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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Giants
slip past
49ers

Pick 3:317
Pick 4: 4808
Cards : K-H, A-C
7-D;S-S
Super Lotto:
9-29-30-32-39-42
Kicker: 009603

PageS

Vol. 42, No. 84

Low tonight In mid 60s. Chance

or rain 100 percent. Wednesday,
high In mid-80s.

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, September 3, 1991

Copyrighted 1991

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Yeltsin criticizes
Gorbachev in speech
MOSCOW (AP) - Russian
Federation President Boris Yeltsin
harshly criticized Mikhail S. Gorbachev today for failing to foresee
last month's coup, and he urged
independence for the republics that
want it.
In a speech to the Congress of
People's Deputies that is weighing
a sweepin$ plan to restructure the
Soviet Umon, Yeltsin also sou$ht
to allay fears that his huge Russl811
republic would try to bully other
republics.
"The Russian state, which has
chosen democracy and freedom,
will never be an empire or big or
little brother," Yeltsm declared in
a 10-minute address, drawing
applause. "It will be an equal
among equals."
As the Soviet president watched
GOVERNOR'S SCIENCE AWARD HON·
OREE ·Rusty Bookman, teacher, and the Meigs
Junior High School science department have
been selec:ted lor the Ohio Academy or Science
Excellence in Youth Science Opportunities ror
their accomplishments durine the 1990-91

school year. Here Bookman, right, looks on as
Israel Grimm and Amber Bennett prepare to
bang The Ohio Academy or Science Award
poster beneath other awards the junior high science students have won over the past nve years.

Rusty Bookman, teacher, and 1990-91 science fair, 140 students finished second in Ohio and tied
the Meigs Junior High School sci- participated, 12 received scores to for 23rd in the nation.
ence students were among the 100 qualify for district competition, and
The Excellence in Youth SciOhio teach~ lllld~ecled --four ·went-on 'to slate con\petitien.- --enco- GJ!Pi&gt;rtl!!liti!lS cprogram was
by the Ohio Academy of Science to Walt Williams, Bookman Wd, 'was initiated by The Ohio Academy of
receive the G~vernor's Aw~ for the winner of the Projett of the Science in cooperation with The
Excellence m Youth Science . District award.
Office of The Governor and the
Opportunities for their accomplishTo qualify for the Governor's Ohio Department of Education to
ments durin,g the 1990-91 year.
Award, each school must conduct a recognize schools and leaChers who
The Meigs school was one of local science fair with more than 25 stimulate student scientific research
onl_y four sc~ools in ~outheastern !;tudents, have one or more qualify and who. ~xtend science edu~ation
Ohio to receive the sc~ence a:-vard. to participate in one of the Acade- opportumues beyond the tradiuonal
The oth.ers were Lick M.tddle my's 15 district science days, and classroom activities.
School m Jackson and Bishop involve students in one or more
Flag~t Elementary School and youth science opportunities beyond
Now in its Centennial Year, the
Huntmgton Htgh School, both of the classroom such as State Science Ohio Academy of Science empowChillicothe.
Day, visit to museums, or field ers curiosity, innovation and dis. Special_Gov~rnor's Award ce_r· trips.
covery by stimulating interest in
tificates will be ISsued, by The OhiO
Last year there were 105 junior the sciences and technology, proDe~ent of Educauon. .
high students involved in the Meigs moting and supporting research,
This IS the fifth consecuuve year Science Club and the students par- improving science education, disfor'Meigs Junior High School to ticipated in Science Day at Kings seminating scientific knowledge
receive the award.
.
Island. The Meigs group also annu- and recognizing and publicizing
Bookman noted that m the ally participates in the National high achievement in attaining these
Science Olympiad and last year objectives.

Teacher negotiations continue around Ohio

--Local briefs---.
Meigs jobless at 9.2 percent
Meigs County's unemployment rate stood at 9.2 for July, according to a release from the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
The report showed a decrease of .4 from June, 1991, but an
increase of 2.6 over July, 1990. The labor force is listed at 8,300
with 7,500 employed and 800 unemployed in the county.
According to the report, among the state •s 88 counties, the
unemployment rates ranged from a low of 3.8 percent in Geauga
County to a high of 14.3 percent in Adams County. Overall, following the state trend, rates decreased in about three-fifths of the counties.

Fireman trea,ted after fire
A Pomeroy fll'CIIIllll was treated and released at Veterans Memorial Hospital for an injury sustained Monday afternoon while fight·
ing a sbUCture fire.
According to Pomeroy Police Cbief Danny Zirkle, Fireman Rick
Blaettnar sustained an injury to his finger when he attempted to
move a department exhauSt fan. He was transported to the hospital
by Pomeroy squad.
A house owned by John Hunnell, located at 504 East Main
Street, suffered smoke and water damage due to the fire, which
Zirkle said began in the kitchen. The residents of the house, reported to be the Stobart family, were not at home at the time of the

blaze.
The main fire damage to the house, according to Zirkle,
occurred to the exterior wall near the kitchen of the structure, and
Continued on page 3

2 1 coup, such as KGB chief
Vladimir Kryuchkov, Defen se
Minister Dmitri Yazov and Vice
President Gennady Yanayev.
" Let's remember last January
when the whole country felt with
concern President Gorbachev' s
course sharply swerving to the
right," Yeltsin said.
He said Gorbachev allowed the
KGB to strengthen its repressive
role, let the army participate in
political decisions and stifled the
media.
But Yeltsin also said his opinion
of Gorbachev has changed radically since the coup, saying the Soviet
president "found strength in himself to re-evaluate a lot of things.' •
"I have more confidence-in
Mikhail Sergeyevich Gorbaclic;v
now than I did three weeks ago,
before the putsch," he said.
·

Mushrooming campaign gift
probe hints at major scandal

Meigs Junior High School science
pupils and teacher among honorees

CLEVELAND (AP) - Con- say what the board had offered
tract talks continue between teach· until he had a chance to inform
ers and school districts around the union members. However, he said
state with rrogress reported in at the offer was "a good one" and
least one o the districts, a newspa- that the union would vote on it Friday.
per said.
"We have a contract we can
Teachers in the Keystone school
district in Lorain County are endorse to the people," said Bell.
Teachers were to report today
expected to report for work
for
in-service training with classes
Wednesday after contract talks
were successfully concluded scheduled to begin Wednesday,
between the union and the school Bell said.
Teachers voted to strike last
board.
Alan Bell, spokesman for the week when talks stalled over
107-member Keystone Local salaries. On Aug. 26, the union
Employees Association, declined to rejected a 4.75 percent salary hike

from the podium, Yeltsin stood at
the central lectern and accused the
Kremlin leadership of having acted
"practically blindly," addin~ : "It
had no clear political course.'
He blamed Gorbachev for refusing to listen to reformers and
allowing the coup plotters to hold
high office in the government and
Communist Party. The coup, he
said, "was not accidental."
Of Gorbachev, Yeltsin said:
"His inconsistency in implementing reforms, indecisiveness,
sometimes capitulation to the
aggressive onslaught of the party
elite - all this created a favorable
soil for a revanche of the totalitarian system."
He said Gorbachev had to know
the political leanings of the hardliners who engineered the Aug. 18-

a year for two years. That night, the
Board of Education voted to delay
the start of school a week to allow
for more negotiations.
"It appears that was a good
decision to make," Superintendent
David Ring said of the delay. He
said he was very happy with the
scUiement.
The district includes Lagrange,
Carlisle and Pennfield townships.
Meanwhile, the Sheffield$ heffield Lake teachers strike in
Lorain County continues with no
talks scheduled. The Board of Edu·
cation took out full -page ads in
local newspapers telling readers
that the board has been fair and is
trying to get an affordable settlement. It noted all attendance and
grading policies remained in effect
during the strike, saying ''failure of
students to attend classes could
result in loss of academic credit
during a prolonged strike.' '
In other parts of the state where
negotiations are under way. school
officials do not expect strikes.
They say failed levies and
decreased state funding have made
strikes a less attractive option.
"If you know you're not going
to get it, money doesn't become an
issue," said Bill Hart, labor relations consultant for the Ohio Education Association office in Cuyahoga Falls.
The Cuyahoga Falls, Green and
Talmadge school districts in Sum·
mit County are negotiating. The
Akron Education Association,
which just settled a one-year contract, is about to begin negotiations
for a longer-term contract
In Portage County, the Streets·
boro teachers union is negotiating a
contract which expires at the end of
September. Teachers at the Medina
Copunty Career Center, a vocational high school in Medina County,
will begin negotiations in October.

,l

COLUMBUS (AP) - Seven or
more state and federal agencies are
investigating what may become the
biggest Statehouse scandal m Years
involving members of both pohncal parties.
Investigators will try to determine if lawmakers knowmgly
accepted campaign coJ!Jributions in
the mid-to late-1980s that in reality
were tax dollars from state-support·
ed colleges.
There were rumors earlier that
about 60 accepted such money. but
some officials now think up to 100
members of both chambers did so.
Rep. Jim Buchy, R-Greenville,
says although he has no idea if any
of his colleagues accepted the
money. but said he will introduce a
bill Tuesday requiring the appointment of a special prosecutor to
investigate.
Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Whcclersburg, and Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, who
accepted contributions, said they
were unaware of the source and
returned the money.
Riffe said he thought the money
represented privutc donations from
college presidents and that he
wrote leucrs thanking them.
Both returned money they
received by personal check from
Harold Roach, former director of
the Ohio Technical and Community Colleges Association.
Riffe returned $17,800 and
Aronoff gave back $800.
Roach, a central figure in the
investigations, stepped down as
executive director of OTCCA m

1989. He has been registered as a
lobbyist since 1980.
State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson and Highland County Prosecutor Rocky Coss said their separate
investigations have produced no
evidence that any lawmaker knowingly accepted public funds.
Coss is investigating because of
the involvement of Southern State
Community College, one of 24
members of OTCCA.

Other investigations are being
conducted by Franklin County
Prosecutor Michael Miller, the
State Highway Patrol, Secretary of
State Bob Taft and the Ohio Elections Commission at Taft's request,
the FBI and, reportedly, the Internal Revenue Service.
Penalties vary for violating fed eral and state tax and election laws
but can include stiff fines and
ousters from office.

Substitute teachers,
non-certified personnel
hired by Eastern board
Several teachers, substitute
teachers and other non-certified
personnel were hired at Thursday
night's meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
Margaret Cauthorn and Judy
Wolfe were employed as DPPF
aides pending approval of the program. Randy Churilla was given a
one year teaching contract effective
Aug. 30, to fill a vacancy created
by a leave of absence of Robert
Lang . The hiring is contingent
upon Churilla's pending certification in biology.
Robert G. Ashley and Tonya R.
Cummins were employed as substitute teachers, William Blaine as the
high school yearbook advisor, and

CAR SHOW WINNERS • A crulse·in car
show wu a hlpUaht ol the Third Almual Rut·
land Street Festival on Saturday. Pictured are
winners or that ~ar show, 1-r, Gary Warren,
,.

Donna Wolfe as a home instruction
tutor at the rate of $12.50 per hour.
Payment for substitute Ron Wilson for services in the area of
maintenance retroactive to Aug. 19
was approved as was payment of
substitute aide Joan Calaway for
services rendered in the kindergarten classes, retroactive to Aug.
26.
Rebecca Maxson and Darlene
Buckley were employed as substitute secretaries. The resignation of
Barbara Young as secretary at
Riverview Elementary school was
accepted . Attending the meeting
were Ray Karr, president, and
members, Bill Hannum, I. 0 .
McCoy, and Jim Smith.

Firemen's Cholc:e, 1986 Chevrolet; David ·Stewart, People's Choice, 19611 Camara; and Warren
DeVault, Best of Show, 1970 Nova.

�Commentary

Tuelday, September 3, 1991
Paat-2.....TJ:I8 O.lly SenUnel
Pomeroy-;;:Mide#Jeport; Ohio
llJesday, September 3, 1991

II

••

Weather
VVednesday,Sept.4

Soulb·Central Oblo
Tonight, occulonal !bowen and
thunderstorms. Heavy ninfall pos·
slble. The low 6S·70. The chance
of rain is ncar 100 percent.
Wedr~csday, showers likely with
thundentorms possible. The high
75·80. The chance of rain is 70 percent.
Extended forecut.,,
Thursday tbrou&amp;h Sittl'fday:
Mainly fair. Lows in the up~r
SOs to mid-60s Thursday wuh
mostly 50s Friday and Saturday.
Highs in mid-70s to low 80s Thursday and Friday and 80s Saturday.

Accu·WeathetA forecast for daytime conditions and

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVO'lED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARB!\

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Da ily Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishe rs Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and mu st be signed with
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published . Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues. not personali ties.

President ·Bush
expects busy month
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON- Whatever it is that makes Augusts hectic. as President Bush mused, double it for September.
Rtx:eilses are over this month, Congress is back, and the White House
is in for a succession of challenges and comroversies.
In a system that usually functions best when deadlines loom although they often are missed - the clock really starts running after
Labor Day.
Who knows, before September is over, there may even be competitors
for the Democratic nomination to run against Bush in 1992. The
Democrats now have one candidate, a former senator, two recent
dropouts, four prospects who say they will decide soon, and the enigmatic
New Yorlt governor, Mario Cuomo.
Home-front issues will be drawn more shalply in the weeks just ahead
as Democrats try to shift the emphasis for a campaign in which Bush now
lo&lt;*s like a landslide favorite.
The opposition theme is that Bush has no domestic l'rogram. The
opposition problem is that congressional Democrats haven l been able to
put together a program of their own.
In those circumstances, the rival strategies may come down to challenges and vetoes, with Democratic majorities passing bills Bush is committed to rejecL That may not make laws, but it can make issues.
One that's coming up soon after Congress reconvenes next week; a
$5.2 billion extension of unemployment benefits, with Democrats insisting it is needed for more than 1.6 million out-of-woric Americans whose
jobless pay has expired.
Bush had said he would veto an outright extension, saying it would
bust the budget just as the recession is ending. He signed the compromise
that passed Congress, but kept it from taking effect by refusing to declare
an emergency that would release federal funds to pay for exftnded benefits.
.
Democratic leaders say they'll push through new legislation as soon as
Congress reconvenes, and this version won't be optional. That would put
it back on the veto list, and Bush has yet to be overridden, despite the
Democratic majorities in both House and Senate.
But holding the veto line may become increasingly difficult this fall
and in the campaign year ahead.
" I think they've come upon a theme: Go after the president on nodomestic-policy," Bush said in mid-August. "And I will be retaliating in
time, at the proper time."
That was during the Maine vacation that was interrupted by the coup in
Moscow and the upheaval that followed. Bush lamented that it was the
second midsummer crisis in a row - Iraq invaded Kuwait on Aug. 2,
1990. •'What is it about August?'' the president asked at one point.
"I'm wondering what we're going to do for an encore next year," he
said Thursday, raising the subject anew.
Those August problems played to his foreign policy strength, and have
helped to put him into the politically dominant po_sition he will be trying
to hold as the September agenda turns to domesuc 1ssues.
Amonttthem:
-LegiSlation to reassen employment righrs weakened by six Supreme
Court rulings on job discrimination. Bush has threatened a veto on
grounds it would lead to job quotas. The House passed the measure, but
without the margin to override a veto, and an attempt at compromise by
some Senate Republicans was spurned by the White House.
-A transpOrtation bill Bush had challenged Congress to pass weeks
ago. House Democratic leaders delayed action because of dissent over a
five-cent gasoline tax increase written in to fmance an expanded highway
aid program. The tax prompted a veto threat, and now there's a real deadline looming. The current highway program expires at the end of the
month.
-Abortion, again, with veto warnings out against at least two bills.
One is a measure to overturn the Supreme Coun decision that upheld regulations forbidding abortion counseling at federally aided clinics. Another
is the District of Columbia appropriation, which would let the city use
local revem,1es for abortions.
And there's a lot more. Only two of 14 appropriations for the new federal budget year that begins OcL I have been completed. There's a crime
biD with a gun conbOI provision the White House doesn't want, an overhaul of the troubled banking system, a disputed defense budget, measures
on uade terms toward China and the Soviet Union.
The Senate will be considering two contested Bush nominations Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Coun, with hearings beginning Sept. 10,
and Robert Gates to head the CIA, hearings Sept. 16. Simultaneously,
there are to be twin inquiries by House and Senate panels into assertions
that Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential campaign struck a secret deal
with Iran to hold the U.S. Embassy hoscages until afler the election so that
an "October surprise" release wouldn't boost the Democrats.

Letters to the editor

Pollution started the ·Bulgarian revolution
WASHINGTON - The Bulgarian revolution will be remembered as the one in which the
greens routed the reds.
If perestroika is propelling the
second Russian revolution, then
environmentalism was the engine
for the Bulgarian revolution. But
not before the crisis was. vividly
underscored by the poisoning of a
large gathering of 7-year-old young
communists.
Of all the communist overthrows of 1989 in East European
countries, this was the only one
incited by environmentalists, who
were able to topple a man who had
ruled Bulgaria for 35 years. But not
before a steep price was paid: 85
percent of Bulgaria's river water
and 70 percent of its fannland had
been damaged by industrial wastes
and pollutants.
That fact became clear in interviews with Bulgarian officials,
including residents of Ruse, a
northern city on the Danube River
where the seeds of the revolution
may have been sown.
The genesis was really when the
Romanians on the other side of the
river, in the city of Giurgiu, with
the aid of the Soviets, constructed a
large chemical plant with no pollution con bOis whatsoever.
Literal clouds of sodium and
chlorine gas routinely drifted
across the river, slowly killing residents of Ruse. Respiratory diseases

Ruse's children!" Other demonstrations followed, but the communist-run media -remained mum.
Out of that disaster, in 1987 the
"Committee 'for the Ecologi cal
Protection of Ruse" was born.
Many key figures in Ruse joined
up. Later that year the restdenrs put
on an exhibition of 41 p1eces of art
featuring the horrors of pollution
- pictures of 'deformed _trees and
dying wildlife; most of tl m a mouf
of chlorine-yellows or gray.
The pressure built to the point
that a promise could be extracted
from Zhivkov in January 1988 to
discuss the problem with his opposite number in Romania, the butcher Nicolae C~ausescu. The residents and acti'Vists waited nearly
two months for Romanian action
- but the problem grew worse.
They concluded, correctly •. that
Zhivkov was reluctant to spo1l h1s
fraternal relationship with Ccausescu by comp~ing.
Protesters ' demonstrated again,
an unthinkable act in a communist
state, and this time their resolve
hardened as t.he suffering and dying
continued needlessly. Zhivkov
Ruse had become the most poi- moved quickly, cracking down on
soned, poUuted city in Bulgaria and the movement's leaders. Some lost
they were not going to take it any- their job's , others were ousted from
more. In the wake of that scene, the · the Communist Party.
But the crackdown produced the
first demonstration of its kind this
century in Bulgaria took place. opposite effect outrage at Zhivkov.
Several thousand residents took to Within a ye.ar, it had rolled across
the streets shouting, "Life for all of industrially choked and polshot up since 1975, with hundreds
of residents flocking to hospitals
with lung ailments. In the five-year
period between 1982 and 1987, the
medical registrar of Ruse, Dr.
Evgeni Nazarov, logged 281 major
emissions of chlorine from the
Romanian factory at between three
and 14 times above the safety level.
The soil of Ruse developed concentrations of mineral acids 40
times the safety level.
Leaders of Ruse quietly begged
then -Communist leader Todor
Zhivkov in Sofia to protest the
emissions to the Romanians. The
request was denied.
According to knowledgeable
sources, the issue finally reached a
head in September 1987 when a
celebration was held to induct 7year-olds into the Communist
Young Pioneer movement. A cloud
of gas descended ' on the open -air
service and the hundreds of children began staggering and choking
violently. They escaped the main
square by breathing through their
newly acquired Young Pioneer red
scarves.

ft

'{oiJ caN BUiLD

aT!oiRaNe.
sur

our oF BaYot-~e.'tS,
You cawr SiT o~ 'i'He.t-1 LotJG.''
-(kJRj$ Y~LTSiN

If the new worrying season
could be bottled, Senous Worriers
could stock their cellars and face
the decade ahead with complete
faith they would never run short of
exquisite vintage.
Take a couple of sips and roll
them around on your tongue:
Thanks to facsimile machines.
modems, pagers, cellular phones
and the like, telephone companies
are running out -of numbers. Only
three usable area codes are left.
The frightening question : Will
callers soon have to dial eleven
digits to reach your car fax?
Famine, cyclones, death squads,
Saddam Hussein, serial killers .
Time magazine wants to know: "Is
there more evil now, or less evil,
than there was five years ago, or
five centuries?"
Splendiferous stuff isn't it,
phobophiles?
A few words of explanation for
Normal People: The worrying season runs from Labor Day to Memorial Day. SWs get summers off to
recharge the batteries, then resume
the noble burden of worrying about
things that phlegmatic NPs
wouldn't give a passing thought to,

such as the possibility that the
Earth could be struck by an asteroid and that the ensuing debris
could block the sun and create a
new Ice Age.
Here are a few of the
humdingers that will preoccupy
worriers in coming months,
arranged according to Worry
Level:
Level One. (Rookie leaguers
who ponder personal safety and
welfare): Swimming in chlorinated
· water may tum blonde hair green
(Johns Hopkins School of
Medicine). Grilling hamburgers
pollutes the air with microscopic
particles of cholesterol (Science
News). Wearing shoes may not be
healthy for the feet (Pediatrics).
Lawns dosed with chemicals may
be hazatdous to children and pets
(Senate testimony). A proliferation
of new mustards is crowding store
shelves (New York Times).
Level Two. (Minor leaguers
who worry about moderately vexatious things): The leaning tower of
Pisa tilted another .04 of an inch
last year (Italian government officials). Over a million Americans

may be m danger of iron overload
(Iron Overload Diseases Association). Southerners face greater risk
of heart disease (American Heart
AssocH!lion). You could get an
unhealthy dose of radiation if you
ate a "hot frog" that escaped from
a nuclear lab in Tennessee (Dept.
of Energy), A radioactive goat that
escapeq froiD researchers may have
contaminated bighorn sheep {New
Mexico Game and Fish Department).
Level Three. (Triple-A league
worriers who fret over things they
cannot control but still manage to
sleep): Television may be detrimental· to the human brain (Seattle
Times). Japanese and Soviet
trawlers are harvesting too many
krill off Antarctica and endangering the penguin population (Washington Post). Urbanization of the
Wodaabe tribe of the southern
Sahara may spell doom for their
exotic mating ritual (NYT). Utah's
salt nats are disappearing at the
rate of I percent a year (Bureau of
Land Management).
Level Four. (Major League worriers who cannot sleep for agoniz-

IND.

' ' ' ' '

\.

' •

I

Police arrest 180
at Riverfest
'
W. VA.

'

...

"""

CINCINNATI (AP)- Police
reponed 180 misdemeanor arrests,
mosdy for alcohol or drug possession, as thousands on both sides of
the Ohio River celebrated Labor
Day at Riverfest. -an annual music
and fireworks event
Police said today the arrest total
was about the same as for last
year's Labor Day weekend event.
Most were misdemeanor alcohol
violations, police Lt. Gary Glazier
said.

Department on Saturday. In addition to musical
entertainment, the ReedsviUe-based department
held its traditional chicken barbeque and hosted
games at the firehouse.

COUNTRY BLEND • Racine-based Coun·
trr Blend, a popular local band, provided entertainment at the annual Labor Day weekend cele·
bratlon at the Olive Township Volunt~er Fire

Area deaths _ _._..______~ .....--Local briefs...
Vonida Landers

Burial will be in Bate' ,Ceme-

Vonida (Bonnie) Landers, 68, of ~riends may caU at ~a funeral
State Route 248, Chester, died after 2 p.m. on Wednesday.
Monday, s_q,t. 2, 1991 at Veterans
Memorial ~tal. Pomeroy. fol- Alma Doss
lowing a brief illness.
Alma Nida Doss, age ~. died
Born on DeL 17, 1922 in Meigs
Aug. 30, 1991 at Parlters·
Friday,
County, she was the daughter of
burg,
W.Va.,
following a lpng ill·
the late Alben Biggs and Fannie
ness.
·~ ·.
Decker Biggs.
She was born Mareh 1!1, ,1907 in
She was a member of the
Chester United Methodist Church, Lincoln County, W.Va. S)ie made
Order of the Eastern Star, Chapter her home in Meigs and: Athens
186, Chester Council 323, Daugh- County for over 60 years. ·
She is survived by one·spn and
ters of America, Auxiliary of the
daughter-in-law,
James anq Louise
Chester Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment, and Auxiliary of the Eagles Harlior. Coolville; five 8J'!IIIdchildren and one great grandcliild; one
Club.
She is survived by a brother and sister, Nellie Pinkerton, Hamlin,
sister-in-law, Homer and Helen W.Va.; one brother, Normail Curtis
Biggs, Union Port, Ohio; a brother- Harbor, Milton, W.Va.; several
in-law, Dewey Lyons, Middlepon, nieces and nephews and a host of
'
several nieces, nephews, and friends.
were
held
Monday
at
Services
cousins.
Funeral services will be held the Koontz Funeral Home in HamThursday at 1 p.m at the Ewing lin, W.Va. Burial was in Lincolon
Funeral Home. The Rev. Sharon Memorial Park in Hamlin, W.Va.
Hausman will officiate and burial
wiU be in the Rock Springs Ceme- Beulah G. Blessing
tery. Friends may call at the funeral
Beulah G. Blessing, 91; of
home Wednesday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Eastern Star services will be Clarkrange, TN., died Saturday,
held at 6:30p.m. Wednesday at the August 31, 1991 in Cumberland
Meiiical Center in Crossville. 1N.
funeral home.
, ...
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She was born June 1, 19()0, in
Point
Pleasant, W.Va., daughrcr of
Martha Douglas
the late Riley Andrew and ~litha
\
Martha Mae Hartinger Douglas, May (VanMatra) Blessing.
of
Delta-KappaA
member
80, of Shade, died Sunday, September 1, 1991 at O'Bieness Memorial . Gamma and a charter member of
the Randolph Str=t Baptist C~h
Hospital after a brief illness.
in
Charleston, W.Va .. she held a
She was born in Atlantic City,
master's
degree and was a fonner
NJ., the daughter of the late Ernest
teacher
within
the West Virgi11ia
and Benha Sutphin Hartinger.
sc~s~r.em.
·
Mrs. Douglas was a member of
urviVOCS
include
one
niece.
S
the Modem Woodmen.
Surviving are her husband of 30 Mrs. John E. (Elizabeth) Peele, ni
years, R.E . (Emerson) Douglas: of Clarkrange; three grand nie_ees
one son, Donald K. Douglas, Sr., and nephews; and five great grand
Chauncey; two step-sons, Gerald nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be con"Hank" (Eleanor) Douglas of
ducted
Wednesday at 10 a.m. in the
CoolviUe, and Alton ''Wimp" (VirBoard
Baptist Church Cemetery,
ginia) Douglas, Athens; a stepwith
the
Rev. Scott A. Gilmer offidaughter, Mrs. Red (Rose) Carr,
ciating.
Coolville; four grandchildren; 11
Foglesong Funeral Home is in
step-grandchildren; four great·
charge
of arrangements.
grandchildren and 21 step-great·
grandchildren; a sister, Clara
Hartinger, Athens; and several Minnie Cook King
nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
Minnie Cook King, 91, of New
preceded in death by her fust hus- Haven, W. Va;, died Saturday,
band, Fred Douglas; a daughter-in- August 31, 1991, at St. Mary: s
law, Carol Douglas; a step-grand- Hospital in Huntington, W.Va. ·
daughter, Kimberly Carr; and a
Born August 21, 1900, he was
step-great-grandson, Scott Alan the son of the late Willard T. Roush
Burltt.
and Effie N~ Roush.
Services will be held on ThursShe was preceded in death by
day at 2 p.m. at Hughes-Blower two husbands, Robert Cook in
Funetal Home in Athtns with Rev. 1933, and Ralph R. King in 1969;
Robert Webb officiating.
one brother, E. Ray Roush; and one
sistei, Anna Roush Bumgarner.
A retired farmer, she was a
The Daily Sentinel
member of the Graham United
Methodist Church.
(USPS lfiiCIA)
Survivors include two daughA Dtvloloa ol Multimedia, Inc.
ters, Maida Coole Rardin of Chat,
tanooga, lN., and Kathleen Coo~
Publlsht'f;l every afternoon, Monday
through Friday. lll Court St., Po·
Smith
of Clarksville, AK.; thre~
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-·
sons. Larry J. King of Milton, and
ltshlng Company / Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomoroy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-2156. S..
Oscar Ray and Otmer Roy, both of
rond class pogtag.,. paid at Pomt"roy.
New Haven; 12 sr~at grandchilOhio.
dren; and 13 grandclnldrert.
Member: The Associated Preas, tn-.
Funetal services were conducted
land Dally Press Association and the
at
11 a.m. today at the Foglesong
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Funeral Home. The Rev. Rex
Advt"rll!lng Representative, Branham
Newspaper Si.le&amp;, 733 Third Av~nue ,
Young officialed. Burial followed
New York, New York 10017.
at Graham Cemetery. Pallbearers
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
were Jeff King, Greg Cook, Mike
1o The Dally Sontlllel. 1lJ Court St.. I Rardin, Dale Rardin, Dave Cook,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9.
Scou King. Honorary bearer was
SUIISCBIPTION KATI!B
Brett Pierson.
lly Canter or 11101• Bolle
Calling hours were held j\1on011t0 Week .......... ... ... ....... .. ... ....... $1.60
day from 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral
011t0 Month ................................. $6.95
OnE' Year ........... .................... .. 183.20
home.

