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                  <text>Page--1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

TUesday, September 10, 1991 '

Whither the weather? For 200 years,
the answer is check the almanac

HOAX? Two men have claimed responsibility
for creating these circular patterns in a wheat
field in Southern England, according to the London tabloid 'Today: The men say that they used

By MARGARET LILLARD
Associated Press Writer
CONCORD, N.H. (AP)- Born
the same year as the presidential
veto, commercially baked crackers
and the New York Stock Exchange,
The Old Farmer's Almanac is celebrating its 200th anniversary as it
observed the last 199.
Once again, there's no shortage
of odd tales , recipes and weather
forecasts for tlle coming year.
Quaint constancy is tlle endearing feature of the yellow-bound
volume that evolved from a slim
booklet created in 1792 by Raben
B. Thomas, a bookseller, teacher
and amateur astronomer from what
is now West Boylston, Mass.
Botll the original and the 1992
anniversary edition contain
"recipes, articles both current and
historical, advice, an odd assortment of useful and rather useless
information, gardening hints and
yes, weatller forecasts," reads the
forward in the glossy bookstore
edition of the newest almanac.
It was being released late Monday.
The new almanac "is once in a
lifetime, in our view," said editor
Judson D. Hale at his office in

four-foot planks with rope reins to natten the
wheat and produce the circles wbicb have puzzled scientists since they rll'st appeared in 1990.
(AP)

Dublin, N.H. "It really is a sweep
of the last 200 years and a look at
tlle next200."
Features includes 200 years of
favorite dessen recipes and an article that tells how to set up a 1792
garden.
A book gleaning the best of the
200 editions is being released;Tuesday.
The Old Farmer's Almanac isn't
the only almanac , however. It isn't
even the only one celebrating an
anniversary.
In Maine, The FaTmers'
Almanac, whose I75th anniversary
edition just came out, marked the
event by venturing into politics,
suggesting national elections be
changed from Tuesdays to Sundays.
Unlike its New Hampshire rival,
with two versions for newsstand
and bookstore sales. the 48-page
Maine almanac is sold to banks,
insurance companies and other
businesses that place tlleir imprint
on it and give it away.
While acknowledging that the
New Hampshire almanac can claim
to be first on the scene, tlle younger
rival's editor for 58 years, 81-yearold Ray Geiger, says longevity

isn't everything.
"We admit they're older, and
we're a Johnny-come-lately. But a
Studebaker is older tllan a Cadillac,
and who would buy a Studebaker?" Geiger said last week at his
Lewiston, Maine, office.
Hale shrugs his shoulders at
Geiger and otller competitors.
''There are lots of imitators that
have come out," he said. "I can't
get too angry at them . I'd much
prefer to be us and be imitated than
the other way around."
The similarities between the two
almanacs arc marked. Weather is a :
staple, and both feature a year's
worth of forecasts.
Farmers' Almanac prognosticator Caleb Weatherbee said tlle coming winter will bring moderate temperatures and more rain than snow.
The sum'mer of '92 will be stormy
and turbulent, he said.
Richard Head of The Old
Farmer's Almanac agrees the winter will be considerably warmer
than normal east of the Mississippi
River and in the eastern Great
Plains. The rest of the country will
see below-normal temperatures, he
predicted.

Ohio Lottery

Hoople picks
Cardinals
over OSU

Major Hoople's

Pick 3:175
Pick4: 5289
Cards : 2-H, 2-C
5-D;9-S

Page 5

Vol. 42, No. 90

Copyrighted 1991

card for 37 years.
Or Charlie MacArthur up in
Maine, an advocate of energy selfsufficiency who built a car that
runs on chicken fat and a furnace
that burns dirty diapers.
Then tllere was t1le bandit who
robbed $4,000 from a bank in Connecticut and spent 75 cents to make
his getaway on a city bus.
New Hampshire raises $2,000 a
year auctioning the pelts of road
kill.
The state's health department
saved 10 times that amount by
using a urinalysis machine
designed for horses at t1le Rockingham Park race track for people
instead. That backfired when one
person was mistakenly diagnosed
as having equine encephalitis, a
disease that afflicts horses, because
of mixed-up urine samples.
When members of the Trinity
Episcopal Church in Hartford,
Conn., needed to restore the churth
organ they organized the Pigeon
Poop Brigade, cleaned droppings
from the bell tower and sold the
stuff as fertilizer for $1 per pound.
Rosa Patoine of Hardwick, Vt.,
collected 545 discarded plastic
bread bags, cut them into strips and
braided a rug that won ftrSt prize at
tlle county fair.
Thriftiness runs in tlle blood of

Meigs board reviews
food service program

New Englanders, and is extolled by
Yankee authors. In "Walden,"
Henry David Thoreau exhorted
readers to exist simply and economically so tlley could "Jive deep
and suck out all the marrow of life

.

Lydia Maria Child's "The
American Frugal Housewife,"
published in 1828, advises that ear
wax can soothe chapped lips, and
pig heads make good cheap eats,
especially tlle cheeks.
Clark theorizes that New Englanders grew thrifty because of
their unyielding environment.
" It's not the greatest farmland
in the world," Clark said. "The
growing season is shon, and natural resourtes aren't abundant So an
ethic grew up about not wasting
anything."
Of course, there's a fine line
between thriftiness and being a
tightwad, and the magazine
recounts some infamous misers.
Child stepped over the line
when she wrote: "It is a great deal
better for tlle boys and girls on a
farm to be picking blackberries at ,
six cents a quan tllan to be wearing
out their clothes in useless play."
Multimillionaire Hetty Green of
Vermont spent so much time looking for a free clinic after her son
was hurt in a sledding accident that
the boy's leg had to be amputated.

Sixteen abortion protesters convicted
By MARILYNN WHEELER
Associated Press Writer
FARGO, N.D. (AP) - A ftred
Minnesota police chief was among
16 members of an anti-abortion
group convicted Monday on misdemeanor charges three montlls alter
they occupied North Dakota's only
abortion clinic.
The members of the Lambs of
Christ anti-abortion group had been
scheduled for trial July 30, but the
trial was postponed when they
refused to cooperate. Eight of the
24 people involved in tlle May 31
protest at the Fargo Women's
Health Organization clinic were
convicted previously.
Under a plea agreement Monday, the seven women and nine
men agreed to tlle facts presented
by Cass County Assistant State's

Attorney Connie Cleveland.
East Judicial District Judge
Georgia Dawson found all defendants guilty of criminal trespass
and preventing arrest, botll misdemeanors. Criminal mischief
charges were dismissed against
three of the defendants.
The protesters say their prior
refusal to walk or speak symbol·
ized the helplessness of the fetuses
tlley are trying to protect. Seventynine of the group's members have
been arrested in a series of four
protests at tlle Fargo clinic, tlle only
place in North Dakota that per·
forms abortions.
Cleveland said she would seek
the maximum sentence of 120
days . The protesters already have
been jailed 102 days.

Because of that jail time,
Michael Gerrety was f1red as police
chief of Redwood Falls, Minn.,
after being absent from his job for
six weeks. He has appealed his dismissal and a hearing is scheduled
on Sept. 16.
"What went on in the courtroom made me want to throw up,
considering the nature of the
crime," his wife, Paula Gerrety
said. "They're not hard core criminals. They're people who care
about human life. I think they're
being mistreated.''
According to the evidence. 24
protesters burst into tlle clinic carrying two heavy metal boxes and
several metal pipes. They scattered
throughout the building and locked
themselves together. It took several
hours for locksmiths to free them.

MAKING PROGRESS - Construction of
the $1.2 million expansion of the Meigs County
Department of Human Services is right on targel, according to Michael Swisher, director.
While funding for the construction came from
the state, the building is owned by tbe county
and wiU be leased to the Department of Human
Services. Wesam is the general contractor on the

Vallejo, Calif. Seventy-six cadets toured the
park on the last day of their visit to the Bay
Area before continuing on their training cruise
around tbe world. (AP)

wasn't tlle greatest.
As cameras rolled, a double pre·
tended to get his tongue stuck on a
freezer that the crew had brought
in. "A ugh!" he groaned, on tiptoe
at tlle freezer. "Augh!" he repeated for about 30 seconds.
"Cut," said Director Mark
Cole. "Try to make it natural.
You're not frustrated in the beginning. Where's tlle dry ice?"
On the set, the director called
take after take, hour after hour.
Five crew members scrambled

around the cramped kitchen fetching dry ice or getting ready for the
next shot.
Duane 's 2·year-old niece,
Melissa Garman, had a starring
role. Duane was looking in the
freezer for something to eat Aug.
18 when he bent over to yell at his
niece for trying to climb into the
freezer.
When he realized his tongue
was stuck, he told his niece to drag
her high chair to the telephone,
climb up, get the receiver and bring
it to him. He dialed 911.

Twiggy recalls modeling days Church to hold
Twiggy has since added several
NEW YORK (AP) -Twiggy
has some fond memories of her pounds and an acting career to her homecoming
days as a model, when Andy resume . She has a 12-year-old
Warhol dubbed her "tlle new-style
girl of '67" and her androgynous
look was all the rage.
"It was better than going to
school," the 42-year-old former
model says in the October ISsue of
Lear magazine. "I was suddenly
being whisked around the world
wearing these wonderful clothes,
working with people who were
wonderful and spoiled me to death:
"I could have gone
.. on, but It
was madness, reall Y·

daughter, Carly, and is married to
actor Leigh Lawson.
Her next role is a foray into television in "Princesses," which
debuts on CBS tllis fall.
"In TV, the script is changing
from day one," she said. " You
don't get the final draft until the
night before the shoot, which is
done in front of an audience. I've
been on Broadway, but I'd never
done anytlling like this."

The annual homecoming of tlle
Mt. Hermon United Brethren in
Christ Churth, Texas Community,
will be held on Sundily. Sunday
school will begin at 9:30 a.m. and
worship service at 10:30 a.m. to be
followed by a noon dinner in the
fellowship hall.
The afternoon service will be
held at 1:30 p.m. with The Gru~b
Family of Gallipolis as the special
singers. The Rev. Robert Sanders,
pastor, invites tllc public to attend.

Enrollment

1990-91

I
•
I
•
BE ON THE LOOK OUT•••

0

UNIVERSITY' OF RIO GRANDE ENROLLMENT GROWTH ·&amp;IDee 1987, enroUment at the
Unlveralty of Rio G11111de hal lDcreued by over 20 percent. The number of atudenta
attencUn&amp; Rio Gl'Ulde thl8 faD totall1,998, with 813 enrolled lD the private university
ud 1,385 lD the community coneae.

A record fall enrollment of
1,998 students at the University of
Rio Grande reflects tlle continuing
physical and programmatic growtll
of the institution and a growing
awareness by residents of southeastern Ohio of the importance of

hi~her education, says the university s president.
Rio Grande has experienced
steady enrollment growth since the
late 1970s, with the most significant increase occurring over the
past five years - an overall growth

...---Local briefs _ _,
Eastern board to meet Thursday
A special meeting of the Eastern Local Board of Education has
been scheduled for 4 p.m. Thursday ai Eastern High School. Purpose of the meeting is to discuss personnel.

School's bock in session and in the excitement of the new school year,
many school-age children, especially the young ones, may forget to look
both ways when crossing the street or exiting the school bus.
That leaves it up to you as a driver, to be extra careful around schoolyards, neighborhood ploy areas, and departing school buses.
So remember ... when you see yellow, be sure to see red-as in red
alert. Let's all slow down and give our children the chance they deserve.

The Daily Sentinel

'
---· ~----------------~--~-~---------------------

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
The ARA food service program
in Meigs Local schools and the
proposed increase in a Ia carte
prices were reviewed at a meeting
of tlle Meigs Local Board of Education Tuesday night.
Sharon Saylor, ARA food service director, met with tlle board to
discuss tlle program and the price
increases. The increases from 90
cents to $1 apply only to sandwiches, piz za and all other entrees
offered in the school lunch pro·
gram.
As explained by Mrs. Saylor, if
1he a Ia carte price is the same as a
Type A lunch, $1.15, three components of a nutritious lunch (milk,
bread and protein), then the student
can select a fruit and a vegetable
witllout additional cost. This then
qualifies the a Ia carte selections as
a Type A lunch and makes it reim -

bursable from the state, she said,
and at the same time provides more
nutritious lunch for the student.
Last year there was a $81 ,000
deftcit in the school lunch program.
Fenton Taylor, high school principal, indicated tllat he felt the students were not aware of the options
of taking the fruit and vegetable
without cost when choosing from
the a Ia carte menu . Information
sheets will be prepared and provided to tlle students, it was dCCidcd.
Mrs. Saylor said that in May at
Meigs High School, the average
number of students taking a Type
A lunch was 268, while the average
so far this year has been 304: at the
junior high 168 last year to 263 this
year, and at Salisbury School, 95
last year to 93 tllis year. These fig ures do not include students scl(!\:t·
ing a Ia carte.
A discussion was held on holding over food from one day to the

next with Mrs. Saylor pointing out
that safe practices are carried out in
maintaining correct temperatures
and storage techniques. She said
tllat food is never served more tllan
a second time.
Nutrition education and a student survey to determine food preferences are among her goals for
tllis fall , Mrs. Saylor said.
The board agreed to release the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Phelps
to the Alexander School District.
Mr. and Mrs. Phelps met witll tlle
board last night to explain the problems they have encountered with
the bus being unable to negotiate
their road in Scipio Township in
the winter time. They said there
were eight or nine days last winter
when tlle bus did not appear to pick
up their son. The Alexander bus
which travels another direction and
docs not encounter the same road
Continued ~n page 3

Supreme Court nominee Thomas
stays mum on abortion issue
WASHINGTON (AP)
Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas refuses to discuss abortion
in his Senate confirmation hearings, but he's backing away from
earlier comments tllat liberals said
indicated he would vote to ban tlle
procedure.
. .
Thomas, under questiOning
Tuesday, said for the first time that
he believes in a constitutional righJ
of privacy. And he said his belief in
"natural law," a theory his opponents say could be invoked to outlaw abortion , would never affect
his judging of constitutional cases .

Today 's leadoff questioner, Sen.
Howard Mctzenbaum. D·Ohio,
said he would try to zero in on the
conscrvati ve Thomas' aborllon
views. "I'm going to start out on
the area of women's rights," he
said.
When the Senate Judiciary
Committee voted to confirm
Thomas as a federal appeals court
judge last year, Metzenbaum cast
the only vote against him.
Thomas, if confirmed, would
become tlle Supreme Coun's 106th
justice and its second black. He
would replace the retiring Thur-

good Marshall, the court's only
black -and most liberal - mem ber.
Thomas told the Judiciary Committee at Tuesday's opening hearing that it would be inappropriate
for him to discuss in any detail the
Supreme Court's Roe vs. Wade
deci sion that legalized abortion in
1973.
But when asked by Sen. Orrin
Hatch, R-Utah. whether he has
made up his mind to try to reverse
that ruling, which bore on tlle right
to privacy, Thomas replied: "I
Continued on page 3

Chamber supports retention of
lOth Congressional District

Affordability, programs spur
record fall enrollment at Rio

Recreating frozen tongue mishap no fun
ALTOONA, Pa. (AP)- When
it came time to re-create the day
Duane Della got his tongue stuck in
a freezer, the 14-year-old was
lucky enough to avoide re-cnduring
the ordeal.
. The television show ' 'Rescue
911" provided tlle stand-in tongue
on a stand-in actor. The show
recreated Duane's sticky situation
1~ weekend for broadcast later on.
Ouane was mum after a ';'}cek end of taping at his house . He
would say only tllat the experience

job. The new building will allow consolida~ion ?f
all operations or the department resultmg m
lower utility and other costs to the Department.
While tbe entire project will not be completed
until early spring, certain areas will be finished
in mid-December allowing some offices to move
in at tbat time, Swisher said.

·G rande
SOVIET CADETS - Visiting cadets from the
Soviet Union's training ship "Pallada" are
entertained by Jolyn, a 7-year-old female
orangutan held by trainer Kirk Loveland Monday afternoon at Marine World Africa USA in

2 Secllono, 16 Pages 25 cento
A Mulllmedla Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio. Wednesday, September 11, 1991

Frugal Yankees do almost
anything to save a buck
By TONY ROGERS
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - New Hampshire auctions road kilL A Connecticut church paid for a new
organ by hawking pigeon droppings from tllc belfry. And a Vermont motller of 16 braided a rug of plastic bread bags,
New England frugality is legendary, and Yankee magazine
devotes its entire September issue
to t1le topic wilh columns, tips and
even a frugality contest. First
prize? A some-expenses-paid trip
to t1le road kill auction.
Managing Editor Timotlly Clark
said tlle magazine has had special
issues every September for about
five years,
"Last year we did sex in New
England, a very thin issue,'' he
said,
This year, with tlle economy in a
quagmire, editors of the monthly
based in Dublin, N.H., decided an
issue devoted to thriftiness was in
order.
"If there was ever a time we
needed New England frugality, tllis
is it," Clark said. "We wanted to
explore whether it's a myth, and
see what examples we could find."
There's brother and sister Dick
Chasse and Ramona Clavette, in
Connecticut, who have been
exchanging the same Christmas

Low tonight tn mid 60s.
Thursday, parlly cloudy. High tn
tower 80s.

Teeninjuredinwreck
A Racine girl received minor injuries in an accident Thursday
evening on Letart Township Road 98.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of tlle State
Highway Patrol, Carrie A. Gloeckner, 17, of East Letart Road,
Racine, was soutllbound on T.R.. 96 when her car slid off the right
side of tlle road. It slid back across the road, went off tlle left side
and ovenurned down an embankment into some trees.
The Racine Squad of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service transported Gloeckner to Veterans Memorial Hospital where
she was treated and released.
Damage to Gloeckner's 1986 Oldsmobile Cutlass was listed as
heavy and disabling.
Altllough the patrol cited unsafe speed on the rain-slick road as a
contributing factor, no citations were issued.
Continued on page 3

of more than 20 percent.
"A number of fa ctor s arc
responsible for the growth," said
Dr. Barry M. Dorsey, president of
the University of Rio Grande, "at a
time when some campuses
throughout the nation arc begmning
to experience enrollment declines."
"The na1ure of the institution.
the programs and facilities we have
available, and the uniqueness of
Rio Grande as both a private four year university and public two-year
community college arc very attractive to students.
"In addition, Rio Grande's
affordability, accessibility and program diversity arc primary draws
for students," Dorsey noted.
In recent years, the university
has added a number of new,majors
and has moved aggressively to construct facilities to meet tlle needs of
students. Six building projects arc
currently underway on campus.
"The traditional student seeking
a four-year degree sees Rio Grande
as a vital, growing institution, with
a wide range of quality programs,"
Mark Abell, executive director of
admi~sions and records, said.
"Students considering a twoyear degree will come to Rio
Grande because it offers a traditional college experience not possible at other community collegestlle chance to live in a dormitory,
become involved in a full slate of
Continued on page 3

Thirty-nine people were in
anendance when the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce met in full
session on Tuesday evening at
Sonya's Country Kitchen near
Racine. The meeting was co-sponsored by Sonya Wolfe and National
Gas and Oil.
Richard Jacobs , President and
CEO of National Gas and Oil and
Jack Harnett, Vice President and
Chief Operating Officer, presented
information abcut the operation of
National Gas and Oil throughout
Ohio and in Meigs County.
In addition to their talk, the
company made a $250 donation to
the chamber's general opcratmg
budget.
Resolution passed
The chamber adopted a resolution at tlle meeting supponing tlle
retention of the IOth Congressional
District now represented by U.S.
Congressman Clarence E. Miller
(R-Lancaster).
The district has frequently been
targeted as one of two distri~ts. to
be eliminated in the re-dtstncong
process. although no new lines
have been drawn yet. The process
is now underway in light of the
population loss in Ohio reflected in
tlle 1990 census.
"The lOth Con~ressional District is a district wh1ch is consistent
in make-up ... whose counties share
tlle same social and economic concerns," tlle resolution says.
"The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce expresses its desires to
continue under the representation
of tlle !Otll District as it is presently
comprised, which has historically
repreented the counties within, who
share common needs and interest."
"Therefore," tlle resolution continues, "tlle Meigs County Chamber of Commerce urges tlle Ohio
Assembly to enact a bill to retain
the JOtll Con~ressional District of
Ohio and mamtain representation
for Southeastern Ohio."
Otber programs
It was announced that Executive
Chamber Director Elizabeth
Schaad has been appointed Re~ion­
al Coordinator of Ohio Busmess

Week, a one-week program that
aims to teach high school sophomores and juniors tlle "inside story
on business operations and principles of the free enterprise system.
The program will take place at
Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio
in July, 1992.
Schaad reponed that she would
be coordinating scholarships for
local participants.
The chamber met its fundraising
goal of $1,000 on a recent golf outing, and otllcr fundraising projects
are also underway , including a
sternwheeler crui se giveaway
scheduled for the Big Bend Stemwheeler Festival in October.
Details about a "Start-Up
Basics" small business workshop
were announced. That program will
take place on September 17, under
tlle co-sponsorship of the chamber

and the Small Business Development Center and Management
Development Division of the College of Business at Ohio University.
The program will be co-hosted
by Schaad and Marianne Vermeer.
Registration fee is $15 and pre-registration through the chamber
office is required for all partici pants.
It was announced that Mctgs
Health Services and Creative Contractors had joined the chamber
since the la st full meeting. Other
new members joining in August
were Hawk' s 76 Station in Tuppers
Plains and David Harris of
Pomeroy.
Schaad reponed that new memberships for tlle remainder of the
calendar year arc being offered at a
pro-rated $15.

DONATION MADE - A $250 donation was made to tbe Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce at Tuesday night's full chamber
meeting by National. Gas and ~il. Pictured at the presentatio~ are
National Gas and 01l CEO R1chard .Jacobs, and Chamber Dll'ector Elizabeth Schaad. (Sentinel Photo by Da~id Harris)

-

�Wednesday, September 11, 1991

Commentary

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--3

\

O HIO Weather
Page-2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, September 11, 1991

Accu-Weathe~ forecast for daytime conditions and high

Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON ARBI\

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETI

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

General Manager
Pi\T WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publlsher/C ontroller
A MEMBER o!The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers·Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters aro subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good lasle, addressing Issues. not persona II ·

ties.

Small town rallies
to fund strapped
school's activities

t

I

By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
BLOOMDALE (AP) - On most Friday nights in the fall, talk in
this northwest Ohio farming community centers on the fonunes of the
Elmwood High School footba!J team.
But for a time this summer, there was little hope that Elmwood
would field a team because of the district's financial problems.
A group of community leaders, however, raised enough money to
continue extracurricular activities- at least through the fall.
That's good news for Steve Bish, a community leader whose son,
Andy , plays on the football team.
" The community has responded fantastically to our fund-raising
efforts.'' said Bish , a customer service manager for Seneca Wire.
"We'll have football and other activities Ibis fall. But after that, we
just don't know."
The 1,350-pupil district in Wood County has asked voters four
times in 18 months to help the schools. AJI four issues failed.
The school board has placed a 0.75 percent income tax issue on the
November ballot. It would generate $404,295 annually for the next
five years.
"Extracurricular activities would resume if the income tax passes.
but there 's not enough to bring back the personnel we lost," Superin·
tcndent Kenneth Hawley said.
The district, facing a projected $237,000 deficit, cut all extracurricular activities, high school busing and laid off some employees.
Over the summer, community leaders raised about $40,000 to
restore extracurricular activities for the fall term, high school Principal
Harold Bower said. The effon means the school will have football and
volleyball as well as marching band and other activities, Bower said.
About $28,000 must be raised by November to restore winter athlet·
ics and other programs, he said.
Bish said his group raised money by holding car washes, auctions
and asking businesses and Elmwood alumni for financial support.
There also was a cow patty drop that raised $20,000.
He said people in the community are willing to suppon activities
outside the classroom even though the ballot issues have failed.

My first thought upon hearing
that Vi ce President Dan Quayle
had addressed the American Bar
Association convention in Atlanta
recently was that it must have been
a hilarious affair. With an estimat·
ed 10,600 lawyers in attendance,
that meant that 10,60 1 of the most
joked-about people in America
were gathered under one roof.
(Why do sharks not bite
lawyers? Professional courtesy.
What' s a Dan Quayle savings
account? No interest, no maturity.)
Funny thing is, what Quayle had
to say was anything but humorous:
The country is suffocating under a
dense cloud of litigation. Too many
lawyers are filing too many law·
suits .
There are 729,000 lawyers in
the Uni1ed States, 70 percent of the
total world supply. They rack up
$80 billion a year in direct litigation costs, $300 billion if you add
indirect costs. The courts are overburdened, insurance is all but unaf·
fordable, industry is inen with fear
of being sued.
It sometimes seems like everybody is suing somebody:
In Washington, D.C., a driver

crashed while being chased by the
police, then climbed atop a.mailbox
and informed his pursuers they
couldn 't arrest him because he was
on federal property. The officers
took him in. He sued.
In Ventura, Calif, a woman flied
a $1 million lawsuit against a veterinarian wbo allegedly injured her
pet iguana.
In Portland, Ore, a grocery store
cashier sued a fellow cashier for
passing gas in his direction. The
defendant mounted a First Amendment defense and was granted a
dismissal.
Like a few million other people
in the country, I have a personal
tale of woe. During a 20-year
career with columnist Jack Anderson. 1 was involved in perhaps a
dozen lawsuits. All were frivolous,
of course.
Some plaintiffs were so litigious
they would sue at the very mention
of their names. Once, we were sued
for breach of oral contract by a private eye who claimed we had
promised to use his story and
didn't. Put another way, we not
only got sued for things we wrote,
but also for things we didn't write.

Even more ridiculous than the
nature of many lawsuits is the
solemnity with which they are
treated. Complaints are served, the
"discovery" process is begun,
motion after motion is filed and
argued. The private eye's ludicrous
case against Anderson and your
correspondent dragged on for over
a year and ended only when the
plaintiff suddenly died. It's all part
of the great American tradition that
everyone - beg~er, baker, broker
-is entitled to hts day in court.
When Quayle went before the
ABA with his complaints, he car·
ricd a list of more than 35 proposed
remedies prepared by the Presi·
dent's Council on Competitiveness.
The most important would stream·
line the discovery process, limit
punitive damages, urge settlement
of disputes through arbitration and
require the losers in certain types of
lawsuits to pay legal and court
costs. The latter, often called the
English Rule, is extremely effective in discouraging frivolous suits.
All these are ideas whose time
came a decade ago and ought to be
adopted immediately.
I would add yet another: Judges

"HOORAY - finished at last"'

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 11, the 254th day of 1991. There are Ill
days left in the year. ·
Today's Highlight in Histay:
Fifty years ago, on Sept 11, 1941, in a speech that sparked charges of
anti-Semitism, aviation hero Charles A. Lindbergh said in Des Moines
that "the British, the Jewish and the Roosevelt administration" were try·
ing to draw the United States into World War II, and that Jewish groups
should ~ the prospect of war instead of "agilating" for it. (Lind·
· bergh denied being an anti-Semite, but never withdrew his statements.)
On this date:
In 1777 during the American Revolution, forces under Gen. George
Washington suffered defeat at the hands of the British in the Battle of
Brandywine near Wilmington, Del.
In 1789, Alexander Hamilton was appointed the fust U.S. secretary of
theIn
Treasury.
.
.
.. h.m
1814, an American fleel scored a dec'ISive
VICtory
over the Bnus
the Baule of Lake Champlain in the War of 1812.
In 1850, Jenny Lind, the "Swedish Nightingale," gave her fust conccnin the' United States, at Castle Garden in New York.
In 1885, author D.H. Lawrence was born in Eastwood, England.
In 1936, President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated Boulder Dam now Hoover Dam -by pressing a key in Washington to signal the start·
up of the dam's fust hydroelectric genc:rator in Nevada.
In 1944, President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston
ChJXthill met in Canada at the,second Quebec Conference.
In .1971, 20 years ago, f(l'lller Soviet leader Nikita Kluushchev died of
a heart auack at the age of77.
In 1973, Chilean President Salvador Allende died in a violent military

C~- 1978, Georgi Markov, a Bulgarian defector, died at a British hospi·

tal four days after he was SUibbed by a man wielding a poisoned wnbrella
tip.

e

IMansfield I 79•1•

should be urged to show the door
to off-the-wall plaintiffs . How
would you deal wtth a group of litigants who sued the Maharishi
Mahesh Yogi because he promised
to teach them to levitate and "fly"
but only got them to the point that
they could "hop"? How long
would it lake you to kick them out
of the courtroom and tell them to
call United?
Why does Washington have the
highest concentration ·of lawyers
and New Jersey the highes.t concentration of toxic dumps? New
Jersey got first choice.
Why do foreigners yell "Long
Live Bush!" when the president
visits their countries? They know
about Quayle, too.
What did the columnist say
when he looked down and saw that
he was standing in a pile of freshly
deposited horse stuff? "Oh, my
God, I'm melting." (That last one
is what we call a preemptive
maneuver.)

'-:, IColumbus I 81' I

'

W. VA .

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Sunny

Vi.t Associated Press GrapticsNt~t

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Cll991 Accu·Wealher, Inc .

-----Weather----Soutb-Central Obio
Tonight, panly cloudy. Low 60
to 65. Loght northeast winds
becoming east. Thursday, partly
cloudy. High in the lower 80s.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Extended forecast:

Friday through Sunday
A chance of showers or thunderstorms Friday and Saturday. Fair
Sunday. Highs upper 70s to mid
80s Friday and Saturday and in the
70s on Sunday. Lows mid 50s to
mid 60s.

.----Local briefs... ----.

~BoUT WHY THe~e.'S So
MUCH 'liol.et-tce., ~ND
THiNG$ \JUST GoT

Continued from page 1

EMS units answer six calls

HaND!

Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered
six calls for assistance on Tuesday and early on Wednesday.
At 9:05 a.m. on Tuesday, Pomeroy squad was sent to Country
Mobile Home Park for Samuel Ziegler. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 10:16 a.m., Syracuse unit was sent to Third
Street. Helen Williams was iaken to Veterans.
At 5: II p.m., Pomeroy unit went to Meigs High School. David
Fetty was transponed to Veterans. At 5:49 p.m., Tuppers Plains
squad went to State Route 7. Glenna Shon was iaken to Veterans.
At 6:50 p.m., Pomeroy unit was sent to Anne Street. Hattie Hysell
was transported to Veterans.
At 2:45 a.m. on Wednesday, Pomeroy squad responded to Nyc
Avenue. Heinz Coates was iaken to Veterans.

