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                  <text>Monday,August19,1991

Page-10- The Dally Sentinel

Building home to
two different faiths

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich

Fifth and sixth graders who are
to play with the Big Bend Youth
Football League this fall will have
their physical examinations from 6
to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
The exams will be given by Dr.
James Witherell and Dr. Thomas
Spencer in the Home Heallh Nursin g Service quarters of the Me1gs
Medical Building, adjacent to Veterans Memorial Hospilal. The front
of the door is marked with a Home
Health Nursing sign so that the
young people and !heir parents can
find the right location. Clarence
Molden has arranged for !he physicals before practice sessions start
on the following Tuesday, Sept. 27.
About 60 youngsters from Meigs
and Mason Counties are involved
in the football program.
The Rutland Fire Department
and its Ladies Auxiliary - who
always do such a good job in staging !heir July 4th celebration - are
now gearing up for their third
annual sueet fesuval and ftsh fry to
be held Saturday, Aug. 31 , from 10
a. m. to 10 p.m.
Joan Stewart is serving as chairman with lots of help, she says.
There will be crafts for sale and if
you want to have a craft table for
the day contact Joan. The cost is
$5. There will be a bake sale, car
show, public games, pie and cake
baking contests, a tractor pull for
kids,live enlertainment by Dee and
Dallas and the Country Misfits in
the evening. The popular dunkin'
machine will be in operation with
Meigs High cheerleaders getting
dunked. The Meigs High Band
will also perform. Incidentally,
there will be cash prizes for the top
three winners in both the pie and
cake baking contest. The phone
number which can get you
involved is 742-2421.

I

I

You remember Mary Ellen Hennessy of Pomeroy? Many of you
will.
Her son, Capt. Thomas I.
Eubanks has been named Prospective Commanding Officer of the
USS Hue City and this marks the
third ship that Capt. Eubanks ~as
commissioned as commandmg
officer. He graduated from the U.
S. Naval Academy in 1966.
Capt. Eubanks· sea assignments
iJJclude ftrSt lieutenant and naviga-

tor, USS Cochrane; weapons offtcer, USS Agerholm, and commanding officer, USS Illusive. While in
command of Illusive he participated in Operation Endsweep, the
1973 mine-clearing effort in Nonh
Vie!Dam's harbors after the war.
Capt. Eubanks also served as commanding officer of the USS Robert
G. Bradley and executive officer of
the USS Anhur W. Radford. He
has held a number of ashore assignments during his rraval career.
He is a graduate of the Industrial
College of the Armed Forces, the
Armed Forces Staff College and
Naval Postgraduate School. He
holds a master's degree in computer systems management and has
received numerous awards in
recognition of his worlc:.
The USS Hue City will be commissioned at In~alls Shipbuilding,
Pascagoula, Mtss. , on Saturday.
Sept 14.
An aunt of his by marriage is
Mrs. Phyllis Poulin of Pomeroy
and Phyllis does plan to attend the
commissioning and of course, other
festivities involved.

Sunday was like "hangover" day
for many residents whose duties in
one activity or anolher took them to
the Meigs County Fair every day
last week. The fatr is a nice activity but most workers breathe a sigh
of relief when it wraps up.
Incidentally, Katie Crow, retired
Sentinel reporter, was again on
hand Friday night to join Julie Dillon, present staff member. in getting all the facts together on the
annual Junior Fair Livestock Sale.
Covering the sale is a big job Katie traditionally has come back
every year to help - and her help is
really appreciated.
I'm really not into all of lhese
pulling contests held at the county
fair. Frankly, on most days my big
concern is pulling my own weight.
How about you? Do keep smiling.

Community Calendar items ChUJCh, Long Bottom. David Daiappear two days before an event . ley wiD be the speaker. The public
and the day of that event. Items is invited to attend.
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the calMIDDLEPORT - There will be
endar.
a meeting Tuesday at 5:30p.m .
regarding the Middleport Catfish
MONDAY
Festival. The meeting will be held
RACINE - Southern Junior in Middleport Council chambers at
High yearbooks are in and may be village hall
picked up at the Junior h1gh school
on Monday between the hours of 9
TIJPPERS PLAINS - A meeting
a.m. and noon. Extra copies are will be held Tuesday at 9 a.m. at
available for $10 each.
Tuppers Plains Elementary school
for kindergarten registration. ParPOMEROY - The 1992 Mau- ents will need to provide a copy of
rader yearbook staff will meet their child's binh certificate and
Monday at II a.m. in Room 310 at various vaccinations and shots
Meigs High School. All staff urged already received.
to attend.
POMEROY - The American
SYRACUSE - The Meigs Coun- Lefion Post No. 39 Drew Webster
ty Board of Mental Retardation and wi I meet Tuesday at the post
Developmental Disabiliti~s will home. Dinner at 7 p.m., meeting at
hold its August board meeung on 8 p.m. All members urged to
Monday at 7 p.m. at the board attend.
office.
WEDNESDAY
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP SYRACUSE - ADK Fall picnic
The Board of Truslees of Columbia and meeting will be held WednesTownship will meet in special ses- day at 6:30p.m. at the home of
.sion on Monday at8 p.m. at the ftre Linda Fisher m Syracuse. Members
.station to discuss an addition to the are urged to atlend.
machinery building.
CHESTER - The lOth CongresREEDSVILLE - Eas1ern Junior sional District Democratic Action
High Football practice will begin Club will hold its summer meeting
Monday at Eastern High School Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the home
from 9 a.m. to I I am.
of Mary Hunter, 37613 Texas
Road, off Rotue 7 at Chester. Bring
TUESDAY
a covered dish . Meat and beverages
LONG BOTTOM - Flame Fel- will be furnished.
·lowship will meet Tuesday night at
7:30 p.m. at !he Faith FuU Gosvel

Rates likely to rise for
.young women drivers
der gap IS begmmng to narrow,
sa1d the Akron Beacon Journal.
Some men pay double what
women pay because men m the!r
teens and 20s have had mor~ accidents and more .severe acc1dents,
the newspaper satd.
.
But as more women drive more,
they are havmg more acc1dents, the
newspaper satd.

---Hospital news--~uotzer Medical Center
Discharges, Aug. 16- Mrs. Gregory Caulley and daughter, Zelia
Coppick, Arthur Essman, Mrs.
Brian Hughes and son, Floyd Newsome, Paul Nonh, Dessie Preston,
Ouwarra Roe, Mmi She~. Betty
Stewart, Michelle Thomas and
Andrew Weaver.
Births Aug. 16 - Mr. and Mrs.
John cwoll, a daughter, Gallipo-

which tractor can -pull a we ighted sled the
longest distance. Here, one or the competitor's
tractor "di~s in" to pull the sled at Friday' s
event. (Sentinel photo by Brian Reed)

Gerald Shuster, long-time Lincoln Heights resident in Pomeroy,
was returned home Thursday from
the Holzer Medical Center where
he was confined for a couple of
weeks following major surgery.
He's doing fine but as we know.
recovery is slow in these things.

Community calendar

AKRON, Ohio (AP)- lnsurance company officials say auto
premiums may rise for young Ohio
women as they follow nationwide
trends by having more traffic accidents, a published report said Sunday.
Young male drivers have historically paid higher premiums than
young female drivers, but the gen-

LAWN TRACTOR PULL - While the garden and lawn tractors may lack the brute horsepower or their larger counterparts, they are stiU
a popular event at the Meigs County Fair and
the Idea behind the pull is still the same: to see

lis. Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Lyles,
daughter, Jackson.
Discharges, Aug. 17 - Cynthia
Bentley, Luann Pentz, Stella Perez,
Joseph Stewan and Robert Woods.
Births, Aug. 17 - Mr. and Mrs.
Troy Ward, a son, Long Bouom. .
Discharges, Aug. 18 - Lo.n
Blanton, Tiffanie Deem, Dale G1ll
and Jean Johnson.

DAIRY SWEEPSTAKES ·Winners of the
Dairy Sweepstakes at the Meigs County Fair
were announced prior to the junior fair livestock
sale Friday evening. Pictured, 1-r, and their
placement, are, front, Tricia Davis, eighth place;
Kristi Warner, lilth place; Paul Smith, second

place; and Tyson Rose, ninth place . Back,
Chuck Parker, lirst place; Vicki Warner, third
place; Mike Parker, sixth place; David Smith,
seventh place; and Brent Rose, tenth place. Not
pictured is Chris Parker, rourth place.

LA Dodgers
hike .NL West
Division lead

CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, Ohio
(AP) - Rosh Hashana, the Jewish
New Year, will signal the stan of a
unique joint venture between two
Jew1sh and Christian places of worship.
The congregation of St. Alban
Episcopal ChUJCh in this Cleveland
suburb has agreed to rent space m
its new church to Templ e Ner
Tamid.
Temple Ner Tamid was established in 1948 and is located on the
city's east side. It will operate a
satellite congregation at St.
Alban's.
Rabbi Bruce Abrams, spiritual
leader of Temple Ner Tamid, had
announced this year that his synagogue inlended to open a branch in
Cleveland Heights to provide a
place of worship for Jews of the
Reform tradition.
The agreem ent to share th e
building is "a new chapter in
Christian-Jewi sh relations in the
Cleveland area, " · said Jeffrey
Bendix, a spokesman for the two
churches.
The new St. Alban's church is
expected to be completed by next
June. It will replace a church that
wa s des troyed in a June 1989
arson.
Until then, the two will share
worship spac e at yet another
chUJCh, !he First English Lutheran
Church.
The new building will contain
symbols appropriate to both faiths,
Bendix said.
Bendix said he knew of only
three other places in the United
Stales where Jewish and Christian
congregations worship permanently
in the same building.
The suggestion that the two congregations share a house of worship was made last spring by a
small group of Jewi sh residents
who were not members of any congregation and wanted a branch
staned in !he area.
Abrams said he was aware of
plans for the new church and
approached the Rev. Robert C.
Weaver, St. Alban' s rector.
The two congregations met, and
their governing boards approved
!he joint use of the building.
Abrams said services would be
on Saturday morning, the Jewi sh
holy day, while the Sabbath eve
services would be at another synagogue.
He said he believed this was !he
first Reform Jewish congregation
in this eastern suburb, which has
long had a suung Jewish influence.
The present Jewish congregations
in the area follow Orthodox or
Conservative traditions.

Durst, third place Best of Show and rrrst place
Best Dressed; and Jessica Barringer, third place
Best Dressed.

'Dead Again' opens August 23
By DOLORES BARCLAY
AP Arts Editor
There is something so Hitch cockian about Kenneth Branagh's
"Dead Again" that you can almost
slice it with Norman Bates ' bloodspeckled meat cleaver.
It is a film that combines the
best of such timeless suspense
yarn s and thrillers as "Spell bound,""Dial 'M' for Murder"
and " Psycho," and dabbles in the
supernatural.
With a touch as devilishly light
as Hitchcock's, Branagh smoothly
pours a delicious blend of romance,
comedy, mystery and murder that
goes down as nicely as hot-buttered
rum on a snowy night.
Fresh from his directorial and
acting triumph in "Henry V," the
Irish-born actor plays the dual role
of cynical but upscale private
detective Mike Church, and Roman
Strauss, a flamboyant and romantic
conductor and composer of 1940s
Los Angeles.
Emma Thompson co-stars in the
roles of the mysterious Grace, a
woman who has no memory of herself other than haunting nightmares
of another life, and· the lovely and
urbane MarJW"Ct, who fell in love

with Roman· and lflarried him. She
is slashed to death with a pair of
antique scissors, and Roman is convicled of the murder and execuled.
Andy Garcia pops up as a jaded
journalist who was attracted to
Margaret and later as the owner of
a bar frequented by Mike.
As hard-boiled as he pretends,
Mike is actually quite tender and
becomes Grace's champion.
rranKL:yn Madson (Derek Jaco-

bi), an effete and eccentriCantiques
dealer who Jives with his mother
(shades of Norman Bates), answers
a new spaper ad about Grace and
volunteers to regress her through
hypnosis in an attempt to discover
who she is.
The regression reveal s a past life
not only for Grace, but for Mike as
well. As they gain more knowledge
about the
!he present becomes

Pick 3:398
Pick 4: 8674

Cards : J -H, 2-C
3-D ;2-S
Partly cloudy tonight. Low ~
mid-50s. Wednesday, sunny,
high near 90.

Page4

Vol. 42, No75

Thousands protest takeover

Investments in
the Soviet Union
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev's ouster
by military hardliners has undermined the
already fragile relationship many westem
businesses have wnh the Soviet Union.
Here's a look at how the Western world
has Invested in the Soviet Union:

By BRIAN FRIEDMAN
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW- Hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets
today to shout for !he downfall of
the military and Communist ~Y
hard -liners who ousted Pres1dent
Mikhail S. Gorbachev a day earlier.
"The junta that has come to
power will not stop at anything to
keep that power," Russian Federation President Boris Yeltsin told a
cheering, waving crowd of m~re
!han 150,000 people at the Russ1an
Parliament building.
"They understand that things
have reached the point that if they
lose, they will lose not only their
armchairs, but !her will be seated
on court benches, ' said the Russian republic's president, who has
spearheaded resistance to Monday's ovenhrow of Gorbachev.
In another development, a Soviet Foreign Ministry official said
Foreign Minister Alexander Bessmer!Dykh had taken "sick" after
returning from vacation, "but was
expected to return to worlc: in a few

As of April 1, 1990
Western partner
country

W. Germany"

I U'

Number of
joint ventures

Investment In joint
ventures In millions {US)

IL====:;=;;~...!2::4::.J41 £1QB\MiliB'lL\1~Ml

Finland r

nsl

fu1~1illh'if~&amp;Rl

u.s.

112 1

m~~iil~t~~t~~~~1Ifi%tll!~!!IUllt:i

Austria
-at
Britain
G

991

!@f[L~i.~

961

lR!:tiWli)~
~;~~;;:.;:::;;&lt;::;.;a;:,~ f.!:!'v~~

.

ualy I
951
swnzorland I 691
Sweden c:J!I
France[]!)
Canada 0 37
Japan Q27
Spain 021
Australia 0 21
Netherlands 0 20
Other I 70 I
Total: 1,256

!iilWUE&amp;INJ&amp;Wi&amp;i~Jii'B!l

mns3o
Rill~11ltl~!i

days.' '

~t~~t. $38

fu1Btil$Jt}j
Total: $2,165 million
AP

source: PlanEaJn Research Assodates Inc.

Bob clears out after
soeking-New-England
BOSTON (AP) - The rem nants of Hurricane Bob swept eastern Canada today after the storm
tossed boats around and tore off
roofs in a race up the Eastern
Seaboard. At least four deaths were
blamed on the season's ftrSt hurricane.
The hurricane, the ftrSt to hit the
Northeast since Gloria in 1985,
knocked out power to an estimated
1.5 million businesses and households from the Carolinas to Maine
and injured 20 people, authorities
said.
"The bad news is, someone told
me, 'There's a tree in your room,"·
said Teri Barba, assistant manager
of a restaurant on Martha's Vineyard, Mass. "But the good news is
the rest of the house wasn't hurt.''
Hurricane Bob was downgraded
to a tropical storm late Monday
when its maximum sustained winds
dropped to 70 mph, 4 mph below
the hurricane threshold. At its peak
its sustained winds were 115 mph,
with gusts to 138 mph.
The storm crossed into Canada
early today and was moving northeast at about 30 mph with gusts
near 50 mph , said the National
Hurricane Center in Coral Gables,
Fla. At 3 a.m. the storm was near
Fredericton, New Brunswick.
In Canada , the storm toppled
trees and utility poles, producing
scattered power outages.
As the storm moved up the coast
Monday, Navy submarines left
their benhs in Connecticut for !he
safety of the deep.
Fierce waves off Massachusetts

SABINA, Ohio (AP) - It has
been 27 years since the embalmed
body of a transient was displayed
for the public, but the unidentified
man still attracts notice.
About 1.5 million people traveled to this Clinton County village
between 1929 and 1964 to see the
embalmed body of a man nick named Eugene.
"You have to understand how it
was back then," funeral director
Barth Littleton said. "People today
lhink this was weird."
The man wa s found dead on
June 6, 1929, hi s body leaning
against a fence by a small pond. He
was one of many hobos who passed
through the community.
The death wa s due to natural
causes, the county coroner said. In
the man ' s pocket was a scrap of
paper with a scribbled address for a
vacant lot in Cincinnati, but there
was no other identification . The
closest resident 10 the lot wa s
Eugene Johnson, so village offi cials nicknamed the dead man
Eugene.
Officials delayed burial for a
few days in case someone came to
identify the man. Nobody did.
"People don' t understand why
we did it. It was planned to keep
him just a few days. Before you
knew it, 35 years had passed," Littleton said.
Littleton, 62, said he inherited
the body when he took over the
funeral home operation in 1948.
Eugene was dressed in a new
suit each year and laid on a table in
the turn-of-the -century building
that housed his body.
A chicken-wire screen was built
in the small building to thwart
pranksters, but college students
sometimes stole !he body.

spit fi sh into the air and tossed
boats like toys . "It looks like
someone just took their finger and
poked boats over like a kid in a
bathtub," said Elmer Bartele, a
vacationer on Martha' s Vineyard.
Vacationers in Saco, Maine,
defied an order to evacuate. Instead
they marveled at how the hurricane
sent plumes of spray 20 feet into
the air. "I've never seen this
before. This is beautiful," said
Donald Jacques of Plymouth, N.H.
The storm, which formed off the
Bahamas last week, glanced off
Cape Hatteras, N.C., late Sunday
night. causing little serious dam age.
Then it swirled northward off
the coasts of Virginia, Maryland,
Delaware and New Jersey, staying
about I00 miles offshore.
The storm center slipped about
50 miles east of Montauk on the tip
of New York 's Long Island, turn ing the midday sky purple, crossed
Rhode Island with winds of at least
I 05 mph and cut across Massachusetts, passing just east of
Boston.
At Newport, R.I.. waves
engulfed three waterfront homes.
A housing project and the
Chamber of Commerce lost their
roofs in Falmouth, on Cape Cod.
On fashionable Martha's Vineyard.
Bob rudely interrupted the summer
routine of yachting, drinks at the
water' s edge and celebrity-watching.
The storm passed east of Boston
around 4:30 p.m. The usually
Continued on page 3

Board to pay for SUS band,
athletic busing events this year

'

1 Section, 10 Pagea 25 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 20, 1991

Copyrlghteci19G1

Embalmed transient
drew millions

BEST DRESSED - These pets were judged
Best Dressed at Friday's Meigs County Fair Pet
Show. Jennlrer Dunn, second place ; Cindy

Ohio Lottery

The cost of busing students to
athletic and band events during the
1991-92 school year will be taken
care of by the Southern Local
Board of Education.
That was the decision following
a lengthy discussion with about 50
parents and other interested individuals at a meeting of the Board
Monday night
Cost of the busing for the fmancially strapped district was not
reponed although it is expecled to
be several thousand dollars.
A discussion was also held on
changing from the SV AC League
to !he 1VC with the superinlendent
and spons personnel to check into
that possibility.
Fmal plans for the opening of
school next week were made. The
teachers will meet on Monday with
classes to begin on Tuesday.
It was noted that $36,800 has
been received from the State
Department of Education for the
DPTF disadvantaged pupil pro-

gram.
The resignation of Kelly Rizer
as a substitute teacher was accepted. Thelma Salser was hired as a
cook at the high school replacing
Laura Circle who retired. Salser
was formerly a parttime custodian
at the junior high school.
Don Smith was added to the list
of custodian substitules, and substitute teachers hired were Barry
Haynes, Karla Brown, Earl Fields,
Jennifer Barnette, Cheryl Halley,
Marta Blackwood, Amy Murray,
and Sherri Hensler.
The Board accepted the resignation of Bill Hensler as assistant
football coach and hired Jeffrey
Baker to that position. The re~igna­
tion/reurement of Delbert Sm1th as
a bus driver was accepted at the
meeting.
Attending were board members,
Denny Evans, Susie Grueser, Gary
Wilford and the newly appointed
member, Joseph Thoren, Supt. Bob
Ord, and Treasurer Dennie HiU.

The coup leaders also claimed
Gorbachev, who was overthrown
while on vacation in the Crimea,
was ill. Few believed it.
Resistance to the overthrow ,
meanwhile, appeared to be spreading.
A demonstration in Leningrad
drew 200 000 people - many of
them heeding a call by Yeltsin to
protest the coup by going on strike
- and one in the capital of the
Moldavian republic drew an estimated 400,000 people.
In his speech outside the Russian Parliament building, Yeltsin
derided the coup leaders and told
the crowd to disobey their orders.
"Was it not Pavlov who
brought prices and inflation to !he
level that the people are poor and
hungry? Pavlov!" yeltsin s~~ted.
referring to Pnme Mm1ster
Valentin Pavlov, one of the coup
leaders.
"Does not Yazov have blood on
his hands, the blood of people of
other republics? Does not Pugo

BUILDING UP A BARRICADE Protesters topple militia booth and move it into
position ror use as a barricade across one of the
have bloody hands from the people
of other republics?" Yeltsin continued, referring to Defense Mimster Dmitri Yazov and Interior Minister Boris Pugo.
One speaker told the crowd that
a radio broadcast had said Yeltsin's
arrest had been ordered "Will we
allow that?" the speaker shouted,
to cries of "No!" and "Yeltsin!
Yeltsin!"
The report that Yeltsin was
ordered arrested could not be confll11led.
The Russian president spoke for

streets near the Kremlin and Red Square early
Tuesday to prevent access or Soviet tanks and
troops. (AP)

less than I 0 m.inutes, sayin g he
could not stay long at the podium
because snipers had been sighted
on the rooftops of nearby buildings.
Meanwhile, the Russian Min istry of Foreign Affairs issued a
diplomatic note saying it refused
any responsibility for action s or
obligations incurred by the coup
leaders, and asked all foreign governments to freeze lhe gold and
hard-currency assets and transfers
of the Soviet Union until the coup
commitlee is disbanded.
In Leningrad, crowds jammed

Palace Square and cheered for
Mayor Anatoly Sobehak, a radical
reformer like Yeltsin . Protesters
filled the center 0f Ki shiniev, the
capital of the southwestern republic
of Moldavia, according to Molda vian television.
Rally organizers, including Mol davia 's independence-minded lead ers, issued a resolution calling for
the resignation of the coup leaders,
the reinstatement of Gorbachev and
for Moldavians serving in the Red
Army to "follow the people, not
the fascists."

Council OKs second reading for pay-hike
Mayor Richard Seyler settled a
By BRIAN J. REED
tie vote on an ordirrance that would
Sentinel News Starr
The second reading of ordi - raise council members: salaries to
nances granting raises to elected $30 and the pres1dent s salary to
village officials was held at Mon- $40 in January.
.
Bruce Reed made the motiOn,
day night ' s regular meeting of
Larry .Wehrun g. seconded and
Pomeroy Village Council.
Bryan Shank was the only coun- Baron1ck voted tn favor of the
cil voting against a ordinance rais- raise. Shank, Young and Werry all
ing the salary of the mayor to vot ed again~! t~.e rai ses, with
$6,000. The motion to approve the Seyler voung yes to break the ue.
All members voted in favor .or
raise was made by Betty Baronick,
with Bill Young seconding the mamtammg the salary of the vtl motion . That salary currently is set lage clerk durin,g 1992. That. salary
at $3,600. The raise, if approved at was ratsed Significantly earlter thts
the next meeting, would take effect year, with the salary. to change
back to the ongmal f1gure at the
in January, 1992.

