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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 16, 1991

Researchers puzzled by boost in Fillmore fanatics push virtues
suicide rates for older Americans of our 'obscure' 13th president
By MALCOLM RITTER
AP Science Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Suicide
rates for older Americans ended a
30-year-decline with a sharp upturn
from 1980 to 1986, a federal study
rcpons. and researchers say the rcasons for the increase are unclear.
Rates for Americans 65 or older
rose 21 percent, including increases
of 42 percent for black men and 23
percent for white men .
"The rea son for that trend,
we ' re not quite sure of," but
maybe increases in social isolation
and longer lives with chronic ill ness played some role , said study
co-author Dr. Richard Sattin.
"All we can tell is that there is
an increasing lrcnd," said Sattin, of
the federal Centers for Disease
Control in Atlanta.
The increases occurred before
recent publicity about doctor-assist·
ed suicides and this year's publication of a best-selling suicide manual. Sattin said in a telephone inter·
view that when the study was done,

figures for 1986 were tfle most
recent available.
Updated federal figures for 1990
show a 4 percent increase over
1986 for people ages 75 to 84 and a
6 percent increase for Americans
85 and older. but an 8 percent drop
for 65-to-74-ycar-olds. For statistical reasons, however. it is unclear
how these changes compare to the
trends found in the new study.
Dr. Dan Blazer, a psychiatry
professor at the Duke University
Medical Center who studies suicide
by older people , said he had
expected some increase but not as
large as that found in the fed eral
study .
The study appears in thi s
month' s iss ue of the American
Journal of Public Health. It noted
that nearly 37:000 Americans 65 or
older killed themselves from 1980
through 1986.
Researchers said that within this
age group, the suicide rate ro se
from 17.8 suicides per 100.000
people in 1980 to 21.5 suicides per

I00,000 in 1986.
White men had the highest rates,
rising from 37 .2 suicides per
100,000 white men 65 or older in
1980 to 45.6 suicides per 100,000
in 1986. For black men, the rates
rose from 11.4 per 100,000 black
men 65 or older to 16.2 per
100,000.
White women 65 and older
showed a 17 percent increase to 7.5
per 100,000. There were too few
suicides by black women to produce a meaningful trend , Sattin
said.
Although youth suicide has captured much attention, experts say
suicide rates among older Americans arc higher.
Federal figures for 1990 show
13.6 suicides per 100,000 population for people ages 15 to 24. The
1990 rate for people ages 65 to 74
was 18.1 per 100,000, with 26.1
per 100,000 people for ages 75 to
84 and 22.5 per 100,000 for people
ages 85 and above

Other man is valuable to wife

•

l·

Dear Ann Landers: I have had
male friends, no sex involved, for
the last 25 of my 33 years of
marriage. Odd? Not really. My
husband, a wonderfu.I person and a
successful businessman, has never
made an effort to meet my emotional
needs. His life consists of work,
COOling borne to cal with the TV
turned on, and then reading the
newspaper in his comfortable chair
until bedtime. On weekends he
sleeps or performs business-relalcd
activities.
I was a gregarious person when
we manied and enjoyed being with
friends. All that ended lw:anse my
husband "meets pedple all week
long, and the last thing he wants to
do on weekends is socialize." When
be's home he says be needs peace
and quieL This means he eats no
dinners out and his social life is zero.
The way I see it, my husband
has a precious commodity which
increases in value as the years go
by. Me. In addition to my job down·
town, I've cleaned, cooked terrific
meals and nised three sons. I've
been my husband's sounding board
whenever be has needed a listening
ear. I never refuse to accommodate
him sexually, even though sex to
him is for his pleasure only.
After repeatedly asking him to
coosidet my needs and suggesting
that we bolb go for counseling. be
said, "I'm a happy man. I don't
need counseling.• So, I ooted for
the other-man relationship.
I've had several male friends over
the years. Io each case, we enjoyed
one another's company until he
found a woman to many. At that
point, another man comes along to
take his place.
My typical male friend is a

Beat of
:the Bend..
Cherry Ridge resident, Jim
Lucas, reports that Columbus
Southern Power has a couple of
good free offers going-but says
he talked to the company and pub·
lie response hasn't been all that
great
To take advantage of the offers
you do have to be a Columbus
Southern customer and a home
owner. Jim reports that the company will supply water saving shower
heads and water heater wraps free
of charge and will even do the
installation if you indicate that you
would like to take advantage of the
offers. To do so call l-800 28WHASH-and· by the way,
that's a toll free number.

I

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I

With fall upon us, Shirley
Quickel is opening her classes of
The Dance Company for another
year. This fall the sessions will be
held in Pomeroy and there will be
classes for all ages. Included in the
instruction this fall will be tap, ballet, aerobics, and jazz. Shirley's
new phone number is 992-6289.
Pomeroy Barber Mickey
Williams, an active member of
Drew Webster Post 39, American
·Legion, for years, was the only
Meigs Countian attending the
National American Legion Convention held this month at Phoenix,
Arizona.
It was Mick's fust visit to Arizona. He reports the scenery was
great and the accommodations for
the 18,000 Legionnaires attending
the convention were more than
adequate. Convention days and
some of the nights were very busy
for those attending. Mick is Division Four Commander and is
Eighth Distfict Chairman for the
Korean War MemoriaL
The year is moving rapidly

professional between 30 and 50,
unmarried, who is fed up with
women who have tried to trap him
into marriage when he's not ready.
While my current "friend" is not
interested in marriage or sex, he
ANN LANDERS
"lttl, Loe Aarels
longs for a relationship with a
11m,. S)'lldlcale ....
woman who is willing to listen
C..atonSyndl ...... "
to him, laugh with him and share
his joys and sorrows. In return,
he's willing to do the same - which wouldn~ be surprised if you wrote
is where I fit into his life. He again to ask what to do about a nice,
doesn't feel ~ because he platonic relationship that suddenly
knows I love my husband and have turned into a love affair.
no interest in getting a divorce.
Gem of the Day (Credit Josh
By now you must be wondering ·Feinberg, Indianapolis): Memo to
bow my husband feels about this. the rich: Go first class or your
Well, he says the other man in my children will.
life is a valuable commodity to him
Is alcohol rllinillg yolll' lift or IM
as well. It relieves him of spending life of a lovt!d oM? •Alcoholism:
the time and energy required to be a How to Recogniu It, How to DtaJ
friend to me. In tum, the freedom With It, How to Conquer It" can llll'n
he gives me ensures against having things around. Send a sel/
an unhappy, neglected, nagging addressed, long, business-size
wife. Perfect? No, but it suits me envelope and a CMCk or money
just fine . Care to comment? .. order for $3.65 (this includes
DOING TilE NEXT BEST TiliNG poslage and lrandling) to: Alcohol,
IN JACKSON, MISS.
c/o AM Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
DEAR NEXT BEST 'I'HING: The Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
design for living you have described CIJIUJda, send $4.45.)
may be just dandy for you and your
husband and the transient males who
parade through your life, but it is
nothing I would recommend.
It sounds to me as if you have a
sterile and meaningless marriage
with a man who is self-absorbed,
inconsiderate and totally disconnected from you. You say be is a
• wonderfu.I person" and that you
By ED WHITE
love him. I wonder why.
•
Associated Press Writer
I also wonder about a man who
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jencoosidets your cumot male comnifer
Gresham wears the customary
panion "a valuable commodity"
uniform
of gray shirt and green
because it relieves him 'o f the job of
pants,
but
she's not your average
being a friend 10 you.
park
ranger.
Keep my address handy. I
Instead of directing visitors
through the wilds of Yellowstone
or the depths of the Grand Canyon,
she shepherds White House tourists
though lines that seem to wind for·
ever.
And to keep the tourists happy,
Gresham, 30, keeps them entertained with church choirs, marching bands, jugglers, dancers, bluegrass singers and even a bagpiper
who once guarded London's Buck·
towards the last quarter of 1991 ingham Palace.
and as a result plans are being
She lines up the talent, makes
made for Veterans Memorial Hos- sure the amplifier is plugged in and
pital in Pomeroy to become a even has cold water ready for the
performer who may wilt in the cap·
smoke free facility.
At the present time, smoking is llal's oppressive summertime heat.
"It's a neat program," Gresham
permitted in the hospital lobby as
well as some other designated said recently as the crowds thinned
spots. However, as of Jan. I, 1992, in the early afternoon. "The enterthe hospital will become a smoke- tainment eliminates the frustration.
free institution with absolutely no What else can these people do
smoking permitted inside the build· while they're waiting to get inside
ing. The steps must be taken in the White House?"
order for the hospital to continue to
The performers have arrived
hold its accreditation standing.
from every state except Alaska.
Speaking of the hospital Sue They come at their own expense.
Zirkle, supervising registered nurse and their reward is a certificate
in the Emergency Room and signed by President Bush and an
Urgent Care Center, could have escort to the front of the line of
opened her own flower shop on White House visitors.
Sept. 5 when she was so well
Of course, there also arc brag·
remembered by friends and co- ging rights.
workers at the hospital on her birth·
Band members from Concordia
Lutheran School in Peoria, Ill., had
day.
their picture snapped with first lady
A new experience over the Barbara Bush. "Everybody was
weekend for Mrs. Sara Owen, going crazy," Gresham said.
After Labor Day, the traditional
Seneca Drive, Pomeroy.
end
of the summer tourist season,
Ycp- Sara took her first plane
trip ever. She accompanied her Gresham signs up local talent from
daughter, Mrs. Judy Mor~an, to Washington, M!u'Y.land or Virginia.
Boston. Judy who IS pubhc rela- The number of daily visitors drops
tions director at Pleasant Valley from 5,000 to about2,000.
"The next song is a sad song
Hospital in Point Pleasant was
about
a wayward criminal, Tom
scheduled to attend a hospital
Dooley,"
David Burger of Manasmeeting in Boston. Her husband,
sas,
Va
..
told
the crowd Friday as
Damon, was unable to accompany
her on the jaunt so Sara stepped in partner Alan Webb adjusted his
to keep Judy company. We hope guitar. "I want everyone to sing
you enjoyed historical Boston and along with the last verse."
the flight, Sara.

Ann
Landers

By SANDRA SKOWRON
Associated Press Writer
BALTIMORE (AP) - He
averted an international crisis over
bird droppings and helped install
the first cast-iron stove in the
White House.
Millard Fillmore hasn't exactly
electrified American history books,
but the 13th president has a dutiful
if slightly daffy group of admirers
who are brushing away the sands of
obscurity to preserve his memory.
The Baltimore-based Society to
Promote ResP.ect and Recognition
of Millard F1llmore likes its Mil·
lard "lite."
Every Jan. 7. the anniversary of
Fi II more' s birthday , the group
throws a bash in his honor. Invita·
lions are extended to the nation's
pre-eminent politicians, but in
seven years not one has accepted.
"We read all the regrets from
all the politicians," said Ra e
Rosen, of Randallstown, Md., a
freelance writer and the society's
coordinator. "This is one of our
main sources of humor.
" We're lucky they don't attend
because we don't want to be politically inclined," she said. " Mil·
lard's last party was the Know·
Nothing Party, and we want to
keep it that way."

Society members say they're not
out to ridicule Fillmore, just spread
the word about his accompli shments.
Fillmore's presidency was
tucked between those of the equally obscure Zachary Taylor and
Franklin Pierce. Devotees say th e
controversy earlier this year over
whether Taylor was murdered or
died of a stomach ailment was a
publicity boon for Fillmore, who
was Taylor's vice president.
An autopsy later ruled out mur·
der in Taylor's death.
Historian Elbert Smith, a retired
professor at the University of
Maryland , believes Fillmore
deserves better than obscurity.
Fillmore was a self-educated
man who became a lawyer, a New
York legislator and complroller and
vice president before entering the
White House in 1850.
He kept slave-state Texas from
invading free-state New Mexico in
1850, which could have sparked
the Civil War. He sent Commodore
Perry to establish relations with
reclusive Japan.
He refused to back American
traders who wanted to invade a
Peruvian island to obtain its bird
droppings, which made a valuable
fenilizer.

"He kept a finger on what was
happening," Smith said. "He was
honest and made intelligent deci ·
sions. He was a good president''
Fillmore's handling of the Fugitive Slave Act didn't please Northerners . .The law required federal
troops to capture fugitive slaves.
Smith said Fillmore halfheartedly
dispatched troops, but there is no
indication any fugitives were
caught.
Fillmore and his wife, Abigail,
didn ' t like Washington, so he
decided not to seck re-election in
1852. He changed his mind after
learning his party, the Whig s,
would nominate a candidate unacceptable to the South. But by then ,
it was too late to get the nomination .
·
In 1856, he ran for president as
a candidate for the Know-Nothing
Party, which was anti -foreign and
ami-Catholic.
The party had a following in its
day, but "the Know-Nothing Party
looks like a reprehensible party
today," Smith said.
The only state Fillmore carried
in that election was Maryland.
He lived out his years in Buffalo, N.Y., and died on March 8,
1874.

Ohio Lottery
Oilers down
Chiefs 17-7
Page4

ly with thunderstorms possible.

I

House visitors

Copyrl~htod

The West Virginia State Farm Museum will have a chicken barbeque and flea market on Saturday at the Route I , Point Pleasant
site.
Serving will begin at 9 a.m. and continue until 5 p.m. Anyone
interested in participating in the flea market at the Museum are
asked to contact the West Virginia State Farm Museum at 304-6753972. All buildings will be open and admission is free. The Museum is located four miles north of Point Pleasant just off Route 62.

GALLIPOLIS - Convicted rapist, kidnapper and murderer
William A. ·Mathias, 24, was transported Tuesday morning from the
Gallia County Jail to the Orient Correctional Center where he will
stay before being eventually transfcred to the correcuonal facil1ty '"
Lucasville.
Mathias was recently convicted of last October's rape, kidnapping and murder of 12-year-old Stacey R, Lucas of Gallipolis.
Lucas was sentenced to a total of 50 years for the crimes.

Prison escapee still at large
CHILLICOTHE (AP)- An inmate who escaped from the Chillicothe Correctional Institution remained at large today.
Eugene Partin, 60, escaped Saturday, said Lynn Goff, prison
administrative assistanL Partin was serving a life sentence for second-degree murder.
Prison spokesman Gary McCalskey said Monday night that
Partin had not been a~prehended.
Partin was committed from Clermont County in August 1973
and paroled in 1983, but returned to the prison on a 1985 parole violation.
Ms. Goff said prison officials discovered that Partin was missing
from the medium-security institution Saturday night when they conducted a head count after inmates were brought in from the prison
yard. She said investigators could not immediately determine how
Partin escaped.
Partin is white, 5 feet 9 inches tall, weighs 146 pounds and has
grayish brown hair and blue eyes. He has a mole under his right
eye.

EMS .1/.nits .answer 8 _t;alls

Out and Touch event wb.icih is billed as giving
support and unity for people with HI VI AIDS
around the world. (AP)

Eight calls for assistanCe were answered on. Monda~ and Tuesday morning by Meigs County Emergency Medical Semces umts.
At 9:41 a.m. on Monday, Middleport squad went to Page Street.
Jason McCormick was treated but not transported. At 9:50a.m.,
Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 31. Carlos McKnight was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 11:12 am., Syracuse squad went to
Southern High School. Ronald Wood was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
At 1:36 p.m., Chester and Pomeroy units went to Pomeroy Pike
for an accident Tim Frederick was taken to Veterans and Martha
and Amanda Smith refused treatment. At 2:24 p.m., Racmc u011
went to the station for Amanda Ward. Ward was lreated but not
transported. At 9:20 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Pleasant R•dgc.
Crystal Adkins was taken to Veterans.
On Tuesday at 2:44 a.m., Rutland unit went to ~eigs Mine 31.
Don Justus was transported to Holzer Medical Center. At 7:25 a.m.,
Racine unit went to Letart Falls. Floyd Cummmgs was dead on
arrival.

--

1 noticed that President Bush
was generous to the three Baltic
countries now independent of Russia-to the extent of some 14 billion dollars, according to the news
report I saw. And the cobbler's
children have no shoes. Do keep
smiling!

D of A to meet
CHESTER - The Chester Council No. 323 Daughters of America
wiJI meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
Quarterly birthdays, which were to
be observed and the potluck, will
be postponed until the Oct I meet·
in g.

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•
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•
BE ON THE LOOK OUT•••

School's back 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 play 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 BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
The decision to apply for Community Development Block Grant
Funds to demolish unsightly and
unsafe slructures was made when
Pomeroy Village Council met in
regular session on Monday nighL
Councilman Bruce Reed made a
motion to apply for $15,000 in
CDBG funds, and also suggested
that the village pledge a $5,000
match of local funds.
The action, which passed the
council unanimously, is a part of an
ongoing attempt by council to rid

13 callers across the nation on
King's late-night talk show.
It was the first time astronauts
have participated in a talk show,
although past crews have used ham
radios to talk to people on Earth.
"What really changed you when
you went up in space?" the first
caller, from San Antonio, asked.
Creighton said he gained more ·
respect for Earth.
"It tends to give you more of a
global perspective and an appreciation for the environment,"
Creighton said. "When you look
out at the horizon and you see an

Carnival rides or a car show,
contemporary or country music.
crafty items or catfish sandwiches,
residents will be able to find it all
at the First Annual CatfiSh Festival
to be held Saturday in Middleport.
The carnival will move in
Thursday and the rides will be
ready to roll on the first of three
days in the village by late afternoon. Advance tickets for rides are
already on sale at Video Touch and
Middleport Trophies. While the
single price of a ride will be $1
once the carnival has moved in,
there is now a half-price sale going
on. Strips of four ride tickets are
$2. The carnival rides will be located at Dale Diles Park and on the
village parking lot on South Second Ave.
This week Donna Gocrg or Ripley, W. Va. was added to the list of
entenainers for Saturday. She will
be doing contemporary fold music.
Goerg, lilce all other entenainers.
will perform on a flatbed to be stationed on North Second at Cole
Sueet Goerg will be performed at
6:30p.m.
The schedule of other activities
will include a pet show at noon
sponsored by the Meigs County
Human Society, the Ritz Band at I
p.m., the Midnight Cloggers at 2

ing, water plant, sewage lreatment
plant and city service garage to
three at each site.
Robert Turner, regional director
of AFSCME Council 8, said the
union and council agreed on the
limits.
At issue in the dispute is lan guage involving medical absence,
seniority, job descriptions, con·
tracting for some city work and
obtaining commercial driver's
licenses.
Negotiations began in early
August. A State Employment Relations Board official mediated during bargaining sessions.
"Everything we're striking for
is non-economic -contract Ian·
guage stuff," said Local 2403 President Bruce McLead, a city water
maintenance worker. "I think we
could live with their wage proposal. "

atmosphere that's only about an
inch thick, you realize just how
fragile this planet can be. We better
take eare of it''
The astronauts, scheduled to
return home early Wednesday,
released an atmosphere research
satellite that will examine the vanishing ozone layer.
Weather permitting, the shuttle
is scheduled to return to its Aorida
launcb site at 2:06 a.m. EDT
Wednesday. It wou.Id be the ninth
shuttle touchdown at Kennedy
Space Center and the fust one there
in darkness.

_......................____________________
f·

/I

the village of abandoned and
unsafe structures. Houses on Cave
Street, Condor Street and Cherry
Street have been targeted with
future demolition, but council did
not commit to dedicating any grant
monies awarded to those specific
projects.
Earlier this summer, a house on
Ebenezer Street was demolished
after all attempts to contact the
owner of the structure were unsuccessful.
Council discussed the expense
involved in paying village workers
to perform the demolition work and
discussed alternatives in future pro-

jects. According to Village Clerk
Brenda Morris, the work at the
Ebenezer Sireet site cost the village
over $4,000, and took three weeks
to complete.
Village Administrator John
Anderson told council that he felt
that the project would fall under the
CDBG eligibility guidelines. The
deadline for submitting potential
CDBG projects to the county commissioners is September 25.
Last year, the village received
$14,800 in CDBG monies. Those
funds were used to complete
improvements at the village water
department.

Other business
Anderson also requested a
change in the village ordinance
dealing with building permits.
Anderson' s request involved the
inclusion of the phrase "change of
mtended use" in the law requiring
building permil application.
This phrase would apply to a
change in type of business, as well
as the change from a residence to a
business establishment in the same
building.
No action was taken on Anderson's request, but Councilman
Tllomas Werry said that he felt the
Continued on page 3

Catfish festival slated

Discovery shuttle astronauts
featured on Larry King show
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(AP) - The slightly increased risk
of a nighttime landing hasn't fazed
the Discovery astronauts as they
prer,are today to return to Earth.
'There's a little more risk
involved in landing at night than in
the daytime," Commander John
Creighton told radio talk show host
~ King Monday night.
But Creighton said he was confident he and pilot Kenneth
Reightler would "brinf the shuttle
in right on the money.'
As the shuttle zoomed around
Earth at 17,500 mph, the five crew
!Pembers answered questions from

1 Section, 10 Pageo 25 cents
AMultimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy council to apply for
CDBG funds for renovation

Athens officials approve wage
increase to employees during strike
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - The County and Municipal Workers
City Council approved a pay raise rejected a contract offer Sunday
for city workers who are working and went on strike Monday.
during a strike.
\
The union had sought 8 percent
The ·6 percent wage increase is \ increases in each year of a threethe same as the increase the city year contract. The city offered
offered the union in contract nego· wage increases of 6 percent the
tiations.
first year, 5.5 percent and 5 percent
Mayor Sara Hendricker said the in the second and third years.
pay raise affects five employees Supervisors will operate water
three probationary employees who and sewer treatment facilities, city
are not permitted to strike and two officials said.
The council also approved a
other employees who chose to
work rather than strike.
S20,000 emergency contract with
The strike by garbage coUectors Sanitary Commercial Services, a
and other service employees private firm, for garbage collection.
entered its second day today.
Service-Safety Director Ron ChapMs. Hendricker said the city had man the company will begin col·
no plans to hire replacement work· lcction Monday. It was not known
ers.
how long the contract will be in
The council Monday night also effect.
voted to hire a private garbage col The city _al_so was granted a
Iection company.
court order hm•Ung the number of
Members of Local 2403 of the pickets at City Hall, the parking
American Federation of State , garage, Law Administration Build·

t7

ay, September CliP!, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, M

1991

Chicken cookout slated

entertained

Bob
Hoeflich

_J utsc}t.3

Vol. 42, No. 94

Convicted murderer transported

THAT'S WHAT FRIENDS ARE FOR • Pop
star Whitney Houston poses with children of the
Reach Out and Touch Choir in London's Hyde
Park Sunday. Houston appeared at the Reach

Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low
60-liS. Wednesday, showers like·

Park ranger

keeps White

Pick 3:757
Pick 4:6842
Cards : 4-H, 2-C
K-D;4-S

' band at 3 p.m.,
p.m., Crossover
Charles Lily at 5 p.m. and "The
Golden Melodies" by disc jockey
Lee Osborne at 7 p.m.
Emcee for the entertainment
program will be Chuck Kitchen,
who will be awarding prizes each
hour during the day. The top prize
to be awarded Saturday evening
will be a color television provided
by the Middleport Community
Association, sponsor of the festival.
Two $100 savings bonds provided
by Feeney-Bennett Post . 128,
American Legion, a $50 bond by
Central Trust, a micro-wave ·oven
by Dr. Nick Robinson and Dr.
Nancy Kime, and numerous merchandise certificates will be award·
ed.
A car show will be held on the
old PI ymouth lot on South Third.
Bob Gilmore, president of the
Community Association and chairman of the festival, advised that the
North Second from Walnut Street
to Mill Street will be closed to traffic beginning at 7:30 a.m. to allow
time .for .those selling food, crafts,
Continued on page 3

FESTIVAL T-SmRTS ·These colorful shirts will be made on ·
site by Middleport Trophies and sold at the Catfish Festival Satur- ·
day. Proceeds from the sale will go to the Middleport Community
Association.

Lawmakers call Thomas'
confirmation prospects good
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sena·
tors of both parties say Clarence
Thomas' chances for confirmation
to the Supreme Coun appear good
as the Senate Judiciary Committee
turns its attention to some 90 witnesses with varied opinions of the
conservative judge.
Thomas ended an exhaustive,
five-day job interview before the
committee Monday by expressing
gratitude for "the courtesy and the
fairness you've shown me."
Thomas then embraced his wife,
mother and sister and shook hands
with most of the 14 committee
members before leaving the ornate
hearing room where he repeated! y
had refused to discuss abortion and
at times had disavowed provocative
stands taken as a Reagan admini stration official.
Democrats continued to complain that Thomas, named by President Bush to replace the retiring
Thurgood Marshall, had ducked
too many questions. But committee
approval of his nomination
appeared likely.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, predicted that Thomas would win the
support of at least eight Judiciary
Committee members - all that arc
needed to send the nomination to
the full Senate.
One of Thomas' most vocal crit·
ics, Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, DOhio, agreed that committee
approval appeared likely when a
vote is takeri in about two weeks.
It also appeared, from the tone
of their questions, that two tradi·
tiona! swing members - Sens.
Arlen S~cter, R-Pa., and Dennis
DeConcmi, D·Ariz. - were leaning heavily toward voting for
Thomas.
As Thomas neared the end of
his testimony, Chairman Joseph
Biden, 0-Del., told him, "You are
going to be the judge (on a court)
with nothing to bind you but your
conscience.''
Bush telephoned Thomas " and

__

......._.

congratulaled him on the completion of his testimony," White
House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater
said. ''The president is confident
that Judge Thomas will be confirmed."
Leading off the confirmation
hearings' second phase, the head of
the American Bar Association' s
judicial screening panel said Mon day that Thomas was an outstanding, but not the most qualified,
nominee.
Ronald Olson, a Los Angeles
trial lawyer, said Thomas was rated
"qualified" for the Supreme Court
because he was an outstanding
nominee. But to receive the ABA's
higher "well-qualified" rating,
"the candidate has to be among the
most prominent members Of our
profession," Olson said.
Thomas did not meet that standard because of his limited ex peri·
ence as a federal appeals judge.
Biden said he plans to conclude
the Thomas hearings by Friday,
after taking testimony from numcr ·
ous groups supporting and oppos·

Meigs County will play host to a
murder trial beginning on Thurs day .
The trial of Athens Countian
David Losey, accused of murder,
will begin in the Meigs County
Common Pleas courtroom on
Thursday due to renovations taking
place at the Athens County Court·
house.
Losey was indicted by the
Athens County Grand Jury on May
23 of killing Donald McNaughton
of Glouster.
Athens County Prosecuting
Attorney Michael Ward and Assis·
tant Prosecutor K. Robert Toy will
represent the state in the jury trial,

____

............_..........

