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                  <text>Page-10- The Da1ly Sentmel

Pomeroy-Middleport, On1o

Monday, August 5, 1991

Fund-raising party raided
HUNTSVu..LE, Ohio (AP) - A
woman who raises money for charilable causes has been charged with
illegally serving alcohol at a fundraising party that was raided by
authorities.
Freda Taylor is to be arraigned
today in Bellefontaine Municipal
Court. If convicted, she could be
fined $100 to $500.
Ms. Taylor, a past president of
the Indian Lake Chamber of Commerce, was charged with selling
liquor without permit, said Pauy
Haskins, a spokeswoman for the
Ohio Department of Liquor Contml.
On July 27, two liquor control
agents, acting on an anonymous tip,
raided the party held at Ms. Taylor's Logan County home, said Ms.
Haskins.
State law requires non-profit
organizations to get a temporary

permit to sell liquor. Ms. Taylor
did not have a permiL
Guests were charged $75 per
couple to attend the Polynesiantheme party sponsored by the
chamber of commeroe.
"I've had 22 oc 23 parties in the
last five years for the Cancer Society, for education. I've been a good
community supporter for many
years. This ha&lt;; certainly been a bad
experience for me and my family,"
Ms. Tayloc said.
"I never heard of the word 'permit' before. We've had all kinds 01
parties up here," she said.
On July 25, two days before the
event, a liquor agent called the
chamber of commerce office,
informing the group that serving
alcohol without a permit is illegal,
Ms. Haskins said.
" The depanment. recognizes a
lot of people don't know what the

Browns drop
pre-season
opener

liquor laws are. ll's not a situation
where we say, ' Let's go get
them ." ' she said. The department
had received a copy of an ad that
appeared in an Indian Lake-area
newspaper promoting the event.
Ms. Haskins said it was possible
that a permit, which usually takes
I 5 days tD acquire, could have been
issued if chamber members had
returned the liquor department's
calls.
On July 26, the liquor department called again, she said. Ms.
Taylor said a chamber member
informed her of the call, but she
said she thought it was something
that could be handled Monday, two
days after the party.
"In reality, there was a communication problem," Taylor said. "I
guess I lake the blame because I
dido 't pursue the phone call."

Fourth annual doll show slated

Community calendar

in the rugged Sierra Nevada area
180 miles southeast of San Francisco.
Yosemite
Superintendent
Michael Finley acknowledged the
park wants to buy the land but said
park service officials are not trying
to force people to sell.
"Our general management plan
says we will acquire that property
from willing sellers," Finley said.
"But our position has always been,
meet the same (health) standards,
let it be professionally evaluated
and let the chips fall where they
may. "

Blackened granite boulders and
the burned-out husks of pine and
oak trees are reminders of the blaze
that scorched more than 26,000
acres. The fues forced the closing
of Yosemite for 11 days, the only
time in the park's 100-year history
that it was closed.
Ferns and lupin are returning,
but Focesra won' t resemble its former self for years. Many residents
wonder if they will be around to
watch tbe area recover.
Four of six people who have
filed applications to rebuild have
been granted permits thus far.
Dozens of others are waiting to see
wbat happens with the remaining

two before filing. Major sticking
points have been sewage and water
rules that, among other things,
require that a septic tank be no
closer than 100 feet to a well.
Residents say the codes are too
strict for an area where houses
were built in the 1940s.
Finley acknowledged regulations have been tightened over the
years. "Foresra was kind of a backwater - an out-oi-the-way place
- and there was no construction
going on," he said.
Residents also complained about
the eviction after the fire of four
households that sold the park service their property in return for an
annual lease equal to I percent of
the sale price.
After the blaze, tenants were
told they were being evicted
because the frre had destroyed park
employee housing and the properties were needed to house workers.
George and Lucille Lange said
park personnel had led them to
believe they could remain in Foresta the rest of their lives, though
such a clause wasn't in the contract.
They have been ordered to leave
by June. Park officials have denied
making any such promises.

Great scot! Designers are mad about plaid

Names in the news

If you do,· Contact Jean Trussell, Housing
Spedalist, for further information.
Phone (614) 992-6712

skinny pants, ankle boots - and
racy black leather motorcycle jackets to wear anytime, anywhere.
"Our number one trend for fall
is color, ranging from brights to
jewel tones, color blocking, plaids
and black and white combined with
red," says Karen Bohnhoff, vice
president of public relations for
Dayton Hudson Corp. in Min -

neapolis.

pants, $215, are a water resistant
blend of nylon, couon and spandex.
Add A-Line's polyester and nylon
jacket in lime with zip-off sleeves,
$285.
Also. look for stirrups in zany
patterns such as houndstooth or a
mustard and purple plaid, all with a
big top. Bohnhoff suggests a cardigan updated with color blocking
and zippers, an over-sized turtleneck or a big shin.
The perfect ending?
"The proportion of a big tunic
over a slim leg is best finished off
with short boots," Bohnhoff says.
"The components work well for
walks in the woods, riding bicycles
and doing Saturday errands.''
Many have zip closures. Nordstrom's Davies suggests those in
black suede or patent with a midheel. "Black is the good neutral,"
she says, although colors such as
fuchsia or purple are strong contenders.
Whatever the color, match them
with opaque stockings. "It gives
the longest line to the leg," Davies
says.
The shon pleated skirt is a musthave accordmg to Kaner, preferably in thin wool crepe or georgette
or chiffon that gives it 11-month
wearability.

"The most popular palette," she
says, "is the red family, from purple to burgundy, scarlet to flame.' ·
Look for it head to toe.
A jacket, says Kanes, is the most
vital and versatile piece in a
wardrobe. New styles are long and
shapely, with a peplum or cropped
at the waist and Zipped up scubastyle.
'·A jacket works over almost
everything from leggings to short
skins to catsuits to jeans," says
Sarah Davies, fashion director for
Nordstmm. headquartered in Seattie.
Two bright ones to catch her eye
are by Gemma Kahng: a tangerine
wool knit cropped jacket with purple and gold dove-shaped buttons,
$594, and a fuchsia tweed banded
in lime green, $830.
. Some of the best-dressed legs,
thts season w1ll be stepping out in
sleek ski pants . "It's a trend
"It's a way to update the long
inspired by athletic gear," Davies
says.
jacket you may already have in
Anne Klein 's A-Line black ski your wardrobe, she says.

Sometfr.ing (joorf's Yt{ways Coof:j.ng Ytt

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TUESDAY -Creamed Chicken over Biscuits
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
WEDNESDAY- Philly Sandwich, Fries, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
THURSDAY- Chopped Steak, Choice of Potato
Soup &amp; Salad Bar
FRIDAY· Chick!ln Sandwich, Fries, Soup &amp; Salad Bar roESDAT • THilJISDAT, CIIILDU!f VlfDER 12 ICAT li'REit
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Low Iooigb I lo mid -60s.
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Page4

1 Se&lt;;Uon , 10 Pagea 25 centa

1991

A Multimedia Inc.

Pay raises pass first reading

Residents burned out in Yosemite blaze
say park is trying to force them out
By NOEL K. WILSON
Assodated Press Writer
YOSEMITE
NATIONAL
PARK, Calif. (AP) - One year
ago, 70 homes surrounded by
Yosemite National Park burned to
THRILL AND CHILLS • Twehe-year-old ence Sunday. His 5-year-old cousin; Cory King,
the ground. Now homeowners say
Tony Thomas, left, finds tbe kiddie roller coast- was less thrilled, actually chilled, about it. (AP)
the National Park Service is blocker at tbe Ohio State Fair an exhilarating experiing rebuilding efforts in an attempt
to foroe them out.
"I still dream about my home
every night," said Marion Patterson, who was in Utah last August
FINDLAY · The Fon Findlay Boslon, will be doing doll and bear and country. Also on sale will be when sbe learned flames were ragDoll Fanciers Club is sponsoring appraisals at the show. She is a doll clothes, supplies, patterns and ing through the park. "All the
things I had, all I was going to
its founh annual Public Doll Show. member of the Auctioneer's Asso- accessories.
A snack bar with homemade work on in my retirement were
Sale and Competition on Aug. 18 ciation and a member of United
at the Old Barn Auction. Route Federation of Doll Clubs, Inc. food will be open all day. There there - and it burned, it all
224-W (Exit 159 off 1-75) in Find- Appraisals are limited to two dolls will be hourly door prizes given burned."
lay from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
By the time she returned, Patterper person with a $2 charge per away.
Admission is $2 for adults and doll.
Proceeds from the show are son's house and 69 others were
$1 for children 12 and under.
Dealers from surrounding states given to area charitable organiza- destmyed. Only 18 houses on eight
Barbara Blevins, a former Find- and Ohio will featurc all kinds of tions. For show information or acres of private land in the area
lay resident , now living in New bears and dolls - including antique. competition forms you may call known as Foresra still stood.
reproduction, collectible, original 419-422-7577.
Pauerson and others who lost
homes in the forest rue believe the
National Park Service is trying to
make them sell. The fire, Patterson
said, was "a convenient way to get
us to go."
Since the fire, Patterson said,
Community Calendar items Friday. Classes are held from 6:30- in the Multi-purpose health build- residents trying to rebuild have
appear two days before an event 8:30 p.m . To register call the ing on Mulberry Heights.
been stalled by strict sewage and
and the day of that event. Hems church at 742-2060. The program
water regulations that residents say
must be received weD in advance features Bible study, crafts, activiwere never rigidly enforced before
CHESTER - Mrs. Joan Tewksto assure publication in the cal- ties and music.
bary, R.N., will give skin tests
endar.
Monday from 4:30-6:30 p.m. at the
SYRACUSE • The Sutton Chester Fire Slation.
MONDAY
Township Trustees will meet MonPOMEROY - Open Gym for day at 7:30 p.m . in the Syracuse
TUESDAY
By FRANCINE PARNES
girls volleyball, grades 9-12, will Municipal Building.
MIDDLEPORT - The MiddleFor AP Special Features
be held at Meigs High School
port Masonic Lodge No. 363 F and
There's enough plaid out there
Monday through Thursday from
REEDSVILLE - The Olive AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
9:30-11 a.m. Practice will begin on Township Trustees will meet Mon- There will be work in the E. A. for fall to pave all the roads in the
Scottish highlands.
Friday, Aug. 9. All girls in grades day at the Reedsville firehouse at degree.
There are plaid handbags and
9-12 interested in playing are 7:30p.m.
headbands.
Plaid dresses, jumpers,
encouraged to attend.
POMEROY • The American
MARlETT A - Spina Bifida Legion Post 39 Drew Webster of skirts and jackets. Plaid shoes,
LETART - The Letart Township Suppon Group meeting, Monday at Pomeroy will meet Tuesday at the plaid jewelry. And, of course, plaid
· Trustees will meet Monday at 7 7p.m.
post home. Dinner at 7 p.m., meet- scarves.
p.m. at the office building.
Don't fret it's ubiquity. It's an
mg at 8 p.m. All members urged to
easy, budget-friendly update. An
POMEROY - Vacation Bible attend.
REEDSVU..LE - The Reedsville School at the First Southern Baptist
investment of just $39 at The LimChurch of the Nazarene will hold Church in Pomeroy will be held
ited,
for example, will get a red
MILLWOOD, W.VA - The
Vacation Bible School Monday Monday through Friday from 6:30- River Valley Herbalists will meet plaid cotton and Lycra skin with
through Friday from 6-8:30 p.m . 9 p.m. The public is invited.
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home of side zipper pockets.
for children to age 13. Adult class
Plaid is a versatile look, showGlenna Tucker, Millwood, W.Va.
will be offered. Those age 14 and
ing
up in traditional schoolgirl tarRACINE - The Southern Local
over are invited to assist with the School Board will hold a special
tans
as well as in new hot combinaPOMEROY - Tire Pomeroy
program. The public is invited.
tions
of color, fabric and style.
meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at the Eastern Star will meet Tuesday at
"If
you were to buy only one
high school.
7:30 p.m. Members wear chapter
RACINE - The Southern Boostnew
thing
for fall, in my opinion
dresses.
ers wiD meet Monday at 7:30 p.m.
it'd
have
to
be plaid," says Joan
POMEROY- The Fellowship
to work on the football programs. Church of hte Nazarene in
Kaner,
senior
v1ce president and
PORTLAND • The Stiversville
Those having ads should bring Reedsville will have vacation Bible
fashion director at Neiman Marcus.
Word
of
Faith
Church
will
have
a
them to this meeting. Anyone school Monday through Friday bake sale fundraiser on Tuesday at
A new plaid jacket will perk up
wanting to help is invited to attend.
last season's. pants and skirts of
from ~to 8:30 p.m. Ther will be from 9 a.m. to dark on Stiversville
complementary hues, or tanan flats
both children and adult classes and Road in Portland. Rain will cancel.
MIDDLEPORT - Tiny Tech the public is invited to attend.
Call Pastor David Dailey for fur- with proper tights can give new life
Preschool will have an open house
to an old suit.
ther information or directions, 985on Monday at 6 p.m. at the United
For a Glen plaid with a jolt, try
MIDDLEPORT · "Around the 4482.
PenteCOstal Church in Middlepon.
Adrienne Vittadini's marigold and
World with Jesus" is the theme of
magenta suit. The double-breasted
Vacation Bible School at Victory
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle- Baptist Church in Middleport Monwool blazer, $370, is worn over
NELSONVu..LE
•
The
Hocking
port Arts Council will offer a t-sltirt day through Friday, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Valley Community Residential
matching slim skin, $195.
designs with paint class, for chil- nightly. Public invited.
Making a foray into evening are
Center Board will meet Wednesday
dren on Monday at I p.m. Michele
extravagantly embroidered plaids.
at the Quality Inn Hocking Valley
Garretson is instructor. Each child
"A new twist," Kaner says, "is
PORTLAND - The Portland in Nelsonville from 11 a.m . to I
is to bring his or her own t-shirt Elementary PTO will meet Monday p.m.
adding sequins or beads or braid
and a card board to go under the at 7:30p.m. at the school.
trim. ' '
shin. Cost of the class is $7 .50.
Scipio
PAGEVILLE
The
A strong seller, she predicts,
4(74-MR2675 to register.
POMEROY - Joan Tewksbary, Township Trustees will meet will be Oscar de Ia Renta's short
R.N., will give skin tests to
RUTLAND • Vacation Bible employees of Meigs Local School Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the beaded pleated skirt in red plaid
silk, $4,400, with black longSchool will begin at the Rutland District on Monday and Tuesday Pageville Township Building.
sleeved wool crewneck, $470.
Church of God Monday through from 8:30-11:30 a.m. al her office
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
With all the fuss over plaid. is
Springs Grange will meet Wednes- there anything else?
day at 8 p.m., instead of Thursday.
Color. color. color.
Annual inspection will be held and
Shapely jackets, kicky pleats,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Don nearly two years perfecting the all members are urged to attend.
Ameche has wrapped up filming script. "Please don ' t change a
the new comedy "Folks" just in word," Lubitsch told them.
time to see a tribute to his 58 years
And they didn't.
in front of a camera.
"All I had to do was learn my
A retrospective this weekend lines every morning and go to
Would you like to purchase a SOxl 00 ft. buildincludes excerpts from 10 Ameche work," Ameche said. "I never had
ing lot in a good location for only S3SOO?
films, including two of his more to worry about what I was going to
recent effons, 1985's " Cocoon" do with them. I knew I was in perWould you lilce to build a new home and pay
and 1983's "'l'rading Places."
fect hands."
Ameehc, 83, said he's glad the
no real estate taxes for 1S years? ·
tribute will open with his favorite
film, "Heaven Can Wait,"
DECATUR, Ala. (AP) Would you_li.. to have up to SSOOO FREE
released in 1943. It stars Ameche Singer.W~lie D.'s mother says seeas an 1890s playboy who goes to IDg h1m JUmp around in black
for site improvements on your building loti
hell and is sent to heaven in a leather pants in music videos
mocking gesture by Satan.
instead of playing college tennis
The 1978 film "Heaven Can has taken some getting used to, but
, Wait," which starred Warren Beat- she has adapted.
ty was a remake of die 1941 film
"One o( my friends aslced how I
"Here Comes Mr. Jordan" and could stand seeing my son in tight
unrelated to Amecbe's fJim.
leather pants on tbe video, but that
For his movie, Ameche said, didn't faze me at all," Jane
23 7 lace Strttt, Mlthlltpert Village Offices
director Ernst Lubitsch called the McClung said in a recent interview.
Tille lervlee .. , ....... tllrotllll tile Jolllt efforia ol the vm.,e
cast together the flr5t day of shoot- "You have to accept it. ... It's like
"' Mlddlepel1111d tile Governer•a Ofllee ol Appalacllla.
ing and told them be and writer a costume.' '
Samson Raphaelson had spent

Ohio Lottery

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News StafT
First readings of ordinances
granting pay raises to village officials were conducted when
Pomeroy Village Council met in
regular session Monday evening.
All readings were approved last
night, but not without dissension
from some council members.
The council voted 3-2 to raise
the salary of the mayor to $6,000
per year. Council member Bruce
Reed abstained. Councilmen Bryan
Shank and Thomas Werry voted
against the raise, while members
Betty Baronick, Larry Weluung
and Bill Young voted in favor of
the raise. Reed and Wehrung are
both seeking election to th e
mayor's office in November.
Accordin~ to Mayor Richard
Seyler, the ume involved in the
mayor's job warrants an i11crease in

salary. Seyler has stated previously
and reiterated Monday evening that
he has paid some expenses related
to the job out of his pocket. Seyler
curren~y is paid $3,400 per year as
mayor.
Shank, Werry and Wehrung
voied against raismg council memhers ' salaries, and Baronick, Reed
and Young voted in favor. Seyler
cast the deciding vote in favor of
the raises.
Th e proposed increase would
raise the salaries of council memhers from $25 per meeting to $30
and the council president's salary
to $40. Currently, Wehrung, the
president of the board, does not
receive extra money for attending
the meetings.
Council also unanimously voted
to continue a raise for the position
of village clerk. That ratse wa s
granted earlier this year, but was
set to expire in January.
Two more readings of and votes

on the raises must be conducted
before rassage. All raises in question , i passed , would become
effective in January, 1992.
Council agreed to place two
levy renewals on the November
ballot One levy - a two-mill, five
year levy - would provide $156.000
for the operation of the fl.fe depanment. That money, if approved by
the voters, would probably be spent
on the purchase of new pumper
truck for the department to replace
a 1968 truck currenuy in use.
Clerk Brenda Morris slaied that
Fire Chief Danny Zirkle has estimated the cost of the truck at
$150,000.
The second proposed levy
renewal, a one-mill levy for street
lights, would generate $15,694.
Council voted to place two cur·
ren~y unused street lights within
needed areas of the village.
Young presented council with a
petition si~ned by residents of the

Dumpsters are a thing of the
past at selected state parks
WREATH FOR A-BOMB VICTIMS- Japanese Prime Minister
Tosbiki Kaifu carries a wreath of flowers to the memorial or atomic
bomb victims to otTer a prayer during the·memorial service at the
Hlroshi.ma Peace Memorial Park Tuesday. Japan is observing the
46th anniversary of the atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima. (AP)

· ftnii1versary of Hiroshima
bombing observed today
HIROSHIMA, Japan (AP) Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu
praised nuclear disarmament gains
today as he joined more than
50,000 people for a solemn commemoration of the 46th anniversary
of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.
The city paused for a silent
prayer at 8: 15 a.m .. the exact
moment in 1945 when a blinding
flash killed thousands in the
world's first atomic attack.
"I pay my deep respects to the
citizens of Hiroshima, who have
built this city of international peace
from the ashes," Kaifu told the
crowd. "Tragic experience is a
warning that must be shared with
the world for the sake of the human

race."

Japan's constitution, written at
U.S. msistence after World War II,
bans the use of all but defensive
force. Parliament is, however ,
debating whether the nation's Self
Defense Forces should be allowed
to join international operations like
the Persian Gulf War coalition.
Kaifu has endorsed a role for
Japan's military in international
peacekeeping , but with some
restrictions.
In his remarks, the prime minister noted the U.S.-Soviet agreement

on reducing long-range nuclear
weapons and the closing of the
book on the Cold War.
The 55,000 people gathered
with Kaifu in the cool early morning bowed their heads. Then
mournful bells peeled, and 1,500
doves symbolizing peace were
released into a sunny skies that
belied the somberness of the ceremony.
Exactly 46 years ago, the bomb
unleashed a devastating fireball
that killed 140,000 people. Three
days later, a second atom bomb
was dropped on Nagasaki, killing
70,000 people.
Mayor Takashi Hiraoka, as pan
of an annual appeal for the
"preservation of the human race".
c11lled for renewed efforts to eslablish peaceful resolutionS' to conflicts.
"Let all peoples everywhere
recognize the folly and futility of
war, reaffllm the treasure of peace,
and work together for human happiness," he said, appealin~ this
year for an end to nuclear tesung.
Throughout the day, a steady
stream of people, some in black
mourning, bowed before the
memorials for the bomb's victims,
offering flowers, incense and water
to console the dead.

r----Local briefs----.
Special applications available
Special management antlerless deer permit applications for 1991
are available at the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District
Office, 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Applications must be mailed
before Aug. 16. The office is open between 8 a.m. and 4:30 Monday
through Friday.

Miller to have booth at fair
The office of lOth District Congressman Clarence E. Miller will
be represented at the Meigs County Fair next week to assist area
residents with any concerns they may have with the federal government
A public opinion ~ on national issues will also be conducted .
from the Miller bootli during .!he fair. Questions on Social Security,
national health care, the use of the military, medical research and
Soviet relations highlight this year's fair poll.
The office will be staffed from 12:30 p.m to 9 p.m each·day by a
field representative from the Congressman's Distnct Office.

By BRIAN J . REED
Sentinel News StafT
Unsightly dumpsters will be a
thing of the past at Forked Run
State Park near Reedsville and at
other selected state parks this summer.
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources officials have launched
the "Carry In/Carry Out" program
which encourages park visitors to
take out with them any items that
they bring into a p;u-k area.
"Rather than disposing of trash
on site, we are asking park visitors
to 'carry out' their trash, recycle
what they can and properly dispose
of the rest," ODNR Director
Frances Buchholzer said. "This
program will also educate visitors
about separating recyclables from
their trash and taking the materials
to a local collection center."
In addition to eliminatin~ ugly
eyesores, ODNR officials S81d that
removal of the dumpsters should
reduce the number of bees, other
insects and nuisance animals in
public picnic areas and give a more
na1ural appearance to park areas.
From a fmancial standpoint, the
state parks in Ohio are faced with
increasing trash-hauling costs and a
rapidly decreasing budget.
With assistance from the ODNR
Division of Litter Prevention and
Recycling, the Carry In/Carry Out
Program will use signs and printed
information to educate the public
about a variety of solid waste
issues - including litter prevention
and recycling - to keep the park

clean.
According to Forked Run Park
Manager Randy Wachter, the program will be implemented at the
park in two to three weeks, or as
soon as the signs arrive on-siiC.
Wachter reports that the campgrounds and the concession areas at
Forked Run will not be affected by
the new program this year. However, dumps\Cll$ will be removed from
all of the picn ic areas and the
campground areas.
Those using the areas affected
will have no place to leave their

This symbol will mark
locations in Forked Run State
Park and other participating
state parks where tbe "Carry
In/Carry Out" program will
go into effect. Visitors to these
areas will be encouraged to
take their garbage with them
wbeo tbey leave selected areas
or the parks.

'·

.

BERNARD GILKEY

Gilkey to
Health Recovery Services receives grant seek trustee
position
The Health Recovery Services
which works in a four-county area
including Meigs has been selected
as recipient of a grant through the
Ohio Department of Alcohol and
Drug Addiction Services.
The funding will be used to train
an individual in drug and alcohol
prevention techniques. The person
will work as a VISTA volunteer
under HRS supervision during a
year long training period _and after

that time could be reaay tor a pre- general relief in the form of food
ceptorship as a prevenuon special- stamps as as Blue Cross/Blue
ist subject to cenification.
Shield medical benefits.
As explained by Belinda FlemAnother plus of the program ,
ing, Prevention Program Manager, Fleming said, is that time put in as
an acceptable applicant would be a VISTA Volunteer can be applied
someone with a desire to work in to paying off any form of outstandthe field, somewhat assertive, with ing student loan. Benefits received
a high school diploma. Although through VISTA will not, however,
the state money would probably disqualify the recipients for any
not be enough by itself to live on, other government benefits such as
the trainee would be eligible for Social Security.
Besides such training as attending conventions and workshops,
the person would do educational
)
work in local schools and communities. Deadline for applying is
Aug. 15. Any additional information may be obtained from Fleming, 28 N. College St, Athens, 1800-645-8287.

Judging Friday

Woman hurt in one-car wreck
A one-car auto accident on Pearl Street in Middlepon around 4
a.m. Tuesday resulted in heavy property damage and injury to the
driver.
According to Middlepon police, Carol A. Riffle, Racine, was
traveling south on Pearl Street when she lost control of her vehicle.
It went off the left side of the street, hit a tree, struck a porch at 738
Continued on ~~~ge 3

refuse after a picnic, and Wachter
anticipates that littering may be a
problem at Forked Run until park
users get accustomed to the lack of
trash containers in the picnic areas.
He explained that staffers at the
park were prepared for this problem, and that the park planned to
continue issuing trash bags to park
users through the office upon
request
However, an informal survey of
park users conducted recently by
Wachter resulted in a largely favorable response to the new program,
which is aimed at encouraging
campers and other park users to
"reduce, reuse and recycle."
Wachter says that a new
brochure offering tips to picnickers
will be fonhcoming from Columbus, but in the meantime, he slates
that the first rule of thumb for those
·planning to visit Forked Run to picnic would be to carry foods in plastic or other reusable containers that
can be taken home after the picnic,
.and to bring a trash bag or other
container to transport trash and
other non-recyclables home.
Of course, the state is encouraging park users to recycle those aluminum, paper and plastic products
that can be recycled, and those
products should be packed separately after a picnic.
Funher information concerning
the program will be available at the
park offices or by contacting the
Ohio State Parks Information Center at 1952 Belchcr Drive, Columbus, Ohio 43224.

400 block .of Spnng Avenue, who
stated that a rash of theft and vandalism in the area could be alleviated with additional street lights.
Werry stated that other areas of
the village were more in need of
additional street lights, including
the area surrounding the MG M
property and the Pleasant Ridge
community.
With Ba ronick voting against
the light placement (also stating
thai other areas were more in need
of lighting) and Young abstaining
(he lives in the Spring Avenue
area), the motion to place the lights
on Spring Avenu e and Pleasant
Ridge passed.
Council agreed 10 spend an estimated $1,385 to pave a portion of
East Main Street from the new Nye
Av ~ nue intersection to the Food
Shop. (All of Main Street is to be
paved in 1992). Discussion was
also held regarding the need for
pothole repair and other tar-related
work in the village, including
repairs on Lincoln Heights, which
will be included in the East Main
Street contract
Council also:
• approved the mayor's report of
fines collected in July in the
amount of $3,544;
• held second readings on a resolution for a transfer of funds into
the cemetery account and a resolution authorizing financing for the
new village police eruiser;
• approved the interdepartmental
transfer of $!,000 for Public
Employee Retirement System benefits for Clerk Brenda Morris;
• discussed lime frame for
repairing streets after water leaks
are repairoo;
• discussed a complaint regarding a dead tree on Maple Street
with specific discussion surroundmg liability and ownership.

MILLER BOOTH AT MEIGS FAIR· The mobile ofllce or
Congressman Cta.-eoce MUter will be at the Melp County Fair all
next week. Miller's r~etd representatives will stafT the otr'tu from
1Z:30 to 9 p.m. each day.

There will be a make-up judging
·on Friday for any Cub or Boy
Scout Explorer that did not bave a
project judged. If you have a project to be judged call Brenda Neutzlinj! at 9'1?- ~770 for funher informauon.
Patrol duty for all B.S.A. units
exhibiting at the Meigs County Fair
is as follows: 10-11 a.m. • Pack
245; 11 a.m. to noon • Troop 240;
noon to I p.m. - Pack 240; 1-2 p.m.
• Troop 249; 2-3 p.m. • Pack 249;
3-4 p.m. -Pack 241 ; 4-5 p.m. •
Pack 235; 5-6 p.m. • Troop 245; 67 p.m . • Pack 246; 7-8 p.m. · Pack
246; 8-9 p.m. - Troop 235; and 9
p.m. to m1dnight · Post 230.

Bernard Gilkey of Middleport
will seek election to the position of
Salisbury Township Trustee in
November.
Gilkey has , in the past, served as
a Township Trustee for 13 years
and served for two years as a
Meigs County Commissioner. He
also served for two years as the
superintendent of the Ohio Depanment of Transportation's Meigs
County Garage.
Additionally, Gilkey acted as
the County Supervisor of the Meigs
County Ltuer Control Program for
several years both county-wide and
for the Village of Middleport
Gilkey also was elected to the
position of Central Commiteeman
for Middleport Founh Ward, where
he resides, and served in that position for several years.
Gilkey is a member of the
Meigs County Senior Citizens, a
Veteran of \vorld War II, the Ohio
Trustee and Clerks Association,
V.F.W. Post 9926 and Fraternal
Order of Eagles 2171.

Chamber to meet
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce will meet in full session
on Tuesday, Aug. 12, at noon at
Overbrook Center in Middlepon. A
representative from Congressman
Clarence Millcr's office will be the
guest spealcer.

