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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Red skins

Pick 3:
229
Pick 4:
3029

humble

Cowboys

Super Lotto:
9-16-34-37-45-47

Low tonight In mld·SOs, partly
cloudy. Wednesday, hlgb In 80s.

Kicker:

PageS

854698

Vol. 44, NO. 92

1 Sac:tion. 10 Pagee '35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. r..wapaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 7, 1993

Multimedia Inc.

Truck of murder·ed
man found in Florida

PERFORMING • Evan Wiseman plays his keyboard for bis borne town at the Rutland
Street Festival Saturday evening. ·

Festival brings
RutlandVFD

into Sugar Run, she said. However,
B.J. Smith.
By staff reports
the water from that section of the
"If
no
agreement
is
reached,
we
The United States Environmenmine has low iron and Ph levels,
will
comply,"
said
Siqith.
"Howevtal Protection Agency Monday
·
the eompany maintains.
.
er,
we
hope
the
U:S.
EPA
considgave SouthemOhio Coal Company
The order will not affect 5,000
ers
..
.
the
improvements
made
to
until midnight tonight to comply
gallons
of water per minute that is
with an order to stop pumping protect the streams and the minimal
being
puJllped
into Parker Run
untreated water from Meigs Mine environmental effects of the current
because
it!
being
fully treated, she
31 into Sugar Run, a tributary of release."
said.
Some aquatic life is starting to
Raccoon Creek.
To date, the company has
Company officials are continu- return to the affected streams, she
removed
approximately 800 miling to meet with U.S. EPA officials said.
lion
gallons
of water from the
Some 2,000 gallons of water per
in an attempt to extend the deadflooded
mine
since
pumping began
line, said company spokeswoman minute is being pumped, untreated,
on July 30, she said.

RUTLAND PRINCE AND PRINCESS • Pictured are the Rut·
land Street Festival Prince Cassidy Wilford and Princess Emily
Davis.
Davidson who took second place
with a cake decorated like an angel.
The winning cakes and pies
were later auctioned off. The first
place pie and the first place cake
were bought by the Burchfield
Funeral Home of Rutland.

Marjorie Davis, president of the
Rutland Volunteer Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary said the proceeds
from the event will go towards the
purchase of a new truck for the
department and the expansion of
the station.

Picnics, parades,jestivals mark Labor Day
nobody won the $1 million up for
grabs in a charity golf contesl
Labor Day messages from a.
Catholic leader and unions called
for health care reform and equal
employment opportunities.
Cincinnati police reported few
problems at the fueworks display.

About 25 people were arrested on
alcohol-related charges, and one
assault on an officer was reported.
Rain fell across northern Ohio,
where highs Monday were in the
60s and low 70s , th e National·
Weather Service said. Highs were
in the upper 70s and low 80s across
central and southern Ohio.
Rain delayed the final program
of the three-day Cleveland National
Air Show by 40 minutes.
~Vomanjailedfor
The show at Burke Lakefront
Airport
included stunt planes, an
A Pomeroy woman was jailed in Gallia County early Sunday
appearance
by the Air Force
morning after she was taken to the sheriffs Office by the GalliaStealth
F-117
fighter, the Army's
Meigs Past of the State Highway Patrol for driving under the influGolden
Parachute
team and the
ence, authorities reported.
Navy's
Blue
Angels.
Laura M. Haley, 24, 17 Coal St., Pomeroy, was jailed for DUI,
No one won shot a hole in one
driving under suspension, left of center, possession of drugs and no
at
a
golf course in Kettering to win
seat belt. She was also jailed on a Meigs County Court bench warSl
million.
Thirty-five golfers paid
rant for failure to appear.
$10 for 10 shots each in the contest
that raised about $29,000 for Dayton 's Ronald McDonald House.
A Pomeroy man is being held in the Middleport Jail pending two
Brad Middlebrooks of Kettercharges each of breaking and entering and theft.
ing, an amateur shooting from 150
Ronnie Coats, 35, of Union Avenue, was observed Satwday by
yards away, won $5,000 for comLt. James Stacy at approximately 6:36 a.m. pu~hing a shopping cart
ing closest - 9 feet 1 inch away
containin~ a fax machine, an answering machme and a touch tone
from the hole.
phone, srud Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald Roughl
Cleveland Catholic Bishop
Upon investigation, it was learned that Coats alle~edly .stole the
Anthony M. Pilla said the United
items from a vehicle owned by Banks Construction and from
States should work to create a more
Williams and Associates Insurance on Mechanic Street.
just economy and society.
Coats may face arraignment on the charges this afternoon in
•'We. all need. to develop a new
Meigs County Court.
vision of our role in the U.S. economy of the future," said Pilla, the
church's
second' ranking
spokesman in the United States as
The Pomeroy Village Council will meet tonight in regular sesvice president of the National Consion at 7:30p.m. in the Pomeroy Municipal Building.
ference of Catholic Bishops.
'
That vision , he said, should
" lead to more opportunities for
The Syracuse Board of Public Affairs will meet tonight at 7 p.m. • work and participation in the
nation's economic life, especially
in council chambers. Village offices will be closed Thursday and
by the unemployed, the underem·
Friday.
Continued on page 3

By The Associated Press
An estimated 560,000 people
watched fireworks above the Ohio
River as Cincinnati's Riverfest
ended. Elsewhere in Ohio, resi dents attended picnics, parades and
an air show to celebrate Labor Day.
In suburban Dayton on Monday,

where the truck was spotted.
The license plate that was on the
truck had been reponed stolen from
Pamela G. Hart of Leon Friday, according to Mason County Chief
Deputy George Plants.
Plants said the sheriff's dq)art~e~t received a teletype from Vu~~a Saturday that a white male
w1th long blonde hair had at·
tempted to sell Laudermilt's stolen
gun. Allegedly after the shop owner
got the serial number off the gun
the man took ihe gun and left
quickly.
LaUdermilt's body was found
Thursday morning in a dry
creekbed beside the McClintic
Wildlife Management Aiea's public
shooting range. He had been shot
six times either right before or right
after dark Wednesday.
Funeral services for Laudermilt
were held Sunday.

Meigs 31 pumPing deadline
extended until midnight

in $650for
The third Rutland Street Festival
held Saturday at the station raised
about $650 for the Rutland Volunteer Fire Departmenl
Attendants at the Festival were
treated thrl)u~hout the day to a
number of acuvities and entertain·
ment including the Midnight Clog- ·
gers, the .Big Bend Cloggers, performers Dee and Dallas and Evan
Wiseman.
A Prince, Princess and Little
Miss were also crowned. Princess
Emily Davis, daughter of Mike and
S he~ry Davis, received the most
votes by going door-to-door and
collecting $129 . Votes were a
penny a piece. Cassidy Wilford
was crowned prince and Jamitha
Wilford was crowned Little Miss.
The Prince and the Little Miss are
the children of Ray and Kimberly
Wilford.
There was also a pie baking and
cake decorating contest. Winners in
the pie baking contest were Lori
Barnes who took fust place with a
peach pie and second place with an
apple pie and Shirley Miller who
took third place with an apple pie.
Winners in the cake decorating
contest were Sharon Riffle who
took fust place with a cake decorated like a pumpkin and Wilma

The missing truck of a murdered route to Florida and are scheduled
Mason man has been found in · to question Francisco upon their arFlorida and the occupant of the rival. Florida authorities are
vehicle is in· custody, according to processing the truck.
officials.
·
The 1985 Chevrolet S-10 truck,
Investigator Chuck Brannan of registered to Laudermilt, was found
the Baker County, Florida, Sheriff's at an Exxon station, near MacDeparunent said David John Fran- Clenny, FL around 4 a.m. Monday,
according to Brannan. Francisco
c~o. 18, is in custod~ cruuged
wit!J ~ealing in stole'! proJ&gt;C:rtY and was in the truck when a deputy saw
resJSUng arrest w1th v1olence. the vehicle. A license check showed
Brannan said Francisco refused to the vehicle was stolen.
The deputy scuffled with Frangive an address when taken into
custody at approximately 6 p.m. c~o. tearing off his shirt. FranMonday. He is scheduled to appear c~o ran into a heavily wooded
before a Florida judge sometime area wearing only a pair of shorts.
today.
A search from the air and on the
It is not known at this time if . ground took place, Brannan said.
· FrancisCo was · spOtted walking
Francisco was involved in the actual shooting of Norman Ray on the railroad tracks near the area,
Brannan continued. He was taken
Laudermilt, 28, of Mason.
Mason County Sheriff Ernie into custody at approximately 6
Watterson and SgL G.L. Clark of p.m. while attempting to use the
the Point Pleasant Detachment· pay phone at the Exxon station
West Vuginia State Police are en-

,.o;---Locai ·Briefs ----.

Man cited for DUI after
striking ~ree, parked vehicle
An Albany man was cited for
driving under the influence, no
operator's license and failure to
control following an accident on
Bedford Township Road 232 Satur·
day night, the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol reported.
Steve W. Haning, 29, 7141
Wood Road was northbound when
he slid off the left side of the road
striking a tree and a parked vehicle.
The parked vehicle belonged to
Wayne M. Chase, Route 2, 38101
Chase Road, Albanr.
Haning's veh1cle sustained
mqderate, disabling damage and
was towed from the scene. Chase's
vehicle sustained moderate damage
and remained at the scene. No
injuries were reported.

left of center following an accident
on U.S. 33 in Bedford Township
Friday afternoon, the Patrol report·
cd.
William C. Dennison, 77, 3645
Pleasantville Road, was eastbound
when he lost control in a curve and
went left of center, striking
William M. Jones, 43, 31460 Pine
Grove Road, Racine.
Both vehicles sustained moderate damage and were driven from
the scene. No injuries were report·
cd.

Star Hall Road, Dexter, was eastbound when another vehicle, also
eastbound and following Hobbs,
struck him from behind and continued on.
Damage to Hobbs' vehicle was
listed as moderate and it was driven
from the scene. No injuries were
reported.

A Middleport man's vehicle
sustained light damage Saturday
after he went through the intersection of Salem Township Road 45
lind County Road 2 and struck an
A Dexter man was hit from embankment, the Patrol reported.
James P. McCloud, 34, 359
behind by an unknown driver in an
accident on State Route 124 in Front St., could not stop at the
Salem Township Friday morning, intersection. His vehicle was driven
from the scene. No injuries or citathe Patrol reported.
Jimmie L. Hobbs, 56, 2726'8 tions were reported.

A Rushville man was cited for

several charges

Man held pending charges

Pomeroy council meeting tonight
Public affairs board to meet

.~

PLACING LINE - Worken were busy late
last week lnstaUing a water Hne to tbe site or the
new Meigs Motel near Rock Springs. Here,
1\i.

backhoe ciperaJor Rick George puis tbe ftnlsblng
touches on a burled section·of tbe water line Friday afternoon near Willow Creek Road.
·
1\J.

�I

Tuesday, September 7, 1993

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DI:VOTZD TO 11R JIII'I'ERESTS OF 11R DIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
~ARGAREI'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

LEHEW
Controller

&lt;reoeral~anager

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wordi. All loners ~ subject to ediling and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned lerlers will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addnessing issues, not personalities.

Reassessing the Gulf War
..

By MIKE FEINSILBER
Associated Press Writer
WASIDNGTON- Before the fighting started, the hand-wringers held
forth. They foresaw awesome nwnbers of American casualties if it came
to war in the Persian Gulf against ''the fourth largest army in the world.''
Experts played out war scenarios on computezs. One predicted 10,000
· American dead and wounded. Another said casualties would range
'between 3,344 and 16,059. An antiwar group, the Center for Defense
Infonnation, foresaw 45,000.
Even Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf, the U.S. commander, predicted a
"tough fight" that could last as long as six months.
And at the end of the war, says military analyst John ~ueller, the victors were just as inaccurate in assessing what they had done.
He· says !he American military vastly overestimated the number of
Iraqis !hey had killed in two months of bombing and 100 hours of ground
war in 1991. Largely, he said, that is because they vastly overestimated
the size (to say nothing of the morale) of the army Saddam Hussein fielded in his invasion of KuwaiL
The Peritagon's position is that it does not know how many Iraqis died.
At one point after the war, it estimated 100,000, with an "error factor of
50 percent or more.' '
Schwarzkopf, saying he is "anti-body count," adamantly refuses to
speculate. But a few weeks after the war he, too, said "as many as
150,000" had died.
~ueller, a political scientist at the University of Rochester who studies
warmaldng, has wriuen an assessment of the Gulf War mathematics.
1n asserting that the U.S. challenge was Jess than first thought, he is not
beliuting the accomplishments of the allied coalition.
Instead. he thinks !he Persian Gulf buildup offers a useful and hopeful
lesson thai can apply to the kind of police missions that could be the chief
role of the American military in the post-Cold War era.
The lesson: "Peace-keeping and peace-enforcing is most likely to be
effective when it is carried out by hUge numbers of troOps, not by small
numbers of artful political manipulators as in so many UN missions. The
technique may cost more money, but the Gulf War experience suggests it
can very substantially save lives on all sides.''
As to how he decided that Iraqi casualties were remarkably low (as
were allied losses), ~ueller notes that only five of the 63,948 prisoners in
U.S. custody died in captivity from combat injuries. From medical
reports, he estimates !hat fewer than 1,500 prisoners suffered from bante
wounds. Since !he nonnal ratio of wounded to killed in modem war is
three to one, this suggests a low kill counl
He notes, too, that U.S. soldiers talked of seeing tens or scores of Iraqi
bodies, not thousands. The Geneva Convention required the Pentagon to
report how many bodies of Iraqi combatants were buiied by U.S. forces
"after the war. It reported111nly 577.
In the air war, helicopters and loudspeakers bombarded the Iraqi forces
with messages saying, in effect, "Tonight we drop leaflets; tomorrow we
bomb; don't sleep in your tank" -advice Iraqi Soldiers took to heart.
As for the famous "highway of death" - the escape route north to
Iraq -it was only a few miles long and more of a highway of destruction
than death. The fleeing Iraqis realized the consequence of being caught in
the gridlock of retreat: most of them hightailed it from their vehicles.
Tbe high estimates of dead, Mueller said, arose from an exaggerated
estimate that Saddam had fielded an army of 540,000. In fact, it was probably 200,000, he said. No other number accommodates the estimates of
deserters, escapees, wounded and bodies.
Mueller is not alone in thinking !he toll was lower than initially advertised. John Heidenrich, a fanner Pentagon analyst, ~ cdncluded that the
number of Iraqi dead was I ,500. He said the chief lesson from !he prosecution of the Gulf War may be this: "Military effectiveness is not synonymous with human slaughter."
.
As wars go, Mueller said, this one must be "reckoned a remarkable
success." It punished aggression; clobbered Saddarn's army, which had
been a rogue force in the Mideast; undercut Saddam's plan to make nuclear weapons, and liberated Kuwait.
And "all this at remarkably little human cost either to the victor or to
the defeated."
(On the other hand, it failed to bring down Saddarn, triggered two civil
wars against him and caused vast, continuing suffering among Iraqis civilians.)
"The real achievement for U.S. combat forces in the Gulf War," said
Mueller, "may well be in the way they routed their pathetic and terrified,
but heavily armed, enemies without killing many of them."
EDITOR'S NOTE:
ington since 1968.

~ike

Feinsilber bas covered events in Wash-

Berry's World
NICE
POUCH!

Cool, dry weather forec~st next couple of days

OHIO Weather
Page-2:....The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
Tuesday, September 7, 1993 ·

Wednrsday, Sept. 8
Accu-Weather 0 forecast for

conditions and high 1emperarures

MICH.

A common hoop binds-House pork barrel
WASHINGTON- Retiring
Rep. Tim Penny, D-Minn., seems
tom over wbelher bipartisanship is
a blessing or a bane.
Last month, the 41-year-old
Penny announced that he was abandoQ)Jlg a promising political career
pastly because Congress had squandered a unique opportunity this
year "to dramatic8lly reduce !he
deficit in a bipartisan fashion.''
But in a subsequent interview
with·us, Penny painted a picture of
bipartisanship that almost gives
grullock a good name: Democrats
and Republicans lined up "shoulder to shoulder'' to protect each
other's pork-barrel projects. As !he
story of Steamtown USA illustrates, the sight of pork can tum the
most ardent deficit-hawk into a
chicken.
. Penny was rallying support in
July for an amendment by Rep.
Michael Andrews, D-Texas, !hat
would have slashed the $3.1 million earmarked for Stearntown next
year. Taxpayers have already

poured $66 million into SteamIOwn, which is located in Scranton,
Pa. It's touted as American's
national railroad museum, even

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
though at least 25 percent of its
steam engines were made in Canad
a. In addition, the United States
already has 217 other railroad
museums, which once prompted
the Smithsonian Institution's transportation curator to call Steamtown
' 'an inconsequential collection
(which) largely duplicates what can
be found elsewhere in better condilion." But what Steam town Jacks
in historical significance, it makes
up Corwith raw political muscle.
It sits in !he congressional district of powerful Rep. Joe McDade,

R-Pa., ihe ranking ·Republican on
the House Appropriatioos Committee. That's why Penny figured he
had some two-faced Republicans
on the run.
"Here was an example where
the Republicans were being absolute hypocrites because by and
large they were going ·to vote to
save Steam town," Penny told our
associate Ed Henry. "When it
carne to one of !heir own members,
they all rushed to the trough despite
their dailr, ravings against deficit
·
spending. '
But when Penny charged into
the House chamber for the vote, he
found an amazing spectacle playing
out at each set of the chamber's
doors. Prominent Democrats on the
Appropriations Committee were
''lined up" with committee Republicans "shoulder to shoulder - in
each case urging a vote for Steamtown.''
Penny says he was scandalized
to see Democratic leaders "urging
Democratic members to vote to

..

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

NASA

~Prae

I
I

•

•

save (Steamtown) so as not to;
embarrass Joe McDade." McDade·
is apparently very "bipartisan" in:
the help he renders Democrats on,
other issues.
" [ ·guess (McDade) doesn'~
raise a big fuss in the Appropria-·
lions Committee when Democrats:
wan~ pork for their home districts,",
explained Penny . " They helped
Joe McDade ilecause they expect in.
return ·he's going to help them."
Indeed, ·,only seven of the 37
Democrats on the House Appropriations Committee voted to derail
Steamtown's funding. That helped
kiU the amendment.
"It's not a big surprise that the
appropriators stick together on
these matters," said Penny. "This
proj~~Ct protects the time-honored
tradition wilhin the committee !hat
they take care of their own." But
despite Penny's understanding or
how the game works, he still finds
the Steamtown incident a symbo{
of what's wrong with Washington
and why he's personally fed up.
"That was really disheartening
to me to see that we couldn't even
gin up sufficient Democratic votes
to cancel a project in a Republican
district, when Republicans come to
the floor day after day to offer
amendments cutting Democratic
projects," he said. "I thought we
had the Republicans caught in a
classic case of hypocrisy and yet
we had Democratic leaders running
to the rescue of Republicans.''
The experience also Has Penny
wondering whether or not the runaway train of federal spending can
be slowed, even !hough he is one of
many in Congress who have called
for a,new round of spending cuts
this fall.
"Common sense tells you that if
you can't make the easy cuts you
will never make the tough cuts,"
said Penny. "If we can't cut the
more egregious examples of porlc
then it's no wonder we can't get up
the courage to cut entitlements,
big-ticket weapons systems or
other programs m the budget that
represent billions and billions or:
dollars."
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Will NAFTA be good for Americans?
The North American Free Trade
Agreement is:
I) The best job-creating lengine
for the United States since World
War ll.
2) A one-way ticket to economic
ruin for Americans and environmental degradation for North
America.
3) Bill Clinton's biggest political headache, tougher even than the
looming struggle to pass his healthcare package.
As of early September, !he only
obviously correct answer is (3). As
for the other two •. they are at the
heart of the debate about NAFTA.
Initialed by President Bush and the
leaders of Mexico and Canada a
year ago, and now fully supported
by President Clinton, it would
phase in the total elimination of tariff and other trade barriers between
the three countries over a 15-year
period. As envisioned, the North
American free trade zone would
link 360 million people in the
world's largest and most powerful
open markeL
Opponents and supporters alike
resort to oversimplifications- and
dubious conclusiOns, like the first
two choices above. Ross Perot
speaks of the "loud sucking
sound" of lost jobs. Pat Buchanan
has weighed in against the "leveraged buyout of American libe~."
The No. 2 and No. 3 rankmg
Democrats in the House are thus
far adamantly opposed to the
agreement as a sellout of American
interests.
On the other side, !he administration holds out the vista of hun-

dreds of thousands of new jobs
thanks to vastly increased exports
to Mexico. Major American corporations and business groups such as

Hodding Car.ter lll
the Chamber of Commerce are lobbying on NAFTA's behalf. Despite
Buchanan, a majority of House and
Senate Republicans seem likely to
vote yes.
Like some 250 mill ion other
Americans, I won't be voting on
th,e · issue in Congress, and like
most Americans, I've been worried
about what I hear and unsure about
whom io trust. After long reflection, however, I've come down as a
supporter. Most of the alleged
drawbacks of the agreement have
existed and would exist without it,
from American plants relocating to
Mexico to environmental ruination
associated with the industrial zones
along the Mexican side of the border. Approving NAFTA, on !he
other hand, would provide obvious
economic benefits to broad sectors
of the American economy while
actually reducing the incentives for
plant relocation to the south .
Thanks to the side agreements
recently negotiated with ~exico
and Canada, some rudimentary
tools for dealing.with environmental and labor practice abuses are
also provided, and they can be built
upon:
The U.S.-Canadian free trade
agreement approved several years
ago has already demonstrated the
validity of the tdea. While various
economic interests in each country

have been hurt by tariff- free competition from more efficient producers in the other, the overall
effect has been one of win-win.
But that was an agreement
between two nations with similar
economies and standards of living.
~exico is a developing country
whose average wages are roughly
one-seventh those of the United
States. Once there were no trade
barriers between the two nations, it
would seem only logical for American firms to stream southward,
since ~exico's low-wage industrial
workers have proved teachable and
highly productive.
This is an instance when common sense and reality diverge.
Under current conditions, Mexican
duties are roughly two to three
times higher on American exports
than American duties are on ~xi­
can exports. Under NAFTA, there
would eventually be no tariff barriers. Consequently, NAFTA would
.substantially reduce the economic
incentives to relocate in order to
tap the Mexican market.
Furthermor;e, it is simply wrong
to say that in the new international
economic order, industries are eternally on !he move in an insatiable
quest for ever-lower labor costs. If
that were true, all of Germany
would be a disindustrialized wasteland, since the average hourly cost
of an industrial worker !here is 70
percent higher !han in supposedly
high-wage America. (Japan's is
roughly 25 percent higher than
ours.) Worker productivity, easy
access to raw materials, transportation networks and numerous olher
factors are as important to deci-

sion·making about plant location as
wage levels. Otherwise, all of the
world's heavy industry would have
been in sub-Saharan Africa long
ago, paying 50 cents an hour.
Anyway, economic growth need
not be a zero-sum game, in which
someone else's success equals our
failure. A strengthened ~exican
economy is a net plus for the United States. Mexico is already our
second largest market for industrial
exports and third largest market
overall, behind only Canada and
Japan. Truly open economic borders, including greater industrialization in Mexico, would improve
that picture. Our heavy machinery
and other capital goods would be
central to Mexican industrial
growth, as they already are. Whatever jobs are lost over the 15-year
phase-in ofNAFTA would be more
than matched by new jobs in our
export industries.
The last 20 years have been
unkind to American workers so it
is no wonder that many are to'oking
the NAFTA gift horse in the
mouth . But this is one of those
defining moments when the country gets to decide something fundame~tal . NAFTA is a historic opportunity whose loss could, 20 years
down the road, make the '70s and
'80s look like a time of wine and.
roses . .
Hodding Carter III, former '
State Department spokesman '
and award-winning reporter, editor and publisher, is president o(
MainStreet, a Washington, D.C .based television production company.

