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                  <text>Page-D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W .Va.

Warmth, not sunlight,
ripens picked tomatoes
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUP i i - A
common sight these days on
windowsills across the country is
unripened tomatoes, but a veget able specialist says they might as
well be in the attic.
Robert Precheur says that ,
contrary to popular belief, sunlight has nothing to do with
ripening tomatoes.
"Who knows wbere the tradl
lion started," Precheur says
"But most Americans habitually
put their tomatoes on a sunny
windowsill to ripen I've even
seen people turn thOS&lt;' tomatoes
dally to be sure all si des are
exposed to the sun."
The misconception about sunlight and tomalo ripening proba
bly comes from people observing
that the fruit ripens best In the
garden when It's sunny . And
while the observation Is correct.
Precheur says It's the hea t of
those sunny days, not the light.
that ripens the tomato
That's why the windowsill
works well for ripening picked
tomatoes . But any warm spot
will work .
Knowing tempera ture's effect
on the ripening process ca n let
gardeners enjoy fresh tomatoe s
long past_ the !all's first frost
Just before the fall freeze .
mature green tomatoes should be
picked and put In a dry plac e
You can tell the green tomato Is
mature It tl has a whlllsh co lor
Instead or the rich green color of
the Immature fruit.
A malure green tomato will
also have seeds that are too hard
to cut with a knife. You can cu t
open one tomato, check its seeds
and then use its color to pick out
other mature green fruit
By controlling temperature.

you ran keep thl' tomatoes green

II malure tomato will stay green

tomato patch this summer
Prr•cheur says ra pid changes
in soil moisture this summer
havl' caused tomatoes to crack,
letting bacteria enter the cracks
and cause soft rot . Moisture
problems also made tomatoes
vulnerable to blossom end rota problem that ca uses the li ssue
at lhe bottom or the fruit to
collapse and turn black or brown.
He says not to try to ripen
green tomatoes with these problems Indoors brcause thPy won't
keep.
Srveral ot hei rlisPasf's wrrt•
also plentiful th is summer and
w11l cause tomatoes tu spoil
indoors Rut If a mature grern
tomato looks gaud. it sho uld last

Leafltopper pays ~dew'
for -car, protection
WOOSTER, Ohio I UP! ) - A
Central American lea fhopper
trades honeydew with ants for
care and protection . Understand Ing the unusual relationship
could help scientists prevent
related leafhoppers from costing
corn growers billions or dollars
worldwide .
''What we are doing Is compar Ing pest and non-pest leafhopper s
and studying the evolution or
these leafhoppers and their host
plants," says L.R. "S kip" Nau lt,
an Ohio State University enlomologist. "This process provides
us with a unique understanding
of how Insects become pests."
Nault and colleagues first
observed the non-pest leafhopper
Dalbulus qulnquenotatus. also
called the live-spotted gama
grass leafhopper, Interacting
with ants In Jallsco, Mexico. 1n

1983.
Last March , Ohio Sial&lt;' rl'search associate K irk La rse n
surveyed 195 gama gras s plants
tn that region to learn more about
the behavior The lea fhopper
prefers setting up housekeep ing
on gama grass, a fora ge grass
that's closely related to corn .
Larsen found 121 of the plants
colonized by the five spot ted
gama grass leafhopper There
was Interaction between ants and
the leafhoppers on all or them.
'"!'his Is significant. because
even though ant attendance Is
fairly common among treehoppers and aphids, It Is rarely

•
Ohw

see n

m leaf hopper spec ies,··
Larsen says. ThiS Is the firs!
detailed study Into th e relationship between an t s and
leaf hoppers
The ants are attracted by lhl'
high suga r co ntent of honeydew
that the l ea~hopper excretes In
return, thr ants protect the
five -spot ted gama grass lea!hoppPt ft orn predators suc h as
sp!drrs, Larsen says
Larsen notes th at when tended
by an anr. the f1ve spotled gama
grass lea fhopJX'r excretes a
droplPI of honPydew upward and
holds it for severa l seconds to let
thP ant n•rnow• it When· una! ·
tended, the leafhopper quickly
fl ips away the honeydew It
exlTetes

Larsen also VIdeotaped the
ant -leafhopper relationship In
the laboratory His tests sought
to determine Interaction diller
ences bC'twren five spotted ga ma
grass leafhopper and a closely
related species. fl maidis. also
railed lhr corn leafhopper
The corn leafhopper is proba hly I he most Important pest of
corn in Latin America and Is also
a major pest in the sou thern and
southwestern United States.
Larsen says. It carries disease
t ha1 often kills yo ung corn pta nt s
Unlike I he f1ve spot ted gama
grass lea fhopper, the co rn lea fhopper Is attacked by ants In his
next f'XPf'rlment , Larse n will try
to attract ants by r eleasing lh~
five -spotted gama gras s lea f
hnpper Dn VDung corn plants

Darm ····- Cn nt1nued from D 1
J'l
-----

day lows below 50 degrees Fat 50
degrees f and day highs over 8()
degrees Fat 86 degrees F . Even
though warm days and nights
enhance crop maturity, 86 dejp'eeS F for the day high Is
enough. We really didn't need
those 90 plus degree afternoons.
The corn supply In Southern Ohio
available for livestock producer s
ts currently low but the feeling of
people I talked to In Central Ohio
ts that the new crop harvest Is
only about three weeks away.
The Ohio Farm Science Re
view is Just a little over a week
away. I am sure the "Review"
crew ts concerned about crop
maturity tor harvest during the
event which runs Tuesday , September 18 lhrough Thursday,
September 20. We still have a few
hundred advance tickets ($2.00)
available at the County Extension Office. Since they are
advance tickets, at half the gate
price, the ones we don't sell must
be returned when the ortlce
closes on September 17.
The mUltary crisis in the
Middle East and thl' Clean Air
BU! currentlY working It's way
through Congress have caused a
renewed Interest In ethanol production from corn. Ethanol program cost estimates vary widely
depending on whether
farmers, ethanol producer' IP
petroleum and automobile lndllt•
tries are performing th~
calculations.
An estimated five million
ethanol engines art currently

cqrn

Research shows ridge tillage works

or ripen them as red as If they
wPrr o n the vine, Precheur says.
at :;:; to 60 degrees
Be low 50 degrees the tomato
will chill and will not ripen later.
Turn the heat to the 65- to
70-degree ra nge, and the ripening proc·ess starts. It doesn 't
matter If the tomato Is on the
windowsill or wrapped In newspaper In the attic.
"You ca n ripen tomatoes as
red as If lhey were on the vine so
long as the fruit doesn't get
chilled . bruised or have cuts
where fungus can start grow ·
lng," Precheur says. "And It's
temperature, not sunlight. that
makes things happen ."
Ripening tomatoes Indoors lh1s
fall m ight sound simple, but
Precheur warns that al l kinds of
things could go wrong Any
disease or damagP that the fruit
ha s su ffered outside will get
worsf' Indoors And th ere have
been plenty of problem s in the

ru nning on Brazilian highway s.
Estimated Ethanol production
cos ts usi ng S2 50 per bushel corn
Is $1 30 per gallon The whole
price policy starts getting very
co mpli ca ted when variables
such as "subsidy payment s, tax
exempllons. and Import duty
factors get thrown Into the

formula . Dr

Norman

Rash.

O.S.U. Professor, ha s written a
tour page report that atlempts to
summar\zp the current understanding or the potential role of
ethanol as a fuel. We do have
some options Dr Rask says that
Brazilian ethanol ca n be delivered to US gasoline refineries
for about $1 10 per gallon, but the
$.6(] Import duty brings the total
above the present price.
Tentative date for the annual
meeting of the Gallla County
Pride In Tobacco Association has
been set for October 11. Details
should be out following this
weeks board meeting.

auctioneer
makl'1! top I0
Area

PT. PLEASANT - Only lour
points separated the top 10
auctioneers at the Ohio State
Aucuo,er contest, as Poor
Boy'$ Tires of Pl. Pleasant
owner, Lon Neal m~ge It into the
top 10 auetloneers, 1ft (:Ompeted
against several Olllttr partie!
pants from all around the state of
Oh lo. A live action was held with
proceeds benefiting Jerry Lewis
Klds for MDA.

September 9, 1990

TIMOTHY K. BURTON

Burton promoted
GALLIPOLIS - Timothy K .
Burton has been promoled to
Department Head, Technical
Compu ling Services, by Martin
Marietta Energy Systems. He
reports to Gerald A Komlos,
Department Superlndentent,
Computer Systems and
Procedures.
Martin Marietta Energy Systems, Inc .. manages the Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion Plant
under contract to the U.S. Department of Energy. The ura nium enrichment plant Is located
In Pike County.
Burton came to work at t he
Portsmouth plant In November
1972 as a Programmer He
became Programmer, Stat!, In
.June 1976, and Programmer, Sr . .
In March 1978
He was promoted to Section
Head, Systems and Program ming, In October 1980.
Burton was graduated from
Rio Grande College In 1971 with a
bachelor of science degree In
mathematics .
Burton Is a U.S. Army veteran
He has one son and lives In
Portsmouth.

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPli Fewer that 2 percent of Ohio
farmers use ridge tillage methodson their land. but those who
do say the method pays off.
Ridge till farmers and researchers will speak at a Farm
Science Review. program Wednesday, Sept 19, at II a.m.
The program will cover some
of the same topics as National
Ridge Tillage Field Day, which
was held Aug. 29, says Randall
Reeder, Ohio State agricultural
engineer and coordinator of the
events. The field day. also held at
the Molly Caren Agricultural
Center near London, attracted
170 people from Oh to and
Indiana.
Ridge tillage differs from
conventional and other low 1111
methods In thai a crop of corn or
soybeans Is planted on top of
ridges formed in the field ,
Reeder says
The ridges are created during
cultivation or after harvest. and
they remain In place year after
year. About an Inch of soli Is
removed from the top of the ridge
when the next crop Is planted to
leave a smooth seedbed. Eq ul pment tires travel In lhe valleys
between the ridges .
There are some handicaps with
ridge tillage.
Wheels of all vehicles must fit
between the row s. On steep
slopes, ridge tillage Isn't as good
as no-til l methods . Forages such
as alfalfa can't be harvested on
ridges, eliminating a possible
crop rotation . And few farmers
have plan led wheat on ridges, so
farmers who use wheat In their
r otations hesitate to start using
ridge tillage
But Ernie Behn, an Iowa
ridge-till farmer who spoke at the
field day, says most farmer s
don't try ridge tillage because
they don't want 10 change their
standard practices.

This year's
rain could
hurt next
year's crop
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPli- A
wet July hurt Ohio wheat harv ests and an agronomist at Ohio
State University says It will cut
next year's crop If growers aren't
careful
A week or cool. wet weather
starting July 9 caused unharv ested wheat to sprout In the tleld,
cu tUng yields and destroying
expected pro!lts. James Beuerleln says. And profits will be cut
again next year II the grain Is
used for seed this fall
"Wheat that sprouts In the
head before harvest will germinat e as little as 30 percent II
seeded in October," Beuerleln
says. "Any grain !hat was
harves ted after July 1:i shouldn 't
be kept lor seed because of that
ri sk Sell that grain and go out
and buy some certified seed."
The actu,il germination per centage at planting depends on
how far the sprouting had gone
before harvest.

Stock market ...
Co ntinued from D 1
where bad news Is most likely to
come from these&gt; days
the
Mideast
"That's sti ll keeping most
mvPslors at bay." he said "No
une 'Wants to assume new posl ·
lions or buy stocks when that
cloud hangs over the market. It 's
very hard to Imagine how we ca n
put together anything sustaina ble till Its resolved.
"T here are moments of hope like when 1U .N
Secretary Genera!Ja&lt;lerl PerezdeCuel!ar
goes to the Mideast and nego
tiates , and now everyone's lookIng al the Helsinki summit this
weekend !between Presldenl
Bush and Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev) But with every day
the c hance of a face-saving
settlement looks dimmer, and
this Is weighing on the market,"
Johnson concluded.
Alfred Goldman, market
strategist at A.G Edwards &amp;
Sons Inc. In St. Louis, agreed that
the markel remains hostage lo
the actions of Iraqi Presldenl
Saddam Hussein.
"We're trapped by Saddam
Hussein," he said.
Goldman also acknowledged
that Wall Street Is worried about
the outlook for corporate earnIngs, which he said Is
deteriorating.
Expecting both hl!\her interest
rates and higher Inflation, Gold·
man said: "When you surround
Ibis with the serious unknowa bles created by the Mideast,
people step back from the
market . And the trend is down."
On the trading tloor this week,
General Electric was the most
active issue, down 1:U, to 60% .
AT&amp;T followed, otllY. to 31\ir .
Toys "R" Us was third, otf2Y. to
23\ir as analysts were said to cut
earnings estimates tor the
company.

'1'hey 'II say, 'II works for you,
but it would never work for mP, ·
he says. "But they ca n never tel l
me why It won'l work for them"
Farmers on a panel during the
program were believers AccordIng to them, ridge tilling·
-Reduces erosion
-Helps drainage, which allows earlier plantmg in wet
springs .
-Reduces the number of times
farmers must work the field,
which cuts labor and machinery
costs and decreases st ress .
-Reduces the need for agricul tural chemicals com pared with
no-till.
Ken Magdyc h, a farmer from
Trumbull County who was on the
panel. told the audienc e he
couldn't farm all of his 700 acres
using conventional methods
"But the biggest advantage," he
said, "Is net profit There's a lot
less herbicid e and machinery
costs using ndge 1111 ·
John Clravf'J , f arm manager
of the Western Branch of the
university' s Ohio Agricultural
Resea rch and Development Cen·
ler, was also on the panel

"I v.ouldn't go back to conven
Ilona! till if you paid me," he
said "With rldg e- 1111 . I only have
to make five 1nps across the
field, on avera ge "
Cleaver uses ndge till on 270
acres He also farm s a 30-acrr
demonstratlion plot that com pares ridge tilla ge with three
other tillage systems In three
years, there' s been no significant
difference In yield s on that plot.
Also during the pro~ram, an
Ohio Stat e agr icultural economist told the audience that ridge
tillage makes econom ic sense.
Allan Lines compared the
economics of four tillage systems
in a study with Reeder and
Darrel Acker, district farm management specialist with the Ohio
Coope rative Ex tensio n Service.
They used a hypothetical1,500
acre !arm that planted40percent
corn, 411 percent soybeans and 20
percent wheal. The study didn' t
take into account harvPs1 yield s,
although Reeder says most re
search In Ohio and lnd 1a na shows
that ridge tillag e averages the
same or higher corn and soybean
vlelds.

OPHTHALMOLOGIST (M.D.)
lof"thal -mol' o-jist)

A medi,al doctor who specializes in the
diagnosis, treatment and surgery of the eye,

HOLZER CLINIC

Jean A. Disseler, M.D.

SOUTHEAST
IMPORT CENTER

Open
results

Pick-3: 229
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Cards
5-H, S-C, K-0 , 5-S
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Kicker 228111

Page 3

Vol41, No.89
Copyrighted 1990

1987 Nissan Sentra, Red .

2 Door . ) Speed . a1r AM / FM Cassette

1987 lsuzu Truck, Blue. Sport Str1pes . Rear Bumper AM / FM Cassetle

Iraq blasts President Bush's summit stance
By LEE STOKES
United Press International
Iraq said President Bush's
statements after the Helsinki
superpower summit displayed
his hatred lor Arabs, but re
!rained from a! ta cking er stwhile
ally Soviet l ea der Mikhail
Gorbachev.
Bush's "statements displayed
his hatred for the Arab nat1on,
because Bush Ignored the crisis
or the Palestinian people who are
suffering under th e Zionist night mare, " the official I raq i News
Agency quoted a government
spokesman In Baghdad as sayi ng
late Sunday
"It Is the policy of big countries
to move according to their
mater ial lnterPsts .1nd elect ion
pressures," !Nil quoted the spo-

kesman as sayi ng
But the Iraqi spokesman refrained from attacking Baghdad's former staunch ally Moscow , even though Gorbachev
accused President Saddam Hus
sein of leading Iraq mto a dead
end and called in Helsinki for the
1mmedlate and unconditional
withdrawal of Iraqi occupation
troops from Kuwait, whlchBagh
dad Invaded Aug. 2.
Also In Baghdad, Iraq i Foreign
Minister Tareq Azlz returned
hom e from Iran Monda y after
persuading Tehran to restore
diplomatic relations between th e
two former foes But there was no

IndicatiOn he convinced wa ry
I raman leaders to allow food and
oil across the Iran Iraq border
Although Aziz received a for -

mal welcome In Tehran. Iranian
authorities refused to fly the
Iraqi flag and a senior Iranian
official said Iraq must withdraw
from Kuwait. The Azlz visit was
the first to Iran by a top Iraqi
official sl nee before the 1980-88
Iraq -Iran war and followed
Baghdad's complete capitulation
to Iranian demands lor peace.

The statement came as more
Western hostages released by
Saddam flew home Sunday A
charter flight landed In Charleston , S.C. , with 311 liberated
Americans who sang "God Bless
America" and told of daring
escapes. Another flight with
about 165 freed American wom en
and children was expected to
arrive at Baltimore Washlnglon
International Airport Monday

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1987 Nissan Sentra Wagon, Whrte Deluxe Brown Cloth tnterror AM /F M A ~r

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1987 Chevy Spectrum, L1ght Blue . Sunrool.

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1986 Mazda King Cab Truck, Black . Sport Str1pc s AM / FM Rear Ju mp Seats

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1986 Nlssan Truck, Red . Rea r Bumpe1 . AM / FM

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1986 Nlssan Pulsar, Mel allrc Bl ue . Sunroof AM / FM . Rear Delroster

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1986112 Nissan 4x4 King Cab, 2 Tone Parnt AM/FM Rear Fl1p Seats

' 169 Per Month

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M1les , AM/FM Power

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1987 Chevy Celebrity Wagon, Blue. Automat1c . AI! AM/FM

'99 Per Month
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1987 Pontiac 6000, Gray. Gray Cloth lnleo01. AM / fM . Au . l rlt Wheel . Automa1'c 4 1Xl01 Cru1se ' 99 Per Month
1987 Pontiac Fiero, S1lver. Sport Strrpes. Automal1c. Air . AM /F M

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1987 Chevy S-1 0, Red. AMIFM , Standard . Cloth lnterror Bed Lrner Sport Strrpe ReJI Bumper

'99 Per Month

1987 Chevy Cavalier Sport Coupe, AM/FM Cassette. Standard

s75 Per Month

1987 Chevy Cavalier Wagon, Whrte . Automatrc. A1r. AM/FM

' 99 Per Month

1986 Pontiac Sunbird GT,

2 Tone

1986 Chevy Camaro, Rally Brown.
1986 Olds Calais, Maroon.

Parnl 4 Door. AutomatiC All . AM /F M

2 Door . Aul omattc All. 35.000 M1les

2 Door . Au1omat1c . Air . AM/FM

1986 Chevy S-10, Red 54.000 Miles. 4 Speed. AM/FM. Bed Lr ner
1986 Pontiac Fireblrd, Bnghl Wh1te, x-S harp . Air, AutomatiC, AM/FM

' 116

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' 127 Per Month
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s99 Per Month
s139 Per Month

1986 Chevy Celebrity Eurosporl, factory Wheel s ~Door Arr . AM I IM Automatrr l ilt Wneel ' 99 Per Month
1986 Chevy Chevette, Blue . 4 Door . Automalr c. AM/FM . Low M1tes

' 33 Per Month

1985 Olds Firenza, Ma roon. Auloma11c . Air . AM/FM . Ratty Wheel s

' 52 Per Month

1985 Pontiac Grand Am, Wh1te . V6 Eng 1ne. Air Automat1c. AMIFM

' 115 Per Month

Air, AM/FM Rear Defrosler .
4 Door . Aulomat1c . Atr . AM/FM Stereo

Per Month

1988 Ford Tempo, Red . Automattc . An . AM/FM

' 119 Per Month

1988 Ford Tempo, Tan An Automattc . Ti ll. Cru1se. (one owner)

'149 Per Month

1987 Ford EXP, Melalllc Blue.

2 Door. Sunrool . Sport Wheels. AM I FM Cassett e

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1987 Ford Escort Wagon GL, Met allic Gray Automat1c. a1r I.a.. Mrles

s99 Per Month

1986 Ford Escort Wagon, Blue , Blue Str1pe , Automa11c AM/FM

' 75 Per Month

1986 Mercury Cougar, Black , A1 r. Aulomat1c. AM/FM

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Dua l M1rror s. 54 000 Mrles '114 Per Month

Wlag4)n, Metallic

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1986 Plymouth Duster, Gray. Automalrc. 2 Door A1r . AM/FM

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1986 Dodge Charger, Blue. Au!omat 1c. AM/ FM

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SOUTHEAST IMPORT CENTER
"Your Vehicle Savings Place"
93 Columbus Road - Athens, Ohio - 592-2497
I

afternoon
The Iat ter group of Americans
had been aboard a chartered
Iraqi AJrway s flight also carry .
lng 186 Britons and 32 Irish that
flew !rom Baghdad to Gatwlck
airport outside London Sunday
evening
On Sunday. Baghdad Radio
had quoted an Iraqi spokesman
as saying no more chartered
!lights carrying Western hoslages would be allowed to fly to
the Jordanian capital Amman,
because Jordan could not handle
any additional air traffic
Bush and Gorbaehev, at their
daylong summit In Helsinki
Sunday, threatened further pressure on Iraq If diplomacy fall s.
"We are united in the belle!

that Iraq 's aggression must not
be tolerated." Bush and Gorbachev said in a joint statement
Issued after the summit. "No
International order is possible if
larger states can tlevour th eir
smaller neighbors."
"Nothing short or a retu rn ro
the pre-Aug. 2 status of Kuwait
can end Iraq's Isolation," Bush
and Gorbaehev sa1d In their joint
statement. "Nothing short of th e
complete Implementation of th e
United Nations Security Council
resolution s (ordering an Iraqi
withdrawal) Is acceptable."
In London , Prime Minist er
Margaret Thatcher said 1n her
first public comment on th e
summit, " I think It's very good
for the wor-ld 10 know that the two

great powPrs, the U nited States
and thP Soviet Union, art' absolutely at one In saying that what
the U N _sa id should be done, will
be done "
Bush apparently did not
achieve the goal stated by
American officials of getting
Moscow to pull all military
advisers out of Iraq, Jts former
ally Gorbachev did say, how ever, that the number of advtsers
had been red uced from 193 at the
outset of the cris is to about150
But Arab radio stations on
Monday pointed out Bush had
also pledged to the Soviet leader
that US. troops would not
remam 1n the guli region after
the Iraqi danger to thereg1on had
been dealt with

Voinovich still leads in poll

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, September 10. 1990

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MISS MEIGS WINNERS NAMED - These
individuals were Instrumental in the numing of
"Miss Meigs", Meigs County's most !amou.,
dwarf cow. Pictured are, front row, l·r, Bob
Gilmore; Georg~ Schneider. accepting for winner

Jay McKelvey; Dor Coates; Ellen Rought and
Barhara James. Second row, l·r, Fred W. Crow,
Jr.; judges Tom Reuter, Tom Reed, and Hank
Cleland; Emmogene Hot.teln Congo, accepting

for winner George Strode; Patricia Carson.

Cow contest winners are named
By BRL&lt;\N J. REED
Sentinel Starr Writer
On Friday afternoon. amid
muc h pomp and c ircu mstancr.
Pomeroy attorney Fred W
Crow. Jr. and his team of judges
awa rded a namr to "Miss
Meigs" and prizes to some of the
Individuals who hPipPd in the
selection
"Miss Meigs". a mmiarurr
cow co-owned by Crow and Mikr
Warner. has been th e subject of a
contest conducted by her owner s
and several local bus! ne sses and
individuals who have helped to
provide prizes for the winner
Crow es ti ma tes that nearly 600
people entered th e contes t. both
through the mall and by droppin g

~ Local

entri es of! at the Dally Sentin el
and at Crow and Crow
Thf' bov1nP princess. who h as
toured the county in connection
with the contest. wi ll now be
known as "M iss Hind Teat Tillie
Meigs" . and she can thank Bob
Gilmore• from Middleport Tro
ohlt's for the nam e
GHmor£&gt; was a-warded SPVPra l
prizes a t thP CPr emony, as wrrr
Dor Coates of Middleport . the
second pl ace winner. who sug
gPS!f'd !h(' n.lme or " Mi ss Ht'iza
Poppln Meig s" . Jay McKelvev.
SyracusP, whose name "Miss
Moodona Meigs" won him third
place honors. and George St rode
of Grove Cit y, who suggested the
name of "Miss Wagon Path

news briefs---.

Chamber to meet Tuesday
The Meigs Cou nty Chamber of Com mer cr Will hold their
monthly meeting on Tuesday at noon at J\met icarf'·Pomc&gt;roy .
All members are urged to attend The guest speaker will be
Roscoe Mills of McDonald 's.

Lawmen make weekend arrests
Stephanie Yaromey. 12 . Pomeroy. was arrested and
incarcerated Sa turd ay bv thr Gallla Cou nt v Shenff s
Department on a bench warra nt lor a traffic violati on
Paul Qualls, JR. Bidwell ~&gt;as arres ted and lncareera l&lt;•d
Saturd ay by the Ga l!lp oli s Pollee Department on a bench
warrant.
Gerald Sanabria. 28, Co lumbus, was arres ted and incarcer
ated Sunday by the Ohio State Patro l for coca ine possession
Henry McHenry. 49, K anauga , was arrested by t~eGal llpolis
PoUcc Department Su nday for no operator's licen se and wa s
l ater Incarcerat ed on a bench warrant for failure to appear

Lawrence judge dies
PROCTORVlLLE - Lawrence County Municipal Judge
Charles L. Surd died lat e Su nday of Injuri es suffered In a
single-car accident In Pickaway County
Burd, 43, died In the surgical Intensive car e unit of Grant
Medical Cenler of massive head and Internal Injuries,
according to reporl s The judge was Injured Saturday night
while traveling alone In his late-model M ercedes-Benz south of
Ci rcleville when his ca r lefl the right side of the !our-lan e Route
23 and hit an embankment.
Burd was reportedlyy returlng !rom the Ohio State-Texas
Co ntinued on page 10

Meigs" Strode was awardrd
fourth place lor hi s nam e
Crow al so arranged additional
pnzes to those entrants who
submi11ed prose or poe-try ex
plalnlng their selection.
Ellen Rought was awarded
fir st pla ce 10 this category for her
poem. "Meigs Co unty Dribbl e' .
Patri cia Carson. seco nd place for
her poem en li tle d "Crusa der
Clara· ~nd Bar bat a .J ames thi rd
place in the writing conte st tor
her p0€m ea l led · Miss Bit ty Beef
Me1gs"
Crow Initiat ed the cont est to
draw attention to the tend ency of
s tatr l evr l politicians to i gnorr
the need for major highwa)'
1mprovemrnt and construction
1n Me1gs County
Cr ow IS hoping that the contest
will spark some commltmrnt
from those officials during this
r lrr ti on season

Soviet
Parliament
underway
MOSCOW I UP! I - The SoVlet
Parllamenl reconvened Monday
lor Its fall session. facing the
dl!!lcull task of Implementing
practical steps to move toward a
market economy while dealing
with stagger ing shorlages and
widespread unrest.
"In e!feet, the session marks
the end or the preparatory stage
of perestroika, which resulted In
the disintegration or the old
political and economic system."
the official Tass new s agency
sa id.
Monday's meeting of the Su
preme Soviet, or Parliament,
wa s devoted to a reporl by It s
chairman Anatoly Lukyanov and
the approval of an agenda that
Included 31 bl!l.s.
"We have entered a stage of
serious tests," Lukyanov said.
"Sharp polemics are under way
as to further ways or development of our slate.''
Continued on page 10

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPii Republican gubernatorial nomi ne&lt;' George Voinovlch has a big
lead over his opponent eig ht
weeks before the election.
A Columbus Dlspalch pub lished results Sunday or a mall
poll taken last week. It show s
Voinovlch leading Democrat An thony Ce lebrezze by 13 points
T he newspaper surveyed 1.581
register ed Oh to reg Is tered
voters
This is the third poll the paper
has taken, with Volnovlch le ad Ing eac h one. Hl' had a seven point lead In J.anuary and H
pcints In May
This poll shows that 53 percent
ot Uu&gt;lll', J;eSpondln&amp; aald tlr.ey
pretered Voinovich, the same
percentage that preferred him in
May . He enjoyed the support of 46
percent of the responders in
January.
Celebrezze. who had support
from 39 percent of the respondees
10 January and May, Inched up to
40 percent In this poll.
The remainder of the respon
dees said th ey were undecided
Celebrezzr pi cked up some

4 charges
filed against
Meigs man
Four charges were filed
against James E St mp.son, Syra
r u se, as the rrsult of an ac c ldrnt
at the intersection of Route 7 and
33 early Su nday morning
Th e Simpson accident wa s one
of three ln ves tlgated by Pomeroy
pollee over lhe weekend . Simpso n was charged with DUI.
leav mg the scene of an accident
no OJ)(&gt;rator's !icf'nce, and no
In surance
According to the report Simpson traveltng south on Rout r 7.
lost control of hi s vehicle as hf'
came tD the inlrrSPction of Rout P
3.1 , where he failed to stop. wPnl
across lhC' r oad. struck a trPr
and then he11d cd Past on Route 3.1
Oamag£' to h!s trurk wa s modl'r
HI£'
Simpson reportPdly wa s
rnroute to thr hosp ital w1th a
passenger, Margaret Blake
After striking the tree. Simpson con tinued east on Route 33
until the ve hicl e stopped. The
Pom eroy emerge ncy squad was
ca lled to the scene and transported Blak e to VMH where she
was treated tn the emergency
room
fn an accident Sunday at 11.40
p m . on th e Beacon parking lot ,
Nye Ave . . a vehicle owned b)
Cynthia Anderson, Pomeroy, In
cu rred light dama ge to the rear
Pomeroy pollee reported that
Anderson had left her car when It
ju mped In gear and rolled
backwards across Route 33 and
Into a road sign. She was not
cited.
Sheldon Gerlach of New
Haven, W. Va. was cited for
failure to maintain assured clear
distance as the result of an
accident friday evening on West
Main Street. Gregory Phillips,
Texas Road, Gallipolis, was
traveling south on West Main
Street when his vehicle was
struck In the rear by a truck
driven by Gerlach.
There was moderate damage
to the front end or the Gerlach
truck and light damage to the
rear of the Phillips vehicle.

su pport In his hometown or
Cleveland where he ha s been
concentraling his campa ign, and
a llltlr In Franklin County, but
Volnovich st ill leads Franklin
County by 16 point s. the newspaper said
Volnovich of !set Cplebrezze · s
ga in by widening his lead among

voters In nlne other large coun
ties - Buller, Lake, Lora in.
Lucas. Mahonlng, Montgompry ,
Stark . Sum mit and Trumbull
The poll also found that Vomo
vlch led In th e suburbs of
Cuyahoga County with 52 per cen t
while Ce lebr ezze got 40 percent

from the same area
Crlebrezze , thr attorney gen
era1 lor lhe pu\. ei&amp;h.l, yeare, 1a
seeking to retain the Il&lt;'mocratic
hold on the governor's offil'l' b_v
being elected to succeed Richard
Celeste who Is prohibited from a
thtrd consecutlvr

term

Voino·

vich had been the lieutenant
gover nor before serving 10 year~
as mayor of Clevela nd
And in a clrar mPssagP to thr

Unlled States, Egyptian Minister
of State for foreign Affairs
Boutros Ghalllmked Iraq 's occu pation of Kuwait with I srael's
continued hold on the occupied
territories
Ghall sa id Monda y while his
country, which ha s sent troops to
help defend lhe oil-rich gull
stales of Saudi Arabia and the
Un1ted Arab Emirates, praised
the outcome or the Helsin~l
summtt, Ca i ro saw the need for
reaction aga in st both Iraqi and
I sraeli aggression.
"The Helsinki summit's statement affirms the mability 10
separate the concept of aggres sion or occupat ion of terrltones
by

ton::e, wt\ether tb.l&amp; ooneerns

thr gu lf crisis or the Palestinian
iss uP." Ghali said in a statement
c.1rr1Nl on .sta i P·owned Ca iro
Radio
Shortly afln Iraq's Aug 2
invasion of Iraq, Saddam called
for a regional so lution that would
include I srael '&lt;&gt; withdraw al f rom
thr occupied lands .