end of !he derk's current term.
Counctl members heard of a
neighborhood's interest in annex1ng lhetr street m10 Middleport.
Ro~er Manley of Rutland Street
cxplatned that members of that
neighborhood are interested in
bemg a~ncx ed by Middleport. and
that offiCials there have sa1d they
would be willin~ to annex the s treet
(part of which IS now m M1ddle port).
. .
. .
Counctl d1scussed a Similar proposal !hat was made before council
several years ago, at wh1ch t1me
~~~jdcnts of the Rutland Street area
mvolved
to pay for the nee-

essary legal paperWork. However,
no action was taken, and the idea
was forgotten .
Last nigh~ council expressed no
immediate objection to the annexation but again said that !he paperwork would have to be performed
and paid for by those involved.
The residents on the street
which makes up part of the flood
road bet ween Pomeroy and Middlcport, arc generally served by
emergency crews and other services from Middleport.
Coun cil di scussed overtime
compensation for a salaried street
Continued on page J

Raid nets 107
marijuana plants
in Meigs Coun~
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News StafT
An estimated $104,000 in mari juana plants were seized on Monday in Columbia and Bedford
Townships in Meigs County.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, 107
plants were seized from private
properties in those townships. In
the case of the Columbia Township
property, a search warrant was executed, enabling officials to seize
the plants and possibly make a ease
to send to the Meigs County Grand
Jury.
A total of 35 officers from the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department, the Army National Guard,
and the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation
conducted five separale air searches in ftve townships. The Natiorral
Guard operated a ground communications center and assisled in the
collection of marijuana.
The operation was late in getting staned and cut short in midafternoon due to fog and impending storms, and that, according to
Soulsby, was a major disappointmenL
, "I am not disappointed in the
Continued on page 3 '
,
1

GROUND CONTROL - This operation on
U.S. Route 33 was the communications center
set up by members of the Army National Guard
to assist in marijuana eradication efforts in

.
'

Meigs County on· Monday. $104,000 worth or:
plants were c~riSCllted and at least one person.
is expected to be Indicted. (OVP Pboto by Brian·
·
J , Reed)
I

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- ------ ----·- :·········--,--- - ------ TUesday, August 20, 1991

Commentary

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

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERFSTS OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AR811.

6MULTIMEDIA,INC
ROBERT L. WINGETt'
Publloher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Asso. elation and the American Newspaper Publishers·Association .
LE ITERS OF OPINION

are welcome. They should be less Ihan 300
words long. All letlers are subject 10 editing and must be stgni!d with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leiters should be In good laste, addressing Issues, not personaliti es.

The real victims: You
and all other Americans
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - Determining who is the most affronted victim of the
latest scandal from the financial center is like trying to rate the casualties
of war by the grievousness of their injuries.
It is a long list, and it includes Uncle Sam, purchasers of securities
from Salomon Brothers, employees, competitors, creditors, shareholders,
part-owner Warren Buffett. Who is the most wounded? None of them.
The greatest wound of all has been inflicted on the American public,
whose confidence in the integrity of financial instirutions and financial
managers has been strained beyond endurance.
The mess at Salomon Brothers, which sought to illegally reduce competition and control trading in the most sacred of all markets, that for U.S.
government securities, can't be divorced from other scandals.
To some dej!Tee. all are linked by the selftsh motivation and self-righteOus justificauon of that motivation, and the costly consequences to the
public. And, shockingly, by ineptness among those claiming superior
skills.
' Michael Milken enjoyed a popular image as an innovator while he funneled fortunes into his own pockets and into worthless investments, lhe
tab for which cannot even be estimated until all the borrowers destined to
fail have done so.
. Savings and loan executives poured the torturously saved funds of
middle Americans into worthJess real estate developments, often ineptly
but sometimes with full knowledge, and called themselves daring and
innovative.
Bankers prided themselves on their ingenuity by bundling the small
savings of depositors and recklessly shipping the bundles abroad in search
of higher returns -losing the money and forcing up domestic borrowing
rates.
Insurance companies, which once claimed to be the most conservative
of investors, bought junk bonds and thus risked the security they had
promised their customers, often arguing they did so to keep rates competitive.
·
The boast of all the' outfits involved in these shenanigans, financed in
some way by public funds, is that they are hard dealers, shrewd, competitive, competent, knowledgeable, responsible, proud, legal, honest
Such descriptives, of course, are meant to reassure customers, much as
the public image of a restaurant depends on its food, cleanliness, service
and decor. But now the public has seen the kitchen, and it knows differently.
The biggest victim is the public, and the most dama~ing consequence
of the public's victimization is the loss of confidenoe m secwities mar·
kets. Markets function on trust and confidenoe. They come apart without
them.
Among specific victims are Uncle Sam, wbo probably paid more for
his money than would have been the case if competition hadn't been
reduced.
The list also includes the competitors of Salomon Brothers, who claim
they lost millions because of illegal competition; honest employees of
Salomon Brothers, who may lose their jobs: Salomon shareholders. who
might lose their investment.
·
Salomon creditors, whose bills are corning due any day. might be vic·
ttms if interim chairman Warren Buffett fails to keep the fmn afloat Buffett, part owner, conceivably could lose both funds and reputation for
investing genius.
.
.
·· These are some of the specifics, but the Salomon scandal is so large it
affects the finances of everyone. Still, big as it is. it fits within a pauern of
financial ineptness and greed that is distressingly familiar to Americans.

i'

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participants are kept so busy that
they have little or no time to enjoy
the lavish offerings the hotels. We
have to assume !hen that the IRS is
squandering money on amenities
that it pays for and never uses.
Although the IRS is reviewing
its standards for scheduling such
retreats , they will still be held if
deemed necessary, an IRS
spokeswoman told us.
We have already reported on
other trips the IRS has deemed
"nece ssary" in recent months .
There was the ethics seminar, costing at least $124,000, put on last
winter in a cozy West Virginia
mountain resort. In June, 100 internal auditors from the IRS head quarters in Washington attended a
computer-training meeting at a
beachfront resort in Ocean City,
Md., at a total cost of $34,600.
Just a few days later, top IRS
managers from Philadelphia put
their noses to the grindstone at a
seminar at an elegant - but who
had time to notice?- golf resort in
the Pocono mountains. If the IRS
employees hadn't been so busy.
they could have used one of two
championship golf courses, tennis

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
courts, swimming pools, a sauna, a
trap-shooting range and a Nautilus
fitoess center. That getaway cost
taxpayers about $88,000, not
including travel expenses.
We acknowledge that the IRS
needs an educated workforce so it
can collect taxes, but the taxpayers
can't afford the price of that education.
PRESIDENTIAL PRIVILEGE
- Congress has been thwarted in
its attempt to investigate a deal
between lhe Pentagon and McDonnell-Douglas, lhe contractor on the
canceled A-12 aircraft project.
When Congress canceled the project because of cost overruns, the
Pentagon was supposed to get
some money back from McDonnell-Douglas. When congressional ·
investigators pressed for the docu- :
ment spelling out the settlement, ·
Defense Secretary Dick Cheney ran
to the White House for protection. :
President Bush invoked executive ·
privilege and told Cheney not to :
release the document. Executive ·
privilege is usually reserved for :
delicate security matters or political embarrassments. Now Rep. John :
Conyers, D-Mich., who heads the ·
House Government Operations :
Committee, is alarmed. Our .
sources say the document may :
include some terms that Congress
wouldn't approve of. The executive .
privilege ploy has enraged several ·
powerful members of Congress, :
who are now more determined than
ever to find out what deal the Pentagon made with McDonnell-Douglas.
MINI-EDITORIAL- Who can ,
blame Imelda Marcos for wanting ·
to return to her home in the Philip- ·
pines? She left 1,060 pairs of shoes :
behind in her haste to pack. She ·
will find them neatly preserved in ·
her old house, which is now a.
museum of "excesses." Philippine
President Corazon Aquino says
Imelda can return from exile in
Manhauan, but she will return to a
courtroom where she will be tried
on charges of fleecing her country.
At least she would have something
to wear.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Senate Bill l30_________S_e_n.. .: . .l.:.:. . an.:. . : .M. : . :·- =L:.: . . :on..:E. g:
In response to the June 199C
decision of the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) to create a cat·
egory of radioactive waste to be
designated "Below Regulatory
Concern" or (BRC, Senate Bill 130
was passed by the Ohio Senate by a
29-4 margin.
The intent of Senate Bill 130 is
to continue current procedures for
the safe storage and disposal of
"low level" radioactive wastes.
Generators of low level" radioactive wastes include medical facilities, university research facilities,
hospitals and nuclear power plants.

This legislation was critical due to
the NRC's efforts to deregulate
radioactive wastes. In the end their
actions could have meant the storage of "low level radioactive waste
in local landfills, sewers and incinerators. Currently, low level
radioactive waste is sent to special
facilities in South Carolina , Washington state, and Nevada.
Six states have already enacted
anti·BRC legislation aimed at continuing strong "low-level" radioactive waste storage and disposal regulations. These states have decided

that it is inappropriate for lhe federal agency, which has been given
the responsibility for protecting the
general public from the risks of
radioactive waste, to suddenly
decide that many of these wastes
are safe.
To prevent the threat of contamination to Ohio's citizens and
resources, Senate Bill 130 will prohibit radioactive waste from being
disposed of as "Below Regulatory
Concern" in Ohio. This legislation
will maintain the status quo for
Ohio requiring all "low level"
radioactive waste to be deposited in

NRC licensed and regulated
radioactive waste facilities.
The spirit of this legislation
allows for the furure discussion and
study of lhe safest and most effec·
live means of disposing of Ohio's
"low level" radioactive waste.
As always, please feel free to
call or write me, State Senator Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comments about these
or any other issues. My number is
(614)-466-8156, and my address is
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohio,
43215.

Don't let hostage takers scare U.S.

The recent flurry of events
involving
Westerners held hostage
· Thought for Today: "Hastiness and superficiality are the psychic dis·
in
Lebanon
raises anew a number
eases of the 20th c~ntury, and more than anywhere else thiS disease is
reflected in lhe press." -Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Soviet author (1918- of familiar questions about the
right way to deal with hostage tak).
ing.
Who is not made happy by the
release of hostages? Who does not
rejoice when vacant-eyed or exuberant men walk off the planes that
have whisked them back to their
loved ones and the resumption of
more normal lives? But who, too,
does not understand deep down
that our nation· s near obsession
with hostage dramas is unhealthy
on several counts and counterproductive on others?
To begin with the most obvious
point, presidents should not must not - expend as much
focused energy on the release of
individual hostages as many Americans seem to demand. It is true
that the president is constitutionally
enjoined to look after the welfare
of all American citizens. It is also
true that there are 250 million
Americans, thousands of whom are
in dire straits at every minute of the
day. And it is equally true that,
with a million Americans !raveling
or stationed abroad at any given
time, the pool of potential hostages
is extremely large.
Thus, when Americans are
seized by terrorists or bandits, the
president has an obligation to balance their undoubted tra$.edy
against his multiple responsibilities. How many other citizens will
be penalized or hurt if government
agencies are required to concen·
trate on the -hostages? Can or
should distinctions be . made
between those who voluntarily put
themselves in harm's way, or
" ... Your honor, my client's defense is whose professional obligations put
them
there, and those who inadver'EVERYBODY DOES IT!"'
tently llapJien io be in the wrong
place at the wrong time?

Berry's ·world

for two days.
But it was only two weeks later
that 150 IRS attorneys threw public
opinion to the wind and headed for
the Pier Sixty Six Resort and Marina in Fort Lauderdale, our associate
Scott Sleek has discovered. They
were there for further education,
including discussions of new developments in tax court rules and procedures.
It sounds like serious work, but
it's hard to swallow the all-workno-play line from the IRS when lhe
hotel , in its own brochures, is
described as "lush," with private
balconies overlooking the water,
telephones in the bathrooms, daily
cruises to the Caribbean islands,
waterfront tennis courts, a worldclass marina, parasailing, snorkel·
ing, yachting, massages and free
shuttle service to the beach.
The IRS claims it holds these
events at getaway hotels when
work needs to be done without the
constant interruptions of the office.
Apparently the IRS has never considered a conference room with a
lock on the door, a box of donuts
and an order to, "Hold all calls."
The IRS also claims that the

To be even more cold-blooded
about it, what should the govern·
ment be willing to trade for the
release of an individual hostage?
For a large group of hostages? It is
official policy, incessantly recited,
that the United States does not
negotiate with terrorists. That is
simply not true. Unofficial emis·
sarles and friendly nations do constant service as our diplomatic surrogates. When it seems useful,
American officials themselves deal
directly with those purporting to
speak for the terrorists or claiming
to have influence with them. As
Israel can attest. direct and indirect
pressure is brought to bear on
nations whose oolicies are thoul!ht
to hold a partial key to the
hostages' release.
Out of this murky background,
deals are made and agreements
reached, however indirectly. Even
as we claim otherwise, payoffs are
made. Even if there is no direct
quid pro quo, terrorists are rewarded indirectly. At the least, they are
not penalized for their crime.
From "America held hostage"
in Tehran to President Reagan's
exchange of TOW missiles for
hostages five years later, to the present day, our instincts have
betrayed our intelligence. President
Carter and his spokesmen - most
particularly, me- talked too much
about the hostages in ~ran. Eaclt
time we talked, their wo'hll to tl{e
Iranian revolutionaries rose. Reagan promised to do it differently.
and did, paying blackmail in private rather than professing nonstop concern. While we do not
know all the details of how the
most recent hostage releases we~
arranged, President Bush's public
gralirude to those most responsible
for their long ordeal is not reassuring.
~
Unfortunately, there is no "right

By Hodding Carter Ill
way" to deter hostage taking. The
Israeli approach of two eyes for an
eye, four teeth for a tooth, venti- as possible. The official line should
lates rage but, as Israel's history reflect the operative approach .
proves, does not deter future terror. When Americans are held hostage,
That is not an argument against the nation must not be. No deals,
attacking known terrorists, which no concessions. Anything more all
has the utility of exacting a price, but guarantees there will be more
but a statement of reality.
hostages down the line.
There is general agreement in
This is one of those cases where
this country that nations that toler- the conventional wisdom happens
ate hostage taking or encourage it
should be made to pay. The prob- to be wise. Virtually everything in
lem is that the rhetoric masks mas- our society's ethos argues to the
sive hypocrisy. Washington's contrary, but the fate of individual
hands are not clean. Remember the hostages must not be of more than
Nicaraguan contras, our "freedom peripheral importance to the presifighters" who were often unable to dent and the government he leads.
distinguish civilian from military It is politically difficult to say and
targets? Until there is international humanly impossible to remember
agreement that terrorism is terror- but it is the best antidote availabl~
ism is terrorism, however noble the for the poison of hostage taking.
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER
rationale, effective sanctions are
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
impossible.
Hodding Carter III, former State ·
So we are left with the grim
likelihood that hostage taking will Department spokesman and awardnot vanish anytime in the foresee- winning reporter, editor and pubable future. Understanding that, we hsher, 1s pres1dent of MainStreet a
must hold to a policy that offers as Washington, D.C.-based televisi~n
linle encouragement to kidnappers production company.

Today in ·history
By The Associated Press

~oday is Tuesday, Aug. 20, the 232nd day of 1991. There are 133 days

left m the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 20, 1940, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill paid tribute to the Royal Air Force, saying, "Never in the field of human conflict
was so much owed by so many to so few."
On this date:
In 1833, Benjamin Harrison, the 23rd president of the United States
was born in North Bend, Ohio.
'
In 1866, President ~drew Johnson formally declared the Civil War
over, even though fightmg had stopped months earlier.
W~nl.l914, German forces occupied Brussels, Belgium, dwing World
In 1918, Britain opened its offensive on the Western front dwing
World War I.
,
~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinei-Page-3

Funnel clouds sighted in northern Ohio &gt;

Accu-Weather• forecast for

By The Associated Press
in Cleveland could not confmn that
Minor flooding and several fun- a tornado had touched down.
nel clouds were reported in storms
Several funnel clouds also were
that hit northern Ohio, keeping sighted near Alliance in northeast
authorities busy checkiilg reports of Ohio, but they did touch down or
damage but causing no m~or- pi'Obo ·· cause any damage, sheriffs deputy
!ems.
Kerry Hester said.
A funnel cloud touched down
"Police and rue units, as well as
briefly about 10 miles northwest of ~everal citizens, had reported seeMarion in north central Ohio at mg the clouds, but we have no
6:08 p.m. Monday, said Brian Bender, a State Highway Patrol dispatcher.
· Bender said he saw two other
funnel clouds but does not believe
they touched down. Patrol troopers
found no sign of damage in the
area, he said.
The National Weather Service

MICH.

Is it work or play at IRS seminars?
WASHINGTON - It's tough
to oi'Cn our mail these days without
finding at least one anonymous tip
about yet another extravagant trip
by Internal Revenue Service
employees !raveling on the taxpayers' dime. Collecting all that tax
money apparently has warped the
agency's sense of thrift. Easy
come, easy go.
The latest getaway involved a
flo ck of IRS lawyers who spent
four days at a tropical resort in Fort
Lauderdale. They simply had to
remove them selves from the distractions of the office for an educational seminar that cost lhe taxpayers about $100,000.
Before we expose the sordid
details, we must note that the IRS
IS reviewing its wanderlust. Our
recent columns exposing a few of
those trips encouraged them to
think twice about scheduling fancy
retreats for employees. In fact, a
two-day meeting for managers,
originally scheduled last month at a
fancy hotel in Maryland, was relocated to spartan Andrews Air Force
Base. So, instead of being put up at
the hotel for $70 a night, the 62
participants in the meeting commuted to the base from their homes

"'

0 111 0 Wi'cl lli t' l
VVednesday,Aug.21
· ruesda~August20,1991

The Daily Sentinel

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IMansfield I 81 • I•
IND.

•IColumbus I 81 • I

injuries or damage to repon," she
said.
Streets in Port Clinton in north west Ohio were flooded after heavy
rains fell on the city about 5:30
p.m., Ottawa County sheriff's
deputy Dan Cuevas said. No
injuries or major property damage
were reported, he said. The weather
service said the Marblehead Penin-

sula received an average of four
inches of rain from 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
A funnel cloud was spotted
about4:20 p.m. in Newbury Town·ship in Geauga County but the
sheriffs department satd the cloud
didn't touch down or cause injuries
or property damage in the northeast
Ohio county.

:
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:
:

Bob ...
W. VA.

i)
Ice

Sunny

Pl. Cloudy

Clo&lt;Jdy

019i11u:cu·Wealher,lne.

Vil-ai«&lt;Preu Gnphi-

,.---Local briefs-____,
Squads make seven runs Tuesday
Meigs Emergency Medical Services answered seven calls for
assistance on Monday and early on Thesday.
On Monday at 3:58 p.m., Tuppers Plains squad went to State
Route 681 for Jessica Boso. She was taken to Sl. Joseph Hospital.
At 4: 12 p.m., Middl~ unit went to Custer Street for a smoke
odor at the Kenny Pridemore rcsidelx:e. At 7:03 p.m., Racine and
Bashan units went to Dewitt's Run for a brush rue. At 10:22 p.m.,
Middleport unit went to the Middleport Lunch Room for Tom Sanford. He was treated but not 11'811Sp01'ted.
On Tuesday at 5:23 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to State Route 7
in Tuppers Plains. William Grueser went to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 6:48 a.m., Rutland unit went to Mei~s Mine 31 for
John L. Young. He was taken to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. At
9:36 am., Pomeroy unit went to Union Avenue for Gary Rose. He
was taken to Vetetans.

Volleyball court completed
A sand volleyball court has been completed at General Hartinger
Park and the equipment is available at the park.
Roger D. Williams, recreation director, advises that the equipment may be signed out at the mini-golf stand. Plans are also being
made to hold a volleyball tournament on Sept. 21 and 22 and anyone interested in taking part is asked to contact Williams.
The Middleport Recreation Department will also sponsor a catfish tournament at the Rutland American Legion pond on Saturday.
Sept. 7 and Sunday, Sept. 8. Applications and information on the
tournament may be obtained at the Recreation Department office,
992-6782, or from Dennis McKinney, 742-2279.

Hail reported in Syracuse
While . hail fell in Syracuse late Monday afternoon there
were no reports of property damage, according to Syracuse Mayor
Eber Piclcens.

Council
...
Continued from page 1
employee, voting to grant him
compensation time for work per·
formed for the water deparunent.
Baronick voted against the action.
In other action, council:
• a~roved the second reading of
an ordmance that would transfer
$1,000 from the general fund to the
clerk's fund for payment of PERS;
• voted to donate the old police
cruiser 10 the Meigs High School
vocational program, with Councilman Thomas Werrlabstaining.
(He is a member o the program
faculty);
- agreed to cover parking meters
within the village from November
28 to December 30 for Christmas
shoppers. The meter covering
would provide two free hours on
the stteet and aU-day parking in the
parking lot.
• • entered into a consulting
agreement with Seyler for the period of January through June, 1992.
Seyler's term of office expires in
January, and the contract entered
into last night will enable him to
qualify for the remaining time
required for Public Employee
Retirement benefits.

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..

Area deaths
Mary Kennedy
Mary E. Kennedy, 77, of Middleport, died Monday, Aug. 19.
1991 at Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Born at Little Hocking on Feb.
19, 1914, she was the daughter of
the late Emerson and Annis Davis
Dye. She was a homemaker and a
member of the Middleport
Nazarene Church.
She is survived by three daugh·
ters, Mrs. Lewis (Anna Mae) Ellis,
and Mrs. John (Mildred) Nash ,
both of Middleport; and Mrs.
Arthur (Shirley) Kishbaugh, Colorado Springs, Colo.; two sisters,
Ora Gilkey, Athens, and Blanche
Smart, Albany; six grandchildren
and three great-grandchildren.
Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband,
William R. Kennedy, and two
brothers, Alfred Dye and William
Dye.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at the Fisher Funeral
Home at 2 p.m. with the Rev .
Lloyd Grimm officiating. Burial
will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Wednesday.

Ella Schultz
Ella R. Schultz, 93, of 26617
Mile Hill Road in Racine, died on
Monday, August 19, 1991 at Overbrook Center in Middleport. She
was a housewife.
She was born on October I,
1897 in Wayne County, W.Va., the
daughter of the late William Napier
and Willie Ann Bradshaw Schultz.
,Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Charles (Ann) Findley,
Racine, and Mrs. Herben (Phillis)
Walker of Nlrlolk, Va; a son, Jack
(Shirley) Harliss of Racine; a sisll:l,
Julia Clar~ of Taylor, Mich.; 16
grandchildren and several great·
grandchildren and great-greatgrandchildren.
Besides :!larents, she was
precede4 in
by htz rust bus. _band, .Willi8111 Okcy Har1iss; her
