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Page-1 0 The Dally Sentinel

Health myths persist
By RICK HAMPSON
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Stay
warm to avoid a cold, drink milk to
ease an ulcer, suck out the venom
to treat a snakebite.
And while you're at it, call in
the leeches to take care of your
extra energy.
Inherited medical wisdom often
1S no w1sdom at all, accordmg to
the October issue of American
Health magazine, which lists I 0
medical myths that persist despite
scientific evidence.
Colds: Repeated experiments in
England indicate that people left
shivering outdoors are no more
like! y to catch a cold than those
who stay warm indoors. That's
because colds are caused by viruses, and unless there's a virus out in
the cold with you, you're not going
to get a cold.
Ulcers: Milk may taste bland ,
but it is rich in protein, which stimulateS acid production in the swmach and only irritates an ulcer.
Snakebites: Using your mouth
to suck venom out is the worst
thing you can do for such a wound;
since the bacteria in your mouth
multiply the risk of infection. An
equally misguided, if popular,
snakebite treatment is the application of a towniquct, which can kill
tissue by cutting off the blood supply.
.
Why do such myths endure m
an era when surgery is no longer
performed by barbers?

"People need rules of thumb to
order their lives," says Yale Uni versity's Jack Warner, who teaches
the history of medicine.
"These rules take on new meaning as they 're passed from generation to generation," he said in a
telephone interview. ''They gain
authority, because often it comes
from someone who IS known and
trusted."

Contrary to what your grandparents may have told you, there is no
ev idence that chocolate causes
pimples; mayonnais e is vastly
overrated as a source of bacterial
infect ion ; and fasting will not
shrink yow stomach any more than
11 will shrink your mouth.
Vision is an area particularly
susceptible to popular misconception. Children who cross their eyes
will not become cross-eyed those who have enough muscular
control to deliberately cross their

~e~r:~!~~btytheteastliketyto.
Similarly, reading in dim light
won't ruin your eyes, although you
might get a tension headache. And
children's eyesight does not necessari ly deteriorate after they start
wearing glasses. provided the
glasses are properly prescribed.
The moral of our story? Feel
free to sit out in the vard this winter. You can bring along several
egg salad sandwiches and a box of
chocolates, and,read the latest issue
of American Health well past dusk.
But watch out for rattlesnakes.

'

'f

r

, ..

~

' '

.

Tuesday, September 24, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Scholarships are awarded
Marissa Nelson and Susan·
Houchins were the 1991 recipients
of $300 scholarships from FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion.
The awards were made at a
recent meetin~ of the legion after
the application of seven were
reviewed by the scholarship com·
mittee. It was noted that only those
two fulfilled the requirements.
However, the Post agreed to award
this year only $200 scholarships to
each of the other five applicants Van Johnson, AR'Iy Epple, Mark
Norman, Terry Reuter, and Joe
Schuler. It was agreed that clarification on the rules will be made at
least two months prior to acceptance of applications next year.
The Post also voted to sponsor
Barbara Hudson in the Turkey
Walk of the American Heart Association in the amount of $200.
A vote of thanks was extended

.,.

Harrisonville community news ;

· to Albert Roush who officially submitted his resignation from all
duties at Feeney-Bennett Post.
Roush has been a dedicated worker
for man; years in the various pro·
grams o the posl
It was noted that Robert
Schmoll is the newest life member
of the posl
At the request of Rick Edwards,
Meigs teacher, members agreed to
save cash register receipts to be
applied toward purchasm$ some
new computers for the learrung disabilities resource room at Meigs
High SchooL Receipts may be
turned in on any regular meeting
ni$ht or mailed to P. 0. Box 128,
Middleport, 457~. .
.
The membership drive was discussed and plans made to exceed
the goal set for the Posl A dinner
to be held at 6 p.m. precedmg the
regular meeting on Wednesday,
Sepl 25, was announced.

Mrs. Pauline Atkins entertained field visited Thursday with Norma

Wednesday evening with a birth·
day dinner for Robert Jewell and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire. Mr.
and Mrs. Babe Whaley and Lola
Clark were Friday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gilkey.
Albany.
Mrs. Dorothy Woodard visited
Pauline Atkins on Friday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee. Mans-

Ohio Lottery

Hoople likes
Michigan . Ma1or Hoople's
over FSU

Lee.

Mr and Mrs. Robert Jewell cel-

ebrated Cheryl Jewell's birthday
with a cookout on Saturday
evening. Guests w~ Misty Frum;
Eric Jarius, Chad Fields, Norma
Lee and Pauline Atkins.
;
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Christi!)
visited Friday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Christin and Mrs,
Evelyn Huffman in Wellston.

Pick 3:505
Pick 4: 4983
Cards: Q-H; 7-C;
9-D; 6-S
Partly &lt;loudy tonight.
Thursday, high In mid-60s.

Page4

Pullins baby shower held

A baby shower honoring Stacie Kelly Tripp. The door prize was
Pullins was held recently at the won by Cindy Chadwell.
Bashan Fire House with Beckie
Others attending were Janice
Pullins. hostess.
Pullins, Mattie Pullins, Christina
A teddy bear iheme was carried Mather, Lera Hall, Lou and Robin
out in the decorations and cake Pitzer, Denise Laughery, Zachary
baked by Jean Spencer.
Pullins, Teny and Justin Browning,
Sandwiches, chips, mints, cake Jamie Bailey, Wilma Buckley.
and ice cream, tea and Kool-aid
Others presenting gifts were
were served.
Francis Sanders, Susan Pullins;
Games were played with prizes Phyllis Lattimer, Pauline Riley,
going to Donna Pullins, Michelle Sue and Danielle Kibble, Chris and
Laughery, Laurie Bailey, Roberta Angie Spencer, Pearleen Lee,
Pullins, Susan Hall, Edna Wilson, Tammy Timmons and Anna GrifHenderson will check on the
fith.
details. Mrs. Henderson and Nellie
Parker are going to UMW District
annual meeting on Sept. 26.
A clean-up day will be held at
Osie Mae Follrod had the prayer
The Tuesday Morning Ladie~
calendar and chose Elizabeth Stauf- the old Sugar Run School in
League
of the Meigs County Golf
fer, evangelist and international Pomeroy on Saturday beginning at
Course
held
its last play and end•
9
a.m.
The
public
is
encouraged
to
missionary at Mar del Plata,
of-the-year
party
recently.
participate
in
the
clean
up
and
Argentina. The group signed a
A scramble was played and winthose participating should bring
birthday card for her.
ners
tied for flfst place were Dee
tools
such
as
rakes,
clippers,
weedDuring the social hour Martha
Teaford,
Mary Grueser, Elizabeth
Elliott and Mrs. Henderson served ers, saws, etc.
Lohse
and
Nellie Wright, and
sloppy joes, cookies and party mix
JoAnn
Childs,
Velma Rue and Julia
to those mentioned and to florence
Hysell.
Spencer, Martha Poole, Nina
Second place winners were
Robinson and Kate Rodehaver.
Margaret Follrod, Nellie Brown,
The Middleport Arts Council Mary Pickens and Nancy Reed.
will offer a sketching class. No preAfter play a dinner was catered
vious sketching instruction is nec- to the group.
The group will resume play in
Ann and Tim Harris and hostess, essary. The instructor is PJ. Harris
and
the
cost
is
$25
for
class
includApril
1992.
.
Lavina Brannon.
ing
all materials. The class begins
New
officers
for
the
coming
Refreshments were served.
Thursday through Oct. 24 at 7:45
1lle next meeting will be held at p.m. each session. To register, call year are Julia Hysell, president;
the home of Cindy and David Durst Harris at 992-2451 or Mary Wise at Debbie Sayre, vice president; '
Roberta 0' Brien, secretary; and
on Oct. 21 at which time officers 992-2675.
Mary Bowen, treasurer.
for 1992 will be chosen.

Wednesday,

Henderson, Parker to attend
UMW district meeting Sept. 26
Gertrude Robinson led the
pledge program, "A Mission Partnership," when the Alfred United
Methodist Women met recently at
the church with ten members present.
There were 57 sick calls report·
ed and members gave their pledges
and regular monthly collection.
During the business meeting
Sarah Caldwell, nominating committee chairman, gave the slate of
officers for 1992 and they were
elected.
An outin(l to Blennerhassett
Island was discussed and Thelma

Clean up slated

Better Health Club
holds meeting

Scramble held

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -State utility
regulators say American Electric
Power should keep its options open
in complying with federal pollution
regulations and not rule out use of
equipment that would let it burn
Ohio coal.
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio on Tuesday rejected
AEP' s preliminary conclusion that
a switch to cleaner out-of-state coal
at its Gavin power plant in southern
Ohio would be the least expensive
compliance method.
But AEP stood by its analysis of
comJ.lliance strategies.
' We understand that others may
differ with some of the indicated
conclusions in the report based on
their different assumptions, analytical approaches or objectives," a
company statement said.

Class offered

/

TOUNGATE'S TAIL· Zachariah Toungate, 9, hangs from a
tree limb in Bastrop, Texas. Zachariah bas been banned from
school in Bastrop because or his ponytail, so be attends Fourth
grade at a private school in Austin. The Bastrop school district is
seeking dismissal of Zacb's lawsuit against the district, saying that
children do not have the same rights as adults. The judge in the
case said Monday he needs a week or two to rule on the dismissal
request. (AP)

Health care worker files HIV
lawsuit after accidental cut

•

By LINDA DEUTSCH
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)- A surgical technician exposed to a
patient's HIV -infected blood sued
the woman for concealing before
the cosmetic surgery that she carried the AIDS virus.
The patient, clinical psychologist Jan Lustig, said she kept her
diagnosis secret because she
ibought no surgeon would operate
on her knowing she was mv positive. The lawsuit is the flip side of
recent moves to force disclosure by
health care professionals with the
virus.
Diane Boulais was exposed to
Lustig's blood July 23 when a
scalpel nicked her finger during
surgery, her attorney said.
Boulais has tested negative for
HIV but is taking the AIDS drug
AZT as a precaution.
"She will live under the cloud
of a possible positive test for many
months," said Boulais' lawyer.
Rex Beaber. He noted that a recent
case of swollen glands terrified her.
"It keeps me awake at night,"
Boulais said.
Lustig, 44, of Vancouver,
Wash., said in an interview Monday that she hid her diagnosis
because "this was plastic surgery.
an elective procedure, and because
no one else in Los Angeles would
work on someone with HIV.''
But she said Boulais and 'the
surgeon were responsible for the
exposure.
. "The doctor was negligent,"
she said. ·'Neither of them was
wearing gloves, and he punctured
her. If they had used universal precautions, this wouldn't have haped"
penL~tig said she believes doctors
should treat all patients as if they
carry the virus.

The federal Centers for Disease
Control reponed in March that it
knew of only 40 health-care workers who have been infected with
HIV through work-related acci dents. It advised health-care workers to treat all blood as potentially
toxic and take precautions.
The CDC says a patient's
chance of contracting the virus
from a. health worker is between
one in 41 ,667 and one in 2.6 million.
One florida dentist accounts for
all the nation's documented cases
of doctor-to-patient infection. The
CDC says five patients apparently
were infected by David Acer, who
died of AIDS a year ago. The case
prompted widespread calls for
AIDS testing of doctors, dentists
and other health-care professionals.
The American Medical Association advocates voluntary testing for
patients and health-care workers.
Boulais said the lawsuit, filed
Monday in Los Angeles Superior
Court, is intended to prevent Lustig
from exposing others. It seeks
unspecified damages and alleges
intent to inflict emotional distress
and fraud.
Beaber said he hopes the lawsuit
will spur legislation forcmg
patients to reveal potentially deadly
diseases to health care providers.
According to the lawsuit, Lustig
approached Dr. Neal Handel, coowner of The Breast Center in Van
Nuys, in January and arranged for a
breast reduction operation. She
signed papers saying she had no
medical problems and was not
being treated or observed for any
illness.
If she had revealed the diagnosis, Handel atid Boulais would have
taken special precautions, Beaber
said.

The Rock Springs Better Health
Club held its regular meeting
recently at the home of Agnes
Dixon.
Helen Blackswn conducted the
meeting and Louise Bearhs was
appointed to be chaplain of the
group.
For devotions, Agnes Dixon
read from the Upper Room.
A number of cards and calls
were sent to the sick in the community as reported by the committee.
The program was given by
Frances Goeglein and the contest
was by Louise Bearhs. Winners of
prizes were Nancy Morris, Frances
Goeglein and Dorothy Jeffers.
Refreshments were served to the
group by the hostess.

20 ~'€Jli:Sons.- T,o Join
•\'•

L

Busy bees meet
The Busy Bee Class of the Middleport First Baptist Church met
for its September meeting at the
home of Pooch Brewer.
The blessing was given by Rev.
James Seddon and a wiener roast
was enjoyed by Ruth Ebersbach,
Jerry Pullen, Elizabeth Searles,
Elizabeth Slaven, Rosemary Lyons,
Beulah Whue, Terry Brewer and
daughter, Jim Brewer, Mary Beth
Brewer, Rev. Seddon and Sharon
Seddon.

L
L

Car strikes moose
CONCORD, N.H. (AP)- A
passenger in a car that struck a
moose died of her injuries Monday,
a hospital said.
Gina C. Newhouse, 37. of Newport, R.I., was the fourth person
lc:illed in auto-moose collisions on
New Hampshire roads this year.
Newhouse's husband, Richard,
was driving the car late Saturday
when it struck the moose on Inter·
state 93 in Plymouth, said Maj.
Henry Mock of the state Fish and
Game Department. She died at
Concord Hospital, Mock said. Her
husband was not injured.
Mock said I 52 moose have been
killed in traffic accidents in the
state this year.
Officials have posted signs
along northerfl New Hampshire
highways warning people to brake
for moose.

When praise ba9kfires
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)Praise given in the right way can
encourage effort, according to a
psychology professor at .the Un.iversity of Rochester. Delivered m
the wrong way, however, it can
have unintended effects.
For example, if students bring
home a paper with ·an "A", and
parents say "! always knew you
were smart'' the parents are
attributing the accomplishment t.o
their intelligence rather _than thelf
effort, says Professor Richard M.
Ryan. Praise that f&lt;?cuses on
specifiCs is a better motivator, says
Ryan.

T

"

lk&lt;"

OUTSTANDING FIELD COMMANDERS
• Holly Williams, right, and Stephanie Price,
rield commanders ror the Meigs Marauder

PEOPLES CHOICE
v' Banking Can Be Fun!
To b&lt;! oliglblo, mem""" must maintain a $10,000 minimum balane&lt; In a Pooptos Bank savings acrount, CD, IRA, or any
combination thereof. Peoples O.otco. Chotco flnandat ....,ofih, and choice travel opportunltlos for J"''Ple 50 and over.
Call Mary Fowll!l' at (30t) 675-1121 for more Information.

FIRST PLACE BAND · Pictured are
seniors or the Meigs Marauder Marching Band
which captured rirSt place in its class at tbe 29th
Annual Marietta Band·O· Rama on Saturday.
The band also qualified for state finals, to be
held in Columbus on Nov. 2, with a score or
236.55. This is tbe second year in a row tbe band
has qualified for state competition. Pictured, 1-r,

'

•

front, are Wendy Clark, Misi Neutzllng, Melinda Dailey, April Hudson, Dodie Cleland, Mary
Stein. Second row, Josh Bartels, David Swanson,
Ryan Cowan, Heather DIVenport, Beth Clark,
Tony Six, Miranda Nicholson and Michele Scott.
Back row, Keith Smith, Barbie Anderson,
Bobby Vance, Richie Carson, Paul Sharp and
Chri&lt;i Hall.

MUS band qualifies to compete in
state final event slated on Nov. 2
The Meigs Marauder Band competed Saturday at the 29th Annual
Marietta Band-0-Rama and captured ftrSt place in its class and best
field commanders in its class.
Fields commanders are Holly
Williams and Stephanie Price.
With a score of 236.55 the band
qualified to compete in the state

finals in Columbus on Nov. 2. This
marks the second year in a row that
the band has received this honor
and only the second time in the
~c hool's history that Meigs Local
will be represented at state contest.
Of the 16 bands at the contest,
only two Ohio bands · Meigs and
Marietta, qualified for state finals.

LYNEHAM, England (AP) Jack Mann, his sagging features
and halting steps betraying the ri~­
ors of 2 1/2 years of captivity m
Lebanon, came home to England
today,
The military VC-10 carrying
Mann and his wife from Cyprus
touched down at midday at the
Lyneharn air base 80 miles west of

London . The Royal Air Force
saluted Mann, a World War II
pilot, and a Spitfue fighter like the
ones he piloted against Nazi Germany flew overhead.
Mann, 77, was freed by the proIranian Revolutionary Justice
Organization on Tuesda)'. and
reunited in Damascus, Syna with
his wife S unnie. A nurse helped

--Local briefs-____,
Woman cited after accident

22UJACKSON AVENUE

POINT PLEASANT

PEOPLES

BANK

675-1121

2ND STREET
5TH STREET
MASON
NEW HAVEN
773-5514
882·2435

MEMBER F.D.I.C.
SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY
WITHDRAWAL OF COs anciiRAa.

fCIUAl HOI..III«l

"""""

The band will compete again
this weekend on Saturday at Cambridge Cavalcade of Bands at I :45
p.m. and later Saturday evening at
Zanesville Bonanza of Bands at
7:45p.m.
The band is under the direction
of Toney Dingess with assistant
John Van Reeth.

Mann arrives home after
more than 2 years of captivity

Julia Cremeans, 504 East Main St., Pomeroy, was cited for failure to yield and no insurance following an accident Tuesday at 4:26
~m.
.
According to Pomeroy police, Cremeans pulled from the sidewalk in front of her house where she" had parked into the path of a
car driven by Hazel Webb, Racine. There was moderate damage to
both vehicles, the right s1de of the Webb car and the left side of the
Cremeans vehicle.
Police are also investigating a hit-skip accident on Nye Avenue.
Continued oii page ~

__________

........;.....

~-

'

Marching Band, captured the award for Outstanding Field Commanders in their class at the
29th Annual Marietta Band·O·Rama on Saturday-They also received a superior rating.

- ~ ..

You want to travel with your friends.
Mary will personally escort every trip
(haven't you always wanted a banker at your beck-and-call?)
You love the theatre.
The price of every trip is based on cost alone.
You11 have fun.
You can't drive and read a road map at the same time.
You're a fan of JoAnn Castle.
Your bank doesn't have it.
If you're between 50 and 54, you can't get checking account benefits
like these anywhere else.
You want someone else to carry your luggage for a change.
You11 have fun.
You like good hotels in convenient locations.
You don't want to drive 50 miles to catch the bus.
You'll get free Peoples Choice checks.
You enjoy the finer things in life.
It will make your kids jealous!
Isn't it romantic?
You've always wanted to see the Festival of Lights.
And you'll have fun.

2 Soctlono, 16 Pagoo 25 cento
A Multlmodla Inc. Newspaper

PUCO tells AEP to
keep options open

Joppa UMC to hold revival
The September meeting of the
Joppa United Methodist Women
was held at the home of Lavina
Brannon.
Margaret Grossnickle presided
at the meeting in which a check
'was given to the Festival of Sharing.
Inspirational poems were presented during the program by Pastor Brenda Weber, Gertrude Bass,
Cindy Durst, a guest, Maxine
Miller, Athens, Opal Harris, Mary

25, 1991

-··

Mann climb down the steps of the
plane today.
Even as Mann flew to his homeland, a disagreement arose between
two players in the hostage ordeal
thal could threaten further releases.
Israel today accused Iran of
breaking a promise to provide
information on an Israeli soldier
missing in Lebanon, a condition
thal is part of a broad deal to free
Western hostages.
A Shiite Muslim cleric involved
in the hostage negotiations said in
Lebanon today that the soldier was
"probably dead."
Pro-Iranian Muslim kidnappers
hol!ling Westerners in Lebanon are
demanding Israel releue Arab prisoners in exchange for their captives. The Muslim cleric, Hussem
Musawi, said the kidnappers were
awaiting a reciproc11l action after
freeing Mann on Tuesday.
Musawi said an American may
be freed soon "if things continued
to proceed normally.''

' 'The important estimates,
assumptions and study methodology have been rigorously reviewed
and confirmed by nationally known
independent engineering and environmental consulting fums," AEP
said.
The United Mine Workers union
welcomed PUCO support for
installing anti-pollution equipment
known as scrubbers that would
allow the continued burning of
Ohio-mined coal.
"That's what we have stressed
since the first of the year, that
scrubbing is the least cost because
we foresee what the western coal
market would be in the future if we
got dependent on it. So the scrubber option is the least cost," said
union representative Bill Oiler. ·
Gov. George Voinovich said he
also was pleased with the decision.
''This effort is part of an on

going process wh1ch we have
worked on throughout this year ...
to address least-cost solutions for
the Clean Air Act and to preserve
as many Ohio jobs as possible,"
Voinovich said m a news release.
PUCO Chairman Craig Glazer
said on the basis of evidence gathered at hearings in Columbus,
Athens and Canton the panel could
not accept AEP's conclusion that
fuel switching at Gavin was necessarily the least costly option.
"Instead we are strongly indicating that AEP should not foreclose installing scrubbers at the
Gavin plant," Glazer said at a
commission meeting.
''We are further finding ... that a
scrubber at Gavin is the least cost
alternative if AEP receives critical
bonus allowances which arc to be
handed out by the U.S. EPA next
Continued on page 3

Meigs Local Board fills
teaching, coaching positions
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News StaiT
Several teaching and coaching
positions were 'filled and names
added to substitute lists at Tuesday
night's meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education.
Karla Brown was employed as a
teacher for the 1991-92 school year
to teach special education at the
Bradbury School. Her employment
is contmgent on certification .
Bryan Zirkle was hired to fill in
this year for the teacher who is on
leave for the school year.
Employed as basketball coaches
for the year were Pat O'Brien, seventh grade; Chris Stout, eighth
grade; and Gene Wise, ninth grade.
They were hired after it was noted
that the positions had been advertised for certified applicants and
that none had applied.
Jack King was hired as custodian at the Pomeroy Elementary

effective Sepl M.
The resignation of John Arnott
as girls' junior high basketball
coach was aCcepted by the board.
Added to substitute lists were
Thomas Gates II, teacher with certification in elementary and political science; Susie Abbott, Diana
Ash, Nancy Hill, Sarah Johnson ,
Patty Pickens, Jacklyn Spaun,
Michelle Triplett, and Jo Ann
Wildman, aides: Sherri Hart. Irene
Kennedy, and Nancy Clark, secretaries.
In other personnel matters, a
leave of absence was granted to
Brent Manley, transponation director, pending the results of an examination by a board appointed doc·
tor. It was generally agreed that if
Manley's doctor and the board's
doctor disagree, then a third physician will be consulted.
Three purchased service con·
tracts were awarded Paula Horton

was employed as a tutor, the Blue
Streak Cab Co. was hired to transport two children, one to the
severely behavior handicapped
junior high unit at Athens, and
another handicapped student to a
school within t6e county. The
board also agreed to reimburse a
parent for the cost of transporting
her visually handicapped student to
Rio Grande.
The board adopted the Regional
Resource Center's recommend&amp;·
lions on updating changes regarding the administration and implementation of special education programs.
The bid of The Glaser Company
to perform the three year inspection
of schools for asbestos at a cost of
$985 was approved, as was a field
trip for the FFA to Kansas City on
Nov. 11-17 for seven students and
an instructor.
Continued on page 3

Key issue in RA C hearing: Did workers
walk off job or were they locked out?
CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP)
- Steelworkers out of work at a
Jackson County aluminum maker
since their contract expired testified
they were ordered out of the plant
20 minutes into their shift last Nov.
L

The testimony by some Of the
1,700 members of United Steelworkers
Local
5668
in
Ravenswood came Tuesday in the
second day of National Labor Relations Board hearings on unfair
labor practices charges against
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
At issue is whether the union
members were locked out or
walked off the job. The company
contends the steelworkers are on
strike.
The union and the NLRB say
Ravenswood Aluminum failed to
bargain in good faith, prematurely
declared an impasse during negotiations and illegally hired 1,000
replacement workers.
With the union's contract to
expire hours later, William Hendricks Jr. said he reported for work
at 11:50 p.m. on Oct. 3L
At 12:22 a.m., a reduction plant
manager reading from a statement
told Hendricks and others talks had
broken down and that they were to
leave the plant, Hendricks said.
"We want you to leave, and we
want you to leave peacefully. We
have another group of people ready
to work," the manager said, according to Hendricks.
Workers returned to the plant at
4 a.m. and 8 a.m. on Nov. I and
found newly erected gates closed
and padlocked, with security
guards manning them, Hendricks
said.
Under
questioning
by
Ravenswood Aluminum attorney
David Laurent ,ndricks said he

didn't report for his next shift Nov.

2.

The union never struclc Kaiser
Aluminum, the plant's previous
owners, in 31 years, said Joe Chap-

man, the union 's lead negotiator.
Chapman said the union refused
to negotiate in July 1990 because
workers were upset about having to
Continued on page 3

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OJ' THE

MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WtnTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ControDer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association utd
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 300
words long. Allleum are subject to editing utd mwt he siplCd with name,
address and telephone number. No unsiJn,ed leaers will he plblished. Letters
should he in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Letters to the editor
Officials have short memories
Last week, I attended a District
Commanders meeting of lhe Dis·
abled American Veterans. In atten·
dance !here was last year's national
commandcr,lhe current Slate Com·
mander and many Slate staff offices
of the D.A.V. as were all of the
Staie 10 District Commanders.
It would tear your heart out to
see these people in wheelchairs,
with crutches and canes, seeing-eye
dogs, empty sleeves, and empty
trouser legs to make a couple of
suits of clothes and to lhink a few
years back these fellows were all
whole men until lhese awful wars
changed all of !his.
There doesn't seem to be much
compassion for lhese people now
by some in our govemmenL
In lhe past year, lhe benefit book
for veterans has been re-wriuen
completely such as cuts in who can
go to a hospillll, prescriptions, burl·
al benefits, transportation to the
hospillll and many more. \.._.....F
When these wars staned, lhese
people were !he finest in the book
and promises of what !hey would
do for these people.
Now, these people are old and
aren •t needed any more and they
can get by lhe best way !hey can
and some of !hem are barely get·
ling by.
Our government can give these
countries of lhe WCI'Id financial aid
every time one of !hem yens. Ten
billion to Israel, 14 billion to !he
Baltic Slates, one billion to Russia
and seven. billion debt to Egypt
canceled. Most of lhese people outside of Israel wouldn't pick us up
out of !he mud

A lot of lhe people in this COun·
try have short memories when it
comes to remembering what the
veterans have done for thls country.
Our veterans had better wake up
and help to do something about
these cuts in Washington or we will
all go down !he di'ain.
I urge all veterans to become a
member of a veteran's organization
of your choice and get active and
help fight this thing that is eating
all of your benefits.
Another think that is in short
supply is special marked parking
places for disabled and elderly in
most small villages. Very few busi·
nesses have made any provisions
for this. Mail drops are not marked
clearly and most of !he time someone is parked illegally in these
areas.
The public should have more
consideration for !he less fortunate.
The cities and businesses could
get togelher with !he law enforcement people and work something
out 10 solve this problem.
Everyone should think of themselves as being in !he same pr.·.l•cament as these unfCI'Iunate pcupl~.
A couple of weeks ago, I saw a
man in a wheelchair outside a
financial institution ttansacting his
business. I suppose he couldn't get
inside as I didn't see any ramp for
wheelcbairs.
Denver Curtis
Commander, 91h District
Disabled Alllerican Veterans
201 Mulberry Avenue
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

A 75th anniversary
tribute to a coveted prize
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
NEW YORK (AP) -When Arlhur Miller, lhe playwright, won the
Pulitzer Priu, he was blase.
. "Like most good luck, !he Pulitzer Priu usually comes to those who
don't need it," wrote Miller, honored in 1949 for "Dealh ora Salesman."
. When John O'Hara, the novelist. didn't win, he was bitter, writing
friends that he had been bypassed for w011t that dido 't eq~ his. By !hen,
O'Hara's works had earned him fame and wealth, and he was asked why
!he omission so nettled him.
"Pulitzer Priu, includin' the common mispronunciation of old Joe's
name is in the language ... ,' he replied.
:The 75 years that have made it part of !he language were celebrated at
Cplumbia University on Sunday, an anniversary assembly attended by
296 of the men and women who have received Pulitzer Priz.es.
They are among 1,056 people honored in journalism, letters and music
since !he ftrSt four were awanled for work published in 1916. There have
been 617 journalism awards to reporters, writers, photo~ers and cartoOOists 439 to novelists, biographers, historians and musici8Ds.
. That' is !he medal O'Hara wanted and never got, said Russell Baker,
tlie New York Times columnist, recounting the story in an anniversary
address.
· not
· "Wanting !he medals is acknowledgement that ,,.
we •s report card IS
qioney," said Baker, who Wll!' Pulitzers !n 1979 for con:'mentary and
I-983 for biography. " ... Then: IS a hunger 10 us fCI' something mCI'C !han
a. money standard . ... "
· But Baker also reminded !he winners of !he elite company they cannot
clJim, because Pulitzer Prizes never ~ awarded to people like George
Gershwin, F. Scou Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington, 'lbeod&lt;xe Dretser and Hl..
Menclcen.
.· In Mencken 's case, it may have been because the judges knew the
iOonoclastic sage of the Baltimore Sun would have scorned lhe offer.
Menclcen, Baker recalled, described !he prizes as "imbecilities repeated
a'nnually."
· But !he prizes endowed by Joseph Puliczer, publisher of !he New York
World and !he St. Louis Posi-Dispareh, are sought like no olhers in jour·
rlalism, cynics notwithstanding.
: For lhe 1991 awards, 22 of !hem, pese!!ted at lhe anniversary ceremo·
ny, !here were 1,610 entries in~· S93for books, 11!7 for music ..
· Loolcing out at !hem and the"' prectecessors, Baker said he found tt
macabre to know how half their obitulriea would begin with !he phrase
''Pulitzer Priu-winning," and fJll in lhe name.
:. Most of !he names to be filled in -later will be olherwise litde known or
nilted. In the meantime, for winnen llkc thole, it is striking to be part of a
list that includes the names of John Updike and Neil Simon, 1991 win·
ners, and Eugene O'Neill, William F~. Ernest Hemingway, Upton
Sinclair, John F. Kennedy, Robert Flllll, James Reston, World War II correspondents like Ernie Pyle and Hal Boyle, and many more.
It is borrowed fame, but no less treasured.
In a high-tech age, !he Pulitzer Prizes are old-fashioned words and pic·
tures. In a time of big money, !hey don't pay df in dollan - !he awards
now are $3,000, up from $1,000only four years ago, less than many mod·
emboooiS.
.
"The existence of ihese prizes and lhe national prestige which they
have achieved is one more demonslration of lhe fact lhlt m:m does not
live by technology ' alone,'' Grayson Kiik, then president of Columbia
University, said at !he SOth anniversary celebration in 11166. ·
Kirk's successor, Michael Sovem, told Sunday's gathering that "!he
gmt~cst force for ihe ppblic good in America toclay is to be found in !he
powerful triad of scbOIJn. journalists and artists, Jepi'CSCIIted by lhe peo..,,,. o .. l'll ,.,. ~ ~honor todav." .
.,.