By Joseph Spear
"

ing over things they cannot control) : Fish raised in hatcheries
imperil the genetic integrity of wild
species (NYT)_ Climatic changes
are causing animals and plants to
move north (University of Michigan). The ice content of the Arctic
Sea declined 2 percent during the
1980s {Nature). The explosion of
Mount Pinatubo filled the sky with
sufficient dust to cool the tropics
by four degrees (National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration).
And for World Class WoiTiers,
this magnum of champagne from
the World Future Society about the
technology that deals with ultra·
tiny devices: ''Nanotechnology
could spawn a new form of life that
would overwhelm all other life on
earth, replacing it with nanomachines. It could provide a tool for
domination greater than any
weapon ever developed, even
greater than nuclear weapons and potentially more destructive."
I told you the '90s would be a
worrier's Nirvana.

Robert J. Wagman
ordered the numbers turned over.
She ruled that a state can use any
reasonably derived numbers to set
up state legislative districts, pointing out that at least three slates use
their own internal counts rather
than the Census Bureau •s. She also
ruled that, in this case, to do otherwise would effectively disenfranchise 1.1 miUion Califoniians.
Mosbacher and the Justice
J?epartmeni are fighting the decis•on. They refused to comply with
the order and instead filed an
immediate appeal with the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals in San
Francisco.
Left · open at this point is
whether California could use the
revised figures to draw new U.S.
House district boundaries. If they
can, many of its seven new seats
would likely be in minority districts and would go into the Democratic column. Another suit has
been filed by Republicans to get a
court to order that ooly the "official" numbers be used for congressional districting.

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•I Columbus I a1•l

Courts tackle botched head counts

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IMansfield I 79• I•

luted Bulgaria into a movement
called "Eco-G lasnosL"
Eco-Giasnost, the Bulgarian
environmental movement, was the
sole organizer of mass protests in
early Novem~ 1989 ~~brought
about Zhivkov s res1gnauon on the
same day the Berlin Wall crumbled
- Nov. 10.
Though communism has vanished, the consequence~ it wrought
for the environment wtll take generations to cleanse.
.
. YELTSIN DIARY - Behind
the dramatic events in the Soviet
Union lies the story of two disparate men - Mikhail Gorbachev
and Boris Yeltsin. We've learned
the story from one of them, the
free-wheeling Yeltsin.
Yeltsin was plucked out of
obscurity by Gorbachev in 1985.
After making Yeltsin_ Mos~ow
party chief in 1985, theu relauonsh ip had peaked and was headed
for a fall. They were nev?r ~.ally
friends according to Yeltsm. We
never drank vodlca together," he
said._Gorbachev used Yeltsin as a
stalking horse - Yeltsin cleaned
up the Moscow party organizalio~
and agitated for reforms . Gor,
bachev would quietly assess the
opposition Yeltsin had stirred up.
Then Gorbachev would adopt the
reforms he thought were safe.
. As Gorbachev's favorite Don
Quixote, Yeltsin was supposed to
bide his time unlll Gorbachev
could dust him off for the next battle. But the impetuous Yeltsin kept
flailing away until he went out too
far on a limb, a limb Gorbachev
sawed off. That's what makes it
even more ironic that Yeltsin
would re-emerge to save the· Russian republic - and Gorbachev.

Worriers have a lot to ~ think a_b out

WASHINGTON (NEA) study group recommended adjust- make sure they never saw the light
_ When Commerce Secretary Robert ment by a vote of 6-2. An eight- of day.
Mosbacher recently announced that member blue-ribbon panel from
Now, in the first major court
of good stuff wiU be on irs way to he would not order the Census ours ide the Bureau split evenly, 4- decision growing out of the undermother Russia.
Bureau to adjust its 1990 results, he 4, on the question. Mosbacher and count, a California federal judge
Take a look at your phone bill, insisted his decision was not politi- the White House had tlie last word, has ordered t.4osbacher to tum over
your electric bill, your sales cal. (You could hold a meeting in a and that word was no adjustment.
corrected figt,ICes to the California
receipts and your last tax returns. phone booth with everyone in
Mosbacher's reasoning was that state legislalllfe.
The latest loop hole the tax advo- Washington who believes that.) any mathematical adjustment could
An estimated 1.1 million Calicates want to close is the sales tax However. Mosbacher's decision introduce new errors into the count. fornians were missed in the Cenon out of state catalog orders. was the final one within the gov- While the adjusted totals might be sus. Had they been accurately
Watch them go after yard sales ernment process. The debate has more accurate for some popula- C'\)Unted,_California would have
soon.
now moved into the courts, and tions, they would be made less g;pned eight new sears in the U.S.
Taxes have been ground out of they are starting to be heard from.
accurate for others. However, it is House of Representatives instead
the people for centuries. Do you
The 1990 Census was both the widely believed the decision was of seven.
remember where and why Mary best and worst in the nation's histo- made in the White House on the
The Demop-atic majority in the
and Joseph were going. rrax collec· ry. On the one hand, it counted a basis that the places likely to gain Galifomia le~islature has voted to
tors used physical means some- record number of Americans. in population would be urban areas redraw distriCt lines for the state
times. Your property can be confls- U11fonunately, it also overlooked a that are traditionally Democratic, S~ate and Assembly according to
cated. Some collectors got a per- record·number of people.
diluting the power of growing the corrected figures. Using the
centage. That is son of true to-day
Based on a post-Census survey Republican suburbs.
corrected numbers would undoubtbecause bureaucrats thrive on pub-/ of a scientific sampling from all 50
When Mosbacher announced edly add greatly to both Demecratlie money.
states, the Census Bureau estimates that there would be no statistical ic; and minority strength in the legCalvin Coolidge is credited with that the Aprill, 1990, count missed adjustment, he alSo announced that islature. ·
saying, " It is easy to spend the 5.3 million people. A very high corrected figures would stay locked
; To obtain those figures, the legpublic's money. It don't belong to percentage of those not counted in the Census Bureau's vaults. The islature sued Mosbacher and the
anybody".
live in big cities, and a majority are .Bureau had already calculated what Census Bureilu. Federal District
Signed,
Hispanic or black. About 21 per- corrected counts would have been Judge Consuelo Marshall agreed
Gayle Price cent live in California.
for every state, county and city in that it was rea:ionable for the Slate
An internal Census Bureau the nation. Mosbacher wanted to 10 use the corrected count. and has

'

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

MINI-EDITORIAL - If communism is dead in the Soviet
Union. could it have a pulse anywhere else in the world? Fidel Castro's Cuba is still defiantly Marxist,
but perhaps not for long. Cuba has
been one of the Soviet Union's
bigt~est welfare clients, receiving
bilhons of dollars annually in aid
and credits. Now Russian leader
Boris Yelrsin had ordered a halt to
all foreign aid because, he says,
"charity starts at home." With
Cuba about to suffer a slow process
of economic suffocation, Castro
will find that his people cannot eat
slogans.

Why so many taxes?
The Daily Sentinel for August
23 1991 listed several tax levies to
be' voted on in November of this
year. Every one of these levies
requires justification.
Give the public an analysis of
why any parUCular levy is needed.
Considering the tax load we now
bear and the tax additions that are
ill the wind, this is importanL
l'he Carleton levy has been
repeatedly turned down. The
Lebanon Township cemetery levy
mileage is greater than last ume. In
view of the fact that GR worlters
are available. Why ?
The idea in the last few years
hat been to put on all kin~s. of
taxes, keep them on, keep nusmg
them and thinlt up some new QIICS.
A IiUlc here and a little there ~ it
won't be noticed. Tell them lis
temporary and lhen in the dead &lt;?f
niJIIt make it permanent. 'lbl!t ts
wli8t is happellillg. They are gnnd·
ing us down with taxes. I bet you
before another year that a boatload

MICH.

SINGLE COPY
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rler may remit In odvanco dlred to
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week.
..... No su~lptlo,; by mall permitted In
~ ~o;t! ."'a reu wh~ home earrter service 11

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Mallhlleertptloeo
!-•
Melp Coea&amp;y
13 Weeltl ......; ;............. ..... ........ $21.84

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avall;lble.

Z6 Week! .... :.............. .... .. ......... U3.16
52 Weeu ................... .. .. :......... . l84.76

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.O.Iolde Melp Coouoly
13 Weeko .................................. $2UO
Z6 Weeki' .... :................. ..... .. ..... U5.50
52 Weeltl ........... ............ .. ......... l8&amp;40

She was also preceded in death
by a son, Glem Michael, in 1960,
one grandson, and several brothers
and sisters.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Lany and Violet Jeffers
of Pomeroy: daughter and son-inlaw, Nancy K. and Leonard Hurlon
of Qifton, W. Va, daughter, Diana
Isabelle Jeffers of Mason; a sister.
Ora C. Cochran of New Haven,
W.Va.; nine grandchildren, nine
great-grandchildren, and several
nieces atld nephews.
The funeral wil be Thursday, 1
p.m., at the Foglesong Funeral ·
Home with the Rev. Rankin Roach
officiating. Burial will be in the
Zerkle Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Wednesday, 6 to 9 p.m.

Correction
The ninth annual Gallia FarmCity Day will be observed on Saturday, Sept. 14, on the Jim and
Jessie Boggs family dairy farm
between the hours of 11 a.m. and 3
p.m., and not SepL 8, as stated in
the SWlday Times' Sentinel.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................. .30
Ashland Oil ............. ........ .30 5/8
AT&amp;T............................... .39 1/4
Bob Evans ........................ 18 7/8
Charming Shop..................20 1/4
City Holding ..................... 1S l/4
Federal Mogul... ................ 14 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ .JSI/2
Key Centurion ...............'.. .15
Lands' End ....................... 20
Limited Inc ..........., ...........28
Multimedia Inc .................27
Rax

Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS None.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Kenneth Markins.
SUNDAY ADMISSSIONS Katie Guth, Pomeroy: Martha
Hoffman, Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES None.
MONDAY ADMISSIONS Helena Daniels, Middleport, and
Marie Pellegrino, Middleport.
MONDAY DISCHARGES None.

Continued from page 1
water and smoke damage occurred throughout the ftrst and second
floors.
Units from both Middleport and Pomeroy were on the scene, as
were 23 men - 19 from Pomeroy and four from Middleport.

Incorporation papers filed
Articles of incorporation have been filed with the office of Secretary of Slate Bob Taft b,Y Auto Liquidation Services, Inc. Michael
E. Warner, Racine, is the mcorpoonor and agent.

Hit-skip wreck under investigation

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Friday, Aug. 30 Constance Borden, Misti Chapman,
Jessie Crabtree, Jonathon Elliott,
Jennifer Hardesty, Christopher ·
Harrison, Donald Henry, Mary
Jones, Pamela Melton, Thelma ·
Raines, Charles Roe. Bruce Smith,
Edgar Thomas, Mrs. John Thompson and son, Richard Young.
Births, Friday, Aug. 30 - Mr.
and Mrs . Angelo Cross, of
Langsville, a daughter: Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Keams, of Pomeroy, a
daughter.
Discharges, Saturday, Aug. 31
- Norma Barry, Catherine Cooper, Nicky Craycraft, Donna Curtis:
Mrs. Robert Gilmore and daughter,
Mrs . David Hammond and daughter, Anthony Hughes, Mrs. Vernon
Isaac and daughter, Robert Neal,
La wanda Rafferty, Anna Shelton,
Nicholas Stalnaker, Delbert Taylor.
Births, Saturday, Aug. 31 Mr. and Mrs. David Foreman, of
New Haven, W.Va, a daughter.
Discharges, Sunday, Sept 1Leonard Beverly. Vicki Combs.
Orville Cooper, Andrew Newsome,
Laurie Reed, Patricia Rhodes,
Juanita Ross, Carolyn Tucker.
Discharges, Monday, Sept. 2 ·
- Mrs. Angelo Cross and daughter, Mrs. Patrick Keams and daughter, Kaylee Milam, Melissa Moore,
Mildred Smith.
Births, Monday, Sept. 2 - Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Canter, of Oak HiU, - •
a daughter, Mr. and Mrs. David · · _,
Harris, of Hamden, a son, Mr. and ·· ·'
Mrs. Timothy McDaniel, of Rutland, a son, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson - ·
Pryor, of Gallipolis, a son.

A hit-skip accident on Coun Street late Saturday night remains
under investigation by Pomeroy Pollee.
It was reported that a parked car owned by Melvin Henr~.
Pomeroy, was struclt: on the passenger s1de by an urudentified vehicle about 11:45 p.m. There was moderate damage to the passenger ·
side.
.
At 10:43 p.m. Friday police investigated _a minor accident
involving a motorcycle and school b~ on the high school football
field access road.
According to the report, Kenneth Longstreth, Langsville, lost
control of his motorcycle when he hll a rock and 11 swerved mto th_e
school bus. The mirror was damaged on the motorcycle when 11
struck the bus causing minor damage to the left side of the bus.
There were no citations nor injuries, it was reponed.

Walter Mercer, Jr.
Walter R. (Jack) Mercer. Jr., 65,
of West Columbia, died Saturday.
August 31, 1991, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was born August 15, 1926,
in Smyth County, Va., son of the
late Walter Jackson Mercer and
Bertha Shupe Mercer.
He was preceded in death by
one brother, Dean Mercer, and one
sister, Nell Hash.
A retired electrician, he was a
United Scates Navy veteran as well
.as a member of he American
Legion Post #128 Fennery &amp; Bennett of Middleport He was also a
member of the IBEW Local 596
and the Cedar Bluff Baptist Church
in Atltins, Va.
Survivors include his wife Betty
L. Mercer; one son Charles Dean
Mercer of Clifton: two stepsons,
Dennis Persons of Chestc;r, and
David Persons of West Columbia;
three stepdaughters, Denise Clark
of Racine, Reva Stafford of Letart,
and Lisa Bowlin of Cheshire, one
sister and brother-in-law, Sarah and
Harry Hall of Rural Retreat, Va.,
one sister-in-law. Guilda Debord of
Johnson City, TN.; several nieces
and nephews; and II grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with the
Rev. George Hoschar officiating.
Burial will follow in Gravel Hill
Cemetery in Cheshire, where full
military graveside rites will be con·
ducted by the American Legion
Post # 128 Fenney &amp; Bennett.
Friends may call the funeral
home today from 2 to 4 and from 7
to 9 p.m. and Wednesday from I
p.m. until the time of the service.
Pallbearers for the services will
be Bob Gilmore, Charles Dean
Mercer, Dennis Persons, David
Persons, Ronnie Bowlin. Rick
Stafford, and Robert Clark.

Hospital news

Akzo plant contract ratified
William E. Mayes, president of Local #859, the United Rubber.
Cork Linoleum and Plastic Workers of America, AFL-CIO, and
Bill i... Brady, plant manager of the Akzo Chemicals_ Inc. plant at
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va .. announced Tuesday the rauficauon of a
new worlt agreement expiring SepL I, 1994. The new agreement
contains both economical improvements and admmtStraUve procedural changes.

Man injured in motorcycle crash
A Pomeroy man was injured and cited as the result of a motorcycle wreck on S.R. 124 in Rutland Township Saturday evemng.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Terry M. Jarrell, 37, of Pomeroy, was westbound
on S.R. 124 when he struck a dog crossing the road. Jarrell, who
was not wearing a helmet, was thrown off the motorcycle.
The Meigs County Emergency Medical Service uansponed Jarrell to Veterans Memorial Hospital where he was treated and
released.
Damage to Jarrell's 1980 Suzuki GS550 was listed as moderate.
Jarrell was cited by the patrol for driving under the _innuence and
operating a motor vehicle with a suspended operators l1cense.

Meigs announcements
Missionary service
There will be a missionary service at the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
on Route 143 on Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. Beth Manns will be the
speaker. Rev. Victor Roush invites
the public.
Dances cancelled
There will be no more dances
held at the Tuppers Plains VFW
Post No. 9053 until further notice
according to Kenneth Hoger, Commander.
Plan rummage, bake sale
The Pylhian Sisters of Rockland
Temple No. 615 will be having a
rummage and bake sale on Friday
and Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. in Tuppers Plains next to the
post office.
Classes oiTered
Shirin Nuggud, administrator of
the Gingerbread School, will begin
at series of Creative Fun An classes, sponsored by the Middleport
Arts Council, on Sept. 14 from
9:30-11 am. for children age three
and one-half to seven years at the
council's chambers. The cost is $4
and the class will meet once each
month with dates to be announced.

A program for children ages 7-12 is
also in the planning stage. Call
Janette Thomas at 992 -5696 or
Susan Baker at 992-7733 for further information.
State convention
The Knights of Pythias and
Pythian Sisters State Convention
wiU be held at the Cincinnati Marriot, 11320 Chester Road, on Sept.
11-14.

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SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

.:,.',; , ·::.·~:·
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BArtGAIN AATINEES SATURDAY &amp; SUHMV ,
BAIIG.lJN NIGHT TU£SDAY .

CHILD'S PLAY J
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SHOP MONDAY NIGHT
UNTIL 8:00 P.M.

