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                  <text>•

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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SUPERMARKETS
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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

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:- 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---

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Losey sentenced on murder charge
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Reds, Braves
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•'

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.
·

�Thuredly, September 26, 1991

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Oil I( 1 vVt ~. tll1t:1
Friday, Sept. 27

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 26, 1991

Temperat~res

Accu.Weathe..- forecast (or daytime conditions and

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
. DEVOTED TO THE IN'I"ERBSTS OP THE IIEIOS.MASON AREA

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associ&amp;&lt;~ l'ras.lnlond Doily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher AssocialiOJL

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300
words long. Allleoers are subjecl to editins_and must be signed with name.
address ond telephone number. No unsigneddeuen will be published Leu.en
should be in good Wle. oddressing isslll!l, ml penonalities.

Excerpts from.other
Ohio newspapers
By The Associated Press
Following are excerpts of editorials published recently by Ohio newspapeR!:
: PORTSMOUTH DAn.. Y TIMES, Sept 19: We have come to accept
the fact that Senate confirmation bearings for presidential ~intments
)lave become irresistible opportunities for lKJiitical ~g.
.
. Ever since the Walergate hearings P'OJCCted Sam Ervin from relauve
obscurity lO "grand ol' man" pominence, politicians have perceived that
their penetrating interrogation and profound pronouncements -: on
national television, no less - will endear themselves to the Amencan
people...
And if Sam Ervin did Nonh Carolina credit in 1973, Howard Metzenbaum is an embarrassment to Ohio in 1991.
We agree that CIA dir~ctor-nomin~e Rober~ Gates must provide
answers to the Senare intelltgence Comnuttee on his role, or lack thereof,
in the Iran-Contra affair. We can even accept Metzenbaum 's strident
skepticism over Gates • conrention that he was unaware of the diversion of
funds to the Contra rebels ...
But then Ohio's senior senator said. " You carne up through the ranks
of the CIA as an analyst whose expertise is in Sovietology. ln today's
world that may have the equivalent currency of a U.N. interpreter specializi~g in Latin - inrellectually fascinating but all but useless in a practical sense...
.
We are astounded that a United Stares senator- a seruor member of
the intelligence committee - would declare that expertise on the Soviet
Union is suddenly obsolere...

'

r·•

; THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH, Sept. 20: The lesson for this week is:
Don't get President Bush angry.
· Last week he asked the Israelis to postpOne their.request for $10 billiOJ!
in loan guarantees until January. That was so the IS;RIC of fuJ1her Israeli
settlements in the West Bank and the Gaza Stnp would not cloud
!)respects for a Middle East peace conference.
· Instead of agreeing, Israel's Prime Minister Yitzhak Sham!~', for interrial political pwposes. reacled truculently. Worse. one of. his members
c!alled Bush a liar and an anti-Semile. Although a SharDJr spokesman
apologized for the remarlcs, the damage was done.
· Now, through Secretary of Sta!C Jamt:S A. Baker m. Bush has. upped
th(: ante. The administtation would CODSJder the loan guarantees m January, but only with the proviso that none of the money be used for settlements in the disputed rerritories...
· The United States has always been a staunch friend of Israel and ~g­
its suategic imponance in the region. Ties between the two nations
should remain strong and enduring.
: But Shamir risks jeopardizing a lengthy and JeWanding relationship if
h( thinks he can dictare policy and demand assistance with no thought
given to U.S. sensitivities.
· While many of Israel's American frie~ would rem~ s~ast, he
risks alienating many Americans and worserung U.S.-Israeh relations.

nized

. THE MARIETTA TIMES, Sept. 19: The specter of U.S. planes ~ov­
ing toward Iraq is a fearsome reminder oC a war thought to be flmshed
monthsago.
.
· Although the shooting ended Feb. 28, Saddam Hussein has kept up h1s
showdown with the rest of the world.
·
As demonstrated by his invasion of Kuwait on Aug. 2, 1990, an~ by a
multitude of actions since then, Saddam refuses to honor human nghts,
national boundaries, international laws or the treaties signed on behalf of
his country...
Saddam 's brinkmanship has caused one rest of wills after anoth.er. That
led to Wednesday's announcement of increased air support in Saudi Ara·
bia...
th
. Saddam tested the world's resolve before and eventually learned e
r~ult. As ominous as this larest buildup seems, failure to respond could
open the door to an even more frighrening future.
THE SPRINGFIELD NEWS-SUN. Sept II : When Gov. Douglas
Wilder of Virginia fust attracted national attention he seemed to have a
knack for saying the right thing. But his rising political star dimmed as a
result of foot-in-the-mouth starements ~t Clarence Thomas ~d the
Catholic Church, not 10 mention the eruption of a feud between him and
his Virginia coUeague Sen. Charles Robb.
Well, the knack is back. Reporters asked Gov. Wilder .about.the issue
of Playboy magazine in which.former ~uty queen Im Coll.ms ~ade
serious charges about Robb, while also domg some senous posmg m the
mide. Wilder said he would have no comment about the article because he
dflln '1read it; he only looked at the pictures.
- That response avoids aggravation of the situation between the governor
aild the senator. It could offend those who ~y do ~Y Play~y for the
Brticles. But we have always suspected that this voung bloc IS not very
l)lrge.
.•

Today in history
By The Associated Press
. Today is Thursday, Sept 26, the 269th day of 1991. There are 96 days
left in the year.
·· Today's Highlight in History:
: On Sept. 26, 1789, Thomas Jefferson was appointed America's first
SScretary of Stare; John Jay was named the first chief justice of the United
S(aleS; Samuel Osgood began service as the first Postmaster-General; and
Edmund Jennings Randolph was named the first Attorney General. ·
..·On this date:
: In 1777, British ll'oops occupied Philadelphia during the American
Revolution.
.
·- In 1820, pioneer Daniel Boone died in Missouri at the age of 85.
: In 1888, poel T.S. Eliot was born in StLouis.
: In 1892. Jolm Philip Sousa and his band performed in public for the
flfst time. in·Piainfield. NJ.
: In 1898, compoeer George Gershwin was born in Brooklyn, N.Y.
· 1n 1914, the Fcderal Trade Commission was established.
: 1n 1918. the Men» Argonne offensive against the Germans began durin_$ World War I. .
In 1950; United Natioas troops in the Korean Conflict recaptured the
SOuth Korran ~tal of Seoul from the N&lt;rth Koreans.
• In 19S5 following word that President Eisenhower had suffered a
hCart auack, the New York Stock Exchange saw its worst price decline
since 1929.

Preach to Thomas about his shortcomings or sing his praises. Some
did ask probing questions, but
Thomas wasn't providing many
clues to his reasoning, arguing that
to offer an opinion on anything that
might come before him on the
bench would be inappropriate.
What? If all attorneys refused to
opine on the premise that one day
they might become judges and be
asked to rule on like cases, law
journals would be nothing but news
blurbs and ads.
I had been eager to hear Thomas
defend some of the ideas he had
espoused in front of conservat~ve
audiences, but concepts he delivered so forcefully in speeches he
shrugged off in the hearings. He
told senators he now disagreed
with an article he once called a
"splendid example of applying natural law." I was stunned when he
told senators he'd only skimmed
the article before praising it, and
that the statement that had so
pleased his audience had been a
"throwaway line."
And while we're on the subject
of stunning testimony, the same
adjective applied when Sen. Patrick
Leahy &amp;sked Thomas to cite a

"handful of the most important
cases" since he had entered law
school 20 years a~o. and Th"'"as'
first reply was that he'd "have to
go back and give it some thought."
Then he could name only two.
Another time, he tried to make us
believe he •d never expended much
brain power on the concept of abortion. If that's correct, that would
make him the only person of conscience and intelligence in the
country who hasn •t. Not a very ·
high indication of character.
Perhaps I'm naive. I had
assumed someone nominated for
the Supreme Court would be
steeped in the law, a voracious ,
perpetual student. I can 'I imagine
anyone proposed to head a news
organization who didn't have a
healthy knowledge of the most
important news stories of the last
20 years. And even if Thomas'
knowledge of these cases had
dimmed, wouldn't he have expected some questions of that nature
during a hearing to determine his
qualifications for our highest coun?
What were Thomas and his coach·
es studying over the summer?
Judging by his respOf\l'eS, the
courses were Bob-and-Weave 101

Ice

that the more you give people, the
more they want; that the more you
try to help people. the more dependent and demanding they become.
Faced with a bloated bureaucra·
cy, increasing taxes, spiraling inflation, a stagnating economy, and an
eroding ability to compete internationally, the Swedish people concluded something had to give. This
realization coupled with the realization that they had little more to
give, resulted in a massive election
day rejection of the Social
Democrats, a pany that had governed Sweden since before World
War II.
Perhaps· it is time we in the
United States likewise take stock of
where we are and where .we are
going, with respect to our government's networlc of social programs.
We, too, like to think that our government can be all things to all
people. We, too, like to think that
there is no limit to what government can accom~lish.
Personally, I m very concerned

••

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low 35. 40. Friday, mostly sunny with the
high in the mid..(i()s.
Extended rorecast
Saturday tbrouah Monday:
Fair with a warming ll'end Sat·

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

urday and Sunday. A chance of
showers Monday. Highs in upper
50s to mid-60s Saturday with mid60s to low 70s Sunday alld Monday. Lows in the 30s or low 40s
Saturday with 40s Sunday and
Monday. ·

..---Local briefs...---,
Continued from page 1
der Bar in Glousrer.
The state was represented in the trial by Prosecutor Michael
Ward and Assistant K. Robert Toy. Public Defenders Michael
Westfall and Jay Wamsley l't",presented the defendant.

EMS has three calls

,

--Area deaths-John Larkin
John L. Larkin, 83, of Depot
Street. Rutland, died Thursday.
Sept. 26, 1991, at the Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation .Cenler
foUowing an extended·illness.
Born on Aug. 22, 1908 in Rutland Township, he was the son of
the late Guy and Frances JohnstonLarkin. He was a tool dresser and a
coal miner. affiliated with the
Methodist Church, and an army
veteran of World War II.
He is survived by his wife,
Mary Larkin. Obetz; two sons and
daugh~rs-in-law, William L. and
Viole&amp; 'D. Larkin, Hannibal; and
Sam L. and Sue Larkin, Lancaster;
two grandchildren, Valerie Larkin,
Grand Forks, N. C.• and Eric
Larkin; Lancaster.
Besides his parents, he was pre·
ceded in death by a son. Tommy
Larkin.
Graveside services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at the Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call from 4
to 8 p.m. Friday at the Birchfield
Funeral Home, Rutland.

Sarah Overstreet

Leo C. Stumbo
Leo Curtis Stumbo, 33, Bidwell,
died Wednesday. Sept. 25, 1991 in
Union . Memorial Hospital in
Marysville, of injuries he sustained
in a truc1t: accident. He was a self·
employed truck driver. known as
"Snowman" to his IJ'UCking friends.
He was a 1977 graduate of

The Daily Sentinel

The American Red Cross bloodmobile will visit Eastern High
School on Tuesday. October 8 from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Each time someone donates a
unit of blood, they give someone
they don't know another chance for
a birthday. another talk with a best
friend, another walk on the beach,
and another chance at life.
Every day throughout Ohio,
West Virginia and Ken~ky. people undergo surgery, IJ'auma care
and treatment for cancer or blood
disorders; These treatments result
in the need for at least 350 units of
blood to be collected each worlcing
day.
When goals are consisrently not
met, blood shortages can result.
When shortages occur, planned or
non-emergency surgeries are sometimes postpOned so blood will be
available for emergency needs.
If you are aged 17 to 20, we.ig.h
110 pounds or more, you are eligtble to donare blood and are urged
to do so by the. American Red
Cross. .

to drop into 30s tonight

The record low was 33 in 1940.
Sunrise this morning was at
7:22 a.m. Sunset will be at 7:23
p.m.
Saturday thrOugh Monday:
Fair .with a warming uend Saturday and Sunday. A chance of
showers Monday. Highs in upper
50s to mid-60s Saturday with mid60s to low 70s Sunday and Monday. Lows in the 30s or low 40s
Saturday with 40s Sunday and
Monday.
Around the nation
Rain lashed the Northeast early
today and a Canadian cold front
was expected to bring snow flurries
to the Great Lakes.

Six of the defendants charged
with open container on Saturday
night during the Catfish Fesuval
were fined $25 and costs each
when they appeared in the court
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Wednesday night.
Fined on the charge were
Arnold Priddy of Rutland, and
Patrick L. Hagen. Charles Rayburn,
Jo Fink, Donald Armentrout,
Robert Scarberry. and Gary Rose,
all of Middleport. Hearings on oth·
ers arrested on the same charge ~
the same time were postponed until
next week.
· Other~ fined in the court were
DennisR. Wise, Middlepon. $25
and costs, dis~y mariner, $100
and costs. resisting 81rest and $100
and costs, assault; Randy D. Smith,
Middleport. $25 and costs, expired
temporary tags; Gary Lambert,
Crown City, SIO and costs, expired
tags~ Brenda K. Rainey. Gallipolis
Ferry, W: Va., $100 and costs,

TW 0 •••

Meigs announcements
Middleport Association to meet
The Middleport Community
Association will meet Tuesday at
5:30 p.m. in council chambers. A
follow-up on the Catfish Festival
will be presented and downtown
revitalization will be discussed.
Jean Trussell will be the guest
speaker.

reckless operation.
Also fmed were James E. MiU·
iron, Middleport, $10 and costs,
fictitious registration; Amy L.
Epple, Middleport. $10 fine only
left of center, Kimberly S. Pinker·
man, Gallipolis, $10 only on running a stop sign; Scou Newell,
Long Bouom . $10 and costs,
expired registration; Karen S. Hall,
Middleport, $25 and costs, no operator's license, Jeff Cundiff, Mid·
dlepon. $25 and costs, contempt of

aI news

446 4514

Continued from page I

Malone said it was not immediarely
known if Rawlins had been shot
inside the house.
Malone identified two of the .
wounded Delena Branham, 28,
of South Webster and Ernie Raw!ins 64, who lived in the house. .
Both were in serious condition
in the inrensive care unit of Grant
Medical Cenler in Columbus, said
spokeswoman I?onna Wilson: MaJ. ·
one said Rawbns was shot 10 the
chest
Delena Flo Rawlins, 51, was
taken to Southern Ohio Medical
Center in Portsmouth. She was list-

as

ed in fair condition, said a nursing
supervisor who declined to give her
name.
Malone said Mrs~ Daniels was
ll'eated at the Portsmouth hospital
for shock.
Mrs. Daniels had been separated
from her husband for about seven
weeks and had been living at tl!e
house, Malone said. He sa1d
Daniels was despondent over the
separation. ·
.
.
Daniels told mvesugators he
would waive extradition to Oh1o,
Malone said.

Just one-hundredth of an inch of
rain feU Wednesday at Bakersfield,
Calif., but it was the first rainfall.
since April 20. More showers were:
called for in California as humid airmoved nonh to southern Oregon. :
Temperatures were expected to:
be in the 90s and lOOs in ce ntral
Calirornia and the Southwest
deserts; in the 80s in Florida and ·
inland along the Pacific Coast; in:
the 70s in the Rocky Mountain ;
states and much of the South; in the ·
60s in New England and parts or:
the Midwest; and in the 40s and ·
50s in the Great Lakes region .
The high temperature for th e
nation Wednesday was 110 degrees ·
at Borrego Springs, Calif.
:

Stocks

The Jackson City Council took no action to ratify the six-county
solid wasle plan Monday, put will consider approving it later, the
Jaclcson Journai·H~rald re~ Wednesday.
.
Representatives from citizens' groups and the Athens-Galha·
Hocking-Jackson-Meigs- Vinton district ~tor spok~ at the meet·
ing. Council decided to take a first reading on the ratificauon resolution and will take action at a later meeting.
William C. Martin ill, of Jackson, an outspoken opponent of the
plan told councilmembers that the wasre management plan "makes
no ~se whatsoever" and that there are "other alrematives that do .."
the article said. But Lance Wilson, district director, told the council
that the plan "is a plan, not a law" and can be amended as changes
warrant
The plan must be approved by four of the six boards of county
commissioners and 60 percent of the district's population. as represented by city and village councils and township trustees.

. North Gallia High School and
Buckeye Hills Career Center, a
member of the Eagles Lodge,
coun.
Pomeroy. and was bap~ed in the
Forfeiting bonds were Donald
Clarlt Chapel Church.
L. Dailey, Middleport, $460, physiHe was ·born Nov. 8 1957 in
cal control of a motor vehicle while
Oallia County, son of Raben and
undef the influence of alcohol or
Nellie West Stumbo. Bidwell.
drugs; Larry E. Rainey. Gallipolis
. 1n addition to his parents, he is
Ferry, W. Va., $460, physical consurvived by his wife, Bonita Glasstrol of a motor vehicle while under
bum Stumbo, whom he married
the influence of alcohol or drugs,
April24, 1981, in Grundy, Va. and
and $210 on reckless operation;
two daughrers. Tara and Risa. both
Roy R. Gilkey, Middleport, $50,
at home.
speeding; Edna Richmond, MiddleAlso surviving are three broth·
port, $51, speeding; John ~ · Holers. Steve Stumbo and Max Stumcomb, Middleport, $110, disorderbo Bidwell, Jerry Stumbo. Char·
't
ly manner; Ernest R. Wisman, St.
loite, N.C., and one sister, Mrs. .
OSpl
Albans. W. Va .. $60, no eye proScott (Neda) Roush, Wellston.
.
tection while riding a motorcycle;
Funeral services will be con·
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Rex Darst, Pomeroy, $500 on
dueled 2 p.m. Saturday at the VinWednesday Admissions: Floyd physical Cl?ntrol and $500 on reckton Baptist Church, ~i~ton wi~ Brown Middleport; Tracie Wright, less operauon.
Rev.' CJ. Lemley officlallng. Bun- Rutland; and Louella Driggs. Long
a1 will be in the Vinton Memorial Bottom.
Park. Friends may call Friday 6-9
Wednesday Discharj!es: Mar·
p.in. at the McCoy-Moore Funeral garet Dutton, Mary Wmgett, and
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
Home, Vinton.
Ruth Bennett

H

Winds gusting up to 110 mph on
Wednesday lifted the roof off a
building in Boston and blew out the
windows in another , the National
Weather Service said.
More showers were called for
today over New England, Florida
and the Great Lakes . Rain wa s
expected to turn to snow over
nonhein Michigan.
Hot weather was expected to
continue in Florida, where several
cities broke temperature records
Wednesday. In Melbourne. the 93·
degree reading broke the previous
90-degree mark set in 19 74, and
Daytona Beach tied its 1988 record
of 93 degrees.