·second buibalid; Cit! Schultz, Sr.;
two sisters lftd two brothets.
S})e attended the Mt. Moriah
Church of God.
Funeral services will be held on
Thursday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home wilh Rev. James Sa.tterfield officiating. Burial will be in
Letart Falls Cemetery.
FQends. may call at the funeral
home from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on
Wednesday.
•

Continued from page 1
bustling financial district looked
like a dark ghost town.
President Bush. vacationing at
his oceanside home in Kenneb unkport, Maine, said the hurricane
"wouldn't scare us a bit." He then
left for Washington - not because
of Bob, but in response to the overthrow of Mikhail Gorbachev.
Barbara Bush and the Bush
grandchildren went inland for several hours.
In New York's Westchester
County, a train conductor was
killed when a tree smashed into a
commuter train. Three other people
were injured.
A swimmer drowned Saturday
night off Myrtle Beach, S.C., in
heavy surf attributed to Bob, and a
man drowned Sunday off Holden
Beach, N.C .. officials said.
Police in Hooksett, N.H.•
blamed the storm's heavy rain for a
traffic accident that killed a 67- ·
year-old man.

Raid...
Continued from page I
results of the operation," Soulsby
said. "However, I am sorry that we
didn't get the results that we could
have because of the inclement
weather conditions."
The 69 plants that were collected in Columbia Township will
more than likelr be the grounds for
a grand jury mvestigation and
potential indictment later this
month, aocording to Soulsby. How·
ever, no names or information
about other possible arrests were
released.
Soulsby was unable to say
whether another operation would
get underway on Tuesday. Heli ·
copters were grounded by fog in
Columbus at press lime, and skies
in Meigs County were threatening
another rainy afternoon.
Yesterday's marijuana seizure
was a pan of an ongoing marijuana
eradication effort being conducted
by several governmental entities.
Unless the BCI determines that a
case can be based on evidence
seized in the raids, plants confiscat·
ed from locations are destroyed
almost immediately after their
removal.

...ROUGH SAILING • Several sailboats were
tossed onto the Padanaram Bridge by Hurricane
Bob Monday In Dartmouth, Mass. Dozens of

By The Assoicated Press
The overthrow of Soviet Presi·
dent Mikhail Gorbachev has had no
immediate effect on Ohio's investments, nor has it cancelled plans by
some Ohioans to traveiiO the Soviet Union.
State Treasurer Mary Ellen
Withrow said Monday thai
although the coup shook world
stock markets, it had almost no
impact on Ohio's investments.

Weather
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, becoming partly
cloudy. Low 55 to 60. Chance of
rain is 20 percent. Wednesday,
mostly sunny. High around 80.
Extended forecast:
Thursday through Saturday:
Mostly fair through the period.
Highs each day in the mid to upper
80s. Lows in the low to mid 60s.

Music to be offered at park
Reunion scheduled
The Daileys, Free Country with
The Johnson family reunion will
Debbie Moore and Country Blend be held on September 1 at Portland
will peform a free concert at Star Park. Potluck dinner will begin at I
Mill Park in Racine on Saturday at p.m. Everyone is to bring a hand7:30p.m. The concert is free to the made item for an auction.
Bloodmobile sc:heduled
public.
The Meigs County Bloodmobile
Tenna'bt lists now due
All landlords who rent property will be at the Meigs County Senior
in Middleport must subm1t an Citizens Center on Wednesday
updated tennant list to the Middle- from 1 p.m. to 5:30p.m. Local res·
port Income Tax Administrator idents are encouraged to donate
before September 1. Questions can blood at this time.
be directed to 992-2827.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharge, Aug . 19 · Judy
Adkins, Freda Ash, Mr.;. John Carroll and daughter, Emma Carter,
Kermit Fisher, Stanley Harbour,
George Ingels, Joyce Knotts, Mr.;_
Stuart Lyles and daughter, Mitzi
Martin, Berley Ousley and Amee
Ward.
Births, Aug. 19 . Mr. and Mrs.
Christopher Hampton, a daughter,
Patriot. Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Higginbotham, twin sons, Southside,
W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Curtiss
Jayjohn, a son, Oak Hill.

Court news
Marriage Licenses
Brian Shawn Sharp, 21,
Reedsville, and Stacie Gayle
Downer, 20, Coolville.
Paul Anthony Hornfeck, 22,
Pomeroy, and Debbie Lanette Six,
19, Pomeroy.
Richard Joseph Gilbride, Jr.,
213, Racine, and Barbara Ann
Lisle, 20, Syracuse.
Divorce actions r.Ied
Four actions for divorce have
been filed in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Filin~ for divorces were George
Brent SISson, Pomeroy, from Susan
R. Sisson, Pomeroy; Teresa Marie
Florida, .Middleport, from Ernest
Michael 'Florida, El Paso, Texas;
Virginia L. Doerfer, Racine, from
David Doerfer, Pomeroy; and Alice
J. Stewart, Pomeroy, from David
A. Stewart. Pomeroy.

r

boats moored in the area ran aground after
coming loose from their moorings. (AP)

Soviet coup has little
immediate effect -on .Ohio

Meigs announcements

Hospital news

:JI ~ • • •

·The Dow Jones industrial stock
average dropped more than 69
points Monday. At the American
Stock Exchange, the market value
index declined 7.68to 358.91.
In her latest earnings report on
July 3, Ms. Withrow listed $296.7
million from all sources for the fis cal yele'ending June 30,1991.
State money is invested primarily in U.S. Treasury notes and bills
and securities of federal agencies.
The changes in the Soviet Union
are being felt elsewhere in Ohio.
Because of the coup, the State
Department withdrew permission
for a 30-member Soviet delegation
to fly two MiG-29 fighters and an
IL-76 cargo plane to the Cleveland
National Air Show, which begins
Aug. 31.
But U.S. Rep. Bob McEwen, ROhio, was among three members of
Congress preparing for a trip to the
Soviet Union.
McEwen said Monday that he,
Sen. Dan Coats, R-Ind., and Rep.
Frank Wolf, R-Va .. were to leave
today for three weeks of meetings
with political leaders, academics
and religious officials.
When the group reaches Lon -

don, they will reassess the situation
and ~o on to lhe Soviet Union if the
Sov1ets honor the previously
approved visas, McEwen said.
''I have every intention of
going," McEwen said. "Unless I
hear differently, my visa is good,
stamped by the official government
of the SoVIet Union."
The trip was arranged and
financed by the radio program
"Focus on the Family."
Meanwhile, city officials in
Cincinnati and Cleveland hope the
coup won •t ruin their plans.
1n Cleveland, Richard Konisiewicz , Mayor Michael R.
White's ethnic affairs liaison, said
he wondered if the city's plans to
host a delegation from sister-city
Volgograd Sept. 15-20 will be
changed.
Joseph Dehner, vice president of
the Cincinnati-Kharkov Sister
Cities Project, said he was con-,
cerned the coup could affect a
September conference in his city. Iii
was planned to bring together representatives of 65 Soviet cities and
their counterparts from U.S. communities.

Two inJured in plane crash

WILMINGTON, Ohio (AP) An plane loaded with freight
crashed into a corn field shortly
after takeoff today. injuring the
pilot, officials said.
The twin-engine Becchcraft E18F crashed around 7 a.m. eight
miles south of Wilmington after an
engine quit during takeoff, State
Highway Patrol technician Eugene
McKibben said.
The plane, owned by Northern
Airmotive of Kenosha, Wis., had
JUSt taken off from the Airborne
Express airport in Wilmington, said
company
spokeswoman Sue SoderCLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
strom.
the Ohio Louery selections made
Northern Airmotive handles
Monday night:
fr eighl for Airborne
excess
Pick 3 Numbers
Express.
3-9-8
(three, nine, eight)
Pick 4 Numbers
8-6-7-4
(eigh~ six, seven, four)
Facemyer Forest Products and
Cards
Mountaineer Veneer purchased the
J (jack) of Hearts
reserve champion hog for $9 a
2 (two) of Clubs
pound at the Meigs County Junior
3 (three) ofDiamonds
Fair livestock sale held Friday
2 (two) of Spades
night at the show arena on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds. It was
earlier reported that Facemyer
Lumber and Mountaineer Veneer
made the purchase. Facemyer ForAm Ele Power .............. .... 29 1/4
est Products also purchased Billie
Ashland Oil ...................... 28 3/4
Pooler's lamb.
AT&amp;T .................. ..............38 1/4
Bob Evans ........................ 17 7/8
Charming Shop..................22 7/8
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
City..Holding ..................... 14 1/2
446 4524
' ' ~ ..
Federal Mogul.. ................. l4 S/8
$) .110 ~AMAIN IIMTH,US SAfVIa)AT I SUJClAT
Goodyear T&amp;R .................34 3/8
$).00 IMGAIH NI GHT fUES~Y
Key Centurion ................. .15
Lands' End ....................... 19 3/4
Limited Inc ....................... 27 3/4
7:00, : ~llf
Multimedia Inc ..........:.....;27 3/4
5Alt5UN I'.ATUEES
1:00.) :20
Rax Restaurant ................ .13/32
II MU.U
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .30
(,._Ul
Shoney's lnc .................... .IS 1/4
Star Bank ..........................22 3/4
7: 10 ,!1 :1S DAILY
SAT/SU N MATIIfUS
Wendy Int'l.. .....................9 1/8
I :10.1 : IS
Worthington Ind ...............27 1/2
!O)
S.toclc rtports are tht 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
7:20 ,9:10 DAI LY
SATn UM MATIHUS
and Loewi of Gal/lpalis.
1:20,) :10 .

Lottery numbers

Correction

Stocks

Cl-····.,..·

,_,...UI

The pilot and lone occupant of
the plane , Gary Jelinek, also of·
Kenosha, walked to a telephone .
and called authorities, the patrol
said.
Jelinek was being treated at
Clinton Memorial Hospital in
Wilmington, said Amy Allen, a
hospital clerk. Ms. Allen said she
did not know the nature of
Jelinek's injuries or whether he
would be admitted to the hospital.

WE'LL
OVERLOOK
YOUR FIRST
ACCIDENT
When you quellfy

11 1

preferred

rlek for State Auto Companies'

apociol M~doliot AU1o Polley, your
rate• won t go up with your firet
accident.
Unlike olmilor pollcloo 1~11 !Wqulro
three y .. ,, of policy ownerlhlp
the Medaliat allows the exemptlo~
lmmedlotely.
The Medalist recognizee the older
tafer driver with tubttential ret~
reductions end broeder coverage.
Rete reductione .begln 11 11rty 11
ego 25 ond oro ponlcularly attroc·
live lor 1ho 45 to M yeor old .
If v~u heve 1 11f1 driving record,
••• JUit how low your cer Jnaur·
1nce premium cen be with the
Medollot AU1o Polley from Stole
Auto lnaurence Comp1niea.
Call us about this car inaurence
breakthrough for ufe drlvera.

.

214 EAST MAtll

POMEROY
992-6687

.1!1 .........
..
,....,_.c
..........

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

The o'atty Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~ -

...

I

ruesday,August20,1991
.Page-4

Oakland tops Minnesota 8-7 to cut
Twins'
AL
West
lead
rust

By The Associated Press
The Oakland AthletH:s knew
what !hey had 10 do.
Anolher loss at !he Melrodome
and !he A's would be looking at an
eight-game deficit in !he American
League West
But Terry Steinbach broke a
ninth-inning tie with a two-oUI single Monday night as the Athletics
rebounded from another blown lead
and ended a seven-game losing
streak with an 8-7 victory over

•

Minnesola.

"You've got to be realistic
about this. Six games is much bel-

American Coalerence
Buffdo
Miami
IndianapoW

!all
W L T Pet.
....2 2 0 .500
....2 2 0 .500
.... 1 2 0 .333

New Enalond
N.Y. Jcu

...0 3 0 .000 13101
....0 3 0 .000 :lO (il

Central
.... 2 I
.... I 2
.... I 2
.... 1 2

PF PA
79 ..,
61 57

44 55

.667 50 54
.333 71 77
.333 M 87
.333
62

0
0
0
0

w

w...

...-

··.-

SanDiqo

--

. ~7 11 41
.61i/ l3 45
.500 40 54

... .2 I 0
.... 2 I 0
....2 2 0
... .2 2 0
... .1 2 0

Kon&amp;tt City

Setnle
Doa...
LA. Roi4as

2.

"We won three out of four and
il's a good feeling," Minnesota
loser Steve Bedrosian said.
On Monday, the Mariners
moved a litde closer with a 7-1 victory over California and now trail
the Twins by 6 1/2 games. Elsewhe~ it was New Yort 6, Kansas
City 2. and Texas 4, Baltimo~ I.
Cleveland 111 Boston was called off
because of Hmricane Bob.

.500 64 6S
.333 47 77

Detroit ('fc:rrcU 1·10) at Cbicaao
(llooall 7·6), !:OS p.m.
Se~ulc (Huton 7·!5) at Milm01oL1
(EriWon ll-5~ !:OS p.m.
New York (Sandenon 11·3) •~
Kmw at7 (Gubiaa 7-6), 1:35 p.m.
Baltim"" (Maa H) ot Tow (Boyd

~) , IJ5p.m

Cllifontit {l.anJtl&lt;lO 15-6) 11 Oak ·
Wid (Dadina 2~). I Wll p.m.

wednesday'• somes

Cleveland (Kiaa 5-7} 1t Boa ton

(Clement U-1~ ''" p.m.
Milwnbo (Plcu.' 1-S)

It

Toronto

(Key I ~I). "15 p.m

Dcuoit (Lcit.cr 5·2) at Chicaao (AI·
yucr; 1·0), 1:35 p.m.

New YDlk (P. Pera. 1-0) at Kltllal
City (Sabed&gt;~l-6), 1:35 p.m.
Setttlo
... lQ-5) " Minnctott
(Toponi lQ-7),1: p.m.
Bthimoro (J). Johnloa ~) at Tctu
(BftlWIII-9~ 1:35 p.m.

California (Grah.e 1-4) at OUbnd
(Moore 11-7), 10:0! p.m.

Nallonal Conference
Eool
W L T ret. rr PA

T,_
Phoam

.... 3 0 0 1.000 89 23

Phihddphit

w.......,.

.... 3 I 0
.... 2 1 0
... .1 2 0
.I 2 0

Groen Bay
Tampa Bay

Central
... .2 I 0 .667 83 62
... .2 I 0 .667 41 41

N.V. Gionu

Dolltt

..

.750 17 71
.667 'S7 43
.333 56 61
.333 55 "'

....220..5006882
....120 .3336169
.... 1 3 (j. .250 33 "'

Dc&lt;roi&lt;
MiMeocu
ChicaJO

Wal

San Fnncilc:o
AlltnJO
NewOdaru
LA. R.unt

....4 0 0 1.000 93 43

....2 I 0 .667 83 36
....2 I 0 .667 77 57
.... 1 2 0 .333 48 64

Monday's results
Denver 21, Milmi 13
San Francilco 2A, San Diego 13

Thursday's game
Lo• Anaelea Rams vs . Houlton at
Mcmpftia. Tenn., 7 p.m.

Friday's games

-.

PituburJh ttllotroit, '!:30 pm.
lndiontpolio ll Pltilodclphit, 7:30pm.
Su fnnciaco at Seaa.le. I p.m.
Kmw Cily ll Tompo Boy, I p.m.
C1evdwl at~. I p.m.
Atltuta tt Dol1ot. 9 p.m.
Dar.vcr at PboaUx. 9:30p.m..
t..c. Anplea Raib at Sm Dieao. 10
p.m.

Saturday's games
New Yort Oianu n New Ensland, 4

PCinannw

va. Gftla1 Bay at Milw1ukee,
7p.m.
New Yc)lk !en va . Wuhinaton at
Colwnllio, S.C., 7 p.m.
New Odean.lat Miami. 8 p.m.
Buffalo at OUcaao, 9 p.m .

I

I'.
I

I
I

.

In the majors ...

'

I· '

NATIONAL LEAGUE

•'

Euten Dlvllktft

Twn
PITTSBURGH

StLouis

•

~

.

.,

' .

.........

NcwYID
.......
Philtddphit .......
.........
.........

7t 44 .613
6l 53 .543
W 58 .501
S1 60 .417
55 62 .470
47 70 .402

T'

W L PeL
Loa Anp1a ...... M 52 .559
AtloaJO
........... 63 53 .543

CINCINNATI

• 57 59 Atl

San Jlio&amp;o ....... 51 61 .417
San fnnQoco ...... 'S7 60 Al1
HCRIIton
..... ,... 49 61 .419

GB
1
11

13.5
15.5

23.5

2
I

1..5
8.5
16..5

illnin"

Today's&amp;amn
1), 2, 5:35 P,IL

.•·
.••·

Cbic:aao (Scanlan S-5) at Montreal
(Haney 1-4), 7:35 p.m
"lllburab (Smiley 14-1) ol P~llodd­
phlo (G.....,.I-5), 7:35p.m.
SL Louil (B. Smith 10-7) at New YU
(Cone IQ-9). N()pm,
San Franci.aco {McOellan 3-1) at J-loualOn (Ocahlic:. 4· 10), 8:35p.m.
San ~Mao (ll.uris 4-3) at t..o. Anadc.
(Mminez 14-8), 10,35 p.m.

Wednesday's games
San Dieao (Bonm 1-1 ) at Lol Anaelca
(Honhioer 4·2), 4:05pm.
Atlanta (Reynoao 1·f) at CIMinnatl
(M,.n 5-9h H5 1':'"Chicaao (Sutcliffe 3-4) 11 Montreal
(Nabholz 2-S), 7:35p.m.
PlttJburah {Tomlla 1-4) at Philadel-

..
.·
·:

.
·-

-.

phia (D&lt;Jeoua9-4), 7:35 p.m.
St. Louis (Cormier 1-0) at New York
(Fcmonclc&amp; Q-3), 7,40 p.m.
San FnnciKO {BID 9--11) al HOUlton
(Hornloch 7-1), 1:35pm.

Eultn DI•Won
W L Pd.
......... 6l S4 .546
........... 63 57 . 5~

Toronto
Delroil
Booton

........ .. 59 59 .500

Milwali.ce

...... .5!1 63 .466

New Yorl:

....... 54 63 .462

Baltim~n

........ 48 71 .403
CLEVELAND
31 7t .3l5

GB
25
~ -~

9 .~

10
17

1'

Welttrn Dltialon

Team
Mion-..
Chie110

Oo1tlond
s ...tlc

Kouu
Tau

W L Pd.

....... 71 49
......... 67 52
......... 65 55
........... 64 55

c;,, . . . . 61

Diego,~ .

TRIPLES - Ltnkforcl, SL LouiJ, 12;
T. Gwynn, San Diego, II; L. Gonzalez,
Houaton, 8: Finley, Hounon, 8; Van
Slyke, Plllaburah, 7; Griaom, Monlrel.l ,
6: W. Clark, San Franciaco, 6; Kruk,
Phibdelphia, 6; Candacle, HoUlton, 6;
Felder, San Franciaco, 6.
HOME RUNS - Gon&lt;, Alltn10, 77:
John1on, New York, 26; McGriff, San
Dieao, 2S; Min Willimu, Sen Fnnciaco,
2A; W . Clui:, San Francisco, 23; Kevin
Miu:h:dl, S1n Fr.nciaco, 23; O'Neill,
Clnclnnall,ll.

STOLEN BASES - Nixm, Atlanll,
63 ; Grissom, Monltell, 52; DeShields,
Montre.r.l, 44; Coleman, New York, 37;
Bondi, Pllllburah, 35; Buller, to.: An·
&amp;&lt;leo. 34; Lankford, St LouiJ, 29.
PITCHINO (11 docUi0111) - Cupenter. St. l...ou.is, 1-3, .7"'l, 4.50: Hullt, San
Dieso. 14-6, .700 , 3_27; DeJesus,
Philadelphia, 9-4, .692, 3.25; Down~, San
Fnnci&amp;to, 94, .692, 3.30; Avery, Alllnl.a,
13-6, .684, 3.S7; Tomlin, PlttJburah:, 14. .667,1.351 RIJo. 'Cinclnn•tl,l-4, ·'"'
l. 74.
Cone, New Yor.k,

New Yoti:, 145; Glaville, Atlan\1, 144;

Hamilch, Hounon, 125; Huru, San
Diogo, 120; Bdd!cr, Loo Anoeleo, 117.
SAYES - LccSmilh. Si. LouiJ. 33;
Dibble, Clnclnnat~ Z.C; Mit.c:b WLlliuns,
Philtddphit, 23; Franco, New Yodt, 22;
Ria)xui. Son Fnocitco. 19; Ldfe:u, Son
Diogo. II ; Bamll'or, AIItnJO.I7.

American League
BATI'INO- Palmciro, Tc:xu, .340;
~·-. .337; Fnnco, T...... 335;
Molitor, Mihnukee, .331 ; Tan•buU,
IC.IJUII Cit)', .329; PuckcU, Minne&amp;Oll,
.3211; Ken Gri!Cey Jr., Seatlle, .326; C.
Ripken, BoltirnoR, .326.
RUNS- Molitor, Mih,..ukee, 96;
Palmciro, Teau, 90; C.moc:o, Oakland,
18; Sic:m, T01u, 84; Thomu, Chieaao.
12; White, Toronto, 82; Fnnco, Tuu,
RBI - Fidder,Dcttoit. 101; Thomu,
ChicaJO, 93; Canauo, Oakland, 92;
Carter, Toronto, U; Juan Gonzalez,
Tcuu,IS; Siena, Teku, 85; Joyner, Califomia,l4 .

mrs -

Palmetro, Tcku, 162; Moli-

tor, Milwaukee, 161 ; C. Ripkcn, Balti-

more, 155; Puckcu., MinDel au, I S4; Sicr,., Tuu, 149; Fruco, Teua, 141; Su,
New Yolk., 139.
DOUBLES - Caner, Toronto, 34;
Do~ Bolton, 34; Ptlmciro, Teus, 33;
C.
en, Baltimore.. 33; Ka! GriJfey Jr.,
Sea
32; R. Alomu, Toronto, 32; Btett,
Karwu City, 31.

TRIPLES - Molitor, Milwaukee, 10;
McRae, KUIIU City, 8; White. Toronto,
I; R. Alomar, Toronto. 7; Devereaux .
Baltimore, 7; Polonia , California, 7;
Whltm, Cleveland, ': Puc:kett, Minne~~&gt;­
ll, 6; Gladden , Minne1o1a, 6; Rainu,
au..80,6.
J-IOME RUNS - Canscc:o, Oakland,
3!Sj Fielder, Datoit. 34; Camr, Ton~nto,
28; C. O.via, Minncuu, 26; C. Ripkm,
Baltim..., 26; Tuttbull, Kmw City,~;
Thomu, Oticqo, :14; Bulmer. Setale, 24;
D. ll&lt;ood&lt;non. Ooltlond, 24.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
T..-

Butler, Lol An~e&amp;, 140; J01e, SL Louis,
136; Once. Chicago, t 33; Bonilla, PlltJburp, 131; Sandberg. Oticago, 131; W.
0.0, San Francitco, 130.
DOUBLES - Joac, St. Lovis, 36;
Bonilla, PlttJburah, 33; McReynolds,
New Yort, 27; Morrta, Cincinnati, 16;
Sabel. Clndnnall, l5; Gant, Atlanta, 2.5;
Pendleton, Atlanta, lS; T. Gwynn, San

79.

Allonto (A"']U-6ood Smolll 1-IJ)
at Clndnnau {IUJo I..C and Slllf'ord 1-

r

RBI - W. Cuk. Son Francisco, 90:
Bonds, Plltaburah. U; Johnson. New
Yod.,ll; Dawson, Otieago, 78; Bonlll•,
PHisburah, 71; McGiff, San Diea;o, n :
Gant, Atlanta, 74; G. Bell, OUcaso, 74.
1m'S - T. GwyM, San Diea;o, tS9;

Gl

Loa Anplel3, San Diogo 2, 10 uminp

....

National League
BAlTING - T. Gw,_ s~ Oiqo,
.334; l~»e., SL Louia, .327; Pendluoo, At·
!ant., .32 1; Morrl1, Cincinnati, .314;
Nixon, Allam.a, .314; W. am., San fnn·
cilco, .311; BonO .., Pltllbuflh1 .310.
RUNS - Butler, Lol Angclu, 82;
Stndberg, Chicaao, 81; Jotmson, New
York, 77 ; Gant, Atlanta, 74; Bonllla 1
Pltblxlrah, 74; 0 . Smith, St Louis, 73;
l'axlldoo. Alltn10, 7l

STRIKEOlJI'S -

Mooday's srores
Chicaao 3, Moncrcal2. 11

Major league leaders

ISS ; 0 . Maddu, Oticago, 147; Ooodul,

w...... DI.-Woe

•'

.'

W L Pet.

..........

etwao

GB

.592
.S63
.542
.538

56 .521

........... 61 56 .521
Cllifamio ......... ll 60 .492

3.5
6
6.5
8.5
1.5

12

STOLEN BASES-R.. Henderson,
Oaklond, 44: Raina. au....,. 41: R. Alomar, Ttm:da, 36; Poloni.a, 'tilitami.a, 14;
Cuyler, Deuoit. 31; White, Toronto, 21;
Fnnoo, r ..... 24.
PITCHING (1 1 dcciliau) - Henneman, Detroit, 9 -2, .811, 2.72; ErieUon,
Minn-., 15-5, .750, 2.89; Kliok, Ou ·
land, 9-3, .750, 3.77; Finley, ~·ru:omia,
U-6,.714, 3.96; ~pm.Calif~a,IS 6, .714, 3.:10; Oulliciton, Dooroil, 15-6,
.714, 4.11; SKKtlcmyrc, Toronto , 11 ·5,

.617, 3.42.
S'TRJXEOUI'S - R. Jobnlon, Seat·

u•• 113; oemena, B01toa, t64: Rr••·
Teua, 152; MClDowcU, Chi~IJO, 41:
Candidti. r ....... t39; SWiadoll. CJe••
lud,IU:Lu-.Cilif...U..ll4.
SA VI!S - Ec:luaole1. Ooldtnd, 34;

Aauilera, Minneaota, 12; Rurdon ,
Boatoa. 11; Harvey, California, 29;
Henke, T~. 21; ThiiP'G. O.icaao,
27; Olooo, B~ 25; MoolpoiVJ,
K.- City, :15.

MOIIday'a sc:ores
a ...... at Bell&amp;oa, Jtllld.. rain

-.
' l'
I I

?:

··••.
•

Oak1ud 1. Uiaemeca'f ·
Doaoit 3, 00...., 2
New Yadt 6, Emou Cily 2

T......

Joe Klink (9-3) blanked Minnesota for 2 1/3 innings. Dennis
Eckersley pitched the ninth and
earned his 34th save - but just
~ly, as Gene Larkin's bid for a
two-run homer into the right-field
upper deck went foul by just a few
feet Larkin then popped out to end
the game.
The Athletics, who couldn't
hold leads in each of the first three
games he~ - including two lateinning situations - frit!Cred away
6-1 and 7-5 advantages Monday
and had Rickey Henderson thrown
out 111 the plate twice.

Scot·eboat·(J
-

In the NFL .•.
T...

tet than eighl," Steinbach said
The Twins, meanwhile, kept
!heir 3 1/2-game lead over Chicago
as the White Sox lust 10 Deuoit 3-

a.-.•

s..tlo 7, Cllifamio 1

Toda~,W"
c ...olotld (5
7-11 oad OllcJ
J-3) ol (Hodtotlo 7-2 ud Gard - 5-6), 2, 5:115,...
Mijwau.kea (BOlio 9·1) at Toronto
(S-,.11-S~ 7:35p.m.

Transactions
BuebaU
AJatrkaaiM...
BALTIMORE ORIOUS - Aclivttocl Olaut Dovio, lint booeman, from the
60-day disabled liiL Smt R.oy Smllh ,
10 ltocbOIC.Cr fl lbe lnla:DIUonai

r::-,

~XAS

llANOEilS -

Activotocl

Nalu ll;rm. pildloo', l'lum tbe IS..y dioobled lilt. Pltoed a..Jd ~. pildler, oa lbc Is-day disabled lill. reuoaetivo
10 Aua, 1.5.

Notlc•ul Loope
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS - S"'t
Bernard Gilkey, outfielder, 10 .Looinille
of lhe American Aaoeiabon.

FoothaU
NotlotuiFootlloiiLeoaue

ATLANI'A FALCONS -

Waivocl

John Buddeabora and Mark Tuctor,
auarda; Ricbarcl Carey. conerback;
Leonm1 Cmtle)o, JUOCtioa boct; IJ. Dovil
and Eddie M.ilu. linebacken: Mike
Rhodoo, ~ Jleoji Rolond, ....
ttckle; lelo1 Tnilil. all'..ave tocklo. IIUl
Naz Wdhen, widereceiYS".
CINCINNATI BINGALS Wal•ed
Cllr.. S•U•,
na•t
DooaloAny,wldo
__
_ tad, ae4
CLIVILAND BROWNS Slpod ..... .._....,..,- ........
er, lo a two·Jtlr ce•lracl. Wal•ed
Chorloo Arllodlk, 11Ptoo4; Keo Edolmaa, placeldcWi Dwa1• FoateDtUe,
Unct.ct.; .... W.., cW•I•a cad;
Pete L•caa, on..•ln t•clde; Be•
MltcMI~ oll•l" ......, uc1 Cllorlle
ou..., .,..,_ Pllcotl RltoedJ'
dereulu 11Dtwlall1 011 lbl WIIYid•ID·
jured 1111 ud TU11 Gm, nfelJ, 011
lht rMt"e-piiJIICIIIJ llftlblt to per-

w-

lonn IIIL

DETROIT UONS -Waived Mel
p..,. Jr., ...,;,, bock; 0... J~, qu...
terbaclr:; Darryl Milbum. cfer.wve end;
and Ores Patrick ud Claude Pettaway,
defensive bleb .
OREEN BA V PACKEilS - Waivod
Mic:bacl Haddia., t\ltUiinl back; lcny
Woodo, oal"7; Williom IWzio tDCI XciJh
N"'borl, tip cndl; Woba: Deon, ....,;.,1
bact; Daao Wilkow&amp;l. liDabac:br. Ron
PUts, defonlive beet; SJeYe Cromer, SteVe
Gabbud .... ,... Shortl, line"""'
1lcb
,
_
IOCtlo,
OIIAI
Mit&lt;
linn,del'alli.......
HOUSTON OIU!RS- Woi...S Tec1dy Ouoio, olt&lt;:ctid&lt;er.ll,._ Banto. clofen.aivo ODd; Dick Clulpura ad Roa Vi·
aem, dei..Wve tackle~; Patrick
Cedric J - . FrW MUUetlld Jon .....
..;de ...,._, Caoy l!dmooultlld ICy!o
lioeblcken; Tf&lt;!!1 Ony, Sbeldoallolibwton one! Mike JCioo1ak, .......
Muion t.e.ino IIUl J - Smilh, ..,.......

eo.r.

p....,..,

andTom~o.~

INDIANAPOUS COLTS - Woivec1
R"''Y Hilpr, quu&lt;abodt; Roman&gt; Brice,
linebocker, Riduml M&lt;C.U.Ua!J, dcfa~­
•ive linanan, and ltopr ]DIICI, cldcna:ivc
blck.
KANSAS &lt;l1Y CHIEFS -Waived

qu-

Clifford Chad 'On aftd Maurice Henry,
lineb•cken; Ron Stallwoftb, defemive
end; Stan OelbouF.
Patzick
Allen tDC1 Eric lkUint, comcbock; RoOhie ~ . puntcr-plac:eklcker, !!ric: Rom•ey and Oq Boy11w, dcfcuivc bleb;
Ron SIUpley, auul; 'rttuo DU.oa ""dAndre Riley, wile receiw:s; Man NcCattin.
offaWve lineman. and Willie Fean. de.
femivelineman.
LOS ANGELES RAIDERS - Tftlllformd Mike ll)ool, ..... a~d, ud lod Pottal, ,suard. from thear mMr to lho pb)'li·
Cllly 1mablo 10 ~oan lia. WaivecfTodd
WCIIlonltDCIIoaoTum81.1incbockaL

LOS ANOI!LES llAMS - Waivod
Mike Wilcher, linebacker; Oeorac
ddauivo a~cl; Tbeo
ct-

B......._

A-._

fenlive tackle; Mike Babb, ufcty;
Banud Blockmon, tride receiver; Brian
Brown. ........ bock; BiU Golc1bq. cloferuive Llclde, one! John llclpldno. plocokick.er.

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS Waived Joh.a Thornton, defenlive end;

Mod&lt; llrobcztk .... JC.oay v-. offen-

livc pud1; l...cmmo W.U. Afay; Pat
s...~ lincblcker, Ai&gt;IIJcay
run. bedl, and Kaq Simic, wide roocivMo.oy, ......-."'

w.......

&lt;he-

::.'1-.....,.c..tinoll far Dont Kmaud.

offcmivc pwd. and 10 nnd;ld=r dntt
chcice.
NEW YORJC GIANTS - Pltcocl
Thorn K.au.meyer, alfd.y; Jay Bulla', of·
(ensive tackle; Clint Jamu and Tim

Do.....,, dol'enolve 1intrnco. on

iajwod

retcn'e. Waived Hairy Blada, n01e liCk·
le; Simmie Carter, def'l!lll.live back; Luia
Cn.t.bol, pnl: Philip Jlo11o- ltoebd&lt;e:r; Tom Rouen, punter,
defen•ive tackle; Mau Kelly, ·
aclcer;
Tony Saner. NMina hack, add Alu

Stanl~~=-·

Shell, wido rooci.YCr.

NEW YORIC JETS - Tndocl Ron
Mauca. offcuive \lcklo, 10 We Cbiuao
BGID far 1ft WMiisclOMd CCIOdil.ionall992
d.nf1 pick. Waived Pe1e Balinricri,
Onnlio 8e1J. PhiiiApn and Ron Yount.
wide receivcn; Paul" GIOftet, defallive
w:t1o; Modt llol", oJrenoi,.IOdde; Tim

J11n01, lllay; Rocen K.ectcm. liDebacter;
Doua PuriM, defawive beck, and Mike
Riley, comabtdt. Plocecl A.B. Brown,
Nnnina back; Dcnnil Price. clelealive
baclr., and Jo.Jo Townsell, wide ncclve:r,
on the reaerve-ph)'lieall~=ble to per(onn lin. Placed Quia
, offeuive
auud, on injured raetYe.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLES

Waived Don Mc:Phonon. quarterback;
Bnd 800UII', pu.n\a; Dan Plocki, placekicker, Stovo Gnnt, Bill IUu and Lamonde Rus1Gll, wide rcc:oi.vc:n; Broderic:k
Onvea:, Hany !ac:bon and O!uc&amp; Wealb·
enpooo, runnin&amp; boc:b; Miko CunruntatOI and Irwin Gnbilna, defenaivc tactleo; Dom:UBetven, DovidBellond Mike
Hollis, dcfcnaivc backs; ud Kevin
McAnllur. lla1 Smp one! Tuo Wilton,
lincbocbn. Plot:ed Poul KAwell. tiaht "'cl,
~ Quia Milchell. defcm:ive blck, on tho
....,.....,10i..Uy ....bla ta perfoan liot
Pt.oed 9.eD Tarnburallo, olf..tve ptd,
on injurecl~e~e~Ye.
ft!OENIX CARDINALS - Waived
AI Dol 0...0, p.........or; CodDc Mack,
corncriJock; Dad&lt; Hill, Doa Jlolm• ond
Eddie Brown, wide rcccivcrli James
Kuper, otiCIIive panl; Mit&lt; Nonl aod
AI Jac:evh:iua, olfonsho tacklu; Jeff
Alc:under, lUMina bock; x.my... a..h.