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AT

ANDERSON 'S
DOW NTO WN POMEROY , OHIO

OPEN MOND A Y NI GHT 'T IL 8 PM

H&amp;R Block Offers Income Tax
Course In Pomeroy

Thousands of people learn
tice problems provide studenrs
testhook s and supplies. Gradu·
1
with a thorough underscanding
ate s recei ve certificates of
.•ow to prepare mcome nd
ax
Acht'evcment and continuing
of each tax topic included in the
Block a
Lola Elizabeth Jeffers, 73, of
re l urns f rOm H&amp;R
educau·on
un1'ts (CEU's). Qual•'• come tax
course. Students learn how to
then earn moneY as ID
Mason, W.Va., died at her home
· 1
1
r.1ed ~aduates Qf the course rna~
~!~:::i:JI~~i~~~~~~~~~J:~: H&amp;R Block, the
handle increasmg y comp ex
"
Monday. Sept. 2, 199 I. .
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income
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Born June 20. 1918, in Lellrl,
Shoney's Inc ................. .... I
preparation service, offers _its
cow;r:Jrogresses.
H&amp;R Block but are under no
W.Va., she was a daughter of the
Star Bank ..........................22 1/2
Income Tax Coone starling
I
for people who wan! to
obligation ·to accep~ employlate Adam and Nancy Isabelle · Wendy Int'l... ....................9 1/2
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increase their tax knowledge,
menL
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the course teaches studen ts how
Those interested in more
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ber of the farmer United Brethren
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Experienced instructors teach
also prepares them for a rewardBlock Income Tax Course may
Chun:h in Muon. She married Roy
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law, theory, and application.
ing career,
contaCt the H&amp;R Block office at
Thomal Jeffen MIUth 6, 1941, in
Pomeroy and he Preceded her in
~~~~~~~~an~d~prac::~-----~T~he~af:fu:rd~a~b~le~f~e~e~in:c~lu~d:~~~W::2~::7:4~in::Po:m:ero~y~.----~J
death on July 11, 1950.

Lola Elizabeth Jeffers

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�....

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

, ---- ~ --~~--~----------------~~~~----~--~----~----------

..... ._.

...-..... ..... ·- ··- ··· - ...·. .

- - •b- - - - --- -·- - ·- --~~-- -~-- --

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

- - - - -- -

•• v ••

·-- -

--

TUesday, September 3, 1991

The ,Daily Sentinel

Sports

Bahr's clutch field goal gives
·Giants 16-14 win over 49ers

TUesday, September 3, 1991

_P&amp;g&amp;--4

Cincinnati, Cleveland-io.se to Denver, Dallas in NFL openers
Associated
John ElwayByis Tbe
having
fun evenPress
as he increases his
workload.
Calling his own plays for the fml time in 8 nineseason career Elway ran and passed the Broncos to a
stunningly es:sr 45-14 romp over the Bengals as the
NFL opened the regular season on Sunda .
On a day when the Eagles' Randall
ham
likely had his season ended with tom knee~ents

and the sh
Seaha wk s • Dave Kr'teg had hIS
· · at least
1
~vere Y ortened by a ~roken lhumb, the NFL got a
btg,~r:om one oflts btggest~wnes. .
.
. ~ 85 muc~ fun as I ve had 10 a game ma
~ong tune, Elway SOld after completing two touchown .passes, two TO runs and 4 71 yards. What
made 11 more.fun was that the Broncos ~ad av~~ed
arere 10 pomts and 225 yards a gwne m exhtbJUon
Pay.

t ·

GRINDS OUT YARDAGE- Denver Broncos
running back Gaston Green (28) grinds out
yardage against Cincinnati Bengals Ricky Dixon
(2!1) and David Fulcher (33) move in to try to stop

him during Sunday's NFL game In Denver, Colo.
Tbe Broncos declawed the Bengals by a 45-14
count.(AP)

Kuuu Cly (.(pp;. 10.9) a1 Cllicogo
(Mcl)o...U IS-I), l:lll p.m.
Oraklaad (SieWIIt H)-I) at Milwaukee
(Pioaac 1 -S~ lj)S p.m.
New Yort (Iobnaon S-1) 11 Tctu

NATIONAL LEAGUE
lui O t -

TI'ITTSBlJROH

WLPd.
...71 l2 .600
St.l.ouia ............ 71 59 -~
Qioqo
........... 66 65 ..504
Now Yea ......... 64 67 .419
64 67 .419

GB

:.:;:r·· . . . . .

1A

w..... D t -

T-

W L Pd.
AIW!ta
............72 59 ..550
Loo Anloloo .......12 59 ..550
CINCIJiiNATI ....64 67 .419
Saa IIIII" .........64 61 .415
Saal'riDdlco .......62 69 .473
..........54 77 .412

GB

8.5
9

10..5
18.5

Wednnday'ocames

o...... (llalt«h 9-3), 7:35p.m.

Baltimore (Nilacki 1-7) at Toronto
(S-yre 12-6). 7:3S p.m.
Kanaaa City (Boddicker 11-8) at
Cllicaa~ (Ftmoadoz 6-12),1:05 p.m.
OU!and (DuliDa H) •• Milwaukee
(W-1().6), 1:05p.m.
Clewland (Blair 1·2) at Mlna.o&amp;a~
(TipUI13-7),Io35 p.m.
New YOlk (Stndenon 14-8) at Teua

~i•5,AIIoma0

i . - 4, 10 iMiD&amp;s
~ 3, Sulllep :Z, 121u""'
Lao Aoploo 3, ClliA:a.. 2
Suacby'a results

M&lt;oalrool6, u....a I
JI!Wadelploia 5, Allmo 4, 10 inninp
N. . York t, Cladn11aU.
Lao Ao....O..I2. 0UcaF 3
SL
Sin FnnciJoo I

.....:i4,

Transactions
BasebaU

ln the NFL ...

Moocby's scores

_ . 4 , Allanla 3

H.,......3,NowYeaO

1...0
1...0
0 ... 1
0 ... 1
0 ... 1

KanouCUy
LA. Raidc:n

SanDieao
Scanle

AlllnLI (Satohz 10.13) tl Montreal
(llameo 3-S), 7:35p.m.
Clnd101d OlUo 11-4) II Pblladelpbla
(l&lt;o.U., "~ filS ......
Houaon (IUtupli0-6) al Now York
(Y..... 0.1), 7~p.m.
Chicap {Maddu1 11·1) at San Diq:o

10.10),10:05p.m.

Pll-.., (WIIk 7·2) at Sao Fraada·

.. ~ J.f), 11135 ......
s.. ......, (Oiiv... 7-S) 01 Lao Ana"""
(Mqon 10.9),1~35 p.m.

Wedaescby'a games
PIIIIIMirah (StnlltJl•f) at S.n Frandoco (Biacllf.JJ~ 3;3.5 p.m.
Atlanta (Avery 14-1) at Montreal
(Oardner 1-9~ 7:35pm.
ClocbouU {Mfon S-12) II Phlladel.
pbla (G,_ t-6), 7:35p.m.
Houacn (Draahaicl 4-12) ll New Ycd
(C....I2-IO), 7:40p.m.
Oioap (D. Jacban 1_.) at San Dieso
(P•,....•••4-ll), IO:O~_p.m..
SL Lcuil (Cormier 2·2) u Lao Anae!ca
(llddlcr9-l~ 10:35 p.m

ODCAGO WID1ll SOX - Rc&lt;alled
Robeno He:mudez, phc:her, frcm Birm~ d lhc Sowhem l.clgu• Optioned

Bnan Drabman, pii.Chcr, to Vancauvcr of
the Pacific Cout Lea

MILWAUKEE lfREWERS- Acti·
vatc.d Jim Hunter, pitcher, from the 15day diaabled liat Placed Mike Ian11iak,
pitcher, on !.he 1.5-dly diublcd liJL
MINNESOTA TWINS - Optioned
Allan Anderton and Tom Edens, pitchcu,

47 17
26 20
14 45
14 26

to Konc.ha of the Midw01~ Leapc. Recalled JarviA Bmwn and Pedro Martinez,

Wtttern DIYIIIan

Denv..

TonJ&amp;Iit•s games

.......

IW..,Dt_
W.L T Pd. PF PA
Bulfolo
1...0 0 1.000 35 31
New EnaJand
1...0 0 1.000 16 7
N.Y. leu
1...0 0 1.000 16 13
lndllnopolil
0 ... 1 0 .000 7 16
Miomi
0 ... 1 0 .000 31 3S

T..,

~bt,Saor.-IHol

iMiD&amp;s

Amerlc.. Luaue
CALIFORNIA ANGELS - Purclwcd the c:ontrad m Ban) Lyorw;, c.~tch­
er, from Edmonton of the Pacific Cout

AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Central Dtvt.ion
HOIIIUln
1...0 0 1.000
PnTSBlJRGH
1...0 0 1.000
CINClNNATI
0 ...1 0 .000
CLI!VI!l.AND
0 .. 1 0 .000

Sao Dllto 7, PtlliiMirah 4

..

Far West

Airfo...,48, Weber St.31
Colorado SL 38, Manus SL 24
Hawaii 32., WyominJl7
SacmnQ\10 SL 43, Pacific: U. 40
Ullh 12. Ullh SL 7

IBM&amp;noo 3-118:35 p.m.

S... Fnocioco 6. St. LeW I
Now Yarl&lt; I, Cloduall 7,lllanl,.

~

Southwest
Hru.ton 73, I...ouiliana Tech 3
Miami 31 , Arlr.anaas 3
Te.lu-El Puo lS.Ncw Mexico 19
Tu!Ja 34, SW MWouri SL 13

C.tiromit (McCukill 10-17) at

Satunl•y'slln•ls

l'hlllo4lolplolai,CiodoulaiJS
Chicl&amp;o 10, San Di.t~F I
SL Lcui1 7, Loo Aoploo 4, II

~i".l;;Cardino 31

Miomi, Ohio 15, Ball SL 7
W. Michi&amp;an 13, X.CIIl SL 10

9-5), 1:3S p.m.
Decroi1 (Aidrod 0.2) 01 Scanle (l!olmmll -13), 1~ p.m.

14..5
14..!

........... 54 76 .41!

Bowlin o-11,F. Mic11Wn6

CcnL:J~ 17,0hioU. T7,tie

(Ouzman

7
12..5

01.000
0 1.000
0 .000
0 .000
0 .000

rutfieldcn: P.ul Sorrento, fant baseman;
Gary Wtync, Denny Nca&amp;lc, Willie

4~

14
14 3
17 47
20 26
24 27

Bank• and Pnl Abbott, pilchcn, and
Lmn.y Weblter, e.tcher, han Portland of

tltcl'lci&amp;C...,Lca.,...
OAKLAND ATHLETICS - Re·
called Lince Blankeru:hip, Vtncc Law

and Scott Hemond, inficldcn; Kevin
Bnwo Wal~an and Joe Slusuki. pltc:hcn:, ancl Dtnn Howitt. oulfiddcz',
frun Tacmu of the Paci6c Cout Lc.pc.
Oplionod Bnd lt:onominol&lt;, oullielde., 10d
Brad Wi1meyer, firll bueman, to Taco·
ma. A«iwted Willie WU.on, outfielder,
!rom tltcl5·day diablod 1iiL

NATIONAL CONFERENCE .

C~,

EutamDt•llloo

T..,.

W.L
1...0
1...0
1...0
1...0
1...0

O.Uu
N.Y.Gianll
Ploiloddpbia

,._..

Wu!!inpn

T Pd.
0 1.000
0 ).()()()
0 1.000
.o1.000
0 1.000

Central Dh11klll
1...0 0 1.000
llclroo&lt;
0 ...1 0 .000
O...ORay
0 .. .1 0 .000
Mmn-.
0 .. .1 0 .000
Tamr- Bry
0 ... 1 0 .000
Chict.'O

Pf PA
26 14
16 14
20 3
24 14
4l 0

10
0
3
6
13

~s~~S-Actiw~J~

Hu.aon, infielder; Rich Oot:aaac. pitcher.
John IWucll. eak:hct, and Jack O.uJhcr·
ty, outfielder; from the IS-day cliaabled
liiL Rc&lt;alled 8111')' Manuel, piodoeo:, rrom
Tulaa of lhc Toua ~JUe. Pwthuod tho
contract of Donald HarriJ, oudiclder,
frun Oklahoma City or lhc American AJ·
1ociaticn. San TriiYil Buckley, pi'Cher, to
lhc MontrMI EllpoilO complete lhc tndc

6
45
20
10
16

Waltrn IH¥11ton
New Odcm.~
1 ...0 0 1.000 27 24
Atlanta
0 .. .1 0 .000 3 14
LA. R..,.
0 ...1 0 .000 14 24
SanFranciJco
0 .. .1 0 .000 14 16

r.,. D....U. BO)'d.

TOROIIITO BLUE JAYS - Recalled

Derek Bell, Cory Snyder and Turner
Wild, ~&gt;~tfidden; EddicZooky, lhOIUI&lt;lp,
and Pal Hc:nlf,en, pitcher, from Syncwe
of lnte:mational League. Recalled David
Wealhcn 1J1d Vinoc Homnan, phchen
from Knotville of lhc SOUlhcm Lc.gu.C:
Named Bill Mew~bouqueue coach..

Sunday's openers
K&amp;Nal01y i4.Atlama 3
New Odant 27, Scaalc 24

NewYeaJ«al6, T1mp1 Boy13

Dollul6,Cio....ndl4

AMERICAN LEAGUE
l.ulonl Dt•loloo
TWLPcL
T...........74 S9 .SS6
tloiP*
.............71 61 ..538
a - ............67 63 .lll
63 68 .411
Now Yea ......... 59 11 .454
8 - ......... S3 71 .405
CI.I!VELAND ..43 .. .!21

Mil- ........

GB

2..5
l.S
10
t3..5
20
30

,.

WLPd.
10 53 .602
...........71 61 .531

=·· .........

ODc:oao
Ooklood

.......... 71 61 ..538
r...
.. ...........69 61 .s3t
~01, ......... 67 63 ..Ill
-·
.............67 ~ .501
Califomla ...........64 61 ...19

Sawro.y'sllnals
T - S, Now\'odiO

011Wnd9,Douoit 1,10 UuUnp
Olapii,C......... 5
Califomio 2
5,lloltimcono 2
JCoaou Clt73, Tuu 2

Mil-*•'·

a-•.s.. a~e•

ATI.ANTA BRAVES - Pun:h11ed
lhe contnct of Ymu Paoz, pitcher, rrom
Richmc:nl or l.ho In~em~tional Lcape.
CINCINNATI REDS - A.c:Untal

Chril Hammond, pitcher, trom the u.
daJ dlubled llal. Called up Donnie
Scott, ulcher, fl'ohl N11hllle of the
American Alloclltioft.

Dellm 45, Cllldnua 14

Wuhinalm 45, 0.W. 0

LOS ANGEU!S DODGERS - Ro-

called Dennil Cool! and Jolon Wea.llnd,
pilchcn; Cui01 Hcmandcz, caltha; Eric

Monday's score

w. . . Dt•Won
T-

Natlonll Luaue

Phi1adclplola 20, o - Boy 3
......... 24, LooAnad .. Ramo 14
Howlon47,LooAooelooRaiden17
Bullllo 3l, Miomi 31
OU,.I0."'""-6
New l!qllllcll6,1odilnopolil 7
PIIUII-U,SaoDioaOlt

GB

New Yod. Oiallla 16, San Fr.nciaco

k.am., fiM buanln. and Tom Ooodwin,
Cllllfioldco, rrom Atbuq~· d"" Pocif·
icCoutlap.
NEW YORK METS - Ploced
Dwilltt Ooodat, pil&lt;:her, 011 lite 15-diJ·
ablccllilt, n:ti'Oictive to Aug. 24. Rccilled
I~ Gltdncr, infoddcr, and Todd Hund·
ley, e~tcher, from Tidewater« the lnta·
nnional Leapc. Recalled Terry Brou,
&amp;om WilliarNport of the E.,LCrn

14

8.5

1.5
9.5
11.5
12..5
1!5

Sunday, Sept. 8
Otictao at Tunf11 Illy, t p.m.
Clewlond 11 N"' Entlond,l p.m.
Orom Bay It Dr.c:nl.t.

r,.m.

lnd:i&amp;nlpohl " Miami,

p.m.

La. A..del R11n1 11 New Yodt Gi·
I p.m.
MiilaeiO(a at Atlaml, I p.m.
NewOdean~rt Kanau City, t p.m.

[!,.tchot,
~ELPHIA PHILLIES -

&amp;nll,

I'Mmli1 a\ Philodeloltil, I p.m.
Pl1Ubo'111 ot Bu~lo, I p.IL
San Diqo It SUI Fnnc:iKo, 4 p.m.
Denver ll Loa Anaetca Raiden, 4
p.m.

New Yod: Jcu at Sc.ulc, 4 p.m.
llowton •t CI~:Minnat~ I p.m.

Mondar{; i!:pL 9

w...ru.,..ll

1

.9 pm.

College football scores
East
PIIU!outah 34, W• VUJinia 3
Ruo... 20,B01too C..... 13

South
Auburn 32. Gearaia Soulh""' 17
Gaqio 41, w.
0
LouiMIIc 24, E. K&lt;111U&lt;ty 14
~ 22. Tu1onc 3
~ SL 47, Cll S1.-Pullmon 3
NE ............. 21, SW Louiliau 10
Southem Mill. 25, Dalla SL 7
Viopoia Tcdo41,J...,.. Modioon 12

c...u..

Mldwut
W
I

''

By TOM CANAVAN
AP Sports Writer
EASt RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) -If there were any questions
about Ray Handley •s decision to
malce Jeff Hostetler the Giants'
starting qU81'telback, they may have
been answered in New York's season-opener.
Hostetler engineered a 13-play,
60-yard drive in the final 4:40
Monday night and Matt Bahr
kicked a 35-yard field goal with
five seconds remaining to give
New York a 16-14 victory over the
49ers.
The win not only made Handley's regular-season debut as the
GI8Dts head coach a success, it also
ended the 49ers' 19-game regularseason road winning streak, the
longest in NFL history.
The win was especially sweet
for Hostetler. After leading the
Giants to a Super Bowl victory in
January, he spent training camp
locked in a fierce quarterback competition with longtime starter Phil
Simms, whose injury gave him the
chance to play lllSt season.
Even when Handley gave him
the job, there were those who disagreed.
"I've had a long camp and
worked hard for this job,"
Hostetler said. "I won the j&lt;J\&gt; and

· ended a
Hodson threw for a IOUchdown. The ~tnots
14-game losing strealc da~ng to th.etr last meeting
with the Colts, a 16-l4 vtctory. Dick MacPherson
won in his NFL coaching debut.
Bears 10, Vikings 6 - Jim Harbaugh passed for
a touchdown and Kevin Butler kicked a field goal on
an afiW!oon when the defenses held center s~e in
Chicago's home opener. The Bears made the Vikings
settle for field goals of 26 and 24 yards by Fuad
Reveiz.
Bills 35, Dolphins 31 -.~t Ric~ Stadium, Jim
Kelly came back after sprammg hts left ankle to
throw for 381 yards and a touchdown. Thurman
Thomas accounted for 267 yards rushing and receiving, scoring twice. Dan Marino passed for three TOs
and is sixth all-lime with 243.
Oilers 47, Raiders 17- Warren Moon passed
for two touchdowns and ran for one and the Oilers
set up three touchdowns with turnovers in the
Astrodome. The Raiders had the ball for 77 seconds
in the fusl period.
Cardinals 24, Rams 14- Tom Tupa ran for one
touchdown and passed for another as the Cardinals
overcame the Joss through injury of last year's slarting quarterback, Timm Rosenbach. The Rams helped
the Cards by IUrning the ball over six times at Anaheim SUidium.
Cowboys 26, Browns 14 - ln Cleveland, Troy
Aikman passed for 274 yards and two touchdowns in
helfing to ruin the coaching debut of the Browns·
Bil Belichick. Ken Willis also kicked four field
goals. The Browns cui it to 20.13 on Bernie Kosar's
62-yanl TO pass to Webster Slaughter on the first
play of the second half.
Jets 16, Bucs 13- Pat Leahy, the NFL's oldest
player at age 40, kicked three field goals, including a
40-yarder with 1:22 to play in the Meadowlands.
Blair Thomas, who ran for 92 yards, kept the final
drive alive and Ken O'Brien's ~5-yard pass to Rob
Moore set the sUige for the dectding kick.
Cbiers 14, Falcons 3 - In Kansas City. Christian
Okoye ran for 143 yards, scoring on a four-yard run
and bolting 48 yards to key a 91-yard drive capped
by Steve DeBerg's six-yard pass to Emile Hairy.

all the doubters came out again ....
Under the conditions I felt real
good about it, especially to open
the season with a big wm agamst
the 49ers."
The win was very similar to the
Giants' 15-13 victory at San Francisco in last season's NFC title
game. In that game, Hostetler.
playing in place of the injured
Simms, drove New York 33 yards
in seven plays for Bahr's gamewinning 42-yard field goal al the
final gun.
"On the last drive, we were just
trying to force them to kick a long
field goal,' • 49ers linebacker
Charles Haley said. "But unfortunately it was just like the play·
offs."
Hostetler made two big plays on
the final drive, hitting Stephen
Baker for 14 yards on the fmt play
and then fmding Mark Ingram for
II yards on third-and-10 from the
San Francisco 37 with L:33to play.
After two running plays got the
ball to the 18, Bah( split the
uprights for his third field goal of
the game.
This battle between the two
teams that have won four of the last
five Super Bowls wasrl't easy for
either team. The biggest lead for
either team was six points in a
game again dominated IIY lhe two

defenses.
New York gained just 331
yards, while San Francisco got 254
wtth Steve Young al quarterback in
place of the injured Joe Montana.
After Bilhr staked New York 10
a 3-0 lead with his fmt field goal,
Young connected with Jerry Rice
on a 73-yanl TO pass play against
six defensive backs.
Hostetler, who completed 17 of
31 passes for 228 yards, got New
York back in front with a 25-yard
scramble that set up a one-yard
touchdown run by Ollis Anderson.
A 47-yanl pass to Baker and a 10run scramble by Hostetler set up
Bahr's 28-yarder before the half.
The Giants' offense bogged
down in the third quarter and San
Francisco took advanUige, taking
over at the Giants' 42 following a
shon puRl by Sean LandeUI.
Seven plays later, Young rolled
left and ran into the end zone,
helped in part guard Guy Mcintyre's lakedown of Lawrence Taylor.
However, Hostetler was able to
rally the GianiS in the closing minutes.
' 'The las1 drive, we needed to
put some points on the board,"
Hostetler said. "We executed well
and il was a good come from
behind victory.''

Phillies post 8:'5 victory over Reds

Scoreboard
In the majors•••

·
Cunrungham,
the NFC Pro Bowl starter thl'i'last
three years, had his season likely come to ~end
when he was hit_as he threw a pass early in the Second quancr agamst the Packers. He tore two liga·
ments in his left knee and according to lhe team ~octor, was orobably facing s~ery.
~he ~agles didn't seem to miss Cunningltam
agatnst the Packers. Jim McMahon threw for two
touchdowns and the defense did the rest in a 20-3
victory.
The Seahawks got a l!fl'from their sub qwr.erbock, Jeff Kemp, afrer Krieg went out with a bf.ken
thumb. But the Saints edged the Seahawks -24
behind the late heroics of Bobby Hebert, wh was
making h!s return after sitting out last season in a
contract dispute.
HeJx:r:t's 10-yard throw to Floyd Taylor with 1:11
left won tL
Kemp had a late touchdown pass wiped away
when receiver Tommy Kane was ruled out of
bounds, and a 15-yard penalty for arguing tha call
p~hed kicker John Kasay back just far enough to
'?ISS a 37-yard field goal attempt that would have
ued iL
ln other games, it was Redskins 45, Lions 0;
Steelers 26, Chargers 20; Patriots 16, ColiS 7; Bears
10~ Vikings 6; BHls 35, Dolphins 31; Oilers 47,
Rruders 17; Cardinals 24, Rams 14; Cowboys 26,
Browns 14; Jets 16, Bues 13 and Chiefs 14, Falcons
3.
.
Redskins 45, Lions 0- Darrell Green set up two
to~chdowns with pass interceptions and Brian
Mitchell returned a punt69 yards for a score at RFK
Stadium. Mark Rypien passed for two TO$ and
~t Bynar scored one and threw a halfback pass
to RICh' Sanders for another.
Steelers 26, Chargers 20- For the fmt time in
three years, the Steelers got ~ TD pass in a ~on
o~er. Bubby Bnster threw 11. and G&amp;r:r An~erson
kicked four field goals. John Fnesz, making his second ~~· threw for only 75 yards through three quarters m f&gt;!ttsburgh.
.
.
Patrtots 16, Colts 7 -_In lndtanapohs, Jason
Staurovsky ktcked three fteld goals and Tommy

Senr.
Dave Hollina, third bluman. and Von
lhy01, out1icldet,ID the Smn""'·Wilkco·
DIDO ollho lnl&lt;lnlti«WI.clp on tdt1·
bililltioo . .ianmema. Purchuod lhe con·
lncl. ol Clif'rord Bnnllcy, pitcher, from
Seranton·WiJk.:!Batre.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS - Ro·
caUed Bemard Gilkey, outfielder; Ray
SteP-. catdlcr, .oncl Rod Brewer, lint
buaiwi, fJum LouiMI1e of lite Amorican

-......
SAN DIEOO PADRES -Recalled
Allco u......kar, "" Clanatu, and JoM
ollho

c........ pitehon. fJum ..... v..u

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - In
his 14 major league seasons, Dale
Mwphy has never hit for the cycle.
The Phillies outfielder had a
chance in his fmal at-bat on Monday night
Murphy needed a triple but
tined a single to left. Nevertheless,
his four hits, including a two-run
homer, sparked the Phillies to an 85 victory over the Reds, Cincinnati's fourth sttaightloss.
''I was trying to figure out how
I would ever hit a triple," said
MIJ!IlhY, who has lost a good deal
of hts speed because of two sore
knees. "The only way 1 can get a
triple is if the outfielder falls down
and kicks the ball into the corner.''
Mwphy gave Philadelphia a 2-0
lead in the first when he followed
Ricky Jordan's single with his 17th
homer of the season. lt came off
Tom Browning (13-9). Lifetime
against Browning, Murphy is batting .382 (26 for 68) with four
home runs.
"He's a real good pitcher,"
Murphy said. "He doesn't walk
guys. He makes you hit the ball, so
you feel he'll be around the plate."
The Phillies knocked out
Browning with a six-run fourth
inning, capped by Dickie Thon's
two-run homer off reliever Kip
Gross. But the Reds rallied for five
runs in the sixlh off Terry Mulholland (13-11).
Chris Sabo singled in two runs
and Joe Oliver had a th=-run dou·
ble. Barry Larkin had a sixth·
inning single, extending his hitting
streak to 16 games, currently the
longest in lhe major leagues.
Joe Boever eventually relieved
Mulholland and retired the side.
Boever and Mitch Williams then
held the Reds scoreless, with
Williams picking up his 25th save.
Cincinnati manager Lou Piniella
was rightfully concerned about his
team's starting piiChing.
"It's tough to come back from
an 8-0 lead," Piniella said. "Our
pitching has got to get better."
In the last three gwnes, Cincinnati's starters have allowed 16
earned runs in 13 1/3 innings, an
ERA of 10.80.
Piniella also noticed Murphy's
success against Browning.
"It seems like every time
Browning is piiChing af,linst Murphy, he hits a home run, ' he said.
Browning couldn't explain it.
"I had good success with him
until the last couple of years,"
Browning said. "Now we have all
these home runs and hits."
Cincinnati had beaten the
Phillies seven sttaight before Monday night's gwne.
. "This was a good win for us
because they've played so well
a¥ainst us," said Phillies manager
Jtm Fregosi, whose team is now
tied for fourth place in the NL East
with New York.
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Montteal 4, Atlanta 3; HoustQn 3,
New York 0; Pittsburgh 9, San
Francisco 8; and Chicago 10, San

Paci&amp;COuo~MeK

SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS - R..

callcd Sieve llocUt, eatdocr, Mib Blll·
jlmin, iallelder, onc1 Oil Hcndia, oilcher,
fJum l'looatia d lhc Pacilic Cout Loop

FootbaU
Nllloul POOiboll Laaauo
DI!IROIT UONS - P1&amp;cool Aub&lt;oy
Mauhaw~, wide rwceiver, on inju.red re...,., Ac:cinle:l Bra Plniman, wide r.

.....

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTSAotlviiOd lohMJ RMthorl, Unobldler.
Relouod Rldtonlllor..,y,lilllbadt«.

Correction
Because of a unannounced
change in uniform numbers, the
Meigs Marauder quarterback ~ic­
tured in the Sunday Times-Sentmel
was identified inconectly. The
Mei~s quanerback was Jeremy
Phalin (113) and not Jim Pullins as,
was listed.

innings for the victory.
The Dodgers tied it at 4-4 with
The. Braves don 'I think there •s two out ·in the bottom of the ninth
on Lenny Harris' run-scoring sinany catise for concern just yet.
Atlanta lost its third straight gle off Smith. The NL leader with
game ~onday as Andres Galarraga 37 saves, blew an OpPOrtunity for
hit a two-run homer and Bill Samp- only the sixth time thiS season.
en piiChed six suong innings for
The Cardinals had gone ahead
Montreal to beat the Braves and 4-3 in the top of the inning on Ray
Tom Glavine 4-3.
Lankford's SIXth homer of the year.
The Braves had to wait several
Pirates 9, Giants 8
holliN to see if they would lose fmt
Lloyd McClendon's run-scoring
place in the NL West. But the pinch single off Dave Righetti with
Dod~ers obliged by losing to the
two out in the ninth inning lifted
Cardinals 7-4 in 11 innings on the Pittsburgh over San Francisco at
West Coast, so Atlanta and Los Candlestick Park.
Angeles remained tied for first.
Jay Bell. Andy Van Slyke and
Sampen (7-4), pitching because Orlando Merced ~h had three hits
Dennis Martinez has a lower bock and an RBI, and Barry Bonds had
strain, gave up four bits in only his two hits and an RBI for the firstfifth· start of the year and his fmt place Pirates. who won for the
since April 28. Mel Rojas pitched sixth time in seven games.
two.innings and Barry Jones strug·
Stan Belinda (4-4) pitched 2 1!3
gled to get the last three outs.
innings to earn the victory. Rosario
The Braves rallied in the top of Rodriguez retired Will Clarlc, who
the ninth against Jones as Otis had four hits, for the final out to
Nixon hit a two-run triple and Jeff earn his second save.
Treadway singled him home. But
Astros 3, Mets 0
Terry Pendleton hit into a double
Rookies Ryan Bowen Rob
plar to end the game.
Mallicoat and AI Osuna combined
'We've been through strealcs on a six-hitter to lead visiting
like this before and we've come out Houston past New York.
of !hem," Pendleton said. "I don't
Bowen (4-2) allowed five sinthink it's a question of us getting gles and four walks in 6 1!3 innings
into September and starting to before Mallicoat came on to stop a
tighten up. The important thing is rally
in the seventh. Osuna got his
to stay loose and have fun and lOth save with two innings of onethat's what we're doing."
hit relief as the Astms snapped the
Glavine, (17 -9), the NL leader Mets • three-game winning strealc.
in wins, gave up five hils and
Frank Viola fell to 12-13 and
struck out I0 for his ninlh complete third baseman Howard Johnson
game.
made two costly errors, giving him
Cardinals 7, Dodgers 4
29 for the season.
Relief ace Lee Smith blew a
lead in the ninlh before the CardiCubs 10, Padres 8