Jackson council postpones action

Middleport court news

· Three calls for assistance were answered by units of Migs
County Emergency Medical Services on Thursday morning.
On Thursday at 12:55 a.m., Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 31.
Bobby Adkins was taken to Holzer Medical Cenrer. At 5:22 a.m.,
Syracuse squad went 10 CoUege Road for James Cotterill, who was
taken to Holzer. At 8:39 a.m .• Tuppers Plains squad went to Pine
Tree Drive. Evelyn Summerfield was treated but not transported.

and Advancea loe-I..&gt;ancing.
Even Thomas' chief supponer,
Sen. John Danforth, who I expected to help me understand why he
was so sold on a man to whom the
American Bar Association gave
on Iy a mediocre qualification rating, told me nothing except
Thomas was "his own person"
and •'will never become a sure vote
for any group of justices on the
court" That Thomas has, as Danforth noted, the "loudest laugh on
Earth," one that was "an antidote
to the dread disease, federalitis,"
seems a pretty silly reason to eire in
support of a seat on the Supreme
Court
So after several days of hearings, what did I learn about
Clarence Thomas? He did seem
like a darned nice guy, one trying
very hard to say nothing that would
offend anyone.
In light of his performance, and
those of his inquisitors, political
analysts have been asking if the
process serves the people very
well. That's the best quesuon asked
during the entire proceedings.
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

"-

Legion to meet
The American Legion Drew
Webster Post No. 39 will meet
Tuesday at the post home. Dinner
wiU be held at 7 p.m. followed by
meeting at 8 p.m. All members are
urged to attend.
New classes
The Middleport First Baptist
Church will be starting a new
Wednesday night program for children beginning Oct. 2 at 7 p.m.
"McGee and Me" is a special
event for children presented by
Focus on the Family.
Regular adult bible study will be
presented at the same time. All are
welcome to atrend.

Am Ele Power .............. ....30
Ashland Oil ...................... 29 IrAT&amp;T .................... ....... ... .37 7/8
Bob Evans ......................... 18
Charming Shop.......... ........ 21 7/8
City Holding .................... 17 1/2
Federal MoguL .... ...... 14 3/8
GoodyearT&amp;R ................. 43 t/2
Key Centurion ..................15
Lands' End ................... ..... 17 112
Limited Inc.. ... ............. 25 3/4
Multimedia Inc ......... .... ..... 24 3/4
Rax Restaurant ......... .... ....... 5/16
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .42
Shoncy'slnc ..................... l7 1/4
Star Bank .......................... 22 1/4
Wendy lnt'/.. .. .............. ....... 8 1/2
Worthington Ind . .............. 29 1/8
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis .
and Loewi of Gallipolis.

Lottery numbers
Super Lotto
1-15·29-30-35-46
(one, fifteen, twenty-nine,thiny,
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Kicker
1-4-7-3-8-4
(one, four, seven, three , eight,
four)
Pick 3 Numbers
9-9-9
(nine, nine, nine)
Pick 4 Numbers
5-6-2-9
(five, six, two, nine)

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A Dlvltl• ol tllottbn,!la, lac.

to put fonh. Many of our couniJ'y 's
problems relate to that oft voiced
addage, "You can lead a horse to
water but you can't make him
drink."
Government can help provide
the best schools, the best transportation systems, the best eco·
nomic and social settings in which
to work and prosper, but it can't
look over, nor should it be expected to look over, the shoulder of
each and every citizen to ensure
that they are taking full advantage
of the opponunities that are theirs.
Until our society gets back to
placing the emphasis on the individual, until it stops makin~ excuses for those that are unwilling to
pull their share of the load, this
country will continue to buckle
under the burden of its open-ended
welfare (li'Ogr&amp;ms. It used to be that
an individual was too proud to be
on the public dole.
Today it seems some people
can't get enough of Uncle Sam's
generosity, whether they need it or
not, Government can only do so
much. It is up to the people to do
the rest. Sweden finally realized the
road they were on was a dea4 en~.
When are we in the United Sta!f
going to realize the same?

J

Sunny

------Weather-----

Cong. Clarence Miller

with the mindset that views government programs as the only path
to follow in seeking solutions to
our country' s many social ills.
Many times I feel government is
more a part of the problem, than a
part of the solut1on . With our
already extensive and expensive
network of social service programs,
with our already overburdened federal bureaucracy, it is time to be
looking for ways to cut back the
role of government in our daily
lives, not adding to it In my opinion, many of these programs have
crearea a dependency on govern·
ment that undermines individual
initiative and responsibility.
This is not to say there aren •t
areas of national concern that need
our attention. This is not to say
· there aren't a myriad of pressing
problems besetting our society that
need to be confronted. It is to say,
however, that many of these con·
cerns are outside the scope of government to address. Government
In 1957, the musicai"West Side Story" opened on Broadway.
can't keep our citizens drug free;
In 1960, the ftrst of four relevised de bares between presidential candi • government can't mandare morals
dares Richard M. Nixon and John F. Kennedy took place in Chicago.
and a disciplined and responsible
In 1962, the television comedy "The Beverly Hillbillies" premiered way of life. Ours is-a nation of
on CBS .
individuals, a nation in which indi,
In 1977, Sir Freddie Laker began his cut-race "Skytrain" service from viduals succeed or fail largely a3 a
London to New Yorlc. (The carrier went out of business in 1982.)
result of th~ effon they are willing

Bloodmobile visit
scheduled

C1991 A&lt;:cu-Woo1!1er, Inc.

Sweden wised up, why can't we?
The worldwide march away
from statism, that form of government in which all power is central,
continued last week when the people. of Sweden threw out their
socialist oriented government in
favor of one that promised a more
open and competitive society. For
the last SO years, Sweden has epitomized the cradle to grave welfare
state. As a people, the Swedes have
lived under the Yoke of the highest
tax levels of any industrial democracy, taxes that go toward underwnting the most generous and
expansive series of welfare programs known to the wesrem world.
Finally the people of Sweden
have said enough is enough. Finally they have come to realize that
the expensive social commitments
funded by their tax dollars have
served to undercut, rather than
shore up, their standard of living.
Finally, they have come to conclude that big government is not
necessarily better government.
Finally, they have faced the fact,

PA.

W. VA.

Keeping an eye on Clarence Thomas
I looked forward all summer to
Clarence Thomas • confirmation
hearings. (Maybe that tells you
something about the kind of exciting summer I had.) Before. I'd
always been working and unable to
watch the televised grind of government. Now I have a TV and
cable hookup in my office, and as
long as I have on CNN or C-Span
when my boss walks in, I control
my remore control.
I don't know exa::tly what all I
was expecting, except maybe a
chance to witness the worlcings of
Clarence Thomas • mind and to
understand why a Missouri senator
I respect was so taken with him. I
would finally get a chance to hear
Thomas defend his cheerleading of
the concept of "natural law."
which was mud in my mind despite
all the newspaper analyses I've
read on it. And I would finally hear
his views on a constitutional right
to privacy, which I had found alternately troubling and reassuring
depending on which newspaper
columnist I read.
To say the hearings were disappointing is like saying "She's the
Sheriff" was a mildly lackluster
sitcom. There were senators using
their questioning time to either

•

IMansfield I 57• I•

seas partners.
The increase in fraudulent
schemes comes at a bad time for
Nigeria, which is in the middle of
yet another transformation from
military to democratic rule. Offi.
cials at the Nigerian Embassy are
skittish, fearing the bad publicity
wiU smear the whole country. The
Nigerian government claims to be
taking steps to stop the scam~. and
recently issued its own wammg to
American businesses to be on the
lookout for easy money offers.
The Central Bank of Nigeria
issued the same warning after sev·
era! people Died to collect from the
bank the money promised them by
the scam artists.
LEFTOVERS - Not all Soviet
personnel are pulling out of Cuba.
More than 2,000 Soviet communi·
cations and intelligence technicians
are staying behind at a secret installation called Lourdes, one of the
Soviet Union's largest eavesdropping centers. Its operations are so
secret that it is off-limits to
Cubans, except for a few IJ'U~~d
intelligence officials. The factltty
has always had its electronic ears
tuned to the United States, ·but the
mission is changing {rom military
espion~ge to industiial spyin~. The
Soviet Union has ordered th1s and
other listening cenrers around the
world to concentrate on fmding out
what scientific and technological
advanoes are in the works.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
Environmental Prorection Agency
has been fooling around with a ban
on the pesticide parathion for I 0
years. For more than 20 years, the
EPA has been gathering statistics
on poisonings, nerve damage and
death of farm worlcers exposed to
parathion. Yet it is still used. Most
recently, the EPA got the sole manufacturer of parathion in the United
States to agree to limit its use to
just nine crops, out of the 90 that it
had been licensed for. But those
nine still represent the majority of
parathion use. The EPA's baby
steps are taking this issue nowhere.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WIUTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

By lbe Associated Press
Unseasonably cool rem~
will move into Ohio tomght and
could be low enough to create
~orne sleet along the lakefront in
the northeast pan of the stare.
The National Weather Service
says lows tonight will be in the
upper 30s to mid·40s. The sleet
could result from the cold air movin~ across the warm waters of Lake
Erie.
Highs on Friday will be in the
mid·50s to mld-6noi.
No pecipitation is predicted for
most of Ohio tonight and Friday.
The record' high temperature for
this dare at the Columbus weather
station was 92 degrees in 1900.

MICH .

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

. . . . ..\ .

E~-~. .-----~------------~-------------·----------------------------------...;.~---J-------------------------·-----·------------------------- . ~

•
...).o,h.L .!l.. j i

• •

�\

Thursday, September 26, 1991

The Daily .Sentinel

Sports

North Gall.ia to host Eastern i~ battle of SVAC unbeatens

lltursday, September 26, 1991
Page-4

Cincinnati, Atlanta split double.h eader Wednesday
By TOM SALADINO
AP Sports Writer
The
ATLANTA (AP) Allanta Braves edged closer to the
Los Angeles Dodgers, but were
still left frustrated by what could
have been.
The Braves split their double
header Wednesday with the Cincin-

nati Reds, winning the opener 2-1
in 10 innings on Ron Gant's RBI
single, then dropping the nightcap
I 0-9, also in 10 mnings.
The day began for the Braves
with the news that rookies Brian
Hunter and Keith Mitchell had
been arrested on separate DUI
charges. It continued with the

retuni of outfielder Deion Sanders,
who plans to play the rest of the
season with the Braves and also
continue playing cornerback for the
Atlanta Falcons.
Atlanta, which began the day
two games behind NL West-leading Los Angeles, made up a halfgame when the Dodgers lost 8-2 to

Gallia Academy six defeat Southern;
Eastern spikers beat Warren Local
By SCOTT WOLFE
Suzanne Wolfe said, "We are
Sentinel Corespondent
hoping to improve on our record of
The Southern Tomadoettes Of 7-13 from last year and remain
12th year Coach Suzanne Wolfe competitive in the SV AC. This is a
had won two in a row before their $ood group and the girls are workmatch with rough, non-league Gal- mg hard The girls have practiced
lipolis Wednesday night in the hard and played very well at times.
Charles W. Hayman gymnasium, The girls have really appreciated
where the Gallians won 15-6, 8-15, the support of our very vocal fans
and 15-0 in three sets.
at the games. Tonight after the first
Earlier Southern had defeated game, our parents and fans kept us
Southwestern 15-6 and 15 -2 in hanging in there and we won the
addition 10 a 15-12, 15-3 win over second set."
Hannan Trace in SVAC league
In the Southwestern win Me¥an
action.
Wolfe ·served for 13 straight pomts
The Blue Angels, 9-5, tOGic the in the firSt game while Marey Hill
first win 15-6, but its was quite did the same for the winners in the
competitive. Southern, 5-8, second game. Both Hill and Wolfe
rebounded in the night's most ex cit- had big nights in leading roles for
ing match to claim the win, but was the Tomadoettes. Lean Byer and
shut out with a great Gallia Acade- Alicia Chambers had two points
my performance in the last round
each for Southwestern.
Lorri Hauldren led GAHS with
Against Hannan Trace, Megan
9 and Tandra Adams had 8, while Wolfe served for nine points with
Megan Wolfe led SHS with 7, . 12 assists and three kills; Christi
Renee Russell 5, and Angie Swiger Maidens had eil!ht points in a great
5. Going into last night's match game, Angie Swiger chipped in
Wolfe and Russell had been two of with six points and two important
the top serving cogs in the SHS blocks; Marcr. Hill had two points
line-up as Wolfe had 70 serving with seven kills and seven assists.
points and Russell68.
Tanya Shon served for five points
In reserve play SHS won 15-0 for Hannan Trace.
and 15-6. Erica Adkins led GAHS
Southern won the reserve match
with 6, while Br.111di Mallory and 15-10, 15- 11 to boost its league
Aimee Manuel each had good mark to 4- I. Amy Weaver served
games for Southern.
for serven points and Andrea

Moore had six. Anita Rossiter had
six points for Hannan Trace.
Eagles beat Warriors
·Eastern posted one of its biggest
wins of the year with a bil! nonleague uprising against Warren
Local, l-15, 15-7, and 15-2.
After losing the first match EHS
regrouped for a great comeback
attempt
Carrie Morrissey scored I 7
points in 20-2 I attempts and one
ace. Led Gillilan had 6 with a 1010 effon and one ace; Penny Aeiker had 3 with a perfect 5-5 and one
ace, while Jessica Radford had 3
points (5-5), Jaime Wilson had one
(6-6), Becky Driggs one and Amy
Well 3-3 successful serves.
Julie Owens had nine for Warren, while DeLynn Edgell had 5,
Renae Wentz four, Stephanie
Arnold 4, Tara Johnson I, and
Brandi Knight one.
Amy Well was 10-10 with two
lci_ll~ for the Ea~lettes, while
Gillilan had 8-9 spikes and a kill.
Morrissey was 3-3 and Shelly Metzger was 3-4 with one lc:ill. In settiug Jaime Wilson was 22-23 and
Metzger 3-4 as Wilson had another
great overall performance to supplement the accurate serving of
Morrissey.
Toni&amp;ht EHS is at Hannan Trace
and SHS hosts Oak Hill.

San Diego.
The Braves, who have 10 games
left, can get to wilhin one game of
Los Angeles tonight with a victory
over Cincinnati. The Dodgers are

idle and have nine games remaining.
"We won a big one in the first
game, then lost the lead and the
ball game in the second game,"

said Braves manager Bobby CQx.
"It would have been nice to win
the double header, but we can't
think about it. We've just got to
come back tomorrow."

..'
"'

Meigs to host Trimble Friday night
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The Trimble Tomcats will
invade Bob Roberts Field this Friday evening to tangle with Meigs
Marauders. Trimble comes into the
game with a 1-3 record and 1-1 in
the Tri- Valley Conference, the
Tomcats are coming off a 34-14
loss last week at home against Belpre. The Marauders are coming off
their firSt win of the year a 37-14
pounding over the Miller Falcons.
Mei~s is now 1:3 on the year and
1-2 m the Tri-Valley Conft'J'ence.
Trimble coach Greg Holbert
welcomes back only 12 lettermen
from last year Tomcat team that
finished 4-6 on the season. For lhe
first time in four years the Tomcats
do not have Roger Bingman canlng
the signals at quarterback. Bingman led the area in passing last
year throwing for 1,653 and for
over 4,000 yards in his career.
Instead. Bingman's favorite target,
Charlie Gatchel, will take OV\2" the
duties of quarterback. Gatchel a 63, 195 pound senior was an AllOhio selection at end and led lhe
Southeast dislr_i~t in receiving with

56 catches for 105 yards.
Gatchel is an excellent athlete
who is a threat to both run and pass
the ball. Gatchel was injured two
weeks ago in a 45-121oss to Buffalo of Wayne (W. Va.), the senior
came back last week and was
injured again in the loss to Belpre.
If Gatchel can't go the quarterback
will be 5-6, 125 pound sophomore
Rusty Richllrds. Richards was nine
of 22 off lhe bench last week for
127 yards and a touchdown.
Roger Jenkins a 6-1, 165 pound
senior end, Reuben Kittle a 5-9,
140 pound slot back and Buddy
Yore a 6-0, 200 pound junior tight
end are the Tomcats ends. Kittle
pulled in five passes for 81 yards
last week, while Yore caught four
for 4 I yards including a 18 yard
touchdown pass. The ground threat
for Trimble is 5-10, 175 sophomore
fullback Chris Craig.
Leading the Cat' s defense is
middle guard Jerry Lackey, Lackey
a 5-9, 165 pound junior has outstanding quickness.
The Marauder offense showed
signs of coming out of lheir season
long slump last week in the win

over Miller. Frank Blake led the
way with 144 yards on 14 carries
and touchdown runs of I, 15, 17
and 4 yards all in the first half.
Junior tailback Mike Cremeans
added 6o yards in just seven carries
as the Marauder offense r.111 for 278
yards on the evening. Jeremy
Phalin showed signs that he is also
getting his passing game in gear. if
the 5-11. 209 pound senior can get
the air game going it his going to
mean problems for the TVC.
Shawn Hawley led a maroon
and gold defense that limited the
Falcons to minus 28 yards rushing
and 67 total yards , with most of
lhem coming in the fourth quarter
as the Marauders playing second
and third team defenses. Hawley
moved to defensive end from his
safety position and played havoc
with the Falcons all night. The 6-0,
165 pound senior was in the Falcon
backfield all night and totaled
seven sacks, all coming in the first
half. Mike Welch also had a good
game on defense with two interceptions, both setting up Marauder
touchdowns.
Kick-off for Friday night's
game is 7:30 at Bob Roberts Field .

,

.. ,
..
•

"
..
.,
.,
,"

,..

~.....--

n

..,

Scoreboard
In the majors ...

weekly fOQd,&amp;ll comj)III.Cr nililp u rabr tho Ohio Hi&amp;h School Athletic
Aaoci.atJOn (by divilion and region. with
bi-Jevel points) :

lcaod

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eutemlll•llloft
Tum
W L PeL
•·PiiiiiNrBh ........ 92 l9 .609
SL Low. .......... 79 74 .SI6
NowYcd&lt;
... .... 72 78 .480
Plliladelpftia ....... 73 10 .4n
Chicas•
......... 72 79 .4n
McnaOa1
......... 68 14 .447

Western Dlvlllon
TWLI'l:l.
Loo llnpla ...... 88 6S .57S
Alieni&amp;
........... 86 66 .S66
Son IJioso · ........ 78 7S .SIO
ClodnnaU - - 7l II .474
Son Francilco ...... 71 82 .464
""""""
......... 62 91 .40S
-~ divilion tille.

GB

14
19.S
20
20
24.5
GB
1.5
10
15.5
17
26

Wednesday's scores

,......

Pbilldelpftia 5, Chi"'o 4
Atlanta ~. Cladnnatl 1, lt lnnlnp,

ClaclnnaU 10, Atlanta 9, 10 lnnlnp,

2D4aamc

PittsburJh at New Yolk, ppd. , rain
San Francilco 2. Housuai 1

Monuoal 7, SL Lclllil 2
San Dies• 1. Loo Anpea 2

Today's games
PilllburJ)! (Tomlin 8-7 and Smiley 188) at New Yom (Cone 13-13 and Cutillo
:Z..I),:Z,S:IOp.m.
Clnclnnall ~RIJo 14•5) at Atlanta
(Lelbrandlll-11~ 7:41 P""'

Friday's games

San Dltp (llarrll 7-5) at Cincinnati

(Scuddorl-7), 7:35 p.m.