�·----------·----· .... ____.
Thesday, Auguat 6, 1891

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTE D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON A R~

t,~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L . WINGETI'
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Generlll Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

\

A&amp;slstant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inla nd Daily Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE TTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should

be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing apd must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Communists free to leave,
but not free to enter
By MIKE FEINSILBER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Through 40 years of Cold War, the West scolded
the Soviet empire for using barbed wire and guard lowers to keep its citizenry locked within their borders. The taunting watchword was, "Let
your people go."
·
The freedom to leave one's country for a better deal somewhere else,
said the West, was nothinj! less thim.a fundamental human right.
"But," asks Bill Frelick, a policy' analyst at the U.S. Committee for
Refugees, " is there a comparable right on 'the other side of the door? Is
there an automatic right to enter'? ' '
It is a question beginning to haunt the democracies of the West.
Now that the barriers have fallen and people are leaving the Soviet
Union and Eastern Europe by the hundreds of thousands, fear of foreigners is gripping Western Europe.
The feared are ethnic Turks leaving Bulgaria, Albanians taking a short
boat ride to Italy, Romanians sneaking through Poland to swim the border
rivers into Germany, Armenians looking toward resettling in Armenian
colonies in France or the United States. They're Gennans from what used
to be East Germany talcing the short trek into what was West Germany.
They leave without papers or authority. They flee not out of fear, but to
survive.
They are looking for the better life, and they know it .will not be found
on the old soil.
In 1984, during the chilly days of the .Cold War, 100,000 East Europeans managed to escape. and find a place in the West; in 1989, after the
barriers fell, that number Jumped to 1.2 milhon.
And the numbers are likely to keep growing.
Dennis Gallagher, who runs a Washington think tank called the
Refugee Policy Group,_sees worst-case and best-case scenarios.
Here is the bad vers1on! Old hatreds and revolullon tear apart what was
the Soviet empire. (Already happening in Yugoslavia.) The Soviet
republics break away from Moscow and kick out outsiders they don't
view as ethnically desirable.1The Czechs and the Slovaks go their separate
ways. Old lands like Croatia re-emerge in which non-ethic residents finds
themselves an unwelcome minority. The Soviet Union collapses into economic chaos.
The good version: Western-style capitalism takes root in what was
once the Soviet empire. But without a communist system to promise
everyone a job, widescale unemployment is an inevitable side effect.
(Poland already is experiencing uneniploymenL) By some estimates burying communism wiD cost 30 million Soviets their jobs.
Under either scenario, people are likely to be on the move, in search of
safety or of a better life. Fear or famine- both are drivin~ forces.
In Yugoslavia, "I suspect what we are going to see ts more fighting
and therefore more displacements of populations,'' said another expert,
Roger Winter, Washington director of the U.S. Committee for Refugees.
"They're going to go somewhere. To Italy? To Austria? To Hungary? I
don't know where.''
Asked Galla!!l!er: ''If the Soviet Union were to fall apart, where would
the ethnic RUSSI8DS go?" He points. out that 60 million ethnic Russians
live in other Soviet republics and they already are under pressure to leave.
Ethnic Germans are moving from all over Europe into Germany,
already pressed by jts attempts to rebuild th~ economx in what was East
Germany. That explains why, at last month s econom1c summ1t m London, the champion of Western aid for the staggering Soviet economy was
Gennan Chancellor Helmut Kohl.
"The Eastern Europeans are scared to death of the problem," Gallagher said.
Besieged by their own economic uoubles, they don't want to have to
find a place for destitute people who come from the land of their former
oppressor, the Soviet Union.
.
·
"There are going to be massive population readjustments over the next
10 years, some internal and some across borders," Gallagher concluded.
"And the capacity of states Ill absorb those numbers are stretched." _
Western Europe - unlike the United States, Canada and Australta doesn't have the give-me-your-tired, your-pOor ttadition of welcoming the
hungry or the prosecuted, he pointed out.
What the world must keep in mind as it grapples with this problem,
said Winter, is its humAn dimension. These mass migrations involve peo-

I

ple." Both Ieavmg
' and staymg
' takes a I
. a nasty
ot f
o courage i f
you, re m
situation," he said. "Even if home is not so nice, it's not so easy to leave
family, village, traditions, personal history, language. None of us have the
moral right to sit in judgment of those who make either choice.''
EDITOR 'S NOTE: Mike Feinsilber has covered events in Washington
since 1968.

·I

Today in history
j

I

)

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Tuesday, Aug. 6, the 218th day of 1991. There are 147 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History!
On Aug. 6, 1945 , the United States dropped an atomic bomb on
Hiroshima, Japan, killing an estimated 140,000 people in the first use of a
nuclear weapon in warfare.
On this date:
In 1787, the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia began to debate
the articles contained in a draft of the U.S. Constitution.
· In 1806, the Holy Roman Empire went out of existence as Emperor
Francis I abdicated.
In !825, Bolivia declared its independence frqm Peru.
In !890, the electric chair was used for the first time as convicted murderer William Kemmler was executed at Auburn State Prison in New
Yorlc.
.
.
.
_ .
In 1890 Cy Young gamed the ftrSt of hts 511 maJor league v1ctones as
he pitched Cleveland to a 6-1 win over Chicago.
In 1914, Austria-Hungary declared war against Russia and Serbia
declared war against Germany.
In 1926, Warner Brothers premiered it~ Vitaphone sound-on-disc
movie system in New York. (A shon film mttoducmg the process was
shown along with a feature film, "Don Juan.")
In !926, Gertrude ~erie of Ne~ York became the first American
woman to swim the English channel, m some 14 1/2 hours.
In 1948 Bob Mathias wqn the decathlon at the London Olympics.
In 1962: Jamaica became an independent dominion within the British
Commonwealth.
In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act
into law.

'

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~!e::t'Y: AUAL!!tt 6~ 1JJ91

WASHINGTON - An FBI
investigation of bribery allegations
may split open yet another Pentagon procurement scandal, this
oneexposingconttactorswhodon't
do the work the taxpayers pay them
to do.
The early focus of the investigalion is on Sooner Defense of Florida , wh ich took $11 million in
advance payments from liJe Army
to build detonation devices, and
gave excuses in return.
We reported in 1989 that the
Army kept giving Sooner money
and business, despite many indicators that the small company was
not delivering on its end of the bargain. By the time the Pentagon got
wise to Sooner, the firm was liquidating its assets in bankruptcy.
Pentagon investigators initially
reported that Sooner had been
cheating the government. The FBI
has since discovered that the Army
weapons inspector assigned to
monnor the Sooner contract may

~·

Names for Pettit Jury duty have
been selected in the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas for the
September 1991 tenn.
Dale Macolm Kautz, Pomeroy;
Charles E. Johnston, Pomeroy;
Ethel M. Arbaugh, Tuppers Plains;
Steve Patrick Mather, LongtBot•
tom; Leonard Buford Huffman,
Shade; Cecil Orlando Toban,
Pomeroy; Doug W. Beaver,
Pomeroy ; Kathy Sue Wilson,
Pomeroy; John K. Bentz, Long
Bottom ; Dawna Rae Grueser,
Racine; Valerie L. Woods,
Pomeroy; Connie Jo Quivey ~
Shade; Cathy Ann Laudermilt,
Shade; Raymond Eugene Klein,
Pomeroy; Daniel Ray Russell,
Pomeroy; Dale F. Riffle, Pomeroy:
Jennifer L. Swartz, Pomeroy; Norman M. Presley, Pomeroy; Elizabeth Ann Mohler, Pomeroy; Margaret Brooks, Albany; Patrecia
A.nne Wood, Long Bottom; Erma
K. Yoho, Pomeroy; Joan Heinzman. Shade; Brenda S. Cunnin~­
ham, Pomeroy; Paul Leon Sincl811',
Shade.
Denise E. Arnold, Pomeroy;
Barbara Joan Smith, Shade;
Michael Lee Conley, Portland;
Juanita Mae Griffith, Long Bottom;
Loren
Edward
Benedum ,
Reedsville; William Pooler, Jr.,
Pomeroy; James Bailey, Long Bottom; Erma 0. Cleland, Chester;
Bruce Caldwell, Albany; Inzy M.
Newell, Long Bottom; Leonard A.
Myers, Long Bottom; Eleanor Kay
Withrow, Shade; James Curtis
White, Pomeroy; Josephine Lynn
Hill, Long Bottom; William Foster
Wells, Long Bottom; Marilynn
Maye Trussell, Reedsville; Helen
L. Icenhower, Shade; Mary J.
Hunter, Pomeroy; Caryl Emma
Pooler, Pomeroy; Kathryn Faye
Facemyer, Shade; Clarence Leo
Story, Pomeroy; Nora R. Eason,
Pomeroy; Iva P. Rayburn, Long
Bouom; and Clara Mae Swindell,
Shade.
Gay Ann Clay, Chester; Ada
Gilliland Morris, Chester; Tom
Zano, Pomeroy; Margaret Izetta
Amberger, Chester; Samuel
Frances Williams, Shade; Terry
Joseph Bailey, Racine; Lowell

IMansfield I so• I•

W. VA.

-l)Ql\~
Showers T·stomrs Rain Flurries

South-Central Obio
· Tonight, showers likely, thunderstorms are also possible. Low
around 65. East winds 5 to 10 mph.
A 70 percent chance of rain.
Wednesday, showers and thunderstorms likely. High 80 to 85. The
chance of rain is 70 percent.

Sunny

Pr. Cloudy

Cloudy

Extended foretast:
Thursday tbrougb Saturday
Fair and ~ild Thursday . A
chance of showers late Friday
through Saturday. Lows· from the
upper 50s to mid 60s Thursday and
in the 60s Friday and Saturday.
Near nonnal highs in the lower and
middle 80s each day.

..---Local briefs----.
Continued from page 1
Pearl SL and then a parked car owned by William Powell, before
coming to a stop.
Rime was taken by the Middleport emergency squad to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she was admitted for treatment of wrist
and shoulder fractures and possible internal injuries. She was
reported in stable condition late this morning.
Charges are expected to be filed following completion of the
investigation.

Man injured in car-cycle wreck
A Pomeroy man was hospitalized from injuries resulting from a
car-motorcycle wreck on C.R. 26 Monday afternoon.
According to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Pauol,
Pamela Lewis, 35, of Pomeroy, was westbound on C.R. 26 when
her 1983 'Chevrolet Camara was struck in a curve by an eastbound
motorcycle operated by Randall L. Moore,18, of Pomeroy.
Moore was admitted into Veterans Memorial Hospital where he
is reportedly in stable condition from head injuries sustained in the
accident. Aecooling to the highway patrol, Moore was not wearing
a helmet at the time of the accident
Lewis was treated and released from Veterans Memorial Hospi-

Drought hits Ohio_·_ _ ____se_n._Ja_n_M_.L_on----4gj

'"' 1lll; . ..

- .

.

..

Damage to Lewis' vehicle was listed as moderate. Damage to
Moore's 1985 Honda Shadow was listed as heavy.
Moore was cited by the patrol for left of center and no motorcy.
cle endorsement.

tions and make recommendations ;
to t1le Governor for future action. i
Should conditions worsen, the ;
Governor may have to declare 1
affected counties a disaster, thereby :
qualifying farmers for federal help, :
such as low-interest loans. Prepar- ;
ing for the worst-case scenario, our ;
Governor alerted tht U.S. Secretary ·
o~ Agriculture .aboUo our situation :
inOhio. ,
· Hopefully, we w1ll receive the ;
necessary rainfall by the end of ;
August in order to vanquish the •·
drought of 1_991. ·
:
As a,lways, please feel free to :
call or write me, State Senator Jan ·
Michael Long, if you have any :
questions or commem. about these :
or any other issues. My number is .
(614)466-8156, and my address is ·
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio, ·
43215.
.

Dry sludge to be available
Pomeroy Village Adminisuator John Anderson would like to
hear from local farmers interested in receiving dry sludge for use on
their propeny.
According to Anderson, bids on the expansion of the village
sewage plant are to be awarded in the near future, and when that
project is completed and in operation this sludge will become available at no cost to the farmer.
Consideration will be given to !IQil type, proximity of the farm to
streams and the crops raised on the farms, and Anderson stated that
a sample field will be examined.
Anderson stated that the sludge is recommended for use in the
farming of hay in particular, and described the substance a~ and
"excellent way to build up soil at no cost to the farmer."

.

Squads answer 11 calls
The Meigs County Emergency Medical Services

De Klerk fosters democratic forces

team

answered

II calls for assistance on Monday and early on Tuesday.

At 9:28 a.m., Pomeroy unit went to Rock Springs Road. Violet
Hysell was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 10:11 am.,
Pomeroy squad went to Chester Road for Hemz Coates, who was
taken to Veterans.
At 3:20p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Main Street for Angelique
Dorst, who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 4:30p.m., Syracuse squad went to Rock Street William Barnhart was taken to Veterans. At 5 p.m. Pomeroy units went to Flatwoods Road for a
motorcycle accident. Pamela Lewis refused treatment. Randy
Moore and Rhett Millhoane were taken to Veterans. At 5:46p.m.,
Syracuse unit assisted in the accident At 10:54 p.m., Racine squad
went to Mile Hill Road. Twila Clark was taken 10 Veterans.
At 2:52 a.m., Rutland squad went to North Run Road. Qerald
: · Shaluts was ttansporte4 to Veterans. At 4!01 a.m., Midldepon unit
: went to Pearl Street for an accident. Carol Riffle was taken to Veterans. At 5:48a.m., Rutland unit went to State Route 143. Juanita
Karr was taken to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. At 7 a.m.,
Pomeroy unit went to Page Street for Freda Casto, who was taken to
Veterans.

By William A. Rusher
since Mandela ' s release from
prison.
Now it transpires that the government of President de Klerk has
given far smaller sums to Inkatha
- partly, no doubt, to strengthen it
for its coming battles with the
ANC. It is the best news that has
come out of South Africa in
months.
.
For the past two years, it has
often seemed that President de
Klcrk was determined to negotiate

Ice

...;.______ weather-----

.

indicators are considered when drought.
you are probably aware of the old determining the existence and
Whereas, the drought's ultimate
saying, "Knee high by the Fourth extent of a drought,including pre- impact on corn and soybeaJ) crops
of July." As this adage went, if cipitatiQII, stream flow, reservoir will not be known until harvest
corn had gro\'n at least to the levels, temperatures and the Palmer time, it has taken an immediate .toll ·
height of a farmer's knee by this Drought index. By all indications, on livestock because of adverse
time, then the crop was considered Ohio is in a drought. In fact, our pasture yields . Hay and alfalfa
to be growing at a pretty good clip. state is ac;tually the driest around fields are not expected to have the
Modem day fertilizers and.farm- the Midwest states. The Palmer- necessary moisture to produce the
ing techniques have long since ren- Drought Index(which ranges from normal three to four cuttings. Four·,
dered that old saying obsolete. +4 for an "extreme moist spell" to - teen counties have reported signifiPlentiful rainfall and a warm spring 4 for "extreme drought") pegs 78 cant pasture losses. Some reports
got this year's growing season off of Ohio's 88 counties at a -3 to -5 even indicate that some producers
to a particularly advanced 'start ranking.
around the state have reduced or
with even weekend gardeners
Despite this sobering data, the liquidated their herds to conserve
noticing the robust plant growth. current dry spell is not as bad as the what feed and forage remain.
Suddenly though, what promised to drought of 1988. As of July, there
On July 26, Governor
be a bumper crop could tum into a have been 24 days of above 90 Voinovich declared a drought alert
season of failure. By late July, a degree temperatures, compared for 78 Ohio Counties. The alert
serious drought had spread across with 43 in all of 1988. We are also triggered the Ohio Emergency
the state.
coming off a near record high for Management Agency to activate a
A drought has occurred 20 times spri'ng rainfall. Also, Ohio is about special Drought Assessment Comin the last 100 years. A variety of one month behind the 1988 mittee to monitor drought condi·

Snow

0 1991 Accu-Weather, Inc.

I~

If you grew up on a farm, then

•I Columbus I s2• I

•

!f··

"Of course,
mothers can kiss it and make it all well."

But it also opposes the ANC (for
reasons discussed below), and furthermore has opposed sanctions
against South Africa, arguing that
they hun the country's black population first and worsL If there is to
be true democracy in South Africa
after its blacks get the vote, Inkatha
must be a powerful part of the process.
As for the ANC, it is, despite
the wonderful press it gets in the
West, by long odds the most dangerous obstacle to black democracy
in South Africa. A few years ago
the U.S. State Department offtcial1y confirmed that more .than half of
the members of the ANC's executive committee were members of
the South African Communist
Party.
At its rece nt reorgani zation
meeting the ANC enlarged the
executive committee, retiring some
metpbers (including a few Communists), and electing new ones (also
including Communists). I have not
been able to find a tally of the total
number of Communists on the new
executive commi~tee, but New
·York Times correspondent Christo·
pher Wren, in a sadly misplaced
attempt at humor, reported that
they will Ebably make the organization ' more efficient" Indeed
they will.
For decades virtually the entire
financial s~pport of the ANC, to
the tune of many millions. of dollars, has come from abroad - primarily from the Soviet Union and
China· of course, but also from.
sympaihetic Westerri governments
and s~Cl! addled organi~ations as
the World Council of Churcbes.
We may be sure that these subsidies bave increased enormously

Accti: Weati!CJ4 foRc.st for daytime conditions and high temperatures

IToledo I s1•• I

Wind" investigation exposed how
some top-level Pentagon officials
used their insider leverage to the
benefit of the highest bidders and
Sooner first began making fuses
the nation's big defense contracand
other small munitions for the
tors. The Sooner investigation
means that the little people were Army in 1982. One of its first jobs·
getting in on the act too - small wa:; to build safety devices for an
contractors and rank-and-file feder- artillery round. The Army paid'
al workers all the way down to · Sooner $524,471 , but the company
app.aren:ly never delivered the
plant inspectors.
Pentagon sources told our asso- gOOds.
ciate Jim Lynch that there have · The lack of return on invesunent
long been tales of bribery and gra- didn't stop th(: Army from giving
tuities floating around the Army Soo.~ 1er more contm(.ts. In 1987 the
munitions agency in Rock Island, cornp•.;,ny got an $8.7 million contr.act to build fuses for 25mm shells
Ill., - the agency that super.vised
on
Bradley Fighting Vehicles. At
the Sooner contract. This procurethat
time, Sooner had already failed
ment hub deals exclusively .with
to
comple;e
live prior contrdCts.
small munitions mant~facturers.
Before
the
Anny stopped paying
The Pentagon often gets a better
deal working wi\h the little guys, Sooner in March 1988, the compabut sources close to the Pentllgon 's ny had received $12.1 ,million for
procurement proc~ss tell us. that six contracts, and there was no
some small contrac!ors get good at return on four of those contracts.
conning the military into believing Last Der.ember, a Sooner official
pleaded guilty to participating in a
they can ::omolete a big con1!;3ct. ·
scheme to give the Army fraudu·
lent test results.
MONEY FOR NOTHING ~
Last Columbus Day weekend, the
federal government was forced tu
shut down because it ran out oj
money while Congress played its'
annual game of fisCal chicken. As
always, the taxpayers were the big
losers because the governmenc.
wastes money even when it is idle.
The General Accounting Office
figures the shutdown cost $3.4 milAt'MINI$WA110N
lion, much of it in lost revenues at
· National Parks, visitor centers and ·
museums. Had the shutdown ·:
occurred over three days during the :
. work week instead of on a holiday :
weekend, the cost would have been ,
even greater - $12.8 million.
.
MINI-EDITORIAL- George ·
Bush has logged more ttavel miles :
than any other president in history, :
including trips to 32 foreign coun- •
tties and nearly every state in the :
union. The president's foreign trav- :
el has helped to make him a master ·
player on the world scene. But at:
home, he might as well be flying •
around the country with the shades ;
drawn on Air Force One. Bush's ;
domestic policy, or lack thereof, •
our ultimate goal is to refer all our Medicaid patients to their · shows that his travels have tau~ht :
him very little about what Aqlenca ;
then whatever the individual medical problem is, the mother
needs.
·.

Suppose Gorbachev's critics in
Moscow discovered and revealed
that his regime had secretly paid
$100,000 to the new Democratic
Reform Movement, launched by
Eduard Shevardnadze and others,
to help it lobby for Western fmancial aid to the Soviet Union. Does
anybody doubt that this would be
taken as further proof of Gorbachev's determination to strengthen and work through the country's
nascent democratic institutions, and
scored to his eternal credit?
Yet when it transpired that the
South African government of President F.W. de Klerk secretly gave a
roughly equal sum of mone~ to
Chief Buthelezi 's (Zulu) lnkatha
Party, for use in lobbying against
the sanctions imposed on •South
Africa by the outside world, liberals promptly treated the disclosure
as discreditable to both de Klerk
and Buthelezi.
The distincti.on, in the liberals'
eyes, is that Nelson Mandela and
his African National Congress wear
white hats, whereas Chief
Buthelezi and lnkatha wear black
ones. We have had it drilled into us
by the media fo r years that the
ANC is the sole leg~timate political
representative of South Africa's
blacks, and that "democracy." will
come to that country when the present regime turns power over to it.
Inkatha, as well as spokesmen for
numerous othe_r black, colored,
Asian and white constituencies,
liave been ignored wherever possible, and dismissed contemptuously
as tools of the white regime when
they had to be discussed at all.
The truth, however, is far otherwise. lnkatha is every bit as
opposed to apartheid a8 the ANC.

Select names for petit jury duty of Common Pleas Court

By ]aclc Anderson:
and Dale Van Atta

have been reluctant to blow the
whistle on the company because
Sooner was giving her gifts.
Army conuact specialist Bonnie
K. Hurd has admitted in coun that
she accepted an array of gifts from
Sooner executives, including hotel
rooms, meals and entertainment
when she made 25 trips to the
Sooner plant in Lakeland, Fla.,
over a three-year period. Hurd also
admitted that Sooner's chairman
bought her son airplane tickets tr.
go to Tampa for spring break in
1985, and also paid his way to Dis·
ney World and Busch Gardens.
Hurd's attorney says Hurd wa~
not manipulated by Sooner, an&lt;!
Sooner officials say they weren't
trying to get anything from Hur~ .
But Hurd was convicted last month
of accepting bribes. As part of h&lt;!r
plea agreement she is cooperating
with the ongoing investigation,
which sources tell us is spreading
fasL
The Justice Department's "Ill

ME~ICA\P

OH10 W(-'ct tllt :l
VVednesday;Aug.7 ·
MICH.

Pentagon procurement scandal looming

his country's future w1u1 the ANC .
alone. No doubt this was partly the ·
result of media distortion, but de ·
Klerk shared responsibility. Now
we know that he understands the
terrible future that would face a :
South Africa under the conuol of ·
the ANC, and that he has been .
working quietly to encourage and ·
strengthen those black political ·:
forces that genuinely want democ- :
racy. Let's pray that he succeeds.

Berry's World

---Area deaths-Bessie Smith
Bessie E. Smith, 88, of Bidwell,
died in Holzer Medical Center,
Tuesday, August 6, 1991.
Born March 15, 1903, in Gallia
County, she was the daughter of
the late. Samuel and Ida Lucas
Viney.
She was preceded in death by
her husbands, Kermit Fi,gins in
1936, and Gordon Smith 10 1983;
one SOD/ Lester; one ii\fant son; orie
daughter, Dorothy; and one step-

~"

---~

-

...
--({{]

son, Lacy Hogan.

I

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

She IS survived by one son,
Maurice. Figgins of B1dwell, and
one daug)lter, ~· .Carl~ (Martha)
Qalliam~ 0~ Qai ~· &lt; '
· Also surVIving are seven ~­
chilclfen,' five great-giandcbildren,
and one ·sister, Minnie Garnes of
Gallipo
' ...,..
1;•.
.
. . ,....
She was a member of the Provi'

dence Buck Ridge Baptist Church.
Services will be held I p.m.,
Friday, at the Mt. Carmel Baptist
Church in Bidwell with the Rev .
henry Fletcher officiating. Burial
will be in the Bunch Cemetery.
Friends may call 6-9 p.m.,
Thursday, at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, in Vinton.
.

Allen Ridenour, Long Bottom:
Goldie M. Frederick, Long B~:
Virginia Dare Smith, Pomeroy;
Pamela J. Miller, Pomeroy; Fernie
Woogerd, Pomeroy; Everette W.
Holcomb, Albany; Mark A.
McCloud, Middleport; Kimberly Jo
Lamb, Middleport; William B.
Gillpgly, Albany; Randy A.
Hanion, Albany; Charlotte A. Hanning , Pomeroy; Robert W. Reed,
Pomeroy; Donald Buffington, Long
Bottom; Richard Allen Gilmore,
Reedsville; Donna M. Davidson,
Middleport; Carol Denise Chapman. Rutland; Kathy Jean Clonch,
Middleport; Deborah J. Young,
Reedsville; anc Charles Dewey
Hauber, Reedsville.
Terry R. Brown, Racine; Adaline P. Summers, Portland; Hugh P.
Custer, Pomeroy; Faye A. Steinmetz, Pomeroy; Sharon L. Hudnall,
Albally; Mary E. Carpenter, Portland; Jerry L. Six, Pomeroy; David
Richard Thomas, Syracuse; Charles
Eugene Carson Jr., Pomeroy ;
Claudette J. Pickens, Racine; Bonnie Jean Ransom, Racine; Clarence
W. Weddle, Portland; Jason Lee
Hall, Racine; Nancy Jean Larkins,
Tuppers Plains; Wanda Lea Monroe, Portland; George Franklin Cremeans, Coolville; William Dawain
Ours~ Reedsville; Roger J. Spann,
Racine; Jerry E. Frederick, Long
Bottom; Sara Jo Cheadle, Albany;
Vir~inia Eloise Rees, Racine;
Omlle Lee Phillips, Albany; Mary
Denise Baldwin, Racine; Angela
Marie Richards, Racine; Ethel Lois
Moore, Racine.
Alan L. Halliday, Dexter; Katrina Snodgrass, Racine; Michelle
Renee Tripleu, Pomeroy; Frances
M. Moxley, Pomeroy; Florence L.
Thornton, Racine: Jerry W. Well,
Shade; John A. Dean, Pomeroy;
Linda L. Edwards, Long Bottom;
Patricia A. Circle, Racine; Zelia
Mae Coppick, Portland; Delmar
Donald Dorst, Shade; Orville
Wayne Bennett, Reedsville; Ernest
Eugene Imboden II , Middleport;
Judith A. Sams, Reedsville; Eric
Manuel Priddy, Middleport; Olen
Clyde Young, Reedsville; Martha
Joanne Dill, Long Bottom; Sharon
L. Louks, Long Bottom; Edward
Eugene Patterson Jr., Pomeroy;
Betty J. Carsey, Pomeroy; Martha
F. Nash, Pomeroy; Carla Sue Nottingham, Pomeroy; Scott Lynn
Walton,
Pomeroy; David William
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Fox,
Racine;
Laurie Susanne WayMONDAY ADMISSIONS
land,
Pomeroy.
Violet Hysell, Pomeroy, and
Pamela L. Boso, Racine; Linda
William Bamhan, Pomeroy.
C.
Diddle, Racine; George Edward
MONDAY DISCHARGES Cummins,
Racine ; Duane K.
Fred Goebel, Milton Hood, and
Black,
Middl
eport; Leonard L.
Junior Hunt.
Bass, Syracuse; Karen Sue Hill,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER Racine_; Timothy Brian Walker,
A· .
. . . :Albany. V1rgtn1a S. Pickens, Port. h ·.
DISC arges! ug . 6 - Anna land; Angie E. Roush, Portland;
Allen, Joan Bllll'd, James Conkle, Dorothy Jayne Brooks, Cheshire;
Russell Eshelman, John Ewmg, Trent o. Upton, Reedsville; Wilma
Rebecca Foley, Mrs. Darrell Herd- Lou Parker, Long Bottom; Mildred
m~n. and son, Glenn Samons, A. ~rider, Long Bottom; Robert
W1lham Umbe~ger, Judy While Wayne Powell, Pomeroy; Richard
and '!fudy Working.
Lowell Lattimer Jr., Long Bottom;
Bmhs, Aug. 6 - Mr. and Mrs. Robert 1. Knapp, Syracuse; Mary
Raymond Truman, a son , Long A. Kerns, Portland; Alice M. .
Bottom.
Ratliff-Wooten, Albany; Ida
Coleen Whaley. Pomeroy; Leo

Hospital news

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
the Ohio Lottery selections made
Monday night:
Pick 3 Numbers
4·8-3
(four, eight, three)
Pick 4 Numbers
7-0-0-7
(seven, zero, zero, seven)
Cards
6 (six) of Hearts
J (jack) of Clubs
Q (queen) of Diamonds
3 (three) of Spades

;

Clara 0. Broderie"· ·

___ Announcements ___
Trustees to meet
The Chester Township Tmstees
will meet in regular session at 9:30
a.m. on Friday at the town hall.
AA group to meet
The Pomeroy Group of AA will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Call
992-5763 for further information.

forming will be the Children of
God, the Redeemed Quane~ God's
Little Lambs, the Joyful Hearts and
the Willing Hearts.
Youth revival
The Carleton Church on Kingsbury Road in Pomeroy will have
youth revival Friday through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly. Carl 'Yard
will be the speaker. On Fnday
there will be clowns; on Saturday
there will be a weiner roast; and on
Sunday Tabitha and the New Life
Singers will perform. Clyde Henderson invites the public .
Pomeroy Lodge to meet
The Pomeroy Lodge No. 164 F
&amp; AM will meet Wednesday at
7:30p.m. at the Middleport Lodge
Hall.
Vacation Bible School
"Around the World With Jesus"
is the theme of Vacation Bible
School at Victory Baptist

Lesa H. Rucker, Reedsville; Denise
Leni a Bunce, Pomeroy ; Edward
Darrell Reed, Reedsville; Eugene
T. German, Long Bottom; James L.
Trader, Pomeroy; Rae A. Gwiaz·
dowsky, Middleport; Charles Hill
Kuhl , Pomeroy; Patricia E. Anderson , Racine; Alice M. Freeman,
Pomeroy; Jack L. Frederick, Middleport; Phyllis M. Cline, Pomeroy;
Cindy J. Allen, Racine; Emest Lee
Hawkin s, Pomeroy; Deloris J.
Winebrenner, Pomeroy ; Thomas
Ray Tobin, Middleport.
Richard Lee Dee m, Tuppers
Plains; Charles R. King, Pomeroy;
Bernice A. Godfrey, Portland, Carolyn Mae Taylor, Lon~ Bouom;
Belly Jean Taylor, Middleport;
Michael D. Hellm er, Pomeroy ;
Clovie E. Brown , Ewing ton ;
Anthony E. Cardillo , Vin ton ;
Pamela Sue Colwell, Vinton ;
Jonathan Duane Dunn, Pomeroy;
Helen Grace Rusche!, Pomeroy ;
Danny R. White, Pomeroy; Ernest
M. Cale Jr., Pomeroy ; Charles E.
Chancey, Racine; Peggy L. Lewis,
Middleport; Eddie M. Turley,
Racine ; Merri C. Amsbary ,
Pomeroy; Raybon R. Wallace ,
Pomeroy; Danny R. Tillis, Rutland;
Dorothy M. Whited, Pomeroy;
Norma Jean Arnold, Albany ;
Audelle Mildred McCain,
Reedsville; Gary M. Johnson Sr.,
Long Bottom: Ernest E. Bastin,
Albany; Ruby A. Davis, Pomeroy.
Troy Allen Willis, Rutland;
Freda Marie Jacks, Langsville;
Roger E. Carpenter, Langsville;
Robert H. Fetty, Langsville; Barbara Jun e Herald, Middleport;
Linda L. Sommers , Rutland;
Thomas 0 . McKay, Long Bottom;
Stephen E. Jenkins, Rutland; Florence M. Stearns, Rutland; Charles
A. Searles, Rutland; Shirley Mae
Lambert, Rutland ; Robin Renae
Haning, Rutland; Ann B. Thomas,
Middleport; Milo B. Hutchison,
Rutland; Thomas R. Burnside,
Langsville; Catherine C. White,
Middleport; Kristina G. Riffle, Rutland; Geraldine C. Reed, Middleport; Bernice Ceola VanMeter,
Rutland; David W. Proffitt, Racine;
Emma Carleton, Pomerdy; Ralph
Herman Ballard, Long Bottom;
Walter L. Burke, Pomeroy; James
William Hobstetter, Rutland; and
Kenda K. Williams, Rutland.