Convicted Oklahoma
killer executed today
MCALESTER. Okla iUPII Char les Troy Coleman. a con
victed double murderer. was put
to death early Monday by injec
lion. becoming the first person
executed In Oklahoma in '2-1
years
Co lem an. U. th1• so n of .r
sha rerro ppr&gt; r tA.as givl'n thl'
injPc tion nt 12 25 am and
pronounced dead at 12· .15 a m
The Supremr• Court refu sed
tw!ce Sunday to considrr appral s

flied bv Co leman s lawyer
i\mong the right ju stices now on
th e court, onlv death penalt_v
opponen t Thurgood Marshall dissr&gt;nted both times Justice Har r v
Blackmun was li st c&gt;d a s not
part tc!pating 1n r rt hrr drctsion .
Co lrm an was IIH' fu st p P! son Ill
Oklahoma to bP rxPcu tPd by
lethal injf'ctl on Thr stafp ' s last
Pxecution, 1n EH)fl, v.-as by Plf'lrl
ricrhair
Co h•mHn 's !LJw yc•rs fliPd rnnrP
th an 20 unsuccrssful bids in f ivP
co uns to nvprturn hi s Sl'n trncl'
Hr was moved at 7 a m Su nd ay
from his death row cell to an R b\
15 foot holdin g cell next to the
CXPC Ut!On Chambrr
The holding cell contain s a
metal cot w ith a mattr ess,
sheets. a shower sta ll and a steel
toilet -sink unil

fOif'ma n WdS Sf' ll tf'nCed tO
death for lhl' february 1979
shotgun killmg of a m an dunng a
burglary in Mu skogee. John
Sf'w &lt;Jr d and his wifr. RDxte. wrrf'
fatally shot when they surprised
Coleman as he burglarized the
home of Sewa rd 's sister
HP was sen tencf'd to dl'ath In
October 1979 for the hu sband 's
s l,I .V ln~
but wa s nrver prosp
ruled 1n the death of the wile
Colr m ;tn was capt ured several
hours after thr killings, but
esr.1perJ from Jail while awaiting
Ina! Hr latrr allr~edly overpowt•rf'd .1 polit·t• offic er In Luther .
Okl.1 . anrl slashed hi s throat.
Tht' officer " urvive d, but CDIP
rna n latpr use d thr sidearm he
stole from thr officer to kil l a
man m Sand Spr·ing s, n{'arTulsa,
and steal h1 scar Co lema n finally
wa s captured in Ari zona and also
was convicted of murder in thr

Sand Spring s r asr
More than 100 pr otester s of
Ok lahoma's death penalty ral
lied Saturdav on the ste ps a! the
state Capitol. Ok lahom a City's
Roman Catho Uc Arc hblshopCha
rles A . Sa Iatka delivered to Gov .
Henry Bellman's office Friday
an appeal l or clemency on behalf
of Pope .lohn Paul II.

AIDS cases are on upswing
MANILA . Philippines rUP l i The number of AIDS cases In 1R
countries In thr westrrn Pac1flc
ha s nearly doubled over the past
year, the World Health Organlza·
lion reported Mondav
Australia. Japan and New
Zealand accounted lor most of
the reported cases of people
afnlcted with th e acquired lm
mune defici ency syn drome, sa ld
the report released at the annual
WHO regional co nferen ce in
Manila .
As of July I, theWHOsald2,406
aids cases were reported In the
region, up 46 percent from 1,650 a
year ago.
The highest number of cases-

'

93 p('J'cent Australia,

Wf' l('

Japan

rf'ported in
a nd New

Zea land.
In the oth er 1o co untri es
covered by the WHO regional
headquarter s. the number of
cases Increased to 160 this year
! rom R9 over th e pa st year. the
report sa ld
"This mdlc ates that the AIDS
pandemic Is spreadi ng In the
regio n,·· said the report. It added
that as reporting aboui !he
disease Improves , more cases
are likely to be di scovered .
Australian AIDS cases accounted tor 77 percenl of the
total, arid 55 percl'nl of those
victims died, I he report said.

�Monday, September 10, 1990

Commentary

Agent organge maladies being denied

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Courl St r eet
Pumt•roy, Ohio

WASHINGTON -

llF.VOTF.D TO THE INTERF.STS 01' TilE MEIGS-r•MSON ,\RF.A

Q~

~~

- r ' rr"'-'=! d

rT""'L...J\-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhlblwr

Page- 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 10, 1990

men! knew aOOut the dangers of
Agent Orange, It used the defol -

The Bush

admi nistration has continued a

Iant anyway,

shameful pattern of denying the
link between Agent Orange and
medical maladies of the Vietnam

. J=t

CHARLENE HOEFLICII
Gt•n{'ral Manager

PAT WIIITEIIEAD
:\ssi~tant Puhlbiht•r/ Controllt•r
A MF. M11 F:H of ThP l 1ni!Pd PrA" I ntNna ti ona!. I nla nrl Dailv P rf&gt;S&lt;&gt;
1\.sSfl{'i atl nn and ltlf' Amn ica n :-,;pwo.;pa p('r r ubllshers Asso(' taf ton
I.ETT C:HS OF OP II\' I ON uri' wl'lcornt•. ThPv sho tJ ld be l ess tha n 300
words long. All if'llf'rS arr subjf'cl to Pdl!\ng and must be slg: nf'd with
nam r . arlrln-ss cl nd ! f'lf'phonf' nurnbt&gt;r . :'llo un sig nPd IPttPrs will bepub11s hrd . I.P1tt•r s &lt;; hou lcl tJf'in good l ttslf'. ;l(ldrPssln g Issues. not pPrsonall -

II Ps

lly 1.1&lt;;11:\ UANI~~I.
lif&gt;l Chid forn•spondt•nt
WASHI\IC TO!\- \\'ha t if !ht•y had a war ancl f'\'f'r_vunP just forgot
abou t i1'' That 's wh&lt;.~t happ(•npd to t hr onf' agams t drugs
t\me ri rcws n nJ.i.· vagul'i _v rPrnl ·rrllJE'l Jln•s ident Bush dl:'ciaring V.'ar
1Hl drugs u \'C'ar ago, alth oug h he did if with grra l fa nfan' and on
primP· timP tPJc,·i sion . ThP poll :-- shDw(• (! thrn 1hat the drug scourg(•
wa s thPir main t'Onc rrn
~ow Ampr· i('an.; c
u r pn' OC(' Uf.) iE·d with thr• Pf'r :;. ian ( ;ulf crisis and
thP 1hrPat o f &lt;l re cess ion.
:\ n rp id1 •rn1c uf d rug war ll'YE 'I '&gt;W E'( Il th e cu un!rv when Hu .'i h
dPt.: lart&gt;d th &lt;-l t naJTotics abu :-;t• wa s " thP graH'St cl oiTwsri&lt;' rtm•at
facing our nat ion ..
i\mrric.ln .-. knt •w lhP ir pn ·sH !t •nt w ;1s '&gt; l'rlfHJ &lt;., wlwn l!t• tH·id aloft J
bag of cra c k cot'a inP on ca mrra and soirmnl\' disc ios&lt;"d tha t il h&lt;trl
b('(' n SPi?.t'd right across tht' s trP('I fr om thr Whit e Housr
Rush n;1med a Cl garPitr-smoking niC'otinr adcli{'t as his Umg l'Z&lt;tr .
1Jut Wilii ~l rn 8r' nn1 •t I promptlv dr mon stra!Pd h is rP so lvP to wag1 •
al l-ou1 war b.v &lt;'OuragNJu s i ~· k i ckin g but ts co ld tu rk PV
J&lt;,·p n bt'fOrt ' thl' jJrPSidf•nr df'liH·rPd hi s dN·Iaratio.n nf w;11 , tlrt •r·t·
wen ' &lt;~limini."lr&lt;-lf i un i(•&lt;Jk" !h d t !lush w as co nsidPring commi111 ng
fPdPrai troops to f ig h1 drug rf'!Jtcd nimc in \\'ashin~ton .
E ven that dOP£ '\ :-;c hf'OH' '-f'f'JlWd CI'PdiblP hr rr In :\o1urrlf'l r ih-, . . ()
dubbe d bC'C' &lt;lU Sf' t ht• nati () n·s r·;t pi! &lt;ri is a fflk!C'li wi th i\nwrica· ..,
-highPSI horniri&lt;Jio I'&lt;J1P
: Th osf' WP n · th(• cla rk d , t ~· ~., wh1·n t'\'f'n Ma,v or Mar ion H;-IITV wa _
-. .
iorC'Pd to drn~· 1unwr:--. w hi f' h sub.. , Pq w ·nt!v tu r ned ou r to lJf' t r u;·. th at
·hr wa s a crack smo kPr .
·
A s t hP \~' ell' on ill(' gal narfutic-. t·sc ala trd . SPn . Mit c h MrCon rwll . H
K .v .. c c1 mt• up wi 1h c1 h.J n•br;1i w ·d _
-., dwnw t u pf'r m il 11 i rbo rm· agent s tn
shou r do wn pianps &lt;.. uspcctrd llf drug traffi ck ing
Fllrtu na tl'l\·. coo iN hr c_rch pn' "a ill'd . somrhm,· ma naging tn·
conv inct· an .Jrnu.&lt;&gt;£'d ('n ngrp so., !hat .-., u('h a dan gf• rn u-.. 1.\ dumb id t•a
could l~&gt; ad to dogfight s over !he C arlbbean
B u! 1ht ' d 1 Jg war'" Uo pi( •s t &lt;;t ra 1t'g\' b\· f; n· wa c; a pIan to d ispa 1eh tu
Sou tll . \nwri ('a n junl:! l(•.-. . 'i\\'&lt;Jrm s uf &lt;·tw ;.H·homplng carrrpiil ar s for
clt•pitl .\'OH·nt in l'nturn() logic.rl v. .rr f&lt;-tr(' ;Jgclin st cocainP .
ThP . \ gr il'u l tun• Df'parlrrtl ' nt l1ad hopt•d tu co nH ' up with
c;Hrrpillar s thar wDu ld df' \·our I1•;1V t •;.. of tlH•cora plant. Prr s umabi ~·.
thrsP disninn n;l!mg c dt e rp!l lJJ " '. 1.·oulcl rdr;ti n from nibblin g on IPss
&lt;'X Otic n o p.. , -.; uc h a o.; ('Or n d lH.I torna 10P'l)('nm•tf \-\':1 ~ quick to Pm ph a:.,in• !hal thr plan was in &lt;In
t ·x ~X'ri me nt ; r! stJgl'. w hilP lhP Whit P ll ousr p lrdg(•d th ~11 " nPilhl 'l
II'OO\)" nor c.di'J pll ldr.., .. •nnlid l u• !'n rnrnittt•d to 1t11• d r ug w&lt;_Jr unl&lt;'""
Jn\·itPd b.\· l )llli\·1&lt;1 or Pe ru .
Hu sh profl'""''" 1u ~~ ·~· "r h·,Jr '- !gn.. , of prog rr·s.., .. in h1:-- ~ t·ar ol d drug
wa r . ro nt r ndin g th .d ''cur ;t illl' I'- hardrr 10 find . m on · PXpt• n&lt;.,i\ I' and
l1 ·ss purr th :tn it wa o.; j ust nnt • _rr; n· ;1go."
rvLI _
\ ·tw :-.o. hut thf' pn•;-, !cl (·nt·..., nlf ic&lt;., C' !I P figmr s th.t! dJ sr lo:-.f• mon •
hard -con · t'Of'at rH' ll '-.1' ;rnrl rlt• l ug f•d rn•;ltllll'111 f;rrilitipo..,
Th( ' t·n gint· th .J! :-- till driu •s !h( •clm g tr ~tdr is !h(' inordina1r d('m; Jnd
1n 1h(• l ' nrtcd "il, tlt '" fn r ilh •g;J! n:rrciJtics Yrt th r drug Wdt' bud gt&gt; t
&lt;'O ntinw ·-., 111 l' lll]llr .r-...i/1' (';l tdlillh lra f fickl'l" .rt !IH' PXj.JPn~t · ,l(
n·dul'ing dl'·mand lw t n·atin~ usN s.
T h1· dn1 ~ w.tr t ~t n'1 tH' won 1n dogfigh 1.-... OW' !' th1· l' ar ibtwan ur lw
!'H('.I ch!tlnprrl)-: t ' .r tt'l p1lltr1" u t .I n\· 11 tht'r q llid' f i.x

Berry's World

memo r efused that courtrsy to
populatrd arPas.
Other mPmos fret about thL'-

vt&gt;feran s who Wl're doused with

vernment policy of composing
thP mu sic while playing It -

show the federa l government
knrw more thnn It W(:IS willing to

making up policy as It went along
and covering up the blunders.

adm it about Agenl Orange three
decadrs ago, yet It continued
haphaza rd use of the dioxinladen ehemlca l. The pi cture Is of
the caval ier U.S. war effor l
bumbling along with Agenl
Orange, discovering pitfalls
along the way and covering them
up with a propaganda campaign _
WP hav£&gt; exa mined milita ry
cmd Stat e Drpartment mrmo's

When AgPnl Ora nge's dangers

drew public flak, !he government
ducked the fire through publi c
rela tion s campaigns inslead of
ser i o usl y

exam ining t he

problem .
Even from the get-go, there
was mo re conrern about ruhbf'r

plantations than about th e sold Ires and civilians. The U.S.

The

same rlasS!fil'd

problem of drift and how to
correct it . The Implication is that
Agent Orange was sprPad ow·r
even more than the 6 million
acre s tha t were targe ted.
Our associate Uan NjPgom i r
examined the old documen ts and

talked to advocates who have
lrled for years to get the
governmpnt to takl' rrspon sibil ity for the fallout fr om Agent
Orange . Ron Rossani, a disabled

operations rPspf'rtrrJ a secret,
five ·mlle buffer zo ne around

Vietnam vel who ha s studiPrl
Agrnt Orangf' for yPars, said tlw
documrnt s reve31 " inrompP

VIetnames e rubber plantation s,

tence at /he highest leveL"

for rea so ns "wP mu st accept. ..

As

publie conc('rn gn•w in

Virtnam and at home, the U.S.
gnvernm t: nt sffmed most tnterrs tPd in orchestrating a media
blitz as a co unte r measure . One
propo sal that was almost
adopted w as an outright llfl .
Thr Arrn:v ncvpr went public
with that lie, bu t It wasn't an

attack of honesty that stopped
tht • propo sal. The pla n was
dr-opped because the army was
afr aid the VIetcong would con gn.. gatr ln lhP areas toutPd as
Agf'nt ·Ora ngr- f rcr.

We asked the Pentagon to
ro mmPnl on the pattern of
di 'CPptlu n Pvidenced in the me-

mos . A spokesman Insisted Ihe
/\gent Orange program was
undrort ak cn without an eye to

public

relallons .

"It

had

a

mil II ar.v purpos e and a milita ry
;tppllc;Jtlon on l y,·· he said.

~ND
THi5 iS THe ~e.De.Ra"
:Z\cil.iiV WHeRe. THe

,;l.(J

51'e iN '9

RecK':"~.

GeW S · f.l2.2
~

~p~e.

WMo C3l1SW iKe 5$1. Cl\iSiS
aRe SeR'ViN6 iHe.iR i8.RMS.

Dodgers remain alive, defeat Reds, 6-4
LOS ANGELES !UP[) _ Rick
Dempsey would like the Los
Angeles Dodgers to be In firs t
place In the National League
West for just one day: The last
day _
Alfredo Griffin delivered a
squeeze bunt lo drive In the
go-ahead run In the fifth Inning
Sun day, lifting lhe Dodgers to a
6-4 triumph over Ihe Clnclnnall
Reds.
By taking two of three games in
the series, Ihe second -place
Dodgers move to within 5 I -2
games of the Nallonal League
West leaders. The Dodgers have
22 games lefl and the two teams
meel In Cincinnati for the final
three encounters next weekend .

"We 've got Io bear down and
play rea lly hard," Dempsey
sa id . "We're getting the key hits
when we need them. I only wan 1
Io be in firs t place one day: Th e
la st day ,"
Ramon Marllnez, 17 -6,
struggled In Ihe fi rs t five Innings,
yielding a total of four runs on
eight hits. He walked lhree and
Slruck out eight, upping his
NL-leadlng total to200 . It was his
ninth comple le game Ihls season
In 29 star ts , the most In th e

By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK tUP!i- Almosl
as quickly as It look him to lose
th e U .S. Open final, AndreAgassl
wrote the final word on !he
de structiv e force thai had
wa shed him away .
"This was just a good old fashioned streel mugging, "
Agassl sa id . "l l 's not like I lost It,
I got my bu It kieked Anylhlng he
louched turned Io gold oul
Therr wa s no better way 10

ex press wh at happened at Ihe
National Tennis CPnte r on a

gloomy Su nda y afternoon when
Pete Sampras, rising from !he
ranks of the unknown, humbled
Agassi, t;-4, "3, ti ~ In a malch devoid of drama or
cas t

skies,

Sampras

capture the U.S. Open.
"This is unbelievable. this is
the ultim ate in tennis," said
Sampras . who ear ned $350,000 .
''W hat eve r else I do In my career
I' ll alway s be the U.S. Open
cha mpion ."
Samp1.a s, at 19 years, 28 day s,
replaces Oliver S Campbell as
the youngest men's champion .
Ca mpbell was 19 years , 6
months, 9 da ys wh('n

ReaI women reaI men, real life Sarah Overstreet
'

I n a I'C'cent

issue of USA

Weekend , Christopher Kimb all,
publisher of Men magazine.

sharing the dlapPrs and dishPs as
long as women arr prepared to
sharP thr eco nomic support of

whic h wl!l debut early nPx 1 vPar
offers womrn a riPal :
·
.

lhr family. "
Chr is, If you rea lly mean It , lr' .s

"In thP '90s . women will slop

a deal. My on ly qU(' Stlon Is whrn'

as king 'Wh~ ca n't a man bf&gt; morP
llkr a woman?" and le t rnen we ar
hnx rr shor ts: grt thrir hair cu t
by n• al bar ber s. not hai r
drrssrr.o;;: wear sturdy, m.ain ·
strf'arn r l othPs In cludin g socks

on earth did you get the Idea /hat

1

eomprtltivr and downright rh ii -

wom('n like tho sP bikini bottom s

dl sh, all the thin gs wr de arl y love
to be ." Forgivp me If I wa s
look ing the othrr way while you

you say replaced boxer shorls, to
SPf' you wearing flimsy clothrs.
or fur you to Kl'l your hair styiC'd
in uni sex salons ? .Just w ho
among my gender have you brr n

payin g t oo mu ch attention tn mv
significant othrr , who Is al l &lt;;f
thosP thing-s and wondHfuilv so.

tal kin g to, any wa y?
It wasn't wom{'n who pu t .vou
out or boxer sho rts. it was thr
ITII'n 's fa sh ion Indu stry ilnd1tw sr
of you who wprr sil ly Pnough t o
buy somrthlng you werrn't rom ·
fortablf' in . F iim sv rlolhPs ?
Samp culprit s. Per so nally , thP

hlu o;; h wl nPs.
" I n rPturn ," hr r ontlnuf's.
"mrn will not bf&gt; ro ndrscpnding
and, with n c!Prp srnsr of rrllr f
and sa tl sf.1c tlon to all co nrrr nrd.
art llkP rPal mPn again . That
in r ludPs opPnlng doors for
wom r n; acti ng lik e Mel Gibson.
not PrrWpr Hrrman: senrllng
flnwr rs, wit hout occas ion. to hrr

a limP when " boy s r an tw hov s"

again, and mf'n ran r r tu r~ rn
being "a!1o lf' srr&gt;nt . tmpati Pnt.
PX UbPr an t , rt.l Sh , 0\'( 1'S('X £' d,

first adjective th at pop s to mind
Whfln ] SPf' fhOSf'
"crram puff ."

C!Oth f'S

is

Chri s. .vou tal k aboutth r'9{1' as

wrre belngothrrwise . but I guess

I missed II . Or perhap s I was

Oh, and he pla ys a lot of soft-ball ,

lf'SS that v.'J~'·

T hrrr's only onP pl ace where
part compan y, Chris. and
1t1 at's on thr subjrct of feelings.
You .sPe rn tu think m en are
na tura lly k ss ln cl!ned to exprf'ss
wp

th rlr fe elings and hint that that' s
OK . F:vcrythlng I've read In Ihe
field of psych ology and medicine
In lhr la st IJ vra rs , the majority
nf It wrlttPn by men, points to the
su pprrss io n of emot lo n as a

lead ing ca use of heallh problems, and to th e lack of communi -

withou t ncrk ch ains. throws his
gluvr In thr dirt on occasio n and
gars t o a ba rbf'r.
As [ said . I dfln'l know who
you 've tx·en talking to, but I and
most of my womrn frlrnds j ust
wish w e could bf' a littl e morr

or not RP t t lng what you want out
nf llfp becausr you're too affrald

"downright childish," wish thai
the cult ure hadn 't forced 11

to HCk now ledg e It and too \nhl hitPd tO PX))J'f'SS it

aimos. t complrt el,v ou t of us hv
thr !lmf' Wf' rt:a c hPd adulthood .
rathr-r th an wanting you to hr

Oh. and If .v ou rvpr nf'f'd some
f rf's an' qu itf' rf'asonablc .

ca lion as thr sin gl e most Impor tant cause of unh a ppy ,
unsa t isfying rPlatlonshlps with
ot her peo ple Have It your way .

13utl don't want you dying early,

Why oil really is worth fighting for
see ms to ha ve Indu ced some

I n Its Issue dated Aug 20, The

pas I first base for his second
error.

to

" There's no reason for me not
make those plays," said

Doran,

a

recently

converted

third baseman. Unlll his trade to
Los Angeles !room the Houston
Astros last week, Doran covered

second base. "My back Is fine."
In the third, Kal Daniels scored
on Brooks' sacrifice fly, giving
the Dodgers a 3-l lead.
The victory, said Daniels,
"puts us in a better situation I han

overrun Saud i Arabia - and his
huge arm!rs wrre po!s l:'d on it s

Tfl illiam Rusher

ment of U.S_forces In the Middle
East. Deploring the near -

go to war'1 A lot of Americans
still believe the old propagand a

universal !-;u pport for Mr. Bush's

m y th that J apan plungPd Into

Even then , thl' pPrll tu 1tu•

prJssl bly f'scapl' a major and

action, the magazine' s ed itori al

World War II for the sheer sake of
agg-randizement. But th e real
reaso n, oddly enoug h, was tha t
old dev il : oil .
In 1941, the Jap anese economy
was heavily dependent (as It still
Is) on Imported oil - much of It ,
In those day s, from Ihc Duich conlrolled ollflelds of Indonesi a.
In July 1941, I he Unlled States.
Brita in and I he Netherlands, as a
punishment for Japan's aggres sions on the Asian mainland,
Imposed a lol a! embargo on
shipment s o! oil to Japan . As
Winston Churchill lat er ob served, " II was evident that !his
was a slrangehold , and that Ihe
choice before them was either to

Unit ed Statrs would be only
Indi rect. The New Yorker Is

probably (X'rmanent economic
downturn .

concludes as follows:

"The American -Iraqi Wa r. If
there Is lo be such a 1hlng , Is not
about freedom, or, rea lly, about
deterring aggression . This war Is

a

war for oiL American soldiPrs

are In Saudi Arabia becaus e we
are a society dependenl on Arab
oi L Th e still. small voice sug
ges ts that we stop and lhlnk ."
By all means, let us stop and
think . The New Yorker's editorIal wrllrr clearly regards oil as a
grubby and highly unsatisfactory rea son for going to war. He
would be happier, at least rela tively , If Ihls country were to go
to war for "freedom," or to
"deter agresslon" - nice, highsounding objectives, arguably
worth somebody (else) dying for.
But oil"
In response, let us begin by
noting lhat, al this writing,
America Is nol, In fact. at war. On
the contrary, the huge American
deployment In Saudi Arabia

Japan to reach an agrPempn t

wllh the United States or go l o
war." Remember Pearl Harbor?
Saddam Huss ein Is not In a
position to strangle anybody so
completely. Even with Kuwait
under his bell, he control s only
about 20 percent of Middl e
Eastern oil . Bul If he were to
I

border. In attack forma tion- hP
wou ld acquire dr facto con tr ol of
virtually thr entire output o f th(•

;H'1 sn del'i slvf'iy
For !hf' coll apse of Wes tern
F uropf' and .Iapan would hf&gt; an
absolutf' di sastl'r for the United

region, and with It an immensely
powerful role In world affairs .

Statc•s: pollllcally , economically
and rultura lly. We eou ld not

simply wrong: We arP nut in f&lt;Jcl

No dou bt a da y will come when

"a soc iety depend ent on A ra b
oiL" But Wesl ern Europe and
Japan mos t certainl y are , anrl
wlthoul It their economics w vu ld
grind to a hall In a matter of
weeks . It was this rlrar dangcr
that prompted Presldl'n/ Bush to

substit utes wilt reli eve modern
civilization of It s dependence on
oil, and I he Arabs can ge l back on
their ca mels and plod slow ly off
Int o th e desert. Until !hen,
however , oil Is as vllal lo
mankind as oxygen, and as much
worth flghl\ng for.

Today is Monda y , &amp;&lt;pt. 10. the 2o~rd day of 1990 with l1 2 lo follow.
The moon ts waning, moving loward Its last quarter
The morning slars arc Mercury, Venus . Mars and .Jupiter
The evening star Is Sal urn .
·
Those born on I his date are under the si gn of VIrgo . They lncluM
F.ngllsh srlenll sl and clergyma n John Needham In !713, physicist
Artltur Holly Compton In 1892, English critic Cyril Connolly In 1903
aclres s Fay Wray In 19rr7 (age &amp;li, film dlreclor Robert Wise In
I age 761. goaer Arnold Palmer In 1929 1age 61), Ielevls lon journal lsi
Charles Kurall In 1934 I age 561, singer Jose Feliciano In 1945 1age 451
andactn&gt;ssAmf Irving In 1953 (age371
1

1914

t.t
.
~.

"i\o one said thi s was going to

br easy," sa id Reds Manager
Lou Plnlella . "We battled hard
today . We score dfouroffRamon,
shou ld have
win ."
wf'

come

up with a

we were before thr serirs . Wf'

definitely won . When he hit.s the
serve 120 mli(•s per hour down the
lines, there' s not much you can
do about it. "
ll

Asked if he always sPrved th is
well, Sampras quipped, "Not In
I he finals of th e U.S. Open."
Sampras, seeded 12Ih, is the

rawe s t scPd evrr 10 capt u re the

title during the Open era. He ha s
been in only three f inal s during
his career, &lt;..~II this year, and hr

now has won all three.

..

Agassi. so i mpressivP in eliminating defending champion Boris
Becker a day earlier, has been
beaten in the finals of the only
two Grand Slam s hr playrd

i;,

this year. He fell to Andres
Gomez in the French Open_
" It wou ld be so easy to get
disco urag&lt;'&lt;l thinking yo u could
havr won two Grand Slam s.'

-

-·..t• --.

•

. ~ "1:
~

said Aga ssi. who was conso lPd
with tht&gt; runnerup prize of

if

$175.000. · I have 10 view thi s as
&lt;.tn indi c&lt;l lor. I'll comr out Pvf'n

., f

morr prrpan•d

nl~x

1 timl' "

Aga ss l sai d h&lt;' isn't disturbed
at falling in both Grand Slam
finals . and .addl'd hl' ha s nothing
to prove ro anyone

" I don 't think I need to prove tt

......
FRUTH PHARMACY - The Fruth Pharmacy team , pictured
here, participated In a special lund-raising game for the American
Cancer Society Sunday at Hartinger Park In Middleport.

U.S. OPEN CHAMP- Pete Sampras, 19, beaJ American Andre
Agassl In three sets Sunday to claim Ute t:.S. Open men's
championship and heeome the youngest player to win ttn•
tournament. ( UPI)

in thr open ing Sfl! hr YlPided
mPrely thrcP point s in fi vr
se rvice games, and ln the second
srt hf? al lowrd fi ve point s in fo ur
ga m Ps .
On 1h(• fir st point he srrvpd in

Pnd i ng th r sevC'nth gamr with a
pa ir of acrs. g lvi ng him B for thf'

the m atch. Sam pras dtlivered a

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

SPCOnd SC'I'VP ;) r P, and in hi s
sprond &lt;:. rrvic(' game he rrgi s·
tr rrd thrrr co nsecutivr aces .
No t until thP 1hird set did
t\g assi rn&lt;l nagt• 1u1 akl' more than
two poin ts ~ga in s ! Sampras ·
srrvP . Thr fourth se rd actuailv
had two brl' ak point s in the fir~!
gamr of the se t and one morr in

as much as I want to do it." h(•

the thi rd. bu I was unable to

sai d. "My co nfid ence is great , if I
had to bet on it I 'd have to sav I'd

ro nvrr t.
Sampras, in lu r n. too k ad,·a ntagp Of hi s only lJrP ak Oppo rtun ·
ity. ro nvC' rhn g il i n t h{' .:; ix th
gJffil' wh r n hr br okP al lovr wi!h

have comr out on top

·

" I fell I cou ld beat him. but he
picked up his game ano th er
notch, so he dPsrrvrd it .
So dom inant was Sampras that

day
and
I OU
champtonshlp.