Mmt101l (Gardoer 9·10) a&lt; Piusbur&amp;h
(Smilh 16-10), 7:3.5 pm.
: Philadelphia (DeJesus 10-7) at New
YOJI&lt; (Scllowol&lt; 4-4), 7:40p.m.
Atlanta (Glavine 19-11) It Houlton
(B....., S-4), 8:3.1 pm.
Chic::aao (C11tillo 6-6) at St. louis
(fewabuty 10-12), 8:3S
San Frucisc:o (Black I -15) all.a&amp; Anada (Beleh« 9·9). 10:3l p.m.

r·"'

AMERICAN LEAGUE
E..r.em Dl'lllon

T...,
TOftllllo

W
......... 8l
..... .... . 81
........... 71

L Pel.
68 .SS6
69 -~
14 ..liO

GB

Milwaukee

...... 7'3 17 .487

IO.S

Bokim,..

....... 61 86 .430
........ 63 87 .420
--- n " .347

19
20.5
lt.!l

Boo"'"

1
I

lI

Deaoit

N... Ycd&lt;

e~ovetand

W-rn Dlvlllolt
WLPcL
MiftncwOCI
....... 91 61 .399
Cltiaao
......... 83 69 ..l46
T11M
........... 80 71 ..l30
Ooll!and
......... 80 72 .526
...,_City ....... 71 7S ..l07
CaJllorola ......... 76 16 .500
~ale
........... 76 16 ..lOO

team

2.5
7

Division I
Reaion 1-

. Division IV
34.3333. 2. Avoo 2!1.0000. 3, Elyria
Ca!hollc 23.6666. 4 (tie), Oatea MiJU
Hawk"" Cbapin Pallo 22.5000. 6, Cam!'"
boll Maoorial22.0000. 7, Abm Maaob-

I. Euclid 42.5000; 2.

eator 19.5000. I, Huron, 11.0000. 9 ,

Cleveland St. lan•tius 42 .0000 ; 3.
PaineiVill.e Riverside 41.(000; 4. Manor

Windltom 17.0000. 10. Lonin Clouviow
16.5000.
Ropon 14- I. Maria! E1ain 25.00110;
2. Carey 24..l000; J. Ardlbol~ 23.00110; 4.
Bdlvillo C1oar FOJI&lt; 22.5000; 5. Bloomdalo Elmwood 22.0000; 6 (tie). M..,tpelict, Oolpbo1 Jcf(cr.on, S.rri~_afiold
Catholic C..tnl 21.5000; 9. """""""'"
Lincoln 20.5000: 10. Liberry Center
16.0000.
Roaion I5- I. Steubenville Catltollc
Contnl 38.5000; 2. BUIIOIYillo 30.5000;
3. Toronto 27.0000; 4. Apple Creek
Waynodalo 23.5000; 5. Alblaila Mapleton
22.SOOO; 6. Summit Stotioa LiotiDJ lfa.
22.00110; 7. lloftrl7 Fort Jlrre 21.-;
8. Cadiz p.SOOQ; 9,Jio.. ibollijver
17.0000; 10. Cotambiana Creat'&lt;liew
16.5000.
Reaion 16- 1. Columbus Ha~~Y
31.00110; 2. Cincinnati Wromin&amp; 30.5000;

40.0000; S. Middlebura H~. Midpark
26.0000; 6. Kent R001cv~;lt 25.0000; 7.
0.... 23.0000; 8. SaunpYillc 22.5000; 9.
Eaatlako Nonh 21.5000; 10. Lakewood
21.0000.
Resion 2- 1. Toledo St. Franci•
43.00110; 2. Amm EUet 42.0000. 3. oa~
bcn.on 39.0000: 4. Toledo St. John's
38.0000; 5. Toledo Ccntrll Catholic

33.00110; 6. Toledo Whitmer 31.0000. 7.
MluillOD WuhinJ1.0n 29.0000; 8 (tie).
Caatoa Mc::Kin.lcy. Bruruwict 27.!5000;
10. M.uaillon Jackson n.oooo.
Rcaion l--- 1. Grove City 46.5000; 2.
Pickerinpn 44.0001&gt;j 3. Piqua 39.()(X)O;
-'· GaD.oWiy Wmtland :W.SOOO; 5. Man•fidd 34.0000; 6. Loncuter 33.0000: 7,.
Dublin 30.0000. 8; Beam=ei&lt; 25.5000;
9 (tic). Muion !Wdins. Troy 23.5000.
Rcg1on 4- I. Cincinnati Princeton
41.5000; 2. Cincinnati Elder 40.8333; 3.

3. Wca Jelfmon 30.0000; 4. Columbwi
Ready 28.0000. 5, Porumouth Eall

Micldlclown, '9.5000; 4 (lie). Cincinnati

21.st... 6 (tio). Amanda·Clcarcrook,

Modi.,, CU.:UU..ti Mt. Hcallhy 38.0000;

Wheelertbura 27.ttH. 1, MinFord
17.-. 9. Brookville 16.1251), II. Coal
Crme Dawaan-Br)"anl U.IOII.

6. H.aniaon 29.5000; 7. Cincinnati WO&amp;tarn Hilh 28 .0000; 8. Cincinnati Sl.
Xavier, 'Il.OOO; 9. Cincinnati Glen Este

24.00110; 10. CcnterYillo23.5000.

Dlvlslonm
Rc&amp;ion 9- 1. Oirud 37.5000; 2 Men·
tor Lako Catholic 33.5000; 3. UhriC;hJville
Claymont 32.SOOO; 4. Minerva .3LOOOO.;
5. StreeUbom 30.5000; 6. Onadcnbuuen
Indian Valley 28.5000; 7. Youngstown
Mooney 26.9166; 8 (tie). CCll1land Lalte-

"iew, Struthcn 26.$000; 10. Wickliffe

26.0000.
Reoion 10- I. TwinJburtl O&gt;anmedin
37.!600; 2. c....u. MuaaMia 34.SOOO;
3. Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary 27.0000; 4.
Medin• Buekcye 26.5000; S. Bucyru1
26.00110; 6. Swanton 20.00110; 7 (tie). Oak
Harbar, Cleveland Central Catholic,
Wi111rd 19.SOOO; 10. Rcoaford 18.5000.
Region 11- 1. Ironton 46.U66; 2.
Columbua DeSalcl 31.0000; l. Utica
29.!1000. 4. Proctonllle Fairland
13.1251; 5. Portmaoutb Wall9.16";
6. Sunbury B~::ut 18.5000; 7. McDermott Nwt
17.5110; I. Ironton
Rock IDH U.otOG; 9. Hebron Lakewood
IS.5000; 10. Bloom-Curoll15.5000.
Rqjoot 12-1. Cincinnati Pun:dl Muian 41.5000; 2. Katerin8 Alter 31.00110; 3
(tic). Sprin&amp;field Northeutem, Spring·
bcxo 33.5000; 5 (tie). Sprinsfield Kenton
Ridge, Bellbrook 30.5000; 7. Hamilton
Badin 28.5000; 8. St. Pati.J Gnh1m
28.0000; 9. Now Ricbnlond 25.5000; 10.
GeunantoWII. Valley View 220000.

• Tandy® 2500 SX/20 • oeskMat~ SOftware
• MS-DOS'" 5.0 • Prodigy® • America Ontin~

\

9915

lltil- 148.85

112-1940

• 30 Watts Total Power •

Mopdcn 16 OOO~tabulo SLiolut
16.0000. 8, Sebrina llkKinloyl5.0000. 9,
Indopondcnco 14."'0ooo. 10, Oata Mil1a
Gilmour 13.5000.
_ ReJiM 18- I, BMIIM 28.5000, Z.
lJelphol SL lolut'a 20.5000. 3 (tie), Ileli,

~LIS he..

Micro
Recerdlr

-Cut
-3388

ance Aycraville, McComb 20.0000. 5,

Minner 18.0000. 6, Now Bremen
I 7.5000. 7, Dot a Hardin Nonbcm
16.5000. 8 (tie~ SL Heuy,llicbvillo, Azcadi.a 15.0000.
R~aion 19- I. Newark Catholic:
29.5000; 2. R-.... Eotlenl :13.-;
3. Woodsfield 21.0000; 4. MalYom
20.5000; 5. Vloloo Nerlb Gallla
11.51H; '· Frankll• Furn1ce Green
13.-; 7. Strubuta·Franklin I 1.5000;
I. Rldoe Soulltom fU332; 9 (tie).
cntcr Filher, Danville, Waterrord

3~

~LIShC...

Ciii'
33%

11.-.
Rqion 20- t. Middletown Fonwidt

cr...

