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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:

Steelers
blank ·
Bengals

339
Pick 4:

Page4

6696

Tcmlaht, portly dcluciy. Lw ·
In tbe mld401. Weda....y, partly cloudy. ,Hlgblll tile Iow60o.

·•

VoL a, No. 125
Copyrighted 1882

OUTSTANDING STUDENTS • These stu·
dents at Tuppers 'PlaiDS Eleinentary School were
bouored at a recent asseinby as students of the
month. Perfect attendance were also presented.
Tber are, front 1-r, Le Ann Marcinko, second

· grade; Bailee Cline, nrst grade; Jamie
kindergarten; Jeunller Hayman, kindergarten.
. Back row 1-r, Jessica Brannon, sixth grade;
Matthew Boyles, fifth grade; Joshua Kehl, •··
fourth arade; and Kimberly Marcinko; third
·grade.

Volunteer workshop held recently
THE CIRCUS IS COMING • "Circus Futasy'' is comilig to Meip High Sebool ill ro..eroy
oa Od. 22 at 7 p.m; far oae show. The sbow is
sponsored by Amerk:an's Missing Children, a

natiollwide non-proftt orpnizatlon dedicated to
loc:atiaf missing cbildreD. Pictured is Jobaaila
Zer!1ill .on the slagle trapeze, as sbe performs
ber IJ'III)efuland dan~ ad.

A volunteer in-service training
workshop was recently held at
Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
The program developed as a part
of the RU1111 Demonstration Grant,
encouarged parents to become
involved wi!h !heir child's educa-

Your Social Security
By ED Pt:I'ERSON
Social Seauity
Manager ill AtbeDS
Many people know tbat wives
and widows can get Social Security
benefits when their husbands retire,
beCOme disabled, or die. And men
have these same benefit rights on
their spouse's Social Security earnings. What may. be less well
known, however, is what happens
if the marriage ends-what rights
do divorced spouses have to Social
Security benefits on their exspouse's Social Security earnings?
A divorced spouse can get benefits on a fonner husband's or wife's
Social Security record if the marriage )as led at leaSt I 0 years. ,The
divorced spouse must be 62 or
older and unmarried. The worker
aJ,so must be at least 62. If they
have been divorced 2 years or

more, he or she can get benefits as a legal spouse. Previously, these
even if the worker is not retired.
women and men were considered
People often aslc if the amount. wives and husbands for !he purpose ·
of benefits paid to their ex-spouse of gelling Social Security benefits
will reduce !he amount of benefits · only if no legal spouse received
paid to their current wife or hus- benefiis.
band. The answer is "no." Social .
A P-erson C!lnnot receive
Security figures benefits for an ex- spouse s benefit if he or she quali. spouse without regard to the fies for a higher benefit on his or
her own work under Social Securiamount paid to a cune.ll spouse.
ty,
nor can he or she receive bolh
A change in !he Social Security
benefits.
He or she will get the
law !hat went into effect in January
higher
of
the
two. This is one of the
1991 eliminaled the 2-year wait for
reasons
why
men,
With their generpeople who were already 'etling
ally
higher
earnings
and thus highspouse's benefits at the ume of
er
benefits,
arc
less
likely than
their divorce.
women
to
receive
spouse's
beneAnother new provision of the
fits.
.
Social Security law affeets women
The full amount of the Social
and men who married in good faith
and later found out !hat !heir mar- Security benefit for a spouse is 50
riage was invalid. As of I an. I, percent of !he worker's benefit. If a
1991, !hese people can qualify for spouse's benefit is takeo before age
benefits on the worker's ·social 65, !he benefit amount is reduced
Security record on !he Slll!le basis for each month before age 65 benefits-to a low of 37.5 percent of the
worker's benefit at age 62.
For more infonnation, call the
Social Security toll free number (1·
800-l172-1213). The Chillicothe
phone number is 774-5500.
POMEROY· MADD will meet
The September meeting of the
Tuesday at Health Recovery Ser- Natures Garden Club of he Galvices, 119 Butternut Avenue in lipolis Developmental Center was
Pomeroy at 6 .,.m. Everyone wel- opened by 14 members repeating
come. Further mfonnation may be the pledge.
Roll call was called by Mary
obtained by calling 992-5277 or
Kirkwood. Virginia Garnes was a
742-2933.
visitor. Minutes of !he last meeting
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- were~ by Charlotte Young. For ·
were . the poems "A
port Literary Club will meet devotions
Reassuring Smile and "A Touch of
Wednesday at 1:30p.m. at the Love" were read by.Lucy Earwood
home of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
Mrs. Wendell Hoover will review of the Gallipolis Garde11 Club.
The program of the day was
the book "Dear and Glorious
given
by the French City Garden
Physician" by Taylor Caldwell.
Club
of
which Mrs. Elaine .George
Roll call will be "share a verse
is
president.
Members assisting
from the Gospel of Luke."
were Bertina Smeltzer, Juanita
SYRACUSE • The Syracuse Spurloclc, and Willa Saunders,who
Homemakers Third Wednesday gave readings of, "Friends Are
group will meet Wednesday at 10 Like Flowers", "My Neighbor",
a.m. at the municipal building. "When You Wish U~ A Leaf",
B~ng wallpaper or colored paper, "Front Porch Rocker , "In An Old
SCissors and glue to make shopping Garden" and "A Garden".
The members of Natures Garden
bags.
Club then participated in a plant
CHESHIRE - The Galiia-Meij!S identification of geranium, fern,
Community Action Agency w11l dusty miller, sweet pea, begonia,
hold a (ree clothing day Wednes- . marigold, clover, dahlia, petunia,
day from 9 a.m. to noon at the old passion fl~wer, spider plant, pansy.
coleus, airplane plant, asparagus
high school building in Cheshire.
~ern! mum, sedum, holly, wanderREEDSVILLE - The Meigs mg JeW, camphor plant, vinca vine,
County Republican Executive dandelion, lobelia and pyraeantha.
Comm1ttee, fall campaign dinner, Each member made an arrangeWednesday, Eastern High School. ment in a small bottle consisting of
Social hour, 6:30-7 p.m., followed dusty miller, white and purple
by dinner served by Eastern Band globeamratha, straw flowers and a
Boosters. Tickets are available for small bow. Refreshments were
$5 from any officeholder, candi- served. The meeting closed with
date or at the Republican Party the benediction "God Bless You
.
Headquarters, Main Street, and Keep You in His care•.
The
next
meeting
will
be
Oct.
Pomeroy.
22.
.

lion.
Dr. Donald Shue, principal, welcomed ·the group to the meeting,
and John Costanzo, Meigs County
Elementary Supervisor, provid~d
an overview of the program.
Joann Calaway and Leslie Kid-

der, volunteer coordinators, spok'e
of the satisfaction invQlved wi!h
being parent volunteers.
Instructional stations were located in !he gymnasium where teachers demonsttaled the types of activities in wh'ich par~nts could
become actively involved.

RVRRY IN
SALE · ENDS SATURDAY:

permits

JlothFor

*399

Community calendar A
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
MONDAY
ENTERPRISE - Enterprise
Uniled Me!hodist Church will hold
a series of meetings through Tuesday at 7 p.m. nightly. Rev. Kenny
Baker will speak Sunday. Bruce
Stone will perform Monday and
Tuesday. Public invited.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet in recessed session Monday at 7 p.m. at Star Mill

Part.
SALEM CENTER - Revival at
Salem Center United Methodist
Church will be !vJonday through
Friday at 7 p.m. nightly. Special
singing night! y. Rev. Chester Lemley, Ed Mingus, Roger Kennedy
and Dennis Faught will be the
speakers. Public invited.
lffiEDSVILLE - A meeting for
...1 Easlem High School seniors and
their parents, especially those interesled in going on the class trip, will
be held Monday at 7:30p.m. in the
cafeteria at the high school.
RACINE - Big Bend Antique
Tractor Club meeting , Monday,
7:30p.m. at Southern High School.
TUESDAY
PORTI.AND - There will be a
special meeting at Portland Ele·
m·entary on Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Superintendent of schools, Robert
Ord, will speak on the school levy
and the teachers will discuss the
effective school 1\!Bnt Open house
for the school w1il be held at 6:45
p.m.
POMEROY 'Women's Auxil·
iary of Veterans Memorial Hospital
will meet Tuesday at 1:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT • The annual
Meigs County Sconish Rite dinner
will be held Tuesday, at 6:30 p.m.
at !he Middleport Masonic Temple.
POMEROY - American Legion
prew Webster Post No. 39 will
meet Tuesday at Pomeroy. Dinner
at 7 p.m. Meeting at 8 p.m. All
urged to attend.
·· pOMEROY • FOE 2171 Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Tuesday at
'7:30 p.m. Members bring a bag of
Halloween candy.
·

'

(

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News of our servicymen
SAN ANTONIO, Texas - Air·
man Shawn C. Marcinko has P,d·
ualed from Air Force basic tnuning
at Lackland Air Force Base, San
Antonio, Texas.
During the six weeks of training
the airmail studied Air Force mission, organization and customS and
received special training in human
relations.
In addition, ainnen who complete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree through .
the Community CoUege of the Air
Force.
Marcinko is the son of Charmaine R. and Bill R. Thoma of
Racine.

rank and reported for duty wi!h 3rd
Battalion, 8!h Marines, 2rid Marine
Division, Camp Lejeune, N.C.
The 1991 graduate of Southern
High School, joined the Marine
Corps in February '1992.

FOR
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any position. (sitting or fully
lleiined), lhia conlempollry beauty
has been qUality constructed to.give.
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COLUMBIA,' S.C. - Army
National Guard Pvt. Kevin L .
Grady had compleled basic training
8l Fort JKkson
During the training, students
received instruction in drill and
cen:moniea, weapclDS, map reading,
tactics, military counesy, military
justice, fust aid, and Anny histoty
and traditions.
Grady is !he son of Paul L. and
Marine .Pfc. Aaron H. Knopp, Cathy L. Grady of 48360 Bowmans
son of Max L. Knopp of 28305 .. Run Roed, Racine.
Tanners Run Road, Ra~ine, 'fas · The private is .a 1992 graduate
recently promoled to h1s present of Southern High School.
.
&lt;

ByBRIANJ.REED
Sentinel News Staff
.
Pomeroy Attorney Patrick H.
O'Brien, legal counsel for !he Vil·
lage of Pomeroy, discussed a proposed contract between the village
an4 SBA Consultants of Jackson
when Pomeroy Village Council
met in regular session on Monday
evening.
' The contract outlines the tenns
of tlie Pomeroy Downtown Revital·
ization Plan, to be developed by the
consulting firm and submitted to
!he Ohio Department of Development in February with a ~~:vitaliza­
tion grant request. O'Brien

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Council, O'Brien discuss revitalization contract terms

Lawsuit says
landfills lack

BUY ONE, GET ONE

1 Section, 10 P-a•• 25 centa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, October 20, 1992

reviewed the contract by section,
and expressed a concern about a
clause in which the firm retains
ownership of the plan once it is
compleled.
In the event that the plan is
complele\1 and the grant application
is in tum denied, business owners
who have expressed an interest in
renovating !heir buildings would
not be able to carry out the work on
their own. without !he involvement
of the consulting firm, which
resC?rves. the right to perform all
engmeenng wort.
The plan, which will act as a
"blueprint" for the revitalization

pro~,

will cosl !he village and extend the Ohio Department of
busmoss donorS $10,000, and sev- T~ansportation' s pavmg of Main
eral council members feel that !he Street to the bridge on to !he Mid·
village should.own lhe pian once it dleport corporation line. The loan
is completed.
is through Bank One. A!hens, N.A.,
O'Brien, Mayor Bruce Reed and at a rate of .75 point below the
Revitalization Committee Chair- prime lending rate.
Fire Chief Danny Zirkle was
man John Musser, who was also
given
permission to seek specificapresent, will contact lhe consulting
tions
for
the
of a new ftre
ftnn this week to discuss changing
·trUCk.
Council
and
Zirkle
also disthat condition of the contract
cussed
the
sale
of
two
fire
trucks
before the village agrees to enter
not being used by the department.
into the a~menL
.·
Counc1l approved a resolution to No action was taken.
Reed announced !hat boundary
borrow $41,000 to eay for recent
questions
surrounding the .village's
paving work in !he v1llage. The village voted earlier this year to

eurchase

The free two-hour, on-Street rarking will begin on November 2 and
continue !hrough New Year's Day.
Council President Larry
Wehrung reported !hat a complaint
had been received about barking
dogs on Wehe Terrace, and Councilman Thomas Werry stated that
road grading was needed on Willis
Hill.
No action was taken on a $791
request for winter police unifonns.
Present, in addition to those
named, were council members
Betty Baronick and John Blaettnar,
and Clerk Kathy Hysell.

Many government owned buildings
exempt from American· Disabilities Act
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
While private businesses are
required to make their establishments handicapped accessible in
compliance with the Americans
with Disabilities· Act, many govemment owned buildings, inciuding the U. S. Postal Service, are
exempt.
Gary McCann, facility engineer
wilh the U. S. Postal Service, said
Monday that the "Postal service
doesn't have to comply with the
ADA-•
· His response Was in reply to a
question relating to what was talcing place in the way of construction
at th1f Pilin"eroy Post Office after
local postal employees Said it was
not a mmp to make the building
more accessible to the handicapped.
The exterior entrance improvements, McCann said; are not being
made to alter the building, but just
to repair and maintain what is
already there - 14 steps to the
front door.
..

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Two landfills that are part of a
court challenge against the state· s
new garbage law are operating illegally, a consumer group alleged.
West Virginia-Ciuzen Action
Group filed a lawsuit Monday in
Kanawl!a County Circuit Court
alleging landfills in Parkersburg
and Clarksburg should be' shut
down or forced to show they have
apPIOval from state regulators.
A hearint~ is set for Monday.
Namlld 1!1 the 'lawsuil are the
, landf'ills~ operator, Mid-American
Waste Systems Inc. of Canal
Winchester, Ohio, and two pf its
subsidiaries, Northweslem Disposal Co. and Mid-American Waste
Systems of Harrison Inc. The state
Division of Natural Resources arid
Public Service Commission also
were named in lhe suiL
There was no answer early
today at the offices for the state
aJ!encies: A call to Mid-American's
offices also went unanswered.
"There are pretly significant
.legal questions about whether these
various entities are properly permitted to operate these dumps,"
said Tom Rodd, one of three attorneys who filed the lawsuiL
"It points to the existence of an
elaborate shell game of corporations which are not in compliaoee
wilh West Virginia law," he said.
The company is part of a law&amp;uit
to abolish West Virginia's law limiting landfill size and chargirig new
- fees for garbage dumping.

Asked about adding a ramp
McCann said that is not feasible
because of "site constraint and
ienglh of run and area size it would
take to construct a ramp." ·
He emphasized that post offices
are not subject 10 the ADA legislalion "if the building in which the
operation .is taking place is owned
by the U.S. Postal ServicJl."
However, he explained, if the
building in which the postal service
is being opemled is leased, !hen !he
owner may be forced to comply
with the ADA.
.
As to how handicapped persons
arc to receive service at either the
Pomeroy or MiddleP.ort Post
Offices, since boJh bwldings are
owrttid by .the U. s. Postal Service
and neither are handicapped accessible, McCann said that if the postmaster is contacted, "accommodalions can be made at the curb."
He also said that there is a
"stamps by mail" service with
delivery by rural carriers.
He indicated that there are "no
plans" to make eilher the Pomeroy
or Middleport post offices more

accessible to handicapped individuals.
The Americans with Disabilities
Act went into effect in January.
It is aimed at breaking down
barriers for the handicapped and
disabled, many of them senior citi-·
zens, by giving them access to new
opportunities in all areas of their
lives.
. The law prohibits discrimination
against disabled individuals in private, state and local government
employmenl. That can be accom plished by constructing new facilities or· by reinov ing barriers in
existing buildings.
It also prohibits discrimination
in public accommodations, public
transportation,. government services
and telecommunications.
It requires ali public and private
facilities (restaurants, hotels, theaters, stores and offices) to be completely accessible to aU disabled
oersons.
- But, according to McCann , it
excludes the U. S. Postal Service
from compliance.

Bush shines in final debate; needs
historic .turnaround for victory ·

By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
EAST LANSING, Mich. President Bush and Bill Clinton
today opened a two-week dash to
Election Day fresh from a stonny
debate marked by clashes over truS\
and taxes ,and Ross Perot's frequent, pointed attacks on Bush's
foreign policy.
NOT A RAMP • Construction at the Pomeroy Post Office led
Bush's last debate performance '
to speculation that perhaps a ramp to make the buDding handiwas his best, repeatedly criticizing
capped accessible was being installed. Not so. Just replacement or
Clinton for a "dangerous" pattern
OEA endorses Malone
the 14 steps which lead to the front entrance of the building.
of waffling on issues ranging from .
trade with Mexico to war with Iraq.
The HoUse Dislrici 94 Screening
Bush wa's more focused and
aggressive
than in the first two
. Committee of the Ohio Education
Association/Educators Political
encounters, yet instant polls
Action Committee has endorsed
showed voters viewed Clinton a
Rep. Mark Malone for election to
· narrow winner, suggesting Bu.sh'
!he Ohio House of Representatives.
had not done much to loosen Clinton's tenacious grip on a doubleRep. Malone is a 10 year member of the Ohio House of RepresenDAYTON, Ohio (AP) _ The
'"I have federal and state land," digitl.ead.
.
tatives. A fund raiser and meet the federal government is losing said rancher Mike Corn, of
W1th the election two weeks
candidate night was held recendy money on grazing land it owns in Roswell, N,M_ "'You see. any dif- away, Bush needs a hasty and hisat Mogio's American Cafe in Gal- the western Uniled States because ference? There's noL"
toric turnaround if he is to win a
lipolis. Jane McCarley, chairperson it charges ranchers half as niuch as
New Mexico charges ·corn second term.
of the HD 94 Screening Commit· states charge to graze similar land · $3.46 a month to feed one of his
Their debate series over, Clinton
tee, presented Rep. MaiOQe with a newspaper reported today.
' l"egistered H:reford bulls . Th.e and Bush 'today begin what promis!he check from !he OEA-EPAC at
The Dayton Daily News pub- ~s on. the hill across the road 1s es to be a heated and hecuc cam·
that time. The Ohio Education lished the repon as part of a series JUSt as high, just as thick and just as paign finish. For all the post-debate
Association represents 109,000 on goyemment waste, based on an healthy, but that hill is owned.by bragging of the campaigns, the
school employees as members in eight-month examination of federal the federal government. wh1ch schedules·best illusttaled the state
600 school districts aciQSS the state. ~udit reports and interviews with . charges Cor.n $1 .92 month~ the ofthemce.
federal auditors and investigators
newspaper wd.
Bush headed South, for a train
· · · New Mexico mised its land-use tour of Georgia and South Caroli, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , fees, and it makes $6 million a year na, trying to rebuild a crumbling
from its grazing land. The federal R~ublican base. Clinton looked to
government refuses to raise its fees sohdify leads in Illinois and Wisand it loses $52 million a year, the consin before a swing through
Daily News reported
W-estern states that were once
Since the 1970s, government thought solid Republican.
auditors have .toid Congress the
Clinton provoked few fi~hts
federal grazing program is losing during the third debate in etght
money. A 1986 congressional days, but he returned Bush's volThe American Red Cross Bloodmobile will visit the Meigs
report concluded that because of leys, mocking Bush's trust arguCounty Senior CitiaDS Center In Pomeroy on Wednesday from
the country's "burgeoning ment with a recitation of the presi1 to 5:30 ,p.m.
•
.
deficits," !he· federal .government's · dent's "read my lips" tax promise,
"Pamlly ¥1catlona and summer activities are now over for
grazing program "cannot be justi- his pledge to create 30 million jobs
a~r yur," Bloodmobile Chairman Brian Reed said; "Now
fied." the Daily News said.
·
and his s : ' t of what he once
that famiUes are baek Ia lbelr routines; Meigs County folks
economics."
A proposal to18ise grazing fees called "v
should IIIIo lhlDk about lnc:ludlnil replar blbocl donatious into
about 33 percent by 1~95 passed
To Bush's charge that Clinton
tboae roatlnea. Tbe need for blood is aever-endln£1 and·has no
the House but died in the Senate was a failed governor, Clinton
respect for our bill)' llthedales."
last year. Ali but one Western sena- countered that Arkansas was head"We uever bow wben a family member or loved one will
tor voted to kill the proposed ing in !he right direction under his
need blood,' aad local h011pitals depend on volunieer blood
increase.
.
leadership while the country OoundOIIon to pi'O\IIde our area blood supply. Please show your coa"1 don't think the present sys- 'dered under Busb.
eena lor the commnnlty by tU1n1 a moment from ;rour day and
tern is fair to the taxpayer," said
For his part, Perot said neither
clonallq blood."
.
.
.
Rep. Ralph, Regula, R-Ohio, the of 1:\is opponents' economic plans
Thole frolllaaes 17 to 70, who weigh at least 110 poua!IJ may
ranking' Republican on a House added up and !hit he would, spend
donate blood at this time.
subcommit~ that handles grazing
more than $60 million of his own
legislatioti
•
money 'on his campaign . Perot

Government losing
Ijtoney on grazing land

Bloodmobile to visit ,
Meigs Wednesday

'

purchase of the old junior h-igh
propeny on East Main Street had
been resolved, and a deed is forthcoming this week. Council also
agreed to purchase a lot at the corner of Spring Avenue and Condor
Street from Bob Thompson at a
cost of $3,000 in order tci construct
a road to the new property. That
amount is the appraised property
value, at which Thompson agreed
to sell the land.
At the request of Councilman
Scott Dillon, council agreed to provide free parking for lhe Christmas
season in the downtown district.

