put part of the blame on
ll)ose who, safely behind the li~.
w~e so self-rig~reopsly ardent in
lhell' eondemnauon of lhe war and
lhe American warriors.
.
The nation a~ a whole; whtch
. had turned against the ~ar for a
complex set of reasons long before
it ended, wa'S nonetlleless shellshocked by the,~feat. The "Vietnam Syndrome becan:'e lhe !JI~l
for supposedly defeaust pohc1es
abroad and loss of confidence at
home. National election~ were
fo~ght and won on the prom~ that
V1etnam would be put behmd us
or, conversely, overcome. ·
.. Neither has yet to happen. The .
lost wai still infects many of us.
Some cannot forgive lhe anti-war
activisiS, like Clinton. Some, me
included, will not forgive those like ·
Henry Kissinger and Richard
Nixon who, we believe, needlessly
prolonged lhe bUtchery for reasons
of geopolitical mumbo-jumbo and
political face.
And yet, this election could -·
finally t,alce us over the hurdle. If
so, it will not be maturity that prevails so much as time. Hencefonh,
the candidates from whom we
choose wiD almost certailily come
from lhe Vietnam War generation.
It is hard to believe that they,
ambivalent for so long about the
event that' forever altere(!; their
lives, will be much interested in
prolonging its effeciS. Exhau.stion
may fi~ally Fesolve what political
debate nevl!r could.
Hodding. Carter III, former
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, (eli·
tor and publisher, iS president or
MainS!~, a Washington, D.C.· .
based television producJion com·
pany and a synd•cated writer for
Newspaper Enterprise· Association ..

Finally, under the supervision of a
Los Angeles-based federal judge,
William Byrne, a settlement was
worked out
Under iiS tenns, people detained
will be told they have a right to
confer wilh an attorney before ·any
administrative proceedings 'can
proceed, and they will be given a
written copy of any charges
broughi against !hem.
After the agreement was
reached, Justice Department
l~w_yers tried to downplay its signtfJcance. But spokesmen for
immigration rights groups were
quoted in various national news
stories calling the· agreement _
"ground breaking," "historic"
and a ''landmark . ' ~
So Justiee Department lawyers
filed an extraordinary motion seeking to abrogate the settlement on:
lhe grounds Jhat the other side wasI .
misrepresenting it to the -press, Bull
Judge Byrne spentliule time beforeI
he threw outlhe motion..
J
He noted that press coverage! ·
had nothing to do with the sub-f
stance of lhe seulemenl •~Whethe~
it's called a landmarlc or insignificant, the terms remain the same,
right?" Judge Byrne snapped at a
government lawy. er. When. th~
answer C8J11e back yes, Byrne dis .
missed the' motion and approve
lhe settlement
Robert Wagman Is a syndical+
ed Writer for NeWspaper Enterp~­
srise Association.

~~tal~~;~~~:f:rt::~~
~~c~~ldre!\:Sa~dJuhtice~ewis
.
·ng
'or
young
·and
poor
we
,
wntmg
or
t
e
maJOrity;
Schooll

......

IMansfield ls!r I•
IND.

j

(

•

'.

WASHINGTON (AP) .- The
House today_barely ,approved a
catchall tax. b1ll· whose _future was
clouded by a Senate fill~ thatalso ~ned plans to Mg ~wn
tbe clirtam .on the contentious
102nd Congress. ·
. ·.
In fact, opponents promiSed
lhey would try to talk to death lhe

W. VA.
KY.

.

.

·.

·

·

4,@,~~"'~ ~ •
shoWer. r : -

Ran

Flum.. · SnqW

Ice

sunny

in 1963; r~cord low was 30 in · nesota and Wyoming. Predawn 40s in Maine, Montana and
1980. ·
tel!lperatures ranged from the 30s Wyoming; SOs in the Northeast,'
Sunrise Wednesday will be at to lhe high 40s.
.
norlhem Appalachians, nonhero·
7:34; sunset at 7:04.
Cold was fmecast for lhe Pacific Plains and Rockies; 60s from .the
Nonhwest, with snow possible in mid-Atlantic states throuah the
Around the nation
. soulhero Montaria, lhe mountains Great Lakes to lhe central Rockies
A lingering storm system left of Wyoming and pans of Colorado, ·and northern Pacific coaSt; 70s In
wind and heavy surf along Ole mid- Nebraska and South Dakota.
lhe South, Mississippi Valley and ,
Atlantic coast, and clouds hung
On lhe east coast, clOuds were soulhem Rockies; 80s in Florida,·
early today over lhe northern Mid- scattered from Florida to North Texas and California; and 90s in.
west and Great Plains.
Carolina, where wind continued to lhe southwestern deserts.
'
The day .begalt with cold and kick up the surf. Cold weather was
The higl) temperature for the
cloudy weather in much of the forecast.
·
·
nation Monday was 101 degrees at
DakOias, Nebraska, Montana. MinHighs today were forecast in lhe Palm Springs, Calif.

Pte~

o_nly thr~e fll&amp;jor bills awaiting worlced through the night, clearing
fmal act10n m lhe Senate -an away a pile of biDs after voting for
~nergy bill and a package of West- the fnt time to override a veto by
em water projects in addition to the President Bush. By votes or 74-25
$27 billion tax measure. Republi- in lhe Senate and 308-114 in lhe
can leaders predicted that if lhe tax · House, lhey enacted a cable-lelevibiD l_llade its way through lhe mud- sion regulation bill that Bush had
die, 1l would be vetoed.
,
rejected,
Both the House and Senate
After approving lhe,tax bill on a
·

208-202 vote, the HouSe moved:·
ahead wilh plaits to adjourn for the:
year by midday. The Seriate facet!
the pOssibility of having to return
Thursclay, following !he Yom .l'ippur holy day to complete the three
biDs.
'
·
·
Even before the Semite got lhe·
tax bill, Sen. Alfonse D' Amato, R.:
N,Y., had begun a talkalhon 19 pr0-

• ·· ~remeans pledg~s to cosponsor capital =~~rf:1U!:~~~b.:~
Ck&gt;udy

C1982 Ac:cu-W..Ihor,ln&lt;.

zmprovements bzll for local schools

·

~h~:':!:: ::~u:Sc!"l!~~1C::8

'
its Cortland, N.y., _plant. SmithFrank Cremeans, candidate for Capital Improvements Initiative, if less than 15% of the stale's bienni- Corona says it is bemg forced out
. ,
the 94th House District, .has passed, would make great strides a1 budget for replacement or signif· by unfair competition from foreign·
.
Thursclay,
fair.
Lows
in
the
40s
endorsed
a proposal initiated by a towards enaj)ling our local schools icant renovation of local elemen- owned firms that assemble in lhis
South-Central Ohio
·""'
highs
id
u...
1o
70s
fellow
House
candidate to replace to face structural repair projects. "
tary or secondary schools.
try type ·r.ers made from ror
Tonight, clear wilh. a chance of "'"'
m
""""to
wer
·
.
the
aalng
infrastructure
of
Ohio's
House
Bill
832
has
resulted
Under
the
plan,
school
districiS
coun
Friday, a chance of.showers.
o•
f
·
·
h
eign pariS. wn
frost. Low 3S to 40. Light soulh
rom an initiative promoted by a · would apply for funding t rough
"" If you lhink I'm going to roD·
winds. Wedn~y. mostly sunny Lows in lhe 40s and highs in the schools. .
60s.
.
"This
initiative
would
provide
House
candidate
in
the
90111
Dislhe
Iiepanment
of
Education.
Proover
on this, you're wrong,"
with a high 65 to 70.
.
Saturday,
fair
Jllld
cooler.
Lows
decent,
substantial,
and
preilictable
trict
lntnxluced
last
monlh,
lhe
bill
jects
would
be
awarded
on
a
.
D'
Amato
said at the start of a·
1
Extended forecast:
35 to 45. Hi~~:hs 55 to 65. .
funding for Ohio'.s school's, said has bipartisim support, including 15 matching grant basis.
.night-long speech.
Cremeans. "It is time for lhe state cosponsors . The Ohio Schools
''The beauty of this initiative is
The energy bill, which would
to address the needs of our school ' Capital Improvements Initiative that it will not increase anyone's set new conservation standards for
· ·
.
.
cbildrell. first" Tlie Ohio Schools would earmark an amount or no taxes," said Cremeans. " It will light bulbs and electric products
law,
Bertha
and
Don
Gibson,
guaran1ee growlh in state support and facilitate construction of nudeMaxwell G. Barnes
Athens; a sister, Elsie Barnhart;
to our schools. It will bring $50.to ar power plants, is under atllK:lo
"'
db ury; a b rot her, L awrence
$75h million
f•nm
Nevada lawmakers. DemoDr&amp;
1 d' tr'in state hfunds
1 to oqr
th
~
'nton
.
Maxwell G· Barnes• 72• V1
•
Douglas Pomeroy· two grandchilsc oo •s •c 1s 1o e P pay e cratic Sens . . Harry Reid a~d.
di~ Monday, Oct S, 1992, at his dren,
Gibson; Frederick, Md.,
cosiS of rebuilding local schools, Richard Bryan of Nevada have
~s•dence,
· .
lind Gay Lynne Gibson, Athens;
and it relieves lhe property·taxpay- promised to go aU-out to block lhe
. He was ~x?m July 6, 1920, m and one great-grandchild, George
..
er from paying lhe entire ·bill for bill unless it is stripped of a provi-·
Lnc~field, Mich., lhe son of. Mar- Gibson, Frederick, Md
our schools."
sion lhey say would weaken heallh
guente Werner Barnes, Litchfield,
Besides his parents he was preState Representadve Marte Mal- credits to spur export trade and
"Every two years, when it is standaids for a nuclear-waste dump
and lhe late Clare Barnes. He was a ceded in death by an infant son, one (D-Soulh Point) has praised the industry research and development time to get re-elected, lhe career 100 miles northeast of Las Vegas. ,
U.S. Army veteran of World Will Robert Dale Douglas; two brolhera, recent passage of a package of jobs
"This kind of legislation is politicians talk about the need for
And the water bill, which lhe
II
Cl
~h Dou las 1111d
bills in the Ohio General Assem- designed to boost economic devel- improved funding for our schools. House passed by voice VOle, was
· In addition to his mother, be is 51· arenceHazelandH.of
g ;
a . ·.bly, pledging to continue lhe fig· ht opme'nt in areas such as Sonlheast- Yet, these same legislators have threatened by opposition from ·Sen:
survived by his wife, Thelma
~rvices will~Friday at 11 for more lad better jobs if re-elect· ern Ohio, as well as create badly spent millions on a marble state John Seymour, R-Calif. The bitt
Woodruff Barnes, whom he f!lar- a.m. at Ewing .Funeral Home 'with ed. ·
needed jobs. It wiD indeed revital· offiCe tower, a private gym for leg- authorizes numerous water projeciS
n~d Dec. 12, 1941, m Albton, Rev. Roland Wildman officiating.
"The passage of the jolis bills ize communities all over Ohio," islators, and an unbelievable $88 in 17 w~tern states but is anathe-Mich
· 11
• ells Cern
sends out a strong message to the Malone added.
million on a Statehouse expansion rna to California farm interests
AI'so surviving are: a son, Jerry Buria! w 1be 10 W .
~people of .Ohio thllt. this General
"These measures will help deal project. " This initiative demon- because it would divert scarce Cen(Connie) Barnes, Gallipolis; a
Fnends may call at the uneral Assembly is in tune with their wilh bolh lhe shon and long tenn strates why we so desperately need tra1 Valley Project water to munici.daughter, Shirley (John) ~mith, Rio ~ ;r!'~lo: ~JJ'uf"~tions needa and addresses those needs." economic problems that face Ohio. a change in Columbus. It's time for pal-and conservation uses.
Grande; three gfll!'dchtldren and· may be made to lhe Pomeroy Nun- Malone said. . . ·
However, more must done ifJ)hio fresh ideas and ne-.y thinkiCre'ng about
The embauled ~ bill began as
three great-p-andchJidren.
·
· d R h b1T · c
The legislature passed a three- is to beatlhe competition for jObs," our old problems," said
means. Bush's "enlerprise zone'' plan for.
In addiuon, he"is survived by ~ F~ JtatJon enter bill package, Key features· of lhe he said.
"Actions speak louder than improving inner cities and blighted
two brothers, John Barnes of Litchpackage would:
.
According to Malone, the fol- words. If elected to lhe legislature, rural .areas in the wake of lhe Los
field an~ Jesse Barnes of St. Gloria Ible
- Speed up the eltpenditure of lowing steps are among lhose lhat I would ,cosponsor this bill. It's Angel~ riots last April. LawmakJoseph Mich.
Issue 2 public works projects should be taken:
obvious that lhe legislature needs a ers added many projects of tbelr
He ~as preceded in death by
Gloria (~y~lle) Ihle, 64, of lhroughout lhe.state. The projects
- Improved fu~ding for job major priority adjustment. and I own- and lhree dozen targeted
one sister.
.· Pomeroy• dted Mon.day' Oct. S, . are expected to create up to 15,000 training and re-training programs;
can help make those changes, if tax increases .worth $27 billion
He wu retired from Columbus l992, atlhe home of her nephew, jobs stalewide.
_
• Stepped up technical assis- elected m November."
ov.erlive years to pay lor lhein.
Southern Power Com_pany after Frank~. Pomeroy, following an . - Provide a tax credit to busi- tance to struggling businesses;
serving 33 years as a lineman. He extended illncss. ., ·
. .
nesses which create new jobs. This
- Better conditions bet~een job I I •
was also a memberoflhe following
Bor~ on Sept. lO, 1928 m measure is designed to stimulale training and re-training programs J.Y.I.
organizations: Trinity United Frankhn CountL, she wl!-s the . job growth for ex.istina Ohio busi- and the needs of business;
Methodist Church; the Vinton daughter of the ate ~t.n, and nesses as well as induce businesses
·- Less governmeill regulation
Dance planned
.
ly. Rev. Chester Lemley, Ed MinAmerican Legion Post' 1116I· mem- Charlolte ~tty. Sh4? was 1 ~~ to locate in Ohio.
•
and more growth inceQtives for
There will be a dance at lhe Rut- gus, Roger Kennedy and Dennis
her and past member of the Vinton of the Racme Umted MethodiSt
- Provide tax exemptions and business.
land American Legion Hall Satur- Faught are lhe speakers. Everyone
· Masonic Lodge 131; Aladdin Tern- Chureh. ,
.
day from 8 p.m. to midnight Music invited.
.
pie, Columbus; Ancient Accepted
. She IS surv1ved by sev~ral
·
·
·
Hymnsing
wiU
be
by
White's
Hill
Band.
Pub---=c...:o:::n•:::in::.ue:::d...:rro:..::.::m:.!p...:ag:::e...:t_ _ _ __
Scottish Rile, Valley of Columbus nte~es, nephews and cousms.
lic inyited.
Faith Full Gospel Church in
and ·the Gallipolis Shrine Club; Bes1de~ her parents she was preBazaar and luncbeon
Long Bottom will hold a special
Councilman Bill Young sugmember and past patton of the Yin~ ceded 1n de~th by her husband, improve lighting outpuL ·
A bazaar and luncheon will be hymn sing Friday featuiing tlie
The conversion, according to gested that a parte and ride area be held Friday and Saturda)' at Trinity Brady Family from Parkersburg,
o E s 375: th · H nt'ngton
Chari~ lhle, m 1984.
1
Carmichael,
will give the village developed between lhe junior high Chureh in Pomeroy dunng, lhe Big W.Va.- Pastor Steve Reed invites
g&gt;:!n~ :i7i · the' Ohlo s~1e HighGnveside Services will be held
way Patrol Auxiliary, Gallia Coun- at II a.m. Wednesday at the Lelart twice the lighting output at an building and the First Baptist Bend Sternwheel Festival. A large lhe public. Fellowship will follow.
ty, and a retired employee of the . Falls Ce.metery: 'flle Rev. ~oger increase of $64.70 on lhe village's Church. No action was taken.
HCHDecoming
:
assorunent of crafiS will be availCouncilman John Blaettnar able as. well as homemade breads,
V'nton Village Water-Department Grace :will officllte. There wtll be monlhly bill.
.Carleton Church, Kingsbury
l'!lp&lt;xt.ed on a Fire Supression Rat- cookies and candy. For the lun- Road, will hold homecoming Sun' .
fi departme
· no calling !Joun. Amnaements are
Oth~r business ·
and villl!"teer !Ill
nt
undu lhe direction of F'Jsher Funering
seminar that he auended. He cheon, chicken and homemade day with Sunday School at 9:30
Council
member
Betty
Baronick
Semces will be held 11 a.m ., a1 H
· Middl""""'
reported
that ihe book: used in the noodles, sloppy.joes, hot dogs, hot a.m. , worship at 10:30 a.m. and
registered
a
complaint
regarding
Wednesday, at lhe McCoy-Moore
. orne m
......-~ .
program
was
donate~) by Downingbarking dogs in the area of Butterchicken sandwich, ham salad, cole basket dinner at noon. Afternoon
Funeral Home, Vinto.n, _with th_e Lillie M. Stewart
Cbilds-Mullen-Musser
Insurance of slaw, potato salad, baked beans, servic~ are at 1:30 p.m. with spe.:
nut Avenue aDd Mechanic Street
Rev. C.J. Lemley ofliclllbng. BunPomeroy.
pie, cake and beverages will be cia! singing by Jan and Kathy. Rev.
a! will be in lhe Vinton Memorial
Lillie M. S1ewart, 74, 60 NeighCouncil also:
serVed from II a.m. to 6 p.m. each Clyde Henderson invites lhe pubParle. Military grav~ide rites will borhood Rd., Gallipolis, died Tues- Aulhorized use .o f the ~arlcing day.
lic.
·
conducted by the Vinton American day, OcL 6, 1992, at Holzer Medilot
for
an
Oldies
but
Goodtes
Car
Revival
Legion Post 161.
cal Center.
Show on October 31, upon lhe rec•
Revival at Sal~ Center United
Friends may call at the funeral
She was a hornelilakcr.
Am
Ele
Power
...................
.32
1(1.
ommendation
of
Councilman
Scott
Melhodist
Church will be Oct 19home Tuesday from 3-5 p.m. and
She was born Aug. 23, 1918 in
Ashland
Oi1
.............
:
..........
24
5/8
Dillon;
23
at
7
p.m.
Special singing night7-9 p.m. Masonic services will be Gallipolis, daughter of tlfe late
AT&amp;T
.........
,
.......................
416/8
Allllroved
lhe
Mayor's
Report
conducted 8:45 p.m. Tuesday at the Rura and Lottie While Blazer.
Bank One...........................44 1/8
of fmes collected in the amount of
Vinton Masonic Lodge 131.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Survivors include one son, Elmo
$6,i90;
.
Bob
Evans
..............
...........
18
1/4
Pallbearers will be Ralph Srewan of Gallipolis; one brother,
Monday
night's Ohio Lottery
Channing Shop..................31 3/8
• Granted free parkingfor SaturMitchell., Jack Simms, Bob Arm- Walter Blazer ol Tampa, Fill.; ~
selections:
City Holding ......................17 3/4
day in conjunction with the Big HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
sttong, Harold Werry. t\ndy Lem- grandchildren, William Stewart Jr.,
Pick 3 Numbers
Federal
Mogul...
................
.l5
7/8
Bend Stem wheel Festival;
ley and Bill Kuhn.
Discharges,
Oct
5
Mrs.
John5-7-0
of South Bend, Ind., Bruce A.
Goodyear T&amp;R ... :..............60 3/8
.. Authorized Video Touch to ny Ellis and son, Betty Johnson,
(five,seven,zenY)
Stewan of Indianapolis, Ind., and
Key Centurion ...................20 1/8
collect
parlril)g
tickets
at
the
rate
of
Lindy
Jones,
Mrs.
Michael'
Nance
·
Pick
4 Numbers
Murl Douglas
Brian Stewart of Gallipolis; and
Lands End.... ......................27
25 cents per ticket.
·
and
son,
Lloyd
Perry,
and
Mrs.
3-4-9-3
Murl L. "Bud" •Douglas, 89, two great-grandchildren, .Zachariah
Limited Inc....................... 21 3/8
Irvin Saunders, and son.
(lhree, four, nine, three)
Route 4, HarrisonviUe (Pomeroy), and Jackie Slewari.
.
Multimedia Inc..................24 7/8
Public Notice
diet! Monday, Oct 5, 1992 a~ _the
She was preceded in death by
Rax Reslaurant ................... 5/32
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabdtta- her husband, Elmo Stewart in
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Reliance Electric................ I6 7/8
The Daily Sentinel
TAX LEVY II EXCESS OF
1989;
and
one
brother,
Floyd
F.
tion Center.
. .
.
Robbins&amp;,Myera ................ 13 3/4
11-IE'.
TEN
11LL
UIIITAliON
(U8P81la..G)
Born Feb. 11, 1903 m Metgs Blaur.
·
Shoney's Inc...................... 16 3/4
NOnCE II 1\fieby ·glVM
Veterans MeiiiOrial
Published
enry af\llrn,oon , Monday
County, he was a son of ·the late
Services will be h!:ld 1 p.m.
Star Bank ...........................30 3/4
th•t In purau•nc• ol •
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
lln-oa8h Friclo)l tit c-t St., Pvoi.loy,
Harry and Ella Cuckler Douglas. Thursclay at Willis Funeral Home,
Wendy Int'l........................ ll 3/4
R•ooluUon of th• VI. . .
Ohio by Ill• Ohio Valley Publ1ohloc
None.
He worked for lhe Meigs County wilh lhe Rev.Jack Finnicum offiCi·
Company/Multimedia lac., Pomeroy,
Council ol the VIIIIJIII ol
WQnhington Ind. ...............19 ·
MONDAY DISCHARGES - . Ohio 45769, Pit. 992-21116. S..O..d clue
ating, Burial will be in Rife CemeR•cln•, R•cln•, Ohio,
Stock reports are the 10:30
Highway Depai'II!ICnt. 'ved b ·h'
po1tap ptid at PGcueroy, Ohio.
None.
.
puoMI on lh• eth dey of
Mr. DougW IS Survt
y IS tery .
.
a:m. quotes provided by Blunt,
wife, Margaret Williams Douglas,
July, 11111 - · wll be tultMember: 'nle Afoociated Prua, and lhe
Friends may call at the funeral
Ellis and Loewi Of GaUipolis•. ..
mlu.cl to • voto ot IM.,..,_
Ohio Nen,.pe:r A.odati011, National
Pomeroy; a daught~r and son-m- home on Wednesday from 6-9 P·'!l·
Adnrtilin1 RepreHnt.atiYe 1 Branham
PI• of ellid eubdlvl- 111 .1

ViiiA.-torJPiw•GtaplicfNel ·

. Weather

Area deaths
M8rt

.·

By Tbe -'-'elated Prea · .
Tonight will be clear and chilly
with lows of 35 to 40.· The best
· chance for frost will be over th~
eastern counties.
More sunshine Wednesday with
highs of 65 to 70.
A •!ow movin~ cold ~~ over
lhe plains swes will move mto the
Midwest Wednesday nisht and
Ohio Friday and cabac a chance of
showers. Temperatures will turn
cooler for lh_e ~ .
·Record high for lh,. dale .,,.. 116

·House approves. tax bill, -lawmakers eye. adjournment

• lco1umbu~lsgo l

M·alone comments on
• b S pack age
recent JO

ezgs annOUnCementS

Pomeroy...