Sylvia Law of New York Umversity said Thomas " has staked
out a position thai is ex1remist" on
abonion and reproductive freedom.
She called his views "far outside
the mainstream or conservative
American political and judicial
thought. ''
Frank Michclman of Harvard
University and Thomas Grey of
Stanford University al so questioned Thomas' qualifications and
criticized what they perceived his
abonion views to be.
Speaking in support of Thomas
on Monday were Griffin Bell ,
attorney general in the Carter
administration; U.S. District Judge
Jack Tanner of Seattle; and Mary
Bush Wilson, a former chairwoman
of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People.

Murder trial to begin Thursday

"''

...._....__~

ing the nomination. The commutce
will not meet Wednesday due to
the Yom Kippur holiday.
Testifying Monday, three law
school professors voiced either
opposition to or concern about
Thomas.

.

while Public Defender ·Michael
Westfall and Jay Wamsley will
serve as co-counsel on behalf of the
defendant.
According to an Athens County
Common Pleas Court spokesperson, jury selection before Judge
Alan Goldsberry will commence on
Wednesday morning in Athens
County.
The Losey case is the first in
Athens to be moved into another
county due to renovation work of •
the Athens County Courthouse, aittt
was only done so because of the.
serious nature of the charges. Onc.e
a jury is seated, the trial is expected.
to last two weeks.
~~·

____......................_.._" _______________ _ ....___.._............,.
_

�...

Witnesses in Noriega trial head for the hills

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED'TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

GMULTIMEDIA.INC
ROBERT L. WINGE'M'

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher;Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LEITERS 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 taste. addressing Issues. not personalities.

Justice's decision
spotlights high cost
of running for office
I

'

Page-2_;_The Dally Sentinel
·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
··TUesday, September 17,1991

WASffiNGTON- The prosecution team trying to put Manuel
Nonega away on drug charges has
assembled a witness list of pots
calling the kettle black. Most of the
witnesses ready to finger Noriega
as dirty are tainted themselves and
Noriega's lawyers plan to h~ve a
field day with them. But, one by
one, the most embarrassing of the
rogues have become conveniently
unavailable to testifv.
A recent example is Boris Olru:te
Morales, a convicted drug smugglcr who was to take the stan~
a ~ain s t Noriega. In another drug
trl31, Olarte admllted to lying under
oath, and there were problems with
his story m the Noriega case. But
they aren't problems anymore,
because Olarte won't be testifying .
He was shipped to Colombl3 to
work as an mformant for the U.S.
Customs Service . T_he move
became so embarrassmg to the
govcrnment that last week Olarte
was unexpectedly brought back,
but there are still no plans to put
himonthestand.
. .
The. U.S . Attorney's Office m
MIami , where Nonega will be

tried, would not comment on
reports that Olarte had been threatcned with prosecution if he
returned.
Jose Blandon, once a star gov·
ernment witness who provided key
information leading to the original
indictment of Noriega, was allowed
to return to Panama and is not
expected to take the stand at Noric ga's trial either.
That won't hurt the feelings of
prosecutors. Blandon, Noriega 's
former political ad'viscr, is report edly under threat of indictment by
U.S. authorities who say he is the
one who gave CNN the controversial tapes showing that the government was eavesdropping on Noriega's telephone calls from jail.
Widening Blandon's credibility
gap are doubts about his version of
an important chapter in Noriega's
alleged drug career. Blandon
claims that in 1984 Fidel Castro
mediated a dispute between Noriega and the Medellin cocaine cartel
of Colombia. But Blandon has the
dates and key facts wrong on the
Castro-Noriega meeting in Havana,
according to our sources.

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS (AP)- The decision of Associate Justice Herbert
Brown not to seek re-election to the Ohio Supreme Court may be fur·
ther evidence of the need to curb the runaway costs of political campaigns.
The 59-year-old Democrat attributed his decision to a desire to
devote full time to writing novels, spurred by the publication of
book, "Presumption of Guilt," which he said was lOth last month on
Doubleday's national fiction list.
It was his first publication in more than a dozen attempts.
But at a Friday news conference and in an interview later, Brown
said the need to raise money for a 1992 campaign "certainly wasn't a
plus'· among factors that went into his decision to leave public service.
Brown spent about $175,000 in 1986 to win his seat by a 22,864
votes among about3 million cast -less than two votes a precinct.
"That was a cheapie," he said. He estimated that it would cost
$350,000-$500,000 to get re-elected, even as an incumbent.
"People don't know who judges arc," he said.
Brown said the canons of ethics, which assertedly keep judges and
judicial candidates above the political fray, make fund-raising extremely difficult and time consuming.
"I couldn't call up people and ask them for money. People would
have to set up fund-raisers and I'd have to go to all of them," he said.
Brown's last name has been long popular among Ohio's voters, and
many people think this was a factor in his 1986 election. He brushed
aside a suggestion that Ohio's old political "name game" is still operative.
"It's money," because it takes television which is costing more
every year. He added that people "go into the voting booth and vote
for the name that is familiar, usually the name they've seen on televi-

a

sion:•

.

At his news conference, Brown did not mention bills pending in the
Legislature that would seek to set limits on campaign contributions and
costs. But he said latel that limits arc needed.
"You are constantly aware of the next election," said Brown,
adding he feels good about serving out his term without having to raise
money.
He said he could not comment on the specifics of the pending bills
because some provisions pose constitutional questions that might come
before the Silpreme Court before he steps down.
Some lawyers said Brown, although new to the court in 1986,
developed stature with independent and well-reasoned decisions that
ignored politicalfhilosophy and that his departure will be a loss.
When asked i he thinks big-money campaigns may be keeping talented people out of public service or driving them from it, Brown said:
"I think that's right."
However, he did not suggest he fit into that category.

Letter to editor
Upset with cuts

I

• I

.I

Dear editor.
Many in Meigs County never
knew about the cuts to G.A. until
Sunday, September 8.
Can it be tllat OlD' State doesn't
care about those who musrrely on
G.A. to survive?
Being a diabetic, having to pay
for my medicine, and pay utilities
and rent, something has to go.
I'd rather work, but jobs in
Meigs and surrounding counties are
extremely scarce.
I worked with the Job Club, and
saw a program that helped, now the
State wants to drop it
To me and others. these cuts are
cruel and unwarranted for they
endanger our very lives.
For us, these cuts mean no
medicine, no way to pay rent or
utility bills, come winter we will
die.
I Icnow of no One who can live
on $100.00 a month. I would like
to see our State Legislators try it
for one month, let alone six.
How are we supposed to live
after our G.A. runs out?
Those in Columbus and Wash·

ington aren't operating on a full
tank ..
What's going to happen to us,
when winter comes and we can't
heat our homes or obtain medical
assistance.
The Legislators haven't thought
about that, how many of their constituents will suffer; how many
families will continue voting for
the same people who sentenced
their loved one to untold suffering.
They should think about the
poor instead of wining and dining
foreign investors. After all 200 men
just got laid off from the mines.
Quit turning a blind eye and
deaf ear to our poor, don't entertain
countries that can buy us out. Let's
help our own who need it most
I love Meigs County and
Pomeroy, it would be a shame to
sec it become a haven for drugs
and crime.
I will continue letting my elect·
cd officials know that I don't like
these cuts and would like to see the
right people helped.
Sincerely yours,
Martha Hall

Today in history
By The Associated Press
T~y is Tuesday, Se~t 17, the 200t~ day of 1991. There are 105 days
left m the year. Yom K1ppur, the Jew1sh Day of Atonement, begins at
sunseL
Today's Highlight in History:
On Septem~r 17, 1787, th~ &lt;;onstitution of the United States was
completed and Signed by a maJOnty of delegates attending the constitution81 convention in Philadelphia.
'on this date: '
In 1862, Unioo forces hurled back a Confederate invasion of Maryland
in the Civil War Battle of Antietam.
·
In 1920, the Ametican Professional Football Association - a precur·
sor of the NFL- was formed in Canton, Ohio.
In 1939, the Soviet Union invaded Poland, more than two weeks after
Nazi Germany launched its pre-emptive assault
In 1939, the Harry James Orchestra and featured soloist Frank Sinatra
recorded "All or Nothing at-All" for Columbia Records.
In 1947, James Forrestal was sworn in as the first U.S. Secretary of
Defense.

,

II

By Jack Anderson
an d Dal Yan A fta

Another potential witnes s.
Felipe Camargo, was at that meetT7
ing, but he probably won't be testi·
~
fying either. As we reported last show up. As we reported last April,
year, U.S. authorities gave the cold Navarro died in a car crash a few
shoulder to Camargo when he days before he was scheduled to
offered to testify against Noriega. testify against two Noriega coCamargo had extensive ties to defendants.
Cuban intelligence, and., as a
Nanrro was killed when hi s
lawyer for one of Nonega s co- speedmg red BMW plowed
defendants told us, the prosecutors through 75 feet of wood fence in a
"won't touch anyone that smacks Miami suburb. Authorities ruled
of intelligence."
that the crash was an accident, but
Why 1 A former friend of some witnesses said Navarro was
Camargo told our associate Dean being chased by another car.
Boyd, "Camargo could blow open
His death remains a mystery .
the whole case with what he knows but his liability as a prosecution
abou t dirty U.S. operations in the witness was not. In a previous drug
region."
trial in Miami, according to court
Today, Camargo sits in a Pana- records, a Customs agent purposely
man ian jail awaiting the verdict kept Navarro away from the COUrt from hi s recent trial for human room where his testimony would
rights abuses while he was a rank- have been discredited by the
ing member of Noriega' s intclli- defense team. The defense lawyers
gcnce force.
sent a private detective to NavarAlso among the mi ss ing is ro's house to bring him to court,
Ramon Arturo Navarro, a drug run- and Navarro chased the man off
ncr whose own criminal escapades with a shotgun.
would have damaged theprosecuDianne Cossin of the U.S .
tion's case if he showed up to testi- Attorney's Office in Miami would
fy against Noriega. But he won't not comment on the dropout rate of
the potential witnesses . She said
the prosecution team bas a solid
case with "a large number of wit·
nesses.''
THE NEXT WAR - The thousands of folks in their cubicles at
the Pentagon are engaged in high
drama and low skulduggery. They
look back with pride on their victory in the Persian Gulf, and ahead
with trepidation on defense budget
cuts. Rival branches of the service
are engaged in a struggle for survival and uncertainty hangs over
the future of the military brass.
This has caused an outbreak of
conniving, feuding and finagling.
The winners will be tllose-who can
garner the stron~est back;ng in
Congress by hyprng the weapons
systems that are sacred to legislators.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Forget
all tile reports you have heard about
Dan Quayle being a lightweight.
Quayle's new-found platform -a
diatribe against lawyers - is a
stroke of brilliance. Through personal genius or good advice, he has
chosen the one subject that will
bring him mountains of fan mail.
Never mind that as vice-president
he can't do anything about the
twisted state of the U.S. judicial
system. Never mind unemploy·
ment, poverty. drugs , crime and the
recession. After nearly three years
in office. Quayle has found himself
a can' t-lose issue.

Party believes '92 will ·be a big year
CHICAGO (NEA) - Leaders
of the Libertarian Party - which
recently nominated Las Vegas real
estate broker Andre Marrou as its
presidential candidate - believe
that, with the Democrats in disarray, 1992 ~'1. be the year to finally
establish their group nationally.
The Libertarian Party's platform
calls for as little government as
possible- eliminating virtually all
government regulation of economic
life and personal behavior - and
the end of income wes. Most libertarians are fiscal conservatives
and social liberals.
Based on election results, the
Libertarian Party is the third largest
party in the United States - but a
very distant third.
Established in 1971, th~ party's
best showing came in 1980 when
Californian Ed Clark qualified on
every state ballot and collected
920,859 votes - almost I percent
of the total national vote. That year
the campaign even raised enough
money to run national television
advertising.
Recently, however,the party has
regressed. The low-water mark
came in the Reagan landslide of
1984 when only 228,314 Libertarian votes were recorded nationally.
Four years ago, former Republican
Rep. Ron Paul of Texas qualified

for the ballot on the Libertarian
ticket in 44 states and he collected
431,679 votes in the presidential
race.
This year, Marrou, 52, won a
first-ballot nomination, polling 257
votes - 32 more than needed to
win . In second place, with 155
votes, was college teacher and
motivational speaker Dick Boddie
of Huntington Beach, Calif.
As is tradition~! at Libertarian
conventions, "none of the above"
was entered as a candidate- and
finished third. At this convention,
" none" became something of a
serious candidate. A number of delcgates argued that the party docs
not have the resources to waste on
a symbolic presidential candidate
and that it should concentrate its
energies at the state and loeallcvel.
where the party has had some suecess.
Libertarians claim that, since
1972, they have elected more than
100 state or local office holders,
and that 200,000 voters are registered Libertarians in the IS states
that allow voters to declare for the
party.
Marrou is one of the party's few
previously elected office holders.
He was a member of the Alaska
State House from 1985 to 1987,
before he moved to Las Vegas. He
was also Paul's vice presidential

running mate in 1988. ·
Marrou says he plans to be on
every state's ballot next year and to
actively campaign in all 50 states.
His main campaign theme will be
the repeal of the income tax and
elimination of tile Internal Revenue
Service.
Marrou said you can judge the
kind of campaign he will run by the
way he campaigned for the nomination. He ran hard, in a wellfinanced effort, that included tetevision commercials on several
Chica~o stations, targeting delegates m their hotel rooms before
and after convention sessions.
"I think that we are going to
surprise a lot of people next year,'·
the nominee said. "We deliver performance, not just promises . We
offer results, not just rhetoric.··
Many here see '92 as a "breakthrough" year for Libertarians .
They hope that voters, believing
George Bush to be a landslide winncr. will feel free to register their
general unhappiness with both
major parties through a protest
vote. Marrou says he will be on
every state ballot to collect that
protest vote.
"When voters see it's no contest. they tend to vote for what they
really believe in," Marrou said.
Marrou says that fund-raising
will be a top priority. A major issue

Robert]. Wagman
here became whether a Libertarian
candidate should accept federal
matching funds. Before the convention, Marrou had said he would
accept matching funds, but here he
was pressured to reverse that decision.
This convention showed significant strains within the Libertarian
movement. One wing - centered
around The Cato Institute, a
respected Washington think tank
- is made up of button-downed
neoconservatives, many of whom
started as conservative Republicans
and continued to move right. The
other wing consists of ullraliberals
who believe that all drugs should
be made legal and government
should let people alone to make
whatever mistakes in their lives
they want.
While both sides believe that
government should shrink to as
small a level as possible, neither
wing of the Libertarian Party seems
to think much of the other.
(C)I991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
It hopes that voters, believing
George Bush to be a landslide winncr, will feel free to register their
general unhappiness with both
major parties.

Pondering the lessons of last summer
Summer's all but over (Sept.
23). Now for the memories.
Two of the high spots of my
summer were going to the county
fair and seemg Thornton Wilder's
"Our Town" again. Both took me
back to a kinder, gentler time.
Unlike most things, county fairs
don't change much through the
years and if you go to one today
you can transport yourself back to
the turn of the century when life
was slower and people took time.
We were an agrarian people
back then and while not everyone
lived on a farm there was always a
farm not too far away. and "one
touch of nature makes the whole
world kin." We saw that nature
doesn't hurry and we unconsciouslY adapted our stride to nature's
leisurely pace.
A county fair may be the closest
most of us get today to the good
old days. After a morning wi!h the
amiable, unhurried goats and pigs
and sheep, we too start to slow
down and feel more amiable our-

'

selves.
If you stay off the midway there
is not much excitement at a county
fair. Quilting displays and the
apple-butter jul)ging arc about as
exciting as things get.
The people aren't very exciting
either. You see a lot of Opics and
Aunt Bees and Andy Taylors and little children holding hands
with their parents. People who talk
about the decline of the family
should go to a county fair.
Those who stay away from
county fairs probably tell themselves there are better ways to be
bored. I wonder if they realize what
we have lost in quality of life
through our preoccupation with
activity and excitement.
Bertrand Russell said, ''A
happy life must be to a great extent
a quiet life for it is only in an atmosphere of quiet that true joy can
live." Russell recommended a life
in which monotony played a part.
Constructive purposes, he said,
don't form themselves in a mind

full of constant distractions.
For this reason, said the British
philosopher, "a generation that
cannot endure boredom will be a
generation of little men.·'
Did he mean us?
Now, after I rest awhile on this
park bench and do a little daydreaming, I'll get around to telling
you about "Our Town."
It's a story about the good life
- about people "living two by
two" in the early years of this centwy in a small town in New Hampshire, and about the joy, happiness
and heanbreak they share.
We come away from the play
with the ·conviction that "making
it," materialism and the American
success syndrome do not of~er the
ultimate promise or pwpose m living.
We learn that the good life is a
life of relationships and sharing a sharing of ideas, possessions, of
values and "experiences of a thousand kinds."

George R. Plagenz

Paul Gallico, the author of' 'The
Snow Goose" and other stories,
wrote an essay titled, "You Don't
Know How Lucky You Are to Be ·
Married." Gai'Iico, who was
divorced at the time, said we often
fail to appreciate how wonderful it ·
is to have someone to talk to when
we come home at the end of the .
day.
.
. ''When the sound of your key in
the lock initiates no human
response of 'Is that you, dear?' or even 'Well, where have you :
been this time?' - you realize " ·
wrote Gallico, "that the bart of
d&lt;?g or the chirp of a biid iS no subsutute for the human voice."
The lessons of last summer: to
walk !l"d not run through life. to ·
take ume, to cherish the moments
with those we love.

a.

(C)I991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

..·- ---·- ----- . -- ... -·

---~-- --- --------

Bert L. Grimm, 93, of Letart
Falls, died Monday, Sept. I f), 1991
at Veterans Memm;ial Hospital fol·
lowing an extended illness.
Born on April 20, 1898, at
Letart Falls. he was the son of the
late Joseph Grimm and Letha Pickens Grimm.
He was profess ional baseball
pitcher with teams in Dallas and
Beaumont, Texas, and Charleston,
W.Va. for 17 years, and after that
farmed and operated a restaurant in
Letart Falls. He was a member of
the Racine United Methodis t
Church and Masonic Lodge 461,
Racine.
Surviving are two sons, Robert
R. Grimm, Columbus, and Russell
of St. Clairsville; five grandchil·
dren, and seven great-grandchildren . He was preceded in death by
his wife, Chlorus Coe Grimm , a
sister, Bessie Humphrey, and two
· brothers , Ernest and Carroll.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at II a.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Roger
Grace will officiate and burial will
be in the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral

-

--· --

- ·- -The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

--Area deaths-- Meigs announcements
Bert L. Grimm

-· · ..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 17, 1991

Commentary

--

home Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Masonic rites by Racine Lodge will
be held at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday
evening.

Jessie Dodderer
Jessie Dodderer, 74 , of Tuppers
Plains, died Tuesday , Sept. 17 ,
1991, at University Hospital in
Columbus following a brief illness.
Born in Stewart, she wa s th e
daughter of the late Charlie and
Raldie Longstreth Wilson. She is
survived by a son and daughter-inJaw, Dave and Lois Dodderer, Baltimore, Ohio ; two sons, John, of
New Orleans, and Ronald, of Tup·
pers Plains; two si sters. Juanita
Kaylor of Guy s ville and El sie
Keaton. of Gahanna; a granddaugh ter, Debbie Dodderer of Baltimore,
and a grandson, Jay Dodderer of
Tuppers Plains.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband.
Roland, in 1975.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at I p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville. Burial
will be in the Tuppers Plain s
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home Wednesday 2-4 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m.

Post 602 to meet
The American Legion Post 602.
Racine, will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. Members are reminded that
1992 dues should be paid.

Picnic canceled
The Middleport Lodge No. 367
and Evangeline Chapter No. 172
family picnic scheduled for Sunday
has been canceled.

VFWto meet
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. All auxiliary and post
membe rs are to meet at th e post
home.

AA group to meet
The Pomeroy Group of AA will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. For
more information call992-5763.

Auxiliary to meet
Th e Ameri can Le gion Dr ew
Webster Post No. 39 Unit Auxi liary will meet Sept. 24 at the post
home at 7:30 p.m. All jun iors are
asked to attend for a meeting.
Eight and forty
The Ei ght and Fort y Me igs
County Salon No. 710 will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the home of
Marie Boyd. Rain will can cel the
meeting.
Better Heallh Club to meet
The Rock Springs Better Health
Club will me&lt;:t Thursday at I p.m.
at the home of Agn es Di xo n,
Pomeroy.

Star Granges to meet
The Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange will hold their annual
hayride and wiener roast on Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the grange hall.
The grange will provide the buns.
Everyone is to bring wieners,
marshmallows, drinks and other
snac'Iis. All' members, ~otential
members anti friends are onvited to
attend:
Missionary sen ices
The Hobson Church of Christ in
Christian Union will have special
mi ssionary services on Sept. 24 at
7 p.m. with Rev. and Mrs. Carl
Nozzle, Chambers. Ariz. They arc
with the Navahoe Indians and will
be taking back Christmas items and
food . Theron Durham, pa stor ,
invites the public.

•.

OHI O Weath er

•

Wednesday, Sept. 18
Accu· Weathere forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH .

' ''

JToledo I 76° I
' ' ' ' '

IMansfield I 83° I•

~
' ' '

IND.

.......

Showers T-storms Rain

Flurries

Snow

Pomeroy...
'

\\

'.

"''

. .._.... ·

I

WHOOPING IT UP - Presidential hopeful
support rally f~r Harki~ i~
...
. Sen. Tom Harkin, D-lowa, laughs it up )Vith ._Monday. Har~m was fi~Ishmg a. day:long .vosot
supporter Barbara Holmes or Boscilwenf 'J\I·lH., ... to the state Wl!h the earliest prt;Sidenhal pnma·
center, and New Hampshire House Minority
ry before beadmg back to Washmgton, D.C. (AP
Leader Mary Chambers during a Democratic
LaserPboto)

ACT averages hold steady,
minority students continue gains
NEW YORK (AP) - More
minority students took the ACT
Assessment in 1991 and their
scores crept upward, but the overall
average score on the college
entrance exam held steady for the
fifth year in a row.
The average composite score
among 797,000 students who graduated from high school last spring
was 20.6 on a scale of 1-36, American College Testing of Iowa City,
lo.wa, said in a summary report
Monday.
· The average on the four-pan
multiple choice test was unchanged
from I 990. Scores have changed
slightly since 1987, when they
averaged 20.8.
The news last month about last
year's scores on the rival Scholastic Aptitude Test was far worse:
SAT verbal scores dropped to an
all-time low, and math averages
declined for the first time since
!980.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 14HIIOI

~

Dlvl•ton of Multimedia, Inc.

Publl shE'(I pv pry aft Prnoon. Monda y

through Frid ay. 111 Court St .. Po mProv. Ohio. bv th P Ohio Va ll f'Y Publishin.Ft" Comp .l n~· !Mulllmt'dla . Inc ..
PomNoy, Ohi o 4S7fi9. Ph . 992-2156. Se cond cl ass prn; t a,I:P pa id at PomPr oy.
Oh io .

Me mber: Th f' Assod atC'd PrE"Ss. In land Dallv P ri'S~ Associ ation a nd thP
Ohio Nf&gt;w.sp aper Assoc ia tion. Nati onal
Advertls lnt{ RE'pn•sentali vP. Bra nh a m
Np\lo' Spap("f Sal t'S. 7ll Third A\'('flU f' ,
NPW York . Npw YorK l!l017 .
POSfMASTER: Send addrf&gt;SS c han ~&lt;&gt;S
to lllr Dallv Sfn!lnPI. 111 Cour1 51..
Pomeroy. m·:to 45769.

SUIISCRIPTION RATE.~
By Carrh•r or Motor Ro•h•

One W•rl: . ..................
Onf' Month ........
On• Year ..

..11.60
. ........ $6.95
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The SAT tests verbal and math
reasoning skills, while the ACT is
considered a broader measure of
high school achievement.
The ACT is the predominant
college entrance test in 28 states,
main! y in the West and Midwest.
The SAT predominates in the rest
of the country . .
ACT officials said they took
heart from the growing success of
minority students, who accounted
for nearly 27 percent of test-takers
in 1991, compared with 21 percent
in 1987.
Eighteen percent more black
students took the test in 1991 than
in 1987. 50 percent more Asian Pacific Islanders, 47 percent more
Puerto Ricans and Cubans, and 37
percent more Mexican-Americans.
Four percent fewer whites took the
exam.

News agency asks permission to
seek contract modification
WASHINGTON (AP) - Unit ed Press International wants a federal judge to reverse himself and let
the news agency begin proceedings
to cancel part of its labor contract
covering U.S. employees.
The financially-strapped news
service earlier this month proposed
laying off ISO people in its effort to
stay in business. But first it wants
to seck court permission to elimi nate contract provisions guaranteeing those employe&lt;:s severance pay,
advance notice of layoffs and other
benefits.
On Aug . 28, UP! sou ght
bankruptcy protection for the sec-

Dally ..

ond time in six years. filin g th e
new action in New York. However,
creditors in the I 985 bankruptcy
act ion, which wa s handled in
Wa shington, asked that the new
case be transferred to the nati on's
capital.
That request triggered an automatic stay in all other proceedings
in the case, ihus preventing UP!
from seeking court perm iss ion to
abr ogate th e contract ove r the
obj ec tion s of th e Wire Servi ce
Guild, a local of The Newspaper
Gui ld .
On Friday, UP! asked U.S. District Judge Thomas F. Hogan to lift

---------------,

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PRICE

Still, minority students continued to score well below the national averages: blacks averaged 17.0,
unchanged from 1990; Mexican
Americans and Chicanos' averages
rose sligh~y to 18.4 from 18.3, and
American Indians and Alaskan
natives averaged 18 .2, compared
with 18.0 the year before.
White students al so gained
slightly, to 21.3 in 1991 , from 21.2
in 1990.
"The increasing populations of
minority students taking the ACT
and the stability of their scores as
their numbers increase arc wel come trends," said ACf President
Richard L. Ferguson
ACT officials have consistently
refused to release state-by -state
ACT averages , arguing it would
invite invalid comparisons.