A black lawyer defends the Klan
In 1958, Justice John Harlan, Michael J..owe - grand dragon of
speaking for !he Supreme Court in the Klan - who has pledged to go
I'lAACP vs. Alabama, ruled that to jail rather than give up the
the state of Alabama had no right names of those members. ("These
to demand the membership list of people could lose their jobs or busithe NAACP: "It is hardly a novel
perception that compelled disclosure of affiliation with groups
engaged . in advocacy may ... ncsses.")
expose these members to economic
A volunteer attorney from
reprisal, loss of employment and Galveston, Anthony Griffm, is hanthreat of physical coercion."
dling the case for the A&lt;l.U. He is
In 1993, the Texas Human . an experienced constitutional litiRights Commission has brought gator and has won some notable
suit to get the names of any mem- First Amendment and voting rights
bers of the Texas Knights of the cases. Griffm is also general counKlan who lived in the town of sel for the Texas NAACP. AccordVidor - or who may have been ing to the Houston Chronicle, the
there - · between last Sept. I and black lawyez told the grand dragon
Dec. 15. There have been attempts, that Ibis case "wasn't about race. It
by court order, to integrate a previ- wasn't about whether I like him or
ously all-white public housing unit he liked me. It's about the basic
in Vidor. The Texas Human Rights principle of his right to speak and
Commission wants to find out if organize.' •
the subsequent threats and other
I11 August, at a meeting of the
forms of intimidation against black NAACP state board in Galveston
reside nts were the work of the County, most of those present
Klan.
agreed with Raymond Scott, a Bap·
The American Civil Liberties tist minister and head of !he Port
Union of Texas is defending Arthur NAACP: "You can:t_~-

Nat Hentoff

sent the NAACP and the Klan at
the same time.''
One of those present told me
there were "more than a few ugly
moments." Anthony Griffm said to
the assembly that so far as he was
concerned, lhe issue was not debatable. Those critical of his stand
shouJd..remember that the leading
Supreme'Court case on this .question had been won by the NAACP.
If the NAACP
now to advocate that the state does have a rig~t
to take 1hose membership lists, he
said, that decision could one day
haunt them. (And indeed, Texas
had tried to get NAACP membership lists in the 1970s.) .
Answering demands that he
apologize for defending the Klan
Griffin said he would not. As fo;
the calls tlult he resign, he would
not do that either. If the forced
c~o~ came between sticking with
his ~trSt Amendment principles or
leavmg the NAACP, he would
leave.
In !he mi~ty. one of Griffin's
defenders, OScar Woods, president
9f the Dickinson-Bay Area

were

while the record low was 40 in
By The Associated Press
Unseasonably cool conditions 1988. Sunset tonight will be at 7:53
will prevail across Ohio at least p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
.
through Thursday, the National 7:06a.m.
Around the nation
Weather Service said. No rain is
The northern Plains felt a falllikely during that period.
·
Highs will remain in the 70s and like chill this morning as the passage of Labor Day marked the
lows in the 50s.
unofficial end of summer.
Some showers are possible on
Frost was expected across the
Friday, forecasters said.
Dakotas
and upper Michigan ,
The record-high temperature for
where
temperatures
dipped into the
this date at the Columbus weather
40s.
station was 98 degrees in 1939

Rain persisted today over the
Soulheast, the northern Appalachians and north~m New England.
A co ld front pushed into the
Northeast, and widespread thunderstorm s were expected. Highs in the
70s were forecast.
Most of the West was expecting
an01her sunny day with highs in the
80s, although thunderstonns could
pop up again from the central
Rockies to the central Plains. Oneinch hail fell Monday near

Cheye nne, Wyo.
Highs were forecast in the 60s
today around the Great Lakes, in
northern New England and along
the Wes t Coast; the 70s over th e
northern Rockies and across the
central Plains; the 80s in the South·
east; and the 90s in southern Flori·
da, Texas, Louisiana and the desert
Southwest
The high temperature for the
nation Monday was 109 degrees a1
Laughlin, Nev. '

Thousands cheer return of Marcos' body to Philippines
Cincinnati 78'

W. VA.

Ice
Vis Assocfalecl Pr~s Grapfw'csNet

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Cl1993Accu-Weather, Inc.

-----Weather----South Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy with the
low 55-60. Wednesday, partly
cLoudy. High near 80. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
.
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:

Fair on Thursday. Lows in the
50s. Highs in the 70s. A chance of
showers Friday. Lows 50-55. Highs
in upper 60s to mid-70s. Fair on
Saturday. Lows in upper 40s to low
50s. Highs in upper 60s to low 70s.

--Area deaths__...;..._
Clinton Donovan

Barbara Wilson

Barbara Jean Wilson, 40, Middlcport died Sunday, September 5,
1993 at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Born in Connellsville, Pa., on
October 29, 1952 to Johh M and
Bertha E. Bobbs Wilson, she was a
former nurse's aide. She was a
member of the Middleport Church
of the Nazarene and active with
local youth.
.
Survivors are sisters and b(Others-in-law, Iva Mae and Anthony
D' Auria, Connellsville, Pa. and
Beverly and Paxton Pickrell,
Mount Airy, Md.; brothers and sisters-in-law, Leroy and Eileen Wilson and Howard and Thelma Wilson, all of Monarch Pa. ; brother,
John Wilson, Monarch, Pa.; one
niece. four nephews, one great
niece; special friends, Shirley
Louise Thompson
Yoder and Mariano Weaver, both
Louise Thompson, 70, Middle- of Middleport.
Private services are being held
port, died Saturday, September 4,
1993 at her residence after an wday at Riverview Cemetery with
the Rev. Thomas McC,lung officialextended illness.
Born in ~iddleport on August in g. Arrange~ents are being han24, 1923 to the late John Clyde and. died by the Ftsher Funeral Home. )
Isabelle Winebrenner she was a
homemaker. She was a member of
the First Baptist Chwth in Middleport, Evangeline Chapter of the Wood Reunion
Order of Eastern Star, the Middl~­
The Wood family will have a
pori Garden Club and a veteran of reunion at the home of Virgil King ,
the U.S. Anny during World War 38858 Smith Street, Pomeroy, on
II.
September 12. There will be a picSurvivors are daughters and nic lunch at 12:30 p.m.
sons·in.Jaw, Na.ncy and Pat Hill ,
Pomeroy and Jonnie and Pat Kin- Carl reunion
ney of New Kent, Va.; sister.
Descendents of Emett and Lou
Dorothy Neutzling, Pomeroy; five Carl, Nan Frazier, Corbel~ Mertie,
gmndsons and three nieces.
Ales hire, Ed and Lena will hold a
She is preceded in death by her reunion on September II at Star
husband, Daniel Thompson.
Mill Park at 5 p.m. Please bring a
Services will be Saturday at I covered dish. Table service will be
p.m . at Fisher Funeral Home. Buri- provided.
al will peat Gravel Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call Saturday from Square dance
I 0 a.m. until the time of the service
There will be a round and
at the funeral home.
square dan ce at the Long Bottom
Community Building on September
II from 8 to 12 p.m. Music by
Whites Hill Band. Caller will be
Jim Carnahan. Refreshments and

Clinton Donovan, 69, died Sunday, Sept. 5, 1993, at his home in
Sperryville, Va.
Son of the late Amos and Leora
Donovan, he was born June 17,
I 924, in Lebanon Township and
was a retired Army veteran.
He is survived by his wife;
Carol of Sperryville and a daughter
and son-in-law of Germany. Also
surviving are sisters, Mae Smith
and Faye Wolfe of Pomeroy; a
brother-in-law, Alfred Wolfe of
Pomeroy; a sister-in-law, Betty
Donovan of Syracuse, and several
nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by
four brothers and four sisters.
Funeral services will be held in
Sperryville at-a later date.

LAOAG, Philippines (AP) llocano prayers and songs for the
To the cheers and sobbing of thou- dead.
sands, the body of Ferdinand MarVendors sold food and T-shirts
cos, who inspired both loathing and readinll "Marcos Mv Hero" and
adoration in 20 years as wesident,
was returned today for burial seven
years after he fled into exile.
His black-garbed widow Imelda
kissed the closed casket and wept
By The Associated Press
after a chartered jet brought the
It was dangerous Labor Day
body from Hawaii. The body was
weekend on Ohio's streets and
then taken by horse-drawn hearse
h1ghway. The State Highway Patrol
to the city's Roman Catholic cathe- said traffic accidents during the 78dral along 10 miles of ·crowd-lined
hour period killed 20 people. Four
roads.
accidents claims two lives apiece. .
A 74-year-old woman, Felicidad
The patrol counted fatalities
Faustino, walked the entire stretch.
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
"I would walk a thousand miles Monday.
more" she said. "I was born for,
The dead:
and I will die for, Marcos."
MONDAY
Others were even more devoted:
WARREN- Evelyn Cram, 85,
members of !he Alpha Omega cult, of Strulhers, in a two-vehicle acciwhich worships Marcos as a god.
dent on Ohio 5 in Trumbull Coun"My cause is God Almighty,"
ty.
said Emesto Ramirez. "With his
LANCASTER- Ronald C .
·return, all our suffering will end.''
Shahan, 35, of Lancaster, in a
Virtually every window along motorcycle accident on U.S. 33 in
the route was filled with people
viewing the cortege. About 500
people packed the cathedral for the
Continued from page 1
Mass, and thousands of others
jammed the courtyard outside.
played and poor of our communiAfter the Mass, the body was ty."'
taken 10 a black reviewing stand in
The Akron-based United Rubfront of the gleaming white provin- ber Workers union called for action
cia! capitol. It will lie there until on several social and economic
Wedne sday, when a torchlight fronts.
"We stiil !teed action on health
parade is to accompany the body to
Marcos ' hometown Batac , nine care, striker replacemeni, trade,
national industrial policy and other
miles away.
There he will be buried Friday issues," URW President Kenneth
L. Coss said.
.
in a mausoleum next to his family
Warren Davis, director of the
home. Marcos' mother Josefa, who
died in 1988, will be buried Thurs-. Cleveland-based Region 2 of the
day. Her body had been kept in a United Auto Workers, said the proposed North American Free Trade
refrigerated container until her son
Agreement should be defeated.
could come home.
"We cannot solve unemploy Despite his reputation as a carrupt dictato~. Marcos is reyered ment in America by sending jobs to
Mexico," he said. " NAFTA is a
among Ilocano-speakers of northdirect th reat to the ability of the
ern Luzon Island.
United States to control its own
Mourners blew a water buffalo
economic
destiny."
horn, an Ilocaqo rite signaling a
death. A woman in black smashed
a .clay po1 to drive away evil spirits.
All afternoon and evening peapte filed by the coffin, flanked by a
Units of the Meigs County
Philippine flag and the seal of the
president. A sound system blared Emergency ~edical Service
responded to 17 calls for assistance
during the Labor Day weekend.
Units responding included:
- II :50 a.m. Middlecake walks will be available. Cost portSaturday
to Overbrook Center for Cecil
is S5 per couple, $3 for single, $1
who was tran.sported to
for children under 12 and children Teaford
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 12:28
under 3 are free.
p.m. Middleport to Main Street for
Louise Thompson who was dead
Moore reunion
.
Dece nd ents of James C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moore will hold a
reunion September 12 at the Sutton
United Methodist Church on
Am Ele Power.................... 38 1/2
Racine-Basham Road. There will a
Ashland Oil... .................... .33 5/8
carry-in dinner at IZ:30 p.m. All
AT&amp;T................................. 62 118
relatives and friends are invited.
Bank One ........................... 41 1/8
Bob Evans ......................... 17 7/8
Woodmen cook-out
Charming Shop.................. 12 318
Burlingham Modem Wood[!len
Champion Ind ............. .. .... 12 3/4
will have a cook·out at the North
City Holding................ ...... 27
bound park on State Route 33 near
Federal Mogul... ............ .....24 3/4
Darwin on September II at 6:30
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ ..42 1/8
p.m. Camp wil furnish hamburgers,
Lands End .......................... 36 5/8
hot dogs, condiments and drinks.
Limited Inc......................... 21 3/4
Members, families and friends
Multimedia Inc .................. .33 1/2
bring potluck dinn er and lawn
Point Bancorp .................... l4
chair.
Rax Restaurant .................. 1/32
Reliance Electric ................ 20 1/2
Quilt show
Robbins&amp;Myers................. l9
The Middleport Arts Council
Shoney's Inc ...................... 22
will present a quill show on
Star Bank ........................... .35 1/4
September 18 and 19. If you would
Wendy int'l... ..................... I4 3/4
like to show a quilt call Susan Worthington Ind ................. 29 3/4
Baker at 992-7733 or Janelle Stock reports are the 10:30
Thomas at 992-5696. The frrst 30 a.m. quotes provided by
applicants will be accepted. Dead- Kemper Securities, Inc., of
line for applications is September Gallipolis.
10.

Couples receive
marriage licenses

Two couples recently received
marriage licenses in the ~eigs
County Probate Court of Judge
Robert Buck. Receiving licenses
were:
Jerry Wayne Blackwell, 34, and
Penny Jo Sullivan, 31, both 11f
Racine, and Kent Gregory Lumbatis, 27, Athens, and Melissa Sue
Clay, 23, Rutland.

(VSPS 21J.!IH)
Publllhed every aflerDOOD, Monday through
Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio by the
Ohio Valley Publilhint Compuy/Mulllmedla

~DC.. Pomeroy, Ohio ~!1769, Ph . 992·2 156.
Second clau poataae paid ar. Pomeroy, a,tlo.

Member: The Auociared Press. and .lhe Ohio
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Daily Senliacl, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio
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oo I ltwe,lill or ll month ball. Credit will be
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No ltlbac::ript.iou by mall permitted In areu
where home carrier lei'V!ee iJ avail1bie.
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28 Weeks ......................................... $45.50
52 Weetca.........................................$88.40

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions- None.
Saturday discharges -Mary
Bayles, Middleport.
Sunday admissions - Marvin
Kelly, Middleport; James Heaton,
Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges - None.
Monday admissions- None.
Monday discharges - None.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Sept. 3 discharges - Jason
Roush, Henry McKinney, Grover
Hazelwood, Lokie Smith, Samanlha Brooks, Carrie Williams, Gary
Barnett, Gary Exline, Ronald Winlcrs, Christal Neal, Vicky Cooper,
William Arrowood, Darrell Smith,
Cecil Ro seberry and Catherine
Cox.
Sept. 4 discharges- Amy Fetty,
Mrs. Timothy Tucker and son, Mrs.
Dean Colwell and daughter, Lizzie
Borders, Mrs. Paul Bragg and son,
Henry Hilderbrant, Leda Kraeulter,
Tracy Williams, Anna Welch and
Eric Walford.
Sept. 4 births - Mr. and ~rs .
Robert Van Meter, son, Point
Pleasant.
Sept. 5 discharges - Joann
Willford, Wilbur Hanners, Randall
Lane Raymond Stewart and Sarah
Adams.
Sept. 6 discharges • Sherri
Beaver, Dorothy Caldwell, Mrs .
Robert Van Meter and son, Melba
Miller, Wendy Bradbury; Clarence
Brown Ladora Malone and Siieen
Lewellen.
Sept. 6 births - Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Mershon, son, Thurman. '

''!'saw the return of a great Filipino.··
Earlier, crowds waved and
cheered as the cortege proceeded

behind a marching band. The Marcos family followed in a limousine
ahead of a riderless horse, symbol
of a fallen leader.

Twenty killed on Ohio highways

Picnics ...

both of Zanesville, in a one-car
Fairfield County.
ZANESVILLE- Two uniden· accident on Interstate 70 in eastem
Lified people in a single·car acci. Licking County.
NEWARK- Cletus G, Wal ·
dent on a Muskingum County road.
TOLEDO - John W. Burkett, Lers, 75, of Granville, in a one-car
22, hometown unavailable, driver accident on a Licking County road.
CAMBRIDGE - John D.
1n a one-car accident on a city
Hammonds, 21, of New Concord, a
street.
passenger in a two-vehicle accidem
SUNDAY
on
a Guernsey County road.
NEW CUMBERLAND- E.J.
RAVENNA
- James L. Zazo,
Franks Jr., 35, and Jacky L. Franks,
23, both of Newark, when their 46, of Akron, motorcyclist in a
motorcycle collided with a car on two-vehicle accident on a Portage
County road.
Ohio 212 in Tuscarawas County.
LANCASTER -Randy Gif- FRIDAY NIGHT
WOOSTER - Daniel C. Good·
ford, 39, of McConnellsville, driver
will
, 19, of Big Prairie, driver in a
of a motorcycle, and Lisa Jo Taylor, 30, of Zanesville, a passenger Lwo·vehicle accident on Ohio 39 in
in a van-motorcycle accident on a Holmes County.
CANTON
Peter N.
city streeL
LISBON - Jeffrey B. Weaver, Cazantzes, 63, of Canton, driver in
35, hometown unavailable, driver a car-train collision on a Stark
in a one-car accident on Ohio 9 in County road.
Columbiana County,
CHILLICOTHE - Adam R.
SATURDAY
Gibson, 16, of Frankfort, driver in
GROVE CITY - Joseph a two-car accident on a Ross Conn·
·.,
Farkas, 37, of Grove City, a motor- Ly road.
cycli~t killed in a motorcycle-truck
MARION - Tamoko Costello
collision on a city streel
44, of ~indlay, passenger in a one '
NEWARK- Janita M. Adams, car acctdent on U.S. 23 in Marion
31. and Lucinda M. Burrell, 32, . County.

Bill proposes repeal of
tax on employment services
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Temporary help companies say a
sales tax on their services is hurting
business and should be re~led.
The state Office of' Budget and
Management estimated that the tax
on employment services would
produce about $100 million d~ng

Squads respond to 17 calls

-Meigs ant/ouncements--

The Daily Sentinel
NAACP chapter, told the Houston
Chronicle that he certainly did
remember that Supreme Court
decision and had no problem with
Anthony Griffin laking this case.
"It's a constitutional issue,"
Woods said, "not the NAACP vs.
!he Klan."
Also supporting !he beleaguered
Griffin was the Galveston County
Observer News, an African-American monthly newspaper: "For
those who do not want the Ku Klux
Klan to have their righls protected,
you should considez which of your
rights you are willing to give up
liec!'use the Klan has to give up
the us. It may be you giving up
yours tomorrow.''
Nonetheless, at the meeting of
!he state NAACP board, there was .
considerable anger that Griffm w:is
representing the Klan against, of all
things, a state investigation of
hou's ing discrimination that the ·
NAACP had helped initiate.
Nat Hentorr is a nationally
reno-ed authority on the First
Amendment and the rest or the
Bill or Ri&amp;bts.

The Dally Sentlnei-Pnge-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

upon arrival; 2:40 p.m. Middleport
Volunteer Fire Department to Hudson Street for a motorcycle fire;
3:49 p.m. Tuppers Plains VFD to
State Route 7 for a ftre involving
an automobile owned by Leona
Musser; 5:33 .p.m. Syracuse to
Waid Sayre Hill for Franklin Lemley who was treated at the scene; 6
p,m. Rutland to Rutland Fire
Department for Jamitha Willford
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Center; 7:33 p.m. Racine
~o Third Street for Ronnie Pickens
who was transported to VMH:
Sunday-3:21a.m. Middleport
to Grant Street for Marvin Kelly
who was tran sported to VMH; 3:55
a. m. Middleport and Pomeroy
VFDs and Middleport squad to
State Route 7 for a structure ftre at
a residence owned by Roger Shoemaker; 11:19 a.m. Pomeroy and
Middleport squads to Condor Street
for Mary Kauff who was transported to VMH; II :56 p.m . Skymed to
VMH for Timothy Wolfe who was
· transported to Children's Hospital
in Columbus;
Monday - 2:36 a.m. Pomeroy
to Pomeroy Police Department for
Ronald Jones who was transported
to VMH; 3:32 p.m. Pomeroy VFD
and Middleport squad to State
Route 143 for a motor vehicle accident in which Leslie Osborne
refused tr eatment; 5:2~ p.m .
Pomeroy to Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center for Mary Gee
who was transported to VMH; 5:32
p.m. Tuppers Plains Squad and
First Responders to State Route 7
for Lydia Montgomery who was
transported
10 Camden Clark Hosgranted Thursday to Sherry S.
Chapman and Craig T. Chapman, pital; 6:44 p.m. Syracuse VFD to
and Teresa D. Courtney and John Apple and Third streets for a structure fire at a residence owned by
M. Courtney .
Donna Roush ; 8:43 p.m. Scipio
VFD to State Route 681 for a brush
fire on property belonging to Tom
Lee.
The nam e of Arica Blackwell
was inadvertantly omitted from the
· Eblen reunion story in the September I Daily Sentinel.

