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. Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

BIG ·BEND

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Reds rally,
defeat LA
Dodgers, 9-5

Your Independently Owned
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•
.

2 Sections. 1 6 Po goa 26 Cerill
A Multimedia Inc. Nowapoper

Pomerov-:-Middleport, Phio, Thursday, September 7, 1989

CDBG requirements
discussed by officials .
By NANCY YOACHAM
were addressed one by one by cally depressed areas of the
Dally Sentinel Staff
Shields.
state, such as Meigs County, now
Area government officials gaExplained ill detail was the receive a sli,::htly higher
thered Wednesday evening In the process by which survey sam- allocation.
commpn pleas courtroom of the pllngs must be taken to deterProposed CDBG projects may
Meigs County Courthouse to mine the percentage of low and be approved only If they benefit a
discuss requirements for the moderate Income households In large percentage of low and
county's new allocation of Com- areas that would be affected by moderate lncom·e household~ , or
munlty Development Block proposed CDBG projects.
If the area where the project will
Grant funding.
Commurllty Development take place has been declared a
Available to the county In this Block Grant money comes to the slum or blighted area, or at least,
round of CDBG funding Is Ohio Department of Develop- a parually blighted area.
$103,000, to be divided among as ment from the federal office of
With just a few weeks left
many as eight county projects.
Housing and Urban Develop- before project applications must
Meigs County Commissioners men!. The money Is channeled be submitted to the commissionManning Roush, Richard Jones from the state through the county ers, Shields encouraged tho!!'
and David Koblentz, and Devel- commissioners In each of Ohio's who are planning to submit
opment Director Kim Shields, 88 counties.
proposals to begin preparations
explained new requirements and
Although In past years, CDBG right away .
procedures to the 20 area govern- funds were allocated to counties
Anyone with questions or needmen! representatives who at- on an · equal, per capita basis, log assistance inay contact
tended Wednesday's meeting.
Shields pointed out that David Shields or the comml~sloners.
Information packets and maps Baker,Ohlo'scurrentDlrectorof' The commissioners may be
were distributed to those pres- . Development, changed the ~llo- reached at the courthouse , at
ent, and documents In the packet cation process so that economlContinued on page 16

FRESH LEAN

Ground Chuck
80NEI!SS

3 LIS.
OR MORE

Shoulder
Roast
'
'

$189

llUf IONNET . , .._....,

.· Margarine
Quarters
1 II. PtCG.

ll •

•REG. •HOMESTYLE

Tropicana
·orange Juice

FALL BLOWOUT

Cyprus ·Mulch

Fryer ·
EXPLAINS REQUIREMENTS - The Meigs
County Commissioners and Director of Develop-

rnent Kim Shields explain the requlremenlll for
the new round of funding from the Community
Development Block Grant Program.

r---------,.~~~~

Elevator project will
FROZEN

STU-lOST

,

· GOlDEN .DEliGHT

Tuna

Turkey •east

6.4 OZ. CAN.

$119
ll.

KING SIZE

FOODLAND

White. Bread
20 oz.
LOAVES
KRAFT

Mayonnaise

DElMONTE

Tomot~ Juice

32 OZ. JAR

46 OZ. &lt;AN

$189
ASST .

•PLAIN •SELF RISING

Tide Detergent

Hudson Cream Flour

CORONET

25 LB; .
BAG

Bath
Tissue

I ROll PMG.

ASST.

99(

DEL MONTE

egetables
12-17

CANS

oz.

Frozen
Yogurt

$ 89

1

QT.

-· ke .dpfll! .J?Y _Nqv~rnl?~r
By NANCY YOACHAM
. Dally Sendnel Staff .
·
:,, The Melill Co11nty Comm!s· sloners antfclpale that Instal !alion of the elevator In the·Meigs
County Courthouse will be completed by early November.
The commissioners reported In
Wednesday's meeting that renovatlons are now complete In the
Meigs County Court office on the
third floor of the courthouse, and
work In the treasurer's office on
the second floor Is nearing
completion. Extensive rearrangIng of these two offices was
necessary In order to make room
for the elevator which· Is being'
lnstalEd to serve the elderly and
handicapped residents . of the
county.
Funding for · the elevator was
acquired through last year's
Community Development Block
Grant allocation to Meigs
County.
Meigs County Engineer Philip
Roberts reported to the commis·
sloners that funding for State
Issue II Small Government projects Is expected to be released In
thf near future.
Roberts told the commissioners that after prioritizing the
Small Government projects
which were submitted from our
district. Pomeroy's $2.9 mllllon
proposal for a sewage line
extel!slon to the Monkey Run
area is rated fourth overall In the
district, and the Bearwallow
Ridge $11.900 water line extension project Is seventh on the list
In the district.
Whether or not these and other
local projects are funded wlll
depend upon how they rate on a
statewide priority list.
Scipio Township Trustees Don
Weaver and Gary Welsh attended Wednesday's commissioners meeting to discuss the
possibility of closing Scipio

Township Roads 458 (Graham
R9ad) and 384 (Reeves Road).
The commissioners explained
to .the trustees the pecessary
procedures to close a road.
including passing a resolution of
Intent to close and submitting
their request to close In writing.
A public hearing and viewing of a
road must then be scheduled,
wtth all property owners along
the road to be notified by
certified mail of the hearing.

Ohio Supreme Court
rules on .alimony, gifts
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) . The Ohio Supreme Court ruled
Wednesday that courts may not
modifY or terminate alimony
awards set forth In separation
agreements that become part of
marriage dissolutions.
In the case before the court,
Jackie·Adams of Belmont County
got his $200 monthly alimony
payments terminated In 1987
after his former wife, Nancy,
remarried.
·
But the Supreme Court held
that the state law had been
amended In 1975 to eliminate
conlinubtg court jurisdiction
over alimony once It Is agreed
upon.
"To obtain a dissolution. the
parties enter Into a separation
agreement," wrote Justice Herbert Brown . •'The separation
agre.emen tis a contract between
spouses which ·the court may
approve or disapprove. The
court, however, cannot unilaterally change the provisions of the
agreement."
The court also ruled that the
Ohio Consumer Sales Practices
Act applles to real estate transac-

Local news briefs-Syracuse home gutted by fire

.

A Syracuse home was completed guited by fire of an
undetermined origin Wednesday morning.
The Syracuse Fl're Department was called to th~ College St.
residence of the Eakins family at 8:31 a.m. The Racine
Department was called In to assist when II was determined the
fire \Vas out of control.
·
It was reported that four member.s of the Eakin famlly were
, at home when the ·fire started In the bedroom of the one-floor
frame structure and all escaped without Injury.
None of the household furnishings were saved, although the
family does have Insurance. It was reported.

Motorist injured in accident
The driver of a disabled vehicle was slightly Injured In an
accident at 6:50p.m. Wednesday on Forest Run Road, (CR 30)
Conti11ued on page 16
· •We Resel"' e The Right to Li'l'il Ouentitlee •Prie'!l Effectlvethru Set.. 6'1)t.9, 1989

1

··-

A requestfor . transfet ·Of ~ C1
liquor license (for beer carry out
onlY) from Ralph and Mary
Wells, doing business as ~ TD
Carty Out, Route 7, Chester, to
Terry and Larry Deem, Route 7,
Chester, has been received by the
commissioners. Any objections
to the transfer must be submitted
tothecommlsslonersbySept.27.
The request must be submitted to
the Ohio Department of Llqour
Control by Oct. 1.

tlons where the customers were
Induced by free gifts.
The court ruled In a Warren
County · case where a couple,
induced by an ad offering a tree
set of steak knives, purchased a
camper lot In Indiana 10 years
ago.
Donald and Mary Brown later
disputed the location and Identity
of the lot, and charged a breach
of contract. A lower court said
the case was not covered by the
Consumer Sales Practices Act
because the steak knives were a
"promotional gimmick," but the
Supreme Court said the consumer act should apply.
The court also held that a
tenant may collect damages In
court for a landlord's failure to
maintain rental property without
pursuing less drastic remedies
under the state Landlord and
Tenant Act.
The court said Anthony and
Belinda Ritchie were entitled to
damages, even though they had
lived In a Bethel, Ohio, apartment for a lengthy period without
taking action under the Landlord
and Tenant .Act .
The apartment had faulty and
dangerous wiring, holes In the
floor, Inadequate plumbing and
no heating system, according to
court records.
The Rltchles moved out in the
spring of 1987 owing four months'
back -l'ent, which the Clermont
County Common Pleas Court
awarded to the landlord, Dexter
Miller.
·
However. the court also
awarded the Rltchles $3,000 plus
Interest and costs because Miller
had failed to maintain the apartment properly.
The court of appeals reversed
the latter award, bu 1 a majority
of the Supreme Court ordered the
trial court to calculate · the
damages to the Rite hies reducIng their $200 monthly rent by a
percentage according to the
habitability of the apartment
while they lived there.
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SEEK INFORMATION - Represenlatlves
from Racine, Middleport and Rutland VIllages;
Salem, Salisbury and Sutton Townships; Scipio
F1re Department; and the Pomeroy Area

Chamber of Commerce llslen and ask quesdons at
Wednesday night's Community Development
Block Grant . hearing at the Meigs County
Courthouse.

Ohio officials praise president's
plan; express doubt over funding .
By THOMAS M. BURNETT
United Press Inlernatlonal
Ohio authorities had praise for
President Bush Wednesday for
focusing the nation's attention on
the drug problem, but many
expressed doubt over the amount
of money Bush proposed spend-

tng, and whether his war strategy was going In the right
direction .
• 'I would applaud the president
throwing the weight of his
'leadership behind this effort,"
said Dr. Greg Collins, director of
the drug rehabilitation section at

SEORC to meet at
Rio Grande Sept. 21
The Southeastern Ohio Regional Council, with the assistance of 12 area Chambers of
Commerce, will host an Jndustrtal Development Appreciation
Banquet Thursday, Sept. 21 at
the University of Rio Grande.
according to Robert L. (Bob)
Evans, SEORC president.
The hospitality hour wlll begin
at 5: 30p.m., and dinner will be
served at 6: 30 p.m. Tickets are
$10 and are available at any
Chamber of Commerce office.
Lt. Governor Paul Leonard
will be the guest speaker.
Several companies and area
development personnel who have
been responsible tor tbe economic growth and development
of southeastern Ohio will be
honored. Among the companies
and their development staffs to
be honored are Columbus South·
ern Power Company, Columbia
Gas of Ohio,,, Inc. , Buckeye

I

Power, Ohio Power and the State
of Ohio.
With the assistance and dlrec·
tion of utility personnel, the
SEORC and area Chambers are
preparing an Industrial site booklet to be pres en ted to Japanese
Industrialists In late November
and early December, when a
te,am from Ohio visits Japan with
the purpose of marketing southeastern Ohio as an ideal place
to locate.
Area Chambers participating
are Gallipolis, Pomeroy, Middleport, Jackson, Wells ton, Vinton
County, Lawrence County , Portsmouth, Athens, Logan-Hocking,
Lancaster- Fairfield, Perry
County, Washington County,
Chllllcothe·Ross, Pike County
and Nelsonville. Also particlpaflng are the Gallla and Ross
County Improvement Corporations and the Scioto Economic
Development Corporation.
(

\

the Cleveland Clinic. "(But) I
have some reservations about
the specifics.
"I also have some ques lions as
to whether the commitment of
funds is going to be adeq uate.
Eight billion dollars sounds like a
lot of money , but ... to put that In
the perspective of 50 states and
225 million people, It gets pretty
thin."
Gov. Richard Celeste agreed
Bush made an Important first
step In his speech, but added, " I
have profound concerns about
raising expectations of change
among our people withOut really
moblllzlng the resources needed
to effect that change. "
"I don't really know where
we're going to get the money. I'm .·
skeptical of the JllOney because 1
don't think the president has
tackled that one honestly ."
Le9nard Wllllams, a professor
of criminal justice at the University of Akron, and a former
narcotics detective In Youngstown, said a solution Is possible,
but that Bush's proposals fall
short of what's needed.
"We'll need a lot more com- .
munity Involvement than he's
asking for," Wllliams said. "(Pollee campaigns) are not scratchIng the surface because of the
Intimidation fact&lt;X'. We've got to
show (neighborhoods) some type
of protection . In the past, It
~omeorie helped break a crack
Cotinued on page 16 .

·y

•

�Sentinel-

Commentary
The Daily ,S entinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~'b
ISl m~

q;,v ""'-'....._...,..,

,.,..._=·""'

•ROBERT L. WINGETl'
Publisher
PAT WHfrEHEAD
Assistani Publlsher/ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
, General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. 1bey should be less tluon 300
words lone. AU letters are subject to edltlna aad must be signed with
•ame, address and lelephoae number. No unolped leiters will be pubU.bed. Leiters should be In good Iaale, addresoiDc los-. nol personali-

ties.

Drug czar faces
I

committee .maze in Congress

Page-2-T'he Daily Sentinel
Pom•oy-MiddJePoort, Ohio:

-'

.

.

!J1ursday, September 1. 198~
'

Education, not force, key to drug war
WASHINGTON - The U.S.
government Is waging a mighty
war on drugs. And sometimes at
night, along the dangerous front
lines at the U.S.-Mexlcan border,
your highly trained troops dress
up as cactus.
Funny, maybe. But not half as
funny as spending $25 million for
radar balloons · that .as yet haven't managed to nail a single
heroin or cocaine trafficker. The
cactus costumes worn by the
National Guard are part of a $2.9
million drug-fighting graljt. Such
simple techniques are beginning
to look promising, unlike the
colossal failure of the higll-tech
gadgetry, guns and manpower.
National polls indicate that the
drug crisis concerns Americans
more than AlPS or nuclear war.
Drugs are In the nation's race,
and klll11!g your friends, your
family and even some of your
heroes.
How~ver, these days, when the
White House Is boasting about Its

Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta

commitment. to wln the war on
drugs, our federal drug-busters
are far more overwhelmed than nalre, which Stark plans to send
they let on.
to his colleagues on Capitol Hill
Consider that the u:s. govern- with the note, "Here's another
ment spends more than $1 billion drug test you can ta.ke withO!It
annually to stop drugs at the fear tllat some lab will screw up
borders, yet the . Coast Guard the results."
estimates as little as 5 percent to
Stark's review ofthecasualtles
7 percent . of the U.S.-bountl
of the drug war makes it clear .
heroin and cocaine Is Inter· . th11-t the good guys are outgunned
cepted. Consider that the United and outmaneuvered:
States represents 5 percent of the
The National Institute on Drug
world's population and consumes Abuse estimates there are about
about !!0 percent of the world's 6.5 million cocaine and heroin
cocaine. The annual U.S. market addicts In need of treatment.
tor Illicit drugs is roughly equl· ' About 2 million will seek treatvalent to the federal budget ment, but they're In for a
deficit, approximately $150 surprise. There are only 250,000
billion.
treatment beds available In the
The disheartening facts are country, so even If a person
sprinkled throughout a ·tongue· wants to go straight, it may not
in-cheek drug questionnaire pro- be possible.
ducect by Rep. Fortney "Pete"
The government's tactic has
Star!l. D·C8li!. He plans to use it been not to·offer more treatment
as a forum to-help slap America facilities, but to slow the supply
to Its senses.
of drugs. That has been costly
Our associate Jim Lynch ob· and futile .
talned a copy of the questionIn 1988, the U.S. Navy and

By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON iUPI) _:As the administration launches Its new
attack on illegal drugs in the United States. some people worry that
the leader of the fight -drug policy director William Bennett- will
be so busy dealing with Congress he will not be ablP to do his job.
That was a concern expressed repeatedly by Rep. Larkin Smith,
R-Miss., bP!ore his recent dealh in a P,lane crash. In a series of brief
daily speeches to th e House, Smith warned that jurisdiction over the
drug problem and related issues is spfioad among dozens of
committees of Congress.
·
He said Bennett and others face "a drug war maze" in the halls of
Congress.
Smith was not alone in his concern and other members have been
taking up the crusade to na rrow jurisdiction rver the drug issue.
Not surprisingly, most of the concern has bel'n voiced by
Republicans. Democrats are no less worried about the drug problem,
but they have a ves ted interest in the status quo in Congress.
Democrats are in the majority in both the House and Senate and as
such they control all lhe committees. The chairmen are all
Democrats a nd a ma jority of the members are Democrats.
Howpver, even many of the minority Republicans respect one of
Capitol Hill's most sacred rules: Never give up any turf. It is unlikely
that any committee will voluntarily give up the opportunity to be
involved in the drug issue with all its potential for media exposure.
But the argument is.made that the drug war needs a focused effort
and those involved need to concentrate on the war, not on making
reports.
Rep. Matthew Rinaldo, R··N.J., is one of those backing a bill to limit
the jurisdiction of congressional committees over the drug issue.
Rinaldo says Bennett will bP unable to wage the field war against
drugs if he is kep t bu sy tes tifying beforP congressiona~ committees.
At leas t 23 committees and subcommittees claim primary
responsibility for overseeing the drug war. But Rinaldo argues, as did
Smith. that at leal 80 panels could have a claim on some aspect of the
drug war and therefore expect Bennett to deal with them.
If Bennett "spends the next six months explaining and defending
every s tep in the drug war'' to all those panels he will be "chained to
Capitol Hili while the various federal agencies muddle along without
clear direction, " Rinaldo said recently.
The plan backed by Rinaldo and others In the House calls for
establishment of a .single drug committee in the House and one in the
Senate. The committees' sole function would be to oversee Bennett's'
activities.
Under the present sys tem. Bennett faces the prospect of testifying
beforp dozens of commiltees, starting with those dealing with foreign
affairs and the judiciary committees of the House and Senate.
[f drug sm ugglers are tracked by U.S. intelligence agencies,
Bennett would be expected to report to the Intelligence committees
a nd the Armed Services committees of both c hambers. In addition,
there are Select Co mmittees on Narcotics on both sides of the Capitol.
and both Appropriations co mmittees would want to know how federal
funds are be ing spent in the drug war.
If drug smugglers la nd shipments in a national forest, the
Agriculture committees would take an interest, and if traffickers
commit offenses involving U.S. currency transactions the Banking
committees of the House and SPnate would want to hear about it.
"Tha t's just scratching the surface," Rinaldo has warned.
"Virtually every commitee in Congress might be tempted .to get In on
the act" and Bennett might decide he needs " roller skates just to get
from one committee room to the next."

B~rry's

World

~

111111\' NEA. ....

"Congratulations on being elected to the
Stonewa//er's Hall of Fame on the first
bsllot!"
. ,\

Coast Guard scoured the coas·
tUnes for smugglers, using up
2,347 shipdays at a cost of more
.than $40 million. Only 17 shipments were seized. That adds up
to more than $2 million per
smuggler. It would be cheaper to
give each smuggler the money
and set them up in a retirement
home In Sun City, Ariz.
Recently, the U.S. attorney In
Miami declined to prosecute a
drug-smuggling case in which
the Customs Service bad confls·
cated halt a ton of marijuana.
Why? Because the proSecutor's
office Is -swamped and won't
touch a pot case of less than 2.5
tons.
Exasperation· has spread
through evei'y tier of the popula·
tlon. Guess who said this: "If you
want to lose the war on drugs, .
"leave it just io law enforcement."
It was U.S. Attorney General
Richard Thornburgh, and he'~
right.

' '
. RICHARDSON HOMERS
The Reds' Jell
Richardson Is congratulated by third base coach
Dave Bristol after Richardson's homer In the
eigllth Inning of Wednesday nla:hl's game against .

the visiting Los Angeles Dodgers. The drive, olf
reliever Mike Munoz, brought In the final run In
the Reds' 9-5 victory. (UPI)

Tigers hand Royals 11-5 loss

-.

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· ByJOEILLUZZI
, UPI Sports Writer
The Detroit Tigers are having
a big say In the pennant race, Not
the American League East, the
West.
The Tigers, who already have
been mathematjcally eliminated ·
In the AL East, are doing their
part to knock the Royals out of
contention. Detroit pounded Kan·
sas City ll-5Wednesday night to
sweep the three-game set and
P&lt;!st its 13th straight victory over
the Royals at Tiger Stadium.
The, Royals, who last won at
Tiger Stadium Aug. 4, 1987, went
Into Detroit with a 2',1, game
deficit in the AL West and left
trailing Oakland by 4',1,.
"They had an outstanding
series," Kansas City manager
John 'wathan said. "You have to
give them credit . The ' last six
days have been very good for
tl(elr offense . It's been frustratIng to play them the last two
years.
"I don't know wh~t the answer
Is, We'll just have to try again
next year. This came at a tough
~rlod In our schedule. But it

'Majors

for short. QMB's are nat eligible
for all Medicare coverage unless
they are also eligible for regular
Medicaid. QMB medicaid eligibility Is based on federal poverty
guidelines effective January 1,
1989.
Qlverage Is extended to el·
derly and disabled Individuals
who's income Is at or below 80%
of the poverty level. That percen·
tage will Increase each year by
5% through 1993 when it will
reach 100% as the phase In
requirement allows more individuals to be covered e.ach year.
County department's of Hu·
man Services In all 88 Ohio
Counties are now accepting ap·
pllcatlons for this expanded
healthcare coverage. If you are

found eligible for QMB medicaid,
you will receive a special QMB
Health card. Show this card to
the doctor and Hospital where
you receive health care services.
The card ' is good for services
covered under QMB Medicaid
services only.
·
As a qualified medicare benefi·
clary you will be eligible for help
1
in applying your medicare premiums and deductibles and coinsurance for some of the follow Ing medical services:
Medicare part A benefits, such
as in-patient hospital coverage,
skilled nursing facility coverage,
home health care coverage,
hospice coverage and Medicare
part B benefits such as physician
services, out patient hospital

services, physical and occupational therapy services speech
pathology services, and dlagnos·
tic services. If you are •found : ,
eligible for QMB medicaid you
are responsible for reporting to
the county department of human
services with In 10 working days
after any ·change in your circumstances occurs after you first
apply for your QMB medicaid.
•
These are just a few things that •
Ohio Is doing to help low Income '
elderly and disabled ilidlvldual' s •'
to meet their expenses. It you '
have any questions concerning II
this Issue, please do not hesitate ;
to contact me at (6H) 466-8156 or . :
write: State Senator Jan Michael '
"
Long, Statehouse Columbus
Ohio 43215.
'

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New York, New York 10017.

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(llf'uiiChel

Soccer
Swedish police arrested 102
British fans before England's
World Cup qualifier against
Sweden. And some 100 Swedes
caused considerable damage In
downtown Stockholm after the
scoreless draw, smashing windows and damaging cars.

Cardinals 3, Mets 2
While the rest of the National
League East contenders stumble
In their efforts to catch the
first-place Chicago Cubs, the St.
Louis Cardinals are surging to
the top.
"Now it gets exciting," said St.
Louis reliever Ken Dayley, who
picked up his 11th save during the
Cardinals' 3·2 victory over the
New York Mets Wednesday
which moved St. Louis a hall
game behind Chicago. "The
teams ahead of us let us back in

2 ROLL

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Han

nale and ·Bill Spiers clobbered
home r11fis for the Brewers. The
third·placeAngels. whO have lost
six of seven games, fell 5',1,
games behind Oakland In the AL
West. Chris Bosio, 15·9, was the
winner and Dan Plesac recorded
his 29th save.
Blue Jays 4, White Sox 2
At Chicago, George Bell had
two hits and scored once to help
Toronto extend Its lead to two
games over Baltimore in the AL
'East. Todd Stottlemyre. 7·5. and
Duane Ward combined on a
sili'·hitter. Stottlemyre went
seven Innings en route to his fifth
str;~lght victory. Ward notched
his 15th save.
Indians !1, Orioles 0
At Baltimore, Dlon James,
Cory Snyder and Brad Kom·
minsk bias ted home runs to help
Cleveland snap a flve-game
losing streak. Bud Black, 10-11,
scattered four hits in hurling his
fifth complete game and second
shutout. Rookie Curt Schilling,
0-1, was the lo.s er. Ben McDonald
made his major-league debut in
'
relief of Schilling.
Yankees G, Mariners 3 ·
At Sea!tle, Mel Hall and Bob
Geren each hila two-run homer
in the seventh Inning· to lltt the
Yankees to ,their seventh straight
victory. Yankees outfielder
Delon Sanders left the game In
the seventh IMing when he
learned his attorney and the
Atlanta Falcons agreed on contract terms.
Rangers 3, Twins 2
At Arlington, Texas, AL RBIleader Ruben Sierra doubled
home the deciding run and Jeff
Russell set a Texas career .save
record. Sierra raised 'his RBI
total to 102. Charlie Hough,10-12,
won his third straight and Rus·
sell notched his 33rd save of the
season and the 38th. In a Texas
uniform.

the race. This was a big wl~ for
steal agalns t New York. The
us. A blg.iift·."
. · Mets, who have ·never caught
St. Louts, which last occupied
Coleman stealing, may ' have to
the top spot in the division on May
resort to silver bullets or garlic
13, has won four of· five games .
necklaces to stop him.
Meanwhile, Montreal remained
When catcher Gary Carter
two games behind while New
threw tbe ball into center field ,
York stayed 3',1, games back. The
Coleman moved to third and
Cardinals last won a divlslon title
scored on a sacrifice fly by
in 1987.
Oquendo.
St. Louis pushed across the
New York tied it 1-1 in the
winning run in the eighth Inning. second when Kevin McReynolds
Ozzie Smith reached on an error
hit his 19th homer. TheMetswent
by seco"nd baseman Gregg Jef- ahead in the thlrd when Jefferies
feries to open the inning and went
singled, stole second and scored
to third on a single by Jose
on Howard J ohnson's single.
Oquend.o. Smitl) scored on a
Expos 11, Pirates 6 _
grounder by Pedro Guerrero.
At ·Montreal, Hubie Brooks
"These guys (Vince Coleman, drove In four runs with a
Smith and Oquendo) are always
three-run homer and a si ngle and
on base," said Guerrero, who
Mark Langston, 11-6, pitched slx
collected two RBis. "I hit better intngs. Randy Kramer , 5-8, was
wltb runners on. I concentrate
the loser.
more. With a runner on third and
Giants 7, Braves 2
less than two out, it's 90 percent
At Atlanta, Scott Garrelts, 12-3,
I'll get hlm in."
tossed an eight-hitter and Will
The winner was Frank DiPlno,
Clark ripped a two-run homer to
7-0, the third Cardinal pitcher. lift San Francisco. Derek LilDan .Quisenberry pitched one- iquist, 8-9, was the loser.
third of an inning in the ninth and
Phil!les 9, Cubs I
Dayley finished .
At Philadelphia, Dickie Thon
Ron Darling, 12-12, went seven and Darren Daulton knocked In
and one-third innings, giving up tnree runs each to cut Chicago's
eight hits and one earned run .
lead in the NL East to half a
Guerrero doubled home Cole- game. Bruce Ruffin , 5-8, hurled
man from third base ih th e sixth his first complete game of the
to tie the score 2-2.
season. Greg Maddux, 16·11,
"The way he's going, he's sustained the loss.
another MVP candidate," Da- Padres 3, Astros 2
rling said of Guerrero.
At Houston, Roberto Alomar
St. Louis opened the scoring in hit a solo homer and an RBI
the ·first wHen Coleman led off single to lead San Diego to its
with a bunt single and stole . sixth straight victory. Calvin
second. his 52nd consecutive Schiraldi, 4-6, gave up one run
and two hits over six innings

wc:d\"rr lleiUI MclhtMI* piMtd llrfeaMNf' llal.'tt. ,... Miller ud lner
Ala.•*• .... dl'INIIIW rndM JanM'I1

NATIONAL LEAGUE

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· Torolllo -·····················" Q .511 &amp;ltlmol'f' ...................•'JS 15 .SM ~
ao..ton .........................11 1t .Sit 1

•

into effect; there were hundreds
FDA in recent' decades ostensiTJ"I
or red, orange, yellow, green and
bly to conduct conclusi~e studies
0
W
blue food dyes used in soft drinks,
of Its potential health effects.
·
·
baked goods, candles, biscuits,
Most recently, they proposed a
jellies, syrups, puddings, saus- new study that would require market research shows that fruit ·
cup sales decline by about 20
agecasings,fishpastesandother three to five years to complete,
foods and beverages.
thus preventing any FDA ban percent If the cherries are either •
All were allowed.to remain on during that period of a dye undyed or omitted entirely - a
the market provisionally, until recently described by one con· prospect that uMerves the pro- :
they could be tested for toxic or gressional proponent as "a vital ducers of peaches, , pears and
carcinogenic properties. With all marketing tool for America's assorted other Ingredients In the :
mLxtuJ1!.
except one of those safety tests agriculture."
Also Involved, on both sides of
concluded, the last artificial
Red No. 3 is used to add color to
coloring agent to remain on the strawberry Ice cream, baked the dispute, are those who have
provisional list is the water- goods, candy and various other no financial or other direct
Insoluble form of FD&amp;C Red No. foods, but Its ability to turn Interest In the future of commer3.
maraschino cherries a bright red cial success of fruit cocktail.
Strident critics of the Delaney
Laboratory evidence suggests that neither fades nor stains the
clause,
for example, .insist that
that when Red No. 3is consumed other Ingredients in fruit cup has
there
is
little or no correlation .
In large doses, It interferes with ·· become the focus of the fierce
between
large doses of any
normal thyroid hormone produc· debate over the dye's future. ,
substance
fed to rats and moder- ,!ion. The overstimulation of the
Most of the cherries used In
ate
doses
consumed
by people.
· thyroid gland, In turn, promotes fruit cocktail are too bruised to
But
respected
medical
author!·
the formation of cancerous be sold fresh so they are
tumors.
bleached and chemically colored ties. are far more 'convincing
''FDA scientists have con- with Red No. 3. If not dyed, they when they note that the sacrifice ·'
eluded that Red No. 3 causes oxidize and tum an unappealing of brilliantly dyed cherries In
cancer," says Rep. Theodore S. brown when putlnto the fruit fruit cups Is a small price to pay,
at a lime when health hazards
"Ted" Weiss, D·N.Y., citing cocktail mixture.
cases of tumors formed In rats:
Canners and growers say abound, for the elimination of a
cancer-causing agent.
"Yet the Industry has used every
trick In the book to prevent the
law from being Implemented."
Indeed, the agricultural Inter·
ests who believe the coloring ·
Today is Thursday, Sept. 7, the 250th day of.1989 With 115 to follow,
'
agent Is Important to marketing
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first qwirter
tbelr products have been granted
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
·
·
more than 30 extensions by the
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn .