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sumer wilh better service and lower
fares...
Congressional investigators
recently found, in a study of 1988
fares, that when one or two airlines
dominated an airport, passengers
paid 20 percent more than on
routes with greater competition.
Competition is likely to contract
even furtller if any or all of the airlines that have filed bankruptcy
within lhe last year halt operations
altog~lher.
.
W11h ~ loss of every compeutor, there IS a cost to every consumer who travels. Some 76 percent of all domesuc passengers fly
o~ routes where _only three or fewer
whnes are available, and 45 percent travel on routes served by only
one or two.
.
The ~t behmd lhe success of
lhe btg cam.ers has less to do ~tlh
good serv1ce than something
kno~ as :·slot restrictions" -a
specialprlVllege !hat keeps the
compeuuo~ grounded. Few consumersrealize that. access to four of
lhe nauon'~ key ~rts - ~ashmgton Nauonal, Chic~go 0 Hare,
New York LaGuard1~ ~nd New
York Kennedv - ts hm1ted by a

Federal Aviation Administration
High Density Rule. It req.uires air·
lines serving those key auports to
obtain lake-off and landing reserva·
lions, or slots, before !hey can even
;ontemolate using the airporL But
the slots at the four airports are
sold out. That happened before
deregulation. And even after the
industry was deregulated. the slots
stayed.with the same airlines.
It wasn't until 1985 that the
FAA changed the rules to allow
!hose airlines to sell or lease lhetr
slots to olhers, but !here was never
any attempt to reallocate lhe slots
so any airline had a fair shot at
!hem.
Congressional inves.tigators
found that consumers pud 4 per·
cent higher fares on routes to and
from those four airports. The pnces
are higher because a select few are
allowed to buy and sell access to
public air space.
According to McCain, one
smaller airline that has shopped
around for slots at Washington
National and LaGuardia airports
has found that most owners are
starting !he bidding at no less than
$1 million per slot. Andsoiiieiire

a~!&gt;s. w~ 1~ct-nt.D \N ~~~ ..
\~t991.

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
not for sale at all. The lucky air·
lines prefer to lease them for the
short term, so they can conD:OI the
competition. More !han 70 percent
of the leases have been for 90 days
or less.
McCain is pushing for sweeping
reforms aimed at erasing the rigged
rules that favor big carriers. He
blames lhe FAA for defending the
stahls quo for big carriers. His bill
would mcrease the number of land·
ing and talc:eoff slots by 5 percent at
the big airports, and free up under·
used gates for the competiuon. The
president of Americim Airlines has
had shouting matches with McCain
over the issue, one source told our
associate Michael Binstein.
Until reforms are enacted, the
small carriers will be operating on
a wing and a prayer.
S&amp;L RAP SHEET- The Justice Department is slowly, belated·
Iy trailing the lhieves who looted
savings and loans, leaving taxpayers with a $500 billion tab. The
prosecution auempts to illustrate
anew that the best way to rob a
bank in America is to own one. As
of late this summer, Justice charged
328 people with crimes in connec·
tion with an estimated 243 thrifts
that were fleeced by !heir former
management and owners. There
have been 213 convictions, with
judges meting out 413 years in
prison terms and nearly $1 million
tn fines. An additional $56 million
has been ordered in restitution bittersweet justice for beleaguered
taxpayers.
MINI-EDITORIAL - It's
heartwarming. Members of
Congress are continuing to fly all
around the country to meet with the
little people, even though lhe members can no longer collect bono·
raria for those speeches and meetings. What !hey can collect is free
air fare. And collect it they do.
Trips by lawmakers as lhe guests of
special-interest groups have not
dropped off appreciably, even
though the trip can no longer
include a gratuity for the· member
of Congress. Of course, it helps if
lhe special-interest group wants the
lawmaker to speak at a convention
in Honolulu instead of Newark. It
also helps if lhe invitation talc:es the
lawmaker to his or her home dis·
trict at Christmas time or two
weeks before tbe election.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Worker's compensation - Time for reform
A worker is injured on lhe job. ralher !han a bureaucratic maze, to
In Ohio on !he average, that worker deal wilh in resolving cases. These
does not receive his first Workers teams would also review compenCompensation check until some six sation premiums to make sure !hey
months later. Obviously there is reflect the employer's safety
need for reform of this system.
record.
To speed up lhe system in which
This past week a private con·
suiting firm completed a five six months typically elapse
month stud)' of Ohio's Workers' between a worker's injury and his
Compensauon system that could first check, the study recommended
save up to S900 million a year for treating lhe bureau mCI'C like a pri·
Ohio and speed up the system for vate insurance company, not a state
injured wCI'kers.
agency. Under lhe proposal some
The study suggested regional claims processing and accident pre·
claims teams be ~ven the aulhority vention would be contracted to prito handle specific cases. Both vate companies. Thus reducing lhe
injured workers and employers current backlog of cases.
would have specific officials.

In a distinct change from the
present sbUcture, the study recommended allowing the bureau to
decide how much of an injury is
permanent and how much money
the claimant should receive in com·
pensation. Currently those deci·
sions are made by the Industrial
Commission, in a settlement pro·
cess !hat usuaU y takes several years
from the time that worker is
injured. Under this proposal, The
Industrial Commission would only
handle appeals of claims and set
policy.
Whether it is from manage·
ment's or labor's perspective,

It's time for Ollie to zip his lip
On behalf of the dozen people
still left in America who are shlb·
bornly holding to their conviction
that Oliver North is a sanctimo·
nious twerp, I hereby offer a deal:
We'D shut up if he will.
OK, Ollie? Take lhe "victory"
handed to you when the special
prosecutor threw in lhe towel, and
JUSt go away. Stop talking about
how you are now "tollllly exoner·
ated"; stop bashing Independent
Counsel Lawrence Walsh as a
"vindictive wretch"; stop claiming
your case was a "political prosecution"; stop belittling your critics as
communist sympathizers.
Just zip it, Ollie, and we'll do
lhe same. We'll quit pointing out
that you are .anything but a true
patrio~ because true patriots don't
regard lhemselves as above lhe law
and eslablish !heir own liule dicta·
torships in defiance of the demo·
cratic process. We'll quit arguing
!hat toting a Bible to court was a
theatrical gimmick and that your
vaunted "sincerity" was as phony
as your MacArlhuresque "should I
just fade away" fund-raising pitch
was asinine. We'll abandon our
claim that your alleged valiance is
counterfeit, because valiant people
don't blame others for !heir every
trespass.

Anc! lhe best part of lhe deal for
you, Ollie, is that we'lllay off our
most effective argument - that
despite your constant moaning
about,your travails, the democratic
system you belrayed treated you a
whole lot better than you treated it.
Start with your jury - that
oant.l of DiSTrict o~Columbi• citi·

zens whom your aUies belittled as a
bunch of know-nothings. They
defied Judge Gerhard Gesell's
instructions and accepted your
claim that you were just "following orders." They threw out nine
of lhe felony charges against you
and convicted you only on those
you virtually confessed to obstructing Congress, destroying
government documents and accept·
ing an illegal gratuity.
Then there was Judge Gesell's
merciful sentence -two years'
probation, $150,000 in fines and
I ,200 hours of community service.
A kid caught with a small bag of
magic mushrooms at lhe University
of Virginia pulls jail time; constitu·
tiona! usurper Oliver North coon·
sels teen-agers.
Then came lhe greatest gift of
all - two Reagan-appointed
appeals judges who handed down a
curious decision that made it all but
impossible for the lower court to
sustain your conviction. If your
prosecution was politioal, as you
claim, ypur "exoneration" more
!han balanced !he equation.
The Carter-appointed member
of the three-judge panel insisted
that you "received a fair trial not a perfect one. but a competent·
ly managed and a fair one." But
the reasoning of Laurence Silber·
man and David SenteUe bordered
on the absurd. One count destroying documents - was
tossed out on technical grounds
related to Judge Gesell's instructions to !he jury. But Ollie admitted
he destroyed them, didn't he? So
wh1't'c:

' .

rh~t

n1h?

The appeals court said Gesell
should not have told the jury to
ignore North's claim that he was
simply doing his superiors' bid·
ding. But lhe jury paid no attention
to Gesell anyway, and threw out
nine counts on the grounds that
Ollie was just a loyal soldier. So
what's the damage to his case?
The appeals court said Judge
Gesell '&amp;ad not done enough to
ensure that trial witnesses were
unaffected by Ollie's immunized
testimonr in the Iran-contra hear·
ings. Thtnk on that. Oliver North
was convicted only of those
felonies he acknowledi!ed commit·
ting. As one juror told The Wash-

Sen. Jam M. Long
everyone agrees !hat the current
Workers' Compensation system in
Ohio is too slow, too bureaucra·
tized and too costly. Hopefully !his
latest study will be carefully constdered and attempts at reforming
!his boondoggle will be made.
As always, please feel free to
caD or write me, Slate Senator Jan
Mic~ael Long, if you have any
quesbons or comments about these
or any olher issues My number is
(614)-466..8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio
43215.
'

Thursday, Sept. Ui
Accu-Weather'" forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

...

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IMansfield I 61 I•
o

"' "'

•J Columbus! st•l

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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

By Tbe Associated Press
Even cooler weather is on tap
for .Ohio the next few days, forecasfers said. High temperatures
Thursday and Friday very likely
will remain in the 50s in many
BmiS of the slate.
The National Wealher Services
says conditions could be rather
gloomy, too, wilh overcast skies.
Some rain is possible Thursday in
the norlheasL
A large area of rain dampened
Ohio on Tuesday night but most of
it had moved out of the state by
'morning. Overnight lows were
mostly in the mid-50s, but some
readings in the upper 30s were

reported in northwest Ohio.
The record high tempertll{ue for
this date at the Columbus wealher
station was 93 degrees in 1900.
The record low was 33 in 1967.
Sunrise this morning was at
7:21 a.m. Sunset will be at 7:25
p.m.
AroUDd the nation
A wet morning greeted the
Norlheast and !he day promised to
be a cold, windy one for New Eng·
land. A warm day was in sight for
lhe West Coast.
Rain fell on parts of lhe Nonh·
east at dawn, and parts of New
England were expected to receive
up to 4 inches of rain today.

Thunder was expected to
accompany tbe rain in some coastal
parts of southern New England and
the mid-Atlantic states.
Rain was forecast from New
Orleans to Maine . Highs in
Louisiana were expected to reach
lhe 70s, topping out in lhe 50s in
Maine.
Heavy storms were predicted for
some areas of the Carolinas and
Georgia.
Rain was also forecast for the
Great Lakes region, where highs in
the 50s were also predicted. In
northern Minnesota, the mercury
was expected to climb only into the
40s.

Winds gusting to 45 mph were
possible for parts of lhe northern .
Plains.
While much of lhe eastern half
of the country was wet or shivering, summer-lil&lt;:e wealher was con·
tinning along !he West Coast, wilh
a warm-air front bringing highs in
the 90s not only to California but to
parts of Oregon and Washington as
well.
On Tuesday, Medford, Ore .,
warmed to 99 degrees, breaking a
17-year-old record for the date by I
degree.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was 108 degrees at
Palm Springs, Calif.

50th U. S. Savings Bond campaign off to good start
W. VA.

Showers T·stonns Rain Rurriss

Snow

Ice

Pt. Cloudy

Sunny

Cloudy

01881 Accu-W•ther. Inc:.

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
slight chance of sprinkles. Low
near 50. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday, variable cloudiness.
High in lhe mid-60s.
Extended forecast
Friday tbrougb Sunday:

Cool on Friday with scattered
showers north. Fair on Saturday
and Sunday with moderating temperatures. Highs in the 50s Friday,
60-65 Saturday and 65-70 Sunday.
Lows in mid-30s to mid-40s Friday
and Saturday and in the 40s Sun·
day.

--Local briefs... -....,
Continued ~om page 1
The parked car of John James, Jr., was struck a~ut 9 p.m. by
anolher vehicle which failed to stop. There was extenstve damage to
the entire left side.

Mailbox, tube vandalism probed
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department reporta that mailbox
and newspaper tubes continue to be stolen and vandalized across lhe
county.
Bob Sloan of Rocksprings Road reported on Saturday afternoon
that during the night. a subject or subjects got out of !heir ve~clc
and tore down his newspaper tube. Sloan reported that !he subject
had also hit his mailbox, damaging it as well. The club broke when
lhe mailbox was struck.
·
The subjects, according to Sloan, left footpints at the scene.
Darrell Smith of Pine Grove Road reported on Monday that
sometime during lhe night his mailbox and a 4x4 post were stolen.

Posts reported stolen

Man to be turned over to authorities
David Steinmetz of Middleport has been ordered turned over to
California Department of Corrections representative foDowing a
recent hearing in Meigs County CourL
.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Stem·
metz was recently arres~ on a Gover;nCI''s WarranL .
.
Steinmetz is wanted m Mendocmo County, California for a
parole violation. According 10 documents filed in lhe court, Stein·
mentz was convicted in California for robbery and burglary and
later violated lhe tenns of his parole.
Steinmentz in now housed in the Meigs County Jail and is
expected to be picked up by California officials this weekend.

Murder trial sent to jury
The trial of David Losey of Glouster has now been placed in the
hands of an Athens County jury.
The case was heard in lhe Meigs County Common Pleas Court·
room due to renovations underway in lhe Alhens County Court·
house.
.
.
I 6 30
Jurors deliberated in Meigs County unt1l appro~1mate y :
p.m. on Tuesday evening, before being transported to Athens ~­
ty for further deliberations. They are not expected to return to Me1gs
County.
.
Losey is accused of the May beaung death of Donald
McNaughton, also of Glouster.

mgton Post after lhe trial: "I just
made my decision on those three
counts because he said from the .
witness stand he knew it was
unlawful." So in effect Norlh's
own testimony was the only relevant testi'!'ony. Vfas the appeals
court makmg lhe mcredible argument that North's testimony was
tamted by what he heard himself
say to Congress?
So why don't you just stifle
yourself, Ollie? You do it and
we'll do it- !he dozen or so 'or us
diehards in whose minds you
remain guilty as charged.
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

EMS answers five calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units answered five
calls for assistance on Tuesday and early on Wednesday.
On Tuesday at 11:02 am., Pomeroy. unit went to Pomeroy Nurs·
ing and Rehabilitation Center. Susan S1ckles was lllken to Veterans
Memorial Hospillll.
At 3:19p.m., Middleport units went to Bradbury Road for a one·
car mo!CI' vehicle accidenL Doug Gloyd was lllken to Veterans. ~t
6:40 p.m., Slcy Med took Kenneth BtsseU from V~terans to Oh1o
Slate University Hospillll. At 5:22 p.m., Tuppers Plains un1t went to
Calloway Ridge Road. George Cremeans was taken to SL Joseph
Hospillll.
.
Mai s
On Wednesday at 12:I 1a.m., Pomeroy umt went to
n treeL
Freda Smidt was ueated but not transported.

Jury trial canceled

Today in history

The 50th anniversary campaign
in support United States Savings
Bonds is off to a successful slllrt in
Meigs County. according to Dave
N. Gabe, area manger, U. S. Savings Bonds Division.
For lhe first eight monlhs of the
1991 campaign, October 1990
through May 1991, Meigs County
bond sales were $277,485, an
increase of 121 percent compared
to $125,434 sold during lhe same
period last year.
The campaign encourages
Meigs County residents to buy U.
S. Savings Bonds lhrough the pay·
roD savings where they work and
through applications initiated by
local financial institutions.
While May sales f~ are lhe
most current for Melj!S County,
nationally, sales of Senes EE Savings Bonds increased six percent in
August to $692 million, compared

A jury trial scheduled for Thursday, September 26 in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court has been canceled.
Prospective jurors Cl' witnesses need not report.

A Dexter man was treated following a one.;:ar accident on C.R. 5
in Salisbury Township Tuesday afternoon.
According to repcxt filed by. !he Gallia-Meigs Post of !he State
. Highway Palrol, Douglas C. Gloyd, 30, of Dexter, was soutb~d
on C.R. 5, slid off !he left side of lhe roadway and struclc a utility

.

polibe reporting officer cited ~safe speed on lhe rain-slick road as
the contributing cause of lhe accJden!.
.
Gloyd was transported by the Me1~s County Emergency Medical
Service to Veterans Memorial Hosp1111l where h~ . was treated and
released.
Damage to Gloyd's 1983 Chevrolet Chevette was listed as hcavy
and disabling.
. Gloyd was cited by the patrol for failure to control.
'

_.......

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52 Weelcs ..................... ..: .... ...... 184. 76
Oulalde Molp CoaiiiJ

..

The market-based rate program
for U. S. Savings Bonds has been
in effect since Nov. I, 1982 and
has been responsible for a marked
turnaround in lhe sale of bonds dur·
ing the past decade. Since 1982
when sales of $3.1 billion marked
the lowest ebb for the pro)!ram
since it was established ;, 1'1.\ 1, the bond program has sec" .lcs .
increase more !han 150 perc. 111, to :
$8.1 billion in 1990. During the ·
same period, the value of bonds
held by Americans has increased
by 97 percent, from $68 billion in
November 1982 to $134 .6 billion
today.

... __

One Week .... .. ..... ......... ... ........... .$1.60
One Month ... ...... ................ ........ $6.95

Man treated after accident

Oct. 31, 1991. The previous semi·
annual rate was 7.19 percent. The
new rate is 85 percent of lhe average market yield on five year trea·
sury marketable securities between
Nov. I, 1990 and Apri130, 1991, a
7.73 percent
.
For bonds held at least five
years, yields at redemption are the
average of semiannual market·
based rates during the time held,
compoundeJ semiannually, or a
mintmum rate, whichever is
greater. The current guaranteed
minimum rate is six percent. EE
bonds held less than five years earn
interest on a fixed graduated scale.

National Hunting and Fishing under, must be present to win.
Cbapter Ito meet
Day
There will be a Southern Loc!ll
The Annual National Hunting
and Fishing Day, sponsored by lhe Chapter I parent meeting on Mon;
~lj'~~
c_o_n_ti_n_u_ed_~
__o_m~p_a~g_e_1_________________ Ken Amsbary Chapter of lhe Jzaak day at 7 p.m. at !he Southern High
Walton League, will be held Satur· School cafeteria.
Hayride to be held
.
spring ... or if other critical uncer·
AEP had estimated that day, SepL 28 from 9 am. to 3 p.m.
The
Age
Level
and
Family
Min·
The event wiD be held at its new
tainties discussed in the case and installing scrubbers would cost
location
at the Izaak Walton Club istry Committee of the Pomeroy
elsewhere are resolved," he said.
$800 million, compared wilh $200
House,
two
miles past the Boy United Melhodist Church will host
The federal agency plans to million for modifying the Gallia
Scout
Camp
on
Scout Camp Road. the annual hayride and wiener roast
award on a ftrSt-come, first-served County plant to accommodate lowon Sunday at the George Wright
Signs
will
be
posted.
basis next year special reserve sulfur coal from other states.
Farm at 4 p.m. Bring a lawn chair ·
Admission
is
free
to
the
public
allowi!n~es to utilities which plan
Glazer said there were uncer·
and
potluck dish.
to inst811 scrubbers. The allowances tainties about the future price of and a free lunch will be provided.
There will be events for men
would.extend from Jan. I, 1995, to low-sulfur coal.
and
women, children and adults,
Concessionaires sougbt
Jan. 1,1997, tbe deadline by which
"We were very concerned about
including
displays and demonstra·
Groups or individuals interested
utilities must comply with regula· AEP's ratepayers becoming captive
lions.
to distant coal producers and being lions on gun safety, wrkey calling, in setting up a food booth during
Although AEP is not required to overly dcpeodent fCI' all of its fossil taxidermy, 22-rifle shoot, fishing, the Second Annual Big Bend
follow ·the PUCO recommendation, fuel generation on an ever-tighten· archery, trapping, canoeing, reload· Sternwheeler Festival can conlact
regulaiOrs could enforce the deci· ing market for low-sulfur coal ing, black powder, trap shooting Mary Powell at 992-2239. Interest·
ed crafters may call !he same num·
sion by denying lhe company part which is what the future would and coon hounds.
ber. The deadline for sign-up is
A
prize
will
be
awarded
at
3
of any future rate increase requests have brought with a fuel switch at
p.m. and the winner, age 18 and September 30.
which tire contrary to lhe order.
Gavin," he said.
·'That's exactly !he way it oper·
ates. 1n future rate cases we would
... lulve to consider this decision
Vetel"IIDil Memorial
and they'd be loolcing at potential
TUESDAY
ADMISSIONS Six were fined and five others $63 and costs, operating under suslarge 4isallowances of cos.ts,'' Susan Siclcles, Pomeroy.
· forfeited bonds in Pomeroy pension: Harry D. Barton ..
Glazer said in an interview.
TUESDAY
DISCHARGES
•
mayor's court conducted by Larry Pomeroy, $373 and costs, DUI, and
He also said !he future of the Mary Gilkey and Kennelh Bissell.
Wehrung,
president of Pomeroy $63 and costs, driving under suscompany's two coal mines in
pension: Edie Grimm, Pomeroy:
ViUage
Council
Tuesday night.
Holzer Medical Center
neighboring Meigs County that pri·
$43
and costs, assured clear dis·
Fined
were
Janice
Breeding,
Discharges
Sept.
24
•
Brittany
marily supply lhe Gavin plant did
tance;
and Robert G. Robinson, ·
George, MaUory Hill, Kevin, Jami· Reynoldsburg, $63, and costs, no
not figure in the decision.
Pomeroy,
$375 and costs, our, and
"The issue of the Meigs mine son, Violet Jayjohn, Terressa Jef· driver's license; William Dean
$63
and
costs,
operating under sus- ·
$88
and
costs,
open
Whittington,
and lhe future of the Meigs mine is fers, Mrs. Thomas Pullins and
pension.
.
flask;
Theresa
Rodatz,
Pomeroy.
a separate issue, and !hat is real! y daughter; Faye Samples, Mary
Forfeiting
bonds
were
Jerry
.
one for AEP to resolve. We do not Vollborn and MicheDe Wellman.
Bentley, Shade, $63, no motorcycle
Births Sept. 24 · Mr. and Mrs.
regulate the mine. We don't control
endorsement;
Donna Loudin, Point.
Sherman
Bentley,
daughter,
Jackthe mine. That is an issue for !hem
Pleasant,
$43,
improper backing; .
son;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Darren
Clagg,
to resolve. What we did here is
John
Myers,
Ravenswood,
$48,
Divorce
granted,
dissolution
look at what is the systemwide son, Oak Hill and Mr. and Mrs.
speeding;
James
Mills,
Pomeroy,
·
sought
James Scott, son, Jackson.
least-cost plan," GI82Cr said.
$38,
leash
law;
and
Eric
Best.
·
A
divorce
action
has
been
grant·
AEP has about 1,200 workers at
Columbus,
$46,
speeding.
ed
in
Meigs
County
Common
Pleas
its Meigs County mines. A switch
Court to Janet E. MiDer and John
to out-of-state coal could cost lhe
L. Miller.
miners their jobs.
Continued from page 1
An action for dissolution of
It was agreed to reimburse marriage has been filed in that
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
Shirley Lambert at the state court by Riclcy L. Jordan, Pomeroy,
approved amount in lieu of provid- against Teresa L. Jordan, Lao·
446 4524
" ',,' ·;,",
ing transportation of her child to relsville.
Continued ~om page 1
Marriage licenses granted
work forced overtime. That monlh, the Athens Christian School for
!his
school
year.
Marriage licenses have been
a worker had died while working
The board also authorized the filed in Meigs County Probate
forced overtime on a 130-degree
pot line after suffering a heart filing of an application for a drug· Court to Timothy Carl Tackett, 27,
free schools grant
Langsville, and Christine Ann
auack.
Treasurer
Jane
Fry
reported
that
Boggs, 34, Langsville; and to Dale
The NLRB hearin~ began Mon·
$376,536
in
Chapter
I
federal
Harrison
McDaniel, 57, Mason,
day, wilh administrauve law judge
monies
for
math
and
reading
pro·
w
.va,
and
Mary Eua Hughes, 55,
Bernard Ries presiding. Tuesday's
session was held at City Hall, wilh grams and $109,811 in federal dis· Pomeroy.
about I00 union members and sup· advantaged pupil funds have been
porters on hand
· approved for payment to the dis·
Ries has said it may talc:e months trict
The board voted to endorse the
before a decision is issued.
one.·half mill tuberculosis levy
which · will be on the November
The Daily Sentinel
baUot
Attending were Supt. James
!USPS IIIHIO)
Carpenter, Treasurer Fry, and
Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive
A Dhillon ol MuHtme&lt;lla. Inc.
board members, Robert Barton,
Customer Service
Larry Rope, Richard Vaughan,
Published every afternoon, -Monday
through Friday. 111 Court St. , PoRobert Snowden, and Jeff Werry.
What mailers most to you when it comes to propane?
meroy, Ohio, by tile Olllo Valley PubAn executive session to discuss
lishing Company tMultlme&lt;lla. Inc ..
Prompt delivery. Reliability. Safely. Energy-savings.
personnel and negotiations fol·
Pomeroy. Ohlo 45769. Ph. 992·2156. SeKnowledge and experience. Friendly. helplul delivery people.
cond class postag~ paid at PorMroy ,
lowed lhe meeting.

By Carrier or Motor Route

IJ&gt;

to lhe $653 million sold in August
1990. It brought lhe figure for lhe
first II monlhs of fiscal year 1991
to $8.47 billion, a 17 percent
increase over last year's sales of
$7.23 billion for !he same period.
For 50 years !he Bond program
has proven to he a stable source of
funds for the Treasury, as well as
an easy avenue to increased savings. The program's most signifi·
cant change occurred Nov. 1, 1982
when interest rates were tied to
market fluctuations wilh a guaran·
teed minimum rate to protect
against declines.
Rates change each May I and
November I based on market per·
formance during the preceding six
months.
The latest change, reflecting lhe
downward turn in rates since last
fall is to a rate of 6.57 percent
which will remain in effect through

Hospital news

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Wednesday
mCI'Ding that deputies from his department took a report from Del·
bert Stearns of K.eebaugh-Follrod Road that sometime between !he
181h and 201h of September. someone stole 35 bundles of seven·
foot steel fence posts (five posts in a bundle). He also reported that
a post driver was talc:en as well.

By Joseph Spear :

By The Associated Press
Today. is Wednesday, Sept. 25, the 2681h day of 1991 There are 97
days left m the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On SepL 25, 1789, lhe first United States Congress, meeting in New
York, adop~ I~ amendments to lhe Constihltion and sent !hem to !he
states fo~ ratiflcauon. (Ten of lhe amendments became lhe Bill of R'ghts)
On lhtS date:
'
·
In 1513, Spanish explorer Vasco Nunez de Balboa crossed lhe Islhmus
of Panama to discover !he Pacific Ocean.
·
In 1690,. one of lhe earliest American newspapers Pu.blick Occur·
rences, published 1ts first- and last- edition in Boston
In 177.5! American Revolutionary War hero Elhan Alien was captured
by lhe Bnush as he led an attack on Montreal.
In 1890, M~on Pres~t Wilford Woodruff issued a Manifesto for·
mally renouncm~ lhe pracu,ce '?fpolygamy.
In !890, .President BenJamm Harrison signed a measure establishing
Sequ01a Nauonal Parle.
I~ 1904, a New Y~k City police officer ordered LiDian Orr, an' auto:
mobile passenger on Fiflh Avenue, to stop smoking a cigarette (A male
comnan~on wa~ arre~ted and larPr fil'oi'JI ~? f&lt;V '~ahn•ing" 1ru. nffi('P.• \

~ .f

Cooler weather forecast for Ohio next few days ~:

OH 10 Weath er

IND.

.'

\.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Airline deregulation creating monopoly
WASIDNGTON - Sen. John
McCain, R-Ariz., a former Navy
fighter pilot, is in a dogfight wilh
the big airlines. He believes that
the big three - American, United
and Della - will not be satisfied
until they achieve a tollll monopoly
of the skies.
Just ·three airlines carry more
than half of all passengers, and lhe
top eight airlines control more !han
90 percent of the market. This is
not what Congress had in mind
when it deregulated the airline
industry in 1978. Dere~tion has
become a bait·and-swuch con on
the customers. There is less, not
more competition, and higher, not
lower fares (unless you don't mind
loclcing in your travel plans weeks
in advance). Service is notoriously
bad, and flights so frequently overbooked that even customers with
tickets are not guaranteed seats.
"Congress did not pass airline
deregulation so that the industry
would become concentrated into a
few mega-carriers," McCain says.
"The promise of deregulation was
that airlines ... would spring up and
compete freely, providing the con-

J

"·-····

Wednesday, September 25, 1991
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, September
1991

~l

Ll Weeks ........ ..... ..................... $23.40
26 Weekt ......... .. .... ............ ... .... $45.:10
52 Weeks, ... ...... .. .... ... ............ .... $ll8. 10

KERO·SUN BY
TOYOSTOVE
ELECTRIC
HEATERS
PELANIS DISC
FURNACE KING
COAL HEATERS

-·

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W.Va.

-

S and R Gas Service

Ferrellgas

Cylln•n &amp; S.nlce

lulk and S.nlce

992·2.43

992·50.,

"A WINNING COMBINATION"

.--------------------~~~~~~~-~ -- ·-·- -··---

....

. , ..

�I;· 1,1 f

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Wednesday, September 25, 1991
· Page-4 ·

L.A. extends NL West lead
~o two games over idle Atlanta
By The Associated Press
While it rained on the Braves,
the Dodgers pounced the Padres
and opened a two-game lead over
Atlanta in the NL West.
Mike Morgan allowed six hits in
·eight-plus innings as Los Angeles
beat San Diego 5-2 on Tuesday
night. Atlanta ' s game again st
Cincinnati was rain ed out and
rescheduled as part of a twi-night
doubleheader today.
" We don ' t have 10 pound the
ball to win ball~ames , " Darryl
Strawberry said 'Sometimes you

pound. the ·ball and not win. The big
thmg •s gelling key hits at the right
time and getting guys in."
Eddi e Murray had two hits for
the Dodgers, including a single
leading off a two-run second
inning. Morgan (14 -9) won his
fourth consecutive game and even
drove in a run.
. It was the second straight offenSive show by a Dodgers' pitcher.
Ramon Martinez homered Sunday
in the Dodgers' 3-0 victory over
the Braves.
" We've got a bat in our hand,"

Scoreboard
In the majors.. .
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eutem Dlvlllon

Tum

W L PeL

GO

.......... 79 73 .520
......... 72 78 .480
....... 72 78 .480
Philadolpllia ....... 72 80 .474
MOiliiOil
......... 67 84 .444

13.5
19.5

•-l'ilubluxh ........ 92 59 .609

SL LGuil
CbiA:oao
New Ycxt

19.5

20.5
25

Weatun Dlv"lon

.............. W L
..... An~ ...... 88 64
Atlanu
........... 8l 65
Sao IJioao ........ 77 75

PeL

GB

.579
.561
J 07

2
II
16

Cbtchanatl --- 71 79 .4'73
Sao FroociJco ...... 70 82 .461

(g

""""""

......... 62 90 .408
a-clincbod divilion title.

26

Tuesday's scores

Clltdnud at Atlanta. ppd., rain
Aillodo!pbi• 4, Cllicoao 2
SL LGull4, M1111aoal 3
PitubuiJIIIO, NowYmk 8
Sao Fnncilco 9, llo.,non 7
LooAn~l,SonD!eto2

Today's games
Philadololtio (Orocno 12-7) at Clucago
(Bolltia 4-l), 2:20pm.
Clndaaad (Amutrun&amp; 7-U and Myen 6-13) al Adaa«a (Smoltz: 12.-13 ud
/t.Ytf}l1.a), 2, 4:0$ p.m.
PiJubut&amp;b (Smiley 18-1) at New Yod:
(Ca&gt;o 1 3-T3~ 7,40 p.m.
San Fnncilco (Butkett 10-11) at Hous""' (Kilo 7-9), 1,35 p.m.
M'ontru l (Bamca 4-6) It St. Loui•
(Cmmier 3-4), BS p.m.
Loo An~ (Ojod&gt; 11·8) It Son Diego
(Ba1•13-10), 10,05 pm.