Stocks

the budget period. The tax was
enacted in December to help bal ance the budget.
The average gross payroll of
temporary help companies dropped
by 18 percent immediately after the
tax took effect, the Ohio Tempo·
rary Service Association said.
Companies are not hiring tern·
porary help because the tax add s
bet ween 5 percent and 7 percent 10
lhcir operating costs, Jay Mattern ,
legislative consultant for the group,
told The Columbus Dispatch for "
swry published Monday.
A bill to repeal the tax, pro ·
posed by Sen. Robert Cupp, R·
Lima, is to go before the Senate
Ways and Means Commiuee Sept.
28.
"We're going to listen to wha1
people have 10 say," said the com .
miuee's chairman, Sen. Richard H.
Fina n, R-Cincinnati. "But if th ey
want to repeal anything we enacted
in House Bill 904 (the budget-hal ·
an cing bill) they're going to have
to come up with something 1u
replace the lost revenue."
Budget Director R. Gregory
Browning said the state enacted the
wx because temporary employmem
is a growing industry. He said i1
makes up 25 percent of th e U.S.
worlc forc e and will increase to 50
percent because companies do m11
wanf to pay employee benefits.
Manern said 59,500 Ohioan s
were employed as temporary hell'
work ers in 1992.

Divorces and dissolutions
The following actions for
divorce were filed recently in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court of Judge Fred W. Crow III:
Linda Capehart, 'Middleport,
ftl ed Aug . 31 for divorce from
William R. Capehart Jr., Middleport; Carey J. Stanley Simpson,
Racine, filed Aug. 31 for divorce
from Christopher S. Simpson, Seymore, Ind.
In addition, dissolutions were

Name omitted

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

John A. ade, .D.
Ide Ill V.U., DrhnJ
Pt. Pla•nt. WV.
· Call....,..ll44 far Ant. or·lnfor. .tlon
Mtmlter of ltt•a PPO &amp; li4tral Motul PPO

COI'IINC SOOftl •IINDDCOY!R IILUI!:s•/

KEL GI BSON in

~KAR

WITHDUr A FACI'"

l '"TH.I kJAL RCCOY"

AEROBICS

NEW ~ WEEK SESSIONS
BEGINNING SEPT. 13th

/I1

•Mon.-Wed. (1 0-11 A.M.) Royal Oak Resort
*Mon.·Wed. (5:15-6:15 p.m.) Carleton School
*Tues.-Thur. (7~8 p.m.) Royal Oak Resort
Call 992·6893 for Information.
FIT TOGETHER
AEROBICS

JEANNE OWEN
CERTIFIED INSTRUCTOR

�'

Sports

The Dail-r Sentinel

Tuesday, September 7, 1993
Page-4

Ohio State has limited time. to solve
Washington Huskies' pass rush
By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Stanford coach Bill Walsh had a
month to try to solve Washington's
pass rush. Ohio State coach John
Cooper will be uying to find an
answer in the next five days.
Before the 16th-ranked Buckeyes host No. 12 Washington Saturday night, Cooper's top priority
in practice will be fmding a way to
prevent Husky defenders from
becoming regulars in the OS U
backfield.
In Washington's 31 -14 lashing
of Stanford Saturday, the Huskies
had seven sacks and hurried several
other throws. In general, they created mayhem in Walsh's perfectly
designed attack.
" You all know how much Bill
Wal sh knows about the passing
game and pass ·blocking and
schemes," Cooper said. "Their
quarterback was running for his
life. He did not have time to sit in
the pocket. You are not going to set
up in the pocket if this guy's covered, then you're going to look
over there and throw the baD. That
does n't happen."

121

Tuesday, September 7,1993

•

"~""L-"-~ - The Eastern varsity
volleyball team or bead coach Don Jackson
began its season this past week. Eastern is lookIng to improve its record from last season as it
begins its first as a member or the Tri,Valley
Conference. Pictured are (front row, L-R)

2t

throw.''

Washington' s new head coach is
Jim Lambright, who was named to
take over when James resigned.
Lambright was the Huskies' defensive coordinator the last 16 years
and oversaw the change to a head- ·
hunting,
quarterback-eating
defense.
(See PLANS on Page S)

Smith gets seventh win in eight-cylinder
bomber class in Vinton Raceway action

l .?l

Amanda Caspers, Jessica Karr, Patsy Aeiker,
Becky Driggs, Jessica Radford, Jai.me Wilson
and Heidi Nelson. Behind them are Penny Aeiker, Shelly Hendricks, Wendy Rach and Kathy
Bernard.

Both teams are 1..0, 16th-ranked
Ohio State pounding overmatched
Rice 34-7.
Walsh had made negative statements about the Huskies while the
Pac-10 was investigating possible
NCAA rules violations. Washington is banned from bowl games the
next two years and cannot receive
any television money for one year.
Then Don James shoc)ced the
Pacific Nonhwest by res'1gning as
head coach in protest.
So, the Huskies took out some
of lhcir anger and frustration on the
Ca rdinal quarterbacks. Walsh's
vaunted passing attack was in
shambles.
Cooper wasn't surprised.
"You'd beuer set up and throw
it and throw it in a hurry or do one
hell of a job of protecting your
quarterback because they flat get
after you," he said. "Usually
they're going to bring four rushers
from one side. Your problem is
determining what .side those four
arc coming from. Are they coming
from the back, the front or the middle? "
Ohio State quarterback Bob

.

Hoying completid 13 of 22 passes
for !44 yards with a touchdown
and no interceptions against Rice . .
He was sacked once and hurried a
couple other times, while Ohio
State's ballyhooed defensive front
did not have a sack.
"I' ve got to count on my linemen to get the job done," Hoying
said. "Then I have to drop back
and make some plays. It won't be
like it was Saturday. I've got to
make some decisions."
"We're going to have to spend ·
hour after hour after hour this week
pass protecting," Cooper said. '
"Not only blocking the. guy across
from you. but having a scheme
where we can pick up where the
rushes are coming from and on ·
each particular pass we try tc

,.

One hundred-degree temperatures didn't keep the fans nor the
cars away from Vinton Raceway
las t week as a large crowd saw
Pomeroy's Todd Smith in the yellow T-7 Nova streak to his seventh
feature win this season in the eightcylinder bomber class.
Reedsville's Rick Blake came in
second after changing a cluth after
th e qualifying heat race. Third went
to Langsville's Delmas Goff.
Smi th wasted little time establi shing the lead ahead of the field
and led the entire race. Smith was
cha llenged repeatedly by Adrian
Doles in the Crazy-8 ear, but held
off his challenges and zoomed to
the win.
The heat was won by Adrian
Doles ahead of Smith and Goff.
Winning ·the the Super Four
Cylinder feature was Delbert
Rou sh of Reedsville ahead of Bert
Flora and Tom Christy. The heat
was won by Reedsville's Bobby
Bailey.
The Road Hog class is always a
crowd pleaser with lots of action
and excitement. This week's race

was full of fun with several lead Heats pay $30 and $15 respectivechanges.
ly. Entry fee is $15. Rules may be
The eight-cylinder Road Hog · obtained by phoning 388-9617 or
winners was Tony Jacks over 388-9300.
Bryan Seagraves and Wayne MayNo alcoliotic beverages are pernard. Maynard won the first heat mit ted on the premises, making the
ove r Jacks and Kevin Saunders, local raceway a great place_for
while Seagraves claimed the sec- family fun. On Sunday_, S~pl; 12,
ond over John Powell and Brent the track will feature an mv1tauonal
Paxton.
in all classes with a larger purse.
The four-cylinder Road H')g
feature was won by Reedsville's
Rocky Blake over Tony Roush and
Donnie Yost, while Blake claimed Meigs High School
th e heat over David Lively and sports calendar
Donnie Yost.
The Powder Puff race was won
TODAY
by Rae Farley ahead of Doris MayVolleyball: MiUer, home
nard and Christy Dixon.
Golf: TVC Meet at Federal
Racing continues today at Vin- Hocking
ton Raceway, where general admisWEDNESDAY
sion is $5 for anyone over ten years
Golf: Point Pleasant at Riverside
of age. Under ten are admitted free, Golf Course in Mason
while bicycle races will be an
THURSDAY
added attraction for the kids.
Golf: at Nelsonville
A demolition derby wiD be held
FRIDAY
Saturday. Gates will open at2 p.m.,
Varsity Football: Trimble, home
and the derby will begin at 5 p.m.
SATURDAY
There will be' a prize of $300 for
Cross Country: at Warren Invifirst place and $100 for second. tational

By 'MATT YANCEY
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Dallas Cowboys learned what the
Washington Redskins found out
last season: Sitting on top of the
world as Super Bowl champions
can be a slippery slope.
A year ago, the Cowboys
knocked the Redskins off in a sirililar season opener at Texas Stadium.
At RFK. Stadium on Monday
night, the Redslcins, taking advantage of Emmitt Smith's holdout,
re turned the favor with a 3S-16
rout. It was the most points the
Cowboys gave up since their I· IS
season of 1989.
But even if the NFL's top rusher

wi~

Dodgers'

By The Associated Press
The Los Angeles Dodgers, ·who
arcn' t going to win the NL West
this season, hope to have a say in
who does.
They beat the Atlanta Braves 21 Monday night to drop them 3 112
games behind the San Francisco
Giants, who defeated Pittsburgh 41 in a day game. The Dodgers still
have two games left with the
Braves, and a four-game series
with the Giants at the end of the
season.
"It was neat," Dodger pitcher
Tom Candiotti said. "It was like
we were really playing for something."
" I said before we left that we
were going to lose some games on

Mindee Sampson, Rebecca Evans, Brandi
Reeves and Alicia Walker. Behind them are
Valerie McGinnis and Jeannie Cline. The team
is coached by bead coach Don Jackson and assistant Paul Brannon.

MHS Athletic Boosters
meeting Wednesday
The Meigs High School Athletic
Boosters wiU meet Wednesday at 7
p.m . at Meigs High School.
The meeting will be held on
Wednesday evening this :.ve.ek
only, and wiU go back to Tuesday
evening next week. Marauder football coach Milce Chancey w1ll be m
attendance to show films of the
Gallia Academy football game and
talk about this week's opponent
Trimble.

•

and Nicole Meade.
Jaime Wilson led Eastern with
se ven while other scorers were
Karr (6,1 ace), Driggs (3), Aeiker
(2) , and Bernard (!).
Driggs was 5-9 with one kill and
fi ve blocks, Penny Aeiker 4-7 with
one kill, Patsy Aeiker 2-3, Karr 2-3
wi th one kill and three blocks, and
Bernard 1-2 with one kiU and two
blocks.
River Valley won the reserve
match 15-7 and 15-7,
'
Scoring for the winners were
Leann Byer (12), Lavra Queen (5),
Christina Carey (4), Erin Conley
(3) , Shelly Williams (3), and
Stephanie Cash (3).
Eastern scorers were Chevalier
(5), Reeves (4), Guess (3, one ace),
Valerie McGinnia (1), and Jeannie
Cline (!). Guess was 3-3 in spiking, Holter 2-6 with one kill and
Sampson 1-1 with a kill.

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eutem DM•Ion

W L T PeL PF PA

Team .

Buff1lo ............. .

I 0 0 1.000 38 14

Miami .............. . 1 0 0 l.OOO 24 2D
lndianapoW ..... . 0 1 0 .000 2fl 2A
New Fn&amp;]arKJ ... . 0 1 0 .0001438
N.Y. Jets ...... .... . 0 I 0 .000 11J &lt;6
Central DIYislon
CLEVELAND.. I 0 0 t J&gt;O(I T1 14

Houslm ............
Piuaburgh .........

0 1 0 .000 21 33
0 1 0 .000 13 2A

Western Divltion
Denver..............
K1nus Cit)' ......
LA. Raidcn .....
San Diego .........
Seattle...............

I
I
I
I
0

0.
0
0
0
I

0 1.000
0 1.000
01 .000
0 1.000
0 .000

26 20
X1 3
24 1
18 12
12 18

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Ea1lern Dhillon
W L T PeL
N.Y . Giants ...... . 1 0 01.000
·Philadelphia ..... . 1 0 01.000
Walhin(lton ..... . 1 0 0 1.000

Ttlm

and five strikeouts in eight-plus
innings.
Do·dger pinch-hitter Dave
Hansen tied the game -and a club
record- with his RBI single in the
seventh.
Hansen, batting for Candiotti
with one ou~ singled off Smoltz to
score Snyder from third. The hit
was Hansen's 17th as a pinch-hiller
this season, tying him with Mitch
Webster, who had 17 last year, for
the Dodgers' record.
Tony Tarasco, a rookie making
just his fourth stan for the Braves,
drove in Atlanta's run with a sacrifice fly in the fourth inning . .
Elsewhere in the NL, it was
Chicago 7, Philadelphia 6; Montreal 4, Colorado 3; Houston 7, New

JS 16

Dalh1 .. ............. .

0 I 0 .000 16 35

Phoc:nix ........... .

0

I oO .000 17 23

Centul
Detroit ........... ... 1
Grea! D1y ........ . I
Chicago ............ 0
MinllCIIolli ........ : 0
Tampi Bay ....... 0

pivlsioo
0 0 1.000 30 13
0 0 1.000 36 6
I 0 .000 20 26
I 0 .000 7 2A
I 0 .000 3 1J

Walern
New Odelns..... 1
San FranciJco .. . 1
Atlanll .............. 0

Division
0 0 1.000 33 21
0 0 1.000 24 13
1 0 .000 13 30

LA. Rama ........

0 1 0 .000

6 36

• Sale 30 minute delivery

• Cerrvout available

Te•m
W L
Phil•dclphi1 ........... 85 52

Pel.
.620

GB

Montreal .... ............ 71 61

.558

SL Louis ................ 74 62

.544

Chicago .................. 68 70
Piu.sbW"gh .............. 63 75
florida .... ............... 58 79

.493
.457
.423

New York ............. .47 91

.341

8.5
10.5
11.5
22.5
27
38.5

Western Dl\'\slon
SutfnnciJco ........ 89 48 .650
Atllnu .......C.........86 52 , .623

6.5 ,. .526

Houston ................. 72
LotAngelc:s ........ ... 70
CINONNA11. .......61
Colondo ................ 53

66

.515

71
JJS

.486
.384

Sut Oicgo ........... ... 5J

85

.384

3.5
11
18.5
22.5
3&amp;5

3C.l

OUcago9,NewYolk 8

dNCINNATl 6, Phil•delphia S
Atlana.a 3, San Diego 2
San Francisco 3, SL louis l
Montrul7; HoWl lOT\ S
Colorado 10, PittabuiJh 4

Su·nd.,y'S stqres
Atlanu 3, San Oieao 2

Florida 4, U. Anaelc:a 3
,O!ic•go 2, New Yolk 1

Pllil1dolphia S, CINCINNATI3
Houaton 7, Mon~ll

CoiOAdo 4, Piu.burah I

St Lruia 7, S1t1 Fl"'.nci..co 6

Montreal4, Calondo 3
San Franci.lco 4, PiwbUrah 1

0tiCIJD7, Ptillodolphia 6 .
Lol Anaol• 2. AW.nu 1
Florida~. San Di.eao o

T.oday's games

OH : St. Lo.uil (Cormie~r 5-6 and
Towklbllt)' tl-8) "CINCINNATI (Raper

York, 31; D. Lewil, San Fnncisco, 37;

Gri11om, Morw'UI, 37; Nh.on, Allanu.,
36; Dybtrl, Philldc.lphia, 35.
PITCHING (ll dooiJiono)' T. o..on..
Philadelphia, 13-3, .812. 3.51; Avery, At·
ltnta, IS-4 •. 739, 294; Porwaai. Hoos1.0n,
14-4, .778, 2.99; Gllvinc, Atlanta, 17-5,
.173, 3.24; Bu.rkeu., San Fnncilco, 18-6,
3.33.

.

STRIKEOUTS : Rijo, CINCINNATI,
194; Smolu, Atl•nta, 176; G. Maddux,
AUant1,l6S; Bcna, San
163: Hunillch, Howton, 158; OL~Zman. Chicaao.
154; Schilling, Phil1delphia, ISO.

Dieao.

SAVES: Lee Smith, St. Louia , 43;
Beck, Sm Francisco, 4 1; Harvey, Floridl,
41; Myers, Chicago, 40; Mitch Williams,
Philldelphia , 37; Wetteland, MontrC1I,
34; Stanlon, Atlan!.l , Tl.

Alomar, Toronto, .317; Griffey Jr., S e~t •

tle, .3 16; Hamilton, Milw1ukoc, .3 16.
RUNS: Palmeiro, Teus , 11 I; White,
Toronto, 104; Molhor. Toronto, 104;
Lofton, CLEVELAND, 100; Griffey Jr.,
SCittle, 98; ~ . Detroit, 98; Thcmu,
Chie•go, 97; B1erga, CLEVELAND, 97;
R. Hcndcnon . T910nto, 97.

RBI: T~omu, Chic1go, 120; Belle,
CLEVELAND, 11 1: Fielder, Deaoit, 108;

Gon:r.alcz, Texas, 104; C1ncr, Toronto,
104; BacrJ•· CLEVELAND. 102: Tell.leton. Detroit, 100.
1m'S; Molhor, Toronto, 180; Olcrud,
Toronto, 179; Baerg• ~ CLEVELAND,
174; R. A lomar, Toronto, 163; McRae,
K1nsaa City, 162; Lofton, CLEVELAND,
158; P•bnciro, Te~11, !58; Puckett , Min -

nCIOll., 1S8.

Saturday's.scores

DOUBLES: Ole rud, T oronto , '47 ;

K1nus City 4, Basttv~ 2
Chic•go 11, Deu-oit 2
New Yorlt4 , CLEVEI.ANDO

White, Toronlo, 3Bi Palmeiro, Te~.a1 , 36;
Joyner, Kanns City, 34; PuckeLL, Minncsou, 34; Griffey Jr. , Seattle, 32; Orccnwell, Bolton, 32.
· TRIPLES : L. John1on, Chicago, 12;
Hulse, Teus, I 0 ; Con, Chicago, I 0;
Lofton, CLEVELAND, 8; McR1c, K1nus
City, I; Cuyler, Detroit, 7; T. Fenundez,

Kanus City S. Boctcrl2

Toronto, 7.

Chicago 5, Detroit 3
SutUe 3, Milwaukee 2

Thcmu. Otkago, 40; Ori!I'ey Jr., Sc:a~tle ,
40; Belle, CLEVELAND, 34; Palmetro,
Texu, 34; Tcttleton, Detroit, 31; S1hnon,
C1lifomia, 30.
STOLEN BASES : Lofton, CLEVELAND. 51; CuniJ. C.lifomia, 45 ; Po1onia, California, 45; R. Alomu, Toronto,
42; R. Hc:ndmon , Toronto, 40; L. John son, Chic1go, 34; White, Toronto, 28.
PITCHING (15 deci.siCII'II): Key, New
York, 1~5 • .762, 2.94; Femtndc:z, Chica-

HOME RUNS : Gonu.lcr., Teua, 4 1;

Milwaukee 3, Kan~aaCity 2
B&lt;Wton 3, Chicaao t
Baltimore .5, Scaalc 1
Teus 8, New York 5

go, 17-6, .7~9. 3.06; Mussina, Ballimorc:,
14-5, .737, 4.10; Wickman, New York.,

Tonight's games
California (Finley 14-1 1) 11 Detroit
(Wells 10-7), 7 :05p.m.

Minnesota (Ta~i 7-14) at CLEYEL\ND (M.., 9·10), 1:05 p.m.
Oakland (Dulin&amp; S-7) at Toronto

(Stewan 1-8), 7:35p.m.
Seattle (Boaio 11 ·1) 11 Baltimore
(Rhod.. 4-3), 7,35 p.m.
Bolton (Duw1J1 13·10) at Chic1go
(Belcher 3·3), S:OS p.m.

Wednesday's games

Loo Ansel" 9, Floriclo 4

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

25

New Yort (Key 16-S) 11 Teua (Bo-

Eastern Divlslon

992·2156

19.5

honm 4-3), US p.m.

HoUiloo 7, Ne~w York 2

"

.426
.385

6
6.5
9
15.5

Monday's srores ·

Monday's JICOres

9
4e 9

Minneaota .............. S8 78
83

2
7
7
12.5
19 ,

Mi.nneloc.a 8, Tuu 3

NATIONAL !lEAGUE

FOR MORE INFORMATION

$

.504
.456

.5

Califorftit S, Tormto I

- * Baseball * -

'

z NEW SUBS!
Philly Steak and Meatball
·Lunch Special·

68
74

Sunday, SepL 1l

'

AIHon~e.

Watern DMsion
59 .569
65 .526
66 .522

ChiCigo.................. 78
Te1t11 ..................... 12
Kanua City·...........72
Suttle .................... 69
Cali!omia .............. ,62

CB

Balt.imOR 9, Oakland 2

San Funciaco at CLEVELAND. 9

THIS SPACE
$12.00

Eulern Division
. Team
W L PeL
Toronto ..:............... 78 60 .565
New York ............ .. ?&amp; 61 .561
Ball.imorc ............... 76 62 ..551
B01t.on ......... :..........10 66 .515
~it .................... 71 67
..514
CLEVELAND ....... 6S 72 .474
Milwauk.c:e ............. 60 80 ..429

New Yoc:k 7, cr.EVELAND 2

p.m.

- Po111eroy
992·2124

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Sunday's JICOres

Olica go at Mitmuota, I p.m.
Dcuoit at New Ensland, 1 p.m.
lndi1napoli&amp; at CINCINNATI, I p.m.
Kansu City at Howa.on, I p.m.
New Orlc.ans at Atlant.a, I p.m.
Phi l1dclphiau Green Bay, I p.m.
Phoenix at Wa•hing~a~, 1 p.m.
Tanipt B1y 1t N.Y. Gi1nta, l p.m.
Piuaburgh 11 L.A Rams, 4 p.m.
Buffllo at O.llaa, 4 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Mi1mi, 4 p .m.
San Di.,o 1t Denver, 4 p.m.
LA. R1ader. at SCIU.le, 8 p.m.

STOLEN BASES: Carr, Florids, 47;

JcfferiCI, St. Louil, 31; Coleman, New

AL leaders

C1lifomi1 4, Toronto 2

Next week's action

Williamt, San Francilco, 30.

BATTING : OleNd, Toronto, .379;
Molil£1r, Tomntfl, .335; Thomu, Olicago,
.321 ; Lofton, CLEVELAND, .318; R.