1

Stocks

Lottery numbers

Hospital news

Hospital news

.,.
1

'
~
"Education,' of course, IS not
citizens.
·
There was a case before lhe U.S. protection
among the under
rights our
af£orded
federalexplicit
Con~
. Supreme Court filed in 1968 by stitution;"
.
'.
Demetrio Rodriguez of San Anto' Justice Thurgood Marshall and •
nio, whose children were going to a other dissenters found that diserimschool where lhere were hardly any inw.ion against poor chikben in the.
basic supplies, the building was way schools are funded is indeed "
· falliog aiJart, and nearly half lhe violation of lhe "equal prcleCtion"
t~ch_ers were not certified. That clause.
.
dtstnct was abl~ to s~end, only · · State courts, however, are able
$231 fC?r each chdd w~J!e! 1n the _ unde'r state conatitutions _to
same clly, a wealthy dtstrtct w~s .bring an end to these , 'savag
able to spend•$543_on ~h pupil. inequalities. ·• The Texas Suprem~
There w~ even wider d.if£erenc~ Court has made a beainning, but .
elsewhere m TCl\IS.
.
· the leg· 1 1 e .- till
.
1
· Mr. Rodrj_guez ~ lhe co~ over ho~ ~u~~ !ct,K';:nseq~ •
to_ ~ that all. 1,000 school dis- for the poor. Elsewhere in the
tncts m T~ be funded e;qually. • • nation,:property taxes still deter'- :
. In_1973, m S_an Antonio School · mine 10 a large exrent, which ldds :
DIStriCt v. Rodriguez, the Supreme will rise and which will not. Whal
Court, by a 5•4 vote, told M~. would either GeO
B sll • Bill :
R~auez that tbe federal ~onsu- Clinton do about th:~? u or
tuuon had no _remedy for hun and ·
·
1

Easter,n part of state niay get some. frost tonight

· Aecu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high ~perarures

GOP fund-raising woes continue

0. or se.pa.rate a.nd unequal scho.ols
: · In the same state, in ihe same
·
. country,
I har,~__been in pu bl'1c
Schools lhat recalled photographs
of Southern shanty classrooms of
193os. The bUildings were nckety. the books were out of date, and ,.
the teachera were overwhelmed by
too•many children in each class.
In the same state, in the same
country, 1 hav~ been in public
Schools that are airy, with brightly
colored walls, relatively small
classes, and libraries with inviting
displays of new .books and maga. zlnes
·· ·
JOOathan Kozo~ a Cornier classroom reacher who has been writin~
for many yean about how scho!Jis
fail poor children, says tliat these
separate and unequal schools ate
·the cause of lhe "Savaie Inequali'
ties' • to which millions of Americap kidS .ue subjected. "I;Jlat's .the

OHIO Weath er
Wednfsday, Oct. 7

Page-2...:.Th!' ·Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, October 6, 1992

q

The Dally Senunei-Paqe

Local.briefs-~,
PA. Denny schedule announced
Boarding for lhe P.A. Denny Cruise on Thursclay, sponsored by
lhe Meigs County Chamber of Commerce. will begin 11 7:30p.m.
Departure is planned for 8 p.m. The CrossOver Band will be per' fonning.
.
.
According to lhe chamber, dress is ~ual. biit t!Jdse attending
should dress warmly.
· · · ·
· '·

EMS units answer calls
Meigs Emergency Services units answered three calls for assistance on Monday. ·
·· ;
.
· .
.
· At 10:38 a.m., Rutland unit went to Colfege· Avenue and took
Kennelh Zuspan to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At S:)3 p.m., Middleport squad went to South Second Avenue
'for Morris Neutzling. He was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At
6:37 p.m., Tuppers Plains squad ~ent to Saunders Road. Grace
Smith was taken to St. Joseph Hosp•tal. . ·· · ..
.

PubliC Notice
ELECllON

LEGAL NOTICE
Th• Ohio Soli and W- .

Conaorv•Uon Comml•llon
will uuo• •n ....uon of
IUpUVIIOii of th• Illig•
Soli 111d W•t•r CopauVItlon Dlatrlct lo be llekl ir,o

eccoriiance with Char.t•r

1515 of the Ohio Rev en
E........,
Sc'-1 on Oo!DW 20, 111112
~Ill Ruttend

at7:10f..m.
Nom n - ••: David E.
Gloeckn•r and John C.
Rln.
. Nomlnllllone will b•
· .....,IMI lrom the floor 11
th Um• of •l•tlon. On•

a.-111 Election to be llekl
In lh• Vlll~~g~ of AlaiiHI II

lh• regulor ..-.. ot voln9
th.rlin, on th• :ltd diiJ' of
NavMiber, let2, thti qu•tlon ol ._vying • tax, In

P81CI:

Da~ . , ..................................:.......26 Ceolo

eoohw..t.

No •abKription1 by mail permUted in: '

ar.t· when home carrier Hnice i1

otMn •t I :SO

llallld I CI'IIPUt••

· 1s

Byor. . ot.,....,.of

CouoiF

.

E!-84
.1&amp; •

w..u.......................:.................

ll8 w..u.........:........,..... ,....-...........

112 w..............................................

Election• of u.l• C.Unty,

. . o.tol4e..,C....IF

'I

.'IS· •

13W..U..................................,........ =40

.

'
lii!Woob..........................................
,•
112 w..u.............................,............ 40.

Henry L. Hlirltlf, Cl""'
.-

Allll D. Snllth, Dlnctor
o.lld 8eplllliMr 4, 18112
(10) •• 13, 20, 27, 4to

.
,·

-Mol.

&amp;Yailable.

oiNidct.r.

•

'

s..t ribi:a nol . . lo iiHi carrier may nmit in ad•ance dinct to The '
· o.tty Sentinel on a &amp;hioee. 1t1. or 12
month bMil. Credit wiU be &amp;tnn earrieT

o'clock A.M. 1ncl r•al!l
· ...,... unll 7:30 o'oiOct P.M.

HGurn lrom the eon..r·
Vllllon Dletrlct Oftlce. .
(I) 22; (10) l,o21c

POSTMASTER: s-1 addrou cha-·lo
The Daily Seatiul, 111 Coart .SL.,
l'rmaO)l OHio '-5'189.
.
,

One Year..........:........... .............--...183.20.
81NGLBCOPY

Th Poll• for uld

Ohio.

"

One Monlll......................................... $6.96 '

tor
-hone
. .f7)
llnof
VIIUitlon, folliw (I) yMrll.

. You ,.., vot. •t the •mual
-ling or on ••I ilbe......,
b•llot which m•y b•

Sal•, 733 Third Avenue.""

One W..t. ..............:...........................$1.60

··--...:::J"'
Election will

New~p•fe!

NewYOn,Newv..tlOOJ7.

8llii8CluPnON liAD8
11,- Curioror- lo•to

••-• of th• 111n mil lmllltlon, lor 1M IMn•lil of
Racine Vlllllgl lor II• purpoe•ofc.......t...,..-.
Saldtu being • r-11
ol an ....... tu ot 1.7 Mil
at a rate nol Ulllldlftl 1.7
mOl Jot - " - ·dollar of
vaiUitJon, Which - • to

IU.... &lt;l•or I• lo ... IIHied.

'

A THEATER
. ACHOICE!

,,

'

�.

•

'

•

1

Sports

Tuesday, October 6, 1992 ·

-

NLCS _ tabb~d

__,T he _Daily Sentinel
·

·'

·.

·

Tveaday, October 6, 1992

.

:Philadelphia beats Dall3s 31-7 _to stay among unb·e aten ranks
how Dallas traded Walker during tently tossed aside any revenge
lhe 1989 season to the Minnesota m~ve .
Vikings for five playtzS and eight
He said of lllc aborted end zone
draft choices. The Cowboys used spike: "Everything is son of sponWallccr's talent as bait to jtt~l start- taneous in fOOibalL.'
ed on a massive rebuilding proThe Ea_llles' defense held
gram.
Emmitt Snitth, die NFC'·s leading
Walker, a taci1urn type who rusher, to 67 yards ·.on 19 carries
rarely shows enKlliOn on or off lllc and hiiiT8$sed Aikman iniQ an ineffield, son of gave away his intense fective night. Ailcman compleled
feeling after scoring a third-periOd · 19' of 38 for 256 yards, niost or it
touchdown that gave the Eagles a when lllc game was olil of hand.
17-7 lead. He raised lllc ball above
"Right now I feel a lillie SOI'e,"
his head as if to spilcc it, then Aikman said. "Their defense gave
us a lol of fits, This is a tilugh Joss.
. s~abfuptJy:
·
· . 'This was just another fOOiball We have 10 gel over it and come
.
game,'' said Walker, who during back."
die week before the game consis. The Eagles came out ,of 1he

.

'

.

In the NFL.~ .
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

'TT"

--:
ht.
Miamio ........... - ..••.. A 0 cOUICD
Bulfdo ...................4 ·I Q .100
lndlanapoU. ..........% 2 0 .sao
N.Y. leU ............... I • 0 .200
New ......... .........0 4 0 .000
T...,

_,

1'1' PA

.....,

Ollkland at Toronto., ~ : 37 p.m., ~nee·

11117
Jol "

I
IWINICity ....... ...3 , 2
LA.!Wd&lt;n ......... I •
San J&gt;ie&amp;o ........,_ .. ,l 4
Seattlo ....... -...... -... 1 4

0
0
0
0
0

1!...-.-

'

L TN. I'I'PA
0 01.000 I 0'1 30
I 0 .750 " 19
2 o .sao 11 11
l 0 250 79 92
l 0 .250 61109

w........,.,. . . . . .

I.

,.

Pi 'xqh. .]ll;~.Allanll , .~ll .

C•lraiDI.I 0 .100
Tompo Bay ............3 .2 0 -~
C!Dap.................2 3 0 ...00
en- Boy .............2 3 0 ...00
DctroiL ....r·••"''"""'l 4 0 .200

"'""""""·--·-----·4

P dletaa, A.duu, lOS; Mc:Oriff, $u
· DioJO, 104: BoH1, PilUba.rah, 103;
Sboffi.td, Sd Dicao, 100; Ba,woll.
lloallaa. 96; D. llolliaa, Jllti' tlphz•. 93;
L Walker, Mc.troal, 93; Mum:y, New

IUTS-

129 91
liS 13
101131
74104
' 9$ '11

oa-.

NcwYmt,n.

Mm~li~s!Diqo,

35; Bon.k, ~ 30; _SIIdliel_d. ~on
Di'l•· 33: D: HolliDo, Pltilldclpltio, Zl;
Daulton. Philadelphia , 27:. Sahdbera,

Plti!ldolpbi1 31, Dallu 7

Nexl week's' a~mes

Cbf£t26;L Walker, Monttea1,23.
LEN BASES - .Oriaam. MOn-

If""·

Plti!ldelphl1 11ltoalu Osr.
PboaliJ. I&amp; Now YCil ~. p.m.
Piaabwp atQ.EVEI.AND, 1 p.m.
F
lp.a.
Seoaloot
1 ....
Buffalo " t.o. Aalc* JtUJcn. • p.m.
Houl&amp;on l l CJN(jNNAll. ... p.aL

=NMr.......

. aoo1. 71; DcShioldo. MClltaool. 46: Finley,
H--. &lt;1-4; RoboN. CINCINNATI, 44;
0 . Smith, SL Louil, 43; Lankford, St.
LoWs,of.!;Nix..__41; B-.Loo

-·1.

!&gt;ITCHING (II dcci'"""')- Tnb·

t.u.y, Sa. Lauio, 16-S, .762. 2.161 GloW...
Atluuo. 20-1, .71., 2.76; Loillnodo. At....._ IS-7, .612, 3.36&lt; M....,, CIW:ol"o
16-11, .661, 2..S.S; Cane. New Ytd., 13-7, "

NewYCitSCIIIath=espc,ti .4p.ra..

Lo. An~ Ramall New Orle&amp;ftl, ,
7,30p.m.

.650, 2.11;

OJII!N DATE: Ctiap, 0...0.. o.B•y, ~. SaaDiip, T~qM Bay.
Dan-a-,at

0'flltll'81

T - ...........W L PCI. WLT Pd.
MX~Upt ....... 1 o 1.000 3 o 1 1.ooo ,

0 1.000
MidUpn St. ..I 0 1.000
- . . . ......1 0 1.000

N - - .1
01Uo S1110 .....0
lllin&lt;U·.........o
lndlona .........o

_

CINCINNATI, 171; B-. S1• Di'l•·
. 169.
SAVES ~ Loe SnUih, Sa. Looio, •3:
M,_, s.,. Dicp, 31; W"""'nd. MooUeol, 37; D. I ..... H....,., 36; MK&lt;b
William•. Philadelphia, 29: Charlton,
CINCINNATI, 26; Dibble, CINCIN·

l 1 0 .750
I 3 0 .2SO
I l 0 250
1, 3 0 250

NAn,25.

01.000
I .000 3 I 0 .750
1 .ooo 2 2 o .sao
1 .000' 2 ·z o .sao

Jllrioo ..........O I .000
Jowa ....... - ......0 I .000

Amtri.,.D l.ugue

BATTING.- 'E. Mltlinu., Se~tlle,
.3-t~; l'udcCll, t.linnc.CII, .329; Thomu,

a.icop, .323: Moli10r, Mllwoultec, .3:10;
Mock,......_,, .315; Boap. CL£VELAND•.312; R. A)Gmu, T....nto. .310.
RUNS - Philll p1, Detroit, 1"14;
nomu, Chic~Jo, lOI; R. _Alomar.
Toroato, lOS; Kaoblluc:b, Miaaaota,
l04; P\Jctou, MiaDOIOU, 104; J..aifta,
Oboaoo.
102; - · - . 1 0 1.
lUll- fidde&lt;, Dctn&gt;i~ 12A; c......
Toroato, 119; n .... Chicaao. 11!5;
Bello, CLEVELAND, 112; G. Bell,
Ot.i.caao. 112; Puc.lr.eu, Minneaota. 110;
Jua\ Gonuler. Tcu.~.I09.
HITS -Puckett, Minncaota, 210;
Bacraa, CLEVELAND, lOS; Molitor,

I l 0 250

1 4 0 .200

Lui Satunla•'• scores
... ~.7

Michi&amp;u St. 4Z.IMiMI31
"'""""" 52, (owl 21

Nardi- 21,Ptorduol.

Wa.cc:min 20. OhioS~IC 16

's.tunlay'o games
Illinoil1t Ohio SLIIc

Indiana It NmhWIIIk:m
Wilcauin It Jow1

.

Midli&amp;an Statalt ~an
Mi.nn-* It _fUrduc

Mllwoube. 19S; Modt, ~ 119;
Tham.u,

'

'

c..r.

T Pd.

Kmt ........... l • 2
Ohio .......... .! 3
Tolodo ........o 2
E.MKII. ....Q 3

0 .33)
0 .250
0 .000
0

w

o....u

L T
] -2 0
]
I 0
3 I I

0 1.000
0 .750
0 .750

0 .667
0 .667
0 300

]

2

2

.oro

2 0
3 0
2 I

I
I

•

2
0

2 0
5 0

4

Q.,EVELAND, I ; R. Alomar, Toron10,. l;
tied. widl1.

s ...

0

HOME RUNS - Juan Gonzalez,
Tau, 43; MoOwUo. ~ 42; field35; Iloilo, cu:vEIAND, Jol:
Carter, TGIGIIta, 34; Doer, Detroit, 32;

0

... o..ao.

!rJ'OLEN BASES -

I

Bowlina a-. 17, C..&lt; Midli&amp;on 14
Miomi. Ohio 24, E. Micbipn 7
W. MidUpn 2l,Bal1Stl4

. . . _ Ookhod, . ,, lt.oin.., OUco.,t:~-:!

Na.-tGaftf'ftCt
CinciDMti 3 I , Kent 0

Bo!ri

. Ca!.t Mcbiaan It Miami. Ohio

l
I
'

••'·

•
~

l'
''•

"'"'I

.·

Baseball playoffs ·

...

" ,

, 11-S, .713, Ul; lad! Monia.

TOI'On\O., 16-!5, .162, 2.64; Bo.io, Mll•aa·
..., 16-6. .m, 3.62; MtOowell, ou..ao. 20-10, .667. 3.11; X. BI"'WD, Teu~,
21-11, .656, 3.32; Appiu,
Cioy.
IS-I, .652. 2.46.
S1lUUOUTS - R.I......, Sootdo,
2Al; Perez, N~w Yort. 211; CICIIDenl, ,
201; 1- Ouzmon, T.... , 179;
Mdl
0Pcqo,l71; ...,_, c.tir..,;.. 17•: It B.....,, Ta-. £73.

Akron at Kcn1

E. Michi&amp;m at Ball S"L
Ohio 11 llowlin&amp; Orom
W. Wic:hipD at Toledo

PITCHING(lldocio;....)-

T""""' 21-6.. na. 4.04: """ Guzmoa.

Saturday's ramH

•

Lo11oa. CLEVE-

LAND, 66; Liotodt.
54: An·
denoa, Balliraore. !53; Poloni1, California, !Jl; ll Aiomar, Taron~o, 49; R. Hen-

/Won ll, Ohio 0

I
.

Mil-

T...-, o.o..it, 32.