-·

lly Unled P'"" .. iN .at"MI
o\MERJC'-'N IEA.CUE

Health fears . now focus on frui~ cups ·
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Just
when you thought all or the
world's serious disputes were
being contained, if not resolved,
along comes the brouhaha over
the color of the maraschino
cherries in canned fruit ,cocktail.
This one certainly doesn't
constitute a major global crisis,
but it is (as columnists are wont
to say) a metaphor for an era In
which consumer convenience
and commercial Interests cease·
lessly conflict with health con·
cerns and environmental values.
At Issue are a trio of related
laws, sponsored by former Rep.
James D. Delaney, D-N.Y., cotlectlvely known as the Delaney
· clause and enacted In 1954, 1958,
and 1960. They apply to three
potential sources of chemical
contamination of food - agrlcui!ural pesticides, food additives
and coloring agents.
Manufacturers of those ·prGducts must conduct extensive
animal-feeding tests, then submit the results of the laboratory
work to the Food and Drug
Admint.tratlon. After examining
the data to determine if there Is
any evidence that the addillves
Induce cancer or other adverse
health effects, the FDA decides
whether they can be lawfully
marketed.
When the Delaney clause went

It's been 'a good week, though.
In other AL games:
A's 7, Red Sox 5
At Oakland, Calif., Dave
Parker hit his . first AL grand
slam to key a five-run third
iMing. Bob Welch,16-7,left after
the fifth Inning with a slight
abdominal strain. Dennis Eck·
ersley pitched the ninth for his
29th save. Mike Smithson. 7-14,
was the loser.
Brewers 7, Angels 4
At Anaheim, Calif., 'Robin
Yount and rookies George Ca-

Scoreboard ...

•••

Ohio's Medicaid Program Is
helping a new group of low
Income elderly and disabled
people with there Health Care
Costs. If you are elderly or
disabled, . including the blind,
receive Medicare and your income is low you may be eligible
for help in paying Medicare
costs, sharing expenses such as
Medicare deductibles and coInsurance.
The federal Medicare Catastrophic Coverage · act of 1988
·requires state Medicare programs to phase in coverage of
these Medicare cost sharing
expenses to a new group of
elderly and disabled people.
These people are called Qualified
Medicare Beneficiary or QMB's

year."

'

•,.

Ohio's medicare qualified__,____s_en_.J,_an_M_._Lo_n_g .

happened, it's over. You have to
go.on. We'll keep battling- but
evrry game from now on keeps
getting that much more
Important."
Detroit, which has the worst
record In the A,L, Is on as lx-game
winning streak which has manager Sparky Anderson relieved.
· 'The guys are relaxed," Anderson said.. "The kids are re·
!axed. They know I'm not going
to do nothing (to them l . If they
lose 110, (hey lose 110. Playing
well now means the bad part is
lessened - b\1 t it's still a bac;l

CINCINNATI {UPil - Bar~
Larkin may not be ready to play
In the field, but that doesn't stop
him from swinging a bat .
The CinciMati Reds shortstop,
activated Sept. 1 after being on
the disabled list since July 11
with a partial tear of the medial
coUateral ligament In his right
elbow, lined a two-run pinch hit
single to right to tie the score at
5-5 against the Los Angeles
Dodgers as the Reds went on to
win 9-5 Wednesday night .
"After abo.ut· seven . weeks
$landing .around my locker It
feels good to be a part ofthe team
again," said Larkin, now 2-for-3
in pinch . hitting situations In
hiking his average to .343.
"I tried to throw the ball from
left field the other day and I just
couldn't do it," admitted the
native · Cincinnatian. "I was
hitting the ball well in the minors
&lt;while rehabbing with Nashville
and going 5-for-5) and I'm jusi
trying to meet the ball up here,
too. "
Sharing t!le spotlight with
Larkin were a pair of rookie
battery mates, catcher · Joe
Ollver and lefty Rosario Rodriguez. Oliver hammered the two·
run double that put the Reds
ahead to stay, 7-5, and 20-yearold Rodriguez hurled an Inning
and a third of one-hit ball to earn
his first big league victory after
being called up from Class AA
just last Friday.
"I · asked (Ron) Oester what
Mike Morgan throws, and I went
· up there lool\lng for a fast ball," ·
said Oliver. "I got a good pitch to
hlt and lined It down the third
base line. I'm just trying to take
advantage of every opportunity I
get and I'm happy to be able to
contrlbu te."
Rodriguez, a Mexican who
doesn't speak English, once
again relied on teammate Mariano Duncan, a former Dodger, to
serve as his interpreter.
·'I'm going to call home to my
family," Rodriguez said. "They
live in the little town of Los
Mochls and I guess I'll be famous
there ·after winning my first
gQme."
Rodriguez had retired seven
straight batters in three appear·
ances for the Reds before he
walked John Shelby and gave up
a single to Jose Gonzalez in the
eighth. Rob Dibble came to his
recuse and retired the side by
striking out Billy Hatcher and
getting Alfredo Griffin to fly to
center.
Belting solp homers were Luis
Quinones tNo. 12l and Jeff
Richardson {No.2) for the Reds
and Mike Scioscla (No.8) for the
Dodgers .
Quinones' first-Inning blast, ·
which ended 24 innings of shutout
pitching by Dodger starter Tim
j:lelcher, extended his hitting
streak to 14 games. Richardson's
homer came on rookie lefty Mike
Munoz' first major league pitch
in the last of the eighth.
In other NL games:

Subocrtbera 11&lt;11 dMirlqtq pay U.oar·
rf« .!110)1 ranlt Ill ldYanco tllreet to .
.The DallY SoatiDelon a3,6or12month
bula. Credit WID bestven..m. MOb ,

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'

4 'The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. Sept.,ber 7, 1989

Pomaoy-Middeport, Ohio

Tontadoes look for first points of year against Waniors

'Skins won't have to face Morris in opener

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
week fOr their first win since taken to a hospital in Portsmouth
In last year's game, the PI· hasn't forgotten how 10 win And
OVP Staff Writer 1
defeating Waterford 15·0 on Nov.
before being transported by rates won 12-11.
It's an a(jvantage If the ieam
Southern needs to score. .
6, 1987.
helicopter to University Hospital
I(CHS.Waterford
without a whi isn't that hungry
The Tornadoes, shut out In
Now that the celebrating is In Columbus.
Kyger Creek's Bobcats, one of for one • And the s artans are
their first two games, shouldn't over, the Eagles have the task of
Stout recovered from the con- · three SVAC teams with 2·0 winless ·after losses ~ 0 Oak H!ll
g()!l)g to be looking for any easy facing an 0-2 Wahama squad still cusslon, but Coach Gregg Dee! marks, wlll face another stern and Meigs.
points just because Warren Local fuming over last week's 28-21 w!ll keep him on the bench for test ln this last week of non·
The Highlanders rushed _or
Is sending its junior va~s!ty overtime loss. If the Eagles can Frlday',s game against Ross conference play .
should we say tramped _
squad to Racine Friday ~!ght.
keep their passing (the Eagles Southeastern In Rlchmondale. In
. Solid rushing from running through West VIrginia mud for
. Like Eastern, Southern soften- passed for 90 yards against his place w!ll be senior B!lly backs Joe Edwards and "Jitter" 403 yards against Hannan but
slve numbers are on the rise. Hannan, 38 more than against' Williamson, who moves from G!lmore have kept the scarlet only manufactured 8 fracti~n of
.After passing for 13 yards and Waterford) · and rushing (the tal.lback.
and gray In contention, espe- that total _ 153 _ in last week's
Southeastern, whose senior clally after last week's 28·21 26-6 loss 10 Ross Souiheastern,
rushing for 48 against Fort Frye, Eagles rushed for 225 yards
the Tornadoes passed for 19 against Hannan, 33 more than
tandem of . fuUback Chad Hale overtime victory against Wa- which they played on a somewhat
(5-7, 145) and tailback Todd hama. Now the two take their drier field. The running game
yards and ran for 83 against against Waterford) numbers on
Waterford. Hmmm. Even though the rise, they could find them- Osborne (5·8, 155) powered Its combined . four-yards-per-carry must revive Itself In time 10 face .
quarterback J arrod Circle cut selves ready to return to their · runnl?g game effectively In last average (162 yards In 40 carries) a Spartan defense frustrated by
hls Interceptions from three (vs. f!rstw!nnlngseas~nlntwoyears. weeks 26·6_.v!ctory over Southw· against a Waterford squad that glvingup30po!ntsto0akHllland
Fort Frye) to one (vs. Water·
In last seasons contest, the estern, lsn I likely to abandon has claimed victories over the 22 to Meigs
ford). it seems Uke the Torna- Wildcats won 27-0.
that formula , but neither are the league's Meigs County entries,
Han~ Trace-Green
• N. Gallla-Ross SE
Panthers l!kely to forget about The • W!ldcats achieved thOSf! - Hannan Trace has lost its last
does should keep the ball on the
ground.
Its comeback time for North the pass anytime soon. Quarter- wins in part by allowing a total of three games, and after scoring
Wahama·Eastera
Gallia in general, and for Brian back Mike Adams, a 6-5, 195· 275 )lards rushing in both games their first points this season In
Eastern head coach Arch Stout .In particular..
pound senior, still has his reIn last year's clash, the Wild· last week's,49. 16
the
Stout, the Pirates junior quar- celver corps of senior SP.l!t end cats won 10·7.
Rose, sensing the need lor a
change, decided to have senior . terback, suffered a concussion In Cory Black (6·1, 168). junior tight
Alexander-SWHS .
tailback Shaun Savoy and q~ar- last Friday's 27-3 loss to Green end Joe Johnson (6-1, 175) and
.Southwestern has an advanterback Jeff Durst trade post- Local In Franklin Furnace. Hit junior flanker Jamie Dray (6-1, tage over Alexander: the High·
tlons. As a result, Eastern ended from the side in traffic by a 165) tocallon·!ftheP!rates' front landers have a win this season .
its long !light In the loss column Green defender while attempting seven shut off the Panthers'
That's an advantage only If one
by knocking off Hannan 28-8 last to pass, the 6·1, 165-pounder was running backs.

By WILL DUNHAM
UPI Sports Writer
The Washington' Redsklns are
making no secret of their delight
over not having to face New York
Giants running back Joe Morris
In Monday 's season opener .
Morris has been a key figure in
the Giants' recent domination of
. the Redsk!ns. New York has won
seven of Its pas! nine encounters
with Washington dating to 1984,
excluding a strike replacement
game played in 1987.
Morris, the Giants' all-time
-leading rusher, will miss the
entire season after being placed
on injured reserve with a broken
foot sustained In the exhibition
finale against Plttsurgh.
"Joe Morris definitely rose to
the occasion against us," Charles
Mann, the two-ti me Pro Bowl
defensive end, said. " It's defl·
nltely a relief for us not having to

hanch of Huntington Vinson, they
will need to make an immediate
pUgrlmage to Lourdes ln search
of a cure for the loss-column
blues.
·
The W!ldcats face a 2-0 Green
squad that makes the transition
from taktng on Gallla County's
largest football team (the PI· ·
rates have 46 on board) to
playing against its smallest
gridiron squad (the Wildcats
have 17). But the Wildcats have
their backs to the wall and can do
no worse than they have already
done. Maybe that w!ll serve as
their motivator. If not, It could
make the Guyan faithful hold
their breaths and walt for basket·
ball season.
In other league . games.
Symmes Valley
host Chesapeake, and Oak . H!ll will host
Rock Hill.
·
·

' '' ll&gt;&lt;'

w!ll

CIN~INNATI (UP!) . - The
C!nc!.nnatl Bengals boasted the
NFL s No.1 offense last year, but
, h~ad .coach Sam Wyche Is worned that a lot of zip, might be
: missing for. Sundays season
opener agamst the Chicago
~~rs.

Our offense was not ~.ood
eno\lgh to win in th~ NFL, he
said after t.he club s pathetic
_ . · 17-10 lo~s to the Ml~nesota.
• .. _Ylkmgs m last weekends final
:~ ex~lblt!o~ ga~e .
,
&gt; I don t thmk we ve lo;&gt;t our
• confidence, but we haven t per·
~: formed . It's llme to putuporshut
~ up. Deep Inside of me some~ where, and m~lde of our ballclub,
;,· I know there s one whale of an
:; _offensive football team."
.
.~ . Wyche Is hoping that the
:~ excitement of the regular season

•

-• .

da~ce. But in the exhibition start in place of holdout Eddie
season, Woods gained only 55 Brown, tackle Brian Blados
yards on 31 carries and Wyche replaces injured Joe Walter,
said he was not near the runner Bruce Kozersk! moves from
he was a year ago.
center to guard in place of Max
Woods has decided not to grant Montoya, who just re-joined the
interviews th.!s week to help him team after ' a long holdout, and
concentrate on getting back to Paul.Jetton repiaces Kozersk! at
form.
· .
cenier.
"What's he got to talk about?"
Defensively, nose tackle David
agreed Ben gals' running back Grant replaces injured Tim
coach Jim Anderson. "He Krumr!e, linebacker Kevin
doesn't want to· talk about last Walker takes over for injured
year and there's nothing to talk Reggie Williams and Rickey
about this year.
Dixon has beaten out Solomon
"Actions · speak louder than Wllcots for the free safety job
words and in this line of work, It's
·
production, not predictions, that
count."
.
Against the Bears there wlll be
several changes in' Cincinnati's
(All games)
starting lineup from last year.
Team .
W L PF PA
Wide receiver Ira Hillary wlll Oak H!ll ................. 2 · 0 58 6
Symmes Valley ...... 2 0 56 32
Kyger Creek.. ......... 2 0 44' 21
North Gallia .. .. ... ... .1 1 49 27
Eastern ................. .I 1 40 41
Southwestern .......... ! 1 21 26
Hannan Trace . ....... 0 2 16 65
timeouts are gone, a 5-yard our play. That's our approach. Southern ... :.. ....... ....O 2 0 35
Let's have a football game that
penalty is assessed.
Friday's games
"The noise situation has us doesn't turn into a rock concert
Eastern
at Wahama
very concerned," Meyer said. sort of event."
Hannan
Trace at Green Local
San Francisco reserve quar''I'm not sure fans realize how
Kyger
Creek
at Waterford
· devastating ills to lose a timeout.
terback Steve Young backed
North
Gallla
at
Ross SE
away from the center three times
It gives fans a way of flaunting
Rock
Hill
at
Oak
Hill
last week in a noisy Kingdome,
authority and saying, 'Our team
is goocl enough. We don't need costing Seattle Its second-half Warren Local JVs at Southern
timeouts.' Well we do. We have to
timeouts in a game theSeahawks Alexander at Sou tltwes tern
a bide by this as much as we won 28·17. Fans in the Hoosier Chesapeake at Symmes Valley
Dome screamed through five
dislike It · or we w!ll jeopard!ze
our football team and make it
similar third-quarter plays, costalmost better to play on the ing the Colts their timeouts and
road.''
helping set up a Denver touc~­
A unanimous vote of NFL
down. Indianapolis ralUed for a
38-34 victory. ·
owners would be needed to
revoke the rule ~fore next year.
''How can we control what the
Meyer said that might be too late fans want to do? We can:t stop
them ,'' said ·Colts defensive end
to prevent a tragic situation.
Ezra Johnson .
"I'm coneerned about riots and
mass hysteria, " Meyer said .
Seattle coach Chuck Knox also
"I'm concerned about places like
cited rowdy fans In Cleveland
Cleveland and Foxboro (Mass.)
and Denver "for disruptive beha·
voir other than noise. Knox said
and places where crowd control
NFL owners never realized they
can give you soccer situations.
It's a situation we!ve already had
were creating a problem with the
rule.
In London. We don't want that in
•the NFL."
"There probably was a lot of ·
The NFL season opens Sunday confusion, but nothing like the
with three games in traditionally · confusion that's going to !oUow
loud domed stadiums matching that thing around," he said.
Houston at Minnesota, Dallas at
San Francisco quarterback
Ne.w Orleans and San Francisco Joe Montana, whose team could
at Indianapolis.
benefit from the noise rule again
San Francisco's George Set· this week, said the 49ers dlsl!ke
fert, who makes his NFL coach· using It but see it as the only way
ing debut Sunday. said excessive to make certain their signals can
noise dentes teams the chance to be heard.
truly determine which Is better.
"We have· the approach that
"I would hope · the fans t.he rule, to a· certain degree. is
wouldn 't want to jeopardize their ridiculous," Montana said. "We
ball club. Something like that ~an went into the game not planning
destroy a team," he said. "We to take advantage of It . We don't
don't really want to use it but our· want to, but we've got to use It If
hands are tied. We want to run It's going to cost us not to use II.' :
will prove more inspirational to
his off~nslve players than the
ex.~lbitlon campaign d!~.
To this point, we ve been
practicing plays that may or may
notflt the opponent that week,"
he noted. "Last week. we had
only a handful of plays for
Minnesota. This week will be
dl~erent.
The ,mood of the tea~ is good
and we II find out If were good
enough to beat the Bears. I think
the Bears will have to~lay well to
beat us. Of course, I ve got no
way to prove that until we get to
Chicago on Sunday."
Wyche has been especially
unhappy all through the exhlbllion season with running back
Ickey Woods, who rushed for
more than 1,000 yards last season
and delighted fans with his
"lckey Shuffle" touchdown

and Krickstein ·in semifinals.

·-..

INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) - A
, new NFL rule penalizing home
·· teams for excessive crowd noise
has spawned cries of protest
from coaches who fear. losing
games because of vocal fans.
.•
"I'm worried about the Integ: ,rity of the game. " said Indiana·
-; polis coach Ron Meyer. "We've
put the responsl blllt y of the game
:: in areas we can' t control. It's a
- ~ shame this pressure has to go on
fans "

·

~ :: The noise rule, passed 21-7

; ~. during the off-season by NFL
~:·· owners, costs the defensive team
:::' a timeout each time the referee
-: declares the noise too loud for the
:: offensive team to hear the
~·: quarterback call signals. If all
.

.
.. .~~

Sports briefs

:
Auto Racing
: ·. - OrganiZers announced plans
for the 250-mile, $1 million
Hawaiian Super P r ix I, a Grand
Prix style rrace 19 be run in
March 1991 around Aloha Stadium on the Island of Oahu .... A
. federal &lt;~ppeals court rejected
· . c laims the National Hot Rod
' Association violated antitrust
law when it banned owners of
jet-powered trucks and motorcycles from drag-racing exhlbi·
tions. In 1987 the drag racing
organiZation banned jet-powered
trucks at speeds over 55 mph.
Baseball
New York Yankees outfielder
Dave Winfield and club owner
George Steinbrenner set tied
their lega l dispute over contribu·
tions to the David M. Winfield
• Foundation. In an agreement
reached through binding arbitration . Winfield Is to pay $229,667In
dellnquen t cont rlbu lions . He
must also give the foundation
$30',000 for money inappropriately spent by the foundation.
Steinbrenner is to release
$600,000 in funds held In escrow
and earmarked for the
:. foundation .
CoUege
' Iowa State football coach Jim
Walden suspended four, 1reshmen for the openl!lg game
Saturday night against Nheo
University. Walden decl!ned to
say what team rule the four
· violated .... Kathy Arendsen. a
: world-class pitcher .who struck
out Reggie Jackson in 1981, has
been named softball coach at
. Eastern llllnois University.
, Arendsen was named Amateur
• Softball Association Player of the
: Year three times.
Hockey
Bruce Firestone. chairman of
. Terrace Inve~ tments Ltd., said
: he hopes to win an NHL franchise
· for Ottowa by bu!ld!ng a 22,000·
seat arena about 12 m!les west of
the Canadian capital. Hockey
· was first played in Ottawa In
: 1852. The city was a founding
· member of the first national
: hockey auoctatlon In Canada in
: 1886, and wu a foundinl member
:'"o f the NHL.

r

-C

: ' NEW YORK (UPI) - Defend''They're mad at me because
• · Ing champion Sleffl Graf, play- I'm serving to him," Kr!ckste!n
:: lng with typical machine-like said of the crowd reaction. "Me
;. efficiency. yielded merely two and Jay are friends and I have to
• games toHeleliaSukova Wednes- · win the m!ltch. Being fit Is part of
!• day to cruise into the semifinals it."
: ·~ of the U.S. Open against Gabriela
Twice In the second set Sanchez managed to come back from
• Sabatini.
: • Aaron Kr.!cksteln also earned a a break down, the second time
: berth In the semifinals for the drawing even at 4-4, but S!lbat!.nl
• firSt time but wasn't happy the fol]owed wltb two more breaks In
: way )t came about. Jay Berger the seventh and ninth games.
Sabatini ran off the first five
• suffered crarpps in his left leg
• midway through the third set and · games of the final set before
: had to retire In the fourth, giving Sanchez broke at love in thesl;x:th
: Krlcksteln · a 3-6, 6-4, 6-2, 1-0 game.
' ' victory . . '
:
"It's a difficult situation, not
' the way you want to get Into the
; .• U.S. Open semifinals," said
: ' Krlckste!n, the 14th seed. "It's a
• · great opportunity. Maybe I'll
~ , play a great match and be in the
" final.~·
i'
Kr!ckste!n · w!ll face second
: seed Boris Becker In the semlfl·
{ nals. The three-time Wimbledon
• champion overpowered un·
: seeded Yann!ck J11oah 6-3, 6-3, 6-2
: in an evening match. The West
• German lost only 11 points Iii 13
: · service games.
•
Becker. seeking his first Open
• f'tnal, played nearly flawless
; tennis. He fired his ground·
~ strokes into the corners.to set up
• easy volleys and hit line-hugging
' passing shots when Noah ap•
•· preached the net.
· "I don't think I had made one
: · easy mistake," said Becker. who
~ ~ 36 P.Jaceml)nt winners versus
• · i4 by Noah.
·
:
"Boris was just too strong,"
·:· said the Frenchman. "I feel like
'· he was the only one on the court."
The rejuvenated Noah, who
was talking of retirement three
weeks ago, was the only un. seeded player to reach · the
quarterfinals.
.
"I'm disappointed by this
match but I'm going to re. member the others." h.e said.
Graf, seeking to achieve her
lOth consecutive appearance In a
Grand Slam final, crushed Sukova 6-1, 6-1 in 45 minutes before
; Sabatini was stretched for 2
: hours, 17 minutes In disposing of
• French Open champion Arantxa
Sanchez VIcario, 3-6, 6-4, 6-1.
There were ·16 servic.e breaks
in the Sabal!ni-Sanchez affair
and foUowing a gallant effort, the
17-year-old Sanchez lost when
she failed to put away easy
smashes on the final two points.

SVAC standings

]::NFL coaches upset over noise rule

·~
~-. o..BI..~
~--· ~·
.

.

.

1989

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The lJ(JWI That Mdlts ~ liJppna.

Graf has a 16·3 advantage over
Sabatini, her doubles partner,
including last year's U.S. Open
final when Graf completed her
Grand Slam.
·
Friday's other semifinal pairs ·
N~. 2 Martina NavratUova and
No. 5 Z!na Garrison, the conqueror of Chris Evert.
- Graf has conceded merely 14
games In winning five matches,
and only once has she been forced
to work more than an hour. The
20-year-old West German has
·compiled a match record this
year of 67-2, dropping only seven
sets. ,
"I AM a machine, you know, "
Graf said somewhat facetiously
when asked if she played like one.
Both Graf and Sabatini, the
third seed, said a key element to
lbelr match will be to dictate the
flow of play.
' "! just have to. go for the shots
at Ute light time, just try to step
In and always take advantage to
be the one who Is dictating the
game." Graf said. "''ll try to
'play my game, not hers."
Berger, hoping to cap an
exceptionally fine summer with
a big performance In the Open,
broke service to begin his duel
with Kr!cksteln and broke again
In the ninth game.
Krlckste!n got even, breaking
In the fifth and seventh games of
the second set. and be. took the
Initiative In the third set with
llnother break in the first game.
With Krlckstein serving at 3·2,
15-30, Berpr bepn limping
notietabiY and he was given a
delay Of 1ame warning. The 11th .
IM!ed trltd pmely to continue but
. couldn't win another point, fl·
nal" glvlag up when he trailed
31)-0 In tile aecoat1 game of the
fourth set.

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Graf, Sabatini, Becker

INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST
6 MONTH CD.
NOWI

Wyche feels Bengals offense lacks zip

~

.-----jh~(

CELEBRATES VICTORY - Argentina's Gabriela Sabatini
celebrates her hard-fought 3-6, 11-4, 6·1 victory In the {J.S. Open
quarterftnal Wednellday over Aranlxa Sanchez. (UPI)

WHY YOU SHOUI.D

·&gt;

The Daily Sentinel- Page-5

Ohio

•

'

"

deal· with him. But I really feel
bad for him that he has to be out
the whole year."
Redskins Coach Joe Gtbbs said
he w!ll have to adjust his defense
to stop Morris' replacem'i&gt;nt,
Ottls Anderson, who at 32 may
have to carry a team's ground
attack for the first · time since
coming from the Cardinals In
1986.
Morris ' younger brother
Jamie, a reserve running back
wl.th the Redsklns , says he thinks
Joe aggravated an Injury.
"His foot has always been
bothering him," Jamie Morris
said. "I think he had a stress
fracture and he finally put
e11ough pressure on It to break
it."

Elsewhere:
-The Falcgns agreed with
first-round draft pick Delon
Sanders on a four-year contract.

Twin ·victories boost
Expecting a new and Improved
effort from Shawnee State, the
University of Rio Grande volley·
ball team found Its fears justified
in part Tuesday, but stlll walked
away with a set of victoP!es.
The Redwomen defeated SSU
15-12, 15-~ and had earlier handed
a struggling Cincinnati Bible
twin losses of 15·6, 15·3 .[n
matches played at Shawnee's
'Athletic Center.
In the first game against the
hosts, Shawnee built an 11·3
advantage, but the Redwomen
rallied to overtake and · then

The flamboyant defensive back !our-year contract for $4.4 mil·
from Florida State was playing
lion including·a $2 million signing
with the New York Yankees in
bonus.
Seattle. The Falcons hopetohave
-Jets All-Pro wide receiver AI
Sanders in Atlanta Thursday. It Toon is questionable for Sun·
Is not clear If he Will play In day's game against New EngSunday's opener against the
land because of a right shoulder
Rams.
sprain. Toon, wearing the arm In
-Tony Mandarlch, the
a sling, will not practice this
Packers' $4.4 m!llion man,
week and a decision will be made
.worked out for the first time with on Saturday or Sunday. Toon,
the team Wednesday and admit- who led the NFL with 93
ted he has a long way to go before receptions last season, was in·
being ready.
jured In New York's !Ina! exhlbl·
"I .· feel like I weigh 600 lion game· last Friday; five days
pounds," said Mandarlch, a . after signing a three-year, $3.9
6-foot-5, 315-pound offensive million contract.
tackle from Michigan State. "My
~The Saints placed running
legs are a bit tired. I think the back Rueben Mayes on injured
first four days are the hardest, reserve and signed tight end
just getting Into hitting shape.
Mitch Andrews to flll the roster
After that, the hardest thing w!ll spot. Mayes, the NFC Rookie of
be the knowledge."
the Year In 1986, had been
Mandarlch, the No. 2 pick in hampered throughout training
.t he NFL draft , ended his holdout camp with a sore Achilles
Tuesday when he signed a
·
tendon.

~G

surpass the Bears.
"We were a lit tie slow get tlng
started. and we made some
mental errors," Coach ·Patsy
Fields observed, but Ute victory
helped boost Rio Grande's confl·
dence as Shawnee's sagged In the
second contest. The Redwomen
were a head 8-0 before the hosts
could score in the final game.
Fields hailed the work of the
team, which did a "super job,"
she said.
Leading the offense for Rio
Grande were Shelly Hoop and

volleyball to

Shannon Huston, who had seven
kills each. Teresa Zempter provided five, while Robin Sharp
and Michelle Spears added three
apiece. Hoop and Zempter had
two blocked solos each, and Hoop
was credited with two serving
aces. Hoop and Spears provided
six digs each and Chris Williams
netted five.
Employing a somewhat differ·
ent offensive style, the Redwomen swamped Cincinnati Bible
early. Zempter posted nine kills,
while Hoop; Sharp and· Kyoko
Kawakami h.ad three each.

5~0

Zempter and Hoop had two block
solos apiece and Williams recorded two serving aces. In digs,
Hoop led the way wlih 11, Huston
had seven, and Sharp and Kawa.
kaml added six each.
The wins boosted the Redwpmen's record to 5·0. They wlll
participate in the Carnegie Mel·
Ion Tournament In Pittsburgh
Friday ·and Saturday , facing
three schools from Pennsylvania
- Allegheny, Carlow and the
University of Pittsburgh at John·
stown - ·and one from Ohio. the
College of Wooster.