nals came back to win as Rich
Ryne Sandberg hit his second
Gedman doubled home the go - career~ slam to cap a six-run
ahead run in a three-run 11th.
etghth mmng as Chicago won in
Reliever Jay Howell (5·5) San Diego.
walked Jose Oquendo to start the
With the Cubs leading 6-5,
lith and gave up Gedman's RBI Mark Grace was issued an inten·
double. Todd Zeile and Rod Brew- tiona! walk and Sandberg greeted
er added run-scoring singles.
reliever J1m Lewis with his 22nd
Willie Fraser (3·0) pitched two homer.
Diego8.

. Expos 4, Braves 3

JIMBO'S BACK! - Jimmy Connors, at age
39, roared into tbe quarterfinals of tbe U.S.
Open with a 3-6, 7-6 (10-8), 1-6, 6-3, 7-6 (7-4)

victory over Aaron Krlcksteln Monday in spite
of seven double-faults, 106 unforced errors and
his failure to convert 19 or 24 break points. (AP)

Connors outlasts Krickstein to make
U.S. Open quarterfinals Monday

Call Sentinel

CLASSIFIEDS%
992-2156

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including
Asthma, Allergy &amp; Hearing· Aids

John A. Wade, M. D.
· Suite 112 Valley Drive
Pt. P,leasant, WV.

Call 304·675·1244 for Appt ar Information

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - In the
end, tennis' rebel with a cause simply would not go off quietly into
the night. Jimmy Connors has
seized the U.S. Open by lhe lapels
and he won't stop shaking iL
Energized by the National Tennis Center crowd and a couple of
close calls that went against him.
· Connors summoned energy from
the depths of his 39-year-&lt;&gt;ld body
on Monday to reach the quarterfinals with a victory that defied
logic.
Behind almost throughout and
angered by two rulings by the chair
umpire, Connors somehow outlasted 24-year-old Aaron Krickstein 36,7-6 (10.8), 1-6, 6-3,7-6 (7-4), as
the energy and emotion of a sellout
crowd carried him past still another
plateau on his dizzying trip through
this tournamenL
He double-faulted seven times,
committed an astounding I 06
unforced errors, and failed to convert 19 of 24 break points.
And still he won.
It was as if lhe crowd would not
let him lose. When be was in trouble, they seemed to will Connors'
shots inbounds and Krickstein 's
wide of lhe lines.
''When I beat Patrick McEnroe
(in the fllSI round), that was 7,(XX)..
8,000 making lhe noise of 20,000,"
Connors said. "This was 20,000
making the noise of 60,000.
· "That's some crowd to play in
rront of. To get that reception and
feeling, I cail't describe 11. I can't
explain il It's awful satisfying for
Someone who shouldn't be playing
any more. How can you not be sat·
lsfted?" •
When)t was over, after 4 holliN,
41 minutes of gut-wrenching tennis, the crowd serenaded Connors,
singing Happy BirtJI!Iak!him.
· Happy .Birthday, 10
· Jimbo has had few better ones.
He made shots be had no business
making against a player 15 years
t' '

younger. When a close call cost
him a vital point in the second-set
tiebrealcer. Connors heaped abuse
on chair umpire David Liulefield
and then won the next three points
and the set, gesturing each umc at
the official.
It happened again in the fifth set
when Connors recovered from a 25 hole. Again, the debate seemed to
fire him up, help him recover from
an early service brealc and force the
tiebreaker.
"At an important point like thai,
I've got to go nuts," he said. "''ve
golto stick up for my righiS."
The monumental ConnorsKrickstein match overshadowed
the other action . Earlier, the
women's quarterfinal bracket was
completed with four-time champion Martina Navratilova, seeded No.
6, leading the advance. The 34year-old reached the quarters for
the 13th time in 15 years and settled a year-old score with a 7-6 (75), 1-6, 6-2 victory over IOth-seeded Manuela Maleeva-Fragniere,
who eliminated her from this event
a year ago.
Next for Navratilova is founhsceded Aranlxa Sanchez Vicario,
who eliminated Nalalia Zvereva 63, 7-6 (7-4).
In the other women 's quarter,
No. 8 Conchita Martinez meets No.

I Steffi Graf. Martinez advanced
with a 6-4, 6-4 victory over No. 12
Zina Garrison and Graf ousted
Judith Wiesner 7-5,6-4.
On the men's side, defending
champion Pete Sampras, seeded
No. 6, finished No. II David
Wheaton 3-6, 6-2, 6-2, 6-4. He will
meet No. 4 Jim Courier, who
advanced with a 6-4, 64, 6-3, viclory over No. 14 Emilio Sanchez.
Also advancing was Paul
Haarhuis, who finished off CariUwe ~lceb 6-2. 6-3, 6-4. Thar pur
Haarhuis, who eliminated top-seeded Boris Becker, into the quarlers
against Connors, the people' s
choice. Jimbo promises not 10 fold
his tents, not after coming this far.
''l'riYnot going to give il to
the•·'·" he said. "They are going 10
have to beat me. And I can handle
it if I am in a little bit of pain. I've
played in pain before. I'm 39. I'm
nor supposed 10 win here. But if I
do, watch out."

CELEBRATE GAME-WINNER- New York
Giants quarterback Jeff Hostetler (15) celebrates
with kicker Matt Bahr (9) following Bahr's game-

winning field goal with five seconds left in Monday night's NFL game against the visiting San
Francisco 49ers, who lost 16-14. (AP)

Jackson plays first game of '91, but
Hernandez's arm gives ChiSox win
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The fans came to see Be .
lnslead, they almost saw another
Bobo.
Bo Jackson got the biggest
cheers Monday night as the
Comiskey Park crowd of 37,187
celebrated his return to the major
leagues. ln a game that many
thought he would never play, Jackson went 0-for-3 with a sacrifice
fly.
"I'm ncl 100 percent, but I am
back," he said after the White Sox
won 5-1 over the Royals, the team
that released him in spring training
because of a hip hurt in the NFL
playoffs.
Roberto Hernandez did no1 get
any ovations. At least, not at fusL
But Hernandez, making his
major league debut, quickly drew a
lot of attention. He held Kansas
City hitless for six innings, and
allowed only one hit in seven
innings.
Bobo Holloman is the only
piiCher since 1900 to piiCh a no-hiller in his ftrSI big-league start.
Hernandez, like Jackson, once
was told he would never play baseball again. Hernandez was diagnosed as having blood clots in his
pitching arm earlier this season,
and underwent surgery to transfer
veins from his inner thigh 10 his
right forearm.
"I have a strong will 10 compete," Hernandez said. "I've been
through a lot, so I lake nothing for
granted."
In other games, De1roi1 downed
Seattle 12-5, Toronto topped Baltimore 5-4 in 12 innings, Minnesota
beat Cleveland 9-3, Texas tripped
New York 7-2 and California beat
Milwaukee 7-6.
Batting sixth as Chicago's designated hitler, J~kson hit the ball
squarely all four times and ran hard
without any apparent problems.
"I'm satisfied with the things as
they arc now, but they will get better," he said. "I've laid the foun dation."
Hernandez, given an early lead.
breezed until Bill Pecota led off the
seventh with a double. Pecota later
scored on a groundout and Hernandez left after the inning. having
slruck out four and walked 1wo.
Scoll Radinsky finished for his
sixth save as Chicago won its third
straight. The White Sox tied idle
Oakland for second place. 8 1/2
games behind Minnesota.
Tigers 12, Mariners S
Cecil Fielder hit his 37th home
run, leading Bill Gullickson and
Detroit at the Kingdome.
Lou Whilaker hit his 21 sl home
run and Tony PhiUips got his 16th
for the Tigers. Ken Griffey Jr. hit
his 19th for Seaule and Tino Mar-

tinez had his second.
Gullickson (17-7) gave up four
runs in 6 2/3 innings. Paul Gibson
finished for his eighth save.
Rich DeLucia ( 11-9) took the
loss as Seanle dropped its fourth in
a row.

Twins 9, Indians 3
Scotl Erickson, showing his
early-season form, pitched seven
shutout innings before Minnesota
broke it open at the Metrodome.
Kirby Puckeu's RBI double in
the bottom of the seventh broke a
scoreless tie and keyed a fow-run
inning. Shane Mack's second grnnd
slam of the season capped a fiverun eighth.
Erickson (17-6) gave up six hits
and struck out seven. Rick Aguilera
closed for his 37th save.
Eric King (5-9) shut out the
Twins on one hit until the big seventh. Mack hit his 17th home run
and second career slam the next
inning.
Blue Jays 5, Orioles 4
Joe Carter began the bottom of
the 12th inning with a triple off
right fielder Chito Martinez's glove
and Cory Snyder followed with a
game-winning single.
Mike Timlin ( 10-6) pitched one
inning for the victory. Gregg Olson
(3-5) stranded a runner at tllird base
with one out in the IOth, but gave
up the two hits in the 12th.
Rangers 7, Yankees 2
Oil Can Boyd fmally won for
the Rangers. helping Texas beat
New York for the 14th straight
time at home.
Boyd (1-4) pitched five shutout

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214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

Basketball
BOLOGNA, Italy (AP) Knorr Bologna of the Italian
League said it revoked 1\1icheal
Ray Richardson's comract because
the 35-year-old guard 1es.1ed positive for cocaine use.

992,6687

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fn1ur•nc:e Comp•me1

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BUY 1 CHAIN AT THE
REGULAR PRICE

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-Sports briefs-Football
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Philadelphia Eagles quanerback
Randall Cunningham will miss the
rest of the season and undergo
surgery to repair his injured left
lcnee.
He was hit on the knee by Green
Bay linebacker Bryce Paup on the
first play of the second quarter in
the Eagles' 20·3 victory Sunday.
Dr. Vincent DiStefano, the
team's doctor, said a magnetic resonance imaging test confmned that
Cunningham tore lhe IJiedial collat·
eral and posterior cruciate ligaments.

innings.
Ruben Sierra hit his 19th home
run offTim Leary (4-10), who took
over in the second inning after rain
forced starter Wade Taylor to
leave.
Angels 7, Brewers 6
Junior Felix drove in a careerhigh five runs with two doubles
and two singles and Jim Abboll
won his sixth straight decision as
California slopped its seven-game
road losing streak.
Abbott ( 15-8) gave up three
run s on 10 hils in 5 1/3 innings.
Bryan Harvey pioched the ninth and
got his 34th save. Don August (97) took the loss.

FOR

ssoo

SALE ENDS 917/91

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
606 EAST MAIN

992·2094

POMEROY

�Tuesday, September

Ktm, a local dtsc jockey. has not
been sohctllng funds for any pohucal pany, nor have any of the other
staffers at WMPO. Ktm reports that
the person makm~ the call has been
concentrating h1s efforts on the
local semor populauon , and those
folks should be cspa;ially wary.
If you are contacted by a fund
ratscr that you do not know, do
yourself a favor and call the orgamzauon for whtch the person is collccung. and conflfiD that 1l IS legtumate
Thts could save you some of
your hard -earned money
On this date ... Last week's feature examtnmg past headlines
proved popular, so lei's try 11 agam.
Durmg the fu st week m
September m 1967, The Dally Sentinel reported that hot lunches
were bcmg served to students at
Pomeroy Jumor H1gh and Htgh
School students for the first time as
the school year got underway.
Perry Kennedy, Mark Tanneh11l
and Pat Story were the tn-captams
of the first Metgs Marauders football tewn, whtch played tiS debut
game thts week 24 years ago. The
team, as you probably remember,
combmed players from the former
Rutland, Pomeroy and Mtddlepon
teams

Check It out.. ."C hcck out
before mailing a cha:k"
That 's a warntng 1ss ued last
week by Meigs County Shc11ff
James M. Souls by. He reports that
Ius department has rcce1ved anum·
ber of inquines regardmg telephone
sohcllalion that reponedly w1ll a1d
county law enforcement officers.
Sheriff Soulsby advises me that
Who was " Mr Eddy Educator"?
be has not been contacted regardIng solicitahon by any organaza- The Metgs County Bookmobtle of
llon. The Buckeye Shenffs Asso- course, under the dtrecuon of
c•auon is the only organazauon V1lma PikoJa. The bookmobile prol:ohnected w1th local depanmems, gram announced thts week m 1967
that 11 would expand servtccs mto
~ul its membersh1p d11ve 1s m the
Jackson County
,~&gt;pring.
Dclalled plans for the Tuppers
1 Soulsby also advises that the
llepartment IS not aware of the Plams-Chester Water Dtslrict were
)lame or the sohciUng organazatmn, expa;tcd 10 be completed anyume.
If you planned a tnp to the
but that he can only urge restdents
d11ve-m movtes, you mt~ht have
io mvesugate before they donate.
"A Funny Thmg Hap''; FYI...Jn a related vem, 1f you constdered
pened on the Way to the Forum",
'have rece~ved a phone call sohctl· starnng zero Mastel and Phtl Stimg funds for a pohucal organiza- vers (It was, by the way. suggested
:tion by someone posmg as Kim for mature audtences).
:French, dtsregard the call, and 00
'NOT SEND THEM MONEY .
Take Care.

The Amencan Legto n Drew
Webster Auxthary Umt 39 met
recently at the post home.
Juha Hysell prestded and welcomed the guests, Mrs. Don Anderson and daughter, Barbara, who
was a Buckeye Gtrls State representallve; and Mica Jones, past
Gtrls State represeDiative and a
past JUnior member and present
semor member.
The mcetmg opened w1th prayer
led by Catherine Welsh, chaplam.
The Pledge and Preamble were
recited.
Mtss Anderson descnbed 10 the
members her tr1p to Ashland College where 1,200 Juniors pantctpal·
ed tn Gtrls State Weelc m June.
Mtss Anderson was a member
of Lenhen Cowtty and Bacon C11y.
She parllctpated tn elections of
state, county and ctty offictals, and
was elected to Deputy Dtrector.
County Board of Education. In that
office she checked pct!lions of
office candtdates and helped make
ballots for voting. Later she transCered to the Secretary of State

Htlda Yeauger presented the
program, "Heahng Power" at the
recent meeting of the Forest Run
Umted Methodist Women held at
the home of Mary Nease

The purpose ol the program was
to affirm the healing power of
Chtrst and the church's role as a
healtng commwttty. Scnpture was
from Luke and the song used was
"Have Thme Own Way ." Other
readers were Mary Nease, Kathleen
Scou, Faye Wiggms and Edith Stsson. The program closed wuh
prayer
Edtth Stsson prestded at the
meeung wh1ch opened w11h a readmg from lsiah and mcditauon from
!lems chtldren had wnuen. Devouons were by Kathleen Scou cnu-

'l!mlar.
TUESDAY
: POMEROY - The Amencan
:Ug10n Drew Webster Post No. 39
:.V•II meet Tuesday at the post
f!ome . Dinner is at 7 p.m. and
meeung time ts 8 p.m All members urged to attend

l

I

POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter
tlo. 186, O.E.S., w1ll meet Tuesday
et 7:30 p.m. Wear regular street
;tresses. Members w1ll go to
1dcDonald's for refreshments.

•

POMEROY • The Meigs Local
i!land Boosters wtll meet Tuesday
~not Monday) at 7 p.m. in the htgh
;thool band room.
, ,LETART - The Lctan Townshtp
:rrustees wtll meet Monday at 7
p ~ - at the office building.
REEDSVILLE - The Rtvcrvtcw
Elementary School PTO w til meet
rl!(lsday at 7 p m Parents are urged
to-aucnd and paructpate m dlscuslt6n about the upcommg school
~armval The mccung wtll also
afford a chance to meet the teachers Babystllmg and a movie w1ll
be provtded for children.

ATHENS - The Hockmg Valley
Chorus of Sweet Adehncs. lnt'l .. 1s
currently conducung a membershtp
dr1ve. Thts ts a chorus made up of
area women who perform locally
and at regmnal compeuuons. Any
woman of average smgmg abthty ts
encouraged to altend guest mght on
Tuesday at 7 p m. at the Columbia
Gas of OhiO butldmg on East State
Street m Athens. Smgers do not
have to be able 10 read m ustc or
have any prevtous trainmg . Sweet
Adehncs, lnt'l., educates women m
the an of smgmg four-pan harmony, barbershop style. For further
information call 698-8552 or 7974556.

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - The Chester Garden Club w1ll have tiS open mcctmg on Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the
Chester Untted Methodtsl Church
All vtsttors and members of other
clubs are welcome. Conme Htll .
guest arranger, wtll present "Country Nostalgta."

: RACINE · Racme Vtllage
Council wtll meet Tuesday at 7
~m . at council chambers
; RACINE - The Southern Boostets will meet Tuesday at 6 30 p m
at the football ftcld lO diSCUSS
IIIJ'Om!Dg 3CUV!bCS

j

lwnDDLEPORT - The Middleport Commumty Assoc tauon w1ll

DOWNING CHILDS
MUWN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 S.ofttl St., Pomtray
...

TOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SIIVItG
liEIGS COUNTY

SINCJ 1161

PAGEVILLE - The Sctpto
Townshtp Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. Restdcnts of
Pagevdle arc to meet w1th the
trustees at 7 p.m. to d1scuss the
water SIIU8l!On
POMEROY -The Metgs Athlettc Boosters wtll meet Wednesday
at 7:30p.m. at Mctgs High School.
Parents of athletes are urged to
aucnd.
POMEROY - The Salisbury
Townshtp Trustees w1ll meet
Wednesday at 7 p m. at the home
of clerk.

THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Ohve
Township Trustees wtll meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m at the
Reedsville Ftre House
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Ladtes Aux.thary of the Tuppers
Plams VFW Post No. 9053 w11l
meet Thursday at 7.30 p m
LOTTRIDGE - The Loundgc
Community Center w11l meet
Thursday at 7 p.m The public ts
mv1ted to auend.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees wtll meet tn
regular sesston on Thursday at 6 30
p m at the Rutland Fue Stauon

Sometliing (jooa's Jit{ways Coofjng Jtt

MASON
FAMILY
1
RESTAURANT

CHESTER - The Chester PTO
w1ll meet Tuesday at 7 p m at the
Chester Elementary School. All
parents and teachers arc urged to
altend

Located on Rt. 33 beside Mason Exxon and Mason Motel, Mason, wv

Sunday rtru&lt;Thursday, 6 30 am-tO pm, Friday~ Saturday, 6 30 am-11 pm

oncs"
Offtcers repons were gtven and
the group voted to support the
tuberculosis levy.
There were 46 stck and shut-m
calls reponed.
The annual mecung, to be held
Sept. 26 at New Lextngton, was
diSCUssed.
The July meeung of the group
was held at the home of Erma
Roush wttha miscellacous program
by all auendmg.
Refreshments of homemade tcc
cream and cake were served.

Public Notice

Monday Friday . 11 a.m . to .1 p.m.

A baby shower for Debra
McCall was held recently at th e
Grange Hall m Hemlock Grove
Games were played and refreshments served to fam1ly fnends and
many ladles from tht' Hemlock
Grove Chnsttan Church
Anendmg were T1na Lambert
and Bobbt Jo Stew art , Jo sep h
McCall, Joan May . Phyll1s Simpkins, Charla Htcll. Suzy Carpenter.
Verna Snowden, Helen Qu1vey,
Leota Smtth. Bemtcc Hawk, Golda
Reed; JesSIC While, Munel Br,1d-

THE PURPOSE OF PAYING

hetrs and asSigns, hereby
grant to the grantee her
ment 1n Perpetu•ty 1n an on
the above descubed p1ece or
parcel of land u a means of
rngreu to and egress from
the adJoanmg real estate

0

:~~L~~~GT~~IR&lt;j, ~~ug~

AND RELATED EQUIPMENT,
AND DECLARING AN EMER·
GENCY.
WHEREAS, lhls VIllage
Council has heretofore by
proper legislation declared

upon a 1udgment thor01n
EXCEPTING tho Ohoo Rov
rendered. be 1ng Case No: er Raelway and
Power
90-CV-274 on sa 1d Court. 1 Company's 11ght of way be·

wdl offer for sale, at the
front door of the Court
House 10 Pomeroy Me1gs
County, Oh10, on the 30th
day of September, 1991. at
10 00 o'clock A M the fol low1ng lands tenements
and personal property, towtt
Situated 10 Sec1ton 35,
Range 12 Sutton Townstup, VIllage of Syracu18,
Me1g1 County, State of Ohto

eng fourteen feet m Width.
seven feet on eatner s1de of
the followmg descr.bed can terllne
Commencmg at a po1nt m
the mtersectton of the ex1st·
mg southerly reght of way
lme of State Route Number
124andtheWestllneotsald
One Hundred Acre lot Number 293, satd po1nt also be·
mg the grantors' northwest
property corner, thence

Hundred Acre lot No 293
and be.ng more fully de·
scnbed as follows
Commenctng et an tron
p1n m the mteraectlon of the
extsttng southerly nght of
way line of State Route No.
124 and the west line of One

West along the grantor s
West property line and West
hne of One Hundred Acre lot
Number 293 and the ex1st
•ng centerline of Walnut
Street. 176 00 feet to the
real po1nt of begmmng for
the land heretn descr~bed

thence south 2 degrees 41 :
17"westalongthewesthne
of satd One Hundred Acre
Lot No 293 and the 81usttng
centerline of Walnut Streeta
total distance of 192 00
feet
thence
south 97
degrees 18' 33 .. east a total
d•stance of 3500 feet ;
thence northeastwardly con
t1numg along satd hne and
w1th the arc of a curve 10 the
left hav 1ng 8 redtusof732 78
teet a dtstance 151 88 feet
to an won p 1n the potnt of be
gmnmgofthetract heretnde.
soribed
thence south 3
degrees 35 54 ·east 1 15 66
nor-th 85
feet,
thence
degrees 00 27 east 27 29
feet to an tron p 1n, pas,ng an
non ptn at 1 29 feet. thence
south 4 degrees 10' 40" east
207 80 feet to the edge of
the Ohto R1ver pau1ng an
~ron p1n at 167 73 fe~;
thence along the riVer north
75 degrees 44 29" east
77 22 feet thence leavtng
the nver's edge north 2
degrees 41 ' 27' eau 325 84
feet to an ~ronp1n pas11ngan
iron ptn at 47 18 feet thence

33 " East along the center
hne of the Oh10 R1ver Ra1l
way and Power Company s
nght of way 35 00 feet to a
pomt,
thence northeast
wardly contmutng along
satd line and wnh the arc o f a
curve to the left havmg a ra
d1us of 716 78 feet a d1s
tance of 148 56 feet to a
pomt the long chord of sa•d
arc bear.ng North 86 de
grees 45 1 1 east 148 30
feet to sa1d pomt thence
North 80 degrees 48 56
East conttnwng along scud
hne 145 12 feet to a po•nl tn
the grantors east property
hne and there to term 1nate
and conta•nmg 0 106 acres
Further EXCEPT ING on
the south s1de ot the above
descr~bed land an easement
as heretofore gtven to Glenn
CundtH Jr and Carol Cun
d1H, thetr hetr s and asSign s
for gas and water hnes and
th e nght to enter and mamt
am same
The real es tate above de
scr~bed •s subtect to all
leases easementsandr~ghts
of way of record

south 80 degrees 10 33"'

DEED REFERENCE Vo

lhe necessity ol acquiring a
hre truck and related equip·
men! (lhe "Project"), and
WHEREAS, lhe fiscal officer ol lhls munlclpallly has
hereloloreesllmalod lhallhe
hie of the Improvements
hercrnafler described 1s at
least hve (5) yearS, and certl·
tied that the maximum rna·

1ur11y ol lhe bonds Issued
lherelor 1sten (101 years and
of notes to be Issued In an·
ttc1patlon thereof Is hftcen

(15) years, and
WHEREAS, lhls VIllage
Councllanllclpales !hal debt

and be1ng a part of One South 2 degrees 41 27

&amp;ervlce on such bonds and
notes will be paid from the
general revenues of lhls

municipality (lhe Revenues""): and
WHEREAS, lhe Unlled

Hundred Acre Lot No 293: lhnce South 87 degree• 18

Slates of America, Farmers'

Home Admlnlslrallon (lhe
"FmHA""), has agreed lo pur·
chase such notes upon the
terms set forth herein;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
ORDAINED by lhe Council ol
the Village ol Middleport
(hereinafter called the "Munlclpallly""), Slale of Ohio
SECTION I Thai II Is
necessary lo issue bonds of

lhe Mun1c1pat11y In

Qlstered Surveyofl6535
Satd real ostate wa s c1p
SubJect to all legal htgh· pras1ed at $2 5 000 00
ways easements of record
Terms of Sale Cash
end rtghts of way of records .
Real estate cannot be sold

EXCEPTING therelrom tor less lhan lwo lhords of
the coat 011. gas and other the appratsed value
mtner•l• and rtghts hereto·
James M Soulsby

of Meogs County

Ohto

corded m Vol 167. Paga (8) 27. 191 3, 10. 3tc
220. Daed Recordo. Me•go
County, Oh1o
Public Notice
Further the grantoro. their - - - - - - - - ORDINANCE NO. 1247-91

TUESDAY It 11IUJUIDAT, CIIILDRBII' VJifDZR 12 ICAT FRE&amp;
FROM CIIILDRBII'"8 MENU. (EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSER11
IJIIIT 1 CHILD PEK ADULT

I

VISA • MliSTERCARD • AMERICAN EXP~

.............,if'\
ill ~
CLASSIFIEDS .. .

Your Key to Great Buys

AN ORDINANCE PROVlD·
lNG FOR THE ISSUANCE OF
NOT TO EXCEED $368,500
OF NOTES BY THE VILLA9E
OF MIDDLEPORT, OHIO, JN
ANTICIPATION OF THE 1S·
SUANCE Ot BONDS FOR

1

princi-

pal amount not lo exceed
$368,500 lor the purpose of
paying part of the cosl of
acqumng a fire true and re·

laled equlpmenl, Including
lhe costs ol prlnllng lhe
bonds reg1stermg the bonds,
upense of delivery of the
bonds, serv1cechargesofthe

paymg agenl, reglslrar and
transfer agent, legal services
and obtaining an approvang
Op1n1on

SECTION 2 Thai sa1d
bonds shall be dated approxlmalely lhe first day of lhe

lume 310 Page 643 M e1gs
County Deed Records
The above descnbe d rettl
estate ts rdettfted •n th e rf'!
cords of the Me1gs County
Aud1tor by Parcel No 20

Sher~ff

The Hoclcing Valley Chorus of
Sweet Adehnes, lnt'l., is currently
conducung a membership drive.
Thts IS a chorus made up of area
women who perform locally and at
regiOnal compeutions Any woman
of average smging ability is
encouraged to aucnd guest mght on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Columbia
Gas of Ohto budding on East State
Street m Athens. Smgers do not
have to be able to read music or
have any prevtous traming. Sweet
Adelmcs, In!' I., educates women in
the art of smgmg four-pan harmony, barbershop style. For further
mformauon call 698-8552 or 7974556.

Public Notice

Public Notice

1

p ud

· R1

t t rvr

I rr r• ,lth

J

lUll

ca lendar month In whrch the
notes authorrzed herein are
redeemed , shall ~ear Inter·
csl al the estimated rate ol
l1vo and seven·elghths per
centum !5·718°4 ) per annum,
and shall mature In substan·
ltally equa l annual inslall·
ments of prtnclpal and Interest over a period not exceediog ten years alter lhe1r 1ssu·
anee

SECTION 3 Thai II Is
hereby delermlned Ihal no teo
(herelnaller called lhe
"'Noles"') In a punclpal
amount of no1 to exceed

$368,500 shall be lsaued In