Lasl Saturday's scores

i

ClicaJO.. liS;

Matlinaly, New
Y""',IM; E. ......... Sable. II I.
DOUBLES - Thoma; CIW:op, 46;
E. Mudoa. Scoule.46; ~y. New
Y«&lt;t. 40: Y-. Klw"*-oe. 40; Oriftcy,
Seattle. 39; VIDDln. OUclp, ll; Puck·
... - - . . 3 8.
'l1tii'LES - L ' 1o1uuoa. 0Ucoao. 12;
o.--.,Bol......._li ; - B o lcimoae. 10: Ra.inOJ, Chictao, 9; Lof\an,

MAC standings
Tdlll - W L
BGSU ......... 2 0
Akml .........l I
W . Mid&gt; .... .l I
c. Mid&gt;......2 I
Boll St........2 I
MJam; ...:.... .l
I

Oai.::aao, 20..11,

STJUJ:EOUTS - Smoltz, Atlanta,
21!5: Cane. New Yart:, 214; OMaddu1,
OU.e~p. 199; S. Fern.ftdc:t. Ne-• Yodr:,
193; Dr•be.lr.. Piulbut~h. 171; Rijo,

Big Ten standings
Witconlin .~ ....l

OMaddux~

.64S, 2.11; It Hlll, - - . 16-9, .640,
2.61. '

9 p.m.

Coni'.

.'

D. S~. Aw..:;tl, 14;
f1nlcy, Houaton. 13; V1n$lylr.c, Pittl·
boqb, 12; Ali"", Sc LoWs. II; Buder,'
Loo Ao&amp;d-.11 : Monndjni.~1,
8; O f f - Loo ......... 8; 1loSIUcld.,

liuPI.J:.s'-

Mm...y'ssmre·

_,
w........,.,,

Atl,Jata, 199;

Pinsbuqh ,l99; Sandbers,
~.,,.j• Jl6;,0ra.::e, Chi..::aao, 115;
, SanDiqo, 184;Griaom, Mon·
aooi.I&amp;O: Finley,-. 171.
DOUBLES - VanSlyke, Piwbuf&amp;h,
4S; Lankford, SL Louis, 40; W. Cl1d.,
Sm Fnncilc:o, 40; Dwxan, Philadelphia,
40;
MCOIUOII. 39: - - · At-~. 39; Gnce, Chieaao. 37; Mumy,

Now Odeana ..........3 2 0 -~ 74 ll
Atllnla ...................2 3 0 ...00 991111
L.A. Rml&lt; .............2 3 0 ...00 7311Xl

SUodoy
Alluu 1t Miami. I p.m.

Poadlcl~.

V~Slyb,

w-..s... Fnndloo ........4 I 0 .lao 136 96

·'

.n.

National Ltque
.

T....~

Pitubur&amp;h (Dnbek U-11) at Allat!11.
(Smolu Js-12), 1'39p.m.

,.,

.

Phuburlh (Jacboa t-tl) at Atlanu
(AWilll · fl~ 3:07 P·""

-y

Atl..,.~(OJ..ripe 20-1) 11 Pitul-.uJh'
(Wikef'..Id 1-1~
pm.

,,3'1

Atlatl11. at Piaa' qk &amp;:n p.m•

,.. .,.,Od.u

A'Uan&amp;l at~. 1:37 p.m, it n11:&gt;

'•

l
~
~

"

,''
' ~
i

•'
'

i
~

""'11

n

WI
1

ICOUliaa. for one year, lluou&amp;h the

ond
19M

lal&lt;lll.

Nlllonl...._
.

CHICAOO CUBS1- Ruined Billy
Cannon, pit~~J..coach; Tom Trcbol·
b - ..._
. • Cluck Couior, thiN

· ball coach; ')oae Marlincz, fint buc
cooch; .... Billy Willionio, bittinJ mtaruc-

~~~nS::y1nij~b;~C:~~

N~od 8NU Pilchor auil\lat .uainor;
Gamu. Oicmoat ph)'llcal devclopmCill
coontinltor; OIMy Monzon direclor of
international tcoutiaa and •outheut
. "'i&lt;Uoupor"'ioar, J.od Prid1ey
Jcuo Fl0101
WCIItem refional acoulin' tuporvisor;

=

·tm·

0.. o...:..,. CCiltpl Nlional 'ICOIItin&amp;

..........,.l!ddlo

auperrilar. Billy 8Uac:r no:tbout
11-..,
Faod ..mn,

......

nol'lheut ICOUt; 111d Stfte Fllller

ate~

LOS ANGELES DODGERS -

COIIInCl

~·ruksco cnAt(1'S
or
31.
.

-An·
DCIIIII:IId ebB . . . . . . of Da.vo Nahab&amp;dian, diroctor
acoucin&amp;, e1fcictillc Dc.t:.

.

ON THE RUN - Philadelphia quarterback
Ralldall Cunningham (12) looks for a hole in tbe
Dallas ddeue to gala yarda1e duriag Moaday
.
.
'

night's NFC East battle in Phlladeljlbia, wbich
tbe~gteswon31-7.(AP)
·

, Buketball

N i l - BMIIodooll Afoodallao
CIUCAOO BULLS- SiJne&lt;1 t ...t

Tuclu&gt;r,...,..,IOI___ .

---

GOLDEN STATE WARRIORSSipod Stne Hc:n.on, auard,lo If one•

HOUSTON ROCKETS - Trodod

0.\'id Wood, forwu1. to tho Son """'"i•

~,.,.I 1!193 ................ dnllpck.
S;p.!TrooRom..;...-.
INDIANA PACERS - Slpod Molil&lt; ·
SNly, forwml. W&gt; 1 mWiiyur contract,
llld S.. a-., ICIIWU'd.
UI'AH JAZZ -Aped to tcnns with
laue Autin, ceal«, on a two-yeu con·

Incl.

FootbaU
Nl&amp;loool F - 1 Loo&amp;llf'
GREEN BAY PACICEit$- Waived
LowUIIilluJ&gt;o.- bodt.

JCANSAS CITY CIIII!I'S- Activ110d

. . -t

ileclr., fJan the p-ac.

NEW
PATRIOTS"""""""·
aoUDCOd the toripltion ol Pat H.nlon,
An·

EN&lt;JUNO

of (lllblioSTEELERS
""'"""'·
PITTSBURGH
Waived D•niek Owen., wide receiver.
Siped 'Yancey Thi~. •ide ret:oinr.
Wlived Mike Finn, dcl'a~~ive lineman,

.

ANDIDATE
.

.

lnm lhopnctioo11(111d.

Hockey
Nl-.lladtly .......
BOSTON BRUINS - Sisnc&lt;l Glen
w-.,, Mf....nm, lo. two-yur con-

.....

DI!I'ROIT RED WINGS - Sau Don

Mc:Swee, delon~Cm~n, to Sm. Dieto or
tbo-aul-0)' I.oque. .
LOS ANGEU!S KINGS - luGp!ad
Dave Tratowicz, defen&amp;eman; Mite
VU:cmic:b, ceoter, and D•vid Govctde,
ollio, 10 Pbooaia of ~o International

fiocby Loo- R....,.od Prod Bnlh·
w.U.. •Oilio; Cam Du.)'1ui., ten. win.J;

-

""'a.;,

w,... ............. -

junio&lt;

MINNESOTA NORTH STARSSlpOd Don Quim, n,hl wlna. .. I ....,.
)'•r con&amp;aCL Roclllod Bncl DC~. d~
!~ fmm ICaJamu.oo ~lhc,Inte:ma·

~ ~=="'

Smith,leA
tioool

. ....
10
. Denidt .
NEW YO K ISLANDERS - Re•itMd ltlfNOMD, ~.to a muJ.
tiyeu CGIIIncL Alliped ·o.we Chyzowa·
ki, Bnd DaJa.am~. Zip:und.Pallfy and
Scott Sciaaon11, fonnrdl, aild Wayne
McBean, J.rt Pinlo)' lrld Donnil V•lke,
dtliDMiftOII, to Capital Dillrict o'f the,
~-.,.

.......

~

T~e

I

Dai_ly Sentinel
.Will Publish·A
Special Supplement

Sportsmen fiu'nd conservation
tb.r00g
' h ' Se Jf.•liD
• pOSe
·
d· t.aXeS · .

''DECISION '9_2''
•

NEW YORK RANOERS- Aped to
IOnlll wilb AJeul Kcwde¥, riaht ~.
#!n'sBURGII PENGUINS.- S;p.l
Mario L.emicua., ceater, -to a aeva~·rau

-

Call Dave or P. J.
fGr More Information
'

'

992~2l5S

.

.

dy,Od.U

p•-a:»,.._il_

4

. Specibllntrotluctory
Offer!
•

'

...

· Smillt.
·
Turner, '-:indsey and Stephanie
. Thc-:ictoriespUttheRe&lt;lwomcn
The Redwomen 's only other McLaughlm each had two.
al 17-4 on 111c season aa lhil we&amp; ·
encoumer of las1 week was with . ·I.!' wha! Fie!~ termed a "super . began. They resume lhelr MOC
Mid-Ohio Conference opponent JOb on Lmdsey s part, die fresh- schedule, where they were 6-1,
Ohio Dominican, which fell in man from London, Ohio had five against Shawnee State tonight,
three to Rio Grande, 15-2, 15-11, serving aces, ~nd ~ith S~e~rs which is to be followed by a trip to
15-10.
racked up s1x digs aptcce.- Btlhna Cedarville -hurldar,. This Satur·
In lhe match played Sept 29, Cooper and Hambel each had four day, Rio (;rande will be at' Weat
Billina Cooper Jed wilh 16 kills digs, while Bill ina netted eighl Virginia Wesleyan, where it will
while Hambel netted 13 Kellina blocks, Smith five and Kellina meet the hosl school and Seton Hill
Cooper ~ad 12 Spears four and four.
ina triangular match.
'
•

Lemi·e·ux.si·gns seven year:
$42M cont raet. •th p enguin
•

DENVER NUGGETS - SiJnod
Llftauo ElliJ, forw1rd, lOa five-yeu

Tlhllm Lowi1.

~with three serving ~~s, while
Lindsey had five and Billina Cooper four.
.·
.
. The &lt;;on cord wm_~as accomph~hed m pan_ as Bdhna C~per
reco~ded 18 kills, Ham bel ntn~.
. Kelhna Cooper and Spears Sl,x
each, and Jo Chapman fo~. KeUina Cooper posted four servmg_ac_es,
wtth lwo each offered by Bdbna
Cooper, Spears and Li~dsey. BiUina Cooper had. five _d,_gs and her
SISter four, whtle Btlbna Cooper
recorded six blocks and Chapman
· three.
.
. .
. The champtonshi~ till !llw ~elbna Cooper lead wtth moe kills,
Billina Cooper and Ham bel had
five each, Chapman .four and
Spears three, In adcjition, Lindsey
netted folir serving aces, while
Smilh and Kellina Cooper each had
three. Billina Cooper led in digs
and blocks, posting five and six,
respectively. Kellina Cooper and
Spears each had three digs, and
Spears was credited with three
bl!Jeks.
Named to the All-Tournament
Team were th~ Cooper sisters and

By BEN WALKER
· derson tore up lhe playoffs and
''Riclcey had a-great series in
TORONTO (AP) - . r_o see Dave Stewart and Milce Moore 1989," Oakland manager Tony La
exaclly how much and how fas_t dominated 1he earthquake-lorn · Russa said. "If you look at all lhe
liaseball is changing, just look at World Series against lhe San Fran- great stpff we had going lhat seathe lineup~ for .Toronto and Oak- cisco Giants.
son, you can understand why we
land now and compare diem to .the
Stewan and Moore will pitch won." ·
Blue Jays and.Athletics thai mel in the first two games this year
Mike Bordiclc, Lance Blanlcenthe 1989 AL playoffs.
•
· against Toronto, bul Oalcland also ship, Scou Brosius, Jerry Browne
Only three yeats ago, Ibis was will bring a differenl team.
and Eric Fox all have played key
who started for Toronto in October:
Jose Canseco is out. Ruben Sier- parts.
.
Fred McGriff, George Bell, Tony ra is in righl field. ·
· •'They're not the same team, •'
Fernandez; Lloyd Moseby, Moolcie
Henderson's strut is slowed by Gaston said. "The pitchers may be
. Wilson, Lee MazziUi, Nelson Liri- bact spasms. Dave Henderson's older. They don't throw as hard as
·ano, Ernie Whitt and Kelly Gruber. smile is sagging because of ham- they did once. But !hey know how
. Only Gruber will be on the field siring problems.
to pill:h."
Wednesday night when Game 1
begins. The rest are long gone, out
· of Toronto or out qf the game, and
•
' ··
.
have been replaced by lhe result of
S
an aggressive strat(:gy of making
WI .
1rades, signing -free agents and
developing young players.
By KEN RAPPOPORT
to keeping a great learn in ~~~~-01her clubs have tried IO do
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Mario . burgh. and I wanl to be part of IL
· wha~ 1he Blue Jays have done. Lemieux gOIIhe deal of a lifttime
LernieW&lt; also thanlced his agent,
None have been more successful at on"Monday.
Tom Reich, for negotiating the
changing players wilhout changing
On LemieW&lt;'s 2711t birthday, lhe contraeL
' ·
lite winning results.
, Penguins announced that 1heir
"He's the besl agent in the
"This is a beiiCr team than we megastar cenler had signed a world," Lemieux said. "He's
had back ihen," manager &lt;;:ito Gas- record seven-year contract..
proved ilto me in the last couple of ,.
ton said. "We cenainly have more
Although the Penguins would contraeiS."
'
JlQWer, and our pitching is beuer. not release 1erms of lhc contract
LernieW&lt; still had two years to
But, it's nOI al all the same team other than its ·Jenglh, Lemieux had go under hi~ old contract, which
we had."
said earlier that the deal was worth · paid him about $12 mllhon over
Jaclc· Morris will start die opener ·$42 million, nearly double what five years. Thai ranked him fourth
for Toronto and be followed by an)lone malces in the NHL.
in lllc NHLsalary scale.
.
David Cone; Gaston has nol
The Philadelphia Flyers' Eric
"Mario has been loyal IQ 1h1s
annOUI)CCII who will piiCh Game 3 LlndrOs signed a six-year, $21 mil- franchise;'' Penguins ~owner
in Oalcland, although it appears · lion deal earlier Ibis year.
Howard Baldwi11 said .in making
Juan Guzman has the edge.
The Penguins also had been the conttact announcement. "We
In 1989, when the Blue Jays expected to name their coach for would be remiss if we all.owed
were wiped oul in five games by lhe 1992-93 season on Mlinday, but Mario ID leave Piusburgh and talc:c
Rickey Henderson and the A's, the they deferred thai until Tuesday him away from Oil!' fans."
rotation was completely dirferenl. morning's skate. They have been
"If we didn't thiak it was a pruDave Stieb, now _injured, started wilhout a head coach smce negolia- dent investment. we wouldo 't have
1wice and was joined by Milce tiont between Scott~ Bowman and made il We expect to get a J'CiurR
Flanagan, Todd Stottle.;nyre and general manag~r Craig Patrick for our money.'·
Jimmy Key.
brolcedownoverthesummer
"My back: is in great shape,"
Even though Toronto is the only
"It was a great binhday pre- Lemieux said. "It has been in great
1eam in the majors with 10 straight sent." LC:mieux said 81 a news con- • shape all summer."
winning seasons, a slteak lh~t ference. "Ownership is dedicated
includes four AL Easl champ•onships in eight years, the Blue
jays have never advanced to the ··
.
·
World Series.
"People have labeled lis cholt·
ers and I know (the Milwaukee
d 'sed~ .·.L- be0efit
1 of game and
Brewers manager Phil) Gamer said
COLUMBUS, Ohi'o (AP) - ·
evt .or u"'.
a couple of times, 'Wc'll .gellhem, The assertion thai SJ!Ortsmen pay non-~e species.
·
. .
we know lheir reputation;' and Ibis . for conservation is right on large!.
Smce 193 7' Ducks Unlu~uted
and that," reliever Tom Henlce
Figur~s from the Na1ional has rmsed more !han $694. mt!U~
said. ·~Hey, we stayed focused and S~ Foundation shows thai $16 to purchase wetlands, largely 1.0
won
. the games.''
btllion bas been raised for conser- Canada where most North Amen·
can ducks and geese are hatched.
• 'This is my founh lime win- vatton.
. ·Compared wilh Ducks Unlimit·
ning the division," he said. "I manTyh. e sources of that Iota! are ed, the National Wild Turlcey Fedwant to go to lllc next step.':
.
cration is a newcomer. But its
The currenl Toronlo players
- $323 million annually from fund-raising projecls hal{e conhave combined for 43 appearances the sale of state hunting licenses
tr"buted nearly 512 million since
in 111c playoffs, but have won only
- $200 million from excise 1977.
five pennanls and three World taxes on fishing taclcle
.
.
Turkey fedl)ration money goes
Series. Morris has been on 1wo
- $100 million from excise · toward relocating wild turkeys in
~~~ :::di~':Octo~r ~na~ :~~~on sporting arms and ammu- unoccupied suitable habitat,
Alfredo Griffin was on one, .
- .$40 million from excise research ana pro~ects undc~en
' t'
ha
taled tax s hand
with pubhc and pnvate age,nctes.
Oakland s· p ayers . ve to
e on
~
.
The lurkey lale is a success
55 appearan~ in the playoffs and'' -:- SIS IJillhonJrom CXCI~e story wlthOuiJ~arallel. U~c~
advanced .42 .limes. The resull has . taxes on·archery equ~ent
_· hunting hall Wiped out die bitd m
2
been 16 World Series rings. .
· - $l milliOI! ro1_11. sales .o f much of its native·range in the
"They have experie11ce," federal waterfowl hunung stamps early l900s.
.
Toronlo"s Dave Winfield· said. (theduclcs:;g)
2 ~s_._~ticmapoteg:utiton'hael
"They've done these things
Thai'S $6 million a year the
~y ,l9Sild'
before."
.' .
·
states llld fedenl governmenl can Jlauon s w JUu,
The A's also have somelltingto use ,10 ~y 1811!1 for wildlife, pay for {ewer dian 100•
go biers and
prove. They're still ·smarting from \'esearoh and educate hunters.
~s.
t
. ·
·
lhe period of 1988-90, when they
. This combi~tion of'taxes -.
Today, than ~ 10 aggress~ve
won lhree AL pennants but -won sportsmen lobbted for thcnl, one of · man.,emcnt thaltncl~de.s trad g,
just one World Series.
.
lhe rare instances when anyone . trappmg and transfcrn~g- turkeys,
The only time Oalcland made it asked to pay a tax - 1111d .stamp . ~ are more _
dtan 4 mtUion of the
'~ d&lt; My- 1989, ""'· . ooiOI tit&lt;~'' ·:""\ml&gt;- ..... d&lt; Um.. ,,_,
,

Nomod Jtouic Smith mloor I•J114 fiold
coordiniiOI',
MON11CEAL EXPOS - Enended lhe •.
mFelipe ·Aiou, manap:r, throuJh
the1994NEW YORK MilTS - El.m.od the
1993 oplioal in the COiltri.CII cl. Sid fer.
nlll.de&amp;, pilebet,' and Howard Johnaoa,
cwdi u • .
SAN llii!OO PADitES- Alllloootcod
. . , wauW not ,...lho caalnd. ~Rick

99
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"Thai's in lhe pas!,'' Bonds. We played down the stretch, we're righl, Mike LaValliere catchi.ng, relieves - all-time avealeadcr
said. "We don'llive in lllcpast." , ' ready for the playoffs. We've Orlando Merced at fii'St, Bonds and Jeff RCII'doa llld fu,...lliiiJ Mart
The Pirates If¢ lllc first team to played great, solid, consistent, Van Slyte - that was 70-34 Wohlers arc now the Brave1'
win three consecutive NL East sleady baseball the last nine against right-handed SlarterS.
closen- the Pilllel m• be wontides siocc Philadelphia (1976-78), weeks.''
.
•'Smoftz.has pitched great late· ~ If !he Odober m~JaiM will
but those Phillies never made it to
The playoffs last juSI seven Jy, but I really couldn'llose," Cox . slrike IIIUIwhal Pirates OM Ted Simmons games or fewer, and !hal's why said. "I've got 11uec good guys to
TheXillerB's-Boadulldlhe
calls "the_ Grand Banana" -the ~raves manager Bobby Cox is talcC piq from, and Smaltz has '-! .the now-departed Bobby Boni-lla...,.
World Senes.
mg one huge gamble by starting better .of lhc duec lalely by a little slwnpec! badly tile J1811 two playPitts~gh also doesn't want to !i&amp;ht-hallder John Smoltz (15-12) bit He's heallhy and strong."
offs. ind"the Pinlea' ship ...t widl
be reminded of lllc past two play- 1n Game 1 against tile Pirates'
One of just two NL 20-game them. Now lhe offense revolvoa
offs, ~hen Bonds had no RBit in Doug Drabek: (15-11). Drabek's winners, Glavine (20-8) still is aroun&lt;! Andy Van Sly~. who bu
13 games and the PiraleSJOI 1.16 post-season ERA.in one of the recovering from a tracked nb and 199 hits, and Bonds who bad 34
Wocd out in !he .bijlgamcs. ·~ncy besl in NL history.
.
won'1 start until Game 3 Friday homers and 103 RBIJ in just473
lost 2-1 on one hll 10 1990's dcc1Smaltz beat the Pirates twice in · against,pjratcs Jcnuc;kleballer Tim at-bets - or nearly 170 fewer ~sive Game 6 in Cincinnati and were . laSI year's playoffs, but js 0-2 Wakefield (8-1). Avery will start bats !han Pendleton, who drove m
~h~t out at~ in Games~ and 7 · ,ag&amp;U:Isi them this season .. Also, by Game 2 Wednesday afternoon 105.
' ·
!II 91 afler taking a 3-2 sencs lead srarung Smoltz, Cox allows Pit\S· agains1 playoff-tested Piltsburgh
If Bonds doesn't hit. the Pirates
m Adanta.
burgh to start its strong left handed- Jeft-handtz Danny Jaclcson. :
wi~ ne.ver ~ee their firJt World
"We're. going to he better," lllc hitting lineup ~ Alex Cole in
No matter who statts and who . Senes smce 79.
Pira1es' Jay Bell said. "The way

Oakland,_Toronto to square off
in AL plo:yoffs with new faces

C!OIIdl~

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tbediooblodlioiEIUIIdod t h e - of
T aa1. Oriove, Yiot Pftllidcnt and pnerll
maupr, and SaMy Johnaan, MaiJtanf

RIJIIS - Boodo, Pittobuqj, 109, D.
Halliaa, Pbiladolpbia, 104; "'V1nSlylr.o_
Pi I p. 103; --..... OW:op&gt;, 100;
Oriaeom. Me11U.L 99; Pcndlaon, At·

Yaok.93.