Thursday's games
Clndonatl (Rijo t4·5) at Atlonta

(LelbronclllS-11~

7:40p.m.
PiUibur&amp;h (Tomlin 8-7) It New Yolk
(Cutillo2-l), 7'40pm.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EutmtDI•Idon
Tum
W L Pet.
TOJOnl.o
......... 84 68 .553
B&lt;»tat
......... II 69 ..140
Dcoroit
........... 77 73 ..113
M i l - ...... 73 76 .490
Now Yom
....... 64 86 .427

GB
2
6

9.5
19

Ballimcn

........ 63 87 .420

20

Ck"laad

- - 51 II .342

31.$

Wakm Dl•blon

TUIIII
Minnclo&amp;a
...•...
Cbiuao
.........
Tu•
...........
OU1and
.........
Kli\JIS Cty .......

W
91
12
79

79
77Califotni&gt; ......... 76
Seanle
........... 76

L
60
69
11

PeL
.603
.543
.521

72 .523
74 .SI0
75 .503
75 .l03

GB
9
11.5
12
14
IS

IS

Tuesday's scores
B•Lon at Babimore. ppd, nin
Dttroll 7, Cle\'tlaad-1

-...a9,0tico 2
Milwaukee S, New fom 4

Toronto 3, California 0, 10 innings
IWiau Cily l, OU!and 4
Tt~.M

•• Soau.lo 1

Today's games
K•nua City (Boddicker 12· 12) n
OU1and (Wolch 11-12), Hl p.m.
TCUI (Ryan 11-6)" Seattle (Dd..,u·
cia 12-11~ 3'3~y.m.
Toronto (K.e"l,IS -11) 11 Celifomie
17-7), :05 pm.
· Scnm (Clemont 11-8 end Bolton l 1) ot BallUnme (lobMM 4-6 ond Milo&lt;ki
10.1~ 2. HI! p.m.
Cltnland (Jontl 3-7) al Delroll

a..-on

(Loiter 1-51. 7:35 p.m.
Now Yodt (Sondonon 15-10) It Mil·
waukoo (l'lcuc 2-7), a,o.s p.m.
Cbiceao (Fernandez 8·12) at Min-

_ . (Andc:non S-9), a,Js

~m

Thursday's eames
Cleveland (Otto 1-7) at Detroit
(Taaanall-ll), 7:35p.m.
New Yolk ITaylor 1-11) at Milw ~ u ­
keo (W'l"'on ll-7),1,Ql p.m.
California (PetteR 2- 3) at Kansaa
Cily (Gubic:ul· ll), a,Jl p.m.
TCUI (Boyd 2wS) at Oakland (Moon:
ll·l), 10:05 p.m.

Major league leaders
National League
BATTING - Morria, Cincinnati ,
.321 : T. Gwynn, Son Diqo, .317: Pendloton. Atlanto . .314: Mc:Gee. SID Froncisco,
.312; )010, SL LouiJ, .306; Booilla, Pilll·
bumb. .306; Larkin, Cincinnati, .301.
"lUNS - Budar, Loo Ansdeo, I OS:
Jchnion, New YOJt, 104; Bmilla, Pitu·
burJ,Il. 97; Sandbefl, Chicaao, 96; Oant,
Atllll.ll, 91 ; J . Bell, Pi ttlbWJh, 91; 0 .
Smilh, SL Louio, 89.
RBI - Johnloo, New York, 111 ; W.
0..0, San FrancUc:o, I06; Bonds, Pitu·
bu.raft, 106; McGriff, San Diego, 100;
OUuao. 100: Gon~ Atlonu, 97:
Booilla. Pll1111wJ)&gt;. 9l .
HITS - Butler, Loa Angclea, 173;

o.......

Pendi.Un. Atlanta, 169; T. Gw)M. San
llicao. I61: Bonillo. Pitubwah. 167: Jooc.
St. l.ouia, 16S; Gra ce , Chiu 1o, 162;
Sutdbcq, CbiA:I&amp;o. 162.
DOUBLES - Bonilla, PinsburJh ,
•3; Jolt. St. LouiJ, 40; O'Neill, Cinclnaatl, 35; Zeile, SL Louil, 33; Morrlt,
C.Jadn1111, 3li Sabo, Cincinnati, J 2i
Oant, Atbnla, 32; McRcyn old 1, Ne w

Yoot,32.
TRIPLES - Lank!ord, St. Louia, I S;
T. Gwynn, San Dieao. II ; Finley, .HO\IIao., I0; t..Oonzala.. Houlton, 9; GriJ&amp;om,
Monweal, I; J . Bell, Pittaburgh, 7; CanWe. ~~oua·m , 1; PendietM, Atlanta , 7;
Von SIJlco, l'llllbwJ)t. 7: Owa!. Monl!O-

ol. 7.

HOME RUNS - Johnaon, New

y &lt;8, 31; Nou Williunl, Son Fnncioco,
31 : Gaat, Allaau, lOt McGriff, Stn
llUp, 2!1; 0.-~.:.~o, 28: 0 ' Ntll4
CJ-11, J7; It. .
, SUI FrtneiJ·
oo, 27.

STOU!N BASES -

om...,, M&lt;11-

ueol, 73; Nhoa, Allanta, 72; DcShi.W. ,
Montro~l , 56; Bond•, Pituburah, 4 t ;
Loald.n, SL Loulo, 39; B....., Loo An-

.... ,.,~,NcwYmk,37 .
PITCIIINO (ll Dociolocu) - Rljo,

Cllel . .atl, 14-!J, .737, 2.Al; Smiley,

11·1, .692. 3.29: MiWilli&gt;m•.
, 11·5, .617, 120: AY&lt;rj. At·
laata,
, .610. 3.32: llwo~ Son Diego,
15-1, .652. 3.2!1; Goodat, Now Ymk, 137, .6.!_01.3.60; Olavillo, Allanu , 19· 11.
. 633.~.
STRIKEOUI'S - Cane. New Ycx:k,
lOt; 0. · CllicaOD. Ill: Gllvlne.

Allartta , 117; · H~miich, H~~~~. 164;
Benu, Sen Diego, l SI; Gooden, New
York, ISO; Greene, Philadelphia, 149;
Rljo, Clnclnnall, 149.
SAYES - Leo Smith. St. Louis. 43:
Dibble, Clnclnn•U. 30; Mitch Williama,
Philadelphia, 29; Fnnco, New Yori, '1:1;
Righetti, San Fnncilco, 24; Lc:ffc:ru, San
Dloao. 22: B. Londcum, PitubutsJt, 17;
Dave Smith, Otie~ao. I?; Bcrcngucr, Atlanta, 11 .

American Lea2ue
BAITING - Franco, "fexu, .341 ;
Ken Griffey Jr., ~cattl e! .334; Boggs,
Bocmn, .332; Molitor, MUwallkoe, .326;
Palmciro, Tau, .324; Tltllbull, Karuaa
City, .324; Thornu, OUuao. .321; Puck"eu, MiMeeota , .32 1; C. Ripken, Baltimore, .321 .
RUNS - Molitor, Milwaukee, 122;
P"'"""'. TOIU, II&amp;, Conoeco, Ookland,
108; Siem , Tcxu, lOS ; White. Tcronto,

104: Fnnoo. Tuu. 102: Thomu. Oticago, 9g.
RBI - Fielder, Detroit, 128;
Canaeco, Oakland, 113; Sictra, Tuu ,
110; Thom11, Cbicaao, 104; Cuter,
Toronto, 104; C. Rip:cn, Baltimon:, 101;
Juan Oonzalcz, Tcxu, 99.
HITS - Molitor , Milwau.keo, 199;
P1lmoiro, Tcua , 191; C. Ripken, Balti·
moro, 191 ; Sien-a, Te.u, 190; Fnnco,
Teus, 188; Puckett, Minnesota, 187; Su,
New Yolk, 180.
DOUBLES - Palmciro, Teul , 46;
Ken Griffey Jr., Seettle, 42; Sierra, TcAu ,
42; C. Ripken, Beltimore, 42; Ca rter,
Toronto, 4 1; Reed, Bos\On , 40; R. Alomer, Toron to, 39; Boggs, Bouon, 39;
Brm, Kan.us City, 39.
TRIPLES - Molitor, Milwaukee, 12;
R. Alomar, Toronto, 11; L. John son,
Chicago, II ; McRae, Kanu s Cit y, 9;
White, Toronto, 9; Gladden , Minnesota,
9; 0evl2'CIUJ. , Baltimore, 8; Mack , Minnesota, 8; Polatia, California, 8.
HOME RUNS - fielder, Detroit, 43;
Canacco, Oakland, 4 2; Caner, Toronto,
33; C. Ripken, Baltimore, 31 ; Thomas,
Ollcego, 30; Tattabull, Kanua City, 30;
Belle, Cle• t:l•nd, 28; Tadewn, Detroit,
28; C. O.vil, MinnCIOUI, 28.
STOLEN BASES - R. Henderson,
Oakland, 52; R. Alomar, Toronto, SO;
Raines, Chicaao. SO; Polonia, CaJifomie,
46; Cuyler, Detroit, 37; White, Toronto.
33; Fnnco, Teua, 31.
PITCJDNG ( IS deci aions) - He~ ­
kcth. Bc»IDot, 11-4, .733, 3.21: Ericbon,
Min;neao~ , 19-7, .731 , 3.32; lAngston,
Califonua, 11-7, .708, 2.94 ; Clemen~ ,
BortOa, 11·8, .680, 2.43; Gullickson, Dcuoit, 19·9, .619, 3.94; Tapani, MinnesOla ,
16-l , .667, 2.87; Jc.e Chwnan, Teus, 12·
~ . ~7. 3.20.
STRIKEOt.rrs - Clc:mcru, Bos ton,
21 1; R Johnson, Seattle, 216; McDowell,
Chica go , 186; Ryen , Texu , 179;
l angaton. Cal ifornie , 16S; Candiotti,
Toronto, 163; Swindell, Cleveland, 161.
SAVES - Harvey, California , 43 ;
Eckersley, Oakland, 41; Aguilera, Minne.tOta, 40; Reardon, 801\on, 40; Henke.
Toronto, 32; M.onlg:omery, ~anus C_lty,
31 i O!Jon, Balumore, 30; Thigpen, Chic•·
go, 30.

Transactions
Baseball
National Leaaue
ATLANTA BRAVES - Activated
Deion Sandm, oudi.eldc:r.
Plnl.ADELPmA PHlLUES - Sen1

Amalio Carreno, Darrel Akerfelds and
Chuck Malone, pitchers, and Sil Ca.mpu·
u no, oulfielder, outright to ScrantonWilkes-Burt of the International League.

BIISketball
National Bukelball A11oclallon
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS Signed Te:rrell Brandon, g\lltd, to a seven-year contract.
MIAMI HEAT - Sign ed Carlos
Funchcsa, guard.

Football
Nll1onal Football Leaaue
BUFFALO BILLS - Placed James
Williams, comc::rback, on injurecl reserve.
OREEN BAY PACKERS - Activated Louis Check, otYenrivc: linemen, from
injured rc:aervc. W1 ivc:d Scott Iones , offcn&amp;ivc: Uick..le.
HOUSTON OILERS - Wai ved
Guy Wellman, wide receiver.
LOS ANGELES RAMS - Pil ced
Rodney Thomu, cornerback, on injured
reserve. Placed Marcua Dupree, ruMing
back, m the practice f'Oiter. Relu.Kd Corwin Anthony, light end, and Trevor Rya!J,
center, fran the practice f'Oiter.
PIITSBURGH STEELERS Agreed to terms with Oreg Lloyd ,
linebacker. Re-aiancd Rick Strom, quar·
tcrl&gt;•ck.

Hockey
Natlonalllockty Leaaue
EDMONTON OILERS - Signed
Eu Tikkancn, lclt wing, to a W.·ycar con·
lncl

HARTFORD WHALERS -

Ao-

cignod Mario G011elin and Jim Crozier,
sodtenders; Jeraua Ba ce, Core y
Beauleau, Vinctnt Doc. Cam Brauer, Jim
Burke, Shawn Evans, Scou Humeniu.lt: ,

IWi Johnlton and John St.cvali , defensemen: Blair Atcheynlm and OuiJ Tancill ,
rilht winp; Paul C)T, Scott Dllliels and
eMs Oovodaril, left wing~; and Jam e~
Black, Chril BriJhl, DeDit Chalifoux,
Kelly Ent ond Kerry Rlwell, centc:n, 10
Sprinafield of the American Hockey
Lcaaue. Retwned Steve Yule, defense-

man, toKamloopl olthe Watem Hockey
Lc.aguc; Manin llanulik, dclc:nacm~no to
Zlln ot the CzcchcolovokUn Le.gvc: U&gt;d
Mike Lcnarduzzi. fotltcndcr, to Sault Stc.
Mario of lhe Onl&amp;nO Hockey Loasue.
ST. LOUIS BLUES - Returned
Steve Staiol , defc niemln, to Niagara
Falla ol tho Ontario Hockey Wguc. At ·
1igned Briln Pellerin, Juon Ruff, Yves
Heroul. Richard Pion, Derek Frenette,
Mart Buacn, Joe Hawley and Dan
Fowlc:r, forwuda; Olea P,.., lllft l..uilt,
Teny Hollinaer and lob Tuatian, defenaemcn; and Alain R1ymond, David
Schlll and Froncil Oueleue, JOIItatden,
lo Peoria of Ute lntemational Hocke)

Lci~ASJIINOTON CAPITALS -

M·

aiancd Byron DaFoe, Alain Haney, OW
Kolzia and Shlwn SimE-.OG, &amp;oaltcndc:n;
Bob lhl.cock, Wade Bartley, Chris
Clarke, Muk Ferner, Rob Lealk, Ken
Lovain, Jim Mathieacn, Muk Somuon,
Jiri Vykoulul, defen•emen; Craia Dun canson, Victor GcrvaiJ, Trevor Halverson,
Todd Hluahko , Bill Kovaca , Steve
Martell. Harry Mewa, Dave Moriueu.e..
Randy Pearce. John Purvet , Bo~by
Reynolda, Regie Sava&amp;e. Steve Seficl.
Tim T1ylor, Richie Walcott, Simon
Wheeldon, forw1tda, 10 Baltimoro of the
Amprican Hoc*ey Leap.

Morgan said. "Like Ramon the
other day, he hit a home run off
(Tom) Glavine for the third run.
We've got to help ourselves sometimes. We've got 10 get a double,
bunt 'em over, hit a sacrifice fly,
get 'em in. Execution wins ballgames a lot more than just power.
If you can win ballgames executing, you don' t need the three-run
homers."
·
In other games, Pittsburgh beat
New York 10-8, San Francisco beat
Houston 9-7, St. Louis beat Montreal 4-3 and Philadelphia beat
Chicago 4-2.
Ricky Bones (4-5) threw a runscoring wild pitch in the second
inning and Mike Sharperson hit an
RBI groundout. Brett Butler's double made it 3-0 in the fourth, but
the Padres got two runs in the fifth
on Thomas Howard's RBI sjngle
and Bip Roberts' run-scoring
groundout.
Morgan got his RBI grounder in
the sixth and Mike Sciascia hit a
run-scoring grounder in the seventh.
In the ninth, John Candelaria
struck out Fred McGriffwith a man
on and Roger McDowell got Benito Santiago on a game-ending double play for bois ninth save.
Pirates 10, Mets 8
Howard Johnson broke his own
NL record for home runs by a
switch-hitter with his 37th. Daryl
Boston added a grand slam for the
Mets, but Pittsburgh got 17 hits.
Frank Viola remained winless in
nine starts since Aug. 8. Bob Patterson (4-2) pitched two scoreless
innings and Rosario Rodriguez got
his fifth save. Jeff Innis (0-2) was
the loser.
GiaDts 9, A5tros 7
Matt Williams homered in the
fourth, then was hit with a Brian
Williams pitch his next time up.
Williams charged the mound, both
benches emptied and both were
ejected.
Trailing 5-2, San Francisco got
seven runs in the ninth on Willie
McGee's RBI single off Mark Portugal (10-10), Will Clark's runscoring groundout, Kevin Bass's
sacrifice fly, bases-loaded walks 10
Kirt Manwaring and Darren Lewis,
a hit batsman to Mike Benjamin
and an error by second baseman
Casey Candaele.
Rod Beck (1 -1) won despite
allowing two runs and four hits in
two innings.
CardiDBis 4, Expos 3
Catcher Gilberto Reyes, center
fielder Marquis Grissom, shortstop
Tom Foley and pitcher Chris
Haney (3-6) made errors that led 10
four unearned runs for SL Louis.
Omar Olivares (10-6) gave up
seven hits in seven iMings and Lee
Smith finished for his league-leading 43rd save.
Grissom stole three bases, passing suspended Otis Nixon of
Atlanta for the major-league lead
with 73.
Pbillies 4, Cubs 2
Andy Ashby (1-4) won for the
first time in six major-league starts,
allowing three hits in seven
innings. Mitch Williams finished
with one-hit relief for his 29th
save.
Mike Bielecki (13-11) lost,
allowin~ four runs and six hits in
five innmgs.

Sanders rejoins
Braves
By ROBERT BYRD
Assoc:inted Press Writer
ATI.ANTA (AP)- Two-spon
star Deion Sanders sped 10 the rescue of the Atlanta Braves on Tuesday and rejoined the team in its
drive for theN'- West title.
Just two days after he had an
interception in the Atlanta Falcons'
21-17 victory over the Los Angeles
Raiders , Sanders was expected
back in a Braves unifonn for Tuesday night's game against the
Cincinnati Reds.
Sanders, a cornerback, also
plays outfield for the Braves.
Sanders hit .193 with four home
runs, 13 RBis and nine stolen bases
in 49 games for the Braves before
leaving for football training camp
on July 31.
He was added to the Braves'
active roster "for the remainder of
the season, " team spokesman Jim
Schultz said.
It was not immediately clear
how many of the Braves' remaining 12 games Sanders would make.
On Sunday, the Falcons are home
against the undefeated New
Orleans Saints, while the Braves
are at Houston against the Astros.
Schultz said he believes Sanders
intends to play for the Falcons on
Sunday. The Falcons are off the
following weekend, when the
Braves close out the regular season.
Financial terms of Sanders'
return were not disclosed.
The second-place Braves could
use Sanders' speed as a baserunner,
now that stolen base leader Otis
Nixon is serving a 60-day drugrelated suspensiop.

. Wednesday, September 25, 1991

By DAVID L.PATION JR.
The final round of the 1991 Action Sports Summer Tour Supercross Series at Nelsonville leatured
some of the finest amateur riders in
the nation as well as up-and-coming pro riders Junior Jackson ,
James Bickel and Mark Musselman.
Greg Rand of Hillsboro, easily
dominated the 125 and Schoolboy
classes on his Team Green
Kawasaki, while Jeff Gibson or
Thornville, the Micro Class National champion, swept the Micro
Class. Josh Sreel, the 250 Amateur
National, champion ran away from
the 125A Class, but had starting
gate problems in the 250 Class.
Jackson took advantage of
Steel's misfortune to claim the
overall victory in the 250A Class.
The series ftnale also fealtlred the
largest rider turn out and set a new
.attendance mark of nearly 5,000
die-hard supercross fans.
Rand, the 125 stock and modified amateur national champion,
dominated the Schoolboy and 125B
classes. The Hillsboro rider led all
four motos by the end of the first
lap and easily opened up huge
"leads. Rand's lap ttmes would have
put him near the front of the 125
Pro class and in 1991, the PRO
CIRCOIT,ISCOTT/FOX/PJI/ DUNLOP/100%/MCGRATH star will
be a top 125 pro.
Following Rand home in the
·12SB class was Series Champion
Heath Bennett from Chauncey.
.Benneu, riding an Athens Sports
-Cycle Yamah&amp;, overcame an error
plagued first molD 10 take second in
moto 2 for second overall.
- The Micro Class saw series
·champion Brian Bartleu and Jeff
·Gibson run away from David
Whitcraft, the 15th ranked micro
,racer in the nation. Gibson, who
holds the top ranking in the country
won the first moto, leading nearly
the whole way. Bartlett, from New
Marshfield, stayed close, but could
never
challenge Gibson.
.
Micbae Massey, from Parkers: :burg, W.Va., led Christopher Tur. ;rill and David Whitcraft 10 the fin: ·isb line. Bartlett led most of the
:!second heat with Gibson trying 10
.fmd a way around him. Their battle
. carried them away from the battle
.for third, which Whitcraft won.
Bartlett, whose ITALJET had a
bent rear shock finally made an error, letting Gibson by, and the
Thornville rider claimed the overall
win. Whitcraft finished third and
clinched the series runner up spot,
:narrowly edging out Christopher
Turrill, who rode 10 fourth ahead of

tbird by Cecil Espy in tbe seventh Inning or
Tuesday night's National League game In New
York, which the Pirates won 10-8. (AP)

Kaff-kLlff!

No.1 Florida State, No.2 Michigan
to square off in key Saturday game
By Mllj. Amos B. Hoople
Fearless Forecaster
Egad, friends! This week has the
college football game you've been
waiting for: Florida State vs.
Michi$an.
Gomg into the season, FSU's
Seminoles and the Wolverines
were rated No. I and No. 2, respectively, by the Hoop!~ System .
Nothing has happened since to
change that assessment.
Florida State stands 3-0 for the
year, including a 44-28 thumping
of Brigham Young in the Disneyland Classic. The Seminoles have
won nine straight, which is the
longest major wiMing streak in the
country.
Michigan is 2-0 this fall with a
big victory over highly-regarded
Notre Dame. The Wolverines' 2414 victory broke a four -year
drought a$ainst the Irish and gave
Michigan 1ts eighth consecutive triumph.
Coming off open dates, both
teams are well-rested and ready to
get on with the first "Game of the
Year!" The contest wiU be telecast
from Arm Arbor, Mich., by ABC.
Looking for passing? Michigan
has 6-foot-8 QB Elvis Grbac, who
has thrown 34 completions, seven
for TDs, and not a single interception. You might say - heh, heh that Elvis is not only alive, but
rockin'! Countering for FIO'rida
State is He is man candidate Casey
Weldon: 48 completions, seven TD
tosses, no interceptions. Weldon is
9-0 as the Seminoles' starter, too.
How about pass catchers?
Michigan has Heisman hopeful
WR Desmond Howard, the 1991
"Rocket," who has six TDs in two
games - four via passes, one on a
kickoff return and one on an endaround. Florida State boasts gifted
TE (6-3, 220 pounds) Lonnie Johnson and ~Y WR Eric Turral.
Runnmg backs? The Wolverines' Ricky Powers hjiS six straight
Barnes with 100 yards'or more. But,
rn Edgar Bennett and Amp Lee, the
Seminoles may have the best rushing duo in the country. Jove! That's
enough talent to make the pro
scouts bug-eyed!
In a sure-ftre crowd-pleaser, the
Hoople System is calling it for the
hometown Wolverines, 31-27. Harrumph!

Sports briefs
Hockey
EDMONTON, Albena (AP) Esa Tikkanen, who played out his
option after leading Edmonton in
scoring last season, signed a 6-year
contract with the Oilers. Tikkanen,
26, scored 27 goals and had 42
assists last season.

Elsewhere, Clemson and Georgia Tech will stage a real grudge
match in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Yellow Jackets narrowly
defeated the Tigers, 21-19 , last
year on their way to the league
crown and a share of the national
title. As usual, there's a lot of talent
on both clubs. With the home-field
advantage this year, give it to
Clemson, 24-22.
.
Also in the ACC, next-door
neighbors North Carolina and
North Carolina State will get it on
for the 6lst time. The Tarhecls of
UNC are rated as legitimate contenders for the ACC crown. In another nail-biter, look for UNC to
win, 24-21.
The Sunchine State's two other
powerhouses, Florida and Miami,
will be in action this week, as well.
Steve Spurrier ' s "Fun and
Gun" Gators have the tougher assignment, meeting Jackie Sherrill's
rejuvenated Mississippi State Bulldogs (on TBS-TV). In a fun -filled
afternoon, look for the Gators to
win, 42-32.
The Miami Hurricanes are too
much for Tulsa's Golden Hurri cane. Miami's QB Gino Torreua
will outpitch Tulsa's gifted passer,
TJ. Rubley. Make it Miami, 44-31.
In other top-rated action, Washington will drop Kansas State, 3810; and Nebraska will beat Arizona
State, 38- I0.
On Thursday night (ESPN-TV),
UCLA will defeat San Diego State,
35-I 8. Har-rumph!
(C)I991 NEWSPAPER EN TERPRISE ASSN.
Thunday, SepL 16
UCLA 35, •san Diego State II
Saturday, SepL 11
·~ 24 Norlhcm Arizm• 14

Baylor 42. •soulhcm Med:nxlill29
•Bria,ham YCJUt18 44, Air F~ 34
Central Michigan 17, .Yclcdo IS
•Clanaon 24, Oecqj.a Tech 21
Colorado 31, •Stanford 21
•Collftdo State 38, Hlwaii 21
'Columbil 27. LdUsJ! 24
•Comell 21, Colaatc ll
•Dartmouth 17, SuctneU I0
Fl!Xida 42, •Miaiaaippi State 32

Furman 30, •watem Camlin• 20
'Gool(lia 44, Cal Sute F......,.. 21
•Grambling State 18, Nonh Cuolin1 A&amp;T 15
•Holy Crou 24, Pt::nnaylvania 20
Indiana 31, 1 Mii10Uri21
•Iowa 49, Northern lllinoi114
•Kcntucky42, Kent State 14
•I..ouilville 'Il, Southc:m Mia · · i 2A
Miami (Fh.) 42 ' .,...... 31 ...,..,
Miami (Ohio) 27, *Cincitwti 7
'Michipn 31, Fl.m.t. Sute27
'Michipn Sute 21, Rutgen 20
•MWiui i23, Amnw: 11
•Navy 20~owlina Omen 18
Nebruka 38, 1 Arizma Slate 10
•New Me1ica 11, New Mczico Sllto 14
No. Carolina 24, 'No. Carolino Sllte 21
•Nollh Tuu State 18, SW Mi110Uri State 1~
Notre Dame 45, •Purdue :M
Ohio Univ. 24, •WCIU:m Michiaan 11

' &lt;JIWhoom 3l, VIIJinia Tech 25

•Penn Statc49, Bolton CoUeae 20
Pluabw&amp;h 4l, 'Minnooot.o 26
•Prin~anl7.~14

1 Rice

3) ,JOWl S\11.0 14
San Jon Sta1C 14, •Utah State 13
Southcm Cal 33, 'Oropl 21
Sruth Carolina 35, •Rut Caroline 21
S)Tlcuse 42. 'l'ulan8 21

-Tcnneuoe 35, Aubum 27
"Teus A&amp;M SO, SW Lcuiaiane 14
"Teu1 Tech 33, Tun Christian 2S
•Virginia 28, Duke 11
'
Wa.ke Forest 21 , •Northw cst.em 1
•w u hinaton 38, Kansu Sti tt 10
Washington State 38, •UNLV 24
•William &amp;:. Mary Tl, Jamca Madisoo 22
•Wyoming 21, UI'EP 19
Yale 21, • t.arayene 20
•Youngltown State 33, Notthea11em 13
•-Home team

FALL HARDY MUMS
6Y2"8" POTS
Asst. Colors - '1.35 ea.

8/'10"
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, OH.
992-5776
OPEN DAILY 9-5
CLOSED SUNDAY

Alabama 49, •Vanderbilt 21
•AppWchian Sl 28 Tc:bn.·Ol•a. 11
•Arizam 42, Lons Be~ch SUite 12
•Army 3S . ~ard 21

The Meigs Co. at
many cute little kittens and
beautiful cats that are ready for
adoption.
992

---,-----,--.--- - - - - -- ·----

~---- --

·---

--------- - - - - - - -

Massey.

The Mini Jr. class also featured
top amateur ride as Mark Burlthan,
ranked seventh, was untouchable.
Behind Burlthart, Scott McMillin,
Jeremy BenlanBer ranked 13th and
15th in the nauon respectively and
series champion Jason Frecker battled for second. McMillin, from
Hartford, W.Va., slid out twice, but
still was able 10 pass Berwnger at
the end of the moto for second.
Frecker rode a solid fourth, though
be wasn't able to pressure
Berwanger and McMillin.
Frecker, from Pomeroy, grabbed
the holeshot for moto 2 but
Burkhart quickly took the lead.

'

'

'

The Dally Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Frecker among Actio~ Sports

reallr

TUMBLEAYA! ' New York Mets second
sacker Keltb Miller (25) tumbles over Pitts·
burgh pinch-runner Carlos Garcia, who was
rorced out at second on a fielder's choice bit to

( ' 1 , ~.

I •..