Stolen motorcycle recovered

;

••

While the primary task of any
legislative body is to make changes
to existing laws to improve their
purpose and application, changes
oftentimes come about as a result
of special study comminees. During the course of any General
Assembly, study committees are
formed by the Legislature as either
a result of the Legislature's reaction to a crisis or to develop longrange policy planning.
During this last year of the General Assembly, several task forces
and study committees were formed
by the General Assembly, of which
I have been appointed as a mem ber. This Weekly Report will
examine those study commiuees
and their particular goals.
Earlier this year, Senator Scott
Oclslagcr introduced a bill that
would dramatically change the
structure and jurisdiction of county
boards of education and county
school districts. Because of the
magnitude of such a change, this
bill was assigned to a Senate Edu·

cation Sub-Committee, chaired by
Senator Oelslager and consisting of
Senator Dick Schafrath, as well as
myself. Over the course of the next
several weeks, we will be examin·
ing the function of today' s county
school districts, whether or not
changes should be made to address
any current circumstances and if
so,
what changes would be beneficial.
Several different plans have
been laid out for discussion, ranging from a complete consolidation
of the existing county school district structure to an "open market"
concept. Our sub-commiuee will
be receiving substantial testimony
over the next several weeks so that
a substitute version of any legislation can be offered back to the full
Senate Education Committee for
perhaps consideration later on this
year.
Another special task force that
has recently been formed as a result
of Legislative efforts is one that
deals with veterans' issues. Spccifi-

cally, a Special Legislative Committee, of which I am a member,
has been created to examine the
existing Veterans Service Commission structure. With the focus on
veterans as a result of our returning
Persian Gulf War soldiers, a
renewed emphasis upon meeting
the· needs of our State's veterans
has rightfully been brought to the
State forefront. There is no question that our State Government
should continue to insure that our
laws are appropriately meeting the
needs of our veterans. As a member, my focus will be to make sure
that whatever chant:(es are su,tU!est·
ed will first focus on the needs of
Ohio veterans and the best and
appropriate system that we can
devise to meet those needs. I anticipate substantial input from all
across the State so that legislative
recommendations may be dis cussed early next year.
Finally, a Joint Senate-House
Study Committee has been formed
to examine Ohio's racing industry.

Sen. Jan Long
Statistics have demonstrated that
Ohio's horse racing industry has
declined over the past several
years. Many will suggest that this
is in part due to our border states'
competitiveness in terms of offtrack betting facilities. Consequent·
ly, the horse race task force will
examine the options of Ohio
expanding to provide for simulcast
betting or off-track betting, as
already provided for by Pennsylvania and Kentucky.
In the interest of finding the best
solutions that meet the needs of the
17th Senate District, I welcome
your comments and thoughts on
these study commiuee issues.
Please feel free to express your
comments on these issues and oth·
ers by writing to me: State Senator
Jan Michael Long, Ohio Senate •
Statehouse, Columbus, OH 43215
or by calling me at (61 4)466-81
56.

A motorcycle stolen in August from a cabin near Horse Cave has
been recovered
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that a Carmel
Road resident had been in the woods near his home when he found
the bike lying on a trail. It is believed that the cycle had run out of
gasoline.
Tom Wolfe had reported the cycle missing from his cabin last •
month.

Thefts investigated
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating two
thefts reported late last week.
On Saturday, the department was notified by Raymond Werry of
Chester that his father-in-law's 14-foot aluminum boat had been
~tolen from his campsite on State Route 338 across from
Ravenswood Aluminum.
According to the repon, the boat had been chained and locked to
a tree.
It was located tied to a tree on shore at Tanner's Run Creek.
Lola Clark of Harrisonville reported Saturday afternoon that
sometime during the early morning hours, someone had entered her
garage by a rear window. She reported that gasoline and a gas can
were missing from her garage.

Vehicle damaged in accident
James Hupp, 47, of Manuel Road in Racine, struck a deer on
Tuesday morrung that ran into the path of his vehicle. Light damage
was listed to the right front of his 1987 Ford pickup. The deer was
not found.

sUpfeme

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The top secret newsletter that is circu·
CIA's reputation, already taking a latcd at the highest levels of govbeating both at the White House ernment. The day before the coup,
and on Capitol Hill, was not helped the NID came out with its strongest
by the ab&lt;irtive Soviet coup. During warning yet that a coup was in the
the key 72-hour period following air. The CIA concluded that conthe attempted takeover, the intelli· servatives could not allow the new
gence agency was able to provide union treaty with the republics to
little more information to the U.S. be signed.
· Meanwhile, State Department
government than what was already
available on CNN and many news analysts were downplaying the
whole thing. Reponedly, at the speservices.
Actually, the start of the coup cific request of a high-level Nationpartially redeemed CIA analysts. In al Security Council aide who
sharp contrast to Saddam Hussein's became alarmed at the NID analyinvasion of Kuwait- which the sis, State prepared a memo that dis·
CIA flatly predicted would not agreed with the coup predictions.
happen - this time its analysts, Even if one were attempted, the
along with those from the Pen- memo insisted, Gorbachev could
·
tagon's Defense Intelligence Agen· . w,eather it.
However, while CIA analysts
cy, were about the only ones in
town who warned that a conserva- were on the correct side of the pretive rebellion against Mikhail Gor- diction th.is time, knowledgeable
Capitol Hill sources say the agency
bachev was near.
to provide timely informa·
failed
In fac~ the CIA had been soundtion
about
what was happening
ing the warning for almost a year,
·once
the
coup
started.
but in recent weeks its alarms had
While arguing that an attempted
become more urgent.
Every day the CIA publishes its takeover was becoming ever more
National Intelligence Daily - a likely, the CIA did not forecast the

actual coup. Capitol Hill sources
say the CIA has admitted it learned
of the coup the same way the rest
of the world did - from a Reuters
Actually , a small specialized
News Agency nash citing tanks publisher in Colorado provided the
rolling through the streets of U.S. government with much of its
Moscow.
inside information from the
The National Security Agency's republics during the 72 hours of the
massive communication satellites coup. DGL Publishing had ju'st
were able to pick up heavy radio · signed a deal with lnterfax - a
traffic between Red Army head- new Soviet wire service that oper·
quarters in Moscow and outlying ates by fax machine - to edit
posts. NSA analysts were able to some of Interfax's daily output into
deduce from the lack of return a newsletter to be sold to U.S. comcommunications that the general panies.
staffs pro-coup orders were probaIn the hours following the start
bly not being obeyed. This key of the coup, DGL's fax machines
information was passed along to . started spitting out reports froin
President Bush at his summer hundreds of Interfax reporters
home in Kennebunkport
located all over the Soviet Union.
Sources say that while the CIA DGL compiled these into reports
was able to get small amounts of for its regular customers - and for
information out of Moscow, it was some new ones in Washington and
rarely more than what was avail- Kennebunkpon.
able from the general media. As far
The CIA's performance during
as the rest of the Soviet Union was the fo~r days bf _the Soviet coup
concerned; including the key has raued questoons once again
republics, the CIA...)'{as even less about the return taxpayers are getable than the media tO 'deliver time- ting for the estimated $15 billion
ly information.
spent every year on the agency.

Robert J. Wagman

Con~inued from page 1

think it's inappropriate for any
judge worth h1s or her salt to prejudge an issue."
In numerous previous articles
and speeches, Thomas has
endorsed the natural-law philoso-

The Daily Sentinel
(U81'814J.Iet)
A Dlvllloa of MultlmMI•, InC!.
Publish~

Media beat CIA to Soviet coup events

o eor

every afternoon, ·Monday

throuah Friday, lll Court St .. f'&lt;&gt;.
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lllhln&amp; Company /Multimedia, Inc.,

PomoroY. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. S..
eond clau postage paid at Pomeray,
Ohio.

Member: The A.uoctated Preas, Inland Dally Press Anoctatlon and the

Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertlalnl Representative. Branham •
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

Now York. Now York 10017.

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Dally ................. ... .............. 25 Cents

By Tbe Associated Press
Ohio skies will remain at least
partly cloudy tonight despite high
pressure building into the area.
This will be due primarily to high
clouds moving east well in advance
of the next weather disturbance that
will affect Ohio. Lows tonight will
range from the middle 50s over
parts of the north to the middle 60s
south.
Clouds will be even more abundant on Thursday as the front
begins to return as a warm front
and low pressure begins to advance
east out of the central U.S. A few
showers cannot be completely
ruled out over western Ohio dupng
the afternoon hours. Highs ilhursday will again be mostly in the 70s
except near 80 in the south.
For the rest of the nation: fog
and clouds at dawn were expected
to give way to sunny skies in the
East and South. Rain was predicted
for the northern Plains.
Rain was anticipated again in

Affordability...

;

Rain

~THeY Wet\~ aRGUiNG
our C#

PA.

IND.

Study committees eye changes for future

'·

IToledo I 78° I

By Joseph Spear

Berry's World

.·

•

U. S. suffers from a pox of litigation

phy that some personal rights are
mdependent of governmental
authority. On Tuesday, he said that
endorsement was a limited one.
"I don't see a role for natural
law, or natural rights, in constitutional adjudication," Thomas testified.

Continued from page 1
campus activities, join a fraternity
or sorority," he explained.
Rio Grande has seen increased
interest from "non-traditional" stu·
dents - housewives or displaced
workers seeking new skills.
"That has accounted for a real
increase in our numbers," Dorsey
said. "The number of non-traditional students who are beginning college work or returning for job training or personal enrichment is growing and we have made a commit·
mcntto serve this population."
The average age for a Rio
Grande student is 26.
The construction of a new campus day-care center is an example
of Rio Grande's dedication to the
concept of serving non-traditional
students, he said.
Abell further credited the university's ability to provide a wide
array of scholarships and financial
aid for the institution's growth in
service.
"Nearly 80 percent of our stu·
dents receive some form of finan cial assistance ," he said. "That
assistance allows us to serve
numerous populations that previously went unserved ."
In addition, Rio Grande's growing endowment for academic scholarships has brought a significant
number of the region's "best and
brightest" to campus. Abell said.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS·
Patricia Preece, Middleport; and
Gladys Shon, Chester.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES .
Brenda King and Bertha Dill.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Sept.IO · Felicity
Blanton, Amy Bush, Pauline Davis,
Linda Fillinger, Mrs. James Gillenwater and daughter, Sampson Gale,
Mrs. Thomas Hargett and son,
Nancy Johnson, Steven Kalinchak,
Carol Knotts, James Layne, Regina
Taylor and Tammy Watkins.
Births, Sept. 10 . Mr. and Mrs.
Jackie Delaney, a daughter, Jack·
son. Mr. and Mrs. Larry McDaniel,
a son. Jackson.

northern Utah, but was expected to
diminish following four days of
record rainfall.
A tornado Tuesday whirled
through southeastern Brigham City,
destroying a shed, uprooting trees
and ripping siding off some buildings. '
·
Thunderstorms were forecast
today for Montana and parts of the
Dakotas. Rain also was expected in
parts of California and Arizona.
Temperatures in the 70s and 80s
were forecast for the East, where
highs slightly above normal were

Meigs ...

problems since it is coming from a
different direction passes near their
home.
A parent of three elementary
students met with the board to
protest the workbook charge. She
said it has created a hardship for
her to pay for the books, noting that
the kindergarten workbook alone is
$18.95.
The policy of the board regarding workbooks was explained.
Because nearly $9,000 was not
paid by parents for workbooks last
year, it was decided that parents
must make some effort to pay
before the books are issued.
Arrangements are handled through
the individual school principals,
and students are given workbooks
once a payment arrangement is
established, it was explained.
In other action Jane Fry reported
that the annual tuition this year is
$913.99 a year for Ohio
studcnts.The district now has four

No aubscrtptlons by mall permltttd In

avalljlbl•.

Mallllubo&lt;r1p41oao
Julde Motp Coualy

Cremeans reunion
Descendants of James and
Bertha Cremeans will have their
annual family reunion on Saturday
at Forest Acres Park. Dinner will
be served at noon. All family and
friends arc invited.
Rally Day
The Rock Springs United
Methodist Church will have its
annual Rally Day on Sunday. A
potluck dinner will begin at 12:30
p.m. and the afternoon program
will begin at 2:30p.m. with the
Gospel Notes. The public is invited
to auend.
Dance to be held
The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will hold a
dance Sept. 21 from 8-11 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Senior Citizens Cen·
ter with caller Bill Bumgarner, Galloway.
American Legion to meet
The American Legion Racine
Post No. 602 will sponsor ga mes
every Sunday evening beginning at
6:45 p.m. All proceeds wi II be
donated to area charitable organizations.
Dinner planned
There will be a dinner at the
Faith Full Gospel Church in Long
Bottom on Friday at 5:30 p.m. The
church will be in revival until Sat·
urday and the evangelist is Jimmy
Stewart. The public is invited to
attend.
Flame Fellowship to meet
The Flame Fellowship Chapter
will meet Tuesday at Faith Full
Gospel Church in LOng Bottom at
7 p.m. Hershel Facemyer of Nitro,
W.Va. will be the speaker. The
oublic is invited to attend.

~~5::: :::: : :::::::: m:~
Oulolde Melp Coualy

~ ~;:::: : : ·:

: :::: :::::::::: 5~

where the mercury dropped to 71
degrees. The previous record of 72
degrees was set in 1960, the day
Hurricane Donna struck the Florida
Keys.
The record high Tuesday was
set in Lake Havasu City, Ariz ..
where a reading of I 00 degrees was
reponed.
Record high for this date in
Ohio was 96 in 1895: record low
was39in 1917.
Sunrise Thursday will be at
7:08; sunset at 7:48.

dent, Jeff Werry, Bob Snowden,
Richand Vaughan, and Larry Rupe,
board members, and Jane Fry, trea·
surer.

Area deaths
Betty Nitz
Betty Jo Nitz, 48, of Pomeroy,
died Tuesday, September 10, 1991,
in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Foglesong Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements, which are
incomplete and will be announced
at a later date.

Pomeroy Court
Four were fined and eight forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night.
Fined were Gerald Arnold,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, assault,
$50 3Jld costs, public intoxication;
Rodney Clonch, Middleport, fined
$30 and costs, failure to yield right
of way; Terry Watson, Pomeroy,
$88 and costs, open flask: Wayne
Dent, Middleport, $57 and costs,
speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Johnny
Mokas. Rock Bridge, $49, speeding; Christopher Tenaglia,
Pomeroy, $43, speeding; Joseph
Griffith , McArthur, $52, speeding;
Carl Williams , Rutland, $56,
speeding; Merch I. Rife, Cheshire,
$46, speeding; Stephen Deaver,
Coolville, $43, failure to stop at a
stop sign; Beth Brown, Pomeroy,
$50, speeding; Walter Haggy II,
Rutland, $25, failure to appear.

Chicken barbecue
The Scipio Township Fire
Department will have a chicken
barbecue and tractor pull on Saturday with dinner from 1-7 p.m.
Tractor weigh-in is at 5 p.m. and
the pull starts at 6 p.m. Classes for
12 horsepower and over and 12
horsepower and under are: children, 800 pound; and adult classes,
900, I ,000, and 1,100 pounds.
Genealogical Society to meet
The Meigs County Genealogical
Society will meet Sunday at 2 p.m.
at the Meigs Museum.
Car wash to be beld
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249
will sponsor at car wash on SaturCLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
day at Pleaser's Restaurant begin· the Ohio Lottery drawing selecning at 9 a.m.
tions made Tuesday night
Group to sing
Pick 3 Numbers
The Sounds of Victory will per1-7-5
form at the Mount Olive Commu·
(one, seven, five)
nity Church in Long Bottom Pick 4 Numbers
tomght at 7 p.m.
5-2-8-9
Water to be off
(five, two, eight, nine)
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Cards
Waier District will be working on
2 (two) of Hearts
Crew Road in Pomeroy tomorrow
2 (two) of Clubs
(Thursday) between the hours of 10
5 (five) of Diamonds
a.m. and 2 p.m. to connect water m
9 (nine) of Spades
a new subdivision. Water in that
area will be off during that time.
The road will be closed but traffic
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
may operate on the by-pass.
446 4514
.. ~- .
Hymn sing
The Stiversville Word of Faith
Church in Penland will have hymn
sing on Thursday and Friday at
7:30 p.m. nightly featuring the
Sounds of Victory from Mansfield.
Pastor David Dailey invites the
public.

Lottery numbers

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Rax Resrawant .................5/P
Robbins'&amp;Mym .............. .33
Shoney's lnc ..................... 17 3/8
Star Bank ..................... ..... 21 1{2
Wendy Im't.. .....................9
Worthington Ind ............... 28 1/4
Stock rtports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewl of Gallipolis.

A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Betty Jean Moore, Middleport, and Raymond L. Moore,
Middlepon.
A dissolution action has been
granted to Timothy D. Lawrence
and Dena M. Lawrence.

tuition students.
Marlene Carpenter was granted
an unpaid leave of absence to Sept.
30, and the resignation of Carl
Morris as a substitute bus drive was
accepted. Robert G. Ashley, Jr. ,
Tonya R. Cummins, and Mary D.
Owens were put on the subslltute
teacher list for the 1991 -92 school
year.
The board approved Dave
Deem, John Merrit, Kathy Price,
and Susan Clark as volunteers to
work with the band under the
supervision of Toney Dingess,
director.
Pam Crow was granted a dock
day, the student and teacher handbooks for the 1991-92 year were
approved, and a request for permission for the FFA to attend a con vention in Kansas City, Mo., Nov.
11-17, was tabled.
An executive session to discuss
negotiations following the mcctin~ .
Attending were Bob Barton, prcso-

_Meigs announcements __

on

area• wherE' nome carrier servlct&gt; 1s

predicted from Boston to Washmgton.
Heat and humidity were ewccted to persist in the Southeas~ wt~At
highs reaching into the 90s. Highs
in the 90s also were predicted in
Texas and parts of California and
Nevada
Temperatures in the northern
half of the country west of the
Great Lakes were expected to stay
in the 60s and 70s.
A record low for the date Tuesday was set in Miami Beach, Fla. ,

Continued from page 1

Subscribers not desiring to pay 1h£&gt;carrltr may remit In advance direct to
Tbe Dally St&gt;nHnel
a 3, 6 or 12 month
basts . Credit wUI be g1vrn carrier each
WH'k .

I'

Clouds to cover state despite high front

Thursday, Sept. 12
MICH .

The Daily Sentinel

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Wednesday, September 11, 1991

the Daily· Sentinel

Sports

Wednesday, September 11, 1991
Page--4

Eastern tops SHS in
SVAC volleyball tilt
BY SCOTT WOLFE
RACINE-At EHS ·Tuesday
night, Eastern defeated Southern in
three sets after trailing 11-3 in the
third and final set. The comeback
netted Eastern the win and the
match, 15-4,8-15, and 15-li.
Carrie Morrissey led the way
with 22 points overall, including
nine in the com back anempt
Marcy Hill had twelve for
Southern.
A rundown of further statistics
will be in Thursday's edition of
The Daily Sentinel.

·

READY TO HIT BALL - An Eastern volleyball player gets
ready to hit ball back across net (complete number bidden from
view) while teammate Amy Well (16) looks on. Eastern won tbe
league match.

SVAC VOLLEYBALL ACTION - An unidentified Southern
player knocks ball back across net in Tuesday SVAC volleyball
match against Eastern \\ith teammate Megan Wolfe (10, right)
looking on. Tbe Eagle girls won.

Being in
spotlight
isn't new

SIGNS WITH RED SOX - Chad Renfroe
(center), a two-sport standout at Symmes Valley
High School, signed a contract with tbe Boston
Red Sox in early July and is scheduled to report
to the franchise's minor-league farm club in

LOUISVILLE . Ky. (AP) Though a fifth-yea; senior who has
never started a college game, being
in the sp01light isn' t something
new Erik Wau s of Bixby, Okla.,
ha.' to wrestle with.
Th e 6-fo ot-5, 225-pound quarterba ck who will start Saturday
ag ain st No. 19 Ohi o State on
national television, is the son of
form er profe ss ional wrestler
"Cowboy" Bill Watts.
" Life was wild. To everyone in
Oklahoma, my dad was a legend,"
sa id the 23-ycar-old Watts, who
once took wrestler Andre the Giant
to second grade for show and tell.
" It was a reli ef coming to
Loui sville where dad wasn't nearly
as well known ," he said . "It
wasn' t nearly the shadow."
Watt s, who has earned hi s
degree in business and is a graduate
student working on his MBA , had
pretty well faded into football
obscurity at Louisville until Thursday night , when starter and rising
star Jeff Brohm suffered a broken
leg in a 28-11 loss to No. II Tennessee . Now he's tabbed as the
starter for coach Howard Schncllcnberger's Cardinals as they play
their second nationally televised
game in nine days.
" You know you take those
courses when you first get in
school, you've got four or five tests
or quizzes and its OK if you mess
up on one you'll have another
on e, " Watts said , comparing academics to football. "But it seems
like I' m thrown right into the final
ex am . Even th ough I've been
studying for it more than I'd study
for any test, it's just a make-it-orbreak-it exam."
Watts, who has made less than a
handful of appearances for the Cardinals, has completed four of six
passes for 95 yards in his entire
collegiate career. The highlight was
a 35-yard touchdown pass in last
season's 68-0 rout of Murray State.
But Ohio State coach John
Cooper, who coached at Tulsa, said
he's not overlooking Watts, despite
his inexperience.

Winter Haven, Fla., in March. Seated with Renfroe are his parents, Brenda and Chuck Renfroe. Behind them are (L-R) Amy Renfroe,
Chad's sister; Viking bead coach Mike
Delawder and Red Sox scout Larry Thomas.

On today's baseball scene,

BoSox snag Sytnmes Valley grad;
Spencer still seeking manager's post
native Tommy Spencer is caught in
a catch-22 in regard to being considered managerial material
because he wasn't a superstar in the
major leagues (he played 29 games
in the majors, hitting .185 with the
Chicago White Sox in 1978), he
isn't the only one, according to a
Aug. 5 article in The Atlanta Constitution written by staff writer Terence Moore.
There have been a total of five
black managers in major league
The 6-2, 170-pound Renfroe, baseball - period. Hall of Farner
who racked up a 17-6 career record Frank Robinson, whose playing
- which includes an 8-1 mark this career started with the Reds, had
past season - in three seasons for three stints as field boss (with the
M1ke Delawder' s Vikings , struck Cleveland Indians, the Giants and
out 277 and walked 53 in 154 the Baltimore Orioles), and each
inning s in posting a career 2.22 time he was frred. Then along came
ERA . He was an all-SVAC selec- Larry Doby (the first black player
Iion who was named the confer- in the American League), Maury
ence's most valuable player, played
in a district all-star game, recorded Wills, Cito Gaston and Hal McRae.
a school·record 18 suikeouiS in one Only Gaston and McRae still have
game and picked up three saves in their jobs.
The playing careers of Doby and
his career.
Gaston
didn't raise many eyeRenfroe, according to the July 5
brows,
but
Wills was an all-star
article in The Ironton Tribune writbase
stealer
for the Los Angeles
ten by sports editor Jim Walker,
Dodgers
in
the
1960s, and McRae
signed the contract after talking
who
like
Robinson
started out with
with the Cincinnati Reds, the Pittsthe
Reds,
was
a
solid
but not specburgh Pirates and the San Francistacular
DH/outfielder
for the
co Giants. He also spumed college
Kansas
City
Royals
in
the
1970s.
offers from Rio Grande, Shawnee
State and Eastern Kentucky.
. " I kn ew Chad had college
:potential, but this I didn't expect,"
Delawder said of Renfroe, who will
report to the Red Sox ' s Winter
Haven, Fla., team in March.
Chad Renfroe. a recent graduate
of Symmes Valley High School
who distinguished himself in baseball and basketball, signed a minorleague contract with the Boston
Red Sox in early July.
The contract also includes a
signing bonus and money that will
aid his college education should
career end prematurely because of
inJury .

I,
I

I

II '
I

I
/

I

- jI
.I I

"With Chad, we like the whole.
.package," said Red Sox scout Larry
·Tqomas. "He has a breaking ball
·that he throws with control, he has
good speed on his fastball, and his
Jastbalf's got life. With time. we'll
have even more velocity," Thomas
added.
Renfroe said the Red Sox's
:decision to have him wait until
'March to repon was the factor that
weighed heaviest in his decision to
sign with the Red Sox rather than
the Giants, who he said "warited to
send me to Arizona ...and start in
the middle of the season. They
were pushing me_to_m~e a decision. Larry took hiS ume.
. Renfroe is the son of Chuck and
Brenda Renfroe of Willow Wood.
Spencer in catcb-22?
If it's true that New York Mets
r;,., _ h o ~r. cnach and Gallipolis

Moore' s contention wa s that
many team s hire black superstars to
become managers , only to f1re
them, using the excuse that th ey
can ' 1 relate to the average player
(the cornerstone of thi s rationale
may be the tale of Red Sox hitting
superstar Ted William s and hi s
short -lived career as the Texa s
Rangers' manager).
However, marginal black ex player&gt; such as Spencer (the Gallia
Academy grad guided the Class A
Asheville team to the South
Atlantic League title in 1984 before
piloting the Class A Geneva club to
the New York-Penn League crown
in 1987) who according to the
aforementioned reasoning should
be able to relate to the average
player are passed over constantly in
favor of whites of similar abili1y.
"Right now, all they're looking
for when it comes to possibly get- Plan softball tourney
ting a black manager is a name,"
The Pomeroy Teen Center will
Spencer said, "and I'm not in that
sponsor
a men' s softball tournacategory. I keep hearing baseball
people say that blacks haven't ment on Saturday at the Middleport
worked themselves up through the ·softball fields. The entry fee is $65
ranks to become managers. Hey, and two softballs. Teams will be
thi s is my 22nd year in baseball. drawn on Friday and the entry
I've done a lot of things in the deadline is Thursday. Call Iva Sisgame, and I haven't gotten a call to son at 742-2187 for information or
be a major league manager yet."
to regi ster.

SHOTGUN
SHELLS
AND

Sports and Rehabilitative Center
Announces The

SATURDAY MORNING SPORTS
MEDICINE CLINIC

RIFLE SHELLS
By Winchester and

Registration Required by 8:30 A.M.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.
,.

Boston moves within 4
games of fi~st place
By The Associated Press
Roger Clemens and his Red Sox
seem to be heating up at just the
right time. Clemens pitched a twohitter as Boston beat Detroit 4-0
Tuesday night at Tiger Stadium to
move within four games of firstplace Toronto in the AI.. East. The
Red Sox have won seven straight
and have gone 28-12 since the AllStar break.
The Blue Jays finish the season
against the West, and started Tuesday night by losing 5-4 to Seattle at
the Sky Dome.
"I look at this as a snowball
effect," Boston's Jody Reed said.
"We've got something going and
Roger kept the snowball rolling
tomght.''
The Red Sox used a similar
strategy last season, winning 10
straight in September to edge the
Blue Jays.
Clemens lost a perfect game and
no-hitter in the seventh inning with
one out when Lou Whitaker
walked and Alan Trammell
grounded a clean single to left
field.
"You can't be disappointed at
that time," Clemens said. "I mean,
you look up and there's Cecil
Fielder standing there. One swing
and he could have made it a onerun ball game."
Clemens was consistently
throwing 92-94 mph fastballs. He
struck out six to surpass the 200
mark for the sixth consecutive season.
"In my two years here, this is
the hardest I've ever seen Roger
throw," catcher Tony Pena said. "I
knew for certain he was going to
get the perfect game. I still can't
believe he didn't"
Ellis Burks hit a three-run double in the first inning off Frank
Tanana (11-10) for all the support
Clemens would need.
".He threw really hard tonight
but he wasn't trying to strike people out," Detroit manager Sparky
Anderson said. "He threw mostly
fastballs and sliders and just a couple of forkballs. With a fastball like
that, that's how he should pitch."
Elsewhere in the AI.. it was first-

place Minnesota 7. Kansas City 2;
Cleveland 5, Milwaukee 2; Baltimore 6, New York 3; Texas 6, California I; and Chicago 3, Oakland
I.
Mariners S, Blue Jays 4
Harold Reynolds participated in
a uiple play in the fifth inning, hit a
two-run homer and snapped an
eighth-inning tie with an RBI double as Seattle beat Toronto, snapping a 13-game road losing streak.
Omar Vizquel started the Seattle
eighth with a leadoff double off
Todd Stou!emyre (13-7) and David
Valle's fly ball to right sent
Vizquel to third. Reliever Mike
Timlin struck out Jeff Schaefer
before Reynolds sent a roller past
second baseman Roberto Alomar to
score Vizquel.
Brian Holman improved to 1313.
Twins 7, Royals 2
Pedro Munoz hit a two -run
homer and Allan Anderson and
four relievers combined on an
eight-hitter as Minnesota rolled
past Kansas City at Royals Stadium
for its fifth straight victory.
Anderson (5-8) stopped the
Royals on three hits over five
innings in a game delayed 43 minutes in the fourth inning by rain.
Mark Guthrie, Terry Leach, Steve
Bedrosian and Rick Aguilera finished. Aguilera escaped a basesloaded jam in the ninth for his 39th
save.
Indians S, Brewers 2
Doug Jones, Cleveland's longtime relief ace, won his first majorleague stan and Reggie Jefferson
hit his first grand slam as the Indians beat Milwaukee at County Stadium.
Jones (2-7), whose contract was
purchased last week from Cleveland's Triple A affiliate in Colorado Springs, gave up two runs
and eight hits over 8 2-3 innings. It
was his first start in 272 majorleague appcarcnces since 1982.
Bill Wegman (11-7) took the
loss.
Orioles 6, Yankees 3
Mike Devereaux and Cal Ripken hit. consecuu ve home runs in
the third inning off loser Eric Plunk

CLEARANCE SALE
1991 OAKSPRINGS 60128

-,,I'

AClink Physklan, X·Ray Tech and
Nationally Certified Athletk
Trainers Are On Duty For Early
Diagnasls and Treatment of
Friday's InJuries
Coaches, Athletes, Parents Roger Grimm, IN, ATC
Lori Ward, ATC
Call 446·5244 for Details!
Becky Irwin, IT
BONY~'

BELAY IN GEI'I'ING YOIJR

ATIIIBIES BACK TO PLAY!

ByBENWALKER
AP
B b W .
ase a11 r•ter
T~e Los Angeles Dodgers were
lookmg ahead. Instead , they fell
behmd.
. Manager Tom Lasorda, plannmg for a b1g weekend series in
Atlanta, moved up Ramon Marunez m the rotation to pi tch in

•

1

This elegant home has many more outstanding features too
numerous to mention.

Stop In and See John Smith or Dick Cole
For Details.