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�Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 7, 1989

Meigs Marauders to host undefeated Trimble Tomcats
By DAVE HARRIS
ROCK SPRINGS - The unde·
feated Trimble Tomcats Y{lll
Inva de ¥arauder Stadium Friday night to tangle with the
Meigs Marauders.
The Tomc arts · are 2-0 with
victories over Minford (28-0) a nd
conference foe Wellston (14·6) .
Meigs defeated Alexa nd.e r 22-14
last week to even It's record at 1-1
after the opening game loss to
G41llpolls.
Coach Greg Holbert's Tomcats
return 16 lettermen from last
year' s 4-6 season and nine of their

11 starter$ on both offense and
defense. The Tomcatsstrengthls
In the line where Holbert W\'1·
comes back three. post season
honorees. Brent Swaro (6-2,175)
who ear ned All-Ohio Honorable
Mention from his guard slot,
All-TVC tackle Rich Cain (6·
0,210) and Ali-TVC Honorable
Mention Center Jerry Pastol
( 5-10 , 19 5 ~ . The Tomcats will have
6·2, 180 pound junior Roger
atngham at quarterback .
atngham a two year starter has
thrown for over 2,000 yards In his
freshman and sophomore sea·

FINISH SECOND -The Rutland Little Leque
ended the season In second place In the Big Bead
Youth Leape. Pictured left to right are first row:
Jason George, Gary SIB!' ley, Eric Jones, Jeremy
Pierce, Bryan Colwell, Phillip Edmonds, Jeremy
Imboden. Second 1!-ow, Assistant Coach Shorty

Ohwf~hingreporL

sons. Jeff Holbert. will play spilt
e nd and free safety, Maraude r
Head Coach ·Mike Staggs says
that Holbert might be the best
free sa fety the Marauders will
face all season. Holbert wa s
injurled part of last season and
with out him the Tomcats went
2-6. "Todd Fouts (5-10,150) Is a
good running back," Staggs said,
" he has real good speed'" . Fouts
In the opening game victory over
Minford rushed for 110 yards.
The Marauders are coming off
an Impressive second halt In last
weeks win over Alexander. One

Russell, Ray Ru~ell, Mike Jarvis, Paul Searls,
Travis Hendricks, Kevin Collins, Adam Hendrix,
Coach Frank Ebersbacb. Absent Pal McGuire,
John Cleland, Anthony Jones, Dean Dankla,
Jeremy Coleman, Batboy Scotty Colwell · and
Assistant Coach Marly Pierce.

of the major factors of last weeks
victory was the play of sophom ore fullb;~ck Frank alake, all
Blake did was rush.19 times for
140 yards .and one touchdown and
pick off two passes on defense.
"Meigs strenght appears to be
the offensive and defensive line,"
Trlmble coach Greg Holbert
said. "They feature an excellent
running game, the sophomore
Blake Is real Impressive. ·· Hoibert went on to say "On defense
t he Marauders appear to be very
good against the ruil. We are
really pleased with our start this

,

year (2·0~ , but we respect Meigs. In last week win over Alexander
It should be"' real good game,"
Cremeans In his fi rst va rsit y
Hobert s;~ld .
·, carry .dashed 35 yards for If
Marauder Coach Mike Staggs touchdown.
added "It' s going to be a real
LOoking back over the years
challange, they (Trimble) beat a · the two teams have met a total of
real good Wellston team last six times with the Marauders
week. We have to be pfl!liared," holding a 5-1 edge. Meigs has won
Staggs added, "but It we play up the last four games between the ·
to our potential we can beat
two teams with last year's game
anyone on our schedule." Terry finding the Maroon.and Gold on
McGuire sophomore tailback for top 22-6. The Tomcats only
Meigs Is a question mark with victory came In 1984, when they
sprained ligaments In his knee, If won 14-8 In a game played at
he can't go Friday night fresh - Glouster.
man Mike Cremeans will start.
l&lt;!c!koff for Friday night" game
Is 7: 30.
·

PERFECT SEASON - The Tuppers Plains
Orioles T-Ball team was 10.0 this year. They won
the Eastern T-Ball Tournament and the Eut
· Melp- Athens League. First Row, left to rlcht
are Corey Young, Jeremy CoanoUy, Darlene
Connolly, Bradley Brannoa, Jak!l Houeebolder,
Danlelle Spencer, Dustin Marcinko, Joe Browa,

~

and Jeffrey ' Circle. Second row, ·Casey Duvall,
Travill Lyons, Matthew BIMell, Matt Caldwell,
Matthew Slmp!IOII, Michael LeFebre, Sari Patman, Sarah Housebolder, aad Klrt Spencer.
Coacbea: Paul Bra~~non, Jeff Circle, Dan
. Speacer, Alan Duvall and Jell Householder.

with cut bait, chicken livers, soft
craws and nigh~crawters is pro·
duclng the best results. Bluegill
fishing remains good during
daylight hours throughout the
lake. Anglers should use waxworms, mealworms or ctickets
to catch these small panflsh.
Lake Snowden - Channel
catfish are being caught by using
traditional catfish balls fished
along the bottom during ·late

evening hours. Crappies are . undersized largemouth bass are
being caught (luring daylight
being caught a ill) released, with a
hours by anglers using crappie
few of keeper size. Anglers also
m lnnows fished near submerged
are catching a few saugeye In the
structures in shallow water.
tal !water below the dam ranging
Largemouth bass are being
up to six pounds. Bluegill fishing
caught on artificial night - action Is good with most fish in
crawlers, spinnerbalts and occathe five- to six-Inch category.
sionally with minnows or
Waxworms fished in two teet of
nlghtcrawlers.
water will catch many of the
Southwest
bluegllls. Crappies averaging six
Paint Creek Lake - Many
to eight Inches also are being

caught on minnows fished In
water four to five teet deep.
Central
· Kiser Lake - Shoreline cover
continues to provide good bluegill fishing opportunities.
Anglers should be using ·waxworms on small hookS suspended
beneath a slip bobber In two to
four feet of water near submerged structures. Crappies can
be caught In the same areas when

fishing with minnows. The shore·
line areas also are producing
largemouth bass ranging In size
from 12 to 18 Inches. .
Griggs Reservoir - Channel
catfish averaging two to four
pounds continue to produce good ·
lat.e night fishing. Cut bait,
nlghtcrawlers, shrimp or
chicken livers should be fished
along the bottom near shore.

.~lUOOOOJE)J{ ~JIOOJE­

~JPJECJIAJL~
Offer Good Now Thru September 30, 1989

LP GAS TANK

p CIAL P I CBS

NPBT 0

*

NB

Plus Tax

...
CITY ICE &amp;FUEL CO.
. ForD ;1 ' ' ' ,....,_..,._

Phone

Phone

(304}

(304)

675-1700

' 675~2460

I

CALL TODAY...
ASK F=OR CAROLYN JHOMAS
.•

"'

and unable to stand trial.
aut after hearing Johnson 's
evaluation, Potter' asked Bakker

I! he felt he could understand the · '
charges against him and assist In ·
his own defense.

'89 FORD THUNDERBIRD
$1,500 c..h Bonua on tM 1981 Ford Thunderbird
SU!ndard with Poww Drlver/Puunger SNt and
Pref..-ld Equipment Pickage 151 B.
M•Jor Standud
Equipment:
•3.8L EFI V~ Engine
•4-Speed Aulllmatic
Overdrive Transmission
•lVI Conditioning

hoklge 1518
Equipment:

•Eiec:tronic AM'FM Stereo
Racio wilh Ca111.8118 and Clock

•Power Brakes

•Speed ConlrDI
.•nt Slaamg Wheel
•Power Lock Group
•Rear Window Defroslllr

•Ton tad Glasa

•And

•Power Wondowl

mani

'89 FORD RANGER
$1,000 C11h Bonua on the 1818 Ford Ringer XLT
4x4 SUper Cab with Mm11111l TranamiNion.
lltojor ... ndolnl
Equlpn~e~~t:

-5 Speed MMual Ovetdrive
•Deluxe two-tone
•211L V.fJ
•T111ad Glasa
•Tachometer
•AMIFM Casaelle
•Vinyl Jump Sellts
-chrome Rear Slap Bumper

'89 FORD ESCORT
$1,000 Caah Bonua on the
198ti.Ford Eacort LX W•gcm
lltojor s""""'nt
Equipment: • "1::
•1.9L EFI 4-Cylinder Engine

•Four-Wheellndependent
Suspension

··Automatic Shoulder B81t
Restraint Systam

•Power Brakes
P•cbge321 A
Equipment:

•Automatic Tnon38XIe
•Eiac:lranic AM'FM Statao

Radlo/Casaeltll
•T1111Dd Glaos.

•Pawer Steering
·lntetvai Wipers
•Dual Eleelric RemoteConlrDI Minora
•Rear Windowl Defroster
•UghUSec:urity Group
•l&lt;ir Conditioning
•luggage Rad&lt;
•Polya~at Wheels
•PI8rnium Sound
•ArtJ Motel

DECATUR; Ga. (UPH-Georgla's 156-year-old sodomy law
wa:s declared unconstitutional
· when applied to consenting mar$1,000 Caeh Bonua on the
ried adults by a judge who said
1888 Ford Crown VIctoria .
the government should stay out ,
of'a married couple's sex life,
hcbge111A
Mtojor s..ndllrd
In a five-page ruling released
Equipment:
Equipment:
Wednesday, DeKalb County Su·
•Speed ConlrDI
•I&lt;Jr Condition
perlor Court Judge Robert Cas•Rear Delrost
•Aulomatic
tellani overturned the sodomy
•Power lades
•Pawet Slaclring .
conviction of James Moseley,
•TIItS.mg
•Power BlaMs
who served 19 months for having
•Pawet·Wlnclowa
•AM'I'iM-181111
oral sex with · his common-law
•V-8
wife,
"Whew! I feel like someone
took a millstone from neck,"
Moseley said from his mother's
F1orlda home. "It's great, you
know, it's great. We won:' 1
The judge made It clear his
ruling applied only to married
couples and only In DeKalb
County, leaving intact a Supreme
Court ruling that sodomy beNOW
tween consert ling homosexuals Is
Illegal.
''This court believes (Moseley's) right to marital and
domestic privacy has been violated by the sodomy law as
applied to him," Castellani wrote
NOW
In his ruling. "&amp;th our state and
federal constitutions recognize
this right." ·
Attorneys for the American
Stock t 969t 1. 4 doors. slalion wegon, front wheel drlw,
Civil Liberties Union said they 4 speed trans., AMIFM radio, budullseats.
bad hoped Castellani would declare the sodomy law unconstituWAS 12995
NOW
tional among all consenting
adults. clearing the way for
1978 PLYMOUTH
another ·appeal to the nation's
highest court.
VOLARB
"I think at least all married
Stock t 1163t2, 4 docn, stadan
couples can celebrate," said
wagon, V-8 •.tr~.. auto. trans.,
CliVI! A·. Stafford-Smith, an
PS, PB, AMIFM rado. ·
ACLU attorney who represented
Castellani. ''They can bring out
the champagne.
"But there are still a large
number of nervous people ·In
Georgia who are not married,"
Stafford-Smith said. "For those
people, we have to persevere and
get rid of the rest of this
monstrous statute."
Altboll&amp;'h the atate araued
against overturnlna Moseley's
conviction because of allegatlona
by bll aow u-wlfe. Bette 1'tobertl, that ahe did DOt co•nt to
the oral tex. MtQrniy General
Mike BoWtre aatd.be doubts the
state will appeal the declalon .

$

·ASK FOR CAROLYN l"HOMAS

day, aakker 's lawyers and psychiatriSt told U.S. District Judge
Robert Potter he was psychotic

1986 DODGE AIRES

Stock. 9633_.! cloorl, ~.front wheel drMI, .. cvt..... ~-.
- · ........ ""· PB, NM-M 1'8do, ltldial tires, whllt walls. """
~dalag.

'

WAS 149!15

1984 FORD ESCORT.

(304) 675 .. 1700· or 675·2460
"TOUR PETROLANE LP GAS DEAtER~'

•

The trial was Interrupted Aug.
30 when a prosecution witness
tainted while testifying. The next

'89 CROWN VICTORIA

LPGAS

* Installation Includes 20' Of Copper, Over 20' Of Copper Extra!

CHARLOTTE, · N.C. (UPI) Although declared emotionally
fit to resume his fraud and
conspiracy_trial, television evangelist Jim Bakker said he was
exhausted and felt he had spent a
week In a "loony bin. "
&amp;kker: 49, was slumped In his
chair, his head cradled In his
right hand, his eyes downcast
during the entire 2 ~-hour
competency hearing
Wednesday. ·
. ··
Dr. Sally Johnson, chle! psychiatrist with the Federal Correction Institution In · Butner
N.C., where Bakker underweni
six days of tests, said he Is not
crazy and was rational last week
· when he perceived reporters as a
pack of animals bent on his
des tructlon.
"He Is . not going crazy."
Johns~;~n said. ''He does not have
a hidden mental Illness. The
kinds of anXieties he feels are
anXieties we all feel to some
degree. There was some dlssocl·
atlon going · on, but he did
maintain contact with reality."
Dr. &amp;sll Jackson of Milwaukee, who last week told the court
he was Bakker's personal psych!·
atrlst, had testified that Bakker
was hallucinating Aug. 31 when ·
he perceived people outside the
courthouse as anlmals. Johnson
disagreed.
"When he ·was leaving tlie
courthouse," Johnson said, · •'be
saw the media with their cameras and eq ulpment as large
animals with antennae. But he
maintained conlact with who
they were,
''He was seeing something that
was actually there," Johns.;~n
said. "He did not lose sight that
they were actually the press, but
he was very frightened by the
number of people In the crowd."
The crowd of journalists was
even larger Wednesday as all
four teleVIsion networks beefed
up their crews. Newspapers from
around the world sent reporters
to the trial that has been eveh
more sensational than the drama
that preceded !t.
·
Bak-k er· was -o nce the most .
widely recognized television
preacher In America, the
founder of PTL's vast television
empire that . reached homes
around the world. But he ran Into
trouble over a one- time sexual
fling with former church secretary Jessica Hahn and turned bls
empire ·over to the Rev. Jerry
Falwell, who refused to give It ·
back.
Falwell . fleutenants turned
PTL's records over to the U.S.
Justice Department artd now ·

Bakker Is on trial on 24 counts of
·Criminal fraud and conspiracy
~te~rnlrl~ _from money-raising

'

COMPLETELY INSTALLED
WITH 20' OF COPPER

•

lJakker ruled competent; psychiatrists begin testtmontes

Sodomy ruled
constitutional

Offer Good Now thru Sept. 30, 1989

The Deily Sentinat· Peg• 7 .

Pomaloy-Middaport, Ohio

•

By JUNE PRESTON

Tycoon Lake catfish . prefer chicken livers--------

By United Press International
Here is the weekly Ohio fishing
report. !rom the Ohio Division of
Wildlife. For Information on
lakes or streams not listed In the
weekly reports, ca1Hil4-265-6317.
Soulheast ·
Tycoon Lake - Channel ca!lsh
ranging five to 10 pounds are
providing plenty of la te summer
fishing action in Gallla County.
Fishing during nighttime hours

Thursdev. September 7, 1989

•

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PB, AM'FM radio.

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�Page

\

B_;lhe Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, September 7, 1989

Drug 808~~ extradited; Colombia lauded
·'

BOGOTA, Colombia (UPI) ~
Colombia extradited the Medel·
lin cocaine· cartel's reputed fl· ·
nance boss to the United States,
promptlilg U.S. Attorney Gen·
·eral R,lchard Thornburgh to
" applaud the ex traordlnary
courage " of Colombia ' s
president. .
Offlclllls In ColOmbia braced
for possible retaliation for the
extradition of Edu11rdo Martinez .
Romero, 31, who allegedly
helped launder up to $1 billion In
drug money.
President VIrgilio Barc9
Issued a local martial-law decree
Wednesday empowering the na·
tiona! security council to suspen&lt;!
Bogota's mayor and name a
military leader In the event the
capital's security serlousjy declines, Colombian television
reported.
· A cartel-financed hit squad
called The Extradlta bles has
threatened to kill five Americans
and 10 judges for every Colom·
bian extradited to the United
States.
· A bomb blast late Wednesday
seriously damaged a · state·
owned bank In the drug capital
Medellin and Injured at least one
person, Colombian media .reported. There was no immediate
claim of responsibility for the
. attack.
" I applaud the extraordinary
courage and resolve of President
Barco and the government of

Colombia In their e ffort to
restore the rule of Jaw in
Colombia, " Thornburgh said 1!1 a
statement Issued In Washington
disclosing Mar ti ne z's
ex tradition.
." Mr. Martinez Romero will be
treated fairly and humanely In
this country ," he added.
An Atlanta federal grand jury
Indicted Martinez on charges of,
conspiracy to ppssess cocaine
with Intent to distribute and
conspiracy to launder proceeds
of drug trafflcklilg.
A U.S. narcotics expert in
Bogota called Martinez a
wealthy man with a "slgnifllcant
role In money lliunderlng," say· •
ing he owned five ranches tn
Colombia and gold mines In
Venezuela; Uruguay and Peru.
He managed a Colombian bank
office In Panama until early this
year.
Ma r tln e7 d e nted the
allegations .
' .'I want It to be clear that I am
not a narcotics trafficker, nor do
I have any connection to the
Medellin cartel," the suspect told
Bogota's Radio Caracol before
being placed aboard a U.S. plane.
. Martinez said a thorough in·
qulry would prove he is "a good
man; a worker who has loaned
his services to the fatherland, to
publiC entitles and private
entities."
·
The Colombian government
Wednesday began runnlilg televl·

ston ads offering $250,000 re·
wards for tn(ormatton leading to
the capture of two reputed
Medellin cartel chiefs, Pablo
Escobar and J9se Conzalo, " the
Mexican'· Rodriguez Gacha.
Both fugitives have been in·
dieted on federal drug charges In
the United States and are on a
U.S. list of 12 suspects " most·
wanted" for extradition. ·
In response to escalating drugrelated violence, ,Barco last
month restllred ail extradition
treaty with the United States that
had been struck down by Cotom·
bla' s high court.
Washington recently asked for
Martinez's extradition, but
behind-the-scenes negotiations
about possible maximum sen ten·
ces and other legal Issues appar·
ently delayed the action.
The Colombian president and
the nation's newspapers wei·
corned the new U.S. anti-drug
offensive that President Bush
announced Tuesday on Colom·
blan and U.S. television and
radio, Colombia Is receiving $250
mUJion this fiscal year under the
program and $2 billion over the
next five years.
Barco called the program "a
very favorable beginning, " but
said with a note of resignation
that the coealne cartels' operations had reached such propor·
tlons that any measures appear
·'Insufficient."
"Colombia certainly needs in-

ternatlonal support to u.ndertake
the battle against the lnterna·
tiona! drug trafflcklilg organlza·
lion," the president said.
"The aid Is urgent and most
necessary, but It cannot be
substituted for the responsibility
that each nation has with respect
to controlllilg the links In this
chain of crime."
Colombia' s antl•drug offensive
"will go forward · because the
fight against dr~,~g trafllcklilg Is a
,battle for demoCracy, •• lie sal(!.
· Barco declared a state of siege
Aug. 18 hours after theassasslna·
lion of the natidn's leading
presidential candidate .a nd the
pollee commander In Medellln,
the headquarters of one of the
cartels. The president ordered
sweeplilg detentions, conflsca·
tion of property and reinstated an
extradition treaty with the Uni·
· ted States.
The Extradltables declared a
• 'total war'· In response. A spate
of at Jeast28 bombings since then
has left at least three people
dead, and the wife of an army
colonel was killed In a shooting
officials attributed to hit squads.

T·he Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Thursday, September 7, 1989

Page- 9

Community calendar

Beat of the Bend

Home sweet home...

GREETINGS · President Bush (I) greets Colombii!D
Ambassador Victor. Mosquera ChauxfoUowlnK an address by Blish ·
Wednesday to a group of foreign ambassadorS, and American
state aud local officials on the new anti-drug program. UPI .

·

THURSDA~
MIDDLEPORT- yangellne
Chapter 172, Order · f Easter n
Star, Middleport, will obser ve
obllgatlori and instruction night
for new members on Thursday a t
7: 30· p.m. All . new members
should attend. Officers are to
wear street dresses. A potluck
dinner at 6: 30 will be precede the
meeting. Drinks and tableware
provided. Bring covered dishes,
Including meats. All members
welcome.

True Country Ramble'rs. Bring
snacks for snack table.
ROCKSPRINGS Mar y
Shrine No. 37, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, will meet at 7: 30 on
friday at the Rocksprings
Grange· Hall. All members are
encouraged to attend this lmpro·
tant meeting.

·By BOB HOEFLICH
that needs to be painted. Go
A man's home Is his caslle.
ahead, use those advertised
That . fact has
• been paints tjlat are ·applied across
acknowledged.
·
. the nation In the restoration of
the homes df your forefathers .
However, today man's home
Betella they're gonna peel too. Of
ownership has
course, . If your home needs
RED BRUSH - Gospel meet·
become the
'repainted, this Is something you
lngs will be held Friday through
A m e r Ic a n
can always do yourself. You'll
Tuesday, Sept. 12, at the Red
Dream.
look good sprawled on the sideBrush Church of Christ on
walk after your fall from the
Cars have lost
BashanRoad. Meetingswtllbeat
ladder propped up aga inst the
a great deal of their status
POMEROY - Big Bend Ser· 7 p.m. each evening. Sunday
symbol and the blggle today Is second story. Geez! And no
vice Unit, Girl Scouts of Amer· morning worship will be at 9:30
getting that home of your own.
Insurance.
lea,
will meet Thursday, 7 p.m . , a.m . The speaker will be Guy
This isn't easy , of course, In view
Now If you plan to become an
of Inflation and the high costs of honest-to-goodness, sincere ho· at the Pomeroy United Methodist · Mallory, of Wintergarden, Fla.
Everyone welcome.,
Cl)urch.
building. Still, even Uncle Sam meowner, you wtll need to
Is interested in making that
become a commode watcher
· SA,TURDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury ·
dream 'come true. Occasionally, lrnmediately. Commodes have
RUTLAND
. - Square, round
he puts out some low rate Interest this great knack ' of springing · Township Trustees wtll meet In
rponey toflrst·limehomebuyers. · leaks almost magically. Unless regular session Thursday, 7 and slow dancing wtll be featured
Safilrday evening, from 8 p.m. to
I understand sometimes In some you become trained early in the p.m. , at lhe township building.
12
midnight, at the Eli Denison
locations you stand in line a day game of being an exceptional
Post
of the Am erican Legion,
FRIDAY
or two ahead to try to get it.
commode watcher, you 're In
Rutland.
Music by Country Com·
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Now I'd be the last to want to trouble. In no time a leaking
bination.
Refreshments avalla·
punch holes in tl!e great Amerl· commode on floor two can play Senior Citizens are sponsoring a
ble.
Everyone
welcome.
square dance on Friday, from 8
can Dream but owning your own . all sorts of havoc on floor one.
home does have some dlsadvan·
Play it smart - with a little to 11 p.m., at lhe senior center on
BURLINGHAM - The .Bur·
tages ·.- In fact, you troubles are concentration you can detect Mulberry Heights. Music by
just about to start and they go on, when the first drop of water goes
and on. and on.
astray. This talent will save you
After de)ermlning that your thOusands. You may want to ,
dream home, Is, structurally bringdownthehouse, but dolton
sound -It isri't sliding over a hlll stage - not literally With a leaky
The fifth annual reunion of the Schultheiss, Jason Ludy , Bety
or leaning 15 degrees to the west commode.
children of Edwin Schultheiss Blackledge, Dale and Madeline
- a first consideration , of
Before making the big pur- was held recently at Malvern Muntz, Lyle and Rita Beebe,
course, Is the roof.
Now, chase, also check out the hot Park In Canton.
Opal, Gary. and Justine Sinclair,
undoubtedly, you'll get the word water hea·t er . Don't worry If it 's
Following the noon dinner a Savanna Parsons, Rhonda , Bill,
that the roof is guaranteed for a gas or electric.
That's not white elephant sale was held. The Derek and Dedra Smlthburger,
lifetime. NoW, tsn'tthat reassur~ important. Just make sure it 1990 reunion will be held at Robert and Ramona Hawk,
ing? Of course, it Is. However, Isn' t a Mayflower import. It Logan.
Kelly , Lynn, Derek and Kodl
check out what that means.
probably Isn't golilg to be guaranAttending were Sonny, Cindy Haw. Gregg and Robin Gibbs,
Whose lifetime? Yours, which teed for a lifetime- and If it is, and Maggie Hearn, John, Joyce Paul, Garland, Dena and Travis
· hopefully will be a long one, or you can be sure the guarantee and Amy Schultheiss.. Ted, Valentine, Burl, Judy , Krist!,
the lifetime of a butterfly?
doesn't mean your lifetime Jackie, Laura and Lynnette and Scott Baker; Kasy Pritchett,
W9uldn't It be better if someone unless, of course, the installer Lauer, Tina and Denise Shrader, Emily Hayes, Rodney Blac· would just put a number on that knows something you don't Elizabeth Neville, Jan and Ron kledge, and Debbie Caldwell.
guarantee I mean, years, know. Like furnaces, hot water
montl!s or days? Now If it !urns heaters also die quite unexi:&gt;ect·
£
• •
· out this guarantee is really, ediy and with very !Iitle prior
IOf
really for a lifetime, who do you notice and at most Inconvenient
.
tell when the roof goes bad at the times.
Raymond Canter, 30, of Ra· then taken by LlfeFlight to the
Of course, when you acquire cine, who was Inju red last Columbus hospital.
end of .80 years and· you 're still
gqlilg strong?
your Dream Home, this is the Thursday night while on his
He has undergone three sur·
'Another factor to consider in license to begin collecting all of employment at the Dravo Plant, geries to date and additional
capturing that great kmerlcan the essentials and non-essentials Apple Grove, was reported In fair surgeries are scheduled along
' Dream ts the furnace. Even that you'll need to make the condition today at Riverside with therapy. It is anticipated
though there's a warranty ,
house a home. This will turn out Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
that Canter will be hospitalized
-· r,!4!"JUICes ha,ve !I J!IOSI Cf!_nvef!len~ . to be ~,leng!~Y Jist o~~te!!!s, all of--·.·-- . __ ·-- _ • __ • _;,. . ·- (o~ ~.III!J'Jll l'l~k• l!.nd will have
· -· way of llonklng out at about 2 --which are sUb'tel!t to. SQtlc!@'n
Canter suffered extensive In· to undergo therapy for several
a.m; when the telllperature out· · death. This lt!eans, of course, . juries tohisentlrerightlegbelow months.
side·ts eight below zero. You see, that you Immediately start com· the knee Including the foot when
Cards and other remembran· ·
furnaces don't seem to under· piling a list of repair people he. became entangled. in sorne ces may · be sent to him at
stand abouNhe guarantee. Sure, treat these P!!DPie weir 'cause . moving equipment. He was Riverside Methodist Hopsltal,
there's always the furnace re· you 're going to be In touch with treated at the scene by Racine 3535 Olentangy River Road
pairman but have you ever tried them frequently!
squadmen of the Meigs County Room 6023, Columbus, Ohio:
getting him at about 2 a.m. when
So as you embark upon that Emergency Medical Service and 43214.
the,temperature Is eight below?
path of the great American
·
The exterior of your home is Dream, enjoy your castle and be
important too. Brick and stone thankful that I didn't even touch
are nice. However, you probably upon the mortage payments. Do
Two 1989 Meigs High School gaining proficiency In a variety
are going to end up with siding keep smiling.
graduates have joined the U.S. of military skills, Including first
Marines and are now taking aid, rifle marksmanship, and
basic training at Parris Island, close order · drill, along with
te;~mwork and self discipline.
They
will complete basic and
S.i-heyareKarlaSueOsborneof
graduate
in November.
Rutland, and Wesley Howard of
Harrisonville.
()()fl
Thetwowlllundergollweeks
of intense training where the
By United Press International
Nancy Schul, Reedsville, Opal and Judy Collns of Moatsville, W. basics of battlefield survival are
Ira Glasser, executive director
taught.
Emphasis
will
be
.
on
Hollen, Chester, and Eleanor Va. will be back with their
of
the American Civil Li bertles
Bennett and Jan Stapleton, Point handmade basket s. These two
Union,
on President Bush 's new
Pleasant, W. Va. will be among exhibitors won the first and
anti-drug
plan:
. the 89 Ohio and ·West Virginia second piljce awards at last
"This
policy
is a scandal. It is a
A film, "A Man Called Nor·
arts and crafts exhibitors at the year's fes tlval.
full-fledged
polltlcall:oax
. Ever·
annual Harvest Moon Festival to
In addition there will be a man" will be shown at the ything In It has been tried before
be helc;l at City Park In Parkers· demonstration on making apple· Middleport Church of Christ,
-: not once, not twice, but five
burg, Sept. 16-17.
butter by the Stlllwei14-H Club, Fifth and Main St. , Middleport, times, 10 times. "
Sunday
at
7
p.m.
The
public
is
Mrs. Schul will be taking her handmade furniture by the Whitt
invited to attend.
looms and weaving during the Family Furniture of Lewisburg;
Now you know
two-day festlvaJ, Mrs. Jiollon will chair caning by Dixle Elmore of
demonstrate making quilts and Parkersburg. and the carving of
By United Press International
rag rugs, while Mrs. Bennett and
lifeslze carousel horses by Pa·
The familiar song played dur·
Neva Seyfried will observe her lng the Final Jeopardy portion of
Mrs. Stapleton will be displaying trick Wentzel of Parkersburg.
handmade baskets and demon·
Numerous food vendor·s will be 95th blrlhday Saturday. Friends the "Jeopardy" television game
strating how they are made.
on the park grounds, the Parkers· are planning a card shower for show Is titled "A Time for Tony"
As explained by Kathy Ander· burg Clown Club will be walking Mrs. Seyfried who resides on and was written by Merv Griffin
when his son was born.
son. the volunteer coordinator the f!!stlval with fre!! balloons for Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
for the festival which Is spon· the youngsters, and there will be
sored by the Junior Department ·musical entertainment , ranging
of the Parkersburg Women's from classical guitar to soft rock
Club and the Wood County all afternoon on both days. All of
Recreation Commission, the res· the entertainment will take place
ttval provides artists and crafts· on the main stage In front of the
· people with an opportunitY to pavilion.
On Sunday, Sept.17, storyteller
exhibit and sell their work and to
encourage the development of Dr. Gail Herman of Swanton,
Md. will be at the park to tell
quality craftsmanship.
stories
to the children from 12:30
It also provides publiC access
to
1:
30
p.m. There will also be a
to fine crafts and the processes
by which they are made. Each " make-It -and-take-It" craft cenparticipant Is required to demon· ter for the children operated by
strate his or her craft so th'at the Barb Angus of the YWCA Craft
public can witness the process. League. Funding for this Is
Bolli amateurs and professions provided through the Artsbrldge
participate in the fEO,s tlval where Grant.
The festival hours are 10a .m to
only or~inal work, handcrafted
8 p.m on Sept. 16, and noon to 6
by the exhibitor. Is accepted.
The Reed Roberts Award wtll p.m. onSept. 17. Admission price
be given to the outstanding Is $2 for adults, $1 for students, 7
craftspeople again this year. A to 18 years of age, and free for
jurJ,ng committee headed by Dr. children under six . ·
Gary Ogilvie, wtll select the most
outstanding exhibitor at the
fesdval. Judging wtll be quality
ahd originality of the work and
the way . It Is displayed. The
award carries a SlOO check with
Open house and Meet the ·
second place to receive $!50 and
third place, $25.
Teacher Night will be held at the
The festival will feature a Salisbury Elementary School
tremendous variety of arts and Monday evenlilg at 6:30 p.m.
992-5177
crafts. Fancy Turnout of Lancas· followed by the Salisbury PTO
ter will return this year with their " meeting at 7 p.m ..AII parents are
POMEROY, OHIO
220 EAST MAIN
.hand-smocked clothing and Joe . encouraged to attend.

