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Times--Sentinel

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Pomeroy...:.Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

~ . '!

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win a $5 prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co• . Leave your name, address and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be acceptefj. All coolest entries should
be turned in to the newspaper office by 4 p.m.
each Wednesday. In case of a tie, the winner will
be chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallia County
farm will be featured by tbe Gallia Soil and
Water Conservatk!n District.

Boxers are a knockout this fall
Hy L&lt;\URA FISHER
For AP Special Features
Men's boxer shorts, once a mere
necessity. have become a star in the
gloomy retail industry.
But forget plain white or pale
snipes. To ·be BC (Boxer Correct)
requires boxers that are lou;!, with
humorous patterns in brilliant colors, and that can be worn not just
.as underwear but as outerwear.
"It's an absolute phenomenon,"
says Alan Mills"teih, pulilisher of
the Fashion Network Report, .an
industry newsletter that keeps track
of trends. "What was once the
province of lhe WASPy preppie set
1s now outerwear."
Street looks inc! ude boxers that
hang below regular shorts or peek
through ripped jeans. Boxers, especially pncier silk brands, have
become standard couch potato
garb. Brooke Shields showed up at
a recent Hollywood party in a pair
of silk boxers by Nicole Miller.
Jockey International reports a 20
percent increase in boxer sales last
year and a 17 percent increase this
year to date.
"We've moved hundreds of
employees to boxer production.
We've started second shifts. Pro·
duction can't keep up with sales,"
says Howard Cooley, president.
At the high end of the market

are silk boxers by Nicole Miller, numbers, driving the b'end.
which recently dropped its price
Joe Boxer has even come out
from $75 to $50 a pair, thanks to with a style for women. It has a
"better labor deals," says Bud sewn-up fly and patterns the com.
Konhcim, com pany president and pany considers more femin in c,
CEO. "Business is terrific. Once such as cats and perfume bottles,
yo u wear silk you never want to go Of course, that take"s the fun out.of
back."
bOrrowing shorts from a brother or
That's a matter of debate. Mill· bOyfriend.
stein, a cotton briefs man, says silk
is 100 clammy but he can appreci"What's available today comate the appeal.
pared to five years ago is stagger"For $50," he says, "every par· ing," says Chip Tolbert of the
venu can feel like royalty. That's Men's Fashion Association. "You
what silk drawers are all about. see- them everywhere from K-mart
Everyone wants to dress like the to Bergdorf Goodman.''
Prince of Wales."
Several companies, including
A ubiquitous brand is Joe Joe Boxer and Brieny Stated, offer
Boxer, credited with opening up boxers with secret glow-in-the-dark
the novelty boxer market. The messages. Sample: the word
company 's shorts have surreal, "Nice" on a pair by Briefly Stated
graphic patterns. One with swim· turns to "Naughty" in the dark.
min~ cows is called "Heifer
Williams."
·
Joe Boxer has 'doubled sales
Other companies shy away from
every year since it began six years such b'endiness. But !hey find that
ago. This year the company expects boxers are booming within their
to sell $24 million in shorts.
niche. J. Crew sold 150,000 pairs
Traditional boxers have a roomy last year, the first time boxers
"bucket bull," but newer styles appeared in its catalog, and projects
slimmer and have a center back to double that figure. This fall The
seam. Most men find the bucket Gap rolled out a new men's line to
butt more comfortable, but manu- selected stores with plans to
facturers have other customers to expand. Both brands feature conplease - namely women who are servative patterns and retail for $14
buying novelty shorts in record to Sl6.

:~

October 20, 1991 :~

Next spring's lawn will
depend ~on this fall's lawn care

MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
in the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your guess .
orr to the Daily Sentinel,lll Court St., Pomeroy, .
Ohio, 457~9, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may

.I

~

Ohio Lottery

_Twins ~take
·2•0 lead·in
World Series

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Pic~ 3:743

Pick 4: 7562 Cards: 9-H, 4-C,
9-D, 6-S
Super Lotto:
. 7-ll-17-21-40-42
Kicker:901388

PageS

By EARL ARONSON
grass plants may lose so much through their roots. An adequate : ·
supply depends on the size of th~ :
For AP Special Features
weight th!lt life processes cease.
Autumn is the time of year ' "Autumn fertilizati.on," they root system and the volumd of SOil , ·
when the quality of next summer's conclude, "is the only means for with which the roots have contact ;
lawn is determined, according to preventing next summer's growth The more roots and the deeper tl\ey : ·
experts at the Lawn Institute in d;;cline."
grow into the soil, the beUer.
· :
Pleasant Hill, Tenn.
Lawn Institute experts note that ; .
The plant reserves that will Getting Back to Your Roots
all grasses establis~ a. balance ·:
carry lawngrasses through periods
Leave~ - ·of lawngrasses and between growth of fohage and ·.of hot weathet next summer are essentially all ornarnental plants - roots.
•
stored in plants during cool autumn get water and mineral nutrients
days. As days become sh·orter,
growth rates become slower; lawn.·,·
WANTED;
grasses make more carbohydrates
than they use to sustain them~lves,
BANK STOCKS
, so they store some for future needs.
NamlnaiQuql•uotSeptemblr30,1891
- ~ lid Alktd '~
This storage process continues into
Peapln Bancorp at Marlalla ....................................................... -..........................$ 32 st
the winter as long as leaves are
Paltl Jtoltonal8ank at Newark... -.................... ,, ......,.......... ,, ................. .................. 15 .llod&lt;lng Valley Bank oiAI~~I ............................................................................. .. 117 121
gteen. Thus, fall is the only time of
Ohio Ylilloy Bank ot Gotllpolto......... ,................... ,.. ,.................................................37 - .•
year when lawngrass plants actual·
Chtuno Bank or LOgan........................................................................................... 215 Firat Jtollonal Bonk 01 MCCiinnalavlllo.. ~ .................................................................105 ly gain weight
Chtzano Nltlonol Bank or llcConnolovlllo ........................................................ .....130
Falllawncare, then, is the key to
F""""" Bankl"!! Co. of~............................................................................. 50 •
healthy turf next spring and sum·
Wo ... thl "hlromoot bonk atock lmlkoroln Ohio.
FIRST SCIOTO COMPMY
mer.
6271BuKh Boulovord
The lawn experts point out that
Cotumbuo, ()hlo 13221
in spring, as soils warm and days
Clll8rod Smhh at 1-800-157-IIANK
become longer, most of the carbo-.
'·
hydrates produced each day are
used to replace the foliage removed
. by mowing. There is little excess to
be stored. The faster the grasses
grow, the more carbohydrates are
needed. So, although spring fertilizing improves the lawn's appear. ance as it thickens the turf, it
doesn' t help build reserves as docs
autumn fertilizing. In spring, lawn·
grass plants actually lose weighL
According to the experts: ·
"When hot summer weather
arrives and night temperatures are
higher, rates of respiration increase.
Stored carbohydrates are called
upen to maintain healthy turf. Not
enough are produced during the
CAIOU SNOWDEN
day to sustain growth and meet resCorner of Third Ave. &amp;State St.
piration needs at night, too.''
Gallipalis, Ohia
They note that in situations
where there are inadequate carboPhone 446-4290
hydrate reserves, " lawngrasses
Home 4U·4S 18
become more susceptible to diseases.
"They lose vigor, thin out, and
IU.U fAIM
weeds gain a foothold. Insect dam ·
age is more severe during these
periods because grasses cannot sur- ·
INIUIANCI
vive loss of plant parts. Roots stop
•
their growth during hot weather,
Slalt' F;~rm
and some dieback occurs: Thi s
l.ifl' lm;urancc Company
causes a less extensive root system
Ht iOit' &lt;&gt;ftit•t·: tihNiminutt•n. lllinoi~
for uptake of water and nutrients.
These conditions weaken the lawn
and cause it to become unattractive.
Like a good neighbor. State Farm is ther~ Thus, during summer, cool-season

Low ionighj in mid
40s. Tuesday, sunny.
High in mid· 70s.

-·
VoL 42, No.11a
Copyrighted 1991

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cenls
A Multimedia Inc. Nowopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 21, 1~1

'

Both sides claim· win in weekend abortion.protests
CINCJNNATI (AP) - Both arrested in connection with antisides are claimingvictory in the abonion demonstrations Friday and
weekend anti-abortion demonstra· Saturday at the Plamed Parenthood
lions that resulted in more than 100 center in·the Mount Auburn neigh·
arrests at a Planned Parenthood borhood. Most were charged with
clinic.
trespassing.
The shouting ended Sun4ay,
Tri-State Rescue, which orgawhen more than 300 abortion· nized the demonstrations, hoped "to
rights activists held a·rally in front · prevent women from baving abor·
of City Hall to mark the end of a lions at the clinic. Planned Parentweekend of marching, singing and · hood officials said the clinic conconfrontation.
•
tinued to operate during the
Police said 108 people were demonstrations, with patients ·

''Ufe.Insurance
that's right for you...
·
that's what
State Fanil is
all about''

esconed through the crowds.
. "They came out here determmed to deny people's rights, and
we didn't allow them," Kathleen
Curry, president of the local chap·
ter of the National Organization for
Women, told the rally Sunday.
"This is a victory rally to bid
farewell to Operation Rescue and
to celeblflte our total, overwhelming ability to outnumber them,"
she said. "They are a tiny minority; wearethemaioritv."

But the anli-alionion demonsb'ators also claimed victory. Tri-State
Rescue spokeswoman Kim Bush
said she believes that some women
must liave changed their minds
about having an abortion when
they saw'the large group of demonstrators.
"We feel there are babies alive ·
today that would have died Friday
or Saturday," she said. "If one is
saved, it's a victory."
There were no anti-abouion

demonstrations Sunday. The clinic
is closed on Sundays.
The demonstrations began Fri day, when 7.4,people were arrested
..:.. 73 of them on trespassing
charges for climbing a fence to
block a clinic entrance. Another
person, not one of the anti-abortion
demonstrators, was charged with
disorderly conduct.
Eight more anti-abortion
demonstrators were arrested on
trespassing' charges Saturday, and

26 Jieople were arrested outside the
gates for disorderly co nd uct or
refusing to obey a police order .
There were several scuffles
between the two sides.
One , demonstrator, Janet
Graziani of CindMati, remained in ·
jail today. She pleaded no contest
to trespassing but refused to pay a
$250 fme, resulting in a 10-day jail
sentenc~.

Some of those arrested have
·court appearances scheduled today.

At least 10 people killed, 380
homes destroyed in Oakland fire
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Firefighters today battled a roaring
fire that swept out of the dry hills
above Oakland and Berkeley and
raced through well-to-do neighbor·
hoods, killing 10 people and
·destroying more than 380 homes,
authonties say.
Ash-covered residents grabbed
pets, photographs and other keepsakes before frre chased them from
their homes Sunday. Some people
drove to safety through streets
filled with flaming debris and lined
with burning trees,and homes.·
"1 didn't take my checkbook,
nothing. There was nobody to help
me think," said 77-year-old PiccoIa White, who fled with her greatgrandson.
Among the victims were a fami·
ly of five who died trying to escape
their bumi~g home. A firefighter .
and a pollee officer also were

A

CALL ME.

~~~~~{~S~:~c:;:~:

fire made a deafening roar as it
burned terrain par£hed by five
years of droughL
Wildfires burned elsewhere in
Northern California and the West
Firefighters battled blazes in Col·
orado, Montana, Oregon and
Washington.
In the Oakland area, winds gusting to 40 mph whipped the flames,
forcing firefighters to flee along
with residents. Thunderous explosions attributed to propane tanks,
1rees or elecb'ic transformers were
heard.
The ftre in the heavily wooded
neighborhoods near the Caldecou
Tunnel destroyed at least 350
homes in Oakland and 30 to 50 in
Berkeley, said Oakland police Sgt.
Kevin Traylor. More than· l,500

acres were blackened.
As dawn approached today,
clusters of flames were visible
throughout the Oakland hills,
although the fire appears to have
been driven from the Berkeley
· hills; Traylor said from the fire
command center in Oaldand.
The winds died down overnight,
but ftre crews were still struggling
early today to contain the fire,
Traylor said.
Authorities closed highways and
halted Bay Area Rapid Transit
trains, which run through the tunnel.
At least 50 people, including
three firefighters, were treated at
hospitals for burns, smoke inhala·
tion and other injuries, officials
said.

Mezgs
• county ['lSted as
labor surplus area

J

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·

the blaze, which was reported
about midday Sunday and moved
Meigs and several neighboring businesses located in these areas
quickly from street to street, then counties have recently been desig- wiD receive preference from federhill to hill, in Oakland and Berke· nated Labor Surplus Areas by the al government agencies in all forms
Parish on Friday. Presenting the money to Betty
CONTRIBUTION MADE • Bank One's
of procurement.
ley neighborhoods with panoramic U.S. Department of Labor.
bean
soup
and
cornbread
dinner
held
in
the
Weyersmiller of the Parish is "One-da" of Bank
Ohio Bureau of Employment
views of San Francisco Bay. The · This designation means that
mini-park during the Big Bend Sternwheel Fes·
One. With the contribution the Parish will be
Services Administrator James Con·
·tival
brought
in
approximately
$122
which
was
able to purchase approximately 854 pounds or
rad said the labor surplus area desgiven
to
the
Meigs
Methodist
Cooperative
food.
ignations are good news for Ohio.
"Federal contraCts mean taxpayers dollars coming back to Ohio,
and in particular to areas of Ohio
. F~ur Meigs County teens escaped injury after the car they were
hard-hit by unemployment. Giving
m slid off the toad on S.R. 124 near the intersection of Portland
employers
in these parts of Ohio
Road early Saturday'IIIOming.
preference in federal purchasing
. According to a repon from. the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
will mean more jobs for out-of·
Highway Patrol, Shawn P, Rollms, 16, of Reedsville, was eastbound
The International Committee of
work Ohioans," Conrad said.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - In
The United Nations and a group
on S.R. 124 rounding a left turn. He lost conb'ol of the car which
the Red Cross said 14 prisoners.
The following entire counties another step toward ending the holding two American hostages slid around backwards, went off the roadway and over an embankincluding two women, were freed
are designated Ohio's Labor Sur- hostage ordeal, Israel and its allies Allan Steen and Jesse Turner ment before coming to rest in the edge of creek.
plus Areas: Ashtabula, Brown, freed 15 Arab prisoners today, and both said a hostage release was at 9 a.m. today from the Khiam
Rollins' passengers, Michelle L. Friend, 17, of Syracuse, Eric E.
Crawford, Darke, Defiance, Shiite Muslim kidnappers said they imminent. The hostage to be freed prison in Israel 's self-designated
Powell, 16, o( Reedsville. and Brent Dccosse, 16, of Racine were
security zone. Another prisoner,
Fayette, Fulton, Gallia, Guernsey, would release an American captive was not named.
uninjured in the accident.
Hardin, Harrison, Henry, Highland, within 24 hours.
U.N.-brokered negotiations have Hezbollah activist Ali Fawaz, was
The four youths were riding in a 1988 Chevrolet Corvette, a twoAlso today, Israeli warplanes engineered a swap of Western released from a prison in Israel
Hocking, Huron, Jackson, Meigs;
seater designed to carry only the driver and one passen~er.
Monroe, Morgan, Morrow, Musk- bombed a Hezbollah guerrilla base hostages, Arab detainees under about an hour later.
Damage to the front, bottom and left-rear of Rolhns' Corvette
ingum, Noble, Ottawa, Perry, Pike, in southern Lebanon, wounding Israeli control and an accounting of . The Arab releases came eight
was listed as light.
Putnam, Ross, Sandusky, Scioto, three civilians in apparent reprisal Israeli soldiers missing in Lebanon. hours after Islamic Jihad for the
Rollins' was cited for failure to maintain control and failure to
Since August, three Western Liberation of Palestine said it
Seneca, Trumbuii ; Vinton and for a bomb attack by the Iranianwear a safety belL The patrol cited unsafe speed as the connibuting
allied
group
that
killed
three
Israeli
hostages
have been freed after would free a hostage within a day.
Wyandot.
factor in the accident.. .
soldiers
Sunday.
years
of
capli
vity in Lebanon and a The group did not say who would
In addition, the cities of Akron,
Hezbollah is believed to be an Frenchman was release.d after be freed. Its statement was accomBarberton, Canton, Cleveland,
Dayton , East Cleveland, Elyria, · umbrella group for Shiite factions being held three days. Sixty-six panied by a photograph of Turner.
Fawaz , the Lebanese freed in
Investigation continues at the Ohio Buteau of Criminallnvcsti·
Hamilton, Lima, Lorain, Mans- holding Western hostages in Arabs have been freed, and Israel
Israel,
was transported to the southgalion and Identification into a gun found in Ravenswood, W,Va.
field , Marion, Massillon, Middle- Lebanon. It was not clear whether has received word of the deaths of
ern
Lebanese
port of Tyre, where
last week.
town, Newark, Springfield, Toledo, the Israeli raid would affect the two soldiers and the body of a
he
said
he
was
held in Israel's
The shotgun was found on Monday near the mouth of Sand
Warren, Youngstown and release of a hostage.
third.
Ramleh
prison
for
five years.
•
Creek near Ravenswood by the Ravenswood Volunteer Fire Depart·
Zanesville were also listed as labor
ment.
surplus areas.
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, there is
The U.S. Department of L.abor
no evidence to indicate that the gun is that used to kill Jeffrey L.
designates a city or county as a
Halley of Gallipolis, whose body was found near Portland last
Labor Surplus Area if its unemmonth.
·
ployment rate has averaged 6.6 perHowever, Soulsby reponed, all angles are being investigated by
cent or more during calendar years
BCI, including whether the gun could have been the gun used to kill
1989 and 1990. The designation
Halley.
will be in effect until Sept. 30,
Hatley's body was found on September 25 near Portland. Halley
1992.
.
had been shot in the head and authorities believe that he was proba·
bly killed shortly after he was reported missing by his family in
Febiuary.
HaUey's 8on, Jeffrey S. Hl)lley, 12, is still missing.

--Local briefs---.
Four teens escape injury in wreck

If everyone in the
U.S. recycled

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even one tenth

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.25 million trees every year.

BCI continues to investigate gun

1991 BUICK CENTURY 4 DR.

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''The Hoosier Schoolmaster" by Edward Eggleston will be the
next book presented on !he "Heroes and Heroines of the Ohio River
VaUey" at the Meigs County Public Library on Monday at 7 p.m.
Dr. Ronald Grosh of Springfield will again be the narrator and
disCussion leader of the book. This is Dr. Grosh's second visit to the
program.
According to Libmry Director Ruth Powers, Grosh did an excel·
lent job on the book ''Follow the River" and his presentation was
-well received.
Dr. Grosh holds a Ph.D. from Ohio State University. an M.A.T.
from Kent State University and a B.A. from Cedarville College. He
is currently Superintendent of Christian Schools in Springfield.

The Meigs Marauder Marching
Band, under the directioo of Toney
Dingess, prevailed as the Grand
Champion Band at Saturday'·s
"Battle of Bands" competition held
at Saunders Field in Point Pleasant,
W.Va. Founeen bands participated
in the festival.
The Meigs Band also won for
Outstanding Show Desi~ over all
other bands as well-as wmning fli'St
place in Class A competition over
1 three other bands, first place for
· best field commanders, fmt place
for best auxiliary and third place
Sunday will be the fmal for the _Middlepon Park . n Putt mmla·
for percussion.
ture golf course at General Hartmger Pa.rk '" Middleport. The
The · J07-member Marauder
miniature golf course will re-open in Apnl, 1992. Regular hours
Marching Band wilf compete at ·
will be observed on Sunday, whiCh are 12 noon unbiiO p.m. ·
state contest at Cooper Stadium in
Continued on page 3
Columbus on Nov. 2 81 approxi·
mately I p.m.

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1\
I

Meigs bimd named
grand champion

Reading program to continue

'

an environmental organization.
__ Adopt-A-Stream
__ Rainforest Action Network
__ Renew America
n ...~, ('ha•uwl.

Israel, allies release 24 Arab
prisoners; Americans may be freed

' I

, .'

GRAND CHAMPS
The Melp
Marauders Hi&amp;h School Band was named
grand champions at the Point Pleasant Hilh
School Battle or the Bands Saturday afternoon.
The Mel1s County band was recipient of the
first place band award In Class A'(71 or more
playing · members); first
place color . guard
.
.

award; flnt pllce field commanders; tblrd
place percussion a-nrd; outstandlag show
design; and ftnaUy, graad champion band ror
tbe day. Pictured aboft, leh to riabt, Josh Bar-

tels, Holly WUllams and Stepbalie Price, field
commanders, Wendy Clark, April Hudson, IIICl
. Beth Clark. (OVP photo by.Mindy Kearns.)

�,'

Monday; Oqtober 21, 1991

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~~MULTIMEDIA, INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

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

LETTERS .OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less th'an 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wilh name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

The moral is this: Americans down easier: The president can·say
crave to be told the ti:uth. They with impunity that there will be
know their government is doomed "no new taxes," as long as he calls
if lies continue to be the order of tax increases "revenue enhance·
the day. And they are not yet so ments."
Thomas was not the wisest, the
jaded that they have stopped
fairest, the most impartial or the
demanding honesty.
We .agree with Sen . James -most des~rv ing person in America
Exon, D·Neb., who said the lies in to put on the Supreme Coun. The
this sordid episode began when notio~ that the Supreme Court is
George Bu sh ridiculously pro· made up of such people is a lie. But
claimed that Clarence Thomas was • in Washington, that kind of lie is
chosen not on the basis of race or called "adviSe and c'onsent."
political conservatism, bnt because When we elect a president, we
he was th'e absolute best person in elect a whole slate of Cabinet offi.
the land to sit on the Supreme ccrs, department heads and judges
Coun. That was a lie, but in Wash· who are not necessarily the best
ington that kind of lie is called people for the job. They are the
"political hyperbole" and it is choices of the president we choose,
swallowed every day, usually wit]) and thin is where our choice ends.
a dose of euphemism to make it go
Thomas, in round· one of the

Deadline for publication of
el~ction letters Oct. 30

IT SHRUNK!

The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 5 election.
However, in the interest of fairness, no election letters will be accept·
·ed after 12 noon on Wednesday, Oct. 30.
Individuals should address issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used.
Letters should be 300 words or less. All letters are subject to edit·
ing and must besigne(l with name, address and telephone number.
Telephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned letters will be
published. All letters should be in good taste.

Hill-Thomas miniseries ends
without a clear conclusion
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHINGTON - Investigations into government scandals usually
unfold slowly, in dry detail.
This was instant drama.
Often, the charges involved arc complex, legalistic, hard to grasp.
This one was sex, lies and video. on holiday weekend television.
FrequenUy, the accusing wimcss is a bureaucrat, an auditor, a federal
investigator.
.
This time it was an outraged woman denouncing her former boss, with
accusations he said were concocted for a lynchii)Jl.
And all in the span of three days, a 30-hour miniseries rivaling stan·
dard prime-time fare, adding heat on a volatile issue.
No wonder the encore confirmation hearing in the case of Anita F. Hill
versus Clarence Thomas boosted TV ratings, dominated conversations,
and ~arne an instant national fixation .
Even the mother of all scandals, Watergate, was months in the telling.
The drama and confrontation at the televised Senate hearings in 1973
came with weeks of less compelling testimony. Those hearings also
gripped national attention, but not so swiftly and pervasively as these.
The later episodes that made gate a suffix for scandal didn't come
close to stirring the intensity of the Hill-Thomas hearings.
'There was no final chapter to the mystery; the plot ended without a
solution. Her charge of X-rated sex talk and harassment a decade ago
stands, and so docs his denial, total and unyielding.
So it's left to the audience to decide who lied.
Thomas said he'd never be able to fully clear his name because he
could not' prove a negative. Nor did that come with the Senate decision to
copfmn him as an associate justice of the Supreme Court, 52-48.
"I know of no system of government where, when you add the
kerosene of sex, the heated flame of race and the incendiary of television
lights, you arc not going to have an explosion," said Sen. Joseph R. Biden
Jr., D-DeL "I know of no institution that has been created by mankind
that can contain that conflagration."
His, the Senate Judiciary Commiuee, certainly did not.
While Biden, the chairman, defended his handling of the Thomas pro·
ccedings and said there had been no screw up, the consensus is that some·
thing certainly went wrong.
.But there's no consensus on 'the way to repair it
One proposal is that a president consult with senators of both parties in·
advance on the people he is considering to fill a Supreme Court vacancy.
Sen. Paul Simon, D·Ill., a Thomas opponent, introduced a resolution
on Wednesday, recommending " informal, bipartisan consultation"
before nominees arc chosen. His measure, which wouldn 't bo binding on
anybody, also sax~ the president should consider "philosophical balance"
when selccung a JUSOcc.
·
To Democratic liberals, that means President Bush shouldn't keep
appoin ting conservatives.
He will, of course.
That deals with selections, not with the procedure by which nominees
are considered and colli!Jned.
Sen. Sam Nunn, D-'Ua., who voted to confirm Thomas, spoke more
directly to that point, saying there should not be public hearings on confi·
dcntial charges raised against a nominee, not even if they are leaked and
become public, .as material from an FBI repon on the Hill accusation did.
Bush said Thursday that the Thomas hearings should have been conducted behind closed doors.

"LOOK/ THE ECONOMY IS WEARING NO
RECOVERY/"

,----Local briefs... - - - . More

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
, Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Mol)day, Octol)er 21, 1991 ·

-~ ~·
}'j th

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!I

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

I
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confirmation hearings, implied !hat
he had never had a discussion in
which he expressed his opinion
about the merits of Roe vs. Wade
in his time as a law student, lawyer
or private citizen. That waS proba· .
bly a lie. But in Washington, that ·
kirid of lie is called "spill control."
Without it, a,nominee to any feder·
al post will be dr~mmed out of
cohsideration by those who do not ·
share his .or' her opinion on vital
iss ues of the day. The nominee
with no opinions is the one who '
gets the job, so the system has
made lies a necessity.
With li es so pervasive and
accepted in' the nation's capital, it
.was refreshing to sec the ·Senate
faced with having (0 determine me
truth in this case. Still unaccus·
tamed to getting at the facts, the
Senate failed, but the exercise
served as a bucket of cold water on
Congress, which normally follows
Mark Twain's maxim, to get the
facts first and then distort them at
youf them believe the time has
come to accommodate Washington.
MlNI·EDITORIAL - Personal
freedom has hit an all time low in
Texas, where 9-year,old Zachariah
Toungate has had to move to a pri·
vate school because the public
school won't let him wear a pony·
tail. Zachari~h's case recently suf·
fercd a setback when a state
appeals coun refused to intervene
for him and order the public school
to take him back, ponytail and all.
The unfortunate message to
Zachariah and other children is that
adults don 't care whether they can
read, write or do arithmetic as long
as their personal appearance con·
forms to the norm.

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attempts went nowhere.
Almost every term, some mem·
bers of the House or Senate try to
bring the body under the jurisdic·
lion of some of the most significant
anti-discrimination laws. One such
member is Sen. Charles Grassley,
R'.-Iowa, who has tried on three
occasions, but to no avail. This
year he is trying again.
Gmssley has introduced legisla·
lion to curtail Congress', exemp·
lions under 16 federal laws incl ud·
ing the Social Security Act of
1933, the National Labor Relations
Aet of 1935, the Fair Wage and
Hours Act, the Civil Rights Act of
1964, The Equal Pay Act of 1963,
the Privacy Act of 1974; the Occu·
pational Safety and Health Act of
.1970, the Ethics in Government
Act of 1978 and the Freedom of
Information Act.
Recently, Grass ley told a press
conference: "There are two sets of
laws in thi s nation , one for
Co'!,gress and one for everyone
else. That has to stop."
With his bills going nowhere,
Grassley last year tried a new laC·
tic. He added an amendment to a
new labor rights bill - The Ameri·
ca ns With Disabilities Act specifically putting Congress under
its strictures against employment
discrimination based on a handi'·
cap.
The Senate agreed. but not the

Leave it to ·the th
Grand
of
. Prig
Pun d1'try to dnve
1 1ance
e f'liS
through the heart of the resurgent
populist movement.
.
'f
Yau are ,oorgtven
1 you assume
.
.
t
H'
I am rcfcrnng o IS Emmcnce
F B kl J b 1 1 1 .
W'll'
al!/:vc i~c mi~/hisu fo:~~r
acolyte, George F. WilL One of
George's patented · diatribes
appeared in the Oct. 7 edition of
Newsweek ma azine, c ing the
title "A Pox ~n Populrsi'" Who
but ille sniffy conservative' colum·
ni st would dispatch blue-collar
America with such chiDing conde·
scension as this·
"Do au love ' the eo le' so
darn mu~ you can hardfys~nd it?
Are you ticked off that 'the inter~
,
..
..
csts are conspiilng to hiJack gov·
em"!,cnt of, by and fo~ you·kn'?w·
who . Doyou thmk ~~ ts . hl~h urn~
the graspmg few ~un gnndmg, the
faces of ~~e many. If so, you are a
popuhst. .
Get a gnp, George. We ~he you·
~now-who have afready d1seussed
11 and when we take over, you will
be ass1gncd to one. ~f those mtnt·
mum SCCilfltY factl~ues wtth a mcc
hbr~ry. You mtght even be
appomted the trustee who rups the
place beca\tse you know so damn
many three-dollar ~ords. . .,
Now ~~~ truth .. Populism ·I~ a
noble pohttcal philosophy whtch
holds that the co~mon people are
w1sc ~nd vtrtuous, that they have
bought ~nd pat,d for !Qis gove~·
ment wtth th_et r taxes and the11
blood many ~~~~s over, and they
therefore own tt; that they arc the

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a zsm reporte

Hospz'tal news

H . . l neWS

ery esults

Stocks

FR~e!
5 P.M.-9 P.M.

Meigs Bookmobile
.schedule announced

..

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""""

PIZZA&amp;

··

PASTA

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congressman or scna1or can .

-Bpeeial Store Hours-

c

y]osephSpear

i

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Today in history

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Meigs announcements

·n
d h
h 1
· ·
· · ·
• .
soverctg
o th e obJeCtoon
th s, an t ose t e ect
. that populo sts w ge hike
· that· was' 30 cents more
~~~Is c government are thco scr· ou
to stop pokmg fun at George I an h1s capttalist heart cou ld
·. . . .
.
Herbe ~alk cr Bush. He tS a ndurc. It ts a fa,ct that he refused
Th1s os m dtrect contrast woth wealthy e 1 wtth scant regard for to extend bcneftts for the unem
·
· cl
· politic
·
cGI'111sm,
Ih'd
e Ph'l"'
1 usop hY to wh'och the labonng
nd hts
ploycd - • and mdced
mocked·
1 b 'be
·
corgc cv1. cnt Y su sen s, along opponents should n
sttal to Congress efforts to do so as
Wlthfanattcs on both cnd.s of the point thatouL Evcn.Richar 1xon "garbage." It is a fact that he has
~ohttc~ spectrum who thmk th~y has reponcdly cautioned Bu~h , in been ~bsessed wtth obtaining capi·
bnowf ller than anybody what s so many words, that he's gomg to tal gams tax breaks for himself and
est . ?1 7v~rybody. You can spot have to eat a truckload of pork his wealthy pals.
·
an ehost 10 JUSt about any crowd by nnds to makeup for all th~ speed
So to the real populists out
lookmg for~ person With a puck· boatmg, golfmg and tenms he's there, I say raise the banner high
erect expressiOn that suggests he's . been indulging in.
,
.
And to the elitists, I say a pox on
cnctrcled by natulent peasants.. .
It tS a fact that the nch got nchcr you. Except you, George. Truth be
h In fairness to George {ehusts and the poor got poorer durong the known, us you-know-who Jove you
ate 1t when the you-know-who tenures of Ronald Reagan and so darn much we can hSidly stand
•call them by thCII fJist names), he George Bush. It is a fact that mid· it.
I
hfd fer tl;'mplamts about the pop· die-class income has fallen. It is a
(C) 1991
NEWSPAPER
0
'
u tsts
elate 19t~.century who fact that Bush vetoed a minimum ENTERPRISE ASSN.
•'
were possessed of honest pas.
•
sions stirred by huge problems."
George's gripe. is that modem pop·
'
ulists arc shallow fellows with
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"synthetic" passions who think
- t
they are being trenchant when they
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refer to El Jcfe and El Jefito by
By The Associated Press
, 'I
their full, grandiose names, George
Today is Monday, Oct 21, the 294th day of 1991. There arc 71 days
''
Hcrbcn Walker· Bush and J Dan· · left m the year.
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forth Quayle.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
.
'
There is some validity to the
qn Oct. ~I, 1805, the BatUe of Trafalgar tack place off the coast of
''
complaint that populist ranks arC' Spam: A Bnush fleet comnmnded by Adm. Horatio Nelson defeated a
peopled with pretenders. Indeed, ~ombmed French and Spamsh nect, thwarting plans by Napoleon 1 to . '
pulism 's main problem is that it on vade England. Nelson, however, was killed.
ras no mechanism for excluding
On this date:
charlatans. The tent is big enough
. In ,I,797, the U.S. Navy frigate 'Constitution, also known as "Old Iron· .. 'I'
to cover the likes of Tom Harkin, . stdcs, was Iaunched m Boston's harbor.
'
Bob Kemiy, Bill Clinton and Dou·
In 1_879, Thomas Edison invented a workable electric light at his !abo·
·
glas Wilder. But pavid Duke on ratory on Menlo Park, N.J.
the right? Jesse Jackson on the left?
In 1917, members of the First Division of the U.S. Army training in
They should pitch their own tents. Luncvdlc, France, became the first Americans to see action on the front : :
The movement is called populism. lmcs of World War I.
·
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not demagoguery.
.. .
In 1944, during World WSI II, U.S . troops captured the German cit1y of '
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There is absolutely no vahdtty Aachen.