Baltimore 6, Oakland 3
T eus 6, Minncwta 4
Setttlc 6, Milw1u.kcc I

Monda)', Stpl.l3

THIS SPACE
$8.00

Wednesday's games

OU!and ................. 52

Monday's score

40; Juati&lt;:e, Atlanta, 36; BonUla, New
York, 34; Sou, Chicaao. 31: Oant, Atlant• , 31; McGriff, Atlanta, 31; Man

.750, 3.75; Swift, S1n Fn.ncilco, 17·7,
.708, 3.16 : Kite, Houston, 14-6, .700 ,

Colondo (Reynoso 9-9) 11 Mont:retl
(RueteJ:6-0}, 7 :35p.m.
Chicago (Hibbard 11 -11) at Philadelphia (Greene 13-3), 7 :35p.m.
St. Louis (Wauon 6-3) at CINCIN NATI (Ay1la 5-7), 7 :35p.m.
New York (fanana 6-14) 11 Houston
(Kile 14-6), S:OS p.m.
Florida (lhmmond 10.9) 11 San Diego
(Ashby 2·9), 10:05 p.m .
Atllnu (Gl1vine 17-5) at LOa Angelea
(M11tinez 9·9), 10:35 p.m.

23 11

Wu hington 3S, Dallu 16

THIS SPACE
$16.00

or Sanford l·

7:35p.m.
Ch.icaao (Guzm1n 11-1 0) at Pttilldelphia (Riven 12·7)', 7 :35p.m.
New Yolk (8. Jone~ 2 -2) at HOUitCI'I
' (Dr~bek 8-IS), 8:0S p.m.
Florida (Rapp 3-4) a1 San Diego
(S1ndcrs 2-l),IO:OS p.m.
Atl1nta (AVery 15-4) at Los Anaetea
(A1t1cio 11·7),10:35 p.m. ,
Pituburgh. (Cooke 9-8) 11 San Francisco (Hickcnoo ~5), 10:3S p.m.

PF PA
76 20

San Fnncisoo 24, Pitu;burgh 13
LA. Raidm2A , MiMcsota 7
N.Y. Giln\S 26, Chic1go 20
S1n Diego 18, Seattle 12
New Orlc.~na: 33, Houston 21

CALL
NOW

1-~

2) at Montreal (I)cMil Maninc 13-8},

CINCINNATI .. 0 1 0 .000 14 27

Saturday's scores

6" sub, bag of clips and ·
LARGE PEPSI
11 • 1 Daily

this road trip," AtlantJi pitcher
John Smaltz said. "The momentum in the race is going to swing
back and forth a liule the rest of the
wuy."
Breit Butler's RBI groundout
with the bases loaded and one out
in the ninth gave the Dodgers the
victory. Tom Goodwin, a pinch·
runner for Cory Snyder, came
home on Butler's soft grounder to
short with the infield drawn in.
Jeff Blauser fielded the ball and
frantically dashed to touch second
for the second out, but had no other
play.
Pedro Martinez (10-3), who shut
out Atlanta over the last two
innings, got the win. Smaltz (1310) allowed five hits with six walks

Colorado (Lealtlnic

On:cn B1y 36, L.A. ~ms 6
Mi1mi 2A, lndian1polis 20
Buffalo 38, New England 14
Phil1dclphia 23, Phoenia 11

IN THE

Belpre, River Valley defeat Eastern netters

ing 22 of 34 passes for 161 yards,
including three for touchdowns.
" For the most part, they really
didn't have a bead on what we
were doing," Rypien said of the
new two-back sets and the quick,
short pass timing routes that rookie
head coach Richie Petitbon has
added to the Redslcins' playbook.
"We're going to spread the ball
around, make people defend everybody," said Petitbon, making his
debut as Joe Gibbs' successor.
"It's just one ~e, you can't read
any more into 1L But I thinlc poten·
tially we have a chance to be a
pretty good football team."
Not that the Redskins didn't

'
openef

make mistakes, too. No defender
was within 15 yards of Harper
when he caught Aikman's 20-yard
pass over the middle and sprinted
60 yards f!lr DaUas' fust scote.
And after the Cowboys narrowed the Redsldns' margin to 2113 early in the third period on a 32yard ·touchdown from Aikman to
Harper, Brian Mit~hell, thinking he
was in the end zone, downed the
following kickoff on the Redskins
one.
That mistake, however, gave the
Redskins a lift. MitcheU recovered ·
quickly, picking up 12 yards on
two carries as Washington moved
the ball out to the 24. Rypien then

' completed five straight passes,
including a 29-yarder to Art Monk
to put the bali on Dallas' IS-yard
line.
Two plays later, he hit Monk
again in the end zone to give
Washington a 28-13 lead going
into the fourth quarter•
" That 99-yard drive was the
turning point of the game after they
cut our lead," Petitbon said. "We
made enough mistalces to beat our·
selves.• but we came back."
Finally, Mitchell ran for a 29yard touchdown with 2:12 left on
the clock after Elliott made it 23-16
with a 22-yard field goal with just
under five minutes remaining.

over Braves may give them say in West tit'e chase

2· 3 and Luobbon 2-3~ 5,35 p.m.

-*NFL*-

Kansu City TJ, Tamp.~ Bay 3

The reserves hit 43 of 65 for 65
percent in serving en route to a !55, 2-15, 15-12 win over Belpre.
The team also hit 32-44 sets and
12-1 7 spikes.
Eastern scorers were Jessica
Chevali er (10), Rebecca Evans
(7 ,two aces), Brandi Reeves (6),
Martie Holter (5, I ace), and Melissa Guess (4).
Eastern dropped its opening tilt
to River Valley in two se ts, 15-5
and 16-14.
Coach Jackson said, "Our passing has improved over last year, so
it gives us more chances to set.
We're playing hard as a team, but
we need contributions from everyone."
River Valley scorers were Monica Ehman (12), Heather Conkle
(8), Tanya Drummond (6),
Stephanie Jones (2) and one each
from Cassie Peuie, Alicia Ward,

as we're capable of," Dallas coach
Jimmy Johnson said, adding that he
is "sick and tired of talking about
Emmitt Smith." _,,
Team owner Jones, however,
may be having secon d thoughts
aboui his vow last week not to
reconsider upping his $2.5 miUion
offer to Smith unless thy Cowboys
lose their first two games. On Sun·
day, DaUas faces the AFC champion Buffalo Bills, another team with
something to prove after their 5217 Super Bowl loss to the Cowboys
last January.
Meanwl!ile, Redskins quarterback Mark Rypien returned to his
199 1 S~per Bowl form after a disastrous season a year ago, complet-

Scoreboard

Dcl.mit 30, Atlanta 13
CLEVELAND Zl, CINCINNATI 14
Dcnver26. N.Y. Jeu20

Belpre defeated Eastern 15-7, 815, and 15-13 in three sets in the
open ing week of area volleyball
action.
Belpre had a balanced attack led
by K. Arnold and K. Coya_n with
nine points each, A. Thornhill wtth
eight, four by Jamey Colebank and
three each from C. Lawhorn and A.
Haynes.
.
Jaime Wilson, a senior setter
led Eastern with 16 points, Kathy
Bernard had 6, Jessica Karr five,
Becky Driggs four and two each by
Patsy and Penny Aeiker. Bernard
(8-9 successful 'spikcs), the Ae1kcr
sisters (each 6-7) and Dnggs (5-9)
each had a good night at the net
with two kills each, while Bernard
led the way with six blocks. Karr
and Penny Aciker had three.
Coach Don Jackson said, "Our
serving and passing really
improved, but when we got ahead
in the last game, we relaxed too
much and the momentum switched,
then we couldn't get it back. The
coach got outcoached the last 10
points of the game, but the girls
played well as a team . We will
come back."

of the past two years had reached a
financial agreement with Cowboys
owner Jerry Jones and played, the
end result probably would have
been the same.
The Cowboys lost the ball four
times on fumbles, including twice
on botched punt returns. And they
allowed Washington's new offense
171 yards rushing, more than twice
the yardage they gave up to the
Redskins in two games last year.
Lin Elliott's missed extra point
after the Cowboys jumped to a 6-0
lead on an 80-yard touchdown pass
from Troy Aikman to Alvin Harper
in the first quarter may have been
an omen.
" We didn't play nearly as well

Page-s

In NL action,

Sunday's scores

NOW
AVAILABLE

The Dally Sentinel&lt;

Washington Redskins pound Dallas 35-16 in their

. ~·

BULLETIN B-OARD
EASTERN RESERVES - The Eastern
reserve volleybaU team began its season this past
week. Team members are (front row, L-R)
Melissa Guess, Jessica Chevalier, Martie Holter,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.714, 2.12.

STRlKEOUfS : R. Johnson, Seattle,
254; Ouzman , Toronto, 168; Langston,
Cali!omis, 164; Cone, Kanus City, 163;

Finley, California, 162; Appicr, Kansas
City, 156; Eldred, Milwaukee, 150;

Clemen•. B011an, 150.
SA YES : Montgomery, X.1mu City,
42; D. WaJd, Toronto, 38; R. Hernandez:,
Chicago, 33; RusseU, Borton, 33; Henke,
Teus, 32; Olaon, BalLimore, 29; Aguil cr•. Minnesot.a , 29; Eckcnley, Oak.lmd,

California (Lanaston f5· 6) at Detroit
(Doheay 11-11), 7:05p.m.
Minnaot1 (BNmmett 1-0) 1t CLBVBLAND (Orimaley 1-2), 1,05 p.m.
OU.land (Win !1-12) at Toronto (Ouz1!\111

11-4, .733, 4.20; McDowell, Ch.ic.~go, 218, .724, 3.31; Appicr, Kansu City, 1.5-6,
.714, 2.83; Langston, Ca!ifomi1, 15-6,

29.

- * Transactions * Baseball

11-3), 1:35 p.m.

Suttle (Haruon 10..1tl)

It

(VII"""d' 6-9~ BS pln.
Bottoo (Dopaon 7-9) 11 OlicaKO (Sere
7-5), 8:05p.m.
New York (Jean 1.0) at Te~xu (Brown
I I · ll ), 8'35 p.m.
Milw1ukee (Bones 9-9) 1t Kansas City
(Pichardo 6-1), 3,35 p.m.

NL leaders
BA.TnNO : Gwynn, S1n Diqo, .358;
Bonc\1, St.n Franciac:o., .343; JeKeriet, St.

Louis, .334; Rob 'J11ornpaon, S111 Fnncilco, .333; Once, Chicaso, .330; K.ruk,
Philadelphia, .325; Mercod, Pittaburah,

.321.
RUNS : Dyklt.ra, Phil8delphia, 126;
Bonds, 8111 Francilco, 111; BlauiCr, Atlanta, 92; McGriff, Atlanta, 91; Oant, Atl~ntl, ~; J. Bell, Pittaburp, 90; Krult,

Philadelphia, 89.

·

RBI: l~co. Alluna, 102; Bmdl, San
F,...cllco, 102; Doultm, Pbilldolphia, !14;
Gant, Atlanta, 91 ; .Mtn William1, San
Func:ilco, 91; Jl\pu, Lot "'naclc:~, 81;
Baaw•ll, Hou~ton, 17; Bonil11, New

Yort, 81.

IDU 0w)'l11l. Son Diqo, 115; 1. Boll,
Pittaburah. 171 ; Grace, 'Chlcaao, 161;
BaJwoll, Hounon, 166; Dybtn, Phil.adcl.plua, 163; Banda, San FranciJco, 151;

Bullet, Loo Anplel, I57.

DOUBLES : Bic:bette, Colorado, 42;

Gwynn. Saa Dieao, 41; Biaia, ~.
31; Dyb1r1, PhDadel~a;,l; Ba~;w.U,
lioul1on, 35: Once, Cl.ieoao. 35; Oilkey,
SL Louia, 34.
TRIPLES' Finley, H.......,,,IO; Bollot,
1M
~~ Monadinl,
Pllilo-.
9; J.""'""·
Bell, Pitllbu:rJh,
I ; Coleman,
New
Yodt, a, B. Y~, Colomlo, 1; Manin.
Pilllbu'lh, 7; C..lilll, Col....!~ 1.
HONE RUNS: Bondo, Son Pnn.U..,

•

American League
BOSTON RED SOX : 'Recalled On:g

BaltimoR

Blosser 1nd Jeff McNeely, out!iclden ,
and John Aahetty, c1tcher, frcm P1wtud:·
~

of t.he

In~emaUonal

League. Purchased

the contr1c t of Steve LYons, infield er,
rrom Pawtucket Activaled Lllil R!IICU ,
infielder, from the 15-dly diublcd Lin.

DETROIT TIGERS ' Recalled Mike

Gsrdiner, pitcher, from Toledo of the In·
te:mltionll League.
NEW YORK YANKEES : Recdled
Bobby MunM., pitcher, frti'TI Columbus of

York 2; and Florida 2; ·San Diego
0.
Giants 4, Pirates 1
Scott Sanderson pitched six
shutout innings in San FranciSco's
victory over Pittsburgh as the
Giants returned home trying to
hold on in the West.
Sanderson (3-1) retired 12 of 13
batters after the second inning. He
allowed. two hits, struck out four
and walked one. Rod Beck pitched
the ninth for his 41st save.
Royce Clayton had a two-run
single in the fourth off Paul Wagner (5-7).
Cubs 7, Pbillies 6
Chicago hit three consecutive
ho111e runs in the sixth 1nning including Willie Wilson's fir st
homer since I990 - for its fourth
straight victory.
Leading 4-2 entering the sixth,
the visiting Cul;ls teed off against
reliever Roger Mason with one out.
Steve Buechele !lit his 13th bomer,
Wilson fo llow ed with another
blast, and Steve Lake connected for
his fifth of the season.
Both starting pitchers left thP- •

game because of injuries. Winning
pitcher Mike Harkey (8-8)Jeft after
backing up a play at third with two
outs in the sixth. Harkey was diagnosed with a mild strain of a tendon in his right knee and listed as
day-to-day.
Phillies starter Terry Mulholland left after loading the bases
with no outs in the first inning ,
aggravating a hip problem. Mike
Williams (I-I) relieved.
Expos 4, Rockies 3
Marquis Grissom singled home
the winning run.as Montreal rallied
at home for two runs in the eighth
inning.
Tim Scott (5-2) pitched one
inning for the win despite allowing
Dante Bichette's 21st home run.
John Wetteland got three outs for
nis 34th save.
Andres Galarraga hit his 19th
homer and singled in four at-bats.
Astros 7, Mets 2
Luis Gonzalez hit a career-high
14th homer and tied a career high
with five RB!s, and Houston's Pete
Harnisch pitched four-hit ball over
seven innings.

Gonzalez hit a two-run double
in the sixth off New York's Pete
Schourek and a three-run homer in
the eighth off Mauro Gozzo.
Harnisch (13-8) struck out five
and walked three.
Sid Fernandez (3-6) left after
five innings with soreness in his
left shoulder. He allowed two runs
and three hits.
Marlins 2, Padres 0
Benito Santiago hit a two-run
homer off former batterymate
Andy Benes and David Weathers
pitched eight shutout innings in his
first major-league stan Florida won
at San Diego.
Gary Sheffield, the 1992 NL
batting champion, went I -for-4 in
his first game at Jack Murphy Sta·
dium since being lraded to the Mar·
lins on June 24 as part of the
Padres' salary purge.
Weathers (1-0), who was
recalled Monday, retire~! the side in
order five times and aUowed only
three singles, Bryan Haivey,go\ the
final three outs for his 41st save.
Benes (15-11) lost for the fourth
time in six decisions.

In AL affairs,

Rangers' win over Yanks makes
Jays stand alone at East summit
By The Associated Press
The New York Yankees still
can ' t claim first place in the AL
East for their very own. .
Rafael ?almeira hit two home
run s, just missing two more with
doubles off the wall, as the Texas
Rangers beat New York 8-5 Monday night at Arlington to knock the
Yankees out of a firsi-place tie with
Toronto.
The Yankees have been tied for
first place 16 times this season, but
have never had Sole possession of
the top spot.
"It would have been nice to go
into first place," manager Buck
Showalter said. "Anytime you get
the opportunity to put pressure on
them, you'd like to take advantage
of it. We got down early 5-0, and
it' s tough to come back. I'm not
happ y ubout it, but we're still
close."
Palmeiro, who drove in four

Ohio State's plans ...
(Continued from Page 4)
"We' ve tri ed to de sign a
defense that gives a quarterback
problems as far as pre-reading the
defen se goes," he sa id by telephone. "I'm sure Ohio State will
giv e its quarterpacks simple
answers to what we're doing."
Those unswcrs would include
quick-hitters, the draw play, screen
passes and the shorter, quicker pass
routes.
Ohio State's insurance policy is
backup quarterback Bret Powers.
Powers played against Wushington,
which went on to win the national
championship, while a quarterback
at Arizona State two years ago.
Powers hit 5-of-8 passes for 102
yards with one touchdown and one
interception against Rice. Cooper
said that he expected both Hoying
and Powers to see action against
the Huskies.
~
The game , telecast by ABC
Sports, will be the second night
game ever at Ohio Stadium.

runs, has 34 homers and 93 RBis
this season.
"Another couple of feet and I'd
have had four home runs,"
Palmeiro said. "But I'll take it. The
best ball I hit was the double to
center field in the second inning."
The Yankees rallied in the ninth
on Mike Gallego's three-run homer
off Craig Lefferts.
Roger Pavlik (10-6) was the
winner as the Rangers closed to six
games behind first-place Chicago
in the AL West. Loser Scott
K :~mieniecki (9-5) lasted three
innings, allowing six runs and eight
hits. He's 9-0 at home and 0-5 on
the road.
While the Yankees were losing,
surging Baltimore won its eighth in
a row with a 5-1 victory over Seattle at Camden Yards to move within two games of Toronto. Jack
Voigt and Mike Devereaux each hit
home runs.
" We're two games behind
Toronto," Devereaux said. "Hopefully, we'll put everything together.
It seems like it's going that way.
The hitters are starting to come
through."
Starter Ben McDonald (11 -11)
al lowed six hits in 7 1/3 innings
and won for the seventh time in 12
st:trts.
Losing pitcher Dave Fleming
(.10·3) allowed five runs on seven
hi ts and walked six in 7 2/3
innings.
In the only other games in the
AL Monday, beat Chicago 3-1 and
Milwaukee edged Kansas City 3-2.
Red Sox 3, White Sox 1
Rob Deer hit two home runs,
inc ludin~ a tie-breaking shot in the
seventh mning, as Boston beat Jack
· McDowell and Chicago at
Comiskey Park . The Red Sox
snapped a five-game losing streak,
while Chicago lost for only the second time in 10 games.
Deer entered the game in a 1for-23 slump, but had three hits and
scored all of Boston 's runs.
McDowell (21-8) lost for on! y

the second time in his last t 1 deci·
sions, giving up three runs on tO
hits. He was ejected after Deer hit
his second homer of the game with
orie out in the ninth for arguing
about a previous pitch.
George Bell of the White Sox
was ejected in the second inning
when he was hit by a pitch from
rookie Aaron Sele and charged the
mound.
Brewers 3, Royals l
Malt Mieske singled in the goa~e:a~ run in the seventh inning as
VISlltng Milwaukee beat Kansas
City.
Mieske, hitting .194 on 6-for-31
with four RB!s, knocked in the
winning run in the seventh off Greg
Cadaret (1-1), whO' relieved Mike
Magnante.
Magnante allowed only three
hits in six innings, but one was Pat
Lis tach's game-tying, two-run
homer in the sixth.
Jaime Navarro (10-9) won his
third consecutive decision, giving
up two runs and six hits in seven
innings.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868
.-,.

State Auto's already
low premiums can be
reduced even more by
insuring both your car
·and home with the Sl~itlll
Auto Companies.

the lnlemalion•l League, and Sterling
Hl!chcock and Domingo Jean, pitchen ,
f rom Prin ce W illi1m of the Cuolina
leaJUe.

N11ional LeaJ.ue
ATLANT A .BRAVES : Activated
Dei on Sanden, outfielder , from the l S·

day disabled list.

FLORIDA MARLINS ' ROCIIIod

David We~then, pitchm, 1nd Nigel WilICII, OU~cldet, (rom Edmontm of the Plcific Coast Lcapc.

NEW YORK METS : Recalled Doug
S1un~n

1nd Tito N1varro, infieldcn,

from Norfolk g the lntemaLional Loape.
Pun:h11od tho contract of M1uro Oauo,
pitcher, from Nod'olk ,

SAN DIEGO PADRES : Recalled
Melvin Nicve~~, outfielder, Luil Lopez, infielder; Dive St11on, fi.nt 1 b11oman, and

Frank San.inan, pit~;:her, fn:m Lu Vea11
of t.ho Pacific Coast Iague.

FootbaU
NaUonal Football Luaue
GREEN BAY PACKERS : Waived
Tim Klial, punier.

ICII, llf~y.

'

Ro-risned Tim Wat-

let us tell you just

··"'
how much your savings
can be.

. ROGAN . ~
NER

~Services

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687

"1nsurance
J!j State
Auto
Companle•
..

�I

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
··

The Dally Sentinel-Page 7

Ohio

J

•The Area's Number I
Marketplace

Tuesday, September 7, 1993

Page-6

.·

Engle second
birthday
celebrated

Multiple medications po~es
•
serious -r----r.oblem· witb elderly

•

Michael Allen Engle, son of
Ann and Fred Engle of Portland,
celebrated his second birthday in
• his home on July 24.
.
Attending were: Ann and Fred
Engle, Agnes and Cheryl Sellers, ·
Marilyn, Gary, Christie and Gary
Lee Cooper, Ruth and Harold Sellers, Stacy, Brittany and Danny
Black, Clarinda, Tommy and J essica Theiss, Kasie and Jacob Sellers
and Julia Engle.
Sending gifts were Betty Reed
and Candy Burkhamcr.
The theme of the party was John
Deere Trac10rs.

Dear Ann Landers: This is in
response to the letter from "Bellevue,

MICHAEL ALLEN ENGLE

Winchester; Ryan Carsey, DayiOn;
Bob and Gerry Halley, Cheshire;
John, Ruth Ann and Misty Carsey,
Athens; Seth Kendall, Albany;
Terri, Kevin, Nick, Autumn and.
Shannon McLaughlin, Steve,
Cheryl, Ashley and Mcgann Halley, all of Middleport. Pearl and
Lena Yeauger, South Charleston,
W.Va.; Wayne and Susie Yeauger,
Elkins, W.Va.; Jennifer Yeauger,
Alfred and Hilda Yeauger, all of
Racine; John, Cathy and Grayam
Ycauger, South Point; Amy and
Robert Kuhn and Robert and
Joshua Halley, Dexter.