Mo-•·

.1:,

...... !II; B . . . - . 96.
RBI - O.ult.oa, PhUaddphia, 109;

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
TW
PIUiadolpiUa ...........4
Oollu ......... ...........3
.2
N.Y. Ilion~ ........... I
Pb....U .................. I

"'""'"" .......

Natloaal Lugue

.100 70 7S
-~ - 116 fi7
.200 70106
.200 46101
.200 43 19

'

TEXAS RANGERS - l'llcod .DiWc:
"11lm, ~. oD waiv. . far the parol pm1 bini hili ubconditimai Rl·
luG..... Teity
pitchor,
Morio Dioz. iafioWa: lftd lad! Doualler1)', autficldcor, _ , . 10 Otloh..., City
of 1bc Amorican Auoc:iation. Acti.vaiOd
Julio Franco, infielder; Dunr Leon,
pitcher; ucl John Ruuell, catchec, from

BA1TINO- Sbcffield, San Die8o,
,m VoaSiyb, 1"-np .324;-.
CINCINNAn, ,323; ~ Foilodelpllio,
.32l; Gwrrm. Sa. Diqa•. 317;· Ronda ,

w-.DMoloo

ea.... .................4

aslowstartin~openerwilhFairmonl, 'Put the -htttmg strength of
sisters Billina and Kellina C~.
who recorded 29 and 17 kills,
respectively, helped pul lhe Red-.
w01nen offCIIse baclc on ttaclc._
In~!taUonal,
Amy Hambel added 10 kills to
That was a good tournament the effort, along wilh seven from
for us because I go! to the play lllc Deana Smilh and five by Michelle
freshmen, and kepi lhem in for Spears Spears netted three serving
quile awhile," Coach Patsy Fields aces ind Ham tiel had twd, and
·said. "It was -a tim~ when I got to Spears and, Kcllina Cooper each
see some good things from our had seven digs. Dillin&amp; Cooper
players." ·
added six. In blocks, BiUiria CoopTh~- Re~women opened by · er had 13, Kellina Cooper six,
defeatmg FIW1llont State 13·15, 9- Michele Turner and Spears four
15, 15-0, 15-13, 17-15, followed by each, and Smilh and Kristy Lindsey
a 15-3, 15-7, 15-6 trouncing of the three apiece.
hOst school. Lenoir·Rhyne (N.C.)
In the Concord match, Billina
was lhe Redwomen 's next victim, Cooper had 12 kills, Hambel eight
15-6, 15-7, 16-14, prppelling the and Kellina 'Cooper six. Spears led
!eam into tl)e firsl ·seed, where it in serving with eighl aces, backed
again defeated Concord 9-15, 15-5, by four each from Kellina Cooper
15-10, 15-11.
and Smilh. Lindsey added lhree,
The championship game saw the and HambellJ(ISICd tw.o blocks.
Redwomen face Fairmont, which
Billina Cooper had 16 kills
feU 15-2, 15-6,15-l.
against ·L-R, while Kellina Cooper
Due to a delay in the start of the added 14, Hambel 10, Turner six
tournament. Rio Grande got off to and Lindsey five. Smith was credil·

Butball

Baseballleaders-1992

l 0 250 S. fh

Baclc~d by a strong _freshmen
squad lilts season, thc Rio ·Grande
-:olley~all ~ swep1 all oppos,iuon astde this !*II w~kcnd ID ~
us s~cond consecuuvc champ1ons_h!J? al the Concord (W.Va.)

Oalr.JaDd. 51 ;

Transactions

~

..

.........,.,Od.ts

5

Pllgl

Redwomen net championship of Concord volleyball tourney

Jo6"R....u. o.tlood.!O.

u TCIOilto, 3:07 p.m. cr 1:26

p.m., if DIICCIIIItY

~

, Central Dlwl.lo.
Hous10n ..............3 I 0 .7:lfl !N 59
PU..t..P ..............3 I 0 .750 12 S'l•
CJNCINNATI........2 2 0 .sao -~ 90
CI£VELANI) ...... I

S~VBS - Bct~~n,ler,

John Booty intercepted Ailcman on ::hes Hopkins thai aboned a Pallas
Dallas' fust series ~ returned 22
The second half was all
yards to 111c Cowbo~s 14. Quarter- Philadel hi a. Walker ran nine
back: Randall Cu_nrungham scram- yards in ~e third periQd to "!like it
bled tl for a fust down at the .. 17-7. t!len went 16 yards 1D _the
three, then scored on a two-yan,l · four1h for a 24-7 lead.. Keilh Byars
boodeg run · ;,_ th
· de1ph'1a sconng
·
. ki koff · finished .the ·Phtla
Dati
. _as too.. e ensw'!g c
. with a 12-yard scoring run.
and ~ve 84 yards on etght plays
It wasn't the greatest of nights
to ue the game. The key play was a
· ham the teague's 1~59-y~!fd compl~tion from Aikman f~rC=~gHecOmpletedjustll of
to Mtc~ael I":m that went to the 1/for l24 yards and suffered his
Eagles 25. Aikman threw seven fitst inte(Ception of the season. He
Yards :to Jay Novacek: for lhe score.
. bled for 43 yards on seven
Philadelphl&amp; went ahead 10-7 on . scr~~;ID
.
.
Roger Ruzek's 40-yard field apal. c_amCes. . bam is 8-0 against the
They held on with the help o1 an
unnmg
interception in the -end zone by Cowboys.

Apilcn, Minrt010t.1, 4 ; Montaomery,
K.&amp;nlu City, 39; Olmn. B1himore, 36;
1'-b. Tapa&amp;o, 34; Fur, New YOlk, 30;

w.....,. ()d.l4

~

10!1 60
16l 12

...

• ...,.OcLu

ToroaiO It Olldutd, 4:10p.m.
.
. M.-y, Od.l2
,
TorrdD at tJul.IDd., 3:07 p..m., if nee-

game 4-0 and the lead in the NFC
East. Dallas. lost for the fust time
and is 3-1 afiCr having their regular
season eight~game winning streak:
snapped. .
.
"It was ·a big-hitting foolball
game, and we put pressure on them
which eventually paid off," Eagles
coach Rich Kotite said. "We were
swaniling to lhe ball and we played
smart with a lol of good judgment"
~
.
Dallas coach Jimmy Johnson
said his learn' "made too many mistalc:es.''
On Walker, Johnson said nierely, " I lhoughihe did a good job."
The Eagles took a 7-0 lead when

The Dilly Sentinel

as formality . for Braves in _drive to Series

. By ALAN ROBINSON .
with Alejaqdici Pcna Out and Kent
ATLANTA (AP) -=- Barry Mercl1cr hurting, Mi4 Stanton is
Bonds has never been~- l'ostsca· only beallhy Braves' lcft-hander
son and lllc Pittsburgh Pirates are · reliever to counlet 111c Pirates' lefl~ ·
0-for-October since 1990. The only handed strength. of Bonds and
question about theN~ League ~dy Van Slylre.
.
·
playoffs ~alch , lhal '!egms TuesSo the NL's first playoffs
da-y seem!ngly u wbtch Adanta remi!IC!t since lhe Los Angeles ·
Braves' ptlcher wtll be thts fall's Dod$crs and Philadelphia Phi!Ues
Zero Hero.
.
met m 197? and 1978 just might
The Braves· Will start John · not be an mstant replay or 1he
Smollz, Steve Avery and Tom pitching-domina1ed 1991 series
Glavine againsl Piltsburgh, which thai fcatorcd three 1-0 games. This
was shut oul in its last threc .home one might be an Oktoberfestof hitgames of the '91 playoffs.
. · ting or an October slugfesl
This year die Pirates enler the ·. "We won't steal this ·series,"
playoffs on a tear, ·winning 42 of Terry Pendleton, lasl year's NL
their last 56. The Braves'. young . MVP, said. "If we don'l beat litem,
gun starters have won just lhree they're nol going to beal diemtimes among them in a monllt, the selves again. If we win it, it will be
bea1-up bullpe~ is questionable because we earned iL"

PagH

•

By RALPH BERNS I ElN
. PHILADELPHIA (AP) - It
took three years, but Herschel
. Walker finally gOI the revenge he
·has insisted he nevtz wanted. ·
. The 30-year-old WallccF ran for
'86 yards and a pair of touchdowns
on 19 carries Monday night as lllc
•Philadelphia Eagles routed the Dal-'
· las Cowboys 31-7.
·
Meanwhile, the Eagles ' toprated defense frusll'3ted Troy ·Aik·
man and the Dallas offense with
two interceptions and a fumble
recovery, leading to 21 points.
. Another interception in the end ·
zone snuffed a Dalla$ drive.
It's well documen1ed history

Pomeroy-Middlepor:J, Ohio

I'
•

RI·o men ·spli't pai·r of weeke,n·d ti•lts

Rio Grande's soccei' team split a
pair of games againsl Wesl Virginia learns ovtz the wcelcend, and
Coach Scou Morrissey is hopeful
thatlhe learn's performance dido'(
1111! because it was ~eeting non-distriCI opponents.
"I lhink whal it comes down to
is that mentally, they're not there
yet," Morrissey remarked after the
'Rcdmen defeated Salem-Teikyo 21 on Friday and lhcn fell to Alderson-Broaddus (i-0 Saturday.
"I 4on'l know if playii)g baclcto-baclc games had something to do
wilh if, bul mentally I thiilk they're
tired and they don'! know how far
lhey can push lhemselves," the
coach added.
Againsl Salem-Teikyo, lhe Redmen set tl!e pace within the ftrSI 10
minutes by scoring its firsl goal
when Jack Wroblewski convtztcd a
buildup on the righl side of 1he
field into a pass ID Abdrew Jones,
who ran the ball down lllc sidelines
and back to Wroblewski, who
scored,near the post
Thlus for both 1eams then
·stalled ilfto lllc Iauer portion of the

first hall', when Salem-Teilcyo
came back and took: advantage 1lf a
defensive breakdown to slip a goal
past Rio Grande's Jim Egntz, ending the period with a tie.
The game contil)ued 10 stall
until the final five minutes, when
J.C. Circle, on assist, fired the ball
to Wroblewski, who scored the
winning goal on a full volley.
Overall, Rio 'Grande took 20 shots
on goal to the hosts' two, while
Egner was c~ted with two saves
to his ceiUnterpalt's 10. "
"On the positive side, although
we played poorly, we still managdd
ID gel a victory," Morrissey said.
Againsl 1he nationally-ranlced.
A-8, with ils rich tradition in
NAJA soccer, ''we were out of Ibis
game before il even started," Morris~y reflected. The hos~ scored
theirftrSt goal in lllc opening eighl
minutes, "and after that. our guys
were talc:en oul of it." The Battlers
reeled off three unanswered goals
for the fll'st half and repeated the
trick in llte·second.
Rio Grande took: seven shOis on
goal to A-D's 24. Egner recorded

eighl saves 10 lllc hoSts' two.
"In lhe past, we have had stroag
performances againsl the top 20
schools, but this past Saturday that
didn't happen," Morrissey noted.
"But. once again, I 'think our concentration tends to slip wben you
talk aboul non-dislrict and nonconference opponents. We have '
talenr- thai's not the issue- it's
just they need to push themselves."
Morrissey said that by next
week the picture on the distri~t
playoff scene ·- in which the lled·
men hope Ill make a secood allf! 1• .
ance this year - should cletlf. lf
Rio Grande wins its fmal four dlatrict games, there is a possibilily
that me Redmen, who started this
week 81 2-2 in c!istrict play, could
get home fteld advantage.
. .
As Ibis wcelc began, the Redmcn
were 4-8 overall and 2-1 in die
MOC, where th~y reswned play
thts afternoon wtth a home 8IIII!C
against Shawnee Stale. Rio Grande
will play Lindsey Wilson (Ky.) 0t1
the road Ibis Friday 10 complete
!his week:' s S&lt;;J:iedule.
·
·

Hood, Wolfe among KC race victors By SCOTI WOLFE
filied his right rear wheel with
Sentinel Correspondent
mud, throwiilg his mounl's tirC out
·
Leading from start to finish, -of balance.
Columbus
'llriver
Charlie
Fisher
Booneville, Ind.'s Riclcy Hood led
all 40 taps en route to his second finished third, Saldana claimed
win of lhe year _al KC Raceway fourlh, followed by Hunlley,
during "The Club", All-Star Circuli "Rocket" Rocky Hodges; Powell's
of Champions $4,000 to win sprint Todd Kane, Kelly Kinser, Mark
car race Saturday evening.
Keegan and BuiCh Schroder.
Hood said in victory lane, "YesChillicothe's·Mark Frazier was
all smiles after holding off constanl terday, Ibis car was still in boxes, .
chal!eng~s from Charlie Seyr~_~o\"' all over the garage floor. We fin1o wm hiS first Late Model mam m ished il up lasl nighl and came back
10 win today. Several times in die
the season fmale.
The results of Salurday's1aces race I decided to pull oul(because
lefl All-Siar con1enders Kevin the car heated up), but when I saw
Hundey of Bloomington, Ind. and Frankie and Kevin pull up beside
Frankie Kerr of Fremont in a dead- me, I just couldn't give up. The
lock: for the AU-Star points charnpi- engine's ruined, bul Tim (Engler)
onship, a prize worth in excess of wiU put us togelher anolllcr one.'' .
$10,000 to 111c winner.
The temperature gauge 10
Hood jumped into an early lead Hood's sprinter was 'pegged al285
and had built up some distance degrees .
belween himself and second place
Heats went 10 Keegan, Kerry
Joey Saldana by lap 10. Mean-· Norris , Kelly Kinser and Scott
while, points leader Kevin Huildey Miller, while fasl time went to Jim
and defending champ Frankie Kerr Nier of Piketon with a 12:071
engaged in a torrid balde for posi- clocking. Trophies were presented
tion; a baule that not only meanl to the winners by Ross County
lite race, but a bid for the All-Star Sheriff candidate Bit Knott.
championship.
·
Joey Saldana won the B-main
The duo firsl overcame third over Hood, Nier and Schroder.
place·Todd Kane in a three-wide
Finishing one spot ahead ofNier
bailie up 1he front chulc and in lhe feature, Sharonville driver
lhrough turns one and 1wo. With Mike Bowling claimed the KC
Kane helplessly in lhe middle,.Kerr Sprinl Qtampionship ovtz•Nits.
dove instde and Hunlley took the · • Although many fans in attenhigh road as bolh made su~ful dance were travleing sprinl fans,
lhey were well -pleased wid! one of
passes.
'
Nexl, wilh Hood Slill out in, lite closes! Late Model races of die
.
front, the duo claimed second year.
In La1e Model action, Frazier
place Joey Saldana. Continuing
dicing ~act and forth, the duo proved to bC the cream of the crop.
moved m on Hood, who had Consistendy improving throughout
slowed somewhlil with an over- lhe year, Frazier moved up to a sec,
healed engine. Kerr momentarily ond place finish two weeks ago,
passed Hood in IWll tw\), but Hood lhen held off'points contenders
pressed onward despile his engine Charlie Seymour and Craig .
problems
.
.
"Fudge" Leist to post Ihe biggest
· "
.
For 10 laps, ~e 1110 brought lhe win of his caretz, a $1,000 pay day.
Frazier, whose falhtz Bud, was a
KC c_rowd to thell' feel Hood made
·multi-year
champion at KC, had his
a daring front stretch pass of!apped
dad
as
the
main man in the pits fortraffic lhat probably ~DI! htm lh~
Saturday's
big win .
race on lap 29. Kerr dido t make _11
Following F1azier across the
t~ro~gh ihc .hole and heated hts
urcs m_pursutl of Hood, who went line was Charlie Seymour, Leisl,
Andy Bond in the McDonald's Aon to.viCID?'· .
10, Bobby Oncy, Rod Evans, Scott
Huntley s drive :wed~hen
Wolfe
in the McDonald's of Gal011
lap l9, he plowed
cu
·

lipolis 1114, Dave White, Rop
Adams, Jon Osman, Tim Coleman
and Duane Ackley. ·
' ·
Heal winners were Scott \Volfe
in die McDonald's car over fast
timer Bobby Oney and Bond, while
Ackley defealed Frazier in the sec- .
ondhcat.

Meigs linkmen
to play in Division
II sectionals
Meigs is one of 11 teams taking
part in the Division n sectional golf
tournamcnl Wednesday 11 Lakeside
near Beverly.
The Marauders (75-6) finished
the season as'Tri-Valley Confer,
ence champions for the third
straighl year.
.
' .
The sec1ional champion and ·
rumier-up .and lwo individuals no!
on a qualifying team will advance .
to district play next wcclt. Other
teamS takin&amp; part include Fairland,
Alexander, Gallia Academy, New
Lexington, River Valley, Sheridan',
South P!lint, Vinton County, Wll'ren Local and Wellston.·

State'Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring bolh your car
· and home with the State
Auto Companies.
Let us ten you just
how.much your savings . ,

canbe.

·

a:=;

___"':'______
-. N
-ew hours
I 0 better
·serve 'our.
.
5
I
M
0
12
..
communitv:
tart ng - on., ct.
I•

--~'!"""-"":".._

~----,

Mon~-Sat.

'

10:00
am-6:00 pm
.
Friday 10:00 am-8:00 pm

MJddl
. epo_
rf · .
. Depa
· rllllent. Store
·

.

L._..__ __,_.....;__,.....;;_______, ___.;.._.a

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
. 992·6687

.I!J $1~

Aulo •

lnauranc.e co,..•••

�.