def..a•e eod, anillelf Bridowe[l. quarlerblck.
rJTTSBVRGH ST!ILIRS Wohad Chudt Leona, ...tart....._

rou,

Ill¥~ 10d Clrl
wldo ........., .
Korlllunbor,-

tot..._on_.•••- ·-•llloua
.1WIIIItWJ·

M•....,, ...,...

.u, .... tackle; Ia•
terlucka aad SeoU Dnlt •.-• Kell

Rock, n••l•l baeU. Plaetcl DeiB

........

Dlltp•a•, olrtMI" paN, oa lltJurt4

SEAlTJJl SEAIIAWD- Woivecl
Ric:ky Anclrew1 eDd J1m01 SpMl,
lineblekcn; Doullu Cnlt IDd Sbawa
Puner, llfaiel; Karda Hocbtrtl, .,.,.
liw a.aad A&amp;a wu..s--.
TAtoii'A BAY BUCCANI!EilSWoivod 1\oomdlo Toyl«. '9ide recoiver.
l!ddie Oodf..1, dofllllive lloct; Sltoltc&gt;n
Thom~ defensive lineman; QUp Ni·
towUi and Rm VUJO, otr..awlialmm;
leD Wataon,
aM Bennie
J'?;!:i.Jtt ond.
Eondoll TroUtcr.
•· 011. injured......_ Placed
Mm. Jordon, d4..aveu-... oo the

rwutipe.!t·

..............foo&lt;l&gt;all iajory u...

In the
inning, Jose Canseco
became only the sewnd Oakland
player with 200 career homers,
JOining Reggie Jackson (268).
Canseco's 3S homers lead the
majm. CanscaJ has 27 homers and
67 RBis in his last 69 games.
Tlgen 3, White Sox l
Frank Tanana continued his
mastery of Chicago with seven
strong innings.
TIIIUKUI (10-8) has wm eiJ!ht of
his last 12 decisions and is 1!-1 in
his last 11 SIBI'tS against the While
Sox. He gave up two runs and
seven hits bet~ Paul Gibson fmished with three-hit relief for his
seventh save.
Alex Fernandez (6-10) $BYe up
lhree runs and eight hits m fiveplus innings.
Rangers 4, Orioles 1
Nolan Ryan, making his first
start in three weeks, gave up two
hits in five innings for his 310th
victay.
The 44-year-old Ryan Mw 74
pitches and allowed only a double
to Cal Ripken and a single 10 Joe
Orsulak. Ryan (8-5) walked two
and struCk out seven.
Rookie Mike Mussina (1-3)
pitched 5 2/3 innings, giving up a
solo homer 10 Ruben Sierra in the
fourth inning and a three-run
homer to Kevin Reimer in the
sixth.
Yankees 6, Royals l
Don Mattingly hit a go-ahead,
two-run double in the ninth.
Mike Boddicker (10-8) walked
Bernie Willians with one out in the
ninth, Steve Sax singled and Mike
Magnan!C ~lieved. Mattingly followed with his second double of
the game, a drive off the fence in
right-center field. The Yankees got
two m~ runs on a throwing error
by shortstop David Howard.
G~g Cadaret (6-4) allowed two
hits in 2 1/3 sco~less innings.
Mariners 7, Angels 1
Omar Vizquel hit his fust home
run in 512 at-bars and Pete O'Brien
also homered and drove in three
runs.
Vizquel also had an RBI double
off Kirk McCaskill (9-16) as
Randy Johnson (12-8) followed up
his one-hitter against Oakland with
seven-hit ball over eighth innings.
Ken Griffey Jr. had his sevenlh
strai~ht multi-hit game with a pair
of smgles. Seattle had 10 hits,
including two home runs and four
doubles.
lD the National League...
Dodgers 3, Padres 2
At Los Angeles, it's been the little things that have kept !he Los
An~eles Dodgers from opening up
a stzeable lead in the National
League West since the All-Star
b~-

They went into the ~ with a
four-game lead befo~ losing their
next seven games. Miraculously,
they have not ~linquished the top
spot since getting there on May 14.
Monday night's 10-inning, 3-2
victory over San Diego widened
their slim margin to two full games
over the idle Atlanta Braves.
In the only other National
League game played Monday,
Chicago edged Moo~ 3-2.
•'The~ were many ways that we
weren't playing as well as we
should have," said the Dodgers·
Chris Gwynn, who delivered the
winning run with a pinch-hit sacrifice fly. "We've had guys on base
with no outs and couldn't get the
guys over, and we couldn't get a
bunt down.
"But we've all grown to learn
from those experiences, and we
aren't worrying about what's
already happened...
The same can be said for the
Padres' Jack Howell, who has
played in only 18 games since the
July 30 trade for him that sent
Shawn Abner to the Angels. He
already has hit more homers than
he did in 32 gameS with California
- and more than Abner did in 53
games with San Diego.
Howell hit two homers in a
game for the third time in his
career and the third time on the
road, giving him three since the
trade. Both were leadoff homers, in
the second inning off Tim Belcher
and a game-tying homer in the
ninth off eventual winner Kevin
Gross (8-9).
Belcher scat!Cred eight hits over
eight innings, including three singles by Fred McGriff, and worted
with men on base in every inning
except the fiflh. The right-hander.
who ended an eight-game winless
streak in his previous start. struck

SVAC football
preview August 23
The SVAC foothall pRvicw will
begin with the Oak Hill-Hannan ·
Trace scrimmage on Friday, Aug.
23 at 6 p.m. on Kyger Creek High
School's field
North Gallia and Southern will
take the field at 6:4S p.m., and
.Symmes Valley aod Eastern will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Southwestern
and the host Bobcats will play in
the fmale Ill 8: IS p.m.
· Ticket prices are $3 for adults

L---------------~------------------------~----------~ and~fmc~~.

out eight and walked none for the
second time in 25 outings.
Dennis Rasmussen pitched
shutout ball for seven inmngs and
left after issuing a leadoff walk in
the eighth to pinch-hiuer Mitch
Webster. Webster later scored on
Kal Daniels· single, and Daniels
scored from fust on Darryl Strawberry's hit-and-run single.
Webster scored !he winning run
on Gwynn's sacrifice fly after
opening the lOth with a double off
loser Larry Andersen (3-4).
Rasmussen allowed four hits,

none after Suawberry's leadoff single in lhe fourth.
Cubs 3, Expos 2
At Montreal, Bill Sampe n
walked Luis Salazar wilh two outs
in !he lllh inning.
The Cubs loaded the bases with
none out against Sampen (6-3)
before Andre Dawson hi! into a
fielder's choice, shortstop 10 home
and George Bell flied out Sampe~
!hen walked Salazar on a 3-1 pitch.
Paul Assenmacher (7-4) pttched
two innings for the Cubs, who were
outhitl4-7.

CLASSY WINNER - The grade mare
"Classy" won Grand Champion at the Meigs
County Fair last week. Pictured with the horse is

Elizabeth Bearhs or Pomeroy. The horse was
shown by her husband, Tim Bearhs.

'

UNSUCCESSFUL CHARGE- Minnesota's Chill Davis (44)
charges into Oakland catcher Terry Steinbach in an attempt to
score from second base in the rourth inning or Monday night's game
under the Metrodome in Minneapolis, Minn., which the Athletics
won fl. 7. Davis' charge was uosuccessrui, as Steinbach puts the tag
on him here. (AP)

The fish population of the Ohio
River will be examined in an interagency coope111tive sampling program that will begin Sept. 4 and
last through Oct 3. The Ohio River
Valley Water Sanitation Commission (ORSANCO) is coordinating
the program. Participating are environmental protection and natural
resource agencies from Illinois,
Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. along
with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, and the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service.
Fish will be collected from
locks along the Ohio River and categorized by type, size, aild weight.
Fish will be examined at the Racine
Locks and Dam on Oct. 2, while
fish will be sampled at !he Gallipolis Locks and Dam on OcL 3.
The results of the survey will
indicate the t~es of fish that live
in the river. FISh are good indicators of water quality; finding populations of fish species in the Ohio
River that are sensitive 10 pollution
indicates progress in water pollution controL The data collected
since .1968 show general improvements in species diversity, particularly in the upper Ohio River.
Along with the population surveys, chemical analysis will be
conducted on fillets taken from certain species of fish. Fillets from
such species as walleye, sauger,
white bass, channel catfish, drum
and carp will be analyzed for
chemical contamination.
Results from previous years'
analysis have found levels of PCBs
and chlordane to be above action

Gft:A.J\Ib' Cfii:UtPJON - John 1'Dilc19 R'Ose or
and his
Belgiall mare, ''Dixie'', look Grand Champion honors last week at
the draft horse judging at the Meigs County Fair.

levels established by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration for
human consumption. This information prompted the States of Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia,
Kentucky and Indiana to issue
advisories against eating certain
kinds of fish from !he Ohio River.
Results from the 1991 collection
and analysis should be available in
early 1992.
ORSANCO, headquartered in
Cincinnati, is an interstate water
pollution control commission
formed in 1948. Members of the
commission represent Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia and the federal govemmenL
The Commission has been
involved in periodic cooperative
fish population sampling since
1968. Since 1986, !he surveys have
been conducted annually.

-

Michigan believes in
shot at national crown

Sports briefs
BasebaH
NEW YORK (AP) - Bobby
Bonilla of the Pittsburgh Pirates.
who batted .577 with seven multihit games and a .633 on-base average, was named NL player of the
week. Bonilla was 15-for-26 for the
week with five doubles, a homer
and seven RBis. Ken Griffey Jr. of
!he Seatde Mariners, who hit .412
wilh 27 total bases, was named AL
player of !he week .
Tennis
WASHINGTON (AP) - Fifthseeded Zina Garrison defeated
Cristina Tessi 6-2. 6-2 and sixthseeded Katerina Maleeva beat Carrie Cunningham 6-4. 6-0 in the first
round of the Virginia Slims of
Washington.

WEDNESDA Y NIGHT
IS SPAG HETTI NIGHT
AT
CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

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ONLY
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WE~T

MAIN

POM~R

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Steve Young isn't about to push
Joe Montana out of a job, but some
San Diego Chargers defenders may
soon be looking for work.
Young, starting a second
straight game in place of Montana,
beat a blitz wilh a 47-yard touchdown run and threw for another
score in San Francisco's 24-13
exhibition win Monday night over
the Chargers.
"We put the all-out blitz on
(Young). He saw it for what it was
and ran for the TD,'' Chargers
head coach Dan Henning said.
"The 49ers conuolled the game,
ran it fairly well and passed it
extremely well. Their time of possession was awesome."
San Francisco held the ball for
37 minutes, 56 seconds as Young
completed 18 of 25 passes for 227
yards and a touchdown. San Diego
had the ball for just 22:04.
One 49ers' drive lasted almost
as long as the third quarter, spanning 12 1/2 minutes and covering
84 yards in 18 plays. It ended in a
19-yard'field goal by Mike Cofer.
Henning said !he lack of offensive opportunities handicapped the
staff's evaluation of Billy Joe Tolliver and John Friesz, who are
competing for the quarterback job
in San Diego.
Montana missed most of practice in the week leading up 10 the
game because of elbow tendinitis
in his throwing arm.
The Chargers' only touchdown
followed a 49ers turnover. Spencer
Tillman's fumble was recove~ at
the 49ers' IS by linebacker
Stephan Weatherspoon, and rookie
Eric Bieniemy scored three plays
later on a seven-yard run with
10:01 remaining.
Broncos 21, Dolphins 13
At Denver, Colo., John Elway
has restored the long pass to the
Denver Broncos' attack by taking
control over play selectioo.
Elway, calling his own plays for
the second straight game in an
exhibition experiment that looks
more and more permanent, completed four passes of at least 25
yards, including a 62-yard scoring
strike to Ricky Nattie!, to lead the
Broncos past the Miami Dolphins
21-13 Monday night.
The result left both teams with
2-2 records.
In Denver's first play from
scrimmage, Elway completed a 46yard pass to Mark Jackson. He later
hit Jackson for 31 yards to set up

Arbor. Bin !hey did.
.
By HARRY ATKINS
"Every
time
we
play
the
btg
AP Sports Writer
games, we come close - we lose
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) These are radical times at Michi- by two, one, four points," Evans
said. "We lose in the fourth quargan.
In the past, the Wolverines have ter. Now we're gonna have a fast
frequently been picked to win a start with no slowdown. and play m
national championship. Picked, that the founh quarter like it was the
.
is, by everyone except the Wolver- second quartet."
The
offensive
weapons
are
m
ines themselves.
No one in Ann Artlor wanted to place to make it happen. And
hear that kind of talk. It was con- everyone is comfortable with
sidered bad Iuck at best and very Moeller, now starting his second
year after replacing Bo Schem on-Michigan at worst.
But that was then. This is now. bechler. Last year the Wolverines
And this year they're talking open- (9-3) ran for 23 touchdowns and
passed for 22.
ly about the whole enchilada.
With quarterback Elvis Grbac
"We're going for the whole
returning,
along with receivers
thing, the title," defensive_ tackle
Desmond
Howard
and Derrick
Mike Evans said. "Along wtth that
Alexander,
the
balance
might tilt
comes the Big Ten title and the .
toward
more
passing
this
season.
Rose BowL"
• 'When Bo was here, the title
The Wolverines, who finished
wasn't
the focus," Grbac said .
No. 7 last season after demolishing
"But
we're
national championship
Mississippi 35-3 in !he Gator Bowl.
caliber.
A
lot
of players and coachhaven't won a national football
es really think we can win it. We
championship since 1948.
Many times they've had the tal- want to get to !he Rose Bowl and
Sports briefs
ent and frequently they've had !he goundefealed."
teams will always run
schedule. But they just couldn't theMichigan
ball . And why not? At the
BasebaU
make it happen. This year they've Gator Bowl, the entire offensive
CIDCAGO (AP)- The Chicacertainly got the right schedule, line - most of which returns ~o White Sox believe Bo Jackson
they might have the talent, and !hey was voted MVP of !he game.
ts ready to stan playing again and
certainly hope they can make II
Greg Skrepenak, a 322-pound will announce his rehabilitation
happen.
.
.. tackle, is featured on the cover of assignment Wednesday.
"It's true I'd love to wm one,
the Wolverines media guide. That
Jackson sustained what was
head coach' Gary Moeller said . should tell you something about diagnosed as vascular necrosis of
"You cannot get that out of your how Michigan feels about running the left hip while playing for the
mind. It'd be a great thing 10 have the footbalL
Los Angeles Raiders in an NFL
happen. But as fa_vorable as our
Ricky Powers. who gained 748 playoff game against Cincinnati on
schedule is for domg that, tt also yards as a freshman. promp1ed Jon Jan. 13 . He was examined at
worts against you. ~ ' ,
vaughn to take an .early jump to Comiskey Park by his personal
What he means ts th1s:
the NFL. Powers finished 1990 physician. Dr. James Andrews of
The Wolverines, after opening with four consecutive 100-y ard Birmingham, Ala., and the White
th~ season at Boston College, then
game~.
.
Sox medical staff, led by Dr. James
return to Ann ArtJor to play Noue
Defensively, the Wolvennes Bo~:Sphysical went well and it
Dame and Florida State. After
have
to replace three secondary has been determined that he is
those non-conference tuneups, ~ey starters,
!he talent is there to do
hit the road for two weeks, opemng it. Evansbutand
Chris Hutchinson . ready to play," White Sox sernior
the Big Ten season with games at anchor the defensive line and Erick ;,ice pr~sident Ron Schueler said.
Iowa and Michigan State.
We will announce ~Wednesday
Anderson leads a good corps of
If they're still alive and well linebackers.
when an~ w~ B~ will be ~nt for
after those five games. they can try
Anderson has a chance to hts rehabilatloniiSS!gnmenL
to float the next five wee~ un!!l become the· first player in Michi~ecent ~ulauon was ~ ~e
Nov. 23 when they fmish WJth lhetr gao's modern history to lead the ~~~ Sox s Double-A affilia~ m
traditional grudge match ag81n~t team in tackles four consecutive Bmnmgham would be the obvtous
Ohio State, which will be played tn seasons. They've been doing this chmce because Jackson would be
Ann Arbor this year. .
. since 1879 around here.
based near An~ws. Jackson grew
Michigan might have puUed tt
The kicking game is sound with up m _Mc~a~la, Ala., and has a
off last year. The Wolvennes outlson who made 47 PATs ho!lle 10 Blflllmgham.
. · Car :
Tennis
played Notre Dame but lost by four J ·D
COMMACK N y (AP)
points. Those things haP.pen 10 w1lhout a mtss and 16-of-26 fie~d
defellled
South Bene\. But the ~ killer_w~ goals last year . Punter Edd1e Second-seeded 1 ~
Azco~a
averaged
37.1
yards
an~
Carl-Uwe
S!eeb
6-4,
3-6,
6-3
in the
a pair of onc-1'\)int l~s 10 Mi.chisomeumes
made
Moeller
hold
h1s
fi
d
f
!he
Ham!
Chall
gan State lind'Iowa. Those. things breath.
ust roun o
et
enge
Cup.
aren't supposed to happen m Ann
r
_,_
.. ---- -- -

LendJ

OY

'1'12-5432
.

horse was awarded Grand Champion at the
Meigs County Fair last week.

49ers, Broncos win
NFL tuneups Monday

.- ..

State, federal agencies to
study Ohio River's fish

BELGIAN WINNER - Charles Chancey is
pictured here with "Tim" the Grand Champion
Belgian gelding belonging to Dave Coen. The

__________

___

~

.-

the fust of rookie Greg Lewis' two
scoring runs.
In the third quarter, Elway
hooked up wilh running back Steve
Sewell on a 25-yarder, one play
before hitting Nattie! in stride on a
streak pattern for the 62-yarder
midway through the lhird period.
Just 27 seconds later, after a
Dolphin turnover, Lewis swept !he
right Side from 25 yards OUL
Elway went long on three olher
occasions as well, but rookie Derek
Russell dropped two throws and
Elway overthrew Russell on the
other.
"It was imponant for us 10 open
things up, 10 go deep so we could
loosen up the defense underneath,"
Elway said. "I had a square-out
picked off against San Francisco
(in the last exhibition game), and if
they're picking off square-outs,
they· re not respecting our speed
deep."
Dan Marino. who had Jed the
Dolphins 10 a pair of field goals by
Charlie Baumann. gave way to
Scott Secules after Denver's third
score. and Secules promptly engineered an 80-yard drive for
Miami's lone TD.

DOUBLE CHAMPIONS - Charlie Shain, pictured here with
his two Persians, was awarded Grand Champion ror the draft mare
and the stallion at the Meigs County Fair last week. Pictured with
Shain are the winners, "Marge" and "Duke."

ASpecial Edition In
The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, August

2~,

1991

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
NOW BY CALLING:

992-2156
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1991

�-- -----------,The Dally

The Daily Se~tinel

By The Bend

TUesda~August20,1991

Page-6

I

Ann takes
a vacation

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

"1"1, Loo .-\..d ..
Dt ar Rtadtrs: I am on vacalion,
'llmel8,........ ud
bw I havt ltft bthind somL of my
ere...... S)'lldlalle."
favoritt columns that you may have
Missed the first time around. llwpe
joll tnjoy them. -- AM Landers
: DEAR READERS: Wilh every- wearing one. The paper boy came
thing lhal is happening in lhe world, to collect one day and the poor kid
do you know what people are almost fainted. - SL Louis
Put a clolhespin on your noae and
concerned about this week? Would
you believe it's how to peel onions keep yow moulh open. It never fails.

I

'

I

without cryin&amp;?
· Recently I printed a Ieuec from a
reader who had lhe thing licked. "I
learned the ttick from my molherjn-law," she boasted And lhen she
went on to say. "If you start at lhe
ioot of the onion and peel up you'll
never shed a teat."
WeU, I did a linle home resean:h
and ended up with bloodshot eyes
and a runny nose. I told my "linle
helper" to give my regards to bee
molher-in-Iaw.
This is what lhe mail has been
Iilce all week:
Weep no more, my lady. Just put
an electric fan on your work counter
when you peel onions and it will
blow all those awful fumes away. -Michigan Fan
; Why cry when you can put a bag
Over your head and get lhe job done
dry-eyed and in recoi'd time? -Cincinnati Clara
Our home-ec teacher taught
.Us how to peel onions and keep
·3R1iling. Just stick a whole slice of
bread in your mouth, you'll never
ihed a tear. Grandma reminded me
·llf Ibis trick when I was a bride. .(&gt;rand Rapids Fan
: No mac bawJin&amp; over lhe onions.
since my next-door neighbor
·SOld me to slice lhem submerged
:m a bowl of cold water. But he
and don't cut your finger. -Rosemary in Rochesler
Just put lhe onions in lhe freezer
.for IS or 20 minutes before you cut
:lhem and your problem is solved -t.as Vegas Hash Slinger
. - My great uncle 8C1Ycd in World
War I and brought a gas mask home
from France as a souvenir. The
-darned lhing is perfect for peeling
:OOions. But don't answer lhe dour

:Not

mful

-- Memphis
I wear my husband's motortycle
helmet wilh lhe goggles when I
slice onions and I haven't shed a
tear since I thou@lt the stunt up. ManhaUan Cook
Put a large hunk of nw potato in
your moulh and you'll never cry over
an onion again as _long as you live.

-- Jatkson, Miss.
If you wear oonlaet lenses keep
lhem in. They make your eyes
onion proof. -- Linle Rock
So, there you are, dear ones, a
whole host of helpful hints to choose
from . But remember -- I'm not
guann~eeing any of them. You're
strictly on your own. And please
don't wril.e and tdl me whal works
and what doesn 'L If I never see
anocher Ieuer about onions apil, it
will be too soon. YOURS TRULY,
ANN LANDERS
Dear A. . Loden: rve been
siUing here for 30 minUICS trying to
say this in language you can prinL
Here's the best I can do. After IS
yean of marriage, my husband is
suggesting lhings I think are far OUL
What is right and what is wrong in
maJried sex?-- N.N.
DEAR N.N.: '~'heR's no "right"
or "wrong." If two people ~.
anything is OK. It's up to them to
decide. Note, I said MJ people.

Tolre charge of your
life and IUJ'n it around. Wrilt for
Lo~~nome?

AM Landers' MW booklet, "How to
Malee Fritflds Dfld Stop Bt~iflg

Lonely.• &amp;nd a self-4ddressd,long,
busilless-sizt tfllllllopll and a clrtc/c
or mo~~ey ordtr for $4.15 (tllis
iN:~s

postag11 and llandlillg) 10:

Friends, clo ANI Landers, P.O. 80J;
11562, Chicago, Ill. 6061 Ul562. (In
CIIIICldo, Sllnd $5.05.)

Community calendar
:: Community Calendar items
) ppear two days before ao event
and the day or tbat evmt. Items
must be received well in advance
"to assure publication in tbe calendar.
TUESDAY
LONG BOTIOM - Flame Fellowship will meet Tuesday night at
-7:30 p.m. at the Failh Full Gospel
.Church, Long Bottom. David Dai:Jey will be the speaker. The public
;is invited to auend.
'
I MIDDLEPORT - There will be
:a meeting Tuesday at 5:30 p.m.
:regarding lhe Middleport Catfish
:Festival. The meeting will be held
oin Middleport Council chambers at
:village hall.
' TUPPERS PLAINS - A meeting
will be held Tuesday at 9 a.m. at
T uppers Plains Elementary school
.Ior kinderganen registration. Parents will need to provide a copy of
:their child's birth certificate and
:various vaccinations and shots
:already received.

.:

POMEROY - The American
•Legion Post No. 39 Drew Webster
:will meet Tue sday at the post
:ttome. Dinner at 7 p.m., meeting at
:S. p.m. All members urged to
11uend.
•
•
1 POMEROY - The Southeastern
.Ohio Rabbit Breeders Association
:Wlll meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the e~tension office in Pomeroy.
t\nyone interested in raising rab-

bits, commercially or show, is welcome. Program and commercial
report will be followed by refreshments and a get acquainted time.
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - ADK Fall picnic
and meeting will be held Wednesday at 6:30p.m. at the home or
Linda Fisher m Syracuse. Members
are urged to attend.
CHESTER - The I Olh Congressional District Democratic Action
Club will hold its summer meeting
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at lhe home
of Mary Hunter, 37613 Te~as
Road, off Rotue 7 at Chester. Bring
a covered dish. Meat and beverages
will be furnished.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
Marching Band will perform at
Forked Run State Park on Thursday at 4 p.m. at the lower picnic
area. The concert is free and lhe
public is invited to attend.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Women 's Fellowship will have
its monthly meeting on Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy Church
or Christ. The prognm will be on
herbs with Donna Nease and Bobbi
Karr demonstnting the uses of the
herb. The public is invited.
RACINE - The Racine American Legion Auxiliary will have its
picnic Thursday at 6 p.m. at the
Star Mill Park in Racine.

Southern schools to open
. Schools int· he Southern Local
School District
open for classes on Tuesday, Aug. 27, according
to District Superintendent Bob Ord.
~ According to Ord, classes will
begin al lhe same time as last rear.
and any 'quesuons concemmg umes

will

Card shower
- Terri Lynn Spencer, 3443 Pine
Ridge Drive, Galena, Ohio 43021 ,
is confmed to her home and would
.appreciate receiving cards.
According to a family
spokesm~. Spencer suff~ from a
rare skin disease called Eplidennolysis Bullosa.
She will celebnte her 31st birthday on Friday and cards may be
~nt to the above address.

can be directed to the principal of
lhe building where the srudcnt will
attend.
In addition, bus routes and
pickup tim es will remain
unchanged.

Yard sale set
The Lady's Au~iliary Post 9053
VFW Tuppers Plains will be having a yard sale across from the
street from the Farmers Bank in
Tuppers Plains on Sept. 7 starting
at 8:30a.m.
Anyone wanted to donate items
or tools should call June Smith at
667-3374 or Helen Kaylor at 66732S3 after 5 p.m.

Southern announces Third Annual Rutland
kindergarten roster Street Festival slated
The kindergarten roster for the sopia Cleland, Tim Cogar, Sasha
1991-92 school year in the Soulh- Collins, Jessica Curfman, Michael
The Third Annual Rutland a.m. and other games will begin at
em Local School Disll'ict is as fol- DePue. Chelsa Dilcher, Jared Street Festival will be held Satur- II a.m. also.
lows:
Dilcher, Stacy Eakins, David day, Aug. 31.
There will be a dunking
First semester - Monday, Gloeckner, Sarah Hawley, Jessica
There will be a fish fry lhrough- machine all afternoon and a kiddie
Wednesday, Thursday, and second Hill, Nicole Holman, Montana Jar- out the day, along with other tractor pull will be~in at 4:30p.m.
semester - Tuesday and Thursday: rell, Tabilha Jones, K.arrje McCor, refreshments, hotdogs, sloppy joes,
A bake sale wdl be s~Mlnsorcd
Bethany Amberger, Stephanie Kenneth McKnight, Stephante popcorn, ice cream , and snow by lhe fU"e department ladies auxilBradford, Cole Brown, Jason Michael, Amber Mills, Willis Mor- cones.
iary beginning at 9:30 a.m. Anyone
Caplinger, Randall Cogar, Ben- ris, Joseph Phillips, Stacy Pullins,
Cnft tables are available for $5. wishing to donate baked goods for
