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                  <text>Page DB Sunday Tlmn Sentinel

Oilseed sales expected

.
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Tobacco production expected to fallll percent

to boost U. S. exports
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
agricultural exports to the Euro·
peen Com"::~ are expected to
•ncrease in
1993 because of
more sales of oilseeds and their
products,
say
agriculture

e&lt;:onomists.

"U.S. imports from the EC are
growing more rapidly lhan exports,
led by high-value products," said a
recent situation and outlook summary on Europe by the AgriculiUre
Department's Economic Research
Service.
In fiscal 1992, U.S. exports to
the EC totaled $7.2 billion, compared with imports of $4.7 billion.
Crop production is expected to
decline in 1993, it said.
"Production of wheat and
coarse grains will fall only slightly,
despite CAP (Common Agricultur·
a! Policy) reform price cuts and the
set-aside program,'' the report said
"Smaller cereal area will be
partially offset by the recovery of
yields from last year's drought·
depressed levels,'' it said.
On oi!seeds, the report said
changing competitive conditions
and poor wealher at planting time
should redu&lt;;e EC outpuL
Sugar production is expect.ed _to
returrt to normal levels in the EC
after a record crop in 1992, it said,
adcjing that "reform in the sugar
sector was put off for another
year."
.
The EC is implementing its
CAP reform, changin~ the way
domestic support is provtded to EC
farmers, the report noted. It affects
most agricultural sectors, with the
biggest change in cereals, where
support prices will be cut 33 per·
cent.
The reform will lower feed
prices for livestock producers, the
report said.

•

WASHINGTON (AP) Tobacco production in the 1993-94
"With lower feed costs, con- crop year is expected to be about
sumer prices for pork and poultry 11 pen:ent lower than .the previous
should fall, increasing consump- level because of smaller acreage
tion. Hi~her pork and poultry pro- and yields, the Agriculture Departduction m 1993 should boost subsi- ment says.
"The likelihood of a large feddized exports that compete with
era!
excis~ tax increase, to help
U.S. products," it said
finance
nanonal health care reform,
Beef support prices in the EC
is
lowering
future cigarette producwiD fall15 percent by 1996, it said.
lion
prospectS,"
USDA's Econom"Lower CAP prices, combined
i~
Re.!!earch
Service
said in a recent
with expecled reductions in arable
stblatlon
and
outlook
summary on
crop production, could contribute
.
to a decline in EC farm income in to~cco.
Flue-cured tobacco ou~ut ts
1993," it said. "However, significantly hi~her direct payments and down this vear," it s!lld. • Even
reduced mput costs for livestock
producers will offset all or part of
the lower value of crop produc~ ASHINGT&lt;?N (AP) - The
tion.''
•
.
the report noted that negotia- Umt~d States W_Ill donate 1,800
tions on EC membership with Aus- metnc tons of agncultural products,
. tria, Finland, Sweden and Norway · including nonfat dry milk, rice and
started earlier this year and said vegetable oil ~ n~y children in
support for arctic and Alpine farm- . the former SoVIet.U!llon.
.
ers was the main agricultural issue.
!,he_ $1.6 mtlhon donauon,
''Accession could occur as early as whtch mclu~ ocean and overland
1995," it said.
.
tr~nsporll!llOn C«?Sts, w~ll be dtstnbuted, directly _m Russ•~ and the
WASHINGTON (AP) - The other former S~VIet republics.
Agricu!IUre Department will donate .
The donauon w•ll be made
about $27 million worlh of farm under the _Food for ~gress Act of
products to the Russian Federation
~983, whtch authonze~ ~e donaunder the Food for Progress pro- non of surplus commodi~es owned
gram.
by the '7ommodity Credit Corp. to
The commodities include developmg ~tt:tes· .
.
29,400 metric tons of vegetable oil
The donanon IS bemg provtded
and 2,200 metric tons of pork. The through~ the Children, a l!.S.donation will be distributed or sold ~d pnvate v~luntarr orgamza·
by the Russian government to help non. The food wtU be ~tnbuted to
develop a~cultural and economic about120,000 needy children for a
reforms wtthin the Russian Federaperiod of three months in a food
lion.
All transportation costs for the
commodities to be delivered to of Education.
Russian ports will be paid by the
United States. Russia will pay for
all inland transportation, handling,
deficient diets, residing in chi!~torage and distribution costs withdren's homes, o~hana~es, handi· 10 the country.
capped children s factli ties and
children living in large families.

=~.:n!!:'~~si:~i~~t;
It~:u~~t"~~~~:~i~rili

The AgricultUre Department is

WASHINGTON (AP)
August, following a 2.8 percent
Orders to U.S. factories for big- drop in July and a 4.3 percent gain
ticket items such as cars and com· in June, the Commerce Department
·
puters rose in August for the sec- said.
ond time in three months, the govBefore that, new orders had
declined for three consecutive
ernment said Friday.
Economists took the report as months, from March through May,
evidence American manufacturing and factories had to struggle to
is starting to recover from a slump bring their production in line with a
earlier this year, but said the stall in consumer demand.
rebound isn't fast enough to pro·
The latest gain · ' 'is just one
more
piece of evidence the manuduce significant new hiring.
facturing
base is slowly picking up
Orders rose 2 percent to a seathe
pieces
from the dismal perforsonally adjusted $131.2 billion in
mance it had in the first half.
T
A
Continued from D-1

TSDI~ ••• - - - - - - u,

Meigs ...

governmental support, good harvests and a realistic exchange rate
policy."
It said the United States will
continue 10 face strong competition
from Brazilian exports of poultry
and soybeans.
Brazil is becoming Argentina's
most important market for grain,
and close commercial ties are
developing between the two
nations, the report noted.
"Soybeans and derivatives are
Argentina's leading agricultural
cxpons," ii said . "The expansion
of the Argentine farm sector will
depend upon private investment,
reduction of marketing costs from
'privatization' of storage and transportation and prices in the world
market.''

Conlinued from D-1

Muskingum, 5.7; Noble, 6.5;
Ottawa, 4.7; Paulding, 4.8; Perry,
8.7; Pickaway, 4.6; Pike, 12.7;
Portage, 3.9; Preble, 4 .4; Putnam,
4.7; Richland, 6.0; Ross, 5.7; Sandusky, 4.5; Scioto, 7 .5; Seneca,
7.2; Shelby, 7.3; Stark, 5.2; Summit, 4.6; TrumbuU, 6.4.
Tuscarawas, 5.0; Union, 3.4;
Van Wert, 4.7; Vinton, 10.5: Warren, 4.5; Washington, 5.5; Wayne,
3.8; Williams, 4.9; Wood, 3. 7;
Wyandot, 6.5.

The rales for cities of more than
50,000:
Hamihon, 9.5 Springfield, 6.0;
Cleveland, 9.5; Cleveland Heights,
3.2; Euclid, 3.9; Lakewood, 3.2;
Parma, 2.4; Columbus, 4.7; Cincinnati, 6.5; Elyria, 6.4; Lorain, 8.7;
Toledo, 6.5; Youngstown, 11.2;
Dayton, 6.9; Keuering, 2.0; Mansfield, 7.5; Canton, 8.2; Akron, 6.4;
Warren, 9.8.