MiMIIOCi (Tapani 16-1) at Toru~to
(lua Oolmoa 1-2), 7:3:1 ......
s - ~ 1-oJ." au..ao &lt;Mo-

~~~a:tjj·!0-11) otltlnlu
Cloy (Salilllllpo I:Z..I). 1:0$""'

120-128

SVAC grid standings
(OveraD)
Team
W
Eastern ..................4
North Gallia ..........4
Southern ...............2
OakHill ................ 2
Southwestern ........2
Symmes Valley .... 1
Kyger Creek .........1
Hannan Trace .... ...0

PA
0 134 18
0 83 21
2 119 13 7
2 101 44
2 48 95
3 72 79
3 33 112
3 I 4 69

L PF

year'! Time will tell.
In short, what Kyger Creek
needs is a pair of 100-yard games
from running backs Phil Bradbury
and Matt Rhodes. The Bobcats'
veter.111 offensive line, ouunuscled
ill last week's Oak Hill game, is
stlll strong enough to take care of
business against a Symmes Valley
team in ttansition in the walce of
departures of longtime starters such
as Kenny Daniels, Carl Robinson
and Jason Sheppard, among others.
Southwestern vs. Hannan Trace
Southwestern, as has been noted
in weeks past, is one injury away
from having to scrap with Hannan
Trace to win.
Jack James' Highlanders have
veterans in junior quarterback
Aaron McCarty, semor wideout
Steve Davis, senior fullback Kevin
Gillman and junior tailback Willy
Gilben operating behind an offensive line with young veter.lllS such
as sophomore Kevin Staten and a
few freshmen such as Devin Metzger and Jeremy Ford. The Highlanders' passing and running
attacks are somewhat more highly
evolved than those of the Wildcats
because of the fact that some of
these gents suffered together
through the lire of a 2-8 campaign
last year.
Probably because of a running
game suddenly gone anemic (the
Wildcats were held to 86 yards
against North Gallia, as opposed to
the 154 yards they gained in their
20-8 loss to Alexander in Week 2),
Trace has gone to passing by committee, and with measurably positive results (12-21 for 71 yards vs.
North Gallia, compared with a
combined 6-14 for 38 yards in the
Wildcats' firSt two games). In the
North Gallia game, the Guyan
eorps had six people throwing the
ball. In spite of this success, Wildcat boss Don Saunders, who main-

L PF

PA

0 58
0 53
0 41
0 36
I I2
1 6
I
6
I
6

12
6
6
6
58
36
4I
53

Friday's coatesiS
Eastern at North Gallia
Southwestern at Hannan Trace
Symmes Valley at Kyger Creek
Oak Hill at Southern

Eastern Eagles

North Gallia Pirates
(Oireme)

(Oifeme)

~~J~-~ .......................... 6-':- ~k

r;.·

LG 63-Siunci.-ncs .......................S-10 tiS

Jr.

C 50-T,aiiiiRoae .......................... S-6
RO 74-Stovc~Bunett ........................ 6-l
RT 6:Z..Iom01 McDanieL ................ 6-2
TE 10-Milte Smith .......................... 6-1
A.. 40-MikeNcwllnd. ..................... S-7
QB 24-0sadSavoy .......................... S-7
FB 33-MikoltoJrman. ..................... S-7
11l ?U"&gt;•die Frucis ..................... S- 1

So.
S1.
S1.
Sr.

141
190
197
203
130
140
150
ISO

TE 76-Gu)'Truancc• ................... 6-0 210
LT S9-I..U.Euua.........
.... 5-10 200
or 74-Mike IUrimons ................... 6-0 220
1.0 63-Bradd Sdw.Itz ......................6-1 174
C 61-Tom Meade ................. ....... S-10 180
RO 60-Scoct Oilor .......................... !-10 1!6

RT
TE
FL
QB

Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.

62-B..,t Skidrnon: ................. .!· 10
ll· Rob Canady ........................ 6-1
27-Brad FuUer .............................6-0
IS-OtarleoP&lt;dt ........................ l·ll

KICKERS- Randy Kaylor (No. 42, 5-9.

Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Sr.
Jr.

fi&amp;ht end in certain li.lUitiOM.

170, ar.)

(Spectalleams)
Kkker - Dobbina. Punttr - Jamie Egan.

(Dereme)
NOSE GUARD- Hoftinan. TACKLES (LBamcu and Sh:Oll. &amp;NDS (L-R) -

(Derense)

Mc -

NOSE GUARD - B"" llawka (No. 20, S10, ISO, or.). TACKLI!S (L-R)- Skidm"" and
Jamie Easara. INDS (L· K) -Canady and

Daniel and Smhh. UNEBACKERS (t..R) Dunt 1nd McGuire. MONSTER lACK Savoy. CORNIRBACKS - Mike Newland and
lcten)' Cline (number unknown, S- 7, 110. jr.).

Schultz. UNEBACKERS -

SLiton and Oiler.
CORNERBACKS Fuller and Peck .
SAnnES- Smith and Meade.

SAFETY -Wca Hoher(No.l0.6-l, 160.ar.).

---------------,
LARGE
PEPPERONI PIZZA

s

s
l P~::;o~o;c".::J;u. fl 8 99 l
AND 4 LARGE COLAS

I

I

I
Storca
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2 MEDIUM

II
I
I

.-.

Eastern vs. North Gallia

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

(Conference)

Team
W
Symmes Valley ... .1
Oak Hill ............... .!
Eastern .................. !
North Gallia .......... l
Southern ...............0
Hannan Trace .......0
Southwestern ........0
Kyger Creek .........0

Bell and Bill Potter, and safeties
John Conley and Travis McCain and linebackers Chad Jones and
Ryan Morgan have to respect.
-,
Why? These fellows will take on a
passing auaclc, headlined by wideout Jeremy Dill (he has six of
Southern's seven TD catches and
averages 18.2 yards per reception) .
that has increased its production
from 48 yards in the Tornadoes·
opener to 171 yards against
Symmes Valley.
But the Oaks have beef on both
sides of the line, a man-eater
defense, an all-world tailback in
Bill Potter (20 carries, 189 yards
vs. Kyger Creek) to take advantage
of the holes the offensive line creates and a solid passing attack starring three-year staner Allen Potter
at quarterback, a speed merchant in
Conley out wide and Chris Simpson, a 6-7, 205-pound redwood, at
tight e11d. Enough said.

tains that he wants to look forward
and not back, probably wishes at
times that a certain young ace had
remained as his hurler instead of
heading north.
Oak Hill vs. Southern
Southern. particularly junior
fullback Russell Singleton, will
make Oak Hill pay for any overconfidence that may exist in its
camp in the wake of the Oaks'
cakewalk win over Kyger Creek.
At least in the beginning.
Singleton, handcuffed by
Symmes Valley last week to the
tune of 13 yards on seven carries,
will have plenty to prove against
the Hill's brawn in an attempt to
reverse the drop he had in yardsper-rush average from lhe 9.8 he
had before the Symmes Valley
game to the 8.7 he has now.
In addition, the Tornadoes have
a passing attack that the Hill's secondary men - cornerbacks Bill

TANDY

11.5000.

•·c••••l• ..

Frlday'•aames

Atil· 159.95

Moments of honor
for 1971, 1981
Eastern gridders set

106 in fts next three games.
Symmes Yalley's Vikings, this
week's guests of a Bobcat team
that bombed on its three-game road
tour, took their frustration - created by an 0-3 start that saw their
opponents outscore them 67-14 out on Southern to the tune of a 5812 victory. For Merrill Triplett's
Norsemen, still drinking in their
first win of the season, it was a
great way to open the conference
portion of the schedule.
Now for the task at hand. Senior
running back Chris Copley will be
the Bobcats' first tarl!et. a~ he
picked up 169 yards and three
touchdowns against the Tornadoes
to headline a 381-yard ground
assault Valley even threw a touchdown pass - its second of the year
- in the contest It's probably not
a good idea to look for Triplett to
order anything resembling last
week's 5-9, 61-yard aerial diversion in this encounter. But then
again, you never know.
The Bobcats' running game was
shackled in last week's 53-6 massacre at Oak Hill. The last time
Kyger Creek gained fewer than 100
yards rushing was when Valley
held KC to 35 yards in blanking the
Bobcats 20-0 on the Cheshire field
on Oct. 20, l989. As a side note
from that season, Oalc Hill held the
Bobcats to 48 yards in the preceding game, which the Oaks won 528. Could this be de ja vu, considering that the Bobcats have these two
powerhouses back to back this year
after getting a break from that last

21.7500; 6, Milford CcnUir Fairbank•

20.00110; 7. Muion P!ouont 19.So&lt;io; I.
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Toclay'sgames

Nnr Ywk (hrtc l ..t) at CltYtlaad

Low AI 115 Por Month,

Eoch

By G. SP&amp;NCER OSBORNE
8r.lllted, in spite of its relative dorOVP StafF Writer
mancy, because in the Wahama
The halfway point of the 1991 game quarterback Chad Savoy
football season is close at hand,
and three things in the SV AC are tossed ~ team's only aerial TD
passes. th1s season - one to tight
now abundantly clear -,- Randy end
Mike Sm1th and one to wideout
Churilla's Eastern Eagles and Greg Mike Newland.
·
Deel's North Gallia Pirates are one
North Gallia has shown a simiwin away from winning as many lar preference to terra fuma, even
games as lhey did last year (both in its season opener against Trimfinished at 5-5), both have yet to ble, when the Pirates' run/pass
lose, and one of them will, some- pulse was 162{12. But they had to
time Friday between 9:30 and 10 come from behind to win in that
p.m., fall from the unbeaten ranks.
encounter. In the last two weeks,
Eastern has only allowed one of however, the Pirates' passing game
its opponents - a tough Wahama
practically invisible.
squad- to score in double figures hasInbeen
all four games, the aerial
and kept two others - Waterford routes have produced two of their
and Hannan - out of the end zone 12 touchdowns, as opposed to nine
entirely. North Gallia can only by the running game (the other TD
claim one shutout, which came in was on an interception return). H
its contest against Ross Southeast- the Pirates expect to win, the passem, but has not allowed any of its ing game needs to increase its proopponents to score in double digits. duction against an Eagle defense
No matter how you slice it, if you that will be seeking to contain Mr.
like defense, there is plenty to like Quicksilver, also known as quarterabout these combatants. Why? The back Charles Peck.
Eagles have surrendered only 18
Peele, a 5-11, 155-~und junior
points, and the Pirates have given who has one of North s touchdown
up 21.
·
passes (tailback Darin Smith has
The Eagles' running game, the other), has been a visitor 10 the
though it plans to march on without end zone at least once in the last
senior tailback Tim Bissell (58 car- three games. His rushing (14 carries, 469 yards in three games), ries, 196 yards, four TDs in three
isn't hurting because of his -games) has been a welcome comabsence. In fact, last week's 41-6 plement to the bulldozing Casey
whitewashing of Soulhwestem saw Staton (71 rushes, 280 yards, one
running backs Charlie Francis. and TO in four games) at fullback. But
Terry McGuire (36 attempts, 219 it has been Smith, not Staton, who
yards in four games) combined to has been the lellding workhorse out
produce the first twin 100-yard of the backfield so far.
rushing game (Francis had a gameIn four pmes Smith, a 6-0, 200high lOS yards, and McGuire had pound semor who is playing foot103 in that game) the Eastern back- ball for the first ume in high
field has had since Bissell's arrival school, has 344 yards on 50
on the scene last year. Could this attempts, including a four-touchbe the beginnin~ or a more solid down, 19-for-201 jMlrformance in
backfield that w11l be less depen- last week's 36-6 WJn over Hannan
dent on Bissell when he returns to Trace. As such, he and the 5-9,
action? Time will tell.
180-pound Staton have combined
Considering the weight this to create a reasonable resemblance
game will carry in possibly deter- to the Kansas City Chiefs' quartermining which squad will be a seri- ton backfield of Christian Olcoye
ous contender for the SV AC title, 1111d Barry Word Deel and his offiBissell, whose acromioclavicular cers hope these two will create a
(A-C) sprain in his right shoulder similar unpact on the Eagles.
was found to be healing at such a Symmes Valley vs. Kyger Creek
rate that he may be able 10 play FriHave we encountered two teams
day night, may leave the sidelines that are going in opposite direcand get into the game. "Whether tions? Perhaps so. Let's consider.
he's ready to play Friday night is
Kyger Creek, after beating a
up to him," said ChuriUa
banged-up Federal Hocking squad
The Ea(!les, owners of a six- in the season opener, proceeded to
game winmng streak, have had lit- score 19 points to its opponents'
tle in the way of offensive balance,
as the fulcrum leaned almost exclu- National Hunting and
sively to the running game. Even
their run/pass pulse of 300/146 Fishing Day Saturday
The Izaak Walton Club will be
against Wahama- the closest
thing to balance Eastern has had in sponsoring the National Hunting
its four games - indicates this and Fishing Day activities Saturday
affinity for ground uavel. But don't at the Izaak Walton Clubhouse,
take the EaRles' oassin11 attack for located approximately two miles
beyond the boy scout camp on
scout camp road near Chester. Participants are asked to follow the
signs for directions. Formerly this
had been at Horace Karr's
rne r.astern Atnteuc uepan- activity
Royal
Oak
Park for many years.
ment announced that at halftime of
Activities
begin at 9 a.m. on
the Hannan Trace-Eastern football
Saturday,
Sept.
28 and last until
game on Friday, October 4, the
around
3
p.m.
The
event is sponEagles will recognize members of
sored
by
the
club's
Ken Amsbary
the undefeated 1971 and 1981 footChapter.
ball teams.
No admission is charged, and
All players on the 1971 and
organizers
say lhat "there will be
1981 teams are asked 10 return for.
something
for people of all ages,
this special occasion. Athletic
boys
and
girls,
men and women."
director Pam Douthitt indicated
Some
of
the
activities include
that all players should meet at the
firearm
safety
courses,
turkey callflag pole two or three minutes
ing,
taxidermy,
archery,
fishing
before halftime. If anyone has any
activities,
trapping
Canoeing,
trapquestions, they are asked to call the
shooting
ana
much
more.
Also
school at985-3329.
door {lrizes will be awarded
is 7:30

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Wednesday's scores

.

...

Region 13- I . Warren Kennedy

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

__ _

••

...t......:......._ .• _._....,. ________.._ ___

~ --

_........, _ ·--

•·

. .-

.

�-..-·
"
~

Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, september 26, 1991

'

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Football '91!
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Simon Frllll'
PuQOt-d

•••
10
7
t4
t4

t7
t3
20

HALLS

IAWLINGS·COAiS

. .D.UPOIT

CROWS

..

Family Restaurant

t3

21

7

•

13
t7

20
7
:10

28

' FOft LIWII

23

• Eutem O,..on

St••

t4
10

t7
7
20

11

Pomeroy, Ohio

CJCJ2·5432

BAKED PORK CHOPS &amp;
DRESSING

I

EACH

$525

Lots ol Other Unadvertised
In-Store Items Are Marked

__ ___ .,.......-

TIE BOB HARMON PRO FORECAST

StUJGGLE

FOR SUIDAY and MOIDAY, SEPTEIIID II and 30
• • BUFFAL0.......... 20 CHICAC0.......... 17
In '88, these two won reapective conference&amp;, but their match-up during lhe aeaaon waa onesided ... Beara, behind QB Jim McMahon, won 24-3 ... BiUa had zero rushing yards!
• *DALLAS .......... I6 NEW YORK GIANTS .......... IS
N. Y.lookingfor 7th straight win over Cowboya .. .laat fall, it was 28(7, N.Y., in DaUaa, then 31·
17 in Gianta' stadium ... N. Y. defen11e held Cowboys to 9 lat downs in opener.
• *DETROIT.......... 23 TAMPA BAY.......... 21
After winning two from T. B. in '89, Lions had no luck againat Buca in 90, losing in Detroit 38-21,
then 23-20 in Tampl, QB Vinny Trestaverde's passing dominating both samea.
KANSAS CITY........... 23 USAN DIECO .......... l7
Chiefs won both match-ups over Chargers last fall, QB Steve DeBerg lhrowing three TD paaaea in
firat'27-10 victory, then throwing two more in K.C.'slast minute 24-21 win. ·
. . L. A. RAMS .......... 24 GREEN BAYt. ........ l7
In aeason opener last fall, QB Anthony Dilweg, making first NFL atart, no I only threw for three
. TDs, but complf ted 20 of 32 pa111es to lead Packers to 36-24 win over Rama.
MIAMI .......... 21 UNEW YORK JETS .......... 20
Last season in Miami, Jets took 13-0 halflime lead, Dolpl~A tied it in third, N.Y. went ahead 1613, Miami scored winning TD in final1:03, 20-16 ... Miami then beat Jetal7-3 .
**MINNESOTA .......... l7 DENVER .......... 16
In back-and-forth contest in Minnesota last fall, Vikings rallied twice to defeat Broncoa2722 ... Vike WR Anthony Carter had five receptions for 147 yds. and TD ... repeat in '91.
NEW ORLEANS.......... 27 **ATLANTA.......... 20
Falcone Jon first '90 encounter with Saints, scoring 7 points in each quarter to come from behind
to win 28-27 in final minute ... in 2nd match-up, Sainta rallied to win 10-7.
. . PIIOENIX.......... 26 NEW ENCLAND .......... IO
Carda have won 5 of6 meetinga with Pata, including last three ... in '90, RB Anlhony Thompaon
carried 26 times for 136 yards, leading Carda to 34-14 win in Phoenix.
SAN FRANCISC0.......... 17 .. L.A. RAIDERS .......... IS
Four FGa marked the total pointa acored the laat time these teama met in 1988 ... Raidera' Chria
Bahr kicked three of them giving home-standing L.A. 9-3 victory.... 49era, no TDa?
USEATLE ..........20 INDIANPOLIS .......... 7
TeaiDIIIaat met thirteen yeara Q8b in 1978,_that being only their second meeting ... Colta won both,
in '77 and '78,.then franchise waa alill in Baltimore., .Seahawka thia time.
(Monday) . . WASHINGTON ....-. ..... 31 PHILADELPHIA.......... 20
Redakina abut down Eagle QB RandaU Cunningham in fll'at match-up laat fall, winning 137 ... Eaglea bounced back to win second 28.· 14, RB Heath Sherman ruahing for 124 yarda, two
--'
TDa.

oz.

89~

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL!
SALAD, lOLL and
CHOICE OF POTATO

VANILLA
WAFERS

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DICI ft$111 - O...r/Oparetar

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HEINZ
KOSHER
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24 oz.

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6 PACK OF
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'SI.UOJYI, CA
Santi! Barbara
Midland
NIW Mexico Hlgtllanda

FRIDAY
POMEROY - 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 . Those
attending bring snack s for the
snack table. The public is invited.

SALES • SERVICE

t7

M••
Colaol&gt;a

28

RUTLAND - The Women' s
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet
Thursday at the Rutland Church of

POMEROY - The United
Methodist Cooperative Parish wiU
have a clothing day on Thursday
from 9:30a.m. to noon at 311 Condor SU'eet in Pomeroy.

SAVE THURSDAY THRU SUNDAY

7

7

Trinity, l'X
'Wiles
Centre
Clark
•
Hllf

35

MIDDLEPORT· The Middle-

POMEROY · The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thwsday at
7 p.m. at Sacred Heart Catholi c
Church. Call 992·5763 for information.

B PHARMACY'S A
BABIES OF

•

2t

Alabama AI M

• Nonhrldgo

v

t7
7

BASHAN - The Red Brush
Church of Christ, Bashan Road,
will have special services through
Sunday at 7:30p.m. nightly and on
Sunday at 10 a.m. Guy Mallory,
Winter Garden, Fla., will be the
speaker. The public is invited to
auend.

REEDSVILLE - The Riverview
Garden Club will meet Thursday at
7 :30p.m. at the hom e of Ruth
Anne Balderson . Fall gardening
will be the program topic.

'I'IIMIE~

Air (Mtolfioft••

' Hardlna

• PoniaftlfSIItt
R.tlands

-foParl&lt;

·u..

21
20

Wt have tht
Stria you want
in the size you nttd
at a price you'll likt.

HEATING
AND
COOLING

INSTALLATION

••

REEDSVILLE · The Joppa
United Methodist Church wiU hold
revival through Sunday with services at 7:30p .m. nightly. For
homecoming on Sunday, Russell
Spencer and the Southern Hills
Singers will perfonn and there will
be a carry-in dinner at 12:30 p.m.
with singing at 2 p.m.

POMEROY • The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority. will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Church in Pomeroy. Hostesses will
be Reva Vaughan and Eleanor
Thomas. The program wiU be presented by Joan Anderson.

•

WARNER

20
t3
t2
7

with summCI' plants in those colors.
Mrs. Birchfield gave Mrs. Bolin
a traveling prize from July and
Mrs. Bolin also won this month's
prize owed by Judy Snowden. Mrs .
VanMeter won the door prize.
Plans for the September meeting
were discussed with Mrs. Davis to
get the supplies 'needed for mem·
bers to make seed wreaths of dried
beans. Mrs. Birchfield prepared the
Rutland Post Office display for
September with a fall nature and
wildlife scene. Carrie Morris had
displayed a back-to-school window
in August.
Janet Bolin discussed the clemeniS, principles and atuibutes of
designs from New Dimensions in
Floral Designs. She described geometric designs and use of line
material of different kinds of various designs.

Christ. Marge Purtell will be the
speaker. All women are urged to
&amp;!tend.

1I

Pomeroy, Ohio

7

"tO7

21
7

'ltwlal Clark
' Llnllokl

21
24

7
13
t4

·• K1ntuekr W..leyan

"t7
""

:~. Shirley VanMeier was· accepted show schedule. Winners were
:-.1nto the Rutland Friendly Gar4en- selected by the 'PUblic who selected
.:.ers Club at the group 's August their favorite in each class .
:::Jlleeting. Kimberly Willford presid·
An invitation to an open meet--ed.
ing of the Chester Garden Club was
·; Marge Davis , hostess, read read and plans for a AAA tour to
·:iJevotions, "Throw in the Towel," Ameriflora including transportalnd Mrs. Willford read "Unexpect- tion, hotel and AAA guide were
_ed Blessings;· the collect repeated announced.
·by all members.
An additional 50 ceniS has been
..,. Kimberly Willford and Carrie requested from each OAGC mem·Morris were congtlltulated for their ber. Members voted to donate $1
:~nuies in the recent flower show
per member to the program.
held by !he Rutland Garden Club
OAGC judges, Janet Bolin and
-judged by Janet Bolin. Mrs. Morris Suzy Carpenter, viewed the floral
.was noted for her enuies in the two carpet from Belgium which was