McMillin also passed Frecker's
Yamaha in the grandstand whoop.
section and Berwanger, from Murray City, got ahead of Frecker on
the last double jump of the section
but Jason passed him back in the
next turn. The finishing order was
set by the second lap as Berwanger
tried to close the gap, but Frecker
rode flawlessly 10 take third overall
behind Burkhart and McMillin with
Berwanger fourth.
The 125A class had some of the
hottest action of the evening as
Jackson, from East Moline, Ill., and
Team Green's Josh Steel, 250 Amateur National Champ led the field
at the stan of moto 1. Jackson, on a
brand new 1992 Honda led the first
three laps with Steel right on his
rear wheel. James Eickel, from
Grovepon, pursued the leaders and
Hayden Richards and' Mark Musselman were moving up after bad
starts. On the fourth lap, Jackson
nearly crashed in the grandstand
whoop section giving Steel the lead
and allowing Bickel 10 catch him.
"I just messed up." said a disappointed Jackson afterwards.
Steel was able 10 pull away from
Jackson, who was fighting off
Eickel. Eickel was able to pull
alongside Jackson a couple of
times but could never make the
pass. Steel, sponsored by John's
Kawasaki, Barr Competition and
Dunlop won by seven seconds and
Jackson held on to second by 10
feet over Eickel. Hayden Richards
also on a Team Green Kawasaki
rode all alone in fourth, and Dayton's Mark Musselman, on a KTM
survived a race long war with Craig
Noack of Guttenburg, Iowa, to
claim fifth.
In the second moto, Steel, on a
borrowed bike got a ~ond start and
romped 10 an easy wm. Eickel and
Musselman led Jackson and Blane
Annbrusrer until Jackson slid out,
letting three riders by. Junior kept
the engine running and immediately charged after Noack and tie 25+
series champion Mike Morg an.
sponsored by Malcolm Smith.
Eickel tried to cut into Musselman's lead, and Jackson passed
Noack and Armbruster. Hayden
Richards got a terrible start and
tried to follow Juni or by Armbruster. Noack crashed hard in the
infield triples and Richards out
jumped Armbruster to work his
way to fifth . Bickel staned to fly
over the double and triple jumps
and moved up on the KTM rider's
rear wheel. Musselman seemed
able to match Bickel's every move,
but on the last lap, Eickel forced
Musselman into a mistake and
James claimed second. Musselman
held on for third with Jackson and
Richards taking fourth and fifth .
James Eickel and Junior Jackson
moved 10 the front of the start of
the first 250A moto. Blane Arm bruster and Musselman led Hayden
Richards and Josh Steel got hung
up on the gate, starting way behind
the field. Junior took the lead as
~ickel, riding a borrowed Kawasaki, adapted to the unfamiliar bike.
Musselman, on a KTM sponsored
by Yokohama and KRW Cycles
was able to pass Armbruster, but
Eickel and Jackson had pulled
away . Hayden Richards passed
Armbruster in the infield triple sec-

S~percross

Series champions

YAM
lion just as he did in the 125 class.
Steel and Noack were flying up
MINI SR.
through the fteld and easily moved
I.ID.Collina
KAW
NoaMuimolr
suz
up 10 fifth and sixth by the fifth lap. 3.2. 0WThomu
suz
Jackson, sponsored by Prin~eton 4. Jim Swan&amp;
suz
KAW
Honda/Bell/Smith and TX-10 Race 5. DoAn.S..B...,
gear, had great lines through the
SCHOOLBOY
two tough whoop sections and Ju- I. 0..,. Ran.t
lllllobooo
KAW
Mldd......
KAW
nior rode 10 a solid win. Bickel feU 2.J-Siowvt
suz
3. T....,J
CIUllloolho
off the pace with bike problems 4.1D.C
1.
"""""
KON
llilliml
and slipped back 10 ninth. ·Mussel- 5. ChriJ I suz
man moved into second ahead of
115B
Richards and Noack led Steel to the I. OooaRan.t
lllllobooo
KAW
line for fourth and fifth. Josh Steel, 2.lloalhBomat
Chouncoy
YAM
Nidi T..,-.
llilliml
KAW
wflO hates night racing, got caught 4.3. Robbie
SIWJell
Aohvillo
KAW
by the gate at the stan of moto two l . c..;1 BiDiaploy llilliml
liON
and would have 10 stan at the back
of the pack again. Out front were I. Pociy Mendolaobn115C
Sprina Volloy
KON
the KTM of Musselman and Eickel 2Juat Rantin
Athllu
YAM
PldconburJ, W.Va.KAW
on the Kawasaki. Armbruster, 4.l.s-ClolneaNoaltew Gllaaow Jocbon
SUZ
Noack , and Jackson chased the S.Tw Flnlt
Loam
liON
leaders, and Richards got another
250B
poor stan.
I. MibWollb
L4llcutcr
KAW
Noack, a little sore from his 125 2. EN: Rankin
Athllu
KAW
crash, went down hard again, end250C
Athllu
YAM
ing his night. Bickel pressured I. luat~Wtkio
RylD Bridlla
Athllu
YAM
Musselman for three laps but 3.2. "
KAW
' - Mendolaolm SoMa Valloy
KAW
couldn ' t get the lead, and Mark 4. Bryan Wallace
"ellocMIIo
was able 10 pull away to a threeOPENB
second lead. Jackson moved into I. lo6b Wcllll
Lanclllt:r
KAW
Coh..bul
liON
third when Annbruster went down 2. JobnV3. Michlol Orant
Batavil
KTM
and with clear track ahead of him 4.
Rondy Thibaut
liON
Coh.nbul
charged after Bickel. Hayden was S. lo6b lloldcroft
Alblny
YAM
methodically oassing his way to25+
warJs the ti'ont ant! passea Arm - l. lotib Morpn
SondyWio, w.v.. suz
bruster for fourth ahead of Sreel.
2. Willilm Bruoltat Dayton
KA W
PultenburJ, W.Vo.KAW
With three laps 10 go, Jackson 3. SoCIIIOalner
Michael fddley
Columbuo
YAM
caught Eickel in the grandstand 4.
5. S~&lt;mm Annmhlnllcy RaynolcbbouJ
IIUS
whoops and dove under James in
VETERANS
the tum after the last double jump.
loctJctn
YAM
l.loftiort.
Millc:r
Jackson pulled out all the stops try- 2.T•b KAW
Nalt' Pl7.?'w&amp;h
O..C..Yillo
ATK
ing to catch Musselman and got 3. Oioa Mllllna
VlDCal.l Loyola
Columbuo
HON
within three seconds of the KTM 4.
w..,...;u.
S. Tunochy KuchlaJcr?ol
rider at the finish. Eiclt:eltook third
125A
and Hayden and Josh Steel took
KAW
I.JodiStoel
O.yton
fourth and fifth again.
2. JamCI Eictcl
O....City
suz
s.t Molino, Dl. HON
The winningest family award 3. J..U..Jocbon
Malt Mu.lelman
O.)Mft
KTM
went 10 Athens riders Eric and Ja- 4.
c.mmdp
KAW
S. Haydrn Richuda
son Rankin or Team Lodi and
l!IOA
Athens Sports Cycles. The brothers
M.ult Muaoolm.,
KTM
O.)Mft
captured championships in the 2.I. Jwtior
l!oot Molino, Dl.
HON
Jacbon
250B and 125C classes respective- 3. 1hyd&lt;m Rlchuda Combridp
KAW
KAW
Joah Stool
Oa)Mft
ly, and Jason added a third in the 4.
OmvoCily
KAW
s.J..... Eidtel
250C class, ridin~ only the last two
races, both of wh1ch he won.
Among the sponsors were Series champs
Crossroads Convenience of The
MICRO
Plains, Athens and Nelsonville,
Blkt
lloctMI&lt;mt
Larry Simmons Chevrolet, Jeep, Rider
I. Brian BuUea
New Mmhfic1d
ITA
YAM
Eagle, Mazda and GEO, and Coors 2. David Wltilcnll P1&lt;*odnp&lt;11
3.
Turrill Athllu
YAM
Lighl
The Columbus Indoor Races
6Scc
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will be held from Dec. 13 10 Dec. I. ShanoSwon
KAW
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IS.
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3. Briullu1lca

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1. Eric Rankin
2. Matt Eutman

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~ Bryan Wallace

l. Juon Rlnkin

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2. Trent Cone

3. Brian Pull

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WINS MINI JR. TITLE - Jason Frecker or Pomeroy nailed
down the Mini Jr. class cbampionsbip or the 1991 Action Sports
Summer Tour Supercross Series recently. Frecker is tbe son or Mr.
and Mrs. Rodney Frecker. (Pictures courtesy of David Patton Jr.)

aw..,..

_..,

Race results

1. Juon Fndc.,.

Rid«
l.lcl! Oiboon
1.BzianBartleu
3. David Wbiacnft
4. ChriJIOpbor Tutrill
S. Michael Maaaey

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"•

IS YOUR DOODLING A DISASTER?

RiO ladies sweep ODin three
Playing with confidence was the most intensive weeks of competikey Tuesday as the University of tion this week and we have 10 get
Rio Grande volleyball team swept straightened up to meet that chala Mid-Ohio Conference match with lenge."
Ohio Dominican, 15-7, 15-4, 15-10
Billina Cooper contributed to
at Lyne Center.
the offense with nine kills, while
The win boosted the Redwom- Spears and Tiffany Neff had three
en's overall record 10 12-4 and 3-0 each and Andrea Hedges added
in the MOC.
two. Spears also had four serving
On a 15-kill attack from Teresa aces, while Zempter, Cooper and
Zempter, the Redwomen surged Neff each had two.
.
through the first two games to
. On defense, Hedg~s added rune
. swamp the Lady Panthers' offense, digs, Coo~ and Robrn Sharp e1ght
but the visitors rallied in the third and Neff s1x. Zempter recorded s1x
and came 10 within three-points of block solos and Cooper three.
tying with Rio Grande before the
The Redwomen return to MOC
defense, led by Michelle Spears' 20 action Thursday at 7 p.m. at Mount
digs for the match, gave the team Vernon N~ene and play Walsh
room enough 10 win.
and Malone m Canton on Saturday
"We played real well in the first afternoon.
· . two and lost our momentum in the
. · :third, doing some things we
shouldn't have done," Red women
Coach Patsy Fields noted. "I realize
we're getting tired and some of us
are hun, but we are facing one of

LEARN TO DRAWl
Join the Drawing Workshop
Thursday Nights, 7:45
Sept. 26th - Oct. 24th
$25.gg All Materials Provided
Instructor- P.J. Harris
Middleport Arts Council

An Open Letter ...

Sports briefs
Tennis
. BRISBANE, Australia (AP) Top-seeded Brad Gilbert of the
United States defeated Thomas
Hogstedt of Sweden 6-2, 6-1 and
second-seeded Andrei Chesnokov
of the Soviet Union beat Patrick
Rafltl of Australia, 6-4, 6-1 in the
Jirst round of the Queensland
;Open.
; In other first-round matches,
:third-seeded Aaron Krickstein of
the United States defeated John
Fitzgerald of Australia 6-3, 7-Q (7;2) and fifth-seeded Wayne Ferreira
of South Africa beat Johan Ander:son of Australia 7-Q (74), 2-Q, 6-3.
• BASEL, Switzerland (AP) ·Jimmy Connors, playing his ft.rst
:match since a loss in the semifmals
·of the U.S. Open, beat Laurent
:Prades of France 6-3, 6-1 in the
;fii'St rotmd of the Swiss Indoor.
- lit other first-round matches,
:rourth-seeded ~etr Korda of
_Czechoslovakia defeated Anders
-Jarryd of Sweden 3-Q, 6-4, 6-3 and
:Patrick Mc~nroe of the United
:,States beat Claudio Mezzardi of
-5wi~6-7 (3.7); 7-5, 6-0.
..

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By The Associated Press
Th~ Oatiand A;thletics are out,
the Minnesota Twins are nearly in

and the Toronto Blue Jays are a
step closer.
With their 5-4 Joss to Kansas

The Ohio Valley Christian
School Defenders varsity volleyball team swept the 1991 OVCS
Invitational Tournament with victories Friday and Saturday.
Participating with OVCS were
Zanesville Christian School, Xenia
Christian School, and Ballard
Christian School. Competition featured a round-robin style tournament with double-elimination rules.
The Defenders squared off against
Zanesville on Fnday evening and
llandily defeated them 15-11,15-4.
Early Saturday morning the
OVCS squad downed Xenia 15-5,
15-12 and then overcame a strong
defensive team in Ballard 15-3, 121'5, 15·8. On Saturday afternoon,
Ohio Valley faced Ballard once
again in the championship match.
Finding her team trailing J3. 8,
senior Pam Holley served the Carolina blue and gold to a J4.J2 lead
and fellow senior Cindy Sheets finished it off at 15-13. OVCS then
rolled 10 a 14-9 lead in game two,
only to allow Ballard to score
seven consecutive points to snatch
vjctory from the Defenders' fingertips. Enraged at their mistakes in
game two, the girls from Ohio Vailey stewed onto the cowt in game
three fired up to play and blew
their opponents off the cowt with a
15~ I match victory and the tournament championship.
· Sophomore Jodie Hager and
~nior Cindy Sheets led their team-

maleS in serving percentage for the
tournament by not missing a serve
in all four matches. Hager served
perfect in 46 attempts while Sheets
never missed in 25 aaempts. Senior
Jenny Hughes only missed one in
47 attempt. Senior Beth Blevins,
who led in serving points with 34
(12 aces), was followed by Hager
32 (eight aces), Hughes 32 (six
aces), HoOey 19 (folD' aces), Sheets
16 (five aces), and Meredith Pollard 13 (three aces). The Defendm
serve 94.2% for the tournament.
From the spiking line OVCS,
which hit 208 of 255 with 65 kills,
was led by PoUard in a 65-for-78,
25-kill performance. Blevins tallied
16 kills in hitting 45 of 50, while
Hughes hit 39 of 55 with 12 1rills.
Holley added seven kills.
Holley dominated the:coun in
the passing department with an 85·
for·106 weekend. Sheets passed 52
of 74, Hughes 48 of 69, Hager 40
of 49, Blevins 26 of 35, and Pollard
22 of 33.
Ohio Valley placed Blevins,
Holley, Hughes and Pollard on the
all-tournament team, and Blevins
received tournament MVP honors.
The tournament was sponsored ·
by Gary L. Jarvis, CPA, of Fair·
field Centenary Road.
The four victories boost the
Defenders' overall record to 12-2
including an 11-match winning
streak.

•kers capture thezr
•
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0 Vcs 'I'
Weekend l•nvz•tQ ti•0 nal'S u•tle

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City on Tuesday night, the Athlet- · for clinching the division to three.
ics' three-year reign as AL c~pi- ~~sota.can c~ch a share of the
ons officially ended. Wath 11 dmsaon Utle tonaght, when they
games left Oakland dropped '12 again host the White Sox.
games beh'ind AL Wesi-Ieading
Meanwhile, the Blue Jays
Minnesota, which beat second- increased their AL East lead to two
piaceChicago9·2.
games with a 3-0, 10-inning win
The victory over the White Sox over the California Angels. The
reduced the Twins' magic number second-place Boston Red Sox had

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Meigs volleyball team stays
undefeated after 14 matches
The Meigs Marauder volleyball
team picked up three more wins
recently to run its record to a perfect 14-0 and 11 -0 in the TVC. The
Marauders have opened up a two
match lead in the TVC standings
over Vinton County and Miller
who are tied for second place.
Last Thursday the Marauders
defeated VInton County by scores
of 15-6, 13· 15 and 15-10 in an
exciting match. Kim Hanning led
the way with 10 points, four aces,
eight lc.ills and was a perfect 17 for
17 serving, Tricia Baer added rune
points, five aces, and nine assists,
Yevette Young seven points and
four kills, Niklc:i Meier six point
and 10 assists, Chrissy Taylor five
points. six lc.ills, and nine for nine
serving, Chrissy Weaver seven
lcills and six blocks for points,
Misty Butcher four points and
seven for seven serving while Carrie Bartels had an outstanding
game serving. As a team the Lady
Marauders recorded 27 kills and
was 71 of 75 serving.
In the reserve game the Little
Marauders handed tlle Vikings its
farst TVC loss with a 6-15, 15·13,
15-12 win. Sarah Pullins and
Amber Blackwell led Meigs with
eight serves, Billie Butcher added
six_

On Monday evening Meigs
defeated Alexander 16-14, 15-5. .
Hanning led Meigs with nine ·
points and five lc.ills, Young added :
eight points and seven lc.ills, Bacr :
five points and eight assists. ·
Weaver five points, Meier two :
points and Butcher and Taylor one
point each.
In the reserve game Meigs won
both games by scores of 15·2. :
Sarah Pullins once again led the :
way with ei~ht points, Lee Hender- :
son and Billie Butcher scored
seven each.
Meigs defeated on Federal
Hocking on Tuesday evening 15-3,
15· 13 . In the second game the ~
Lancers jumped out to a 6-0 lead
but Meigs went on a 12-2 run to
take the lead only to hold off a
Lancer charge in the end. Mei~s
was a perfect 40-40 in serving m
the two games. Weaver led Meigs
with 14 points, Hanning had nine, Meier three and Taylor and Young :
two each.
.
Meigs won the reserve game 15- 7. 15-9 to run the JV's record to :
11 -2. Lee Henderson led Meigs
with nine, and Billie Butcher and
Blackwell added six each.
Meigs will travel to Miller to
play the second place Falcons on .
Thursday evening.
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Royals 5, Athletics 4
:
. Oakland wa~ the first team to ~
wan three straaght AL pennants ·
since the 1976· 78 New York Yan-:
kees. The Twins, in 1987, were the.
(See AL on Page 8)
·

their game rained against Balnmore
and will play a doubleheader
torught
In other games, it was Detroit 7.
Cleveland 2: Milwaukee 5, New
York 4, and Texas 8, Seattle 7.

SPIKES SHOT- Kim Hannin~ or Meigs spikes a Federal Hocking return Tuesday evening at Meags Hlgb School. Tbe Marauders
went to 14-0 overaU and 11-0 in the TVC with a two-game win.

(

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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Twins within grasp of AL West crown; Athletics exit that race

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Page

~The

Wednesday, September 25,1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dally Sentinel

Tuesday , "thaf it's in good
hands."
Chances are, though, that when
this nightmare of a season ends,
Detmer is going to want to wrap
his own hands around the Heisman
Trophy he won last year - if only
to remind himself that !here was a
time, however brief it might seem
in relrospecl, when he was considered the best collegiate player in
the land.
Right now, Detmer has many
more critics than passing yards. He

and BYU are 0-3, and ·despite the
fact that the losses have come
against very reSJI!lCtable opponents
- UCLA, Flonda State and Penn
Slate - his chances of winning the
He is man a second time are on Iy
slightly better than the Cou~ars'
chances of winning the nattonal
championship.
In light of that, someone asked
him whether, like 1989 Heisman
winner Rocket Ismail and a few
others who preceeded Detmer to
the dais of the Downtown Athletic
Club in recent years, he might not

should look at this," he added, "as
an example."
David Klingler is beginning to
wonder whether there is any other
way to look at it. Granted, the
record-setting quarterback from
Houston is looking on from a very
specific vantage point: he was
expected to provide most of the
competition for Detmer in this season's Heisman race.
And like Detmer, he suffered a
spectacular crash when high-flying
Houston was humiliated in back -tohack losses to Miami and Dlinois.
On top of that, Klingler has never
been a darling of the Heisman voters because of Houston's merciless
·ransacking of weak opponents. But
he's like the leader. You look at a he still raises some very good
little guy like that and you say 'if points.
"The way they conduct the
he can be as good as he is, what
whole
(Reisman) thing is ridicu ~
should I be?'"
In fact, Mills' size helps.
A blocky 225 pounds, he is able
to burrow underneath 6-foot-61inemen and through narrow gaps to
stop running backs behind the line
of scrimmage.
If he •s sometimes overpowered,
his quickness helps him more often
and tt's getting harder to exploit his
lack of height against the pass. His
ftrSt career interception came from
perfect positioning against Kansas
City's Steve DeB erg as the Chiefs
were driving for what might have
been a tying touchdown.
"Guys like me, we overpower
people or use our ability to get
around them," Swilling says. "A
guy like Sam, it's all instinct - he
has a knack for being around the
ball."
And experience?
"I guess you can say I've been
around a .while," Mills laughs.

have been betltl off to defect to !he
pro ranks after his junior year. At
least that way, the suggestion went,
there was no room on his pricetag
for markdowns.
"There are a lot of things you
can Jearn from an ex~ence like
this," Detmer said. • I knew a lot
was going to be expected of me. I
recognized dtal going into this situation. And I knew that we would
have a young team and we weren't
going to be playing as good as
everybody thought we would.
"But I don't think people

New Orleans LB Mills not as short as he looks
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
After the Saints methodically
took apart his Rams a week ago,
John Robinson walked up to Sam
Mills, shook his hand and said:
"You're a hell of a player."
Someone suggested it might be
recruiting, if only Jim Finks and
the Saints' management were dumb
enough to leave the mini-linebacker unprotected under Plan B after
the season.
They won't
" I know there are a lot of great
inside linebackers in the NFL ,"
New Orleans head coach Jim Mora
said Sunday after Mills had 11
tacldes, an interception, and forced
a fumble as the Saints shut out
Minnesota 26-0.
"For my moner., there are none
as good as Sam Mills."
Not this season, anyway. Mills,
who could probably get elected
defensive player of the quarter-season, has been the glue to the
defense that's gotten the Saints off

to a 4-0 start. the best in their 25- high school teacher-and coach.
Then came the USFL, the
year history.
Even though he's 32, he's play- Philadelphia Stars and a new coach
ing almost every down for the frrst -Jim Mora under whom Mills
time in his six-year NFL career; established himself as an AU-USFI..
has his ftrSt two NFL interceptions linebacker starting in 1983. He
and, most importantly, is making signed with New Orleans when the
the big plays - a shorter, but just USFL folded after the 1985 season
as effective version of Chicago's and Mora became the Saints' head
perennial AU-Pro Mike Singletary.
coach.
In a 17 - I 0 win over Kansas
'• At least one man had faith in
City, he stopped Christian Okoye, me," says Mills, who went to the
who outweighs him by 40 pounds, Pro Bowl in 1987 and 1988 and
on third-and-inches at the New was the team's leading taclder in
Orleans 3; on Sunday, he did the 1988 and 1989.
That faith is returned.
same against Herschel Walker on a
"Sam Mills," says Mora, "is
fourth down to put away the Minnesota game.
the hardest working player I've
And this from the ultimate com- ever been around. I don't only
puter reject- a guy whose college mean during the season. I mean
(Montclair State) and height Oisted from January to July. The guy
at S-foot-9 but closer to 5-7) left never stops keeping in shape. ••
him undrafted when he came out of
He's also an example.
school in 1981; got him cut twice
' •Some of us are gifted with size
by Cleveland and by Toronto in the and ability," says Pat Swilling, the
Canadian League. It was about Lawrence Taylor-like outside
time, he thought, to do what he'd linebacker who has three sacks in
expected all along - become a the first four games. "With Sam,

lous. If it was someth~ing people
thought about, then voted on, at the
end of the season, it would be one
thing. ,I,nstead," he said, "it's like,
like ...
A demolition derby?
"Yeah," Klingler continued.
"It becomes a weekly contest
where you tear down some guys,
build up some others, and llten tear
them down the week after that.
There's too much emphasis on the
Heisman. By the time you gel
around to awarding it, it seems like
it goes to the guy who does the
worst the least.
"Think about it. Ty Detmer is
the same, or an improved version
of the guy who won it last year. He
was a great player, he is a great
player, and the fact that he lost a
few games makes him no less a
great player."

By USA CORNWELL

pound point guard from the University of Oregon, was signed to a
CLEVELAND (AP) - The seven-year coniract by the CavaCleveland Cavaliers hope a combi- liers Tuesday. Terms of the deal
nation of their veteran players' were not disclosed, but The (Cleveexperience and the enthusiasm of land) Plain Dealer reported today
roolcies like Terrell Brandon will the deal amounts to nearly $7 milmake for a winning combination lion.
The Cavaliers' ftrSt-round draft
this season.
Brandon, a 5-foot-11, 180- pick averaged 26.6 points and shot

49 percent from the field last season. Selected PAC 10 Player of the
Year as a junior, the 21-year-old
Brandon ranks second among Oregon' s all-time leaders in steals
( 114) and in assists (315).
The Cavaliers are looking to
Brandon and other rookies for
added depth in their backcoun.
"We've obviously improved

our backcoun with the addition of
Terrell, John Battle, and Jimmy
Oliver," said Wayne Embry, the
team's general manager. "I think
what we'll see also is the maturing
of our veterans."
Coach Lenny Wilkens said
while management is cautiously
optimistic about the season, the
coaches are very optimistic.
"At the same time, however, we
do realize it's going to take time
for us to mesh as a team and for
our young players to get some
experience. But we feel that if
things go along as we project, by
the end of January we'll have a
prett Ood team ...
WJ~ All-Star guard Mark Price
recovering from knee surgery,
BrandoJI could start as point guard.
Howev'er, Willi:ens said he would
wait until camp to decide positions.
"I'm not going to make decisions before I have a chance to
work with people and see what
combinations work best for the
team," said Willi:ens.
Brandon said be just plans to do
the best he can for the team and
hopes to make it through the season
without injuries.
'The tou~best thing for me right
now is getl!llg use to the time difference and the scheduling of so
many more games," said Brandon.
While the cavaliers have a policy of not disclosing contract terms,
the team did have to consider the
NBA's ~cap of $12.5 million
per team d1D111g negotiations.
"We've known all along what
the cap would be, and it was just a
matter of making it fair to him and
to us," sai" Embry.
The Cavaliers are $2.5 million
over the salary cap, which limits
Brandon's pay to $525,000 in his
first year. That amount became
available when the Cavaliers
released Derrick Chievous.
One of Brandon's agents, Bill
Duffy. said the long-term contract
did assure his client of some security.
"You just try to compensate for
HERO'S WELCOME - Toronto's Pat Bortbe blast, the Blue Jays were held at bay by
your
inability to get him his money
ders (10) gets just that after cracking a threeAngel hurler Jim Abbott, who fanned 13 and
immediately,
but over a period of
run homer iD the lOth iDniDg ofTuesday night's
gave up only three bits in his complete-game
time we can mate up for what
AmericaD League game against the host CaliforeR'ort.(AP)
we're not able to gel up front,"
nia Angels, which the Blue Jays won 3-0. Before
Duffy said.
As for Brandon, he says he's
(Continued from Page 7)
glad the contract negotiations are
behind him and he can concentrate
last team other than the Athletics to what had been a fine display of slcipped into center field and Mar- on basketball.
win the AL title.
pitching by Abbott (17-10), Toron- tinez wound up with a double.
"I'm going in with a rookie
Danny" Tartabull hit his 30th to starter Todd Stottlemyre and Jerry Don Gleaton came in to get mentality and not a high ego, and
homer for the Royals and Kevin Blue lays reliever David Wells the last two outs.
hopefully I can learn quicldy and
Brewers 5, Yankees 4
Appier (12-9) allowed eight hits (IS-10), who worked the final2 2/3
be an asset to the team,'' he said.
Cal Eldred won his major
and one run in six innings. Tartab- innings.
ull's first-inning homer off Joe
Abbott gave up four hits over 10 league debut and Robin Yount tied
Slusarslci (4-7), following singles innings and struck out a career- Babe Ruth for 27th place on the
by Brian McRae and Kurt Stillwell, high 13 with one walk. Stottlemyre all-time hit list.
Eldred went 5 1/3 innings,
gave the Royals a 3-0 lead that they gave up five hits, walked two and
allowing
seven hits and three runs.
never losL
struck out three before Wells came
Eric
Plunk
(2-S) was the loser.
"It's tough to give it up; I mean, on in relief with one out and one on
Milwaukee
led 4-0 by the third
it's all over," Athletics manager in the eighth.
inning
with
the
help of Paul MoliTony La Russasaid.
Wells allowed one hit, struck
tor's
double
and
Yount's 2,000th
Twins 9, White Sox 2
out two, and also picked Luis PoloCINCINNATI (AP)- It's isn't
Scott Erickson had a no-hitter nia off firSt immediately after com- career single. Yount is the 37th Homecoming, but Saturday's game
player in ma)or league history to at Nippert Stadium marts a coming
until Dan Pasqua homered in the ing in the game.
have 2,000 smgles and the hit was home for the University of Cincinseventh inning as the Twins moved
Tigers 7, India us 2
closer to the AL West champiThe Tigers kept their meager his 2,873rd, tying him y.'ith Ruth.
nati football team.
Rangers 8, Marmers 7
onship.
pennant hopes alive and Scott
The Bearcats have played II of
Brian Downing singled in Gary their last 14 games on the road.
Kent Hrbek capped a four-run Aldred earned his third major
second inning with a two-run league win.
Pettis from second base with two Even their "home" games at
homer off Jack McDowell (17-10).
. The Tigers broke !he fl'l:!e open outs in the runth inning.
Riverfront Stadium downtown
That was more than enough for wtth four runs off rookte Charles
Pettis singled with one out and didn't feel like home games.
Erickson (19-7). He fmished with a Nagy (10-13) in the first and Mick- moved to second on pinch-hitter
"It was lilte playing an away
one-hiuer over seven innings.
ey Teuleton hit a two-run homer in Jack Daugherty's infield out off game," defensive back Kelly Sims
Mark Guthrie completed the the ftfth.
Mike Jackson (7-7). After Jackson said. "You had to pack up everyone-hitter with two innings of . Aldr~ (~·3) allowed nine hits hit pinch-hitter Rob Maurer, thing, and you really didn't feel
relief.
m 8 1/3 mnmgs, including Albert Downing singled.
.
like you were at home."
Blue Jays 3, Angels 0
Belle's 28th homer in the ninth
Jeff Russell (6-4) got the VIctory
Satwllay's game against Miami
: Pat Borders hit a three-run before he was literally knocked out by pitching the ninth tlfta blowing
of
Ohio
will be the ftrSI on the UC
homer otf Jim Abbott in the lOth of the game by a line drive off the hts lOth save in 38 oppa:tunities in
camJ?US
since Nov. 18, 1989.
. .
,
mnmg.
ided bat of Carlos Martinez. The ball the eighth, when the~ Marincts tied Cincmnati lost that one, 56-3, to
Borders' Qlle-()llt homer dec
the score.by scoring four runs.
Nnrthem Illinois before 4,610 fans.

AL games · · · - - - - - - - - - -

BUYS MEMBERSHIP - Hank Cleland, right, was the first
Meigs Countlan to buy a membership ticket for the Big Bend Youth
Football League. ''The 200 Club" memberships are a primary fundraiser for the league, which begius play on Saturday at Southern
High School, beginning at 6 p.m. Cleland, pictured with Dave Jenkins, who sold Cleland tbe membership, was one of the organizers of
the league.

PONDEROM
g~

,-EXTRA·CUT

Dl

Nednesday, September 25, 1991

~

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I

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--9

. ~ON, Ohio (AP) - A grand
Jury mdicted Jeffrey Dahmer in the
dead! of a m.an Dahmer says was
the ftrst o~ ~ts 17 s!&amp;ying victims,
but authonues won 1 try 10 extra~te ~im until charges against him
m Milwaukee are resolved.
.
· "If Dahmer is found not guilty
by reason of insanity in Milwaukee, he would be released in theory
in six months, and no matter what
his sentence is, he would still be
~ligible for parole in IS years,"
Summit County Prosecutor Lynn
Slaby said Tuesday. "I want to add
another lSyearstothat"
But Slaby said he will wait until
the Wisconsin cases are resolved
before he asks Gov . George
Yoinovich to issue a warrant seeking the extradition of Dahmer, 31 .
· A Summit County grand jury
indicted Dahmer on Tuesday with
two counts of aggravated murder
and one count of lcidnapping in the
death of Steven Hicks, 18, of suburban Coventry Township.
Hicks disappeared while hitch hilting to a concert in 1978. At the
time Dahmer, a Revere High
School graduate, was living in Bath
Township.

One aggrava.ted murder count
charged that Htcks' slaymg was
premeditated: the second charged
that the. slayi!lg wii:S com~itted in
connecuon w1th a kidnappmg.
Slaby said a jury could convict
Dahmer on one or both charges of
aggravated murder, but the court
was limited to sentencing on just
one of the two. He could be sentenced to life in prison if convicted
of aggravated murder and ~en to
25 years if convicted of idnapping.
Under Ohio law, the charge of
aggra\'ated murder can carry the
death penalty. But it could not in
this case because Ohio did not have

a death penalty at the time Hicks
died.
Dahmer told authorities he
killed Hicks .after piclcing him up
and talcing htm to h1s home for a

search at the house in July and
Au st
E:.h.mer was arrested in Milwaukee July 22 when police found
parts from 11 bodies tn his apartment. Police searched the apartment after a man fled the a artment saying Dahmer had tri~ 10
' .
attackhtm.
.
Dahmer h~ pleaded mnocent by
reason _of t~sanuy to murder
1!1 Milwaukee and faces a
Jchargestrial
2
7
an.
·
He has confessed that he lured
men to hts apartment to take nude
photos, drugged and strangl ed
them.

bee,~·

The guy wanted to leave and I
didn't want him to leave," Dahmer
told police. He said he hit Hicks in
the head with a barbell and strangled him.
Dahmer said he cut up Hicks'
body and buried the parts. He said
he later dug up the remains,
smashed them and scattered them
behind his house.
Bone fragments identified as
Hicks' remains were found in a

IIIII I'OUCY-Eo&lt;ll of lhooo odvonlood homo to •-ltod to bo 1Hdlly
evu.ble fOf .... In MCh K10Q4M' Store, ••~;ept 11 tpldflclly noted in thAI ed. If we
do run out at 1n ad\lertleed Item, we wit ofl., you your Ghokoe of • c:omparablt item,
when tv.a.ble, reftecdnglh• a1tnt INV6nga or • rlincMcll whkh wllentltle you 10
purchaM the ldvertMd Item 11 the edven:Md ptC. wkNn 30 ct.ya. Only one vendor
coupoo wll be eccepted per kern putcheMd.