Schultheiss reunion held

1-989 OLDSMOBILE· CUTLASS CIERA

"JUSl ANNOUNCED"

•$3 500°0 DISCOUNT
'"

*DISCOUNT INCLUDES REBATE TO DEALER

ADDRESSING PRESS - Drug war chief
.WID lam BeDJJelt wipes his brow and then adopts a
prayerful pose before addressing lhe National

Press Club Wednesday to detail lhe Bush
administration's new anti-drug program. UPI

Anti-drug warriors fight over dollars
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Drug
policy director William Bennett, ·
one day after the extradition of a
major figure in the drug war, was '
headed for Capitol Hill Thursday
to confront criticism over spend·
ing in the administration's anti·
narcotics plan.
Eduardo Martinez Romero, 31 .
suspected of being the chief of
finances for the Medellin Cartel
111 Colombia, was extradited to
the United States late Wednesday, the Justice Department and
Drug Enforcement 1\dmlntstra·
lion said.
Martinez, who was arrested
Aug. 19 In Colombia, Is wanted in
Georgia op c barges of money
laundering for the cartel. He had
!ought extradition.
Bennett. who agrees with congressional Democrats on the
corroolve effect of narcotics on
the country, was scheduled to
tes ti!Y Thursday on Capitol Hill,
where the administration and
some lawmakers are marching
out of s tep in the campaign to
wipe out the menance of drugs .
"What we must do now is meet
the public demand lor effective
and prompt action. " said Senate
Democratic leader George Mit·
chell of Maine, a form er U.S.
attorney and judge. "And that
means putting our resources
where our rhetoric Is.''

In his testimony Bennett, 46, a
former educator who can speak
as bluntly as Mltchetl: was
expected to contest the main
criticism of the administration's
anti-drug plan - that it short·
changes Americans who are
demanding a comprehensive,
no-quarter victory over drugs .

614-742-2421. 3 Miles North of Rutland, Ohio, New Lima Road; Watch For Signs

September 8th-• 16th.ljI· oPEN

Family Practice

•SPITFIRE II 125 lbs.
•FOX FIRE II 12 S lbs.

Green Leaf and Hill Country

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· SHOTGUNS-NEW ENGlAND ..~~.~-~~!!.=.-..!?..~:.!!.~.~:.~.~-~~..~; .. S8495 ea.
lUOTGUNS:_NEW ENGLAND .........................!.t~~!P........................... $13 9' 5

GER 10/2 2 CARliNE ••• ~.........~·.!¥!!.,.!!.~.~.....~ ................. S13 9' s
RUGER SPORTER 10/22 ............!·.!¥!1':............................... S17 4u

870 WINGMASTER REM. MAG. 12 Ga........................ S375oo ea.
26" larr~, 27" Barrel, 21" Barrel
·
870 l.W.T. MAG. 20 Ga. 28" Barrel.............................. S365oo

SHOTGUN SHELLS, 12 Ga. H.V. ACT IV ............................................. S695 Box

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Office Staff:
Mary Dillard,C.M.A.
Gail Hoveatter
•

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PORTLAND - Hazel Community Church Is having a hymn · CHESTER - Chester Naza.
sing on Saturday at 7:30p.m. The rene Church will celebrate
Grubb Family will perform. Homecoming on Sunday with a
Everyone welcome.
special afternoon ser vi ce at 1: 30,
featuring the Charity Sing~rs , of
SUNDAY
Soulhslde, W.Va. Ever yone
RACINE - The Carmel United welcome.
Methodist Church, the Racine
area, will hold Homecoming
MIDDLEPORT - Heath Unl·
services this Sunday, wi th Sun· ted Methodist Church will have a
day School at 9: 30a.m., worship special outdoor service Sunday , 4
and communion at 10:45, a p.m ., at Dave Diles Park.
potluck dinner and social hour at
5 p.m .. a special time and sharing
MIDDLEPORT - A film, " A
of music at 7 p.m. Everyone Man Named Norman " will be
welcome.
shown Sunday evening at the
Middleport Church of . Christ,
RACINE - The annual Harv- Fifth and Main, Middleport. The
est Festival of St. John Lutheran publiC Is invited to attend.
Church, Pine Grove Road, Ra·
cine, will be Sunday . Worship
MIDDLEPORT - A Youth
will be at 11 a .m., followed by a Group Klck~Off Beach Party
covered di sh dinner at 12 noon will be held at the Middleport
and a hymn sing at 1:30 p.m.
Church of Christ, Fifth ~~ Main
Sunday from 5: 30 to 7 p.m. The
POMEROY - Rev. Joe Jor· event ts for those three years old
dan, of Logan, will be preactling through high school. There will
and singing at the Pomeroy be a best beachwear &lt;'on test but
Church of the Nazarene on no swimsuits permitted .

.WALLCOVER INGS

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Quote of the day

PEP CLUB

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0 T-Shirts
0 Sheets

o Bibs

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0 Cards

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Local women p·artie.ipating ,
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Largi s.llction of Sll-. Colors, Styles

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Buy Early an• Safe For Chrltllnael
ALL

Appointments and Walk-ins Welcome

JOAN and
SHAION

POMEROY - Homecoming at
the United Faith Church, Pome·
roy, will be held Sunday. Sunday
School at 9: 30, chu rc h .at 10: 30,
basket dirlner at 12:30, and a
gospel sing at 2, fea turing the
Joyful Aires, of Winfield , W.Va.,
and J an and Kathy, of Syracuse.
Public welcome.

To note birthday

S22995

3.99 Box

RUTLAND- The descend ants
of James and Bertha· Cremeans
will hold their annual family
reunion on Saturd ay at Fores t
. Acres Park on New Lima· Road .
near Rutland. DinnerwHJbeat12
noon. All relatives and friend s
welcome.

RAC INE -A mortgage bu rn·
lng ceremony will be held Sunday
at the Racine First Baptist
Church. A dinner will be held at
12: 30, followed by the mor tgage
burning at 2. Ever yone welcome.
No evening service that Sunda y.

Film slated

$1949'5

SHOTGUN SHELLS, 12 Ga. LV ........................................................... S$95 Box
Accepting New Patients
¥onday, Tuesday, Thursday an8 Friday
9 a.m . - 5 p.m.
Wednesday
9 a.m . - Noon

10 A.M.-5 ....

Monday-Saturday

CROSS BOWS

CAMOUFLAGE CLOTHING

lnJUfed man

Sunday at 9: 30 a.m. The Sisson
Family, of Gallipolis, will a lso be
singing. Everyone we lcome.

LexaI man enlists in Marines

Gun Shop, Gift. Shop, Pottery, Concrete Lawn Ornaments

100 COUNT
"I don't think people who have
recommended $6 b!Uion are in a

992-6614:

STEWART'S

fol' . ' '

Bennett, who drafted the plan
this summer In what amounts to
a personal an tl·drug crusade,
said the Democrats ate propos·
lng anti-drug legislation with a
·price tag of $6 billion.

Jim CobbPOMEROY, OHIO

EAST MAIN

position to criticize $8 bllllon as
not being enough," Bennett said.

The plan, the centerpiece of
President Bush's domestic
agenda, calls for spending $7.9
billion.
Democrats said the funding is
inadequate, and more painfully,
that Bush wants It taken from
other social programs already
hit hard by budget austerities.
''The need Is for resources to
match the verbal commitment,"
Mitchell said . "We need deeds to
match words. ' '
Describing some critics as
"cynics or wet blankets," Ben·
nett said Wednesday, " We should
spend what needs to be spent and
that is what the strategy calls

Dr. Daniel
R. -Trent

•

Cards sough t

!Ingham Junior Modern Wood'
men will have an Ice cream
social, bake sale and yard sale on
Saturday from 10 a .m . to 7 p.m .
at Modern Woodme n Hall In
Burlhigham . The r egula r
monthly Modern Woodmen get- together will be a cookout at
the southbound park on Route 33,
Darwin. The cookout will start at
6.:30 p.m .

'
'I

'

•

heritage house
THE SHOE PLACE
2nd Ave.

992·5627

Middleport, Oh:
I

�'

Page-1 0-The Daily SantinIii

Thursday. September 7, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

·Now and then becomes frequent

Abdul big
•
wtnner at
M1V awards
LOS ANGELES .(UP)) - A
controversial music video by
Nell Young that MTV initia lly
refused to air was awarded top
honors Wednesday night at the
sixth annual MTV VIdeo Music
Awards.
"This Note' s For You," which
raised a storm of controversy for
Its message attacking musicians
who promote procjucts, beat out
four other productions to win lor
' 'best video."
Young's production rivaled
videos by superstar Madonna,
newcomer P aula Abdul, the Fine ·
Young Cannibals and Steve Winwood . Madonna and Abdul each
were nominated six times.
The awards show , hosted by
comedian and talk show host
Arsenio Ha ll, was broadcast live
from Universal Amphitheatre to
a global audience.
· Abdul picked up four awa rds
for her · song "Straight Up,"
Including best dance video, best
choreography, best editing al'\d
best female, beating out Tracy
Chapman, Madonna, Tanlta Tlkaram and Jody Watiey. ·
"I'm very excited," said Abdul , who started her entertainment career as a choreographer
for the Los Angeles Laker Girls.
"I can' t comprehend It right
now . I'm just trying to enjoy the
moment," she said backstage.
Newcomers Living Colour.who blend jazz, funk and reggae
rhythms, claimed three awards
for best group, best stage performance and best new artist for ·
their song, "Cult of Personality."
Other nominees for best group
were Fine Young Cannibals,
Guns 'N Roses and Traveling
Wtlburys. Living Colour com-

FOUR TIME WINNER- Slncer·dancer Paula Abdul holds up
lour fingers to show how tniUI)' MTV awards she won during tile
evening Wednesday, aa she holds one of &amp;he awards In her hand.
Abdul was the big winner of the night. (UPI)

Dear Readers: I'm writing everytlme he lost his temper. He
about the 17-yeat-old girl In begged me to marty hlln. Like a
Green Bay who was madly . In fool I did. I had two miscarriages
love with a guy who.lilts her "now • because of his beatings. He made
and then. •' He promised It me believe that It wa my fault for
wouldn' t happen agaln,llutltdld. provoking him. When I realfted
That letter produced a flrestorm he was driving me crazy I fledof responses from women who 1,600 miles away. After nine
have some platinum-plated ad- . years of therapy I finally got
vlce for "Green Bay. " Read on:
well. Too bad there was no Ann
From PhUadelphla: I wouldn't Landers when I was 16.·
be able to steep tonight It I didn't
..,Ue Foree&amp;, IU.: No woman
get this letter offto .Gteen Bay. everchangesamanwhobeatsup
Thepatternlsfamlllar; Youhave females . Thewlsewomanknows
an. argument. He · shoves . you this and goes about changing
against th~ wall and slaps your herself. She gets counseling and
face . You cry, He getsv!!:ryquleL discovers that her life Is 100
The next day _he apologl&lt;:es and percent better without him. I
brings ybu flowers. -A few weeks know because I've been there.
later you ·have another arguBlrmlngbam, Ala. : Men who ·
ment. This time M punches you hit their wives almost always
In the mouth and breaks your beatthelrklds.For10yearslwas ·
jaw. He · says he's· sorry and .knocked around by a 220-pound
drives your to the emergency bully (I weigh 115), and I was
room. After the. next argument ashamed to tell anybody. When
you wind up with a broken arm he started In on my kids I brained
and a fractured skull. He says, him with a frying pan · and-ftll!'d
"It's your fault. You drove me to for divorce.
/
II." He's so convincing that you
Pqrtland, Ore.: Not all abusers
believe him. Please take It from are men. My 23-year-old wife
me, Green Bay, ·he will not broke . my nose and gave ine
change. Leave him· before ·he ·s everal black eyes because I
cripples or kills you.
wouldn't let her go crazy with
Pensacola, Fla.: !fell In love at credit cards. I told her we· were
16 with a fellow who hit me

ior, best cinematography and
best art direction.
Elvis Costello's "VeroniCa"
won top male honors over Bobby
Brown, Lou Reed and Steve
Wlnwood.
.
OJ Jazzy .:left &amp; The Fresh
Prince's "Parents Just Don't
Understand" grabbed the award
for best rap video, over Ice-T,
Kool Moe Dee, M.C. Hammer
and Tone Lo~.
Guns 'N Roses won the heavy
metal award over Aerosmlth,
Def Leppard and Metalllca.

peted with Abdul, Edie Brickell&amp;
The New Bohemians and Neneh
Cherry fo·r the best new artist
award .
Madonna was amorig the. featured · performers In the audience, making her first television appearance since the first
MTV awards show In 1984.
N9m1nated In six categories
for her two videos, " Express
Yoursell" and "Like A Prayer,"
Madonna claimed no personal
award~ bu t her video crews
piCked up honors for best dlrec-

When thethreeRutlandga t den
be over five inches overall, and urlng wOod; and "Down In the
clubs join for a flower show the other not to be over eight Meadow", a special class limited
Saturday and Sunday at the Inches overa ll; "Country Cot- to four entries, a picnic setting to.
Rutland Civic Center . exhibitors . tage", a door or window design ; be staged. In an allotted space oi
will have ·a variety of classes "The Herbal Kitchen·" . a wall one quarter of a circle with an
from which to select for display- decoration; "Springtime on the eight foot diameter, judged as a
Shady River",
Ing their a rranging talents.
niche.
·'The Change of Seasons Down Japanese manner-moribana:
The Invitational division offers
a Country Lane" is the theme of "Birds In Flight", modern, show- one class to area florists entitled
the Show which will be open for Ing motion: "The Gathering "Birds an.d Butterflies."
publiC viewing from 2 to6p.m . on Basket". must include basket ,
The final division, educatlomil ,
Saturday a nd I to 5 p.m on fruit s or vegetables; "Snow offers three claslies to exhibitors.
Sunday.
·
Covered Lane", mass design bird houses and bird feeders, by
In most of the classes, an yone featuring white; " Church In the junior club members: "Along the
can exhibit . The exceptions a re Wlldwqpd'', must Include a figu- Fence", flowers for a wreath
classes In the senior artis tic rine; "Wildflowers", a novl.c e garden: and ·. natural resource
. division which are opert to only class, designers choice; "A Co- posters.
members of the three sponsoring vered Bridge" , floor design featclubs. a nd another cla,ss which is
limited to exhibitors who have
As of September 12th we will no
never won a bh,Ie ri bbon.
Thirteen·c lasses will be offered
longer be at the Middleport office.
in th e senior ho rticulture division
including roses,
grandiflora ,
We sincerely thank all our clients
floribund a . a nd miniature: mari go ld, a ny va riety; zinnia, any
for their past patronage and look ,
va r iety; da hlia, . a ny variety;
forward to seeing you at our new
impatient. new variety: everlasting, dr ied. one stem; everlasthJg,
location. ·
fresh, one ste m; flowering house
plant : folia ge houseplant ; and
Please come and visit us at our
cactus and s ucculent.
The junior horticulture · dlv·
more spacious .and comfortable
tsion will offer three classes,
roadsid e material. dried. one
office in Athens. We have plenty
s tem; road side material, fresh ,
of convenient off-street parking.
one s tem ; a nd gourd or pumpkin ,
any variet y.
R. CRAIG MATHEWS, D.D.S.
Classes offered in the junior
ar tistic divis io n include "Under
530 W. Union Street
the Toad Stool," a design not over
Athens, Ohio 45701
12 inches ove rall; and "The Old
Apple Tree,·' a favo rite desi gn of
Toll frH 1-800-527-0922
the exhibitor.
Classes, open only to members
592-1483
of the sponsoring clubs, in the
We'll all be there, too. Janet, Rhonda, Tonya, Paula
se nior artisti c division are
"J;;Ives and Fairies" , one not to

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BOSTON t UP!) - A new test women and in some samples of
appears effective for Identifying · breast cancer tissue.
early breast cancer patients at
Researchers are not sure how
greatest risk for suffering a Hpr would lnflueilce the chances
life-threatening recurrence of of having a recurrence, but
the disease, researchers scientists suspect the protein
reported.
may play a role In the cancer's
Breast .cancer patlen ts who ability to spread.
test post ttve)y(or a protein i: ailed
In a study published WednesHpr have nearly four times the day In The New England Journal
cliances their cancer will come of Medicine, researchers · at
back, indicating they may be Johns Hopkins University School
candidates for the strongest of Medicine in Baltimore tested
drugs Initially , the researchers cancer tissue samples from 70
said.
women diagnosed with Stage I
Although the test needs to be and II breast cancer from 1977
studied further, It appears through 1985.
promising. ·
Those who tested positively for
''We're very encouraged by the Hpr had nearly four times the
repo1'1. ·~said·Dr:- Gerald Murphy risk of suffering ·a recurrence
oft he AmeriCan Cancer Society . compared to those who did not In
''The potential is for better ways the 11 years after diagnosis, the
to Identify- early- women wtth researchers found.
breast cancer who might be
"We found there was a slgnmneeding more Intensive cant association between the
treatment."
expression of Hpr and the recurThe test will be available on a rence of breast cancer," said Dr.
limited basts for doctors to order Francis Kuhajda, who led the
for their patients sometime later study. "What Is hoped Is that In
this year or early next year, the future this will allow us to
according to ChekTec Corp. of stratify patients to Identify those
Baltimore, which Is developing who have a high risk of
the test.
recurrence."
Breast cancer strikes about . Hpr seemed to be a stronger
.one out of eyery 10 women In the predictor of recurrence risk than
United States, making It the most several other factors, Including
common form of cancer among tumor size and disease stage, the
women and the second leading researchers said.
cause of cancer death for women. '
The test also appeared to be an
Researchers have been trying even more powerful predictor
to find ways to determine which · when combined with a test of
women with early stages of the whether the tumor had receptors
cancer are most likely to have for the hormone progesterone,
relapses so they know who to the researchers said.
treat with the most Intense drugs
Ninety-two percent of the
Initially to prevent the recurren- women who tested positively for
ces, which are often fatal. Hpr and negatively for progesteDoctors hesitate to use the rone receptors suffered recurstrongest drugs on all breast rences, the researchers found.
cancer patients because o! possi- Recurrences occ urred In 45 perble side effects.
cent of those who tested Hprposl II ve and progeteroneScientists recently discovered receptor negative and In 22
the Hpr protein, which stands lor percent of those who were
haptoglobin-related .protein, and Hpr-negatlve and progesteronefound It In the blood of pregnant receptor positive.

Menopause increases risk of
heart disease, cholesterol changes

AM/FM Stereo Cassette

Cut

colons to surger y and re mained
at risk of developing poly ps.
According to the A merican
Medical Association, an estl·
mated one In 10 of these benign
tumors become malignant.
Researchers asked each of the
patients to eat two servings, or 22
17 grams, of wheat .bran cereal
dally for four years. Half of these
people were given a cereal high
In fiber. The others were glv~n a
low-fiber verslol),
Also, half of the patients In
each gNUP were asked to take
dally supplements of 4 grams of
vitamin C and 400 mllllgrams of
vitamin E.
DeCrosse and his team determined that polyps shrank In the
patients who ate the high-fiber
cereal, but . not In patients consuming the lower fi)ler cereal.
"Benefit from the prescribed
!lber appeared to be concentrated among those study patients who consumed more than
11 grams of fiber dally, suggestIng a threshold level of lnges led
grain fiber f()r a treatment
effect, " they reported.
The researchers also found
that fewer polyps formed In the
patients placed on the vitamin
supplements. No adverSe effects
were reported.
Warning signs of colon cancer
Include blood In the stool. bleedIng from the rectum and changes
In bowel habits. Known risk
factors are family history of the
disease, a history of polyps and
Inflammatory bowel disease.

New breast cancer
tests for recurrence

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WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
study ·published Wednesd ay provides ·SCientific evidence that a
dally regimen of wheat bra n In a
diet decreases the risk of colon
cancer, the No.2 killer o! cancer
patients In the United States.
The main source ol bran In the
study, published In the Journal of
the National Cancer Institute,
was a cereal high In the dietary
llber that helped shrink benign
Intestinal tumors, or polyps .
Previous research suggested
that a diet low In fat and high In
fiber would dramatically slash
an person's chances of suffering
colon cancer . ·
' 'The results of this nutritional
Intervention trial are promisIng," said Dr. Peter Greenwald,
director of cancer prevention at
the National Cancer Institute, In
an editorial accompanying the
four-year study.
"These data suggest that a
dietary modification In adults
has benefits," Greenwald wrote.
"Lifelong exposure to this. diet
was not require(!."
· Cancer of the colon and rectum
Is the second leading cause of
U.S. cancer deaths . The American Cancer Society estimates
that 61,300 Americans will die of
the disease in 1989 - second only
to lung cancer. .

''

144·1140

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144-141

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I •

N SHOES

.I

I •

BOSTON (UP!) -Menopause
appears to increase the risk of
heart disease for women by
causing harmful changes In their
cholesterol levels, researchers
warned.
The findings, reported Wednesday In The New England Journal
of Medicine. Indicate postmenopausal women should get their
cholesterol levels tested and
change their diet or take other
steps If the results are
worrisome.
"As women go through menopause they should have their
lipids cht!Cked, and If they see a
change consider a number of
options," said Karen Matthews,
a professor of psychiatry at the
University o,f Pittsburgh who
headed a first-of-Its-kind study
on the subject.
Women usually go through
menopause In their 50s when
their ovaries stop producing the
female hormone estrogen. This
estrogen drop has been associated with a variety of health
problems, Including hot flasbes,
thinning bones and possibly
heart disease.

disease Increased at that age
because of menopause or because of other age-related factors. If the increase was due to
menopause, researchers were
not sure why.
The new study Is the first to
directly measure cholesterol levels In women before and alter
they went through menopause
and compare the levels to other
women In the same age group.
"I think It's an important
study," said Dr. Elizabeth
Sarrett-Connor of the University
of California-San Diego. ·'This
confirms what some people had
suspected."
The researchers tested 541
heathly women before they went
through menopause In 1983 apd
1984 for a variety of factors
believed associated with an Increased risk for heart disease.
When the researchers compared .1he 69 women who went
through menopause in the next 2
% years to women who did not,
the women who went through
menopause had about twice the
Increase In their blood levels
low-density lipoprotein.
Low-density lipoprotein or
But researchers were unsure LDL Is known as "bad choleswhether a wornliji'S risk for heart · terol"

I
-.-,_..o

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Wheat bran cuts risk

going to get joint therapy and
learn how to live together In
peace or I would divorce her. She
agreed. That was eight years ago
and today we have two beautiful
children and a solid marriage. ·
Tills Is Ann &amp;alldng: Any
woman who remajns In an
abusive relatlopshlp must recognlze the fact that she has no
self-esteem, and If she stays the
abuser wlll never treat her
better. For those who say they
have nowhere to go, there are
shelters for battered women all
over the U.S. and Canada. Most
shelters wlll take the children as
well. Look In the phone directory.
Call the Domestic VIolence Ho- _
tllne at (800) 333-SAFE and find · ·
out about help In your area. Go to
anelghborandcallaclergyman.
Call a . family service agency.
Call the pollee and file charges.
There Is help for you, but you
must seek it.

The study , led -by Dr . Jerome
DeCosse, a surgeon at New York
Hospital-Cornell Medical Center,
focused on 58 p;~ttents with a
history of cancer who lost their

Rutland clubs. plan .flower show

BLACK SMOOTH
BLACK PATENT
BROWN
TAUPE
WINTER WHITE

Thursday, September 7. 1989

"'

Blood test detects hidden thyroid disease
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - An
signs as dry .skin, ·coarse· hair, ·
"exquisitely" sensitive blood
brittle nalls, fatigue and constitest can detect an overactive
pation to getting older rather
thyroid - such as suffered by
than an organic disease, " said
first lady Bar bara Bush and 1
Dr. E . Chester Ridgway , profesmillion other Americans - and
sor of medicine and head of
prevent severe complications ,
endocrinology at the Universit y'
experts said.
of Colorado Health Sciences
Doctors at the Amer ican Thy - Center In Denver.
·
roid Association's annual meet·
Now , a test used for years to
lng Wednesday noted no clear check for hypothyroidism - an
symptoms maY. appeal;' In people . underactive thyroid gland found
with hyperthyroidism. marked
In 7 million Americans · - has
by overproduction o! a hormone become "so exquisitely sensivital to the proper functioning of tive, It can diagnose the hardernearly every cell in the bOdy.
to-detect occult hyperthyroidism
' 'The !:Jig problem with hidden as well," Wariofsky said In an
·
thyroid disease is patients are Interview.
not aware they have a disorder
·An estimated 25 mllllonAmerl- ·
tllat may lead to severe heart and cans are afflicted with a variety
cardiovascular problems," said of thyroid disorders, Including
Dr. Leonard Wartofsky, chief of hypothyroidism, .. hyperthyroiendocrinology at Walter Reed dism and malignant and benign
Army Medical Center and profes- thyroid nodules, said Dr. Marvin
sor of medicine at Georgetown Gershengorn, chief of endocriUniversity, both In Washlngton.
nology and metabolism at New
"People may attribute such York Hospital-Cornell Medical

«Latchkey kids' at risk
WASHINGTON (UP!)
"Latchkey kids," children who
regularly care for themselves
after school, are more likely to
abuse marijuana, alcohol and
tobacco, a study warned
Wednesday.
The research, appearing In the
journal Pediatrics, also noted the
number of children left on their
own Is expected to lpcrease In the
future as the pumber of working
mothers and single-parent families Increases.
The problem, It warned,
crosses all ~octal, ethnic and
economic lines -affecting children in single and dual parent
homes and those In poor, middle
class and affluent households.
Even grades, athletic and extracurricular activities seemed to
make ito difference.
PubliCation of the work follows
President Bush's address Tues·
day on drug abuse In which he
encouraged families, their
friends and neighbors, to•protect
children against the scourge
sweeping the nation.
The study of 8,000 eight-grade
students In the Los Angeles and
San Diego metropolitan areas,
financed by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, determined
that:
-"Latchkey kids" who spent
II or more hours a week on their

own were twice as likely to use
alcohol, 2.1 times likely to smoke
cigarettes and 1.7 times as likely
to turn to marijuana.
-Children who spent 5 to 10
hours each week taking care of
themselves were 1.7 times as
likely to use alcohol, 1.6 times as
likely to smoke and 1.5 times as
likely to use marijuana, the study
said.
Of . the students studied, 52 .5
percent were girls and 47.5 were
boys.
The researchers, from the
. University of South California at
Los Angeles medical school and
University of Illinois school of
public health, reported the
youngsters appeared to be "manifesting a desire to display their
sense · of maturity and
independence. "
"It Is possible that a lack of
parental lnv6lvement In the
child's activities Is an underlying
problem that becomes most
pronounced In the sell-care situation, leading eight grade students
to express autonomy by use
drugs," they said. ·
.
The researchers also cited
previous studies that suggested
behavioral problems are linked
to parental supervision, and they
encouraged development of
after-school and community programs to help "latchkey kids."

Center In New York.

e arly ,'.' and the prognosis is go od,
Wartofsky satd:
"With even earlier detecti on,
she might not have lost as much
weight ," he sa id .