First Tillis
birthday
recoRnized

CAITLIN RENEE TILLIS

Wash,,' whose 73-year-old grandfather is taking a number of
medications and seeing several
doctors, "Bellevue" was concerned
1•
bo
d •5
0f
a ut ran for
pa hisuse
mu ttple
medications
heart condition
as well as his severe depression and
periods of disorientation.
This is a very serious problem that
needs more attention, Thirty-six
million Americans 60 years of age
and older are taking one or more
prescription medicines. More than
half are not taking dleir prescription
medicines correctly. Different
dosage schedules can be confusing,
· L
eas to 'orget and ·
Y '' combining mconvemen
Moreover,
several medications increases die potential for
adverse drug reactions.
The National Council on Patient
Information and Education (NCPIB)
qelieves that betler communication
is the key to solving this problem.
Please tell your readers to as1c the
following questions and get the
answers about their prescriptilln

ANN LANDERS

o

Yeaugre family gathers
The 22nd annual Yeaugre
reunion at Silver Run Baptist
Ch urch was attended by the following:
Ella Mac Yeauger, Allen and
Dolores Yeauger, Fort White, Fla.;
Norma and Dorothy Yeauger, Melborn, Fla.; Paul and Ethel'Yeauger,
Palm Bay Fla.; Wanda Grandstaff,
Helen Wachinger, Lester Yeauger,
PreSIOn and Pam Yeauger and family, Columbus; Mary Doefer, James
Bumfield, David Hill and Joshua
Doefer, all of Mooresville, N.C.;
Sanlea and Gene Yeauger, Enon;
Don and Marlene Yeauger, Canal

Ann
Landers

Caitlin ·Renee ·Tiilis celebrated
her first birthday on Saturday, July
I 0 at th e hom e of he r parents
Angela and George Tillis.
Attending or sending gifts were:
Melodie, Randy and Rachel
Forbes; Delmar, Deana, Brandon,
Sarah and Jonathan Larkings; Darlene and Jerry Tillis; Wanda Wolf;
Lena and C.C. Howard; Jerry , Jeri ,
Jessica and Heigi Matson; Mike
and Joyce Cline; Phillis and Jerry
Cline; Mark Cline; Chistal, Jeff,
Cody and Hannay Ridgeway; Jerry
Howard and Margaret Eskew and
George Gum .

.. 1~J.s!~t=,~~~
"

Times

Crutors Syndicate"

medications:
l. What is the name of lhe
medicine, and what is it supposed to
do7
2. How and when do I t.ak,e it -and for how long7
3. What foods, drinks, other that:
medicines or activities should I avoid
He will leave me 10 percent of
while ·-'-'-g diu' medi..l-?
his assets while his three daughters
'"'"'"
.4. Are
there any side~effects, and will receive 30 percent each.
what do I do if dley oceur?
He expects me to 'fund my own
5. Will this new medicine wock checking account
safely with die other medicines I am , We've looked at some condos, and
lakin 1
he expects me to put up one-half the
6.
there any wriuen informa· down pa)'menL
tion available about die medicine rm
I must pay my own income tax.
taking7
I must pay for my own medical
Physicians, pharmacists and insurance.
nurses will be happy to counsel
He's a nice man, but I always

t

CommUlll ty al endar
•

patients about their medications if
they ask. Please, Ann, lei them
know. -- PAUL 0. ROGERS,
CHAIRMAN, NCPIE
DEAR PAUL: You've let diem ·
know, and I. thank you. Your letter
could malce a great deal of difference to millions of seniCI' citizens, I
appreciate your taking die time to.
write.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm 60 and
single, and I have been a schoolteacher for 35 years. I've been
dating a 65-year-old widower since
last September. He wants to marry
me but has already made il clear

· RATES
Daya

·

dreamed of a tilarriage in which I
would be-taken care of complecdy,
Whal do you think about this~
--"MS. CHIPS" IN MIAMI
i
DEARMS. CHIPS:Ifyoo'vebceli
teaching fm: 35 years, you slioulcl
have some savings and ,retirement
money. Ifyou care about thi~
man, you should not bailc at ~
idea of sharing part of die fmancial
klad.
·
~
It would be a shame to pass up
an opportunity to have a nice;
compatible companion in the;
evenmg of your life. I urge you to
rethink this silllation.
'
Gem of die Day: Experience is:
what you get when you don't get;
what you wanL
•
Plannino• a wedding? What's

To place an ad ·

COPY DEADLINE

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.8-12

POLICIES

CLOSED SUNDAY

Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Thunoday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

• Ad1 ou .. kle the eounty your a«;; f'UIUI mUll be prepaid
• BeceiYe dUeount for ada paid in advance.
• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Fouod ad. under 15 wordl will be

And they're a tt wom e n excep t, of course, for the Old Bachelor, a pree ning type in a tweed
sui t, bow tic and pocket handkerchief.
Both wo men said the Old Bachelor is meant to be a figure of fun ,
rmher than the cruel caricature they
sa w in the Old Maid.
"E verything in the trad itional
game was based on the Old Maid's
unattractiveness," Eisel said. "We
wanted to eliminate that."
"We didn't want the Old Bachelor to be misconstrued as a putdown of any kind of man," she
added. "He's kind of from another
era - out of step."
" He' s basically a nice guy, but
something 's lack in g." Johnston
said . " He doesn't have an interesting job like the other characters,
und he's more interested in himself
than what's going on in the world. I

right? What's wrong? "The Ann:
Landers Guide for Brides" will
lie~ yoru: anxiety. Send a self-ad·:
dressed,long, business-size enwlope:
and a cltec/c or money order for
$3.65 (this i~telruks postage and ·
handling) to: Brides, c/o Ann Lan- .
tkrs. P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, I//,,~
60611-0562. (In Ca11ada, ~end
$4.45.)

rei

Public Notice
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
lliANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio Auguat20, .
1813 Contr.ct Sal•l.egll
CopyNo.t3-831
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
SNiad ·propoAia will be
raoalvad at the oftlce of the
director of the Ohio
Department of Tranaporllltlon, Columbua, Ohio,
unlll 10:00 a.m. Tueaday,
September 14, 11113 for
lmprovemenlll In:
Parllt 1 thru 10 lnclua.lve

c·

Plains VFW Post #9053 wilt" meet· '
Boosters will ineet at 7 p.m. in the at 7:30 p.m. Dinner will be served'
High School Band room. All at 7 p.m. All members are enC!Jur----~~~~-......:;....-:~-----------=Meigs
band parents are encouragea to =aged to attend.
TUESDAY
RACINE - The Southern Local attend.
,,
School Board will have its regular
POMEROY
Percc
pter
Beta'
•
RACINE - Racine Village meeting at the high school.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport .Beta will meet at 7:30 p.m . at the ' l
Council will meet at 7 p.m. at Star
Lodge #363 will have its regular home of Nellie Brown. Members 1
Mill Park.
CHESTER - The Pomeroy OES stated meeting of at 7:30 at the are encouraged to wear purple.
186 will meet at 7:30p.m. at the Lodge Hall. All master masons are
·I
CHESTER - The Chester Town- Chester Nfasonic ·Temple. All offi- enco uraged 10 auend.
POMEROY
-There
will
be
a
ship Trustees will meet at 9 a.m. at cers are encouraged to attend and ·
dinner at the Senior Citizens Center . •
the Chester Town Hall.
should wear street dresses.
WEDNESDAY
with serving from 5 to. 6 p.m. Cost ·:
for
the meal is $4 per person. The
POMEROY - The regular
POMEROY - F.O.E. Auxiliary
MIDDLEPORT • Weslyan menu will be turkey; dressing,
monthly meeting of the Drew Web- #21 71 will meet at 7:30p.m. there Bible Holiness Church will hold a
mashed potaiOes and gravy, tossed
ster Post 39 of American Legion will be a potluck dinner at7 p.m.
missionary service at 7:30p.m. salad, roll, beverage and cherry
will be held at 8 p.m. Dinner will
with Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kline of
beat7 p.m.
REEDSVfLLE - Eastern Athlet- Cottonwood Ariz. Everyone is wei- delight. Following the dinner,
music will be played by The Clasic Boosters will meet at 8:30 p.m. co m~.
sics,
featuring music of the 40's,
CHESTER • The Chester PTO in the high school cafeteria.
SO's
and
60's. A free will offering
will meet at the elementary school
MIDDLEPORT - There will be will be taken for the musi cians .
at 7 p.m. All parents are encourBURLfNGHAM - The Bedford
a meeting of all Catfish Festival The public is invited to attend .
·agcd to attend.
Township Volunteer Fire DepartQueen contestants at People's
ment Committee will meet at the
Bank, Middleport, at8 p.m.
POMEROY - Alcoholics
PAGEVILLE- Scipio Town- Burlingham Modern Woodman
Anonymous
meeting 7 p.m . at
ship Trustees will hold a regular Ha II at 7:30 p.m.
THURSDAY
Sacred
Heart
Church. For more
monthly meeting at 6:30p.m. at the
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers information call 992-5763.
Pageville Town Hall.

446-GolllpoUo
367-ChooLii-o
3118-:VIniOn'
245-RioGraade
256-Guyoa oi.t.
643-Arohlo Dt.t.
379-Walnut

675-Pt. Pl.e... alll

992-Mld.U..por!l
Pomeray

4511-Leon
576-Apple
773-MMOD

c...,..

9115-Chooler
843-Portlond
247-Letort Folio

882-New Hano

949-Ra~lne

895-t.lart
937 -Bull'alo

742-Rallond
667..{;oot.lle

l!llount bid.
ihe Dlalllct Deputy Director.
Porlll 1 thru 10
Jerry Wray
Athena, Galtla, Molgl,
Director of Tranaporllltlon
Morgan,
Waahlngton (8) 30 (9) 7, 2 tc
Countlea, Ohio for
Improving tan atructur• on
verloua routn and •-=tiona

EAGLE
LANES

. PUHUCNOTlCE
The Melga Count- Board
of Revlalon haa completad
Ita work and the booka era·
now open for public
lnapactlon.
.
Melga County
Bo•d of Revlalon
(8) 27,29,30,31,(9) t,2,3,5,7,8

(Fermer Mascn Lanes)
3rd and Pomeroy Streets

Mason, WV
(3041 773·5585

101c

WINTER HOURS
Sun.-Thurs. 4-10 pm
Fri. &amp; Sat., 4-pm·?

DINO-MITE

Now Nllilg {Jiinl b8lllld lll&gt;riv
supplier• WBII• poolstickl

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING
Tri-m., Tepp1ttt. R-oval

985·4181

LINDA'S
PAINTING

'•

. .;

INTERIOR

'-"
.'..:..t
...

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
pal ntlng. Let me do It
lor you.
VERY REASONABl,.E
HAVE REFERENCES

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,....

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614·985·4180

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8/t211311 mo. pel

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Public Notice

P.:

PUBLIC NOTICE
THIRTY (30) DAY COMMENT
PERIOD

• i '1:

-- ~

Huge Garage Sale
Friday 4th 9-4
179 Oak Dr.

-·g
... .

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.

In accordance with the

~1

·~

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l:il

Jerry Lewis k{cks of! 28th Labor Day telethon
Dy ROBERT MACY

Associated Press Writer
LAS VEGAS (AP) - Comedian Jerry Lewis opened his annual
star-studded telethon against muscular dystrophy with a promise:
"We are gomg to beat this," he
said of the debilitating disease.
The 28th annual Labor Day
Telethon to raise money for the
Muscular Dystrophy Association
began Sunday night. In the 2 I 1(2

hours before tod_ay's finish, Lewis
and MDA off1c1als hoped to surpass last year's record total of
S45.8 million. ·
In addition to a throng of entertainers, Lewis promised the audicncc the telethon would provide
details of new advances in the battic against muscular dystrophy and
other neur'?.J!lUSC~Iar diseases.
Celebnt•es s1gned on for the
show included· Wynonna, Elayne

Boosler, Michael BellOn, Jay Lcno,
Lynn Redgrave, Mel Tillis, Ray
Charles, Willie Nelson, Carol Burnett, Garth Brooks and i'ack Jones.
As it has ip recent years the
telethon opened under a clo~d of
criticism from activists who say •
Lewis raises money by evoking
pity for the disabled. Demoristralions were planned today at some
of the 200 television stations airing
the show.

LAYNE FURNITURE

€f.

MATTRESS OR
BOX SPRINGS

_; ~}

FULL OR TWIN SIZE
REGULAR ................................. S78
FIRM ................. ......................... S88
EXTRA FIRM ............................. S98
ORTHOPEDIC
KING SIZE SETS.........;.. $350 &amp; Up
QUEEN SIZE SETS ........ $275 &amp; Up
BUNK MATTRESS ............ ts8 &amp; sat
BED FRAMES ............... S25·S36·S60
MON. THRU BAT. li-5-PHONE-MIJ-ll322
3 MILES OUT BULAVIUE PIKE

,_.

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PHONE=------------------------------------------

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MAIL TO=----------------------------------------

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·The Daily Sentinel

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111 Mechanic Street, Pomeroy, OH. 45769

Executive Director

The•• comment• mu•t be

recolvad betwaen September 4, t893 and October 4,
11193.

;d '

"'""'
,!f.;
•

provlalona of Section
3734.55 (A) of the Ohio
Ravlaad Code, the Gallla,
Jackaon, Melga and Vinton
Joint Waate Management
Plan. The Droll Plan Ia a
comprehenalve document
that addreuao aolld waote
management In the Four
County Olotrlcl for a tO year
planning period.
The GJMY Joint Solid
Waate Dlatrlct'a Droll
Management Plan lo available for public ravlew altha
following location:
GJMV Joint Solid Waata
District
213 Eut Broadway
Walla ton, Ohio 456112 ,
(Dlolllct Ofllco)
Wrlden commenta regarlf.
lng the GJMV Joint Solid
Yiaote Olttrlcl Droll Plan
may be oubmlllad to:
GJMV Joint Solid Waolo
Dlatrlcl
2t3 Ent Broadway
Woliaton, Ohio 45692
Adontion: ·
•

s:

Expl111s September 15, 1993- One Item - One FI'INIItem Per

13- lo•uranee
14--- BllliDeU Trainib.S
15- SehooJ. &amp; IDit.ructtoo
16- Raruo, TV 4 CB Repair
17- Mioe..lo-uo
18- Want.&lt;! To Do

.,

38904

. c.........

Midd'-port, o•io

614-.992·7144

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspout&amp;
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESnMATES

949-2168
3-16-113-lfn

4/29/93 '"'

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

RACINE
MOWER CLINIC

•New Homes
-Garages
&gt;Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Parts aad
Mowers • Chain Saws
WHdeaters

915·4473

s.r•

WALKEI AlLEY

Authorized: BrW:,• &amp;
Sln!tlon MTD, an,
I.D.C. Repair Center
PICKUP and DEUVEAY
Hour• 116- M-F 11-3 S.L
Cloaad SundiY

949·2104

7122/93

(9) 7 lie
'•

'

.

41- Ho ..... for Beat
42- Moltlle Ba•e. far Reat

47- Waascd to Rent
48- EquipMeql for Bent
49-Forl.ouo

\11 l:t II 1\lll :- 1
51- Ho....bolcl Cooclo
52- SportiaJ Gooclo
53- Aallqueo
~ Mioe. Mon:handioe
5~

BuiJdims SuppUoa

H WARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZE.!! 1_!1}CKHOE
and TRACIUIUI: .WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC ~YSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER BITES,

•DOZERS
•BACKHOE
•TRACK LOADER
•TRUCKING

&amp;

Extarlor

Painting
(FREE ESnMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmeatone,
Dln, GrtiVel end Coal
Ucenaad .,d Bonded

GENERAL
HAULING
Limestone
Dirt
Gravel

992-7878
7rTI1mo.

314.V31 mo.

•LIGHT HAULING
&gt;FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
12-30-92-lln

Box 189

Middleport, o•lo 45760
(614) 843·5264 5/14/93/lln

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions e Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTlMATES

614·992·7643

12·6-tfn

(No S1ntlay Calls!
2/12192/tfn

Shade River Saddle Shop
RICHARD ROBERTS

"Ad Specialtieo"
122 JIY Drift, Gallpallo, Oh.

446-7612
FIXIVolce 446-7612
.

1-4~111

Pomeroy, Ohio
GRAVEl. SAND,

614-742-2138

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM ••d
REMOVAL

AMERICAN GENEUL LIFE and
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE

PH. 614·992•5591

We Haul Gravel,
Coal, Trash, etc.
614-698-3290

SAYRE TRUCKING

DIIWIII.OIIO
7131191/lfn

BUllDOZING

WICK'S HAULING
SERVICE

Reasonable Rates ·
Joe N. Sayre

'·100.141-t070

Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

B&amp;G
Trucking

LIMESTONE,
GRAVEL, TOPSOIL
&amp;COAL

992•711hr
992·5551
or TOLL .fill

Pomeroy, Ohio
li-1"Hfn

CUSTOM SADDLES,
LEATHER REPAIR
and BALL GLOVE REPAIR
36358 SA 7

HAULING

IIW &amp; . . . Nllrl L'OII
AUIUIU&amp;MIIU

(614)
667·6628

Arnold's
Plumbing,
Heating
&amp; Cooling

7flllfn

Frame Repair

Accident •Annuity, IRA • Mortgage

R&amp;C' EXCAVATING

or
614-698·6500

Specializl~ In Custom

EXCAVATING
4-19-93-tfn

QUALITY WORK
&amp;GOOD RATES
DAVID ARNOLD
(614) 992-74741
Pomeroy, Onl.ol

~nlerlor

PARTS

Life • Medicare • Cancer • Fire • Health •

FREE ES'nMATES

EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Ea~y Bird
$100 PayoH
This ad good for 1
FREE carcl.
Lie. No. 005t-342
11124192/lfn

-Roofing

WHALEY'S AUTO

D.A. BOSTON

UMESTONE-TIIUCKING

BINGO

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-R..Om Aclclltlona
-Gulloor Work
.£Iectrl..t and Plumbing

4126/lln

Lone ktle•, Olt. e5J'e:u

-..~.

,;.

;a
l.e••li••
~

992·3838

, I~

NAME=----------------~-----------------------

How..! L Wrftesel

FRU ISTIMITES
50734 IItle'
Rtl.

1'"'
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. ....
•J

nonn . Celebrities helped Lewis raise over $46million and set a new record for the annual
Labor Day weekend event. (AP Photo/Ralph
Fountain)
· ·

DAVIDSON'S
PLUMBING

DRI~~~~:~Ll.ED

;i;.;

·(ELETHON TALENT SHOWCASED •
Entertainers Steve Lawrence, left, and Eydie
Gurmc perform with Jerry Lewis in the final e of
the 21-hour telethon for the Muscular Dystrophy Association in Las Vegas Monday after-

11- Help Woated
12- Slluotlono Wonted

Paint Mobile Hon~est
and Aluminum Siding
J•Pc&gt;wer Washing

in the Classifieds!

(NOTE: 15 WORD LIMIT AND YOUR SEUING PRICE MUST BE IN YOUR FREE.A,D)
(SORRY, THIS DOES NOT APPLY TO YARD SALES)

3- AnnouDCe•eob
4- Ciwea~ay
ii- Hoppy Ado
6-- Lo.t and Found
7- Loot and Found
8- Publ;. Sale 1:
Auction
9- Waat.d to Buy

LeaveMessap

-~

,\ I I I I , I ' " 1,

46-- Space fof Rent

Fr"btlmatu

SAVINf.S•••

..

.

43-- Farnu for Rut .

Public Notice

I1·~~:::~~~~ &amp;Services
Exterior

This Is Your Invitation To Sell Any Item For $100.00 Or Less
And Advertise It FREE.
Simply Clip This Coupon (Photo:Coples Not Accepted),
Fill In Your Ad and Mail It To Us or Drop It Off At Our Office.
Your Ad Will Run For One Week.

I \1:\1 - 1 1'1'1 I I ,

-44- ApartMeDtlor R~t
45- FumUbed Roomt

f!~PIPing

ENTERPRISES

FREE
CLASSIFIED AD

FruiloaV......Ioo
ForSolaorT......

PubliC Notice

742·2360

Clean Out Your Closet,
Basement, or Garage•..
And turn Your Unused Or
Unwanted Articles Into CASH With A

GET REStJI.TS • FAm

Gallla Counly Melp Counly Muon Co., WV
Aru Cod&lt;! 6I4 Ana Code 614 Area Cod&lt;! 304

Public Notice

1 In the Village' of Malta, 1
1n tha VIllage of
McConnelavllle, 3 · In th,e
City of Ath-) by clunlng
and painting ulatlng ateet.
"The date aet for
completion of thla work
ahall be aa aet forth In the
bidding propoAI."
Plana and Speclficatlona
are offered •• one contr.act are on fila In the
and will be conalderad on Department of Trane..
tho baale of the total portatlon and the oftlco of

?

thin k I dated him two or three
times, at least."
The women said the idea for the
new game came to them five years
ago when they were playing Old
Maid with Eisel's daughter, now
11.
"We noticed that all the male
cha racters were supposed to be
fairly competent, but the female
characters weren't,': Johnston said.
" And there was a particularly ugly
Old Maid."
An d the women always
appeared in very traditional roles,
such as librarian, schoolteacher and
secretary.
Eise l and John so n created a
whole new set of characters with
names like Josephine Judge, Consuela Cardiologist, Primrose ·
Plumber, Stella Stage Manager and
Ann Archaeologist.

Pota r.. su
Muolull.........,,.