44&amp; •4524

l? 15

~ li

for

J.lC/tSOI'I

ROUH

l~

Pt K ~

M~U;A!N ~ TI N [(S SATU~DA~

Sf

~~

BARGA: N

~I G~ l

i SUNDAI
lU[\0.1.1

![I(IP! " f.IIO ST'·)

SEPT!MIIeA 7 lhru 13

~==-~"~lOA• thr~
.'10&amp;9 ( 0
OAI ! 1
101 I IY' ""' IK( ( \
1 7 0 ~ 120

1\.'T!U I ' •

1 10

a9

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-

E\1!'1\ f.~t 'I\ I

10

flAil'
&lt;Jo T I \U O "" ll KII \

1 10 a ! JO
··· ·~ "" "

YOUNG GUNS U
. . ·-

100 ~ 91 0
0 ~ 1(

I

I" ~ ·~· /101!•11 1

I 00 &amp; ) JO

a back hand down the lmr
Samora s lhrn he-ld trl 1m·1•.

grrat flme out thpre . "
Sam pras used a shotgun se rve

competed against Fruth Pharmacy In a game on Sunday .
Proceeds for the game went to the Middleport -Pomeroy chapter of
the American Cancer Society .

"AT&amp;T has a calling plan
for me. When I get the
bill I can see the savings."

Redmen 2-1 following tournament
The Cn\ver slly of Rio Grande
soccer team spll1.1 pair of game s
In th e Indiana Unlve rs lt v
Unlvcr slly-Purdue Unlvcr slly at
Indianapolis Tournament over

l'ub! lshNi f'verv &lt;~f iNnoon . Mo n dav
lhr r-ugh F rida \ Ill rourt Sr Po
ITl r'r11"o' . t)hl n. tJ\ I hi' Oh! D \' fl ll l'\' Pub-

lishin g Compan y Mul!lmf'dl a.· In r ..
l'oml'rf l&gt; . tlhio ·l ~?nq. Ph qq2 21:111 . ~·
r·ond c luss ~os t agp paid tt l Pu rm•r ov.
()hl n
·
Mi'mbrr lJnliNI Pri'S s ln t Prn a tlonal.
Inland Oall.v Pr f&gt;S ~ A &lt;;.so:' I fllio n and th e
Oh! n ~ew sp ap rr A .~s oclatlon . Nallona !
i\dvPrllslnf;l RPprP~P nt a tlv('. Bn1nhmn
N1•w spapt'r S;tl PS, 7JJ T h ird Awnut' .
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POSlMASTER · Sfond addn's&lt;i l'hanW"'
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lilt• weekend, but returned wilh
i::ln overall rPc ord that ha s Coach

rral ly pickPd up pu r ga me in lh P
second half."
With thi s in mind. the Rcdmen

Sco ll Morri ssey pleased .
" I'm really happy with the
wa ys lhlngs are goi ng, ' Morns-

rP1urnfld In dominate lhP second
game. mounting a co mpletf'

sey sa id as the Redmen wen t to
2-1 in early sea son art io n.

r issey sa id .

The Redmen opened against
IUPUI Friday, losing 3-1. and
defeated Indiana-Purdue at Fort
Wayne Sa turd ay night.1 -l.
Barry Saunders, thl' junior
from Jamestown, scored Rio
Gra nde' s single goal of the first
contest on a free kick from 25
yards out midway through the
first half. The hosts had score d
ea rller on a penalty kick and on a
free shot15 mlnules later, bu I by
then the Redm en had pulled
togeth er to a llow Saunders to

move In for I he goaL The period
ended 2-1 In IUPUI' s favor.
The vlsllors' offense picked up
In the second half aod for th&lt;•
majority of the period, the
Redmen prevented IUPU! from
advancing . The hosts managed
to brea k through within the ·flnal
10 minutes lo post lhe winning
goaL
IUPUI took 18 shots on goal
compared to the Redmen's eight.
Rio Grande goalkeeper Corey
Feerer was credited wllh nine
saves and his counterpar t for

IUPUI had two.
"From what I saw, agalnsllhe
kind o! team we were playing, we
competed very well," Morrissey
said. " I think, though, I! we had
played an entire 90 minutes of
soccer, the oulcome could have
been dlfferenl. As It was, we

1

'
,f;di

tram effor l against IPFW. Mor
Out of 21 sho ts on goa l, the
Redmen co nnected when Bran
don Ru ssf'll scorf'd on an as s!st
f rom Sa undl:'rs at 1hr 35· m lnute

ma r k In the first half. With a 1-0
adva ntage e ntflr lng the seco nd

period, Tony Danll•ls powered
I he ball into the oppon ent s' nrt at
10 minutes Into the half. Ricardo
Ca mpbell notched lhe last two
goals, receiving an assist each
from Daniels and RusselL
Mo rrissey credited thP work of

defenders Win ston O'Connor,
Chris Slagle, .Jeff Bellar and
Frank Pa yerc hin In holding off
I PFW . adding that Daniels and
Sa und ers kept things cooking in
I he midfield . The on ly down side,
he sai d, was the loss of four-year
veteran Daniels for the -nex t
game due to a rPd card from

officials .
Bul considering Ihe fact Ihe
next game Is against Dl stricl 22
leader Tiffin a I home Tuesday a 1
4 p.m ., the loss of Daniels
couldn ' t have come at a worsP

lime. Nevertheless, Morrissey
said, !he team would overcome
!hal obsta cle.
"I 'll pul It Ihls way : on
Tuesday every player has got to
be ready 10 play andplayourbest
soccer If we 're going to be In a
position to win ," the coach
remarked.

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

""

·-·-·--- '- ··----

---- ----

Don't let anyone take Aim value
away from you. Call1800 522-0177.
A"I&amp;T has alwavs been your ltlllg
distance company But if vou don'! d11
somethmg 10 keep it that wa}: your
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to a long dislance company And it
might not be AT&amp;T
The vast maJority of people like
you considered the facts and decided
no11o lei that happen.
But--you have to decide for yourself
If you don't want to lose AT&amp;T service,
© !IMJAUtt

qual tty, rel iahilil\' and v:tlue, 1uu ve
goiiO take JCitotl Choo~r your o\\'tt
long distance wmpam: Brillre &gt;ome
one does it for you To keep AI:~T an
now Call1800 522·0177ext. 5168.
We'l l lake care of L'l"l'fllhing

Mayno1~fl'ly 1nalla rea~

----·- -- -- -- -------

AlaT

I

THUR SO AI ! _____J

pays off.
"I had absolulel y no ner ves or
anything. It was greal 1 had a

to seek and des troy Agassi, never
allowin g hi s fourth -seeded rival
to m ount a c haHPngc_ Thf' young
Ca l ifornian delivHed IJ aces,
giving him a tol al of 100 for th e
champion ship.
" I came here hoping to pu t on a
good show ," the 20 -year -old
Aga ssl sa id, "but the bt&gt;lter man

lhc

Wf ST

There's no quE&gt;stlon, hard wo rk

W('('k

Ry United Press lni.•rnatlonal

The Reds took a 4-3 lead In the
fifth _ Doran smacked his seco nd
doubl e of the game and scored on
Barry Larkin' s tr iple, which
exlended his hit ting slreak to 17
games . Lar kin's line drive fell
out of leflflelder Daniels' glove
afler a diving altempl to catch
the sinking baiL Hal Morris
followed with an RBI single to
score Larkin.

slm·p John McEnrO€ in 1984 .
"Today was the best I rould
poss ibly play," Sa mpra s sa id.
"It couldn 't hav e happened al a
better tim e. I think I deserved 11 .

Subsr rlbNs nor df'Sirtng t ope~· thPCar rif'r mn~· rf'mlr in advance dlrf'l'l In
Thf' Daliy Sf&gt;nt !nl'l on a 3. 6 or 12 month
bas is Cr edit w!!! l&gt;l · ~lven ra rrlf'fC'arh

Today in history

season.

Sa mpra s a lso i s thp f ir st
Americ an man to win thr Open

A Ulvl... lon of Multlmf'dla. In! '.

work on President Bush'sdeploy-

Yo r kPr maga zine, which
always been a sort or

has
journalistic peacenik , goes to

'

Doran then booted Griffin's
grounder to put runners at fir st
and third. Sharperson scored on
Martinez's Infield sing le and
Griffin came home when Doran
threw Juan Samuel's grounder

he won th e

I lf~ I'S 1H -960 ~

sa lut ary seco nd thoughts in S;~d
dam Hus.scl n.
Bu t In any case. Pxactly what ls
It that usually prompts nations to

Npw

'·' '•' 1-1 wll .i!f/Jkt'

second on Dempsey's groundout .

"Bad luck again," said Jack son, making just his third star!
since coming off the disabled lis I
twic e In a row_ "I'm making I he
pitches, I'm jus! not getting Ihe
breaks. Things aren't going my
way . I can'tdoanythlngabout It ,
so I'll jus! keep going out there_"
After Ihe Reds scored twice In
the fifth to take a 4·3 advantage,
Los Angeles came right back In
the boll om of the Inning lo lake
control. With one out. Huble
Brooks and Mike Sharperson
singled and Brooks scored from
second on Dempsey's single.
Sharperson moved to third on
Dempsey's hit and scored the
go-ahead run when Griffin laid
down a perfect suicide squeeze
bunt.

have a lot of games to play and
hopefully somebody else can
beat up on the Reds . We have to
look for some help and keep
playing the kind of ball we're
playing. They're no better than
us. The f ir st half of the season
be longed to !hem, I he second half
to us. II 's going logo Ia the wire "
The Dodgers have a 35-23
reco rd since I he All-Star break.
Eric Davis got one run back for
the Reds In the fourih when he led
off by lofting a home run over the
cenler field wall. his 19th of the

lllil' In 1B90

The Daily Sentinel

I

two unearned -on

needed

merel y .an hour and 42 minutes to
become the youngest man ever to

ln_g out ! hf' ga rb agp: CJn rl OK .

,,, II/ I ' " ' 11-\ ,1/ )1'1/1/IJI/ dll&lt;ll/( O/ISU!I/1/\, /Iii/

five runs -

seven hit s In five Innings. He
struck out three and walked two.

Brooks, who had two RRI in the
game, added a solo home run In
the sc•venlh . The homer was
Brooks' 19th and came off
reliever Rick Mahler.
The Reds took a 1-0 lead In the
second when Jl'ff Reed singl ed
home Paul O'Neill with one out.
The Dodgers goltwo runs In the
second on two errors by Ihlrd
base man Bill Doran. Sharperson
si ngled with one out and took

tension, and played under over

office; splitting the wood; carry

-

majors .
"I don't feel any pressure,"
sai d Ihe 22 -year-old right ·
hander. "We needed that game
and that was all I was thinking.
"I'm not worrying aboul strikeouts, we need wins. We won't
win the division on slrikeouls."
Danny Jackson, 5-4, gave up

Sampras upsets Agassi for Open title

therr . "

vou can't Se&lt;' t hrough; and dr ink
S('Otr h on thP rorks ins tP.ad of
r\ th ctu~-:ht l r1 1 _the d;n t 'r- tttc · &lt;\ril ConnoJI\· v.-rote. · ·otx·si1Y i s .1
mt·n 1.11 -... r a ! I ' d d i-...1 ' &lt;1 ~~ · br nu.rz h1 (,n .t)\ horPrlnm. a nrl rl i '&gt; il ppoi n lffi.('ll t ·

Saigon .

the herbklde.
Newly declassified reports

Agent Orange in !h(• 19t;us They
show th a t whatPvPr thP govern ·

arrordi ng to a .Junr 19fiR nwmo
from the U.S. Embllssv in

qu(•stlon s both ahout its safety

and efflcaey.
The documents suggest a go -

thCit wrrr traded on thr issuP of

President"s war
on drugs is a bust

In the face of

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The right choice.

�Page- 4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Monday, September 10, 1990

Middleport. Ohio

By The Bend

Cleveland defense shines in 13-3 victory over Pittsburgh
CLEVELAND tUPI I AI
halftim e, the Cleveland defend
ers got together and and faced
the bruta l truth If thev ~~;ere
going to bPal the Pittsburgh
Steeler s, thedefensewasgomgto
have to find a way to get the ball
Into th e end zone
l.r•ss tha n fourmm utcs 1n to the
lt11rd quartet, thev ca me up w ith
thr· b1g pla v they n&lt;'cclr•d to turn
thP game a10und when c-orn('!
bat'k Anthon\ Rl a\lork scooped
up .1 ~1Prnl Hog&lt;' fumbi&lt;' and

finished the game with 210 yards
lncludtng just 49 on the ground
while CIPveland was held to J5H
TheStel'll'rshadl4ftrstdownsto
I 1 for the Browns
Th e ha"J hillin g game left
players on both Sid es hurting.
and Pittsburg h safet v Thoma s
Everett was r at ried off the field
on a stretc he1 after takmg a knep
from Kev1n Mack l o th e helmel
Evflret l suffe1ed a concussiOn
and cut forehead
Mack, whogatncu 4'&gt; yards on

Brlslet completed 17 of :12
passes for 19.! yards and was
Intercepted !wtce. He was sacked
three limes. was toughed by the
Browns twice, and was hit hard
ory ot her occaSions when he did
manage to get the ball off
" I don 't know exactly who
came through all the time. but
th ey put pretty good pressu r e on
me " Bri ster sa id. "I t ilearmng
JolJ Walton's nt?w offense) ha s
been fru stra ting for a while now
l' ts just somethtngwe'tegoln gto

Jl.ll Pd :10 vard s for the g&lt;~m(· ·..,
on lv luulhdown 1n CIP\(' Lmd "
lJ J w1n U\t£'1 P1tt sbur gh
M1ddk• lmebdfkcr Mike John
son v.ho JU St s1gnrd o~ ron!I,H'I d
wrrk ago. fun·ed the fumblr·
.lf'T J v K.tu!l{ kJckPd rv.o fu·l d
goals for C'i r'l'l' i and. whrt h

s1x carries. Jef1 thP g.JmP la tP In
th e fa st h alf w1t h tJ broken r lng
flngrr on his Iff! hand and did no!
Jrturn
Vvh! lP HL:~y l nck's louchdown
ga l(' defending ~F(' C&lt;'nllal
, ha m piOn ClrvPlanrl .~ 7 .l lri:id

have to work on and try to g et
brttr1 '
Ko sa 1 &lt;ilso was under hPa vv
piess uJP all day and was sackrd
a rareer high SPYPn llmes HP
comp lc ted 13 of 30 passes for 120

Opt' nf'(j

up ! h(' W' dson fo1

th!•

second st ra1 ght H'tl l \\llhd ~~In
ove r Plt ls hu 1g h 1 ds l ~ t' ,l l th1•
B1owns sc01rd tllli.'f' dPIPnsi\1'
touc hdown s 111 L1ll (] ~\ tn m1•r llw
S t erle ! ~ &lt;~1
1'1111' 1' Hl\1 ' 1 s
Stad tum
'AI h alfltnw lh ( dl'fP ns1· ..,di d
wt' IC gomg to m ak (' &lt;.1 b1g pl.n
scJtd Blay lock " th11cl Vf'ar pro
out of \\-m ston Salrm v. ho 1s
Sid! tmg Ill p! ,lt \' o f fh(' 111JUlt fl
M&lt;11 k Haq)('J 'Wf' kn{'V. Wf' h.nJ
to sco re Wr k nPv. \.I. P hMJ to
m&lt;.~kr something ht~ppt ' n to g t·t
l hP ball rollin g
1\o t mu&lt;. h was happrn mg V.ll h
r tllwr of fr nsP, as th•• Stl't' h'l s

wt th .1 . 30 gone In the t hlld
qudrtr 1 . thrdPfenSf' puttogethf•r
d hu gf' sPnPs m thf' fn st half
~\hr n th{'\ ltm Jted th PSIPP ler s to
d 19 \&lt;JI'd Gar v A l ldt&gt;Json fwld
~ oa t .tftC'r A.aronJone s r ecovered
J 11PJn!P Kosa 1 fumblr at thr•
flrov. ns 1
!'wo Junn 1ngpJ 1vs 1r sult ed ln J
Jo ss ol on(' \£tirl bPforr Bubb\
l111st r•r s thud du~~;n pas s for
HogP fl' ll Jnrom pletP
'WhPn \O U gt•t It on thf' Olll'
\OU \f' go t tu b,• d blf' to punch It
1n
~a id
Pttt ~.; burgh Coa c h
Ch uck :\o ll
Df'frn sf' gavp us
g 1 pa f f JC'ld pcs tll o n and vou \I '
go1 tobP rlblrt o pun c hJt 1n It Si.l'
s1mplr as tha t

vaJds
"It's scatv.' Cleveland euaeh
Bud Carson sa 1d of thP prrs su rP
o n his quartr1bark
'Spvpn
S3&lt;'ks Is way too murh "
On P1t1s burgh 's second pla v
aft PJ thr Bl ay lock touc hd own.
f n•r saft&gt;tv Th&lt;.~ne Gas h st(•pp(_'d
lnftontofaBriStf'rpassiniPndPd
f01 J-l oJ,:wa ndrcturnrd itl6\aJd s
to lhf' r Jpveland 9 to sr t up

I( auric s 28 yard f1eld goa l
fhf' Cl rH' land offense fmallv
lnO\Pd t hP ball on JI S llf'.''l.l
possrssiOn, gomg bl va rd s 1n 14
pl,t vs V.llh KauJJ c rapping !tiP
ll tJve wllh a .J 7 \a td f1i'ld god l
that gavr ClevP ictnd a 1:13
ad\·&lt;Jnl&lt;.igr ThP Bro\.\J ns held thr
b &lt;:~ ll fo r 10 Ob on that possPssJon

"II really was Important to
control the ball for that amount of
time, give the defense a rest and
get that field goal to go ahead by
more than a touchdown," Kosar
said "It wasn't a beautiful
performance by us , but we won
and that was the matn th mg "
Grayson sto pped Pittsburgh s
final dr ive whr-n he Intercepted

Brtslf'r .t! the r leveland 15 ~~;ith
:IK second s left
With th e Cle;eland offensive
line strll slruggltng Carson said
his defPnse once agam1 s gomg to
ha vf' to carry the club unt il th e
offrnsr ga tn s some cons1stencv
" We're gomg to have to pla v
good defen se and give our offen se
tlm r to mature," he said

Th P fr rs hm en mrmbrrs of thf'
llhto\..,, Thtl nl ll 11]1 \ t l

Majors

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CINCINNATI tUPli - Thr•
Clncrnn a!l Bengals needed a
furious 15 point fourth quarter
rally Sunday to fmallv subdue ,,n
Pmotlonally charged new breed
of New York J ets .
Trailing 20-10 earlv tn the final
period, the Benga Is scored f our
!tmcs in t he final 10 mmut es to
wtn 25 20 and spo il the head
coachmg debut of Bruce Cos let. a
Benga ls' ass ist am the pa st n1nr
yPa! s w ho took ovf'r th P Jets t hts
st? ason
"It was. a good Win for u s.
because we were playing a tram

as rmotlonallv high as there l'Vl'r
~~;t il be, " said Bengals Coach
Sam Wyl'he ·The .Jets want ed to
w1n for the11 new coarh "
· Wr rdmt• hPrr to wtn an d
though w• • dldn'r get the JOb doni'
I'm p1 nud of mv plavers brcau sr
they pl.t yc·d theit guts out.'
Cos lrl said
·11 was dn rxc Jtl n,ll
f'Xp('llf'll C'P fur m P '

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Layette shower held
A layette shower wa s held
recently for Ruth Bush at St
Paul Lutheran Church i n the
fellowship hall
Games were played and pr izr•s
were awarded to Joyce Davis
and Heather McPhail. The door
prize was won by Heather
McPhail.
Hosting the shower were
Teresa Wilson, Becky Vance.
Judy Elchln~er and Mtldred Fry
Attending were Carole, Su
zan ne and Teresa Bush, Mary ,
Mary Beth and Donald Bush ,
Violet Bush; Connie Tuc ker .
Betty Pigott ; Carol Rhodes,
Eloise Stiles, Nina Craddock ,
Kay Platter, Barbara Fry; Susie
and Leigh Mash , Agnes Dixon ,
Joyce, Emma Lou Helen and
Elizabeth Davis , Kelly Eichln
ger , Jennifer and Denise Mora .
Suzie Will; Bell} Ann WoUe ,
Alberta Loftis, Selma Ca ll; Sallv
Savage; Cindy Ctump, Carolyn
Rgush, Robin Shamblin, Chris
Una McGuire, Debbie Wayland,
Sharon Pratt, Stacy and Ste·
phanle Wilson , .lulla Norris,
Nancy Morris, Anne Adam s, Pat
and Sandy Philson , Sharon
Gibbs, Naomi Yeager La Vera
Yeager; Sally Ross, Beverly
Yeager; Ida Diehl, Mary Roush ,
Nancy Lou1se Powell , Catol
Kennedy; Co nnie Ca rleton, Ra
chel Jennings, Ginny Ward, E;a
Robson; Lenora and' Wllmetta

The .Jets, a slu ggis h, discont
r•nted l ·l2 team a year ago
appea t ed highly mouvated Su n
day under Cosl et as they ga\e th e
favor ed Bengals all they could
handle
·Bruce Cooslet 1s building "
who le new at utudr and a who I(•
new at mospherr wi:h lhr .JP ts"
said New York quarterback Ken
O'Brien, who f ired a parr of T D
pas ses Su nd av
It '..; exciting
he&lt;.' a u se Br ure 1s gom~ to build .1
\\-l n ner he1r "
Th P .Jets were on t hP br rnk of .1
h1g wm Sunda v , r• nroyr ng a 20 111
lead ~~; ith 13 43 to pl.tv Hut
Cinclllndl l, \\-hich faliPd to S( nrP
a touchdown 1n lhP fu st h.J!f

ThP RPn g.J io.; tH'gd n tiH' II ('fHllf'
back on Boomer F\ o.; J.J son " ] v.J! d
touchdown p~1ss Io , Ia mt's Hr ook s
wi th 9 46 1cmainlng Lf' ss th.1n 1:1
mmutf' la1Pr , sa fPI\ D.n Jd
Fu l r hPI blil i' Pd on il :ird o~ nd l X .11

mrnt ,Jfi PI thf' tournamf'nt Rill
Child s of th e Jaymar C,ou Club
hosted a rook-ou t fo r the o2
lr agUL' go llrts. assJStrcg Childs
with lhf' rook o ut wen~ Jac k
Sla &gt;ln Cella McCov Wa rre n
H,ut .lud) Har t •nd Fenton
' I c!VIOJ

Th (' M~u.turlf'r s now 20 ·1 on lhP
Vf'dl \\- Ill travPI to Wf'll s ton fo1 a
TVC lll.Jirh on Monda\ n1ghl

'T h.Jt \ nnpo1 t.rnt IH•t .tuSP so
much of th p gc~m1' IPvolvf' ~.;
til

ound ht'l JJU '&gt; IIIOrl"
Oshkosh lllPs sf' d v.i1h

sPt of
'n!Cl' hlltl'IS ' 111 F1elds Pslrma
11on hPlcl off 1ht • HPdwomPn to
w 1n tlw m&lt;:~l c h Zem p le1 ,Jg.lln
It'd ltw g.trnl's \\llh mru • ki lls
w i t h Hoop .lnfl Hu -, ton s uppl v 1ng
fl\ '1' t'tll'h Sh.1 1p ch1ppNI 111 w11h
th1 Pt' dig~ . J g d m~l Os hkos h anrl
Hoop 1 rr·o, drd tiu PP solo blocks
T h e• 1\ or th ('p ntJ.il lll dtrh was
nnr of ou1 lwltt 'l g &lt;.~mf' s
Ftf'ld s s.tlrl .1s ( oopPr took
mmmc~nd v.1th r&gt;1ght ki ll s Ho op
Jddrd ft\t' .J nrl Zf'mptrr and
ln g1 am t• .Jt h 1 .1mf' up w1!h fo u1
Hoop addrd ft\ r hloc k so los to I hP
pffoit. \~lth Shr1 1p anrl foopf'l
t)) lllglll g Ill l\\ 0 Sf'l Vl llg .JCf'S
il

.lp lf'f' ('

SPPclrcJ l ou Ji h 111 tiH• I mill s !hi '
RPdwonlP n hdt 11Pd Mi l li gan
r ill I fo 1 Wl ns uf J',I1 l'1 ~ Fie l d s
( !Nittrd M!IIJ~.ul s SI'J ~P rPcrp
!Jo n Wl l h kl'l'fJin g up tht• rompP I I
tHHI hu r ll uup .wd Co opf'l fo 1g r d
J ht\ ld Y..l lh Plgh l k r\Js f'JCh !O
lhf'll nf'dit Zc&gt;mptPr also supp
lrrd foot ki lls .t nd two srrvlng
c~ct ·s wht lf' Ingram ra mf'upwllh
tv.o hlcx k solo s
l'h&lt;• Redwomen !1mshed !h&lt;'
touJn Jm r ntv.hf'nth pvlos1 l l l rl
II l rl . lo lllm o1' BPnf'dJrt 1n thC'
fin tal s
'Th!'\ didn I !)lm\ Ui.i .tWa\ .
F tt•lcls s.1 1d In tht • st't o nd g.tnw
l h1 '\ hJd us drmn I (I but V.&lt;'

ca mt • b,u k .rnd g J\t' 'h f'm d
ganH' Hut dJ..: dlns t .1 l r·.tm lh, tt
good H ILl \ .ill t ,JIIO! fl tn fJJl
hehmd
Howrve1 l'oope1 addf'd 11 ktlls
to RIO C randP s g.J illP, w hllf'
Hoop lf't'Oirlt •d s ix &lt;~nd Zr&gt;mptPI
111rl

ln gr,ml

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f1m shrd l hl'

rn.Jich wit h fou r ch gs
" L ook mg ba ck un 11 11 w01~

the .Jets' 12 and chased down
O'Br ren 1n the end zone for a
sa fl'l y That brought the Bengals
to within 20 19
That wa s a big mtstake." said
('oslet ' It was a rollout pass, a
dtffir'ult pla y, and we dtdn 't
f'Xf'CUt(• If WPII .
&lt;~etttng the ball back after th e
safi' I Y, the Bengals moved 3o
va td s tn rtght plays to set up a
1-1 ' "' d field goa l b1 Jtm Breech
for a 12-20 lead ~~;Jth 4 53 left
Aftr•r the Je ts turned th e ball
OH'l un down-;, BrrPch kJ cked a
17 va1der w1th 2 12 toplav to put
!hP fina l ma t gln a! 2j 20
· I lt ke to think J ktck th e ba ll
wt•l l 1n C! ur 1al s1tuatwns." sa1d
111 Prrh " Fortunatel v, tod av I
hd cl thr opp01 tumt\ to p!Ovt' It
A df'spr&gt;r al ton Jets· dn vr In th r
!mal 1\H J minul es endrd w i th
Ful chP r l nle rceptrng ,tn O' Bnrn
pa so.; 111 thP Pnd zonP \\lth 2 ~
seconds left
" The on lv l htng I was tr v1ng to
do WJ S ffiilkP SUI(' thiS gU}
( 111 tended 1 rcr1 ver Rob Moore 1
didn t C&lt;J[(' h 11 . Fulch er sa td
''ThP ball ru st happened to come
do\\-n m 11l\ hand s
A Iough Cincinna ti defr nsP
hrlprd mak&lt;' t hr comeback poss1
bh• bv stopptng a .let s' ft rst and
goal at the I ea rly 111 the fmal
period I' hre e plav s resu lt ed 1n a
lo ss of threP ya rd s fm the .Jet s
and for cPd them to sf' l!l e lor a
2b vard P,tl Leahy field goal T he
third down play was an rmba1
1ass1ng at temp t at an rnd arou nd
bv r OOkiP Doug Well sandl .
ptckf'd up Just J wf~P k ago f1 om
th e Bc ngal s. which trsultf'(1 Jn .1
l Vdl d loss
Th at hUll.' l osl et sard "\\'• •
USPd

an

lll PX pPl i P flf'p&lt;J

pidVI'l

and th e Bengals didgnoscd tt
vrrv \Nf'll Cin c innati was PX
trr mrlv tPnacJOus on dPfrnsP "
·'Tha t goa l linP s! .1nd." so~1d
Wvr hr ' gavP us llfl'
Bf' forr f1 nrinnatt 's fo u r1 h
quartet r xploston thr• &amp;•ngal s
managed onl y ,, 4.1 yard f1 eld
goal bv I~ree c h in the seco nd
quartr1 .md .1 10 vau.l TD tos s
I rom Es 1ason 1o E tldit' Brown m
lhr third p&lt;&gt;rlod
Esl ason completed 17 or Ill
pas srs for 202 yards a nd was
Jntrr cPp!Pd t'&gt;NJcr O ' Bnen hit '27
of 4q pass{' S for 100 va 1ds w11 h onP
111tr rcrpuon
O'Bnrn thr Pw TD passPs of .Jf)

,t nd 9 va rds lo AI Toon. ~ho h.rd
&lt;' tght catches for II~ y.Hfis .1nd
suff r1rcl a mmor lnJur v d unn g
lhP .J f' t S clPSpPraiJOil d 11\'P In t hl'
r l os tn g srco nds
" I got h it In the storn"' h and
Wdsd li tllf'dJzzv ' Tnonsd Jd · It
wa s not hing srr ious I m OK
A lot of pos1!1 ve lhrngs hap
p(~ n r d out thPrP today for us.'
ddcled Toon "Brucl' Cos ier Is
givin g us that v.mning mes sagr
Wt•' rf' going to imp1nvp as wr go
,d ong ·

.t

good tompPtJtJon " Fi&lt;"ld s S&lt;Hd
"" 1hp f{'.tm 'sO\ r1 &lt;J II r0rord wf'n l
10 q l
I ~\a s pl rasf•d lhd t v.p
r , Jffif ' homl' Wllh th.lf but hdd wr·
pl.t vt'd a t ou r full pDt(•ntlal I lhmk
\U' would havr donr het1r1
WP
d1d " lot of good thing s il nd ~~; e
know v. r ('.til rompp tf' but Wf'
ha\1' to wo rk on ou1 sPrvc
JI' C'l'Jvlng, wh tch I lh1nk IS ou r
'APak f' SI ff' dtUrf' Tig ht nov,."
ThP RPdv.. omPn w tll host th('!r
fn sl homl' m.JII h of lhl' sea son
Thursdd\ .11 I) p m
aga1 ns1
Wilmin g l nn .1nd C' on co rd
rW Va r

Middleport
Block Party
Saturday
Sept. 15, 1990

"Don't Miss It"

Distribution set

DANCE CLASSES AV AILABI.E -The Middleport Arts Council Is sponsoring a series ol dance
classes, ballet, tap, Jazz and exercise. The classes
will be taught by Shirley Quickel ol The Dance

Company. To register, call Mrs. Quickel at
992-77MI or Uue Baker al 992-7733 . Pictured, 1-r,
are students of Mrs. Quickel, Jenny Carpenter,
Mindy O'Dell and Lori RuKSell.