PARKERSBURG LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC.
Mineral Wells, WV
September 18, 1993
STOCK STEERS:
300-under
90.00-115.00
80.00-110.00
300-500
70.00-98.00
500-700
800-over
60.00-79.00
STOCK HEIFERS:
300-under
78.00-105.00
70.00-103.00
300-500
60.00-78.00
500-700
800-over
55.00-68.00
STOCK BULLS:
75.00-110.00
300-under
300-500
70.00-100.00
500-700
64.00-83.00
Slaughter BuUs
53.00-66.00
Cows &amp; Calves BH
475.00-950.00
Bred Cows By#
350.00-650.00
Slaughter Cows:
47.00-51.00
Hi~h Dressing
42.00-47.00
Utility
Canner &amp; Cutter
35.00-41.00
70.00-80.00
Medium
SHEEP-Ewes
18.00-25.00
45.00-60.00
Feeders
40.00-120.00
Baby Calves BH
45.00-61.00
HORSEScwt
35.00-40.00
Ponies
HOGS :
30.00-38 .00
300-500
25.00-30.00
Male Hogs
23.00-30.00
Pigs
15.00-50.00
Goats
ial
~~~~~~~~~~~----~

s

with legislation requiring increased
use of U.S.-grown leaf in cigareaes
manuf!'Ctured ~the United SlateS
and 1\tgher pnce suppotls, fluecured prices are below a year earlier."
Reduced quality for much of
this season's crop, large world supplies and lhe probable decline m
ctgarette producnon are respoRSible
for the lower average price.
After the 1993-94 crop year,
bolh domestic use and exports of
flue-cured an4 burley leaf a.re
expected to decl_me, ~e report SBid.
Because of the limttations on use of

I

imported leaf it said cisarette
manufaciUrers have an ~olive 10
shiftsomeoftheirproductionover-

seas.

Exports are likely to decline lhe
repon said, because foreign~wn
leaf is less expensive and linlitalions on the use of foreign leaf in
the United States will increase
quantities available for use in'other
countries.
·
U.S. cigarette consumption for
1993 is expected to fall about 1.5
pen:ent "due to smoking bans and
restrictions, health concerns and
declining acceptability of smok-

ing,"the report said.
Consumption was reduc~d in
ea.rly 1_993 bec~.use of h1gh~r
pnces, It noted. But starting m
April manufacturers lowered prices
!l"d this will_mode~te the dechne
m consumption dunng the second
half of 1993," it added.
The per capita smoki~g rate _for
people 18 and older wtll dechne
from last yem:'s 2,640 cigarettes,
thereportpredicled.
. While cigarette exports have
mcreased because of growmg
d~mand for Amen.can-made
ctgarettes, the rate of mcrease IS
slowing, it said.

Ohio Lottery

Toronto,
Chicago.get
slice of titles

Pick 3:
677
Pick 4:

0954
Super Lotto:

2-17-29-32-45-47
Kicker:

089442

Page4

Low toolgbtln mld-405, dear.
Tuesday, sunny, blgh In mid
60s.

•

U.S. to donate prqducts to former Soviet Republics

Orders for durable goods up
second time in three months

1960s have had a major impact on
Chile's farm sector and its agricultural and nonagricultural trade,"
the report said. "By the early
1980s, these reforms had created
what is today one o.f the most open
market-driven economies in the
world."
Mexican population growth and
higher per capita income are
expected to expand the marke~ for
U.S. exports. At the s~me ume,
Mexican exports of htgh-valuc
farm products, including fruits,
vegetables and livestoCk products
to the United Stales are expected to
rise.
"Increasing political and economic uncertainties have slow~d
Brazil.' s growth," the report said.
"However, the agricultural outlook
remains stable due to conJ.inued

September 26, 1993

inviting dairy farmers_. milk dealers
Proponents of the mer~er say a
and ~ons'!"'ers to tesnfy at a public larger o~er would provtde for a
heanng m Atlanta ·OR Nov. 1 on more eqmtable sharing among propropo~als to merge federal milk
ducers of the higher-valued fluid
orders m the South.
milk:, or drinking milk, sales in
The_ proposal would merge .the what h~ become a c?mmon milk
Georgta, Alabai_Ra_-~es! Flonda, producuonandmarketiRgarea.
Ne": &lt;?rleans-MisstSSIPPI, Greater
The hearmg will begi~ at 1 p.m.
Louts13na and the recently term•· on !'lov. 1 at the Hohday Innnated ~ashvtlle, Tenn., federal Pen meter Dunwooody, 4386
111arkenng orders.
Chamblee-Dunwoody Road,
They would become a Gulf Atlanta.
States federal milk marketing
~der. Another cooper~nve assoc13U.S. poultry producers can sup~on, the ~"!msas Drury Coopera- ply the Chinese market at a very
nve.Association Inc., has proposed _low cost because the Chinese prefer
addmg the Central Arkansas mtlk "moving parts" such as legs and
order to the merged order. An~ a wings, which is the opposite of
pnvate fum has proposed addmg U.S. preference, trade specialists
the temtory th~t was part of t~e say.
recently term mated Memphts,
"The strong performance of
Tenn., order to lhe merger.
China's economy i~ at!fllct!~!\ sub-

stantial interest m the c.:nmese
poultry market, •• said a recent
report in the Foreign Agricultural
Service's AgExponer magazine.
U.S. breeding stock .dominates
commercial production in China, it
said, thus exposing consumers
there to the taste of American birds.
"Market development opporbl·
nities now need to focus on
expanding consumer awareness of
the versatility of broiler products "
the report said.
·'
"Broiler pans should fit easily
into the Chinese food scene.
Because Chinese preferences are
for moving parts, such as paws, .
legs and wings_ just the opposite
of the U.S. market_ U.S. traders
can supply broiler products at a
very low cost to the Chinese market"

Lawsutt
• chaII enges labeling
· •
date .eor
m·eat p.oultr· y
1
.

·

1

WASHINGTON • (AP)
Claill)ipg the, Agriculture Department i!Cted with undue haste, food
industry groups are suing to block
the agency from requiring safe handling labels on uncooked meat and
poultry products by Oct. 15.
The department set the deadline
last month for adding labels that
give instructions on safe cooking,
handling, refrigerating and thawing
meat products that are not fully
cooked when purchased.
The labels also must warn about
possible bacterial contamination U
the product is mishandled or
cooked improperly.
The requirement was one of several moves by USDA after a fatal
outbreak of food poisoning linked
to meat contaminated with E. coli
bacteria, and a subsequent lawsuit

.

'

.

.

demanding warning labels.
Two children died and hundreds
of other people became ill in Washington state last January after eating undercooked hamburgers from
the Jack-in-the-Box restaurant
chain. A third child died of illness
caused by the same E. coli strain,
although the death could not be
traced directly to ham burgers.
The lawsuit was filed Thursday
in U.S. District Court in Austin,
Texas, by the National-American
Wholesale Grocers' Association,
the National Grocers Association
and the Texas Food Industry Association.
The Texas association was the
lead plaintiff in the suit, which
enabled it to be filed in that cattleproducing state. The two national
groups represent food distribution
· companies and independent whole-

sate and retail grocers.
The lawsuit contends the ·Agriculture Department violated laws
requiring timely notice of new regulations, depriving affected groups
a chance tn comment on a requirement that will have a serious economic impact.
It says food stores "will be
required to make extensive changes
i~ pac~ag_i~g and labeling, incur,
rmg s•gntftcant costs associated
with the development of new
labels, printing new labels and discarding existing inventories of
packaging and labels.· •
USDA spokesman Steve Kinsella said he could not comment on
the lawsuit because officials had
not seen it. Th~ department has
defended the urgent need for the
regulations, however.

CYNTHIA SEXTON

Sexton·chosen
for position
GALLIPOLIS • Cynthia Sexton,
oWiler of Mane Designers FuU Service Hairstyling Salon in Gallipolis, has been chosen as a Redken
Regional Performing Artist.
Sexton auditioned for the position in Cincinnati, and was selected
by a panel of judges; on her haircolor and cutting abilities and also
for her knowledge of Redken products and perms.
As a Redken RPA, Sexton has
received training in color, perms
and Redken products.
Sexton's duties with her new
position will be to travel throughout Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky. educating other salons about
Redken products and updating
them on perms and color techniques. Sexton will also be assisting in aU major hair show conventions.
Sexton has been involved in the
beauty industry for 22 years. She is
a member of the State and National
Cosmetology Association,a substilute cosmetology instructor, and a
member on the advisory board at
GaUia, Jackson, Vinton Vocational
School.

TO SAV'IIfQa
AT SMITH BUICK·PONTIAC

I

MODEL
CLOSEOUTS!

Racine Fall Festival
is successful despite
persistent ·fall showers
By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Would southeastern Ohioans let
a little rain ruin their parade?
Noway.
Despite contrary weather requiring a move to Southern High
School and moisture causing tech·
nical difficulties with sound equipment, several hundred turned out to
experience the annual Racine Fall
Festival held Saturday.
·
trophy for Stacy Black who submitted a 64PUMPKIN .
-Richard Cummins,
Persistent fall showers, which
pound entry. Also shown is 1993 Fall Festival
· center, holding Dalton Cummins, won first place
began soon after the parade passed
Queen Aimee Mills. Not present was second·
in tbe pumpkin growing contest at the RHine
through
downtown, ruined opportu·
place winner Perry HiU witb a 122-pound entry.
Fall Festival Saturday witb a 205-pound pump·
nities for fun in the sun and man'
kin. Agnes Sellers, left, accepted the third place
dated moving the festival to Southem High School.
Southern J{igh School Cheerleaders won first place in the
parade followed by Cub Scout
Pack 241 and area Girl Scout and
Brownie troops 1004, 1290 and
1261.
Aimee Mills, a senior at South·
em
High School, was named 1993
The Vehicle was lisled as a total
According ·to a sheriff's depart·
Three people were kiUed on
Fall
Festival Queen. Daughter of
county roadways over the weekend, ment spokesman, Rollins was loss.
Randy
and Redenith Mills of Syra- ·
The driver and passenger were
according to a spokesman for the traveling south on S.R. 2 and
cuse,
Mills
is involved in basketMason County Sheriff's Depart- · proceeded into the passing lane to killed in a single vehicle accident ball and softball.
overtake another vehicle. While Saturday evening on S.R. 62, near
menL
She was crowned by last year's
A Point Pleasant woman was kil- overtaking the vehicle, the 1988 Lakin. according to the sherifi's queen, Amber Ohlinger, who is the
led and two people injured in a Toyota RoUins was driving, regis- spokesman.
daughter of Les and ·Carolyn
Joyce A. Kingery, 45, of Ripley
single v eliiCie··wreck oil-s.R. !, . tered to Sonya Bateman, apparently
Ohlinger,
Racine.
near Gallipolis Ferry, Saturday af- began to hydro-plane, causing Rol- and Howard C. McCormick, 53, of
Candidates
were Mills, Bridget
lins to lose control. The vehicle Milton, were both killed in the 5:38 Leanne Davis-Powell,
ternoon.
Jennifer
Rebecca D. Bateman, 51, of traveled off the left side of the road p.m. wreck.
Cummins lind Amber Thomas.
The spokesman said Kingery
Point Pleasant, died following the wilh the rear sliding to the left for
Mills' tiara was donated by
1:10 p.m. wreck on S.R. 2. She was aP.l?roximately 130 feet and struck a was traveling south on S.R. 62 at a Middleport Trophies while her tro·
a passenger in a vehicle driven by utility pole. The impact apparently high rate of speed. As ~he rounded phy was donated by Larry Wolfe of
ejected Rebecca Bateman, who was a sharp right curve. the rear of her Racine. Mills also received a $50
David H. RoUins, 18, of Leon.
Rollins and Sandra D. Bateman, sitting in the rear seaL The car spun 1987 Ford started to slide to the left savings bond and a floral bouquet
17, of Point Pleasant were injured. around or continued past the pole into a spin. The vehicle traveled off from the Fall Festival Committee.
A Pleasant Valley Hospital spokes- for approximately 30 feet and came the right side of the road and struck
Richard Cummins won first
man said both were treated and to rest approximately 12 feet in the a large tree.
place in the pumpkin growing conroadway.
released.
test with a 205-pound entry. Perry
Hill Farms won second place with
a 122-pound J&gt;Umpkin while Stacy

Three people killed in two
Mason County accidents

Varney gets maximum sentence

'BUICK·PONTIAC
1900 EASTERN AVE.
GAlliPOliS, OHIO

"Where Snviee .Ma•es l'he Difference"

QUEEN CROWNED - Aimee Mills, left, was crowned Racine
Fall Festival Queen at the Racine Fall Festival Saturday. Mills,
daughter or Randy and Redenllll Mills of Syracuse, was crowned
byl992 Fall Festival Qileen Amber Ohlinger.
.
Black won third place with a 64pound entry.
Providing entertainment were
One Way Street, Silver Wings, C.J.
and the County Gentlemen, Out of
the Blue, Born Again Believers,
Middlebranch Bluegrass and River
Valley Boys. Also performing were
Southern Hi~h School and Southem Junior High School cheerlead·
ers.
Announcer for the day was
James Winchester.

Festival organizer Kathryn Hart
commended the Fall Festival Committee for "hanging in there" and
also thanked anyone who helped
wilh the festival.
Hart also commended Principal
Gordon Fisher and Mary Smith,
custodian, for allowing the festival
to be moved to the high school.
"We've done something and
people came out and attended,"
Hart said.

One of two men accused of on the attempted murder charge. ing her in the second ·vehicle
She was then raped and taken to
abducting a Jackson County which will run consecutively to the
woman, raping her and shooting ' other ·sentences. The defendant was Vinton County, lead from the vehi·
her three times received the maxi- also fined $250, suspended, plus cle and shot three limes.
The victim was able to escape
mum sentence for each of three court costs.
after
the shooting and sought help
Prosecuting
Attorney
Brent
char~es this morning.
Vmcent H. Varney, 23, Route I, Saunders said he was pleased with at a nearby residence.
A second suspect, Gregory S.
was sentenced this morning by the sentencing.
Pickens,
27, 12283 State Route
Gallia County Common Pleas
"The judge did give the maxi160.
Vinton,
is accused of particimum, which we asked for," he
Judge Joseph L. Cain.
pating
in
the
incident but has not
Varney, who pleaded guilty said. "And in a crime such as this,
yet
gone
to
trial.
A hearing was
Wedne.sday to rape, kidnapping that" s what he deserved was the
scheduled
for
last
Friday
to considand attempted murder last Wednes- maximum sentence."
er
the
suppression
of
evidence
in
day, was sentenced to 10 to 25
Vamey was accused of pulling
his
case,
but
his
attorney
withdrew
years in jail for each charge. The the victim's vehicle over by using a
terms are to run concurrentl.y.
flashi~g emergency light, ordering , the motion and the hearing was
He was also sen~enced to three out of her car at gunpoint and plac- canceled.
years in jail for a gun specification

A Vinton man was killed Sunday night in an apparent alcoholrelated accident, lhe Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.
Billy Maynard, 43, Mt. Carmel
Road was transported by Gallia
County Emergency Medical Service to Holzer Medical Center
where he was pronounced dead on
arrival.
A spokesman for the patrol said
.this morning that blood-alcohol
tests indicate Maynard's driving
ability was impaired by alcohol.
Coroner Edward Berkich said
this morning the victim died of a
head injilry. He also conftrmed that
there was-alcohol in Maynard's
blood.
According to the accident
report, ~aynard was northbound

.

1 Section. 10 Pagea 35 conta
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 27,1993

Gallia County man killed
when vehicle overturns

Livestock
report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Friday by
the Ohio Department of Agriculture .
.
Barrows and gilts: steady to
mostly 50 cents lower; demand
light.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 45.50-46.50; plants 47.2548.25, a few 48.75.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
country points 46.50-47.50.
Recetpts Thursday 8,300. Estimated receipts Friday 9,000.
Prices from The Producers Live- ,
stock Associatioo:
Cattle: 2.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 66.0072.00; select 60.00-68.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 64.0072.00; select 59.00-66.00.
Cows: steady; all cows 55.50
and down.
Bulls: steady; aU bulls 65.00 and
down.
SI:teep and lambs: steady; choice
wools 62.00-64.50; choice clips
61.00-64.00; feeder lambs 71.00
and down; aged sheep 29.00 and
down.

Vol. 44, NO. 107
llultiiiHidialnc.

on Mt. Carmel Road (County Road struck a fence and a ditch Sunday.
89) in Raccoon Township, Gallia
Randy K. Lee, 27, Wore hester
County, at a high rate of speed Street, was transported from the
when his vehicle went off the left scene by LifeFiight emergency
side of the road and struck an medical helicopter service and
admitted to the hospital for treatembankment.
The vehicle then crossed to the ment of lacerations and abrasions.
right side of the road, struck a secAccording to a report from the
ond embankment and overturned. Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Maynard, who was not wearing a Highway Pairol, Lee was eastscat belt, was partially ejected from bound on County Road 30 when he
the vehicle. The body was turned drove off the right side of the road
over to Willis Funeral Home.
and struck a fence.
The vehicle sustained heavy,
The vehicle continued on
disabling damage and was towed through the fence.and struck a ditch
from the scene. The accident is still before coming to a stop. The patrol
listed unsafe speed as the contributunder investigation.
Mannown
ing factor.
No citations were issued. The
to Columbus
A Syracuse man is in fair condi- vehicle sustained heavy, disabling
tion this morning at Grant Medical damage and was towed from the
Center's trauma unit after his truck scene.
·

Radon crisis may ~e worse than thoug._t
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Levels
of radioactive radon gas in Ohio
homes may be higher than health
officials thought, said a spokesman
for an environmental group.
"It appears that radon is far
more widespread in Ohio... and a
much bigger potential problem than

anyone had realized_.-' said Stuart
Greenberg, executive director of
Environmental Health Watch,
based in Cleveland.
Half of Ohio falls in the U.S.
Environmental Protection A~en­
cy's highest-risk "category, wtth a
medium risk in the rest of the state,

said Ohio Department of Health
spokesman Bob Owen. . .
.
The potential radon risk m Ohto
is the seventh hi~hest in the country - with the '!Jteli~ that «?ne
in fiVe houses will fall federal hmits, Owen ~d.
·

PARADE WINNERS - Parade winners in
the 1993 Racine Fall Festival Parade held Satur·
day were witb representatives from left: second
place J~ey Manuel representing Cub Scout
Pack i41; first place, Brandy Roush and Sherri

Frederick representing Southern High School
Cheerleaders; third place, Anna Norman repre:
senting Girl Scout and Brownie troops 1004,
i290 and 1261.

Demjanjuk adjusting slowly
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
suburban city of Seven Hills filed .
suit today to block protests outside
the home of John Demjanjuk.
· Seven Hills Prosecutor Steven
Sackett filed the 'suit in Cuyahoga
County Commons Pleas Court,
asking Judge Daniel Gaul to issue a
temporary restraining order blocking further demonstrations.
Sackeu said the ~rotesters are
violating a Seven Htlls ordinance
passed Sept. 13 that prohibits picketing against an individual in residential neighborhoods.
On ·Saturday, a small group of
hooded Ku Klux Klan members
marched outside the home, carrying signs in support of Demjanjuk.
No one was home at the time.
Jewish groups demonstrated
outside Demjan)uk's home last
week to protest hts release from an
Israeli prison. The Israeli Supreme
Court ordered Demjanjuk freed
after overturning his conviction on
cbarges he was a brutal Nazi death

camp guard during World War II.
The Jewish groups, led by Rabbi
Avi Weiss of New York, marched
Wednesday and Thursday but did
not demonstrate over the weekend.
Yom Kippur, lhe Jewish holy day
of atonement, began at sundown
Friday.
An anti-Demjanjuk rally sponsored by several area Jewish
groups was planned for noon today
on Cleveland's Public Square.
City police watched the demonstrations against Demjanjuk last
week but did not enforce the ordinance. Sackett said last week the
law would not be enforced unless
there was a disturbance or neighbors complained.
In 3ffidavits filed with the suit,
Seven Hills Police Chief John
Fcchko, an officer and two Demjanjuk neighbors said they feared
the demonatrations posed a risk to
public safety.
A lawyer for the Ohio chapter of
the American Civil Liberties

Union, which said. it would defend
protesters arrested under the ordinance, appeared today to argue
against the city's request. .
Lawyer Raymond Vasvari was
in Gaul's chambers and could not
immediately be reached for commenL
Gaul did not immediately rule
on the request.
Meanwhile, Demjanjuk's sonin-law said Demjanjuk was slowly
adjusting to being back in the Unit·
cd States.
"The family is around him," Ed
Nishnic said Sunday after anending
services at the family's church in
suburban Parma. "I won't conftrm
or deny that the family is with him
or is not with him, but what I can
say is the adjustments are going

slow."

Nishnic was surrounded by
members of St. Vladimir's Ukraini- ·
· an Orthodox Church who wanted
to send messages of support to his
father-in-law.

�.

.
•

Monday, September 27,1993

Se~tinel

•water a key issue for

111 Court Stleet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED 1'0 THE l!f'BRBSTS OP THE IIEIGS-IIASON AR&amp;A

ROBERT 1,. WINGEIT
Publbher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH

LEHEW
Controller

~ARGARET

General~anager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be le&amp;s than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Letlors
should be in good tasr.., addressing issues, not personalities..

Approaching elections
spawn reform bills

By ROBERT E. MD..LER
Associated Prts&amp; Writer
COLUMBUS - House members from both parties apparently are
warming up for next year's legislative campaigns with promises of
reforms to help reswre confidence in Ohio's elected officials.
S~er Vem Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, predicts House passage of a bill
requuing all lawmakers and public officials to ·disclose all sources of
income, including honoraria received for speeches.
He brought out the bill Fri"!'r after Minority Jnder JoAnn Davidson,
R-Reynoldsburg, and others criucized one of his eommiuec chairmen for
accepting $500 for meeting with a health-au~~ group in Toledo.
Ms. Davidson called the meeting a scandal and introduced a biJIIO ban ·
all honoraria. Riffe's propos&amp;! would allow them to continue, but would
ban solicitations and reqwre officials to disclose all payments.
Rep. Paul Jones, D-Ravenna, said he was returning the money he
received for the Toledo appcwanee. Riffe said Mrs. Davidson's comments
and news repons about the meeting were unfair.
He said Jones was not charged with wrongdoing and no one produced
evidence that he broke rules or Jaws.
Under existing law, only those payments from a single· sowce !hat
exceed $500 must be included in fmancial disclosure repcru.
Riffe, with the GOP set to challenge his 53-46 House majority in next ·
year's elections, charged that the Republicans were attempting 10 gain
' politically from Jones' situation.
"If they want 10 play politics, I'll show them how 10 play some politics," he said before the reform bill was introduced.
Two days later•.Riffe unveiled a proposal !hat went far beyond honoraria
It requires public officials who have private income - lawyers, businessmen, teachers, swre owners or whatever - to repon the amounts and
· sources of all their income.
"A lot of people are going to be under this," the speaker said.
The bill also says that a person who belongs 10 or works for an association may not vote on legislation that has been the subject of lobbying by
that association.
If !hat were to become law, Mrs. Davidson's vote could be in~)(
on many bills. She works for the Ohio Chamber of Commence, wh1ch is
one of the most active of all lobbying groups.
She said Friday she has been traveling and had not had a chance to
study the Democratic bill. However, she said Republicans would wort
with Democrats on what she called legitimate efforts 10 raise ethical stan·
dards.
. Riffe said hearings on the bill would begin this week and !hat, "It wiD
pass.'' He declined to speculate on its fate in the GOP-com.rolled Senate.

Letters to the editor
Volunteers a great asset
by Debbie Clay, Dano and Charles
Dear Editor,
King,
Ben Ewmg, Jim Diddle, Tim
To be a part of the Ohio State
King,
Mila and Jeremy Raymond,
Fair along with other counties is
Jane
Walton,
JoAnn Corder, Ann
another boost in developing the
Rupe,
Jeff
Thornton
and Jeff
tourism industry. The Meigs disGrimm,
Velma
Rue
and
Paul
play followed the them "Where the
.
Casci,
Scott
and
Julie
Dillon,
Road Meets the River" which was
adopted for the 1993 Meigs County Eugene Triplett, P.J. Harris, Joe
. brochure. With Meigs County's 57 and Janet Bolin, Bill and Debbie
miles of riverfront and its opponu- Toundas, Kenny Utt and Susie
nities for economic development, Salser, Bruce and Joan May, Don
recreation and wurism it seemed a and Maida Mora, Jack and Judy
Williams and Lin and Ann Colelogical theme.
A special thanks 10 Jeff Thorn- man. Thei.r time and efforts are
.
ton for the hours he spent designing deeply appra:iated.
The
Meigs
County
Chamber
of
the 20 feet mural of rolling hills
and river backdrop for the state fair Commence donated a Meigs Coundisplay. Thanks to Jeff Grimm, ty handmade walking stick make
Jeremy and Mila Raymond, Misti by Bernard La Valley and the
Powell, Josh Blair and Debbie Clay Meigs COWity Park District donatwho assisted Thornton and the ed a t-shin and hat for the state fair
Grace Episcopal Church for the use give away.
In the past most of our resources
of their room to work on this prowere
obtained by attending · the
jecl
regional,
state and other county
A 12 feet stemwheeler cutout by
By networking data is
meetings.
Dano and Charles King is greatly
accumulated
which is important
appreciated. The sternwheeler
and
beneficial
10 economic develaccented the road to the river. The
opment,
parks,
recreation and
Meigs County video and pictures
tourism.
Often
valuable
doors open
from around the county helped
at
these
meetings
by
havin3
direct
attract visitors.
·Having the support of volun- contact with various direcwrs,
teers from various parts of the mayors, commissioners and state
county is certainly a plus. Their 311d U.S. officials. It is a challenge
involvement helps to strengthen to come out of the shell we have
our efforts, not only in helping to allowed to surround us and it take
build the tourism industry, but each time and effons. We must continue
volunteer becomes more positive to represent and market the county
through becoming better acquaint- whenever possible. Volunteers are
cenainly a great asset and again I
ed wiUt the county.
Being knowledgeable and hav- thank everyone for their time and
ing direct contact with hundreds of efforl
Mary Powell, Directoc,
visitors at the Ohio State Fair is a
Mei~s County Park
wonderful advantage. There 3,000
Dislricl/fourism
pieces of literature were dislributed

Responds to column
Dear Editor
I just read the Mental Graffiti by
Kevin Pinson.
Why a person can't (or doesn' t)
write or talk, without abusing the
En$1ish language in the way they
do IS beyond me.
When I read his article today
(Sept 19) itlmade me think of a job
I had in Omaha, Neb. in 1962. I
was worlting by myself and another
man came to me and said "The
blankety-blankety boss said for me
to help you with your work." I told
him to go back and tell the boss I
would rather do the. work myself
than listen 10 his filthy talk.
He helped me with my work but
he siOI)])ed the filthy talking.
Birds of a feather will flock
together. I· would much mll}er be a

v

dove than a buzzard. Enough said.
Opie C. Cobb, Middleport.
P. S. I just thou3ht about the
m.an that was keepmg company
w1th a woman, and he was in a big
way talking and he said, "Let's you
and I get married". She said "Let's
do". So he just shut up like a clam.
Mter a good while, she said, ''Why
don 'I you say something?" and he
said, "I have said too much
already."
I just read the Ann Landers column about the toilet seat. Made me
think about the boy that said, "he
couldn't do anythin~ to please his
sister". He said "fust she complained because he left the toilet
seat up, and then she complained
because he left it down".

•

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September27,1993

cious liquid in the pardled ~on is
fresh water, not oil. Conflict Is
inevitable. in the future if Middle
East countries don't wodc together

WASHINGTON - The Middle
East peace talks lllay wind up wallowing in watet.
It comes as no surprise 10 J&gt;a!estine Liberation Organization Chairman Yasit Arafat or Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin that this
should be one o"r the most contentious, though less-publicized
struggles: Israel gets two-thirds -of
its watet from aquifers and streamS
that run in land it capturC\! in the
1967 war.
·
The Palestinians want some of it
back unda an autonomous arrangement. During the occupation, the
Israelis restricted Palestinian water
use, severely cutting down on their
agricultural inigation water, and
not allowin~ . them to dig wells as
deep as JeWJSh seulen in the occupied rcnitorics. If the Israelis give
some of the water back, they will
(lave 10 Scale back their own selfsustaining agriculture.
For more than a decade. Central
Intelligence Agency officials have
been raising the specter of water
wars in the Middle East before the
end of the century. The most pre-

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein
on a resource plan and agreements
to ration ou( rivers and aquifers
they share.
As an example, one CIA report
maintained that a key motive for
Israel's invasion of Lcb111on in
1982., besides "cleaning out" the
PLO, was to gain control of the
Litani River's dependable water
supply. A second CIA report,
•ssessmg the longtime Syrian troop
involvement in Lebanon, reckoned
a key reason the Syrians did this
was to protect the headwaters in
Lebanon's Bekaa Valley of the
depends on
Orontes River.
· the river for a
deal of its elec-

lrical power and irrigation.

Finally, a third CIA report
assessing the world water siblation
estimated that of the 10p 10 places
in the world .where a water war
could break out, more than half
were in the Middle East. Only
Egypt and Turkey, of all the Mid·
die East countries, have a fairly
abundant and reliable water supply.
The formula the CIA has been
usin' 10 prognosticate water disasters m the region is not complicated. With a high population increase
rate of 3 pen:ent a year, meaning
the Middle East doubles in population every 20 years, there simply
are not enough renewable water
resources, according 10 current use,
to service all the needs much after
the year 2000.
·
What fuels the current Palestinian demands for more water under
the ctiJTent Middle East accord is
an undisputed inequity in the sharing of water- with Israel's smaller population getting the lion's
share. Israel sees it as a national
security issue, and is greatl_y apprehensive that 40 ~t of 1ts water

YOUR TURN

· To KEEP WATcH.

•

IToledo! 59" I
•

currently comes from the West
Bank, whose land it is negotiating .
to return 10 the Palestinians.
When counlries in the region are
already tapping inw the non-renewablC water supplies, it's no wonder
!hat even King Hussein of Jordan
stated as a matter-of-fact in 1990
that the only issue that would spark
a Jordanian war with Israel was
over water.
MEMO OF THE MONTH There's something cooking 111 the
Resolution Trust Corp., and it's not
another contract scandal
Steve Katsanos, director of communications at the RTC, ~ecently
set his sights on the " management
objective.. of ridding the agency or
"culinary odors." Up 10 now, Katsanos has devoted most of his time
defending the agency, which was
created to clean up the savings and
loan scandal, against charges of
lavish bonuses and conflicts of
interesL
"I'm sure all of us are aware of
the limits on smoking in the
office," reads an internal memo
prepared by Katsanos. "As we prepare for our office relocation, I
would like 10 suggest we also consider the effect of culinary odors on
our workers and visitors.
" ... At times, members of the
staff have commented that they
found certain lunch-time odors
offensive and disruptive .... Vegetables in the cabbage family are particularly-noticeable when heated or
pickled. I had the unfortunate experience of being told how offensave
my Chinese sweet-and-sour cabbage was to fellow employees on
the elevator. Certain piscatorial
preparations also can be particularly pungenl"
Finally: "Let's keep in mind
that our favorite dishes may evoke
unpleasant childhood memories in
others. In our small wort environment,.. air is a commodity
we
.
hare.
s
.
.
Katsanos told us that since he
wrote the memo he has received no
more complaints about culinary
odors at the RTC.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Bring murder outrage closeand to home
As of late September, nine foreign wurists had been murdered in
Flo~ida during the preceding 11
!llonths. It is an appalling sta~c
10 hum~ terms. and a po~nually
dev~ta~gone~c;conom•c~rms.
Tounsm •s fionda s No. 1 industry, and foreagners make up about 7
million of the annual influx of 42
million~ Official ~lion~
the slay10gs was as deciSive as 1t
was vocal. The mass media have
treate.d them as a~ong the year's
most unponant stones.
With that as the background,
imagine a. different sc:enario. Suppo~ that •nstead of rune deaths of
fore1gners over the past. year, there
had been about 5,000 m the Sunshine State. What would have been
the response? What kind of coverage would they ha':e received?
. Now, drop eon~~ure and deal
w•th facts. The honuc1de death rate
among young black !'-merleans was
76.8 per 100,000 10 1988. That
co_m~s down to well over 700 Jl:CI"
milhon and over S,OOO per 7 milli.on, which is. ~e nu~ber of for.e1~ers who VISit Florilil! ann~y.
It ts also roughly seven nrnes high·
er than the national homicide average.
And what is the r~sponse to
these figures? In the white community, hos~le apathy mixed with
apprehensiOn, as re~ected by the
~hr~-paragmph wflt~·ups on an
ms1de page us!lally gav.en to most
black m~ ·~~daily ~wspapers. W~•te ~hUc18Ds looking for
a rhetoncal usue ta~k to.ugh ~nd
offer crackdown leg•sla~IO~ bills
they know are unconsutuuonal.

Overwhelmed wban police depanments feel they are successful if
they are able to contain the violence within the ghetto and clean

u

n 0

Jng Carter JJJ

dd'

up the streets after each killing.
To put it another way, there is a
crime crisis of epic dimensions in
America today, but it has vinually
nothing to do with foreign visitors.
It is centered within the black eommunity in particular. It is getting
worse and no one seems willing 10
do what should be done or even 10
know what !hat might be. It is not
coincidental that Florida's violent
crime rate is the nation's highest, at
1,184 pet 100,000 J!«&lt;Pie, and that
a disproportionale number of these
crimes are black against black and
Hispanic against Hispanic.
In the 1980s, the answer was 10
expand the number of crimes, particularly druj!·related, for which
mandaiOry jail senten~ could be
imposed, and then to build more
jails. The results speak for themselves on two counts.
First, the number of Americans
behind ban went from 196,441 in
1970 10 1,100,000 in 1991. Going
to jail is more probable for black
American males than going 10 college. Almost 3,400 blacks are in
jail or prison for every 100,000 in
the population. The comparable
figure foe all Americans is 4SS. For
Japanese, it is 4S.
Second, the violent crime rate
continued 10 rise even as the over-

all crime rate evened off
began
to drop. The upward trend defied
all pred!ctions since it was widely
believed that ;nth the aging of the
baby boom cohon, violent crimes
would go down. Illustratively,
however, the ovemll murder rate
went from 4 6 per 100 000 in the
mid-1960s u) over 10 ~r ' 1 oo 000
As a group of post· baby boo~
spokesmen declared in their "Third
Millennium Declaration"last July,
"During the past three years, more
Americans have been murdered on
our streets than were killed in the
16 years of the Vietmim War.' •
Bad as they are, these are so
!llany numbers, horrifying but ster1te far removed from our daily
liv;s. Within Urban black communities however they translate into
tragedy, cease!~ fear and neighborhood disintepation. A generation of inner-c 1ty youth is being
raised 10 think of violence as both
inevitable and casual. Human life is
devalued, worth less than the opinion of your peers and your own
self-esteem. VastsweepsofAmerica's cities are like so many prisorts,
ruled by their most violent inmates
and subject only sporadically to the
rule of law.
As Dr. Alvin Poussaint, a Harvard ~ychialrist, put it a year or so
ago, 'In the past five years, we've
come to feel that anything goes.
There is an immunity 10 violence
and an acceptanCe of it by the perpetrators as a legitimate way to
deal with things. The pe!petraiOrs
use violence as a tool to negotiate
the environmenl" More poignant•
ly, a fifth grader wid a Washing10n

Post repone_r, "I don't go outside.''
A little less, than three years ago,
a reporter for the Baltimore Sun put
his finger squarely on one of the
cent;raJ problems. As Jerry Bembry
put,\t
.. . It seem~ t~at only whe!l !"
white person IS killed vtolendy IS 11
considered a crime that shocks a
~mmunity. and ~purs outrage. If a
difference IS gomg 10 come about
in the bla~k com"!unity, tha! same
commumty passiOn IS ~omg to
have 10 come out every wne they
wheel the bodies of our black
youll}s away in body bags."
L1ttl~ needs to be ad~ed. So!"e
of the killers of the fore1gn touns!S
have already been apprehended m
FlOrida. Others will be. Highway
rest siops, airline terminals and
other visitors' centers an: going 10
be ":~Ore thof?ughly pohced. Protecung tounsts and the tourist
indu~try is the governor's most
press!ng pnonty.
It IS ~ C!Jm":len.dable goal, but in
the end 1t IS ml$directed. The place
f'?r an all-out effort is. the inner
c.•ty, where the cll!"'lage IS too rouune to be shockmg. Our fellow
Americans ~ being terrorized and
mu.rdered tn ways and at a rate
whtch defies the imagination. We
owe no less to them- and 10 our~lves -.. than we do to the occas1onal VISitors on our shores.
Hodding Carter III, former
State Department spokesman
and award-willning reporter, editor and publisher, Is president of
~ainStreet, a Washington, D.C.based television production company.

Innocent until forced to confess .

There is an intense conviction
tlupughout the country that defendants in criminal cases - certainly
those accused of murder - have
too many rights. From what I have
seen of the cunent Democratic and
Republican crime bills, this is also
a bipartisan view in Congress that
is shared by the presidenL
Since Ted Koppel's ~'Night­
line" is one of the few television
programs that occasionally c)lecks
out our system of justice around the
· country, it is encouraging that his
ratings are up IS percent over last
year and that he usually attracts
more viewers than Jay Leno and,
more
David Letterman.
A panic ly useful illostration
of how "Nightline" casts some
light into the shadows of the criminal justice system was the recent
"The Railroading of the Tucson
Four."
.
On Aug. 10, 1991, nine members of a Buddhist temple on the
outskins of Phoenix - including.
six Thai monks - were robbed and
murdered. The ease received wide
national and international attention,
and there was mounting_ pressure

recen?.rv

on law enforcement officers to
catch the killers.
The fust seeming break was a
voluntary confession by a man who

Nat Hentoff
phOned in his story from a psychiatric institution where he was a
patient. He named four accompli~. They were seized and interrogated but were not arrested, for
that would have required bringing
them before a judge within 24
hours. Without being technically
taken iniO custody, they could be
questioned for many more hours
than thaL While this was going on,
the suspects had no access to a
lawyer.
The ~tioning of these menwho, as
I put it, were "innocent until on:ed to confess" was tape recorded, and excerpts·
were played on "Nlghtline." ·
At ~::.Joint, suspect Mark
Nunez
if he wu under arre11.
A detective said he was not. At that
point, Nunez could have refused 10
be qucitloned Illy further and
could have left. But he did not

...

know the rules, and the detectives