Wendy's is ex-dividend today.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

,

,;,~l' ~."'

Sl . OO I!ARGAU MATI!I([S SAT\JROAY I SUMMY
U . OO IAII&amp;AIN NI~T TUESMY

AUGUST 2 lhnl a

nu~v t~ru

SAT / S U~ AATI,. EE~
7 " l ·"''
:20 ,) ; "10 '"
("· IJ)

TH!JRSDAYI

~

--J

""= ,. '•
.~
~-~
.

•

7:00 DA ILY

SAT/ SUN MATHif ES
I :00
!l'li· ll)

bulinell lniUI'IInce Plek·

limited

aval~blp ,

Mall SubBcrlptlon•
l ..lde Melp Counly

,
13 Weeks ...... ,... .. .... .................. 121.84
26 Weeks .............. ..... . .. ....... .. ..:143.16
52 Weeks .......... .......... .. ..... .. .... . 184.76
OUiolde Melp County
13 Weeks ........... .. .. ...... .. .. ......... 123.40
26 Weeks .... ..... , ...... .. .. ..... .. .... ... I4MO
52 Weeks ... ............ ........ ........... 188.40

Pre-School
Only

EnroUment

Pre- School &amp;
Doy. Care
for Ages 3 to 12

446-2483

Call

Mrs. Shirin Nuggud • M. Ed.

5' 1 Setond An
Galli poNs

Administrator

1

broad-cove,. 1•.

plan

for ,...;J storea.. affic:ea.
church••· 1p1nmenta and
dNO stores. C1ll ua for a PI'O·
pout and quotation.

PRE-SCHOOLS and DAY CARE

No subs criptions by mall permltt€'d In

-....

992-7328
116 N. Set. An

,

I•

Am Ele Power ..... ............. 29 1/8
Ashland Oil ......... ............ .30 3/4
AT&amp;T.. .............. .... .......... .39 1/2
Bob Evans ........................ 18 1/8
Charming Shop.................. 23 1/4
City Holding ........ ............. 14 1/2
Federal MoguL ................ 16 3/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ .36 7/8
Key Centurion .............. .... 14 718
Lands' End .. ..................... 19 318
Limited Inc . ..................... 29 7/8
Multimedia Inc ... .............. 29 1/2
Rax Restaurani ........... ...... 13/32
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .31
Shoncy' s Inc ... .................. 15 1/2
Star Bank ............... .. ........ .22
Wendy lni'l.. .... .................9 3/4
Worthington Ind . .............. 26
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewi of Gallipolis.

S UBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrlfr or Mol or Routl'
On e WPek .. .
...Sl.60
On to Month .. .. ...... .... ..... .. ....... ... S6.95
One Yea r ..
.. .. .. ............ .. ... SS3. 20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
... .... ... .... 2~ Ct&gt;nt s
Dally ........

areas wher(&gt; hom E" ca rrl eor SE&gt;rvlcf' Is

.•.

Stocks

ONE.

TWO LOCATIONS
State Licwtd - Title XX funded - Open Year Round

!

I

competitively-priced

rlt&gt;r ma y rtimll til advanef' direct to
Tht Dally St nllntt.on a 3, 6 orl2 month
basts . Credit will b&lt;&gt; glvt n carrier tach

•

I

•o•. th1t i1. h'l SERIES

NOW ENROLLING
-J.~ - GINGERBREAD HOUSE
1'/f.. PRE-SCHOOLS

)

I

to Tht&gt; Dallv Sentinel. 111 Co urt St..
PomPro~· . Oh.lo 45769.

week .

Funeral services foroClara oj,ai
Broderick, 79, who died Thursday,
Aug.l, ·1991. at the Hel!nland Rest
Home ii) Ml!J:ysville were held Sat- _.
· ~r4ay at ,'til~. ~n.mith .FIIDeral
Hoene in MatYavWc. Amoof Mrs.
Broderick's survivors is a-daughter,
Ruth Pearson, .Leading Creek
Road, Middloport. Mrs. Broderick
·was a ~ve of Mason; W.Va.

ley, Syracuse; Mildred L. Hart,
Racine; Mary F. Nottingham, Long
Bottom; Sarah Jane Fowler, Middleport; Terry L. Stotts, Shade...
Rita S. Mathews, Racine; John
Meeks, Shade; Cynthia Baca Nau,
Pomeroy; Rodney .Lee Keller,
Pomeroy; Margaret E. Hawthorne,
Long Bottom; Tonja Lee Hunter,
Racine; Wayne E. Milhoan, Shade;
Patricia Diane Ferguson, Long Bottom ; Christopher Tod Wolfe ,
Racine; Mildred P. lhl e, Rac ine;
Richard Frederick Fick, Jr., Long
Bottom ; Kelly Dawn Ri zer ,
Racine; Elmer L. Pickens, Racine;
Pearlie Irene Martin, Albany: Joyce
E. Manuel, Racine; Harry Earl Stobart Sr., Racine; Coral Sal ts man .
Racine; Thomas Ronald Cammarata, Portland; Denise G. Fick, Long
Bottom; Troy E. Hy att, Albany ;
Robert Eugene Hudson, Racine;
Martin J. Chapman , Pomeroy ;
Orella Dorothy Hysell, Pomeroy ;
Helen Jane Burson, Shade; S. Ray
Karr. Pomeroy.
Susan A. Well , Shade; Allen
Gail Lipscomb, Pomeroy; Sarah
Jean Roush, Racine; James Edward
Lucas, Pomeroy; Ron E. Eastman,
Pomeroy; Betty Jane Gaul,
Chester; Cletes Perry, Pomeroy;
Jack D. Sorden, Rutland; Laura
Lee Hawley, Long Bottom; Ronald
Lee Clark, Racine; Janet E. Theiss,
Racine; Lawrence Eldo Rose Jr.,
Racine; Eric Allen Thoren, Racine;
Warren Frederick Denney. Albany;
Lydia Chevalier, Reedsville; Judith
N . Avis, Coolville; Robert B.
Gibbs, Syracuse; Mary M. Brady ,
Albany ; Kevin Lee Barber,
Reedsville; Kim S. Jordan, Albany;
Rilla Charlene Lowery, Pomeroy;
Franklin Harrison Casto, Pomeroy;
Margaret L. Cauthorn, Reedsville;
Herbert Leroy Miller, Racine; Don
Richard lflll, Racine.
Wanda E. Shuler , Racin e;
Thomas Daniel Crow, Pomeroy ;
Goldie Marie Wolford, Racine;
Cecil E. Midkiff, Pomeroy; Martha
E. Jeffers, Albany; Edith Barton ,
Pomeroy; Jerry Lee Larkins, Long
Bottom; Betty Jane Lambert ,
Reedsville; Darrell Wheeler, Tup·
pers Plains; Tammy Jo Landers,
Middleport; Ruby D. Drake, Long
Bottom ; Ethel Newman, Middle·
port; Paul F. Marr, Pomeroy; Ruth
E. McGrath, Racine; Roger B. Di:.
Jon , Long Bottom; Kenneth H.
Wheeler, Dexter; Amy S. Hall ,
Reedsville; Robert D. Spires, Rutland; Shane Marcel Engle, Middleport; Dorothy Jean Hewlett, Long
Bottom: Dennis Roland Eichinger,
Reed sville; Bracy A . Korn .
Pomeroy; Freda M. Durham, Middleport; Rodney A. Tripp,
Pomeroy; Teresa Elizabeth Bycr.
Middleport.
Harold
William
Fetty,
Langsville; Harry R. Mozingo,
Rutland; Gregory Mack Stewart.
Rutland; David Arthur Davis,
Pomeroy; Tommy J. Ferrell, Mid·
dleport; Cynthia Richard Bin,
Pomeroy; John David Gillogly .
Albany; Jeffrey Dale Johnson ,
Reedsville; Max L. Knopp, Racine;
David Michael Mellott. Pomeroy;

Davis reunion
Descendants of Orlando and
Katherine Sheline Davis will be
held Sunday at the American
Legion Eli Denison Post No. 467,
Tattlelate?
Beech Grove Road, Rutland. A
basket
dinner will begin at noon.
"Whistlcblowcr · IS the term for an
1ndiv1dual within an agency or corpo- Golf meeting
Southern High School students
ration who disl·loses misdeeds w1thm
interesting in playing on the golf
that organization
team are to meet at the Meigs
County Golf Club on Monday at
5:30 p.m . Call 949-2534 iri the
The Daily Sentinel
evenings for further information.
Golf scramble
tVSPS IU·t80)
A J)lvklon of Multimedia, Inc.
The Southern Golf Team is Cbam ber to meet
sponsoring
a four-person scramble
·The Meigs County Chamber of
Publlshfd P\'t"ry af!Prnoon. M o nda~·
at the Meigs County Golf Club on Commerce will meet in full session
through Frida y. 111 Court St. . Po·
mPro.v. Ohio. by lh t&gt; Ohio Vai!Pv Pub·
Saturday at 9 a.m.
on Tuesday, August 12 at noon at
1\shlng Compan.v!Multlmedla . Inc ..
Entry fee is $35 for non-mem - Overbrook Center in Middleport. A
PomProy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992 · 2 1~ . SP·
cond class pos tagp paid at PomProy .
bers and $30 for members. Teams representative from Congressman
Ohio.
will be drawn prior to tee-off. For Clarence Miller's office .will be the
more information or to sign up call guest speaker.
Me mbPr: ThP Assocl a tf'd PrPs .~. In ·
land Da llv Prf'Ss Associ ation and the
992-6312 or 992-3671.
Ohio New'spa per As.'IOCia tlon . Nat iona l
Trustees meet
Hymn sing
Ad vNtl s ln g Rf' pr&lt;'St'nl a tlve. Branham
Chester Township Trustees will
There will be a hymn sing on
NPw spapt'r Sa l ~ . 733 Thi r d AVPOUP,
NP1f' Yor k. NPW Yo rk 10017.
Saturday at 8 p.m. on the Pomeroy meet in regular session at 9!30 a.m.
Parking Lot Stage. Singers per- at the town hall on Friday.
POSTM ASTER: Sf'nd addrf'Ss c h a n ~f'S

Subscrlbfl r s nol d es lrln ~ to pay thPcar .
,I

Casto, Portland; Kenneth E. Buck-

•

�tuesday, August 6, 1991

Browns drop pre-season
opener to Buccaneers 23-10

GOING DOWN HARD - Cleveland Browns
quarterback Bernie Kosar (19) is sacked by
Tampa Bay Dues lineman Keith McCant (52)

for a one-yard loss in the second quarter or
Monday's exhibition game in Cleveland. (AP)

Scoreboard
BASKETIIALL

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
T......,

..

o.uo;.

.. .........

a.....

. .......

Now Yad&lt;
Mil ....w..

.......

......

a.m...

a-Jand

.......

...... ..

WLPet.GB
60 46 .566 55 5o .57A 4 1n
50 55 .476 9 1n
41 !4 .471
10
45 60 .42914 1n
42 62 .404 11
35 69 .m
2A

West Division

W
....... 64
ODcaao
......... 59
OU1and
... 59
Seoalc
.. 57
T..•
........... !4
JWao City
.. 53
Califumia ......... 52

MW-u

L
43
45
41
49
48

Pet. GB
.598
.5t;T J 1n
.551

51

5
.531 6 1n
.529 7 In
.110 9 1n

!3

.495

II

MODCIIJ11 Gama

Milwaukee 6. Ballimon: S
Now Yad&lt; 7, Douu;t 5
1tanut City S, 801101 3
~d9,TCJ.&amp;f0

o.tl.aDd 3, Se~.llle 0
MinneloLI 7, Califomi.a 4

T

,e:l.«hodulod
J'tG..,..

Mil..ubc (J-lwucr ()..4) at Baltimore
(DJolono«&lt; 1·3), 7:35p.m.
llouo&lt;(C&lt;nati 1·3) "Tooor11o (Key
11-&lt;1~ 7:35p.m.
New Ytd (C.darcl4-4) at Oticlgo
(Gan:il ).3~ 8:05p.m.
8011Aln (Oud:i.nct 3-$) 11 KanJu City
(Bolklicket ... 7). 8:35 p.m.
(]c¥dand (Nap 6-10) at Tcxu (B.Witt
34), 835 E.m· .
Scaulc (llrrcl...r.lci 9-6) at Oakland

t

(Moorc9-7),l&amp;.Ol p.m.
~CU

(Banb ~0) IL Califomia

(Finley 14-5), 10:35 p.m.
Wtdn~l'' Gamet
Seaale (Holman 9-1 0) at O&amp;klarui
(Woldo 9-6). 3:15p.m.

MiMcloU (Moailt ~8} at Califomi.l
(I.Abbon ~1), 4:05p.m.
Milnukce (Navano 1·9) at Baltimti"C
(Mdlaoald 5-5~ 7:35p.m.
Dolrrli1
a- 7) "
(lu.Owmoo H). 7:35/.m. •
NewYcD.(I..cary4- mEil.OO 1·3)•t
Chica&amp;o (M&lt;J)owdlll-&lt;1), 8:05p.m.
B•IGD {Cic:rnulllZ. 7) It K.anau City
(App;.r 1·7), 135 p.m.
ClcYc1aftd (Nic:holll -9) at Ta.u (Bohonoa 0.1),1:35 p.m.

rr......

r"""""

NATIONAL U:AGVE
~.ll..lolroo
WLPet.GB
I'll~
......... 61 42 .592 SL l,oWo
.......... !6 48
331 5 1n
Now Yad&lt;
.. ..... 55 49 329 6 1n
52 52 300 9 1n
·
· ....... ol6 sa .44215 1n
......... 43 61
.413llln
W•llll ... lcin
WLPd.GB
Lao Aqda
. 51 46 .558
Allanll
55 4&amp; .534 2 1n
Cilll:innlli ......... l2 51
.sos 5 1n
SuoFnncisco ...... 50 !4
.411
8
s..oo;qo ........ 50 55 .476 8 1n
llouA&lt;lo
......... 4S 59
.43'!
13
MaedaJ'aCiuna
Cincinn.ci I 0, Lao Al&gt;Jda 6
ALlan~ S, S1.11 Franc:isoo 2
Chicllao 7, New" Yodr: 2
Houi\Ull. San Diqo 1,12 i.nninp

S" . . . . .

~ ""'
.. ochodu!Od
y'aGUMS

T•

Lao Anada (Hcnloiscr 3-2) II Cincinnati (Ki.dioa 4-2), 7:35p.m.
OriCIJO (Sut.c:liffc 2..4) at Philadelphia
(Ruffioo 3-J&gt;. 7:35 e.m.
San Fnnrilc:o (McOellan 2-0) at At ·
l.uooa (Mahler 24). 7:40p.m.

Piwbutp (fooilin 6-4) at New YOlk
(fcmondczll-1), 7:40p.m.

San DiCJG {Peter1on 3-3) at Hou1l011
(l(ilo 4-6), 8:35 p.m.
Moatrc.al (Nabholz 2-4) at St. loW•
(fowbbwy7-7), 8:35p.m.
Weci~Macb~J'•

Games

Anfdel (Ojeda S-8) at Cincinnati
(M,... s. 7,35 p.m.
Lao

~

OUeaao (Bielecki t 1-7) at Phil.tdelphia
(MWholl.uod 10.10), 7:15p.m.
San Fn~nciaco (Blick 8-9) at Atb nu
(Lcibnndo 9-10), 7:40p.m.
PiuabwF CZ.Smilh 10.8) at New York
(Gooden 11-6), 7:40p.m.
San OiCjO (Hunt 13-5} at Hounon
(J.Jon.. 6-7), 8:35p.m.
Montreal (Oudncr 5-8) at S1. Louis
(Otivara 4-3),11:35 p.m.

ap-co-08-06-91 OS49cdt
6:44AM lncloe" 08 .2 REGULAR
PM-Trmu.aiou,027B

11&amp;'11

:::-J'• Sport. Tranaction1
A.•triCII• ln.pe

CAUFORNIA ANGELS - Recalled
1.. Gnloo, pilcloe&lt;. from Edmonlao ri lhc
Paeific Cout l..ca&amp;_ue. Optioru:d Bobby
Roae. cufieldcr, to Edmonlon.

DETROIT TIGERS- Si&amp;ncd John

Mosea, outfielder . Optioned Rully

Melcfum, pitcher, 10 Toledo d the lnta..lionlllMI""-

UN"SAS CI'JY

ROYAl.S-ActiYI~

Jo1uk O.Yia, piodoa. !rom lhc 15-d.y dioablcd Utt.I'IAocd Km1. Stillwd.l, tborutop,
oa the 15-Uy dilabled Wt Designated
W• Qadn«, pitcher, £or aui.gnmenL Recolloot Soon limy, Uof'ocl&lt;i&lt;r, fnxn Omw
ol the American Aaodarion.
NEW YORX YANKEES - Placcd
s- JC.rUaoiocti. pilcloer, ao lhc IS-day
diaabled lilt, reuou:tivc to Aua. 3. Recallod o... l!ilaad, pllcloer, fn&gt;m ColwnNollho
Loap~

J

Ia"""'""'*
SEATIU MAJUNERS-I'Iac:ocl Ruu

~BALL

Natm.l Football l..naLM
D..U.U.S COWBOYS- Waived Cary
Bllnchur:l ri•crkiekcr

KANSioi CITY C.HIEFS - Waivcd
Ema.t 'Thorrl~on. nmnina blck.
PIIILADELPIIIA EAGLES-Sill"cd
Antone Divis, offensive tackle. to a ooeyear CXdflc:t with an q&gt;tion year. Waived
Paw Palm... runnin1 bock, and Cam Pq&gt;pcr,offauive guard

HOCKEY
National Hockey Leaaue
DETROIT RED WINGS- A'recd to
with Ray Sheppard, right WUIS, oo a
three-year cmtnct.
MONTREAL CANADIENS- Signed
Frederic Chabot, goalie, to a one-ye.11r
con1li.Cl with Ill opticm year.
PHII..ADELPHIA FL YERS - Tnded
Shaun Stbol. defenseman, to lhe. New
Yodi. Ranaers for futwe cau:idcr~ticw.
tama

. •p--co-08-06-91 0644edt
816111 6:06 AM lnc:he" 08 .7 REGULAR
PM-BBA-LcadCIS,0274
MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE

BATTING- Palmeiro, Texas, .345;
Boga, Bo.:ton, .338; Tartabull, Karu~u
City, .332; Fnnoo, Tuu, .332; Puc.keu,
Minne&amp;ota, .330; Baine~ , Oakland, .322:

CRiokm. Baltim.,._ .320.

RLINS-Palmeito, Tl!!l.u, 79; Cam~o.
Oa.kllnd, 79; Molitor. Milwaukee. 77 :
Thonw, Otic:ago, 73; White. Tormto. 72
Franto, Texu, 72; Fielder, Detroit, 71:

DHcodascm, Oakland, 71.
RBI-Fielder, Detroit, 91 ; Canseco,
Oakland, 15; Thomat , Chic•so. 79:
Cartet, Toronto, 75; Sierra, Tuu, 74;
CO.~. ~. 74;~ . Teuu,

72.

IUT5-Palmc:iro, T~u. 143; Puckeu,
Minncaota, 137; Molitor, Milwaukee,
136; CRipkcn, Baltimore, 133; Franco,
Tc.au, 131; Sierra, Texu, 12!; RA.lomu,
ToronW&gt;. 124.
DOUBLES -Pa lmeiro, Tuu, 32;
RAlomu, Toronto, 31 : Boua. Do11on,
31; Caner, Toronro. 29: Wh.it.e, Toronto,

28: Clliokm. Baltimooo. 28: B...,, Kanw

City, rf.
TlJPLES-MoliLor, Milwaukee. 9;

RAlomar, TU'OI'IlO, 7; Polcrria, CalifomiJ,
7; White, Toronto, 7; McRae, Kansas
City, 6; Puckett, Minneaota, 6; Raines,

Chicaao,6.
HOME RUNS - Fielder, Detroit, 32;
Oakland, 29; CDavis, Minncoou, 2S; Caner, Toronto, 24; Thomu,
Chicaao. 21; Tutabull. Kuuu City, 22;
~J•h.i.morc, 22; DHendcnon,

ean...o.

ST~N

BASES-RHendenc:m, Oak·
l.and, 31; IWns, OUcaso. 36; RAlornu,
Toronto, 32; Polonia, Calif&lt;omi1, 31:

Cuyler, Drouoi• 26: While. T...,,., 24:
Franco. TCJW, 22.
Prl'CHU!IG (10 Dccisions)-EriWon,
Minn,.ou, 15-3, .833, 2.36; Hcruoeman ,
Dcuoil, 9-2. .818, 2.51; Finley, California, 14-S, .737, 3.91; I.Anptoo, Caliior·
nil, 14-5, .7J7, 1.45; Klink. Oakland,l-3.
.727, 3.23; StOUlemyre, Toronto, 104,
.714, 3.28; Thiapcn, Chica8o, 7- 3, .700,
3.29; Oullicbon, Detroit, 14· 6, .700,
4.22.
STRIKEOUTS- RJohnt(ln, Seattle,

159; Ooncna, ~· ~SI; Ryan, !cxu,
14S; l.anplCI1, CalifCIIIWI, 121; Swutdell,
Clcvdand, 126; McDowell. Chicago, 12S;
Finley, Califmnia, 122.

SAVES- Asuilcra, Min.nclota •. 29:
Ed&lt;erdcy, Oakland, 29; Ham:y, Califor·

nil. 25: Rcatdoro. lloolooo, 25; Ollon, Bal·
......_ 24: Thipn, OU&lt;aao. 24: ila&gt;kc,
Toronto, 23.
8/6/91 6:27 AM lnchca: 09.4 REGU·
LAR PM-BBN-Loa4cn,0348
MAJOR U:AGUE LEADERS
NATIONAL LEAGUE

BATTINO - TOwynn, San Diego ,
.337; Pmdlctan, Atlanla , .329; Ni.tcm, At·
lanta, .326; Morris, Cincinnati, .l?-4; Dig~
~0, Howton, .309; JOK, SL Louis, .309.

andbcq, Chicaso• .305 .
RU!IlS - Butler, Loa Angele1, 75 :

Sandberg, Chieaso. 73: Johnson , New
York , 71 : Gant.. Allanta, 6S: OSmith, St
Louit. 65: Pendleton. Allanll, 64: ffidl,
Pi_tt.lburah, 63: Van S1y.ke. Piusburah. 63:
Ntxon, A.tlanll, 63.

JlBI - WClar.k . San Franctaco, 80:
8ond1, P ittsburgh. 76: John son, New
York, 74; Dawson , Chicago, 71; GBell.
Chic~&amp;?· 69; Bonilla, Pituburgh, 65;
MaW1lltams, San Frtnci•co, 64 ; Ktuk ,
Philadelphia, 64; McGriff. S111 DiC@:o. 64.
HJTS- TGwynn, San Diego, 142;
Butler, Lo• Angeles, 121; Samuel, Lru
Angelc1, 118; Sandberg, Chic1go, 117,
] (IIC, St . loui1 , 115; Finley, Hou.smn ,
Ill ; Pendle ton, At1anu, 113 ; GDcl1,
O.iC.llgo, 113.

DOUBLES - J oac, St . loui s, 30:
McReynolds, New York. 27; Morris,
Cincinnati. 26: Bonilll, Pittsburgh , 26;
Gant, Atlanta , 24: Zeile. St. louis, 23:
Pend let on. Atla nta , 21: TGwynn. San

Dlcgo, 23.

TRIPLES- TGwynn, San Diego, 9;
Lankford, St. l.Dui.J, 8; Fmley, Houston,
7; LGonulez, HoultOn, 6; KNk, Philadelphia,~; Candaele, Hous~ , 6; Felder, San
~rancuco, 6; Van Slyke, Pii1Jburjh, 6.

HOME RUNS--'oi\Non, New Yod&lt;,
23; Oant, Adanta, 22; MI.Williama, San
Fnmcilco, 22; Mildtel.l, San Frtncitco,

s.................. ll-&lt;117 cliAblod 1ill.

22; WCWk, San Francitc:o, 21; McOriff,
San Dic&amp;o, 20; GBcU, Chi.caao. 20.

Na_._...

STO:LEN BASES-Ni.•on, Atlanta,
51; Griuom, Montreal, 41; DcShieldl,
Montreal. 41 ; Coleman, New York, 3S;
Bon_d•, Piuabursh. 32; Lan.kfo.rd, St.

a-lied Koilh CaD"""', pilcloeT, fn&gt;m
CaJpl7 ollloe- Cou&lt; Loapc.

LOS ANGELES DODGERS-Placed

Alfredo Griffin, tborutop. on the lS-d•y

II

. Nalloaal BMkdball Aaotilltion
UTAH JAZZ-Sipcd Eric Murdock,

c~UabiN lltt. Recalled 1ote Otfennan,

""""""" fn&gt;m Albooqo&gt;enju&lt; of lhe PacificC..olMNEW YORK METS-SiJIIcd Bobby
Joeet , pitcher, and auipcd bim to
CdwnbU ollhe Solllh Atlanlit Loa-

Louis, 29: Butlcr. Loo An8d ... 29

PJTCfUNG 00 Deci•ions) - Rijo.

Ci.ncinuti, &amp;·2, .800. 2.98; Hunt, San
Diego, 13·5, .722, 3.18; Avery, Atlanta.
12·5, .106, 1.62; Otuna, Houlton, 7·3,
.700, 2.25; Cazpen,.., So. Louis, 7-3•.700,
4.70; RMartinez,Loo An8elcs, 14·6. .700,
259; Glavine, Atll.nu.l4-6, .700, 2.21.

Brown's
former
players
comment
CINCINNATI (AP)- Paul
Brown's former players remember
the Hall of Fame coach as a caring,
but demanding coach.
Brown, voted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame after he achieved
winning records at every level of
football, died Monday at age 82 as
his Cincinnati Bengals prepared for
another season.
He could be hard on players
who he thought had failed to perform up to their levels, said Marion
Motley, a star running back who
played for Brown on the Cleveland
Browns.
"He always made sure that
when we went off the field, we had
to walk right past him. And everytime he would look at you and just
say, 'Do you know you're killing
this football team?'" Motley said
Monday. "Of cowse he was a person that wasn't emotional. I mean,
he was a rock."
Sam Wyche, who played for
Brown as a Cincinnati Bengals
quanerback in 1968 and has been
the Bengals' head coach since
1984, recalled that Brown had a
word of praise for players who felt
down.
" He had a knack for recogniz·
ing when a guy needed a crumb
thrown his way," Wyche said. "If
I had a bad practice, he'd look at
me and say, 'You're coming along,
something's coming there."'
Brown founded the Cleveland
Browns and later the Cincinnati
Bengals. His colleagues and former
players remembered Brown for_
helping shape the National FootballLeague and the way football coaching is done.
"He was a stickler for detail, a
well -organized person and - like
any successful man - he was able
to delegate responsibility to his
assistants." said Lou Groza, who
played for Brown in high school.
college and the pros.
Brown died early Monday at his
suburban Cincinnati home of complications from pneumonia Funeral
services are Wednesday in Massillon, Ohio, the city where Brown
coached Massillon Washington
High School's football team to six
state championships and four
national titles from 1932 to 1940.
Fonner NFL commissioner Pete
Rozelle credited Brown with
encouraging Rozelle to become
commissioner when he was asked
in !960 at age 33.
·'Whether they know it or not,
nearly everyone in the game of
football has been affected by Paul
Brown . His wealth of ideas
changed the game," Rozelle said
from his San Diego horne. "When
I was approached about becoming
NFL commissioner, I expressed
some initial reservations because I
was so young . But Paul Brown
reas sured me and said, ' Don't
worry. You'll grow with the job."'
Paid Tagliabue, who succeeded
Rozelle as NFL commissioner,
said: "He brought innovation and
meticulous organization to every
level of the game and was a true
Continued on page 5

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Inhumanity was the winner in
Monday night's pacing feature at
Scioto Downs, covering the mile in
I :59 1-5 and paying $9.40, $4 and
$3.20.
Return Escort was second,
returning $16.60 and $6.80; while
Rich Reese finishd third and was
wonh $2.&amp;0.
'
A crowd of 2,751 wagered
$219,496.

CLEVELAND (AP) - After
their fii'St preseason game, coaches
Bill Belichick and Richard
Williamson were in agreement on
one point: They're glad they have
three more weeks before the games
count.
Williamson's Tampa Bay Buccaneers beat Belichick's Cleveland
Browns 23-10 Monday night as
three different Dues quarterbacks
directed scoring drives.
"I thought overall we got
accomplished what we wanted to
accomplish," said Williamson,
who is running his first uaining
camp after taking over the Bucs for
the final three games last season.
"It is obvious we have a lot more
work to do, but we have three
weeks to do it in.''
Belichick, the defensive coordinator for the Super Bowl-champion
New York Giants last season,
didn't see much lhat he liked.
''Certainly there were a lot more
mistakes than great plays,'' he said.
"We had one good drive in the
third quarter. We kicked the ball
off OK. We had some spots where
we were just too inconsistent.· •
Vinny Tesraverde quarterbacked
Tampa Bay's first two series, using
a no-huddle offense lhat was effec·
tive but lhat stalled before it got to
the end zone. Steve Christie finished off both drives with field
goals of 44 and 20 yards.