jamin Collins, Alex Craig, Codi Joseph Richard, Larry Richie, To register for a table call Joan the sale should have them at lhe
Davis, A.J. Dickens, Dustin Ervin, Christina Rose, Kasey Roush, Stewart at 742-2421 or Kim Will- fU"e station by 9:30 a.m·.
Jennifer Grady, Emily Hill, Ty Katie Sayre, John Sellers, David ford at 742-2103.
Door prizes will be awarded
Hill, Michele Imboden, Adam Shamblin, Matlhew Smilh, Ashley
There will be a cake decorating hourly.
Johnson, Timmy Jones, Daniel Spradling, Brandon Sturgeon, contest and a pie baking contest.
There will also be a Little Miss
Malloy, Stefani McKinney, Shea Brandi Vance, Elisa Wamsley , . Entries should he in by noon and and Mister Rutland contest as well
Meeks, Brittany Miller, Paige James Sellers, Glenda Goble and judging will be at 2 p.m. The pies as a Prince and Princess Contest.
Musser, Amy Norman, Deana valerie Patterson.
and cakes will be auctioned at 4 Crowing for these contests will
Pullins, Autumn Reed, Joseph RifAny student who needs to regis- p.m. The cake decanting contest is take place at 7 p.m:
fle, Billie Rizer, Christopher ter for Soulhem Kindert~arten or open class. Prizes for lhe cake decA car .show will be conducted
Roush, Stephen Sellers Jr., Andrew for Southern Junior H1Sh is to orating contest are $35 for first, by Jerry Tillis and Danny Davis
Smilh, Joshua Smilh, David Snod- come to the Soulhern Juntor High $25 for second and $1 S for third. and trophies will be awarded to lhe
grass, Eddie Stoban, Christopher School on Thursday from 9 a.m. to For the pie contest the prizes are top 30 cars. There will be a best of
Tnvis, Tyler Whitlatch, Timonlhy noon to register. Parents should $25 for first, $IS for second and show, fuemen' s choice and a peoWolfe, Ricky Truelson and bring !heir child's Social Security $10 for third.
ple's choice awards given. RegisAndrew Philson.
number, birlh certificate and shot
Entertainment throughout the tntion is from noon to 2 p.m. and
First semester - Tuesday and records. Kindergarten parents who afternoon and evening will feature trophies will be a~arded at S p.m.
Thursday, and second semester, missed the Aug. I meeting are to lhe Midnight Cloggers at 2 p.m., The entry fee is $6.
Monday, Wednesday and Friday: come this same day and time to Dee and Dallas at 4 p.m., and the
For further information on these
Jordan Bass, Brandon Bowling, pick up their child's class schedule, Country Misfits at 6:30p.m.
contests contact Joan Stewart at
Edward Brevilc, Mary Bush, Cas- name tag and school booklet
There will be a turtle nee at II 742-2421.

WEIGFIT WINNERS - These young·
sters were awarded winners prizes in the Meigs
County Fair Kiddie Tractor Pull Championships on Saturday. Pictured, in order of place,
are Jeremy Roush, first place; Robbie
Lawrenee; Cbris Barringer; Evan Needs;

Karyn Lee Thompson, Racine.

SENIOR HORTICULTURE
Hybrid tea roses: Patricia T.
Holter, Pomeroy; alllhree places.
Floribunda roses: Betty Dean,
Pomeroy; first and second, and
Patricia T. Holter, Pomeroy, third.
Grandiflora roses: Patricia T.
Holter, Pomeroy ; Beuy Dean,
Pomeroy, second and lhird.
Miniature roses: Lisa Stethem ,
Pomeroy, firSt and third, Carrie B.
Morris, Rutland, second.
Full blown rose: Evelyn E. Hollon, Racine; Patricia T. Holter,
Pomeroy; second and third.
Large gladioli: Alice Thompson,
Pomeroy; Betty Dean, Pomeroy;
second and third.
Miniature gladioli: Betty Dean,
Pomeroy, firSt and second.
Decorative dahlias: Addalo u
Lewis, Pomeroy; Beuy Dean,
; Alice Thompson ,

Pomeroy.
Cactus dahlias: Melanie Stethcm, Pomeroy; Betty Dean,
Pomeroy, both second and third.
Ball dahlias: Betty Dean,
Pomeroy; first and second, qo
lhird.
Pompon dahlias : Addalou
Lewis, Pomeroy, first only.
Dahlia flower zinnias: Addalou
Lewis, Pomeroy; Evelyn E. Hollon,
Racine, second and lhird.
Cactus zinnia: Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy, firSt and second, no third.
Large sunflower, Alice Thompson, Pomeroy, frrst only.
Sm&lt;ill sunflower: Betty Dean,
Pomeroy; Alice Thompson,
Pomeroy; Addalou Lewis,
Pomeroy,
Large rurned marigolds: Belly
Dean, Pomeroy, first and third,
Alice Thompson, Pomeroy. second.
Small marigolds: Betty Dean,

stemmed from the same act
Gonzalez, who had admitted setting the fire but claimed insanity,
was convicted on the fourth day of
delibentions.
The 87, many of them immi grants, died in March 1990 when
fire swept lhe unlicensed Bron~

the word " guilty" 176 times representing two counts of murder
for each victim, as well as .pne
count or arson and one of assault.
Judge Burton Roberts set sentencing for Sept. 19. Gonzalez
faces a maximum of 25 years to life
in prison, since all of the dealhs

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Disney's animated " Beauty and lhe
Beast" is scheduled to be the first
work-in-progress screened in the
New York Film Festival's 29-year
history.
The movie will have a finished
soundtnck and animation frames in
various stages or completion when

Classified

Betty Dean captures top flower awards
Two of the top awards rosettes for best or show in
arrangements and horticulture
sweepstakes for specimen exhibits
- were won by Betty Dean of
Sumner Road, Pomeroy in lhe second flower show of the Meigs
County Fair s~ed Thursday.
Other spectal awards in the
show which carried oot lhe !heme,
"America", went to Shelia Taylor,
Chester, reserve best of show in
arrangements and Evelyn Hollon,
Racine, nature, art and industry.
Junior rosettes went to Lisa Stelhem, Pomeroy, best of show; and
Susie Francis, Tuppers Plains,
reserve best of show; Macyn Ervin,
Racine, junior horticulture sweepstakes, and Karyn Lee Thompson,
Racine, horticulture sweepstakes
honorable mention.
Winners in lhe various classes,
listed fii'Sl lhrough third respective!y were as follows:
ARTISTIC ARRANGEMENTS
"Rocks or Rills", assemblage
using rocks: Betty Dean, Pomeroy;
Peggy Cnne, Middleport; Krista!
Bolin, Rutland
"Let Music Swell the Breeze",
vibratile: Betty Dean, Pomeroy;
Krista! Bolin, Rutland; Melame
Stelhem, Pomeroy.
"Every Mountainside", featuring
1reasured wood: Allegn Will, Rutland; Alice Thompson, Pomeroy;
Shelia Taylor, Pomeroy. ·
"Thy Wood and Templed
Hills", line mass featuring greens:
Shelia Taylor, Pomeroy; Melanie
Stethem, Pomeroy; Patricia T.
Holter, Pomeroy.
"My Heart with Rapture
Thrills", featuring reds: Betty
Dean, Pomeroy; Krista! Bolin, Rutland; Kathryn A. Johnson,
Pomeroy.
"Lon!! May Our Land Be
Bright",tnterpretive: Shelia Taylor,
Pomeroy; Melanie Stethem,
Pomeroy; Donia Rene Crane, MiddleoorL
"My Country 'Tis of Thee", pop
art using recycled items: Melanie
Stethem, Pomeroy; Shelia Curtis,
Pomeroy; Betty Dean, Pomeroy.
"Land Where Our Fathers
Died", using antiques or reproductions: Peggy Crane, Middleport;
Allegn Will, Rutland; Donia Rene
Crane, Middlepat.
"Sweet Land of Liberty", junior
class, design using a bell: Susie
Fnncis, Tuppers Plains; Lisa Stelhem, Pomeroy; Laura Mitchell,
Pomeroy.
"And Ring from alllhe Trees",
junior class, design using all
greens: Lisa Stethem, Pomeroy;
Kathryn T. Mitchell, Pomeroy;

Unfinished animated Disney film set for screening

Guilty verdict in 'Happy Land' social club fire
NEW YORK (AP) - Julio
Gonzalez was convicted today of
what is believed to have been the
nation ' s largest mass murder, an
arson fire that killed 87 people last
year at the Happy Land social club.
Family members wept as jury
foreman Louis Rodriguez repeated

Pomeroy; Addalou Lewis ,
Pomeroy; Alice Thompson,
Pomeroy.
Crested celosia: Evelyn E. Hollon, Racine; Betty Dean, Pomeroy;
second and third.
Plumed celosia: Evelyn E. Hollon, Racine; fust only.
Squash basket: Betty Dean,
Pomeroy ; Melani e Stethem ,
Pomeroy; no third.
JUNIOR HORTICULTURE
Zinnia: Karyn Lee Thompson,
Racine; Laun Mitchell, Pomeroy;
Lisa Stethcm, Pomeroy;
Marigolds: Macyn Ervin,
Racine; all three places.
Sunflowers: Karyn Lee Thompson, Racine; Kathryn T. Mitchell,
Pomeroy; Laura Mitchell ,
Pomeroy.
Roadside materials: Lisa Stelhem, Pom~roy, first and third,
Macyn Ervm; Racme, second. •·

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-21 Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
' Ads o ut sld u Me1 g$. G•lha or Mason cou n11es IIIU i l b u p1e
p&lt;itd
'R llctlfVt: $ 50 d1s co unt tor adf pou d tn atN ;IJl cll
• Ftee ads
G1veaway a nd fo und ads und ~ 15 w o rds Will be
n m J dav s at no ch•ge
'P11 ce ot • d 101 all cap1tall etter s ts do ublc ·pu ce ot ad co st
'7 I)O IItl lm e type only u 5ed
'S ent•n t.-4 IS not t e spons tbl e 101 enor s c~h c r lu st Iliff' !C h edl
to r e rror s h u t dav ad "runs u• papml Call b elor e 2 00 p m
rlil¥ ah m pubh cahon to rn • h ~ co rrectton
'Adi th•t mu st be pa1d m adv itn cll au!
Card ollhan&amp;.; ~o
H;,ppy Ads
111 Mcnl O II.)fU
Yond S al ~
' A ci,I5 SihlKI i1thlt:orl•se munt plac ~:d ,;l lht:"Dilllly S tm tut!l (tl•
Cttpl
cl iiSStflt.ld '"!...,...,. . Busl!tt.'~ \o C&lt;1u.l .tnd tvuiil nohces l
w1ll ;,lsu ii .. J.I t! &lt;~r "' th e Pt Plc.6 a nt Re!lts lu r -and lh t! Gallt
pulls Omly l11h'"":. n: a c hm ~J o vct 18.000 hom us

CO PY OEAOUN E
MONDAY PAP ER
TUESDAY PAPER
W£0NfSDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIUAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

•""

•

DAY 8EFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM SATUFIOAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
l 00 PM TUESDAY

1 .00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 00 PM THURSDAY
1 IJO PM . FRIDAY

Kimberly, John Will and Chris Krawsczyn. Also
pictured is Michelle Laughery, First Runner-up
to the 1991 Fair Queen. Tbe prizes were sponsored by Dr. David Krawsczy n, DVM and
Country Bumpkins 4-H Club.

HIGH WEIGHT PULLERS - Kay Hunt, far
left, won rtrst place in the high weight division or
the Kiddie Tractor Pulls championship at the
Meigs County Fair on Saturday. Also pictured,
in order, are Larry Ritchie, Jonathan Smith,

Shawn Stewart; and Travanna Moore. Also pictured is Mk:heUe Laughery, First Runner-up to
the 1991 Fair Queen. The prizes in tbe low
weight division were sponsored by Ridenour
Supply and the Country Bumpkins 4-H Club.

it is shown Sept. 2Y.
" Viewers will see full y drawn
color and animation down to line
sketches and everything in
between," said Wendy Keyes, the
festival's executive producer for

through Oc t. 6 at New Yolk 's Lincoln Center.
" We discussed it and decided il
would be a unique opportunity for
people to see the different stages or
animation ,"
said
Disney
spokeswoman Terry Press.
Th e fini shed "Beauty " i ~
scheduled ror release Nov. 22.

programmin~.

The fesuval will include 28
films and run from Sept. 20

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.fo//ou&gt;iII~ I 1'/l'flhl ;Ill' f' X1_·/w11 1{1'-~ .. .
Me1gs C ounty
Area Code 614

446 Galhpohs
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388 V1nton
245 Rio Gtande

992
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843
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M.ason Co . WV
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M1s c ell t~ nt10u s

1~

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773

882
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V t~n s &amp;4wo ·§

MotorcvcttJS
Boat s &amp; Mo ton lm S.tlt!
Aut o Part s &amp; A tcl5~o0f • ~
Aut o Re p.111
Cii mpm g EQutpm t!nl
Ccunp er ~&gt; &amp; Motor Htu1 w ~o

l\i§Uli4W

5 1 Houwhold Go ods
5 2 · Sporting Goods
5 3 Anttques
54 Mts c Merchand•sc
55 Burldmg Supph iJS
5 6 Pe t s for Sale
57 Mu 11cal lns trwnuo t s

2 1 Bus.neu 0pp0rtunJt y
22 Monl!'f to l oao
2 3 ProfesSional Servt Ctti

ln1t:s lock
Hay &amp; Gnm
Sccd &amp; Ft:rllhter

Trans ortation

Hou Mn lor A efl1
M obt lt~ Ho m es lo r Rt:ru
Farm s for Rant
Al)at tlll tllll lo r Runt
Fuuu s httd Room ~
Sposctt f 01 Rent
Wanlt:d 1u Atm t
Equ 1p111tl!lt lo r Rt:lll
For le a.se

Merchandise

675 Pt Pl tt•ant
458 leon
576 Apple Gr ove

M1ddlepofl
Pomeroy
Ch•ler
Poflland
lel iln hils
R•cme
Rutland
Cool~ II IF

M Dbil tl Hom es tor SoJl c
f ifrms tor Sale
Busm ess 8UII dmg!.
l o t s &amp; Acru g e

41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49

Help Wantud
S I1UI IIon W anted
ln 5u ran ce
Bu s m es s Tr a•nu19
School s &amp; lo s1ructum
Radto. TV &amp; CO Rcp&lt;1 11

13
14
15
16
17

Ho mes tor S a le

31
31
33
3a
35

l;bjlfjUI

Employ111ent
Serv 1ces

Cln.~ .~ifif•rl fm~1· .~

Galh• County
Are a Code 614

G tve awav

6

Rates M e tot con se cuiNI!l fun s. bt-oktn updll'f S w•ll b e ch•g ed
tor e.c:h d~ as sep• r•te ads

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

1 Card ollh an b
2 In Me m01y
3 Anno u cem en ll

81 Hom e lmpr oW!ment ~
8 2 Plumb111g &amp; Heolll: mH
83
84

E J.C iNaiiJI{J

f led fiC a! &amp; Re lr '\lt.oratw n
8 5 Gnnt.'filll Hau ling
Bti Motll l tt H om t= ReJ!il ll
8 7 Uphols te ry

BOARD
•;

I

,,•

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

~

'

•~• ~-------­
PRICE REDUCED!
..••
Partial owner flrenci1 a v~~ble. The pri:e
has been reduced to
• $n.900 and
.owner linaocing ol up lo 8(111, of purchase
amount may be possible lor qualifv1ngperson
to buy very nice large home on 3 ~ acres in
Racine. 4 BR. 3 baths, 2 garages, rented 18R
apt. Property ioclllles4,80D sq. H.larm bl~.
Call614-992-7104 for Appt

81

,,'

Every day, alcohol shatters
thousands of families who
have no means of coping
with the
problems of the
alcoholic.
The fact is,
families of
alcoholics
need help, too.
If alcohol is running
your family, stop and get
help--before you run out
of options.

Auxiliary meets
The Lady 's Auxiliary Post 9053
VFW Tuppers Plains held a special
meeting recently to find volunteers
to wolk the auction at the home or
Pauline Rose on Bashan Road. Pies
are needed for lhe sale which will
be held Saturday beginning at 8:30
a.m.

"
~

~~

'

...

....
,.

THIS 1"x 1"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT S5.00 PER DAY

I

•

1

--

2

In Memory

In Memory .t HARRY C.
SURFia's 63nl
Wards a -•upnss
•ow ..G wtllill
Sally ..... "' wilt,
step-dil•-.

J•·

THE DAILY

Sign-up for the Big Bend Youth
Football Lea11ue Players and
Cheerleaders will extend lhru Aug.
26. To sign-up contact one of lhe
following : Dave Jenkins, Gary
Mitchell, Clarence Molden. 9923374 or after 4:30p.m. Lisa Roush,
992-3486.

SENTINEL

Birthday celebration

Susie Circle H.arris, former
Trumpeter Miles Davis, who was Meigs County resident and wife of
born in 1926, is regarded as the pio- lhe late Lee Harris, will celebnte
Russell Cave National M0111111M11t neer of cool jazz.
her 90th birthday on Sept. 7.
near Bridgeport, Ala., contalolb a deCards may be sent to her at
tailed record of ocetiJIIIICY by lllltaDt
German bombs in World War II 6356 Springfield/Jamestown Road,
from about 10,000 !.!.C. to 1650 A.D
killed 70,000 English civilians.
Springfield, Ohio 45502.
\

--

_ ________________.....______

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•lnsuletlon

........,,.....
11

POOU,

ClmaiiS, nc.
1,625 GAL - SIJ.$45

It, I, 101 71•A

IUTUND,
OHIO C5775·t626
614o7C2•2904
7-24

ttDAYWAIUNn

IJASIIIIS- $100 .,
DIYIS-Sev 1f1
IIFIIIIWTOIS-$100 op
IAHGES-Gos·Boc.-$t U

.CIO OVINS-$79 .,

NEW-· REPAIR
· Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FULLY INSURED

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992·6648 or
698·6864

5-14·'11 -tln

·

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE
992-SUS or 915-3561
Acrou From Post Office

n.,

Irons .................. $14.75

742-2421
Mi. outside

REPAIRS

2112

NO SUNDAY CALLS

lima Rd.

AWARDS

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

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Vinyl
siding, Painti•g,
and Ho• repairs

- lnterk&gt;r &amp; E•terlor
Painting

(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

5-10-, 1-tfn.

THE

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All Breeds
EMilEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

614-992·6820
Pomeroy,

Pomll'oy, Ohio

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARtS
If you're in need of
Mobile Home Parts
or Accessories...

SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
IT. 33 WEST OF

DARWIN, OHIO

8/ TB / 1 mo. tin

INDEPENDENT

CAIPD CLIANIIS
and nLI FL!JOI CAll
•Rt~sonable R1tt1
•Quality Wofk
•Frat Estimates
•C1rpet H.. Feet Dry
Time
•High Glo11 on Tlla
Floor Finioh

MIKE lEWIS. Owntr
lt. I, lotlanol, OH.

742·2451

8-9-1 mo. pd. ·

BILL SLACK

667·6611
After 7:00 p.m.

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
8-12·80-tfn

11-14-'90 tin

lUSON, WV.

Woods ................ '22 .00

10:00 am-6:00pm

949-2168

-Eitctric.l 1nd Plumbing
- concrete work
- Roofing

773-9560

l0/a0tl9

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 9C9-2B60

OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday

Used lrons ............ $5.00
Used Woods .........$7.00

- ftoom AdclltJona

1·(304)·

POMEIOY, OHO

RICisonable Prices"

Golf
lessons (61 .... 'SS.OO
New Grips ............ $4.00

••ur eSIU eTI&amp;DI

Rutland on New

- Gutter work

Across fro111 Post OHice
117.1. Stctlld St.
POMIIOJ, OliO
316/90/tfn

lUIII

"~

GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

Day or Night

CARPENTER SERVKE

AllMAKIS
· lrl111 It In Or We
Pklt Up.

Convertible Tops,
Carpets. Headliner
&amp; Seat Covors and
Minor Auto Repair.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB

STEWART'S

FREE ESTIMATES

YOUNG'S

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

A&amp;B
COMPLOE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

BISSELL
BUILDERS

7 -115-91 - 1 mo. pd.

992·5335 cir
985-3561

USED APPUAJICES

ramu-s ns .,

ROOFING

SERVICE

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
7C2-22S1

WATER
HAULING

Howard L Writ•tl

•Remodeling and
Home Repaire
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

liEN'S APPLIANCE

539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

llrtWiy, Alto 20th.

Sign-up extended

DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006
6-&amp;-·91

J&amp;L
INSULATION

f

,.'

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING

7-:ZS I mopd.

BISSELL &amp; lUilE

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

•Ga......

ladalllla C.U.Iar
Phaes, (• Stereos

•Complete

Re~Mtleling

or Radios, CB's

Stop &amp; Compare
FrH E1timates

On Shelnstalatloa
f11t Estlllatu
742·2656

985·4473
667·6179

7/lffl•rA-

3-14-'91-tln

5-31-'90 tfn

Help Wanted

CAREER POSITION ·AVAILABLE
Front Encl M111ager position requires a
lllnllll11111 of Syears of experience, 3 of
which being In a s..-msory poslt1on. Pay
and benefits !lased upon experience. Brllg
resume to Vaughan's C•dinal Supermarbt
In Mlddlepo.rt, .OH.
·
992·3471.
• I

. ...

AUTO PARTS
Spedall•lilt Itt
(lilt- f r - llpalr

NEW &amp; USED I'AITS
FOI ALL MAlES &amp;
MODElS

992·7013
... 992-5553
OITOU ..II
I ' ID0·141·D070
DAI- DIIO

l / 31 / '91 tin

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIPING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

WE DO

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
..... tli1llttltlllt
"Frat .l!ttimat""

PH.

· or

Re~o

94,'·21160

NO SUNDAY

ROOFING

AND IVERYTHING UNDERNEATH
I

TROMM BUILDERS

FREE EstiMATES

•20 Yeere Experience
,•Quality Homee and

Cu1tom Remodeling

742-2328
5/ 22/tfn

lllfflffllllf.

Now
S'od//

.,...,_

AIR CONDmONERS - HEAT PUMPS anti
FURNACES FOR MOIRE &amp; DOUBlEWIDE HOMES
•••

••

••

0

••

••••

0

•••

•

•

0

~

•

•

••• • • •

•

•

••

0

I.
I

�~~~~~~~1!99~1~----------------------------~-!P~om~e~~~-!Y~=i~~~d~d~le~p~~~~-~~o~~~~q~-~-----r--~:::::::::::;~Th=e~~~======~:!~-~
Television
'::~:t~~, S(Cf~~lA"i,~S· ::::
_ _ _ _ _;.;_.;;; 14ho4
CIAT I . IIOUAN

f\llll OU11C Clll C 11t S

13 on Sond Hill Rood, 122
ft rood lhnloge; oi!Xs 3-=er·
-llnonolng; lOW
•
2 l o d -·2 lllho, TnlllrOn
314 Aoro lAt. "-ox. 2 lllloo
From H-,.~; Elootric Hoot
With
WI. ...l~' C:.U After
p.m. .,..._...,,

3 Announcements
To...,_. •Y _

, I will

I

not bfl Ulpoftllllll tor any
-

Olhor Ilion

w. Holloy.

ony _,_ llork

Glvuwsy

4

-·

Houoo ond 4-mobllo homos on

ono lot. Good loolllon. Good

oondftlon. Approx. •1100 por
month lnoGmo. Will return lnveetmenl In 5-yeara.. NN Heven
WV, 304-1824411 on,tlmol
llooclowhiU lubdlvlolon, U
mlloo out Bond HIU Rood, hoo
rollrlclod building toto for oalo

....z.F... - · 114+4t-2772.
Z"INIIIIIII.
1~.-

· put Calllo,

S lomllo Calllo pupo, 1 opoyod
......... ...... lob IUld booglo
mll,*-:1153.
.
I PUIIIIIH To 01-oy, 3 lloloo,
3 Foinoloo, Port looglo, 2
-hoOid.tM.at-1111
Black I wllllo pup. llolhor woo
o Sponlol. 1 - 3 0.
llaclo/Whlto w/cogo, 1141IIM141.
F,.. To Good Homo, Smlll

U low II ,1600, lnd OM ICrl

loll lot olnglo wldoo ovolloblo

lllo, IOW'I$-3400 Oll75-4100.

Mercw

Bottom

Prioo roduood, cfty wotor, 304!171-2338.
Aoducocl: 12 112 Aoroo 2 U.rgo

B1rne, Trailer Hook-llp1 Rur11

"Next time. tell me 11 the cat 1have to get
out of a tree has escape d from the zoo ."

Water, Tobacco Bue, Rt.l 3041'13-8111.

Rentals

1184711.

-~ T~To~~o

~~.,

h

11

Help Wanted

---=----

Twin Groy/Whfto lona Holrod
Klttono, 1 llocii/WMolunon, 4 Blbyolllor Noodod In lly Homo.
llontho To Good Homoo Onlyl 814-441-1'111 Aftor Op.m.
11~1
Bo on TV many noodod for
00&lt;nmorclolo. Now hlrtng oil
Lost&amp;
Found
6
11101. FOl ceiling Into. (81S)77i7f11 111. T-478.
Found: Largo Doa In lulavtllo
Addloon Arlo. IM~.o.403.
CANNERY WORKERS/AlASKA
Hiring MoWWomon. Up to MOO
wllltly. Tranopcrtlllon, Hou•
Yard Sale
7
lng. CALL NOW 1·208-731-7000
Ell. 1817B5.
Dairy Form llonog• Wantod.
Suporvloo au upooto of dolly
Gallipolis
operotlon. lnouranoa I pold
&amp; VIcinity
vocation. Bond rooumo to P.18,
clo Polnl Ploooont Aoglator, 200
1011 I I04CI Bocond Avonuo. lloln Stroot, Point Plouont, WV
AugUII23, 24.
25500.
AU. Toni 8oloo- lo Plld In Dairy Form WOlka11 Wantod. ln- · DEADLINl: 2:00 p.m. auranoo I Pold Yacellon. Bond
1114 cloy bo""' tho od le to run. raou,.. to P·17, clo Polnl
lluildof odlllon • 2:00 p.m. Pluaant Aagl.t1r, 200 llaln
Ffidoy,' - y dlon • 2:00 Stroot, Point Plouont, WV
p.lll. . . . . .y.
25500.
Conlolt _ , 2 llllel NCNih 01 EARN MONEY Roadlng Bookol
Income Pot~~ntlal.
- · ........
At. 20th.
110, 130,000/yr.
11c1n&lt;11y,
Tlllodoy,On11th,
Dolollo. (1) 805-112-8000 Ext. y.
~.
Adullo Clothing. 1018t.
~ lllocolla_,.l
Eaay WOlkl Excetlonl Payf Aeoombla Producto AI Homo. Coli
Pl. Pleasant
For lnlwmotlon. 004-141-8003
Ext. :113.
&amp; VIcinity
Gil pold lor compiling nomoo
1 Foi'IINY - ond Old very 1arao ond oddr-, SSIIO. per 1,000.
yard oale on LIYno Stroot, lion- C:.ll 1-1100-246-31:11 ($0.11/mlnl
diM Ill ?1, lllrf 10:00 All, 141 « write: PASSE, 5170, tli
Lo~ 11.- Hovon.
~h
Uncolnwoy,
NCNih
Auroro, 11110142.
HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED:
Pomeroy,
Gourontood $1'10 Wook Pluo
Mlddlepon
Morol Paid VocoUono. 814-446-

&amp; VIcinity

Fmancial

Business
Opponunlty

21

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rocommolldo thol you do bualnooa with pooplo you know ond
NOT to oond monoy thr;;;;;;J. 1111
mall unlll you hlvo lnvMifgilod

H ou aakeepar/Co m pa nlo n
noodod lor 17 yoor Old lod~
good mind and good
.
liiNIIy nood ond otdor lady to
moke her homo wMh lllr. Othor

conlklorod.
114-11..2115.

-n

-ion

M,

Employ ment Serv 1ces

11 · Help wanted
mollh no • - who you
.
_ you wleh
1 lllr
~~llll!lf
your-roo
- - 10 'fOAl'. Cllltclllood
oro very
~
• II1
rr'u
••
.....
o1 hurt ... ly -..ng .ao
- r ponnt, you -con luiiM lho
or obuood

child. C:.M Try·Aalln HOmoo,
Inc.' 31WII3. 422·3151, 345ICIDIIOI 1-'21·1083. Booomo
1 1-r poronl. lloke droomo

-·-

PIIOIDAT PROCESSING
!'HONE ORDERSI PEOPLE
CALL YOU.
NO UPEIIIENC€ NECUSAAY.
1.eoo.211~2.

AYOfl • AI ~- C:.N llorllyn
Woov•:IOWIZ·-1.
ADOIIIS81111 WANTED lrn1111 •oti'IY' No Eaporlonoo
Ill
y.
,_
FHA
lloll- llolundo. WOlk At
Honli.CIII ~.
/Ia par AftiCio lloi,ronoloro ond

:r=~od~=

-

"il:"'iLTA ..... lho
11aan1 ol Ecluclllon, tho llllgo
~ - - Dlllrlot .. Jl!llll!'l
tho ......"" YIOin&lt;lel tor ..
~ -ltlng llall: LD
f ...... II P_,o, Efl•ntory
onc1 Clio.- 1 T-hor lllllltl

.1un1or lfltlll ,_ pooltlon).

·

110111!1101'
'I'OITAL JOBS'
ht.78-tl4.10
For
...... ondlr. No oocp. - Into.,·
cotl 141M17-U11 7o.m.·10p.m.

..,....lion

7clql.

WeNed Avon r..,...nlatlvee,
IUld llllporo. No
doOl-1~ ncoooory. Froo
gift. C:.ll Koy otl14 ..12-noo.

Wantod: Port-limo Bookkoopor.
Muet

Have

Knowledge

Of

Professional
Services

23

....,...

In My

Anytlrno.
Rodney
Aroa.
Ro'-- A v - Colt 114-

........ MU11--

'

. ..., . . . ...... In ' Vinton
ArM. ...... Ita...., I 114411-

tti1 Allor ......

UnturniMed

31 Homes for Sale

1310.

Heat,
on Rl.

2300.
Very Nice, 14d0, Air CDndlllon,
C:.bla Avalloblo, Dopoolt a
Aollronooo Roqufrod. 814-446-

0121

44

Apanment
tor Rent

1 Bodroom Portlolly Fumllhod,

now-

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
11172 Bllmood 12xU1 _portlally
lumllhod, 2-BA, 114-l...eMG.
1184 Colonfol 14170 All Elootrlc,
3br, 1 112 Botho, CA{ Flroploco,
Porchol, And OUtbu ldlngo. Ex·
collont Colldltlonl Quoit Crook
llobllo Homo Pork. 114-245-

34

o~

saa. No Poto. S2101mo. ,,......

AISOUJTELY IIUST SELLII
Aoduood To Soli: 2 Story 3br
Comer La4 In Cholhlro, Ohio.
Excollonl Condition. Flananclng
Avollablo With Per Polnto. fi04.
m.ee8, 1104-132·7170, 114·31170141.
3br Hom., 25 Acrn, 1 Milt From
c: ~i'Ho. Will Conoldor Trodo.

s 4

2br, CA,

Prl•ll• Lot, 2 1111oo

'

Business
Buildings

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Ava., Clalllpollo. CtoOI to
luoh Hog ..,.,.... Aoooonoblo Court
Hou11. 1 room. 2 roomo,
Alloo. NO .lob To Smonl 114- S roomo,
4 r00&lt;n1. AU nicely
S'INI42.
-lod, air· oondltlonlnli,
yoUr wator &amp; bfll oro polil.
lloke your cholco , _, No
tho phono, you
muot - thom. P - '"' on

...... 0..,
.....,_._71Hdoy,

..........

LPN W.ntlrlg To Do Prmto Duty

m:=-·P~OI AO:.::::!l
Avenue, 1'14-31V-i011.

1 Bodroom Portlally Fumlohod,

m~=· ~:~ ,r.zAO::::!l

Avonuo, 1.,....11Hnn.

1br Aport"'"'!', Wator, Sowogo,
Gorbooo Pota. Dopollt flo.
~~:.r. C:.ll 114-44&amp;-4348 Ahor
2 AOOlR Fumlohod Aportmont.
Downolalro, ).II UIIIKiao Paid,
r~~~~ Sooond A•onuo.
2 lA
~
nt I lllddl 1 rt
hcu.:rd.";:.M ~qulrod 'i"ti
112-2218.
4-IA oportmont In lllddloport
$200 month, 3-BR lllddloport

•
1m Chomlol Mit tan ploloup.
I cvt. I ll&gt;lod. !lady .........
13'1f. !104-11S-1717.

!:

1180 YW truolr. 4 epd. Ill •
trodl lot oar wlh mo. -

·'

Wodao Apto, 001 Burdotto 91
Poln£ P-nt. no 11111, 1 ond 2
bodroorno, 104-171-2072 oftor

114 4111211

Why Ront? Homoo lor ft.OO,

11n CIIOY-, 4x4 Ploll-up,
114-31N111.

1:00.

RoGov' GlvooW.y
Progromol For lnforrnotlon, 004141-1003 Ell. R-313.

Rooms

I ·Jc

ROOIIICIIor ~onl · Wlok or month.

s::~l:7 ot $120/rno. Ollila Holol. ~ T
e
1110.
IAJfll"'1

~ '"' "...., "'·

Slooplng roorno wfth -ng.
Aloo trollor · All hoolc-upo.
~~~p~~
1151, oon "•·
1