COLE'S MOBILE HOMES
Located 5 Miles East of.Rt. 33
. On Rt. 50 East, Athens 592·1972 ·

Martinez worked on three days'
z

Amerle~n

NATIONAL LEAGUE

W L

82 56
Pittsblolrgh
.......... 72 65
St. Louis
.. ....... 69 69
Chicago
.. ... ,.. 72
New York
. ,.. 72
P'ni1adclphia
..... 59 78
MonlrCal
West Ohlsion

W L
ALlanll
.........
Uu Angeles ......
San Diego
........
Cincinnati
.......

78 60
78 61
71 68
67 7 1

San Francisco ..... 63 75
... .... . 57 81
Houston
Mond1y'a Gamel
Pitubi.ttgh 12, C hi c•~o \0
Atlanu 8, San FranciSCO 3
Montreal4 , New York J
San Diego 3, Houu on 0

Pet. CB
.594
.526 9 1{1
.500
11
478
16
478
16
43122 1{1
Pet. CB
.565
561
1{1
.5 ll 7 lf2
486
11
.4 57
IS
41)

21

St. Louis 4, Philadel ph ia 2
Los Anseles I 0, Cincinnui 4

Tutsday'• Games
New Yort 9, Mont.rcal 0
Cincinnlli 6, Los Angeles 0
At.l anta 4 , San Francisco I
Ch.ica go 6, Pitts burKh 2
Philadelphia 5, Stlouis 2
San D1ego 7, Houston 6
Wedntsdly'l Gamu
New York (f.Cu t.i.llo 1· 1) at Chicago
(f.Cutillo 6 -3), 2:20p.m.
San Fnndsco (1-Lckcrson 1- 1) at
CincinnaLi (Scudd er 5-6), 7:35 p.m.

San Francisco (McClclhn 3-)) at
Cincinnati (Browning 13-1 0), 12:35 p.m
New York (Viola 12- 14) at Ch tca gu
(Bielecki 13· 8), 2:20 p.m .

San Diego (Hun;l 1.5-6) at Allanta
(Lcibnndt 14· 11), S.40p.m.

Lot Angela (Ojeda 10-8) at Houston
(Bowc:n4-3), 7:0S p.m.
Montreal (Nabho114-7) at Ptuladclphia
(Ruffin 3-6). B5 p.m
Pittsburgh (Dr&amp;bc.k I 3-1 2) at St. Loui s
(Hill 8-9). 8' 3l p.m.

Toronto
Uoeaon

........ 79 61
....... 74 64

Detroit
Mil waukee

....... 72
. .. . 6S

New York
Bahim on:
Cleveland
Weal Division

Minnc.sota
CIUcago
Oakland

Teus
Kansu City

California
Seattle

66

Pet.
.564
.5 36
.)22

GO

4
6

72
....... 60 71
57 8\
.... 45 93

.4741 2 112
.43817 J(l
.4 13
21
.3 26
33

W

Pet. GB
.61 2
.5 50 8 1{1
.5 2911 1{1
.526
12
.51l714 1{1
.5 0015 1{1
.5 001 5 1{1

L

.. . 85 54
.. ....... n 63
74 66
. 72 65

....... 70 68
......... 69 69
.......... M 69

Monday'' G1met
B1himore 8, New York 0
801ton 4, Cleveland 3
Chic• go 7, Oakland I

Mmnesou 10, Kansas City 4
Cdifomil 4, Teus 2
Only g•mca achcdulcd
Tut'Sd&amp;y'a Gamet
Clcvc.bnd S, Milw•ukoe 2
B01ton 4, Detroit 0
Semle 5, Toronto 4
B1ltimore 6, New York. 3

Wednesd1y'1 G1met

Chica go (Al~aru 2-2) at Oakland (Van
Poppcl 0-0),3.15 p.m.
New York (fay lor 7-8) at Dallimon:
(Mussin• 2-4}, 7 :35 pm .

BcalOO (Young 3·5) at DeLTOit (Tcm:ll
11 · 10),7'J5p. m.
Seattle (Hanwn 7-7) •L Toronto (K ey
15- 9). D5 p.m.
Cleveland INu v 8-121 at Mi.lwaulr.c.c
(DOlio 10- 10), 8:05p.m.
Minne&amp;(ia (faparu 14-7) 11 K1JU11 City
(M.Davi.s 4-1 ), 8:35 p.m .

Tcu s (D ohanon 3-2} at CaW"omia
(Lewi.s 1-5), 10:35 p.m.

Games

Boston (Monon 4-3 ) at r\cw York
(Perez 1-2}, 7:30 p.m .

Cleveland (Otto 1-6)111 Baltimo re
(Mao 5- 9). 735 p.m.
Detroit (Leiter 8-l ) at Milwaukee

Terry Pendleton hit his 19th
home run as the Braves handed
John Burkett (9-10) his fifth consecutive defeat. The Giants have
lost eight of nine.
Mets 9, Expos 0
Pete Schourek pitched a one-hitter, allowing only Kenny Williams'
single with two outs in the fifth
inning, as New York stopped a
five-game losing streak.
Schourek (3-3), making his
fourth major league start, set down
the first 14 batters before Williams
singled. He struck out seven and
walked two.
Howard John son and Mackey

Sasser each hit three-run homers as
the host Mets snapped Montreal' s
five-game winning streak. Johnson
connected off Mark Gardner (8-10)
for his league-leading 33rd homer.
Padres 7, Astros 6
Tim Teufel hit a thr ee- run
homer, Benito Santiago had a tworun single and Fred McGriff added
his 21th home run as San Dieg o
won its seventh straight game, its
longest winning streak since 1987.
Dennis Rasmussen (6-11) was
the winner and Craig Leffert s
pitched the ninth for his 21 st save.
Teufel hit his lith homer in the
second inning and Santiago singled

Miami-Houston game an aerial duel;
Louisville upset of OSU in forecast
By Maj. Amos D. Hoople
Soge of the Sidelines
Egad, friends' The college football season has barely started and
we're already facing big contests
involving top-rated teams.
Here comes Miami vs. Houston .
And Notre Dame vs. Michigan.
Did you notice, by the way. that
the Hoople System of picks by
your Fearless Forecaster got off to
a 27-5 stan this year, for a winning
rate of .844. Not a bad way to begin my 50th anniversary season.
This week, for starters, there
will be a spectacular air show in
Miami. On Thursday night (Sept.
12), the Miami Hurricanes will host
the Houston Cougars (on ESPNTV). And both team s like to throw
for aU the marbles.

won its last four confrontation s
with the Wolverines. This year's
contest features two evenly matched clubs. Doth began the season high in the rankings.
Despite N.D.'s success, QB
Elvis Grbac of Michigan almost
beat the Irish single-handedly over
the last two years, completing 34
out of 51 tosses for four TDs.
Without " Rocket" Ismail to go
to, Notre Dame will be evenly split
on the ground and in the air. A big
game for QB Rick Mircr could propel him into the Heisman picture.
The key questions? Can N.D.
beat Michigan five years in a row?
Can the Notre Dame defense throttle the Grbac-to-Dcsmond Howard
attack?
The Hoople Hunch is that the
luck of the Irish is about to run out.
Michigan will win in a cliffhanger,
31-27. Kaff-Kaff!
Penn State's Joe Paterno has
won more games (230) than any
coach in the Division 1-A rank s.
But he stands ju st 1-1 again st
Southern Cal.
The Nittany Lions have two
games under their belts, including a
34-22 Kickoff Classic win over defending national co-champ Georgia
Tech. QB Tony Sacca set a Penn
State record with five TO passes
against the Yellow Jackets .
The Trojans are still upset about
their stunning Labor Day loss to
Memphis State. 24-10. But USC is
bl essed, as usual , with a brilliant
tailback: Mazio "Rolls" Royster.
He had six 100-yard games and a
total of 1,168 yards last year.
Even so, we look for Penn State
to prevail, 28-24.
Elsewhere, Florida will top Al abama, 42-27, in the SEC headliner
(ESPN-TV); Tennessee will shade
UCLA, 35-25; and Nebraska will
defeat Colorado State, 3t -21.
The Hoople Upset of the Week
(on ESPN) : Invading Loui sville
will shock Ohio State, 28-24. Harrumph!

"Aub!Jm 28 , Mu.SLn iflPl I]
Ari.ton• Sa te 17 , ' Oir.Jah oma S111e 14
• Califo rnia J 1, Purdue 24
•Ciudel 35, Wofford 6
•Colorado 24 . llaylnr 22
'Ei•t Carolm1 28, Memphis SliLC 14

'Florida 42, Ala bam• 27
'Florida Sute 49, We.stem M1chigan 18
Georgi• Tech 35, '8Dston College 17
Georgia Soothem 38, 'NE Louutana I 3
•Grambling 42, Vtrgmia Uruon 27
'llawau 45, New Muico 2 1
lloly Cross \4, 'Muuch u ~tu \0
Illinois 3S, ' Mm ouri 31

Iowa 42, •iowa Su.1c 3S
'Kmsu 27, Tu lsa 24
'Kansas S~tc 24, Idaho St.au 14
Long Bea ch Stale 28, •B oise Sw c 11
Louisville 28, -Dhio Sute 24
·~nhall21, Morehead Sutc 10
' Miami (Otua) 17, EasLCm M!d ugan 14

in the third off Chris Gardner, who
lost his major league debut. Santiago hit a run-scoring double for his
third RBI.
The crowd of 4.353 was th e
smalle st of the season at th e
Astrodome.
Cubs 6, Pirates 2
Rync Sandberg hit a two-run
hom er and Jerome Walton al so
connected for Chicago at Wrigley
Field.
Ri ck Sutcliffe (5-4), given a 2-0
lead in the first inning on Sandberg 's 24th home run, la sted into
the eighth inning. He gave up six
hits and struck out four. bob Scanlan pitched I 1-3 innings for hi s
first save.
Randy Tomlin (8-5) got tagged
for four runs on eight hits in four
innings . Andre Dawson and
George Bell hit RBI singles in the
Ihird inning , and Walton hit his
fifth home run in the eighth.
Phillies 5, Cardinals 2
Tommy Greene p1tched eight
strong innings and hit an RBI dou ble as Philadelphia sent St. Louis tn
its sixth straight loss.
Greene ( 10-7) took a four -hitter
a 5- t lead into the ninth , bu1 left
after a pair of singl es . Mitch
Will iams closed for hi s 26th sa ve.
Charlie Hayes , who had three
hits, Steve Lake and Gree ne each
doubled in the second inning for a
2-0 lead against Rhea! Cormier (2 3). The Phillics had lost fi ve in a
row at Busch Swdium .

'Michigan 31. NOln: Dame 27

James placed on

'Michigan State 42, Centra l Michigan 20

•Minneaou 23, San lose Sunc 12
'Missislippi Sute 35, Tulane 15
•Nebnsb 31, Colondo S ~ t.e 21
•Nevada -Las Vegas 28 , Oregon Sute 20
• New Meuco SlllC 21, lffEP 17
'North Carolina 24, Cin cinnn i 1
' North Carolina SLue 42, Ken t SUite 14

• Nonhwestcm 27, Ri ce 24
•Ohio UrU verslty 40, Tennenoc Tech 18
• Ok.Jahoma49, Nonh Tex as 21

Penn State 28, •sou!hem Cal 2A
'Pittsbwgh49, Temple 10
Rhode ls1&amp;nd 28 ,'Ri chmond 17
Rutgcn: 28, •Duke 24
•san Diego Sute40, Pacific 20
Soulh Carolina 28 , •Wcct Virgitua 1A
Syr1cuse 18, •M.ary1• nd 17

St•nford IS, 'Arizon. 13
"f enneuce 35, UCLA 25
"f ~ us A&amp;M 42, l...o.l i.siana State 28
"Te.a:u Christian 27, Ball Su te 15
"feus Tech 17, On:gon 10
•Vanderbilt 21. South em Methodu t 14

'Vi(gini• 42, Navy 17

•Wake Forest 30, Western Cu alma 24
'Wuhington Slltc 30, Fresno S\ltc 20
•western Kentucky 3K, Munay State 10
•William &amp; Mary 35 , Debwu-e 27
•Wtsconsin 24 , Western lllitloU 14
•Wyoming 35, SW Louis ian• 28
'Youngstown St. 38, 'Dda wart SL 25
• - llomel.Um

disabled list 60 days
CLEVELAND (AP) - Cleveland Indians ouU'icldcr Chris Jam es
has been placed on the 60-day disabled li st due to chronic pain in his
right shoulder. team officials said .
James, 28, was undergoing magnetic resonance imagery at Lutheran Medical Center in Cl eveland . a
team spokesman said Tuesday, but
results of the tcsl were not immedi ately available.
The team also announced Tuesday it had purchased the contract of
Class AAA Colorado Springs out fielder Wayne Kirby 10 replace
James on the team' s roster. Kirby
batted .294 with one home run and
39 RB!s at Colorado Springs.

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

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•Mtami (Fla .) 38, Jlow;ton ) 1
Saturd•y,Sepl.l4
Airfum::40, •U~&amp;h 14
'Akron 2l,lll.inoia Su.IC 14
'Appt.l•c:hi•n St. 18, Vi.rstni• Milillry 7
• Army 31, Colg•te 24

C. D.'s DUE?
STOCK MARKET BLUES?

(Navarro 13- ll ), 8:05 p .m.
MinnesO!.a (Morri • 16-lO) at Texas
(Ry1n 9-6), 8:35 p.m.
Chi cago (J-Iemandez 1-0) at California
(Finley 17-8), 10:35 p.m.

Only

a double during the fifth inning of their National
League game in Cincinnati Tuesday night. (AP
Laser Photo)

HEAD FIRST - Umpire Paul Runge gets a
good look as Cincinnati Reds baserunner Paul
O'Neill slides safely into second past the tag by
Los Angeles Dodgers' infielder Juan Samuel for

According to Major Hoople,

Offense doesn't take a back scat
in Miami, either. The 'Canes play a
wide-open game and quarterback
Gino Torrctta can air it out with the
best. In fact, his first pass this year
in Miami' s 31 -3 victory over
Arkansas was a 99-yard TO toss to
Horace Copeland.
In a high-scoring affair, we look
for the Hurricanes to blow down
Houston, 38-31. Um-kumph 1
On Saturday (Sept. 14), Michigan hosts Notre Dame in the afternoon, and Penn State visils Southem Cal under the lights: This twin
bill is on ABC-TV.
Michigan holds a 13-9 edge
over the Irish, but Notre Dame has

Minnuou 7, Karuas City 2
Chica go 3. Oilland I
Texu 6, CaWomi1 I

Thur~ day'•

rest for the first time this season.
The move will enable him to pitch
this weekend in Atlanta, but it
backfired for now.
"It wasn't his stuff, it was his
control. His control put him in a
hole, and they got a couple of hits
that hurt him . They weren't hit
very good, either," Lasorda said.
In other games, Chicago beat
Pittsburgh 6-2, New York defeated
Montreal 9-0, San Diego stopped
Houston 7-6 and Philadelphia
downed St. Louis 5-2.
Martinez (16-10) lasted only 3
2-3 innings. He gave up five hits,
including Mariano Duncan's solo
homer and two-run doubles by
Chris Sabo and Billy Hatcher, and .
walked three.
"I felt very good," Martinez
said. "I don't know what the problem was. I had control (troubles) a
little bit."
Jose Rijo (13-4) shut down the
Dodgers on two hits for six
innings. He won his fifth straight
start and improved to 8-0 in 13
games at Riverfront Stadium this
season.
Rijo struck out two and walked
three. He left with a 6-0 lead after a
brief lalk with manager Lou Piniella.
"I told Lou , 'I'm feeling too
good, get me out of there. I'm
afraid.' I wanted out of there before
something happened," Rijo said.
Braves 4, Giants 1
Steve Avery shut down visiting
San Francisco before needing lastout relief help and also got his first
major league RBI as Atlanta won
its fifth straight.
Avery (15-8) gave up three hits
in 8 2-3 innings and left with two
runners on base. Alejandro Pena
retired Kevin Mitchell on a
grounder back to the mound for his
seventh save.
The victory was Avery's first in
four career decisions against San
Francisco. He was 0-2 with a 12.79
ERA this year.
Avery went 3-for-4. His single
in the eighth inning gave him his
fir&gt;t RBI in 92 lifetime at-bats.

David Klingler , triggerman of
Houston 's run-and-shoot offense,
will be firing at will. He's the lead·
ing candidate to take the Heisman
Trophy away from BYU's Ty Detmer. The Houston quarterback
tossed 54 TD passes last fall.
Klingler, who broke or tied 33
NCAA records in 1990, opened
with a bang this year: He had six
TO passes in one quarter against
Louisiana Tech. On the day, he
passed for nine touchdowns as the
Cougars won, 73-3.
Offense is certainly the name of
the game for Houston coach John
Jenkins, so look for Klingler and
the Cougars to score aplemy on the
Hurricanes.

Ltlgue

Eut Division
W L

Eut Division

Thurs(lly'• G1mes

$3.2 44 s

1.

Scoreboard

(ll.misch 9 -8) . 8:35 p.m.
Pituburgh (Z.Sm1th 13-1 0) at St. Louis
(Tewksbury 9 -10), 8:35 p.m .

NOW

Tuesday night. It
didn't work, as the Reds roughed
the Los Angeles ace and won 6-0
The loss dropped the Dodg~rs
into second place in the NL West,
one-half game in back of the
Braves, who beat San Francisco 4-

BY SCOTT WOLFE
P('',ffiROY-This weekend the Eastern Eagles host the very tough
Wahama White Falcons m a battle of the bend on Friday evening, while
Southern wruts unul Saturday to meet non-league foe Ironton St. Joe in
Ironton. Both games begin at 7:30p.m.
At Wahama, talk around town have the White Falcons talking about
the state playoffs. Is the talk premature at this point in the season? A big
test will come this Friday as two undefeateds meet at Eastern.
E~tern has set some very high goals for themselves and thusfar they
haven .t met any compeuuon as both games have been big blowouts. Friday will mdeed be a test, but Randy Churilla, second year Eastern coach,
merely sees the gam e as a stepping stone. Whatever the outcome, the
upbeat mentor says, "We' ll usc It as a building block and move on to next
week."
Next week is the SVAC opener for all schools. Will this be the last of
the SVAC grid openers?
Churilla said, "The key to a win this week is simply our "confidence"
and the success of our offensive and defensive lines!"
Commenting on last week's game and the success of his offense and
defense against Hannan, WV. he says, "With adversity, our athletes kept
their poise and composure." He was referring to the over 70 yards in
penalties of the first three minutes of the game. which stymied the EHS
offense momentarily and recalled at least one score.
·:we played well on both sides of the ball. Again I have nothing but
poSitiVe to say about our performance. I beheve we can win this week.
The confidence factor is the big key."
In closing the energetic coach said, "Our approach to this football
team, or any team, is just that: TEAM. We expect our athletes to play a
role. We sell them on accepting their role and contributing for the benefit
or the team. This component is the key for us to have a successful team ."
Churilla's remarks come in reference to the fact that every Eagle
seemed to be a star last week; Multiple player&gt; scoring touchdowns, gaining yards, blowing people off the line, etc.
In two games, Tim Bissell has 38 carries for 283 yards and two TO's,
Terry McGuire 18-108 and two TD's, Mike Hoffman 18-128, Charlie
Francis 6-38, and Scott Golden 2-32.
Jeff Durst, two TO's, and Mike Smith lead the receiving corps.
Durst had 13 tackles last week in a great defensive game. He had 6
solos and seven assists and one caused fumble. Steve Barnett had 8 and
one sack, Mike Hoffman 6, Mike Smith and James McDaniel four each.
Smith, Hoffman, and Pat Newland each had sacks. Shane James had
two caused fumbles. Fumble recoveries were had lby Hoffman, Jared
Ridenour, and Robert Reed, while Chad Savoy had an interception.
SOUTHERN COMMENTS:
Southern coach David Gaul. still sparkling over last week 's win, was
upbeat about his chances this week.
He said, "We've got a lot of confidence now. We made some mistakes, but we ' ve made adjustments and I believe that we can have a big
game Saturday."
Last year Southern defeated St. Joe in five overtimes at Racine.
Gaul said, "We had a good rushing game last week and we threw well.
We want that half and half blend to continue if possible. Our offense is
really starting to come around. We had very few mental errors."
Defensively Gaul reflected on his team, "We played well defensively:
We gave up 20 points, but special teams, not defense was our letdown.
Once again we played aggressive and we played hard with people flying
toward the ball. The seniors played well. especially Wagner (Ronnie) and
Circle (Shane). The whole team put forth a lot of effort and I'm
pleased."
What is a key to victory Saturday? "How well our special teams do.
Waterford made some very outstanding plays against our special teams,
but we've made some big improvements this week. The kids are playing
hard and they are focused. They arc doing what they arc supposed to.
This game will be a key to the success of our season."
Gaul praised the efforts of his assistant coaches C.D. Mcintyre, Jeff
Baker, and Jay Hill for endless hours of hard work.
"Kids that haven't seen much game time are geuing better. I've seen a
lot of improvement in them. We have a good group of young kids coming
up and I want them to stick with it."
Like Eastern many players have contributed for Southern.

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Page 5

Reds knock Dodgers out of top spot with 6-0 triumph

Montreal (l-hney 3-4) at Ph.ibdelphi a
(Dc.Jcaus 10-.5), 7:35 p.m.
San Dieso (Harris S-4) at At..lanu (Mer·

HOLZER CLINIC

8:00A.M.
Sycamore Clinic in Gallipolis
Saturdays, through November 2

Remington

EAST MEIGS -Although playing some very fine ball, the Eastern
Eagleues volleyball team dropped
two non-league bouts to Warren
and Ohio Valley Christian.
Eastern is now 2-5 overall and
2-1 in the SVAC.
Eastern lost to Warren 15-12
and 15-6.
Lee Gillilan had 5, Penny Aeiker 3, Jaime Wilson two, and Carrie
Morrissey 2, and Becky Driggs
two. Jeanette Pierce and Renae

Wentz each had four for Warren.
Gillilan was 6-6 with two kills
and Amy Well 2-4 with one kill .
Jaime Wilson had 9-17 sets and
Radford 1-7.
Coach Pam Douthitt said, "We
played well the first game and did a
good job with Warren, the second
game we had problems receiving
the serve."
It took three sets against OVC,
but the Crusaders won 15-13, 9-15,
and 15-3.
Wilson led with eleven points,
12-16, and one ace. Lee Gillilan
had 6, 11-11, Jessica Radford five,
8-8. and one ace; while Penny
Aciker had 4, 7-7. Carrie Morrissey had three, 7-8, and Amy Well
two with a 4-5 night
Becky Blevins led OVC with 9,
Pam Holley bad 9,Meredith Pollard
7, and Jodie Hager 6.
Gillilan had 11-15 with two
kills, Morrissey 8-8 with one kill,
and Shelly Metzger 2-3 with one
kill. Wilson was 16-26 setting and
Metzger 10-15.

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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The Meigs County Golf Course is holding an 18
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Cost is $9.00 ($7 .00 green fees, $2.00 for prizll). Prizes
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DENNIS L. HOCKMAN

992-7066
An lndependenl Ealale Planner, 657 High S1., Middleport, Oh.

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.

~

l

I'
I

l

1

�Wednesday, September 11, 1991
·- ~

By The Bend

-

.

Wednesday, September 11 , 1991

Community Calendar 'items home of Gladys Cummings.
. appe,a r two days before an event
' · and the day of that event. Items
THURSDAY
· muSt be received well in advance
CHESTER - The Shade River
to as5ure publication in the cal- Masonic Lodge will meet Thursday
endar.
at 8 p.m. at the lodge hall. AU master masons are invited to attend.
WEDNESDAY
Refreshments will be served.
LONG BOTTOM · The Fai th
Full Gospel Church in Long BotPOMEROY - The Meigs United
tom will hold revival through Sat· Methodist Cooperative Parish will
urday at 7 p.m. nightly with Jimmy hold a clothing day on Thursday
Stewart, Albany, the evangelist. fro m 9:30 a.m. to noon at the
Pastor Steve Reed invites ille pub· parish at 311 Condor Street in
lie.
Pomeroy.

Page-6

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Med icine

FamilY.
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

.

.t
••
..

Question : I'm writing you to
inquire about herpes. What I want
know is why isn't there a cure
• to
for it, and why isn't it taken more
• seriously than it is? Shouldn't it be
• researched like AIDS?
;.
Answer: Many people use the
t·
I· term "here;s" only to describe the
•i geni!al in ection caused by the her·
pes virus, but there is actually a
~
whole "family" of herpes viruses
•• that
can produce a number of different
illnesses. In fact, the com•• mon cold sore is the result of an
•• infection by a herpes virus known
;
simplex Type I."
' as "herpes
It is not surprising, therefore,
.. that the lip, mouth and throat are
'· the site of about 90 percent of her·
' pes infections. Genital infections
•..
- the ones that get most of the
in the press - are caused
•I attention
by the herpes simplex "Type II"
virus. A blister-like painful sore on
..t the
end of the finger or near a fin.
•
• gemail is called a whitlow. and this
• may be caused by either the str1tin
• of th e herpes simpl ex virus that
' usually produces oral sores or the
one that commonly produces geni.,L Ia!
sores.
Chicken
pox and shingles are
••
r
caused by yet another member of
r
•
family.
• theAherpes
person infected with the her,• pes virus
develops painful blisters,
.- swollen lymph glands and general·: ly feels lousy. The blisters break,
•• leaving
a red sore that clears up m
•,
a few days to weeks. The first
~ episode is typically the worst, but it
~ may be followed by repeated
• attacks, particularly when the
~ infection produces cold sores or
C genital lesions.
(:
I don't know who you have met
~ that fails to take herpes infections
~ seriously, but all the health care
~ professionals I know certainly do!
• Herpes infecuons are a senous con• cern for individuals and for the
~ general population. There is comin, uing research 10 f1nd a cure for her~ pes infections , although th1s
I·
~

..
•

•

f

,

.
~

&lt;
••

research is not as well funded as
AIDS research.
The difference in funding only
makes sense. AIDS is a serious no it's a fa!al- disease while herpes rarely becomes life threatening.
A greater percentage of government research money should be
used on the study of AIDS. Interestingly, though, what we are finding out about AIDS, which is also
caused by a virus , is providing us
some clues about the mysteries of
herpes infections as well.
Question: I heard that bleach
kills the herpes virus. Is that ttue?
If it is ttue, why can't they make a
cure from bleach? •
Answer: That is a very logical
question . Yes, plain household
bleach will kill the herpes virus if it is on a toilet seat. It carsot be
used to kill a virus that is · side a
living cell. This is unfortunate
because it is the virus inside living
cells which causes problems. Inside
a cell, the virus reproduces itse lf
until the cell is full of new virus
particles. The cell then ruptures,
releasing the virus to infect other
cells. Bleach can't get inside living
cells to kill the herpes virus without
kiUing the living cell, too. So, it is
O.K. to use bleach to clean your
toilet, but applying it to your skin
won't kill enough of the virus to do
any good.
Bleach has no medical proper·
ties. Its ability to kill bacteria and
viruses comes from its strong
chemical action. This action attacks
all cells - the ones we are made
from as well as those that cause
human illness. Putting bleach into
the bloodstream would be fatal.
There is no way to make a bleach
that would penetrate to the inside
of infected cells and then destroy
only the virus.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni·
versity College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio 45701.

•
p

,•

r

:
~

•
~
~

'

~
~

~
:
•
••

•
•'

t
~

~
:
•

The Herb Fest to be held Sept.
28 at the Riv er Front Park in

Ravenswood, W.Va. , was di s·
cussed at the recent meeting of the
River Valley Herbalists held at the
park.
Members showed samples of
herbs and crafts made for the Herb
Fest. A variety of items will be fca.
tured.

lines--

Videos are now available for
; loan at the Middleport Library, The
~ same lending rules apply there as at
··: .-------~

·.
t

•'

LEGAL NOnCE

The Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio has set for public hearing
Case No. 91-102-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procurement prac·
tices and policies of Columbus
Southern Power Company, !be
operation of its Electric Fuel Com·
ponent and related maners .. This
; hearing is scheduled to begtn at
10:00 a.m. on September 16,
• 1991 at the offices of the Public
Utilit~s Commission. 180 · East
: Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
• 43266-0573.
;
•
:
•
•
"

All interested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard. Further Information may be obtained
by contacting the Commission at
the above address.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMIS·
SION OF OHIO By: Gary E.
Vigorito, Secretary.

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August weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins have been
Mrs. Wilma Wamsley, Mrs. Betty
Loudin, Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenny Larkins, Amber, Alissa, and
Amanda, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
'Steve Salisbury, Adam, Aaron and
·Anna, Gallipolis.
Mrs. Ada Bissell is recuperating
·at her home after breaking her foot.
Tyler Winebrenner spent the
weekend with grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Hayman. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Greg Wine·
brenner, Alfred.
Mrs. Alta Ballard's brother, Otis
Fredrick, has moved back to Meigs
County after living in Westerville
for many years.
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Fitzpatrick
spenL the weekend at their summer
1home in Long Bottom. Also there

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

· The lith annual Sinclair family
reunion was held Sunday at the
:tJome of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sin·

627 3rd An., Galipolis
PH. 446·1699

clair and Chad and Mrs. Ora Sinclair, Sumner Road, Pomeroy.
Those attending enjoyed a bas·

election in November.
Ida Murphy had the program
',, recently at the home of Ida Mur· using an article about fruits and an
article about Christmas trees. She
~ phy.
Lucille Allen presided at the also had two games, one about fin.
: meeting with all responding to roll ishing the quote and one about
• call with a scripture using the word inventions and their inventor.
The next meeting will be Oct. 3
; "neighbor."
Hazel Stanley had devotions , at the home of Susie Warner. The
"Let's Enjoy Life," and advised the Bible work will be "journey" and
group to be able to laugh, forget, devotions will be by Ida Murphy.
Al so present were Ev elyn
remember, appreciate, write letters,
become prayer warriors, please Thoma, Susie Warner, Kathryn
!; God, model after the great com- Johnson, Dorothy Reev es and
Marge Purtell.
~ mandments and enjoy life.
Reports were given about a
Blennerhassett Islar.d trip, Zion
Homecoming, Mens Fellowsh1p,
~ the quill show and th e commg
J womens retreat at OVCA.
'
The group decided to back the
:tuberculosis levy for the commg

~

The Circle of Helping Hands of

~ th e Zion Church of Chri st met

I
i
l

:Thieves have
demolition derby
.in stolen golf carts
f BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) ; Thieves stole scores of motorized
• golf carts from a warehouse, then
used them for a demolition derby
on city streets, police said.
Someone broke into a warehouse early Sunday and word
spread quickly that It was f1lled
with the carts, Sgt. John Carraro
1
•said Monday.
..
~
People "all went and got one,
~ he said. " They were doing crashmobiles into cars going down the
street''
Police estimated 50 10 100 carts
were stolen. No injuries were
reported and no arrests were made.
: The carts, which previously had
been leased to country clubs, were
·being stored by Golf Car Systems
of Clearwater, Fla., pollee s:ud.