~

•

again left the specifics to his TV
ads, turning in another colorful
debateperfonnance.
"We'D be down in the trenches
under. !he hood working on fixing
lhe old car to get it back on the
road," he said. Perot said votm
worried about jobs.should suppon
a businessman who has created
thousands - and ignore "these
folks in the press Jelling you you're
throwing your vote away."
Perot's sharpest volleys were
aimed squarely at Bush, whom
Perot said needed wars to remove
Saddam Hussein and Manuel Noriega from power only because he
had tiuilt up their regimes . And
Perot's mere presence complicated
Bush's attempts to land a lcnock:out
punch on Clinton.
The fights Monday night were
on familiar issues, but s11iced .at
times with the tens1on and mtens1ty

befitting a fmal clash.
Some highlights:
- TAXES. Bu·sh argued that
Clinton couldn't be trusted to keep
his pledge to raise taxes only on lhe
rich. :'Mr. and Mrs. America ...
watch your wallet because his figures don't a&lt;ld up and he's going to
sock it riglit-to the middle-class
taxpayer." Clinton said Bush had
zero credibility on the tax issue and
said Bush was wrong to promise
never to raise taxes. But in impiementing his campaign promises,
Clmton vowed: "If lhe money does
not come in to pay for these programs we wm cut other government spendtng or we will slow
down the phase in of the programs,
I am not going to raise taxes on the
m1ddle class to pay for these programs." Pe~ot said gene.rally that
~.e would ratse taxes, asking ~oters
to take fau, shared sacrifice. '

-----Local briefs--Youth cited in car-bus accident
A Pomeroy youth was ciled following a car-bus accident at the
intersection of Pomeroy Pike and Flatwoods Road in Chester Township Monday around 3:20p.m.
Todd A. Perty, 16, 36485 Lakewood Road., was eastbound on
Flatwoods Road and pulled .oul onto Pomeroy Pike into' the path of
a southbound school bus driven by Patricia S. Pape, 50, 30485
Bashan Rd., Racine, according to a repon from the Gailia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Perty reportedly sustained minor injuries and was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
Pape and her 13 passengers were uninjured according to the
report.
Damage to Perry's 1990 Honda Civic and the 1988 International
bus belonging !he Meij!S County Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilitr. was listed as lighL
Perty was cited for failure to yield from a stop sign.

Woman cited in wreck
A Middleport woman escaped injury aftir a one-car wreck on
U.S. 33 in Bedford TownShip Monday around 9:25 a.m.
Accordina to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of !he State
Highway Patrol, Ly1tn E. Shuler, 45, 245 N. Fifth Avenue, was
nor!hbound when ber car dropped off the right side of tile roadway
in a curve: The car !hen went off !he left side of the road and struck
ag~nge.

Damage to Shuler's 1989 Ford Tempo was listed as heavy and
disabling. .
Shuler was ciled by the patrol for failure to control.

�•

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_:Commentary
-.

The Daily Sentinel

'•

111 Court Sheet ·
PomeJ:Or, Ohio
DIYOTU TO 'DIB IJII'I'a1B81'II OJ' TBIIIDI08-IU801'1 All&amp;\

'

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asllslant Publlsber!ControDer

CHARLENE.HOEFLICH
General Manager

LIITI1!RS OF OPINION ue welcome. Thoy llbould be le11 than 300
woJdJ. All lottm ue tubject to editin&amp; llld must be ligned with o..,.,
llddlalllld telephone number. No untigned lettm will be publilbed. Letten
slx&gt;uld be in good taste, addressing issuea, oot pcnDDIIiliOs.

~~ I

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.

&lt;Rhodes .going strong, but his

·.absence from politics strange

By ROBERT E. MILLER
AaN:iated Press Writer
. COLUMBUS - Former Gov. lames Rhodes served coffee and donuiS
• in bis suburban Upper Arlingtm home to a small group of reporters who
; IIUirVeled at bis energy IMid robust 11ppe81'811Ce.
:
The 83-~-old Rhodes. considered "Ohio's No.1 Salesman"· during
:· his four temis in office, held forth at a news conference.on something he
·. indicated WIS dear 10 his heart. But believe it or not, it wasn't politics.
He was demonslmling an air filtralion system that he installed in his
borne as part of a commacial veniWe by lames A. Rhodes &amp; Associates,
:· the company that hu kepi him busy since he left office in 1983.
·· · Rhodes was defeated in 1986 in a gubernatorial comeback attempt, and
· ·. · ·since then hal been busy wilh the indoor-air system which he has regis- ·
• ' ICRd with the u.s. Patent Office.
··· · He has been c:onspic11011$1y absent this year from !he. Ollio p!CSidential
" campaign, aad be shunned eveu a discussion of it.
However, lames Duerk, a longtime associate, said afterward it is
because the busineas venture is taking most of his tiine.
Rhodes and. Duelt have been traveling intermittently to Los An~eles,
where they are about 10 begin construction of a "Clean Air Home' fea·
turing the filtration system.
.
Duerlt said whUe Rhodes has not been out on the campaign trail to help .
Republicans, "he's making aome contribution~
·
. .'· Rhodes, a millionaile, gave George Voinovich $100,000 two years ago
: ..-for his successful gubernatorial campaign. Duerk did not disclose the
amount or beneficiaries of the • t contributions.
·
;· Tlie former governor, who has boosted Republican presidential candidates in their Ohio campaigns in every election in recent history,' is
believed br some 10 feel Oeorgc ~ush wiD lose Nov; 3 and there's np rea·.
· son to getmvolved.
; . : Duert did not confirm or deny the theory. "He tens -everyone
, · •(reporters) who caDs that he does not want to discuss iL"
•.• At bis dining room lablc, accompanied by his physician, Henry Cram··
. ··blett. Rhodes spouted ~-liners about his health.
• ·.. "Someone wiD call eirly in the morning and ask how I am, I teD them
• , . lhat anyone who can get out of bed when they are 83 is doing fine," he .
' . ' llid, laughing.

.

.

,· .. · Cramblctt, who was there 10 attest 10 tile health benefilS of the r.ltration
... ·system,
ioined in hwnor. Cie inlrOO~ ~l.ii'1, ~:: w .. ~le govw·,,vi·'s yeW·
• ,,•.• lric1811.
-Rhodes said he walts two miles a day, indicating recovery from a bro. ··ten leg he suffered in a faD at his home, while getting out of bed 10
answer a rin~· pbone, a few years ago.
·
er Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, who saw Rhodes last
HouseS
.;.-week, said was amazed at,his looks and energy. :•1 wish I knew I
... would live 10 be 83 and look that.good," said Riffe, a longtime friend of
~ Rhodes.
•

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~...
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"~;

• •
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Berry's World

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I .. •

.... ..

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E

''

~; - ·

... .

t"
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!loo ·
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By The Assoc:lated Press
It was·.inother,cold night across
Ohio, with temperatures generally
in the 2!Js, some 15 10 20 degrees
below nortnal. But forecasters said
warmer weather was on the way . •
· Snow turning to (ain could
lin~er over nonhern and eastern ·
Ohto IOnighL Lows across the state
wiD be 40-45, the National Weath'
er Service said.
Sties will be partly· cloudy on
Wednesday with highs reaching the
low to mid-50s north and low 60s
south.
Tbe record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

. MICH.

•
IToledo Iss- I

Bush takes the low road, once again
If you know your histOry, you enough to fall for the same line of demonstrated against the confllcL the answer is: Level with the
know that uash politics are an • bull he fed us four years ago.
As an Oxford University student in American people."
Never mind that an estimated
American tradition.
· We'ro not going 10, are we? Tell 1969-1970, Bill Clinton had 120,000
Americans __. lncludina
George Washington was me we're nol going to.
gasp! - traveled to tho Soviet
accusell of wanting 10 be a king. · _ _._ _ _ _ _..;__ _ Union; And he couldn't remember high school teaehen and students
Thomas Jefferson was slid 10 be an
- gasp!- who he spoke 10 during - traveled to the Soviet Unicn in
·that
trip 23 years ago. And it's con· 1969·1970. Never mind that the
atheist • .Abraham Lincoln was
ceivable
he could have been impor· Nixon administration was pursuing
likeued 10 a baboon. Ulyues Grant
was assailed as a drunk. Grover
tuned by the K...G...B! And impart· .a policy of deteute with the ,SovieiS
In
1988,
you
will
recaU,
Bush
Cleveland was berated for fathering
ed some really big secretS that were at lhat time, and that the nuclear
regularly
wrapped
himself
in
ihe
of vital importance 10 the national anns limitation treaty with Moscow ·
a child out of wedlock. 1ohn
·
· bad been signed just weeks before
Kennedy was condemned as a flag and cast aspersions on Michael security!
Dlikakis'
love
for
bis
country.
Do
Clinton's trijl.
·
George
Bush
himself
appeared
papist dupe.
.
. .
Never inmd all thaL Sounding . ·
So what's the big deal about Bill you remember what Bush said on "Larry King Live~' and was
Clinton being flayed as a skirt then? He said, "I am R!&gt;t question- asked by the faux journaliste; for alltbe world like loony Joe
chaser, a draft dodger and a com- ing his patriotism." And do you "What do you make of the ClintDn McCarthy waving a list of suspect·
munist stooge? Nothing, I guess. recaU what he said about his tactics Moscow trip thing?" Responded ed Commies, the leader qf the froe
he had won? He said, "That's our leader: "I don't want 10 tell world wanted 10 know whether this
Except, I find it hard 10 accept that after
" ,. ' .,
.
you ~hat I really think." He then furtive Oxford student. skulking
our pOlitical process has not h!Story.
Earlier this month, the Republi- proceeded to reo us what be realty arotDid the streets of Moscow was li '
improved a particle in 200· years.
And it repulses me that a president can trash machine launched an ' thought: "I don't have the facts, ComSymp.
Bush did not like being comof the United States is rolling in attack on BiD ClintDn's love for his bUt 10 go 10 Moscow one year after
muck. And it infuriates me that country. During the Vietnam War Russia crushed Czechoslovakia, pared to McCarthy, either. SpeakGeorge Bush thinks we are stupid . - gasp! ...:.. Bill Clinton had not remember who you saw, I think tog 10 the.Fraternal Ordc:a' of Police
in Oncinnati, he said: "You let the
liberal elite do their number today
trying to caD me 1oe McCarthy I'm standing ·on American pnnci·
pie."
· ·
· Two days after raisin$ the issue,
with even feDow Republicans complaining that it was sleazy, Bush
appeared on "Good. Morning,
America" and backed off. Exactly
as he had done four years esrlie.r
when·he bad questioned lhe patriotism of Michael Duk8kis, he said:
"I'm not questiolling his patrio-

tism."

•

"I'm L$rry King. The subject is suspenders. President Bush flexes his, ·
Ross Perot snaps back and Gov. Clinton keeps up his par:tts."

IMansfield Iss· I•
IND.

• IColumbusJss• I

Tbe reason so many of us view
our presidential debates as more
graung than great is that none of
the Marathon Men of '92 is running the bold race we really want
and need.
President Bush is running on
empty - · he still has no new
domestic initiative, except some~
lhing called a "Jim Baker."
Gov. Clinton is running on
change - probably just enough
change 10 get him through the tollgate at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Mr. Perot is running on air mosdy hot, all of it lite, as the billionaire who once ridiculed General Moun' decisions-by-committee
now promises us government by
task forces.
Meanwhile, we're running out
of ,patience, and time. Neither our
professional politicians nor our
. professiona,ltycoon has shown us
the wit nor will to tap the !iCSOIII'Ces
lhat can solve our publems.
·
Consider the. problem of our
underclass. A bold, innovative
leader could have months ago
tapped a resource that Is known
throughout a certain Pleasonton,
Calif., security institution as Feder·
at Prisoner 16126-054. We know
him as Michael Milken.
...

"Milken ... is widely consideied
to be the most influential financier
of the postwar era,'' as Tbe WashingtDn Post.wrote earlier this year.

cl'etited a South Bronx-Waus Redevelopment Corp. 10 rehabilitate block by block - the lluildings and
the lives of the people who live in
them. .

This most influential financier
of
our
time could have been given
Martin Schram
a federal court chatter 10 wheel and
deal with his chums from Wall
But he was' also a white-collar Street an!f co~rate America to
crook of unprecedented propot· finance lhe rebuilding of the decay·
lions. And so, in 1990, our federal ing structures -plus the counsel·
justice system punished Wall ing, training, job placement, health
Street's king of junk bonds by sen- care and on-Site security needed 10
tencinB him to 10 years in prison rehabilitate the lives of the resi·
- wllicb was iiSelf a federal aime dealS (subjectiO coun approval).
No doubt Mitten's financing
of missed opportunity.
·
effort
would require some creative
A govemmeut beaded by a bold
thinker-doer could have proposed tax breaks for coi'porations who
that Milken pay bis debt 10 society sign on; so let Milken figure out
by doing the kind of work he does .what is fair and let the govemmeut
best. They could have sentenced make the deals that wiD get the job
Milken to 10 years of working to done,
As CEO of the Redevelopment
reshape an urban ghetto wasteland.
Milken could ~ve been ordered 10 · Corp., Milken would have all that
live in and work in, say, New Yolk he needs in stan-up capital - the
City's South Bronx (which is near $600 million he paid 'in fines and
his fonner kingdom of WaU Street) penalties. That was just pocket
or in WallS (which is near his·home change for Milken, who in 1987
in Encino, Calif., just a gemstone's alone made $550 million. So it's
throw from the Beverly HiUs site not asking too much 10 have him
where he began his Drexel Bum: . put up a few hundred miUion more,
ham Lambert Joe. empire).
, if need be.
(Perhaos this idea ..strikes a
In either locale, he could have

.

.
.. .....

q,·.

· .\:;:Today in history
'. • On

IM~

------Weather-----South-Central Obio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
the mid-40s, Wednesday, partly
cloudy. High in the low 60s.
· Extended rorecast:

v

George R. Plagenz

w

Memorial services for Florence
Huldah Frances Gordon, 61, 34
L.
Smith, who died Tuesday, Oct.
Neil Ave., Gallipolis, died Mon13,
1992 at the Holzer Medical
day, Oct 19, 1992 at Holzer Medi·
Center,
will be held Saturday at 2
cal Center.
p.m.
at
the
Middleport Presbyterian
She was born Nov. 26, 1931 in
Church,
165
North Fourth Sueet,
Meigs County, daughter of the late
Middlepon.
Robert Lee and Dellona Clark Pan·
Donations in her memory may
nell.
•
be
sent 10 the M~gs County Coun·
She was a homemaker, a memcil
on Aging, Mulberry Heights,
ber of Paint Creek Baptist Church,
Pomeroy,
in lieu of flowers.
and a lifetime member of the
American Legion Auxiliary, Meigs Jack Whr'ttle
County.
.
·
Survivors include four daugh- · Jack Whittle of 8501 East
ters, Mrs. Owen (Sonseerhay Roma, Scottsdale, Ariz., died Sun"SoMy") Garnes, Mrs. Iantha lean day, OcL 1~, following an extended
Bates, Mrs. Dennis (Desiree) Hurt, iUness.
·
arid Mrs. Robert (Crystal) SomHe was married to the former
merville, all of Gallipolis; two Sharlee Newman of Syracuse, a
sons, Rudolph M. Gordon 1r., of school teacher. Mrs. Whittle is the
Gallipolis, and ·Lee Gordon of daughter of Margaret Newman and
Alexandria; and 17 grandchildren.
the late Charles Newman of Sy~-aShe was preceded in death by cuse. Her sister, Nancy Buckley,
her husband, Rudolph M. Gordon Reedsville, has been in Arizona for
Sr., in 1987; and one infant brother. the past month assisting in Whit·
Memorial services will be held tle's care.
6 p.m. Wednesday at Paint Creek
Baptist Chiii'Ch, with the Rev. Dennis Hurt officiating, There will be
Board
no calling hours,
Leading Creek Conservancy
In lieu of flowers, contributions
· can be made to the Amaican Dia- District wiD hold a special meeting
betes Association and/or to the on Wednesday at S p.m. 10 discuss
contract negotiations.
American Heart A~:::::::i:~~~ .

. · He also said: "Clearly,' if he's
told aU there is•to teD on Moscow,
fine .... A lot of people went to
MoscoW. And so that's the end of
that as far as I'm concerned."
No, that's not the end of iL Bush
said in 1anuary that he would "do
what I have tO do to be re-elected,''
and now we know just how low he
will ,o. He cannot possibly be
standing on principle because he
doeS'n't know the meaning of the
word. PolitiCs is already a sleazy
business, but George Bush man·
ages somehow to cheapen it, He
· deserves 10 be rejected.
You wiD do 11, won't you? TeD
me you will.
Robert Spear Is a syndicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise .
Association.
·

to meet

Fake bills protest rejection
of anti-discrimination law
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Fake mooey bearing gay-rights
slogans was scattered downtown in
protest pf the City Council's rejec·
lion of an ordinance 10 ban discrim·
· ination against homosexuals, a
councilman said.
"I think it's some kind of attack
or scare tactic. But whatever it is,
I'm not buying it," Arley Johnson
said Monday. "If this 1s part of
their campaign to get' this passed, it
cenainly isn't a step in the riaht
'§='
directi.on. "
The council last week deleted a
reference to sexual orientation from
aproposf:d measure aimed at end·
ing discrimination against homosexiJllls.
On Monday, $3 biDs printed on
light green paper were scattered
downiOwn .. The bills carry slogans
such as "Fight homophobia" and
"An attack on one of us is an

also bis pany's presidential ·candidate in 1988. He received 8,000
VOleS (compared to George Bush's
nearly 49 miUion). But the Prohibi·
lion Party Was on &amp;he ballot in only
four states- Arltiinsas, Teunessee,
New Mexico and Colorado.
Dodge will be on the ballot in
just three states on Nov . 3 Arkansas, Tennessee and New
Mexico. But he hopes 10 get writein votq elsewhere, particularly in
ColoniOO, Michigan, North Dakota
and Minnesota, the site of the
parry's nominating convention (in
Min~~C~qX~Iis) last year.
The problem for the Prohibitionists is that states require so many
signatures on peti~ons for a third
PartY to be listed on the presidential
ba\!ot (for example, 750,000 in
California). Dodge doesn't have
tbe following of Ross Perot, of

~

England. ·
A few rainshowers splashed
southern Florida and the lower Rio
Grande Valley of Texas.
:
Highs today were f&lt;ncast in the
40s in the N'ortheast and in the .
upper Great Lakes; in the 50s frOm
the Middle Atlantic states iniO •
upper Mississippi Valley; in the
60s from oeorpa. Tennessee ltld
KentuCky and 1010 the lowcc Mls·
sissippi VaUey; in lhe 70s acrOU
much of the rest of the nation; ~
in the 80s and 90s in the South·
:
west ·
The high for the nation M~y
was 98 degrees at l,ake Havuu ·
City, Ariz.
!

tiler away from being decided than
I was before," Yusuf Muwwalddl .
said.
Walker, who was staiioned in
Japan while in the military, liked
Perot's call to revise uade agreements on tenns more favorable to
the United States. "We're in bad
shape financially," he said, "Perot
is a proven businessman.'' ·
"Government doesn't work like
a businessman," cOuntered Teresa
Jeter-Chappell, a Bush supporter.
' 'Whoever said Ross' one-liners
weren't working was wrong,"
added Monica Jones, who often
laughed heartily at the independent's colloquialillms during the
debate.
'

While Clin10n won praise in the
group for forceful answers, 1oe
Beasley, the host, complained,
"The Democrats and Clinton,
they're taking us (blacks) absolutely for granted."
.
Doreen CeDerino, 42, who owns
a boutique in Torrington, Conn.,
said Perot made the debate more
interesting. But a Democrat all her .
life. she is sticking with Clinton.
"He made some excellent
points from the common -sense,
bread-and-butter point of view,"
she said of Perot ''He puts things
in such·common terms like asking·
your dad for advice on buying a
car. He appeals to people in that

sense.''