certainly were not going to tell
him.
They also - as Dave Marash
reported on "Nightline" - put
him in a room with photographs of
the scene of the crime. Thereby
~ific details might be planted in
h1smind.
Why did Nunez and the others
confess? "You were half asleep,"
Mark Nunez says. "You were
starved, confused. After a while ·
you just get II inw your mind !hat
they're not going 10 give up."
Along with constant pressure,
the detectives gave the unsophisticated suspects assurances that
would not be meL "Nobody else is
hearing what you are saying 10 us
or w~ we're saying to you," one
detective had said during !he questioning. ·"It's not goin, to go any
funher than this room.'
Polk:e are permitted 10 ensnare a
suspect inw a eonfeasion ~$1)ing
belt.~ the tnlth. On "Ni tline,"
Jc
Higginbotham, an l special agent who tel!Chea police officers about intenoptiona, says 10 a
class: "It's OK, under ecnain cit-

•

conditions and high temperatures

MICH.

iddle East peace

WAKE UP, DEAR...
IT'~

Tuesday, Sept. 28
Accu-Weather• forecast for

.

cumstances, to con the con, to tell a
lie, to overstate the strength of your .

case. u

That is why a defense lawyer I ·
know tells his clients, "No matter :
what they say 10 you, do not say a
word until I get there."
·
The confessions of the Tucson :
Four were not supported by any ·
physical evidence. When they tried : ·
to ~ecant their confessions,- the :
pollee were no longer listening.
'
Two and a half months after :
their ~onfessions, the four men :
were released because the police •
had come into possession of the :
actual murder weapon, and that Jed •
to two local teenagers who had :
committed the murders.
The sheriff at the tinie Tom :
Agnos, said he eould find ~o evi- :
dence that the Tucson Four's con- •
Cessions had been coerced: "This :
investigation 'procm!ed literally by :
the book."
·
Nat Hentorr is a nationally :
renowned authority on the First :
Amendment and the rest or the ·
Bill or RJaht&amp;
.

•

The Dally Sentlnei-PaAe-3

Clear, cool weather forecast for southern Ohio

OHIO Weather

Commentary
The D'aily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PA.

IND.

• IColumbusf 62" I

W. VA.

Ice

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
01993 Ac~u-Weather, lne.

Weather

nonheast on Wednesday. Lows 40South-Central Ohio
45.
Highs 55-60. Fair with a chance
.
Tonight, clearing and cool. Low
of
shower
nonh on Thursday. LOws
in the mid-40s. Tuesday, partly
35-40. Highs in the 50s. Fair on
sunny. High 60-65.
Friday. Lows 35-40. Highs in
Extended forecast:
upper 50s 10 mid-60s.
Wednesday Through Friday:
Fait with a chance of showers

Area deaths

By Tbe Associated Press
Temperatures will remain
around 10 degrees below normal
through Tuesday with afternoon
highs ranging from around 60 in
the north 10 tower 60s in the south.
Lows will also be cool, in the
lower 10 mid 40s statewide.
Tonight, skies will gradually
clear over southern Ohio. Most
locations were 10 get from around
one-quarter to one-half inch of
raiqfall before it ends early this
evening, except in the northeast
where the showers will continue
into Tuesday.
·
Early this !110111ing, rain moved
inw the southeastern and extreme
western counti~ and was 10 spread
over all of Ohio ioday.
Sides were cloady across Ohio

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical • Service
responded tQ 10 ealls for assistance
during the weekend. Urtits responding included:
Saturday - I: 32 p.m. Racine to
Stiversville Road for Ida Holter
who was transported to Veterans ·
Memorial Hospital ; 8:59 p.m.
Pomeroy. to Collins Road for
Annette Pierce who was transponed toVMH.
Sunday - 10:5&amp; a.m. Syracuse
to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center for Mary Kauff who
was transported to VMH; 12:54
p.m. Middleport to Sout11 Third
So:eet for Lori Lee who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
2:0&amp; p.m. Tuppers Plains to the
Tuppers Plains Fire Station for
Eddie Griffm who was transponed
to Camden-Clark Hospital; 3:46
·p.m Syracuse Squad and Fire
Department and Racine Squad to
~orning Star Road for a motor
vehicle accident involving Randy
Lee who was later transported to
Grant Medical Center via LifeFlight helicopter; 5:10 p.m.
Pomeroy to Brick Street for DeAngelo Thompson who was transported to VMH; 8:21 p,m. Middleport
to bverbrook Nursing Center for
Mildred Fowler who was transponed to VMH; 9:11 p.m. Racine to
ENTERTAIN~ENT- Area band Silver
Old Penland Road for Louis Smith
Wings was one of several bands providing enterwho was transponed to VMH:
tainment during tbe 1993 Racine Fall Festival
Monday-5:06a.m. Tuppers
held Saturday. Other entertainment included
Plains Squad and Rescue, Olive
One Way Street, Southern High Scbool CheerTownship Volunteer Fire Department to State Route 248 and Sand
Hill Road for a motor vehicle accident involving Mark Brosak· who
was transported to O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital.

Stocks

Hospital news

tures falling into the 50s from
Texas to Alabama.
The western half of the nation
was ex~ted 10 be hot and sunny
most of the day with near record
temperatures in the Pacific states.
The Midwest and Great Lakes
states were forecast to be be mosdy
cool with some showers around the
upper lakes.
"
Thunderstorms hit Atlanta this
morning and rain fell in parts of
Tennessee, Kentucky, Indianapolis,
Chicago and in Portland, Maine.
On Sunday, thunderstorms and
showers stretched from Texas
tlm&gt;ugh Louisiana 10 northern Virginia. Thunderstonn winds in Gurley , Ala ., knocked down utility

poles and 80 mph wind gusts at the
Laredo, Texas, airpon damaged
some property.
Winds reached 70 mph in
stonns east of Charlottesville, Va.
Showers also fell in Florida, Geor· .
gia and Maine. Dry weather pre- :
vailed across the rest of the nation.
Heat baked the Southwes~ West •
and parts of the South. WilmingiOn, '
N.C., equalled its record of 93 for
the date. San Luis Obispo, Calif.. :
set a record of 104.
The nation's high Sunday was :
108 at Palm Springs, Calif.
Today's highs were forecast in :
the 70s and 80s for most of the
nation, with some 90s in the West
and some 40s and 50s in the nonhero Great Lakes states.

EMS responds ·
to 10 calls

Bateman of Point Pleasant; and one
sister, Suzanne Piercy of Orlando,
Charles "Chuck" Ray Alkire, FL.
70, Racine, died Sunday, Sept. 26,
Service will be held Tuesday,
1993, in Hilton Head, S.C.
Se{ltember 28, at 2 p.m. at the
Born Feb. 14, 1923, in Har- Crow-Hussell Funeral Home with
risonville, soli of the late Felix Ray the Rev. Donald Johnson officiatand Lena Aletha Turner Alkire, he ing. Burial will follow in the
was a retired maintenance supervi- Suncrest Cemetery.
sor at the Gavin Plant in Cheshire.
Friends may call Monday after 6
An Anny Air Corps veteran of p.m:at the funeral home.
World Warn. he was a member of
In lieu of flowers, people may
the Racine American Legion, conlribute to an educational trust
Racine Masonic Lodge, Racine fund at the Peoples Bank, ' Point
Grange1 AEP Veterans Club and Pleasan!.
Aladdin Temple. He was also a
member of the Racine Bapt-ist Hazel E. Crabtree
Church. ·..
. .
HaZel E: Crabo:ee, 66, formerly
He is survived by his wife, of Po111eroy, died Friday, Sept. 27,
Dorothy Jean Carnahan Alkire; a 1993, in Good Samaritan Hospital,
son and daughter-in-law, Jeffrey Zanesville, after a brief illness.
and Nada Alkire of South Point; a
She was born in Whites Creek,
daughter and son-in-law, Jennifer W.Va., daughter of Arthur V.
Jan and Marvin Hill of Racine, and Fields of Whites Creek and the late
four "grandchildren, Jeannie and Hazel Wilson Fields. In addition,
Tricia Alkire and Andrew and she was the former owner and
Jcnni Hill.
operawr of City Restaurant in New
Also surviving is a brother and Lexington.
sister-in-law , Robert and F.rancis ,, ·She is surviYed by four grand- Police probe incident
Alkire of Harrisonville; sister and children, Valarie Bray of
A glass was broken out above
brothers-in-law, Virginia and Wal- Zanesville, Douglas Bray of New
the
front door.at Buttons and Bows,
ter Burke of Pomeroy, Lena and Lexington, Tina Donohoe of Com100
East Main SL, Pomeroy, someJames Hewitt of Columbus and ing and Jamie Bray of Hemlock
time
overnight S.unday. Pomeroy
Helen Pickens, and a half sister, and seven great-grandchildren.
Police
report that the incident
Coelle Campbell.
·
She was preceded in death by rem:lins under investigation.
He was preceded in death by a her husband, Hammie Crabtree,
Three accidents were investigathalf brother, Felix Alkire.
and a daughter, Diana Bray. •.
ed
by Pomeroy Police over the
Graveside services will he held
No services are planned. Mrs. weekend.
Wednesday at I p.m. in Green- Crabtree donated her remains to the
On Friday at 2:21 p.m. on East
wood Cemetery with the Rev. Ohio University College of OsteoCharles Norris officiating. Masonic · pathic Medicine for education and Main Street, a parked rental car
driven by June Slobodian of
graveside rites will also be held.
research.
Athens, was struck on the driver's
Friends may call Tuesday from
side
rear tail light area by a Meigs
.
6:30-8 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Eldon Van Meter
Local
School Dislrict van driven by
Home.
Eldon E. "Gene" Van Meter, 64, Eugene Hawkins. Hawkins was
In lieu of flowers, memorial
died Sunday, Sept. 26, backing from a parking place when
contributions may be made to the Granville,
1993, at Licking Memorial Hospi- he struck the Slob.odian vehicle.
American Heart Association in care
Newark.
There were on charges. The van
of Millie Midkiff, Box 586, tal,Born
May
8,
1929,
in
Orange
had no damage.
Pomeroy OH 45769.
Township 10 the late Earl and MyrHeavy damage was incurred to
tle
Young
Van
Meter,
he
was
a
two
vehicles in an accident at I :05
Rebecca Bateman
retired welder for Nonh American- p.m. Saturday on Second Street.
Rebecca (Becky) Bateman, 51, Rockwell of Columbus and attend- Police reported that Jackie Large,
of Point Pleasant, ·died Saturday, ed Tuppers Plains High School. An Jr. , 23, Pomeroy, was traveling
September 25, 1993 at Pleasant Army veteran of World War U, he west on Second St. in a 1985 Izusu
was a member of American Legion when ChriStopher Murphy, 21,
Valley Hospital.
. She worked as a secretary for Post 92, Utica.
Racine, driving a 1985 Toyota
Survivors include a wife, Donna owne-d by John Murphy, pulled
Shell Chemical Company at Apple
Grove, was a member of the Main Wolfe Van Meter; a son, William from the Eagles parking lot onto
Street Baptist Church, a 1959 E. Van Meier, Newark; a daughter Second and struck the Large vehigraduate of Point Pleasant High and son-in-law, Sandra and James cle.
.
Murphy was cited for failure to
School and a Marshall University Clary, Newark; a brother, Everett
Van Meter of Bremen; two sisters, yield, and Large was cited for no
graduate.
Zelda
Howard, Guysville, and insurance.
Born November 18, 1941 in GalMelva
Coen,
Athens.
The third accident occurred on
lipolis, she was a daughter of the
Also
surviving
are four grand- East Main at the Dairy Valley.
late Dee W. and Roma (Crooks)
children, three great-grandchildren David E. Jenkins, 44, of New
Rothgeb.
Haven, W. Va. driving a 1992
She is survived by two and sevetal nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by Chevrolet truck was making a left
daughters, Sonya Lynn Hem of
Huntington and Sandra Dee one grandson, three brothers and turn into the Dairy Valley when his
two sisters.
vehicle was struck by a 1989 Buick
Graveside services will be held driven by Dorothy Stone, 74, of
The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday a1 I p.m. in Chester Pomeroy. There was light damage
Cemetery with the Rev. Sharon to both vehicles.
(USPS Zl3·!16t)
Hausman officiating. Friends may
Published eYcty lf'lemooa. Monday through
Friday, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo by the· · .call at the McPeek Funeral Home
Ohlo Valley Pub\lshiDJ Compuy/Multimedja
in Granville Tuesday from 2-4 and
Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21!16.
7-9
p.m.
SeCond clau postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
.
Am Ele Power .. ................. 38 3/4
Member: The A11ocllltcd Preas, and the Ohio
Newspiper Aslodllioa, National AdvertiJiag
Ashland Oil... .....................33 3!8
Representative, BriUiham Newspaper Sales,
AT&amp;T ................................ 59 7/8
HOLZER
~EDICAL
CENTER
733 Third Aveauc, New York. New York
10017.
Bank One ................................ .41
Sept. 24 discharges - Sherrie
Bob Evans ................. ........ .l8 3/4
Might, Bonnie Coy, Mrs. Mark
POSTMASTER: Scad addrr£1 chuge~ to The
Charming
Shop ................... l2 3/4
Daily Sentinel. tU Court SL., Pomeroy, Ohio
Haner and son, Leda Kraeuter,
45769.
Champion
Ind .................. .. 13 3/4
Mrs . Bruce Fizer and daughter,
SUBSCRIYflON IIATES
C!:fc Holding ...................... 28 I/2
Bonnie Clemons, Andrew Jones,
a, Carl'la- or Molor RIKIIC
F eral M~ul ...................24 5!8
Darla Lynch, George Speakman
Ooc Weet .......... ,.......................................$1 .60
Goodyear &amp;R .................44 3!8
One Month ................................................$6,95
and Sharon Morley.
One Year.......................................... - .. S83.20
Lands End ........ .-................. 38 1/8
Sept. 25 discharges - James
.
SINGLE COPY
Limited Inc ....... .......................23
Allen, Lora ~ann, Mrs. Mikey
PRICE
Daily.........................................- -3S Cea!JI
Multimedia Inc . ................ .35 1/4
Graham and daughter, Roger AshPomt
. Bancorp ... .......... .............14
wonh
and
Renea
Boyd.
SubAerlben not dealrifll to pay the carrier may
remit in advance direct to The Daily Sentinel
Sept. 25 births - Mr. and Mrs. · Rax Restaurant ..................... 1/32
oo• thtee,1i1 or 12 moalh buil. Credll will be
Reliance Eloclric ................ 18 3!8
Barton, daster of Pomeroy, Mr.
given caniereach week.
Robbios&amp;Myers ...................... 19
adn
Mrs.
ny
Gi
.
lkey,
son,
of
No subacripllona by mall permined In •cu
Shoney'
s Inc ......................22 1/8
Pomeroy
and
.
and
Mrs.
Johnnie
where home carrier lei'Vicc ilavaUable.
Star
Bank
................................ .36
McCloud,
son,
of
New
Haven.
MoiiS.IoomotlOftl
Wendy
lnt'J.
............................. l5
Sept.
26
discharges
Elizabeth
IJuid.e Melp tocintr
13 Weeb ...•.....•..••.... ...................... ........$21 .84
WonhingiOn Ind. ...............28 3/4
Trainer
and
Mrs. Harry Barton and
26 Wt&lt;lcl.........•.....•.............................••..$-13.16
daughter;
Stock reports are the 10:30
l2 Wccb•............................................... .$84.76
a.m. quotes provided by Advest
Oui.W. Mol.. COUftty
Sept. Ui births - Mr. and Mrs.
13 Wt&lt;lcl ..............................•.................. $23.40
of Gallipolis.
Mitchell
Costilow,
son,
of
Jackson
26 Waekll......... ................................$45.50
and Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Hensley,
52 WHI&lt;S.•....•..•...... ...........•.•......•..•.$88.40
son, of Oak Hill.
·.

Charles Alkire

overnight with early morning tem·
peratures ranging from the upper
40s to lower SOs.
Record ~ tempemturc for this
date was 90 m 1946; recool low 32
in 1947.
Sunrise Tuesday at 7:25 a.m.,
sunset at 7:19 p.m.
Around the ution
Rain and winds battered much
of the East and parts of the Midwest early today while skies over
most of the West were fair.
Strong thunderstorms were foreeast 10 stretch from New York to
the Carolinas by tonight. Cooler
less humid air was expected t~
move across the Gulf Coast states
into the Southeast, with_t~mpera-

leaders; C.J. and the Country Gentlemen,
Southern Junior High Che~rleaders, Out of the
Blue, Born Again Believers, ~iddlebranch Bluegrass and River VaUey Boys.

U. S. claims U. S. Korean War
prisoners were taken to USSR
I

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
U.S. government says it has
"broad and convincing" evidence
· that the Soviet Union secretly and
illegally moved hundreds of U.S.
Korean War prisoners 10 its territory in the early 1950s and never
released them.
It is by far the most dramatic
and comprehensive assertion by
Washin~on on a Soviet connection
to missmg U.S . servicemen since
the Korean fighting ended in 1953.
The allegation was ·made in a

Livestock report
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Direct livestock prices and receipts
at selected buying points Monday
by the Ohio Department of Agriculture:
Barrows and gilts: mostly 1.00
lower; demand light.
U.S. 1-3, 230-260 lbs., country
points 44.50-45.50; plants 46.2547.25, a few 47.75.
Sorted U.S. 1-2, 230-260 lbs.,
country points 45.50-46.50.
Receipts Friday 10,300. Estimated receipts Monday &amp;,500.
Prices from The Producers Livestock Association:
Cattle: 50 cents to 2.00 lower.
Slaughter steers: choice 65.0073.75; select 60.00-69.00.
Slaughter heifers: choice 64.0072.75; select 57.00-67.50.
Cows: steady 10 2.00 lower; all
cows 57.50 and down.
Bulls: steady to 2.00 lower; all
bulls 66.00 and down.
Sheep and lambs: steady to 4.00
lower; choice wools 59.00-67.00;
choice. clips 56.00-68.00; feeder
lambs 72.00 and down; aged sheep
30.00 and down.
,

Meigs announcements

Board to meet
The Eastern Local Board of
Education will meet in special session Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at the
high school. Purchase of the meeting will be to discuss personnel and
other othe•matters.
Community education
The Meigs Local Community
Education Committee will meet at
7 p.m Tu~sday at the Meigs County
Publtc Ltbrary, West Main Slreet,
Pomeroy. The public is invited.
DAR to meet
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughter of the American Revolu·
tion, will meet for a luncheon at the
home of Rae Reynolds Saturday.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
· Saturday admissions - None.
Saturday discharges - Helen
Jeffers, Syracuse.
Sunday admissions- None.
Sunday discharges- None.

detailed presentation by a senior such transfers. Washington has
State Department official at a meet- · known, though, since the end of the
ing with Russian officials in war that some evidence existed that
Moscow earlier this month.
U.S. POWs from Korea had been
The evidence is detailed in a 77- taken to the Soviet Union. It asked
page repon titled "The Transfer of Moscow for information on this in
U.S. Korean War POWs to the May 1?54 and again in July 1956.
Soviet Union." It was given to the Both Urnes the Soviet government
Russians at the Moscow meeting denied any knowledge of U.S.
but the Clinton administration has POW son its soil. ·
Russian President Boris Yeltsin
refused to publicly release il
A copy of the report was said last year that Soviet records
showed 59 captured U.S. serviceoblained by The Associated Press.
"The Soviets transferred several men in Korea were interrogated by
hundred U.S. Korean War POWs Soviet officials, and that 12 crew
to the USSR and did not repalriate members of U.S. aircraft shot down
them ," the report said. "This in reconnaissance missions unrelat&lt;ransfer was mainly politically ed to the Korean war ·were transmotivated with the intent of hold- ferred to Soviet territory. But the
ing them as political hostages, sub- Ycltsin government has yet to conjects for intelligence exploitation cede that Americans were taken
aild skilled labor within the camp from KQrca.
In the three years of fighting in
system.''
It asserted that the evidence Korea, in which the United States
gave a "consistent and mutually led a U.N. force on the side of
reinforcing description" of Soviet South Korea against communis!
intelligence services forc ibly mov- North Korea, 54,246 Americans
ing U.S. POWs to the USSR at a were killed. The government lists
lime when Soviet forces, including 8,140 as unaccounted for, although
anti-aircraft units, were active in .ahe number of missing for which
North Korea.
there is no direct evidence of death
It did not assess how long the is estimated at 2,195.
American servicemen - mostly
Air Force aviators - may have
lived, or whether any might still be
alive in the former Soviet Union.
Just last year the U.S. government said it had no evidence of

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Ill Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
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SINCE 1868

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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28TH, 2:30 PM74:30 PM

. FRUTH PHARMACY

786 N. Secolll Ave. • Mlchleport, Oltio

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Peg• 4 The Deily Sentinel

Monday, September 27, 1993

River Valley downs Warren ·
Local14-7 for second victory

Wallace closes in on Earnhardt

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
TribuM Stlllf Writer
Wam:o Local had the last word
on end-zone visits. River Valley
had the last word on defense ,
Guess who won.
If you guessed River Valley in
Saturday night's gridiron battle at
Vincent, give yourself crediJ. The
Raiders's 14-7 victory - it marked
the rllSI time lhat Jack James' silver-and-black crew won two
straight games. made it !0 the .sao
mark before the season s halfway
point and defeated a Southeastern
Ohio Athle.t it League team - was
earned by denying AI Riffey's
Warriors the end zone in the second half, desJ: the fact that the
hosts started
p in their own ter•
ritory and pushed deep into Raider
country on their last drive of the
game.
"I got two run11ing biiCks with
over I00 yards," said James of his
most effective backfield members,
senior fullback Adam Denney and
junior hallbaclc Jason Jenkins, who
combined for 234 yards.
The Raiders were seven seconds
shy of using up half of the first
quarter to run a 13-play, 66-yard
drive that ended with senior quarterback Paul Covey's four-yard
touchdown run on a sweep to the
left side. His two-point conversion
pass to Denney was caught, giving
River Valley an 8-0 lead.
A pair of three-and-out series by
the Warriors that covered a !Dial of
17 yards sandwiched a Raider fumble that was committed by junior
halfback Abe Haislop and recovered by Warrior defensive end Seth
Eddleblute near midfield.
However, the exit Qf Warrior
running back Eric Reeder following his 11-yard run in his team's
second series of the game - Riffey
said he had some initial numbness
in his neck, but at St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, he wasn't
. found to have sustained any serious
injury, though the senior is expect-

ed to see a spec181ist Tuesday - · and we had only three defensive
may have hurt the Warriors in the backs," said Campbell shortly after
last quarter,
the game. "We were more or less
The Raiders' next drive, a four· vulnerable, but when they were in a
play march covering 85 yards, was hook-and-curl, he (Graber) looked
more fruitful, Jenkins followed up where he threw it Anybody can get
on senior fullback Mike Coole's those."
seven-yard, rllSI down-gaining run Quarter totals
by cutting off left guard, turning River Valley ... ;.... l4 0 0 0 = 14
right toward the Raiders' sideline warren Locat ........o 1 o o= 1
and outrunning the Warren defenders f(JJ' a visit 10 the north end zone Scoring summary ·
from 59 yards out. Covey's twopoint conversion run was short of
River Valley: Covey 4-yd. run
the mark, and the Gallians settled (Covey
for a 14-0 lead in the last minute of 1st qtr. 2-pt pass to Denney), 6:07
the fiJ'St frame:
River Valley: Jenkins 59-yd. run
Warren had another three-and- (2-pt run failed), :47 1st qtr.
out series that straddled the first
Warren : Tullius 2-yd. run
and second quarters, but after the (Pinlcerton Ieick), 4:50 2nd qtr.
Raiders lost the ball on downs at
Warren's 37-yard line, the War- Statistics
riors went to work.
·
RV
WL
It took the hosts 3;21 to cover Department
First
downs
....................
16
9
63 yards in nine plays, with junior
Total
yards
..................
400
245
halfback Charlie Tullius charging
into the north end zone from two Rushing att.-yds..... 51-367 32-168
75
yards out with 4:50 left before half- Passing yards .... ............33
Comp.-atL
....................
3-7
4-12
time. Brian Pinkerton's extra-point
0
kick was good to create what be- Interceptions thrown .......0
Fumbles-lost
.........
:
......
4-1
1-0
came the ruu11 score.
Penalties-yards.......... .5-55
6-40
From then on, River Valley's Punting
.......................
l-34
6-210
defense too1c over, as shown by the
fact lhat Warren only crossed midfield once after afler Tullius' score. Statistical leaders
But the Raiders showed some vulR.iver VaHey Raiders
nerability to the pass on the WarRushing- Denney 21-130;
riors' ruutl possession of the night,
when junior quarterback Heath Jenkins 10-104, 1 TO; Covey 6-68,
Graber threw seven of his 12 pass- I TOi Haislop 8-37; Cook 6-28.
es during the drive. Three of them
Passing - Covey 3-7, 31 yds.
- two to tight end Shane Perdue
Receiving- T. Campbell 2-30;
and one to Joe Greenwalt - made Denney 1·3, 2-pL conv;
the marie.
Fumble recoveries - none
But a pass-interference call
Warren Local Warriors
against the Raiders on the guests'
Rushing - TuUius 6-31, 1 TO;
31 and a pair of short runs that got
Warren to the Raiders' 12, Frye 11-22; Graber 8-18; Reeder IGraber's fourth-and-seven pass to ll .
Passing....:.. Graber 4-12, 75 yds.
the end zone was thrown in an area
Receiving - Perdue 2-22;
where Raider defensive end Tim
Campbell was, and Campbell Pinkerton 1-42; Greenwalt 1-11.
Fumble recoveries - Eddlekno.clced it to the ground .
blute(l)
"We put another linebacker in,

Blue Jays, White Sox clinch
ties for division crowns
By The Associated Press
This could be a big night for
celebrations in the American

loss to the Yankees in Toronto's
final home game of the season.
Toronto, seeking its third conLeague.
secutive AL East title and fourth in
The Toronto Blue Jays and five years, plays at Milwaukee
Chicago White Sox clinched ties tonight, and Molitor will have a
for their division tides Sunday and chance to clinch in front of his forcould win outright tonight All they mer Brewers teammates.
need are victories by themselves or
Chicago clinched a tie by beatlosses by their closest pursuers.
ing Texas 5-3 in the opener of a
"When we got to this stage, we doubleheade.", then lost 3-2 in the
certainly hopetl to do it in front of second game.
the hometown crowd and have a
The White Sox are home against
party in the Sky Dome," Paul Moli- Seattle tonight, while lhe Rangers
tor of the Blue Jays said after a 7-3 play next on Tuesday ni~ht at Oalc-

land.
Jim Leyritz hit a three-run
homer in the fust off Todd Stottlemyre (11-11) at Toronto, and Jim
Abbott (11 -13) allowed three runs
and six hits in 7 1-3 innings as the
Blue Jays lost for just the second
time in 14 games.
In other games, the Royals beat
the Angels 9-8, the A's beat the
mariners 3-2, theTigers downed
Baltimore twice, 9-4 and 6-5 while
the Twins defeated the Red Sox 5-2
and the Indians topped the Brewers, 6-4.

Braves win tOOth; Giants keep pace
By The Associated ~es~ · .
Most seasons, 100 v1ctones ts
plenty to finish in rust place. The
Atlanta Braves still need a few
more wins, tho11gh.
.
J ff Blauser's two run smgle

started a four-run seventh inning to with Atlanta by beating visiting
snap a tie and Atlanta went on to San Diego 5-2 behind Billy Swift's
beat Philadelphia 7-2 Sunday at 20th victory to stay I 1/2 games
Veterans Stadium, improving to behind the Braves and one in the
loss column.
100-56.
"I thought in the low 90s would
San F
· (98 57) k •t •ac
win it," Braves manager Bobby
Cox said. "Cincinnati was a choice
in the spring but they had a lot of
injuries. And San Diego traded off
Dcuoil (KNoecr S.3) atltOIUift (Sele 6i&amp;s roster.''
2), HSp.m.
Despite the loss, the Phillies'
California (Finlell5·13) at Minne~Gta
(Btnkl 10.11), 8:0 f.m
.
magic number for clinching the NL
Seaule (Flcmincl ..4) al aucaao (Al East title was reduced to three as
varu 14-8), ! :OS p.m.
Tororao &lt;Heat~«~ li-S) at Milwallkee
second-place Montreal lost at New
(EidRd 16-!S), r,(l'j p.m.
York.
.
Cleveland (Ojeda 2-1) at ICa.nlu City
Steve
Avery
(17-6)
pitched six
(Gonion 11-6), s,:u pm.
Only- ochodulod
innings for Atlanta, allowing four
hits and two runs as the Braves
improved to 27 •7 this season when
How top 25 fared
By The "'-loltd p..,
he starts.
How the top 25 \OliN in me Auoc:iatWith the score 2-2, pinch-hitter
ed Preu' collesc foocball poll fared lhi•
Deion Sanders opened the seventh
1. Florida Stu (4--0) did not play.
with a walk and advanced to secNmtt: VL OearJia Tech. Satwday.
2. Altbtmt (4-0) bet1 LouUW.. Toch
ond on a wild pitch by Curt
56-3. No.u: 11 Soulll Cuvlint, Stwtdty.
Schilling ( 15-7). Otis Nixon then
3. MitnU (3-0) belL No. 13 C.kndo
beat out a bunt, with Sanders tak.
:ll-2'1. NllliL' ,Oooqia Soulhom, Stwrdty.
4. N"'" DtmO (4-0) bell 1'11111110 17·
ing third. Nixon siOle second with0. Nm.t: II No. 17 S&amp;aaford, Sltw'day.
out
a throw and Blauser hit a 3-2
!5. florida (3.0) did oot pby. Neat.: Yl.
MiiCaloo! s~.., slllllllty.
pitch for a lie-breaking single.
6. N'dwuka (4-CJ) but Colon.do Suto
At Candlestick Park, Swift
41-11 Nut: It Oklahoma SLate. Oct.. 7.
7. a:aio St1to (3-0) did ncK play. Na1:
became the Giants· second 20VL NOdhwecan. S.tuniay.
game winner this season and Barry
I . Micbipn (2·1) bctL Houllon 4221 . Ncun:va.loWI, Sawnky.
Bonds hit his fourth home run in
9 . Penn Stae (4-0) beat Rutaen 31 -7.
three games.
Next: a&amp; Mayland. Saw.rday.

Scoreboard

.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
luiDI•Ioloo
WLPCI.GB
Philldclp(Uo

M....,.}

61 .606
.574 l
.......... 14 71
.542
I0
......... 10 76 .513 14112
......... n 13 .465 22
.......... 63 92 ,4()6
31
....... , .

.........

Sc LouU
Chicqo

~'~•ubu&gt;Jh

Florida
New YcG

19

66

....... 53 102

.342

41

Will Dlwlalon
WLPCI.GB

AllanUI
...•......100 56
s.n Francil&lt;:o ...... 98 l7

HouoiM

Loo Anpla
Cincinnlti
Col""'do

.641

.632 I 112
II 7S .519 19
79 76 .510 20112
71 16 .4S2 29112
66 91 .420 34112

.........
......
.........
........
........ 59 97

San ~o
.371
SundayJCIIMI
PitllburJh S, Chica&amp;o 1, la same

41

Pii""'"'I,Chi:r;
·" 0,2nd&amp;une
Atlanta?, Philt

. 2

Sl LouiiiO, fl .

7

New Y..k 9, Mmual3
coton.to 12, CinciMiu 1

HOUIIM S, Lol Anselm 4
San Fn.ndlc:o S, San Dieao 2
Mondl1 11 G•a
Phil.ldclphit (Mike Willi.arna 1-2) n
Pill•bwtill (Coote 10.9), Hl_p.m.
Moauul (Paucro 124) uAarid•
(R.&gt;pp 3-S), HS pm.
SL l...wU (Tewksbury 17-10) at New

Yolk (femondcz 4-6), 7,40 pm.
Chieta,o (B.Iutiii.I 9-3) M Lot AntelCI

(Henhda 12·12),10,35 p.m.
San Oiet.o (Baa 15-14) 1l SuFnncilco(Bwlca. ~7). 10:3S p.m.
0nJY gantel IChcduJcd

10. a.Johomt (].0) belL Tul11 41·20.
Next: allowt Stile, Saturday.
11. T.....,oo (].I) bell LSU 42-20.
Next: Yl. Duke,. Saturday.
12. Syracuse (3-0.1) belt Cincinnsti
24-21. Nul: n 801ton CoUcae. Satur·

AMERICAN LEAGIJE
Eul DIYiaioft

W L

y-Tomuo

........ 90 6!1

New Yom

....... 14 72

........ 12 73
Bahimcn
........... II 74
Dcuoil
.......... 79 76
u......

CI...W.d
Milwtukec

II
...... 66 90

Ctlifomia
Minneo&lt;U

Otlllond

.523 9
.510 II
.411 15112
.423 2AII2

13. Colondo (2·2) loll10 No. 3 Mit·
ml3S.29. N"'" YJ, Miloowl, 01:1. 9, St1·
uodoy.
14. TC:..u AAM (2· 1) did not plty.

Ne.u: M Tuu'Tod\, Sawrday.
IS. Aril.ant (4-0) boat Orqon State
33-0. Ntu.t: va. Southern Cal, Saturday.
16. WuhiJialaL (2-1) bot1 Eul Ctrolina 35-0. Neat: ·VI. San Joac

....... 19 66
12 73

17. Slllllonl (2-2) 1001 10 U&lt;l.A 2125. Nc1.l: vt. No. 4 NotJc Dame, Sa1\&amp;r·
day.
II. Norlll Ct..un. (4-1) bot1 No. 19
Nonh Carolina S\aiO 35-1&lt;4. N11.1: va.
Toua·Pl Puo, Satwday.
19. NOIIh Cuvlint S1110 (2.1) loo11o
No. II Nonh C.101int 35·14. Nox1: 11

. ..... 10 76
.......... 71 77

·""'" 69
...... 66
.. ~ ..... 66

.574
.529

-

y-clinchcd tie for diYilion Iillo

Tex• 3, OUca:ao 2. 2nd aamc
I&gt;euGb 9,8ahimcn4,lllpnc
DeaDit 6, Blldrnc. S, 2nd aunc
-..,s,~~o~~a~2

Clowlud 6, Milwtukoo4
Now Yodt 7, TOI'OIIIO 3

Ci,,.

::autt.mi.ll, I 0 inninp

O&amp;k.llnd 3......ctlo 2; 12 u.un.

G••

1

.513 9 112
.503 II
86 .&lt;14S 20
19 .426 23
19 .426 23

sundaJ'• c.....
Chicqo5, Tewl,ll\.....,

K~n~~~

dty.

WatDI\'W.
' WLPd.GB

y-Chicaao

S..lllo

GB

.lSI
.llS 6 112
.529
I

........ 75

r.... .. .. .
.wGly

Pd.

.....,,

Mond•1'1
Now Y..k (l(unieniocli 9-7) 11 Bolti·
m~n(S...tlll'o9-9~ 7,35 p.m.

uodoy.

S~

Slt-

'

Ciant.... s.-y.
.
20." C.UforNa (4-0) beat San Io•c

Ssato4-13. Nat: vi. Ofoo&amp;on, Saomlly.
21. Bri&amp;h•m Youna (4·0) botl Alt
Force 30-3. No.r.t: at UCLA, OcL 9.
22. Vltttlnit (4·0) ~· . Dulle 35.0.
Next; VI. Ctio tJ,, ~llunlly.
23. Wlooonoin (4-0) booL IA&lt;Uant 21·

15.Noll,... - - O e l . 9 .
:M. Lou1l\'ll1o (4-0) beol Tuu 41·10.

NMt: a\ Plalbwah.

25......... (4-0) " " ' - Mjo.

oi.otipp13S.:I4. N""' II VtndodoiiL

U. S. wins Ryder Cup

SUTfON COLDFIELD, England (AP) - The inexorable
momentum that earried the United
States to a Ryder Cup triumph was
started when captain Tom Watson
went to his bench for a couple of
pinch hitters.
Three points down to Europe
and with his team's chances looking poor, Watson called on Chip
Beck and John Cook to tum the
tide in fourball play on Saturday.
''It all stems from Chip and
John winning lhat fourball match,"
Watson said Sunday after his team
had rolled to a 15-13 vic10ry that
kept the 27-inch trophy in Ameri·can hllnds for another two years.
It takes nothing away from the
Sunday heroics; 51-year-old Ray
Floyd grinding .away as only he
can, the critical comeback win by
Davis Love· III, Jim Gallagher's
singles victory over Seve Ballesteros, Beck's rally from 3-down
with rave holes to play.

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP) Eighty-two point.s and counting.
That's the difference between

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

leader Dale Earnhardt and pursuer Goody's 500, the second straight
Kusty Wallace in the WinsiOn Cup disastrous race for five-time cham·
point chase following Sunday' s pion Earnhardt.
Ernie lrvan gave Robert Yates
Racing its rust win since the late
Davey Allison went to Victory
Lane at Richmond, Va., on March
7, but even lrvan's dominating and
emotional
triumph couldn't steal
Anderson-49 and Jerod Cook 50.
the
spotlight
from the suddenly
Southern's good team effort was
tense
point
battle.
led by .Mike McKelvey' s 39, folEarnhardt has led this season by
lowed by Andy Fields-40, Jason
as
many as 309 points and came
Shuler-41, Andy Grueser-42, Jereinto
the 500-lap ev~nt on M~r­
my Northup-43 and Ryan
tinsville
Speedway s .526-mtle
Williams-45.
oval
leading
Wallace by a still
In dual match action this week,
daunting
181.
Meigs dropped its match with GalBut a broken rear end gear 60
lipolis ·at Cliffside 164-172. Eric
laps
from the end sent Earnhardt
Roderick of Gallipolis was medalre
eling
to 29th place, his second
ist with an even par round of 36.
.
,
\raighJ
early finish and only the
Meigs scorers were Adam
third
time
in 25 races this season he
Krawsczyn and Benny Ewing with
has
not
been
running at the check·
42's, Reggie Pratt-43, Jason Hart45, Brad Anderson-48 and Jerod cred flag.
"The problems I had early (in
Cook-51.
·
the
season) he's having now,"
At Hidden Valley, the Maraud·
Wallace
said. "It's getting us nip
crs tied a course record for a high
and
tuck
right
down 10 tlie line, ·
school team with an outstanding
round of IS2, that equals an earlier
round shot by Parkersburg South.
Match medalist was Adam
Krawsczyn who rued a tWO under
MASON, W.Va.- Middlepar round of 34. Ben Ewing fued a port' s Don Wilson has taken an
round of 38, Reggie Pratt-39, Jason almost unbeatable lead in the 1993
Hart-41 and Bmd Anderson -43.
Riversid'e Men's Senior Golf
The Meigs golf team's record League with a big day in this
now stands at 74 wins and 14 loss- week's action, taking a 10 1/2es.
point lead of 156 to 145.5 over runner-up Dana Winebrenner of Syt'3TVC standings
cuse.
· (Six-match totals)
Just behind Winebrenner is the
Meigs -43 piS
1992 champion, Jim Wikoff of
Alexander -' 40 pts
Shade, with 144 points.
Southern- 38 pts
Tuesday's low score was turned
Belpre- 32 pts
in by the team of Don Wilson ,
Wells10n - 21 pts
Harold Lohse of Pomeroy, Harold
Trimble -18 pts
Clark of Ravenswood and Pete
NelsonviUe- 16 pts
Grinstead of New Haven. The team
Vinton County - 4 pts
shot an eight under par 62 for the
Federtal Hocking - 4 pts
day for Low Honors. The Closestto-the-Pin honors went to John Fer-

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Meigs golfers back on top
in TVC after two victories

STOPPED ON THE ONE • Seattle defender
Kevin Murphy (98) stops Cincinnati -Bengals
running back Harold Green at the goal line late

in the fourth quarter in Cincinnati Sunday • .
Green rumbled on the play, with Seattle recovering. The Seahawks won, 19-10.

Kickers in NFL spotlight;
Browns, Bengals are beaten
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
AP Sports Writer
In pro football , the operative
word is "fooL"
There were game-winning field
goals Sunday and long field goals,
but there. weren't too many missed
field goals.
And that seems to be the trend
this season, with kickers converting
163 Yield goals in 202 attempts.
The Jeague-wide accuracy rate of
81 percent is up from last year's 73
percent.
There have been almost as many
field goals as touchdowns - 163
to 178. That too is a big change
from last year. when the ratio was
561 FGs to 958 tus.
The game-winners:
- Morten Andersen made a 49yarder with 5 seconds left, giving
the New Orleans Saints a 16-13
victory over the San Francisco
49ers.
- Fuad Reveiz made a 22yarder with 6 seconds left in Minnesota's 15-13 decision over Green
Bay.
The long ones:
- Steve Christie of Buffalo
kicked a 59-yarder, the thirdlongest in NFL history, in Buffalo's 22-13 loss to Miami. "When
you've got the wind, you've got the
confidence to say: 'Oh, why not,"'
he said.
- Oreg Davis of Phoenix connected from 54 yards in the Cardinals' 26-20 loss to Detroit
Tonight, Pittsburgh plays at
Atlanta.
Denver, Kansas City, the Los
Angeles Raiders, San Diego, Dallas, the New York Giants, Philadelphia and Washington had the
weekend off.
Colts 23, Browns 10
At Indianapolis, the Colts (2-1)
kept Cleveland (3-I) from becoming the league's second 4-0 team.
Vinny Testaverde came off the
bench again to attempt a fourth·
quarter comeback. Unlike last
week, he dido 't succeed . Testa verde threw an interception and
fumbled in the end zone on Cleveland's last two chances.
Jack Trudeau led the Colts on a
65-yard drive ending in a 6-yard
TD run by Anthony Johnson to
make it 16-10 with 3:14 left Jeff
Herrod fell on Testaverde's fumble
in the end zone for the final touchdown wilh 1:19 to go, ..

By SCOIT WOLFE
Correspondent
After suffering a 9-15 setback in
1he first set, Eastern came back 10
defeat Federal Hocking 15-9 and
15-5 in consecutive sets to claim a
'fri-Valley Conference volleyball
match Thursday night.
Eastern boosts its record to 3-9
overall and 2-5 in the conference.
Senior setter/server Jaime Wilson led the Eagles with a 15-16
. serving night, three aces and I 0
points. Sophomore Jessica Karr
-was 12-14 with two aces and eight
points; freshman Patsy Aeil&lt;er was
11-12, two aces and six points;
senior Penny Aeiker, 8-11, one ace
and six points; and Jessica Radford,
8-8, one ace and three points.
Shelly,Hendricks was also perfect with a 4-4 night, one aee and
·: three points. Eastern had ten aces
: on the night. Kathy_ ~emard added
· · two points. a 5-8 spiking mght, two
· kills and two blocks, while Wendy

.»• •

j

• A_NOTHE.R SACk • lnd~napolls Colts tackle Jon Hood goes
h1.gh 10 the a1r to av~ld .hitbng sacked Cleveland quarterback
Vmn:r Testaverde durmg fourth quarter action in the Indianapolis
Hnn&lt;••• nome Sunday. The Browns lost, 23-10. (AP)
Sea hawks 19, Bengals lU
At Cincinnati, Harold Green of
the Bengals (0-4) fumbled in his
own end zone with 4:26 left and
Rod Stephens pounced on it for a
touchdown, giving Seattle (2-2) the
deciding points.

In other NFL results it was the
Saints 16, 49ers 13, Vikings 15;
Packers 13, Dolphins 22, Bills 13,
Lions 26, Cardinals 20, Rams 28
Oilers 13, Bears 47, Buccaneers ri
and Jets 45, Patriots 7.

..

they were No. 24 last October.
Alabama received four firstThe Mountaineers face tougher place votes and I ,482 points after
opponentS ahead. This week, they crushing Louisiana Tech 56-3 .
host Virginia Tech ; which beat
Miami beat Colorado 35 -29,
Maryland 55-28 last week, fol - Notre Dame shut out Purdue 17-0,
lowed by No. 18 Louisville, Pitts- Nebraslca clobbered Colomdo State
burgh and No. 13 Syracuse.
48-13, Michigan defeated Houston
Meanwhile, Stanford, 17th last · 42-21, Penn State routed Rutgers
week, fell out of the poll after los- 31 -7~ and Oklahoma downed Tulsa
ing to UCLA 28-25 . Stanford, 41-20.
which lost its season-opener to
Florida and Ohio State did not
Washington, is 2-2.