.·

By The Bend

The·· Daily Sentinel

Public Notice

'Ueada~October6,1992

Page

6

t

'One voice .in the crowd' makes
a.plea,to pirrents with teenagers
'

'

Dear Ann Landen: I im 17 years . , A -- ·old and as far as I can tell, I am a :.t"\.1111
normal, depased tcen-8ger. I have ·
·several ·scars on my left arm and ·
band, all self·inflicled knife clll8.
·
. ·
I have never wanted to kill
ANNLANDDII
myself. Ir that were the case, I
.;;:'&amp;~~
would have blown my head off with
c - 8,... •...., .
a shotgUn. I only want to hurt' ·
myself. This may seem strange, o ers the ~Jy relief from their
but the menial psin I so through Ullbearable emotional pain.
·
every day is so hard to deal with
"They are unaware that all
· that physical pain actually makes me adults am 110t the same and that
feel beuet. ·
.
·
a competent profession.@) . can
An adul~s fJrSt reaction would be, provide a positive, JIOn-judgmenlal
"Youmuststopdoingthis.Itmakes al.temative •• DI!Dely, a healing '·
no sense.• But how do you explain relationship - 10 the bleak choice
10 people that you enjo:fphysical between emotional and physical
pain because it is easiet to deal with suffering." ·
·
· ·
than lhe emotional pain they are
You need 10 tallc 10a menial health
giving you?
professional and get a beuet handle
. Teen.:agers today need help in on what 10 do with your hostile
life, not more money or things. We feeli':lgs. And ·• your parenrs need
need someone who will listen ·and · 10 see this letter and know that you
not condemn us. Allow us to lnaice wrote iL Good luck.
. .·
mistakes without raninding us that
Dear Ana Landers: My mother· .
we screwed up again. We know in. law is not easy 10 get along with.
when we're doing something wlllllg For example, she asked me if I
. and often ~ do it tri get attention. · wbuld buy back the gift we gave
Nothing is worse than being ignored · her last Christmas. She can't use the
8!ld made 10. feel like a' nan-person, rectangular place mat$ we bought
and there am a lot of·us out there. I and would prefer oval ones. Get the
am just •• ONE VOICE IN 1HE picture?
. .
CROWD IN LA GRANDE, ORE.
A few months ago, she started to .
DEAR VOICE: I contacted complain that I was "alienating• her
William J. Pieper, M.D., 11 Chicago son because he doesn't phone her
psychoanalyst, and here is his as much as he used 10. Ann, my
response: "Tragically, many teen· busband is 39. He has never spent .
agers mutilate or kill themselves ' muchti~withhismolherorcalled
becausetheyhavewrittenolfadults herveryoflen.I~esentthewayshe
and believe physiCal pain onieath is trying 10 make it look as if I am

Landers

RECEIVES DONATIO~· Beverly Schu! macher, prealdent, Atheu County HlstoriC.I
; •Sodety and Museu•, Athens, right, attended
~
tile .rectllt Modem Woodmen of America, Camp
• 10900, "victory party" to accept the $4,645
:

•...._ ..

donation rro.O the MWA's Matching Fund
Drive. Pictured '\lith her are, l'root Jeft, Franceii
Henderson, and Marjorie Malone, Coolville,
area coordinator, and back, Ralph Henderson
and John Bredlove, Coolville.

,

.. Modem Woodmen make donation
~

..

'

.

.

: : .·• A chect for $4,645 was present·
Beverly Schumac~er, president artifacts and manuscript materials
: ed 10 the Adlens County Historical of the historical society, was there dealing with the history and people
: Society and Museum by the Mod· to accept the money. She thanked of Athens County.
·
Opening·ccremony for the meet·
• em Woodmen of America, Camp the group and.encouraged them 10
' 10900, at a recent "victory party" · visit the museum and to take an , ing was conducted by Jessie
held at the Hocking River camp· interest in the history of Athens Brooks, ~h C. Henderson, !l"d
ground.
·
·
CoUJilY and its residents. The D;mny B
OVer, all of Coolville.
~ --· · The money represented that j:n&gt;Up's primary function, she said,
The pledge 10 the f1aJ! was led by
• ... Modern Woodmen of America IS 10 collect, preserve and display Robert Henry, Amesville.
! :IMalching Fund Drive.
.

f

Community Calndar Items
appear two days before an event
an~ tile day or that event. Items
mUll be received weD Ia advance
to assure publication In the cal·
endar.

1

Military band t1rgan

·

f

&amp;w.

f

I
II
1

TUESDAY
POMEROY • The Bi¥. Bend
Stern wheel Association will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p;m. at the Carpen..
ter• s Hall in Pomeroy, Final p~
for the festival will be COJDI!Ieted.
Anyone interested in. helping is
urged to attend.

Tpesday at 5 p.m~ Public invited. .
CHESTER · .Pomeroy Chapter
No. 186, Order of the Eastern Star,
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Chester Masonic Temple. New
officers will be elected. A potluck
' dinner wiD be held at6:30 p.m.

Friday ucl
Prlljaga
bepn coastruclloa
organ
from a cllurcll pew and table in
1983. ne organ Is transported
on a ~ailer 11 feet loa&amp; and sb:
feet wide. It stands seven and a
ball feet taiL Tbe organ features
a painting on the l'ront tbat wu
completed by Prtljaga's mother
. and Prtljaga carved the wood on
top or the organ. Tlie organ wiD
be performing fro'~!. the Bank
One Autobank lot at the corner
of Main and Lynn Streets.

!

L

,.._-to

CE REOUCEDI

llon -ol lavylng • tax, In

sea.eoo ...

u - ol the bon mill llmltalor the benefit"' Merge
Looat Sollool Dltlrlcllor'tho
Curpoae of pormonenl
nop.-ta.
laid tax being In addlllonal IIIX ol 5 milia at a r.te
not excaodlng S milia lor

Roclna. 4BR,3~,2-...-1

BR opt. 1'-'Y - - 4,800 aq. ft. twm
bklg. '
Cd 614-1111:!-7104 for

:=..0:::...':: ~~ fi~::::~

POMEROY , Post Matrons of
Evanaeline ChaptrZ No. 172, OES,
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the .home of Kathryn Knight
BEVERLY • Ewings Chapter,
Sons of the American Revolution,
Pomeroy, will be cond~ting pave
marking services Tuesday at noon
for Patri.o t Silas Fearing at the
Round Bottom Cemeltzy, Beverly,
and following It Harmar Cemetery,
Marietta, for Palriot Noah Fearing.
· RACINE • A pave marking for
David Reed. a soldier of the Amer·

ican Revolution at the Weldon
Cemetery in RaciQe will be held

Revival .slated
Revival at the Long Bottom
United Methodist Church will be
Sunday through Oct. 16 at 7r30 ·
p.m. Norman Butler will be the
evangelist. There will be' special
m·usic anit the public is invited.
Seldon Johnson IS )NISlOr• .

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCElS OF
TAX LEVY IN EXCElS OF
TIE lEN
LMTAllON ntE TEN IIIU. UIITATION
· NOllCE r. IMrHy given
NOnce Ia hereby glv•
that In pureuartoo ol a tbal In pureuanoe ol a
RaeoluUon .ol lho Board ol Retolullon of the Board "'I
Tru- of the Towlllhlp ol
o1 the T.......lllp o1
Buttan, Olllo, p-od on the lolplo, Pagevllle, Ohio,
3rd • of February, 111811, paattcl on lhe 411 •
ol
there will be aubmlttlcno • ~~ 1112 ..... wll ...
vo• ol the puple ol tal!! aulimlll8d 1o a voa "'f the
·oubdlv!olon 11 1 General people of aald aubdlvlalon
Elaotlon to be IMkt In tho at a Geilarlll EIIOUon 1D be
Townelllp of sutton at the beld In tba Townahip ol
regular p i - of voUng Scipio, Ohio, at .... l'llglllar
lharlln, on the 3nl • ol ~ of voting 111.....,., on
No_._, 1992, the quet·
3rd day ot Nov11nber,
lion ol lavylng 1 tax, In "''
1992, the queaUon ol levy·
u - of the bon miN llmlta- lng
a we, In exceaa ol the
llon, lor tho benellt ol ten mill llmltaUon, for lhe
Button Townablp lor the bene/It ol Solplo Townahlp
purpoae ol.....,lllnlng ond lor the purpoee of Ore
........I l l _......
prolltcUon.
Wdtabelngo....,_ol
Sold IIIX being a ,.,.. ..,
ol ., alttlng tax of .4 mUI of an ur.ttno we ol % mill
at ·o 111ta not uoaodlng .4 M a raa not uoMctlng %
•NI lor each one dollar ol ..111 lor each dollar ol
Vllluallon, whlcll -unta ID Vlll•llon, whloh -1111n11t lo
lour oenbl (SO.D4) lor - b live -Ia ($0.05) lor aaeh
one llundrtd cloU1111 ol vlll- one bundrod dollarl ol val·
uatlon, lor 11w (5) yean.
uallon, lor one (I),_..
Tbe Polla lor oald
Tba Polla lor aold
ElacUon will open at 1:30 Election will opan at 1:30
o'clock A.ll. and remain o'clock A.ll. •nd r•maln
open until 7:30 o'clock P.M. open until 7:30 o'clock PM.
olellctday.
..
olaald day.
By order ol the Board ol
By order ol tho l!oard ol
ElacUona ol lltlgl County, Electlona of lhlp County,
Ohio.
Ohio.
.
·
Honry L Hunlllr, Cllalnnan
Henry L Huntar, Cbalrman
Alta D. lmllh, Director
Aibl D. Smith, Dli'IIQtor
Dalliid lleplltmber 4, 111811
Daltcl Saplllmber 4, 1992

•u.

~=::=::::====:

. Grace Episcopal
Parish H ..Hostesses are Norma
Custer and Jean Werry. "Together
We Grow in Health" will he presented by Norma Torres, Meigs
County Health DeportmenL

(10) .. 13, 20, 27, 419

20th Hayman family reunion held Nuclear
negotiation
r
'

.the 20111 'annual

~e~~~~ion

of the

. ~of H.A. Fred and Gamet F.

Jr!lk Hayman was held Sunday at
home. or their el~ son, C.E.
;;Hayman Sr., II Antiquity.
,•. C.E. Hayman Sr. was re-elecled
JIIUident with Lda Johnson being
n.ned .ecmary-~.
· • - A chicken .dinner was served

. .me

'

r.

Tile lnrermediate-Range Nuclewith grace by the host ' .
•
a_r'F~rces (I .N.F.) Treatr was
There were 82 attending and stgbecl Dec. 8,1987 in Washington,
g!DII~S were played in the after· D~C.,. bl' Soviet-t7nion loader
noon.A .b .
.
MikhBil Oolbachev and U.S. Plesi·
usmess meeting was con· · dent Ronald Reapn eliminating all
dueled and next year' a reunion was medium- and lhortel·llllp nucleiir
set for the laSt Sunday of Seprem· missiles. I~ was ritified with oondi·
. beratthehomeofC.E. Hayman Sr. tiona by the U.S. senate May 27,
1988. .

.

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;a

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. •·

•LIGHT HP.UUNG
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269 .
USED RAILROAD TIES

Public Sale ·
&amp;Auction

'"

.

..

RAOII. OHIO

· .

(For-ty Eagle RWga W

Eijlat)

31904 .........

PARTS &amp; SERVKE

CrNklo•d
Middleport, Olllo

Mowers • Cllait Saw5
• Weedeaters

614·992·7144

614·949·2804

.

-; ..•.

•
•N

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

GJ

......, -

0

., ... .

•
I

LAND FOR
SALE

LICENSED a nd BONDED

33 acres,
Rutland Twp.

PH. 614-992-5591

25 acres,

UNLIMITED SESSIONS

Thursday, October a, 1992 .
10:00 a.m.

Mont•s of September
and October

LOCATED AT 2023 CHATHAM AVENUE IN
. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
WILL BE SELLING THE REMAINING ITEMS FROM
THE MARGARET WOLFE AUCTION.
A large sei8C1i&lt;m of glassware, German Bowls,.Carni·
val Glass, Depression Glass, hens on nests, phcher,
butter dishes, baskets, sad irons , pictu~es, some toys,
cordless phone, rugs, linens, pitchfork, step ladder, 2
iron kenles, plus 4 • 30 gal. barrels lull ol glassware.
Bring A Chair/
AUCTlON CONDUCTED Bf

RICK PEARSCJN AUCTION CO.
LUNCH
MASO~. WV
773·5785
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON #66
OWNER: MARGARET .WOLFE
TERMS: C.n or ct11c11; Wil.h I.D.
Not Aelponllble lor acddentl or ion cl p1op11rty
Lk»nMd and 9ondecl il OhiO, Ktnii.ICI\y, &amp; West \IWglnla t 66

· Call 614-667·3484

or 614-667·3109

112W1 mo.

slsoo

•Roollng 4lcllnf

-oua.n

ef1oom Addllona
olrUriOr Rent!~ th i ng
i(odlld .... E.~

FiEEESliiUI'ES

985·4473
667·6179

(614} 992·2~

.·•'
KmN'S LAWI
IUIIIIEIIIIICE

~UIIDI'S
~ PIIIID~G

949·2391e~

&amp;CO.
"Tao n..,.. OatOI,...,
-141 u. ,.,, ,., ,...

1·101-137·1460
.__,. lllowlng, :
Flrtlllzlng, Wilding,
lind S I i dlllf. ,

INTERIOR &amp;EXTERIOR
FRIE ESDUTES
IUODKES
Ieiwe 6 . ... '-• • SSFJI
Af1• 6 p.a. 614-985-4110
IIA~

ShrubudTrM .

Trlnming a Ramov•l

Ar U it~~~ A C [ R arci-1
F,_Eol_
RREWOOD FOR

Howrn L Wrilesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

. .

Downspouts

YOUNG'S

CALIFORNIA
TANS
949-2823

CARPENTER SERVICE

MICROWAVE OVEN ·
a•d VCR REPAIR
AlLIIAKES

-Room Addltlonl
-Gullor Work
.
-Electrical and Plumbing
-Rooftng
·
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Pointing
.
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

·

lrlna.lt In Or We
•
Pick U

Pomeroy, Ohio

9·10·92-Hn

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561
Acro11 Frea ""' Olllco
217 L Sace.. St. ·
POMEROY, OHIO
3123192/t1n

I

HOW RD
EXCAVATING

BULLOOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE'-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614·992·
6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire,

Real Estate General

eG• .
-c.::£'
.. .
··-••li•t
Slolt&amp;Co.,.re

Qutters

Qucllity
Stone Co.

.

.....

•llewll. . .s

111ti

Olive Twp.
Timber .on both
tracts.

SPECIAL

TOP- TO I01'TOM
IIAIIIEIUIICE .

BISSEll &amp;I ..U
COIISTIUCTIOII

WW.IItlrA II•)I ·

•• ·N·· •

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES ·
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Grav!ll and Coal

More Legals on Page 3

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
·

we Alao Haul eoar, ...,,

FREE ESnMATES.

Ume, Com, Grain ·
-Wood
.

949·2168

(614)992·3470 •

fi181'92Jifn •

.·
'•.'

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

WILSON'S ARMY
SURPLUS :

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

County Ret. 19- -

PMc:hfork Ret. .:
9112·70113 ..

o.ttltlf Sptelll

llon.-Sun..-.....

See ua lor 'yow lluntlng

UNUMITED WINING

and back to · acli.OI
n -. - ·· largo!at
aelectlon ol •111'1\Y

$2500

949·2826

................. ,

OFFiCE 992·2886

. 91281'92/lln '

••il

FU llll
f;EIIEUl SEIYICE

'rr..:.t~~ ·

L....

20%-30% 01.:!:
-tit tiS......

Gc.geo.ly ;
SIMS Sept. 27 :

Real Estate

992-2259 .

1117.:...

GUll SHOOT i
UCINE 1
GUll ClUB !
SUNDAYS .
1:00 P.M. :
fadery Gob 1z

·992·3838

frat fsthata.-)'42·2360

Wt&amp;lfn

RUTLAND
MINE SUPPlY ,
Pipe for Water, Sewage:
and Gas

.. .1
NICHOLl RD. -OWNER WANTS TO RELOCATE AND
ARE ANXIOUS TO SEW Thit It a vary nice ranch atyle

R•tland, OH.~

-

horne wllh 3 bedroom a, 2 baths on 1.053 acm. Homo
bat newer heal pump &amp; alec. hoi wallr tank, it carpeted
throughout. Include• prbago diopo..l, dishwasher &amp;
Nnge, Andenen windowa wilh·tlorma &amp; ac:rMna, central
air, added inaulation PLUS a 12 ft. round abOve ground
pool wilh decking &amp; privacy lance, 2 outbuildings MUCH
MOREl MUST SEE! ASKING $46,000 may consider any
illaoonable olfo~ .

742·2656 :

WEDO
AID ·MlniiiG UIDEIIIUTH'
GAUGES • IDDIDONS • SIDING :.
'

.

TROMM BUILDERS'
•.t QIHIIii, Asswell C..t,.,,e,- .

20 Jr. Elrp.
LOVETT RD. ~ QORGEOUS, SPACIOUS AND
. ECONOMICAL ALL IN ONE I - Thlt homo simply hat it
alii 2208 aq. ft. olllvlng apace, 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs. This
log home hat a newer LAnnox heal pump &amp; central air,
alto a woodbumer wilh stone becklng, buiH·in cabinets
and bookthelvot, added inoulation and attic space lor
extra ato111ga. This hom• It embraced by a Ia~ wNp
110und poreh auitablelor viewing the attached 3V.,ac"'• '
alto Includes 2 outbuildings. II you iko lho outdoors and
having room to move lhls Is lor YOU! ASKING $80,000.
COME SEE, ENJOY. MAKE AN OFFER!.

IIDDLEPORT - Thlt apaclouo 3 btdiaom home Ia jull
w!MIIIhl r.m11y naoda. It alto bat a lafVe living room,
nice tlze kllchan wllh cull illla nook. Hu new 11101, new
wiling, ond even a new heal pump.
123,100
HARRIIONYILLE - lloltlle Home Only - A 1984
Nathua mobile hom•. Comet wllh equipped kitchen plua
mlcnlwave, dlthwather, lronl porcll, rear deck, and
undaiplnning. LDoka like NEW.
St 1,0110 •

.

.

.

'

REDUCED --akll SUBDIVISION - ExtNmoly nice
home in very nice location! Thia bridcllra{n• rl\flch style
home foalil"'t 3 bedrooms, lull finlthod baMmont, a
26x14 attached pNga, fi"'place, N.G.F.A. heal, contNI
air. Owner~ l8ducod to $411,750 (mw an offer).

.

NEW UITINQ - Yac:anllqt eoxeo located at124 Laurel
St in Pomeroy . ASKING $3,500.
.

POIIEIIOY - Lincoln Halgllll - Cul8 u a Bullon, Neat
· aa a Pen ctMcribet lhit lwo bedroom home wllh an
aqulpptcl ki"hen, carport, and part beeamont. Hao a
lloo...t allic and a 50x2aaloL Wu 125,0110.
NOW-.0110

C•llll, 614-742·2321
11171itn

HEIILDCK GROVE - Randl

~ homO

on 1 """'lot. 3 SR.
2 ballw, LR. OR, ldt .. doCk,
pordl. New roof. $34,900.

HOUSE FOR o;,AL
BY OWNER
'
· 12 Year old ranch type house. 3 :
bedrooms, 2 baths, t Y. car garage ~
· and breezeway, central air and heid;
pump, many ext~.
·. 1
o.n 2 acres of land.
~
Eastern School District.
!
roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32. :

.

- Good Ia~ homo
localed on 3 """" m/1, wlh a
grut vlowl You wll lind s BR,

Lit DR-1&lt;1. · 2 bah,
FR. don. utlly room, c:olllr, 1
cor
alladled
· localed
!4 way
betWeen
Athenl
&amp;

Pomeroy. In 1ho SO'a.

left.

ga-.

utlly room,

fenced ln . Low ITIIJrMnanea ,
low ~I lles. gu fumaca. Ill
cond., lnoulaled. grut loCao
lion, exl111 -

·

or 985-3839 :

$52,000.

.

NEW USTING - Yac:antlol 40x136 located on Poaoock
Ava. in Pomeroy. Atking $3,500.
fiEDUCED - CHEITER wen known eatablithad business
INdy lor ccaJpancy by youl Building Ia 401&lt;90+ lncludea
equipment and 11M gu ID bYikling. G"'al oppo~unity II
you•,. thinking ol going !nlo butlnen Call today lor
datdtl '

IT. AT. 124 - A buutllul BRICK RANCH, 3 btdroorna,
1% bat1 home. Hat lull be...,.nt and aa.clltd 2 Clr
..-ge.
.IUBT ...IOO

RASCALS TALENt DIRECTORY, with miJor New
York City Affiliations In the child modeling and
acting Industry will review children In this area
sc)c)n. We have succe•fi.llly had children Hen
and/or placed fQr adl, covert, catalogs, videos,
and TV commercials; a"d programs for clients
such as: TOYS 'R'. US, HUGGIES, -MACY'S;
BLOOMINGDALE$, etc. Interviewing. soon
locally.

CHESTER - SUMner ,Road - A,grutltlta ptaway or
lllllllr home. Hat 3 btdrooma, 1 bath, luel olllumaCI
w!th apprax. 34 ...... .
$32,500

MUlDI.EPO"AT - 1 ftoor lrame. home will\ 3 bedrooma,
bath, Ml baMment, one car garage, F.A.N.G.,
appllanceo, allic apace. Really cuta and aflorilable at only

IIDQLEPOAT- WalnUt ltraal - A one IIIDry home In
town. Thlt e """"· 2-3 btd!llom home alta on 2 Iota and
1\u a.,parllal .,......... Hao al new wlmg and low udtlet. ·

$22,000.