"I felt very comfonable," said
Testaverde, who was 4-of-4 for 44
yards. "I was on target with my
passes. I felt good abQul running
the no-huddle offense. it was very
effective, and it will get better."
He and Williamson decided ear·
lier in the day they'd, try the hurry·
up· if the situation was right. Good
field position - their first two
drives started at lhe Tampa Bay 43
and the Cleveland 44 - convinced
them to give it a go.
"I don't think there was any
breakdown by the Browns because
of the no-huddle," Williamson
said. "I don't know if they were
expecting it or not. Vinny did a
good job of making some good
calls. The disappointing thing is
that we had an opportunity to put it
in, but they stopped us. ''
Backup quarterbacks Chris
Chandler and Jeff Carlson, however, each golthe ball to the end
zone. Chandler capped an 80-yard
drive lale in the fii'St half with a 5·
yard run and dive for a touchdown;
Carlson threw a 15-yard scoring
pass to John Harvey in the third
qllliJ'tU.
Kendall Trainor added a 43-yard
field goal in the fourth quarter.
Cleveland scored on a 35-yard
field goal by Man Stover in the
second qllliJ'tU and a 3·yard run by
rookie free agent Archie Herring in

Reds rip Dodgers; Atlanta
wins again to cut LA's lead

the third. Herring, a longshot to
make the team, played at nearby
Youngstown State University.
·'This is the team I grew up
with, with the Kardiac Kids of
Brian Sipe and Doug Dieken and
all those guys. I love the.BroWQS,"
Herring said.
George Hemingway, a rookie
prospect from Colorado, set up
Herring's touchdown with runs of
31 and 7 yards.
Other than that, Cleveland
accomplished little on offense.
Bernie Kosar started at quarterback
but completed only 2·of·5 passes
for 13 yards. Hemingway gained
46 yards rushin!!, and Derrick
Gainer was next w1th 16 yards.
Overall, Tampa Bay outgained
Cleveland 294-133 in total offensive yards.
"I don't think anyone feels
happy with the way things went,"
Kosar said. "Obviously a lot of
work needs to be done."
Kosar completed one 51-yard
pass to rookie Michael Jackson. but
it was called back because of illegal motion.
"Michael's had a good camp
trying to catch deeper balls,''
Kosar said. "Today we wanted to
work it in. I knew I was going to
play just a few plays, so I wanted
to see how he'd be able to do
against another team."

DOWN AND OUT - Los Angeles Dodger
baserunner Alfredo Griffin collides with Cincin·
nati Reds shortstop Barry Larkin as Reds second baseman Billy Doran applies the tag in sev-

same.

The New York Giants beat the
Buffalo Bills again, this time 2317.
And the Giants controlled the
ball for nearly as long as they did
in their Super Bowl victory over
Buffalo - 38 minutes and 9 seconds to 21:51 for the Bills.
Otherwise. the game was an
excercise for rookies and free
agents trying to make two of the
NFL's best teams.
"You play 30 guys to find
three," sa1d Buffalo coach Marv
Levy, whose team played without
Jim Kelly and Bruce Smith and
used Thurman Thomas only as a
decoy.
"What are you asking about,
this is a preseason game," said
New York linebacker Lawrence
Taylor, who played two series and
dropped an easy interception as
Ray Handley won his first game as
Giants' coach. "What would have
happened if we had lost the game?

Councilmen take
Park 'n' Putt game
Dewey Honon and James Clatworthy, representing Middleport
Village Council, took home a traveling uophy following their victory
against Pomeroy councilmen Bruce
Reed and Larry Wehrung recently.
The tournament was held at the
Middlepon Park 'n • Putt and was
organized by the Middlep&lt;rt Recreation Depanment.

Does that make him a bad coach?

Does this make him a great
coach?"
Indeed, this was a game about
which almos~ no conclusions could
be drawn. Not when the second
half featured the running of the
Giants' Tony Satter, a rookie free
agent from North Dakota StaJe
against a second- and third-string
Buffalo defense and the passing of
journeyman quarterback Gale
Gilben of Buffalo against a similar
group of Giants.
Even New York's heralded
quarterback duel between 12-year
starter Phil Simms and Jeff
Hostetler was inconclusive.

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
Oh, my Darling!
Ron Darling did exactly what he
and the Oakland Athletics hoped he
would, making his American
League debut a dandy Monday
night with a 3-0 victory over the
· Seattle Mariners.
Darling, pitching four days after
the Athletics acquired him in a
trade with Montreal, got his tOOth
major league victory. He shut down
Seattle on two hits in seven
innings, sUiking out six and walk. ing two.
"Feels better than the National
League, that's for sure," Darling
said. " They traded for me to come
over here and win ballgames, and
that's what I intend to do."
Darling began the season with
the New York Mets, where he went
5·5. He was traded to the Expos on
July 15 and went 0-3 with a 7.41

Simms staned, went 6 of II for
46 yards and directed the Giants to
10 points, including a 15-play, 84yard second.qllliJ'tU drive that consumed 8:40 and was capped by
Ottis Anderson's 2·yard touchdown run. That was Ihe closest
thing to the Super Bowl anyone
saw all night.
Then Hostetler, who led the
Giants through the playoffs and
Super Bowl when Simms was
injured, came on and went 10 of 13
for 136 yards and produced 13
points - but that was accomplished mostly against Buffalo
backups.

Umpires upset with Lou
CINCINNATI (AP) - Lou
Piniella isn't surprised that the
major league umpires' union is getting involved in his latest on-field
outburst.
The Cincinnati Reds manager
was ejected Saturday night for
arguing a foul-ball call, and kicked
din on home plate and ftrst base
before leaving. On Sunday, Piniella
blasted umpire Gary Darling, who
made the call, saying he was biased
against his team.
The accusation of foul play
brought a denunciation Sunday
from 30-year veteran umpire Doug
Harvey. It also caught the attention
of Richie Phillips, head of the
umpires' union.
Phillips was traveling Monday
and unavailable for comment, but a
spokeswoman in his office said he
would release a statement about the
incident. There was no release from
his office Monday.

·

.

TIRE SALE

..

EVE
TIRE
IS ON SALE THRU FAIR WEEK
;arestone
FALLS
SUPREME·$
ROADMASTER
1n
RADIAl IV
All Season

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17&amp;/80A1 3 ......... .............. .. '41.00
186/8DR13 ......................... '43.00
186/76R14 ..
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206/76R14 ...................... ... '47.00
226/79R16 ......................... '60.00
216/76R16 ......................... '61 .00
226 176R1 6 ......................... '63.00
236/76R16 ... ...................... '66.00

WMe SITipe
P186/80A13
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P18&amp; / 70A14
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' P206/ 70R14

CALL US BEFORE YOU BUY!
Many More Sizes And Styles
Available and On Sale

~-

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If we sell out of your size before
the sole is over - No Problem We restock twice weekly.

WE SERVICE THE
TIRES WE SELL

~

;'
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SALE ENDS SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 19«U

•.

We Want Your T1re Busmess'

!
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POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
600 E. Main St.

992-2094

•
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Pomeroy, OH.

Sening The Area For 25 Years

Continued from page 4
founder of the NFL's modern era.
... What he taught everyone in football would ftll volumes."
More than 50 of Brown's former
players and assistants have been
NFL coaches, including Sam
Wyche, Chuck Noll. Bill Walsh,
Don Shula and Weeb Ewbank.
Two of Brown's sons are Bengals
administrators: Mike, as assistant
general manager, and Pete, as
director of player personnel.
"I feel privileged to have played
under him," said Shula, coach of
the Miami Dolphins, who was a
Cleveland defensive back in 195152. "He had a profound impact on
my development as a coach, and I
know he will be missed by his
many friends in and out of football."
Wyche said he learned principles of loyalty, dedication and
commitment from Brown. Wyche
said Brown's encouragement in
1968 when Wyche was a free-agent
quarterback trying to make 1he
Bengals prompted Wyche to
remain in football rather than qmt
to pursue a post-graduate degree.
Wyche credited Brown with
instituting modern foo1ball traditions, including use of facemasks,
pass J?atlems, playbooks, full-time
positiOn coaches and housing a
team together the night before a
game.
Brown also began classroom
preparations for games, going over
game films to prepare game plans.
and use of guards as messengers to
carry in plays from the sidelines.
"He was way $ead of the game
as it exists today. Players had playbooks lmd scouting reports on the
other teams. All of these things are
part of what he brought to 1he
game," said Cleveland Browns
guard John Wooten, who played
for Brown from 1959 to 1962.
Brown made a request that the
Bengals not change their routine,
including practices and season
preparation, after his death. Wyche
said. The Bengals have no immediate plilns to wear a remembrance of
Brown on their uniforms.
''One of his final requests was
that absolutely nothing be disturbed, that everything would be
done as usual - 'business as
usual,' as he put it," Wyche said.
"I will honor his request, and
that'll be that nothing will be
changed. That's because that's the
way he wanted it."
Brown was born in Norwalk ,
Ohio, on Sept. 7, 1908. His overall
coaching record of 351-134-.15
from 1930 through 1975 includes
high school, college, wartime and
pro jobs. He was 170-108-6 in 21
NFL seasons and 222-112-9 overall
as a pro coach.
. .. ·.
Brown started coaching in 1930
at Severn Prep in Maryland where
his teams compiled a 16-1·1
record. AI Massillon, .hjs Tiger
teams were 80-8•2 and won six

- .I
•

'·

ERA before Oakland, needing
another pitcher for theJslretch, got
him for two minor league pitchers.
With the win, Oakland stayed
five games behind Minnesota in the
American League West The Twins
beat California 7-4.
In other games, New York
downed Detroit 7-5, Kansas City
beat Boston 5-3, Cleveland
trounced Texas 9-0 and Milwaukee
beat Baltimore 6·5.
Darling retired 16 of his final 17
batters. Rick Honeycutt got two
outs and then it was time for Dennis Eckersley, who completed the
combined two-hitter for his 29th
save.
Darling won in his first game
since he got pounded July 30 in a
10-3 loss to San Francisco. The
Oakland defense helped him out
early, with Rickey Henderson making a diving catch in left field and
second baseman Mike Gallego

Brown's former players ...

Piniella has an idea what
Phillips is going to say.
"I expected we'd hear from
him," Piniella said. "He's going to
say I should be lined and suspended. Fined and suspended for what?
Because one of his umpires made a
mislake?
"Let's get real. Let's live in the
real world. This isn'tla-la land."
It was a very unhappy place Saturday night when Darling overruled a call by Dutch Rennen,leaving Bill Doran with a foul ball
rather than a home run. After
Piniella was ejected, outfielder
Paul O'Neill also got thrown out of
the game fQI' tossing a drink cooler
on the field.
Fans littered the field, holding
up the game for sevezal minutes.
Piniella was still fuming Sun·
day, when he blasted Darling and
exchanged words with him before
the game.

Meets or e•ceeds carmaker standards
14 performance areas. A qu•et runn•ng .
all-season. ""'
radtal .

enth inning action in their game at Riverfront
Stadium Monday. Griffen was assisted from lbe
field and taken to a local hospital for tests. (AP)

Darling blanks Seattle in AL debut

Giants slip past Bills 23-17
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) -To the 76,121 fans who
showed up at Giants Stadium to see
a replay of last January's Super
Bowl, only two things remained the

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

II

state title s and four national
crowns.
He brought a national champion
to Ohio State Universily and
amassed an 18-8- 1 record there,
coached a )Xlwerhouse a1 the Oreal
Lakes Naval SJation during World
War II with a 15·5 -2 record in
1944-45, then made his name in
professional foolball by founding
the Cleveland Browns of the AllAmerica Football Conference.
The Browns were 47-4-3 and
captured all four titles in the
league's existence before entering
the NFL in 1950. They won the
championship that year - the first
of their three titles in 1he 1950s.
Brown's Cleveland teams were
167-53-8 overall and 115-49-5 in
the NFL when new Browns owner
Art Modell fired Brown in 1963.
Modell had become majority
owner of the Browns, dnd !here
was a clash of personalities
between him and Brown. Some of
the players, including fullback Jim
Brown, indicaJed !hey would n01
play another season with Paul
Brown as coach. Some said his
football philosophy was too old
fashioned. Others complained he
was too aloof.
At the time he fired Brown,
Modell explained it by saying:
"The only reason I will give for
the change is that I believe it will
serve the best interest of the Cleveland Browns."
The firing created an uproar in
Cleveland, where some fan s ha ve
yel to forgi ve Modell nearl y 30
years later.
Modell creditcd Brown on Mon- ·
day with having made Cleveland a
football city.
"There is no ques1ion he started
a great love affair bclwecn the city
of Cleveland and the franchi se,"
Modell sa id . "He's a Hall of
Farner and he was a true Hall of
Farner."
The 1960s saw Brown win election to the Pro Foo1ball Hall of
Fame and Conn the Bengals expansion franchise that he coached until
1975. He continued to run the Bengals' operations as vice president.
part owner and general manager,
usually taking a behind-the-scenes
approach.
The Bengals went to the Super
Bowl twice, losing to San Francisco both times, in 1981 and 1989.
Bob Johnson, the fii'St player the
Bengals drafted for their initial season in 1968, remembered Brown .
for )!eing restrained in his assessment of an early B\lftgals game in
which the team lost 38-7 and dido 't
get a first down umil the fourth
quarter. Johnson said the players
expected a to.11gue-lashing from
Brown, but reeeived a surprise.
"The first thing out of his
mouth was, 'Not too bad.' I
couldn't believe it. But I think Paul
was so confident in his position
that he could do that," Johnson
said.
.

turning a nifty double play.
Bill Krueger (9-4) gave up one
run in 6 1-3 innings.
Henderson's speed set up the
fliSt run. He beat out an infield hit
with two outs in the third inning,
stole two bases and scored on Dave
Henderson's bloop single.
Twins 7, Angels 4
Brian Harper and Randy Bush
hit two-run doubles in a five-run
first inning, enough for Kevin
Tapani to win.
Tapani (9-7) gave up eight hits
and struck out six in 8 2-3 innings,
and Rick Aguilera got his 29th
save.
Dave Winfield hit his 399th
career home run.
•
The first six Twins batters
reached base against Joe Grabe (I ·
2).

Yankees 7, Tigers 5
Mel Hall homered and drove in
five runs.
Hall went 4-for-4 and matched
his career high for RBis. Don Mattingly also homered for the Yankees.
Scott Sanderson (II- 7) struck
out a career-high 12 in six innings.
He gave up four runs and four hits.
Eric Plunk pitched two innings
and Lee Guetterman got his sixth
save.
Walt Terrell (7-10) was ragged
for five runs on seven hits in 4 1-3
innings.
Royals 5, Red Sox 3
George Brett doubled twice for
his I,OOist career extra-base hit.
Gary Thurman singled home a
run and David Howard doubled
home another.
Jeff Montgomery (2-4) got the
victory. Tony Fossas (1·2) took the
loss.
Indians 9, Rangers 0
Eric King pitched a two-hitter
and Mark Whiten hit two home
runs.
King (5-{i) struck out seven and
walked one.
Kevin Brown (7 -9) took the
loss.
Brewers 6, Orioles 5
Robin Yount doubled home the
go-ahead run in the ninth inning.
Franklin Stubbs hit his I Oth
home run as the Brewers took a 5·0
edge in the thinl inning.
Darryl Hamilton singled off
Mark Williamson (3-5) in the ninth
and scored on Yount's double .
Doug Henry (2-0) was the winner
and Edwin Nunez got his fourth
save.

Buck not
worried
about
'
getting work
By The Associated Press
Cincinnati Bengals defensive
lineman Jason Buck isn't worried
about finding work if the Cincinnati Bengals decide to Jake away
his job.
"I know if I don't have a good
season here, I'U have it for someone else," said Buck, a former No.
I draft pick who lost his starting
job last year.
Buck had the team's only sack
in last Friday's exhibition opener
against Detroit, but it's not going to
easy for him to return for a fifth
season.
The Bengals have kept six
defensive linemen for the past several years. Nose guard Tim Krumrie and David Grant appear certain
to -make the team, as does secondround draft choice Lamar Rogers.
Bob Dahl, a third-round pick,
also seems to have won a spot and
Skip McClendon. who started at
left end last season, has returned to
practice to test his foot And Natu
Tuatagaloa was credited with get·
ting Buck the sack with his pass
coverage last Friday, showing why
the Bengals covet his athletic ability.

CINCINNATI (AP) -Jose
Rijo knows when it's over.
He proclaimed the National
League West race over last season
long before the Cincinnati Reds
clinched. He wore an "It's Over"
T -shirt as the Reds swept the
World Series.
The self-styled expert in sure
things knows one thing for sure this
year: an NL West race that looked
over just a few weeks ago is any·
thing but.
"Not yet. Not even close," Rijo
said, after pitching the Reds to a
10-6 victory Monday night over the
fii'St-place Los Angeles Dodgers.
The third-place Reds moved to
5 1/2 games back with only their
eighth victory in 25 games.
They've made up three games on
the Dodgers despite the slump, and
opened a four-$ame series against
LA in encouragmg fashion.
The Reds scored six third-inning
runs off Ramon Martinez (14-6),
who was unbeaten in three career
starts at Rivetfront Stadium. The
rally wiped out a three-run deficit
and sent Los Angeles 10 a fourth
straight loss.
"That's something I've been
looking for all year," said Rijo (82). "Thai's the type of game we're
capable of playmg, the type of
comeback we can make. We fmally
did it, and we did it at the right
time."
"You start to get the breaks,
you start to win,'' said Glenn Braggs, who hit a pair of homers to
drive in three ·runs . ''This club
feels we can make a move.''
The Dodgers are starting to look
like a team that could get run over.
Los Angeles has lost 14 of its 16
road games since the AII·Star break
to let its lead nearly evaporate. Second·place Atlanta closed to 2 1/2
games Monday night by beating
San Francisco 5-2.
And there was more bad news.
Shortstop Alfredo Griffm fractured
his right cheekbone during the
game and went on the 15-day dis·
abled list. Second baseman Juan
Samuel also strained a hamstring
and will be hampered for a while.

"When things go wrong, they
go wrong," outfielder Darryl
Strawberry lamented . "One day
Jhey'll just click back and every thing WIU Start to go right again."
They'd better click back soon.
or the Dodgers might be looking
up.
"We have to play better just to
hold onto first place," Strawberry
said.
They got a good start on it Mon day, scoring three runs in the first
three innings off Rijo. The righthander was making his third start
since coming off the disabled list
from a broken right ankle, and the
still-swollen ankle bothered him
more than it had in the two previous Starts.
"The ankle wouldn't let me
push off like I wamed lo," he said.
"I couldn't get the ball shrup to th e
plate."
Martinez was healthy, bul didn '1
have a very good fastba ll. He
fooled the Reds for two innin gs
with change-ups and curves. They
caught on in the third.
Braggs led off with a homer, his
ninth. One outlatcr, Rijo si ngled 10
start a string of six consecutive hiLs
capped by Paul O'Neill's two-run
double.
Ten batters. Seven hits. Six
runs. Fony-five pitches. A 6-3 lead
that the Dodgers couldn 't overcome.
"We've got Ramon going. We
go out and get the lead and you feel
we have a good chance to win the
game," Strawberry said. "When
you get the lead, he usually pitches
a good game."
Not this time.
"It happens sometimes," said
Martinez, who failed to las! into the
seventh for only the third time in
22 Starts.
It was only the second time this
season the Reds have scored six
runs in an inning. They realized
they were enjoying a rare moment
"It was a tremendou s win,"
Braggs said. " When you beat Martinez, it gives this club a boost II
should bolster our offense.' •
Chris Sabo hil a solo homer in

the fifth off Martinez, and Braggs
added a two-run homer in the sixth
off Jim Gou to keep the Reds comfortably ahead. Rijo allowed nine
hits over six-plus innings to win his
se venth straight decision, and Rob
Dibble closed it out with two hilless innings for his 24th save.
The blown lead, th e six -r un
third and the 1wo injuries left the
Dodgers stunned.
"What a night. huh'" manager
Tom Lasorda said.
In other games Monday night,
Atlanta beat San Francisco 5-2 and
Houston edged San Diego 2-1 in 12
innings.
Cubs 7, Mets 2
The Mets were blasted again by
the Cubs, who reached .500 for the
first time since June 16.
Luis Salazar drove in three runs,
two with a first-inning single off
Pete Schourek (2·2). Frank Castillo
(4-2) overcame a shaky start to
piu:h a nine-hitter.
Rraves 5, Giants 2
Allanta moved within 2 1/2
games of the struggling Dodgers as
John Smohz continued his rebound
with a six-hitter and Tommy Gregg
capped a five-run third-inning with
a two-run homer.
Gregg's homer capped the big
inning off Giants starter Don
Robinson (5-8), who had just come
off the disabled list after a ham·
string injury.
Smoltz (7-12) won for the fifth
time in his last six decisions. He
struck out six and walked none.
Astros 2, Padres 1
Baseball's houest team, the lastplace Astros, made it eight straight
wins as Craig Biggio's 12th-inning
RBI single shot down San Diego.
Rafael Ramirez and Steve FinIcy si ngled with 1wo outs in the
12th off Larry Andersen (3·3)
before Biggio's single to left.
Dwayne Henry (3-0) got the win.
Astros starter Pete Harnisch
allowed three hits and struck out a
career-high 12 in seven innings, but
San Diego tied the game off Curt
Schilling in the ninth on Thomru:
Howard's RBI single.

''
•I'

I

,

l

I

I

U.S. baseballers eye perfect mark
HAVANA (AP)- The U.S. fifth inning, when Ware allowed the only Dominican run.
baseball team is thinking about
going undefeated. And, accorrung
to the U.S. coach, the Cubans are
thinking about the Americans
doing just that.
''The Cubans have enough
depth to win," U.S. coach Ron
Polk said, "but I guarantee you
they are very concerned about the
Esrados Unidos. ''
That's the name the United
States goes by in Cuba, where the
best amateur baseball in the world
is played. Their murderers' row
consists of players like Jose Raul
Delgado, Omar Linares and
Orestes Kindelan, and they strike
fear in all but the United States,
seemingly.
The Cubans opened the Pan
American Games on Sunday with a
14-6 victory over Nicaragua that
included seven home runs . The
Americans followed the next day
with a 6-1 pasting of the Dominican Republic, geuing six-hit pitching from Jeff Ware of Old Domin·
ion.
Then the Cubans struck back by
romping past Mexico 22·0 with
four more homers, including two
grand slams.
"The kids think they can go
undefeated," said Polk, of Missis·
sippi State. "I don't care about
that. I just want to get into the
medal round and let the rest rake
care of itself."
The United Slates does not play
Cuba until Saturday.
What the Cuban team is to amateur baseball, the American women
are to amateur basketball. Maybe
even more so. And, after losing to
Brazil the day before, they came
back with a vengeance to beat
Argentina 97-40 on Monday, holding the Argentines to I 0 )Xlints in
the second half.
JAMMIN' - USA's James Jackson (8) pulls down the ball as
The American men won their Venezuela's Cesar Portilla (5) and Armando Recker (6) look on dursecond straight, a 91-66 romp over ing the Pan Am Games basketball competition in Havana Monday.
Venezuela.
The U.S. won 91-66. (AP)
At the track and field stadium, it
was a day short on positive results
and long on controversy for the
United States. The host Cubans
won six gold medals, the United
States none. And at least one
224 EAST MAIN • POMEROY, OH.
American, long jumper Llewellyn
Stark, thought he was robbed of a
gold medal by a phony foul.
Through three dars. Cuba had
compiled a big lead m the medals
standings. The Cubans had 39, 26
gold, while the Americans trailed
with 28, five gold.
Ware, a 20-year-old right-hander, struck out eight and allowed
three walks in beating the Domini·
cans. Three of the hits came in the

!

l

f

I

t

POMEROY HEALTH CARE
992-6418 or 992-6588

THOMAS SPENCER, D.O.
Receiving Patients
Starting August 5

Plan golf scramble
The Southern Golf Team is'
sponsorin$ a four-person scramble
at the Me1gs County Golf Club on
Sarurday at 9 a.m.
Entry fee is $35 for non-members and $30 for members. Teams
will be drawn prior to tee-off. For
more information or to sign up call
992-6312 or992-3671.

OPEN:
MONDAY &amp; WEDNESDAY
8 am-12 noon and 1 pm-5 pm
TUESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
10 am-12 noon and 1 pm-8 pm
FRIDAY 8 am -12 noon and 1 pm-4 pm
SATURDAY 8 am-12 noon
Appointments or Walk-Ins Welcome

.I

�. ....... .....-----··-·-

•

,.

!

T-he Daily Sentin·elt,:.

By The Bend·

1\Jesday, August 6, 1991

.

Alfred area notes

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich
In case you haven't heard - and
I' ll bet you have - the Meigs County Fair has been extended this year
to a six day event. That means the
fair will have its rust full day of
activities on Monday. Nonnally,
Monday has been the day to kind
of get it all wrapped together in
preparation for opening on Tuesday.
the Meigs Fair Board is asking
all exhibitors - this includes the
business and organization booths be in place by Saturday. The board
does not want the traffic of people
trying to move onto the grounds to
set up exhibits and booths on Monday when the fair will actually be
underway this year. The Rock
Springs Fairgrounds will be open
from Wednesday through the rest
of this week so that you can proceed to set up your booth and have
it ready to go by this Saturday.
The Secretary's Office on the
grounds will be open from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday
to accept registration for the open
class competitions in various
endeavors. Unless properly registered, of course, your entnes cannot be awarded ribbons and premi-

ums.

One more point- phone nomben listed in the tabloid premium
list publication of the fair board are
incorrect. The Senior Fair Board
Office number this year is 9922641 and the Junior Fair Board
Office is 992-2142.
I •

And here are the figures for the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services for the month of July.
The service made 222 runs taking I 07 patients to Veterans

Memorial Hospital; 34 to the Holzer Medical Center; 12 to Pleasant
Valley Hospital and 18 to other
hospitals. Runs made by the different units include Columbia, 3;
Middleport, 59 ; Pomeroy 64 ;
Racine, 31 ; Rutland, 33; Syracuse,
22, and Tltppers Plains, I 0. In
addition, transfer units of the service made 60 runs during the
month. There were five aero-medical runs during the month.
A family dinner was held honoring Mr. and Mrs. Ralph McKenzie
on their 67th wedding anniversary ,
June 18, and Mr. McKenzie's 88th
birthday on June 8.
The dinner was held at the home
of their daughter and son-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Lew is in
Pomeroy. Also attending were
their grandson, David Lewis, and
Katie and Niki of Pomeroy.
Unable to attend due to family illness was the McKenzies' granddaughter, Carol Durst and greatgrandson, Robbie and Eric , of
Akron.
Sixty-seven years - now that's a
long spell. Congratulations!

JULIE WOLFE

TONY BROWN

RANDALL ROACH

Wolfe, Brown, Roach tourney winners
A pool tournament was held
recently at th e Locomotion Teen
Center in Pomeroy with parti~i­
pants from four counties attending.
Winners were Julie Wolfe , girls

division; Tony Brown, boys, age announ ce d later at one of the
13-15: and Randall Roach, boys, dances. Officials for the tournaage 16-21. The tournament was ment were Jim Wea ver, Robert Sisunder the direction of Terry John- son, Terry Johnson, Linda Lauderson. Another tournament will be milt and Shirley Yoder.

14th annual
reunion held

Friends are waiting to hear further from personable Mary Jane
Talbott who became ill while
enroute to Columbus. Mary Jane
was in Lancaster and ended up in
the Lancaster-Fairfield Hospital
where a stress test was to be run
Monday since Mary Jane was
experiencing severe chest pains.
And we were blessed with rain
on the weekend. Not enough but
enough to help us keep smiling.

Community calendar
.Community Calendar items
appear two days before an eveat
aad tbe day of tbat event Items
must be rec:eived well iD advance
to 188Ure publication ia the caleadir.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Open Gym for
girls volleyhall, grades 9-12, will
be held at Meigs High School
through Thursday from 9:30-11
a.m. Practice will begin on Friday,
Aug. 9. All girls in grades 9-12
interested in playing are encouraged to attend.
REEDSVILLE - The Reedsville
Church of the Nazarene will hold
Vacation Bible School through Friday from 6-8:30 r..m. for children
to age 13. Adu t class will be
oftered. Those age 14 and over are
inviled to assist with the program.
The public is inviled.
RUTLAND - Vacation Bible
School will begin at the Rutland
Cburch of God Monday through
Friday. aasses are held from 6:308:30 p.m. To register call the
church at 742-2060. The program
featureS Bible study. crafts, activities and music.
POMEROY - Vacation Bible
School at the First Southern Baptist
Church in Pomeroy will be held
thiough Friday from 6:30-9 p.m.
The public is inviled.
POMEROY- The Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene in
Reedsville will have vacation Bible
school through Friday from 6 to
8:30 p.m. There will be both children and adult classes and the public is inviled to attend:
MIDDLEPORT- "Around the
World with Jesus" is the theme of
Vacation Bible School at Victory
Baptist Church in Middleport
thr()ugh Friday, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
nightly. Public inviled.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middlepcx't Masonic Lodge No. 363 F and
AM will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
There will be "''ork in the E.A.
degree.

l&gt;OMEROY - The American
Legion Post 39 Drew Webster of
Pomeroy will meet Tuesday at the
~ home. Dinner at 7 p.m., meetmg at 8 p.m: All members urged to

aaend.
)fiLLWOOD, W.VA - The
River Valley Herbalists will meet
Tu'eaday at 7 p.m. at the home of
Glenna Tucker, Millwood, W.Va. .
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Eastern Star will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. Members wear chapter

dresses.
PORTLAND - The Stiversville

Word of Faith Church will have a
bake sale fundraiser on Tuesday at
from 9 a.m. to dark on Stiversville
Road in Portland. Rain will cancel.
Call Pastor David Dailey for further information or directions, 9854482.