play.
Florida State, which has been
Tennessee is lith, followed by
No. I since the start of the season, Arizona, Syracuse, Texas A&amp;M ·
remained on top of·the media poll Washington, North Carolina, Ca~ :
with 58 rust-place votes and 1,545 fornia, Louisville, Colorado, BYU,
points. The Seminoles had the Virginia, Wisconsin , Auburn ·
weekend off.
North Carolina State and West Vir:
The rest of the Top I 0 also ginia.
stayed the same, with No. 2 AlabaColorado fell six spots to No.
ma followed by Miami, Notre 19, and N.C. State dropped fiv~
Dame, Florida, Nebraska, Ohio
to No. 24 after losi~g to
State, Michigan, Penn State and notches
Nonh Caro~na 35-14,
Oklahoma.

T.P. ANGELS - The Free Country Band·
T.P .. Angels softball team placed second In the
Big Bend league tournament and fourth in overall league play. Pictured are (front row, L-R)
Lisa Steihem, Michele Caldwell, Heather Well,
Amanda Gaspers , Laura Brown and Jeannie

Newell. In the back row are Traci Heines, Mar.
tie Holter, Amanda Millhoan·, Rebecca Evans,
Crystal Morris, Tracy White and Kristi Warner. Absent was Joanna Gumpf. Coaches were
Jill Holler, Larry Heines and Teresa Evans.

Wilson's Riverside Men's Senior Golf League lead boosted
guson on number seven, while Jim
Capehart took the honors on fourteen.
The highlight of the day came as
87-year young, Pete Grinstead
recorded a hole-in-one from lhe
red tee,on number nine. Pete used
his "trusty wood" shot and a couple
of hard bounces and a roll 10 record
his second career ace. The shot also
secured the victory for Grinstead's
team for the day. It's good that this
could happen since Pete has been
taking a lot of ribbing about the
Cincinnati Reds this year.
Chuclcie Lester made it back to
action after an absence last week.
Club spol!;esmen said Lester had
to "tend to domestic chores," but
Luther Tucker said that "was a lie,

because his wife actually pays the
other Jackson County Golfers to
pick him up and get his can out of
her sight"
Clark Greene of Hurricane came
back to play after pursuing a parttime job in the province of British
Columbia in Canada. Lester said it
was good that the Canadians needed a man of his abilities and wished
he could go back and stay.
Next week is the grand finale
with the big senior "Fun Day" on
tap. The seniors will play their regular IS-hole match with a possible
well-lcnown sports analist filmin g
play.
Following the day's play, the
seniors will have their annual picnic at the shelter with a closest to

the pin contest. This will be followed by the awards ceremony and
special prizes to be given ·away to
outstanding senior players for
1993.
All players who have taken part
in play this season are invited, even
if they have been absent for a few
weeks.
The top 20 golfers are the following: Don Wilson, Dana Winebrenner, Jim Wil&lt;off, Harold Clarlc,
Earl. Johnson, Milt Maxwell, Bill
Hannum, Harold Lohse, Luther
Tucker, Chuckie Lester, Bill .Winebrenner, Clark Greene, George
Burns, Lew Gilland, Keith Woods,
Elmer Click, Bill Howard, Carroll
Norris; John Ferguson and Ralph
Sayre.

Eastern varsity spikers
down Federal Hocking
Sentin~l

West Virginia jumps to 25th in AP ratings
CHARLESTON , W.Va. (AP)
- West Virginia coach Don
Nehlen hopes that brealcing into
The Associated Press' Top 25 poll
is only the beginning. His longrange goal: an undefeated season
for his Mountaineers.
Gratified that his Mountaineers
made the ranlcings for the rust time
in nearly a year on Sunday, Nehlen
said he was more interested in
keeping the 'Mountaineers' record
unbeaten.
Ranked No. 25, they're 3-0 so
far after Saturday's 35 -3 victory
over Missouri.
"We are happy to be ranked,
and it's a credit to our players and
program," Nehlen sa1d Sunday.
"(But) we have goals for ourselves, and we must keep striving
to reach lhem."
The Mountaineers are in the
rankings for the first time since

The Meigs golf team's two vic·
tories in TVC tournaments last
week, coupled with two Southern
second-place victories, has vaulted
the Marauders into fiJ'St place in the
Tri-Valley Conference standings.
On Sept. 20, the Meigs team
won the league match at the Meigs
Golf Club with a team score of
150. Southern placed second just
four shots back at 154, followed by
Alexander-! 56, Wellston-165 ,
Trimble- 167, Belpre-168, Nelsonville-York-171, Vinton-206,
and Federal Hocking with a 214.
Adam Krawsczyn was the
match tri-medallst tying Burt Leach
of WeUston and Jonathan Kaiser of
Trimble with a two over par 36.
Marauder senior Jason Hart fued a
37, Brad Anderson a 38, Reggie
Pratt a 39, Ben Ewing had a 42 and
Jcrod Coole a 43. Southern scorers
were Mike McKelevy and Andy
Fields with 38's, Jeremy Northup
and Jason Shuler had 39's, Ryan
Williams a 42 and Brain Anderson
a49.
In the week's second conference
tournament at the Franlclin Valley
Course ncar Jackson , the Meigs
golf team placed first in an
extremely Close match. Meigs shot
a I61 , Southern 162, Alexander
163, Wellston 167, Belpre 172,
Nelsonville-York 173, Trimble
174, Vinton 182 and Federal Hocking 230. Match medalist was Jeremy Ward of Vinton County with a
round of 35. Meigs players recorded rounds of 38's by Adam
Krawsczyn and Jason Hart, Ben
Ewing 41, Reggie Pratt 44, Brad

Rach was 5-6 spiking, had two
kills, three blocks and one point
Penny Aeiker added a 7-8 spil&lt;ing night to already fine -credentials, while posting two kills. Sister
Patsy had a 4-9 front line night
with a kill and a block, while Karr
was 5-7 with two kills. Eastern had
six blocks and 10 kills on the night.
Federal Hocking was led by
Martese Barnes with nine points,
Anna Barnes with seven, Holly
Rader six, Amanda Beasly three,
Carrie Runser two, Alison Pierson
one and Jennifer Pullins one.
Eastern coach Don Jackson said,
"Superstitious. That's a word that's
plagued us all year. Every time I
say something good about the team
in a certain area, we do poorly in
that category the next time out. We
made a good comeback and played
a good all around game."
Eastern hosts Vinton County
Monday at Eastern.

Toledo hands OU
12th loss in row
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Casey
McBeth rushed for 147 yards and
three touchdowns and Maik Herron
broke the game open with a 40yard score on a punt return.as Toledo beat Ohio U. 28-10, .extending
the nation's longest Division I-A
losing strealc to 12.
McBeth, who carried 23 times,
scored on runs of 18, II and 3
yards for the Rockets, 2-1 overall
and 1.0 in the Mid-American Conference.
With Toledo ahead 7-3 in the
second quarter, Herron, a true
freshman, raced 40 yards for the
touchdown after a short Bobcat
punt.
The Rockets piled up 280 yards
on the ground on 48 attempts,
while Toledo's defense limited
Ohio U. to 123 net yards on 43 carries.

Toledo quarterback Tim Kubiak
completed 7 of 11 passes for 122
yards with no interceptions. The
Bobcats' D.R. Robinson hit ·on 14
of 23 passes for 115 yards with one
interception.
Oh:o U. dropped to 0-4 on the
season and 0-3 in the M/ C. The
Bobcats have not won since beatingKent27-14Sept. 12,1992.

You've Got The

fP@~

To Finance Your Dreams.

1993 grid standings
(Overall)
Team
W L TP OP
Point Pleasant. .......5 0 130 27
GaUipolis ............... 3 I 101 32
Portsmouth ............2 2 77 60
Logan ............. .......2 2 90 92
River Valley ...... .... 2 2 43 90
WarrenLocal.. .. .... l 3 63 81
Jackson ................. ; I 3 49 65
Marietta .. ............... I 3 68 110
Coal Grove ............ ! 3 49 113
Athens ...................O 4 37 139
Meigs ................ :...0 . 4 28 140
Friday's results:
Gallipolis 27 Portsmouth 14
Coal Grove 36 Athens 20
Waverly 19 Jackson 0
Chillicothe 60 Logan 28
Marietta 28 Belpre 19
Pt. Pleasant 36 Meigs 6
River Valley .t4 Warren Local 7
(Sat)
Oct. 1 games:
River Valley at Gallipolis
Portsmouth ND at Athens
Jackson at Vinton County
Miami Trace at Logan
Marietta at Hannibal River
Pt. Pleasant ai Hurricane
Warren Local at Meadowbrook
Portsmouth at Ashland
Buf· Wayne at Coal Grove
Meigs at Alexander

Peoples Bank
MEMBER FDIC

MASON

POINT PLEASANT

NEW HAVEN

773-5514

675 -1121

882-2135

�-.

•
I
/

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Monday, September 27, 1993

Page--6

Old flames aren't disa pointing

Peoples bank
seeking art
entries

.

Art show which prompted uproar opens non-exhibit

•
•

MONDAY
LETART FALLS -Letart-Portland PTO will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the Letart Falls Elementary
School. Officers will be elected and
parents are encouraged to attend.

•

•
•
•
•

acting gutless," said Scott Simmerly, 26, a junior.
But the director of the gallery
had a different view.
· ' ' It's a uue experiment," said
Robert Thurmer.
People who didn't like the frrst
nine People's Art shows "arc probably going to like this even less,"
Thurmer said.
Last year, an student Steve
B(\Stwick entered a painting of a
topless, smiling teen-age girl who
was missing at the time. The girl,
Angel Ormston, later was found
murdered.
Bostwick apologized and withdrew the painting after the girl's
family complained. He said his
motive was misunderstood: he
wanted to poruay a violent society.

use an

The
of American flag as
a doormat in 1991 also led to uouble. The coniroversy faded when
the flag was stolen.
Last year, the university ordered
the art department to "develop
appropriate controls" on artists
who used the show "to shock and
insult the community."
Tburmer doesn't know what to
expect on the waD. He said people
who don't like a particular visual
expression can co·ver it up with
their own artistic creation - like a
crowded buUetin board.
One swdent artist said he might
ex press his displeasure with the
format by hammering nails into the
wall to represent missing art
The art show runs through Oct
8.
.

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received in advance to
assure publication in the calendar.

RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club will hold its regular meeting
at 7:30p.m. in the home of PauUne
Atkins. New Lima Road, wilh Stella Atkins and Cleotine Blackwood
as co-hostesses.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Veterans Service Commission

will meet at 7:30p.m. in tfi'e Veter- beg. in at 8 p.m.
ans Service Office.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The OH KAN
coin club will meet at Burket barPOMEROY · Big Bend Clog·
ber shop. Social hour and strading gers will be sponsoring a beginners
session will start at 7 p.m., the workshop from 6 to 7 p.m. at the
meeting will follow. Refreshments Pomeroy Municipal Building. Call
will be served. New members are 992-7853 For more information.
welcome.
RACINE - Racine Church of
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern Nazarene will have a revivial Sept.
Local Chapter of the Ohio Associa- 29 through Oct. 3 starting at 7 p.m.
tion of Public School Employees nightly with Evangalist David
will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Myers.
the high school cafeteria. .
RACINE - Southern Local
TUESDAY
School DisUic Chapter I inuoducPOMEROY - There will be a tory meeting at 7 p.m. in the Southsupport group meeting for social em High School cafeteria.
workers conducted by Nancy Scarbrough, LSW, at the Meigs County
ROCK SPRINGS - Wildwood
Health Department. Welcome will Garden Club will meet at 7:30p.m.
begin at 7:30p.m. The meeting will at tl)e home of Betty Milhoan.

Festival discussed at preceptor meeting
.

Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of wheei Festival on October 9 and
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority endorsed 10. Stage lights will also be
the one mill five year levy to be on arranged by the group. It was also
• the Nov. 2 ballot when the group announced !hat the Meigs County
met recently at Grace Episcopal Showcase will be Oct. 10 and 16.
A discussion was held concernChurch.
.
ing
a county drive for lhe American
Donna Jones presided at the
Cancer
Society with the matter to
meeting which opened with the ritbe
presented
to village council.
ual.
Tom
Dooley
and Bruce Fisher
During the business session,
from
the
Middleport
Department
workers were appointed for the
selling of souvenirs for the Stem-

Store displayed fall apparel from
their store for the members.
Prior to the meeting a salad supper was enjoyed and crafts were
on di.splay_for the coming ways and
means pro.JCCt.
Attending were Norma Custer,
Rose Sisson, Charlotte Elberfeld,
Ann Rupe, Jane Walton, Velma
Rue, Vera Crow and guest, Mar·
garet Stewan

Poe/ talks about surviving rape
GRANVILLE, Ohio (AP) . Maya Angelou, the poet who recitcdone ,of her wor~s at President
Clinton. s m~ugurauon, told Denison UmversJty students that black
literature has helped her survive
rape.
.
Ms. Angelou told an audience of
about 1,100 people at. the cenu.al
Ohto campus that she ~d not speaic
for five years after bemg raped by

I

'fl:le letttz

Dear Alia ~de~:

Entties for the Peeples Banking
and Trust Company's first annual
Peoples Collection an exhibition
will soon be accepted.
Entries for this year's exhibition
should be two-dimensional (paintings, drawings, photographs, prints,
fiber works and calligraphy) completed in the last two years.
All works submitted for the
exhibition will be evaluated by a
panel of regional artists with input
from bank officials. From.this evaluation several pieces wiU be selected for purchase, becoming the
ch~ l!Cquisitions in the Peoples
CoUection. The collection will be
displayed at the newly renovated
NEW OFFICERS INSTALLED ·Betsy Jones, left, was ll!lltalle4
Peoples Bank Putnam Street office.
president
or Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, Beta .Sigma Phi Sorority, in
According to Robert Evans,
ceremonies
conducted at a recent meetlog. Other olllceni lostaUed
president of Peoples Bancorp, the
were
l'rom
the
left, Tammy Bachner, rec!)rdiDJ secretary; Mary
idea for the collection was conDutcher,
correspolnding
secretary, and Valerme Hanstlpe, vice
ceived when the bank began dispresident.
cussing ideas for anwork for the
Putnam Street office. "We decided
to continue Peoples Bank's practice
of supporting the arts in the area,
while beautifying the bank building
at the same time. We are also looking into using the an to benefit oilr
partners in education," Evans said.
Area anists wishing to submit
artwork for the exhibition may pick
up a rcgisuation form at Peoples
Bank or at art centers, galleries, '· ·
and framing shops in the area.
Completed registration forms must
be'mailed to Peoples Bank by oCt. ·
I. Art work must be hand-delivered
; . Oct 14or 15.
•
Announcements of those works
chosen for purchase will take place
Oct 29. A combined public reception for the exhibit and open ~ouse
for the newly renovated bank will
talce place Saturday, October 30.
The exhibition will be on dis- .
play through November.
· For additional information about
NEW MEMBERS • At the Ritual of Jewels tea of Ohio Eta Phi
submitting an work for the exhibiChapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, held recently at the home of
tion, refer to the regisuation form
Susan
Clark,
four new members were inducted. From the left they •
or contact Larry Holdren at Peoples
are
Debbie
Lowery,
Kim Dettwiller, Cindy Facemyer, and Becky
Bank, (614) 376-7111.
Edwards.

By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - A campus art show that has been criti·
dzed in the past for explicit displays opens today, this time with a
blank wall that anyone can use as a
canvas.
The People's Art Show at
Cleveland State University has a
20-by-25-foot whitewashed space.
The rest or the gallery features a
display of news clippings, intended
as an examination of media attention and its influence on the annual
show.
The blank wall received mixed
reviews on the campus of 18,000
students.
"! consider it as the university

Arnold's
Plumblnt,

her mother's boyfriend at age 1.
She read all the books she could
get her hands on and memorized
poeuy by her favorite authors.
"During those days I would
either sit on the mourning bench or
the children's pew. I would think:
' If only I could recite. If I could
only~· I c~ld ~these peopie up, she Sllld Fnday..
Ms . Angelou encouraged the

audience to read works by black
authors.
"How is it black people survive? I suggest it's the literawre,"
she Said.
Ms. Angelou author of 10 best
sellers, she deiivered the poem
''On the Pulse of·Morning" at the
inauguration in January. She was
the frrst poet since Robert Frost to
use verse at a swearing•in ceremony.

from 1be WQIIIIII tn Clliforrua ~
hu~ ~led to book up ~ 111
old girlfriend IOUIIded familiar. It
. wu • comfort to know I'm not ihe
only ODe. Here's my~: •
•
My husband "Larry met Olga
at a runcn1 after not having seen
her for scvaal yean. The~ began to
~ cxebanged videos ant,!
tapCI and became "prayer partners.
When I found ow a~ttt, I Bed
'!'Pleaae stop wnli:"g to Olga.
He IDSisled that everything was on
the up and up and that there was
. g wrong w"tth what he was
nothio
doing . . He ace used me o.. r be'mg
paranotd.
The had
· 1
d ·
•Y
• severa c1a~ estme
~s. ~th Larry malcins up a
senes of bizarre excuses to explain
his out-of-town '"""· Wben 1·could
no longer tole.::~· h. I . . d
•
..... IS r•ng an
sneaking around, we g~ divorced.
1 Why you would advtse a woman
toletherhusbandmeethisoldflame
and "hope he will be disappointed"
is a mystery to me. - TWENTY.
FIVE YEARS DOWN THE DRAIN
DEAR TWENTY·FIVE YEARS·
My advice was OK If·
..
.
. a man IS
determ
•
.ined to, meet an _old flame,,
~fe cant stop ht.m. _Man.y .
.
e applauded me for gtymg the;
jerk nougl! rope to hilng htmself. 1
Read on·
Dear Ann Landers· This 15
• •or
.
. • .
"
the lady 10 Cahforma whose
husband decided to coniact an old
' If " dbehadn't
• 40
gu nen
seen m years.

Llr?'

·

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1993, Lo• Ancet..
Tlma Syndicole
Cr..ton Syndicate"

I ·was married for 30 years to a
man who suddenly becamC obsessed
with the memory of a girl who
dtimped him when he was a high
school J"unior After nus
· mg
· 1wo
·
daughters, tolenJting his numerous
_,.,
auairs with the worst kind of trash
and nursing him through a series of
illnesses, I was informed that he was
soing to visit his old flame, 111d I
could like it or lump it.
.
Th
flam
e old
e, it turned out, was
married and had three children. I told
him to go ahead and while he was at
it he could take all his clothes
because he had loused up our
marriage and I didn't care wltltt he·
did.
.
He wenl I med for divorce, and
h
.ed th
ld h"
e marn
e o
tgh school
c.utie. Six months later, I heard he
was undergoing heart surgery. All I
could think was, "Thank God I don't
have to nurse him thrbugh this one."
I am happier than I've been in
years and feel like writing his new
wife a thank-you no•A 'or •·'-'·g him
"'" """''
off my hands.-- MONROE, LA.
DEAR MONROE: ThankS for
H ,
.
your 1etter. eres a Stmilar stcry

with a different twist
Dear Ana Landers: 1 thought
your advice to lbe woman whose
husband had a thing for his old high
school sweetheart was perfect. ·If a
man wants to fly the COOP and check
out lbe chickS on the other side of
the fence, he should be penniued to
do iL Why hang on to a guy who
feels he's missing SOinething?
My husband lalked for years about
•vema," the girl he pinned when
they were in high school. Finally,l
told him to can her up and go see
'f
She l'ved 400
her. 1 he wanted ~- ~
1
i1
) H did deed can her
m
es
away.
e
m
and learned that she was divorced
and d ·
h"
H 1 ft
ymgtosee un. e e Q1l
Friday and said, "I'll 'see you
Sunday."
w u he back on s·h·-'·
· e • was
.._ ....y -at noon. ·He shamefacedly told me
that Verna was dumb as a box of
rocks, had doubled her weight and
Uied to borrow $500 from him 1
Ia ghed
·
·
u
myself stck. -- GLOATING
IN OREGON
DEAR G.: He who laughs last
laughs !'est Cheers!

Feelmg pressured to have se~?
How well-informed are you? Wnte
for AM Landers' booldet "Sa "and
the Teen•ager." Send a self-addressed, long, business-size envelope
and a check or 1710• ..., order [cor
$3 65
··
. . (this includes postage and
handlmg) to: Teens, c/o AM J...antiers p 0 Box 11562 Chica 0 111
606' "o.
'
II ' .
ll- 562. (In Canada, send

The "Smoke-Free Class of

thts m_on.th as the .American Heart
Ass~;xaauon, the American Cancer
Soctety and the American Lung
Assoctation reach out to sixth
graders in classrooms across the
1
counuy.
It is another effort in a 12 year
cooperative program.
"The ultimate goal is to graduate a nationwide smokefree class of
seniors in the year 2000," says
John Costanzo, program chairman
of the Meigs County American
Hean Association.
·
"That would' be considered a
major step in the creation of a
smoke-free society at the start of
the 21st century..,...dte dream or former U.S. Surgeon General C.
Everett Koop,ll, said Costanw.
. ~ixth-grade level materials constsung t;&gt;f posters, _teach~' guides
and a VJdeogpe wtll be muoduced
m about 125,000 U.S. classrooms,

including all sixth grade classrooms in Meigs County. The material will help children learn about
the ~!angers of smoking and smokeless tobacco.
·
"Reaching sixth graders with
anti-tobacco messages is consid·
ered crucial to the 'success of the
Smoke-Free Class of 2000," the
local .spokesman said, because
"ninety percent of aU smokers start
as teen-agers, and they seem to be
starting younger every year".
The "Smoke-Free Class of
2000" is pan of an overall effort
labeled the Tobacco-Free America
Projet:t The three voluntary health
agencies also encourage the
National School Board Association
to adopt policies to eliminate
smoking in schools.
In addition, the Tobacco-Free
America Project provides a 'naiional clearinl\hOu.se in Washington,
D.C., offllflng mformation to local
cualitions about measures affecting

&amp; Cooling
QUALITY WORK
I. GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-7474

100

To place an ad

Call992-2156
MoN. thru Fat. 8A.M.-5P.M •• SAT.8-12
.,

CLOSED SUNDAY

''

'

POLICIES
• Adt o•MMie the couaty your ad runt mull be prepaid
• Rec:ein dilcount for &amp;d1 paid in adnnce.
• FreeAcb ; Cive.awll,)' and Found ad. under 15 word. will be

'

run 3 da)'lat 1110 eharse.
Price of ad for aU ~~:apitalleuera i1 douhle price of ad colt
• 1 point line type only uaed
• Sonllnel ir not re.ponaible for erTor1 after fll'tt day (check
for erron f1r1l day ad runt in paper). CaU before 2:00p.m.
day after publleation to make correetion
• Ad. that mUll be paid io adnnce·are:
Card ol Th•nka
H•ppy Ad.t
ln. Memoriam
Yard SaiM
• A clq1ifiod adYertilemen\ placed ill 'the Tbe Daily Sentinel
(~xcept Clai1ifted Diaplay, Bwinu. Card or Le1al
Noticll!tl) willallo appear in the Poiol Pleal&amp;lll Repter and
the Calli poW. Daily Tribune, reachi"' over 18,000 home~
1

••

$4.45.)

tobacco consumption. Included is
legislation involving clean indoor
air, taxes on tobacco products,limits on the sale of ctgarettes and
other tobacco items to minors and
information on lhe disUibution of
free cigarettes to minprs.
. A non-profit health organization
funded mainly by private donations, the AHA spent more that
$232 million during fiscal year
1991-92 on scientific research,
public and professional education
and community programs, according to .COstanzo.
With more than 3.6 miUion voiunteers nationwide, it is the largest
volun.tary health organization dedicated to reducing disability and
death from hean and blood vessel
diseases, which is the leading cause
of death in the United States.
Additional infOrmation nlay be
obtained by contacting the American Heart Association at 1-800282-0291.

.."

'-··
Dominos Pizza
is now offering
Meatball &amp; Philly Steak Subs
1 Free Bag of Chips &amp; 1 Free
Drink w~h purchase of sub.

PubliC Notice

,,,

PUBUCNOnCE
INDUSTRIAL LOADER
FOR SALE
The Boord of Trua- of
Orang• Townahlp, Melga ·
" County, Ohio, offer lor oale
,by aealed bid on• 111
~o 1nternallonal lnduatr •
1
Loader, Modal 2424. Serial
'' nuinlrer 037:12.
·
·: · Seated bldo will be
, accepted until Ock&gt;ber S,
1013 at 7:30 p.m. when blda
"'' will bo . opened at Ill•
·, · ragul• mee!lna. ·
' The loader wil be aold •u
· " • Ia" with no ••rr•nU• or
guarantee• expreoa'ed or
•I

llod.

.

; "T;,'! Boerd of Truo- of

·: Orona• Townahlp reoarve
: the rlgh! to waive any
I ' lrregularltl••
and/or ·
1. lnformelltlea and to raiiiCI
'·' a"&amp;.;Md.Ublclo
.
order of the Board of
' Truoteoa of Orange
:: Townahlp.
:: Ttr view the lo- prior to
, tha m•llng conlact ana of
: tho following lrualeoa:
. Roger Rllchlo, Jameo
Wataon, Robert Marcinko.
Palrlclo Calawey, Clerk
'
46&amp;86 Guthrie Rolld
i•
I'
Coolville, Ohio 45723
.. (8)2&amp;, 27, zr, 21, so, (10) 1,

BULLETIN BOARD

.

NOW
AVAILABLE

3,4,5,1, 10tc

Public Notice

"

IN THE
iunb~ ~imes
CALL
NOW ·
THIS SPACE
$16.00

THIS SPACE
$8.00

·'

THIS SPACE
$12.00

.

I

992-~2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

Call By 2:00 P.M. Friday for Sunday Edition .
,,

NOnCE OF INVIfAnoN TO
SUBMIT SEALED BIDS FOR
THE BALE OF REAL
ESTATE BV THE CITY OF
PT. PLEASANT, WEST
VIRGINIA
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that tho City of Point
Pleeoan~ Weal VIrginia, will
accept ...111c1 blda at the
City Building, 400 VIand Bl,
Pt. PIOOIII!II~ Maaon County,
~Wool VIrginia, until 4:30
' o'clock p.m., on tho 121h
day of October, 1813, and
· will open alld ualad bl• at
·, the regularly achedulod
mHIIng of the common
.; council of the City of Pt.
. Ple•anl, Weot Virginia, al
7:30 o'clock p.m., or 11
" aoon lhareaft•• •• Ia
· r::,Ucal, on the 12th day of
.;
Jrer, 1113, lor tho
•. purchaae from, and ule by,
' the City of Point Pl..aant,
w.. t VI~=~·· ot tho
following
rlblld tracll
end/or parctlo of voluablo
:• r•l utalit altuote, lying and
:· being In the City of Point
,. Pl••••nt, M•eon County,
· WMI Vlrglnlo, and mora
,' particularly boundlld and
' dHcrlbed .. foltow.:
'· Baglnnlng on tho
:. South-terly ao....,. of the
, Pol~t Ploaaant Roglalor
:. ComJNtnY lot, now the Carl
,· Frulh Lot, In the Northerly
':line of Filth Street, aald
·corner being Eaaterly• In
'1 aald line 30 f•t from tho
,South-'" aomer of tho
,' Point Pl.. unt National
o, Bank Building lol, now
ll occupllld by the Peopleo
'• Bonk; thence at right angleo
to Fifth Str•t ancfa parallel
:nne with Main and VIand
:s1ree1o In a Northarly
:drecllon along the W•tern
·· boundary of an alley, lor a
:dlotano 0 ol 135 feat 1o a
point oppoalt• lha
Southw•t corner ol what Ia
'. commonly kn-n •• the
·Community Building
.atanding oti a part ol the
Court-houae lot; thonco at
·~ rlaht angl• Md .a a,_ lie
·. aney to the Bouthweal
comer of aald Community

...

Building and wllh ~d along
the Southerly boundary of
aald Community Building
lot by a line .,.,allel to Fifth
StrMI and In an Eaaterly
dlrwctlon tor a dlatance of
137 IMt 7 Inch• to the
W•t.rty boundary ol Viand
Sir•t; thence with lha
W•lerly boundary of VIand
Street In a Southerly
dlrwctlon 138 r..t 7 Inch•
lo the W•Wiy boundary of
VIand SlrMI; thence with
W•tarly boundary of
VIand SlrMI In a Southerly
dlraatlon 131 r..t I Inch•
lo lhe.Norlhorly line of Fifth
SlrMt at Ita lnleraeatlon
VIand Btr•t; thence
with the Northerly line of
Filth .SirMI for a clatanco or
144 fMI I lnchea lo the
plaoe ol beg!Ming.
Saving and ncoptlng,
howwer, from the openrtlon
of thla Deed, all of the
ouiiNioa • daacrlblld In the
Robart L. Hogg and Loulae
Hogg daod, thitlld the 1tth
day of Fobruary, 1142, of
reco.rd In the Ofllaa of the
Clark of the County Court of
Maaon County, W•t
Vlrglnle, In Deed Book 120,
at Page 221, and • wtll, all
of tho nceptlona and
rooervallona
out In •
doed made by B.S. Hu•on
and Mary C. Hu..,, to J.O.
F. Johnoon, dal-.1 April 11,
1145, recorded In uld
Clerk'o 0111- In Deed Book
127, at page 303.
.
Tho above deocrlbed
property Ia the aama • waa
conveyed to The City i&gt;l
Polnl Pleaunt, · W•t
VIrginia, a municipal
corporation by daod dated
tho 2nd day of Augual,
1873, and·belng ol r-d In
the oltlco of the Clerk of the
county
Commlaolon of

••I

Maoon County,
W•t
VIrginia, In Deed Book 232,
at =='OF SALE
(1) The City of Point
Pleaaant, Weal VIrginia,
r11. , . . the ~ht to _
- r1
or rejeat Jhe lgh bid for
each Of alther parcel of rul
•tate:
'
(21 Upon acceplllnco of •
bid, )he rul •tall Ito aold
aublecl to all nlallng
....manta, rlghta of way
and3)raatrlctlona
of title;
( The high bidder will,
upon acceptance of lhe
high bid lor • parctl of real
eatata b7 Jhe Common
CouncU o the City of Point
PIN..nl, WV, depoait with
the City Clerk a c•h or
certlfllld chock depoolt of
10% olthe acceptad Bid by
4, 00 p.m. on tho next
bualneaa day after
acceptance of the bid; and
ohall pay the bala._ ollfuo
acceplad bid amount within
thirty daya ot Jho
aacoptanoe of the bid by the
!:ammon Council ol.th• City
of Point Pleaaant, W•l
VIrginia, who r-rv• the
rlghtlo reject the high, any
and al blda aubmltled.
Doted at Point Pl-ant,
w..t VIrginia, thie 24111 ctay
of lloptembert..1~. .
The City oii'Oint Pleaanl,
W•t VIrginia
By RuaMII V. Holland
I- Mayor
Tea•:EiheM.wCity Cler!&lt;
(1)27,(10)4,111112tlo

CUIIC

WllDI ALLIY

Pttrts•s.na
......
a.s.ws
Wllllalln

Authorlaecl: BrlaD• l
Stratton MTD, Ryan,
I. D.C. Repair Cenlar
PICKUP .-tel DEUVERY .
Houra • M-F N Sat.

eBACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

D.A.IOSTOI
EXCAYAniiG
(614)
667-6621

CIOMCI Sunday

t4t·H04

1112&lt;!~92/~~n

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31904 .....Ia.

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Ml••ltport, o•lo

614·992·7144

ROBERT
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~a rages
-complete
Remodeling
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FREE ESTIMATES
1-16-13-Un

well convoying all
oo-nlll m- by the ..lei
Kanawhe and Michigan
Railway Company lor the
benefit of aald grantora In
7n 1
aald doed; and being the
aame real •tala of whlah
16-1/10 10~• (Ina 1 acre
Md I acraa) wore conveyed . - - - - - - - - - . ,
to lfuo Point Pl-ant Wetar
a Light Company by Marla
Chatloo and Anna M.
Charleo by deed bearing
LIMESTONE, ·
dale to 20th day of Mey,
1901, and recordod In the GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
County Clerk'a Office of
..Jd County, In DMd Book
&amp;COAL
11, ,..._14, and one - • of
Reasonable Ratn
the oald 18 and 1110 wao
conveyad to the Point
Joe N. Sayre
pleaaant Water a light
Company by John L.
TRUCKING
Charloo, and wile, by daod
614-742-2138
burlna data July 14, 1-.

HAULING

SAYRE

.nd raaardad In alld Qd'a

~193

Office In Delld Book 82,
, _ 487. The.one •rwl•l

hereinabove referred to

being the on• aoro
.ta.crlbed ao an o~_c,eptl~n I
In the dood from
M.
Chari•• and Anna M.
Charlo• to the Point

~::~:. v:!e~.!- 111

thla deed P.ll.nY•Y•d .
•Umalad k&gt; contain 14-6/.10
acr• ind ~ the property
whlah the WOiar roaarvoJr
l"'::tbeing 1M ftrallnct of
tho ume real eatate
convoyed to the
of
Point Pl-ant,"';s•~,:J·~~=·I
corporation, o
•ltlng under ond by virtue
of tha Iowa of the Stabt of
Weal VIrginia, by deed
dat-.1 the 22nd day of July,
11141, 111d being ofrecord In
lhtt Ofllae olllro Clark of the
County Commloalon o!
M81on Counly,
Weot
Vlrglnloln DMd Book 119 at

W'A9ER
MI

R&amp;C IICAVITIIIG

WHALEY'S
PIITS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
nw&amp; ... Nmftl
AU.UIII&amp; ....IS

992·7011 fir
9t2·SSSJ
or 1011 FREE
1;IOO.UI•0070

DAIWJI, OHIO

·FREE ESTIMATES
Taka the pain out ot
painting. Let rna do It

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent
lox 119

Middleport, Olllo 45760
(614) 843·5264

CUS.TOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR

742•2904
L-----.;";;..;1.;;mo:;;·~
fill

50734 IIIIer

..,,. ..,0...

IL

36358 SR 7

Chester, Oh. 45720
985·3406

985·4181

"\'e11lOD

•LIGHT HAULING
-FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

w.t ~ria
992·2269
By Ruoa.U ~i. ,..;: USED RAILROAD TIES
. Toole: Ethall
CityGheen
Clerk _L.._ _.__12-30-92·lln
_ _..J
(8)27, (10)4, 1813 2tc

CHECK THE

Call Sentinel

CLASSWIEDS!

BISSELL IUILPERS, INC.
;:

I·

:t

l;,.,...~

New Homes • VInyl Slllftt ,. , ~;
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing
' COMMERCIAL and RESlDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·1643
(No Sundoy Coll•l
2112192/tfn

YOUNG'S •
CARPENTER SERVICE
-Room Addition•
-Gutter Work
-Eiaatrlcal and Plumbing
-Roofing

-Interior a Exterior
Painting
(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
t-10.12411'1

GENERAL
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel
992·7878
7nl1roo.

EXCAVATING

BUll MZE! 1.!'ACKH0E
and TAACMUE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME Sill'S and

TRAILER BITE~

DRI~~=WD
UMEBTONE-TRUCJQNG
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838
. I

OWNII: .loll Whit..._
6110111

Sllade River

Ralph At

t....------.....1

992-2158

992-3470

u..... -.~and Bonded
PH. 614-992•5591

614·915·4180

II

(2) Upon acceplllnoo of a L..;...-----~!!::.1
bid, the real ~late Ia aofd
oublect to all exlatlng
Blll'a Tire
....... .,. .. , rlghta of wey
of
Revenawood
and reatrlctlona of tltt.;
(3) The high bidder will,
announces
upon acceptonce of the
RIChard Moore
high bid lor a parcel of real
eatota b7 the common
hu Joined our ataff.
Council o the City of Polnl Richard comes to us
Pl-onl, WV, depoelt with
with 12 yrs.
tho City Clerk a aaeh or
corllflad check depooll of
experience at
10% of the IICcopllld Bid by
Pomeroy Home &amp;
4:00 p.m. on the next
buolnou doy after Auto end C&amp;A Auto
acceptance of the bid; and
Come Vlalt Us.
aholl pay the bolonce olthe
acceplad bid omount within
thirty daya of the
ac..ptance of the bid by the
Common Council of the City
of Point Pl.... ,.,~ WV.
Thlo oale Ia aubjaclto the
opprovol of the Common
SHRUB &amp; ·
Counc;tl ollhe City ol Polnl
Ploaoant, Weal VIrginia,
TRIM •••
who roaervea tho right to
REMOVAl
reloct Jhe high, 111dy Md all
•-

'

&amp; FILL DIRT

HAWNG: Ll...tona,
Dl rt, G1'11Vtl .-tel Colli

for you.

...... i

Poln1~~.::.:'t

GRAVEL. SAND,
LIMESTONE. TOP SOIL

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

'SO per load...

TERMS OF SALE:
RICHARD ROBERTS
(1) The Clly of Point
"Ad SpecialtOe•"
Pleaoant, Weal VIrginia,
'12
Joy Drive, G.olllpolio, Oh.
reaervn tho rlaht to accept
448-7812
or relact the lilgh bid lor
Fax!Volca 448·781
each or either parcel of real

~~ltd at Point PleaaMt,
Woal Vlrglnlo, thie 24th day
of Soplember, 1RI.

Po.r!!Y, Ohla

IIITERIOR

1112113/1 mo. pel

Q

36970 Ball Run Road

AMERICAN
LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPANY

1625 Gallons
Q

PONDS .
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATERl
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS a
HOME BITES

LINDA'S
PAINTING

HAULING
(

BULLDOZING

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

· 12·5-tln

VERY REASONABLE ·
HAVE REFERENCES

I

,_264.

1 mo.

3rd and Pomei8J St11tts
Ma11111,WV
(304) 773·5515
WINtER MOU.RS
Sun;•Thu,.. 4-10 pm
Fri. a Set., 4 pm-?
tW ....,_~.,.,IIMq
.......... IIO/ll ...

RESIDENTIAL
COIICRETE
WORK
Porches,
Patios,
Sldew.-lks
992·7878

·EAGLE .
LANES
(Former Mason Lanes)

949·2168

712'1193

4/29/93tJ.

· Public Notice

NOnCE OF INVITAnON TO '
SUBMIT SEALED BIDS FOR
THE SALE OF REAL
ESTATl' BYTHE CITY OF
PT. PLEASANT, WEST ·
VIRGINIA
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN lfuot the City of Point
Pluunt, W•t VIrginia, wUI
accept ...1-.1 blda at the
City Building, 400 VIand Bt,
Pt. Pleaan~ Maaon County,
Weal Virginia, until 4:30
o"aloak p.m., on the 12th
day of October, 1813, and
will open ..Jd -led blda at
. the regularly achllduled
m•llng of tho common
council ol the City or PL
Pl..aarrl, Wnt VIrginia, at
7:30 o'aloak p.m., or aa
aoon ther.. tter •• Ia
practical, on 1M 12th day of
October 1Ita, lor tho
purch- from, and aale by,
. tho City ol PL PleaoMt,
w..t VIrginia, ol the
following deacrllo... tracta
and/or paroola of r!llll · altuote, lying and being In
the Diatrlct of Lowla,
County of Maaon, Slalo of
Weal Virginia; and more
particularly boundad and
deacrlbed • folio-:
Firat tract:
. Beginning at the center of
cterkaburg Road "on tha line
between the Ianda of tho
p o 1n t
p 1• a a an 1
Manufacturing
and
Eitanalon CompMy .net tho
Ia·"·
,..,. of c •a. waggoner,M d
olharo, • ralerr-.1 1o In the
hONinafler menllonlld dood
to the grantor herein from
Marla M. Chari•• et al;
thence No. 43 degreeo 30'
E.110 r.t to-a olllka; thonco
N. 48 dagr•• 13' w. 467
l•llo a etake; thence S. 43
degr- 30"W. 215 loet to
the Clarkaburg road; th.,ce
along uld road N. 61
dagr•a 2a' W. UO teat;
thenco N. 47 degroao 23' w.
500 1•1 ta a ollrke; thllflce
N. 48 degr- 23'E. 474 r..t
to a alike; thence N. 45
degr- 42' W. 417 IMIIo a
•tab; then.. I. 48 dear23'W. 4111 fHt to a otako;
thence N. 48 dogrna 2S' w.
107 r..t to a otake; thllflce
a. se dagr- 15' w. to a
point 50 fnt oaalerly altha
cantor of tho main llna of
tho Ohio Rlvor Rallr.. d
(now tho- Baltimore and
Ohio Railroad) thence
aoutherly parallal with oald
centor line and IItty loel
dlotanl therefrom to the
center of the Clarkoburg
road; thane• following the
aald road oaoterly to the
place of BEGINNING,
oonllrlnlng 1&amp;-6/10 ocroa,
more or Ina; but aovlng,
nceptlng and reaervlng,
however from the operallon
of thla daod a certain tract
or parcel ol rNI ootale
•tlmated to contain two
acroo, aonvoylld by Marla
Charlea and Anna M.
Charlee k&gt; the Kan11Wha and
Michigan Rallwey Company
(now the New York control
Rallw
' daod
· ay c ompany) by
dalad the 22nd day ol July,
1-. and of record In tho
Offloo of the Clerk ol tho
County Court of Maaon
County, In Doed Book No.
78
546 b
• pege
• ut expr-ly
oonveylng, tranalerrlng and
•algnlng unto tho uld Clty
of Point PJ..aant all the
rlghta re~ervlld In •aid
llbove dood by and unto the
.. ld Marla Charlea and
Anna M. Chari•, and ao

;a

~

&lt;:LASSD'IEDS
GET RESULTS ·FAST!
PubliC Notice

...

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES ·
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6;46p.m.
Spec;lal Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla ad good for 1
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051-342

Pomeroy, Ohio

·-J

Smoke-free project picking up momentum _
2~" project is picking up steam

~Heating

111110

We have a t.rge ataak of •ewral n11me brand tir• and
H- don't have, WI can flllllt.

OUR NEWEST LOCAnoN IN MASON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL.
304-771-5533
2nd Locallon coil Lon Nool
Hon•roon, W. Va. 304-C75-3331
Maotarcard and VISA -opled.
e-6-trn

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL

REPLICEMEit WIIDOWS
GREAT LAKES~ Tlle ....t .

Advanced All VInyl Replacement
Windows on the Market.
Wht

P•t high eut-ef-tewn

prlee• when yeu
un t•t It ltnlly 1nd uvt $$$?

Until October 1at: Buy any replacement
window and receive FREE - B1aullful
woodgrain Interior.
·
Colors: Light Oak, Dark Oak, Cherry.
Lifetime GuarantH.

CHRISTIAN'S CONSTRUOION

~.:44:6~-4~5~14~·:.!:1•!:800~·7:!'!;:'~41~1~3-J

-,

1
·

�•

Pomero~lddlePort,

'
lEA TI'IE BLVD.TM by Bruce Beattie

31

Homes

tor sa1a

44

·Monday, Septemb8r 27,1193

Ohio
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wript

Apartment

---.2% ~-··

71

.., a.• '

'Tit'lll'l" To l""'ftATIATe Youll-$61-F WtT14
A C#o'f' fa"!.SoH- ~o4'1ET/M&amp;SIH1; Wofti;S.
$&lt;&gt;ME1il•\lo $ IT l&gt;o!OS l't'T.

-I'll

-ln-.wv.-81.
3 bod-. 1112 bollia, fuN

an--· -

1AnciMton
both, w'.nd
FOIIor ~~ ·

a1lirmlle ~ ,,. To Good

32

1 1.1g1r1 Grtvl ~
WIUi WMe ~ 1 WMk OW,

Htoioo.

I~UII ' WHII 01cl

~:

814-448-0251 To

Female llue Hoolll', 814-3No
8430. . "
H~ , Klttyo, Black a
~n.!Oi.Ocr&gt;Dd HOmo Onl•l 114-

,._41

·

'
K " - , _ IIi a ...... tron., 11

old, .,., trained, """
84HGfl.d.rlpm,
.
Port lloaglo pUpploo, lwko. old,
oomo ....... --.1. 30,._
31111 -~-

6 ,, •·

-~

r ...It &amp; Found
...,.
Found: lltrrglo Famola
Dog Found '2 Mlloo llolqw Clip.
par Iiiii Tlli Claim, 1144485410,
1-8381 Aile For Choryl.
LaOt: Bl- Lob Fornola,
StftchOI on Loft Loa, Loll
=~~ 141, - .. Cirll 114-

7

•Yard Sale
1,,, . .. '

"'.. &amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Soloo MUll Be Pold In
Advor101. DEADliNE: :tOO p.m.
the dey betor. the ad I• to run.
Sundoy tdltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frldey. Mond.oy tdhlon • 2:00

p.m. Seturdl.y.

8

"C

k lh'
'ct
I k l'k . '
.
an you ma e IS PI ure oo . 1 e tt s g01ng
to make nioneu for the investors?!"

r

11

18

HelpWinted

Al&gt;t&gt;llcatlono Arlo Bllng AccootOri For Tlla 01 OIIRo
Cou"'" .,..,.,. lll'¥ic&lt;l Oltleor.
A.....:i:!.
. ua
MU..
Be An
~t&gt;i'v Dtochargod Votoran
And Be A H.S. ~ Or Ea•lv·
llant. Appl otlono Should Ho..
Admlnlolrollve Elporlor101 And
Ho.. Kl-'odgo 01 Votrono
~~~- And s-tho Ap.
llflcitlono May Be Plcltod 'up At
TIMr Volra,. S.Nico Olflco, Ool1111 Co&lt;rnty Court Holao, Oal·
llpollo, Ofrlo And Be AIIYmod
B~OO P.M. Octobor t, t993D
Mull Accompony Apptlcollon.
a. Jo!.~t!':,!.monlof ho.ldTralIn
In
•~
wa ng·
bnrD, mllolllc,
mti. eo~· Tho~du~~":..?:ri
Contor, 1-800-837-8508 or 514753-tltt.
Cortina! F-'•ht Corrloro.O.T.A.
D•v.,. -·nt""'irl lor 1 · - lor·