PITTSBURGH (AP) - Spe cialists intrigued by a woman's
upside-down writing found she's a
true lefty who developed the
unusual sty.l~ so she could see what
she was wnung.
Sue Colaizzi, 43, a tax accountant, turns tax forms and other documents around and writes upside
down. Her clients sit across from
her and read the forms as she
writes.
"It was far easier for me to
write that way from !he very beginning," Ms. Colaizzi said. "My
teachers tried to gel me to wnte

$

AllFORONLY

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD fO
DEALERS.

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A 9year-old girl missing for more than
20 hours before she was discovered
unharmed told officials she had
feared her adbuctor would kill her.
Jessica Lee Repp was reported
missing at about 3:20 p.m. Monday
after a friend found her bicycle
abandoned two blocks from her
suburban Coventry Township
home, Summit County Sheriff
David Troutman said.
Jessica and a girlfriend had been
riding together, but the friend left
her to ride to a gas station. She
returned 10 minutes later to find
the bike, Troutman said.
He said James E. Hatcher, 42,
who had no permanent address, has
been charged with one count of
lcidnapping and is being held in lite
Summit County Jail, awaiting a
hearing today in Barberton Muncipal Court
Troutman said police received a
tip from a clerk in a Barberton convenience store that Hatcher had
come to !he store at around 5 a.m.
with a girl matching Jessica's
descriptim.
·
The clerk, whose name wasn't
released, identified the girl from a
picture in the Akron Beacon Journal and said Hatcher was a previous customer, Troutman said.
Hatcher had been questioned by
Barberton police in June as a result
of reports that he allegedly was trying to entice children into his car,
Troutman said.
He said police in Doylestown
spotted Hatcher's car at a store
there around 11 a.m. Tuesday and
arrested him without incident Jessica was found unharmed in the
front seat, Troutman said.
She was taken to Akron Childrens Hospital and was released
quicldy. Troutman said police and
doctors don't believe she was
molested.
"We're thankful we're all back
home," the girl's fatherm Donald
Repp, told a crowd outside his
home. "If it hadn ' t been for her
guardian an~el watching over her,
we wouldn t have got her back.
You seldom get one back.''
Jessica showed her brother the
bruises on her arms and giggled
when she told how she tried to bite
her captor.
"He gave me crackers but I
wouldn't eat them because they
might have poison in them," she
told her sister. "I thought he'd lcill

Eorn1n9
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DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - A new
study released today shows that
alcohol is the drug of choice among
seniors surveyed at area high
schools.
About 89 percent of those surveyed said they had used alcohol at
least once in their lives without
parental supervision, and 53 percent said they had used it at least
once in the 30-day period prior to
the survey.
Nearly 29 percent said they had
five or more drinks in a row at least
once in the two-week period before
the survey, and 4 percent said tlfey
used alcohol on a daily basis.
"The survey data clearly indicate that young people are using
alcohol and getting into trouble
with it more than any other drug,"
said Harvey Siegal, director of
Wright State's Substance Abuse
Intervention Programs.
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"She talked with Hatcher,"
Troutman said. "She fell that by
talking with him she was able to
calm him down."

Alcohol popular
among high
school seniors

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE OR

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shed.

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.
nght-s1de up, but they finally gave
up."
Typically, left-banders cover
therr wnttng w11h therr left hand as
they wri~e. Many left - hand~rs
rotate thetr paper m some Cashton
so they can see what they're writing.
"It' s not uncommon to see
these kids rotating the paper 90
degrees," said Gregory Slomka, a
neuropsychologist at Allegheny
General Hospital. " With Sue, we
saw the ultimate logical extension
of this. She rotat.cd the paper until
it was completely upside down."

COPYRIGHT 1181 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOO SUN·
DAY. SEPT. 22. THROUGH SATURDAY. SEPT. l8. 1991 . IN Pomeroy

Troutman said Hatcher bound
her hands with tape, but she
removed the tape by pulling at it
with her teeth. He said Jessica
struck up a rapport with Hatcher
that may have prevented blood-

NEW
PASTA
BAR

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

me.''

UC Bearcats
back in Nippert
Stadium vs.
Miami Saturday

()

I' . ' ' • I

Missing girl
found safe

Cavaliers sign Brandon to seven-year contract
Associated Press Writer

• I"&gt;

Grand jury indicts Dahmer in death C?f hitchhiker I Lefty writes upside down

Klingler expected to succeed Detmer as Heisman winner
By JIM LITKE
AP Sports Writer
The most desired piece of sculpture in college football, the one he
paid for with blood and sweat and
tears, the one that brought so much
satisfaction but so many more
expectations, is gathering dust in
his grandparents' house back in
Texas. Then again, it might be at
his parents' house.
Right about now, Ty Detmer
isn ' t sure which.
"But I'm sure," Brigham
Young' s senior quarterback said

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Page-1 0-The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1•

. J!;:.

·.

. ..(~~
-~-.

'~.

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•

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: ',&gt;,

~

or appointments due to demand for services
being greater than manpower resources.

ADJUSTMENTS - The Meigs Clinic or
Woodland Centers Is IUIIIonncing rescheduling

Meigs Clinic announces rescheduling
The Meigs Clinic location of
Woodland Centers, Inc. is currendy
open on Mondays and Tuesdays.
Since the month of June, the
request for additional services has
been grealf2' than the manpower on
hand.

In order to accommodate the
increase, additional staff will be
placed in the Meigs Clinic and lhe
new hours will be Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays from 8:30
a.m. to S p.m. The new hours will
go into effect on Sept. 30. All per-

sons who currently have appoint·
menrs on Tuesdays will be resched·
uled. The clinic is located in the
multipurpose building on Mulberry
Hei¥hts, Pomeroy. For more infor·
mallon, cal1992-2192.

AIDS panel warns against public
complacency, lack of leadership
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
National Commission on AIDS
warned roday that a growing indif.
ference to the AIDS epidemic and
continued lack of national leadership is making a bad situation

rarely broken its silence on the
topic of AIDS. Congress has shown
leadership in developing critical
legislation, but has often failed to
provide adequate funding for AIDS
programs.
worse.
''Articulate leadership guiding
In its first comprehensive report, Americans toward a proper
the 2-year-old commission listed response to AIDS has been notably
more than two dozen recommenda- absent," the report said
The commission's primary rections, topped by development of a
national AIDS plan to identify pri- ommendation was that universal
orities and resources needed to health care coverage be provided
fight the disease and health care for all people living in the United
States. However, the panel said that
coverage for all Americans.
"Our nation •s leaders have not was a long-term goal and that more
done weU," the report said. "In the immediate Steps need to be taken.
These steps should build on
past d~ade. the White House has

existing programs, such as Medi ·
caid, Medicare and the Ryan White
Comprehensive AIDS Resources
Emergency Act, which provides
money for areas hard-hit by the
epidemic, the ~el said.
The commtssion, whose members were appointed by Congress
and the White House to advise
national leaders on AIDS policy,
often has been critical of the federal efforts to address the crisis.
In previous, shoner reports it
has warned against complacency in
the face of AIDS and has urged
President Bush and Congress to
ensure that the needs of people
with the AIDS-causing human

immunodeficiency virus; or HIV,
are met.
The message in this repon is
essentially the same.
"It's to 511y: Mr. President, get
out there in a leadership position
and indicate that we have a steadily
mounting crisis on our hands and
that we need 10 roll up our sleeves
and hit it directly," said Dr. David
E. Rogers. vice chairman of the
commission.
The role of the commission and
the purpose of the repon, Rogers
said, is to keep the AIDS issue "on
the front burner and see if we could
coax more concern from leaders at
the federal level, and at the state
and local levels."
AIDS - acquired immune deficiency syndrome - has been diagnosed in more than 186,000 people
in the United States since June
1981 when the disease was first
discovered. Of these, more than
118,000 have died.
More than I million Americans
are believed to have been exposed
to mv. and are at risk for developing AIDS. The Centers for Disease
Control estimates lhat only 12 percent of people with HIV know they
are carrying the virus.
AIDS is already stretching thin
the resources of inner-city hospilals
overloaded with cases. The federalstate Medicaid health care program
for the poor, where money is also
increasingly scarce, covers about
40 percent of the people with
AIDS . Nearly 30 percent of people
with AIDS have no health insurance.
Two weeks ago, the commission
lost one of its 15 members when
Belinda Mason died of complications from AIDS.

j'

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LONG JOURNEY - Kimberly Bergalls,
23, Okeechobee, Fla., II comforted by ber mother Anna Beraalis after they mived iD Washing- ,
too by train Wednesday. Ms. Bergalis was ooe of

Educators: black students fear 'acting white'
DETROIT (AP) -Black students who accuse studious classmates of "acting white" are victims of self-hatred and racist
stereotypes that equate blackness
with lack of achievement, educawrs 511y.
"It's frightening," said Mignon
Oldham, an English ~eacher at
Renaissance High in DetroiL
Oldham taught black urban
youths in a summer Upward Bound
program and bickered with a few
students who doubted the benefits
of speaking with propel' grammar.
They said, "Black people don't
talk like that." Oldham responded:

I

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five patieoiS to be ilifeeted with the AIDS · ~rus
by her Florida dentist. She Is slated to testirybefore a congressional committee on Capitol HiU
on mandatory testlog or health care
workers.(AP LaserPboto)

"Yes. I have been black all my
life. And yes, I talk like that.
"I'm not trying to demean or
belittle them, I'm trying to give
them ~rns in language, •• she
said. "
it what you will, grammatically correct English in many
instanCes opens dom."
Jawanza Kunjufu, a Chicago
educator and author of ''To Be
Popular or Smart: The Black Peer
Group,'' said hazing exists because
too many black youngsters have
not had the positive aspects of
black culture and lhe value of education reinforced. Instead, they follow stereotypes.

Dr. Alvfn Poussaint, a black
psychiatrist at Harvard Medical
School and a consultant on "The
Cosby Show," said clouded thinking comes from self-hatred.
"That is, there is some association that black ts bad and dumb and
that white is smart. And there's
also some feeling that in order to
achieve, that somehow you have to
adopt white styles," he said .
"Achieving and doing well is not
white; they need people to say that
over and over again, to counter the
opposite in every way that they
can.''

Drug-sniffing machine targeted at workplace
BOSTON (AP) - Drug-sniffing dogs might get competition
from a machine that can detect
microscopic traces of narcotics,
even when the drugs arc hidden
from view.
The maker of the device, Thermcdics Inc. of Woburn, announced
Monday it is teaming with a major
security finn to screen wort places
for drug use. But a ~resentative
of tire American Civil Libenies
Union feared that workers' rights
could be violated.
''We would object if an employer wanted to X:ray evecy ~mploy·
ee •s desk or bnefcase. This IS no
different," said Lewis Maltby,
director of the ACLU' s national
work place rights office.
·But ~ncnts say the device,
used judictously, can be a potent
weapon that need not infringe on
people's rights.
···--·--·--- - -

"This can be a very effective
tool for emptorers to create a safer

work place,' said John Wood,
president ofThermedics.
The device, called Sentor, is an
outgrowth of a machine Thermedics created several years ago to
sniff traces of explosives that might
be hidden in luggage. That system,
developed with suppon from the
U.S. State Depanment, is being
used in several international air-

pons.

' By adjustin~ the technology,
Thermedics devised a tool that also
can detect airllome traces of heroin,
cocaine and metbamphetamines.
Wood said the device is already
being used by law enforcement
agencies in the United States and
abroad, but he could not disclose
those agencies because the work is
confidential.
Now, the device is moviog into

•

the private sector. Pinkerton Security &amp; Investigation Services said it
would use the system to help
employers detect illegal drugs in
the wort place.
Pinlccrton, which has more than
200 offices in North America and
Britain, provides security and
investigation services to about half
of the Fortune 500 largest industriat rums in the country.
Pinkerton Chairman Thomas
Walben said his agency uses drugsniffmg dogs, butlhey get "burned
out'' and need frequent brealcs to
maintain their sensitivity. Also, he
said dogs cannot detect the tiny
· residues that can be disclosed by
the Sentor machine.
The device uses a hand-held
unit that talces air samples, which
arc then fed into an analysis •
machine about the size of a small . .'reliigmuor.

•

DOWNING CHILD1·
MUWN MUSSER

By The Bend
.

_______.
SIRCE' 1161

Wednesday, September 25, 1991
Page- 11

"

Community calendar

·Famil~

·,•

·

Medicine
' '

Community Calendar Items
appear two clays before an eveot
_and the day of that event. Items
must be received weU In advance
to assure publication in the cal·
eodar.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
· Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Question: How do you cope
with chronic sinusitis? I had a
severe case of sinusitis. I 58W several doctors and took their medication. Ever since, I have had joint
soreness and muscle soreness from
my neck down to the middle of my
back. I've also talcen all types of
over-the-counter sinus products
wilhout much help.
·Answer: Let me start off by
saying lhat the sinuses are cavities
- like small caves - inside several fJf the bones that join to make up
the head. The bones that form lhe
cheeks, fa-ehead and the eye sockets have sinus cavities that open
into the nose. These cavities are
lined with a mucous membrane
much like the inside of the nose.
No one is sure why we have sinuses, but they certainly do contribute
to human mise~}'.
Infection wtthin a sinus sp~ce
- called sinusitis - is a common
illness that can affiict individuals
of any age. The infection is often
caused by bacteria, but it can also
be caused by a virus. Whatever the
cause, the infection irritates the
mucous membrane and increases
mucus production. This produces
the typtcal heavy, yellow-to-green
nasal discharge of sinus infection.
The infection also causes increased
pressure within the sinuses that
generates g(lneral headache discomfort, as well as specific pain in
the face, upper teeth or behmd the
eyes.
When the pain has developed
rather suddenly, the diagnosis is
usually easy to make. In fact, it is
unusual for me to see anyone who
has this acute form of sinusitis
without him or her having already
correctly made the diagnosis.
But m other cases, the infection
progresses like a slow, smoldering
fire instead of like a stack of dry
kindling cwhich suddenly catches
rue. This is a chronic sinus infection, and it is more difficult to distinguish from allergies, chronic
tobacco.smoke exposure, pollution
exposure, abscessed teeth and other
conditions.

(

HOT OFF THE PRESS - Angie Boyette of Atlanta waits to
purchase several ropies of the new book "Scarlett'' by Alexalldra
Ripley early Wednesday morning at B. Dalton Booksellers Ia
RosweU, Ga. The store was the only ooe open in the Atlanta area
for those who wanted the first copies or the "Gone With the Wind"
sequel (AP Laser Photo)
car accident. Several Atlanta
authors have denounced the sequel.
"When bad reviews stan coming in, I could 511y they won't bother me, that's a lie; they will bother
me," Ripley 58id Tuesday. "I'm
just hoping to get more good
reviews than bad reviews.··
"The consensus I've heard from
customers is they 're interested in
deciding for themselves," said Jim
Enright, publicity coordinator for
Borders Book Shop in Atlanta.
In Charleston , S.C., Rhen ' s
hometown, Chapter Two bookstore
placed its largest order ever: 1,200

copies, saleswoman Kelly Koester
said.
In Seattle, people started reserving the book two months ago and
150 copies were on hold, said
Dawn Martin, assistant manager at
a Waldenbooks.
Atlanta's Oxford Book Store
had 1,500 advance orders for the
book, a figure boosted by Ripley's
scheduled book-signing Sunday,
said sales manager K.C. Culberth.
Ripley, 57, who has wrilten
three historical romance novels,
says a sequel ril her sequel is possible. But she doesn't want to write
it.

CBS wins first week of new season
LOS ANGELES (AP) - CBS
kicked off the fall rating season
with four of the top 10 shows in
prime time, including the one-hour
premieres of " Murphy Brown"
and "Designing Women."
The win was a coup for CBS,
which has ranked third in the A.C.
Nielsen ratings in recent years.

Viewers made "Murphy
Brown" the No. I show and found
out whether tbe acerbic TV
reporter played by Candice Bergen
is pregnant and which, of two possible lovers, is the father. She is
and the responsible party is ex-husband Jake, played by Robin
Thomas.

The Rock Springs Grange members enjoyed a cookout and potluck
at the home of Jim and Barbara Fry
recently.
-Gr.,, c was given by William
Radford and a meeting followed
the meal.
The grange voted to endorse the
tuberculosis levy.
Barbara Fry reported on the
county judging of contests. Bunny
Kuhl received first on quilts and
wall hanging.
Kath,Frine MiUer placed fLTsl on
quilt square and )Jillow cases.
Opal Grueser gave a legislative
report on theme for grange, "Cele-

Jordan

~o

Boys Flannel Shirts 30% off
Girls Coordinates 30% off
1 Rack Girls Jeans 30% off
(6) Men's
Leather Bomber Jackets
30o/o off
Long Sleeve '1T's"
9.99
Crew Neck Sweatshirts 6.99
Hooded Sweatshirts 8. 99

Sh()W.

:WHEATON, Ill. · (AP) Patrick Lilley, who played Eddie
Munster in the 1960s television
series "The Monsters," was sentenced to two years probation and
200 hours public service for beat·
ing up a limousine driver.
Judge Peter Dockery on Tuesday also fined Lilley $200 and
of4ered him to pay his victim $850
in ·restitution . Prosecutors had
sought a two-year prison term.

Friendship day slated
,

friendship Day at the Reedsville
Fenowship Church of th~ Nazarene
will be held Sunday wtth Sun~y "
school at 9:30 a.m. and mormng
worship at 10:45 a.m . .l~ev. John
Douglas invite~ the pubhc to stay
for a covered dish dinner.
' ,J

.,

,

REEDSVILLE • The Joppa
United Methodist Church will hold
revival Wednesday through Sunday
with services at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
For homecoming on Sunday, Russell Spencer and the Southern Hills
Singers will perform and there will
be a CBrl')'·in dinner at 12:30 p.m.
with singmg at 2 p.m.
CHESTER - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Heidi
Elberfeld. Everyone is to bring
bulbs.
BASHAN • The Red Brush
Church of Christ, Bashan Road,
will have special service Wednesday through Sunday at 7:30 p.m.
nightly and on Sunday at 10 a.m.
Guy Mallory. Winter Garden. Fla.,
will be the speaker. The public is
invited to attend.

Farra observes 96th birthday

Catholic women's club meets

,;.

Young Riders hold meeting

The annual reunion of the
descendants of James C. and Ethelinda Stone Moore was held recently at the home of Larry and Patty
Circle with 30 guests and relatives
present
Table grace was given by Rev.
Roy Boolcman and a baslcet dinner
was enjoyed by all.
The birthdays of Florence Cir·
cle; Bertha Smith and Rev. Carl
Hicks were recognized.
Two relatives, Harlan E_iselstein
and Rodney Chevalier were
remembered.
Gifts were given to the oldest
man, George Genheimer: oldest
woman, Florence Circle: youngest
man, John R. Bentz; youngest
woman, Abbie Chevalier. Gifts
were also given to the Tripp twins.
Roger and Janet Grueser traveled
the farthesL
The 1992 reunion will 1•. l•cld
the third Sunday of Septc" "'· r at
the Circle home.
Altcnding were Florence Circle,
Rev. Roy Bookman. &lt;;Jeorge Gen heimer, Wayne and Lmda RusseU.

Revival slated

FRIDAY
POMEROY · The Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and
Ladies Auxiliary will hold a dance
Friday from 8- 11:30 p.m. wllh
music by the CJ and Country Gentlemen.
POM EROY · The Pomeroy .
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
have a square dance on Friday from
8-11 p.m. with music by the Happy
Hollow Boys of Athens . Tho se
auending bring snack s for the
snack table. The public is invited.
LONG BOTIOM . There will
be a hymn sing at the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bot!Om on
Friday featuring the Dailey Family.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the public.
SATURDAY
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom Community Association
will hold a smorgasbord dinner on
Saturday at 5 p.m. in the Long Bottom Community Building. Cost is
$5 for adults and $2.50 for children
under 12. Desserts and drinks are
included in the price of the meal.

Douglas Circle, Beuy Lou Dean,
Fred and Bertha Smith, Virgil and
Kathryn Windon. Roger and Rosemary Keller, Ethel Orr, Martha
Lee, Becky Bentz, Amy, John
Robert, Tara Rose, Paul Moore,
Roger and Janet Grueser, Larry
Circle, Grant Circle, Sue Hager
Debbie Chevalier, Adam, Abbie:
and Rev. Carl and Maxine Hicks.

O'DELL LUMBER .
September Special!
•off the Saw• Chains Only

CHAIN SAWS
SHARPENED

99c

O'DELL LUMBER
634 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH.
992·5500

Special of the Week!

SIRLOIN SANDWICH

$1.59

..

WITH FRIES..........$2.29

.

.

