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                  <text>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-

-•
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,

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i

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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.

�'
WedneSday, August 21, 1991

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy , Ohio
DE VOTE D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARIM

d~

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC

ROBERT L WING EM'
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assoclatton and the Amencan Newspaper Publishers Association .
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long All lei ters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name. address and tel ephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues. not personal!
lies

Letters to editor
Appreciates help

I
'

Recently I lost a large amount of
money whtch was never recovered.
I'd like to take this time to
thank all the good people who
helped me through this time. There
were so many volunteers who carne
and helped my family look for long
hours. too numerous to menuon.
but I thank God for all of you. I'd
also like to gtve a special thank you

to the Laurel Chff Free Will
Methodist, Rutland Free Will Baptist, and the Middleport Ash Street
Free Will Bapust Churches. It 1s
comforting to know that there are
still plenty of good people out there
who care about other people in
ume of cnsis. I thank you all, and
God bless you.
Woody Call, Jr.

EDITOR'S NOTE - Walter R. Mears, vtce president and columnist
for The Associated Press, has reponed on Washington and national politics for more than 25 years.

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
I Today is Wednesday, Aug. 21, the 233rd day of 1991. There are 132
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 21, 1878, a group of lawyers, judges and law professors
founded the American Bar Association at the Saratoga, N.Y., town haiL
On this date:
In 1680, Pueblo Indians took ,possession of Santa Fe, N.M., after driving out Ibe Spanish.
In 1831, fonner slave Nat Turner led a violent insurrection in Virginia.
(He was latet executed.)
In 1858, the famous debates between Senatorial contellders Abraham
Lincoln and Stephen Douglas began.
In 1931, tiO years ago, Babe Rulh of the Yankees hit his 600111 home
... ,.,. ,.,. f\1',.,., VnN "-"'(#h. C:t t ,..,;.., 'Q"''"nu• 11 _'7
..

----------

stating that I2-year -old Stacey
Renee Lucas had been missing
since Oct. 6.
Under cross -examinatton,
Defense Attorney Charles Knight
attempted to reveal that Raymond
Mathias' relationship with William
was not as close as the relationshtp
between Raymond and his other
son, Robert, and that Raymond
might be covering up for Robert.
"Can we agree, Raymond , that
Robert is your favorite (son) of the
two," Knight asked.
"No, we cannot," Raymond
Mathtas replied.
"Can we agree that you told the
police 'I have two sons, one is
do in' good and one tS a rotten
egg?"' Knight said.
"No, I don't remember saying
those words. sir," Raymond satd.
Even after being shown a transcript of a police recording, Raymond denied making the remark.
"I didn't make that statement. If
I dtd, I must have been under
stress," he satd.
Robert Mathias, 21. was ordered
to submit to DNA testing m the
case 10 determine if he was
involved with the killing. Knight
had asked for the order followmg a
preliminary hearmg m Oct. 1990
when Knight satd Robert gave
details of the case that had not been
revealed earlier. No charges were
filed against Robert Mathias.
Seven other wttnesses testified
Tuesday, including two 12-year-old
females and one 15-year-old
female. Robert Mathias was
e~pected to lake the stand Wednesday.

said. "i said I can't believe it.
You're just messing with me right?
"He said I was running around,
looking for something to get into.
He said I went down, ,went around
the (Gallipolis city) park and I seen
thi~ young girl. She come over and
got m the car. I took her up to the
stnp mmes.
"He said they had Intercourse
and that he hun her He said she
wanted him to bring her down to
the police department so she could
turn him In for rape," Raymond
Mathtas said.
"And then what did he say?"
AsSIStant Prosecutor Mark Sheets
asked.
Raymond Mathias hesttaled.
"It's hard for me to turn in my
son," he said.
When Sheets pressed for details,
Raymond Mathias told how his son
explamed the alleged mwder.
"He satd he grabbed a screwdriver and he stabbed her m the
heart," Raymond Mathias srud. "He
satd he gave it an upward thrust
and twisted 11. And then he satd he
stabbed her in the neck and once
through the comer of the eye."
He further testified that William
Mathias told him he put the gul's
head between two rocks, had covered up the body with leaves, and
went back to his car.
"As he walked away, he satd he
heard gurghng in her throat," Raymond Mathias said. "He said 'If I
dtdn't ktll her then, she' s surely
dead by now."'
Raymond Mathias also testified
that he didn't call the police about
William Mathias' confession
because he "just didn't believe it"
But when the Oct. II issue of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune arrived at
hts home, Raymond Mathias decidSouth Central Ohio
ed to caU the police.
Tonight, mostly clear. Low 55
"My wife had gone out to get
the paper," he said. "She opened it to 60. Thursday, partly sunny. High
up and there was thts gtrl's picture. 80 to 85.
Extended forecast:
And Bill come in. Bill looked over
Friday
through Sunday:
her shoulder and said 'There 11 ts.
.
Mostly
fair through the period.
That's the girl I killed."
Htghs
each
day from the mid 80s to
That tssue of the newspaper
contained a missing person noucc, the low 90s. Lows in the 60s.

Questionable Medicare bills go unnoticed
WASHINGTON - Congresswnal mvesttgators recently hs tened m on I ,000 LCicphonc calls to
In surance earn ers that process
Medtcare clatms, and what they
heard wasn't pretty. Elderly people
were calltng in by the scores,
reportmg what they thought was
fraud in their medical bills. But that
wasn 't the worst of it. The insuranee earners dtd little or nothmg to
mvestigate the fraud . They stmply
approved the bills.
The earners are paid by Medicare to revtew doctors' btlls and
pay them. The federal Health Care
Fmance Admmistrauon oversees
the msurance carrters and ts supposed to make sure the carriers are
on the lookout for phony claims.
The General Accounting Office,
whtch staked out the phone calls
with the permission of the carriers,
wiU release its fmdings in September, and that report wtll show that
HCFA and the earners have done
lmle to follow up on the reports of
fraud . "We went lookmg for a
paper trrul and couldn 'L find one,"
an mvestigator told our associate
Melinda Maas. Some carriers kept
no records of the complaint calls.
Others didn't even have investiga-

uve umts to follow up on the calls.
Ruth Garnett, 72, of Weslaco.
Texas, knows how hard tlts to get
someone to pay attenuon to Medt care fraud . She spent stx years
wnting and telephoning Medicare
to report rip-offs and then she gave
up . She says no one would listen.
In 1984, she fell and broke her htp
and wrist. When she got the hospi tal btll, she was shocked 10 learn
that she and Medicare were bemg
dunned $950 for a heart pacemaker
and an arm splint - neither of
whtch she got.
The surg eon and the hospttal
agreed that the pacemaker was a
mtslake, and said they would correct the bill. But Garnett found out
laterthat the btll was never corrected, and Medicare patd in full
Garneu's husband, Paul, said
thetr case IS not an ISOlated one.
"People down here get bills from
doctors they've never heard of. I
knew a man who was charged for a
pregnancy test after an $8,000 hospita! stay. Another fnend of ours
was in the hospital for cancer treatment, and on thetr btU were deliv cry-room charges."
Otto TwitcheU, of Ogden, Utah,
had to make repeated phone calls to

convmce the HCFA that Medicare
had bee n charged $417 for ht s
booster shoL "People m Washmgton asked me why I was so upset;
the btll was alread y patd . Th ey
made me feel like I was pan of the
problem " Twttchell finally got a
congress man to listen and the btll
was reduced to 597
Florence Paul, 70, of Santa Ana,
Calif., went to a doctor wtth a back
problem. The doctor examined her,
reached no conclusiOn and btl led
Mcdtcarc $927. She read on th e
Mcdtcarc statement that the btll
could be challenged. and she took
that to heart, makmg stx or etght
calls over three days. The phone
calls and subsequent letters got her
nowhere. "Now," she said, "I'm
beyond bemg shocked. I just throw
up my hands in dtsgust wtth the
whole system.' '
The GAO tnvc sugation was
ordered by Sen . David Pryor, DArk., chamnan of the Senate Spectal Committee on Aging. A scparate look at the problem by the
inspector general of the Health and
Human Scrvtces Department found
lillie to cheer about The msurancc
camers refer few cases to the
inspector general to investigate. In

~--------------~------~

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What is U.S. policy toward
Moscow without Gorbachev?
•
By WALTER R. MEARS
:
AP Special Correspondent
· .WASHINGTON - Now comes the rest of Amencan poltctes tied to
LA9se of the fallen Mikhail Gorbachev by six years of personalized dtplo$cy that began a new order in U.S.-Soviet relations.
-: Prcstdent Bush satd Monday mght that Gorbachev should be returned
t.Oyower, but the administration has no way to enforce the demand. So the
ct~allenge to U.S. policymakers may be to preserve international gains and
tR(emal Sovtet reforms without Gorbachev.
: Bush denounced the new Soviet regime but said "we have no miCrest
uta new Cold War or in the exacerbation of East-West tensions."
: ·He satd there would be no economtc aid while Communist hard-liners
gpvem by tllegal coup, and that the Untied States would avotd any acuon
thl\l would lend legitimacy to the men who toppled Gorbachev.
:· A reversal that would bring back the Cold War is improbable, tf not
.qipossible.
· .But lhe rise of the hard-liners could dampen prospects for ratification
o! the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty in 1992: may complicate Senate
a~ uon oo a conventional arms agreement; and adds to the problems of
arranging the Middle East peace conference Bush and Gorbachev had
agreed should be convened in October.
.Bush had proposed preferential trade Lerms for Moscow. That' s on
hold alon~ with othlll' economic gestures the West had hoped would hasten the shift to a market economy in the Soviet Union.
He satd the United States and its allies are committed to foster reform,
openness and democratic change in the Soviet Union, although !hero's Itttie they can do about it beyond saying so.
The new Moscow leadership assured the admmtstration that it intends
to conunue social, economic and political reforms - but the Kremhn
hard-liners obviously didn't lake over from Gorbachev in order to stick to
htscourse.
Administration critics accused Bush of tolerating represstve moves by
Gorbachev in Lithuania and other breakaway republics in order to avotd a
rift when Soviet backing was essential to the aUtance agamst Iraq m the
Persian Gulf War.
Defense Secretary Dtck Cheney had said six months ago that with the
Soviet economy collapsing, mtlitary planning had to factor in the danger
of ctvtl war in the only nation with the capability to destroy the United
States.
.Cheney said early m the Bush administration that the defense budget
shouldn 'l be slashed on the assumption that Gorbachev would succeed
He guessed then that Gorbachev "would ultimalely fail," and was chastised for the forecast
Bush said Gorbachev represented "the best opportunity to sec reform
go forward," and administration foreign policy had been based on that
judgment. But the president said there are other democratic forces at work
in me Soviet Union now, and they wtU not toleraLC a reversal to the old
ways.
Bush's Monday night statement could be read as a call to the Sovtet
people to rally agamst the new regime, as reformer Boris Yeltsin urged
with a tank as his platform.
Yeltsm. president of the Russian republic, urged a general stnke
against the new rulers. Lithuama's president did too. The new Sovtet government threalened to use military fon:e to maintain order and power.
Bush,like Ronald Reagan before him, got along with Gorbachev. They
dealt with him at nine summits, a series that began with Reagan m Geneva in 1985, and conunued to the July meeting m Moscow. where Bush
and Gorilachev signed START and agreed to push Middle East peace
Ullks.
Gorbachev was, Bush said at the Moscow summit, a man who mspiies
confidence.
He said Gorbachev had built a foundation for progress, and that he was
convinced the Sov1et people wanted to see it continue. He also noted that
coups sometimes fail, and can be reversed.
Nevertheless, the United States, as Bush observed, has had to work
w1th hard-line Soviet regimes before. "Hard-line governments m the past
adhered to certain treaties that were enacted," he srud.
But Bush said he does not intend to work with thiS one.
It is a measure of the change in the Soviet system and in U.S. atlltudes
that the president denounced the new government for taking power
through illegal, "extra-constitutional means."
Not long ago, the American assumption was that a power grab was the
only way to become boss in the Kremlin.

Continued from page 1
Father... --------------------------

Page-2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, August 21 , 1991

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By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
some ca ses, the earners know
about fraud but don 't report tt.
There tS little mcenti ve for the
Medtcare carriers to catch ovcrbtlhngs. Most of them arc 100 busy
JUSt makmg sure the drums arc processed m a umely manner. So that
leaves the burden on dthgent senior
ctuzcns who arc gomg above and
beyond the call of duty to get
someone to hstcn to them
PEACETIME CORPS - We
reported last week about mtcrnal
problem s tn the Peace Corps
mcludmg dwmdhng resources and
qucsuonablc spending. But politics
are also a problem. In a new book,
" What You Can Do For Your
Country: An Oral History of the
Peace Corps,'' author Karen
Schwarz reveals how the service
has been bound by politics despite
its people-to-people mission. For
example, the deciston to send the
Peace Corps into Eastern Europe
was conveniently in synch with
Prestdent Bush's foreign policy
agenda. According to one Peace
Corps volunteer Schwarz interviewed, " ... everybody knows that
part of the reason we are over there
is that we are pawns used by President Bush to 'beat the Germans' to
Eastern Europe."
MINI -EDITORIAL - Creditreponmg agencies have taken a bad
rap recently, but there is some good
news. Two of the largest agencies,
TRW and CBI/Equtfax, have
begun a new program to keep track
of one glarmg bad debt - unpaid
child support. Since 1984, credit
agcnctes have been legally allowed
to include child support track
records tn a person's credll file .
But they have had to rely on stares
to tell them who tS delmquent. The
states report when a parent on welfare ts not getting the child support
due them, but the non-welfare parents have been ignored. Now.
thanks to an agreement with the
National Child Support Advocacy
Coaltlton, the custodial parent can
arrange to have the ex-spous~·s
credit report include unpatd ch1ld
support. It ts only fair that dead~t
parents be kept from borrowmg
more money when their most
important debt ts in arrears.

Weather

r----

On Aug. 9, at an Army base 80
miles from me, a kind Kansas
phystctan was sentenced to 30
months m prison . From all
accounts. Dr. Yolanda HuetVaughan was cut from the cloth of
the old-time family doctors we talk
about fondly and lament that there
are far too few of these days. As
her case progressed, her patients
and co-workers wrote to local
newspapers of her willingness to
lake Medicaid patients when they
could find no other physicians to
treat them , of her spectal kindness
to patients wtth AIDS. That she is a
good person and extremely valuable to the rest of us is unquestionable.
The case is a heartbreaker. Her
three young children will be motherless for a ume tf she doesn't win
her appeal, and who will treat the
indigent pauents who found their
way to her when others shut their
offtce doors? Yet I am at a loss to
explain the behavior that earned
Huet-Vaughan thts sentence. I find
tt more reasonable that the Army

reacted as 11 dtd, than that HuetVaughan dtd what she dtd.
What she did, very stmply, was
desert. A physician m the Army
Reserves, she refused to go to the
Persian Gulf when ordered. Then
she walked away from the U.S.
base where she was asstgned and
back to ctvilian life.
Her defense was that she
belteved the United States could
have done more to avoid war with
Iraq, and she could not 10 good
consctence support the mihtary
aclton. When she was found guilty
she told reporters, "I've learned
from thts expenence. You can't
tru st government to do the honorable thmg."
Of the many statements HuetVaughan made to the press in the
months leadmg up to her trial , I
found tht s one the most stunnmg .
Given the history of government
military actions, what could she
have expected? Dtd she thmk the
mtlitary underwent a complete personality, as well as personn el,
change smcc Vtctnam? What news-

papers was she reading during
Grenada and Panama? Did she not
have access to a ICicvision?
I can ' t speculate about HuetVaughan's motives, but it's not
speculauve to point out that she
JOined the Army Reserves dunng a
time expected to remain relatively
peaceful, 10 an era when reserve
duty paid well for part-time work.
Lots of Americans gambled that
they could get that pay wtthout
ever havmg to pay the ptper.
A reservtsl colleague of mme
used to play recruiter with me on
long road trips we had to take
together, extolling the viitues of hts
" easy" reserve duties and the great
pay. Ttmc after time I told htm that
tf we ever got mto a confitct where
I thought I should serve, I'd enlist
tf they'd have me or do related
ctvtlian work tf I could. But I also
realized that tf I signed up as a
reservtst, I wa s promtsing the
Army any duty for any reason at
any ttme. I wasn't g01ng to make
promtses I mtghl not want to keep.
Ttmc after 11mc my colleague

Gun theft reported
John Causey of Reedsville reponed to the Me1gs County Shertffs Department on Sunday that several guns were missing from his
residence. No forced entry was noted. Mr. Causey reponed that he
had left his residence at around 2 p.m. on Saturday and dtd not
return unul I p.m. on Sunday when he noticed the guns missmg
from the gun cabinet
.
Missmg are: Model 871 12 gauge Wmchester; 12 gauge pump
Spnngfield; SO caliber muzzle loader; 22 cahber automauc nne:
410 single shot; and 20 gauge Savage smgle shot.

By Sarah Overstreet
would tell me, "Oh, this country's
not gomg to war anyttme soon."
and then recite his knowledge of
current world affairs, gleaned from
rcadmg magazmes he subscribed
to. It turns out he was wrong. There
is no way a military can operate if
each service member can decide
whether or not to obey each order.
Huet-Vaughan's was nola case
where a soldier was conscripted for
duty that might end up going
agamst his or her ethical beliefs.
It's a case where the soldier knew
full well the Army mtght sometime
ask her to do something that vtolated those beliefs. She was gambling
it would not.
A true act of consctence would
have been to level with herself
before she signed up and started
collecting her pay, and acknowledge that there were things the military might do that she could not
support. and that there was precedent to expect the military mtght do
them.

Minor accident investigated
Meigs County Sheriff_James M.. Soulsby reports that the department investigated an acc1dent on Titus Road JUSt off Lcadmg Creek
Road on Tuesday.
A 198 I Chevrolet Chevette owned by Dulcie Phalen of
Langsville was towed on Tuesday mormng when depuues were
nouficd that the vehicle had been wrecked.
Rodney J. Clonch of Mtddleport reported that he was driving the
vehicle and lost control in the curve and went off the roadway on
the right and struck some logs along the roadway.
Light dama~e was listed to the vehicle, and charges are expected
to be forthcommg.

EMS units answer two calls
Meigs Emergency Medical Services units answered two calls for
ilssistance on Tuesday and Wednesday morning.
On Tuesday at 10:50 p.m., Nicholas lhle was taken by Ltfe
Fhght from Veterans Memonal Hospital to Rivcrstde Methodtsl
Hospttal
On Wednesday at 5:19a.m ., Pomeroy unit went to Oak Hill
Road. Jeffrey Wolfe was transported to Veterans and was later
transported to Pleasant Valley HospiUII.

Judge Thomas stands out on purpose
Some people JUSt naturally stand
out, even in the world's capital of
self-tmportance: Washmgton, DC
Others have to work hard at
bemg memorable.
Daniel Inouye was very much
the former - a natural standout
who, on the day he was sworn m as
Hawaii's fiiSI conwessman, found
htmself in the offtce of legendary
House Speaker Sam Rayburn .
Speaker Sam was telling thts young
American of Japanese parentage,
who'd lost his right arm in combat
as an Amencan soldier in World
War II, that he was already the best
known representative in Congress.
"But- why?" asked the flabbergasted freshman . To which Rayburn explatned, with a certain
unmistakable clarity ol logtc:
" .. .How many one-arm Japanese
do you think we have in the
Congress of the United States?"
Clarence Thomas, in contrast,
had to work hard at the very Washingtonian busmess of becoming a
standout.

Just after the 1980 clcctJon, thts
black man who'd ri sen from the
poverty of south Georgia to cam a
Yale law degree, made his moveand made himself memorable,
mdeed unforgettable, to Washington's newest power elite: the inner
ctrcle of Ronald Reagan.
It took some doing. Thomas who'd founded the Black Student
Umon at Holy Cross in 1971, and
who'd been accepted into Yale
Law School after tt adopted new
affirmative action rules for applicants, plus a 10 percent quota for
minorities - wrote a memo to the
Reagan transition team strongly
criticizing affirmauve action and
quotas.
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission had pushed too
hard on affirmauve action and quotas, Thomas wrote in December
1980. That, coming from a man as
black as he, made Thomas immediately memorable to the Reagan
htgh command.
Suddenly, Clarence Thomas was

In 1940, Communist revolutionary Leon Trotsky, whose clashes with
Josef SUilm had led to his exile from the Soviet Union, died in Mexico
City of wounds inflicted the day before by an assailant.
In 1944, the United Stares, Britain, the Soviet Union and China opened
talks at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington that helped pave the way for
establishment of the United Nalions.
In I 945, President Truman ended the Lend-Lease program that had

"";--A connu• (~n J..m;,...., 1n ~ i A tn

A.m,,..; ... ., tv

o niPC!

tlnrinn 'VnrM W•u

n

a standout - yet hts crcdenuals
were not yet outstandmg. Just a
few years out of law school,
Thomas was named assistant secretary of educatiOn for civil rights.
Never mtnd that he had ncnhcr
traming nor experience in civil
rights law or the educauon professton. Thomas had very black skin,
very humble origins and very conservattve pronouncements. He was
Reagan's affirmative acuon candidate for the civil nghts job.
The next vear. Thomas was promoted to chairman of the EEOC still a standout who was not yet
outstandmg. Never mmd that others may have had more formidable
credentials and experience. Thomas
was Reagan's affirmative action
candidate for the EEOC job.
But - surprise for the Reaganauts! - Thomas led the EEOC
into several dcctstons that relied on
affirmative action and quotas. Yet
after Reagan' s landslide in 1984,
Thomas reverted to the refram that
had gotten him his job - bashing
afftrmative action and quotas.
Again, he was a standout among
the white-on-whtte Reagan RtghL
New President Bush made
Thomas his affirmative action can·
didate for the judiciary. Thomas
started near tile top - as a D.C.
circuit court judge. A year later,
before even Thomas could become
-

R .

...

..

~

. . ..

11 ~

.. .. • '"\1~

-•• .. , _... _. ..

The Daily Sentinel

By Martin Schram
Bush nomtnatcd htm to the
Supreme Court where, tf confirmed, he may sit for four decades.
He is Bush's affirmative action
candidate for our future.
But, in a stand-up routme worthy of top billing at the Improv,
Bush declared lhat Thomas ' blackness had nothing to do with his
appointment to succeed Justtce
Thurgood Marshall. Bush insists
hts nominee is simply the most outstanding jurist in the nation.
Next month, senators will begin
advtsing and consenting. Questions
will be asked; replies will be given;
votes will be cast without senators
knowing anything for sure. Thomas
will say just enough of the right
stuff. He ' ll espouse "natural
rights." That's the theory of inherent. nevcr-specifted " rights,"
which Thomas may eventually use
to become as conservative as Judge
Robert Bork became using narrow,
literal interpretations of the Constitution.
This much we now know: There
is another, larger differenct;
between Reagan's Bork and Bush~~ ~
Thomas. Bork was a jurist and11
scholar whose credenua1s, whii!J~
ultra-conservative, -were clearlyll
outstanding. Thomas's main ere·
dential is that he is a self-made
...............

Local briefs... - - - -

continued from page 1
mg Star Roads. According to Stiriff James M. Soulsby, the damage
was done around midnight on Monday.
Anyone wtth infonnation reganding the suspects should call the
sheriffs office.
Kenneth Walbrown of Portland reponed to the department on
Monday that a house he owns on Barringer Ridge Road near Portland had been damaged in the areas of the door and window. Walbrown also reported damage instde the house.

Peace-loving reservists were no dupes

'(l

tUSPS 1411-llllll
A Dlv~lon of Multimedia, Inc.
Publi shed r vcry aftPrnoon , Monday
throu~h Frida\, 111 Court Sl , Po
m t&gt;rov. Ohio. bv lhf' Ohio VaiiPV Pub-

\

llshlnj{ Companv !Mul!lmedla.

Inc ,

Pomr r ov Ohio 45769 , Ph 992 21~ Sf'
rond cl ass pos lag(' paid al Pomf"roy.
Ohio
ME'miM'r

Th r 1\Ssoctated Pn&gt;s s. In

land Dallv Prf'Ss A.ssOC'Iatlon and I hE'
Ohio NPwspaper Associ at ion National
Advflrllsln~

RPprtsfntatlvf'. Branham
Nf'WspapPr SalE'S, 733 Third AvpnuP,

Nf'w York . Nt'w York J001 7

POSTMASTER St'nd addrf'S!i r han2PS

to

ThP

Dallv

SenllnPI. Ill

Poll1l'rov. Ohio mill

Court SJ ..