WE HAVE TIE HOllE FOR YOUI COllE IN AND lEE
OUR IELEC110HI
HENA'I' E. CLEJ.ANO.._______....._ ._.. __....etl1
1'AAC'f • tlltAGEA...- ""'''_ ............ _ ..,,.......... . .
.lEAN 111.181EL.L.......:..........._,,, ....................... . .
QFRCI!--···~.- ,-..-'..-···-···--·-·..............ZZSI

. 412~856·6330
.
~~------------------~~~~ ..

.

P.O.Ioi194-Wtt• Aley

Real Estate General

RASCALS TALENT .SEARCH
··aa•• 3 mos. to 16 years

'

n~

'

'

I

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

(10) 8,13, 20, 27, 4tc

..

,.

DAYIDSOI'S
PLUM IlliG

REMOVAl
lr,

Tru•-

The de~ndanis of James and Cremeans, Tommy and Shirley
Bertha Cremeans held their family Simmons, Carrol Smith.
..
· reuni~rl recently at Forest Acres · T.T., Dee, 'Thomas, Tyler and
Park !n Rutland. There were 95 Trista Simmons, Tuppers Plains;
attending.
.
Teressa, Aric and Alyson, Patter·
. Maude Smtth, age 90, Rutland, son, Melanie Dudding, Robert,
was the oi~L .
.
· Jason, J¥andon, Bradley and
. Auendtng from ~!ddleto~n Aaron, David, Amy and Cody
were Norman, Patncta, .Leshe, Smith, all of Pomeroy; Karen and
CJw:les and Norman Jr. IJo!laway, Richy Gilkey, Paula and Jarrod
Gratg, Carolyn and Mtchelle. Hall, Cheryl and Bryan Smith,
Lucas, Delores and Charles Schop- Charles, Linda and Healhez Boyles~
pen Jr., and Ka!hY Heron.
Luther and Mary Smith, all of Mid. From .Mason were Dou~. Anne dleport; Charles and Vera Cre~~=· Gosney and Jamte HoJJ. means, TrMent.on:. J udyRand Amy
.
Harrisonvill ·, · Dann · 0·oomer, amvt 11e; oger and
,
e were . Y Adam Musser, CQsiiocton; Claude
and Barb Cremeans. Attendmg Cremeans, Wheelersburg; Bill
froJI! Ru~and ~ere . Danny, Judy. Coakley, LOgan; Budgie Cremeans,
·Angae, Mindy ~;DC~ Tiffany MeDon· Mick, Joyce, Andrea and Nicole
aid, ~ Moms, E':'erett, Sherry Cremeans, Arlene and Vandall
.and Ehz.abeth Sm.llh, Iv.a Cre· Noble, Marcia, Lauren and Cara
means, Ltsa and Alisha ~ompson, Dodrill, Mia, Lia and Ali MeDonKenney Zuspan 1 Angte Kerr, ·aid, Jack Cremeans, all of Hunting.
Arthur and Glen~IB Musser, Pa~I, !Oil, W. Va; and Zelma and Daniel
Amanda and Kevtn Musser, Melu· Kaylor New Haven W.Va
sa and Pauy C~emeans, Katltleen
'
·
'
·

.

8

NOnCE QF ELEC110N 9N

Cremeans descendants gather

PORTLAND • Portland Ele·
mentary PTO meets Tuesday at 7
p.m. Parents of fourth, fifth and
. sixth graders who plan to play bas·
ketbafi or to parUcipate m cheerleading am asked 10 auend ·

Tbe Poll a lor t al d
Election will opan 11 6:30
o'clook A.M. and retneln
op1111 until 7:30 o'clock PM.
ot N!ld .-y,
By order ol the Boord o l
EleCIIone
Ohio.
. ol M..._
_,. County'
Honry L Hunar, Chairman
Ala D.lmlth, Director
O.ltd Rtplltmber 4, 11192
(10) 1, 13, 20, 27, 4tc.

($0.50)
lor e~··~•h~~on~•~==~=~~~~hundrtcl dollara':
ol valu•

Public Notice

Public Notice

has everythirtg? Artn Landers'
booklet, "Gems," is ideal for a
nighwand or c'of!ee table. ~·Gmu"
isa collection of Ann lAitders' most
requested poems and essays.l*nd a
self-addressed, lortg, business-size
envelope and a checl: or IIWney
order for $4.85 (this irtcludes
postage and htuidling) to: Gems,
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Bo~ 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562 . (111
Canada , send $5.87.)

.

.

lion, lor 11Ye (5) y-•·

~a: :r~::~~~j h-.....,~......-----·lhlp County, Ohio, ~I lhe
SHRUB
&amp;
reaut•r placeo ol voting
.
..,.,"'"· on "'• srd dar ol
TRIM and
No...,....,, 1992, the quea-

"'•"*ill' al up 10 - " ' pun:~*~
--bo..-lor~- .
oonlobuy--llomoon3llacntln

POMPROY • There will be a
dinner Thursday at the Meigs
POMEROY • Meigs County County Senior Citizens Center
AMVETS, Chapter No. 1942, and · from 'S-6:30 p,m. Cost is $3 per
Vietnam Veloenlnll will meet Toes· " ·person (or baked steak, mashed
d3y·ilt 7 p.m. at the DAY Building potatoes IIIII pavy, cole slaw, peas,
in Pomeroy.
·
roll and beverage. Music will be
·prOvided by The Classics. Public
POMEROY • A Meigs County mvited. Free will offering for the
.
REEDSVUJ..E • Eastern Athlet· "Showcase" ~!Ianning meeting will band. .
ic Boosters meet Tuesday at ?p.m. be held Tuesday at 5 p.m. at the
in the high school caf~
·
Meigs County Cham be( of Com·
MIDDLEPORT • Janet Bolin,
merce Office in Pomeroy by the past state president of the Ohio
HOBSON , Rev. ~l.Noggle, · Meigs CountyPark Dislrict.
Association of G~ Clubs, will
Chamber, Ariz., who worlts with
instruct a pine cone wreath malcing
the Navaho Indians, will be' at the
class for the Middleport ArtS CoonWEDNESDAY
Hobson Chun:h of Christ in Chris·
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle· , ell on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
tian Union on Tuesday at 7 p.m. p6rt Literary Club will meet council's chambers. Cost is $15
Theron Durham invites ·the public. Wednesday at I:30 p.m. at the and to register call 992-2675 or
Noggle will be taking back money hOme, of Mrs. Eileen Buck. Mrs. 742·2095.
and canned food for the Indians foe Bernard Fultz will review '"fhe
Christmis
ROCK SPRIN:OS • Rock
Mother Book" by Uz Smith. Roll
Springs
Grange will meet Thurscall wiD be " an anecdol.e or memoday, 8 p.m,, at the hall. ·
RACINE · . Southern Junior ry of !IIY mother."
High School Boosters meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the junior high.
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
THURSDAY
Plains
VFW Post No. 9053 will
Bob Ord will speak on the tax levy.
POMEROY • Preceptor Beta
.meet
Thursday
at 7:30p.m. Ali
Beta Chapter .. Beta SJgma Phi
are
urged
to attend.
memben
POMEROY • American Legion Sorority, will meet Thursday at
Drew Webster Post No . .39' will '
meet Tuesday. Dinner at 7 p.m.
Meeting at8 p.m.
'
.

011

4 30 P. .. Dl
".UCIIION

111o potoo

·Community cale,ndar ·

· -~--~-----------------

''
I

keeping her son awar.. ftorn Iter.
I haven't gone to any family
functions since she made that
accusation and my husband won't
go either. He siys lhat eventual tv
bis mother will get the message and
apologize. Yet J;le ~efuses 10 speak
up and te1J his mother she shouldn't
ha¥e spoken 10 me lhal way and that
is why we don't visit her. ·
,
I feel guilty that he iJ ,n ot seeing
bis family because of ine. Am I
wrong 10 expeet my mother-in-law
10 apl'logize? ,. DEEPLY HURT t;N
OHI{J
·
DEAR OHIO: What is needed
here is not an apology, but a
husband. who will find the cour&amp;ge
10 sii(l(lllri his wife and not allow
bis lnother 10 abuse her vedlally.
Offer to go wilh your husband
to talk with his mother so he
can start the mending process.
Unresolved Jamily fighiS can be
painful, especially when somebody
dies une~pectedly before things
get Jlii!Ched up. A word 10 the wise
is sufficient
Whal can you give tM perSIJn who

PubliC Notice

N011CE OF ELEcnON ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
TIE TEN IIIU. LIIIITA110N
v
NO~ It hereby given
:
•
II
that In pureuance ol a
Reeolutlon ol the Board ol
.
Eduoatlon ol the llelge
--~=;;;::;:;;,;;;~~:;:;;;:::~--11 County,
Looat 8ohool
·llhlp
Oblo, Dletrlct,
paaatcl on
die
FREE SCREENING FOR
IIIII day ol Auguat, 11192 .
CATARACT AND GLAUCOMA
..... wiO be aubmlll8d to a·
FOR INTERESTED SENIORS
vo• of tho people of oald
CITIZENS AT
oubdhrlalon at • General
RI TE-AID IN POMEROY
TUESDAY, OCT. 13
BEGINNING AT I O:OOA.M:

'

'

.

IIIOOLEPOAT~2

API. houto,

up 2 SR. bolh, LR, lei. Down.
lludlo type with kl. l bath.
G o o d - -· $211,500.

-

UITIIIU - BEDI'OAD

TOWNsHIP - CO. Ref. 17 Loc:aled on IIOarwlllow Ridge
fief. Vou wl1 find oiO aaoo mil
w11111Jllllv -lind T14JP1R
Pllh wattr only. Yo
r!IIOI(.
SoptiC

SY*O". -

"*

~

IIOIIIo-wlhll'it .....

fiiiiY. $25.000.

llllllli.EPORT • Low ....,.
llliiii1CII II10no homo. v.y

good concltlon. l'ltc&lt;lcl IC!f
lhooo al you ~· .llilng OUI ,

:,~:.;~;-..~

dqu to town. $22,000, ·•

DANVILLE - tY. -

mil. 1

ttory, 2 BR, blllh, LR, Ill.
l'ltc&lt;lcl for quick Ufo. Low
Teer..
·

•...l,lllt'
c.II614144..Mli•1-10Hn· H67

-1

.

,.
"
•

·\.

''•

�._,
TUeeday,~ober6,1992

Ohio
21

,. . . . . -·n..

.

Apt11ttlnt

•

lorfllnl

INOIICI!I

----w-:'1:
--r--- .

ar--..- ......::=

NOTio--

~~~-. ~-

aw

,... _..... -

HEY CIU\'SIII

Cllrlo Wn To
Youll 1.0
&amp;t.
lUI Per llln. IIUOI So 18

•oom

........... -

.,,...a.--. ....

-

TALK TO CAHDY·UYE

BORN LOSER

wa.em

- · 1100: 114- .

-··

Ia.: . .. ....... .

,... c.-.

............. ICIIk-

M;, . . . . .

Clronl To Fne llonef
Cll"' ARp . A!!'Ue•io -

Un- Ceo. IOHJt-001.

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

'""'!''IIII Tho Arlo.

......... ..=-~iloft!il.
lllot~"'"'~... ,.._,.,---Or·.
.--~,
~.•

•

ewnroilf, I

BuliO

:11.

I

•

1

ilDeF.. HJQ

I - ' lll!lall llado Routo For
Sole. Eom t1,000 -illy. · -

REMEM6EI{ ME ?M'i' NAME
15 CORMAC... I HAVE THE
DESK RIGHT BEHIND 'i'OU ..

S'/IIo-&amp;.t.S.

MA'i' I JOIN

·YOU FOR
LUNO~?

. I ONLY
EAT LUNCH WITH
M'i' SWEET

MacOyver

(JJ

•

CONFUSED PERSON

OTTAPO

I I 1I I
2

ORCCK

I' I I -I t

I

E l 8 AK

·

Ill Running
Racing
all WOIId Todly
tD Rln nn Tin, K·l Cop Q

l-IE 5 A VER'i'

len•n

four scrambled
low to .form four ·

Ill.

P.O.. Bo•

1Q, Clolllpollo, OH

0 Rearrange

8:00 (2). (I).
till ..
D .e aiiNetots
(JJS.Vadbylheltl
CD Square One TV C 1!1 Math LDarnlng tklUr

j

8ollll t311 To

TUE.t OCT. 8

•

EVENING

.-."'9 - ....

1·100 1104415, $25 .ICIIII
Crvwn Com. loco FL, 18 •

The Dally SentlneJ-Page-9

Television
Viewing

--...;......--•:ao.
·

OHIO VAWY fiUII ••ICI CO. t
&amp;11 , . . . . .~
'
n
uu•U.youdo....,.. ,..., &amp;' . . . . .
In 1-. ')ll&amp;f'a a a • "

lido. WiiO to O.P. P. b.

~

lullalll
OppMultlty

1\le8day, October

8:05 ()) _Th-'• Company
8:30 I])
IIJ NBC Hlwo Q
!1l Ed McMahon'o Star

BA6600 ..

e

Search

CIJ II

(J)

(l) WheN

·

e

ABC HIWo Q

In the WOIId II
ca .......~Sandiago? Stereo.

~~~ aJIIICai~c_

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

®II Ro-nne Stereo. Q

Real Estale

9

Wolklf, 6 W - Old, 614·245- Co. 50 Rd. 11 - - 28
5115.
_,._m_INoo_.At_;_
. 8l...;._ _ _ __
1
UNCI 55 pUon hot WIIBr tank to
Pomeroy,
gjYNWOy, 8-12.$809.
MiddlepOrt
~ , Lost .&amp; Found
&amp; Vk:lnlty

.

ID New ZorrD Q
6'351Il Andy GrHflth
7:00 \a~,
all
ol Fortune

Communlly aaMI. October -7 &amp; 1.

Pupplq: Put Bilek n-an Part

Up CioN

QJ

Wamedto Buy

o.;.r

Would Llko To Bur Non Woftllng
Woshora &amp; D_ryora, Q.E., Hoi'
point, llaytog WP Seara Only
Nood C. II. 114-448-2144.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWEIIS

w._..

e

~
Stereo.

Gusher • Pasie • Venue • Arrive • EARRINGS '

I had a date with a guy that took his fishing too seri·

woman

ously for my taste. He gazed at me lovingly and· said,
"I could make great lures out of those EARRINGS!'

Cllflln
E-Q
CD 1!1 MacNeil/Lehrer
HlwaHaur Q
(J) fl M.rried ... Wlllt
Chlclren C
iiJ ID JeOiiardrl
ilD II Star Tm: 'ifia Nell

Employment Serv1ces

c

•

Genel'lllon

I

.

mllel . ~a2184,

Stereo. Q .
Quantum Leap Q
SportaCenter
· aMa...ytlne
ID Ule Goea On Q
7:051IJ 8ave~y HIHbtlllea
7:30 (2) • IIJ JeaperdyJ.D
(!) The Jellaraona t;J.:
Cll II Entertainment Tonlgllt
Stereo. Q
Cllfl Yoo Get Your Ule
!D) liD Wheel ol Fortune Q
.• 1121111 FamiiJ Feud
QJ NHL Hockey Philadelphia
Flyers at Pittsburgh Penguins

72 Trucks lor Sale

--·

FRANK AND ERNEST .

·~ ChaY. Stlfi_Sido oiOO Sm. '
Blodc 3 Spd, 12,500 O.B.D. .... 'i

Lolt ; 8f111111 black and tan
Yorklhlrw terri1r, Reedavlll•
vlelnltv, rewardi 814·378-6439 or
61j-3711'8406.

mnsag1.

8

Public Sale

&amp; AUction

Child care rao...C. • ro,.,al

.•

10181.

Wanced To Buy: Junk Autoe
With Dr Wltho.- llolora. Call

• Vlclnhy

i• 3 - - 1 - o o n o n A t . Lorry Llvaly. 614-3118-9303. '
· 35, Oct 1 tiwu a. Ent. ....., sao.

....._ TV, Homlt lnl, ahMtt, Top Prlcao Pold: All Old U.S•
Coins, Gold Rln'a. Sliver Colna,
--.., !~"'!!~· ddhoo, Iampo, Gold
Colno. 11. •S. Coin Shop,
-.-.olll8oonl•uttoach
151 Second Avenue, Galllpollt.
doy. IO:ON:OO.

~

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE EST~TES

614·949·2801. 949·2860
or 915·3839
(No S1llllay Calls)
2112192/lfn

Flrot Flvo Ladloo To Call To Soil
Avon WID Roclln t1l Worlh 01
M1rchandlal FrH, Call IM..w&amp;o

~bile Homes

3351.

'

.

·£~~

~UILDERS

!.!)

9 Year•

104 Beech Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
"Cs/1 Ut for All Your Building Needt''
COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
AGRICULTURAL
Livestock Buildings· Machine Sheds. Hay
Barns - Carports
.
Garages · Storage Buildings • Roofing Windows • Siding

Expe~lence

u.:

WV
fWV 020343
FREE ESTIMATES

ROBERT BORING
(114) 112-3541

JEFF STAATS
(304) 713-5346

•
•

lim• AN. 32 To 4G Hours Ptr

Wook. Prolorrocl. Long ' Tlfm
Car• And liDS Exp.rtenc•.
Bonollt Pockogo lniKI Wllh
Compolltlvo WOgos And Dil·
,_,,., Wllh EKPo&lt;lonca, Equal

l,po I]) 8 1121 Ouanlum Leap
Sam leaps into the life ot a
parapl~- Vlelnlll' vet.
Stereo.
.
..
!1l MOYI : Stale the Wild
Child (2:00)
CIJ II Cllfl Full H Jesse's record becomes aM

(D 1Hl b, Hf.A . IO&gt;C,

in Japan. Stereo.

114-251 1011 Afler I P.M.
1
1117 Ford Wn E-250, I Uter .:
Full lnjocted, Aulomollc DYer· •
drive, ~'· Eanllenl CDndtllon1 ..;
Aalllng: ss,200 s_, Ai: 322 ·,
Thln:l Avanue, Gltll-ilt. 814- '
t'"""]

245-6003,

f

r.lcrchand I SC
51

I .

I

4 . . - . $30.00

.......:11t ••2te0.

441--1G2.W.BurAIIII8ol~ DFumHonl .._ l'tllo-Up

0

$5.00 For

=-..::r· -...... •--=
.............
..
====-.......

rldaf

rtl'lp!t.

App'l c11, 71

FLu• =•• For lataJa'! Oak. In~
.....
lllllloia: I'M-3IJ.:
•
For _ _ _ .._

- -- -

2 eNad1n ~- ~!1.-1..._..

O:C,:":

Business
Training .

R•traln
Nowii!Southe..t•m
Buslnna Coll•ge, Spring V1111y

eonv.. &amp;e~a,

Plaza. C.OII Today, 6--436711

P•ts,

No

18 Wanted IQ DO
~ .....,_, lor..., Wholmio • ..tail. v...,
~Ait.:-o-ra-.tlo;..:no"':::.,..
:.:.,n.;.g~.~ll:..tnd":':'ln-g,· I UnODin Nolghto; 814-ti2•M Oak F - - --.uoa.
. aftor 5pm.

Drummonds A••lo
Bodv &amp;
•
•
M1ctllnlc Work. FrM Eatlm1te1.
Nalghborlloocl Rd, a:tl, 814-4411-3~.
.

l'wo b...~m -

nlollod,

·-

prMio

partly ... _
•
,,......

Qtll, 1 , .

PICKEHII'UIINITIIRE
Nca1'1Jf

-'*"'

-Ina
In IM.M.5- Jlrrlcho Rd. Pl. PI
call :104-elS-1410.·

Pomerov, $2101mo.,·

Ill
1111.
111 W¥
1

1

~~----------· , .~~~~--~~
Ro~r~gora~.,..
.......... •-.
E&amp;R TREE SERVICE. Tow.:ng, 42 Mobile Homes
DrY1o1tr ~
C..

Trimming, Troo Romovol, odgo

for· Rent

Trimming. FrN Estimates! 6f4-

T.V.'o Elii.IIIWII-1231.

367-l'VI7 Aftor 4p.m.
l4ll70 I I - - . CA, - r
G-goo Portable Sawmill, don't Porlar, S2IOiilo. Pluo s;;~O:/
houl your logo _to lht moll Juot Dope. I, e~,.. e
call304~75·1t67.

...

Hanydman Strvk:.. : 24 houra. ' Ita droccm Unl.._. mobile
Hava ,.,..,.c• 10 yra. ax- home, 114 4tl 0101 dM 8:00
Johneon'• TrM S.VIce, trimmlng
Nmoval, treH, ahrube,

.a

.,..PM .;;;i;;;;;~;;n;;'i;;-;;;;;k;

2 1bsdRI;OIII
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trllllf

tar ,.. In

IIIGf month

plue
hadgoo
.
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_
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....