POMEROY - The Salvation
Army will have a free clothing da y
on Thursday from 10 a,m. to noon.
All area residents in need of clmhing are welcome to auend .

~~~

Meigs VSC to meet

.

..

Moore family gathers

Shade Valley
4-H club meets

uxtax.

POMEROY · The United
Methodist Cooperative Parish will
have a clothing day on Thursday
from 9:30 am. to noon at 311 Condor Street in Pomeroy .

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT · The Middleport Arts Council will offer a
sketching class . No previous
sketching instruction is necessary.
The instructor is PJ. Harris and the
cost is $2S for class including all
RACINE • "Super Saturday,"
materials. The class begins Th~­ sponsored by the Southern Boostday through Oct. 24 at 7:45 p.m. ers, will be held Saturday at Southeach session. To register, call Har- em High School. A car show will
ris at 992-2451 or Mary Wise at begin at!O a.m. and chicken barbe992-2675.
cue will begin at noon. The cost of
the dinner is $4 and includes chickREEDSVILLE • The Riverview en, green beans, mashed potatoeS;
Garden Club will meet Thursday at slaw, roll and a drink. Desserts are
7:30p.m. at the home of Ruth available at an extra charge of 75
Anne Balderson. Fall gardening cents. Carry-out orders are availwiU be the program topic.
able and delivery will also be available for the Racine area only by
POMEROY - The Pomeroy calling 949-2817 on Friday. A sale
Group of AA will meet Thursday at will begin at 5 p.m. in which the
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic 1980 State Basketball Champion :
Church. Call 9'12-5763 for infor- uniforms will be sold along with .matlon: · ·•
..... ,., '"''?'&lt;' '·'' \i.liii\i" .up suits, baslcetballs; t-shirts .:
imd tennis·shoes.
·
RUTLAND · The Women's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
POMEROY • A clean-up day :
Churches of Christ will meet will be held at the old Sugar Run •
Thursday at the Rutland Church of School in Pomeroy on Saturday :
Christ. Marge Purtell will be the beginning at 9 a.m. Those wanting ;
speaker. All women are urged to to assist in the clean-up should :·
attend.
bring necessary tools such as rakes,
clippers, weeders, etc .
POMEROY • The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
LOTTRIDGE • Country Music
Sorority, will meet Thursday at Night at the Lottridge Community
7:30 p.m. at the Grace Episcop~l Center wiU be held Satruday from
Church in Pomeroy. Hostesses w1ll 7 p.m. to midnight. All bands are
be Rev a Vaughan and Eleanor welcome and refreshments will be
Thomas. The program will be pre- available. The public is invited.
sented by Joan Anderson.

give SNL the edge Saturday

NEW YORK (AP) - "Satur·
day Ni~ht Uve" is bringing in bas·
ketball s Michael Jordan to slamdunk the competition when the
v~nerable late-night ~ kicks
o£f its 17th season thiS weekend
: But the Chicago BuDs superstar
warned at a news conference Monday that his acting experience is
liqtited.
. "I was in a play in the sixth
gtl!de, but I was a tree," he said.
"It wasn'ta major part"
:Joining Jordan for Saturday's
show will be the rap group "Public
Enemy" and the show's regular
cailt, which includes two new membets. Ellen Cleghome and Siobhan
Fallon.
:They replace Jan Hooks and
Dennis Miller. Hooks is now on
CBS' "Designing Women" and
Miller has his own syndicated talk

·FALL SAVI GS

21JO N. Seeen4
992-1684
Ml4•1•port
OPEN M••••Y thr11 S1t11r••Y 9 to S
•

The treatment for sinusitis USI!·,
ally consists of antibiotics to stop !
the infection, a decongestant to
help reduce the sinus congestio!l
and promote drainage, and resL ~
the person smokes, he or she ,
should quit. In chronic infei:~ons
the same tteatment is used at fJrs!.,
but if improvement isn't apparent '
within a few weeks addilionallherapy may be needed.
Sometimes, for instance, it is .
necessary to treat the individual for .
allergies that are causing onsoing .
na581 con~estion . At other umes.
surgery ts required to correc1 . I
mechanical problems that ·keep thci
sinuses fran draining ~y.
•
During any illness 11 is commo~
to have muscle aches and the gen,.
eralized "blahs." Once the illness is
over, the muscle and joint discomMRS. MONA FARRA
fort clears up. Since your sinus
condition has cleared up, I'm suspi·
cious that the muscle and joint dis·.
comfon in your neck and back is
caused from some other problem,
Mrs. Mona Farra, Racine, cele- R. Farra, Racine: Mr. and Mrs .
not your sinuses.
Greg Furra, Nathan and Abigail
brated her 96th birthday Sunday.
Farra, Groveport; and nephews and
Mrs.
Far'ra
was
born
Sept.
21
,
Non-prescription sinus medicanieces from Beavertown, Marietta,
1895.
tions contain a mixture of drugs. ·
Parkersburg,
W.Va., Ravenswood,
Attending
the
celebration
were
They usually have a decongestant
W.Va.,
Ripley,
W.Va. and MillMr.
and
Mrs.
Joe
Farra,
Rome,
to help open the nose and sinus
wood,
W.Va.
N.Y.;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Floyd
"Pete"
area, an antihistamine 10 reduce the
amount of sinus drainage, and a
pain reliever such as aspirin or
acetaminophen.
The reason you haven't had
The Catholic Women's Club of at 2 p.m. with a salad luncheon and
much relief from your aching is , Sacred Hean Church in Pomeroy dessert followed by the guest
that these medications aren't · met recently for its regular meet- spealcer, Sister Mary Agnes Gib.
designed to help with your prob- ' mg.
bons, from the Diocesan Office of
lem. They work just fmc, though,
Christian
Formation. Her topic will
The president, Ann Layne,
when taken for mild sinus conges- opened the meeting with the mem- be "Keeping Our F.aith Alive and
tion and aching associated with a bers joining in prayer and the Strong." The day will end at6 p.m.
cold or allergies.
with Benediction.
pledge to the flag.
I recommend that you talk to
A retreat for women of 'the
Commillee reports were given
your doctor again. TeU about your and plans for the annual church parish will be held at the Hackell
achinll in the neck and back. Just ' bazaar, which will be held Nov. 14, Cottage at Long Bottom on Oet. 18
descnbe your symptoms to your were discussed. It was decided that and 19 by Father Robert Borer.
doctor. Let him or her figure out creamed balced chicken will again Details will be given later.
the cause.
Sister Fidelis Bell, the new Pasbe served. The price of the dinner
"Family Medicine" is .a weeldy will be $4.50 for adults and $2.50 toral Association at Sacred Heart
column. To submit Qll~tions, write for children 12 and under.
was introduced and welcomed to
the
group. She spoke briefly of her
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni·
The craft circle of the church
versity College of Osteopathic displayed several items that they pleasure of being in Pomeroy.
Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, have been malcing the past several
The club voted 10 endorse and
Ohio45701.
months that will be sold at the support the Meigs County Tuberculosis Levy.
bazaar.
The meeting closed with prayer
Committees and workdays in
by
Father Walter Heinz.
preparation for the bazaar will be
The
hostess is Doris Woodyard,
announced later.
brate Grange 1867-1992." The goal
Kate
Wells,
Dorothy 'Fhompson
On Sunday the Catholic
is to increase leadership and mem- Women's Club will hold a "Day and Dorothea Fisher served a
bership. She also reported on credit for Women" for the women from dessert course to the 26 mem hers
cards, driver's license photo and the Nativity of Mary at Sacred present.
multiflora rose program.
Flean Church. The day will begin
Bunny Kohl reported that the
resolutions and community service
reports had been sent in to Ohio
State Grange.
The Young Riders, a new 4-H held Sunday at 4 p.m. at the home
Pat Holter presented a program
on weather and jokes. A film on horse club, held an organizational of BiD Cornell.
At their second meeting the
fann safety was also shown. Sarah meeting recently at the bam of Bill
Caldwell presented "Captain Stub- Cornell. Advisor for the group is members planned for t~eir Fun
Terri Carsey.
Show and a cookout to foUow. Proby Says."
The members selected a name ject books were given out and the
Maxine Aldridge and Louise
for their club, had election of offi- ftrstlesson was assigned.
Radford were reported iU.
cers and planned a fun show to be
The next meeting of the club
will be Oet. 10. Any new members
are welcome whether they have a
horse or not. For further information call Terri Carsey at 949-2455.
Jessica Smith, reporter.
Lilley, 38, of Austin, Texas, was not intimidated. I hope I can perconvicted of aggravated bauery in suade others not to be intimidatthe Nov. 2, 1990, attack. He was ed.''
acquitted of an armed robbery
Albee, who won Pulitzer Prizes
for "A Delicate Balance" and
chB;,r$.e.
Another new club, the Shade
Lilley, who was known ss Butch "Seascape," said he has only one
Patrick when he appeared on "The piece of advice for young play - VaUey 4-H Qub, held their organizational meeting on Sept 15 with
Monsters" from I~ to 1966, said wrights.
the sentence was fair. He told
"Don't do it, unless it is some- nine members in attendance. AdviDockery he regretted the incident.
thing that you will be an incom- sors are Jim and Debbie Watson
"No one should be beat up," plete person without doing," he and Jan Haynes.
The group selected a name for
said Lilley, who earns a living said.
making personal appearances as
Otherwise, he said. "go waste the club and discussed possible
Eddie Munster.
your life writing screenplays and educational trips and money-raising projects. The next meeting is
for TV."
scheduled for Oet 12.
LOS ANGELES (AP) LOS ANGELES (AP) - Eddie
Actress Daryl Hannah and comedian Ruth Buzzi were among some Murphy will stick with Paramount
200 Jim Henson fans who turned Pictures for at least two more
The Fellowship ·church of the
out to celebrate the addition of a movies, including "Beverly Hills Nazarene
have special services
star to the Hollywood Walk of COl&gt; lll," the studio says. Murphy Oet. 1-6 atwill
7
p.m.
nightly aod Sun- .
Fame honoring the late "Moppets" and the studio had been reported on day services at 10:30
a.m. and 7
the·verge of parting ways following
creator.
p.m.
Rev.
John
Douglas
invites the
"If Jim were here. he would the di58ppointin$ performance of public.
his
recent
movtes
"Another
48
have said, 'This is neat,' " Henson's longtime agent and friend HRS." and "Harlem Nights." The
Bernie BriUstein said of Tuesday's Walt Disney Co. was among the
unveiling of the walk's 1,938th studios reportedly trying to woo .
The Meigs County Veterans
bUnaW&amp;y.
·
star.
Service
will meet
Murphy will make his next Monday atCommission
Henson, who would have been
7:30
p.m.
in
the Veter55 on Tuesday, died in May 1990 movie, "Boomerang," for ans Service Office in Pomeroy.
Paramount beginning in November
of pneumonia
.
and
"Beverly Hills Cop III" will
-CINCINNATI (AP) -Who's begin•ftlming next year, the studio
GOOD USED
afraid of Edward Albee?· Not his said
WAS..ERS, DiYERSI
Another Mutphy project. "Disstudents, hopes the playwright
whose work includeS "Who's tinguished Gentlemen," will be
REFRIGERATORS, IVs,
made at Disney's Hollywood PicAfraid of Virginja Woolt'l"
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
Albee, who il ttacbing a writing tures.
. workshop at the University of
Cincin•. ~d Tucaclay he hppcs · Dea:hurst graduates
his 1Q st®c;llts won'I be,friglittned
Beth Dewhurst o( Rutby. his celebrity. His tllSt class is landJ-enny
was amon~ the 224 graduates
627 3ni Awe., Gallipolis
Uruversity on Aug. 16.
' I don'.t plan to. be intimidat· of~
Pll.- 446-1699
De~liurst received a bachelor's
ing,'' said Albee, 63,. " And I am degree
HOUI$:
I A.M.-6 P.M.
in education.
•
.,.
.,'

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND · Revival at the
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
will be held through Sunday with
Bob Mead the speaker. Pas10r Paul
Taylor invites the public.

Rock Springs Grange meets

INSURANCE
EGscoum

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

111 S.OIICISt., ......,

YOUIIJIDIPINDINT
AGINIS SIIVItG

'•

Wednesday, September 25, 1991

Readers line up to buy first
copies of'' Scarlett''
"''i.ANTA (AP)- Employees
at a bookstore in the hometown of
"Gone With The Wind" author
Margaret Mitchell donned antebellum costumes early today to greet
customers who snapped UP the first
copies of the sequel.
Abuut 300 people lined u~ out·
side one store for copies of' Scarleu: The Sequel to Margaret
Mitchell's 'Gone With the Wind"'
Some 900,000 copies of the sequel,
written by Alexandra Ripley. were
shipped to stores for today's
nallonwide release.
"I just have to see what happens
to Scar leu." said Kenneth Nix,
who drove three hours from
Dublin, Ga., and waited five hours
for a B. Dalton Bookseller to open
at midnight
Costumed store managers
served pecan wts and mint julep
punch. The store planned to stay
open until its 1,000 copies are sold
or until customers slOpped coming.
It gave away paperback copies
of "Gone With the Wind" and
sold the hardback version for $3,
the price when it was published in
1936. "Scarietl" lists for $24.95.
Cathy Hart headed to the cash
register with four copies of "Scarlett," and four of "Gone With the
Wind."
"It's part of my heritage, the
continuing saga of Scarlell, Rhett
and Atlanta," she said.
Mitchell's epic story of the
romance between Scarlett O'Hara
and Rhell Butler has sold more
copies than any book except the
Bible. It won the Pulitter Prize.
The sequel runs 823 pages,
about 200 less than the original.
Ripley was chosen by Mitchell's
estate and her style follows
Mitchell's closely, with much of
the action talcing place from Scarlett's point of view.
Ripley keeps Scarlett moving:
from Melanie's funeral in Georgia,
to an attempted reconciliation with
Rhett in Charleston, to a journey to
Ireland and the stan of a new life.
Does Scarlell find a way to get
him back? You won't find out until
the last few pages.
Debate raged over .the appropri.
ateness of a sequel by anyone other
than Mitchell, who died in a 1949

·~

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

COUNTY
C
APPLIAN.CES

lrkllt"
. PH. 992-2556

"At 'lllllatl If till •-roy-llcnen

PO.IOY, 0"'0 .

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Wednesday, September 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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We Now Have Super
Lotto, Pick 3 and Pick 4

FIVE POINTS
EXPRESS

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..tala doecrlbed In Volume

THIS 1"x 1"
BULLETIN BOARD ·
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

Public Notice

Lb.
7-9 Lb. Average

Boneless Pork Loin Chops 2~! ®5

Cbooae From
Regular,
Butterfly or
Amerka'a Cut

Public Notice

LEGALNOnCEOFSALE
for the following deacrlbad
OF REAL ESTATE
real estate and pasalng Iron
Notice Ia hereby given by plna eat at 33.83 feet ·and
the Boud of Park 254.00 '""' aald point of
Commlaalonara of the 0. 0. beginning being marked by
Mcintyre Park Dlatrlct that an Iron pin aet;
they will oHar for aale by
Thence l,avlng aald right
••led blda the following of way north 43 degrees 00'
dftcrlbed real aatate:
00" west, 150.00 feet to a
TRACTI1
point;
Situated In the City of
Thence north 47 dogreea
Galllpolla, baing part of 00'00" east, 86.83 leet to a
ungley'a Lot No. 15 and point;
No. 7.
Thence Iouth 43 degreea
Beginning for reference at oo· 00" eut, 150.00 f""t to
a point whara Spruce lht northerly right of way of
Strlll'a aoutherly right of 5th Avenue;
way lntaraacta the northerly
Thence following aald
right of way of Strawberry rlghl of way aouth 47
Allan; Strawberry Alley her· degrees 00' 00" west, 88.83
alnahar referred to aa 5th feet to the place ol
Avenue;
beginning.
Thence following the
Containing .299 acres
northerly right of way of 5th mora or Ialt. SubJect to all
Avenue South 47 degreea legal easements, leases end
00' 00" weal, 294.00 feet to right of ways of record.
the true place of beginning
Being part of the real

eomn-a

Thomps,on Seedless White
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Real Estate General
_____..:..;..:=..:.:..:.:.:....:..:_:....:.
____ _

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Mega 1/2 Gallon
I

Choose from Vanllla, Neapolitan,
Chocolate or Fudge Swirl.

. _ _•

. HOME

992·6692

f~"·•:

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206 NORTH SECOND AVE .

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_ MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER
MIDDLEPORT-3rd Str..Hf you need 1o b8 close to the
school this is lhe house lor you. This house has 2 bedrooms. large living room, dining room. and newer wall
furnace. A great starter home.
$17,800

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$

Umlt one per
family wltb
any otber
purclwe
(exducllal

prohibited by

-·

RUTLAND-New Lima-If you're thinking ol buying homeWe've gol the one for you. With a great location. level
approx. 1 aaa lo~ 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, and an
upstairs balcony. AU within your reach at
$39,800

SO Ct. Caplets

Tylenol

Mega 12 Oz. Can

MIDDLEPORT-Uncoln Street· Look at the price on this 3
to 4 bedroom 2 story home en a nice street Has maintenance free, siding and storage building.
.
JUST$18,000

Orange Juice

POMEROY·Sklnner Road-Ready to build that dream
home? Three 2 acre building lots. Electric and water
available .
$8,500
MIDDLEPORT-Hay look 11 thla· Two businesses for price
of one. IN one aide you can start your own tire business with
the compressor 6 tire changer. IN the other you can have
an appliance business with usod washers, dryer'l, ~IQve,
and relri~tora already there. Come take a look at alllhe
things thiS business has 1o offer.
JUST
$8,500

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POMEROY·Do you need a MONSTEROUSLYlarge home?
Or"couldbe4apanments. This home has 16 rooms,large
hallways, enclosed fronl perch, one car garage, 4 bathe
and 4 kitchens. Has a 119wer fumace and roof. wei.
recently redecorated. Possibilil)l of some owner financing.
$55,000
MIDDLEPORT-Maple Street•A nice home with 2 bed·
rooms upstairs, a ruta kitchen down with a dining room,
and a lovely living room . It also sits on a great corner 50 X
100 lot Even has a lillie garden spot
$28,800

Lb. Qtrs.

law)

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Beans

Margarine

Cake Mix

'l
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Joan Of Arc Ught Red

Food Club

ltema

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OF~ICE 992·2886

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"ondav 7 a.m. thru
~a1tur4tlav Midnite
Sunday 7 a.m.
'til 10 p.m.

September 1991
Wed. Thurs. Fri.

Sat.

25 • 26 • 27 • 28

Bear
Minimum
Prices
Items and Prices Effective only at:
GALLIPOLIS BIG BEAR SIDRE

PORTLAND-Big Lot-One story home. A cute 5 room , 2
bedroom home with attic opaca lor more rooms. One car·
garage, IIMII lo~ well Insulated lor economical llvillg.
O.Vner wants an offer.
WAS $22,500
NOW $20,000
POIIEROY~ulbeny Avanua-Lookatlhis Historical home ..
Thio horne haa cherry croblneta In the kitchen, a beautiful
wooden 1/dlway, and large wooden pocket doors aeparling lhe living room from the dining area. Also hal en
open alalrway, 3 bedrooms, and a garage.
$32,1100

........ - 882-30$11

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se rvt•c e s

The Dally Senllnei- Page- 13

°1

BUllE

'GRO()M
. ROOM

. 614-992-6820

'BISSELL
.BUILDERS

Begl'ns Sept. 1S

Ewtry Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Guns Only
91919112 mo.

USED APPUANCES
tODAYWAWNTY

w~m-s1oo

.,

DIYIS-$69 11ft
IIFIIIUATOIS- $ 100 11ft
IAIIGIS-O.·IIoc.-$125 up
fiUZEIS- $125 op
'
OVINS- $79 u~

•oo

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

742-2421

••1u 51 M S

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"

., A

ON, VA.

21/1

Mi. outside
Rutland on New
Lima Rd.

1-(3034 )·
773-9560

9 / 9 / 91 / 1 mo. pd .

POMEROY, OHO
tfn

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain out of
pointing.
Let me do it for you.
VERY RfASONAilE
HAVE REFERENCES
16141 915·4110

8·21-91 · 1 mo. pd.

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•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIPING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
• ........ ltlllt
"Free Batlmataa"

CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

Used Irons ............$S.OO
Used Woods .........$7.00

~·

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3 Announcements

FIT an.d TRIM
RE·OPENING
OCTOBER 1st
CALL 112-3033 or
112-3121
nR IPPOIIftllft

Call For Re•Openlng
Specials .·

8-12-90·tfn

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

•Reaaonebla flates
•Quality Work
•Free Estimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
Time ·
•High Gloss on Tile
Floor Finish
Mllf lEWIS, Ow nor
Rt. 1, Rutland, OH.

Bashan Building
EVERY
SAl. NIGHT

6:30 P.M.
Starting Sept. 28
Fa&lt;tory Choh
I t Gauge Shotgun Only
Sl ridly lnforud

742-2451

9 -13-'91 -rtn

3- 14-'91 -tfn

J&amp;L

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAIWlE

NQ SUNDAY (AilS
3-ll·tfn
. - ... ·· - · -

USED RAILROAD TIES

&amp;- 14- '91 -tf n

6·6·'91

FlEE ESTilW15

992-2269

INDEPENDENT
CARPET CliANERS
and TilE FlOOI CARE

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

992-7458

BILL SLACK

992-6648 or
698-6864

AWARDS
8·9·1 mo. pd.

PH. 949·2101

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

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

GoH
lnsons (61. ... 1SS.OO
New Grips ............ $4.00
Woods ................ 122.00
Irons .................. $14.7S

· or le1o 949·2160

992-6289

5·10·'9H tn.

REPAIRS

992-5335 • 915·3561
Acron from Post Offici

THE DANCE
COMPANY

10:00 em-6:00pm

Minor Auto Repair .

I.NSULATION

If you're in need of
Mobile Home Parts
or Accessories...

•Vinyl Siding
oRaplacamant
Windows
•Roofing
•Insulation

SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
RT. 33 WEST OF

JAMES KEESEE

992-2772 or
742-2251
539 Bryan Place
Middlepor1, Ohio
11-14· tfn

DARWIN, OHIO

8-28-011 mo. pd.

8 / 19 / 1 mo. tfn

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

MI(ROWA E

BULLDOZING

OVEN REPAIR

Real Estate General

992 -2156
I
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992 70 13
the northerly right of way of
Strawberry Alley Intersect;
or 992~5553
Strawberry Allay herelnalter
01 YOU referred to •• 5th Avenue;
1•100•141 -4107
Thence following the
northerly right of way of 5th
DA. . .7 ~ ''"
Avenue aouth 47 degreea
00' 00" -•t, 207.17 feet to
an Iron pin aat and paaalng
an Iron pin ael at 33.83 feet;
Thence leaving aald right
&amp;
of way north 43 ilegrees 00'
00" weal, 150.00 feet to a
CONS11UCnON
point;
eNtw
Ho11111
Thence north 47 degrees
00' 00" aaat, 207.17 feet to
•Garap•
the aoutherly rlghl of way of ·
Spruce Street;
Thence following uld
lemotWin1
right of way aouth 43
Stop
&amp; Contpare
degreea 00' 00" eaat, 150.00
FrM
Estimates
feet to lhe place of
beginning.
985-4473
Containing .713 acres
more or Ina.
667-6179
SubJect to all legal easementa, leaaea and right of
way a of record.
Baing port of the real
eatJta deecrlbed In Volume
180, Poga 265, Galli•
County Deed Recorda.
TRACTI3
Situated In the City of
L~Jr-.
Galllpolla baing part of
unglay'a Lot No. 18 ond
part of Commons No.7.
Complete Grooming
Beginning 11 on Iron pin
For All lrltds
aat at the lnteraecUon ol the
north e111 right of way 111\e
EMilEE MERINAR .
of Spruce Street and the
north -•t right 'or woy of
Ownt; &amp; Operator
Strawberry Allay;
Thence following the
north weat right of way of
Po1111roy,
Strawberry Allay north 47
degreea 00' 00" aeat, 158.81
f"t to an Iron pin found In
the south aaat corner of the lr-~-----'1
property deacrlbed · In
.
Volume 272, Page 27, Golllo
County Deed Recorda;
Thence north 84 degr"a
01' 03" Weal, 50.00 feet to
an Iron pin aet;
CUSTOM IIILT
Thence north o4 degr..a
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
58' 57" eaat, GO.OO t..t to a
point;
·-., ltallnallle Prien"
Thence aouth 84 degr..a
01' 03" taat, 50.00 r..t to an
PH. 949-2101
Iron pin aet and paaalng an
or les. 949-2160
Iron pin aet at 15.00 feat;
Thence north 04 degr"a
Day or Night ·· ·
58' 57" eaet, 119.16 teet to
NO SUNDAY
an Iron pin aet;
Thence lOUth 47 degr"•
00' 00" Will, 314.00 feet IO
an Iron pin aet In the north
Public Notice
eaat right of way of Sptuce
Street;
Thence lollowlng said
right of war. aouth 43
degreea oo· 00. uat, 140.00
feet to tht place of
beginning.
laat weak.
Containing .856 acrea
of ftnal
moreorlua.
laauanca dat"
SubJect to all legal aoaa- of propoaed acdona and of
menta, leuea and right of draft eotlona 111 alated.
way a of record.
Final actlona may be
Being part of the real appealed, In writing, within
eatate described 11 Tract 30 daya of the data of thla
No.'a 1 and 3, Volume 180, notice, to The Environment·
Page
280, Gallla County al Board of Review, Rm. SOO,
Deed Records.
238 E. Town St., Columbua,
sealed bids will be OH., 43215. Notice of any
laccepted at lhe 0. 0.
appeal ahaU be Hied with the
Mcintyre Park Dlatrlct Main director within 3 daya.
Office, Gallla County Propoaed aotlona will
Courthouse, Galllpolla, become final unlaaa 1 writ·
Ohio, 45631 until 12:00 tan adJudlcollon haorlng
noon on Tueaday. October raquall Ia eubmlnad within
22,1991, and opened Imme- 30 d1y1 of the IIIUinCI
diately therNher.
data; or the director ravlaEach tract will ba aold to aalwlthdrawe tha propoaed
the hlghNI and bHI bidder action. Any paraon may
pursuant to 1545.12 of the aubmlt commanta and/or a
Ohio Revised Coda. Terma maatlng regarding any dralt
ol Sale: The aucceaaful ocUon within ·30 daya of tha
purchaser, aa aoon •• hla data Indicated. "Acdon", aa
bid Ia accepted and they are uaad ebova dou not
notified, shall be required lo Include receipt of a varlfted
depoalt, within three (3) complaint. If algniHcant pubdays by cosh or certified lic lntar..t axlata, • public
check payable to the 0. 0. m"tlng mey be held. Aa to
Mcintyre Park Dlatrlct, ten any action, Including receipt
percent (10%) of the amount of verified complalnta, eny
of ouch accepted bid. The paraon may obtain notice ol
unpaid balance or the further actlona, and addipurcheae price ahall be due tional Information. Unlaaa
and payable to the 0 . 0. otherwl11 provided In
Mcintyre Park Dlatrlct upon Notlcea of pertlcular
delivery of lhe deed. Taxoa ectlona, all communfcatlona
will be prorated to the day ahall be aant lo: Hearing
of closing.
Clark, OEPA, P. 0 . Box 104i,
The Board of Park Columbua, OH., 4328&amp;-014i
Commlulonera ol the 0. 0 . Ph. (814) 844·2115. Conault
Mcintyre Park District ORC Chap. 3745 ond OAC
reserves the right to reject Chapa. 3745-47 and 3740·5
any and all bids and waive for requlrarnanta.
any Informalities.
Final laauenca ol Permit
By Order of the Board of to lnatall.
Perk Commission••• ol the Mayor &amp; Council
0. 0 . Mclntyro Park District, Pomeroy, Ohio
Gallla County, Ohio.
Effective Data: Oi/17191
Board of Park Facility Deacrlptlon:
Commlaalonera,
Waatawller Treatment
Dr. William B. Thomas,
Plantlmprovamenta for
Pres.; Ronnie Halley, Sec.;
Pomeroy Phue I.
Judga Thomaa S. Moulton, Application
Commlaalonet
No. 06-313D
Atteat:
Thla ftnal action not precod·
Joaette N. Bak111,
ed by propoaed ectlon and
Dlreclor/Secretary
11 appealable to EBR.
(9) 25; (10) 2, 9, 16
(9) 25, 1tc

•c-pltte

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

Pillsbury Plus

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h==;irf.i~=::;t;========rr.:::::=;:;;:::::;il-;::::======;rt=======:::;
STEWART'S
eounty ";:.S;c:;d•.
GUN SHOOT
A&amp;B
BALLET, TAP &amp;
Situated In lha City of
.t~n~
CO!'APlRE AUTO
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES
Galllpolla, being patt of
Sped zllltl
·
fORKED
RUN
UPHOLSTERY
JAZZ CLASSES
•BUY eSEU •TUDE
t..nglay'a Lot No. 15 and Ctntot. Fr- lltpalr
Commona No. 7.
N•EW ~~ ~SED PARTS
SPORTSMAN
Convertible Tops,
OPEN
AGES 3 and UP
Beginning 11 a point
rOI AU. IUIIES &amp;
Tu es day thru Saturd ay
where the aoutherly right of
MODElS
CLUB
Carp.ats , Headliner
way of Spruce Street and
8a Seat Covers and
_

BISSELL

You'll Come Up Aces With
The Classifieds

Assorted

'• i

180, Page
and Volume
180,
Page274205,
Gallla

1

ST. RT. 7, FIVE POINTS

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B u· SID
• e.s 8

Public Notice

BULLETIN BOARD

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Ohio

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE :
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLlCATION

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1991
Page-12- The Dally Sentinel

)

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING :
Umostone, Dirt.
Gravel and Coal
Uconaed and Bonded
PH . 614-992-6691
9·11 -1 mo. pd .

Acra11 Frem Poot OHica
217 E. Stcllltl St.
POMEIOY, ONIO
316/ 90/tfn

ATTENTION

YOUNG'S

FIREWOOD
SELLERS

CARPENTER SERVICE ·

All MAlES
Bring It In Or Wa
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
992-5335 or
915-3561

-

Hardwood Slabs
For Sole
Great Price!

Room Addition•
Guntr work
Eiectrlc:el 1nd Pl"mblng.
Concrete work
Roofing
Interior • Exterior
Pelntlng

(FREE ESTIMATES)

CALL

V. C. YOUNG Ill

OHIO PALLET CO.
992-6461
9 -1-91 · lmo.

992-6215
Pomeror, Ohio

11·14-'90 tin

RACINE GUN

Howard L. Writnel

CLUB
GUN SHOOT

ROOFING

NEW LISTING- Mlnwavflle
location that hu an exoaUent pdtentialto be a lovely home
lor someone that wants to do a Utle fixing • up. 3-4 bedroom&amp;, large bath, beautiful stairway and some pine woodwork. Large front pcrcli, ahod &amp; outbuilding on approx. I
aaa of land. Asking $22,500

1:00 P.M.

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters

SUNDAYS

Gutter Cleaning

Downspouts

Starting Sept. 22

Painting

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

FREE ESTIMATES

949 -2168
9 / 9/ 91 / 1 mo. pd .

9·6·1fn

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

CAll JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·2653
For Old &amp;New Roofs, Shingles
Repairs, Gutters
Building and RemodeRng

NEW USTlNQ. Middleport-1floor frame 6vinyl home with
5 rooms, 2 bedrooma. Situated on 1Wo lots the home has
some new wiring &amp; plumbing. Asking $18,000

We Guarantee Your Satisfaction

RUTLAND- A 'MUST SEE' homel3 bedroom , 1 t/2 bath.
ra~ sl)llahoma. Heat pump, central air, baamodceilings.
pabo, garage, carport, various other outbuildings with
approx. 6 acres. O.Vner anxious to sell Asking $39,500
make an offerl
LONG BOTIOM· FALL IS COMING I And in the location ol