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Routt&gt;
One Wttfl'k
Sl 60
OnP Month
J
S6 95
OnrYear
..
SR320

Dally

SINGLE COPY
PRICE

Subscrltwrs not dPSirlnsc to pay I hE" car·
riff ma y rPmlt In advance direct to
The Dally SPnllnel on a 3, 6 or 12 morith
basta Crf'dlt will be gJvpn carrier f'8Ch
week
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas where homE" carrier service Is
avall;lble.
Mall Sttllo&lt;rlpllona
lnolde Melp C&lt;lu!Ky

13 Weelto. ....... ...... ..... ... .. $21.84
26W.etco ...... .. ...... . . . .... . $43.16
52 Weeks ..... . .... ............ ........ $84.76
llalllde Melp C&lt;Jualy

13Weelta ..... . ...... ,.... ... .. ..... .. . $2UO
26 Weeks ............ ......... .. ........ ... $45.50
52 Weeks .................. ..... . ... .. .. $88.t0
.

"

The Dally Sentinel

Pol'f'leroy--Middleport, Ohio

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 20- Ktmberly Bond, Kathy Buttemaugh, Edna
Carman, James Fannin, George
Kerns, Robert Monfrooe, Kevin
Payne, Bonnie Tabor, Richard
Young and Richard Zinn.
Births Aug. 20 - Mr. and Mrs.
Barry Arthw. daughter, Gallipohs.
Mr. and Mrs . Jack White, son,
CrownCtty.

Area deaths
Charles Deem
Charles Deem of Racine died on
Wednesday, August 2I, 1991 at
Ohio State UmversiLy HospiUII in
Columbus.
Arrangements
will
be
announced by Ewing Funeral
Home of Pomeroy.

Ella Schultz
Ella R. Schultz, who died on
Monday, was the daughter of the
late Willie Ann Bradshaw Napier.
Mrs. Napier was incorrectly identified in Mrs. Schultz's obituary.
Additionally, thre~ _,.ons, who
preceded Mrs. Schui!Z 'in death,
were omitted from the obituary,
and her fust husband's name was
incorreotly spelled. It should have
read William Okey Harliss.
)I

Page-3

Eastern board acts on personnel matters
TheEastemLoca!SchooiBoard
acted on several personnel matters
when they met in regular session
on Monday night
Rick Stobart serv ed as a
spokesperson for approximatel y 30
concerned parents that attended the
mecung regardmg the proposed cut
of a kindergarten teacher.
The board went into exccuuvc
concern after heanng the concerns
of those present and then reafftrmed 1ts stance to cut one kmdergarten teacher with one kind ergarten bemg held at Tuppers Plams
Elementary School. The savmgs
with thts program IS esumated at

S25,000to$30,000peryear.
The contractual status of Marge
Bartee was changed from hal f-ume
tcac hmg status to full -time teachmg
status for th e 1991 -1992 sc hool
ye ar , the effcc tt ve date be tn g
August 23.
Barry Ha ynes , Karla Brown .
Earl Ft cld s, Jcnntfer Barnetlc,
Anna Nuzum and John Sncdtker
were htrcd as substttutc teac hers
for the 199 1-1992 sc hool year. The
restgnauon of Kelly Rtzer as a substitutc was accepted
The board approved the request
of ht gh sc hool sctencc teacher
Robert Lang for a one-year leave o f

absen ce durm g th e 199 1- 1992
- htr ed Jill Holter as a high
school year.
school chcc rlcadmg advtsor for the
The board accepted 1hc res tgna- 1991 -1992 school year;
- appro ved Jenmfer Cremean s
uon of Nancy Larkms and Becky
Edward s as the dtstrtct's mterven- and Terry McGutrc as tullton stu tJOn program coordmators
rk nl s for the 199 1- 1992 sc hool
In another person nel matter. the )C~u .
board agreed to extend the cxtsun g
- appro ved the dtsposal of books
OAPS E co ntra ct fo r one yr.1r, 1&lt;lcnu lted as surplus,
cxptnng on August 31. 1992
- appro ved several temporary
In addtuon , the board
.1ppropnauons
. appr oved chan ge s 1n th e
The nex t reg ular mceung ts set
school handboo k and workbook for September 25 , 199 1 at ? p m.
pnces;
Aucndmg were Ray Karr, Prcs . htred LtfciOu ch Inc ,ts Ihe llkn t ,md mcmhcr&lt; Btll Hannum
sc hool ph01ographcr for the 19'! 1 I 0 ~ h C\l\ .md lull Sm1th
1992 school year.

O'Brien processes 26 cases during past week
Metgs County Court Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien processed 26
cases dunng the past week.
Fined were. Robert L. Headley,
Lon g Bollom, seat belt, $20 and
costs Mtchael R. Hatfield, Rutland. left of center, $10 and costs.
seaL belt, $20 and costs; Randall J
Carpenter, Jr. , Mtddlepon, seat belt
vtolauon, costs only; Debbte Priddy, Middleport, dtsorderly conduct,
SIOO and costs; Enc Pnddy, Rutland , disorderly conduct (two
charges), $100 and costs on each;
Patncia L. Smith, Pomeroy, scat
belt violation, $20 and costs: Davtd
A. Smith, Albany, speed, $24 and

costs; lena Bohn , Pomeroy. sea l
bell . costs only; Curtis E Stewart.
Ironton , speed , $20 and cos 1s.
Mtchael Meldau , Mtddleport, latl ure to dts play va hd rcgt strauon.
SI 0 and costs, Melody Sand, Hau
rue. Mt , speed , 520 and co sts
Todd Evans, Mtddleport, reckl ess
operauon, S40 and cos ts, Jerr y
Unbc , Pomeroy , no operat or's
hccnse, SIOO and costs, 30 days m
Jail, suspended to three days . Todd
Powell, Pomeroy, exptrcd opera tor' s hccnse, $75 and costs, three
days m Jail, $35 of fmc and Jail
11mc suspended.
Jan1cc Brcedtn g and Ltnd a

Brecdtn g. Rey nold sburg. thcf l
rcs tuuuon. SIX mon th s m Jatl. suspend ed and ft vc years proba uon
and costs Li mes Lee Garn es
Pomeroy, mrn1nal trespassmg. 520
and costs, Ihrcc da ys 1n Jail suspended and stx month s pro bauon
Ra ndall Moo re, Pom ero y. no
motorcy cle endorsement , $100 and
cosLs, 30 days m jatl suspended ancl
one yea r probauon: left of ce nter
S3 0 and costs, Tro y Yankun s
Po meroy, dtsordcrly while tniOxt·
cated , SIOO and costs. suspended to
SSO and one year probauon, Karen
Will s, Mtddl eport, paSSin g bad
chec ks, $25 and costs, ftn e sus-

Steelworkers union agrees to
settle NLRB complaint with RAC
RAVENSWOOD , W Va. (AP)
- The Umted Steelworkers union
has agreed to settl e a National
Labor Relations Board complamt
alleging misconduct tn its labor
dtspute with Ravenswood Alu mmum Corp • the company said.
Local 5668 signed a formal set-

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
the Oh10 Lottery drawmg selecuons made Tuesday mght
Pick 3 Numbers
4-6-3
(four. stx, three)
Pick 4 Numbers
5-7-5-5
(ftve, seven, five, five)
Cards
7 (seven) of Hearts
6 (six) of Clubs
9 (nme) of Diamonds
Q (Queen) of Spades
The Super Lotto JaCkpot IS S4
mil !ton.

tlcment that wtll ulumately mvolve hav e been off th e JOb at th e
a court order prohtbtung further Ravenswood Alummum plant smce
mt scondu c t, Rav enswood Alu - thctr contract cxptred Nov. I.
The company contends they arc
mmum satd m a statement Tues on strike and has htrcd permanent
day.
The umon also stgned an mfor- replacement workers. The unton
mal agreement that prohibits future contends tts members have bee n
mt sconduct wtthout admttUng any locked out of the plant.
Ravenswood Alummum all eged
wrongdomg tn the past, the compathat
union ptckcts harass ed and
ny satd.
Telephone calls to the NLRB 's threatened replacem ent work ers,
rcg10nal office m Cmcmnau went flallcncd 11rcs on workers ' cars and
unanswered Tuesday mght. Local bloc ked ve htclcs from enl cnng Ihe
5668 Prcstdent Dan Sttdham dtd pl.tnl.
The se ttl ement mu st be
not return a message left for htm at
umon headquarters tn Ravenswood . approved by th e Na uonal Labor
About I ,700 unton members Relauons Board . 11 smd

Thirteen ...
Continued !'rom page I
There arc 34 clubs located through
out the county. The 4-H program ts
open to all youth thtrd grade or
mne years as of January I each
year up through the age of 18 For
additional mfonnat10n on the 4-H
program m Metgs County, contact
the Extcnston Offtcc at 992-6696.

Meigs announcements
Missionary service
A missionary servt cc wtll be
held Sunday at 7:30 p.m . at the
Harrisonvtlle Hohness Chapel on
Route 684 m Pomeroy featunng
the Thompson Famtly. Rev. John
Neville invites the pubhc.
Ice cream social
The Columbia Townshtp Volunteer Ftre Department Auxihary wtll
serve homemade ice cream , pie,
sandwiches and beverages at th e
ftrehouse on Route 143 near Carpenter on Sunday from 4-8 p.m.
Ballfield meeting
There will be a mceung Sunday
at 2 p.m. at the Star Mtll Park m
Racmc for all interested parttcs
regardmg the ballfteld project.
Anyone who ts wtlhng to help wtth
the project is urged to attend Call
949-2643 tf unable to attend
Johnson family reunion
The Johnson farntly reumon wtll
be held Sept. I at Portland Park. A
potluck dinner will begm at I p.m.
Everyone is tnvttcd to bnn g a
handmade ttcm .
Softball tournament
The Harrisonvtllc Youth League
wtll be sponsonng a men 's class
"E" softball tournament on Saturday and Sunday at the Mtddlcpon
?ark. Entry fee is $65 and hit your
own balls. Call 742-2302, 9925449 or 742-3300 for mformatton.
VSC tomut
The Metgs County Veteran s
Service Commission wtll mee t

Monday at 7'30 p.m. m the Veterans Service OffiCe tn Pomeroy
Country mustc nt~ht
Country Mustc Ntght at the Lotwdge Commumty Center wtll be
held Saturday from 7 p.m. to mtdmght. Refreshments wtll be served
and all bands arc welcome.
Rose reunion
The John W. Rose reuniOn wtll
be held Sunday at Forked Run
Siate Park. Dmner wtll beg1n at
12.30 p m.

. Hr ('s (

l 'AO } C' Jf\ prOb3 LJ O n , SI X

111\lltlh s tn ptl suspend ed 10 60
d.tys. rcsill utJ on .md costs, OWl .
) \511 .tn d cos b . ~0 days 10 Jail sus·
pcnrlcd 10 three· da ys and 90 days
l1 cc n ... c su ... pcnston , dn vmg under

suspcnston . 5 100 a nd cos ts. 30
d.t yc suspended 10 Ihree days, two
) c,ns proh.tuon. Roger Dent, Mtd dk pon sc.ll belt. costs only; Ray mond Lll chft cl&lt;l. Racmc, dnvm g
under FRA suspensiOn. SIX months
tn Jail suspend ed to 30 days, two
ye ar s proballon and costs; and
Robert Taylor, Pomeroy , reckless
operauon, S100 and costs, one year
probatiOn
Po stmg bond s were: Shawn
Dearmg, North Canton, disorderly
condu ct, $80; Pamela Steele, ;
Ree dsvtll c , scat belt , $5 0; and
Thoma s McCabe . Belpre, speed , · .
$60

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS ~
Jun10r Hunt, Long Bottom.
:
TUESDAY DISCHARGES - .
Dora Ann Clay

SPAIN&amp; VALLEY CINEMA
"" ~:.::;.:·

446 ·4524

$l 00 RARG.IIlH M TI N[( S SATURDA Y • ~li!OA T
Sl 00 8ARGA) Jrl NIGMT TUntJot, v

L_ AUOUif
le lhfu 22
IRIDA l !hrw
l HUII ~ OA Y '

1 00 9 20 OAIL'
•, AI ':.U N '1A TI ~( f \

Meigs
...
Continued lrom page I

,\II&lt;:HAEI. j. FOX

DOC

I 00 1 ?0
J(l•l l 1'
00)
( P~

passed when the vote on the tenn !nation was lllkcn Voun g m fa vo r
9f the tcrmmauon was Larry Rupe,
Bob Snowden. and Je ff Werry
Rtchard Vaughan was not presenl
Whtlc the mauer of constdenng
the cooks' rcJnst.atcment was on the
agenda , no acuon was taken at last
mght 's meetmg

t.A ~I ~

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~ A I t ~U N

HOLLYWOOD

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REVIVAL
AT THE

Chester Nazarene Church
Aug. 21·25
7:00 p.m. Nightly
6:00 p.m. Sunday
Evening

Stocks
Am Elc Power .. ...... . . 29 5/8
Ashland Oil
.
29
AT&amp;T .. .. . . .. ..... .38 5/8
Bob Evans.... . . . ........ 18 1/8
Charmmg Shop. . ...... 23 1/2
City Holdmg .. .... .
. .. 14 1/2
Federal Mogul
14 7/8
Goo:lyear T&amp;R
........ 35 7/8
Key CenturiOn . .. . .. . 14 I!2
Lands' End . .
.. 20 l/8
Ltmtted Inc . ......... . . / 27 7/8
Multtmcdia Inc. ... . . .. 28
Rax Rcstaumnt . .. . .. .. ... 13/32
Robbms&amp;Myers
31 1/4
Shoncy' s Inc ...... ... . .. IS 5/B
Star Bank ....... . .. . .. .22 3/4
Wendy lnt ' l..... . .. . . 9 1/8
Worthtngton Ind........ . 28
Srock reports are the 10:30 am.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
a11d Loe wi of Gallipolis

pcndcd .md rcq Jiut to n Tomm y
l' llllltps. R1 pley W Va rcststm g

Evangelist
DAVID CANFIELD

Evangelist

David Canfield
from Russell, KY.

Pastor Herbert Grate

Are You Looking For Value?
1991 Carrollton Sabre Supreme
14x70

Middleport Court
Johnnie McCalla , Galltpolt s,
and Donald K. Goheen, Letart, W.
Va. were each fmed $425 and
costs and sentenced to three days
on jrul on DUI charges when they
appeared Tue sday night tn the
court of Mtddlcport Mayor Fred
Hoffman.
Goheen was also fined $100 and
costs on an FRA suspension
charge.
Others fined in the coun were
Mike D. Hindy, Syracuse, $50 and
cost, disorderly manner; D1ana
Barber, Middleport, $10 and cost,
expired registration; April D. Cundtff, Middleport, $10 and COSLS,
expired registration; Donald W.
Hoschar, Chester, $25 and costs,
open container; Dean Whittington,
Middleport, $50 and costs, indecent
exposwe, and $50 and costs, contempt; and Raymond E. Sayre,
Rae me, $IS and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Otis M.
Noble, Jr., Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
$60, expired registration; Charles
B. Knapp, Jr., Columbus, $110,
disor~~~ manneri· Steve !3rum·
field, · eport, $ I 0, defrauding
an innkeeper.

11

This home IS standard with vinyl lap !:irllinn
singled roof and fomecore wrap on
endwalls and root, 3 bedrooms and 2 baths.

LIST PRICE

SALE PRICE•••••••••••••

$21,900

$171 99 5

AS LOW AS............................$203.38* Per Month

Extra tough
polyurethane gloss
enamel finish. Resists
scuffing, abrasion and
weathering. Ideal for
heavy traffic areas.

PIC KErfS
HARDWARE
·MASON,·W. VA.

Other feaMes tncluded wllh thts homo are R19 roof •nsulabon. self storing
storm wmdows, upgrade carpet and pad, upgrade drapes with sheers
cathedral cel11ng. oetltng fan. noose. type door With storm. miCrowave cabJnel,
extra window in hving room , 14" shutters, 15 cu ~ 2 doorrefngerator brass
paao light and much, much more

'

Stop In and see this beauty because at this price, It
won't be here long!
•PIJrntflll llguNd lor 180 rnontha_ 11'Modown, 11.76,., APA to qudlltd bu'f'IIL S.• tndl
Auguel24lll, 1"''

' '

COLE'S MOBILE HOMES
located 5 Miles East of Rt. 33
.On Rt. 50 East, At~ens 592·1972

I

'

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-.

•

�The Daily· Sentine~:~.

Sports

.

i

Page----\1

...•••..
-··
-··

---------------~~--------------------------------------------------------------------------~:~
·
By JOE KAY
A P Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP)- John
Smaltz sa ved the Atlanta Braves
from a doubleheader sweep they
couldn 't afford .
Smaltz pitched a five-hitter to
give the Braves a 5-l victory and a
doubleheader split Tuesday night
with the Cincinnati Reds. The sptit
left Atlanta 2 1/2 !(ames behind Los

.

Hatnil&lt;h.liou.,...,lll;a-.,Phila4d·

pru.. 121 ; Hunt. Son Dieao.l20.

SAVES - Lee Smith. SL Louis. ll;
Dibble, Cincinnati, 14; Mitcl! Wil.lilmt,

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eu1ern

Dhl1~n

W
.7t
.. 63
..60
.17

L
47
13
19
60
.16 62
.4! 70

Tum

PITISRURG II

St. Louis
Ctucago
New York
l'hilade.lphu

Montn:a1

GB

PeL
.591
.143
.104
.4!7
.471
.407

6.1
II
13
14.1
221

Wtstern Dlvlllon

W
.67
.. 64
.51
.11
.II
.. 49

Tum
l.m Angeles
Allanll
CINCINNATI

San Franci.lco
San Daeao
JloiJJlOrt

L
12
14
61
60
62
69

GB

Pet.
.163
.142
All
.492
.4!3
.411

11
1..!
! .I
9.1
171

Tuesday's scores
Clndnnad I, Atlanta l, ht 1mc
Atlanta J, Clndnnatl l ,lnd pme
Monuul 4, OU..ao 2
Philadelphia'· Phtaburah!
S1. Louia 1t Ne• Yod!:, ppd., ttitl
San Franeisco 9, HOUlton 3
Lo• Anadet 6. S1n otq,D c

Pltllburah (Tomlin 1_.) at Phlltdtl-

Thursday's games
a1 H~

AlllnU (Ltlbrudl 11·11 ) at Clndn-n • U (Scuddrr 4-3), 7:35p.m.
St . l.ouia (Tc•Ubwy 1·1) It New York
(Goodm 12-7), 7 :40p.m.

Dwoit

a..~m

New Yod:
Milwaukee
Baltimore

CLEVELAND

J

Dtdl, Kan~u City, 31 .

TRIPLES - Molitor, Milwau.kct, 10;
M&lt;;Rac, Kanu• City, 8 ; R . Aiomar,

Toronto, 8; White, Toronto, 8; Devereaux,
D•.himon:, 7; M1ck, Mlnnca:ota, 7; Polo-

nia, CalifDmia, 7.
HOME RUNS - Cln1eeo, 01k.hnd,
3~; Fielder, Detroit, 34; Carter, Toronto,
28; C. Oavil, Minne~oll, 26; C. R.ipkcn,
D1ltimo~. 26; Tartabull, K.ansaa City, 2.5:
Thomu, Chic•ao, 24; Buhner, Seattle, 2A;
0 . Henderson, Oakland , 24.
STOLEN BASES - R. Hend cnon,
Oakland,.....,.; Raii101, ChicaJO, 41 ; R. Alo-

tl -6,

.m.

3.96: Gulli ...... Detroit. ll·

6, .714, 4.11; StCIUlomfft, Totonto, ll-S • .
.706 , 3.33 ; Lananon , Califomia, IS-7,

tO.I
11

79 Jll

26..!

Toronto, 139; L..anpton, Cdilomil, 138;
Swindell, Clenland,. 134.
SAVES - Eckeraley, 01lthnd, 35;
Aauilen, Minneaot1 , 32; Rurdon,
Bo11on, 31; Huvey, Cali(ornil, 29 :
Henke, Toronto, 29; Thiapen, Ch.ic1go,
77; Olson, B•himore, 25;-Montaomtry,
Kiln~., City, 2!.

21
6
10

.. 66 II .14l
.. 64 16 .Ill

.. 61 17 .117
.. 61 17 .117
.. II 61 .481

Transactions

Gl

BasebaU

4.1
6
7j

ArMriun Lnaue

DETROIT TIGERS - Activ1ttd Uoyd
rrom the l ~ ·da~ dis-

9.1
9.1
1l

Mo~ebr, C)Jtfldder,

ableA! lilt.

.......,1.

c~mand •I
ppd.. r•ln
Torm&amp;o 3, MU...\Ik.. t

D&lt;uvill, ODaao o

Mi.nDac.U 10, Seatlle 5

New Yod: 7, 1Canau Oty3

B•ltim«c I, Tc.us'
Ooltluld 3, c.Jifomia 2

Today'a games

Football

aod oao I·

Nationll Footblll Laauc
ATLANTA FALCONS - Waived
John Sc:ully, perd; Bob Ouillian, Nn ·
nin&amp; back; Willdm Even, cornerback;
JamCI Goodo, lincb.cker; Pn Jaduon,
wide tudva-, and Emi.c
dcfcn~vc.
linanu. Ploccd 1om Radc, lincbocUi ....
the . .cn .... phyticaUy·unabk-to-paionn
lioL

J) al . _ (llaltdll 1-l and Clan&lt;M
IJ..I~ l, l:IS IU"•

Milwtu.kce (Ple11c 1-~) It Toronto
(Key l H). 7o3l p.m
Dr:troil (Leiter S-2) I I CtDciJO (AJVIJ"CZ
I ~.l oll p.m.
""'v ... (P. ,.... HJ&gt;" Kanau c;.,
(Sobcdt&gt;p I-6).Ul p.m.
Se.uJe (Kruc:F IG-~) 1t Minnuou
(Toperu 101). Ul p.m.
8dtimore (Rhode~ 0·0) at Te1u (X.
D"""' I.'J). I.ll pm.
Callforni1 (G nhe 1· 4) al 01lr.hnd
(Moore 11 -7), I

l..oa:'n•

BUFFALO BILLS - W1ived Rick
pw~ICr, Atnir RuW, nmnina blc:.k,
Md CniJ Hcndricluon, olfet~~ivc tact1e.
Pt.cc:d Brent Collin.l, llnc:baclr.er; on the
injund ........ liJL Plocod Chris H~c, detcnmc bldl:; cr1 lhc ptl)'lieally-\ll\lbJ.c.t.o-

Tuletl,

om p.m.

Thursdlly'• gamn

paform lior.

Cle•el1nd (Kina S-1) •t lodoft (Gar diner 5-4),l:M p.m.
Seatllc (DeLuei• 10-1) 1t MinMiou
(Morril lS -9), 1:1Sp.m.
Cdifomi• (Finley 1~ · 6) It Oakland
(Welch 10-1), ) :IS p.m .
Milwtukec (Ausutt 9-5) at Toronto
(h11n CAwnan 4-2), 7:3S p.m.
T eus (Jolt Gu:tman 1-S) at K.anua
Ctty (i\qu111o (). 2), &amp;:35 p.m.

CLEVELAND BROWNS - Wal•t&lt;l
Roy GrHn, wide rtcel•tr, 1nd Ku
Reewa, olfet~~~lvc lhwtnan.
DAU..AS COWBOYS - Waived D1·
mon M•)'l, wide: rcc:ci.Ya"; P1ul Frazier,
noUns t.ck; Don s~. dctcn&amp;ivc ~~·
and Regie: Cooper, Unt.back.cr; Willie
8n:q)ILOG, otrawive linan.~n, IJid Kcil.h
Po.rc, dc:fa.in end. PlKcd Kevin Hun., lindNdLu, mel Teny Bolc:a, NMinJ
bck, cw:~ lhc ro~UYD-nOn·(ooc!MU injury
liiL Pba:d Xcith Jonc., nuW~~a back, c.
tbc ........pto,.;..Ily...,bl....,.pafonn·

Major league leaders

lin. ~'bud Michael Brooks. wlay, lAd
Undrl kftuon, n.tnnin&amp; beck; on injured

Nallonal League
BAITING - T. Gwynn, San Dleao ,

-~
DENVER BRONCOS - Wai ved
Mchin Br~~a.on. ~ Ra Dc:milon,

.313, J a~e, St. Louis, .317 ; Pmdleuln, At·
lanta , .3J"7: W Clark, San F11nci.u:o,
.314: Morrb, Cl nd nn•tl, .JLJ; Bonlli.J..
Pllbburah, .313; Butler, Lot Antdet,

lincbaro:kcr; ChriJ Vcdutln, tipt md ;
5wo IIana
MoColl,tl!'cnoivc
linemen; Blab E&amp;or aa4 Tony Alford,
n~nninJ bub; Tim luUworU!, Curti•
a.t.ytiel4, Emcn Pric:•u:r tn.4 Norell

..r-

3 11.