"

·-

pey, lay .... poy, n
y, com="::.r: 111 ton. 401

&amp; Auction

WantedtODo

Gonorot llo-nonca, Polnt1"!1 1
Yard Work Wi'ndowo Wahl':.
Ll hi H 1
Guttoro Cloontd g
oul ng,
~=1::k. RnlcHintlal, Stovo:
Ooorg11 Portoblo Sowmlll don1
houl your loot to thO mfll Juot
coll304-875-tll57.

my

Hovo voconcy In
homo lor
bod potlonl, boot 0 core, 114849-2321. A-oblo I'IIH.
Mloo Poulo'o Day Cora Cantor. 1
Block Will Of HMC on Jackoon
Plko 11-F 5 A.M. -5:30 P.M. H

~·l\'!,!"~ El~o': ~hiTS.:
0

Coro. Coli Uo For ·A Vloh. lnlonl

~ !:';

71 12 1 II ...... o homo, 2 badroom, 1
lmmtdlota'sf'""
-·~
e••
••- ··
• ~~-~ •
12x511 trollll' w1 12x10 addMion,
vory
•--3 - cond,, mutt Nil, 304:;-;:::::;:::"'::..
· ;-;:--;-- -;---,--::
12xl0 mcrl&gt;llo homo tar ooiO, 3
bedroom" oil -~. $5000,
304-f82·•4M.
·
1811 12185 mobil homo, :lvr.,
both a 112. now - . • win· pa~ly Jwnlolrod, neado
oo•2500 firm. 304-

_1,.,

..

21

=. GJi~1o

:t,:;

·=""~~..::."::"·~~

1 H.M.C. 110, ii'M-441-1810 -"h• 1
P.M.

COUNTRY HOMES /ACREAGE
Ell1ro Lorgo Contompory Homo
On 17.8 ACroa 1M. With 2 Borno,
Pool, 2 Ponula, f110~000; 4 llldroom Homo, 2 112 ..tho, Lo_rgo
Porty Room, All on 4 Acr11 MIL

SMO,OOOj 110 Acn MIL Farm
Wllh 1om • 30 llllobfa. t110.000;
10 Aci'N MIL 130.000: All Of Tho
Abovo Whhln 3 IIIII Of Rio
Granda • Pf- Colt Bill Connoll At Donno llummoro ~';'ehl
For Moro Information. 8
5281.

in the Classifiedsf

F

f - S I
arms Or a e

513-

·-

~35 lot &amp; Acrea

S
ge
112 Acroo With 2 BoCiroom
Troller, Troao, Wlldlfto, $35,000,
814-8119-3113, 814-318.fll01.
2 ~
1o: ~~prerol.otxlmo 11 1 Y
1 .. Flotor Be&amp;112
•
· •
0
mila out No'-hborllood Rood
Olf Sl At 141:"814-4411-3438 for
morelnro-tlon.

411

SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
Malao County, Solom Twp.
$850/ ocra. Romoto, booutltu1
1-; - · · paoturo hlllo.
Coli lor good mop. 1-814-51131145, Alhono,OH.
'
,
Trollll' Lot For Solo, 814-251111148 Aftor 5 P.M.

A~

=~~~\~..l~orol"\":.f=t~ -~~~~~=~':n

SAVINGS•••

ouronco, and 1 yaor of !roo lot
rent, all lor only $17llmo., collt·
100 374238
"
·
3br., totololoctric mobil homo, 2
full botho, CA, undorplnnlng,
muot 1111.1114-311-MOI.

DeXIer1 Ohio, M1lga County,
All ay - . 58 booutlhrl
•c,..2ila2 hou..., My fillda,.,

Business

FOR SAlE· 2 bedroom - ·
112 aero In country, Aaclno .,..,
doubfa pono tin-In 1 outbuildIng, -Y to ~
ol turnoco, 125.000,. I
9-2140 1~
tor 5:30 p.m.