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Weather

A private employer may not
reject a job upplicant based on race,
religi on, age or gende r - but a

Elitists vs. pop ists - who wins

History may be picke~ up

--Area deaths--

Robert]. Wagman
House. It substituted ·its own tan·
guage - quickly agreed to by a
majority in the Senate. This made
discrimination on Capitol Hill
baSed on a handicap not a violation
of law, but of congressional regula·
tion. Thus it is subject not to the
courts, but only to the ethics com·
miuees of both bodies.
It is not only anti-discrimination
laws from which Congress ha s
exempted itself.
In the 1970s the Internal Rev·
enuc Service was concerned
because many more Americans
were living a considerable distance
from where they worked and were
taking deductions for travel
between home and office.
So Congress passed a new tax
law saying there would be no more
deductions for commuting pr main·
taining second homes near work.
Except if you are a member of
Congress. The expenses of a con·
grcssman maintaining a home in
the Washin~ton area, and travel to
and from hts or her home district,
arc fully' deductible as an ordinary
business expense.
(C) 1991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

pleasant weat er EMS
has to
weekend rUnS

• on·Qb 10
•
At 1east .-d·Ie
roads over weekend
.

L tt

Congress still exempts itself from laws
WASHINGTON (NEA) mcnt, the employee has rights and
Many U.S. senators vehemently recourse to the courts. But not on
insisted on the public airing of Capitol Hill. Congress has, at least
Anita Hill 's sexual harassment in part, exempted itself from the
charges against Clarence Thomas. Civil Rights Act.
Ironically, however, a lot of them
A few years ago, under interise
were the very same ones who pressure, Congress did pass rules
fought his attempts, while head of pulling itself under some of the
the Equal Employment ()pponuni· titles of'the Civil Rights Act.
ty Commission, to make tongress ·
More recently, the House of
subject to the federal anti-bias laws Representatives established a Fait
ordinary Americans must obey.
Employment Practices Office. It
One of the oldest stories on '' informally'' hears ''inquiries,''
Capitol Hill is how , every time not complaints, by House employ·
Congress passes a new law regulat· ees against their bosses. It doesn't
ing conduct, it specifically exempts investigate, but "counsels." Last
itself:
year it received more than 250
One of those areas is employ· inquiries, and few are surprised it
ment discrimination. A pnvate did not find one instance of dis·
emp loyer may not reject a job crimination.
applicant based on race, religion,
The Senate does not even have a
age or gender. However, a con- formal procedure for following up
gressman or senator can', as can on employment discrimination
Congress itself or its committees. ' charges. The Senate Ethics Com·
If an employer wrongly fires an miuee "informally" handles comemployee, that employee has plaints behind closed doors.
recourse to the courts; unless, of
When Clarence Thomas was
course, that employer is Congress head of the EEOC he tried to
or one of its members.
change this. In 1988, he wrote to
The same is true in a situation Sen. Patrick Leahy, pointing out:
where an employer makes an "For equal employment opportuni·
unwanted sex ual advance towards ty and civil rights laws to have
an employee. Technically, sexual appropriate clout and relevance in
harassment is a violation of Title this society and throughout the
VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. government, these laws must apply
If such a violation happens in to Congress." ft was the same plea
the private sector, or in any part of he made earlier to a House equal
the executive branch of the govern· employmetlt bcommittcc. Both

. ConllnueclfromJ!IIel . .

rreek.en

·:

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

ByTbeAuoclittdPras ·. petailt.
. ·
ThePi~torial History of Meigs
Generally clear t:Onditioas will
Indian summer ·will be the
County·, published by the Meigs
be the rule over Ohio tonisht. It weather words over Ohio this
10 calla for auistance were County Pioneer and Historical • •
,will n!)t be as cold as Monday week. . ·
· wwered by units of Meigs Cotinty Society may be picked up at the
. Registration for Youth Bowling League, •sponsored by the Mid·
morning with lows in the 40s. ·
Warm southerly breezes and a Emergency Medical Services over Meigs County Museum Tuesday
'dleport Recreation Dcpanment, will be held thrQugh Saturday at the
.Anoiher p!cuapt day will occur good amount of autumn sunshine the w~nd.
.
.
through Saturday from 1. to 4:30
.Middlepon Recreation Department in Middlepon Village Hall from
on Tueaday 13 temperatures warm will allow the mercury to warm
.On Friday at 3}5 p.m., Middle· p.m. or this Wednesday evening
' 10:3.0 a.m. to 12 p.m. The league is open to all area. youth aged 6 . ' to the mid'60s in the nOitheast and 'each day, reaching the 70s on . port squad went _to South Thud from 7 to 9 p.m.
·
through 12, both experienced bowlers and beginners. The regisua·
tbe lower 70s in the southwest. Wednesday and remain at that level ·, Street for Chnsune Hedgepeth,
A very limited numbef of addi·
tion fee is $12 per bpwler and the bowling fee is $3 pet Saturday for
Some. high cloudiness will push by the weekend. ~·
~ho wi!S .taken to Veterans Memo· tiona! boo~s are available at $37 if
bowling with free shoe rental.
·
across the state but sunshine will
rial Hospttal.
purchased m person or $40 tf pur·
The bowling league wiU begin bowling on Saturday, November
·~
- -~
·"'
On Saturday · at 12:05 a.m ., chased by mall.
2 and continue throughout March. Those interested'.in additional .
Racine units went to State Route ' The books may be ordered from
,information, contact the Middlepon Recreation Department at 992·
·
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124 for a motor vehicle accident.' the museum at P.0. Box 145,
6789.
•
Eric Powell, Michelle Friend and Pomeroy, or at the museum on But·
1
ShawnRollinsweretreatedandnot temutAvenueinPomeroy.
UT ·
d
d- l'
d
transported. At 3:42a.m., Syracuse
V(ln
squad went to Seventh Street for
1
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...
SUNDAY
Loi.s Cunningham, who was talcen ·
.
·
By The Assoc:ll!ted Press
The Meigs.(;ounty Sherifrs Department reponed several week·
At least 11 people died this
UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS to Veterans. At 9:29a.m., Syracuse
Veterans Memoriai,Hospital
end vandalism incidents.
weekend in accidents on Ohio Sydney M. Sokol, 82, in a one-ear squad went to Second SD'eet. Marl·
SA'TURDAY ADMISSIONS .
.Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that deputies took a report · roads, the State Highway Patrol crash. on Cedar Road in Cuyahoga on Rizer was laken to Veterans.
from CSiol Barnett of Reedsville, who stated that her son's 1979
said Monday.
. County.
At 3:41 p.m., Pomeroy unit Sarah Yonker, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESCamara had been vandalized during the night. Someone had
The pmol counts fatalities from SATURDAY
went to Pomeroy Nursing and
dumped white paint on the vehicle Thursday night or early Satur· ·
6 p.m. Friday through midnight
SANDUSKY .- Gregg A. Rehabilitation Center for Harry None.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
day.
Sunday.
lynch, 22, a passenger in a one-ear Perry, who was taken to Veterans.
0~ Saturday morning, the depanment w~s notified _that dur!ng
The deild:
accident on U.S. 6 in Sandusky At 8:46 p.m., Middleport unit went William Anderson, Ponieroy.
'•
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
the mght, mailboxes had been damaged on Ptne Tree ~ve m Oltve
County.
to Turkey Run Road for an oil tank ·
Helen Will.
Township.
,
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,
FREMONT - Eugene W. ftre .
Ralph Lavender of Syracuse reponed that someume on Fnday
Bulkowski, 60, o( Fostoria, in a
On Sunday at 1:49 a.m., Tupnij;ht or SQturday moriting,_3 subj(l!;t or subjects ~u.t_the new barbed .
0
f~
.
twO"-vehicle accident on a San· pers Plains units went to the .
0Spl/Q
wue fence that he had built along Snowpall Htll Road m Sutton
dusky County road.
Arbaugh Addition for a chimneyTownship. It was reponed that a number of beer cans were found at
CLEVELAND (AP)- The sin·
.SMITHVILLE ~ Michael A. fire at the Stoops residence. At
Holzer Medical Center
the scene.
·
gle Ohio Lottery ticket showing the Thompson, 31, of Steubenville, in a 4:01 a.m., Tuppers Plains unit went
Discharges,
Friday, Oct. 18 six Super Lotto numbers picked one-car accident on a Jefferson to Reedsville. William Anderson
Mario'
BarceUi,
James
Eakins, KeeSaturday night is worth $8 million. County road.
was taken to Veterans. At 9:59
sha
Facemire,
Jessie
Hoffman,
When the ticket is vlllidated, its
BARBERTON- Jeffrey H. p.m., Middleport unit went to
Chad
McCarley,
Rose
Nelson,
holder wm receive either $307,692 Harpster, 30, of Barbenon, a pas· South Sixth Street and took
James
Raimey,
Otto
Rodgers
,
a year for 26 years, before taXes, or senger in a one-car accident on Dorothy Roller to Veterans.
Symra
Simpkins,
Katie
Taylor.
.
a discounted lump-sum payment
Interstate 76 in Summit County.
On Monday at7:47 a.m., Racine
Births, Friday, Oct, 18 Harry Miller
Margaret Cloud
The Super Lotto jackpot will be
FREMONT - David L. unit went to Bashan Road. lllanche
Nene.
$4 million for Wednesday night's Rinebold, 21, of Fremont, and Biggs was taken to Holzer Medical
Discharges, Saturday, O~t. 19
Harry Miller, 72, of Middleport, drawing.
Margaret Elizabeth Thomas
Mark A. Rinebold, 25, of Clyde, in Center.
- Mrs. Christopher Bates and
Cloud, 85, of Vinton, died Sunday, died Sunday, Oct 20, 1991, at the
Here are the selections made a one-car accident on a city street.
daughter, Florence Carroll, Ray·
AKRON ~James L. Marney,
Oct. 20, 1991 at Holzer Medical residence or hiS' daughter in John· Saturday night in the Ohio Lottery:
mond Ferg~son, Olive Garrett,
Center.
stown, Ohio follOwing an extended Super Lotto
53, of Kent,' in a one·car accident
Adam Jenkins, Rose Newell, Philip
She telired from the Gallia illness.
7-U-17-21-40-42
on Interstate 77·in Summit County.
Stapleton,
Mrs. Michael White and
County school system following 34
He was born on Sep1. 28, 1919
(seven, elevq~, seventeen, twen·
CANTON- Walter L. Decker,
South-Central
Obio
son.
years of service, having taught six in GallipQiis, the son of the late ty-one, forty, forty·IWO)
65, no hometown available, in a
Tonight, mostly clear and not as
Births, Saturday, Oct. 19 years in· Richland County and 28 Harry and Matilda Kinser Miller.
Kicker
one-car accident on a Stark County cold. Low 45 to 50. South winds 5
Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Creech, Albany,
years al the Vinton Elementary
He was a former employee of
9-0-1-3·8·8
road.
to 10 mph. Tuesday, mostly-sunny. a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
School.
the Owens Illinois Company in
(nine, zero, one, three, eight, FRIDAY
High 70 to 75.
Davis, Oak Hill, a daughter.
She was a member of the Vinton Columbus, and a veteran of the eight)
AKRON Robert W.
Extended forecast
Discharges, Sunday, Oct. 20
United Methodist Church, the Sun· U.S. Anny during World W.ar II.
Michaels, 64, of Akron, in a two·
Wednesday through Friday
-Gerald
Clark, Linda Moore,
shine Class, and the United
Surviving are two sons, Capt.
car accident on a Summit County
Pick 3 Numbers
l:Jnseaso~ably warm through the Ruth Myers, Lori Payne, Betty
Methodist Women. She was a 50· Jerry (Donna) Miller, Fon Riley,
7-4·3 .
road.
penod. Fatr Wednesday with a
year member of Vinton Chapter Kan., Richard (Charlene) Miller,
LIMA - David M. Crisenbery, chance of showers Thursday and White,
(seven, four, three)
Births, Sunday, Oct. 20 - Mr.
375, Order of Easter Star, the Columbus; two daughters, Mrs.
19, of Van Wert, in a one-car acci· Friday. Highs in the 70s and lows
Pick 4 Numbers
and
Mrs. Charles Anders; Jackson,
Lafayette White Shrine - of Dennis (Brenda) Payne, Hilliard,
dent on an Allen County road.
7-5·6-2
'
45 to 55.
a
son;
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Groff,
Jerusalem 44, the Cardiff Club, the and Mrs. DoJI (Roberta) Delong,
(seven, five, six, two)
Wellston,
a daughter.
Huntington Grange 731 and the Johnstown; seven grandchildren,
Cards
Gallia County Retired Teachers and several nieces and nephews.
9 (nine) of Hearts
In addition to his parents, he
Association.
4 (four) or Clubs
She was born Aug. 24, 1906 at was preceded in death by four
9 (nine) of Diamonds
MADDtomeet
Women's FeUowship to meet
Cora, Ohio, daughter of the late brothers: Earl, Denver, Leon and
6 (six) of Spades
The Meigs County Chapter of
The Meigs County 'women's
Luther and Ethel McMillen Hubert Miner, and four sisters,
M.A.D.D. will meet Tuesday at 6 Fellowship will hold its monthly
Thomas. She was preceded in death Dessie Mottou, Minnie Brown,
p.m. at 101 1/2 Second Street in meeting on Thursday at 7:30p.m.
AWEST VIRctiHIA COMPANY
by her husband, J. Harley Cloud on Gladys Miller and Pearl Bunce.
Pomeroy. For further infonnation at the Zion Church of Christ. There
Services will be Wednesday at
March 29, 1972, and by one broth·
cllll 742·2933.
will be a candy maldng demonstra·
BUY1-GET1
l!·a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
er, Thomas A. Thomas.
lion. Everyone welcome.
She is survived by two daugh- Middlepon with Rev. Frank Smith
Sorority to meet
ters, Mrs. Harry {Marilyn) Richard· officiaung. Cremation will follow.
The
Preceptor
Beta Beta Chap·
Halloween Party
Am Ele Power ..................30 7/8
Friends may call at th~ funeral
son, Troy, Mrs. Karl (Margaret)
ter,
Beta
Sigma
Phi
Sorority
will
The
Burlingham
Modem WoodAshland Oil ......................28 3/8
Justus, Lancaster; four grandchil· home on Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
men
wiD
have
a
community
Hal·
meet
Thursday
at
7:30
p.m.
at
the
A.T&amp;T................................38 If}.
dren, Richard and Rhonda Richard·
Ioween
party
at
the
Burlingham
Grace
Episcopal
Ctiurch.
Everyone
Bank One ..........................44 3/8
son, Georgetown, La., and Edward
is to bring an 11 inch by 14 inch Hall on Saturday from 6·8 p.m.
Bob Evans ........................ 18 7/8
8fld Carol Richardson, Troy, KSil
Charming Shop..................211/4 .frame with glass for a reverse There will be games, fish pond,
PICKUP OR DINING ROOM ONLY
B: and Jennifer Jane Flowers, Lan·
painting class. Hostesses are prizes, guess cakllt;;lnd a country
City Holding .................... .16 5/8
caster, and Karl B. and Colleen
·
Roberta O'Brien, Betty Ohlinger store
Federal Mogul... ................l5 1/8
Justus Ill.
and Ruby Baer.
GoodyearT&amp;R .................44 3/8
The Meigs County Bookmobile
FOE Auxiliary to meet
·
Also surviving Sie six great·
Key
Centurion
.................
.14
518
FOE
Ladies
Auxiliary
2171
will
granchildren and two step-great· will make the following stops this
Racine Legion to meet
l.Jtnds' End ........................23
hold
a
special
meeting
on
Tuesday
grandchildren, three brothers, Leo week: WEDNESDAY • Racine,
The Racine American Legion
Limited Inc....................... 23 1/2
Thomas, of Ashland, Ohio, Roder- noon to 5 p.m., Ponland, 6 p.m. to
Auxiliary
will meet Thursday at 7 at 7:30p.m. All members are urged
Multimedia Inc. .................22 1/4
7
p.m.;
THURSDAY·
Rutland,
11
to attend.
ick Thomas, of Greenfield, and
p.m. at the post home.
Rax Restaurant ..................5/16
a.m.
to
3
p.m.,
Dexter,
4
p.m
.
to
6
· Forrest Thomas, of Gallipolis, one
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... .37
sister, Mrs. Earl (Rosethel) Tope, p.m., Crossroads at Stale Route 124
Shoney's Inc ..................... 18 1/8
SPRING VAllfY CINEMA
Gallipolis, and one sister-in-law, and Bradbury, 6:30p.m. to 7:30
Dance to be held
Star Bink ..........................23 3/4
Mrs. Mildred ThomaS, Gallipbtis. · 'p.m.; FRIDAY· Tuppers Plains, 12
446 4514
'.. • '
Th·e Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Wendy lnt'l... ......................9 1/4
Funeral services will be con- p.m. to 4 p.m.. Success Road, 4:30
Dance
Club
will
hold
a
dance
Fri·
.
SUO IAIGAUI IIATIIIES SAnJIQr.T &amp; Slii11A1.
WorthingtOn
Ind
...............
30
1/4
Sl.OO loi.$1N II IGMT TU£SDU .
. ducted 10 a.m. Wednesday at the p.m. to 5:30p.m., Keno, 6 p.m. to 7
day from 8·11 p.m. with music by
Stock reporu are the 10:30 a.m.
Vinton United Methodist Church p.m. SATURDAY • Syracuse, 9
the Happy Hollow Boys. Public is
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
with Rev. C.J. Lemley officiating. a.m. to noon, Southern Baptist
invited.
Those attending bring
and Loewi of Gallipolis.
Burial will be in ihe Vinton Memo- Church, I p.m. to 2 p.m., Har·
snacks
for
the snack table.
risonville, 2:30p.m. to 4:30p.m.
rial Park.
Friends may call at the McCoy·.
675-1812 • Point Pleasant
Moore Funeral Home, Vinton, on
Tuesday from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to
PubUc Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
9p.m.
of CommiAionlll
elude the following ltemo VIrginia 281~ upon poy
In lieu of flowers, memorial
ADVERliSEMENT
Uory Hoba..nor, Clerk
lor which blda will b• menl of Twent~-Fin doltoro
gifts may be made to the church or
FORBIDS
-'
accoplod:
($25.00~ NON OF WHICH (10) 21, 28, 21c
M.tga County
charity of choice. Eastern Star ser·
Telephone; lloio iirid ·· · WILL B REFUNDED.
Commlnlon.ro
vices will be conducted at 8:45
TM lronl of lho onvelo
Securlly Sylltm
Molgo
County
Deportment
Public Notice
p.m. Tuesday by the Vinton ChapMolgo County Doportment encloolng th• bid muat
of Human s.Mcto
ter375 OES.
morkod "Snllld eld, Humo n
of Humon Sorvlcn
175 Roc•Sti'MI
ADVERTISEMENT
Doptrtmon l
S.rvlcoa
Middleport,
Ohio
4576i
'
FOR BIDS
with The Controcl Document• T•lophone, Dolo on d
Mlltll
County
Marriage licenses issued s..Innanoccordonoo
Security", blddlr to lurnloh
307.18 of tho Ohio m'fr.be ouinlMd at:
Commloelonora
thitlr own bid form.
Marriage licenses have been Rovlaod Coda, •••loti bldo
a Office of the Molgo
County Doplnmonl
lho County Commleolon Molgo
County
Commlollo
..
ra
issued in Meigs County Probate lor lhe Telephone, Dtlll and
.of
Human
Sorvlcoa
oro ore b~u"d bt Flldtre
Court to Allen Lee Easter, 32, S.curlly Syatom for tho Molgo County CaurlhouM ·low
175
Rae•
Sti'MI
which prohl lie con
Pomeroy, Ohio 4571111
Mo~o County Deportment
Middleport,
Ohio
Pomeroy, and Bonnie Lee Huu:hei· of
trocllng from on oatobllth In occord1nct4576i
umon Sorvlcol will be
with
'son, 38, Pomeroy; and to Roger r..olved
ot tho office ollho Burg•a &amp; Nlple, Umltod mont lhoy or a family mMn j Soctlon 307.88 of lht Ohio
Lee Dent, 34, and Trudy Ann Hen· Melgt County Cornmlnlonber mat_ hov. 1 flnoncl 1 Rovlood Code, aeolod bldo
4424 Em1110n Avonu•
lnlllreol •
Porkeraburg,
Wtol
Ylrglnlo
drix, 36, both of Meigs County.
era, Me l ~o Count;
for lnte~or Furnllhlngo for
Th• Boord of Count Y the
28104
Courlhouu, om•roy, Ohio
Mtlgo County
Coptoo of tho Controol CommlooloMro moy occepl Doportmonl of Hum~~
4571t untU 1:30 p.m. (ioool
The Dilly Sentinel
limo) on Nov, 4, 1881 ond Documenta moy be ob- tho IOMII bid or tllecl lh1 Sorvlcea will be received ot
As
then 11 ookl•oHic• publicly tolned ot tho olllce of beol bid lor the Intend•d tho olllct of the Uotgo
(USPS ats.HQj
Bura-n
&amp;
Nlpla,
limit~,
purpooe,
and
rooorv•
th
1 County Commloolon•ro,
oponod ond rted oloud.
Publtthed every a flernoon, Monday
SEEN ON
WORK oovorod by the locold ot 4424 Em.,oon right to rtloct ony and 1 II Molgo County Courlhouao.
through Frida)', 111 Court St. Pomeroy,
Conlroct Documanlo In· Avenue, Porkaroburg, Well blda or any (Mill thWIOf.
Ohio by the Ohio Valley p,;bliohins
MA.JOR CA!II .E
Molg1 County Board (Conllnued on Page 7)
Company/Multimodia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio 467691 Ph. 992-2156. second cia•
TELEVISION
po1tage paia at Pomeroy, Ohio.