RU NS - Outl er. Lns Anaelea , 13:
Sandberg. Ch icaao. &amp;I ; Johnson, New
York , 17 : Gan t. Atlanta, ?5 ; BonUia,
Plltsburgh, 7.5; 0. Smith, SL Louis. ?3:

....... -

Pendleton, Atlanta, ?2
RBI - W C1uk, San Franciaco, 95:
Bondi, PIU1burah, It; John1on, New
York, &amp;1; DawlOn, Ch.ieago, 78; Gtnt, Atllnll, 77 ; Bonill•, flttaburah, 77; McGriff, San Dicso. n .
lOTS - T. Gwynn, San Qieao. 15_9;
Butler. U. Anv-Jes. 142; J01e, St.Lnu11,
116; Gnu, Oue~go, 135; W. Clatk, San
FnnciM:o. 133; Bonilla. Pillsbui'Jft, Lll ;
Sudberl. Chiaso. 112.
DOUBLES - Jose . St. Loui1. 36:
Bonlll-, Pllbburah. 34; Gant. AU.nu.
77; McReynolds. New York, II: Morrll,
Clndaw•ll,l6; Sabo, Clndnnall,lf;
Pendleton. Athntl , 25; T. Gwynn, S1n

[);'lo.).l.
TRIPLES - unklor&lt;l, SL Louis. 12;

......... .... Hcpny,&lt;pW"·

...-, llollln ......, ..r Daua ,....,.,
dercnm-e linemen; PJ'IId F.,.pc. coma"·
buk, and Trtc:)' Bm~JQI , pi-"'IUR:c:r.
P\aml Jim Jurip,
Yetk, on in·
juml . - . .. ""' Alphonoo c.nsa, d..

..,....c:

fawive eM., on RIICIVc-ph)'llaUJ-unabkto pafomt lia.
bETJtOIT LIONS - W11ved Jerry
K.ll.ldc: pi
BAY PAcateas - w.....
ldJFt~c, ........
INiliANAPOUS COLn - A&lt;qw ....
Robc:tl Tykl-,li&amp;hl end, f101n '-1M AAaelca Raiden lor I ruw" •-.di.telc.c4
dRA pd&lt;. Woiv..S s_, - · ..W.
rocci:va. Pl..ced Tvn BMOG. tip md, on

oRieN

iniJ('tNm11TY CHIEFS - Ploccd
Stump Mitchell, runnin&amp; bact; Clifford
Chuhon and Man: Munlotd, lincblcken,
on in)wtd racrvc. Sianed Bury Word ,
runn1n1 back, to 1 two-you contJ1ct.
W1ived Lew B1mt1 , wide receiver ;
Richud Bell, runn.in&amp; btc.lr., tnd Chril
DuM, linebacker.
1

WS ANOELI!S RAIDERS - Ploccd
0rq Bell, nmninl bacll, and Todd Poot.
afferuive ptrd, on the waivcd· injum:l
Lilt. Waivod Mtteul Wilton, defauive
blci; F.m.,uel Kitll and Mlloolm Showell, dcfniva e11da;
Rothe:r, 6e!en~ive

,.im

tackle; Bruce Kloatormann tnd Tim
Coficl.d, lineblctcn; Jetr Orlm111, orra~ ­
liveJ.uard; Charle~ Youna and Doua
Uoy , nrWna blcka, and D&amp;rrcl Hoppa-,
Keilh Wfi&amp;hl and SLCton Adlma, 'Wide toccivcn. Pllced Mike Wile, dctallive ond,
on tho •e:rvo-left camp lilt. Tndai Bob
Tyler, UJht end, to die Jndianapolil Colli

for 1n llndilcl.Clled dtaJ\ pa.

LOS ANGELES RAMS -

Si .. cd

Mi.h McDonald, linebacker. w.,ved
Dau1 Reed, ddcnoivo toclllc; Corwin An·
Lhony, tiJht end; Jeff Hammcnchmidt,
1&amp;fety; Crai&amp; tl&amp;nluykm and ht Tynncc.,
lineblcken ; Dunin Quinton, o((c.mive
ucklo ; Trevor Rytl1, center; Ernie
Thcmpoon, rwminJ bocll, and JdJ Fiddo,
ddauive tiCkle. Placad Jdf Pahuk01, of·
fcn~ivc &amp;lloiJ"d. and K.Uk K.Ukpallick, tia,ht
end, «1 a.o waivod-injwtd JilL

MIAMI DOLPHINS -

Sianed Dan

Mlrino, quarterback, w a five-yuc 00f1 ·
tracL Siplcd MaR: Lo&amp;an, NIVlinl t.ck,
and Shawn Loo. aack.k, lO 01'\00)'CU coo·
uact1. Wa.i* Stephen ScoucG, fullback;
Michael Tidoy, Uaht ond; Mike Pncloc,
tackle; Ciaco Richard, runnina back;
Rich1rd Buchanan, wido rcc:cin:r; Tom
TOlh, Juud; Dw1yno PGham, lincbtc:lr.a;
Ric.lr. Floocc, liOICI t.ack.le; Tun Brown 111d
Scou Miller, dctcnive en•, and AI~
Onnt and Tom Balcom, ufcli.CI. Pbc:cd
Bran Fullwood, rwuUna bact; Ned Bolcu,linebackcr, and Jamw Paailh, Ll~
on lito ,.,,.i&lt;:allycunablo-t&lt;&gt;perform lioL

MINNESOTA VIKJN&lt;lS - Si.ncd
Rc.&amp;iD Rulhnd , cornc.tbad; . Wasved

OW Thomo. Brady Piaroe and Ptu.l Boncdelli, otfen~iva liacmcn ; Kc:n St.ilb,
urety; Willilm Kirksey 1nd Mu
Stephen•. Hncb1ckcn; Cui Mim• and
Tony Jonca, comcrblcb; Jamct Pruitt,
Dam:n HuJ.ha and Anthony Owcru, wide
rec:civan; Scou Roaaan, David Wen ·
brooD 1nd Scevo BcfJ, dc(cnlivc linCI·
men ; Dnd Willhm•, punter; Chri1

Coduano, cruartcrboclt, 01d Pnnk GriiJin,
tiJhtond .
NEW ORLI!ANS SAINTS - Ploocd
SteVCI Tnpilo, o{fcn~ivc auud; Rogic:
Wi.J.li&amp;nu, corncrt.ck, and Demcr~d Win·
uon, linebacker, on injured re1orvo .
Wahul Tim Man01, lullback; 8tcrU Orilfith, on'cnti'f'O Llcklc; Todd Whoc.ler, c:cn·
ter; Nne Bolton, wido rocciver; Leon
Cole, dcfen1ivc lincm1n, 1nd Bobby
Pooc. .....crt.ocll.
NEW YORX JETS - W1ived One
Zaw1tson, auud, and Pepper lcnkin1,
linoblc.kcr.
NEW YORK OIANTS - Woivcd Ted
~. tiJht ond. Plaood &lt;l&gt;..S Thonon.
linc:bac:kcr, on lnju.rod

_....o.

PHD..ADELPfiiA EAOLES - Ploocd

National l.eopo
ATLANTA BRA VHS - Actin ted
David Jultict,. C)Jtfielder, fran the l.S-day
diJ.Ibled liat. Sent Jeny Willard, catcher,
to ltic:hmmd or the lntetn~tional Laaue.
NEW YORK METS - Placed Hubie
Broob. oudielder, M the I S.d1y disabled
lilt. Re.e1Ued Chri1 0011.nela, infielder,
born Tidewater of the International
Lul"4

Tuesday' a ~&lt;ores

Cl&lt;fttand (Swt- 1-11

Se~ttle,

181; Clemens, 801ton, 164; Ryan, Tex11,
1.5.2; McDowell , Chica&amp;o. 141; Candioui,

GB

Pet.
.110
.129
.100
.466
.462
.401

W L Pet.
.. 72 49 .191
.. 67 53 .IS!

Minn&lt;o&lt;&gt;u
Chicaao
Oakl•nd
Seanle
Kanut City
Tuu
Califomil

tle, 33; Pabneiro, Te.ua, 33; C. Ripke11,
Baltimcm, 33; R. Alomat, Toronto, 32;

.612. 3.20.
STRIKEOUTS - R. JoMs0r1,

Wettern Dl•ldon

T..m

~Ulw1 '.lk.ee, 163 ;

Minn....,.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Tnmnto

Molitor,

PffCHINO (II derisions) - Henneman , Dc.troit, 9-2, .8 II, 2.72; Erickson,
16-1 • .762, 296: Klink. Ook ·
l~nd, 9-1, .7SO, 3.77; Finley, Californi1,

(Kilol· 7). loll p.m

T..m

II; Si~, Te.ua, 14; 1\om~ , Chi«Sc;"·

82; White, Toronto, 12; C. Ripkm, Ba.lumore, BO.
RBI - Fieldet, Detroit, 102; Thotnu,
Chic1ao . 93; Cu1eco, O•kland, 92:
C1rter, Toronto, II; Ju1n Gonulez.
Tuu, IS; Siem, Teus, 15; Joyner, Cali·

ITII.r, Toronto, l6: Polonia, California, 36;
Cuylc:r, Detroit, 31 ; White, Toromo, 28;
Franco, Tuu, 24.

PltUburall (Z. S.,llh It·') al
Philadelphia (R•mn J..4), 12:3$ p.m.

L
l4
l7
19
63
64
71

8~, 8~ .137; Fruco, Tuu_, .136:
Molitor, Milw1ukee, .313; C. R1pken,
B..ttimore. .329; Puckett, Mlnnesot~, .121:
Ken Grillcy Jr., Sc.attle. .326.
RUNS - Molitor . Milwaukee, !J6;
Palmeiro, Teus, 91 ; CtnltCO, Oa.k..lmd,

Palmeito, Tau, 162; C. Ripkcn, BtltiMinneaou, IS5; Sietn, Te111, 149; fr111co, Tells, 143; Sn,
New Yo.S., 14 1.
DOUBLES - C1rter, Toronto, 34;
Doga, Botton , 34; Ken Griffey Jr., Seat-

phla (DeJa• 9-4), 7:3! p.m.
San FranciK'o {Black 9-11 ) at Hounon
(] lamilch 7-8), 1:35 p.m

W
.. 66
.. 64
.. 19
..II
.. II
.. 49
.JI

P1lmeito, Texu, .338;

rnon; 15&amp;; Puck.ea.,

(K ip GrOd S-4), 7:35p.m.
Chica1o (Sutcl.iffc 3-4) at Montreal
(SabholJ 2-S), 7:35p.m.

Eallem Dhillon

Amortran Lea1u•
BAITING -

HITS -

Today's games

S•n FnndJco (Budc::u 9-7)

Phibddphi1, 23; Fr~nco, New Yor:i., 22;
Ria,hetti. S111 frncilco, 19; Lc.ffau, San
Diqo, II; Ben:nauer, Allan~o~,l7.

fomia, 14.

San Diero (Boom 1- 1) .a Lot An&amp;ele.
0 lonhiK&lt; +2). Hl5 p.m.
St. LOJi• (B. Smith 10-7 •nd Conniet
1-0) 11 New Yod (Ccxlc: 10-9 and Fernandez()..)), 2, S:IOp.m.
/\Ilana. (Rcynoto l-1) al Clnelnnall

J

since -Rijo and third baseman Chris
Sabo got into a fight on the bench
in San Francisco. Rijo had repeatedly complained about the Reds'
uninspired play, saying it looked
like they 'd given up.
The outcome of the first game
Tuesday temporarily moved
Cincinnati 7 1/2 games behind Los
An~les and gave Rijo a little hope.
'If you play hard every day,

Scoreboard

In the majors ...

;

Angeles in the National League
West.
The Reds won the opener 8-2
behind Joe Oliver's five RBis ,
stretching Cincinnati's winning
streak to four games. Jose Rijo (94) allowed five hits over 7 2/3
innings and came away pleased
with his team 's progress.
The defending World Series
champions had won all four games

**'

........

Winrrcd Brymt., dclcruivc Old, on injured

PITTSBURGH STE!LIRS W1IY1d A,J. Jenll.lna, ddenal.-. end;
Andre Joatl, linebacker; Richard
Byrd, auard, aid Rich Drtyton, wide
rteelver.
SAN DIEOO CHAKOERS - Ooimed
Mike Wilcher, linebacker, orr WliVCI"I
from !he Lo1 An&amp;ele• R1m1 . Wlivcd
Dean Brown, orfcnlivo lincmtn; Ron
Heard, Troy K.ylu •nd Elliot! Searcy,
wide roccivel'l; Dunc1n Buramncilter
llld Rcgto McOill, runninJ bow; Shone
Elliol~ locllle; LeAndnl Anderson, Rich
Kaufu1i and CraiJ L11hley, Gelen1ive
endJ; Mike Davil end Alana Fllilananu,
linebacllcn; ~ M&lt;:C.U and Kim Me·
Cloud, eomerb1clr.1, and John Wyche,
Way. Pllcod Dtvid .loncl, wick receiver,
and O.rryl lcnldnt, otreruivc Llclle. on
lfte phy•icaUy·lln•bl•to-perform hat .
Placed Tury Beaurord, pard, and Derrick K.elaon, defau:ive bact. Cl1 injun:d rc-

""e.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS -

Waived
Bubba Pari•, orten1i'f'e tackle; De•n

ColiJuU&lt;, certt«; Rielly Si&amp;lor ond 81011
Wiooc, auarda; Oat)' CAlmplOO, Polo Man·
dley aM Bobby S~uatuu, widerueiv~ ;
'"""' Oray, runtWIJloacll; Ralph Manlrli,
querterbeck; Dill Oi"lyaon, Stacey Havey
tnd Ovil Wuhi.nJlon, lincblc.ten; Mil·
ford IIA&gt;t!IC. Orq Iocl0&lt;11 and John Shan·
non, defen~i•e end1; Kent Wells. no1e
uckle; 81\1Cf Plummer 1nd LoWJ R.id·
dicll, ddauivo ba&lt;b, and Darryl Jnarom.
aiJ&gt;t ald. Plocod Bury llcllal, punta, ..,
thcohylically·~Nbleo.,.paform lia.
S~AITLE SEAHA~KS - Waived

AltOI'I Rutf&amp;n ud Hutan Dtvil, comet·
bleb; Mumy Oamu, dcfwive tackle;
Cecil WtloGn, fullbadt; Erilt Rin10&lt;r1 ond
Richard NewbHI, lincbaclr.en ; Chrh
Bromley 1nd Turnell Sinu, orten1ive
auacdt; Cbril Dyko, offen1ive tatlr..l~ ;
Howard Ouw, quatterb&amp;c*, 1nd Cwua
M&lt;Mam», Dcnrin B..,.... ond Jdln ford,

wiOcftiC!Ciivm.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS Claimtd Cbud&lt; Wcothmpoon, runnina
back off waiva1 from lhe Philadelphia
Ea&amp;l~- Pllud Mark JtobiNon, ut~y.
ani lend)'" Odmel , center, on injured rcoavc.

WAIHINOTON REDS IONS - Placed
Dtvi4 Oulled&amp;e. defensive back; and
l.ecnan McCiriSel1. wide ralriver, on in·
jure4 rcHrve. Wtived loa Leverenz,
levin Woollollt, Ted

R~crw,

ond lock

•• •

a

H&amp;R BLOCK

For More Information Call :

H&amp;R BLOCK

Ba....,, Carl

Ha~,

ond Vicror Cahooot,

.....
bocl; 0..FrueaKid&lt;
ando.-.
Billy ley~.rwminl
ddao·
,;.. ...., Nao&amp; Hill. -~~elk, ""'

TYLENOL
GELCAPS

ONLY

$449

TYPING
PAPER

ONLY

99(

RUSSELL STOVE
FUDGE
8 OZ. - Reg. '2.95

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities CommisSion of
Ohio has set lor public hearing
Case No . 91 -102-EL·EFC, to
review the fuel procurement praclices and policies of Columbus
Southern Power Compa~y. the
ope1ation of its Electric Fuel Componenl and relaled matters. This
hearing is schedulEd to begin at
10 00 a.m. on September 16.
t991 , at the offices of the Public
Utili~es CommisSion, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio
43266-0573.

ONLY

$199

STENO
BOOKS
80 Sheets - Reg. 79&lt;

All i~terested parties will be given
an opportunity to be heard. Furtner mlormation may be obtained
by contacting the Commission at
the above address.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF OHIO By Gary E.
Vigorito, Secretary.

T"un lt4odly ani , . , _ layun, offao·
•iw

"'*"'·

OFF

Hcu.aon. I ; F1nley, HOUlton, I; Oriasom.
Monu.l. 7; Van Slyke, Plttaburah, 7;

ANY PRESCRIPTION

W. Chrk. Stn Franci1co, 6; Kruk,
Phibdclphia, 6; Ctnd•ele, Houlton, 6;

LIMIT 1 PER (USTOMER

T. Gwynn, San Diego, II ; L.

~alez,

Felder. Sill Flll1ciJco. 6.
HOME RUNS - G1nt, Atl1nt.t , 27;
Johnton. N•w York, 26; McGriff, S•n
o;'l•· 25; Mau Wtlliam4. S.. Fnnc:ioco,
24· W. Clark, Stn Fnaci1co, 24; K.
Milchell. San FnnciiCo, 24; O'Neill,

Exalr• 1/31/91 - Swishlr-Loltse. Pharmacl

Clodnnoll, Zl.

'

STOLEN BASES - Niaoot, AOoniO,
64; Gri,.om, Moaue.al, S2; DeShielda,
Moo11&lt;0~ 44; Col emu, New Yodt. 37;
Boodl. Pllllbufllt, 35; BUller, t... An·

I

illltli;;l~

PrTOIING (11 Dodliatl) - Carpcn·

m. 4.50: Drnms. Son

""· SL Louis. 8-l . .

Philodclphio. 9-4, .692, 3.2.5; Rljo,
Cln.dnaall, 9-.C, ·"2, 2."; T•lln,

'""'""'"'
.U7,
2.31;2.94;
Jl .
t.oo An 1 e~...1-4,
15-l
• .6.52.
01a.....

A~-. 11·1, .612. 2.2'1.

STRIKEOUTS - Cone. New York ,
Ill; G. Maddua. Cltica.,, t47; Gooden,
New Yorlt . 14l: Gloviaa, Adlflll. 144;

~-

~

,_

Ch.-lfll RHtt ,_ A Ph.
HlllrAing, R.Ph .
Mon fhru £.,,, a ··.~o e .m to 9 :00 f1·" '
Sund~r" 1l' :Ct. e .m. to 4:00 p m
PA£8CAIPTIONS
rH ~" &gt; :'956
E. Main
Frlencly Service
,,."""" '· fHJ