Continued from page I
change was unnecessary and that
such a stipulation was included in
the village zoning ordinance which
went into effect earlier this year.
Anderson requested permission
to purchase a used truck for th e
water department. He reported that
he had looked at a used model sim ilar to the truck now being used by
the department, and that the water
department account could pay for
the truck.
Anderson also reported that the
new water line is in place on Wchc
Terrace, and that four customers
arc now hooked up to the system.
Vale and Hill Streets are al so in
line for new water lines in the ncar
future .
Mayor Richard Seyler recom mended that council consider the
installation of a traffic light at the
intersection of West Main Street
and Butternut Avenue. No action
was taken last night, although the
possibility of improvements on the
existing intersection was also dis·
cussed.
Councilman Bill Young commented on the expense involved in
the installation and maintenance of
such a light, and Werry commented
that the light would be worthless
unless improved synchronization of
all of the village traffic lights was
made.
In other action, council:
• passed an ordinance approving
the 1992 budget passed by council
in July;
• passed an ordinance approving
1he AGHJMV solid waste plan.
which was discussed and approwd
at the last meeting;
• discussed needed parking
meter and street light replaccmcniS;
In addition to Anderson, Morris,
Seyler, Reed, Werry and Young,
those attending were members
Betty Baronick and Larry
Wchrung.

the stay and allow the news agency
to ask a New York judge to allow
1he employees' contract to be mod·
ificd. Hogan denied the emergency
request but allowed all sides to submit written arguments this week.
In court papers filed Monday,
UPI said that if it is not allowed
soon to drop the contract provisions in question, it "will be compelled to cease operations and a liquidation will occur rather than a
reorganization.'·
It said its losses attributed to the
contract arc accumulating at the
rate of $555,000 a month.

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rl&lt;&gt;r m av r&lt;'mil In ad\' a nceo dlr" rt to
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26 Weeks .................................. $45.50

Weeks ............... ................... $88.40

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Mall Subecrlptlon lt
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fJ Weeks ............................. .. ... $21 .84
26 Weeks .................. .. ............ .. $43.16
~2 Weeks .................................. $84.76
Outsid e Melp County

52

99

"

Pt. Cloudy

Sunny

Clourly

e 1991 Accu-Wearher, Inc.

Via Associate(} Press GraphicsNet

Baker, Shamir report
progress-1n peace talks
JERUSALEM (AP) - U.S.
Secretary of State James A. Baker
Ill and Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir said today they made some
progress toward convening a
Mideast peace conference, but that
they still needed to discuss remain·
ing obstacles.

Ice

Weather

South-Central Ohio
Toni ght , mostly cloudy. Low ·
60-65. Wednesday, showers likely
with thunderstorms possible. High
in
the low 80s. The chance of rain
They spoke to reporters after a
is
60
percent.
90-minute meeting that was also
Extended forecast
attended by Foreign Minister David
Thursday
through Saturday:
Levy and Defense Minister Moshe
Much
cooler
through the period. ·
Arens.
" I think we can say that we A cha nce of showers statewide .
have ... achieved a certain progress Thursday and in the northeast Friin variou s matters related to the dJ y. Otherwi se, fair Friday and ··
peace process," Shamir told Saturday. Highs in the mid-60s to ·
reporters. "We'll have to have fur· low 70s Thursday and in the 60s
thcr discussions about many Friday and Saturday. Morning lows
in the SOs Thursday and in the 40s
issues.''
Baker also said more talks were Friday and Saturday.
needed . "There are still som.e
iss ues between us that mu st be
resolved," he said .
Continued from page 1
Both sides said contacts would
resume in a few days.
or other 11ems to get setur m prepaBaker said there was " a real ration for the opening o the festi·
val at9 a.m.
opportunity to see Arabs. Arab
states, sitting down face to face in
The sponsoring group wiU have ·
two fund raising activities - one a
direct negotiations with Israel,·
adding that he was convinced Israel catfish fry and the other a Catfish
wanted to take advantage of the Festival t·shirt sale. Middleport
Trophies will move equipment to
opportunity.
The secretary of state then left the festival site so that the shirts,
Israel for Cairo for consultations along with mugs and hats, can be
created as they are purchased.
with Egyptian leaders.
Both catfish dinners and sandwiches will be sold from the slllnd
located near Video Touch. Other
food booths, as well as vendors
selling candy and ice cream. The
Am Elc Power .................. 30 1/8
Middleport firemen will have a
Ashland Oil ...... ...... .... ...... 30 5/8
chicken barbeque at the Legion
AT&amp;T .... ......... ........ ......... .37 1/2
Park on Mill Street.
Bob Evans .............................. 18
Charming Shop.... .............. l9 7!8
City Holding ............... ...... 15 1/4
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Federal Mogul.. .. ............ .. .15 5/8
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .... .. ...... .4 I 3/4
Terry Lee Brewer, Long Bottom;
Key Centurion ........... .. ....... 15
Lori E. Roush, Middleport; and
Lands' End .... ...... ............. .. ... 20
Patricia Davidson, Racine.
Limited Inc . ..................... 26 1/4
Multimedia Inc ................. 24 3/4
MONDAY DISCHARGES •
Heinz Coats.
Rax Restaurant ...... .. ..... ....... 7/16
Robbins&amp;Myers .. .. .......... .36 1/4
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Shoncy'slnc ............ ....... . l7 3/8
Discharges, Sept. 16 · Otis BaiStar Bank ................... .... 22 1/2
ley, Dallas Blevins, Staci Davis
Wendy lnt 'I......... ....... .. .... 8 5/8
Ralph Dillinger, Mrs . Jeffrey
Worthington Ind ............. ..28 3/4
Mullins and daughter. Paul PerStock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
roud , Mary Raynolds, Marily~
quotes pro~ided by Blunr, Ellis
Shamblin, John Veith.
and Laewi of Gallipolis.
Births, Sept. 16 · Mr. and Mrs.
Ru ssell Saunders, a daughter, Gallipolis.

Catfish ...

Stocks

Hospital news

Homecoming
scheduled
Homecoming will be held Sunday at the Mt. Moriah Church of
God, Racine. Sunday school will
be held at 9:45 a.m. and there will
be a special program for children at
I I a.m. The dinner at 12:30 p.m.
will be following by guest speaker,
Pastor Randy Barr of the Well ston
Church of God .

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

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�.

Sports

The DailyTU.§~.!!!!~~~
Page-4

Houston hands Kansas City
17-7 defeat Monday night

SHOESTRING TACKLE- Kansas City
linebacker Chris Martin makes a shoestring
tackle on Houston running back Allen Pinkett

after Pinkett gains nve yards in the rrrst quarter
of Monday night's AFC match up in the Houston
Astrodome, wbicb tbe Oilers won 17-7. (AP)

Scot·cboat·d
In the NFL...
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Euttm Dlvlllon

r ...,

W L T Pet. PF PA

BWf'alo
Miuni
New

Enaland

N.Y. Jcu
Indiana poW

Now Yodl .........61 82 .421 19
..........61 83 .41A 19.S
CLEVELAND ..47 95 331 325
BaltimtR

.... 3 0 0 1.000110 85
.... 1 2 0 .333 61 58
.. 1 2 0 .333 22 47

.... 1 2 0 .333 49 S6
.... 0 3 0 .000 13 49

WNttrn O.vblm
w L Pd.
Minneaota
......... 17 58 .600
Chicaao
..........79 66 .54.5
TCJI.II
.............76 66 - ~3.5
Tem~

Gilland

........... 76 68

""""'"'
Pitllbwlh

CUlVE!.AND
CINCINNATI

.... 3 0 0 1.000 94 31
.... 2 I 0 .667 80 78
210 .6674!39
.0 3 0 .000 34 89

Wnttrn Dlvlllon
.... 2 I 0 .667 74 40

o.....
Seattle

...2 I 0 .667 49 60
.... 1 2 0 .333 ll 31
.... 1 2 0 .333 54 56

San Dieao

....0 3 0 .000 44 73

LA. Liden
Wua City

8

9.5

.528

10.5

Scaulc
............. 73 70 .510
Kanau City ..
12 71 .SOJ

13

H

Cenlral Dlvlllon

ca

C&amp;litomil

.....

........... 71 72 .497

14
!5

Monday's scores
Mihuukee 5, New Yode 4

Baltimcn 9, Boaon 2
Minneaota 9, Xanus City 0
Se~ttle 6, Torooto S, II innings

TonJ&amp;ht's cames
MilwiU.kce (Botio 11 · 10) at New
Yodt (P,...I-3), BOp.m.
Baltimoro (Mc11 ~-10) 1t Boston
(MoMn

l-3), 7:3S p.m.

Dtlrolt (Terrell U-10) 1t Clueland

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Ea.llem Dlvblon

W L T PeL PF PA

Team

01.000112 31
.. 2 I 0 .667 SO 58
... I 2 0 .333 57 71
.. .I 2 0 .333 46 53
.... 3 0

Wuhin

Philad~

.... 2 I 0 .667 54 29

PhomiA

Dollu

N.Y. Gianu

(Jon01 1-7), 7:35p.m.

Oakhnd {Dulin&amp; 3-3) 1t Chicaao
(llibb&amp;nt 9-10), 8:0l p.m
.
K.an111 City (Saberhagcn 10-8) at
Minnaou. (Morri• 16-11), S:ns p.m.
California (Lowia 1-S) at Texu (Dohanon 3-2), 8:35p.m .
Toronto (Jaan 0uzman 7-2) at Sc.ule
(Hamon

Wednesday's aames

Ce11tnl DlvWon

.... 3 0 0 1.000 51 43
.... 2 I 0 .667 40 12
....2 I 0 .667 43 43
.. .I 2 0 .333 32 56
.. ..0 l 0 .000 46 52

Chica~·
Dcuool

"'""""""

Green B•y
Tampi Bay

Watem Dlvillon
.... 3 0 0 1.000 68 41
.... 1 2 0 .333 35 44

New Odcant
Allon10
L.A. a.m.
Sanfnnc:Uc:o

... I

1

.... 1 2

0 .333
0 .333

40
62

61
47

Howtoo 17. K.anaaa City 7

Sunday, SepL l1
Clnt:land at New York Giants, 1

p.m.

Detroit at lndianapolia, 1 p.m.
Green Bay at Milm.i, I p.m.

Wuhlnaton •l Clnclnn11~ 1 p.m.
HOUitoo at New England, I p.m.
Lot Anaelca Raidera u Atl•nu, 1
p.m.
~m. at New Orlelns. I p.m.
Pi.ttaburJh at Philadelphia, I p.m.
San OieaG at Denver, 4 p.m.
U. Anada Ram. at San Francisco,
4p.m.

SeaaleatKanau City, 4 p.m.
Buffalo at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m.
Dallas at Phoeni.a,l pm.
Mondly, SepL lJ
New Yort Jcta 11 ChiC:.jO. 9 p.m.

In the majors ...

'

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eutem Dlvillon

l. PeL

GO

............ 76 67 .531
........... 70 74 .486
......... 69 74 .483

9.5

Tflm

W

p;,"'""sh ............ 86 51 .597

Sc Louio

C~Uuao

New Yod
Phibddphio

Manual

......... (;/ 17 .465

........... 63 19 .444

Wtsltrn Dl.-llion
W L PeL
Allanll .............82 62 .569
Leo AnJ'Ia ........ 12 63 j66
San Dieao .......... 74 71 jiO

T&lt;lll

CINCii'INATI

.... 70

74 .486
78 .458

Sin Pnneioeo ........ 66
Hau~tm
........... !58 86 .403

16
16.5

19

22
GB

.l

i.S
12
16
1A

Monday's scores
SL Louil 3, Philad&lt;lpltia 0
Piuabwgh 5, Otic:ago 4
San Dieao 6, Houaton I
S1n Francisco 8, AUanu S
Los Anarlu 6, Clndnnall !, 11 In ·
nlnp

Today's games
Moo~m~l (lhney 3-4 and NabhGil: 5-7)
at New Yoti: (Youna2-l •nd Castillo 2-

7:3s p.m.

Oakland (Stewart Il-l)) 11 Chictgo
(McDowell t6-9~ 8:0l pm.
California (Finley 17-1) 11 Texas

10.6), 8:35p.m.
(R . lohnami:Z.lO),IO:Ol p.m.

Major league leaders
National League
BAmNG - Morrla, Clnclnnall,
.315; T. Gwym, San Dieao, .317; Pendleton, ALlanta, .314; Jose, St. Uluis , .312;
McGee, San Fran cisco, .31 L Bonilla,
PitL~burgh, .307; W. Clark, San Francisco,
.303.
RUNS - Outler, Los Angeles, IOJ;
Johnson, New Yo~. 99; Sandberg, Chicago, 94; Bonilll. Pituburah. 90: Gmt. Atlanta, 89; J. DeU. Pituburg.h, 87; Pendletoo. Atlanta, 87.
RBI- W. Oarlc, San Francisco, !OS;
Johnson, New York, 103; Bond s, Pittsburgh, 99; DawJon, Chicago, 91; Gant,
Atlanta, 94 ; McGriff, San Dieao. 93;
Bonilll, Piuabu.rgh, 91.
I fiTS - T. Gwynn, San Diego, 168;
Buller, Lo. An~elu, 166; PmdletOO, At·
lanll., 162; Bonilla, Pituburgh, 161; JO&amp;c,
St. Louis, US; Sandberg, Chicago, 157;
Sabo, Clnclnn11i, 155; G. Bell, Chicago,
155.
DOUBLES - Bonilla, Pimburgh,
41 ; Jose, St. Louis, 39; O'Neill, Cincinnati, JS; Sabo, Cincinnati, 32; Morris,
Clndnn~ll, 31; Gant , Atlanta, 31 ;
McReynolds, New York, 31.
TRlPLES - Lankford, St. Louis, 14;
T. GwyM, San Diego, II ; F"J.nley, HousLOn, I 0; L. Gonzalez, Houston, 8; GrU:~. Montreal, 8; Cudaclc, Houstoo, 7;
Vm Slykc, PitF.IbuJih, 7.
HOME RUN S - Johnton , New
YolK, 34; Matt Williams, San Fnncisco,
30; Gant, AUanta, 29; Dawson, Chicago,
28; O'Neill, Cincinnati, 11; McGriff,
San Diego, 27; K. Mit.chell, San F111ncisco, 21.
STOLEN BASES - Nixoo, Allanla .
12: Griuom, Monlleal, 68; DeSfuelda,
Montreal. S2; Bondi, Pittsburgh, 40;
Coleman, New York, 37; Buller, Los Angela:, 37; Lankford, St. Louis, 36.
PITCHING (14 dcc:iaiona)- Rljo,
Clnclnnall, U -4, .771, Z.39i Carpcn~r.
Sl. l.oWI, 10-4, .714, 4.23; Oowna, Sm
Fnnciaoo, 10-4. .714, 4.17; Smiley, Pitaburx,h, 18-8, .692, 3.39; Hunt, San Diego,
1!5 -7, .682, 3.22; Avery , Atlanta, 16-8,
.667, 3.48; Mitch WilliaiTUI , Philadelphia,

10·5, .667, 2.25.

Atlanta (l..eibnn&lt;lt 1!5-11) It San FranNco (Dllck 10.1!5), 10:3!5 p.m.

STRIKEOlJTS -Cone, New York,
191; 0 . Maddux, Chicago, 175; Glavine.
Atlanta, 171 : Hamitch. Houuon. t53;
Gooden, New York. ISO ; Benes . San
Diego. 148; Groene, Philadelphia, 146.
SAVES - Lee Smilh, St. Loois, 41 ;
Dibble, Clntlnnltl, 19; Mitch William&amp;,
Philadelphis, 27; Franco, New York, 25;
R.iJheu.i, San Franciaco, 22; Leffcns, San
Dieao, 21; B. Landrum, Pituburgh, 17;
Dave Smith, Clicaao, 17; Dcn:ngucr, Al·
lanta, 17 .

Wednesday's games

American Lea2ue

I),S :IOp.m.
St LouU (Hill 9 -9) at Ph iladelphia
(Bnndcy
Chi.eaao (Bielcdu 13-9) at Pittsburgh

0.1 ), 1:35 P"'·
(Dnb&lt;i.IJ-13), 7:35p.m.
Hou1Wn (Hamiac:h 9-9) at San Diego
(Hwslll-7),10:0Sp.m.
Clnc:lnnall (8rowalnat4-IO) 11 Loa
Ana&lt;lll (Ojeda 10.8), 11:35 p.m.

Montreal (Dennis Martincx 14-9) at
Ptuladcipf-lil (MulhoU•nd 14-11), 7:3S

p.m.

St. Lou.ia (B. Smith 11· 8) at Pitr.~WrJh
(Walk 7-2), 7:35p.m.
Chi.caao (Maddua 11· 10) at New York

(VIOla 12-14), 7;40p.m.

Allanll (Olivine II· 10) at San Die&amp;o

(IIM1114-l), lO:OS p.m.

CIKinnall {Am•lrona 7·11) 1t San
Frs11&lt;ii&lt;G (WI~MIO.II~ ll:f5 p.m.
HouatGn (JCile 7· 9) It Loa Anaeles
{MOIJ"' 12-9), IO:lS p.m.

j
,,

&lt;N•ut-12~

Toronto (Candiotti 13-11) at Seattle

Next week's games

' I'

K.ansu City (A9uino 7-3) u Min nCIOll (Ericbon 18-6), 1:IS p.m.
Baltimcn (D . Joftnson 4-5) at Boston
(GU&lt;tin" 8-7), 6ilS pm .
Milwaukee (NavarTO 13-11) It New
Yodt (l . Johnson S-11), 7:30p.m.
Ddroll (Lcllcr 1-4) al Cleveland

AMERICAN LEAGUE
f.ullr11 Dhillon
TWLPd.
r....... .. .........11 114 .559
u............ 77 67 .m
Dcuoi1
.............75 68 .524
Milw•utee
........61 74 .479

I

Cuyler, Detroit. l5; White, Toronto, 32;

Franco, Teua, 21; Su, New YO!k.ll.

PITCHING (14 d..Uioou) -

BATIING- Franco.'k"cxn, .341:
Boaa•. Boaton • •~32: K~n Oriffey Jr. ,
Seau.le, .329: Molitor, Milwaukee, .32&amp;;

Thomu, CW:•JI!&gt;· .3U; ~••T........
.326; Puckeu, "'""""""· .3:W.
RUNS -Molitor, Milwaukee, liS ;
C......., Oillond, IOl; PalmWo, Tous,
10:4 Sierra, Tex&amp;J, 102.; Whit., Tormto,
tO I; Thomu, OUcaao, 9!1i; Franco. TCJW,
9S.
'
RBI -

Fielder, Dctroh, 123;

C.nKCO, Oakllnd, I 1I ; Thomu, Chiet-

JO, 103; Sierra, ~oxaa , 10~; Carter,
Tote~tto, 102; C. Ripten, Baltimore, 91;
Ju111 Oorwlez. Teau, 95.

HITS -Molilor, Milwout,., 191; C.
Riplcon, Balolmore, 185; Palmciro, Tem,

GB

J.S
5

184; Sierra, Texu, 113; Puckett. Minnoaota. 180; Franco, Texu , 178; Su.
New Yolk, 171.

DOUBLES- Palmeiro, Tu.u. 44;
· Ken Griffey Jr., Seattle, 41 ; C. Ripken,
Baltimore, 41; Siom, Tcxu, 40; Carta',

Erict-

,..,, Mim...,.., 18~ .750,3.15; Hookoth,
Booton, 1()4, .714, 3.33; Unpton. Cali·
fontia , 17-7, .701, 3.00; Joae OrJZman,
Tcs.u, 12-5, .706, 286; Oullicbon Dotrait, 11·8, .692, 4.15; Finicy, Cali!~.
17-1, .680, 3.60; Clem..,., B011on, 16-8,
.667, 2.52.
STIUKEOurs - Oemau, Boston,
210; R.-..., S..lllc, 197; McDowell,
Chic•ac, 179; Ryan, Tcu1. 172:
L•naJton, Cllifomi1, Ul : Candioui,

Toronto, lSI; Flllloy, Califomil, ISS.

SAVES - EckCJ'IIlly. Oak.land, 40:
Harvey, C1lilornia, 39; Aauilcra, Minncacu, 39: Reardon, Ba.toa, 39; Henke,
TDronto, 32; ThiiPen, Cb.ieaao, 29; 01aon, Baltimore, 28; Montaomcry,
Kanw City, lli JelfRIIUdl, TCUJ, 28.

Little Brown Jug
post positions
DI!LIIWARE,Ohio (AI') -On wins

es for 233 yards. He was sacked .
once. but hit often by the hardcharging Chiefs' defense.
Houston 's defense once again
made the big plays that the Oilers
started toward their third straight
victory - unprecedented in club
history to start a season.
Scott Kozak's hit jancd the ball
from Fred Jones on a punt return
and rookie Mike Dumas recovered
at the Kansas City 27 in lhe first
quarter. The Oilers scored in nine
plays with Allen Pinkett diving the
final yard.
The Chiefs, scoreless in the first
half in two games this season, tied
Ihe game with 27 seconds left in
Ihe half on a two·yard run by
Christian Okoye. He finished with
15 buUish runs for 75 yards.
"You just try to get a body in
front of him and pull him down,"
Oilers coach Jack Pardee said. "II
seems like he gelS faster every time
I see him."
Moon and Jeffires thwarted the
Chiefs in the third quarter long
enough to regain ·the lead with a
series of short-range ~s. Moon
completed 12 straight passes.
including the eight in a row during
the 'o·ahead touchdown drive.
' Kansas City's front seven is as
talented as any in the league,"

Moon said. "We lcnew they would
present a great challenge.''
Jefftres caught nine passes in all
for 60 yards, and it was just as saiisfy ing as his last performance
against the Chiefs.
"I'm a different player thi s
year," he said. "I'm trying to be
the best I can be. We didn't win it
pretty as we lhought we could, but
we got the job done. We showed
the nation what the run·and-shool
is all about."
Steve DeBerg and Ihe Chiefs
threatened again after the Oilers
took a 14· 7 lead, but Cris Dishman
ended the charge by intercepting a
DeBerg pass in the end zone
intended for Fred Jones.
Ian Howfield kitked a 23·yard
field goal wilh 21 seconds left for
the fmal margin.
"I just took a shot, actually 1
thought it was a touchdown,"
DeBerg said of his pass towards
Jones . "From where I was, 1
lhcught he came down with it.''
Chiefs head coach Marty Schot·
tenheimer said he was pleased with
his team's progress.
''I felt our players played ... one
of their best games. but it was not
good enough," Schottenheimer
said. "It was a gutty effon, but !hat
doesn't pay any dividends."

Wyche suggests that winning
gets excessive emphasis in NFL
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Sam
Wyche is at it again.
One day after his Cincinnati
Bengals fell to 0·3 with a last-Sec·
ond loss in Cleveland, lhe combat·
ive coach once again stole the spot·
light by suggesting that winning is
overemphasized in the National
Football League.
"That is not life or death,"
Wyche said Monday during a news
conference that turned testy. "And
anybody that wants to die over that,
figuratively, probably ought to get
out of the business.
"Fonunately for me- unfortu·
nately for people like you - I'm
not going to die over that. So I'll
just stick around the business for a
while longer."

Wyche, in his eighth season as
head coach with two more years
left on his contract, has shown a
knack for deflecting criticism from
his team by becoming Ihe focal
point
Last year, he barred a woman
reporler from the locker room in
defiance of league policy, resulting
in a $27,941 fine. The women·in·
the·locker room issue overshad·
owed the team's troubles at the

radio station publicly offering
Wyche a job if he's ftred. Newspa·
pers ran his remarks prominent! y,
and one writer ~ fun in a col·
umn headed, ' While Wyche has
fun, Bengals sink into oblivion."
After Matt Stover kicked a 45yard field goal to give Cleveland
the win Sunday, Wyche downplayed the 0.3 start.
"We're going to have fun,"
Wyche said Sunday. "There's goll
time.
to be played and tennis to be served
He's also sparred with the up and other things to be done out
league over his team's quick·snap there besides worrying about a
tactics, and angered Clevelanders (expletive) football game."
by Ielling Riverfront Stadium fans
Given an opponunity to explain
to stop lhrowing snowballs because the remarks Monday, Wyche didn't
"You don't live in Cleveland."
back down.
His comments following lhe 14·
"It's not fair to us, it's not fair
13 loss in Cleveland had lhe talk to our families, it's not fair to lhe
shows abuzz Monday, with one
(See WYCHE on PageS)

for poll politionl in the $S7S,ISO Liu.lc
Brown Jua 3·ycar-olcl ~ Thursd1y at
lhe Delawuo County FairarowJcls, wilh
nunc ~ dri.Ya' and euiy odaa:
nnt DI\'Ulon

(Ryln

Monday's score

I

8-7), IO:lS p.m.

Toronto, 39; Reed, Botton, 31; Whlte,
Torot~lO, 31; Baa•. Boston,31.
TRIPLES - R. Alomar, Toronto. II :
L. Jolwon, Chlc:aJO, II ; Molitor, Milwaukee, I I : McRae, Kan111 City, 9:
White, Toronto, 9: Gladden, Minnesota,
9; Oevetea\U, Baltimore, 8; Mae.ll, Minnesota, 8; Poi.C.U., Calif'om.ia, 8.
HOME RUNS - Fielder, Detroit, 42;
Canseco, Oakland, 41; Car\cr, Toronto,
33; Tbomu, Chicoao, 30; C. R!fi&lt;""· Dol·
limen, 29; Tuubu.ll. Kanaas Cuy, 28; C.
Davis, Minraw, 28.
STOLEN BASES - R. Henderson,
Oakland, SO; Raina, C~etgo, ~8; ~- AJ~
nw, ToJOnto, 4S; PolOIUI, Callforrua, 41;

By MICHAEL A. LUfZ
AP Sports Writer
HOUSTON (AP) - Houston's
passing duo of Warren Moon to
Haywood Jeffires came back to
haunt the Kansas City Chiefs, but it
was Moon who was scared.
Last December, Moon passed
for 527 yards - second·best total
in NFL history - and Jeffires
caught nine passes for 245 yards in
a 27-10 victory over the Chiefs.
The same combination worked
Monday night when Moon completed eight siillight passes in a go·
ahead touchdown drive, five of
them to Jeffues, capped by a four·
yard touchdown pass that led the
Oilers to a J7. 7 victory.
But Moon had an uneasy feeling
prior to the game.
"I was nervous about this game
because of all the expectations."
Moon said.
The Chiefs, determined that his·
tory would not repeat with another
big game for Moon, held the Oiler
quanerback to 63 y11rds passing in
the first half. But Houston head
coach Jack Pardee changed the
passing game at halftime.
"We decided to go with the
shorter routes in the second half
and just to take what they gave
us," Moon said.
Moon completed 29 of 38 pass·

I.