Some 60 percent to 80 percent
of hypothyroid Individual s show
no symptoms.
Although easy to t reat once
detected, undiagnosed thyro id
abnormalities eventually can
Ri dgway recommended TSI:I
lead to serious coronary arter y screening for patients over 60,
disease, Irregular heart rhythms parti cular ly women, who a re up
and even death , Gershengorn to eight times as likely as men to
said.
suffer from thyroid dy sfunction .
"Left untreated, the thyroid
" We also recommend tes ting
.hormone ·production can drop women under 50 with a family
lower and lower, a nd the person history of thyroid disease," he
will become very sick, gettin g a said .
very slow pulse, very poor
The need for screening Incardiac function and predisposi- creases in the presence of such
tion to infections, " Ridgway said symp toms as a n enla rged thyroid, history of other autoimln.an Interview.
Too much thyroid hormone can mune diseases - In which the
lead to osteoporosis, the loss of body's immune sys(em goes
calcium from the bone. doctors haywire and atta cks healthy
said. Researchers are studying organs and ti ssues - or pre mawhether hyperthyroidism also ture gray hair, i.e ., before age 30,
can lead to a fastpuise and "high doctors said .
"With very simple treatment,
cardiac output" that puts exrra
strain on the heart, as some an abnormal thyroid returns to
normal function , and the Pa·
SCientists believe.
''That's why the TSH - Thy - !lent's other related conditions
can be corrected," Ridgway
roid Stimulating Hormone assay Is so Important to clinical· said.
. medicine. It 's the only test that
Hypothyroidism is overcome
can Identity these patients,"
with
a pill a day of the syn thetic
Ridgway said.
thyroid
hormone levothyroxlnE'.
In th.e case of Bush - who
suffers from Graves' disease, As In the case of Bush , hyperthycharacterized by anxiety, sweat- roidism is most often treated
ing, weight loss, hand tremor and with radioactive Iodine, which
prominence of the eyes - the burns out overactive thyroid
diagnosis was made "fairly cells .

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�Alae 12~The Deily Sentinel

Thursday,

l'hunsday. September 7. 1989 ·

Porrieroy Middleport. Ohio

Study: Farm policies · hinder alternative agriculture.methods
WASHINGTON (UPil -Fed· by alternatlv~ agriculture.
eral farm policies discourage
The committee recommended
. farmers from adopting so-called changes In federral policies " to
alternative agriculture techneutralize their· bias," creation
niques· even though they could of a $40 million a ·year research
save money and prevent environ- . program for alternative agrlculmental damage, a panel of lure and · better protection of
experts said Thursday.
fragile soils and water purity.
·'These policies have generally
Alternative agriculture means
m!lde a plentiful food supply ·a the use of methods that differ
higher priority than protection of from conventional farming with
the resource base,'' the National Its emphasis on mechanlzailon
ReSearch Council committee and chemical . fertilizers and
said In a ·thick report pn the pesticides. The ' panel said It
problems facing American errip~Jilslzes management and
farmers and the potential offered . takes advantage of biologiCal ·
~

I

•

WASHINGTON /UPI) -The
Navy has concltidecl the expioslon a,board the USS Iowa that
killed 47 sailors probably was
· set off Intentionally by gunner's
mate C)ayton Ha,rtwlg, .who
died In the blast, It was
reported. ·
The Navy scheduled a news
conference at the Pentagon
Thur!;day to release the find :
ings of its lengthy loves ligation
inio the April 19 e~ploslon
aboard the World War IIc
vintage battleship.
CBS News said the report
"concludes that the most probable · cause Is that gunner's
mate Clayton Hartwig, one of
those who died In the blast, set
It off deliberately - what the
Navy calls 'Intentional human
intervention.'' '
The Navy decided, however.
not to ·label· the explosion a
suicide "because there were so
many other casualties It coul&lt;l
also be called murder," CBS
reported.
The Navy, which . briefed
senior members of the Senate
. anq House Armed Services
Committee on the 1,100-page
i:locumeni Wednesday, de·
ci ined comment on the CBS
report.
The Washington Post, quotIng unidentified defense offi·
clals, repdrted that the Navy
has concluded Hartwig proba·
bly placed some kind of igniting
device between powder bags.
Inside one of the ship's 16-inch
guns.
The explosion was the worst
. U.S. peacetime naval accident
since 1963, when 129 sailors died
in the sinking of tlie submarine
Thresher.
·
The Iowa explosion occurred
in .the No. 2 gun turret. a
six-level clrcu lar steel struc- ·
ture that runs vertically from
the bottom of the ship to the •
deck and houses three of the
vessel's nine 16-inch guns.
along with shells, powder ·
c harges and targeting
machinery.
The Iowa was test firing its
· guns 330 miles northeast of
Puerto Rico when Capt. Fred

relationships that occur on the and those who successfully adopt
Iarin. ·
.
the techniques "generally derive
Some of the better-known alter- sustained economic and environnative methods ·· lnclllcie crop mental benefits."
rotatiOn to prevent pests from
"Wider adoption of proven ·
. becoming established or to en- alternative systems would result
rich the . soli; Integrated pest In even greater economic benefmanagement. which makes Its to farmers and environmental
greater reliance Oil biological gains for the nation, •• the t;eport'
controls and pest-resistance var- · said.
Ieties; and genetic improvement
The farm recession of the
of crops to resist pests and use mld-1980s and ·increased concern
nutrients more effectively.. ... ;
about soli erosion ·and pesticide
A small ·number of · farmers · contamtnatlon of groundwater ·
now employ alternative farming has encouraged Interest in altersystems, the committee said, native methods· of farming.

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'

" NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Auguot 111. 1989. in
the Meig' County Probate
Coun, C.n . No. 211320. ·
Trocy E. Goodwin. ·. 624~
Merle Street. Clnannoto.
Ohio 411224. w• appointed
Executor of the eatote of
Norma
Goodwin.
de· ·
ceooed. laie of 200 Laatey
Strael.
Pomeioy,
Ohio,
467.89.
Robert E. Buck,
Probeto Judge
Lena K. No11elroad. Clork
18) 24. 31; 19) 7, 3tc

3 Announcements

992-2284
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POMEROY, OHIO

"Weddlag gown
Stecl•llsts" ·

LINDA'S
PAINTING

IIIlER lOR -EXTERIOR

Transportation
71 - Autoa for Sal'e

72- Trucks for Sale
73 - Vant 6 4 WD ' s

74- Motorcvclea
76-Boats A Motors for Stle
?&amp;!-Auto Parts&amp;. AC:c•sorl•
77 -~ Auto

Repair
78 - Cemplng fRuipment
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painting. Lot • do
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82 -.Piumbing • Heaing

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83-Exc:~ating

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Shephard, ~tnswars lo
"Cody",. friendly, reward! lost &amp;\
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7

2 Family: Saturday only, 3 112
mi. oill160. Good cloan 01o1111.,
mlac. 8-3.

4 falnlliils. Clothing and Mlsee)e
laneous. 459 Larlal Dr. Sept. 7,

8-1-J mG.

8. 9-5.
5 Family: At Old Gall!a School
on St. Rt. 233 Frl, &amp; Sat, 8th, &amp;
91h, 9-5.

VAUGHN'S
.AUTO - DIESE.
· SERVICE

5 family. John lana Residence.

1\\ mi. out 141. Ping pof19lablo,
carpet. Thur1., Fri.

SYR~CUSf. OHIO
Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
AiC Ser'vice
· All MajOr a. Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certifi.t Mechanic

8th, 91h. 8-? Crane, tumiluri,
clothlna. much mora. 1f2 mile
out of Rio Granda, S. on 325. :

ALL Yard Sales Must So Paid tn
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the day before the ad Is to run.
Sunday edition - 2 :00 p.m.

··. CALL 992-6756
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p.m. Saturday.

. MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

742-2455
Salem St.
Rutland,Oh.

~qulpm1nt,
glassware, toy ..
misc. 8-4. Five mil•• troni Gal·
F~.. Sol. Whlto Rd. Sm. I.~!,
N1wbom boy, girl 12 mtho-4 r,
Hom• ~nterior, Tupperware.
'

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Largo 4 tomlly gorogo
Thura., Fri., Sat. 2 mi. from 141
on Neighborhood Rd. Lots of
toys, clothing (many sizes.)

•LIGHT HAULING

Large First time, 1 family Yard
Sal1: Sept. 7-8. 9-5, rain or
sh:nt, Items Include curtains,
large slzt clothing, whatnotl,
small 1lectrl~ organ, glasswar~,
b1ddln9, lamps, lar~ &amp; small,
A.C., m•rrors, lawn cllairs, dressing tabla and lots more! 29 Yin..

oFIRE\IVOOD

BILL SLACK
992-226• .

ton13trMt.

EVENINGS

Thurs. Fri. 8:30-5:00.
Sopl. 5, 6, 7. 2 112 mlloa East of

•VINYL S !DING ' ·
•ALUMINUM SIOip!G
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

2111 Milos Out New
Lima Rd.
in Rutland, Oh.
SUSAN COLEMAN

Porter.

Sopt. 6,7,8. Ott St. Rl. 160, Korr
OH. AIISI. Antlq. tablo logo'
Brlgg1 · &amp; Straton' tld1 shllti
motor, 35 yr. old 1olid wood
tabla, morel

BISSELL
SIDING co:

·-

.... ....

Sept. 6, 9. 10-? Saxophone,
gla11wara,
cloth111 . mite.
farmvlew Ad. Eaat or Slluaap

742-2778

"Free EalirMtea"'

Shop.

C•ll '•' F•ll Speol•l•

PH. 949·2801

Two family. Sept. '7,8,1. 4!12
Lariat Dr., H. Bluo O.vlljlclfo.

1st visit FREE

ate, clotho, range hoOd, lut'
miac.
.
.

NO SUJIDA YC\Lt. n

Yard Salo: 120 112 To••• Rei
Thuno. Fri, Sat. Sopl. 7, a, 1. lo? ·
Yard Sale: s.pt. I, 7, I. 1-1, at
123Fourth Avo.
•
Yord Salo: Sopt. 8, 1. 14:t
Second Avo. in back glrltl
clothn. lilt 04, Curllllnt, Wl'l . .

·Zl·'lf.tln

_-~~-.-j;--i'-t

We can ,..... IIIII re·

core r..aton and
hlat1r cor... We CCIII
. . ocid lloil and rotl
out radlaton. We aile ·
r. .r GaiT....

PAIIIIU

' 982·21

l\lllddleport,

BINGO " . , I

BISSELL
BUILDERS

POMEROY -EAGLES
CLUI
· 1· ·

CUSTOII1 IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"A I Reasonable Prices"

' PH...9·2101
or Res. 949-2160
DoyorNigltl ·
NO SUNDAY CIJ.S

224 E. MAIN ST.
982·9176

. 1'

·

uniforma·atc.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp;

VIcinity

'•'

: \'2. H·.D. FREE with coupon and1·1 carport Salt, 45 Bu,.q1 Add''
pu~~:h• of men. H.C. l'lck·tl. Point Ploooan~ Tlnndor in! ,
1 .111. Umft 1 COiqiOII Pit cas-i 1 Friday, Sept. 7a 1.

t.-..
~::... .I,
~
o.••.
•u.oo · ~=~~:=.· O::IIS '.! ,

~ 1:

110 ,_plo

Lergro V.rd Sale . ._

1;

1 1&gt;1,. lloVO, - • ~
'I
l'er Galnt
1~:-...,.,.._..
! 11&lt;!00.5·1!.. ____
, .z-~-lfiiJI · guogo pump dlor 111111. . . .
. t flul:\dredl of Jteme. Chilp:
.

-'-~-~~--~-----------.......--------~- -·--- ..... -.....:--~- -

I
li
I'

, · TIIIIRS. I.L 6:45 P.M. I•
· i SUN~~ ~~~P.M. 1:

11 ·

4-li-li-llll

·

or Res. M9•2160

PH. 992-3922

SERfiCE ·

·

At. 7, Eureka, .hom1 lnt•rlor,
furniture, small desk, lots morL

4/ 8/89 / tfn

' 8-17-1 mo.

In Middleport, Oh.

Four Fomlly. Sapt. 9. Sporting

TREE
TRIM and RE•
.MOVA.!-

•SHRUB

.G ardens

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moot 2 end 4-cyde
anglnoo ·
Stock Parto for
Homellte, Weedeoter.
Tecumooh. Briggro lo
Stratton.

Sl&lt;ldmoro Rd (Old 160) go 1110
mile turn Jeft onto Evergr11n
ProopO&lt;t Rd. Go 112 milo.

llpolla, Rl.141.

al Meigs Memory

Loca.... ot Vllley 1 ..,

only.

Don't miss thit oneh Frl &amp; Sat.
Large lady's clot ••· baby
clothes, books, furnlturt, etc. 4
1!2 mlltl up 160 .turn right on

6/30/tfn

SUN'S UP
TANNING

~

'

Car aat, high chair, pony chair,
atronar, boys clothes 21 to 10,
Woman's 10/12, Cast knlvn,
Kerr Rd. near crossroads.
Saundlfl Residence. s,pt. 8

11600 GALLON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIRT HAULED
9.92-527

LAWN MOWER REPAIR

odlllon • .2:00

Big Yard Salas: Sept. 8. Grelfl
Terrace lots 16 &amp; 31. Very nice
clolhes, toys, shoes, mise.
Priced to 1111.

ALLEN'S
HAULING

•ZETOR TRACTORS
•ECHO PRODUffi
•HOWARD ROTAYATORS
•YARDMAN MOWRS
eiNTERSTAn IATTERIES

Mo~doy

Friday.

"DOC"

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

.

miac:. household, t-3.

Mildloport
992-2725

to Hill Top Grocery)·

'

4 Family: Friday 8th, 3. 112' mi.
out 100, chUdrenl, toys~ Mluttt.

169M. 2nd

•Weedeaters
3 miles. off of Rt. 7

DAVE'S
SMALL INGINE
REPAIR

YardSale

GallipOliS
&amp; VIcinity

KAY'S
BEAUTY SHOP·

992-3897

•Chain· Saws

' ..

614-446-4438 oftor 5p.m. 614'
446-5015 doyo.

lhru Sept. 9, 1919
1()Ofo Off Ali PERMS
WA~K-IN WELCOME

•Riders

-~

sunglas-

G~rman

, ~w

St.' Rt. 124
Middleport, Oh .
(Nex~

Prescription

Found:

lott: In the Upr.•r SecOnd Ave,
ar1a brown ma e Ooxln, &amp; black .
8rindlo, tomalo English B~lldog.

•General C~assis
Maintenance
•Computerized Balar1cer

.

Lost &amp; Found

sn, ecr011 from Direct Carpet
Mill. 11 Rt. 160. 614-446-2200.
LOST Black &amp; sliver female

MEET THE
STAFF
PERM SALE .

•Oil Changes
•Gr~ase Jobs

~

Starts at 1:00 P.M.

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

6

We Service All Makes

• New lo Uoed Tiroo

•Lawn Mowers

Beginning Sept. 17

~-

homo. 614-448-4815.

192-5335~985-3561

JONES TIRE
CENTER

84- Eiectricel &amp; Refrigeration
85-Gen•al Hauling
86-Mobile fiome Repair
87-Upholatery .

EVERY SUNDAY

. .

White mouee to give to good

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
PARTS &amp; SERVICE

Serv1r.es

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT

PVBLIC NOTICE
, The arinuat ,.,art Fann
880PF
for the Kibble
Foundlltion, lornorcl V.
FuiU. Tru-. II willable
for pubtlo lnopeMion et Bernll'd V. Fultz Lew Oftlct.
111~ W. Saoond ltraet.
• Ponillroy, Ohio 4117H. durIng reguler bualneslloura for
• period of 110 . . . . . . . . .
~uant to pub 11c011on of thla
not let.
1117. 1.11.12, 13. 14. li, 7tc

DEAD OR AUVE

7-11-'89-tfn

Business Services

.)

__ _...

Fabric .Shop

(6141 667-3271 ·
Grant A. Niwland

65-See&lt;:t &amp; Fertililer

..--....

~~----

AN·K

OFFERED AT

WANTED

To niCe home. Small black hair
tamale dog. 1yr, old. E•c•Uent
wllh c:hlfdren.
Shots and
houeabroken. 614-992-7244.

•Washers •D ryers
•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators
' "MUll Be Repair.. le"

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

63-llwntock

41 - Houses for Rent

Public Notice

..

DRY CLEANING
SERVICE

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

64-l:fey &amp; Grain

l;i§UJhll

117-Coolvilo

No Hunting o·r Tresspatslng on
th1 property of Hattie Read.
Signed Ernie Grimm.

614·992-2478 .
P. 0. Box 207
· ~~~:~~~' Pulllino
Locally Owned lo Operated bY Bitt S1

DOZER
SITEWORK • ROADS
CLEARING

Form Supplies
&amp; L1ves1uck
62'-Warned to Buy

Real Es1.11e

468-Leon

Get Retuftt fatt .

1-13-'18-tln

58-Fru•ts &amp; ·v•giBI:abl•
59-For Sah!l or Trade

14 - Bul~t!'l•

21-BUsln•• Opportunity
22 - Monev to loan
23-Prot•sional Servir:•

876-Pt.·Piuaant

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

52-Sporting Gooda
53--Antiques
54-'- Mise. Merchandise
55 - Building Suppli•
56-Pets for Sale
57 - Music.llnstruments

1 1 - Help Wanted
12-Siluation Wanted
1 3-lnsurance

Training '
15-Schooll &amp; Instruction
16- Radio. TV &amp; CB Aepelr
17- Miscellaneous
18-Wanted To Oo

following telephone exchanges ...

I

. . FAMILY HOMES INC.

Rt; 31 North of

Me rchandise

Se1 v1r.es

.

.Ranch, Cape Cod &amp; 2 Story

MODEL OPEN DAI~Y MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
· 1:00 P.14·6:00 P.M. or Call Far Appaintment

Cail Anytime

Employmr.nl

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATIOP{

WEDNESDAY .PAPER

.,

1,000 GALLONS
POOLS, W~LLS
CISTERNS

61 - HouHhold Goods

4 ~ Give.wev

Y•d Sales

r. .ching

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

EARN "BIG GREEN" AND SUPPORT
YOUR FAVORITE
TEAM!
.
.
INTERCEPT THE 'iFALL CLASSIC .. C. D.BEFORE TIME RUNS OUT!
•Interest Compounded
ONLY AT
· Qu•rterly

'

ads.

6 - H•PP\' Ads
6- 'toat and Found
7 - Y•d Salejpaid in advance)
8-Public S81e 6 Auclion

capt - cl•lified diiPIIIW'. Bum. . Card end legal notices)
will alto .p.. in the Pt. Pl . .ant Register and the GalliTri~ne,

.. rtav as

1 -Card of Th~nks
2.--ln Memory
3-Annoucements

· A dat.Hi_, achoertiH.T..,t pl'aced in ThaO.aify S•~t1nel (e~t:
polis DailY

15
15

Announcements

•sentinel is not responsible for erronatter first d.,. (Chedl
for arr,ort first d-v ad runs in paper) . Call before' 2 :00p.m .
d_. aft• publiclllion to m*e c::orrectkm.
•Adl thtl mult be paidrln adv•nce are
Card of Thanks
H.-ppy Ads

Huddle Under this Warm And ·
Washable Throw From Blederlack
, Of America's College Colle.ctlon: ·
Choose From Marshall, WVU, or
' Ohio State University Logos;
. $1 OWith Deposit of $1 ,000 or More ,
$5 With [)eposit of $5,000 or More
FREE With Deposit of $10,000 or More

WATER
SERVICE

Rat II are. for c:on ...cutift runs, broken updll'fSWill b8ch•ged

u~ed .

In Memort.m

DvQi 16 Warda
•
.20
ee.oo
.30
S9.00
.42
$13.00
.
.60
S1.30/day
.05/doy

Financial

$7,000 MINIMUM

1-800-535-2199 .·

992-7479

Rote
.4.00

Hi

10
Monthly .

p8id.

•7 point Une ·typa ontv

Word•
16
15

6

•Receive 1.50 discount for ads p.~id in adlfanCII.
•free Mli - GWa.way anCI Found adl und• 15 words will be
ru" l d.,• at no ch•ge.
·
•Pric. of ad for ell c,...ilal 1-.:•• i!l double. price of ad cast.

•

.

•Mobile Home Parts
•Mobile .Home ·
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

RATES
Days
1
3

•Adl outakla Maio-. Gallla or Maaon countiM mud be pre·

Of
Deposit

...._.

'

TO PLACE AN AD CAU 992-2156
MONDAY thru 'FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
.·a'A.M., until NOON SATURD'AY
\'..
SUNDAY
'

'

MODULAR. HOMES .
·e
S.
q((bTIV ·SINCE 1970 ·

ROACHES o FLEAS
TERMITES o ANTS

FrH

3 Announcements

Alf~'l--;,

· A.

SPIDERS
BEES • WASPS
Member Notionol Pest
Control Assn.

Announcements

NEED A HOME? ·

SINCE 197•

MOBILE
HOME PAIK

·• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

I•

. KIC'K OFF ,.BE F007iliLL.sEis··
I .RECORD R
!!
The ·"Fall Classic''
Certi.f icate

____ _____ __ _____

'.

'

Sentinel

8-1·1 mo.

Classifi·e

l
'

Til-CO. TERMITE
&amp; PEST CONTIIOL

S/q/19 ttn

'

p,.,

The

992-2371

~

.

WASHINGTON (UPil- Four Insurance to part-time workers,
out of five Americans believe hut the question likely will be
employers should be required to asked In future surveys sponprovide health Insurance for sored by the benefit . research
full -time workers and a smaller group, said Bonnie Newton, the
majority favors government group's director of education.
·
health insurance, a poll showed.
Ten percent of tbose surveyed
The telephone survey of 1.000 said they did not have health
Americans last June was con- insurance. A · Census Bureau
ducted by the Gallup Organ!za· study of 1986 data concluded 37
tiort for the Employee Benefit million Americans, or about 18
Research Institute, a non-profit percent of workers, did not have
pub! ic policy research group health coverage.
whose sponsors include corporaNewton said the · difference
tions and unions. '!'he poll, between the twos tudies probably
released Wednesday, had a mar- reflected the smaller size of the
gin of error of plus or minus 3.1 Gallup sample as well as confupercentage points.
sion in both surveys over whether
Eighty percent of those polled dependents were being Included
said employers should be re- In the answers.
quired to provide· health insuAsked why they d ld not have
rance to fuU -tlme workers, and insurance by Gallup, 35 percent
three-quarters of them would said they could not afford it and
want employer-provided cover- 14 perc en I said they were In
age even If they had to pay taxes between jobs.
on its value. Taxing the value of
Ten percent did not see a need
such. benefits has been m~nti· for It, 7 percent said it was not
oned as a way to boost govern- offered tiy their employer, . 7
ment revenue Without raising tax percent did not know, 5 percent
rates.
did not qualify, 4 percent had
Fifty-four percent said the mllltary coverage, 4 percent had
government should provide not had ttme to get It, 2 percent
health insurance for all Ameri· were covered by a parent, and 12
cans. Among that group, how- percent gave other answers.
ever, 25 percent said they would
Of those with Insurance, 37
be · willing to · pay only an percent said they did not pay for
additional $300 or less In annual It, primarily because their emtaxes for the cqverage, 28 per- . player picked up 'the tab; 21
cent would be willing to pay more percent paid $50 a month or less;
than that, and 46 percent were 13 percent paid $51 to $100 a
unsure how much they would be month; 10 percent paid $100 to
willing to pay.
$250; 3 percent paid more than
The Senate Labor and Human $250; and 13 percent did not know
Resources Committee approved
how much they paid.
IEl'gislatlon tn·July sponsored by
Of those without Insurance, 4
sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass,
percent said they would not be
to require employers to provide wllltng 'to pay anything to obtain
insurance to employees who coverage, 46 percent said they
work more than 17 ~ hours a only would pay $50 or less a
week. A companion bill Is being month, 17 percent would pay $50
considered by a .House to $100, 12 percent would spend
committee.
more than $100 and 21 percent
. The Gallup survey did no task . were .unsure how ·much they
whether employer.s sbguld give wgukl spend.

- ___

I

,.,~, 11 ' t~'

Employers should provide
health insurance: poll

f

and Diane K. Wolf~ . Racine. Syracuse Vlllage.
Village.
Barbara S. Corbett, Donald
John T. Wol!e, and . affld to Corbett, Beverly A. Sayre and
Richard L. Roush and Josle V. Lynn M. Sayre, parcel , to Orvllle
Roush, Meigs .
B. Sayre and June Sayre , SyraW.A, (}lbbs and Sarah Gibbs, cuse Village.
Thomas Buckley and Judith A.
Nancy K. Van Meter, parcel to
Buckley, parcel to Harold right of way to GTE North, Inc.,
· · Salisbury.
·
McGrath, Chester.
Melvin R. VanMeter Sr. , Pome· Millard R. Burke, entry (46A) ,
W.A . .Gibbs and Sarah 'Glbbs, . roy VIllage.
Jack B. Freeman and Dolores
·Charles Conner, dec' d . . L.H , right of way to GTE North, Inc.,
Freeman, parcels to George
Conner, dec.'d, John W. Conner Salisbury.
· Glisple Howard and Edith C. Search and Margaret Search,
dec'd, Tabitha Parker, dec'd:
,
.
. Milton Conner, dec'd, George M. Howard, right of way to GTE H11tland.
No~th, Inc .. Rutland.
. . · Betty l\1ae Music and Milford
Collins, Meigs. .
Ruth L. Bennett, tracts to John
Everett McDaniel arid ' Anna Music, · parcels .·to James E .
E. Schrlft 11nd Louis M. Schrlft, . Phyllis McDaniel, right of way to Diddle, Sutton: ·
Linda L. Holter, 2A to Ronald
Olive. ·
.
GTE North, Inc., Salisbury.
·
Ida M. Murphy, right of way to . T. Holter, Sutton.
Robert N. Clark, dec'd, affld,
· Ronald J. Holter. 4A to Linda
•.to Lola E .. Ciark, SclplQ.
·
GTE North, Inc., Salisbury.
Marvin G. Little, Dec'd affld, L. Holter, Sutton.
" Lola E. Clark, 15:4 A, to
Samuel Barnhart, dec'd affld.,
Richard W. Vaughan and Ruby to Juanita M- Little, Mldd]eport
to Helen Barnhart, nka, Helen
A. Vaughan, Scipio.
Village.
,. Dean K. wm and Dorothy R.
Blanch Fleming; Dec'd affld., Bailey; Sutton.
Helen Barnhart, ·. nka, Helen
Wlll, 'f.! A t0 Dean K. Will and · to Madolyn Markhan fka, MaBailey,
· 1.111 A, to Denise L.
Dorothy R. Wlll, Rutland. . .
· ctolyn Fleming, Rutland, BedWilliams
and I)ebra L .
, 'Marjorie A. Leonard and Law• , _ford, and Salisbury.
renee D. Leonard 1parceltoElvln
James W. Clifford and Faye F . . Trampler, Sutton.
Jay . E. Altfater, dec'd by
M. James ;~nd Helen L. James, . Cli!ford, right of way to Colum- .
executors,
parcels to Jerry J.
Salisbury.
bus So. Pwr. Co., Bedford.
Grueser
and
Norma J. Grueser,
Pearl M; Poulin, dec' d affid. to · Kenna H. Bush and Kathy S.
Sutton:
J. Lucian Poulin, . Pomer.oy· Bush, right of way to Columbus .
Charles H. Bartels and Joyce
Vlllage.
·
So. Pwr. Co., Bedford.
.732 A, to Steven 0.
Bartels,
Ella E. Wllllams, parcels to · Jack P. Allm!ln and Barbara
Stout,
Cliester.
William E. Williams III, James ' · Allman·, right of way to Colum- ·
Michael Grate and bebra L.
• A. Williams, Nancy W. White, bus So;. Pwr. Co., Columbia.
Grate,
parcel to Perry A. Carpen- .
, Ruth Ann A)len, and Thomas V.
Pat Schaekel and Edward A.
·
l Williams, Sutton.
Schaekel, Jr., right of way to ter, Rutiand.
Arthur J . Strauss and Beulah
l Terl Stackhouse, parcels to Columbus So. Pwr. Co., Chester. Strauss,
parcels to WI.Uiam E. ·
Vena Marcinko, rlghtof.wayto
1 Fred C. Rider and Verdle M.
Miller,
Barbara
L..Miller, Pome• Rider, Rutland.
Columbus So. Pwr. Co., Chester.
roy
Village.
W.A : Gibbs and Sarah Gibbs,
LewiS E . Humphrey and PatriRlght of Way, GTE North, Inc., cia Humphrey, right of way to .' · John R. Weeks, Barbara
• Salisbury.
·
Columbus So . Pwr . . Co., Weeks and Ruby Frick, easement to G.W. Pullins and Linda
,
Bernard 'Bobo, 2%A to, Clyde Salisbury.
Pulllns,
Meigs.
.
' Kuhn and Marlene Kuhn, Olive.
James D. LaComb dec'd, cert.
'Patsy
G.
Ingels,
Lots
6
&amp;
7 to
~ Carol Hubbard, toBenjamlnF. of trans. to Teresa La Comb,'
Michael B. Staggs and Barbara
~ Davidson, Jr. and Kathy A. . Olive.
: Davidson, Middleport.
Titus G. Pickens and Laura E . A. Staggs, Middleport Village .
Stella E. Thomas, lots and part
, Scott Alan Bearks and Anna Pickens, parcel, to Virgil L.
lot
to Wanda L. Haskins, eta!,
: Marie Bearks; .96A to Jerry A. Collins and Martha L. Colllns,
Mary
L. Maggled. Harold E ,
• Spadling and Charmele L Spa- SyracuseVlllage.
Thomas,
Laura P. Hysell and
~ dling, Bedford.
PaulS. Sayre .. exec. parcel to
David
·
R.
Thomas, Mlddleporj
;, Hilton Wolfe, Jr. and Marilyn Barb,a ra S. Corbett, Beverly A.
Village.
• L. Wolfe, .11A to Bryan J. Wolfe Sayre, Lynn Michelle Sayre,

''
•'•'
I
•

Ohio

Business Services

. CompUed by:
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Record~r, Meigs County