Mist Paula'• Day C.rw Center.

2 I • - • - 011111.7 On

• urmr, acelln1

F111 on C1J I
Buslnen ·•
OpportunHy

=

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...
,......
loll•-·

....._ - - Available- ••·
Olu I...., '• Rite Aid Piwmlcy.

r .:::.:

- - -'lod...

..

=,.~= =~"~
......

-............

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&amp;~ wamed to Buy

Cunle

Home

~.
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-·

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;11H11

-

-m•a......... -312-20111
.
- - C o o l FurnoeoLWllh
Wll Slokor F - HOiod
For :100.000 B'IU. 1114-258 1088
AtlwiP.II.
.

-

I
I

WllltiHI~Q

I'M QUITTIN'
TH' KNITIIN'

lfMI

•

AN' QUilliN'

CLUB!!

...... llrloll, -

...........

-.-.IIO.CboiHioWin-

1 - ... Or-, OH Cal 814-

ALREADY
HEARD!!

1.-. -~r
-

..,
'~
.:.;

Jackoon, Oli. ·---37-41128.

·

PHILLIP
ALDER

WFsr
+AI

••
•aoz

.KQ98
• Q7 6
+AJIOB

+10532
+95 3

SOUTH
+KQJ983

••o

Q·

(

all Spons Tonight

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)

MacQyvet

Exceptions
do occur ·

Vul~erable: North-South
lleitler: West·

By Pblllip Alder

Soulb

Welt
I NT

l

a:-

,= ••-

The World Almanac: 18 Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

(II.)

35 DlalincUvulr
36 Ancient
mtlllcal
lnalrumonl
37 Endlau
38 Leaunad
40 Thou
41 e.., galt
42 Huah
45 Dolenoe
dapt.
48 Spawn
49 Lalli ma •
50 Hurrt.S
52- bun
53 Year (Sp.)
54 Author
Gard55 Youra and
mine
56 Women'• p•
tabrlc
lrlotlc aoc .
2 Air pollution
57 Bock
3 Ot mloollo
59 Fill to
· lnduatrJ
mention
411ao- tung
5 South AmeriDOWN
can animal
6 llro. Charlll
1 llatalllc
Chaplin

1 Futuro aHJI.'
111m

5 Lounge about
tiBembl'a
mother
12 Singer Ed 13 Girl of IOIIg
14 Speck
15 Addntonal
18 Na Ha,- or
bull
17 Timber 1roe
18 Altar19 Aciran
Thurman
20 Rendezvous
22 Bird
24 Hlghlll note
25 Two-looted
animal
.
27 Make happr
31 hiWIId
procluet .
32 Tatk
lmparlociiJ
33 Chemical

aulllx

34 Phrlk:lan

·

Cl!lll Oaitce Stereo.

R•

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'Your
'Bir_thday
Oct. 7, 1112

There are strong Indications you could
derive bonu- end promotiOns In the
year atiead trom Ideas that InvOlve y011&lt;
. work. Don'l keep them to yOU&lt;oell.
LIIIRA (lept. 23-0ct. :Ia) II could be the
little things you're involVed In today that
turn Into money-malun.lon't discount
them becluH of their otze. Libra, treat
yourullto a blrthd-v gHI. Send tor Ll·
.bra'a Altro-Graph prediction• tor the
J8'l! ahead by mailing $1 .25 plua along,
111111-addraued, atlln\pad enveloPe to
Aotro-Graph, c/o tpla neMJ)Ipll' , P.O.

Box 91428. Cleveland, OH 44101 -3428. counselor talks to you loda~ about ways
Be sure to slate your zodiac sign.

to open u"p a second source of Income,

SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov. 22) Your orga· perk up your "'I'S and strive to be total·
nlzatlonal abilities are exceptionally lr allen live.
keen today. It others lollow t~rough on ' TAURUS (Apr1120-Mily 2G) One ol the
the aoslgnrnento ~ou delegate to them. reasons others are so tond ol you Is due
all could benetlt.
·
to your gift tor making everyone leellm·
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. at) Take porlanl. You'll be able to use th is anrl·
adequate lima to study lmportani is· hula in several encounters today.
suesloda~; your lnsighto could increase GEMINI (May 21 •JUM 2G) You can do
after caretiJI review ot whal ~ou Initially whatever ~ou set your mind to loda~.
eppraloe. 1
provided you believe In ypur ablllllao.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen. 11) Be lav· .Give It a test by aiming tor something
Ish In your praiH ot trlenda who deserve Iotty that's within your reach. ·
·
It tod-v: compliments ·tram you will CANCER (Ju,. 21·July 22) Partlctpat·
make il bill Impact. Vou'lt know who lng In some type of vigorous physical
activity today could revitalize ~our zest
merits thtm lnd who doesn't.
·AQIIARIUI (Jen. ZO..I'III. 11) Your lo· tor IHe and challenge you mentaNy.cus today Ia likely to be on things thai · Don't be a cooch potato.
affect your alalus and tlnances - Just LEO (.IUIJ 23-Aug. 22) Yoor faculty tor
where It ahtiuld be. Brlghl Ideas could Improving things thai others begin will
enhllrice, your reputation and your be operative today. There could be
reaouroes.
·
three lnatanoas where rou'li u~ this gift
PISCES (Pelt. :10-Milroh 2G) You have effectively.
'
the ability lo twar othooalo ~our-way ot VIRGO (A,.. 23-lepl 22) It you have
thinking today, eapeclally It 11 regards _ oomelhlng olgnlttcanl to negotiate with
., luueln which you truly believe. Let another today, don 't lei It become a
your voice be heard.
committee Involvement. Best reouna
ARIEl (Merch 21·Aprll 11) It a reliable will be ac:hleVad on a OMrto•one basta.

/Je

'Forever Knight'
Crlmelllftl Afllr ,,.,..._

:a:£-

aManeyllne
11,311])e IIJ Tonlghllhow Wlllt
Jay ~ Sterl!!. Q

..

· m~·~~
12:30
MOVIE: ...,.,..,.. on
Pll'lde(2:00)
. Cll: Jerry ..,
.....ft.........

TilNe'l Contpeny .
liZ. Perfect Scor.

F J

'F H D

p F·

/
'

P

.a

D

LDJIIWOZSD

VEPG

BFON

U ,E W P D HE H R

MJI W P

AmeriCan Natlontls from
Epping, N.H . fn
8 tnllde Polltlol '12

.- .'

.

FPGDJIIW

D Z N W

·-

••
••

VZIW

•

EW

'
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PF

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PGDY.'

ilD

Ill IHRA Racing Nortlt

.•
• •

.

iDZH
NOWX.
PRE\ItOUS SOLUTION: "There are too many· men In politics and not
enough eiMWhere.'' - Hermione Gingold .
ICl 1112 by~. InC .

, ,.

.•
.. .
•

..
t

"

111 1111.

,,

· ..

48 Direction
51 lndlgM!Ion
52CardQIIIll

12:00 Clle Ruth Umbaugh
(JJ The Equltllaar
a Miller I Company
8 NtwaNight
tD liOMnu: The 1.oa1
(2:110)

...

•

47 Biblical klltt : :;

Wlllt •

12:GI ()) MOYIE: II. i - tPG)

•

•

crtmt

CIJDChe«aL,I

EpleodH

(2 wtla.)

0 1M4data
10 Fumbler's
exclamation
11 Coup d'11 TJPI ol ba.,
21 Radiation
moaaure
23 Over (poet.)
24 Famo•
lion...
25 Comlllllnclad
26--

30=.,
321'...1111
How all
35 Atlllerenl
one
38 D~nk Hke a
cal
38 cereal
30 Plly..: : (ai.J
41 One
IIIII ·
to win
•
42c.m-aru
43
bone
44 """
Believe-not
45 Creme - ;...,. •

::J

!.a:~rr

7 Collave dag.
8 Final at.age

Rhylllm

11:30 !1l SlrHI Juollce
CD To lha
Stereo.
Clle Nlghlllne
A.- ~a _ Stereo.

304-fi'IS- "

-.

27 Famale
28 HeiiVY
hrdi'Otlln
21 Grallad, In

SCarecrow and Mre. King

R-.
=:...-.
oollmatao,

No rill
Pass
4+

Today's deal contains two features 2 +
Pass
.that are seen infrequently, and it came
Opening lead: • K
'!ithin a whisker of a third rarity. Can
you spot them all?
Defending against four spades , West L - - - - - - - - - ' - - _ 1
.led the heart king. Declarer won with
dummy's ace .and played a trump to
the king and ace. West cashed the
heart queen before exiting with his
last spade. South won in hand; then he I queen. Was she oouDteton or not?'
played a club to dummy's king and a When West turned out to have onlyctwo :
, club -back to his queen. West woo with spades and at most eight_ cards in : .
the ace and returned the club Jack, hearts and clubs, South knew tbe an.. .
which declarer ruffed . Next, South led · swer to that question. And if West bad.
the diamond jack: queen, king, two. Fi· queen·thlrd of diamonds, the Cllllynally, declarer successfully finessed &lt;chance was \he backward fm- :
the diamond nine through East and which South aceomplisbed successful:
claimed His contract,
ly. Normally one doesn't ·attempt
What were the rarities• First, it is backward finesse, because it requirel ;
unusual to bid and make a game after two cards, the queen and 10, to be ·
an opponent has opened with a strong 'well·placed, whereas a simple rmno-trump.
.
requires only one card onside.
Second, there was South's handling
The near miss was East's hand. aut
of tho diamond suit. With this hOlding, for the diamond 10, he 1101114 ba,. lloild~
me customarily takes a simple fi· a perfect Yarbor ough, wbicb should
nesse. Here, though, South saw that he , occur once in every 1,827 hands.
_ . ..
was missing only 16 points. That · @..., _
meant West had to have the diamond

S

•

6

·tA J4
+Q2

Star.

0

•

EAST

10:05 (]) MOVIE: Kinjlta: Forbkklen
SubJoota tRi (2:00)
10:30 12!1 On
QJ NHRA ICing JOlly .
Rancher Nortltwest Nationals
• trorn Seattle rn
11,001])G CIJD CD Wa

\

a:~!f-::1 Triple 'A' Roollng
I
pon:hoioo, .... Ouaihy
W8. WYI03138S.

tK 9 8
+K 7 6 4

Aobeman

~;.To;-'..'1tereo. Q

11

Pullll&gt;lng_IIO 'aam1
Co; RON EVANS ENTERPIIIS!B

.AJ

tllliD liZ. ~·...

e

1 liJ . . . . . .?:IJWII In Pt.
PI
nt, W.Yo.; ,_..,._.,

FOUR SOLID
HOURS OF
NOTHIN' BUT
GOSSIP I(

«D tD Hunter C
a World NewT
1D 7110 Club WHit Pat

THAT I

rH»uUt motors In stock, RON , ,,

- - -Ohio. · -

.....,............

AT HIM.

1
I
I

- l c - - · Cu'-tllnch
Tin
10 Inch In SIDell. Ron

~-

9:30 (JJ 0 (J) Calc~ Lutlter
reveals his teelings tor
Christine after he has a
trauma. Stereo. Q
10:00 I])
i1J Dateline NBC
Innocent people who are hurt
and kMied during !!!!lice
pursuns. Stereo. 1;1 ·
...@HiwaC
~· CIJ D CllG Going ta
. El111-o Cheryl unleashes a
tumultuous uprising when
she hires a maid. Stereo. Q
(l) (f) Listening Ia Amerlcit

FISH TANK

a

Houle and tl'llllir rwpalr, •..ctrf.. ·.,~

· &amp;optic Tank

~

THREW~E

.J

other brwndt. Mo-. celTs. aleo
eorM apptlance rwpairl. WV
304-6~!11 Ohio 1'+448-2414.

...... .... oldlng. bookod

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'M-IEN MY NOM

J

lmprovemeru•

-••a

Or Attar I P.il.

~-re,

500 Davlo Sowing llaclolna And ,

l!!!i.,HI~
- . 04~
-~

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Ba
IA.II.

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'

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-_
......
ohopo. F - l o n Wort&lt;, Rooti!!g,
...In ,.....,114_-1723.
Kllchono And Balho. Fooo £j..
limit.. Rtt.MDII, No Job
63
Livestock
Too Big Or Smalll814-367-0518,

I F'*-f - . -

move lo Lantord. Stereo. Q
TuntlaJ Night Flghla (C)
12!1 Naaltvlle Naw Stereo.
a Leny King Uvel
Fallter Dowling Mrotartea
(JJ

AND HE SAID "T1-EY1&lt;e
MOeTL..Y TAX CHGIAT6
AND DRAFT CXX:SiEI!B .

0'

dar « night.
8o01mont Watorpr-

Roseanne's mother wants to

MOR.TY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP --

'
' •

114-m.o4tlll,

'

lod 1.11. I!MiiJ Tollove In Bolo
Onl.aniiCanlilol.1lllooloF"'"'

Oop,

Home
lmprovaments
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

EVANS, JAI:KSON, QH,
Sply,~.
-·
521'-1528.
.
;;::;:-;::-=-=----:--::-!!Jill ICDal IIDYI · Wllh :fltao:..:.:C'ttor---:--,
..
::-12,-......,-,-.old- Ron'o TV SlfYice, opoclallzlng
,., aoo 11oot1 :,v~ 1ron Prliooo_= nry. ~~
· In Zonlth aloo
moot

2111-~WIDOnRon­

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llo,.-.,114-111W114.
YocuUM Cioaowr Rapalr, Freo J
-~ -ion
Produeto
...........
-.li"'h Plci!.IJP Alii Doi'-Y. CIHrgoo ,,
Anolno Acid Body a ouv. .
,. c..- Rood, 8~14.
·- ~
.... "'-2 - and Ill

Solo, affordable, chlldoan. 'II·F Cloy~ Rd. 1M 2111401
5 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2,.10. 11r*oon• ~CUll
Before, aft• echool. Drop-1M
wk:lorne. 114 441 122t. NIW lnDJpr1o':..
lanl Todd* C.... 114-44W227.
MDIII PWILIM 111 I aL

="':'t":l..

Ooubla· Hard-core feminist
activists traoh an aduH
bookstore. Stereo. Q
(JJ a CllD Ro~eanne The

~~- - · Purobrod cal, plumbing, haaUng, cor· ~
1,.,.,,.
.... ,_. i bulla; 112 r:1ry,
!:'.'!'ll.ng.lnoldt and out: \
112 - 1
HoMir Jack Tonolloto: l""ld lelalan 1M. 112 llmllllfllal
.f ,
toOcl -• llf'J_,.. conlalnt .... buiiOI hoiWo, 114-141-21122:
JET
I
_
.
.
nulrlonlo
to
lllmlnolo
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Aorotlon Mae-. ropalnd. New , 'I

....-- · - ohalra,
..,.,. . Ro--.
'...._.,
- .... -...,
'
254
1
wa--. dotalloU, -

Rog.fill-05-12741.

614-446-41134.

For.., • c

NolghboriiDDd, Comor Lot, PW, 0322. 3 mloo oul Bulnllill Rd. - - . fl50, 114-M:I-3187.
_GO, Full BoMmonl, 304-575- ~Frao:=;.Oolln=:::::."!:.'-=----::-::...,Tank ot Full 0t1, $200. Con
7175·
'
,
Uvlng , _ oullo, - . - · Full
BaT... - ..... 114-4441-21123.
In Rio

.

·-·
.,

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9:00 we 1121 Raa-ble

•

Uncondhlonll lttea"m• gu.,.,.. :
••· Local
turilllhed. · •
Frw eetlmstet. Call eolllct 1~ •

........r

2 Bedrooms. MJddltport, Nlc•

Grandt, Rudy: Octobtr Slh. taloia, t188. ....,_....,.. .,.....1148.
:;lpo:...m:;-o.--:::--:---:c-=--.,..,2 bo..._ ho!mt, ~l:rd, nlco ~n.,"'::.,.~
no'l!hborhood, 304,
213.
Dryorw 1100 1 Up.- Pallo in
Smaft Fumlohad 3 Room Cot· Stock. Cal &amp; Dryw
tag1 In GaWpoll.. Close To Shoppt,l14 •• 2t44.

81

- - t o r -Nia. 304-

Styllat NMdld Booth Aanlal,

Houra: Yon Sat, N. I~

'

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

1'1p ,.,, ,,..

1::

New

Accessories
aM t~nka, one ton

Serv1ces

Oponlng Oocolbor 3, 111112, :me
141,

Auto Parts &amp;

372-313tw1~.

COUNTRY FUIINITIIR£

2 bodroom homo Pt. Pll, close
to achoola 1: 11om, Hnd In-

3 Bldroom HouM

61 Farm Equipment

76

whooli, radlaton, lloor mato, '
otc. De RAulo, Roploy; wv.-. r

Plnecrnt Drtv•, Galllpolltt Ohio
45131, fl4n'411--7112.

an~r

L1vcstock

Broyhll 3 pc. Lhltng - . .

bodroom homo, now houH COUTMQTo-ASpooo
oondltlon, rol l dop r,oqvlrad, 0000 USED APPlJAHCES
no poll, 304-67UII2.
W.~ron, lololgll.-,

&amp;14-44~

Championship Sarles: East
Dlvls_lon Champion at Wast
Division Champion (game 1)

Suppli&lt;·S

suuo, s ....,.... 0a11 To-.
w
... ~.::-=-·. W.dolo,.
Band.
State -

2 btdroom houte for rwnl, one

Eoi:h.

lloor,- hoot p!!mp, earpot, lg. Ylni 11-iti 1 - J a , 1· Wna
$110; lloo mloc.
yard, , country utllng fn =IOO..t~;:;•;;;34;=.;:.·
lodlilo Ill: ... 114-112·
Baohom, 1210/ inont'\:olt &amp;
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
2111. ...... .,~!ht "' 2204 ...
rotor- roqultad, ••
-5135, Complota homo ,_,......_

Conlacl: K•llr AI
Dr lt4.ea:Z.7181.

.

:iBa-1
D liZ e Major
National League

(l)

. s Ior RenI
41 House

.

II rn

~

Household
Goods

2

Oppprtunlty Employer. Pla111

C

CD 1!1 RNima at Ilia
Ruaalan Baar Stereo. C
®1 liD ~ Reacue' lift
Stereo.
®•
IE: Number One
Wlllt a Bullet (R) (2:00)
(JJ Mu-. She Wrote Q
12!1Croal&lt;andCheM
a PrtmeNewa D..
tD Yaung Rille,.- Q
1:05 ()) Sheka Zulu (PI 2) 12:00)
1:30 (JJ II Clle Hangln' Wlllt
Mr. Cooper Mark's former
flame returns witlt less titan
honorable intentions. Stereo.
l.eagu4i

WV25550.

Contact Tho Dlroctor Ot Nura·
11111, Pln-oot Caro C.OniOr, 170

21 .

7:35 Ill Sanford • San

Oil, WE'LL,_ LIVE
fit'.' LE.O.KN I

1188 F-150 Ford FMI '
Looko I Ru,. Gocd 13,000. :

qulrad to Box C.28 % Pl. Pn. ~fp.lii~
Rogl...,_ 200 Main St, Pt. Pn,' So
Floo

lmmodlato Oponlng For Full·

,

(l)
Ia Crooofire

ALLEYOOP

Rentals

po~tnca. 114-2511--8147.

MORRIS
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE

1

MOLD ll !... T~H r

Me

Roqulrad. 8ond -mt: Boa
CLA 240il e/o Galllpcllla Dally 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
T~bu"'J.c25 Third Avonuo, Go~
llpollo, unlo 41831.
· IC,.. mil, with Will, ..pile
._m, t1a,OOO. 304-885-3421.
Pold

home ca,. of paUent, call

PRECISION POST FRAME

~

. FO,GOT :ro GillE
fOOl&gt; AGAIN !

Mllao North Of Crown Cll~. 614·
3-.114-256-61149.

puter Ex~nc• Deelr..:l, HoC

14

TOOTtiPIGIC.....

for sale

27 Acrw Farm More Or Less, 2

Full·nmo Otilc:o Poslllon: Com-

Spm 514-192-2838.
"Any Sin Avallebla"

" Pole Buildings"

ICNIFe. FOI"IC

ANT&gt; SF'OON.

FAST FOOD

33 Farms lor Sale

Wanted: Experi1nCed help tor

I

P~ASTIC

.

. -BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes e VInyl Siding
~ew Garages e Replacement Wfndows
RC)om Additions • Roofing
:

COUPOI'If, PAGICAGE5 Of tcETG~lJP,
. __.. MUST ,4~D. MAYONNAif~. SAt. T.

UNtV£RS£··~

Wagoo.

•

...