:shows at the Meigs County Fair displayed recently on the Stateand for making the show sign for house lawn in Columbus as a pre·
that event.
view of AmeriF!ora.
.' Mrs. Davis discussed plans for
Mrs. Bolin discussed planting
!!!e Rutland Friendly Gardeners the Civic Cenler Flower Bed with
riOwer Show at Bank One in Rut- . spring-blooming bulbs in the colors
~d. Judy Snowden developed the of Amerifloni then replacing them

pon Ans Council will offer a
sketching class. No previous
sketching insb'Uction is necessary .
The instructor is P.J. Harris and the
cost is $25 for class including all
materials. The class begins Thursday through Oct. 24 at 7:45 p.m.
eai:h session. To register, call Harris at 992-2451 or Mary Wi se at
992·2675.

t3

• Elon
W•t Vifginil W•lt)'an
' Mllltapt
oav•on

• Colorado Wlnn
• Eaat•n New Mexico
laVerne

7

THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Revival at the
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
will be held through Sunday with
Bob Mead the speaker. Pastor Paul
Taylor invites the public.

_.,

ANDERSON'S
992-3671

Community calendar

gardeners welcome
0VanM eter as newest member

t3

Olher Gamao - For Waol

·Azusa

~utland

t7
14

Wcwehouu
Cal Potr
NW Oklahoma

2:1

.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

...

10

Olher Gam.. - South I Southwell

• Albanr. GA
• Anoeto 81111
' ArUnau Tech

7
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24
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~ursday, September 26,1991

20

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81. Tho!NI

WilallaW CoJeoe

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Upper Iowa

DISCOVER WHY
PEOPLE SAY, II Dr

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7
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Bethany, KS
• Carleton
' Core
• Dayton
• Eut Ctnlral Oklahoma
• Grand Vai'-Y
GUIIIYUI Adolphus
Htidolbora

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Idaho State

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J.,... Madllon
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South Carolina Stat.
' Nlcholll Still
' WOfthnd 91111

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22
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Blown
• BOlton u.
Wurray S1ate

Bloon.burg

Muh .. nbltiJ

22

..

Down!

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SOFTENER

MIDDLEPORT

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$2

99

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LIMITED

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PACK
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'

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POINT PlEASANT,
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(304) 675·2303

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9.92·6491
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GALLIPOLIS,
.08.45631
(614) 446·6620

786 NORTH SECOND. ST.
MIDDLEPORT,
OH.45760
(614) 992·6491

�'

'
.•.. .. .
·-----"'!··---.. .-.---.. ..... .. .. . . . --.. - -~

•

""'4 ··------~,.~

Sentinel

Beat of the Bend....
by Bob Hoeflich

-- -----~- _~ --_ l
.
~

·.:

!

•

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,._.._._M
__.
, .
·.•._-_'_-'

I

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_:&lt;

;

-· ........£~-~:.rl ____ _j
Donna Boyd has done it again!
Last year. Donna had her rust
laSI.e of cruising when she made a
(our day trip to the Bahamas.
Donna loved the experience and
vowed to make cruismg an annual
event
Well-Donna has just returned
from her second cruise. This year
she chose a seven day outing on the
new ship, Ec!asy, owned by Carnival Lines. Donna's outing took her
to Nassau, San Juan and St.
Thomas-she loves Nassau and the
tiickering at the basket market.
Accompanying Donna this year
was her aun~ Marjorie Payne of the
Addison area.
There were 2,045 J'assengers
aboard the Ectasy an a crew of
1,000. Donna miraculously
escaped the long layover in Miami
on her rewm trip. So many others
!lave complained about the eight to
10 hour layover ther have encounti:red on similar outmgs. The only
layover Donna and her aunt experienced was in Atlanta and that was
only about one-half hour and it
took them that long to move
through the airpon to board their
i!lane for their return trip to Columbus.
Donna repons the accomnfoda·
tions on the Ectasy are good and
she was particularly impressed with
the RoUs Royce Cafe where a lavish RoUs-locked up, of course. lest
some jubilant paSsenger drives it in
t&amp;e:ocean-is a pan of the cafe set·
tjng. Service for passengers on the
cruise ships is really fantastic-as
those of you who have made simitar trips know-and Donna says the

Thursday, September

Ohio

service on the Ectasy is still -being
maintained at that high standard.
So, two down for Donna and
Donna promises more cruises will
be fonhcoming.
Please make a note to drop
Sadie M. Thuener a card on Oct. 2
when she will observe her 86th
birthday. Sadie's husband, Bill,
was mayor of Syracuse for a number of years and many of you will
remember Sadie fran her employment in a Pomeroy shoe store for a
long time. The address is Box 57,
Third St, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.
Let me alert you on another
annual event which is coming up in
October.
That wiU be the seventh annual
toy run of area bikers and wiU be
held on Oct. 5. Bikers will meet at
Pleaser's Restaurant in Pomeroy at
12:30 p.m. with the ride to start at I
p.m. Of course, the idea is to collect new toys for needy children of
the county and the motorcycle riders have done a stellar job in the
past A ~Y will be held foUowm~ tile nde at the Riverboat Inn,
Middlepon with music by the Mud
River Band and Staff House Road.
Admission is a new toy or $5 cash.
There will be food, beverages and
door prizes.
If you need information call
742-2081.

wOoden burro and a grapevine bas- can become used to the indoor dimate.
ket.
The next meeting will be held
Oct. 15 at the Zion Church of
Christ with Evelyn Thoma as host·
ess. Kathryn Johnson wiU have the
"Super Saturday," sponsored by
program on "Xerioscaping."
the
Southern Boosters, will be held
For the program, Ida Murphy Salllrday
at Southern High School.
had an article, "Primetime Planting
A
car
show
will begin at 10 a.m.
in the Fall." Early autumn is a good
and
chicken
barbecue
begin at
time to plant perennials, tree, noon. The cost of the will
dinner
is $4
spring bulbs, and to divide existing and includes chicken, green beans,
flower beds. After the blooming mashed potatoes, slaw, roll and a
period is over this is the time the drink. Dessens are available at an
new root system begins, so divide
charge of 75 cents. C~·out
and prune now so the roots can set- extra
orders
are available and delivery
tle before .winter and have a chance will also
be available for the
for good growth before the spring
Racine
area
only by calling 949growth begins. Foliage can be
2817
on
Friday.
trimmed by half by digging it up
A sale will begin at 5 p.m. in
and retaining a root ball. Dig a
which
the 1980 State Basketball
larger hole, plant, water and mulch.
Champion uniforms will be sold
Mrs. Murphy also had an article, along with warm up, suits, basket"Houseplants After Vacation." The
plants should be cleaned outside,
sprayed for insects and the pots
should be cleaned. The plants
The Middleport Literary Club
should be brou~ht into the house will meet Oct. 2 at the home of
before the heat IS turned n so they Mrs. Eileen Buck at I :30 p.m.

Also present were Susie Warner,

Evelyn Thoma and Marge Punell.

RENT·TO.OWN

Club to meet

R~r

1V • VCR • 811110 • Boom

balls, t-shirts and tennis shoes.
All procee4s from the days
events will be used to finance the
payment of the freshman basketball
coach and equipment

Man with name
problem arrested

Days
1

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY .
y

KIDS BOWLING LEAGUE
Starting Sept. 28 at 4:00
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Agea6&amp;Up ·
Trophies will be awarded at
the year end party.

-

ARNIE'S SPORT LOUNGE
OaiMpolia Fatry, VN.

Thurs. Night: Male Revye
HOT!
.
Band Fri. &amp; Sat.
Head Dizzy, D.J. Randy Sm~h
675-5781

S4 9900 For A

Public Notice

Improvement• will be
reaelved by the VIllage ol F. W. Dodge McGrew Hill
Pomeroy at the llunlclpol
1175 Dublin Roed
320 Eaatllaln SlrHI
Building, 320 Eoat Ueln
Cotumbua,
OH. 43215
Po-.y, Ohio 45789
~Pomeroy, Ohio 45781
Seperate !MIIed BIDS lor until 12:00 o'clock noan Clo&amp; Nlple, .Umllld
the oonetr,uodon ol the MIIIme); ~tobw 20, 1111, Burgeaa
4424 Emeraon Avenue ·
w.....~ TNelmenl Plenl and then et •ld ollie• pub- Perlltraburg, WV. 28104

ll "Igui.U'wOJJ.'"I',,
1 YR. WARRANTY

~- $88

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDO;lER and

YOUNG'S

-o.- woot
-E- ond

HeppyAdl

Plumblnol

-coo-•
woot
-~ClCIIJng

-1- • Ex10r1o&lt;
PRolniEEineEITIMATES)
IF
-

v.· c. YOUNG
•
_ Ill
992 621

'

OVEN ·IEPAIR
ALL IUDS .

Happy Belated
Birthday to
Sandra!
Love,
. Aunt Effie

••

lrllll It In Or We
Pick Up.

KIN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
991·5335 or
,.._ 915·.561

A-.. ,,....., Offkal

.

~"·· ·

5

•

169
354

fUll EA. PC.
QUEEN SO 5

•
•
•
•

•

SERTA PERFECT SLEEPER
15 Yl. WAIIANTY

•

14Ei9

•
•

CARPET SAVINGS!

•

•

FALL HARDY MUMS
. 6YJ-8'' POTS

•

•

• • • • • • •
• • • • • • •
• •
• •
• •
• • •
• •
• • • •
• • • • •
• •

Asst. Colors - '1.35 ea.
00

8/'10
HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
Syracuse, OH.
992·5n6
OPEN DAILY 11-5
CLOSED SUNDAY

FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain out of
painting.
ht me do it for you.

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES
(6141 985-4110
8·28-91· 1

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

H

• · __.. f
you rt tn nnu 0
Mobile Home Parts
or Accessories...

SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
n. 33 WEST Of
DARWIN OHIO
'

';;:;:;;;';/1;9/;1;m~o;.tfn;::

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LANWDACTLEERA~ING
...
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
.Um11tone,
HAULING:
Dirt,
Gravel and Coal
Ucenotd end Bonded
PH. 814-992-6691
9-11-1 mo. pd.

AnENTION
FIREWOOD
SELLERS
Hardwood Slabs
For Sale
Great Price!

CALL

CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept.

22

9-6-tfn

years ,o,

BOB JONES

·HIIYM Is MudJ N..ar"

EXCAVATING
DOZER and

.......

ftfi.-1, Ws lotnJIJ Will
Te tilte •I• past the
Clt'taltt •• Wt Wtrt fth
IJalllatL
1111 tU.giJ tht ttars IIHI
lllralt'!'! we •now avr
plefw11 cease,
For wa've the Falher'1
of ptact,

Th . 111ds

·-..

• ••
• •
•
•
•

of our

lomorrows are covered

ltv His care,

ana HttJYan Is atuch Rttll'

for we •av• Treasure
thtrtl

BACKHOE
WORK

(614)
696·1006
6-6-'91
Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

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

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

MEIGS CLINIC NEW HOURS
Monday•Wednesday•Frlday
8:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.

NOW YOU SEE IT, NOW

I

Da~a

• 3 New.,.pera • 3 ILines
YOIJB a.AIIIIII'IED AD

THAN YOU CAN SAY .
•ABRACAP~RA!~ .

O~l'

·sa.as. ·
'

-

· · - - - - - - .. _ _ _ _ _ _ 11------,--7.
IZ. _ _ _ _ __

.

z. ______
~

1 ••

~

YOU DON'T! MOVE YOUll

. · MERCHANDISE .FASTER ·

t~

------

WITH AN AD IN THE ·
T~EDAILY

SENTINEL CLASSIFIEDS.
THEY WORK LIKE

... _ _ _ _ _ _ · · - - - - - - 14. _ _ _ _ __

MAGIC.

&amp;. _ _ _ _ _ _ ••• _ _ _ _ _ _ 115. _ _ _ _ __

CASH ONLY. MAIL OR PLACE AT OffiCE.

WOODLAND -CENTERS, INC.

Print

_

word laeaeh •pan abav.. Eaeh initial or roup of fipre• t:~~Ulftls ._.a word. Count name

__. • &amp;Jtdlddft~!Orf~"'".~'iluoed . .lleodfl!'tSeptember30, t991.
' ~AM~ ,i~ ,; _..-' . ·; .;:: ;i&lt;ii.~~h~'A D .PHQNE._.::-· -o---•, (.U ..1. •p,_.. "" GilWpelM Va£1)' Tna...... f'· PM-..1 R.ftn• 1·a!HI Pa.D...oyl&gt;•ily Scn1ind.) ~

_ _

' . . ·.

Professional Counseling·&amp; FamilyServices

OM

II I
'

'

••

I

Tt1E DtdlY &amp;Nf!NEL
111 COURT STREET
POMERQ:Y;
OH ,4.5769
•
•
r
~

~

.Cail 992•2l56

FIT and TRIM
RE;~OP.JNING

o·CTOBER 1st
CALL Bll-3011 or
112-1111

n•

.IPPOII!MINT

Call For Re~Openlng

· . · · . .speclbla .

GROOM
ROOM

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

flew Hilmn lullt
"Free l!ltlme1ea"

EMILEE MERINAR .
Owner .&amp; Operator

PH. 949·210 1

614-9'12-6820

· or Ras. 949-1860

Pomeroy,

NQ SUNDAY CALLS

BALLET, TAP &amp;.
JAZZ CLASSES ·
AGES 3 and UP

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

THE DANCE
COMPANY

992-6648 or

992-6289

698·6864
::::=:;;;;;:~1·;;;14=··=&amp;1:;·tfn~
CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB

9-6-1 mo.

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

Golf
Lessons C6l .... 155.00
Ntw Grips ............ $4.00
Woods ................ 122.00
Irons .................. $14.75

•BUY •SELL •TRADE ·
OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday

10:00 om-&amp;:00 pm ·

REPAIRS

742-2421

$5 00

21fz Mi. outside

Used Woods ......... $7.00

Rutland on Naw

Used 110111

..... ;.. ,T.

•

AWARDS

8·9·1 mo.

lima ld.

pd.

90 DAY WAIUNTY
WASIIIIS-S 100 up
DUIS-$69 op

IEfliGRATOIS-S I00

RACINE GUN

o.. ,.... wa lovltl •~~~

9-13·'91 -tfn

USED AP'PUANCES

992-6461
9·1-91· 1mo.

Sept. 26, 986.

6:30P.M.

Starting Sept. 28

mo. pd.

pr011lsa of comfart and

• •

•

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

OHIO PALlllCO.- ·

I• Lovl11 Metttory
Rev. George Luster Jr.
wha passed away 5

SAT. NIGHT

•Garage•
•Complete
lemodtllng
Stop &amp; Compare
Fr11 E1tlmate1

THE

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

• •

Bashan Building
EVERY

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM Sl(JING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

1171.......

·.

•New Homes

LINDA'S
PAINTING

BULLDOIIIIG

. -1111om Addition•

5

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

742·145'1

r.
(ARPENTER SERYI(E I&amp;C EXCAVATING

~

10 Yl. WARRANTY

l399

1539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

':~rn:~;~~

• • ..
• • •

•

SERTA SUPREME ULTRA
El.PC.

742 ~2251

• • • •• ••• • • • • • •
• • • •• •• • •• • • •• • • ••
• •
• •
•• • • • • • • • •• •
•
•
• • • • • • • •
• •
• • • • • •
• • • •

SERTA PREMIER COMFORT

$119

JAMES IIISEE
992~2172 or '

upon peymenl ol $100.00,
NONE OF WHICH WILL BE
BACKHOE WORK,
REFUNDED.
HOME SITES
Proepeollve BIDDERS
LANDSCAPING
mey eddr•• lnqulrt•• to
w·-R d S
Bur"'" • NW:Ie, Limited,
"' "' an EWER
•
UNES
Parklrlburg, eat Vlrglnlf.
TIUOOIIG
•v•UJLE
By order ol the Vlllege' ol
"'"
Pomeroy.
FilE ESTUIAJES
Thla 23rd dey ol
992·7458
September, ttet
Jom A. Andereon 1 '::==~a.~~t-~~1~1mo.~ocl~VlllegeAdmlnletrotor L
Cl)2t,27,2to

• • • • • • • • • • •• •

rrtiJ

TWIN

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Wlnclo•Rooflng
•lneulatlon

F. W. Dodge McGrew Hill
40&amp; Clpllol S1rMI
Sulte803
Chlrlellon, WV 25301
Coplea of lhe CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS moy be
puroh11ecl et:
BurgMa &amp; Nlple, Umlled

-·-

j.,.'

DISCOVER WHY
PEOPLE SAY,

PubliC Notice

ADVERTISEMENT
FORBIDS
Vlllallo of PoNfOy

SOFA and MATCHING CHAIR

SERTA
SALE!!

I'NSULAnON

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

985-4473
667-6179

3-14-'91-tfn

J&amp;L

GUN

factory Oloko
11 Gallfl• ShOilgun Only
Strictly Intoned

lt. I, lutlallll, OH.

112-3524

.08/doy

11:

Vlltaao of Pomeroy
320 Eeatlbln St1'HI
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

•Reaaoneble fle1eo
•Cluallty Work
•Freo Eatlmateo
•Carpet H.. Fall Dry
Time '
•High Glon on Tile
Floor Flnlah
• MIKE lEWIS. Ow...-

1127rt mo.

Public Notice

Ucfr opened end -d lloUd.
. fhe WORK covered by
tho
CONTRACT
DOCU.IIENTS lnoludee the
following opproxlmete
quenddeL .
Contreotlt-1, 11·1A, end
8 1•1 B
WIIII.Wiltr
Trt·etmont
Plant
Improvement• - Tho com·
plete lnatellellon 11 tho
waal-ter l,.atment plant
ol a llnol olorlller, aeroblo
dla-ter, atudge d-ltrlng
bliltdlng, ohlorlne oonteot
tank, otlloollt!bontory
m..onry building, exletlng
ooredon link rehebllltetlon,
exledng ·nnet clarifier reha•
blllllllon, demothlon work,
alte ~r!t. eanh work, plpo
lng, eleotrlcal, and all
neceaaary appertaining
work. The work mey ba bid
" a totel ol eny combinedon ol the following:
Contreollt-1 -Complete
Pion I
Controcti1•1A- Complete
Plen, Le11 Etectrlcol
Contract 81-1 B - Eteclrloat
together with the neceaaary
appertaining WORK.
~The eatlmated oonatruc·
lion coat Ia '$170,000 aa ol
Auguat,' 11111.
Speelol att~tlon by the
Contreclor Ia II! be directed
to tho mlnorltr. buelne..
enterprlae requ remenl~ _••
edpuletecl wllhln the auppt,.
m•tery condlllone.
The CONTRACT DOCU·
IIENTS moy be examined

ST. AT. 7, FIVE POINTS

Stop In and Look Over Our Beautiful Lines of
Quality Sofas. Loveseats and Chairs.

Pomeroy

.eo

t1.30/day

16

Public Notice

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

),Pif,, ,-·.. . 1.,_,~,

.42

et3.00

IIIDIPIIIDINT ·
CAIPO CUANIIS
and ftU fLOOI CAll

H.E.C.

.30

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money ·

BULLETIN BOARD

·~

t9.00

Home Entertainment
Center

Rltftlft forconMcuUvt runt. brOittnupdfVtWill btcherged
fnr llt'.h 1111¥ II
Ids

. out1id1 Mtill. Otlli• or Mtton eounti• mu 11 be pu·

Pit d.

.

0•••
15 Wordl
.
.20

u.oo

.

1&amp;

Monthly

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -'Adolph "Hitler" Clark hoped to
escape the curse of his name and
lead an honest life, but the ex-convict has again landed in jail after
fatally shooting a man, authorities
said.
Clark, 20, served two years of a
10-yeat third degree murder sentence before being released in
March. He was jailed again Tuesday after killing a man in an appar·
ent dispute over a woman, police
said.

FIVE POINTS
EXPRESS

Sale Prices Start At Only

15
15

10

u.oo

Role

Hi

3
6

We Now Have Super
Lotto, Pick 3 and P1ck 4

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

Words

Box • C.D. Player
Soanner • TYDeWrlter
CordiL Phone
Ulcroweve
Reder Dollctor

s

RA

. TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY II A.M. to S P.M.

WOODLAND EXPANDS SERVICE HOURS

. I '

Sentinel-Page-S- ~

The

Nama Brand Producta
Factory Authorized

SHS Boosters plan event

Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
q.nnounces guest speaker

l

. -- ---··········--· . ... -· ..

'

The Fernwood Garden Club met
recently at the home of Kathryn
Johnson.
Ida Murph)' presided at the
meeting in wh1ch aU repeated the
club coUect Wilovene .Bailey had
devotions using an article, "You're
A Winner."
Reports were given of the Rutland Garden Club Flower Show.
Three had attended as guests. They
also attended the Chester Flower
Show and the Fair Flower Show.
A sympathy card was sent to
Thelma Giles on the death of her
sister. Also a gift was sent to the
fund for a gift for the retiring
regional director, J onnie Lou
Gabrielli.
Ideas were presented for programs for the coming year and the
group will meet on Wednesday to
prepare the books.
For the roll call each showed
and discussed the craft they had
made from nature and there were
honeysuckle and grapevine
wreaths, dried leaf picture, candlering of cones and dried flowers,

All contests were judged when
tlte Meigs County Pomona Grange
met at the Rock Springs Grange

New Hours Will Go Into ERect September 30
, The Clinic Is located In the Multipurpose
Building on Mulbtrrr Heights,
Pomeror, Ohio 992·2192.

~-----------·-

BUsiness
Services
.

.

ference of the Free Methodist
Church.
Pastor William Williams invites
the public to attend.

. ._...

Early autumn planting: Fernwood Garden Club

Meigs County Pomona
Grange holds judging

Tim Kinkead, missionary teach·
er, will speak at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church on Sunday
at 10:30 a.m.
Kinkead was appointed as a
career "lissionary to the COWltry of
Taiwan on Jan. I, 1991 by the General Missionary Board of the Free
Methodist Church Headquarters.
H:e is a graduate of Malone Colle$e
iil Akron with a four-year degree m
Social Work and is presently
enrolled in the master's program
with Fuller Jbeologicallnatitute.
:· : When Kinkead returns to Taiwan he will teach conversational
english at Holy Light Seminary
1111d The Chinese Naval Academy.
..: · This service is being conducted
iii: cooperation with the Ohio Con-

~......_

Ohio

-.r

~

..

1991

The expression, "A day late and
a dollar short" seems to fit the
September rainfall so well. Do
keep smiling.

the diviSion I for quiltS in class A
and Sara Cullums won in class C.
Wall hangings was won by Bunny
ltall.
Kubl and Sara Cullums who was
Master Patty Dyer conducted second.
the meeting.
Naomi Reed, Hemlock, won in
Winners for the state sewing, the national art, subordinate oil and
quilt block were Kathryn MiUer, acrylics. Bridget Vaughan won in
first, Rock Springs; Sylvia Midkiff, the junior division. Patty Dyer won
s~c.ond, Hemlock; Allegra Will,
in the subordinate scenes and Leota
l)lird, Harrisonville.
Smith won for people.
: Waid Nicholson, Star, won the
Patty Dyer was first in the
oeri 's craft with a wooden lawn national color photo for subordilrnament. Young marrieds and nate scene and Leota Smith was
pung adults w.as won by Patty secqW. l)Uy,I&gt;Ycr was first .in.peoryer, Star, with a shirt
pie with Leoia Smith, second Dyer
. Winning in national needlework was also tint in close-ups and sec, ere Rose Barrows, Star, table
ond was Rosalie Story.
oth; Maxine Dyer, Star, doily;
For youth baking, Patty Dyer,
axine Dyer, Star, first, afghans, - was the winner. In junior baking
~d Stella Atkins, Harrisonville,