For More Information Call
JOANNE WILLIAMS
At Farmer's Bank

YourBankjn~...
Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

HOOD FAMILY SHOES
Pomeroy

21 1 Weat Second ·s,,.et
P. o Box 828
Pomeroy, OH. 46789
614-992-2136

992-6254

POMEROY · The Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, D.A.R.,
will meet at the Episcopal Church
Parish House on Friday at I p.m.
for a recept ion followed by lun cheon at I :30 p.m. Officers bring
white gloves.
MARlETTA- The annual meC!ing of the Sons and Daughters of
Pioneer Rivermen will meet at the
Lafayette Hotel in Marietta on Friday and Saturday.

UPCOMING TRIPS
TO ANN CASTLE DINNER THEATRE
MATINEE
Columbus, Ohio
SEPTEMBER 24

her recently.
Callers at the Paul Hauber borne
have been Mr. and Mrs. Junior
Soval, Cleveland; Mr. and M_rs.
Bill Hill, Mansfield; Mrs. Lavma
Brannon. Reedsville; Mrs. Kathy
Larkins and Amanda, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. David Ross. Middleport; Mrs. Jeannie Theiss, Vinton;
Mrs. Shirley Salisbury and family,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Leona Hall,
Coolville; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Sinclair, Pomeroy . Paul vi sited
Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Gluesencamp, Porlla~d; l\1rS. G lues~n ­
camp, Paul's SISter, IS recuperaung
from surgery. He has also visited
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrency Johnston,
Junior and Jeremy, Portland, and
Mr . and Mrs . Douglas Hauber.
Bashan.

L-----'7

)o Ann
Castle

AUTUMN IN THE SMOKlES
OCTOBER 22 to 24
Enjoy the beautiful fall foliage enroute to Pigeon
Forge and Gatlinburg, Tennessee. Visit the Dixie
Stampede for dinner and a show. Admission to
Dollywood and the Fall Crafts Festival is also included, and there will be plenty of time to shop and sight
see at your leisure.

ket lunch, reminiscing over photo
albums and volley baiL
Attending were Jennl and Lori
Freeman, Jackson; Pau and Carolyn Sinclair, Shade; Viola and
Nikki Sturgill, Jackson; Brian and
Brenda Llewellyn, Albany; David,
Cheri Destinee, Mikey and Nichole Shover, Columbus; Christopher Comer, Oak Hill; Ann Si~ ­
clair, Athens; Delores and Robb•e
Hawk, Long Bottom; Ron an~ Nola
Bretz, Mechanicsburg; Cra1g and
Sue Sinclair, The Plains; Dean Sinclair, Athens; Sonny and Barb Kegley, Wallingford, Ky.; Charles,
Margaret, Chad Sinclair, Pomeroy;
Melody Roberts, Long Bottom;
Bob and Mary Alice Bowles.
Pomeroy; Mike, Jenn y and
Nic holas Bowles, Pomeroy; Ora
Sinclair, Pomeroy; Kyle Sinclair,
Shade; Angie Richards and .AI• sha,
Racine; Joyce and Lyle Smclau,
Shade; and Shelly Sinclair, Shade.

Cost: $212.00 Double, $200.00 Triple, $185.00 Quad,
or $275.00 Single. Includes roundtrip deluxe motorcoach transportation, two nights lodging, Dixie
Stampede dinner and show, and admission to
Dollywood and the Fall Crafts Festival. $50.00 deposit due by October 1.

WHEELING FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS
NOVEMBER 10 and 11

Route 7

P. 0 . Box 339

Tuppers Plains , OH. 45783
614-667-3161

Member FDI'c

'•

•

Get in the Christmas spirit as you view this fabulous
light show. A private guide will escort our bus through
300 acres of unique holiday decorations. Cost includes
overnight lodging· at Wilson Lodge with an evening
buffet. Following breakfast the next day (also
included), we will tour the Mansion, Christmas Shop
and Garden Center. Enroute home we will stop at the
St. Clairsville Mall for shopping and dining.

Wheeling
Festival
Of
Ughts

MONEY

Cost: $135.00 Double, $128.00 li'iple, $120.00 Quad,
or $162.00 Single. $50.00 deposit due by October 28,

SA~ERS

PRICES INCLUDE LUGGAGE HANDLING AND '25,000 TRAVELERS INSURANCE

SALE

Join us for our first adventures!
Call Mary Fowler at (304) 675-1121
for information or reservations.

$700 OFF

Peoples Choice. Choice financial benefits and .cho~ce travel opp?~unities for peo.ple
SO and over. To be eligible, members must mamtam a $10,000 m1mmum balance m a
Peoples Bank Savings Account, CD, IRA, or any combination thereof.

ALL AUDITIONS
THURSDAY
FIIDAY

SATURDAY

PEOPLES BANK
Jacluon Avenue
Point Pleasant

ZZ~Z

:crawling up a grassy h11ls1de after
I his pickup overturned was shot and
Mseriously wounded when two
1hunters mistook h•m for a bear •
• officers said.
.. .
• "He's in this long grass, Lm:coln County sheriff's detect~ve
:Doug Johnson said. "I suppose lt:s
• only about a foot high, but II h1d
~e bottom part of him.

lf:NDUI

Our "get acquainted" trip! Attend the matinee performance of Joann Castle, rag-time pianist of the
Lawrence Welk Show, at the Buckeye Dinner Theatre.
Enroute home we will stop in Chillicothe for shopping and dining .
Cost: $49,50 per person. Includes roundtrip deluxe
motorcoach transportation, dinner and show, and
some leisure shopping time. Leaves from the parking
lot of the Peoples Bank in Point Pleasant at 7:30a.m.
Reservation deadline is September 16.

.Man accidentally shot
•: TROY, Mont. (AP).-: A man

@
..... _

JACLYNand
CASSIE JUSTIS

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
have a round and square dance on
Friday beg inning at 8 p.m. with
music by the Happy Hollow Boys
of Athens . Admission is $2 and
those attending should bring snacks
for the snack table .

l
l

""The Farmers Bank Travel Club"

(No Purchase Necessary I

210 East Main

were Mr. and Mrs. Steve Fitz.
patrick and family, Lancaster.
James Mount and sister, Max·
inc, were in for a visit with their
mother, Georgia Mount.
Chester Wells has undergo ne
bypass surgery at Grant Medical
Center in Columbus and is now
recuperating at home.
Mrs. Roberta Hill, Columbus,
has been in for the weekend at her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Larbns and Jerry.
Joey Bartoe, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Luther Bartoe, won in the
third heat of the demolition derby
at the Meigs County Fair in
August.
Mrs. Ruth Stethem is recuperating after a fall which resulted in
broken bones. Mae McPeek visited

·Circle of Helping Hands
::·discuss
women's retreat
.,..

HOUIS: 8 A.M.-6 P.M•

VISIT SUGAR CREEK'S SWISS VILLAGE
ON OCTOBER 8th
Tour Sugar Creek's Swiss Village, The
Broad Cheese House, The Winery,
"Alpine Alpa, Switzerland Over Here",
The World's Largest Cuckoo Clock and
Warther's Carvings.
MANY OTHER TRIPS BEING PLANNED

'

CHESTER - Dr. and Mrs. Glenn
Irwin, missionaries to Papua New
Guinea will appear at the Chester
Nazarene Church on Friday at 7
p.m. The public is invited to attend.

:Annual Sinclair reunion held

Is Pleased To
Announce The Forming
Of ''The Farmers Bank
Travel Club".

MEN~s·D'i("ss'sltoEs ••••• 20°/o oFF
10
L.A. GICII', Convene, Kangaroo, K-Swiss

There was a birthday celebration
held at McDonald's in Pomeroy
recently for the ninth birthday of
Christina M. Hirth.
Those in attendance were
Christina Hirth, Ronald Hirth,
Andrew Powell and parents, Brenna and Claire Sis son, Ashley
Thomas, Amber Giordano, Jessica
and Sara Pore and parent, Cassandra and Holly Coats, June Crc·
means, Autumn Phillips and parent,
Debbie Searles and parent.

the memory of it will linger with
you much longer.
"Feel The Nails" was written by
Dan Eaton, pastor of Liberty Assembly, and features he and his
daughter, Christine. They have performed this play at churches in
Ohio and West Virginia. Their most
recent performances were in July at
Mullen Memorial Baptisl and Word
of Faith Christian Outreach Center
in Belpre. The play is "nondenominational" and is inteded to
glorify the Lord.
Liberty Assembly is located in
Mason, near the Riverview Golf
Club. Watch for the blue and white
church sign.

Your Bankfn~···

NURSE MATES ............... 20°/o OFF
ALL TENNIS SHOES........ 2

Birthday celebration

FRIDAY
FAIR PLAIN, W.VA. - The
Liberty Mountaineers will perform
at the Jackson County Jamboree in
Fairplain, W.Va. on Saturday.

SATURDAY

=

our new fall slloes)

OO/

The musical drama, "Feel The
Nails," will be presented at the
Liberty Assembly of God church,
located in Mason, on Thursday,
Sept 12, at 7 p.m. All area churches and the general public are invited. There is no charge for admission.
"Feel The Nails" is the moving
story of a modem day father and
daughter. It features a "dream sequence" ·in wh1ch the characters
find themselves living at the time of
the crucifixion of Christ
Seveial songs are presents while
the characters are in biblical costume. This entertaining and fast
paced play only lasts an hour, but

POMEROY - The Rock Springs
Grange will have a cookout at the
home of J im and Barbara Fry on
Thursday at 6:30p.m. Meat, drinks
and table service will be provided
and members are to bring a covered
dish. Meeting will follow.

POMEROY - The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at the
Methodist Church in Pomeroy for a
salad supper at 6 p.m. Everyone is
to bring a salad and table service.

Jaclyn Kaye and Cassie Nicole
Justis, daughters of Rhonda Justis,
celebrated their birthdays together
DARWIN· Modem Woodmen · recently at their home with a Little
of America Camp 7230 will have a Mermaid theme.
potluck cook out on Saturday at
Jaclyn Kaye was three years old
6:30 p.m. at the southbound park and Cassie Nico le was one year
on Route 33 near Darwin. The old.
camp will furnish hamburgers, hot
Attending were their grandpardogs and condiments free of ents, Charles and Sylvia Neece,
charge. Members bring a covered Jody and Barb Neece, Chris, Terry,
dish. The public is invited.
Christina and Christopher Neece,
Diana, Lindsey. Joshua Smith, 1an·
DANVILLE · Weekend services ice, Alicia Haggy and Betty Ann
at the Danville Church of Chri st Wolfe.
will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m .
Sending gifts were Da vid ,
and Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 Deena, Jennifer, Gregory and Jessi·
p.m. Denver Hill, Fos.te~. W.Va., ca Diane Kennedy, and Phylli s
will speak. The public IS mv•ted to Drehel and Mitchie Conley.
attend.

Long Bottom community news

Farmers Bank Customers

Save Thursday, Friday and
Saturday at
Hood Family Shoes
LADIES' SHOES .............. 20°/o OFF
Naturaliun, Hush Puppits, D. Myer (hlduding

MEN'S, LADIES', CHILDREN'S

MIDDLEPORT . The Middleport Amateur Garden Club will
meet Wedrwsday at 6 p.m. at the

Drama to be presented irt Mason

rot like flower during the second
season.
It was reported that the wreath
making class at the home of Conrue
Hill was a great success.
Refreshment, served at the
meeting by Ann Kelly, Linda
McCoy and Joyce Stevens, includ·
cd vegetable pizza, tea thyme
tassies and spice cake with orange
and lemon-thyme tea and spiced
apple tea.
The October meeting will be
held at the home of Betty Jones.
She and Jan Gerhold will be
demonstrating making little paper
cottages. Pat Hayman will present
Herb of the Month on bee balm and
refreshments will be served by Eva
Robson, Connie Hill and Lila Ride·
nour.

•

The children's films are once
- again being shown on Saturday
afternoons at the Pomeroy Library
and on Monday evenings at the
Middleport Library.

TO PERFORM - Pastor Dan Eaton and his daughter, Christine,
will be presenting "Feel The Nails," a play he ~rote. The performance
will be at the Liberty Assembly or God church m Mason on Thursday,
Sept. 12, at 7 p.m.

River Valley Herbalists
discuss Herb Festival

Buffington to speak

September is the new Meigs
County Library's birthday . On
Sept. 25, 1989, we moved .into the
new facility. Anyone commg mto
' the library on September 25 w1ll
receive a "Happy Birthday" sticker.

. PORTLAND· The Lebanon
Township Tru stees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. in special ses·
sion at the township building.

I

Members were reminded to contribute something for the public to
sample made from herbs.
Each member will have th e
opportunity to select their location
for a display of herbs and crafts.
Tables are available at the park or
the Pomeroy Library.
By Ruth Powers, Director
members may bring their own if so
Meigs County Libraries
desired
Pomeroy Attorney D. Michael
Septel;lber means many things
Debbie Gilmore presented the
Mullen
has loaned his extensive Herb of the Month on fennel. She
to the Meigs County Library and its
patrons. First of all, Septt:mber ~s collection of physics books to the stated that fennel, with its anise or
Library Card Month, and smce IllS reference section of the library. licorice taste, is a most versatile
also back-to-school time, we want Included in this collection are basic herb. The flavor blends as well
to remind parents of the most physics, books on relativity and with bread as it does with soup or
important school supply of all - a Quantum Physics. If you just need salad. The plant is totally edible. It
library card. The library offers some basic questions answered or is a perennial and requires a calci·
many resources for personal enjoy- you are into the nitty gritty of urn rich fertile soil and direct sunment, as well as educational physics. this is the collection to light. The plant will grow to three
resources. It's important that chi!- look at. These books are available or four feet high and produce a car·
dren know the library is more than for use at the library and copies can
books and a quiet place to study. be made of any information needed. Mike hopes that students can
Come in and "Get Carded" today.
get some benefit from his collecNext, September is Fine Free tion.
Rev . Eddie Buffington of Gal·
Month. For all of you tardy people,
lipolis
will be the guest speaker at
So you see - September is a
this is "forgiveness" month. Bring
Naomi
Baptist Church in Pomeroy
your books back free. This does not busy month at your libraries. Come at II a.m. on Sunday.
include videos. There is still a $1 in and "check it out"
daily fee for overdue videos.

~-Library
•
•

SYI&lt;.ACUSE · There wi ll be an
GALLIPOLIS - The annual picorganizational meeting at Carleton nic of the Diabetes Support Group
School at 6 p.m. for those interest· will be held Thursday at 6 p.m. at
ed in aerobics.
the Holzer Medical Center's picnic
shelter. Bring a covered dish and
CINCINNATI - The Knights of table service.
:Pythias and Pythian Sisters State
Convention will be held at the
POMEROY - There will be a
·Cincinnati Marriot, 11 320 Chester dinner at tlhe Senior Citizens Center
:Road in Cincinnati September 11th in Pomeroy on Thursday ·from 56:30 p.m. Cost is $3 and menu
;through the 14th.
includes baked chicken, mashed
· LONG BOTTOM . Mt. Olive potatoes and gravy. cole slaw,
:community Church in Long Bot· green beans, biscuit and beverage.
:tom will present the films of Victo· Ice cream is extra. Music will be
·ry from Mansfield on Wednesday provided by Junior and Rita White,
·:St 7 .p.m . Pastor Lawrence Bush AI Windon and B1ll Ward. The
invites the public.
public is invited.

ATTEND WORKSHOP - Meigs High School Senior Mary
Compston, Junior Stephanie Price and their ad.visor ~lean~r
McKelvey spent four days this past summer at Demson Un1verslly
in Granville studying yearbook production. These students alo~g
with Sheryl Haggy, Holly WiUiams, Mary Beth Cremeans, Conme
Sauters Tessie Bradshaw, Jennifer Fink, Mindy Findlay, Candy
Harmo~ Marcia Robinson, Misty VanMeter, Missy Neutzling,
Tracey Grueser, Jason Witherell, Adam Krawsczyn, Miranda
Nicholson Misty Butcher, Sherry Johnson, Heather Pauley,
Ronald Va~ce and Allison Gannaway, make up the 1992 Marauder Yearbook Staff. Tbe 1992 Yearbook will be tbe 25th volume of
the Marauder Annual. The theme ror the anniversary issue is The
Year We Struck Silver,

Justis sisters observe

Community calendar

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

67S·~~z~
MEMBER FDIC

2nd Sheet

Maaon
77HS14

Stb Sheet
New Haven
88Z.Z~JS

EQUAL HOUSING LENDER

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY,WITHDRAWAL OF €Ds AND IRAs.

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___ ___ _

•

' -- --·-----

I

'l

�The Dally Sentinel

11, 1991

MERICO

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Wednesday, September 11, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tyson title defense angers feminists
By LARRY McSHANE
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Women's
rights advocates denounced boxer
Mike Tyson on Tuesday for going
forward with a title bout despite
beiug indicted on rape charges,
saying it sends out a tacit message
thai sexual assault is acceptable.
"What's most disturbing to me
is that men like Mike Tyson are
seen as heroes by so many young
men,'! said Melanie Baham, presi·
dent of the New York chapter of
the National Organization for
Women.
The fonner heavyweight champion is a troubled example, facing
one count of rape, two counts of
criminal deviate conduct and one
count of confinement for allegedly
attacking a beauty pageant contes.
tant July 19 in Indianapolis.
Tyson is guaranteed $15 million
for his Nov. 8 fight with champion
Evander Holyfield. Most agree the
fight will come off in spite of the
rape charge, although the effec t of
the indictment on pay·per·view
sales remains to be seen.
Tyson, who is due in Indiana
later this week to post $30,000
bond, would face up to 63 years in
prison if convicted. Through his
lawyer and a spokesman, he has
assened his innocence.
Tyson is scheduled to appear

Wednesday in Marion Superior
Court in Indianapolois, prosecutor
Jeffrey Modisett said Tuesday.
Tyson's denials are unlikely to
put off protests against the Las
Vegas showdown. Lisa Sliwa said
protests would be held in New
York.
Sliwa. a New York radio show
host and a leader of the Guardian
Angels, said she was outraged by
Tyson 's decision to step into the
ring with an indictment hanging
over his head.
"! think it sends a terrible mes·
sage to young men: It's OK to rape
women," Sliwa said. "Tyson is
held up as a hero, and this sends the
idea ·that you can abuse a female
and be able to get away with it."
NOW's Baham said the New
York chapter wasn't sure what it
would do ye1; in Las Vegas, Neva·
da state NOW president Naomi
Millisor said her feeling was a
protest was premature.
"I think it's inappropriate to do
it at this time, because he's still
indicted, n01 convicted," Millisor
said. "With all the violence and
rape and bauering of women, it 's
imponant these celebrity things do
come out, but he 's still not convict·
ed."
One potential target for a boycott would be the pay·per-view
sales, which are projected to smash
the $55 million record set by the

Holyfield·Georgc Foreman fight
Ross Levinson, a spokesman for
the fight's pay -per-view outlet,
TVKO, said her organiza1ion had
not received any protest threats.
"It was obvious in the wav the
media played il ," said Judith
Condo, the head of Albany County
Rape Crisis in upstate New York.
Tyson started his boxing career in
the area.
" It was a lot of 'He's not that
kind of guy,' little kids being
asked, 'Who is he? ' and saying,
'He's my hero," ' Condo said.
"This testifies to a popular notion
that rape doesn't leave long-time
scars, which IS erroneous.·'
Tyson was recently accused of
fondling other beauty contestants;
in 1988, he allegedly did the same
thing to two women in a New York
nightclub. One of !hose women,
who claimed Tyson grabbed her
breasts and behind, won $100 in
damages in a civil lawsuit against
Tyson last year.
Tyson also allegedly battered
his former wife. Robin Givens,
before their 1988 divorce.
"Of course, he 's innocent until
proven guilty," said Ruth Jones, a
fonner sex crimes prosecutor who
is now a NOW staff auomey. "But
what sticks in the craw is we get to
see him go on about his life, mak·
ing money , getting the publicity.
having a swell old time.

Country music DJ honored by award
CINCINNATI (AP) - A counuy .music singer who has won a
Country Music Association award
as radio personality of the year says
he is delighted with the recogni·
lion.
Bill Whyte, 41, still plays coun·
try music, strumming his guitar
with his band, the Shortline
Express. The Country Music Association recognition comes for his
work as morning announcer on
WUBE·FM, a counuy station in
Cincinnati.
He is 10 appear Oct 2 on the
CMA's annual awards show, to be
broadcast on CBS, to accept his
award.
"For a country music announcer, this is the highest you can go.

This is the top," said Whyte, who
announced the award on his Mon·
day show. "Obviously, I didn't
make it 10 the top of the record
industry, or I wouldn't be sitting
here today."
Whyte was reared in a gospelsinging, family. He left hi s home·
town of' Elsberry, Mo., to work at
several small MissQuri radio sta·
tions and then sp~nt a year in
Nashville, Tenn., trying to make it
as a coumry singer. He said he
recorded "two highly forgettable
singles" before landing work as a
traveling opening act for entertainers Crystal Gayle, Donna Fargo
and the Statler Brothers.
When his Nashville effon didn't

work out, Whyte landed jobs
beginning in the 1970s playing in
suburban Cincinnati country music
bars. He began as a weekend
announcer at WUBE in 198 3. He
rose to become the station's music
director and has been the morning
announcer for the past six years.
He said he had known relatively
little about radio work. The station 's management talked him into
becoming the morning host Whyte
was reluctant at fir st but said he
hasn't regretted it.
"I didn't have any concept that
morning drive is where you wam to
be in radio, " Whyte said. "All I
knew is that I was a musician and
didn't want to get up that early."

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BUFFALO PASTURE- Some of the herd of
buffalo at Jim Dodge's farm in New Boston,
N.H., graze in a pasture. Dodge thinks the buffa·

lo will be the health food of the 90s because the
meat is lean, tasty and chemical free. (AP)

Teen puts headlock on boy driving stolen car
XENIA, Ohio (AP) - A I7year-old girl who gave chase after
spotting a boy driving her father' s
stolen car found the 12·year·old
suspect to be a slippery one.
The car, owned by Jesse Bowman, was stolen from in from of
the family home in the early morn.
ing hours Monday. According to
Darlene Bowman, her daughter
Melissa and a friend were driving
to high school about 7:30a.m.
when they spotted a boy driving the
car.
Mrs. Bowman said Melissa
chased the boy in her car for sever·

al miles before managing 10 pull up
beside the s10Ien car at a stop sign.
When Melissa's friend jumped
inside the passenger side of the
stolen car and distracted the boy,
"Melissa opened the door, got him
in a headlock and drag him out of
the car." said Mrs. Bowman .
Melissa said she hauled the
youth to the nearest house. where
she pounded on the front door and
asked the occupant to call police.
When the suspect said he was
having trouble breathing, Melissa
loosened the headlock.
"! was scared," Melissa said.

"I didn't want to hun him."
The boy then wriggled free and
scampered away. She said she
chased the boy on foot but gave up
after he started jumping fence s.
However, police were later able
to arrest the suspect in a grocery
store parking lot.
Xenia police Detective Dan
Donahue said the boy ha s been
charged with juvenile delmquency
by reason of grand theft. He was
being held in the Greene County
Juvenile Detention Center.
Yale University in New Haven.
Conn .. which opened its doors in 170t,
had an enrollment of 10,967 during
the t989·90 academic year.

10 LB. PACKAGE

STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM- A large pilot
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attempting to free itself from a marsh at Chip·
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ing. About 28 whales stranded themselves on the

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shore or Cape Cod town. Many were able to get
free at bigh·tide and it is expected they will
attempt to join other whales as the tide goes out.
(AP)
'

By DENNIS CONRAD
Associated Press Writer
SPRINGFIELD, Ill . (AP) Was Abraham Lincoln a Christian?
Did he drink? And just how honest
was he? Thomas Schwartz says he
doesn't have all the answers, but as
Illinois' "Lincoln answer man"
he'll try 10 find them.
From his office in fue basement
of the Old State Capitol, the curator
of the state's Lincoln Collection
finds much or his time is spent not
on the collection but in responding
10 inquiries about the 16th president.
It can be a call from the Australian ambassador on the accuracy
of a quote, a Aorida woman asking
abOut lhe authenticity of a letter, or
a movie researcher wanting to
know all that has been wriucn on
Lincoln' s dialect.
Sometimes it can even be a call
from one of President Bush's
speech writers, as was the case
when the White House was preparing for a shift in Bush' no· new -

taxes pledge.
The speech writer said she wanted to verify a Lincoln quote that
was one of Bush's favorites . Bush
could recall only the phrase " to
think anew."
About an hour later Schwartz
nad tracked it down to Lincoln's
second annual message to
Congress: "As our case is new so
we must think anew and act
anew."
By Schwartz's calculation, the
36-year-old historian has only a 50·
SO chance of answering questions
posed to him.
"What's so dirficult to do is to
ever definitively say. ' No, that's
not true,"' he said. " Lincoln was
so reticent 1hat you have to surmise, you have to draw a great deal
from the very little he said."
Take. for example, the question
of Lincoln's religious beliefs.
"People are very much con·
ccmed with his soul and whether or
not any of the recollections of min-

LONDON (AP) - A 16th·cen·
tury, carved oak four·poster bed
once owned by Mick Jagger and
then by Bill Wyman or the Rolling
Stones fetched $24,700 at auction
Tuesday.
''I'm just going to enjoy owning
it and sleeping on it, ' said the
buyer, Ray Gaffney of London.
Jagger bought the bed in the late
1960s and used it in his country
home, Stargrovc in Berkshire,
where he lived for a time with
singer Marianne Faithfull.
Wyman, the Stones' bass player,
bought the bed from Jagger in the
late 1970s, Sotheby's auctioneers
said.
Along with the bed, Sothcby's
sa id Gaffney would get a photograph of Wyman sitting on it.

was cited for speeding - I 08 mph
on a 65 mph interstate - 1n a
remote area of northwestern An·
zona where he 's filming a movie.
Van Damme, star of the movie
"Double Impact." was cited by an
Arizona Department of Public
Safety officer Saturday on Inter·
state 40 about five miles cast of
Kingman while driving a 1991
Cadillac. the Mohave County Justice Court said.
Van Damme, 30, of Chatsworth,
Calif.. is filming a movie called
"Universal Soldier."
He has until Sept. 17 to either
plead guilty, pay a $210 fine or
post a $210 bond if he wants to
plead innocent and go to tnal
before a justice of the peace. a
coun clerk said.

isters can be believed where they
claim that in private conversations .
he made a profession of Christ,"
Schwartz said.
"There's evidence to suggest
when he wa s in New Salem he
wrote a tract condemning Christianity .... Supposedly, the offensive text was taken and thrown into
the heating stove so that Lincoln 's
future political career would not be
ruined.''

Schwartz said it is also unclear
whether Lincoln was a man of tern·
perance.
There's evidence of Lincoln
delivering a speech on the evils of
drinking, but there's contradictory
evidence as well.
"Brandy was used in cooking in
order to preserve foods and it was
used as a base for many of the
common home remedies that are
described in a household book that
Mrs. Lincoln had,'' Schwartz said.
As to whether Lincoln deserves
the moniker "Honest Abe," there's
no question in Schwartz's mind.
"All the accounts we have from
other lawyers at the time, they
don't claim Lincoln was the bes1
lawyer, but they'll always talk
about how he's a reputable man,
reliable," he said.
Schwartz is Illinois' second
"Lincoln answer man" since the
curator's position was created in
1958. He took the job in 1985.
At the time, Schwartz was a
graduate assistant working on the
Lincoln collection at the University
of IllinOis to help pay his bills and
doing his dissertation on Andrew
Jackson's foreign policy- work
he has yet10 comple1e.
"In order to make myself credi·
blc with 1he Lincoln communi1y
academics, I've had 10 prove
myself with publication of scholar.
Iy (Lincoln) articles,'' he said.
"And it all takes time."

KINGMAN, Ariz. (AP) Actor Jcan·Claudc Van Damme

FRI., SEPT. 13

DOWNING CHILD1
MUlLEN MUSSER

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Welleta
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"At Tht End of the Pomeroy·Moson lrltlge"

POMEROY, OHIO

~~

PH. 992-2556

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D.O. STUDIO

MORE TIME TO GET THAT SOMETHING SPECIAL

Persona under 11 muat be eccomplnhtd by parent.
LIMIT ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY
SPECIAL SCENIC BACKGROUND NO EXTRA CHARGE
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�Page--10-The Dally Sentinel

Boxer Mike Tyson expected to
enter plea today on rape charge
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Mike
Tyson arranged to surrender today
on charges he raped a Miss Black
America contestant. Nevada's chief
at hl etic com mi ssio ner said the
boxe r 's ti tle bout in November
~h ould go on.
Tyson was to enter a plea today
in Superior Court after being fin gerpri nted and booked at the Marion County Jail and posting $30,000
bail. The case IS not expected to go
to trial until early next year.
Prosecutor J effrcy Modisett
said, ''This will be handled like
any other booking.''
The 25-year-old former heavyweight champion could get up to
63 years in prison if conviCted of
rape, deviate conduct and confinement for the alleged assault July 19
on an 18-year-old beauty pageant
contestant in his hotel room.
Prosecutors said Tyson forced
himself on her after she rejected his
advances. He has claimed she consented. Tyson was in Indianapolis
at the time to make promotional
appearances for the Indiana Black
Expo and the pageant.
The charge is the most serious
in a string of allegations over the
years that the boxer mistreats
women.
"I've never done anything to
hurt any woman," Tyson told the
New York Post.
He is sc heduled to challenge
Public Notice
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT Of
NATURAL RESOURCES
DIVISION OF RECLAMATION COLUMBUS,
OHIO 43224
LEGAL NOTICE
SMALL OPERATOR
ASSISTANCE PROGRAM
This notice Is a periodic
announcement to the con~

suiting lnduatry concerning
Ohio 'o Small Operator Aaalstance Program. The Smoll
Operator Asalolance Program has been In exlat,nce

Wednesday, September 11, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

heavyweig ht champion Evander
Holyfield on Nov. 8 in Las Vegas.
Tyson is guaranteed S 15 million
for the fight.
Luther Mack, vice chairman of
the Nevada State Athletic Commission, said on Monday the panel
would take up the issue of Tyson's
boxing li cense, which ca n be
revoked for an arrest involving
"moral turpitude ." However, on
T)lesday, Mack said he now agrees
with chairman James Nave that
Tyson's license is not in jeopardy.