-·full --4 Jrioi

\'~L-

\llll~T Hli'~

t\'NII'I4.
•

8~•1511,

Wonting to rent· 2 or 3 bedroom
houoo.,ln ciMn and_.... cond~
...-

72

Houses for Rant

Ho
In a. llpoll
4 Bed
$350/MoroomA to/,.poo~
Aoqul...i,
111, 814441•7138·
Chormlng, Oldoi 3 Bod room
Homo, All Nawly Romodalod,
~--•-• Doub """ 0
-lo .,_
0 rall
0 1 Loctloni200Mlnutoo From
· ov n Plont In olllpollo City
School
Dopoo~
••sOJMo Dlotrlct,
"ll"l a••
- 3127.+
~
vo " 10 • -·~
•
CINn 3 Bedroom Homo With
Flreploco,
Oalllpollo
Chy
Schoola, t-150/Mo. Aolorencoo &amp;
DopooH Roqulrotl. Wlnmon
Rill Elllla, 114 ... 3844.

A:.llo~

a,

Good Locotlonl c~ Schooll, 2
Bedroom Home, W 1r Included,
Dopoo~ &amp; Aotorenco, &amp;14-4488114.
Aomodoltd 2 bodraom houoa,
gordon tub, cllllng fans, prlvoto
oottlng,IUO!nro.,114-H5-4258.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bedroom troll":! ref &amp; dop, At.
~.N. ~=~~- on ~"'· no

30

2 Bodroomo Fumlohod, Air,
Crlblo. Ov~ooklng tho Olrlo
Alvor In Konouga.
&amp;
Reference
AeqLilrtd,DopooM
Foeter'•
Moblla Homo Pork, 114-448-1102.
2 lltdroomo, CA, Aontor Bolo
On
Lind Co
ct 2 Bl ko
'
ocAIFrom Bla Boor.ntra
114-441-1401
tar 4 P.IC
3 bod,_ mobllo home for
ront, all oloct~, 1 child, no
poto, •240 per mo., Now Hoven,
304..82-2468.
3bdrm., an aloctrlc doublo wlda,
good nllghborftoo!'LJn Roclna,
1200 clof&gt;oah, I:~W~mo., In·
cludn Wlloril- gll'bago •
-go,ltl-84 2217.
Tr11Uif For A.nt,,tM 381 1*.
Two bodroom trollor In Aoclna,
collll14 ..112-18511.
A
44
partment
fOr Rant
1bdnn. ope~ mont In P-roy
for rant,I14-1182-68SB.
1Middropon,
bdrm. opartmont
-ntown
crintrol hoot&amp;
olr, oil
utllhloi lncludod, NSOimo., f100
rlapooll, 1-9-2217.
1bdnn.
opa~mont. hrlng
Avanuo, P-roy. f17!i/mo,
t1001•-., no ...., 114-817-308&gt;
oftor

a;,. ,...

1br. " " - ope~ mont, convonlori loi:otlon, - - •
d-ft roqulrotl, f2001mo. pluo
utllhloo. 304-175-tO:IIIoftor Spm.
2bdrm. lpla., ICIII -trlc, ap.
pllonon tumlohorl, la•ntlry
, _ facii"IM . - to ochocit
ln town. AoolfcOilono ovolillbfe
ot: Villaga
Aoto. &gt;148 or
collll14.f82-371t. EOH.

·o.-

Fumlohorl
Efflcla!tcY:
807
Soooncf, Oolllpollo, Shin Both,
LhMhillo Pold, f116/Mo, 114-4484418 Aftor7 P.M.
Ar:~mont lor ront In Pt.
P -nl, 814-1192-5858 oftor
m.
Ape~mont lor rent· tumllllod, 3
room, utiiRiao lncllldod, 814-99211141.
BEAUTIFU~ APAmENTB AT
BUDGET PRICES AT ~ACKSON
ESTA!!!,__ 538 Jac:klon Pike
from - - Wolt to ohot&gt; a
movlao. Colt 814 448 25111. EOH.
Fumlohorl ~ 1 Bodroom, 1120 Fciu~h Avenutr, Ool·
Npolla l:ztiMio, Utlltloo Pold
'
114441'441Uftor7P.M.
5
.
p

•'

Trucks for Sale
1112 Chovy 112 Ton. uo 4 lrbt. 4o
11011, AT, PS.i. PI, AC, 3.73 Pool
12,900, Olu /Trod11 514-4482301,

NORTH

...,.,....,

~=======:ir=====~=~
S4
&amp;
E 1
II

F
nt
. 1 arm qu pma
.
Duotx round bolll', 11500. Duotx
oqiiiN boVIll' wl klckor, USOO.
Duotz olla[la rako, f1600. Duou .
17ft. toddor, t11500. .Holland
411 iliac blno, •--· John
Dooro 110 dlac, *'000- Fonnoll
160 dlllal,l3500. I Paq,.o 1-18
klckor wagons, aloo loorlar
WOJICH!01 cop. 2S-hood1. ~50.
llofQan • Flml, At. 35, :IU4-1372014:
·
Fal Ford Holillnd Soli. 408
Dtoc bl,., 110,500. 411 Dloc blno
wl awlval hhch rlamo, t11,100.
571) SQuoro boylll', .,b,500. 840

see aneous
••- h
I

....

rc

and S8

Fl-ood p,_.
·
For Wlntor.
W1l Be Sollontd When Cold
Wlllhor ~. Oolfvwed, l14288-1311, ,_,..711:111 E..r1ngo.
Qo Kll'l• 3 NP &amp; up, - ' I t on
8 HP, In otoclt, M'orrte· Equipmont, 814-1'12-24511 or 814-1112·
25110.
Clood ftre- lor Ala, 814-992·
2153 ar 114-811Ul07.

=·

~"::.1 'J:.00j.~~\':!~P•=

.
'

tMf, $100,114-441-0423.

2

EEKANDMEEK
GET !T ~ ! {;() IT I

IIJI-IATS AU.. lf-lt RJ5'S f.MJr 7
COOT "1'NJJ::. A&amp;XJr ll. .
JUST DO IT!

BUT 1-\00J .
£XACTLY

+J&amp; 2

V.X:UDI,OJ
00 JT1

SOUTH

• 8 s3
• A Q64

1

tm Hon truck, .duol - I a , •
16,000 octual mlloo, 81500, 814t
ll82-3ll41.
"·
1171, ten ctro'1. truck, 4x4, noiJI.
bod , - "'4
,..__
. ••• ~· on --·•
4x4. 11'1'1 Olda porto. Mirlll1
Rongor, 12 Sfi!UIII Wlnchoot ••
304-875-2110 oftor lpm.
I
1HT l oill PI k.U
Wh~ '
Flborgiu"/T - ;,4-,7-0ta· ,,
•
· I
1110 Ford Aongor XLT wno_.:, ,.
loodtd, oolclng 18500, must ooL {
304-6'18-2473 oftor 5pm.
• •
·
,
tvet Ctrovy 11-t~, 4.3 Lltor, V-8, '
~~lora Conartlon, 114-448- ~
'
Chavrolot, Ford , Dodg• pickup :·

lruc!

.~AW

!! IT'S TOO PURTY
A DAY FER YOU TO STAY
COOPED UP INSIDE

PAW IS SUCH
A THOUGHTY
CRITIER

. ANO~ER ~OCKE'f' GAME
' LA5 T N16-:.;_~--T:.;..
.. _ _.-,-

GOTTO MEET
T~E

MAN W~O
DRIVES TJ.IE'
ZUCCJ.IIN 1..

i
,

.•
' .- ...

~

:=1!. "'"'·...,..'

1EniJ":• •

•

"t':1d.

"'"''· hntora,
lllam ·
Worl&lt; boolo. 114-448-3151.
g:::::m:_ndAI
mr:t'~
WoohlrL Dryor, Aofrlgoretor, Julio Wolib. Cal1114 41il Oaft.
Color

tV. FrHZir, Air Con-

dlllonor, Mlcrowovo, 814-211e·
1238.
Wntlngho..o
Froot
Froo
Aolrlgol'll'l' With leo Mokor
Molchl!_lg 30" Eloctrlo Stovo
11100
For Both Will lltperoto,
814--241-9108.

a

3 Mila Alillot- Hlmolayano,
I'M 44&amp; 3111.
·
AKC ~ J!Upo, ltOo 111 - ·
ond IODmllil. olre clom on
prorrtlaii,.,IIOortrarla,8_,_

l=m:l~.::•ltor=...-'4pm;:_:.::·...,...---,--:-

Mil-··

AKC Rig. loMia -

r1ar....,.,

and ol-

53
A II es
mo1io
c..;_ _;..;;.n.;..:q::u.,.:...:;..,..-- ~~coi::ll'i814-::=:1Q.:,::;1;:100.:::_·::-===~
=

B~ or 1Ill · AI va rlna AnIIquoo, -•uc Arrglll- A-loi'O,
~ E. Mo~ Stroo~ ~~RL J~ Tolla DriOked, Door C1owa
oroy. ou,.: . . • :
A-vtd, lhata a Wormad
o.m. to 8:00 p. ~, Sund.oy t :00 ~ 114-251 1111.
108:00 p;m. l14-..2·2528.
=-~glo~ ~ '"liao
54 Miscellaneous
blOO'tlil..., __ tom_.:.~

1

Merchandise
19112 5hp poollvo traction Oo
cart, wn- Horley Davldoon
lorlthlr jockot, quoon olzo
wotorbod on pednlol. 304-1751183.
2 Ton Truck Lood 01 Firewood
Oravol Houlod Up To 10 Ton A
Load, 814-245-11227.
·
20HP s .. ,. lroctor, dl~ blodo,
wtrool wolghto, mony oxtrao,
$2800 nog., 81""1112-21177.
3/4 horM •c:trlc motor, US,
814-992·5282.
4 Whlllor 4x4, z Aluminum
Booto &amp; Trolloro, 2 Trolling
Moto,.; 1 Troyblll Relor Tlllor,
IM-2511-1827.
JO·OOO BTU Holl Noturol Goo
•mooo, to + Rog. t1,195, Solo:
051, lnotollatiOn Avolloblo,
814 448 8301.
lXII - . n Ito
bid
roe:
Sr.f5· dollv~'! No $511. ldaro •
q pmont ~. Hondorrron, WV
1304-875-11121.
Bohomo Cruln, 5 doyo/4 nlghto.
Undll'booktdl
M""l
Hill
$271/oOuplo. Llmltod tlckoto.
407-'187-BIOO oil. 8588. lion-Sat,
1:00AM ·1MOPII.
.

...

£

a-

w1ra old, on1y 3 _... a 1 11112 Oklo Doll:,:..outo.....~~·
lamlla loll, hod puppy - . , aood runnt11g
ion ....,.
podia,. lnclurlad. 814-441-371!1 114-141-8411.
'
'
oftor"tpm or anytlrno - -·
lltoutlhrl Aaglotoratl lloagla
PuppiM, taO, Mill e•oe.
·
Dolmotlon Puppill, AKC Aaalao
torad, 1 Wllltl Old, Doyo: 1143811-1422, 114311 1402 Aftor 5
P.M.
Fomlla Collla, 3 ~,. old,
apoyod, hll oil ilhoto, no
peporo vory aood 1om~

mont, tao,1114-l0-31o2.

Bldroom
Sullo,
Rockor
Aicllnor, Crllll14-44&amp;-2857.
Comlllato CB booo ototlon with
ompllflor; oloo pull tiahlnd corn~:n•loors
4; two locompound
81 --33111
h.
...
,
ovo m...
11go no onawor.
CONCRETE BPITIC TANKS,
11\JOO Oollon,'t325; -JET Bot
(No Bend Flhlr Roqull'ld)
t1,4N; Ron Evono lntorjtrlroooi,
Jac-, Olrlo 1 ~
Cumbllltlon olr cool "'"""·
·aood. oondhlon, 1800, 814-1112·

il084.

Eloctric COIICI'OII vlbr-, 180;
I' IIYm. bnrko, f1!!L Kor:moro
outomolla - . - : 304-87551121.

;

1873 211'1. ~ llalor ltoltMI1
Fully Loorlad, ••&lt;!;!,OOO ....
h ,IIOo. 114 441 "'""
, '
1m Compor :n Fl., With
111-. Air, Awftl~lto. '
y...,
0oor1 Cond"lon,
,'"" •'
-·
"
'""" '~
814--2111.

a; ;
!
l

Ita !!D:Ue Compar, . . _ 1. ,
114 Ill-MOl
,
.-

y;;,

Eul
All pass

·

' X I

WAO'C

ECMC

DCMO

OAIMDNSS

EWXOAK

HXSS

TC

RNXI

I A W

PNGCO,

DNWWCU

DC

AK

SXIC7'

I WA _G

R N L

S C K A .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I have a reputallon in the galleries of being the
· most difficult person 10 deal with." - (Photographer) Edmund Test&lt;o.

-l;:~:t:~' s©~g{}lV\-~t.~s·
lti
lcfit•cl

Rearrange letters of
0 four
s.cra mbled words

WOlD
lAIII

CLAY I. POLLA"

tho

••-• ,...,._,

low to form four words.

llMtHRV

I

I

LI\DIE

T E H \E ll\&lt;•

Th'e two

I .:~-~

mg the very handsoiTle
driver as they sal wa1t1ng for
.
the bus to leave. One cutie an_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,nounced . "This is a case of

I

5

I

RE R ACE
everyone taking lhe bus and
1 _....;.:...:,.;.:..,._:,....:-r;,-1 1eavi ng the ...... to .. !"
t~
l vmPlete the chutkl.e quoted
·~
.
.
. ,.... by illlmg in the miumg word'

I I I' J

I

16 .-.

L_L...l-.L....I-...L......J

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PR INT NUMBE RED
lETT ERS IN SQUAR ES
1:\ UNSCRAMBlE FORI
'1:1 ANSWE R

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Swanky - finch - Wreck • Occult • CHECKS
1 have a friend who is frugal almost to the point of
being called
. If he sprained his arm it wouldn't
be from
the dinner CHECKS.

-MENT

WATIAJIROOIIING
Uncondldonll Mftlllml • •..,.,.
111. Local ....,.nc11 tumColi 1-800-a7-0171 Dr

·-'JI.:
o:a:u:;,•
ra
WlllfJM aalng. let
1171.
CUI'IIo Homo lm-=~o. No
Job
r -. Y11,.
lx•
......Too
_ lla
lO
)n
._
,,

ASTRO-GRAPH

.

.
t::b =~.~It"""
Po"'·

~

ui

.

•

1.

Home

i-~·~~~·~·~~~~;;,.:·==··
_.1'

3 NT

8 Boredom

SPIV ICPS

·Pht~·

·::::.:::;:.=::..·
Conn

0/ER. 11-\SRE .

(

~- AddMiono, ,D\Indlllono,
., ... Prolurla 81, 1 - - Aoollna. Klla- llllha. In"
Floh
2413 Joe·Avo. c~
-:7.:=::·-:--:-::--:-...,..--- ourod, -,,.. llllmotoo. nwt'JI.'
Point· Tonk,
Pllallnt,
304-175-2013
0811.
•
full llrro Troplcol llahloriblnla: 1181 01•\t.ilo Dono u,
lntlllonlmoll lnd ouppl .
!lra&lt;rghottt, , PI, PW, P - r
Sooto, 01111'1111 Control, P - r Dovla 84!!'fng ~~~- And
Aaglll- U . . . - ,._lo, Locka, l!lo. AIIMI cao- YICUIIIII Cloorwr !l.pa!r, 1 yoor aid,
Ol1 - · · -o. l..aacladl OM OWnorl
hoiraobroke
•••H2 - • lloullltt To .•~1 •
'
'·~ ~ ' Eo.ellanl Condftlonl
Schno...., mlnlotura:o.&amp;:'pploo Good .-.Jng: 84 71111 814-448- Klng'o Homo ~AM
lng - I'M 211
Cirll
,.,~
...
ond tdu~o. oloo P
pup- 4223 Aftori:DO P.M. •
tlrilllo,
Hll,
ch. bloociJ.~. !'"llllnoo,
:tool.:::vl::;:l;::ll::_•::'14:;.-8;:::•-::::::::.·_.._ _ 1111 Pantloc Orand Am SE, Aon'l TV 111'¥100, ~lllna
auto.,
a~.
- · In llnlth oloo 111 :iclntl tnool
1 block,
~
Musical
tranom-.- PI,
PB, , _
PWI Clhor bnrndo. Howo ..... IIII'MIIIpa
. now
-~......._wv
Instruments
,..,
,.1'11
~ion
oala
11
011
10
304-I7I4JII
Ohio .............4.
.,.....,.._,....:......:...,....,;....,..:;__ _ l_lo llloto, f20oo. 304-1'111lluntfy alii- a folding muolc 2110altor4pm.
llonc( 1 1 ond *'U 3
~=-=:::.:;,,.:;:::::...,::-:---,-..­ Co.
lltptla
Pumalna
- Tanlt
EVANIINTIA
,
WI a'n orc 5. cpm .,
' 04-175- 1117 OL lkrboru Wagon, Air, llh, Jacltoon,OH----- ~Cnrloe,AMQ ~ol Only
T
lor - n
u 000 Ml'"" u~
•-~"
180. 304=1M botor.lam:::"
-liM
azn · -.' 101'1111011
_pul·
..
WIII ltuld ,
polio
aldlna or t.-' oklrtlnll. I
Conn tnorrl&gt;al&gt;_aood condtlon, 1117 CAX •• - r ,..,_ ~4541112.
~h~I~O,~I~M-992-~~:""~''tT.iij;.;;;-Fo;:s;i;.l Pioneer
root, pragromnrorr
fulling,
lllf'lo, Allored ""-'i, 82
Plumbing &amp;
!fi!~On-&lt;:o,.olo PlanD For Sola. SopiiOObloalc.
atrs rilo~l 183&amp;0,
·•Smoll Poymanto. Sot -· M •Heating
11 1
84
;:;::7
Loco ,~·~-.:::::M:;::~::::
• .. :::.·:,.......,..,-I !pm urookdap.
Ulod Snore Drum...r S!Ond a 1117 Mullana OT 10,000 Mllao, 5
PrlcllcO Pod, Vory Cond~ 1D11r1, AC, llorl On Red 11._
lion, 814 ·441 4211 C.ll Aftor 1
11::..·- - - - - - - - 1
:.P·::
58
Fruita &amp;
=-~=- ~';r"c:/. ~.:'l:
U,HI.!: ~ WIT Pick·
VegetableS
' Up, I
IIIII: 1111-.,
,_...,.......:..::.::.;;::;::::,_..,..12-10
IUN• 1181 - a c
Appi... Juot oil At. 143, ono "'llo Sunblnt tt iiiil, 814-448-1170
oouth ol Crii'JIOnlor. Red ond ~ Ni '.f.h. 1: 114-448~..:.:!"~';."" lpplaa. Opon :0118=1:.__ _'_ _ _ _ _ __

r· --

Db!.

6 DowoloPid
7 Nlghllighl

Improvements

~-· _;,;;~;:..:.:.-:-:::--:-:---::----

ca., -

I F1&lt;3URE I MI&lt;SHT #5
WELL. E!&gt;E HEI&lt;E ,1&gt;6

$

81

Ita Cornaro Whh T·Topo, EoClllonl Condklon, lluot Boo To
~A~ppr~rool!~~~·-_!81~4~3~1!:1!;121!!!1·:..__
1184 11-10, outo., ohM bod,
:*'::150:::;·.:304-1~:.:75-::::214:.::1-:..__ __
1111 Flrablrd T·Topo, Air,
cruloe, Novv 11_,, Lliw Mllao,
Good Conrlllon, 11•11 Boll, Aoking .4,1100, Moko Ollar, 814448'14R.

=ad,

1 NT

Norlb

1+

5 Outftl

1 ~~~joint
2 - Lang

37 Pulln

TODAY'S HISTORY: On this day in
1964 the Warren Commission issued
its r~port on the assassination of J ohn
F. Kennedy, which stated that Lee
Harvey Oswald acted alone .
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS : Samuel
Adams (1722-1803), Revolutionary War
patriot; Thomas Nasi &lt;1840-1902&gt;, cartoonis t; Louis Auchincloss 0917-),
writer, is 76; William Conrad (1920-).
actor, is 73 ; Arthur Penn (1922- ), film
director, is 71 ; Wilford Brimley
(1934-l, actor, is 59; Meat Loaf (1947-l,
singer, is 46; Mike Schm idt 0949-1,
baseball star, is 44.

woi.'iOf!

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Well

wllh

4 $mclolh

DOWN

(2 Wdl.)

Sept. 27, 1993

goo tonka, ton trueltwholli. -toro. _ ...
olo. D l A Aulo.lllalw.
&lt;
312-:IIU or 1-lll0-27S-413zt.
·.

79

Souill

Sy1111
3 lllkll dO

m111ur1

36 Wllhdrow

@ 1-. HIWIPAPER ENTIRPRtll MM.

buy-"""

1116 Buick Special Covortoblo.
Rollorw-. - · -.,,,
point, and ,.w top. llfdng
$1100.00 114-441-41114
1872 ChryMi New Yorb 4c1
hlnl top, 8 000 mlloo. r,1oo:ii
g~, very llttla Not, 414-941- ·
2808
1m l•lck t.Solmr A·t R..,_
nlng Condhlon, Naw Tl,. &amp;
Blllf.,..,
1800 Or Lllo, l14-448-·#'
4951.
1m Oklo 11tt1o ruot aoo
•
•
oman
block,
trent.
ahlft
kh3'o • good
bum-ra
••oo
OBO
~ • ..
• ~3H2.
1 m~moulh Valanr • ·-· •14•
441·
Alii' 3 P.M.
1171 Chrralor Nawpo~. •uo.
814-2511'1112.

18 Cuddle
21 EnJoy
23 Rellremenl·
plan lnlt..
24 1004, Roman
271odr of
WIW
211 Dl¥lelon word
32 Rul&gt;ber on

1141ftCII

If you are forced to fight someone, il
is usually advantageotJS to strike the
lint blow. But it may be even more
important to know where to strike the
lint blow. And the icing on the cake Is
to know why you are striking there.
...----,----.....,-~-=&gt;'
Today's deal was reported by Lucien Claden in the French newspaper
ZAM60N I ..
Nice-Matin. When North raised to
three no-trump over West's doutble,
evidently he had a long, solid club
and was hoping to steal a game. With a
very strong hand, he would
redoubled.
West should lead a top spade.
he bas seen the dummy, it is obvious
that he should switch to a low diamond. East wins with the ace and
turns the diamond 10. After South coven with the queen, the defenSe takes
the first five tricks - two spades and
three diamonds - for one down. But
West is feelil)g particularly avaricious
and potentially suicidal, he returns a
low diamond at trick lour. When part·
vi~AT A~~ YOUJ( IMMtl&gt;~ATE
ner wins with the eight and has anothGOALS \N LIF~1
er spade to play, the contract goes
three down.
One cool customer - or cucumber,
f
according to choice - made an incredible opening lead: he selected
M~f'J'S ~OOM1
spade jack. Now, of course, de&lt;~la;rerl
could have put up dummy's queen, run
the whole club suit and finished with
nine or 10 tricks. But not unJIItiJralily
he played tow from the
make matten worse, after
cashed five spade tricks and led a
diamond to East's ace, South d'd"'' I
cover the diamond-10 return. So a
third diamond play allowed the delenders to cash five tricks in that suit
too. Six down: 600 points to East-West!

:':!

Olurnllv~ St., Golllpollo. Nwow &amp; Ulod'l:!l8;f.;;;;;;-P~et;;;;ia~f~O;;r~S;;a~liie;;:p;

Shiro
53 Hewlllan
Wrtllh
54 PollonOUI
mulltroom
56 Symbol of
.
'llclory
57 Rogulellon
58 Graftod, In
il«lldry
511 Paid notlclt
60 AfriCan lox
61 Peper

34 High aoclety

- - - Wt4t,E' Tl'f~

i

*:

13 Prllt
14 Dutch town
15 Height
17 GrPIJ men
18 Unouccenlul

Strike
the opening blow .

...-----.......,

. M'/ DAD TOOK ME TO

Monitor,.,:.,-

==A~-~~~~~ =:..~

44 Fornterly
41 Wlird
48 Aelrlll-

,.

fEANUTS

pl._. - -

no .. as

OWMI't1 0rg.

liOI'IIIc

'By PbUiip Alder

i

~:,:hlon.

(pret.l

Opening lead: •

h~:,'l'• 1:;~P:,

-

a lncorrocl

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

.;

CC

.K10973
• A 10 8

+85

=

·

+64

• Q713

::,'o,

·_c.,_

EAST

YES.SIR .. .