the winner was Chip Macomber.
Fcond; Rose Barrows, sweater;
Linda-Montgomery was founh
tmma Adams, Racine, fus~ three in the decorated wreaths for youth
1ece baby set, and Rose Barrows, and younll adulL
pcond; Rose Barrows, firsi,
Participation awards were preJnbroidery table cloth.
sented to Catherine Colwell, apple
t Kathryn Miller won rust in the crisp; Eric Montgomery' brownies;
iass for any item other than pillow Larry Montgomery, men's fudge;
ases. Patty Dyer was second and Patty Dyer, decorated wreath;
~ara Cullums, Hemlock, was thinl.
Linda Montgomery. women's
· Rose Barrows won for counted fudge.
pro_ss stitch; Opal Dyer, needleRosalie Story, lecturer, presentpoint; Rose Barrows, fus~ miscel- ed a~ 'This is Grandparents
18neous innovative items, and Sara Day.' Several members gave readCuUums, second.
ings and the meeting closed with a
· Bridget Nelson won for stuffed food contest
toys, age 15 and under. Rose BarThe benediction was given by
rQws placed first, Rosalie Story, Westina Crabtree, chaplain.
second, and Emma Adams, third.
The Racine Grange served
Bunny Kuhl, Rock Springs, won refreshments.

",,

....... _,. ......... ., __ .-..,..,.,.. _ .~-- ... _. ·-----..

up

5-I0-'91-1tn .

A&amp;B
COMPLOE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops.
Carpets, Headliner·
&amp; Seat Covera and
Minor Auto Repair:

IANGES-Gat.o... -$125 up
FlfEZRS-$125 up
'
IICIO OVENS-$79 up

KEN'S APPLIAN(E
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915-3561
Across From Post Office

MAIN ST., MASON, YA•.

1·(3034)·
. 771!U't»O

I'OIIIIIOV, OliO ·
IO/~Otl9 lfn

918191 1 1

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS

GUN SHOOT:
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"4t Reasonallit Prim"
P'H. 949·2101
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night .. ·

•FIREWOOD

••

CLUB
Begins Sept. U
Every Sunday 12 NOOII-I
Factory Guns Only

NO SUNDAY CALlS

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

mo .

9/t/91/2 mo.

AUTO PADS
Speciallling in ·
Custom Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR AlL MAlUS &amp;

MODELS

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

,_
8·12·10-tfn

992-7013
or 992-5553
01 Tou. nn
1-100·141·0070
DAIWII OliO

7131/'81 tfn

,,_

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

·sto~k/1

AIR CONDmONERS - HEAT PUMPS and
FURNA(ES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
•••••••••

0

••••••••••••••••••••••••

BENNETT'S

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;

COOLING

Locattd On Safford School I d. off It. 141
C614) 446-9416 or 1-1110-1112··591•7

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES, INC.
(A venture of J&amp;F (ont ructing ond 1(8.J (onslruction)

Dozer, Backhoe, Trenching Work
Ulilitie5: water, gas, sewer, eler.tric.
Cu5tom and Log Homes
Rernodeling and General Contracting
Commercial Development
about Sunshine Room Solariums
Jim Clifford-992·720 l
Grcq Builcy 992·681 0
See

U5

4 ~ I

110 o

Is Yow ROot Reaclj For Another Year of Ice and Snow'l
Now's The nme to Find Out. .
.

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION

.

992·2653

For Old &amp; New Roofs,

Shingles
Repairs( Gulters
Building aaa Remodehng

We Guarantee Your Satlsfaetlon

FIH miliATIS .

.

.

JO~PMD. JACU

•u-.

1

�Sentinel
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

44 · ··Apartment
for Rent

Business
==""·,.Buildings
34

3 Announcements

72 TrUcks for Salt . . , "":
1057

45701.

.

1811 Chovy c..20 long bed otop
eldl, MOO. 304-tlS-5301.

Giveaway

w

1:00 &lt;Zl •
Cll •
ONtwt

'.
'.1

441-7281,

,

'7

~ Reiling Rllnbow

3-malt

7-wttk old

1-"''T"i§

Overweight man
from kitchen to his wife," H
1 I I
werenl for the fact of having
L-.J.I.-.1.._,J_L-.l.,_J_ 0 the television and refrigerator
so far apart, some people
--rR;r..:.H,.;E:...;:E:...:.,
T..:T~--l~ wouldn't gel'any ···--·-- al all."

I

1D Rln '1'111 Tin, K-8 Cop

S"tereo. r:;l

1:011(1) Too Clotle lor Comlort

&amp;a."=§

r

1:30~!.9
~ £'1Ameflc8T1ere0. r:;1

puppies.

Huaky/Auat,.illan

Shopord ond Bluo Hoolor, hovo

L-

(i) 3-2-1 eom.ct r:;l

bttn wormed. 3 112 mlln out

143. 614·992-5597

wa1ch

dogl

Moth•

Ei~£

malu and 1-ltmalt. 114-843-

FrM Kllttnl: Houubrokln, At.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCitAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
H S
Assail - Weave - Gourd - Nettle - ~ET LOST
From The Have You Ever Noticed Department:
Summer is that time of year when thousands of people
rush out to the great outdoors and GET LOST

..

11

s-~

:::

•i

•s

tAQ871
+A K 76

Stereo. r:;1

Lost &amp; Found

.--:- YfAff, Tf'IAT WAY

t"'

JTI.IPEN'f$ C,OUL&amp;&gt; ~
tiEI.f' PAY F0 fl
;

Tflit!t

OWN

~f&gt;UCATII)N I

Rea l Estate

Yard Sale

--·

r

31 Homes for 1!18
AII80WTELY iiillT 'iELLII
Aotii'Cid To Ill: 2 IIOIY 3llr
COnw 1.111 In CIIMhiN, Ohio.
E o - Col1cltlon. Florionclng
Anlloble. ' ...... 1112·7170, 1-UMI.

111 MF Tnclor, BllorDI $4•310:

T030 ~-With

,P
:.Sor,_
8522.

Form mochlnory lor oolo. Coli
tobY lomt• oloMy Lynn Crib, 2 onytlmo114-245-1441.
~~rollor, TWin Strollor.
SA.

-11100

onddopoell~.

3-IR No

:~

poll.

,....~~~~~.

· - - - -·or-.
--ftnonolna,,~10110.

A.,;

piloncoo Gall Clubo, llloc. 20
Willow Drlvo, Thunodly, Frkloy,
Soturdoy, H.

Blue ololh Ill chair, exc cond,
new SIOO. ooll $300. 114-286-

on FIIIWOodo Rd.

~

Fum- tbr ...._, Loooled
7U -Third /I~ ttllllmo.
ttoo o.-~~.114-44Wm, · 114-

. . . .
Car - . 1 Car Goroga, 3 441-t340.
Ac.-, Bullville Rood. 7 Yuro
Old, saa.ooo. 114-441-11118.
42 Mo~lle !'I~II'IM .
3br, hill, Khchon, DR, LA,
. f~· Rent •,,
1
·
Goroae
c.wu
Air,
au
Hoot Mid $20'L llldcllopotl. 1143br, I

1
1112•384.

Bllutllul - r y lilting ......
W/3-112 - , gtlrdOIIIIIOI, llllro
....,. .... 111· uiiiiiiH.

Wit .... Now $11; w...... w.

l'i.w AI Ani Ooumnttld. IMP·Appllenats, 114441-731&amp; : .
c:.1c
•Roilgo " wlbul.-ln

Cluotor Ring, 1 Corot, Dlomond,
14 KGold. $400. 114 441 304Q.
Concroto I plootlo ooptlc lonlul,
Ron Evano Enterprluo, Jock--···
Doublt
...,.~. IJ!I
' .ald,
... 1300.
1m oon, OH 1-8011-8374113.
old, $100.· Odttr . ... .....
CRAFT SUPPUES
..... .,. - 11042
.
Hind llodo Crane
Strow
drlod noworo,
bookoll ond moro. Tri County
Spol1o llhoJ&gt;. Point Plo-nt,

·-ho,.

30W7W08i:

2-BR mobile hotnM. ~
w.-/drylr, olr, eloMIIZ-.
2·1A port. film. or unfllm. In
country. ~oo,..
qulrotl. 114-04114131 . ' .

For Solo: 11173 Indian 12xeo;
Good CondHionl Corpotoa
Throughout, Dllhwuhor And
Applll.-, llocko And Undorpinning, Roody To, llovo lntol
Aollng, S4 1100.114-216-8237.
For Solo: 20 ConelY vondY mochlnoo 11 locally_ phlced,
PIIO.Oo, 114-1112~001 or 1112•

For Solo or Ronl, 1111
""""
....,. on -ed
lot, count,ry -lng, dopooll onc1

For Solo: Good Uoed CUt Iron
Cool Furnoco, Choopl CoU 114-

Voty

3014.

441-:lm.

Huoky 1.111 ond llcCuJ.
looh oholn oowo mo- - n
~ :V~~·

~~· CoM Allll' ap.m. · -

01111 ru.. ComlltiiOiollile l!allor

.,... ,., rouna ..........
~

plclc... p, IUinleiMid;
III.OOjlor -..11, 111 1141 2121

Hounhold' fu.!.lllt!t!ng. 112 mi.
~ P.Joiunt, WV,

.,.._,..

REN1'20WII

43 Fafllll for Rent
Form For Aonl. Or ..._ 14
Ac.-, NMr North Golllo 'High
School, 304473-4881.
.

Dl._. Wlih lletiiltl • 4 Qlllro,

Aplrtrnent
for Rent

44

Solo 1 Clililr; ttuo WoN:
Aooll-, 111.47 .Wool&amp;, 8wlvol
Aoolulr, tt:a Wooll.lunk led
~· $1.41 Wool&amp;, 4 Drftoor
ChoM, .lUI Weill; ...........
room
luM~JlQ&amp;::
1no1uc1oo
· rrW•k.
_Plnl
ttO.II WMk.OPIH:

1 I 2 bdnn 1D1 In Mlddl1part,
UIIIHoo Fum, clop roq. no pe11,

i11t1nUt

Thru lllunlor, ILm. to lp.m.1
lundov 12 N_, Till lp.m. •
Mlloo Olllloute 7 On AoUio '141,
In Coftl-.y.

llWIIa-2211.

11173 Flomlngo 2 B•*- Corpotlng, Jllov. And Ao~tor.
AII storm Window, Gil Fur-IS,40Q. 114o38M724.
11173 C.moron 3 bedroom trollo&lt;
304-aiiS-31180.

'

2
obo¥1•
-·
OlnlcorWillIJIIVlrglnll,
1111.
2·BR In Mldclloporl. No poll.
Poy own utllltloo, $200 por riio.
Doilooltlllo- rllJulrotl.
1br On Control Avonuo,. Wlil II
mllobti Flr111&gt; or ·· Oclobor,
tl85/mo: EHicloncy Alllllinonl

:r:r-•ForRonl,·-

=

*

CLRSSifiED·RDS

·=-··

.· anti._,

o-..llolriiV..pupo,........., ·
~
114-11
111m...'M

... .., ....

,,,

.. . ..... .... . . -· -·-.._,.,. ..... . ... .... ...
~

,:

,M
·•
. ·~

. ·•

·-=:

_ _.. .. .
...

,. ., ,,

. ...

I

- . 114 . ~247-4282

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

=-

MOICU!)'

301h'

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

11101141l· Stereo. C

"""

r

IQ.JON f.lON MLlQ-1
NINETIMESNINE
le ... OO~':l

IS THAT SOit-15- 10
HEL.PI.l5CLEANI.IP~

R?LLUTeD eKIEe":!

JIJ5rTHE ANet.NER r'D !;XP£0r
FROM ~WI'O t:'OE5N'r KNOW
~

MIJO-i NINE 11Me5 NINE 15.

HOme ..._.... ..., • •

Yooro EIP.eoioroco On Oldor I · •
,._., Holiloo. A- Addltiona,
Fountlotlon WOIII. Rooii!!G, :
Wlndowl I Sldlnj; Frio Ei- ,
1111114oel Rolor01- No Job To •

' .

~ottlo~ ~Con. U. oond,

t'il" 111Uilinco

~l'll:a,1~~.;.:; fiT

BARNEY
SENTLEMEN
OF TH'

.1UitY ••

UpholStery

p

IIDwroy'o Ufholliortng oorvlt · :

~~=lil tlmoloo.
=lrl~"!~~
·,~
... " "·'
..

~

...

• 10 5 3

• 82

tK2
+Q J 9 4

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
South

West

I+
4+

3•
Pass

North

East

It

••

3+
Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • J
tract was doomed, the Groovy Guru
eventually winning two more spade
tricks.
·
"Guru. you overcall very light. You
had only the A-Q ol hearts and the
spade jack."
·
"No , Smart, baby, I had the A·K· Q
of hearts. I doped you at trick one. "
"Anyway. Max ." chipped in 99 . "you ~
had a safety-play available. Just lead .
a spade to your ace at trick three. II
the king doesn't appear, return to
dummy and lead a spade toward your- ·•
queen. The finesse couldn 't gain; it
could only lose."
@ 1111, NEWIPAPEfl ENTERPfiiiSE ASSN.

1 Center or

ehltld
5 Popper
• beverage
·g Wipe
12 Small vehicle
13 Got ofl
14 Egga
15 Newopaper
opinion
column
17 Big18 Rlglld
19 Actrell Ruby
20 Vertically
22- Tin Tin
(movlt dogl
23 Sibling or 1 s
24 R1re Gil
27 Blondle'a
huaband
31 ActorO'Neal
32 Goad
33 Norma 34 Conlempo·
rary palntar

35 Putalo work
36 Compollr
Jerome37 Longtd
39 PaiiJ·40 011¥11 ridge
41 Bridge or San
Lull42 Sailing ahll)
45 Move quickly
46 Blick bread
411 1051, Roman
50 Mt1ldl1h
(2 wds.)
53 Cry or
ourprlu
54 Improve lan·
guagt or
55 Hat malarial
56 Mualc
ayllables
57 Largt
amount
58- wall \hal
ondo wall

DOWN
1 Hawaiian
lnatrumenla

AniWir io PrevktUI PUIZII

2 Formulated
3 Kind or
chteae
4 Ba11ball
player Mel ~
5 ActrenBiack
6 I cannot tell

mother. starao. Q
Ill MOVIE: MIMii1g (PG}

WITH ONE
POSSIBLE
EXCEPTION!!

(2:30)

• Naslivllt Now
• LlnY King Uvel

8,....,

Dowling Myllerlel

1:30 (J) • 0 Wlnp Helen
smashes thrOugh Joe's olflce
wttli her jeep, caualng a
lawsuit. Stereo. r:;l
(I) ()). Amlrloln

DIMCtl¥t (Stleon Premiere)
Drugs end prollltutlon
reineln In Las Vegas. Stereo.

·•

.

12,411. 1IIIIIUIU llilo

•

.1'111118

:

In Z.nlth oloo oorviOing moot
othor IMando. Houu calle, o1oo
oomo· oppllonco repolro. WY

v..

W7112.1... 1-10

wttnaallld on a train and the
body IS milling. 0
Ill 1D
ol ROlle
O'Neil Rotle dotendl a wife
charged wttli contrllullng to
her eon's detlth. Stereo. C
II]. leveftr Hill, 110210'
Dylan conlronta hla emotions
and re118r11ri'1811b toward his

_ :

Ho~, 1718.

wv.

Stereo. 1;1 .
CD Ill MYaterYI A murder Is

:=

Ron'e TV Servlc., ~lallzlng

Stereo. D
Fll: Tho Untald
ltoriM A casino IS badly

dlmaae&lt;l when a huge bOmb
Ia deliberately exploded.

JET
~'
Aorotlon M-, ropolrotl. Now"':
I rHiulll motOia In otocll, RON --\
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-80C). ~

537-1121.

trip and lotl8 their Inhibitions.
(I) (I) •

\r"a-.-.1

Big Or.lmlll1114-441.._
D I E Conotruotlon a-.J
Conlroelor, -ng, c=-oto,
Glllnl lltDaiN Gontrol ConIINctlon, 114-ai toll, Froo Eo-" •

~~--·

Stereo.
ID You Alkldlor It
1:00 &lt;Zl • 0 CMM Frasier
convinces the guya to take a

• J 10 9 6 2
tJ 965

til

ACROSS

II] • .,..• ..,, 0.11 Drexel
and RoiCOI meet on the
balkllball coun to settle a
rivalry. Stereo. Q
.. AiMrlcll1 Mtitlt: lliop

EAST
• J 10 8 5
.AKQ74
• 10 3

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle

ID TWa My Dog

1:30 (J). 0 Dlrr..nt World
Whlttty and Dwayne argue
o,... how to apend their

WEST

• 83

We continue to look at the second
rubber in the bridge match between
the two rival spy organizations, Control and Kaos.
On the fourth hand. Agent 99 opened
one diamond as North; the Groovy
Guru overcalled one heart, and Max·
well Smart, Agent 86, bid one spade.
"Alert'" cried 99.
"Ja, dear lady'" asked Siegfried.'
"It shows at least five spades,
Siegfried."
"Danke. Shkip bid, tree hearts."
·Alert, man," said the Guru. "Like,
pre-emptive, man."
Agent 99 bid an aggressive three
spades, and Max went on to game .
Siegfried led the heart jacl&lt;, and as
99 tabled her cards, she apologized lor
being a little light.
"Better zan being lat. Mrs . 99 ."
quipped Siegfried.
"Thank you, Siegfried. May we get
on with the game now'"
The Groovy.Guru won the first trick
with the heart ace before returning
the heart four. Max ruffed in the dummy and finessed the apade queen: lOll·
ing to Siegfried's king. Now the .con·

0 Col1ge 1'00111111 UCLA at
Sin Diego State (L)

18Q No lion 22ll toll-Con- ' '

Cuitle

u..

+K

SOUTH
+AQ762

a1 On~ Stereo.

Wit.,_

c..,_

Tho llnitllont

rtldl I patrfollc 8SIIy II the
Kennedy Canter In
Wallilngton:.!l·C· Stereo. Q
0 .....,, - WI'Oitl
Angola ~ • friend •
lnveetiglte the murder of a
mullt;lln'a wife. (R) r:;1

talned, · EXOIIII,. Condhlonb
81-.- I, $4,000 Or Boot Oflor. .-

=.::

7:31 (I) Mljot ' " - . ....,..
Clnclnnllf Recla at Attanta
Bravea (L)
1:00(1). 0 COIIIy 8liow Cllll
gives Clllr bluepllnta lor her
own ~ate room. Stereo. Q
(J) MOVIE: Tho Flying
Delal(2:00)
!ll (I) • Plea I Cone
(Premiere) An ex-con /Dins
lorcea wttli a retired pollee
ofllcer. Stereo. C
CD An:tk: Wan floe
envlronrnentallsaues
surrounding the Arctic:
Nallonll Wildlife Refuge In
Alllkl are examlnecl. (1:00)

ifi •

1

kl£105 1t.AM 11J TUEV!S/00...

tti'IWII~HSI.~-=--~~ ' '
llontONY C-lc. ~
Vory 'Good Englno, NoW Exhoull 1111 Btarcroft Pop-Up C.mpor, ':'.,!
1111
Uko NeWt 82,300. 114-;::
• 2nd .Ownor, Aollng
l14-441-4752.
1m BuioiiBkylorto, Runa (lood,
' .:;!
Good Tlroo, $800. t1WM-1'11ti. '
Se rvices
~·
11171 Buick'...... Convortll!ll,
"
Now T!!P, Poln4, 1lrll. 411 En; -st":l.;---Ho...;,.m-e""·_...;:··- -' :-:
.alnt, Oci!&gt;d stoapol Q,200. 30477MI32.
_,
lmp~er;ienta
11171 lloreul)\ llorqulo, 400
onlnao. olr ccincl, .,., ooncl, no
IIAIIIIINT·
ruot,'l04-882-371S.
.
WATEAPIIOOFINO
_..:..;.;==='---~- U-.dlllonol llfldmo DUII'Ifto
1117111&lt;&gt;dgo ,Chorgor, 12,000·Ao- tat. Lcicil ......,._ tum-.
tull Mil-, 1 Ownor, Auno Uko F.- ottllillloL Clll. oolltcl 1·
Nowl ~14-441-4832.
114-2l7o0411; cloy or nlglil.
"'1m='=o""a.,.'t_olo_nt_l_mot_or_l ~ tolellll..
·:
traoamll• on In aooct lhlpe, ••· n~
tru, 8200.00, 1111-38H771 or
Comiltottllill!ll•l!-0""
Sot.Upo,
•
:
381'0421
Ropoh: Cotnmorlool, RooldOno
,
11171 Z~a C.IMn&gt; NbuiM :1110 1111 ~ Including:
'
'
lhlft-ltl~ BlM ohl~er, 11500 oi Plumbing; liltetrlciil. lnouroiiCII
trade lor oldtr Chevy. 114-371- - -..111-114-2111-1111. _ ..:..:
1184

WhHI of 1'1111Une Q
• l'amiiJ 1'11111
a~e.awstereo .
~ EIPN'IIptlciWitk
1B Crolltlni

• a• Top Copt Stereo.

1J.I1'5 IJE:TIVOI(I.;. ~~&amp;'fAT
~DE IIJ 'Tl-1£. fA("f iHPrr
WRS IS 1H£ Ht611£ST-12A'TED

.

Manleti. ..WHII ClolltiNn

starao.
Ill ADDIIIcNin RIPQit
lllnlltMIIII ea.. 11 :OO)

' ~

a.

lUll ............_. 104-1'111-2013,
. . . .'TnlpiOoi_.~J
.
__Iilnlo,

,_,

1113 Chevy 4-0R hlnl-top, 283
-r5do. Aod/Whllo, runo
good,
~. vory rllloro-

·~·
1881 Oklo Dille 18, &lt;W)R Sodln.

=~Toni!; 2411 ......_ Avo.

... ........

ttn:;,::',Y

Now 11M
po!lt, ono
ton lrvcll
_ rlclltcn,
floor moto,' tic. D I R Auto,
RIPleY, WY. 304-3'12-3133 or 1•

79

71 Autos for' Sale

Trlplo
linedplowo.
plpo ""
woodburnor. 14"
Rowing
mo- 1110 Pontile ·~·••,
- chino. 30U75-3t31.
point, 1800. 114-1112-f
1881 ~ CoiL Good llloogo,
llog WIMiOio, Now Polio, $800.
Building
55

111 4"1114 .,..., p_m.

. '""

I

~::;

•-ns7

Read the Best Seller
Read the
•

114471-'

.

Btocll, brick, Dlpoo, wfn- Uko·":.l.:;"'l Ollllon, 301 Y-11,
dowo, llntoto, etc. Cl,udo Wln- tt711.
2 nl
30W711~3118 Ohio 114-446-2484.
toro, Rio Orondo, OH Coli 1141182
Oklo
CulloM
...710. lloko
245-1121.
Rool work ond otlior liollll
ollor. 30W'III-a301.
repolro, 304-1711-3110.
Pets
for
Sale
56
S.pilc Tonk P~mplna SlOeGolllo
a....... ond Bupplr Shop Pol
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
oloekoon, OH t-too-637-8121. '
Groomtng. All broldo, otyloo.
lima Pol .Food OHler. Julio
Sow-Voc
llonrlco, "
Wobb. Col 114 441 02:n, 1-80C). 1184 c..tbrlt1, 4dr,· AT, NJ, PS, Dovlo
312-41231.
PI, Ext1a Cleonl P,IIO. Colt Al- Goorgoe Crook Rd. Polio, oup- .""
plloo, pickup, ond dollvoiy. 114- ':'
lor 5p.m. 114-441-1244.
448o02114.
Pupploot
112
Auotrolllin
BhODIIord, 112 A.....,lan Bluo 11• C.maro lrac, Burgundy,
Noolor, From Worldng Poronto, WHh Red lntorior. S5,315. I~ Will build potlo eovoro, docko,
acrMMCI r001'118, put up vinYl
Altor4p.m.
318.a313 Aftor &amp;p.m.
oldl!lll or trollo&lt; oldrtlng. eMAKC MlnlotuN 8ohnouzer, IIIII 1111 c.vwn Ylctorlo: ovorythl!lll 246-8157.
Pu~ ~':'oit$200. Wonclorful but -ric loclio. Now tlioo on
Potll1 4
. 0.
'
orouncl. 114-441·1~ allor 1 p.111. 82
Plumbing
AKC roglotorod Coeker Sponlll 111r Fonl LTD C&lt;vwn Vlclorla 4Heating
IIUOIPIIO, oholl ond wonnod, DA Boilon. 8Hutlful flmiiY cor,
. S04~76-8412ofter 4:00PIL
C.rtll''l Plumbing
Ill Ollllono. 302-V• $atM. 114ond Hoollng
AKC
Rtglotorod
Mlnoture ltz.Cnl
Fourth ond Pfne
Sclwiluzer, Soli, I Ptppor 1117 llon:ury Grond llolquoo,
Gotllpollo, Ohio
Color. 1 Yllr Old. .- · · 3'1:000 mllll, ' A-1 oancl, ono 114-441-3811
Pollino. ...... lrokon: l14-441- -~ $1,500. 304.e1NI11.
1llll, _,4 4Ml Dt21.
1117 Pantloc Tnrw-Am, T~op. 84
Electrical &amp;
AICC Rogittlrotl Yotlow Lilli '"'"·• ou. - . , • - -34
Refrigeration
lllie~ 7 WOolto Old. 1171. oltor o:OOpm.
:::=.~~~:.:::::.::__
114.1114a
Rooldontlol or com-.:lol
1, . bl ,._,__ ......., 11r":. "'i 'iiri..:e;-eo,Oiiil wtrlng, new oorvlcl or ropolro. ·"
Dntgott•tltCI eoaory Porolon, •• ...., ~-·llootor UCIMod 'oloctrlcllin.
8 1 - Ond HlmoJoYon kin-. mlloo
·
, ..~~~··
Rldonour Eloc:trlcol, 30W'If.. .• ,

IM-illl2·2lll doyL
2br All UIIIHIM Pold, f21Qtmo.;

, . , . , _ ond dopoell,
112-aMI. '

2213.

-;

1731.

.=r.!"-'

Supplies

1975 Flootwood 3br, Both 1 112,
Totll Etoctrtc WHh Wood Bur·
-.18,500, Or .... -bit UIIIHIM Polcl1 tllllhrio. All In Rio
Grando, 114. 111 1141. .
.
Oflor.l14 418 11075.
.
11171 Uberty 14x10, 3 bodi'CICifllo
lnphlco, gardon tub, 7X1ii
porch, conlrol olr, $1,000. 30411101110 .... .... Jn. 1182-331111.
. 1 • 2-bclml 114-1112lram I to 1pm.· ·.
1185 Wind- 'llx10, 1 112 both
bedi'OOIII, vory nlco ·~';:j II!AUTII'UL APARTIIiH'ia AT
• ..,100,
call MDin llWIIa
IUOG!ET PRICE$ AT IACKIOII
or oftor IIMI34.
UTATE!,.. 11M ,......._ Plko
18lllohullz trallor on 1 112 oore tram 11...,_ w~~-- •
proporty, nHd to .... quick ond mowlll. C.U.114 441 HI•. Eq_t4:
cheilp, soua.an
IIIKh II,.., llldtlllllor1
.
., 01111.
Two bod- lurnlohoil . lilt

!.4

Transportation

Plno . Dlnoltlt ·Ill And Cholro;
Few ~ Clothoo And So
Forth EIO. 114 4411441•
RICOII!Illonlll wuhoro I
dryoro, uch $100 ond up. Wt
oorvlcllllmokoo. Tho Wo- 1 1251
DryerS~
11171
Conlobo 1110,
St~moilc Stovo, liNd 8 Wln- outo, . evwythlng, $1400.
til,. 114-1112-2114. after 1:311pm,
toro, $800. 114-3111o8851.
ooiii04-IJMIII.
.
lklri'IUO Army Comoullougo
,11171 Oklo Cuuoto, poe!
-hlilg, omoll o, loothor US Combol runo .:,.1 aood. ...710. 1121
EvoraDi,
p,;
olot
1;001111.
• - · Som lomorvlllo'o .L!'ndyvlllo WV booklo &lt;mlcl
At. 21 N. Fri, Sot, Sun, .-M:iiil 11171 Oklo Dob' II Ropl, txo
·py (oxtonclocl houro during
wei· iMint
auto,
10,000..ned,
- · N,
......
hu,.lng --~ 3Q4.273.a455. 11,200. 104-1'111-7111.

,_.-21144.

Vl'~aFumlttn

I

Tool box erooo bod fDr wldo bod
pickup. T - Hborlgao ""
ohorl wklo bod pickup. 30W'III- •

a-

For

Plirta.

n:i•71H

1121, Now $II Anclt'lll; ~To

,...,..,.. rwqulrOd, . 104-1'1117118.
lloblle Home
Aonl.
Rollronco And Dlpoolt Roo

BU!klli T~1 _Uood 1 . __;
NllulM, =l8-:~
A.-o• ._,

For Ale or lrldt 77·71 G~and
IIIII porto, dooro, 11-, lntor- ..-.
~1 oon-, lhlfter, - · · 114- · -

llorgoln Altltlloncal 10 Dip
OntJ, · Fnlll" Rorrtgorotor

two-

Coii114-114M320.

eoo.m.asas.

8817 or 258-1123.

·-NMl

ttoo oao.

Now ...... 4-14" llumlnum -

; D-17 /II; WHh CUI, Buill Hofl, 12,1150.
Ownor WIM Flnonco. 114-Uf.

3----··

ALL Yard Soloo Muot Bo Pold In
Advonoe. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho doy blf911 the ad II to nm.
Sundoy edhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edhlon • 2:00
p.m. Soturdoy.
·

Auto Pans&amp;
Acceaaorlea

76

61 Fann Equipment

oohoole ond .........,,

n- Ctothoo.' emon

PHILLIP
ALDER

(J) 'ro le AMotlnCed
(I) Em.rtH'.ment Tonight

.
I

1-!6-91

.943

1D Tho Wallont

Tear down 2 atory okl wooden
hoUit tor materllila, mull cleln
up m..., 304-773-4588.

Flrlt

NORTH

BRIDGE

7:01i(J)Ieveltyltlblllel
7:30 &lt;Zl • 0 Jupardyl Q

7

Complete tho chuckle quoted
by filling In the miiSing wa&lt;do
you dovolop from step No. 3 below.

ID. lloiiW...._nt Tonight

218 Soulhl 3 MIIH, Whlto And
Brown Tro lor On Right.

6

.1.~

ANSWER

Ne..etourQ

5421

.L.-.L
.-

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR

()) • C8ntllil ea......

Freo klnono to good homo. 2·

1

1D New

/Ji I DrMm of Junnle
~·&amp;-::.:~

Ia

I I IS I · 0

7
.L.-.L.-

•

Stereo. Q
1:31 (I) AndJ Ortfllth
7:00 \2.)• 0 WhHI of F111111M

W"maraner. lial hu Ill ahota
and nauttred. 114-Mt--2808

l

6