...

~·

46 Space for Rent

J.:54======:::::,-;=:;==::=:;=====i
Miscellaneous
61 Farm Equipment

Country llobflo Homo Pork,
Merchandise
Routo 33, North of Pomoroy. 1-queen aiD waterbed, tuiJ..
Lolo, rontolo, porto, oaloo. C:.ll
wovo, Wlhoodboord1 • ~·yro old,
114·192·lii7V.
114-112·3111 Olll2-a41.
For Ront: ONico Spoco Within Rooond
- · - "lonod -horo, Dryoro.
City LlmHo. Socond A•onuo And
"
Stoto Routo 7. 114-441·1188, G...ntood povmpl _,Ice IOl
1:~:00.
au mokoo, · Tho -hor
Dry• Shoppo. 114-441-21144.
llobllo Homo Spoco FOl Ront
NNr Holzer HooPIIol, No Plio, Blcklobor 11.-; S 112 HP Boll
$71/mo Wolor lncludod. 114-44f. Pr"1:&amp; 34" CUI, Good Colld~
3117.
l'::lon:;"'~ll:::.·:,114-::::24:::1:;-6::171:.=..·_ _
llobllo opocoo, Roue z =~:· .,=.ta:::,O:.:,..,:~
IM 12 at '"Y", 304-IJ75.381t.
clothing (ronlll ourpluo clothing
13, jllr gannont). Som nlllo'o, fllndyvlllo Pool
Merchandise
ONioL Frt. 811, Bun. Noon-1:00
Pll
doro~•• IJ!!!I!. call
boloroothor
tt:OOAII.
_ ,.... ea.

Household
Goods

21" CoiOl TV, chino Clblnot,
uprlghllroozor, 2po oouctt. 7 po
mopto dlnotto, COIIIolo llcloraoord.. trock, oolloo I ond
tobloo, IOW'III-21111.
40 Pleooo 01 Norflake Clllno.
Porfoot CotldKionl Novor Uoodf
N
WIK Soli For 1170.
e1 4 1422Aft•5p.m.
Anllquo Wood Colfatovo WarmIng Oven, Woler Tonk, $100. 814441-3040.
County Appllonoo lno. Good
uood opplloncoo, T.'v. 11111. o8 o.m. lo I p.m. llon ..Sol. 1114441·1Sif!.1. 127 3rd. A••· Gol·
llpollo, utC

':"A rec;

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Woohoro, dryoro, rofrlgorotOll,
rangoo. Slciggo Applloncoo,
Upper Rlv• Ra. Booldo Stono
Croat llotol. C:.II114-44 ..73N.
GNen YIIVII 8ft couch ond
molchlng choir, 304-l?fl,.tlllll.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Comptoto homo 1ur111f.1~C·
Houro: llon-811, N . I
0322, 3 mllel out lulavfllo Rd.
Fnoo Dotlvory.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Nowr\Jood
Houoohold lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrk:ho Rd. Pt. PINUnt, WV,
coll304-17$-141!0.
RENT20WN
114-441-3158
Vl"raFumMuN
Solo I Choir, $11;10 WOOkj
Aoollner, U.47 Wook, Swlv11
Rooker, $3.13 Wook.Bunk Bod
Comploto' P.41 'Wook, 4 Drowor
Choll, 13.21 Wook; Pootor lodroO&lt;n luMo, 7 pc., .. 8.87 Wook,
lncludll -lng.Country Plnl
Dlnotto WMh loriCh I 4 Chilli,
$10.11 Wook.OPEN: llondoy
Thru Soturdoy, ll.m. to &amp;p.m.,
Sundoy 12 Noon Till 5p.m. •
lllfoo 011 Roue 7 on Route 141,
In Cant1n1ry.
Solo On All C:.rpat I VInyl FIOOl
eo-tng In Stockl Mollohan
C:.rpoll, Rt. 7 North. 814-4411'144.
SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 52
Olivo Sl., Golllpollo. Now I Uood

TonnlntL ~. 7 bulbi, now
bulbo. ·Polo Rcill brand, 3041'11-2114 altar 5:00 Pll.
Wllghl St4 - · Prooo, K-

g::~..;.row

.=. T~::ra::.J

Wllght. 1110. 114-379-2111 Ahor

&amp;p.m.

55

Building
Supplies

Block, brk:k, Dlpoa, win·
don, llntele, etc. Clludt WJn-.

ter11, Rio Grande, OH Call 11..._

245-612t
24X24Xt, a...... ovorheod. t-3
tt entrance door, erected.
$3841.00
Proclolon
Poll
Bulldoro 114.fl2.384t.

_56~~P;:.et:;:S;,;f:;:o;r.:;S:a;:le~~

:::
Groorn olld luiiiiiY tutop.PII
Groornfng. AQ IM'eida, atylto.
lamo Pol Food Doolor. Julio
Wobb. C:.ll 114 448 0231, 1-IIQO.
312.0231.
2·1AD. robltlto ond 3-rollbll
hutchOo lor Nlo, 1"-812·2883.
AKC Chow'o, t-c:room and 1bfuo, hOO oaoh, 114-112·75111.
AXC tomato Goldon Allrl•or
DuPOioo, hOO. ooch. ,,......
11084 Ol44fl.t317.
AXC PontorMtum pupploa,
1110111 wormod, 304-1114t'113.AKC noglatorod Afahon Hound
pupplao, ..... or limolo, bOln

WEARS SUN6LA5SE5
ALL THE TIME
COULD BE HAVING
EMOTIONAL
PROSLEMS ..

....

1ooo·r

Cllll I'M-441•1tM, 114 .......

12xllmollllo-.nll!ocktoP nood, oMy ....... ttire, good huttllna. IMn,

304-411-W2" oortouo
••1&amp;:10. 114:4411224. ........ 8:13,000.
cello only.

fii!IITOddiii'C.,114-44HZZ7.

•

w.wr ro GO

ro ~D!

•.
'•
''

,.

,.
·:
·:

~.

!04-137-34111.

1HI 810-Yo";.~d, 4-c,t, ohlft·

M'( ~IOI.OGICA~

.:63-7,;;;;L:;I;ive;:at:;o;ck;-T,;i;;:;:

114-112.e&amp;37.
:'
1t81 Hondo C8, TOO K, om
ohlpo, t400 mllel, mUll - to
oppnoclato, .,,100. or ollor, •:

Cl-OG/( NE.EI&gt;f'
NEW

Transportation
11

Autos for Sale

•·

$500 080, •

3Q4.111.7Q4.

eATTf/tlf$.

1

tiN Honda ll!atlna V.U, now ':
baftory olld tlroo, axe cond, .
u,ooo. ~2.
:

II•'""·

='110
".:. =
5·-------.
Kowulkl-220 4-whoolor,

814-1112·2871.
Suzuki DR 100, Rune Rool ·•
Slrong1 · UOO 0.8.0. 114-m. , ,
2155 IInor 7p.m.
:

f.IOW D'vOU FIGURE
ON DOING ~1\T,

OSCAR? WE Cl&gt;iiT

Sll IN TH' PARK,
FOit 0\TSAAE!

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale
11118 Ploybov Pontoon boat1 .2!1 ~
II. lona. 30 HI&gt;- 8:1?00; '
1'111-7151.
'
ltororol 1g'r 1711 HP Outboord
Aunoboul, U,OOO. 114-448-4823, . ·
114-446-1011.
~

Auto Pans&amp;

1m Dodao Dirt, 410 31,000.
11 4 381
Accessories
:::::::'"::::~:::.·- - - -1177 C:.•ro, whMo wfth rod In- 118t 4.3 Vortoo onglno IUld
torlor. Lootco I runo roal good. tronomloolon 12,000 mlloo, 8141112·2171.
.:..::.:::.::..::.:..._
714181, VIII clllcllod, Ill lhoto, 114 448 OOI:L
elrod SBIF Champion, exotk: 1178 Chryalor Cordoba 380, . 8udaol Tronomlellono Uood I
COfOll, 304-1171·71181.
auto, now ovorythtng, $1400. ~~~n. olartlng 11 lot; Auto ·
doyo f14-112·215f. oftor 5:30pm, PlrtL 114-245-1177, I'IW7f.
AKC~ · a-­ oall304-171...55.
2213.
pteo, Rllily to gol $100, Frlnolo
lleneduril, 114-IIJ.3851.
1178 otdo U, Air Storoo,
Ill..._ Plain, No DloopServ1ces
Auotrolla
Shophord
Pupo. 112,000
114-387-0501.
Roglaterod,
Lf-Brod
FOl polnlmontol
QuiiHy. All Slloll. Broodod 1178 Pontloo Flroblrdil Sllahtly
Slnoo1117l1. 114-171-2127.
Domogod On Drtv.,. Ida. '"N- 81 ·
Home
Iattory.. Good Running CORdi·
Bulldy II Ano Souphono, good tlonl
~. 814-441-3375, 114Improvements
COM, 304-t78-2112.
444 ..211 E•onlngo.
All typoo of ........,, brlc:k,
Drogonwynd C:.Uery Porolon, 1110 Pontla s bl • c .., r..,
Slomao ond Hfrnofayon kHtona. 1·
block olld atono. F,.. ...
114 ue 3144 after 7 p.m.
""· now paint. saoo. 114-11112· llrnat-. 304-7734510.
702.

____ _

ueo.

Female w~g: ~:J. Poodle, S ~r•
old,hOO.
· -·

ORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WAH WHeE
WAHOOWIE
KAFI...CXJ'NIE
WAHOO'WI5...

"''IU EXPECT ME
'TOOOWHEN

IM I!CRED... KNIT

'·
CUrtlo Homo lmprovernonto:
Yoaro ExporlonOI on Older •
:
Newer Homtoc Room Addlllonl,
Foundollon WOlle. Roolf!!ll,
Wlndowo I Biding. Froo Eitlmatool Rotoronooo, No Job Jo ••~
lllg Or Small! 814-441-G225.
-, 1 ·

E I A TREE SERVICE. 'T~
Trimming, Troo Aomovol,
••
Trimming. Froo Eotfrnotool I
· ··
317-7157.'
:
Aorotlon llotora, ropolrod. Now

&amp; ro-buln _,.,. In llook, RON

....-....... -.. .
114-IIU782.

THEM REVENOOERS
SHORE WON'T FIND
MY STILL WHAR

FER THREE DAYS AN'

l CAN'T
FIND IT II

:; ·
··

~

·

,.. '

!\•1')\,[ ~

I

L·

l.-

l.-

l.-

l.......J

V

infant Is missing after a car
wreck. (A) Stereo. D
crD e MOVIE: Phonloom II
(A) (2:00)
(!]) Murder, She Wrote 1;1
Ill On Stage Stereo.
Q!l PrlmeNewo
® MOVIE: Who'a Got the
Action? (2:00)
1:15(1) Hogon'o Herooo
1:30 (I) ()) fll Who'o the Bou?
Tony and Angela learn they
are married according to the
lAS. (A) Stereo. 1;1
Ql Church Street Shltlon
Stereo.
8:35 (l) Mojor League lla11bell
Atlanta Braves at Cincinnati
Reds (L)
9:00 ill 8 11111n the Heat of thl
Night Virgil and Jamison help
the son of a condemned men
cope. (R) Stereo. 1;1
(1) ()) fll R0111nne
Roseanne has problems
convincing Carlene to wear a
pretty dreas. (A) Stereo. 1;1
(f) Gtrdenl Of thl World
With Audrey Hepburn Formal
gardens alld the beauty of
the rose are celebrated.
(1 :00)
1111 1121• MOVIE: 'When
Ho'o Not a Stntngo~ CBS
TUtldi9.Movle (2:00)
Stereo.
i1J TUI ey Night Fighll (L)
Nelhvllle Now Stereo.
18 L.eny King Uvel
9:30 (1) ()) fll C011ch Christine
tries to reconcile a feud
between Luther and a friend.
(R) Stereo. 1;1
10:00 (J) II 1111 Lew 6 Order
Investigating a child's death
turns up a crack-addicted
mother. (A) Stereo. D
(I) ()) .. llllrtyiOftlllhlng

Michael is torn between work
and responsibilities to Gary's
widow. (R) Stereo. D
Ill Infinite Voyage Stereo . 1;1
(f) P.O.V. D
II] II) Star trek
18 World Newo
1D 700 Club Wttfl Pat
Aoblrtoan
10:30@ Nowo
1211 Crook and Chaae
fD Mojor Loaguo Ba11boll
(L)

11 :oo rn e rn Cll • 1111 c•
«JJ Newo
Ill Nowowatch
crJIII) A111nlo Hell Stereo. 1;1
iiJ Crime Story
Ill On Sligo Stereo.
18 Sportt Tonight
® Scar.crow end Mra. King
11:20(1) MOVIE: The
OUI·Of· Townell iGI (2:00)
11:30(J)
«JJ Tonight Show
Slereo .
@ Magnum, p.t.
Ill Adam Smltfl'o Money
World
()) fiJ NlghUine D
1111 Aroonlo Hall Stereo. D
1121e 'The Exllo' CBS Lela
Night Stereo. 1;1
Church Street Shltlon
Stereo.
Q!l M-yllne
11:35(l) ChHrl 1;1
12:00 ()) • Into thl Night Stereo.
crJI• PMy Mlelttne With
NlaPeepleo
i1J The HitChhiker
Ill Nalhvllle Now Stereo.
18 NewaNigltt
1D MOVIE: Who'a Got the
Action? (2:00)
12:05 (1) Nightllno 1;1
12:30 (J). «J1 L.ete Night With
Dlvld lt11em1111
@ MOVIE: H0411ne (2:00)
g Party Machine With Nla

IN

UNSCR.t.M8LE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

I'

.....,...

I I ] . hll of lDYI

ConMOIIon

. ,,,,

SCRAM-LnS ANSWERS
e _,_,
Hyphen - Lusty - Joist - Quorum - MY HIPS
A crowd watched as the man took a lump of clay and
smoothed It into a long slender vase . " Say," s1ghed
one woman. • I wis~ I could do that with MY HIPS I"

BRIDGE

NORTH

H UI

+AQ

.K 6
+A 7 S 2
+KJ8 S 4

.J

PHILLIP

EAST
+54
•Qt09&gt;43

WEST
• 632

ALDER

t KQH
+Qt096 3

• 10 6 3

+12

.. ,

"

SOUTH
+ K J 10 9 8 7
• A8 72
t8 4
+ A

The necessary
precaution

r

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: Norlh

By Pbillip Alder

Sooth

When declaring a conlracl or de·
fending, an expert willlry to find lhe
play lhal works againsl all possible
distributions. Most of the time, allowing for some strange lie of lhe cards
produces no benefil; a s1mple line of
play would work because every suit is
breaking beautifully and every finesse
is winning. But occasionally the extra
care pays a dividend. The expert
makes his contract whtle the less able
player goes down.
Today's hand is one in which lhe ex·
Ira edge works, of course - otherwise
I wouldn't be using the deal, would J?
Cover the East·Wesl cards and plan
your campaign in six spades against
the lead of lhe diamond king.
Perhaps you are wishing you were
in seven, bul your job is to make six,
not seven. And that is exaclly what the
declarer did. He won the first trick
wilh dummy's diamond ace, played a
club to his ace, led a heart to dummy's
king and then discarded his diamond
loser on the club king. Now he made
the key play: He led dummy's heart six

I+
3+
I NT
6+

Wesl

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

I+
2+
4+
S•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

-·

Opening lead: +K

.
..
...•

and played low from hand.
.Easl did the best he could, winning
with the nine and returning a trump.
But declarer won with the spade king ;
and ruffed the heart eighl in dummy
with the spade ace. Al this poinl de· •
ctarer had only top trumps and the ···
hearl ace in his hand, so he tabled his :
cards.
Who was South' Arthur Robinson,
who won silver medals for lhe United •·
States in the World Team Champion- · ·
ships of 1963, 1964 and 1968 in parte .
·" ·
nership with Robert Jordan.
@ 1•1, NIWPA'IR ltm!RNIIE AIIN.

_T_h_e_W_o_r-ld_A_l_m_a_n_a_c-::®-C_r_o_s-sw-o-rd_P_u_z_z_le-_··
. '".
....
ACROSS
1 Verse maker
5 1002, Roman
8 - school
12 Evaluate
t3- Got a
Secret
14 Genua ot
frogs
15 Medieval
&amp;la•e
16 Dlallgure
17 Believe- not
18 Depot
20 Sheriff's
band
21 Brltflh Navy
abbreviation
22 Female
pronoun
23 Technical
unlv.
26 Living on oth·
er creatures
31 Goodbye, In
Madrid
33 Two, Roman

JethroRollick
SW stale
Arab country
lloat Inclined
to doze
41 Not many
42 Knock
43 Hallway
45 Dads
48 Poked fun at
52 Underground
plant part
53 Thouaand
54 - avis
55 Regarding
(2 wds.)
56 -de mer
57 Narrow
58 Horae
commands
59 Actor Ron 60 Type of lava

An1wer to PreYious Puzzle

34
35
36
37
38

DOWN
1 VP'a superior
2 Furnace

3 Lab burner

4 llolaro, e .g.
5 Champagne
and orange
Juice
6 lannla player
- Lend!
7 Comp•atlve
oulllx

.

8 Precedence
9 Vormfn
10 Adam'o
gtondoon
11 Peel
19 Domono
20 Foot
22 Ball23 A planet
24 Adored one
25 Duration
27 While frost
·•
28 Lawn
· _'...
covering
__
211 Tennl1 player '
- Noalaoe -"
30 Clutch al
wildly
32 Runa
36 Small bite
37 lllx
39 Dance atop •·.
40 Odorouo
44 Solis
45 Stuffy person
48 Fllat-rato
(2 Wdl.)
· •
47 Skin opening . •
48 Clock liCe · •·
49 Actraao
..... ·
Arlena50 Worm
51 lltltlcl
eXpltiiYI
53 Mother of
......
Mite.

...

r--1-+-1

"'

..•
.
"·

"TJ
YJV

YLDZTNY
HWTJB

at•HerdCopy

CJZDYII.

Ptelllllte

ECHATVD

GEC

MYHNW

HWYH'A

HWDJ

GIC

HO

HEHYAIIG

'·
,•
•',•

AHDX

iiJ AlfNd HitChCOCk
12:35 (I) Love eor.'11C11on
1:00 (II. FaM Ouy 1;1

1111 .....
liD • Ron RIIQin
1121• E.D.J.

I!NTI!RTAINMENT DAILY
JOURNAL

'

..

a

year ahead by mailing $1 .25 plus along. AOUARIUB (Jan. :ZO..Feb. 1g) A welf· in·
self-addressed, slamped envelope to formed Insider may pass some helpful
,t,stro· Graph, c/o this newspaper. P.O. inlormallon on to you today. In order to
BERNICE
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428. reap Ita potential. follow this Individual's
exact instructions.
BEDE OSOL Be sure to state your zodiac sign.
VIROO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Business PIBCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Organize·
and pleasure blend compatibly loday, lional Involvements are favored today.
provided they're conducted In an ami· Something propitious could result from
\
cable selling. Don't \&gt;8 In too big of a the contacts and friends you have in
clubs or large companies.
hurry to make your pi'8Miltatlon.
LISIIA (hpt. 2:3-0ct. 22) Today marks ARIES (March 21-AprU 11) Don't be
the beginning of a favorable shift In do- afraid to set tougher than usual objec·
mestic conditions. What lransPires lives today. Conditions are conducive
could be to everyone's benefit and en· lor succese - 11 you're prepared to pay
the prtc:e.
honea your family lite aa a whole.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOY. 22) Perllatent, TAUIIUI (AprH 20-Miy 20) Recently,
constructive thoughts that dominate you've learned allgnlflcant lesson from
Aug. 21, 1811
your thinking today should nol be treat· observing lhe eHectfve performance of
Your ambitiOns are likely to beCome ed lightly. Tlte8e· Ideas could lead to one you admire. Tod3y lslhe time to pul
your knowledge to use.
much more'lntenslfled In the year ahead something worthwhile.
than they 'have been In the put. They: C.AGITTAIIIUS (lltw. 23-hc. 21) Your QE. . . (IIIJ 21-.ltlne 201 A reliable,
wtfl be stimulated by deSires IO&lt; mater!· llnanclll proepecta look extremely en· older IIIOCiate who usually looks out
at growth and recognition.
coureglng todey, especially If you're In· lor your lnteresto may have something
LEO (.lolly 22-Aug. 22) 11 you think your vollled In 111 endlivor With a material· worthwhile to dlscuu Wflh you today. It
. should be Investigated.
r-.rt efforts ment II, IIPPrlae your SU· minded uaoctltl.
perlon of your aceornplllhmenta. It CAPIIICOIIII (Die. 22-.len. 11) New en· CANCER ( " - 21...1uly 22) Something
could 1111111 a special perk you would terprl"' launched . today hiVll better advantageous can be derived from a
not heve received otherWise. Leo, treat than the u-' probobUHieslor succesa. trCIUUred relationship today. However.
yourself to a birthday gift. Send for Thlt Ia not· a time to be chicken about to reap Ita real rewards, you must focus
on giving oather than on receiving.
Leo's Aatro-Graph predictions lor the • taking I r-eble rlek.