BURG£R

outriN}Ch worker. 2 or 4 rear de-

grM In child dovolqpment or
rolalod tleld and oxportonce
Rick Purson Auctlon Company, pratwred. Sand Mume to P.O.
full time auctlon•r, ~mpl•t• Box 14;11L · Huntlnglon, WV
Gallipolis
auction
MrYicl.
UcenHCI 25703. E.O.~ .
IH,Ohlo &amp; w..t Vlrglnlo; 304&amp; VIcinity
COLLECTOR I
773-5781.
Landing Taam AI Clllzona 32
1J limo: ton, N. 1 milo pall Mt. Alto Auction. Audlon Frld1y Tho
Rio G.- Unlvonlly on 321 &amp; Saturday, 7:00 Pll. Frl- National Ot-Polnt ~-nt • A
Dlvlolon ot Firat Hwdlngton Na.
SOuth. Wateh lor olgn1.
grocriH, rww &amp;. uud merchaft. tlonal Sonk HH An Oponlng FOI'
4 family ale: acron from Kerr cliH. Sat.,.._ guarantMd mer• A Colloctor ot Dolinquont ""'
Dlff.,.nl dellera ,_.,., CDhego Dogroo Pr•tor·
pdot oftlco on 01c1 At. 160. Wod., chandlu.
wHkly. Ell Frulor, At. 2 North red. Excallenl v..tMil And Writ~
Thurs. 10o4.
.
slxt11n mil... Llcenu No. 830.
t•n Communication ~1111 A•
4 flmlly: tlrot thlo y11r. 260·112
qulrad. AppiJ AI Cl!lzono No·
4th A.... qct. -nh, 8th, 9·?
9 Wanted to l;luy .
tlonal • 421 Main St-t Point
Plooaan\,. WV 25550 Or o Tho
w Dolly, Oel- 7, B, ith: Win· "aoo_,.ko.:.::.;B;ooko.:..:.:..:,..:B.:ooko...:.:~. :..,~-· Human
"MCOUrc• O.S.rtlnlnl
t~ Slotlon Qd 35, Antlquas,
~
FlnUiuntlngton • 1boo Fifth
CM!rW, Yanllyl Boby Clothoo, and Roro, llought and Sokl. ot
llaftrM•, Mora
.
Theophll\18, Box 731, Gllllpollt, A - Huntinjpon, WV 21708.
Ohio 4583L 614-4411-7282 8· EEO /ij., Emplofor. IID-r Koy
Clntu~on Bank Shl.rH, Inc.
ALL Yord Soloo llusl Bt Pold In IOP.M.
·
Adnnco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Don~ Junk hi Soli Uo Your HonDATAENTIIY
1hi day botDN tho od lo to ""'· Woftllng llojOI' Appllancao, Wo hovo
lmmodla,. ~ ..
SoondaY ectlllon • 2:00 p.m. Color TV'•._ A•frigerstora,
In lllo lloDon Cou~
Friday. llonclaj odlllon • 2:00 FfWDrS, VCK'e. Mlcrow...t, o'l!nmonll
arH tor lnclvkiulla wnh
P·'ll; Solurdoy.
Air Condiii01Wni, Gullar Ampo, koylng alllilo. • IIDdlcll llf·
mlnology holplul. Compotlllvo
Fqiloy. ·1-112 mlloo out 218. John Elc. 614-251--1238.
Dilre 110, push ' mowt~r, hand Good uMd lull •oil fum.c1. 114::~;:."~1.!'7 :IO~s:
1-. .,..., clolhao, booaball 3711-21177.
.
3031 or • - In IDUy, MAN- . dodil"llo mloc.
POWER TEMPORARY SER·
Uood
Mobllo
Homto,
Coli
814Subdtviolon 1, a, IOih. s- 441.0175.
VICES
.
wv. 528
'" llh Avo. Hunti""'on,
....
5. Wolaht Uftlna Btnch, Plow
.
..
Btby Cllothoo, NUmtroua Olhor Wantocl otondll!l tlmbor, top
EARN
IIOHIY
llaodlna
lookol
- p a i d . .... - - .
"· '
llcoNod logging company, :104· m.~. 11otont111.
Dotallo. (1) 1105-182-8000, Ext. y.
115-3055.
•. - Pt. Pleasam
· Yard Sale

r---------------~~~------------~
Lf-7'5 s~e NAPICIN.r. ~orro GAMf',

•

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+10 7 52

C

(JJ
QJ

•...

iH-tl

NORTH

BRIDGE

·

1121111 E~nment Tonight

1111 CiloY. CaYIIIor. liuo,'lood, ;
AC, All..fll . ...,_, 23. 6oci ..,

" .s

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Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

•'

TUesday, October6,1992

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

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Braves
win playoff
opener 5-1

..

~

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Ohio Lottery

··

.........

.

·.

.

/! \\ '

Pick3:

305
Pick 4:
4259
Buckeye 5:
5-6-14-22-25

'

_Page 4

Partly cloudy lonlghL Low In
50s . Thursday, chance or,rlhl. .
High In 70s.

,,

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Vol- 43, No. 111

Copyrighted 11112

2 S.c:llono, 14 Pogeo 25 ...,.,.
A MuiUmedlo Inc. -paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 7, 1992

-

Voinovich opposes·
proposed label law

CONCRETE PRODUCTS
801b.

•

Gravel Mtx.............s3.59 ~"-'t\\t'\:
- ·~
. . t\l"~~ ..... ~.
80 1b
MOrtar M.IX.............$3 .59 \.;co•c•t1'1 -·.....
"'

&amp;.,---1

•

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oQ•"

1

941b.

GEORGIA PACIFIC SHINGLES

Portland Cement.....:........$5.99
.1o lb. Mortar....... ~............................$4.99

·~reen

•Chestnut Blend oCopperwood
•Black •Bark Brown •Green &amp;White

CONCRETE WORK PRODUCTS
90 LB. MINERAL SURFACE

ROLLED ROOFING
· •Green •Brown •White
•Black •Green &amp; White

$10.99~··}
ROLL
NO. 15
ROOFING FELT
$

'

I

.
STEEL NON·INSULATED

GARAGE DOOR

...,,

WIRE MESH
'

'

8"-x6"x1 0/1 0
5'x150' WELD WIRE MESH

) j_ ~$43.99 ROLL
- ....-:.....

$18 9•9 5

3/8"x20' REBAR

GEORGIA PACIFIC

-'3.00

DOUBLE 4 or DOUBLE 5

1/2"x20' REBAR

WHITE VINYL

,

'

. '

'J

PREMIUM GRADE

'

ROOF COATING
&amp; FOUNDATION
5 GAL.

$9.99

ALUMINUM ROOF COATING .
5 GAL.

3
3112"

15"....-......;......$12.58 ROLL
X 23" .........._•••••• ~...$18 •22 ROLL .

112" X

6" X 15"........................$11.51 ROLL
6" X 23".........:...............$17 .65 ROLL

100'x4" SOLID or PERFORATED ·

F'LEXIBLE .PIPE

$24.95
1-----~-------1-.J

Committees outlined Tuesday
evening include: publicity and
tours, with Mary Powell, chairman, Jean Trussell, co-chairman,
and Julie Dillon: eatertainment,
. Paula Thacker,. Econoinic Development Director f&lt;ir the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce; an agriculture and' buslaess committee,
Jcff Thornton and Mary Rose, cochairmen, and PlltlY Pickens; food
and festivals, Cindy Oliveri, chairman, .and Harry Bailey; historical
aspects, Oave Gloeckner, chairman, and Margaret Parker, Susan
Oliver and Dan ,Smith; ~(up and
resenoations, Mary Rose, Addalou
Lewis, Kenny Wiggins, Beta
Sigma Phi Sororities and Shirley
.
Huston.

CARE .FREE

$24.95

FAUCETS ·

ROOF CEMENT....5 GAL. $12.80

Economy 8" Kitchen w/Spray.................. s23~35 . . . . . . .
Economy 8" Kitchen no spray.:...........~$15.25
Better 8" Kitchen w/Spray.........................$41.35.- -.a
Best 8''. Kitchen
w/Spray ......................~......S50.35.
. .
..
.
$ . . ..
Better Tub &amp; Shower................................ 58.45 '· ~----..~
_
Better Shower Only..............:....................s49.45..,_,.

BLACK BOARD INSULATION
4'x8' SHEET

1&gt;mos'"ror showcase ~f ~eigs
Gounty's offerings were oudined
Tuesdily evening ~ committees to
organize and plan .the event were
selected. • ' · · ·' · '
Mary Powell, director of the
Meigs_County Park District and
Tourism. and Cindy Oliveri. Meigs
County Extension Agent, Office
Chairman,
Home
Economisi/CNRD Agent with The
Ohio State University Cooperative
Extension Service, are coordinators
for the event which will be presented Sept. 16 and 17 of 1993 at the
Rock Springs Fair Grounds. Set up
for the showcase would take place
the day before - on Sepl 15.
The showcase idea has been
handed· down from the State
Depariment of Tourism in an effort
to create an awareness · of
Appalachian counties in the state as
well as create and generate tourism.
During the showcase, all unique
aspects of the county would be fea·
tured in a display-!ype situation.

Ajlother meeting was set fot
March 9, 1993 at. 5 p,m. at· the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce Office. Until that time, commiuees are to be working indepen-.
dently to complete the necessary
tasks of implementing the show-

case. ,

Mrs. Powell states the main goal
of the showcase is to promote what
Meigs County has to offer. !twill
feature displays from each fesilval
jil the county .to p~te that particular event as well as biiSinesses
and industries wit~in the county
anil what thllse entities have to
offer. She stressed ihe importance
of keeping the event a showcase
and iwt tu{lling it into a festival .
Displays at lhe showcase will .fea·
· ture demonstrations and pictures
and items pertinent to each individual festival.

..

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Further in formation on the
showcase may be oblained by call·
ing Mrs. Powell at 992-2239.
·
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The governor and four members
of his Cabinet called the news conference to ~e the defeat or ballot
Issue 5. whtch requires warning
labels on prod~ts that cause cancer and binh defects.
His directors were finishing
their comments when Voinovich
was handed a note by .an aide that
apparently advised him of the
protesters' presence. He got up and
walked out without c;oniment, ieaving the aides to fmish up.
Michael Dawson, the governor's
executive assistant, said he "did
not intend to take part in a side
show, with someone waving weenies over their heads. He's already
answered all of iheir questions."
Earlier, Voinovich said he had
asked the depanments of heal\~!,
agricultJ!re, development and 'the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency to evaluate Issue 5 "with
an open mind" and make a recom·
mendation.
He said they concluded the proposal "will not make Ohioans
healthier and safer.
"In fact, it could take money
and staff away from our current
efforts to enforce Ohio's laws, proteet consumers and improve the

quality of life,' ' he said.
EPA Director Donald Schregardus said Issue 5 is vague, contradtctory and underfunded. He also
said it would duplicate federal and
s~ate laws requ1ring polllllers 'to
dtsclose potential riSks to lhe publie.
Heahh Director Peter Somani
said it deals with cancer and birth
defects only minimally. The state
should use its resources to campaign against smoking and
unhealthy lifestyles, he said.
· Development Director Donald
Jakeway said the proposal would
hurt Ohio's economic development. Fred Dailey, di.J1;ctor of agriculture, said it would impose
reporting and other unnecessary
burdens on farmers.
Ohio Citizen Action, which circulated petitions .to put the issue on ·
the ballot, and the Ohio Environmental Council, criti'cized
Voinovich's position. ·
The council"s executive director, Richard Sahli, said Voinovich
reneged on campaigri promises to
protect the environment "and now
opposes the option which citizens
are promoting to fill the vacuum of
governmental inaction."

More bodies pulled from plane
wredtctge;flight~recorder found

a

00_ _ _ _....a---T
SIDING ....._.....s....4·_

ROLL

$9.99 ,--

Trent Tuesday afternoon. The youngsters each
received a fire bat from the Pomeroy Fire
Departmeat. Jeff Shank was assisted by his
brother, Stacey, also a fireman.
·

Showcase
plans outlined
by com·mittee

••

5 GAL

LEARNING ABOUT FIRE PREVENTION
, • How to prevent fires, report one, and escape
from a burning house were among the things
wbic:h' Jeff Sbank, Pomeroy assistant lire chief,
.tqld Pomeroy kindergarten students of Becky

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Gov. George
Voinovich called a news conferehce to annmmce his opposition to
a Nov. 3 baUQt proposal, but cut it
short after a group of protesters
showed up to demonstrate on
another matter.
,
Opponents of a hazardous waste ·
incinerator in East Liverpool
waved wieners in the back of the
room during Voinovich's news
conference Tuesday in which he ·
urged defeat of a ballot issue that
would require warning labels on
certain products.
Terri Swearingen of the TriState Environmental Council and
Beth Newman of the Greenpeace
Toxtcs Campaign said afterward
that the gesture was meant to show
that Voinovich and his aides are
" weenies on waste."
Voinovich says he lacks power
to block operation of the incinerator.
Earlier Tuesday, Greenpeace
held a news conference in Columbus. conte.nding that changes in
Waste T!l(:hnologies Industries •
ownership have invalidated its
incinerator permit.

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands
Investigators today round
the flight data recorder of the El AI
jumbo jet that plowed into a suburban Amsterdam apartment build·
ing, killing an estimated 250 peo·
pie.
• · ~
i.
, Bui ,the.recorder was badly dam·
aged, officials said, leaving little
' hope it could detail the moments
before the Boeing 747-200 cargo
plane crashed into the 10-story
building 10 miles east or Schiphol
Airport on Sunday night ·
Sear.chers picking through a
floodlit, smoideri'ng plane crash
site early .today had already lost
hope of fmding survivors and were
not even certain they would recover many bodies.
By early in the day, only 30
corpses had been pulled from the
§Corched rubble of the high-rise
apartment building. Eighty of the
building 's 230 apartments were
wrecked, and 150 were heavily
damaged.
·
Officials also raised doubts
today about earlier reports that the
plane lost both of its starboard
engines.
·
"Whether the plane's right
inside. engine also fell orr has not
yet been detennined," Transponation Minister Hll_!lja_Maij-Weggen
(AP) -

Kill EN RESCUE A'ITEMPT • Scott Shank and Jetr Shank
of the Pomeroy Fire Department attempted Tuesctay afternoon to
rescue kittens that appeared to be stuck between the walls or
Anderson's and Bank One in Tbe Daily Sentinel's mini·park in
Pomeroy. The kittens are, however, situated in such a way that
makes retr.ievalunlikely. Concerned citizens are now trying to lure
the kittens out with rope~.

.

Agriculture ,officials
~re against Issue 5
"Agriculture and food process·
ing js Ohio's #I industry, employing one in every seven Ohioans. It
is the job of The Ohio Department
of Agriculture (ODA) to help
ensure agriculture continues to
grow s1ronger and more competitive .in lhe future, but Issue 5 seriously threatens OQI' industry," said
Fred L. Dailey, ODA director

Tuesday.
He said that if Issue 5, a product
labeling and chemical notification
proposal passes, agriculture may be
the hardest hiL
· Here's why, he said: ·•.
"Issue 5 would require many of
our. state's businesses (including
fl!IJiling) to place cance.r and binh
Continued on page 3 ·

,------Local briefs
Reports highlight board meeting
Reports on special education programs and the new Adult Basic
Literacy Program class (ABLE) were given by John Riebel, superintendent, 81 Tuesday night's meeting of the Meigs County Board of
Education held in the board office.
The board adopted regulations for operating the special educa. lion progrQR~to be in epmpliance with the Ohio Depinment of Education's Special Education Compliance System _(SPES). Riebel
reported on unils in the county and some proposed changes. He also
.reported on~ of the new ABLE class at Racine.
··
A list of those who have access 10 sllldent records was approved,
alona witlr a bus driving cenificate for Neal White of Meigs Local.
The treasurer's repon was given and several bills were-approved for,·
paym~L
,.
.
Attending were board members, Oris Smith, president; Bill
Quickie, vice president, Bob Burdette, Jeff Harris, and Harold
Lohse.
·

Coin collection sought
The t.fcigs County Sheriff's Dcpanment has re~:eived a request
from another dc:parllllenlto seek missing coin collection. .
·,
· Contiaued OD iiate 3

said in.a letter to Parliament.
Hans Scholten. spokesman for
the Dutch aviation authoriry, said,
the flight recorder was sent to the
Air Accidents Investigation Branch
of Britain's Departn1ent of Transponation in Farnborough. abQut 35
miles southwest of London.
The jet's pilot, who had strug ·
gled to get the jet -~ack to. the air·
port after encountenng engtne truuble, died along with the other three

people on the plane.
The Boeing Co. said Tuesday
~at company officials'met in Seattle with some operators of 747
jllmbo jets two weeks before Sunday's crash to discuss engine
mount problems.
The Sepl I 6 meeting was held
because of longstanding concem
about crac/ljng in the fuse pins tha~
hold the .iit9Jbo jet's four engines
Continued oil page 3

1\vo ex-Perot supporters
give their support to Clinton
CLEVELAND (AP) - Two · his idea of eliminating the deficit
former supporters of independent too fast might increase unemploypresidential candidate Ross Pero1 ment, Vukovich said.
today threw their suppon to Demo"I still admire the guy , I like
what be's done for veterans," said
cratic nominee Bill Clinton.
State Rep. lOseJ(lh Vukovich, D· Vukovich, a U.S. Anny veteran.
Jennifer Gusik, 19, a former
Poland, 'said he onginally support:
ed Perot but now thinks Clinton's Perot volu,ntcer from Maple
economic ideas are better. Clinton Heights, said she supports Clinton ·
also would be more likely to work but still admires Perot.
with Perot to solve the nation's
"I think he's got very good
economic problems, Vukovich said ideas, he doesn't want to pander to •
this morning during a news confer, special interest groups and I think
ence at the Clinton-Gore campaign if Bill Clinton weie elected, he'd
headquarters in Cleveland.
work with Perot more readily than
While Perot is very good at Bush would,'
. .' Gusik said.•
identifying th!' nation's problems,

.

'

Strategic Bosnian ci.~y fal's
to Serbs; gas cut to Sarajevo
.·
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina ,(AP)- With .a final push
fought hand-to-hand on the sireets,
Serbs caplllred th~ northern ' border
city of Bosanski Brod and with the
viclory widened a laod corridor
from easiem to western Bosnia
Sarajevo radio reported today
that the Serbs followed up Tuesday's capture by demoying the
local bridge that was lhe only Croa·
tian-Muslim-controlled link over
the Sava River to Croatia
Meanwhile, heavy shelling was
- ~in the capital this morning,
wnh some shells landing near the
presidency building.
''We are all still shock'ed·, " a
local Bosnian official, his voice
trembling. said as he reported the
developments in Bosanslti Brod.
The city's 'loss was a major defeat
for !Josnia:Herzegovina's defend·
ers.
·
'!be official, who spoke on con-·
dition of anonymity, was reached .
by telqJhone in Slavonski Brod on
lhe Croatian side of the ~va river.
"I still can' t believe it, we can
see them (Selbs) now on the other
side of the: Sa'IB," he said, explain-

ing Serb forces had taken the city
and reached the Bosnian bank or
the Sava, which fonns the border
with Croatia
Bosans,Jd Brod is 95 miles north
of Sarajevo. S~tbs now hold about
70 percent of the republic.
Croat•Muslim forces still hold
the town of Brcko further east and

were believed to have sent reinforcements there.
Meanwhile, seven U.N. rel.icf
planes landed_Tuesday in besieged
Sarajevo, where an already dismal
situation was worsened by t.he
interruption of natural gas supplies
to tens oC thousands of residents.

:Union, Anchor Hocking:-·
Glass dispu-te co~ti.nues .
LANCASTEI{, Ohio .(AP) Union members say Anchor Hocking Glass locked them out, but the
company says the workers are, on
strike.
American Flint Glass Workers
members said the company told
them to leave Saturday morning.
Vern Sampson, a union.worker,
saiq emplo~ were told to leave
without limshing the work that was
• Qn tJie line. ThOusands of dollars of
glassware was destroyed by being
left on the .line, said Sampson, a
27-year employee. ~
·
·

The . plant is owned by the ·
Newell Company in Freeport; ·1)1.
No one could be reached ill AnChor
Hocking in Lancaster or at the .
Newell Col)lpany. late Tuesday
night.
.
·
· Work at the plant halted after
negotiations for a new contract
broke down Saturday nioming.
The contraCt expirtd last.ThutsdAy. Talks had c:enterecl on raises
health insurance bCnefits and ~
· pension plan for the union, which
repres¢nts I ,300 employees at the
pianL

-

.•

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