. The Daily Sendnel
Pu.biUhed evei-y aRemoon, f.{anday
~h Frida); Ill Coart 81. Pomm.y,
Ohto by the Ohto Valley il.ibllohlnr
COmpan_y/Mulllmedia Inc., Pomeroy,
0~ 45?88, Ph. 1192-31156. Sooond clua
..,..... poldat .......,, Ohio •

Member: Tile Aloodated Pnu, and the
Ohio Newtpaper Alloc:la&amp;ton, ·National

AdnrtieinJ

Repn~ent1tive,

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POSTMASTER: 8eacl adclnu ella.... to
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Hospital news
Veteraus Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS •
Robert Roush, Pomeroy; and
Gladys Walburn, Middleport,
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
Sheila Jones and Cecilia Mitch.

FLAG PRESENTED
Carleton
School/Meigs Industries bas received an Ohio
nag, courtesy of State Representative Mark
Malone. Pictured at the presentation are Mal-

40

one and John Lentes, President or lbe Meigs
County Board or Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities.

__ Meigs announcements-·_
Open house
. Health Recovery and Meigs
County MADD will host an open
house at 119 Butternut Avenue in
Pomeroy on Tuesday, OcL 27 from
4-8 p.m.

Hill, Foster, W.Va., will be the
speaker. Public in-.:ited.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Oct. 19 - Roy
Wi_seman, Delilah 1ohnson, Barbara Brooks, Nicole Harper, Mrs.
John Hunter and daughter, lames
McCartney,, Dorothy IUlston, L.ois
Young, MII!'Y Oldaker, Timothy
Klingensmith, Mrs. Dale .Lear imd
daughter, Bcc_9 Gillispie, Kaidyli
Spees, Scott Rtggs, Thomas Can·
ter, ijarold Mash.
Birth...:. Mr. and Mrs. Rodney
Clary, daughter, Crown City. :

Dairy event Saturday
The Charles lhle Family and
John Easterday will be the hosiS for
. a special dairy activity for the pub·
lie on Saturday from 1-3 p.m. The
Ihle farm is located on Morning
Sllll' Road in Racine. ·
·
Highlights will be the new
Westfalia Double 6, fully-automat·
ed millting parlor. The facility is .
set up to handle 150 cows and
includes "indexing" parlor stalls
and crowdgate, The builders, !lob
Thompson and Associated Fabrica·
tors, wiD be present to make comments ·and answer questions.
Charles lhle will .discuss the pas·
ture program for the milking hent
All ~ fanners and friends of
the dairy mdustry are invited to
anend. Further infoonation may be

A THEATER
WITH A CHaCE!

Turkey supper
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
attack on all of us," as well as a
No. 9053, Ladies Auxiliary, will
photograph of Johnson, who
hold a turkey supper Oct. 31 beginopposed the onlinance. ·
ning at 4 p.m. The menu will ·
Gospel sing
lim Buresch of the Huntington
Mt. Moriah Church of God in include turkey and dressing,
Campaign for Human Rights, Racine will hold a gospel sing Sun- mashed polatoes, noodles, green
which supported the ordinance and day at 1:30 v..m. featuring the Eden beans, cole slaw, pie and cake, ice
criticized 1ohnson, denounced the Family, Datley Family, Mountain tea and coffee for SS for adults, and
stunt and said his group bad noth- Top Singers and Crystal Powell. A $2 for children 12 and under.
ing 10 do with iL
dinner will be heiO pnor 10 w e Carry-out will be available.
' "We don't approve of the sing. Public invited.
behavior, nor do we condone it. We
Dance planned
oppose it," he said.· "It does not
Dance planned
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
lead to beneficial discussion of the
The Meigs County Senior Citi- No. 9053, Ladies Auxiliary, will
issues and it does not help any- zens will hold a round and square hold a round and siJuare dance Frione.''
dance Friday from 8-11 p.m. at the day from 8-11:30 p.m. with music obtained bv r.nntAr.t-ino thP. MP.iuc:
The bills also bear the words senior citizens center. Music pro- by the Happy Hollow Boys. Public County Extension Service at 992·
"Queer Nation," which is the vided by Country s·weethearts. invited.
6696.
name of a loosely-organized gay Public invited. Bring snacks for the
rights group that Bu(esch said snack tilble.
OAPSE to meet
recently protested similarly in
Meigs OAPSE Local 17 will .
Cleveland.
·
Preacbina and singing
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at Meigs
.He said Queer Nation was not
Faith Full Gospel Church in Junior High School in Middleport.
part of the Huntington group's Long Bottom will have preaching
campaign for the ordinance.
and singing Friday at 7 p.m. with
Garden C!::!: ~~ -·~
..
Pastor Steve Reed and local
Riverview Garden Club will
singers. Public invile\1. FeUowship uavel to the Betsy Mills Club in
will follow.
Marietta on Thursday. The group
will meet at the home of Maxine
Weekead services
Whitehead at5 p.m.
D~ck your halls and walls for the holidays
Weekend services at the
Danvil1e Church of Christ will be
Bake sale and soup sup)ltr
Whatever your style,
held Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday
Eden United Brethren ,Church
let our professional staff help you...
at 10:30 a.m, and 6 p.m. Denver . will have ·a soup supper and bake
Units of the · Meigs County
We oUcr exclusive tlyling and original designs from all of the top
sale on Saturday at S p.m. The ·
Emergency ~.~ l! ,~;,...,, ~ ...... o. . ~rli'======•==========~ church
designu book• tuch u WavHiy, Gumcrcy, Van Luit, Louil
will hold revival Oct. 26responded to five calls (or assisBowen, Creff; Bob Timberlake, Laura Ashley, Adrienne ViUadinl
Nov, I at 7 p.m. nightly with Rev.
tance on Monday and early Tuesand. many more.
Bob Wiseman. There will be spe·
day morning.
These boola rangc in slylcs of faux marbles, light rtOtctivt silk•
Am Ele Power....................32 5/8 cial singing nightly.
On Monday at 11: 14 a.m. the
ond cmbos1cd mi1tblcs, cracklc.t, stripes, plaids,Jhunt accnu, al~
Ashland Oil........................27
Middlepon uru1 went 10 Nonh Secan artful display of water color prints, stylized fruit and rlorals,
Special services planned
AT&amp;T............. ,...................42 3/8
ond for Marsha Murray who was
masculine and tntural des igns &amp;t exclusive Children'• designs.
Coffman Family Ministries will
Bank One..... ......................46 18
transported 10 Pleasant Valley HosFabfictand acc:es~orles Jet you tie . it all together for a decorator
Bob Evans ......................... 18 1/4 hold services at the Racine Church
pital. . .
.
look.
'
of the Nazarene ,' Tyree Blvd.,
Charming Shop...........:...... 36 3/8
The Tuppers Plains unit, at
Wallpaper and Blind Shop iJ your .ourct for beautiful Window•.
City Holding ...:........... ,...... l8 3/8 tonight through Sunday at 7 p.m.
12:48 p.m., transported Lita MontHunter Oouglu, Levolor, Kirsch and Jwnna offer a wide variety of
nightly.
and
ot
10:30
a.m,
and
6
Federal
Mogul..
..................
l6
3/4
gomery from Tuppers Plains to
•leek styles and fine fabrict, designed to fit every window and tuit
Camden Clark Memorial Hospital. · Goodyear T&amp;R ..................64 1/8 p.m. on Sunday. Pastor Thomas L. .
,. every·tastr.
Gates II invites the public. F'unher
Key Centurion ..~ ................20
Todd Perry was transported to
information may be obtained by
Lands
End
..............
............
29
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
calling
949-2668.
Limited
Inc
.......................
23
112
Pome~oy unit following a motor
Multimedia
Inc
..................
27
1/4
vellicle accide!lt 81 3:16p.m. at the
Only At
Special meeting
Rax ReslauranL ..................7/32
in~ction of Pomeroy Pike and
There
wiD
be
a
special
meeting
Reliance
Electrie
................
16
3/8
FlatwoodS Road,
Oi JUjJyt!.t S ClWUS 'irYY rOS ~ ! 'lj(J.
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 14
On Tuesday at 2:42 a.m. the
9053
on Thursday at,7 p.m. ReguShoney's Inc .. ,...................18 3/4
Pomeroy unit went 10 lhe Pomeroy
lar
meeting
wiD foDow at 7:30p.m.
Star Bank ....... :................:.. 30 l/2
Nuning and Rohabilitation Center
Ask our·' salespeople about our extra discounts
.
Refreshments
wiD be served.
Wendy lnt'l........................ 12 3/4
for Georgia Marlow who was taken
Wonhington Ind. ............... 20 1/8
MEMORIAL BRIDGE APPROACH
to Veterans.
Stock reports are the 10:30
AT CARFIELD AVE., PKSBC., WV
At 8:16a.m. this morning the
On liec: 8, lt5S, President Dwl&amp;bt
a.m. quotes provl~ by Blaat,
Tuppera Plains unit responded to
n
EIJenhower propOied the Ule of
Ellis arid Loewl of GaDipolls.
Bigley Ridge Road for Opal Basin.
atomic
power for peaceful purposes.
S~ was taken 10 Veterans. .

Ftolti Our Decorator's Desk

Meigs squads

(U8P811J.It0)

'

What Edith Neely of Beai'er
Falls, Pa., beard were too m•ny
promises from Clinton. "He thiDks
he can chan!!e this whole wprld tnd
he can't do 11 at all," sbe said. •
But that did not change her ..
mind: She was planning 10 vote for
Bush anyway. "He's the man for
the job," the 85-year-old Republi·
can said.
On Chicago's Southwest Side,
3 8-year-old Maria Bernal, who
voted for Bush in 1988 but now
sum,rts Clln!Dn, was "very irritat·
ed' by the president's debate per·
forrnance.
· "He kept attacking and lttack·
ing. I wish he'd stop wasting his
time. I really feel that he feels he
doesn 't have that much 10 offer. It
really turns ine off. It's not what
the people want to hear," she said.
EDITOR'S NOTE~ Special
Correspondent George Esper in
Bosliln, Midwest Regional
Reporter Sharon Cohen in
Cbkago and Michael Fleeman or
the Los An,eles bureau contributed to IbiS report.

Florence Smith

Huldah F. Gordon

det:idi.J:'ae

II

Snow accumulations of up to 3
inches were possible from northern
Michigan to the mountains of
northern New England,
Winds gysting 10 40 mph ahead
of a cold front were expected to
buffet the Patific.Nort)Jwest !Dday,
along·with rain. Wann winds from,
the Southwest were expected .to
blow across the eastern Plains into
lhe Tennessee Valley.
Showers were scattered from the
upper Ohio Valley to New Jersey
and New England Monday
evening, with rain changing to
snow over parts of the lower Great
Lakes reg1on and northern New

---Area deaths--

~.tine

1967.r,25e··,
•.-c-wn.
....... On••'•
·

of govemmeut - as well as reduc·
ing the consumption of alcohol arid
other drugs.'' The party is also
against abortion.

ATLANTA (AP) - James
Walker arrived at a final presidential debate pany undeci'ded about
his choice and left it leaning toward
Ross Perot.
But a samplin$ of voter reaction
around the natton found other
Americans' minds mostly
unc~anged by what they heard in
90 minutes of boasts and barbs.
At Monday night's debatewatching gathering in a middleclass black neighborhood here,
about 20 backers of Perot, Bill
Thursday through Saturilay:
Clinton
and President Bush all said
Thursday, fair. Highs in the 60s.
their
views
were reinfo(l:ed by the
Lows in the 40s. Friday, fair. Highs
candidates'
perfonnance.
in the mid-60s to low 70s. Lows in
Even the uncommitted mostly
the 40s. Saturday, chance of rain.
remained
so. "Right now I'm farHighs in the 60s. Lows in the 40s.
W. VA.

.

familiar chord. I've made it a
milior campaign theme for a couple
of years; a similar plan was also
championed in 1990 by The American Lawyer publisher, Steven
Brill. It w&amp;S a grand idea then; it
sliD is !Dday.)
It's not too late. A new presi·
dent could move f!~~?idly 10 write a
new chapter for whtte-&lt;:Oilar crime
and pumshment. Recendy, Milkeu
received a whopping reduction in
sentence in exchange for his testimony .in· a trial of a former associ· .
·ate. Milken will be released from
prison on March 2, 1993 -but,
while living at home, he must worlt
full time for three years at a community service job. .
Let Michael Milken 's community service be as grand in scope as
was his crime. Let Federal Prisoner
16126-054 be charged with the
responsibility of financinJ and
implementing the rehabilitauon of
America's Most Wanting. ·Let his
work become our national model as
he restDres~decayed dwellings and
shattered lives - those of America's underclass and of Wall
Street's fallen king.
.
Martin Schram Is a syndicated
writer ror NEA. ·

station was 84 degrees in 19 53
while the record low was 24 in
1972. Sunset IDnight will be at 6:44
p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
7:49am.
Around the nation
· Fog and clouds h11ng over the
West Coast. early today· and temperatures diPiled into the 30s from
the upper ~ississippi Valley to
New York state.
.
Clear, Gold wea~ was forecast
east of the Appalachians, giving
way 10 thickening clouds. Intermit·
tent rain and snow was expected
from the southern Great Lakes
region 10 the interior Northeast

Final debate doesn't change many voters' mindS.

Michael Milken can save
our
cities
..

, Askin~ what the Prohibition
Party stands for is like asking who
is buried in Grant's Tomb. The
answer seems obvious, but th.ere's
more 10 it than thaL
1f Oen: Ulysses S. Grant is your ·
answer 10 who is buried in Grant's
Tomb, you are only half correcL
His wife Julia is also buried there.
The Prohibition Party is four·
square ajlainst drinking all right, ·
but that IS only part of the answer
10 what the political group stands
for.
"We have never been a .oneissue party as people oflen think,"
says Earl Dodge, the Prohibition
Party's 1992 )l!Csidential candidate. ,
"We were· the ftrst (in 1872) to
campaign for the rights of women
and minorities 10 voce. We supponed child labor refonns from the
begln';!~nd we're for a bal·
inCed .
llld reducing the size

'

. . p ...

Accu-Weather• forecast for

TuNday, OCtober 20, 1112

The Prohibition Pany bad its '
It-.·
presidential heyday lliOUlld the tum
.~: .
of
the century.ln the 1892 election,
'
a
Civil
War general named John
"•
·~·
Bidwell ran on the Prohibition tick:::
I]) 1H2 by NEA. 1r.t.
et and received 270,000 votes to
..''·•'
winner Grove!' Cleveland's 5.5 million. Bidwell's total would be equal
'
" .·
today 10 nearly 2.5 million presidential votes, says Dodge.
If Prohbition comes back, S.
·'I'd say we were for family val•
ProhibitlonisiS
expect, it won't be ·
ues long before the major parties
by
odnstitutional
amendment,
- ...
thought 10 put that in their plat·
•••
Dodge
,predicts.
It'
wiD
be beca11Se
fonns," notes Dodge.
•. •
I
By T1Je Alloc:la~ Prell
people
are
getting
the
message
ProA 59-year-old Baptist, Dodge
;, • Today is Tuesday, OcL 20, the 29(th day ofl992. There are 72 days
hibitionists
have
been
prtacbilig
for
lives in Denver, where he OJX:r&amp;ICS
' ,_ left In the~·
.
123
years:
Alcohol
is
a
hazard
10
a successful mail-order business
· ; '. Tocla,=ght In Histil'y:
.
health
and
a
menace
to
society,
specializing in POlitical memorabil·
i ' -· One
ye.a ago, on OcL 20, 1892, the city of Oli~o held 111
resulting in broken homes and
ia- such as old campaign buiiDns
..'::'ellboniiC caemony 10 dedicate the World's Columbian Exposition, ceJe..
highway deaths.
,
and~ten. (The ·~ostcoDected" '
·; .. ·bnling the 400ih anniv~ of the arrival of ChristDphet Columbus.
"A
Gallup
Poll
last
year
p_restde'nts: Teddy Roosevelt an!f
:: ~· lhe exposition did not offtciaUy open until the foUowing May.)
show~d that the percentage of
Harry
Truman.)
thiullle:
·
adults
who are total absllinen juSl
Dodge, who is national chairt •
Ia 1740, Maria Theresa became ruler of AusUia, Hungary and
coune.
.
juRIJfd
from 28 perm~~ in 1978 to
man of the Prohibition Party, was
: :·BcJbemla upon the dellll of her l'alber, Holy ROIDIII Emperor Chlrles VI.
But
no
m1111er
the
obstacles
that
44
percent
!Dday,'' Dodge happily
; •: In 1803 the U.S. SODMerlllifted the Loidaiana PwchMo.
have
been
put
in
its
way'
the
Proh·
claims.
·• '' Ia 1fil. durlq World War II, Gen. Douglu Mllc:Arthur stepped
I
bition Party his had a candidate in · Dodge doesn't agree that Probi·
inthel'hllippinel,clecWiq, "lbave~"
·• .·.....,...
every proshlential election since bition was a failure.
.
L.
Rlciilnlann
and
Deputy
Atlorney
Oeneral
Willianl
B.
Ruckclshaus
:.•' In
Clllle under IICIIIIiny • the HoUle Un·American
1872;
.~.Years
after
the
group
He
says:
"The
liquor
industry
•·• Acllvllill \.lt rime opened._.. imD lllepl Communist inOaeoce
lllelllbcn of the rock group Lynyrd Sltynyrd were lriUed
was IOUDOIIO.
. would mike you believe that it ; • IIIII illftlllldollla the IIIIIYio 'ndt,..Y.
.
The
unbridled
groWth
of
saloons
a time when people were gottina
in
the
c:niih
ria
cbnred
pllaeMI:Coml!,
Miss.
: . In 1964, tbe'31• J)relldent of'the United StaleS, Helbert Hoover, died
Ia 1979. the 1o1m P. Kamedy Ulary, containiq memorabilia. pipers and breweries after. the Civil War . lriDed by booileJien Ill thO time.
• ·111 Netr Yolk Ill IFill!.
·
and other INIIII!nden of lhe Kennedy adminillration, wu dedicated in led 10 the founding of the National But lhoae who lived lheu IUielllber
' ,. Ia
IeVeii men, Including a Ku Klux Klan leader
·Prohibition Party and the Anti· · it u 1 time when lhey never saw ·
~ ~' &lt;_. 1 . .
were CODYicled in Meridian, MilL, on cbarpa of BCllloiL
'
Saloon Lequc, which were even- · anybody druhk on lhe 11reet1 111d
Tm
fcm
qo:
The
SL
Louil
Clrdlnals
defeated
the
Milwlllllcee
Brew: ·Yialldll-~ clftl 11 of tJaee mwdered civil rilbtl worbn.
tually su,:cessful in euacting Probi· _ ' the man of the liollse wasn't Sill·
of the World Series,
... Ja l!Jfl, . . . I
lady JICQIJCID ICcnaedy Jllllried Oroek lldppina . ~ 6-3,111 win the IIC\'CIIIIIIIId
Fl~
,_.
qo:
T1111
Jllllll)le
were
.
wheu
m
Air
Force
jet
crashed
·
bitiori
in the country in' 1920. . geringbomecachnlahL" . ' ·
011 the1illod of Sc:llrDio.
.
.Know(!
as the 18th Amendment,
Georp Pllpnz II a syndkat·
II dill ll)('ellocl "SMurday Niall " - . ' ' spec:ill Wlllllr· into a R•n 1111 butel atilrlndillllpolia Jaaemetjope! ~ lfler the Prohibition
was repa~led In 1933.
eel writer ror NEA.
pilot. who Wllti'Yinl ~ lllltb Ill CiiiiCipiiCj iandmJ(, eiected llfely.
'
1 1 Aadllblld Cox - clilmilled aad Aaomey a-at BUiot
}

•.....

Tem.p eratures drop into 20s in parts of Ohio

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

I

Prohibition Party is in '92 race, too

·..
..,. .' .
'

Page 2-The Dally sentinel

The Dally Sentlnel__,._::

OHIO Wei.ither
WedllfSday, Oct. 21

Joseph Spear

.
ROBERT L WINGE'IT
PubUsher

."

.-

Pomeroy-:-Middleport, Ohio

respond to 5 calls

Stocks .

TheS~=~~.~out 50%·60%·75%·80%

WALLPAPER &amp;BLIND SHOP
'

'

(

''

I

.'