~~~~Q
~UpCiote
Zorn~

Big block dog, 10...,o. old. Good

~ ~j

FR A S C
1-:5,....,..,-;,...;_;.....:;_,_~~

=~Qigall

I

ATRIRY

I T.;.,.,.I~R;_;.i..:...E~~~~

Stereo.

s&amp;:=:s

l pupDioo ond mommlo dog,
304-e7W300 after 4:30.

Siberian

l

•

a o•

CD Club eon-t

otonclord, now · ti,., no ruot • · ...~
11Um1or10 oil. 1-1-4411 ,
' "'"?'· :
1111 Chev. 112 Ton 42,000 Millo. "!
PS, PI, Auto, Trana., ~Y)' -.- ,
Duty Aoor Slop lumpor, led ~ •
Unor. Exootlont Condltlonl I'll'

2 Whitt Kltttna With Blut Eyta.
6 Wooko Old. 814-:Jaa-aSH.

tht
below to form lour llmplo wordo .

(J)Yldeoi'O.-

8UIIUIIL4141110, 104-1'111-7130.
' •o
1182 Ch!lvy 112 Ton 2!0, 1-GyL, •' ••

to good homo. 514-C4&amp;-11170.
4 Molo Khtono. 5 Wooko Old, 2
Clroy, 2 Bolgo. Thoy Are Eotlngl
614-4411-7140.
2 Khlono To Good Homo. Lhtor
Trolned. 814-446-3all7.

THU., SEPT. 28

0 four
Roorronga lollon of
ocromblod WOI'do

EVENINQ

w. ~ ;

·.

11171 lludo tiiiCII f700, 1110 ' .

1 wk. old, ..malt caneo kitten,

·•

•
•
• •
., ,. '

1118 Fonl F-tOO llotbod truck. .
Eocolllnt condlllon. llWIIa·

Slnglta, P. 0 . Box 58461 Athena,

4

Television
Viewing

,_• • 1

Reduce Solo And FIM WHh
GoB- C.plolo And E-Vop
Dlurwtlc At Fruth Phonnocy.
Wo Moko Groot Motchoo. C.roro

OH

The

1991 ~·

r:;l

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BED!!: OSOL

•l

..\

goVerning you in the year ahead . Send

awed by extenor trappings.

for Libra's Astro-Graph predictions to·
day by mailing $1 .25 plus a long. sell-

ARIES (March 21-April 191 11 you put
yourself in a position of giving more

addressed. stamped.enveJope to Astro-

than you can afford , either materially or

Graph, c/o this newspaper. P.O. Box

emotionally. your liberal nature will

91428, Cleveland . OH 44101· 3'. 28. Be
sure to stale your zodiac s ign.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Don't make
any major domestic decisions today until you've had a chance to talk things ·

prove to be a detriment today. Try not
lo overextend yoursell .
TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20tyou might
have some problems today gelling co·
operation from others. And il you 're as

over with your mate. There 's a possibili-

reticent to make compromises as they

ty your betler half will have a betler pic- are. nolhlng will be accomplished .
GEMINI (Moy 21· Juno 201 It's admirature of lhe situation than you do.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 211 · ble to be helpful to others. but be careSomeone who has neglected to thank
you lor previous favors might have a

tut whom you volunteer to assist today.
You might pick a person who's been

new requesl again loday. What you do wailing to unload a great many burdens
is your concern . but don'tlook lor a dif· on a bystander.
lerent ending.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) If you atCAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jali. 1a) Usually. tempi to buck the will ol the majority,
you're a reasonably cautious person. complications are likely today. Being
But today you mighl be inclined to take the lone dissenter could make you stick
Sept. 27, 1991
a chance on something your better out like a spre thumb.
y'ou mighl be subjected . to some judgmenl has· warned you against . Be LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don't overplay
changes over which you'll have little or careful.
your role In a collective endeavor today.
no control In the year ahead. Oon't let AQUARIUS (Jill. 20-Fob. 191 To be on Tooling your own horn too loudly could
these developments intimidate you. be· . the sale side, have alternate plans avail· turn supporters Into opponents In no
cause they'll ultimately prove to be to able today as to how you hope to . time.
your benefit.
achieve a critical Ob!eclive. You may VIRGO (Aug. 23-llepl. 221 Nothing will
LIBRA (Sept. 23-oct. 231 11 you're OPI!r· , have to scrap your onglnal blueprint at , be gained today by arguing with somesting in an unfamiliar commercial arena the last monute.
one whose views and opinions dlametrltoday, be sure the deal Is crystal clear to PIICEB (Feb. 20-M1rch 20) Just be· cally oppose yours. To make matters
ou - so you'll have recourse just In cause the . ,lndiilld_ual who p~esents worse, neither ol you has the power to
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case you ve
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Cl 1tt 1 by NEA. Int .

26

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Star Garden Club installs three
new officers at recent meeting
The Sw Garden Club· held its
regular meeting at the home of
Mrs. Orion Nelson in Dexter
recently.
Mrs. Allegra Will presided at
the meeting and led the club in
prayer, club collect and creed. Mrs.
Nelson had devotions, "Let Me
Live In th e House Beside the
Road." Roil call was answered by
the 10 members present naming a
wtld flower m bloom.
It was announced that Allegra
Will, Stella Atkins, Binda Diehl,
Neva Nicholson and Pauline Atkins
attended the open house and flo\Ver
show presented by the Rutland
Garden Club. Allegra Will, Stella
Atkins and Binda Diehl attended
the Chesler club's open house.
Mrs. Will announced that she
and Pauline Atkins laid the ribbons
ror both shows at the County Fair
Flower Show and they made
arrangements receiving a first, a
second and three third place ribbons.

They discussed the therapy program to be presented at Gallipolis
Developmental Center on OcL 24.
Mrs. Will installed the follow ing officers: Mrs. Virgil Atkins,
president; Mrs. Neal Jeffers, vice
president; Mrs. Orion Nelson, secretary-treasurer.
Mrs. Binda Diehl, Virginia Nelson and Pauline Atkins displayed
"A Mass Arrangement of Fall
Aowers."
Mrs. Neva Nicholson's topic for
the program was ''To Pot or Not to
PoL" She said that signs of plants
needing repouing was if roots grow
from the bottom of the pot, plant
wilting and looking for yellowing
and loss of lower leaves. She stated
to always choose a pot an inch or
two larger that the present one and
always use potting soil not garden
soil.
Mrs. Binda Diehl stated that this
is the time to divide iris and
peonies. Iris should have the

The Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ met
recently at the church for its
September meeting with Dorothy
Roach presiding.
Frank Ihle opened the meeting
with prayer and the secretary and
treasurer reports were read and
approved.
The class made plans for its
52nd annual banquet to be held in
October at tile church. Committees
were appointed with Frank and
Kathy lhle to plan the program.
Geneva Tuttle, Hazel Wilson,
Clarice Erwin and Mary Martin are
in charge of reservations. Thelma ·
and Nettie Boyer, Flo Grueser and
Roseanna Manley will do the decorations.
A goal of 52 was set for the
class attendance for Homecoming
Sunday on OcL 27.
Devotions were given by
Kathryn Evans reading "A Verse to
Jiang Onto" from Romans 8:28 and
DorothX Roach read "Grandpa's
Coffee ' relating to Revelallons
3:16.
The meeting closed with prayer
by-Joe Bishop.
. Geneva and Clay Tuttle and Flo
aitd Bill Grueser served refreshto the following members:

Bud and Hazel Wilson, Gene and
Dorothy McDaniel, Dorothy Baker,
Delcie Forthe, Elsie King, Roseanna Manley, Dorothy Roach, The!-

foliage cut back to three inches. If
division is needed, dig carefully
and wash din from the roots and
cut away any damaJed part.
Peonies need not be divided for
several years unless they become
crowded. They do best when plant·
ed in the full sun and in a neutral
soil with good drainage. Cut
foliage off after fall frost at ground
Jevel and burn the foliage.
Mrs. Stella Aikins gave the garden tip: oriental poppies can be
divided or transplanted or used to
sow new seeds. Cut flowers to be
dried by hanging with heads down.
This is the time to do lawn seedings of spots or renovation.
Other members present were
Ruby Diehl, Martha Chapman and
Wanetta Radekin.
Mrs. Harry Lewis was reported
to be in the nursing home.
Refreshments were served and
Mrs. Norman Will will receive the
hostess gift.

UCLA romps
over Aztecs

Cards: Q-H; Q-C;

9-D; J -S

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DR. SEUSS DIES,Seuss Geisel, known as Dr. Seius to
readers or classic children's books, iucllidiDg "The Cat In the Hat"
and ."How the Crlnch Stole Christmas,!i! died Tuesday night in
LaJolla, Calli., after a long Illness. He was 87.

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SHELBY POWELL

'

New arrival
: Lawrence and Nannetle Powell,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of a daughter, Shelby Malynn Powell on Aug. 9 at Holzer Medical
Center.
.
· The infant weighed .e1ght
pounds and nine ounces and was 21
mchesloog.
Grandparents are Delbert and
Loretta Blake, Middlepon; Hattie
and Gerald Sellers, Pomeroy; and
the late Roy Powell.
Great grandparents are Virgie
Blake and the late William Blake;
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; Sarah
Congo and the late Dud Congo,
aacine; and Ruth Powell and the
late Charlie Powell, Torch.

Gene Wilder
moves on
• STAMFORD, Conn. (AP)Actor Gene Wilder, who has spent
much cif the past two years helping
In the fight against ovarian cancer,
says it's about time he got on with
rest of his life.
· Wilder, whose wife Gilda Radner died of the disease in 1989, is
to receive an award tonight from
the Yale Cancer Center in New
Haven. He said that will probably
ponclude much of his anli-cancer
effons.
• "I'm going back to watercolor
painting and acting and d,irecting
and I'm ~oing to retire from
·medicine,' said the star of such
movies as "Stir Crazy," "The
Woman in Red" and "Young
Frankenstein.''
· It wesn 't until, after Radner ' s
W, Wilder said, that he learned
earlier detection of tbe disease
might bave saved her life.
· wilder, 56, remarried earlier
this month. His wife, Karen Webb,
. is a ~g specialist.