Chuck Minker, executive director of the commission, said Nave
"believes you are innocent until
proven guilty. You don'tlose your
rights until convicted."
The World Boxing Council said
Tuesday it is " ratifying" the fight.
"As regards the charges against
Mike Tyson, the WBC considers
him innocent until he is shown to
be otherwise. The WBC has full
confidence in the U.S. system of
justice and also in Mike Tyson's
innocence," the WBC said in a
statement.

Come Out On
TUESDAY, SEPT. 17 at 9:00 P.M.
And Enjoy The
INTERNATIONAL CALENDAR MEN
It's all in good fun!
The Place: SMinY'S of Pomeroy
And you can bring your camera to this one.
The Cost is $10.00-Tickets on Sale at

SMinY'S IN POMEROY

Public Notice

Public Notice

when applying for a alrlp mine
ORDINANCE NO. 601
permll. Conaullanla are uUI- An Ordinance To Establish
Ized to perform thoae sluilThe Salaries of Certain
los. Conaullanlllhat are used
Elected Officials Of The
must be Included on a lis I of Villi go of Pomeroy, Ohio,
approved conaullanla which effective January 1, 1992
Is malnlalned by lhe Small BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
Operator Aaelatance Pro- COUIIICIL OF THE
gram. Any conaullanl Inter- VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
ested In applying lo be In- OHIO:
SECTION 1: That the sal·
cluded on the llot or who
wants further Information
concerning the program

should con1ac1 lhe Small
Operator Asalstanca Pro-

gram at tho lollowlng ad-

for over ten (10) yaaro. Ilia a dress:Ohio Department ol
federally funded Slate operNalural Resources
ated program administered
Division of Raclamallon
by the Ohio Departmelll of
Smell Operalor AaalsNalural Resourcoa. Division
tence Program
ol Reclamallon. The purpoae
Alln: Don Povolny
ol the program Ia to aulat
1855 Fountain Square,
Ohio coal operalora whose
Building H-3
annual production la100,000
Columbus, Ohio 43224
Ions or loll In tho acquisiPhone: (814) 285-6623
tion ol hydrologic/geologic 9-11-91
sludles which are required

ary for the position of Clerk/ Treasurer for the Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, shall be and
ia hereby established at the

rate of $15,000.00 per year.
SECTION 2: That this Ordinance shall take effect and

Public Notice

The Salaries of Cenain

Elected Officials Of The
Village of Pomeroy, Ohio.
effective January 1, 1992
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
OHIO:
SECTIOIII 1: That the sal·
ary for the position of Presi-

Your FREE Membership Includes:
GROUP TRAVEL! Travel with your friends! As a Peoples Choice
_member. you'll have all the advantages of a first class travel club
at a fraction of the cost. The itinerary will include something for
everyone ... everything from one-day trips to cruises and overseas
travel. All trips will depart from one of our three Peoples Bank
locations right here in Mason County and, best of all, the trips
are affordable because the price is based on cost alone!
SOCIAL EVENTS! As a member of Peoples Choice, you'll always
have somewhere to go and someone to go with! Meet new people
with common interests as you atte'nd pre-tour get-togethers,
dinner theaters, picnics, plays. ball games, shopping ttips and
seminars.

PLUS:

SECTION 2: That the sa-

. larv for the position of mem-

ber of the Villllge of Po·

meroy Counci_l, shall be and

law, but in no event prior to

is h.e reby established at the

January 1, 1992.
rate of $30.00 per meeting.
PASSED: Sept. 4, 1991
SECTION 3 : That this Or·
Betty Baronick, Bryan dinance shall take effect ond
be in lull force from and after
Shank. Bruce Reed.
the earliest· time allowed by
law." but in no evant prior to

January 1, 1992.
PASSED: Sept. 4, 19.91
Betty Baronick, Bruce
Reed, Larrv Wehrung.

Real Estate General

For People 50 And Better!

dent of the Vitiligo of Po-

the earliest time allowed by

(9) 11, 18. 2tc

0/e.oice TRAVEL OPPORTUNITIES and
0/e.oice FINANCIAL BENEFITS

meroy Council, s~all be and
is hereby established at the
rate of $40.00 per meeting.

19) 11, 18,

2tc

R. D. Sayler

FREE LUGGAGE HANDLING!
FREE QUARTERLY NEWSLETIER!
FREE TRAVELERS INSURANCE!
.

'

TRAVELERS CHECKS WITH NO ISSUE CHARGE!
A PEOPLES BANK VISA or MASTERCARD
WITH-~NO ANNUAL FREE!

As a Peoples Choice member, you are also entitled

i./£P
...

to a special checking account.
•
Here are just'some of the benefits of
Peoples Choice Checking:

o••, ••o. ·

HOME 992-5692
;:QuAL HCJUstNO
.;&gt;PP'.JRf\.INITY

••.
•.
QUic.tlfW ~ hW•...,...

205 NORTH SECOND AVE.
~ MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTTIE S. TURNER. BROKER

RACINE AREA-ST. RL 124-Airnost 4 aaes ol nice laying
lawn and garden area and a 4 bedroom home lhal within
lhe last 8 years has had a new rool, new siding, new
cabinels, new lumace. new windows. new sa19l~19. new
stool garage, new 'lixlures, and new plumbing in bath.
ALL FOR $40,000
!ANGSVILLE-De111er Road-Nestled in the Pines-is this
modem totaleklctric home thai has a largo family room for
relaxing after a hard days worl&lt;. Included is 3 bedrooms, 2
car garage, central air, and a treated deck. All sonong on
approx. 25 acres.
PRICE WAS $69,900
NOW $59,900
Happy Hollow Rd.-Looking lor a place to.build? Then you
gena see this. Approx. 2 aaes of noce lay1ng deared land.
water and electric available.
REDUCED FROM $6,500
TO $5,900

The Meigs County Humane Society has
many beautiful cats and kittens that
are now ready for adoption.
SHELTER PHONE NUMBER 992-6843

JUST

NEAR RACINE ON' THE RIVER-An acre with a 24X40
metal buiding wilh a deCk and sets ol patio doors, huge
sliding metal doors lor easy storage ol a camper or boal.
Has sewage, water, and electric.
$17,900
ROUTE 124-Have you ever dreamed ol owning your own
business? WeN now's lhe time to buy. This business is
equipped with shake mixer, 4. freezers, ice cream machine,
deep fryer , ice machine, gnll, and lots more. Sotting on
approx. one aae corner lot along a stale roule.
ONLY $60,500
•

MIDDLEPORT-VIne Straet-A nice area to iva in-This
home oculd have 3-4 badrooms. All rooms are nice sized.
Has dishwasher. stove. relrigerator, disposal, and fireplace. What more oould you want? Sits on 21enced flat lots.
Plenty of playroom tor kids.
TAKE A LOOK AT $38,900
POMEROY-Laurel Cllff·Silling on a linkl less than 1 aae
ollevelland is lhis 3 bedroom housewilh an open stairway,
fireplace. and maintenance lraa siding.
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER
$23,000
CHESTER-Sandrldg•Want some acreage? Uve in lhe
clean country air on this nice 33 acre smell farm, with some
timber tree gas, 40X32 pole barn (could usa as a 3 car
garag~) . Also a 3 bedroom. 2 balh home, with a linished
basement and patio.

ALL THIS PRICED AT JUST $59,000

RED HILL ROAD-You've got to see this one-A 3-5 bedroom home has 2 112 balhs. Also has a finished basement
with a lireplace, an attached 2.car ll"~age, an in11~ound
swimming • · end a well aquopped kitchen. It aU 1111 on
approxA~es .
ASKING $120,000
CLOSE TO TOWN-YET PRIVATE- This 2 112 aaes is
easy to mow, because ~ is level. Come•. with large ~ving
room and dining room . Also has a larmly room, 2 bedroOms, and oentral ai' concllioning.
$26,900
SANDY BUTCHER.............................................992·5371
SH!i!RYL WALTERS ...........................................36NI421
DARLINE STEWART.......................................... 992-8385
BRENDA JEFFER$...........................................992-3058

ARRIVED
FROM THE
AMISH
COUNTRY!
BLU
........ ........ ........ •4.50 lb.
BABY SWISS ........................ 3.55tb.
FARMERS CHEESE ...... ...... ... 3.15 lb.
HAVARTH CHEESE ...... .. ....... 3.801b.
MA2ZER ELLA ........................ 2.95 lb.
COLBY CHEESE.. .................. 2. 75 lb . .
MARBLE CHEESE ................. 3.05tb.
LACY LOW SODIUM SWISS .. . 3.57 lb.
MILD CHEDDAR ................... 3.20 lb.
SHARP CHEDDAR ................ 3 .40 lb.
SUMMER SAUSAGE
TRAIL BOLOGNA .................. 3.60tb.
AMISH BUTIER .................... 3.001b.
PEPPER BACON

$0METHINC NEW/
Take the Guess Work Out of Bread
Making and Baking!
•Whole Grain &amp; White Bread Mix
•Dinner Roll Mix
•Bran or Blueberry Mix
•Cookie Mix • Sweet Roll Mix

EXTENDED HOUIS:
Optn Thursday &amp; Friday Until 5:30 p.m.
CAU IN YOUI OIDEI FOI QUICK PICKUP

Ohio Valley

51. EAST MAIIII
POMROY

.

Foods

992~6910

W.• leapt

Food

MARY FOWLER

BALANCES OVER 0 100.00

All travel will be scheduled
· and escorted by
Peoples Choice Coordinator,
Mary Fowler.
For more information,
reservations or itinerary,
call Mary at (304) 675-112 L

People's Choice. Financial benefits and choice travel opportunities
for people 50 and over. Spouses of members automatically quallfy
regardless of age. To be eligible, members must maintain a $10,000
minimum balance in a Peoples Bank Savings Account,
Certificate of Deposit. IRA or any combination thereof.

PEOPLES BANK
2212 Jackson Avenue

2nd Street

5th Street

POINT PLEASANT

MASON
773-5514

NEW HAVEN
882-2135

675-1121
MEMBER F.D.I.C.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"lltl, Lot AqoiM
Tlmea IIJaolcole lllld
c-ters 8ylldl-."

&lt;nvt/ope and a citeck or money
order for $3.65 (rhis includes
poslilge twJ handlirtg) to: Brides, cl
o Ann Landers, P.O. Box.11562,
Chicago, 1/1. 60611-0562 . (In
Canada, send $4.45.)

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
- Bowling Green State University
has begun requiring all freshmen to
take at least one class 'in cultural
diversity to graduate from the
school.
Robert Perry, chairman of the
ethnic studies department, said
Tuesday that the university is trying to seek more balance.
"Hopefully, it will teach young
people about the contributions of
others and how their cultures interact with the dominant culture," he
said.
Bowling Green is the first state
university in Ohio to require such a

cowse, administrators said Tuesday. It took about five years to
develop the curriculum, and there
was little protest because students
and faculty in all departments were
asked for opinions.
Requinng students to learn
about the impact of ethnic and
racial groups in the United States
can improve race relations, said
Beth Casey, the university's director of general education.
"It seems to us the best way to
hold a community together is to
understand the history, the literature and the sociology of these peoples," Ms. Casey said. "Some pea-

EQUAL
HOUSING
LENDER

"Rememoer ro write the $400
check for the mandatory college
class you must lake this summer so
you can keep teaching.
• Most people believe you get paid
during your time off, but don't tell
them you get no paid vacation
because they probably will not
believe you. They don't see you
. spending one to two hours every
·: night correcting and grading

ch&amp;d: which will enti'cle yo ~. to purchlse the aovems.e d 111m at the edvtn_iled
pr1ce within 30 davt . 0f'l'" ~ne vendor coupon wrll be accepted per nem
purchased .

WE RESERVE lHE RIGH T 10 LIMIT QUANTITIES

Gl
=

'
SUBSTANTIAL PENAL1Y FOR EARLY
WI1HDRAWAL OF COs AND IRAs.

NONE SOLD TO DEALER S

Eorn1119
For
Learni

Introducing Kroger's easy way to ~arn
computers for our schools! save register
receipt tapes from your Pomeroy Kroger
store &lt;dated sept. 8, 1991 or afterl and
donate them to your favorite school. With
$200,000 in receipt tapes, your school_gets
a free IBM PS/2 computer and a pnnter
from Kroger. or you can redeem register
tapes for valuable software &lt;hundreds of
titles to choose froml.
What can you do? start saving receipt

•

tapes today and get your school
Involved In this outstanding program.

schools must register with a nearby ~roger
store by oct. 8. complete details are
available in store.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, GRAIN FED
BEEF, "UIIITRIMMED WHOLESALE CUT"
CAP-0111 110-14-LB. AVG.) BEEF ROUND TIP

Whole
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GOLDEN RIPE

Dole
Bananas
Pound

58

Planning a wedding? Wha(s
. riglll? What's wrong? "Tiu Ann
; Landers Guide for Brides" will
t relieve your anxiety. Send a self~· addressed, long .. bu.sintss-sizt

•
DES MOINES , Iowa (AP) : The common household tragedy of
! losing a valuab_Je ring down ~he
• drain - or accidentally llushmg
t (IIU'I'ings or a gold watch down the
• toilet - is unfortunate but avoid1 able.
! Rota-Rooter Corp., which often
: helps people retrieve their lost jew' elry, offers these tips to prevent
mishaps:
•
- Always remove jewelry
I before washing dishes or hair.
l Once in soapy water, rings
• bracelets and watches can easily
~ slide off.
~
- Never leave loose jewelry in
• kitchen or bathroom, and don't
: wrap valuables in tissue to protect
: them , Tissue bundles often get
1 Hushed away or thrown out
I
- When putting on necklaces
and earrings in front of a bathroom
,. mirror, be sure the sink stopper is
: .sec~ly closed.

department offers cowses in black
music and jazz. The popular culture
department will have a course on
19th century slave culture.
The psychology department
offers a course on American sign
language for the deaf taught from
the vantage point of deafness as a
social and psychological phenomenon- the deaf as a minority.
Ernest Champion is director of
the university's new culturad diversity curriculum. When he set up the
program, he said he remembered
what black novelist James Baldwin
told him years ago when Baldwin
was a visiting professor at BGSU.

COPYRIGHT 1991
THE KROGER CO . ITEM S AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY . SEtJt R THROUGH
SATUROA"Y , SEPT 14, 1991 . 1N Pon.ro, . CtuoKror&lt;~•

reld•IY availeble for ule in each Krootr Store, except as speclfrcally note~ In
thil ad . 11 we do run out of en advenis!Ki i1am. wt will ot1er you your ChO~t
of 1 compertble item. wh~n tvailtble, rellect•ng the ume ll'llrng s or I r_am-

"Forget the fact that the fedenll
and state politicians continue to
criticize your teaching even though
they know nothing about your
. profession. You must realize their
. primary conccm is gelling ne-elected.
"Be sune to teach these kids the
basics and remember they must
· score well on the Slate test If they
don't, we know whose fault it will
be."
Gem of the Day (Credit The
:: Progressive magazine): When
· Frances H. Moore died peacefully
at age 90 in a local ~hopping mall,
relatives suggested, according to the
._ Journal Times of Racine, Wis., that
she be buried in her "Shop iii I
Drop" sweatshirt.

How. to avoid
losing treasures
down the drain

ple believe ignorance is the best
way to unity. ThaJ seems to me an
unacceptable view."
Mosl of the 20 courses in the
cultural diversity curriculum
already existed, although there are
some new ones. Administrators
hope eventual! y to offer about 30
courses.
The courses are offered in various departments, including ethmc
studies, English, history, geogra phy, music , popular culture and
psychology.
The geography and hi story
departments teach courses on
American Indian s. The music

ADWEITtiEO mM I'OUCY-Eich of thta'J edvenfler! •tems is r~utred to be

papers.

FREE Peoples Choice Checks!
INTEREST Paid On Your Balance!•
FREE Accident Insurance!
NO Monthly Service Charge!•
FREE Jeanie Card!
FREE Credit Card Registration!
'ON

Dear Ann Landers: In one of
your recent columns, a writer
lambasted California schools. The
~ Sun-~tar (Calif.) recently
pnnted an article on this subject by
R.icha!d H. Lewis, a local teacher I
!"ink ~our readers may find ·it
tnleresling. -- B. B., BRENTWOOD
CAJLIF.
•
D~AR B.B.: Lewis' piece will
ccrtamly open a lot of eyc1h-arid
perhaps close lhe mouths of some
parcniS who have no idea how hard
teachen wort.. Thanks for sending
it on. Here it is, folks:
"If you believe education is our
future, the future looks bleak. The
· very people on whom education
d~ds are now experiencing a
crisis in maale.
"If you think teaching is an easy
job, reDect on how you would enjoy
spending an entire day with 32 of
· your neighbors' kids and their
friends.
"Suppose of those 32 students, 12
speak only Spanish, Hmong and
Lao. Five of the students had no
breakfast that morning. One girl
spent the night with her mother
going from bar to bar looking for
her stepfather. Two students are
exhausled. They were up all night
. listening to their alcoholic pareniS
argue. Another is distraught bec3use
a boyfriend beat up her mother last
night
"Remember to send the boy to
the offtee to take his medicine that
helps keep him calmed down .
The student next to him must see
the psychologist in 30 minutes to
help work out his molestation
problems. Two students in the front
row are too sick to be at school.
They may infect the entire class with
flu. Deep down you have a terrible
feeling that these lcids were sent to
school because there is nobody
home.
"What are you going to do with
the student who has lost his third
social studies book this semeste(l
The librarian says we are out of
books.
"When you donate your time for
open house IOnight, try to convince
those who will listen that there
will be no edocational reform
without parental intervention. Let
them know they must insist that
their children turn off the 1V and
spend the evening studying.
Blaming failing grades on too much
1V is a cop-ouL It is the parents'
responsibility to police the viewing.
Parents have an obligation to take
control of their children's lives.
Children are not just small adults.
"Don't forget to return the
telephone call from the parent who
wants to know what you are doing
wrong that causes his or her child to

misbcbave ar~tt]ritNt

AND THAT'S NOT ALL!
OFFICE 992-2886

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Teacher deserves credit Students must take course in cultural diversity

s • •

ORDINANCE NO. 699
An Ordinance To Establish

be in full force from and after

William A . Young, Thomas
Werry, Larry Wehrung
Brenda L. Morris, Clerk

INTRODUCING

Wednesday, September 11, 1991

lb.

BUY ONE
1-LB. PKG. SLICE!&gt;
REGULAR OR RED RIND

Oscar fYiayer
Meat ·Bologna

· U:S. GRADE A
TYSOIII/HOLL·Y FARMS

Boneless
Chicken Breasts
Pound

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

Deli Fresh
Apple Pie
24-oL l-Inch

SLICED
FREE

ASSORTED VARIETIES
GREEN BEANS, GOLDEN CORN
OR SWEET PEAS

Stokely's Finest
Vegetables
14.2§...15-oL

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

GET ONE

FREE!
U.S. GRADE A
TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

Pick Of
The Chix
Pound

For
KROGER

Grade A
Large Eggs

Kroger Dry
Pinto Beans

1a.&amp;t

4-11. Bltl

I

SAVE UP
TO t1.20

j

\

,,

�~- ------~__..,....----.---------------------------

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 11, 1991

Wednesday, September 11, 1991

Bus,iness Services

Classified
• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

RATES
1

3
6

10
Monthly

An no u11 ce 111 enl s

run 3 d.,aat no charge

1- Cird of Thanks
2 - ln Memory

"SentineC is ~ot responsible tor errors afteJ first dCI't' JCheck

3- Annoucements
4 - Giveawav
5 - Happy Ad s
6-loat and Found
7- Vard S1le (plid in ad\oance)
9 - Pubhc Sale &amp; Auction
9 - Wanted to Buy

after publicatiOn

tel mall e correct•on

•Ads thlt must be paid in advance 1re
Cerd of Thanks
Happv Adt

In Memouam

Yard Sales

"A clauified a~ent~emerH placed 1n Thfll DAily Sent1n~ le• ·
ce.pt --:- cl•stfted. dllplfY , Bus1neS;s Card and legal nohcesl
will alt o IPpeer '" the Pt Plessant Aegister and the Galh·
polls Dltly Tr1bune, reach1ng Oll4!1r 18.000 homes

COPY DEADLINE

r

'I

Pick Up
Volume 2
Of Grolier

,j

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP,ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

.,

FRIDA'( PAPEA

SUNDAY PAPER

.

BEFORE PUBLICATION
1100 A .M SATURDAY
200PM MONDAY
2 00 P.M TUESDAY
2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 00 PM THURSDAY
200PM FRIDAY

jollou:in{! telephon'f' exchanf!es ...
Gillie County

Are• Code 614

L .. - · - ·· .J

Me1g s County
Area Code 614

Mason Co. WV
Area Code 304

446 -GIIIipolis
367 - CI'leshire
388- Vinton
245- Rio Gflnele
256- Guyan Oist

992 - Middleport
Pomeroy

675 - Pt Plees1n1
458 - leon

985 - Chester
843- Portland
247 - Le1art Falls

576 - Apple Grove

643 - Ar~bil

949 - Racln e

379-Walnat

Oist

742 - Rutlend

773 - Maton

882 - New Haven
895 - letart
937 - Butfalo

667 - Coolville

tht Recults Fast

61 52 53 64 56 -

56 57 58 59 -

Hou•ehold Oood1t
Sporting Goode
Antiques
Misc. Merch1nd1u
Building Suppll•
Peu for S.ht
Muticallnatruments
Fruita &amp; Veg41tlbl•
For Sale or Trade

Ernploymenl

Servrces
1 11 213 14-

Farm SuppliP.s
&amp; L1ves1ock

Help Wanted
Situllion Wanted
lnaurance
Business"Tn1n1ng

61 - Farm Equipmeru

6o2 - Wanted to Buv

6J - l1vestock
64 - H•v &amp; Gt~tn

17 - MisceU•neout
18- Wi nted To Do

66 - Seed &amp; Fertij1zer

COUNTRY CLUB
Golf
Lessons (6) .... 155.00
New Grips ............ $4.00

Woolh ................ 122.00
Irons .................. $14.75
REPAIRS
Used lrom ............$5.00
Used Woolh ......... $7.00
AWARDS

This resolution
paned
RESOLUTION 802.91
BE IT RESOLVEO by tho Sept . 4, 1991 .
APPROVEO:
Council of tho Village ol PoRichard 0. Seyler,
meroy, all members concurMayor
ring:
Larry Wehrung, Pres .
That the Clerk/ Treasurer
Village Council
of the Village of Pomeroy.
transfer in the General Fund ATTEST:
hom A1 -7A-240 (Supplies Brenda l . Morris
and Materiels) to A 1 ·70- Clerk of Village Council
212
!Clerk's
Benefits) 191 1 1. 18. 2tc
$1000.00.

Real Estate General

•

I'

Estate

31 - HomeS ror Sale
32 - MobileHomes for Sale
3 3-Ferms for Sale
34- Business Bu~d1nos

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BIILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"4.1 Reasonable

Limit 3 Pkgs.,

Per Customer With Additional Purchase
(excluding items prohibited by law) .

New Crop - U.S. No. 1 - Russet

Betty Brown

Baking Potatoes

White Bread

Day

l;fiijlfNd
41 - Houses for Aen1
42 - Mobile Homes for ~ ent
43 - F~rml for Rent
44 - Apartment for Rent
45-l= urnit l'ted Ro oms
46- Sp ace for Rent

e

POMEROY- A comfortable home in a beautiful setting that
includes two lots. The brick ranch home lealures 5 rooms,
2 bedrooms with finished basement and attic thai could be
used as additional rooms. Fireplace. carpet &amp; hardwood
flooring. 1 car brick garage with exira storage space o&gt;er·
head. All located on a nioo paved street close 10 everything
in town! ASKING $45,000

•

47- Wanted to Ren1
48 - Equipmll!!nt for Rent
49 - For lease .-

8

Bathroom Tissue

Soft 'N Gentle

Mega
&amp; Cheese

Ground Or French Roast

Ground Coffee

Dinners

4 Roll
Pkgs.
i•

Maxwell House

Your

·. 7.25 oz.
Box

1.111 111 ~ l'k ~o~~. l 1 l t&gt;il~ .

1\or Fmnil)' Wirh An)' Olher
\ddllltU l.ll l'ufdl dw [t!xdut.linN ilcms pruhibilt..'lll&gt;y law)

'

Monday 7 a.m. thru
Saturday·Mldnite
Sunday 7 a.m.
'IillO p.m.

Choice

12-13 oz.

·~

.

White,

· Wheat Or Sweet

3-16 oz.
Loaves

12 oz. .

Can

Prices Good For 4 Days
September 1991
W~nesday, September II .thru
Saturday, Sept~mber 14, 1991
-

Mega
Orange Juice

Rt. 62 N. of Point Pleasant, WV.
Saturday, September 14, 1991
10:00 A.M.-?

The Salaries of Certain
Elected Ollicials Of The
Village of Pomeroy. Ohio.
effective January 1. 1992
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE
VILLAGE OF POMEROY.
OHIO:
SECTION 1: That the salary for the polition of Mayor
of
theshall
Village
of Pomeroy,
Ohio,
be and
is hereby
established at tha rate of
$8000.00 per year.
SECTION 2: That this Or·

Can

Limit ·One PkR. """""· Per Famuy Wilh Arry
A!tdilior.bl. ~rc:ha5elellduding ilems prtilibiled t1j law)

Bear
Minimum
Prices
Items and Prices Effective only at:
.

.

GALLIPOLIS BIG BEAR STORE

Brenda Morris. Clark

(9) 11,18, 2tc

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

NEW LISTING! Vacant lot located on Main Street in Porn·
eroy . Immediate possession ol this 60 x 100 loti ASKING
$3,900

TUPPERS PLAINS. 1 floor plan home. 3 bedrooms, fireplace, woodburner,luli basement. I car garage, equtpped
kitchen, satellite dish all on approx. a tOO x 200 lot ASKING
$36,900
SEARCHING FOR THAT HAPPY HOME? JUST SOME·
PLACE TO CALL YOUR OWN. A UTTLE PLACE TO
HANG YOUR HAT, WITH YARD TO HOLD YOUR DOG &amp;
CAT? COME ON IN AND TAKE A LOOK! WE'LL LET
YOU BREATHE, WE NEVER PUSH! COME TO THE
PLACE THAT'S WARM &amp; FRIENDLY. STOP RIGHT
·HERE...WE'RE CLELAND REALTY!
HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................992-1111
mACY BRINAGER...........................................I49·2438
JEAN TRUSSELL .............................................MII.2880.
JO HILL...............-..... _.....................................t85-448e

Jim Clillord-992 -7201

Greg

3 Announcements
LITE &amp; RITE: No more dlttlng

wtight toss program; 100%
natural. 614-378-240 after 4:30.
Reduce your WIIShl·take " New
Shape Diet Plan and Hydrex
Water Pill s. Available Fruth

Drug.

Bailey 992-6810

Roduce your wtl~ht -take ''Now
Shape Dlot Plan' and Hydrex
Water Pill s. Available Fruth

9·S I mo.

Singles, P. 0 . Box 5846, Athen s,
OH 45701.

Now '"·

Sfo~k/1
AIR COHDinONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBIL£ &amp;DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

BENNETT'S

Giveaway

4

1 112 Year

Old Female Oog

Medium Size, Spadt 1 Curranl
Shots, Good With Children! 614·

446-1211.
1 male collie, 1·1 1!2 yrs old,

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

good farm dog, 614-992·2070
l·mlxad breed flmale house
dog. 9-monthl old. Bag of toys
logo with her. 614-367-®07.

Locahtd On Safford khool Rd. off Rt. 141
(6141 446·9416 or 1-1010·1172··596

A&amp;B
COMPLUE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops,
Carpets , Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair .

MAIN ST., MASON, VA.

1-(3034)773-9560

Rutland on New
lima Rd. '
1-10-'91-tfn.

In

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New IOnlt1 lullt
"Free Ettlmates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAW
l-tl·lfn

3 long haired kittens, blk &amp;
whitt, gray &amp; while, gray. 30467!1-735'1.

9 / 9 / 91 / 1 mo . pd

Street, Point Pleasant, every

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Tuesday 10:00 1111 noon .

German Sheperd dog, malt, 2 yr

old 614·985-4288

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•Insulation

llon Call 614-446-2398.

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251

6

Free To Good Hamal 8 Month

Old Halt Collie, Halt Siberian
Husky, Mala, For More lntorma-

Kitten 4 mo old, malt, yellow &amp;
luzzy,littor tra lned,614-092-7623

liKE
DIAMONDS

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

lost : Orange And Wl'lltt Female
Brittany SpanieL Star Acrose

539 Bryan Place

Forenead. 614·256·9340.

Middleport, Ohio
11 -14-tfn

Mobile Hame Parts

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and

or Accessories ...

BACKHOE

If you're

need of

SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
RT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO
8 / 19 / 1 mo. tfn

Yard Sale

7

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Garage Sale, 260S JaHarson
Avo, Sal, Sap! 14, 8:00-3:00,
blby ciO(hu, Brownie uniform .
Moving Sale, 2608 Garflerld Ave

Thura I Fri. Unto bil ol ovoryth:
lng.

WORK

Rummage Slle Burctene Addn,

(614)
696-1006

Saturday, 8:00o41:00, Home Inter-

lor, Jewlary, catMttl, Wllllmt,
boob, gla18WII'II, blby ctolhlt,

mlac::.

6·6·'91

Yard Sale, Frl and Sat, Sept. 13
&amp; 14, 166 N. Park Drive, rain

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For

All Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR .
Owner

&amp; Operator

614-992-6820

Howard

l.

Writesel

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

Pomeroy,

9 / 9/ 91 11 mo. pd.

GUN SHOOT

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

2 Yard Saltt, Sept 12-13, Hyaeu
Run Road, off 124, many Heme

ovorythlng choop, 614-Q92-527S.
S.Fomtly,
Sept.
t2·t3-t4,
Pcmeroy Naylorl Run Road,
lotlow efgno noor Big Whool,

Begins Sept. 1S

rain cancera

Every Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Guns Only
9/9/91/2 mo.

All Yard SaiH Mull Bo Poid In
Advance . Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run
Sund1y editiOn• 1:00pm Frld1y:
Monday
edition
10:00a.m.

Saturdoy.

Frldsy Onlyl Eaat Rutland, Rt.

124, baby, children, big men'a

Business Sen-ices

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

YOUNG'S

t;::======~~ CARPENTER SERVICE

RACINE GUN
CLUB

GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22

-

ROom Additions
Gutter work
Electrical and Plumbing
Concrete work
Roofing
- Interior 6 Exterior
P1intlng

(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Choh

All MADS
Bring It In Or We

Pick

Up.