'. ,

you develop from step No. 3 below.

8 PRINT
NUMBERED lETTERS
THESE SQU,t,RES
A

Comp lo to tne cnuckle ~uoted
~Y filling in the missing words

e

ASTRO-GRAPH

Will do rornodolng, - , , · ·
building. ,,.. ~ .,.

lllntlnil,

ME If I BEEN LOOKIN'

·'

Sopite Tonk Pullllllntl '.!!..011111
Co. RON EVANII ENTE"""IIES,
Jooklon, OH 1-tll0oll37-1521.
lla.Jo
Sow-Voo
Sorvtco,
Goorg11 Crook Ad. Porto, ....
~':"o plokup, ond dotlvery. 1142114.

NIIIOYal, . , _

BARNEY

I dOT IT
HID NOW II

182-2111.

i\!

WELL, 'M1.AT 00

ASWE6-TER1

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-IIQO.
837-9121.
Aon'o TV ~ ~!zing
In l&lt;tnMh oloo • riOtnll moo1
othor--cofo,oloo
OOlRI olltlllo- _.,.. WV
304-1714Stl Oltlo ......2484.

1121• Reacue: 911 An

a

1

1111 AIIC Elala 4 WD, Air, AT,
AC. AIIIFII, 't~1 'IDK $2,11110;
1110 Hondo e~•k: SW, Air,
$200 month, 1·BR Pomeroy S150
furniture, heat.,., Western I
AIIIFII C:.oo lopd, 40 lllloo Por
month, S14-112-t712.
WOlk booto. 114-446-3111.
Gillon, Orlg1not Ownor, $1,200.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
114-24!1-1117.
VI'AA FURNITURE
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
811-441-3181
1111 Uncoln Town C:.r, lhorp
ESTATES, 538 Jacuon Plko
UVING ROOII: Solo &amp; Choir,
from $102/mo. Wtlk to ahop &amp;
~' txc wot1dns cond,
movloo. Cllll14-444-2118. EDH. $188 .00~ Roollnor, $141.00;
P,OOO. 304-1711,.2337.
Swivel HOCker, $88.00; CoHoo &amp;
Complololy Fumllhod Small End Tobloo, ....00 Soi.DINING
1111 llonto Corto, .304-17!1-1501.
Houoo, No Poll, Yord, Pluo ROOII: Toblo With 4 Poddod
1112 C:.moro v;a $2,000. 1811
UtiiHioo. $235/mo. 114-4411-1)331. Chllro, $141.00; Count'I Plno
Dtnotto With Bonoh nd 3 Poodle pupploo, toyo IM loo llodolllon air, IIH, cruloa, 12,100.
Efflcillncy, eto"•• ret blth Cholro • UII.OO; llotchlng 2 cupo, AKC ·ehomplon Bloodllno, 304..75-7134.
w/oho-r1 •ole oil oloct, lull cor- Door 1"""h .341• Or $119.00 Coolvlllolt4.ee74404.
1113 C:.moro V-t~ 2..110 of cu•
potod, HuD oocptod, 304-t75- Sot; Dok Toblo 4ZX62 With 1
1
'"'" whNia 1Ol uii·FWD 11tro,
1200.
Bow
BICK
Chilli, Reglttered Beagl• pupa for 114-112-nll4.
1111. 814--742·208J or 742·2421.
For rent , 1 bedroom IJ)Iirtment, $828.00.BEDROOII: POIIor Bod·
$225 utllltloo lnciUdod, dopoolt room SuRa (5 po.), f348.00; 4 Trolnlng You lo train your Poll 1883 Dodgo Arloo, $1100, rune
D11wor Choot, $4U5; Bunk Dog oliodlonoo ciao- 11311111. aood. C:.ll bllwoon 2:30pm ond
Nqulrod, no poll, 114-112·2218.
Bod, S22li_Complo1o Full lion Shorry
Roborto,
c:.rtlllod I :OOprn, 114-112.e&amp;03.
Fumllhod Aportmont, 1 Bod- Sot .,05.w Sot; 7 po. C:.dor Trolnor, l14-441-1114.
IIU otdo Dolll U Royoll, 4-DR
Boclroom
SuMo,
Ult.OO.OPEN:
room, Water Paid, $275, 112 Mile
Sodon, booutlful oor, overy opMondoy Thru Saturdoy, lo.m. lo fiT
Eaot 01 Portor. 114-381oti83.
Musical
tforl lncludn loctory CB. 307 v.
8p.m., Sundoy 12 Noon Till
Fumlal'led
Apartment,
1br, 5p.m., 4 Mllu 011 Ro~o 7 On
I, $2288, 114-112-1718.
Instruments
Share 81th. 701 Fourth Ave, Gtl· Route 1tl In Centenary.
11111 C:.maro Z28, loodod, 11c
llpollo. ft85 \JIIIIIIoo Pold. 614·
Bralld now Bundy Trombono, cond, P.500. 304-175-8121.
448-4416 Ahor 7p.m.
Antiques
53
$350. 304-tl5-3411.
IIIII Nlooan 200 SX. lop,
F~mlohod
Alllrtmonlo, tbr,
S221 Utllllloo Pold. 120 Fourth Buy or 1111. Rlvorlno Anllquoo, Bulldy Alto Snophono, 1200, loodod, uclllont cond, colllt4112·7151 ofter lpm
Avo I 007 8ocond Avo, Go~ 1124 E. llaln _Stroll, POntOfOY· 814-114i-2727.
Hou11: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
11p;;i1o. 114-445-4411 ofter 7p.m.
Conn
TrO&lt;nbono
Uood
For
1
1/Z
IIIII Omnl GLH Good CORd~
p.m 2 .!undly 1:00 lo 1:00 p.m. YNra, $275, 114 311 1408.
Fumllhod Ellk:lonoy, 1175/mo. 814-w•·2128.
tlonl11,000 llllel, Aoklng $1,800.
Utllllloo Pold, 7111 Fourth Avo,
114-317.0007.
Fruits &amp;
Golllpolla. 114 441 4411 Ahor SOlid Olk Bulfllt Rotlnlohod, 58
1225. 614-446-3114 Evonlngo.
7p.m.
1188 a.ovono, 4opd, Air ConVegetables
dMionod,
GOod
CondMionl
Fumflhod EHiclonoy, h85/mo.
$1,110; 1111 Ptym~h HorWir\,
Utllflloo Pold, Share Bolh, 807 54 Miscellaneous
Good Condltlori, $1,400. 114-211Sooond Avo, Galllpollo, 614-44&amp;1211.
Merchandise
4418 Allot 7p.m.
Fumllhod oHk:lonoy w/ot••• &amp; t·wtdo Scroon Proloctlon TV,
rofrlgorllor. Shira lillh. 111 2nd $500, 814-441-1205 Olii2·78M.
Avo. $100 por month. All Utllllloo
Pold. 114-441-31145.
2 1r.i ton Inter Thorm central olr C:.nnfng , _ aJroody
unit $300. 20ft lxl olio polo ploked or· pick "'"' own ·II 1111 llonto c:.rto s .s . 114-387Ql'll:louo living. 1 and 2 bod· wMh zoo omp, dloconnoct wllh Johnoon'olonn, 114-247-2111.
7141.
lfDom lpirtmantli at l/JIIaga mltor baoo $70. 304-1571-2321.
-'"'lo-,.Cut
- looo,..-...,Ciorro,.,.--,
C:.nnfng Tomot-11 Pk:llod·P • :.;1I,;:II:..,Oidomobl,..,..
Manor
and
Rlvaralde
Aportmonto In Middleport. From 7-Exoorloo Toning Tabloo. Top of buillll. Picked own 13. ·Bll•or ";'lr~, A·l oondKionf $3100,
114.
$111. C:.lll~·m7. EOH.
the llna by Suntanal 114-H2- Ouoon Corn II roody, Roymond I
Aowo, 114-24'1-4212.
3033orll:f.flll.
Lolnllto IIIII~ 2 Bllhl, All
Utllhloo lncl
• $425/rno. Cherry twin bod wMh boxaprfng C:.Mina ~--, p bulhol.
o.-tl Aoqulrod. No Polo. 114- • mohNoo. S chlld,.,.'o ooloty Wo tlollvor II lyrocUII,
Pomeroy IUld lllddl_.. 114441-7733, 114-441-422Z.
rolla. lt4-24W781.
1141-2381.
Complotly Fumllhod mobllo
home, 1 mila below town overlooking rlvor. No Poto,-Ci.. 114444.0331.
NCNih 3rd St,!llddloport, Ohio, 1
bodroorn lumllhod apt, 11t-.
- alld ·dopoolt roqulrod.F !tn, ) 1 Jj)fd~~

defends a couple accused of
murderi
'n a molher. (A)
Stereo.
(1) ())
Full Hou11 O.J .
gets in trouble when she
sneaks out to meet a boy.
(A) Stereo. 0
Ill (I) Nova The s tatues ol
Easter Island are examined.

~

1Hfl Hondo y..g
La4a ' ·
ol Ulral. LM llllilao. Exc. ':
cond. 114-4,._,, ~7371 .~ ..

76

Night Court 1;1
iiJ Mec&lt;Jr- 1;1
1ZJ SportoConter
18 M-yllno
ID Sc:llrec"'w ond Mro. King
7:30 (J). «JJ Joopordyl 1;1
@ Mojor League lla11balt
Chicago Cubs at Montreal
Expos (L)
(1) 1121• Enterllllnmant
Tonight Stereo. 1;1
()) 8 Mema•a Family
ill Wheel of Fortune 1;1
II]
M' A' S'H
Ill h 1 Shlr Slereo.
ID MeiOr League llaaeball
II] •

1.-

18 Croaollre
8:00 ill 8 QJl Matlock Matlock

T.O. 30-Forguoon troctor, 1141'12·2171.
2 H- G co nook Troller,
u.1111 Dr~ A-.., u,ooo;
- · 12 Fl. Stock Traitor, .,,711;
llorcl1 11th 1118 AOHA Sorrell
Filly With Otto Hanor Point;
Follruary 141h 1810 Cholln,ll
Filly Sonny O...Bor Blood Llno.
114-288 U22
F - C:.lf Solei Auguat 24th Ill
1p.111. With Raaular saturdoy
Solo. Alhono Uvollock loloo. II
Hood Holot. Solo ·From Ono
Form. Uvollock C:.n II
C-od In Aftor 4p.m. On
Friday. Houllno Avolloblo. Con~~monlo Wok:omol 114-112·
,114-111-312t
Whllo toaaor laying hanL $75 •
placo. 111=381-8252".
Zlppo Doll Plno Bor Choatnut
IIIN 15 Hondo, h,?OO; Sharp
Point ..... 14 HI~$700.
Duclco. Goooo. · .

1111 IDI8 Current Affair 1;1

~~~'"I-

~-;:~...:;..l.;_y:l...;.;"'l;s.:-..1--l G)

(L)

FRANK AND ERNEST

good, $3011. 080, '

drlv., nuw

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Sound advice to shoppers:
Read
all ads carelully. What
0
.
•
•
.
.
.
the bold type gives can be
.-- -- - - -- -,taken away by the small .....

LETWAH

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Night Court 1;1

,.

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(1) ())
lnlkle Edltton
Ill (f) MacNIII/Lohror

I

2

.;,..;1
3 N:.;...:.;(:....;..I...:...,D

I-I

1 1 1 I

NowoHour 1;1

Dairy Equlpmont 4 Dolaval
llllkell PulootOl iloooum Pump 1m Cltlvy van, $1100 0.1.0 .
Plpo Uno. 114-245-1525.
C:.H Aob.tM-441-1008.
Jlm'a Form~-nt1 .SA. 35, 1117l1 CJ·7, Hold Top, 304, $2,700.
Wool Oalll
• 114-4&lt;11-1777; S-:11.
Wldo now I UIOd finn .
,_.,. I lm.,-o. Buy, 1171 F-150 400 llotor. Runo
Mil, trodo, 1:~: 00 wookdoro, good,loollllhlrp. 114-317'0187.
Sot. 1111 Noon.
•
1178 ~ ~-il cruloohtll,
Uoll llodll 135 IIF TractOl ~aNd-~. ~J~
P,IIO; Ill With Huvy Duty
Loodor, U,IIIO; T030 Forguoon aftor;;~.
With ' 4 Ft. luoh Hog 12,315• 1111 Chov 4x4, 314 ton .......,,
1800 Ollvor $2,115. OWner Wfli
good oond. Bolin 8mm
Flnonco. 814-ZIWIZZ.
Tauruo polo10I MIG. IOWJ&amp;.
HoUolld Iuper n7 2-Row
t:hoppor,
Oliver
t•toot .,.
Tranoport.otoo, ·
cloon r•
Motorcycles
whootlatrow,
814-112·7302 .;;,....,.;:.:;,:;.::::,;;~=:,....ovonlngo.
1m Hondo 110, 4 cyt, runo

I I I' I I
~

i

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

good, -

ca

a

I READ IN
T~E PAPERT~AT
SOMEONE WHO

1'-210, 4x4 -Pickup,
1 OWner, lliOIIIonl
Condition! 114-441171, 1144411• •
1..,- '-'!, 1'-110 XLT, 83,000
lllloo, AutoL HI Englno, Air, 114446-4221 Anor 4p.m.
Extro Good 1110 lntomatlonal z
112 TOn Truck, 404 Enalnohll 2
Bpood. 1711. Flatbed ""Wit LoCI
luna; 310 C:.00 Dozer llfllll l
~~~~~
ceritagl -lupor .llolof
, _End
n
TriCIOl
lncluatrlol
~,:~~.:a.•- Log Fortto.
~I

Furnished

45

•

low ro form lour tlmplo WOitdl.l(l\IJ:IJ'fi!/

0 E y I RR

8:00 tJ~ • (1) Cll
ill
1111 NIWI
III Andy Orllltllt
Ill Club Connect
(f) Reading Rainbow 1;1
II]
Andy Otffflth
iiJ Ca"-1 Elpntll
18 World Todly
ID Aln nn nn, K-8 Cop
Stereo. 1;1
8:30 (J)
«J1 NBC Nowo 1;1
!Ill Dream of Jeonnlo
(1) ()) 8 ABC Nowo 1;1
Ill Wild Amlrlel Q
(f) 3·2· 1 Conllct 1;1
1111 Q 8 CBS IMwl 1;1
II]
WKRP In Cincinnati
ID New ZOITO Stereo. 1;1
7:00 (J) 8 «J1 Wheel of Fortune

'

1117 -

•

EVENING

e

--~ ~--

Roorrango lottora of
0 four
ocromblod wordt

TUE.. AUO. 20

...' '·,,

72 Trucks for Sale

''

Nurolng. AWIII*o Arrr lhlfl.

..... - · · Doy c:.ro Contir.
..... ~oNidD.I.II.f
• ..... • 1:30 p.m. ~ :nt-10.
........ • .llropolno

Holzer

Mobile home, Syracuu 2·BR,

245-1711.

AYOfl f AI Arolo I Bhlrloy

Unlurnllhod~. !Mar

Viewing

Ono bedroom unlumllhod
gorago oportmont, goo hN~ olr
cond .~volo, .vory nice qulot
nelah~aall sao month. 3041.,.:1110., 114 441 ONI:
Unlur11tohod aportmont, 2nd
n-, POI!*OJ. 4""- both.
No pota. Refoionoolllld dopoott,
S14-112-227ttofter 1:30pm.

51

$140/mo piUo utllhloo, ilopooH,
514-112·5732 altar 1:00pm,

Real Estate

1220.

HOlno

for Rent

No t'W'II, 11711mo
Wotor lnolucfod, .. 00 Dopoolt,
814-441-3117.
CuatOln Butcftortng, I doyo o 2br Air, C:.blo, Now C:.rpat Nice
Wook. Cowa. Hogo, Door, 304- • Cloan, Booutllul Rl..,. Vi'ow In
Konougo. Follor'a llobllo Ho,..
1182-2353.
Port&lt;. 114-441·1002.

1817 Concord, like now, conlll
olr, IINpfoce, bla front porch, on
14
Business
rontod lot, 304-t78-tS24 or 114Training
446-2124 .
"R"'II_ra.,.ln-_,
Howt...,"'lllouthoo,:;.
, --at,..ern- Groll lotoctlon 01 "'-''wnod
&amp;moll Down
Bualnooo ~. S""na Volloy llobllo
Poymont. Financing Avolloblt..
Plaza.
T~M-441-438711
A ,_ C:.llton
•
Froo Sllup An~ DOIIvary. C:.ll
og-orot
t2lll 8.
El- Homo eontor AI 114-m·
Will

42 Mobile Homes

HOipHII,

etlctrlc, centl'lll. air, 2 dec:kt,
h3,000. 304-IJ7fi,.Tt22,

WantidtoDo

3 Badroom Ronch, City
SChoolo, UOO/mo. 114-381-8305
Aftor 8 p.m.
For Ront: 2br Homo, Doublo
Gorago, $300/mo. Pluo Dlpooft
And Roleronooo. 114-446-3541.

2br

WMholdlng Poyroll, Etc. Aoply
To Boa CU. 017, clo Golllpollo
Dally Trlbu!!!' 125 Third Avonuo,
1585.
Goltlpolll, ......1 411431.
We'N P1y You to type ,.mea 1114 Bohullz 14dS, 3 BA, oil
oloctrk:, undorpiMing, 2 POl·
•11&lt;1
from hOlnol choo, outbuUdlng. lluot bo
NQ.OO- ~ 100. C:.U
1-1100-24131:11 (IO.tflrnlnl or Wrtto: movod. 814-441-1223.
PASEJI. 31Z, 111 B. Unootnwoy, 1115 Flootwood, 14172, 3 bod·
N. AworaiL 00142.
roome, Z b8th1, utility room,

18

Third Avonuo, 1100 ~~=·
~0/mo. 814-441-3870, e
.
1340.
3 bodroom 1112 botho, 2 atory,
110 Pork brivo, $378. month,
$250. dopooll. 304-t7S.t242.

2 bodroom troler OO&lt;npllloly
lumlohod•.~· wo-. dryer,
304-n:w......
ploto lnollllatlon. Phono: 114- 2·BR lumllhod Ol unlumllhod,
384-tm
good &lt;INn oondlllon, Now
Loool Vondlng AMo For Solo.- Hovon, 304-1182-2418.
WIII Sill All Or Port. Aopoll
tuml•= wultor/dryor,
Buolnooo. Abovo Avorogo ln- 2·BR,
control air,
pluo dopollt,
oomoi1.IIQO.t40-8113.
814-112-5800.
Loool Pay Phone ~o. Com· 2br Traitor In Choohfro. 114-317·
~~·Soli Quk:k. t.IIQO. 7580 Ahor 4P.IIL

l===~=~~~~

cuotomero

1 br HOUII, Fumllhld. 735 RNr

Arthur'• Ch.lln Unk Fence.
R•l•nUal, Commerclal, lnduetrial, FrM Eltlmat..t Com-

GOVERNMENT HOliES From f1
(U Aopolr). Dlllnquont To1
Propertr. ft•pone•lona. Your
AIWI (1 1101-11112-1000. Ext. Glf.
1010 FOl Curront Ropo Uol.
HOUSE FOR FREEIIIIUII movo
oil 101 In lllddl-" Fill In
bl...,.nt, 1Md and at,.w, llu8l
algn oont-1 :Z..IR, Lorao LR,
DR, BoUt, hoo now roof 11\d g~·
tor,
IM PVC plumbIng, nood oomo work. You PlY
,., till movfngf Onty oartouo
celltlll C:.ll IM-182·2011 ohor
7:00pm.
Houoo For Sola: 3 Bodroomo
With Partial Buernont In Bidwol~ Rouonoblo. l14·318 1821.
Log houoo lor uto bv ownor, 15
ocroo, 3 bodroom, llvtngroom,
wontod
blllld.
Only ..,._
noodtotoform
opply.
fn. lomllyrOO&lt;n, 2112 bathe, pool,
oatoiiRo, mid 70'o, 304-tll!l-3111.
torvlow, 814-llt-4301, 1-0 P.ll.
Noodod
lmmocbtoty, Stcluded-Huntert Drum, 31
- o h..... Apply tn po-., woodod ooroo WHh 3 BR, both,
oU modern convonlonooo. Onlr
Country KHchon;Aoolno.
11 mlnutoo lor Rovonowood ond
lor I ohornk:ol 2 112 mllel from Rocfno, coli 114- m. Book: 1411-2311.
12·15-houN -11. Unlquo 3 bodrOO&lt;n houoo on 10
Solid roourno'oto: F.A.C.T.S., Rt.
2 Box 2n-A, Bldwlll, OH Ullt4. ooroo, oxtru1 .1 milo from llld·
O..d
&amp;.... 30, 11111. MIFIH, dloport, Low ..,., 211-3115-2388.
E EtIno: ...._.
.0. ·
Vary nk:o 3·BA Ranoh, brtck
Truck . Ortvera Netded, manu front, c1rport, 1f2 baHmtnt,
houlo wilhln 200 milo rodluo ol hordwood llooro, litO ocroo, 3Pomeroy. Send r•ume to P-16, mf from Holzer Hoopltol, SR 160,
c/o Point Pleuant R•gl.ter, 200 aoklng $31,!500, 814-1112·2128.
M1in. StrNI, Point P....ant, WV
25550.

$350/llo., 3200 Dlpollt. 2 Bodroom•. Uvlng Room, Llundry,
Lorge Kltcllln, Slnglo Gorogo.
Smoll Yord. 814-4ote-f381.

the offering.

Help Wantad: Dairy Ferm Per·

INCOME TAX COURSE: Clooooo
Alcll ,..,_AucllonCompony, Bogin Soplombor e, 1ge,. NYou
Aro CorOor Orlontod Or .Juat
lUll llrno - - · -plelo Booking Port·Timo Emptoymont,
-Wool Vlrglnlo,
· Ucenood Ohio, Thlo CO..Icl II FOl You! COntocl:
304-7'73-17111.
DanTu,lno. At 114-44WI71.
9 . wanted to Buy
KUWAIT/SAUDI .lOBS Now
Hiring llon/W- llony Flolda;
Qood
lUI Ford Ea.
hcetlont Ply With Tronopcrt•
0011. Pony or ar wino or
lion Pold. e.o11 FOl Dilallo I·SOS.
motor. 1_..111onytlme.
3JII.IOII Ext. K-283.
Uood ......... Call 114LET THIS NEWBPAPEA IE
44f.Om.
YOUR
KEY
TO
HUGE
Wantod I I = ond oorop mol· EAIININGI. No hp. Nocoooary.
ai,IOtlll
.
Coli 1-ICIG-241-3121 f'CI.II/mln)
Or Wrflo: PASEE • 3SA, 111 UnWantod to buy, lloncilna llmbor, colnwoy, N. Aurora, IL 001142.
Bob ww- • Bono "114-112·
5441.
Llllla C:.0..11 Plua II oooklna
olltlllconta lor our Aullloril
Top Prkoo Pold: AI Old U.S. lhnogor Tral- _.m. Pold
Colno, Gold Alnat. Dllrnonft tralnlrit, compotMivo ulory IUld
Bllvlr Colnl, ltlrllna. GOid
oxcollonl
odvonoomont
- .,·
CoiM. II.T.J. Coin lliop, 1SI
Thurocftty
tunltlel. Apply
~ lwenul, o·wr
Friday oftor 1 p.m., Glltlpollo.

-ol~tod

41 Houses for Rent

Wanted to Do

Will bobyolt In my homo,
RoooovoH oohool orN, 304-11756544
;:.::.:;:,:·- - - - - - - Would like lo hlbyalt omoll
bobl-young toddtoro an,thno,
614-112.:1242
.

monont Port·Timo. 814-24!1-1232.

arrongemonto
colloct
(Aibony)

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

18

72t7.

AI Toni Solei lo Pilei In
AdviiiOI. Doldllno: 1:OOt&gt;lll 1111
cloy bolofl tho od lo lo run,
!klildor dfon. 1:OOprn Friday,
llondar odlllon 10:001.m.
Soturdoy.

Sub-division,

ono ocro loto, Rt 2 trontogo,

~~K~~~~~~kLG~~------------------~----------------~

=.....

~y

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TH ' A

HWD

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A Y L D • "
I E Y J
Y Z L Y H Z Y V T J U .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Admiration: our polite ·..cognition of anolher'l
r~~~tnblance to o u r -." - Ambr- Bloroe .

e

1101 by NEA. Inc.

20

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�Page-10- The Dally Sentinel

....
Tuesday, August 20, 1991:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Food poisoning report New cas~ of· rare cancer
cripples melon markets spurs action in small town
·,

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By JENNJFER DIXON
AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - West
Coast and Texas cantaloupe markets have been virtually shut down
smce the federal Centers for Disease Control linked a nationwide
outbreak of food poisoning to contaminaled cantaloupe.
. Angry growers say they're losmg thousands of dollars by the day
as ripe melons sit in the fields and
migrant workers wait to go back to
work in paclcing sheds or help with
the harvest.
Properly handled, cantaloupes
are safe to eat, said Emil Corwin, a
spokesman for the Food and Drug
Administration. The melon rind
should be washed with tap water,
the fruir should be cut with a clean
knife and either refrigerated or
thrown away within four hours, he
said.
Barbara Buck, spokeswoman for
the Western Growers Association,
said orders for California can-

taloupes stopped completely Friday, after the CDC's findings were
reported, forcing farmers to leave
ripening melons in the fields.
Although growers reported
some orders Monday, they were
getting as many cancellations,
Buck said. One farmer told th e
association, whose members produc e 60 percent of the nati on's
fruits and vegetables, that he had
already lost $125,000.
Jerry Walzel. vice president of
government affairs for the Texas
Citrus and Vegetable Association
in Harlingen, said $1.5 million
worth of cantaloupes is sitting in
the fi elds of the Pecos region
because there had been no orders.
Some 1,200 seasonal workers
who had migraled to the area from
the Rio Grande Valley, he said,
were unemployed Monday.
The growers ' troubles began
after the CDC said Thursday that
more \'Jan 400 people in 23 states
and Canada had become ill from

eating cantaloupes this summer,
most in June and July. Researchers
assume there are dozens of cases of
salmonella poisoning for every one
that is reported and confirmed.
Producer woups say the induslry has complied with new handling
guidelines foc cantaloupe issued by
the FDA since the salmonella outbreak was detecled.
"As a resull, there has been a
virtual end to new cases," said
George Dunlop, president of the
United Fresh Fruit and Vegetable
Association.
David Moore, president of the
Western Growers As sociation,
complained the CDC acted irresponsibly by reporting illnesses
that occurred more than six weeks
ago.
But CDC spokeswoman Gayle
Lloyd said the agency routinely
publishes reports on food-borne illnesses and said they often come out
after an outbreak is over.