this ranch atyle home you11 be able to experience tall's
beauty right out your winclowl This total ?ie&lt;:tric home
Includes 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. appliances, &amp;ck, storage
buolding, 1.36 IICfe&amp; of quiet, private, preny surroundings.
Ask1ng $49,000 O.Vner relocated ... wan1s to sell.
Come .. admire ...MAKE AN OFFERI
HERE'S A BUYI a 1974 Now Yorker Mobile Home on .69
aae. Home Includes 5 rooms, 2 bedrooms an 8 x 24
axpando with 8 x 8 room build on. Front and .:ear perches
and a I car garage. ONLY $17,500
1880 • 14 x 70 skyline Mobile Horne. 3 bedrooms, front
porch, large bay window. Buy this home and move it to a
aile suitable lor you. Asking S11,500 O.Vner wants to sell!
Horne muat be moved.

WHEN WE SELL YOUR HOME IT MEANS THAT WE DO
ALL THE WORKI ALL THE WORRYING, QUESTION
ANSWERINOANDINFORIIAT10HGIVING. THATSOUR
JOBI WE'RE BffiER THAN THE YEI.LOW PAGES,
WITH US THE ONLY WORK YOUR FINGERS WILL
HAVE TO DO IS THUUBINO THROUGH THE CASH
:~EN YOUR HOME IS 80\.DI CALL TODAY AND PUT
'~&gt;'• TO WORK FOR YOUI
HENRY E. CLELAND... ... ............................... H2.S181
TRACY BRINAOER. ......................................II4f.24311
J. ~ TRU.SELL....-·- ·- ................................Nf.2tl0

Jq "'~-.....~..- .... _.......,- ...............................
tOFFICE..- ...- -.... - ....... - ............ - ...- .....111-2251

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fR££ [!liMATIS

JOSlPH D. JACIS

Now /n. ·
'$11J6H/
AIR CONDtnONERS - HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
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BENNETT'S

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MOBILE HOME
HEAliNG &amp;

COOLING
Safford School ld. off lt. 141

loCGtd On
(614) 446-9416 or 1·100-172·

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES, INC.
(A venture of J&amp;F (on heeling end K&amp;J Conlfruct1on)

Dozer, Backhoe, Trenching Work
Utilities: water, gos, sewer, eleclr ic
Cuslom and log Homr 1
Remodeling and General Controc linq
Commercial Developmenl
See us obout Sunshine Room Solmiums
Jim Clifford 992· 720 I
Greg Bailey 992-681 0
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Television
Viewing

Announcements
3 Announcements
Roduco Soft And Fut With
GoBooe caplolo And E·Vap
Dlurollc AI Frulh Pharmacy.

•

1 wk. old, female C.llco kllten,

~

.

B-h Stroot, Middleport, Ohio.

One room apt, rafeRncet and

dopoolt, 304-1182·2588.
Campllloly Fumllhod Small
Houoo, No Poll, Yord, Pluo
LHIIHiu. I:!Wmo. 1*446-0338.
Colllge, ~ lew 1, Clrpotod,

:,o:c·h, '%lc~i

6042.

Rotraln

-IISoulholllom
Bull-~. S~ Volley
Pluo. Call Todiy, 11
43170
Roglolorlllon .-.12JIIB.

Lost&amp; Found

~3~0~~non ~q':ia~~-4!

alngt•wldo trolloro, pltooo.
10 112 ,.... In Ollila Co. on
Popu~r Rldao Rd lor oolo. ~
camolory toli on Gravol Hill In
Choohlro, Sond lnqulrloolo: 545
Holon Sl-, Columbuo, OH
43223
Lot 130x40 In town clolo to
ochoolo, otoro, holpftol with
wolor &amp; olocttlc hook-&lt;Jp,
gorage on lot Into opl,

Found on Fo- Run Rd. 1&lt;al,
blook/gray,
yotlow
oyoo,
doc~Woi. 61~DO~•

Found 1.... of lleyo w/chongt
purte on Wll.l Hill Rd. AUI~d .
IM,'lll2·2501
Found Oroal Bond Aroo, Lg. Caahltl'l Full hrv• Attendan11
ma~ woll carod lew dog. ~~~ NMded. · Part•Tlme, Must Be
Ablt To Wcwk WMIIendo And
84~214 or 84:1-5384
Holldor:· Mull Bo NMI And
l0$T m•l• blond TerTier F~ond y. APIIIY In PO&lt;Son BP
vicinity Long Hollow R01d tnd Food Marf, · 'Route 35, Rio
Rt. a, ~114-805-3470.
Orondo, Ohio.
LOliT HI of koyo, 304-475-10!10. Domlno'o Plua of Pcwnoray now
taking appllcallono.
7
Yard Sale
EARN MONEY Roodlng Books!
$30,000/rr. Income Polonllol.
Dotalla. 111 805-GIZ-4000 Ext. y.
Gallipolis
10188.
&amp; VIcinity
Eloctronlca Technic~, Ex·
3 Flmlly Elllll And Porch Solo: porlonco Roqulrod. Good W&lt;Hk·
Sopllmbor 27, 28, l :mtl. 30 lng COIIdhloiL Full nmo. Apply
cako Dlcorlllng Pone, car AI: Bob"o Eltc1ronlco, Uppor
Soli, Slrolltr, 2 Ul Chll .. And Routo 7; Oolllpollo, Ohio.
Full-time poeltlon open at R~•

Polnlo Expnooa, oxporlonco
pnollrrod but nol --ry.
Sond r-mo to S4070 SA 7
Pomoroy, or drop oil II Corry·

4 F.amlly: 48 Central Avenue, Out.

Glrll mull bo 11 y.... cw older,
S7. por llcHor pluollpo, Jntorvlow
30447H7811aftor 3:00PM.
Exportonco ""
ry. A
Dilly Solory Of $300 For Buying
lllorclllndlll. 114-J8&amp;.2012, "Eo(
No

383:1.
Pr~vo

111 Bod Long Tonn
caro Facility In SouthMotom
Ohio S.,..,ng Dlroc1or Of Nurolng Sorvlooo. Facllhy llodlco,..
Modlcold·VA cartlllod. Long
Term Care And Management
Expo- A Pluoi\ Ellglbllhy
For Uconouro AI N In Ohio
Roqulrod. Sind Rooumo To:

Admlnt.trltor, Plnecrelt can
Public Sale
c.nter, 170 PlnecnM Drtve, Galllpol... Ohio 40131.
&amp;Auction
Taltnlod
drummor noodod lew
Rick PM.- Auction Campony,
full •lme audlonNr, oompllee Rock Bond, oorlouo lnqulroo
Chrlo 304-77:1-50118 ..
•uctlon .me.. Llcwlaed Ohio, ontylocoll
Jam 304-812-UU.
Wool Vlrglnta, 304-77:1-1711.
WINed molivllod -por.on,
121,000. to f52,000. IIIII yNr.
9 wanted to Buy
T..tnlng provldod, upotlonco
WINed II~101k and oc ..p mot· prellnM. S i n d - to Box
ai,304M3o • .
N,% Pl. Pit. ~!t 200 llaln
WINod to buy, Standing tlmbor, St., PoiN Plolllnl, .. v. 25150
Bob WilHam• &amp; Sono 814-1192· Wanled: Clerk:al worker, com~
Mt8.
putor oxporlonco noc-ry.
Knowlodgo ol occounto poy·
WaNod To Buy: Junk AUioa •bl•,
.-.Jrable 6 payroU. Send
Scr.p llotal. can oftor 2 p.m:
roiiiY to: Box CLAOII3 olo Qa~
IM-«1-0013.
ll)iollo Dilly Tribu"!t.i:i5 Thlnl
Top Priolo Paid: All Old U.S. Avenue, Galllpollo, "" 45131.
Celina, Gold Rln~ Sliver Colno,
Port-nmo Uconood
Gold ColnL M.U. Coin Sltop, WANTED:
Proctlcol Nu... (20 Hra/Wk) Few
151 -..cl A-uo, Oolllpolla.
Two CommW~hy Group For P-.. Willi O..olopmonlll
DllobllhiN In Gall~ County
Employment Servtces (Qalllpoh/Bidwoll.
Houro: 3:308:30p.m. Friday; 8o.m ...Sp.m.,
Soturday; Wp.m., Sundoyl· 211 Help Wanted
Hour Wookly Stall IIHI ng;
1350. por day procooolng phone OM-Hour Wookty LPN -lng;
cwdor.l Pooplo call you. No ex· 01 AI OlhorwiM Schoduloil.
portonca noco111ry. t-IIOCI-255- CUrrent LPN Llcanoo (Interim
PormH
~•bltl
02•2.
OOPNESINAPNES!Or
Stile
AVON • All
Call Marilyn Boord Aoorovod Tralntng, Valid
WNvor 3CM-882·2645.
Orlvor'o Uconoo And GoOd Orlv·
lng Rocord, Good CammunlcaA Dally So~ry 01 $300 For tlon And Oralnlzollon llldllo,
Buying MorchandiN. Buyer Punctuol, AncfAblt To Work AI
Noodecl. No Expo~onco Noc•• Pall Of A Tum Roqulrod; Ex·
oary. 814·385-2082, Ext.38S3.
portonco Worldt&gt;g Whh PoNOno
With Mental IIOiordatlon And
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
DINbiiHioo
E.J:cellenl
Pay,
Benefhl, Dlwlopmonlal
Protorred. Solary: ...00/Hour, To
Tronoportatlon,
407-2112-41117 Stort.
RMUmo To Cocll~
Ext. 571. h .m.·10p.m. Tod S.Ur, Sind
P.O. Bo1 lOot, Jackson,
Rolundad.
OH ut140. Dlodllno For ApAVON I All Arooo I Shl~e~ pllcanto: W3Q/11. Equal Oppor·
lunlty Employer.
Spoaro, 3114-875-14211.

$1,500. 30U71oa27.

HouH ciMnlng or otflce clean-

Ing, 14.00 HR. Call 114-1192·3541
Ufhl carpontor wott, lnlorlor
ond oxtorlor pointing, 304-175U34.

Milo Pou~'a Dly cara Conlor. 51'1-2131.
Solo, olfordablt, chi-. lll.f
I o.rn. • 1:30 p.m. Agio ~10. Lind In Svr~~cuu .Call After
Boloro, oftor ochool. Drop-lno&gt; Bp.m. 11~048.
WIICDIM. 114 ttl 8224. New In- ,
Mon:or Bottom Sub-dlvlolon,
lan4 Toddler c-, 114-44W22l
ono .... lola, AI. 2 lronlogo,
Will do a.byo1111ng In my homo, Drice Mucecl, city w1ter, 3Q4.
sy..... OH, 114-tt:z-wr.z
51'1-2335.
WIU Do lnlnlnp And -lng, Nlca Building loll BllwNn
Good Rl-114-441-1111.
Now BI-Poa lind St. At. 35 On
Rodney Pille, Aoolrlctod. I*
318 ..412.
Financ1al
O.J. Whho Rood, 2 Acroo
Woocltn Building Lot, ANdy To
21
Business
Build On. RNlrlctod. $7,!100.
81~2t5-!1585.
Opportunity
Troller lot lor ronl: 10 mlllllrom
INOTICE!
on AI. 141. 1*37G-2501 a~
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINO CO. town
tor 4 p.m.
you do ......
whh ........ you -,and Trallor 101 for rent on New Um1
N01' to money througl lhl Rd., Wltartaewer hook·u.-. 6')4.
maU untU you hawln.-Jgotod 1112-2421
tho olltrlng.
AHontlonl !llyllna Solon For
Renta ls
Solo) Prtml LAicallan. Call '*
441 110:11, 114-441-1381.
. "

--·1114

22 Money to Loan

41

SLOANU

All typoo Of Loono Po.....al
Bull- Eto. Col For FrN
Conounlllon With A Loon
Ollloor Todoyl 1.eOO-D02-8450.
Qauranlood Rooulla.

23

Professional

8

ar••.

3 to 4 ....., localld In r-rt
or11. Good ' bOlting. 7 mlloo
lrom Qalllpolla. 1500 down. $111
mo. 1*25&amp;-121t.
80x110
Comer
Lot,
Moo-brook AddHioiL ~

Services

Houses for Rent

lbr Houu, lllo~1 • Rlll'lgorotor
Fum~od,
$11101m0.
$100
Dlpooh. 21 Mil CIMk. 114-448·
1340.
2 bdrm houN In Pomeroy, 1225
mo plua ullhiN, rot • dop ,..
qulnod, 1*012·7503
Z·BR part. fum. or unfum. In

countrr. Depoalt/Aelerencn ,...
qulrod.II~Mt-2835

Cullcwn Butchering, I dayo a
wook. caltlo, Hop, Door, ~ 2br Houoo, 3 Millo Down At. 7,

182-2383.

River VIew,

Rea l Estate

31

Homes tor Sale
ABSOWTELY MUST iELLII
Roducod To Boll: 2 Story 3br
con. lol In Chllltlre, Ohio.
e-IIIN Conclllon. -nclng
Avol~blo. 1104-11324HI, 1104'
032·7870, ·-~..
Z
bedroont8,
kitchen,

dlnlngroom, llvlng100111, la110
acroe~

balh, walk-In oiOMcl,

Wuher,

Dryer,

Rolrigorator
Fumllhod.
$275fmo. ·-1115, 114-448·
1243.
3 boclr- homo c1o11 to
ochoolo ond hootlllal, roltr.nco
end dapoolt.304-C7W115.
:1-BR '-"a .on F~twooclt Rd.
No
poll.
Roflro,_,....
raqulrod.
1*185-3841
Fumllhod 1br Ho-, Located
735 Roor Third Avonua1 f1501mo,
$100 Dl-'1. 114 441 ..70, 1114tll·1340.

lrom Loon Pork, no(IOI~blt, 304- Sm1ll 1br Stove I AafriQI!rator
Fumlohod, Wuhor &amp; Dryor
411·1138.
Hook-up,
1225/mo.
$200
3br, 3 Cor Shod, 1 Cor Garogo, 3 D11101H, I llonlho Loaoo. 142
Ac ..., Bu~vlllo Rood. 7 Yoaro Fourth A... Oalllpol... 114-446Old, $15,000. ·-1568.
3117.
Jbr, Both, Kllchan, DR, LR,
lui, Oor.go, C-ol Air, Gao 42 Mobile Homes
Mid t:lO'I. Mlddltport. I*
torRent
11924384.
2
bldroom
Allt4orl Uplond Ad,
Booutllul country ootllng homo Hud aocoptod,
no (1111, :104475WJS-112 IOI'M1 garden lpot, eJtra
mobile homo ohl, au utllhtoa. 4011.
114-8411-2141
2 beclloom trailer, HWWI water
-ncoa, Aloo
QOYERNIIENT HOliES From $1 tlumllhod.
..llor _ . . North AI. 1 Locuot
!U Ropolr). Dollnquanl Tu Rood
Pl. Ph. 30W75·
Pra,.rtr. RepoaMnlonL Your 1071 .on rlghl,
.
""'" (1 101-112-8000. Ext. QH.
10188 For Cutrllll Rlpo U.l
2·BA ..rnllhod, good cloan
HOUSE FOR FREEII Mull movo condHI';l;. ~~ yonl, obovo N2-2tll.
oil 101 In Mlddllpon. Fill In Hovon,
balmenl, Had ancletraw. Mutt 2·BR mobllo homoo, lumlohod,
olgn controctl 2·BR, Lorgo LR, woohar,'dryor, air, 114-012-4100.
DR, Both, hal now root arid gut·
tor, now coppor ond PYC pluinb- For Slit or RoN, 111811wo bodlng, nood 1101111 wott. You pay _., mobllt homo on · r.nlod
lor tho movlngl Only oo~ouo lol, ...,.., -lng, dlpooh end
col...l can 114..112·2071 after ret.renc. rwqulrM, 304-1~
7:00pm.
nMB.
Mull •II 2 11~1
room, both, MKcholl Rood, 7Dll14, 2 led·
2 car gorago,
lot, nlco. room, 2 Botha W~h Elpondo,
SomarvDio lllllly,
7H030 S250/mo, Pluo Dlpooh; 70114 3
Bedroom, 1 Iaiii, 1250/mo. And
orl'll-3431.
Dlooall Ro-1 Roqulrod.
Nlca 4 boclroom, fully corpotod, call B-on lp.m And Op.m.
hill pwnp~ !'" ! ..... now out· 814-&amp;4:1-2018.
building. ...- Lowl 7 mlloo
Ohio River campgroiNidotrollor
from •-n. :104o171-2188.

-l

1

•pace, ,.., round water, MWtr,

32

Mobile Homes
tor

sa1e

10150 mobllo homo,
lhodod lot. locolod In
oroo: bOlting &amp;

l~lng.

~rgo

.-r
flOOD

down. 1204 mo. 7 mi. ltotn Qal.

lipollo.114-215-1211.
1m l'lomlngo 2 Bodroom, carpoling, Slo•• And Rltrtg...tor,
All Storm WI""-, OU Fur·
..... $3,400. 1*381-1724· .
1171 Fleetwood Sllr, lith l 112.

TOiol Elooltlo Wl4h Wood B..,..
nor. 88.100, Or 1111 ~bit
Ollor. ~

~----------~~~--------~~JI1111~M~~.a~

Glrball• plck..,p, lumllhod,
$15.00por month, 114-8411-2521
Small 2 bldroom trollor
Hertford, $125. month pluo
dlpooh. 304..12-2104.

43 Fanns tor Rent

f

\

:..:::..

homo, 12112 on

1.11 - . lol, noor

~or

$10,500.00 obo 114 IIIJ.3881

'

w.-

14 K Gold. 1400. 11t 448 3040.

\

45

Furnished
Rooms

Roomalor rent·- or month.
s::~la' at $1201mo. Gall~ Hotel.

•

85110.

Stooping rocwno wHh cooking.
Aloo lrallor opoco. All hoolo-upa.
can oftor z:oo p.m., 304·77:15851, Maeon WV.

46 Space tor Rant
Country lloblll Homa Pork,
Aouto 33, North of Pornoroy.
Loll1 _r.ntala, porto, ootN. ca11
'*w.&lt;·JII7G.
Mobllo
homo opaco '"' .....
c~y wotor. No po1o. 1-.;3617.

Merchandise

Ron Evana Ente11MiH•, Jack-

51

HOUSehold
Goods

I:--.-----=;.:.;:.:;;_....,._,..
:1-olr condll-, 2-couchao, 2·
- · 1-doublo lnd 1-twln. ' *
1112.et1B1 canoftor 3:00pm.
Antiquo Wood-Coal Cookllovo
Warmlna Ovon, Wllor Tonk. 8*
446-304G.
BargoIn Appl~ncoo 10 Dlyo

Only. Fnoot Froo Rolrigemor
Wlo $150- 171: WIIOMr Woo
$125, $85 And $71; llany To
Choooo From All Ani Oourantood. SUggo Appl~ncoo. I*
441-73118.
catcwlc
Aongo
wlbulft~n
mlcr-•v• oven, ~.. old, $300.
Doubfo.wldl rolrigerotor, ~ro
old, 1500. Othor lumhuro lor
ulo.I*OI2-1Dt2
Clrpol h12 $50 • Upl Soli On
All Out- carpot: 83.11 •
14.01: Kitchen COrpot, S7; VInyl
83.01 • 14.01. llolt On All carpot In 81ocltl llollohan carpoto,

carpol,

8ooo rant
$241 •
Julio II :10477W1211 ar llop by Lydia
~ tocotod on """""'
- •• bohlnd u. golf driving
rongolnllaoon.
mllll(llr

57

Musical
Instruments

Spinal • Cltnooll P~no Bargain.
Wanted: rnponolblt polly to
m1ko low monthly poymonto on
plano. can bo 010n locally. call
Mr. Whhe at: 1~ 111.
101.

18

1.

1884 Bronco, 1St, V-4, Auto, Air,

· f.

nt~ Now Point! $5,000. 1*2ts5841.
11181 Dodge carovon LE, 7 -

Wide •election new a uNCI f•rm
tracto,. &amp; lmplamanta. Buy,
Hll, trade, l:oo-1:00 weekclaye,

Livestock

0146·7222

Registered Morg•n Stud HoNt.

CaD 6M-«W07G
Only.

Woollendo

TransportatiOn
11

Autos for Sale ·

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

everything ntw or rlbuiH alao
1m Monte Carlo nice car,
111oo.oo obo 114.eiii-7111B

Sopl. Solo. Sldora Equlpmont 1071 Buick Skylark, Runo Good,
Hondoroon, WV. 30W75-7421. ' Good Tl .... 1500. lt4-2!1f1.173D.
Plno Dlnello Sot And Chol111· 1g'l5 Buick LoSab.. Convortlblo,
Ftw Womant Clotl•• And ~ Ntw Top, Paint, nru. 455 EnForth Etc. 61~48-0.41 .
gina, Good Shapol 83,200. ~
Racondlllonld
w•hera
&amp;
dryera, aach $100 and up. We
nrvlca aU makH. The Wutler &amp;

Dryer Snoppo. 814-448-2844.

Surpluo Army camoullougo
O~glnol clothing, omoll occ..
oorloa, ltalhor US Combo!
Booto. Som Sornorvlllo'o Sondyvllla1• WV bolide Poll CHico
Rt. 21 "· Frl, Sot, Sun, noon.e:oci
PM (llllndod hOWl during
hunting 111oon). 3~27:1-15155.
Trlpto lined plpo for woodburnor. 14" plowo. Rovrlng ma·

chine. 304-175-3031.

Uolld oalollllo oqulpmont, ln.
eluding, whole oyotom wllh
docodora, rocol•• ... dllh ond
decodera. 114-182-817J.

Building
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Supplies
Wllhonl, ~ ............. :B:-Ioc-:k,:-:-b-,rlc""k,....:...-:,_or,;,.;;,DI_po_o.,.;-wl-n~ _,_Unlllo, ,o le. Claude WinA-ll u~.l ,.,_.. .....____. •. _ tn, Hlo ~ Grande, OH Clll 114-• • .... · - - - · - ·
2•1-412t

.
I

liJ Murder, 11M Willie

Jesalca vlahl friends In
Nashville and encounters
murder. (R) Q

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

8 ludwalaer ROCk •n•
Counlly Stereo.

0 lllg Brollter .....
1:05 (I) MOVIE: Fot Your EJH

77:1-g532.

Only !POl (2:45)
8:30 (I) ()) Growing P•lu
(Preview) Mike wanll to help
a relllldlal student whO 11
hOmtlesa. Stereo. C
1111 @ Te«&lt;l Gl6aon
does 1101118 aouHIHrchlng
about his job 11 Winthrop
Academy. Stereo. Q
0 Manlec ManiiOti

e
e

I:OD ez~e 0 Nlgltt Court

(Season Premiere) Dan
camps out In the bllemtnl.
(PI 2 of 2) Stereo. I;J

Cll ()). Doo(lle ~.

~

'1WI&lt; iROUSU:

'YOI.I 'NANT MC. 1ZJ TELL
'IOU WHAT~ TI&lt;O!JBL5

,.•'
;.'•

15~'REA

eMA~ALECK .

IS'J

,.
::

8

s Larry King Llvll
Father Dowling MyoNfleo

::

:•
•

Ill Mobllo Homo Sot·Upo

1:30 ez~e 1111 Selnleld A new
glnlrland lnslall on h11nng
the truth. Stereo. Q
Cll ()) 81111 Not'e feels
great about hlr new
buslneas, and Warren begs
for 1 job. Stereo. Q

::
,,

I
lmptOvomonta. Including: ,.
Plumbing, Ellclrlcal. lnouranco ••
~,... Aecoplod. 114-251-1111.
•
~CUII~II~ijllot~.•;,.;=k~m;II"';;V.,;m;oo~Ni;:o: :
y..,., Extlirlonco On Oldor • ': .
Nowor llolnoo. Room Addhlono ,
FOWidollon Wott, Roofing' ,
Wlndowa I Slcll~ FIM ~
llmll•l Roltr-. No Job To
Big Or Smalll 514-441o0225.
D l E COIIotiUCIIon Oonorll

e

1O:OD ez~e 0 Quantum LHp
Sam tries to help a

•
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800- ·.•
,,.

;;:Ron::,;:.,~TV;;-;;aorv=lco.:-:-a-poc-.,..,lal::-~:- ':
In Z:.nHh allo oorvlclnG
·
Nowi8M-4-32.
Olhor lnndl. 11ouoo coJio, 111o
1gys Dodgo olont I -or • """'- opplla- ropalro. WV
lronomloolon In ~ood lh~, ••· 304-t7W3. Oltloi14-441-24M.
troo, $200.00, *387or Roof lnd Olhor homo .
421
I ::J&amp;=M:-::
,.._.,.-..,-..,---- rapolre, 30W7541110.
1117V Chovrolll llallbu Wogon.
Tank Pu5$.!!!LQalllo
HHcn, roo~rack, Nnl gOod, Sopllc
RON EVANB E 11PRISES
looks good1 auto, AC. John Co.
Jockoon, ON 1
:17..1121. '
Krawoczyn, 014·D02·271l
--Voc
Borvlca, ·
1117V Chryoltr Conlobo 360, Dlvlo
auto, new everything, 11400. a-goo c- Rd. Parle, oup- ·
piiM, pickup, lnd clallvory. I*
dayo &amp;14-192·21115. onor 5:30pm 441-0204.
.
call304-175-4855.
'
1117V Old1 Cut~11 too•Wilt build patio COVIIrl, dlckl,
,.. good
ICraenad roome, put up vl':t
runs ru.l ~. ' $1,710.
1127
ldl
Evorgroon Dr, P.P. ator 1:00PM. llatng or lrolllr lklrtlng. 1
241-087.
1"80 p·1 1 ~-00 lltnt Condition - - - - - - - - . - - ""
•
n
83,000
Mlloo,
Good Mllllge Por· 82
Plumbing &amp;
GallorL .$1.300 Aftor 5p.m. '*
Heating
441.0208.
Cartor'l Plumbing
1880 Pontiac Sunblrd, 350, now
and HootinG
point, $000. 114-1112-4102
FowlhondPfno
10G2 Otdl Cutlooo $1,750. llako
GaiUpollo, Ohio
olltr. 30W75-5301.
114-440-3111
1883 Nloaon Slanu Now 84
Electrical &amp;
Brakoo, Now Exhlull, At• nH,
CNioo, PW, Hlah Mlloago. 11,000
Refrigeration
080, 114-388-1575.

1Q84 Celebrity, 4dr, AT, AC, PS,

PB, Extra ·Cioionl 83,050. can A~
tor 5p.m.'l14-441-1244.
1084 Monte carlo as, g...ga
kopl,-..,500. :IOW75-11114.

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
\

-=

11181 e-n
IVIfYIItlna
bUI oloctrlo ,,.... ..
arOI!IId. l-1-1831lolllr 1 p.m.

Sopf. 21, 11181

Rill-Ill

1781.

•

,.,_.....,..u..:,p,..ho~lst-.-a-:ry-=--.,....

liowooy'e Upholotaolng llrVfo. "
lng trl "'"""' 2t ~... Tho .
1ft - - ...-Mng. "
Col 304-171-41M lor lroo ,,_...
L
•"

. .. . . . . .

-~ - .'

·~1084
·~QJ 9

'

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer: East

By Phillip Alder

South

West

N..-tb

Eall

The two super-spy organizations,
Control and Kaos, have turned in their
cloaks and daggers lor decks or cards.
In the second rubber, Kaos is vulnerable, since the Groovy Guru, the man
wilh tie-dyed !lowers in his hair, made
a slam.
On the third hand or the rubber, the
Groovy Guru. West. led the heart nine.
"Good luck, 99," said Maxwell
Smart, Agent 86. as he tabled his
dummy .
"Thank you. Max," said 99, relieved
to see the heart honors on the table.
Declarer could see at least one
heart trick . one club trick and lour diamond tricks. II East had the club
king, the contract was sale unless the
delenders could cash . lour spade
!ricks. But 99 was always cautious,
even when hunting lor bloodthirsty
Kaos killers. She hoped lo make the
game despite a losing ~lub linesse.
First it was vital to neutralize the
threat or the opponenls' heart suit.
"Heart king. please, Max."

I NT

Pass

3 NT

All pass

••

Opemng lead: • 9

Sieglried won with the ace. selling
up South's queen, but he couldn't re·
turn a heart without giving declarer a
second heart winner. Instead he tried
the spade queen. Agent 99 put up the
king, played a diamond to the dummy ·
and ran the club 10.
·
Alter winning with the king, the
Groovy Guru returned a heart because
he knew the spade suit was blocked. ·
Agent 99 won with the queen an~
claimed her nine tricks: one spade, one
heart. lour diamonds and three clubs . .
"Well played, 99 ."
"Thank you, Max. I was lucky the.
spades were blocked ."
"Ja , 99. you vere lucky." said Sieg- .
rried. "But such a pretty voman is allowed to be lucky vonce."
@ 1111, NEWSPAPER INTERI'IIIIE AIIN.

~

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Anawar lo Prewlou• Puzzle

36
38
39
40
41
44

Full
Cantered
Everylhlng
- Franclaco
Use a loom
Stimulua tor
antibody
formation
4 8 - - want
tor Chrlolmll

1 Rope
connection
5 Deatroy (al.l
8 Be aware
12 Indian maid
13 Low tide
14 Flral-rale
(2 wdo.)
15 Dole
16 Thing In law
11 Gather
18 Alcohol
20 Oldnf exlat
21 -the 11•
aon to be ...
22 Collection
23 Revolving
part
26 Wing flap
30 Actrna
Deborah31 Annul
32 S•uiiMorla
33 Soak (llaal
34 Small vehicle
35 AclorNovello

49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56

Go to court
Aulllor Grey
KluMeMra. ln
Modrld
Feminine
aulflx
Adom'a
grondaon
Urchin
Future plant
DOWN

1 Glacl•l ridge
2 Ruulan veto
word
3 Solemn
pledge

4 Uovlo5 000
6 Biblical
brother
7 Non·prolll TV
8 A m•rtlal art
9 Ntg8tiVII
10 - - oven
kool

Robertlon

°• ""

4008.

t9 72

=· ..

JET

1176 Dodge Charger, 52,000 AI&gt;
tual Mila, 1 Owner, Runt Uka

1883 Oldl Dllll 88, 3114-875-

• 53

(Season Premier•) Hannah
.and Marty re-evaluate their
relationship. SleriO. Q
!Ill
Houn
Examination and
Investigation of lorenslc
evlelenee solvea cnmea.
Stereo. Q
illle Huitter Q
S Warld Newl
0 7DO Club Wltlt hi

Aeration Motora, rep~~lrad. N. .
&amp; r.-!Mdh moloro In otock, RON

·or · ocwnmorclal
wiring, now or -""- ··
Mellor Uoonood olocttlc!an. ·
Rldonour Elocttlcol, ~75- .

+K64

sell-destructive baseball

e.

537~8528.

. ,\ 1842

~¥:';.~tereo Q
Ill ()) e Anylh(n(l But Low

Contractor, Roollng, Concrele,
Oonoral Ropal.. Gonorll Con-

otiUCIIon, e14-iil !1051, tlmlloof

M.D. (Senson Premlerl)
Ooogle 11!d VInnie HI out to
lose their virginity. Stereo. 1;1
!Ill De Jlllt MCI lilt
F•-n (Season Premlerl)
McCabe helps his friend, a
~rlvate cletecllve. (PI 2)
Stereo. C
liJ MOVII!:: Wltlll LJI (2:00)

a Nelhvllll Now

••
'•

·~QJ

.9 7
• 6 53

SOUTH
+K 7
.Q 53

Agent 99 cuts
communication

e

••·,

EAST

WEST
+96 542

MtirMd. ••Witll ChlkiNn

e

w: . :;

n; CommericaJ, A•lden!

.K

PHILLIP
ALDER

7::15 (J) 8llnlord •nd Son
8:00 (2)
11J1 UIIIOIVICI
Mylterlet Two historians
m8kt d8JITII •bout Jolin
Wllkn Booth. Stereo. Q
® MOVI!: Amuon won~ Moon (RI (2:00)
Cll (J). DlnOIIIn the
Slnd81r family competn
together on a television
gama ehow. Stereo. Q
CD (!) Uve From LinColn
c.nter Ster10.
all @ Royll Family
Curtla IMma • Ienon when
AI sneaks him out to the
bowflng 8fley. Stereo. C
lllle MOVI!: M'A'I'H (RI
(2:00)

,.

1-U ·II

t K QJ

(L)

Serv1ces

A

NORTH
• 10 8 3
106

BRIDGE

+ to 8 12

se-n..

..

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATEAPAOOAHO
Uncondhlonal llflllmo guaranIN. Local retor.ncoo fu(illlhod.
Ftw ootlmlloo. ca• oo11oc1 1·
814-D7o0488, dar or nl~t.
RogO&lt;S Bul.,.nt Watarpr-

ToniQitt

'NIH of Farlunll Q
• fllltlly fiUd
Ill 1111 • Star Stereo.
ID M8lor IMgue . ....,.,.

::

Home

'

~terto. Q

" '·•

81

I I I II I I I I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTER S

E,.,...,_.

for Sale
1183 So•Rir SAY 210, 21 ft. ••'•,
·- cond . """
A.u ...
~
c~ cobln, v.a. ...
aftor , 114-4*-1783.
,
And Waw Runnor WintoriZIIIon. Foc1cwy Tralnod. I*
251-4150.

ling.

Jocally

loch cl'llln aawa marked down

1
·

• I' I' I' I

12

I

• ·• ~
Carbon - Apple - Hence - Weevil - ONE PIECE
Customer to butcher:"Do you have a 15 lb. roast?"
Butcher: "No, but I'll order one." Customer:"That's not
necessary. I just lost 15 lbs. and I wanted to see how
much that looked like in ONE PIECE ."

=~

.•&lt;

.. '

PRINT NUMBERED LETTER S I'
IN THESE SQUARES
I

D Tile W811on1
7:01 (I) leverly H•lll••
7:30(2). aJ Jtaplnlyl Q
Cl) ,..0 .. Anrtouncld
Cl)
Tonight

1

=Lib-

C)

..

~ ~-:!~

Ste~

Nnger, every option, 10.000 , o~

76

/li 1 llfNII or o111n111e

==lnrnlnt

I
I

~=F=O=R=A~N~5~W~E~R~:7~·~~·~·~
SCIIAM.lriS ANSWIIS

e

New-"-Q.

·i

.

e

()). Certdlil c llll CurNnt Allelr C
illle S1ar TNII: 1'1ie Next

'·
·.

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

61~1'12·2005

Huoky Homo Lho and llcCul·

.

bod · :;

pllced, good, tiody aoocr, ..., ...._
or 742· oblo, $14011. 8l~2U-42ll2
301 • •
lg'IO Chovollo, high ponor·
For Salt: Good Uaecl Ca1t Iron mane• 350, new cu.tom Interior,
Cool Fumoco, Choopl call 81~ cowl
hood, bluo wlwhMo llrlpoo,

$2050.00,

I
~~OUE ~~f ~Wilt~

·'

73 vans &amp;4 WD's

Tterto. ..,

0 New Zorro Stereo. Q
8::15 (I)''Andy Ortlfltll
7:0DIJI
0 'NIH of Fortune

YOU Mt~ YOU CAA) fAG.

I

ENTELT

Complete lhe chuckle quoted
-.L.
-.L.
-.L.
_.L.
-.L
.
.....J
by filling In the missing word•
L
you develop from step No. 3 below .

1D Up CioN

2w-

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables
canning Poochlo now ovolloblt,

CHivy ~R hordolop, 283
For Sa .. : 20 Candy vendy m• 1063
powor-glldl. Rod/Whlll, Nnl

chlnM,

'·
'·

~

1----r1....:..:,.,16.:-TIr7:.,1...:....,1---1 O

3-2·1 CoiiiiCt Q
ill @. CS8 New. Q
tD • Andy Ortlfltll

''.

~
0

kftd

(!)

Auto Pans&amp;
A!:cessorles
,•
4-14- olumlnum- $100 OBO. • '
ca11 ~1112-2:120.
also Bartlett Pura and Prune ludaol Tr.nomllolono, Lload a ;:
Plume ~tor In A;:ll::: cau 1· .. buln, atartlng It Stli Auto ••
800-447-3750 lor
BOB'S Porto. •*z.s.een 114-3711- " ·
MARKET, llaoon or Galllpollo, 2213,
I
: :~:
OH.
" J,
Now gu tanka, body po~o. ...
ton lrudt whMia, radloi&lt;WI, · 1 .
flocw mala, otc. D l A AUio, '.
Farm Supplies
Rllllow. WV. 31J4.372·31133 or 1· ;·
&amp; Liveslock
~-.
· ,.
•'
For ooto or lrldo 77·7G Gr.nd
Prll parll, doorl, londor, Inter- ·.
lor, COMOII, lhlftw, 111t1. 114- · ,
61 Fann Equipment
D02·711G
'•
165 MF Troc1or, Sharpl 14~350; Tool box crou bod lor wlda
T030 Fo!oon With Now •ulh pickup. . T - li!tlrlgul lor :•
Hog, 83 ; D-17 AC With Cu~ ohort wfdo bod pickup. ~75- ''
llvalor, low, Bulh Hog, 83,050. 1731.
.
Owner Will Flnanco. 1*285,.•'
6522.
79 campers&amp;
160 MF Troclor, Sharp! With I
MotorHomBs
Foot Bush Hoo, 14,850; 50 MF
,,
With Now 5 Foot Bulh Hoo, 1812 No ..., 2211. ilotr.con.
13,195. Ownor Will Rnoncol 61~ talnod, Excollonl CondHionl ·;,
286.0522
St- I, 14,000 Or Soot Ollor. 1'
Farm machJnary tor ale. Call
.·,,
anytlmo 61~245-&amp;440.
IHI Slltetal Pop,Up campoo: .•:
Jim'• Farm Equlprftent, SR. 35,
$2,300• •
W11t Galllpoll1, 114-446-877'7i

58

Feodor call Solt Dotoo are:
Sopl. 7; 2\ Oct. 5,11, Nov. 2,18,23.
G1lllpollo Slockyonl Co. I*

CRAFT SUPPLIES
Hond Modo c ..fto
Strow wraatlto, d~od floworo,
buko~ ond moro. Tri County
Spo~o Shop, Point Ploaoonl
304-475-21168.
'
For Solo: 1m Indian 12160
Vory Good Condhlonl Carpotod
Throughout, Dlohwuhor And
Appl~ncao, Blocks And Undor·
pinning, Roady To Movo lntol
Alklng, 14,100. 114-251-e237.

"

175-08M•

I

ncr-... "
~ &amp;•Amll(ca

(!)

mllll, nlco cond, uklng $5,150.
304.e75-1304.
.
HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE: 1g81 Pl•moulh Mln~VIIL Ful"' , ,' 1
Rocognlzod
Nfl of
andYei.Onafy
alr.ctlvo equlppeCI,
• excellent conciUori,
'' . ' 1•
bf u:.s. BurHu
madlclno ogolnot - · round1 garage llepl, 17000. 114-1182· '11
ond ta-onno In doge ona 5082:
:
call. Avollablo C&gt;T.C ot R 6 0 .,.
''
Food. &amp;M-1192-2114
,..
Motorcycles
· ::
Rog Iotorod Blac k ~nd
•
,=50;:-;"'G-oo""d'"'Cond,...-.,-'
· ', ',
Whho, "Hoo--"'ldo,....,-250=R"'..
~
Llvor --~ Whllo, Dolmatlon 11on11•• • • • -·~
- • • • •·
"
Pu:r.o FCf Salo. ANdy October
• ,,
3' ·• 814 -'441-175175 Boats &amp; Motors
,.,,

Conn Trumpat, aKcallent cond.

1100.00 114412·3507

Xoroa 2100 COplar Mochanlcally
Good Condhlonl DNm Nooda
County Appl- Inc. Good Some
Work1 $75 Or.Maka Ollor.
uood oppl~nooo, T.~. 1111. ODon ~~~41-7Zio.

:r.:::·Aivorsur.

I,

63

44

Apartment
tor Rent
1 • 2 bdrm 1114 In Mlddltport,
Lhllh• Fum, dop roq, no polo,
114-012-2211.
2 bdrm lurnllhod apt, no polo,
roloronco l dapook roqulrod,
114-1182-21137
2·BR oporlmonl now oval~blo
lor qlllllflod oppllcanl. Eoch
~ ....... Ill moclom

m•••·

AKC roglolorod Cockor Spaniol
ohols ond wormed,
412
4
-475-5 oftor :00PM.
AKC
Roglllorod
Mlnotwo
SChnauzer, san, • Poppor
Color. 1 Yoar Old. Sholl,
P:J:.'"· HouH Brollen. 114-4481 614-446-0128.
Dragonwynd
Porolon,
Slom010
a d HIcanory
I
k"l
n
ma
ayan
• ono.
614
384
7
I4B
• oftor p.m.
Floh Tonk, 2413 Jocbon Ava.
Point PINNnt, ~75-208~.
lull llno Tropical lllhl bltdo,
small onlmola end oupploo.
Goldon Rotnovor pupo. 5-mallo,
:J..femaln. Ready Sept. 30th,
$100 11. 61~D02-t883

oon, OH 1-100-4374521.

«1-3678.

'

Pets tor Sale

Concrlto • plullo oopllc tanlto, Sot. till N-.

8 a.m. to I p.m. llon.o$al. t14'
~-oH I2Y 3rd. Avo. Qal.. 55

School, 304d13-4588.

1170

::t"' - -

Atlorl-..

56

I" Is I I I 0

a

,,·'
·'

~~,.

uG0 R

From' The Have You Ever
Noticed Department: Summer
~ is that time of year when
. . . . .
thousands ol people rush out
, . - - - - - - - - - . . to the great outdoors and

o

=-=7-=28"'1"'.,.-:----,c-:--,:-:
dri!!t elarMIIIrd, · IIC. cond.,
- il,$5000. I*
47;ouu mlloa,a
uklng
012-4232 oftor I:JOtim.
"
1111 Joop Comancha Col... do
Rod, AU/FM Dloc Sllroo, 51,000 • ·•
1111•. S14-440-g'l51.
: . ::
1087 Nl111n 414, black, loW :::
mllll, llu paymontol I* •
012-6387
·.:
,
1881 Chov. h4, S!tl, 350t ..,.,
"
Jl::t, ":~"~~~~~':.11h.'~

l-=========r=========l'D87 Fcwd

·-1'144·

~ wall I~ wall

$12,100, ...

11'11''"~ I

Form For Ront Or Ll- M
AciM, NMr North 0.11~ High

You'll be floating on a doud with ~~~:. ~~. ~
"='"·';:~II
1 the buys you'll find In the
~-bodw.=:w v':,y :..!.~.:r.:, ,..:;:::.vo
on 1111.
· Colt·
dass/1.·~
~s.

~AJIJ.Y

"IDt....,.

E"'cIoncy, •.otovo, ..r, both
w/ohowtr,.llc on otoc~ Nl car· 51
Household
potod, HuD occptod, 30W75Goods
&amp;200.
F
N
btl
1MldJ.': opt, fum
1
or "1:,.
·- R
- ENT OWN
2
::Z~'kl'!. ~-530t. port, 8*
SM-446-3158
Vl'ro FumHu..
Fumllhod s Roome l Both, Sofa l Chair, $11.10 WMk:
CINn, No Polo, Roltronco &amp; Rocllnor, $5.47 WNk, Swlvol
Dopooh Roqulrad. 114-445-1511. Aockor, $3.13 Wook.Bunk Bod
Fumllhod Aporlmont, 1 Bod- Camplllo ...41 WNk, 4 Drawer
roombiWIIor Poldi14 ·~Vol
Milt. ,_,
Chait, WI Wool!; Pooler BodSuHa, 7 pc., Sll.87 WNk,
3- =
Ea.. Ponor·
-·
lncludal Boddlng.Country Plno
Fu111&lt; Dlnollo Whh Bonch •• Chain,
$221 LHUHIII l&gt;old. 120 Fourth $10.111 WMk.OPEH: Monday
Ave, &amp; 507 8ooohd Ave, Qal.. TltiU Soluldly, km. lo lp.m.,
Upotlo. 1114-446-4418 olt!or 7p.m.
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. •
llllu on R - 7 On Route 141,
Fum- apt. 107 2nd Gal- In Contarwy.
llpollo. 1 BR, $2211~ UIIIIIM polcl.
114 Ul 1'111 aft•,I p.m.
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE. &amp;2
Fumllhod EllllllnCY. 1112 Noll Olivo St., O.lllpolll. Now a Uolld
A~1 ~~~~ $1SO, Ullihlll tumhlft, hut ..., Wlllom a
Pota,
I .