Nuke Skywolkez, Ron Pi=. 1·2;

2. lnterpretor, D.R. Ackonnan, 4- 1; 3.
Stormin Jcuc, Cat Manzi, 9-2; 4. Happy
Family, Doug Brown, lS· I ; !1. Complex
Trooper, no driver, t;-.1; 6. Duke Emn, no
driver, 6-1 ; 7. Stan dle Fire, Michel
Lr.CIWJoc, 3-1.
Secmd DlviJion ~
I . Die Laughing, Richie Silvemun, 21; 2. Black GolcJ Ro1d, D.R. Ac.t.ennan,

IS-I ; l . Thno Wiwdo, Bill Gale, ll·l;
4. One Bad Boy, Chria Borina. 6-1: 5.
Silky S1allmo. Michd L40.once, 7·2; 6.
Precioua Bunny, Jack Moiseyev, 9-S; 1.
Noble Return. Otip Noble.. 6-1 .
Third Dlwblan

I. E.. y Goer, Joe Pavia Jr., 3-1; 2.
Mant.esc, Mickey McNichol, 9-l; 3. Radium HanOYer, Dick Stillinp, 6-1; 4. Nuke
of Eul, Michel LIO!an~ I 0-1 ; S. Nuclear Lca•cy , Bill Fahy, !5-2; 6. Arcane
Hanover, Norm McKnight, 6-2; 7 .
Cambat, Dave Rankin, 10-1; 8. Ooan• day, BillOale,I0-1.

Transactions

I
•
I
•
BE ON THE LOOK OUT•••

Baseball
COMMISSIONER'S OFFICE Nallon•l Lugue

Sll~J)endcd

Atlanta Bravu outfiddcr Otis
Nixon f« 60 da)'l for violalinalhc \Crms
of hU dna a-abuse l.l\e:r-ean: proJnm.
NL - Swpc:nded Clndnnall Reda

pitcher Norm O..riLon ror IUin dlya
and ftncd hlra Sl,oot ror lluowtna It
Laa Anaelea Dodaers ulctler Mike
SciCN:cla In I StpL 9 aame and llyln&amp;
arterwardt he ml&amp;hl lr)' to hll him

17 1991

L.A. hands Cincy 6-5 loss in
12 frames; Giants top Braves
By WENDY E. LANE
AP Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Tom
Lasorda, always ready to trot out
superlatives, actually had to pause
a minute before finding lhe words
to fit this one.
"I would describe that game as
one of the most exciting, interesting, unbelievable games I have
ever been involved in," the Los
Angeles Dodgers manager said . .
Pennant race or no pennant race,
Lasorda was· wowed as Los Ange.
les rallied for three runs in lhe 12th
inning to beat the Cincinnati Reds
6·5 on Monday night The victory
moved the Dod~ers within a half
game of Atlanta m the NL West.
Eddie Murray hit his first triple
of the season and Eric Karras got
his first hit ever to rally the
Dodgers before Jeff Hamilton
drove in lhe winning run.
"It was something to see so

many players partake. and to see
such enthusiasm even after they
(the Reds) scored those runs "
Lasorda said. "We seemed to f~l
we could come back. I've never
seen so much enthusiasm on the
ball club like I saw tonight. In the
clubhouse, it was like New Year's
Eve."
The Dodgers used 27 players an NL record for an extra·inning
game - to win a game they all but
lost several times.
The Reds grabbed a 5·3 lead in
the 12th, breaking the tie on rookie
Chris Jones' first major league
homer.
But Darryl Strawberry walked
to lead off the Dodgers' I2lh and
Murray followed with a shot to
right field off Ted Power (4·2) to
make it 5-4. After. Power walked
Mitch Webster, Gino Minutelli
relieved and fanned Gary Carter.
Milt Hill relieved and surren·

NL suspends &amp; fines Charlton
LOS ANGELES (AP) - It was
Mike Sciascia doing the hitting this
time. and Cincinnati reliever Norm
Charlton the one being hit.
The Reds pitcher was suspended
earlier Monday for deliberately hit·
ting the Los Angeles catcher in a
game last week in Cincinnati. The
seven·day suspension and $1 ,000
fine, imposed by NL president Bill
White, was to begin immediately,
but Charlton appealed it and was
eligible to play m Monday night's
game.
He relieved Reds starter Scolt
Scudder in the eighth inning and
gave up a twO·Out single to Scios·
cia. Charlton was booed loud and
long by the crowd of 33,434 at
Dodgers Stadium when he entered
tl)e game.
"I have a regret for talking
about it publicly," Charlton said.
"It's probably not the way I should
have handled it, but that's the way I
did it. There's not much I can do
about it now. I made a mistake by
saying it."
A statement from White said,
"Charlton was suspended for his
commeniS admitting he deliberate·
ly threw at Mike Sciascia of Ihe
Dodgers and his threaiS·concerning
hitting Mr. Sciascia in the future.''
Charlton, one of the Reds' three
"Nasty Boys," said he hoped to
get a fair hearing.
"In all honesty, he needs time
10 gather his information," Chari·

ton· said of White. "So if he hears
about it from CNN or ESPN or
reads about it in the paper and
gathers his information without
galhering any faciS, that's not very
intelligent. So he needs to take
whatever time he needs to take to
galher his faciS and make an intelli·
gem decision."
Charlton hit Sciascia on the arm
in a game at Cincinnati on Sept 9
because he believed Sciascia was
stealing signs.
"I threw at him. I hit him on the
arm, but I didn't mean to hit him
on the arm," Charlton told a
Cincinnati newspaper reporter after
the game. "He'll be lucky if I don't
rip his head off the next time I'm
pitching."
After the ori~nal incident, Reds
manager Lou Pmiella immediately
reprimanded Charlton, and
Dodgers manager Tom Lasorda
was livid when he heard the
remarks.
"He made a big mistake by say·
ing tha~ " Lasorda said. "It's a dis·
grace to baseball for a guy to make
a statement like that''
Reached at his Fullerton, Calif.,
home Monday morning, Lasorda
said he supported White's decision.
"First of all, it's good to see
that he reacted ," Lasorda said.
"This guy made a very, very seri·
ous lhreat toward Sciascia, saying
he wanted to tear his head off. He
&lt;hould be punished.

Wyche ... __(C_o_nt_in_u_ed_fr_o_m_Pa_g_e

_4)_ _ _ _ _ __

real fans to let it be so important
that the fact that the scoreboard
said you didn't score enough poiniS
to win, !hat everybody else should
be miserable for seven days,"
Wyche said. "Baloney. Get a life,
would you?
"I mean, it's not that big a deal.
You get another chance to come
back and win. It's a big deal to try
to win, but if you don't win and
you're trying and making the effort
to win, that's the deal. ''
Wyche's remarks about winning
coincide with the Bengals' worst
start in six years. He said he's only
now realizing the overemphasis on
winning in lhe NFL.
"I've seen it happen over Ihe
years. I guess if it's anything, I've
been too dumb to figure it out
before now,'' Wyche said.
"What we've done is as a
league and as individual organiza·
lions and as promoters of the game,
we've made it out to be such an
important event each week that the
outcome of the game is so crucial
to the atmosphere of an economy,
to the feelings of the fans, the sup·
port or lack of support that you're
going to gel ... And !hat's not lhe

way it ought Io be."
Wyche 's news conference
turned into a wide·ranging philo·
sophical discussion of education,
professional sports and lhe media.
He didn't spare the NFL, which has
changed iiS locker room policy this
year a1 Wyche's urging.
"We bring up our kids . We
make them think, 'The National
Football League says don't drink,
don't take drugs, go to school, walk
around naked in front of women,
that's OK. But you've got to win at
all costs. Winning's the only
thing.' Winning's not the only
thing. Making the effort to win is
the only lhing," Wyche said.
Wyche said that's why he's
ignonng criiicism as lhe Bcngals
prepare to play undefeated Wash·
ington next Sunday at Riverfront
Stadium.
"I lhink I've got 20 to 25 years
left before I start eating soda crack·
ers for lunch, and those 25 years
aren'I going to be wasted worrying
about whether some editorial is
wriuen saying that we're stupid
because !he field goal went through
the crossbar instead of ouiSide the
crossbar," he said.

aaaln.
Amtrtan Lutue

NEW YORK YANKEES - Roeollod

Alan Milil and Darrin Chapin. pitchen:;
John R1mot and Jim Leynu, cuchers,
and Torey Lovullo, infielder, from

rHRDUQH 8/141111

Columbul of the lntcmat.ionall..claue.

1

Basketball
NaUmal Baoktlball Allodallm
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS

2
3

Sis,ncd Ed HGnm, forward.

FootbaU
N1tlonal FootbaiiiAaauc
DALLAS COWBOYS - Traded
Jenc Solomon, linebacker, to lhe New
EnalanG Patrioca for an un4isclCICd 1992
dn11 pick.

6
7
8

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Waived Bry1n Wopw:i, puniCf.
NEW YORK JETS - s;sned Lomy

9

K.in1rd, runn.ina back, to the practice
~quad . Wlivcd Jamca Bradley, wide receiver, hom the practice tquad .

Hockey
DETROIT lUID WINGS - SiJ111ed
Natlonll Hockey Lt1aue

Manin LapoinlO, riaht wins, to a four-

year CCIItnct.

LOS ANGELES KINOS - Son1

Muc Sawnicr, center; Andre Bouli1ne
W1yne Marion, aoal~den; Jerome
BOdwd, 0...,1 Willilma, Kevin Whioo,
Tim: BruHn, Kovin Hei1c, Bob Bera.
R.o11 Wilton and Jim Ballantine, forward•: 1nd Kri• Nillor, Mik.o Ruui:,
Trevor Poc~ipindi, Shawa Wheeler,
Kevin MacDonald and Brie Ricard, d~
(c:nHIIMR, Lo PboWa ol b lntanltiontl

School's back in session and in the excitement ofthe new school year,
many school-age children, especially the young ones, may forgetto look
both ways when crossing the street or exiting the school bus.

ri&amp;ht Win&amp;, \0 \htet-yelt coaane~.~, and
Bob Bu~en, c.,la', to a two--you contriCL Rcc.umtd Nalhlr1J.,afayea.o, c:enter,
to Com wall of the ODurio Hoci:ay
Lcaaue, and Orayden Reid, center, \0
Owen Sound of tbo Ontario Hockey
Leop. R........ lC&amp;Wt Malpw. riah•
wina. and Juc.t BI'OUIIUu, Wt wina. to
their junior teaml.

Florida 51. (47)

3-0·0 1,436

1

1-0-Q

2·3-0 longest win streak at 9

Miami (8)

2·0·0 1,345

2

1-0-Q

2-0·0 OuiScored opp. 71-13

Michigan (I)

2·0-0 1,329

3

1-Q-Q

1·2·0 Howard, Heisman favorite

WashlngiOn (1) 1·0·0 1,270

4

o-o-o

0-1-0 D faces IDp NCAA offense

Florida (1)

6

1-Q-Q

1+0 Mallhews·Ahen lao much!

Tennessee

2·0-0 1.107 11

1-Q-0

2-1·0 Host Miss. St and Auburn

Oklahoma

1·0-0 1,047

9

o-o-o

0-Q·O Kicking game Is weak spot

CierMon

1·0-0 1.028

8

o-o-o

0-0·0 Georgia Tech on Sepl. 28

Nebraska

2·0·0

899 13

o-o-o

1·2·0 No puniS this season

2·0-0

864 14

0-0-Q

3-0-0 17 piS . In first !'!a1s

1-1-0

856

7

0-1-Q

1·0·0 1stB 10 lo!ll since '86

2-1-0

715

5

1-Q-Q

1-2·0 10 ~ts . after 57.5-~. avg.

2·0-0

711

15

0-0-0

1-1-0

2-0-0

525 19

0-0-0

2·1·0 6-ovs.

1-1-0

49t

17

0-1-Q

1-3-0 ShawnJones3t5 total yds .

404 22

0-0-0

2-D·O Host

10 Iowa
11 Nolte Damo
Ponn Sl

13 Aubum

2·0-0 1,250

fresh came lhru

Baylor

~d

"7. ~t:jS BLIIES - SiP,ed OIM
Butdlcr, dcfeaaeman, and PJdl Sutter,

REC.vo OPP.
19111
RECORD PTS. PVS. TOP 25 REC. EXTRA POINTS

Texas 1\&amp;M

That leaves it up to you as a driver, to be extra careful around schoolyards, neighborhood play areas, and departing school buses.

Ohio Sl.
Tech

2·0-0

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.

2+0 Beat

The Daily Sentinel

ll.S

'.

/'

Sl.

dered a pinch double to Karros,
scoring Murray with the tying run.
After Jose Offerman was intention·
ally waiked to load the bases, Jeff
Hamilton hit a line drive single to
center to score Webster with Ihe
game·winning run.
"It felt good to be back in lhe
game," Hamilton said. "I thought
we had it early. but I'm glad I came
through. We lcnew Atlanta had lost
Just the fact that we came back
twice was great Everybody came
through when we had to, and it was
a team effort."
The game took all sorts of twists
and turns as the Dodgers returned
home from a 7-4 road trip, includ·
ing two losses at Atlanta over the
weekend. The Braves started their
West Coast trip with an 8·5 loss at
San Francisco on Monday night
The Dodgers blew a 2·1 lead in
the ninth as Cincinnati scored twice
but !hey scratched out a run in the
ninth to force extra innin2s.
John Wetteland (1·0), the ninth
Los Angeles piicher, was the win·
ner.
With one out in the top of the
12th, Jones hit a 2· 1 pitch from
reliever Tim Crews into th e
Dodgers' bullpen in left field . The
Reds added a run when Wetteland
walked Power with the bases load·
ed.
After the Reds took the lead
with two runs in the ninth, the
Dodgers tied the score in lhe bottom of the inning on Lenny Harris'
RBI single to bring home Offer·
man. Pinch hitter Dave Hansen led
off the iMing with a single off Rob
Dibble and Stan Javier followed
with a bunt single.
Billy ·Hatcher, who had three
hilS, drove in his second run of lhe
game with a two-out single off
Kevin Gross to tie it at 2 in the
ninlh. Reed lhen hit a bloop single
to center to score pinch runner
Stanley Jefferson.
After Hal Morris singled to lead
off the ninth, John Candelaria, came
in and allowed a single to /pinch
hitler Carmela Martinez, who was
replaced by Jefferson . Two outs
later, Gross, the Dodgers' fifth
reliever in lhe ninth, replaced Steve
Wilson and surrendered Hatcher's
ground single.
Dodgers starter Ore! Hershiser
gave up five hits in seven innings.
After giving up a run in the second,
he retired 14 of the next 16 batters.
The right-hander threw only 73
pitches, 46 of them strikes, before
giving way to Jim G01t to swt !he
eighth.
Elsewhere in the NL it was San
Franciscan 8, Atlanta 5; St. Louis
3, Philadelphia 0; Pittsburgh 5,
Chicago 4; and San Diego 6. Houston I.
Gianls 8, Braves S
In a close pennant race, it
doesn't take much to change the
momentum.
The momentum changed quite a
bit on Monday.
Atlanta was lhinking big after
its 9·1 victory over Los Angeles on
Sunday before lhe home crowd.
But less than 24 hoW'S later, the
Braves learned outfielder Otis
Nixon was suspended for 60 days
by the commissioner's office for
vwlating his drug aftercare pro·
gram. Then, Atlanta went out and
lost 8·5 in a sloppy effon at San
Francisco.
Playing without Nixon. the
major league's leading basestealer
with 72, the Braves self-destructed
on defense and on the mound at
Candlestick Park.
Atlanta blew a three·run lead as
Tom Herr had three hits and three
RB!s and Darren Lewis scored four
runs for San Francisco.
Kent Mercker threw a wild pitch
that helped the GianiS to a two.run
third inning. and left fielder Lonrue
Smith fell trying to catch Terry
Kennedy's tlyball in the fifth, lct·
ling two more runs score .
Francisco Oliveras (5-5) was the
winner and Jim Clancy (2-5) took
lhe loss.
Pirates S, Cubs 4
Zane Smith won his 15th game
10 match a career high.
Smith (15 · 10) won hi s th1rd
consecutive swt, despite allowing
home runs to Hector Villanueva
and George Bell.
Smith gave up six h1ts in eight
innings and Roger Mason finished
for his lhird suve.
Orlando Merced's hit a 1wo-run
homer in the Pirates' thrce ·run
sixth against loser Frank Castillo.
Cardinals 3, Phillies 0
Bob Tewksbury (10·11) pitched
seveil·hit ball over seven innings
and Todd Zeile homered. Lee
Smith got the last three outs for his
major league· leading 41st save.
The Cardinals took advantage of
Jose DeJesus' wildness in lhe second inning as two walks led to RBI
sin~les by Lankford and Ozzie
SmiJh. DeJesus fell to 10-6.
Padres 6, Astros 1
Thomas Howard drove in five
runs, including a three·run homer
to break a scoreless tie in the sev ·
enth inning.
Howard spoiled the major
league debut of starter Bnan
Williams (0·1) when he hit his
fourth homer of the season.
Greg Harris (6·5) allowed one
run and eight hits in 7 2/3 innings
for the viet~, and Larry Andersen
finished for has lOth save.
\)

1

J

OPEN MOUTH, INSERT FINE - Cincin·
nati Reds pitcher Norm Charlton (center),
shown having a few laughs with teammates Joe
Oliver (left) and Stan Jefferson (extreme fore·

ground), was slapped with a seven·day suspen-.
sion and a $1,000 fine by the National League
ofl1ce after throwing at L.A. Dodgers catcher
Mike Scioscia, admitting to it afterwards and
saying he might try to do it again. (AP)

OUT OF REACH - Kansas City third base·
man Bill Pecota dives for a ~rounder off t~e ~at
of Minnesota's Greg Gagne m the second mmng

of Monday night's American League game in
Minneapolis, which the Twins won 9·0. (AP)

Top-shelf Toronto bullpen falters
in 6-5 extra-inning loss to Seattle
B BEN wALKER
Y

•

AP Baseball Wrtter
All season long the Toronto
'
Blue Jays have been able to count
· bu11 pen. 1t •s th c one arc a
on thelf
where they may have an edge over
baseball's other division leaders..
So !hat's why it was so surpns·
·
.Ing Monday night when rehevers
·
Tom Henke ' Duane Ward ' Mtke
all
Tl. ml 1·n and Bob. MacDonald
.
failed in lhe late mmngs as Toronto
wasted a chance to mcrcase liS AL
East lea d·
Pete O'Brien homered 10 lead
off the lith at lhe Kingdome and
the Seattle Mariners rallied twice
before beating the Blue Jays 6·5 .
Toronto stayed 3 1/2 games ahead
of Boston, which lost to Baltimore
9-2 , and had its lead over idl e

Dcrroit trimmed to five.
"We aren'I used 10 los ing many
.
..
J
.
like !hat, B1ue ays starter
rgames
mm Ke said
'
Y My . ·
d . ·
score
h The
. h h armers
. H
nk tw1ce
d W 1nd
1 e e1g. t agamst e e an
ar
to tie lt at 4. Afier Toronto goi a
run ·m the
lOth, Seattle · came
T back
agam
an d even ed tt· agamst
•m rm.
h
O'B
·
h'
h'
In the lit ff, Ma Do
nen aid11(3 lS3) 13 t h
home run o
c n M' - ·
In other games,
mn eso ta
defeated Kansas City 9•0 and Mil waukee beat
G · ffNewJYork
h · 5-4.
Ken 11 ey . r. 11 a two-run
homer, his 20th. m lhe fust mnmg
off Key. The Blue Jays grabbed a
3,-2 lead 10 Ihe fourth on a two·run
smgie. by Candy Maldonado and an
RBI smgle by Dave Parker.
The Blue Jays lOOk a 4 · 2 lead

imo lhe ei.ghth, but Jay Buhner hit
an RBI smgle with two outs off
Ward Henke trying for his 33rd
·.
db. I
r
th
save, mstea
ew one .or e second time when pinch·hitter Alvin
. a run-sconng
.
Davis followed with
. 1
smYoe~ Carter's RBI single pul
T or on 10 a hea d .m th e lOth . Th e
M .
all ' d t ,. .1 t 5 h
r .1e o . 1e 1 da H w en
Edanncrs
M
gar arunez smg 1e , aro ld
Reyno ld s sacn·f·ICC d an d Gn'ffey
followed with a single.
Russ Swan (5 -2) got the las! out
.m t he top of the lith • an d O'B ncn
·
won it moments later
0 . 1 9 RedS 2
Rand;~~Tiligan hi I ~~o home
run s and Mike Devereaux and
Chris Hoiles hil one each.
Cal Ripken added a double and
Iwo singles to the Orioles' 16 hilS.
Rookie Mike Mussina (4 ·4)
gave up I0 hilS in his fust complete
game. He walked none and struck
out lhree.
Tom Bolton (8·8) allowed four
two kills), Jenny Hugncs (two
runs
on five hits in three innings.
points, 12· 13 at line, five kills),
Devereaux,
with his 19th. and
Pollard (five points) and Jodie
Milligan,
with
his 15th, each hit
Hager (two poiniS).
two-run
homers
in the third. Hoiles
Marcy Hill led the Tornadoes
hit
his
lOth
in
the
fourth off Dennis
with seven points and three aces.
Teammates Megan Wolfe and Lamp and Milligan connected in
Marcy Mathews chipped in fiv e the seventh against Dana Kiecker.
and four points, respectively.
In the junior high match. Southem won 15-13, 3- 15, 15-0 behind
WE'LL
Sammi Sisson 's 16·point effort.
OVERLOOK
which included II aces overall and
the first 10 of the rubber game.
YOUR FIRST
Helping Racine to victory were
ACCIDENT
teammates Jennifer Cummings
When you qualify as a preferred
(five), Hillary Harris and Amber
risk for State Auto Compan\aa·
Thomas (three each). For the
special Medalist Auto Policy, vour
Defenders, Jami Gianechini led the
rates won ' t go up with your flret
Defenders, 4-2, with nine points
accident.
and four aces, and Amy Pollard
Unlike similar policies that require
throe yoora of pollcv ownorahlp.
chipped in with six.

OVCS six defeats Southern
Ohio Valley Christian's volleyball team won its fifth straight
match by beating the host Southern
Tornadoes 15-8, 15· 10 behind the
l3· point barrage offered by
Defender senior Pam Holley.
The Tornadoes stepped out Io a
6·2 lead in the first game before
OVC's Meredith Pollard reeled off
five straight service poiniS to put
her team ahead 7·6. And in a virtu·
al repeat of lhe first game. South·
em erased the Defenders' 2-0 lead
in the second game and took a 7-2
lead before Holley's serving deliv·
ered four ace serves and folD' regu·
Jar poiniS to put the Defenders, 6·2,
ahead for good.
Holley, who had five aces over·
all, delivered seven passes •n 10
attempiS. Also contributing to Ihe
Defenders' victory were Beth
Blevins (eig~t poin~~· 7:7 at line,

the Medalist allows the exemption

Immediately.
The Medalist recognltea the older,

aeftr driver with aubltantlal rata

reductions and broader covere9e.
Rate reductiona begin 11 early 11
ogo 26 ond aro panicutorlv ottroctive for the 46 to 84 v•or old.
11 you heve 1 aafe driving record,
see just how low your car Insurance premium can be with the
Medalist Auto Poliey from State
Auto Insurance Companiea.
Call us about thia car insurance
breakthrough for safe drivers.

./!J ,..............
........
----··-· - -I,_Aitto

~-

�~·

September 17, 1991

~

,;~:,. ,-.By The Bend

Rev. William Middleswarth pre·
.sented a slide show at the recent
)lleeting of the Wildwood Garden
&lt;:Jub held at the Morning Star
-l.iethodist Church.
· · Rev. Middleswarth 's slides
included flower s, sce nery and
insects. He also had slides of flower arrangements at different flower
shows and fairs.
The meeting opened with devot(ons by Beuy Milhoan reading,
"Make Your Day Bright by Thinking Right," and "Trust God." For
roll call everyone gave a useful hint
in taking care of their houseplants.
: Kathryn Miller presided and
jcad an invitation from the Chester
Garden Club for its open meetin g
at the Chester United Mett10dist
Church. She also read a thank-you
note from Juanita Will for flowers.
: Evelyn Holler thanked the club
from the mums she received for her
Mth wedding anniversary.
:· It was noted that Evelyn Holter
tlad received 21 ribbons in the Fair
Flower Show with seven ribbon s
pn fruits and vegetables.
• For "Now is the Time," Peggy
Moore noted sa11e leaves can be

picked and hung -in small bunches
for drying. Onions and potatoes can
be dug and sweet potatoes bef9re a
frost. Weeds and grass should be
kept out of the garden even after
harves t. They are forming seeds
now and will present larger problems next year if not destroyed
before maturity. August is a good
time to go over your lawn destroying insects and crabgrass. A dressing of lawn food would be beneficial. Check for grubworms as they
hatch in July and fee d on grass
roots.
For th e arrangement of th e
month, everyone brought a flower
specimen that was in bloom in their
garden and told about it.
For show and tell Betty Milhoan
had a bloom from a plant grown by
Pe te and Virgene Elberfeld. She
noted it is an annual that grows
approximately five feet tall with a
woody stalk and then long velvet
burgundy type ropes hanging to the
ground .
Th e mee ting adjourned and
refreshments were served by the
officers to members and guests,
Donna !hie and Mildred !hie.

P of A holds meeting
: : The Past Councilors Club of
,:(;hester Council No. 323 Daughters
9f America, met recently at th e
':borne of Marcia Keller with Mrs.
);.eller, JoAnn Baum and Laura
tM_e Nice as hostesses.
r
Mary Jo Barringer presided at
~e meeting and read from the I I 8
Psalm . The Lord's Prayer and
Pledge to the American Flag were
given in unison.
Members answered roll call by
reading poems which were given
. out by the president.
. Mrs. Barringer gave the secre- tary's report and JoAnn Baum gave
: the treasurer's report
Members sang "Happy Birthday" to Lora Damewood and each

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Horton and
daughter, Worthington, and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Eichinger and
Suzanne, Pickerington, spent Labor
Day weekend with Opal Eichinger.
They enjoyed a family reunion and
picnic at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Don Eichinger and Tiffany and
Justin at Vincent. Jo ini ng th em
were Mr. and Mrs . Dennis
Eichinger and Dane, Reed svi ll e,
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Hartun g and
Jed, Avon Lake, Kenneth Hartung
and Andera, Louisville, Ky., and
Laura Mac Nice, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Roark, Oklahoma, spent a few days with her
grandmother, Erma Cleland . She
went home with them for a visi t
with Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cleland,
Walters, Okla., and to attend the
wedding of granddaughter, Dianna
Cleland. Jerry Cleland and grandso n, Matt, brought hi s mo ther
home on Labor Day and remained
for a few days visit.
Clctus Allen and friend, Columbus, vi sited on Labor Day with Mr.
and Mrs. Clayton Allen.