o,.. We• Nights ' til 9

. . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _..,.._....,.........._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ......_

~~~--_

. . . ._ _ _ __

.... t....

,

:• • •

r d

, KICKS UP DUST -The Atlanta Braves'
·- David Justice makes Reds second baseman Bill
: Doran eat some of the dust be kicked up in the
: process of sliding into second on a sacrifice fly

NL gameS ..
beat Piusburgh 6-5 and Montreal
bc)at Chicago 4-2. St. Louis' game
at New York was postponed by

niin.

Giants 9, Astros 3
·Will Clark had a little incentive
against the Astros. He wanted to
shut up Houston's fans.
: "They were all over me," Clark
said. "They had a blast."
.· Clark had Jhe last blast Tuesday
night. He hit a game-tying double
irt the sixth inning, then broke a 3-3
tiewithagrandslamintheseventh
a~ San Francisco won 9-3 and
ended a three-game losing streak.
: ''When I came in alter the flfsl
inning, they were cursing and I told
them to keep it clean," Clark said.
"Any time you 're at a visiting park
. yOu expect some of that, but with
kids all around I don't like to hear

cUrsing.''
: With the score tied at 3-3, Dave
Anderson singled and Jimmy Jones
( ~- 8) walked Kevin Bass and
Willie McGee . Rob Malli coat
r~ Jieved and Clark hit his second
pitch for his third career grand
siam. It gave him 23 hits in his last
SZ at-baiS, a .442 average.
• "After! hit the grand slam, they
&lt;!ld n' t say a word," " Clark said.
' ~They just hung their heads."
· Kevin Mitchell homered on the
nex t pitch, chasing Matlicoat. It
also was the 24th hom e run for
Mitchell.
· '"They've got a heck of a lineup ," Astros manager Art Howe
said. " They arc always one swmg
away from changing the outlook of
3game." ·
Kelly Down s (10-4) won hi s
eighth consecutive decision sinc e
~llnc 5, pitching one inning of one-

by Brian Hunt~r-in the firth inning of the nightcap of Tuesday night's Nadonal League double·
header in Cincinnati, which the Braves won 5-1.
(AP)

•_.:.(c_o_nu_
·n_ue_d_fr_om_Pa..::.ge_4..:...)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
hit reli ef. Jeff Brantley pitched run homer in the ninth.
three innings for his lith save.
Barry Bonds' RBI si ngle gave
Piusburgh a 5-4 lead in the ninth,
Dodgers 6, Padres 4
Ramon Martin ez ended his but Dale Murphy led off the bouom
three-game losing strea k despi te of the inning with a single off Stan
leavi ng th e game with a brui sed Belinda (3-4) and, two outs later,
Than hit hi s seventh home run .
pitching arm .
Eddie Murray and Darryl StrawSteve Searcy (2-1) pitched twoberry homered off Greg Harris (4- thirds of an inning for the victory.
4) and Kat Daniels cclcbraled his
Expos 4, Cubs 2
Rookie Chris Haney (2-4) gave
28th birthday with a home run off
up two runs and six hits in six
Jose Melendez.
Martinez (15- ~) led 5-3 in the innings.
Andres Galarraga had three hits,
sixth when Jack Hu wd ll ined a
pitch off the bicep of h1 s right arm . brcalcing a 2-2 tic with an RBI sinManinez left immediately, having gle in the sixth off Bob Scanlon (56).
allowed four runs and fiv e hils.
Mel Rojas. the Expos· third
Jay Howell got three outs for his
pitcher, threw 2 1/3 innings for his
13th save.
first save.
Phil lies 6, Pirates 5
Dickie Thon hit a two-out, two-

Dolphins sign Marino;
Giants' QB still unknown
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Football Writer
The Miami Dolphins have one
first'string quanerback, are pefectly content with him, and are willing
to give him the largest financial
package in the NFL.
The New York Giants have two
fir st-string quarterbacks and are
trying lO figure out if they can use
them both in the same game.
While the Dolphins were signing Dan Marino to a contract extension expected to pay him $25 million over five years, Giants' head
coach Ray Handley was once again
delaying his announcement on his
starter - Phil Simms or Jeff
Hostetler. Marino's new contract,

announced at a Miami news conference, includes a $3 million signing bonus that added to his $1.6
million salary this year will bring
his earnings to $4.6 million.
$600,000 more than San Francisco
49crs' Joe Montana is due to make
this year.
" I didn't want to make the quarterback siluation out to be a circus," Handley said. ''I'm trying to
determine how to come out of this
without the perception that there's
a loser here."
(See NFL on Page 6)

dealt to Oakland on July 31.
Darling (3-0) aiJowed six hits and 1wo runs in 7
213 inning s. Rick Honeycutt got the last out in the
eighth and Dennis Eckersley pttched the ninth for his
35 th save.
Langston. (15-7) gave up three runs, one earned.
Dave Henderson had an RBI single in a two-run
third inning.
Orioles 8, Rangers 6 -Glenn Davis, playing in
his second game after missing nearly four months
with a neck injury. matched his career high with five
RBis. Davis doubled in two runs in the first inning
and tied the game with a three-run homer in the fifth .
Leo Gomez put the Orioles ahead ro stay in the
sixth with a solo homer off Wayne Rosenthal (1 -2).
Dave Johnson (4-4) pitched four scoreless innings
of relief for the win.
Blue Jays 3, Brewers 1 - Todd Stolllemyre
pitched seven s1rong innings.
Stottlcmyrc (12-5) allowed seven hits, including
B.J. Surhoff's solo homer. Duane Ward pitched the
eighth and Tom Henke worked the ninth.
Toronto got all the runs it needed in the first off
Chris Bosio (9-9) on Pat Borders' sacrifice fly and
Manuel Lee's RBI single.
Tigers 5, White Sox 0 - Walt Terrell pitched a
six-hitter for his second shutout in 10 days.
Terrell (9- 10) walked three and struck out four.
Lloyd Moseby homered in lhc first inning off
Charlie Hough (7-7).
Yankees 7, Royals 3 - New York scored four
runs in the second, three during a botched double
play.
The Yankees loaded the bases with none out in the
second off Mark Gubicza (7-7). Kevin Maas then hit
a sharp grounder to second baseman Terry Shumpert,
who opted to try for the double play at second bu1
threw the ball into left field as all three runners
scored.
Scott Sanderson (13-8) allowed three runs in five
innings.

Leonard leaves dad's shadow, finds peace at OU
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Early
on, Ray Leonard Jr. fi~ured out that
he wouldn't follow h1s father into
the ring.
"I tried boxing when I was 5,"
Leonard said. "When I got hit kind
of hard , I thought football would be
the way to go. You get to wear
pads."
So instead of trading left jabs,
Leonard is running pass panerns
with other Ohio University freshman football players.
Leonard said he chose football
because of the added protection,
and that's the same reason he opted
for the relative obscurity of OU
football.
Athens offered protection from
the stifling pressure of being the
son of one of the world's most
famous athletes, he said.
"I looked at a lot of different
schools: Georgia, Georgia Tech,"
Leonard said. "I decided to come
to Ohio because it's quiet. kind of
away from everything, but il's not
too small.
"I wanted to get away from my
father's shadow. I wanted to malce
my own name.
"I felt some schools wanted me
because of who my dad was. But I
knew that was going to happen. I
started looking at schools before I
talked to coach (OU assistant Bob)
Proctor. He seemed to really care
about me as a person, and I felt
they wanted me as an athlete, not
just for the publicity."
So, Leonard - who will also
run track for the Bobcats - decided in March to go to OU. He and
his mom, Juanita Wilkinson
Leonard, visited . Later, his dad
checked it out.
Head coach Tom Lichtenberg
didn't know for sure that Leonard
was coming until he saw Sugar Ray
on Arsenio Hall's television show
last month.
It was the only time Lichtenberg

learned he had a recruit by watching national television.
"Arsenio asked him how the
family was, and he said his son was
going to go to Ohio University,"
Lichtenberg said.
So far. Lichtenberg likes wh~l
he sees.
"Let's face it," Lichtenberg
said. " If he was a super player, he
might be somewhere else. But he
has good speed, good hands and
you know he •s an athlete. Those
are the kind of kids you like to
work with.''
Leonard, 5 feet 9, 165 pounds,
said he had a frustrating high
school career.
As a junior he was all set to be a
halfback in the wishbone, but an
injury to the other halfback
scrapped that plan. His team went
to a power game and Leonard was
reduced to a sub.
Last year, his team went to the
run-and-shoot, and as a halfback

Leonard carried the ball only about
five limes per game. But he averaged 7.9 yards per carry (with six
touchdowns). caugh1 19 passes for
392 yards and fiv e touchdown s,
and ran back three kicks for scores.
Leonard said, " I felt they lo st
confidence in me. They sa id I
couldn't catch the ball. I fe el here I
have something to prove.''

DOWNING C91LD1
MUWN MUSSER

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111 S.CIIId St., P111111roy

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preview August 23
The SVAC football preview will
begin with the Oak Hiii-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 6:45 p.m., and
Symmes Valley and Eastern will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Southwestern
and the host Bobcats will play in
the finale at8: 15 p.m.
Ticket prices are $3 for adults
and $2 for children.

A. JACKSON
BAILES, O.D.
·11 0 MECHANIC ST.
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
992·3279

Sports briefs
Tennis
SCHENECTADY, N.Y. (AP)
- Second-seeded Sergi Bruguera
defeated Jason Stoltenberg 4-6, 62, 6-3 in the fust round of the OTB
International Open.

SIGN UP EXTENDED
Sign up for the BIG BEND YOUTH
FOOTBALL LEAGUE PLAYERS AND
CHEERLEADERS will eXtend thru
August 26th.

acloo,J4;.Unkford, SL Lcuil, l9.

Fnncisco, 10-4, .714, 3.26; Hum, San
OieJO, 14-6, .700, 3.11; De.Juu1 ,

ninth inning of Tuesday night's American
League game in Arlington, Texas, which the
Orioles won 8-6. (AP)

LEa

Bn4ford. linebocbn; Keith C.uh, tilht

end; Charlcl BeU, eomerback; W1fier

By The Associated Pre5s
Scott Erickson became the major leagues' fust 16game winner with a liuJe help from his friends. Mark
Langston might have 16 wins, too - if he had Erickson's friends .
Erickson, struggling to find the form he had
before straining his right elbow in June, gave up five
runs, three earned, in 5 1/3 innings agai ns\ Seallle.
But he got more than enough offensive support to
improve to 16·5 as Minnesota beat the Mariners 10-5
on Tuesday night
Langston, pitching on his 31st birthday. was much
sharper than Erickson, allowing only five hit s in
eight innings. But an error led to a pair of thirdinning runs and the California left-handcr took the
loss in Oalcland's 3-2 victory.
Erickson (16-5) and the Twins both say he' s
healthy. even though he has a 6.88 ERA in his eight
starts since coming off the disabled list.
"That's the best arm speed he's had since the AllStar brealc," pitching coach Dick Such sai d.
Luckily for Erickson, the Twins have scored 51
runs in those eight starts since his return , enabling
him to go 4-2. He's aiJowed 13 earned runs in his last
nine innings, but didn't seem concerned about hi s
struggles against the Mariners.
"I got a few balls up and they hit them, " Erickson
said. "My problems are more mechanical now. I've
got no pain, no soreness. I'm happy. The velocity is
coming back.· ·
Kent Hrbek had a three-run double for the Twins
and Mike Pagliarulo singled in the go-ahead run in
the fourth off Erik Hanson (7 -6) as the Twins moved
4 1/2 games ahead of second-place Chicago in the
West.
In other AL games, it was Baltimore 8, Texas 6;
Toronto 3, Milwaukee I; Detroit 5, Chicago D. and
New York 7, Kansas City 3. Cleveland and Boston
had a doubleheader postponed by rain.
Athletics 3, Angels 2- Langston was outpitched
by Ron Darling, who 's found new life since being

"I

you've got great chance," Rijo pitchers in the lineup when I'm hit- downed Houston 9-3, Los Angeles
said. ''I'll tell you what, I think ting .150, and we can't~ that."
beat San Diego 6-4, Philadelphia
we're walcing up a little bit. The
In other games, San Francisco
(See NL on Paae $)
media we got (over the fight) really
helped. We were just going through
the motions. We weren't playing
like we ' re capable. Now, we're
playing up to our level."
Smaltz could see that. He did
something about iL
The right-hander allowed just
five singles in the second game,
going the distance for the second
consecutive start. Smoltz (9- 13)
retired the last I 0 batters in order to
drop the Reds 8 112 games back,
matching their biggest deficit of the
season.
" We got the split and that killed
• tncrP:t c,t • ycJII• 1. 11 kllowl,~(lcJI"
their momentum," Smoltz said.
Smoltz has been gaining
• Ohi:111 1 . 1 n~:W r, kll l
momentum since the All-Star
•
t
;
(JII
V
f
~
rlll
~
flf flfllf ·'. i-~ lr)f .. JI I( H I'
break, going 7-2. He's won four of
his last five starts, 1he only loss
coming in a ·1-0 victory last Thursday by San Diego.
Smoltz has allowed just four
earned runs in his four August
starts.
"I'm just confident," he said.
·'In the last two games they've gotten one run, but I felt they
shouldn't have gouen any. It's a
good feeling knowing you're going
to go out and malce your pitches.''
Reds rookie Mo Sanford (1-2)
failed to malce his best pitches in
the clutch for the second consecu611 EAST MAIN
992·6674
POMEROY
tive start.
IICII117f·l. . . MM
Sanford walked Otis Nixon and
Jeff Treadway on eight pitches to
open the sixth inning with the score
1-1. One out later, Ron Gant pulled
a two-run double down the Jhird
baseline, and Greg Olson drove
him home with a single for a 4-1
advantage. Nixon added a sacrifice
fly in the ninth.
Sanford had let a 1-0 lead slip
away in the fifth on Rafael Belliard's two-out RBI single, and he
was still fuming over it when he
took the mound for the sixth.
"I lost my concentration in the
sixth because of what happened in
the fifth." Sanford said. "I've got
to show more maturity by not
doing thai. I'm still learning.'
Sanford's inexperience decided
Jhe second game. A blister on
Steve Avery's pill:hing hand helped
decide the frrsl.
Avery (13-7) left the game in
EXTRA STRENGTH
the middle of the fifth inning with a
Buy SO Get 50 FREE
blister on his index fmger. It's the
third time this season he's been
forced out of a game by a blister.
"It would have been a different
game if I didn't get the blister," he
said. "There· s no skin left on it. I
felt it when I was warming up in
the ftfth."
The Reds were up I -0 at that .
point on Oliver's RBI ground oul.
Avery gave up a run-scoring double to Chris Sabo and an RBI single to Glenn Braggs in the fifth
before deciding he couldn't pitch
anymore. Randy S1. Claire relieved
60 SHEETS - REG. s1.69
and served up a two-run double to
Oliver, putting the Reds ahead 5.0.
Oliver added a two-run homer in
the seventh, his seventh, for his
most productive game of the season. The catcher came into the
game with a .211 average and just
20 RBis.
"If I don't get hits and drive in
runs, I'm not helping the ttam,"
Oliver said. "It's like having two

L·~ !

Twins pound Ma~iners . 16-5;
Athletics edge Angels 3-2

• )/

wednesday, August 21, 1991 •:•.

Reds, Braves capture wins in Tuesday's doubleheader

r:~

TO SIGN UP CONTACT ONE OF THE FOUOWING:
Dave Jenkins
Gary Mitchell
.
Clarence Molden - 9~2-3374
or after 4:30 p.m.
Uia Roush- 992."3486

·'" '·

Dr. A. Ja.ckson Bailes, Optometrist,
announces the establishment of new office
hours which began August 1, 1991. The
new hours are: Thesday, Wednesday and
Friday-9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and is also
open the first and third Saturdays each
month from 9:00 a.m. to 12 noon.
Dr. Bailes provides total optometric eye
care, fits all types of contact lenses and
provides low vision care. Assignment is
accepted on Medicare; and all major eye
care insurances are honored.
You may phone 99~·3279 or stop by the
office at 110 Mechanic Street in Pomeroy to
set up your appointment.
'

,,

�Wednesday, August 21, 1991
Page-6-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Red Sox rebel against management snub consecutive do~~lehef!ders
By HOWARD ULMAN
AP Sports Writer
BOSTON (AP) - The Boston
Red Sox are rested. Consecuttve
rainouts gave the players two days
off and a chance to strength en
themsci ves for a pennant drive.
Th ey didn't want that energy
drained bv four games m 36 hours.
So they s~agcd a clubhouse rebellion against their own management
for scheduling back-to-back doubl eheaders today and Thursday
against the Cleveland Indians.
Eventually. the team bowed to
those wishes.
Team officicials announced late
Tuesday that only one game would
be played on Thursday at Fenway
at 1:05 p.m. EDT . The_second
game will be played later m Cleveland on an undetermined date, _srud
team spokesman Dick Bresctant.
He said the scheduled change
was made by American Lea~ue
president Bobby Brown. Bresctam
said the s!Jlrting pitchers for Thursda y's game would not be dectded
until early today.
Player representativ~ Man
Young agreed with the deetston to
cance l the doubleheader, saymg:
" It· d be senseless to play the game
just to play this."
.
Earlier in the day, Boston assiStant player representative Roger
Clemens said he hoped .team management would change tts declSlon
and schedule just one game Thursday. Red Sox general partner Ha~­
wood Sullivan, however, had mdicated that was Wllikely. .
. " A lot of fortunate thmgs have
happened to us to get back into this
race to let it go,'' Clemens satd. .
Boston, II 1/2 games behmd
first-place Toronto on Aug. 8,_ts stx
games behind the Blue Jays m the

~as

American League East after winning nine of itS last II games.
k wo hours 28 minutes
fo/k~~o S~x official~ 10 postpOne
Tues da y's night doubleheader
because of a downpour that began
minutes before the scheduled
;t~. The doubleheader was nee~sitated because of Monday nt~ht s
Postponement caused by Hurncane

t~u~~ ~~~g ~ ~~~~t ~fJt

after the postponement
played in ClevelandOct. 7, the day
announced to di_scuss their O!&gt;tions after thedregular season ends, " We've work~ (hard} to gget to 5
and try to convmce team offtctals Young sat .
h
1
that two doubleheaders were too
Playing a doublehea~r Thurs- ~~e ~~~)bd::e\:~~ .J::n~ggo~
much. The players suggested play- day would have mc~ark il:ncisd
to ourballclub"
ing the one game Thursday, then SIOn alsosales atuiFedn;ay
ed the e- watleveland's 38-79 record is the
leavtng for a ntne-game West Sox
wo
ave sav
e pos
.
aU
Coast tr!P starting Friday night in stble expense or travehng to Cleve- wo~~ ~~~:~he . .ust want to get
Cahfomta and conhnmng m Oak- lan~.~~t}.;.es (starting) in 24 the games over ~i~," Young said.
land and Seattle.
. gl
k f
.t h.
"I think the last thing they'd want
If the unplayed game has a bear- hours ts a ot to as o a pt c _mg
.
Oc
ing on the
. race, it could be slaff and an everyday player before to dots play a
t.

Bo~ttook players nearly an hour

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(Continued from Page 5)
: There were a lot of other losers
around the NFL as teams pared
down to the 60-player roster hmtt
In' the 4 p.m. EDT deadline.
: Among the prominent names to
go Tuesday were two Denver
Broncos _ Melvtn Bratton, Denver's s!Jlrting fullback th~ past tW!J
~asons and linebacker Rick Dcnmson, a 10-year veteran. The Atlanta
E'alcons cut another 10-year man,
offensive lineman John ScuUy.
Backup quarterback Steve Pel[uer returned to the Kansas Ctty
Chiefs after walking away a week
ago and told head coach Marty
Schottenheimer he wanted to
resume his career- .
.
: "I've been deahng wtth a personal issue, and now I've ov~ome
that " said Pelluer, who wtll be
abl~ to practice with a roster
exemption.
.
: "Now I'm trying to work !t .
through with Many. I made a dect~on to come back and want !D see
if it's possible."
.
- The 35-year-old S1mms, who
has started for most of his 12-year
career and led the Giants. ~ an. 11-2
start last year before tnJ!lnng a
foot, did not talk to the media.
• Hostetler carried the Giants
~rough two playoff wins and the
Super Bowl victory over the Buffa·
(o Bills.
.
h d
- Aslced if the situauon a
become tiring, he replied: "Yeah."
Asked how he had handled it•. the
·30-year·old Hostetler rephcd:
!'You wait."
• Handley said he hoped to
jnnounce a decision Wednesday.
He said one option would be: to
use both quarterbacks, leavmg
opponents wondering whether to
PJCpare for Simms' dropback style
or Hostetler's scrambling. He said
he got the idea while discussing the
situation wtth hts offenstve coaches.

...

john C. Wolf, D.O.
J\ssociate Professor
'
of Family Medicine

WE'REWORKINGIIARDER•...

In the NFL ...

Falcons - Atlanla placed John
Rade a starting linebacker who
unde~ent knee surgery during the
offseason, on the "physically
unable to perform" list. He would
be eligible to return to pracuce
alter the frnt regular-season game.
• The Falcons released three draft
dtoices - fifth-round pick James
Goode, a linebacker from Oklalioma; ninth-rounder Ernte Log~.
a defensive end from East Carohna· and 12th-round selection Bob
Christian , a running back from
Northwestern.
: jets - Guard Dave Zawatson,
'8ho appeared in aU 16 games last
season after being signed from the
Chicago Bears under Plan B, and
ltee agent linebacker Pepper Jenki!Js were waived.
, Giants - All-Pro line~acker
~;:.awrence Taylor, who sprruned an
ankle against the Jets Saturday
Jiight returned to pracuce..
• The Giants wa1ved ught end
Ted Popson, their II th-round draft
olloice and placing linebacker Chad
Titorson on injured reserve.
Saints _ Two Plan B free
agents, fullback Tim Manoa and
gffensive taekle Brent Griffith w_ere
among six players cut. Starung
juard Steve Trapilo and free agent
&lt;;orncrback Reggie Williams went
on injured reserve. .
.
Eagles _ De£enstve en~ ytmfred Bryant was placed on InJured
reserve.
laced
BrOil COS - The Broncos. P
tiCkle Jim Juriga and defenstve ~nd
Alphonso Carreker on reserve lists
i'ith back injuries. Also cut was
runnin~ llljck Blake Ezor, the former Micigan State star.

Family
Medicine

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i.,

Question: My barber has a limp
because of poho he had as a kid.
Last time I was in his chair having
my hair cut, he mentioned that he