•
OU B
. OW·z·zng League t0--b
. eg1n

In ·washington, it is a long wait for the truth
WASHINGTON- In a city
that functions on lies, the Clarence
Thomas-Anita Hill drama demand·
ed that the full truth come out It
didn't. Americans watched the tele·
vised hearings as though viewing a
nightm are tennis match - the
advantage bounding back and fonh
depending on who had the microphone.
She's telling the tru(h; he's
·
lying.
He's telling the truth; she's
lying.
[t was a nationwide head-throb·
ber of a migraine that left many
with a sense of hopelessness about
the process. But as the Dutchess
said to Alice in Wonderland, "Tut,
tut, child. Everything's got a moral
if you can only find it"

Pomeroy...:Middle ort, Ohio

.. THE CARD BOX

Will be open Monday thru Saturday
from
10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Call (614) 667·6092

Mombor: The Auocialed ProM, Inland
Daily Prell Auoclatlon and the Ohio
New1papcr AuoeialiOn, National
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Now1papor Sale1, 733 Third Avenue,
Now YOrk, New YOrk 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send addn:u thaiiJIIll to
The Daily Sontlnol, Ill Court St.,
'Pomeroy, OHio 46769.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Cantor or Motor Route
Ono Week........................................... lt.60
Ono Month ......................................... l6.96
Ono Ycar.............. .....................""_.. ,$83.20
SINGLE COPY
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Subllt'ribon nol dotirlng to pay the carri·
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month baai1. Credit will be Biven carrier
ooch wook .
No iub1c:riplion1 by mail permitted in
areal where home carrier urviee te
availabio. •
Mall Sub.crlpUon1
.
lnoldo Galllo County

13 w..h ......................................... f2t.84
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26 Weelta ..........................................$415.60
52 WHko .......................................... $88AO

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fAI.I. SAI.E

There is a beUer
way... for those you
love!

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SAVE THOUSANDS
'AT'

:/bnerat arrangements don't have
to be made on the day aperson dies.

FAIRPLAINS
FACTORY OUTLET
Take the short scenic
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177 Exit 132 .• 6 mile 21
"Southern Flash" AND
"No.rthern Built Quality" in North beside 84 Lumber
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Rutland, Ohio 45775
CaU us roday for morr infor;mation!

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Arranging a funeral at the time of
death is emotionally difficult:
however, by talking with your
funeral director abootForethough~
funeral planning' you make the
arrangements today before the need
·arises .

BIRCHFIELD
Funeral Home

614-742-2333

Funded by po~ldes frum •·oorcthnut,:hl l.ifc ln~urunce t:umpun}

.•
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Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

' 21, 1991
.Monday, OCtober

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Browns rally to defeat Char ers 30 ..24 in overtime
S4N DIEG9 (AP)- Don ' t
expect the Cleveland Browns to go
· exclusively to a point-a-minute, nohuddle offense.
Then again. Bernie Kosar didn't
have to. He expertly executed the
quick offense on two drives to pull
the Browns from a 17-3 deficit into
24-24 ti e with the San Diego
Chargers on Sunday.
' 'I'm not sure if we're the type
of team like Buffalo or Houston
that can consistenly do that, week
in and week o ut, " Ko sar said.
" Today the situation calle(! for it
and we wanted to do it, and it was
de:: nitely the right decision. We
spread th em out using our
receivers.''
Form er Chargers line backer
David Brandon then scored on a
30- yard interception return with
7:20 remaining in overtime to lift
the Browns (3-4) to a wild 30-24
victory over San Diego (1-7) and
spoil John Friesz's best day as a
pro. ,
Brandon, who spent last year on
injured reserve, was left unprotected by the Chargers and signed with
Cleveland as a Plan B free agent.
· "All during overtime, they were
trying to ~ct the ball out to the flats
and get mto field-goal range,"
Brandon said. "I knew sooner or
later, he was goi ng to throw it in
there.
" I was tryi ng to hide so he
wouldn't see me and make a break
· on it. After I caught the ball , I
wasn't going to gel caught."
Kosar threw touchdown passes
o[ 6 and 15 yards to Leroy Hoard
to cap quick, long drives. Joe Morris scored on a.l -yard run set up by
the first of Friesz's two intercep·
tions.
Friesz actually outdueled Kosar,
completing 33 of 54 passes for 321
yards, all career bests, with one
touchdown. Kosar completed 26 of
42 passes for 297 yards.

More importantly, perhaps, back.
Kosar extended his stnng of passes
Kosar moved the Browns 77
without an' interception to a club- yards in 2:29. He completed four of
record 233, breaking Milt Plum' seven passes for 72 yards, includteam record of, 208 set in 1959-60. . ing a 15-yarder to Hoard for a 24·
Kosar, the only NFL starter without 24 tie with 4:09 left.
"The coaches have shown a lot ·
an interception this season,
matched the second-longest inter- of confidence irt .not only myself,
ception-free streak in NFL history, but the other players.~· Kosar said.
• set last year by Kansas City's Steve "None of it is scripted, it was kind
DeBerg.
of a feel situation with myself out
The Browns went to the no-hud- · there, trying to feel some plays and
dl~ "because we were just down
make some things up. I asked the
two touchdowns late in the third receivers a lot in that situation ~
quarter," Kosar said. "We really what they feel like they could do,
weren't moving the ball. Our · and just try to work it all in."
defense played tight and kept us in
Tile Chargers had gone ahead
it in the first half. We went to the I 7-3 by scoring on consecutive
two-minute offense and just kind of third-quarter drives. Ronnie Haropened it up and called plays at the mon scored on an II -yard draw
play and Marion Butts got in on a
line ."
2-yard
run . Both drives started
It worked. and the Browns
inside
Cleveland
territory.
ended a three-game losing streak.
Friesz
completed
seven of nine
"They came out with a quick
passes
for
55
yards
to move the
sequence," Charger linebacker
Leslie O'Neal said. " We didn't get Chargers from their 20 to the
the substitutions we needed all the Cleveland 24 in the final minute of
time. It's very tough, just like when regulation. A holding call agliinst
Buffalo was running it a year ago. i\rthur Cox moved the ball back to
You try to figure out what person- the 34, and John Carney was wide
nel they have on and what person- left on a 49-yard fteld goal as time .
~xpired .
nel we need to get ant he field."
On the third drive of overtime,
With the Browns trailing 17-3
la te in the third quarter, Kosar Friesz rolled right on a naked bootcompleted five straight passes , leg and Brandon stepped in front of
including a 6-yard touctidown to Nate Lewis for the interception,
Hoard, to move th e Browns 76 and ran uncontested into the end
yards in 2 minutes, 30 seconds.
zone.
Richard Brown intercepted
"I would trade the good passing
Friesz and returned it to the Charg- numbers for the win any day,''
ers I I, setting up Morris' !-yard Friesz said. ''I'm as hungry as anyrun for a I7-17 tic with I3:42 left one else on the team for a win."
in regulation.
Both teams struggled in the first
Friesz recovered from Brown's half.
interception by leading the Charg--'
The Brown.s dido ' t cross into
ers on an 86-yard drive capped by a San Dtego temtory unul thetr sev2-yard touchdown pass to Steve e~th possession, when Matt Stover
Hendrickson for 'a 24- I7 lead with kicked a 30-yard fteld goal as ome
· 6:38 left. Friesz was 7-for-9 for 68 expired for a 3-3 halftime tie.
yards on the drive, including 3-forThe .Chargers had to settle for
3 Jn third down.
Carney s 27-yard ftcld goal alter
But the Browns came ri ght Kitrick Taylor returned a punt48
·
yards to the Cleveland 12.

yards and a touchdown, completing
19of31.
The Bucs couldn't get started
against th e league's top-rated
defense. Interceptions by Brett
Maxie and Toi Cook set up both
Saints touchdowns, while Frank
Warren and Pat ~willing led a sixsack effort with 2 1(2 each
Jels 17, Colts 6
Hapless Indianapolis heads into
its bye week at 0-8 and with just 55
points. The Colts have not scored a
touchdown in four games.
New York (4 -4) sacked Jeff
George four times and used a 47yard flea-flicker from Ken O'Brien
' to Johnny Hector back to O'Brien
to Rob Moore for a touchdown.
Oilers 17, Dolphins 13
While the run-and-shoot was
sputtering and Warren Moon was
held to his lowest output of the season (111 yards, which is I 33 below
his average), Houston still sur vived. The Oilers made some big
defensive plays , forcing five
turnovers, including Sammie
Smith's fumble as he hurdled
toward the end zone in the final
minutes.
That made up for four turnovers
by Houston (6-1).
Broncos 19, Chiefs 16
John Elway is back making big
plays and the Broncos are back on
top of the AFC West at 5-2.
Elway bad one touchdown pass,
a 22-yarder to rookie Derek Russell
that ended the Chiefs' string of 18
straight quaners without allowing a
TD pass. His 7 I-yard pass to Mark
Jackson - the ball went.at least 60
yards in the air - on third-and-17
got the Broncos going toward the
winning field goal, David Treadway's fourth of the game.
Raiders 20, Rams 17
Ronnie Lou is ~rovi ng that Plan
B stands for Bargam.
The veteran safety picked off
two passes, setting up the tying and
winning points for the Raiders.
Lou, who left the 49ers to sign with
the Raiders after he was left unprotected, also set up the winning ftt~ld ·
goal with an interception last week.
Patriots 26, Vikings 23, OT
Jason Staurovsky, who missed
an extra point in the fourth quarter
and a 36-yard field goal in overtime, hit a 42-yarder with no time
left for New England. At 3-4, the
Patriots have won as many games
as the 49ers, Pittsburgh Steelers
and Philadelphia Eagles and a lot
more than some of the league's
tailenders.
Minnesota recovered two onside
kicks 10 force the ovenime.
Cardinals 16, Falcons 10
Former Falcons kicker Greg
Davis made three field goals, ti:om
29, 51 and 49 vards.

• VOTE FOR AMAN WHO CARES •

vou FOR

.Leo Mofris
Caillldatefor

Meigs Local School Board
Your Vote and Influence Appreciated

PaW For Br 1M Ca•dldate

THANK YOU .

Let Moms • Box 212 Rudand. Ohio 742·24SS

RetlrH E• · o ee of the Mel slocal Scho.t District

.

A Delco

Results ,
ROCKU GHAM, N..C. (AP) Results Sm.day in the $"752,500 AC
Delco 200 Busch Grand National
race at the North Carolina Motor
Speedway with siarting position in

.. ..

Results o.f Champion 300 announced

MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) Results Sunday from the Champion
Spark Plug 300 Indy-car race, with
starting position in parentheses ,
hometown, car, laps completed,
reason out, if any, prize money and
winner's average speed in mi.les
per hour:
1. (I) Michael Andretti,
Nazareth, Pa:, Lola-Chevrolet, 84,
$83,700, 103.604 (breaks race
Tom Tupa threw a 31-yard record of 103.556 set in 1990 by
touchdown pass to rookie Randal Danny Sullivan),
Hill and the Cardinals (4-4) .used
2. (8) AI Unser Jr., Albu four takeaways in the second half querque, N.M.. Lola-Chevrolet, 84.
to subdue Atlanta.
$66,100.
.
Sea hawks 27, Steelers 7
3. (6) Mario Andretti, Nazareth,
Dave ,Krieg, back from a six- Pa., Lola-Chevrolet, 84, $50,000.
week injury layoff, directed two
4. (3) Emerson Fittipaldi, Brazil,
second-period scoring drives set up Penske-Chevrole~ 84, $42,950.
5. (2) Rick Mears, Jupiter, Fla..
by a blocked punt and a fumbl e.
The Seahawks, leading the AFC in Penske-Chevrole~ 84, $39,300.
6. (7) Eddie Cheever, Aspen,
takeaways, were ahead 17-0 at
Colo.,
Lola-Chevrolet, 84,$35,400.
halftime - the third straight game
7.
(5)
Scott Pruett, Dublin,
in which the Stcelers were blanked
at the half.
Ohio, Truesport-Judd, 84,$34,500.
8.·(9) Arie Luyendyk, NetherKrieg, sidelined since Seattle's
opener with a fractured thumb hit lands, Lola-Chevrolet, 83, $28,600.
9. (15) Danny Sullivan, Aspen,
his ftrst nine passes while going 26
of 31 for 266 yards and two touch- Colo., Lola-Alfa Rom.eo, 82,
downs .
$26,700.
10. (12) Cornelius Euser,
Netherlands, 1990 Penske-Chevrolet, 82,$15,520.
I I. (13) Scou Goodyear, Canada, Lola-Judd, 81 , $24,180.
TENNIS
12. (20) Willy T. Ribbs, San
FILDERSTADT, Germany Jose, Calif., 1990 Lola-Cosworth.
(AP) - Anke Huber of Germany 81,$24,250.
upset top-seeded
Martina
13. (18) Jeff Andretti, Nazareth,
Navra,tilova of the United States 2- Pa., Lola-Cosworth, 80, $24,000.
6, 6·2, 7-6 (7-4) in the final of the
14. (23) Didier Theys, Belgium,
WT A tournament Sunday. Huber, I990 Lola-Cosworth, 80, S2 I,800.
16, spoiled Navratilova's bid to
15. (14) Mike Groff, Northridge,
equal Chris Evert's record of 157 Calif., Lola-Chevrolet, 79, spun
tournament titles.
out, $2 I ,800.
16. (25) Tony Bettenhausen,
VIENNA, Austria (AP) - Top- Indianapolis, 1990 Penske-Chevroseeded Michael Stich of Germany let, 79, $15,100.
·
defeated Jan Siemerink of the
17. (24) Jeff Wood, Wichita,
Netherlands 6-4, 6-4, 6-4 in the Kan .. Lola-Cosworth, 79, $19,250.
final of the CA Trophy on Sunday.
18. (22) Roberto Guerrero, San
Juan Capistrano, Calif., Lola·
LYON, France (AP) - Second- Buick, 78, $9,250.
seeded Pete Sampras of the United
19. (10) John Andretti , IndiStates beat Olivier Delaitre of anapolis, Lola-Chevrolet, 74,
France 6-1, 6-1 in the final of the $14,250.
Lyon Gr)llld Prix on Sunday.
20. (19) Him Matsushita, Japan,
Lola-Chevrolet, 73,$19,250.
HONG KONG (AP) - Ivan
21. (27) John Jones, Canada,
Lend! of Czechoslovakia beat 1989 Lola-Buick, 48, gearbox.
David Wheaton of the United $13,400,
States 6-3, 7-5, 6-1 in the final of
22. (21) Buddy Lazier, Canada,
the Marlboro Championships on 1990 Lola-Cosworth, 4 I, engine,
Sunday.
$13,400.

• r•1

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Sometfiing qooa's .'it(ways CooKing .'itt

I MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT

LOCited on Rt. 33 bel1cll Muon Exxon 1nd Muon Motel, Masoo, wv

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HOMESJ'YLE LUNCH

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to :J p .rn.

MONPAY -Beef Bar-B-O with French Fries and So1,1p
TUESDAY- Meatballs, Choice of Potatoes, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
WEDNESPAY • Ph illy with Fries, Soup &amp;Salad
THURSDAY. Stuffed Green Peppers, Choice of Potatoes,
Soup &amp;Salad Bar
FRIPAY • Liver &amp;Onions, Choice of Potatoes,
'
Soup &amp;Salad Bar
TUI8DAT a '1'1111UDAT, CIIILDUH t!IQ)U 12 £AT FREE
FROM CHJU)RIIfS JII:NU, JEXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSE!n1
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our crRD&amp;s AVAD "B"E ,304, 773·5321

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'ACCEPTED

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Sports briefs

1\fond&lt;ltj

parentheses, driver, car, laps completed, reason out, iLany, and.winner' s average speed in miles per
hour and winner's prize money:
. I, (10) Davey Allison, Hueytown, Ala., Ford Thunderbird, 492.

Arkansas moves
into AP's top 25
be scores the winning touchdown for his team's
30-24 overtime victory Sunday in San Diego.
(AP LaserPhoto)

L'

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I..ITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) When Texas Christian Upiversity·
led Arkansa~ 2 I-0, you would have ·
been laughe · out of Amon Carter
Stadium if Y• J had suggested those
same Razorb. cks would be nation·
ally ranked in d couple of weeks.
But Arkl.&gt;nsas beat TCU 22-21,
knocked off Houston 29-17,
slipped by Texas 14-13 on Saturday and is ranked No. 25 this week.
"I'm not sure I would have put
us there, but I'm not sure I
wouldn't," Arkansas coach Jack
Crowe said Sunday.
Prior to TCU, Arkansas lost to
Mississippi and had to struggle
against Southwestern Louisiana (97) and Southern Methodist University (17-6).
"This team does not know how
good they are and I don't know
how good they are," Crowe said.
''We can play better. If we do. how
good can we be? Pretty good. .
"To be 25th is probably a compliment'to the fact that we're
Arkansas and our name is Razorbacks," he said. "I'm very happy
for our players. I think they deserve
to have some good things happen
to them."
Arkansas (5-2) has the week off
before playing Baylor in Fayetteville. The Razorbaclcs replaced
Arizona State (4-2), which fell out
of the Top 25 after losing to Washington State 17-3.
At the top of the poll, there was
no change - Plorida State, Miami,
Washington, Michigan, Notre
Dame and Florida hold down the

top six spots.
AI'abama, 6-1 after beating Tennessee 24-19, vaulted seven spots
to No. 7. Tennessee (4·2) tumbled
from eighth to 15th. Colorado (4-2)
jumred six spots to No. I6 after
bcatmg Oklahoma 34-17. Because
of the loss, the Sooners fell from
12th to 21st.
Florida State (7-0) beat Middle
Tennessee State 39-10 and received
56 of 60 first -place votes. The
Seminoles, No. I every week this
season, received 1,496 of a possible I ,500 points from a nationwide
panel or sports writers ana broadcasters.
Miami (6-0), which routed Long
Beach State 55-0, received two
first-place votes and 1,416 points.
Washington (6-0) got the other two
first-place votes and I ,408 points
following a 24- I7 victory over California, which fell three places to
No. 10.
, Michigan (5-1) beat Indiana 2416, Notre Dame (6-1) downed Air
Force 28-15 and Florida (6-1)
defeated Northern Illinois 41-10.
Penn State (6-2) moved up two
notches to No. 8 after beating Rutgers 37 -17, and Nebraska (5-1)
remained No . 9 after edging
Kjlnsas State 38-31.
Jo~a is I lth, followed by North
Carohna State, Texas A&amp;M, Ohio
State, Tennessee , Colorado Illinois, Syracuse, Clemson and East
Carolina. Rounding out the Top 25
are Oklahoma. Baylor, Pittsburgh,
Georgia and Arkansas.

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Florida State beat Middle Tenn. State 39-10
Miami beat Long Beach State ............. 55-·0
Wuhlngton beat California ................ 24-17
Michigan beat Indiana ....................... 24-16
Notre Dame ~at Air Force ................ 28-15
Florida beat beat Southern Illinols ..... 41-10
CaUfornla lost to Washington ...... ;..... 17·24
Tenneaae lost to Alabama .................. 19-24
Nebra•ll:a beat Kansas State ............... 38-31
Penn State beat Rutgers .......... ; ........ 37·17
N. Caronna State beat Marahall .......... 1IS-14
Oklahoma lost to Colorado ............... 17·34
IWnoiJiost to lowi. ............................ 21·24
Alabama beat Tennessee .................... 24·19

liS Iowa beat UUnola ............................... 24.. 21

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1
2
3
4
IS
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14

'•..
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$66,050, 127.292.
· 2, (13) HaJ:r. Gant, Taylorsville,
N.C., Oldsmobtle Cutlass, 492.
3, (3) Mark Martin, Jamestown,
N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 492.
4, (II) Geoff Bodine, Chemung,
N.Y., Ford Thunderbird, 492.
S, (6) Ken Schrader, Fenton,
Mo., Chevrolet Lumina, 491.
6, (21) Bobby Hamilton,
Nashville, Tenn., Oldsmobile Cutlass, 490.
'
7, (4) Dale Earnhardt,
Mooresville, N.C., Chevrolet
Lumina, 490.
8, (24) Sterling Marlin,
Columbia, Tenn. , Ford Thunderbird, 490.
9, (I) Kyle Petty, Randleman,
N.C., Pontiac Grand Prix, 490.
10, (12) Bill Elliott, Daw sonville, Ga., Ford Thunderbird,
490.
II, (9) Rusty Wallace, Concord,
N.C., Pontiac Grand Prix, 489.
12, (5) Ricky Rudd , Chesapeake, Va., Chevrolet Lumina, 489.
13, (30) Hut Stricklin, Calera,
Ala., Buick Regal, 486.
14, (29) Jimmy Hensley, Ridgeway, Va., Pontiac Grand Prix, 486.
15, (15) Derrike Cope, Charlotte, N.C., Chevrolet Lumina, 485 .
16, (31) Richard Petty , Randle·
man, N.C., Pontiac Grand Prix,

glove on· his leg . I knew he was
going to fall off the base because
his momentum was carrying him
off."
Muscle and momentum. It was
all the Twins needed.
·
." 1 was definitely on the base,"
Gant said. "I 'm sure everyone
watching on tel evision and in th e
stadium knew I was on the base. I
don't know since when you can
just pull a guy off the base.''
It was the third out and spared
· Tapani the problem of fa cing
David Justice with runners on ftrst
and third.
The Braves tied the score in the
fifth on Rafael Belliard's sacrifice
ny and had a chance to take the
lead in the eighth when Gant hit

'

16
17
.18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25

Baylor lost to Teza• A lk M ................ 12-34
Georgia lost to Vanderbilt .................. 25·27
Ohio State beat Northwestern .............. 34-3
Teua A lk M beat Barlor .................... 34-12
Plttaburgh lost to Syracuse ................ 27·31
Clem10a ......... :........................ Did not play
Colorado beat Nebraska .................... 34-17
East CaroUna .................. , ........ Did not play
Syracuae beat Pittsburgh ................... 31·27
Arizona State beat Washington State ... 17•3

•

Minnesota proves it is a team of density
By JIM LITKE
AP Sports Writer
MINNEAPOLIS - Atlanta
may be the team of destiny , but
Minnesota proved beyond a doubt
it is the team of density,
What began as a play at first
base at the tail end of the third
inning Sunday l)ight wound up as a
tractor pull between the Twins'
253-pound Kent Hrbek and the
Braves' Ronnie Gant, 6-foot and

172.

It wasn.' t even close.

"I felt the whole force of him
pullinf, me off the base," Gant
said. ' I don't think he was really
trying to pick me up, I just think he
was trying to pull me off the base.
"He's twice my size," Gant
added, "so he was pretty successful."
Of course, Hrbek saw things differently. Of course, he had a reasonable explanation. Of course he
had .a hard time keeping a straight
face .
"Mp-men·tum," Hrbek said,
his lips slow-dancing the word
while a rhumba broke out at the
corners of his mouth. "M-O-M ... "
And that was all he said at frrst.
Either Hrbek was stuck on the
spelling, or more likely he realized
pretty quickly that this flip tone
was something the Braves might
4~5.
yet make him regret. This is what
t7 , (19) Morgan Shepherd , he said after a bri ef moment of
Conover, N.C., Ford Thunderbird, reflection: .
.
485.
"You might think I was trying
18, (27) Rick Mast, Rockbridge to take his foot off the base. He fell
Baths, Va. , Oldsmobile Cutlass, into me," Hrbek said . " I was
485.
falling back and kept my hand on
19 , (1 8) Michael Waltrip , his foot. His momentum knocked
Davidson, N.C., Pontiac Grand me back and knocked him off the
Prix, 484.
base.
20, (25) Rick Wil son ,
" If it was a body slam," he
Huntersville, N.C., Buick Regal , added, "he would have been nat
484.
on his back."
21, (32 ) Ted Musg rav e,
This is what actually happened:
Franklin , Wi se., Pontiac Grand With two out and Minnesota ahead
Prix, 483.
2-1 , Gant lined a single over short22, (28) Jimmy Spencer, stop to send Lonnie Smith to third,
Mooresv ille. N.C.. Chevrolet· then made a wide tum at first bll,se
Lwnina, 482.
when left-fielder Dan Gladden tried
23, (33) Chad Little, Charlotte, to make a play on Smith . GladN.C., Ford Thunderbird, 481.
den's throw skidded past Twins
24, (23) Randy Lajoie, Norwalk, th ird baseman Scott Leius to the
Conn., Pontiac Grand Prix, 479.
25, (8) Dale Jarrett, Hickory ,
N.C. , Ford Thunderbird, 479.
26, (7) Dave Marcis, Skyland,
N.C., Chevrolet Lumina, 479.
LAKE BUENA VISTr, Fla.
27, (26) Joe Ruttman, Franklin,
(AP) - A fast finish and little
Tenn., Chevrolet Lumina, 473.
luck was enough for Mark
28, (22) Terry Labonte, O'Meara to capture his frrst tournaThomasville, N.C., Oldsmobile
ment of the season.
Cutlass, 471 .
" You ha )\e to be a lilli e bit
29, (14) Greg Sacks , Winter
lucky," O' Meara.said after a final Park, Fla ., Oldsmobile Cutlass, round 64 , featurin g a 178-yard
eagle , carri ed him to a one -s hot
470,
30, (20) Brett Bodine, Harris- victory over David Peoples.
O'Meara closed out the front
burg, N.C., Buick Re gal, 401,
nine of the final round Saturday at
engine.
31. (2) Ernie Irvan , Concord, 4-under when his 5-iron approach
shot bounced into the hole for an
N.C., Chevrolet Lumi'na, 365.
32, (17) Darrell Waltrip, eagle on the 434-yard, par-4.
·'That kind.of gave me the bclost
Franklin, Tenn., Chevrolet Lumina,
and
the charge I needed to get close
362, engine.
to
the
leaders," added O'Meara,
33, (16) Alan Kulwick i, Harriswho
finished
with a 21-under 267.
bur$, N.C., ~ord Thunderbird , 31 8,
"Obviously the shot on No. 9 was
engme.
34, (34) Ricky Craven, Con- the shot of the tourn ament.''
And it was the one strok e
cord, N.H., Oldsmobil e Cutlass,
O'Meara needed to edge David
. 22 I, engine.
35, (35) Jimmy Means, Forest Peoples for the $180,000 winner's
City, N.C., Pontiac Grand Prix, purse in the $1 million tournament.
Peoples. who grew up in th e
203, ignition.
Orlando
area. carded a 65 in th e
36. (36) Mark Stahl, Monroe,
fi
nal
round,
but ran out of b1rdies in
N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 16, han the
final
four
holes.
dling,
O'Meara
,
who
spent the week at
'37, (39) Keith VanHouten ,
his
home
less
than
a half hou r from
Merced, Calif., Pontiac Grand Prix,
the tournament site, matched a pair
13, handling.
38, (37) Jerry Hill, -Brandywine, of 66's to take the lead after two
Md., Pontiac Grand Prix, 13, han- 10u nds, but dropped one strok e
behind Paul Azingcr after a 71 on
dling.
Friday.
·
39, (40) Gary Brooks, Charlotte,
O'
Meara
snapped
a ti e with
N.C.. Oldsmobile CuUass, II, hanPeoples
wi
th
a
birdie
on
the 400·
dling.
yard,
par-4
16th
hole
when
his sec40, (38) James Hylton, Inman,
ond shot left him an 8-foot putt.
S.C., Buick Regal, 7, handling.