-

Cla11ified page• cOtoer the
foUowing telephone exchange• •• •

.nan 3 day• at DO eb&amp;I'JII.
• Price of ad for all capitalletten I• double price of ad eo.t
• 7 point )iDe type oaly uted
• Sen~ ill not re~pon~lltlc for errora af~rr.r•t day (~beck
for errora {JJ'al day ad r\UU in paper). C.U before 2:00 P·•· ~
day after publication 1.0 make eorrection
• Ada that mwt be paid ia adYance are:
Card of Thanlu
Happy Ado
Ia Memoriam
Yard S.JM
• A elault~ ·advertilemeat placed ia the The Daily Seat.inel
(except Clauiried. Di.tplay, Bu1in.u. Card or I..tp1
N'otiea) willai.o appear iu the Polnt Pleuant Repter and
~i.e GaUipoiU Daily Trihune, reachine: over 18,000 home~

DAY BEPORI! PUBLICATION
l:OQ p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuaday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thunday
I :00 p.m. Prtday

New card game offers 'The Old
Bachelor,' with a bald spot
By F.N. I)• ALESSIO
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Remember
the Old Maid, the long-nosed and
less-than-lovely lady on the card
you didn't want 10 get stuck with?
Two women have discarded the
Old Maid and replaced her with the
Old Bachelor. He combs his hair
over his bald spot, keeps his mother's picture on his dresser and has a
thick· 'little blf!Ck book."
"It's Old Maid for the '90s,"
said Jane Johnstdn, who developed
the game with Debby Eisel. They
are Chicago-area editors for legal
publications.
Old Bachelor went on sa le
recently at 75 area stores for $10 a
pack. Gone are the lumberjacks,
sk iers and go'ld-diggers seen in
some versions of the game. Th e
new characters include a cardiologist, a stockbroker a~~ a rock star.

Rate Over 15 Worda
I I \ I\ I I I I
15
$4.00
$ .20
21 . . . . _ Oppol'llllllly
3
15
$6.00
$ .30
21- Mo.y 1o Lo..
6
15
$9.00
$ .42
2h Prol-t s.r.....
10
15
$13.00
$ .60
Monthly 15
$1.30/day
$.05/day
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day u separate ads.
33-- Fuw.1 for Sala
. Butlneea Card--.$17.00/ Inch per momlh
34- B,..l_. Baildm.
Bulletin Bo•rd ••.$6.00/inch per clay
3~ Loto 4 Ae...,.
1-----~;;-.....-;======------i
Roai .Eolato 'll'..ted
l:l\111Wonlo

1

Chester, Oh. 45720
985-3406
3/&amp;'tln

36970 BaH Run Road
LIMESTONE,. TOP SOIL
&amp; FILL DIRT ·

992·3470
OWNER: Jtll Wld!•6110111

RESIDENTIAL
CONCRETE
WORK
Porches,

Patios,
Sidewalks
992~7878
717t

We hava • large atook of aeveral namo brand tiraa and
If we don't have, wa can get IL
OUR NEWEST LOCATION IN MABON, W. VA. IS
OPERATED BY CHRIS NEAL.
304-n3-5533
2nd Location call Lon Nul
Hendaraon, W. Va. 304-175-3331
MMierowcl lind YIIA -.ptacL
1-5-1111

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL
'

�\

Tuesday, September i, 1993

I

Sentinel

OhiO

An noun cr rn c111 s

35 Lots &amp; AcnNigi
I, I, 10 20 Acroo MIL Will Land
Con1rad, llnlall Down Poymont,
.._ Paymonta, 114o:IM.atM.
2 I.Mo For ..SilO: ApplDKimllloly
1 Aero lol / l 112 Aero lo1, 4110
milO out Nelghbotl aad Rood
011 .. Rt 14\. ·-4438 for
mcrelnlonnatlon.

3 Announcements
NOTICE_., molorcycloo or 4
Uughl 01 ..... Oft lhe
0111 PI i I rty on Oil Ridge or
~ Rei wiU be Pf: I: utecl
to tho l u - Ulllll oiiMIIw.
....

I

•

.... -·"'II ·-··

~z::.ocil4 01 :104~207.

I

4

45

1993

Furnished
• Rooms

"-for

ron!·-

71

_'_::_~-~-:~'__;,S_~...;;.~~lf.~»trs·

BRIDGE

AutOI for Sale

.
r

or - h .

loortlntat~. --

114 1WIIIO.

.......,.. roome wtth cc=•

~,•
.,..,AIItlaah\'11&amp;
Coli ..er 2:00 p.Ja., -~
-.Mo-wv.

letters of
0 Rearronge
fgur Krombltd words

PHILLIP
ALDER

Rentals
46 Space for Rent

Giveaway

1·~11

NORTH

. _ . . lor '""' atarllng at

.QJ86
.KQ 1086

S85/mo.,IM.fta·2117.

.g

EAST

.97542
+7 42

I
I TAUDI

I

WH 1 C T

I

TROMEH

• AIH

tA965
.AKQ1074

~

s

SOUTH

Solilll

Found: 2 ball glovoo Ill the Star
Mill Park In lloclno, 814·9482G21

1187 Ford F-150 XL, t3,10G i 111M

Loet:· gray clUtch puf'lt, keep'
money, return contente, no

57

qunllonl asked, Pomeroy araa,

:104-675-2503.

Glllla ·Mtlgl Community Acllon
Agency Rat An Immediate

Yard Sale

7

Opening In Mtlge County For
An O&amp;aruch Jlntake Worker.

Thlt Position Require• An In·

dlvlduol Who WO&lt;ko Woll Undar

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Pr ...ure.

Qood

Math

Or

Bookkooplng
Sklllo
And
Capability Of Working lndoponALL Yard Sal11 Mum Be Paid In dontly Aa WoH Aa Teamwork Ara
A~ulreNntt For the
Advonte. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Funhtr
COmputer Exporionca
the doy bOforo the od lo to Nn. Poolton.
SUnday edhlon • 2:00 p.m. DoslrOblo. Tho lndlvlduol Mull!
SlnCIIIW Concern For thl
Friday. Mondoy edhlon • 2:00 Have
Economlctlly'
Dlaac:lvantaged
p.m. Slllurdoy.
And Ability To Work Effoctlvoly
Solo:1051 Socondl ovo. 6-8. With Thom It Eauntlal. High
ltorm door,tabln-&lt;:hlrll, ntw School Educ.otlon Or Equlvotant
Roqulrod. Tripo To Out.of·Aroa
coal lOla other ~hlngt;.
Modlcal Facllltloo Aro A Po~ or

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Tht Jobj Therefore Experltent
In Federal Program• Including
Outreach And Trsnsportatlon

Aro Bonoflclol. Only Thou Wllh
lbaurablt, Rtllablt Trtneporta~
Gallipolle Fe~, elan eouth of tlon And Valid Driver•• Lk:ti\H
Poll! Olllco, SOpl. 2-11, clolhoo Should Apply. A Kni"JJIedge or
Molgo County Noedo.:' For Out·
250 .
rooCh
Tranoportlllon. Application• And RHume·a Will Be

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity.

Accepted Through September

14, 1193 At Tho Gollla -Molgo
Community Action Agency 8010
Norih Stoto Routo T, ChHhlro,
Ohio. Wo Aro An Equal Oppor·
tunhy Employer.

Financial

recommend• that you do bull-

n - wl1h pooplo you know, and
NOT to Hnd money througn the

mell Unlll you have lnv...fgatecl
the offering.

l.ac.ol Pay Phono Routo: $1,200
A Wook Po4ontlol. Prlcod To
Soli. 1-iOG-4ai-7U2.

2 bedroom trail• In Porter area

m-5785.

Wanted to Buy

NHdtd, llcenN, Thi'M Yiart

Driving Experi1ncl, Good Drlv·

also buying Junk cars &amp; trucks. Ing ROCO&lt;d,_ And Adoquato
AUtomobile (;Overage Requlr.d.
304-173-5343.
Salary: $4.75/Hour. lt lnlerHted,
Junk cars, any condition, 614· Contact Cecilia At 1-800.531·
2302. Doadllno For Appllconta:
992·7553.
f/10/H. Equal Opportunity
Wanted .tending timber, top
priCII paid, frM t1tlmat11, Employer.
llc:tneed • cartltled logging, WANTED: EMERGENCY RELIEF
COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUC.
304.S9S.3055 or Si!i-3838.
Wanted To Buy : Standing Tim· lORIS) ntlcllcl to teac:h com·

and peraonal tkllle to
Plna. Can Start lm· mun ty whh
ltamlng llmhatlons
medially, Good PrlcH, 114-MI- 1dult1
In Gallll &amp; Mtlgl. HOURS: Aa
ber &amp;

H06.

echedulld/ae

nMo.d;

aomt

·
nooded,
Top Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S. ovornlghto
Hl~h
Colna, Gold Ring'!, Sllvor Colno, WHkdoylliwHkondo.
Goad Colne. M.T.~. Coin Shop, achi&gt;ol dogroo, valid drlvor •
llclnae, thrM ynrs driving ••·
151 Second Avenue, Gelllpollt.
pertenc:e, good driving r.c:ord,
adtqu~la
1utomobU1
Want.cl to buy: uMd mobile and
homM. 1'14-o441-0175

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted .

M.f&gt;.
Plaallc tonko, 255 gal, po~abio
• dunblt. 304-1113-4838.
POL£ BUIUltNG SPECIAL
30'x40'1'. Pointed Stool Sldoo1
Galva!,... Staat Roof, 15'XI
81oot 81kll• 3' Mon Door.
$5,888. ERECTED. Iron Horw
~a .. Bullcloro 1-1100-352·1045.

:tbdrm. ·~nment In Pomeroy
lor ront, 814-62-61158.
1bdrm. unfumlahed apartment

Fumlohed,

(Ginlf'OIIOJ

lng, Roloronco Roqulrod, 114448-GBSS, 9-4.
2bdrm. opts., total oloclrlc, opNtw

2

HomeiBaeement.

Bedroom
$38,500.

COVIFIQI

required.

S.lary:

1964 New Moon 10x55 2 Bidroome, AC, Awning, Good Con-

dillon, $3,500, 814-256-8187.

1m 12x60 mobile home,
2bdnn., muat move, 12500, lm-

madlata pcuoulon, 814-742·
2357.
1172 Wlndoor, 12x&amp;p, 2br, goa
hllll• good cone!., .,,ooo. :J04.
882-&lt;8M after 8pm.
1m 12xl&amp;5 Kirkwood, 2 btd-

room, new carpet, fumace' air

3yra old, 10x12 bldg,
trNted deck wl roof. 304-1757138 IIIVI rneeug1 or 1~304cond

1186-2013.

tm Unltopo 12&lt;85 2BR. au

hut, ntw ctrpet,lllra riica
through out. $7150.00 814........_

0175

pll•nces tumlehld, laundry
room facllllln ciON to ach~
In town. Appllc1tlone avalltb._

at : Vlllago Groen Apia. t49 or
call614-992·3711. EOH.
2br, effk:lancv apartment, off

BHCh St., Middleport. 304-882·

2561.

Fumlohad
Efflcloncy:
807
Second, Golllpolla, Shero Bath,
Utllltl01 Paid, t1851Mo. 614-44114418 After 7 P.M.
Fumlohed EHictancy 7 112 Noll
Gall~lla, Utllhtao Paid, St65:
614 446 4418 Aftor 7 P.M.
Fumlohad 1Br Apl., 101 Fourth ·
Gallipolis, Shere Bath, S2oO
Utlllll01 P,ld, 61&lt;-446-4418 Aftor
7P.M.
for rent In Pt.
614·892·5858 after

BEAIJTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 531 Jockoon Pike
from $208Jmo. Walk to 1hop 6

movloo. Call514-441-2588. EOH.
BHCh St., Mlddlaporl, 2br, fur·
nlahtd
apartm•t,
alto
efflc:ienc:y,

depoell

&amp;.

ret..,

utllllloo pold. 304-882·2!588.
.
I
rafwence,

underpann1ng,

EOE .

cond, Galllpolla Forry,

12

Situation
Wanted

AVONI All areu. NHCI extra
money or want a carter tither Gentleman looking For Uldy
way-call Morilyn. 304~·2545 Companion, Friend, PIHH
or 1-8QO.OI2-63S6.
Send Reaponu To : Box CD "100,
Clo G1lllpolla Dally Tribune, 825
AVON I All Araaa I 5hlrioy Third
Avenue, Qalllpolle, OH
Spoors, 304-675-14:5.

6~2!178.

304-

1183 14x52 01kbrook Tolal
Electric, AC, 2 Btdroom1, Exctl·
lent Condition, 614·256-e543 Or

114--256-1141.

tumhur1, hMtlf"',

w.tern I

I

1i88 14xl2 Hollypork, 3br., 21ull

baths, total tlectrlc, $13,000.

304.S75oi521B anytime.

S.arw
Woodburn•,
Doon, AutomatM: F1n, Bleck
Pcrcolaln Plpo l Chlmn.y A.

oombty Inc. Stokomotlc Coat
Slovo,l14-3117'7530.
Sot 01 Bla OWl Lompo, With
SMdoo, $40, 814-3-33.

Work booto. lf4.441.:1188.
Ullflghl Frigldalrra llcl. F.....,,
ofmond,llko . -. $200.00 11424U31Q
Slzo I 112 Nlko Shark Foo4batl
Clolto, $25,114-245-577:1.
W•-~ O.V., llalrlgorator,
CoJor 1.V. FrWur, Ali eon.
dhlonor,
Co- ·SID
Rolrklorator, Mlclvwovo, 114251·1238.

63
Ll est k
-'7--:-::~:..;Y..:..:.;.;OC;.;:.:;~....,...,..
2i Urnoolno oowo l bul,
$21,000
firm .
· Morgon'o
WoocllawnoFarm, Rl. 35. 304'Hl'
2011.
C:.Hit
Hauling: . Anyllmo,
Anywhero. PLA Hllltboro Ohio,
Evory Monday. Chuck Wllllomo,
~ Crook Trucking. 814-246Hont, TNm 01 Draft Multa,
Herne• a Llrge W.gon, 114-

52 Sporting Goods

532.:1870.
12 J"UIIO Brwnlng auto modo Sun Ray Eloot llova, 20" Gl~o
In_,_ olalum, - . 8800. Blka, call Anyllmo, 8M-388-mt.
Transporlation
linn. 30"4-a76-17:12.
Boor Hunter ll-num C- Ton Oollon Flah Aquarium With
-.
-·· Hood And Bockaround And 1\No
. :.:-_ ~ ~~ camaullago, Nolo To. 13&amp;, 8 "-~• 2551 •
pouncl
71 Autos for S&amp;le
5
~5. !ll&gt;oooo-.
"iii9.~;;;;;u;~~t.~;
-Remington ?ODADL 270, new
cond, ICOpe l CIH Included,

uood ona aoo110n, 1400. 30WJI.
•

2048.

53

Antiques

Buy or oatl. Rlvorlno Antlqun,
1124 E. Main 8trool, on Rt. 124
Pomeroy. Houtw: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. lo 8:00 p.m., Sundar 1:00
to 5:00 p.m. 114-fl2·2525.
Wanted to IMry: "Old Loa

HOUM" WIU . ,.mo¥1. 114--~
1448 evenlnga or NriJ am.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
10 R. Alum. - . SlllatU!o Dloh
I Rocat-. 814-441·1731.
10 Satatlfta Dlih ToohlbO
llacol- /Romoto I Coblo
12.500 Finn. 24 BUlb Wolll Tonnina Bad 12,000 • - - .
NO, 114-388-1212 Anydmo.

w-

porch,

wv.

SWAIN •
AUCTION I RJRN!TURE. 12
Olivo St., Golllpotla. JMwl Uood

12hp riding - · · 31" out,
1880. 30WI;l·2422.
1887 Kawuakl 280 4
8800, 1887 Eocor1 11.100. oao:
Air Condhl«w, $50, 114-317'
0132.

$4.75/hour. lllntorooted, contact 1m Now Moon, 14x70, 3 bodCocolla
at
1.S00.531·2302. roomo, AIC1 natural goo~~
Otadllne for appllcanta: S/10113.

VIta Ml.tw e1ercl11 bike, good

~172 Oldsmobile Dtltt 11, EJC:el.

17' Alum. Molor Box1 Robulh1 15
Hl"', Mercury Gooa Conclt10n,
$1,4001 1'14w448-1258.
111714 Sklllcraft 22 R. No Troltor,
114-2!56-1528.
1H1 Boyllnor, 18ft., 14Dhp, lnboMI/ooilbolord~orythlna Included, 881100.
75-4080".

PROBABLY .. A
EDVCATION 15

'i'OU ClON'T

14AVE A
DOG ..

I

76

=

Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories
~

BudCIIt Trenunltelone, UNCI

J

arM, no pete, 114-112-~33.
No~h

4th, Mlddloporl, Oldo, 2br.

tumfahed apartment, •I.e 2

aHiclancy apa~mont,
l rotwonco. 304-882·

z•
3NT
Pau

·-

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Immune - Greek · Pants • Vanity. KNITTING

My neighbor, who is. very active, had to stay in bed
with a broken leg. She insisted that she was not really
being idle, because her bonss were busy KNITIING.

ACROSS

48 llltory

1"'-"'

As in last year's experiment, this
year there were two Epson Worldwide
Pairs, held on June 4 and&amp;. Clubs in 90
countries took p~rt. Some 30,&amp;00 play·
ers competed In North America; there
were 11,500 competitors in China.
The Epson is unusual in that when
you finish a deal, you learn your score
(from 0 to 100) immediately. The other
results in your club - or anywhere are irrelevant.
The deals are taken fro!JI tourna·
ments held many years ago. The ·
scores are derived from the orillinal ·
results.
The biccest single score was 1876
out of 24,00 . It was achieved on
June 4, by Zhao Bao Qi and Wang
Lei from China.
The best North American score on
that day, 1818, was achieved by Roland Brunet and ~rko Kassabian, who
live in Montreal. They did very well on
today's deal from the event.
Kassabian, South, reaUzed that he
had a very strong hand, Opposite
something In spades, which North
must have bad In order to bid three notrump, he deCided to take a shot at the
club slam. Even If his partner was
short in clubs, perhaps the jack would
1 w:vp. It pays to be accressive in the

t::"o

- ·--

1 DNtan of •
Ar-lort

It

152 AlldlltJiw"INIICitlt

"lloopoM

1113-14 ToOl far

14£-

15=.
111NIO!IIo
17 roa-..,

11 """'"
oro! col10 Oflllodawll
11 Actor
llonlond

2511tr

llo.tdltowo

21-

DOWN

1 Old-

......

I Actor -

~-··
Slantr

-....-·tball

4

5

23
24 ""'
Propllol

30 'A33 Uortr

IAc--

15 -1101

7Rhtvo

27=. ....

:14 Notoo rich
38 -(ptt1.)
31 Vool-

I P11tldt IIIII

,_

&amp;Mrymors .

·-37-ln

lick....
' foroflorl
llnapthot.

to_ • ..,..

40 tom
43 Crftlcoi Slo-

-

kot llld45 8llppory
41 K1ttll&lt;hm

II

=o1

13 Blrollhl-

III'DW

18:10 Aoofodgo

28=
2thloo

nMI
3D Oloclplo
31 lolllory

32 - Angatoo
38~
GrQIII

38B*Iollltl
3f Eorlrlltnt of

22·Swene

'•

West led a low spade. Kassabian
won in hand with the 10, played a dia·
monel to dummy's king, ruffed a heart,
ruffed a diamond, ruffed a heart,
ruffed a diamond, overtook the club
jack with the ace and ran the rest of
his trumps. West kept two spades, so
the
made exactly.
920 was wprth 87 out of

.
...

,.buln, 111 typoo, 110111ng at Iff:
-nor 514-245-5877, •M-m22113.

Sept. 7, 1993

CJ-5 llborgl- Joop body to Ill
11175 and undor and lo~,
141711, 114-247'28SI.
r
·
·
Lfahl •lght utllhy trallor hhch,
tHo Horlzono, Orrin!, and oll&gt;ir .

Tod ay is t~e 25 0!~
day of 1993 and the
79th day of summer

IMIII bumper c•rw• S15. ~

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I'D AATHE!&lt; HAlve; tv":'( DAD
READ TO Me AT ee:DTIME
THAN MY MOM . .

I

WHa-1 MY MOM RQA.DS
TO ME, i1'5~Y5

AeroRY...

.

I

-

TODAY'S HISTORY&gt; On this day in
1876, the James gang was ambushed by
local citizens when it attempted a bank
robbery in Nort hfi e ld, Minn . Th ree
members of the gang were killed and
two wounded ; only Frank and J esse
James escaped.
TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS: Elizabe th I
(1533·1603), queen of England; Grand·
rna Moses (1 860·19611, painter; Paul
Brown 0908· 19911, football coach-exec·

I

l

•

I

•

cryptogr"81'1'1S ar• Cl"ellled from quOIIIIOnl by famous people, put and preMnt.
IEM:tl!Mt•ln the dph« ltendiiOf another. Today'• due: J ~ 8.