was worried about somethin§ he
called "post-polio syndrome. He
said he could get some of the
symetoms of polio again. Is this
possible after all these years?
Answer: In the 1940s and '50s,
about 20,000 Americans a year
contracted polio. Of course, the
Salk and the Sabin vaccines vinu·
aUy eliminated new occurrenees of
the disease in this country, but
polio is still a health problem for
some 300,000 U.S. Citizens who
conuacted the disease before the
vaccines were available. Some of
these people - the exact percentages aren't really known - are
now finding themselves losing
ground in their battle against the
disease with the reappearance of
old symptoms and the appearance
of new ones.
This post-polio syndrome, as
you correctly termed it, often
seems to appear about 30 years
after the original acute infection
with the virus, although it may
occur anywhere from five to 60
years after the infection. There is
also evidence - according !D Medical Sciences BuUetin - that postpolio syndrome may really be two
separate diseases.
In the fust type, victims begin to
lose the use of muscles that had
ori~inally been affected by polip.
ThiS is probably due to the aging
process. It's known that healthy
people lose a liUie bit of the ability
to use their muscles as they grow
older, but for them the loss may be
hardly noticeable. In polio victims
who have already lost some use of
their muscles,
the additional loss from
can be fliOR~ sigrlificant

1f&amp;~u~~~:

been affected by -the original auack
of polio. We know little about what
caWJCS this condition, but when tissue from the spinal cords of these
individuals is studied, it shows the
same inflammation and degeneration that is characteristic of an
acute infection with polio.
Question: Is there anything my
barber can do to prevent getting
post-polio syndrome? Is there any
treaunent for the condition, if he
does get it?
Answer: Post-polio syndrome
develops more frequently in individuals who had relatively severe
initial illnesses. Those who experienced only mild weakness in one or
two muscle groups are less likely to
develop these later complications.
Since your barber has only a mild
limp, he probably had a mild polio
infection and is therefore at low
risk of developing post·polio syndrome.
Even though there is no way
you can prevent post-polio syndrome and no way to directly treat
it, the~e are things that can be done
to lessen the effects o( this slow
developing disease. From what you
wrote, I assume your barber has no
symptoms of post-polio syndrome.
It still might be a good idea,
though, !D tell him to talk with his
physician ahoul measures he can
rake to improve his oventll health,
since good general health reduces
the normal slow deterioration in the
nerves and muscles that will effect
his polio-weakened muscles the
most. It's particularly important
that he pcrfonn proper exercises to
maintam muscular function and
endurance. Learning to pace his
activities and conserve his energy
is also important
C:'FIUflily Mtdlclnt" Is a Wetldy
c(IIUrnll • .To submit questions,

write fD Jolr;,t C. WoU, D.O., Ohio
wJ!£P.tnii1.:(1P,UtP. '!f q~ttopa~lc
t. M#_Itlclllijti·.(irosillnor Hall;'
Atluil1, OlrlO 45101.")
'

Hayes overall
horse show winner
t'

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1

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I

tt ;l
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'
!

Lori Hayes was the oventll high
poilll in horses, and Brandi HyseU,
the overall high point in ponies, at
the Meigs County Junior Fair 4-H
run horse show.
Both Hayes and Hysell were
awarded saddle pads for capturing
the most points in the fun show.
Prizes for the 12 classes of the
event were donated by Downie
Acres and the Meigs 4-H Pleasure
Riders advisors.
The winners in the various
classes, listed first through third
respectively, were iS follows:
Drunkards paradise for horses
and ponies: Sandi Smith, Jayme

Bats looking for
shelter bug residents

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OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Bats
seeking shelter from recent cool
weather are making their way into
homes, diving at residents and
keeping the Nebraska Humane
Society hopping.
Norman Butters, who manages
an apartment building, said he
received a call Monday from a tenant who complained 50 bats were
holed up between a storm window
and interior window of her apartment
"She said she had about 50 of
them and I couldn't believe it,"
Buuers said. "One or two, yeah,
but 50? They're flying around and
trying to get in."
·
Recent cool nights have brought
more bats indoors and calls to the
humane society have averaged
about 14 a night for two weeks,
Beth Brown, education and development coordioator for the soeiety,
said Tuesday.
The caUs for bat help are more
than in recent years, partly because
old warehouses torn down two
years ago downtown destroyed the
homes of the nocturnal creatures,
Ms. Brown said.
But bats don't have !D be feared
because they don't genentlly attack
unless provoked, she said. They
can carry rabies, but it is rare, Ms.
Brown said.

Miller, and Sarah Craig.
Egg and spoon for horses and
ponies; Lori Hayes, Brandi HyseU,
and Kandi Hysell.
The dollar bill for horses and
ponies: Tiffany Hickel, Donnie
May, Mollie Tobin.
Catalogues for horses: Lori
Hayes, Kandi Hysell, and Sarah
Craig.
Catalogues for ponies: Brandi
Hysell, Tiffany Hickel, and Sandi
Smith.
··
Ride and run for horses: Lori
Hayes, Mollie Tobin, and Kandi
Hysell.
Ride and run for .pones: Brandi
Hysell, Tiffany HiclceJ, and Shea
Meeks.
Potato race for horses: Jayroe
Miller, Holly Milhoan, and Kandi
Hysell.
Potato race for ponies: Brandi
Hysell, Tiffany Hiclcel, and Shea
Meeks.
Boot race for horses and ponies:
Kandi Hysell, Brandi Hysell, and
Jayme M!Uer.
Barrells for horses: Lori Hayes,
Kandi Hysell and Mollie Tobin.
Barrens for ponies: Brani
Hrsell, Shea Meeks, and Tiffany
Hickel.

To celebrate birthday
Mr. and Mrs. Sam (Clara)
Williams of Burlingham will be
celebrating their 73rd Wedding
Anniversary on Saturday, August
24 at ·their borne.
Mr. and Mrs . Williams were
married in Pomeroy on August 24,
1918.

Results of the Boy Scout projects judged for the Meigs County
Junior Fair have been announced.
The troops, scouts receiving
grand and reserve champions and
honorable mention on their projects, and those raking ftrst place
awards were as foUows:
Explorer Post 230: Ellen Watson, reserve; Brian Hoffman, honorable mention.
€hester Troop 235: Sean
Maxey, grand; Larmar Lyons,
reserve; James Clifford, Bobby
Keaton, ftrst places.
Rutland Troop 240: B. J. Workman, grand champion: James
White, a frrst.
Middleport Troop 245: Bobby
Johnson, grand; Chris Chapman,
Willie Johnson, fmts.
Pomeroy Troop 249: Shannon
Staats and Adam Smith, grand
champions; Jason Roush and David
Neutzling, honorable mentions;
Adam White, Michael Frymyer,
Nate Sisson, frrsts.

Warden, Adam Cumming s, and
Matt Hill.
Midleport Pack 245: Ju stin
Roush, grand; other firsts, Brandon
Smith, Andy Kitchen, Joey Cornelius, all one first; and Christopher Gilkey and Seth Rawson, each
three firsts.
Salisbury Pack 246 : Shawn
White, Jamie Boyd, Jeff Michaels,
Billy Young and Daniel Hysell .
each one ftrst; Matt Milhoan, Johnnie Witherell , Andy White, and
John Wilson, each two firsts, with
Wilson taking a reserve champion.
Pack 249: Joseph McCall,
grand; Wesley Thoene, Nicholas
Dcttwiller, reserve; and Wesley
Thoene, two honorable mentions.
Others receiving ftrsLS were Adam
Thomas, Chris Snouffer, Ryan
Well, Ryan Pratt, Josh Hooten ,
Chris Pickens, and Justin Robson ,
all one each; Michael S1acy, Joseph
McCall, Wesley Thoene, Christopher Neece, three firsts; Nicholas
Bowles, two ftrsts.

Chester Pack 235: John Cooke,
three fmts; Wes Crow, two frnts;
Justin Brewer, three firsts; Josh
Will, one first; Chris Krawsczyn,
two first; Jonathan Haggerty, one
frnt; Joey Sisson, one ftrSt; Kevin
Keaton, three firsts; Ryan
Hawthorne, two firsts; Michael
Taylor, three firsts; Jonathan
Louks, two firsts; Jonathan Will,
one first; John Krawsczyn, two
firsts; Josh Broderick, one first;
Travis Brewer, one frnt
Rutland Pack 240: Gabriel Jenkins, grand champion; Zach
Williams, honorable mention: Derrick Bolin, three firsts : B. J.
Kennedy, two ftrSt; James Conley,
three frrsts; Brandon Collins, Matt
Stewart, Jake Birchfield, Johnny
Lentes, Shawn Workman, each one
ftrSL
Racine Paclc 241 : Corey
Williams, Jonathan Evans, grand
champions; Denis Jones, reserve;
Tyson Evans, honorable mention;
other firsts, Joshua Davis, Derek

Community calendar·
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weU in edvance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

RACINE - The Dailey Family,
Free Country with Debbie Moore
and Country Blend will perform a
free concert at Star Mill Park in
Racine on Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
The concert is free to the public.

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE- ADK Fall picnic
and meeting will be held Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the home or
Linda Fisher m Syracuse. Members
are urged !D attend.

BASHAN - The Bashan Ladies
Auxiliary will hold an icc cream
social on Friday beginning at 5
p.m. Hot dogs, sloppy joes, ham,
steak, hot sausage sandwiches, ice
cream, pie, coffee and soda will be
served. Take-out orders will be
available and there will be live
entertainmenL

CHESTER - The IOth Congressional District Democratic Action
Club will hold its summer meeting
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the home
of Mary Hunter, 37613 'texas
Road, off Route 1 at Chester. Bring
a covered dish. Meat and beverages
wiD be furnished.
POMEROY - The Meigs County Bloodmobile will conduct a
bloodmobile at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center on Wednesday from I p.m. to 5:30p.m.

PAGEVILLE - Free clothing
day will be held at the Pagcville
Town Hall on Friday from 10:30
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Everyon e in
Meigs County is welcome. The
event is sponsored by the Scipio
Township Volunteer Fire Department.

POMEROY - Belles and Beaus
Western Style Square Dance Club
will hold a dance on Friday from 8
THURSDAY
p.m.
II p.m. at the Pomeroy
.
REEdSVILLE - The Eastern SeniortoCitizens
Center with Roger ·
Marching Band will perform at Steele as the caller.
Forked Run State Park on Thursday at 4 p.m. at the lower picnic 1
SATURDAY
area. The concert is free and the
HARRISONVILLE
- Harpublic is invited to attend.
risonville Youth League will sponsor a men's Class E Tournament at
RACINE - Any student who the Middleport Park on Saturday
needs to register for Southern and Sunday. Entry fee is $65 plus
Kindergarten or for Southern two softballs. For information, call
Junior High should report to the 742-2302,742-3300 or992-5449.
Southern Junior High School on ,
Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon to .
POMEROY - Fraternal Order or
register. Parents should bring their Eagles Anniversary Dinner will be
child's Social Security number, held on Saturday at 6:30 p.m. A $5
birth certificate and shot records. I deposit must be made to Becky
Kindergarten parents who missed . Mankin or Ann Cale on or before
the Aug. I meeting are to come this :
same day and time to pick up their , August 20.
child's class schedule, name tag
NELSONVILLE · The Annual
and school booklet
Parade of the Hills cheerleading
competition will be held on Satur. POMEROY • The Pomeroy i day at the Nelsonville-York Middle
group of AA will meet on Thurs- 1 School. The competition is beth a
day at 1 p.m. at Sacred Heart'
Catholic Church. For more infer- ·
mation, caU 992-5763.
'
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- .
ty Women's Fellowship will have ,
its monthly meeting on Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the Pomeroy Church
of Christ. The program wiU be on
herbs with Donna Nease and Bobbi
Karr demonstrating 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.
POMEROY - The Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative Parish wiD
hold free clothing day on Thursday
from 9:30a.m. until noon. The
parish is located at 311 Condor
Street in Pomeroy.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - The office of the
Meigs County Board of Elections
will close at II a.m. so that staff
may attend a computer training ses·
sion.

Come Grow with Us.

squad and individual event. For
information, call 753-2561 or 753·
2212.
NELSONVILLE - The Annual
Parade of the Hills arts and crafts
show will be held on Saturday from
9 a.m . to 9 f.m. in Nelsonville at
St. Mary's o the Hills Hall.

Social Security
may help find
m1ssmg persons
People who have urgent mauers
that they need to notify a missing ·
person about can sometim_e s .
rece ive help through the Soctal
Security Administration's (SSA) _
letter-forwarding service.
The service is available to
inform a person about a matter of
great importance of which he or
she is unaware and about which he
or she would undoubtedly want to ·
be informed. For example, where
there is a serious illness or death in ·
the missing person's family or a
missing person is due a sizable
amount of money, such as an inheritance, SSA will attempt to forward
a letter.
Friends and relatives should be ·
aware , however, that the service is
not available to forward love leuc..S
or other correspondence for the
purpose of establishing contact
with old friends and acquaintances.
In fact, it can be used only in very
limited and compelling circumstances.
SSA forwards letters primarily ·
for the benefit of the missing person rather that the requester. And;
by regulation, the agency must be .
careful to assure the missing petson's right!D privacy.
Because letter-forwarding is not
related in any way to a Social ·
Security program, the use of the service must be limited so that it
does not interfere with regular pro,
gram activities.

When You Need Prompt
Dependable Propane Delivery.

I I

Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive

Customer Service
Whal mailers most to you when it comes to propane?
Prompt delivery. Reliabilily . Salety . Energy-savings.
Knowledge and experience. Friendly, helplul delivery people.

S and R Gas Service
Cylinders &amp; Service
992-2943

~
Ferrellgos
Bulk and Service

992·5097

"A WINNING COMBINATION"

REJOICING LIFE

i
II

ELEMIN,.IRY CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

i
I

GRADES: Kindergarten thru 6th Grade
STATE REGISTERED
MeetaaU atate •lnlnowa stanclanb.

TUITION 1'EEJ
GRADES 1 THROUGH 6: $1,100 per year
PER MONTH BASIS;
suo per lhldent • Brit child of family
$811 ..C:Ond child ollamlly • 20% oil tuition
sss third child of lamlly • so% oil

JUNDEKGARTEN; SftO per student • per year
PER MONTH BASIS1
S60 per lhldent • Bnt child of family

1991-92 Book Fees

suo.oo Gradel 1· •

se.s.oo Kindergarten

Reclltratlon 6 Testing Fees
Resi~Uon FH szs.oo
Teltlnl FH $10.00

BIG BEND
700 W. MAIN ST.-POMEROY, OH. ·
992·2891
MON.·SAt 7 ·1 SUNDAY 8-10

Wednesday, August 21, 1991
Page-7

Scout judging results announced

Ohio Univer~ity
College of Osteopathic Medicine

\_\.\Cv

34.5 oz.
CAN

The Daily Sentiner

By The Bend

7. Thursday was originally an open
date for both teams. But Boston
had two games postponed m Cleve·
land April 19 and 21. One was
made up as part of a doubleheader
Aug. 13. The other was to be
layed in Cleveland on Thursday.
p But because the_ Indian s arc
making their last trtp to Bosto6
Red Sox offtctals have the
1
to schedule a
use

I

HOLZER CLINIC
Pedialrics/Family Practice
992·2188

Fer mere lnlonaatlon, lree brochure and manual,
write or calh
SJJ N. Second Ave. • Middleport, OH. 4S7ft0
.14-992-fd49

' I

..

�.-.~ ...--.

Page

~The

Dal

Sentinel

Pomeroy~lddleport,

Wednesday,

Ohio

• .. ,,. ' ..,, ~ ... •• , " - r .

21

WHITNEY.'
' .

] Lead~rs

to continue talks
\on country's future ·

PINK··
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SALMON
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Monday. thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

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CHICKEN
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SOUP

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FRESH PORK BUTT

S/S2

STEAKS/ROAST ••'! S139
FARMER PEEl'S SO LONG

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·~-

BURNING CONFRONTATION. A bus
,.. tb11t was used by an anti-coop demoDBtrators to
~ block tbe exit or Soviet armored personnel carri·
~! ers from tbe area near tbe Soviet Foreian Min·

istry office burns during a verbal confrontation
. between some or the demonstrators and Soviet
soldiers early Wednesday morning. (AP)

U.S. Trade With
the Soviet Union

~Economists say Soviet turmoil
~ could endanger economic recovery

In billions ol dollars

and 1.6 percent in 1992, and Japan
to grow 3.3 percent and 3. 7 per·
cent. it said.
Kevin Darlington, an economist
with UBS Phillips and Drew, was
not convinced.
"We're taking the view that, in
fact, as things stand. the implica·
Lion could be quite mild, in fact
imperceptible," he said.
Moves in the dollar and com·
modities prices have not been big
enough to have an impact, and the
Soviet Union is a closed economy
on which other countries depend
little for trade, he said.
The world economy wasn't as
badly affected by the Gulf War as
feared. But inflation was accelerat·
ed as oil prices more than doubled
to $40 a barrel. pressuring interest
rates to rise and slowing growth.
In this case, the flight to the dollar as a safe haven investment
could increase European interest
rates, or at least keep them high
longer than expected, Jackson said.
The dollar soared against other
major currencies Monday. panicularly against the German mark,
which was hurt by Germany' s

--Kt-u.s. expo·rts--

3

.

~

;: LONDON (AP)- Mikhail S.
.': Gorbachev's overthrow and the tur.• moil it has caused in the Soviet
; Union could endanger Lhe world
:::, economy's fragile recovery but
,; does not appear as disruptive as the
:;. Gulf War, economists say. ·
.. The events could push up inter: est rates and mak.e it more difficult
.: for businesses to borrow money to
: expand production and hire work·
- ers.
:
"The world economy is in a
:;; very fragile state in tenns of where
:, it is.in the cycle. It's coming out of
:; recession very slowly." said Leo
• Doyle. an economist with the Lon :. don investment firm Kleinwort
: Gricveson Securities.
:. World economic growth could
~ be cnmped by half a percentage
: point by the latest developments,
: said Paul Jackson, economist with
.:; the investment finn Morgan Stan.. lcy International in London.
~ Before Monday's coup, Morgan
... stanley was predictin~ that the
·: u.s. economy would shrinlc by half
:apercentage point this year and
- grow 3.4 percent next year. Europe
: was to grow 1.1 percent this year

U.S. Imports

•

2

proximity to the Soviet Union.
Weak.ness in the mark will pres·
sure Germany to raise interest rates
again to fight inflation, and that
could slow European economic
growth. Germany, already pressured by the credit demands of unification , raised its interest rates
only last week.
A Gennan rise also would mak.e
it difficult for Japan to cut its interest rates, Jackson said.
Although the United States
wouldn't mind a strong dollar as
much as Germany, it still likely
would be concerned that further
dollar strength would hurt U.S.
ex ports by making th em more
expensive.
Another possible problem is that
the new Soviet regime might be
less likely to reduce defense spend·
ing, mak.ing other countries reluctant to cut their military budgets ,
Jackson said.
That would mean bigger budget
deficits, and higher interest rates,
he said.
"Essentially, the peace dividend
may have disappeared," Jackson
said.

0

1

lJ '

'I

u (

I

I

'

H

Alcoh~lc beY&amp;rag-~ 3%
Inorganic

chemiCals 5%

Maat4%

A~QRTQ); .. ;. '"

By MARGARET SCHERF
Assodated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - An
Agticulture Department entomolo·
gist who climbs mountains in his
spare time was pan way up a 300fool cliff ncar Rome, Ital y, when
tiis ·gaze fell on a damaged weed.
Th~t sighting may produce a new
we~pon to fight leafy spurge ,
which infests millions of acres of
U.S. rangeland.
" I was about to tie a knot on my
rope when I saw damage to th e
stem of an ugly weed," Massimo
Cristofaro of USDA's Agricultural
Research Service recalled. He is
based at the ARS Biological Control of Weeds Laboratory in Rome.
The damaged weed was a rcla·
tive of leafy spurge that is known
as Euphorbia characias.
"I called out to my friend and
asked him to wait a minute - he
well understands my sickness for

TOILET
TISSUE

Lawyer says CIA's
twetten not a 'subject'
of Iran-Contra probe ·

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Psychotherapist David Scott has found cthat
50% of rapists use pornographic material prior
to seeking a victim.
University of New Hampshire sociologists'

t,. WitH FRIES.~.~••~ •••••• $1·9~
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found that rapes are highest in those stet's
who have the highest sales of sex ,magulnel.
Meigs &amp; ~iddleport Ministerial Assoeiations

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Michigan State Poli.ce found that out of
38,000 sexual assault cases between 19661957, that 41% involved the use of pornographic material .

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627 3rd Ave., GaHipolls

Men's

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
. lawyer representing Tom Twetteil,
&lt;
the CIA's chief of operations, sajd
•
Tuesday his client is a wi~ss arjd 1.
not a "subject" in the investigatidn
. of special Iran-Contra prosecutor ,
. Lawrence Walsh.
\.
Walsh's office declined to con!ment on Twetten's status or other
aspects of the 4 1/2-year probe. · ·
· William Gardner said he hall
been told by Walsh's office that
publish rollowin~ Monday's measures taken by
Twetten. his client, was a witness,
NEWS ON THE WALL· Muscovites could
the State Commttlee for State Emergency. The
: only rear;! tbe popular newspaper "Moscow
meanin~ he is believed to have
Moscow
News is not one or them~ (AP)
infonnatton relevant to the investi: News" on the walls in downtown Moscow Tuesgation, not a subject.