anticipation ol lhe Issuance
ot said bonds. The Notes shall
be of lhe denomination of
$100 or any Integral mulllple
lhereol provided that each
Note shall be or 1 alngle
malurlly, shall be numbtrad
lrom R-l upwards In order or
issuance, shall be dated lhe
dale of lnlllal dollvtry, and
shall bear lntaraal on the
principal
oulltandlng
amounl al lho rail of: live
and aoven-elghlhl per cen1

Public Notice
tum (5·718%1 per annum,
I!IY•b,(p a~nually ~n Sep~m­
ber 1 orooi:h year, beginning
Seplembtr 1, 1992, undllho
principal oum lo pold: provided, however, that 1r the
total par value oltht Notn It
paid by tho FmHA In lnatallmenls, auch lnlornt alulll
accrue on thoomountoiNCh
auch lnallllmont from tho
actual datil lhtreor. The No'"
shall mature on Seplombtr
1, 2006, but ahall be aubjec:l
to mandatory alnklng lund
redemption on September 1
ol each of the yeara and In
the prlnclpalomounls aa lol·
low a:
Year
Amount
1992
$18,000
1993
16,900
1994
17,900
1995
19,000
1996
20,100
t997
21,300
1998
22,500
1999
23,800
2000
25,200
2001
26,700
2002
26,300
2003
30,000
2004
31,700
2005
33,800
Unlesa previously redeemed,
the remaining principal
amounlollheNoloo($35,500)
shall be paid II slated molur·
lly (Sepllmber 1, 2008) .
The Notaa ahall alao be
aubjec"t to redemption at any
limo prior to malutlty, In
whole or ln port, altho option
of the MunlclpaUiy ,In lnverao
order of maturlly, al par plua
accrued lnteroat. Tho Munlc~
pallly shall send notice or
such optional redemption by
llrsl clasa mall, pollage prepaid, to the reglalerad hold
era or tho Notes to be redeemed olloaal30 dayaprlor
lo lhe dolo of redemption
When leaa lhan all the Notea
ot a alnglo maturity are to be
redeemed, lhe tolectlon of
Noles to bo redeemed ahall
be m1de In auch manner ••

lhe Municipality shall deter
mine.
The Notea shall alto be
subject to redemption alany
lime ollhe option of tho FmHA
al par plus occrued lntarntlf
II than appear to the FmHA
that the Municipality It able
to rellnanct lht Notes ualng
responsible cooperallvo or
privallaourcetalrtaaonablt
rate• and terms for Hnane&gt;
lngs for almllar purpooesand
periods of lime
This Village Councl
hereby deltrmlntt that tho
maturity and redemption
provlslona of the Nolee are
In tho beat lnloroato of tho
Municipality.
SECTION 4. Thai tho
Notn lhaU bt dHignattd
"'Fire Equipment Notoa" and
ahall oxproaa upon their
facea tho purpott lor which
they arolaauod and tlult lhey
are lsauod In purau.nco of
Chapter 133 of tho Ohio
Revised Code and thlo ordtnonce. Tho Notoa ah.rl be In
fully reglatered form andaluill
bear tho algnatura of the
Mayor ol the Municipality,
provided that auch tlgnaiur&amp;l.'
(Cont~nued on Page 7t

M~·~~ ~

G,tll ,1 or M d~UI\

tOUIIIII !"'

llhl &gt;l lH

::. ~0 1h ~c ou111 lor .HI{ 1
),1111 111 ,ul11 111110
(JI \1 1 &lt;I&gt;'Yoly II HI four HI olth torlr hr 1!:! Wtllth will

rl,ty~

15
15

10

15

Monthly

15

20

30
42

60

S 1 JQ ; day

A•lcs illl ft 11 CU il~ CUIIVt! 11111 !&gt; br okcn UP dirVS Will b~ c h M~tt!'IJ

lor eac h

d~

as separate

Announcements

Over 15 Wmds

$4 00
$6 00
59 00
$13 00

15

1
3
6

pq

Rate

Words

Days

PO l iCH S
1\d~ u 1\ ~ ulr

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL ' 992-215b
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P .M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

illh

lot

1
2
J
5
6
7
8
9

fmr l lllf \
d,~

H•ppy Ad)
lo1t and found
'( •rd S• l e l~hl·d Ill &lt;HivcUlll I
Pubhc S;~ l c &amp; A oc: lro"
Want001o8uy

Ad~

!11 ::. 1(I

IV HI lUll ~

Ill

lldlll

rl

( ,Ill il l illl t

7. 00

Employment
SerVICes

jllll

th,ll

IIHI S I

hr

~loll !I 111 dtlv,lll CI

(' llllrrl1h urk

( /u"t{11•tf fHt!(t'\

,111
H.rpp" J\11 ,

follolf'lll!(

'" M, "'"" '"

A,

l,c.,, t.,~l

ul11 • 111 ~ 1 ,,, nl

p i " , tl ,.,

11" 11

~tly

S o"''"" lc"

Gall•d County

opt
c l t ~:.olo,., l lh :. pl oy B "~' "' ~~ ( ,,.t 11 11ll1tj 1tl lliiiHc!&gt;l
w•ll tbtt •PP' ,u on !lot Pt Pl 1 ,.:,. &gt;UI Ro •1• ~ 1• 1 111011111 Go~ Uo

Au•o~ C od~

t

p .,I, :. O.,ty

r,,,,,,,

"''""" I" " ' ' IBOO O h"'" '~

COPY Ol:

AOliNt
MONDAY t&gt;APl:A
TUESDAY PAPt:R
...VI ON t SOA'w' PAI't:A
THUR SD AY PAPfA
t HIOAY PAPL A
SU NDAY PAP£ R

D AY IJUORr PUU II CAT ION
11 00 AM SA TURDAY
} 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 PM TUE SD AY
2 00 PM WfONESDAY
2 00 PM THUR SDAY
2 IJO PM FRIDAY

BULLETIN

BOARD

614

t•·I•·JIIIIIIIo ' t'\1111111~&lt;''
Me1g~

County
A•c• Codt' 614

446

Gall1poln

991

367

ChUiolmt:

J88

Vu1\011
R1o G•ande
Guyan D1s1
Areb111 D•st

Poml!fuy
985 C ht!3iltH
843 Poflhtnd

24 5
256
643
J 79

W;tlnut

M1ddltll)ul\

247

ltrhr1 f411S

949

RiiCIIltl'

742
667

Rulldnd
Cool\l'ollt

Public Notice
sale or bonds anticipated by
the Nolea, and any excess
fund resulllng from lhe Juuance of the Notes, ehall to the

extent nece11ery be used
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
only for the rellremenl of the
4:30 f'.M. DAY BEFORE
Notea at malurlly, together
PUBLICATION
wllh lnleresl lhareon and Is
.
-------~----------11 hereby
for period
such
purpoao.pledged
During lhe

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

while the Notes run there
ahall be levied upon ell oltha
laxablo properly In lhe Munlclpalfly wllhln applicable
llmllallona, ln odd Ilion lo all
other taxe1, a direct tax an-

nually In en amount sulllclenl
lo pay the principal of and
lnleraal on lhe Noles when
end as the same fall due and
In any evenl, not leu than
that which would have been
levied II bondt had been
Issued wllhoul the prior Is·
aue of the Notes 1 which lax

shall nol be leasthalhelnler·
est and oinking lund lax required by Article XU, Section
11 ollhaConslllullon of Ohio.
Real Estate General

Public Notice
(Continued from Page 6)
may boa lacslmlle algnalure,
may bear the aeal of the
Munlclrallty or a tacolmlle
thereo , and thall bear the
manual algnalura of lho
Clerk-Treasurer of lhe Munlclpallly, who Is hereby
detlgnated as paying agent,

of the same maturity and for

Cml e 304

14
15

Busmess I folllllltrt
Scllouh &amp; lns tHit: l ot rll

16 RadiO
17
18

Applt!

lV

81 CH

4!)

F urn11&gt;f1tl1l Ruum!i
Spactf lo• Rtml
WanhHI lo Runl
(q ...pmenl f01 Ro 111
fmlu.sc

49

51
52

lihihiij6JI

moneys 10 available and

r .1mpt't!&gt;

&amp; Mt tu• ll uono• -.

tlu11 •~ loll p&lt;uvUIIII!'Ill ll

F "l:oN&lt;I IIIIII

l:lcc1 "C•tll!. H1l•

Musu: c~l hntHIIII!'Ill!o

IHl

G•

fnuts &amp; Vt:1Jlrtct1Jitl5
For Sal1 01 llilf1tr

H6
Hl

Mnh•l• II• not H, I' •"'

~9

St:rlll [t!)

l"J

8)

58

upon all ollho taxable properly ln the Municipality shall
be reduced by the amount of
the Revenues or such other

fltoo~l \ &amp; Mo lu l\ ltH S '''
/6 Aul oP ,nt } K. Alll~ !&gt; lllll ~
11 Aulu Rql.IU
II:! C.t mplll iJ ftllllllllll'lll

l'i

84

P•ofcs)lonal

amount of such direct tax

Motm cy d ~

V,t11 ~

P~ts

Mullt."V lu l oa11

payment ol lhe Noles and
such bonds and are appropriated lor such purpose, the

14

Tru c k~

Plumlt11111 &amp; H1 ,llonq

21

or moneys from other
eourcea are available for the

A.tllu ~

Hou suh o ld Gooell&gt;
Spoflmg Goods

55
56
57

Opporlwnty

for S.tlt•
fn• S,•l•
~ 4 WO '

11
II
I J

Ill
lil

23

however, lhalln each yearto
the extenlthattha Revenues

Trans ortation

AIIIIQU~S

lllldl1
Bufldlu

years are certified, extended
and collected, provided,

li,ly tlo G1"111
&amp;1 ml &amp; f c tlolo t t o

6:.

MI H M!lrch and&gt;St;
Bmldmq Suppll tS

B11"n~As

lime that taxes for general
pul-poset lor each of said

11\/ntutk

1.:14

54

l l

same manner 1nd It the eame

6 1

!)]

Muon
New tlavt 11

Public Notice
Sald lax shall be and Ia hereby
ordered
computed,
levled and
extended certllled,
upon the
IlK dupllcale and collecled
by lhe same oltlcera In the

fa1111 l:C!IIIJI!II t'l l l
VV .ut1d to Huy

Merchandise

H~p111

Wmtml Tu Ou

G I U\I'C

Huuses t or Rt~lll
Mobtle Hom es lur A t n t
Fa1ms 101 Rum
A.panmmH tor R1•nt

47
48

MISCUII.tnoou s

Pt Plcasctnl
leon

f ur

Sal t~

q,.,,,,,.

,,~..,1 H,,,l""l

llpl&gt;oi !&gt; II''Y

siness
Services
B
1----------+----------+---------+--------W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

Howard L Writesel

If yaur re in need af

NEW - REPAIR

Mabile Home Parts
ar Accessories...

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

S~E

US FIRST!
992-5800
RT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO

ROOFING

949-2168

7 15 91 1 mo pd

8 / 19/ 1 mo tfn

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK

epproprlaled. Said lax shall
be placed before end In prof·
arencelo all other Items end
lor tho full amounlthereol.
Tho lunda derived lrom
IBid lax levy hereby required
or from the olher deocrlbed
sources shall be placed ln a
separate and dlsllncl lund
and, logelher wllh lnloresl
collecled on the same, shall
be Irrevocably pledged lor
the payment of lha prlnclpol
and lnleresl of the Noln, or
the bonds ln anllclpallon of
which they are Issued, when IL------.::;:,~

account reasonable expec--

tations altho lime the debt Ia
Incurred, so lhallhey wlll not
conslltule "arbitrage bonda"
underSecllons103(b)(2) and
148 of lhe fnlernal Revenue
Code ol 1966, as amended
(lhe '"Code'") and the regula·
lions prescribed thereunder
and will, lo the exlenl poa·
alble, comply with all olner
applicable provlalona of the
Code and the regulations
thereunder to relain the Federal Income tax exemption
for Interest on the Notee,

INCENTIVE- Do you need 1ncenb118IO buy? WELL Here
IllS' ARanch Home With 2 15acres, 7rooms. 3 bedrooms
v1nyl s1d1ng, catpeVv~ny l floonng, beauulut landscaping,
bnck l11eplace, 24 x 24 shed and large closets Need
MORE 1ncenllve? Irs REDUCED to $44 900 MORE?I
0 K The seller Will negobate avon more woth the buyer'
Benar hurry' With allth1s oncenlove 11 won llasllongl

Including any expenditure
requlrementa, Investment
limllallons, rebate requlrement•or use restriction e. The

Clerk-Treasurer or any other
oHicer having reaponslblllly
with respect to the luuance
of lha Nolea Is aulhorlzad
and dlreclod lo give an approprlale cerllllcale on behalf of the Municipality on
the dale of delivery ol tho
Notaa lor Inclusion In the
trsnscrlpl ol proceedlnga,
aelllng Iorin the lacls, esll·
mate• and circumstance•

TUPPERS PLAINS-APPLE PIE ORDER! Do absolulely
noth1ng bul move 1n and entOY thos 3 bedroom ranch wolh
huge fam ily room, located on two beauutullots ol approx
one acre Satell1te d1sh and covered paho solid oak lnm
and sta1rway woodburner and two car garage are all
added benefits Be sure Ia make an appomtment to see
thiS' ASKING $48 000

lhe some aggregale prlncl·
pal amounl will be luued lo
lhe transferee In exchange
therefor.
The Munlclpallly and the
Poylng Agent and Reglslrar
may der1nt and treat the reg·
laterad holder or the Notea
aalhe absolule owner thereof

heater, basement, Cistern waterw1t TCP tap ava1lable IM

for 111 purpoaea, and neither

Frame construction w1th hard wood Hoonng Gas space

the Municipality nor the PayIng Agent and Reglstrarahall
be alfactad by any notice to
lho contrary.
SECTION 5. Thai lha
Notee shall bo aold for not
1111 than their par value and
eccruod Interet Ito lhe FmHA,
In accordance with Ita otfar
10 purchaao which It hereby
accepted. Tho proceed a from
the aalo of the Notea, except
any premium or accrued
lnleroat received, thall be
paid Into lho proper fund and
uaod for the purpoae afor•
tald and for no other pur·
pose, and for which purpoati
aald proceed• are hereby
appropriated. Tho premium

healers A GOOD INVESTMENT FOR SOMEONE' ASK
lNG $29 ,500

NEW LISTING-RACINE· Frame larm home w1lh 80+ acres
3 bedrooms f11eplace BG healer ooal &amp; wood space
MEDIATE POSSESSION' ASKING $54 000
NEW USTING· POMEROY· Here IS a place that has
polen11allor 3 apartment umts Has a 50 x 100 parking lol

POMEROY- 1 112 stooy home wolh polenloal 3 bedrooms
&amp; bath ut1hty room mce s1ze lot Needs some work

ASKING $20 000 make an oiler
TRAILER ONLY- 1976 14 x60 w11h 5 rooms 3 bedrooms
2 balhs lolal electnc Needs some repaor ASKING $6 500
Owner Will accept reasonable offer

POMEROY· 2 s1ory home wuh 5 lots and I car garage
Home has 2·3 bedrooms bath some hardwood lloonng
and a fireplace Th1s JS a nu::e home and 11can be yours for

ONLY $14.500 COME TAKE A LOOK I
CONGRADULATIONS TO JANE BANKS-WINNER OF
THE FAN AND TO MARCELLA CHAPMAN·WINNER OF
THE COFFEE MAKER, FROM OUR DRAWING AT THE
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR.

end accrued Interest, II any,

ahall be tranalerred lo the
bond rotlrament lund of the
Munlctpallly 1o be applied to
tho payment of lht principal
of end lnllreal on the Noloa
In tha manner provided by
law.
SECTION 6. That the
Nolee shall be tho full gon·
eral obllgaUona of the Munlctp.rlty, and lha full fallh,
crtdtt and revenue of the
Municipality ' " hereby
pledged for tho prompt payment of tho aamo. Tho prlncl·
pelamountriCIIIvod from l~e

675
458
576
773
882
895
937

WIJ

SECTION 7. Thalthls VII·
lage Council hereby cov•
nanlt lhel II wlll rellrlcl lhe
use of tha proceeds lor the
Noleo hereby authorized ln
aucn manner and 10 ouch
extent, If any, aa may be
neceaury alter lalng Into

recorda. '

lalned by the Poylng Agenl
and Reglatrar. Upon ouch
tranafer, a new Note or Notea
of authorized denominations

Are~

Cu

Helo Wanlud
S1tualtOn Wanted
lnsufCUlCe

41
42
43
44

1.:11
&amp;2

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS
SpKialidng in
Custom Frame ltpair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
fOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS

992-7013
or 992-5553
01 TOU FlEE
1-100·848·0070
DARWIN, OlHO

7 / 31 / 91 ttn

AIR CONDinONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp;DOUBlEWIDE HOMES
•••

0

•

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

BE NNETT'S

MOBILE HOME
HEATING

&amp;

COOLING

locGtwd On Safford School ld. off lt. 141
(614) 446-94111 or 1-800-172-5967

• 29 91

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

FREE ESTIMATES
Toke the pain out of
painting.
Let me do tt for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

NO SUNDAY CALLS

(614) 985-4180

Naw H-s luHt
"Free E'ttimatee"

3 tHin

8 28 91 1 mo pd

and as the aame fall due.

(lhe "Paying Agent and Reg·
latrarn) lor lho Noln. The
flnalprlncfpalamountoleach
Note ahall be payable to the
reglalered holder of ouch
Nolo allhe principal olllce of
tho Paying Agent and Regt ..
trer, and all other amounts of
principal and Intereat thereon
aha II be paid on each Interest
peymenl dale to the person
whose name oppeara on the
record date (August 15) on
the Nolo registration record•
aa tho reglalared holder
thereof, by check or draft
mailed to tuch rogfslered
holder at his addresa as It
oppears on ouch reglsltallon

reglatratlon recorda main·

Mo~ s ur1

11
11
IJ

Jl
35
36

lor S•lt
8usmou Bulh11fl\JS
Lots &amp; Acre1ge
Re ,tl Estatu W anh•tl

46

(614)
696-100

reglatrar and transfer agent

The Notes ahall be lranaferable by the reglalered
holder thereof In perton or
by hla allorney duly author·
lzed In wrlllng al the principal oHice ollhe Paying Agenl
and Reglatrar upon proaen·
tatlon and surrender thereof
to tho Paying Agent and
Registrar. Tho Munlclpallly
and lhe Paying Agent and
Registrar shall not be required to transfer any Nolo
during lhe 15-day period
preceding any lnlereal paymen! data or alter II has been
aeleclod lor redemption, and
no ouch transfer thall be ellec:llveunlll entered upon lhe

I Ill IT t/11•

r .ums

I;MIItlll

II IHI C hdlljl

rlfll plll.IIH olfiUII f Cl lllolkt I IIII I t.:IIOII

Humus lm Sal"
Mobtlt•Honmt.lm S ,1,

] I
]]
:i J

An11oucemt!'fll S
Govecrw•y

4

Fartn Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

Cud ol Th itnh
h1 Me mury

iJ• •cr n l,!l l lur ,,11 c .tprt.t! lt111r ~ · ~ du uhlr prrr• ul r r l r1o~l
• J pu1111 hm l y!Jt unly u ::.r II
Sru ltll lll~ IIOII~l&gt;pOi l!o rblt hrlt iiUI !&gt; d1o1 lu &gt;l d,ry j(hrdt

Sweet Adelines
begin drive

The Ladtc s Auxd.ary of th e
Tuppers Platns VFW Post No
9053 wtll be havmg a yard and
bake sale on Saturday across the
street from the Farmers Bank m
Tuppers Plams begmnmg at 8 30
a.m.
Anyone w1chmg to donate
glassware, tools or other uems
should call June Smtih at 667-3374
or Helen Kaylor at 667-3253 after
5 pm

mon Pleas Court of M8 1gs
County. Ohio an the case of
The Home Nattonll Ban~.
Plamt•ff. agatnlt Wilham J
Halley , et al , Oefendanl,s~

fore reoerved by C H wu.

ford; Sara Cullums; Sylvta Mtdkiff;
Mildred Ziegler; Cmdy, Carrie and
Knsu Lambert, Vada Hazelton;
Marge and Amy Barr; Cynthia
Hazelton; Jane Hazelton; ~nd
Guyla Walburn .

Yard sale set

hetrs and asstgns, an ttase

hama. Truatee, tn deed re·

nutnents, many of them valuable
trace clements. Whtle weeds grow
thetr roots loosen the soil • a kind
or free c ul u vauon. The tops of
weeds are also so1l improvers when
spaded under.
Janet Bolin judged the flower
show adn gave many good points
on arrangmg and showmg.
A film was shown by Joan May
on AmenAora.
Margaret Parsons, Octa Ward
and Bmda Dtehl regtstered and
greeted the guests.
Dorothy Woodard was in charge
of the door prizes.
Paulme Atkins furmshed the
table arrangement.
At the close of the meeung
refreshments were served consistmg of frUit, cookies, nuts, mints,
coffee and tea.

Several attend baby shower

s Gregory K Wroght Re" 00246

MONDAY ·Sauerkraut &amp; Ribs, Soup, Salad
TUESDAY· Stuffed Peppers, Choice of Potato,
Soup and Salad
WEDNESDAY· Creamed Chicken over Biscuits
THURSDAY • Beans &amp; Cornbread, Soup and
Salad
FRIDAY· Beef Tips and Noodles

CARRY OUT ORDERS AVAII..\BLE·(S04) 773-5321

The open meeung and flower
show of the Rutland Garden Club
was held recently at the Rutland
Umted Mcthodtst Church
Pauline Atkms welcomed th e
guests and members. She Introduced J onnte Lew Gabrtella,
rcgtonal duector, and Janet Bolm,
past pres•dcnt of the Oh1o Assocta!lon of Garden Clubs
Garden Clubs altcndmg were
Galhpohs, Fernwood , Star, Rutland
Fncndly , Chester, Shade Valley,
Wtlkcs\lll e and Middleport Amateur.
Margaret Be lle Weber had
devouons
Pearl Canaday had th e h1nt
" Weeds . Arc They Some Darn
Good." She stated weeds are very
good at growmg roots and m domg
so they mm e the low er sot! for

Sale ••sued out of the Com·

west 141 80 feet to the
pomt of begtnn~ng and contatntng 0 7777 acres
The above descrtpttOn prepared by Evans Mechwart.
Hambleton &amp; T11ton Inc.

HOMESTYLE LUNCH SPECIALS

SENIORS GET

tied, "Splfll Ltftcrs." Roll call was
answered with "School Day Mcm-

NOTICE Of SALE
By vtrtue of an Order of

Community calendar
meet Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. m the
Middleport Council Chambers.
DIS CUSSIOn Will be held On the
upeommg Mtddlepon Catfish Festtval.

off1ce where her responstblhlles
were for bonds and commtsstons
clerk
Mtss Anderson reponed that her
ctty at Girls State won two out of
ftve days a pennant for 100 percent
perfect housekeepmg. There were
28 cines.
Since rcturntng home, Mtss
Anderson has recetved an apphcauon to auend Ashland College wtth
a $2,500 scholarshtp She thanked
the un!l members and Bank One
and Fanners Bank for allowmg her
thts honor to represent them.
The prestdent presented a gtft to
Miss Anderson and thanked her for
auendmg the meetmg and speaking
on her expenencc at Buckeye Gtrls
State
Mtca Jones wtll present a mus1c
program on Sept 24, the next
meeung.
Mrs Hysell appomted Mtss
Jones to serve as JUD!or advtsor
Members were remmded that
dues should be patd. S1x new mem bers JOmed the unitm August.

Forest Run UMW learn
about the 'Healing Power'

•

, Community Calendar items
:appear two days bdore an event
•and the day or that event. Items
:must be received weD in advance
:to. assure publication in the cal·

TUesday, September 3, 1991
Pag.....S

Area garden clubs attend
Andersons guests of
Drew Webster Auxiliary Rutland flower show

By Brian J. Reed

Are you tn a rut?
It has been sa1d that the only
d1Herence between a rut and a
grave 1s the dimensmns, and let' s
face 11, most of us have found ourse lves neck-deep in a rut at one
line or another.
: 'Your Health Matters" . a pubhcauon 1ssued to employees of Mul1:1111edla, Inc. lists 60 ways to chmb
&lt;11it of a rut. I'll spare you all 60,
bin some of them are wnusing, not
tO menu on creative.
- Here are some of the beuer
ones Look through a mail order
catalog and send yourself a present
Chan ge toothpastes . Try a new
kind of cereal. G1ve a coworker a
pat on the back. Put a funny cartoo n on someone's desk. Buy a
new wallet. And my favome - Put
the toilet paper roll tn so that 11
rolls the other way
Keep those m mind th1s week,
and maybe you'll remam, uh, rut·
less.

'

OhiO

Classified

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
Consider this ...

1991

WE HAVE WHATIT TAKES TO HELP YOU WITH YOUR
HOUSING NEEDS. IF YOU ARE WANTING TO BUY OR
SELL, GIVE US A CALLI WE'LL HELP YOU IN EVERY·
WAYWECANl

I

HENRY E CLELAND. ...... ......... .. . ... .. . . .992-6191
mACY BRINAGER................................ ....... 949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL ..........................................949·2660
JO HILL.. .......... .............................. ............. 985-4466
OFFICE....................................................... .... 992-2259

and reasonable expeclallons
perlalnlng lo lhe use of lhe
proceedo lhereol and the
provisions ollhe Code and
regulations lhe1eunder
SECTION 8 Thai lhe
No tea are hereby designated

as '"qualllled lax-exempl ob·
llgallons'" lo lhe extent permilled by Secllon 265(b)(3)
ot tho Code Thla VIllage
councllllndunddolermtnes
that lhe reasonably anllcl·
paled amount olqualllled tu·
exempt obllgallons (other
than private activity bonda)
which will be laaued by lhe
Munlclpallly during lhls cal·
endar year does not and the
VIllage Council hereby cov•

WATER
HAULING
POOU,
CISTERNS, nc.
1,625 GAL- US·S45
It, I, lall 71•A
RUnAND,

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homts
•Gara..s
•Complete

Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

985-4473
667-6179

OHIO 45775·9626

614-742·2904

7-24 lmo

5-31 "90 tln

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAIIAIU

MICROWAVE .
OVEN IEPAIR
AU MAlES

Iring It In Or Wt
l"lck Up.

DAVE'S
ElECTRONIC
SERVICE
l•stalliaJ Cellular
Phones, Car Stereos

or Radios, CB's

On SHe lnstalatlatl
freeEstl•tes

742·2656

I{Jt{r-. ...

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Vinrl
siding, Painting,
and Home repairs
667·6611
After 7:00 p.M.
7-25 l mopd.

A&amp;B
COMPLnE AUTO

UPHOLSTERY

CONSTRUCTION

Convertible Tops,
Carpets. Headhner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repan
MAIN ST., MASON, WV.

992·6648 or
698-6864

1-(304)·
773-9560

"BISSELL
BUILDERS

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

CHESTER

•LIGHT HAULING

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"'1 Reasonable Prilts"

OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10 00 am-6 00 pm

BILl _SLACK

PH. 949-280 I
or Res. 949-2860

fREE ESTIMATES

992-7451
8-26-lll 1 n1) pd

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIVICI
992-5335 or
985-3561

Acro11 , _ Post OHica
!17 I. Socootl St.
f'OMIIOY, OHIO

316/90/lfn

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•FI REWOOO

992 2269

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

USED RAILROAD TIES
6-12·90-lfn
IL,,...___.;...~;.;,~
Public Notice

ordinance were passed In an
open meallng oflhla VIllage
Council, and lhal all delibnanls that, during such year,
erations ol thlt VIllage Coun·
the amount of tax-exempl
and ol any of Ill commit·
obllgallons Issued by lhe ell
lhal resulted ln tuch
Municipality and deslgnaled lees
formal aetiGn, were In meet·
as "qualified lax-exempt ob- lngs open 10 lho public, In
llgallono" lor ouch purpose
with the law,
will no I exceed $10,000,000 compliance
Including
Sacllon
121.22 of
The Clerk· Treasurer and
the Ohio Revlud Code.
other appropriate olflcera,
SECTION 11 . That lhla
and any of them, are author·
Is hereby declared
!zed to take such actions and ordinance
to be an emergency me1aure
give such certlflcaUons on
lor lhereason lhal
behalf ol the Munlclpallly wllh necessary
public peace, health,
respect lo the reaaonably the
of the
anllclpaled amount ol tax· safely and ofwelfare
lhollunlclpal·
exempt obligations to be lnhabllanll
require the Immediate
Issued by lho Municipality lly
luuance of the Notea to
during lhls calendar year and support
contracts relative to
with respect to auch other
lha
Pro(ecl,
and to provide
manert aa appropriate un· lor the orderly
financing of
dar Secllon 265(b)(3).
lhe
Project,
and
ahatl take
SECTION 9. Thai the
Clerk-Treaaurer Ia hereby eller:t Immediately upon lla
dlreclod lo forward a cerll· ~ataage.
pASSED: Augual 26, 1991.
tied copy ot lhla ordinance to Fred
Hollman
the County Auditor.
Mayor
SECTION 10. Thai ll Ia
lound and dalermlnad thai Allee! :
all formalacllona of this VII· Jon Buck
!age Council concerning and Clerk-Treasurer
retallng to the paasagool thlt (9) 3

4·16·16·tln

INDEPENDENT
CAIPET CLIANEIS
and Till FlOOR CAll
•Reasonable Ratea
•Quality Work
•Free E111mates
•Carpet Has Fall Dry
Time
•Hogh Gloss on Tole
Floor Finish
MIKE lEWIS, Owner
Rt. I, Rul .. nt!, OH.

742-2451

3-14-'91 -tfn

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR

5·14· 91 ttn

•BUY tSEll tTIADI

742-2421

REPAIRS
Used lrons ............ $5.00
Used Woods ........ $7.00
AWARDS
8 9· 1 mo pd

5109!Un
THE

Complete Grooming
Far All Breeds

EMilEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992-6820
Pomeroy, Ohio

2ll9lUn

AnENTION

CARPENTER SERVICE

FIREWOOD
SELL£RS

Room Add1tktn1
Guner worll
Eitctrk:el and Plumbing
Concrete wort.
Roofing

- Interior • bterlor

P•lntlng

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomii"Gy, Ohio