'

'•

�•

·s ports

Tuesday, October 20, 1992
-

The Daily Sentinel

Tony LaRussa of.the Oakland A's anOther pit fieldei- who can also
become The World. Almanac' s sWipg the baL Laddn's11iuina (12
Manager or ~he .Year for 1992. 78, .304) for the Cincinnati Rocb
Eckersley, who bad S1 saves, went put him on tbia All·~ League
7-1 with a dazzling 1.91 ERA.
squad for the IICaiDd time In three
The relief ace also joined the years. His OPS this season (.831)
AU·Majori..eapeBa..JwD tam.
was ciOIC to 'Ernie Banks' career ·
It wu chosen by a panel of total ( 833)
sports experts on behalf of The
nint b-: Gary Sheffield ·A~
World
Almanac;
its
publisher,
· the
Pharos Books; and eo-sponsoring the a~ of 23, he almost won
wl\at
his farewell , newspapers across the country.
performan~o - 34i:omers, l03 NEA distributed the ~ts to mote (.330), fmishcd third in homers
.RB
'l"iJs ::'~~~.!7:'J:'s~!oos than 600 U.S. dailies.
(33) an~ wound up fifth .in ~RBis
bas been ch~~':. as The World
Here is ·The World Almanac's (100). His OPS of .965thJS season
Almanac's Player of the Year for All-Major League Baseball team was far above the pm:er level of
l992.
for 1992:
·
any Hall of Fame third baseman,_
. He was named to this All-Major
First base: Franli: Thomas. The
Left ~: Barry Bonds. He was
League Baseball team for the third ~~O:~~~f.1f3) J::~ ~-~ Tnpie ~own contender. In
season in a row in a poll conducted Chicago White Sox. Thomas, who a 1~1on, . o~ s stole 39 bases,
10
1
30 3
byNewspaperEnterpriseAssocia- isjust24yearsold,ledtheAmeri· ~ ~Bh)~ 0tthe
" ~club
tionB.onds·ledthe ·. I-...;,.· this can League inOPS (.975) and 00·
.
maJor - . base percentage (.439). He was exetq player m baseball, but also
year m ~-~ percentage (.456) second in the AL in runs (108).
the best defensive outtlelder.
and sluggmg (.624). It gave him a
Second bue: Ryne Sandberg.
Ceater field: Kirby Puckett.
spectacular t~ of 1.080 for Oil· The Chicago Cubs star did more Another millionaire free agent,
bas~ p_lus sluggmg (OPS), ~ new ihail enoUgh (26, 87, .304) to make· 'Puckett (19. 110, .329) made The
~tat_Jsti~ called th~ truest Sli!!Ple The World Almanac team for the World Almanac team tor the sixth
10~1cauon of balti~g ,Production. fourth time in five seasons. He time in its seven-year history. What
H1s OPS average m 92 equaled scored 100 runs for Chicago, a sub could he ·his goodbye to the MinLou Gehrig's career total.
.SIXJ club. Plus "Ryno" might lie nesota Twins was special He led
This season's other big star, the hest defensive second baseman " the major ICagues in hits (210) and
reliever Dennis Eckersley, helped in the National League.
the AL in total bases (313)
Shortstop: Barry Larkin. He's
Right field: Larry Watker. He's

BJHOWARDSINER
NEW YORK (NEA) - Bury
~onds , who has Just earned the
nght to be called the top baseball
star of the 19?~s. is ready to
become 8 $30-milliOII man. . ·
The 2~-year·!'ld outf•eldcr
hopes to SIP the nchest ~qent
dealfi in ~ historyUedof the P!M· !1
lgures: "'"'exec
once agam this
season

Page-4 .

,

By ALAN ROBINSON
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The
. calendar said October, the weather
felt like December. Piusburgh got
its earliest snowfall in 20 years, the
temperature dipped into the 20s
and the 1'llmc Riv.ers Stadium playing fwld turned icy slic~
Maybe that's why the Cincinnati
Bengals' offense went into the
dee freeze.
.
.
~oomer Esiason has had four
300-yard games and a 409-yard
game in his career against the
Steelers, but he couldn' t manage
even 100 Ylll'ds on ~miserably cold
Monday night. And miserable
· desaihed Cincinnati's offense in a
20-0 loss to the tied-for-first place
Steelers.
The Steelers h~d just enough
offense and plenty of defense. The
Bengals had nothing - no points,
no momentum, no big plays, no
offense, no defense, no rushing, no
passing.
- "We were pathetic/' Esiason
said after throwing for 86 yards, or
about a nonnal quarter's worth of
work against Pittsburgh. "We were
inept"
,.
· The Bengals (2-4) managed
only 118 yards - or only 10 more
than Pj.ttsburgh •s Barry Foster ~n
for - and totaled only 14 .yards m
· the second half.
Esaison played with a bruised
right arm, but his ego was even

Cincin~ati

more bruised.
•'To get as few yards as we did
is pathetic, " he said. " I can ' t
remember playing in a game where
we had so few yards. I don't have
any answers. .•• H you SUlp believing you can win, you can 'L"
For a while, the Steelers (4-2)
acted like they had stop)led believing they could score. Af~ an .3;0
. start, they were held w1thout a
touchdown in losses to Green Bay
(17, 3) and Cleveland (17-9), two ·
teams mat will never he compared
to the NFL' s great defenses of all
time.
The Steelers' nine-quarter streak
without a touchdown finally ended
on Dwight Stone's 24-yard touch·
down catch late in the first half,
two plays after his own 30-fard run
on a reverse. He .scored agam in the
fourth quarter on li 5-yard throw
from Neil O'Donnell, following
Jerrol Williams' recovery of an
Esiason fumble at the Steelers' 20.
" Finally getting into the end
zone gave us a lot of confidence.' •
Stone said. "You keep wondering
how long it's going to go on."
. Gary Anderson added field
goals o£.21 and 27 yards as O'DonneUfinished 23 of 37 for 287 yards
and no interceptions.
The NFL 's ·leading rusher also
eme~ed from the game, and while
his fust name is Barry , it's not

20-0

Sanders. Foster's fourth 100-yard
game of the season gave him 642
yards for the season and moved
him past Emmitt Smith of Dallas .
(S8I) .and Ricky Watters (S76) of
San Francisco into the NFL rushing
lead.
Even more surprisingly , the
Steelers' 4-2 record tied them with
Houston for the AFC Central Division lead. They'D get a better idea
of exactly !)ow good they are in the
next month, when they play Kansas
City, Houston, Buffalo and DetroiL
The Bengals .were shut out for
the fllilt time since a 34-0 loss to
Cleveland in a 1987 strike game.
Their last previous shutout defeat
in a non-strike game was 14-0 to
Buffalo in 1980.
The only time the Bengals seriously threatened, wide receiver
Carl Pickens fumbled after an ISyard gain to the Steelers' 21 and
Pittsburgh'.s Siunmy Walker recovered with just over a minute left in
the fust.half.
"We just got nothing going,"
Bengals head coach David Shula
said
The shutout ended Bengais
kicker Jim Breech's NFL record
streak of scoring in 186 consecutive games. Breech, who kicked for
Cal-Berkeley in the mid-1970s,
said he had never before failed to
score in a coUege or pro game.

Mter

AFC Central game in Pittsburgh, which the
Steelers won 10-0 in part behind Foster's fourth
straight 100-yard game. (AP)

Rio Grande's volleyball team
tied for top spot in conference

In a hectic week of volleyball for Rio Grande, which dealt earlier
action , the University of Rio with non-conference opponents,
Grande Redwomen came out2-I in but included a hard-fought victory
a trio of matches at home and on over perennial District 22 foe
the road, helpin~ the team preserve Mount St Joseph.
.
i!S current standing in a tie for first
Rio Grande handed MSJ ' s
place with Mount Vernon Nazarene Mountie Lions a loss of 15-5, 18m the Mid-Ohio Conference.
16 on Oct. 13 in LY,De Center, preThe Redwomen defeated confer- ceded by a 15-4', 15-8 win over
ence opponent Tiffm on Saturday Concord (W.Va.): Two days later,
on the Lady Dragons court, 15-6, the Redwomen fell to Thomas
5-15, 15-7, 15-llto stay in con- More (Ky.) 15-10, 4-15, 4-15, 15tention for the defense of their 17, also at horne.
MOC championship. jt was the
"I was super-pleased with the
only confen:nce match of the week way things worked out," Coach ·

Scor.. eboard
MiMoocu .......... 4 3 0

AMERI~!,N_fg~RENCE
T..,.

W L T Pc.L PFPA
6 0 01.000 168 94
Buffalo............... ~ 2 0 .667 16SJC:
• . ~... .. . 3 3 0 .500 6811 2
N.Y. .h&lt;l .......... I 5 0 .167 84123
Now l!naJmcl .... 0 6 0 .000 63157

Mioai.-............

. '

CeolraiDI- .
JlauRaa ......- ..... -' 2 0 .667 t53Jt0
l'lalboqlo ......... 4 2 . 0 .667 111 74
a-Jao4.......... 3 3 0 .500 ii ..
Cinc::inn•L........

0 .143 43135

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eu&amp;em IM•Ialon
W L T PeL PFPA
1 0 .133 139 99.

Dolla................. '
.Phuo&lt;loiJI'i• ....... 4
w................. 4

2

o .667 136 74

2 0 .667 121 92

N,Y.Oioa. ........ 2 4 0

JlhceUs. .'.~ ........ _

.333

IZ7m

1 5 0 .167 110170

Central Dh'llkln
u;,.-.,.
,
.
.....
. - ' 1 0 .133 160112
..... :........ 3 3 0 JOO 139145

~

Tam,. Bay ...... ..

3 3 0 .500 129114
4 0 •.333 80121

ate.. Bay ........ _ 2

J)oaoi1...............

I l 0 .167 109128

WIIIUII Dtv"loft
SanFrancilco .... 6 I 0 .8S7 21 612.5

Now Odosn. ...... ' 2 0 .714 117 12
L.A.
3 4 0 .429 121133
Atlanu ............... 2 5 0 .216 133119

Rims .........

10

21 20

2 3 1

5 20 23

ScLoWJ ............ 2 5 0

4 21 30

Tomnt.o .M.. .... ,....

Smythe Dltolllon
LAIIAngclcs ....... l I 0 10 21 19
Vancouver......... 4 1 0
8 2S 12
C:J;;~_:;-..... ....
r. 2 CO 0 ::!~ 1~
WmrupeJ ........... 2 5 0

4 24 33

Eclmonta1 ..........

I 5 I

3 20 34

SanJc.c .............

I 4 0

2 12 25

Monday's score

Tonight's games

OU..wa VI. TIXO!l.to at Hamilton, OnL,
7:35 p.m.
Hinfotd" New Jmey, 7 :3~ p.m.
Philadelphia It N.Y. Islanden, 7 :35
p.m.
Vancouver at Piu.bUJKh, 7:3S p.m.
Winnipec at Detroit, 1:35 p.m.
Edmonton at T~ B•y, "1:35 p.m.
1.01 Anae:Je~ at CaJ.&amp;uY, 9:35 p.m.

Wednesday'scames
OUcasoat Buffalo, 7:35p.m.
·
Waahm&amp;ton at N.Y. Ranaen, 7 : 3~

p.m.
San Joteu Montnal. 7:35p.m.

Quebec at SL 14lit, 8:35 p.m.

World Series slate

.

Tonlfht
Atlanta (Avery 1·11) at Toronto
(Guzman 16-5), 1:29 p.m.

w_,

AtlaJ:Ita at Toronv. (Key

1~- 13),

8:26

p.m.
Thundoy
AU&amp;nu.al TOI'On10. 1:26 p.m.
Saturdl)'
Ton:nto at Atlanta, 8:16 p.m.,lt necs·

....

Monday's srore
PituobwJ.h 20. Ci.ncinnlli 0

Sundl1, oa. u
T&lt;WIUO at AtlanUI, 1:29 p.m.,lf' ncccs-

Next week's games

ouy

Sunday, Od.l!
OUctJO" Or.&amp; Bay, 1·p.m.

Transactions

CiGcirlalti at Howton. I p.m.

..

' 19

s

M"'oal 6. S.. LoWJ 2

2 0 .714 100130
J[WuCity ....... 4 3 0.5711l0101
LA.Ilaidtn ...... 3 4 0 .429 ti)IJJ OIJ
Soa Dieso .......... 2 4 0 .333 BOllS

T-

6 18 16

Tampa ·a.,......... 2 3 1

o-w .............. '

I 6

8 2S 26

DoooiL.............. 3 2 0
C!Ucaso............... 2 3 1

2 4 0 .333 99148

Wlllern Dlwldon

Seoalo...............

W L T Pb. GFGA

T-

In the NFL...

~IIT"'!P'.B•y, I p.m.

Pboenia .. Phila~ , l p.m.
S..allat N.Y. Oiliu, l p.m.

BuebaU

Wdhin~

at Minna~~&amp;, 1 p.m.
Denva at San Dlqo, 4 p.m.

Nalloul tape

'

Cleveland at N~w En,.llnd. 4 p.m.
Dolla .. L.A. Rsidm, 4 p.m.
.lndianlpolilat Mini, 4 p.m.

Pilubwah atKuuu City, 7:30p.m.

aNCINNATI REDS - Named Gene
Bennett lpocil1 Uli.ltant to lhe aencn.l
man..-; Taft,. Robdlo senior ldviaor tor
player penonnel; and Chid Bender dirccdovdopncm.

.•

OPEN DATE : AllltUa , L.A. Rams,
New Odeanl, Sl.ll Francisco.

Basketball

.

'

M..,u,,Od.u
BWflloal N.Y. lc&amp;f, 9 p.m.

In the NHL...
WALES CONFERENCE
Palrl&lt;k Dl•ldon
W L T Pia. GfGA
' l'l1tahlqh .......... 4 0 2 10 31 19
Newl-y ........ 4 2 0 I 19 19
, N.Y.=
..... 4 2 0 I 2S IS
, · 1'11111-....... 3 3 I
7 :tl :16

r-

w.................

3 3 0
.- N.Y. Iafindus .... :. 3 1

6 23 22
5 23, 2S

A.._DI_

a--...............

ktaft................

410

QaaWI ..............

I 4 ·0

3 I 1

_ . ............ 331
8ulfalo .............. 330

Jlulfaod ............. I 5 0

'--

I
7

lf• l7

7 ~:;
6 31 :tl
2 12 XI
2 14 XI

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
)

v

"" of.,..,...

..

N1Uonal lli,Jketi:NIII AaodaUOft
NEW YORK KNICKS - Ws ived
Terry Dozier, forward. and Gary Waitea, .
JIUonl.
WASIDNG')l)N BUI.l.ETS - Sipd
Tom &lt;NJ,liou, forward, to a aeven-ycar
......... snd o..1 o....... fWd.

FCHitblll

NsdooaiP.,.bslll.tquo

DALLAS COWBOYS Ricky Blob, ........ bod!.

Waived

By DAVE GOLDBERG
CIDCAGO (AP) - It seems to
come up every few years - a
problem that NFL .owners can ' I
solve.
Three years ago, it was picking
a commissioner.
This year, it's getting some sort
of labor agreement that will allow
the league to go on with expansion,
the draft and ·the rest of its future.
And it starts again today as the
owners come together for their
annual fall meeting, one that was
expected a year ago to perhaps produce lhe names of the two new
cities to which the league will
expand.
But the September jury verdict
which invalidated the league's limited free agent system- Plan B has made expansion a lower priority than labor.
· Judge bavid Doty, wi10 io e ar~
the lawsuit that invalidated 'Pian B,
has set Nov. 12 for motions on that
verdict, liD~ the NFL would like to

have in• place som,e sort of f~ee
agency plan of its own by then assuming there-will be no agreement with the players.
"I think we're moving toward a
consensus on our plan," Jerry
Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, said Tuesday. "I don't know
that we'll have something to
announce from these meetin~s, but
I think we'll make progress.'
In addition, the owners are
under increased pressure from
more lawsuits, including one filed
by Reggie White of the Philadelphia Eagles and two others that
could mean complete free agency
for the nearly 300 players who
become nommal free agents on
Feb. I.
Nonnaily, these meetings are
fonnalities, designed· to review the
season's on-field progress , its
finances and to Set up the next season's exhibition schedule.
But this year, there had heen
plans to announce the two new .

Patsy Fields remarked. "It was a
tough week for us and I hope the
kids can get rested up before we
start'again."
·
In the Tiffin match, Billina
Cooper dominated the statisti~. as
she had all week, with 25 k11ls,
eight digs and six blocks. Her sister
Kellina pumped in nine kiDs to the
effort, followed by six from
MicheUe Turner ana four each sup·
pli~(l by Amy Hambel and Jo
Chapman. Kellma Cooper also had
six digs and Hainbel four, while
Chapman, a freshman from Oak
Hill, stepped forward. on the
defense with eight !11ocks for the
win, which took Rio Grande to 9-1
in the MOC as this week opened.
In spite of the loss to Thomas
More, Billina Cooper again led the
offense with a total of 29 kiDs, her
highest output in that category for
CIRCLEVILLE, Ohio (AP) _
said. "But our kids did nothing
the season, and Kellina Cooper · When is a 41 -0 blowout not a wrong. Our team should be 5-2;
frred in 21. Hamhei was credited blowout? When the team with the our coaching staff and administrawilh nine, Turner netted five, and 41
· li ·b·l 1a
tion is 4-3.
·
uses an me gt e p yer.
. Amanda-Ciearcreek used senior
Deana Smith and Michelle Spears
Amanda-Ciearcreek, a Division
were each credited with two apiece. IV football playoff team last year, Jeremy Cook sporadically in its
"Thomas More played super found out the painful answer to that win over Circleville. Cook, a 6against us," Fields commented. "I question Monday when the Ohio foot, 215-pound defensive end,
think if we could have won the High School Athletic Association. transfered to Amanda from neigh·
fourth game we would have puUed ruled its OcL 9 rout of CircleviUe boring Lancaster High School durout the win, but it didn't happen. had becri forfeited because the ing the summer, but his lack of four
But we got a tremendous effort Aces used an ineligible player.
one-credit courSes in his spring
from the team and our younger
The loss left the Aces 4-3 over- semester at Lancaster m~de him
players are really coming ~ound au dropping them out of contention ineligible ~ start ~ season.
.
for us." .
for a repeat playoff berth and most
Amanda s first SIX·wc:ek grading
Smitl! recorded three serving likely a chance to win a fifth . JX:nod ~nded on the Fnday of.the
aces in the match, while Billina straight Mid-Stale League division- Cm;leviUe ~e. Cook tume«! m. a
Cooper had seven blocks, Turner a1 championship.
2.8 grllde pomt average for hiS SIX
five and Keilina Cooper four. In
"If we get beat on the field, graded co~s. at Amanda, and was
digs, Billina Cooper led with 11, then we admit defeat," Amanda- declar,ed eh~1~Ie to play by the
Kellina Cooper had nine, Kristy Clearereek head coach Ron Hinton school s aQminJSirauon.
Lindsey supplied seven, Hambel
·
"We thought we had double
had five and Smith notched four.
checked and rechecked all the
MSJ, "a nice team, not as strong
bases," Hinton said. "The kid did
nothing wrong. If anything, he did
as in the past," as Fields observed,
everything he was supposed to do
gave the Redwomen a run for their
and even more satisfactorly.
money in the second game of the
"He practiced every day, his
·match after an uncharacteristically
grades improved and his attendance
flat offense on MSJ' s part led to an
was exceUent,' ' Hinton said.
early win for Rio Grande.
But. Cook had not become offiBiUina Cooper had 161dlls, Kei. cially eligible under OHSAA
lina Cooper netted 10, Hambel
Bylaw 4-4-2, which states that a
chipped in with eight, and Smith
student-athlete's ineligibity contin·
and Turner had two each. Lindsey
ues ulitil the start of the fifth school
served up two aces, while she and
day
of the next gnuling period.
Billina Cooper were credited with
Cook
had heeD a standout player
five digs. Keilina Cooper and
at
Lancaster
as a junior, and CirSpears had four each. In addition,
cleviUe
coach
Eric Tudor and his
Biilina Cooper led with nine
siaff
recognized
the name when
blocks, Turner had five and Ham·
they spotted it on Amanda's prehe! four.
season roster.
The short work the Redwomen
"During the summer, we !mew
made of Concord was accom he ·had moved in," Tudor said.
plished wh en Billina Cooper
"We kept looking for him to play
recorded 16 kills, Kellina Cooper
had Seven, Turner and H11!nhel had
four each and Smith neued two.
Smith and Hamhel each had two
serving aces, while Keilina Cooper
had six blocks, BiUina Cooper five
and Turner three.
DIVES
The Redwornen were 23-6 overFaulk,
son ·of Charles
all as this week began and continue
Linda
Faulk
of Pomeroy,
the second half of the conference
reeeatly
dove
iato
tbe water for
schedule . with a home match
this
nine-pound
catfish
in the
against Urbana tonight at 7. The
Ohio
River.
A
1111y
from
his
pole
team completes this week's action
at
the
time
the
fish
took
the ·
DOMINO'S NOW
·Friday and Saturday in the MiUigan
bait,
he
caught
up
to
what
1I'IIS
(Tenn.) Invitational.
OFFERS
happening only. arter the fish
pulled the rJShlog pole into the
Sports briefs
water.
He retrieved his pole
Basketball
and
the
attached rJSh after divLANDoVER, Md. (AP) - The .
ing
into
the river fully clothed
Special Introductory
Washington Bullets signed top
duriutl a camping trip with his
draft pick Torn Gg'!=l!a, slipping
Olf~rl
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. ·
under the NBA's
cap ey givRichard
Rupe.
·
.
·
ing him a seven-yeat contract.