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-----Sports briefs----

- Track and Field
Mark Witherspoon stole tht'
glo r v from track' s two hotl&lt;•st
c u JT(•nt n amrs. scon ng a sur
pri se \l ctorv rn th e m en's 100
mel PIs at an Inter nationa l m eet
at !{rl' ll l lc~ l y Witherspoon out
sprrnt ed ' "o of his more famou s
· Santa Mon ica Trac k Club tea m . m ates. handing new G rand Prix
champwn Leroy Burrell his
second defeat of the season

Introducing
Dr. Randy Hawkins

Witherspoon won In 101:1 se
conds, with Car l Lewis second at
10 14 . Burrel l. placed thi r d at
10.25 Newly crowned women' s
Grand Prix champion Merlene
Ottey or Jamaica beat Evelyn
Ashford In the 100 Ottey took an
early lead and ~~;o n going away In
10 85 seco nd s. with Ashford
breaking lhe tape In 11.07.
Michelle Finn took th ird at II 17 .

P

leasa nt Valley Hn!';pHaJ Is

By United Press International
GATHERING OF THE CLAN Hunk of hunks ,John F .
Kennedy Jr., may have taken flak for twice flunking the New
York ba r exam, but he Is still the favorite among Kennedy
watch ers. John-John drew the loud es t cheers when he turned
and waved to the crowd Saturday at the Cape Cod wedding of his
cousin, Kara Kennedy , to Washing ton architect Michael Allen
The most poignant moment came after the ceremon y, as th e
divorced parent s of the bride, Ted and Joan Kennedy , stood
hand -In-hand on the church steps next to the happy couple

KASEM COMPLAINT: Disc jockey (; a.•ey Kasem , an
American born Arab of L ebanese desce nt Is concerned about
the anti -Arab sentiment berng sttrred up by the Middle East
situ ation Kasem says Arabs have been "demonized and
dehumanized" by stereotyping 'V.e think of them, to quot e an
Israeli gPnera l , as coc kroac hes to be kept rna bottle ." ' he says
In People magazine 'That s not th e kind of mmd set tha t ts
hl'alth y for the world ." Part of the problem 1s Ho l l y~~;ood .
Kas em says · Sevent y years ago 'The Sheik' began to creat e 1n
the minds of the Am eric an people the 1dea that al l Arabs we re
knife-wielding, gun toung womanizers not to be trusted," hl'
said " Th en television ca me along and t! got even worse I don 't
have any objections to a show wtth an At ab as a b.Jd guy . but
where are the Arab policemen ? Where ar r lhf' Arabs who are
l ike John Sununu, the president' s ch 1ef of sta ff , or George
Mitchell, th e Se nat e m ajortty leader ?'
KI1'I'Y SPEAKS: Kill)! Dukakls, wtfe of former presidential
candidate Michael Dukakls, says no on o should have been
su rpri sed that she went so far as to drink halrspray and nail
polls h remover befo re get lin g t rea tment for her a lco hollsm "If
you re an alcoholic, you understand.'' the Massachu set ts first
lady says In an lntervl ew air ing Monday on "Good Morni ng
America " I didn't want to commit suicide I ju st wanted to get
away from the awful feelin gs I was having and the depression,
which just kept going on and on ·

PRINCELY PAIN . Th e heir to th e Brltt sh th rone says he feels
"awful" after surgery to repai r the royal right arm. brok en In a
June 23 polo accldenl Prince Chari"" limped out of the Qu een's
Medical Center In Nottingham Saturday leanmg heavily on a
cane after a week long stay to recover from the surgery
Doct ors removed a bone ft om hi s hlp and Inserted It and a metal
plate In his upper arm to promote healing Asked how he felt, th e
prince sa id, simply , " Awful ," then smiled wryly and got Into a
waiting car with his wife, Princes s Diana

Wolf Pen personal notes
.Jeff and Peggy Bole tra veled to
Winston Sa lem, N C., with a
friend where they viSited rela·
tlves and friend s They returned
home on Aug
Harley and Kathryn Johnson,
Ida Murphy and Iva Johnson
enjoyed a cookout at the home of
.Jeff and Pegg) Bole on Labor
Da y. Out door games we re
played

:n

plea~d lo Wt'lrom e H.1nd.dl f H awkin s, M U

to It s mf'dtc a l sf a fT Ur
Hawklns earned his medical &lt;k~ree In 19t:l7 from the Marshall University Sr hool of Medlt'lne.
wh e rt he rompleted a three -y~a r re-sidr-nry In l ni,.rnaJ Medlcme While at Mar~ hall h~ attended a
rombinedAmerJran Suvle l st-mlnar on ~troke r1 euroloey h eld In th e Sov iet Union In 19b7, he studird
nf"umlozy at the National Hospll al for Nervous lJlsonlt'rs In London. an ln1 ern a \lona.lly rf' cogntzcd
ren trr for neurolo~ . A memhf"r of 1ht" Amt"rlc.m Mtdtral Assorlallon and an assorlal e member of the
Am erlran Co lle~e of Physician s, he ha s co-authored arllr les that have appeared In nallonal
publJraUons, Including The Joumal n{Cnmporallue Neurology and an upcoming Issue of Chl·~ t . an
lnlemallonal journal or respiratory disease

Dr Hawkins Is now see in~ pati ent s In hi s onlre tn Suite 13 of the Pleasa nt Val ley Ho,pllal
Medical Offi&lt;e l:lrrllrlln~ Appointments may be made by r aJ ling IJ041 675 7700

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
The family of professionals

Mr and Mrs Jeff Bole, Hor ner
Hill, were Tuesday visitors of
Mr and Mr s Charley Smith
Mr and Mrs Mike Lavender
and son were Labor Day visitors
ol Mr . and Mrs Kevin Knapp,
Mich elle, Amy and Ash ley
Mr and Mr s. Tom Summer
fi eld and Crys tal. Medin a, were
Labor Day weekend visitors of
Mr and Mrs Robert Rus se ll and
families

PLEASE ENTER MY ORDER FOR ·
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
"Thru the Vearo In Picture ..
_ __

Copvl~•t@

The Alfred United Methodist
Church will celebrate It s homecoming on Sunday Regula r
ser vl ces will be held In the
morning There will be a basket
dinner at 12 30 p m and after·
noon service at 1· 30 p m featur·
lng Russl'll Spenc er and the
Soutltern H ill Singe rs
Visitors of Mr and Mrs Wilbu r
Robinson were their daughter
and husba nd Lee Ann and Kirk
Flck ol Evansto n, Ill The Robin·
so ns, Gay Ann and Bob Burke,
and Wilma and Harold Hendrr
so n hosted a chicken barbecue at
Woods Grove which was at
tend ed by many relatives and
friends An evening hayri de
ended the festlvittes
J am es Brooks, local, and Pam
Pia Riggs, Parkersburg, W Va
were united In marnage at th e
church on Aug 31 by Rev Sharon
Ha usma n A reception foll owed
Lon Ritchie has ac cepted

The Racine F.JII FL'sllv,ll will
be held Sept 29 starting at
approximately 9 a m
There will be food , arts and
cra rt s. a parade and Harve st
Queen
Spa ces will be available for
vendors at a price of SIO
Th er e will be a ca r show at 1
p m and live enterta inment by
Country Bl end , Co untry Free,
Go spel Harmony Ci r cle Fam ily,
Hart Brothers. Mount ain Fever
Band and Strictly Business
There w111 be gas and steam
engines for Interested partie s
In case of raIn the mu sic will b&lt;&gt;
held In the Souther n Hi gh Schoo l
Auditorium

ViJiting
Charl es 1Duke ) and Be tt y
Spa un and T im. Joy and Zachery
Imboden. all of Racine. spent
La bar Da y weekend visiting
Navy Ail man Kevin Spaun at
Milli ngton , Tenn
Besides touring th e Naval Air
Station at Millington. the group
traveled to Memphis where they
enjoyed a sightseeing cruise
along the Mississippi River
aboard lh e I sland Quaen.
Airman Spaun, a 1988 graduate
of Southern High School, Is
assigned to the Aviation M ainte·
nance Support unit of Naval Air
Station Memphis at Millington .
Tenn

NAME _____________________________
ADD~ S

$29 95

1 8IJ Tax
+ 3 00 Po11age &amp; Hllndhng

________________________

CITY _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

$34 75 Tor•!
Shipped .,,...,.,... ~ ,.,. u s

STAIT. ZIP'-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

_ __ (opvl"' l@ $29 95 Picked up ol Me\g• Museum

+lBOTax

$JiTs To!AI

emplotment In Ca ldwel l School
Dis trlct as a business education
teac her She and her so n, Larry
have moved to the area
Labor Day weekend guests of
Cl ara Follrod and Nma Robinson
were Mr s Follrod's niece and
husband, Mr and Mrs Don
Springer, Dolton, Il l
Donna Stearns , Centerville ,
Va , v isited her parent s Mr and
Mrs Delbert Stearns They all
went to J,lle Stearns ances tral
home at Wayne where they
visited his brothers, Delbert and
Dale and other relati ves and
fr iend s
Mr and Mr s. Clatr Follrod,
Edith Harper, Mr. and Mrs
Clarence Hender son. attended
th e Sliver Ridge Ce ntenm al
Nellie Parker visited Mr and
Mt s Howard Parker Other
visi tors were t heir daughters
family. April. Todd and Karle
Lew is. Peru . Ind

Racine Fall Festival slated

DEADLINE&amp; DECEMBIR 8, 1990

ORDER ILAIK

Total amount mcioted $ _ _ __

Valley Dnve, Pornt Plea sant. WV 25550 (304) 675-4340

Commodity distribution will be
held In Meigs County on Sept. lB.
9 30 a.m. to noon at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds, Tuppers
Plains Fire Station and the
Pagevllle Town Hall There Will
be no Ra cine dlstnbullon site
Bring a Food Commodity card
and a paper bag

.--People in the news---. Alfred area happenings

o1 ' oii )Hinll

\.oll htl r. lll t!lrol' ol I •h I• •
(I no ini'W II I ,11 l o 11 ,,

&lt;

I'hr• Marauder s hosted a T VC
toUJ namf' n1 on Thursda\ O:l l th e
.Javma r Golf C'Iub and th e
Al ex.t nder Spar tan s slipped pas t
the host team to post a w1nmng
sco lt' ofl 61. one stroke ahead of
Meigs's Hit Federa l Hockmg
fini shed In thtrd with a 179
followed bv Helpre wtth a 1~ 0
Trimble fini shed 1n fifth pla ce
wi th a 182 Well ston foll owed wtth
a IRR. Vtnlon C'o un tv had a 192
and Nelsonville York flm shed
wt !h a 200
Chri s Casto of AIPxander w as
thr ma tch m edalist wtth an evrn
pa1 .14 J amey Little and Phil
Hopvat ter led MPigs With a scor e
of .19. Jav Har n s carded a 4 1.
Tom Peterso n a '1.1 .Ja son II at t ,1
J.J and Mike Van Meter a 4h
Dtrk I!Ltpe of Pomer 01 " as t hP
cour sP mal shall fo1 lh r tour nJ

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mf'nl r~nd p 1m Ptl o.; hp is a good
( om pPI 1101
Fl{'lcl s 1Pm,u kPd

MHS golfers second
in two golf tourneys
The M eigs Ma ra uder goll team
co ntinued to have an out s tanding
season finishing SC'Cond In t" o
tournamrnts las t week JUS! onr
stroke off the pa ce In both
I n the fir s t ma tch , a foul lf'clm
even t held at Hidden Valle1 (,o tf
Course In Po mt P!('asa nt on
Tuesdav, the hos t Pomt Pl easant
Rig Blacks won thr t o u rn&lt;.~ mf'nt
wllh a scorr of 17 1 Mr1gs
fini shed second ~llh" 172
Sou th ern onlv fo u1 s t1 nkPs
ba c k with a 175 and \V a h.Jrn d
finish ed with a 190
Jay Har n s of Mf'Jg s v. c~ s thf'
m atch medaliSt w1th a Ill. Ttm
Pf'trr son turn ed 111 an o ut s tr~nd
mg round of 41 a s hp pla\ rven
par th r la st f1 vr holps .LJH'\
Li lli(' addrd a 4 ~J. Ph il H ova t tr 1 .1
·I n and Mike VanMete r .tddPd ,,
.J ~ R.rsrn'f' sco r rs for M&lt;' lg"
Included Ja so n Ha11 and .1.1\
f rrm ra ns a 4.\ and Ch 1 is Kn1gh1
added a oO
.J &lt;:~ mJe Andrrson of So uth Prn
had .1 ~ood round of 42tto lead 1hr
wa\ fm thr Torn adoPs. o01P1
sro H•r s for thr purp le and go lei
WPJ f' l uhn Hobac k and .lc~v so n
Cocl nPJ Parh Wl l h ,1 -11. J osh
Corlm•r added a 4o. Andv H.1er ,J
~1l dnd lhdd WI SP a ;~1

Page-5

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came ba ck to hand "'orth Cen t• al
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Against Alm a . T eresa Zempte 1
paced the Rro Grande oflen se
~~;lth 11 kills. while Shell\ Hoop
and Shann on Hu ston rach hart
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ft\(' cJtg s Hoop I f'rordPd thJPf'
SPJ VJng a cps and Robin Sh.11 p
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Elmhurst f al tered In both
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p1 obiPms. .t s lhr R!o la d1rs
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Co opP r .urd fou r b\ Zemp tPI
Hus ton supp liPd two dig s \.\ tllll'
Hoop sholl'd up th1' ga m r with ct
tno of solo bl oc k s In lhf' st•co nd
gi;imf' sP1trJ Sharp sprvcd 1r1
consPru ti vf' pomt s as Elmhu1 r.. l
~Nas. una hlp to grt It ' offrn sP o ff
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Monday, September 10, 1990

Bengals rally, trip lets, 25-20

RG volleyball team nets third place
l nJ\'f' l s11v of Rio (Jrandr vol lP\
b&lt;1ll tr am go t a c hanc{' to s hov..
thrtl li:ilPn t ovt• J thr W('f' k('lld .1 ..,

Blaylock said he had a premo
nit ion he was going to come up
w1th a big play against the
Steelers
"Believe 11 or not, I dreamed
about It las t nt ght, ' Blaylock
satd "(dreamed I was going to
make a big p lay . All last nigh t!
had fla shes of r unnin g som&lt;&gt;thin g
rn

The Daily Sentinel

Smd dNd .. ......., .,.,. ""
M11g5 Counry Hlormc.ol Soclory
p 0 Bo· 143
P""""'Y OH 45769

T hoSf' .Jttendlng are to bring
la\N n chairs

Ca ll Jovce or Mindy at 949 · 2~93
for space. resprva t to ns or fu r the r
mformatlon

Church dedication
held recently
Dedicat io n Sunday was held
recent ly at the Hlllsldr Bap tist
Church
Guest spea ker for the ded1ca
tlon ~~;as Rev Don McQu een,
r;alllpnlls FPII}
Special slngmg was by Angle
Willett, "H&lt;&gt;Ip Me Stand Lord ·
The Redeemed sa ng 'What a
Meeting In the Air" and "Giorv
Divine " T he Chrld ren of God
sang "Wp'rp Can na R1 se. ·
"Building Tl1 is House · and
" Thf're' s a Ml!ac le 1n th r
Making "
A new bib le was presented to
Pastor .lam es R. Acree by Dan
Hood from all the members of th e
church

Fruth Pharmacy
Fills More
Prescriptions!
There Must Be A
Good Reason!
Have A question
about your
medication?
Call your

Fruth
Pbannacist today!
He cares
about your health!

Stinderella meets
In the Tuesday mght cl ass of
Sl inderella at Mason , Joan
Vaughan l ost the m ost weigh t
and Lois Ann Rr1tm1rr was the
runner up
The Mond ay mght F1vr Pomts
class will reopen tomght at6 p m
and th en• IS a possrbllity that a
class will open In Pomt Pleasant

Lei fheit , Patty Cook, Kathy
Moore, Gloria Kloes . Lisa and
Linda Riggs,
Rev
Laura
Shreffler; Martha and Heather
McPhail; Kim Calvert, Sylvta
Neece; Phyllis Drehel; Sue Fry ,
Ida Mae Clark, Rachael Downte ,
Lillian Moore; Mary Hamm.
Jea nne Braun and Teresa Fields

Helping Hands group
makes plans for retreat
7

The Womens' Ret real at the
Ohio Valley Christian Assembl y
on Friday and Saturday was
discussed at the recent meetin g
of the Circle of Helping Hands of
the Zion Church Christ held at Ute
home of Grace Warner. Stx
members will attend the retreat
Lucille Allen presided at the
meeting and had devotions using
an artlcre," Jesus Is Lord or My
Emotions ' She stated there are
negative and posll1ve emotions
with five steps to overcoming
tragedy In one 's life They ar e
shock, anger, bargalntng, de
pression and acceptance with
Inner peace .
The group will send a donation
to Grundy Mountain Mission,
Grundy, Va., for school supplies.
The Middleport Church or
Christ has Invited area churches
to a rally on Oct 6from9a m . to3
p m with Pam Perry, K.C C , as
speaker Five v.orkshops will be
offered
Kathryn Johnson requested
that anyone wishing to go camp
lng in October contact her by Oct

Grace Warner had the pro
gram usmg " Friends " as her
theme She used the example or
.Judas who was bitter that the
nard used In anointing was not
sold for money She stated that
people shou ld concentrate on the
positives of life Biblical exam
pies given wl·•·e Noah, who built
the ark to saVP, Jospeh, who
forgavr. Mo ses. who was raised
by Pharoah's daughter but remembered hi s kmsmen , Jesus
with the woman at the well Mrs
Warner read a fM)em from
M cGu ffey' s Reader and a poem
by Edgar A Gues t, "Make New
Friends But Keep the Old "
The next meeting will be Oct 4
at the home of Suzanne Warner
with th e Bible work "worship"
and the program. 'Show and
Tell "
Present besides those menli
oned were Ida Murppy , Evelyn
Thoma Peggy Bole, Hazel Stan
lev, Helen Eblin. Kathryn John
son, Ginny Wyatt and Marge
Purtell

Bahr family gathering held
The Bahr reumon was held
recently a t the VFW Hall In
Tuppers Plains
Attending were Lila Winters,
Vic VanMeter, Don and Lila Van
Meter , Orville Hill and Alvena
Van M eter, Brenda and Brandy
Woodrow, Amy Lee and John R
Bentz, Ken and Aile Ha ger ,
Howard and Goldie Russe ll,
Ellene &lt;Bahfl Leonard , Chick
and Donna Co nley, K athy Stone.
Norm an Ba hr , William L Wi ll,
Arvilla Frecker, D1ck and Kaye
Flck, Jane and Joev Coates

Jimmy Hensley, M ark Kay,
Sheena, Aaron and Jeremy Gil
llan, Randy, J anet , Randy II. and
Leah Koehler. Terri Bartee and
Brandon, Roger, Angle and Jo
shua Bahr, Scot t Wlellnsk l, Anita
Zielinski, Lavi na Brannon,
Roger and M ary Bahr, Kirk and
Lee Ann Flck, Eileen Bahr.
Mild red Lipsey, Victor Bahr.
Jim Bahr Vlck Gillilan and
Shellle Deari ng, Vicky Gillilan,
Pat Bahr, Russ Well, Cheryl
Sparks and Bill Bahr.

Woman joins
local salon
Abbv Fry, Rutland. has re
cently been employe d at For the
Bot h or You Beauty Salon In
Sy ra cuSE'
She Is a 19R9 cos metology
gra duat e of Meigs High School
She r ece ntl y received a degree tn
bat berin g and cosmetology m an
agem ent athOhlo State School of
Cos metology and T H E Barber
School in Reynoldsbufl: While In
sc hoo l tn Reynoldsburg she re
ce lved a Mi chael Co l&lt;' People
Sk ills Certification and a Go ld
well Halrcolor and PermanPnl
Wave Ce rtific ation
Appclntment s mav br made by
cal l ing 992 3982

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H&amp;R Block Offers Income
Tax Course In Pomerov•

Thou sands or people learn how
t o prepare Income tax returns
f rom H&amp;R Block and then
earn money as Income tax
preparers H&amp;R Block, the
world 's largest Income ta x
prepa ra tion service, offers its
Incom e Tax Course starting
Sept lOth. Morning, after·
noon, evening and weekend
classes are available
Experienced Instructors teach
tax law, theory and appllca·
lion. Classroom discussion and
practice problems
provide
students with a thorough understanding ol each tax topic
Included In 'the course. Stu·
dents learn how to handle In·
creaslngly complex Income lax
situations as the course pro-

Id eal for peop le who want to
Increase thei r tax kn owledge
the course teaches students
how to save montlv on 1helr
taxes and also prep ares them
for a rewarding career
The afforda ble fee Includes
textbooks and supplies Gra·
duates receive Cert ificat es of
Achievement and continuing
education units tCEU'sl Qual·
lfled graduatt'S of the course
may be offered job Interviews
with H&amp;R Block but are under
no obligation to accept employment
Those Interested ln more information about the. H&amp;R Block In·
come Tax Course may contact
the H&amp;R Block office at 618 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh . Ph. 614-

gresses.

~2-6674.

Rtg. 17&amp;.10-I))JfiM

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 10, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.House taking up post-Cold War defense spending
:
·
:
:
.

WASHINGTON \U P !) - The
dizzying plunge of post-Cold war
defense spending Is running
headlong Into the Iraqi crisis In
the House, and the downwar d
slide In military expenditures is
expected to temporarily stop or
slow significantly.
House Armed Services Chairman Les Aspln, D-Wis .. managIng the debate, to begin Monday,
says the $283 billion authorization figure In his bill is certain to
go up, but the size of the Increase
may not be known until budget
summit negotiators reach an
agreement that will affect the
defense leve l.
The Senate's bill calls for $289
billion in budget au thorlty, and
the final product out of the House
could equal or even exceed that.

The initial req uest was for $307
billion In spending authority and
$303 billion In actual spending,
figures that have slid downward
somewhat with Pentagon revi sions In a variety of programs .
The authorization bill provides
permission to spend money on
Pentagon projects in fiscai1991.
which starts Oct. I. and In
succeeding years for projects
that take more than a year. A
later appropriations bill - to a
large extent driven by previous
authorization bills - will actu ·
ally give the Defense Department the money It needs to pay
its bills In 1991.
The House bill equates to
actual spending of about $295
billion and the Senate bill tran slates to about $297 billion.

The latest Pentagon guess
about what the Iraqi operation
will cost - absent a shooting war
- Is In the $11 billion to $12 billion
range, but Saudi assistance and
monetary contributions from
others could hold down the U.S.
share.
If the budget negotiators decide to give Aspln more In
long-term spending authority,
the money Is likely to be added lo
accounts for fast ships to haul
troops and supplies around the
world, buying more of the new
C-17s or extending the lifespan of
the older C-141 cargo jet.
And If the negotiators decide
more In 1991 outlays Is the
answer, the money probably
would be added to the so-called
operations and maintenance ac-

counts to pay Immediate bills for
item s such as food, fuel, chemica l suits, equipment repairs and
such.
For the moment, Aspin believes Pentagon accounts will be
able to handle the strain of
paying for the Iraqi deployment.
He said that "without a shoot Ing war. lthe coso Is still low
enough" for exlstlng accounts to
deal with It with perhaps only a
little extra thrown ln.
House Speaker Thomas Foley,
D-Wash., termed the operation
"a special circumstance" In
terms of the budget and declining
defense spending.
"This Isn't something that we
are ready to assume as a
permanent condition ... and It
comes more under the heading of

Monday, September 10, 1990

emergency conditions than regular planning for I he future, .. he
said.
Analysts say the Saudi deploy ment will have lillie Impact on
the drive to cut back on st rateg ic
weapons such as t he MX and
Mldgetman missiles. thP B -2
stealth bomber, whic h m ay end
up killed. t he Trident submarine.
the Strategic De fen se lnttative
and the Mils tar war communciatlons satellite.
And the shipment of more than
100,000 troops to Sa udi Arabiaroughly 5 percent of the total U .S.
force and many of them reservists - also Is unlikely to have
much impact on the drive to
reduce the long- term size of thl'

cu t abo ut 500,000 troops over five
years. The House bill proposes an
initial cut of 129.000. with much of
It com ing from Europe.
But Operation Deser t Shield
co uld be a blessing to the M -1
tank, which the Pentagon soug ht
to phase out. Built at plant s In
Ohio and Michigan, t he tank line
co uld benefit by the prospect of

armed force s. Plans now arp tu

more conven tiona! w ea ponry.

lncrPased overseas sa les, par ticularly to the Saudis, which could
keep the lines operating for
several years . And the House
also wants to keep the lines open
anyway to upgrad e earlier mod els with the newest in night fighting technology .
The V-22 tilt -rotor Osprey al so
could benefit from the pu sh fo r

!Budget approach deadline
WASHINGTON tUPl)- Little
progress was reported In meet:ings between congressional
-budget negotiators as the dead: line for reaching a $500 billion
deficit-reduction agreement
approached.
The White House and congres•lona l budget negotiators, who
have been meeting since Frldav
· In the Officers' Club at Andrew's
Air Force Base, Md ., about 15
miles east of Washington, have
given themselves an unofficial
deadline of Monday to reach an
agreement.
President Bush has originally
Invited House Democratic leader
Richard Gephardt of Missouri,
who is taking part In the talks , to
the White House for a Monday
morning meeting, but that meel ·
lng was canceled late Sunday. a
· Gcphardt spokeswoman said. No
· rpason for thP cancellation was
glvL•n.

- But It was not clear whether
the meeting with Bush was
· designed to spur th e talks towa rd

a successful conclusion or to
allow the president to put his
personal stamp of approva l on
what negotiat ors may have
decided.
Bush. returning from Finland
after a one-day summit wllh
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbac hev, Is scheduled lO address a
joint session of Congress and the
American people on Tuesd av.
That address would be an ideal
time for Bush to try to rally the
nation behind th e series of
difficult and politic ally unpopu
lar spending cuts and l ax in
creases that are expected to be
part of the deficit reduc t ion
package being '' raft ed by
negotiators .
Upon arrival in Was hington
from Hels inki, White House Chief
of Staff .John Sununu sa id he had
been In touch with the budget
negotiators and could report "not
much progress " In the talks. He
sa id he expected the meetings
would continue through Monday.
Democrat s have prodded Bush
si nce the talks began on May 15 to

tell Americans about the sacrifices that would be needed to cut
the soaring federal deficit. Bush
has declined, however, sayl ng he
would prefer to address the
nation after a budget agreement

is rl'ached .
If negotiators fall to reach
agreement to cut the estimated
$168.8 billion fiscal year 1991
deficit , It would on Oct. I trigger
$105.7 billion in automatic spendIng cuts split between defense
and domestic programs.
Negotiators are trying to craft
a deficit -reduction packageol$50
billion In fiscall991 , which begins
Oct. I , and $500 billion over five

CAPt-: CANA VERAL . Fla .
Engineers replaced
leak ing fuel pumps aboard the
&gt;huttle Co lumbia over the wee
!end. with :'iASA mana gers
opti mistic the ship will be ready
for another takeoff try around
Sept. 17 to finally end a four·
month laun ch drought.
At nea rby launch pad 39B.
. meanwhile, engineers were rea d·
:y1ng the shuttle Discovery for
•blastoU on -a higher-priority $750
mUllan mission around Oct 5 to
ca rry the European -built
. Ulysses probe Into space for a
five-year voyage to the sun .
Ulysses was loaded Into Dis
covery's cargo bay Saturday,
and the ship's five -man crew flew
to the Kennedy Space Center
from Houston Sunday to review
emergency procedures and par
llclpate In a practice countdown .
The mock countdown. a t rad 1
tiona! test to make sure the
launch tea m Is ready for the real
thing, began at 8 a.m. EDT
Monday . It Is scheduled to end
Tuesday with the simul a ted
r ignltlon of Discovery 's t hree
·)!lain en111nes.
• ''This Is a milestone for us In
getting ready for ilaunchl."
co mmander Richard "Dick" Ri ·
Chards told reporters Sunday.
•We've st ill got some hurdles in
front of us over th ese nex t three
weeks, but ail of u s are confident
that nex t October. we're finallv

going to get Ulysses down t he
road on its five-year journey to
t he sun ...
Richards. 44, co-pilot Robert
Caba na, 41, Bruce M elnick, 40,
William Shepherd, 41, and Thomas Akers, 39, plan to climb
aboard Discovery Tuesday for
the final hours of lh e mock
countdown .
Discovery' s launc h processing
Is running abou t two days behind

schedule with engineers rontinui ng to assess the potential impact
of a slo w Freon leak In one of the
shuttle's two coo ling systems .
NASA spokes man Bruce Buckingham sa id It appears Discov ery ca n fly as Is, although
additional In spect ions will be
required before the issue Is
resolved once and for all.
" It looks !Ike we're not going to
have to replace any of the
1Freon; lines and with the
current liea kl r ate, we're proba·
bly go ing to be able to fi v as Is, ..
Buckingham said.
As for Columbia. engineers
worked to re move and r eplace a
package of three hyd rogen reclr·
rulatlon pumps In the sh uttle's
cramped engine room thai wa s
blamed for a furl leak that
grounded the ship last week .
Engineers rPmoved ins ulating

foam from around the pumps
Saturday and worked Sunday 10
remove the entire package . With
thf' repair work on sc hedule at

years.
Both Democrats and Republicans have put severa l proposa ls
on th e bargaining table, but It
was unclear Sunday how close or
far away they were from final
agreement. There had been
reports, howev er. that negotia tor s had narrowed I heir dlfferen -

abe walb alon1 lhe surf In

lronl of her hotel early Sunday momlnr alter

who left thei r na1ivf' la nd s to
launch new liv es.
A nig htmare for some. the
gatf&gt;w ay

f or new dreams for

many, the facilit y operated from
1892 to 1~54 and was th e star ting
point for the f am ilies of an
e stimated 140 million
Amer icans.
Visitors will be a bie' to en ter th e
main building through th e ba ggage room , j ust as immigrant s
did, and climb the Registry
Room sta irs that officials used to
spot asthmatics. hea rt patients
and others who were phy sica lly
impaired.
From there, visitors will be
allowed to see waiting room s
with original graffiti on the walb,
I he Special Inquiry Room where
rejected Immigrant s would
plead thPir cases, and a dormitory with thn'l'-li Pr i ro n pipe
bunks .
n PWI'st

proudly - wearing a g1PPn
rorsagC' - when her namr was

dom es ti c

se t a new launch date as early as

Monday
''We're very co nfid ent we can
meet Ihe early part of the week of
th e 17th, .. Buckingham said .
Columb ia 's seven- man crew
originally was sc heduled fo r
blastoff May 30. bul thl' shuttl e
was grounded lhe nlg hl before
i~toff by a hydrogen fuel il•ak
A seco nd launch attempt Sept.
1 was canceled because of
trouble with an on-board telescope, a nd a third try Sept. 6was
scu tiled by yet another hydrogen

lea k.
The lea k In May w as blamed on
damag&lt;-d seals inside a 17-lnchwlde fuel line fitting. A similar
lea k grounded the shuttle Atlan
tis In July . Bul engineers now
bellevP two leak s werE' prese nt In

May and that only one of th em,
the one Involvin g th e 17 -inch fu el
I ine fit ling, was fixed
It appears lhe leak last week

ca me from

th e rec!rculallon

pumps. which arP used to keep
superco ld l iquid hy drogen l'in·u
latin g through t he shuttle' s rn glnes before liftoff. H.epi,JCing
the pumps should fix the prob
!em. officials say.
Ass uming no other gli tc hes
crop up. Columbia could be ready
for the star t of yet another launc h
countdown as ear ly as Friday at 1
a.m EDT for a launc h attemp t
around 1:30 a.m . Sep t. 17.

i\ WELCOME GREETING -

Robert Horn·

designs at the :--lew Langton Arts
gallery. "The pier was the last
bastion of freedom for the kids . I
decided II was time to move.
Southern Ca lifornia ts becoming
a place full of wimps."