1114 90 lin

sn

21ft Mi. outside
Rutland an New
Limo Rd.

YOUNG'S
-

COUNTRY ClUB
Golf
lessons (61 ... SSS.OO
New Gnps ............ $4.00
Woods ..............
.00
Irons .................. $14.75

Hardwood Slobs
For Sale

Great Price!
CAll

OHIO PALLET CO.
992-6461
9·1·81· 1mo

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacemen1
Windowa
•Roofing
•lntulttion

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-22S I
539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio
fl .f4. 1fio

USED APPUANaS
tO DAY WAHANn

WASMm-$tOO up
DUil-$oY "'

HIIIGIIATOIS-$100 "'

IAIIGil-Gos·lloc.- $1U up

lllflllll-$1U.,
'
$7t .,
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•c10 OYINS-

992-SUS or 91S · 3S61

A&lt;ross from I'Dst Offke
POMEROY, OHO
IOI3orn tin

Get Quick Res u1ts! P1ace A S5 Per . 0ay ·BuII etin Board· Ad verI is e111 en.I In The 0a1_
1y S~ nIin eI CIa ssiI,i ell Set: Iio n.
'

�Pag1e-e~~
-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNA FU® by Bruce Bea ttie

44
Apartment
Mobile Homes
for Rent
for Sale
1072 Aamlngo 12x50, 2br, Gaa For rent, 1 bedroom ap~~rtment,
Fumaca, Carpeting, Good Con- $225 ulllhlee Included, depoah
dltlonl $3,100. 614-388-9724.
roqulrod, no polo, 614-ll92-:121a.

32

1976 14x70, 2br, Don Total Fumlohod oHicloncy W/otovo &amp;
Eloctrlc, Now Corpot And Wator rslrlgorotor. Shoro both. i19 2nd
Hoattr Applioncn, Bx16 Porch, Avo. 1100 par month. All U111hloo
.:
$8::,,~·..:
000 61:..:4-..:3:::..
88 -=
i 38
::t:.__ _ _ Poid. 614..C&amp;-3945.
1
1978 Bondn, 14X711, 3br, 81th 5 Groclous living. 1 and 2 bod·
room apartments at VIllage
112, 114·25e-646V.
Manor
and
Rlveraldl
1984 Schuhz 14x85, 2 BR, aU Apanmanta In Middleport. From
electric, underpinning, 2 por- $1V6. Call614·i02·7187. EOH.
ch11,

outbuilding. "Mutt

moved. 614-446-1223.

Lafayette M1ll: 3br, 2 Baths, All
UtiUtlea Included. $425/mo.
1985 Redman 14170, 2Dr, 2 Depoalt Required. No Pets. 114·
Baths, Extr11l Muot SHI 446-7733, 614-448-4222.
$14,900, O.B.O. 814-446-6605
Leave Me11ag1.
Mod1m 1 Bedroom Apartment,
1986 FIHtwood, 14x72, 3 bod· 814-446-0380.
rooms, 2 blthl, flr11plact, ullllty Ntw 1· BR, tuml1hld apartment
room, control lir, $13,000. 304- In Middleport, 814-992·5225 ohor
675-7122.
6:00pm.

H ONEST ...
Cluss ified s
Work!

Announcements
3

1

Announcements

We Make Gre11 Match... Carol'•
Singles, P. 0 . Box5648, Athono,
OH 457111.

1M I D• "&lt; !A lr&gt;C

" This is how we nab the cars with· bra ke
lights that don't wor k."

-;--'--'-:;::;::::::::=:--- If----------..,.---------~
4
Giveaway
10 Week Old Gorman Shaphord 9
Wanted to Buy
11 Help Wanted

Pup. Coli Anytime, 614-441·1329.
2 Outdoor Long Haired Gny &amp;
White Kln anti 1 Black And
White KIHen, 4 Monlhl Old. To
Cood Homes l614-441-0317.

:::--:--::-:--=-~7.---:- 1

Black llalo Kltlon, 5 Months!
Very Friendly, To Good Home
Also, Have Gray Mall, 2 While
Femal11, And 1 Female Tiger
Striped. Good Hunterl, L.ltler
Trained. Inquire At 109 Second
Avenue, Gellipolla Or C.ll 614245·5573.
Free kittens all while malt and
females, to good home. 304•
882-2n4 or 1v enlngs 882·2717.
Kittens To Give away, Litter
Trai ned To A Good Home. 614446-3897.
Mother Cat To Giveaway. 614·

:::--::---::--:--....:.~-

Standing
Timber,
Johnso" Logging.
Coli Tracy
Aho r FREE J OB TRAINING OHIO AND
7p.m. 614 _367-023( .
W.Vo. YOUTHS. Ars you lntoroo·
tod In trolnlng In hnlth occupo·
auch 11 LPN Nur1ing ••
Wanted all Junk and sc rap mel- tlon
silllnt, llodicol Anlstont lnd
II, 304-895.j{)J6,
modlcol record• clorks. Alao,
Wa ntld to buy, Standing timber, trolnlng In other lloldo. Young
Bob William• &amp; Sons 614-992· womon ond mon 18-21 yoors
S44SJ.
old. Out ol oehool, dropouto or
Wanted To Buy: Old Roofing
Slat.., 614-446-2296.
Top Prlcos Paid: All Old U.S.
Coins, G~d Ring e, Diamonds!
Silver Coins, Sterling, Gola
Coins . M.T.S. Coin Sflop, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis.

Employment Services

446~259 .

6

Lost

&amp; Found

2-yr old full blooded German
Shepard, no papers, we moved
and have no place to keap him,
very friendly, 614-7•2-3703 or
'71t2·2947.
FOUND, Meadowbrook lrll,
goldon color puppy Wll~ng col·
lar. 304-675--7330.
Found-Female
lemorv'White
Beagle,
3-mo old.
Malt
blackltarVwhltt Beagle mixed, 3mo old, 614.-98-2606.
Found: Medium Brown Male
Pony, Geld. Vicinity Of: Forest
Run Road Aru. Partly Blind.
Frlondly. 614·1149-3046.

11

$350.00/Doy Procnolng Phono
Orders I People Clll You. No Ex·
perlence Neceeury. 1-80G-2S50242.
AVON - All arus, Call Marilyn
WNvtr 304-882·2645.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Exc.Jienl
Pay,
Beneths,
Trans por1atlon,
407-292-4)17,
Exl. 571. h .m.-10p.m. Toll
.,.
R•,',.,
u".,.d...,..
ld...,.......,.--....,.--AVON I All Aroll I Shi~oy
SpNra, 3()4..875-1429.
Bebys lner dayl for g yr otd boy,
304-282-3554.

::--,,...:..::::,.:=:::--:-:---,--,,In r.ty

7

Y1rd S.le, Mon, Tun, Wed Rt . 2

North, Rollinstown , comforter,

pillow thlmH, all alzn men
dott\lng, household heme.

12

Situation
wanted

Recent Anlval To Ohio. Maslere
Dogi'Hd Educotod lndlvlduol
Looking For Empioymont, Any
Typo Employment, Noodo A
Chonco To Po~orrn . ANdy Wll~
lng And Ablo. Coli Doy Or Night.
WaRing Potlontly. RHUmo Con
And Will Bo Sont. 614-388-9105.

14

Help Wanted

- -..:....-------1Homo.
Baby•iner WHII:days
Yard Sale
S14-448-8252.
Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Dota Morkl11ng Ropnooontotlvo.
Nood
Dopondoblo.
Soli
llotiYIIod lndlvlduol Who En·
Joys Working With Tho Public.
llust Have Some KoybOird Ex·
porionco And Ba Willing To
l.llrn. Send Rnumo: Box
CliO&amp;;, c/oGIIIIpollo Dolly
Tribune~..~5 Third Avonuo, Go~
llpolls, "" C5631.

Business
Training

Retrain
Nowii!Southeaatam
Buolnooo Collogo, Spring VIlifY
PIOZ.I. Coli Today, 614-446-436711
Rogl11orltion fi0.05.12l'IB .

18

wanted to Do

Will BobysH In lly Homo
Anytimo.
Rodney
Aroo.
Roloroncoo Avolloblo. Coil 614245-5887.
Bush HCJg Service. Reaaonable
Ratn. No Job To SmaUI 114379-2942.
Child Ca,...My home, IX·
perienc., ~ reference•.
Dayal
evenlnga,
Mondey·
Friday. Re11onable rat11. Cill
614-1149-2141 or 114t-2123.
Dunlovy Welding Shop. Will do
omon )obo on~ monullcturo
omoll n..... 304-937-2733.
GoorvM POitobll Sowmlll, don't
hauiJ-.0: ~· to the mill jull
coil
7l5-tl57.

Portable Welding Service,
273-3415.

3()4..

EARN MONEY Anding Bookol
$30,000/yr. Income Potontlol.
Dotollo. (1) 80H62-t000 Ext. Y·
10189.
Middleport
Experienced flat bed drlvara
&amp; V.lclnlty
needed. Mult have 3 )',. over
All Yard S.IH Must 81 Paid In tho rood oxparlonco, ;ood drlv·
Adwance. O..dllne: 1:OOpm the lng rKord, ataWe work history,
dey be1ore the ad le to run, tHi 25 yrs of age. P111 drug tnt
Sundey ediUon· 1:OOpm Friday, and road te1t1. 801)..228-6658.
Pomeroy,

Mondty
S.turd8y.
Gar~ge

edition

10:00t.m.

Sale, furniture, email

appllanc81, household good11
booka. clotho. Route 7 fowara
Parkaraburg. Turn ~fl 11 Melg1

County COlt Couru tlgn f/2
mile from Pomeroy. Go

2~11u.

Sop1.6·7, 9oOOam.e oOOpm.
Yard Solo, TuHdoy 1nd Wod·
n11da~.

Comer ot Forn1 Run

and 7. "Rain canc111.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
2 Family Yard Solo: Soptombor,
4th, 5th, 6th. 9:001.m. To
4:00p.m. S.R. 7 South 1 IIIIo
Pjtlt Blodon Landing On Lah.
Wotch For Slgno. Loto Ot
Evol'flhlngl
750 Second Avenue, Saturday,
8131, Mondliy, 812, Tuesday

9/31!11. Baby A«:norleo, WI"·
dow Air Conditioner, Booka. In·

font Twin Soto, Boy • Gl~. Nlco
Adun Ctothingl Boby Clothoo,
Glr1a Newborn: To Slze I ; Boya
Nowbom: To 3T.
ALL Yard Sales Muet Be Paid In
Advanct. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
1t11 day befort the ad It to run.
Sundoy odltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Mondoy edition • 2:00
p.m. Saturdly.
Big Gorogo Solo: Bohlnd Bid·
wolf P.O. Soptombor 2-7. Loto Ot
Nlco Clothing! Prlcod Lowl
Big Ylrd Sllol TUHdly, Wod·
nesday, Thursday, V To 5. 123
Fourtn Avenue.
Firtt Time! September 4tt1, 5tt1.
3 Miles Out Addison Pika.

Crahsman Riding Mower, 40
Inch
Commatelal
Gravely
Mower, Home Interior, ClaMs,
Clothing, Etc. Rain Cancelt. 114367-014g,

Garage Salt: Junction Rt.7 &amp;
218. Thursday, Frldoy; Soptombor 51h, 6th. cola Good Cloth·
lng! 9-5.
Largo G1r1g1 Sill) Sp~ng VII·
loy, Bohlnd l..Nr'o Pllo1ogrophy.
WodnHdoy, B:otl-4:00, Blby,
Gl~s ClothH, ElcorciN Blko.
Monday, Tunday, Wednelday,
AI lson'a NNr Nor1h Gallla High
School. Home lnltrior, 9hnta,
Sproodo, Compulor.
Moving Sale: Wednudar 915Ji1.
3 Sectional German Wal Unit, 3
Sectional Llvlngroom Sot, 8
Piece Olnetle Set, Retrigentor,
Walher/Dryer, Oriental Rug,
Mlocellanoous ltomol 715 Third
Avenue.
Soplombor 4th I 5th. 9-? 2 112
Elll Ot Por1or On SM. Now
Stuff!
Thunodoy, &amp; F~doy. Soptomblr
Slh &amp; llh. t-6. 23 VInton Avonua.
ThunodoJ, Frldoy, 1 Mill On Rt.
218
- · Chlldrons
And
Adunetothlng,
Eloct~c Wlro,
~ llan, BoNboN Cordo,
Old Col~, Uwn Boy Mowlf',
Recorcll, 1 ~rKk Tapa, Miacl
Yord Solo AI Rt. 110 &amp; 554 At
Por11r On Soplombor 5th, 6th. t-?

be

Hou-llonlng ond oHico ciNn·
lng, llondoy through Fridoy.
Rotoroncn, coil 304-675-2363.
Mill Paula's Dey care canter.
Sa,., eHordablt, chlldcarw. M-F
o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2~10.
Flold Advortlolng Dlroctoro 8Befort,
after school. Drop-lne
$7.00/Hour. Window And Siding welcome.
614--448-8224. New In·
Spacloltlas. 1-800. TRY·WASS, fant Toddler
Car., 614-446-0227.
(11711-11277).

gradual• come Into Pl. Ph. Job
Sorvlco, 225 Sixth St Point
Ploaunt, WodnHdoy Sept. c,
10:001m to 3:00 pm, 11 lor Job
Corps rop.

GALUPOLIS JOBS Not Advor·
tlood In Nowopopar. All Typos,
lncomn. 24 Hour Rocordlng. 1·
100-288-2245.
G1n1r11l farm worker needed tor
local farm, Ml'ld reeume to Box
C-30, core of Point PtoaNnt
Roglllor, 200 llaln St., Pt. Pn,
wv.
KUWAIT/SAUDI JOBS NHirlng MlniWomen Uany Fittda;
Excellenl Pay WHh Tranaportatlon Pold. Coli For Dilallo 1-5053111-8066 Est. K-253.
KUWAIT, SAUOI JOBS
$35/HOUR +I llaiVWomon Now
Btlng Hired. All Flolds. Poid
Tronoporotion. For Info Coli 1·
1102-161-2227 Est. 2524.
Leon Water Syllam Bookk"r.:
triCaahler DOSltion evaltab • ·
Prefer lndlwldual preMntly on
Leon Water Syetem. RaaumH
and handwritten application ac·
ctptec:l. Sept. 15, 10~, deadline
for applications. Send reply P.O.
Box 117. Leon, WV 25123.
Dporotlng Room Tochnlclon ot
INst 1 YNI 11perilnce ,..
quired, contact Pltaaanl Valley
Hospital Ptrsonnlt Copt. 304675-4340. AAIEOE.
Progrooalvo 118 Bod Long Torrn
Core Foclllty Is SHklng A Dlroc·
tor 01 Nursing Sorvlcoo. Facility
11 Co~lllocf By llodlcaro,
Modlclld, And VA And Otlors A
Wide Range Of Service~ . Inter·
ntld Persona Should Bt Cur·
rently Llconood Or Ellglblo For
L.lcenaure AI A Reglatered
Nurso In Ohio. Suporvioory
And/Or L.ong Term C.r11 Ex·
pertence A Plus. S..,d Resume
And Solsry History To: Ad·
mlnlauator, Plnecrnt Care Ctn·
ter, 170 Plnecr... Drive, Gal·
llpollo, OH 45631.
RADIOLOGIC TECHNOLOGIST
Flexible Howe, Top Pay.
To 118 .Hour, Coli Choryl, w..
tem Medical S.rvicn, 614-846-

aua.

WA NTED: Two Pooklono Avlil·
oblo At A Communlly Group
Homo For Ptrsono Whh
O.voiopmontol Dloabllltloo In
Bldwoll: Houre: (1) 40 hrs/Wk:
3:30-1tp.m..
Sun/MontrUHIThurs; 1-t1_p.m..
Wod; Elcolltnt BonoiH Pock·
ogo; (21 22-hr. lo.m..ep.m. OR
t0:30o.m.-i:30p.m. (RotatM),
Sal; lll.m.-tp.m. OR 1-t1p.m.
lrotllnl, Sun; BOTH: 2·Hour
WNkly Stoff Mlltl\'llj Or All
Othorwt11 Schodu110. High
Schoof DogrN, Void Drlvor'o
LlconN And Good D~vlng
Rocord, Good Communication
And
Orgonlution
Skills,
Punctuol, And Able To Work As
Port 01 A TNm Required; El·
porlonco Working Whh Poroono
WHh Montol Rotudlllon And
Dovolopmontll
DllablihiN
Proltrrod. Solory: $4.1Gnrr, To
Yord Solo: 1 IIIIo Out Rt. 218. Stlrl Sond R-mo To Coclill
ThunodoY And F~dly, t-? Chin.~, laklr, P.O. Box I!M, Jac"-t,
011 45640· Pllllo Spaclly
School Clcllhing, l.ofs Ot Mlocl
WNch Position Applying For.
Doodllno For Appliconto: 1115/il.
8
Public Sale
Equal Oppo~unlty Employer.
&amp; AUction
Wllll Qlwmod lndiYidUII For
"'-II'~ SaiH p
Aic:k Poo.-r AucUon Company, -.,,.
ooHion. No El•
lull time auctlonMr, complsto Dlilo- Roqultod, llondoy •
ouctlort MI'Vic:e. LicinHd Ohio, J:rtdly, ._mbtr 2 • 51h, la.m.
·lp.m. t"M-441 3014.
WMI Vlrtllnla, :104·773-6711.

4br, 2 Batha, Doublewlda In Rio
Gn1nde Ohio Area. ti14-24S.5588,
Anytime.
For Sal1: 1m FIMtwood mobile
home.
Call
114--992-6185
an••imo.
''
New 1992 14180 tMrll btdroom,
2 lull bathohohlnglo roof, vinyl
siding,
carpeted
1 uttera,
throughout, 111 drywoll lntorlor
ond 3-bay window. 117,997.00.
Coil 1~·
•~ - ·~
•••5 ·

34

B

1

us ness
Buildings

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Avo .. Olllipolio. CioN to
Court Houta. 1 room, 2 rocmt ,
3 rooms, 4 rooms. All nicely
decorated. air conditioning,
your water &amp; nwer bill are paid.
Make your choice now. No
quOin over lht phone, you
must 1M them. Phone tor an
oppolntmont. 614-te&amp;-7699 doy,
446·SI53V lVI.

Merchandise

Rentals
41 Houses for Rent
3br Houu Hondymon'o Drum!
You Fix H For Low Rontl Other
Optlono Avolloblo. 614-4C1~29
BotwNn 19o.m. &amp; Cp.m.
Small 1 br Stove l Refr1g~:rator
Furnished, W11htr 6 Dryer
Hook-up,
$225/mo.
$200
Dopoalt, 1 Montho LNM. 142
Fourth Ave, Getllpolla, ·814-44636117.
Small 2br, :2~ Rur First Ave,
Kitchen,
With
Stove,
Refrigerator, $260/mo. Plus
umniH, Dopoon, Rolorenco. No
Pols. 614-441-4926.

51104.

Opportunity
INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

rtcomn.nda that you do bual·

naa with people you know and

NOT to 11nd money through tho
mol until you hovo lnvllllgotod
tho oHorlng.
Arthur'• Chain Link ~net .
Rnldantlal , Ccmmerclal, In·
du11rilll, Free E111matesl Com·
plete lnatanatlon. Phone: o-w.

!184-em.

For Sale: local

Antaun~nt .

Good Sutlne.. And location.

Roply To: P.O. Box 1170, Gil·
llpollo1 OH. All RopliH Will Bo
Conflaentlal. Serious lnqulriH
Only I
Locol Ply Phono Route. Must
Soil Ouickly. 1-80().2111-1414.
Video Store For Sale, Low R1nt,
Call 304-343-1104 Up To 10a.m.
To Sp.m. Ask For Roy.

Real Estale
31

Homes for Sale

ABSOWTELY IIUST SELLII
Reduced To Sol: 2 Story 3br
Comor Lot In ChHhirs, Ohio.
&amp;.xcelllnl Condi"on. Flananclng
Avolloblo With Poy Polnto. 11()4:.
i32-G959, gg"-'32·7610, 814-387064i.
3 Bedroom Houoo, With C Lots
For Solo. 814-388-11315 Consldor
Land Contract.
GOVERNMENT HOMES Fn&gt;m 11
(U Repair). Delinquent Tu
Proper1r· Repoueaelona. Your
Aru 11 805-962·8000. EJC1. OH·
10189 For Current Ropo Llot.
GOVERNMENT HOMES From 11
(U Ropalr). Dollnquont Tox
Proportr. Rapoo.. oslon•. Your
Aroo 11 805-962-8000. Est. QH.
101UForCurront Ropo Llot.
HOUSE FOR FREE!! llulll move
off lol In llicldloport. Fill In
b111mont, olod lnd ltrow. Must
olgn contract! 2·BR, Largo LR,
DR, Both, hN now roolond gut·
tor, new coppor ond PVC pluinblng, nood worll. You pay
lor tM movlngl Only Mrtous
Clllarsl Ctll 114-1192-2071 lftor
,7:-':00.:. :. : p,..;
m':.- -.,..,..,---:--=-':
Lovoly I yr. old homo In Rome
1r11, Proctorville. 2 BR, 1 both,
· 2·112. cor gorsgo with rlvor view.
Eidorly paronto nood to Nil,
moy Qnonco. $57,000. 304-t:zt.
:375::::7.· - ----,-.,.--,---,Mobl'- Homo And Double
w
Gorogo On 1 Aero. Loto In Gal·
llpolls, Ohio. lfll~lo Occuponcy. 114-448-3940.
Prlco Reduced: Mobile Homo
On 112 Acre. At. 2. North Of
Point PI-nt. Excollont Cond~
tlonl P~voto. Fronch City Mobile
HomH, 114-441-0MO.

No~h 3rd St, Middleport, Ohio, 1
bedroom tumlohod opt, roloronen and dopooH roaulrod. 304882·256tl.
N01th 4th, Mlddloport, Ohio. 2
bed
1u 1 • - •
d
"
room m 111 - apt, eposn
and reference required, 304-8822560
·
One
and
two bedroom
apartments for rant. ldul tor
amall fa mllln and slngiH. 3Q4.
675-2053 or 675-4100.

71 ICrH cny Wltlr Npllc:, pil- Roome for rent ·weak or month.
tUrl 1nd uc hunt\ng, 2 mil11 ~=~1:2'111120/mo, Golllo Hotot.
8560,
from Kanawha River, LAon, 8
$28,500. 304-456·1522.
Slooplng roorno whh cooking.
M..dowhill Subdivision, 2.8 Also trailer space. All hook-upa.
mlln out Sand HI• Road, has Call after 2:00 p.m., 304-773reatrlcled building loCs for 1111 5651, Ma.on WV.
11 low 11 $6500, and one acre 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - lots tor alngle wldH available
46 Space for Rent
also, 304-e75-3410 or 675-4100.
Marcer Bottom Sub-dlviaion, Country Mobile Homo Pork,
on• acre Iota, Rt. 2 frontage , Routo 33, Nor1h of Pomoroy.
price reduced, city water, 304- Loto,_nontolo, porto, NIH. Coil
576-2336.
614-w•-111111.

M011m1n

Business

Complttly Fumlshed mqblle
homo, 1 milo below tow.!', ovor·
lookJ';!,river. No Petll, CA. 114C46~ ·
NOith 3rd St, lllddloport, 2 •-~
room unlumlohod 1pt1 rolorsnen ond dopook roautrod. 304882-2568.

Small 1~ Apanment, 7 Coun
StrMI, Kttchen With Stove,
Refrigerator 1185/mo. Plua
Dopoolt, Utllltin, Roloronco.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
614-446-4925.
Lots &amp; acnage available tor Unturnlshed ape;rtment, 4·
new home conltruction on rooma and bath upetalrt, 114Rayburn Rood. Povod road, 992-5908.
county
water,
rauonable
rostrlctlono. Comploto Inform•·
tlon moiled on rsquost. 304-675- 45
Furnished
5253, John D. Go~och, no
Rooms
olnglo-wldt trollers, ploou.

42 Mobile Homes
Will Do Bobyolltlng In My Homo.
for Rent
Reterencn, Rusonable Ratea,
Any Shift. 514--446-4532.
12x110 2br1 • Air Conditioning,
Will do bobyontlng WNkdayo In Water PaiCI, $240/mo. Plu1
my homo In Brod ury. can &amp;14· Oopooit. 114 C48 0885.
11112-3537.
2 bedroom mobile home, furnlshldlunfurriahed, $:2001$250.
per month, deposit and INII.
Financial

21

Newly rwmodalld 2 and 3 bid·
room 1partmema In MldcUepon.
Equipped kitchens, WfD hook·
ups. Reference and depoail ,...
qulrwcl. Phone 114-SNIH«t af.
tor 8:00pm.

Avenue,

304-875-

51

Household
Goods

1 Sot Coltloo End Tobias, $275;
Excellent Condklon, 1 Sot Col·
IN, End T1biN, $150; Couch,
$50. 814-441-41101.
BIIUtllul oolld ook chino
ctblnot, 1 yr. old, $950. Ook plo
Nit, 1 yr. old, $350. 614-4408000 1ftor4 p.m.
Brown couch and chair $25:0.
Blue dott love aNt . like new
1150. Batty llorrloon 304-458·
1783.
County Appliance Inc. Good
uHd opplloncu, T.V. 1111. Opon
8 e.m. to 8 p.m. Uon ...Sat. 814-448-168!1, 827 3rd. Avo. Ga~
lipolil, 011
For Solo: Uood Amon• Sldo By
Sldo Rol~gorotor Fr11urJ... 22
Cu. FL GoOd Condhlonl 0100;
Used Soors 25 Inch T.V., $35;
Now. Croftoman Scroll Sow $75;
614-446-7383.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washer11, dryera, retrlgeratc:ws,
rongn. Skaggo Appllencoo,
Uppor Rlvor Rd. B11ido Stone
Croll llotal. Coil 814-4411-7398.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home fumlahlngs.
Houra: Mon-Sat, t-!1. 614-4450322, 3 miiH out Bulevlllo Rd.
Froa Dollvory.

2 bodroom lrollor, oowor &amp; wotor
lumlshod. Rolorsncn, Also
lrsilor IPICI. Norlh Rt. 1 Locust
Rood on right, Point Pluunt,
wv.
2 BR untumiahed near Holzer
Hoapltal. No pete. $178 mo.
Water InclUded. 1100 dopoolt.
PICKENS FURNITURE
814-+le-3117.
Now/Uood
2-BA mobile home, furnished, Houoohold lumloling. 112 mi.
Jorricho Rd. Pt. PtNNnt, WV,
washer/dryer, air, 614-fl:z-5800.
Clli304-i75-1450.
2·BR, mobllo homo, Syracuoo.
$140 mo., pluo utill:iao. dopod, Ratrlgerator Coppertone Fro11
FrM, $115; Alfrlgertllor, Uke
614-992-6459 or 11112·5732.
Now Wlllto $265: Konmoro
Country Trailer L.ol For Rem, All Woohor, whitt, S9S; Konmoro
UtllltiH And Woll. GoUla Counly. Dryer, While, $75; KanmOfe
513-31111-4594.
Washer, Harvest Gold, t~; O.E.
Dryer, Harvllt Gold, $V5;
Mobile Homes For Rent, quiet
location, cable TV available, Up~ght FrMZor, While, $85;
Hud approwed. 614-446-05(]8 or SmoD Chill Typo F - 9
Cubic FNI, $85; Aportmont tao
446-8321.
Dryer, $85; Sklaao Aoolloncoo,
Trailer lot, !Ml' x 100' gas, Upper Rivll Roo7, 1~7398 .
electric, w1ter hookup, GalRENT20WN
llpollo Forry, 304-675-3216.
614-+le-3158
Vl'ra Fumhure
44
Apartment
Soli &amp; Choir, 111.10 WMk;
Rocllnor, 55.47 WMk, SwiVII
for Rent
Rockor, $3.03 WNk.Bunk Bod
1br Apartment, 1 EHiciency Complete $11.4t WMk, 4 Drowor
Apanment. CioN To UnlversUy ChHI, $3.21 Wook; Poltor Bid01 Rio Granda. 614-JII8.9946.
room suno, 7 pc., 116.67 WMk,
lncludn Boddlng.Country Plno
2 bedroom apt above Holzer Dlnttto WHh Bench I 4 Cholno,
Clinic of Welt Virginia, 614-446- 110.98 WNk.OPEN: llondly
5186.
Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to 6p.m.,
2 BA apt., Stowe, &amp; ratrlg. SUndoy 12 Noon TYI 5p.m. 4
Mlln Ofl Route 7 On Route 1&gt;11,
tum·~. Water &amp; tras h pTu
In centenary.
lum'od. 814-4411-3940.
O.k dining room suite
Aportmonto For Rent, 614-446- Solid
comltle wlth/lt ufe, 1 yr. old,
822t
$2400. 614-44 -8000 ohor 4 p.m.

::=:,:,-=---- -BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON AUCTION &amp;SWAIN
FURNITURE. 12
ESTATES, 536 Jockoon Plkl
St., Golllpolls. Now &amp; Uood
from $192/mo. Walk to shop &amp; Olivo
hoatoro, WHiom &amp;
movln. Colll14-448·2588. EOH. lumlturo,
Work boots. 614-440-31511.
Completely Fumlehld Small
VI'RA FURNITURE
HouM, No Peta, Yard, Plua
614-4411-3151
UtllltiH. $235/mo. 614-446-0338. LIVING ROOM:
Solo &amp; Choir,
Recliner, $149.00;
Efficiency, llovo, rol both $191.00;
w/shower, llc all elect, lun car- SWivol Rocklr, $1111.00; Co11M I
paled, HUD occptod, 304-&amp;75- End Tlblu, $119.00 SII.DINING
6200.
. ROOM: Tobto Whh 4 Podded
Cholro, $149.00; Country Plno
Fumlshld 5 Room Apanments, Dlnotto With Bench And 3
All Utilltlea Paid, Downstlars, Cholro, $299.00; Mltchlng 2
$285/mo. 91V Second Awanue, Door Hltc!!, $349; Or $511).00
614-4411-3945.
Sot; Ook tlbio1 &gt;12ldi2 Whh 8
Bow
BacK
Chalr1,
Fumlshlcl Apartment, 1 Bed- $629.00.BEDROOM: Postor Bod•
room.~.."'ater Pakt, $275,. V2 Mila
room Sulto (5 pc.), $349.00; 4
Elst ur Porter. 614-388-9963.
Drawer Ch11t, $44.15; · Bunk
1229i_Compioto Fun llatt
Furnished Apartmont, 1br, Bod, 1105.uu
Sot; 7 pc. Codlr
Shore loth. 101 Fourth Avo, Gil· Sot
BOdroom SuHo, $699.00.0PEN:
llpollo. 1185 U1111tln Pold. 6t4- Monday Thru 8alur•y, ILm. to
C46-4ol18 Aftor 7p.m.
&amp;p.m., SUndoy 12 Till
Fumlshod Apanmonts, 1br, 5p.m., C MIIH 011 Route 7 On
$225 U111nln Plld. 120 Fou~h Routo 141 In Contonory.
A.., &amp; 107· Boconcl Avo, 0111·
llpollo. 114-44f-4ol11 ohor 7p.m.
52 Sporting Goods
Fumlohod Enlcloncy, $1751mo. Thompaon Hawkln 45 Cougor
Utllttlel Pakt, 701 Fourth Ave, whh Gorrnon ollv~,_ 50 cat.
Gllllpollo. 114 441 4411 Ahor motchod ofl·· 22 ..., orlalnol
7p.m.
Golden 31 As Mo~ln wAh •
· 700
Fumlshod Efllc:loncy, 1155/mo. ocopo; 331 cs Mo~ln Remington 243 Tuco 4
U111HIH Pold, Shoro Bllh, 107 power;
Thompaon
Com-r
Second Avo, Qalllpolls, l14-44e- 4f-410; &amp; 22 bbl. 10 Inch. 114,.C411 After 7p.m.
246 .. 449.

TUesday, September 3, 1991
53

Farm Supp lies

Antiques

Buy or ollt. Rlvorlno Antlq""'
112C E. Main IIIMI,
Houra: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to ••110
p.m,_!llndly t :DO to 1:00 p.m.
614--·2526.
.

&amp; Livestock

Poo•••oy.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise ;
1 ComPIItt Stl 0t Bunk Bodo.
114·31111-111114.
18'x7' whho llborvluo gorogo
door, w/opener 6 remote, t150
lor door, 1150 lor opanor1 bolh
$275, 114-1112·2101 lor lnronna·
Uon to He.
C Comotory Loto In Vinton
Momorlsl Comotary. 1100 Eoeh.
Lot t63. Phone: ol1~5.
Or C1N25-3481.
5-EIIctrlc rongoo $751up, 24
Inch etack waalter/d~r, $'115,,..
g•• ronvn Sllllluf!. Bob Hog·
glrly, Flrsllono otoro, lllddlepon,OH
Commodore 14 computer, dek
drive, Joy lllc:ko, 25 gomo dlako,
Pentax K1000 camera w/lens,
304-1115-3319.
Commodore 841128 homo computar, color printer, $2,000 In
gamH, educational ecftw.,.., •II
ottochmonto, $400. (304) 6755815.
Concrsto &amp; plootic Mptic tonko,
Ron Evan• Entervriut, Jack·
oon, OH r..oo.a37-0528.
Cratlmatlc lllctrlc twin Md, ex·
tra long, never uald, IJC tor .,_
darly or Invalid, 111 lire,. 1,.
eluded, for Information 304-fll1832.
For Silo: Flrowood Colt Ahor
Sp.m., Wookdoyo, ~hone: 814446-3210.
For Solo: Good UHd Rcllotlllor 5
Horso Power, RNr Tine Now
T- 6 Panol Interior Coon, p,.._
hungl Slzo: 32xl0. 814~1m,
Evon ngo l Wllkondo.
Howord S h - Commorclel
Froozar Cku. ft. $2500.00 Aloo
opproxlmotoly 300 pnovlouoly
vllwod movlos, 614-1112·2103
Huoky Homo Uti ond llcC.
loch chain aan marked d4M
Sept. Solo. Sldoro Equlpmot
HondttSon, wv. 304475-11121.
Portoblo chongNblo Iotter olgn
$259. Froo iott-dollvery. Pioo1ic lot1or $C7.SO box, AAA Slana.
1-G0..,533-3453oxplroo t-1..,tt.
PSE.foriiN C - , ocopa,
orro-, llotd tlpa, brood hudo,
quiver, 1175. Wood burner, $125.
814·992-7799.
Rocondhlonod Wuhoro, Dryoro.
Guorsntood prompt MrYico lor
Ill mlkH, modlil. Tho WHhor
Dryor Shoppa. St4-448~114C .
Soli (duo to Ill hoohh) Whore: C28 Flotwoodo Rd. Po~Mroy,
Ohio. HIVI oomothlng lor
ovoryonol (Uttlo rod fiouM)
Wotch lor slgnsl HouN ond 1
112 acrw 1ana, 28'-motor home,
1973 IIGB-GT cor, 11181 O.toun
4-WIO pickup, ntotorcycloo,
mopodo, 111116 lnL Scout 4-WID,
Mustong body, whootllltlrso,
pick up truck (111119 Int.), luml·
ture, rttriall'atora, 11ovee,
microwave, Mat and otherWiae,
~ding mowor lnd olhor gordon
11UR. All klndo Ol oddl lnd
enda, French Pr0¥1nal dining
room aulte. Jult come 1nd ...n
Moko ollor. Coll814-1112-3822.
Som Somorvlllo'o Army Surptua
booldo Sondyville Poot Otllco
Fri, Sot, Sun. Noon, 1:00PM
other dlyo hours 304-273-S855.
(Jr comou"- lllt,o big guyo)
IUrpiUI ,.nlil clothing, "al
IHther 0.1. bocta.
Sooro 100,000 BTU 0111 Fu,..
noco, Used 1 Hoatlng s-n.
614-446-8194.
Sylvonle Video Comers, caool
T~Pod. Elcollont Condition
$400. 814-446-8189.

61

Farm Equtprnent

50 IIF Tnodor With Pio- And
Cuhlvator And 5 Ft. Buoh Hog,
$3 650· 165 MF Tu~ Troctor With
6 Fl Finished Mowtr, $5,350.
Ownor Will Flnonco. 614·2866522.

56

BORN LOSER

Television
Viewing

Aulds for Sale

1988 Ford Esco~ LX low
mliHgo, $3500, 814-992·W5 •~
tor 6:00pm.
1988 Ford F-150 XLT l.lrlot, •
loaded under 30,000 miiH, excollont' condhion, 110 500: 1987
Orand Mercury Marqu11 , loaded,
under 48,000 miiM, excellent '