.
: · day. Only nine newspapers are now allowed to
Two sources. who spoke on ·
condition of anonymity. had previ·
ously told The Associated Press
that Twctten was notified he was a
The three-day air show begins that their clearance had been "subject" in the invesli$3tion. The
~
CLEVELAND (AP)- Plans to
tenn, as used by tile JustJce Depart·
: bring a pair of Soviet MiG ·29 Aug. 31 at Burke Lalcefront Air- revoked.
mcnt.
designates an individual
Foster said the planes returned
: fighter s and an Ilyushin IL -76 port. Newcomb headed a commit·
whose
activities
are under scrutiny.
tee
that
arranged
for
Soviet
aircraft
to the Soviet Union.
; cargo plane to the Cleveland
· National Air Show have been can· and a delegation of 30 Soviets to
: .celed because of turmoil in the visit seven air shows.
The Soviet planes also were to
; soviet Union, air show officials
appear
late in Augus1 or in Septem•' S8l'd .
ber
in
Westfield,
Mass.; Manlcato,
• " I would prefer the timing be a
Minn.;
Harrisburg,
Pa.; Topeka,
!-little bit different, but we can't die·
Kan.;
Fort
Worth,
Texas;
and Sali&gt;tate these things," show director
nas,
Calif.
~:Chuck Newcomb said Tuesday.
Jim Foster, air sbow assistant
~· Newcomb was referring to
• Monday's coup by Communist director, said the planes had landed
70% of pornographic magazinei that are sold
I
:,hardliners that ousted Soviet Presi· as planned Monday in Alaska, but
end
up
in
the
hands
of
minors
according
to
the
were
told
by
the
State
Department
: dent Mikhail Gorbachev.

GRAPE
JELLY

U.S. NO. 1 WHITE

$1

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WASHERS, DRYERS,
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GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

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bugs and beetles," said Cristofaro.
"Then I opened the plant's stem
and found a moth larva feeding
inside."
The ARS Systematic Entomology Lab in Beltsville, Md., identi·
fi cd the insect as Nephopterix
divisella, a moth known to breed
several generations a year.

~

12 ROll PKG.

LOYALTY .

including the right to secession and
assoc iation." .
The sta tement. carried by the
Yugoslav new s agency Tanjug .
also dec lar ed una ccep table
"changes of the country 's external
and mtcmal borders through unilat·
cral acts or the usc of force.'' It
said tht s could only be done "by
democratic and legal procedures ...
Serbia says that if Croatia
secedes from Yugoslavia, it ~:&lt;mnO!
take along territories largely inhab·
ited by the republic's 600,000 eth·
me Serbs, who mak.e up about 12
perccntofCroatia'spopulation.
Leaders at Tuesday's meeting
also ca ll ed on ~amng parties in
Croaua 10 stop ftghung and stick to
a ccasdire dec lared by the presidency on Aug. 7, Tanjug reponed.

Chance encounter provides clue
to fight against plant disease

$5------~==~~~

4

seceding after feuding republican
leaders failed to reach agreement
on the country's future. Croaua and
Slovenia envisaged a loose assoc iauon of slates. Communist Serbia,
the largest republic, and its ally
Montenegro favored maintaining
strong central control.
As the leaders met Tuesday,
new clashes broke out in the ethni·
cally mixed Slavonia and Banija
regions of Croatia, the republic's
Infonnation Ministry said . At least
10 people were killed in ft ghting.
officials said.
The republic s' leaders and
Yugoslavia's cight·man fed eral
presidency said in a statement that
they had ag reed to ba se furth er
talks on " respect for the ri ght of
every nation to self.dctcrmination.

CHARMIN

$ 09
LUNCH M£1TS •••'! 1

. FLAY911lTE
'
''

CRISCO

s:.99

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

By SLOBODAN LEKIC
Associated Press Writer
1
BELGRADE. Yugoslavia (AP)
Yugoslavia's quarreling
,: repubhcs havt agreed to respect
: each other's sovereignty and right
. : to secede, raising hopes for an end
1 to nearly two months of violence
' that has left more than 250 dead.
I The leaders of the six republics
and the federal presidency reached
. the agreement Tuesday and set
; ground rules for talks on how to
· revamp the federal government
1system. Another meeting was
, scheduled today.
i Such negotiations had been
) interrupted after Croatia and Slove: ma declared mdependence on June
i 25.
.
.
The repubhcs sa1d they were
:

TOMA.TO
SOUP

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

I

.oz.

$199

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE AUG. 18 THRU AUG. 24, 1991

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

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OHIO RIVER PLAZA
,.
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UPPER II. 7 - GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
•..........JIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~........~;
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21' 1991

Pag&amp;-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

COUPON
S~~G§
e..
!t'st•
1

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 1192-215b
MONDAY. thru FRIPAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

r Store• will ~~8LES::. U'lf.:.r1
ttem Named On
'
leoujiol'• of up to 50' tor Tlla
• ot 50' or Loso, Not
•otto• umlled To Monulog!";".!.CO.~or Retollefl ond No:: ldontlcllllom• And eoupono
C -· F,.. C::f:~om pun:hooed· Additional eoupono
~ :ew~~-- AI FOCI Voluo.
·

T~..':J.~,:!·~ ~':,..

I'

Mt:~gs .

Galh a

Cl r

Mas un count1eo&gt; m ust b t! p1e

Cou nt lor ad( p.a1d •n
·~· ild J $ .50Givedi&amp;iiWi
y l'l nd Found ads

' R ~c ervu

Days

3
6
10

o.,,16 Worm

Rate
$4.00

Words
15
15
15
15

1

16

.

.20

$6.00
$9.00

.30
.42

$ 13.00

.60

S1 30/ doy

.051 day

R•t ~s • •o

lo• con se cutNe ru n•. broken upd aysw•ll be ch •ged
lor each d""' as s ep.,ate ads

ilchl oi!1 CC

u ilpp uitl 11 \, tht: Pt Pl t:iiSiUlt R e n• s l t:l &lt;I IHI t h ~
puhs O ouly T11bun c. •ca d llll !l over 18.000 flonu~s

Will .. h

COPY DEADLIN E
MONDAY PAP ER
TUES DAY PAPER
W£0N ES OAY PAPER

c .. n.

D A Y SHORE PU8l! C A110N

1 1 OOAM S ATURDA Y
2 00 P M MONDA¥

THURSDAY PAPER
tHtOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

2.00 PM TU ESOAY
2 00 PM WEDNESDAY

2.00 PM THURSDAY
2 1)0 PM FRI DA¥

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

Summertime Favorite!

lh

nll ' f'r

1l11•

Galha County
Ar ~ a Cod e 614

446
367
388
246
256
643
379

Mtng~

County

M nu n Co . WV
Are• Code 304

Area Code 614

Gall!l)oh s
Ch• h• e
Vinton
Rio Gr~nd e
Guyan D•at .
ArilblaD•st

992

M•ddlepor'l
Pomltf'o y

ges Ch • ler
e4 3 Ponlo~nd
247 let1rt f;~ll s
949 Racm e

742 Rutland

W~nul

67 S
4Se
676
77 3
882
e96
9 37

...
.....

I Gallon Carton

21
22

Buffalo

2J

Public Notice

s:.~!~b~~T'&lt;;,~n

ce

1·14·'11-tln

.

......

Public Notice
ter Water· Dlotrlct reoervea
the right to w•lve lnlormall·
tlao, to reJect any ond oil
bide or to accept auch bid
thlt will beat aerve the
DlalricL
Tuppero Plalno·Cheator
Watw Dlatrfcl
By; Harold Blackalon,
Prialdent ol tha Board ol
Dlractora
(8) .18, 21 2tc

Merchandise

Aut os lor S.alu

72
73

Tru cks lo r S iil c

74
lb
76

Mot orc ycltl5
Uoa l' &amp; Mot01 s fu r S•l l!
Aut o Pan s&amp; Access01 ••

11
78
79

All l o R e p ;~•r
Camptn g Equ•p01 ttll1
Cumpeu; &amp; Mo tor Hon1 e:.

Vom ~&amp; 4wo · ~

aiQUUI4W

55

56
57
58
§9

H 1 Home hnprovt~ ment ill
82 Plumb1n g &amp; He• mu
8 3 E •C&lt;IIIol 111lg
84 Elee1 r1ca' &amp; Re fuguta llon
95 G., ntlf&lt;lll H1 ulm y
t:l 6 M obrl 11 Hom e R ~: p ;w
tl7 Upholshll"

8u1ld1Mg Su pph t~~;
Pa1sl or S al e
M u Si c ~ lnsuum ents
fru•ts &amp; Ve g tftilbl es
For Sale or lr art e

Public Notice
RESOLUTION 702.91
WHEREAS, lhe Village of
Pomeroy Police DaiNirlmenl
wiahaa to make paymenta

on o new 1991 Coprice
CruiHr purchased July 2,
1991 .

Public Notice
months from

Bank Ona.

Athens NA al 6.375%.
Patted: Aug. 19 , 1991
Richard D. Sayler,
Mayor

Lorry Wehrung , Preo.
Pomeroy Village Council

Thoroloro, BE IT RE· Brenda L Morris,
SOLVED lhll tho Vii· .Pomeroy VIllage Clerk
lege of Pomeroy
bor· 18121 . 28. 2tc
row $13,000.00 for s ht (6)

Sovinrs You'll Find In tht

Classified Section.

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006
6·6·'91

BISSELL
.BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"" Rlasonabla Prices"

,H. 949.-2101

CHEST£R
COUNTRY CLUI

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

Golf

•BUY •SELL •TIADE

lKIOftl (11).... 155.00

suo

OPEN
Tuesday thru Suurday
10:00 am·5:00 pm

Now Grips ............
Woods ................ •22 .00

742-2421

REPAIRS
Used lrons ....;.......$5.00
Used Woilds ......... $7.00
AWARDS
8· 9·1 mo. pd .

ln. 949·2160

21ft ill. outsida

Day or Night · ·
ND SUNDAY CALLS

lutland on New
Lima ld.

or

Irons .................. $U.75

I·IO·'tl-ltn.

· 4-16-l&amp;·tln

r.eam

GROOM

CARPENTER SERVICE

EMILEE MERINAR

.' .

: ·$ ..

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .
J
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OOTTIE S . TURNER. BROKER
UIDDLEPORT - North Second - Ever dreamed ol own·
ing your OWN BUSINESS? Here's your chance. A bar
that is 0¥4111 equipped and stocked. A DS liquor license.
Has 2 apartrnenta (lumished) and 1 sleeping room.
Buying bulking, businesa and ~cenaa.
ALL FOR JUST SSS,80CI

.. .. ''
.. '

DANVILLE - Red Hill Road - You've got to one lhis
horne. II is beautifully decorated and haa plenty of room.
You'll love the 2 kll balha with the maslor bath havm~ a
garden tub. The house has 3 bedrooms, lormal dinmg
mom, lamlly room, and tilling room. all oilling on approx ..
3 acres.
1100,000

..
Limit I Can "'-e.

Family Wllh Any
Your Choice
Addltlonol l'llrchaoe
ltaao prohibited
law)
Maxwell House French Roast (excludlna
12 oz. Can
Or 13 oz. Can Ground Coffee
~

by

Maxwell House

bedtooma, 2 balh&amp;. Feat""'"
re• porch, storag1ee ;~~~~:=~:;.
al new plumbing. ,..
NEW USTINGI Brick ranch homo with 2 lots, fireplace,
central air, attic and lull basement hat could be used lor
additional bedrooms. Front &amp; side porches, 1 car garage
With siDrage apace OVerhead. All this located in close 10
town on paved street ASKING $45,000
.

UALLOON'B RUN- The Quiet Ule - Sit on one olthe
porches and leal tho peacelulneaa. This 130 acre farm
.wilh large bclttom.s, a 2 story house with 3-4 b bedrooms,
bam, other outbuicings, and lree gas.
SM,IIOO
POMEROY - WHAT A VIEW- Lounge in the sunroom
and enjoy the sights of the beautiful Ohio River. With this
3 bedroom home is a huge tilling room with .a lowly stone
lireplace. Has an equipped kitchen, partial basemen~
and a fenced backyard. Also a paved driveway and car
carport. Don't miss lhe two gigantic fasclna~ng 11'888.
REDUCED FROM $49,000
TO $45,000

LANDAKER RD. - 4Q plus acres ol pround with a 1987,
14x80 mobile horne. Fireplace , aJr conditioning , all
tumiture and appliances included. Horne s ready for
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIO~! Asking $54,900.

N. 2DN - Middleport - Look at this one . II can
RESIDENTIAL or COMMERCIAL - whatever way you
want to use it. Great location.
$28,1100

Prepriced 1.49

DEXTER - Railroad Street - Gel a "Down Horne· leeling
In Ia 3 bedroom, 1'II story woU inaulatad horne with bay
window in filling room. Featunltl a two &amp;tory cellal house,
oiDrage ,building and extra lots. ONLY $19,500

MIDDLEPORT - Pear StrMI - A nice 2 oiDry horns with
3 bedrooms, 1\! baths, vinrl siding, new windows, lull
basement. HouBB is on a GOOD STREET. Price was
$39,000.
NOW $37,000

Laundry Deterge.nt

REDUCED I POMEROY- Remodeled home in town with
large lot. Thrtlll to lour bedrooms, carpel, electric B.B.
heat. It was a "Bargain" now it's down right CHEAP!
$18,900. Come seal

LAUREL CUFF- Sacllonol ONLY- No land -A three
year old 24x52 home thai has a lamlly room with a fire·
place, 3 bedrooms, 2 balha, cathedral ceUing, lkyligh~
extra inoulalion, heat pump, and more extraS.
$30,000

Limit I Box

Ploue, ~ Fuolly Wllh
Any AddllioiiiiJ .......,.,_
(exrhwlfnll....,t probllllled
'

POMEROY PIKE - Approx. 25 acres - 3 bedroom, 2
balho, latt!• lilling and dining rooms, equipped kitchen, 2
A /C until. Much morel This is a must oee homel
ASKING $68,000. MAKE AN OFFER
REDUCED PRICE on is lovely home. This home has
tvetylhlng - 4 bedrooms, 2Y, baths. large Uving room
w/llreplac:e llld manr. many more unique teatureal
$100,900. MAKE AN. OFFERI
t: r' "

·~ •

THE FAIR IS •OVER, ITS A BACK TO BUSINESS.
COME ON IN ' WE'D UKE TO UST VAl IF YOU'RE
LOOKING TO,:·auv A HOME. COME SEE US... YOU
WON'T BE ALONEI WE'LL HELP YOU OUT IN EVERY
WAY, AVISIT WJ1N US~~~ MAKE YOUR DAY I
HENRY E. CLELAND.- ....................................882-6191
TRACY BRINAGER-·-·· ·-················'"············'411·2438

JEAN TRUSSELL.......... .. .............................11411-2680
JO HILL..·--··--·-·- ...................................1185-W&amp;e

dfFJC;E..~-;...~--· ......,.."..''"".. '''''''''''''""''~~2-22st

CHESHIRE - Wolaon Grove Road - Coma see Ibis
lovaly brick Iron! home with full basement, 2 car garage,
3 bedrooms, 2 balho, and lots of storage space. All lhis
sitting on 631100 ot an acre in a great location. Price was
$63,900.
NOW 180,1100
NEAR RACINE ON THE RIVER - An acra with 24x40
metal build!ng with a ~ and sell ol patio doors, huge
slicing metal ctoora lor e11y storage ol a camper· or bciat
Has oewage, w-. and electric.
117,1100

- ftoom Additions

-Gullo&lt; -rk
- Eiectrk:•l •hd P4umblng
- Concrete worll
- Roo ling

lor.

-lnt...
bt•k»f
Polnllng

IFREE ESTIMATES!

Owner &amp; Operator

V. C. YOUNG Ill

614-992-6820

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy,

ouec...... ..:. .... -

by law)

YOUNG'S

Complete GrOoming
For All Breeds

. . . . . . . . HOME 992-6692

Campbell's Soup

•IDSO

THE

ROOM

MADliN OHIO

;

For Leue

Hou se hold Goods
62 - S porling Goods
53 Antrqu es
5 4 M•'c Mer ch and•se

Bus lfltll Opportunn y
Money ID lOi n
Proleuional Ser v1ct:S

Real Estate General

·chicken Noodle

I

49

Trans ortation
/1

5\

liUfihiN611

l etiut

New H• Yen

69~·6164

Limit 3 Cans Pluoe, .,_,r Family With Any Additional l'lln:bue
(excludlna llemo probllllted by law)

I I

HelD W.tntud

Ho u aes lor Re nt
M o bil e Hom es tor Rt!n t
Farm s 101 Rttnt
Ap;u tm ent tor Re nt
Furms hed RCionls
Spa cu lor Rent
W ant e d to R a nt
Equtpm ern for Rum

'

667 Coohnllf!

Public Notice

w.

11

4l
42
43
44
45
46
47
48

.

:.~

Super Dip Vanilla

Box

l;dilEll

12 S•tu111on Wanted
1 l ln1uran ce
14 Bustn• s Trauung
1~ Schools &amp; lns tn te twn
16 Radto, TV &amp; CB R u po~•r
17 M11Cetlanoou s
1.8 Wo1n1ed Jo Oo

Apple G1ove
M u On

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

I

7 'r• d S.te tpauj •n aiiYa u cuf
B Pub~c S1l e &amp; Auct tan

G 1 fa rm Eq utpmuut
62 W ante d t o Bu y
6 J l• vc, toc h
6 4 Ha v 11o G 1am
6!) Sued II h rttliltH

Business
Services
L...--------,--------..,.--------'T""--------,:---------

California Melons

32 oz.

·-- .

L--------....i---------'---------.1--------...JI...._______

Cool Refreshing Flavor

Cans

Hom us tor S al e
Mo btl e Hom es tor S o~lc
3 3 Fil'rm s to 1 S al e
3 l B us•ness 8u1ldmQs
35 l o ll &amp; Acre age
36 R eal E1 tat e Wante d

Gtveaway
Hlpl)y Ad i
lost and found

4
5
6

PI Plt~asilnt
l oon

will be returned to the ouc•
be CoNIUI bidder upon OXICU•
Uon ollhe Contract
Exit the Appai~Ji:hlan Highway onto 5D
r-Ived and opaned by the
ln1pocUon lour ollhe tank
towa
. rds McArthur. Auction Is a quarter of a Tupper a Ptolno·Cheater wlllloave lrom the Olllee
Water Olotrlct 11 thalr olllce,
mile on the left. Exit Is across from the 38581 Bar 30 Road , on Augual 27 at 11 :00 A.M.
University Airport. Signs will be posted.
Readovllla, Ohio unu111:00 to lhoae who call and make
A.U. on September 4, 1881, an appolntm•l on the 28th
of Auguol belore 4:00 P.M .
New, used, antiques, collectibles and other ~ems. covering the palnUng, both Thlo Ia to allow. lor draining
Tak
Interior and Exterior lor ona
ing consignments 11 :00 a.m.-3:00p.m. the day of 71,500 gallono 12' xll' ol the Tank lor lnapecllon.
The Tuppera Plalno.Choo·
lhe auction. We are now laking consignments lor our otandplpe water tank localantique to ba held on Sept. 1, 1991 at 11 :oo a.m.
eel on Co. Rd. 44 In Metgo·
County.
Taking consignments 11 :oo a.m.-3:00 p.m. day ol
Addlllo1111linlorrnadon and
auction and also laking consignments tor our ant 1"que opeclllcatlono may be
obtained atlhaolllcoolthe .
auction on Sept. 1, 1991 .
Dlolrlcl at 38581 Bar 30 I
Variety of food available.
Road, Readavllla, Ohio.
Each bid muat ·be
Terms of Auction
enclooed In an appropriateCash or check with positive ID. No out of state
ty marked and oaaled enval·
ope ond muot contain tho
checks. Payment In lull day of auction.
l
M ... H
hi
6
06
lull nama ol avery paroon, I
A uct oneer a,.. utc nson 98-67
llrm ondlor corporation
Llcenead and Bonded by the State of Ohio
lnlereat In the Nme end
•Remodeling and
muot be eccomponled by o
Aasoc. Frank Hutchinson 592·4349
Home Repairs
% Bid Bond In the lull
L - - - - - - - . . . , : - - - - - - - - - J 1 1 0 0amount
•Roofing
ol each propoNito
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - J i h e aallofoollon ol the
•Siding
Real Estate General
District Board aa a guaranty
•Painting
-----~;;:;..:::;=:...:::.:.;;:.;.:;__ _ _-Jthol If the bid lo oceepted, a
FULLY INSURED
contriCI will be entered Into
and lla parlormance
FREE ESTIMATES
oecurecl. On blda lhat ora
reJected, the guarantoa wtu
be prompUy returned 10 lhe
blcfdera. On the bid thai lo
992·6641 or
accepted, ouch Bid Bond

THUR., AUG. 22, 1991 AT 6:30P.M.

Enjoy These Flavorful Fresh

10.5 oz.

.. ...... ·-·

'· '

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Ltvestock

Estate

31
32

2 lnMemar't'
3 Annouc: ement s

Se r vices

followilll{ ll'i«•f'htim• t•xdamll{t'L.

'A clotss• lt cd adY e rlrs ciHl.'lll Jl l,tc c ll m lh t.' Oa •lv S•· •••u•d (e•
cuvt
cl asSI It+..od th s pl..y . 9 u sm uss C.1r d . u ~&lt; II +.."!J itl noll cesl

•1c ens

Real

Employment
Cln .~si.fit•d tm~t· .~

'Ads that mu st be patd m advan cu a n ~
Card o t Th a nk s
Hap p v A.d :.
In Mt:lll Ofl tiUI
Yard S&lt;~ l cs

Fresh Frying

Announcements
C1rd of lhM'IIu

1

d..,. ~

dcty a ft n r pubh ca11o n t o n Hik tt c o n ccltun

Holly Farms · Whole

.,_,r

~-

lhe

9 Wanted to Buy

\ ll ltlt: r 1!) wurtb w1lllle
a t nu c hcr g u •
•pn ctt o t J~d 101 all captt all el te r s •s doubl e ~11 c e o l ad coi l
' 7 I)Citn1 hne type o nly used
'Senl••uJI rs not r es p o n ~1 bl e lo r e 11 oro;. &lt;t h c • lu s t tlifV ICh ecl
lor e tr on h rs t day a d run s m papurl C;1l1 h t:lore 2 00 p m

run J

'

Limit I Carton
Pleale,
fllllllly Wllh
Any Addlllonal
Pun:haoe (excluding
Items prohibited by law)

.. .... ·-· -··-·-'.. .

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

' f ! I!IJ

'

,,'

RATES

Monthly

POLICIES
'" Ads o uts td tJ

II

I''

.. ' -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Classified

DOUBLE Manufacturer's
'

"

Wednesday, August 21, 1991 :.;
•

I

. .--... - ..

.

J&amp;L
I.NSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Wlndowo
•Roofing
•lnoulatlon

JAMES KEESEE
992·2172 or
742-2251
639 Bryan Place
M lddlePOn. Ohio
11·14·11•

SHRUB &amp; TREE

TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
8· 12·80·1fn

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

SEE US FIRST!
992-5100
RT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO

8/ 1811 mo. lin

J.&amp;B

'COMPLDE AUTO
UPHOLSTDY

POMEROY - Uncoln Hta. - Cuto u a button, neal as a
pin - . describes . this two bedroom home with an
equipped kitchen, carport, and part basarnenl. Has a
ftoorecl attic end 50x288 loot lot.
$25,000

Convlt1ible Topa,
Cerpeta, Heedlinar
· It Seat Covara end
Minor Auto Repelr.

SANDY BUTCHER............................................IKI2·5371
BHERYL WALTERS...........................................387-o421
DARLINE STEWART.........................................IKI2-e385
BRENDA JEFFERS.........................................882-3051

·llllN

st~

MASON, WY.

1·(304)·
773-9560

992-621 s

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

Across From Post Office
217 I. Secorotl St.

949-2168

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCnON

IAIISES-Goo·floc.-S I U up ·
fiiEIEIS-$1!5 .,
'

•cto OVINS-$79 up
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992-SUS tr 985-3561
Across From Post OHict
POMfiOY, OHO
10/l0/'89 tt•

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULIIG
POOLS,
· ClmiNS, ETC.
1,621 IlL- SU·$41
lt. 1,1oll 71·1
lunA..,

OHIO 45775•9626
614-742·2904

7-15·91 · 1 mo . pd .

316/90/ tln

Homos
•Garages

INew

•Complete

lemotWing
Stop I Compare
FrH Elthwates

Ott Sltelnstalatlen

915-4473
667-6179

7/'1'1/1-.~

I mopd.

WASHIJS- SIOO.,

FREE ESTIMATES

POMIIOY, OliO

frM Estimates
742·2656

DIYIS- SU up
llfiiGEIATOIS-$100 up

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

992·5335 or
915·3561

667·6681
After 7:00p.m.

90 DAY WAIUNft

Gutters
Downspouts

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

lnstalliaJ Celltlar
P~om, Car Stereos
or Radios, CB's

USED APPUANCES

Writ•ll

NEW- REPAIR

"ck Up.

Roofing, Vinyl
siding, Painting,
a•d Home repairs
7 -~

L

ROOFING

ALL IIADS
Iring It In Or Wa

11·14·'90

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION

How..-d

5-11-'90 tin

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Specializing in
Custom Fr-• lapair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FDR ALL MAKES &amp;

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

MODR5
992-7013
or 992-5553

New lliMMtltrllt
"Free E"otl""atea"

01 TOLL FIR
1·100-141-0070
DAIWIN OliO

PH. 949·2101
· or Its. 949-2160

,_
-

NO SUNDAr

7 t 31 / '91 1fn

........

AIR CONDmONERS.i- HEAT PUfiii'S and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWID£ HOMES

..... ...... ... ........... ..... .. ..
MOIII.f HOME

BENNETT'S

a:::::a'

Lecat.d On Safferd School ld. eff lt. 1•1
(61.) ........ or I•ICIII•IJ'2•5967

7·24 lmo

. . . . . . .lilT

. CIIPET (UAIUIS
•1111 nu PLOOI CAll
•RNaonable Rat••
•Quality Worll
•FrM Eatimateo
•C~rpet H11 Fait Dry
Time '
•High GloN on Tile
Floor Flnlah
Mill lEWIS, ow-

lt. I, 1111lortol, OH.

742-2451

3-14-'91-tfn

WE DO

RO.OF,ING

AND IVERYTHING UNDDNEAIH ,

,TROMM BUILDERS
FREE ESTIIUTES
e2D Veers Experience