FirntS roll back pesticide use ·

!A

M

;Meigs County property ·transfers ·

While only ·a few farms rely cide use. and unsustainable use
exclusively on · them, many of )an.d and water."
The chief offender, It said, is
farmers . llave ·adapted compoihe government .crop ·subsidy
nents of them into their
program. Farmers face a reducoperations.
tion in benefits .If they rotate
''Many federal policies discourage adoption of aUernatlve .crop&amp; or allow yields to fall.
Federal grading standards . Inp~actlces and systems by ecoclude
cosmetic standards for
nomically penl!llzlng those who
adopt rotations, apply ·certain fruits and vegetables, which may
soli conservation systems, or encourage use of pesticides.
attempt to reduce pesticide ap- . Other policies make lt.dlftlcult to
plications," the committee said. · gain approval for new pesticides .
''Federal programs oft_en toler- that m11y be less hazardous.
Alternallve agriculture is sucate and sometimes encourage
unrealistically high yeild goals. cessful primarily because it
Inefficient fertilizer and pesti- reduces the cost' of "inputs;"
such as pesticides and antibio·
tics, that a .farmer has to buy,
while maintaining ·productivity,
The committee Sllid It WllS ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Pont, Pennwalt and Rohm &amp; EBDCs on the 13 crops would
difficult
to predict how s11ccessfour major manufacturers of Haas, and Maneb, made by pose a cancer risk to the pub!!!: 23
fully
alternative
practices could
EBDCs, a widely used class of Pennwalt, Between 12 and 18 times higher than the EPA's
be
adopted
.on
a
particular
farm
pesticides, said they are voiun- mlflioit pounds of EBDC pestl- one-In-a-million staddard.
because
they
must
be
tililored
to
tarily suspending their use on cides are used domestically each ·
Hathaway called on the EPA to local coildltions. However, Its
Moosally turned to a visiting
more than 60 fruits and vegeta·. · year.
go beyond the companies' move
admiral aJ1d said, "Hey, this Is
bles because of "theoretical"
'In a proposal submitted to the . by redudng or eliminating report includedH case studies of .
my best crew coming up here,
cancer risks.
EPA, the companies said they · EBDC residues on grapes. bana· farms - ranging from i[yestock •
Admiral; you've got to watc.h
The announcement Wednes- would halt, u~ of EBDCs on ·nas and potatoes, which are · to hay, vegetables ;md grapes - '
these guys fire. "
day by Pennwalt COrp., DuPont apples, cantaloupe, ·carrots, eel- eaten by children In large where the methods appear to be
. working.
'Moments later. an explosion
Co., Rohm &amp; Haasc0 . and BASF · ery, cucumbers, melons, pears, qtian titles.
and fireball erupted, followed
Corp. was designed to avoid. squash and pineapples, among
The NRDC charged that
by another thud and. then · a
possible action by the Environ- · other crops1
EBDCs
are a much larger health
third muffled bias tfrom deeper
mental Protection Agency to
At the same time, thecompan- thFeat to consumers than Alar,
within the 50,000-ton battleship.
restrlct use of the pesticides, ies said they wantto continue use. the controversial growth·
All 47 sailors In the upper
which are applied to more than 70 of EBDCs on'13 crops: almonds, .regulating pesticide ,banned by
levels of the sealed steel turret
crops to halt growth of mildew asparagus, 'bananas, cranber- the EPA earlier this year after
were vaporized by the force of
and mold.
rles, figs, grapes ; onions, pea- allegations thaj It posed unaccep- · ·
the explosion; only 11 men In
The pesticides are used on nuts, potatoes, sugar beets, table health risks, particularly In
the lowest compartment · .escrops ranging from asparagus to sweet corn, tomatoes and wheat. apple products.
cawct unh~;~rmed behind a · bananas to wheat.
Environmental groups praised
In a statement, the EPA said
bias t-proof door.
"EBDC fungicides offer an
the· chem)cal companies for the action by the 'companies was
''Everything was ·on fire and
Important contribution to · safe acting '·before the EPA forced "clearly · a step In the right
,bloWing . ·up," · said G~nner's
food production," Penn walt, t&gt;u
their hand, calllng the voluntary direction/' but that the agency
Mate Kendall Truitt, one of the
Pont ·and Robin &amp; Haas said in a . withdrawal "an unprecedented could add further restrlctlons
11 survivors who later. became
statement. "However, the theo- and responsible step."
going beyond the industry
a key figure In the Navy's
retical risk associated with some .
However, the Natural Resour- proposal. ·
Investigation. "I was crawling
specific uses of these products ces Defense Council charged that
EPA spokesman · AI Heier
Make their J~y special with a
out ... smoke was filling all of
unnecessarily raises questions continued use of EBJ?Cs on the 13 refused to comment on the
the spaces."
carJ irom Carlton Cards.
about the safety of this entire · crops would result in cancer risk NRDC's charges that EPA amiThe Navy launched an Invesfar exceeding the EPA's.allowa- lyses showed there would be
class of fungicides.
tigation and ordered a morato"By acting now to suspend
ble risk level for pesticide unacceptably high risks. if
Grandparent• Day Is
rium on the firing of the 16-lnch
certain uses. we hope to maintain residues · on food. The agency EBDCs continued to be used on
Sunday, Septt'mher 10
guns on its four battleships.
pUblic confidence in these probars any 'pesticide posing a the 13 crops cited In the Industry
· Witliina month, Navylnvestiducts and to encourage others cancer rl.s k greater than.one in a proposal. He said the agency
. gators eliminate~ as the possi- . interested in food safety to work million.
·
would not announce Its decision'
ble cause of the explosion the
constructively rn the public fnter"NRDC. concludes that the on EBDCs for another four to six
powder charges that are
est," the three compal)ies said. . cancer risk from the conthiueq · weeks.
packed In the gun barrels to
BASF Issued a separate statefood uses of the EBDCs Is
Pennwalt, Du Pont and Rohm
propel the 2, 700-pound shells up
SUJISHER LOHSE
ment saying it.w1.1s taking action ·dangerously high, " said Janet &amp; Haas said their studies showed
to 24 miles. Tests found the
·to "help allay public concern
Hathaway, senior attorney for that foods treated with EBDCs
Phormoc y
powder to be stable.
over the safety of fresh produce
the NRDC.
·were
safe
to
eat,
and
that
normal
The Navy could not find any
prompted by the debate over
"The cancer risk which will processing removed most reKMaU ~ .... " ·"'
Cftlrl• RMI-. 1'1 ,I'll
evidence of mechanical mal·
pes tkid.e residues."
remain from · the . u~e of the sidues f~om .fruitsand vegetables ,
Ilion.-"'"'""" Lll ......
~'"""
IM. i ·oo • J!'l. ,. i :oo"'"'
functions, electrical problems,
Among the widely used pest!- EBDCsontomatoesandpotatoes before they reached superS...,~.. ! 0:00 • &lt;t
4.00
PIIUCRIRTIOJill
. 1114 IU ZIIS "
accidental detonation or techni·
cldes that have EBDC ....: or alone is more than 16 times the markets. They said consumers
E Mto~
Fro....,$'""''.:.
P~ ..,• n • o~o~
cal flaws.
.
o... W.tk
(EPA) risk level," she said . .
ethylene bisdithiocarbamate could
furthet
reduce
risks
by
.
The investigation soon beas their active ingredient are
The NRDC said the · EPA . washlng produce.
came sensational with news . Mancozeb, marketed by Du
calculated
that continuing to use
.
'
leaks that Investigators · were
looking at th~ posslb[llty of
murder or suicide, and were
examining two crewmen Truitt and Hartwig, who died in
the turret .
Un lden titled Navy officials
Implied there may have been a ·
homosexual affair, describing
the two men as 'having "a
.
.
special relatior\shlp" and not·
ing that It soured when Truitt,
21. got married in December.
It also was revealed that
Hartwig, 24, had taken out a
$100,000 life Insurance policy
naming Truitt as the
beneficiary.

Sailor is ·blamed
for Iowa explosion ·

7; 1989 .

\•
· - , -----· -~·

--

�Page 14- The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

pt, Pleasant
·1 VIcinity

Thursday,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
42

46

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

Spaca for Rent
Offico or omoll buoln- opoco
lor rant In Mldrllooor1. AQ
Yord Solo 3 Fomlly Sopt 7 and e.
utllllln lnciudod. Air conBoY• and rMnt clothM. Lots
2dltbodl room,holu/mdlohod~~r C!&gt;"· · dltlonod. $200Jmonth. Coil 114dlahoo ond mloc 8t00 IIU 5:00.
on, woo r ryor. ... . por 992-8545 7:ooa.m..o4:00p.lll. or
2628111. Vornon Avo.
monrh ptuo pooJt ond utllltfoo. 614..82-1348 ovonlngo.
814·112·7471.
· ·
Yard Solo Frldoy ond Soturdor,
~~ 0 Jockoon Ave., P!. Ptt.
2BR tum'od wllh wuhor l
dryer, 112 milt E. of Porter on
SIX tamllloo, don' ·
thlo
554.114-388-9963.
one, lirat .... In two yMre. 37
Warwick Avo, Frl ond Sot. Sept 6
2br., tumlohod, cobto, orr con· Hou_.hold
&amp; D. 8:30AM till toto PM.
dltlonod, booutltul riverview In
· GoOdS
Konougo. Footoro Mobllo Homo 1--..,==,..,.~==-Portt 114-446-1602.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Pomeroy,
2br
bl homoo d 1 1 Sotao ond cholro prlcod trom
Middleport
_,.;•, 1;::, ~:4 _..a.o52 7.•P '" · $3t5 to $995, Tobloo SSO ond up
·-·to $125.' .HidH-bodo S399 to
I VIcinity
$515. Rocllnoro $225 to $375.
3Kygar
bodroomo,
HUO
IPI"'vod,
~nCreek Sch~ . 114-317• Lompo •••
,._. 10 SI2S. ""
0682.
S109 ond up lo 8415. Wood
Sapl. 7,8,1. AI: 405 Pogo St.,
toblo w-t chalro $288 to $7115.
Mlddi0port, OH. 11-5.
Nico, 2 br., tumlttwd trailer:, Otekl $145 up to $375 Hutchel
loigo yord. ~14 Third ·St. $400 &amp; up, bunk bodo 'comptoto
2 miiH north of Tupporo Piolno
Konuoga. 614-448-74?3.
wllh moHrooo $295 and up to
· on Rt . 7. Sap1. D. 9:D0-4:00. Rain
cancel1.
$395. boby bodo 1110 llottnoouo or box oprlngo fuN or !Win
4 fomllr. Thw._ ond Fri. 1/4 milo
44
Apanment
$76, tlrm $88, ond $98. a-n
on 143 ot Humphroy•o. Wlntor
~~~
for Rent
ooto $275 6 up, King $350. 4
clothoo, olumlnum opolce mogo.
"'· ~ .. • ·•
drawor chHI Sat. Gun C.blnoto
1BR unlum. opl. Rongo &amp; rofrig. 6, 8, J.: 10 gun. Baby man,.....
FrwdWolforw-.NowLimo
W31\fS
pn&gt;vldod. Wotor, oo,..go, go,.. $35 &amp; $4~. Bod lromoo $28,
Road, Rutland, Oh. Thu...., Fri.,
blge, patd. o.p. &amp; Rell1~i- QuHn Slzo $35 &amp; king lromo
SoL Sopt.71h,llh,lllh. I:OOom·?
4345.
$50, Good ooloctlon of liod..,.m
Soplomboo 11h,llh. 44VN Boum
()
te lOUSe ...
m
1bril Opirtmonl, oil utllllloo ,,..
hoodbolrda motal
$30 ond upcoblnoto,
to $15.
Addhlonlv AI. 3, bolllnd tho
lJttSy."
cru od $300 por mo. Cop. roq'd. aultH,
to
daye
tan
11
caeh
wHh
ap.
Skat•A· ay, Porn~~ray, OH.
~
614-448-4222 betwHn I &amp; 12
~rovod crodlt. 3 mi. out Bula•lllo
knick
lu\ocko,
.,---,,---,,.,..,---,-,- th':;, ~.nc:rfe~4~WJI2. Mon,
Clothl~,
niceole.
..814--8.
t
!.:::=~~~=;::;:=:'jj:;:=====~===1''m.
1br. largo khchon, wooh-dry
Yord Olio. 33362 111. 33, 11
Help Wanted
Homes for Sale
h;;okup, oduHo onlr. No polo. 311vlngroom table•, 1 cDGktall, 2
Pomoror.
Sopt.l-9,
Tolol 8p.m.
oloctric. Call614-4-27 drume. fS14-742--2321.
Boob,
furniture,
cloth.._9orn-?.
VMn ,j~~~~;;~~~;
lor Poll Bom
' ' Swr~cuM. Brick horne with al• after
accumulation.
,
:::-':::-':-'----:---::--::--=::--:;;;.;.;.;;....;;=.;.;;.----tached
garage, 8
roome, 2 . bedroom aipertment, Mld- Couch ond choir. Good conWanted to .Buy
nroploco rn living n&gt;Om, both, dloport. Pmlallr lumlohod, dillon. EIOC1no cook otoYO.
9
' baHmtnt, ntw heat . pump, utllllln not Included. Dt~tt Oroooor with mirror. J75. lor otl.
::Ba'::00
:7.:'ba::ti:-:Ca::-r~d::-a-p::-,.~
'!::--.-.:
•.11 12
SituatiOn
clooo to achocl. Nlco locotlon roqulrod. $175.00 111r month, ln- 814-9411-2801.
1 1::980
Thurodoy or Fridoy ontr, 304-.
Wanted
with lorgolot. 014-i92·3804.
cJudoo gorbogo. 1-lli4-IIV2·2381 County Appllonco1• Inc. Good
675-2453.
doro.
.
UHd lppllaneet. T.v. ..... Open
32 Mobile Homes
2 bodn&gt;om ipt. rn Brodbury. ,. 8 o.m. 10 6 p.m. Mon ..Sot. 114for Sale
112 botho. Protor oldor oouplo. 446·161,!1• 627 3rd. Avo. Got·
No poto. 614-112-3312. DoUy tlpollo,..,.,
1972 14160 Amoricon 2 br., goa Wood.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
hut, ntw Clrptt, txtrl nice 2 bedroom . . .. for , .... ea,. Wlllhtn, dryers, refrlgerttora,
lhnlughout $SUO 114-441-0175. potod. Nlco oottlng, toundry rongoo. Skor!So Al:c:loncoo,
1974 Kirkwood, 12xe0, 2 bod• tacllftloo ovollablo. Cill614-112· ~r.':'M~\':.rCan ·6 ~~-J',;~
,_.,, 2 ocroo of land, out 3711 EOH.
PICKENS FURNITURE
building bank
whh oloe1ric,
chlckon 35
· w. apt. 2 br., 1 boI h' pr1vate
hOUllo,
cellar. IS14-H2·
oncloood polio. Clooo to Houoohold Now/Uood
lurnlohlng. 112 mi.
7121 .
gn&gt;eory otoroo &amp; ohopplng con·
1971 14x70 Elcona loc.ted on ftr,
water,
uwe'l_ lraah Jorricho Rd. Pt. Ptoaoont, WV,
Stoto R1. 7901 Mor !loreorvltto, provldod. $26Simo. call 814- cotl304.f75-1450.
SWAIN
prlco roducoo to J7500 614·256- 448-8727.
1877ori14-251-1S28.
Apartmtrit tar rent, 30U7S.. AUCTION l FURNITURE 62

&lt;)

"lJe
f tl

2 nu,.... aidH, ahap clark, . lnqufN, at Odd• end Ends Shop,

MI.. Paula'• Day care Cenltr.
AVON I Ali Areas I Shirley Salo, offordablo, chltdcoro. M·F
6 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Agee 2'A·10.
Spears, 304-675-1429.
Before, after schoo( Drop-Ina
AVON • AU areae, ... t:all Marll~n woicomo. 614-448-8224.
Wuwtt 304-882-2645.

Remodeling Interior, exterior
Babysitter nMded In my homt. painllng, roofing, concrete
Mus\ be mature and dapen· work, tltctric:al &amp; plwnblng.
dable. Rtf.,anct nteded. 814·
Exp. H.. rtfertnen. Pltue call
992-E539.

Opening. Guaranteed wag11
plut camm. paid vacations,
manager, ttyllsts nMdtd. 614-

after Sp.m. 814·256·1611 .

882·7018, onytlmo.

1/malo. 614-3711-2320.
Will cloan houoo $5.00 por hour,

Coupl8s and Individuals tor
businest of your own. Local

call bltwun 8:00 and 1:00,304576·2833.

Amway distributor assists

Will do baby olnlng In mr homi,
have retertnctt, 304.&amp;75-nau.

lou

1~

992·7563.

EARN MONEY Read ing books!
$30,000/yr. lncoma potential.

Oorailo (1) 805-687-liOOO Ext. Y·
10189.

Would llkt to do house ciNning
$5.00 per hr. Have reterencaa.
614-446.&amp;199.

salesperson, tar a Southeastern
Ohio tlectrleal distributor, Send
resume to Box cl~ Box 011 Gal·

llpolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third

Ava., Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

Hausewlvlt work at home eam
big profits, full time and part
time 304..S82·3190.
·
IN A RUT
Tired
of minimum wage?
Bori ng, dead end Jobs. We're
looking ~for 8 lively people who
want mort out of life then just
'gelling by, Earn while you le arn.

(614) 266-6422

Closed lues. &amp; Wtd.
Loraine Crane Operator, Drag
Line , Salary depends on tiC·
parlance. Apply at Jesco Inc .,

US Rt. 33, Lolart, WV 304·8953611.

tlon 8 acc1pttd.

nltwo, lot 901100 flo! lol on Sun

Ono bodroom tumlohod opt,

Prlcod nogotlonablo 114-4468005.

poto, 304-676-1386.

Valley Drive, ready to movtlnto.

33 Farms lor Sale
44 A., 32 A.llllablt. 2BA ranch,
rural wl1er, 24x38 ahed, pond,

Tycoon

Lakt, owner

flnonclng. 614-8n·3364.

34

21

Business
Opportunity
INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

Pome~y~ All major rtpaira
dono. $88,500. 814·992·7204.

&amp; Acreage

1 acre ground on At. 7 $5000. 5
tern Rt. 7, $17,000. firm. 614-

water, 304-&amp;7S.2?22.
12 acrn land on Long Hollow
Road, 30W9S.3929.
86.4 Acret. Loc1ted 11'2 mUt
North of 554, &amp; mllet W111t of
Cheshire. Wooded • hilly. 10
acret, Cleared land. Bardere on
Van Zant Rd. Oil wtll with ' ln..
comt. FrH gal for resident.
Solid, 20•40 barn. No house.

recommend• that you do
business with people you k!'loW,
and NOT to Hnd money
thro1.1gh tht mall until yo"' havt
investigated the oHtrlng.
· Bordarad on S.West and North
Sides by reclaimed strip mine.
HEALTH AND WEALTH OPPOR· Perfect ofr hunting. lott of
TUNITY MEETING. Tuao. Sap!. deer, groust and turkty.
12, 7:30. Kountry Kitchen. Dont S29,500. 614-448-1822 or 448miss thit.

9591 .

Shot Store and Vldao Store
ccmblned for salt. In Pomeroy
area. 614·992·3930 or 614·992·
2571 .

Ashton, beautiful ant acre lote
with river frontage, public water.
Clyde fBaw.n, Jr. 304-576·2336.

23

mobile hamu permi1tecf, public

Professional
Services

Ashton,

large building

late,

water, prlcH reduced, Clyde

Can't gel credit? Had credit

problems? Trying to utablish
cradil? Claimed bankrupty? We
can help. 304-882·3100 ext M-

84.

Real Estate

Bowon, Jr. 304-578-2336.
Building titea on Ia ke or cre8k

halt to one ac111. Water, ejeotrlc,
road, $1,900. tach. 304·576-

2026.
Lot In Rio Orondo, OH. 150'x85'
614-245·5144 .

Woodland, 132 tcrtt, $35,000,

Rt. 7, bolow Euroko, Call 614446-441 &amp;a~or 7 p.m.

Rental s
41 Houses for Rent
2 bedroome, bath, newly
decorated, c:ltan, nice. 614-992·
5858.

2BR houoo In Pl. Ploooant, WV.
Unlurn'od. or furn'od. •280/mo.
•
R. • I •ug., etavt, wee her,
dryer.
0op. roq'od. 814-446-E114.
3br., houoo with ottochod

garage, CA, no pale, dip, &amp; ret.

roq'd, 31 Chillicothe Rd, 114446·2583 8-6, doiJr.
4br., bl4ovol, 2 boiho, living

. room. &amp;argt rec room, Family

,_.,, lorgo 31hl40 gorogo
locotod Rt. 3211, Nortll, Rio
Grondo1 '500/mo, 3brr bi.Jovot, 2
batht, flmlly room, 110el1td on

3br., 2 both, 1 outbuilding, 2 J/2
mlln South of GoiRpollo,
S37,000. 114-44HH1 or 114-410997.

3br.. Tudor at['' houae. E11 In

khchon. FR, R. 2 lull bllho.
Loundry ...om. 2 car gorogo,

. , . , txtrt
monoy? Why nc4 oon houoo of
Ltor,d· No oupplloo to buy. No
coioctlng. No dollvorlng. Froo
S300 kh. N- hiring lor 1011. 114to

. .m

pool. 112 acree, VA epprovect,

Iron! Wood Dr. ~/mo. 3br
nnch In Spring VolloJr Aroo, ~
botho1 largo roc. room. Oood
oroo tiiCIOrmo. Socurlly DopooM
I roloronco roq'd. Wloomon
ROll Eoloto. 111441 3144.
I room houM on At. 79 ov•
looking nvor. Nlco -ntry oot·
ling. 614-441-0031.

Prtvoto
modom
lumlohod
officloncy opt Whh gorogo &amp;
otorogo. Wator potd. 614'448-

mo.

*

Uood

opplloncoo.

Wuhoro,

ranges. rtfrlgerltora.
mrcrowtve ovena. Ktn"l Ap.

drytra,

..;~

Vallty Furniture

Now ond lilod turnhuro ond oppllancoo. Call 61 4-446-7572.
Houro 8-5.
Vory nlco old trunk, ani~UO
d"nl&lt;• 1 110 on 11quo 100 "II
choir. 114-445-8743.
Yl'ra Fumhuro &amp; ApptloncH
Rt. 141, 1/4 mi. on Lincoln Pika.
Mon·Salt o.m.-8 p.m. Sun 12-5.
Colli II! g p.m. for oppol~tmonta,
614-448-3158.
Financing
I
down.

Rogoncr, Inc. 2BR, opt., now
plush

·carpet,

new

paint,

1BA

eHielency,

Ac.

carpet

throughout. ldtal for 1 person.

114-4411-2602.
Small lum. houst. eultable tor 1
or 2. 614-44&amp;-G338.

~

...,v ill
1l '~~ ;av""

Antiques

=----::-:::"-.-=~~

TWin Rivers Tower-Housing tar Buy or aoll. Rlvorlno Antlquoo,
the Elderly, Handicapped and 1124 E. Moln Stroot, Pomoror.
Disabled.
Located
near Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
downtown Point Ploaoant p.m.• Sundor 1:00 t~ 6:00 p.m.
phono 304-675-6671. Equo 1 61 4-992·25211.
Hauelng Oppcrtunity.
Top Caah pold. Old lumlluro
quilts,
oriental,
Unfurnlohod, 3 · ...om bath cuboarda,
downotalro, Daya: 514-446-7572 palntlnge, toye, or entire Htete
call collect 304-525-3275, or
or Evanlnga: 614-446-1980.
304-523·6854 .
UpolalroiJ unlurnlohod opl. Car·
potod. o poto, tnqulro ot 300 54 Miscellaneous

1971 Chovy PU, oxc. conrl. 114448-7848.

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

1971 Ford· plck..,p, 302
Automotic with Air Ccind. 114446·7720.
!971 Frod · PU, 1~ Ford
Bronco II. 114.-446·7720.

( (

'f· 7
-

Starting ot· S120/mo. Gollla
Hotol. 614-4411-9580.
SIHplng roomo whh cooking,

Saxaphono $400. 304-675-3096.
2 ploco llvlngroom oulto. 114992-5441.

r===========F-=========l
., ,,. ., ..... ""·

54

Miscellaneous

61 Farm Equipment

truck,
v.a, Vonlc
onglno,
AM·FM
11181 QMC
Slop814-142-2402
Sldo holt
lon
lttreo
conetlt,
Of
304-878-4630.
.
8112 motol ttot dump bod wllh
hoovy dutr wr-h Ford Truck

Oavld Brown 885 Farm tractor
43hp, PS, dal. with uNCI s•

w•h dual whetlt. 11200. Molar,
trans., rur and In n:oet&amp;.nt

Merchandise
For Solo .. eoncroto and Plootlc

bruoh cuttor *3150. 614-446·
•
0813.
E ANS ENTERPRISES, Jock-'
oon, OH. 1.aoo.637·1528.
Ollvor tl5 1 row com plckono,
oxc. John Dooro groin drillo,
For . Solo Sopl. only. PR~Ix _ , dlokl, rokoa 1 l!aloro, ·
S12,00
por
bolo,
oliO grovlly bod wogono, cuhi·PICk·
GrunhOUII au.,~ I- lntertl .,., plek up illl~ I plowL
S29.00.L tloto $33.0d Caoo. Kon l Olhor flold roody oqulpmont.
Ed'o wHnhouoo. 15n Evono Howo'o Farm Mochlnory. Rt. 124
Rd. Jtockoon, OH. I14-2...3453. I Mayhow Rd. Jockoon, OH 114For Sail: 8 ft. poptor lumbor; 281-8944.
2x4'e· 2x8'1 and 8hNtlng Jim"l Farm Equipment Sr. 318 w.
booiilo. Othor lumbor ovollablo. Golllpollo, O.or 80 now Shonnlu
~~ !.1~~:" 1 or 81 4-992- 25ondhpModiHII
orauoo.nuo,od
001F0orrl,..
0 "t1roctF"•
Fullor Brvoh Componr oJ. 4', 5',
KlngKuttor rotary
,.,. you o now oorolco, ony moworo. "'""' uoid bruoh hogo
mdooln tholr moU - r cotalocl trodod ln. 614-448-&amp;m.
you con ordor· lrorn your lociil
LivestOCk
Fullor Bnroh Dollar ond oovo 63
Dolo o.nd Vl!tmo Wood, 2 Anguo Horoforrl bulo ono 8
.. lotO.
mo old rod &amp; whllo loco othor
oo~tlc lanko. 'All olzoo. RON

s·,. ·

=•n:

ru:: ~~~~~~'l:[h0:. ~~~;!

4

.

AIIO attreo outfit/ plue more.
814-371-2115, call rom 8-8 p.m.

4084.
~v-~-hl
kl
~~ F-~olghl-k
ro - . oldI Iplati,
ng
$100.
$25. -h. PttOna 814-112-3001.

64

Hay

&amp; G!illn

150 pound round boloo, good
111l1od IUo•, $15; 11W7tl-2798
tveni,.,.L,
.
...
ltrow lor oolo. $1 ,50 bola: 114-

448-4111
7157

Evonlngo:

&amp;14-446-

crulao control, v.a onglno,
tormodllto wlporo, roar window
dofrootor. Hlgll mlloago but runo
ond 1 - grool. $~. Coli 1148411-2055.
1981 Ford Bn&gt;nco 11, 68,000
mlioo. 5 orioorl. 1!4-441·7720, .

~=. ~~;.:.~ror ~";:

11164

Frtdoy only, 304-67W!543.
ml
Woodbu
r;~~uo~:,;:,•. Sow muf'!':.':
gin!, Dolor wonch. 114-38&amp;8211. 114-445-8038.
Whoolcholro. now or uood. 3
whoolod oiOCiric ocootor. Call
Aogon Modlcol, 1.10Q.f81-2104.

1178 Morcu~ Monorch, good
oond. 114-44 7848.
1978 Oldomobllo, 310 onglno, a
Torry com::;g lnllilt. Sloopo 1.
I1W87-7 '
1171 CadUioc Sodon Dovlllo
good cond, now llroo, 11,200. or

,,. 1180, eaft Thuradty

or

A' utos for Sale

Motor COoch,
~.soo; 1157 Chovy, 4 dr, $850;
1..1 Hondo, 780 onglno, 8450.
&amp;14-245-5342.
Cortoz

1173 Plymouth Duotor, I cyll"'
eutomlt~ 71,000 , Ktual
'!'!~"!.~ cond. $750. 814-

der,

~MH~~Mlaflar ap.m.

·-.

·

fn1de for Hlf cont. camper of •

qual votuo. 114-992·21 28 oltor
5:00PM.

toro, Hlo Grondo, OH Coil 114245-5121 .

cond.

_56
____P_e:-:t-:s-:-fi-:or:-S"""':'I_e==
4 mo. old block malo Cockor

448·7721.
1980 Chtvy Monze. Excelltnl

Sponlol. $100114-379-2103. '

1178 Pontlao Orand Prix, good

t4aw

tranemlnlori

f

;t ONC:.E

M0Nfy J'O Ju~N, ~
~

cycle. New Urn. Mw ohaln, txc.

e t121 48 Houra D ·
e tiD MOVIE: Dead Men

1U2 Honda Cullom 250, 304-

Don't Wear Plaid (POl (2:00)

1!)1 Pr111111Newa

I!J) MOVIE: St. lvea (PO)
(2:00)
'
Con-lion With Dinah

a

8:30. (JJ Ill) Different World

Whitley frelB thai Kim won't
room with her ~ain next
semester. (R) 1;1

tl &amp; J Cyclo, wo now boro cyiJn.
doro, toot HMoo lor boring ond
plolon dollvorr, Oory Klnnolrd,
304-8715-11181.
·

(!) World 01 C8rtoonlng

.._,.lor oolo. I14-Bt2-2201 .

9:00

1172 17 ft. Ston;roft Trl·Hull
Boot. 125 HP, Evlnrudo En gino,· . _
comploto top, ,_ uphololory. 1
$3500. Call 814-2811-1311 oftor •
7'.;.00;.:;;P·;;.
;_
m;_. ...,.._ _ _ _ __
79
Campers I

IT IS A KI~R

AtJD~OOUI

... ISIJ'T rr?

Motor Homes
10 112 truck c:ampor. leoo. Call
oltor 4 p.m. 114-441-4015.
1173 Hqlldoy_ Vocotlonor, ool~
conlolnod. $3000. 114-992·7471.
21 ft. Fronkln 1riVII trollor, 1111
oon1alnorl.l14-441-7146.

9:30 G (JJ Ill) oa. John John
and his son. Matthew
become snow-bound in a
remote cabin. (R) Q
10:00 ()) 700 Club With Pat
Robartaon
• (JJ Ill) LA. Law A fearful
Brackman lairs the results
from his blood test tor AIDS.

81

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unoondlllonol llflllmo guorontoo. Loco! roloroncn lumlohod.
Froo ootlmotn. Call colloot 1·
114-237.Q488, cloy or nlg~t. R o

304-6715-2398 Olllo 614-4482454.
Rolory or coblo 111!11 drilling.
Moot wollo complotod oomo
arid MrVIae,
88
.
.

Pur:.=•

(R)
(I)

D (J) Prlmetlme Live Q
Ill t!J Newa

a 1 m • n t "" '

1

(!) On The Una
iiJ • (JJ 'Knot• Landing'

Beat Of Knota Landing Abby
tries frantically to separate
herself from Murkame Corp.

•

... ·
.~·
... ...-.:

~8 Iamay Millar

·""-".

.

=z·

IIJ)

•
'•'

I ALMOST
FORGOT!!

'"1llf'id
f. l1. e&lt;,~ock

••

t

Orahlm Upho111., Centtr, 101
Hilltop Dr. Col lor IPIIOintmonta
1-motoo. Colllt4'446-3431.

Harriet returns in time lor
Edwina's wedding and a
reunJon with Guy. Q

• tiD Iamay Mlllel'

a

USO Calobrlty Tour:
01.-' of
country music Is featured in
her third •uso special
entertain~ military
psrsonneltn Germany,
France, Spain, Greece and
the Mediterranean.
11:00 ()) Ba-n Riddle A Day
Keaps The Rlddler Away
Loretta Lynn

••

•

(JJ • (JJ

iiJ • tl2)

Ill)

Newa

()) 1188 NFL Playoff

Till!

ee roaar-

acorn
(1

. .

/

1!)1 Monayltne
IHl Talea Fllllft The Oarllllda
Annlveraary Dinner
t1J Miami VIce Clldarone's
Return, PI 1 01 2
11:30 ()) . . _ When The Rat' a
Awl'j. Mlea.WIII Play

today belofe llhllllng your attention to
more lrlw1ouo actMtlea. II will be hard
to catch up H you fall behind,
P' ult 21-Apr1111) Your Claclatona today are likely to be brilliantly
waluilad IIIII they could be vary con-·
IIINCIIwe. How....,., they won't count lor
much 11 you don't do 1111ythlng abOUt
them. a.t moving.
TAUII!II (April • Mar •J Uaually
when
undertake a projaet you hiV8
tiM! t'"IICity to - I t through to Ita con·
1:1ua10n. IIUI today you might be tempt-

•

..
.,..
••u

. NORTH

BRJDOE
By James Jaeaby

..,

Whoever heard of cue-blddiDI wltb
the 8-S.3 of lhe 0fi1J =t'a lllit? Nerth WEST
was not reaDy demeated wlieo be bid .AKQJ74

Tbe play came ,down to ll.nowin&amp;
to count. Welt led thn!t high
spades and then lhe queen of ~
moods. Declar:er toot the ace, drew
two rounds of trumpa, and tbeD played
dummy's dlamoad klnl llld ruffed
dummy's last·low diamOIId. West bad
sbown with lis .,ades and two hearts,
and bad followed to lbree dJamondw
Tbat left Welt with no more than two
clubs. SIDce East had at leut five
clubB, It was rlabt to play for lhe cl•b '
queen to be with Eut. ADd vlrtunu

rewarded.

,

OpeaiD&amp;lea_d: +K
n

~ble

held the dollbleton q - of clllil IIIII
declarer -"! be let. That wwld be &lt;'
bad luck, but at 1eut declarer would ~-·
avemadeanechated.-•tolhelocatielll of tile clab ~
'
.. ·
,_,_,_ ,,_.,._~-!' ·

•..._,. ~-~- _..,_., ·
~=:. 1f'1 ~~

:e.•!Nl

'

a

•r

I

.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
42 CoiTecl
ACROSS
1 Ball
of yarn
!! Slough
9Wrlter.
lra· ·11 Tessera
12 Marble
13 Proclamation
15 Family
member
16 Colorado
·shoshone
18 Indian
weight
unit
19 Churchman
21 Chemical

suftix
22
23
24
26
27
28

Cut down
Rooster
Disfigu1e
Numerous
Rebuff
Make
lace
29 Bard's
adverb
30 Mexican
state
33 Mullin
34 Greek
leller
35 Moslem

a lext
43 Trust
44 Brazilian
tapir

DOWN
1 Dressed
2 Lawful
3 Circumvent
4 Farceur
5 Bullock
&amp;Concealed
7 Omission
of a
syllable
8 Propriety
100ne
·
ol the ·
genders
14 Journey
17 Haul

Answet'

20 Guy

28 Tyke
23 Roman
30 Shabby
statesman 31 Poe bird
24 Woody
32 Repre·
Allen
senlatlve
111m
36 Famed
25 Shade
soprano
of red
38 Nothing
26 Get along 40 'I 27 - lily
Camera"

DAILY CRYPTOQVOTES- Here'tr bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

·.·.

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
· apostrophes the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Elich day the code letters are different.

·.

..

.

caYPTOQU01E

.
•

ZEYB,

MN

D

SDYY
ES

.IP

MNN

WNE'ZX

IN Z X

H.IDRHX

U.IMB.

1919 ICing Faalufet

..
•.

..

•R 0 Z Z W

YOU PLEASE, 11ERE'S NOBODY AT HOME.
ALEXANDER POPE
C)

'

MBDP - WNE

PATE, AND FANCY WIT WBJ. COME: KNOCK AS

II

'

IE 0 B

CDZRXZ
Yulel•.,•• CaiPI••••tea. YOU BEAT YOUR

(,I

'

37Think
39 Judge's
allentiongetter
41 Geraint' s
love

NC.

Croak • CllaM
A DIDIOtr'a l1ofJ

Yesterday's

title

ODMOB

p=

••••z .

L-----------'
.
Of coune It was
tltat Welt ::

CAIICII (.lllna ......,.., Ill You might

haW 1 • dancy today to ldd -.lrllla
tO your hlfiChorlc 1111111 f11a, be I II illd.
Don't let your ertlltlc .. . , . . _ . your
I)OOCIIMII.
LEO(- 11-bg.ll) &amp;.•ptl- or
..,_.....,. - - could be very llpto you today. Doo't ' - .your
c1
• to the degree to wlilni you
might IIMIIII unaound rtak.

JWT

.....
•••• z• s•

bow

012

12:00

.QIOH
.AK5
+AJO!i

All put

make it.

WNE'ZX

a

'*"'*
ldnd, IIIII *&lt;I be ftrm when nUIII"'Y·

..

three spades. He bad four-card sup·uaeu
.QJ 10
port for his partner's openbta bid aDd +74
.
+QUS2
enough high cards that be wciWd have
opened tbe biddiD&amp; blmlelf. If be bid
SOl1l'll
an iinml!diate four bellrta, partner .
+IOU
.AitJII
would play blm fot las streDIIUI llld
.74
more diatrlbutiOIIII ¥1lues. So lbree
+ .K JI
spades fiUed the bill, 11 10111 as South
knew It only sllowed a tiOUIId ralle to
Vulllerable: Eut·Welt
four bellrtl llld did DOt ablolutely
Dealer: South
promise a control ID spades. Slllce
Wool Ntrdt
South bad a prbaae openiJII bid, be
bid four hearts llld bOped lie could

UBXP

• D U.S.~ Tennla
t!J Magnum, P.l. L.A., Pan 1

IPI to IIIII your mnnaa . , _ II you
thlm too muoll. Be gentta and

H

and when you're oftertd CANDY;.:·-· -·---------,

1\fS:=Q
0 SpOIII TGIIIght

not

5

Gain$(~ =
There are 1wo timll when a clased moulh can be of help
.. . whan you are about to say something against someone,

~='&amp;.

;w"....!!
1111 uiiCOflllllel8d.
, _ 21....... 101 When dald-

lng Willi ~ today, you're

aJ T~ 8llow

(1)~(0:30)

rou

~,

(JJ

r I" 1 I' I' I' tJ

SCUM-LETS ANSWERS
Annoy - Quick - Justly - CANDY

• tiD AIUIIIo Hall (1 :00)

lhe relationship work. Mall $2 to MatChmaker. P.O. Bo• 91428. Clevellnd. OH
BERNICE
4-4101-3428.
BEDEOSOL
UIRA (Sept. D-Oct. 211
reallatle where your 1811-lnt-'• are
concerned today. II you let your heart
. rule your held, a crafty lnc1Mdu81 might
• • • • • • • - taka 8dvant1Q8 of you.
SCOIIPIO (0111. 14 Now. 22) Be careful
loday thai your calh outleyt don't exC8!1d your Intake. You'd be belt• oil
now II you would think ol lilting IWay
!hem.
your ourplu-lnat811d ol
SAQITTARIUS (Now, 11-DaD. 11 Although ltlanda witt t,.t you In 1111 allen·
...,._ 7, 1...
live .,.;ner today, It's beat you do not
•
• requeat lavon tram them lor thlnga you
1(1 the year ahMd you could be rather C8r1 eul~:.lor youraall.
IUCCUtfulln , . _ wiiiN you may have CAPIIIC
(Dec. :a-.i8n. 111 A r.ilure
experrenoed 1.uur. Jn the put. Tr- to llallp your go.!~ In locue at all tlmla
1UC c II PI wllltaiCII you II .twaya paya today could you to Ia. your Incentive llack oil when you ahould
~SIP'. 22) Make the be aolna luH ataam llhMd.
moat of your apportunlllea today, even AGOAIIIUS (,_ • ,.... 11) There Ia a
tllough they IIIIJ' be relatively IIIMII poeajblllty. today you might read more
Intended II a
01181 Ramemblt. rl-lrorn tiM! Httl8 Into • altuatlon than that the mighty oak tree gift. Ill..... ol tiM! appll:lllll ~~~~-·a bit
T~ to Jlllch up a broken rOIIIIIICf? tnote lrtanclly t-.1
1 you 1111111 1111111.
Tile Aatro-GfiPh MatCIIIIIIIctr _, IMtlp ·I'ISCU (Pall. • '
oto II) Taka cata
you 10 underatlnll what to .do to I'Mke , o1 your dutlea and raaponelbllltlea lint.

his leQ and smlteq1

BecaUee I can'T- to-.

I I I I Irol I I I l

•&amp;riAMtLI

Hlghllghla
(I) Nawl

=

1

Evening NIWI

10:20 ({) MOVIE: Nona But The
Bravtl (2:t5) '
10:30 (!) Maaterplaca Theatre

DOC PRITCHART SAID
. I HAD TO GIT. MY
DADBURN CALORIES
WAY DOWN II

SAKES
ALIVE II

I
I' 0

CROSSWORD

~ 8rry King Uvel

Ser v ices

Fotty Troo Trlmmlng1 _ otump
removal, call304-175-1)a;1.
Aon'e TV Strvla., e~lallllng
In Zenith alao MNiclng motil
Olhar brandt. Houet calli, 1110
some appliance rwpalra. WV

a Crook 1 Chaaa
e (JJ Ill) Chaara Sam

e tl2) IIIIJ' Graham Ctuaada
a Naahvllll Now

&amp;

Insurance egent to chef,

1
mw.~UMIERED 1
. I'

•

.

pushes for a reunion
b e - RebeCCa and her
.
aloter. (R) D
(I) • (J) '!Dckdown Ill ThiS
program focuses on the
pursuit and capture ol parole
violators by various el~8
groups of law entorcemenl
agents.
Ill (!) Myataryl
. Pennyfather's disappearance
seams to be connected to
Gorman's murder. Q
or The Equalizer An elderly
woman contacts McCall
about her abusive landlord.

75 Boats &amp; MOtors
for Sale

aWotorproonng.
• r • B•

Football .

i1J

1811-2750. ·
, .7 Yomoho. llg whool IOCC.
Excotlant -Ilion. $700. 114-

t

Complete the chuckle qu;,.ed
by lilling In 1he mi11ing word1
L-...L.-"·-..\·-'"'·'--'-__, rou dovolop from llep No. 3 below.

lmposatble Former IMF
agents are stalked by brutal
serial killer. (R) Q
Ill Frida Kahlo
(!) VIntage: A Hlotory Of
Wine

'THE NtiES.

1

--il
;
.,~ I. I' I . I .. ~!Y...J~!'rJ:~I~~
~~~~~::_., ~cin
I