UPENDED- Minnesota Twins Kent Hrbek upended Atlanta
Braves runner Ronnie Gant after Gaol rounded first base during the
third inning of Game Two of the World Series at lhe Melrodome in
Minneapoils Sunday. Gant was called out on the play. (AP LaserPho·
to)
second-base side of th ird, where it
was promptly retrieved by pitcher
Kevin Tapani.
Tapani threw back to Hrbek on
the chance he might get Gant leaning. Hrbck made sure of that by
putting his glove, with the ball

safely SlBShed inside, on the back
of Gant's leg and then falling back
off the base and into foul territory
with Gant securely in his grasp. At
that precise moment, there were
55,000-plus hanky-waving, hysterically screaming people wanting
fronti er justice.
King Solomon would have
taken a day to mull it over. Judge
Wapner would have gone to commercial break. But umpire Drew
Coble didn ' t have that luxury. He
jerked his right thumb toward the
billowin g roof.
"He (Ga nt) lung ed into th e
bag." Coble said afterward. "His
mom entu m was carrying toward
the first-base dugout. When he did
that, he began to switch feet. He
tried to pick one foot up and bring ·
the other one down. That just carried him more toward the first-base
dugout.
" Hrhck took the throw low and
tri ed to ta g him as his feet were
com ing up too. As he did that, he
(Gant) just went over th e top of

"I knew I didn 't want to go to a
pla yoff," said O'Meara, who sank
a 6-footcr for par to avoid a playoff.
O'Meara pushed hi s season' s
earnings to almost $530,000.
Peoples picked up $108,000 for
his second-place finish.
Azinger, who came into Saturday's final round with a one-stroke
lead, finished third.
Azinger shot a 67 Saturday on
Lop of successive 65s. but in lhc
end couldn't overcome his par 72
in the opening round.
Australian Steve Elkington, who
shared the first-round lead, fini shed
fourth at 270 foll owi ng a f•na l- him. "
round 67.

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DINO-MITE

Sports briefs
AUTO RACING
MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) Michael Andretti captured his frrst
Indy-car driver's chainpionship and
seventh victory in 16 races this season with an 11.99-second triumph
over AI Unser Jr. in CART's
Champion·300 on Sunday.
Andrctti entered the race with a
I 3-point lead over Bobby Rahal
and needed to finish sixth or beuer
in the season-ending race at l..agu·
na Seca Raceway to capture the
title. He started from the pole and
, . led all but one of the 84 laps on the
2.214-mile, ll •turn road circuit
Andrclli averaged 103.604 mph
in his Chevroiel·~K&gt;Wcred Lola to
break Danny Sulhvan's 1990 raee
record of 103.556.
1.'

.,

with runners on first and th.ird.
of the eighth over the left-field
But Tapani got him to pop up fence .
.
behind the plate and Justice ended
Rick Aguilera relieved Tapani .
the inning with an easy fi y ball to to smn the ninth and struck out the
left. It gav~ the Twin s more side fo r hi s second save in two
momcntl\m with ·more muscle to · games and his fifth of the postseacome.
son. Tapani gave up seven hits,
Atlanta left six runners on base walked none and struck out three.
after stranding seven runners in
Glavine got in trouble right
Game I. In the extra-base hit away when second baseman Mark
deparunoot; the Braves were limit- , Lemke and Justice didn 't spend
ed to two doubles in the first two enough time watching Gladden's
games.
high pop to shallow right field
"We could've won with a leading off the frrst. Lemke lost the
clutch hit," manager Bobby Cox ball for a moment and then Justice
said. "You can't blame a ballpark knocked the ball out of his glove.
or the umpires."
After a · walk to C~u ck
Lei us, who hit on! y five homers Knoblau ch, Glavine~ got Kirby
in 199 at-bats this season, hit Puckett to hit into a double play ,
Glavine's first pitch in the bottom but Davis followed with his homer.

O'Meara cops Disney Classic

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By JTh:l DON~GHY '
So faf the Metlodome mystery has sacrifice ffy.
AP Baseball Writer
escaped Deu-oi~ SL Louis, Toronto
In the third, Lonnie Smith
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The and now Atlanta.
reached on Lcius' error and, one
Twins. are taking a 2-0 World
The Twins have wort six straight out laier, Ron Gant singled to left
Series lead to Atlanta simply World Series games at home and field. Dan Gladden's sloppy throw
becauseof too much Minnesota eight of nine in the postseaso~.
to third got by Leius; Tapani
muscle in the Metrodome.
"It's fun to play at home, picked up the ball and threw to rust
Home runs by Chili Davis and whether it's the regular season or as Gant rounded the bag by a courookie Scou Lems - the Twins ' postseason," manager Tom. Kelly ple of steps .
second straight two-homer game said. ''The fans get real excited and
The 170-pound Gant and the
and a show of strength at fJISt base that helps."
250-pound Hrbek ended up in a
by Kent Hrbek, senf the Twins to a
A controversial call by frrst bas&lt;~ . twist of arms and legs, with Gam
3-2 victory over the Braves Sunday umpire Drew Coble might have slipping off the base an~ being
night.
helped the Twins on this night, just called out by Coble. TV replays
The Series resumes Tuesday as much as the fans, the hankies seem to show Hrbek, a pro
nip:ht in Atlanta with Scott Erick- and the muscle.
wrestling fan, lifting Gant off the
son (20-8) pitching for Minnesota
Davis' two-run homer in the base in' a move Hulk Hogan would
against NL playoff MVP Steve first inning off loser Tom Glavine be proud of.
.
Avery (18-8),
·put the Twjns ahead and the Braves
•His momentum carried him
By then, maybe the Braves will sc ored a run in the second off into me," Hrbek said. "I kept my
have figur"1 out what happened. Kevin Tapaoi on Brian Hunter's

Announce
results
ofDelco
event
c
·oo

E •·VICTORY - San Diego
Cbargen Nate Lewis (right) is unable to catch
Cltveland Browns linebacker David Brandon as

The Dally Sentinel-Papa 5

Twins_ edge Braves 3-2, take 2-0 serieS lead

•

San Franc'isco routs Detroit
By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
Reality hit the Detroit Lions
almost as hard as the Sail Francisco
49crs did.
The Lions rode a five-game
. winning streak and the best record
in the NFC Central into Candlestick Park on Sunday. They limped
out with a 35-3 loss and the realtzation that perhaps they are not quite
ready to join the NFI.'s elite.
.· "We re not going to get any
real respect until we can beat the
San Franciscos and Washing tons,"
said Detroit quarterback Rodney
Peete.
And they are not about to do
that with the kind of performances
.. .they offered in lopsided losses to
the Redskins and 49ers this year.
San Francisco got a magnificent
game from Steve Young. He tore
. apart the Lions for 237 yards and
two touchdowns, hitting his first 16
· passes and 18 of 20.
He had help on the ground from
Keith Henderson, who rushed for
104 yards. The Niners had 233
yards on the ground , the most in
" two seasons.
Detroit built its winning string
against teams with losing records.
The 49ers arc just 3-4, but not
many observers consider them a
loser.
After the last two games - San
.. Francisco lost to Atlanta 39-33 the
· previous week - it appears the
offense has aw akened under
Young, the replacement for Joe
Montana, who is sidelined for the
season followin g elbow surgery.
"I think we answered some of
our own questions today," Young
said. "We cursed each of our loss·
es this year because they were losses we shouldn't have had. The atti·
tude we have is to redouble our
• efforts."
•
In other games, New Orleans
moved to 7-0 with a 23-7 verdict
against Tampa Bay, while Indi anapolis remained winless by
&lt;1--~' falling 17-6 to the New York Jets.
•
Also, it was Houston I7, Miami
. 13: Denver 19, Kansas City 16; the
• Los Angeles Raiders 20, the Los
: Angeles Rams 17; Cleveland 30,
: San Diego 24 in overtime: New
England 26, Minnesota 23, also in
• OT; Phoenix 16, Atlanta 10; and
Seattle 27, Pittsburgh 7.
Tonigh~ winless Cincinnati is at
Buffalo.
On Thursday night, the action
began with Chicago taking Green
Bay 10-0.
The NPC East, except for
Phoenix, was off this weekend.
Saints 23, Buccaneen 7
Steve Walsh , threw two early
interceptions, then made up for tt
by leading the Saints to another
vtctory. Walsh finished with 205

•

~meroy~lddleport, Ohio

Monday, October 21, 1991

SAVINGS•••
in tlte Clnsslfieds!
,.

�".21.

\
Monday, October
~

ByTh~Bend

''

The&lt;Daily ·sentinel

Bl'L LETI ~ BO . \ RD

.

IUlLEnll BOARD DEADUIIE
4:30 P. M~DAY BEFORE
.PUILICAnON

Mond!IY1· October 21 1 1891
Page--6 .

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· ----~------------~~----------~~--------~--7- '

·

Mums brought to America over
R
.
t
l
d
.
d
.
200 years ago: u an gar eners

:Consider this...
ByBrianJ.Reed

· I, too, was interested in and

p'leased to read "Along the Diagon;il" in the October edition ofOhio

Magazine.
~ The story, which takes readers
along U.S. Route 33 from Pomero,Y
to Willshire in West Central Ohio,
takes an intimate look at eacn town
along the way, and begins with
Pomeroy.
·. There are some minor errors in
wl'iter Mark Shelton's story - folks
living on High Street and Lincoln
Heights might argue that The Holly
Hjll Inn is not on .the highest
ground in Pomeroy, and personally,
I •do not agree that our looming
county courthouse is prim or little.
: However, for the most part,
S~elton's description of our town
was charming and right on track.
And if I dido' t work here every
day,l would want to visit.
: I was especially amused at the
d~cription of the counhouse shopJl!lr's lounge. "An absolutely artful
1dea," Shelton called it. "All cities
s~ould be so gracious as to provide
(one)",
· And on the renovation of Sacred
Heart: "One of the more meticulous refurbishings of a church since
tOe' Sistine Chapel."
• In addition to about three pages

.

of copy about Pomeroy, the article
visits Shade, Athens, Nelsonville,
Logan and several others. All of
the descriptions are really interesting. It always takes somebody who
isn't a mitive to appreciate things,
and of course we Lake our communities for granted.
Unfortunately, none of the striking phOtographs that accompanied
the article inducted Pomeroy landmarks.
If you get a chance to look at the
magazine, Lake a good look at the
story. It will m~ your week:
Oops... Yes, State Representative Mary Abel (D-Athens) did
speak at the Meigs County Farm
Bureau Dinner on Tuesday night. .
The omission of her name from the
meetin~ coverage was my fault and
was umntentional.
Interesting ... The display of
magic memorabilia at Clade's Jew·
elry is most fascinating and well
worth stopping by to see. Courtesy
of Lee Jacobs of Pomeroy, the
items offer a really fascinating look
at the world of magic, and you
don't have to uavel far to take a
look.

The Rutland Friendly Gardeners
met at the home of Margaret
Edwards for the September meeting.
Kimberly Willford presided and
Marjorie Davis gave devotions on
"Fellow Traveler" by Dorothy
Niederberger. Members responded
to roll call by telling "Things I
Have Gathered and Dried."
Janet Bolin, chairman with
Pauline Atkins, discussed plans for
the flower show held by the Meigs
County Garden Clubs during Stemwheel Weekend in Pomeroy. The
show was held at the Meigs County
Public Lib1Jif)' in Pomeroy and was
judged by the public. Designs featured mass, treasured wood, fall
colors, ceramic and pottery con tainers, still life, and one design in
twa containors. The club was
responsible for class signs. Educational exhibits included riverboat
pictures and baskets of gourds,
pumpkins and Indian Corn for a
colorful disP.lay.
Mrs. Willford, Mrs. Bolin and
Judy Snowden were named as dele-

gates With Suzy Carpenter as alternate for the fall regional meeting to
be held Saturday at Warren High
School.
.
Club members thanked Bank
One of Rutland for assistance in
sta~ing the public voting far the
d~s1gns in the club's recent flower
show there.
Mrs. Bolin and Mrs. Carpenter
made plans to replace the annuals
in the civic center planting with
tulip bulbs in the color of Amenflora '92. Area businesses and residents are encouraged to assist with
the cost of the planting.
Mrs. Bolin assisted the 4·H and
Junior Garden Club in planting
mums at Rutland Elementary.
Marjorie Davis is to bring a .
traveling prize to winner Shirley
VanMeter. Secret Pals honored
birthdays or anniversaries of Carrie
Morris, Judy Snowden , Marjorie
Davis ai'Id Lorri Barnes.
Kimberly Willford presented ~
program on "Mum's the Word ."
She stated th~ y bloom from July
until and killing frost. The plants

Participates in
Co·op program

were brought to this country over
200 years ago from Europe where
they hl!li migrated from the Orient.
They grow best if .planted in the
spring; two to three feet deep. They
should be pinched back after reas;h·
ing six inches to encourage bushiness.
.
Suzy Carpenter spoke on "Fall
Groundwork," noting there are a lot
of jobs that can be done to enjoy
the fall sunshine. Invasive perennials should be cut back and divided
so as not to takeover. Make ~ subsoil barricade to prevent spreading
of underground runner-roots.
Perennials. trees ana shrubs can be
planted now until .mid-November.
Put a thick layer of mulch over
newly planted roots when freezing
temperature p\evail. ,
Margie-Davjs led the groop-in a
workshop making wreaths ofdried
beans and seeds mixed with glue
and adhered to Styrofoam bases
trimmed with lace and ribbon.
Garden hints were by Lorri
Barnes.

Charles Carson, Pomeroy, is :
employed at the Mead ColpOration
in Chillicothe through the coopera· '
tive educ'atioii program at.Ohio :
University's College of Engmeer· .:
ing and Technolo~.
.
'·
Co-op educauon blends class·
room study with work experi7nce, :
allowing students career expenence j
which employees seek m college •
graduates.
.~
.
Students who paruc1pate m CQ· .
op education are required to com·
mit to spending at least two quarters, about six months, at their coop jobs during a five-year course of
study.
. .
Carson, a computer science
major, is the son of Charles E. Carson Sr., Hysell Run Road.
'

Adam Berluti, a state police by police in th e United States,
spokesman, said his depanment has according to Kustom Signals Inc.
210 outside-mounted units, more of Overland Park, Kan ., the
than enough to maintai ri"S peed nation' s leading .manufacturer ·of
enforcement while its 70 hand-held radar guns.
units ~put aside.
Kustom denies the guns pose a
The ban Tuesday was believed health risk , citing tests showing
it?"
to be the first of its kind by a state emissions are within government
But now Casenano says he was police agency.
safety levels.
the one getting zapped during 20
By Friday, at least 13 municipal
Eleanor R. Adair, a Yale Uniyears with a radar gun at his side. polic~ departments in Connecticut versity ex~ert on radio frequency
Like dozens of officers around the had followed suit. The Shelton and microwave field exposure, said
country, Casertano suspects long- Police Department was not among there is no evidence the guns are
term exposure to radiation from the them . Two other departm ents, hazardous.
device gave him cancer.
Rocky Hill and Windsor Locks,
Mast radar guns have an output
Surgeons removed his thyroid imposed similar bans before state equivalent to a nursery monitor, a
and surrounding lymph nodes after police acted.
child's walkie talkie, or "a jar of
he was diagnosed with cancer in
The St. Petersburg, Fla., Police 30 fireflies, if you could train them
1988.
Departmen~ believed to be the first
to all go off at once," she said.
·
"When I woke up 1 couldn't to act on fears of a cancer link, in
Casertano and two other Conmove my head. I was cut ear to ear.· January replaced hand-held units necticut police officers have filed
I saw one priest come in, then later with units outside patrol cars. The worker's compensation claims
two more. I thought this must be Hernando County. Fla., Sheriff's alleging they got cancer from daily
the end," the Shelton police officer Department moved its radar trans- exposure to radiation from the
said.
mitters outside cruisers earlier this guns.
. ·• ·
Casertano, 55, is back at work, year.
Officers in California, Wisconminus the hand-held radar gun he
Data collected by Ohio Trooper sin and Florida have filed similar
used to stop thousands of speeders Gary Poynter for the Fraternal claims.
in this town 10 miles west of New Order of Police showed that dozens
F. Alan Anderson, director of
Haven.
of officers were stricken with can- the Food and Drug AdminisuaConnecticut found itself in the cer in parts of the body where they tion's Office of Science and Tech·
middle of the safety debate last would have been most exposed to nology, said there is no evidence
week when the state police banned radiation. The findings were pubradar guns cause cancer. Yet he
hand-held radar guns as a precau- lished in Law Enforcement News recommended July 31 that operation while studies are conducted in 1990.
. tors of traffic radar never place the
into possible links between cancer
An estimated 75,000 hand-held
antenna within 6 inches of any pan
and the devices.
and mounted radar units arc used of the body wh ile the unit is trans·
mitting.
Associated Press Writer
SHELTON, Conn. (AP) - Sgt.
Vincent Casertano loved catching
speeders with his radar gun.
"You got 'em dead to right," he
said. "How are they going to fight

CALEE REEVES
: CommUlllty Calendar Items Garden Clubs are reminded of the
lfppear two days before an event upcoming fall meeting on Monday
~d the day or that event. Items at 7:30p.m. at the Meigs County
Bryan and Susan Reeves,
must be received wen in advance Extension Office. Officers of all
Pomeroy,
are announcing the birth
tb assure publication In the cal· clubs are urged to attend 10 draw
of
their
first
child, a daughter,
.fndar.
for the schedule for the Christmas
Calee
Marie
Reeves,
on July 25 at
flower show to be held Nov. 23 and
Holzer
Medical
Center.
MONDAY
24 at Royal Oak Resort. New offi.
The infant weighed .eight
; POMEROY - "The Hoosier cers will be installed and Janet
pounds
and four ounces and was 21
Schoolmaster" by Edward Eggle· Bolin will be demonstraiing new
mches
long.
.
s)on will be presented by Professor trends in arranging for the Star
Maternal g{andparents are
Ronald Grosh, Superintendent of Club . The Middleport Amateur
Charles
and Sandra King,
Springfield Christian Schools, on Club will host the meeting.
·
Pomeroy,
Monday at the Meigs County Pub·
Paternal grandparents are Bob
lie Library as a part of the "Heroes
TUESDAY
and
Mar~ie Reeves, Chester, and
a)ld Heroines of the Ohio River
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi
Sheila
Miller,'Columbus.
~alley" series.
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
•
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
: REEDSVll.LE- The Eden Unit· Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
ep Brethren Church in Reedsville All members are urged to auend.
Airman 1st Class Brian S. Sharp
will hold revival services Monday
has graduated from Air Force basic
tf!rough Oct. 27 at 7 p.m. nightly
POMEROY · A "Meet the Cantraining at Lackland Air Force
with Rev. Bob Wiseman, Point didates " night is scheduled for
Base, Texas.
P.leasant, W.Va., as evangelist. Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at Trinity
During the six weeks of training
'\'here will be special singing each Congregational Church, Second
the airman studied Air Force mis~ening.
·
sion, organization and customs and
and Lynn Sueets, Pomeror . The
received special tnlining in human
public is invited. This will g&amp;ve the
'
• RACINE - The American Red public an opportunity to hear the
relations.
Gros s Bloodmobile will be at three candidates for mayor and to
In addition, airmen who com~outhern High School on Monday learn of their positions on various
pl:te basic Lraining earn credits
from· 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Everyone projects.
IOWIIfd an associate degree through
who is eligible to give blood is
the Community College of the Air
!qged to do so.
POMEROY - FOE Ladies AuxForce.
iliary 2171 will hold a special
The ainnan is the son of Mr. and
: MIDDLEPORT · Revival at the meeting on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. William B. Sharp of 39037
Old Bethel Freewill Baptist Church All members are urged to attend.
Silver Ridge Road, ReedsvUie.
¥"Route 7 and Story's Run Road,
He is a 1988 graduate of Eastern
~uth of Middleport, will be held
HOUSTON (AP) - Country estimated he has interviewed
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Clas- High School.
HARRISONVILLE · The Har·
Monday through Saturday at 7:30 risonvillc Senior Citizens Club will singer Clint Black wed actress Lisa 40,000 people in 30 years.
sical guitarist John Williams, who
p.m. nightly. Marvin Markin will begin its winter meetings and sup- Hanman in a sunset ceremony at
"I don't do any research. It's all studied under Andres Segovia, says
~e the evangelist. There will be
instinct. That's the only way I can he was inspired by the master but
pers at noon on the dates set for his farm .
~ial singing. The public is invit29_,
and
Hartman,
34,
Black,
work and do all the things I do," didn't like his teaching style.
them . The first meeting and cov .
tld to attend.
ered dish dinner will be held Tues- exchanged vows Sunday at a cere- he said.
' 'Segovia was unique in what he
King's newest project is "Larry created .and he was a great inspiraday at noon at the townhouse. All mony attended by 30 relatives, said
) RACINE • 'The Southern Local members are urged to attend.
Joe Dera, a spokesman for the cou· King TNT Extra," a series of ontion to me," Williams said before
(Joard of Education will meet Monpie.
location interviews that draws on an appearance Sunday at the
day at 7 p.m. at the high school.
Hartman has appeared in several footage from the TNT cable netWEDNESDAY
•
Ambassador Auditorium.
TV
movies and had a role in work's film library.
•
POMEROY - An adult educa·
"But I don't think he was a
: POMEROY - The Salisbury lion class for basketball officiating "Knots Landirlg."
good
teacher. He was autocratic,"
PTO will meet Monday at 7 p.m. will be held Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Guests passed through three
NEW YORK (AP) - Singer- Williams said. "If you did what he
&amp;mdidates for Meigs Local School at Meigs High School. Far further security checkpoints before reach - songwriter Seal rsn't letting a tor!Joard will speak. All parents are information contact Dave Jenkins ing the wedding site about 50 miles rent of praise from the critics go to wanted he could be very charming
and malce you feel good. But music
urged to attend. A pumpkin judging or any other local basketball offi· outside Houston, Dera said.
his head.
·
is more than just the correct finger·
¢ontest will be held prior to the cials. The class is sponsored by the
In addition to a traditional wed"Some people are doing quite ing of pretty sounds."
feeling.
.
Athens Basketball Officials Asso· ding cake, Black and Hartman well )llithout my music," the 28Williams , 50. was first taught 'lbu'/1 be floating on a cloud with
feasted on a groom's calce that fea- year-old pop star said in the Oct. 28
the guitar by his father, dance band
the buys you'll (lnd In the
tured a replica of a hot tub in their issue of People.
guitarist
Len
Williams·.
At
12,
he
new home in Nashville, Tenn. ,
classl(leds.
Seal 's self-titled debut album
Dera said. Black is depicted sitting was No . I in England and is began studying with Segovia in
in the hot tub, surrounded by his approaching gold status in th e London and Siena, Italy.
He made his professional debut
dog and a TV set with Hartman's United States, thanks to the hit sin·
•
in
1958 and later earned a reputa• Following a public meeting in the calendar year.
picture on the screen.
glc ' Crazy."
.!
tion for his immaculate teChnique
lleptember bringing a civic service
Officers are Frank Cleland,
The singer's full name is Sealrganization to the village, Racine president; Gary Norris, vice-presiCHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP) henry Olurnide Samuel. His music and clean, elegant style.
urit~n Charter Night was estab- dent; Mary Ball, secretary; Arthur
- A talk show host's job is never is described as a mix of dance ,
CRETE, Neb. (AP) - Do we
t hed for Oct. 15. This meeting W. Nease, treasurer: and Aoyd R. done, Larry King says·. And he soul, new age, R&amp;B and country .
call
him Admiral Kangaroo now?
111 Second St.; Pomeroy
'f_as attended by diguitaries of the Farra, Paul Harris and Charles Nor- wouldn't have it any other way.
The British press has compared
Bob
Kceshan,
television's
Capflanization as well as local inter· ris, directors.
"It never leaves me. I interview him with Marvin Gaye, Jimi Hen~persons.
The next meeting will be Nov. elevator operators," King said. drix and Peter Gabriel, among oth- tain Kangaroo, was chosen for
induction into the Admiralty of the
"'· Ruri~ 's purpose is to create a 26_and the time and place will be " I'm just gettin~ paid well to do ers.
Great Navy of the State of Nebras·
r understanding between pea- announced.
what I love 10 do. '
"Melody Maker was calling me ka by Diane Nelson, ·wife of Gov.
and through volunteer commli·
. King, the host of "Larry King everything short of God, " Seal
Ben Nelson. The ceremony was
. service to malce the area a betLive" on CNN and "The Larry said. "That's not really healthy for scheduled~
for today.
place to live and work.
Kin~ Show" on Mutual Radio, me at all."
:!!he Racine. Ruritan had as its
Mrs. Rose Sisson and Mrs. Olga
1~!porary
president, Paul Harris, Gaudin of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.,
~as its tempomry secretary-uea- have returned from Galion after
(lfcr, Mary Ball.
visiting Alfred Sisson and family.
~ :T'.t this charter night meeting the
They went for services that pro·
'"'"bcrs present signed the charter gressed Alfred Sisson another step
ltd it will be open for those who toward the Dioconate in St.
were absent as well as those who Joseph's Chun:h.
Join throughout the-remainder of
While there they also attended
•
the open ·house at Galion High
School for Mrs. Sisson's granddaughter, Andrea, and a grandparEveryon~ is.Jnvited To
ent's
day for her other pddaughPOMEROY~ A "Meet the Can- ter, Angela
at
St.
Joseph's
School
idates" night is scheduled for in Galion.
.Stop .By and See Our
ucsday at 7:30 p.m. al Trinity
On
Saturday
the
Galion
High
(:ongregational Church, .Second
DEDICATED, CONCERNED &amp;
School, of which Andrea is a rnem·
New Shipments.
~nd Lynn Streets, Pomcror. The
l!er.
and Fred is director of percusWILLING
TO
LISTEN
public is invited. This will g&amp; vc the siori section, will play at the UniOPEN 9:30·5:00 MON.·SAt
ic an opportunity to hear the
THANK
YOU
versity of Toledo Homecoming.
ce candidates for mayor and to They wiU also be in the homecom·
PAID FOR BY THE CANDIDATE. JOHN H~
l
of their positions on various ing parade at half-time.
703 Second St. (Third House on Right fro
155 PEARL ST., MIDOLEPORT,

New arrival

Completes training

=
projeciS.