JOLIET . Ill. I CP I 1 - Richard
Speck Monday waited. with l ittle
rea l hope. word whet her he will
be freed on parole fo r the
sta bbing and st rangling 24 years
ago of eight st udent nurses - a
case prosecutors said "shocked
and dismayed the world ."
The Illinois Prisoner Review
Board had und er consideration
Speck's latest requ es t for parole.
one which drew mor e th an 21.0011
lett ers of protest.
In a hearing before the board
las t week, a clas sm ate and
relati ves of t he nu rses killed Ju lv
13. 1966. by Spec k pleaded with
with the board to keep the killer

hear in g. He J iso sk ip ped his las I
hea ring three yra r s ago.
· 'The pain and anguish caused
by this m an is more than I c an
expres s.·· said Betty .Jo Purvi s. a
rrl ati ve of one of thr V!C' Ilm s. "

Cook County Sta tr's All or npy
Cecil Pa r tee also ob)Pr l ed l o l hr
l atest par ole requr st
" Th e murders of lh esr r ight
stud en t nur ses shoc krd and dis
mayed th e world ... Pa rter sa id .
" I wll I fight 1hr pa r olr of Richard
Spec k on behalf of th r families of
the victim s and l hr people of
Cook Co un ty ..
I l linois paro l&lt;' offi cial s. in pa st
rPqursts, nrvr r h&lt;1vr indica tr d

th£&gt;y

arP

COLU MBUS, Ohio ;UP li - A
news paper poll published Mon
day showed Incumbent Democrat Sherrod Brown holding a
narrow lead over Republican
challenger Bob Taft In this year's
race for secretary of state.
The 1.581 regis tered voters who
participated In the Co lumbus
Dispatch mall poll gave Brown a
! -point advantage over Taft . The
poll also showed Auditor Thomas
Ferguson with a 14-polnt lead
over Republican challenger
Jam es Petro .
The poll, conducted Aug. 30
through last Thursday , has a
margin of error of 2.2 percentage
points. The poll Is the third
conducted by the newspaper this
year. In the May poll, Brown had
a 3-point lead and Ferguson a
31 -polnt lead.
The lates t poll showed Brown
and Taft with similar-size leads
among voters of their respective
parties, and virtually deadlocked
among Independents. Brown had
a big lead In Cuyahoga County.
while Taft led In Franklin and
Hamilton counties.

close

to gra ntin g

Spec k 's fr!'cdom . Reiali vrs of
th e vi ctims have expressed doubt
Spec k would be sa fr ou tside

prison wa lls - rvf'n almos t a

q ua rtrr ·ern tu ry

Sprrk forc·rd h i~ w ay int o J.
So uth Side tow nhome being used
as a rps idence by st ud&lt;'fl1 nur sr~

from South Chica go Com mumt y
Hos pi tal. He bound thr vou ng
womr n w1th s tn ps torn fr om a
sheet and he stabbed and
strangled eight of th em dunng
thr cou rse of sPvera l hours.
Onr resident of thP tow nh ousr.

howrver. man aRed to surv1vr
C'ortzon Amurao ro ll ed undrr

POli C I£ S
'Ads ou tsode Meogs Ga llo a or Mason caun!o es mu51 ta pre
pa•d
'Rc ce"'c S 50 d•s co um l o • arl~ pa•d •n ed118n ce
'Fr ee arh
G1~eawny lind Fou nd nd~ omdf!f 15 w (' rds wo ll be
run 3 diFYS .1 1 no charge
'Pr~ cfl o l ad lo r 1111 c aprtalll!'l! ers os rloLJ tl l•· nror,. o f lid ro' l
' 7 p o u11 lon e type only u!&gt;f!d
' SMtmel1s no t respo n51bl 1' io r P.rr ors a tl er f~r s ! diN IChl!cio.
fo • ti"O'S !'" ' dll', arl • uns "'PHI"" I Cs l' h&lt;'fo•"? 0 0 rJ "'
dlP'r' ~It er Publ• t81t0 11 10 IT'akf' co " et !o on
•Ads thai mu\ 1 be pard m advancf' ilfe
C l!td ol Than k~
HIIPP J Ad~
Yard Sil l !!:I
In MPm 0 1111m

J

TH U ~ SDAY

(304) 675-1244

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

(Dining Room Only)
Served

w~h

whipped potatoes. chicken

gravy. cole 1lew, hot rolland butter.
Sorry, no sub1titutea except beverage
w~h

additional prlceo.

FR IDAY Pfi. PER
SUNDAY PA PER

( ' {n _, _,ifi~·d png&lt;''

Are a Code6 14
44 6
367
388
245

&lt;' tlll'r I

h&lt;'

u•lep!t~!lll ' t•.tdlrlll,l-(~'-'-·
Meog s C oun rv
Ar ea Cod!' 614

G11\lre Ca.Jr·.l v

TUE SOAY

2 00 PM WEDNESOA Y
200PM Tf-IUFISDAY
') 00 PM fR !OAY

POMEROY, OH.

Featuring Kentucky Frltd Chicken

P.ar)s

Rer.'lals
•Lot• Rentols

992-7479

man said.
The Las Vegas St rip resort
co ntributed 100 cases of rards at
the req uest of Felec ia Chavez.
Red Cros s stalton mana ger at
Nellis Air Force Base, Caesa r s
spok es man Phil Coope r said.
''When we were made aware of
th e opportunity to con tri bute
som ething positive to our people
who have been sent halfway
across the world. we dec ided i'o
provide a specia l Caesa r s Palace
diversionary tactic," Cooper

said.

SEPT 16, 1990

3

15

15

S9 00

10

COMBINED FINANCIAL
REPORT OF THE MEIGS
COUNTY BOARD OF
EDUCATION FOR THE
FISCAL YEAR ENDED
JUNE 30. 1990
GOVERNMENTAL FUNOS
RECEIPTS Misc.

Receipts .. . .. 28.490 .00
State
Sources .. .. .606.714 .63

t5

A at Mar ~ lo• con..ac ut Nf! run

li

1
2

Ca rd of Thank s
In Mfl m o ry
3 Ann ouce m erHs
4 G rvuwav
~
f.i11pp~ Ad s
6 - los! and Found
7 'l'ard Sale !pa•d on ae!vanrr l
A Puhlr c Sllle &amp; Aull'o"
9 Wen1ed t o Buy

Hetp Wen •ed
S rtulltoon Wl!nl ed
13 lnsur11n ce
14 Buslf\85 1 Tra rn1ng
1 S Sc:huo l• I!. ln •t •uct ron
16 Rad ro TV I!. C B Rep a"
17 - Mo scellan eous
1B W1nted To D o

Ga l l tp ulr~

Poml!r Ov

Ch~ h ~r e

9B5 C ht~ster
843 Pu otl..,nd
2 4 7 - Lttllrt f al ls
949

A~crnto

742
667

Coo l11 rll f'

Ru ll anr1

12

Real Estale

Co WV
A1ea Code 304
67!1
458 576
77 J
882 B95 9J7

Pt Pl euan l
Leo n
Apple G •nvt'
M uon
New Ha~ en
l !!tllll
Bul1~1 n

Get ResuHt Fast
Do you have anything in your
house tiro I can I urn into

31
32
33
34 -

Ho m esforS ale
Mobrle Homes lor Sale
f arms lor Sele
Bu soness Burldr n(lS
J5 l o is &amp; Ac reage
]6 - R11al E1 tat e W11nte d

litfilfiltJ
41 - H ou~e~ tor Renl
42 M obil e Ho m es l ot AP n l
4] F11 rmi lor Alint
44 Apl!r!ment lo r Rent
45 - Fu rnrshed Room'
46 Space fo , Re 111
47 - Wamed 10 Rent
48 EQurpmP.n t lnr Aenl
4 9 Fo , l eMe

467.007 . 43

Services ..

Ell:tiiCUrricUIBr
Activities ..
. .. 636 .00
Total Disburse ments . ..... 528,826 76
E11c. Rcpts. 011ers{Under)

Oiab ..

15.890 78

Ellc . Rcpt1 / Sources
011er / IUnder)) Oisbursa menh S. Other

Utea/ Not ..... . 15.890 78
Beginning Fund Cash

ALL MAKES

Bring It In Or We

Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Across From Pot:t Office
217 E. S.c., Pomeroy
POMlROY, OHIO

.. t33.10B .1 0)

In loving Memory Of

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

BILL SLACK

992-2269

keep you ,
We watched you dey by
day .
Until et last with breaking
hear'ls,
We watched you slip
away
God watched you as you

su ffored .
He ltnew you hAd had
your 1hare
So gently He closed your
weary eyes
And took you in His care
Our memory is our keep ·
sake
With that we w ill neve r

pan
God h&amp; s you in Hi1 keap ·
ing,
But we have you in ou1

hoon

Au l os f o r Sale

Happy Birthday, Mom
We love and mise you
Sharen and Marshall
Br&amp;dy and Jane

72

Va n s~

BULLETIN BOARD

Happy Ads

5

W.E .M.!!
21

Business

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes
.'\6 Yt•ar!il F. .. pt•rienrt'

614-'192·2328

FREE ESTIMATES

We Say What We Do .
We Do What We Say·:

949-2168

9-6·1 riO

B-7-'90-1 mo .

R'LL. HOLLON
TRUCKING

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CHESTER, OHIO

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

"AI Reasonable Prim"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949.2860
Day ur Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

985-4422

1 11 90 tln

4-16-8&amp;-rtn

HOT SPRI NG

SPA

SER~ICE

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. ·we con
also odd boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PROFITABLE
BUSINESS
FOR SALE
Business nHds
to remain in
RacineInventory plus
Fixtures.
OWNERS LIVING
OUT OF STATE

PEIMANEitiTL Y
For More
Information

949-2800

) ' ( our

; (, ~

D.r\ -1\ Y r ·: ~r
I( l' I rc:lf

PAT' HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1· 13-Hc

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

i\ l i h r 1l. l·.., F :t v (lritl'

Pon.•hlc Sp,t

•New Homes

BAUM
LUMBER

t~G'arages

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

CHESTER
985-:BOI

985-4473
667-6179

8-9-1

1-31-'90 lin

WANTED

GINSENG ROOT
YELLOW ROOT
We puar&amp;n1&amp;8 you $20 00 to 9100 00 more pet
pound than anyone We are the only company in Oh io
with a Fed er al Ginseng E.11port license . Don 't be
fo oled any more. ship your ginseng to Hong Kong with
u s W1:1 do n 't "G rade " your ginseng but if you ha ve
premium roots WE PAY e~etra larg a PR EMIUM
PRIC ES . We are your fri e nd s and w e wilt make y ou
lots of e11 tr a money Co m e see us You may only hav e
" Roo t s" but we r eac t as though it was gold
4 great locat ions in your ar ea
TUESDAYS . 9 am . to 11 am J ac kson . OH at th e
Ce rtified Gas Station . At 35
1 2 N oon t o 1 :30 p.m . McArthur. Ohio at th e tr on
Kettl e Re staurant on At 50 Eut

FRIOAYS · 9 am to 11 am . Gallipolis. Ohio at tho
Blu e Fountain Motel . Room 34 . At 7 South ju st
past the Rl 35 E•it
2 p m 5 30 p m ., Coal G10ve, Ohio 11t Goorge Electnc
Co Lot Rt &amp;2 &amp; 243 across from Bi·Lo Gas Plaza
OHIO RIVER GINSENG &amp; HERB CO
P.O . 8011 2347 l SI At 267)
East LJverpool . Oh•o 439 20

Phone [216) 385 - 1832
Lawrence &amp; M1tchelt M cCu ll oug h · Owners
Call u s an y t1m e for price m cr eases or r.h Angfl ~

12 16) 385 · 1632
R ega rdless of where you live Ieven 1n W Va ) 1f y ou
rtug thA 9 1n gseng in Ohio we ca n legally buy 11 1

Announcements
3 Announcements
$600. REWARD tor lnlormatlon
leading to the arrest and conviction of person or persons vandal iz ing , breaking and entry.

Stealing on mr, property Indian
lake Road • M1s sion RldQe"

Maso n County Pro piirfy talr.a~
two 750x 16 truc k !Ires complete
w1th rims, wire c onnectOJs
while ln color. One Shakespear
trolling motor Moda l 801PS or
606 LP S. Ons Cratlsman waed
wack&amp;r ModAl 257 797-600. One
Home lite chain saw with 20" bltr
and chain, cover Supar Xlt2 . 1
will Identify, please, report Info
to Mason County S herlll's Dept
or C he s tAr Martin , 541 Capitol
Blvd, Elkhart, Ind. 46516.
Adopti on .
Happily
married
coupl &amp;, bolh counulors Wish
to adopt infant to shert ou r
lava Ca ll our aHornay collect
~OB - 2BB - 1100 A - a ~

McDanl&amp;l C u sto m But c hering, 6
Days A Week, 30 ~ - 8 82- 3224 .

Real Estate General

4

Giveaway

2 boau tltul 6 woak o ld k lttans

wllh while paws, Ina to a good
home! 614-446 -7435 .

{ 4
_. .....
A'·...,, '
'i

--:,

·t.o.. _,, ••• ,

/

•.

lfiWo\ .CMIM "-' ~- ._.,.._

205 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992 -2886 / HOME 992·5692
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER
LETART - Bet you'll love it - Ju st r~ght for a :a m11y Has 4

RACINE DEPT.
STORE
Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal Cafeteria
Topic: "Survtving a Heart At1ack"
SPEAKER: Dr. David Ayers

UPHOLSTERY

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

6 -12-90 t'fn

Good
Gracious!!
Sakes Alive!!
look Whose
Sixty-Five!!
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY,

Opponunlty

HEART TO HEART MEETING
THURS. SEPl13-7:00 P.M .

ol Middleport

NEW- REPAIR

LOVENIA M . EVANS
On Her Birthday.
September 10. 1990

Farm Equrpmt&gt;tol
Wanted tO Bu~·
Lrveuock
~ Ha v &amp; Gram
65 - S fled &amp; Fer1 rlrll!r

•c"'

CAIN'S

ROOFING

USED RAILROAD TIES

Our Mother

62
63
64

8 1 ~tom e Improvemen t I
8 2 - Plumbrng &amp; Ha!!!ong
B3 -~ E
a11ng
84 - Electucal &amp; Refroglf l! •on
85 - Ge ntrr a! H•ulrng
86 - Mob1l e Hom e Repett
8 7 - UphOISiery

Across From Post Olfl&lt;t
POMEROY , OHIO
I0/30/'8911n

Howard L. Writesel

3/6/'90/ rtn

1 Card of Thanks

e1 -

Services ·

992 -5 335 or 985 -3561

NO' SUNDA T CALLS
4-16-86-rtn

MICROWAVE
OV_EN REPAIR

992-S33S or 98S-3Sbl

S 1 Hou1ehold Good11
52 S por tmg Oood1
53 - AntiQUes
54 Mrs c Mer ch andoll'!
5&amp; - Bu1l drng S uppl •8!5
56 - P ~&lt;U tor Sal A
57 - Mu•• cal ln 1!run. enl \
56 frurts &amp; VI!QI!Ubl 91
59 ~ F o r Sale or Trade

Truch1 for S11le
4 VVD s
Mo to rcyc le!!
Boau &amp; Moto rs lor Sa l e
Au 10 PariS~ Accessorres
Aut o Rep•"
78 Camp •ng EQuipment
79 - Campf!l'! &amp; Mo tor Homes

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

I / ?8/ 1 ~1

Balance ... . .... . 81 .856 35

60
05 / day

I:IULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

992-2156

1"-:&gt;r -

ble Bills Here
· IUSIN£!1 PHONE
(6141 99%-6SSO
~ISIDENCE PH&lt;INI
16141 99%-7714

End1ng Fund Cash
Balance . . .... . 77.346 . 13
Reserved tor Encum·
brances . .... , .. 2,248 40
Unreserved Fund
Balenct ..
. 76,097 . 73
Cash in Banks

Merchandise

73 74
7S 76 77

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

N•w Hames l•ilt
"F ree Estimates''

Supporting

30

money?

ADVERTISE IT

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C¥'y fi1hing Suppli es
Your Phone

We wanted so much to

71

up '

.. 61 ,283 .32

Instruction .

Opp or 1unot ~

11 - M o nll',' to Loan
23 - ProtMs•onal Sl!rvrces

New Location:

I b8 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 457b0

DISBURSEMENTS -

Transporlalion
21 - eus•nen

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING

Receipts ... . &amp;44,617 . 63

b&lt;oH.en up day 5 wr!l be cha1ged

Announcements

90 DAY WAIUNTY
WASHER S- $100 up
DRYIR 5-$69 up
RlfRIG ERATOR 5-$100
RANGES- Gas- Eiec - 1125 up
FRHlERS- $125 up
MICRO OVENS- $79 up

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Sept . 4 .tfn

Sources .. .... .. 9,3 13 .00

20

5, 3 00
51 JQ ; day

15

Monthly

42,

USED APPLIANCES

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Public Notice

(9)10 . 1tc

6

SUNDAYS
16 Gauge Factory
Choke only

Pomeroy, Ohio

Total Fund
Balance. .
77.346 13
I certify this rapor'l to be
correcf'.Hd 'U'Ue, tbthe' \M,.t
of my knowledge .
John 0. Riebel, Sr .. Tr&amp;ae
of the Board of Education

Over 15 Words

1:00 P.M.

SHOOTS START

Net

Rate
S4 00
56 00

1

GUN SHOOTS

Rt. 33 Nerth of

Cash With Fiscal
Agent .
. 110.464 23

Words
16

Da\ls

813 90""

RACINE
GUN CLUB

•Mobile- Home

Total

RATES

M11 ~u "

$345

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

•Mobile .. orne

in Saudi Ara bla, a r Ps orl spokes-

FOR JUST

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROll

PH. 992-5432

2 00 P M MONDAY
:lOOf' M

PAPER

Vontun
R•o Grande
266 - Guvan D o' I
64) Arah·~ f"l os r
379 Witltl iJI

II

DAY BUORE PU BliCATI O N
11 00 AM SAT URDAY

WEDN ES DAY PAPEf&lt;

foUmr ing

\\WE HAVE HEARING AIDS

COUNTRY
MOliiLE ,
HOME PARK

11

COPY O£ADUNE
M ONDAY PAPEA
TUESDAY PAPER

his arm r ecognized him

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

614 992-5114

c ep l
cla:.srlred display Busrness Card and I!!'gal no ! •cesr
wrll also apre,;or '" thf&gt; P t P I.,Mafll Reg •s ler 11r1d lhr Ga llo
po lr s Dar lv Trrbune rl!ach ong ove r 18 000 homes

wh en a doctor trea t i ng a c u t on

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Clean Auto Radiators 44(: lb.; Batteries $1 ea.
Yellow Braes 40C lb.: Alum . Sheets 40C lb.

'A Cl !l~ s oht!d llrhi ll rlr~emflfll nl~cer1 on T hf'O a rl~ 5cn l~t1 E!'IIc•

b('d and hid. Speck apparent ly
los t counl of his VIC tim s and left
I he apartmen t not knowt ng Amu rao had escaped his deadly
att ac k.
Spec k wa s f ound July i 7 in a
skid row fl ophouse on Chi cago 's
near West Side and arres led

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

#1 Copper '1 per lb .
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans. 35C per lb.

614 -992 -5592

TO PLAH AN AO CALL 992-21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'
CLOSED SUNDAY

a rt rr his cr imt' ~.

PAYING AS OF TODAY, AUG. I 0, 1990

Federal

fonner hostages and dependents of hostages,

Parole board to rule on Speck

POMEROY : 9 a.m. -7 p.m. 7 Days
ALBANY : 10 a.m. -5 p.m . 6 Days. Closed Sunday

Aces, deuces are wild
LAS VEGAS, Nev. iUPli
Caesars Palace has donated
14,000 decks of playing cards to
the American Red Cross for
shipmen! to U .S. troops stat io n&lt;•d

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

foreground, as they return to the U.S. after fl eeing
Kuwait. I UPII

POMEROY, OHIO : Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY. OHIO : Rt. 50 &amp; S.R. 143
NEW HOURS :

1-11'88-lfn

Classifie
beck, 10, holds a placard as his way of greeting

OFFERS 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU ...

coca, who created lhe Statue of
Liberty-E llis Foundation th at
raised the $160 million used in the
eight · year restoration of the
is land' s m ain building, sa id
Americans sacrificed to create
the monument to the Immigrant s
who have already paid a price for
the country 's freedom.
"This is a very special momenl
for me. I happen to be sta nding on
th e very piece of land that my
mother and father firs t set foot
on," laccoc a said.
Americans, said Iaccoca, feel
an emotional bond with the place
where many of their ancestors
first touched this countrv's soli.
"Thousands of dtlferent
names. thousands of different
stories, but stick them all together and you have one huge
saga. And It 's our saga," he sa itl.

By United Press Internalional
Rat Fink creator blows smoke
at native Southern California
SAN FRANCISCO tUPI) The• ereator of Mickey Mouse's
alter-e go, the hairy pot -bellied
H.at Fink, said he has !ell his
native Southern Ca lifornia for
the hot -rodding, mu sc le-car
ethics of mid -America.
E d "Big Daddy" Roth - whose
bulgy -eyed drawings and weird
au to designs brought him fame In
th e 1960s co unterculture - says
he's ex per iencing a renaissance
of Interest in his works from his
new home 1n Manti , Utah .
A native of Wesl Hollywood
with It s movi e heroes and pop-art
cullure, Roth sa id Sa turday thai
he moved to the small Utah
co mmunity las t year after smog
laws killed so uped- up ca r s and
lh e Huntington Beach pier was
closed .
"That was the last straw." said
Ro th, In Sa n Franc isco for the
opening of an unusual showing of
his T-shlrts, drawings and ca r

ca lled in honor of her lrr k to
beg in a new l ife in A m enca.
The white-ha i red Queens.
N.Y .. resident, now 84. sa id she
II('(! her count ry to rsrape farm
I If e.
" il' s rea liy very good to see the
place . " Flah erty said . " It was
th e start of my li fe. It's

pad 3'lA. NASA managers co uld

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING

memoril's our immi gran t
ances tors.''
AutomotivP executive Lee lac-

Quirks in the news

rili;cns and

ing defense
spending cut.s.

beln1 crowned Mila America 1991 al Convention
Allanite City, N.J. (l!PI)

Hallin

the vision and fortilude of I hose

cPs in sevPral key an•as , inelud -

Brown, Taft
in tight race

1111

Mond ay as a museum honoring

Business Services

the ;ice presiden t sa id . "We
must hold in our hea rt s and

lonin Sca lia led 1o adults and
three children in the oalh of
c itize nsh ip.
' 'I'm very proud and happy to
be an American citizen," sa id
Jorge Luis Cedeno, 31. of the
Bronx. "It's quit e a compliment
to be here for this special
orTa s ion [t makes this day
unforgettable."
Quayle substituting for
President Bush, who canceled a
long - planned appearance to
meet Soviet President Mikha il
Gorbachev In Helsinki - reca lled the impact of Immigration
on the nation.
"I wish every one of today's
Americans could make a pll·
grlmage here," Quayle said.
''We all need to feel the extraordl·
nary human drama that still
pulses within these walls .
"What we celebrate in Ellis
Island Is nothing more than the
triumph of the American spirit,"

gran ts first stepped un l o Ameri can sho res. reopens lo the public

dPdicatp 11 s new museum .

classma te Bernadette Kel!her
"WhPn we found our cla ssmatrs
WL'r£' murde r e d , we s harPd t hr
gr ie f and we shared th e guilt of
su r viv ing "
Speck, originally sen tenced l o
death and now .serving eig ht
ro nsecuti H' pri son terms of ~0 to
I SO yea rs . did nol attend th r

HIGH STEPPING - Majorie Vlnceat of DUnolll

Elli s

I r ish-horn Joha nn a Flahertv,
who em igra ted in 192:1 at age• 16.
chatt ed with Quayle as lhe U .S
Ar m y Band a nd Herald
Trumpet s played and stood

and

marvelous ."
SuprPmP Cou rt JustiCl• An·

a handful of it s oldPs t immi grants dedicated tlw mu seum.
loc ated In :--lew York Ha rbo r near
th e N ew Jersey shoreline and
adjacent to the Statue of Liberty.
on Sunda y- eig ht vears and $16(1
million after res tora tion began
Six elderly immigra nts, repr ese ntative of the 12 million hopetub who got their first glimpse of
AmPrlca at Ellis Island, sa l
alongsi de Vice Pres id en t Dan
Quayll' to reopen th e isla nd and

in pri son .
·'We w(•n• a ll vt•ry c losr, '' sa id

doeo a high kick

NEW YOH.K tLP!t -

America' s

_Leaking pumps replaced
1UP!)

Revamped Ellis Island opens
Island, wherP millions of immi -

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

bedrooms. d1nmg room. new k1tchen cabm ets, new ran ge.
and ent~re home has been remodeled n1c ely - 1n s1de &amp; out
Al so has a v~ew ol th e Oh10 RIVer
$13,900
MIDDLEPORT - Hlslm1cal lookmi cor ner store. Ha s 6
apartmenl s up and another store down . Start your own bu si-

ness. Has lots of room . and ha s an mcome Ca ll for more de·

tailsI

2 Puppies, 1.12 Bolon Terrien ,
phomt 304-nJ-5926
2 yr male Border Co llie. 2 klf·
tens 3 mo o ld. Female and mill
c ats 304 -675-2512.
5 long ha ir kit1an1 . 2 while, 2
lig9r, 1 beige 6141992-5685 or
6141~2 - 3 1 54 .

Bl ac k &amp; Tan Pup, Par1 Doberman, to glvoaway, 614-388-8614 .

Cats, Hoallhy, spade , deetawed.
Need an Indoor 1'1oma, 114-8861107, plena luv• mns1ge .
Washtr and dryar, dlshwuher,
ale c lr lc stov•, 304-nl-5652 .

6

Lost &amp;

Found

FOUND Ple asant Street, b4ond

malo Cocker Spaniel dog, 304-

675-1185.
Found : Kev to Subaru · Vlclnhy

PEACH FORK RD.- Showc ase ktlchen built-In diS hwas her
Jenn-A1r ran~e. oven and microwave Three bedrooms, luli
basement. and lot s ol b1g n~ce trees for shad e s1tt1ng on 2
pretty wes
$36.000
LETART - Maintenonce Free Exterior - 4 bedrooms. 2
baths, 3 s1tting porches. and a d mm~ room N1ce biP leVPI
yard f enced area w1th barn tor an1m als. and a tree hou se for
ch1idren . PRICE REDUCED - WAS $44 ,900
MUST SEE $41.500
NAYLOR'S RUN - Beautilul VIew. corner lot w1th 2.15 acres
Has natural gas across the road , eieclnc ava~lable . Older dr1·
veway.
ONLY $6 .000

of Third AVI. &amp; Pine StrHI. Sae
a! Galtlpoll e D11iy Tribuna, 825
Th ird Aile, Gallipolis.

7

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

ALL Y1rd Stlaa Mult Bt P1kl In
Ad111nct. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the dty bafo,. lhe td 11 to run.
Sunday edhion • 2:00 p.m.
Frldty. Mondty edition - 2:00

p.m. Saturday.

�8-Tha Daily Sentinel

Gallipolis

Pomeroy

35

LAFF-A-DAY

&amp; Vlclnlly
Houu for S.le· Br Own•r
Rhitrvlew1 3br, 1 112 bltt't oM
large lot. &amp;14-388-8003

11112 Acra on George Creek Rd
Will Condldar Land Contraet
614-446--2000

Oak Wood Apartm•nts Uotl1m
1br Apt Stove, rafrigtrator air
conditioning no pats, Rat
security deposi1l_ $175 par
month &amp;14·448-20"

public water, no ,..trlelions
some with rtver tront1ge, 30•·
578-2338.
Rentals

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
41 Houses lor Rent

Rick Peii"'In Auction Company

now

booking

auction•. exptrlence makte the dlffe... nea
LlcenMd Ohl.!t_ K_!ntucky Wut
Vl'lllnla,

3 BA

2 Batha

FP, Newly
Dacaratlld &amp; C1rpot Oop &amp; Rot.
Required 814-446-2000

304-r r...,r85

3br ,ou• In Marctnllle wlpool,
$450/mo nagotlablt, 614-4467602 tfter 5p m

O.Yid Bogge Auction Service

Now booi!Jrig auctions, llcens;d

In OhiO. 814-446-7750

3br, 2 blocks from Washington
9

..