til Mlallon:

(I)

•

-rC;,.,;U;..:.S-rO;,..;;.R

VlcleoCountry

walege
e

JuT L.AT£'1-Y 'l'vf ,!
8EEN SIFTIN~

blowl'1

If oil

f'IAI&gt;

broko. Runo grootf $150. 114-

Point Pltaunt, 304~75-2083, 10 tr~de far Canlt. &amp;14-441·1052.

gol 001 up $14.119 ond 10 gol
comploto 843.25. ,
.
Groom ond tkrpply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All br.-rto. All otyloo.
lomo Pol Food Doolor. Julio
Wobb. Call614-446~231.
Wontod: AKC ShHh-lzu lor 81UI! .
oorvlco.l14-3111-1354.

,

--tr !

II I I I

0 Croultra
t1J Prolaalonal Tennla
aTop Card
7:35 ({) Major League .,_.,.II
8:00 ()) MOVIE: A Doctor'&amp; Story
(NR) (2:00)
• (JJ Ill) The Colby Show
Rudy complains that she has
to abide by too many rules .

268..321

71

111'1

Q

Ill • tl2) 8) Jeopardy! Q
• tiD WA"S"H

FRANK AND ERNEST

11

K0 NL UC

7:05$ J"'*7:30 • (JJ Family Feud
(J) lpe•dweek
(I) Entettalnment Tonight
.(JJ USA Today

For Bolo ar Trttdo, 1879 Hondo
XL310. Good ohopo. 8400. 114-

Sovring mochlnoo S125. Sovon
brond now Frnarm Slngor
Sowing Mochlnoo. $125. ooch. 1·
614 ..92·2225.
Sllonl mcvlo comoro, Droloctor
&amp; flood Ugh!. Llko n.W. Valuo
8450. All tor $200 614 446 3431.
81 row lor 1111· •• 1·50 bol 0 • 011
oot dlac lor oolo. $250. 114-114113051oltor5:30p.m.
Wontod to Buy Bouboll Card•

r

D

5

e

a-3540.

Pomeroy 1raa. 114481-4181.

~~ 1'" r El

_,A;,:_;.C...:..T-n;A...;.Rlt.

6:35 ({) Andy Grlfllth
7:00 ()) Father Mutphy
• (JJ PM Magazine
()) llpoo1aCantar (0:30)
(I)
(JJ Cunent Altair
Ill (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NawaHour
Gil • tl2l Ill) WhHI Of
FortunaD
·
• tiD WKIIP In Cincinnati
0 Monayllna
tiJ Mr Slatar Sam

a

tho
boo

form four ~mple -do.

0

11

tl2) ShowBiz Today

~~...:=. \ :0~~·;,J8J.;', ':: 5725.

P1lnt PLH, 2411 Jeckaon Avt.,
Polnl Plaooont, pllono 304-875-

10

• tiD Lova Connactlan

1::: :~':"c..':..":' .:::_r...

oond. $310 llrrn. So~ouo lnqulrioo only! 114-446-7627 oftor
5' 30 p.m.
18711 Yomoho 7SO. Blloft drtvo,
5000 original mlloo. $850 or
lrodo. 1982 Yamabo VIrago 120.
Shoft drlvo1 dloc bookoo, 4500
mllll lomnga, ooddlo bogo.
AII·FM, oxcollonl conriHkirt.
l1100orlrorlo.I1W112-1758.

memory, IMk &amp; ecan, fader,

O four
Roorranga letters ol
xrombt.d wordt

or • t121 cas New. Q

1111 Chovrolot 8-10 llozor.
Power ••ring, power INaktl,

S75.114-448-3375.
Pooolbly tho llrgoot booobotl
cord -•loction In • coun"oo
Rango- lrorn 1157 to• 198t." In-·
cludoo Toppo, Floor, Don Ruoo,
Scoro. Hoto, pootoroi comploto
ooto. Soriouo lnqu rtoo only.
&amp;14-247-3055oftor 1:00.
- · XL 100 Floor od0 1 t
"m
.v.

(JJ AIC Newa

(I) •

¥--

Motorcycles
74
1178 500 Yomoho Strootblko, 2

~ SportaL- (0:30)

Ill llocly El8ctrlc
(!) 3-2-1 Contact Q

cond"lon 81 • - · ••79.
·
" ·
73 Vans 14 WD'S
·
1873 Ford Bronco 4 whool drivo
~75-8120 oftor 5:00PM.
1871 Jeep. CJI, ntW ur... new
muHior, s1750. 614-446-4141 .~
tor&amp;oron-kondo.

7481.
198-3981.
Now I I - , •MJFMJ~--o., cor·
··- "
ATTENTION H - · ownoro,
rodlo, dlg~ol 12 llotlon, Point Ptuala now corrylng took:

- - - - - - IAo4 loy CLAY I. ·~

e

114-379-21~.

•-·

"I can't decide. Which relrlgeralor comes
In the best box lor my kid to play In?"

MAKING HOUSE CALLS J.IAS
BECOME MORE DIFFICUL.T?

:.:.;:.,:.::;,.,;:.==::,--=:;-:--;-:;-:-

1982 Comoro V-8, T·TOPI, 304175-6301.
1982 Chryolor Lo Boron, ono
Also tralllr apec1. All hoak·Lipt. 2 y1ar old Buck Wood Bumer.
owMr, body good cond" S1 ,BOO.
Coli oltor 2:00 p.m., 304-773- Noodo blowar. S250. 514-992·
304-678-2971 oftor 6:00 ~M.
Davlo
Sow-Voc
Sorvlco,
5651, M11on WV.
6756.
1983 Pontloc flroblrd loclory Ooo- Croak Rd. Porto, oup46 Space for Rent
Atari gamo llko now w/2 aamoa,
oun...of1,AC, $2995, 19~5 Dodgo plloo, pickup, ond dollvorr. 614extra ttt control padt, alf hook..
0.100 Pu truck, rwd, $31196.
~-.
Commorolol
1 1400 oq.lt. up wlroo S45.00; gkl'o 26" blko,
57
Musical
1985 Chryalor Now Yori&lt;or, good Sopllc Tonk PUmalng_$90~GoUla
Comtr Stcan 1na Pint. Ample W/chlld carrltr1 good concl, $20.;
Co. ROlf EVANS liNTERPniSES,
ohopo loodod, 304-57W722. ·
pirklng. Calll14-448-4249, 448- ,_ AMIFM otoroo cooootto for
Instruments
Jackson, OH 1-IOQ.637-9528.
2325, or 448-4425.
outol llko now, SPirkomotlc &amp;
1115
Dodgo
Chorgor,
AC.
Roolotlc 840. ooch; 304-773- 2 - · &amp;PI - - Block AMIFII loUYoro loW mllao, 82
Country Mabile ·Home Park, 5231 .
Plumbing &amp;
Wid- oquiHod $180, Will Nc4
Routt 33, North of Pomeroy.
Jow. 304-e7&amp;:41 80 botwoon 8:00 cloan, beoo, 114 iee 8267.
Heating
Lo!•.1 renttle, partt, 11111. Call Bendnwt:, lablt AWl, plan.~~, ond 1:00 Pll.
1985 Ford Tompo, AC, PB, PS,
61 ...92·7479.
Jolntoro, ohaporo, lathnl oonCartor;a Plumbing
TrumpoL S75. 114-317· rune good, exc Interior, take
lot for email mobllt hom!a dtrw, duat collector~, drll .,_.. Conn
ondHootlng
o'lll' Pllz';"la, aall anytime,
0208.
water &amp; ttwer furnished, Tv ;:j.~=-:~:a:..achlntry end
304-862·:
or 882-3845.
Fourth and Pfno
cable and garbage enllabl1,
lndlvlduol · gultor
louono,
Galllpolla, Ohio
1981 Chovrolot Spectrum 2
.
304 -875-5984 •
lrunoo wood 0 nd cool lumoca. ~lnnoro1 ooriouo gulioniL doora, red, 5 epeH, four wheel 114-446-3888
B(Unlcord
I
Muoio
1114-4480
··
Hooto 3200 oq.H. Duel work,
nt acre lot, tralltrl: allowed, firewood Included. :z yearw old,
0671. Jolt. wamoror lnotruotor, drive, 47,000 mil•, OM own.-, 84
Electrical &amp;
occ,_,rcot 41 mpg, $3,500.
chy water, Galllpolle Ferry. 304- exctlltnl oondhlon, 814-742114~41-80T7, llmltod -nlngo.
675-2722.
.
2897.
·
304-882-2200.
Refrigeration
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..L;;:;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.l58
Fruits &amp;
1981 Chovy Cotobrltr CL, outo, RHidontlll or oonunorclol
PSIPI, AMIFM, AC, cruloo, lift,
now or riPIIra.
Vegetables
roor dofroot, luggogo rock. wiring,
LlconHd otootriclan. Rldonour
84,71)0.
114-38N79CJ
or
614-311Oroon boono. You pick. $1.00 8240.
EIOC1ricot, 304-875-1111. ·
buoltol. John HIM, Lotort Folio.
114-1147-2142 or 114..:147·3042.
1981 Flrolllnl106 onglno, llmod 85 General Hauling
loodod, 40;DOO . . .
Horrta Form1 81. AI. 124. wlndowo.
Portland. PICR your DMt. Hotl $1,000. :sil4-m.&amp;412.
Run. . lluo Lolto groon boono,
J8.00 buohol, lomot- h .OO
buohol, _ . . $1.00 Plcltlng
houro:llon..eot.s-a,
lun. 12-t. Iring own oon-

•:r:-•

1

E5PECIALL'(, WHEN 'I'OU RE
NOT ALLOWI;D IN THE HOUSE ..

cyllndlr, 4-tlpted, MW tlret •

1978 Monte earto $750. 1nd

Furnlthed
tfflclency,
i19
Second Avenue, Galllpolle. All

DOCTOR, DO '&lt;OU FIND THAT

oxhouot, ·aoor1 ol10po, $1600.

Roome for rent • wttk or month.

Furnished ·
Rooms

•
)

1985 Fori! F1 50, 414, 30Q.41

utllltln pold, ohoro o bath.
$135/mo. 614-448-3145.

45

1:00 ()) llonan:ut: 1'1* Loet
Epi!IOdel
• (JJ Cll • (JJ Ill • tl2)
Ill) Nawa
()) Home R,.. Oerby
Ill SNIIIIIfl Time at.tton Q
(!) Re.cllng Rainbow Q
• tiD Happy Daya
o cartoon Expran
a Amartcan Magazine
6:05 (I) aaverty Hlllbllllaa •
8:30
(JJ IIJ) NIC Nightly Nawa

,.:.m~:,:O:;::M:::C-:Trl-o:-.--::xlo:::-:6;:500;:;;-:oori=oo=

condition. 69,000 original mlloo.
Mor bo ooon ot Ellie
AKC rwd BrlHony 8poonlol Pupo 11200.
Sohlo
80!II·5pmilu
Mon • Sot.
far aala: $100 Hah. RHdy In 4 Evening~ and
nday at 104
-ko. 114-3811-1354.
Wright St., Pomoror, OH.
AKC r.glotorod Dobonnon 1981 Buick Rogol Llmftod. 2
Puppy"""· podlgroo, $150.614- door Mdan lib ntw, v-e.
256-6403.
$2,298. B14-H2-8711.
Dalm1tlon pup8 4 with llvtr 1981 Dodgo Mlrodo, 87,000
epat• 1 with black, all can bt mil•. PS/.-tr oond. POw• wl""
AKC raglotorod, 304-882·2279 dowo, !IH whHI. $2800. 114-367·
Merchandise
o~or4:00 Pll.
7877 o~or 5p.m.
10 ~. ftborglooo dloh wllh Oragonwynd Canory Konnol.
1981
Montt Clrlo. Sunroof,
receiver 1nd remot1 control
Peralan,
SlameN
and AMIFM!Cin., AC, IIC. cond.
unit. Llko now $750. 814-742· Hlmoloyan
klftono. Ch- olud
2525.
mlloogo. 114-448-1827 or
oorvlco. 114-446-3844 oftor 7 ~lJhe747.
p.m.
10 ft. ootolllto dloh, $350. 3Q4.
1981 VW Robblt. Ooorl tlroo,
m-s267.
.
Floh Tank, 2413 Jockoon Avo. motor. 0oor1 cor. $1300. WIQ

Fourth Avt.

EVENING

6::::3;::2"'5.=--::c:-:-::--=~;:-;-:-:

posal, pnvett encloted patio,

53

~':Too'!,~

O

....
'::~:~' scc~~:r~A-"~~s· ....

low

514 lronomlooiOn. 12 Iron! 1111
34 ,..,., Now war olr axto. ·1sft.
olum. bod. Sol wllhlwhhoul
bod Call ~- 8 m 114-211·
Oowr p. ·

dawa._ llnttle, ate. Cl1udt Wln-

DOOt, playgra"'nd. Water, uwer,
l tras h rncluded. Starting at
$289/mo. Call 814·367·7850.

Television
Viewing

72 Trucks for Sale
1974 Ford ono ton whh 12 ft
flltbed, .,.. ,t l,...
. brlkN, tl.
In1
ood lorg cottlo. 6::;
448·1052.

f":..rrJ1.0.11'"

55

CA, dlohwoohor, dlo-

·

rtM.~&lt;f
Df M,i/t: A{t~f I
'·10 ou• ..&lt;. M~
'-'.~~'( IC&gt;
I OKlDMfDI"'"(M;.
~~'Ji'v ·(JII¥f'
:.vii/·_,

Tara Townhouae Apta. 2 br., 1·
ball~a.l

The Daily Sentlnel-"-11• 16

Autos for Sale

Muot ooll
1168 CUIIooo
Supromo. bood tQ oxcorronl
cond~l~. 114-379-21111, ooll
from ~ p.m. on 1r.

I ~WI
1 o\1

Building
Supplies
Block, brick, _., alpoo, wfn.

112

71

~

e»Yt

pllonco, 217 E. Socond St., ·only.
·
Pomoroy, 614-892·5335 or 114- Scrop lro'!.. 'Junk farm oqulp985 -3 561 ·
mont, 77 ••novr PU lor porto.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12lll5 2br., W.O hookup, AC,
W~ prlvOiolol, RL 1181.
614-4
•
14xl5 2 br., locltod In
Evorg- Wuhot &amp; dryor
hook..,p
cobla T.V. 114-4463117 orl14-245-&amp;223.

clly aohoolo. Rodnoy 114-2455117.
1 ,_. houoo on St. Rt. 7,
bol- Aocooon lridgo, 3 bllho,
448·7002.
.
MW vln)'l aidinG, 3 gorogoo on
;01 acrn. 814.(48·'1211 or IN
WOrk ol homo. Eol!l up to Oorrott Wotoon, 1/4 mi. obovo 2 borlroomjfllor, portly fumlhood, you
utllhln, dopooll,
$100/doy. Pooplo coM youl 714- Raccoon Brldgo.
304-876-2 .
240-&amp;498 Exc L•1.
·
t

Poln1 Ple11ant, very cltan, no

1

whh ooadlng, $241. Full oln
mottrooo &amp; loundotlon otar11ng
$11. Rocllnoro otortlng $911".
UESD ledt1 druttrt. bidroom
ouhH. Dooko, wrlngor waohor, o
comptoto llno of ulod tumllwo.
35·
NFW Wootorn boola
Wori&lt;booto $18 &amp; ufs. "-toot
&amp;
t~
oolt too.) 814-448-3! I.
Supor alnglo ,..tor bod wllh
mlrrow ond 6 droworo lutl wovo,
$250. 304-E75-4815.

729 Second Avtnut. Deluxe

Apartment houtl for ult In

35 Lots

quol opportunhy houolng. Soc-

~=
:.o:.'~~~\~f.: ~
oultoo $,199-$599. Bun~ bodo

1!111/tloo, parltolly pold. $175/mo.
Call 304·675-5104.
SHADY LAWN APARTMENTS

Business
Buildings

1 acre Iota Gallipolle Ferry, city

years txptrill)nct, Powers Body

Exptrlanctd electrical counter

12x60 n\obllt home aome fur·

112·2571.

Financial

Ex.,-rltnctd body man, prater 5

Shop, 304-E75-7950.

formation call 304-882-3711. E·

mart,

Roof painting &amp; coating, trollor
roota, houses, &amp; bamt, rru u-

b.anb and ac:hao18. For rrtOre in-

$12,500. Kanauga Mobile Home

SaiH. 614-448-1662.

Middleport.