'r

... -

ROOFING

A&amp;

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

·

to lAY WAIUII1Y

WAIII~SIOO •

.

DIYIS- " •

•·

me.

'

Mom

.,

Jl
•

'

1.....

•• ~ •

CLUB

GUN S"OOT' .
1:00 P..M. •

.,..IUTIIIS-$100.,

UIIIIS.-S..·k-$12~ .,

FIIIZIIS- •115., .
I!ICIO OV!Nl-$79 .,

·''

SUNDAYS

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVKE

'22

Starting Sept.
12 Ga F

9t2-S3U • 915-3561
Aatu F10n1 ,.... Office

.:tory

Ugt

POMUOY, OHO

ChOke

1on•rn
, .. Hn

'

RENT·TO·OWN

MICIOWA E
OVEN ,UPAii

NAME IU. PIODUal

factory Alth~lod Repair
TV • VCR • Stereo
Boom Bqx • C. D. Player
Sc~nner • Typowrller
Cordi••• Phone •
Microwave- Radar
Detector

au~as .

lrl.. It li Or We

·

Plclr U,.
IEN~S APPLIANCE

SEPICE

HOIII

992-5335 Of'
915-3561

.

Entert1inment
Center

...... ,,.. .... Office

H.l.C.

2171. ltCOIIIUt.

Pomeroy .

I'HIIOY•. 01110"

992·3524

•

3/&amp;110/Hn

912711 mo.

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING , .
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK

SHRUB .&amp; TREE
TRIM .and

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
•

BILl SLACK

(614)
696-1006
&amp;-&amp;-'91

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
e-t

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS

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

"At Reasonable Prices"

THE DANCE
COMPANY
992-6289

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES
PH. 949-210 I
or les, 949-2160
Day or Night · ·
NO SUNDAY

9-6-1 mo.'

GUN SHOOT,

CAIPn CUAIIIIS
and nu FLOOI CAll

RACINE
FIRE HPT.

•Auaonable Rotea
•Quelity Work ·
•Fra Ealimatea
•Ctrpet Hoo Feat Dry
Time '
•High GloU' on Ti~
Floor Finish
MilE LEWIS, Ownor
Rt. I, Rul..nd, OH.

lashan luildieg
EVElY
SAY. NIGHT

6:30P.M.

Startiina

Sept. 21
Cllollo

lhtly

12 """'
Stilctly

YOUNG'S

•Remodeling and
Home Repeire
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

CARPENRI SEIVKE
-Room ActdttiDnt
-Guner walt!:

"""-•I

-Efootttcat -~~~
end
-con..

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

_,_,_""
•• El_.

-R_ootlng

. CEDAR
CONSTRUCnON

.

]FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill ·· ·
. 992-6215

992-6648 or
698-6864
.

,_.
.......

~ -- -

========

Mason

•

GUN SHOOT

15

GINGERBREAD
HOUSE OF GIFTS
Is ..Now Open In

RACIW
G
. UN
""

USID DPUAIIIOS

-'•

JNSULATION ' FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENT$ SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

FOR
MEIGS LOCAL S(HOOL BOARD&gt;

!

g~;:;~o=~~= :==:o:o~.e22':'~:l

October 2t, tHO, and r• 72t.8footllongthollldwoll
llno; thonct ooulll. 88 dog.
NEW - REP All
OPENING
cordlid In .Book t88, tl pogo 1111 2007.M fotl to tho con·
.DOGWOOD LOFT GIFT SHOP
99 ollho Doed .Aocordo of tor ·at Slate Routt No. 1;
Gutters
Mtl~ounly, Ohio.
thence north 4 d,eg, 40' w111
Down•noutl
10 E. Horton, Mason, WV.
Roloronco: Volume 90 foot 1tong the conltr of
..,.
Across from Janet's Hair-Go·
t95, Page 7t8 of the Molga t~lctStetoRouto,tollleoouth·
Gutter Cleaning
Around
CouPnatyr'cDeedl
e 2'. ~~tuo•r~doin . the eutcorneroltheOhloVallly
Painting
TUES. THRU
10-6
"'
Manufacturing Corp.; thence
Townahlp ol Rullon ,In the North 87 &lt;Mg. so· weat 348
FREE ESTIMATES
CountyoiMolgundSIItoof loottoalotnowownedbytho
949-2168
Ohio:
VallMonulocturlng
o-1nnIn g ...
-L
-• north 2 dog.
e/l/ g.1/1 ·mo. od.
SKATING
...,
ou1 .~hty 1Co·ro.: thence
(FREE FOR MOOSE ME~tBEFIS
one rode and fpurt11n t nko
t251Mt wlih thellno
, .... ........... -· ..
ONLY)
oaat from tho center of well
11ld Ohio Valley MonulacMONDAY, OCTOBER-28th
llne of Section 3e, Town 6, turing Corp; thoncoiOuth 78
•VINYL SIDING
I
7 to 9 p.m. at Skatesvijle
Range .t4 of tho Ohio Com• dog. 30' well 272 foot with
•IILUMINUM SiptNG
pony'oPurchuoollhonorth· the line of Mid Ohio Volley COMPLOE AUTO
Prizes lor Costumes
•BLOWN IN
eell corner of Jo~ephua Monulocturlng Corp.; thence
INSULATION .
C11ponter'a land; thonco north 58 dog. 25' wnt 244
UPHOLSTDY
ooulh 44 roilt to tfie north- leetwlihthellrioohaldOhlo
Convertible :rops,
Public Notlci
.wool cornor of Grant Vtlllf Manufacturing Corp.;
Public Notice
(&lt;arp,e ts. Headliner
-~~~~~~As-~ ROnllne'o land; thence eoll thence north t dog. 45' toll
&amp; Seat Covers and
711-1/2 rodo to lho northoatl 22t.5foot·wlththotlneolaald
(Conllnuod from fl111e 3)
corner ol Gronl Romine'a compony to the oouth Uno of
Minor Auto Repair.
COUNTY, OHIO
land; thonce aouth t8 rods tho Chrlallan Church tot; MAIN ST., MASON, YA.
Pomeroy, -Ohio 45768 untli
"Free Bltlmet.. "
HOWARD E. FRANK
and 23 llnka; lhonce 0111 n thence wool 336 lttl otong
2:00 p.m. (tocol limo) on
PH. 949·2101
MEIGS COUNTY
rodi and 22·tl2 IInke to tho tho oouth nne of tho Church
Nov. 4, t99t ond·thtn 11
1-(3034)·
TREASURER,
weat
tint
of
Jamu
lot
and
thooouth
line
of
tho
uld ofllco publicly opened
· or Its. 949-2160
I'LAINTIFF, .
Chapmon'o land; ·thonct cemetery to tho oouthweal
773~9560
and read oloud.
·
NQ SUNDAY
CASE NO. 90 DLT 01
north 60 roda to tho cenlar of corner of uld cemetery;
9/ 8/ 81 / 1 mo. pd.
WORK covered by the
Contract Documonll In· THE OHIO VAvLLEY MANU· therood; thtnctaouth 67·1/2 thence north 0 d•JJ· 38' out
clude 'tho following ltoma
FACTURING
dtg,_ WHI18 rode and 6 265.1 lttlllong the WHt Uno
lor which bide will be
tlnko; thence north 76-t/2 of told cemetery to tho place
accoptod:CORPORATION, ET Al,
&lt;Mg,_wHI14roda;thonco of begl!lnlng, containing
AUTO PARTS
DEFENDANTS,
north 4 rodoto tho center of 22.36 tcrH: ·
Furntohlnga for tho
Spocialiting i•
NOTICE OF SALE UNDER tho ulct oocllon No. 36;
Excepdng and reserving
Molgo County Department
Custom Fr- lepair
JUDGMENT
OF
FORECLO.
thence
well to tho place of &amp;o tho Iormor Gran&amp;or, Edda
oiHumanSorvlcu
SURE OF UENS FOR
NEW &amp; USED PARts
Archttecto Eotlmate
DELINQUENT LAND TAXES beginning, containing 33 and Boggaao, her odmlnlatlatora,
FOR ALL MAKES &amp; ...
Complete Grooming
S125,000.00
67/tOO ocroa, more or te11. executora,holrtfl)daaalgno,
Tho Contract Documonll
Whereas, Judgmonl hu
Deed roforoncn: Volume on•olllttnlh (tlt6) of all oil
MODELS
For All lr..ds .
bHn londtrlld agalnat cer- teo, Page 37; ond Volume and gil lying under and
may be oumlnod 11:
992-7013
taln parcelo of ral pro.,.rty 234 p 411 M 1 eo t
h
A. tb
Tho 01~ of tho Molgo
EMILEE MERINAR
for llxeo, llllllmonta,
' oge • • go un y within I t premlua ~~· y
County Comrnlalicnoro
or
992·5553
Deed Roc0rda.
·
convoyed, davotoped, proOwn.er &amp; Operator
Parcel 3: Tho fcllowlng duced and 1emoved ther•
Molga County Courthouoe chargeo, ponoiiiH, lnlornt,
Dl TOU FlU
ond ecole I I follows:
deocrlbed promlaaa, oltuoted from,
.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45781
1-100-141-0070
614-992-6820
Parcel Number-Tnea, Inter• In tho Townohlp of Orange,
Subject to on oil and gu
DAIWIN1 OliO
Poo,teroy,
County ol Melgo and State of ltaao from Edda Boggeoa·to
Burg111 I Nlplo, Umltod eat, ond Ponattlu
7/31/'91 tfn
1Q.00780.000-$ 38t.t4
Ohio ond bounded and d• B.H.PutnamdatedAprll24th,
4424 Emer10n Avenue
ocrlbod u follows: Bolnt:' 1948, ond recorded In Vol.
Pllkoroburg, Wool Vlrglnl1 ta.oom.o00-$17,273.t2
09-00888.000-$t,44t.70
Soc 1 No 5 T
hi
26t04
'
t1·00785.00().$t,8t5.8t
ton . ' owno p . 4t, pogo 38 of lho Lease
BISSEll &amp; BUllE
Coplea of tho Ccntr1ct t0.00778.00().$tO,St9.02
4 and Range No. t2 of tho Recorda of Molga County,
Documenta m1y be ob- Total·$3t, 240 .58
CONSTRUCTION
Ohio Company'a Purchou, Ohio.
FIREWOOD
tained ol tho olllco of
Parcel t: Sltuolod In lho and beginning tn the middle
Sub)ocllo tho light oflho
•New Ho1111s
Burge11 &amp; Nlpte, llrnttod, County olll"'--, Slate of ofSiateHlghwayNo.680,on Grontoro, Guy G. BoggHo
SELLERS
located ot 4424 Ernoraon Ohio, and In the
•Gar-.s
~,.
No. •nd Myrtlt C. Bogga11, their
Townthlp of 5the Northd tint o Section
1
Hardwood
Slabs
Avtnue, Parkeraburg, West
• 14-112
to co' n·
•Complete '
end bound--~ on d 1 , 44 1hro0 N
h eel West helre and as•Igns,,
•
Vlrgtnlo 26t 04 upon pay- Orange,
deacrlbed u followo:
rom
ort '"'corner of llruct, maintain, repair a all
For
Sale
Remodeling
mont ol Twonty.flvo Donora
Section
No.(). 5;/4 thence
Inch 10we~ line to a run on
No . 5, told
Being
In
Stcllon
w
od
f
($25.00), NONE OF WHICH Township No.4 and Range 111 £v r 1 t t 80110 oaldresltstato,logtlherwllh
Greal Price!
Stop &amp; Comport
WILL BE REFUNDED.
,
tho
Chrlatlan
Church
Lot;
tho
right
of
lngrou
and
1 th
Fret Estlmotes
So th 8 od h
CALL
Tho front of tho onvolopo No.12oft h•I Ohlo Co mpany
ud rh a; 1 senceh egress· for said Grantors,
Town- wence
Purch11e
n
Orongt
oncloolng tho bid mull be hi
985-4473
I Co unty, Ohl 0 • 21eat/2tOoctro a;thI onceE out52 their agonll, aoslgno and OHIO PALL£T. CO.
morlced "Soiled Bld, Humon • p, Mega
·1 rd 2o;•-- once
all
Invitees, to conatruct main·
So
h
beginning
at
tho
ut
wool
rod
h
N
h
Servtcoo Deportment corner ofa 5.28 acrotlact of
667-6179
992-6461
un -t;t once ort lalnondrepalrthoaaldoewer
Furnlohlngt", blddtr to landoiThoOhloVatltyManu· 2od•1/2 throda; tNhenceh27Weodllt6 Uno.
9-1·81 · I mo.
Hl-'90 lfn
lurnlth their own bid form.
toclurlng Company, 1 corpo- r a; .once orl
r 110
Subject to all easements
The Commtutonoro oro ration, doocrlbed In deed tho pfoco of beginning, con- and hlghwayo of record.
bound by Fodera! llw which rocordocllnBookt91,at.,.ge talnlng 5.28uocrea,
mort or
Releronco Deedo: Vol.
prohlbltt contracting from 283 of tho Deed Recorda of 1Ill;"':/' ng th0 10 11ow1ng 166, page 99; and Volume
BULLDOIING
an ootobltahmtnl they or 1 Molgo County, Ohio, thence dtocrtb
PONDS
proml•tt~• ~on· 227, Page409, Molga County
lomlly member may hove 1 South 58' 25' E111 244 loot; voyod 10 Btillno Hordway by Deed Rocordo.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
flnonclollnttratln.
thencoNorth78'30'Eoat2n FlorrloO.Lilmblndbounded
Parcel 5: Slluatod In the
LAND CLEARING
Tho Board of County fttt to the Eoat nne of tonda and. doocrlbod ao fottowo: County of Molga, In tho State
WATER &amp;
Commlootonore may occopt . of Guy ·G. ond Myrtle c. Beginning 35 feet Eut altho ol Ohio, and In tha Township
SEWER LINES
tho loWIII bld or 10lect tho Boggou, thence North 77.5 North1111
corner of let No.3 ol Olive, bounded and deBASEMENTS&amp;
Offer Ends Oct. 31
boat bid for tho Intended feet to tho South tint oluld In W.W. McCuno'o Fl rot Addl· scrlbod ae!QIIowa:
HOME
SITES
purpooo, and reoervo tho 5.28tcre troct, lhonco Wool lion to tho Vltloge of Tuppora
Being the weetern oneHAULING :
right to reject any and on 475ftetolong tho South tine Plaint, Ohio, In tho center of holt of tho wulern one-hall
Umestone,
Dirt,
blda or any port thereof.
olaald 5.28 aero tract to the tho TuppenPiolnnnd Allred In Fracllon32, Town 4, Range
Gravel
and
Coat
ll~ga County Boerd
•·] n· Rood,nowonplaiiiMIJISt.;
11 cl lht Ohio Companu'a
placo of "-1
- . nnIng, con~
h
E 70 ._ h
'
Licen•d •nd Bonded
of Commllolontt'a
lng US aero. Excepting '"d I once ut 1 ...t; I ence Purchase, and beginning al PH. 614-992-l&gt;t:i!l
949·2826
Mary Hobalatlor, Ctd
South
2051eot;
lhonco
WHI
tho aoutheaat corner of aold
1041 mo.
9-11
rHorvlng
on•alxltlnth
(1/
o
1
1
h
t
No
h
(tO) 2t, 28, 2tc
16) of all oft and gao un dor IY· 11 oe1 ; Idlonce1 n • rlh • Fracllon No. 32, and running
-lor y rocl on to I o wntto Ianda now owned by
placo ol beginning, contain- Lone VIneyard (formerly
Real Estale General
lng 1/4 of on ocro; ,...rvlng owned by Reuben Weboter);
thorlghttoloyandmolntalno thence north far enough to
drolnor-orlromthehoult make one hundred ac•01;
•VInyl Siding
now on tht following d• thence uot to the Fracllon
ocrlbed proml111: Sllualed llne;thoncesouth tothaplace
•Replacement
In Orange Townthlp, Molga of beginning, · contolnlng
Windows
County, Ohio, being In Sec- twenty-live acreo, more or
•Roofing
lion No. 5, Township No. 4, lou, ondlylng In tnewestorn
•Insulation
Rongo No. 12 and bounded one-hall of real osla&amp;e lorJAMES KEESEE
end deecrlbtd 11 loltowa: merly owned by Lucy
Begins Sept.
992,2772 or •
Beginning In tho middle of Osborn, deceased.
Every Sunday 12 Noon
State Highway No.7 Woot29
Being tho same real os742-2251
roda6 IMI, ond South t 8-t/2 tate convoyed unto W. Fred
539 Bryan Piece
Factory Guns Only
roda from tho Northoul cor- Osborn by Hernon G. Oabo1n
Middleport. Ohio
919191/2 mo.
- of 11ld Soctlon No. 5; and Allee Osborn, hla wile,
lt-14·Hn
thence Weal 18 rods to on by deed daled Oc&amp;ober 10,
......
Iron pin; thence South 8·1/2 1962, recorded In Deod Book - - - - - - - FIREWOOD
rode to an Iron pin; thence No. 217 at Page 89, Daod 1 Clrd Of Thl!lnkl
Eoat16roda;thonceNot'th 8- Records of Meigs County,
FOR SALE
t/2rodotothapllceolbegln· Ohio.
All Hard Wood
nlng, containing 0.85 of an
Deed Relerence: Volume
1wish to thank
For Residential
acre, more or lno, and being 238, Page 345, Meigs County everyone that helped
1 port of tho 11mo promloeo Deed Records.
and Commercial
canvoyodbyFiorrloO.llmb,
Whoreao, such judgment
in anyway in the
Dump Truck
till., to ForrNI A. Word by ordera such real prope•ly to
reception in honor Of
warranly deod of dale March be sold by the underolgned
Delivery or Pick·
17, 1844, 1nd recorded April to aallsfy the total amount of
my 90th birthday.
17, t944, In Deed Book No. auch judgment; Now, &amp;hero- To each and everyone
Up Your Own
151, pogo 321, Dolld Aocorda lo1e, public notice Ia hereby who attended, for the
Also Splitter
of Molgt County, Ohio; over given that I, Jamea M.
ond acrooolhollrat h,..olno· Soule by of Melgo County, · beauliful gifts, cards
Services Available
bavo dooorlbod priimloeo Ohio, wlllotllauch real propand flowers. Special
can 992·6142
either to tho dllch rurinlng erty at public auction, lor
thanks to Morse
1D-171MO
through tho flratabcve d• caah,lothohlghostblddorol
tcrlbed preml..und crou- an amount that equal a at Chapel church friends,
lngSIItoHtghwayNo. 7orto least;
for beautiful gold
3 Announcements
tho rovlno running North ond
As In the cour&amp;'o order,
I
d k M
South on tho flrat obovo tho lair market value ol the P aque an ca e. ay
deacrlbed p1omloft, which parcetuodtlormlned by the
God bless you .
ATIENTION
revlntllto W011 altho houae county audllor,ln tha amount
Gamet Ervine
nrect of keeping the
on
tho lllltbovt doacrlbod amount
of $84,950.00
tho total 1
1
promilll,lllddrllnor..Wer
ol theor judgment,
.•
secre1 of being
tobtloldetadepthiOIOnot Including all tax11, 11son· 2
In Memory
used, abused, and
to·lntorloro wllh tho forming menlo, cha•goa, penalties, :,_.;.....:;,;:::=:..!..-living In fear? Please
or cul·tlvotlng of tho ftrat end Interest payable ouba•
help yourself and
obovo dt~crlbod promlooo; quont to the delivery to the
prosecuting allorney of tho
Am I alone? No
1nd belng tho ,lime pro.,.rty delinquent
land tax certlllcato · IN LOVING MEMORY
convoyed by ForrHI A. Ward
names required.
OF MY HUSBAND
and Eulo t. Ward, hlo wife, 10 or maater list of delinquent
Please wrlle to
H.A. Cole and Onolta Colt, lractslcratotalol$31,240.59.
CHARLES A.
SURVIVOR
by delid datod Auguot 24,
The llrllauch salt oholl
MASH, JR.
1845 and niCorded In Book be between tho hours ol 8
, P.O. Box 91 D
WHO PASSED AWAY
t53, at Pegt 617 cl Deed a.m. and 4 p.m, at the Iron&amp;
OWNER WAHl'S lHIS RUSTIC LOG LOOK COUNTRY
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
OCT. 21 ; 1982
Rocordo of Molga County, IIepa ol tho courthouoo In
SffiiNG HOME SOLD! t\1 &amp;lory, 3 bedrooms, reOhlo,ucepl0.35oc,.thereol Melga County, Pomeroy In my hllrt lharo Ia •
modeled with large front porch 4. deck on a toox200 lot.
convoyed by H.A. Cole and Ohio, on Friday tho 15th dey
Owner has redJoed the prioe to $27,900 but will oonsider
picture of the ona I
5
Happy Ads
Ontlta Colo, huobond and of November, t991 .
any reasonable olferl
·
Iova
the btal;
wlla, to lib Allee Cooper by
II uld parcel• do nol r•
dllllldatodAprll3, tU7,and celvo 1 aulflclont bid, they I can alwayaloel your
IMMEDIATE POSSESSlONI•1972 t2x60 mobile home
recorded In Book t5ht page ohell. bo offered lor 11to,
with 2 acres of level gr&lt;Mld. Includes outbuilding, garden
praHnct end know I
230 oluld Deed Recorda. under tho oamo Ierma and
space with Leading Creek water. ASKING $18,000..
waalruly
bleat.
Being tho umo real 01• condttlono of tho flrat aalo
1111 oonvoyod to H.A.__Cole ond at the aame time of day H I had all the world to
MIDDELPORT - 1 lloor frame &amp; vinyl home with 5
give, I'd give II, yta,
lumber co., Inc., by Homer lnd II tho aamo p~cdo, on
. rooms, 2 bedrooms, localod on two lois. Some new wiring
A. and Onolla Colo by,deed Wednnday, tho 27.1, 1 ay o1 and more;
&amp; plumbing. ASKING $18,000.
recorded In Dolld Book 185 November, t911t, lor an To hear your volct, to
Pogo204,
MolgtCounty Deed amount that equal a at tttal:
MINERSVILLE AD. - 2 story frame home. 6· rooms. 3-4
- your emlle, and
At In tho courl'o mder,
bedrooms, beautiful stairway &amp; balh with pine woodwol11. Rocordo. ·
Deed Roloronco: Volume tho lair mal11tt valuo of tho
grill you allht door.
Home needs some repair. Immediate possesslonl
181, Poge283, Molgi County porcote 11 dtltrmlnod by tho But God IIW you
ASKING $22,500. COME MAKE AN OFFERI
Deed Rooordo.
countyoudhor,lnthoomount
gettlhg weary, 10 Ht
Parcel 4: Tho following of $84,8!0.00 or tho total
~ld what He thoujlhl
real ntate btlng In Section amount of tho Judgment,
FALLIS A BEAUTIFUL nME TO LOOK FOR THAT
bast;
5,
Town~.
Rangot2,
Orange
InCluding
ott
taxM,
•
•
NEW HOME! COME IN, LET US SHOW YOU WHAT WE
Township, Melga County, menla, charg11, ponlltloe, He came end etood
HAVE 10 OFFER.... WE'LL DIRECT YOU TO THE
Ohio, end bounded ond d• and ln*Ht poy1blo tuba•
Lordy, Lordy!
HOME OF YOUR DREAMS!
IMialde you and
quont to the delivery to the
acrlltd 11 loltowo:
whlepered, "Como
Beginning In tho center of prooooutlng oltornoy of the
HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................I82-et8t
Look Who's 40!
Stall
Rou1o
No.
eat,
whore
dellnq-tllndtucertlllcate
and
R111t".
TRACY BAINAGER ...........................................848-24:te
the Wootllno of th• Christian or m111tr Mat of dollnquont
Slldly ml111d by wHa,
tiEAN l;'AUSSELL .............................................MIJ·~
Love,
Church
Cemetery Inter-to troclalonlolllol$3t,240.SI.
JO HILL.................:...................:...................,....MS-4488
Ann; children and
theconterolllldStateAoute;
Jarnoo M. Boutaby,
OFFICE............................................................... II2·2251
granlchlldrtn.
thoncewollll07.881eotalong
SHERIFF
thocentorolaalci ,Stoto Route 10 (t4) (2t) (21) 3TC

J&amp;L

INSURANCE

Sissons return

Meet the candidates

Hnr•d L Writtsll

FOREVER
BRONZE

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

1

JOHN HOOD

.

IAU IESJIVAL
SPECIAL
20 SESSIONS
For $20.00

Namesinthenews-----------

VOTE FOR.

Public Notice
(IOWhorethoWoalllneol
lng aotd
promiMo
hereto- form,
Guy Boggo11'
S7.84
foro
excepted
ond••re~rved
~cflbed' In
Vol. tcre
1118,
by prevloui grontoro.
Pllll II of the Melgo County
And betng·port of tho root llMd Recordo,Interaectathe
eti!"la convoyed by Eddo
A
1 I ld S

AnENnON

By LARRY ROSENTHAL

THE RIGHT CHOICE!'

Public Notice

The

.GROOM
'ROOM

Getting zapped: police worry
about radar guns and cancer

j;;;;;;:;~i;h~ ;::ablished
t

BU81Dess
•
s
·
•
·
ervtces
1------"'1"'-...;.·~r.:=======:;,-;:::::=:::· ::::::;;:::;1i=;;·:;;';:;;#,=1

Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

1991

N1w I•· ·
:fffeM/ .

..,...

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMI!S and
FURNACES FOR MOBilE &amp;DOUILEWIDE HOM(S . .
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

0

BENNETT'S

•

•

•

•

•••••••••

•

MOIIU HOME
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

Loc111td On SaHertl School Ill. off lt. 141
(614) 446-9416 or l·ICM1·1172··59jt7

ATS INSULATOR®
"VINYL REPLACEMENT WINDOW
We WUI Not ae Undersold
*Save up to 50% on Fuel Bills
*Increase the Value of Your Home
*Call for Free Estimates

742·2328 .

I0/7Afo

Is Y• Reof ~Fer Another Year Ill let and Snow?

.

slht 1hll II Flnll Out.

CAL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTIUCnON
992·2653

·

For Old &amp;New Roofs, S"'ales

•••Gtttln

••IWili
...
........
We Guarantee Your S1tlllaetae.