condhlon, 17,500. Phono 304- .
675-3298.
1981 Lincoln Town Car Loaded,
43,000 MIIH, 1 awnor, Eicollont ·
Condltlonl 614-44&amp;.e157 Aftor

•

Grinder And Mlx•r. 614379-2370, 614-379-2145.

Ghll

ln't Cub, Cultlvatoi, Side
Dreuer. 1 Row Toblceo Sslter
With Cutllvator. NH 595 Tobacco
Strl-. 614-446-4101.
Jlm 'a Farm Equipment, SR. 35,

WMI Gatllpoilo, 814-«8-11777;
Wide attectlon new 6 uHd rarm
tractort a lmpltmenta. Buy,
Mil , trade, 8:00..5:00 wMkdt ya,
Sit. till Noon.
Unlco 250-gal. lc:obonk Milk
Cooler, Delillval No. 75, vac.
pump,
114-049-2860
after
1:00pm.
We have had a good June and
July monthl ol ln1dlng and
need to Mil UHd equipment.
IIF 238 dl- 42hp with HOPS
$5,600. IIF185 dlo111 52hp with
~,ooo FrHman loodor $5,500.
MF291 dlllol 82hp wHh cab
$7,000. O.utz 8008 dloool 85hp
with- $7,100. A.C. 6140 diHol
41hPt 4 whlll drive, 4 ~alwe,
very aood. $9,950. JD
gao
AoH" and canopy, FAT &amp; wts,
oxc tlrM l-4,000. AC 7045,
145hp, Clb 3 double val"'ee, IXC
tlrM, 112 000. Ford Compact
tractor 1'fi0, 24hp diHOI, 4
whMI drtve with all hyd loedlr
$8,500. John Dooro 550c Dozer,
5 woy hyd blodo, ROPS wanch,
rear aux hyd, oood under car·
riogo 118,000. l(ooh~ng modol
t350, COhp ICubcllo dlooat okld
ltNr toodor1 2 buckoto $7,500.
Now Hollona modot 355 grlndor
mixer 100bu current model

~or:· ~;m~~rhd ~!';,\'"•~~::;

(JJ ANding Relnbow

\llle AnciJ Otttfllh
IIJ C.rtoon Expma
Stereo. Q

1:05(1) Too CloH for Comfort
1:30 Ill
iiJI NBC Newo D
())I Drwm of..._...

e

ltl-ic.~~Newt 1;1
(JJ 3-2-1 Contact

IDUpCioM

0 New Zorro Stereo. 1;1

1971 GIIC Chovy, 350-onglno,
overhauled, 30&lt;kturation cem, ..
501-lift, 31• ton, twln-stackl,..
304·773-5126.
1977 Ford 1 Ton Dump Truck, ·
Excollont Condition! 614·256- ·
1058 .
1977 Ford F·150, Good Condl·
tlon, Runs Good, $850. 014·3888262.
1980 Chevy 112 Ton, Silo~ Bod, ··
305, Automatic, $595. 814-446- '
0233.
.

IT'~

IJOT

fi \Ill.e Nlaht
Court 1;1
lnllde Edllloli 1;1

fAJR.i

Cll (J)

(!) (!) MICNeii/LehNr
N..,..._C
illl Cunent A;ftelr 1;1

=

Sporbc.nt.r
ar.-y11ne
0 Tile Waltono
7:05 (I) Beverly Hllblf..l
7:30 Ill • iiJI Jeoperdyii;J
(!) Andy GIHiflh

--- - .,.·
73
4
WD's

981

71

Autos for Sale

======~=:-7
1967 Chovollo, 396 Molor, All Sot

Up To Rocol $2,000 Firm. 614388-8603 Ahor 7p.m.

Pets for Sale
1V70 Ford 500 Fol~ono, naw
Groom ond Supply Bho!H'at tlroo &amp; bottory, 302 onglno,
Grooming. Alt broodo, olyloo. $300. 11 lo. 304-675-5;56
lomo Pol Food Dolior. Julio ovonlngs.
~~".g ~n IM-448.()231, ,-eoo. J·,-971-Ch-=-.-..-,-,.,-11-50-.-,-98-2-FordE•cort motor ,.bulh $150. 3()4.
AKC Boston Tomer Pupploo. l ·6 -,75-=-:76-:-5:ci.,...,...-----Siro And O.m Show Dogo. 2 11m AMX Jovolon1 wloxtro parts.
Low boy tor houllng caro $600.
Mllll, 614-2511-8251.
AKC Rogfltllld 12 WNk Old 304-4175-7530.
White Fomolo Poodlo, $200. 614- 1971 Old• Cutlln, s':Jlromo,
448-3615, Allor lp.rn.
••
-r. 1 Ow nor, AutoL;A"
v• s , PB .
Aullroilo
Shoohor~
Pupa. $400. 614-4411-38lr, 814-446Rogiltorod,
Uno-Bred
For C998.
Ouelhy. AU Shott. BrMdtrt 1m Olds Supr11111 CUII.. a,
Slneo 1971. 614-678-2527.
1500. 304475-4697, 41l5·A Finn
Como now pick CK.I your AKC SC, Polnl Pleasant.
Cocker Sponlll puppy, ohoto 19111 Chryltor Cordoba 380,
ond wormed, rsody sept. 1, 304- auto, new every1hlng, $1400.
875-5412 ohor 4:00.
daya 114-002-2155. after 5:30pm,
Dragonwynd Canery Peralan, coll3044~855.
Slam... and Himalayan kht1111. 1981 Codllloc Coupa DoVIilo,
614-4C&amp;-3844 ohor 7 p.m.
72,000 lllloo, Elcollont Rumlng
Floh Tonk, 2C13 Jackoon Avo. Shopa, $1.500. 814-387-0588.
Point Pleaaant, 3()4...175-2063,
lull line Troplcli llohl blrdo, 1881 llonll Corto, 304-675-15011.
small animals and 1uppl M.
1982 llonlo Corio, T-Top, PS,
Poodlo pupploo, toyo, ond IN PB, $1.800.'304-875-5470.
cupo, AKC Chompion Bloodlino, 1982 Oldt Cutlau Brougham
Coolville 014.el74404.
PS, PB, PW~ P~L. Crul11, Tlh,
Ezc•ll•,. conattlonl A.aking
Wonted To Rent: AKC Roglo- $3,000. 304-175-7158.
ltrld Malt Goklen Altl1evtr
Womod For StUd Sorvico. 814- 1883 Cutllll Supromo, good
388-f751.
cond, $1.000. 304-882·2888.
1983 Toyota Collc:1 Gt 5 Spood,
57
Musical
Crul11, Air, Tin, AIIIFU, Excol·
lont Condition! $2,700. 814-448Instruments
3131.
lnltNmMitl Wanled: 18rt1on1, 19M Oklo DoH1 88 Royolo, 4-DR
Alo Cll~not. Cta~not,
bteutlful Clr, every op.
Concort Frsnc:h Horns Tonor S.dln,
tlon. lncludoo loctory ca. 307 v.
Soxophono,
Boritono 8,
$2150, 814-1192-41710.
Soxophono, Plc:colo. 814-4403563, 114-440-3301.
1985 Nlooon 200SX two door
Mtch bock, •1~ AM-FM, AIC,
Wonted: Rnponolblo party to aooct
cond, ..,500. 304-675·
take
on
small
monthly
paymonto on
tocslly. iM5.
Coli manogor
1111.
1965 Nloun 300 ZX, 19odod, InYlntJhl sltvor trumpo~ 1200. cluding T·tope, leather lnltrlor,
low ml!Mge, excellent condl·
304-875-'IIH.
tion, $6500. 304-182·3311..
Fruits &amp;
58
1888 Plymouth HorllOn, C opd.,
good cond., $1400. 614-2511-8251.
Vegetables
11188 Ford EXPJ. f:!ood CondHionl
Boll Poppors For 8111, Hall MUll Sollt wtt 814-441~25
luohoiOr luohoi,IM-2CIIo- 8orloutl81lyorl Only!

231

A~anta

FuRN•;utzf

t&gt;rPT.

II

IDle I'IIIIIIY Feud

..

11J Tlllllll U.S. Open !rom
Flulll11ng Meadow. N.Y. (L)
Be a IIUtr Stereo.
MljOr I.NguiS.Hblll
(L)

=
8

ac101811tw

. . . . ..

e

i

ia OnPrlmeNeWI

IIU1gl Stereo.

rJ:::i:"

CUtta

Connl"' 1 ' - now ovolioblo, 1111 Oldan:oblte
Cltm1,
otso firtltlt Poono ond Prune
Pt..,. "'" 1n Auaufl, eon r800-44J.3710 lor prlcM. BOB'S
MARKET, IIOMn or Ollllpolls, 1987 Chevy Covolllll PS, AC,
011.
AIIIFII Topa, CiHn 814-245:
532t
Conning
Tomltoos, 1.::-:::--:---:-..,...,:--:--=:~
$11.00/Buohol; Conning Boons, 11187 Pony Ford Eocort, Black
$12.00/Btlthol, Wo · Pick Or Whh Sun Louv111, Sunroof,
$5.00/Buohol, You Pick. 3Q4.882. Spoiler;, Fancy WhNIS. Tokl
2237.
Bill o .. ~ 114-388-1831.

0 Tile

Serv1ces

brlc~,~,

All typea of maeonry,
block end 11one. Fne atlmatN. 304·773-8650.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
YOU Q4.N ~e &amp;Ia&lt;
IN ANO'IHEa UR:,\IW.i V£ULD
'TtXJ L.IKE 10 COME ~ H&gt; "?
IF

r li!eAU..Y IX'N'T ~
WHAT I C2::)W;; IYCK .1&gt;8.• •

AS~ASr&amp;TAY

AT "THE lOP OF "THE
FVOD~IN .

Movie=

Gil til

r

a urrr 10no Uvet

1:30(!)Newl
Cll (J)
CoiCh Hayden and

e

Christine learn the tneanlng
of being an outcast. (R)
Stereo. 1;1
10:00())
i1J1 Llw &amp; Ondef
Greevey and Logan
lnveatlgata the shOoting ol
two chTidren. (R) s~

e

WHY AIN'T
OL' BULLET
BAYIN' AT
TH' MOON?

MAYBE HIS
VOICE BOX
15 OUT OF
WHACK

HE'S YORE 0061!
YOU OUGHT TO GO
HELP HIM OUT I!

(J)

I1

1

IJ

We h a d eaten so much take
out food that after a home
cooked meal my son arose
•
•
.
•
. 0 from the table and promptly
.
. . - - - - -- - --. thre w a c hina p late tn the

E G U G0
1-:.,~1;;.-:;,I..;.."TI~s""TI-l; j

I
I

IQ

GEGDAJ
1--rl6;,....::,1,...;;...;;.1_;.,17,:....,1~

L--.1..--.L.--..1.--..1.' -...1-·--'

-

8

;

Davis
S.W-Vac
S.,._lce .
Georgn CrHk Rd. P.irta, suP:
pliH, pickup, ond dollvory. 514·
448.02114.

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

NORTH
• 10 52
fAKJ

BRIDGE

• Q7 62

PHILLIP
ALDER

Will do remodeling, rooting

.~

ASTRO-GRAPH

Plumbing&amp;
Heating

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Carter'a Plumbing
andHNting
Fourth and Prne
Galllpollo, Ohio
814-448-388a
HEAT PUIIP SIIH &amp; Slrvico
304"75-3()9; or 814-446.e308. ,_

.rl

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

or commorclal
wl~ng, now NfYico or IIPttlri.
Mostor Uconood lloctdclsn
Ridenour Eloctrtcal 304-175:
1781.
•

Rnldontlal

Sept. 4, 1H1

85

General Hauling
.
Wo Do Hauling Anytlmo, .. . ·
~ypileo, No Jab Too Big Or , , ..
•OO Little. ~~- CIHnlng, · • • • ·
G~n~rsl Worlc, Any Kind. 61~ ·· · '• .
3111 22 7 8
~~·..:...;;..:.An:.;YI:,:I:.;mo:;;_
. - - - - .:;
1fT
Upholstery
".

Mowroy's Uphofsttrlng Nrvic- ·
lng trl county lrN 28 YNrs, Tilt '
In lumhuro upftolllltrlng
can 304-676-4154 lor ltN ..: ·" ·
II matH.

WEST

EAST
+J J

.9 6 2

'10 74 3

. 98764
+K 9 4

• u 85
+ 602

+K 3

SOUTH

tAKQ
fQ85
• 10 3

As circumstances
dictate

+U8 74
Vulner able : Both
Dealer : South

By Pblllip Alder

Sootb
I NT

To test yourself on today 's deal. cover the East and South cards a nd pre·
pare to defend as Wes t. After· a
s traightforward auction. you lead the
spade nine: two, th ree. king. Declarer
plays a heart to dummy's king and
runs the club nine: two, four , king. The
warning bell has rung. What do you do
now•
In general, es peci ally m the middle
of the hand. leading a high card signifies a weak sui I not headed by an honor. Conversely , leading a low ca rd indicates a suit headed by at tea st one
honor. However. occasionall y you
have to improvise to maximize your
chances of defeating the contract.
Your best chance to beat three notrump is to cash four diamond tricks
now . That requires finding partner
with A·J ·x-x. but the highe r "x" is a
critical spot-card . If it is the 10. you
can switch to the diamond four. Pa rt -

West

Norlb

Eas t

Pass

3 NT

All pass

Opemng lead:

+9

ner w1ll win the trick with the 10 a nd
lead a low diamond bac k to your king.
A third round will produce the desi red
result. But what if tha t critica l spotcard is the eight' The n declare r has 10
doubleton. If this is the position. you
must lead the diamond nine - no ot h·
e r card wtll work. Partner will win the
trick with the jac k and return his lowest ca rd to your king, picking up declare r's 10 in the process. Finally you
will lead the diamond four. and par t·
ner's A·8 wtll be ove r dummy 's Q-7.
Note th at if you star t with the di a·
m ond four , not the nine , whe n you lead
the nine on the third round . declarer
ca n pla y low from lhe dummy, a nd the
s ui I is blocked.

Malar Lugua II

®

Posjtive transformations in your social
lile could be in the oiling in the year
ahead . Relationships will be revised In

ways that will create closer emotional
bonds.
VIRGO (Aut. 23-Sepl. 22) Be a good
listener today, ·especially il you 're wllh a
group where new topics are being dtscussed. What you learn can be later
used to your advantage. 1/lrgo, treat
yoursell to a btrthday g ilt Send lor 1/lr·

go's Astro-Graph prediCtions lor the
year ahead by mailing$ 1.25 plus a long,
sell-addressed. stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph, c/o this newspaper. P .O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
Be sure to state your zodiac sign.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Conditions in
general should be quite ta\lorable for
you both today and tomorrow where
your career and material Interests are
concerned . Do something meaningful in
these areas.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Nov. 22) Knowledge
gained through personal experience is
your greatest asset today . II you're sty·
mled In any undertaking, look Into the
past lor the key to unlock the present
dilemma.
SAOmARIUS (Now. 23-Dec. 21) Your
commercial affairs should be conduct·
ed in a somewhat' secretive atmosphere
loday. with only the individuals involved
pr-nt.
Kibitzers
can
c ~ usa
complications.
CAPRICORN ·IDee. 22-Jan. ~II II you
have ~,.ethlng pleasant you want to
share with others today, contact your
old pats first to see if they are Interest·
ad. Hard .feelings could resuh 11 they
leam IIley - • overlooked. •
AQUAAIUI (Jitn. 20-Feb. 11) Seek oul
and try lo get closer to those who can
help advance your career objectives to·

day: The ladder to success will be
s teadier with their cooperation.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Merch 20) You're an
eKceptional organizer today. If you see
associates lumbllng around because ol
lack ol direction, take it upon yourself IO
provide them wilh a system that will
produce desirable results.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) You 're the
catalyst today that can unite the family
lor a common mission. The changes
you should be able to ellect will bring
greater harmony to your household.
TAURUS (AprH 20-Mer 20) This is a
good day to discuss critical matters that
are ol slgnlllcance to both you and your
mate. Your collective conclusions will
be far better than any that could come
about singularly.
GEMINI (.._J 21-June 20) You could
begin to leal the effects of influences today that should have a stabilizing effect
on your financial poslllon. Tha trend will
be obvious and wor1hy ol development.
CANCER (J- 21--., Tau'H spar·
kle and shine today- II you're Involved
in creative endeavors, and especially II
you have an imaginative par1ner as
bright as you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Take charge ol
events today so that the final results are
determined by you, not by the caprlciousneas af·fate.

ACROSS
1 - Bracklnrldga
5 Big lizard
1 1 Suitor
12 01 medicine
13 Enormous
14 Incapacitate
15 Pine or fir
17 -Beta
Kappa
· 18 Many
19 Buddy
21 Child
24 -and
downs
25 TV antenna
type
26 llloerly
27 Charged
atom
28 Overshadows
30- Marcoe
33 Author
Fleming
34 Valuable fur
35 Ballerina's

Answer to Prevloue Puule

slrong points
37 And ao on
(abbr.)
40 Non·prollt TV
41 Row ol
atablll
42 Nile cjueen,
lor short
43 Compass pl.
45 Engraving
47 Single·
handed
50 Cement
containers
51 Oflha back
52 Aclrna
Anouk 53 Playwright
Eu9ene 54 Undermines

DOWN

and TN
s 3, Roman
6 Canadian
panlnaula
7 Mormon
State
8 Moderator

9 Zero
10 Athletic star
t 1 Yelp
t4 Tug
15 Actor Gulager
16 losue lorlh
20 Neateol
22 Lout
,.,...-1--1- +-1-+-t 23 WI. unllo
25 Hebrew letter
--1--1----1f--+-+-l 26 Mill
27 Sort
29 Exloled
30 Mlschlovoua
child
31 Playing
marble
32 Capture
36 Wtolndebted
lo
37 Slura
38 Nervouo
38 Gear tooth
41 Metal disk
42 Chew nalolly
--1-+--4 44 Unle11
48 Mexican
shrub
4 7 Salad herb
French
negative
49 Hause wing
52 Comparative
word

1 Climbs
2 Eaotern
myotlcs
3 Atoll
4 Belween OK

10:15(1) MOYIE: Beach Red (2:15)
10:30(!) Tile 2111 Century Now
(0:30)
\llle To Be AnnotlnCecl
11J Tlllllla

Ill Crooll lnd CltiH
ID Malar League S.Hball
(L)

11:00 Ill •

.

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle

R*-

814-1192-5752.

o.J·OI

+Q 10 9

World tlewo
0 700 Club With Pat

fi'M Htlmatu, call George at 1·

&amp;- Jo

Torrid - Eight - Shawl - Packet - EACH OTHER
You know you're watching a soap opera wedding
when ifs the fourth marriage for both but only the
second to EACH OTHER.

a

removal, houH Plintlng. For

Comple te tho chuckle auotod
by fill ing in the mls.sing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERE D LETTER S 1
IN THE SE SQU ARE S

Chicago Cuba at San Diego
Padres (L)
Cll (J) • tlth1yiOIMIItlng
Michael makes Important
deci&amp;Jons aDOut hiS career
and marriage. (R) Stereo. 1;1
!Il Democracy In Educallon
(0:30) Stereo. Q
(JJ P.O.Y. C

Soptlc Tank P~INflgg• Ollila '
:

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

Stereo. Q
Now Stereo.

ID 8caNcrow and MN. King

~:~:!o~. ~~loo.s37-'!"~~ES,

84

Legend of Prince
Yellant
1:30 Cll (J) • Who'l the lou?
Tony goeslo the Senate to
help an elderly friend. (Pt 1)
(R) Stereo. C
Gil Chun:lt llnet Stltfon
Stereo.
0 BIICII IIUtlllon
t:OO Ill
IIJIIn the HMI of the
Night Gllleaple lnd Virgil
Investigate an accident
causedi moonshine. (R)
Stereo.
Cll (J)
Ro-nne
Roseanne conlronte Becky's
boyfriend aDOut sneaking
around. (R) Stereo. 1;1
(!) (JJ Who WJU TNdl for
AIMflcll? The experiences
ol 500 1990 graduates from
top COlleges whO committed
themselves to teat:ll lor two
years In the country's most
need~ schoOl districts. (1:00)
9 @
MOVIE: 'The
ap.ntlott' CIS Tuelclay

e

r

82

VAENt ~~
~
3 ...,......,..
,
~I 1

e

_.,
~.

tr11 trimming

1121. Billy OrehMI

Cruuele lan Scott Sings
lnaplrattonal songs; Sir Oavld
McNee. former Mid ol
ScoUand Vend recounll his
experiences. (1 :00) Stereo.

...
-81________________
J~·
Home
•••
Improvements
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rapreaente a movie star
acc:uHCI of murdering her
ex-lover. (R) Stereo. 1;1
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Cll (J)
Full Noull Jnse
organizes a g,.duatlon
ceremony lor Mk;hetle's
preschOol. (R) Stereo. 1;1
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Indiana In Ecuador live much
the way Stone Age man did.

1:00 Ill

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BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lllttlme guaran·
tH. Local ralerencn fumi•Med. 1
FrM HllmiiH. Coil collect 1·
614·237-o488, dly or night. :
Aog1r1 BIHmtnt Waterproo- ,
ling.
~~--~~----~--Complete
llobllo Homo Sst·Upa, ·•
Rtpilra; Commerlcal, Rlllden· ·
llaf Improvement•. Including:
Plumbing, Electrical. lnaurance
Clolma Aecoptod. 114-256·1611. :
Curtis Home lmprovetn~nt a: '
Y1111 Experience On Old1r &amp; ,
Newer Homea. Room Addltiona, ,
Foundotlon Worll, Roolln9, •
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tlmatnl Reference•, No Job To '
Big Or Smolll814-4ol1~5.
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EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1.ao0- '
537-8526.

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Cemper for ultl, good condl-~ 1 :
lion, 11Hpa.8, very I'MIIOnlble., ~ .
614-843-512..
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Stereo. Q
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sm. 114-'

Ron'• TV Service, ~p~elallzlng
In Zlnllh 1110 Nrviclng most
other bnrnds. HouN calla, also
1ome appliance repairs. wv
304-576-2398 Ohio 614-446-2454.

below to form fovr almple word1.

(I) MljOr LMDH S.MIMtH

1971 Chovy von, roal good cone!, ''
Nil $800. or trado ,., cor ol o- ..
qual value. 304.05-3568.

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Stereo. Q
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1983 Ford F-t50 with (ult Nbum
motor, Dwight Bokor 304-8953931.

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a world toc111r
0 Rln Tin Tin, K·t Cop

PANCAKES All.E NO
600D WITHOUT SVRUP..

11,800.
Doull-AIIIo
modol
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SU45CR 7ft tine dlac mower
•'
condhioner 3pt. Demo $5,900. 1i88 pickup, S.10, 4 whHI drive, ,,
Deutl KM25 7ft drum model loaded, exc Cond, HI II M110n °
11,C95. Doutz KM22 5'1 drum Auto Gllll, 304-882·2432.
mower 11,100. 2 Now kOuand 479 -..
Nino 1oo1 hoybl,.. 52,200. 11ch. _r..
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k Tod 1994 Hondo Shodow, 5,800 I C·
~-;:,~$2,700. ~~~· H~land tuol mlln, 11100 tlrm, 814-742·
modll 273 boler, good cond, 2545.
$2,200. Now Holland modol 310
,.
baiH 11c cond $3,100. IIF 124 76
Auto Pans &amp;
bo111 $2,000. MF No3 bolor 11c
Accessories
cond, $000. Now Holland 151
round bllltl auto wrap new 200 Turbo automat~ tranlmlscholn $5,800. N- Holland 151 slon out of 1982 Comaro. Shin ·
round boiN Hyd wrop $5,500. kn. (304)&amp;75-5815.
. ,
New Holland 853 round baler
current model 'demo $9,500. For Nil, 7-Volkowogon pa~• . ~
New Holland &amp;48 round baler csrs, enough p1r11 to build 31.&gt;
current model, wery good complete BMIIt's and more.
$7,500. Now Holland 325 l'TO Fim $000 goto oval'flhing, 114 '
manure aprMder $1,000. New 802-3481 aKer 1:00pm.
.
Holland 513 oprudlr 175bu,
ulod vory tbtlo, $2,COO. Now Hoi· New gaa tankl, one ton truck ;:
lend 813 op,..dor 175bu hyd whNis, rodlotors1 floor moto, •
ond gal• $1.!100. ThrM ntw ld11 ole. R ., R Auto, Rtploy, WV. 304- ·
'
model m olc:klrs1 1 row, good 372·3933 or 1..80Q.:zr.l.8585.
cond, 11!~· oocn. Ono now Roll buggy VW onglno $650,:~
kiM rnoae1 325, 2 row narrow
olc:klr, 12 rotl hulking bod White llbor(llln t o - lor 1
Soi,OOO. Now Holllnd 770 chop- oman pickup 1125. 304-li75-7930~
pet 2 row hlecl, new knlve1,
$3,500. Now Hollond 711 chop- 79
Campers&amp;
part_'!. ,_ hood ourront model
Motor
Homes
$3,11ou. Th- SUpar 717 choppers, 1 row Mad $1,100. tach.
Throo 2 bootor lontgo bOioo 1973 18h. Bonanu Compar, '.
from 11,200. to $1,800. Wo hovo 7 SINfl 6, Equilltlld, $800. Vory "
Nlco 614-448~832. 304-175- '
lawn and prclen
from
23111.
.
12 to 17 fip ill """ It Drlcoo. KNfora Sorvlco Ctntor Bonanu Travel Trailer, 20 FocHr '
!II. Rt. 17, Point P - ond Solf.(:ontolnod. 11,300. 114-25&amp;. ·
Alptoy Rd, ~5-311111.
1058,
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72 Trucks for Sale

1m Chovroltl Von,
992 .. 282.

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1888 Rod Oldomoblio Cutlou
SUpreme. L.oadld, With Sun..
roof, 614-44Hl200.
1986 Sundonco, AutomltlcbWith
Air,
$3,500i
1988
mnl,
Automatic, $2,200i 1059 Edaal, 1
· $2,000. For Silo Or Tradol 614..
256·12'111.
11100 Ch1vy Bluer, Cx4, Full
Slz.a Towing Psckage. Silverado,,
All Optional 116,000; 19&amp;7.
Chovy Bal.llr Hordtop. $4,500.•
614-388-111153.

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PUIILII

1:00 Ill. ()) (J). illl 1121.

5p.m.

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256 038
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Building
G01t1: Nubian mothtrl &amp;
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babla, al purebred, eome with
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245-81Zt
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dollvor. Will oroct. 2-30xCO
2,40xl0, 2-401100. Coil now ond
roiii'Vt 303·"3-4860.

71

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-9

Pomeroy-Middle~~...QI~!Q

ruesday, September 3, 1991

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Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

MDA's 26th annual
telethon winds down
By ROBERT MACY
Associated Press Writer
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Comedi·
an Jerry Lewis joined celebrities
and muscular dystrophy victims in
coaxing tens of millions of dollars
out of viewers in his 26th annual
Labor Day telethon.
The show sought to surpass last
year's record tote of $44,172,186.
The telethon drew a handful of
pickets in Las Vegas and Los
Angeles. but Lewis won accolades
from those appearing on the annual
show.
Actor Jameson Parker fought
back tears as his daughter, 6-year·
old Katherine, who suffers from a
sometimes fatal form of muscular
dystrophy, told Lewis: •'•Thank you
for letting me smile.''
Parker, star of the old CBS television series, "Simon and Simon "
said that even before learning his
daughter had the disease he fre quently appeared at Muscular Dystrophy Association events.
Parker said he was grieving in
his kilcllen one night shortly after

Tuesday, September 3, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

he learned of his daughter's iUness
when Lewis called to offer sympathy and support
" He 's given hope to millions of
people who had no hope.·· Parker
said.
Singer Maureen McGovern,
who has participated in the telethon
and worked with MDA for a dozen
years, said her niece contracted a
neuromuscular disease the previous
year.
"If you think muscular dystrophy can't strike your family, think
again," she said. "I never dreamed
I would be thanking MDA for helping my family."
Two former MDA poster chil·
dren, Cris Matthews and Mike
Ervin, recently announced a national campaign to boycott the telethon
until Lewis is removed as host and
the appeal is changed. Matthews
has sa1d they want to change the
telethon "but not discourage donations to MDA."
Six protesters, including one
young man in a wheelchair,

America's 9ldest person
nearing I 14th birthday

demonstrated outside when the
show opened at the Sahara Hotel in
Las Vegas. And in Los Angeles,
seven demonstrators showed up in
wheelchairs at a local telethon
headquarters, saying the telethon's
costs are too high and those afflicted were being depicted as " helpless human beings."
Jerald Friedman. oresident of
the association's Los Angeles
chapter, said independent audits
have shown that the association has
one of the lowest overhead costs of
five top charities.
Lewis kicked off the 21 1/2·
hour event by saying his goal was
the survival of muscular dystrophy
sufferers.
"I want my kids to live. I don't
ask you to pity them," Lewis said
in opening the show Sunday. ''I'm
asking you to keep them alive.''
Lewis has raised some $570.7
million from the telethon that bears
his name. Corporate contributions.
which are not included in the
telethon totes, have pushed the total
past $1 billion.

By TOBI ELKIN
Associated Press Writer
LINDSIDE, W.Va. (AP)- At
113, Ettie Mae Greene, America's
oldest person, has earned the right
to do things her own way.
Lilce sleeping.
·
Greene usual Iy sleeps for about
three days and is awake for three.
Marrianne Blakeslee, director of
nursing at the Springfield Compre·
hensive Care Center, said Greene
talks steadily before she tires herself out. Nurses feed her three
meals a day as she dozes, Blakeslee
said.
A former fanner and seamstress,
Greene said a daily milkshake, a
viuunin and "good, clean living"
are the keys to her long life.
"It's been a pretty good life I
guess," she said. "I'm so tired I
can hard! y stand it. ..
She has outlived five of her nine
children and has been a widow for
72 years. She has 21 grandchildren,
47 great-grandchildren and 37
great-great-grandchildren.
The Guinness Book of Records
lists her as the world's third-oldest
person, behind a 117-year-old in
France and a woman m England
who is a month older than Greene.
Family and nurses, who call her
" Grandmother," will celebrate her

!14th birthday Sept 8 at the nursing home where she has lived for
three years.
It's an age she thinks is "quite
much."
She recently greeted visitors to
her room with outstretched arms
and a spritely "Howdy."
Her snowy hair was twisted
back with purple combs and a silky
ribbon . She we ighs about 95
pounds.
. "Grandmother always says ' liv·
rng a clean life· is what made her
li~e so long," said granddaughter
Rita D11lon Barker, 50, of Wayside.
"She never smoked or drank and
she worked hard on the fann.''
"When you ask her something,
it's not just 'yes' or 'no.' She
always makes a complete sentence," Blakeslee said.