Wane

2218.

1::

Help Wanted

lor splendid oppor1unity.

do
.

379-29211.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
1985 Skrllno1 on rontod lot, liP' BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
clloncoo, zBR, 2 docka, ESTATE:v 5341 Jockoon Plko
A~~~· 1f~4f.=: $!5,500. ~~~r!~ eall':i~~~:S~l&amp;t~
2 bodroom, 11110 Llborty. 14152. Fum. Efflcloncy $175 utllftiH
All · otoe1rlc, tumlohod. $5100. od. Shoro both. 80? Socond,
11W92·7479.
Galllpollo, 114 446 4411 ohor
ap.m.
82 ft . mabllt homt lor alt.
$4000. Soo ot 5811 Gonorol Hor- Fumlohod opt, oduho, prlvato
llngor Pukwar, Middleport, OH. ontronco, 304-675-2257,
Holly Pork, 12170 whh tlp·&lt;n•. 3 Groclouo living. 1 ind 2 bod•
bedroom•, underpinning, nlct. room apartmtnta II VIllage
18800. 114·112·2489.
.
Moncr
ond
Rlvoralao
Apartmtnlt In Middleport. From
Now 1989 Mobllo HomH. 14170, $184. Coll614-i92·7767.
2&amp;3 Bodroom. 2 only, ot
$12,900, Fln.anclng available. 1· Now accepting application~ for
800·729;-4045. ·
2 bodn&gt;Om opt, tully corpotod,
applltncte, water and trath
Ropoooooold doublo wldoo,
1 1w
11113 Horton 24x40, S12,500, or
11':: pn&gt;Y ldod• M1 lntonanco
1979 HamiHan Houoo, 24x55,
lvlng ciHt to ahopplng,

Employment Services

COSMETOLOGISTS. Now Salon

~\,

il1

1178.Bayvlew 14XU, 2 br., 814-

11

5

'

to ta)k to the heac)
I
l
r· too
mt

end tablee,

)(IT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Syndicate: InC "

...
'

~

'

.

•,

~

�Page 18-The Daily Sentinel

Ponwoy-Midclaport. Ohio

Thuraday. Septanber 7. 1989

.

'

In Sutton Townsnhlp of Meigs County, just east of TR 118,
according to the. Melgs-Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Robert alack, 37, Barringer Ridge -Road
Portland, ~!aimed a minor Injury but was not immediately
treated,
The patrol said Black' s 1978 Chevrolet was disabled on the
roadway . Wayne F . Ward, 52, Rt.1, Portland. stopped to assist
Black. But, Johnny B. Hoback 16, Racine, was .unable to stop
His 1986 Ford Escort struck the back of Ward's 1978 Chevrolei
and then struck Black who was standing by the Ward vehicle.
There was no contact between the disabled car and any other
vehicle. Damage was minor to Ward vehicle and moderate to
hobl;Jack's car.
The palro! cited Hoback for failure to stop within the assured
· clear distance:

Release mock election results
· Secret;u-y of State Sherrod Brown announced today the
results of the mock election held at the Meigs County Fair.
Brown said that mock elections are held each year at various
couniJI _falrs thorughout Ohio· and are one or the most popular
programs sponsored by his office.
"The mock elec~lons gives all citizens the opportunity to voice
their opinions while learning the electrical process, " Brown
said, "By conductclng the elections, we are attempting to
familiarize all Ohioans with vodng."
In the mock election, voters approved ail four ballot issues.
· Seventy-siX percent of the voters favored additional funding for
education, 86 percent favored adding AIDS education to the
curriculum In Ohio schpols, 86 percent of those participating
wanted a law requiring motorcyclists to wear ·helmets, arid 50
percent favored the banning of assault weapons. ·
The mock election Is intended to make people feel more
comfortable with the voting process," Brown said. "Having
voter registration at county fairs allows people to register while
enjoying the fair. However, registering to vote is only the first
step. I hope people go to the polls, too,"
The mock election and voter registration took part at a booth
sponsored by the Democratic party of Meigs County In
cooperation with the Secretary of State's office.

EMS has nine Wednesday calls
Nine calls for assistance were answered by units of the Meigs
·
County Emergency Medical Service on Wednesday.
At 11:05 a.m. the Syracuse unit went to South Third Ave.,
Middleport, for Netde Hayes who was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center; at 1:19 p.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Main St.
for Juanita Clark who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and then later transferred to the Holzer Medical Center.
All: 39 p.m. the Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 2 for Marvin
Gretz who was taken to O'Bleness Hospital in Athens; at 1; 59
p.m. the Syracuse unit went to Burlingham for Marcer Miller
who was transported to the Holzer Medical Center: at 3:06p.m.
the ·Pomeroy unit took Mary Crickman from her home on
Peacock Ave. to Veterans Memorial.
Howard Pinnell was taken from the Riverside Apartments to
Pleasant Valley Hospital at 3:25p.m by the Middleport unit;
Rose Lee was transported from Chester Ro,a d by the Pomeroy
unit to Veterans at 5:41 p.m.; Carleton Drurnrn!!r was take.n
from Southern High School by the Racine unit at 5:56 p.m to
Veterans: and James Powell from Meigs Mine 2 to Holzer
Medical Center by the Ru !land unit at 6: 42 p.m. .
·

Pair sentenced by Judge Crow
Mary Ann Riffle; charged with forgery , aJld David J. Priddy,
charged with trafficking In marijuana, were sentenced Friday
by Meigs Common Pleas Judge Fred Crow III. •
.
Riffle was sentenced to six months in prison and Priddy toone
year.
Riffle has beep transported by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Departme.nt to the Ohio State Reformatory at Marysville.
Pri~dy has been transported by local au tho rilles to the Orient
Correctional Reception Center.
Ronald Davis, \VhO was found guilty by a jury of gross sexual
imposition, has also been transported to Orient. Davis's jury
conviction came last Friday .
In other court matters, a judgment entry confirming sale and
ordering dtstrtbution of sale proceeds has been filed In the case
of America's Mortgage Servicing Inc., formerly known as First
Family Mortgage Corporation of Florida, against Brian Friend,
et aL
·
A judgment of $3,774.51 has been granted the Ford Motor
Credit Company in a case against Edward E . Adams.
A restraining order has been issued against the defendant in
the case of Deborah M. Wells against William F. Wells.
And the case of Arnold Hayes, et al. against Super America,
has been dismissed.
. ,

4C:j[)~~ ... __c_o_nt~ln_u_e_d_f_ro_m__p_a_g_e_l______________~-992-2895, and Shields may be
reached at the county's development office at the intersection of
Route 7 and Union Ave. , at
992-6861. Shields. who is not in the
local office on a daily basis, will
arrange appointments as
needed.
Applications for CDBG funding
must be sumbitted to the commissioners by 4: 30 p.m. on Sept.
27. The applications will then be
reviewed by the commissioners
and Shields to determine eUgibil·
ity. A final public hearing will be
held 1 p.m. Oct. 4 in the

commissioners' office, at which
time. the eligible projects will be
announced .
According to CDBG require·
ments, no more than eight
projects may be funded.
Attending last night's hearing
were representatives of Racine,
Middleport and Rutland · VII·
lages: Salem, Salisbury and
Sutton Townships; Scipio Fire
Department; and Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce.
Mary Hobs tetter of the commiSsioners' offiCe was also
present.

Deputies probe· incidents
Jerry Grueser, o" Minersville.
reported Wednesday morning to
the Meigs County Sheriff's De·
partment that sometime between 12:30 a.m . and 8:30a.m .,
the back window of his pickup
truck had been . broken &lt;lJ!f.
Nothing was found at the scene
that could have caused the
damage.
A 15-year-old Racine area girl
was reported Wednesday to the
sheriff's. department as a runa·
way . However, the girl was
located Wednesday evening.
Charges. of contributing to the
delinquency of a minor are
pending, according to Sheriff
James M. SoulS by.
The sheriff's department also
reports that the rash of hay bale
!Ires that has been underway in
tbe county since the week of the
Meigs County'Falr, is continuing.
The bales that are being set afire
are the large, round bales of hay.
Two more hay bale fires
occurred Wednesday night in two
different locations on Mudsock
Road In Orange Township. One
bale belonged to Paul Buckley .
Sixteen bales belonged to Ml·
chael Burke.

According to the sheriff's report. a Mr. Calaway was on his
way to work when he spotted the
Buckley fire. ·Calaway notified
Buckley who immediately used a
tr ctorto push tl)e burning bale
away from the vicinity of other
bales. Firefighters and the she·
riff's department arrived to help
but Buckley sent them on up the
road to Burke's where he had
heard there was a bigger fire.

By United Pres&amp; Iftternatlonal
Showers alld thunderstorms
soaked the nation's midsection
early Thursday as heavy rains
stretched to Colorado and !nun·
dated pardons of Kansas for a
fourth straight day.
• The National Weather Service
said showers and thunderstorms
hll eastern Nebraska, western
Iowa, northwest Missouri and
spread to the Nebraska panhandle into southeast Wyoming and
northeast Colorado.
New Mexico, Louisiana and
southern · Mississippi also were
doused with rain, which reached
Into the southern Atlantic Coast
and over to northern Indiana and
lower Michigan.

Golf ball- s!~ed . hall pelted Torrington, Wyo., early Thursday
and the weather service Issued a
flood watch for northcentral
Kansas due to the threat of
locally heavy rain on grounds
already soaked from overnight
thunderstorms .
The central .Plalns region was
hll with heavy rain Wednesday,
causing flooding In parts of
Kansas. Patchy fog was blamed
In a Wisconsin school bus accident that Injured 17 people.
More than·3 Inches of rain fell
In n()rtheast Kansas, where flood·
lng closed roads, the NWS said.
Some creeks overflowed their
banks In Washlngton County.
Roads, low-lying areas and
basements were reported

flooded Wednesday in neighbor·
ing Riley and Geary counties .
Water as deep as 18 Inches
flooded a trailer court, the NWS
said. No Injuries were reported.
The thunderstorms were belng
caused by upper air disturbances
moving from New Mexico across
Kansas Into northern Missouri.

James Hayes of the NWS said tlie
heavy ,rain tliat has hit Kansas
this week was unus11al, something that occurs once every two
or three years. He said the
drought is now officially over for
the state's eastern half. which
has received above-average
rainfall for the year.

Stocks
Dally stock priCes
(As of 11 a.m.)
Bryce aud Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .............. 30
AT&amp;T .. ............. ............ ...... 38¥.
Ashland 011 ........ .............. ..39%
Bob Evans .......................... 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 16%
ctt.y Holding Co ., ................ 15'1.
Federal Mogul.. .................. 25~
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ................. 59%
Heck's ..... ,............................. %
Key Centurion ..................... 13
Lands' End ............... .... ...... 27%
Limited Inc ............. ........... 37%
Multimedia Inc ................. 104~
Rax Restaurants ...........,. ...... 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 16~
Shoney's Inc ....... ..... ........... 12~
Wendy's Intl .......................... 6
Worthington Ind .. .... :..... ... .. 24~
(Key Centurion Bancshares
declares regular quarterly $.13
dividend. Pay Oct. I.)

Page4

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~:;•!JSNOW
FRONTS:

R

-RAIN

Warm '" Cold

KATIE CROW
Daily Sentinel Correspondent
Heory Eblin, who owns and
operates Eblin's Trash Collection Servi~e. advised Syracuse
. VIllage Council Thursday night
that rates for trash services
within the .vitlage will be increased due to the increase In
landfill prices at West Columbia.
Eblin noted that rates at the
West Columbia landfill had
tripled. A load that would nor·
m~Uy cost $10 now costs him
$43.75 due to the fact that scales
have been installed
the cost

~SHOWERS
. . Static . . Occluded

r.tap shows minimum temperatures . At least 50% or any shade&lt;J area is rorecast
lr:J recJ?ive precipitation indicated .
'" ·
UPI

WEATHF:R MAP - Durlnr; early Friday momlnr;, showers and
thunderslonns · are forecast for parts of central and upper
Mississippi Valley. Showers are possible In parts oft he ceatral and
northern Plains ·with showers and thunderslorms possible In parts
of the upper Great Lakes. UPI
·

•mcrease
...

is now $12.50 per ton.
The rates for the residents of
Syracuse wltl be increased from ·
$7.00 a month to $9.50 and t)le
senior citizens rates from $5.75 to
$7.75. The Increase is based on
current landfltl prices.
Eblin did say that the rates at
West Columbia are less than
what he would pay If he would use
the Gallla County Landfill. The
new rates became effective as of
September 1.
Malcolm Parks, a representa·
live of the National Gas and Oil
Corporation, invited council to a

trash .collection rates

meeting to be held Monday, letter was the result of a recent
September 25, at 6:30p.m. in the accident In which there wa§ a
annex at Racine Fire Station. fatality and . several people
Council ·members !rom Rutland · injured.
and Racine have also been
The letter read "I was personinvited to at tend. The purpose of . ally Impressed with the time and
the meeting Is to update council · professionalism whjch was given
membersoftheprogressthathas by EMS personnel . The profes·
been made by the company over slonal manner In which Syracuse
the past year. Husbands or wives Squad · members conducted
of council members are also themselves and assisted with the
Invited to attend.
victims." Dr. Patterson exMayor Eber Pickens presented tended his sincere thanks.
a letter to council from Dr,
Mayor Pickens advised council
Richard · G. Patterson of Vete·
that a bill Is now up for passage
r~ns Memorial HospitaL The

Lotto jackpot climbs.to $12 million

.

•

numbers and are worth $75 each.
There were no Kicker tickets
sold listing the winning combina·
Ilion of 420586. But seven tickets
listed the first five digits hi order,
to be worth $5,000 each. Officials
said 74 tickets listing the first
four digits will be wo1 ih $100,
while 7087 tickets llstillg the first
three Kicker . numbers ·in order
are wortti $100 each. And 7,200
tickets witl be worth $10 for
listing the first two Kicker
numbers.
·

Sapta111har
Savings
Daysl
..
'

'

.,.

ALL THAT'S LEFT- This rubble Is all that's
left of what was once a salt stora·ge building for the
White Rock Salt Company at Minersville. After
the salt was bagged, It was stored here. From

bere, the salt bap were loaded by conveyor onto
barges. The building, located on the river side of
Route 124, was razed earUer this week.

Tucker resign~ · West Virginia
Senate post after gUilty plea

The Pomeroy Fire Depart·
ment answered 15 calls during
the month 'of August, according
to Danny S, Zirkle, fire chief.
Zirkle reported that five were in
town with the other 10 outside
town. Four were structure fires,
10 auto accidents or fires, and one
was a mtual aid calL Equipment
was driven a total of 426 miles
and 280 man hours were
recorded.

•LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS

*EASY UEDIT

*90 DAYS SAME AS CASH

TERMS

lrJ.VANIA

Salisbury Township Trustees
will meet in regular session
tonight (Thursday), 7p.m., at the
township building.

SAVE
OYER SJO

QUALITY
SYLVANIA ·'
VIDEO

,PRQDUCTS
•Color TV
•VCR's

License issued
A marriage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Jeffrey Andrew Barnltz,
21, Mason, W.Va., and Corinna
Kaye Bass, 21, Mason, W.Va.

FUU SIZE ....:_ REG. 1329.00

WHIRLPOOL MICROWAVE OVEN

I

ON SALE
NOW •

MicroComputer Touch Controla, Quick
, Detroit Cycle. Keep Warm Cycle.

SPECIAL

Hospital news
Veterans MemorlBI
Wednesday admissions: none.
Discharges: John Bohran,
Chester Young, and Paul Grady.

$2 58 .

Sale·· Sale • Sale-·
JIPEN STOCK .

BEDROOM FURNITURE MAPLE or OAK FINISH
SINGLE, DOUIIf or TRIPLE DIESSEIS, CHESTS, IEDS, NIGHT STANDS, HUTCHES

It'1 AU

FREE

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DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO
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agreement and said Tucker
admitted to an extortion of
$10,000 at Tri·State Greyhound
Park.
Tucker is the second West
VIrginia lawmaker in the past
two weeks to resign because of
corruption charges, and the
fourth major state official to ,
leave office under a cloud this
summer.
Former state Sen. Si Boetlner,
also a Democrat, resigned Aug.
28 after pleading guilty to a
federal tax charge. Boettner, is
expected to testify at Tonkovich's trial as a prosecution
witness.
On Aug. 21 former Attorney
General Charlie Brown resigned
in exchange for Kanawha County
prosecutors dropping a grand
jury investigation In to allegations .he lied during a child
custody he11rlng ..
On July 9 former Treasurer A.
James Manchin retired one day
before his impeachment trial
was to begin In the Senate over
massive losses suffered by the
Consolidated Investment Fund.

that will increase fines on all hour in alleys. Connolly noted
types of ·arrests. The bill also that motorists are to. obey ail
calls for additional training for · speed laws due to children
attending school and youngsters
all law enforcement officers.
Council also discussed repair walking and riding bikes on
of the tractor and repair and village streets. All violators will
be cited to court Connolly
upkeep of the park and pool.
Police Chief Jim Connolly warned.
Attending were Mayor
warned motorists that they must
Pickens,
Chief Connolly, JaniCe
obey the speed limits on village
Lawson,
clerk-treasurer, Jack
streets as well as the main
Williams,
Mynter Fryar, Jim
highway. The speed limit In the
Hill,
Kenny
Buckley, Ernie Sisschool zone Is 20 miles per hour,
25 miles an hour on all other son and Kathryn Crow council
village streets and · 15 miles an members.

Byrd says funding
request 'closer to law'
WASHINGTON - U.S. Sen. the Incomplete segment of Corri·
Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., said dor G. from Williamson to Miller
Thursday his funding requests Creek in Mingo County,
The Energy and Water Bill,
for $73 million to finance construction of Appalachian High· Byrd said, · spec!fles that West
way Corridors H and G in West VIrginia receive $~1 million out of
VIrginia "moved a step closer to the Appalachian Regional Combecoming law" by winning ap- mission's 1ARC) funding for
proval from two Congressional highway construction In the 1990
fiscal year that betdns Oct. 1.
commlt\ees.
''In the Energy and Water Bill,
"I succeeded in gaining approthe
House had only set aside $11
val from the Senate Appropria·
million
for Appalachian High·
!Ions Committee, which I chair,
way
construction
In West Virgl·
of $42 million in the Transporta·
nia,
yet
I
was
able
to secure $31
lion Appropriations Bill for Ap·
million
in
the
compromise
palachian highway construction
work In the state, and I won re11ched between the two
another $31 million in·the Energy chambers," ' Byrd explained.
and Water Appropriations Bill "This Is a great· victory for West
approved today , by a House- · Virginia, and I plan to see it
Senate conference c()mmlttee," through."
Byrd. said the Tr;msportatlon
Byrd said.
.
''These dollars, totaling $73 Bill also contains his funding
mlllion for Appalachian highway requests of $35.5 million that will
construction In West Virginia, allow the continuation of the
represent a great step forward Essential Air Service program
compared to the funding set that serves five communities In
aside for West Virginia last West Virginia, and $85 million for
the upgrading of Amtrak's Card!·
year," Byrd said.
Byrd said the Transportation nal passenger train in southern
Bill, which now goes to the Senate West Virginia from twice-weekly
floor, contains his proposals for to daily service.
"Roads, rails, and air service
$32 million for construction of
are
all vitally important to· the
Corridor H from Elkins to Norton
economic
development of rural
in Randolph CountY,, and $10
states
like
West Virginia, since
mUllan to initiate construction on
· they open isolated areas to the

commercial transport nf goods
and services," said Byrd. "I will
continue to do whatever I can to
upgrade the transportation net work in West Virginia ."
Byrd said . the Energy and
Water Bill included his requests
for a variety of flood control and
waterway projects in West VIrginia, totaling $197.5 million.
Byrd also won the following
funding requests, among others,
in the Energy and Water bill:
- $20.8 million. for work on
replacement of the Winfield lock
and dam on the Kanawha River
in Putnam County; - $17.9
million for renovation work on ·
lock and dam 8 on the Monongahela River at Point Marion, Pa. ;
- $13.4 million to complete work
on the Stonewall Jackson Lake in
Lewis County; - $7.5 million for
the last of seven dams comprising the Wheeling Creek wa·
tershed project In Ohio and
Marshall Counties; - $4 million
for a dam along the Lost River in
Hardy County; - $2 million for
the second phase of the Patterson
Creek w~tershed near Mannington, Marion County; - $780,000
for flood protection planning and
design for Petersburg In Grant
County and Moorefield in Hardy
County; and - $250,000 for the
Charleston Riverfront project.

Ohio receives grants to fight crime

Tucker was elected to the
Senate president's post onJan.ll
Reporting System , will allow 52 crimes.
at the beginning of the 69th
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII Gov. Richard Celeste announced separate pieces of information to • Attorney General Anthony
Legislature. He succeeded Tonkovlch In that job after Tonko·
Thursday a federal government be computerized for each crime. Celebrezze said Ohio is the only
The information will be about one of the eight or qine largest
vtch, also a Democrat, left the
award of $560,119 to Ohio for a
Legislature in 1988 to make an
sophisticated crime-reporting victims, property loss, drug and states to lack s11ch an informaunsuccessful run for governor.
system that could lead the nation alcohol Involvement, crime en- tlon network.
"The creation of the NIBRS
vironmen t and victim-offender
in that area.
Gov. Gaston Caperton, upon
relationships.
The
data
can
be
and
the financial investigation
receivi~ Tucker's letter of re·
At a news conference, the
used
to
determine
patterns
of
unit
will
put Ohio's crime investislgnation, said, "I think It's very governor also announced receipt
criine.
.
gation
and
control efforts at the
sad f6r West Virginia. very sad of a $168,000 federal grant which
For
example,
said
Celeste,
forefront
of
our nation In just a
for Mr."Tucker and his family."
wlll allow the slate attorney
Caperton must now call a
general's office to establish a computer analysis of assaults few years." said Celeste.
Celebrezze said the new finan·
special session of the Legislature . · new unit to track narcotlcs might show . that assaults i.n
money and prosecute drug taverns are rare, while assaults c!al investigation unit In the Ohio
within 10 days to select a
in homes are common. Law Bureau of Criminal Identifica·
successor to Tucker. He said he chieftains.
hopes to call the session during
The governor said the new enforcement agencies could then lion and Investigation will enable
next week's legislative interims crime reporting system, known direct their resources accord· his office to "go after the people
as the ' National Incident-Based ingly . The governor. said the behind the scenes" in illegal drug
in order to save money.
system could even help predict sales. '
This Is the first time since 1925
that the Senate has had to elect a
new president in mid-term. That
year, Charles Coffman had to
resign due to ill health.
bal~s
Senate President Pro Tern
Tony Whitlow, who will lead the
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Souisby said today vandals
Senate until a successor to
have struck the hay bales again.
Tucker is elected, said he was
WASHINGTON (UPI) - ConAbout 7:30a.m. Thursday, the sheriff's department received
"shocked and surprised" at the gressional leaders, trying to
word that a large round bale of hay at the Paul Hoffman farm on
settle the politically sensitive
news.
Pooler Road had been burned around 4 a.m .
ques lion of how to pay for the
The department had already been to two hay bale fires earlier
drug war, have called for the
Thursday morning; one on the Paul Buckley property on
creation of a "super committee''
Mudsock Road and the second on the Michael Burke property,
to accelerate President Bush's
also on Mudsock Road. Both of these fires were reported In
nearly $8 billion battle plan.
Thursday's Daily Sentinel . Orange Township Fire Department
"In my humble opinion, we
were on these calls.
have to sit down quickly and
.The first of the hay fires in the area were started on Aug. 14 .
agree how to do this," Sen.
Sheriff Soulsby advises that If anyone has information
Plant employees were working Joseph l'!lden, D·Dei., told drug
the identity of the vandals responsible for these
concerning
with 2,000 gallons of para nltroto- policy director WilHam Bennett
fires, please contact the shertrrs offtce. The indentlty of anyone
luene when II overheated, and on Thursday.
providing Information w!ll be colifldentlat
"I agree," ·Bennett replied.
released pressure that created
Ro·n atd E. Coats, 31. has been ·a rrested for the Aug. 31
But there was no agreement on
the small fire. Tim Hickin of the
burglary of the Harold Reeves residence on Union Ave. Items
Ohio Environmental Protection how to pay for the adcllUonal $2.2·
taken from the residence were recovered early Sept. 1. Coats
Agency said the chemical, which btlllon In new money Bush seeks ·
was arrested In Pomeroy Thursday evening. He is being held In
In 1 order to raise anU-drug
Is highly toxic, Is used In a dyeing
the Meigs County Jail pending a hearing In Meigs County Court.
spending In the next budget to
process.
The cloud drifted north· $7.9 b!lllon.
The White House said the
northeas I toward Hllllard, then
. dollars c.an come from money
dissipated: ·
Jack Monda, director of the Small Business Development
The presence of the cloud already tagged for other acCenter of Southeastern Ohio, will be the guest speaker at a
forced the evacuation of people in counts. Democrats such as Sen.
Continued on page 10
two apartment complexes and Edward Kennedv of Massachu·
Continued on page 10
about 20 businesses.

Congress
seeks funds
for drug war

Local news briefs--

Hay

burned by vandals

.Leaking chemicals force Columbus
residents from homes Thursday
COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI)- A.
. poisonous chemical being mixed
at a far west side company
leaked Thursday morninj!, sending an orange powder over the
area and forcing the evacuations
of several dozen people.
About 20 people covered with
that orange powder were taken to
Doctors Hospital West for a
decontamination treatment.
•'That's a complete washdown.
They'll get oxygen and irrigation
of the eyes and stay a few hours
for observation," ~aid hospital
spokesman Jeff Gutterman.

ON SALE This Wetkendl

-_/

CHARLESTON, W.Va. IUPI)
- State Senate President Larry
Tucker resigned after pleading
guilty to a federal felony charge
said to involve extortion, becoming the fourth key state official to
resign under a cloud this
summer.
U.S. Attorney Michael Carey
would not give details of the plea
agreement until it is filed in U.S.
District Court, which is expected
Friday, but a lawyer in ihe case
said it involved the extortion of
$10,000 from a dog racing track.
Tucker, a Democrat with 19
years in the Legislature, signed
the plea agreement late Wednesday, and the lawyer, James Lees,
disclosed it Thursday afternoon
during the extortion and racket·
eering trial of Tucker's predeces·
sor . as state Senate president,
Dan Tonkovich.
Lees, who is representing
Tonkovich, . told U.S. District
Judge John Copenhaver h~ had
been told about the agreement
because Tucker was scheduled
as a defense witness for Tonka·
vtch. Lees said he saw the plea

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 Conti
A Multimoctialnc. Newopapar
·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 8. 1989

Syracuse to

Pomeroy firemen
release report

Trustees to meet

5167

Vol.40, No.87 M
Copyrighted 1989

CLEVELAND (UPI) - No
Super Lotto winners in Wedneslng, specials, and Christian fel- day night's drawl.ng means Satlowship. The publiC is encour- urday night's top lotto prize will
be worth at least $12 million,
aged to at tend.announcment
Lottery Commission officials
The Ohio Valley Chapter of
Women Alive .will meet Monday . sale! no tickets - were sold for
at the Kyger Creek clubhouse in Wednesday night's drawing listCheshire. There will be a speaker ing ali six $uper Lotto numbers: •
and also oil the program will be a 3, 17, 21, 31, 33,. and 41. However
demonstration of basket weaving 145 tickets listed five of the six
by Cathy Howard. The meeting numbers to be worth $1,000each.
begins at 7 p.m. and all women And 7,470 tickets listed (our of the
ar~ invited to at tend.

.

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
In 70s. Chance of rain 20
percent. Saturday, parUy
cfoudy. IUr;h In upper 80s.
Chan~e of rain 30 percent.

•

Orange Christian Church plans meet
The ·orange Christian Church
will have their fall meeting today
through" Saturday at 7: 30 p.m.
nightly. Sunday worship will be
at 10:45 a .m. and homecoming
will be at 1: 30 p.m. The guest
speaker will be evangelist Jack
C. Prentice. There will be sing-

907

IIATIOt!AL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 9·8·8?

lutely opposed to legalizing
drugs.
"There hasn't been enough
effort . m~;~de towar!ls prevention," Collins said. "Teachers
are not oriented about this thing.
They're very demoralized. I
sense from (Bush's) speech
there was a kind of an emphasis
on the 'bootstrap' approach, the
president asking schools and .
churches to do more.
"But in Inner. cities they're
already strapped and don't. have
the resoqrces to do more. I really
feel we should start with the
schools. We should be developing
a generation of kids who are
turned off to drugs." ·

Pick-3
·Pick-4

Ohio... Continued from page 1
dealer, in some way these·people
would find out and retaliate. The
community then ,closes down to
the pollee."
A Cleveland narcotics detec·
tlve, who asked not to be
identified, said legalizing co.
caine was the only solution to the
,
problem.
"Look, we've got 25 (narcotics
detectives) on the street here,"
he said. "Even doubliiJg or
. tripling that wouldn't even make
a scratch on the problem. We'll
bust one or two (crack) houses a
day, but there's still hundreds of
others."
He added, "This is going to be
just like Vietnam- and we sure
didn't win that war."
But Collins said he was a bso-

Ohio Lottery

Connors
ousted from
U.S. Open .

.---Local news briefs...- - Heavy rains continue throughout Midwest
continued from page 1

l

Gutterman said five firefighters, two pollee officers, a local
television reporter and cameraman were among those treated.
He said '13 had been brought in
by the middle of the afternoon
"and we anticipate four or five

more."
Officials at the Orsynex Inc.
plant emphasized it was a
chemical leak, rather than an
explosion, as was Initially reported. A small fire broke out
Inside the plant, but was quickly
exdnguished by plant workers
and firefighters.

Chamber speaker named

,

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