CLASS OF 1931 ·These members or the 1931
Class of Chester High School attended that
reuaion held receatly at the home or Kathryn
and Virgil Windon. Pictured, l·r, front, are Earl

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
S!Wigs Grange will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m., instead of Thursday.
Annual inspection will be held and
all members are urged to attend.

MILTON, W.VA.- The Golden
Wolf Chapter, Muskies, Inc., will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Milton Volunteer Fire Department.
The public is invited.

Pauline Ridenour, Betty
DaviSson, Bertha Smith (teacher.) Back, Irene
Parker, Nellie Parker, Virgil McElroy, John
Bailey and Fred Smith.

The Chester High School Clas
of 1931 held its annual reunion at
the home of Kathryn and Virgil
Windon recently. Nellie Parker
asked the blessing before the basket dinner.
During the afternoon the group
shared memories and took pictures.
Teachers present were Bertha
Smith and Earl Knight. Class members attending were John Bailey,
Irene Parker, Virgil McElroy ,

PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m . at the
Pageville Township Building.

POMEROY - The United
Methodist Cooperative Parish will
have clothing day on Thursday
from 9:30 a.m. to noon at the
parish located at 311 Condor Street
in Pomeroy.

Koi~hf(teacher),

CHS Class of '31 gathers

WEDNESDAY
NELSONVILLE - The Hocking
Valley Community Residential
Center Board will meet Wednesday
at the Quality Inn Hocking Valley
in Nelsonville from 11 a.m . to I
p.m.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Local
Band Boosters will start fair booth
clean-up on Thursday at 6 p.m. All
boosten are urged to attend.

Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Burke, Sherry and Greg, returned recently from
a trip through the Southwest.
In New Mexico they 'visited
Mrs. Burke' s sister, Sandra
Marcinko, and her family at Cloudcroft. They toured the White Sands ·
Monument at Almagordo and an
Indian Reservation. They went
boating on Elephant Butte Lake.
In Texas they visited Jerry 's
brother, Kenneth Burke, and family .
at Huntsville.
On the way home they toured
Graceland, home of Elvis Presley,
Memphis, Tenn.
Imogene and Lester Keaton
attended the funeral of her sister,
Thelma Sarver, age 87, at Spencer,
W.Va.
Will Poole returned home after a
week of computer training at the
Cleveland Sight Clinic. Martha and
Joe Poole went to Cleveland to
bring him home . They report
drought conditions are very bad m
that area
Osie Mae Follrod has been
assisting in the care of her grandson, Brian Follrod who had surgery
recently at a Columbus hospital.
Lloyd Dillinger returned to
work after an illness in the hospital.
Nellie Parker and Martha Poole .
visited carolyn and Lewis Smith. ...
Sherri and Michael at West Shade ••
on Wednesday.
-;

Pauline Ridenour, Fred Smith, Nellie Parker and Betty Davisson.
Others present, besides the
hostcs, were Martha Poole, Henri etta Bailey. Mary Buck, Kenneth
Davisson, Brian Windon and
Amanda, Adam and Abbie Chevalier.
Next year's reunion will be held
the last Sunday in July with place
to be announced.

Gilkey-Hudnall reunion held
THOMAS BARFIELD

New
arrival
Kenneth and Barbara· Barfield .
Lynchburg, Va., are announcing
the birth of their son, Thoma s
Lamar, on June 9.
Th e infant weig hed eight
pounds and nine ounces and was 21
and one-half inches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Richard 0. (B ob and J can )
Thomas.
Mrs. Barfie ld is a graduate of
Meigs High School and Ohio University. Barfield is also a graduate
of Ohio University. He is employed
by B and W as an electrical engineer. She is pursuin g a master' s
degree in business administration.

GUYSV!Ll:;E - The Ohio Valley Church of God, U.S. Highway
50 East, GuysviHe, will be presenting films on Thursday and Friday.
Films on Thursday at 6 p.m. ·
include "Thief in the Night" and
Jimmy and Jenny (Cowdery)
"Distant Thunder." Films on Friday Nutter
are announcing the birth of
at 6 p.m. include "Image of the their first child, a daughter, Jade
Beast" and "Prodigal Planet." Pas- Rachelle , on May I at Camden
tor Donald Combs invites the pub- Clark Memorial Hospital in Parklic.
ersburg, W.Va.
The infant wi eghed eight
pounds and seven ounces and was
19 and three-quarter inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Jim
and Sandy Cowdery. Paternal
grandparents are Jim and Shirley
Nutter, all of Reedsville.
Great grandparents are Jim and
ATLANTA (AP) -Freddy
Cole isn't complaining about being Maxine Husk, Mildred Eliswick
" the Cole that nobody knows." and Virginia Walton. Great great
The brother of Nat "King" Cole grandmother is Rose Chevalier.
says he's had a preuy good career
in his own right, with a gold record
and loyal fans to show for it.
A picnic and hymn sing with
" My brother was one of the atea singers was held recently at
greatest entertainers ever," said the Stiversville Community Word
Cole, a jazz pianist and vocalist.
of Faith Church.
·
··
"But I'm not Nat," he added.
A potlu ck dinn er was also
"It's lilce my father once told me: enjoyed;
Every bucket has its own bottom.
A bake sale fundraiser will be
You can't sit on Nat's bottom and held Tuesday at from 9 a.m. to dark
he can't sit on youn. You got to sit · on Stiversvtlle Road in Portland.
011 Freddy's bottom."
Rain will cancel. ·

Birth is announced

The Cole that

noboby knows

Picnic, sing held ·

The 21 st annual family reunion
for descendants of the late Tommy
and Milda Jane (Hudnall) Gilkey,
was held recently at the roadside
park on Route 33 near D;u-win.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Gilkey, Lancaster; Iva Powell,
Chrissy Goble, Edj cl Gobel,
Pomeroy; Tony Gilkey, Mr. and
Mrs. Tim Gilkey, Amanda Gilkey,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Duncan, Jason
Duncan, Jami Duncan, Mr. and
Mrs. Kermit Gilkey , Justin Gilkey,
Carol Wines, Darwin ; Marth a
Varner, Duncan Falls; Mr. an d
Mrs. Joe Judson, Tommy Gilkey,
Ray Judson, Lisa Scott, Malta; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Moore, Dan icl
Moore, McConnelsville ; Darrell
Young, Shade; Penn y Bingman ,
Brook Bringman, Jesse Bingman ,
Amesville; Mr. and Mrs. Garold
Gilkey, Rick Gilkey , Danie l
Gilkey, Courtney Gilkey , Kati
McKibbin, Myrtle Gilkey, Mr. and
Mrs. Scott Wolfe, Amber Wolfe,

Descendants of the A.D. Biggs
Family held their 14th annual
reunion at the Chester Fire House
recently with 42 in attendance.
· Attending from out-of-town
were Hom er and Helen Biggs,
Unionport ; John and Florence
Shlotterback and family, Marietta;
Morell and Eula Smith, Delaware;
Jack Frederick and family, loca!;
Opal Biggs, Judy Bailey, local;
Elizabeth Hayes, Jerry Frederick
and family, Jackie Wamsley and
family, Goldie Frederick, Bill and
Caroly Biggs and family. Sandy
Beaver, Bill Coy, Charles Bailey
Jr. and family, Denver Biggs and
family. Saltra Davidson , Steve
Martin and family, Andy and
Cylinda Cross, and Bonnie Landers.

Degrees were presented to 22
students from this area during
spring quarter commencement
exercises at Ohio University.
Graduate degrees wei'C awarded
to Shirley L. Tabor, Cheshire, Master of Arts; Timothy Ray Roberts,
Reedsville, Master of Education;
and Judith Ann Sams. Reedsville,
Master of Education.
Receiving degrees with hi-honors were Ronald Todd Clay,
Chester, Bachelor of Science tn

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

PRICE REDUCED'

Parti~ owne~ fiflancinfstv~abif. The price

has beefl reouced to ,
$77.900 and
owner f~ancing of up to 80% of pUithase
amount may be possi(je for qualilying ~n
to buy vr1J niO! farl!ll home on 3\1 acres in Ill·
tine 4BR. 3baths, '2 garages, rented 1BR apt.
Propelty iltludes 4~00 sq. n. farm bid~
Call614'992·7104 for Appt.

MENDOTA, Calif. (AP) - An
88-year-old woman who said her
husband had " never let me do anything evea close to this" is claiming a record as the oldest woman
ever to sky dive.
Hazel Stout, of Portland, Ore.,

Days

15
15
15
15

Monthly -

16

MONDAY PAP ER
lUESOAY PAPER
W[ ON F SOAY PAPlA
lHURS OAY PAPER
~HIOAV PAP E R
SUNDAY PAPER

Country singer
builds theater

Ra1e
.
$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13 .00
$1 . 30/ da y

.20
.30
.42

60

.06 / day

aro tor consecuttve tuns. broken upd, s wrll be ch•ged

( .' /fl.~si/if•tl

fiiiJ{f '.\

~

D AY BEFOR E PUBLI C ATIO N
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM MO NDA"'
2 0 0 PM TUE SDAY
2 00 P M W EDNESDAY
2 00 PM THURSDAY

••..

.•

...'

PubliC Notice
The auoceaaful bidder

Galha Count y

Met gs Counly

Ar ea Code 614

Ar. . Code 614

446
367
380
246
256
643
319

992

Galhpol•s

Ch• h•re
Vinton
Aro Grande
Guyan D•st
Arab• a Orst
W.alnut

949 Rac•ne
742 Rutl1111d
667 Co o l"~l e

!'~

•

- ·~

:.
'.

..

In Me mory
Annoucttm unt s

Gtveawav

5
6
7

Happy Ads
Lost and f i)Und
Yard S ale (p a rd 111 oldll ct n ccl

8

Pubh c Sal e &amp; Au cltot•
Wantt!'d

Dult .a&amp;o

Motnl t: Ho rntn lor S,rll!
filrm s lor S alt!

3 1

Bu SIIltlS!i Bmldm ~J II&gt;

3536

lots &amp; A ~ r eagt:
R e al Es t at e W anh:d

t o Bu.,
41
42
43
46

47

Help Wa ntud

48

17

51

18

61
62

•

!

49

65

lih6hi46JI

I 1

A tri os t o r S i!l u

7'1

78
79

Tr ucks l or S alt!
V ;ua &amp; 4 WO ' ! o
M ut orc ycl t5
Boat s &amp; Moton lUI S o~ l c
Aut o P art s &amp; A CI:USSOf t iA
Aut o Rup""
C11 rnprng Equrp!H t.'lll
C umpen; &amp; Mot ur Hnme~~&gt;

81

H o m e lltlj)fDVUm ent 1o

73

74

11,
76

11

'

l
l
I

I

H o u st~ h o ld Goo d ~&gt;

62

Sportrnljj Good •

&amp;3
54

Antiques
Mrsc M er ch and•so
lhuldmg S u p ph ll!io
Pe h l or Sal u

5&amp;
~6

8 2 Plumbrng &amp; Htt atmu
B J E~tc ;rvattno
84 Ehu ..1ru::al &amp;

R~frltl ll~'&lt;tll u n

B!t G tmet a l H;lll hnu
86 M o brlt: H unH: R ep a u
87 Upholstmv

5 7 Mu srcallrn tnun un h
58 fru rts &amp; V eg ~ il bl ~
59 f o r S alt! or l riul t~

2 1 Bus m ll51 Oppor1u111t y
22 Mo ne'¥ t o l oan
23 Pr o fesswn al Ser v r cc~

Sued &amp; FertrhJ cr

Trans ortalion

Merchandise

Mrsc llil clll.rou )
W;mtad To Do

I

Faun EqU!pm ont
W a111t:d 1o Buy

63 lrvcs lock
6 4 Hay &amp; Gram

H ouses tor R enl
M o btle Homen ln r R ent
f ar m s lot R t1n t
Apa rlnH!fll to r fh.m t
furm s h ed Room !!.
Spacv lot Re 111
WanltnJ 10 R t1 nl
Equ rpru t:n \ fo r A1 mt
Fo r lt:iUC

44
4 ft

12 Srtua1ton W a nt od
13 lnsmance
14 Bu s tnen lrc•"""!l
15 Schools • lnllruc tum
16 Rt~dt u . lV 8r CB Acp ,m

Luon
Apple Gr o v 11
M ason
L Atart

H um tJs lor Sale

32
33

I;®Flltl

Po Pltr•ant

New Hav e n

31

_______...J________.J.________..J..________..J..._ _ _ _ _ _ __

SIGNS

r

PARKER

CONSTRUCTION

(8) 6, 13 21c

5

Happy Ads

---.:..:.-=----

Ooo't get stung by high prices!
Shop the dossified section.

CONGRATULATIONS
and THANKS!
Congratulation• to Dale
ID.J.I Herman and Earl
IRichiel Hunt lor obllin-

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE

ing their wei ding certifi-·
cation through the WHt

l1stilllaa Cellular

Virginia State Highway

Department in Char'"ton .

0 . J . and Richie com-

pleted the welding program at Meigs High

667·6681
After 7:00 p.m.

PH1es, (• Stereos
or Radios, CB's
On SHo lnstalat!Gn
frM Estimates

School under the super-

vision oi instructor&amp; Ken

7-25 1 mopd.

A&amp;B
COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops ,
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair .
MAIN ST., MASON, WY.

742·2656

Eblin and Richard Fetty

making them eligible for
qualification.

Thank• go to Midwaot
Steel Corp.. Pomeroy.
and Detail Metalo. Mid-

1-(3041·
773-9560

George Wright for tran -

sportation.

AIR CONDmONERS - HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES .FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

·· ·-·-· ·- · ···· ····· · ·Moitii ·.ioMi.·

Help Wanted

BENNETT'S

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

locat.d On Safford Schaol ld. aft lt. 141
(614) 446·9416 ar 1·100-172-5967

4-29-91

YOUNG'S

V. C. YOUNG Ill
Pomeroy, Ohio

USED RAILROAD TIES

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

J&amp;L

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

7-24

lmo

ALL MAdS

Iring It .. Or Wo
Plclt Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

992-6215

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•tn1utation

JAMES KEESEE

915-3561

992-2772 or
742-2251
539 Bryan Place
Middleport. Ohio

BOB lONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006
&amp;-6-'91

992-2269
6-12-90-tfn

11 -14-'90 tfn

992-5335 or
Acrooo FNM PHI OHica

Specializing in
Cultom Fr11111a lepair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES I
MODELS
992-7013
or 992-5553

INDEPINDEIIT
CAIPET ClEANERS

ontl TILE FLOOI CAll
•Aeeooneble Rates
oQuatlty Work
•Free E1timitaa
•Carpet H11 Fa1t Dry
Time
•High GIDII on Tile
Floor Flnfoh ·
MilE lEWIS, Ownor
II. I, lvtlonol, OH.

7 1 31 / '91 11n

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"tt Reasoitoble Prices"

742·2451

Opponunity To Cross· Train
In Speciality

Home Aepaira
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

STEWAIT'S

ROOFING

GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

PERSONNEL
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
POINT PLEASANT; WV
'
.
(304).875-4340 .. ·.. .

AND·JVEIYTHING UNDEINIATH

,TROMM BUILDERS
.
.

,.aa•m
•20Y. . .· hpiMiw1CA

·

•ciYa•ttv Horne• ~ .
C~~~tom

R emoclollng

.

742-2328

CEDAI
CONSQUCTIOIII
ttl_.641 or

691·6864 '
;

1·14-'11·1fn

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Paintin9
F~_I!E

ESTIMATES ·

' 949-2161

7·11·11 · 1 mo. i!d'

3-lt-lfn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•Now Home•
eGartlfl•
•Complete

985-4473
667-6179
5-3 1-'90 lfn

9D DAY WAftAIIn
WASIIEIS- $100 up
DIIYIS- $0Y op
llffltiGEIATOIS-$100 up
IAHGIS- Got-lltc.-$125 up ·
fllfUEIS-$US up
'
•cwo OVINS-$" .,

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915 -!561
Arross from hst Offico · '·
POMEROY, OHO

t0/30tl9 tfn

4-16-16-lfn

Howard L Writesel

ROOFING

NO SUNDAY (AllS

USED APPUANCES

BISSELL
'BUILDERS
PH. 949·210 1
or 111. 949-2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

3-14-'91 -tfn

PH. 949·210 I
· or los. 949·2160

lomodtllng

01 TOLl flEE
1-800-848.0070
DARWIN, OliO

11-14-lfn

GROOM ...

8IUY aSILL tRADE
OPEN
TuHday thru Saturdly
10 :00 om-11:00 pm

llltliiiMI on New
Rd.

H0·1l-lrn.

'

•

~

Cornp!ttt Grooming "
For All lrlltls
_,

-

Owner &amp; Op~n~tw

Jilt MI. 011tsl•

j

ROOM
EMILIE MERINAR

742·2421

u""'

l'

Stop I Compare
FrH Eltlmates

•Remodeling and

WE DO

'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

IU1UIID,
OHIO 45775·9626
614-742·2904

217 E. Seco1141 St.
POMIIOY, 01110
3/&amp;/90/tln

Now ln$toekll

dleport. for sponsoring
these atudentl and also

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING

EXPERIENCE PREFERRED

.,

,·

.•

Business Services

1

'

2

3
4

be an Equal
Employment Opportunity
Employer which prohibita
dlocrlmlnatlon becauH of
race, creed,
colorlnandlcap,
natlonoiiI'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _r------..,;,--,--------~--------T-------orlgln,
nx, age,
pcllllcatamllallon or bellefa. ,.__ _ ...__ _-'-The VIllage of Middleport Ia. •r
•VINYL SIDING
u
Equal · Employment
CUAtLIJI!
SHRUB &amp; TREE
•ALUMINUM SIDING
Opportunhy
Employer.
CARPENTER SERVICE
The Owner
reaerveo the
•BLOWN IN
TRIM and
rl~ ht to reject any or all
- Room Additions
INSULATION
ropouta and to wolve any
- Guner wort
REMOVAL
nformolltleo ·
or
Eitctrlctl
•nd
Plumbing
POOU,
Roofi1g, Vinyl
-Con~tl work
lrregulorttlu. In the
•LIGHT HAULING
ClmRNS,
nc.
propoaalo received.
- Rooflna
·
siding,
P1inting,
- lnttrior II ExteriOf'
•FIREWOOD
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT
1,625 IAL.- SU·S45
Pointing
Now ltOilln hilt
Fred HoHman
It, 1, loa 71·A
and Ho11111 repairs
Mayor
!FREE ESTIMATES!
BILL SLACK
"Free Eatlmoteo"

CONTACT
•

675
460
576
77 3
882
095
937

if

f

Farm Supplt es
&amp; LJveslock

Real Eslate

Th~tnlu

Card o f

11

M ason Co , WV
Ant a Cod e 304

MrddlepDrt
Pomot"oy
986 Chfl$1er
843 Ponland
247 let1rt f1ll s

~-------..Jl,.

Medical • Surgical • OB
&amp; Pediatric Registered Nurses

·;~

I

Bottom; Nancy Lynn Baker,
Kevm Donald King, Kristen M.
King, Larissa Lee Long, Steven
Alan Musser, Sandra- L. Carleton ·
Needs, Larry Scott Powell, Jennifer
Leigh Swartz, Monica Layne Tum- · ·
er, Susan Renee Young. all or · ·
Pomeroy; Charlene R. Christi&amp; ·
Smith, Portland; Lori Richclle
Adams, Jennifer Jayne Arnold,
David Jennings Beegle, Nancy J.
Parker Campbell, Jimmy Lee Freeman , Paul Bryan Harris, Tammy ·
Dawn Holter, Kathryn Louise Ihie, :
Greta Lynn Riffle, all of Racine; ·
Robyn Gail Barnett, Reedsville;
Kevtn Victor King, Shade; and
Tracie Rae Hubbard, Syracuse.

2 0 0 PM FRIDAY

R.N.'s

-1

n ll 'f•r tlf I'

j"l/11 wi 11 !-{ lr•l c•ph1 ;,,. c•.n ·lr 1111 1-{1'.\ ...

YilrU S otlu)

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
S..lld propooeta will be muot

11

Announce 111 en Is
1

Employ men!
Serv1 ces

Ho~pp'f' Ad ~

Public Notice
r-Ived 11y the VIllage of
Middleport, llelga County,
Ohio In the Office af the
Mayor, VIllage Holl1
Middleport, Ohio until 4
P.M., Aug. 22, 1001, and
then publicly opened and
reed aloud lor
VILLAGE OF MIDDLEPORT
PEARL STREET
IMPROVfMEHT
The propo ..d work
lnctucleo Improvement to
the exlollng otreet end
drolnogeoyalltn. In general,
work oonoleto of pevemont
planning and removal, ourb
and gutter, oldewalk
replacement, 11pholl
concrete, catch boolno, and
12" culv.. lnalallo~on.
The eotlmaled con•
atructlon coat to $7&amp;,en.5o.
Copt• of Drowfnga and
Contract dccumento may be
oblalned or ex1111lnld at the
Offtca of he Mayor, Vlltoge
Hall, Mlddtapart, .Ohio. A
$8.00 r.. will be required lor
Hch Ml of Drawlnga and
Contract documenlo taken
from tho above ofllcoe.
Chacko ehall be made
payable to tho Vlltog• of
Mlddl7.or1 Ohio. The
metho 1 ol conatructlon
end molerlll opeclllcltlono
that ohall govern thlo
protect ora lha aame 11
outlined In "Slate of Ohio,
Department
of
Tranoportatlon,
Conelructlon end Material
SpeclllcoUono" ,
d ate d
January 11 1ft1 af1,d may be
obtained from the Ohio
Deportment
ol
Tronoporlltlon.
Propo1111 must be
aubmltlld on the Propooaf
Forma contained In the
Contract documento.

"My hu sband, wh en he was
alive , never let me do anything
even close to this," Stout said.
" He wouldn't even let me cross the
street. al~e. He's _ probably.~uming
over m h1s grave nght now.

Lon~

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

9

run 3 11 at s a t n u ch ilf g e
' PIICU ul ;nl lot il ll C ilptt•ll~lt:rs IS d o ub lt:-Vfi CC o l Old CUSI
. •J V'lllt1 lm e typ e u 111y u st.-d
·S!!IIIIIU~ tS n o l uts po ns tbl ¥. tm ltiiUIS c~ fh! l fu ~ l 1l 41'f' tC h !!dl
lor e u u rs tu s l day a d 'n11rs rn pa j)m l C;all hdm e 2 0 0 P m
1) ;,y af t.111 J.!Ubh c utro n I n m a lt ~c ou l'!c trun
' Adi that nru s l btl pard m ad\lan Ct! ;ur!

C UPV 11 E AOUN E

Names to the list were Christina
Ann Roush, Emilie Ann Sisson,
both of Cheshire; David Paul
Collins, Joy Ann Coulson, Amy
Lou Morgan, Amy JoAnne Penick,
Whitney Dawn Smith, all of
Coolville; Diana Marie Bi ssell .
Heather Camille Shuler, both of

parachuted from a plane 10,500
feet over central California on Saturday. If her jump is accepted by
the Guinness Book of World
Records, it would shatter the mark
set by an 80-year-old Bnton, Sylvia
Brett, in 1986.

Over 16 Word&amp;

Words

1
3
6
10
Ra~ es

wrll ,rlsu otj)pc..- tn th e Pt Plt:,.sant Rt:\f! Sicr itlld th e Gorlh
pttlllt O;uly Tnhlull!. mo~ C I IIIItJ ove r 18. 000 hulll tl1i

Donahue teams
up with Pozner

Thirty-two area students have
been named to the Dean's List for
the spring quarter at Ohio University.
To be named to the list, a student must have earned a grade
point average of 3.3 or bener on a
scale of 4.0 for the quarter and
have earned 16 hours.

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-215&amp;
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

' A C liiU ifll~ l 11!1\ltH ti SUIIH..'I II pi .Ko:tl 111 l h t! O;uly S wrt ru td Itt•
Ctll)l
C I OI S~tli t.'ll th spl,ry. Bu s m t..~s C;:ud ollllll"!.to:tl llUiu:t:» l

ARDMORE, Ala. (AP) Country music star Vern Gosdin
said something told him if he built
an a_mphitheater in this tiny town,
mus1c lovers would come.
. When they did, on Saturday
mght, they created a traffic jam
three miles long.
"We had a wonderful turnout
and I'm tickled to death," said
Gosdin, who has adopted Ardmore
as his hometown.
The first show at his Rocket
City Country Music Amphitheater
featured performances by Gosdin
Dean Dillon and Heart of Dixie:
More than I 0,000 people jammed
the place in this town of 2,000.

Area students named to dean's list

Classified

C;utt u llh ; 11 t k ~
ltr Mun m r tdlll

relic which originated in wales in
the 17th century and ended up on
the American landscape in its distinctive form.
Struble has published several
articles on Welsh culture, religion,
and architecture and has spoken at
many conferences throughout the
United States. He also is a guest
lecturer at Ohio University on the
subjects of Appalachian culture and
Welsh immigration and settlement
patterns. In the coming year he will
co-author a series of articles for the
Welsh newspaper "Y DRYCH."

Michael T. Struble's research _written on the Gallia-Jackson
proposal entitled "Horeb Capel: Welsh settlements.
The Evolution of a Welsh Barn The barn chapel design of the origiChapel Upon the American Land- nal Horeb Church is the architecscape" bas been accepted for a tural by product of a series of relipaper session of the Pioneer Amer- gious upheavals that began with
tcan Society at its annual confer- Henray VIII and concluded during
ence in Milwaukee, Wise. in Octo- the reign of William and Mary
about 150 years later. The paper
ber.
Struble of Syracuse, received will explore the origin and develthe word recently from Professor opment of this structure in both
William G. Laatsch of the Univer- Wales and in Jackson County. Its
sity of Wisconsin-Green Bay. The impact upon the cultural landscape
project represents the third in a of ~outhern Ohio may yet be the
series of articles that Struble has finest example of an architectural

Woman claims age record for leap from plane

'Rt:cetVtl 5 !10 diSCount to r adf pcud 10 attv ,uu;c
" bt:~ ,nls
G 111tHtWiiY ;m d found ads ur "l fl'f 1 5 worth vvtll b e

Wolfe TOPS
best loser

,,

Others awarded degrees were
James Donald Bradbury, Cheshire,
Bachelor of Science Physical Education; David Paul Collins,
Coolville, Bachelor of Science
Sports Sciences; Darren Eugene
Hayes, Pomeroy, Bachelor of Science; Joan Stephanie Saraniero,
Pomeroy, Bachelor of Science in
Education; Lori Jean Thomas,
Pomeroy. Bachelor in Business
Adminstration; and. Tammy Sue
Roberts, Reedsville, Bachelor of
Science in Communication.

BULLETIN BOARD

'Ath uut SMit.• Mm9s. Galh a 0 1 Muon countl fl' mu st De P' ~
Pil•d
.

Lula Clark, Frank Wingrove, Mr.
and Mrs. Dwight Sturgeon, Bran don Sturgeon , Minersv ille; Gary
Hogue, Kelly Hogue, Jacks_onvillc;
Effie Maffin, Steve Maffin , Miranda Maffin, Kim Keck, Jesse Stout,
Scott Stout, Iv an Stanley, New
Marshfield; Vera Gilk ey, Nel Shirley Wolfe as the best weeksonville; Cindy East, Shawn East,
ly
winner and Celesta Seralo was
Brandt&gt;~ East, Mr. and Mrs. Emerthe
runner up when the TOPS Oub
son Willison, Kati Pierce, Colummet
recently at the Carpenters Hall
bus; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Thoma,
in
Pomeroy.
Best KOPS loser was
Sheryl Thoma, Bill Young. Rutland; Maxine Weiner, Parkersburg, Virginia SMith.
Angela Payne won the fruit basW.Va.; Glena Wade, Bill Wade Jr.,
Lavada Pidcoch, Kaycee Pidcoch, ket and Judy Wolfe rec eived a
Lenora Hudnall, Albany; Mr. and charm for her six weeks of weight
Mrs .
Raymond
Brickles, loss.
Cindy Faulk will take over as
McArthur; and Mr. and Mrs. Junior
leader
for the group upon the temWiblin, Pageville.
Music was provided by Kermit porary resignation of Peggy VinGilkey, Penny Bingman, Junior ing. Linnie Aleshire·is co-leader.
The "no bake" sale will be held
Wiblin and Raymond Brickles.
Tuesday.
Evelyn Wiblin brought several
For more information on the
albums of pictures of the past 20
group
contact the leader at 992years for all to sec.
5638 or co-leader 81992-7464.

NEW YORK (AP) - Phil Donahue and Soviet political commentator Vladimir Pozner are teaming
up for a weekly news and currentaffairs show that will make its TV
debut this fall.
"Pozner and Donahue" will be
syndicated internationally beginnmg Oct. 13, Multimedia Entertainment said Monday.
Pozner, who was educated in
New York City until his mid-teens
has been li journalist since 1961:
He quit Soviet state-run 'rv this
year. .
Donahue has been host of the
Emmy-winning " Donahue" show
for 24 years.
The two were hosts of a "Citizens Summit" that was broadcast
by satellite to U.S. and Soviet audiences in 1985.

Bachelor of Business Adminstrittion; Larry Scon Powell, Pomeroy.
Bachelor of Business Adminstration; Jimmy Lee Freeman, Gallipolis. Bachelor of Science in Journalism; Rachel Laura Reiber, Racine;.
Bachelor of Science Electrical
Engineering; Robyn Gail Barnett,
Reedsville; Bachelor of Science;
Todd Allen Wilson, Reedsville,
Bachelor of Science Industrial
Technology; and Brenda Susan
Sinclair, Shade, Bachelor of Business Adminstration.

Communication; Mark Randall
Smith, Middleport, Bachelor of
Science; and Marty Lee Cline,
Pomeroy, Bachelor of Business
Adm.inistration.
Graduating with honors were
Richard Allen Hudson, Cheshire,
Bachelor of Business Administration; Joy Ann Coulson, Coolville,
Bachelor of Science in Recreational Studies; Joseph Richard Freeman, Pomeroy, Doctor of Osteopathy; Steven Alan Musser, Pomeroy,

POliCil: S

,
)
_.
•
,

The Dally Sentlnei-Pege-7

Ohio University degrees received - Struble proposal accepted by PAS

·.
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1\Jesday, August 6, 1991

'I

"614-992-6120
Pomeroy,

\

. . ..