~~ri.!,1~~~~ r.~ ~ ·~;~
446-8428 Ev•nlnga1 Ask
Bolly,st4-44&amp;-H12aar•

Wanted To Buy Junk Au1oa
whh gr without motors Call
Lorry llv•ly 114-388-9303
Wanted To Buy Ueed Moblla
Homoo, a1"-'48.om

Employment Services
Help Wanted

$2,ll00 CREDIT CAROl
GuanmtHd Nmt day 1pprovall
Also qualify tor NO deposit
VISAIMC end casn advances 1
800-27!J.81ti5 Ext G2524

AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn

Wu.ver 304-882-2645

.uemblert N•ded Immediate
openings No up neadtd
Fulllplr1 tlml

"Remember, the customer is
always rig ht un )ess t hey
don't buy anything."

tor

~:'~~SwlngSII,w/SIIdo

11

Elam, no pets, $295Jmo plus
utlii!IH, depotlt &amp; rtfaranctt
required 304-675·7575

Wanted to Buy

Call 1-900-463-

4336, 7e m 10p m $2/mln

AVON I All Area• I Shirley
Spears 304-675-1429
BE IN DEMAND Food service
workers made up one of It'll tar

o-st
end faalest growing oc
t;upatlonal groups ln the labor
lorc41 Enroll now tor Fall Term
In tht Adult Food Management

and C.t1ring Program at Tha
Adult Education CentiH-TriCounty Vocational School Wa
have a variety of tundlng
aoureu avallablt tor those who
quality
Call
1-800-637 6506
CIIIIMtl begin October 1 1990
BurLD FOR YOUR FUTURE
L..atn both rough and fln1sh
carptJntry skills at the Adult
"'Edueatlon Center- Tri-County
Vocational School Tha Adult
Carp~ntry program wtll proYide
you with training to become a
carpentsr Carpentry akllls ara
Important and vertatlle that
arpental't. maka up the largest
1;1roup of building trade workers
Tb register tor classts begin
nlng October 1 call 1 800 637
6508 Ask about our variety of
funding aouren available lo
pay for ln~lning

•o

Calh for Christmas S.ll Avon
glh with slg~up For Information call614 992 7180

Fret

Cl'lrlstlan babyalntr for 6 yr old
Wut Col~oo~mbla, days only,
... flnnca required, 304-882
l5S~ betw.. n 4 00/9 00 PM
Comput• prov:rammar part
lime to ualst wtlh new medical
softwara Must know DBASE
Call 614-44fHi366
Cotmttologlst netdtdl Guaran
tttd wagta, paid vacations 614·
446-7267.
DON'T BE LEFT BEHIND BV
THE
RAPID
CHANGE
IN
MANUFACTURING
TECH
NOLOGY Receive Specialized
t111lnlng In mechanical hydraulic tnd tlectrical com
ponanta ot factory f&lt;IUipmentln
the
Adun
Industrial
maintenance Program at Tha
Adult Education Canter-Trl
County Vocation School Wa
have a variety ot funding
aoure•• avtllablt tor eligible
appllcanle Classas begin October 1tt Clll 1-800-631-6508 to
rtgltter
Driver Handyman Assist busy
new doc!or pan lime Call 614·
44&amp;&lt;1366
Driver Wanttd For l P gas
Bobltll Mutt have experience
with l P a .. Appty at Bur111t
011 Co, 488 Pike SlrMI,
K1nauga Ohio
Eam money by tkt w. . k Join
tkt numbtrt to dtmons1f11tt
'Christmas-Around-Th•Wor1d'
Juty.O.CamtMit LN'Itl name,
eddreea and phone number on
anewtrlng Hft'k:e 614-992-6319
EARN UC»&gt;EV Reading Boobl
130,0001)'T Income potanhai
Now ttlrtng (1) 805-687-aooo
E1t Y10189
Euy WorM! Exc.llent Pay! Aeumbla prodocta at horne Call
tor lntonnalion 504-641-8003
bt 313
EJp~rlenctd halrwtyllst apply In
person, VIs Beauty S1lon 508
Main 51 Pont Pteuant, 304-675-

!503
Elperlencad
media
sal"
rtp!'lstntatlvt Baat ptus commillion 304 727788! c111 for In
tervlew
bperilnctd Men to WOfk In
Tobacco 14 par hour Good
mNI at noon 614 446-1585
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
HIRJNQ f!B,000-$62•000 Y•"
Clll 1-805-564-6500 t.xt GB 968
for lmmtdlatt r•ponN
QET PAID FOR TAKINO SNAP·
SHOTS! No experience $900 00
per 100 Call 1 900-23G-3636
~S.Himln) Of' Write PASE 33K,
181 S llncolnway, N Aurora IL
10542
QO THE WAV OF THE HI· TECH
FUTURE T1M Eleetronlc!i Sarvlcln(l program at the Adult
Education Ctnter-Tri·County
Vocational S.:ttool will train you
for jobs In the aervlclng 1nd
maintenance ot electronic ..qulpment We have monltt
nallable to ptY far training tor
ellglbfe applicants Call 1-8001314508 to r.aisttr tor e1111•
btglnnlnt OctOber t

INTELUQENCE JOBS CIA, US
CUIIoma D~J.~~- Now Hiring
Callt-805-W-ouuu Ext K-1018g
JOB HUNTINQ? NEED A SKILL?
WE TRAIN PEOPLE FOR JOBS
as Auto Mechanical Account·
lngiCompuUng Spec 11111, Ctr·
pen1...,
C&lt;!tomotofoglllo,
Food
Service
EiiiCI:riclana,
Worktn,
Eleclranlca Tech
nldana, lnduatrlsl Malntananc•
WCHUf'l,
Machlnlstt1
Paraleplt
Secretarfta ana
Wtldtra Register now for cia•
111 beGinning Octobtr ~ 1890.
Call Tri'County Voca11onol Adun
Cant« II t~37-815011 A
varlely of funding eources to
.,_, lor ttllning IN evaila~ tor
thGoolllglblo