~Cipher

C XL

VOKLVXSM

'V G U

GN

DXSB
X

XUY
DBFXU

AWYIDMO

NXFM
DXSS

X

GN

NXFM

J M W U H

• (IQBBFUWLY)

PWF

FBOOXK.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "A successful marriage Is an edifice that mus1 be
rebull1 ·~ day." - Andre Maurols.

utive·

SEPTEMBER 7 I

ITUESDAY
RIFt'

Home ·
Improvements

Pets for Sale

BASEMENT
Groom lncl SUpply lhop.Pot 1QM Y
Qroomlng. All llioldo, llyloo.
•oyola Catlca OT, PW, POL,
WATERPROOFING
2 Ton Truck L.cod or f l r - . Julio Wolib. Colt 814 445 02:11.
PM, llopd, llr, cNioa, llh, now Uncond1Uon11 lifetime gutran·
paint, new while -..t• tlrH, IM. Ucal refl,.ncM furnithlld.
Grovot ~'r'~To 10 Ton A
Load,t
.
I RogiaWWI Po4 hl1tad Plgo, 1 oharp -,12200. ~2M3.
Coli 1.e00.287-057t Or 114·237·
lrod, 1 loor, 1 Iarrow , , . Dodgo Arloo, Qoad Condl- 0411 Rogoro Walorproollng. E•
31" Klndlowood Wood...._, tabllahtd 1m.
' tlon. Air, 1\200, 114 441 1552.
88,000 BTU W.r111 11ofr11ng 1100 AI, 114-44f..12M.
Propono Holllor, 114-258-1531.
-on T_.., Puppy, S80
eut•- ••- Or
Curtla Hom• lmprovemtnte. No
Pl-.114-251-6251.
~'!.. oy, Job Too Big 0! Small, Vearo Ex·
Cndao,
AM11'M
cu. perlenct On Older INew.r
31 Fo,_ - · h.OO Each, 1114251-1121.
Hom•. Ac:ldltlone, Foundation•
AKC Clllhuahuo Pupptoo, 1
4 Fool Wldo 11-l'olcl Door., 2 Month Cluarantoo, 2 llaloo, 1
Aooflng, Khchlne /Batha. In~
Fomolo,
8121,
1135,
814-387'11100.
tiM
Cldomoblto
DoHa
88
Seta, Ntw StJII In loa, $21,
our11d, l'roo Elllmatoa. 114-3117·
Each, OBO 814-317o02711.
'
AKC Cockw Spanllt, 2 Pup., lroughlm, PI, PI, PW, p.,.; 0518.
M-hor -oo. 11_.- 1Rt1, Cllmm. Control, Power
88 Gallon Oil Dnlmo ta Each Whh You,.,.
... ~ • ..
~
LAcko, Etc. AMIFII Storoo. Ca• Davlo Sowing Machlno · And
Uoo Aa Bum Bonrota Or Qoro 011, 448-4110.
Hllo. Loaded! Ono OWnor Vacuum Cle1nar Atpllr, FrH
Etc, 814-38a.llUO.
Pick-Up And Dollvory, GoO&lt;goo
AKC R~alored Booton Torrler Bought Now Cor, Hood To Soli! Crooll
Rood, 814-448.CJ294 . .
,_
114
Eac:OIIOnt
Conclhlonl
Looka
Mo. .,
1
-441-1441.
1'11--..1 A-Ll
. _.ng: 14,.,..-. 114-446. Aon'a TV Service, apecl•llz.lng
AKC
Roglllorod
Coeur 4223 Allor 5:110 P.M.
In Zlnhh .• lao 11rvlc:lng moel
Sl&gt;lnlolo, 2 Mala Papploo, 4 tiM Pontiac Floro, oil-, I14- other Mode, Hou11 calle, 1110
Montho Cld 1 Bun 1 Wha. 1
oomo oppllonco ropolra. WV
Blo~k l Whho, Aloolt 2 Voor iltd 711:1·2411•
304-171.Za88 Ohio 514-441-2454 .
Fomata Black l Wh o l 3 Y•r 1117 Chfty Cavalier, $2,1100;
Old Molt Buft I Whho, C:OH 1,. Chfty Cantlor, 13,1100. Sapllc Tank Pumpl_ng_880~Gallia
CO. ROll EVANS ENTERPKISES
Anytime: 114-441-G1311,
114-441-Gm.
JackMn, OH 1-800-137-8~8. '
AKC Aoalollrod Moltaoo
1887 Orand Am 12,000 Mltao,
Fomala.,111~W-Oici. ,Ws:.i'i77.' R..-~-• u_,__ - - Will build polio covoro, olocko,
-.- -~ ·~.
KI'Mnld roorne, put up vinyl
Flrlll
Shoto,
l14o24
. IM-24M23z.
oldlng or troller okl~lng 114Sarloololnqulrloo Only.
'
•
1117 OldiiMblt. ... bltlck, .,... 2454152.
Dog For ..... Sovorit 711:1-2411.
81-. 1 112 Ou1 Rt. 141,
Plumbing &amp;
w.rne Shoemakll, 114-446. 1.. Floro OT, black oXIorlor 82
~3.
. gray lntorlot, atr, PS, PI, PW,
Heatlog.
I,
PDL. ..nroor, I llpNd, MY'Ir
Floh
To...
2411
JaokMn
A•o.
d~von
In
wln11!1,
Iunday
clrl-.
F,..man'a
Hutlna
And
Coolin(~
,
CONCRETE SPETiC TANKI, Point P-nt. 30W7WOU,
ti0,1100,114-M8-2217.
lnllollotlon And Sorvlco RSEB
11!JOO Oollon, 1325; 1Mw JET . .
tul 11.,. Tropical J.,~O:ndo, 1188 Ptymoulh Rollanl, Rune 1 c.rtlflld. Allidtntl•l cOmmer- ·
(flo Sand FIHar Roquhd) amiH
tnlft'Walnd I
$1,4111; Ron bono Entanwtooo;
••••· 114-258-1111.
•
•
Jaokoon, Ohlot~ ·
2124.
Locka - . 11,800, · 84 Electrical &amp;
Eight Fool Picnic T - All
,... . ~h
Horhion,
TI'OIIed ,Wood, 180, 114-211Automatlo, Air, 24.000 - .
1131.
Good
Dodao Moo, -OIIJ.IIIc,_ Air,
For hlo:
......
Coot
With """'
Zip Oil
Plio - l..lnlng
11,410. ~:~-ion,
·14o11•14. $50.114...... . -.
1281.

=

Nicely lumlohod opo~mont
largo yord whh Plfvato porldnl

1•
Pau
Pau

Pau
Pau
Pus
Pus

Epson.

YOU Ktc.l [ tOO 'r
UK£ 5£Af001&gt;,
GI.At&gt;YS!

an. lull atzo tNCk topper. - .
71'3oo5831.

Eul

Services

Block, brick, _.,
wtn-.c. c
Win·
loro, Rio Orando, OH Coli 814241-lt2t

56

"'

BORN LOSER

Work Cor, $450, 114-2U- l.:..ll6-:..:..:231..:....:.8·~-----:..
8823.
u-n.w 111 t1nka, one ton truck
1110 Chlvene, ee,ooo Mil••· whHit..! ,.dl1tore, floor mate,
olo. D " R Auto, Rlplo~ wv. 304Runo Watlll~1
372-3W or 1.U00.273-•321. ;
.J acklon, Ohio, 1.aoo.m·M28. '
1110 Flroblnl 1011,000 Mlloo._Eo·
WATER STORAGE TANKS cellon! Condftlon, Camper 1op- 79
Campers&amp;
Above And Solow Oround FDA por Eacol- Condloln, Call
814-378-2882.
Approved For Potoblo Wol111'.
Motor Homes
Ron Evono EntartHI~ Jack•
1.. Chtveltt, 4 doot;o::~· 18ft, Trotwood camper, good
eon, Ohio, 1-800-13'7-11•.
now front brokoo, 1500.
• cond., St250. 304-675-4090. i
Walorlcrd cryatal drinking ,._ 2422.
'
..., Lllrnoor8 pattern, f40. e.ch
1882
Iuick
Rlvorto,
...... for light, 24
plocoa In oii,OIYI tl2. ooch twdlolorL very low mllaaa. ooncl., .,eoo firm. ~JI.l021
ploco, - h - · Large Ftahor oftoropm.
...
burning llovo, Qrondpo - . oonc1
1475. caoh ooto. a~-676-7141. '
Wood Bunw lim With Trlplo
lnoula1ed Plpo,I14-245-N2?.

doWI, tint ...,

I
I ...;..: I I '

concl.,$20. 304-67!1-8880.
WATER LINE SPECIAL: 3/4 Inch
200 PSI tiUS; 1 Inch 200 PSI
132.50; Ron Evano Entan&gt;riooo

55

~

r1

'·::J)·

--· -·

...

-ton, _.,,-. ,...

by mailing $1.2.5 and a long , self-addressed,· iSsueS tOday· Which te nd to div ide family
stamped envelope to Aslro· Grapli. clo this members inlo warring !actions. In stead talk
newspaper. P.O. Bo• 4465, New York, N.Y about 1!1ongs where all are in accord.
10163. Be sure lo slate your zodiac sign.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Be extremely
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) If yo u have some· considerale Ieday regarding lhe ways you
BERNICE
thing of critical importance to do today, put it deal wllh persons who are 'performing spe·
on
the top of your agenda and give It pnori· cia I assignments or ta sks !Or you
BEDE OSOL
ty. Finish this fir st before doing anylhing 1 Unreasonab le demands could shut down
else.
, your producti on line.
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) It's best not to TAURUS (April 2G-May 20) Your 1udgment
make impulsive commitments today pertain- might not be up to par today when it comes
ing to investments. Whal might look good at to taking ris ks in areas that directly affect
first reading may nol hold up when closely your fi nances or security. Move cautiously.
scrutinized.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Today W you are
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·Dec . 211 Even a going to do something special lor a person
well intentiOned associate could unintention- for whom you feel responsible, do it without
ally hinder you today . Try to do what needs fanfare or strings. Contingencies will
WadMOday, Sept. 8, 1993
doing indep en dently ol others, thereby duce negative effects .
CANCER (June 21-July 221 Waot unlil you
In lhe year ahead you might be rather lortu· . avooding risks.
nate in finding and acquiring collectible CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) 0o not let have all the facts at your dis posal today
items of considerable value. If thi s is your your ego get in the way today il there is before making evaluations. If you prejudge
jotention, do so in a methodical. organized something you are trying to do but lack the people or siluations you may have to oper·
L~ay.
know-how lo 'do so. Everyone has to ask tor ate from a distorted picture.
LEO (July 23·Aug . 22) Try not to get
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sapl. 22) Oon'l be inlimi· help upon occasion. .
dated by challenges today. bul, by the same . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Perhaps il's Involved today in an arrangement with a
token . don't make self·diluling assessments best you do not.Pry too deeply into a maHer dose tnend where one has to borrow from
where you lhlnk the odds favor yoll, when , an intimate friend is trying to keep secret. .t he other , or where you are collectively
in acluelity, lhey're against you. Virgo, treat You might learn something you'll wish you doing something you hope would generate a
yoursell to a birthday gilt . Send tor your hadn't
profit.
Astro·Graph ~redictions for the year ahead PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Try lo skirt •
'

ASTRO-GRAPH

Ir~~~~~~~Condll::~lon:,

48831.

SEVERAL 7· AC.RE PARCELS:
Molgo Count_y, Satorn 1\Np.,
MIOI ac:f'll. Remote, belutlful
land; wOodo, pulutw and hlllo.
Coli lor good mop. 1.&amp;14-5f3.
8545, Athtn1,0H.

UNLESS

FRANK AND ERNEST

Apartment
for Rent

Downtown Area, ott Street Park·

oHied Medical O.cupotlona and S4,000,DP. $38D.21 Monthly
P1yments, 114-44&amp;--1157, t-5, Or
O.Corat.cl etoneware, wall tete- Otflco Sarvlcoo. Oponlngo IIIII 614-8114-4501
Aftor 7 P.M.
ovollabta.
Call
now.
Tho
Aduh
phonu, old ilmps, old ther·
mometera, old cloeka, 1ntlqutt Education C.ntll', 1-&amp;00-137·
32 Mobile Homes
furniture. Rlwerint . Antiques. asoa ... 614-753-3911.
Run Moore, owner. 614·892· WANTED: EMERGENCY RELIEF
for Sale
2528. We buy esttt...
COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUC. I::==-:=.:..:...~:..:..--,.,.-.,.,..
Don1 Junk hi Sail Uo Your Non· TOR (S) NMded To Te1ch $144.72 per mon1h, new 14' wide
Working Major Appllancos, Communhy And p.,_,.,l Skllla mobile home, lnclud11 tklrtlng,
With Loamlng otopo, ~:omptoto Hlup •
Color
TV'1,
Refrigerators, To Aduna
Freeurt, VCR't, Mlcrowav.., LlmMatlont In Gallla And Meigs. dlllvery, 1 montha lot rant, 1M
Air Conditioners, Guhtr Ampa, HOURS; AI Scheduled fAt 5 yaar werranty, 1-80().837.25.
Noodod; Somo Ovornlghto
Etc. l\4-256-1238.
J &amp; D't Auto Plrhl and Stlvtge,

AFTER I GRADUATE
FROM SC&gt;!OOL ,WILL I
.A BETTE~ PERSON ?

814-215-alM Aftor 4 P.M.

2 Bldroome, Stove, A•frige,.tor

Like

r·

PEANUTS

Rio Gromlo 12x80 2 Bedroom•

qulrod, 814-441-0284.

Anllq ..a and u'H d furniture, no
h.m too .. rge or too n~all, will
buy one piece or complete
household, c:aU O.by Martin,

2592.

Full SID tm Bronco, 114-251-

1851.

Unturnl1hMi,
Stove,
Ratrtaerator, Clean, Aeftrencu,

2 Bedroom, Qaraa• Apartment,
Stove &amp; Retrta11afor Fuml•hld,
Roloroncoo, &amp; Dopco~ R•

Olver·

Everything, All Tho Eo·

conatruc:Uon worbra fDr rtn·
tlrll. 814~46-0508 .

44

Norlll

By Pbllllp Alder

1181 Dodge Qnncl C.revan Le
51,727 Mltao, v.e, Automlllc.

,.r.renct r.qu!red, will coneldtr

Plw Dlpolh, Utllhl•, 2 Mll11 N.
Vlnlon, &amp;14-388.goao.
__.

p~r~~mt~

73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

Fumlohed Eaooptlonolly Cloon,
c8;;-14_·3::Bc:.8c:.B::OOc:.O:· ....,.,.-.,.----,
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Nice
clun mobllt home, good

West

Canadians on top
on Friday·

1000

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711 Ford F250 4WO. I14-446.9243

-

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NEA Crossword Puzzle

~!1011 .

all utllltln pold, $2!5Q/mo., Stoo
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2 Bedroom, 2 Balho, $275/Mo.

our d1vtlme

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by f1lling in tke missing we~rds

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET ANSWER

Openi ng lead: • 3

COMPANY!!

Bldwoll Arao, Dopooh Roqulrod,
Coli 814-388-11131 A~or 8 P.M.
V55 Fftandly Ridge $200/Mo.
ttoo Dopco~. 1 hdroom, 814-

Local V.nclng Route: $1,200 A

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under

THAT MEANS
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$1,100, 114-448oo1811, Or 0011.

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want to 110 Job roodT In tou
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•a.

MY NOSE 15 ABOUT
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1188 Ford Rongor XLT. 4 ely. 5
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Pursan Auction Company,
eervlct.

SUM· SUMM ·SUMMER
SALEI
Hummlngblnd Muolc C.ntor
J.si:kaon, Ohio
114-216-888i

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3728.

Wll de bObyohtlng In my homo,
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10xl0 moblta homo, 2 bedroom
Will de mocllcol tronocriptlono, 820Fourth Avo, Galllpolla. $325
rwMimM
t•m
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othor typlns, will pick up l 4416 after 7 p.m.
deliver, 1144Q8..1011.
2 bedroom tr~llerl!:!,&amp; dep, no
pot.o, Rt. 82 N.
II Rd on
right, 304-676-10711.

Public Sale
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A~k

Musical
Instruments

au~ trombone, ueed e moa.,
$350. Clarinol, tl50. 304-6~

All Yard Salol Mull Bo Paid In MLTIMT·20 hours per -k.
Advance. Doaclllno: 1:OOpm the Prlmarlty w"ktncilmldnlghte.
day betort tht ad • Ia run, Muat bti able to work holldaye
Sunday edhlo,.. 1:OOpm Friday, and other ohlfta II nooded. Sand Acceaaorln, monthly paym1nta
MondaY
edhlon
IO:OOII.m. resume to p.,.onnel at low ao tt&amp;.OO, coli today FREE
Pl....ni Vatloy Hoophal, 2520 NEW Color Calalog. 1.U00.482
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Valley Drlv.. Pt. Plnaant, WV ttil
Oarogo Sat• 782 High St.1 .Mld- 25550 AAIEO£
dltport . .ttemt of all IUfMII,
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N..cl1d: Heir DrnHr, Pan818,7,8.
0 - Sola• Sopl. '· 10, Wlppto 111M,
NHda Manag. . Llcena~ ' - - - - - - - - - Ad., Five Point.. Po.,..-oy, nln Call 814-446-3353 i A.M. Till 1 1·
P.M
.
or ohlna, tam·?.

8

· 1•
s+
••

Compte!. lhe chuckle quoted

11:\ PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

Lost&amp; Found

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L--L-.L.....l-..L....l~...l yov deYelop from · sfep No. 3 below •

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The not so smart fellow
~
1 1 1
jumped into the slowly moving
. . . . .
~ cab and yelled." Follow that
..----:--:-----"'.., c~bl' Laughing the cabbie reG L A WE G
pl~ed, ·1hayeto, he's ·-···- me!"

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low to form four words .

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the

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..
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'Birthday

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10-The Dally Sentinel

Suprise party
held for
Bradshaw

'The Joy Luck Club' imitates art

A surprise birthday party was
held for Callie Bradshaw at
Me Donalds on Sept I.
Refreshments of pizza, pop,
cake and ice cream were served to
Art, Tessie, and Butch Bradshaw;
Kristi Richmond, Jeanie Lipscomb,
Becky Tyree and Ellie Faulk; ·
Gifts and cards were also presented by Vicki Ashton and Shirley
Tyree.

,,_,, ..!'~!;

,.;,.-

•

CALLIE BRADSHAW

Sayre family holds reunion
A reunion of the desi:endants of
Martin and Emma Roush Sayre
was held Aug. 15 at the Star Mill
Park in Racine.
Attending were: Halley and Jim
Boffencamp, Denver, Colo.; James
and Ann Sayre, Saint Cloud, Fla.;
Irene Payne, Saint Petersburg, Fla.;
Gene Payne, Montgomery, Ala.;
Norma Burris, Orlando, Fla.;
- Eldred Hart, Eliot, Maine; Todd
and Leah Burris, Taylor Hill , Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. William Sayre,
Sandra Sayre, Maxine and Sharon
C!tnp, Jim and Roberta Cox, Doris
Rogers, Aaron and Janeene Davis,
Jack and Betty Jo 'Rush, all of

TUesday, September 7, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Columbus.
Dennis Hart, Middleport; Paul
and Evelyn North, Alberta Saundcrs, Connie Bradley, Shelley and
Brandon Pickens, all of Gallipolis;
Wilma Styer, Waterford; Rod and
Marjorie Grimm, Ronald and Linda
Grimm. George and Dorothy
Sayre, Luiley and Mildred Hart,
Ronald and Hilda Hart, Gilbert and
Audrey Hart, Robert and Lillie
Hart, Mark, Sharon, Kimmy,
Nathan and Matthew Harvey; Rollie, Shirley and Suzanne Stewart,
. Dan, Donna; Danny and Dena
Sayre, Joyce and Robin Manuel
and David 311d Dorothy Sayer, all
of Racine.

Tea," teamed up with writer Amy
By PATRIClA BIBBY
Tan to adapt her hugely popular
Associated Press Writer
Every once in a while a movie novel of the same name that domicomes along that is so stirring and nated best-seller lists in 1989.
so moving thai it stays with you . Simply put, "The ·Joy Luck
long after it's over. Like a wonder- Club" tells the stories of four
ful memory, it washes over rour young Chinese-American women
psyche for days and bathes 11 in living in San Francisco and the
hardships and tragedies their mothsome indescribable richness.
ers
endured before immigrating to
, "The Joy Luck Club" is just
the
United
States.
such a mov1e. This is filmmaking
The
tales
are !OQsely knit around
at its best: a wonderful story that
transcen$ cultures. It is beautifully June's going-away party in which
set and filmed, superbly acted and she is quietly inducted into her
mother.'s mah-jongg circle. June's
masterfuUy directed.
And it's no surprise when r.ou off to China to see the half-sisters
consider those who are responsible her mother was forced to abandon
for it. Director Wayne Wang, as she fled the counll'y. The mothknown for "Chan Is Missing," er, who recently died, never knew
"Dim Sum~· and "Eat a Bowl of the fate of her twin girls after she

--Names in the news-real pale, white, way overweight,"
he said. He has since shed 25
pounds.
Brooks' hits include "Friends in
Low Places" and "The Dance."

·-

-~

-.....

-.;_

..•.....

--··

left them by the side of the road.
June (Ming-Na Wen) has lost
her mother Suyuan (Kieu Chinh)
without realizing the hope and love
she had for her. It's only through
this exercise of venturing into her
mother's past that she finally
understaods the power of her mother's love an~ her high expectations
for the future.
·
Similarly, the three other
women of the mah-jongg club all
have some secret from their homeland that has taught them profoundlY. harsh lessons, And each mother,
like all mothers, wants to spare her
child the pain she has had to bear.
Bring a good supply of hankies
just the same because "The Joy
Luck Club" is a tear-jerker in the

best sense of the word. The film is
rated R.
Motion Picture Association of
America rating defmitions:
G - General audiences. All
ages admitted.
PG - Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be
suitable for children.
PG-13 - Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may
be inappropriate for young children.
R - Restricted. Under 17
requires accompanying parent or
adult guardian.
NC-17- No one under 17
admitted.

Ohio Lottery

Reds,
Cards
split pair

Pick 3:
830
Pick 4:
. 6043

Buckeye 5:
2-4-15-19-33

Page4

Willard honored at
quilting luncheon

Val. 44, NO. 93

Belva Willard, of the Darwin
area, was treated on her 96th birthday with a luncheon held in her
honor at the Hemlock Grove
Grange Hall on Sept. 1, by the
quilting group of which she is a
member.
The quitters have been meeting
each Wedensday for five and a half
years and Willard attends regularly.
In the afternoon the group was
joined by Wallace Bradford, Jim
Hazelton and Ann Lambert to go to
the Pomeroy Nursin~ and Rehabilitation Center to smg and serve
homemade cookies to the patients.
Attending the luncheon was
Helen Quivey, Sara Cullums, Leota
Smith, Golda Reed, Stella Colburn,
May Romine, Edna Clark, Janie
Offutt, Rosalie Story, Vada Hazelton , Aletha Randolph, Mildred
Ziegler, Lutchia Riggs, Muriel
Bradford and the honored guest
Belva Willard .