'

I
I

�~The,Dally Sentinel

P.age

Announcements
3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

44

Tuesday, August

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry WriRb!

Apartment
for Rent

1086 thrN bedroom, 14x70, gas
ltove, rtfr!9eratolj_ __w111her &amp;

dryor, bod, $8,!00. ..,._.75-8613.

70 plua acru, rudv for home,
city wotor, oxc huntrngh$21,000.
$4,000. buyo mobile omo II·
ready on property, 304~58-1522.

Fruth Pharmuy.

Single aervlce and newaletter
lor arR alngln. All agn. eon.
fldentl1l and affordable. Wrtte:

New Skylln1 14x7D. 2br Front

Khchon, VInyl Siding, Shingle
Rool,
Spolcol:
$18,995,
Dallnred 6 Sot. French City
Mobile Homto. 514-446-8340.

Singlet~. !'.0. Box 1043, Go I·
llpollt, &lt;JH 411831.

4

Giveaway

33

Fanns for Sale

Dunham Road farm,
houaa, bam, fenced, panda,

Leon

304-458-11118 or 458-1755.

Fumlthad

no

The Dall
1-lfH, HE:H , .. IT~ N{'CI6

1011 Trtnt Am, loW mllllgl, IX•
ctlltnl condhlon, $8,200. Phono

Apartmante,

$235 UtiiiiiH Pold.

6, 1991

_BORN LOSER

Autos for Sal!~

71

Announcements

I will not be rMponolble lor ony
dtbll othtr than onythlng In tho
nomo ol Floyd D. Weber.
Rtduct· Bum Dtl Fot Whllt You
Slttp, Tokt OPAL Avolloblo At:

Tuesda , August

6, 1991

A~ POULT WORKOUT... IT'S

304-875-11111.

1br,

Television
Viewing

f'()R

ABIT MOCH FOR

KIDS

!

•

Fo~h

Ave, &amp; 607 Second Ava, Gal-

llpollo. 814-441-441! oftor 7p.m.

72

Trucks for Sale
tll73 F-tDO Ford Pick-up Aongor,
Aluminum Slot Mogo Bilek Inlido And Out, $1,100. 514-4410111.

Nlclty Fumlthod Aportmont,
1br, next to Ubrory, porlclng,

central halt, air, refarenc:a ,..

qulred. 814-441-4331.
Fumlohod officltncy wlotovt I
rolrlgorotor. Shore both. 110 2nd
Avt. $100 por month. All Ulllltloo
Pold. 514-446-3845.
Gracious living. 1 ond a bed·
room opo~monto ot Vlllago
Manor

and

0
0

Rlv•reldt

Aportmonto In Middleport. From
$1116. Ctii814·H2·7787. EOH.
Ltlaytltt Mall: 3br1 a Btlht, All
Utlllll11 lncl•dta. $425/mo.
DtposR Required. No Ptlt. !14446·1733,614-446-4222.
Modom 2·BR oportmont In Mid·
dltport.
Clrptt,
oqulpptd

0

458·1816.

DON T BOT~ER LEARNING
. T14E CAT PADDLE ..

1m lntemallonal Trantatar II
•ml, model 40708 400 Cum•

mlng1, axc cond, $6000, 614-

1115;13114 ofttr lpm.
1082 GMC Shortbtd, Auto, 3!0
Ell!li"'- l\4-388418,1 ,,....

kitchen, deposlt, reference ,.
qulred,
614-GSS-4448
attar

. $~'\~:Cno:•w~.Q
l!ll ces News

Cuatomer Service Repreaent•·
tlve.
Ferrellgat, a prfvalely owned
marketlng company and a

Puppltt, 304-4SI-17711.

6

Lost

&amp; Found

LOST· lorgt hordbock Rtodert
Dlgtlt 1 ~ CIIIIICII muolc, North
31&lt;1 I wolnut, Reword. 514-892·
3817
Loot: Black Ltb Puppy, In Vln·

recognized laader In our lnduotry, It utklng 1 Cuotomor

S.rlca RepriSanlatlve for our

Gtlllpollo

locollon.

Rtopon·

tlblllllaa lnclucle providing
HCrttarl•l aupport for our
office, and handlln!iJ cuatomer
Hrvlce r.queata end Accounta
Atcelnblt colltctlont. Tht
ton Area. Hu Choker Chain On aucctttful candidate will have
two plus yul"' general oHice or
ft. 514-388-1201.
HCretarlal uperlenca, 50 wpm

?

typing obllllln1 10-kty bv touch,

Yard Sale

and PC expentnct. Additional
requirement• Include excellent
communlclitlon 1kllla, auperlor
telephone 1tlquette, and a
genuine commitment to provld-

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

fng 1uperlor euetomer 1ervlca.
We otflr a campetltlva ulary
and an excellent benefita P8Ck·

a Fomllet: AuCIIIII tAh H ; 13 ogt, Including prolh thoring

IIIII

Crwk.

blrls,

Womtnl and an lnvntmant plan option.

ClotiiM. N- Turbo Spo, Twin lntarnted undldatn ahould
Std. Lolt Mltol
forw1rd their reauma and ulary
to : FERRELLGAS
3 Fomlly: 1154 Stoond Avenue, requlremtnta
10095 us Rt 31
Thurldoy, F~doy, 110 Pc.
Gxlllpollt, OH 45631
Norttakl China, fl50i Fumtlure,
Equal Opportunity Employer

MIK.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

ALL Yard Salel Uult Be Paid In Delivery 6 C.rpet lnltallatlon,

Mo lng 81~ : Fwnhurt' ApKkfa
Clott111,
Btcyclol, Toyo Everything Hao

Y
Plllncea,

To Qol308 a,..n Terrace Court,

111·7114-446-7442.

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
GIIRAOE SALE • Wtdnttdty,
Thurldty,
Fridty.
Pllnlt,
eumrner clolt1111,
mort. 2218 Jolloroon
A-

=war-.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp;VIcinity
s.Ftmlly yord tolo, 1 112 mllu

tx~rlonct prtlorrtd. Apptj!, 12·
2, on., Tun., Wed. Tope umltu,., 151 Second Avanu1, Gaillpolla.
:-'--:---:::---:---=1
Dollvtry, Corptt lnotollor, El·
podtnct Prtlorrod. Apply 10 • 12
Noon, Monday, TuMday, Wed·
nuday. Tapa Fumlture, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
EARN MONEY Rudlng bookll
$30,000/rr. Income potenuar.
Datalla. 11 805-1162-8000 Ex1. Y·
tOt Be.
Euy Wort&lt;l Elctllont Poyl A..
ttmblt Producll At Homo. Coli
For lnlormollon. 1504-541-8003
31 3
I :""o:.::
...:.:.:c,··' - - , - - , . - , : : - - : - Equol Ot&gt;portunlly Employer.
Non Smolcing &amp; Drug Frae En·
vlronmont. Are Your Energetic,
Stll Motlvotod, Willing To Loom
And With To Be Rocognlztd For
Your Ptrlormonct? WI Will
T11ch You To Be A Mtmbor 01
Our loom. Rnponolbllhlal In·
dude Admlnlatratlve Function

In A Consumer Financial Sar-

vlcto OHict, With Ont 01 Tht

Laadera In Thl Financl1l Str·
nortfl of Chelter on Sumner vlcH Industry. If You Have E.J.

lhru collonl Admlnlotrollvo Sklllo
And Top Notch Phont Sklllt
F~y
PI- Cell, John Brunton, At
All Yord lllol Mull Bt Pold In 814-446-2208 For lmmtalott
· Dttdllnt:
tht Conllldonttlon.
dty belon
tht td 1:00pm
lo to Nn,
Sundty tdhlon- 1:OOpm Frldoy, GET PAlO lor Compiling Nam11
Mondty
tdhlon
tO:OOo.m. ond Addre-. 1500 por 1,000.
Cell 1·1100·246-3131 ($0.Himln)
lllurdty.
or Wrht: PASSE 31W, 181 South
llle Aug 1+10, ROiotllltr, Llncolnwty, North Auroro, IL
rnow~r. turnllurw, air comp,...
60542.
-. ;;I,Mi wolghto, mit&lt;. Flm LABORATORY TECHNOLOGIST:
._.put Chuich, Chitter.
MLT (ASCP) Or Equlvtlont For
Yonl lila, .....,. you got to Holztr Clink: LtwrlltCI Countr.
DOOI In
llgn In yord, Bronch AI Pnoclorvlllo. Ful·
WICI-Titur'frl, nlcl, cloln, dlf. nmo Potlllon Mondoy, Frldoy
...,., 6 . _ ..,., rain c:~~nc .. ComptthiVI Soltry, EICIIIont
Bonotho. Stnd Rnumo To: Ptr·
Rd,Npm,

Wtdnoadty

a,...-.

·-

aonntl O.p~~rtment, Holzer
Clinic, P.O. Box 344, .Galllpoll•,

OH 45131. Ho Phone Cillo.
Public Sale
Llcon11d A • H AgtntoNttdtd
&amp; Auction
Immediately to work medicare,
Rl'* ,_,_, Auo1lon Coonpony, htltnh ond 1111 morlclt. 304-757·
full liml ouctlonler, complete 2757 or t-80D-417·1003.
tuctlon ..,.... IJCinNCI Ohio, Nttd Rtoponolbll, Dopondoblt
Adun To Babph In My Home
Will Vlrglnlo, 304-773-1715.
F0&lt; 3 Month Old.l14-441·1417 AI·
terlp.m.

9 . Wanted to Buy
Wonltd to buy, Sttndlng timber,
Bolt Wlllllmt I 8ono 114-m·

a.«e.

Top Prlcol Plld: All Old U.S.
Colnl, Gold Rinal, Dllmondo,
Sllvor Colno, Storllng, Gold
Colnt. M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
S.cond Avtn,., Golllpollt.

Ttklng AppiiCIIIIono tl
Domlno't PIZzi, Gtlllpollt.
Someone to care for 4 mo. old,

prolttobly In my homo bogln·

nlng Sept, 3, non-emoker, ret.

req.

Pan-Time. Excellent
Payl Your Own Hout'l. C.ll 1·
1100-azo.naa $3/Min.

Typll11:

14

Employment Services
Help Wanted

AVON • All ,,..., Call Marilyn

Woovtr 304-882·2145.'
ADDRESSERS WANTED lm·
JIIICIIitltlyl No Elpmtnco
NICIMifY.
P-.
FHA
- - Rolundl. Work At
Homi. CIN t-405-121·3014.
AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU
Eltcoftent
Poy,
BtntiHI,
TI'IIIIJIOI1Itlon,
4117-2112-41117,
1EJt. m. ... m.•1Dp.m. Toll
llllundld.
AVOM I All AINI I Shirley
........ 304-1175-1421.
1o on TV mony noodod lor
COIIIII*Cialo. Now hiring oil
ege.. for otlting lnlo. (815) 7NTI11 ext. T.:GI•.

Business
Training

Retrain
Nowii!Southuetarn
Bu1lnasa Collage, Spring Valley

Will bUild patio COVII'W, dtckl,
acrHned rooma, put up vinyl

county
water,
reasonable moy quollly If lncomo lo undlr
re1trlctlon1. Complete lnforma· $11,350. yoor. Electric, wotor,
lion mailed on rtquaat. 304-675Included with ront.
5253, John D. Gertach, no gorblg•
Ront It 30% of odjutlod lncomo.
alngla-wlda lrallarw, pleau.
River Band Place, New Haven,

tiding or troller tklrtlng. 614·
245-5657.

Raybum Rotd. Povod road, dlublod pootllo. Low lnccmo

40 Acrll With Mobllt Homo.
814-387·71154.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity
INonCE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommondo tho! you do bull·
n- whh people you knowL ond
Nar to olnd money througn tht
moll until you hove lnvtotlgottd

Arthur'o Choln Link Ftnct.
Rttldlntlol, Commercial, In·
duotriol, Frtt Etllmatoal Com·
pttlo lnotallotlon. Phone: 614364-tm.
Quickly. t-IIOQ..2JII.1414 Elct. S.
VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich

Quick? No Wayl But Wa Have A
Good, Sttady, Affordable, Bullnasa. Won'f La1t. 1-800..284-

VEND.

23

Professional

5111-2338.
Traitor Lol For Rtnt. 3 MUte Off
Rt. 7 On Bulovlllt Plkt. Nlco
Qultl Country Lol. 8t4-a45-842e.

Renlals
41 Houses for Rent

Babysit In Ny Home
Anr.lme.
Rodn1y
Area.
Re erenc11 Available. All Shihl.

Call 814·245-5788.

Bueh Hog Service. Reasonable
Ratn. No Job To Small! 614-

3711·2142.'

Cht1a11an mother will babyah
dayt; and evening•. can 304-

875-5411.
Dunlevy Welding Shop. Will do
omtll jobl on~ manullcturt
omtll lttmt. 304-1137·2733.
Goorgu PorttbWo Stwmlll, don't

3 bedroom double wide private

let, 2 lull bltht, olr cond., llmlly
room, dining noom, control hut,
utility room, lront porch with

awning, plenty of yard 1paca.

Nice neighborhood, Gxlllpollo
Forry, $325. 304-875-3087. Must
Stt To Apprt&lt;lott.
3 bedroom houu, reference re-

Services
Cullom Butchering, 6 daya 1
w.. k. Cowa, Hoga, Dear, 304·

882-2353.

quired, $3!0. month, 304-8753881.
3br Uvlng Room &amp; Dan, 2
Batha, G~rdan Tub. WW Carpet,

Dishwasher, CA., 2 llocka From

City Schoolo. 614-448·1400, 4·
7p.m .

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sale
12 yr old, 3-BR, a-both homo.

Daylight
b1Hmant, 1-acre,
da1lrabla loc1tlon, new root,
new 3-car garage, Interior nHd1

llnlohlng, 28051 Buhon Rd.
Rtc~1 CHL$17,000. Coli 814gga.r.su5
or ..e-2784.

2 llory 3·BR houu localod at
612 l:lront St. Mlddloport.

Sltu11ed an large double · lot
(59'x2H') with 2·11111 horH

born with ottochtd INdltrock
room ond llncod poddock.
HOUII hll lUll blltrnlnt Whh
new roor, tumance, water
hNtar, and aump pump. May be
- n by coiling 114-H2·3015.
A1klng $40,000. Offarw accepted

ot 1-4111-447·7230.
3br Homo, 25 Acrn, 1 Milt From
Cl'l.~l:lll. Will Contlder Trodo.
11
1340.

3 t.ctroom home, fuU baument,

new

roof,

Farmtn

Home

tllglblo, 304-a75-a944.
3 bedroom houM on 3 acres, 1

Fumlahed 3 Room Cottage One
Bedroom In Town. No Pata.
Reference Required, Daposll.

814-448-2!43.

HouH for rtnt, Union Ave,
Pomeroy, Oh. CaU after 4:00pm,

614·992-&amp;2111.

Nice Hou11ln Count'{ For Rent,

$250/mo. 614-379-214 .

42 Mobile Homes
12x60 two bedroom untur·
nlshed mobile home, half mile

poll Holzor MC, dopooll ond
rellronc11 roqulrtd, !14-4484388 or 30W7S.2330.
1417CJ :t'!.~ CA, Kompor Hollow
Road, ~0 mo. Plua O.p011t.
814-446-7903.

2 bedrooma, furnished, washer,

dryer, tlr oond, $200. mor&lt;h
plua utllltlu, ret.rences, 304-

3bdrm 1 112-ltory on 1acre,
Rutland, OH

256-t71a.

4 bedrooms, 1 ocro lei, lully

2br

675-lltU.

Locatld

In

EvargrNn,

$175/mo. PIUI Dtpoth.
3607, 114-2415-5223.

81~-446-

2br, Air, Cable, New Carpet, Nlca

5 room cozy home, exira lot,

l Clean, Booutllul River Vlow In
Kllftougo. FOI1or't llobllt Homo
Porte. 814-446·1602.

meaaaga.

3-bdrm, 1-bath double wide, lg
~ard, 2-car gartga, 8 ml back ol

Cllhcn, alumn oldlng, lronUback
porchu, 304-m-5235 leave

1-Acre, trailer space , Five
Polntl aru, FIIIWoodl Rd. 814-

Ha.ZOOI.
Country Mobllo Homt Pork,
Route 33, North of Ponwroy.

Loll, rentalo, porto, ulu. Cell
814-1112·111111.

Merchandise
51

Household
Goods

N1w &amp; UMd. FrM Eat-Trade

Ins. Mayo Kltchtno, 814-88862&amp;0.
County Appliance, Inc. Good

uaed appllancM, T.V. 1111. Opon
8 1.m. to 6 p.m. Mon...Sat. 614-

446-1688, 827 3rd. Avt. Gx~
llpolls, CH
GOOO USED APPLIANCES

Waahaf"ll, dryara, refrlgeratora,
r1ngea. Skagga Appliances,
Upper River Rd. Bealde Stone

Crool Motol. Call814-448-7318.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

6--room hou11 for aala In upper
Tupper Plains, 614-812·5830.

Roclno $375 mo, S275 dopoolt
ret. req.

Compltll home tumlahlnga.
Hours: Mon-Sat, 9·5. 614-446·

A Frome Homo, 3br, Prlctd
Rlghti814-:ZSS.11181l.
For Stlo By OWner: Outllty

3·8A, tumief)ld, washer/dryer,

FrM Delivery.

Brick Ranch Clou To Holzar

Hoopltol. 4br, Full Boumont
Ltrgo Shodod Lol. 514-446-4647
after 5p.m.

GOVERNMENT HOMES torm $1
re~lr).

DeUnquent tax
propert,. Aepo..nslons. Your

(U

cana,.t can 614-ii2·2071 aner
7:00pm.

Neat and nice 4 room and bath,
Iaroe laundry and 11orag1 area,

111 now Andaraon wlndowa, lol

50x100, axc location, mid 20's,

0322, 3 mlln out Bulovlllt Rd.

AC, 814-1112·5800.
3br Troller For Rent; On Morgan
Sloter Rood. 814·3711-2311.
Fumlahld 2br No Pet1, Wator
Paid, $30Dimo. $215 Daposlt. 112
Milt Eall 01 Porter. 614-3888883.
Mobile Homn For Rant, construction workert and Hud wei·
come. 614-446.0508 or 441-8321.

Now Rio Grtndt Colltgt, S2SO;
$1DO Dopoalt, Newly Romodolod.
814·245-5181.

44

Apartment
for Rent

1·BR, 3 112 mile aouth of Mid·

dlapcrt, 2-BR, Maoon WV both
lumlshtd, utllllltt paid, 614·367·
0611.
.
1-BR,

furnished

basemont

apart mont, all utllltios paid, $200

month, 614.Q92-5603 or 94Q.

304-875-3030 or 675-3431.

2526.

32 Mobile Homes

1 br Apartment. Living

for Sale
'74 Naw Noon, 2 bedroom,

$3,100. 304·675-1215.

Room
Furnished.
Kitchan, Stove,
Rotrlgeralor, Olshwasher, Garbage Dlspoul, Shower In &amp;ath;

Gao Hoatb Air Cond., Also,
Washer,

ryer.

Good

Quiet

Neighborhood. Rolaranco, l
281152 Stctiontl And Gxt A 5Oaposlt. 614-446·1310 Aftor
p.m.
tonxt&amp;h. AHachtd Porch Froal
haul your loga to the mill jult Fronch City Mobllo Hom01, 814· Nlcaly Furnished, 2br, Garage
1111... llllwlltttr Nlldld lm· call304-1115·1957.
446-13-40. Llmlttd Tlmo Dtlorl
Apartment. No Pets, Centrally
modlatlr. In llr Hom•.· Mondoy
Locatod. 614-446·2404.
ThN f'rldly. D!lythlft. 5 Yoor Mill P1ul1'1 Day Carll Canlar. 11110 Llblrty 12x65 wlbulh on
Old And a Yoor Old. Non Saft, 1ffordabM!, ctllldcare. M-F addition $2000, Kenmore stack BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
amOur. 8tnd Roaumo To: CLA 8 o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agtt 2~10. waaharldryar sat $300, 614·992- BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Olli o/0 Qollpotlt Dally Trlbuno, B•fore, after echool. Drop-lnl 5215
ESTATES1 _ 531 Jtckaon Plkt
121'Thlnl Avtnuo, Otllpollo, OH welcome. 114-448-8224. New In- 1812 Mobile H01111, 2br, On Rtn· from $1G;umo. Walk to thop &amp;
fant Toddler C1re, ~14-44W227. lod Lo!, 15,500. !14-446-2231 Or movloo. Ctllltol-448·2568. EOH.
41131.
l.aYIMIIMQI.
B- h Stroll, Mtddtopon, Ohio.
____.:-____..._________-f 11174 SchuHz Mobllo Homo, 2br, One
room tHicloncy opt,
rafartncN •nd depolit, 304CA, Wothtr!Oryor, 18,100. 114· 882
-2561.
3111-2854, Afttr lp.m.
Efficiency Aportmtnt, Fur1t71 Bayvltw 141l70, Zbr, Oen, nlohtd, OopOIIt, 6 Rtllrtnct
NOll( Ctrpot, Blockt Skirting, Roq~lrod. No Ptlo, 614-441-487V.
8x11 ,Porch, · $8,000. !14-:ZSS.
EHiclancy
· oportmont,
9930.
llvlna/llhchtn, bolhlohowor, AC,
tm Fretd0111 Mobllo· Homo, ~ouclt mokto clot~ bod. nice
taxes, Good Condition, sa,ooo.
neighborhood, 304-375-8200.
814-258-1301.
For rent, 1 bedroom apartment
1980 a bedroomt, oil tiOCirlc. $225 utlllll11 Included, dtpoall
304-1182-3157.
roqulrtd, no j&gt;ttl, 114·9112·2218.
tl8ll 141711 Rldmon a BR, 2 1141 Fumlohtd A!Nirtmont, 1br,
bltli, whirlpool 1~, okyllght, Short Both ..lOt Fo~h Avo, Go~
CA., pt~tlo doora, mutt move. llpolll, $1l5 Ullllllll Paid. 814$1a,ooo. !14-258-1058.
445-4415. Aftor 7p.m.

Read the Best Seller
Read the
-CLASSIFIED RDS

Also traUtr IPICI. All hook·upa.

ALL WOOD KITCHEN CABS

Rataranca. 814-256-6408, 614-

(FI'M PorCh) Buy·a Naw Skyline

Household
Goods

$175 tnd S75114-M0.2128

52 Sporting Goods
Remington 22 Mocltt 541.S, Ntw

In Box. Price: M25i Belgium

Modi Browning 12 Gogo, 32
Inch Full Choke, Bont Rib, Ex·
ctlltnt Gondltlonl l5SO. 814-4483413.
Antiques

53

57

Musical

1 st
n

1107 s.to, 4 Cycto, hpd, U,80o.
!14-441-0731.
·
t

rumen s

Alto Saxophone, almoat new,
$400, 114·247-4165

58

Fruits

&amp;

picked -or pick your own 1t

Johnoon'o form, 814-247·2111.
Conning Tomll-ll Plcktd $4 1
buthll. Plckod own ••. Sllvor
...
Ouoon corn II INdy, Roymond
Rowo, Bt4-24H212.
Sllvtr Ouotn com $1.45 doz,
pick $1.20 doz. 304-11751150.

Ron Evan1 EnterpriHI, Jack·

eon, OH 1-800-637-9521.
Frttzor 8•1 For Solo, Uvt
Wolght .711 Conte A Pound. 114·
3711·23$8.

Vl'ra Fumltura

Solo &amp; Choir, $11.10 Wook; Groom ond Supply Shop-Pot
Recliner, $5.47 WMk, Swivel Grooming. All brNCio, otyloo.
Rocker, $3.63 WHk.Bunk Btd lamo Ptl Food Dotlor. Jullt
Complete $8.41 W11k, 4 Drawer Wtbb. Cell D14-44G-0231, 1-IIOQ..
Chill, $3.28 WHk; Poster Bed· 352-4231.
room Suite, 7 pc., $16.67 WHk,
lnclud11 Baddlng.Country Pine 7 Month Old Oormon Shepherd
Dinette With Bench &amp; 4 Ch1ir1, Molo, FuN BI-d, Btoutllul,
St0.98 Wttk.OPEN: Monday Intelligent Dog, $25. 814-245Thru Stturdty, h.m. to &amp;p.m., 8421.
Sundoy 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4 AKC Box1r Pupplea, ready to
Mlloo 011 Routt 7 Gn Rcuto 141, go. 304-875·1556.
In Ctnltnary.
AKC Golden Rotrlovor puppits,

carr••. Rt. 1 North, &amp;t4-446·
1114 .
Solid oak bed room suite, 304·

675·3431 ahor 8:00PM.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
Ollvt St., Oolllpollt. Now l Ustd
fumlture, hutlrl,

w....m

&amp;

Work bootl. 114-446-3159.
VI'RA FURNITURE
814-446-3158
LIVING ROOM: Solo l Chair,

$200 ttmalu, $175 mal11, 614·
593-3738, Athena

AKC roglatored Cocker Spaniol
pup, 13 wkt old, $75. 304-ea2·
3331.
Dog and Cat grooming all
brtade, tpeclallzed In POodt1
grooming, 12 yra erperl1nca,

304-1175-8332.
Dragonwynd Cattery Persian,
Slam•• tnd Hlmal1yan ,klttena.

114--148-3144 ahor 7 p.m.
Floh Tonk, ~413 Jocklon Avo.
S199.00i.._ ReCliner,
$149.00; Polnl Plunnt, 304-1175-2053,
Swivel Hocker, $99.00; Coff11 &amp; lull line Troplcol llthl blrdo,
End Tlbltt, $89.00 Sot. DINING small •nlm~~la and auppln.
ROOM: Tablt With 4 Podded Plno Rldgo ColllnJ.8 Wttkt Old
Chalro, $149.00; Country Pint AKC
Puppln For ale. Cell 514Dlnotto Wllh Bonch And 3
Cholrar. $299.0.~; Motchlng 2 251·1287 Afttr Bp.m. Evonlngt.
Door Hitch, $34a; Or $58.00 Poodle puppJ.a, top and tea
Stt; Otk Tablt1 42xla Whh e cupo, AKC Champion Bloodline,
Bow
Bitcll
Chalre, also Mlnl1.ture · Schnauzar~t
$82I .OO.BEDROOM: Potter Bill- Coolville 514-817-3404.
room Suite (5 po.), $341.DO: 4
Dr1wer Chnt, S44;H; Bunk Poodlo pu111&gt;111, (oyt tnd til
Btd, $221; Coonpltto Full Mon cupo, AKC ·champion Bloodline,
Sot, $105.00 Stt; 7 . po. Ctdtr· · CooMIIo 114-817-3404.
Btaroom Suitt, 181D.DO.OPEN: Rogllltrtd I Month Old Black .•
Mondoy Thru.Saturdty, lo.m.lo While
Cockar ·Bt*!lol Puppr,
6p.m., Sundoy 12 Noon Till
·,
5p.m., 4 Milot Otf R.outa 7 On ·114-a46-5407.
Routt 141 In Clntlnory:
Rigltl- choWCh_ .....,..,...
Whirlpool wothtr, SIS; Ktn• For Stlo. Ctoom, 11..;. I look ·1
~ryor, S75; Konmore dryer, Clnntmoft. 114-441-8323.
•• dryer, S
Cold Spot
Musical
g, H, St25; Copopnono Ad· 57
. mlrol ralrlg, II. $1!0.; Whlrippol
Instruments
rolrlg, $125; ltoozor, upright,
$150; White 1110. ._.go, $15; AIt 0 St
-•·
d.
Moyttg w~ngtr wtihlr, oquoro
x, mu..,. 11on c111 "1ng
tub, 51!0. Sktg~ tftpUoncto, =1111, Uetlltnt condition,
Upptr Rlvor Rd. ~~ . 11-7315. . .:...,_•:..6_14-_84
_ 1-_21
_ 111
_·- - - ' -

"i

~

t&amp;811 Dodge D-SD, at,ooo Muu. 5

Night Court Q
(j) Ill lnolde Edition 1;1
II) Ill MacNeii{Lohror
NewoHourQ
1!1) 112lll Current Alt1lr Q
liD II Night Court Q
11J MacGyvar Q
QJ Sport•Center
Monerllne
IIJ) Scarecrow and Mra. King
7:05 CJJ The Jefferson•
7:30 Ill
l!ll Jeopardrr Q
(I) Malor League BeHbttll
Chicago Cubs at Philadelphia
Phillies (L)
(j) 112)11) Entertalnmen1
Tonight Stereo. 1;1
(I) U M1m1'1 Family
1!1) WhHI of Fortune Q
liD II Major League
Buablll Los Angeles
Dodgers at Cincinnati Reds
IL)
12!1 Be 1 Star Stereo.
QJ Maier Lo1gue Baubell

Spa~d, "Eic•llent
Condition.
Sharp Truckl $149/mo. 514--4488751.

="'=--:-=-:=-=;:-:--:-c:-:--:-

&amp;3

Livestock

~~"'!"'""':'"'!"'~~":--:­

u • ... ·~·tOll!

- · ·~'
1883 Chevy 20 llrlol Glldlotor ,
CqnvtrSion v~!'.L Automotlc, ·
Crultt, Air, AMI&gt;M Cltlltlt, '
~~ s.u Or Trodo. 114-:158·

II

1071 Sulek Lt Sabre, 53 000 oc·
tual mll~1 new tlkru, air, $600.

or beat onar, :J04.675a&amp;e.

tm Lincoln 4dr Town Cor Fair
Condhlon, 11,500, Or Bolt birorl
814-446-11104.
11171 Chryalor Cordobo 360,
IUIO, now IYtrythlng, $1400.
daya 814-1112·2155. ahor 5:30pm,
coli 304-615-8955.
1m Monte Carlo, T·Tope,
crul11, tltt, delay, 304-675-4185.

1980 Buick Rogol with V·6, $500.
304·173-5681.
1981 Honda Accord, a1andard.

$150. 514-441-1808.
1981 Monte Corio, 304-875-150ti.
11e2 Oldl 18 Rogoncy,
Brougham, .a.dr udan, avory

option, Ilk• new, new tlru, 350,

v.a, satoo, eto~-~112-11711.