"Every response is unique.
When you ask her if she's hungry,
she says, 'I'm hungry as a bear,"'
Blakeslee said.
Greene occasionally sings the
hymns "Amazing Grace" and "At
the Cross" and recites the 23rd
Psalm.
She grew up as Ettie Mae
Thomas and lived in the towns of
Wayside, Greenville and Peterstown. Her uncles fought in the
Civil War.

PIGEON SHOOT PROTEST · A young
woman protestor is restrained by a Pennslyvanla State Trooper whUe trying to release pigeons
rrom traps and allow them to ny rree during tbe
annual pigeon shoot in Hegins, Pa., Monday.

onto the field past state police barricades. Charges included trespassing, theft and disorderly conduct. A
man was accused of assault for
tackling one of trapper boys hired
to break the birds' necks.
No serious injuries were reponed.
During the daylong shoot,
protesters and shoot supporters
taunted each other, and some
activists waded into crowds of
spectators to debate the shoot.
Other waved signs and shouted
slogans at people entering the park
where the event was held.
Animal rights activists said they
will protest the event until it's
stopped. Supponers said the shoot
is a tradition.
"It's something that built
Hegins," said James McMasters of

AUBURN, Ind. (AP)- A car
collector decided to keep a 1933
Duesenberg J Victoria once owned
by Greta Garbo rather than accept
$2.8 million for it.
Jerry Moore, who last week said
the car was worth $3.5 million,
rejected the bid at the Auburn '9 1
Collector Car Auction and Show at
Kruse International Auction Park
on Sunday.
"You've heard about big ice

Cambridge, Ohio, one of thousands
of shooters who turned out for the
Fred Coleman Memorial Shoot,
named after a local marksman. The
shoot began in 1934.
Hegins Township Police Chief
Mel Stutzman estimated the crowd
of protesters, shooters and specta·
tors at 12,000, about the same as
last year.
Animal rights activists, who
began protesting the shoot in the
mid-1980s, said 1,000 demonstrators turned out.
Protest organizer Steve Hindi of
Plano, Ill., said the demonstrators
will return. "Every year we fight
another battle in the war," he said.
"I don't consider myself a criminal any more than Gandhi or Mar·
tin Luther King were criminals,"
Sullivan said.

---People in the news___;_-LOS ANGELES (AP) BCCI's tentacles reached Hollywood as financing for "Brenda
Starr," featuring Brooke Shields,
was linked to a Saudi sheik who
was one of the bank's largest
de~sitors and Miss Shields' most
aVId fans.
Sheik Abdul Aziz al Ibrahim,
brother-in-law of Saudi King Fahd,
channeled as much as.$22.3 million
in cash and loans from Bank of
Credit &amp; Commerce International
into " Brenda Starr" to help Miss
. Shields get the lead role, the Los
Angeles Times reported in SWIday
editions.
"Brenda Starr" producer
Myron Hyman, of Tomorrow
Entertainment, said three strings
were attached to Ibrahim's money:
that Miss Shields play reporter
Brenda Starr; that the film be made
for theater, not TV; and that no
advance disb'ibution deal be negoti·
aled.
The litigation-racked film has
been shelved for five years and still
has not been commen:ially released
in the United StaleS because of disagreements over disb'ibution rights.
It has done well overseas. As of
July, it had a release date in this
country of Thailbgiving.
Until now, the movie's backer
had been known only as Mystery
Man Productions, an unidentified

.I

,

'

Arab investor.
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Jan
Berry, half of the 1960s surf music
duo Jan &amp; Dean, was married during a performance at the Stardust
Resort and Casino.
Berry, 50, wed Gertrude Filip
early Sunday before a crowd of
about I ,000 people. His singing
parmer, Dean Torrance, served as
best man.
The band played ''Chapel of
Love" as the bride, wearing a
white beaded silk gown, joined
Berry on stage with the Rev. Bill
Peterson. The newlyweds briefly
hit the dance floor before Berry
hopped back on stage to continue
the show.
"Not everybody was expecting
to sec a wedding, but some of them
had read about it in the newspaper," said Stardust spokeswoman
Kathy Espin.
After the show, the couple cut
into a huge cake decorated with a
surfing bride and groom.
The bride, originally from Cam·
bridge, Ontario, met Berry during a
concert in her hometown. It was
Berry's ftrst marriage, said publi·
cist Rob Kuropatwa. The couple
planned a honeymoon in Hawaii.
Ben)"s first album since a I966
car acc1dent is a solo effon· tentatively titled "Second Wave." It

Pick 3:896
Pick 4: 2885

Cards : K-H, 3-C
8-0;3-S
Low tonight In 60s. Partly
cloudy. Thursday, high near 80.

Vol. 42, No.

as

EITIE GREENE
She was raised amid wild
turkeys and chickens, home-canned
raspberries and homemade apple
butter. Her mother taught her to
quilt and use a spinning wheel.
Greene 's daughter Ada Dillon,
8I, recalled her mother climbing
trees to pick cherries and peaches
while in her 80s and 90s.
"Mother said, 'What do '!lbu
think I'd get done if I rested?,.·:
Dillon said.

will be released later this year,
Kuropatwa said.
Jan &amp; Dean were best known
for their hits "Surf City" and "Little Old Lady From Pasadena.''
CHICAGO (AP) - Lois
McMaster Bujold's latest tale about
overcoming physical weakness
with smarts won her the 1991 Hugo
Award for best science fiction
novel.
The book, "The Vor Game." is
the latest in a series of novels
describing the adventures of a man
born with birth defects who gets
into the Space Force and defends
his fellow beings, overcoming his
handicaps with wits.
The author, a writer from
Columbus, Ohio, claimed the Hugo
- science fiction's answer to the
Oscars - Sunday night at the 49th
World Science Fiction Convention
in Chicago.

cream cones you couldn't have.
Well, that 's the biggest ice cream
cone I've ever seen, and I'm going
to keep i~" said Moore, a Houston
shopprng center magnate who owns
37 Duesenbergs. "It's my favorite.
... But anything's for sale for a
profit."
The cranberry-colored automo·
bile's body kept Garbo hidden from
view. Its rear-seat section included
seven concealed compartments for

Gorbachev agrees to Baltic's independence
MOSCOW (AP') - Mikhail S.
Gorbachev agreed today to grant
independence to the Baltic
republics, officials said, making
them the first breakaway Soviet
states to win such recognition from
the Kremlin.
With Soviet central authority
crumbling in the wake of last
month's hard-line coup, G01bachev
will issue decrees formally freeing
the Baltics, the officials said after
meeting with the So·viet president
Tbe move· cam~ as the highest

Soviet lawmaking body today
debated how power should be
divided as the union is ttansformed
into a loose confederation of
sovereign states. Two-thirds of the
Soviet republics have declared
themselves independent
Under a blueprint Gorbachev
and tlhe leaders of I 0 of the 15
republics are trying to push through
the Congress of People's Deputies,
most of the central government's
power would be tranSferred to the

Negotiations today focused on ments, ~ludin~ the United ~tales.
who would wield the most power, L1thuan18, .LatVIa and. Estoma .also
in the interim government that ... &gt;have apphed for Umted Nat1ons
would be formed to manage the membership, and Moscow has indittansition to a new union.
cated it won't block the move.
Gorbachev had been expe&lt;:ted to
Word of ~chev's agreement
raise the issue of Baltic mdepen· to grant Baluc. mdepe.ndence came
dence at the Congress, but did not ~ter be met w1th Baluc representa·
because it apparently did not have uves from the Congress. He asked
enough suppon.
thell_l to draft a decl~ation, said
The Baltics, which began their A.lgtm~ntas Cekouhs? a for~er
independence drive three years L1thWllWIII deputy who •s auending
ago, have already won recognition · the Congress.
from dozens of
•
The Soviet leader approved the

Florida lawyer writes advice
manual on suing your neighbor
NEW YORK (AP) - Love thy
neighbor? Not in Mark Warda's
book. Sue the bum for all he's
worth is more lilce it.
The Florida lawyer is the author
of "Neighbor vs. Neighbor," a
226-page book that is part legal
history and part legal advice for
people interested in suing those
close to home.
It's filled with bizarre anecdotes
of successful and unsuccessful Jawsuits.
Case in point: a marimba-playing resident of Brookline, Pa..
became a neighborhood bully by
singling out neighbors with her
mu sic . When an Irish neighbor'walked by her house she played ·

"When Irish Eyes are Smiling." A
naval officer got "Anchors
Away," and a man who looked like
Santa Claus heard "Jingle Bells"
regularly.
She was sued, and her marimba
playing was limited to a few hours
each day. She was also banned
from playing certain songs with the
intent of bothering her neighbors.
Although the book offers many
reasons to avoid litigation, it also
provides information aimed at
determining whether you - or the
annoying guy next door - would
win in court.
A w d
· ·
•
. s ar a ~~Hes m the book s
mtroduchon : Smce ~ can no
longer solve these problems by

Subway tunnel reopened
NEW YORK (AP) - A busy said.
subway tunnel where a derailment
The accident Wednesday killed
last week killed five passengers five and injured more than 145 paswas reopened in time for today's sengers in New York's deadliest
post-Labor Day rush hour.
subway cras h in 63 years. The
Workers removed tons of motorman, Robert Ray, was
wreckage, buttressed the roof with charged with manslaughter for
wooden posts to replace the steel allegedly operating the train while
pillars smashed' by the train and drunk.
rebuilt the tracks along the LexingTransit Authority spokeswoman
ton Avenue line, which serves Caren Gardner said ser vicc
500,000 riders a day, authorities resumed late Mpnday.

hurling our neighbors over a cliff,
we must reson to the legal system
to settle our differences."

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com.
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No . 91 ·101 -EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procurement praclices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Component, and related matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
10:00
a.m ..
on
September 4, 1991 at
Public Utilities Commis·
sian, 180 East Broad
Street. Columbus, Ohio
43266.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further information may be obtained
by contacting lhe Com·
mission at 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus.
Ohio 43266-0573.

Bujold also won a Hugo last
year for her novella ''The Mountains of Mourning" and was nominated this year for another novella.
Other Hugos went to Joe Haldeman for his novella, "The Heming.
way Hoax," Mike Resnick for the
novelette "The Manarnouki," and
Terry B1sson for the short story
''Bears Discover Fire.' '

.,

I

'•

general idea after he' read their
draft, Cekoulis said. Former Gorbachev aide Alexander Yakovlev
also said Gorbachev would issue
the decrees after lawmakers con·
elude a special session.
Just 20 minutes into today's
Congress session, Gorbachev
ordered a recess because of " very
serious remarks and proposals "
from the Russian, Ukrainian other
delegations.
It was not immediately clear if
Gorbachev's plan was in trouble.

After a si milarly ordered break in
the fust day of the session Monday,
all the republics' delegations lined
up behind the proposal.
One deputy told reporters that
leaders of the republics' delegations needed to assure lawmakers
they would have some sort of
future role if they agreed to the
proposal. The measures would
effectively dissolve the Congress.
" This break has been called so
the republics can bribe them (the
·
Continued on page 3

Toxic chemicals level sought
in Ohio River fish survey

Police said he lost control o(the car
while driving 55 mph in a 25 mph
zone.
West was the first woman to
win a country music Grammy
Award, with the 1964 hit, "Here
Comes My Baby." Also among her
more than 40 hits is "I Was Raised
on Country Sunshine."
In the late 1970s she recorded
several duets with Kenny Rogers,
including "Every Time Two Fools
Collide."
Recent misfortunes include
another car crash July 19 in which
she was slightly injured. West's
belon~ings were auctioned in June
to sausfy an Internal Revenue Service debt. She flied for bankruptcy
in 1990, listing more than $1 million in debts.

Garbo to secure her jewelry.
Officials at Kruse International
said Moore bought the" (ctress's
former Duesenberg for $1.4 million
on Aug. 4, 1987. The largest bid
Sunday was $2.8 million, offered
by Dalton, Ga, carpet salesman Ed
Weaver.
Garbo, the reclusive Swedishborn ac1ress known for such films
as "Anna Christie" and "Flesh
and the Devil,'' died in April 1990.

2 Sec11on, 14 Pogu 25 cento
A Multlmodll Inc. N1w1p1per

Po~!!eroy-Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, September 4, 1991

Copyrighted 1991

Collector decides to keep Garbo's car

The woman was arrested, along with others,
who tried to disrupt the shoot. Hundreds of animal rights demonstrators protested during tbe
event. Pigeon boys are pictured helping tbe
trooper. (AP)

Animal-rights activists
disrupt pigeon shoot
By JOSEPH COLEMAN
Associated Press Writer
HEGINS, Pa. (AP) - Animal·
rights activists trying to disrupt an
annual pigeon shoot raced onto the
field, freeing some of the caged
birds and gathering up wounded
ones. Police arrested at least 85
people.
"I think this is such an atrocity
that it is worth almost anything to
stop it," Patrick Sullivan of Dallas
said after posting $5,000 bail Monday.
Each year shooters from the
region and Canada come to this
eastern Pennsylvania town to fue at
5,000 pigeons as they fly out of
holding boxes. Boys run onto the
field to gather the woWlded pigeons
and break their necks.
On Monday, activists rushed

and spleen when the car she was
riding in crashed on the way to a
Grand Ole Opry performance.
Doctors operated on Friday and
Monday but were unable to stop
the bleeding. Another operation
was scheduled for Wednesday.
"We do now get survivors with
this type of injury, but most of
them are in their 20s, not in their
60s," said Dr. John Morris Jr .. who
participated in the surgery.
Doctors also thought West had
suffered a neck injury but determined Monday that she hadn't,
Miller said.
George Thackston, an 81-yearold neighbor who was !lriving
West, was in critical but stable condition with unspecified injuries.

Major
Hoople's
forecast
Page 16

Surgery fails to repair singer's liver
By RANDALL DICKERSON
Associated Press Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Country singer Dottie West was
reponed near death today after
surgery failed to stop internal
bleeding.
West, 58, was in critical but stable condition at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. She has continued to lose blood since an auto
accident Friday, and two operations
also took a toll, Dr. Richard S.
Miller said Monday.
"Due to her age, her chances of
survival are not as good as I
thought they were before," Miller
said. "I can't give you an exact
percentage, but they're not very
good."
West suffered a ruptured liver

Ohio Lottery

REGI~;TE:ari\.~q TO wALK • A team of
employees at Bank One In Polileroy is pictured
as they register to walk in tbe annual Turkeywalk of tbe Ameril:an Heart Assodatloa. This
year's walk In Melus County will be held Sept.
28 at 10 a.m. at th~· Meigs HiRh School Track.

Pictured are, MliUe Midkiff,·seated. Marilyn
Wolfe, MarUyn Robinson, Doris Snowden, AprU
Harmon and Gerrl Waltoa, standing behind
desk, and Joan Wolfe, Dianna Lawson and
Marlyn Wilror.

Second damage estimate needed
for gra1nt to aid Pity Me victims
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
The processing of an Imminent
Threat Grant applicatio11. to aid victims of the slip at Pity Jllle needs a
second damage estimate for processing, and county-lev&lt;:l officials
appear to have differing opinions
as to who can and shoulld perform
that estimate.
In the meantime. tl'le Meigs
County Commissioners have
authorized the expenditure of coun·
ty funds to j!et the estimate done.
At this ume, the application is at
the office of Development Director
Elizabeth Schaad, awa1iting that
second estimate. One estimate of
the damage has been performed by
staffers at the .AJIIerican Red Cross.
However, a second estin11ate must
be completed before the application
will be considered by the Ohio
Department of Developme11t.

Schaad reported last week that
the second estimate would be performed by Meigs Emergency Man·
agement Agency Director Roben
Byer. Byer, on the other hand, dis·
agrees.
Byer said Tuesday that he is neither qualified to perform the estimate nor responsible, under the
duties of the EMA position, to find
an appraiser to perform the esti·
mate.
"In the first place," Byer said,
"I'm not qualified to do the esti·
mate. Secondly, I don't have the
time to search for someone to do
the estimate, and thirdly, I don't
have the funds to hire a contractor
to do the wort."
"My job is to reach the people
who need to be notified and get
things moving after a disaster - at
least that's my interpretation of this
job. I'm. not trying to pass the

buck," Byer Said, "but I think that
there is a limit as to what my job
requires."
Since the slide took place in
early May and forced the evacuation of 26 people in 10 households,
the concern has switched from providing temporary relief and housing to residents affected to the pur·
chase of those damaged properties
and homes involved.
Those residents were housed in
a Mason, W.Va. motel immediately
following the slide, and have since
been moved into rental housing by
the American Red Cross.
That organization also provided
a month's rent · and in some
instances, two months' rent • plus
deposits and expenses for those
affected residents.
While there is no guarantee that
Imminent Threat monies will be
Continued on page 3

Union le·aders criticize UP/'s-latest
effort to win new wage concessions
Gary Rosenberger, a guild repWASHINGTON (AP) ·- Urtion achieve break-even fmancial status
leaders representing employees of as soon as possible,'' said UPI resentative, estimated that wage
give-backs by employees have
United Press lnternaticmal are PresidentPieler VanBenne.kom.
In a message to its members, the already saved the company more
rebuking the financially troubled
news service for its latest effort to guild said the company made than $1 million.
''They have sacrificed more
win new wage and other conces· ''demands it says it m115t have in
order to survive. " The union than anyone in the industry could
sions from its workers.
At a meeting in Philadelphia oo warned that if the guild and UPI . possibly have expected," RosenTuesday, the comP.Bny as k:ed the cannot reach an agreement, the berger said.
UPJ said it also asked the union
Wire Service Gutld to accept a company could ask the bankruptcy
wide range of reduced bene,fits that judge to eliminate or modify the for permission to elimin.ate "cercould save hundreds df thousands current contract, which expires lait~. impediments to efficient opera·
June 30, 1992.
of dollars each monlh.
tions.' • These include advance
Guild President Kevin Keane Mtice of layoffs, the current two
Last November, the cornpany's
workm agreed to the fust of sever· criticized the news service's offer, weeks of severance pay, employee
al pay and benefits cuts, under saying, "Management's proposals permission for transfers. limits on
wh•ch employees are now receiv- are very destructive and more like- the use of stringers and the right of
ing about 80 percent of conuact ly will kill the company than its senior employees to bump more
creditors."
pay levels.
· junior workers ftom their jobs.
Saying it was facing losses of
The negotiations began less than
UP1 has about 600 employees in
a week after UPI asked the courts $485,000 per month, UPI told the
140 bureaus in the United States
to grant it bankruptcy protection union it wants to continue the cur·
and overseas, down from a reported
rent salary freeze through next June
for the second time in six yea.rs.
1,600 before its purchase by
The two sides plan to meet 30, instead of allowing it to expire Jnfotechnology in 1988.
again Friday in Washington in as scheduled on Sept. 15. Monthly
In its petition filed last week in
what a company statement said was losses could increase to as much as U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New
an effon "to bring UPI to financial $700,000 if wage levels were fully York, the company said it had lia·
restored, company spokesman Milt bilities of $65.2 million and assets
viability."
''While we are seeking capital CaJll)S said.
of $22.7 million.
fsqp~ outside investors, UPI must

CINCINNATI (AP) - Agencies that police water quality will
check the Ohio River's chief mhabitants for clues to the presence of
tollic chemicals in the water.
The Ohio River Valley Water
Sanitation Commission and agen·
cies in Ohio Valley states were to
begin an annual survey of the
river's flsb population today.
The goal of the month -long
study is to estimate the fish popula·
tion and determine what toxic
chemicals they may contain and if
there are potential health risks to
people who eat the fish.
The commission is concerned
about chemical runoff pollution
from city sewer systems, farmland
and abandoned mines, executive
director AlanVlcoi1 aiil Tuesday.
Findings of the study will be
reported in February. Members of
the Cincinnati-based commission
are the U.S. government and the
states of Ohio, Illinois, Indiana,
Kentucky, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia.
Vicory said progress has been
made in building sewage treatment
plants along the river, which supplies 3 miUion people with water.
Regulators now are working to
encourage cities overhaul their
sewer systems to prevent chemical
and street runoff. The commission
also wants governments and farmen to better manage chemicals that

wash off into the river.
Vicory said fixing such prob·
!ems can be expensive. Cincinnati
is considering a $2.2 billion over·
haul of its sewer system.
"It's going to take time in order
to deal with this," Vicory said.
"But ... the fact that we are now
able to tum our attention to those
problems is an indication of the
progress that we've made."
Toxic substances found in the
river also include polychlorinated
biphenyls, once widely used in
transformer cooling fluids, and
chlordane, a chemical used in pest
control, Vicory said. Although their
use has been banned for years, they

are still found in the tissue of carp
and catfish.
Richard Sahli, executive direc·
tor of the Ohio Environmental
Council, said environmental regu.
lators must begin reducing urban .
and agricultural runoff. He said
Ohio needs stronger laws control·
ling pesticide and fertilizer al.'plica·
tions, and stricter monitormg of
how these chemicals affect groundwater.
Sahli said Ohio should follow
an example set by Iowa, which ·
taxes pesticide purchases. The
money generated by the tax fund a
study of how farmers could rely
less on chemical use.

Gov. Voinovich
hopes to curb
illegal dumping
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich is seeking
an agreement with New Jersey to
curb the illegal dumping of that
state's garbage in Ohio.
In a letter sent Tuesday to New
Jersey Gov. James Florio,
Voinovich said Ohio Environmen·
tal Protection Agency records show
that 500,835 tons of solid waste
from New Jersey were dumped in
Ohio in 1990.
But Voinovich said New Jersey
records could account for only
113,714 tons being sent to Ohio in
1990.
..\'We are quite concerned not
only with the amount of illegal
solid waste that is coming into
Ohio from New Jersey, but also
with the amount of hazardous
waste that may be included,''
Voinovich said.
"I have repeatedly said that I
strongly suppon federal legislation
that allows the states to control
dumping of out-of-state waste. I
Continued on page 3

RAC truck
involved in
fatal wreck
. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A 5-ton roll of aluminum fell
off a tractor-trailer on Interstate 64
and crushed a car, killing a Virginia man who was a passenger and
injuring the driver, authorities said.
Thomas M. Hamer, 26, of Way·
nesboro, died in Tuesday's acci·
dent, said County Coroner Willard
Daniels.
The driver, Eileen Dugan, 23, of
Berea, Ky .• was in critical condi·
tion with multiple trauma today at
Cabell Huntington Hospital, oursContinued on page 3

INSPECTION CONTINUES ·Inspectors rrom the West VIrginia Department of Highways began inspection on the Shadle
Bridge in Point Pleasant Tuesday. According to a spokesperson In
Charleston, the inspection is just a routine inspection that Is
required by law every two years. (OVP photo by Dan Adkins.)

---Local briefs--crothing collected for family
Clothing is being collected for the family of Marvin and Julie
Cremeans whose East Main Street, Pomeroy, residence was darnaged by fue Monday. The Cremeans family resided in the property
owned by John Hunnell.
Mrs. Cremeans wears a size 34-36 pants and large tops and Mr.
Cremeans, 34 waist, 32 length pants and a medium shirt. The chil·
dren's
sizes are Jeremy, 16 husky medium men's, Andy, 4T, and Sean, 34.
32 pants and large shirts. Anyone with clothing or household items
to contribute to the family may contact Anna Cremeans, Route 2,
Colloway Ridge, Tuppers Plains, 667-3238, or John Hunnell, High
Stree~ Pomeroy, 992-3027.

Stump house damaged by fire
A Pomeroy residence was damaged in a Tuesday morning house
fire, the cause of which has been deemed to be a wood burner.
The suucture, located at II Fisher Street. was the propeny of
Contlaued on paae 3

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