It took 88 minutes of intense
play, but the University of Rio
Grande soccer team emerged with
a much"needed 1-0 win Saturday
over Walsh to maintilin its standing
in the upper bracket of District22.
The Redmen, who went to 4-2
in the district to tic with Findlay for
second place, kept their hopes of
ho~ng the playoffs alive by con- .
trolling the tempo of its contest
with a competitive Walsh squad.
"We had the upper hand in the
flfSt half and we felt good corning
off the halftime," Redmen Coach
Scott Morrissey said. "I think we
went through a 15-minute stretch in
the second half where we played a
little to!) relaxed, but then we tightened things up. W~lsh, I think,
entered the game a little too relaxed
themselves, as if they didn't expect
much from us. But we played very
hard and I was very pleased with
our performance."
Both teams battled to a scoreless
tie in the fust half and maintained

By H()WARD ULMAN
TOROm'Q (AP) .;.... Baseball is
big in Toronto, but never bigger
than tonight when the ftrSt World
Series game outside the' United
Swes wiD he p~r:!' here,
.
"E1(eryone ·
about Toronto
being a hockey town," John .
Olerud said. "Now I think the city
belongs to us."
.
"Believe me," Dave Winfield
said, "this is Canada's team at the
moment''
The Blue Jays have been around
for 16 years. They've had winning
records for the !liSt 10. They went
to the AL playoffs in 198S, 1989 ·
and 1991. But they never went to
the World Series until now.
Tonight, they play the Atlanta
Braves before a ~acked house
under the SkyDome s familiar gray
ceiling and surrounded by' more
than 60 Canadian flags, all hung
right-side up.
The series is all tied up, 1-1,
after Toronto's dramatic S-4 win
Sunday night on litue-•mown .tlll
Sprague's two-run pinch homer in
the ninth.
But Sprague's hit wasn't as popular a topic of discussion on Mon. ,.

f

MONTREAL (AP) - Montreal
C8Jltain Guy Carboimeau had some
advice for Todd Ewen .

Sports deadlines posted
The Galltpolls Dally TrlbuM,
Tht Daily Stntine/, the Polnr
Pleasant Register and the SrwiayTimes-SentiMI value the contributions their readers make to the
sports sections of these papers, an(!
these contributions wiD continue to
he published .
. However, certain deadlines for
submissions wiD he observed. The
deadline for submissions of local
baseball· and softball-related photos and related anicles, from T-bali
to the majors, as well as other
·spring and summer sports, is the
day of the last·game of the World
Series. Likewise, the deadline for
photos and related anicles for foot·
ball .,.d other fall sports is the Sat·
before the Super Bowl. The
·ne for photos and related articles for basketball and ocher wiriter ·
is the last day of the NBA

OHSAA commissioner Clair
Muscaro issued his·ruling in a letter
Monday to Amanda.Ciearcreek.
Tudor, whose team improved to
4-3 with the forfeit, commended
the Amanda-Ciearcreek administtation for notifying the OHSAA of
the infraction.
·

CALL US
TODAY!

992·2124

=t

C.

4

These deadlines have heeD insti·
luted to give readers plenty of time
to get their photos back from lhe
- photography studio of choice and
to give the staffs the opponunity to
publish these sports photos and
articles during the appropriate SCI· ,
son for that sport.

I lrte.Stfcblll4
..... l'fnel

{

the sl)ltus quo throughout most of
the second period, at least until the
fmal 15 minutes when the Redmen
turned up the pressure on the Cavaliers.
The resulting attack opened up
an opportunity for Stuart Smith to
fire the ballm to Andrew Jones,
who took it out of danger of being
blocked by Walsh's sweeper bai;k
to sCore with two minutes remaining. Smilh was credited with the
assist

"Our guys playejl very hard.
They knew they ·were playing for
something," Morrissey noteil.
' Statistically, t~e Redmen
recorded 12 shots on goal, five corner kicks and got five goalk~per
saves from Jim Egner. Walsh had
five ·shots on goal, three comer
kicks and its goalie netted nine
saves.
The Redmen, who are 6-9 overall and 4-1 in the Mid-Ohio Conference for second place, renew
action Wednesday with a 3:30 p.m.
.

day's o(f day as a Canadian flag
held upside down by a color ~
during the Canadian nauonal
anthem before Game 2 in Atlanta.
· "I hope it's an honest mistake,
but mistake or no mistake, there's
no excuse for it," Toronto's Kelly
Gruber said. "The crowd ~ight he
a li_ttle.more into (tonight's·game),
wh1ch IS a benefit to us."
The flag was held by a U.S .
Marine color guard from Atlanta.
An apology was issued, but
"you shouldn't letth81 happen,"
Winfield said. "It's like having
dignitaries coming to your home
and putting out your old silverware...
."I imagine they're ~bably stili
domg pushups at theu base after
something like that," Atlanta
shortstop Jeff Blauser said.
The Braves showed up at the
SkyDome for another kind of
workout Most of lhem had never
been in the cavernous 'building
before and wanted to get used to it
Blauser Clll'ed more about the
color of the ceiling and whether it
would cause popups to disappear
than about whether the Canailian
flags were hung properly. They

Montreal posts

.

'

huge surprise in '92. He led the NL
in runs batted in, nearly doubling
his previous high. Plus he was
fomth in the league in bomers and
slugging (.524). He also duew 0111
more than 35 percent of the runners
tryinl'tostea!.onhim.
. R•&amp;ht-handed pitchr: Greg

a

Maddux. A control a~e with
·Oiavine his a live fatball and a
mean slider, Maddux was 20-11 for highly effecli-ve chlnae-up.
the Chicago Cubs _ with an ERA
Relief piUIIer: Dellrus Ecken·
of 2.18. 'nle Cubs were shut 1M in ley. He post~ the highest poilit
seven of his losses. He tDpped the total in the 17-year history Of the
NL in innings l'iiChed (168) and Relaid's Relief Man Award. With
was third in strikeouts (199). For razor-sharp control, Eckersley
five years in a row, he's won at helpcd the A's to a 64-4 record in
least 1S games and worked 81 least games in which he pitched. He
237 innings. Now he's a free agent, blew only three of his save oppor1 2 Year:. Pat Listooi.ert-handed pitcher: Tom
Glavine. He is a repeat entry in this tach. The new shortstop for the
spot from a year ago. StiU blossomMilwaukee Brewers hit .290, 1101e
in.g, 'Glavine (20-8, 2.76) of the S4 bases and scored 93 runs this
Atlanta Braves is only 26 years old. season. Listach also had 47 RBII.
In 1992, he tied (wilh Maddux) for As a fielder, he showed excellent
the NL lead in victories; and (with range.
ex-New YorkM~tDavidCone) for
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
the NL lead m shutouts (S). ENTERPRISE ASSN.

tun~::ie !': ihe

M eigs
• go~~I ers
··
h~ d"
t
1•
k~ t
ea Ing 0 state In I es

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel CorresPQDdeiu
. The Meigs Marauder golf team
will leave Wednesday for the Division n state golf toumiunent to ~~&lt;:
held Friday and Saiurday on Ohio
State University's Sc8rlct Course.
Meigs will play a practice round
on the course Thunday.
Under the direction of head
coach Joho Krawsczyn·, the
Marauders have become one of the
top teams in the state. The Maraud. ers posted a 9 I-8 record overaU and
finished as sectional and district
runner-up to earn lhc berth in the
Slate champi~.
This is the fust time a high
school team in Meigs County has
home contest against CedarviUe, its advanced to the state tournament in
fu\al conference ~e of the sea- golf. Meigs pl8ced the late Parker
son. The team will host Fiddlay Long in the finals in 1986.
this Stllllrday at 3 p.m.
The Marauders claimed their
Both games will he important · third
straight TVC championship
for Rio Grande, Morrissey said, this past season with a S3-l mark.
because a win over Cedarville win At one.. point in the season, Meigs
cement the Redmen hold on the held-a·76-match conference winconference's second spot, whii~
victory over Findlay gives Rio
Grande sole eontiol over second Seve~
place in the districL
The Redmen, who went 7-11-1
By SCO'IT WOLFE
last season and were.5-2 in the disSentinel Cormpondent
trict 81 the end of the regular camJohn Krawsczyn's Meigs golf
paign, entered the playoffs for the team claimed the Tri-Valley ConftrSt time in the program •s history ference title for the third straight
in November 1991. In fomth place year and dominated the confer·
at the lime for the four-team post- ence 's all-league dream team,
season, M:orrissey's club was which was selected based on the
forced .to travel to Tiffin to meet players average score. ·
the top-seeded Dragons, where
Sophomore Adam Krawsczyn
was
named the league MVP for the
they were shut out in the opening
second straight year with a 38.7
round.
·
.
,
The higher seeding will assure stroke average.
Krawsczyn
led
a
host
of
five
Rio Grande of a home berth in this
Marauders, all staners, that domiyear's playoffs, Morrissey noted.
nated five of six slots on the
iea~e·s rust team. Only Alexander s Scott Chapman broke the all-

ning streak.
All five Slalters for the maroon
and gold, who received fust team
aU-TVC honors, were led by twotime conference MVP Adam
Krawsc:,:yn&lt; Krawsczyn, a sophomore, led the conference w1th a
38,7 scoririg average. Also taking
first team all conference honors
were senior John Bentley with ·a
39.1 averag_e, along with, seqiors
Jason Hart (39.2), Jay Hat:ris (39.5)
and Jay Cremeans (40.1 ). Other
team members for the Marauders
include senior Chris Knight and
sopbomores Reg&amp;ie Pratt and
Benny Ewing.
Meigs began the tournament
trall ~Y finish in~ second to
Thornville Sheridan m the Division
II sectional at Lakeside Golf
Coone in Beverly. Meigs posted a
team sctn of 324, 13 strokes ahead
of Gallia Academy, which fmished
in third place in the 12-tewn fteid.
John Bentley was mak:h co-medal·
ist ftx" the in the tournament for the

Ii

I·

6~2

were. So was the lone American
flag in center field.
·
"I don't think it would be very
smart for us not to have a workout," Blauser said.
It wasn't as urgent for the Blue
Jays, who played in the SkyDorne
all season and dido 't land in Toronto until 7:30a.m. Monday. They
were delayed four hours as a pllrl in
their airplane was replaced.
The Braves like the S~Dome a
lot more than the Metrodome,
where they losi all four games last
year as Minnesota won the Series
m seven. Unlike the white ceiling
of the Metrodome, Toronto's darker top is a good background for the
white basebaU.
"Spectacular," Atlanta general
manager John Schuerholz raved.
"This place makes baseball less of
Ill) unnatural act inside.''
·~1 don't see why" the Blue Jays
should have an exrra advantage in
the SkyDome, Blauser said. "The
only disadvantage (we have) is just
like any other park you go into.
They have the home field advantage. You would have that anywhere with fans on your side."

Meigs string, placing fifth on tile
"liallot with a 39.8 stroke average.
Behind Krawsczyn were teammates John Bentley, Jason Hart,
Jay Harris and Jay Cremeans.
Meigs, 81 one point owned a 76game undefeated league winning
streak, which was broken by league
runner-up Southern, who was 4214 in the TVC.
Southern's Bracken McFaru\ led
the second team with a 40.2 stroke
average.
No "Coach of the Year" was
voted on.

John Bentley, MeitiS- 39.1
Jason Hart. Meigs- 39.2
' Jay Hanis, Meigs - 39.5
Scoll Chapman, Alexander 39.8
Jay Cremeans. Meigs- 40.1

Sec:ond·team plc:ka
.
Bracken McFann, Southern .....
40.2
Corey Wingett, Alexander 40.5
Mall Nolan, Belpre -40.8
·
D.K. Robertson, Aleunder 41.6
Tmvis wens. Belpre - 41.7 · .
Michael McKelvey, Southern~
First-team selec:tlons
Adam Krawsczyn, .Meigs 42.0
(MVP)-38.7

'

PBL results
POMEROY - These are the
results of recent action at the
Pomeroy Bowling.Lanes.

Oct. 7

League- Early Wednesday
Mixed
.
Teams (in order of finish) -'
Rutland American Legion (40),
Hackett Roofing (32), No. S S&amp;V
(30), Tony's Carry Out (28),
Teaford Golf &amp; Trophies (22), No.
I (16).
High series- Tetty Scidenahel
(482) and Becky Ellis (492)
Second-highest series - Larry
Dugan (474) and Shirley Simmons
(466)
.
.

"I hope he enjoys it," Carbon· sive club promised when Demers
neau said of Ewen's flfSl
replaced Pat Bums as coach in the
game tiS the Canadiens de~
St. offseason.
Louis 6-2 Monday night. " If he
Rookie Ed Ronan got his first
stays disciplined and keeps worlc:- NHL.goai, while Carbonneau,
ing hard in practice, he can have Brian Bellows and' Denis Savard
mtn nights like this.''
also scored for Monueat; which
Ewen's outburst included the evened its record at 3-3-1 in the
tie-breaking goal in the third peri- only NHL game of the nighL
od, his secOnd of the game.
The Blues, who came from
· And going .for a third goal late behind to defeat Quebec on Satur·
in the third period, coach Jacques day, looked ready to do it again,
Demers put him on the power play, tying Montreal in the second period
IIIIOihet NHL ftrSt for the muscular after trailing 2-0.
right-winger.
Ewen, however, started the d.eciEwen passed the credit on to his sivc four-goal spurt in the fmal
center, CarbonneaU, who has lifted · perio&lt;! with a breakaway goal at
the team since returning from a · 2:29.
sore 1mee last Saturday when Mon·
"It was a fluke, but it went in,"
trea1 trounced Minnesota 8-1.
said Ewen. acquired liom the Blues
"It's great playing with John in 1989. .
.
St; Lou1s coach Bob Plag~r
LeClair and Carbonneau," Ewcn
said. "Carbo puts the·puck right wasn t ~=~· Ooal!C~ &lt;;urus
where you want iL John and 1 are J~ . his ream m ~ until the
~uya who know their limits. We third penod, :but dtfens1ve. CIJOrl
jUSt go Out and play han! "
were responSible for droppmg the
Both LeClair and Bwen are Blues' reconlto 2-S-0.
important to the Canadlens because
"We came b1c1t from two goals
both are big IIIII ~on a sinan, do~: ,...e shoul~ ~ had mornen·
speed-oriented team. But Carbon- tum, Plager Slid But then lheJt
neau mabs things haooen.
was a breakdown and they went
Without CarbonniiU the Cana- down and scored:"
dlens ~eored just IS
in their
St. Louis scoring ace Brett Hull
five pmes.
had seven shotS on goal and rang
They have 14 goals in two another off a post, but was he!d .
games since his return and are scoreless. Hull has ~ goals m
beginning to look lib the explo· his fiiSI ~ games. :

!.'::::Joal

Higb game -

~~!.:~ ~ ~ ! ~ ~~

(190) and Becky Ellis (189)
Sec:ond·hilh ga1ne - Larry
Dqgan (189) and Shirley Simmons
(183) .
.
Team series - Rutland Ameri·
can Legion (1794)
Team game - .Rutland Ameri·
can Legion (629)
SepLJO
l.eague - Early Wednesday
Mixed
Teams (ia order of finisl!) No. 4 (32), Rutland American
Lejion (32), Tony's Carry Out
(26), No. S (24), No.1 (16), No. 2
(14).
High series - Larry Dugan
(S30) ~ Dollie WID (497)
·Sec:nncl-hlaheat series - Russ
Carson (Sl3) and Shirley Simmons
(491) .
H lgh game - Larrr Dugan
(203) and Pat Carsoa (203)
Second-high aame - Russ
Carson (199) and Dottie Will (194)
Team series- Tony's Cury
Out(1785)
Team game - Tony's Cury
Out(697)

iol.l.

,,

scores ·in the sectional were Jay
Harris (82), Jason Hart, Adam
Krawsczyn (83 each) and Jay eremeans (87).
The Marauders. who have
played a tough non-conference
schedule, earned the right to
advance to the 12-tam staiC golf
tournament by flllishing in a tie for
second in the district with Coahoc·
to.i with a team acores of 332, six
strokes hehind district champ Clay·
mont The top two teams and top
two individuals fJOm a ~ualify­
ing tam advllnl:e 10 competition so 1 fdlb-111111 tiebreaker was
played. Hanis came in with an 8S
compared to an 89 by C~'s
fdlh man to put the Marauders mto
• the state. Other Meigs scores
included • an 82 by Adam
ICrawsczyn and Hart, Cremeans
finished with an 83 and Bentley,
like Harris, finished with an 8S.
Extremely windy co_ndition contn'buted to the high scores.

JOHN BENTLEY

win over St. Louis

r""

Marauders with I 76. Other Meigs

Meigs County golfers get all-TVC honors

. ~tlanta guest team of Toronto

in the first three four games, but
then we found out he was ineligible. Knowing he was such a good
player, we ch~ked to see when
Amanda's ~g period was over
to fmd out1f we would have to face
. him.
"We were SUI]Jrised to see him
in uniform and in the game on Friday night," he said
After Cook had played two
plays, Tudor caUed a time out to
mfonn the game officials that he
was playing the game under
protest. Amanda-Clearcreek officialS were notified and they
checked the validity of Coole's eligibility.
"I wasn't aware there was a
problem until halftime," Amanda
principalll utch Kobel said. "One
of our assistant coaches and our
athletic director came up and told
me the game was being played
under protest. I came up to my
offJCC and checked the handbook.
"It was ,ail oversight on ourrart
As the head administrator o the
high school, I feel the I'm the one
responsible. I should have nailed
that one down.
· "But, I've ioolced at the rule and
I've spoken to a number of people
about it since then. It's one of those
technecalities that is not not that
w~lllmown by a lot of people, •' he

99
.............
.........,

&amp;:'~ ?.::;:·~he~JC~oi~ 'l:~~ ~~~i~ta~f:! ~~n~:·;~o~

In .first World Series game in Canada,

A-C forfeits win against Circleville
because of use of ineligible player

BREAD STICKS

~he

of British Columbia, Walker (23,
9~ • .301) iJ an emerging liar for the
Montreal Expos. He was sixth in
the NL in slugging (.S06). He's
~ got the hest arm of any out·
ftelder - which resulted in 16
assists in 1992.
Catcher: Damn Daulton. Tum·
ing 30 did wonders for this~--

Rio kickers' 1-0 Walsh victory
spells . pos.~ible playoff berth

expansion cities - the five finalists are Baltimore, St. Louis, Jacksonville, ~emphis and Charlotte.
However, at a meeting in Dallas
last month, the owneJS put off that
announcement pending a labor set·
tlement, meaning that the 1994
expansion date is likely . in jeop·
ardy.
The new plan for player movement could include one that would
allow players free agency afti:r five
yeats - what the owners have proposed in bargaining with lawyers
for the players. However, it also
would 'he likely to retain some system of compensation to a team los•
ing a player, something the players
have refused ·to accept
.
. Under the invalidated Plan B,
each team protected 37 players
each season with the rest - under
contract or not - hP.r:nmino nnf'P..
stricted free agents. Thq jury did
find, however, that the league had
the ril(ht to keep some sort of system intact to retain players.

8ald

hga 5

.

not ova-looked in Cinada. A native

his-~;_:. · ~~ n~~~~d:em~o~~

NFL looking for Plan B alternative
ONE HUNDRFJ&gt; AGAIN- Pittsburgh runniag back Barry Foster dives through aad over
the Ciacinnatl ddense duriag Monday night's

.

Pittsburgh's Bo1;1ds selected World Almanac's top playe.r

TUeeday.~ober20,1992

Pittsburgh tops

The Dally Senti !Ill

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio
.

'

..