198! C.maro Z28, loeded, txc
cond, $4,500. 304-675-6821.

1985 Ctvtlltr TYpo tO Autornotlc
With Air, 54,004! Mlleo. Exctllont
Cqndltlon. I3,DOO. 814-446-0924.
10a5 Nl01on 200 ax, ltp,
loaded, IICIIIInl Cond, Call 614•

na-111B1 thtr 5pm
1181 Chtvtnt.L 4 Spoad, Air
Condhlontd, uood Condltlonl
$1,!!0. 114-2115-5251.
1181 Chtvltto, 4opd, 2dr, Good
Condition. 114-441·2203.
11841 Chavrol~ Cavalier. 304875-M24.
1181 llultong GT, 302J. 5 SDOICI.
Excollonl Coildhlon uood 011
Mlloogo. Roductd Prlct, · Mull
Stllll14 388 110110.
.1111 AtntUn Alllonco, tlcolltnt
condition, tU!o., · olr, AMIFM,
$1100. 304-875-1238.
tell Buick PJrtc Avonuo, tully
-hltitd: 4;ilo«......IJ.~ O!llot.
,.....,......~. ·

Till

w-tna. Cruloo Control
AMII'IHipe Dick. loldodl

AC
17,000 Milot, $8,000 Firm. 114445-8383 Alttr 5p,m.

01&lt;$ LII&lt;E
TA)C.E.f A~f

601/"'G

.

up

A6AIN.

(L)

Crossfire
7:35 CJJ Major League Baeebell
San Francisco Giants at
Atlanta Braves (LI
8:00 Ill G 1111 Madock Matlock
delends a chemist accused
of killini co-worker. (A)
Slereo.
•
(j) (I)
Who's lite Boll?
Tony and Angela compete
with their neighbors lor the
best party. jR) Stereo. C
II) Ill Nova Alook at lhe
most isolated island chain In
the world. C
l!ll 112llll 'Jouph
Wamblugh'o Echoeo In lhe
D1rltneu (2 of 2)' CBS
Mlnl•erllo (3:00) Stereo. Q
iiJ Murder, She Wrote 1;1
12!1 On Stage Stereo.
PrlmeNIWI
IIJ) MOVIE: Waotem Union
(2:00)
8:30 (j) (I) mCoconut Downo A
newly opened racetrack lilts
a lamily-owned hotel wllh
colorful characters. (0:30)
Stereo. C
Church Street Station
Stereo.
9:00 I]) G il])ln the Heat of the
Night Gillespie and his men
are frustrated in their saarch
lor a r&amp;Qist. lA) Stereo. C
(j) (I) m Rouanne Becky
decides to move out after
Roseanne becomes a
disciplinarian. (R) Stereo. Q
II) Ill Netlonal Audubon
Society Speclttl• Stereo. Q
11J Tuesdly Night Flgltla
Heavyweight bout; Tim
Witherspoon vs. Art Tucker,
12 rounds; Junior
Middleweight bout: Pat
Lawlor vs. Art Serwano, 10
rounds from San Francisco

1188 Voyogtr Mini VonL 1 po..
llngtr, one -nor, PS, t'B, AIC,
luggage rack,

25,000 mllll,

fi,OOif. 304-876-21141.

ALLEY OOP

74

Motorcycles
1183 Hondt llogno V45 75Dcc,

good condition, row milia, "100

whh hoi-. 304-57&amp;-:11114 or
5111-2111.

76

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

73-81 Chevrolet truck hood
$!0.00, 7341 Chtvroltt bodaldt,
po-ngtr oldo, $10.00 !14-HZ·
6121 oftor 1: DO.
.
Budget Tt'lnamlalorw, Used • ·

a

rebulH, atartlng at SHi Auto :

Po no. 8t4-a4if.8171,

814-379- .

2263.

Rorlr•i Comm..-lcal,

tit

...

AIJD IF~~ A::X:R,
~U£05 'EM'!

a

I JUST C/o.NT
PICTURe
JOHNNY
CA.R90N ...

I KN::MI Hce
GjOINEi'IO

RETIR~~NO

MATTE:fo( 1-'CNV

HARD ITRY...

(L)

a Naohvllla Now Stereo
a Llrry King Llvol
9:30 (j) (I) U Coach Reserved
Howard decides to sow
some wild oats 1n Las Vegas.
(R) Stereo. Q
10:00 I]) G il]) Llw I Order Stone
seeks revenge lor being
setup. (Pt 2 of 2) iR) Stereo.

i

(I) mtltlrtyoomelhlng
The outcome or Nancy's

BARNEY

Ra.ldan~ ~

lmprovtmontt. Including:

Plumbing, Electrical.

treatment causes a strain on

the lamily. iR) Stereo. Q
(l) Infinite Voyage Stereo. Q
Ill P.O.V. C
World Newo
IIJ) 700 Club With Pat
Robert.an
10:20 (()MOVIE: Coward of the
County (2:00)
10:30 IIJ Nawa
liD Ill M•A'S'H
Crook and Che•e
ID Major League Bauball
ILl
11:00 Ill. lil (I). 1!1) 1121.,
ONowa
(I) Twilight Zone
II) Newawatch
liD Ill A,._nlo Hall Stereo. 1;1
i1J Cnme Story
On Sllge Stereo.
Sportl Tonight
IIJ) Scereerow 1nd Mro. King
11:30 Ill G 1111 Tonight Show
Stereo.
1IJ Mognum, p.l.
(l) Adam Smltlt'l Money
World
(() • Nlghtllnt C
ill Artenlo Hall Stereo. C
1121111 'The Exile' CBS Llle
Night Stereo. Q
Church Street Statton
Stereo.
Monertlne
11:35(j) Cheera Q
12:00 (() • Into the Night Stereo.
liD • Party M1chiM Wltlt
NI1Peeplu
IIJJ The Hitchhiker
N11hvlltt Now Stereo.
NtweNight
IIJ) MOVIE: Weoltrn Union
(2:00)1;1
12:05 (lJ NlghiiiM Q
12:20 (J) MOVIE: The Petrified
Foraet.(1 :45)
12:30 Ill. tiJ 1.111 Night Wltlt
DIVId I.IMimlln
1IJ MOVIE: AIIICk on Terror:
FBI va. Ku Klux Kiln (PI 2 ol
2) l2:00)
ill Party MIIChlne Willi Nil
, ..pl••

lnaur~nca

Cloln!t Ai:ctptod. !14-258·1811.
Cur11a Home Improvement•:
Y11re E1portanco On Older &amp;

ARE YOU
GOIN' TO
SAIRY'S
IIIEDDIN'?

Newer Hom11. Room Addhlona,

Foundtllon Work, Roofing,
Wlndowt I Siding. Frot EO·

NOT ME II

I GOT TOO MANY

CHORES STARIN'
ME IN TH' FACE'!

a

YORE GIRDLE
IS HERE, AUNT
LOWEEZY!!

tlmatesl Rtfarancn, No Job To

Big Or Smalll 814-441-0225.
JET
Aeration

Motor~,

aome appllence rwPIIII"'. WV ·

304-8711-23!11 Ohio Bt4-446-a454.
Roofing, Shlngloo, And Troller
Roof Coating.
RttiOftlblo
Rotu.l14-448-2203.
Stptlc Tonk Pumping $9DLGxlllt
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jtckton, OH 1-800-637-8528.
Dovl•
Sow·Yic
Sorvlct,
Goorgu Croak Rd. PMI, oupplltt1 pickup, ond dollvory. 614446-u2114.
.

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

year ahead by mailing $1 .2 5 plus along,
self-addressed. stamped envelope to
Astro-Graph , c/o this newspaper. P.O.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2QoFeb. 19) II you

Box 91426. Cle•eland. OH 44101 -3426.
Be sure to state your zodiac sign.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Vour behav-

at this time. give it the serious attention'

ior will win you admiration from friends
today. because ot your fair way of dealing with them You'll be generous in instances where you needn't be.

have the possibilities to open a channel

that might bnng in addttional earnings
tl deserves. It could be good.
PISCES (Feb. :ZO..March 20) II you're
arranging something of a social nature
today, restrict it to those who get along
well wilh one another. Make a point to

l

GU

E0

Professor to class, " I
apologize to rhe student who
....--'·-"'·_.__-...1.--1. o slipped a paper. under my
,......------......., office.. door. It was eaten by

j
'".- .-r.P;-·.,I..;_.,f;_;:,!,..:...,!r·---~~. o ~~~~~~; ~~h~:h~~~~~q.:~

I

OKTREV

'--L-.L......I-..l...'-L..J you develop lrom stop No. 3 below.

6 ·s

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Arcade - Plant - Gourd - Debase - STORAGE
Man to neighbor, "I figured out why the cost of
stamps went up. The extra money is for STORAGE."

BRIDGE

NORTH
+J4
.QJ 7
+K Q 32
Q J 10 9

ARIES (March 21·April 19) This is a
good day lo linallze sttuattons that have
been tell hanging. You're a strong closptesenlly Involved. II you don't receive er, and il will prove to your advantage 10
your rewards nqw, you will shortly.
put the clincher in wherever you can.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Although TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) Your enthu·
you may have to deal with a number ol siasm is pontagious today , and your
dillerent Individuals today, you 'll single ideas will inspire companions. Even
out one person tO iWhom you'll devote those whl&gt; are generally lethargic .or
most of your attention. It's an important ·slow on ttie uptake will ha"e their think·
relationship.
lng elevat~d.
SAGmARIUB (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Be GEMINI (May 21·June 20) You'll know
alert at this time lor possible partlclpa· how to mel&lt;e accumulation an art form
lion In sjolnt venture. This will be an en· tq,ay. II there is anything to be gained
terprlse that could become quite excit· by having something, you'll figure out a
ing lor all COF\Cerned.
way to acquire It .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jin. 19) A' friend CANCER (JuM 21-Julr 22) Your greatwith an unresolved problem might est glh today is your ability to Initiate
come to you lor advice today. This indi· activity. You'll be especiolly adroit at
vidual couldn't have picked a wiser originating endeavors thai ·will benellt
counselor. You'll draw upori your own both you and yours.
experiences to provide the answers.
., ..
is a strong probability today through a
unique arrangement in which you're

Ctrttr'l Plumbing
· ondH11Ung
Fourth tnd Pint
Gotllpoll•. Ohio
614-445-3818

Aug. 7, 1991

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

There are strong indications that you

moy get Involved In a profitable joint
venture in the year ahead. Your coun-

Rl!lldlnllll "" , cornmorclol ,; ·;
wiring, now ltrVtce or FIDilro. ·
Molllr U-NCI tloctdclln. .,,

terpart will be enterprising and have
good business acumen.
LEO (July 23-.Aug. 22) 11 there is some·
thing special you need lrom another to·
day, don't be too direct. Present your
case in a way that mak.e s it seem as II
the olher party originated the Idea. Leo,
treat yourself to a birthday gill. Send lor
Leo's Astro..Graph predictions lor the

11 \

Uphol!ltery
==~=7:'-:~:.....-llcitmy'o Uphollllrlng ltrYI.. · "
lng Ill OOIIIIY.•,.. 21 yooro. Tht
btlt In lumHure UpltOiotonng .
Coli 304-175-4154 lor lr11 .,.:
tlmMM.

87

•

.I

,.

a
a

,

8·1·11 ·

+

PHILLIP

EAST

WEST

ALDER

.6

+8 3 2

+7 6

+ 8 53 2

+AKQ75

• 10 9 a 2

t65

+AJ981

SOUTH

The echo
with three

• 10 9 6
.AK543
• 10 7
+AK4

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder
In most sports these days. ·lhe top
performers get younger and younger.
But not in bridge. Teenagers w;in
grand slam tennis titles, but when was
the last time someone as young as that
represented the United States in a
world bridge championship' Never.
The key reason is experience. There
is so much to bridge that it takes
many, many years to climb the ladder
of success. Even world champions
come across situations they haven't
met before. However, everyone has to
start somewhere.
Would you have found lhe right play
as East on today's deal' North's twospade cue-bid showed at least a limit
raise in hearts. This is a modern treatment thai is used more often by experts than the old-fashioned game·
forcing cue-bid.
Alter West leads the spade king,
how do you plan the defense? At the
time, the spade king was covered by
the four, two and six. West continued
with two more top spades. Declarer
ruffed in the dummy, cashed the Q-J
of hearts, crossed to hand with a club,
drew East's two remaining trumps

Soulb
1•
4•

West
1+
Pass

Nortb

2.
Pass

East
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • K

and led a diamond. West went in with
the ace to save the overtrick.
"I had hoped to score a trump
trick," said East ruefully.
"Well, maybe you could have," re- '
sponded his more experienced part,
ner.

"How? ..
"By playing the spade eight at trick
one. Declarer would think you were
echoing with a doubleton, so probably
he would ruff the third round of apadea
high. Then you would score a trump
trick, and we would defeat the game.•
This is the type of deceptive play
that always works - unless you bold
your cards badly .
@ 1ft1, NEWSPAPER ENTDPRIII AI...

®

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Anawer to Previoua Puzza.

36
37
39
41

Tread
Lure
- of London
Adam's
grandson
42 - Francisco
43 Ship section
45 Royal
headdrsss
49 Eggs
50 Esleamed
54 Raced
55 Do
housework
56 Gravel ridge
57 Conclude
58 Choose
59 Mountains
Iabbr.)

1 Prsaidenllal
Initials
4 .- Pyle
g TV carloon
aeries

12 French yea
13 Money in
India
14 Ear (comb.
lorml
15 Engaged
17 Container
18 Real
19 Fence step
21 VIctory
symbol
23 Israeli folk
dance
24 Latest
27 Sorrel
30 Like a wing
31 House pel
33 Actor Robert
De34 Fling
35 Hatten

DOWN
1 Occupations
2 Gas. e.g.
3 Aerial toy
4 Fumbles
5 Beyond the
limit

6 Speed measure (abbr.)
1 Wide shoe
IIZa
8 Boeton tea"'
(2 Wdl.)
9 Good humor

a
a

exclude dissidents .

LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) Financial gain

&amp;

Electrical, . . 304-175-

I I I I 'I
J
~
1-TI---rl-lr.:-4
.,..,
~c f
I

a

Heating

84

~~

UMEVA

a

Will do rtmodollng, roollng1
building, tree trimming ono
removol, hou11 pointing. For
ftM ..tlmatn, call George at 1·
8t4-H2-5752.
Plumbing

I

I

a

repaired. New

6 r•bullt mctoro In lloclc, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, QH. 1-IIOQ..
537·1528.
Ron'• TV Sorvlco, opoclollzfng .
In Z.nllh 1110 llrYiclng moll
othtr brondo. cello, 1110

82

m

a

11!11 Bronco II XLT,~_!:. PS, PB,
PW, PD Lockt, A101•M Sttroo
Ctalttt, 1 OWner, Low Mlloogt,
Cloln EICIIIont Condhlon,
Mony More Ftolurtol Phone:
814-«t.ostO Bttwttn 1·10p.m.

I
'j

'- 0

ou~

Excollent Condhlon, V'l, 72,000
Mlltt 1•• •••3281

Ridenour
Dtd8
CutlluprCialtlc,.
T·Top,
loldod,
Mull . 1181.

Stt to Approcll1ii114-:ZSS.1417.
""Ford MUitong GT, s.o Lhtr,
5111d.· PW, Door
.·. L.Oclt•. Sunroof,

IT

1111 Plymouth Voyogor L.E.,

~

0 I F ARy
2
II r11

e

::a '.. ·

.

the
be·
low to form foyr simple words .

a

tm Jttp, 304 onglnt, 3 tDOtd, •
4 whtll drive, worll good, 87,000 •
mlln, runt ond lookt good, •
..100 304-578-2737.
·
••• .
.
tm Ford Bronco XLT, 311 :
Cleveland motor, for p11rt1 or .
llx ••75 0 ft 5 DO -· '75: ' ~
'
"
·
111111 811ortbed Chtvy 414. Smoll

t-Roglottred Aroblon Horoo lor 79
campers&amp;
ulo, !14-HZ·HO:l.
Motor Homes
Kenmore portebll cUehwaahlr Gootl, 304.ati2·37SO.
$50. Tolklng Mlckty MouOt and
1181
Storcroft
Pop Up Clmpor,
Roglltortd Anguo o~ng htlllro
ltpll $15. llorblo Corvotto cor and
Good Condhlon, $4!0. 514-446bulla
lor
aale.
Grill
brwd·
SID. 304-875-2514 ond luvt lng stock and vary tame. Prkld 1830,114-441-4312.
muaaga.
upon lnopoctlon, 114-111:1-3033. . 11172-Cotchmon Cldlt compor
Kenmore Waahar &amp; Dryer UHd,
UNCI
4 Horoo a.,_nock Trollor trollor, now owning, good condl·
Good Condition! $2!0. 114--148$1,HI; 12 Ft. Horu And Stock lion, 114-H2-1015.
g34o.
Trallar, $1,111i 3 Hor11 Sl1nt 11171 at ft. Coochmtn Clmpor .
Plnlburgh Point lnloMr llot woll laid Wllh Droning Room, Whh AC, Awning, Vo'le ~;' ,
point $10.41 gol, Interior ttml· $4,515; 11111 Big AOHA Rod Condhlon, $3,800. 814-3
. •,
Rome Mare ShoWn By 10 Year
glon $13.11 . GIL oxtorlor. 1111 Old
BoyL
Nlco
2
Yur
Old
Gtld·
hoUtt point 513.w. 2415 Jock·
l,.:
•t
.on Ave, Point PleaMnt, Pt. PH. lng, 3D uoyo Riding Tlmt And
Services
S~own
In
Hehir;
Big
Flbruory
304-1171-4084.
14, tHO Chutnut Filly, Yoortlng
Porttbll llghtfd chongublo Itt· Point Filly. 114-288-5522.
tor
olgn
SZH.
Fr11
81
Home
dttlvtrynonoro. Plattlc ltttero 64
Hay &amp; Grain
Improvements
$41.!0 box. 1-lf»..l33-3453.
-=-~-..;;..-:"~-==Good hoy, round boloo, !14·843Recandltloned WaaheiW, bryera. 5215
AU typ11 of m. . .ry, bdck, ·
GuorontNCI prompt ttrvlco lor
block and .tone.. Free aa- 1
oil mokto, modolo. Tht Woshor
tlmotu. 304-m-11550.
Dryer Shoppo. 614-441-2844.
Transportation
BASEMENT
Stll Contllntd Compor, 17 Ft.
WATERPROOFlNCI
.
Exctlltnt Condhlon, $1,000;_ 18
Unconditional lltellme gual'lln- ;
Cubic
Fl.
Froat
,.rM 71 Aut
f
Sal
tH. Local referenc• fumlehld.
Rtlrigorotor, Good Condltlonl =-:---=-_o_s_o-=r~_e-:--~ Frot tltlmttn. Coli colloct 1· •
$125. 814;188-8811.
tG68 Clmtro Rune Good, 614·237-D488, doy or night. ·
Rogoro Ba11mon1 Wotorproo- \
Topper for long bed small $1,000. 614-387-71154.
•
pickup $100. Sotnlto dlah with tm Cutlon SS, 2 dr, hord top, ling.
mnh wl~ remota control &amp; • dual exhauat, 1harp, $825, 614· Clrpt{ltry ond rtmodtUng ol Ill •
qulpmtnt ,soo. 304-882-2080.
eor11. Raaonabla ratH. Call ~
247-4ala
onytlmt, !14-742·1400 or HZ· ,
tm Dodge Swinger 2dr, Good 3440.
55
Building
Condition, Auto, PS, PB, 3ta
Compttlt Moltllt Homo Slt·Upo,
Supplies
814-446-3005, 7p.m.

PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uood
Housthold lumlohlng. 112 mi. Block, brick. HWIF plpaa, win·
Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. Plta-t, WV, doWI, lintels, ate. Claude Win·
tera, Alo Grandt, OH Call 614·
coli 304-675·14!0.
245-6121.
RENT20WN
814-446-3158
56 Pets for Sale

Sale On All Carpet &amp; VInyl Floor
Covaring In Stock! Mollohan

you

Rearrange latten of
0 four
scrambled words

7:001])8 1111 Wheel of FortuM

11110 Ford F·250, XLT Ltriol 414,
lotded, 17,100 mille. 304-675VegetableS2214
;;;--·- - - - - - d
Vans &amp; 4 WD's
1
Conn ng tomto101 olr11 Y 73

North 3rd Sl, Mlddltporl, Ohio, 1 . ~~~~-::::~::--:::~~
bed...,m lumlthtd opt, role...,. Buy or 1111. Rlvorl,. Antlqutt,
ctt ond dtpooh roqulrtd. 304- 1124 E. lloln Streit, PomoroJj
882-2561.
Houre: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 8:
p.m., SUndtr 1:00 to !:DO p.m.
North 4thluMiddloport, Ohio. a 614-m·WI.
bedroom mlthtd opt, d - "
ond roltrtnct requlrod, 304-882· 54 Miscellaneous
2516.
one bedroom •fll In Point
Merchandise
Plnunt, extra clnn ond 1 King wood/cool bumor otovt 61 Fann Equipment
roomy, wllh wnhtr a dryer ~cell 1nor 5:00pm, 814-11411- .
hoollup, no pitt, 304-875-1381.
-... 1
1100 Ott- Trtelot With Big
Vtrmotr Round Bolt&lt; $4,1150':
Ono bedroom turnlohtd tpl t·Dovonporl, t-eholn, toblt, 8- 14!0 Otlvor Dlotol~,llso; n30
Main Sl1 rtltrenco end dlpolh cholno, t-chllll, t-dreuor1 mise 111-y, 13,110; Twu Forguoon
roqulroo, 304-a75.Z330.
htmt, 1 month old1 484al SA Whh Turf Tlrll. OWntr Will
Unlurnlthtd 3 room •r,rtmtnt, 3311Atort Fottt, 114-~47·2100
Flnoco. 114-Us.e522.
104 Spring Avonut, omoroy. 1151 John Dotrt Modol B 11111 Stock Trtl~ 14ft, 11,65; 2
Call 814·62-61101.
Rtbuln, Eltcolltnt Condhlonl Ytor Old AOHA Filly Whh I Hoi·
HYIItr 4 Stage Fork Llh, Dook Itt Point 10 Big UNCI Show
Upstolro Fumllhtd A~trtmont, Plttt, 3 Trollor A-•• Trolllr Stddlal, Hlld &amp;rtlll, a Brott!
4 Roome &amp; Bath. 0 Pitt. Btd. 114-446-2351.
Stropo. CIU Exllnt'l Dlocount
Refaranc1 &amp; Security Dlpoalt.
Saddlery, 114--2861522.
814-448-0444.
230 D. Timber Jock Log Sklddtr,
tm lnternotlonol LOg Truck 0.17 AC, Dloool Trootor With
Wtdgo Apto, 506 Burdtftt St, Knuoklt Boom lolder. 114-367- Cunlvotor And Groin Drll~
Polnl Pltaunt, no poll, 1 and 2 7519
$2,550; 0.14 AC, Whh AC
bedroomo, 304-675-2072 ohtr
·
•~or,
••• •• -·; 1030 AC, s upor
5:DO·
aS12I Chain Link Flnco With Shorpl 18,1150; 424 lnlomlllonll
Gtll. Good concrnlonl $200. Dlolll Troctor Whh 1 Ft. Buoh
45
Furnished
!14-388-lltl3.
Hog, $2,HI. OWner Wll
Rooms
55, 30, &amp; 10 Gollon Aquoriumo Flntnc~. 114-211-8522.
AI Whh Flltore I Acc-MI, Jlm'o Form Equlpmont, SR. 35,
Apartm1nt available for 2 01 3 Plut Flth. $300. 114-448-114711 AI· Will Gtlllpollt, !14-ol48-ll717;
conatrucUon worker• 304-882· tor lp.m. Wllf&lt;dtro.
Wldo IIIICIIon now I uNCI form
2568.
Browne Footboll Tlcktta. p,. troctore I lmplomonto. Buy,
Rooms for rtnt - week or month. Stuon loglnnlng Augutt lth &amp; 1111, trodt, 5:00-I:DO Wllkdoyo,
Starting 11 $120/mo. Golllo Hotol. R2~~~r Stuon. 114-258-1287, Stt. 1111 Noon.
814--146·1580.
6
me.
Sttoh Mltzlbuohl troctor, 21hp,
SIHplng rooma with cooking. Concrttl • ptllllc IOptlc lankl, 24pood PTO, 2-tpttd tront,
rune good, $1700, 814-a4J'o42112

For rent or 111'!.. a bdrm troller,
Ohio R.lver 1.0amp Ground,
Rtclnt, OH 114-1141-25211.

2br Furnished or Unfurnished,
Clay Chopol Road, $2!0 Ront,
$250 Dapoth, Plul Utilities,

carpeted, heat pump, 10x12 outbuilding, 10 mlnutn from town
on Rt. 2, reasonably priced, 304-

mobile

46 Space for Re!lt

for Rent

875-49111.

36140 1 112·story log cabin,
newly buJU1 33050 Now Lima,

Compltlly Funnlthod

Call tfter 2:DO p.m., 304-7735851, Mason WV.

mUe

out Beulahvllle Road,
$55,000. IIC cond, 114-446·1568.

wv. EOE 304-882·3121.

home, 1 mile below town overMercer Bottom Sub-division, looking
~ver. No Poll, CA. 814ona acre tots, At. 2 frontago,
price reduced, city wator, 304- 446-4338.

tha offering.

aroa (1 eOII-!182-MDO. Ext. GH·
101a11or current ropo 1111.
Reglltar•llon •90-0S.1274B.
HOUSE FOR FREEII Mutt movt
oft lot In Middleport Fill In
18 Wanted to Do
baMment, 11ad and 1tr11w. Mull
algn controctl a-BR, Largo LR,
2-Famall 11Udlntl IHklng I DR, Bath, has new root and gutperson who commutn to the tar, new copper and PVC plui'nb·
University of Rio Granda and lng, nltd some work. You pay
Ohio Unfvaralty, wll11ng to htlp tor the moving! Only serious
Will

Upright FrNzer, $125, 2-gu lur·
nac•, good cond for a houH

''"" oo,..n.stol-4.....568.

Lot1 &amp; acreage available lor
n1w hom• conllruction on living; tldtrly, hondlcappod .ond

Piau. Cell Tod&lt;iy, 814--148-438711

w/gumoney.

Nice c111n currently available 1
bedroom apt, for Independent

Will blbyolt In IIY homo on lht
Rutltnd aroa. Clll onytlmo, 8141112·21112.

l...aeall Vending Route. Uuat Sail

Advtnct. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
iho doy belore tho od It to run.
pm
SUnd.y td ttlon .. 2·00
•
· ·
F~y. _ . , odhlon • 2:00
p.m. Soturdty.
Go- Stlt: Augutl 8th, lith, 31
Bmhlioro Streit, 1-5.

11

Hauling
and p1lntlng 1t
reasonable rat11, 614-992-2492.

""
"'

~y

QJ Up Clote
IIJ) New Zorro Stereo. 1;1
6:35 (J) Andy Griltltlt

Radio,S.tl
Air, GMC
614-446-1720.
r:==:::========r.=========~ 10a5
Pick-up, AMIFM

,.,.---,.-'-----., ....Nlct tbr, Kltchon, Bath, Wotor
And Troth Fumlth~c $240/mo.

'::~:t:~' S©R~~-l&amp;£~s·
::::
ldltod
CLAY l. POUAN _.;....._ _ __

liD II WKRP In Cincinnati

C) 1111 by NEA.Int

nl1hed
apartment,
deposit 1nd
Ntw Htvtn,
2 bedroom
fur·
ret.renca, 304-882·2566.

8
c

Ill 3·2·1 Contact

1083 f.lSO whh robullt motor,
Dwight Baker 304-815-3138.

6:00pm.

•

a

I

I'M STAIZTIN6 SWIMMIN6
LE550N5 TODA'f' ..

Condition, Call Anytime. 304-

EVENING

6:00 Ill • (j) (I) • IIDl 112).
@Newt
00 Andr Gnltltlt
II) Club Con~ect
Ill Reading Rainbow Q
liD ID Andy Gnltltlt
IIJ Cartoon E•P&lt;"•
QJ Running end R1clng
World Tod1y
IIJ) Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo. Q
6:05 CJJ Bewitched
6:30 Ill G 1111 NBC Newt Q
(I) I Dreem of Jeonnltt

1975 Chevrolet 1-ton, V-8, etan- .
dard, good condition, $7&amp;0 614-

843-822e.
1071 Ford Ronger, F·IOOL Truck
Cub Cop With lm V.a ~gino.
112 Ton, PS, PB, Ant. Two D0ort
With Lty Down Bock Stot. Folr

TUE., AUG. 8

&amp;--9 .

Sentlnei-P

10 And othero
(2 Wdl.)
,.
11 tiny parllcle
16 Turning
• .,
around
.
20 or lbout the
af)Hd of
aound
22 EngriV"
23 Inn•
24 Short lor
Nethln
.
25 North Carol~
na college
26 Deurt
28 Angered
2g Bolita
32 Thr...toed
aroth
38 Force
40 PotenUII
43 Unrntereallng
pertOn
44 Ttnnlt pleyer
-Landi
411 Power eourc•
4 7 Rtmllndlr
48 CoaNng
drink a
51 Building
eddltlon
52 Blthop'o
pro•lnce
53 Srtow lhoe

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Ceteoruy Ctpner cryp tograms are cr111ed lrom quotat1ona byl1moua people, pa11ana present
Eech leller in the cipher atandl lor anothel Tod•y "s c/Wt: S equ•fs R.