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Theodor Seuss Geisel,'
Dr. Seuss, dead at 87
By BRIGITIE GREENBERG
Assoelated Press Writer
LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) Theodor Seuss Geisel, the Dr.
Seuss whose rhyming children's
classics delighted generations of
children and parents has died. He
was 87.
Geisel, author of "The Cat in
the Hat," "Green Eggs and Ham,"
"How the Grinch Stole Christmas" and dozens of other books,
died Tuesday night at his home
with his family at his bedside. He
had been ill for several months.
He wrote and illustrated 4 7
books, selling more than 100 million copies in 18 languages. He
was awarded a 1984 Pulitzc;r Prize
for his contribption to children's
literalllre.
.
Geisel's works were journeys
into nonsense, magical worlds of
truffula trees, ziffs and zuffs and
nerldes and nerds, where top-batted
cats run rampant ihrough youngsters' homes while parents are
away.
They often included subtle messages on issues imponant to him,
from internationalism to environmentalism,+
In his 1984 best seller, "The
Butter Battle Book," he offered a
parable for the atomic age.
Geisel was childleas himself after his fust wife's death in 1967,
he married Audrey Stone Dimond,
a mother of two.
Bom March 2, 1904, in Springfield, Mass., son of a brewer who
ran a zoo during Prohibition, Geisel
gnaduated in 1925 from Darunouth,
where he drew cartoons for the
humor magazine, J~-0-Lantern.
During a year studying literalllre
at Oxford University in England,
he met another American literature
student, Helen Palmer, who
encouiaged Geisel's artistic career.
Geisel drifted to Paris, where he
mingled with Lost Generation writers such as Ernest Hemingway,

C lear toni ght. Low In 40s.
Saturday, sunn y. High In mid 60s.

Page4

Vol. 42, No. 102
Copyrighted 1991

AWAITS OCCUPANTS - Biosphere ll sits
completed near Oracle, Ariz., about 40 miles
northeast or Tucson, where it will become the
home to eight people who will stay inside tor the

By ARTHUR H. ROT51'EIN
Associated Press Writer
ORACLE, Ariz. (AP) Against a backdrop of laser lights
and tribal music, four men and four
women bid goodbye to friends and
families Wednesday before being
sealed for two years in a glassenclosed, self-sustaining miniworld.
The crew of the Biosphere 11
project went through a day of interviews and celebralion in advance of
C-Day- as in Closure -set for
shortly afler sunrise Thursday.
The eight crew members will
spend 24 months sealed in the 3.15acre geodesic-framed compound,
barring serious illness or major
mishap.
Crew members range from ages
27 to 67. Two 1!fe from England,
one from ~elgiUm and the rest
fro!'_~ the, Uruted States.
We ve ~around the har·
bor, W~ ;mow II S 8!&gt;~a fl~t, we
know 11 s gonna S81l, S81d Jane
~ynter, ~9, who~ run the inten·
s1ve farmmg operauon. "Now we
bave to see, can we make it sail for
two years, an~.beyond that, for a
hundred years?.
.
The crew will try to replicate the
earth's environment to te.ot ~ace
col~nizatio~ technologies. And
they II have m-person contact only
with each otl!er.
Space B1ospheres Ventures,
developer of the private, for-profit
project financed by entrepreneur
Edward P. Bass at a cost of perhaps
$ISO million, expects to draw up to
a half-million visitors annually and
has applied for some SO design
patents.
It has incorporated several manmade climatic zones, called
biomes, under the double-laminated glass: 85-foot rain forest with
waterfall, savannah, ocean with
coral reef, fresh-to-saltwater

marshes and high-humidi~ ~
The biomes are packed w1th
3,800 plant and animal species,
from bananas, peanuts and papayas
to wheat and potatoes, talapia fish
and hwnmingbirds, butterflies and
pygmy goats.
"I bave keen anticipalion to get
to that final moment, and then we
can get to that two ye8rs of hard
wort," Bass, wbo generall.r::·
es to talk to~ said
y
night during last-minuto prepara·

lions.

Reproduction among· all the
species but the humans will be
encouraged.
Sex certainly has not been rull!d
ouL The Biosphere's head)Margret
Augustine, says that wbat'the crew
members do after working hours
will be their own business.
Each biospherian is likely to
spend about four hours daily on
farming and other chores; :to maintain the complicated mochinery
driving the BioSJ&gt;here Another four
hours a day will go' to SQientific
work.
Psychologists say the group's
focus on goals likely will keep
them from getting on each other's
nerves too badly
Pre-closure celebrations sched·
uled for much of Wednesday
included American Indian dances
and urban music, a cocktail receplion under the stars and a lailer light

3 Sectlona, Jll Pegea 25 cents
A Mulllmedlo Inc. NewapaP!'r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 27, 1991

Future of coal industry will be known shortly

next two years. "Biospherians" tour men and
rour women will be sealed Inside the 24-acre
'compound today and conduct experiments. (AP)

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - The effects of
the federal Clean Air Act on the coal industry will
soon be obvious, even though new standards don't
take effect until 1995, an American Electric Power
System official said.
"You will know before tllis year is out," said
Jack Katlic, senior vice president of tile AEP Service
Corp. of Lancaster, Ohio. The corporation buys coal
for generating plants operated by American Electric
Power in seven states.
Katlic spoke at a conference at which pri vale and
government officials discussed the coal industry 's
status in southern and central Appalachia.
Katlic said utilities and the state agencies that regulate them will have to make decisions soon on how
to comply with the new regulations, largely because

Biospherians
count
down
to
Homebuilders Class makes plans
for 52nd annual banquet in October start of two-year ~adventure
ma Boyer, Loretta Tiemyer, Lester
Bowers, Frank Ihle, Joe and
Marylin Bishop, Glenn and
Kathryn Evans and Farie Cole.

Pick 3:495
Pick 4: 6666

show.
.
The contractor that bu1lt the
wave-~g_ machine for the_Biosphere s mm1-ocean _asked a Judge
Wednesday to allow 1t access to IJ!e
~upposedly · seakd project. ~o
mspect the equtpment. Pac1ftc
Aquascape _Inc. ~f Hunu~gton
Beach, Cahf., faded to wm an
ernergencr order, but is pursuing
its claim m federal coun that it's
owed $321,000.
.
There have been persiStent queslions about the proJect's scientific
validity. The latest surfaced in
repons that a prestigious consul·
tant, Smithsonian Institution
marine S!'«ialist Waller Adey, had
cut his ues to the project, fearing
that his fi~ld of_synthetic ecology
could be diSCredited.
. .
~e was quoted as saymg tt was
unlikely the system would support
humans ~or tw~ years.
Adey s off1ce S81d Wednesday
he was on an expedlbOn and could
not be reached.
Biosphere II _spokeswoman
Kathleen Dyhr sa1d Adey's contract had expired but that as far as
she ~ew, Adey _had not se_vered his
relauonsh1p wllh the Btosphere
project.
The eight crew members wiU be
residents of some of the world:s
most expens1ve apartments, set m
an all wool-and-oak furniture
decor.

of construction deadlines.
It takes between 3 lfl and 5 years for utilities to
install the "scrubbers" that will allow them to continue to burn the high-sulfur coal found in northern
West Virginia, Ohio, and western Kentucky.
"If you're going to scrub ... you're ~oing to have
to make the commitment this year,' Katlic said
Thursday.
Conversely, the effects on the low-sulfur coal producers of southern West Virginia and eastern Kentucky also will become more apparent, Katlic said,
since those utilities that decide against using "scrubbing" technology will want to buy low-sulfur coal or
other fuels.
Coal operators looking for new markets have sent

out more bids to utilities than they ultimately may be
able to serve, Katlic said.
" It wiU take a while to understand that the same
coal has been bid to a lot of different buyers,'' KaUtc
said.
But Katlic said there are other potential problems
for the coal industry because of acid rain, which is
generally attributed to emissions of sulfur dioxide
from the bwning of high-sulfur coal and oil.
"This is not about high-sulfur versus low-sulfur,"
Katlic said. "It's about carbon dioxide- it's about
any kind of coal you burn.' '
He said the coal industry must seek congressional
understanding, and he said other countries should
also be responsible for reducing pollution.
Katlic warned against "extreme environmental

positions which are either unattainable or prohibiti ve
in cost"

"You're in trouble, coal, if they buy this one,"
Katlic said.
The conference was sponsored by Marshall University and coal associations from Wes t Virginia,
Kentucky, Ohio and Virginia.
" This is the fust of what we hope will be an annual event in conjunction with Marshall University,"
said Chris Hamilton, vice president of the West Virginia Coal Association. "It's intended to provide a
forum for the southern and central Appalachian mining community to examine developing policies and
other llovernment actions that have an impac t on
them.'~'

Agency ~will appeal
judge's MR/DD decision

ILLEGAL DUMP· Yet another illegal
dump has been discovered in Meigs County on
Laurel Clift Road by the Meigs County Litter
Col)trol l&gt;epartment. Trustees of Salisbury
- · -~-11'-llip"lmve--bl!en instrumental In the' cleanup or the illegal dump site containing approxl-

mately 40 to 50 old typewriters, calculators and
other omce equipment, as well as water tanks,
old tires and household furniture. According to
the litter·control department this Is the 37th
clean-up· this year; In addition, 20 otber sites
have been cleaned up by the ortenders.

Job training grants available for
ousted Meigs, Gallia mine workers

~ wANT

ADS
; WORK!

Displaced workers in Meigs and
Gallia Counties as a direct or indi·
rect result of the layoffs at the
Meigs Mines may qualify for job
training grants.
On Aug. 16, 197 workers at tile
Meigs Mines were laid off as the
company continued its cutback. Of
the number whose jobs were deleted, 137 were miners and 60 were
salaried workers.
The Ironton-Lawrence Community Action Organization will
receive $150,000 to serve workers
dislocated due to the decline in the
coal industry in Athens, Gallia,
Hocking, Lawrence, Meigs, Perry
and Vinton Counties.
That amount is a part of Governor George V. Voinovich 's three

992-2156

James Joyce and Genrude Stein.
He returned to the United States
in 1927 to marry Miss Palmer and
to pursue his hope of being a novelist. The Depression forced him to
put the great American novel on
hold and be went to work writing
two-line gags for humor magazines
Judge and Life.
It was on a spoof of scientific
developments that he fust used the
name that would become his trade·
mark. He added "Dr." to· his mid·
die name to sound more scientific.
"Mulberry Street" was pub·
lished in 1937, the same year as his
fust adult novel, "The Seven Lady
Godivas." The children's book,
rejected by 27 publishers before
being accepted by Vanguard Press,
became a spectacular success. His
novel flopped.
He wrote three more children's
books and switched to Random
House publishers before World
Warll.
"Horton Hatches the Egg,_"
published in 1940, reflected
Geisel's impatience with pacifist
sentiment in America at a time of
international crisis.
After Pearl Harbor, Geisel
joined the Arrriy and was se11t to
Hollywood, where he worked on
indoctrination films under director
Frank Capra.
Two Geisel documentaries made
in the ' .'40s "Hitler Lives"
. and
"Design for Death," co-.wrinen
with his wife, won Academy
Awards for their producers.
A Geisel cartoon, "Gerald
McBoing-Boing" won its JI'Oducer
an Oscar in 1951 in the animation
category.
Through the 19 SOs, Geisel
wrote a couple of children's books
a year, capped in 1957 by the publication of"''How the Orinch Stole
Christmas and "The Cat in the .

job training grants which totaled
one-half million dollars to dislocated workers in southern and southeastern Ohio.
The grant money e11n be used to
provide classroom training, on-theJOb training and job search acti vi.
ties. The emphasis of the training
would be on increasin~ job skills
and opportunities for fmding per·
manent jobs.
The other two grants went to the
Joint Training Partnership of
Southeastern Ohio in Cambndge,
$200,000 to serve workers dislocated primarily from the National
Cash Register Corporation, Shadyside Stamping, Ohio Valley Coal
and Sidwell Brothers. That grant

will serve dislocated workers in
Belmont, Guernsey, Harrison, Jefferson, Monroe, Noble, and Washin~ton Counties. The funding is
bemg handled through Joint Training Partnership of Southeastern
Ohio.
A grant of $150,000 was made
to the Community Action Organization of Scioto County to serve
dislocated workers in Hi~hland,
Adams, Brown, Jackson, Pike, and
Scioto Counties. ·
The grants are pan of the Governor's discrelionary funds of Title
III of the federally funded Job
Training Partnership Act. It is
designed to retrain dislocated
workers.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
MR/DD levy back on the ballot.
Sentinel News Statr
"Practically speaking, we can
The decision of Judge Fred W. assume that we are not going to see
Crow III which ordered the Ohio any of that money," Lentes said.
Department of Mental Retardation
In Judge Crow's order dated
and Developmental Disabilities to SepL I I, the Meigs MR/DD Board
provide the Meigs County MR/DD was ordered to provide ad09uate
Board witll $275 ,000 as supple- services to Meigs MR/DD cltents,
mentary funds for this year's oper- while the Ohio MR/DD board was
ation of Carleton School and Meigs ordered to provide any necessary
Industries will be appealed.
funding to the local board.
The order in the case (State ex
John Lentes, president of the
local MR/DD Board, reported rei. Joan Cottrill versus Meigs
today that Jerome C. Manuel , County Board of Mental ReWda·
director of the OMRRDD. has lion and Developmental Disability
advised him that his agency will and otllers) came as a result of a
appeal the decision.
·
civillrial held in June.
Lentes said that Manuel will be
That civil action was flied when
asking the Court of Appeals for a the MR/DD Board announced that
stay on the order -hom .Judge it would lay off 12 staff members
Cro'W's'Coutt'IO pay·llxf $275,000. · bccau~of the fmancial difficulties.
An opinion from the Court of
A pitt of the order issued by
Appeals will likely take a mini- Judge Crow states that "The sermum of 12 months, Lentes vices provided to the MR/DD
explained, which means that the plaintiffs, which were eliminated
state will not be required to provide after January 1991 were necessary
the support while the action is to meet the basic health and weipending.
fare needs of said plaintiffs includIf the local program loses the ing basic hygiene practices. These
money on the basis of that appeal, represent fundamental needs of the
then Lentes said the Meigs MWDD plaintiffs.
·
Board will appeal the case to the
"The state, by its statutory
Supreme Court of Ohio. He said if scheme, has created for the plainthat happens, in all probability it tiffs an entitlement t~ receive prowill take about three years before a gf!imS a~d serv,tces m. accordance
decision is reached.
w1th tbeu IHP s. While the state
The board president said it was may elect not to initiate such profelt right along that the decision grams, once they have been estab·
would be ap~d and the money lished, they become rights of the
not forthcommg. He said that was a MR!pD plaintiffs which must be
deciding factor in putting the proVIded m such a way as to not be

unequally afforded due to geographical location. In no case. may
they be withdrawn without due
process....."
Specifically, the entry ordered
the Ohio MR/DD to provide the
local board the sum of $275,000 as
supplementary funds for the 1991
calendar year to enable the MR!DD
board to fulfill its responsibilities
and duties to the clients.
Currently, according to Lenres,
there is no change in the operation
of the Carleton School insorar as
the number of teachers and aides
are concerned . He said that the
stale law requires not more than
eight students to one reacher and
that the school is in compliance
with the state requirements.
He said that instead of cutting
the program fm the school aged
children, the board O);lted to cut the
adult program to ' bare bones."
That program is being run by a
staff of one or two, according to
Lentcs, and while the same number
of adults with mental retardation
are being served, there are less staff
members to work with them. The
out:placement program has been
discontinued temporarily altllough
Lentcs indicated that it would probably be resumed if the levy passes
in November.
The three year one-mill MR/DD
levy to be voted on in the Nov. 5
general election, if passed, will
generate $211 ,470 per year,
according to William Wi ckline,
auditor.

~-------r------------------~

RAC replacement workers
mount their own campaign
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- About 1,700 out-of-work sleel·
workers at Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp. will have competition in their
bids to return to work.
Replacement workers at the
Jackson County aluminum maker
are lobbying Congress to reject a
bill that would ban the hiring of
permanent replacement workers in
labor disputes.
The workers were hired to
replace members of Local 5668 of
Ravenswood who haven't worked
at tile plant since Nov. I. The company says the S!eelworkers w:Qked
off the job, but the union says its
members were locked ouL
The RAC Volunleer Commitlee,
a group of salaried and replacement
workers, is lobbying Congress to
reject the so-called strikebreaker
bill.
"Although our situation has
been used an example of why this
bill should be approved, it is criti·
cal that you understand we are people, not specimens," the group
wrote in a letter to senators.
"For many, this is the flfSt good
job they have ever secured. We are
working hard to build a better
future for ourselves, our families
and our community," the group
said.
On Thursday, lawyers for the .
National Labor Relations .1,\oard
wrapped up their unfair labor prac- ·
tjces c:ase against Ravcnswopd

.

Hat."

"The Cat in the Hat" revolutionized children's reading habits,
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Aluminum.
Carey Burnell, a benefits specialist with the United Steelworkers
of America union, and Steelworkers District 23 Director Jim Bowen

testified before an administrative
law judge.
Bernard Ries of Washington,
D.C., an administrative law judge,
is hearing the complaint.

ARRESTED IN
- Paul Daniels,
wearing camouflage cap, Tomahawk, Ky., ·is
brought Into the courtbouse by Scioto County
deputies Thursday afternoon. Daniels was

arraigned Friday morning In the shooting
deathJ ot two ramUy members and 1he woundingor three others early Thursday in South Web·
ster, near Portsmouth. (AP)

Kentucky man charged with 2
counts of aggravated murder

,,

SOUTH WEBSTER, Ohio (AP)
- Authorities say a man killed two
of his in-laws and wounded three
others after ·his estranged wife
refused to end their separation.
Paul Daniels Jr., 3S, of Tomahawk, Ky., is charged with two
counts of aggravated murder in the
deaths of his wife's brother and
aunt at the home of his wife's parents, His wife, Judy, escaped
through a window.
Daniels was lll'!'aiPed today in
Ponsmouth Municipal Coun. Judge

David Spi'ars ordered Daniels heid
at the Scioto County Jail on
$400,000 bond and set a preliminaey hearing for OcL 4.
Greg Dunham, chief investi~a­
tor for the Scioto County shenff,
said no other charges would be
filed pending possible indictments
by a Scioto County grand jury.
Mrs. Daniels, 3S, had been separated from her husband for about
two months and was living with her
parents in this southern Ohio town,
said Scioto County sheriff's

Deputy Phil Malone.
Witnesses told investigators that
Daniels telephoned his wife
Wednesday night and asked her to
come back to him. She refused.
He went to tile house at about I ·
a.m. and cut the telephone line and
electricity, Malone said. Deputies
said the women in the house were
watching television and the mtm
were asleep.
Mrs. Daniels opened the fron\,
door in answer to a knock, said
Continued on page 3

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