Salisbury PTO elects officers
Officers· were elected when the
Salisbury PTO recently held its
first meeting of the year.
Officers are Janet Peavley, president; Belinda Soulsby, vice-presi dent; Linda Broderick, secretary;
and Debbie Glaze, b'easurer.
The school's fall festival was set
for Oct. 5 and the kitchen will open
at 5 p.m. with games to begin at
6:30 p.m. Everyone is encouraged
to help with the festival and several
items will be used as fundraisers.
A thank-you was given to Bob
Moore for the good job he did

painting the playground equipment
and to Bob Sloan for the work he
did on the Salisbury sign.
The membership drive ha s
beg un with cost $1 per adult. The
class with the highest percentage of
adults joining will have a pi zza
party at the drives end.
A pumpkin judging contest will
be held at the October meeting.
Prizes will be awarded to the prcuicst, ugliest and most original in
each class. The next meeting will
be held Oct. 14 at 7 p.m.

UMW annual da~ planned
Global Concerns coordinator. She
also serves on the committee on
finance, is a representative to the
regional school planning team and
serves on the Appalachian development committee. Registrati on,
book browsing and coffee hour will
begin at 9 a.m. Reservation deadline is Thursday.

:Willing Workers prepare
jfor Christmas bazaar
.ACT averages hold steady

The Willing Workers of SL Paul
JJnitcd Methodist Church in Tup. pen Plains met recently for an all
day meeting.
. · Evelyn Spencer read from
: Matthew on "Jesus, Our King ."
-Glenna Sanders read "If God
: Would Strilce." The prayer was by
: Mildred Caldwell.
• Many of the group mel previ. ously to peel apples for the "Apple
Butter Stir-Off' in late Septcm ber
: or early October. Apple butter will
- be sold at the bazaar on Nov. I and
: 2 along wit many crafts, quilts and
: comforters made by the people of
St Paul.
A get well card was signed for
Mary Jamison and a binhday card
signed for Rev . Sharon Hausman.
Twenty-five sick calls were report: ed.
Mildred Brooks is taking orders
from anyone who would like to

order cards, gifts and other items.
The group will be havmg several quilting and work days before
the Christmas Bazaar.
There will be a weiner roast at
th e "A pple Butter Stir-off" and
those attending arc asked to bring a
dozen of regular two-piece canning
lids and a food dish. Rev. Hausman
will furnish the sugar for the apple
buller
Those celebrating anniversaries
were Glenna Sanders, Louise Chaffee and Edna Harman. Birthdays
celebrated were Edith Harper, Rev.
Hausman and Mary Jamison .
The next regular meeting will be
Oct. 8 at 9 a.m. at the church. Joan na Weaver will bring poster supplies to make announcements for
the bazaar.
Others attending we re Mac
Vineyard, Patricia Hall, Bulah
Maxcy and Hazel Barnhill.

By LEE MITGANG
AP Education Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Average
scores on the ACT Assessment
held steady in 1991 from the previous year. but test officials hailed
the results as a sij:n minority students are gaimng in sc hool
achievement.
Th e composite average was
20.6, unchanged from 1990. Scores
on the four-Part exam, the predominant college entrance test in 28
states mainly in the West and Midwest, have barely moved since
1987, when they averaged 20.8.
Th e multiple-choice test is
scored on a scale of 1-36. Tha average on the ACT, administered by
American College Testing in Iowa
City, Iowa, was based on the scores
or 797,000 students who graduated
from high school last spring.
ACT revised its exam in 1989,
and test officials said national averages from 1987 through 1989 were
converted to make them comparable to scores on the revised test.
ACT President Richard L. Ferguson said he was encouraged that
sco res have held up despite steady
increases in the numbers or minority test-takers.

Nearly 27 percent of all test-takers were non-white in 1991 compared with 21 percent in 1987,
according to a summary report.
Eighteen percent more black
students took the lest in I 99 I than
in 1987, 50 percent more AsianPacific Islanders, 47 percent more
Puerto Ricans and Cubans, and 37
percent more Mexican-Americans.
· But4 percent fewer whiteS took the
exam.
" The increasing populations of
minority students taking the ACT
and the stability of their scores as
their numbers increase are wel come trends," Ferguson said.
He attributed that stability to
"increasing numbers or ACT-tested minority students ... completing
a strong program of core coursework in high school.''
Black test-takers completing
high school core programs defined as four years of English
and three years each of math, social
studies and natural sciences - rose
from 31 percent in I 987 to 45 percent in 1991.
Among all test-takers, 51 percent completed core programs in
!99!, compared with 38 percent in
1987.

Miss America broke engagement with
football player because of alleged abuse
HONOLULU (AP) - Miss
America Carolyn Suzanne Sapp
broke off her engagement with a
former professional football player
because he beat her and once tried
to push her from a movin g ca r,
news reports said.
Sapp, crowned Miss America on
Saturday, requested a restraining
order against Nuu Faaola (pro nounced NOO-oo fa-ah-OH-Ia) last
October, but withdrew the request.
In a letler to stale District Court
last fall, Sapp said Faaola "beat,
kicked, punched, threatened to kill
me, tore my clothes, choked me,
took a knife to me and held it to my
neck and skin, and emotionally
threatened me," KITV reported
Monday night

By JAY SHARBUTI

Page-6

The an nu al reunion of the
Chester High School Class of 1935
was held recently at Forked Run
State Park. The group enjoyed a
picnic dinner and an afternoon of
visiting. Class members attending
were Harry Bailey, Marie Ferrel
Hauck, Pomeroy; Virgcnc Knight
Elberfeld, Roy Christy and Clayton
Allen, Chester; Milpred Summerfield Caldwell, Evelyn Stalnaker
Sedgwick, Tuppers Plains; Owen
Damewood and Ronald Osborne,
Long Bottom . Guests were Margaret Bailey, Raymond Elberfeld,
Lora Damewood, Ell a Osborne.
Ted Sedgwick, Bill Matlack, Mary
Kautz, Esther Frecker and Norman
and Audcll McCain.
Dr. and Mrs. Btlly Allen, Katie
and Bobby, Greenwood, Ind ., spe nt
Labor Day weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Clayton Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Spence Tedrick,
Old Washington , visited with Opal
Wickham on Labor Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Roush, Winter Haven. Fla .• were recent visitor
of Jean Frederick and Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Roush.

gave her a birthday card. She
thanked all the members.
Mrs. Damewood read a poem,
"Scptember."
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses. Opal Hollon won the
door prize. Games were conducted
by Mac McPeek and Ada Bissell.
Present were Ethel Orr, Faye
Kirkhart, lnzy Newell, Opal Hollon, Pauline Ridenour, Ada Bissell,
Mae McPeek, Margaret Amberger,
Mary K. Holter. Charloue Grant,
Thelma White, Laura Mac Nice,
The Athens District United
Marcia Keller, Emra Cleland. Lora Methodi
st Women will hold its
Damewood, Sadie Trussell, JoAnn annual meeting
on Sept. 26 at the
Baum, Belly Roush, Mary Jo Bar- First United Methodist
Church at
rin ger, Goldie Frederi ck, and a
New
Lexington
.
The
theme is
guest, Sandra White.
"Sounds of Children." The featured
speaker will be Alice Fay, ML Vic tory . She is active in the work of
the United Methodist Women, and
is currently serving as Conference

The Cos says season No.8 is the last

The Dailyrue§..~~!~~~

Rev. Middleswarth
CHS grads hold reunion
speaks to Wildwood club

Sapp, a junior at Hawaii Pacific
University and Hawaii 's first Mi ss
America, said in the letter she
broke up with Faaola in April !990
after he "tried pushing me out of a
car driving hij:h speeds ... , then
strangled me with the seat belt until
I couldn 't breathe."
The letter said Faaola continued
to terrorize her until last October,
when Saap complained to police
and requested the restraining order.
She told the newspaper that she
quickly withdrew the request.
In a story published today in
The Honolulu Advertiser, Sapp and
Faaola said they had resolved their
differences and are now friends.
She refused to discuss her allegations.

AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - This
Thursday, "The Cosby Show. "
armed with a new executive producer and new writers, starts its
eighth NBC season with an
engagement announcement that
shocks the Huxtable household.
It will be the final season for the
show, Cosby's fourth series and
easily most successful, one that' s
made the former Navy corpsman,
Temple University graduate stu dent and comedian one of the richest stars in television.
Next season, Cosby and hi s

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal-endar.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - "Crusade for
Christ" revival will be held through
Sunday at the Pomeroy Church of
th e Nazarene at 7 p.m. nightly.
There will be different singers and
speakers nightly. The crusade is
spo nsored by the Meig s-Galli aMason counties Crusade for Chnst.
Pastor Glen McClung invites the
publi c.
CHESTER - The Chester Council No. 323 Daughters of America
will meet Tue sday at 7:30 p.m.
Quarte rl y birthdays, which were to
be observed and the potluck, will
be postponed until the Oct. I meeting.
POMEROY -"Stan-up Basics,"
a basic introduction to starting a
business. will be presented by
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce. Small Business Development Center and Management
Development Division of the College of Business at Ohio University
on Tuesday from 6:30-9 p.m. at the
Chamber office, 200 East Second
St., in Pomeroy. The cost is $15 per
person and pre-registration may be
done by calling the chamber office
at 992-5005.
POMEROY - The American
Leg ion Drew Webster Post No. 39
will mee t Tuesday at the po st
home. Dinner is at 7 p.m. and
meeting at 8 p.m. All members are
urged to attend .
LONG BOTTOM - The Flame
Fellowship Chapter will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom.
Hersc hel Facemyer, Nitro, W.Va.,
will be the speaker. The public is
invited to auend .
RACINE - The Southern Junior
High Boosters will meet Tuesday

at 7 p.m. at the junior high schoOl
in Racine. School year projects will
be discussed.
WEDNESDAY
COOL VILLE - Revival at the
Vanderhoof Baptist Church in
Coolville will be held Wednesday
through Friday at 7 p.m . nightly
with Wallace Smith, evangelist.
Homecoming will be held Sunday
with a basket dinner at noon and
afternoon service at I p.m. with
special singers. Cecil Morrison ,
pastor, inviles the public.
.

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

GUYSVILLE - Revival services
at the Ohio Valley Church of God,
Guysville, will be held Wednesday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. ni(\htly.
Rev. Brice Utt, Marietta, w1ll be
the speaker. Pastor Donald Combs
invites the public.

'Ao h uut~nlt) Mc• ~l !&gt; . G,1ll1 a 0 1 Ma!.on •·ounltoJ'\ rllt t!. l ho! P'''

, .... ct
'Ho ~c '~ ' "'''

·t

!

OVER THE TOP • Paraplegic climber Mark Wellman is cari ried by Ted Farmer a Wellman, and Mike Corbett, at right, fin.
• , lsbed tbtlr splc ac:aliD1 of Yosemite's Half Dome Monday, Corbett
: and WeUnian accomplilhed tbe feat In 13 days, wbicb included
~ • aow, raiD aDd heat. (AP) .
(

Foster said she persuaded Orion
Pictures to make her director after
she was offered an acting role .in
the film. She starred this xear in
•'The Silence of the Lambs. '

G1vt~i1WiiV

Days

Word s

1
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20
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hu uacll d.., a ~ .,;up;u ;at e ~d~

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Card o f Th anks

1
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Gallt ol County

0~

AOliN I"

MONDAY I'APl:.R
1U£ S0AV PAPER
W£0Nt-S0AY PAPtA
THURSDAY P APER
I HUJAY PAP[ R

POMEROY - The Meigs County Democratic Executive Committee will have a potluck before its
meeting on Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
Bring a covered dish. All are urged
to attend.

OA'f' HHORF P UBli CATION
11 00 AM S ATURDAY
"} 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 PM TUESDAY

2 00 PM WEDNE SD AY
2 00 PM THUR SDAY
2 ClO P M FRIDAY

SUNDAY PAPfR

BULLETIN BOARD

POMEROY - A workshop for
those interested in volunteering
with the Meigs County Museum
will be held Thursday from !0 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. Lunch will be provided and further information may be
obtained by calling Margaret Parker at992-38)0 or 992-2264.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE •
t: 30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

ArCil Code 6 14

Ared Cod e 30 4

446 G.JIIIpOIIS

992

Mu:ldltll)on
Poml!foy
98~ C h es te r

6 75

Pt

4~9

leon

~76

843

Portland

773

147
949

l etart f• lls
Rac•n e

882

Appl t! GI0\11~
Mason
New H avu••

742

Rutland

895
937

l etart
Bu tl,..o

667

Coohull r.

] 88

24S
256
64]
379

Chtahu e
V111t on
Rto G r ;~ nd e
Guyan D1st
Arab• a Ot $1
Walnut

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAIIABL£
FREE ESllMATES

992·7458

P,rtial owne&lt; linando\,.~1~3"·

The pn&lt;e h01 betn
red~&lt;ed to 5e1;9et,
, S73,9DD 10d ownor
linaodng_ of up tp lOX ol p'"h010 omouot m!'f bt
polli~e lor qo~ityill(l ponoe to buy yery li&lt;e lome
01 3-1/lacres lo lodM. 4 Bl 3 both\ I 11'"11\
rentod l Bl opt. l'roporty lndodH 4,800 sq. ff. form
bldg.
Cal61H92-7104 lor Ajlp.

8-28-91 1 mo. pd.

ALL MADS
Bring It In Or We

Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or
985-3561
Acro11 From l'o1t Offlct
217 E. Second St.
I'OMEIOY, OHIO

3/ 6/ 90/ lfn

Helu WanH.'d
Snu owon W an lod

13

lllSUf oi ii CC

14
1~

BuSHHl'S S Tf otl lllll ll
Scttools t1. ln slfltCIH irl
RatJw T V&amp;CBA~ I"'"

16
17

l#h61UH6JI
21
]]
21

Bustntl!. s Oflpo•tumty
Mollt."f' to lu.tn
P •ol uss•o•1.1 1 So:• v • ro·)

•Garagts

BILL SLACK

Begins Sept. 1S

992-2269

Every Sunday 12 Noon

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Fret Estimates

USED RAILROAD TIES
6-12-90-1fn

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
WlndoWI
•Roofing
•Inaulation

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251

ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

EMilEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

614-9f2-6820
POIDII'oy, Ohio

z, u-tt-~n

Available At Mill Street Books
For Christmas Gift Giving
ORDER DEADliNE 9/21/91

lOW.

0/v\.;ff 5tttu,t .CS~o~s

,

Middleport
'

:I'

'
'•

She likes to walk and
talk and yak.
And would love to
have her memory
back.

HAPPY B.D., L.C .

Your

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUilT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"4f IMIOilOble l'ricn"

PH. 949·2801
or ••· 949·2860
Day or Night · ·

P tt l s lot Sill ~

84

M l i SIC.t!III S IHII'll~!l lo

K!:l

Gt :ntf!.tl H,, .. h nq

58
!i9

F lu•t s &amp; Vt• lf u't •h l •"'
F1 11 S,t i HIII lr .lll +!

116

M~tlttlt: ll "n "· Hq1.t11

HI

Upl~&lt;tl ' l'''V

OHIO PALLET CO.
992-6461
9-1 -91 · 1mo
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Naw Hom11 Built
"Free I!Stimatea"

PH. 949-2801
or 111. 949-286D
NO SUNDAY CAtu
3-ll-tln

CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB
Goff
lessons (6) .... '55 .00
New Grips ............ $4.00
Woods ................ 127.00
Irons .................. $14.75
REPAIRS
Used Irons ............ SS.OO
Used Woods ......... S7.00
AWARDS
8-9 -1 mo . pd

NO SUNDAY

BULLDOZING

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Limestone, Dirt,

FREE ESTIMATES

Gravel and Coal

949-2168

PH .. 614-992-5591

9 / 9 1 91 / 1 mo . pd .

L.icensed and Bonded
9 -11 - 1 mo . pd

AIR CONDJnONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

see .... make an offer.

..s,

HENRY E. CLELAND ......................................... 992-81t1
TRACY BRlNAGER...........................................949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL .............................................949· 2660
JO HILL..............................................................985-4466
OFFlCE............................................................... 99~·225t

Holllt' ltHj.ltll~ llt iH.'tll ~

~6

$toekll

WHEN 'S THE BEST TIME TO SELL? ANYTIME IS
RIGHT IF YOU CAN GET THE PRICE YOUR HOUSE
DESERVES. WE HAVE PEOPLE CHECKING
EVERYDAY TO SEE IF THAT CERTAIN HOME HAS
BEEN LISTED, MAYBE YOURS! SOMEONE COULD
JUST .BE ACHING TO OWN THE HOME YOU'RE
1\l.... NOWI. IS THE TIME TO LIST AND SELL WITH

HI
!J ]

57

$37,500.

DOWN RIGHT CUTE I - 1-1/2 story kame home on 1/2
acre. Has 2 sheds, cellar. heat pump, sewing room, 2-3
bedrooms, 1 car garage, drined well wi1h city water available, beautilul oak trim. ASKING $29,000.

G ood~

PltttniJIIHt &amp; l ~ t! dl+llll
! ~~- ,ty,!lm tl
.
l h ! L111L: otl ~ Ht•lt lljtlf,lltt ll l

Now /n-

CLOSE TO TOWN - With Room to Move - Inside and
out! 2 story frame home wrth 6 rooms. 3 bedrooms on
3.88 acres. Carport. garage. barn, garden and pasture ·
space: some lanced. ASKING $29,900.

,

Mut u i C 'f'llt~

,.

H)

NEW LISTING - 2 s1ory frame home, 5 rooms . 3 bedrooms. comple1ely remodeled. indudes mos1 appliances
and cen~al air plus a 16 x 24 garage and deck. ASKING
HEMLOCK GROVE - Ranch style home. 6 rooms, 3
bedrooms. Includes shed. barn, shop, cherry orchard,
garden space and fruit trees on 43+ acres. Additional
farm items negotiable in sale. ASKING $54,900. Come

IH
7Y

But l d111 11 Supl)ltt:::.

GUN SHOOT

accept reasonable offer.

I I

55

NEW- REPAIR

9-6-tln

li~t , tl ' 1\. M u tu • ~ lu• S .tlt:
A11to P,u\!t l'.t A u t rS::.tl fll ~
~\ti l u Ht•fl ,tll
r:, tlllJl!IHI [t lll ljllllt:tll
[ ,uupt.:l !&gt; &amp; M ut\Jt tl "''"' "

Spmtang

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING :

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

s,,,,.

, ,,.(. .. ~ \ (H
Ko 4 vvn

I'J
/tl

Anhqutn
M tsc M eu: h rtt~ft•s• ·

ROOFING

Storting Sept. 22

Aul o:. ' '" S.tl.,

v ,,, ~

52

CLUB

RAtiCH STYLE HOME ~ Located in Riggs
Crest Manor.
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car
allached garage alec. FA heal, partial basement. A
REALLY NICE home! ASKING $42,500 . Owner will

II
1 .1
74

53
54

RIC EXCAVATING

SUNDAYS

/1

for Rt :ll t

Houwhohl Goo d11o

Howard L Writesel

GROOM

ISarkes Alive. she's651
But who would ever
know .
' She cooks and cleans
and pieces quilts,
And even likes to

9-6- 1 mo.

1:00 P.M.

Trans orlalion
Rt •nt

W otnted to R c111
E.• t•npnumt fo • R, :"t
For lc asll

RACINE GUN

THE

.

THE DANCE
COMPANY
992-6289

9/9/91/2 mo.

ll-t4-1fn

•
•

AGES 3 and UP

Factory Guns Only

s,,,,

Fu111tshcd Room .,
Spacu tor Relit

Hardwood Slabs
For Sale
Great Price!
CALL

•Complete

BALLET, TAP &amp;
JAZZ CLASSES

SPORTSMAN
CLUB

AJJiHttnt.~lt

FIREWOOD
SELLERS

•New Homes

3-14-'91-tln

FORKED RUN

44
45
46
47

ATTENTION

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

742-2451

GUN SHOOT

H ouses IDr R en t
M nbl l c H on ll!~ hlf
Farms tot Ret II

' ·'""I !1"'1'""'"'

W,u olld t " H"V
lo vn l u1.._
b4 H.oy !'.. ( )r .' "'
t.'.&gt;
II. ,, ., , ,.. 1 ,:•

.,'
'

Business Services

•Reasonable Rates
•Quality Work
•Free Estimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
Time
•High Gloss on Tile
Floor Finish
MIK! LIWIS, Owner

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

41
41
43

to I
til

ti.l

Merchandise

Rt. 1, lullon&lt;l, OH.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Blues legend B.B. King celebrated
his 66th birthday at the San Francisco Blues Festival, and said he's
amazed he's still around.
''I'd have bet against it. I've
been in 16 auto accidents. I've ridden on planes that crashed after I
got off of them, boats that sunk
after I got off of them," King said
Sunday. "I feel good today,"
Joining King at a backstage
birthday party were guitarist Robert
Cray, singer Bobby McFerrin and
San Francisco Mayor Art Agnos,
who pre.~entcd King with the keys
to the city.
King said he's used to marking
birthdays away from home. "In the
last41 years, I've had three or four
birthdays that weren't on the
road," he said.

lu i!&gt; &amp; A cfl!a \1•:
R+ :.tl Es til lt: Wo~nt•:tl

51

INDEPENDENT
CAIPET CI.EANERS
and Till FLOOR CAB

S; r ~ C u &gt; e Oh .o

J~

36

49

Wo~n1 m l1 o0u

5-Jl.'90 tin

THE BERRY BASKET
230 1 S• 1~1 SirEe l

RtiStrt'l'!&gt;~ 8utl tltnq ~

48

Mt sccll o~IIL'uu ~

985-4473
667-6179

lwe Arf No~~v Qppn for Regul ;.r
Hour&gt; Wedne sda; thru
Sa!urd•y I I am lo 5 p m

31

s,,, ,.

s

li®llll

. Pt~~ant

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

Mnbtlc H n uw ~ I tt •
.11111!&gt; lor o~l• ·

A~t(:ltllll

11
1(

Sal ~

tl o n11:s h!f

]]

W an tt.."'l to Buy

18

PllU IEDUCIDI

Plans were discussed for a
Christmas float and a possible yard
sale during the Wright Sb'eet yard
sale on Oct. 3 and 4.
Attending were Eleanor
Thomas, Jane Walton, Reva
Vaughan, Velma Rue, Joan Corder,
Ann Rupe, Nellie Brown, Charlotte
Elberfeld, Clarice Krautter, Betty
Ohlinger, a guest, Ida Diehl, Rose
Sisson, Vera Crow and Maidie
Mora.

M.asun Co . WV

M e l!fS County

Au:a Co d e 6 1 4

361
COI'Y

6o

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

J l

:n r

Services
fol/ou 'ill!{ tdt'Jiht;IIJ' t•.ldlllll/{1'.&lt;...

• A L l ,~e~!ttlll!tl ,ulvt• lltSt:n lt.'lll p l,u: ,:tlll1 !I tt• O ,wly S+: tl llltH~ I cr.
t. I'P'
r\, 1 !;\; lht:t l t h ~pl.t" Bll!tlll l ~) c.ud .uHIIt~l·· nultl: cs1
w •ll .thu ,tppt:,u m tl tt· Pt Plt:,Lllo.Ull R ~\tt s lt!r .uul tlw G&lt;t tlt
llto lt!&gt; O,utv fl th11111 ' u• .t ciiiiHI W11 :r 18.000 honll!!;

JUSTIN LITTLE

Real Estale

~'!lployment

·Ads that llll tst lu: patd '" atlv.tnct: ,u• :
C,u tl u l Tlo ,,nk "
H.tppy Ath
Y,tltl S.tlt:s

er served in the a&lt;med forces . He was
granted an exempt ion from military
duty during World War ll as a father
of four and the sole support of his widowed mother.

Announcements
1

9

tm cnurs lu s t day atl Ill !I S 111 pifJM! II C;tlt ht!lm c 2 00 p m
llol\l tlfll!l jlUbh ColllOit I n l lldkl! ~Ui fl!t: IIUII

M. : tll1Hidl 11

John Way ne. who wore a variety of
military unirorms in the movies, nev ·

RATES

Oi l 110 c h~ ~ I C

t ••

Ju stin Ray Little, grandson of
Vernon and Sheryl Little, Middle port, ce lebrated hi s first birthdny
recently with a party m his home.
Attending were his mother, Lora
Cleland , grandmother, Sheryl Lit tle, grandfath er. Wayne Cleland,
Joyce Champion. Paulette Cundirr.
Joy Cundiff. Angie Cund iff. Bran ·
don Shaul , Rogi c Grim, Da rl ene
Doore, Page Bradbury. Auntie and
Archie Wheeler.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

iltHI f o untl ;ui s urttlt!1' 1 !J wu1tls wollltc

539 Bryan Place
Middleport. Ohio

93 Mill St.

But it initially was rejected by
ABC when offered without a pilot
or script by Cosby and colleagues
Marcia Carsey and Tom Werner.
Poor ABC.
The show 's arrival in fall 1984
became one of the main causes of
NBC's rise to first in the ratings.

· 7 pumt lm t! lyj.m u nly 11 ~ 1:d
' St!lllll ld IS not lt! ~ p 011S ibh! lut lliiUI~ odi e • f11 11o l +Iii'( t C iu!d•

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Faith Tabernacle Church, Bailey Run Road,
Pomeroy, will have weekend
revival Thursday through Sunday
at 7 p.m. nightly. Noah Callicoat is
the evangelist. Call 992-5746 for
information. Pastor Emmell Rawson invites the public.

First birthday

he said.
"Cosby" has been hailed for its
warmth and ability to escape the
traps of the usual family sitcom , in
which Old Dad almost always is a
boob. Its award s include th e
Peabody and a Humanitas prize. in
addition to the usual Emmys.

'f' HU: ul dl1 f01 iJ II Cill) oti!lfl~\t:IS IS duuhh : ~ftCO! Ill til l CII:O I

Personalized
Hand~Painted Stonewear
by Village Traditions

Martins make visit
Edna Martin and Mary Martin
staye~ a week recently with Mrs.
Sylvia George in Galena while
Mary Martin's husband, Osby, was
a patient in Riverside Hospital in
Columbus.
·

S bO th scouul lur .utf JliH &lt;I tn

, , .,~ &lt;l tls

' ''" J dd'f~

Foster honored during festival
BOSTON (AP) - Jodie Foster
got an award for ''Liule Man
Tate," her directing debut
The inovie, about a gifted 7ycar-old who ~as D'Ouble fitting in
with other kids, is featured at the
Boston Film Festival.
Organizers on Monday gave
Foster the first Piper Heidsieck
Award for outstanding achievement
The 28;year-old actress, who
won an Osi:ar for "The Accused "
plays the boy's working-cla;s
mother in "Little Man Tate."