101 Betch Stretl, Middleport 5
room, fllrnlehad houM Deposit
and rei roq. 304&lt;182-2566

!---------...;-,..._..;;,________
-----~----·, - - - - - - - - - 11
Help Wanted
22 Money to Loan

~~~~~·~~~~~~~
Nuraas, Immediate o.-nlng Gold
Credit
Card
aOO
par1-tima
Full lima
positions tor 11 pm-7 am nuraa
Call Overbrook Canter and tak
fo( Sally Gloeckner, Olrec10f of
Nursing 614·992-64n

Vlaa!Uatercard
Ouar•ntted,
Cash Advanees~_ no security
ct.poth, no c~n check, 1·90022e..0048, $1g 9!! t.a
LOANS BY MAIL

Par1-tlmt CaN Manager • For Up to $5,000 In 72 houra Wt
Goodwill lnd, PI Pleasant, d• ean help you get a algnature
grM in Human StrvlcH or Loan By Mall 1 ;()0-468-~27
relattd field 32 hrslwk E..: - $Q i5 fM
peritnct working wllh han
dlcap~ helpful Soma trtval
necessary EOE MJFNA-1 Reply
Personna! Dept P 0 Box 1365,
Huntington, WV 25775

Real Estate

POSTAL
JOBS
$1a 392
$67125/yr Now hiring Call (1)
805-687-6000 EXT P-4562 for
current list
Registered Nurse or Uctnud
Social Worker to work with tha g
county Options for Eldara
Program baMd In Marietta.
Provide Information, aeratn
clienta tor health and social
service nHds and arrsnge for
c1s1 management and home
care aarvlc• on phone Good
communication skills nacnaary Home eara exptrltnet lnd
knowl.dgt of community based
aervlctl tor th• aldtrly htlptul
Regular hou1111, no wnktnda,
tJcelltnt trlng• bentfllt Salary
range
$17,000 to $19 000.
Resumn aubmltttd by Stpltmbar 1g ,990 S.nd resume
to PO Boll 729A clo The Dally
S.nlinsl
Rtliabla person want1d to
babysit 2 pr•school children,
111 har In our home or yours, 2
pm to 8 pm 3-4 evenings per
week, WMkenda Included SJ
por hour Rtftrancaa required
i==orast Run arN 614-G-40..206-4
or 614 !W9-29!M
Rasidlnr Mana9er'a Position
Avallabl• at Apartment Complex Inquire tt e14-441 -1808
EARN
MONEY
typing
wordprocesslng, pMSonll computing. At homa Full or pi lime
$35 000/yr. Income potentlll (1)
806-117~

El &amp;.1btlt

Salaa Partlfull lima Paat ••·
perlanca In )1wlary rttall prstar
tad but not required computer
useaga helpful, applications
taken 10-12J.....Thurs, Frl, Sept 13
&amp; 14th M 1~ International, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
45831 {Tope Furniture Building)
No Phont Calls Plean
SKILL IS POWER BRIGHTEN
YOUR JOB OUTLOOK We tn11n
p.oplt tor jobs as tl~trk:lans
H.allng llghllng, power air
eondltfonlng and rattlgaratlon
componenls all oporattlhrougk
electrical tysterm~ that are Installed
and
wtred
by
electricians Classes lor the
Adult Electricity program atTn·
County Vocational Scho~ begin
October , To raglster, or lor
more Information call 1 800
637-6508 You may ba eligible
tor mon1es to pay for your !rain
lng ask about our l1nanc1al aid
aourcn
Stylist N
" oo
--ccd:ed-;-;E:-x-:cec:l:1,-,
otc:H
-;-o-u-.,
Salary plus commission lor In
1arvltw 614-446-3353
Toba cco cullert 14 cents a
stick Toba cc o housars $4 per
hour Youngs Farm Buffalo
Putnam County 304 937 2530
aher 8 00 PM
12

Situation
Wanted

Will taka eara of that special
loved one In my home Will accept A.lzhelmers Malt or female
~~:ftra Pl1ina area 614·66716

Wanted to Do

Barry 6 Sons Painting &amp; Build
lng All types of palnllng &amp;
bulldlng Call anytlma frg• 11
tlmala 614 179-2320
lntarlor and axterlor house
palnllng h"H tsl lm1tea, 10
years exparlance, 304~75-2706
ask tor Mlka
M1 glc Vaara Day Care Center
deptndlbla
rea1on1ble,
llcanae, qualhy ehlld care Mon
day thru Friday, 7 30 till 5 30
For mort Information or to
register 304-67S S847
Mary 1 Quality Child C1re, tale
I aftordabta, wlrtfarancea 6 6
Mon-Frl, 614--446-0316
Min Paula 1 Dly Cl!'t! Center
Sate, affordable, chlldcarl M F
6 a m • 5 30 p m Ag.. 2 -10
Btfora after tchool Orop Ins
welcome 614--446..a224
Will baby all full Of part time In
my home, close to sehool, 304·
815-2784
Will babyaltln my hom1, Rolling
Acrtt
sub-dlvltlon,
ha~•
rtferanctl 304-675-3469
Will do babysitting In my home
In the Hemlock Qrovt area and
alto will do c1kt dtcoratlnghavt NinJa Turtin 614-Q92-656'?
Financial

21

Buslne$S
OpponunHy

I NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
rec oiT!mends tkat you do bual
ness with people you know1 and
NOT to und money throlJ9M the
mail until you havt lnvest1gattd
tha oHtrlng
C.1 BMr UctnM In Chtlttr
TWp for 11le Clll &amp;1•-MJ.-3933

atltrlpm

Local Vandlng Aouta HonEST
New Machlnta Maka Good
Monty 1 800-JU-4-US

31

Homes lor Sale

1 1!2 Story Home 3 or 4 BR,
B11om1nt, Cloaa to Town 614
446-4257
2 llory, 3 bedroom houss on
locust Streat $4 500 OBO 614·
927--6436 thtr 5 pm

Large 3 btdroom houu In
Pomeroy 1 112 bath Must bt
employed
Otpoalt r*llAr.d
814-992-!!943
Ntw one bedroom, furnished
api.rtmtnt In Mlddltpor1 Call
614 992 6304 or 614 -992-5225
WHY PAY RENT? Homaa for
$1 001 Bank rapoa, tax dtllnquont propartlas, govemmant
giveaway prognma For lnlor
matlon call 1-"504-8.7.()(]96 Ext
R5214
42

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

3br Trailer tor rsnl, $200, furnished &amp;14 379-2311
1 1/2 btd room fumlehad I raller1
$167
month, deposit ana
ratorence required, watar and
sewer furnished, Crab Craek
Road, 304-675-1206
12x55 2 bedroom mobile home,
$225 plua $100 deposit no
ptta, McCalllhana Trailer Cour1,
Handerson, WV, 304 773-5248
or 30.-675-2532

1985 modtl 14x70 2 BR, gerdon
tub
&amp;
ahower
Built In
microwave &amp; tterec Roally
3 y11ra old, all new, 1 bedroom, n!ct Set up on nice private
refrigerator and alactrlc cook level lot Must have rei Appr by
stove Asking $20,000 Call Hud $275 mo Water Included.
•vanings 614 g"9:2.J122
614 256-1393
31865 Wolchtown Road needs 2 Bad Room Mobile Home al
repair Make ollar Inquire 170 Evergreen 614·379-2678

~Pc:l•"••c:•::.n.:.l;.:Rc:ld:!g::.•:_Pom
= •c:r.•;.-cY-c--:--c 12 bedroom mobile homo 304
7 room house woll Insulated, 675-6984
loll of carpet, 3 1/2 acrast_2 car
bedroom tra iler tor rtnl In
garaga, out buildings VInton 2
area, 614-388-8102
coun!ry
fumlsh.d
$175 a
month plus U1illtlts and dep
7 room Hr.! bath, 1 3 acru, ad· 614 949-2833
dltlonal 33 acrtll hunting and
timber 614 992 7116 or 1 364 2 bedro~Jm trailer fOf' rant In
2097
RICint lrta 614-992·5858
7 rooms t 112 balhs, country
living but closa to Meigs School
and town
Rt
33·4 lane
Township Road 27 Arst road to
right Call 614-992-1118 or 1 384
2097

2br Mobile Home on Oob
McCormick Rd 614-446 9669
4 roomt and balh houu In nice
1 borh d
1
na gh
oo • ra arancas ragulred, or will Hll with owner
financing, 304-675 1090
3 or • bedroom house, dish· Mobile home tot rent to one
washer, sto~•. rafrig luol oil ganllaman In Mlntravlllt 614
furnlct, woodburner fireplace,
992 •3181
Assume loan with $1 500 down
and payment• of $306 month
Apanment
Loealed In P1trlol, Call 614 31'9- 44
28t585pm o.lpm
tor Rent
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1
repair)
Osllnquont tu
property Reposltsslons Your
a rea
805--687 6000 EX1 GH·
4562 or current repo list

(U

I')

For Salt on Land Contract, Nlca
3br hOUM, wllargt FA big back
w/blg
yard
Clean
dock
Neighborhood,
Evergraen
$39 500 814 245-5223
In Gallipolis, Well built move-In
condition Good location large
rooms low heat budget 614256-6855
NO MONEV DOW~ Duptn:
producing, $475 monthly cash
to you at closing, 9-5 Tim, 614·
446-0966
32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

$40 DOWN on 1ny new !lngl•
wid•, plus tax and tlllt to
qualified buyea As advenised
on TV • Call EIHI Home C.ntar

2 rooms
&amp; beth
newly
ramodaled.l. $200/mo All uliltlos
lneludad , uaposlt required 614
446-n33 614~46-4222
2&amp;3 bedroom apar1ments car
pel, equipped kitchens In
Pomeroy · OepO!IIt Raleranca
required. C1ll 614 98!1-44&lt;18 attar
6p m
2br tumlshad, Central located
adults preferrod
$225 per
month plus security deposit
R1ferences 614 446 2236 614
448 -25B1
35 Wast Apt 2br, 1 bath, prlvala
anclosod patio cion to grocery
stores &amp; shopping cenler wat er
&amp;awtr trash provided $265 1mo
614-441 1608
Apartment In downtown Polnl
Pleasant tor rent 614-446 2200

1-80~589-Sno

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pika
from $1921mo Walk to shop &amp;
moviea Call614 446 2568 EOH

12x7U Mobile 11om• one ~tcre,
county w1ttr outbuilding, At 2
Nor1h Thomaa Ridge Rd 3110
mila on rlg~t Taking oHtl't. best
offer under $10,000 gets It 1
614·775-7738
1975 Champion 14x65 2 BR stt
up on privata lot on 216 6 ml
from town $4500 FrM rent for
1 yaar 114-251-1393

Efficiency apar1ment, across
from Unlvan~fty ol Rio Grande
All utilities paid $200 monlh
plus deposit 614 388 9946
Fumlahad Etflelancy, all utllllles
pe1d, share bath S1351mo 919
Second A~e 614 446-3945
Fumlaked
Etfielancy
$175
Utilities Paid Gallipolis 614
448 _. 416 atltr 7p m

10, 1990

Ohi~

Pomeroy-Middleport

GOVERNMENT SEIZED vehicles
from $100 Fords Mercedes
CorveHes
Chevys
Surplus
Your artl (1) 805 6876000 Ext
S-10189

72

Trucks lor Sale

1965 Chevy PU 6 cyl aulo
good cond, $795 1965 Pontiac
$1595, kraflsman Riding Mower
$150 614 446-8159

Three bedroom duplex In nctl·
lent nalghborhood full ben
mtnl w/laundry hook-ups 304·
67S..677C or 675-3618

1979 Ford pickup truck good
cond, 1979 Honda Motorcycle
good cond truck camper 304
273-5470

TWin Rlvara Toware, Housing tor
the Elderly and Handicapped
Apartments now available rentIng for 30% of adjusted Income
200 Second St Of' eall 304-675-88711

1982 GMC Diesel 112 Ton 4/W
P1ck up Good Cond $1700 614
366-8509

apt,

carpel,

kitchan furnished, 304-675·5104
Upstalr1 Furnished, 3 rooms &amp;
balh, •'••n. no"'" rot•ranct &amp;
deposh r11qulred &amp;14-446-1519
45

Rooma for rtnt • wuk or month
Starling 11 $120'mo Gallla Hotal
614-446-9580
Slttplng rooms with cooking
Also trailer spac• All hook ups.
Call afler 2 00 p m 304 77J..
5651 Mason WV
46

Space lor Rent

Country Mobile Home Park
Route 33, North ol Pomeroy
Lots, rentals parts sales Call
614 992 7479
Large Private Lot Green local
School District, 814 446 4053

Merchandise
51

Cl 1m

r=~==========r-=~~~~~~~~~
54
1

Miscellaneous

59

Goods
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from
$395 to $995 Tablss $50 and up
to $125 Hide a beds $390 lo
$595 Recliners $225 to $375
Lamps $28 to $125 01na11es
$109 and up to $495 Wood tablo
w-6 c:hairs $285 to $795 Desks
$145 up to $375 Hutches $400 &amp;
up bunk bads co mplete w1th
mallrasa S295 and up to $395
baby beds $110 Matlrtssos or
box springs lull or twin $78 f1rm
S88, and $96 Oueon sets $275 &amp;
up Kmg $350 4 drawer chest
$69 Gun Cabinets 6 B &amp; 10
gun Baby maHrasses $35 &amp;
$45 Bsd frames $25 Ouean
S ra $35 &amp; king frame $50 Good
so lactlon of bodroom sullus,
molal cabinets, headboards $30
and up to $65 90 days same as
cas h with approved credit 3 ml
oul Bulavlll• Ad Open 9 A M to
5 PM Mon thru Sal Ca ll 614
446-0322
2 malch1ng lllimg room chairs
614 446 0051
84 Inch Shamll Sola axe cond
614 446-4303
Couch &amp; Chair colteo table 1!. 2
tnd t1blaa, stonn door 614-446·
0373

County Appliance Inc Good
used appliances TV sets Open
Bam to 6 pm Mon -Sat 614
446·1699 627 3rd Avt Gal·
lipOIIa 0H
For Salt On All Grass Turf In
stock $2 99 yard
Mollohan
Furniture 614-446-7444
GOOD
USED
APPLIANCES
Washera dryers relrlgarat ou
ranges
Skagga Appliances
Uppor River Ad Be!'ilda Stone
Cresl Molal Call 614 446 7398
PICKENS FURNITURE
Naw!Used
Household tumlshtng 112 ml
Jerrlcho Rd Pt Plaaaant WV
call 304 675 1450
RENT TO OWN
6l4 446 3158
6 pc wood group $14 01 per
wook 4 poster bedroom su1t1
complota $1 5 20 per weak ,
dinette with 4 chain~ S7 50 per
weak Magic Chal 14 cu ft
Ratngflrator t12 95 pflr Wttk 15
cu
tt ffeenr $10 90 per
week VI Ra Furmlur• Rt 141, •
milea off AI 7..Canlanary Open 1
days s WMk
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oil lie Sl Gallipolis Now &amp; Used
furniture haatara Westem &amp;
Work boots 614~46-3159
52 Sporting Goods

n.

~;;;;:;:;;;:;::;::;::;::;::;::~.L;~;::;;;;;~:;:::;:::;:::.:;:;::::._
Bruce Beattie

For Slit 1988 Prntlgt Mobil•
Homa, 14d0, total electric, 3br,
Apr,llancn
•
Rang•
At rlgtntor ~ Washer • Dryer
Cont1et Hocking Vall•y Credh
Union, Inc 814",..46-1820, 482
Second Ave, GtillpoUI, OH
411631
HouH trailer, Fumlllhed or untumllhed, new carpet and
linoleum, two btdroom1, wfth
two larga room• added $10 000
fumlohOd, $8,000 unfumlohod
114·t92·2085, or Columbu• 1~
813--4485
SPECIAL Factory to you199'1, 2
or 3 bedroom14J7'0 modtle 11
lht unbelievable price of
$12,900 d•llvtr.d and Nt up.
Ctll1~~045 for dllalla

or Trade

2 Gooseneck Tralltn, 1 Tamdom, 3 trl-axll Both btda Ia
about 25f1 long 614-446-7046

1971" 24 h Prowler Sell-contained
Excsllont cond1t1on
ITrade or atll 614 1112·2066

3 ton central •lr conditioning
unit lor sala 614-446-9262

eye IInder, 4 dOOf' $350 or trade

410 Homallla Chain Saw like
New Will sell or trade for band
saw or boll trailer 614-949·2013
50 Bush Hog Flail Mower $67~ 1
26 riding mower $100, ATv
snow
blade
$100,
new
dehumldlftr $100, Honds 80 like
new $400, and men'• bicycle
$40 6141985-4369

Early American Safa &amp; Chair,
Boauty Shop Equipment, Call
614·446-4H8 ah.ar 4 OOp m
For Sala Inger Soli Rend Air
Compressor tO HP, Kllhlar Gas
Motor, with hoee 1 6 battery
$800 614-446 4462
Fork llh, hand carts daek pl&amp;tt,
warehouse car1e, truck bad,
trailer axle &amp; !Ires 614-446 2359
Handmade porcelain dolls 304
576 2552
:-=~c=--:-;c;--;­

Hydraullc Wood Splitt or, 36 Inch
ram 614-367-0416
Llh ChaiiJ. $600 llrm 27 Eliln•
Heights, ualllpolls Ohio
Nlntando tapes, 304·882
T Heason

2~96

J

Paint Ball aqulpmtnt, 2 guns
plus vanous eccesaorles 304·
m-5054

Auto,

6

1983, 200 Slg Rod 3 whoalef
1919 Ford Fits1a 2 door Days
304-675 7650 evenings 304 675
1829

Wooden Bunk Bods with llnll
springs $60 Call bolora 2p m
614 446-6641
Woodspllttar, 10 HP gasoline
engine, trallar mounted 614 3792412
55

75 Boats
404 lnt'l Trsctor with Woods
Finished Mower $2 995 2010 JD
wltM Culllliator, $2 495, Ford
Jubll11 with loader $2 495 6N
Ford with Bush Hog, Plow, Cui·
tlvator &amp; Grader Blade $2 395
614-286-6522
440 John O.ert Oozar, now
motor end flnll drives 65 GMC
dump truck 314 ton flatbed l4 It
trailer 614-388-81.23
Jim a Farm Equipment SR 35,
West Gallipolis 614-446 9m,
Wlda aelacllon now &amp; used farm
tractors &amp; Implements Buy,
sell, trade, 8 00 5 00 weekdays
Sat 1111 Noon
like l'ltW, Massey Ferguson .220
Hay Baler 614-446 141 t
Mauty-Ferguson
tractor
Model 135 $2.f00 614·949·2754
al1er5pm
Oliver Tractor with end loador
$900 614 245 5067

1972 17 f1 Starcrah Trl Hull
Boat 125 HP Evinrude Engine
completa top new upholstery
Call614-286-1316 ahar "'! 00 p m
BOATERS
Me rc ury Marcu1sor Spec lall !lt
Factory Tramod Bt~ndad Precl
sion Mobile Man ns Wt coma to
you' 614 259 591'9
--BOATS MOTORS TRAILER S
Marc rulsar, Marcury &amp; Marmor
authot"bod par1s &amp; service
Parts lor most mator brands
WE CANNOT SPEL S CCES S..I
WITHOUT
U'
RIVERSID'
MARINE GALLIPOLIS OH 614
446 2424
Starcratl alumn Jon Boat utra
deer 9 112hp Evlnrudt molor
trall11r, gaa can oan life jacols
seal,
$500
304-576 2855
eYanings
76

Auto Parts

CIJ

FRANK AND ERNEST

Motor Homes

23f1 Terry Taurus Awn ng AC
614 446 9262

Straw, 50 lb w!f"' lied squaro
balas $2 00 bale 304-459 1031

TERRY TRAVE L TRAILER S
1990 CLOSEOUT•
All units to go al lowest prices
thi S yaarJ Plua no charge lor
AJC Terry deale r tor o11er 20
years Buy w1th conhdenca
Fixed rata lmanc ng available
IRVINES CAMPER SALESI On
St AI 7 North at St Rt 555
little Hockmg Oh1o Approx 60
min 614-989-:2291

Autos tor Sale

Services

1966 Ford Falrtana 289 good
running cond, $800 614 446
0938

1969 Dodge Coron91 440 318
•nglne auto AC 83 000 actua l
Ex ca llont
cond111on
AKC Rog BriHney 3 female 1 mifas
mala B weak• old $100 614-- tl500 61417112 2151
965-4456
1973 Ford on e ton llal bed
8 18 000 miles 614 949 2754 afHH
Spm

Dragonwynd Cattery Persian, 1977 Buick Rogal 350 auto 2
Slamtaa and Himalayan kittens new tires now exh aus t one
owner well maintained Vary
614 446 3844 aftsr 7 p m
lhUe rust 614 446-4171
Famala Boston Tarrlor, , vear
1978
Ford Fairmont Wagon
old 304·773-5926
$500 Call 614-378-6138 altar 6
Fish T1nk 2413 Jackson Ave pm
Point Pteatant, 304 675 2063, 10
gal 111 up Sl4 99 and 10 gal 1978 T Bird AC PS PB 302
auto good body No rust $800
complete $43 25
OBO Phone 614 992 6756
Groom 1nd Supply Skop-Pet
Grooming All brHdt All11ylas 1979 Monta Carlo phone 104
lams Pet Food Oesltr Julie 675 7271
~-=-c--=-Webb Call814-446-0231
1980 Olds Omega runs good
Happy Jack F111 Gard All metal $600 614-256-6251
patented davlea eon1rol1 lleas 1960 Subaru Sedan run s bul
1n tha home wlthoul PES..
nMds clutch work, $10 0 For
TlCIDES Rtautts Ovarnlghl At
more Information 614 245 5950
Southam Statts
UIB'I
Pontlec
Phoenix
Poodla puppl11, toys, Taacups Automatic, 4dr, AC, AMIFM
also Schn1uzars
Ch1mpfon radio, ntw trans many naw
Grttnd 91ra, AKC, 11ao adults parte, $750 614 367 7008
Coolville 614--667-3407
1982 Regal Buick, good running
cond, Hll cheap, 304-937·2355
57
Musical
1983 Dodg• Charger, call after
Instruments
6 00 PM, 3CM-882·3'7'1UJ
Bundy Ciarlnot
Re padded, 1983 Olds 88 Royale AT PS.J. PB,
tl25 Call before 2p m 814-441)..
AC, Crulu, I M wipers uood
6641
Ursa Exctllont cond1lion 614Bundy flute Good condttlon ft2 ·7207
$100 20" girls murray bicycle
1984 Oodga Aspen AC avto
$30 6141660--4836
tnnsmlulon, PS PB, slant 6
~0=35=-cM::a-n"l-n-g-u-:~:-a-r- w-cl:lh
::--:h-a-,
rd engine, 12,100 aMc shape, 104ahell case, excellent ahapt,
ft 500 304·m·5054
1985 Subaru 0 L Wgn 4 W D
For Salt Splnet-Conaolt Plano Auto, AJC, ona owner 35 000
Bargain Wanted Rtaponalbla MllasL....C:all Wendtll Thomu 614·
par1y to take over low monthly 446-tr.n
payments on spinet pleno s ..
locally Cali 1-800..321'-3345 Elt 1881 Buick Cer1tury, AT PS PB
lir, tin, crui .., &amp; Morel Vary
102
Good condhlon, $4,500 614 388
930a
PIANO FOR SALE
Wanted Rtapnalbll p1rty to 1987 Chrysler Fifth Avtnue, 1979
take
on
email
monthly Chrysler Naw Yorker 6141992payment• on plano 8H locally 5985 or 6141992·7511 evenings
Call Man1gar at1-800-635-7811
1197 Dodge Coil Dl PS, PB
Pl1no IOJ nls Oood condition
AMIFM Cllttltl, AC New llrts
814-"7112·2328
Automatic
CJtlt good g11
EI"Cttllnt condltron
WE CAAS.JIM (Jtsue &amp; Me) mlitgt
PIANO IERVICI oH•rs EXPERt Muat ttll. M1ks otter 614-99223n
~lono "CARl" lor lhooe 'C.AAEH about th1lr plano• Bill 11187 Muatang LX Sun root, 5
Ward 304-81Z.Z328 (Prov 22 1)
8pHCI, AM/IFM low mlltaga

m-5054

1141868-31104

Pick your own beans $5 buah•t
It I pldl them $8 bush•l. J&amp;R
Product At
338 next to
RIVIniWOOCI Srtdge.

1988 Ctttbrlty Eurosport V6
Autom1tk:, light blue melallle,
CUI1tlm clolh, power locks,
defogger, aluminum whHis,
am!tm l'ltrtoj caasettt tape
Euroeport pack1g1, btnchsut
30,000 mtt11 Excellant condition. Owner burlng van $9,500
Negotiable Cal 81~-GD2 2785

Red Rasbtrrlu, pick your own
Taylor's Berry P1tch. 614-245-50&amp;4

1989 AS Camaro, 5 !Iter, T·Tops,
AT, air, PW, AMIFM c111ttta, low
mileage, 304-67&amp;~863

B1

Home
Improvements

BA SEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional l1latlme guaran
lee Local rolersncas lumtshad
Froe ast1malas Call collect 1
614 237 0488 day or night
Rogers Basoment W.llterproollng

Ron s TV Service specializing
In Zanllh also servic ing mos t
olher branda House calls also
so me 11ppl1anct ropalrs WV
304-575 2398 Ohio 614-446 2454

ll

you cAN TAff
THAT .SIGN DoWN, '

THINK

ne1ghborh00&lt;1 adlusls to the
nch life tn Bel A1r ~
(!) Malar League Baoeball
(I) &lt;II Ill MacGyver Mac
lapses 1nto a coma and has a
b1zarre expertence
r;l
(]) lntlnHe Voyage t:;1
Cil Advantun1 Btcycl.ng the
Argenttne Tom Vernon
diScovers danger 1n the
grass 0
®l ll2l (II Uncle Buck An
uncouth man IS left 1n charge
of h1s t&gt;rother s kids 1:;1
(!] Ul 21 Jump Street Jump
St cops go undercover on
the streets as homeless
runaways (AI t:;1
I!Ji Murder, She Wrole
® Goopel JubiiM
@ ESPN'o ZenHh NFL
Monday Night Motch·Up
Season Premtere
PrlmeNewa
~ Shogun, Part 11NRi
8 OS (I) MOVIE That Touch of
Mink 11 55)

SEEN PRoMoTED
10 MANAGEMENT.

JB)

ALLEY OOP
HOLY MAO&lt;EREL' W&gt;&lt;EIII DAHLE
SAID WE WERE GONNA GET LOST,
SHE WASN'T KIDVING Yil&lt;l$!!

a

EEK AND MEEK
ITS CfMCXJS lHAT 11-\£
I.\..OO.D CAll1 COOTikXJ£.
1D SCM. ffi:a.EMS 1l-\!S
\IJH MMIORf.

AIJD ftffiWAlCR
CAIJ LIV£ IU PUlE WITH
EACH OWER

8 30

V1Cl1'-'\

64

I DON 1TKNOW
EVERY TIME
I ASK HER

Cl.-0 IS
YOOR Mall.
WARREN-=&lt;
f-'ON

SHE G&lt;IIIES ME A
CLJPCAkE AND A

6lA~

lA) t:;l

I!Ji

Primo Tlma WreaHing
® Nuhvlllo Now
@ Anhuoaer Butch World
Cup Jel Ski Racing From
Islamorada FL (T)
12!1 Lorry King ll'81

9 30

LOOK AT THAT RAKE!!
THAT'S PLUMB

OANGERSOME!!

IF AUNT LOWEElY SEES
THAT THING SHE'LL HAVE ME
RAKIN' UP TH' WHOLE
DADBURN YARD"

Wlhtrson'a
Water
Hauling,
ruaonabla ra111, voluma dl•
counts, 2,000 to 4 000 capacity,
cialorns, poola walla, ate C1 1i
304 ·5 76·291 g

87

Upholstery

Mowrey 1 Upholstering servlc
lng trl county 1raa 25 Yt11'11 The
beet In furnlturtt upholstering
Call 34l4-675-4154 for ftM ••
llmatu
Graham Upholstary Center, 303
Hilltop Dr Call tor appolntmenta
&amp; eatlmataa Call 614-446-3438

Oolignlng Woman
Charlene learns her coustn IS
the VICtim Of an abUSIVe
~usb8nd

(AI t:;1

I 0 00 (I) Malor league Bote boll
®l 112: Face to Face with
Connie Chung The soc1al
and health problems ol
se)(ual encounters are
ex.plored
(!]Ill Now Twlllghl Zone
@ Anhueoer· Buach SL
Loul1 Power Boat Aece
12!1 World Now
~ 700 Club With Pat
Robertson

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

BRIDGE

NORTII

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE

OSOL

'"Your
'Birthday
Sept 11, 1990
In the year ahead tl looks l!ke you may
become Involved tn an unusual creative
endeavor ell her as a hobby or avocation In e1ther Instance you Will profll
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sopt 22) Taka a llltle
more t1me selecting your att1re today to
be sure you dress to convey the type at
1mpress1on you want to make There s a
chance you might encounter someone
spec1a1 Know where to look lor romance and you II find tt

LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 231 The charac througn mutual 1ru s1
teriStiCS tnends will find most appealtng
ARIES (March 21 · Aprll19) Your am bo
and attracttve tn you today wtll be your
ttous a1ms can be ach1eved today 1f you
smcenty compassion and warmth
put your 1magmaflon ro prOductive
These attnbutes wtll put you a cui or
uses Don t pul 1tm1t almns on your
two above others
thoughts and dar e to be d1tferent
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 221 You1 pn
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20)1n social s11
mary concerns today Will be for gratify
uat1ons today you can call favorable at
mg !he reqwrements for those you love
tenhon to your selt through understate
rather than your own Your true lOY will
ment rather than overstarement A
be dertved from betng the g1ver rather
whtsper w1ll command attention 11
than the getter
shout won I
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-0ec 211 An
GEMINI (May 2t - June 20) Try lo syn
unusual type ol occurrence today m1ght
chron1ze your .nlu!lton to your Jog1c m
contnbute to an advantage lor you car
your commewalaffalrS today, because
eerw1se 11 could also add a Itt tie wet~t
your reasoning powers and your per
to your wallet
ceptlons could both be very accurate
CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22·Jan 19) Hunch · • CANCER (June 21-July 22) The sec rei
es or lnstghts you get today that have
to dealtng successfully w1th others lospecthc practiCal applicatiOns sflouid , • day Is to treat everyone as an equal
not be treated ltghtly In stead of diS·
whether your boss or the kid who parks
m1ss1ng lhem as good Ideas, put them
your car
to the test
LEO (July 23-Aug 221 Today II you are
AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 191 Be an atdoing comparison shopping quality
tentive listener today because someone
should be given precedence over price
with whom you re mvolved businesswhen comparing reasonably slmtlar
Wise mtght try to pass on some helpful
Items Take time to study intrinsic value
Information to you In a coded form
The Astra -Graph Matchmaker Instantly
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) Somelhlng J reveals which signs are romantically
fortunate could develop tor you today
perlect tor you Mall $2 to Matchmaker.
'through your Involvements wtlh a perclo lhls newspaper, P 0 Box 9t42B
son whose Ideal closely parallel yours
Cle•eland OH 44101 - 3428
What transpires w111 be made posstble

oo crJ II

l!l I!JJ ll2l til 1!]1

News
(J) Newswalch
(!) Star Huotlor
(!]Ill Arsenio Hall
1!Ji Miami Vice
® Gospel Jubilee
@ Baeoball Tonight
12!1 Monayllno

' 16 90

• 9 6 52
'I'AQJ74
tAK5

Ready and
still waiting

+1
\\EST
+A34
'I'KIO
tl0 7 6l

EAST

+3
"6 3 2
t Q 9 R2

+K

tes t for ~our +A 9 o 2
you arP East

Today s deal IS a
tmagmatlon Suppose

defendmg agamst four spades Cover

SOl'TH

the West and South hands and prep ar e
your defense as partner leads the 10 of

" 985

hearts
Declarer nses wtth dummy s heart
an and plays a spade back to hts kmg
plays low Declarer rontmues
wath the Jack of spades and now your

Partner

10 8 4 3

+ K Q I 10'

tJ4
+QJ'

Vulnerable Nc1ther
D&lt;aler North

Wrsl

wms the ace What dtd you d1s South
card? If you took thr v1ew that you 1+
hold values m both mmors and really 3 •
do not care what partner leads you

partner

Nortll

Ea•l
Pass

2.
••
I 'I'

Pass
All pass

m1ght have lei go what seemed lobe a
Op&lt;&gt;mng lraol " 10
Dtsaster 1
The deal occurred 20 years a!!O L - - - - - - - - - --....J
when Omar Shant and the famous
The lesson of the deal of course IS
Italian Blue Tea m were tounng North
that one should ,1l"'ays stay alert on
Amenca playmg exh1b1tl0n matches
World champ1on Belladonna had led defense Be ready t o congratulate
partner wh en he deceives the oppQthe 10 of hea rts and Omar was h1s
nents bu t don t let htm deceive you
hapless partner who failed to take mto
And how a rr' we pnvy to lh1s anec
anounl that the lead of the 10 m1ght
dote' Nalurally Omar tells thiS Sl&lt;!fY
be a deceptive stroke of brtlham..: e ;md
on h1mse lf wtth some emphasts on
that West m1ght a lso hold the kmg Of
Gwrg1o Belladonnas mood when
course 1l s easy to look at all four
hands and see that Ea st should s1gnal Omar threw away the card that Gtor
gw had hoped to ruff
on the second trump w1th the 10 or
fllml's J aroby s books Jacoby on Bndfe " and
clubs Wesl will cash the heart kmg
Ja rob~ on Card Gamr ~ (wrtrtf'"n W!lh Ius !alb~r

worthless hea rt

and under lead the club ace to get the
sr!tlnR tnck w1th a heart ruff

1he I&lt;Jr e Oswald

pub/uht'd

b~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

41 Cotlec

1 Pats

tiona

lightly
5 Shaving

DOWN
1 lnler

2 Pinnacles
3 Femur

cream
Bus

I

station

and

10 Braves

fibula
4 Ollie's

slugger
12 Bout sne
13"1do"

partner

5 Descrlb
lng the

uHerer
14

Ill

Yulerday'e Answer
forte

Beallea
6 Rowing

tempered

• 25 Turn

15 Delibor

26 Rid
27 Happon

alely

woman
16 Emulate

7 Out of

lmn~tlvo
1g Trob&lt;!k ot

Bet•y
Ross

bod
8 Fomod

"Jeop
ardyl"

need

17 Precad1ng

Ford

8 Ex

periods
18 Jacket
foalures
21 Pleasing

Mot
mgr -

pM

20 Aploce

30

Uncloar

22

33

Corn

23 1 hal lady
24 Gave

a

Johnson

lngs
28 Doslros
29 Compuler

Soy pasta

11 Brokaw s

buu

holp1ngs
35 Born
36 Go astray

answer
22
23

Gift
Hang

In

tho ail
24 Word
piece
26 Lawn
molstu1e
29 Opera
group
30 · Zapata"
31 Piping
32 Site for
38 -Across

34

ludicrous

37 007, e g
38 Noted

gatekeaper

38

Decay•

40 Buck, e g

DAIL VCRV1'1UQUOTES- Htre'1 how lo wor• It

g 1

o

AXVDI.BAAXR
IIILONGFELI.OW

~Batman

11 30 (2) II 1!]1 Tonight Show
Stereo
(!)Magnum, PI
(I) European Joumll
®l Night Court t:;l
112J(II 'Night Hoot' CBS lato
NlghtC
®On Stage
@ Spor1oConter
12!1 CNN Sporta
~Shogun, Part 1(NAi
t2 ·00 (I) &lt;lilt Newa
(]) Stir Huador
1!JJ Magnum, P.l.
I!JIID Twlllghl Zone
IIJ Crime Story
® Naohvllla Now
9 NFL'• Greateet Momenta
History ol Pro Foolball
12!1 NewScono
t2 30 (])II 1!]1 Lola Night Wllh
Dovtd ltltlrmon
CD Mavto
&lt;lilt Nlghtllne Q
I!IIID AIter Houro
1!2llll Pertanolllloa

One

slands lor another In litis samrle A Is u.&lt;etl
three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single lellers,

letter

lor the

Rpa'llropllell,

hlnl!

the length and fonnallon ol the word&lt; are all
the code letters are dllfetent

Each day

CRYPTOQUOTES

9-lt
VRS

v IJ p s

I' T S

K 1

G

!J

1 (J

V

SIIBIJ6TT
VQ

QN

QPD

WQGWSZlJ

VRSI·

lR SS WII

P W R
Z G V T

vQ

z1

- QtJKrSIJ

YQUATEKVR
V•eterd•y ' e Crpploq•ote: WilEN A GIRl
CEASES TO ALUSII. SIIE liAS I OST TilE MOST

POWERFUl CIIARM OF tiER BI·AtHY - GREGORY
FIRST

IU
PIIBMS Boots

fllt'Ob}! Hrt' now ava J/abfe

/n•uh lor~ &amp;&gt;r~ &lt;Jri'

CROSSWORD

m

11

Rasldantlai
or
commercial
wiling, naw service or repairs
llcenaad alactrlclan Ridenour
Eleetrleal, 304-675 -1786

A I A Water Sarvlae Poola cl•
tarns, wtll1 lmmedla1•1,000 or
2,000 g. !lone delivery Ca II :104675-637"0

®l ll2l Ill

t 0 30 (!] ID Paid Programming
®Crook I Chua

Relrlgeratlon

85 General Hauling

Nature - Qwlt - Yeas/ - Unless - STARTS
Upon reachmg mnety the old man mutlered "Well the
older I get the later old age STARTS '

~ ID Allen Nation S1kes and
George tallow the tra1l ol a
mystenous Tanctonese box

Plumbing &amp;

Electrical &amp;

1!]1 Foma Bueller A
cha rmmg clever young man
begms a new year at htgh
school C
®l ll2l til lonny A blua-colla r
worker 1s lorced to work two
tab s to care for e famtly c;J
®On Stage
@ NFL Monday Night
Magazine Season Prem1ere

Heart' NBC Mondey Night al
lho Movlea (2 001 t:;1
CIJ (I) llt ABC Monday Night
l'ootball C
(]) (!) Ftrfng line Special
Debate Celebnty po11ttc1ans
formally debate whether
government represents the
cause of or solution to
soc1e1y s problems (2 001
®l ll2l (II Murphy Brown
Corky gets cold feet as her
wedd1ng date gets closer (A)

MORK MEEKLE AND WINTRHOP

DaviS
Sew -Vac
Sarvlca
Georges CreaK Ad Parts sup
pi as, picllup and dellvary 614
446-0294

Car1art Plumbing
and Haatln~
Fourth and Ptna
Gallipolis Ohio
614 440 3888

(])II

9 00 (])II 1!]1 MOVIE. 'Joshua a

SepUc Tank Pump ing $90 Gallla
Co RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson OH 1·800-5379528

Heating

t:;1

7 35 (I) Tho Jefleraono
8 00 (]) II 1!]1 Freah Prince ot
Bet Air A boy from a Iough

fL.Ooc;LE. you'VE

, ·l

SCJtAM.UTS ANSWIRS

ct

Rotary or ca blt tool drilling
Most walls eom plated tame day
Pump salea and ttrvlca 304·
895 3802

62

UNSCRAMBlE LETTEil TO

Bewitched
ll2l (II Enlertalnment
Tonight
&lt;II Mamo'a Family
(!] 1D M"A'S'H
@ Motorweok llluslraltd
12!1 Crouflre

JET
Arlatlon Motor1 rapatred Now
1!. re built motors In stock Ron
Elians Enterprl~•s
Jack&amp;on
OH 1 800 537 9528
Complola Mobile Home sat ups
&amp; repairs elso plumbing &amp;
alectrtcal roofing remodeling
pat 1oa &amp; decks et c REMODEL
lNG' RaiArencas
EsUmalas
614 256 181 t

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS I
IN THESE SQUARES

GET ANSWER

(I)

u~ad automatle transmissions
GM 1!. ate call 304 675 4378
gars ntaed alao rapalr 81/ alia btl

Campers &amp;

G

B) Jame s Jacoby

7 30 (]) II ®l 1!]1 Jeopardy!

Bud9et Transmissions U5ed &amp;
rebuilt star11ng at $99 614-245
56n st4 379 2263

79

e

7 05 (I) Happy Day a

&amp;

Squara bales hay $10 304 862
2537 or 304-nl-5390

Block, brlcj{, sewer pipes windows, lintela ele Claud• Win
82 Chevy Caprice Estate Sta
ten~, Rio Gnnda OH Call 614- lion Wagon, good cond $1 000
245-5121
304 57ti .":!655 evenings

Fruits &amp;

tor Sale

1987 Cttallon 130 HP 1/0 low
hours $5,400 614-245-5978

71

Chow Pupa AKC Rti ed
weeks old 614.-146-7750

Motors

Hay for Sale Clovar &amp; Timo thy
Round Balas m tha Flald 614
245 -6 598

Transportation

AKC 811111 pUJ=iplal $100
Ready to go Francie B•ntdum
614·667-3856

&amp;

I I I

17

from ..... .. kid?

t:;l

Accessories
Livestock

64
___H_ay_&amp;_G_r_a_1" , . -

Building

Pets lor Sale

1987 Honda 250X tour whoelor
304-895-3603

61 Farm Equipment

I

ct

Motorcycles

Farm Supplies
&amp;Livestock

Supplies

56

74

-=r=--'1

r~-W-U-L-:0:--:-A

"'"'"'"' .,

adv1ce you g1ve a kid IS cons1·
dered dumb unt1l 11 IS heard

6
Complete the chuckle quottd
.
.
.
.
•
•
.
by ftllmg m the m1111ng word1
.__,._......_..__,._......___. you develop from step No 3 belaw

Fortune C
(!) Andy Qrilfhh
(I) Inside Edition
(]) (!) MacNeU Lehrer
NewsHour
&lt;II
112lfll Current A Hair
(!] 1D Night Court t:;1
I!Ji Miami Vice
® Music Row Video
@ SportaCentor
12!1 MoneyNne
~ Scarecrow and M,.. King

- --------

0•&lt;

. •

6 35 (I) Andy GriHhh
7 00 (]) II ®l 1!]1 Wheel ot

1988 Ford Aero Star ligh t blua
sharp, $8 900 614 388 9n5

rs·

1

R~,Ar- -1M~rl~ y~ ~•

t...js-.-,H
..:.Erl
_
.
•

Abbon and Coatello
(I) (I) Ill ABC Nawa t:;1
(]) Wild America t:;1
(!) 3-2·1 Contact t:;1
®l l!2l (II CBS News t:;1
&lt;IlliD Three,• Company
®Top Card
@ Sportalook

305 engme,

Honda 3 wheeler 200S $500
1980 Pontiac 305 motor and
transmission $200 304 675
408 3

Reeondttlontd Washol"!! Dryara
Guaranteod prompt service tor Baby Calves tor Salt 614-188·
all mak81 models The Washer 11524
Dryer Shoppa 614-446-2944
Wood &amp; Coal Slovo use "lnsert or frat Slandlng, 2 blowers
&amp; glass door cost SHOO Naver
usod, aell $600 614·256-6413

1983 Chevy Van
614 379 2596

A' 2N ,

-r-r.........
y-T.-r--..TI--111

fi

&amp; 4 WD's

l98B Suzuki GS450l 3 500
miles wmdshlald exc cond
$1,600 304-BB2 2356

old pure breaa, no p1per1
S600 aach 304 675-4478

aala 614 256--1902

Vans

rr

~- -1

8 30 (]) II 1!]1 NBC NlghUy News

1987 Ford Ranger STX 4x4, Ex
tra good Cond 614 446 9258
73

r

1

8 05 (I) Beverly Hltlbllllea

1985 Ford Ranger, 4x4 4spd
standard transmission
wl1h
overdrive 6ft bed, V..fi engmo
44,000 mlios, garage kopt 614
446..0051

Royal Oak Resort Charier Mambtrshlp Regular price $59 95
Asking $49 !liS Financing avail·
able For Information 614 992
6839.

Real Good Locust Posta tor 3 L.lmoualn 8ulla 18 910 monlhs

Halt flunner Btanl, Pick Your
Own, S7 1 bulh•l, 614-448-4591

'Sure IS tough to sell life msurance after
the 1mmortall!y pot1on salesmen co m e
lhrough lawn

Grando

for truck 814·992·:24 40

Par1s Cleaner Tank $70, Two 20
Inch truck rims, $25 614 24563
5067.

Vegetables

Na1hua
14x70
wt•xpando,
.Uuated 75 sere land, Point
PlaHnt, Many tlltn!t,_~plictd
on lnepectlon, 304-175-!Vl'l:

1977 Ford

Air conditioner, 12,500 BTU,
Gibson Washer &amp; Dryer Com·
blnatlon, Riding Lawn Mower
with Brigga &amp; Slratton Engine
Everything practically new 614·
446-8002

58

Must sell, 141156, Llbtr1y, 2br,
$6,500 or beat otter 814 3792443

For Sale

Merchandise

Complete Satellite S)'fltem Must
nil moving 614-367-0210
Household

KNOW IT'S TODA'I''S
PAPER IF T~E DATE AT T&gt;IE
TOP OF T~E PAGE MATCHES
T~E DATE ON THE CALENDAR
YOU'LL

Page-9

Rearrange letters of the
four scrambled worda below to form four 11mple word•

8·00 crJ II iiJ (I) Ill ®l ll2l til
1!]1 Newa
(!] I Dream of Jeannie
(]) 3-2·1 Contact C
(!) Square One nf
(!] (II Andy Griffith
I!Ji He·Man
@ Moloworid (0 301
12!1 World Today
~ Hardcaoue and
McCormick t:;1

1984 Dodge p1ck up, modal 150
good eond low mileage $3 200
614 256 6251

Furnished
Rooms

YOU SHOULD DO
IS LOOK AT TI-lE TOP
OF TI-lE PA6E Jl-lEN
YOUR.SELF A ~1'\lt:NVI'II\.,
WHAT

Daily Sentinai-

0