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6648 or
698-6864

Rt.

Racine.

Fumlturt,

Sept. 13·14, 9-5pm, TV anltnna,
dlntlltstt, clothing, mite, lnterjec11on Texas &amp; Wickham roads
Thursday Sept 12, ~-4 , across
from lodwickt store In Tupper

Plains,

clothing,

yard tools,

elactrlc waedealer, BO Crill &amp;
mort

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Only

Vard Salo: Soptembor 16th, 171h,

18th. 7·? In Kanau~ Acro11
From Super Amerle1 Station AI
Residence Of Dana Aalkt. Drive

9-6-tfn

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

338,

bed,tlothta, drapes, old things,
mlac. ltema.

1·14· '91-tfn

3/6/90/tfn

11· 14-'90 lin

Sept. 12-13· ? Flm house on left

FULLV INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

Aero as Fro111 Post OHico
117 E. Socoocl St.

clothing, Home Interior, toy e,
more.

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

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

Pomeroy, Ohio

12 Gauge fodary

992·7458

BALLET, TAP &amp;

JAZZ CLASSES
AGES 3 and UP

THE DANCE
COMPANY
992-6289

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WAIIANTY

WASHERS-$100 up
DRYIS-$69 up
HFIIGIRATORS-$100 up
UNGES-Got·IIK.-$125 up ·
FIEEZEIS- $125 up
'
INCRO OVENS-$79 up

KEN'S APPLIAN(E
SERVICE
992-5335 or 985-3561

Across From Post Office
POMEROY, OHO
10/a0/'89 tin

9-6·1 mo.

8-28-01 1 mo. pd.

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

Cartfully, Heavy Tr~Hic Are•!

Signs Will Bo Pootod. Port.tng
wm Bo On Ltwn 01 Homo.
"Early Birdo" Wotcomo • Will

Speclallling in
Custom Frame Repair
NfW &amp; UUD PARTS

Have Coffu For You! ltama To

Bo Sold: Display Unho, Lampo,

Many Paptrbteka (Harltquln,
Romanct, A Few Wtlttms,
Kitchen IIams, Uttnlllt~ Many

FOR All MANES &amp;
MODElS

Art NIW!), PotatP1n1, !Upper·

wart, St•mwera, Gllltwlrt,
Olthte, Plattlcwaf11J. Decorator

992-7013
992-5553

Plat11, CIOihlng, uroup. New

or

Socko !Lodiu/Mono), Corner
Shott, Modlcino Cabinet, Small

01 TOU FlEE
1·800-148·0070

Fill I:IIOX, Pl11tlc Buckets, Nice

CoatiiiVute, Mens Jtans,
Bud Vllta/Fiower
Pote , Bookl:, What-Nota, Plcturee, Some Jewelry, Nlscal·
ltneous Houaehold Goods, And
Mtnt

DARWIN, OliO

Flatwart,

7 / 31 / '91 tfn

Manv
Smaller
htma
Too
Numtroua To lilt! Note: Terms :

BALL
God was walking
thru earth's garden
with a special
flower in mind. He
picked our special
loved one 12 yean
ago today. Our
hetrts atilt long to
aee her and some
day we will.
Sadly misaed by all
her
and

in

Lost &amp; Found

ctnctll.

THE

~RESULTS

FRff IS11MATfS

IN MEMORIAM
ANITA (Buckley)

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM StPING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

WANT ADS GET

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
UNES
TRUCKING AYAIIAILE

NEW USTING- WELCH TOWN HILL· 1 floor plan frame
home with 4 rooms. Hardwood &amp; carpet Hoonng. Includes
wood slave and fireptaoo silualed on two lots. ASKING
$17.000
MIDDLEPORT· A very nice aflordable home thai has had
some remodeling completed. Features 3 bedrooms and
bath . would make a wonderful staner home. COME SEE I
ASKING $16.000

Dozer, Backhoe, Trenching Work
Utilities: water, gas, sewer, eleclric.
(us tom and log Homes
Remodeling and General (onlrocling
Commercial Development
See us oboul Sunshine Room Solariums

AI Mason County Fairgrounds

Reed, William A. Young.
Thomas Worry. Larry
Wehrung, Members
POMEROY VILLAGE
COUNCIL

Rhodes
Bread Dough

Breakfast Time Favorite

2 1/J Mi. outside

FALL MACHINEERY
AUCTION

Betty Baronick. Bruce

GREAT LOCATION· LocaledonSR 124bet¥•een
and SR 7. This 1987 Forrest Park Mobile Home with 3
bedrooms is out of town yet clOse enough 10. be handy!
Added tealures with this home are 1. tO acre of ground. 17
x 52 garage with compressor. and 2- 15 x 52 carports!
Furnishings also included' ASK! NG $32.500

•SELL •TIADE

742-2421

January 1. 1992.
PASSED: Sept. 4, 1991

WHITEBREAD

Announcements

(A venture of J&amp;F (ontra(ting and K&amp;J (onstru(fion)

or Night

OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10:00 am-5 :00pm

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

law. but in no event prior to

3-LOAVES

JOSEPH D. JACKS

Prim"

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

dinance shall take effect and
be in full force from and after
the earliest time allowed by

~

Satlsfn~tlon

Clothing fOf entire family, Presbyterian Church, 8th and Main

An Ordinance To Establish

Loaves

WANT ADS

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES, INC.

· 4-16·86·1fn

Public Notice

20 oz.

Thlngs are buzz In In lhr

HI-.

NO SUNDAY CALLS

OROINANCE NO. 598

10 lb.
Bag

We Guarantee Your

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

35 - lots &amp; Acruge
36 - Real Enate Wanted

-No motorized titled vehicles
-No animals
-All farm related consignments welcome
-consignments accepted Friday, September 13,
1991 -12 noon-6 p.m. or Saturday,
September 14, 8 a.m. - Sale Time
-For more Information call (304) 675·5463
or (304) 773-5696
-Must present tax exempt number
-or pay tax - No Exceptions!
-cash or check with proper 1.0.
-Not responsible for accidents
-All commissions go to the Mason County Fair

!

',.

For Old &amp;New Roofs, Shingles
Repairs, Gutters
Building and Remodehng

We Make Great Matches. Carol's

71 - Avtot lor Sel e
72- Trucks fo r Sale
73 - Vans &amp; 4 ~o ·s
74 - Motorcvcles
75 - BoiU &amp; Motor s lo r S1le
76 - Auto Perts &amp; Ac eeuori•
77 -- Auto Repair
78 - Camplng Equ1pmen1
79-Campers S. Motor Homes

23 - Prof•tiORII Serv1ce11

PubliC Notice

Holly Farms Fresh Frying Whole

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·2653

Drug.

Transporl at ion

21 - Businen Opportunity

R~al

CHESTER

•BUY

lb.

Now's The Time to Find Out.

8 -9 · 1 mo. pd.

16 - Schooll &amp; lntrruction
16 - Radio . TV &amp; CB Repa1r

22 - Money to loan

399

I

DAY
-

Classified paf!es .corer 1 he

1 Encyclopedia 1
For Only

Is Your Roof Ready for Another Year of Ice and Snow?

8· 1 2·90-tfn

Merchandrse

"Prict or ~d tor all capite! letters •s dou bl e pri ce o f ad cos t
•1 po•nt lme type only uset1
for erron f1n1. d8y ad runs in paper) Call bi'!!Ore 2 00 p m

I

USED RAILROAD TIES

CLASSIFIED ADS
asupermarket
for everything

• . &amp;Odiscount lor a d s pa•d m 111dvance

ldl - GIVeaway and Found ads undf!f 1 Sw ords w•ll be

dl¥

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•riREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

A at• are for t::onucutfve runt . br o ken updtNI will be charged
tnr e1r.h d~t~~ 11 .. Piflte ads

Meigs. Gallla or Mason counh es must be p re·

'Rt&gt;olive

Rate
Ov~r 16 Wordo
$4 .00
.20
86 .00
.30
e9.od
.42
o13.oo
.eo
81.30 / doy
.05 / doy

Words
t5
t5
15
15
16

Days

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
y

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-13

Ohio

INDEPINDINT

CAII'IT CLIANIRS
and TILl FlOOI CARE

•~eaaoneble R eteo
•Quality Work
•Free Eatlmetea
•Carpet Has Feat Dry
Time ·
•High Gtosa on Tile
Flo·o r Ffnlah
Mill lEWiS. Ow,.
Rt. I, Rutland, OH.

742-201

3-1'4-'91-tln

LINDA'S
PAINTING

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONnRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages

•Complete
lemodtllng

Stop &amp; Compare
FrH Estimates .

985-4473
667·6179

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Toke the pain out of
painting.

let

me

do

it

for

you.

VERY REASONABlE
HAVE REFERENCES
(6141 985·4110

5-31-:90 lfn

8·21·91· 1 mo.

Cooh. All SoiH Final, No
Rolundol
Wodnoodoy
All
Rtmoinlng homo Will So Sold At
Holt Pricot Como And Bring A
Frtondl Wo Will Bo Looking for
You! "Not Rosponolble FOr "'-·
cidonto."

AnENTION
FIREWOOD
SELLERS
Hardwood Slabs
For Sale
Great Pricel

Fumllur~t

Antlquea, OIIIIWart,

Sawing MI Chlno. e MIIM South
On Rl. I. lhurodoy And Friday.
Polio Salo: Rolrlgorotor, Bikoo,
Bop And Gtrto Clothing, Polio
01111 Sliding Doort, Mioc.
HouMhold, A"nd Diohool 430
Lorlot Drivo, 11112 And 8113.
·
Sopl. 13,14,15. t-8. 154t Bledtn
Rd. Clothing oiZH omoll· Olllro

CALL

OHIO PALLET CO.
992-6461
1·1·91 · 1mo.

I

!.

large. ltemt too numeroua to

,mtnt6on.

Get 0ui ck ResuIts! PIat; t! ~~ SJ Pe1 0ay ·8uII eti n 8u~ rr!" Arl vert1se111 en t In
\J ,,
,,,

Ttl e 0aiI y

Senti 11 eI CI~ ssif i erl Secti on.

Thursday Friday, Saturcloy, l
Sunday. M4 Jockoon Piko, Pork
L.one Troller Court. Lot 23.
I

_

...........

.L...-

~

-

,,

�•

Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

SNAFIJ :&amp; h) Rrure llcatli&lt;'

Yard Sale

34

44

2nd Ave., Galllpolle. CloM to
Coun Hou11. 1 room, 2 room1,

Now 1·BR, furnloftod aportmont
In lllddlaport, 814-1112-6225
Complotly Fumlohod moblla
nome, 1 mila bolow town .....
looking dvor. No ......
814-

Business
,.Buildings
OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

0

3

ALL Yard Solos lluol Be Pold In
Advonc:o. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
edition

• 2:00

rooma,

rooms.

4

All nicely

docorotod, air conditioning,
your water &amp; Hwer bill are pala.

0

0

th• day bltore tht eel Ia to run .
Sunday

Make your choice now. No

qudn ovtr the phone, you

p.m.

mutt ... them. Phone tor 1n
appointment. 614-446-7699 day,

Fridoy. Mondoy odlllon · 2:00

p.m. Saturdly.

446·9531 ....

B

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

R~k

Rayburn A01d. Paved road,
county
...,,,
reaaonable
r..trlctlona. Complete Inform•-

Purson Auction Company,

auction HrYict. Licensed Ohio,

tlon m•Ued on ,.quelt. 3~755253, John 0. Gertach, no
alngl..,lde tr~llerw, plllaH.

Wlol Vlrglnlo, 304-rn-am.
Wanted to Buy

1-vacant lot In Middleport all

W1nted all Junk and ecrap mel-

ulllllln ond 1-otorogo building,
814-1192·2G07.

ol,--®38.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry

Apanment
lor Rent

72

Wright

Vory Nice Garogo Aportmont,
lncluda Garage, $24CIImo.
Dapoolt Roqulrocl. 814-44&amp;-211'1,
BolwNn 6p.m. And 10p.m.
Furnished
Rooms

130~108

Rooma for rent .. wnlc or month.

StNplng """"' wHh cooking.
Aloo lrallor opoco. All ftook-upo.
5651, Maaon WY.

1- ft

46 Space for Rent
Counlry lloblfo Homo Pa111,
l\4-ot2-71t70.

Employment Services
11

Mobllt home ~ for rent:

Portable Sowmfll, don,
ftlul your loaa to tho mill )uol
coll304-678-1l57.
HouN ciNnlng or offlco cfoonlng, coll114-4112·3841.
~

Help Wontod On Dairy Farm.
Woln.- Hill Dairy. 114~7f.2ll44.

Help Wanted

5400 WNkly Or lloro Slulflna
Envtlopea A:t Home. Rueh $1.00
S.A.S.E. 110 To: D&amp;A Suppl'!~ 1
P.O. Box 1443, Falrbom, UH

45324.

AVON - All arua, C.U Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2645.

ACTIVITY DIRECTOR
Energetic And Enthualaatlc Ill-'
dlvldual Needed To Coordinate

lmmedlolo Oponlngo Avollobla
FOf Cortlllod NUI'IM Akf01.
Stoning Solary 54.80 Per Hour.
Sign on Bonuo Anflablo. eonloct SuAn SmKh, RN, Plnoccaro Contor 170 PlnocDrtvo, Ga111ji01111, OH 48831, 1144411-7112.
Tr~~nsportatlon,

Proforrod. Excollant Written And
Oral Communfcallon Skills Eooontlal.
.•
Thlo Pooltlon onoro A Campolilive

'

Sal1ry,

Unique

Benefit

Progrom, And Opportunity For
carHr Growth. 'For Prompt,
Contldontlal
Conoldoratlon,
PI oou Fo!WIrd Rosumo, Incl •
lng S.lary Hlotory To:
""
Pomeroy
Nurolng
And
Rohobllftatlon cantor/&gt; 36751
Rk
01
oc 0 11" I"II" Ref,
omoroy,
Ohio 45769. Attn: Bill Billo.
Attontlonl Eam Up To 1500
WNkly ANding Boolco And T.V.

Scrtpts At Home. Many Rudera

Naododl Fuii/Port-Tlmo t.al1·
484-7000 Ext. 288, 24 Houro.
AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU

'

Ben~fltt,

P1y,

Ea:cellenl

Tronoportallon,
407-212-4'11l7,
Ext. 571. llll.m.·10p.m. Toll
Rofundod.
AVON I All Aroao I Shlnoy
Spooro, 304-675-MZi.
Avon-stan your own Bu11neu
tor Chrlltmll. Rtceivt $20.00

· · FrM Avon Glftol call 814-6118..... A370.

CABLE TV JOBSNOW 1·:ZOS.
·. , T36-7000Ext.1617BB.
· CaN llonagor, Fuii·Tlme, Wo111·
&gt;· lng In Gall Ia And Jackaon
. COuntlu.
Minimum
Quallflcatlono, High School
' ' · Dlplom.t, Ex peril net DMJ,.;i,
. · Bono1Ho Oftorod. Send ANumo
· ,, To: F.A.C.T.S. At. 2 Box 273-A,
: Bkfwoll, OH 4Sil14. By Solll..,.
" ·~~or 271ft, 1illt. 11/FIH, E.O.E. .

;

'

!

238 Flrll Avenue, Smoll
2br, KHchon WHh Stovo And
Aofrigorotor. No Polo. Roforon·
coo And DapooiL S288 Pluo
Will Make Your Payments! Aa- utllltiH. 114-441)-41128.
klng $90,000. 814-448-r.IIIG, 304-

3br House And BualneSI. In
Spring Val ..y Area. Buslneu

nu-

675=58GO.

lallry

ucei!Mt

120,000.

RNUmN muol 11o oonl by Sept.
261ft Sond rooume to Dally Sontlnol, P.O. Box 721C, Pomoroy
.::OH.:.c. c48::.71t7-"._,E:.:OE..=...=:- - - Rtg-od N-.
liitonolvoCaro

King'•

oauv~'L....., can-

ter, Alhtana, KentYCky, 18 cur·

rontly -fling rog- nurooo
wnn olporfeiioo for our lntonol¥1 caro ond aurgory unKo.

n......
-duo
·
tunHiot which
oto-ovoflilbfo
to a now MIVIca of ftoan
aurgory bo!ng lmpllmomed 11
our
Expo Iii -'ng for ....
d~ufar ourglcol" potlanto
hotpfuf. Wo- on outotandlna
bonofKo pocMga kif u- lUI
11me pooMiono. Fot - . lnfor·
mlfioll - -Modlcol
- : cantor,
Klng'l
Daughtlta'
Norril1 Rica, RN"_I!roctor, Nuroa
Aacru-rt, """' Lalfnaton
Avo, Aoftfoncf, Ky 41101. 801-'U74807. EIOIE. KDIIC....A potlont

Z bedrooms,

C""' -... _,..,,

448 ..323.

3 lledroom ftou11 on 10 acroo,
400 ft. trontogo, on Brodbury
Ad. 7.62% pooolbfo, S2i,500,
218-315-231111.
3br Houoo And Buolnooo. In
Spring Valloy Aroo. Buolnou
Will llakt Your Paymentel At·

king $90,000. 814-448-1280, 304·

875=5808.

381-ttn.

bedroom eulte, queen

box aprlng1 and mattr..., 304-

8711-6215.
Apt olzo goo range, lied room
30(~75-3431

auhe,
Pll.

after 0:00

Z fumlahed mobile hom.. , 2 1-:-- - : - - ' ' - -.,.--,..-,l i e d - 1200.
128V. ptuo Lg. oofo-bod, good cond., $40.

a

utiiHioa, $100. depoolt. 304-675- 814-1112-3028
8512 or 175-31100.
PICKENS FURN"URE
Z·BR mobllt horn, fumlahed,

woollarldryor, olr, 814-1112-6800.
2br Totol Eltctrlc, 1 112 IIIIo
From Galllpalil, On St. Rt. 588,
Dapoalt And Roforonco R•
qulrod. 1250/mo. 814-4411-3413.
3br llobfla Home. Roforonco
And Dapoolt Aoqulrod. 614-446D52T.

44

1 &amp; 2 bcfrrn opt In lllddillport,

l..ots &amp; Half Acra, Bidwell. 614·

614·1112·221a.
1br Aportmont, 1 Efticloncy

$10.16 WNk.OPEN: llondlf
Thru S.turdoy, lla.m. to &amp;p.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. •
Mlln OH Routo 7 On Rout1 141,

Story

Home.
Bathroom I

rtiW

Kitchen,

Corpollng.
........ 814-4411-.235i.

17

For ula by owner, 3·BR homa

wllh corport, 18x33 abovo
ground pool, 10X12 otorogo
6idg.• cftaln link fonco on Lourol
Cliff Hd. caU614-812-83116.
GOVERNMENT HOMES From S1
(U Ropalr). Dallnquont Tax
r:»roperty. Rtpouelalona. Your
Aroo (t) 805-1162-6000. Ell. GH.
1018i For Current Rtpo Lilt.

HOUSE FOR FREEII lluol move
off lo&lt; In Middleport. Fill In
baatmtnt, aNd and atr11w. Mutt

tlgn contractl 2-BR, Large LA,
DR, Bath, haa Mw root and Slut·

tar, naw copper and PVC plumb-

Ing, nNd oome work. You poy
for tho moving! Only llriouo
collorol can 6f4-912-2071 oltor
7:00pm.
HOUN for Olio In Dallor W/2
loto~ 2 olory, 3 bdnn, 614-742·
210• or 87ti-56V4
32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Utlllta Fum, clap req, no peta,

1m C';'~elon moblla ftomo,
304-6711or 1711-11147.
1f75 Flaotwood 14l70, 3br, 1 112
Bllfto1 With Woodbur-, Toto!
Eloctnc. se,eoo. 814 448 8078.
1184 Scftunz 14•65, 2 BR, otl

Fa,_, ar poroone lnt-lod In
~art Tlmo BabyoHtN Naodod In living on '"'"' a ftolplng wfth
Send '""'Y to: Box
Waohlnglon School Dlotrict. 1 cilorM;
CLAOB1, c/o Qaftii&gt;OIIo Dally
Hour Before And 1 Hour After Tribune, 125 Third Avonuo, Go~
School. Rotoronoo Aoqulrod. llpolll, Oil 411831.
-814-4-46-2101.
Port~lmo oorlng !Of portlally· 14
Business
ambulltory ecltrly women In her
Training
nome.
lncludN
light
houookNpfng. Sond rooume, Rotroln
_,IISouthoollorn
lncludlna · roloroncao, C/o Bo•
~. S~ Valloy
m-o, "rho Dally Sontlnol, BuolnNO
Plaza. Coli Todiy, 11
431711
,_oy, Olio, 45781.
Aoglotorotlon,__B.
Port~lmo
Tronoportatlon
llonHor -lllfl. Appllcailono 18 Wanted to Do
May Only lo Obtolnod From i::-:~~::::~;:.~
And Aaturnod To Your Locof WIU llabyoft In 11J Home
onto lu-u 01 Employment Anytime.
Rodnty
Aroo.
- larvlcoo Olllca. A Complota Job Roloroncoo Avofialltj. Coli e14Daocrfp41on lo Avollabla For :::
24.::5~5.:;111!
~,~:-:--::----:-:­
RilYIIIW At Tho OBES Office. •
tlliocfnno For Appflcotlon 1o Buoh ~ Sorvfca. 111-bfo
&amp;ept. 13, 1ett. -lng Dncdp. Roloo. NO Job To lmolll 114tlon II II - : Port~lmo 378-2t4:t.
TranoDOrtatfon - . . . hourly Doar ..,. nn, ell Ray Prooton,
rwt.si.IS,. 20 ltoura por -11. :I04-61W714 or _.7131.
otftor
iloiJNtor traN,ortetlon
u
·
R•panlll•
...... u .............. ...
of tOOidonto to .,., from
wOfbltM, ,.......,_. ewn11, yord---~
R-ilto rotoo
..
,
ond oppol-• lor non l'lllt1u• ~·
D'l
tionol lociiHr. Perform - - . Clolnlllfl . .
u noodod. Malnllfn _ . o f
.
vlltlcla repair ond .,....,.... dallyotN-14
llloo PIUII'a Day Caro c:.ntor.
mal!"":r;.:::r:ra
Solo, aHordebto, cftlldcan. 11-F
~llllcot'-: ltlgft ..... I a.m. • 1;30 p.m. ~ :M-10.
dlplotno or oqUIYIIont, ..tlol
Boloro, oliN · 11rop-1n1
••~come. 114 ••• a:u. NeW 1no
Cillo -··~~ot-.
font
ToddiN
Caro,
114-44M221.
- o y POSTAL JQII tl1.~
$14.- . No • .,.. noodld...... To. do worll ond/or tolco caro of
oum ond Olllllicallon lnto:~_CIIII odorly or hondlcap In my noma.
1·211-1181'W17om-10pn 7110JL
IM-1112·2403

tl1clr&amp;c, undatDinnlna. 2 por-

chH, outbuilding. lluol

lie

moved. 814-«f-.12:23.

wllx2Boxporldo, lllck,.......,.

penning, e1111rof olr, Included.
PrtvotolCII Galllpolfo, Ohio, :1041171-2112.

.-=t -..,..

1112 14ll0 throe lledroom,
2 lUll llotfto1 ohlngill roof, vlnyt

.=

enuttera,

llding,

carpettid

thi"Ollllftout, oil drywoli lntond l-llo~l:•:r- $17,187.00.

CoJI1oiOQ.

5.

Cfoyton, Bfllrp Ao A Tock.
141711 J lodroom, Total
Eloctilc, StUN. Nowftora EIH
But EIIM Home CortN. Coil 1·
114-712·122G.

- - - --

-

'

-- ---

.. -

- .- - - -·- - --

- - - -- -

Ohio. All Utllltloa Paid. 614-38811141.
Aportmonlo For Ron~ 8t4-44&amp;a22t
Apilrtmtnta for ,.nt In Pomeroy
and llldcloport. 1~ lledroom.
call from I to 5. 814-912·2403.
Aportmonto for tho Eldorly. Gallie Manor Aportmonfo. 856 Buhl
Morton Rood. Daoli"od tor tno
Sonlor CHizon (62 otdor} snd
Handicapped persona. Equal
houolng
opportunHy.
Ai&gt;"
pllcotlono moy lie plckod up ot
Sptlna V.lloy Ptoza, 521 Jack·
oon Pike or call 114 448 4831.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES1 . 838 Jaclcoon Plko
from Slloumo. Wolk to ahop •
movloo. caU614-446-2568. EOH.
Completely Fumlohod Small
HouH, No Pete, Yard, Plua
Utllltloo. l235/mo. 814-446-G338.
Cotiogo, good for 1, carpotod,

-

-- ~

room Suite, 7 pc., $1CS.f7 W•k.
Includes Blddlng.Country Pint
Dinette With Bench 1: 4 Chalra,

In Centenary.

Solid oak chino coblnol wnlaftto.

Glau ahelv.._ 1 year old. taoO.
Oak pie ufl, 1 yur old. $300.

Altar 4pm 814-446-8000.
·
SWAIN
AUCTION ' FURN"URE. 62
Olivo St., Golllpollo. Now I Uood
furniture, heatera, Western

Ci1alra,

Bow

*

Fuml1htd Ap1rtment, 1 Sedroom, Water Paid, •275, 112 Ulle
Fuml1hld

Apertment1,

1225 Utllilln Paid. 120

1br,

Fou~h

Ave, l 107 Second Ave, GaJ.

lipoHo. 114-44tl-4416 """' 7p.m.
Fumlahod ollf, 807 2nd Go~
llpollo. 1 BR, $225tut1Ht1N pold.
114 441 441U~or p.m.
Fum(ahod Eftlcloocf, $165/mo.
UtiiMioa Paid, Sharo Both, 807
SOcond Ave, Gallipollo, 814-ol&lt;t&amp;4418 AffN 7p.m.
Groclouo llvlllfl. 1 ond 2 bod-.
n&gt;am oportmento ol Vlllago
•ond
Alvoroldo
APirtmonto In llfcfdloport, Fnom
fiiMI. Coif 114-112-7?17. EOH.

-

North 41ft, Middfo11Gr1, onto. 2
flodr- fumlol1od apt, clopoafl
ond · · - roqutrod, 304-112One I I - Apartment Uvlng

Room F - . Complata
Kltcllln In latft, Goa
Halt, Air Conclftlon. Waohlr And
DryN, Good ~ftborftood.
Roforonel And~ Raqulrocf, 114-441-1170 AIN Sp.m.

Chalra,

Floh Tank, 2413 Jocklon Avo.
Point Pluoont, 304-41711-2083,
full llno Troplcol 11oft blrdo,
omollonlmafo lnd ouppllao.
Squlrrot dog, 304-675-6132.
AKC Chlhuohua 'ilny 3-112 lb.
Mole, 1 yr. old. 1200. 1114-3117·
71211.
WHAT'S SO DIFFERENT ABOUT
THE HAPPV JACK 3-X FLEA
COLLAR? " WORKSIII Contolno NO Synlhetic Prrolhroldo.
For Doao I catof J D NORTH
PROOutE 814-441-1133.
WhHo Pomoronfon, 114-91202377.
fj1

Musical
Instruments

Bundy Cforlnot S200 814-1112·

2025

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Antiques

Buy or 1111. Rlvorlno Antlquoa,

1124 E. Main Straet, Pomeroy.
Hourw: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m., Sunday 1 :00 to 8:00 p.m.

614·992·2a26.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

16 Inch Glrlo Blcyclo, Purpla
And Whllo, Now Tlroo, $25.00
304-675-1433 Ahor Sp.m.
16'l7' wftlto fillorglaoo garaao
door1 wfopener &amp; remote, $150
tor aoor, $150 for opener both

1275, 614-1'12-2601 tor inlormo·
lion to 111.

1951 John Daoro llodol B
AobuiH, Excolfont CondHionl
Hyotor 4 Sta~ Fork Uft, 3

Trailer Axles, l Tr1ll1r Bed. 114-

446·2359.
8ft. Flllorglooo Toppor• Bought
Ntw, 1522. I

HP

~venrud1

61 Fann Equ Ipme nt
50 IIF Troctor WHft Plowo And
cunlvotor And 5 Ft. Buoh Hog,
S3,550; 16511F Turf Troctar WHll
6 Ft. Flnloftod IIOWN, 15,350.
OwnN Will Flnonca. 614-216es22.
Grode Holololn Hollo•~ •'1100
Brod to Llmouoln bull.
614-2411-1525.
JD 2010 Troctor WKft Now Buoh
Hoa 13.250; t388 on- DIHot
WH'h Plow, Tronaport D1oe And
Buoft Hog 11,160; OWner Will

•••ft.

S"tereo.l;l

e

~ &amp;e~Newa 1;1

a::-

:,.

0 Naw Zorn~ Stereo. 1;1
8:31 (I) Andy Qrttfllh
7:00~e

71

63

Uveltock

-::;~~~~~~~:"'::::~

BIO 4 H - R - 'halflt YOOt

::=,And~~
:!i
...:'~ r=.,flnMIT::,
Shown Ita. . lly lmd Chllif.
111

11114~-~~~·!!:21!:_,,_:_,,__ _

ffCON/) J..ANGUA(;f"7

YOLI JVIf'AN,

IIIIIII I I

scRAM-Lm ANsw••s

e

i

MOVII!: Angel and 1M
ladrnan (2:00)
a:l (J). Dlilllllltn Rollble
rebels against the
rha-ol-paaaaga lladltlon of
hOWling. (R) Stereo. I;J
Cll (!I 'Live l'ftlllt LinCOln
CenlarStereo.
all ill. ,.... and Ill
fllmln Jakl lnd McCabe
IOfva the ,_,. murder of a
mon already dead. (R)
Stereo.C

!lD. MOVIE: AlttiZIIIfl

Slllllea: The lltwle (2:~

!1J Murder She Wrolll:iJ
Ill Funny i1111nua Willi
CMrlla CM• VII Country

mulk: ate" Alan Jac:kt100
and Rettlell Heart become
oblectS of practical jokea.
(1 :00) Stereo.

•

PiltiNNeWI

0 111g lllothar Jaka Stereo.

1;1

1:05 IIi MOVIE: An l!ya tor an
l!ya (2:00)
8:30 a:l (I). Wondar Yaa,.

campe111&amp;
Motor Homes

Kevin plana a party lor
aduatlon from junior high.

~1;1I Stereo. C

Maniac Manolon Stereo.

1:00 we

~
(I) e Doogle " - - ·
M.D. Doogle helpa Wanda
.MORTY MEEKLE AND ::;.~~~--::---1
MRe.