•Quality Homaa end
: Cuetom Remodeling

742·2321 .
1/ 22/tflt

I

�'.. .

....

.

.. ' ...

'

'

..

3

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32
, '" ' "' '"r" ""-

Announcements

...

~

••

• ••

~

34

Giveaway

Black/White moUie wfe~ge, 1514·

Auguat 21, 1~1

Wednesday,

KIT • N' CARL\'LE® by Larry Wriabt

11

Apanment

Autos for Slle '

' '

Wednesday, August

.

'

-·

'

...

...

~·

., • . .,

.

,.

•

. . .... , , .... i

21, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

80RNLOSER
~lXIN&lt;'.,

tXM, W'll.e

•

W~!WNf
w~

nu..r

~~ONHIN.!

HIS

601N6 TO BE VER't' DISAPPOINTED

1

1121e

IIJlNewa
()) Andy Qrtfflth
Ill Club Connect
lllRHCIIng Rainbow 1;1
liD. Andj Griffith
9 Cartoon Expr. .•
@ lnlkllllle PGA Tour
Worfd Today
0 Aln Tin Tin, K·9 Cop
Stereo. 1;1
5:05 (]) Sewllched
5:30 ())
iiJl NIC Nawa 1;1
()) I D,_m ol JHnnie
(I) Cll
AIC Newa 1;1
Ill Wild America C
(lJ 3·2-1 Contact !;I
I1Dl &lt;12le CBS Nawei;J
liD. WKRP In Clnclnnl1l
IDUpCloH
0 New Zorro Stereo. 1;1
6:35 &lt;D Andy Griffith
7:00 ()) G iiJl WhHI of Fortune

I I 1E(

bo-

I

2

L

IIE1NIE1 3

I

II

" ~~ ~-•.
I I I I

0I

HL DI C

I

.

e

8 - ll

I

.

.

Overheard
in
reception
area : "Some tortures are
physical
and
some are
menial . but the one that is

~

.

CE R R 0 T

r-T,&lt;s_,,-.,,r,6,-rl-rl-i

both is ...... 1"

G)

Complele the chuckle quotod
_J...
-.I..-..L.-...1.'-...L
.
.....I.
by f1lli ng 1n the mintng words
L.
you deve lop from step No . 3 below .

8

PRIN1 NUMBERED lEliEQ S IN
THE SE SQUARES

6

~ N~hlllnelele
Court 1;1
EdiUon 1;1

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lEITERS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS

&lt;Il

Ill

ecNaii/Lehrer
Newlllour 1;1
I1Dl ~c,.,t Alfelr 1;1
liD N hi Court 1;1
9
eri;J
ID lpartaeanler
MoneJIIne
0 Scarecrow lnd Mra. King
7:05 (]) The JtffeiiOitl
7:30 ()). iiJl Jtoplrdyii;J
()) Andy Grlffllh
(I)
Enltrlllnmtnt
Tonight Stereo. 1;1
())• M11nt1'a Femlly
I1Dl Wheel ol Fortune 1;1
liD. M'A'S'H
aD Be 1 Sllir Stereo.
ID Mljor Ltegue BaHblll

ANSWERS

&amp; ·lo

Driver - Unwed - Plump - Wealth - PRINT
Sound advice to shoppers : Read all ads carelully
What the bold type gives can be taken away by lhe
small PRINT

a

NORTH

BRIDGE

Dairy ~ Equlpm•n! 1 4 Dolavol
Mllkora Pulaolor vaccum Pump
Plpo Llna. 114-245-UZS.

Glboon 11 Cu. Ft. Upright
Fratzor, E1co11on1 Condition!
$200. 114-448-4189.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wtehtra, dryera, retrigeratora,
rangeo. Skogga Appllancoo,
Uppor Rlvor Rd. Bnlda Stono
Croot Molal. COli 614-4411-7398.
GrMn vllv•t Dft couch and
malchlng chair, 304.f75-1988.
King IIZ8 walor bid, complato
bocf lroma and hoadbolrd. 304·
57&amp;-288g.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furnishings.
Houro: Mon-Sat, ll-5. 614-4460322, 3 mlloa out Bulavillo Rd.
Fooo Dollvory.
PICKE~:w'::J:~ITURE

HouHhold furnishing. 112 mi.
Jerrlcho Ad. Pl. Pleaunt, WV,
call ~75-1450.

•••!I...

'*·

'

. -· ...•

E~lpmanl,

55

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, aewer plpea, win·
dows, llnttla, etc. C'aude Win·
tora, Rio Granda, OH Call 614·
245-5121.
24X24X9, 2·atoot ovarhaad, 1·3
fl entrance door, eractld.
$384D.OO
Prtclalon
Post
Builders 614·992·3541.

SR. 35,

2-Lop rabblta and 3-rabblt
hutchoolor oolo, 614-992·2952.
AKC f•male Golden Retriver
puppies, $100. each. 614-4468064 or 446·1367.
AKC Pomerinlum
puppies,
shot• • wormed, 304175-2193.
AKC registerac:l Afghan Hound
pupplts, malt or female, born
714191, vet chockocl, all ohola,
olrod SBIF Champion, oxollc
colora, 304-875.7051.
Australia
ShaDitard
Pupa.
Atglalerad,
Un•Bred
For
Quality. All Shota. Breedtd
Slnco 1'176. l14.f76-2527.
Baby Guineas, blue, whitt &amp;
blua, white, 614-843-5175
Boaglo pupa, 3Q4.f75-5643.
Bundy II Alto Saxaphon•, good
eond, 304-675-2182.
Cocker Spaniel puppl11, ready
to go, 304-875-5412 after 4:00.
Dragonwynd Cl.ttery Ptrelan,
Siamese end Himalayan khtena.
614.. 46-3844 •her 7 p.m.
Female white Toy Poodle, 5 yra
old, $100. 304-882·3180.
Flah Tonk, 2413 Joe""'" Avo.
Pel,. Plaaaant, ~75-2063,
lull Una Troplcol flo~, blrda,
small anlmala and aupp1ea.
Mala Booton Tarrlor, AKC roglatered, available tor stud atrvk:•,
3 yro old, 304-675-8861.
Petk·l·poo puppiH, ahola and
wormed, all black. $125. 304675-2019 or 675-21U.
Poodle pupple1, toya and t11
cups, AKC Champion Btoodlln•,
CoolwUia 614.f17./J404.

lilt Honda CB, 7110 K, IIC
ahapa, 7.400 miiM, tNJit ... to
approclato, 11,1100. or boat otlor,,
304.f76-7534.
19111 Honda V-45 MagnUitl. Lola:
ot exl:raa. Low miiMI•· Exc.
cond. 114-446-01183, 4&lt;46-7371 a~
1.-5.
'
63
LlvestDck
1117 Honda 4 Whoeler, S1,800.
~-~-.,......,,....,....
2 HOfll GOOHneck Tr1ller, 114-441-1003.
Llrgt Drnelng Room, $2,500;
Haw 12 R. Stoc• Traliar, $1,111· 1991 KX,.O, uc:otlanl cond.
March 15th 1118i AOHA Sorral1 $1200.00, 114-992-3537.
Filly With One Holtor Point; Suzulol DR eoo, Runa Roll
FobNory 14ih 111110 Chootnut StrongL saoo o.a.o. 114-3'/JI.
Filly Somy DM-Bor Blood Llno. 2113 Anor 7p.m.
,
114-286-t522.
614-Mll-2822.
BayoaiDavla Production Solo,
Wodnoodoy,
August
28th
7:30p.m.
Fayotto
County
Folrgroundo,
Waahlngton
Courthouao. Soiling Duroca,
Yorks, H1mpa And Croa
Bradl, Steve bavls, London,
Ohio 114.ff52·27118, Mlko Boyoa
Orlont 51U77-2202.
FMder Celt Sal• Oat11 ara:
SoJ&gt;I. 7,14, Oct. l,t8, Nov. 2,11123.
Goillpollo Stockyard Co. o14-

•s

2
tAK863

Auto Pans

~fUN/ON

-----

....,.

(R)

- - - - - - T~-'-"1'-'E$

8-

71

(R) (2:00)

9 Murder!.~ Wrotai;J
Gr8nd ute 0pry In
Houlton: The EconomiC
SummH Minnie Pearl, Roy
Acull and other members ol
the Grend Ole Opry perform
lor Prealdenl and M(s. Bush
altha Houston summit (1 :001
Stereo.
PrfmeNewa
0 MOVIE: Hollo Oown
Tlltre IGI (2:001
1:05 (]) MOVIE: Summer Girl
(2:001
1:30 (I) (J)
The Wonder Yaera
Winnie refuses Kevin 's help
with a problem. (AI Stereo.

a

...

a

. .

,'ll
"""
a ""Bul,..
ck,.-.,.
Lo""'Sco br~o-4-55
-.-4-B-or·

rell, $700. Looks Goodl Rune
Gooctl 814-388-1333.
1970 Buick Regal, 70,000 mll11,
$600, 114-015-4261 call •fter

Froo Eodmataal

Davia

~

-.vao

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;
~.

''

· aild Helllna
F-andPlite
Oollipotfa, Ohio
114 441 'Jill
HEAT PUMP IIIII 6 SomcJ;
304.076-3099 or 114-441-1301. -•

EleCtrical-a .
Refrigeration

..

'

1•11 Llnootn Town Car._L~:::~
42,000 ...... 1 Owno• u .
Concllllonl 114-441.fil7 - ...liar

--

.....

-~

..

eHOPPING

CAFZT'!

'
•

I
j

BARNEY
I

THOUGHT
THEY ONLY
ALLOWED
VISITORS ON
SATIDDY!!

HE'S GONE OVER
TO WILLER CREEK
TO VISIT
HIS PAW,
SHERIFF

- -~ ~ -

... . ... ... ............__

- ,

I

1:00 ()) G iiJl Night Court Aller
earning a degree. Mac
considers a vocation. (RI
Stereo. C
(I) Cll II [)oogle ttownr,
M.D. Coogle has !rouble
delivering a premature baby.
(RI Stereo. 1;1
Ill Ill Neture Stereo. 1;1
aDl 1121e Jek81nd tho
Falman A psychiatrist
enlicea a teenage patient into
killing her husband. (RI
Stereo.
9 MOVII!: Ue1 of llle Twlna
(2:00) Stereo. Q
Nlrllhvllle NOw Stereo.
a Llrry King Uvtl
1:30 ())
iiJl Bolnlold Jerry
encourages Elaine to move
into his apartmenl complex.
(AI Stereo. 1;1
(I) (J) G [)evla Rulea
Robbie tries out lor a spot
on !he baseball team. (RI
Stereo. 1;1
10:00 ()) • iiJl Quentum Leep
Sam leaps Into lhe lila ol a
Cuban Immigrant convicted
of murder. (AI Stereo. 1;1
()) NlrWI
(I) (J) G Anything lui Lovo
Hannah Is jealous when
Marty Is sent to shOO! a
swlmsulllsaue. (RI Stereo.

c

•s

+109763
+AKQ 9 3

.AK I093
• 10
+ AS

Vulne rable: Neither
Dealer South

Today's hand is one of the most un·
pleasant I have ever seen. I would ex·
peel most players. even some experts.
to go down in lhe grand slam. Only ~he
most careful declarer . who believed tn
looking for the bes t poss ible line ,
would come home safely. And he
would deserve to win all the points.
If you would like to test yourself.
hide the East-West cards and plan the
play in seven spades. West leading the
diamond queen.
South's two-club opening was
strong, artificial and forcing. North's
three-diamond response was positive.
showing a good five-card or longer di·
amond suit. After finding the spade lit,
South used Blackwood twice before
bidding the grand slam .
There are 11 top tricks: five spades ,
two hearts, two diamonds and two
clubs. It appears thai two heart ruff s
in lhe dummy will bring the total to
13. But there is a snag: when you lead
a heart lo lhe king. West rulls. Ugh'
However. there is a successful (and
betterl line available. Win the first

South

2+
3+
4 NT
S NT
7+

West

Norlb

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

3t
4+
St

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

6•
Pass

Opening lead

t

Pass

Q

trick with dummy·s diamond king,
ruff a diamond with the spade queen
and lead a low trump to dummy . If the
spades break 4-0. you must abandon
this line and play for the heart ruffs.
Bul here you continue with the dummy
reversal. Ruff a second diamond high
in hand , cross to dummy with another
trump and rufl the third low diamond.
Finally play a club lo dummy's king,
draw West's last trump and claim 13
tricks: four spades in the dummy, two
hearts. two diamonds, two clubs and
three diamond ruffs in hand.
@ 1111, HEWIPAPift !NTI..._H AlliN.

a

e

~

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

An1wer lo PriYioul Pull._

33 Goahl
34 Econ.
Indicator
35 Film crlllc
Pauline36 Throng
371mmortal
39 Slngor Page
40 Lubrlclto
41 Hall (prel.l
42 Fork part
45 Acquired
46 Celli. airline
deallnatlon
49 Mortar mixer
so Hawaiian clly
52 Tiny particle
53 Proapaclor'a
lind
54 Having fool
parla
55 - and lire
56 Club57 Phoenll
CIQIII
58 Genua of
maploa

1 Tako cover
5 Snake'•
aound
9 Place lor
uerciH
12 Farm

meaaure

13 Loaf-culling
ani
14 .Norma15 Curo
16 Turn oharply
17 Bullfight
cheer
18 Aaler- know
111 Jewel
20 Exemlnod
(a!. I
22- algn
24 HOUitluel
25 San! through
lubl
27 Trout nuraery

31 "A"-"apple"
32 Hlghwey
lhOUidtr

1 Hearly laugh

2 Applloa
lroallng lo
3 Sewer
condull
4 Snakelike
lloh
5 Sala harbor
6 Article

DOWN

g

Nlllonll Audubon
Society SDec:llla Slereo. C
(lJ Lionel Hempton: Back fo
PatadiH HlghiiQhls Include
Sweet Georgia Brown.
Hemp's Boogie, When the
Salnla Go Marching In and In
the Mood . (1 :10)
~ 1121• 41 Houra Stereo.

doll-.

'

. . . . ..... --.

LADY WI'Tl-4 ,A.

- ~·

Co~or'oPiymlolng

84

Dle&amp;UISED AS A FAT

1

Croak Ad. Pll'la, eup.·

plloo, pickup, and
1~
t48.02tA.
.
:!- .,. :
WIH build polio ..,...... dOj;G;
acroonod rooma, pu1 ,. lilllvt
aiding .. trailer eklrllng. 114241.fll7.
WIU clo rem a dallng, roaftng1
bullcllna. tiM lrfn\inl!&gt;g ana
ron»Yal; . . _ paln4JnV. For
lne ootlmotoa, col Goorga al1·
114-1192-$712.

82

T KNEWIT!

11-ii:RE 5 ONE:
NON!...

6Ne.A.Ic:IN&amp; UP ON ME.

Ron'a TV Sonrlca, -lallzlng;
In Zonfth aleo - l n g moat.
othor tiilncla.
' - _,,..
eolia, lilt&gt;
· aomo
ippllonce
WY.
304.078-2211 Ohio 114-441-2414.:
Sopllo Tonk Punllllng_IIIO._Oollla'
Co. RON EVANS lNTiAPKISE!Ii
Jocltaon, OH 1.f00.6J7.f5Mt • •

11117a
·
1100, nlcoty equip.
pod,
condlllon, loW ml~1
.,..
dlya ... JII24Cli&lt;U
avanlnga.
·
1il7 Oldo Dotta II, 82,000 111111,
All P-r. Air, !Eieollortl Condition. 114-44 4 2H, Aftor 4p;ni

ap.m.

I 1-V.vt:.T,:{AT FeELI1'13,A.l\tAI~,
THAT A)l.( ALL1t?\10R. 15

t::m-•.

8251.

.

1;1

"If:

JET .
,
Aorallon ......... rapolrod. Na\r
I rHIIIll motors In llocil, liON
JACKSON, OH, 1-:

11111 Chryator Cordoba 300,

...

tQJ9 7 42
+QJ4 2

1121e M - • Hay••
Chuck and Eddie guerd an
antique vase ahop. Stereo.

All typoa of muonry, brick,
block and etone. Frwt . .
tlmotoo. :104-773-1150.
'
.ASEMEHT
WATERPROOFING
,
u.-nlonll Rflllmo guarantoo. local ralononceo luml-.
Frat 1111011111. Call CIOIICI . 1·
t14-237-0411, dly or nlllhl.
110Q1111 -menl Walarpr.O.

~=·

apm.

0852.

i

Home
Improvements

ComJIIotoMol&gt;llo Nomo Soi.Upo,
AapoiN; COmrnailcel, Raaidfn.
tlol lmprovomonte. -. lnciudlnQ:
PIUitlblnQ, EJoctrlcal, lneuran.,
Clllma liix:opletl. 114'250·11.11• •
Curtla Homo . lnilotvvomo,.~
YNJ8. Ex~ On Oltlar •
Homoa. Room Addhlono,
FOIIIdatlon Work, Aooll~.
Wlndowa I Siding. Froa ~
tlmotoal Rotor-. No Job T~
Big Or Smeiii11W41-o225.
,
E I A TREE SERVICE. l-Ing,
Trimming, T,.. Removal, Hedge

1971 Comoro, whlto with rod lntorlor. l.aoka &amp; Nna nol good.
614-446-8052.

::r,

Services

ling. '

Autos for Sale

auto, now ovorythlng, S1400.
dlya 114-992·2155. anor 5:30pm,
coli ~75.f955.
1971 Oldl 18, AI~ Stereo,
112,000 Mlloo. Plain, No
polnlmontal $950. 114-387.
1160 Pontiac Grand Prix, Good
Condition, S1,200. 114-317·71140.
lilt AMC Exglo 4 WD, Air, AT,
AC, AMIFM, "EC1 711K $2,1100;
1D80 Honda C1vlc SW, Air,
AMIFM ea.., Sopd, 40 Mll11 Por
Gollon, Orlaml Ownor, S1,200.
614-245-111111.
1D81 Lincoln Town Car, aharp
looking, txc working cond,
$4,000. 304-175-2337.
'
1181 Mo,.o Carlo, 304.f75.150tl.
1182 Chryoler LoBaron Convor·
tlbte, $2,000. 514-25fl.1771.
1i84 Oklo Dotto II Royale, 4-DR
Sidon, bojoutltul cor, ovary option. lncludoo factory Cll. 307 Y·
8, $22111,114.fll2.f71i.
1885 camaro 221. loodod, arc
cond, $4,500. 304.e75.fll2t.
1985 Nlaaon zoo sx, lap,
loldod, ncellonl cond, coli 114992·71151 ahor 5pm
1988 Chavotlo, 4apcl, Air Condltlonod, Good Condition!
Sl,ISO; 1985 Plymouth HorlliOII,
Good Condition, 11,400. 114·25fl.

a

e

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

ALDER

By Phillip Alder

Dlnouura Earl
gels fired al1ar asking for a
raise. (RI Slereo. I;J
Ill (lJ Nellonal Geogrephlc
Speclel Slereo . l;l
IIDl 1121• Pollco SqUid
Drebln hunts the kidnapped
daughter ol a weellhy family .
(AI Stereo. C
liD • MOVII!: Ghoal Story

1 I -.

EAST
+4
.QJ7&amp;14

My apologies
to you!

(2:001

(I) (I)

MF.F.K

81

WEST

• 765

SOUTH

Myelarftl The murder of a
Michigan high-school
counselor outrages a
community. Stereo. 1;1
()) MOVIE: Mlrla'a Lovera

&amp;

Accessories

Transportation

10811.

.. ~ ~ ..

76

Zlppo Doll Plno Bar Chootnul
Ma,. 11 Honda, 11,700; Sharp
Paint Mara 14 Handa, $100.
Ducko, ClooM. 114-fD-2711,

fiT

..,.,

FAMIL.Y

lilt Ployboy Pontoon boot, 0
n. long, 30 HP motor $3'100; 304175-77111.
' ••

Roglotorod Angua Hollera and
Bulla, 8-10 montha old. v.rr·
gontla. Prlcod upon lnapoctlon,
614·1112·3033.
Foodor Call Silo I Auguot 24th al
1p.m. With Aogular Saturday
Silo. Athona Llvaatock Sllaa. 18
Head Holot. Solo From Ono
Farm. Llvntock Can 81
Chockod In Ahor 4p.m. On
Friday. Hauling Avalloblo. Con·
algnmentt .,Wtlcome1 IM·582·
z:l22.114-1118-353\
Wtita Joggarlaylng ~0114. $75-.~
pl.... 1~.:186-9252.
. '
'

111111 Supor Sport MO(tla Corio,
11,000. 514-446-4123, 114-441-

iluntiY TromJ:';6 Now! Uaocl 1
Yaar. 1225. I
.f803. ·
Conn Trombone Uaod Frw 1 112
y
.
_ 114 "88
~·g·
4
1101.

Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale ·

).,,, I

f~tTZEL

+KB

.

PHILLIP

(LI

a Cro11fire
7:35 (I) Andy Qrflfllh
1:00 ()) e iiJl Unaolvld

441·122.

1gae Monto Co~o 8.8. 114-3177141.
1ilf Rod Floro Laodod Tlh,
Crulao, Sunrool, · ,_ ·Ulloa.
Morol 114-441.f187 114-446-

Brand naw Bundy Trombone,
1350. 30WU-34118.
'
BuntiY Allo Soxophono, $250,
t114-MJI.272l
Bundy Flute, $160. 114.f41.7013.

75

I Month old Slmmontal bullo

Raglotorod Boa'/lo fWpo lor
aale. &amp;14-742·208 or 742·2421.
Training You to treln yO\Ir Pat!
Dog oliodlanco ella- 8/311t1.
Shlrry
Roborto,
Cenlllod
Trainor, 514-441-I.C.
Musical
lnatruments

ru,..
I'M--112·5537.

1911 150-Y"";'o':d. 4-cyl ahoft·
drlva,
11500 OBO,

troctora 1 lmplemonta. Buy,
Hll, tracll, 8:00..6:00 WNkday1,
Sot. till Noon.
Lito Modll t35 MF Troctor
$4,550; 165 With Hoavy Duty
Lotder, $5,850; T030 F-:guaon
With 4 Ft. Buah Hog S2,3i5;
1800 Ollvor $2,195. owner Will
Flnanca. 114-2116~522.

56

Pets for Sale
-::--..-"":"""~.:........~::---:-:
Groom and Supply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All .l&gt;toodo, atylao.
lima Pel Food O.alar. Julie
Wobb. Call 614·446.0231, 1-fiOO.
352.0231.

Motorcycles

1171 Honda 1150, 4 cyl, runa.
good, good, $300. 080,
304437-3451.

.~:!:: .W.''l=;lt:;,;.

Furnished
Rooms

I HP Walk Bahlnd 30
Roome tor rent • wtek or month. Gravoly
Inch Mower, Excellent Condl·
Starting at $120/mo. Gallla Hotel. tlont
$850. 514-388-11032.
614-44(.8580.
Johnaon
woodbumer adckxl, 2
SIMplng room• with cooking. HI up aquariuma,
&amp;5 l 40 gal·
Alao trallar epact. All hook-upa. ion 6 othor mlac. 614-446-9231.
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304-7735651, Maaon WV.
Lawn Chlaf riding mower, 1 112
yra old, 12 hp, 39" cut, 1175.
304 7
46 Space lor Rent
~ H 859 ·
Lawn
ulld 3 months
Country Mobile Home Park, sns. 2tr1ctor,
ton cantal AJC $500.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Bollar w/pump I ri!QIIIarll,
Lote, rentale, parta, Nln. CaM hooting
ayatom $400. Oloh·
614·H2·1117t.
w11her $75. Puah" mower $35.
Mobile Home Space For Rent Gorbago Dlspoaol 135. Motor
Nt,r Holz.ar HoapU.I, No P•ta. oohonor $200. 304-1175-261g.
$7tlmo Wator lncludod. 514-4411- Maytag Washtr And O.E. Gaa
3117.
Dryor, $150. 114-446-4048.
Moblla home apacaa, Routo 2 RCA 200 vldoo com01o 1350. 5
and 12 at "Y", -6-3811.
pc bedroom suite $250. Couch
and lovo aoat $500. 304-882·
2382.
Merchandise
Reconditioned Washlra, Dryera.
Guarant11d prompt ..rvlce tor
oil mokn, modala. Tho Waahor
5I
Household
Dryor Shoppo. &amp;14;441-21144.
Goods
Slcklobar Mowor, 3 112 HP Sill
Propoltd, 34" Cut, Good Condl·
~" color TV, china cabinet,
upright trwzer, 2pc: couch, 7 pc tlonf $500. 614-245.S87ll.
maple dlntttl, consoJt radlc&gt; Surdus, collactablea, army
record-1 tr1ck, cotta• • end leather boola, camoullaug•
labial, ~75-21115.
clothing (rental surput clothing
per garment). Stm SomeCounly Appliance, Inc. Good $3.
ultd appliances, T.V. 1111. Open rville'•, belade S.ndyvllle Post
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon ..Sat. 614· Ottlce. Frl, Sat, Sun. Noon-6:00
PM othor daya, houro call
446·11Dt, 127 3rd. Ave. Gal·
boforo 11:00 AM. 304·27J.5655.
llpolla,OH
Tanning
canopy, 7 bulba, now
End tablu $15. 11ch, Twin alze bulbs, P•t•
brand, 304·
bodsproodo $12. pr. curtains, $2. 578-2794 ohorROH
5:00 PM.
pr. Good cond, 304.076-$324.

.. ..

=

Jlm'a Farm

45

74

8·!1·11

+J 10 8 2

((2)•

a:

.;

0

a

IF SROOMBALL 15 FILLED, 11M

fht

low to form four simple words

•

EVENING
aa~

WOII
I AMI

~y

0 lour
Rtorrana• ~ttera of
1cramblod words

e

-oopor.

-- -· -

21

S©~~lJ-~t.trs·
141to4
CLAY R. POLlAN

TIIAT DAILT
PUULII
- - - - - --

1

WA'f TO REGISTER FOR
THE FALL SEMESTER

RENTZ OWN
114-446-3158
Vl'ra Furniture
Sofa &amp; Chair, Slt10 Wuk;
Recllnar, $5.47 WHk. Swivtl
Rocker, $3.83 WMk.Bunk Btd
Compllte $8.41 WMk, 4 Drawer
Cheat, $3.21 WHki Poster Btd·
room SUIII, 7 pc,, $16.67 Wllk,
lncludoa Boddlng.Country Plno
Dlnotto With Bonch &amp; 4 Cholro,
$1U8 WHk.OPEN: Mondoy
Thru Saturday, ia.m. to 6p.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
Mllea Ott Routt 7 On Routt 141,
In Centanary.
Silo On All COrpet &amp; Vinyl Floor
Covering In Stock! Mollohan
COrpota, At. 7 North, 614-44611144.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olive Sl .. Galllpolia. Now &amp; Uoad
tumttura, haaltl'l, Wntern &amp;
Work boola. 614-446-315i.
VI'AA FURNITURE
614-446-3151
LIVlNQ ROOM: Sofa &amp; Chslr,
$1H.OO~
Rocllnor, $14UO;
Swivel HOCker, $H.00i Coff11 I
End Tabloo, $89.00 Sot.DININO
ROOM: Tabla With 4 Poddod
Cholro, 1149.00; Country Plno
Olnotto With Bonch And 3
Chalralt $299.00; Matching 2
Door hch $34i· Or $5G.OO
Sot; Ook Tobla1 411d2 Whh 5
BOw
BacK
Chairs,
Op.m.
$829.00. BEDROOM: Post or Bod·
-~--.Freo
Sullo (5 pc.l, $349.00; 4
gilt. Colt Kay It IM.f82•7180.
Fumlahod Apo~mont, 1 Bod· room
Drowar Choat, $4U5; Bunk
WaMod: PII'I•Timo
14170 3br, total OIOctrlc, control room, Wator Paldi t275, 112 Milo Bod, $229; Completo Full Man
Muot HIYI • ltMwlodgo Of air, corport on appror 1-ocr'!t Eoot Of Portor. l1o.:J88-11163.
!"11 Sl05.00. Sol; 7 pc. Cedar
Wltholdlila Pawall, Elc. Ao,ly overlooking rl- 114-11112·5787 Fumlahod Aportment, t br, IIIGroont
Suho, SI99.00.0PEN:
To Sol CU ~ e/o GoRipciiiO aftor !p.m.
Monday Tlvu Sotuodoy, ia.m. lo
Bath.
701
Fourth
Avo,
GIIJ.
Shoro
Dolly Trllou!!!' 125 Thlnl A-uo.
lp.m. Sunday 12 Noon Till
1117Z Balmead 12lrU. fll~lolly IIpotla. $185 Utllhloo Paid. 114- 5p.m.
Oolilpotla, .....1 41111.
4 Mil• Oft Routa 7 On
441-4411 Aftor 7p.m.
tumlahod, Z·BA,IIWOU141.
11out1 141 In cantanory.
Wo'M Pay You to lypo namoa
11114 Colonlo114x711~AR Eloctrlc, Fumlahod A!&gt;ln..,-.ta, 1br,
and odcl- frOm home!
Antiques .
Flowptoco, $225 UtiiHIH Pole 820 Fourth 53
$10.00 Jill 100. Coli 1.JI00.246- 3br, 1.112 Botho,
I 807 Socoitd Ave, Go~ ::---~=.;...,.-~:-3131 · (10.99/mln) rw Wrhe: Porclloo. And Outbu lcllngo. Ex· Ava,
Buy or ooll. Rlwrlno Antlquoa,
PASEP· SIZ, .111
Llncolnway, cotlont Condftlonl Quail Croa• llpotlo. 114-448-4411 aftor 7p.OI.
Mqblla Homo Park. 114-245- Fumlahod EHicloncy, Sl'llllmo. 1124 E. Main Blnot, Pomoroy.
N, A..ora IL 110542.
illtll.
UtiiHIH Paid, 701 Fourth Avo, Hourt!: M.T.W..10:00 o.m.lo 5:00
10
Well g - , ~~­
1i84 Schullz 14d8, 2 SA, all Golllpolla. 511 145 1411 Allor C~z':/. I :GO 1:00 p.m.
Soioa tho lllljll Co. olactrlo, undlll&gt;lnnlng, 2 POl· 7p.m.
orao, I14-992·ZIII.
choa, outbuilding. lluot bo Fumlahod Elllcloncy, Slll&amp;lmo. 54 Miscellaneous
movod. 114-441-1223.
12
Shuatlon
Utllhloo Paid, Shin Ill~ ~s:.r
Merchandise
1i91 . SUnahlna moblla homo 5ocond Ave, Qalllpolla, I
Wanted
4415
Aftor
7p.m.
Mxn. Ill up II Quoll CJMit, 1o1
1-q- · alzo wtarbocl, lull·
Dining room, 1ara0 lthchon,
Wiltlod: 01c1or , _ . To c.r. 53.
wlhoodboan!:IJ"l'" old,
Fumaftldonoy
w/olova
I
llvl~ room, · two ltedroome,
.
FOf In Tltolr Nlaltl lltlll. both whh aa"don tub (nlcol, nfffpllor. ShiN tielh. 91t 2nd 114--·3111 ... 992·
20 Yooro Expo....._ Con Give $17,000. 114-f4H24e ... ~ra;
Avo. 1100 por - · Al1 Utllhlaa 1·Wida' Bc,..n Pro!Octlon TV,
Plld.l14-441-3t41.
Excollarii ,..,.,.,_ · - - 4127 aft• I pm.
$1100, 114-441·1201 or 11112·7811f.

'-

WED., AUG.

s:oo&lt;lle rn &lt;lle

HERE'S JOE COOL ON

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-13

Television
Viewing

W~Y W.T NO· li":":;';:::7:7.~--,/.::::::;:-:::::7:":~::-:-:="

SNrltH
SAJO I 1\116 A
Wl/fof, Dip Hf; ~

-~, I&gt;J.VI~

Business
Buildings

···so.

·•

~

for Rent

1----------

S35CWAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE
CALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1100-251\1242.

..,,

...

44