" 'Cause there ain't ... nothin ...
wrong with it," he said.
"I have other thing s to do ,"
Cosby said simply, when asked
why he's closing his hit family sitcom, in which he plays an obstetrician and Phylicia Rashad plays his
wife, an attorney.
He'd like to produce a new sitcom starring his TV son, MalcolmJamal Warner, he said. He gave no
details, but puckishly added he'd
also like to do a sitcom starring 4year-old Raven-Simone, a "Cosby
Show" cast member.
"And I can't do those things
doing the Huxtables every week,"

Mon1hly

POUCILS

People in the news
BRANSON, Mo. (AP) - Country singer Willie Nelson, climbing
out of a multimillion-dollar debt to
th e Internal Revenue Service, is
taking on a steady job.
Nelson has signed a contract to
become star-in -residence at Branson· s Ozarks Theatre, where Mel
Tilli s currently performs, Th e
News-Leader of Springfield reported Monday.
Nelson is to perform !0 shows a
week beginning next May, said
Steve Browning, manager of Tillis'
office in Branson.
Nelson incurred a $!6.7 million
debt to the IRS. He has put out a
mail -order recording called " The
IRS Tapes: Who'll Buy My Memori es' · to help pay off the debt he
attributes to bad financial management.

truncheon -sized cigar arc going
into game show country to co-host
a new syndicated version of NBC's
old "You Bet Your Life," hosted
circa 1950-1961 by that noted stogie man Groucho Marx.
Cosby already has taped several
installments of the new daily series
in Philadelphia, which he says will
be its home base. Why Philadelphia?
" It 's my hometown ," he sa id.
"And it's time Philadelph ia got
back on the map ." There was a
pause. He chuckled. ''Ask me that
question again , ' Why Phi lade lphia?' " The question was asked.

Classified

SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club will
meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
Syracuse Park near the river. This
is the first meeting of the fall session. The group will make year books. Anyone may attend.

Sorority to participate in festival
A sa lad supper prece ded the
recen t mee ting of th e Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, held at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
Velma Rue was the winner of a
Beta Sigma Phi cookbook.
It was announced that the group
will be se lling souvenirs for the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce during the Big Bend Stemwheel Festival on Oct. I I and 12 .

OhiO

BENNETT'S

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Located On Safford School Rd. off Rt. 141
(614) .. 6.U16 ar 1·100·172·,,91;1

HOM E (REEK ENTERPRISES, IN(.
(A v"nlurr of J&amp;F Contre&lt;ting and K&amp;J Constructron)

Dozer, Backhoe, Trenching Work

Utilities: woler, gas, sewer, electric
Custom and log Homes
Remodeling and General Controcling
Commercial Developmenl
See us ohoul Sunshine Room Solariums
Jim (liffotd -992-7201
Greg Bailey 992 6810
&lt;f ~ I tr~

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

GUN SHOOT.

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

6:30 P.M.
Starting Sept, U

992-6648 or
698·6B64

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building
EVERY

SA~ NIGHT
Factory Choke
·
12 Gauge Sho!Jun Only
Strictly Enforctd

9 · 1J . ' 91 · ~n

5·14· '91-lln

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
- Room Additions
- Gutter work
and

- Eit~ctrieal

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIE.S
•BUY •SELL •TRADE

Plumb ing

- Concrete work
- Roofing

- InteriorS. Exterior
Painting

(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 s

Pom..-oy, Ohio

OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday

10:00 am ·5:00

742-2421
21ft Mi. outside
Rutland on New
Lima Rd.
s. JQ .'gl.tfn

II 14-'90 li n

A&amp;B

COMPLOE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops,
Carpets. Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair .
MAIN ST., MASON, VA.

1-130341·
773-9560
9 1 9 1 91 1 1 mo pd

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS
If you'rt in need of
Mabile Home Parts
or Accessories ...

SEE US FIRST!

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

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS
Specializing in
Custom Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992-7D13
qr 992·5553
01 TOU FlEE
1-100-141·0070
DARWIN, OliO
7 t 31 1 '911fn

pm

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WAIIANTY

WA!H!R!- $1 00 up

DRUS-$69 up
RlfltGIIATOl!-$100 up

RANG!S- Ga•·lt,..-$125 up
fllfiZUI- $l2S up
MIUO OVIN!- $79 up

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

Acro11 From Pos1 Office
POMEROY, OHO
t0/ 301'19 1fn

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006 :

6-6-'91

LINDA'S &gt;
PAINTING :
INTERIOR - EXTERIOR'
FREE ESTIMATES •

Take the pain out of
painting.
let me do it for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES
16141 985-4180
8·28·91 · 1

mo . ~ ·

Is Your Roof Ready For Another Year of Ice and Snow?
Now's fhe Time to Find Out.

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·2653

. •.

'

For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles

Repairs, Gutters
Building and Remodehng

We Guarantee l'our Satlsractlon .
FlU ISTIMA115

JOSIPN D. IACIS
'
t-1] ....

.

�.

.. _...__,..
.
.

~

•.

111e uauy ~ent1ne1
Announceme nt s

SNAFU® by Uruct Beattie

LAlli I acraap oYillabll tor
now " - conllructlon on
Raybum Rood. Paved road,

Announcements
Now Opon, Pomeroy Cor Woah,
will do hlndwloh, wu l clunlng.

county

watw,

We Make Great Matchee. C.rol'l

OH451V1.

Giveaway

3 Khlonoi/lo rMIIy good homol
llwu oi.::J...2 r.mole l 1 mole,

l14·112-na4
:JCI lllrd bock "RMdor DIQHI"
- · · 304-77.1-1112.
Cata: 2 Male, 1 Female, I WHU

Old To Good Homel 11....._
1'170.
FrH prlwte reading Ieason• for
adune who w!.h to Improve
their akllls. 1-IOO-e42-2t't0 or
304-47U071.

Milt,
Froo To Good Homol 814-24~
s121.

~----------1"""----------l

black kltlent, all long hair, 304-

885-31»3.

6

11

Help Wanted

18

BE ON T.V. Many Noodod For

Commerclate. Now Hiring All

AgH. For Calling lnlo. Ca~ 115TTt-7111 Ext T-101.
CABLE TV JOIS

to0-737-45262, extenelon 8152.
8:00am·l :00pm, 7 daya, $12.15

....

CaN Manager, Fuii-T1me, Work-

Ing In Gollll Anct Jackson

Lost &amp; Found

COuntlee.

Found· Sal. mortngln, 1-Mt of

klyo on COurl Sl.

Quollllcollona,

High

Minimum

School

Dlplomt, Experience Deelrad,

Benefit• Offered. Send R11ume

Loat In Rockaprlng•, trN, 1- To: F.A.C.T.S. Rl. 2 Box 273-A
,malt Red lone Coonhound I 1- Bidwell, OH 45814. By Sol)lom!

bar 271h, lltl. MIFIH, E.O.E.
:tamale luglo,ll4-112·11131
·Lese: 4 Angon Q•ta, In The Domlna'e PIZZI of P01n1roy now
.Aroo Of Rt.141 Anct Gnhlm laklnf appllctllono.
ISchMI Rood. 114-441~14t
EARLY INTERVENTION SER·
VICE COORDINATOR NEEDED
Yard Sale
FOR PRE-SCHOOL CHEERS
PROORAM.
Ouollllcallons:
Aeglltared Nurae or Ucenud
Gallipolis
So&lt;al Workor wllh bachotor'o
dogroo or blehllor'o dogrH In
&amp; VIcinity
special
educttlon,
Nrty
~ Yard Sale: SeptMIMr 11th, 111h, childhood education or related
protuelon,
computer
111th. 1-1 In Kllnau• Acrose
' From lupor Amorlco Slollon AI knowledge. Ptld qulr1trly 11
1RHidonco 01 Dona Ralkl. Ddvo Iundt oro rocolvod. PART-TIME
COLLABORATIVE
1Carolully, Huvy Traftlc Ami COUNTY
COORDINATOR.
, Slgno Will Ia Pooled. Portdng GROUP
•Will Ia On Lawn 01 Homo. Oualltlcatlone: Familiar with

=

, ..Ear11 llrcla"' Welcome • Will
:Have CoffM II• Youl heme To
, lo hid:
Unfto, Lampo,
•Mony l'o
lui (Hol1tquln,
· Rama,_, A ,.. Wntems,
: Khchan llomo, Ulonall•'.l .Mony
,Aro -1), 1'14all'antl, ,..,.,.,.

arly lnlerventlonlheaHh tduca. tlon •aen~lll/grant writing and
orpniZatlorVclertcal
akllll.

SEND REIUME FOR EITHER
POSITION TO: CHEERS, 11
Slalo 81rMI, Qolllpollo, OH
41&amp;31.

ware, lternware, Gtuaw~re,
Olehle, PllatiGWIIre Decor1tor

EARN MONEY Rudlng lookll
: Ploloo, Clolhlng, Group Now t30,00C)!yr. Income Potential.
. Socko (Lalli-..), Corner Dotalla. 111 805-1124000 Ell. Y·
·Shelf, Modlclno Cablnll, Small 1CIIII.
·File Box, Plelllc Buc:kolaJ Nlco uoy Workl hcollonl Poyl AaMono COolliVIIIo, Mono oano, Hmblo Produclo. AI Homo. Call
. FloiWIII, Bud VaHIIFiowor loU
POll, Booka, WIIIII-Nol1 Pic· 313. FrM 1 1.aGO~-IMI, Ext.
IUIH, .......ry. MIICII·
IIMOUI HOUNhokS llOodl, And HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED:
Mony Smaller Horne Too Oouranlud 111V W11k Pluo
Numii'OIII To Ulll Nolo: Tormo: llorol Paid Vacallono. 114-441Call!. All IIIII Final, No 7267.
Rltvnclll
wa-day
All
Rlmalnlng ~-Willie- AI Nud oomeono wllh 11pa~anco
Hill 1'11111 ~Anct l~ng A 1o work Wflh ...,.., lodl·• Mon.·
Frllndl Wo Wll... Lookln1l'or Sal. I :OIIIm·I::JOpm. 14-H2·
Youl "Nal RHIIOMI-Ia FOr Ac· 2237
old111ta."
Part Time ltby'lhltr NIICIMI In
ALL Yonl lolea Mull lo Pold In Waohlnglon School Dlll~ct. 1
All¥anco. DIADLINI: 2:00 p.m. Hour Iefort And 1 Hour After
tho doy 111M tho lid II to Nn. SoMal. Rotorwnco Roqulrod.
_, • 2:GO p.m. Phone 114-445-2101.
F~doy. - a y odhlon • 2:00
Pan-Timo Poohlon, Galllpolla
p.m.••Milly.
Arlo. Mlrchlndloor For Grool·
lng Cardo NMdod. Pa11-Tirnl Up
Pt. Pieasant
To 15 H..,.. Por Willi. Flexlbll
Houro1 In Your Neighborhood.
'
&amp; VIcinity
Call l'"rom I . a.m. To 1 p.m.
Anct Wodnooday. 1-aoo3 long llalrod kilt- I Wkl Old, Tuooday
321·3040 Elrt. 4315. Equol OpytlloW l wh:.,lllk I whlll, 11 portunity
Employer. Amerkan

.

IIIII, 3CM-fl'J.

•

Greeting•.

Pomeroy POSTAL JOIS $11.71...,.,........._
•• old ...... $14.00/hr. No oxp. noodod. For
exam and application Info., oall
·nn.... ••+•Mnll ""· millll. 1·21....,.1137 71111·10"'" 7dayo.
Thllll . . 1t, 1:-:00, Lowlo
Quallllod o1porlancod ma•cal
IICrllary, lull or parlllma, call
Pomeroy,
lor dotaiiH, 30W75.e512.
Mlddlepon
SHOW DIRECTOR
Nallonal Ruorl Morklllng Flnm
&amp; VlclnHy
S.tkl MOCIVItecl Person For
All Yard IIIII M... Ia Pold In Boolh AI CATFISH FESTIVAL,
Aclv...,.. Doa.. tno: 1:00pm lhl 1113-133-9371, m-1447.
a.ylloforoiiMtodleiONn, Someone lor tann work, will be
I!UMtY odhlon- 1:00pm Friday, lon; hOIMI, need to be
llondiy · odhlon
10:00o.m. mechank:al lrn:llned, P.l1 b1
lotwday,
hour according lo abUhy and
My~;

...,,

h"" .......

8

Public: Sale

&amp; Auction

l l l o l - - Cempony,

iO~ food uud
ownlngo 114-247-21113

bicycle,

Wancld lll~unk and Krap mtl·
at, :104 115 iOM.

-

t7.00tlr. rnln, HlC 211 W Main,

home na~r.
"SucceteKtr" Included. O.tall•

37'11-2142.
llloo Poulo'o Doy Care Canlor.
Sail, aHordobll, chlldcaro. II·F
1 o.m. · 6:30 p.m. Ape ~to.
lotoro, anor ochool. Drop-lno
welcome. 114-44&amp;-n24. Now In·
tanl Toddler Core, I14-44W227.
Will labyoll In My Homo, Juot
OH 1110, On Bullville Plko, Ex·

3 bldrooma, 1ttachtd garage,
CIOH 10 ltorll, tch~l &amp;

hoopHal. Box P·17, % Pl. Pll.