N A L

USLDNCB

VSCH

ILJKfPJ

H D I L

K N D 0 X

T X

HKUALODPELOC

HDSY

NZDKP .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The old believe everything; the middle-aged
suspect everything; the young know everything ." - Oscar Wilde.
(I 1991 b)' NEA. Inc

'

6

�Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, August 6, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Organ donors should not be billed William Hurt's 'Doctor' is brilliant

I
'

DEAR READERS: This infonnation could mean the difference
between life and death to the 24,000
people who are waiting for an organ
transplant Please read it carefully.
In my column of Sunday, July 14,
I printed a letter from Dr. Michael
Kaplan, president of the Association
of Organ Procurement Organizations
in Washington, D.C., saying the
families of organ donors do not have
to pay any fees whatsoever for
organ removal or transplantation. Dr.
Kaplan was responding to several
letters from readers who said they
were no longer carrying organ
donor cards because a friend or
family member had been charged
thousands of dollars after donating
the organs of a deceased loved one
to save the life of a stranger.
Dr. Kaplan made it abundantly
clear that no family should be
charged for organ donation . If
family members are mistakenly
billed, they should immediately
contact the Association of Organ
Procurement Organizations. The
address is 125024th St, N.W., Suite
280, Washington, D.C. 20037.
Although I thought that column
was carefully worded and straightforward, apparently the message
didn't get across. Also, some papers
did not print the column in its
entirety and failed to run the
response. The results have been
catastrophic. The United Network
for Organ Sharing (UNOS) which
has 4 I 2 member institutions has
been beseiged with calls from

readers of lllat column who said IIley
were tearing up llleir donor cards
and wanted llleir names removed
from llle registry. When asked why,
they replied, "We didn't know that
families of organ donors had to pay."
UNOS wants everyone to get this
straight, and so do I. There is no
charge for donating organs for
transplantation. It is the ultimate gift
of life and is regarded as such.
Families are often unaware of llle
high costs involved during llle final
stages of trying to save a life. They
sometimes interpret lllese charges as
organ removal costs. Any and all
questions about hospital bills should
be discussed with the hospital
administrator.
My Canadian readers were
equally confused. Please note that
in Canada, as in the United States,
llle families of organ donors are not
charged for organ removal or
transplantation.
I ask lllose readers who became
alanned and destroyed their donor
cards to re-register immediately.
Thousands of people are depending
on your generosity. Please don't let
them down.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm guessing
that Ray C. of Tulsa was serious
with his neologisms for the blended
family. Remember, he suggested
"stister" for stepsister, "stunkel" for
step-uncle, etc.
I have a better idea. Let's get rid
of llle ugliest four-leu.er word in the
English language. It is 'step." Step
has become a pejorative •• a way to

By George Robinson

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"lHl, Loa o\o&amp;elM
1lmM SYJNilcale 01141
CrMton Synclcate."

put down, disown and disengage
from the other person. It's a not-sosubtle 'distancer."
Often at a social function an
adult will introduce a youngster as
'my stepdaughter' or 'my stepson."
Who cares?!! Our words reflect
how we feel as weD as what we are
thinking.
I suggest that all families, starting
today, stop using 'step' and go
straight to the heart of the matter.
How much kinder it would be
for a parent to say, 'This is my
daughter' or 'This is my son." ••
ADELE BORMAN, REDONDO
BEACH, CALIF.
DEAR ADELE: I second the
motion. It's definitely a step in the
right direction.
flanning a wedding? What"s
right? What"s wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guide for Brides" will
relieve your anxiety. Send a
self- addressed, long, busiuss-siu
envelope and a check or money
order for $3.65 {this includes
postage and handling) to: Brides,
c/o Ann Landers, 1'.0. Box 11562.
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canada, stnd $4.45.)

Homecoming revival slated OS U honor roll
The Zion Church of Christ,
located five miles north of Route 7
on Route 143 , will be having a
homecoming revival Aug. 16, 17
and 18.
The homecoming will be led by
Doug and Sherry Shamblin of Elizabethtown, Ky. He is frofll Ripley,
W.Va. and a is a recent graduate of
Cincinnati Bible Seminary. He is a
youth minister with Glendale
Christian Church. She is a graduate
of Ohio University and is the

daughter of Bonnie Arnold,
Pomeroy. She will be song leader.
The Friday and Saturday
evening services begin at 7:30p.m.
and the Sunday services include
bible school at 9:30 a.m., worship
at 10:30 am. and a potluck dinner
at noon. The afternoon services
will be at 2 p.m.
All members, former members
and friends of Zion Church of
Christ are invited to attend.

Five Meigs County students
have been named to the honor roll
for sprin$ quarter at The Ohio State
Universtty. They have received
grade point averages of at least 3.5
and were enrolled for at least I 2
credit hours.
Named to the list were Walter
Edward Crooks, Middlepon: Jared
Andrew Sheets, Pomeroy; David
Eugene Rice, Reedsville: Kristina
Kim Adams and Todd Anthony
Adams, both of Syracuse.

MMC holds annual picnic in Pomeroy
The Minersville Methodist
, Church and Sunday School held
their annual picnic recently at the
home of Charles and Mary
Chauncey, Pomeroy Pike.
Also celebrated was the welcoming back of Rev . and Mrs .
Wesley Thatcher for another year.
Rev. lbatcher gave the blessing.
After dinner, Kenneth Wiggins,
superintendent, welcomed the..minister by readtng a poem The.
Farmer and the Lord" then present-

ed them with a plaque and two
homemade rugs from the United
Methodist Women's group.
Attending were Rev . and Mrs.
Thatcher, Rev. and Mrs. Carl
Hicks, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bentz,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wiggins,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Russell, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Braley, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs.
Nathan Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Lefne, Nancy VanMeter. Diana

tfawley, Sandy Hawley, Sara and
Alex, Helen Maag, Sheryl Roush
and Derek, Mary Pugh, Marie Rea,
David and Nathan Robinette, June
Sayre, Doris Grueser, Paula
Chauncey and Mindy. Mike
Chauncey and friend, and Mary
and Charles Chauncey.
Rev. Thatcher underwent gall·
bladder surgery at Camden Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va. He
is now home and recuperating.

Woman who committed suicide during
couple's wedding had long held a crush
PERRYVILLE, Mo. (AP) - A
woman who began firing a gun at
the wedding of two fanner schoolmates and then shot herself to death
apparently never got over a crush
on the man, police said.
Sherry Ann Koranda, 25, shot
herself in the head Saturday and
died about five hours later at a hospital.
No one else at the wedding of
Jeff Aentge, 25, and Deena Petot,
25, was injured, police said.
"It looks like it was possibly
one of those ... the way the groom
described it, it was a crush," police
Maj. William Jones said.
"She was never a girlfriend of

this boy, they never dated, they
never went out," he said. "She
was acquainted with the bride and
groom only in the fact that they
went to school together."
The couple were exchanging
vows at St Vincent de Paul Roman
Catholic Church when Koranda,
who had not been invited to the
wedding, arose from a pew toward
the middle of the church and began
ftring a .22-caliber revolver, Jones
said.
One shot was fired toward the
ceiling and a second toward the
wedding party at the altar. After·
ward, Koranda ran outside, firing
two more shots before fatally

THE DOCTOR (PG -13) Doctors are taught in medical school
that they can intervene in a
patient's condition and make a difference. Often, of course, they can.
But they paf a price for that "cando" mentaltty, a price that is dramatized wonderfully in Randa
Haines's "The Doctor."
Dr. Jack Mckee (William Hun)
is a typically self-assured· cardiothoracic surgeon who tells the resi·
. dents under him that "to judge,
you have to be detached." He cer·
tainly is that - so much so that
someone says of him, "It doesn't
mean he's not caring, that's just his
way." That .is, until he fmds himself a cancer patient in his own
hospital.
Based on a true story, " A Taste

Ventriloquist
to perform
Mark Wade, ventriloquist, is
back with an all-new program
called the "Hatfull of Books
Show ." The program has been
specifically designed for libraries
and features many new characters
which will be of appeal to young
readers.
The show is scheduled at the
Meigs County public Library on
Saturday at 2 p.m. and will offer
something for children of all ages.
Puppets, such as the "Amazing Mr.
Books", a talking top hat named
"Jonathon", magic, comedy and
audience participation activities are
sure to delight the youngsters.
Wade also stresses the importance
of using the library and the use of
good library manners.
He is a veteran of over 500
library appearances and brings his
15 years of full-time experience to
the children of this area.

Reunion set
The annual Samuel Allen Eblin
reunion wiU be held Saturday at 6
p.m. at the park on Route 33 (left
side going toward Athens). Those
attending bring a covered dish din·
ner and table service.

OVCGto
show films
The Ohio Valley Church of
God, U.S. Highway 50 East,
Guysville, will be presenting films
on Thursday and Friday.
Films on Thursday at 6 p.m.
include "Thief in the Night" and
"Distant Thunder."
Films on Friday at 6 p.m.
include "Image of the Beast" and
"Prodigal Planet."
Pastor Donald Combs invites
the public.

wounding herself, Jones said.
Koranda, whose billfold contained a yearbook picture of
Flentge, died Saturday night at St.
Francis Medical Center in Cape
Girardeau.
The wedding resumed about 90
minutes after the gunfire. "We got
everyone settled and said some
prayers to unite the group again,"
said the Rev. J. Edward Wilson,
who presided over the ceremony.
Though none of the wedding
guests was injured, the bride's
grandmother, Aora Petot, 86, suffered an apparent heart aback at the
reception and died Sunday at a
Cape Girardeau hospital.

Metropolitan Ambulance Services
Trust.
Ms. Guerrero told Johnathan to
check if he could see the baby's
head.
. , He yelled back, "It's coming,
11 s commg!" she said. "I then told
him to calm down because •You
and I are going to deliver this
baby."'
While his mother pushed,
Johnathan carefully gripped the
emergmg baby and pulled.

"It was very exciting," he said
later. "It was mushy and slippery."
Within six minutes of the call,
J anesse Ebonee Ariel Carter had
arrived.
When paramedics arrived,
Johnathan's mother was on the
couch holding her daughter, carefully wrapped in a towel by
Johnathan.
"He had done the work
already," paramedic Susan Cox
said.

NEW YORK (AP) - High decibel comedian Sam Kinison
blamed some bad Chinese food for
his no-show as the sole guest on a
fonhcoming "Joan Rivers Show,"
but his hostess on Monday blamed
his nonappearance on booze.
"He did a program earlier
today, 'The Howard Stern Show:
and he got upset when they talked
about drugs and alcohol," Rivers
told her audience Friday after waiting four hours for Kinison.
"He said, 'I've been slipping a
little lately.' Well, he skidded,"
Miss Rivers said. She has devoted
Wednesday's show to the circumstanCes surrounding Kinison's fail- .
ure to appear.
Jama Podell, a production assistant sent to pick up Kinisoo at the
Plaza Hotel, where the show had
out him up, said she found Kinisoo
r 'reeked of alcohol" and was
"staggering". when she found him

The 53-year-old queen tripped
while walking and fractured her
fibula durin$ the latter part of a
one-mooth vtsit to the Italian alps,
said Henk. Bax, spokesman for the
Government Information Service.
Beatrix received immediate
medical attention, he said. No other
details of the accident were disclosed. She is resting at her palace
but will have follow-up treaunent
from a Dutch physician, Bax said.
The esrate is near the village of
Tavamelle, about 50 miles west of
Veniee. Beatrix had gone there
with her sons Johan Friso, WillemAiexander and Constantijn.
The royal family often goes on
sightseeing trips and visits friends
elsewhere in southern Europe during the summer vacation; Bax said.
She returned to Holland several
times to see her Gern•an-bom husband, Claus, who was hospitalized
with depression on July I.

V.I. WARSHAWSKI (R) Kath·
leen Turner is a perfect icon of
female assertiveness for the '90s.
She is self-assured, tough,
resourceful. So the idea of casting
her as Sara Paretsky's Chicago·
based private eye, V.I. Warshaws·
lei, would seem inspired. If only the
film were on a par with the casting.
Jeff Kanew (whose "Revenge
of the Nerds" suggested a director
of promise, since unfulftlled) deliv·
ers a film that is devoid of structure, texture and tension.
Even the detection is feeble:
Warshawksi is saddled with the
teen-aged daughter of a murder
victim, and caught in a web of cor·
porate corruption and real estate
speculation.
·
"V.I. Warshawski" looks and
feels like an unsold TV pilot, with
subsidiary characters briefly intro-

Low tonlgbt In mtd -60s.
Tbursday, mostly cloudy.

. Haod: prince
"R?bms"
611ueve $3 ·3 million
.. . ..

Tuttle Personal
Mr. and Mrs. Milton (Ruth) Tuttle of Pomeroy recently visited
with friends from Hawaii and were
afforded the chance to tour the
Mississippi Queen on its recent trip
through the area.
Frank and Gloria DeWolf had

Sincerely,

;/J-d...;;T~

C. Ronald Tilley
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.

A Mulltrnedll Inc. Newo1apeper

Housing bill could
pass House today

"Mobsters"

1 $3.1 million

duced, never to be seen again,
motifs hinted at, then left behind,
and relationships barely sketched
out and taken for granted. GRADE:
I star 1/l.

Meigs announcements
Baking contests
Bakers are being encouraged to
get out their best recipes and stan
working on entries for the cake
decorating contest and pie baking
contests to be held in conjunction
with the Third Annual Rutland
Street Festival.
·
The festival is set for August 31,
with proceeds benefitting the Rutland Volunteer Fire Department
and Ladies' Auxiliary.
Entries for the pte baking con·
test should be in by 12 noon, with
judging scheduled to commence at
2 p.m. All entries will be auctioned
at 4 p.m. The cake decorating con·
test is open-class, and prizes will
be awarded in the contests to ftrSt,
second and third places.
A bake sale will be held beginning at 10 a.m., and according to
organizer Joan Stewart, residents in
the area will be receiving phone
calls requesting donations for the
bake sale. Stewart can be reached
at 742·2421.

2 Seellont, 12 Poll" 25 cento

Wednesday, AUQl.ISt 7, 1991

notified the Tuttles of their trip on
the sternwheeler, which they
boarded in Cincinnati.
The Tuttles, along with Mr. and
Mrs. David (Mae) Koblentz of
Chester
boated around the Mississippi
Queen near Portland, and then traveDed by car to Marietta, where the
Tuttles and Mrs. Koblentz spent
three hours touring the boat and
visiting with the DeWolfs.
In addition, the DeWolfes had
made an "Aloha!" banner for the
Tuttles, which could be seen from
the river.

EXITS COURT - Suspected serial killer
Jeffrey L. Dahmer is escorted out or court Tuesday roUowing a bearing in which he was charged
with eight additional counts or rll'st degree inten-

O'Dells Lumber
Summer Home
Improvement Flyer
Incorrectly Listed
LANDSCAPE
TIMBERS AT S3.49

ON SALE FOR

$317

tiona! homicide, bringing the total to 12. Dabmer's baU was also Increased rrom $1 million to
$5 minion. (AP)

•

MILW-1\UKEE (AP) - Eig~t
more murder charges replete wiih
pisly allegations of dismemberment and necrophilia were filed
against Jeffrey Dahmer as the victims' families sat nearby in coun,
trying to make sense of the slay·
ings.
The charges filed Tuesday bring
to 12 the number of people Dahmer, 31, has been charged with
murdering.
Authorities said in coun papers
that Dahmer had sex with four men
after death, painted three victims'
skulls after boiling them to remove
the skin, and kept one man' s biceps
in his freezer.
,
About 60 of the victims' relatives sat through the 10-minute
hearing, holding hands and leaning
shoulder-to-shoulder as crimes
were detailed.
"I'm here because I want to
know why," said Shirley Hughes,
mother of victim Anthony Hughes,

31.
Dahmer has admitted to 17
killings since 1978, including three
at his grandmother's suburban Milwaukee home and one at his boyhood home near Akron, Ohio,
police said. Police found parts of
II bodies in Dahmer's apartment
on July 22.
District Attorney E. Michael
McCann said addillonal charges
may be ftled at an Aug. 22 hearing.
The murder charges each carry a
mandatory life sentence and are
accompanied by an additional
count. of habitual criminality,
which adds 10 years to each tenn.
Circuit Judge Jeffrey A. Wagner
released the victims' bodies to their
relatives after Dahmer said he had
no objection. Wagner also raised
Dahmer's bail from $1 million to
$5 million.
Dahmer often stared at the floor
during the hearing but looked

directly at the judge when answering questions.
"I just saw that he was a human
being. Just like you and me," said
Lucy Robertson, grandmother of
David Thomas, 23, who was identi·
tied as a victim.
"God made him," she said.
"Just as surely as God made the
devil."
WITI-TV, quoting from what it
said was Dahmer's confession,
reported Tuesday he used his hands
and a leather strap to strangle the
men , butchered them in a bathtub
and flushed pieces down the toilet.
Also Tuesday, police identified
one of the victims as Steven W.
Tuomi, who was 24 when he disappeared Sept. 15, 1987.
The name of a Hispanic man
believed lciDed at the home of Dahmer's grandmother in the mid·
1980s is now the on! y one not yet
released, police said.

Middleport to hofit catfish festival
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A carnival, a car show, arts and
crafts displays, games, and enter·
tainment will be features of the
First Annual CatfiSh Festival to be
staged in Middlepon on Sept. 21.

Plans for the event were made
Tuesday night by the Middleport
Community Association at a meeting held at village hall. Bob
Gilmore, president, explained that
the Catfish Festival wiU replace the
annual block parties which have
been over the past seven years.

--Local briefs-_____,
Ohio 143 to close
Ohio State Route 143 near Carpenter will close for 90 days during bridge replacement over Leading Creek. The $458,003 contract
with Ratzliff Construction Company of Chillicothe will begin on
Thursday, August 15.
The detour route is State Route 692 to State Route 681 to State
Route 50 through Albany and Pageville.
John D. Dowler, District 10 Ohio Department of Transportation
Director, ~ys the Carpenter Bridge, built in 1930, is in poor cond•·
lion.
"The proposed structure," Dowler said, '"will be a three-span
continuous slab bridge which will serve the traveling public and
commerce well into the future."
The final completion date for the project is June 30, 1992.

Correction
/

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
agreement has been reached on a
long-studied bill letting the state
and its local governments spend tax
revenues for housing.
Rep. Michael Verich, D-Warren, and others on a joint conference committee studying the bill,
announced the compromise Tuesday and said it could be voted on
by the House today.
The House was to convene this
afternoon for a summer clean-up
session.
Although the Senate will be in
recess, it could complete passage
when it reconvenes Aug ..20, sending the proposal to Gov. George
Voinovich for his expected
approval.
Sen . Roy Ray, R-Akron, the
Senate sponsor, agreed that the earlier problems had been worked out
but expressed concerns that the
agreement could come apart, as
another one had earlier this summer.
"We're still dotting i's and

FamilieS look for answers as more Changes
charges filed against Dahmer
noted in

CORRECTION

The filings will not affect Columbia Gas of Ohio's supply of
natural gas -nor our ability to bring it to you.
As always, we are here to serve you day in and day out And,
as always, we are committed to maintaining the highest level of
safe, dependable natural gas service we can provide.

,

Cards : 7-H, A-C
J-0;3-S

StarS

COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO IS NEmiERA PARTY 1D NOR
INVOLVED IN TIIESE BANKRUPTCY FILINGS.

C-

Pi\:k 3:845
Pick 4: 5995

PageS

Let me reassure all customers of Columbia Gas of Ohio that
there will be no interruption in your natural gas service. The flow
of natural gas to your home or business will continue as usual, as
will the services that support it
In recent days, I'm sure you have heard and read news
associated with the Columbia Gas name as a result ofThe
Columbia Gas System, Inc. ofWihnington, Delaware, and The
Columbia Gas Transmission Corporation filing for protection under
Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy laws.
The financial difficulties that led to these filings are the result of
above-market-priced gas purchase contracts agreed to by
Columbia Transmission under vastly different regulatory
conditions and during periods when gas was in short supply.

----People in the news---in the lobby.
The comedian's brother, Bill
Kinison, who also serves as his
agent, told staffers two hours later
that he would not be appearing.
Rivers took a camera crew to
the hotel, but Kinison did not come
to the door. His brother spoke
briefly to Rivers, and blamed the
comedian's behavior on some Chinese food he'd eaten after appearing on the Stern.show.
Kinison also did not make a
scheduled ar~ce on Friday's
edition of "
Night with David
Lettennan" on NBC, a spokesman
said.
Calls to Kinison 's agent and
publicists were not immediately
returned.
THE HAGUE, Netherlands
(AP) - Queen Beatrix returned
from her slimmer home in northern
Italy on Monday with a broken leg,
the government said.

Dodgers
snap
losing spell

IMPORTANf INFORMATION FOR
COilJMBIA GAS OF OffiO CUSTOMERS

Youngster rallies to help mom deliver baby
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Ten-year-old Johnathan Carter got
an early start on getting to know his
baby sister - he helped deliver
her.
Carter was getting ready for bed
Friday when his mo.ther, Mary,
went into labor, three days before
her due date.
Johnathan led his mother to the
couch, then called for help.
"He was really upset and was
crying when he called," said dispatcher Connie Guerrero of the

Ohio Lottery

of My Own Medicine," by Dr. Ed
Rosenbaum, "The Doctor" is a
poignant portrait of a rrofessional
man who finds hirnsel stripped of
his occupational defenses by circumstance. McKee quietly finds
that the detachment he lives by has
made him insensitive to the pain
suffered by patients.
Haines and screenwriter Raben
Caswell have found a variety of
intelligent ways to lfepict the grad·
ual awakening of McKee and its
effect on his wife (the always won·
derful Christine Lahti), his partner
(Mandy Patinltin) and his patients.
Most of all, Hurt brilliantly sug·
gests the process of emotional
growth that his character undergoes
- a subtle performance full of
nicely observed detail. GRADE: 4

Pomeroy Village Council m&lt;;rnber ~ Wehrung ~o~ in favor
of increases in council member s salanes at Monday mght s regular
meeting of Pomeroy Village Council. Councilman Bill Young,
however, voted against the increases. The two me~bers' votes were
incorrectly reported on Tuesday m The Da1ly Sent111el.

Trio charged with B&amp;E
Three subjects, including ~wo 15 y~ old girls, .were arrested on
Tuesday night and charged wtth breaking and entenng.
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that John Tuttle of Bentz Road saw a pickup truck parked near a house owned by
his falller. Tuule reported that he heard subjects in.the ~ouse, so he
removed the tey from the .truck and left to eallthe she~rs de~­
ment When Mr. Tuule returned, he observed two subjects runrung
around the house.
Officials then searched the area, impounded the truck and conCotitinued on page 3

While the festival will be held
only on Saturday, Sept. 21, the carnival will be in town for three days.
Rides will be set up on Thursday in
Dave Diles Parle and the South Sec·
ond Street municipal park so as not
to impede the trafl'ic flow.
Committees were appointed at
last night's meeting with Geraldine
Parsons to handle the arts and
crafts booths. Residents are encouraged to display and sell from the
exhibit area which wiD be the sec·
tion of Nonh Second Street from
Walnut to Mill. She can be contracted at 992-7057 to reserve
spaces or for additional informa·
lion.
Others who want to set up in
town with games, other displays or
food booths are to contract Jean or
Bob Gilmore, 992-6128.
The price for each space is $10.
For those using electricity, the
price is $20.
.
This year the car show wtll be
held on at the former Plymouth
dealership on Third Street with one
section of the street to be blocked
off and traffic rerouted.
Door prizes are being solicited
and several drawings will take
place during the day to award
prizes. The grand pnze of a color
TV will be awarded in the evening.
Tickets for the drawings are being
handed by Bob Freed and Sue Sigman.
It was decided that this year the
entertainment will be moved back
from Dave Diles Parle to a flatbed
at the interseCtion of Cole Md Second. Marcia Terry and Dottie Turner are in charge of entertainment
and anyone interested in parti~ipat·
ing are asked 10 contact euher
Terry or Turner.
The Community Association
Continued on page 3

Meigs fair
schedule
Extending the !28th Meigs
County Fair from five to six days
has resulted in a number of changes
in the scheduling and judging of
entries in open classes. The fair
will officially open at 8 a.m. on
Monday and continue through Sat·
urday , Aug. 17.
The secretary's office on the
fairgrounds is now open from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. and entries in open
classes will be accepted through 4
p.m. Thursday. As in previous
years all entries must be made in
person and will not be accepted by
telephone.
Due to the Monday opening of
this fair instead of a Tuesday open·
ing, concession booths are to be in
place by not later than II p.m. on
Saturday.
Exhibits in several of the open
classes must be in place by noon on
Saturday.
Domestic arts entries are to be
in the senior fair building between
9 a.m. and 12 noon on Saturday
with the judging to begin at I p.m.
Amateur painting entries are to
be in place by noon Saturday but
the judging will not take place until
I p.m. on Monday.
Entries in the canning division
are also to be in place by noon Sat·
urday but entries in the baking division may be brought in before noon
on Monday. The judging of both
canning and baking will begin at I
p.m. on Monday.
Hay show entries must also be
in place by II a.m. on Saturday,
according to the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District which
co-swnsors the show with the Fairboard.
According to the rules of the
show. there must be at least 10
exhibits to make a show. Premiums
will be $20 for first. $15 for second, and $10 for third place in each
of the three categories, 75 percent
or more alfalfa, all grasses, and 49
percent or less leg1_1mes. The show
ts restricted to Metgs County rest·
dents only.
Something new in areas of competition this year is "An Apple A
Day Keeps the Doctor Away" program on Saturday which will
include an apple pie baking contest
sponsored by Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
. The program will begin at II: 30
a.m. wtth Cindy Ohvan, Metgs
extension agent, gi vin8 tips on the
care and use of the vanous kinds of
applies, as well as their preservation.
At noon an apple pie baking
contest will be judged by two outof-county home extension agents.
First, second and third place
Continued, on page 3

crossing the t's, but I expect and
hope that the repon will be signed
tomorrow," Ray said, referring to
his off-and-on negotiations with the
House since early July.
The bill implements a constitutional amendment that was
approved by Ohio voters last
November. Specifically, it declared
housing a public interest and authorized the state and its local subdivisions to use public funds for individual and family housing.
Verich said the key to the agreement was a formula that will determine whether so-called prevailing
wages - those comparable to private pay on private developments
in the same geographic areas must be paid on housing projects.
The compromise also creates an
Ohio Housing Trust and provides
$5 million in initial funding, which
the Senate had removed from the
House version. However, the conferees retained a Senate amendment that set up a committee to
recommend _pennanent funding.

The conterees went along with
the Senate· s insistence that the pro·
ceeds from general obligation
bonds not be restricted to certain
$ffiUPS based on income. But pro·
jects funded by the Ohio Housing
Trust would be channeled to lowand moderate-income families or
individuals - a House demand.
In other business today, Riffe
said the House will vote on Senate
amendments to a bill requiring
women seeking an abortion be told
24 hours in advance about risks and
alternatives.
That bill's SPOnsor, Rep. Jerome
Luebbers, D-Cincinnati, said he
expects the House to accel't the
changes and send the btll to
Voinovich.
The governor said earlier he will
sign it into law despite the possibil·
ity of lawsuits claiming it violates
the constitutional ri$hts of women.
The American Ctvil Liberties
Union of Ohio has threatened such
a suit

Ohio voters reject
most school issues

By The Associated Press
Voters have pushed one Ohio
school district closer to a merger by
defeating two tax levies. They also
halted fall extracurricular activities
in one district while restoring cuts
in others.
The Grovepon-Madison School
District in suburban Columbus
moved closer to extinction as voters rejected levies totaling 22.49
mills Tuesday. A two·year, 9.49mill levy lost by an unofficial vote
of 3,735-3,204, while the unofficial
vote against a permanent 13 -mill
levy was 3,842-3,151, said
Franklin County Elections Director
Donald Spicer.
School officials said passage of
both levies was crucial to the district's survival. State officials said
last month the district could cease
to exist next July I unless it eliminates a $6 million deficit and balances its books through cuts or
additional revenue. Failure to do so
probably would fo!",ce the Colum-

bus diStrict to 8lld Urovepon to its
territory.
Superintendent Charles V. Barr
said he would recommend that the
school board resubmit the levies to
voters in November. He said cuts
already approved by the board
would take effect in the fall. These
include elimination of busing for
high school students and imposition of a $I 00 per student fee for
extracurricular activities.
Lorain voters defeated a pro·
posed levy, thus jeopardizing football and other fall after-school
activities.
The vote was 5,997 -4,964
against the 9.75-milllevy.
The school system said it would
eliminate extracurricular activities
this fall if the levy was defeated.
Among other things, this would
suspend the football rivalry
between Lorain and Elyria hi~h
schools, one of the oldest in Ohto,
dating back to the 1890s.

Rutland street festival
scheduled August 31
The Third Annual Rutland
Street Festival will be held Satur·
day, Aug. 31.
There will be a fish fry through·
out the day , along with other
refreshments , hotdogs. sloppy jocs.
popcorn, icc cream , and snow
cones.
Craft tables arc available for $5 .
To regi ster for a table call Joan
Stewart at 742-2421 or Kim Will·
ford at 742-2103.
There will be a cake decorating
contest and a pic baking contest.
Entries should be in by noon and
judging will be at 2 p.m. The pies
and cakes will be auctioned at 4
p.m. The cake decorating contest is
open class.
Entertainment throughout th e
afternoon and evening will feature
Dee and Dallas and the Country

Misfits.
There will be a tunic race in the
afternoon and gam es will begin at
noon.

. Th ere will be a dunking
machine all afternoon and a kiddy
tractor pull will be in late after.
noon .
A bake sal e will be sponsored
by the fire department ladies auxil·
iary beginning at 10 a.m. Anyone
wishing to donate baked goods for
the sale should have them at the
fire station by 9:30a.m.
Doo r pri zes will be award ed
hourly.
There will also be a Little Miss
and Mister Rutland contest as well
as a Prince and Princess Contest.
For funhcr information on these
contests contact Joan Stewart at
742-2421.

Rockefeller will not run
for president in 1992
WASHINGTON (AP) - West
Vir~inia Sen. Jay Rockefeller has
dectded he will not run for president in 1992. In prepared remarks
today he said there's too liule time
to wage a successful campaign and
plan an administration that "meets
my own high standards."
The Democratic senator was to
announce his decision at a noon
press conference in C~leston, W.
Va. He informed top 111des of hts
decision Tuesday, after days of
agonizing over personal doubts
about whether h'e was ready for the
rigors of a presidential camJl8!gn.

His announcement ends an onagain, off-again, on-again flirtation
with a 1992 presidential run, and
removes from the race another
prominent Democrat who had been
attacking President Bush for ignoring domestic issues.
The only declared major Democratic candidate is former Mas sachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas. Iowa
Sen . Tom Harkin and Arkansas
Gov. Bill Clinton are considered
likely to enter the race next month,
and Sen. Albert Gore Jr. of :rennessee and Virginia Gov. L. Dou·
glas Wilder also are considering
running.
•

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