-'

ADAM KRAWSCZYN

-RETIREMENT?
•HOME?
-EDUCATION?
•VACATION?
.CAR?
We can help you set up
an
Investment
plan to meet
'
.

your financial obJectives. For
as little as $25.00 per month you can
start achieving your important goals. ·

H. D. VEST FINANCIAL SERVICES
UIL IEIUI Ill, C.P.A.
l ..lstertd leprtstntatlvt
(614) 992·7270 or (614) 667·6011
Secdll !lind~ H. D. v.tlnvtAMnt Sladlll, ~
433EIIILII CGha llhd., Thid Fblr•lrvilg, T-75038• 1214) S1651

..,

'

�•

..

The ~aily ~.~~~

By The ·Bend ·.

•

;··--~~~=-~·~---_____:___.~----------~--------------~----------------------------------~~--~----~----~------_!P~ag!e~!_6

~

Ann clears up ID problem

: : Dear Ann Lallden: A friend of
:. .mine says you are a.man. Will you
please set her straight? It iniwcd
me that she was so SUie of herself.
!told 'Palt)''lhat about five years
ago you went from one Chicago
. . paper 10 anolher and the paper you
· • left had a contest to replace you.
'· .They selected two winners, a man
··and a woman. Both are writing
. • under their own names. Me811whilc;.
' you continue to write under !he
: name Ann Landers in your second
: .· Chicago base and in all the othtr
• papers around the world.
I got to thinking that Pall)' may
not be the only person who .has
this mistaken idea. Maybe . you
ought 10 say something about it in
your column. If you want to print
. . my letter and name, it's fme with
: ·:; me. -- RUTH ANN WALLACE.
DURHAM, N.C.
DEAR RlJfH ANN WALLACE:
Your friend Patty is mistaken. I am
indeed the ·Ann Landers who has ·
been writing for 37 years. What's
more, I can promise you that no one
else wiU ever wrile under that name.
I own the CQPyright, and I wouldn't
· ;sell it for any amount of money.
Dear Ann Landers: My wife is
a trained dentist, but she earned
her degree in a foreign countty. I
· believe the American Dental
· Association has put up roo many
.• roadblocks to "prevent people like
: her from practicing their profession.
In order to practice in America,
, foreign dentists must learn college·
level English and then atlend a
denial college for two or three years.

Ann
Landers
ANN 'LANDERS

"19!12, Loo Aller!..
Tba• SfDIIi&lt;... ond

c,.a.n S,..,.Ucalf!'

It seems ridiculous that they must
learn in English wh;lt they already
know and have practiced in their

native country.
Does it lllalre'"Jense to waste all
that vlj(uable talent and throw away
the experience of these fo(eigntrained dentists by forcing them 10
work as taxi drivers and hotel maids
unlilthey are proficient in English?
Surely there must be a way to
prove oneself without having 10 start
all over again in a profession that a
person has spent years in.
My wife has offered her services
10 veterans, seniors. the homeless,
AIDS victims, etc., but the laws in
this country will not permit her 10
treat anybody. I have a physical
disability, and next week, we will
have to apply for food slamps. ••
ANGRY AND FRUSTRATED IN
FORT LAUDERDALE, FI..A:
.
DEAR FORT LAUDERDALE: I
can understand why you and your
wife feel frustrated, bur perhaps
you don't understand that den tal
techniques and procedures vary ,
considerably from country to
country.
·
We spoke with Dr. Geraldine
Morrow, president of the American

33 8cn111, .

26 BCnlll,
Ollw Twp.
Timber on both
tnli:ts.

•

'

Mrs. Martha Hoover, program
chairman, introduced Mrs. Betty
Fulrz who reviewed "The Mother
Book" by Liz Smith, one of America's brightest practition~rs of "peo·
pie journalism."
· ·
Mrs. Fultz explained Ihe book is
a compendium of trivia and
grandeur from· the sublime_ to the
ridiculous, past and present, mcluding vignettes, anecdotes, song

'

l Hemlock Grange memb~rs
; give readings, ·sing songs·
"I'm a Grange" was sung to
· ,._.• open the recent meeting of Hem~ lock Grange No. 2049 with Master
r Rosalie Story presiding.
;
A repon on the election and the
: pesticide ~lill was given by the leg·
: islative agent
~
A letter was read from John and
t
~obbie Pauley requesting their
. ~ · name be removed from the roster.
~
, Happy Birthday was sung to
~ Sara Cull urns.
.: . Helen Quivey installed officers
: who had not yet been installed.
= . It was reP.orted that Elizabeth
• Robens )Vas ill.
~ ~ A donation was sent to the lee·
,. ~turer of state grange in Florida for
• "Operation Baby."
·
Jessie White, lecturer, presented
:
: the literary program with the theme
•
• ••

"October." Beautiful Ohio was
sung by Wallace and Muriel ~md·
ford, Rosalie Story and Sara Cullums. Readings included "Fall" by
Leota Smith; "Opusom Hunting
Time" by Helen Quivey; "Be Like
Columbus" by Golda Reed; "SOOth
Anniversary of Columbus" by Rosalie Story; uJohnie's His,\ory:• by
Muriel Bradford; and Thmgs
Remembered of Past Halloween's"
by Ziba Midkiff and Clarence
SIOry.
.
Refreshments of cider a!ld
donuts were served to 17 members.
Refreshments next month will
include. apple and pumpkin pie and
ice cieam.
"When the Grange is Called to
Order I'll Be There" was Ihe clos·
ing song.

••
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•'
•

,.,.

...
•'

••••
.. ·
t

AWARD PRESENTED • Tbe nursing sta"
and Pomeroy Nnrslng and Rehabllltallon Cen·
ter wa5 recently awarded the National Nursing
Services Award frOiil Unlcare Health Facilities .
ror exemplary perl'ormance ia nursin11 eare and
dedicated eommltmeilt to quality resident ser·
vices. The nurses 'l!m'e ·pr-nted the award at a
luncheon hoaorlag all 511" ror i dellclency free
state survey. Pictured, 1-r, are Carol Kanawalsky, RN, DON, Belinda Lance, LPN. JoanAnn

-

I

•

•

Lockbart, RN, ADON, Pat Hlady, LPN. Back,
Karea Jobuon, RN, Sherrr Miller, LPN, al!d
Connie Hendrlc:kl, RN. ,Not pictured are Mary
Jane Talbott, RN, Cathy Scarberry, RN, Joanne
Heinzman, RN, Lila Barringer, RN, Francis
Reed, LPN, Karla Kuhn, LPN, Betty Chevalier,
LPN, Clady Warden, LPN, Sharol! Russell,
LPN, Kay Pickens, RN, Racheal Robiason, LPN,
and Barbara EbUn, RN.

TUESDAY
ENTERPRISE : Enterprise
United Methodist Church will hold
a series of meetings through T!Jes·
day at 7 P..m. nightly. Rev. Kenny
Baker wtll speak Sunday. Bruce
Stone will pedotm Monday and
Tuesday. Public invited.

Superintendent
speaks to PTO

POMEROY • FOE 2171 Ladies
Auxiliary" will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. Members bring a bag of
Halloween candy.
POMEROY • MADD will meet
Tuesday at Health Recovery Ser·
vices, 119 Butternut Avenue in
Pomeroy at 6 l'•m. Everyone wei·
come. Further tnformatioo may he

Birthday observed

CHESlER • The Chester Coun·
ell No. 323, Daughters of America,
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. for
lodge inspection. Members are
urged to attend and wear white.
Refreshments will be served by the
kitchen committee.

THURSDAY
.
POMEROY": The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will travel to the Amish
Country Thursday. Those going are
to meet at the home of Norma
Cosier at 8 a.m.

WEDNESDAY
RACINE • The Racine Ameri •
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle· can Legion Auxiliary will meet
port Literary Club will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the post
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at.the home.
home of Mn. Wil$0n Carpenter.
Mrs. viendell Hoover will review
POMEROY • The reguh!r meet·
the · book "Dear and Glorious ing of the Meigs County Public
P,llysician" by Taylor Caldwell. Library Board will be Thursday at
R'oll call will be "share a verse · 1 p.m. at die library in Pomeroy.
from the Gospel of Luke."
POMEROY • AA meeting;
SYRACUSE ··The Syracuse · Thursday, 7 p.m., Sacred Heart
Homemakers Third Wednesday Catholic Church. Call 992·5763 for
group will meet Wednesday at 10 . information.
a.m. at the municipal building.
Bring wallpaper or colored paper,
MIDDLEPORT • Janet Bolin
scisson and glue to make shopping will instruct a class on dried floral
bags.
design Thursday at-7 p.m. for the
Middleport Arts Council. Cost is
CHESHIRE - The G~ia-Meigs $12 with all supplies furnished.
Community Action Agency will Call 742·2095 or 992·2675 to reghold a free clothing day Wednes· ister.
day from 9 a.m. to noon at the old
high school building in Cheshire.

POMEROY· There will be an
Alzheimers suppon group meetin~
Wednesday at I p.m. at the mulu·
purpose building (Senior Citizens
Cen~). Bill B~ will be the guest
speaker.

I.

OCTOBER .

.

1SMI
BORDERS

1

WALLPAPER
flrtt quollly

~x$1- 0~
I

j:•:

FIVE GENERATIONS • Pictured Is the five-generaljon Manuel
~ .. ·ramlly .or Roaer Manuel, Gloria Manuel, Angie Manuel, Edison
~ ~ Jotuuoa llld Dalton Colb7 Cumm~.

.

~

;

Pold for by the Comml-to Elect
Fronk A. Crameona, lift., B.

Public Notice
Nottoe of Prapvt'ld

'
1

~Soulhom
Jr. 11th School

Public Notice

o...,....

L 11 10ft ComPitllor 8ta
RD1
PoriW!d, Oh
,

Athletic Booalllf .a-d·
allan '11!111 vote on
amandmanla to by-lawo at E"-ollveDIIII: 1CW&amp;'D2
the 7:30 p.m. November 3, Applcallon !«l(S)
' 0653000024 8003
1112nieellng.
C10) 11, 20, 21, 31c 110) 20,111:

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF EU:CTION OH
ware r• TAX. LEVY If EXCEII OF
lhe
THE TEN laL UMITAllON
NOnCE le her...,. giYMI

PUBUC NOnc:iE

Tha

WALLPAPER
flrot quotlly

~-$3~9

...111..1 thot In pu,.uanoo of o
datu of final AeeoluUon ol the a-d ol
and • - dl!la Thla- of the Townahlp ol
acllona and ot lolplo, Pqavllla, O.hlo,
ara atalad. paa- on the 4th cll!y ol
May be Auguat, 1112 lhara wli be
wllhln oulrmlllod to a vota of J!!e
lhlio people of.., ~
at 1 G-al Elactlon 1e be
hold In • the T-nahlp of
Scipio, Ohio, at tha raguJ.r
p i - of YOIIIII IIMnln, on
_... ahall be
the. 3rcl clay of November,
dl;aotor within 3 cll!ya. 1112, tha qu•llon ollavy·
Propooacl · aotlona will Jng 1 tax, In • - of the
"-11111 llnal
a wrft. 1*1 mil llmltiUon.!. lor .lh•
tan lllf,(uclloallon hearing banafll of lolplo T_,.hlp
raquaat Ia aubmlllod wiU.In lor tha purpooa . of flro
30 claya of the lu1111naa ,-lion.
dl!la; or lhe cllrootor rovlohid ta.111111111 a ...,.at
aaJwllhdr- the propo..d of on uJoU1111 1M of l\ mill
action: Ally paraon 111oy 81 a rata not ......1111 l\
aubmlt oom-la ancllor a 111111 lor eooh cto11ai of
any draft YllluaUon, whloh - t o
aallon wlllln 30 • • of ... llva aonla cto.OI) lor - h
""'" Jndoalad. "Aollon", • ono hunclrM dollan or vllf.
uaocl above don not uollon,lor ona 11) Y..,.,
lncludo raoalpt of a varlllacl
Tha Polla lor oolcl
ooonplllnL II elgnlllcant pub- ElooUon wll opon •I 1:30
llo Intar•t axfala, a pul!Uc o"olook A.M. 1111d re1111iln
mHUng m81' ba hakL A8 to open until 7:30 o'clock Pll.
any ICIIon, lnoluclllll receipt of oald clay.
of verthcl OOMplalnta, ony
By orclor of the Board of
parooti!IIIJ ..Wn noUoa of Electlono of llalga County, ·
lurlhor aallona, and 111&lt;11· Ohio. ,
Uonal Inf-allon. \lnleeo
Henry"L Hunter, Chalnnlln
otharwloa provlclad In
Alii D.llllllh, Dlnclor
Notion ol
Dllad lep-bor 4,1112
oollona, •
110) e. 11, 20, 27, 4111

Factory Chok8
12 Gauge Shot
Strictly Enforced
1crlf12/lln

WICl'S
HlUI.IfG SERVICE

CARPENTER SERVICE

.36970WI•I...
. p~ ow.

Ph. (t14)

· ORC Chap. 3745 and OAC NOTICE OF EU:C110N ON .
Ch11p11 37G-47 and 3741-5 TAX LEVY IN EXCEII QF
I w11.,1L
·
TtE 1EN ~~~~-~~~
F1 . _ _ o f ~at
NOTICE Ia - Y ,..~,
th~n purauanca of a
AHDiullon of the Boardof
5
Tlulllee of the Townahlp of

lor";::$

flrol quotlly

~$4f!R9

~~=-h

State Auto's already ·'
"low premiums can be

reduced even more by
insuring both' your car

Sorry To Be
late.
HAPPY 38th!

• and home with the ~e
.Auto CompBnles.

214 EAST MAIN ·
POMEROY

992-6687 .

!

, ,.

~
Jneur•110e c.,...,.,••
lt... Auto.

Love,

JOANNA
ROLLER SHADES
Buy OneGETONEFREE
llllallly • No ,

Elaine&amp;.

ragulor p i - of voU1111
lhareln, on the :lnl clay of
. . _••• 1112, the .....
lion of lrwylnt a Ia, In
-ofhlonlllll ...n.
lion, for tha benefit of
Iutton "Tow•ahlp for lha
.....,... of lllalnlllnlng and
OpliliA..... tllilee.
lalcl Ia baing a - a l
of on alatlntl ta of .4 IIIIP
at a rat1e nof _ ...1111 .4
mllloreeoh -cfDIIarol
vlllllllon, whloh _ . . le
lour oanta 110.041
eeoh
hunchcl . . . . of yllf.
uallon, lor live Illy--.
Tha Polio lor aald
Elecllo!l will open at 6:10
o'olook A.M. ancl. remain

lor

3 Announcement•

••

. WALLPAPER
AND BLIND

Dla=ne •• CIM••••·Te ..

SHOP . I

IIIMGIIIAt-luPIIOACIION
· URFI~UIAVa. PAIIKIMIURD

Mon.•l'rl....1

lat. t ,II;IO lun, 1·1

............. ~...... v.. .
.. · - 8ookle
...... o.t. ..
U lllan1, Dll II ne, Chlngtt

AfiVOM

or

to Aduallw lllaulcl Cilll

·

428·1065 .

L-~------~--~-m.~,.n..
___. J.~---.~..~-.~~

'
I

·I

I

,,

.SAND -GRAVEL oOIRT
.UIIESTONE .

P-or,OhiD

AI~· VJnllge l

llllga
'""rqulat
of vollng
lld.op a1'1, Ohio
lharaln, on lho 3rd cll!y of
Aok For Dall•
NcYsombw, 1112, lho qu· Evwllneo
lion of lavylng a tox, In
614-742-3020
•
thellonaflt
l!onlllllllmJta.
lion,farofthe
of lloip 1
lr~=====1CI=t1=31!12~
I.aoallohool Dlalrk:t for lho
curpoaa of permonont
lalcl Ia lralna on odell·
tlonal Ia of 5 milo at • roto
not • ....,tne s
for
eeoh - . . . , of voluallon.

••r•to.

•Ill•

whloh-"'
lily..,..
for each one

(SO.IO)

hunctracl dollara of volu•
llon,"!Or live CSl yeora. Tha Polio for oold
Election will open al 6:30
o'clock A.M. and reJnoin
open unUI7:~0 o'clock Plot.
of llllid cllly.
By order of lhe Board ol
Elacllona of llolga County, .
Ohio.
· Henry L Hunl8r, Chairman
Rita D. Smilh, Director
Ollladlletltombor 4, 1!192
110) I, 13, 20, 27, 4lc

MAKE If ARliE...
USE -WANT ADS.
AHANDY
lOOl

&amp;

Trimming &amp; Removal·
R-lol&amp;Com.,...lol
,
Froo EotlmotM

AREWOOD FOR SALE

DAVIDSON'S .
.PLU.IING
nv~~no

.
;Ji'
· li904Lea.a•l
CI'Hklo••

Mi..lt~rt, Olllo
614·992·7144
10/1/92111

s3soo

CALIFORNIA ·
TANS

loforo 6 p&amp;I.Mvo MosSOJO

Ahor 6, ... 614-915-4110
.

. '949·2823

10ft/

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
·
Painting

••lwend.

4-4·92-lfw

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING
...... Itt., ladle
o•••~., s,..l•l
tiNUMITED T4NNING
~soo

949·2826

1:00 P.M.
Factory Clloke 12.
Gauge01Iy
Starts Sept. 27

FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 992·5449

949·2168

111112$2

1111 11'1211fn.

1111111n

----~-·

• BISSELl &amp; BURKE

...........

.....

. CONSTRUCTION

RUTLAND
MINE SUPPLY

. 52100 ••

a&amp; .......
•Complete
......i ••
Stop &amp; ComJI!Ir•
flfEE EStiiU'rES

TOP TO BOTTOM
MAINTENANCE
. and REPAIR

SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
• HOME liTES and
TRAILER liTE~

•Roofing oSidlng
oGuttera
-Room Additions
•Interior Remodeling

FREE ES11MATES

DAIVE~T'AU.eo
UMES'IONE-TRUCIQNG

Herb Sbop Opea (or
ATTN: LDcol Croft Shopo

Pipe ~or. Water, Sewage

and Cnllroro

Ellmlnala the mlcldlo 111.,
-buy whcluale from
ConnIa.
Hlndc,.flod

II

-the

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC

hx194-W..•Aiey

(fnorly !'ogle .... -~
Eorjlat)

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowen • CIIall Saw$
• Weedeaters
•

Weltii•P Allty

~

•

(614) 992·2866

•• ·N·· •

(9) 28-'112·1 mo.

••

Rutland, OH•
742·2656

12 Year old ranch type house. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, 1Y. car garage
and breezeway, central air and heat
pump, many extras.
On 2 acres of land.
Eastern School District.
Blacktop roads Co. Rd. 28 and 32.
949-2860, ~9-2BQ1 or 985-3839

RAON£,01110

-=• T•-•

. and.Gas

HOUSE FOR SALE
BY OWNER

614-949·2804

Co1tact Ro. . l Jacks

~'

BISSEll BUILDERS, INC.

....,"7if..,·-·_

New Homes • VInyl Siding
.
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
·
Room Additions • Roofing

R&amp;C EICAVATIIG

CELLULAR
_.,.

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
TOTALLY AIITOIIOTI'IE PERF~CE
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
II-FREE INSTALLATION• Wl1.h ony phoiHI purehBASEMENTS &amp;
thrvugh October 31
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Umeo1one,
· Servlca ra1as lrvm $19.116 per month.
Dh~l Gravel and Coal
lneluct. 180 mlnut" of oH11Nk .Jr 111M.
Lr&lt;:IONSED onl BONDED

..... ' ............................ .

·

USED RAILROAD TIES

~ SUNDAYS

2-7·92-tt.

PH. 614·992-5591

BILL SLACK
992-2269

GUll SHOOT
RACINE .
GUN CLUB

ROOFING

667·6179

PONDS

•UGHT HAUUNG ;
•FIREWOOD

~-

;';award L Wrltesel

985·4473

BUllDOZING

SHRUB&amp; TREE
TRIM a·nd
.REMOVAL

614-949·2101 • 949·2160
or 915·3139
INo SIWIII•r Cell•l
211219Wn

LeMing available lrvm 115.00 per month.

12·5·1fn

FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL KEN RIGGS AT

.CIOWAYE OYEI
.... YCIUPIIR

Quality
Stone Co.

11111110

~r~-,:~aarw.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Call614·992~

. 6637

1111'S Jl.'tw.cE
SEIYICE
992·5335 or
915·3561

St. Rt. 7
"•illire, OH.

•aoROOniG
AND ·mmHING UNDERNEATH
GAUG.S e ADDinONS e SIDING

T

District Is now accepting applications and resumes for office personnel. Requirements: All basic secretarial skills; ability to meet/deal wHh
. the public; handling money; bookk•plng and computer experience Is
a must with all general ledger,
account. payable and peyroll .all
compuWized. Excellent worklng
c;ondltlona and b8neflta. Pay commenlurate with . experience. Pl....
Hnd reaumefapplfc:atlon to 311561
Bar 31) Road, Reidsville, Ohio 45772.