·j'

·

IO!IPII ,._IACII
Mt

Rll mtiiATIS

j

'

�, Monday, oCtober 21,

Page 8

The

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

32 Mobile Homes

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcement s

44

lor Sale

3

Monda , October

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

71

'

with }JIIIItltt p11ld, raference and

dopoolt roqulrod, 304-1182-2566.
Modom 2 &amp; 3 bedroom 'oport·
ment In Pomeroy. 1-112 blth,
washer/dryer hook·up1. aqulpIU!Chlnt.

. haterence/Dtpot. ~t

Phone
&amp;.OOpm.

required.
114-1185-4448 oftor

Completlv Fumlthtd moblla
home, 1 milt below town, over·
looking river. No Pttt, CA. 6'14·

446.0338.
One and two bidroom
apartments for rent. 304-8752053 or 675-4100.

Small 1br Apartment, 7 Court
SlrHt, Kitchen With Stove,
RelrJgerator,

Deposit,

Plua
Reference.

$185/mo.

UtllitiH,

614-446-4926.

45

4

Giveaway

11

Help Wanted

Bltek/Whllt malt cal, 1-yr old,
neuttl'.ct, hae all shott, Inside

pot. 614·992·3255

Brownlshforangt couch. 614·

1'12·3203
Cttl and kl1ttnt to
homes. 614-843-5445

ATIENTIONI
READERS
NEEDED
I
good $35,000 Veer lneomo Potontlall
Reading Boob And T.V Scripta.
tpact, Call 1-601·368-8242 EXT IB·

F,... mobile home
utllllltl not lncludld 614-949-

21141
Giveaway: 4

Puppies,

Par1

' Boaglt/Colllo, 614-446-6218.
Hot point Washer, Almond Color

614-446-8134.
KIHtnt, Call After 6p.m. 614-441•

1001.

lojat on Portland Ad , small

ftmtlt dog, tan In color, name

Tippy, 614·949-3089 INVI mtsttgt.

Mtlt larder Colllt, 1 1/2 Ynra

Old, Coll614-446-31183.
Molhtr And 5 Malo Pupo, Mlxtd
Brood. 614-256-1525.
Smell malt puppltt, mother Is

Cockopoo, 304-875-7883.

6 · Lost &amp;

Found

Lait: Anllq..,. H.nd Saw, Vk:ln·
tly,OI Bob McCormick Rood And
Rt. 588. LAying On Truck And

Foil OH. &amp;14-44&amp;-1865.

7

Yard Sale

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Big Yard S1l1, Sun. Uon, Tuet,
10:00 till 7. Clolhlo Ill olz... Z5
cent• uchJ. giUSW~rw, boob,
cur1alnt, 1.W. ahoM. eom•
amtll h.wnhure hem•, .. mp~:,
11114 Tompo noodo hood MOO.
Lole mile Item• an 3 Mile Crwtk
R&lt;lj Hondoroon.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick P•I'IOn Auction Comp~ny,
full time auctlonHr, complete
ouCIIon oorvlce. Llconood Ohio,
WOol Vlrglnll, 304·773-5785.

9 . Wanted to Buy

wJilled lo buy, Standing timber,

Bob WIUiamt 6 Son1 61~112-

5448.
WantH To Buy: Junk Autot,
Scrap Metal And Fr11 Removal
Fr&lt;&gt;m Wool VIrginia. 614-441·
0013.
Top PrieN Pold: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ring'!! SII¥W Colno,
Gold Colno. M.T.~. Coin Shop.
1!n s-ndA--.GolllpoUL

Employment Serv1ces
11 ·

Help Wanted

. n.100 CREDIT CARD!
Guar.nleed ume day 1pprovall

Aloo quollly lor NO dopool
V1~ and cuh ldvancaa. 1·
~-27f.IGOO Ext. 2524.
pao.OO/Doy Procooolng Phollf
Orden! PoOpla Coil You. No Ex·
1..00-255-.

=--..,

POiSIILY MAKE $400 WEEKLY
Slulllol Envolopoo AI Homo.
$1.00 SoH Addroutd SlomDOd
En..lot&gt;O No.to To: D&amp;A Sup~ila. P.O. Boz 1443, Fairborn,
OH4UZ4.
• EXTRA INCOME ''81" '
Exm 1200-1500 Wookly llolllng
HolidaY Tra~ Brochur• For
Moro .,lo,.,.tlon !lond A Ad·
drooood SlomDOd Envolopo To:
ATW Trovol, P.o. lox 430780,
Mllml, FL 33111. .

AOMISSIOHS COORDINATOR
Outatlndlng eo- Opportunity
Avallablt At PomtrQy Nursing

And AthabiMtetlon Clrur For

An mdMdUII To Coardlnatt Our
Admlulona And Direct Our

Communnr. Atlatlona Provram.
Thlo Pool! on Aloo Roqulru So-

cial Sll"flcH Documentation. It
You Art Looking Far A Pl.ct To

u.. Your CrNthtl Tlltntl And

Ma.rkellng Sklllt, Wt Ut)' Havt

ASpot For You In Our OrgahiZI·

tlon. UctnMd Social Workers

_,. · Entouroaod To Apply. To
Loorn lloro ~- Thlo OpportunHy Pltllt Forward Rnunw
lnclu~lng So lory HloiOI'f To:
BIIIBioo
Pomeroy Nurlong And Rohob.
Centlf
341751 Roolllprlngo Rood

• Wt

~·:te:: ~S::,.unhy

Employer.

Admlellone

Rtprt•ntathtt

tlndrd. Local COI5tp. S.nd
A - To P.O. loa "213, GoiUpolla, Ohio 45831.
App'astlonl May Onty Bt CJb.

tolnod From And Rolumod To
Your Lolli Ohio lurNu 01
Erroplol-• Sorvl&lt;oo OHI&lt;o.
CoriiDiolo .loll Doocrlpllono Aro
Avolfeltio For Rovlow AI Tho
OIU Offlco. DNclllno For ApIa Qclollor 31, tlllt.
lng_ lllocrlpllon lo 10 lotlowe: Port•TIN Cook, Hourly
roto ...10. ......,xlmololy 20
hOUfa por wMk. R-noll&gt;ll
far 1M
on&lt;l NIYing
ol rnMII to U. rNdtnll, Mult
-~~~ In till l!'oorvitlon ol
roohlonta -'tlnll In lito dining
room ontl t1to klfChllt. Alao a•
ollto In hollli!ll I doNy IC·
•""""'billy o1 lnwontorY. InvolcOa -od. roquiiii!Ono. dol~tc\:
_ . , Lm.
-·
u - lind mo~n~tnonol noodo.
Abllllr •• 1111 In tor - "
,_.::

r:-

,..,.,..ion

-

lind

IIIIIIIY '"

=:...~·lono:

=

oupoo;::::..,:
Hltil lchool
or ~lilnl ond of Okporlonce In lllllftu-lfoor1Nr¥iol.

I

AVON • All ara .., Call Marilyn
WNVtr 304-882·264~.

2946, 24 Hours.'

A Dolly Solory 01 $300 For

Buying Merchandise. Buyer
NNdti:l. No Experience Nee••·

~ary.

614-365-2082, E~ . 3883 .

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Pay,
Benefits,
Transportation,
407·292-47tl7,
EICt. 571. 81.m.·10p.m. Toll
Rolundod.
AVON I All Arooo I Shl~oy
Spooro, 304-675-1428.
Bt on TV many n11dad tor
commerclllt. Now hiring all
ag11. For casting Into cell 61S.
ng.7t 11 "'- T.Z37.
CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hiring MttYWomen. Up to $600
wHII.Iy. Trtntportatlon, !::loutIn;. CALL NOW 1-2116-73&amp;:!7000
Exl. 1617B5.
Drlvtl'l are · you paid 30e 1
mile? That It whet we pay. Uve
ktad and unload pay, travel expenN idvance. Late model tqulpment, nitty and service
ewardt, 115% palletlztdAloads,
Mtjor Mldlcal Insurance avail·
able. 401K pan with company
matching up to 2% ol pay Mutt
have 3 yure over tht road
vtrlfllblt nperltnct and 1 year
experience pulling Vln typt
tralle~W.Pitall call C&amp;N Evans
Trueklng Co., llayd Adklno, 304·
562·1065.
Earn Sl-18 an hour with Avon.
No door to door niiCIIUry. FrH
gift with olgn up. 814·192-7180
EARN M~EY Roodlng Bookll
$30,000/vr. Income Po1antlal.
• Dolallo. (1)805·1162·8000 Ext. Y·
181811.
Eooy Workl Excollonl Poyl Ao·
umble Product• AI Homt. Call
Totl Froo, 1-800-467-Ba&amp;a, Ell.
313.
Exp.rltnced Medical Rac:epo
tlonltt Nttded. Call 614·992·
EXCIIII...

18

Wanted to Do

111111 Flomlng 14x70, 3 bod·
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't room1, 2 b.ilhl, aU llec:trlc,
haul your logs to lht mill just cantral air, und1rptnnlng with
call304-675·1957.
blocks thai Ollot. $1~000. You
Movoi304-458-200g.
Interior and exterior painting, 10
years exparlanca, root painting, 1992 Kentuckian mobile home,
hand washing houats, tralltu, 14' wide, 3 bedroom, prlwata
windows. Odd jobs. Aaterancts. owned, never lived In, will l)ly
Fraa Estlmataa. 304-675-2708.
for moving up to 100 mllu,
L.PN wlll take Cll't ot tht elderly Sovo $4,00; $1~1900 304-372·
or sick In tkelr hamt 1:00-5.00 2388 oftor 5:00 PM.
!-days porwook. 614·8411·2181
New 1D92 14x'T2, 2 or 3 btd·
Miss Paula's Day Care Center. rooms modtlt Z full bathe,
Safl, attordabla, chlldcare. M-F ohlnglo roo!, VInyl oldlng , R2t
6 a.m · 5:30 p.m. Ag .. 2Yl-10. ceiling, 2x6 R20 walls, aet-up
Before, after tchool. Drop-Ins lncludod $17,11117.00. Cell 1-800welcome. 614-446-8224. New In· 7211-4045.
lant Toddler Care, 614·446-6227.
Nted your leaves raked, 304·
-7'73-5649.
Will Babysit 1 Baby In My Homa.
614-441-1408.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

Mercer

BoUom

Sub-division,
one acre lol1 1 Rt 2 lrontage,

INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
n~commende that you do bual·
nett )VIth people you know, and
NOT to ••nd money through tht
mall un111 you have ln~estfgated

the oftarlng

price reduced, cltr water, 304·

578-2336.

.

Rt.141, 8 Mll11 From Gallipolis, 2
L~ Cabin, 14 Acros, 7
Acres Bottom L.lnd, 7 Aerts
Wooded. 114!379-2561, Evenings
After &amp;p.m.,

Story

Local Vtncllng Routt. For Salt,

Cheap. HIOO-i55-Q354.
P1y Phone Route, Local Area,
AHordoblo. 1-800.274-lloaB
VENDING ROUTE : Got Rich
Quick? No Way! But We Have A
Good, Steady, Affcmtablt, Bual·
n111. Won't Last 1-800..284·
8363.

Real Eslate

Rentals
41

Houses lor Rent

1br, Furnllhtd House, 735 Rtar
Third Avtnue, Gallipolis. 814·

446-3870, 614-44&amp;-1340.

31

Homes for Sale

C.ml

==

19e8 Muoung

VJM

2 bedroom hou•, Hlnderton
WV, $225. mo. Reference and

.

APf!BVIOU$ W'E £
SIIIRUY ~I..'JN6! ;,.-"''I --,....+---&gt;-'

,, "

Rooms

,:t!f.)'f
Y'l""""

IN TI-lE SIXTH Cl-lAPTER OF
TI-lE SOOK OF AMOS IT SAYS
''WOE TO Tl-lOSE WHO LIE '
U00N BEDS OF IVORY ''

WOE TO Tl-lOSE WI-IO CAN'T
60 BACK TO SLEEP AFTER

50ME80D'r' WAKES T~EM UP

IT:

-

\

'

.

~~pone

aw:id¥~v
1D Aln nn Tift. K-1 Ccip Q

I~

LYGOR

'

..

1-r.-pr--1,r-1r-il !

~-.u.1~sP"TI_H. ,.ol_crl
~
~
.
..r

~.

at airpon

Overheard

..,,..

...

waning

terminal : "There are

old pilots
and bold pilots, but there are
r-0::--A~T::--C~I~D-•......,~ no ....... pilots."

I. I. I•

6 ' 17

[fhW..•~::::o.,Q

4~tr,2

1.

•

,.

e

Complere lhe chuckle quoted
by f.ll•ng in the miu~ng )VOrds

L......L-.L.-1-...L.._.._;.J yov develop from step No. 3 l:)elow

Stereo.j'l

!IAndyC:'"*
Q
1D Upetooe ·

ID Ntw ZO(I'O Q
8:35 (I) Andy Orlllllh
7:00 1J1t e iiJI WIIMI ~~ Forlilnl

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

'•·"

Quaker- Knock- Error - .Obtuse- OUR BANK
. "I remember when- I first went out on my own;
smiled my neighbor, 'that I was afraid I would bounce
a check. Now I worry what will bounce will be OUR

ID
I Drelm of •nnll
(I) ln1kll Edlllon C
ffi (!) MocNoii/Le-rrer
NowsHourC

BANK!"

Clle C.nciil c....,.

illl Current Affair C
«JJ 1D Sllr Trek: mt Next
Otntretlon C
t1211D Entertalitmon1 Tonight
Stereo.

NORTH

BRIDGE

a

.,03
t86 54
+AQJ 1043

Monoytlne

PHILLIP

aJI Tilt Wenona

/'f' JAYf Tl1f lf\11/fN'J"ION of THf
rt'fflt'fHI/'16 MAGHINf ,f/.tfVtl&gt;
FA{ZNI WO~(d/tf. fRoM
GfNPfNG O'V~fl -

Stereo,

MfAN, NO
MO~f tiA{'l.VffT
NfOON.f(
10 · 11

...

Slereo.

ID WOitd Sertoo Sp aclll (l)

a Cro11flre

7:35 CD lllnfonl &amp; Son
8:00 (lie iiJI Frolh P~nco of
Ill Air S!ereo. C
(!) MOVIE: Klnlia (R) (2:00)
(I) Great Exptelltiono
ffi (!) Childhood Stereo. Q
Cll• Mer:Grvor MacGyver
attempts to protect a Ha1ttan
college student from
extortion. Stereo. C
1111 Ole Evening"thede
Wood agrees to do a friend a
favor and it turns into a big
ordeal. Slereo.
illle MOVIE: Slilrky'o
Mechlnt (2:301
IIJ Murder, She Wrote Q
Q!l On SllaID NFL Mondlly Night
Match·Up

a PrtmeNowo

aJ1 Legond of Prlnce Vllllortl

8:05 (I) MOVIE: Llltly Sings the
Bl-(R) (2:45)
1:30 (lie iiJI BIOiaom Blossom
has a crush on a boy who
• WOI!Id
go out wi!h Six.
Stereo.
1111 01 Ma/or Dad Gunny
and the Major )Oin forces
against an ex~em~ eager
sergeant Stereo. '911
Ill On Stege
ID Schaap Talk
aJ1 Adve!!l!'rel of the Black
l"hllllon Gl
9:00 (lie i1J1 MOVIE: 'Donlello
Sllll'a PoiOmtno' NBC
Mondly Nlghlot tho Movloo
(2:00) Stereo. C
(I) ille ABCMonday Nigh!
Footblll Bengals at BillS (l/
Stereo. Q
(!) Amerlcon Experience

!her

MY NOM. e'AID 5\E OINT
WHAT5HE EVER.

l~INE

$AW IN MY DAD ...

\ZI

AND MY Dt&gt;.DeAIDWHAT

;Ji

Aea..IT Hl6 f74.1l·U:RS
I-I:JTEL. CHAIN ... .

01111 Muophy Brown The

FYI team has trouble whNe
searching tor an u2lf11ng
SIOfY. (R) Stereo

11J WWF Prime n
Wreldlng

a Naahvllle Now Stereo.
ID Surfing

From Hunttnglon
Beach , Celli. (T)
Larry King Livll
aJ1 Father Dowling Myaterlla
Sister Sieve helps a friend
who is charlj!d w1th murder.
(Ri Stereo. 1.,1
9:30 1111 I!J ID O.algnlng Womon
The staff of Sugarbakars
gets a bahlnd-!he-scenas
look at prison life . Stereo. Q
10:00(!) N1wa
ffi (!) C. Everett Koop, M.D.
Slereo. C

a

BARNEY
FINALLY II I GOT
ALL MY DIAPERS HUNG
OUT TO DRY!!

llLM05T

ALL II

+K 52

+7 6

. J

SOUTH

·

p

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

IK QI072

EAST
.KQ 7
.Q 75 4 2
t AJ 3

WEST

• J843

ALDER

Cll• Mam.d...With Children
illl Whtel of Fortune Q
IDeF811111yFoud

Q!l le I

you

•

7:05 (I) Too CIOH for Comtoll
7:30 (lie iiJI JCIOPIIrdrl Q
(!) f"o IIi Announced
(I) E-tnmtnt Tonighl

10 !1-91

• 10

0 MocOrverQ
ID SportoCertW

+A 9652
.AK986

The Nationals
in Las Vegas

t9

+ 98
Vulnerable Norlh·Soutn
Dealer North

By Phillip Alder

South

West

North

East
Pass

3+

.
Tne largesl Nortn Amencan bridge 3 •
Pass
3 NT
Pass
tournament ever was held in Las Ve· 4 •
Pass
Pass
Pass
gas from Jul y 21i to Augus t 4 The
North Amencan Summer Bndge
Opening lead • K
Charnptonsh&lt;ps. commonly known as
the Natwnals. had a lola I of 24.221ta· ' ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - '
bles. ech psmg the prevtous record by
3.146 AI the b1ggest smgle sesswn .
5.332 players were In ac tion
Then S&lt;mS&lt;m mtroduced h1s hearts
The 1n1 ttal event. the Life Mas ter whiCh Rodwell ·· preferred ."
''
Patrs. was won by Enc Rodwell ol
West wou ld nave done best to lead
West Lafayette. Indtana. and Doug · hts trump but he decided to play a ·
Stmson o( Columbus. Ohio They had a forcmg deiense . leadmg the kmg an~.
69 9 percent !mal sesston to leapfrog another dlarnond. Stmson rulled in :
mto hr~ t place
hand. fin essed dummy's club queen
ll1sn t of len you ca n make a game successfully. played a s pade to hts ace, .,
With only 19 htgh-card pomls. espe- rulfed a spade m the dummy, and
ctally wnen the trumps d1 v1de 5-l. bu t rulfed a diamond m hand. Another
S1mson m~~aged •t on today·s dea l
s pade ruff. the club ace and a club rufi.Rodwell s lhree-club pre-empt ts 1n m hand (II cou ldn"l help Easlto rull in ):
the modern style. prom 1smg some brought declarers tnck total to e1ght ·
length m the su1 t Stmson n;&lt;ght have Smce 1mson was stdl ctutchmg the A· ·
passed as South. but he dcc1ded lo lry K of hearls. he claimed hiS contract. '
to fmd a maJOr-suit Ill Ftrst he Thai was worth 31 out of 38 match·
showed hts spades. over wn1ch Rod· pomls.
. .•
weJJ rebid a SCffii -COnventJOnaf t hree
@ 1991 . NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A$$H • . ~
no-trump to md tcate no spade rtt

I

s

The World Almanac&lt;ll Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Country
bumpkin
5 Ferrel
11 Sentimental
12 Tropical fruit
13 Freshwater

tloh
14 Greasier
15 Wlnler pala·
ma Iabrie
17 Snakelike
fish
18 ..,.. Kong
19 San-, Puer·
to Rico
21 Scrap
24 Imitate
25 Armv vehicle
26 Divas
specially
27 Fond du -.
Wis.
28 Prayer
30 Oldn'texlst
33 Bernstein, lor
short
34 Hearty laugh

' -·~

An1wer 10 Prtvrou• Puule

35 Long heroic
poem
37 llother ol
IIIIa.
40 Spanish gold
41 Work Nke42 BIOISing
43 Mountains
(abbr.)
45 Optic
coverings
47 Reveel
SO Citizen 51 - Bacall
52 Facet
53 Overturns
54 - ot March

DOWN
1 Merc•lul
20fthee-

league
(abbr.)
6 Devoured

3 Delecli•e
Charlie4 Bluegrass
Stale (abbr.)
5 Basketball

7 Food lhe
kllty

8 Seafarers
9 Chemical
SUifll

illl IIJI•Northem E•pooure

Ed uses the help of a wise
lnd1an sp~rit to f1nd his
parents. (R) Siareo. Q
Qll otlahore Powtrboill
Reclng Frtim Now York (T)
World Newa
illl 700 Club With Pot
Aobortaon
10:30 illl• To Ill Announced
Crook and Chill
10:50 CD MOVIE: Mohoglny (PG)
. (2:1 5)
tt :OO(lle 1111 1!2111...1!)1 Newo
(!) Night Courl Gl

a

_51

'*'·

.

• •• J

s&amp;:9Q
!!IIMiiiiYihllel
A8c NIW8

G••

1

BOCBEL

8:30(lle 0 NBC Newo ~

,ooa

-~~··

&gt;•
,.

(JJ . . . .