Wol--

with problema arising tram
nor mother' a death. (R)
Stereo.
at
41 Hatn (Season
Premiere) Fate brlngl a
woman to meet her kHier.

=•

c

....----------,
I eeT "We. ec:::m-1 HAD
ot.IR r:Jt-~e~ ~~­

HA~BeRRY

aA.lD IT WA5 NICE 10

Stereo. C
11J MOVlt::

BEHIND OUR~-

e.EEMSAMlN •••

Uglllnlng F1afd
(2:00) Stereo. g
Ill Nelltvllle NOw Stereo.

til LI"Y King Uvet

0

s--ow and Mra. tOng

8:30 a:l Ill. 0.¥11 Rulel
Dwight plana a birthday
surpriH tor hla fatfler. (RI
Stereo. !;I
10:00
Quallturn ~.aap
Sem entere a mental
~=life. (RI Stereo. g

we o

e....-

BARNEY

a:J (I). Anyllllng lui Love
Hannah feels the romance
haa gone out of her

;;m.:=,

EVEil'BODY'S FEDif

(~Stereo. g

PAW, JUGHAID, TATER,
OL' BULLET, AUNT SUKEY,
BESSIE, TH' HAWGS,
TH' CHICKENS
AN'--

tiiWOIIclllawll
0 700 Club With Pat

.Q97 4
tJS IS

+s

PHILLIP

EAST
+8 41

WEST
+K9 7

ALDER

.K 108

•.usz
+K

t9 88
+AK74

SOUTH

•.u

3
tAQ1072
+Q 10 I

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

By Phillip Aider

1.

Wttt
Nor til Eaot
Soul~
When you uncover a good trump lit
Obi.
2+
Obi.
Pass
Pass
in an auction where both sides com·
Pass
3t
pete, you should apply the Law of ToOpening lead: • 3
tal Tricks . It is usually correct to b1d
for at least as maDy tricks as your side
has trumps. So with nine trumps be·
tween you, take the bidding at least to
the three-level. If you fail to win nine
tricks, the penalLy usually proves to be
less than the maximum the opponents
could have scored in their optimum
The percentage play is to finesse,
contract.
but Blakset stopped to work out the
Today's South followed this princi· distribution of the missing honors.
pie. East's double of two diamonds East was marked with the A· K of
was "responsive." It announced that clubs and a high heart honor. (If West
East had sufficient values to bid but held the A-K ol hearts, surely he would
had no clear-cut bid available. South. have led a top heart.) West must have
knowing his partner wouldn't bid two had the other honors to justify his
diamonds with fewer than four takeout double. Declarer put up the di·
trumps, raised to three diamonds de- amond ace, West grudgingly dropping
spite holding a minimum opening . the king. BlakseL lost one club. one
Then the decla~er, .Knut Blakset of spade and two heart tricks.
_
Denmark, JUStified hts b1ddmg w1th an
East could have made life much
1harder for South if he had won the first
excellent piece of card-reading.
East won the club lead with the king l trick with the club ace rather than the
and returned a trump. Would you fi · ! king. True. it would have misled West,
nesse or go up wiLh your ace?
but that couldn't maller here.

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

36 Hllght lboYt

1 Golden·
ftolrtd
7 Article of
apparel
13- Tower
14 Turn•
outward
15 Develop
gradually
18 Spray-pointIng device (2
wdo.)
11 Plnce-18 ActorNovallo
20 Chemical

40 Formerly
41 Totn. .ne~
tarod aide
43 Sine- non
46 Drltd up
47 Float on
water
50 Ramon
covering of
53 Nlgftt of tho

IUHIX

21 Component
24 Between Ky.
and 111111 .
27 One wllo IIIII
31 Held growth
32 Betr
33 Oura- to reason
WhJ
35 Realdua

55 Glacial epoch
(2 wda.)
56 ShoeiiCI Up
(Yif,)

57 8an from 11w
practlce
58
garment

La'-•••

5 fland
6 FDOiblll
team
7 Carrltr
8 50, Roman
8 Ovar lpoel.)
10 Goad
11 Daze

DOWN
1 Exllled
2 Not on tapa
3 The Wlurd
4 Foolboll org.

AotMttaon

Round Pat1onnanoaa Stereo.
• CIOOit lncl CltiM
CD laHball Tonight
11:00()). a&gt; (1)., Ill !Dl.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

•l

Cortor'o Plumbing
Ond Hilling
Fourtllond Pfno
Gaitlpol.., Ohio
814-446-3111

-~

114-4....-.

HEAT PUMP laloo I Sorvlca,
304-6711-3011 or

-good-.
· U ilt.r304-6'15-1510.
'H onglno, 84
Electrical &amp;
15,200,
Refrigeration
naa 0oc1go Arfoo, $1011; aooc1
CI'L,coll l i e - 3pm- RNidonilal
., oommorofol
lpm,I14-510S.
~.--or .........
lo • Truo? , _ For $44 llutir u - oloctrlcton.
'!'hrw\1111 Tho u.s; Clown eou RidaMur Eloctrlcol, :104-675TCIII , _ ,-..17..... ut. SL- 1711,
General Hauling

I

""-".:!!'

I'
l

..

"

..

10

·~

Who holds
the king?

10:01 (J) MOVII!: The Family (Ri
(2:00)
10:30 (I) (1). Manlad Paopla
Ruaeell'a atory about building 1•
lnapectorl cauaea trouble at
hcwni. (A)SblniO. I;I
Cll
(!) . _ , The Pinal

to patch up a broken romance? The As- your target .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Something
tra-Graph Matchmaker can nelp you
rather unusual might develop today that
understand what to do to make the relacould
put your faith to the test. Fortu·
tionship work . Mail $2 plus a long. self·
nalely,
you should find you 'll have the
addressed. stamped envelope to
strength to overcome any and all
Matchmaker. clo this newspaper. P.O.
Bo• 91428. Cleveland , OH 44101 -3428 . challenges .
ARIES (March 21-Aprlf 18) There's a
BERNICE
. UBAA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your financial
chance that you may reap some form of
BEDE OSOL prospects are likely to be a bit brighter harvest tOday from seeds others have
today than they will be tomorrow. If
you 're working on something you hope sown, yet those yo~ participate with will
make you feel as connected to the
will ·add· weight to your wallet. don't
crops as those Who planted them.
delay. · :
SCORPIO (Oct. 2~NoY. 22) You are TAURUS (AprH 20-MIJ 20) Under most
conditions, you prefer to operate lnde·
definitely suited for .the role of a leader
pendently of othere. But tOday you
today. It won't be easy for you to stand
might
lind it more advantageous to do
idly by while someone inept tries to run
things In tandem with partners.
the show.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Several pro·
SAGJTTAI'IIUS (Nov. 23-Dec, 21) The
jects you've been unable to complete
bollom line Is the final factor that ascan be finalized to your satisfaction tosesses success or failure tOday. When
day - H you malee them priority en·
Blpt. 12. ' " '
the,tally Is concluded, you ~hould come
deavors. Put the toughest ones at the
out
ahead,
or
at
least
better
than
you
Loyal friends will put their feet In doors
top of your (let and work down.
··
for you In the year ahead which you anticipated.
CAIICI!R (JUne 21-JuiJ 22) People
A
relaCAPRICORN
(Dec.
22-JIII;
11)
couldn't open on your own. Some of
you'll be lnvol)led with tOdey are likely to
your hopes and wishes will be lulfllled tlonmlp. you've already eslabllmed
mike you letf 'adinlrad end Important.
through the good will you've estab- could begin to grciw In llignHicance to- What tillY say wiN be sincere end can be
day ..You end the other party Involved
liShed In key relationships.
taken at fi!C8 value.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) You have a have a trernendOUa amount in common.
LI!O
'(oluiJ
D-Ailtl.
22)
'. It' a .Important
· natural talent tOday for being able to silt AOU~S (Jan. 20-FIIIt. 11) You will
that
you
keep
'/0111
ob~eetlves and dethrough the suggestions of others and be more effective tOdtly Hyou don't anllires uppermoalln your mind tOday. VIcapitalize on their best ideas. yet you'll nounce your Intentione In advance, es- . sualillng your motlya11on will enhance
acknowledge ihe authors of the ones pecially In matters that have compel!· your' probllblllleltor auc:-"·
that work and share the benefits. Trying live elements. Secrelly proceed toward

I · U· tl

+Q8~2

o Night eo..t

Harry's romance with
Cnnsune auHera when Tony
reappears. (PI 11 (R) Stereo.

Home

D

+J9~ 3 2

7:S6(J) Sanford and loll
1:00 ())
0 UniGivad
MJIItaMI New lnoighte Into
the Bermuda Triangle; a
ltidnapper conteases. Stereo.

ALLEY OOP

•··

NORm

BRIDGE

t~~c-atn

&amp;E$1C&gt;ff •

l MfAN, AMfRICAN •1

BASEMENT
WAllERPROOFING
U-.lltfonllf llflllmo gtl8tant01. Lacaf .......... tumlohod.
Froa 11tlmlf01. Coli CGflocl ,_
514-237-oaaa, dor ' or night .
Rogora
BUamont
fing.

'*'

FORI

(l)

f-N6/..If/1 ANI&gt;,
you /Cf"JOW, J..IJCE,

F - caN Sola Daleo ato: 72 · Trucks for Sale
=·~~Vol, dirt Ond
Sept. 7, 21, Oet. ·~·· Nov. 2.11.23.
~l~palfo -,old Co." .14- 1110 Ford F·150. XLT Lolfat, 4x4,
...-'1222.
.&amp;:~ lr7
Upholstery
Full bloodod Hompoftlrt bolr r:.,...~
firm, 114-112-iZZi.
:M::o=••=oy:::·.~u;::pr~'lol~ot;:!'!nv=:;!---plp.1143MI331
Ford ~to!'~ now lng trf·OOWIIJ.,.. 211 yoara. Tho
Roglilonod
otud- 1110
000. 1.,.
In IUmMura Upftofot""'CaJI 11t '
71 . . . . . . ••
!:J.-:::~'
. ~ .C
oif 304-t7J.4t84 fOr
•-•ftori:DVPM.
tlmaiOI.
only.

=

,. A

/

·-·

"':0 :r'

I'

CD,..._~ llneball

Improvements

8S

I0

Paunch-- Balmy - Saucy - Lotion - BUILT UP
"I'm' not satisfied with the results Df my hair stylist,
and I've been going to him for years." grumbled the
wife. The husband suggested, "Maybe your 1mmumty
has been BUILT UP

a:::-.::g

II

carponlry and Efoctrlcal lor·
vlc01.
Froe
Eltlmotooll
::.:.;.=,:..:..:~-.,:-.,...,...-= 1 A-onoblo Rotooll 814-11111tm c~ ~ 3110, 4484 or N11-31188.
a.-o, now ovorything, $1400.
doyo 814-1112-2155. attor 6:30pm, Compioto Mobile Home Sot.Upo,
call 30W7Mt88.
Ropolro; Cornmorlcal, Atofcfen.:
::::::'-':::--~=--=-:1 tlaf lmpro••oelltL Including;
1160 Ply1110Lth Champ; G- Ptumblria, Eiactrlcol. nuranca
Gaa MIINge. Good Sftopof Runo Cfofmo liiicooptod. 814-288-1011.
Qoodf 2dr, Sumo!, Hotcltbock. CUrtfo Home fmpravomonto:
tl.200. Coli llarll At: . 814-3117- Vooto
On Ofdor 1
0411 e a 7p.m.
NftN Room AddHiono,
1111 .._,_ "~-Founda11on Work. R........,
muol-, Wlndowa I Siding. F.;;"''E::
good wor:!'.~~end loavo tlmoiNI Aaflrancai, No Job To
m11oago_.....,_
Blg0rlmallll14-441-0225.
1112 CUt- 8uprome, y_. duol E I R TREE SERVICE. Tollt&gt;lng
.......... now tlrOo a point, good TriiNrllng, T- Rornovol 14edae
-,o~~arp, 30W71HIII.
TriiNrllng. Froo EoUmotOol ~~
1112 Olcfo Cutlolo $1,110. 304- 387-'IHT.
JET
Alrotlon llo&lt;oro, ropolrod. Now
.
1112 Olcfo Cut- llr_ougftom
PS, PI, PWJ._~L CruiN, Tift, I rH&gt;uiH motoro In llock, RON
Exoolfont liCinOftlonf Allllng EVANS, JACKSON, 011. 1-aoo.
837-1628.
13,000. 104475-7!A.
1112 Ponloc Grond Prix, T- Ron'o TV Service, _..llzfn~
Topo, Efoclrlc Wlndowa, a Soot. In Z.nnn afoo ~ moot
other brlndo. Houoa caiTa, 1110
tl,900.11oH46o227L
"""': opptfo- ropalro. WV
1113 Oldo Dlfll II, 304475- 304v'll-2381 Ohio 1~41-2454.
4001.
Soptfc Tank Pumping 110 Gallla
1184 Cofobrfty, otdr, !:}, AC, PS, Co. ROll EVANS ENTlERPI!iSES
PB, Extro etoonl 13.-. can A~ Jockaon, OH 1-800-837-1521. '
IN &amp;p.m. 114-4411-1244.
Davlo
S.W.Voc
Sorvlco
1114 Fonl Tompo Wrockld, Goorgoo Crook Rd. Porta, o.,.:
Good Englno And 'rrono Alia, plloa, pickup, ond daliv- ...
448.0284.
- ,. • $450. 814-3117-7111.
1c::='-:::0.:7-7:::.;.;.,.,.-,...,..-11111 Rlvorll, Uu _ , Garogo Will build polio covoro, docko,
tcriiiWCI roam•. put up vinyl
Kootl 25114-4411-12110,
'000 Mlloo. 304-875Allllng, oldlng
15,!100.
., trollor lklrtlng &amp;14245-6"857.
.
5801.

4'7.

v

Tllltlght Stereo. !;I
(J) • Mlntli'l flittiiJ

FRANK AND ERNEST

~dUitlonncot!'. ~ r.;v_n
car... f.el!
614-446-llt'o4:""' '
""""

=-

ct

m !lie .....,.._,.

Serv1ces

82

1 1 "'

7:30~fJ'~g

campor for oola, good condition. afooDI-I, Ylry roooonablt!,
11W43-Ii24.

--r -.-.

I 1

;I -

The Wallona
7:01(J) 11-'Y H.....a

Four Ford rlmo wltft now 11roo
-oonaf, PIN 75 R
14. $150. 304-6711-SI51 ovonfngo.
Now gu tanka, ono ton truck
whoolo, rodlatoro; ffOo&lt; moto,
otc. R &amp; AAuto, Rlploy, WV. 304372~132 or 1-aoo.m-aaae.

Autos for Sale

II

My
neighbor
teaches
1---.:C...:.E~H__,E""L;;.,-....j :; classes for those who want to
7
6
become citizens. He tells
L-..1.-.1..--'·'--•·--' • them that a good education Is
r--=~~~-=-':":'"'--, the essential' foundation of a
RI 0
strong ----·-·- .
1--T~_;,;~~-i6:...;~;,~ngi-rl--l
Complllo 1ho thucklo quoted
.
•
.
•
_ •
by fill in; In the milling words
L-...1.-..L.....JI-..L-'--..J you dovolop lrom otop No. 3 below

=~
0

bock tlru

,_a.-

Boor Con And BN~~Cotloclion For S.lt. 614-ol
7.
Contury - · 814-3118-933ll.

!IJ~I;I

2263.

Transportation

1;1

TNII:The Naxl

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories
Budgot Tronomfollono Uood &amp;
robullt, ofodlng at iii; A.-o
Parto. 814-245-8877, 114-3'11-

814=317·7927.

-.-j""Tul_o.,...,A-nis-i!J

I"'"""·

. , UN SCRAMBL E
ANSWER

Netlllllourl;'l
~CtirNnt Aflllr D

76

81

RYELAY

.,....1:.n-12;,;;.I1..:.;-1,1--l

· .1. .

t1J1 Wheal o f F -

Tt.=:n

[ll

~~

A PR INT NUMBfREO
~ LFTTERS

CD Up CloM

1184 Hondo V-15 IIIIana. e,ooo
mlfol.llu now. 304-115-Q.
1181 Kawoookl ZL 100 11bllco, now tlroo, battery a tuno
up, uc cond, 304-f7S..A5I.
t9U GL 1800 Gold Wlna, Excaffont Condnlonl Exlro Chrome!
5,000 111101. $7,200. 114 418 1521.
ttll Yomofto RTI&amp;, T-250 CC,
Nft!. o~~S: Kopt, 2 Holmoto,
$1,6&gt;5.
MI63,AftNip.m.
1110 Hondo Four ~. 2
Wftoot Drlvo, Ulco Naw1 Lo•
Than 100 Houro Aiding nmo,
12.700. 614-448-7708, Or 114-3117o
n$8Attor5:30p.rn.

79

8

c::-1;1

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

74
Motorcycles
:::~~::-:::::;~::::::::=:::::­
1184 Honda lntorcoptor YFSOOR,
now tlroo, matcftlng llolmot,
1,800 mlloo, robullf onglno,
St,IIOO. 304-1'15-1111.

=.r.::d~o

ContMt

(!I 3-2·1

lho
below to form four olmplo wordo.

I

1:01 (I) Too CloM lor Contforl
8:30 (J)
t1J1 NBC Newl 1;1
!]) t IlNam of Jeannie

11878.

- y. ,_

SoL t i l l -.

Concreto a plaotfc Rptic 11...1,
Ron Evano Emanmooo, Jock·
oon, OH 1-800-637.0521.
- · 1br
....,._
Court For Sola: 1m lloblla Home,
It-,
KMchon
With 7 Stovo,
Vory Good Condftlonf Aoldng,
Aofrlgorato&lt;
$116/mo. Pluo $4.000.
514-258-8237.
Dar&gt;c!illt. lltHftloa, Alfaronoo.
SM-44t'-4tH.
Ount, guna. gune, 304-175-1132.

CDllllldlllle IIQA Tour
til WOIIcl Today
0 Aln T1n T1n, K·t Cop

I TRIED T~AT .. TilE ANT DIDN'T
KNOW T~E ANSWER. EIT~ER ..

3821.

I om wonting. to 11 tfto
groan ond wftffo Ford a lllat Ia for oola, coli 304-6711-

1m Olda Dono 88, 112.000 llltoo, \
All - . Air, Excollaftt Condition. 114 Ul 4225, Aftor 4p.m.
1HI Comero AI Black oxt,
groy Int. 37,000 mb01. All pwr.
Flnanca.IIWIMIIZ2.
optlono, trwno- Jl yr.
10,000 mila
........... 16150. 114-441-018t
Jlm'a
w... Famla;llltlf;r'l4l~,"'
Qalll
I
•
Wlda t1o1act
IU1rt orl14-445-ft84
troctoro a lmpfornortiL IIUJ, ~ - , 41,000
..... Indo, 1:00'&amp;:00 waolullya, mlloa, Air cond , . _ win-

Motor And Tank Excellont Condition! 614·387-7927.

Chlldcroft lloby lied con-a to
youth lied, good cond, 128V.
304-8III-384I.
Cluotor Ring, 1 carot, Dlomond,
24 KGotd. l500. 814 4483040.

8!1J ec..to0n
Night Coult 1;1
J!xDNII

8::.
. ::--::-:c:-~"'7-::
;;1::;4.;.4.:;41:,.:1:=:03l=:1184
Ford pickup ohorl lied, 4
whool drivo, alumn _ . , 4"
body lift, 12,100. 304_.1W841.
1187 UL Cuolorn Altlo Yon,
PS , P~c Air, CruiH, Power
loclco, WlndOWO t7,000. 114-4461611 Aftor 1:30p.m.
1187 Fard Aoro Star, XL, LAw
1111•, 11,1100 Or Elool Ollor. 614388-9032.
1163 Chevy 4•4, 314 ton, 350
onglno, 4 opood. Tauruo tmm
ollllot, •tin nlckla, 304-6711llBB4.

Equ Ipment

Tallo- Slfcko Fot Solo. snaroonod 1 End, 22 Cortta eocn.
llotn Endo 211 Con1o Eocft. 114-

~-=-

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

54

F ann

.

Warm Morning atove, 814·742·

53

61

24Wtl1
Wa hlvo ftod a aoocf Juno ond
July - h e ol trodng ond
loto moro. W II ooll roaoonobto.
-MF 2311to dloaol
ootf T.V. 614-446-G0311.
43!p oquljllnlnl.
wftft ROPI
151 ~. IIF118 dlooot
wfth
Huoky Homo Lito 1nd llcCul· S.uuu
,
_
toodor
,100.
loch chain IIWI rnerkld down
cU
S.pt. Sola. Sfd1N11 Equlpmont, 111'211 diNol 121tp
Hondoroon, WV. 304-4175-11121.
$7,000. Doutz .....
wKh cU 17,100. A.C. 1140 Rocondhlonlll Wultorw, DryorL 41ft~4wn..d~4~~..
gaa
Guorontood prompl aorvlcl ..,. verY aoocf. 18,150. JD
all mokN, nlodofo. Tho Wuher RaPS" IIIICI ClttOIIY, FRT I wta,
oxc $4,000. AC 7045,
DfyN Slloppo. .-.a44.
1oUIIp,
c
a
b s - · - · ou
S.m Bomorvllfo'o!MJrrr Sunlfuo tlroe, tt2,000. Ford Compoct
troctor
mo,
24ftp dfoool, 4
Sof!C!Yvllla P.. Ofllco.
Frl, 1111, Sun. Noon, e:OOPM .no. drive wHh oH ftyd foodor
Cllftor doya no.n 304-m-6881. se,eoo. John Daoro 880c Dour,
(Jr camoufllugo llu.blg'guyo), • way hyd blocfo, ROPS - ·
auf'llluo tonlil " clothing. rool till aux ftyd, aoocf u - carlllgo $11,01Mi. Ttoolldng modol
luther Q.l. booto.
1350, 40ftp Kubelo d - okld
Uaod SalotiKo E&lt;1ulpmenl, In- 11- loodor1 2 buclcofo $7,800.
Hotiana modol 188 grlncfor
cluding: Syolamo WHft Dacodiro, Rocolvoto, Dfoft &amp; mi1N 100bu ourront modol
$4,1100. Foi'rnfulnd grlndor ml1or
~ 814-1112-6173 .
modol ItS wnn com oholillr
Uaod ootoiiHo oqufpmont, In- St,900.
Dautx-AIIfo
modol
cluding, oyotom wnn SMUCR 7ft dno doc , _
dooodoro, rooolvoro, dfoft ond oond- Spt. Domo 15,100.
diCQdlf'l, 8'14-1D-tf73,
DauU KM28 711 drum nooc1o1
Doutz Kll22,. ~:s '!N'"
Uaod oototiKo oqufpmont, In- St,4111.
-r$1,100. 2 - HOIIonCI 471
cluding oyotam wnn Nino loot noybf,.l2,200. oacn.
docodorw ..-lv"!J. dlah I
One Hotlond .... 1ft
decoder, 1o14-912-11r.o
ftlybfno 12,100. Loly rolco TodWolaht oo~ 83tltllo of olandord dor combo 12,700. Hotfond
cuf Iron Wllghta, 4-bara, dumbello, Weldor bonch, 5450,00,.
614-1112-6728
. . - -- .7' "" llolii'bo..cond 13,900. IIF 124
llollf 12,100. IIF No3 bolor axe
cond, 1100. Hofland 1151
Building
55
rouna lloioa ol.to now
cftoln $5,100. Hotfond 1151
Supplies
round !loiN Hyd wrop 15,800.
Block, brick, olpoo, wln- Now Hotfond 163 "'und !loiN
don, lntele, etc. Cl1ude Wln- current modol demo 18,800.
toro, Rio Orondo, OH can 614- Hotlond 848 round botor
curront ,_,, vory aoocf
2411-5tl!t
$7,800. Now Holtond 12111'1'0
Six oil otool bldga. Foctory manuro -dor $1,000. dHie. Muat Mil now. Can Hotlend 1113 -dor 17tlbu,
doll'tor. Will oroct. Two 30x40, UHCf very Uttll, 12,400. Now Hof.
2,40d0, Two SOX100. Coli now fond 1113 ·-dol 17IIIU ftyd
lnd ........ 303-1113-4810.
end gatall,too. 1'llrte now ldla
modil 323 pfcMrw 1 ,_,good
oond, tl,71i0. • ..!.. One ....
56 Pets for Sale
ldoo modol S2ll, 2 row narrow
1-Boxer, ma... 2112~11'1 old, tllckor, 12 rolf ftuoldng lied
Nroitall dono, $121. 1-llat Tor· S.,ooo. - Hotlond 770 choprier, tamale, t-monlhl old, $50. por 2 row hood, now knlvoa,
1·black tomato Cockor Sponlol, 13,800. Hotlond n1 cn3112-montho old,S50. 814-387- por, 2 row hood cunant modal
0807.
13,800. Tnroa SuDor m en,.., 1 row hNcf tt,eoo. oacn.
Oroom ond Supply Shop-Pot 1'llrte 2 lloallr foroae bolO.
Grooming. All • - · otytoa. from $1.200. ID ti,IOO. !Ito novo 7
larno Pol Food Daafor. Julia town end go,.n from
Wobb. can 614-4411.0231. 1-80D'
12 to 17 fip loR II 352.0231.
tll'fcao. KNftro Sorvlco Coni•
Bugloo, 1 yr old ond running, tit. Rt. 17, Point PillaNnl iifiCI
Rlptoy Rd, 304-115-36JII.
guarontood, S125. 304-e75-2075.
Drogonwynd canory Porolon,
Sfom- and Hlmoloyon ldttona. H-Formall 5ft. Pull Typo Bruoft
Hoa, 8 112 Ft. lntomatlonol Dlok.
614 448 3844 ott .. 7 p.m.
Hoopltol lied and trat&gt;foo wftool

Matching 2

Back

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

$629.00.BEDROOM: Pootor Bod· S8
Fruits &amp;
room Sullo (5 pc,), S34t.oo; 4
Drawor Cftoll, $44.95; Bunk
Vegetables
Bod, S229; Comploto FuU llan
Sat $105.00 Sot; 7 pc. Codor Cannl~ Peac:h• now 1vallabll,
Bodroom Sullo, SSIII.OO.OPEN: oloo Bortlot1 P•ro and Prune
Monday Thru Saturday,la.m. to Plumo totor In Augull. can 1·
6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till 800-447·3780 for prlcaa. BOB'S
Sp.m., 4 Miles Off Route 7 On MARKET, Muon or Galllpol'-,
Route 141 In Centenary.
OH.