I

,

41 - de
Jlltlllro
42Firoenn

car

+AKQ9113

~~~~Y;,:;.nd·:~~-il~~ =72.~.
or long.
wra~rlamo ~3 300 11-18 -·-•
.

814-317-7031.

1-1'1-11

+Q72
•a
.J

11'1'1 F-too Ford Pickup._ Low
11111191~ Now Corburotor, " , . .
-tor ""re • Mumor, Bed A...

•· "

••··~

Ml

:

No Nil. :;
•
·• •• '
•
-N
For Solo: 19111 Ford 112 Ton I
Now Chain - . Coniptata
Truck, &amp; Cyl-r, Automotlc, j
INvo .,_go on mochlno.
:"t.:.O::.JL"'~in:":::
. 305 SIUI'Yy otii'Oidor 1710, 114-44f-4'1SS. ·
~..
Flihannrtn'o Wodori, 114-388- 100Goa1• 181100. Brllllon · 81 Moclt Troctor 19111 ~o Ton- ~
11403.
r.::'!~'~~~"fs~sa~""\' F'ord dom 210 Cummlnga Englno 41
.,
Koofw so,.lco ~~~:;,• Ft. Log T,.ltor, 18 l't AlunilnYIII
Oualfty Womon - · Cooto, 818 At
. Dump, 8'14-4411-8038.
SmaH lltrlouo luyora only, -;:11:;:•:.:.:::..:
· 11'!:.:·:,:304;::.-at=5-:..:384::.:.:l:.·-,.,51
Household
&amp;14 441 a:ML
73 V
&amp; 4 WD'
•,
. h
~Frrrv~~h T0-20~traccondtor .w11
ans
S
,
GoodS
Aaallotlc car llarao -~
• nnC , VOI'J
n 1on, ~~=-;:--....,,...-,-~-:--: ,•
10 wotto Ilea now ••• •
·
buoh hoG ft. blado, rwor 1982 Ford Econ.llno Cuotomlzod ,.
4pc. llvlngroomaule,llkenew, 2354. '
,.-, v
· utll•r r.ak..f2ti0 tor all, 814- Vln.304475-7182.
_ ::
olooconmlco. 304-882-2081.
1112-8115.
'
Bam ao..."IU.'e new •rmy tr1e
1th Dodge Grind Clrt'lln LE \
Vl'RAFUANITUAE
comllouga, Son- llodol 12 11-ey Forgu_, hoy 10,100 Mllao, Loorladl P - r ;,
dyvlllo Paot Olfic&lt;l F...--aun, bolll', *'100: Coso 3110 do..r Evorvthlng, 114-441-1175, Or- ,
11~4D8-31Av58SAOMrE81A48-4CA48-4SH421 . ~5rhor doyo&amp; trouro. whh trollor, oalrlng 181100; 614-44a.oo78 18,700, ExcoiiOIII '
~ ·•
3044T.I~
Holotaln lloor, wolgliil opprox. Condition.
~, ,',
OR AENT~.OWN (NO DEPOSIT) r ~--:-:=,:'-.:::~:.·::--:-::-:--:::= IOOibo.; .
UmouilnM. .ford
1 Sola a Chair . _ - 1210:
bull
3001bo
1112 Ford Exp- XLT, 4Wf; ~
Dl-o Sot With 4 Cholrw, Ill; ~,:2·M 0:~:.~~421.
4dr.,
oulomollc,
ovordrlvo, ,'
OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS: 114-448-1137.
- r loldod, 25,000 mllol, 814- .;
Wrought Iron T1blo W/4 Choirs; I;.::.;:.:::.;;;:~:-::---=:-::--:ld.ool 2 r - com llf~kor, . 1182-883l
•
1
Fan Beck Rocking Chair · $58; 5 Pc. Oo1t Dlnotto, Pill- ole. cond., 84000. 30~150,
'
'
G d A hW. ·1 ~~oo
Rocke•, Sc!la, Aacll.,.., &amp; Dao".
-.A
M t
1e
·
or on rc
Y ••••·
"' Ook 7 Stlc"• ho__. '"
0 OrC_yC I
)· ',
Corl&gt;ln -8nYrlar Fumltun, 114"
.., I ,,..._,
• .
Bedding -Twin Mott Sol $$9, Full 441·1171.
~::.';'.""n'a Form, At. :11, 304- 11111 RM 2110, runo oxcolllft,
$99 So~ QuHn *'49 Sot; 4 Stocltmotlc 51_ lt4-446-G527.
1800,114-992-&gt;:111.
;·
Drawer "hut $44.95; Cor lltd'o
-·~
POLE
BUILDING SPECIAL.
Bunk lltd'o, Pootor B-. Full Strollor, bai&gt;Jbad, walker, high- 30'x40'1'. Palntod Stoll Slrlao !~p,=~~5-;:::_' oon; :
Llno 01 Southwaotom v - chair, aar - · orolng,
Stoll Roof, 15'x81
,
Sto~l!',!! At $20.00; lndlono Mony :104~141.
.
Stoll llldo• 3' Man D-. 1118 CA 128 Bought Now In Ill •,
Shape • • · Slz•o Sto~lng At
S8,168. ERECTED. Iron Horoo FQr Solo $1,200, Coli 814·387· 1
$5.00. 2 Loeollono -Boold.o Auto Tondy 1000 BL Whh -lc. Print• Bulldo,. 1-800-312·t045.
Evonln...
0433
1
Auction Or 4 Mlloo Out 141. or Arid
Rook·
~
Opon I A.M. To 8 P.M. Man -Sat. Ira~~ itiiii'iioo Shonnlu 22111'1. Flnlllt - r 1191 HIMy 883 Sportotor 1I
Bldroom group: Bod, mattren 8
Aftor PJI.
I Ft. B - 14,000, 814-387-0112, =Dol;;:.:"':;;"::.•1:.;14..;.-3.:;87:.:...;'G1.:.:4::2.:..__ _ _
d bo
rl
d
and Ulllltr truck Mel lrll, aood IU Ul lUI.
.
x
ng!od
ohope,lako 82SO,I14-1112·1ll10.
W.nlld: .. To Do Brulh 75 Boats &amp; MotorS
$350 614-441-1155.
Hot!Qing 1n cantonory. Coli 814lor Sale
,
Froot~
,_..
304- Wont to buy: lapo of TV "*-f03:1
Evon!~
,
814-441· --=:-::::-::~;....::,:::.:.,..-=,_
175
,_ ra .. ..,orotor,
·
"W• W-~· lkrndey 0200 eo- , -ve
~
875-ll75t
9111, , wll pey
lor
••• Ill·
13' •• Boot Flbo~lon Whh :
·
d llvary 304-182 2 8
Bo11 Boo~, ~h Trallor, 3 HP ,
Full Slzo Watorbod With Paddod I ;:;•;;:,::~·~
, ~=-~:=:....,·=.....,. 63
.Livestock
0 - r d 0101or, TroDing Motor, ,
Rollo, 614-441-()131.
WATER LINE SPECIAL: S/42 Ooro &amp; 2 Lifo Jockalo 1400, ,
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
llull. 304-175-2130 114-388-8173.
•
11 Ft. Bon Troctor W!th 50 Ill&gt; •
Woohore, dryoro, rofrlgorllora, Joe- Ohkr, , - . ,
rangoa. ~koggo Applloncoo, 78
'
64 Hay 1r G 1
Ma
h,IOO l14417-7l7l " 1
Vlno Stroot1 ~all614-446·1'398, 1· WATER
STORAGE
TANKS
rl n
. rcury
•
·J
aoo-499-34n.
- A n d llolc!w Onrund FDA Hn
1•- ~-E aft&amp;Y HAA-~-...1 For Wollr
= r e - . *'·50 I up.
-· ~ ._,
-" (
37-..~n
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
AonEvono~nill Joel;
-8
1110.
1
Comploto homo fumlo~l~~- -n, Oh'""1
i
Ho uro: IIon-S II, "S
-.
._..,
Lllto Now Coridftlorl,
tl],_~ Ir
r . 61
, ~
IOO.f37.f121
Dr .,._,
0322, 3 mlloo out Bulovlllo Ad. WHITE'I MITAL DEli!CToRS
lko
,
Froo Dollvory.
Ron Allloonl 1210 Socond
M ·
•
l!ollohan Fumh•ro &amp; Corpota, ~';e. Ooll polio, Ohio, l14- 71 Auloa fOr Slle
76 Auto Parts &amp;
·• :
Rt. 7, N. 614 -441-11144 9., 2 Cor· t :;.;:....;;:;;::.._______
'
pot 180 , Vlnylt-1. 4._
•·
'71 Dodao Do~ drag cor, runo
Acceaaorlea
,~
55
Building
groo~ m99Z-387t tloyo or 814• •
PICKENS FURNITURE
S
lie
1411-21134 a-ngo.
BUdai! T,.&amp; lulo,., Uotd a :·
N,w/Uood
I ::--:--:-~U;:;PP:::.:;;:.:s:--:relrulll, ... . , _ -Ina .. • : \
Hauaaha.ld tumlahlng. 112 mi. I'::Bioc" .......
wl
camaro.J.. Nd1 !,.e, 1utomeUc, owner 114-24W177, ..~ •.
Jorrlcho ·Rd. Pt. Pllount, wv,
"' -...., peo, "" -·OO,IM-'J02-2Hr.
2131. ,
:
call304o.87'S·1450.
dawll, lint• 110.'
Ude Wln1 - Rio Oranrla, OH Coli 114- '84 Cornaro, otondard, oonroof, Wonted to
ond bul'naor ,'
245-f121.
4 eyll,.r,ru,. ond looko QOOCI, lor '18 ford ., .. - H 114-llaAUCTION .sw~~NITUAE. 82 1 : : : . : ; . : = . : - - - - - - - Bre-ry Ad., 814-1112·n511.
110!1:1.
'
:

~rror. v:~

41

,

1 .'\

Pltlline-

woepon

: •.

1HO Clranrl Am 2 Door, wo;
Eo-nl Cond~lon, :11,000 •.
1111•, ..... 114-t...aM Or: ~

MOnth
3ll Wild buffalo

5 QlecW !ldge

12

El-.

C1111:t b1 NIA. nc.

Wanted tO Rent

ALDE:R

J'!, •

tHO StOI'IUU 4 Cytlndor, J.•:
' - "• Air Condhlonlng, AILflrt..
Clollill,
COnalan;
15,000, 814-381-fltl.

:304;;;:-a=eaea~-2581~--;;;;-q;;;;b;;;;;:

47

PHILLIP

- ··l
~

oftor 5pm.

38 ........

1 FHttt cllllc

. .Y cloth lnt01'1«1 ,..u,., a.~
-.mo.; 44,000M.. uOIHeql~
condition, 18,400, &amp;14-1112-31~ ;

flAI/r

On1 · bedroom
~rtiMI\ta,
$22~ lnclurlol uti ••· t100
-urhy " - h , no polo; 814:1182=.:-221=l·:....._....,..._ _ _-=,Stonewood A-dmonto, Midt-'O
dllportl Ohio Ia
.now occaptlng
~d~~
lor ~~ ald0:n~~9
..- ··-..
,
hornllcapped. EOH.

MobH homo ope... lor rent.
304-875-6114. ·
s-oo lor rent oto~lng II
$85/mo,, 8'M.fl2•2117.

ACROU

1110 ca..llll', 2dr., ..... l!op,,

304-. . .

19111 Fl'lldom 12x10 2 Bed·
TCIII Elact~. Control
1
Air, 811 448 0885.
1111 BI'II!IWOOCI Moblo Homo,
3 Bedroom•, Qarrlan Tub, AI·
raocly IIII-Up, COli eM-24s-11622
After 8 P.M.
1994 Aodmon 14~ 3bdrm., In·
•• .,

Prltc LE.

now tlrao, Rmpg, omlfm,

2 badVllloS:
Minor
.nd
RlwfiiApo~- In MlddlaDotL Prom
h02. Caiii'M.-...u. EOH.
Complltly Fumlohorl , rnoblla
hooni, 1 Ootllpolla,
ow-tooklng rtvw. Dlpoelt, No
- . CA, - · 114 Ul ID31.
North 4th, Mldd'--',
..,..., 2 room,
lltlcloMy -~mont. •p &amp; ref.

45

t,

. .·

1181 -

opa~-

Rooms '
FU1111Sflecl
R_,olorr8nt-waokormonlh.
. Storti~ ot t1201mo. oonla Hotel.
1..._ mobil. • - - •-~ lot · 5t4 • NIO4
•••
•-••r - o
•
'
140x40, ..,. w- l *rw,
doubla ov., l'lnga, clly watar, Slooplng ,_,. with cooklng.
goo, coblo ~: block top Aloo trallor · All hook~
rood, *'3.1100.
'1!1-23111.
Coli 111
oftor 2:00 p.m.,
5651
tm motrlla home, Mx711, mUll
• _, WV.
bo moved, 151100, 114-1182-2210 46 Spa
f
Rent
or 114-1149-28113.
· Ce or

:W:.J=-.~IIoyHighSchool,

33

-

~ucat~ ":0 :.0':,'~=~~

I

Mobile Homes
for Sale

ou.n..

I ...

Q00C1 oond. 304-171-172I

o...living. 1 room
11

~:::1~: ~~S::~at:-4"::: ~~~~~lrr!!.=.n~':: ~"l,1".!,vot.:,::'!1\!:

8224.
Plono lnoono In my homo to
blglnnoro odvoncod 11udon11,
&amp; odults. It lntorootod, call 614992'11403.

Opportunity
n,
'
Co BoydArltlno,IOO.f21-8222.
INDTICEI
Eom Ful-Tlmo Pay For Port·
.
Ch
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Tl- AI A
~moo recommondo thot you do busl=lll'llor.11:. 11100 ~:'lr.; noll with poopla you knowlr ond
Colllcllng Or """lvorln,, Allo NOT to aond monoy throug tho
, -Po ...,
moll until you hovo lnvootfglltd
r11oo, Crill 1""245- thtr offorlng.
Bookl
503
1 ng
.
Locol Po• Phono Aouto: $1,200.
FLATBED
DAIVERS~rdlnol A WHk, Potontlol. Pricod To
Freight Coni.,. hoi an oppor- Soli. 1-800-488-'1832.
tun!fy lor liotbod clrlvel'l thot lo
oocoitd ta nonol Do you own Loeol V.ndlng Roulo: .,,200 A
your - n troctor? Hovo you Wook Polontlal. llull Soli. 1-fiOO.
Pomeroy,
thought · - IKrylng your own 653-Vond.
tractOr? lo bolng I compenf
Middleport
driver _ , you ore lntorootod Vondlng Routa: For Solo.
In? Than col Cordlnol todoy at Strong,_ Solid CUh BUoln~~o.
&amp; VIcinity
1-800-129-1222 and Ilk for High bfllc, Local I.Dcallono.
810 South Second, Mlddltpan, Boyd. WE HAVE IT ALLI
Equipment. 1-11011-2114S.pCember 28 through October
Vand.
1
5. l.tsl one of year!
For
prKtlcll, no-nol'lltnM
Elfi t.hed Loc 8 ...
10
Ohio
.JI.h
All Yord Soln Mull Bo Paid In
Advance. ONdllne: 1:OOINn ttt.
trolnlng 11 Tlra ""'"'' Educallon z Bt- In Qparotlon,
day btlor. the ed It fo run, Contor. C - from lnduolrlal Buolnooor Conclato Of Approa.
outo -honlco, I~ Worth 01 Aocounto
Sunday odltlon· 1:00pm F~day, -·'nlanonce,
,_
w h · - ....~ s~ F ·~
Monday
edition
10:00a.m. offlco
""lcoo, lloctronlco,
--. or · Satur•y.
carpentry,
oceount- On Tho Dolillr. Aopeot AllaH
lnglcornl."lng,
perolrrgol, Cult""*" A 10,000
Rummogo Solo, Oct. 4 &amp; 5I ·
Monday &amp; Tulldoy, Episcopo
TParish HouH, t-4pm.
occupottonO. O!&gt;onlngo IIIII You Tlla - - I Olvl You
ovolloblo In 1111/wlntor nmaotor Tho ~ fior Your B•VIna
oto=l Oct. 11th. Coli 1-fiOO. Noodl. P - . . Of Thla full'
wanted
to
Buy
9
••
• u - • •1111
Mayba Marla Dlf.
r·-·- w~ P u - Tho»
Antique• and uud furniture. no -JOIN A o
WINNING TEAM u 1 counta l 1.oa11 1 Or llolh
lttm too larfll or too email, wRI INdo' In lhtr nnonclal lOMeii l•lldl._ Or Purchuo Tho
buy one piece or compllllll orono, bolng a mornbor of our W-'""'a - - . lltrlouo Inhou..hold, eel OlbV M1rtln, eonoumor trnoncao 111m muno qulrlll OniJ For Appolntmll'lt,
. 614-1192-11141.
hovlng 1 good ploco to alart. 1-114- 2flllln.
Decoretlld atOMWtre, Willi ,,.., Ani yo• lll~motlvottd, • • phonta, old lampe1 .. old ther~ tlvo and on)oy d11llng with 23
Professional
momtttl'8, old elocu, antique poopla7 A pt-ont peroonol~y
Services
tumhure. Riverine Antiques. and ;r:&gt;!&gt;d ,...... okllla ... I
AUII Moor1, OWMI. 614-892• must. Aooponolbllllol Include
lcllvltloo ........ Ia crotl~. lllol, Oonoral Olllco And Po~ng Lot
252&amp;. Wt buy 11t1t1a.
account m1 n1 g1 m1 nt and 10&gt; C.nlng Av1lllble For lnfOrml..
Don't Junk hi Sell Ua Your Non- cOunting. For -lmmodlola con- lion Col 114-441·11110.
Wortdng
Mo)or Applloncoo, aideratlon contact Ktvln Smith,
Calor
TV1,
Rtfrigereton, 814-- 2111 EOE ue~ N
-·· ·
· -~n, onfi'MMI'I, VCR't, MlcrDWMrll,
Air CondltloMra. Oult1r Amps, = : n t.•nd drug frH onEtc. 814-256·1238.
lllllulr
Wlnlld,
experl•nee
Grill 1nd bumptr for '88 FOfd t&gt;Nflrrod, bul will tralnilroply to
Pl. Plouurnt Aoglotor, 01 R-23,
Bronco 11, 614-992-!5053.
200 Main SII'Mt, Pl. PIIIUnt,
J &amp; 0'1 Auto P1rt1 1nd S.lvaae. wv 2851111aloo buyinG Junk coro a tnrcko.
No Eoporloncol •soo To 1100
304-771-1343.
-kly n&gt;otontlol Procooalng
Junk oare. any condhlon, 814- FHA Mortgogo Rotundo. own
992·1183.
Hoir,., 1-60f-848-0044 E11.111.
All ,at Mlall IGVIII'Itulg II)
24Hou...
Wonted To Buy: Junk Autoo
IIlii
n a - I l OUbiO&lt;IIO
Whh Or WhhcrrA Malara. Col Overbrook cantor hoo o pertlira Flclol'l1 Fair HouoilgA&lt;I
Lorry Uvoly. I'M 318 1103.
limo 5;00-1;30 poalllon IVIIIIbfa
ol 1968 Which- Uogll
CNA'1. For mo111 InformaWonted To Buy : lllonrllng 11m· tor
to IICfvlll'tillo "onY proloronco,
tion,
pi-•
cell
Robyn
Holton
bor &amp; Plno, Con Still lm· II 814·1192-8472.
11mlllllon or &lt;hcl'fmlnlllon
mtdlotly, Good Prlcoo, 814-388balld on roce, color, roiglon,
ftOI.
Tlla Oollill -llolgo CommunHy
111 famiiiiiiiiUI or nlllollll
Action Agancy lo Currontly
Top ~~~- Pold: All Old U.S. Soalclng To Hire A Pa~-TI- lnorigin, or ony lntonllon lo
Colno, llold Ringo, Sllvor Colno, toko Clork To Work Whh Tho
molco ony oucll prllti'II'ICt,
Gold Colno. M.T.B. Coin Shop, Blrtwlll Houolng Proloct. Tha
1St _ , . , Awnuo, Oolllpollo.
ltrJIIIIon or dlscrlrnlnallon."
PootUon Would lloqufro An lrudlvlduol
To
Work
In
Bl-11,
rnobllo Whooo Prlmory Duty lo To AoWonted to buy: Thla nowop- will not
alot Locol HouHiroldo In
-8'14-&lt;148-0t71
knowingly ar:&lt;::ept
'
Houolng
Ap.
Employment Se rv1 ces Properlng
actYenltement tor real utile
pHcotlono. Olhor RoquiNcl
Wl1lch II In violation of llro
Dutillo Ara Typing Corroopondence, M•lnt1lillng Office FilM
law. Our I'Nrlal'l are lrarllly
And Alllotlng In· P-ring Bid
lnlonnod lhll alf -lngs
11 Help Wanted
Pocltogoo. Experlonco Whh
ldvlf16Md In thll niWIPfiPir
Fadaral
Prograrno
Dulrotl.
AYONI Ail or- olllra
are IVallble on'an IQUII
money or want 1 carM~ ehher Th.,. Ani No 'lltdlcol SonoiHa
oppOrtunhy bway.-&lt;:oll ~IYn. :104 ab-2845 Whh Thla Poohlon, Tho Pooltlon
1o .For Approxlmataly M Months
or 1-8GO-tlll2-635a.
J32 Houri Ptr Week. Minimum
10 eo..-rotorw Hooded To Educodon Roqulrarnont lo High
Soli Toya a Qlfto For Clvtotmoo, School OradUIII. Apply At Tho 31 Homaa for Sale
No Coi~Or Dallvotlng, Golllo -Moloo CAA Clnlrol OHico
1111'1410,
nlco
$500 KM 1kr
•CoM Mary 114- No Later Then October 5, 1183. 2br,
For Fut1htr lntore;nlt1on Call814o lollnolahborfioorf. 304-875-31150
446.f21t
.M.
387·7341 Dr 814·11V2-1629. ·Tho or 304-"173-6315 oft or 4pm.
AVON I AM Araao I Shlrioy Oolllo ·Molgrr CAA lo An EqYII 3 bodroom home In Autllnd,
Speoro, 304-87S-142tl.
Oppo~unhy Employer.
lei, garrlao1, clllor, out·
IKrUdlrugo lii:mtdloto pooAVON CHRISTMAS Sollo At
8 W ted
Do
Worl&lt; Dr Homo. AVII'Igl 18-$14 =1~~a:,:n.:.:.;;_:...;_;t0:....:_:.---,... olon, m,lioci oso, 814-1'12-2502.
Hourly. PI,. Fontlllllc Dla- ChrioUon womon wonting to
Iboth,
bodrawn
lor1ok - ·
· 1 .112
countll Door-To-Door Optional. cl11n homN, IM-102-7030.
flnlaluod
-mont,
1-100-1112-4738.
lloetrlc hool an&lt;!_. olr, 2 cor
E&amp;R TREE .SERVICE. Topping,
· nlca For
~noomood
on
Wlnlld: IIOMeoM 10 IUbltltute Trimming, Tr,e Aemov11, liedge nic&lt;llovlllot.
oppl. &amp;14-441on ntwiPIP« route, c1ll 114- Trimming. FrH Eellmlt..l Sf,.. 8387.
1112-2852.
:117-l'NTAftor 4p.m.
Brick Aonch, 3 lltdroomo1 1 112
lathe, Full 11-.m.nt:, " C.r
Rick PNroon Auction Compeny,
full time euctlonMr, complete
ouctlon
.....,leo.
Uc186,011lo &amp; W11t Vlrglnill, 304773-5785.

773-5150.

11171 · 12x15 A~lnaton Mobllo
Homo On 112 AI:Nl.and, 1 IIIIo

mlnll 1n Hun1cono, wv, muot
hlve1yr. O.T.A. - - pul~
lng 1 ... 11'11111', good otll'llng
•·t --~1 ··•pmont Bl

~M::.U."Sh;:,;inc.,stk~

Public Sale

:0.~.......

1....---------'-J~---------~ ~458;;;:·'::.";:;•;;,·;;--;-::;;::;:-:--;;:::;:;;:

::&amp;-~

• Gallipolis

b'dnqma.

.=
rvr

ICltla,.,

Y!Whlll Malo Kltlll'l, 814-44823ft.
A.o~ ll'ldOIIId hunllng doa gOOd'h01no, 8-S.fllf.

=

'

NEA Cro•sword Puzzle

Cloth ....... I
71 A Coftdlo.#'·
tion, h.IGO. 114-M~-~~47 Allat"'r

· - Fumlahod, 3 Aoomo a Both,
CQmplololywlfln:lly
corporttd101200lol,
Cllll\ No Polo, -orrco I
""'""'·
oorporl,
petl.i, ... Dop:ralt lloqulrad. 114-441-tStg,
pp a air -..t,
304-773-5815.
~tome.

Sale

for Rent

Mllao 0.0 !IIIIo Aouto' 7, 814441·11111111' I p.m.

Flanoh •

Autos for

.

-'

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

; o~
Tuesday. Sept. 28, 1993
Y~u r 1nborn mgenu ity m1ght be th e key to
't(1.ur success 10 tn e '{ear ahead. It could
help to d1scover ways to Improve both your
lifestyle and your busine ss .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Ins te ad ol Idling
your hours away today . occupy yourse lf
with th1ngs that are tru ly sign ifi cant a nd
p'roductive. This can be a day of achievemimi il you'll lry.' Know where to look lor
ramanee and you'lllind it. The As lro·Gra ph
Matchmaker instantly re\ieals which signs

are romantically perfect lor you . Mail S2 suddenly take an unexpected turn for the
and a long . sell-addressed, stamped enve-~ be tt er toda y pertaining to an ambitious
lope to Matchmaker. c/o t1'11 s newspaper. des1r e you·ve been n ur1 un n ~ . Res pond
P.O. Bo• 4465. New Vorl&lt; , N.Y. 10163.
tmm ed ialely when you gel lhe lrts l s tgnals .
. SCORPIO (Oel. 24-Nov. 22) Try to break 1 TAURUS (April 20-May 20) A close fr iend
awa y from you r mundane routines toda y I m1ght talk w1th you today regarding an 1dea
and seek activit1es which are !un and differ- or prOJeCt that is extremely unique . L1sten
ent. A change ol pace will do you a world attentively . because what hei she has to
of good.
say could have poSSibilities.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 21) You• GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Today &gt;I ypu
material aspec ts look prom1sing today. Be denve any spec1al benefitS . they are likely
alert for unus ual developments. beca use to come from a joint endeavor rather. than
you may be able to add to your hold1ngs from an independent purs u1t. Don't was te
tram a least e~tpect source.
time on S11uat1ons you can't handle alo!le.
CAPRICORN (Dee . 22-Jan . 19) Olhe rs CANCER (June 21 -July 22) In a partnerperceiVe you as being very personable and ship arrangement today your counterpart
chansmatic today. You 'll add ze st to any might be more on track than you are. Yield
group and make a favorable lasting 1mpres- if his/her way of doing things 1S su perior to
sions
on new(Jon.
acquaintances.
AOUARIUS
20-Feb. 19) Follow yout ' yours.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don'l be surprised ·
intu itive percep tions today perta1ning to today if more th an one person c.omes t.o
ways you can best grat ify your material you witll h1slher problems. Associates will
desires. Hunch es prov1de a vis 1on yo ur innately sense th at you are the person who

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Try lo involve
logic lacks.
yoursetl
socially with sev.eral .groups today.
because !here is a possibtltly yo u mighl
meet someone interesting to whom you'll
:
be strongly attracfed.
ARIES (March 21·Apri119) Evenls could

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Ke e p tn mrnd
has
.
.
that the
it issotut1on
people,s.not things that ma~es
the
world work. Y011r besl assel loday rs your
ability to get along with others. Use it con'struCti-vely.

1

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~~~~;~~~:~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~=~~~~r~~:~~~~~

�Blue Jays,
White Sox

Biosphere crew celebrates with fancy
dinner before heading back to work
By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
Associated Press Writer
ORACLE, Ariz. (AP) -The
rour men and four ·women of Biosphere emerged to a throng of
media and well-wishers and a lavish dinner loaded with fOQds they
hadn't seen in two years. But questions remain about what exactly the
$150 miUion project accomplished.
Operators say the crew set a
record for Jiving inside an essentially closed structure -designed
as a mini-Earth with rain forest,
ocean, savannah and farm. The
tw~year exercise in self-sufficiency ended Sunday.
But the dome had been opened
more than two dozen times before

craved: chocolate, olives, salami,
crops and begin a plant and animal ·· fancy cheeses and smoked salmon.
survey.
.
The 3.15·acre complex is run by
After testing and upgrading Space Biospheres Ventures, a Pri·
equipment, operators of the private, vate, for-profit company financed
for-profit enteJprise plan to reseal largely by Texas billionaire
the dome with a second crew early Edward P. Bass, who says he hopes
next year for a one-year stay.
the biosphere will help educate the
The first crew ranged in age public about environmental issues.
from 29 to 69. All are single and:
Yet the project, once billed as a
agreed to just one restriction on prototype space colony, has been
their social life- no pregnancies. aecused ofdeecption and amateur
They have refused to diseuss possi- science and drawn unflattering
ble romances or arguments.
comparisons to Disneyland, in part
Abigail Alling, a marine biolo- because it auracted more than
gist who oversaw the ocean and 400,000 paying visitors in two
coral reef, said the toughest part years.
was getting along with each other,
During their stay, the crew probut that they managed to keep sight duced iust 80 oercent of its food,

and later for import of thousands of
small items, including seeds, sleeping pills, mousetraps and makeup.
.Outside air was pumped in once
nod pure oxygen was added twice
to balance the aunosphere.
Still, Biosphere 2 operators
claimed success in achieving their
key goal _ keeping eight people
alive in a ''materially closed''
environment for two years.
"They said it couldn't be
done," said crew member Mark
Nelson. "But here we are health y, happy ·"
The eight crew members were to
return to the Biosphere today to

cxperimen~" Alling said. 'It never
got to a pomt where we all wanted
to get ouL"
.
Food also became very •mporWIL
Crew members lost an avera~e
of 29 pounds each on a low-fat diet
heavy ~n such crops as sweet potatoes, nee, peanuts,. bananas and
wheat. ,They occas&amp;onally had an
egg, chicken or goat meat and coffee. The women dropped an average of 9 to 10 percent of their
weight and the men 18 percent,
said the team physicinn, Dr. Roy
Walford.
.
Among the ttems they most

z

- Pictured are members or the Chester
Elmer Newell and Robert Woods holding a llag
to the department by the Chesler Council 3l3 Daughters
or America.

Chester Daughters of
American present flag
Erma Cleland, Deputy of
Chester Council 323 Daughters of
America presented the Chester Fire
Deparunent with a flag which has
flown over the State h~use, and a
certificate from former-U.S . Rep.
Clarence Miller at the September
21 meeting in the hall.
.
Councilor Betty Young pres1ded
over the business meeting.
.The pledges to the C~stian and
· American Flags were g•ven and
Matthew 11 verses one through six
were read. The first stanza of the
Star Spangled Banner was sung.
Roll call was taken and minutes
from the last meeting were read
andapproved.
All members are aslced to be at
the next meeting for practice for
inspection. The next meeting will
be at 7 p.m.
.
The following were announced
as sick or recovering Dorothy
Ritchie is in Mount Carmel Hospi·
tal, Leta Mae Kraeuter and Octa
Ward are in Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Alta Ballard and Betty
Roush are home from the hospital.
A thank
note from Ruth

Smith w~ read for let~. calls and
cards dun~g her ~osp1tal stay and
60th wedflin.g anmv~rsary;
The distnct meeung will be held
at Chester Hall on Sept. 29 at 6:30
p.m.
.
Faye ~khart read a report from
state sess&amp;on.,
"
.
Erma Cleland read ~~methmg
Old and Som~thmg New ..
The meetmg closed m regular
form and was followe'd by a
potluck and ~ cake for the July ·
September b•rthdays baked and
decorated by JoAnn. Baull!.
Those celebratmg btrthdays
were Margaret Amberger, Laura
Nice, Lillian Demosty, Jean
Welsh, Elizabeth Hayes, Doris
Grueser, Lora D~mewood, Mary
Holter and Faye Kirkhart.
Others present were Ethel Orr,
Charlotte Grant, ~ae McP~ek,
Opal Hollon, Goldt~ Fredenck,
Betty Denny, Ada B&amp;ssell, Mary
Bamnger, Jo Ann Baum, Thelma
Wh1te, Ella Osborne, Betty Young,
Enna Cleland, Everett Grant, Helen
Wolf, Marcie Keller and Katheryn
Bawn.

feed the goats and chickens, water

depending for lhe rest on beans and
grain i11tended as seed and on a
three-month supply of dome-grown
food stocked inside before closure.
Low crop yields were blamc;d on
cloudy wealher and ~ts.
Levels of potentially hazardous
carbon dioxide rose, fluctuated and
settled at about five times the normal level of the gas in the Earth's
aunosphere.
.
On Sunday's menu: a_ppetizers
including bacon-wrappe&lt;l scallops
and pesto-stuffed mushrooms: roast
breast of pheasant with wild mushrooms and saffron sauce, wild rice
pilaf with currants, vegetables and
a dessert sampler with choColates.
,
•
,
,

Speaker named for
revival services

Marion 0 . Fitch, Greenville,
Ohio will be the speaker at the
Carmel United Methodist Church
revival services to be held Frid~
through Sunday at 7 p.m.
Special music ror the servic s
will be conducted by Fred Adki s
of Stoclcport, and the pastor, Rev.
Kenny Baker invites the public to
attend.
The speaker is a graduate of
Ohio Wesleyan University and
holds an MBA degree from Wharton School of Finance, Philadelphia, Pa. His corporate management career spans over 30 years in
financial management with corpo·
rate giants, Abbott Laboratories in
Chicago, Ill.: Ross Laboratories of
Columbus: Texaco, Inc. of New
York, and Sheraton Hotels, Inc. of
Boston, Mass.
He is an active lay person in the
United Methodist Church, and
chair of the West Ohio Conference
Division of Stewardship. He is
director of Development and a
member of the board of directors of
Worthington United Methodist

Page4

Vol. 44, NO. 108

lolulllmedlalnc.

reduced. For example, in 1993, you limit. If you later find that your
can earn up to S7,680 and receive earnings will be higher or lower
aU of your benefits if you are under than you estimated, you should
age 65. For every $2 you earn over contact us again to change your
thi.s limit, $1 is withheld from your estimate.
And by each April 15, you must
benefits. If you are between age 65
and 69, the 1993 limit is $10,560. let lis know how much you earned
For every $3 you earn over this · in the previous year if you received
limit, $1 is withheld from your some Social Security benefits. We
benefits. When you reach age 70, will send you an,annual earnings
your Social Security benefits are report form that you m.ust file iii
not reduced, no matter how much addition to your Federaltncome tax
return. There is a substantial penalyou earn.
If you are under age 70 and con- ty for not filing an annual report of
tinue to wort, you must contact us earnings on or before April 15. If
promptly to give us an estimate of you are still workiJLg at age 70, you
your earnings for the year ·if you no lonqer h11ve to report your earnexpect to earn more than the annual ings to us.
These types of income do not

Church Children 's Home, and
active with the Urban Ministries
Board, the Dayton North District
Stewardship and the Miami Valley
United Methodist Mission Society.

Arthritis self-help course set
An arthritis self-help course
will be offered at the Meigs County
Health Department on the next five
weeks. The pro$f8m will begin on
Oct 1 and connnuc from 1·3 p.m.
on Fridays through Nov. 5.
The course is being sponsored
by the Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine and the
Arthritis Foundation with funds
from the Ohio Department of
Health.
Instructors .will
- - be- Norma Tor-

By SALLY STREFF BUZBEE
Associated Press Writer
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Ted Hall
hates it when he can:t light up durin~ an airline flight. He fidgets,
he s restless and often resorts to
chewing tobacco and spitting in a
small paper cup.
"It's just murder," said the
retired airline pilot
Now, he's trying to solve the
problem and make money, too.
His charter air service for smok·
ers, Freedom Air, is scheduled to
take off for the firSt time Tuesday
round trip between Chicago's
O'Hare International Airport and
Los Angeles International Airport.

The unrestricted fare is $396 place ani! time for the flights."
After Tuesday, Freedom Air
round trip or $198 one way, with a
fly again until early October,
won't
$20 one-time membership fee. The
when
two
charter flights are schedcheapest Chicago-Los Angeles
uled.
round-trip ticket on the major carri- .
Hall says he will then evaluate
ers is about $400 - with restricthe business. His goal is a regular,
tions.
By last Thursday, only about40 once-a-day charter between two
of the 150 seats on the inaugural major cities. He has rented a plane
flight were booked. But Hall said from Indianapolis-based American
he was confident that when· word Trans Air, which also will provide
gets out, the smokers will come.
pilots and crews.
"We get a lot of calls- 'hey,
Even Freedom Air will have
can you offer this from Louisville some smoking restrictions, as
to Chicago around Thanksgiving required by law. No one can light
and Chrisunas?' So we know the up until the plane is safely in the
market is there," Hall said. "It's air. The no-smoking sign goes off
just a matter of finding the right when the pilot chooses.

count toward the earninqs limits:
investments and interest income,
Veterans or other government benefits, annuities, capital gainn, gifts
or inheritances, rental income
(unless you are a real estate dealer
or you rent a farm to someone and
have an active role In managirtg the
farm), income from trust funds,
moving expenses; travel expenses,
and jury duty pay.
If you have any questions about
re~eiving Social Secrity benefits
while continuing to work, contact
the Athens Social SecUrity office at
592-4448. You may also cal !social
Security's toll-free number, 1-800772-1213.

res, R.N. and T.C. Ervin, R.N.,
both on the local health deparunent
staff.
The course is open to not only
those with arthritis but also the
family of victims.
·
Emphasis will be on types of
arthritis, coping with arthritis, protecting your joints, working with
your doctor, pain managemeRL,
relaxation techniques, exercises,
and arthritis medications.

time.''

Parents show off children conceived from fertility clinic
. LEBANON, Ohio (AP)- After
waiting years to have children, parents who succeeded with the help
of a fertility clinic are eager to
show off their high-tech babies.
An annual reunion organized by
doctors at the Greater Cincinnati
Institute for Reproductive Health
gives more than 100 patients a
chance to share their pride.
"I came to show her off," said
Marilyn Sherman of the Cincinnati
suburb of Anderson Township,
who tried five years to have a child
before her daughter, Lauren Eliza-

beth, was born five months ago.
"We had many disappointmerits, but perseverance pays orr in
the infertility game," she said.
For Debbie and. Randy Hobdy
of Milford, perseverance meant
more than repeated clinical procedures, including in vitro fertiliza·
tion.
"It's the hardest thing in the
world to go through," Debbie
Hobdy said at the reunion Saturday. "We put vacations on hold
(and) building a deck on hold.
Nothing was as important to us as

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - An
independent lab is rechecking
19,000 Pap smears screened at the
Newport Hospital since May 1988
after a woman whose tests were
misread four times died of cervical
cancer.
So far, a rescreening of 1,190
Pap smears found 17 women who
were told they didn 'I have cervical
cancer actually showed early signs
of the disease. The private, nonprofit hospital said the women have
been notified, as will all others if
their tests turn out positive.
All women who had Pap smears
read at the hospital in the last five

years have been told that they can
have a new test done for free, hospital President Robert Healey said
Frid;ly.
Helene Lewis, a special education teacher, died in May. 'Tha hos'
pita! had misread ber Pap smears
dating back to 1984. In July 1992,
a technician reported that her test
was "within normal limits." Three
weeks later, she was diagnosed
with invasive cervical cancer.
State and federal agencies
reported finding many technical
and procedural errors in the way
the hospital lab handled the tests.

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including

4-H news

The Klassy Klovers 4-H Club Nicole and Kyle Edwards, Virgil,
enjoyed a chicken barbecue and Gina, Derek,' Jess and Aaron Tayhayride at the home of Lester and . lor, Jerry, Joyce and Greg Burke,
Kevin and Lisa Lute, Jennifer,
Pam Parker on September 18.
Attending were Sharon and Matt, John and Chris Krawsczyn,
Chad Hubbard, Rick, Cindy, Kristi Ron, Robin, and Shane Spurlock,
and George Koblentz, Lester, Pam, Mike, Sheila, Matthew ·and Jenny
Leslie and Lester Parker, Adam Warner, Kristin Foreman, Kelly
Barrett, Roger, Pam, Milce, Christy Osborne, Chad Wheeler, Jonathan ·
and Alyssa Hoffman, David Hess, Haggerty, Christopher Roush,
Mike Robinson, John , Debbie, Danny Backus and Andy Reed.

Pipe and cigar smokers can't
light up, and there's no smoking in
the bathrooms.
·
.
What will the air be like inside
the cabin when the plane reaches
cruising altitude and everyone
·
lights up?
Hall doesn't know. But he said
the airplane's manufacturer has
assured him the ventilation system
is adequate to avoid problems, he
said.
·
"Everyone has a different pattern of smoking, anyway," ' Hall
said. "So I C811'l imagine we're all
going to be smoking at the same

John A. Wade, .D.
Suite Ill van., Drive

Pt. ,..•••a. wv.

Call.....,.ll44 r.ant. ar labMtln
Mtm..r of Itt•• PPO &amp; FttltraiMotul PPO

." We think that's discriminating
having a baby."
Their three-year struggle ended · toward these women that in vitro
four months ago with the birth of fertilizations are not covered," said
daughters Mackenzie and Ashley Dr. Sherif Awadalla, one of two
clinic doctors. "We see patients
and son Hayden.
The couple spent more than that have been trying for 10 years
S15,000 trying for a child because to have a baby."
The oldest child conceived
their health insurance does not
cover fertility medications or the through the clinic is 5; the youngest
surgeries to harvest eggs and place is several weeks. In all, 224 babies
have been born through the clinic,
them in the uterus.
Some people at the party were and 64 were on the way.
The clinic's success rate is
concerned that President Clinton's
proposed health plan will not help between 20 percent and 25 percent
per attempt, Awadalla said.
infertile couples have children.

"Me? Become a foster parent?
NoWay!"
Believe it or not, this was once the feeling
of many people who are now and have
been successful foster parents. Making the
commitment can be difficult. But it can
lead to many rewarding experiences- and
the knowledge that you're doing something
that really matters.
The Meigs County Department of Human
Services needs caring adults to provide
temporary homes to children of all ages.
. Financial reimbursement, training, and
case management are provided by the
Agency.
Help us make the most important
investment we can- our children! Call now
at 992-2117 for information.

Low tonJabt near 40, clear.
Wednesday, partly cloudy, high
In 60s.

Vegetable plant closed
·by Pillsbury officials

CINCINNAn (AP) _ Pulitter sort of .tumor. The m.ore I thought
Prize winning playwright Edward about 11, the more 11 evolved . I
Albee is prepanng to debut his lat- started ,:"riling it down, and here
est work well off Broadway. .
we are.
.
.
.
"Fra~ments: A Concerto
Albee was emgmauc about h•s
Grosso, ' which Albee directs, lat~l ~ork. .
..
.
opens Oct. 6 at the Ensemble The- " . It s a cur&amp;ous play, . he srud.
ater of Cincinnati, where Albee
It IS mostly the ~ast play.mg actors
directed two of his other plays.
y.-ho are, perfonnmg set pLCCCs. The
Two years ago he directed a mte~uon becomes deeper. It ends
revival of 1967's "Everything in up w1th a greater comprehension of
the Garden." He returned last year each other." .
to direct "Seascape," for which he
Am?.ng h1~ other .works, .AI~
won the Pulitzer in 1975.
wrote Who s Afra1d ~f V1rg1ma
"Plays evolve in my head," Wool,f?, " and. "A Delicate Bal• whICh he won a Pultter
1
Albee said. "I always think of a ance, •0!.
play growing in my mind as some m 1967. •·

You can work and still get retirement benefits
By ED PETERSON
Social Security manager in
Atheu
Social Security estimates that
nearly 140,000 people will me for
retirement benefits in September.
But aany of them will not be
•retirees' in the uue sense of the
word because they 'II keep on
working. They also will receive
Social Security checks.
If you are 62 years of age or
older you can continue to wort
and still get all of your Social
Security benefits a8 long as your
earnings don't exceed certain .li~­
its. If you earn more than the lumt,
your Social Security check win be

I

1 Section. 10 P~~gea 35 c.,t.
A Mu!llll!edla Inc. Nenpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 28, 1993 .