Ragtlter, 200 Main St, Pt. Pit,

WV25550.
3br Fenced In Yard, Located

Rodney VIllage II. $330/mo. 614·
~~~14.
.
4br, 2 Bolhtl, Doublowldo In Rio
perlenct And Aeftrencea. 014· Grandt
Ohio Aru. 614-24~55118,
441-2846.
Anyllmo.
Will Bobyoll In My Homo Or
Youro,
Anytlmal
Gol· 7-roo'!', t·bllh. Dopooh roqulrod
llpoiiiiKypr
Crook
Aroo. In Mlaaloport, lt4-DI2~01.
Reterenca Av.tlable. 114-448- Avolloblo Sunda~. 2 BR counlry
82t4, or 114-441·1721.
ho1111 atovo, rat~garolor. No
polo. ~otoroncaa, dopooll. Send
rtlponH: 801 CLAOI2 CIO Gil•
Financ1al
llpollo Dally T~bunt, 125 Third
Ava. Oolllpolli, OH 45131.

21

Nice

Business
OpponunHy

WG0-2JJ.0242.

lunernut

Ave.

Pomoror. Porllallr tumlohod.
llllh l 1121 _!!taroncoo, dopoah,
IAN, 114-ftl•lt:JCI

Fumlehed,

Waaher &amp; Dryer

3br HouH And Bualn111. In
Spring Valley Area. Butlntll
Will Maka Your Paymemef At·

Hook·up,
S2251mo.
$200
Dopooll, I Monlho LNII. 142
Fourth Avo, OoiUpollt, 614-446-

875'1800.

3187.

Allonllonl Styling Ilion For
lolol Pdma l.ocaflon. Coil 114·

42

Local Vonctlng Route. For Solo
Cheap. 1.-W-0354.
Local Pay Phono Aoulo. Big
lSI. P~cod Righi. 1..01&gt;-eiS'
1111.

2-BR mobllo homoo, lumlohod,
woohar/4ryor, air, 814-112-4800.
2br Mobile Homo, RoloroncH
And Dopooh Roqulrod. 114·258·
1122.

Real Estate

).8A mobile home approx. 3&gt;-ml
from Pomero, or Middleport.

king $10,000. 114-446-11280, 304-

4411-1103, 114-441.. 355.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

814-112-5858

3br Moblla Home. Reference

31

And Dopooll Roqulrod. 614-446-

Homes for Sale

0527.

ABSOLUTELY MUST SELLII
Raducad To Soli: 2 Storr 3br
Comer IAI In Chnhlre, Ohio.
ixcelllnl Conlflllon. Flenonclng
Avalloblo Wllh Poy Polnto. 104'
1132oll51, IOW32-711V, 114·317·
01411.

For tale or rent trailer &amp; 3 acree,

SA 143, call aftar 5pm :104-812·
2104.
For loll or Rant, 111811wo bod·
rqom mobile home on ranted

lol, country aaUing, dopooll ond
rtr.rtnce

3 Mdroom hou• on 10 acre1,
400 ft. frontage, on Brtdbury

Contract

Wtth

required,

304-67S-

7illl.

Rd. 7.12% pooolblo, $21,500,
21WIW3119.
3br A Framo On 1 Aere Woodld
LA&gt;I. 127,500 Will Conatdor Lanct

44

Apanment
for Rent

(lWo) one bdrm a~s unlur-

Aeaaonabll

nllhod, parllal ulllhloa paid,
dtpollt and Nftrenc::u ,._
qulrod, 114-112-211!14.
1 l 2 bclrm apt In Mlcldlopo~.

Down Payment. 114-258·1181,
114-258-1141.
3br Houu And Butlnue. In

Spring Valley A.F8a. lusln~u
Will IItke Your Paymant1l Atking $1111,000. 114-446-!1260, 304-

UtllltH Fum, dep req, no pet1,

114·182·2211.
1br Aporlmont, 1 Efficiency
Afartment, Cion To Unlverelt1
0 Rio Grandt. 114·314-1141.

Flvo Slar Mo~pga, FHA·VA
ConvenlloMI loline, Brian
VIJJIIelll, Loon Oftlcor, 314 ..753717.

2 ledroom Apar1mtnt Acroee
From Unlvertlty Of Rio Grandt,

for the moving! Only Nrloue

24/lv. 211 ..51-3213, .... 111-3.

Wantld motivated ul11perso n.

Lmk Fence. Cloet To Evtrythlna
In Town! R11d1 To Move lntol

126,000. lo $52,000. llrat roar
Training provided, e1porlonco

preferred. Sind reaume to Box

12

Ollni.
"""·
111 -~.... -lpallo.

$3100AY PROCESSING
PNONE ORDERSI PEOPU
CALL YOU.
110 EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.

S.IR

INanCEf
RNr 231 Flrwt Avenu., Small
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO. 2br,
Kllchon Wllh Stove Ancl
rocommoncta lhot you do buol· Refrigerator.
No Peta. Referennua wllh pooplo you know1 ond CH Ancl Dlpooll.
NOT lo land monoy lhrougn lho UIIIIIIM. 114-«11-4126.$265 Pluo
mall unlll you hove lnvoatlgalod
tho oHerlng.
Small 1br Stove &amp; Aelrt011ra1or

Av1nue, Galllpolit, 2 Batha, Ntw
3~x30 Block C.aragl, Wilh Chain

-

t rnpl ov m Pn l :, Ptv1rp '
·-·- 11 Help WantiCI

Pet1. Call 8-12, 4·8,

ond dopoal1.304-tl75·3115.

atove refilg, hth, qu•n aize
couch, NO, loCal elect, 304-675-

6042.

Efficiency, 1tove, ref bath
wlehowerL ale ell elect, iuu car·

poled, H D occplod, 304.e75&amp;200.
For rent- New 1 bdrm apt, turn
or unturn, In Ulddl1port, . 614--

614-446-0038.

1192-5225 or 912-5:104.
Furnlohod Aporlmant 1 Bod·
room, Walor Pold, $27S, 112 Milo
usl Of Portor. 614-388-1163.

Rio Grandi, 3 Bedroom, 3 lott,

P-5, %Pt. Pll. Roglo~~!J 200 Moln LA, Large Fr, Dr, 1 112 Bath•
Wanlod to buy, Slanctlng llmlllr, 51., Polnl PINunt, "'· 21550
VInyl Sieling, 2 Car Garage, CA:
Bob WIIIIIJM I Sono 114-112·
Jacuul, $51,000. 114-245-~ 295 .
Wanlod mollvolod uleaparaon,
5441.
S26,fl0.152,000 111 yur, fralnlng
Wlroad To Buy: Junk Au1oo, provided, upodonco pratorrocr, 32 Mobile .Homes
Scrap llllal AIMf FrH RamoVII 111Mf roaumo lo Dally Sontlnol
for Sale
From Well VIrginia. • - • · PO loo 721B Pomaroy, OH
417111
100115t lot wltll'llllhulb, 3-1~.

=..."1::,.2iita.
!. 21\.:1J!;
c.~n

No

achoola and holpttal, reference

Bueh ~ Setwlce. Reatonlb..
Aatu. No Job To Small! 114-

callerol Call 114..11·2071 oftor
7:11pm.
or mo,. ..,..11111. Nlco 2 Slory Houao, Socond

WlntiCI to Buy

Furnished
Rooms

S~:~1:7a1 $120/mo. Golllo Holot.
6
1180.
.

IHII.III'Jn
Wanted

8251.
upodlncad nuroo dMirll 10
llllly.aft In my homa In tho
Pon\trcy IrA, 114-112.e723 If•
lor 6:00pm
Famole Would Ukl To Sharo
Homo Wllh lome Or W111 ':::
Care For Eldarly Lady. II 4

1 ~1ttt1, ~'

Fumlsh•d

Aplrtmtnta,

1br

$225 Ullllllu Paid. 120 Founh
Ave, • 607 Second Avt, Gal·
llpolla. 114-«... 411 after 7p.m.
Fwmlohod opl. 107 21Mf Gtl·
llpolla. 1 BR, $325L ulllllloo pold.
114-446-4411 after 1 p.m.
Fumlohod EHiclency, $115/mo.
Ulllllloa Pold, Share hlh, 107

lh_l,raoYU on cor-

"" lot, 114-112-2117 or 112·
7214.
1m VanDyke 14x70 Mobile
Homa, •r4-:Jaa.0054, II No
AntWot 114·. . .101.
1171 14170, 2br, Don Appllancoo, Block, Sklrllng, Porch,
Tolol Elocl~c. Roductcf, $7,5001
114-31N311.
Bonk Ropol 60114 llraploco,
calhodrol celllnp•· Muol oon
lmmodloJalyl Cal 1-800-416-71171
aok far An or Todd.

Second Ave, Galllpolie, &amp;14~41·

4411 Ahor 7p.m.
Gracloua living. I and 2 bod·
room ·tpartmenta at Vllltgl

Manor

and

Alve,.ICia

Aporlmonll In Mlddloporl. From
$1M. Calll14-002-7717. EOH.
Now .I·IR, lumlohod aparlmonl
In Mlddltport, 614-112-5225
Nlct CINn cun11111y IVIIIIble
apt, 1 bedroom lor elderly, handlcoppod and dlubltd. Rlvor
loncl PIICI, 304-882-3121. E.O.H.
. . pi .., , ....... ' mollie
llllillt, 1 mtli ...... laWn ...,.
INking rlror.. No Pelo, Cl. 114441.033t.

11101.

•

=·~uo~
112-1347

lm

Spac:e for Rent
Counlry Moblil Homa Pork,
Routt 33, North of P-roy.

u-.

T-.

Tcyola, 2 WMol DdvJ

IF 51-lE ASKS

ME TO
SPE~~ ''M1551551PPI II
I'M IN TROUB~E .. •

Extrt nice ldna elud watarW.

Mirrored hood6oard with Ughlod
ahalvu. Elghl droworo ui1dor·
noalh. $1100. 114 441-GOIS.
FNhwood 7 pc dining room 101.
S75. 304-t75-e347 or 17W1113.
Glou door chino colllnll, .....
cond, dork wood, 5221. - ·
2181.

GOOD USED APPUANCEI
Wuhlro, dryora, relrlforallrt,
rongoa. Skitggo AppllanCII,
Uppor Rlvar Rei. laolclo llono
Crwll Molll. Call 114-441-7111.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complllo homo lumlehlnga.
Hou,.: Mon-911, N . 114-44f0322, 3 mllaa out lularlllo Rd.
F-Dollvorr.
PICKENS FURNITURE
NlwiUaod
Ho-hold lumlohlnf. 112 mi.
Jorricho Rd. Pt. Pluaanl, WV,
ca1130W75·1450.
RENTZ OWN
114-446-3151
. Vl'ra fumllura
Sola I Cllalr, 111.10 Willi·
Rocllnor, 15.47 Wllk, Swlril
Rockor, 13.13 W111tlunk 11M
Compltto Sl.41 Wllk, 4 DriMr
Chlol, 13.21 Willi; Poltor ladroom Suho, 7 po., 111.17 W11k,
lncludH Boddlng.Counlry Pine
Dlnlllo Wllh Bonch &amp; 4 Cholro,
110.18 WMILOPEH: Monday
Th"' lolurdoy, la.m. to lp.m.
Sunday 12 N- TIN lp.m. 4
Mll11 Oft Routo 7 On Aoull 141,
In Canlonary.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FU ANITURE. 12
Olive Sl., Galllpolll. - 1 Uud
tumnura, hulora, Wlllllm l
Work lloola. 114-441-1111. ·
VrR~ FURNITURE

orr••hOppl.
· - -·
Ulod Homtlftl IIW.J...!8" bar,

gOOCI-, 114-112......,
Ulad lolallho E~olpmonl, Ineluding: Wholt ,,...,.. Wllh
Dococllrl, R-""· Dllh •
-.114-112-tln.
Ulod aatitlh• "'lil'ftlllll, lnolll41ng, with

.,...m

.........
,.. '"+'12
.....,·41111 '""
Ulod ' tltatlhe

eluding diCDdtrt,

...,..Piflllll, InIYIIIIII wllh
dlth A

riiiH~

- · 114-812..17:1

55

2010-Jofln Deer lulldozer, i-w11
blade, $6100. &amp;14~47-41111

22' Tondom equlpmantlcar
lrollor, allolaal, rory nlco. 11200.
114-245-1122 aftor lpm.
27'' lan opold 111111. 175. 21 cu ft
rolrlg-or $426. Walor So~
llnor 1145. Salt propal mower
$45. Canlrol air cond 1475. 304175-2111.
laity swtnl, laby Wolkar, Hllh
Chofr, Call 14-441-t020.
Cadar wardrobe 1m Ford LTD,
bolh oxc cond, :io4-4U.IUI.
Cluolor Ring, 1 Carat, Diamond,
24 K Gold. QOO. 114-441-3040.
Concrtll I plaotlo Hpllc llnkl,
Ron Ev1n1 Enterprllll, ..lack·
aon, OH 1-100-637-1621.
CRAFT SUPPUES
Honct Modo Crafta
Straw wrN1ht. dried flowere,

Counll

blokola '"" moro. Tri
Sporto Sholl. Point Pleuan ,
304471-21N •.

n •

1111 Dodga Caravon LE, 7 unpr, every option, 10,000
miiiiL niH cond, uklng 15,850.
304.. , .....

TWo 20IIG ft mllol olios, dlamanlllod, makl good grain
lllno, :JOW7J.43QI.

63

Building
Supplies

BlOCk, brllll, 1t1111 11,.1, Win• - · Untlll. tit. Clault WIIIIIIII, Rio GranM, OH CaN 114241-112t
.

Jacklon Counly Uvaolock,
Alply, WV. Thurodo~. 1:00 PM.
G - HOIIIIIn Htlloro, 51100
Elch. Ired To Llmoualn Bull.
:'*:.:.:2:::;411-:.I::G 5::·....,-,-.,..,.,--.,...
7
Puro brMd roglolorod Llmouoln
oow l call polro, cowo l
hlltora. 114-112.e110.
F- Call lalel Thurodly Soplornllll' 111h 11 lp.m. Alhono
LIYMIIIk IIIII. CaUie Accaplod lta111ng 4p.ml On Wod_.
day loptom...,. 111h AI 4p.m.
Collie Acoiplod All Day
Th"'""J· Houllng Arallablo.
Conlltnmonla Wolcomol 614512-3:122, 114-111-3531.

br-.

Trumllll tor 1111, 30W'II-42U
coli olllr 4:00 I'M.

58

Motorcycles
1184 Honcla lnlorcoptor YFIOOR,
new t1r11, matchlng htlme1,
1,800 miiMJ.. robuiH onglno,
$1,100.304-470-11111.
1818 Horiay Dovldaon Cuolom
Soft Toll, w/moloreycte trailer,
1,700 mllea, 11000. 114-112-4244

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale
12 Fl. IMra Bool And Trallor,
Whh Stale. Prlca: 1400. • - • ·
0111.
I

1113 Soa-Ray SRV 210, 21 ft.
cudclv cabin, v... Ex. oond, eau
allor i,IM-441-1713.

Hay&amp;Graln
AllolhllGraoo Rollo 1:10. Slorogo
IYIIIIIIII, Morgon Farm, Rl. 35,
76
804..37~011.
Groin llorago 2 14.000) buahtl
~Ina. 2 llf;OOO) buahol blno, till
IIIII 140,000. NOtjron Farm, AI . trans.
u,,.,._n-,.2111.
Tra n s portatiOn

.... _ oo

· •
auuornu1,
- o y , 0H
ti7G Faldlno 500 2 Door, 302
Automatic, S700. 114-245-14115.
111'1 Com!ttlllngroy 350, High
Pettll'lllln.. E11glno, 4 Sptod,
T•T.,., Now Tim, While on

:::~ ~0::-,.~'::: Good Con-

1171 Uncotn 4dr Town CarJ.f.alr
Comllllon, J1,200, 0. Ball ...,...1
114-441-11104,
1177 Corvette, allver/allnr,
..... 114-247-4111.
1171 Chryllor Cordoba 360,
aulo, now ovlfYihl"f, $1400.
dayo 114-lt2-315f. anilr 5:30pm,
cafi30W71 ... 5S.

FRANK AND
jOXIC W.A)Tf

\.

{)15f0f'AL

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

cotvrpANy

U·Vorloc 111glno on4
olll of 11-10 4-whllkl~vo. ·
12~ mllll• 11hauot, rodlalor,
.,...,, 114·111•·2171.
.:
3/4 Ton Chivy Raar End1 _111·
Gllra, 118: I HP Riding ....~:
-or, No IIOIO!t 130: 4 While.
SIIOko Chorrr uuck Whlllo1•

I

414 Morino EnGI!!!! N~.L Olllar
Mlrlno P_art.,lf4.nHou
Budlll Tranornleolono, Uucl &amp;
roloulH, olll11ng at tOO; Alllo
Pol1a. 114-241-Nn, 114-:171:1213.

ALLEY OOP

"1,':,2"",.dlatora
·tankl, ono 1on truck
floor matt,
lie. Rl A A~~ r· :JOt
372-3133 ., 1
5 5. .

NOT HERE TO SEE THE

SIGHTS, COMMII.NDER!
THE STRANGERS WERE
RIGHT I

Wlnlod To Buy: Good Ulllf
lflr..op For ~liP C: J 7, 114-44f-

2301. .

79

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

For fold ciGwn Skampar
Campor IM-tl2-1703

u....,.

ptaWio

m.

•n.., ...... - ·o.., ln1.,H4,
4411.

.

1NI Dodgo lhlllty Chargor
lurbe, ......... 'II,DIJO mllll;
- · ~harp, opany, 12,110. *171'1301.

a

Fruits•
Vegetables

1111 Fn T1111po GL, Runo
G~ llody Good Condhlonl
........ 114-31N047.
Canni!J9 Pwhle now avalloble,
Oldomoblle· Cullan
alii 8irtle41 ,..,. """ p"'"' 11U
lrouaham All Exlraal
1'111111• Iaiii' In AugUII. Can 1• lupromo
I.Mr lllli~l Elcatlinl CondlI00-44747t0 lor prlcll. 101'8 tlonllt4
441-4012.
MARKET, ...... or. GallpOIIa,
OH.
1117 HoriZon 52,100. 11115 Mtr·
cury Ly1111 SIOO. 1W Cavalltr
1100. 1114 Trono Am 82,500.
804 ..7W440.
F~rm Supp11P S
1NI
CllnNIII lnla, 41,000
.~ I 1v r&lt;,tork
mllel, Air oond, Power adn~-. Ulftar V.. onglno,
'
11,201, .... 1111141, :104-475-1110.
81 Firm Equipment
11N Chovy larana, n ..-s·
1111 Nleoln llnlra 13,285; 1117
110 MF Troet,, Shtrtll Whh I Ponllac lunblnl, $2,215; 1181
FHI lulh H , 14,00; '10 IIF ChiYJ Coltbrhy, S4,2_D_Ij 1117
Whh Now I Ill luah Hoa. Plymeulh Hodzoo, 11 no; 1188
$1,111. Owner Will Flnailcol 11t CtiiYJ COYollor, S4,SI8; 11111
211..122.
Chavy Cavoller $1,416; 1884
eamaro $1,711i 1181
1114 SOOe lnltrnallonll Doztr, Chery Nora
.,,1111; 1115 Ford
"'"• Good. 5-way blldoi winch.
~p
tli 1113 Chivy Cawalllr,
114-H2-23a4, or 112-211
W, ~: 1112 AIIC SW 11,1~j
11Q
CUIIIII 11,111; 11N

.

Home
Improvements

1m

=~,.!f. =~:::.~~~ghway

1111 1'1,..-h Horizon, 30K

:'.:;;..~ oond, 52,500. -

1111 Pontiac Granct Am LE
IIlio, ollln• 14.000 ml, wad
1111lnlalnld, o7100. IM..4•21n

Roger~

lutnwnt W•terprcM&gt;

flnj.

~-

Homo 514-Upa;
A.-Ira: CommoriNI, ~
llaf' lrnprov-.li. IncludinG;
Plumblna, Ettctrlcal. ~ra...,
Ctal""' Aiioaplod. 114-2118-1111. .
C..rlll Homo lrnprovomonl~:
y..,. Elporlonco On Oklar •
Nowar Homoa. R - Addlllono '
Foundollon Work, Roofing:
l Siding. Froo El:llmlt..l Reterencee, No Job

- -

-· -- --- - -

•

-

~----- ---~------- ------~ - - - - -

- _ _.:___ __ - - -

--~·~ - --··-·--· --"· -~l.- __ _. _

CON.E" ON ...

FeEL. L-IKE
TAKINEfA .
L-ITTLE R.IDE,

SOMciH IN6- TE.l..l..6 ME::
rM GOIN610 6E LATE

HOP UPON
MY e.A.O&lt; .

FOR SUPPER .

ANT"?

r'd

Big OrSmalllll4-441-«125.
,
D &amp; E Conllrucllon Oonar6f
Conlractor, Rooting, Concrllt
Gonoral Ropal'!', Gonoral C..:
ll"'ctlon, 114-...,-110118, FrM EoUmatMI

E l R TREE SERVICE. Tolll&gt;lng·
Trimming, Trll Removal, HOclgj
Trimming. FrH Eodmaloal &amp;W
317-7'115'f. .
.
JET
Alrollon MOiora, repaired. Now
• ro-buln rnolora In llock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-IOOo
537·8528.
'
Ron'• TV S«vlce, •.-=lalllln!1

In Zanhh allo wrvlctng mol)'
other brtnda. HouR caiTI, 1110
10m1 all!&gt;lllnco ropalro. WY
304-671~311 Ohio 114-441-2454j
Rool work and Olllar hon+
..pol.. , 304-tl'75-3110.

a

8

BARNEY

9:3CI &lt;II (J) II Slbl (Preview)
Nora and Howie look lorward
to enjoying each olher 10 the
fullest. until Nora's two
sislers turn to lhem lor help
and support. (0:301 Stereo.

YO'RE FREE AS A
WRENNY-BIRD, SNUFFY··
Pi/ICK UP i/IN' CSIT It

82

IM t41 3111

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

I

HEAT PUMP loieo l Sorvk:o
304-4~000 or 114-441-13QI. '

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

•

tl

__

. -- •• . . , ... ~

.~,.

ing $1.25 plus a long . sell-addressed .

PISCES IFeb. 20· March 20) Posi1 1ve

lhis newspaper. P.O. Box 91428. Cleveland. OH 44101 -3428 . Be sure 10 Slale
your zodiac sign .
LIBRA (Sept. 23· 0ct. 23) You 're in a
ralher lucky cycle: Good lhings could
happen for you through individuals and
ways you'd leasl ex pect Be opl•mislic.

expectancy can move m ou ntains for
you today . so don 't let anyone alter your
att itude. Avoid pessimi sts who may try
to rai n on your parade.

keep

an

eye

pee led

tor

opportunities.

ARIES (March 21-April19) Bolh Slalus
and earning condillons could be more
graltlytng tnan usual today. but you
must be relen tl ess when pur suing SP.-

Iected obJECitves Keep gotng until you

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nor. 22) Happy lid· Win .
ings mighl come your way loday . TAURUS (April 20· May 201 A vexing
through a dear friend who is extremely problem can be resolved loda y ~ 11 you
fond ol you and has always had your make it your priority _ The solution will
best interest at heart. It is something tor

be

which you've been hoping .
SAGinARIUS CNav. 23·Dtc. 21) Bolh

imagined .
.
GEMINI (MI~ 21·June 20) unselt!Sn ly

financial and ambitious objectives have

giving of your tlme and tal ent s today will
create an atmosphere that invi tes reci -

excellent possibilities for fulfil lment at

na-..,.

_

.

lr.:...,,~~ ~ ~.~;:.,.

.

•

_

tho chuck le quoted

by ftlling in the missing words

you develop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

~ic:~~~~~ LETTERS

•
1 1 1 1TO 1 1 [

10 [

'H"

Disown - Orbit - Fudge - Walnul - BAD ONES
"What's your handicap?" one golfer asked the other.
He replied, "I'm a scratch player. I wrile down the good
scores and scratch oul all the BAD ONES!"

NORTH
• 10 9 5 3

BRIDGE

tK9
+ A J 10 5

PHILLIP
ALDER

It doesn'l look as thOugh you'll suHer
any 1ype of material prlvauon in the year
ahead.
However, your happlesl
changes are llket~ to be where your social lite Is concerned.
VIRGO CAug. 23-lept. 22) Mutual bene·
Ills can be derived al this time through
those with whom you ,pend your leisure
hours. You can helP them, and Ihey can
help you. VIrgo, treat yourillll to a birth·
day gift. Send tor VIrgo's Astro-Graph
pr~!ctjon8 tor the year ahead by mall-

this time. However,ll will be up 10 you 10
provide the motivation and persever·
anee necessary .

CAPAIC:ORN (Dec;. 22·Jon. 191 Early in
lhe day, you may be 100 serious-minded. bul as you successlully deal with
events, your sobriety will be trans-

formed inlo lighlhearledness.
AQUARIUS CJin. 20-Ftb. 19) Someone
you've lreated with consideration in lhe
P.ast is now In a po~itlon to return the

favor and will be happy lo do so, provid-

much

simpler

than

you

fir st

procily. When you give, you will gel .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You are
likely lo be luckier working wllh part·
ners today than you will be attempting
to do things on your own. This could be-

come evldenl m an importanl endeavor
in which you 're presently involved .
LEO CJuly 23-Aug. 22) Your recenl ef·
loris will nol go unacknowledged, nor
will lhey go unrewarded . What you're
lruly enlitled lo mlghl be paid ott with
dividends In lhls lime lrame.

d

WEST

EAST

. A!

• Q762
. Q9

• Ks

tJI0 64

t A7 32
+ Q743 2

+9 R 6
SOUTH
• K J8

. AJ108 3 2

Keep the enemy
guessing

• Q

~,

+K
Vulnerable : NorLh-South
Dealer : East

Hy Phillip Alder
One ol Ihe driS of declar&lt;r· play ts
keepmg the opponents m the dark
a boul yo ur exact holding in a suit. For
example . you a re playmg in no· lrump.
West leads a low spade. dummy holds
onl y low cards. a nd Easl puts up lhe
jack. You have K·Q·4 in spades. With
which ca rd do you w1n lhe lnck ''
The eorrecl play is the king . wh•c h
keeps the opemng leader uncertain
aho ul lhr location or Ihe queen .
Today ·s hand is a more com pll ca led
exa mple If you would lik e 10 tesl
yoursel f. r o ver the East-Wesl ca rds
and pla n lhe play in four hearts. West
lead ing a low club
Dec la re r had a l leasl lhree rer 1a 1n
lose rs: one in each suit cxrep l clubs.
Assumm g that there weren't two heart
lose rs. declarer had to avoid two
spade losers. In th is yea r' s Eur opea n
Cham pwnshtp . Soren Chns tiansen
from Denm;.rk found a good deceptive
pl ay . He won lhc club lead in hand
with the kmg and 1mmed1ately played
a low diamond . Afra id that declarer
had only two diamonds and one club .

Suuth

West

North

East

I•

Pass

I•

Pass
Pass

2•
4•

Pass
Pas:-;

3•
Pass

Pa&lt;iS
Pass

Open mg lead: + 3

West rushed tn wtth the ace and re·
turned a diamond to dummy's king.
Now Christia nsen cashed dummy's
club ace and disca rde d the spade jack.
Next he led a low s pade. East playing
low .
After his discard ol the spade jack,
ChriSiiansen was sure th at Easl would
assume he star ted with K-J doubleton
in spades. If East he ld the s pade ace.
sure ly he would have put it up. There·
fore . decl ar er fin essed the spade eight .
Wh en this dre w the ace and the trumps
divided 2·2. Christiansen had made his
contract.
@ 1191 . NEWSPAPfR EHT£RPfUSE ASSN.

The World Almana~ Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Answer 10 Previous Puzzle

40 Run
42 Beasl of
burden
43 Tendency lo
blunder
46 Promise
49 Help
so - Doody
54 All people
57 Copters kin
58 Biblical weed
59 Hindu god
60- Dlnesen:
"Out of Alri·

t Sharp taste
5 Sports
implement
8 Browns
t2 Limat3 Kin ol mono
14 Small forest
OX

t5 Wild buffalo
T6 Actress
Whoopi t8 Lions'
sounds
20 Turn the
page (abbr.)
21 Existed
22 Not strict
25 Pianist
Cliburn
28 Frog's cousin
29 Sneer
33 Correctly
35 Now-me down to
sleep
36 Small
37 Purity
39 Serb, e .g.

ca" author

61 Runnared
vehicle
62 Prior to
63 Ornamental
pattern
DOWN

6 Detective
vlalon
7 Caueed to
slant
8 Reslaurant
bill
9 Again

1 Construction
beam
2 Of alrcralt
3 Zola heroine
4 Become
twisted
5 Insect

11 srumpo
17 Actor Murray
19 Abol'l
brother
23 Rtldyor 24 Weekend·
welcoming
abb1 .
25 Tanh
26 Setd corer
27 Columbul'

10 Heroine of "A

Doll's House"

ahlp

30
31
32
34
37
38

Some bones
Forbids
Otltl
Shltklt
Ae1g111'1 aon
Mike
dtll;n•
on metal
40 Kind of vacu·
um tube
41 Aciran GI!J!~i

Q
.

Robettlon
10:30 (!) New•
Ill Malor League a...blll
Atlanta Braves al San
Francisco Giants (L)
Croak and Chi..
ID MilOt Lttgue leoeblll

44 Light btii)J'
45 Allan

(L)

11:00~11

1·11·11

• 764

a

ed you make your neeels known

stamped envelope to Astro-Graph . c/o

and

Sept. 11, IQG1

::'"::::::::U~p~ho;;:lst:::e::;ry~-

.

Q
10:00 (l) II 0 Law I Ord1r
(Season Premiers) Oat.
Greevey is murder after
testlfyinJl at a trial. Slereo.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Canor's Plumbing
ondHIIIIng
Fourlh 11141 Pfno
Galllpoftl Ohio

7

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

On Stlge Slereo .

&lt;II (J) II 20/20
liD Ill Hunter Q
1ft Wo~d Newl
1D 700 Club With Pat

• • tlinlll.
. _ .7121•
1flll lnlornotlonat 1100 ""'• _ . . ,•• Upholot ..
alnfla ull, ~truck. '""' lng trl count~ araa 21 Yll,., T
IIMd 11000
•
In lumhuro upholll..
1om.·
·
• 11 22 a11" Call :IOW711-4154 lor tr11 1
pftl
llmllll.

- - · · - · · · · - - - - -- - -- - ~ -·--- · --

f)

a

~·Mobile

72 ~cks for SaJe ·

:~a= ~fe.c:'l:'.!l:.

e

Vllllnt
8:051ll MOVIE: Wilking Til, the
Flrlll ChiPIII (RI (2:25)
8:30 &lt;II (J) II Home
Improvement CPremlere) Tim
tries to set a good example
lor the boys. Stereo. Q
IIDl @ e MOVIE: 'Coming ta
America' CBS Tueodly
Movie (RI (2 :30) Stereo. Q
Church S""t Stltlon
1D Wltnell to Survtvll Q
9:00 &lt;II (J) II RoHinne (Season
Premiere) Becky asks
Roseanne tor he~with birtn
control. Stereo.
C!l (!) ~Iter the ermlng
Journalist James Burke
reports from the year 2050,
alter humans and the eartn
have survived global
warming. C2:00) Stereo. Q
I!) Tuelidly Nlgh1 Flghtt
Heavyweight bout: Larry
Holmes C51-3) vs. Marshall
Tillman (11-4-1, 9 KOs), 10
rounds; Junior Middlweight
bout: Oba Carr (19·0. 13
KOs) vs. TBA (LI
Na1hvllle Now
1ft Larry King Llvel
Scarecrow and Mre. King

CllnJ ea...... 11.211: 11M
RanauH ~~~
Dtllto~n 210-z

For lola: IBM P.C. Dual ~
Color Monhor, hnyo P.R.
Printer • lnllructlon lookl. lao
Qono
AI Gino Johnoon
Chlv.-, Up(tlr R - 7, Qat.
Mpolll.-·
.
Hondo Powor Plont 11·1000
Sako 30:05 Rllle1 )700; lovago
22 Magnum, .11ou: Bur Com.
punci. I14-44UI11.

1
.

1D The Legend of P~nce

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconclhlonol lllellmo guoro"'
111. Local raloronc11 tumlollld.
Fr11 llllrnaloa. Call collocl I·
114-237&gt;0411, doy or night..

I

1-_;Eir--:-;,MI,.::D_;OiiTs.:,T

8P~meNew1

(Hf(j;.S ..

Rllldonllal or oommorclol
wiring, now or rlpalre
Miller UOinMd -dolan:
Rldonour Elactrlcol, :104-4751711.

------- · - -

i

"TH£~
STCf'ft.D HIS
c...~.:wu=tor'.v\WT

c

12 I

~~l;_;.:.j~o~~~ J

~II

7:351ll Sanford 1nd Son
8:00 ~ II 1121 Mlch1el Landon:
Memorial With Laughter
end Love Family and lrlends
celebrate Michael Landon's
life and career with clips
from his early films and
long-running series. (2 :00)
Stereo. Q
&lt;II (J) 8 Full Hou..
(Season Premiere) Jesse and
Rebecca receive a preview
ol parenthood . Stereo. Q
(!) (!) Nov• Follow an
attempt to lly a 70-pound
human powered airplane. Q
IIDl 1121111 Reocue: 911
(Season Premiere) Two
young sisters are !rapped in
a sinking car. Stereo. C
liD • MOVIE: The Evil 'rh1t
Men 0o !AI (2:00)
I!) Murder, She Wrote
Jessica delends a temporary
llfist accused of murder. (R)

THOSE SOLDIERS ME

0

"Isn't it greal?" asked the
very enthusiastic professor.
. .
.
.
. . • "The sun ripens a bunch of
. . . - - - - - - - - - . grapes as if it had nothing

(L)

"frl&gt;'lve~

the

_,T_H-r:A_,W~E.--If
• 1 I· J!

1ft Cro1111re

(I ltll ' by "'(A '""

of

-rj

1--l

a

w

ea...,., "'"' • IOOkl 81
goorl.l14-ll2~357 or 1'12·23111,

lrakH, New Eahault, Air Tilt,

.JUST /CEIP MAil-ING
IT CACJC ANP FO~TH ANI&gt; fotllf Of
/
IT 6fT$
..tP '""""
1...051 fACII
1'1Mf.

tao. 1~41-MM.

1112

Crul11, ~L High Mileage. C\000
010, 11-U571.
'"1114 Colobrlty, 4dr, '!-_\ AC, PS,
PI, Exira Cieonl
Call A~
lar Sp.m.IM-446-1244.
1114 Chlvotto, tlr cond, c. .
IIIIa
aun root •_,u;c'
wertc ur,
.oa, IM-n2
1114 Cutllll Clara Dlllet
...._ 11,000 ...... All
lu-r Cltan, Aaklng,
it~.-·14 441·23M.
1114 Ptymowlh ~... 2100
Turtoo, S IPiod, ADIIrox. 110,000

1T&gt; f/Nipt-F ••• Wf

9 .. 17

Services

1111 Dodgo Adn, 1700, good
worll ca~- coli llllwMn 3pm·
lpm, 114·n2·11103.
1113 Nluan Slonu Now

I j~ R( l

(IIInolde Edltian C
(!) (!) MacNetlfLehror
NawsHour I;!
(J) 8 C1ndld Camara
IIDi Current AHIIr !;I
liD • Stir Trek; Tlie Next
O.noretlon Q
1121• Ent-lnment Tonight
Stereo. !;I
1!J MecGJVar Q
ID SpottaCentlr
8Maneyllne
1D Tho W11tona
7;051lJ levi~Y Hlllblllltl
7:30 ~. 1121 J.opardvl Q
(!) Mejor League a...~~all
Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh
Pirates (L)
&lt;II Ent-lnment Tonight
Stereo. Q
Ill II Married ... With Child ron
IIDl Whftl of FoltUne Q
1121e Ftmlly Feud
Be I Star Stereo.
1D M1jor League B..eblll

74

lettera

Krambled words be·
low lo lorm lour simple wards.

CD Night Court Q

32 Galry Cows will Ill sold al

Ill all IIIII M&lt;lgll. FU1ery
dull. ll•t llall notr. Can
""'var. WIR • - · r... :10140• Autos for Sale
2,40110, Twe 101100. Can . - -::"~....;..:.:.:..;.;:..:..;.:.:,,..:.::::.:.,..,.._
anct raHrro ,.,_,.._,
1141 .laop ~ood eondhlon,

56 PitS· for Sale
=~:-::-~-iF.~==·~~

1117 ct::ls~lvondo, PU, 4
WD. IM
3.

Uvestock

84

Groom lnd SUpply Shlii-PI1
Groorn[nll- All ,
otvtoa.
laml l'tl FilM Doallr. Julio
Webb. Coil 114-4411G231, r . 312.0231.
7 Pupp!ftl 112 -rallan
Shlf.hord, 112 Allllrollon llui
Mu or. from Worlllrig ·l'aranto,
150 Eoch. 114-441-1117 Aftor
4p.m.
AKC DoHmlln Plnochlr pup,
l14-441-3t5l
moll, 114-742-34104.
LIVING ROOM: '.1118 I Choir, AKC Ragtllorod Allrlcol Male
l1118.00i. RocUMr1 _ 1141.00; Poodle I'Up. 12 Wub Old. 1100.
Swlval -~~·"'li.~ 114 3,11 ~1,fttt.! lp,!l.
Enil To-, ·- .00 - ·
-ROOM: Tabll With 4 Paddod AKC Rltllillrod Alrldtli I
Chatrt, 1148.00'...c;:unlry 'Pine Willi .Oti PuHIII, Wormld,
Dlnll1o With
~ AIMf I And Sholi, IU.31UU2, Bill
c~~a~r~. 1211~; ·Mote!
· 2 Raca, YlniOn.
Door Hllch - •· Or
.114
Sol; oak Tablo. ;j2112 Hh e Drogonwynd can., Plrllan,
.lock
Chafrt, 111111111 11141 HI111111Jift klllllll.
SI21.00.1EDROOII: Pootar.ltd- 114-441-3144_1ftll 7 p.m.
luhi II pc.), 1341.114; 4 Fornall mlnlatu,. clacllahunct. 3
Drowor C-, I44.H; . lunk mos. old. 114-3M-1412.
Bod, ~· Compllte Ful Moll
5111 11111..!o lei; 7 pc. Codlr Flth Tink, 2413 JocktOn Avo.
loaroom Sullo, Slti.OO.OPIN: Point PIM&amp;anl, 304-ll'l-2011,
Monctoy Ttvu laturdor, la.m. 10 lull line Tropical lllhl lllrdo,
lp.m., Sunday . 12 Noon Till omall anlmala anct .,.piN:
lp.m., 4 Mllea OR Rollll 1 On
Por lato: Fornoll 2 112 Year Old,
'Rowll 141 Jn Cantonarr.
Toy 1'00411~1 All Sh!'!-1 Noutarod.