Van Halen CD booklet has bed
and breakfast owners hopping
MONTROSE, Pa. (AP) - The
Woodbourne Farms bed-and-breakfast promises peace and quiet, but
the owners haven't had either since
their telephone number appeared in
a bookJet accompanying the latest
release from rockers Van Halen.
" It 's been a nightmare," said
Sara Lee Strickland . " I can ' t
describe it any worse.' •
The calls began in June, when
the brotherly heavy metal band
released the compact disc of "For
Unlawful Carnal Knowledge."
Callers asked for "Alex," presumably the drummer-brother of
guitarist Eddie Van Halen.
" I finally asked one kid why he
was calling here for Alex," Mrs.
StrickJand said. "I thought there
was a drug dealer in town, and he
said, 'It's on the album.' I asked

him 'What album?' He told me."
whether she is Mrs. Alex.
The bookJet includes a series of
"People come here for peace
photographs, one of a blackboard and quiet," she said . "Forget
with several illegible telephone that. ' '
numbers. A number in the center is
Lately, long-distance operators
legible, and it belongs to Mrs . have been calling, too. Parents of
Strickland and her husband, youngsters who made the fJrSt calls
Charles.
are questioning charges on their
The band's publicist said the telephone bills.
numbers were randomly selected
"They tell me, 'Your phone
and the area code listed before the number is on their bill, and they
StrickJands' number was not 717, don't know anyone in Pennsylvathe code for northeast Pennsylva- nia,"' Mrs. Striclcland said. "I tell
nia. It wasn't meant to be any num - them to ask if they have a teen-ager
ber.
in the house."
Mrs . Strickland said she has
Mrs. Strickland's son operates a
received between 800 and 900 chiropractic service from the inn
phone calls in the last seven weeks, and shares the same telephone
mostly from male teen -agers and number. Changing the number isn't
young adults. They all ask for practical, she said, because of the
Alex , and occass ionally ask advertising she has done.

Many at risk for AIDS virus not tested
By MALCOLM RITIER
AP Science Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Nearly 40 percent or more of
Americans at high risk of getting
AIDS have not been tested for
infection, j~ardizing their health
and possibly mcreasing the spread
of the virus, a study suggests.
A survey of 14,000 people
found that about 38 percent of men
who reported homosexual activity
in the previous five years had not
been tested
Neither had about 47 percent of
people who reported using intravenous drugs in the previous year,
said researcher Thomas Coates.
"What we need to do is continue penetrating and pushing into
these populations because they are
where the majori?' of HIV disease
is in our society; said Coates, codirector of the Center for AIDS
Prevention Studies at the University of California. San Francisco.

HIV stands for human immunodeficiency virus, which causes
AIDS . The virus can spread by
homosexual or heterosexual sex
and by the sharing of needles
among intravenous drug users.
The study also found that about
60 percent of heterosexuals with
multiple sex parmers in the previous year had not been tested, nor
had about 60 percent of people who
said their sexual parmers had been
using intravenous drugs.
Overall, the proportions of atrisk populations that had been tested were "pretty good numbers
(but) we would like to see them
higher," Coates said in an interview.
"Public health requires effective
campaigns to reach at-risk populations so they can receive adequate
care" if infecled, he said.
Such campaigns also help protect sexual partners and future chil·
dren, he S3Jd. The AIDS virus can

be transmitled from a mother to her
baby.
Coates presented the findings
Sunday at the annual meeting of
the American Psychological Association.
The results came from the
National AIDS Behavior Survey,
which contacled participants in the
continental United. States by telephone last fall and winter. The
analysis was adjusted to represent
the nation's population as a whole.
The study was paid for by the
National Institute of Mental Health.
Coates said strategies to
improve the percentages of people
tesled could include more emphasis
on marketing of testing services,
guarantees of non-discrimination in
medical care, health insurance and
employment for people who test
positive for the virus, and guaranteed access to anti-HIV treatments
at an affordable cosL

Redgrave loses discrimination ruling
NEW YORK (AP) - An arbitramr has rejected Vanessa Redgrave's claim she was dropped
from a play because of her opposi ·
tion to the Persian Gulf War.
New York University law professor Daniel G. Collins sided with
the Schubert Organization, producers of Peter Shaffer's "Lettice and
Lovage."
The producers said they dumped
the actress for economic reasons,

fearing her anti -war comments
would hurt ticket sales during the
national tour.
Redgrave and Actors' Equity
filed a grievance with the League
of American Theaters and Producers in March, claiming she was
dropped for political reasons.
During the war, Redgrave, an
outspoken supporter of the Palestinian cause, called for "the withdrawal of U.S. , British and all
imperialist troops." She la~r said

her remarks had been pnnted out of
context.
Reached in London, Redgrave
said in today ' s New York Times
she still believes "there was politics involved in the producers'
decision."
Julie Harris will star in Redgraver's place in the role cnealed by
Maggie Smith in London and on
Broadway. Rehearsals begin in
February.

Candy stars in slapstick soap fantasy
By George Robinson
DELIRIOUS (PG) If you think
your life is a soap opera. you ' ve
got nothing on writer/producer Jack
Gable (John Candy). Mter a blow
on the head, he wakes up in his
own soap, and has to write his way
out of it. As Gable says, "I' m in
hell and my punishment is spending eternity on my own show!"
That's the premise of "Delirious," an intriguing idea for a film
- sort of " Soapdish" meets Jorge
Luis Borges. Unfonunately, in the
hands of the screenwriters and
director Tom Mankiewicz, the
more bizarre _possibilities of the
idea.are seldom explored. What we
get too often is bad slapstick Candy rescues Emma Samms on
horseback, after an interminable
chase, only to hang sideways off
. his horse after she is gone. There's
not enough of the delirium that, in
one scene, finds snow and reindeer
IUIIIing up at an engagement party
because the "bartender needs more
,. cold deer" - the result of a Gable-

induced typO.

structure of the soaps, right down
to the overwrought, tic-ridden acting styles affected by David
Rasche, Raymond Burr, Charles
Rocket and Dylan Balcer. Unfortunately, overacting as a comment on
overactin~ is funny for about 40
seconds.
Finally, as in " Soapdish," the
resolution of the film' s plot draws
on the most saccharine sentimentality inherent in the material, rather
than following the much funnier
potentialities buried within the
script. If only "Delirious" really
were. GRADE: 2 stars
New Home Video
ZOOT SUIT (R) MCAJUniversal. This is one of the most underapprecialed ftlms of the '80s - a
stunningly radical first feature by
Luis Valdez ("La Bamba") based
on his own stage play. Set in Los
Angeles circa World War II, and
based on a true story, the film
recounts the "Sleepy Lagoon "
murder case in which MexicanAmerican gang members were railroaded by a blatantly racist judicial
system, ultimately to be freed on

Unlike the recent "Soapdish," appeal.
MaRkiewicz's film tries hard to , "Zoot Suit" is ostensibly a film
play with the actual conteniS and of the stage play, but Valdez

manipulates that convention for his
own purposes, inscribing not only
the theater audience but also the
film audience in the text itself. He
uses the tension between on-screen
and off-screen space in a way that
he never could in a stage play.
Starting with the murder and trial
as a jumping-off point, Valdez
examines the tensions - between
assimil~tion and ethnic pride,
between mtegrationist and nationalist philosophies - in an oppressed
community. He examines similar
ISsues to those that Spike Lee has
focused on, but with even more
vi~or and visual rigor.
THE RUSSIA HOUSE (R)
MGM/UA. Let's call this a valentine to Sean Connery. He is the
major reason for watching this otherwise pedestrian adaptation of
John Le Carre's novel of glasnostera espionage. Connery plays Barley Blair, a dissolute, mtddle-aged
publisher. Russophile and amateur
jazz musician who is sent a potentially devastating manuscript by a
disaffected Soviet scientist.
Connery centers the ftlm as few
others could; he is always focused,
always attentive.

By CHRISTOPHER WILLS
Associated Press Writer
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) The fear and anger were fading and
Taylorville - population 11 ,200
- was beginning to forget it
almost lost three youngsters to a
cancer so rare statistics say it
should touch only nine children in
a million.
And then it happened to another
child.
A Taylorville 13-year-old was
diagnosed with neuroblastoma, a
cancer of the adrenal glands and
nervous system that occurs primarily in children under 10.
" A lot of people wanted to put
it in the past and go on with their
lives, " said Michael Mayer, a
member of the Christian County
Boand. ''When this came up, it just
kind of floored us."
Brandon Steele entered a
Springfield hospital Aug. 2 and
was diagnosed with the rare disorder. Information on his condition
was not available this week, and his
parents declined to be interviewed.
When word of the diagnosis
spread across the town 30 miles
from Springfield, families and
environmentalists decided not to
wait for another state study like the

one that found the earlier cases
were random occurrences.
Mayer, who heads the county
board's environmental committee,
began a study of illnesses among
Taylorville residents in the hope of
forcing a federal investigation or
inde~ndent study.
' We're not pointing the finger
at anybody. But if something in the
environment is triggering this, then
we want to know," said Mayer. "If
you were in our shoes, wouldn't
you do the same?"
Steele ' s diagnos is follows a
spurt of three cases from March
1989 to March 1990, also conftrmed by the state Department of
Public Health. The children in
those cases, all infants, survived.
Two other families from the
area say they lost children to the
disease: 4-year-old Chad Balcer in
1986 and 20-month-old Keren
Crosby in 1988. The parents say
doctors diagnosed their children,
but the health department said
questions remain as to whether the
two should be considered among
the Taylorville cluster.
Public health officials will study
the newest case, but they said they
found no common cause or link
among the cases in 1989 and 1990.
" It's not unusual to have clus-

-•
'

,

,.
i

•

ters of cases like this," said depart- :
ment spokesman Tom Schafer. ·
" That's not an acceptable answer ;..
to people. We would love to come :
up with an answer, but right now :
there isn 't one."
Some residents blame an aban - doned factory that was contaminat- .
ed with coal tar until 1988. Coal tar ·
is a byproduct of the process that :.
produced coal gas for street lamps. :·
The factory is near a park and pond where children play.
•
Contaminants are still found in :
groundwater, but environmental :.
officials say the sources of drinking .
water are not polluted and are .
checked regularly.
Some residents said th ey they ._
would no longer trust a state study. :
"It rules out common sense, and •
they have lied so many times that :
they've lost credibility with us," ·
said Diane Alwardt, researcher for ·
a local environmental group, Hean- ·
landers Against Rural Pollution. :
"We will continue to research and •
to get people in authority to give us :
information.··
Curt Crosby, Keren 's father, :
said he believes the latest case will •
lead to new studies.
' 'I'm not cynical ," he said ..
"I'm confident they'll do some- :
thing. It would be criminal not to." :

Ohio Lottery

Braves,
Reds split
twin bill

Pick 3:463
Pick 4: 5755
Cards: 7-H, 6-C
9-D;Q-S
Low tonlghtln mid-50s.
T hursday, pa rtl y sunn y.

mid-80s.

Page4

Vol. 42, No76

Death row inmates
want to be fathers

were shown two larger classrooms
and the principal's office.
Heckman, who is Champaign
County prosecutor . said in his
openin~ statement that Ms. Kaech
was a 'high-strung perfectionist
with an uncontrollable temper."
Abuse suffered by the students
was not the result of their misbehavior, but of Ms. Kaech 's frustration and "rigid, unrealistic tinie
schedules," he said.
But defense attorne y David
Greer of Dayton said some of the
allegations against Ms. Kaech are
the product of active imaginations
or were accidents.
He described Ms. Kaech as a
" conscientious, devoted teacher."
About 10 children are expected
to testify using sign language. Prosecutors and defense attorneys will
rely on interpreters to translate the
testimony, which will be videotaped.
Heckman said a police investigation into Ms. Kaech's conduct
was initiated after a parent told
Clark County Children Services
that her daughter had been abused.

The children were between the
ages of 8 and 12 at the time of the .
alleged abuse. Ms. Kaech was a .
teacher of hearing-impaired chi I- ·
dren in the third, fourth and fifth
grades.
The investigation produced allegations that in 1981 , Ms. Kaech
shoved a book into a student's
chest, knocking him from his chair
and causing his hearing aid to jam
into his ear: that she stabbed a stu- ·
dent with a pencil; pushed anoth-er's face into a chalkboard; pushed .
a plastic clock into a girl's chin and
kicked and twisted the arms of
other students.
Jan Samuels, assistant superintendent of Springfield City ~
Schools, testified Monday that the district allows two types of corpo- :
raJ punishment - physical restraint
and paddling.
Teachers are permitled to place
hands on students to quell distur- .
bances that may cause injury ,
Samuels said. Paddling is a
"whack on the rear end" of a student, which must be carried out in
the presence of a principal.

BOYDTON, Va. (AP) - A
death row inmate wants his sperm
frozen and used to inseminate his
girlfriend, saying the state's right to
kill him doesn't mean it can end his
bloodline.
Joseph Roger O'Dell, 49, faces
execuuon for the 1985 rape and
murder of a Virginia Beach secretary . He asked the state Supreme
Court to allow him and fellow
death row inmate Joseph Savino,
32, to preserve their sperm.
The court denied the request,
calling it frivolous. Prison officials
were still considering iL

Soviet coup appears
to be collapsing

World chess
championships
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)India's Viswanathan Anand played
black but still beat former world
chess champion Anatoli Karpov on
Monday to even their challenger
championships quarterfinal at 3-3.
Anand went into the end game a
pawn ahead and kept his cool this
time to beat Karpov in 70 moves.
Karpov would not comment
whether he had been affected by
Monday's coup ousting Mikhail
Gorbachev from power in the Soviet Union.
Anand, 21, had wasted good
chances in the third and fLfth game
to beat Karpov, but nerves each
time apparently got the better of
him. Karpov won the fourth game.
In the end game of the fifth
game, also completed Monday,
both grandmasters agreed to a
draw.
Dutchman Jan Timman, Soviet
Vassily Yvanchuk and Britain's
Nigel Short are all within striking
distance of closing out their quarterfmals series on Tuesday.
The first player to earn 4 1/2
points out of eight games advances
to the semifinals, which •will be
played early next year.
In case of a draw at 4-4.
tiebreakers are to be played Aug.
24-25.

OUTSTANDING OF THEDA Y WINNERS
- These Meigs County 4-H'ers were recognized
at a Monday reception for their State Fair
accomplishments. Pictured, front, is Jill Lemley.

Second row, 1-r, are Nichola Pickens, Michelle
Laughery, Anita Thomas, Debra Frost, Kellie
Ervin and Kelly Grueser.

4-H MEMBERS HONORED - 13 members
or Meigs County's 4-H clubs were honored for
their Ohio State Fair participation at a reception
on Monday. Pictured, front, is Joseph McCall.

Second row, 1-r, are Emily Asbeck, Dorothy
Leilbeit, Darrick St. Clair, Manhew Morris and
Jamie Ord.

Thirteen Meigs Cou.n ty youths
recognized for state fair honors

NEW 1991 NISSAN TRUCK

Thirteen Meigs County 4-H
members were recognized for their
accomplishments at the Ohio State
Fair during a reception held Monday at the Ohio State University
Cooperative Extension Office in
Pomeroy.
Nine of the young men and

women recognized received Outstanding of the Day honors for their
4-H project interviews . These
awards are given to the top 20 percent of all participants in the state.
The other four members received
clock trophies which are given to
the ftrst place 4-H participant in the

---Local briefs-__,
Passport fees going up

Bill Hupp at Taylor Motors in
Athens, Ohio is offering a special
customer financing rate of 9.9%
APR Fixed Rate for 4 days only
(Aug. 22 through Aug. 26).
So hurry to Taylor Motors and
ask for Bill Hupp and get this
1991 Nissan 412 Pickup for
AS LOW AS

$14359 PERMO.

Payment figure for 60 mo., $1 ,000 down cash or trade

plus tax and title.

If you think you will need a passport in the near future, Meigs
Clerk of Courts !:-arry Spencer advises that you make application
before Nov. I. ''That lS when the price is expected to go up," advises Spencer.
For adults the fee for aU. S. passport will probably go up to $55
with the charge .for execution o the application to increase to $10,
making an adult fee charge of $65. The passport would be valid for
10 years from the date of issue.
As for children under 18 years of ago, the charge for the passport
will be $30 while the execution of application fee will also be $10,
making it a total of $40.
The charge until the rate increase goes into effect for both the
passport and the execution fee for adults is $42 and for children,
$27.

Filing deadlines announced
Thursday is the flling deadline for candidates who wish to appear
on the November general election ballot.
According to Meigs County Board of Elections Director Jane
Frymyer, that date applies to candidates for public office and levies.
Candidates will be able to file as wnte-in candidates until
September 26.

Bloodmobile slated
'

The American Red Cross will conduct the Meigs County Bloodmobile on Wednesday from I p.m. to 5:30 P·!ll· at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center on Mulberry Heights m Pomeroy.

Mailbox vandalism probed

992-2156

MOSCOW (AP) - The coup
against Mikhail Gorbachev
appeared to be collapsing today.
with reports that the coup committee left Moscow by plane and military units deployed after th e
takeover were being withdrawn
from the capital.
The news followed a series of
dramatic developments pointing to
the coup's disintegration.
Tanlcs and armored personnel
carriers were seen moving away
from the Russian Parliament ,
which served as the headquarters
for Boris Yeltsin, leader of the
resistance to the eight hard-liners
who staged the coup.
State-run media dropped the
previou s offi cial line on th e
takeover.
One lawmaker said: " The coup
is collapsing."
Thousands of people kept up
their vi~il at the Russian Parliament building following overnight
clashes with Soviet troops that left
at least four dead.
Several thousand demonstrators
gathered outside the Parliament
building roared with approval when
the announcement of the commit-

tee' s departure came over a loud speaker.
The plane reportedly carryin g
the coup leaders was heading to the
city of Bishkek, formerl y called
Frun ze, the capital of Kirgi zia,
2, 100 miles southeast of Moscow,
according to Radio Russia, which
speaks for Yeltsin.

•

By BRYAN BRUMLEY
Associated Press Writer
MOSCOW - Russian Federation President Boris Yeltsin sa id
today that the entire eight-man
committee that overthrew President
Mikhail S. Gorbachev was heading
to a Mos cow airport, possibl y
intending to nee.
Earlier tod ay, Yeltsin had
. announced that the leaders of the
Kremlin coup would allow a delegation of Ru ssian lawmakers to
visit Gorbachev.
The dramatic announ cements
followed reports of disarray among
the coup leaders and growin g
nationwide resistance that turned
bloody ov erni ght in a clash
between demonstrators and Soviet

troops.
The developments were seen as
signs of a possible disint.cgration of
the 3-day-old takeover.
" Th eir goals arc uncertain ,"
Yeltsin sa id of the coup leaders.
" Wh eth er th ey plan to fl ee or
so methin g else is unknown." He
spoke to the Russian legislature at a
spec ial sess ion in the republic's
Parliam ent building, from where he
has been leading nationwide resistance to the coup.
·
One deputy took the fl oor after'
Ycltsin and said, " If they want to
go abroad, let them go. We have 10.
stop con frontati on as soo n as possi-·
ble."
Ye hs in told law makers th at
KGB chief Vladimir Kryuchkov, l\
key member of th e emerg ency
co mmilt ee that overthrew Go rbachev, had in vited him to vi sit
Gorbachev in the Crimea, where
Gorbachev was reported! y arrested.
However, Yeltsin said that lawmakers feared for hi s safety if he
left his barricaded headquarters at
the Parliament building and decided to send a delegation of republic
officials inst.cad.

Meigs Local School Board
adopts open enrollment policy

'·'

;t
'.
BILL HUPP
PHONE: 594·3528
HOME PHONE: 247·4772

in

2 Secllon o, 14 Pages 25 cents
A Muillmedla Inc. Newspaper

Copyrighted 1991

Teacher accused of abusing deaf students
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) A teacher accused of abusing hearing -impaired students was
described in opening statements as
a conscientious teacher who had an
uncontrollable temper.
Beverly Kaech, 39, of Springfield, is accused of 11 counts of
child endangering. Her trial began
Monday in Clark County Common
Pleas Court. She is accused of
abusing eight children over a I 0year period at Highlands Elementary School in Springfield.
Special Prosecutor Darrell
Heckman said four of the original
15 counts of child endangering
against Ms. Kaech were dropped
before the trial began. Those
charges allege that Ms. Kaech gave
unwarranted discipline to four students. The charges will be considered at a separate trial scheduled
for December.
A seven-man, five-woman jury
was seated Monday. Jurors were
taken to Highlands Elementary
School to see the classroom in
which Ms. Kaech taughL They also

High

The Meigs County Sherifrs Department is investigating the vandalism of mailboxes and newspaper tubes on Oak Grove and MornContinued on page 3
'

state.

Outstandin~ of the Day winners
are Kellie Ervm, daughter of Mona
and Eugene Ervin of Racine for her
archery project: Joseph McCall,
son of Greg and Debra McCall,
Shade. for his gun safety project:
Darrick St. Clair, son of Myrtle and
Gail St. Clair of Middleport for his
electricity projec~ Matt Morris, son
of Roland and Fern Morris of
Pomeroy for his electricity project:
Jill Lemley, daughter of Larry and
Cheryl Lemley of Rutland for her
Time Out for Clothes project:
Debra Frost, daughter of Stephen
and Jaclcie Frost of Long Bottom,
for her Dress up Daywear project;
Anita Thomas, daughter of Paul
and Gladys Thomas of Reedsville
for her Aquatic Scienc ~ project;
Michelle Laughery, daughter of
Vic and Denis e Laughery,
Reed sville, for her Dress up
Evening Wear project, and Dorothy
Leifheit, daughter of Roger and
Lenora Leifheit, Pomeroy, for her
Breads II project.
Clock trophy winners and first
place in the State of Ohio awards
went to Jamie Ord, daughter of
Pete and Cindy Scott, Pomeroy, for
the Barrels class in horses; Kelley
Grueser, daughter of Danny and
Debbie Grueser of Pomeroy for
Clothes for Middle School; Nichola
Pickens, daughter of Ray and Patty
Pickens of Pomeroy for her Creative Writing project: and Emily
Asbeck, daughter of Bill and Patty
Asbeck of Pomeroy for Ohio
Ponds.
Meigs County was represented
by over 50 participants at the Ohio
State Fair. State Fair delegates are
selected at the various project judgings held in July and August each
year.
340 young people participate in
the 4-H orol!111l11 in Meigs County.
Continued on page 3

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
An open enrollment policy
which will allow students of contiguous school districts a choice of
the school they attend was adopted
by the Meigs Local Board of Education Tuesday night.
A compatible policy was earlier
adopted by the Southern Local
Board which means that students in
Southern and Meigs will have the
option of school selection in either
district starting with the second
semester of the 1991-92 school
year. There will be no tuition
charge for students to go from one
district to the other, and State
Foundation monies will follow the
student.
The Eastern Local School District has no plans for adopting an
open enrollment policy this year
but does expect to have something
in place by the 1992-93 year,
according to Supt. Richard Smith.
Open enrollment is just one of
several reform initiatives which
will give options to children and
their parentS as to education choices in the 90's.
Districts have been mandated by
Senate Bill 140 to adopt a policy
permitting open enrollment within
the district and to make a decision
as to whether to permit or prohibit
open enrollment between contiguous school districts before the
1992-93 school year.
The open enrollment policy. as
adopted by Southern and Meigs,
does provide for a number of
restrictions, however.
Students, grades kindergarten
through eighth, will not be accept-

Father of
accused first
to testify
By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Staff
A Kanauga man accused of raping and murdering a 12-year-old
Gallipolis girl told his father about
details of the killing and pointed
out the victim's picture in a newspaper, testimony revealed Tuesday.
Raymond Mathias, father of
William A. Mathias, 24, told jurors
and a packed courtroom how his
son came to him on OcL 7, the day
after the alleged murder, and told '
his father how he raped and
stabbed a young girl and left her to
die in an abandon strip mine.
"He said, 'Dad, I killed a girl
last ni~ht,"' Raymond Mathias
Continued on page 3

ed under the open enrollment program if their enrollment will
increase the class size in which
they enroll above the 25 -1
student/teacher ratio as established
by the state minimum standards.
As for grades 9 through 12, students will not be accepted under
the program if their enrollment
increases the grade level in which
they will be placed above 80 students in Southern Local and 200
students in Meigs Local.
One specification of the open
enrollment policy is that an application for admission to the district
must be made at least 30 days prior
to the following school term or
semester, but no earlier than 60
days prior to the following school
term.
StudentS will be accepted in the
order in which their applications
are received with determination to
be made by the posunark.
Certain regulations apply to students who have been expelled or
suspended. Those who have been
suspended by a previous school for
10 or more consecutive days during
the current term are not eligible to
seek admittance to the immediate
preceding term in another district.
Students who arc receiving discipline from the sending school
district will complete the discipline
in the receivin g school di stri ct.
according to the policy.
As for transportation , students
participating under the open enrollment program will provide their
own transportation to and from the
nearest established bus stop within
the district. The di strict will provide transportation from that point

to and from the neares t eli gibl e
school. Parents will be responsible
for tran sportation if th eir chi ld
attends any schoo l other than the
nearest eligible one.
The nearest eligi ble attendance
centcr, according to Supt. Carpen ter, means the school where acce ptance of the student will not create
an imbalance in the student/teacher
ratio.
OTHER BUS INESS
Cl iff Kennedy was hired on a
supplemental contract as guidance
counselor at Meigs High Sc hool,
and purchased services contracts
were entered into with Joan Wildman as a reader guide for a junior
high student and with Josie Morton
as a physically handicapped aide
for a student at Pomeroy Elementary .

The board also entered into a
contract with the Blue Streak Cab
Co. to transport students at $9 a
day and $2 a day. Both students, it
was reported , have handi cap s
which make it impossible for them
to ride the bus.
On rec ommendati on of Supt.
James Carpenter the board follow ing an executive session in which a
hearing for Terry Powell was held
voted to tcrminat.c his contract with
the school district.
Powell was convictcd of theft of
Meigs Local School District property by a jury of six men and two
women in the Meigs County Court.
It was reported that he is appealing
the case through an attorney from
the Ohio Associa tion of Public
School Employees.
Bob Barton , board pres ident ,
Continued on page 3

Classes begin Monday in
Eastern Local School District
Classes in the Eastern
Local School District will
begill Monday with a full, regular day or instruction,
Richard D. Smith, superintendent, announced today.
Teachers are to to report
on Friday to prepare for the
openillg or school, Smith saidStarting and ending times
for school days will be the
same this year as last, Smith
explained, and lunches will be
served beginning the fint day.
The prices·thls year are ele·
mentary students, kinder·
garten through six, $L20; high
school, seven through 12,
$1.25, and breakfast, 65 ceniS.
Elementary students new to
the district are to report to the
school nearest their home on

Monday and new students,
grades seven through 12 are to
report to the high school
sometime before the opening
or school between 8 a.m. and 3
p.m. Information regarding
workbook fees will be furnished on the first day or
sehool.
Smith noted that there have
been few changes this year in
the district' s transportation
system. He did advise parents
to have their children ready
early because some bus routes
may be somewhat earlier than
last year.
Questions concerning anything about the openfng or
school should be directed to
the superintendent's otrlce,
985-4292.

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>schultz</name>
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