I Allor 7p.m.
W&lt;Hk boolo. 114-446-3158.
Fum- EHicloncy, $115/mo.
VI'RA FURNITURE
LHIIftlll Pold, lhonl Bot~ .~l
114-441-3158
Socond Avo, OoUipol~, I
UVINQ ROOII: Soli a Chair,
4411 After 7p.m.
$1DO.ooi. Rlclln"6o $14l.oo;
Oraclouo Uvlng. I and 2 •-• Swlvol Koeller, $DO. ; CoHN &amp;
End T 1. . . oo Sot DINING
_., oportmonll II Vll~go
'
' •·
·
llancw
ond
Rlvorotao ROOM: Tabll Whh 4 Padded
Aparlmontoln.JIIddllpoot. Ftom Chalra, SMO.OO; CouNry Plno
11111 cau 1 - r n t EOH
Dlnono With Bonch w 3
·
• · ' ·
Chalra, 1201.00; MelChing 2
Modom 1 B o - Apollmant. Door Hhch 1341· 0r UB9.oo
&amp;14 m osoo.
Sot:
WHh 8
- 01111 'i'abtolt
a.. 42112 c·1
'' Fu-~·~
, _ _ mobllt $121 00 BEDROOM·
Pollor•...
a-• ,
Campltl ..
homo, 1 milo bolow town ovor· ·
·
looking rlvor. No Poll, Cl. I* """" Suho (S pcJ, I34I.OO; 4
441.03311
c..- Chait, $44.!15; Bunk
.
Bod, 832Di.Campltll Full Man
North 3rd St, Middloport, Ohio, 1 Sol f105.w Sot; 7 pc. cador
-• pi It
Bod~ luho, .. DO.OO.OPEN:
bodroom lumllh~ a • re ron- Monda'Thnt 8olurdoy, ILiil. to
011 and dopooft roq~rod.
lp.m. 8undoy 12 Noon Till
882-2511.
5p.m. ·4 Millo Off Rou!O 7 On
North 4th1 lllddltpoot, Ohio. 2 Routo 141 In Conlonary.
bedroom Nmllhod apt, dopooh
end roloronco roqulrod, 304-11112·
2561.
Antiques
53
Ookwood AportmoNo: lbr Unlumllhod, Convonlonl Location, Buy 0&lt; ooll. Rlvorlnl Antlquoo,
No Poll, SocwHy llopoalt, 112• E. Main Stroot, Pomoroy.
Reference~,
$110/mo
Plu Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 8:00
LHIIHIII. 114-441-2088 Ahor r:t:~l1 :00 to 8:00 p.m.
lp.m.
0no B... oorn AportmoN, Uvlng 54 Miscellaneous
Room Fum-. Complolo
Khchon
And Dryer
Merehandlse
LHI~ho':"lt''~'okl.
Raloronco And Extro Good Lift Cholrl 1350. 614Do
Roqulrod. 114-446-1370
245-al52.
Ahorlp.m.
Smell 1br Apartment 7 Court 1883 camaro, v.a, euto. e..
Strlll, KHchln With Stove, louvered houH windows, floor
Aolrigorat~L $181/mo.
Plua lui'!IICII, tiro~ Inuit. 614·
DlpooH, U1IIHIII, Roteronco. 1112·7184
6M-441-4G26.
Alhlty Wood/Coal Hoolor, Good
Vory nlca lumllhod apl, 1 bocf. Condition, Aloo Baby Bod WHh
Matlr-.
Prllcod
room, u.,.talra, private, no peta, Now
.......... ond dopoolt, J04.I7II. AMIOfllblo. Call114-862·727l
2151.
Babr Homo· Janny Lynn Crlb, 2
Yory Nloo G...ge Aportmanl, Cor Sollo, iltronor, l'Win Stroller.
fnt&gt;rudN Qarogo, . 8340/mo. IM-«1-G723.
01110111 Aoqulrocl. IM-441-2174,
Coder clolot, oman claw loot
Bolw-lp.IO. And 10p.m.
toblt, round gl- chino
Wotlao Apia, 501 Burdotlo 81,
Avon ..cl glaawaro.
Polnr PilliON, no polo, 1 and 2 cab!~
304
1801.
bod100n11, 304-471-2072 oftor
Clullor Ring, 1 carat, D~mond,
1:00.

:::: ~..:-or...:::.~: =

A bu
A
ay "'m oocL Paved road,
coun.,
ntor,
-nabll
rollrlcllona. Complolo lnlorma·

..~t''!io~':"'~~

~· l.S

1080 Chovy C-20 long bod otop
olde, 1500. 304-475-5301.
1117V Mozda INCk 1700. 1850
Subura 414 1750. 304-475-71130.
IOIIB Chov. 112 Ton U,OOO Mlloo.
PS, PI, Auto, Trone.; Hoovy
Duty Rur Slip lumpor, Boil
Unor. Excolltnt Condhlonl I*

1-tiJ

w:....rj...:,.E

0

S Warld Todlty
Rln nn nn, K·l Cop
Stereo. Q
1:05 (I) Too CioN lor comtort
1:30 ez~e 0 NBC Newl

.. ''

3 pupplea and mommlli dog,
304-ti75-4300 after 4:30.

Homo lnllflor, Boyo, Olr..,
01hor Clothing, FlaurlnN, Olhlr
Nloo hlmol U. Thurodoy And
Frldoy So~mbor 21 • 271h,
Tuo'idoy And Wodnooday Qo.
tobor lot • 2nd.
All Yord SoltoMuot Bo Paklln
Adnnco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
thl day bo""- tho lid lito Nn.
Sunday odhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Frlday. Monday odHion • 2:00
p.nl. Saturday.
Filii nmo: Clolhoo, Small Applloncoo Golf Clubo, Mloc. 20
Willow il~vo. Thuroday, Friday,
Solurdoy, 8-4.

1--

1D lulde lilt PGA Tour

2 Klttenl To Good Home. Utter

Trained. 614-440-38g'l.

control Alrpllnol, BollY homo,
112 Milt llount 0111111 lfOid On
Loft.JOrovol Rood By Rollrood
In Boawolll. 388-D354.

I ~r/. :.,. :.1

Reading R•lrtbow Stereo.

~. Night Court Q
oC.-blnn

Gray, 2 Beige. They A... Eallngl

I

I LISASA

(!) Club Connect

to good homo. 014-441-11170.
4 Malo Killona. 5 WNU Otd, 2

onoman Chell Frtear, Remott

bo·
low to form four simple words

1:00 ez~• Cl) Cl) • 1111 @ •
IIJI Newa
Cl) VIdeo Poftr

Giveaway

..·

O four
Rocrrango lollera of
ocramblod words

EVENING

OH 4571)1.

6

'IIIATIAILY 0..~
PUULII 0\!ill

WED., SEPT. 25 •

We Mak• Great Mitch•.
Singles, P. 0 . Box 5840, ..mono,, · 1

614-446-7140.

I

ol

· O.lilo

25, 1991

4

'

'

Important. long-range plans you've
conceived snould· be ready lor lmple·
mentation In the yeat ahead. II you lol·
tow your blueprints to the letter, expect
productive results.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Changes
you've been making appear to enhance
your probabilities lor success. II looks
like things wWI work out to your expects·
lions. Trying to patch up a broken ro·
mance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker

'.

can help you understand what to do to
make ll'le retaUonshlp work. Mall $2

· plus a long, sell-addressed. stamped
envelope to Matchmaker. c/o this ·
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland.
OH 44101·3428.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) This is a Ia·
vorable period lor you to bring con·
tracts or legal agreements to a head . .

t oday lor so me une~~:pected shifts that
could produce opportunities for you in
your chosen field . A power source in a

key position might be the initiator. ·
TAURUS (April :ZO.M•y 20) You have a
umversal appeal today thai others will
find extremely allracllve. Your opposite
gender may view you romantically,
while your own gender will appreciate

The odds are in your favor for making

you as a lnend.

good deals with mutual benefits.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Don 't .
be too timid about laking a calculated
risk at \his time that you teet could help

GEMINI (Moy 21·June 20) You could be
rather lucky today in that people you'll
be involved wllh may do nice things tor
you purely on impulse. Be appreciative

you fulfill an ambitious objective. Just
be sure you think all your moves

of their efforts. and try to repay favors
later .

CANCER (June 21·July 22) You're in a
through carefully.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J•n. 11) You are lavorable cycle lor improving one·lo·
held in especially high esteem today by one relationships. There are two friends
lriends you're very cozy with socially. II you can begin to practice on today .
isn't likely they'll deny you any request Each association Is worth the effort.
you make of them .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) If you applyyour·
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 18) Things sell, ways can be found at lhls time to
tend to work out In your favor today, generate addlllonal earnings or. at !Jte
particularly II they are ol a financial or least. make certain changes thai could
. material nature. Envision positive end . produce more Income from your preresults and work toward lhem.
sent source.
PISCES (F•b. :ZO.March 20) Don't wall VIRGO (Aug. 23-'Sapl. 22) A social con·
lor someone you recently mel - and tact you recently ealabUshed could be
whom you'd like to know beller - to of considerable Importance to you
make lhe llrsl move. You do it. But day, especially If this Individual Is a
know thatlhls person is as eager to es- friend of someone In the commercial
tablish a relationship as you are.
·world whom you've been trying to meet.
· ARIES (M•rch 21·April11) Be watchful
•' I

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25

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Wednesday, september 25, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

Rebellious inmates ignore trapped guards, go after informants
DEER LODGE, Mont. (AP) Inmates charging through a prison
ignored trapped guards huddled in
a shower room, intent instead on
finding and killing jail-houre informants held in protective custody.
By the time authorities had
retaken the cellblock following
Sunday's four-hour rampage, ~ve
informants lay dead on the building's blood-stained floor. Eight
other prisoners, some of them
informants, were injured. The
guards were not harmed.
Prison officials have declined to
give a detailed description of what
went on during the rebellion. But
Sen. Tom Beck, R-Deer Lodge,
and other sources helped piece
together a chronicle of the chaotic
events that began on a warm latesummer day and left the institution's maximum-security cellblock
in a shambles.
Beck was given a tour of the
gray concrete building Monday by
Warden Jack McCormick, who told
him what authorities believe happened. This is how that account
goes:
As guards were returning two
inmates to their cells from a recreation yard late Sunday morning,
nine others charged a chain-link
fence separating the yard from the
building and either smashed or cut
their way through.
Once past the fence, they
entered the cellblock. Inside are
two control booths from which
guards, stationed behind bulletproof glass, can electronically open
and close the various cell doors.
The guards, who saw the
inmates coming, fled onto the roof
through esca~e hatches in the
booths. The pnsoners then gained
access to the booths, entering one
by setting a ftre that melted its bulletproof glass.
As the prisoners roamed through
the cellblock's corridors, five
unarmed guards hid in a shower
room, padlocking its cage-like door

and throwing a mattress up in front
of it
"We put a mattress there, but
the inmates did not try to attack
us," said one of the guards, Sgt.
Donald "Pete" McPhail.
Instead, prisoners headed for
protective-custody cells where
informants were housed. The
guards could hear screams from the
east end of the cellblock, as infor-

BIG BEND

•••

mants were taken from their cells
and executed.
Among the victims was Edmund
Davison, who authorities said was
to be a key witness in the murder
trial of two men accused of beating
to death a feDow inmate in a prison
exercise yard a year ago.
During the ordeal, the inmates
used a prison phone to pass two
demands to authorities: They want·

· ed to ta11c with reporters and they
wanted officers moved away from
the front of the cellblock.
The second demand was
ignored. Authorities say they were
·mulling the first when officers
watching the front of the building
saw and heard at least one inmate
· beaten at the doors o f th e
b emg
cellblock.
Authorities decided then to

stonn the building.
As a diversion, a Corrections
Department employee posing as a
news photographer was sent on a
3()()-yard walk across an open yard
toward the doors of the cellblock.
·At the same time , a 23-man
team, led by McConnick, readied
t'tself behind the buildin1g.
A fire truck moved through a
gate, ostensibly in response to the

tire the inmaleS had star1ed.
But the vehicle was really a
shield for the assault squad, which
once inside the fence quickly
stonned the cellblock.
Officers ftred tear gas, as weU as
a warning shot, and dropped into
the building through the same trapdoors the two guards had earlier
used to escape. But the rebels
inside offered no resistance.

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Page4

Clear tonight. Low In mldJOs. Friday, sunny. High In mid60s.

SUPERMARKETS
2 Secllona, 12 Pagea 25 cent•
A Mutllmedto Inc. N-opeper

26,1991

Open enrollment plans
between Meigs, South·ern
districts are completed

\

WASHlNGTON (AP) - Mil·
lions of Americans whose unemployment benefits have been
exhausted are a step closer to
receiving up to 20 more weeks of
payments, but a threatened veto by
President Bush stands in the way.
The unemployment benefits
showdown loomed after the Senate
on Tuesday approved, 69-30, a
$6.1 billion bill creating the extra
compensation. It would provide
extra payments to the 300,000 people who exhaust the standard 26
weeks of jobless benefits every
month.
The vote followed by a week
overwhelming House approval of a
similar measure. To begin clearing
away differences between the two
bills, the House wiD debate the legislation again, possibly today.
Top Democrats said a HouseSenate compromise could be
shipped to Bush by next week. And
as "they did when the president
killed a similar biD in August, they
contrasted his opposition to this
measwe to his advocacy of aid to
Bangladesh, Turkey and other
countries.
" The list reads like a travelers'
guide to the Third World," said
Sen. James Sasser, D-Tenn. "This
administration can liquidate the
debts for Malawi but can't help the
unemployed in Maine."
Bush has justified his veto threat
by insisting the recession is nearly
over, that it has not been as bad as
other recent downturns, and that
the bill would add red ink to the
budget deficit. The Democratic legislation would be financed with
additional federal borrowing which Republicans said would hun
all Americans because the economy would be weakened.
"Let's bring on the leeches;
let's pile on the blankets; let's
spread the misery," was how Sen.
Phil Gramm, R-Texas, characterized the Democratic measure.
Top Senate Democrats refused
to predict they would garner the
two-thirds majority needed to enact
. a law over the president's objection, even though they exceeded
that total Tuesday by two votes.
They cited changes that could be
made by the time a House-Senate
compromise goes to the White
House.
1
"If the president vetoes it, we'll ' 1
make our best effort at that time," ·
said Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell, D-Maine.
Republicans insisted they would
have enough votes to sustam a
Bush veto. The president has
vetoed 22 bills in his presidency,
and all 11 of Congress' override
attempts have failed.
Fifty-six Democrats were joined
by 13 Republicans in voting for the
measwe Tuesday. w.hile 30 Republicans voted agamst IL ·
The I&gt;ellloCdtic plan was adopted after the Senate defeated a pair
of GOP alternatives designed to .
show that Republican lawmakers
wanted to help the jobless. Both
votes wtte mosdy party-~.
By 57-42, senators rejected a
RepubUean plan that would have !

DETAINED U.N. weapoll$ inspectioo team
chief David Kay, shown at far left protesting
~ lack or access to a suspected Iraqi nuclear site,
,. said Wedoesday that weapons experts were
• besieged by Iraqi troops in the parking lot of a

.....

;: UNITED NATIONS (AP) Facing increasing pressure from the
· --United States and its Persian Gulf
:'.war aUies, Baghdad has offered to
::;free U.N. arms inspectors if they
;:catalogue documents they took
...from .lite flies of Iraq's nuclear pro·.:;gram. . .
.
'
:. As of this afternoon Baghdad
-time, however, there was no offi::Cial announcement of an end to the
:-3-day-old siege of the 44-member
:U.N. team by scores of President
-Saddarn Hussein's soldiers. "Noth--ing has changed," the team leader,
':bavid Kay, told The Associated
~

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Baghdad records bulliliog for the second day.
The 44-member team eoatinued to refuse Iraqi
demands that they surrender copies or documents detaiUng Iraq's secret weapoos program.
(AP)

.r,&amp;.IMNOIJ

HARDWORKING
LOW PRICES
•·· ooul, \'\U

s•••·: n u. ( 'Ot t•o'

:- The Iraqi offer carne in a letter
Wednesday from Iraqi Ambassador
::Abdul Amir al-Anbari to Security
'X:ouncil President Jean-Bernard
. Merimee, the French ambassador.
·• British Ambassador Sir David
:'iiannay told reporters that based on
~.the letter "it appears as if a settle::m ent has been reached on the
"release of the U.N. inspectors.''
: A U.N. translation of Iraq's let. ter concerning the inspectors asked
:Jhe chief U.N. weapons official,
.•Rolf Ekeus, to go to Baghdad to
· work out the details '• of remedying
~the current situation.''
. If Ekeus does not go to Baghdad
-jn 48 hours, "the Iraqi authorities
jnsist that the Ira9i side and the
inspection team jomtly draw up a
;j-ecord of all the documents and

photographs taken by the team
before the team is authorized to
remove anything from the site.''
Kay said today that he could not
comment on the Iraqi letter, but
that he remained optimistic. "I
would be more than happy to go
~ack in'to'tlie building ~p~~ 'finish
ihe inventory," he said In a satellite-telephone interview early this
afternoon.
Earlier today, he said the team's
morale was good. "Everyone's up,
moving around," he said. "Sleeping on pavement isn't exactly normal for most of us," but he added:
"We have adequate food and water
being delivered" by other members
of the U.N. team who were not
detained.
The inspectors have been
camped in a bus and six cars outside the Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission building since Tuesday,
when Iraqi authorities demanded
they surrender documents detailing
the country's secret nuclear
weapons program.
Kay said the documents were
sec
in one of the cars "in the
cente four little circle."
The ·ege has been the most
serious 1 a series of conflicts
between Ira and U.N. inspectors
trying to determine the extent of
Iraq's weapons programs.
The Security Council is attempting to force Iraq to comply with the

Gulf War cease-fire resolution,
which orders Baghdad to destroy
its weapons of mass destruction
and destst from building or acquiring new ones. The council has
insisted that the inspectors be
released and warned Iraq of the
consequences, as have U,S. offi· &lt;..
cials.
The United States on Wednesday began moving Patriot anti-missile units to the Persian Gulf in
case the Security Council orders
military escorts for U.N. teams
searching Iraq.
Washin¥.~Cn says it already has
authority ' to do whatever needs to
be done" to protect the U.N.
inspectors, both those detained in
Baghdad and on future helicopter
surveillance tours.
.........
Iraq gave the Security Council
written assurance Tuesday that it
would no longer interfere with
search flights by U.N. helicopters
- another demand of the United
Nations that Iraq bowed to after
much obstruction.
Gen. Colin PoweD, chainnan of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the
documents discovered by the
inspectors contain "gold mines" of
data proving Iraq lied in its repeated denials that it has a nuclear
weapons program.
Kay said the documents gave '• a
very complete description of their
nuclear program."

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
several weeks ago which is comSeotinel News Staff
patible with the one adopted this
Final arrangements have been week by the Southern Local School
completed for open enrollment District Board of Education.
between Southern Local School
Action by the Meigs Local and
District an4 Meigs Local School Southern Local Board fulfills
District, effective the second requirements of Senate Bill 140
semester of this school year.
which was adopted in the summer
In effect this means that stu- of 1989. That law requires that disdents who reside in one district can tricts form policies concerning
attend a school in the other district parental choice about school attensubject to guidelines established by dance. All schools in Ohio must
the local school boards.
have a policy in effect in 1993.
It means that parents and stuThe Eastern Local Board of
dents will now have a choice not Education has not adopted an open
only of the school in the district enrollment policy.
which they prefer to attend, but the
To participate in the open
school in the adjacent school dis- enrollment program, parents must
trict which has the same policy.
submit written requests to Supt.
There will be no tuition charge James Carpenter in the Meig's
for those changing from one dis- Local School District, and to the
trict to the other since State Foun- building principal of schools in the
dation monies will follow the stu- Southern Local School District.
dent. That amount now is $2,636
Those requests must be received
for a fun school year.
at least 30 calendar days prior to
Meigs Local Board of Education but not more than 60 days before
adopted an open enrollment policy

Feb. 21, the beginning of the second semester.
The postmark could be a determining factor in deciding who is
accepted, according to Supt. Ord.
He explained that class size is
restricted to 25 students and if several students apply and there is
only one opening, then the student
whose application carries the earliest postmark would be accepted.
Supt. Ord pointed out that students will not be accepted in either
the Letart or Portland Elementary
Schools since both currently have
double grades in each classroom.
Restrictions also apply to students who have been suspended or
expelled for 10 or more days in the
current school term, Ord said.
As for transportation, the procedure in both districts will be that a
parent will be responsible for transporting a sWdent to the nearest bus
pickup point in the district to which
the student is transferring.

Officials seek identity of
body found in Meigs County
Gallia County law enforcement
officials were. in Meigs. County
Thursday morning to help determine the identity of a body found
in Lebanon Township Wednesday
afternoon.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, an
unidentified person found human
skeletal remams, along with clotl1·
ing scraps on Old Portland Road
around noon. Soulsby said that the
body was found in underbrush
about 500 feet from the roadway.
Police officials in Gallia County
said Thursday that there was a
"strang possibility" that the body
was Jeffrey L. Halley, 36, a Gallipolis man who has been missing,
along with his son, Jeffrey S. Halley, 12, since early February.
The body was taken from Ewing
Funeral Home to the Franklin
County Morgue Wednesday afternoon along with the elder Halley's
dental records. An autopsy was to
have been completed sometime
Thursday afternoon.
Meigs County Coroner Douglas
Hunter was unavailable for com ment this morning, but a
spokeswoman from his office said

that the Franklin County Coroner's conducted a search in the Portland
office 9ften Clllls Hunter's office area af,c,r.AJ!I\"Ooymous c•ller
with any notable information \feportCd thai the Halleys' bodies
filld.been concealed in the area. No
obtained from an autofsy.
This spring, Ioca authorities remains were found.

Two killed, three wounded
in shooting; suspect held
SOUTH WEBS1ER, Ohio (AP)
- A man upset about problems in
his marriage cut power to a house
early today, went inside with a
flashlight and started shooting,
leaving two people dead and three
wounded, authorities said. His wife

ment in Inez, Ky., Malone said.
Malone said Daniels arrived at
the house in this southern Ohio
community about I a.m. and cut
telephone lines and electricity. He
entered by the light of a flashlight
and started shooting, Malone said.
escaped.
When his wife, Judy, tried to
He was arrested in Kentucky stop him, Daniels shouted, "No
about six hours later and charged I'm going to kill you. I'll kill yo~
with two counts of aggravated mur- all," Malone said. Mrs. Daniels
der.
fled through a window.
Deputies from Scioto County,
The body of Beuy Jo Branham,
Ohio, took Paul Daniels Jr. , 34, 44, of Oakwood was found behind
into custody about 7 a.m. at his a chair, Malone said. She apparenthome in Tomahawk, Ky., said sher- ly was trying to hide, he said.
iffs dispatcher Phil Malone. MarThe body of Steven Rawlins,
tin County, Ky., deputies and Ken- 32, of South Webster was found in
tucky State Police assisted.
a ditch outside with a gunshot
Daniels was being held by the wound to the back of the head.
Martin County Sheriff's DepartContinued on page 3

:southern Local School District,
Grant aids university's efforts
OAPSE reach contract agreement to boost mathematics literacy

PACK

ICII

FOODLAND GRANULATED

SUGARC

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Seotlnel News Starr
A contract agreement has been
reached between the Southern
·Local School District and the local
chapter of the Ohio Association of
Public School Employees.
: The three year conbact, while
:P.roviding for no salary increases,
,iloes provide that the District will
pay increases in insurance premi,Pms. The contract also contains a
:provision for opening the salary
4ssue if additional state funding
l&gt;ecomes available.
'; Despite some complaints about
·the all-day kindergarten schedule
::With several parents. at~nding the

Monday night Board of Education
meeting, no changes were made.
Currently children attend kindergarten thr.e e days a week one
semester and two days a week the
next semester. The change from
half-day every day kindergarten
was made to cut the cost of trans·
portation.
The board added to the substitute teacher list, Mary D. Owens,
Michael Kennedy, Robert G. Ashley, Tonya R. Cummins, Marie
Mulford, and Thomas Gates.
Charles Ray Lawrence was
hired as a substitute bus driver,
Beverly McClain Moore and

--Local briefs---

r
; -

Losey sentenced on murder charge
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next week

i

Ohio Lottery

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Jobless benefits
showdown due

..

Reds, Braves
split pair;
LA beaten

•'

David Losey of Glouster was found guilty of murder on Wednesday by an Athens County jury, following ,a three-day jury trial in
Meigs County.
·
Losey was subsequently sentenced to 15 years to life in prison on
the charge by Athens County Common Pleas Court Judge Alan
Goldsberry.
The trial was held in the Meigs County Courthouse due to renovations at the Athens County Courthouse, although the jury perfanned its fmal deliberations m Athens County.
Losey was indicted in May for the beating death of Donald
McNaughton, also of Glouster.
·
Several eyewitnesses to the incident teStified at the trial that they
saw Losey kicking McNaughton's head and torso outside the WonContinued on pap'3

Jeanne L. Canter as substitute
cooks and substitute custodians,
and Jane Lawrence as a substitute
cook.
Employed as a full -time bus
driver was Don Smith, replacing
Delbert Smith who retired, and
Evelyn Foreman as a cook to
replace another worker.
The purchase of science text·
books for the junior high school
was approved, as was the FHA
budget of $850.
Dennie Hill, treaswer, re~rted
that the Disadvantaged Pupil Program Fund of $37,330 has been
approved, and that district is j!Oing
into the mandated Educational
Management Information System
at a cost of $4,000.
Pick up and discharge points for
students riding buses were
approved.
A motion was approved by the
board for the Southern Local District to participate with Meigs
Local School Dtstrict in the open
enrollment program starting with
the second semester.
The board agreed to name the
football field, the Roger Adams
. Football Field. A fonnal ceremony
will be held later this fall, it was
reported.
Attending were Danny ·Evans,
president, Scott Wolfe, viCe president; Sue Grueser, Gary Willford,
Joseph Thoren, Supl Bobby Ord,
and Treasurer Hill.

Solving the problem of poor
mathematics skills in the region
will be the goal of a program
developed by the College of Edu cation at the University of Rio
Grande in conjunction with three
area school districts.
The college has been awarded
$83,357 through the Dwight D.
Eisenhower Program to create a
Mathematics Inservice Team
(MIT) Approach to Development
of Mathematics Literacy. Release
of the funds was approved by the
Ohio Board of Regents at its Sept.
13 meeting in Marietta.
"Each of Ohio's Eisenhower
Program projects attacks the
national problem of low-level interest and perfonnance in science and
mathematics on the local or regional level," Re,ents Chancellor
Elaine H. Hatrston explained.
"Each creates a partnership involving Ohio's higher education community and its schools."
The Rio Grande project, to be
implemented with teachers in the
Chillicothe, Wellston and Jackson
school districts, is one of 48 separate programs at 25 different Ohio
colleges and universities, and one
of 12 specifically geared toward
mathematics.
The project proposal calls for
six teams of teachers from the three

school systems to undergo intensive mathematics content area
instruction at the university to
improve mathematics skills in areas
ranging from knowledge of ll)athematical operations and processes to
reasoning and critical thinking.
The project will allocate $5,000
to each school district to establish a
mathematics instructional resource
center for use by teachers, parents
or other adults interested in helping
students establish their mathemat·
ics literacy.
The ultimate goal, explained H.
Paul Lloyd, dean of the College of
Education and program director, is
for the teams of teachers to assist
students with low perfonnance and
confidence levels in mathematics to
achieve better grades, understand·
ing and usage of the subject. The
teachers will be enabled to help
other educators address similar
problems in their classes.
The program will also work to
help raise the expectations of par·
ents interested in improving the
mathematics liteflll:y of their children.
"It's not a matter of the university teaching teachers, but really
one of colleagues working with
colleagues," Lloyd said. "The
teachers wiD be ·able to go back to
their school district and share their

learning with other teachers."
June J. Slobodian, Ph.D., graduate education coordinator at Rio
Grande, said the program is pow.
ered by the collaborative effort
between the university, school offi- .
cials and teachers.
:
"Collaboration was the key to:·
our application for the funds, but &lt;
that came quite naturally to the·:
institution," she explained. "Our ·
interest here is child-centered, an :
outreach of the university which is :
service-oriented, in keeping with :President Dorsey's thrust to worlc
closely with the community."
··
The university plans to begin 40 ·
hours of inservice for teachers in :
October. While the instruction the ·
teachers receive wiD direcdy affect :
about 1,500 in the three dtstricts, :
the resowce centers and knowledge:·
shared with other educators can ·
eventually impact on a total student·:
population of more than 8,600 .·
officials said.
':
Once the program has been :
implemented, it will be evaluated ·
for development and officials :
expect the outcome to be a six- .·
course sequence concentration for ·
Rio Grande's graduate course ·
offerings in classroom teaching.
·
A recent survey conducted by .:
the College of &amp;lucation indicated ·:
a desire for improved mathematics ··
instruction skiDs in area schools.
·

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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35116">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35115">
              <text>September 25, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