Rooms for rent • week or month.
(I m1 b)' NU. tnc
Slartl~ 11 $120/mo. Galllo Hotol. ~...:::::::::::::=~=~=~======~ OK.
AUTOMOBILES.
CREDIT
88-81 Modoto.BAD
Guorontood
614-44 ·8580.
Approval, No Down Poyrnont. 1·
M;-•
800-233-8281, 24 Hra.
Slttplng rooms with cooking.
Also trailer tpaca. All hook-upe.
For Sate: 1D84 Forcl Tempo,
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·7'13· 54 Miscellaneous
Wrockod
lui
Roflolroblo.
5651, Mason wv.
Automatic, Run• GooCI, $450.
56 Pets for Sale
Merchandise
614-367·78111.
46- Space lor Rent
Roglolorod Roll Torrllir Pupploo
Country Mobile Home Park,
Mala And Ftmtlll, Ylccinlted
Routl 33, Norlh of Pomoroy.
And Wormed, $75 Each. 6143- 1951 Chevy pickup, excellent
Lals1 rentals, pant, sa111. Call Flrowood For Salt, 114-387-0117. 446·1354.
condition, :lQ4.675-6042.
et4-182·1171.
Flrowood For Solo: Mootly"Hord
Wood.
114-379-28711
57
197e Chmolol tlnglo Olio dump
Musical
Good hunting •nd camp tilts
truck, 10 tt bid, goOd cond, 304·
for rant. 0vlt' 100 acr11 to hun« For Bolt: I Chtllro Llko Now
Instruments
675-7566.
on In Mason County. Call any Ook Tobit, 304-1112~361.
'
tlmt, 304-576-2588.
1
Conn Trombona, ncalltnt con· 1978 Ford pick-up, 3!1, SUper·
Solo: 7 OUort P-ro Con· dillon, uklng $300 oo. Cell 304· Cob, oulo po, pb, topper, prlcod
Trailer lot $75. monlh, lull hook· For
1
nor,
2
Doztn
QUilt Jon And 1e
882·2921.
reduced, t900, 614-102·31121.
up, N01th At. 2, 304-875-7853.
Pint Jaro. ltl-441·1530.
Upright Baldwin plano, 304·842· 1983 Chevy 314 ton, V.a, 4·SP1
For Solo: Choot Stovo, 81&lt;11,
34,600 mllas, PS, PI,
Merchandise
Stands TabiH, COuch, Chalrl 1 ' 3271.
cond., now point, 12800 Inn.
And Etc. 614-446·7468.
614-1112-6756
.
58
Fruits &amp;
For Solo: Wolor Hootor And
191M1112 Ton Chovy Plck.Up, 305
Household
Vegatables
100,000 BTU, Llnnox Pulll FurAuto, Good Condhlon, $3,100.
naco, Coli Boloro llp.m. 114-24&amp;Goods
Fino Tumlj&gt;o, $8/Buohol, 15.00 • Coil After 5:30p.m. 814-446-2238.
6414.
Vou Pick. Al80, t&lt;ale And MUI·
1887 Ford Aongo'i 4 CY\ ••5
County Appllonco, Inc, Good
Electric coppwtont tll'd By The Bushel Or Trailer speed,
nc eond, t3,815. 304usad applllncet, T.V. 1111. Optn rttriarttor
and
.tova, Load. Charlu Mckean Ftrmt,
8 a.m to 6 p.m. Mon ...Set. 614· Frlglaa~rt dlshwtlhll', gold. Fol~ltld Conllnory Rood, Gal· 6'15-6930.
446·16118, 827 3rd. Avo. Gal· 304-675-23116.
llpolls, OH
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Qlonwood Goo Coole Stove, Uko
Farm Supplies
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Brand Now, Aoklng $150. 1141185 Ford Convorslon Van, 302
Washers, dryers, retrlgeralora, 245-6613.
IUto, ovardrlve, loaded, very
&amp;
Livestock
rang11. Skaggt Appllancu,
nice. $5000 or lracla Chevy on
Upptr River Rd. Ba1lda Stona Loa Splitter For Rent. Evans
crew cab dually. 614-1112w207Z
Molors, 614-446-8512.
Croot Moll!. Coli 614-44&amp;-7398.
1185 Jimmy, new tlrea, txctllent
Htw eoft lidl Wllubea king ll 61 Farm Equipment
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
condition. Must 1M eo IPComplate horne furniJhlnga. waterHd w/acC8UOrlu. 614· 1 Row COm Picker, 3 Point Din procloto,l1500. 614-1112·7803
Houro; Mon-511, 9·5. 814-446· 8112.Z:!ql
Seoopor Bucl&lt;ol. (14-379-2198.
118&amp; Chevy S-10, 4z4, Tahoa
0322, 3 mllto out Bulovlllo Rd.
Now
Wolghl
Bonch
Wllh
Ace••
Rims And 111'11, Automatic, V~.
FrH Delivery.
111!1
John
Dooro
Modo!
8,
Com~rill, $100; Aloo llotch Book
614-379-2820.
plotoly
RobulH,
Excollonl
Contll·
Colloctlon.l14-448-1785.
PICKENS FURNITURE
lion! &amp;ft. Blade Lots Spare Parte, 1186 Chevy Van, New Con~er·
Now/Uatd
Fumltu,., Somt Oakj Also
Houoohotd lurnlohlng. 112 mi. Old
::114-4;-;;;4:-;&amp;-;-235=8:::-.
Ki11_$8,000 Or Bool pffor.
Plnblll Machine. StriOUI Ina 3S MF T10ctor ==-:-c~---&lt;l.f&lt;'lon
Jerrlcho Rd. PL Pltattnt, WV,
With Dynobounco 614-441-v:&lt;04 Aftor 5p.m.
qul~n Only. 114~5&amp;-1 t55.
call304-675·1450.
Mo-. MF Bolor, 13,885;_ 30 .,.
M
le
otorcyc s
Atlt Or Mice? In Your HouH? FoiJIUIOn $1,1185; 3000 •oro ,..
RENT20WN
Buy ENFORCER, Klllo 1011 &amp; $3,HI. OWnor Will Flno)1Co. ll4· =:::-::~"':':":':':'::::--::::-:-:=
114-446-3158
11181 KowoukiiOOR Nlnlo, Twin
mlct In only 1 flldlng, 288-6522.
Vl'ra Furniture
Com, 16 Valvo, ~ 1400 111111,
QUARANTEEDI Avolllblo ol:
Solo &amp; Cho~, $11.10 Wuk; Baum True Value Sto~1 .11 Wut 350 Klllbroo Grovlly Btd, Uko NOT A SCRATC"I
now,$500. 304-1137-2018.
Recliner, $5.47 WHk, Swivel Main SlrHI, Cha81ar, utt
A REAL STREET BIKE!
Rockar, $3.13 WMk.Bunk ltd
13,750 Firm. 114-245-6188.
500
gat
Salar
milk
lank,
3
unit
Comploto $1.41 WHk, 4 Drowor Alii Or Mleo? h\ Your Houoo?
Cltoot, $3.21 Wool&lt;; POOler Bod- Buy ENFORCER, Klllo 10lo 6 plpo llno ourgo mllkor, 304·175- 75 Boats &amp; Motors
room SUHo, 7 pc:., $11.67 WHk, mice In only 1 . flldlng, 1856.
lncluda Blddlng.Country Pint GUARANTEED! .Avollablo ol: Jlm'a Form Equlpmont, SR. 35,
for Sale
Dlnollo With lonch &amp; 4 Chtllro, O'DoR Truo Volua Lumber, 134 Wool Golllpollo, 614-448·11777;
$10.116 WHk.OPEN: Mondoy East Main Strett, Pomtroy, OH
Widt llllctlc;m ntw &amp; uHd farm Baal And Wavarunnar Win·
Thru !loturdoy, ta.m. to lp.m.1
terizatlon Factorv Tr1lntd. 614-tractor~ &amp; lmpltments. Buy1
RATS
OR
MICE?
Sunday 12 Noon nu 5p.m. 4
Hll,
tradt,
1:00..5:00
w11kday1, 256-6160.
In
Yout
Houoo?
Buy
·EN
FOR·
MUn Oft Routt 7 On Aouta 141,
CER. Klllo Role And Mice In Sol till Noon.
In Clnlanary.
76 Auto Parts &amp;
Only 1 Foodlq. GUARANTEED!
Solid Ook Chino Coblnol, Wllh Avolloblo At: -Control Suiii'!Y, 17 63
Livestock
Accessories
Llghta, 1 Yoor Old, $800. Coil A~ Court Stroot;· Spring Volloy ::-:":---~--..,.....,..,..­
Hardware, 12t JacksOn Plkti 4 HorN GOOHntck Traflsr, 40 Porto cars, 78.e7 Modolo,
ltr 4p.m. 814-441-1411.
Odll Trut Valut LBR, Ylne tt,t95j 5 Vaar Old AOHA Mart, Ovar 200 Tran•, Motor Rear
SWAIN
Stroot At Third Avon111, Gil· $1,250; 2 Yoor Old, AOHA llaro, Endo. Too Mony Parto To Llotl
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12 llpollo, Ohio. '
$1,500. 1.14·286-6522.
, Bulldlna And Lot For Ront. 114Olivo Sl, Golllpollo. Now l Uood
441-3111.1.
.
'
fumHurt, hetttrl, WISitm A Aecondltlonod woohoro &amp; 5 Hototlln Hollori 4 To 6
drytre, Nch $100 and up. We Monlho Pro'gno,., Prieo: $650 Sioux Valve Grinder, Se1t Grind·
Work booto. 614-441-3158.
torvlce oil mlkN. Tho Wtohor &amp; Pi-114-388-1114t.
.
lng Sot, Guido Equlpmonl . lt4VI'RA FURNITURE
Dryor Shoppo. IM-446-ZM4.
88 Goou Nock troller, AOHA In· 44~·2306.
114-44&amp;-3158
LIVING ROOM,: Solo &amp; Choir, Soko Rille 3008 flOO; Goou conthHI Fund s.yr OICI Ulldlng,
Campers&amp;
$1111 . 00~
Rocllnor, $148.00; Docoyo, 4·215 75 15 Tim, 150; olortod on pol-' borrolo. 114- 79
Swlvol HDCkar, $1D.OO: CoffN &amp; White Toll Bow, f30. 114-44&amp;- 112·2552
Motor Homes
'
End Toblot, $18.00 Sot.DININQ 8111.
Cuolorn Ll-ock Hauling. Con
ROOM : Ttblt With 4 Padclld
19e5 20ft, Toyoto A.U., 5!.500;
Chairs, $149.00; Countrv Pint SoctloNI Couch, GE Woohor Haul To Hlll8boro SaiH Or Lo- Good CandhiOn, 58,000 111ies,
DlntUe With Banch And 3 Whllo; G£ Rofq01o101, All Now cally. Chuck Wlllllma Trlplo Now Mlchllntl TirOl. 114-441Cholrok 12811.00; Molchlng 2 Porto, Con So Soon AI 1075 CrH1t Trudllng. ,14-24&amp;-IIOttl.
202t .
Door Itch $348· Or $5111.00 Stoto ROUII 14\ 1114-441-o433.
G-biPtdlgrood
N-.
Buck,
Sol; Dok Toblo, 42xl2 Wllh I SIGNS;
horl. Good Polo!
Portable
Ughtod flO
Bow
BacK
Chairs, wnott~N (now)
Serv1ces
,.'
1$2.118. Froo AiMj Up. llotrnl Olivo Rood, 114·
Sf29.oo.BEDROOM; Poolor Bod· dollvery.
PIIIOIIIc
lottero 14160
room Sullo (5 pc.), $348.00\ 4
Drawer Chell, $44.95; Bunk box. 1~~3453.An,U...
Spoclll Coli Soltf 81
Home
ltd, $2211; Compltlo Full lion Surpl• A""' Comoulllugo Athono Llvoootock Saito. !loturSot $105.00 Sol; 7 pc. Codoo Original clothing, amen acces.. doy OCiobor 26, At 1:00 P.ll.
Improvements
Bidroom Sullo, $8911.00.0PEN; oorioo, loolhor US Combat t.lvntock Aceoptod Stortlng At
Mondav Thru Saturday, b.m. to llocto. Sam Somlrvlllo'a Son· 4 P.ll. Evory Friday. Soturdoyo
BASEMENT
&amp;p.m.. Sundoy 12 Noon Till dyvlllo, WV booldo Poot bHico, Solo At 1:00 P.M. Hauling Avol~
WATEIII'ROOFINQ
5p.m., 4 Mll11 Off Route 7 On At. 21 N. Fri, Sot, Sun, .-.-&amp;:DO obit. 114-6116-3531, 0. (14-6i2· Unconclltlonal llteUme guarana
Roulo 141 In Contonory.
Pll (ollondod ho&amp;n during 2322.
lao. l.ocol rlforoncoo lurilloltod.
hurtling ooooon~ 304-:z73.188S.
Froo oootlmotN. Co" C&lt;&gt;lloct 1·
Wntlnghoust
Fur·
nanct/Eitclrlc AC, $800 080, WATER WELLS DRILLED: Foot, -:-:64=:-:::H:::a::'y::-&amp;=G::-ra-:l::n:--:= 114-237-o411, cloy ot night.
Rov- Booomont Wolorproohuler, aid NEC computar, belt Prompt Sorvlco, Wlftr Guoron• Alloiii/Gfooo ~olio 121. Frot llng.
olllr. 614·1182-51178
tHd. l14-881-7311.
St0111P- wfth payiMnt, Morgan
Cornplolollobllo Homo Sot.Upo,
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Form, At. 38. 304-1137·20te.
52 Sporting Goods
Rtpalrti Comrnerlcel, AaaldanBon Allloon, 1210 Socond
1111
lmprovorMnto. Including:
Cros1 Bow, P.S. E. Foxtlt'12, i.r. Avonuo, Golllpotlt, Ohio, 114•
Transportalion
~umbl~, Ettctrk.al. Insurance
rows Oulvtr Cau, 1200; CGm· 445-4331.
Ciolmo ACcoplod. 114-256-1111.
pound Bow, 8tn P11rson Ar·
rowo Qulvor Elc. $50; i'rucl&lt; 55
Curtll Home Improvements:
Building
Tool Box, Bohlnd Cab, $6D. 114·
Y111o Exporltnco On Oldor &amp;
71 Autos lor Sale
Supplies
446-3040.
:::-::--:-::~------1 No- Homoo. Room Addltlont,
1m Ford Mustang run1 very Foundation Work. Roofing
Block, brick, IIWif' IMpel, win. good, no Nit, nHdt somt Khchen1 Ancl Baths. Frat e.!
53
Antiques
-:----::--:-:...,.---,,-.,.,-- dowt, lintels, etc. Ciauclt Win· work, 3SI.Cievtllnd, 4o8Al, 4o tlmatal Rtftrencn, No Job To
Buy or 1011. Alverlno Anllquoo, loro, Rio Orondo, OH Coil e14· BLT main, PS, PI, AC, CC, Bl; Or Smoltl &amp;14-441-GZZS.
$1000 080. 814·1112-8756
1124 E. Main Str111, Pomeroy. 245-!121.
JET
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. 10 6:00 Octobar I Spoclola two cor 1875 Chryalor Now Yorkor, $325 Aorollon llotoro,
ropolrod. Now
p.m./ Sunday 1:00 to 6:00 p.m. garagoo
24x24aH3IItii.OO, 614-367·7:146.
l ro-bulff mot,.. In otock RON
614-11112·2526.
24x27all-$41118.00,27x3ZxtEVANS, JACKSON, Oli. \-aD0•
$4148.00, Procltlon Pool Froma 1m Dodae Diplomat 318, Auto, S37·WI.
2
Door,
Good
Condition!
Cell
Bulldoro, 114-tl2·354t.
Miscellaneous
114-446-071t.
Ron'o TV Borvlca, opocloll~ng
'
Merchandise
In lonhh oloo -lng moot
56 Pets for Sale
1m Chryaler Cardoba, 360 ang, othar
brlndL MouN Cllllt, also
t91M1 Ford EXP PS, PB, Air,
114-112·2155 304-675-6855.
oomo oppllonco ropolro. WV
G_,
Inti
SUpply
33,000 Mllet, Excellent Condl· !morning. All bioodo, o(ylto.
304-671~3911 Ohio fM-446-2454.
tlon. New Tirtt. $3,300. 814·38$- larno Pol Food Doollr. Juilt 1810 Dodgo Diplomat All Powor,
Good Shapa, 11,000. 814-256- Sopli&lt; Tonk Pumping SIIOLGolllo
8135.
Wobll. Col 114-446.0231, 1-IQO. 1487.
Co. RON EVANS ENTEAPHISES
3,200 gal ttalnl111 IIIII Wlltr 352.0231.
Jockoon, OH 1-800-637-111121. '
or mlli tank, goad concl, 304. AKC Bnglt pupo, 304-6tH5117. 18!1 Plymouth Champ, Good
Condition! $500 Firm. 114-446- Dovlo
175-7566.
Sow·Voo
SOMto
7317.
G~q CNI- Rd. Parte, aup!
350 Cummine ott frtme cam, AKC roglollfod Pomoronlon
oloo Lhooo Apoo, . - ond 1U3 Culllts Supreme, loaded, plloo, pickup, and doHvory. 614~.ooo mllaa an tht malor, 237
iood cond.,IZ500. lt4-N5-41111 ue-o214
Mack Motor, 35,000 on major, 44 wormed, 304-47S.2113. . .
Bockwtn r.ar endt, rubber AKC rog. loxor puppiN, 1
1983 Z·21, V-8, BuiH Up, Will build patio c;ov.,., dacks,
block tuspentlon, new b;k,~td month old, 4-tn~lw 1.flrnllt, Automat!';,_ Wllh M~llhlfttr, sc:rHntd roomt, put up vinyl
raar end, rHr buiH, 15
114-1112-3782 .. 1182-6764
Loaded wnh Evory Oiltlon, T· siding or trailer eklrtlng. 614·
overdrive tranemlulon with
Topo,
Now Corvette Whho Polnl, 241-6117.
dMp rlductlon ctll Don Ao11 ARHA R'lllltorod Boag!l'o, 1- Corvono Rollin, Spoclll Edl·
114-843-5340 after 6 OOpm lor mos. old, )Uit llalttd, tel e1. lion, Gror lntorior, 17,500 lnvn- 82
Plumbing &amp;
114-1112·2041
more Information.
ted IETIER THAN NEWI $2,000
Healing
50 Yoor Old "Homo Comlorl Drl~wynd canory Porolon, In Motor Alono, 16)95, 814·2455588.
Slo,_
and
Hlrnollyan
klltono.
Rongo"' Cooko With Goo On Ono
Carttr's Plumbing
Sldo (Four Jumoro And OYon) 114 4413e44oftor 7 p.m.
Fourth end Plno
1184 300 ZX Dataun, low mllea.
Cooko Wllh Cool Or Wood On Floh Tank, 2413 ,l_.koon Alvo. eou 614-8112-61100 "' 182-&amp;lln
GolllpoUo, Ohio
01hor Side (3 Bumoro) Eacollont Point "Pitollnl, 304-67S-ZOt3, '""5:00pm.
114-446-3888
Condltlonll14-388-fl24.
full llna Tropical lllh1 blrdo, 1884
Codllloc
Floolwood
65,000 STU Fuol OIIStovo, Nice •man onlrnollontlouppiiiO.
Br&lt;&gt;ughom $3,500, Nogolloblo, 84
Electrical &amp;
Cablnat S200i ProfutiDnll For oolt or trodo, Aoglotorod 114-4ill-8707.
Bruoh Cutt;~ f200 (Uood 4 Slblrtan .· Huoky
Refrigeration
pupo, 1984 c.tlbr1ty, 4dr AT AC, PS,
Houro)l14-2 5 13.
molollomo II I t4-IIIZ-6073
PB, E11ro Cloonll2,eoo. Coli AI· Rllldtntial or commercl1l
Appro1
400 Ft. Of 3 Inch Oak 11
wiring, ntw urvlce ar repalrt.
Ia• lrlm,
Stndtd N1turally S1
ale AI ngntall. -··
,..,...unt1, 304- lor Sp.m. 514~4&amp;-1244.
Malter UcenHd 1ltctrlclan.
Por Ft.I14-44&amp;-2!1S.
::773-58711:7:-""--::--:-::-::~-:---: 188S Monto Corio, Hope, Ridenour
Eltetrlcal 304-875·
loodod
w(ovorythlng,
4.3
motor,
Pot BollY Pill ond
1711.
Big Dokotl Form Homo, luln· Mlnllluro
fuol
lnjoclld,
f2500.
114-liZ·
plglolo. lloko groof Chrlolrnoo
On Your Lot a 8edroam1, 3
IIIlo ond 11collonl potol $150. 3601
Bolho, 131,881 And Up. 114-811- 114-14W453
85 General Hauling
.
7311.
11181 Rtnlult Alliance, runs
Wlltlomo Hauling. .Coal, wood
good,l14-11112-1004
Poodlel toys. and t11 CUpl, 1110
Cool, Homo Dollvory. Minimum mlntture
ond gra.nl. VoucltOfo ICCOplod.
Schnlu11r1
san
•
Of 4 112 Ton, $58 Per Ton, 114· poppor, Champion Qrond Slro, 1987 Autll 40009, now bottory, 114-112·7010
354-3336.
alart•, lan~lan, $4,500. Brian
AKC, CooiYIIIt 114-617-3404.
304-6711-1121 oftorl:oo.
B7 Upholstery
Complete compu1er lytltm, A,?~~ertd Dalmatlona tor Ale.
1167 Chivy Novo: hl,h mlloogo, :::Mo:::w:::roy=•,-=:u::-phol~ot.;......_;:-:.-,_..,.,vlo,..·
304-67&amp;-11115.
1
1751.
noodo ropolr. Good rontporta· 1 ~
--..
Concroto a piootlc uptlc tanlto, ~::...::.:..:.:.._-:-:c-:-~
tlon
$1 .100. For mort lnfor~ ng tu oountr 1r1a 21 1ttll'l. Tht
RoglotOfod lomolo Groot Dono
Ron Evano Entorpriuo Joel&lt;· puppy; vacclnotod &amp; wormod. mollon Co 1I 114-44&amp;·2342, Aok bit! In lumllft Upi!Oiolorlng.
oon, OH 1-800-537-IIW. '
lor Pout.
$110. IM-441-1354.
1:W7$.4154 lor ~" -·- ---'-

uo

•

8:05(1) lleverty H. . .o

nmty, $6,895, 614-t46-1027.

111110 Sllvor Ford Ta"':s

011111 TV Lr&amp;q Inc Ft Worth TX

lorloro of rho
four teromblacl wordo below 10 form four tlmplo -d1

w

LX. Loodod, •,

6,700 mi1H1 SISOO. 114-

•

MON.. OCT. 21

•.

·ORoorrongo

e:OO (2)•
Clle 1111 a e
ONowo
(!) VIdeo Power
,ffi ~One T•llvl~
Slereo.

sze,ooo Mlloo. i!11ondod War·

Furnished

Television
Viewing
!VENINO

a.,..,.,

ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII dopoolt. 304-675-7618.
Rtducld To Sell: 2 Story 3br
Comer lal. In Chtshlra, Ohio. 2 bedroom houn, Ia~ ytrd,
6800.
Excelltnl Condition. Flananclng nice neighborhood, l04-67So
6213.
Flnta Hair &amp; Tanning, Athans, Available. 904-932~959, 904lo looking lor o quoiiHod l ••· 832-7e70, etl-367·0648.
3br Hot.~lt 3 Mllll From Town,
thualattlc ttvuet, to work In our 2-Story hous• In Rutland, 1· $375/mo. Pluo Dopoolt. e14-44&amp;f11t paced welk-In ulon. We of· bdrm ' upstairs apt. 3-bec:lroom 036S.
ltr top hour PlY plus commls- upstal,., dawn1tal,. li~lng rm, Nice Fumlsl1ed 1 Bedroom
alan, paid ~•cation l advance 2·bedroom 1 bathroom, dlnlng Ho~sa, &amp;14·441·1758.
tducttlon haalth llllurance II rm, kltchan, utility nn, asking
eval.. bla call Lynn Olltr 814· 125,000, &amp;14-742·2656
Staking Rnpon•lblt Peopla To
582·9707.
Rent Nlct 2br, Untumlshtd
3 Bedroom HoUia, 116 Kinton HouM On Chatham A~tnua ,
HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED: Drlvo, Golllpollo. Living Room, Atfarenca A Muat. $300/mo.
·oaurantlld $170 W•k Plus Dining Room, Kltchan, Bath, Pluo
Utlllllot And t Month
llorol Paid Vocotlons. 614-44&amp;- Control Alrl: Vinyl Siding, Cll· Dopoolt.
814-44&amp;-25t5.
7267.
ptttcl. 2 ar Gara~. Within
=-'-:-:HI:::G::-H-::-EA-::-R::N:::I:-:NG::S:-.- - 1Walking Dlotanco 01 Tho Pool, 42 ~ilblle Homes
Port Time Or Full Tlmo. u .s. Golf Cooroo And Clinic. Gal·
Govtrnmenl. OWn Hra. Proce... llpolll City School District. 614·
lor Rent
lng FHA Mortgogo Rotundo. No 245·!152.
Exp. t-601·388-1242. EXT. . F· 3 bedrooms, oplll-lovol, 2 112 12160 Mobllt Hom•, lac1ltd 3
From Gonlpoll1. 2br, 1
zt46, Toll Refund.
bath1, tamlly room with wet bar, MIIH
Bath, Water paid, '235Jmo, $235
HOTEL
2.4 acrtll... Grunbrltr Ett1t11, Dopoolt. 114-44&amp;-1055, 614-44&amp;Houllklll)ll'l,
Maintenance 304-615-3a-~6 thtr 5 pm.
2082.
Front Dnlt, Cooks
To
3br, LR , Dl n1ng Room, Equ 1p~ 14x70 all electric on private lol.
.~. Htlptrs
~.
·
$12 Hour P.rm F I. "" 11 1-vYV" Kitchen, Bath, Garagt, CA, 11
f25D.DO plut ulllllloo. HUD Ap551·1'731.
HMI, Low $20'1. 114-)92-6364
proved. 304-675-4088.
HOTEL,
HoullkHpert, 4 bedrooms, 2112 bathe, home 3 2 bedroom mobllt home, Sand
Maintenance,
Front Desk, yre olcl, alec heat pumpbmaster
Cookl, Htlptrt, to $12hr perm. tultl with whlrpool, ulll In Hill Rood, 304-675-3834.
F-T coli 1-i00-551·1731
dlahwilhtr, microwave. Vinyl 2br Mobllt Home, RtftrtllCII
KUWAIT, SAUOI 1'/0RKERS oldlng, wotor &amp; coblo, 1 ocro lol And Dopooll Roqulrod. No Poto.
NEEDED.
In suDalvltlon, Rt. 2 South, 614-446-4819.
$35.00 l Up Por Hou/ T11 Frn $71,900. 304-578-2602.
Mobil• homa for rant, Uppar Rt
lolh Sklllod I UnokiUod For
lnlo. Coil 615-771-6505 Ext. K· 6 room 1·112 both, oiOI'f l hall. 7, 814-446-0508 or 446-11321.
Kitchen, DR, LR, 2 BR
6118.
I ·
downttolro, 1 llrgo BA, 112 bolh 44
Apartment
MOOELS
upstair~. 24124 gt.rtgl. 614-448lor Rent
7878.
CATALOG
All agn Including children over
the age ol one tor catalog typa Corner Lot, IS rooms tnd bath, 2·BR In Mlddloport. No pelt.
assJgnmenta. lnttrvltwlng soon I $24,000. 311 Henderson SlrHI, Pay own utilities, .$200 per mo.
In your araa. For appointment Htnderwon. WV. 114-441-7523 or Dtpotlt!Rtftrancll raqulrtd.
614·8112·2311 doyo.
cell CASTING (412) 571·2004, 304-67&amp;-1488.
Monday through Frldoy, 8 om to GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1 2br
Fwnlthtd,
$230/mu.
6 pm.
IU Ropolr). Dotliiquont Til RoloroncH, Socu~ty Dopoolt 01
•·
N
A Property. AtpotHnlont. Your 1200. 458 ~ond Avenue. 614·
No EXpilr ..
net
tctJUry.
Atta {1) 805-962-8000. Ext GH· 441·2236, 614-44e·258t.
Dolly Solory 01 $300 For Buying 10181 l'or Cu~ront Ropo Lltt.
Morchondlto. 614·3115-2082, Exf.
2br, Refrigerator And Stove
:::
3B-:-3o::3·==-:-:=---....,.-· l Homtlhat was damaged bv lire, Fumloh"'!, Aloo Wiler And
Trooh •umlohod, Corpotod
TV REPAIR, full-time, np. only, 314 tcre, cltW water, Zld
Throughoull 6t4-446-3840.
IUO por HR. H.E.C. 381 W. 11!!: Aoh ton..JI!.:.,OC!O 304-87
Moln, Pomoroy. Apply In poroon. 3" 8 "' 304···-~-.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
HOUSE FOR FREEII Muot move BUDGET PRIC£8 AT JACKSON
Wonted : Fun-nmo "' port-time oil
lot In Mldclloport. Fill · In ESTATES, 531 Jockton Plkt
AN to work four (4) ttn hour
days per wtek, evtnlng shift battmtnt, tNd and llraw. Must lrom $192/mo. Walk 1o tilop l
(2:00 PM • 12:00 llld) to work tlgn contract! 2·BR, Large LR, movloo. Colll14-446-2568. EOH .
wllh roroltltntl In IC~ llclllty. DR, Bath, hat new rooland gut- lrooklldo Aportmonto, 1 Btd·.
Sll1ry commeneul'lltt with ex· ter, new copper and PVC plumb- room,
Slova
Rtfrlgarator,
ptrlanct. Ext•ntlve bantfll Ing, nted some work. You pay Wllhtr, Oryar
Hook·Up, 614·
package. Cont1c1 Opal Gru11er, for lhl moving! Only urlout 446-6627.
calltl'll Call 614·8112·2071 ahtr
AN, D.O N., Lakin Hoopltol, 304- 7:00pm
1
1711-3230 ut. 35. Monday·
CINn 2 bedroom ground tloor
Friday, 8.00AM to 4:00PM.
HouH tor aalt by owner, e 1pt, raftrance, dtpoelt, no pelt,
bath, halt basement, 304-675-6162 oftor 8:00PM.
Wonlod: Load Gultoriol For room1,
localad Jtrrya Run Ad, Applt
Country And Rock Bond. Coil Grove, 304·571·2167.
EHicloncl Apartment, Fur·
114-388-1443.
nlthod, II Utllltln Paid. Rio
Wanlld: Part-Timt Bartend1r, Multi Unit Rtntal, 1 Ytar Old. Orondo, Ohio. 614-388-11845.
FOf Local Privato Club. Eaeo~ Vinyl Siding, Low Molnlenaneo,
lont Working Condlllon. F~dor,o Coni~ l.Ocotod, $51,900. 614· For rant· New 1 bdrm ept, fum
or unfurn, In Mlddlepon, 6*
And SoiiU~oy Nlahll On r.· l46-8 ·
1102-6225 Of 1182-5304.
RIPIY At· CL.A Ot4Lclo Ollllpolt Nttd tomeona to tear down
. Dally Tribune, 121 Third Avenue, hou11 for m"trltlt. 614-992· Fumlahad 3 Rooms 1: Bath,
Clton, No Polo, Roloronco l
· :G:;IIil:::'po::::::ll•::.;•OH::.;.;4::;!1131:.;;;._ _ _ 3438
Dopoolt Roqulroa. 114-14&amp;-1518.
1S;:m::-;2;-;-B;;R:-;:-hou
Situation
=u=w::/6:-m-o_r_•-o-r
12
lest terti, $25,000 cash. 614· Furnllhld lpirtmtnt, 4 room• &amp;
bath, no!'tl. Stc. dip. I ref.
Want,cl
112·2453
114 Ull 0444.
Unique 4·BR houn on 1D-acr11,
Bradbury Rotd, extra building, Nlcoly Furnlohtd Aportmonl,
127,500. 114-812·2841 or 216· 1br, nut to Ubrary, paridng 1
central hill, air, rellf'lnce ,...
381-23118 ~
qulrod. l14-441.0331.
Sornono to llvo In for tholr Vory nlco 3·BR Rench, brick
board. 11,000 ITU oil htlttr tor front, cerport, 112 baaement, oak Furnlohod opt. All utiiMito pold.
~ali choop. 114-4o41-3411.
hordwood lloora, lf1D ocroo, !1- 1 BA, uptta1ra, 2nd Ava. Goocl
mllrom Holzll Hoopltol, SR 160, cond. 114-446-11523.
14
BusinesS
ooklng 136,500, 114-1112·27:18.
Fumlehed EHk:lency, $111/mo.
Pold, Shiro Both 107
Trlllnlng
Wo,. to buy 4 bodroom homo ·Uti!Mito
Golllpollo ·ochool dlllrlcl. Qc. !locond Avo, Golllpotlo, ~~
Rolroln
-IISOUthololorn ~upo8 ncy bPty ouPmmltoRr otl '12. Box 4411 After 7p.m.
luolnooo Colltgo, Br&gt;rlng Volley ~1 • "
· · og olor, 200 Fumlshad Sacand Apartment,
Ploa. Coli Todliy, 11+441-436711 Moln Sl, Pl. Pll., WV 25550.
2br, a41 Second Avenue, Gal·
Roglot-lon fi0.05-12liiB .
llpollt, $2501mo. UUUIIu Paid,
32 Mobile Home!l
614-446-4411 Aftor 7p.m.
Oroclouo living. 1 ond 2 bod·
for Sale
room apartmtn~ aj VIllage
l • A TREE IEAVICI. Tortolng,
and
Rlvtrllc1t
Trlnn!ng, TrH llomo¥ol, HOtigo 1970 Skyllno 12110, 2 bodroom M1nor
Trlmmlni. Froo Eatlmot11l 114- moblr. home. Good condition, Aportmonto In Mlddloport. From
1104-6754471.
' f1M. Coli &amp;14•11112·7787. EOH.
317-'1111."