~~~g~U:taf~~i~;:ri~;h~r:n::: of'!!~e~:'·did I give UP, on the Playwright to debut tn Cmctnnatt

Lab re-examining 19,000
cancer tests after misreadings
MARlON FITCH

Pick 3:
416
Pick 4:
0336
Buckeye 5:
8-12-13-26-35

cop . ti~les

The vegetable processing component at Pillsbury's Wellston
plant will be closed, but the plant
will continue to operate as a pizza
planL the food company's national
office announced Monday.
The closing comes as part of the
Pillsbury's attempt to improve the
competitiveness of its vegetable
business, officials said. Green
Giant experienced a 65 percent
decline in earnings during in 1992,
and earnings dropped by 50 percent
in the f1rst six months of 1993.
Pillsbury said it plans to consolidate its manufacturing throughout
North America. They hope this will
reduce costs, improve customer
service and sttengthen an emphasis

on quality.
Vegetable plants in Watsonville,
Calif., London, Ontario, Tecumseh,
Ontario, and Chilliwack, British
Columbia will also be closed as
part of the $100 million reorganiza·
tion. Production will be transferred
to Green Giant plants in Illinois
and a third party packaging center
in the Northwest.
"The actions will bring Green .
Giant closer to our goal of being
the industry's lowest cost valueadded ~;~roducer," Pillsbury Chief
Execut&amp;ve Officer Paul S. Walsh
said. "The plan we have put in
place will improve our competitiveness and provide better service
to our customers, while retaining
quality sWtdards for - which· · -Green

WASHINGTON (AP) - First
lady H)llary Rodham Clinton
implored members of Congress
today, "as a mother, a wife, a
daughter; a woman," to worlc with
'the -administration to overhaul
America's health care system.
"Americans can no lo.nger wait
for health care reform. As we sit
here today, literally hundreds and
hundreds of Americans will lose
their health care,'' Mrs. Clinton
told the House Ways and Means
Committee.
"Thousands more will turn up
at emergency roorns to seck health
care because it is the only place for
them to turn to," she said.
"The task confronting us is
complex, but it is urgent. The
American people, rightly, are
watching all of us. They are impatient. But they are also hopeful,"

Mrs. Clinton said. "They want to
know that we have heard their stories.''
With members of the panel
looking on in the cavernous committee hearing room, Mrs. Clmton
said sbe knew there would be disagreements in the months ahead as
Congress debates and drafts legislation.
But at the end of the debate, she
said, lawmakers should assure that
"every American will receive a
health security card guaranteeing a
comprehensive pactag~: of benefits
that can never be taken away under
any circumstances."
The fltSt lady's appearance was
historic. Only two . presidential
wives - Eleanor Roosevelt and
Rosalynn Carter - had previously
traveled io Capitol Hill to testify to

Giant is known. It will also
strengthen our frozen vegetable
business, which is the fastest growing and most profitable."
Eligible employees will qualify
for severance and other benefits,
the company said. The total number of employees affected throughout North America is about600.
Local political leaders expressed
shock upon hearing news of the
plant's closing.
"It seems like the decisiori came
out of nowhere," State Rep. Mart
Malone said. "First they said they'd
expand, and we were all real
happy. ButtOda)'. well l'm more
than a little bit disappointed by the
decision."

WWII hero
Lt. General
Doolittle
First Lady pushes for health care reform dead at 96

For smokers only: freedom air offers charter flights

GROUP TO APPEAR • The Tarley family will be slnl!lng at the
Wahama High School auditorium Oct. 1 at 7 p.m. "Others to
appear are the Shafer Family, Hands, Eternity, Reftections Trio
and Kathy Stebbins. Admission is free and concessions will be
available.

Ohio Lottery

Monday, September 27, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

'

.

.

•

THEY LOVE A PARADE - Bradley Donaldson, sealed,
enjoyed a lollipop wblle walling for more trr:ats during the Racine
Fall Festival Parade Iii Racine Saturday, Wa1tlng with Brldley are
- Ry••-Yaces and Stephanie Donaldson.

Three charged at
Jackson County jail
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Three inmates at the Jackson County jail were char~e~ .with ':"isdemeanor counts of 1nc1Ung a not and
destruction of property after a disturllance at the southern Ohio jail.
Charged in the incident are
Terry Vance, Ivan Bowling Jr. and
Chris Gilliland, all of Jackson, who
are in their late 20s or early 30s.
The disturbance occurred early
Monday at the 121-year-oldjail.
The trouble began about two
weeks ago when the sheriff's office
learned that some prisoners were
planning to escape, Jackson County
Sheriff Gregg Kiefer said.
To thwart the escape, officers
"shook down" the jail five times
in the past two weeks and took
items including marijuana and narcotics that had been smuggled to
prisoners in their laundry, Kiefer
said.

On Sunday night, an officer who
smelled marijuana burning in the
jail cell slipped. in through a C.re
escape and saw Vance hiding a
marijuana cigarette under a bed,
Kiefer said.
The officer confiscated the marijuana and wrote an incident report.
A radio broadcast about the
report apparently angered the prisoners, Kiefer said.
"They jlOI upset about it and
began teanng up things_.'' Kiefer
said. "They tore up the1r TV and
ripped their phone off the wall.
The prisoners also broke. t~ree
windows in the office. The ]BilLs at
capacity with 12 prisoners, he said.
Within minutes, officers had the
jail back under control, Kiefer said.
The three prisoners charged in
the disturbance are being held for a
variety of misdemeanors, Kiefer
said..

,----....;._Local briefs---.
Pomeroy Big Wheel to remain open
The Fisher's Big Wheel store in Pomeroy is to remain open.
Fisher's Big Wheellnc., New C3!'tle, P~ .• announced their intention to continue to operate 54 stores mcluding the Pomeroy store.
The chain which recently filed for protecuon under .Chapter 11
of Federal Birucruptcy Law, will continue to operate all stores located in seven states with its 2,500 associates. . . .
Big Wheel is in the process of restocking 1ts •,nventory to the
proper levels and plans are being made for spec1al promouonal
events for the remrunder of 1993 and the future, said Andrew Hess,
president of merchandizing. ·
The Pomeroy store opened in Nov. 23, 1985.

Meigs jobless figures released

The August unemployment rate for Meigs County w~ reporte4
at 10.2 percent by the Ohio Bureau of Employment Setv~ces. That
figure is slightly less than the 10.4 percent rate recorded for July
and is also below the 11.5 percent rate record~ for August, 1992.
Despite the slight decline, Meigs County 1s ranked fourth m the
state in percentage of unemployed workers.
Nationwide, the unadjusted jobless rate stands at 6.5 pereent
while the Ohio jobless rate sWtds at5.1 percenL . .
Neighboring counties recorded the followmg JObless rates:
Athens, 5.5 percent: Gallia, 7.7 percent; Jackson, 6.9 percent; Vmton, 10.5 percent, and Washington, 5.5 percent.

Four injured in bus wreck
Four children sustained minor injuries Monday aftem&lt;?On when a
school bus backed into 11!19th\ll' vehicle m Salem Township, the Gallia'Meigs Post of the State Highway PaD'OI reported.
.
Jeremiah G. Smith, 11, 31003 Fire Ridg~ Road, Langsvlll~;
Kendra E. Clellilld, 10, 44185 Swick Road, Middleport, and Aus.tm
B. Cross, 8, Vance Road, Langsville, were transport~ by Me!gs
County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans Memonal Hosp•tal
where they were treated and released.
.
Julia E. McGuire, 14, 31805 State Route 325, Langsville, was
transported to Holzer Medical Center where she was treated for
• acute strain and released.
.
. .
. According to the aecident report, bps driver. ~me L. Thornton,
Continued on page 3

'

a committee of Congress.
Key lawmakers greeted Mrs.
Clinton ·today with pledges of
cooperation to enact a comprehensive health care plan for all Americans.
"I pledge that I will commit all
of my eaergy and resources to meet
this challenge and to enact health
care refonn legislation before this
Congress adjourns next year," said
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill .,
chairman of the Ways and Means
Committee.
"Many are skeptic~. but it can
and must be done. It would be a.
tragedy for this country if we fail,''
he said, as Mrs. Clinton sat at the
witness table.
Five HouSe and Senate committees had clamored for the privilege
of hearing fmt from Mrs. Clinton.

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP)
- Retired Lt. Gen. James H.
Doolittle, whose daring, daylight
bombing raid on Japan during
World War II snmned the Japanese
and lifted American morale, died
Monday at96.
Doolittle, who died at his son's
home after suffering a stroke earlier this month, set 'a string of aviation records in the 1920s and '30s,
as an Army pilot and then as an ·
employee of Shell Oil Co.
But .he ,was remembered above
all for ·the fmt bombing raid of the
war on Japan . It took place on
Aprill8, 1942.
The raid inflicted no major damage. A later Naval War College
study could find no serious strategic reason for it.
But it stirred American morale,
just four months after the shock of
Pearl Harbor. and put the Japan esc
on notice that their cities were in.
A Pomeroy man charged with where he was caught by officers, on Mechanic Street, both in reach of U.S. air power. No less
than Spencer Tracy played Doolit·
the brealcing and entering or the said Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald Pomeroy.
K&amp;C Jewelry Store on East Main Rought. An undetermined amount
Coates now faces a second tle in the 1944 film "Thirty SecStreet, Pomeroy, early Saturday or jewelry was reported missing charge of brealcing and entering, onds Over Tolcyo."
When President Bush gave
morning was free pending a plea and recovered later by several men said Prosecuting Auorney John
Doolittle the Presidential Medal of
agreement for a similar crime he searching the riverbank.
Lentes.
Freedom
in 1989, he described him
allegedly committed earlier this
Coa~es
appeared
in
county
coun
He was arrested earlier this
month. .
.
month for the alleged theft of sev- Monday morning for arraignment as "the master of the calculated
Ronnie Coates, 35, was arrested eral items from a truck belonging and remains confined to the Mid- risk." Doolittle also won the Medal
around 3:25 a.m. after he was to Banks ·construction on Second dleport jail in lieu of $50,000 cash of Honor and many other awards.
Shortly after the war, Doolittle
allegedly seen running from the Avenue and from the office of bond. A preliminary hearing is
told
a Senate committee: "You
been
scheduled
for
OcL
1
at
I
p.m.
jewelry store toward the riverbank Williams and Associates Insurance
can't lose a war if you have command of the air, and you can't win
a war if you haven't."
Doolittle was born in Alameda
and
spent part of his early childsaid
Prosecuting
Attorney
John
Lentes.
Officials are continuing their
Kuhn
turned
himself
in
to
hood
in Nome, AIaska, where his
Lentes
who
commented
that
Hayes
investigation into a shooting inciauthorities
shortly
after
the
shootfather
was a gold prospector. He
is
unwilling
to
cooperate
with
dent Thursday night that resulted in
attended
Los Angeles Junior Colinvestigators.
ing.
a 32-year-old Dexter man being
Lentes
said
the
case
will
be
sublege
and
the
University of Califor"Apparently
(Hay~s)
~as
shot in the groin with a 12-gauge
mitted
to
a
future
term
of
the
Meigs
nia.
retained
an
attorney
and
IS
unwillshotgun.
·
After the United States entered
· County Grand Jury: Kuh~ is &lt;?Ul on
Robert L. "Pete" Kuhn, Dexter, ing to talk," Lentes said.
bond
pending
further
acuon
m
the
Officials
are
investigating
the
World
War I in 1917, Doolittle
is charged with aggravated assault
case
and
a
restraining
order
has
the
shooting
may.
have
possibility
enlisted in the Army. He earned his
in the shooting of Jimmy Hayes.
wings in 1918, but the war ended
·
The shooting repmtedly erupted been in self defense. According to been issued.
Hayes
was
listed
in
fair
condistatements
after
the
shooting,
it
before he saw duty in France. He
from an argument over the possible
tion
Monday
afternoon
at
Grant
Kuhn
was
followed
into
appears
stayed on in the Army air service.
shooting of Hayes' dog.
In 1922, he flew from Jackh1s
home
by
Hayes
who
was
m~­
·
Medical
Center
in
Columbus.
"We've revei wed all the stateing
threatening
statements,
sa•d
sonville,
Fla., to Rockwell Field,
ments and talked to victims wife,"
near San Diego, in 22 hours and 30
minutes total elapsed time, stopping only briefly. 1L was the first
coast-to-coast flight in less than 24
hours and earned him the Distinguished Flying Cross.
While retaining his Army commission, he studied at MasVento, D-Minn., a member of
in the failure of a New Mexico
sachusetts Institute of Technology,
WASHINGTON (AP) the
House
Banking
Qlmmittee.
thrift,
according
to
RTC
docuearning
a doctorate in aeronautical
The rules say those who may
An
RTC
officiaf'!uggested
mems
reviewed
by
The
Associengineering
in 1925.
have had a role in creating the
the
agency
interprets
its
regulaAfter war broke out in Europe,
ated Press.
savings and loan mess shouldn't
tions differently. .
And Chicago-based Grant
Doolittle returned to active duty.
get any business from the gov"The way we work ... is, we
Thornton received 17 contracts
In 1942, he and fellow aviators
ernment in trying to clean it op_.
don't
take any adverse action
worth $4.5 million over the
But the Resolution Trust
were put aboard an aircraft carrier
against the ·contractor until the
same period even though it had
with 16 B-25 bombers for a special
Corp., the agency overseeing the
lawsuit is filed ," said Marty
been sued in one thrift failure in
government's S&amp;L cleanup,
mission across the Pacific. DoolitBlumenthal, RTC's manager of
1989 and remains under investiawarded at least $27.1 milliou in
tle had made a special plea to be
contractor ethics. "The fact that
gation in another, the documents
recent contracts to two accountallowed to command the mission
there may
an investigation is
ing firms it was simultaneously
showed.
personally .
not
something
that generates
investigating, documents show.
Although the regulations proDoolittle was promptly promotany adverse action until that
Under RTC's regulations,
vide for waivers to allow such
ed from lieutenant colonel to
lawsuit is actually filed."
firms cannot receive new busifirms to get new business, the
brigadier general.
Both firms were being invesRTC granted them for only two
ness if they are being sued, have
He went on to serve a variety of
tigated to determine whether
of the 42 contracts.
caused losses of more thim
in the war, including composts
they had conducted faulty audits
A member of the House com$50,000 or are under investigamander
of the Algeria-based 12th
that falsely portrayed the finanmittee that oversees RTC
tion for contributing to S&amp;L
Air
Force,
and later the 8th Air
cial health of ailing S&amp;Ls,
expressed outrage that such
failures.
Force,
based
in Britain, which
which were their clients before
firms are getting contracts and
But New York-based Coopaway
Germany's
air power .
blasted
they failed. The new RTC conescaping the waiver proce_ss. .
ers &amp; Lybrand was awarded 25
By
the
end
of
the
war,
he
was the
tracts pay the f1rms to help audit
"We were pretty dead. sencontracts worth $22.6 million
youngest lieutenant general in the
other failed S&amp;L's the governnus that those that caused this
from Jljllu;ur 1992 to July 1993
Army.
ment has taken over.
while it was under investigation . problem should not be benefitFuneral arrangements were not
mg fro in this," said Rep. Bruce
immediate! y known. ·

Man charged in two B&amp;Es in same month

Shooting incident still under investigation

S&amp;L cleanup agency awards
contracts to firms it investigated

oo

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