EVENING

R.nt 1 bedroom apartment
Nice carpet, clean and naat
HUO lpproYtd No ptts Pt
FJteasant 304-675-6200

bedroom

....
_Til_,_u~_:t_~_'_S_~.~~~.-j~t/is• ....

Is It True Jeeps lot' $44 Through
The US Govt? Call For Faetsl
504-649·5745 Ext S-313

7S GMC pickup new pamt and
runs good, Will trada lor car
304-61!i 5091

TWo

The

Television
Viewing

Autos tor Sale

Ona Br, unflwnlshed apt ,
Range and regrlg provtdtd
W.t1r aowags, and garbage
paid Dtposll req'td Call 8f4446--4345

•*

TWa bedroom mobile ttome
carport. enachtd building and
lend In Middleport Convenient
to echoole Ito A11LWne loan
8t4-863-8568

September

e

Guns 12 Ga Remington Obi
Gracious living 1 and 2 bed
222 Sauage w1scopa
410
room a'"""r1mants at VIlla~&amp; Sauage pump 22 Remington,
ro
Maoor
and
Rivers! e Bmm German Mouser 614 446Apanmenta In Middleport From 9442 ~Evenings)
197&amp; thrM bedrooms, 141170, 2 $196 Call 614 992 77tl7. EOH
baths If lntarlltiMI 104-675- In New Haven W V 2 bedroom
53
Antiques
2535
carpaled, kitchen furniahod
Buy or uU RIVtrln• Anllquu
1982 Townhou11 14x70, doublt large cloute, 111 1lectric We
1124 E Main Slreul Pomerov
expando, CA On private ranted pay water ltWer and trash
Hours M T W 10 00 am to 6 00
lot In Rodney 614-446-1539 after ~layground for children Basic p m , Sunday 1 00 lo 6 00 p m
6p m
rent $196 month HUD vouchers 614-992-2526
ICCtplad
Call 304-882-37'16
1g34 Man ..on 14r60 all
2 EHO
Top Cash paid Old tumlturt
batha, wa~ehtr and dryer, A!C,
. cuboarda
quilts
oriental
po5-rtl ally turnlshod, tto,5oo 304- Mlddltport, Ohio, BHch St One painlings toys or entire ntata
67 76
bedroom tumlshod apt , deposit cell collecl 304·525 3275 or 104·
&amp; reference rtqulrtd, 304-882· 523-6854
1g85 Knol" by Brlgldar, 2 t».cf. 2566
rooma, 2 b1lha, w/a~pllanc ..,
exe cond, 304.&amp;82·3106 ot 882· Nicely Fum td Small houu, 54 Miscellaneous
2H7.
garage,
not
aultabla
tor
Merchandise
ch1ld""!'t!n, no peta, $300/mo
a or 3 bedroom mobile home, O.posh, 614-446 0338
garageL t:rpando
31• acre
12 gauge alnglt barrel! shotgun·
Nuda tl.C 814·742-2724
Nicely Fumlshed Mobil• Home NEW with full box of shells 410
In city. CA Sul11blt for 1 per
3 shots 2 dozen or more steel
2br Moblla Home, an Double aon Rtf &amp;Dtp Rtqulrsd 6,4. traps-aome brand new 614-992Lot, 6'14~25&amp;.6180
446..0338
6160

SNAFU® by

71

Ona bedroom apts for rsnl
$225 month Otpoa.lt required
614 992 2218 lftlr p m

1975 Wa11ern Mansion lbr
bt
$3 000, 010 , or trade, mual
moved! Set at 26 Cantral
Avenue Galllpollt OH

2br, 14x70, Nuhu1 • 65 Model
New applltncll Total Elac CA,
at4-44&amp;-1411

Monday,

BORN LOSER

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
lor Rent

Rou1t 2 Ashton, 1 acre iotsk 3

Johns

44

5 acrn land on Rt 2 Eckard
Chapel Road, 304-675-3190

mllu aouth Gallipolis Loc a

Big Yard S.le, Tutl and W~
10 00 till '1 Lotd mise !lema 2
mlln Henderaon At 35, Linda

8

Lots &amp; Acreage

Lind on Spring Ave make nice
trailer 101 SSOOll 080 g27.6436
1fttr5 pm

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Monday, September 10, 1990

Middleport, Ohio

�Paga 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Local news briefs-----.
Continued from page 1
Tech football game when the accident occ urred.
Hall Funeral Home In Proctorvi lle Is in charge of
arrangements.

lrag crisis at a glance -----.
By United Press International
Here Is a roundup of the la tes t m a jor events In the Persian
·Gulf crisis stemming fr om the Aug. 2 Iraqi Invasion of the
oU-rlch emirate of Kuwai t.
BAGHDAD. Iraq - Ira q says President Bush's statements
aner the Helsinki s uperpowe r s ummit dis play h is hatred for
Arabs, but refraine d from a t tacking erstwhile ally Soviet leader
Mikhail Gorbachev. Bush's "stat eme nts displayed his ha tred
tor the Arab nation, because Bush Ignored the crisi s of the
Palestinian people who are suffering under the Zionist
nightmare," the offi cia l Iraq! News Agency quoted a
government spokesman In Baghd ad as saying . - - . • . LONDON - Prime MiniSter Margaret Thatcher said in h&lt;•r
first public comment on the He lsi nki s ummit : " !th ink It's very
good for the world to know tha t the two great powers, the UnIted
States and the Soviet Union. are a bsolute ly a t one in say ing tha t
what the U.N. said should be do ne (abou t an Iraqi withdrawal
from Kuwait i. will be done."
CHARLESTON. S.C.- A charter flight a rri ved Su nd ay n ig ht
carrying about 300 former hos tages from occupied Kuwa it via
Iraq and Jordan. They sa ng · 'God Bless Aml•rlca'' after landing
on U.S. soli. Another !light with about 165 frPPd Americ a n
women and children was ex pected to arrive at Baltimore
Washington Interna tional Airport Mond ay a fternoon.
CAIRO, Egypt - A radical Ira nia n dally Is urging world
Moslems to rise up against what it descr ibed as the dis patch of
some 10,000 Egyptian women to entertai n U.S. troops In Sa udi
Arabia . But an Egyptian spokes man described the re por t as
" nonsense ." The Irania n dally Jomhurl Es lamt cited no source
or evidence for Its allegation s in Monday's ed ttions.
BAGHDAD. Iraq -

Iraqi Fore ign Minister Tariq Aziz flew

home from lran Monday after winning agreem ent on a

restoration of diplomatic rela tions between the two a dversaries
In the 1980·1988 Persian Gulf War. Although Aziz received a
formal welcome In Tehran , Ira nia n authorities re fu sed to fl y I he
Iraqi flag and continued to Ins is t that Iraq withdraw fr om
Kuwait
TOKY O- Britis h Secretary of State Doug la s Hu rd joined a
growing chorus of Wes te rn leaders aski ng Japan to givr more
tha n the $1 billion it has al ready p ledged to support the
multinational opposition to I rae's invas ion of Kuwait .
BRUSSELS, Belgium - NA TO foreign ministers gathl' red
Monday to r a bri e fing on the Helsi nki superpower su m mit by
Secretary of State James Baker and to furth L•r coordina te
Persian Gulf s trat egy.

Senior housing project.started
NAPOLEON, Ohio iUP l t Construction has s tarte d on a $1.5
million senior housing project on
Napoleon 's south side.
The 46·unlt Rivervi ew Terrace
wDI'pr6'vlde hous ing for people 62
and older and disa bled ad ult s
when completed In mld ·l99l.

Ground was broken Sat urday
A Colum bu s organization ca ll ed
Na tion Chu rc h Residen ts wi ll
ma nagP the facilit y, whic h is
be ing paid for by the DepartmPnl
o f Hou si ng and Ur ban
Deve lopment.

One player wins in Super Lotto
'

' ,.
CLEVELAND iUP! i - OnP
Super Lotto player ha s a winning
ticket from Saturday nig ht' s
drawing that had a S3 million
jackpotl
· The ticket has the numbers 3. 4.
6, 12; 18 and 19. The owner ca n
redeem It to become e lig ible for
$116,250 a year for 20 years.
Ohio Lottery off ic ial s sa id
Sunday that out of the $3 ,067,864
worth of ticket s sold. 176 had flvr
oL lh~ numbers. ~ ivin R the

ow ners $1,000 eac h, and anothPr
6,829 had four for $75.
Th e Kicker number of 22R711
didn't produce a winner. Lotte ry
officia ls said $575 ,774 worth of
tickets were sold a nd five had the
fir st fiv e numbers for $5 ,000; 5J
had the f irs t fo ur for $1,000, 524
the fir st three for $100 and 5,17&lt;
the first two for $10.
Wed nesdav ·s Super Lot to Ja c k
pot will be $3 million .

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND tUPl i - Sat ur·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Plck·3
229
Plck·3 ticket sa les to ta led
$1,447 ,145 50, with a payoff due of
·
$575,78(] Plck-4
: 7691.
P!ck·4 ti cke t sa les totaled
$272,357.50. with a pa yoff duP of
$151,600.
Cards

five of hearts.

eight of clu bs
klng o( diam on ds.

five of spa dl's
Cards ticket sa lrs tota lrd
$1:&gt;1,2 1 ~. with a payoff due of
$76,040
Supn Lotw
3. 4. 6, 12. lR. a nd 19
Super Lolto tickrt sale~ tota lr-d
$:l ,067,H64
Ki cker
228711
Kickrr ticket salps totalpd
$575.774.

--Area deaths--:Gertrude Van Cooney
Gertrude Frances VanCooney }
81, Middleport, fl ied Sunday a)
Veterans Me moria l Hospi tal. ·)
She was bo rn In ~ddlepoj&gt;l
'the daughter of the I e WIIVa.;
and Sarah Pax ton M ~ey : ShP
was a former garme nt factory
worker &lt;1nd a homem a ker.
She Is s urvived by her hu s .
band, Charles Va nCooney uf
Middleport; a daughter. Mrs
William (Sarah Katheryni Wal
~ers. Middleport ; fi ve grand ·
children. Doxie Wa lte r s of
Hamden . Penni J erlc or Athens.

Melanie O'Nl'll of Pomrrov .
Tommy Walters of Portla nd . a nd
Sa lly Jo Moore of Pomeroy; 10
great ·gra ndr hlld ren; a sis te r.
Eve lyn Cal l, Pomeroy , seve ra l
nirces and nephews .

She was preceded in death by
her parents, an i n fa n t son, a
s is ter a nd four broth ers.
Services wi ll be on Wed nesda!·
at I p.m . at Rawllngs ·Coat&lt;·
F isher Funera l Home with Rev
William Little of fi c iating.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Ce metery In Ch es hire.
Friends m ay ca ll a t the funera l
hom e on Tuesday from H p.m .
and 7·9 p. m .

'Sovr."et
from page 1
:
· · · Co-ntinued
-- - -- - Preliminary debate on p ro pos·
als for the move to a market
economy was not expected until
Tuesday. when Premier Ni kola i
Ryzhkov's governme nt was to
•make Its report on the transit ion
to a market and urge nt measures
needed to stabilize the eco nomy.
· During Its spring session. the
~Supreme Soviet rejecte d the
,government's previou s proposal
·tor "transition to a regula ted
. market" and ordered It revised .
· Ryzhkov favors a s tep· by ·step
transition to some sort or market
·a-onomy . His revise d plan Is s till
conservative and envisages
much continued central control,
a swlnd that has led to numerous
calls for his rtslgnatlon .
f. rival blueprint tor the move
J9·a market economy , developed
by econornlsl Slanislav Shatalln

and a co mmission set up by

Pres ide nt Mikhail Gorbachev
a nd Russian re publi c leader
Bor is Ye lts ln, calls for m uch
more ra dica l reforms to qui ck ly
privatize proper ty a nd decentra l·
tze control.
Although Gorbachev, Yelts ln
a nd other of!lclals have said only
one plan should be presented to
Parllament, the two proposa ls
had major dl!!erences a nd It was
not c lear what would fina lly be
presented to the Supreme Soviet.
Ryzhkov told the Independent
ln terfax news agency he would
present hts plan to P a rUa men t
and proba bly Include "a na lysis
of some articles of the program
worked out by Shatalln's group ."
He said he did not know If anyone
would presen t the e ntire Sha ta l!n
progra m .

Monday, SIIJ)ternber 10, 1990

Dry weather is forecast for Buckeye State
By United Press International
After several days of torrential
ra ins In the past few days, Ohio
has fina lly s tarted to dry out, a nd
it appears the Buckeye State will
have severa l days of reasonably
dry weather.
Overnight, skies were clear to
partly c loudy wllh light winds,
wh ich a llowed areas of d e nse fog
to develop over some sections of
the state a fter midnight .
Th e most s lgolflcan t fog deve·
loped over eas tern Phlo and
along the Phlo River. Just be fore
dawn, visibilities were near ze ro
at Youngstown and Zanesville,
while Akron· Canton reported vis
lblllt y of a bout one · eighth of a
mlle. Temperatures ranged from
the m iddle 50s to around 60,
except In the m iddle 60s In
extreme souther n Ohio.
The fog had dissipated for th&lt;•
most part by the midmorn ing.
Partly s unn y s kies were to rule
over the s ta te Monday , wit h
temperatures well int o the 80s In

the sout h and a round 80 in the
north.

Monday night will be partly
cloudy statewide, with dense fog
lik e ly to develop again over
portions of the central and
sou the rn counties. Lows Monday
night will range from 60 to 65.
Tuesday wi ll again be pa r tly
su nny over the state with little
c hange in te mperature. A showe r
or thunderstorm canno t be com·
pletely ruled out the next two
day s due to a very we ak co ld
front m oving Into the sta te
Monday n ight and Tuesday , but
the probabll1ty of any rain
appears to be quite low .
Wednesday wll1 see a slight
c hance of showers, with h ighs In
the 80s a nd lows In the 60s .
Thursda y will be fair , with high s
In the mid- 80s to low 90s, but
Friday will turn cooler, with
highs In the upper 70s to the low
80s a nd a chan ce of showers.
Wi th the te mpera ture warm·
lng, the livestock safety Index

First visitors tour
Ellis Island museum
NEW YORK iUP II - E llis
Island. where millions fir st
ste pped onto American s hores,
opened to the public Monday with
a few hundred tourists claimi ng
th e ho nor of being the first
visitors to the memorial to
America's Immigrant

E.'XJ)E'rience.
The ear ly birds t rave led by
ferry to the three·acre Isla nd in
Ne w York Harbo r to visit the
restored main Immig ra tion
bu ilding which operated from
1892 to 1954 as the gateway for
fam il ies of a n estimated 140
million Americans.
The fa r e was $6 for ad ult s, $3
for ch ildren , more tha n many
orig ina l Immigrants ar r ived
with .
Althoug h the 9 a.m. ferry was
only abo ut o ne· thlr d filled with
passengers, th e number of viS·
I tors was expected to Increase as

the day progre&gt;Sed under In ·
c reaslngly s unny skies. The
a dm!sslon·free museum. the
ga teway of d rea ms for 17 mlllton
people, opens at 9: 30 a. m . d ally.
T he fir s t visitors en tered the
red brick, co pper domed m as ter·
piece of bea ux·a rts arc hitecture
through the baggage room, just
as Immigrants did, and climbed
to the Registry Room s tairs that
doctors used to spot as thmat ic s.
hea rt patien ts and o ther who
were physically Impa ired.
From th e re , they visited wa it ·
lng room s with origina l gra flt i on
the walls, t he Spec ial Inquiry
Roo m where rejected immi·
gran ts pleaded their cases, a
do rm itory with three- tier Iro n
pipe bunks for Im migrants who
were

held

over night ,

and

a

depart ure r oom with access to
trains going west

wr&gt;rr answered over the weekPnd

by unit s of Meigs Cou nty Emer
ge ncy Medical Services .
On Satu rd ay morning a t 3:26
a. m ., Pomeroy squad went to
Mulberry Avenue for Henry

Wr rry He was transpo,rted toh·
Vete ran s Me moria l Hospital.
Syracuse sq uad went to Second
Street for Iva Logan . Loga n was
transpo rt ed to Vetera ns Me mor
tal Hosplta I a t 10: ! 5 a. m . i\ t 11 : &gt;7
a.m., Pomeroy squad wa s di s
patched to West Main St reel for
El izabet h Horak. Hora k was
transpor ted to St. .Joseph 's
Hospital.
At 12 58 p.m., Pom eroy squad

At 2: 16p.m , Middle port sq uad
was called to Overbrook Cen ter
for Agnes Brown. Brown was
transported to Vet eran s Memor ·
Ia! Hospit a l. Racine fire depart ·
ment a nd sq uad were called to a
motor vehicle accident on Co unt y
Road 35. Ke lly Smith was tra ns ·
ported

to Veterans

Mem orial

Ho s pit a l At H: Jl p.m , Mlddll'
port squad was ca lled to Wa lnut
Street for Ca r l Buc k l('y He wa s
tra nspo rt ed to Vclerans Memo r
ia l Hos pit a l At 9: OJ p.m ..
Tuppers Plains squad tr&lt;Jn s
ported Mar y Jo Reed fr om the
Arbaugh Add it ion to Camden
Clar k Me morial Hos pital

tton ra tes averaging around 0.20
to 0.25 Inch a day.
Fruit a nd vegetable harves ting
m ay gradually resume as the
week progresses . with rai n hold·
ing off unti l Fr id ay most a rea s of
the state.

Page 4

Vo1.41 , No .90

tra ns por ted

F:lizabet h

Mourning to Vetera ns Me mori al

Hospltal. Pomeroy sq uc:tc.l was
ca ll e d to State Houle 248 at 9: 17
p.m . lnzy Nrwcll wa s t ra ns·

por tPd to VC'trran s Memoria l
Hos pita l
On Sund ay a t .1 511 a .m .. Pome·
roy sq ua d was called to Sta te
Ro ut e 3:! for Margaret Blake .
Blakp was taken to Veter ans

Memorial Hospital. Pom eroy
sq uad was called to the Meigs
Co un ty Sheri ff's Department at
4: •16 a m
Je rry Uribe wa s
transpo rted to Vrter ans Memor ·
tal Hospital. Middleport squad
was ca lled to Village Manor

Boosters to m eet
The Tuppers Plains Booster s
are ho ld ing their first mee ting of
thesc hoolyea rtoni ght tMond ay r
at 7:30p .m in the Tuppers Plain s
Elemen tary Sc hool cafeteri a.
There Is a pa id babysittl'r at each
meeting .
Revival services
Th e Carme l Unit ed Me thod is t
Churc h will hold n•vlval services
through Friday a t 7: 30p.m . T he
guest

spea ker

will

be

Rev.

Ches ter Lemley . So ng leader will
he Fred Adkins . Specia l m usic·
wi ll be presented throughout the
wrek .

South Central Ohio
Pa rtl y cloudy Monday night,
wi th a reas of dense fog develop·
lng after m id night . and a low
near 65. Partly cloudy T uesd ay.
wi th highs in the mid 80s. Chance
of ra in Is 20 pe rcen t.
Extended Forecast
Wedn esday through Friday
A c hance of shower s and
thunderstorms Wednesday and

Frid ay, with fa ir weath er on
Th urdsay . Hi ghs will be In the 80s
Wednesd ay, ranging from th e
mid 80s to th e low 90s Thursday,
and from t he upper 70s to the m id
80s Friday Owr nlght low s will
be in the 60s Wednesday and
T hu rsday morning~ . a nd ranging
from the uppN OOs to the m id 60s
early Fr iday

AA and AI Anon
The Pomeroy group of Al cohol·
ics Anonymous and AI Anon will
meet at 7 p.m. at Sacred Hearl
Churc h on Thursday . For more
Infor mation, ca lli 1800) 333·00&gt;1.
Events slarl Tuesday
Round dance classes will start
Tuesday at th e American Legion
Ha ll on Fourth Street In Middle·
port Instead of tonight as was
earlier a nnounced . Glen Ander's
Cue Ste ppers are sponsoring the
classes which are to be he ld from
7 to8 p.m . The re will be no charge
for the first class. Information
m ay be obtained by cal11ng
992·2500 or 446-9759.
Arbaugh home
Joh Arbaugh of Tuppers
Plains, a fte r spending seven
weeks at St. Joseph Hospital In
P ar ke rsburg, W. Va., Is now at
the Skilled Nursing FacUlty of
Veteran s Me morial Hospita l,
Room 140.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN ·MUSSER

INSURANCE
Ill Set: and St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

You Don't Have To estion
AComfort Assured D erS Ability.
They Have Passed The Test.
•.

'

Stocks
Dally stock pri ers
(As of 10:30 a. m .)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

.·- '

... , ·•
VINTON BRIDGE DEDICATE D - A rlbbon·cutting ceremony
was held Monday In the Jlnal step ol opening the new State Rouw
160 bridge over Raccoon Creek In VInton . The bridge had been
closed since June 4 and was opened Aug. 25 lor tra!!lc - 22 day s
ahead of schedule . Those helping In c ulling I he ribbon were: (from
• le'tt) GaiDa County Engineer Jim Baird , Vinton Councilwoman

."

SWldy Maskcw, VInton Councilman Richard Mudd, State Senator
Jan Michael Long, State Rc pre•entallve Mary Abel, Ohio
Department ol Transportation Dlslrlct Deputy .loe Leat,h, GaJDa
County Treasurer Larry Be tz , and Gallia County Auditor Ron
Canaday.

. ,., .. ,

Highway hearing tonight at Pt. Pleasant
PT. PLEAS ANT, W.Va. (UP!) The fim of several hearings on the
best posstble route for a proposed
four-lane highway to follow in
Mason County is SCI Tuesday in
Point PleasanL
After meeting with Rep. Bob
Wise, D-W.Va., and otl)er officials,
the state Dcparunent of Transpona·
tion released its findings, which
recommended ill at botll W.Va. 2
and 35 be upgraded to four-lane
status.
Wise reiteralcd Sunday his poSt ·
lion that ht s fi rst goal was lO gel a

four -lane ht ghway in the region .
" I have also said that no matu:r
which route is developed , our
regton will benefit when at lea.st
one four ·lane highway is finally
built where none exists," he said .
Wise said he sec ured $300 ,000
in in the 1991 tnlnSporution bill for
preliminary e ng meering work and
environm cn!al impac t stud y regardless o r which route is se lec ·
ted.
" I have plll]lOscly avotded en ·
dorsmg an y o ne of the proposed
rouu:s tn hopes that tll e decision·

making process wou ld not get bogged down by poliuca! squabbling,"
he sru d.
"The governor has assured me
that the Milto n alttmauve rouu:
was chosen on me ril and without
regard to political considerations."
Wise cal led the regional approach viewed by the engineering
study a.s the first choice "a sound
concept. "
"If we can succeed in developing both Route 35 through Pumam
Count y and Route 2 in Huntington ,
we will hav e succeeded in es-

tabli shing a solid uiangle for
economic development for western
West Virginia."
The congressman said he hopes
no faction would claim a victory
for itself and defeat for its
ne i~hbors.

This has no place in our efforts
to get a new highway for our
rcgton, " he said . "Instead, let us
realize that we all win when a
highway is built where none exi sts.
That is, has been , and will be my
goal."

Voter registration week set Sept. 21-27
Secreta r y of State She rrod

to Vele ran s MPmorial Ho spit a l

Veterans Memorial
Saturday admissions - He nry
Werry , Pom eroy
·
Saturda y di scharges - Caro l
Stou t.
Sunday admissions - Inzy
Newe ll, Long Bottom; Elizabeth
Mournin g, Middle port; Iva!Lo·
gan, Pomeroy; William Robin·
son, Racine; Carl Buckley,
Middl eport.
Sunday discharges- VIrginia
P hal!n.

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel News Stall
Several fall recreationa l activ ·
Illes. Including a communit y
Halloween part y, were discussed
by Middle port VIl lage Council a t
Monday night' s meeting held a t
village hall.
Councilm an
Bob Gilmore
reported on the block party
which Is scheduled for Saturda y .
All enterta inm e nt , he sa id, will
take pla ce In Di les Park . The
firemen will ha ve a chick en
barbecue, a nd Du a ne Weber is In
c harg e of a car show. T he even t is
sponsored by the Middleport
merchants . Again thIs year somf'
sec tio ns of vi ll age str eets wlll ·be
closed off fo r game a nd cra ft
booths.
Plan s for a communit y hallo·
ween party to be he ld In th e an•a
of the Middleport Marina off

Meigs announcements

transported Do nald VanCoonry

Hospital news

Lo\4' tonight in mid · .
Chance of rain !0 ""'''""
Wednesday, high near
Chance of rain '70 pert·e nt .

Middleport all
set for block
party Saturday

WEATHER MAP - A cold front will be bringing mUd
te mperatures to the Northeast, with highs In the 70s and 80s. Ahead
of the front highs will be In the 80s and 90s with scattered showers
and thunderstorms throughout the southeast. Scattered thunder·
storms also will de velop In the ce ntral and southern Plains and
highs will be In the 90s from Texas through North Dakota and
Montana . The Northwest will be mUd. With arldgeof high pressure
overhead the Southwest will be unseasonably hot and dry.

Apartmen rs aT 10 :33 a m_ and

Am Elec tric Power..
.. 27
AT&amp;T .
. .31],
As hla nd Oil
...... .33';,
Bnb Eva ns ...................... t:l\1
Charming Shoppes .. .
.. .. R
Ci ty Hold ing Co.
.. ......... 15lh
Federa l Mogul .............. 17%
GoO&lt;lyear T&amp;R
.. 21V.
Key Centu rion ................. 11
Lands' E nd .................... 12V.
Limited Inc .
.. ... 15'!,
Multimedia Inc ......... ....... 62 'h
Rax Restaurant s.... . ......... l'h
Robb ins &amp; Myers.
.19'h
.. 13 'h
Shoney's Inc.
Star Bank ......... ... ............ l9V,
Wendy's Int'l.
................ 6 V,
Worthington Ind .... ....... .... 21 'h

CLOUDY

Orown recently· ann ounced that
Nat ional Voter Reg istration
Week, Sept. 21 ·27, will hel p
rem ind Oh ioa ns to rrgi ster to
vote just In time for the general
e lect ion In Nowmber.
"The rig ht to vote Is guaran
teed to a ll of us, bu t unless
Ohi oa ns ta ke the in itiat ive to fill
out a stmp le form. the y will bt•
shu t ou t of the poiltng p lace, ·
Brown said . "Na tional \'otrr
Registrat ion Wr&lt;•k provi des us

with an excel lent oppo rtun ity to
rem ind Oh ioans of the fact just in
time fo r them to regi s tP r bPfo rr

the re gls tra t ion deadline. "
Oh io residents who are U.S.
ci ti zens a nd who will be 18 years
old by election da y ma y reg ister
for the November 6 r lec tl on by
mal l or In personal theSecretarq
of Sta te's off ice. any cou nty
board of eiPc tions or any s ta tr
office Reg istration forms arc
a lso available a t a ll driver's
licrnse rc nPwa l lora tion s. publlc

high sc llools a nd many l ibraries
Brown cauti oned that having
an ou tdated vo ter registration
for m on file will not get a voter
Into th e polling p lace in

Novcmtwr.
"Ohioans who have not voted
for more than sour years hav e

had th eir reg istra tions can·
cel led . because th e O hio Cons !I
tuli on rpquires it. " Brown sa id
A l so, voters who have movrd or
cha ngPd their names need to
update their reg ist rations or they

will no t be allowed to vote ...
The reg\strat ion d eadline lor
thl' November 6 e lec tion Is
Oct ober 9.
''There's st il l plenty of tt nw.
but we want Oh ioans to think
ahead, " Brown sa id . "Register·
lng to vote only takas a minut e,
but It e na bles you to help make
dl'cl slons that wi ll affect Ohio for
many years to come Th£l' ti m r
spPnt regi stering ts a good
l n vl's tmP nt
in
Ohio
gov&lt;'rnm&lt;' nt

If crisis continues, gas shortages possible
By GEORGE LOBSENZ
WASHINGTON 1UP it - U.S
refi neries s hould bP able to ffit'f'l
demand for gasolin e and heat in g
oil thi s year, but th pn• may be
"localized shor tages" of molor
fue l In the months a head, a
federal e nergv expe rt told
Co ngress.
The warning by Ca lvi n Ke nt .

Assure the quality of your heat pump
installation by using a cenified Cornfon
~
Assured dealer. Cornfon Assured dealers
:
have the experience, expentse. and technical knowhow to properly install your heat pump. We know because they
proved tt to us. They fuced the demanding Refrigeration Service
Engineers Society (R.S.E.S.) cenificatmn exam that the Society
admmistered . Only dealers with R.S.E.S -cenified mstallers can
display our Comfon Assured emblem.
We're proud of the experience. technical expenise. and
professionalism of these dealers. Call Oh.io Power, and we'll
introduce you to the Comfon Assured dealer nearest you.

Call 1-800-827-6556.
,.. OHIO
liil POWia

1 Section, 10 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia In c NeV¥spa per

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 11, 1990

Copyrighted 1990

was ca lled to Overb r ook Cent er

a nd

Pick·3: 102
Pick-! : 3037
Cards
4-H, 10-C, 8-D, 10-S

NATIONAL WEA1HER FORECAST FROM 1 AM !1-11-90 TO 1 AM9-12·90

Weather

EMS has 12 weekend runs
TwrlvP ca lls for assistan cE'

may rise into the a lert category
over southern Ohio through
Tuesday
Field co nd itions will be too wet
fo r fieldwork most a reas through
Tuesday, but drying potential
will improvp wi t h pan eva pora -

Ohio Lottery

49ers
defeat
Saints

head of the Energy In formation
Administ ra tion, reflected grow ·
lng concer n abou t the loss of
re fined products from Ku wa it
and Iraq because of th e lnter na ·
tiona I boycott Imposed following
Iraq's In vasion of Kuwa it.
An oil In dustry offic ial agreed
with Kent' s assessment tha t ,
whiiP s uppli es wi ll be ti ght , U.S

Local news briefs-Name speaker for session
EIII.abeth Sm it h, R N. will be the spea ker a! the Wednesda y
aft ernoon trai ni ng session for caregiver s of th ose with
a lzhe lm er's dlesase or rela ted di sorder s at the Sen ior Citizens
Center.
Registration will be he ld fro m 1: ! 5 to I 30 p.m . a t which time
Mrs. Smith wi ll spea k on personal care a nd hygiene skills along
with the services which arc available through Veterans
Memoria l Hosp ita l Home Health Servi ce. Mrs . Smit h Is
coordina tor of that service for Veteran s Memorial. She Is a
graduate of the School of Nu rsi ng a t St. J oseph Ho spit a l,
Parkersburg, W. Va . a nd res id es In Reedsville .
Th ere wil l be a n open d iscussion and ref reshments followed
by a s upport group meeting .

Applications accepted for program
The Ga llla ·Me lgs Communit y Ac tio n Agency Is accep tJng
Continued on page 10

refin ers likel y wil l be ab le to
m f'e1 short · l erm demand for
processed petrole um product s.

However, he told a Hou se pan e l
Monda y that new "clean fu el"
requirements now pending In
Congress would Impose hug e new
cos ts a nd cut outpu t ! rom U.S.

rrflncrs al ready straining to
provide adequate supp lies . The
Indu s try has always opposed Ihat
aspect of the bill a nd t he Indus ! ry
off! cia I u rgt:'d Ia wma ker.s to
re·eva luate the clean a ir bill's
requirement s In light o f the
Pers ian Gulf crisis.
M ea nwhile , a pri vate energy

ana lyst criticized the Bush ad ·
mlnlstra\lon
s pecific a ll y
Energy Department officials for worrying a loud In cong res ·
slo nal tes timony las t week about
possi bl e shorta ges.
E dwin Roth schild, e ne rgy pol·
Icy director lor Citizen Action, a
consumer organiza ti on, said the
hand ·wrlnglng " throw s oil o n a
bl azing lire" a nd he joined
several lawm akers In urging
President Bush to calm shortage
fear s by opening up the govern ·
m ent's Strategic Pe troleu m
Reserve.

Page St reet o n Oct. J l were
outlined by Gilmore . The even t
will be co-spo nsored bv the
village a nd the Aml'riean Legion.
Post 128. and it s au xili ary
Once th&lt;• vi llage has th e deed to

th e two acres nea r th e marina
fro m the Hess fa mily. Gilmore
sai d th a t a dozer will go In and cu t
a path th ro ug h the woods to be
used for a ha unted hayride.
Plans arP 1o secu re two rubbe r
tired wagons for the hayri de
which wi ll leave fro m th e mar ina
parking lot a nd t ravel back in to
the wood s. Legion and auxiliary
member s w il l be providing
hau nti ng scenes a long the route.
Th ere will be a c harge of 50 cents
for kids and $1 for adu lts with th e
money to be designated for the
purch ase of ma sks and props for
futurr even t s.
Con tinued on pagr 10

State adopts rule for
school testing program
COLUMBUS, Oh io iU Pii The Sta te Boa rd of Educ at ion
adopted a rul e Monday esta blish·
In~ a •llltewtfte testing program
for demonstrating 12th· grade
proficiency in c iti ze n s hip ,
m a th e m at ics. writing and
read ing .
A la w enac ted by th e 117th Ohio
Ge nera l Assembly required the
board to deve lop spec ific r ules
for Impleme ntin g th e s tatew ide
trs tlng program .
Starti ng wi th the 1994 graduat ·
lng class, the law requires
stud en ts who hav e passed a l l
ntnth ·grade profi ciency tes ts to
take the l2th·gr ade tests. They
will be used as one of th e crit eria
for earnin g a diploma with
commend a ti on a nd ·or d iploma
wi th distinction
At their regu lar September
meet ing, board member s a lso
adopll'd a rule c hanging two

asprocts of posl -srcondar y enrollment optio ns to coincide wi th

cha nges the Legis lat ure made in
the origina l law.
Now. th e sta tP must reimbu rsf'

a college for a s tu&lt;il'n t'sex penses
onl y If both pos t spcondary a nd
high school credit is earned In
add\H on . pri vatr school st udrnt s
may now p;utlc ipatr in th r

pr ogra m .
The board

a lso

approved

resolu tions:
- To adO gn" de \!:"ve\5 to
Wooster Chris tian Sehoul a nd
Pr ier Hill Ca tho lic School
- The rPscind th 1· f'hartl'r of
lndrtw nclent School in Fasr

C' levpJand
- To dpprovf' a IHlUP~I lor a
bond issuf' for thr (']prmont Nnr fhrn s ff'rn Lordi "chord di s

lrirl in Brow n Jnd (']prmont
countirs
-To tran sff'r tl' tT ito ry from
thr Mount Vrrnon Cit\- sc hool
district to thf' f.a~t Knox L.or-.1 1
sc hool distr ict. from the Brd fonl
Ctty sc hool dls t m t to the :-&lt;ordo
nia Hill &gt; Cltv sc hool d ist mt .
from th e St . Man· s City sc hool
dlstnrt to thr Spr ~c!'rvlile Loca l
sc hool di strict a nd from th r
Talawanda Cit y schoo l dt s lrl ct to
thr Ross Local .sc hool d istrict.
-To cons id r r tr&lt;~nsfer of terri
tory from the Trotwood Madison
Ci ty school d is trict to the New
LC'ba non Local school di stric t .
fr om the St Marys Cit y school
district to l h( • Wapakoneta City
sc hool district and fr om th1 •
Wapakonrt J C ity sc hool dis trict

to thr Spi• n(' t'r\'ii!C' !.or al srhool
dts trlct

Meigs is eligible to
receive SBA loans
Athen s. Meig s and Wash ington
Co untiPs have bern dpc lan•d a
dlsastrr area. and an• nov;

In ju ry Di sas tf'r Loan s 1E 1I)!. 1 111
permit thrm to mrrt f in&lt;~nt'l :ll
oblig ations that rould ha\·c bf'i'n
mrt had thr c\i sas !Pt nt1t
orcurrrd
Dis&lt;-l S!C'r vict im s art· r au tli~nt·d
not to apply thrir rm.uranct·
se ttl em ent s a,£:o unst thr&gt;ir mort
gages uniE'Ss rpquirPrl to Oo so b.\
their lf'ndrr s. VoluntJr~ · assignment or insurancC' prorrPds is not

l{o th schlld alsu contended that
while primary petrole um s tock s
a ppear low -part icularly gaso
line - many indu stries arc
building up s toc kpiles as lnsu

&lt;'liglbk to n•celvl' Small Rusi
ness Admi n istration loans
thr oug h the SBA 's office in
Parkersburg, W.Va
According to Frank D. Ray,
SBA' s District Director. th e
declarat ion has made "SBA

ranee agains t higher prices and

Disa s tcr Loan Assls ta nee a va lla ·

possible su pply problems la ter
this year, creating "artlflca lly
high demand."

bl e to residents and businesses
who suffered losses from flood ·
ing whic h occurred August IR a nd
19."
A res iden t may bo rrow up to
$100,000 to repair h is or her
primary home plus $20,000 for
lost or damaged per sonal prop·
er ty . Re nters are a !so elig ible for
up to S20,000 for per sonal pr op ·

elig ible to bf' rPfinanrt·rl with an

crty losses.

n-o ne ass is tance to an,vonc who

Businesses may borrow up to
$5110,000. Disaster loans can only
be u sed to restore property
affected by the disaster and the
loa n Is limite d to the amount not
covered by In s uran ce. Inte res t
rates will be e ith er lour percent
or eigh t per cent depending upon
the app lica nt 's resources All
appli cants mu st be a ble to
demonstrate repayment a bilit y
a nd a ll losses will be verified by
SBA.
Businesses tha t experienced
seriou s disruption because of this
disas ter may apply lor Economi c

would lik e additiona l help with
completing the ir applica tions.
Th e asststa ncr will be avai la ble
at th e same location September
17th th rough th e 20th from R: 30
a .m . until 4: $0 p.m.
The applicatio ns a nd assist ·
ance may al so be obtained
through th eSBA Disaster Assi s t
ance Divis ion . Area 2. Ra l ph
McGill Bou levard, Atlanta, Ga ..
J030R . The toll·fr ee telephone
num ber Is 1·800-334-0309 .
Filing dead line for flUng the
proper ty loss applica ti ons is
November 2.

However, Kent. admi nistrator

of the frderal energy statistical
and a naylt lca l agency that is
lnd epPndrnl of t he Energy De·
partment . said some a reas co ul d
experience gasoline shortages
thi s winter a nd that jet fuel
.s uppl ies a lso were dicey .
Even with U.S . re fineries oper
atlng at a bout 95 pe rcen t of
ca pacity this s ummer, he not ed ,
gaso line s tocks are a t their
lowest level si nce July 1988 .
"Gasoline Inventor ies arr
quite low and are onl y 5.9 million
barrels above the rrilnlmum
opera t lng lnven tory ," Kent told a
House s ubcommittee on e nergy
and power . " When the m inimum
opera ting Inven tor y Is reached,
localized problem s may develop
a nd shortages may a ppear."
Kent no ted th e e nd or the
Continued on pa ge 10

I' .

SBA di.saster J o;~n
Lo\a l rrsidrnl ~ md' , ·bit tht '
SI3A Di sas tN 1\~st.'-'anrp Oi\·
islon·s trmpora r.\' ofFict• a t Wood

Cou nt y F. mrrgt' nr .\· SPrvicPs,
1810 Staunton AVPnUf' in ra r krr ...
burg. W Va . from ~ - .'~fl a. m. to
4 $0 p.m . througll fridJ\'
SBA will also providt' onP-o-

\

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