Aaldng 11w.•,........12.
Antiques
53
Pota .and &amp;aUng rn1111
au, or 1111. Rlv•l• AntlqYII, ldiHiodl. lwnlnn Rabblltry,
1124 E. Moln Slraot, P-roy. S04-e714S2t.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 1:00
.m, Sunctay· I :00 lo 1:00 p.m. Rol Tonier - " ' • 304-475·
: 14-11112·2521.
1501.
Roglatorod llack AIMf Whllo,
54 Miscellaneous
Liver Anf. Whlt, Dolmollon
Pur For Sale. Rudy Oclolllr
Merchandise
3r ' 114-441'1151.
1-Envi-Coro (Rangor·2) -lrlc
whlll chair, _ . , rollo, now 57
Musical
w/all oqulpmonl, 11200. 114-1'12·
Instruments
:JC171 or 1'12·1104
11SI John Doora Model I
Robulft, Excollenl Condlllonl
Hylllf 4 Ill~ Fork Lift 3
Trailer Aaloa, I Trailer lod. t1444t·2351.

-P Now
-.e,• ~~:~,Good
CondHion·
w
r 3511
Yomahl wanlor,ll4-215-t020.

61 Farm Equipment

Rearrange

• Night Court Q
C1rtoon Ellft..
ID Running and R1clng
8 Workl TOCIIY
1D Rln Tin Tin, K·l Cop
Stereo. Q
6:051l) Too Clola lor Comlo11
6:30 ~ II IIJI NBC Newa Q
(!) I Dreem of Je1nnlt
&lt;II (J) 8 ABC Newa Q
CD Wild Ama!ICI Stereo. Q
(!) 3·2·1 Conlle1 Q
IIDl 1121e CBS New1 Q
liD C8 Andy OriHith
iDUpCio..
1D New Zarro Stereo. Q
&amp;:35 1l) Andy OriHith
7:00 13111 11J1 Whftl of Fortune

~_:;;::;:;,....:;·:;'"'::=::=:;:========~ 173160 Vans
&amp; 4 WD's
•82

Caloric
Rango
w/bulft·ln
mlcrOWIVI OVaRt :lyre old, $300.
Doublo-wldo ,.trte:;ralor, 3yra
old, $500. Olhlr mnwro tor
All.l14-112·5042
Carpel 1112 $50 I Upl loll On 54 MIICelllniOuS
All Outoldo Carpal: 13.11 I
Merchandise
$4. 118; Kllchln Carpal, $7; VInyl
$3.118 • $4.118. lola On All Car·
pol In Slockl Motlohln Carpala,
814-441-1'144 ..
Counl)' Appllonco lt\c. Good
ulod opplloncoa, T.'v. 1111. Opan
I a.m. lo I p.m. Mon.-$11. 114- Aocondhlonld Wuhltt, Drroro.
446-1111!\. 127 3rd. Avo. Qa~ G~~~~antlllll prompt ..,.... tor
llpollo,""
oH makll, · T1it Wuhlr

0 four

I

•••,.illi

tAM I

- - - - - - 141te4 ~r CLAY •. I'OUAN

8:00 ~ II &lt;II (J) D IIDl 1121•
1121 Newo
(!) And~ Orilfitll
CD Club Conntct
Reading Rllnbow Stereo.

17,000 111111, Air,
lied
11,000. 114-2111-UOs.
.
1111 IIUZU PU S3,11S; 11111
~ 1-10 P.U. 13,1115: 1111
FFordord RF·160, P.~ 1 12.1118: 1181
1n1ar "" 14 '116· 1W
Chivy 1-10,
n~lil: 1181
Chivy 1-10 Pu, 11,111; 1181
GIIC Jl11my llllzor, 13,tH; 111$
Chivy 9-10, PU, $1,111; 1112
Dodp Rampago, PU, 11,41~
:::..:'::4r::.. ~hway 1111,

Lote, rent1l1, ,_,..., ..~. Call

PUUlll

EVENING

.

••••

S(Q\\~~-~~~s·

TilT MILT

TUE., SEPT. 17 •

1tr7 Nl•- 4,4, black, tow
milll, llu pa-lol 114-

46

Household
GoOds

Television
Viewing

1117 l'onl Rongor, 4 cyl, f

SlM!IIng IOOmO with CGOkJng.
Alao l,.llor opaee. All--upa.
Call aftor 2:00 p.m., 804-77111151, Mloon WV.

51

c.....

487'1 1100

=-=~·MOOG, 114-~
1NI~S.10, l!oiKIII 111111. •
1111111 4 · lnciK nally Wllllt..
1~24 a, i04-e75-114S. .

Room• tor rent ..... or month.

2br Unlurnlohod Wllh Slova.
Dopoolt Rotarancu, In Gol·

Flatwoodl Aru, Pomeroy. 2 Ohio. All UIIIIIIH Paid. 614-381Story Home. NIW Khchen, 1141.
Balhroom l Carpallng. 17 2 BR apl. 122 Fourlh
Acrn. 114-44W351.
Avo.$275/mo. $200 dop. Wolor
GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1 lncludod. 614-441-G426 !1-4
!U Ropalrl. Dollnquonl Tu wMkdaya.
Proparlr· Aeponenlona. Your BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Area 11 805-tl2.aooo. Ex1. GH· BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
11»11 For Currlnl Ropo Llol.
ESTATES, 531 ·~ackoon Plko
HOUSE FOR FREEII Muot move from $112/mo. Walk lo ahop l
oH lol In Mlddlaport. Fill In movlu. Caiii14-441·2SI8. EOH.
wllllniA. Sind rnume P.O. lox baMment, 1Md 1nd etraw. Mull Compllltly Fumlollld Smoll
algn conlractl 2-BR, Large LA, HoUH, No Pell, Yard, Plua
120, Polnl Ploaanl, WV 21550.
DR, lalh, hoa now root and gut·
T.V. REPAIR, hlll·llmo, ox- ter, new copper and PVC plumD- Ulllllloo. 5235/mo. 114-44H338.
padoncod only, pay -labia Ing, nM4 eome work. You pay Cottage, good tor 1, carpeted,

,_cy,OH
IIIII 111M• - - · · -PIIII
T&amp;LEMARKITING
trem your
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Sentlnei-Pa

1171 lnl-lloMI Tra..ocar I

Merchandis e

614-44&amp;-2418.
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Wanted to Do

17~5800.

Garage loll, nlct clolhlng,

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

45

Houses for Rent

llpolla.

TrM Wllh Alol 01 Qulnco On h. No experience nec:entry.
$'11.501hr. For Information, call1·
You Pick. 114-446-3722.
White mother C•t, 4 while I 1

The Dall

ADI,rtmlllll Par Alnl, 114-44fliZ!·.

1052.

Dachshund,

Puppln to giveaway. 1783
Bulavllle Pike.
Tur down old wood two etory
house tor materlalt, muet clun
up, 30-4-773-5718.

72 Trucks for Sale

114-112·1117'11. .
Trallor Spoco For Rani: 114-441~

Rentals

41

Mlnl1tura

KIT 'N' CARLVLE® by Larry Wright

Apanment
for Rent

I"'HOMble

rHirlcllono. Complela lntonnalion mal'" on ,.quoll. 304-1755253. John D. Gorloch, no
llngll-wldo lrallero, ple111.
1·vacant 101 In lllddllporl oil
ulllllloo ond 1-atoraa• building,
114-1192-2G07.
Morcor Bonom Sub-dlvlolon,
one acn 1011, Rt. 2 frontage,
p~co roducad, clly walar, 304·
Slt-2331.
O.J. Wlhho Road, 2 Acru
Woodin Building Lol, R11dy To
Build On. Roalrlclod. $7,100.
114-241-11111.

Slngltl, P. 0 . Box 5848, Athen1,

Homol614-446-2316.
Kittens,
LIHer Traln.c:t To Good

44

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

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51 Senllblo
52 Fluid
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53 Join
.
55 Dinger colqr
56 All About ..-.

1121 Newa
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(!) Ho1 or Not? The 0101111

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of the leading proponents
and opponents of lha
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "No people ever yel benefited by riches II tltti.ll&lt;
prosperity corrupted their 11ir1ue ." (I

Theodore Roosevelt .

1991 by NEA.. Inc

----------~~--------------------~---· ----------~·!~-~·~"="

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�1\Jesday, September 17, 1991 ;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

RLC honors
its pastors

·Bristol-Myers removing heart
medication from market
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) - A
heart drug that has been linked to
startling death rates in patients
being treated fo r mild irreg ular
heartbeats will be withdrawn from
the mark et in three month s. its
maker said today.
Encain ide hydrochloride, marketed by Bristol-Myers Squibb Co.
under the trade name Enka1d, will
be taken off the market Dec. 16,
said Bristol Laboratories, a division
of New York·b~d Bristol-Myers.
The decision was based on con tinuing uncertainty about the implications of a government study on
drugs that are used to suppress cardiac arrhythmia and because alternative therapies are now available.
it said.
Federal official s put tighter
restrictions on the drugs in 1989.
The National Institutes of
Health conducted a study to determine the effectiveness of Enkaid,
3-M Riker's Tambocor and Du

Pont's Ethmozine in lessening the
risk of sudden cardiac death s
among patients who had survived
heart attacks and had irregular
heartbeats that weren't life-threatening.
A study by the National Heart,
Lung and Blood In stitute later
determined that death was almost
twice as frequent among tho~ who
took the drugs as among those who
took a placebo.
" It is essential that patients not
discontinue medication on their
own but that they consult their
physician," said Dr. E.J. Fox, vice
president of Bristol Laboratories'
medical department.
Officials at Bristol Laboratories
sa id th e reasons for the high er
dea th rates continue to confound
medical authorities.
Enkaid was removed from the
trial in April 1989 and since then
has been approved for use only by
patients with irregular heartbeats

that were life-threatening.
Fox sai d some doctors may
determine that cenain patients with
life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias should co ntinu e to use
Enlcaid.
·
"For such patients, Bristol Laboratories will continue to provide
Enkaid through their physicians,"
Fox said.
The company will provide the
medication at no cost to eligible
patients being treated for lifethreatening conditions as of Sept.
16. 199l , thecompany said.
For patients whose doctors discontinue Enkaid therapy, Bristol
Laboratories is establishing a reimbursement program that will enable
them to return the unu~d portions
of their prescriptions.
Enkaid was approved for marketing by the U.S. Food and Drog
Administrmion in December 1986
and was first available for prescription in April 1987.

The Rejoicing Life Church in
Middleport honored its pastors
recently with a special service for
Pastor Appreciation Day.
Special recognition was giveq to
Senior Pastor Michael and JoAnn
Pangia and Assistant Pastor
Lawrence and Beuy Foreman.
Pastor Pangio and his wife,
JoAnn, have been with Rejoicing
Life for over eight years and both
are ordained through Open Bible
Standard Churches.
Pa~tor Pangia has made two
trips to Nicaragua in the past year
and is currently planning to return
in early November
to. conduct
a
'
.
.
pastors trammg semmar m conjunction with 700 Club Ministries.
He will be meeting with the president of Nicaragua.
JoAnn Pangio is actively
involved as a teacher and administrator of Rejoicing Life Christian
School in Middlepon.
The Pangios reside in Syracuse
with their three children, Jason, 13;
Aaron. II: and Rachel, 10.
Associate Pas tor Law rence
Foreman and his wife, Belly, reside
in Mason, W.Va. They have been
at Rejoicing Life since its beginning in 1980. The Foreman s, who
have been instrumental in the
church's beginning and development, are in charge of the counseling and visitation ministries at the
church.
They have four children, Terry
Foreman, Colonial Beach, Va.;
Michael Foreman. Charleston,
W.Va.; Thomas Foreman, Newark;
and Robin RobertS , Glenville,
W.Va. They also have 13 grandchildren.

PASTOR LAWRENCE
and DEITY FOREMAN

Ohio Lottery
Hoople likes
osu by 10

6-0;7-S
,
:

scheduled to be destroyed. The bear was given a
reprieve when the American Society for t!Je Pre·
vention of Cruelty to Animals Animalport in
New York found a home for her at the refuge.
(AP)

BEARING IT UP • Masha settles into a tub of
water at the Wildlife Waystation near Los Ange·
les Monday. The 14-year·old brown bear per·
formed for an East Coast-based circus when she
bit her trainer several months ago and was

Schuller returns home

Handling conflict creatively
Cindy S. Oliveri

tangle. The easiest way to avoid a
conflict is by not entering into it.
Some of the most uncomfonable Concede to the differing point of
times in our lives are those when view, or let the situation pass withwe find ourselves in conflict with out comment Then forget it; let it
our family members, friends and/or pass like water off a duck's back.
coworkers. Words said during the
In many cases improved comheat of a controversy may have munication and a venting of emolong lasting effects on relation- tions will not change the reality of
ships.
conflict. Then, try compromiseWhen personal accusations are for example, "I can understand
made against you resist the natural your feelings, I will .... if you
instinct to deny charges and defend will .... ". Through such contracting
yourself. The following alternatives each gives up something in return
offer creative ways to handle with · for the other's support. . Both parconflict
ties "win" and a "win/lo~" battle is
When criticized, pause a minute, avoided. Compromise recognizes
collect yourself, thank the attacker that conflict is not all one-sided.
for his or her criticism and then
Another form of compromi~ is
tum the issue back to the attacker mutually agreeing to give a panicufor ~sitive suggestions; for e~am· lar solution/proposal a trial run.
pie 'Thanks for bringing that to my With such a compromise, it is
attention . What do you think essential, however, that agreement
should be done?" This comment is is reached before you start as to
sure to surprise the other person, how the trial will be evaluated.
and may open up a great opponuniThe next time you get into a
ty for discussion. .
possible conflict situation, give one
It takes two to tango and two to of these altemati ves a try.

Georgia's abortion law for
mznors takes effect Monday
ATLANTA (AP) - Beginning
today, Georgia teen-agers under
age 18 are required to notify a parent or guardian before having an
abonion, but they don 't need anyone's permission.
The law, which was twice
declared unconstitutional before
passing legal muster, is considered
one of the most liberal in the South.
Every other Southern state requires
parental permission.
The Georgia law requires that
minors provide a note from a parent or guardian saying he or she is
aware of the abonion. The doctor
or abortion clinic is not required to
verifv the note.
The law also can be satisfied by
the doctor calling the parent or
mailing a letter.
State officials say about 9,000
teen-agers have abortions in Georgia each year. Abonion opponents
hope the law will lower that number, but they acknowledge it will
be hard to enforce.
"In reality, it's a very weak
Jaw,'' said Sheila Mallon, a
spokeswoman for Georgia Right to
Life, an anti-abortion group.
Enforcement would take "an
incredible policing effort," said

Clayton County Solicitor Keith
Martin.
Abortion rights advocates say
the statute will lead angry parents
to throw pregnant teen-agers out of
their homes, and may prompt suicides.

ORANGE, Calif. (AP) - The
Rev. Robert Schuller, who underwent emergency surgery to stop
cerebral bleeding, will need several
months of rest and therapy but
eventually "should be virtually as
good as new," a doctor said.
The evangelist, host of the
·'Hour of Power'' television program, returned to Los Angeles on
Monday, his 65th birthday. He
arrived from Amsterdam, where he
was hospitalized for two weeks.
Schuller will remain in the University of California, Irvine Medi cal Center in Orange for a few days
and will need up to 12 weeks of
recuperation, said Dr. Ronald
Young, chief of neurosurgery.
Schuller has some trouble
''finding the right word, finding the
right thought" as a normal consequence of surgery, but will undergo
speech and physical therapy.
Young said Monday.
"I would expect that within a
reasonable period, several months,
that he should be virtually as good
as new," he said.
Schuller underwent surgery
Sept. 2 after suffering a hemorrhage during a stopover in the
Netherlands. A blood clot was
removed from his brain, but later
bleeding forced a second operation.
Doctors said he banged his head
getting into a car in Amsterdam,
which could have triggered the
hemorrhage.

Catfish Festival
Sallabration!!
SAVE

20°/o

OFF

REGULAR PRICE

@.

CANNON.
KITCHEN and BATH TOWELS
THURS., SEPT. 19 IHRU SAl., SEPT. 21

Naming Graceland
"Graceland," Elvis Presley' s
estatt in Memphis, Tenn., is named
after Grace Toof, a woman who
was not even a relation of "The
King." Presley purchased the
famous piece of property from previous owner Ruth Brown, who had
named it for her Aunt Grace.

'·

107 MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT

•

PASTOR MICHAEL
and ~OANN PANGIO

She~

Not Your Typical Banker

But Peoples Choice isn't your typical bank club. Our members have
all the ad,•antages of a first-class travel club at a fraction of the cost.
And our Peoples Choice Coordinator, Mary Fowler, has over six years
of experience in the travel industry, making her the perfect "choice"
to plan and escort each and every trip.
Of course, Peoples Choice is much more than just a tral'el club.
Here's a list of the benefits that come H'ith your free membership:
PEOPLES CHOICE
Group Travel
Social Events
Free Luggage Handling
Free Travelers Insurance
Travelers Checks With No Issue Charge
Free Quarterly Newsletter
Peoples Bank Visa or MasterCard
with No Annual Fee

flPLES

!flDtee

PEOPLES CHOICE CHECKING
Free Checks
Interest Paid on Balances Over $100
No Monthly Service Charges
on Balances Over $100
Free Accident Insurance
Free Jeanie Card
Free Credit Card Registraton
And More To Be Announced

Page6

;.
·
;
:.
;
•.\
)
,
~

Vol. 42, No. 95
Copyrighted 1991

2 Sections, 14

.
:
,
:

:
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:
:
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·

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Seek renewal
levy for Meigs
TB clinic
Among the se rvi ces offered
A .50 mill ta~ levy for the
Meigs County Tuberculosis Clinic through the clinic are:
-Tuberculin sldn testing, moniwill be voted on by Meigs Countians when they go to the polls on toring of all Meigs County schools
(1.493 skin tests were administered
Nov. 5.
1
The levy is a renewal, reminded in the school system this past year,
Joan Tewksbary , tuberculosi s including Headstan).
-C hest x-rays for all positive
nurse, who went on to point out
that all services provided through reactors.
-Laboratory procedures as needthe clinic are free to any resident
regardless of income. Mrs. Tewks- ed.
-Medical evaluation by a qualibary stressed that passage of the
fied
chest clinician.
levy is needed in order to keep the
-All
tub erculo sis drugs as
clinic functioning at its current
were not avail·
mini-mart were destroyed. Details of the
UNEXPECTED DRIVE-THRU- Gas Plus in Mason received
ordered
by
the chest clinician or the
level.
able at presstime. Among the omcers investigating the 10:45 p.m.
an unexpected customer at closing time Tuesday evening, when a
patient's
private
physician .
"The
open
doors
of
the
Tubercuoccurrence were Mason Patrolman Mark Skaggs, Mason County
vehicle decided to just "pull in" to the counter. The hit-and-run
-Home
visits.
losis
Clinic
are
a
protection
for
Sherifrs Department Sgt. D.L. Pearson, and New Haven Chief
driver, according to witnesses, came crashing through the front
-D isc harge clinic visit for the
every home in Meigs County," ·!he
Paul D. Hesson, Assistant Chief Jeff Fields, and Reser.ve Patroldoors, then backed up and sped away. An employee, her husband,
patient
at the termination of the
nurse said in emphasizing that
man Sean Bumgarner.
and one customer escaped in.iury, but stock and shelves in the
treatment,
to discuss the informawhile tuberculosis cannot be eradi tion
regarding
the diseases, the
cated, it can be controlled. "The
treatment
and
recommendation
for
clinic is dedicated to the ta sk of
preventing the spread of tuberculo- the future.
-Assis tance for patient's dissis through prompt treatment to
those with active disease," she con- playing symptoms of other respiratory diseases such as coal workers
tinued.
pncumonconiosis
(black lun g),
An estimated 16 million persons
bronchiectasis,
pneuemphysema.
m thi s country arc infected with
monia,
and
other
respiratory
distubercle bacilli and carry a lifecases.
long risk of devclopin~ tuberculoCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Education and literature on
sis, Mrs. Tewksbary potnted out.
Private consultants have recom tuberculosis.
mended quick legislative action
that would speed the overhaul of
the Bureau of Workers ' Compensation.
The recommendations revealed
Tuesday by McKinsey and Co.
would allow the bureau to use private companies and techniques
practiced in private business.
The bureau's administrators
have begun a reorganization. The
consultant's suggestions are aimed
at speeding the process and making
it more effective.
McKinsey estimated its rccomDepartment of Development for funds to purDEVELOPMENT SITE • The site of the old
mendations would incre~ operatchase the structure, tear it down, and build
Betsy Ross building, abandoned many years ago,
ing costs by $90 million annually
houses.
may be developed for low income housing. Mid·
but projected improvements would
dleport Village has applied throu~h the Ohio
save 10 times that amount and curb
..
increases in insurance and operating fees that employers pay.
Unless reorganization is swift,
inefficiencies will cause the system
to be operating $700 million a year
in arrears by the year 2000, without
major rate increases.
Workers' Compensation is seck·
explained, is- particularly designed ing a company to install and operMiddleport Village has applied purchase price.
Mrs. Trussell explained that if to aid single parent households, ate an integrated computer system.
to the OhiO Department of DevelPatrick G. Mihm, chief execuopment for funding to purch~ the the funding is approved that it low income households, and house·
tive officer and administrator for
old Betsy Ross building on South means that to qualtfying families holds now occupying rental units.
Income limits will follow the bureau, said requests arc being
Second, to raze the building, devel- the lot will be free, the $5,000 will
FmHA
guidelines to qualify. sent this week to two companies.
take
care
of
the
down
payment,
and
op the lots, and build eight houses
Dependable
income, limited debt Officials said the bureau's computthe
balance
of
the
cost
can
be
there to be sold to low-income famload,
and
good
credit history are er staff has all it can do to operate
financed
through
the
Farmers
ilies.
required, it was pointed out
its current" systems.
According to Mayor Fred Hoff- Home Administration.
Families who feel they qualify
As a part of the grant applicaThe bureau is setting up a ca~
man and Jean Trussell, housing
specialist, the project if funded will tion, a market swvey is needed to and are interested in purchasing management system for handling
HEADSTART PHYSICALS • As a part of the annual Head
provide assistance to low mco~e determine how many families one of the new homes. if the pro- claims to reduce backlogs. It now
Start
program, physicals are given to each of the children \l•hen
families to purchase new housmg would want to participate in a gram is funded, arc asked to con- has 570,000 unpaid medical bills
they
enroll.
Included as a part of the physical is a tuberculosis lest .
by offering a lot .grant as well as housing purchase program such as tact Mrs. Russell at Middleport Vil- valued at $90 million. It can taXc
Here
five
year
old Amber Will gets her tesl from Joan Tewksbary,
lage Hall, 992-6782.
up to six months for initial payequity assistance tn the amount of is proposed.
R.
N.
tuberculosis
clinic nurse.
The pro~ram, Mrs. Trussell
ments to be made for injury claims.
$5,000 to be applied toward the

Aid sought
to overhaul
state agency

Drug charges against Robson dismissed

~PEOPLES BANK
POINT PLEASANT
675-ll2l

MASON
773-5514

MEMBEDR F.D.I.C.

5th Street
NEW IIAVEN
882-2135

@

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL OF COs "'""IRAS. l'i'.-n;

,

.

l

Middleport seeks funds to buy
Betsy Ross building for project

People• Choice. Choice financial benf!fit• and ehoiee truel arJWI'rtunil~• fnr people 50 and o""'· To be efi«iblc,
lfn:mbu• muat maintain allO,OOO miniW~um halsnce in a Peoplct Rani!; 1 uinp account, CO, IRA, or any combination tMreof.

2nd Street

Pages 25 cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 18, 1991

For information,
itinerary or reservations,
call Mary Fowler at (304) 675-1121.

2212 Jackoon Avenue

Low tonight in mid-50s.
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Thursday, high In mid-60s.

'

News notes
Marni Nixon dubbed the singing
for Deborah Kerr, Audrey Hepburn
and Natalie Wood in the movies
"The King and I,'· "Mv Fair
Lady" and "West Side Story,"
respectively.
The Flemings of nonhero Belgium speak Dutch, while French is
the language of the Walloons in the
south. The difference has been a
pere11nial source of antagonism
between the two groups.

Pick 3:606
Pick 4: 6348
Cards : 3-H, 8-C

CONSTITUTION WEEK • Tills week commemorates the Signing of the Constitution of the
United States. Pomeroy Mayor Rlcllard Seyler
signed a document on Tuesday declaring Consti·
lotion Week in the village, The w~k provides an
QIPOrtunity for all Americans to recall tile p

.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The question of whether or not
the address of an alleged confiden·
tial informant should have been
revealed is the reasoning behind
the dismissal of a Meigs County
drug case.
The charge of aggravated trafficking in cocaine against Danny
Robson was dismissed by entry on
Tuesday by Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W.
Crow III. The case was dismissed
on record on Friday, after Story
again refused to reveal an alleged
informant's address, and only after
prospective jurors had appeared for
service in the Roboon trial.
In his entry, Crow states that he
regrets the dismissal, but states that
Prosecutor Steven L. Story's "total
disre~ard for the orders of the
court' left him no alternative.
The issue at hand revolves
around the address of an alleged
confidential inform ant witness
Crow refers to as a "government

witness".
achivements of tills country's Founders. Pic·
The name of that witness ,
lured with Mayor Seyler is.June Ashley of the
to Crow, was known to
according
Return Jonathan Mel~ Chapter, Daughters of
the
defendant
and others.
the A~erican Re":'olulton. The D.A.R. urges all •
merely ordered the
"The
Court
Amencans to .be worthy of the Constitution's
' Prosecuting Attorney to permit
protection.

defense counsel to interview a
potential witness to determ inc
whether or not he could be a wit-

ne ss for the defendant," Crow' s
entry state s. "The Prosecuting
Continued on page 3

Fifth annual Middleport
Car Show set Saturday
About 150 cars are expected to 1974; ·special interest, convertible
participate in the Fifth Annual street rod through 1934, street rod '
Middlepon Car Show to be staged 1935 through 1948, street machine'
Saturday in Middleport in conjunc- 1949 through 1962, street machine:
1963 through 1974; street machine
tion with the Catfish Festival.
Duane Weber, show chairman, 1975 through 1986; mini -truck:
announced that the show will be truck, 2 wheel drive through 1980:
held this year in a new location, on truck, 2 wheel drive, 1981 and up·;
South Thud Avenue at Tri-County tru ck, 4 wheel drive; corvette
Ford. Cars will be displayed on through 1974, corvette, 1975 and
both the lot of the dealersh ip, as up, and pro streeVdrag car.
The special trophie s arc best
well as in the street which will be
closed from Main to Lincoln for pain, best engine, best interior, best
GM, best Ford, best Mopar, long
the day.
· Cars will be registered from 9 dtslance.
A four foot "Best of Show" troa.rri. to 12 noon. The fee is $7.
Two trophies will be awarded in phy will be awarded, and there will
each of 20 classes along with seven be a 50-50 drawing, dash plaques
and door pmcs. A portion of the
special trophies.
The classes are Production proceeds will be awarded to local
through 1948, production, 1949 charities.
Additional information on the
through 1962; production, 1963
through 1974; production, 1975 show may be obtained by calling
through 1986; new car class. 1987 Weber at 992-3394 or 742·2979 or
and up; muscle car, 1963 through Craig Venoy a!.-992-6507.

'
~

'I
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        </elementContainer>
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    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35095">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35094">
              <text>September 17, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3734">
      <name>dodderer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="601">
      <name>grimm</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