Bennetts Mobile Home ~~tittg

•a OHntr Auurefl Cufl'fHffl,.

Uti SoHord Sdtoehcl. .

. CaU AI, 614-742·2321
l/17ltfn

Help wanted

The TUppers Plains-Chester Water

Gtrtillty HI Effkleacy
At Canttiolers, Heat
P1mps, F1rnaces &amp;
Now Water Heaten•

BUILDERS

20 Yr. Exp.
11

'""'Illig

FREE
HAVE

AVAILABU:.

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Waedlng,
and Seeding.
· Shrub and Tree

UNLIMITED SESSIONS
Months of Septemller
qttd OctoiHir ·

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

Ill Hlr.1WOH,
· SH101ell, ,
$40.00 . . . .

BUUD0~ 1-~CIOioE
and TAAI.i!UtUt WORK

949·2391or
1·100·137·1460

co.

SPECIAL

"Tab 1M ,... 0.1 Of
-Itt Ur Do II F11 y,.•

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

EXCAVATING

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAIIIIINANCE

(614) 992-3470

. LINDA'S
PAIIIIING

·Tpvs
Colacllble
Set Dlsplly AL
QUAUTY PRM' SHOP
255 11111...._~

•

We Alao Haul Cool, 118J,
Ume, Com, Grall\
onctWood

992-6215

D.lt's

..,1_.

Public Notice

WALLPAPER

that In purauanca of a
Roaolutlon ol lha Ylllego
Council ol lha VIllage of
Raclno,.
Ohio,
poooect onRaolna,
the 6111 day
or
July, 1112 U.ara wiR be oubmlllad to a VOla of the P"'
pia of aold oubcllvlolon at a
a-at Election to be helcl
In tho Vllloop of AMlin• Ill
lha rogu'-r plaoao of voUng
lheraln, on lha 3nl diiJ of
Novwnber, 1112, the q&amp;IH·
lion of Jovylng a tax, In
m11 Uml...
011caoo ciU.o
tlon, for tho banalll of
Allclna Village lor U.o pur·
po.o of currant axpen-.
Said tax baing a r - a l
of iln ulodllll Ia ol1.7 Mil
at a .rahl nol M aadlng1.7
mill lor oooh ona doll!u' of
valuollon, whloh am-la to ·
oevon- oonta (S0.17) lor
each ono huncltacl dollan ol
valuadon, for ftve CSl ~.
The Polio lor aald
Election will op., at 8:30
o'clock A.M. ancl remain
oraa unUI 7:30 o'clock P.ll.
o oalcldlly.
•
By orclor ol the BNnl ol
ElaaU01111 of llalp County,
Ohio.
Henry L Hunlor, Cholnnon
Alto D. Srith, Director
Olllad ~-ber 4; 1182
(!Of&amp;, 13, 20, 27, ....

'*'

or Air Pormlt"'
CoL Goo rr- CAP

Townalllp ot lu1ton at the

CREMEANS

•*

ntE TEN IILL UIIITATIOH
NOnCE Ia haraby elv1111

son to buy vary nice hotM on 3Y.. acrM In
Rocirnl. 4 BR, 3 blllhl, 2 - • , ro&lt;ted 1
BR api. Pmperty Includes 4,800 sq. ft. Corm
bldg.
.
•
•
Col614-992·7104 tor"""'-

:1n1 clay of
, 1112,
U..WIIIH
Mltoa
v • of lhe p "pia of oalcl
oulldlvlalon at a General
El111lon to be Hid In lhe

l

94th District
State Representative ·

NOTICE OF EU:CTION ON·
TAX LEVY If EXCEII OF

m•llne ,....,

=.1s¢~

I·. All••

. "'

YOUNG'S .

1117pd.

PubliC Notice

IITIOUI1l 1110)' be . , . . _ .t.. ..,allytnu pe&lt;·

p·.m. to discuss contract negotiations.

Susie Fischer celebrated her
97th birthday recently.
Helpin11 her celebrate were
RUTLAND • Leading Creek
Mary Porter. Gloria Michael,
Conservancy
District will l!olch
Roger Michael, Dennis. Michael,
special
meeting
Wednesday at 5
Bill Porter; Carol, Matthew and
Stacey Theiss, Diana and Sam Car·
penter and Kara, Jeff and Anita
Musser. Paige and Wyatt, John and
. Teresa Porter, Ashley, Chris and .
J.W., Mark Porter, Charisae Knight
and Hazel Congo.
She also received many catds
and
. . gifts.
..

••

'
.,.

PUBLICAn ON
PRICE REDUCED!
Tho price- b.., reduced to $68,900 nl
oWIIer tlriaOclng ot up to 80% ot purchUe

obtained by calling 992·5277 or
742'2933. . . .

REEDSVILLE • The Meigs
Countr "Republican Executive
Committee, fall campaign dinner,
Wednesday, Eastern High School.
Social" hour, 6:3().7 p.m., foQowed
by dinner served by Eastern Band
Boosters. Tickets are available for
$5 from any officeholder, candi·
date or at the Republican Party
Headquarters, Main Street,
Pomeroy.

open untl 7:30 o'clook P.M.
ofnlclclay.
By orclar ollha Board of
ElecUono of lloigo County,
Ohio.
Henry L Hunlar, Chairman
Rita D, llnllh, Dlrootor
Dated 81pllll'nb•r 4, 1112
CUI) &amp;, 13, 20, 27, •1a

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

Community calendar .

,•

r

WILSON'S ARMY
112·7093
llon.-lun..- pm
S. ua lor your hun•1111
ancl back to aohool
n•clo. AIM"• tareoat
oelactlon of military
......... llamol

Public "otlce

how much your savings
can be.

,, ..

STARTS
OCT. 18th

6:30P.M.

PMchlork Rd.

Latus tell you just

r
r

EVERY SAl.

12:00 Noon
Factory choke 12
gauge only

County Ret: 1e.

SALEM CENTER - Revival at
· Salem Center United Methodist
Church will be through Friday at 7
p.m: nightly. Special singing night·
Jy. Rev. Chester Lemley, Ed Min·
lyrics, p&lt;J!lmS and curiosities about gus, Roger Kennedy and Dennis
the mothers of the "'famous, mfa· Faught Will be the speakers. Public
moils ·and imfamous. She stated, invited. .
"Here is 'Mom' in all her glory, a - PORTI..AND • There Will be a
curious blend of saint, guilty con- special meeting at Portland Ele·
science, guardian angel and drudge. mentaty on Tuesday at 7 p:m.
Several excerp'ts from the book. Superinlendent of schools, Robert
were shared, including quotes from Ord, Will speak on the school levy
Muhammed Ali, Napoleon, Dick and the teachers wiD discuss the
Cavell, J. Edgar Hoover, Anna effective school grant. Open house
Jarvis (who started Mother's Day) for the school Will be held at 6:45
andothers.
·
Ten members answered roll call p.m.
.
with "an anecdote or memory. of
MIDDLEPORT • The annual
my mother." '
Meigs
County Scottish Rite dinner_
The next meeting will be
will
be
held Tuesday, at 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
at
the
MiddleponMasooic
Temple.
Bernice Carpenter, with Mrs.
Martha Hoover to review "Dear
POMEROY • American Legion
and Glorious Physician."
Drew Webster Post No. 39 will
meet Tuesday at Pomeroy. Dinner
at 7 p.m. Meeting at 8 p.m. All
urged to attend.

Southern Local Superintendent,
Bobby Ord. met with the Syracuse
PTO at the regular October meet·
in g.
He shared with the memb.ers,
information concerning tl!e upcom·
ing school levy which would generate enough funds (along with a
sizable state contribution) to build
a new element.tu;y ·school for the
district Ord stated there were three
reasons why a new school was nee·
essary. One was to meet the educa·
tiona! changes that are affecting the
students. Secondly, to accomodate
special programs which are man·
dated by state law. Ord stated many
of these classes currently meet in
basements, hallways, cafelerias and
other such inconvenient· places .
·Thirdly, to replace old buildings
which have become difficult and'
costly to maintain. The member·
ship of the PTO extended a vole of
approval for the new levy.
In other business, plans for the
Nov. 7 fall carnival were discussed.
The kitchen is to open at S p.m.
with games-to start at 6 p.m. The
Doug Circle Band will provide
en1ertainmen1 foc the evening.
Plans for the preview basketball
tournament were discussed. Tenta·
live dates .of Nov. 28-Dec. 5 were
established. Interested parties
should i:ontaet Roma Sayre at 949·
2196 ot Steph.anie Ash at 992·
6317.
'
. A motion was carried to make a
$50 donation to the Southern LoCal
kindergarten. The sixth grade class
won the room count and received a
cheCk for $10.

SUNDAYS

Call614-667-3484
or 614-667-3109

SURPLUS

Fultz reviews _'The Mother Book'
The M]ddleport Literary Club
held its first meeting of the year
recen~y at the home of Mrs. Eileen
- Buck.
Mrs. Betsy Parsons presided
1
• over the meeting which opened
• with the club collect in unison.
Minutes of the May meeting were
;. given and Mrs. Parsons welcomed
• the members and thanked Mrs.
: Buck for hosting the meeting.

..............
Ill CLUB

CLUB

Rutland 1Wp.

Dental Associalion, and: she said
the ADA has 1101hin11 10 11y about
regulations concernins foreisn·
educated dentists. The licensing
requirements are set by each state.
In order to JQCtiee in"the United
Swes, one must be a llllduile ohn
accredited dental school or have
equivalent ll'lining at a U.S. daltal
school. Check with your swe Board
of Dentistry on the requlmncnts of
your state. OmdjdtMes must also pass
national and state exams. If fcxeip
students can demonslraJe that they
are qualified, some sthools will
admit them as adVIJleed placement
students, which would enable them
10 get !heir degn:c more quietly. I
suggest that your wife look into this.
· For mOle inf~on, send a long,
self-addressed, stamped envelope to:
Dentistry in the United States,
. American Dental Associallon, 211
E. Chicago Ave., Chicago, Ill.
60611.
Gem of the Day: Funny -how a lie,
can travel halfway 'round the world
before the truth has a chanee·to tie
·its shoelaces.
What can you give the perwn who
has everything? Ann Landers"
booklet, "Gems," is ideal for a
nightstand or coffee table. "Gems"
is a collecrum of Ann lAnders' most
requested poems and essays. Send a
self-addressed, long, biiSit~tsNize
envelope and a c}!eck or mouy
order for ·$4.85 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Gems,
c/o AM Lalllkrs, 1'.0. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611 ·0562. (In
Calltlda, send $5.87.)

lUI SHOOT
UCINE

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

..,.,•• .,.,.,..,..

I

."(oii614144H416 orl ..CH1Htl67
'
'

•Any Size Available"

~
'fi'iwi ..®!ll

PRECISION POST FRAME
. BUILDERS .
.
104 BMeh Street
· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

II Y•ra

exp.rtenee

· "Call U. fol' All Your Building N.C."
COMMERCIAL • ~ESIDENTIAL
AGRICULTURAL

l.IYestoc:k Building• • Machine Sheela- Hay
B•rna- C.rportl
.
' G~n~gM • Stongit.Building• • Rooting Windows - Siding

Wv Llo. tWV CI2CI34:t
FRE£ ES'TJIIATES
AOIEAT BORING
1114) 112 3541

Jt,;FF STAATS
C:t04) m.aa

NEW
SIIEL IIISULAIED .
.RAISED PANEl GUilE DOOR
IIISUWD PIICII

b7-S275.00 16•7-S450.H

OPEIEU lmAWt-Y. RP-$200.00

...,,._o,...r

With 2 Tra111mltllra

...........

hrc-.of

.

�•

.'

•

1182

oc~

Sentinel
11 . Help w.ntld

11

TueacleY, October 20, 1992
BORN LOSER

~~~-- ....

71

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Television
Viewing

~~~~0! ..
TH~IIt6

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four scrambled warda
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-----"· __;: l~lto~ ~y CLAY l . POLLAH " ' " " - - - - -

M

TUE, OCT, 20

S@\\otllA-~£~s·

TII&amp;T UILI

(!) Saved by the Bell

ID Square Ono TV 1:;1

I

FRACT

(!I Math Laamlng Hour

(!]l iD Full Houoal:;l
1!J MacGyver C

.........
-·...............
....._
-......
_.............. -

~·-·

.

.......

6LIT DON'T WORRV, MA'AM
Employment Se1v1ces

-.~-

-~··

=

"Maybe llhouldn't play wi1h thl. .a . much. ,
I've been dreaming. I'm o k8ngMoo 1lot lltely.•

•r r ,.,. ..

-.liMn,.,

32 Moblla Homas
for Sala

....................
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ADD¥: 'ion Ill '1 • Frldn. CJo.
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&amp; VIcinity

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____ _

33 Farms for Sale
Wll

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PlN ·c 1own EXTRA

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Don' Col ~ You Wont To
...... miOUI IIOHEY 11o1ng
Yaw Orin Col 1-llh·

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KRAZY·at.UE.

r NE:.VeR KNON WHEN
HE&lt;.'e

PUTTING

M'i/i:. ON.

.

· ... ~

1--------------------2.----------------------------

.3 •. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
4 •. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•

,.

ft. .....

'l1!Ji?

(!I Frontline 1:;1
MOVIE: Bodily Harm
(2:00)
® NaSllville Now
Ill! Larry King Live!
Father Dowling Myote~as

c

5·---~-------6 __________~--~-----

1 . _____________________
8. _______________~~9. _____________________

10~-----------------11~-------------------

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THAT DADBURN
DOS ff HE'S
TREED OUR
PARSON
TUTTLE ff

In

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fliauillt:al,
.......... ~,.

1Wo For Bolt:
Ntc._ln_Lai.Gollpoll&amp; Colt

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Porch'l . _ . . _ , IM-211111111.

- .,... -.
1112 -14111'0, lbdnn.,

oldltlna.
ono - · good ooncl.,
·~1100.

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

I

-~-~~

&amp;4

7

year ahead by mailing $1 .25 plus along. ARIES (Morch 21-Aprii18Jif you don't
self-addressed, stamped envelope to treat co-workers with consldaration toAstra-Graph, c/o this newspaper, P.O. day, hostile reactions from them are
Box 91428, Clltvelancl, OH 44101 -3428. likely. Conversely, kindne88 will assure
BERNICE
you of harmonious support.
BEDEOSOL Be sure to state your zodiac sign.
SCOIU'IO (Oct. :M:Nov. 22) If you hope TAURUS (April 20-MIY 20) Chances
to be ~UCCeaalul today, you must see to you lake for pragmatic purposes should
It that others InvolVed also share In re- pan out rather well lor you today, but
warda or gains. II IIley aren't Included, merely gambling for the sake or gama
nothing me~nlnglullsllkely.
bllng could backllre.
IAGm AIIZUS (Nov. D-Dec. 211 " sit· GEMIIII (May 21-.lune 20) When dealuallon - · you're hoping to get a lng wllh outsiders today, you'll conduct
booatlrom lady luck might not pan out yoursaif In a manner thai should gonertoday. yel you could be rather fonunate · ate good will. Howe-. I here might be a
In two arrangements In which you didn't lack of conganlallty In Involvements
put much alack.
with lamlly mwnbere.
.
.
CAPRICOZIN (Dec. 22........ 11) Don't . CANCER (.lune 21-.IUZ, 22) A poor alii·
OaL21, 1ta
lnterhlre with 1 lltuaUon tod1y where tude could mike work thai !lhOuld be
'
onOiherlalrylng to work outsomalhlng easy to do rather hard today. Try to
. You could be _.y lucky In tho year lor' your benefl1. Your Input could bring think of each ol your tJS~&lt;sualabor of
ahead 11 long u you're t"' one who the arr111gemen1 to 1 halt .
love. The elfect may 111onlsh you.
mlku the dec:IIIOIII and genetatea the AGUAIIIUI ( ...... JO:FIIb. 11) In order LEO (July 21-Aug. 22) Impulse apend· Whent,_Uiignmenll&amp;redel, · to be twccsaalullodly, you must try 10 lngcould put some"""""'denlsln your
: egoted to Olhera, tlllnga might not work · leaveweii8110UQ111lone. There Is 1 poa- · budget today. To be on tha 11fa aide, II
oul u well.
slblll1y you lillY 811empt to change !flight be wiHio 1111J -•Y from atoret
UIIIA (lepL 2ls(lal. 21) lnttead of something, which could turn a vtclory lhat carry Items you Willi but can't
withdrlwln(l from 10Ci11 IICtlviiiU to- · Into • delalt.
p,_,Uy alford.
day tmmerM you...U In thenl. Being a I'ZSCII (hb. 21 Mlrch 211) Someone VIIQO (Aug. 21-hpt. 221 Involve• toM, could make you deiPOildenl; be- who pretends to be 111 ally might, In re- menla you havelodiJ that atresa being
lng with lunslovlng lrllndl won't Libra, allty, be a member of the oppQalllon. of serviCe lo ot,.uhould work out well
1,..1yourMif to 1 birthday gift Send lor Thll Individual Ia llkoly to reveal some for Ill concerned, whereas lust catering
Ubrl'l AatrosGrlph predlctlona lor the true cotors today. Be aw1re.
to No. 1 mlghl not.

..il!•zli••••••

. e~ Ohlr
'Birthday
.

I

II

ASTRO-GRAPH

,,.

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..

...

$213 "" _ . , Including lot
...... NowM'wldomallllo...,_,
lnoludM dlllvory, ....p~e. Oot::lit'lrtlng 6 . . . . 1 - l '

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nelatliMrttaad,
IIIAI1t

•'SOON
AS l
TIDY UP
TH'
HOUSE

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21ir,
CA. - ·
Up, 111

for Sale

--· -

LET HIM DOWN,
OL' BULLET!!

II:~ IFI1.1011.
~---0111.

32 Mobile Homes

~

\21

.. -.,._.

In
.one~

(

..

I

'

Cheryl fall lor one another.
Stereo.
Listen;ng to America
W~h Bill Moyers 1:;1
(!I Listening to America
W~h Bill Moyers 1:;1
(!]liD Hunter C

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15L---~~~~~~---

(

romance w ith Mrs.
Rizzendough in jeopardy .
Stereo. 1:;1
10:00 (!) News C
(I) II (I) 1!1 Going to

BARNEY

14----------~--~---

•

....

Extremes Henry rekindles
with his ex-wife: Kim and

12-------------------13~------------------~
446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

9:30 (I) II (I) II Coach
Hayden·s zeal puts Luther's

I,

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WEST

EAST

+A 1076 3

+9 2
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Vulnerable: East: west
Dealer: North

By Phillip Alder

ca n't secure a loan. Stereo.

·-·
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Crossfire

mother lor help alter she

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strike again

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SOUTH

Auto Racing American
400 from Nashville, Tenn. (T)
9:00 II I!]) 'DanieUa Steel's
Jewels (Pt 2 ol 2)' NBC .
Movie of lhe Week (2:00) 1:;1
(I) 11 (I) 0 Roseanne

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42
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Roseanne turns to her

Tum your clutter into cash,
~ it the easy way..•by phone,
no need eo leave your home•
Place your classified ad today!
15 word...or .lel1, 3 day,
3 gapen, 15.40 paid in advance.

NORTH

Eoll
Nortb
West
South
Pass
t+
The other day a friend asked me to
All pass
Pass 3 NT
I NT
give him one simple tip lor Improving
his game . My immediate reaction was
Opening lead : • 6
to recommend counting all the hands.
But that isn't such a "simple" tip: It
requires a conscious effort by the
player. Instead, I said: "Always take
time when the dummy comes down .
Don't play to the first trick -either as hand entry to take the marked diadeclarer or as third hand - until you mond finesse. II South leads the spade
have formed a plan and considered the . king from the dummy, West withholds
his ace.
.
possible dan~rs . "
I sat and watched my friend play a
However, my friend was still think·
few deals. The one given in today's di- ing. Eventually he saw the solution.
agram pleased both of us.
He called for the spade king from the
Against my friend's contract of dummy. After it held the trick, he
three no-trump, West led his fourth- cashed two top diamonds. When the
highest spade. The contract looked too bad break was revealed, he smiled.
easy, with two spade, five diamond Now South calmly led another sp1de
and tw&lt;&gt;-club tricks ready to roiL But himself. West couldn't stop my friend
with the actual distribution, if declar• from winning a spade trick in his balld,
er follows the normal dictum and im- taking the marked diamond finesse
mediately plays second hand low, the and making his contract.
contract should die. East puts in the
Reldm are invited k&gt; ,.nd cord-play """'
spade nine, forcing South's jack. Two , tiMS to Pftillip Alder, in Cllre ot uu. .....,..,....
top diamonds reveal the 4-1 split and ' Tbey,.,
c•dy lbrwrb lbe ""'""'"·
South suddenly realizes that he has_no ·
Ill-. .........,......_.. ......

be.,..,..,..,

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to cheat on a test. Stereo.