Efflcloncy, llova. rof, bath
wlohowor, lie oil o1oc1, lull earpoled, HUD occptod, 304-6711Efflcloncy Apt. utllllloo, fur·
nloftod, 114-11112·59411
For Rent- 1 bedroom ape 125
~~~7~;~'· lllddlopo~. oil 6

S2H.OOi

Door HHch S34G· Or $58l.OO
S.l; Oak Toblo, 42x62 WHh e

2025

8200.

a

Work boola. 814-446-315i.
VI'RA FURN"UAE
614-448-315a
LIVING ROOM: Sola I Chair,
$199.00;
Roclinor,
$141.00;
Swlvol Rocker, $1111.00; CoHoo &amp;
End Tabloo, 189.00 Sot.DINING
ROOM: Tab to WHft 4 Poddod
Cholro, $149.00; Country Pine
Dlnolto Wllh Bench And 3

6042.

Eoot 01 Porter. &amp;14~118-11983 .

1916 14x70 two lledroom mobllo
homo, 304-8711-71188.
11111 Sunohlno 14x72 mobUo
nome (llico now) tt7.ooo. oloo
130X40 lot In town wltn garogo
opt redone St7,000. llusl Soil,
304.f711-4827.
4br, 2 Bllfto, Doublewfdo·ln Rio
Orondo Ohio Area. 814-2411-55116,
Anytlmo.
Looking For A Daol? Conoldor A
Bonk Roclofmod lloblla Homo.
8500 Down WHh Approved
Crodltl 0... Soloctlonl FrN
Sot-up And Dollvaryl Col Elooo
Homo Contor, 1-80D'~5nt
lllobllo llome kif IIIII or ront
...., nloo, Wlfumfoftod, 14i1ii

....

2 Bedroom APirtment Across
From Unlve... tty Of Rio Grandt,

ltOVI rttiig, bath, QUMn 1111
couch, AIC, tala! elect, 304-475-

14x801HO Fairmont moblla
home, 3 lledroom, 2-batft, total
oloct, fireplace, rul nlco, 814843-o388

vironment.

call304-li78·1450.
AENT20WN
614-446-315a
Vl'ro Fumhuro
Sofa &amp; Chair, St1.t0 Wook;
Rocllnor, S5.47 WMk, Swtvol
Rockor, $3.83 Wook.Bunk Bod

Complete $8.41 WM~ 4 Dr1wer

446.0138.
Apartment, Cloae To University
Of Rio Grande. 814-388-1148.
Flatwoodo ArNL Pomeroy. 2

Lodllo. 114-3A-t1113, 114-3118211.

Hounhold tuml1htng. 112 mi.
Jerrtcho Rd. Pt. Pleasant, WV,

l-ltnderson, WV. 304-875-1488 or

614-441-7823.
7 room, 1 Bath, 2 Car Gar~ge. 3

and .:- DodriH'I Ptlvlta Home Caro:
Hovo Room In lly Home For 1
Efdorfy Man Arid 3 Elderly

New/Used

Choot, $3.28 WNk; Pootor Bod·

room and both, roducod for

quick ule, Henderson StrMI,

en,._

. --·-

5 piece

Apartment
for Rent

5

"""'ncad

menag_em~nt

baMmenl,

3 Bedroom Home, $25,000. 1514-

·. -

counting. For lmmedlato conoldorat!On, contact Tlnl ~
ot &amp;14-W2-2t1t. Eaual Oppor.
lunlty Employor. 11-F-H. Non.
Smoking ond Drug·FrM En-

tuU

onciOHd porch, gorogo, 2220
Lincoln Avo. 304-4175'5301 or
575-8416.

oH. lnformol NUfng voriouo
oklllo ond toillrto iiilt:l.d. If you ANUmN oro now bolng accapllkl 10 cook, IXCiriN, .rdW1, tod for on oplomolrte oool•
'food or drl~~,_wo moy nove a job tonU-ptlonlal pooltlon II tho
for youll .,. oro ~ tor Roclno O,.Comolrlc Clinic.
poopill wno con anloY other Provlouo p r - 1 oftlco ...
~r.le who can tNCh -.,.r~oua ,...,. .... lo roqulrod. RooumN
i,:'il&lt;ll 1 ID otnen who aro croaUvo con lie oant to: P.O. Box 880,
• .Sind whling to wortl u pert of on Raclno, Oftlo, 45771.
•-·- t i c laam. Hlgft ochoolde- T.V. REPAIR, lUll-limo, II·
•~
~"' ree, drlw . . llcenM, gQOd drtvonlY. PlY nagotlabill
.' ·
rocord and odoquoto &amp;T.ootv. min,
HEC »&gt; W Main,
omobfill ...._ . roqufrod. - . y, OH
" Sofory: SS.OO por HR to otart. N
;~Jnt-tid colll-100-131-2302 no TELEMARKETING fram your
nome S20/hr. or mono -lble.
• . tot., ""'" e-1U1. AU for
·s...... Key"inc:ludaif. oa~a1to
• ·tie. E.O.E.
,24/hl. 218~3. ut. 1111-3.
i • Domlno'o Pizzi of Pomoroy ,_
Wontod Olollvatod ooloaporoon,
f !lllilng oppllcotlono.
121,000. to m,ooo. 111"11 yoor.
,; EARN IIONEY Rudlng Boolcol Trolnlng f'!OVklod, oxporlonco
• .$30,000/yr. Income Potontlol. pt11anid. Send to Box
• -Ootofll; (1) - - Ell. Y- P-5, llo Pt. Ptt. Rogfo!:o!1ZOO Main
: •.10181.
S1., Point Ploa•nt, ww. 28850
: .Exporloncod ffot lied ddv1N11 Wonted OIOII'tolod -poroon,
· · noodod. no.. 1 y.- over 128,00482,000 1ol yoor,trolnlng
• 'tfto rood ••....-. good drfv.. .,.,.-, oxporfonco llfllorrod,
lng rocorcf, ....... won hlllory, roMimo to Dally Sontlnol
lie 25 yro of oge. P- drug tool PO Box T.ltB Pomeroy, OH
45711
and rood tlolo. 1100-228-418!1.
Wonted: IICIIIvotod Soloa Poroon
Join 1 winning INm u 1 IMder
128,000 - 152.000 111 Yoor •
In tho Flnonclill Sorvfcoo Aronaf Training
t&amp;porlancod
Bolng o momllor o1 011' con- Pr....,.id,Ptouldod.
Send
Aoouma
To:
sumer finance INm muna Box CLA 000 o/o Galllpollo
having 1 good placa to olort. DallY, Trlbu!!! ills Third Avenue,
1
Aro you Nil motlvolod, u-llvo ond enjoy d011ing wfth Gall polloi, .... 411831.
'• pooplo? A plouom poroonoiHy
Situation
ond good pftono okllla aro a 12
mull. RNponolbll~loo Include
Wanted
..... tctMt'-• rtlatld to Cf'edit, aalea,
lfiGCOUnt

1m.

A~hur'o Chain Unk Fanco. Smell
1br Stove
a Aofrlgerotor
Fumlahod,
Waohlr
&amp; Dfyor BIUI Damok Cftlppondolo Soli,
Rool~ntloFI, ComE morclol, In· Hook"'!~',
$2251..0.
lilco now cond., 1350. 2-ocd ualual, 1M aUmat..l Com- Dtpotn, 1 Monthe Leut.1200
142 culonol Cftolro, $71111. 2·Wing~· lnstall1tlon. Phone: CS14· Fourth Ave, Gailllpolla, 014-446- Bockod Cftalrw, $17Seo ofoo OX·
.am
3887.
collont cond. 1-Eiactrlc Sowing
Attention! Styling S.lon For Smlll home, 4 rooms, 111 new llachlno, good oftlpo and runo
Salol Primo LocaUon. can 814- corpot, 304-675-3220 oftor 5:00 good, 814-11112~3113.
4:::4::6-e:-80-'3,~5~14-44:-=-_8-6::.355=-7..==-:: I :.;PII::·:...__ _ _ _ _ __
carpet llx12 S50 &amp; Upl Solo On
All Outoldo carpet: $UI &amp;
FOR
SALE:
CHRISTIAN 42 Mobile Homes
$4.1111; KHcfton Clrpo~ f7; VInyl
BOOKSTORE growing, roward·
$3.1111 &amp; $4.1111. Sola On All carlng buolnou. l'orty toloeollng.
for Rent
pet In Stock! MoUohan Carpet•,
614·384·2275, offor 5 814-384·
il14-4-46-lll44.
2362.
14x70 tftrN lledroom troller,
VENDING ROUTlE: Gel Rich forgo country lot, Bud Cftonln County Appliance, Inc. Good
Quick? No Woyl But Wo Hove A !1.!'1 Polm PINoont, 304-6711- uNd oppllancoo, T.V. ooto. o8 1.m. to e p.m. Mon •.S1t. 614Good, Siudy, AHordoblo, Busl· """laltor 5:00PM.
440·161111, 627 3fd. Avo. Gal·
nus. Won'f Lut. 1-800-284· 10ae, 14x70 mobile home, 3Q4. llpollo,
OH
VEND.
675-7tl6.
GOOD USED APPUANCES
2 lledroom Aohton Upland Ad, W.lhtfl1 drytrt, r1~11Drl 1
Real Estate
Hud aeeepted, no peta, 3()4..6~ rongoo. Skaago ADOffoncaa,
4088.
Uppor Rlvor Ra. Baolclo Stone
2 BR mobile homo $245 mo., Croll llotol. Coli 114-448-T.IWI.
31
-=:-:H:-o_m~es....,.,for
__S_a..,.le~-l ptuo utMH~ $1211 dopooll In
LAYNE'S FUANRURE
::
Com ploto •--furnfohl
tm Flomlngo 12&amp;110 2 BR, goo in. -mtry. o14o44&amp;-3161.
1n1ngo.
furnace, carpeting, good cond. 2 BA mobile home at EvergrMf'l. Houra: Uon-Sat, 1-5. 1'14-448$3100. 614·388-9724.
::.614-371-:.:,.::~28;=71;:·-.,.,.....,.--- 0322, 3 mlloo out Bulavlllo Rd.
::Froo Dallvory.

bonofKo end tho ._runlty to
llotp oldorw Nvo l~tly
In tftolr PooHiono opan
In Athono ond Malllt1a.

Mlnumum

11 CY. ft. Glbeon refrtgll'ltor,
deluu featurw, 2 yra oiCI. Cof.
bin a Snyder Furniture. 114-MI·

!]) Andy Gflllltll
Cll Club Connect
(J) Reading RllniiOW Stereo.

reuon1ble offer refuMcf. EV.a,

54

•

O four
Roorrongo ieHoro of
ocromblod wordo

!II !121 e

(J) e

tiJI ......

1881 Altro van, l01dld, color
l.v., vcr, cb, mini bllndl, ~~~Wny

!l

Household
Goods

home close to

ochoofo ond ftoopHol, 304-67113185.
7oroom11·botft. DapooH roqulrod
In llklalaport, 814-112-2007.

the offering.

" COIIIIUNITY SKILLS INSTAUC.
. TOR WANTlED. Uvoln lnolructor
• • (wookdayo) noodod to taacn
.,,' communlty ond porooru~l lllilfo
·• 19 2-adulto wftft INmlng
OmHotlono In llolgo County. proflaalcn.
Hours
1:30am.l:30am
1nd
3:00pm-11:00pm1 llon.-Frl. or Aotlablo bobyoit1N noodod oftor
otherwiH ecneduiH. SIMp ochool In VInton area. cau 814gver required, daytime hourt

I

mall until you have lrwHtfgated

3 bedroom

51

HU.

chafr 1nd lift chalr. Walker
,.cllner chair/ tour prong cain,

Merchandise

41 Houses for Rent

INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
rocommoncfl thot you do buol·
nno wltft paopfo you k.- ond
NOT to oond monoy through tho

Nurw Ata Que, upon compl...

echldule,

2 or 3 BR home In P01111roy

oru. caU814-lll2-2528.

w~

by

a&gt;

1:00 (J) e

extrae. Mult ... to appNCilte.
t - - - - - - - - - - ' T " - - - - - - - - - . . . . j l l u o l iotl lmmodlotOiy. No

~ Wanted to Rent

orm-7883.

Business
Opportunity

Hous-

lion of cluo, oludont will lie
otlglblo lor employ.,..• II
Pomoroy Ntnklg altd A Conlllc:Hllll Roclloprfngo Ad,
'Porrilroy;- Oif e14-tt2-.
: :E.:.:O:.:.E::..- - - - - - - R::/:'onod
and llconood
~-~___.. for
1
ooc 1 --ro ~
on
county olcforfy nome car~
~~m lloNd In MarfottL
··r1ono Inc udo tfo.
rlmoty IUnct
I
t
phono -lng, in-llomo ...omontondcooo.........mont or cllonta. Sorvlco pock·
agoo 111 avlltoblo 10 cllonto
NOidng anomatl- to nurofng
nome pfocomont. Rogufor
WMkday

~

Rentals
21

Ing. CALL NOW 1·208-738-7000
Tho ActlvHfol Program For Our Ext. 161788.
100 Bod Nurolng Foclllty. Educo- Accepting oppllcotlono for II·
lionol Proporotlon And Ex·
u
porfonca In ActlvHv Pn&gt;grorn- lion tro;o, Ohio Competency
mlna In A Haatth Care Faclllt~

One ~ere lot, Point Pleasant,

ownor wlll finance, 304-8711-3024

Financial

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hiring Men/Women. Up To S800
Wa•kly.

O.J. Whlto Rood, 2 AcrH
Wooden Building Lot, Roady To
Build On. RHlrlclod. $7,1100.
814-2411-1585.

S7Wmo. Water lncludod. SilO
H. No outoldo poto. 814817.

o u~t 1

73

PUIILU

WED., SEPT. 11

1att S.10 Taftoo Fully Loodod,
15,800.114 448 144l

C.ll Ill., 2:00 p.m., 304-773-

TIIAT DAILY

EVENING

1181 Chov~10,88,000 lllloo, 4
~_._4~
• Roily-...
_ , _ •• 304..75-18411.
1181 Rlnatr XLT :11,000 IIUoo
Allllng, $(,000. 114-4414731.

Starting al $120/mo. Galllo Hotol.
814-4411-1580.

Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
lota, rtnlall, parte, NIH. Call

•

1m lntamatfonal Tronoolar u
- . modol 407118 400 Cummine, ou - , s-, 114-IMII1314 aflor Spm.
1114 Ford Exl&gt;iotot Pick-up. V_.,
Good CondHlonl YOOt T-.
814-441-1411, 814-216-12ltl.
1181 Cftlvy ftoN ton pickup,
311,000 mfloo. 1110 Codalilc
Coupo Do VIla, 16,000 mllao.

North 3rd Sl, llldclopart, Qftfo, 1
lledn&gt;am fumlahod opt, rofann.
CN and dopooM roqufrod. 304-

45

A~~llA'£!

tooHnd. I14--2L

The Dally sentlnei-Page-15

. .

Television
Viewing

'&lt;;t.l'l~..PI~I(• 15 001,/~LV

1m Ford 1 TCII Dump Truck,
Ex-rt Concltlonl · - 10111.

a

448-4338.

Trucks lor Sale

1m Pltarbll _1ono1 400
cummlngo _ . blacll Rood
..._, 1ll """"! trono, 411

11824868.

Loll I acreage available for
naw homt con11ructlon on

full tlmt auc::llonMr, complete

9

Pomeroy-Middle~~ -OI!!ct

Wednesday, September 11, 1991

Wednesday, September 11, 1991

tiJINawll
!ll Twlllgllt zCDNewawiiCh

ropl

all'llnnY ......... With
CltMia Chul Vll Country
mualc ate" Alan JackttOn

and Raatteu Heart become

obleCte of practical jokes.
(1 :bO) Stereo.
CDiporiiCenler
tlllpOitl Tllftlgllt
OT and T
11:30!]) Mlgnum, p.L

4tC'or :
cotton
51 ll1orW rnlnr
82 II10IIInt ..
COIIIm. .
54 !xclartlalf!ln
of dllguat

CZl Amlllo4t'l DlflnH
Monitor

!.':lo"=L.~;~
lCll..._ollie
Sterto. 1;1

=:..

B
Land

(2:00)

Cllrltil'

~~~e Pnlutl

11:JI())e OTCIIIIglll.,_
~(I)CMMII;I

12:00 (J). 1nlo til lllglll Sterto.
111

o•
.._.c..
011tal• 11'

,, llladlcll
aufllx
21 Register
22 Flrttrm
ownert' org,
23 Put1olde
24 The-hera
25 Feclltate
28 OtM of eolutnbtla' alllp1
28 Arrange In
Ia rare
29 Poem•
30 Rllll
..
34 Plpe-ftHing
unit
37 !wetting 1111
31 Sltltp
38 Cowboya'
42 - Plllfbtn43 Tollleco
chew
44 Hooklkl
parte
46 Filii WHII
ravaranc:e
47 lnclonallan
lallnd
46 Unktue

8&amp;:::,Hafl Stereo. I;J

Ln Nlgllt

.,...

12 llladleval

:e:: ,. . ,.
.
............ Sterto.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

c.t.brUy CII)Mr crypiOOf'lll'l'll IN ettlltld trOll! quatlltielftl by tamoua people, put and Pfellnl
E.ch '-tt... WI IN dpftet tt.,_kllf .......... Todl)l'l t:lw: F ~ U.

XMDDPYMMC
YMVDC " G
F J

H

KHLV

P' W H V

D L Z W

L G

IXHI"G

I M M

H

AW WI

DMEII.'

GMIIP'
'KMu ·.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "What a lot of thlngo tnero are a men C11r1. d6
withOut." - Socratoo.

�Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, September 11,1991

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

TV ad may join poster
in being scrapped

Radical group buys two homes with settlement money
PHILAUELPHIA (AP) - The
radical group MOVE, burned out
of its home by a police bomb that
killed II people in 1985, has used
part of a $2.5 million scu!ement to
buy twin row hous es in wes t
Philadelphia, it \vas reported today.
A MOVE member, Alberta
Wicker Africa, said in Ieday's edition s of The Philadelphia Inquirer
that the group bought both halves

scrap the posters was a matter of
By JOHN CHALFANT
taste.
Associated Press Writer
"Every agenc y, I think , has
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
license
to express itself within the
te lev ision ad intended to make
viewers aware of domestic violence bo unds of its own taste, and this
may be withdraw n by the state one we felt was outside ours," he
agency that sponsored it because of said.
scenes it depicts.
One part of the publi c service
announcemen t was the basis for
2,000 posters destroyed by the
Ohi O Department of Human SerVices after officials objec ted to
them. calling them too harsh.
The co mme rcia l and poster
depi ct a fri ghtened woman and
child making a telephone call w1th
a man standing in the background.
The text on the posters declared,
"Domestic violence is a -crime in
Ohio. Quit before you hit." An
inset photograph showed a man in
custody being led to a police cruiser.
Jim Bruney, spokesman for the
department, said Tuesday that he
was considering taking the TV ad
off the air.
"I'm a little concerned about it
simply because you've not only got
the two-dimensional but you've got
motion and sound,'' he said.
"This guy 's breaking lamps and
throwing furniture around back
th ere. I'm not reall y dec ided on
that one. We've got a perfec tly
good one we can usc that's a little
more digestible, I guess," Bruney
said.
He said the seco nd sp~ had
been prepared at the same ti .
"It just basically shows party
go ing on in a household nd the
man 's voice narrating in the background. It says ... something to the
effec t, ' I don't how I got to the
point where my wife and children
were afraid of me ... but I got some
help and things are great now,' "
Bruney said.
The posters, TV ads, radio spots
and brochures were developed last
year when former Gov. Richard
Celeste was in office. The material
TAMARACK
was to be used during Family Violence Month in October.
·
Paul Werth Associates, a public
relations agency , created the campaign.
President Sandra Harbrecht said
the company conducted extensive
research and met with groups that
included victims and professionals.
"The goal was to both raise the
level of awareness among all people as to the prevalence of the
problem and to let people know
• that they can seek help if they are
victims," Ms. Harbrecht said.
Alice-Kay Hilderbrand, secretary of the Ohio Domestic Violence
Network, was part of the focus
group involved in developing the
campaign. She had seen the television spot but not the poster.
"I ' m di sa ppointed that th e
department made the decision to
destroy posters which had already
bee n paid for with taxpay er
money," Ms. Hilderbrand said.
Bruney said the decis ion to

was unclear, the newspaper reponed. Nine people including five children were at the house Monday
evening, but members would not
say how many people lived there,
the paper said.
'
The group, wh ich espouses a
back-to -nature philosophy and
shuns modern conveniences, antagonized neighbors in west Philadelphia in the early 1980s with threats

of the twin because it felt cramped
in a smaller row house in southwest
Philadelphia.
" All we are doing is living normal lives. We're not fortifying the
house or not~ing like that," the
newspaper quoted another member,
Alfonso Robbins Africa, as saying.
Records show the group paid
$144,000 in cash for one half of the
twin but the price of the other half

BIG BEND Your Community Minded

and late-night speec hes on loudspeakers.
An auempted eviction turned
into a gun battle with police on
May 13, !985 . Police bombed a
fortifi ed bunker atop the house ,
starting a fire that destroyed 61
homes. Six adults and five children
in the house died.

.

ICity:
IPhone:

1'1"11"!11

I

FOOD LAND

Cottage
Cheese 24 oz.
,

''
'

/

NEW YORK (AP)- Geraldo
Rivera winced, blushed and joked
his way through a TV appearance
as rival talk-show host Phil Donahue grilled him about his juicy
autobiography.
.
: Donahue spent the first 15 mmlltes of Tuesday's "Donahue"
show on Rivera 's torrid lJiies of
threesomes and affairs with Bette
Midler, Margaret Trudeau and others in his book, ''Exposing
Myself."
After Donahue read one graphic
passage, Rivera asked , " Is the
show almost over?''
Replied Donahue, "Only about
another 48 minuteS. Hold on.''
" I'm afraid I wrote that book in
the locker room, I wrote it rough . ...
l'm sorry for that. I' m sorry,"
Rivera satd. "It's not that I apologize for the book,_ but I'm ~rry for
the women in th1s book, 1f I hurt
their feelings."
---'-

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) Hollywood's most famous beachcomber, Frankie Avalon 1 wowed
fans - and their grandch1~dren while shooting a commerc1al for a
fast-food restaurant

REGULAR

Velveeta
Cheese

I FOOD lAND SPECIAl
I
COUPON

FOODLMD SPEOAL
COUPON

I
I
I

Microwave I
I

Popcom 1
9 • 10.5 OZ. sox

99

$

I 8 OZS. KRAFT

3J$1

2VAAmEs

GOOD
9/8/91 9/14/91

GAl.

2 LBS.

JIFFY POP

RESTORATION DISCUSSED· A public
meeting was held Wednesday evening at
Pomeroy Village Hall to discuss the repair and
restoration of the old Sugar Run School. Dr. and
Mrs. Daniel Whitely of Gallipolis spoke to the
group about the Ariel Theatre and the stages of

ONE

PKG.

I
I

,I

Eggs

4 ROLL

.----

THRIJ 9/14/91
j

Bath
Tissue

HOT DOG SAUCE ....

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Several fund appropriations and
transfers were approved on
Wednesday, when the Meigs County Commissioners met in regular
session at their office.
A budget commission certification of $660 was appropriated into
the Juvenile Court indigent
guardian accounL $12,462.20 of a
$25,000 youth services grant certification was appropriated into several Juvenile Court departments,
including salary, contract services,
supplies, travels, utility and renlals,
equipment, and maintenance and
repairs.
The remainder of the grant is
expected to be apppropriated later
in the year. The tolal grant amount,
in past years, has been $50,000 •
paid in two $25,000 installments.
A $15,000 transfer request from
the Tax Map Department's real
estate assessment budget was also
approved. $15,000 from the salary
account and S!5,000 from the services account were each transferred
to the contract services account.
Leila Haggy of Pomeroy
addressed a drainage issue affecting the residence 9f &lt;h!.l~ m,qthcr,
Alice Kitchen on 'Titus Road in

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barges canying narnmable or· combustible materials, toxic chemicals
and passenger vessels , Luchun
said. The agency is notified before
barges discharge any hazardous
materials and then does a computer
check on the barges' history, he
said.
"And if it's a dirtba!l, we 're
going to be there with bells on" for
a spot inspection, Luchun said.
" It's like a cop on a beat. He's
not always going to be sitting in a
speed trap, but you risk getting
caught when you speed,'' he said.
The Coast Guard completed
I ,195 barge inspec tions on the
Ohio River in fiscal 1989, Coast
Guard Petty Officer Robin Ressler
said. The number of barges that
travel on the river each year was
not available, he said.
The Oil Pollution Act of 1990
made polluters liable to clean up
spillS and created criminal penalties
to increase enforcement, Luchun
said . It also requires that each

barge carries a response plan,
including a contract for a worst
case scenario backed by a liability
bond, he said.
Alan Vicory Jr., the commission's executive director, said
Luchun answered many of the
commission's questions about hazardous materials on the Ohio River.
"The matter of the transportation of hazardous materials has
long been a question of the commission. We have a river used
extensively for inland transporta·
tion but at same time, it is water
supply for 3 million people and
source of recreation," said Vicory,
of Cincinnati.
''The commission wanted to be
apprised of what laws were in place
to assure these materials were
transported in a manner that would
reduce possibility or mishap '" and
what would be done in case of a
barge accident, Vicory said.
The commission was to cone!ude its three-day meeting at the
Charleston Marriott to&lt;lav.

Pomeroy
merchants to
extend hours
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Staff
The Pomeroy Merchants Association voted at its regular meeting
on Wednesday to extend business
hours during the Big Bend Sternwheel Festival on Oct. II and 12 to
8 p.m. each day.
Also during the Festival the
Association, along with Bobbi
Karr, Donna Nease and Dianna
Lawson, will sponsor an herb fest
on Saturday, Oct. 12 from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. in the larger mini park on
Coun Street. Guitar music throughout the day will be provided by
Ron Cozart. Bank One will serve
bean soup and corn bread and the
Merchants Association will be
serving hot dogs with sauce. Bobbi
Karr will also make and serve
herbal breads as a sample for the
public of cooking with herbs.
Members of the Association will
also have on display in their stores
the work of local artists during the
Festival. Susan Clark, president of
the Association, has a list of artists
willing to display their work for
Continued on page 3

Deal may help free hostages

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The U.S. Coast Guard plans to
have equipment in place in five
Ohio River communities by June to
, ~o.p.~ill h3Zll!dOPS m~terial spills,
an official said.
The Coast Guard has targeted
Huntington, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati ,
and Louisville and Paducah, Ky.,
as containment sites, said Capt.
Robert Luchun of the 2nd Coast
Guard District in St. Louis.
Luchun on Wednesday told the
Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission new federal rules
following the Exxon Valdez oil
spill mean authorities have more
power to enforce pollution laws on
the Ohio River.
The Cincinnati-based commission is a pollution control agency
for the Ohio River with represenlJItives from Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, New York, Pennsyl vania, West Virginia, Virginia and
the federal government.
The Coast Guard inspects

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restoration that facility has completed. The
Sugar Run School building and grounds have
been donated to the Meigs County Park District
by the Cornett Realty Company in memory of
U.A. and Marie Cornett.

Huntington is targeted for
equipment to contain oil spills

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BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Shi ite Muslim kidnappers today
expressed suP,IlOn for the U.N. secretary-general s efforts to work out
a " comprehensive solution" to the
hostage ordeal. Separate factions
released photographs of American
hoslJige Terry Anderson and British
captive Jack Mann.
The U.N. chief, Javier Perez de
Cuellar, was in Iran for talks on an
overall deal to free the Westerners,
which would likely involve the
freeing of some Arab detainees

held by Israel and an accounting of guage statement from Islamtc
Israel 's dead and missing in Jihad, or Islamic Holy War, was
delivered to a Western news agenLebanon.
The latest developments came cy's office in Beirut.
"We are fully prepared to
one day after Israel released 51
prisoners from a jail in south extend the required suppon for him
Lebanon and repatriated the (Perez de Cuellar) to reach the
remains of nine Shiite Muslim required comprehensive solution, "
guerrillas. Israel made the moves said the typewritten statement.
Islamic Jihad called Israel's
after recei vin~ definite word that
prisoner release and body repatriaone of its missmg men was dead.
The picture of Anderson, tion a day earlier "a positive ... but
accompanied by an Arabic-ian- incomplete step."

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REGIS
• Helen Bocllm·er
Wanda Fetty
through the Retired Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP) as registrars for Wednesday's mammography
screening at the Mel$5 County Health Department. 30 Meigs
County women participated lu the reduced-fee program. Three
more .screenings are sd1eduled for 1992.
·

.•.
'

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drai nage ditch to sec if there were
prob lems th at th e co unt y co uld
remedy. He al so said that the county would be willing to provide fill
dirt for the well improvements, if
needed.
Warner advised that the county
garage was still grader patching on
various county roads, with County
Road 65 being the target of that
work this week.
Present , in additi on to Roberts
and Warner, were Commi ss ioners
Manning K. Roush , Ric hard E.
Jone s and David Koblcntz , and
Commission Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

Meigs board begins search
for new attendance officer
The Meigs County Board of
Education began the process of hiring a new attendance officer when
they met in reg ular sess ion on
Tuesday evening.
The board accepted the resignation of Otis Knopp from that position, and expressed their appreciation to Knopp for his 33 years of
service.
Following the acceptance of
Knopp's resignation , the board
reviewed the resumes that had been
received, and established a fourhour. per day, five-day per week
position, to be filled on a 180 day
per year basis. The salary for that
position was set at $7.50 per hour.
The interviewing proce ss is
expected to begin shortly.
In other action, the boa rd
employed Margaret Smith, Carolyn
Robin son , Sue Grace, Tom Gates,
Cheryl Halley, Evelyn Forem an,
Carolyn M. Nicholson, Frances
Shrimplin and Kay McElroy as
substitue teachers and aides for use

on an as-needed ba sis for S.B .H.
and M.H. programs in the county.
Bus driver certifi cates for th e
following indi vid ua ls were
approved at the meetin g: James
Vanaman (Meigs Local); Glenn
Easterling and Albert Eastman
(Eastern Local): Jerry Holley (Carleton) and Dale Hill, Charles
Lawrence and Th oma s Theiss
(Southern Local).
A list of employee s hav in g
access to student reco rds was
approved.
The board appro ved a ma intenanc e agree ment with COGSEOVEC for a Digital computer
and printer.
The bud get and appropriations
were amended to include th e new
mul ti-handicapped un it and EMIS
fund s, and the appropriation s for
SUite ABE program were modified
as well.
The meeting was recessed until
Friday at 2 p.m., wh en an attendance office r will be hired.

State seeks private
operators for 16 stores
COLUMtWS, Ohio (AP) Wanted: private operators for 16
liquor stores now run by the state
of Ohio. Apply: Ohio Department
of Liquor Control.
That will be the message in classified adverti sements the depart ment will place in newspapers as it
begins to convert 75 of 262 staterun liquor store s to private businesses.
Direc tor John Hall said Wednesday that the action is required
under the new state budget, which
took effect in July. The spending
plan anticipates the department will
save $10 million over the next two
years from reduced operating costs
and sUite employee salaries.
Stores being considered for conversion are in Troy, Celina,
Mary sville, Defiance, Franklin,
Lebanon, Mainevill e, Bellefontaine, Cambridge, Kenton ,
Northwood, Norwalk, Perrysburg,
Oregon , Ottawa and Wa shington
Coun House.
Conversion could Ulke as lon g
as three month s if private operators
arc found .
"They have to have a business
plan and be able to show the
department that they will be able to

succeed,' · Hall said.
The department alrea dy con tracts with !38 pri vate agencies for
the sale of liquor, and Republican
Gov. George Voinovi ch has proposed conversion of all the staterun stores.
Legislation to implement the
switch has passed the Republicancontrolled Senate but ts pending in
the House, where Democrats hold
the majority.
Opponents have sugges ted
liquor consumption would increase
because the bill would allow for an
additional 100 stores, and union
workers have objected to the loss
of high payi ng state jobs.
Existing law allows the department to have private liquor outlets
in communitias with less tha n
20,000 population. The depanment
has had such contracl~ since 1934 .
Hall said conversion of th e 16
stores alone wou ld generate$! milli on a year in sav ings, and would
affect4 7 state employees.
He said some employees would
be eligible for early re tiremen t,
while others mi ght seck to apply
for contracts "to operate the private
stores or work for those who win
the pac ts.

Thirty Meigs women
have mammography

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Rutland Township. According to
Haggy, the replacement of a
drainage ditch by count y garage
personnel has caused in crea sed
flooding in her yard during heavy
rains. This nooding, Haggy said,
could threaten her mother's drinking water well.
County Engineer Phil Roberts
and Superintendent Ted Warner,
who were at the meetin g, were
reluctant to say that the new ditch
was responsible for the drainage
problem, and advised that the well
casing should be extended.
Warner did say that the deparJmcnt would investigate th e new

During mobile unit visit

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 12, 1991

I

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NEW YORK (AP) - Candice
Bergen says she always wanted to
play comic roles but her good looks
got in the way - until a few wrinkles and the role of acerbic Murphy
Brown came along.
"It was a huge milestone for
me," the 45-year-old actress said
in the October issue of McCall's
magazine.
"My dream, always, since I was
a kid, 14 or 15 years old, was to do
really broad, nat-out comedy."
The role of the saucy TV newswoman on CBS's "Murphy
Brown" has cracked Bergen's
reserve so much that her husband,
French direc tor Louis Malle,
doesn't like to drive with her, said
Diane English, the show 's executive producer.
"She's like a commando. She
went from this quiet, polite woman
to someone who can match barbs
with anyone," English said.

Page 5

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molbUe 11nit was the site of au Ohio
State University Mobile Mammography Unit held Wednesday at
the· Meigs County Health Department. The unit was staffed by
OSU personnel Sandy Conrad, Barbara Hunter and Mobile Unit
Director Vera Garofalo. Pictured, left to right, are Meigs County
Health Department NursloJ Supervisor Norma Torres, participant
Avouelle Evaus of Racine aud Garot~lo.

•

Thirty Meigs County women
had low -cost mammography s
through the Ohio State Universlly
Mobile Mammography Unit"on
Wednesday.
The unit was brought to the
Meigs County Health Depanment
Parking lot by the health depart·
ment in connection with Women's
Health Care Month . The charge
was $55 for both the X-ray and the
interprelJition. In addition to the

clinic, educational material from
the Meigs County Chap ter of the
American Red Cross was distributed.
Brea st cancer is the leading
cause of cancer death in women
betwee n the ages of 35 and 55 .
These years can be a woman's
mo st productive in term s of her
personal growth, her professional
growth and her family life.
Continued on page 3

•

/'

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