::-18-:-::-::w::a::nt-::Bd=t::o::Do~
,

~Y~H, 6JT I HM6" iH~ f'W.ING-or----.,
"!WIT I~

In Mlddlopolt, Ohio. 1 Inti 2
bedroom fumlthtd apt, tome

.The Dall senilnei-P

•

BORN LOSER

AulOI for Sill

11188 Bonnovlllt PoAIIac, V.e,
Automatic, All Power, 15,500;
1988 Buick Bommorool LlmRod,
V-&amp;tAulomollc, $3,000. For Soli
Or rodo. e14-256.1270.
1968 Clmoro AS, 311,000 Mlloo,
Black, Grwy Interior, Munl POI1
Fuollnloclod, V-6, Lol~!t lVith
All Power, Options, lroc wnNII. 1
New Tlrll, 'xct1111nt Condttlonl
$5,550.114-446.0361 Anytlmo.
1988 Corslcl, new tlr~1 brake1, ·
63,000 miiH, $4 4ov. 111116 ·
Sptctrum, 46,000 mh11, $2,1150.
Both good cond, 304-812-3117.
1989 Chovy Comoro, AS, V.e,
Rid, Auti!J Air, Crulu, Tilt, PW,
PDL. T-1opo, Roor Dol-,
A:MIFM Calllttt, Power Hatch
Rolotoo, Sharp! $8,1100; 1118g
Chevoy Btlretta, 4 Cylinder, 5IIHI,
Rtd, Loadoll, Low lllln, Sell
For Pay Ol!t 18.50\'i. 1!181 Oldo
Delta 88, Nelda work, $800,
Flrm. l1oHo6-8112.

Announcements

pad

21, 1991

1991

a

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

«)

'.

· Oct. 22, 11111
You may enter 1nto an Important partnership for a n explicit purpose in the
year ahead .- The alliance will have Its
llmllatlons, bul lhe results should be
mulually beneficial.
•
LIBIIA (Sept. 23·0cl. 231 1rs possible
your mate's conclusions mlghl be more
valid !han your own today. Let your
partner have, at least, a fmal word In
crlllcal matters. MajOr changes are
ahead lor Libra in the coming year.
Send lor Libra's Astro-Graph predlc·

ffiNtWIWitch

lions today Mall$ 1 25 plus a long, selfaddressed, stamped envelope to AstraGraph, c/o lh1s newspaper. P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland . OH 44101 -3428 Be
sure to state your zodiac s1gn
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24·Nov. 221 The zeal
you express in performing your assignments today will Inspire olhers lo follow
your ambitious example If you want 10
aurae! assistance. lnlllale lhe action.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec:. 211 You
mlghl fmd yourself In a position today
where yotJwill ell her have lo choose between personally managrng a mauer or
delegating lllo another.ll m1g~t be wise
to lake care of II yourself.
CAPRICORN (Ole. 22..... n. 19) Family
interesl8 should be your area ol primary
concern Ieday. Other demands might
pull you in diHerenl directions bul, remember, blood lslhlcker Ihan water
AOUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftb. 18) II'S besl
not to volunteer unsolicited advice today, even II you feel you have something
lo say thai could be helpful. Your comments are apt lo be Interpreted as
interference.
PIS~ES (Fob. 20-Morch 201 Innately,
you re an unselllsh lnqlvklual who looks
oullor olhers as well as yourself. There
may be something Ia share today, and
you'll know how to divvy II up fairly.

ARIES (March 21 · Aprll 19) Try to de·
vote as much ttme and attention today
to endeavors. that can advance your
own self-In terests. This Is a time wh en
you should look oul for No 1. because
olhers m1ghl nol
TAURUS (April 20-Mor 20111 you g1ve
lrlends a chance today, lhey will !reat
you as considerately as you would treat
them. Try not to negatively prs1udge
anyone

GEMII!I (Mar 21-Juno 201 The biggest
en!oY!IIenl you'll gel today •s lrom doing
things you like wtth people you ltke II
you're dellberalely reclusive, th•s!ls apt
to be another humdrum day.
CANCER (June 21-Julp 221 Something
you'll be Involved In could get a lnfle
compelltive today. It this occurs, don "l
duck developments; face up 10
challenges. · ,
LEO (oluty 23-Aug. 221 Consider slluations you're presently Involved In nol
merely In the context ot the lmmedlale.
but for lhelr future effects as well . Be
prepared, and lOOk a lillie ahead
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221 Joint ventures look like your best avenues for
gain today. If you have any arrange·
menta of this nature, make them your
priorlly pro/acts.

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Page-10-The Dally Sentl"'el

~

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'

'·

'

~nday, October21, 1991 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Readers agree,' disagree with A_nn

-

at a funky SoHo a~t gallery in lower Manhattan
in .July, and it's still drawing admiring crowds.
(AP)

KITCHEN ART- Marlou Freeman holds one
of her 2,3000 fridge magnets in her Laurel, Md.,
home. Her collection of ma~nets went off display

Freshmen often long to be back home
HARTFORD, Conn . (AP) Homesick ness is not uncommon
among college freshmen, but it
usuall y subsides within several
months, a professor says.
Feelings of loneliness, com pounded by a notion that everyone
else is making friends except you.
is a rea l and painful condition
man y new ·students face, says
David Winer, dean of students and
associate professor of psychology
at Trinity College.
Starting college is an important
and symbolic point in the transition
from child to adult, he says. However. students often become intimidated when faced with new freedoms and responsibilities.
"You want to go back to the
place where you felt comfortable
and, surprisingly, pan of the comfort mar have come from the control others had over you. It's hard
to make decisions on your own.' '
New students must also adjust to
an abrupt change in slatus. They go
from the top of the heap as high

school seniors to the bottom of the You can hope ·your son or daughter
pile as college freshmen.
will want to fill you in on what he
"This comes as a sfi ck, n
or she is doing."
matter how well you have prepared · · If homesickness persists, stuyourself for the new role of being
ents should consider talking to the
low man on the totem pole," he dean of students, dorm advisor,
says.
housing director or chaplain.
Nearly all new students experi"A student who feels alone has
ence homesickness at some time in this feeling fostered by what he or
the first few weeks, but most adapt she sees in their friends. She thinks
by the epd of the first semester. everyone else is perfect: they have
no worries, !hey have good rcla·
Until that happens, Winer says,
tionships. She has the feeling that
"it's usually best for the parent not
to run to the college or give the stu- she's not only different but that.
everyone else is trying to be beller
dent a ticket home. "
He says parents should resist the than she is," Winer says.
"I try to convince homesick stuurge to call frequently to "c heck
up ." "This is really a time to cut dents that they are not the only
the tics and let the student make his ones feeling this way. There is
own decisions, even regardi'ng how nothing unusual about iL"
often to get in touch with you," he
says.
" If you both agree, your child
might be expected to call home on
a weekly basis for three or four
weeks, but I' m more in favor of let·
tin~ that happen spontaneously.

'

e~plaincd.

Noted for her wort on the stage
in Russia, Efrcmova was a member
of the St. Petersburg touring unit
which traveled through the U.S.
and visited Rio Grande with selections of Russian theatre and music

in September 1990. She has been
working wiih theatre instruction at
Muskingum College since the summer and is spending the fall at Rio
Grande.
In addition to directing
"Pushkin's Fairytales," Efremova
is playing one of the leading female
roles in the upcoming Rio Grande
production of "Babes in Toyland"
and will be working on another
children's show, an adaptation of
"The Three Lillie Pigs," prior to
her return to Muskingum in Jan·
uary.
She has been assisted in the production by an actress friend. Olga
Tchainikova, who painted the
scenery to capture the Russian navor of the lale. Tchainikova is also
a member of the St. Petersburg
company. Music by Prokofiev will
add to the atmosphere, she said.
Efrcmova satd she's found the
experience of working with a cast
of Rio Grande students enjoyable
and looks forward to doing it again.
"I like how the students have
understood the Russian style," she
said. "They tell me it's very close
to commcdia del arte - everything
is so broad, so extreme, audiences
should enjoy it."
For more information, ~o ntact
the Fine and Performing Arts Center at 245-5353, extension 364. The
toll-free number in Ohio is I-800282· 7201.

Hours for the turkey talk-line
By The Associated Press
The Buuerball .Turkey Talk·
Line is a toll· free hot line available
10 callers nationwide who have
questions about cooking their
Thanksgiving and Christmas
turkeys.
.
Fort~·four trat~ed . home
economtsts and nutrtltontsls are
available with answers to any

turkey preparation question, from
how much to buy to properly sloeing leftovers.
The number to call: 1-800-3234848.
Dates and Hours:
Oct. 28 through Nov. 27, Mon- ·
day through Friday, 8 a.m. to 8
p.m. Central Standard Time.

,,

'k":::ll

"1991, Lot ,\"OJelel

Syndical,."

K-D,4-S
Low tonight in mid
50s. Wednesday, partly
cloudy. High in mid-70s.

Page4

..

man's body
anywhere." Although some religious
fanatics and health care.poople miglu
see it differently, in my book, that
doctor is a saint.
Within six days Dad went into a
coma and died peacefully. At his
bedside, I repeated those famous
words of Dr. Martin l:!ulher King,
"Free at last. Thank GOd ho is free
at last." -- BEEN THERE IN
BIRMINGHAM
Gem of the Day (Credit Michael
Landon): Someone should tell us
right at the start that we are all dying.
Then we would be more inclined to
live life to the limit every minute of
everyday.
·Drugs are everywhere. They're

en
Vol. 42, No. 119

35MM, 200 SPEED
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Where does she practice?
"The freeway is t6e best to
scream," Lander said. "The traffic
jams on the 91 Freeway in Orange
County give me a good reason to
belt out a few screams."

\

19,9

CLOROX
BLEACH

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The Southern Local School District will receive $60,400 from the
Urban Rural Model Schools Grant
of $250,000 which has been awarded to Meigs County Schools, it was
reported at Monday night's meet·
ing of the Southern Local Board of
Education .
The board voted to enter into a
contract with Rio Grande College
to assist with the planning and ·
implementation for expenditure of
the money.
The pr.ogram is geared to
improving teaching technique s

SMOOTH 'N
CRISPY
CREATURES

119

79c

DUM·DUM POPS .

NESTLE CRUNCH
FUN SIZE BARS

229
12~

COLUMBUS', Ohio (AP) Wildlife enforcement officers have
been given guidelines on the
enforceme,11t of a new Ohio law
prohibiting interference with hunt·

ADULT COSTUME
ACCESSORIES
CAT, DEVIL
CAVEMAN249
AND ·
OTHERS

••

.,

• ••

through graduate school training
grants and in-school workshops for
staff members. Each school will
receive $5,000 from the Urban
Rural Model Schools Grant to
spend on a planning project.
Employed at the meeting were
Jennifer L. Couch as girls junior
high basketball coach, Betty
Hutchinson, Bonnie Kibble, David
Kaufman, Sue Grace and-Richard
Coleman as substitute teachers, and
Judith Flowers as a sub~iitute cook. ·
The resignation of Karla Brown
from the substiwte teachers list was

ing, fishing or trapping.
The law takes effect Wednesday.
Jim Johnson, the division of
wildlife's assistant enforcement

,...--Local briefs--Two S.R.124 accidents probed

7 OZ. BAG

89¢

COKE

Two aecidents were probed recently by the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol. Both accidents occurred Monday afternoon on S:R. 124.
No injuries were reponed but two citations were given.
The ftiSl accident occurred at 3:25 p.m. near the intersection of
S.R. 124 and C.R. 35 (Portland Road).
According to a patrol .report, Michael P. So~merville, 47, ?f
Worthington was westbound and lost control of h1s ptckup truck m
a sharp curve - the same curve a car carrying four teens wrecked
Sarurday morning. Sommerville's 1991 Chevrolet S-10 then struck
a guardrail and a traffic sign off the right side of the roadway, causing moderate
disabling damage.
.
Sommerville wa5 cited by the panol for failure to control. The
patrol cited unsafe speed As the cause of the accident.
·
The second accident occurred at 5~ 10 p.m. in Olive Township.
The patrol report stated a car driven by Tammy R. Bibbee, 19, of ·
Long Bottom :was westbound and another car, driven by Tammy L.
Congo, 29, of Belpre pulled from a private drive into the path of ber
car causing a collision.
.
Damage to Bibbee's 1984 Mercury Tj&gt;~ was listed as light as
was damage to Congo's I981 Chevrolelltitation.
Congo was cited by the patrol for failure to yield from a private
drive.

a.o

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•

accepted. It was decided that all
students on Salser Road will be
assigned to the Syracuse Elemen ·
tary School.
The board approved· the EMIS
information budgeI for $4,000, and
a cafeteria insurance program for
employees presented by Herman
Lynch.
,.Present were Denny Evans,
president, Scott Wolfe, vice presi·
dent, Sue Grueser, Gary Willford,
Joseph Thoren, board members ,
and Supt. Bob Ord, and Dennie
HiD, treasurer .

·state to protect hunters, but
new law may face challenge

HOCKEY MASK
GlOW-INTHE- DARK

games. After that the Mauston wUi be open for
tours every night tbrough Halloween beginning
at 7:30 p.m. This living monster in a casket is
just one or numerous scary scenes crear for
the haunted mausion.

Southern. will receive $60,400 from
Urban Rural Model Schools Grant

•

SUGAR BABIES

CHEESE
CURLS

IBOZ.

THE LOCO HAUNTED MANSION· A sixroom haunted mausion created in the old Elber·
feld warehotise on Mechanic Street in Pomeroy,
site of The Locomotion youth center, will have a
preview at 10 p.m. Friday ·followin~ the rootbaU

OR REESE'S PEANUT
BUTTERCUP
MINIATURES
1
90Z.
4

~~gz

Pomeroy • 300 E. Main St., Ph: 992-2586

•

•

the merchants pay for the lease,
and Wehrung seconded. Council
unanimously approved the agreement
Susan Clark, who serves as
president of the Pomeroy Merchants Association, thanked council for working with the association
to keep the park open, siating that
"it's wonderful that we can all
work together."
The Clarks also thanked· council, on behalf of the downtown
merchants, for approying free parking for the Christmas sbopping season.
Other business ·
Wehrung stated tl)at he felt the
village should be playing an active
role in the funding of the Blue
Streak Cab Company.
The company is currently funded jointly by the Village of MiddlcContinued on page 3

Turner, family to meet in Germany

HERSHEY'S
MINIATURES

70Z.

According to Mr. Clark, the
merchants are willing to assume
liability in order to keep the park
open, and would ensure mainte•nance of the park as well.
"It's the only village park in the
downtown area that we can use,"
Clark said of the park last night. He
cited the "/MY activities held in the
park throughout the year, such as
the herb festival held earlier this
month during the Big Bend Stern·
wheelers Festival.
Council President Larry
Wehrung stated that he was
opposed to the village leasing
property from an individual, but
that he would be in favor of the villagc assuming liability for the
parks if the merchants paid for the
lease.
Councilman Bruce Reed moved
that the village assume the liability
for the park on the condition that
'

\,1

90Z

.

' By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
The larger Cpurt Street minipark will remain open after all. following an agreement approved
between Pomeroy Village Council
and the Pomeroy Merchants Association at the council's regular
meeting on Monday night.
AI their last meeting, council
voted not to renew the leases on the
two parks due to increasing maintenance problems. The larger park is
owned by Pomeroy Attorney J.B.
O'Brien, and the smaller by Multimedia, Inc./Ohio Valley Publishing
Company.
•
1oe Clark and Susan Clark, representing 'the merchants, presented
council with a r,roposal in which
the viHage wou d renew the lease
on the larger park using a cash
donation received by the merchants
for that purpose.

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Larger Court Street
mini-park to stay open
-

75 screams that became stock for
horror mms.
Years later, she started a
screaming telegram service.
Dressed as the Grim Reaper, she
would screech for $75 a shoL
Her screaming gal good word.of
mouth, leading to offscreeo parts in

JUNIORS
t20Z.

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cents
AMultimedia l.nc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 22, 1991 .

Copyrighted 1991

easy to get, easy to use and even
easier to get hooked on ..If you have
questions about drugs , you nud Ann
Landers' booklet, 'The Lcwdown on
Dop~." Send a self-addressed, long.
business-size envelope and a check
or money or4er for $3.65 (this
includes postage and handling) to:
Lawdown. c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box II 562, Chicago, Ill. 606110562. (In Canada, send $4.45.)

vocal cords.
Lander said she was a born
screamer.
"It was-the way I released energy when I got excited," she said.
"When I was happy, I screamed.
When someone scared me, I ,
screamed."
"In the car, when she saw cows
- she loved cows - she would
scream bloody murder," said her
mother, Bonai Sanders.
In 1970, as a college theater
major, Lander answered a casting
call for screamers. She got $50 for

KODAK GOLD
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Cards: A·H, 8-C,

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HAND,.BAG
TRASH BAGS

CANDIDATE FOR
.MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD
Pftl ftt 6y C 61art, It, 1, lox 4, lutltllld,

TEMECULA, California (AP)
- Cheryl Lander's lungs are her
living.
Lander, 40, is a professional
screamer whose work has been
heard in dozens of productions,
from Halloween charities to radio
and TV shows.
"It just does things for your
body that nothing else can," said
Lander, who recently recruited her
14-year-old daughter into the business. "A good scream is a fullbo&lt;;ly experience.''
But there also is the danger of
pulling muscles and damaging

TRIAMINIC

Time For AChange Is Howl

IVA SISSION

!. ·

Pick 3: 560
Pick 4: 1048

Mother-daughter team makes screaming a profession

DM. EXPECTORANT
OR SYRUP

C"'"

•

.

Ben gals
•
rematn
winless

••••

Your
After
Rebate

ELECT THREE
NEW BOHD MEMBERS

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
nmeos,,.._
....
CreMtrl

With Rite Aid Halloween Savings

RG children's show to tell
tale spun by Russian author
RIO GRANDE - A children's
story with a unique cultural slant
will be presented to area audiences
in the Christensen Theatre of the
University of Rio Grande's Fine
and Performing Arts Center when
"Pushkin's Fairytales" is presented,
free of charge, on Friday, Oct. 25
and Saturday, Oct. 26 at 8 p.m.
The show will present '.'The
Pope and Balda," one of the many
stories spun by Pushkin, the noted
Russian poet and playwright of the
early 19th century. It will be direct·
e(l .l:ly Svetlana Efremova, visiting
theltre artist from the St. Petersow·g Theatre Gompany.
The story, raken from Pushkin' s
original script, centers on Balda, a
Russian folk hero capable of amazing feats. Employed by a priest here called a "pope" - Balda's
abilities impress h1s boss so much
that he challenges Balda to spirit
away the fortune of a family of sea
. devils.
Tt.ret of the play's eight charac·
ters serve as narrators to the action
and respond to the play's events,
which are don e in the fantastic
style of a fairy tale, Efrcmova

DEAR READERS: Remember ing the bottom of the barrel. Some
that Je~r about the three sister.! who of the grandkids won't be able 10 go
were in sharp disagreemein a,s to IQ cellege and 1 may lose my home,
· what should be done about their 91· but ·the Lord giveth and the Lord
· year-old father? The man was senile raketh away and he will rake Mama
and had not recogriized anyone in a when he wants her. Until then it
Y1181'. Healsohadbeenrefusingfood is up to us to keep her ·alive.••
for several months.
OREGON
·
The docltlr wanted to insert a
Dear Ann Landers: 1 owe it to
· feeding tube, saying "Papa" would my fathe(s memory. io respond to
die if he didn't get some protein the le~r about the old man whose
soon. Two of the sisters insisted that daughters were arguing about his
lube feeding was, indeed, a life being kept alive by tube feeding.
support, and that their father would
My dad passed 3way recently
not want it. I suggested that perhaps after five months in a nursing home.
their father's refusal tO eat may have His hands had to be tied to the bed
been his way of expressing the wish beCause he insisted on pulling the
to die. Then the roof fell in.
feeding tube out. They kept puUing
That leuer .and my comments it back in even though this 97-yearbrought forth an unprecedented old man told them repeatedly that
deluge of highly charged responses. he wanted til die and begged them
·Obviously a tremendous number of to "stop doing all these tenible things
readers are passionate about the to me."
sut&gt;ject and with good reason. Here
His throat was so badly scarred
are two examples of what my week by the tube that he' could,no longer
has been like:
swallow. Surgery was perforined and
Dear Ann Landers: I strongly a stomach-feeding tube was inserted.
disagree with your advice regarding
We pleadetl with the doctor and
the 91-year-old man whose the hospilal authorities to remove the
daughters were fighting about stomach tube, but they said once it
whether he should be kept alive by has been put in it cannot be taken
tube feeding.
out because it is a life suppon and
My mother is 97 and hasn't known removing it is against the law.
any of us for three years. Sixteen
After 12 trips to the hospital and
months ago we instructed the two surgeries to put the stomach
doctorto put in a feedi~g l~be when feeder in, the surgeon said, "He
he told us she would dte wtthoutJL · cannot stand any more operations
It ts cosung. us a lot of money to and is begging me to let him die. I
keep Marna ahve. We are all scrap- will not allow anyone to force

Ohio Lottery

j'

administrator, says he doesn't
expect any problems ; but the
stawte is different from others that
come under the division's jurisdic·
lion.
It requires prQOf of intenL
"It requires ds to be more care,
ful, and spend a little more time
watching the offender - to
observe and document," he said
Monday.
·
The law makes it a crime to pre·
vent or try to prevent others from
hunting, fishing or trapping.
Actions specifically banned mclude
scaring wildlife away and damaging or removing traps.
Violators could be fined $250
and jailed for 30 days under the
measure, which rakes effect in the
midst of the fall hunting season.
,The pheasant and rabbit ~f\S
begin Nov. I. The bow season on
deer opened earlier this month. The
five=day gun season on deer begins
Dec. 2.
Meanwhile, Sen. Eric Fingerhut,
D-Cieveland, wbo fought the law'~
enactment, on Monday repeated
claims by animal-rights groups and
others that it restricts the right of
protest and should be declared
unconstitutional.
Fingerhut called the statute
unneeded.

BOISE, Idaho (AP) - Jesse
Turner's last day as a hostage was
an agonizing one for his wife and
mother, who went from joy to
despair - and back to joy - amid
conflicting reports of his freedom.
"Today is as if four years to
me," his wife, Badr Turner, said
Monday. "We have been dashed
m11J!y times. But today was from
the lowest to the hig~esL"
__
She was to tty 10 Germany
today with her daughter and in·
laws to greet Turner, a 44-year-old
professor at Beirut University Col·
lege who has been he~ by Shiite
Mu slims in Lebanon for 4 1/2
years. He arrived in Syria early
today.
•
"I will look at him only," Mrs.
Turner said. "I won 't be able to
talk .... I will be seeing how he
looks at his daughter for the first

freed by the Islamic Jihad for the
Liberation of Palestine. But Syrian
officials cast doubt on that report,
and the White House said it had no
evidet~CC of a hoslage release.
Mrs. Turner received a call from
the State Department at about 2
p.m. confirming her husband was
free. 1hen news reports cast doubt
on that.
At 4:30 p.m., a State Department official101d Mrs. Turner her
husband Turner was apparently in
the custody of the Syrians.

Then, about five hours later, the
definitive call came.
Turner and a fellow American
professor, Alann Steen, were
abducted on Jan. 24, 1987. Two
other people kidnapped at the same
time have been released. Three
other Americans, including Steen,
and four o.ther Westerners remain
missing.
''I want all the families of the
olher-hos~ges to feel the same way
I'm feeling now," Mrs. Turner
said.

Judge sets hearing Tuesday
on steelworkers petition

WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) -An
The financial records in the
Ohio County judge scheduled a Boyle divorce case allegedly
hearing Tuesday on a motion by involvetaterial related to Boyle's
time.~'
Their daughter, Joanne, 4, was the United Steelworkers that she hand! in of another strike in 1986.
born five months after Turner was dissolve an injunction ·issued for
Tbe tcelworkcrs contend Boyle
the financial records of worked out a secret financial
abducted.
Mrs. Turner spoke by telephone Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. 's arrangement with an Ohio aluMonday night with a State Depart· chairman.
minum plant while the union struck
The union has been attacking R. the plant in 1986.
ment offi~ial who told her Turner
was on his way to Syria with a Emmell Boyle for his finances and
The union said Boyle publicly
his handling of a current labor dis· announced he was raking a wage
U.N. envoy.
·
·
' 'Now I'm convinced," Mrs. pute,
cut to win concessions from the
Wheeling attorney Pat Cassidy workers. But he actually arranged a
Turner said after she got off the
phone. "I feel he is in safe hands said the union wants Judge Callie $500.000 payment to himself from
now, and I hope to see him in a few Tsapis to void her August order the plant, the union said.
that Boyle's records be kept in conhours."
.
Boyle said the union is using the
Turner's mother, Estelle Ron - fidence.
financial information obtained
The state Supreme Court earlier from his divorce proceedings to
neburg, 70, said the day's emotion·
this
month rejected the union's smear him.
al roller coaster was "tearing me
1
request
to override Tsapis' order.
up inside."
About I , 700 union workers
The
Supreme
Court said the union have" been off the job at
" When it happens like this, it
takes the thrill out of it. We've should first petition Tsapis if it Ravenswood since the union's conwanted the injunction voided.
waited so long," she said.
tract expires Nov. I, 1990. The
Cassidy said·Tuesday's meeting union has said they were locked
Earlier Monday, an editor at the
geirul bureau· of Iran's Islamic before Tsapis is over the union' s ouL The company has said they are
Republic News Agency said the request that the injunction be void· on strike.
. agency reported Turner had been ed.

.•

•
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•:

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F·~·~·:,.

POSTER PROMOTION WINNERS - More
than SO posters to promote the Loco Haunted
Mansion were created by Meigs County six
graders. The posters were judged Monday
evening and the winninR entries selected. Taking

\

.
nrst was Kelll Bailey, ·Sec:oad, April Foreman,
. andthlrd, Valerie Karr, all sixth graders at tile
Cbester Elementary School. Judges dlsplaylq
tile wlnnina natrles are rrom the ldl, P. J. Hll'·
ris, Janet Bolin, and Bob Hoeflich.

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