Ace 11 i astu

,...
,,•••...,..

PHILLIP

8:30 (I) II (I) 0 Hangin' With
Mr. Cooper Mark is asked lo
allow a star basketball player

. ·"A~=a-

Real Estate
31

BRIDGE
,---

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..
..... Slo&amp;U

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.

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41 Houses for Rent

--poapleyou.::=ond
tho

•

.

.,

Caviar - RaPeF.- Quilt - Poplar - COVER IT .
Son to mom: "This new dishwasher is payment for
the years you spent taking c&lt;~re of me.' Mom to son:
"In that case the dishwasher doesn'l COVER-tT!"

Q

INOTICEI

I I I

SCRAM·LETS ANSWEdS

7:35 (I) Sanford &amp; Son
8:00 (}) IJ l!1l Quantum Leap
Sam leaps inlo a killer who
escapes from AI while in the
future. Stereo.
(!) MOVIE: Senior Trip (2 :00)
(I) II (I) Q Full House
Danny grounds D.J. from
seeing Steve .. Stereo.
(!) (!I Nova Where the f~rst Americans came from and
how lheJ&lt;Iived . Q
·
@I Ql) 1!21 Q) Major League
Baseball World Series:
National League Champion
at American League ·
Champion lgame 3) (L)
I!JriD MOYlE: Shakedown (R i
(2:001
Ill Murder, She W;ote 1:;1
® Crook and Chase
@ PrimeNews Q
GJ1 Young Rideni Hickok
hghls an old enemy 1(1
capture an alleged bank
robber. (A) Stereo. [;I
8:05 ® MOVIE: Death in Canaan
(:1:30) .

Business

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1214.

OHIO VALI.E't PUBUS- CO.
1'1 ~ ~ Hllnllllll thlt ~ do bu81-

PRINT NUMBEREO tE llERS tN
THESE SQUARE S

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.~11"~ ··.rclrNTifiC AM~~IC-AN,"

'·'""' ,.. gLQOM~NCMFi! Ttil5
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Tl4~ LAMBADA!

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iJ) (!I MacNeil/Lehrer
. NewsHour
(I) 0 Married ... With
Children· Stereo. ~
@I Qll Jeopardy!
(!]liD Star Trek: e Nert
Generation
1!21111 Entertaonmenl Tonight
Stereo. 1:;1
. •
I!J Quantum Leap 1:;1
@ SponsCenter
Ill! Moneyline
GJI Lite Goes On 1:;1
7:05 (D Beverly Hillbillies
l!1l Jeopardy!JJ
7:30
· (!) The Jeftarsons t;a_:
@II Entenainment Tonighl
Stereo.
(I) II You Bet Your Llle
@I Ql) Wheel of Fortune 1:;1
1!21111 Reading, Writing and
Rapmatazz (0:30)
@ SCCA Racing From
Lexingtpn, Ohio (T)
.

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6:35 (I) Andy Griffith
7:00
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(!]) ID Roseanne Stereo. Q

lluol ...... Ohlq
c~~~~.....
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P.O. loa :101: .,.

priorities straighl,•
1---.T,--A,_c,..E_U.--11 -b the"GetJour
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1 •
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.-----:--:-:--:::--::--=--, their·last words, 'I wish I had,
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@World Today
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· 6:05 (I) Three's Company
.
'
6:30 (l) IJ l!1l NBC Newa Q
(!) Ed M,cMahon's Star
Search
(I) II CIJ Q ABC Nowa [;I
(!) Where in the World Ia
Caimen Sandlego? Stereo.

I TI11NK I'M
PRE · Sf!RUNK!

!BJ Promises, -ffromlaea: The

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
t Leaa clear
7 Forested
13 Florldl
product
14 Scrape
15 Works
16 DHerl

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41 Enlarged
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4 7 Hlmburger
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48 oxlng,
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51 Mualcal
lnlorval
53 Rejoctod
55 Worka hard
56 Rolugao
57 Sp~clol
ability
58 Stocklnga

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rode~!

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18 Character of
a people
20 ObHrve
21 Fomlnlol
Gloria23 ActorO'Noal
26- llolnea
27 AcHng award
31 Actro11
Anouk33 llodlovallabor group
34 Sllealolk
35 lnlarlcir
lpiCel
36 Llaten
37 Brltlah Navy

DOWN
1 Field mouN
2 Ruinproducing
tree
3 Chalters
4 Numoro5 Whiteplumed heron
6 Rolaud

7 Carta

12 T1ke out
18 Heaton
9 Hockey great
21 Showa acorn
Bobby22 Llmbtldn
10 Sprtldl
23 Heodelrong
sparingly
24 Cry of p1ln
11 Singer25 FrtlhWIItr
Adams
fllh .
28 Whirring
aoilnd
· 29 Tonnla pia,..
.,....,.....,'r'"TIII"'Tft"Tnf"'l
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30 Dutch ChHH

Candidateo and the
Economy Economic/election
issues. (1:00)
IIJ) 700 Clu\) Willi Pat
Robenaon
10:30 illl On Stage
@ NHRA Racing Sunoco
Keystone Nalionals from
Reading. Pa. (T)
10:35 ® MOVIE: Clash by Night
(2:15)
11 :00 t1l II

An•••r to PM•tou• PuZZle

1bbrevtaUon

40 Clly In Uloh

8 Fal

32Bend
33 Soutll ol
Tonn.
37 Trullllul
38 t,051,
Rom1n
39 Untidy
~raon

(!) (I) Iii

~ews

(!) Night Coun

Q.

[j) ID Roseanne Stereo.

I!J MacGyver Q

42 Miele on a
loom
43 Fot
44 Party giver
45 W. Coaat coli.
48 And others
(2 lltdl.)
48 t1ke-out or·
der worn
4g CoillpQHr

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1:;1

129 Club Dance Stereo.

B

Ill! Spons Tonight
Scarecrow and Mrs. King

11 :30 (!)Street Justice
(!) To the Conti Stereo.
(I) Iii Nighdine
ljJj CD Araenio HII Ster.eo.

Jerome-

50 Potmc

52_. ......

54 S.ll.moplall

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Crimetime Aftor Primetlma
Stereo. I;!
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@ SportaCenter

Ill! M~&gt;n•YIIne
11:35 (}) G l!1l Tonight Show Wllh
J1y Leno Stereo. Q
(lJ Cl CIIMfo Stereo. 1:;1
11DJIID M1rried ... With
Child18n Stereo.
12:00 (I) Q Rulh Umblugh
1!J The Equalizer
Q1 Miller &amp; Comp~ny
Qll NeweNigh1
GJ1 Ba1111n:u: The Loa!
Epl.12:05 (lJ Cl Nlghtline Q_
@I 1111 Delr John Q
12:30(!) MOVIE: Benyon (2:00)
' (I) G Jerry Springer
·([lilt Three'• Comp~ny

-----

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Clflltlcl tram QWOt.atona b't r.mou. ~. p.- a
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "A conservative Is a man with two portiiCIIy good
!ega, Who hu never learned to walk." - Franklin 0. R9011ve11.
·

i

�•

••
PIQI 10-The D•lly Sentinel

~.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OCtober 20, 1892

0 hio Lottery
Blue Jays ·
take series ·
lead with win

an

Pick 3:
436 Pick 4:

8877
BuckeyeS:

PageS .

I

Cloar tOIII&amp;bL Low Ia 4IL
Tbunday, 1111111y. Hl&amp;b _.. 65.

2-6-20-23-33
'

TO THE

•

' -

VaL a, No.12e.
Capyrlghl8d1892 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 21, 1992

Battrell family honored
by Meigs County SWCD

'

•Tili·Vi\l.t.EY

CONFEIIEN£E
CRUIPIONS .

By JULm E, DILLON
Sentinel News SillY

RECORD

•

Ed Johnson, president and farm
director of ABN Radio and TV was
the guest speaker for the MeijiS
Soil and Water Conservation Dis·
trict banquet and annual meeting
Tuesday night at Rutland Elemen-

0"\'IEHf\J,J,

FOB THIRD

tary.

STBt\IGBT
YEAR

1QTII

•SECI10Ni\L

63-1

TOlJBNJ\MMT.

OUTSTANDING FARM FAMILY'. Mr.
aDd Mrs. Doa {MIJ'Y) BattreU were praented Ill
tile Outstanding Farm FIDIUy Award at Tues·
day's aonual meet1n1 of·tbe Mel1s. Soli and
Water Con_servatlon District. The award was

preseated by Ill Qalekel for Oblo State Grage
lnsunnce. Also plctw tel, are Joe Bolin, liupervi·
sor or MSWCD., ten_ and Ed Johnson, right,
guest speaker and pi'esldent/farm director for

FIRS~' PLACE WINNERS • The field com· ·
mandhig team for the Mel1s High School
Marching Band captur~d first place wins In
tbeir final competitioas Ibis past Saturday at
Riverview Hl1b School and Claymont Higb .
Scbool, Pictured are Holly Williams, center,

bead fteld commander, and Stephanie Price, left,
and Danlelle" Crow. Field commander Instructor
is SusaD Clark, Tbe aWIIrd winning band will
perform In state competition Oct. Jl•at 7 p,m. at
Cooper Stadium Ia Columbus.

ABN Racllo ud TV.

CONFIRM£~

RECORD ·

Good Luck This Friday and Saturday
At Ohio State University's Scarlet Course fo,·· The
Divisio·n II State Cham.pionship,

Meigs
Athletic Boosters

Meigs County·Golf Course

.

•

..

Fu · lure
Jewelry

I~Jgels

Pomeroy ·

.·Adolph's Dairy Valley
992·2506

P~meroy

992·6312

Crow's Family R,staurant
..
992·5432

Po•eroy

Down
lds·Mullen·
Musser Insurance.
992·2342

915·3301

•

• ·'" 992·3715 .

773·9527

Shoe
Locker 219

Cheater

Ewing

......

~uneral

Farmers
Bank
'--,., &amp; SOvings Company
a

•

Home

"\bur Bank

H2·2116
POIIIIOt 01110
. 667·3161 -·
TUPPIIS PWIIS,

992·2955

Middleport Tropies &amp; ·Tees
992•6121
(

·Mldtlleport

fDIC

......oy

992·5479

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

I

Jeff Warner Insurance

s
Quality Print Sh~p
Middleport

992·3394

Presc
Middleport .

992·6669
(

...

..

Home
National
Bank
..
'

992·2210 .
lacl•e, Olllo

:c·oolv'I.lle

.

by antma

Fs
a

A and had the-highest point IOt8l of rill' nitings the-hand will perfomi at
ing Band, under the direction · of the day for all fieldcommanders. state contest Oct. 31 at 7 p.m. at
Toney Dingess, concl~ded the ~- Susan Clark is field commander . Cooper Stadium In Columbus.
son this past Saturday by parttCt· · instruCtor.
· Assistant band director is John
paling in the Riverview Black Bear
Following competition at VanReeth with additional assis·
lnvitalioq and the Clay!llont Band Riverview, the band traveled to tanceprovidedbypaveDeem.
Round·up.
. . ,,_. .·
Claymont compedllg agaln in' Class ·
,
, ' ·, · •
'I'o its list of OUIStanding 8CCOIII· A. The field commanders again
plishments the Class A band added captured fust iii Class A with the
several more awards and two more band's auxiliary placing second in
·
•
Stale qualifying)ICOrea.
the class. Auxiliary instructors are
At Riverview, the band capiUI'ed . Missy Stewart and Kathy Price.
firSt place honors with a score of The band was awarded third in the
•
}
250.3. The band's music score of class.
82,6 was the second highest of the
Dingess stated, ''This past week·
··
·
day, trailing AA baild, Hilliard, by end brought to a close a most sueA Coolville man was killed by a
· R.
less than four points. The band's cessful marching season for the half liori/half ti~er at the B~
field commanders, Holly Williams, band."
Stephanie Price and Danielle Crow•
. With 25 trophies and four supe· Ranch i~~ ownsbip, A ns
received first place honors in Class
.
Co~~· Athen/~~h~riff's
Department reported that Everett
Rodney Cremeans, 45, was pro·
nounced dead at the scene by Dr,
Robpt Buus, Athens County coroner: ·
According to the report, Cremeans was helping !he owner, Ed
Richardson, work on the cages at
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ while the others are Democrats. All the ranch which has several big
Gov. George Voinovich said three were· appointed by former Gov. game and exotic animals. They
Ohio Expositions Commission Richard Celeste.
were moving the animal from one
members whose tmns are expiring
Voinovich' s decision about .the cage to another when the cat
will not be reappointed as he reappointments , outlined · in grabbed Cremeans by the arm and ·
begins to bring changes to the Ohio response to a question at an dragged him· into the cage. The
Stale Fair.
impromfllll news conference Tues- owner was able to get the cat away
But one of the commissioners day, comes as the panel PrwateS to from .Cremeans and into a small
said Tuesday she did not intend to aSk the LegiSlawre for $2.5 million building attachlld to the cage before
~ another term 111yway.
to pay old 6ills. •
officers of the sheriff's department
"I wu not going to re-apply,"
Ohio A&amp;riculture Director Fred arrived on the scene.
slid Phyllis Scheid of Sandusky. "I Dailey, who also serves on the
Dr. BullS teponed there was evi·
had a good five yearS. Even though . commis~ion, said tho Sta!e may dence of claw marb to the right
the past year has not been p,leasant. have 10 restore a subsidy to the fair. side of the neck causing lacenllions
I did not intend to reapply. •
"We've put so much money to the carotid artery and jugular
Her term and those of commis- into .tho J11nior Fair pro~. and vein and multiple bite marts to the
sioniers Edward Kirkpatrick of · I'm beginning to wonder if we citn left leg. He said that death occurred
WuhingtOn Court HOuse and Leo do it without a subsidy. Right now, within a mauer of minu&amp;es,
· Limb of Canal Winchesrer expire I don't think we can. Down the
Funeral arrangements are being
Dec. 1.
·.
·
road, perhaps we can," Dailey. handled
by .the White-Blower
·
· ·
Kirkpatrick is a Republican, said. ,
Funeral Home, Coolp lle.
·

d
m·an kille

•

Swisher·Lohse Pharmacy

.

...eroy

..,

992·2174

Tbe Meigs High School March·

992•5627

11

tor
, ·Sales and Service

the Outstanding Farm Family
Aw..OO. presented by Bill Quickel
for Ohio State Grange Insurance,
went to Don and Mary Battrell
honoring them as outstanding
c~. They own 180 acres in
Metgs County and an additional
· 214 acres in Athens County. They
also rent 174 acres making their
total cash·grain operation approximately 568 acres.
·The Forestry Awar!!. presented .
by Dave Schatz, service forester,
was awarded to Bert and Beverly
Tayltl' ftl' forestry stewardship.
Curtis Balthaser, who resides in
Salem. Township and owns and
operates a cow/calf operation on
approximately 349 acres, was
awarded the Goodyear Farmer
Award. Tbe award was presented
GOODYEAR AWARD • Curtis Balthaser· was presented the :
by Jack Montgomery,
Outstanding
Goodyesr Farmer Award for Meigs County On TuesPlaques were presented to perday
evening
during the annual meeting of the Meigs Soil and
sons placing first in the 1992 Hay
Water Conservation District held at ~utland Elementary.
Show at the Meigs County Fair
including Brian Windo.n for all
Th · · g team ·n the a·gn·
grasses and 40 percent or less
Ashland, Facemyer Lumber Com· ·
· and Virgil' Ki , 75
e wmmn
1
leg~.
, to
. ng •or
- cultural contest was also Sf!Uthern pany, Fal'lllers ·Band and Savinl(i
, percent or more alfalfa. Plaques FFA comprised of Clifford Smith Company, Fruth Pharmacy, Harris
were pesenled by Charles YOSL
.
•
•
District Land Judging Awards Jef~ Rose, Stephanie _Sa~re . a~d Farm and Greenhouse, Home
·
' Chris Hamm. High sconng mdiv1d, Creiek Enllllprises, Home National
presented by Dave Gloeclaier, w~ uals were Clifford Smith and Jeff Bank, Jividens F..-m Equipment,
presented as a part of cwnty·wule
·
fi s han' s
soil judging contest for vocational Rose, bed ftl' lfSt, . tep •e ayre Keefers Service Center, Mead
agriculture students. This year's and Pet_e Engle, 11~ for second, . Paper Company, Montgomery
Trailer Sales, PDK Construction,
contest was held on the John Rice and ~s Hamm, third. .
. .
fannin Olive Township.
Aff1hate memb!:rsh•p certtf~- People's Bank, Quality Print Shop,
Tbe winning team in the urban cates were presented by Joe ~ohn R&amp;G Feed and Supply, Southern
soil judging contest was Southern and ¥arco Jeffers to Assoctated Ohio Coal Company, Sugar Run
FFA with team members Stephanie Fabncators, ~~~ens. Landm~rk, Flour Mill, 3R Industries and ValSayre, Corey Rowe, Stacy BumJ?US B~nk One, Btll s Tue Se~vtce, ley Lumber and Supply Company,
John Rice was elected as superand Christie Cooper. High sconng Birchfield Funeral Home, Ctty Ice
visor
for a three-year.tmn.
individuals were Stephanie Sayre, and Fuel, Columbus and Sou~~
A
baked
steak dinner was served
first, Corey ·Rowe, second, and Power Compa~y . D.R. Rous . s by .the Rutland
Fire Department
S1acy Bumpus and Christie Coop· BO\IY Shop, Dllry Valley, D~vtS·
Ladies
Auxiliary.
er, tied for third.
Qutckel Insurance, _Don Swtsher

Meigs band captures several more honors

··Riveriide
Golf Course
.

Valley Lumber and
Supply Co.
SYSTEM

1

K&amp;C Jewelers

Baum True Value

GaTHE
GRAVELY

-Smith·Nelson

2 Secl~. 12 Pagea 25 cents
A lluldnledla lnp. NewPif~

•-t.er
FDIC

99N3U
.. SJI'IICWH, Ollie

The Dally Sentinel
,,•.,.y,
992·2155

Gov~

Voinovich wants
change.at State Fair

QUEEN CANDIDATES ; Soatbera Hl1h
School's 1991 Homecominl Queea will be
crowned Ia ball'-cime ceremonies Friday nip I at
tbe Syt1met Valley-Southern game at Racine,
Tbe candidates for queen are froat, ten to right,

Julie HUJ, Mepn Wolte, Heather Hill, Valerie .
ConnollT• and Nicole Beegle. Atteadants are .
·Tracy Ptckett, sophomore, Jyl Mathews, fresh· ·
man, and Jenni HID, junior.

Southern homecoming events slated Friday
A pep rally and parade will
kickolf homecl)ming activities at
Southern High School Friday after-

noon.

The annual parade will include
floats prepared by each class, the
Tornadoes on a truck, the cheer·
ltadels, both high achool and junior
high, and .the clndldales for queen,
Julie Hill, Megan Wolfe, Heather
Hill Valerie Coonolly, and Nicole
Beegle on open coavertiblea. The
undcrclass aaendlilll. 'I'rlcy Pickett, sophomore; Jyl Mathews,
freshman , and Jenn1 Hill, junior,
will also be ridiaa in the plflde.
, Firemen and other community
. groups will join in the parade
which will leave the bigh school at
2 p.m. and move throuah down·
town Racine.
· ·
The pep rally will precede the

.,.

parade. Following ttie game , a
dance will be held in the high
school gymnasium. . · .
:
Various activities are takmg
place all week. Monday was hillbil·

ly day, Tuesday, inside out and
backwards day, Wednesday, boxer
sho~ ~ay , Thursdays_, black out;:
the Vikings day, and Fnday, ~ •
and gold day.
.

---Local briefs-·----.
· Juvenilesfac(! B&amp;E charges
·

Meigs County Sherilf James M. S~y ~on W~day .
that three juveniles from Salem Townslup Wi1f be charged IR Meigs
County Juvenile Court for the ~y evening entry at Salem Center Elementary School. According to Soulsby, the d!ree broth~rs
entmd the school after one of them had unlatched a wmdow earlier

~~!~uths .eportedl~ unplug~

in
the coolen, threw milk and
juice onl() the flotl' and damaged a compurer.

Runaway teen reported
Larry Cleland of Hysell Run. Road has reported to the Meigs

Continued on page 3

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· .
•

t

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