Pomeroy council OKs new water district

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A
~-new book by cable TV personality
CLOGGING - Pictured are the Midnight
val Saturday afternoon. (See page one for addiRalph Emery describes a tearful Ctoggers performing at the Rutland Street Festi- , lional pictures, story).
. George Bush on the eve of his reelection defeat
In "More Memories," Emery
writes that Bush broke down
aboard Air Force One the night
before he lost to Bill CliniDn, when
the Oak Ridge Boys began singing
".Amazing Grace."
·
"I think maybe some reality
was hitting," Emery quotes Joe
Bonsall of the Oak Ridge Boys as
saying. "There was a real possibiliBy ERINMARIE MEDICK
ty that George Bush could lose this
The Colu111bus Dispatch
election. Everybody was crying,
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP)- As
NEW YORK (AP) - Frances including the four of us."
her
hands
were
being
wra~ with
Emery wiU retire in October as cloth strips, police recru11
Fisher said having a baby with ·
Shana
Clint Eastwood in real life was not nightly host of "Nashville Now" Smith set her jaw in determination
far from the role she played in a onTNN.
looked into the empty boxing
His first book, "Memories," and
movie she was making at the time.
ring.
"Here's my character wanting spent six months on The New York
She had something to prove to have children and being with a Times non-fiction best-seller list. to herself, to her fellow recruits and
guy who has already done it before, " More Memories" was published to her instructors at the Columbus
and not being sure if it's going to last week.
Police Academy. The day before
wreck the relationship," the actress
had been a nightmare.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) said, describing her role in the yetSmith, 23, was going through
Writers Vernon Vinge and Connie Hell Week- the most grueling
to-be-released "Babyfever."
Talking to Eastwood about her Willis shared top honors at the part of the six-month training to
movie role led the unwed couple to 1993 Hugo Awards, a top prize for become a police officer. One of 33
think about their own situation, she science fiction.
renuits in her class, she already
Vinge, a mathematics professor had made it through five months of
said in the October issue of Redat San Diego State University, and exhausting preparation.
book.
"The decision to have a baby Willis, who had two previous
After today, she knew her goal
had been percolating in the back of Hugos, won in the best novel cate- would be within reach.
rny mind for years, and we were gory.
A single mother, Smith had long
coming close to it anyway," she
Awards were announced Sunday been interested in becoming a
said in an interview that took place at the 51st World Science Fiction police officer.
before she gave birth to their Convention. The annual Hugos are
"It's very hard, very serious
daughter, Franccsca Ruth Fi sher named for Hugo Gcrnsback. who work," Smith said. "But I like the
first published the science fiction idea that I can make a difference.
Eastwood, on Aug. 7.
The child was the first for Fish- magazine "Amazing Stories" in Even if it's in a small way."
er, 41. The 63-year-old Eastwood 1926.
Smith said her 3 1/2-year.-old
BREAKING BARRIERS- Shane Smith
police acade111y on March 11. (AP Photo/The
has two grown children by Maggie
Vinge won for "A Fire Upon daughter, Blaze, was a key part of
practices boxing techniques with Sgt. Eugene
Columbus Dispatch, Jennifer Brown)
John son , whom he divorced in the Deep" and Willis for "Dooms- her decision.
Beer during her lunch at the Colu111bus, Ohio
day Book." She also won a Hugo
"I want her to be proud of me. I
1984.
for best short story.
want her to know that I'm doing stand out."
meant to build confidence. Today Stephanie Martin, as a punching
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) The award for best dramatic pre- my pan to help people."
Once Smith had to wear a would determine whether she had bag.
Garth Brooks says taking his fami- sentation, usually given to a film,
Blaze's father, David Griffith, mouthpiece as. punishment for talk- the toughness to survive on the
After two of the three required
ly along with him on the road took went to "The Inner Light," an also is a Columbus police officer.
ing. On other occasions, her mouth streets.
rounds, Smith was wringing wet.
a weight off his mind - and his episode of the TV show "Star
Smith applied for the job in was sealed with adhesive tape.
The day before she had been Sweat was pouring down her face .
Trek: The Next Generation.''
1991, taking tests to determine her
midriff.
It wasn'tlong before Smith had paired with a male recruit for her
Both boxers were exhausted and
The country star return ed last
communications, reasoning, memo- a nickname. Sgt. Eugene Beer boxing mismatch. Early in the had been stunned several times.
week after a month on the road
BOSTON (AP) - A six-hour ry and writing skills. Of 2,000 called her Tinkerbell, and it stuck.
fight, she was stunned by a blow on · In the final seconds, the
with his wife, Sandy, and year-old Labor Day concert organized by applicants, she ranked 21lth.
Besides physical training, the head. She panicked, forgetting observers yelled, "Good fight."
daughter Taylor to promote his Don Henley and featuring AeroNext, she had to write a biogra- course work included laws of everything she had learned.
"It's over. Thank God," Smith
sixth album, "In Pieces."
smith, Sting, Elton John and Melis- phy.
arrest, search and seizure, criminal
Instead of covering her face, she said. "My arms are like rubber
"I'm doing what I love, and sa Etheridge raised about $1 milThen she waited. After a year, law, patrol operations, civil disor- flailed her arms. When the fight bands. My heart was pumping
tomorrow morning, when I wake lion tn help preserve Walden Pond.
she was asked to take a polygraph der control, communications, acci- was over. she could barely staod or about 100 miles per hour."
up, that little girl is going to be
The Walden Woods Pr~ct is tes t, and detectives came to her dent investigation and traffic breathe.
Beer reinforced the reason for
pecking over the side of the bed at now about $3.5 million away from home to interview her.
enforcement, first aid and cultural
The critique by her instructor, fights.
me," Brooks said.
the $10 million Henley said is
Last December, she was inter- sensitivity.
Officer Joe Smith, and by her fel"Never give up," he said.
Last year, Brooks hit the road needed to buy land surrounding the viewed again by a four-person
But she found firearms training low recruits stung even more.
"Never
quit, if that's the only thing
alone. " You see pictures of me ?t pond. made famous by Henry screening panel, then by an assis- especially interesting.
"You would have been dead on you learn from this program."
the end of the tour last year, and l David Thoreau, and keep it .out of tant safety director.
''They take you and mold you the street," Smith said. "You're
About 11 percent of the recruits
look like I was about to die. Just the hands of developers.
A letter came a month later, in here. and it works. I was very going to get yourself killed."
drop out, Beer said. Five in Smith' s
ordering psychological and physi- nervous at rust because I wanted to
Smith wasn't going to let that class left before graduation.
cal exams. After passing both, she ~o so well, and I had to start fresh happen this time.
But of Smith, Beer said, "She
wa s offered the job of police firing a gun."
Her fellow recruits advised her committed herself to the program.
recruit. Training began March I.
The boxing match also was to think of this opponent, recruit
"It's kind of like a boot camp,"
Smith said. "You get yelled at for
everything. As a person, they tear
you down, then build you back up
again.' '

3y ED PETERSON
Social Security manager in
Athens
A person recently called the our
office and asked, "How much does
Soc ial Security pay toward funeral
expenses?" The caller was referring
to a one-time payment of $255
made to the surviving spouse or eligible children of a deceased wage
earner and is paid in addition to
any monthly benefits that' may be
due. Although the payment is usually considered as help with funeral
expenses, it need not be used for
that purpose.
The payment can be paid under
these circumstances:
• If you are the surviving spouse
and you were Uving with the worker at the time of his or her death.
• If you were married to, but not

li ving with, the deceased at the
time of his or her death, and you
are eligible for Social Security benefits based on the person's earnings
record. (You do not have to be
receiving benefits: you need only
to be eligible to receive them.)
• If there is no surviving spouse, a
child (or children) of the deceased
who is eligible for benefits on the
deceased worker's record in the
month of his or her death may
claim the payment.
The special one-time death paymen t cannot be made to a fanner
spouse. Nor can the payment be
made to a funeral home.
Social Security has been making
th ese one-time payments since
1940, when Social Security benefits first became available. Call our
toll free number 1-800-772-1213
for further information.

The physical requirements were
demanding. Recruits were required
to do 15 pushups, 15 situps and run
I 1/2 miles in IS minutes, increasing exercise routines as the training
went on.
Her pain tolerance was tested
when she dislocated her finger
while wrestling. Her doctor advised
her not to attend training for one
month, but she continued.
"I didn't want to feel like a fail ure," she said.
A white Beauty and the Beast
rain boot from Blaze helped. Smith
used it to cushion her injured hand
when she did pushups.
"It reminded me of why I was
doing all this - for her and me."
Smith found the academy can be
rough on a vivacious person.
"I've been called hyper, and I
guess that's true," she said. ''I'm
also very talkative, and that's a big
problem here. You don't want to

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78-1 0-0636M

2 Section e. 14 Pageo 35 cente
A Multimedia Inc. IMwap.oper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 8, 1993

MuiUmedlolnc.

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs County came one step
· closer to getting a new water district Tuesday night after members
of the Pomeroy Village Council
approved a resolution to join with
the village of Middleport in forming the Big Bend Water District.
·The resolution now needs to be
approved by the Middleport Village Council.
The resolution reads in jJart:
"Whereas, the village of
Pomeroy realizes that there is a
necessity and urgent need for the
establishment of a better public
water supply system which cannot

be economically or feasibly provided by the village individually; and
"Whereas, the village of
Pomeroy desires to join with the
village of Middleport to establish a
water district which would provide
a mor~ economically feasible
source of regional rural water for
the village of Pomeroy; and
"Whereas, it is believed that the
joint efforts of the village of
Pomeroy and village of Middleport
would qualify said water district to
be eligible for federal and state
assistance and would be conductive
to the public health, safety, convenience or welfare of the villages to
organize such a district; and

·"Whereas, the district shall be
designed to construct, operate and
maintain a public water system for
the benefit of the village of
Pomeroy and the village of Middleport; and
"Be it therefore resolved that the
village of Pomeroy join with the
village of Middleport and execute
and file a petition with the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for
formation of the Big Bend Water
District for the benefit of the village of Pomeroy and the village of
Middleport and such other areas as
may be specified in said petition
and/or subsequent modification of
petition."

Also, Council President Larry
Wehrung, Clerk Kathy Hysell and
Mayor Bruce Reed were appointed
to serve on the Big Bend Water
District Board of Trustees.
If approved by Middleport Village Council, the next step is to file
a petition in the Meigs County
Court of Common ['leas for recognition of the new district.
Ordinance discussed
A proposed yard sale ordinance
failed to get a second reading and
was sent back to the ordinance
committee for possible revision
after council members said they
received complaints the proposed
ordinance was too strict or unnecessary.

Realtor Dottie Turner said the
proposed ordinance, designed to
stop perpetual yard sales, would
hun poor people instead.
"A lot of people need the extra
money to buy diapers or food," ·she
sai~. "We're not a big city, we
don t need tn be so uptight." ,
Other business
In other matters, council:
- Authorized spending up to
$8,000 to repair portions of Pleasant Rjdge and Mulberry Avenue in
add1tton to the parking lot at the
Pomeroy ·Municipal Building;
- Approved the transfer of
$15 ,000 from the fire fund to the
fire truck fund;
- Discussed a problem with

people breaking into village parkmg meters. Village residents were
advised to call the police department if they see anyone tampering
with the parking meters;
- Considered examining the
possibility of extending the permitparking only area in the upper
parking lot and the creation of
handicapped parking areas;
-Approved the mayor's report
of$4,588.
·
Present were Hysell, Reed and
council memb'ers Wehrung, John
Blaettnar, Scou Dillon, Bill Young
and Thomas Werry, and Village
Adrmmstrator John Anderson. Not
attending was conncilwoman Betty
Baronick.

Murder suspect resided in
abandoned igloo in TNT area

Woman becotnes officet·
'to make a. difference'

Social Security used
for funeral expenses

Low tonight In mki-SO., partly
cloudy. Thursday, high In '80s.

on Aging whicb wiD provide volunteers· to assist
with clerical and directive work, Ann Looktan,
R. N.; Riverside Methodist Hospital, Nor111a
Torres, R.N., Meigs Health Deparlnlent, Rhonda Dailey, R. N., Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and T. C. Ervin, Health Department.

PROSTATE CANCER SCREENING Meeting jo complete plans for a free prostate
screening cllntc 01r Sept. :i9 at the Meigs County
Health Department were from the ldt, Dr.
James Witherell, one of the examining physicians, Susan Oliver of the Meigs County Council

Prostate cancer screening
clinic scheduled Sept. 29
lly CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A prostate cancer screening
clinic has been planned for Sept. 29
at the Meigs County Health
Department.
~
Final plans for the screening
were made at a recent meeting of
the cooperating agencies - Riverside Methodist Hospital, Meigs
County Health Department, Veterans Memorial Hospital, Meigs
County Council on Aging, and
Continuity of Care.
Meeting recently with rcpresen- .
tatives of those agencies and Dr.
James Witherell, who will be one
of inc three examining physicians,
to di.scuss the clinic function was
Ann Looktan, outreach director for
the Cancer Institute at Riverside.
She is also affiliated with the
National Cancer Institute in Ohio.
Looktao said this is Riverside's
fourth year of doing massive
screening and the second year into
a five year study of the University
of Colorado where the results of
prostatic special antigen (PSA), a
blood test, and rectal examinations

for prostate cancer arc compared. ·is coordinaiing the screening the
This is the hospital's first year to first 60 men to call will be scheddo outside screening, according to ulea. They will be sent questionLooktan. A program of follow-up naires to fill out along with
for several years is planned as a hcmocult packets. On the day of
part of the screening clinic.
the clinic, they are to return the
Statistic show that prostate can: completed questionnaires. The men
cer is the second mos.t common will then be directed to Veterans
cause of cancer death in men. Each Memorial Hospital laboratories for
ycnr over 120,000 men are diag- the PSA blood test.
nosed with prostate cancer and the
Returning to the Health Departrisk increases with age.
mcnt, weight, height and blood
The warning signs are a change pressure will be taken and then the
in urination patterns lasting at least physical examination will be given
two wee~. frequen.t unnatJ~n .espe- by one of the three male medical
cl3lly a~ mght, J?Crs1ste~t pam m the doctors. A registered nurse will
back, h.1p, pelv~c or th.'gh, bummg show those being screened four
sensation d~rmg unnat1on and models of the actual prostate gland
mabd1ty to unnate, .
ranging from the normal to the canThe screenmg Will take place cerous gland. There will also be a
from 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. on Sept. 10 minute film, educational book29. Anyone 50 &lt;!r .over who has nc;&gt;t lets and follow-up information
had a PSA, a d1g1tal rectal ex~m1- given to the clients.
.
nat1on ~r a ~o~pletc physic~!
Torres emphasized that the:e IS
exa.mmat1on w1thm the past year, IS no charge for the examinauons
mv1ted to take part m the prostate which would cost over $100 if hanscreening clinic. The. screen!ng is died by a regular physician.
tree although don~t10ns Will be
To schedule appoinunents, resiaccepted.
dents may call the Health DepartAccording to Norma Torres who ment, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. 992-6626.

Rain improves conditions, but
drought continues around Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
late-summer drought has produced
pockets of sharp agricultural losses
but appears to be less dramatic
overall than other recent dry speUs,
a member of a multiagency task
force said.
"We want to be careful about
this. I don't want to downplay
those folks that are hurting. We
can't ignore that situation," said
Stan Ernst of Ohio State University
Extension.
"But when we look at the big
picture of Ohio and the Midwest in
general, look at wbere we were in
July when we started talking about
bumper crops," Ernst said Tuesday
after a meeting of the Ohio
Drought Task Force.
Agricultural economists and
farmers had predicted high yields
before the dry spell that hit in
August.
"I would guess that's taken the
bumper off the crop in most cases,
not in all cases," Ernst said.
The National Weather Service
said soaking rain of 1 to 4 inches

Iaie last week eased - but did not
end - the drought The rain also

Ohio's drought
assessment at-a-glance
By The Associated Press
- Crop damage assessmfnt
reports from Crawford, Saodusky and Seneca counties sent
to U.S. Department of Agriculhlre, tbe first step in seeking
drought disaster declarations
that would 111ake qualified farlllers eligible for low-interest loans.
- The U.S. Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service said similar reports will be
reviewed Thursday from 17
other counties: Brown, Defiance,
Erie, Fulton, Gallla, Hancock,
.Jackson, Jefferson, Lorain,
Lucas, Medina, Meigs, Ottawa,
Portage, Richland, Sum111lt and
Wood.
,
August · precipitation,
statewide average: 1.56 Inches.
Percent ofnor111al: 45 percent.
'

•

••

"

The suspect in a Mason County
murder told Florida officials he has
lived in abandoned igloos in the
TNT area for the past several
months.
David John Francisco, 18, told
Investigator Chuck Brannan of the
Baker County, Florida Sheriff's
Department, he had attended sehool
at Point Pleasant through the lOth
~e and had been living in igloos
10 the TNT area
Francisco wiU be questioned
today to find out-what part, if any,
he played in the shooting death of
Norman Ray Laudermilt, 28, of
Mason by Mason County Sheriff
Ernie Watterson and Sgt G.L.
Clark of 'the Point Pleasant
Derachm~nt-West Virginia State

Police.
The local officials arrived in
Florida Tuesday and questioned
Francisco. Clark said Tuesday night
that the questioning will continue
because they have nothing definite
yet
Aorida authorities spotted Francisco in Laudennilt's stolen truck
early Monday morning.
Laudermilt's body was found
Thursday, September 2, in a dry
creekbed beside the McClintic
Wildlife Management Area's public
shooting range. He had been shot
six times either right before or right
after dark Wednesday.
Francisco scufOed with a Baker
County, FL deputy after being spotted. He ran into a heavil v wooded

area, wearing nothing but a pair of
shorts. Francisco eluded authorities
for approximately 14 hours before
he was taken into custody.
Brannan said Francisco is charged with dealing in,siDlen property
and resisting arrest with violence.
Francisco appeared before a judge
in Baker County on the charges
Tuesday afternoon and a $75,000
bood was set, Brannan said.
According to Clark, Florida
officials will be processing
Uudennilt's truck Wednesday
morning. He said authorities had
planned to process the vehicle
Tuesday, but were unable to do so
lxica\ISC of a murder in a neighboring county in Florida.

Pumps are going off;
SOCCO going to court
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Negotiations have broken off
between .Southern Ohio Coal Co.
and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA) regarding
the removal of 2,000 gallons per
minute of partially-treated water
from the company's Meigs No. 31
Mine.
•B. J. Smith, public affairs director for American Electric Power,
Fuel Supply, which owns the mine
said late this morning that the U.S.
EPA's order to stop the removal of
that water becomes effective at
1:20 p.m. today.
Meanwhile, Southern Ohio Coal
attorneys today will ask U.S. District Judge Sandra Beckwith to nullify the U.S. EPA order, Smith
said. ·
Tlie order to stop pumping only
affects the 2,000 gallons per minute
of partially treated water going into
Sugar Run, a tributary of Raccoon
Creek, according to Smith.
"We can continue pumping
water that is released into Parker
Run, a tributary of Leading Creek.
That water is fully processed in the
Meigs Mine 31 water treatment
facility. Water released into Parker
Run. a tributary of Leading Creek,
now meets federal and state water
quality standards. This was
achieved through the recent

. upgrading of the Meigs 31 water
treatment facility," the company
spokeswoman pointed out.
"Again the water that is being
removed from that portion of the
mine (going into Sugar Run, a tributary of Raccoon Creek) has less
environmental effect because it has
a higher water quality with lower
iron content and nearly neutral Ph
levels," said Smith.
Since pumping began the company has put into service a second
pond at the Sugar Run release point
which allows more of the iron to
drop out as sediment before it is
released into the sb'eam. she said.
Extensive monitoring by ecological experts show that Raccoon
Creek and the Ohio River have
experienced minimal effects from
the mine water release, she conunued.
Smith pointed out that the environ mental effects of the release
have proven to be tempor~ry as
aquatic life is already retummg to
the creek.
Judge Beckwith issued a preliminary injunction against the U.S.
EPA .ind the U.S. Office of Surface
Mining on Aug. 19. That injunction
prevented the agencies from stop1ling water removal efforts at the

reduced what had been a growing
threat of fire in dry grass and
woodland areas of eastern Ohio.
Ernst said it is too earlr to speculate about the fil)3ncial unpact of
the drought.
"I think by the first week of
October we're going to have a pretty good guess. The corn crop will
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
be in. They 'II be harvesting some
- Negotiations between theUnitof it seriously. We'll have a good
A Chester man was found guilty cd Mine Workers and the Bttumlhandle on what's going on," he
of two counts of criminal damaging no us Coal Operators Association
said.
Larry Gabric, a weather service in a Meigs County Court trial Tues- were postponed until today while
' union officials consider a contract
meteorologist in Cleveland, said · day.
According
to
Assistant
Proseproposal issued by coal operators.
the rain may have reduced drought
cuting
Attorney
Christor,her
E.
sandy Taylor, a spokeswoman
severity by one category in the
Tenaglia,
Robert
"Micky':
Bauer
for
the Federal Mediation and Constate's 10 climate regions.
was
convicted
following
a
trial
ciliation
Service, said negotiators
' ' Where we had extreme
County
Court
Judge
Patrick
rescheduled
Tuesday's meeting for
before
drought in the north central pan of
H.
O'Brien.
The
charges
are
sectoday.
the state ... it's possibly down to
Tom Hoffman, a spokesman for
the severe category now. Where we ond degree misdemeanors.
Bauer
was
charged
on
July
8
the
coal operators' negotiating
had severe drought, it's probably
with
damage
to
a
1985
Volkswateam,
said the operators "reduced
down into the moderate range,''
gcn
owned
by
Belinda
Lane.
paper
all of the things that we
10
Gabric said.
Judge
O'Brien
sentenced
Bauer
have
been
talking about since the
An updated drought report is to
to
60
days
in
jail,
suspended
ID
six
first
of
the
year."
be compiled later this week. As of
" I don't think it should be
Aug. 28, six of the 10 regions were day. He was also ordered to pay
restitution in the amount of $1,000. viewed as a breakthrou~h." Hoffexperiencing severe drought •

Chester man
found guilty

mine.
Both agencies appealed the ruting to the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court
of Appeals, asking for a stay of the
injunction. The Court of Appeals
denied the stay request from the
Office of Surface Mining, but
granted it, in part, on Aug. 30 with
regard to the U.S. EPA.
According to Smith, the court's ,
ruling permitted the U.S. EPA to
conduct an investigation of the
Meigs mine pumping operation .
However, the ruling enjoined U.S.
EPA from issuing an order requiring the immediate cessation of
pumping until after it had concluded such an investi~ation .
The U.S. EPA ISSUed its order to .
stop the water removal on Sept. 2,
only two days after receiving permission from the appeals court to
conduct its investigation, Smith
said.
"We will now ask the judge to
enforce the injunction and nullify
the U.S.EPA order," said Smith
· this morning.
Southern Ohio Cpal initiated its
water removal plan July 30 under
an ~cr by the Ohio EPA that set
stric standards the company must
fol w during and after the pump~ontinued on page 3

Talks delayed as union
reviews new proposal
rnan said. "It is pan of the ongoing
effort to keep talks going and moving forward."
He characterized the offer as a
" comprehensive proposal" that
covers all issues on the bargaining
table: job security, wages and benefits .
.
Union spokesman Jim Grossfeld
declined comment on the new proposal, but said,,· "Our ~jective
remains winning a contracHhat
honors our members' productivity
with job security which they've
earned.''

About 17,000 mine workers in
seven states, including Ohio, are on
strike over job security at association mines. The sl1ike started May

10.

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