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Lota &amp; ecr..;e •vell•ble tor
new home conatruc:tlon on
Rayburn A011d. Pavtd road,
Cats and klnene to good
county
water,
rwasonable
homes, 614·84:J.5445.
restrictions. Complete lntorma·
Fret To Good Hom•, Sm•ll ~::::::::::::::::=T---------~tlon mailed on request. 304-675Mind BrHd Male Dog, GrNI I·
5253, John 0. Gtrlach, no
With Klda But Kllla Oucko. 114- 11
Help Wanted
olnglo-wldo trolloro, plo..o.
14
Business
698-2716.
13 acraa on Sand Hill Road, 522
h
per ArticleD
and
Training
h roa d tron tago, cItty wator,
Voconcloo,
a-tlonTr~~nat.r11
B, Posting,
Tin To Gl'lowayi514-245.Q41.
~
owner
llnancln;, 304-875-3030.
or the NegoUated AgrMment . Retrain Nowii!So~o~thHitlrn
between
ttie
ULTA
and
the
ButiMu
College,
Spring
Valley
For
Sale:
13 acres frontage on
Yard Sale
7
Board of Educodon, tho Molgo Plaza. can Todly, 614-446-436711 CR 28, aouth of B..han, Call
l.ocol School Dlotrk:t lo pooling Rogllloratlon 1~5-t274B.
614·94!).2822.
tho following vaconcln tor ha
regullr INching ataff: LD
House and 4-moblle homu on
lucher at Pomeroy Elementary
on• lot Good location. Good
Gallipolis
and Chaplor 1 Taachor at Molgo
condition. Approx. 1100 por
&amp; VIcinity
Junior High (new poatuon).
18 Wanted to Do
month Income. Will return In·
vestment In 5-yurs, Ntw Haven
6038 • 6040 Slcond Avenue.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Will Bobyalt In My Homo WV, 304·882·2461ony11mol
. Auguat 23, 24.
Exeelltnl
Pay,
Benefits, Anr.lme.
Rodney
Area.
407-2a-471$7, R1 trtncee Available. Call 814· Maadowhlll Subdlvleion, 2.6
. ALL Yard Slloo Muot Bo Paid In 1ranepor1atlon,
571. a..m.·10p.m. Toll 245-5788.
miles out Sand Hill Road, has
. Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. Ext.
Refunded.
restrlct•d building ldl for aa11
. the day before the ad Ia to run.
Babysitting In my home, Mon· •• low ae $6500, and one acra
. Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. AVON 1 All Are.. 1 Shirley day thru l=ridlyl. acrota from lots for single wldn available
· F~day. Monday odltlon • 2:00 SpNrll, 304-e71-1421.
North PolnC 8Chool, have also, ·304-675-3480 or67~100.
: · p.m. Saturday.
retwenea, ~75412.
Babyatnw Netded In Vinton
Mercer Bottom Sub-dlvlalon,
• Carport Sola: ThU&lt;Idoy.l. Auguot Arwa. Neac:l AttwtnCM. 1'*381- lueh Hctg Service. Reasonable on1 acre Iota, At. 2 frontage,
· 22, D-? Georgn CrMk Roecf Off 9187Attor &amp;p.m.
Ratoa. No Job To Smolll 614- prlco roducod, chy watar, 304: Rt. 7, Nlco Soya, Glrlo Clothing.
37V-2942.
578-2331.
Bobyolttor Noodod In My Homo.
· Auguot 22 23, 24th. 10 Old Fort 1~11191 Aftollp.m.
Dunlovr Wolcllng Shop. Will do Roducod: 12 112 Acroa z Llrgo
: Troll. 111 HouH On loll Slortlng
1mlll. jObll an~ manuflcture Bsrns, Tralltr Hook-Up, ·Rural
. Up Evono Holghto Oft Rt. 141.
CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA amoll holM. 304-1137·2733.
Wator, Tobacco BaH, Rt.7. 304Hirlng Mor&gt;'Womon. Up to 1100
1113-81111
: Moving Sale: 3e Mill Creek woakly. Tranaf)Oitatlon.~..J4ou• G - Portablo Sawmill, don't
·
. Rood, 614-446-8.120, Wodnaoday, lng. CALL NOW 1-2CI·IJ0-71100 haul your toga to tho mill Just
. Th ..oday, And Frlday.
Exl. tlt7B5.
can ~75·1~57.
Rentals
Dairy Farm Uanag• Wanted. Milt Paula's Day Care Centar.
Pomeroy,
Suporvloo all aapocta of dolly Silo, aHordablo, chlldcaro. M·F
oporatlon. lnauronco • pold 5 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ago• 210-10. 41 Houses for Rent
Middleport
vac:ttlon. Send ,.,ume to P-18, Betorw, after school. Drop-Ins
c/o Point Piooaant Raglotor, 200 wolcomo. 614-446-8224. Now In· $350/Mo., $200 Dopoalt. 2 Bod·
&amp; VIcinity
Main StrMt, Point P11111nt, WV flint Toddler Car~, 614-446-8227. rooms, Uvlng Room, Laundry,
· 3-tomlly yard ulo, Aug 23-24, 25550.
Will babyalt In my homo, Largo Kllchan, Slnglo Goroga.
· 8:30pm 11 ZUapon Hollow Ad, Dairy Farm Wortctfl Wanted. In- RoouveH school area, 304-67S. Small Yard. 614-448-1'358.
· curtalna, dr1pea, lampt;, diahla,
3 bodroomb1112 botha, z atory,
: record pJayara, cotfHiend auranca I Paid Yacollon. Sond 5S44.
roauma to P.17, c/o Point w ld Ilk 1 b b It
110 Park rlvo, S375. month,
, tabln, lawn mowerhtoola, tabl .. Pluaant
11
Aegltter, 200 Main
ou
• o a ya ama
. aaw, wiring, muc -more, Gil- Stroot, Polnl
Plo ... nt, WV bobJoo.young toddlora anytlmo, $250. dopoolt. 304.f75-1242.
Rea.
514-1192-3242
_
3br With Attochod Gorogo, Fully
· All Yard Soloa Muot Bo Paid In EARN MONEY Roodi"JJookol
Carpotod, All Appllancoa, Llrgo
· Advance. O..dllne: 1:OOpm the
Ftnced Yard. Available lm·
dar bltorw the .t Ia to run, $30,0001rr. Income
ontlol.
modlatolyl
$350/mo.
SlOO
· Sunday odltlon· 1:OOpm Friday, ':::.•· 1) 805-1162-1000 Ext. Y·
Slcurlty Dopoah. lt4-Z45.f114.
· Monday
odhlon
!O:OOa.m.
Soturdoy.
ex1 Y worltl Excellont Poyf ,.. 21
Business
BNutltul 4-BR houH 1n
Syracuoo.
BaaomanVcorport.
oomblo Proctucta At Homo. Call
Opponunlty
eon 614·ill2.f298 daya or 992·
For
Information.
504-641-1003
6750
avanlnge.
Public Sale
8
Exl. 313.
•
INOTICEI
&amp; Auction
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. For Ront: 2br Homo, Doublo
Equal Opportunily Employer. recommends that you do busl- Garafte, $300/mo. Plue O.poalt
' ~R.,..Ic.,..k-::P-aa_roo:._n.:,A:..u:..ct.,..lo:..n-:Com:--,..-n-y, Non
Smololng
Drug-Enerp;etlc,
Froa En- neaa w1 th people you know and And 1 f.,.ncn. 114-«~3548.
vlronment.
AleI Yow
1
· full time auctioneer, complete Self MoU tad WI 1 ""
NOT to
aend
ttwougn the Small 1br Stove &amp; Attri~rator
va • II ng ,o am mall
until
youmonty
have lnvntlgated
· tuetlon Mrvlca. Llcii\MCI Ohio,
And Wloh To Bo R-nlzod For tho oHorlng.
Fumlohod, Waohor I Dryor
Wool VIrginia, 304-773-1785.
Your Performance? We Will
HOCik·up,
$225/mo.
1200
Taoch You To 1111 A Momblr Of Arthur'a Choln Link Fonco. Deposit, 5 Montha Looso. 142
wanted to Buy
Our Taam. Rnponalbllhloo In- Rooldantlol, Commarclal, In· Fourth Avo, Galllpollo, 514-446· Uaod Mobile Nomoo, Coli 114- clud• A.dmlnlltratlve Function duttrlal, FrH Estlmalul Com· 3687.
In A Conaumer Fln~~nclal Str· plate Installation. Phone: 814. 441-4175.
vlcoo OHico, With 0no Of Tho 384~277.
Small 2br, 238 Roar Firat Ava,
Klchon,
Wnh
Slovo,
Wanted all.&amp;c,unk and acr1p met· Llodota In Tho Flnonclol Sor·
vlcoa lnduotry. If You Hovo Ex· Locol Vondlng Routo For Solo. Ralrlgorator, IZ&amp;Oimo. Plua
' al, 304-801 31.
c:otlont Admlnl8traUvo Skllla Will Soli All Or Pa~ . Ropoat Utllltru, Dopoan, Rolaronco. No
' Wanted to buy, Slandlng timber, And Top Nolch Phono Skllla Bualn-. Abovo Avorogo In· Pota. 614-446-4U6.
: Bob WIIUama &amp; Sono 114·992· PI- COII John BNnlon, AI como! 1-8011-MI-8883.
S449.
114-446-220•1 F... tmmodlata
42 Mobile Homes
Top Prlcoa Paid: All Old U.S. Conaldarallon.
for Rent
Coins, Gold Ringo, Dlo111011do
LAW ENFORCEMENT
Sllvar Coins, Storllng, Goid
23 Professional
2 bodroom Alhton Upland Rd,
Colna. M.T.S. Coin Sllop, 151 No ExD~~MAASHALL
Hud accoptod, no polo, 304~75No-ry. For
Services
Socond Avonuo, Oolllpotla.
4088.
Apollcotlon lnlonnotlon Coli: 1·
210·755-1111, Exl. OH155. 8t.m.· Custom Butchering, e day1 a 2 bedroom trailer, IIWir &amp; water
WMk. Cowl, Hogs, OMr, 304· furnlshad. Refertncll, Also
Employment Serv1ces 5p.m. 7 daya.
trailer apac1. North At. 1 locust
Get paid for compiling name• 612·2353.
Road on right, Point Pleasant,
and addr....., $500._per 11000.
wv.
COil 1·1100-246-3131 I$O.iWmlnl
11 Help Wanted
or wrna: PASSE, 5170, 161
2 bedroom tralltr compltttly
Real Estate
South
Llncolnwoy,
North
tumlshad, AIC, waaher, dryer,
..Whln you wllh upon a atar Aurora, Ill 110542.
make• no difference who you
-----------------1~304~-nJ-~5~95~8~·~--~~~
oro. Anything your hoar1 doalraa HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDEO:
2·BR lumlshod or untumlohod,
will come to you". Childhood Oourontood S1711 Wook Plua 31 Homes for Sale
doalroo oro _ , , . . . vory Morol Polcl Vocotlona. 114-446- ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII ~::n, ~~ -~~~~tlon, Now
2
sUnple.. .adequatt tood._&amp;ove...a 7267.
Roducod To Soli: 2 Story 3br
lifo troa of hu~ ...By becoming 1
lol In Chuhlra, Ohio. 2·BR, tumlahod, waahorldryor,
Iotter parent, you can tuflll the H.ou sake• per/Com pa nlon Comor
Exctllent Condition. Flenanclng central air, $250 plua daposlt,
dnlrn of an~lected or 1buHd noodod lor '11 yur old lady with Avalloblo WIJh Poy Polnta. 90-f. 614·992·5800.
child. Call Try·A!IIIn HOmoa, good mind ond good homo. 1132~ili, 1104·U2·71170, 614·367·
Inc. 383-5863, 422·3159, 345- ldoolly nood ond oldar lady to IMI4i.
2br, Air, Cablo, Now carpet, Nlca
KIDSm 1-800-621·1053. Bocomo make hlr homa whh her. Other
&amp; Clean, Beautiful Rlv•r Vitw In
arr~ngaments
conaldered.
a tcetl.r paranl. Make dream•
3br Home, 25 Acru, 1 Milt From Kanauga. Foster's Mobile Home
Phono colloct 114-6i6-27U City Limits. Will Conaider Trsd1. Park. 614-448-1602.
come true.
(Aibony)
614-441-1340.
Unturnlehed 2br, CA, Hut,
AVON • AH oruo, Coli Marilyn INCOME TAX COURSE: Cioaaoa
3br A Frama On 1 Acre Woodtd Private Lot, 2 Mll11 Out On At.
Wuwor304-112•2145.
Begin S.pttmbw 5, 1801. It You Lot. $27,500 Will Consldor Land 588. No Poto. $250imo. 614-446Are Career Oriented Or Just
ADDRESSERS WANTEO lm· Seeking
Wllh
Raasonable 2300.
Part-nmt Employment, Contract
modlotalyt
No
E1porlanco Thlo Could
Down Paym1nt. 614·256·198SI, Very Nict, 141l60, Air Condition,
1111
For
Youl
Contact:
N-aaary.
PIOCIII
FHA
614·256-1505.
Coblo Avollablo, Doposh &amp;
Mottgago Rotundo. Work AI DonTax, Inc. At 614-446-llt78.
Silo By OWnor: Lovoly, Wall R•f•r•nc.. Required. 614-446Homo. Coil 1-405.:121·3014.
KUWAIT/SAUDI JOBS Now For
Kapl 3 Bodroom Ranch Styla 052l
Appilcotlona May Only Sa Of&gt;. Hiring MtniWomtn Many Flelda; HouM Whh 2 Car Oetachad
Excello,.
Pay
Whh
Tronaporto·
talnld Frcm And Returned To
Garago And 1 Car Attached 44
Apanment
Your Local Ohlo Buruu Of lion Paid. COl For Dotalla 1-505- Garag1. Localld In Ch1Shlra.
3111.f011
Eat
K-253.
for Rent
Employment Sorvlcaa OHioo.
Ownor Anlioua To Solll Coll614·
Comoloto Job Doocrlpllone Aro LET THIS NEWSPAPER BE 288-45948 After 5p.m. Or leave
1br Apo~rtment, Water, S.wag1,
Avalfoblo For Rovlow AI Tho YOUR
KEY
TO
HUGE Mo111ga.
O•rbaa•. Paid. Deposit R..
OBES otllcoa. Doodlno For ~ EARNINGS.
No
Exp.
Noc
....
ry.
pllcltlona Ia Auguot :a, 11181. Coli 1·1100-246-3131 (10.99/mlnl GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1 qulrocf. Coli 014-441-4345 Ahor
Rapalr). Dlllnquont Tax 5p.m.
Pootlng DoocriPI!olw lo u tal- Or
Wrha: PASEE • 33A, 161 Un· !U
Iowa:
BookkooJIOI'ISocNtary. colnw•,,
Propertf. Raposanalona. Your
N. Aurora, IL 80!542.
Ar~~a (1 805·962-8000. Ext. GH· 2 Room Furnished Apertmtnt.
Annuol
Solory
114,11110.
Downatolro, All Utllltloa Paid,
SJ&gt;OCiall.zod
Sklla
and Lhtlo Cooaaro Plua lo oMklng 1018, Fot Cunont Ropo Llat.
i1i Second Avtnut.
Knowtodgo:
Roqul,.. epplit;anla for our Aailstanl HOUSE FOR FREEII Muot movo $175/mo.
614-446-3945.
knowledge or accounting end Monagar lrolltM program. Paid oH let In Mlddtaport. Fill In· :..:,:,:.:.:..:::..,.:.c.....,-:--:-::-:-::-boot&lt;koaplng
molhocla· training, compotMiva laiary ond buement, aNd and atraw. Must 4-BR apartment In Middleport
llmillorlly wtth roquloltlon aiM! IICeliOnl odvancltilont oppor· algn oo,.roctl 2·BR, Largo LR, $200 month, 3-BR Mlddloport
pun:ltaao ordar procodu,..; ••· lunllloo. Apply Th ..odly or DR, Both, hao now root and gut· $200 month1 ):BR Pomaroy $150 '
porion..
wllh
uolng Friday oltor 1 p.m., Oolllpotlo.
ter, new copper lnd PVC plumb- month, 114-~-8782.
apreodahoota; abllhy to wrhe
lng,
nood aoma work. You pay BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Noodod
lmmedlalaly,
routln• buaJneu llttlf8 reflect·
lng llondard procodura; OkUI CooklwaltrMa. Apply In person, tor lhl movlngl Only II~OUI BUOOE1' PRICES AT JACKSON
colloral Coil 614-11112·2071 ohor ESTATES, 531 Jockoon Plko
In lyplng; dolo onlry; 10 koy clio Collnlry Kllchon, AICino.
from S19Zimo. Wolk to ahop &amp;
culltor uuv• and word Rocopllonlot tor a chomlcol 7:00pm.
-ling. Dally dutlooo lncluclo dependency program. Ba•lc Houu For Salt: ~ Bedroom• movle1. c.tl 814-446-2568. EOH.
poatlng to 1 compulorlzod ..,. olllco oltllll 12·11-hou,. -k. With Partial BHtment In Bid·
Comp'-IIIJ Furnlahld Small
ayotam; molntalng Sond roaumo'e to: F.A.C.T.S., At. well, Aeuon1bll. 114-W-8621.
MouN, No Pete, Yard, Plus
foGo,
ill and acltoduloo· 2 Box :rtJ.A, lldwotl, OH 45114.
Utllltlaa. $235/mo. 114-446-0338.
ariOwerlng tho toiOphoM aiM! DoodU,..: Aug. 30, lilt. MIFIH,
groatlng vlanono; IOIIaUng
Efficiency,
atove, . rat bath
fKllhy -rotary on IYJ&gt;Ing oa E.O.E.
wlahowar1,lie all afact, lus car·
noodOd.
Minimum
potod, Hull occplod, 304~75: :within
Drlvara
many
Quollllcotlona: Completion of •aulo
zooN01dacl.
milo radlua
ol
1200.
tho 12th groda or oquw.oy. Sond rooume to P-1e,
......,.,...,od by ono yaor ol c/o Point Ploount Aoglotor, zoo
For r1nt, 1 bedroom apartmtnl,
boOitkooplng and -orlol U..ln ltrMI, PcNnt PleaNnt, WV
$225 utllltln lncludod, dopoolt
nporlonco
Including
ox, 25550.
raqulrtd, no ,... , 814-182-2218.
porto,... uolng . , . . - .
Apartment For Rent
Fumlehtd
lnd word ~aalng computor W.ntld Avon ......nlatlval,
In Town. COil 114-446-1423 Ahor
cuot""*' and hollfOII. No
programo.l)po eo wpm.
POMEROY
'POSTAL JOBS'
111'18414.110 hr. No axp. noodod.
For ex•m and appllcaUon Info.,
coli 1..:111--1117-fiM 7o.m.-1op.m.
7 tlaya.

'

R,.1JJ!j:l.[
'-\,11/l

~2·2648.

count!,

..

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Ave., Galllpolla. CloH to
Coun Hou11. 1 room, 2 rooms,
3 rooms, 4 rooma. All nicely
decorated, air conditioning,
your water &amp; atwer blll•re paid.
Make your choice now. No
quotta over the phone, you
muat ' " them. Phone for en
appointm•nt. S1~78i8 day,
446·9539 lVI.

Z·Fooo klttono, 514-114ll-2772.
3 lomolo Collllr' f&gt;Upo, 1 apoyod
temtla, black lab •nd beagle
mix, 304·695-3U3.
3·molh•r cala and 2·kittena, 614·
1112·1302.
5 puppies tor more Information
call304·m ·9564.

. mo,..

1

Groot Soloctlon Of Pro-Ownod
Moblla Homn. Small Down
Paymont. Flnonclng Avalloblo.
FrH Satup And Olllvory. Call
Elaoa Homo Contar AI 114·772·
1220.

REDUCE: b..-n oft lot while you
al11p, take OPAL. Av•llaa. lit
Fruth Drug.
To whom It may concern; I will
not be rMponllble tor any
dtbta olhlr than my own. Mark
W. Hotlay.

4

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Announcements

• •

ASTRO·GRAPH

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AC?UAAIUI (~en. 20-Feb. 18) Circum·
stances may draw you inlo a partner·
ship today. II won't be an opllmum sl1u·
allon, but II does have advantages - If
bolh parties cooperate.
PISCEB (Feb. 20-llarch 20) Someone
whose help you may need In lhe near fu·
lure Is walling 10 be repaid lor som.,.
lhlng thai waa previously done lor you.
Honor your old obligations.
ARIES (a.-h 21·AprH 18) You
shouldn't be heallanl aboul pulling
yourself oul lor lrlenda loday, since
you're likely lobe !he one who galna 1he
moll In the long run.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Overall
conditions look favorable today lor a
project that haa\SUIIered laloly from lm·
peded progress. If you're tenacious,
you can make up lor loslllme.
GEMINI (MIJ 21..June Zo) A jOint van·
lure In which .you're lnvol-.d will nol
ISUfler from a leek of Ideas loday, but
these mual be coordinated eHeollvety. ll
not, you'll end up wllh 1wo Independent
schools of thought
CANCER (June 21..JUIJ 22) An endeavor lhal n~ hilly reached fruition atlll
hall10me life lel11n·H. 11100111 like you
may •-rreol II today and accompllllh
what you failed lo do previously.

20

--

....

··~-~-·~ ~ -""""~,~---

31 FIYortte
41 lttldc-1

42 School dance

Roberllon

43 Ellr•
Ortllnlry
44 Klllg Davld'a
grlndlelher
45 llecluded

10:05 (]) MOVIE: The Blbylllter

(2:00)
10:30 (I) (J) 8 Mlnltd People
Elizabeth 11 offered a
partnership at her law
!lftiCtice. (RI Sllreo. 1;1
ill CftiOk and ChaM
ID BaHbiH Tonight

iiJl NeWI
()) Twilight zCll New-toll

,...
1
41 llllllcll

-·

47 Fron

=·

9

51 Wtlttan

evowll Oil
debt

fi~HaN Stereo. 1;1

CELEBRITY CIPHER

--ltlndl

52 Vllaln'l
IICfllllatJon

Ce6ltwlty Clptw cryptogram~ . . cnMd from

• Grand Ola Opry In

Each MH• In the

HoUIIion: The Economic

rr.

SutNnll Minnie P. . Roy
Acuff and other membera of

P'T

. lhe Grand Ole Opry perform
lor President and Mra. Bullh
allhe HOUlton aummH. (1 :001
Stereo.
0 lporlaCentar
18 lpoN Tonlgltl
D ~ ancl Mre. King
11::10 ()). 0 Tonlgltl Show

Stereo.

(!)Magnum, p.l.
ill America'l DelenH
Monllar

......~....................._,

Ren~llnder

llflhltla
38 -Ind ....
38Re...,'eaon

18 World NlrWI
0 700 Club With I'll

11:00()). (I) ()).

111 DillY

21 Cinder
23 Evon (poet.l
24Liaa
25 Cell
28 Doean'lerlol
278enH
28 S.H·
centered
30Abotnlnebltr
anowm1n
32 Idol
35 Feudal

®. SllirTNII
what to do to make the relationship
work . Mall $2 plus a long. self-ad·
dressed, slamped envelope to Match·
maker. cl o Ihis newspaper, P.0 . Box
91428, Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) An ambitious
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL ~ objective you're slrlvlng tor can be lui·
tilled today. provided you don't strew
obstacles In your own palh. Focus on
success. not negallve probablli11es.
LIBRA (SepL 23-0cl. 23) Someone you
know on a lrlendly basis could be helplui today In a business maller. However.
you musl no1 press lhla person lor favors; they must come by way oflhla Individual's own volition.
SCORPIO (Oct. :14-Nov. 22) Challenges
lhat have lnllmldaled you recently are,
in actuality, paper dragons; forlunale4y,
Aug. 22, 19G1
you may discover this lor youraolf lo·
day. There is a lesson IO be learned
Be alert lor opportunities of a material
here.
naJure In !he year ahead. The possiblli· SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 23-Dec:. 21) An
lies lor adding to your holdings look en·
associate won't mind If you uao his
couraglng, provided you finish what you
Ideas today, bul he will become ans.tact
gered 11 nol given proper acknowledgLEO (J..r 23-Aug. 22) An agreement is
ment. Credit your sources.
only as good as the Intent ollhe parties
CAPRICORN (Dec:. 22..Jan. 18) Condi1nvolved. 11 you .are negotiating som.,.
tions thai have a direct eflecl upon your
thl'1.1) you hope will have longevity, keep
financial security should start to brightIbis. In mind today. Trying 10 patch up a
en up a bit beginning ·today. Gains are
broken romance? The Astro-Graph
possible In two areas.
Matchmaker can help you understand

7 SauiiMerle
8 Irony
II Sllllllbrlc
10 New England
unlvoralty
11 Fllll~~g return

JNX

CMPDDR
KNHR

VJK

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aNM

UNMRDR.

(KPMDAXNMI
EDMJDM
UDMONH.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In ~merlca you welch TV lnd 1hlnk lhel'l 10111y
unreal. Then you ltep out- lnd 11'1 lho lime." - Join Annllrlldlng.

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--.

fiUOIItianl b¥ flmoul ....... - ll'ld ~ tor anothw. Todly'l CU.: 0 ..... 1.

1111

br HEA, InC.

�, ·-·'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, August 21, 1991

Actors accuse
manager of
stealing money

Rutland Garden Club to present 'Salute to AmeriFlora'
The Rutland Garden Club will Miss Ruby Diehl.
Clean-up is lhe responsibility of Quincentennial jubilee, five flowers, other foliage permissable;
Mrs. Jack Robson is in charge all members.
present a flower show, "Salute to
O.A.G.C. Gateway Garden, Mass;
AmeriFiora" at the Methodist of artistic placement with Mrs.
Classes areas follows:
Church in Rutland on Monday Alben Woodard and Mrs. Vernon
Division I ·Senior Horticulture: Discovery Pavilion, tall design in
from 6:30-10 p.m. with meeting at Weber in charge of horticulture rose hybrid; rose, other than hybrid vertical manner; Performing Arts
7
placement.
tea; zinnia, large flowered, one Pavilion, modem, showing motion,
p~ horticulture and invitational
Mrs. Curtis Dalton will oversee stem; zinnia, small flowered, one; special class.
Division V - Invitational :
classes are open to anyone wishing the junior classes and Mrs .. Virgil marigold, large type, one; any other
participate.
Atkins
is
in
charge
of
pubhcoty.
annual;
and
celosia,
any
variety,
Tea Garden (not judged
Japanese
10
for competition) in oriental manMrs. Virgil Atkins in the show
Mrs. Vernon Weber will have one.
chairman with stagin~ by all club th e ed uca tional display with the
Division II · Container-growr; ner.
Division VI - Junior Artisitic:
members and registrauon under the Jade Junior Garden Club in charge plants: African violet; foliage
direction of Mrs. Dayton Parsons, of special displays.
houseplants, can be a hanging bas- Around the World Carousel, your
Mrs. Chris Diehl and Mrs. ()Oa
Mrs. Robert Canady and Mrs. ket; flo'wering house plant, in favorite design.
Division VII - Educational:
Ward.
Virgil Atkins will havNe thh e sho:V blooDm;.and cacti anJd /or suHcculent .
1 Ameri Flora Display and Jade
Judges' clerks arc Mrs. Carl book with Mrs. James tc o1son on
tvtston 11 1 - untor orttcuDenison and Mrs. Curtis Dalton. In charge of photography and Mrs. ture: fresh roadside material, one Junior Garden Club, show and tell.
All of the classes are open to the
charge of class divisions and rib- Alben Woodard and Mrs. Eugene stem; marigold, any variety.
bons are Mrs.
Atkins and Atkins in charge of door prizes.
Division IV - Senior Artistic: public except Division IV which is
~~~~~~==~~~~------~

'
'I

I

j

open to members of the sponsoring
club only.
Entries are to be placed Monday
afternoon by 6 p.m. with oral judgmg at 7:40p.m. One blue, red , reilow and white for each class
except junior classes where th~
judge may lay as many white rib·
bons as desired.
All honiculture entries arc to be
named as to variety and one entry
IS permmed per exhibitor in artistic
classes.
Entry tags and containers for cut
flowers will be furnished.
A best of show, junior best of
show.• horticulture sweepstakes in
both JUntor and senior division ribbons will be placed.
'

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) Della Burke of "Designing
Women" and her husband, "Major
Dad" star Gerald McRaney,
accused their household manager
of stealing $10,000.
Paulette Ava Broughton was
booked Tuesday for investigation
of embezzlement and released on
her recognizance. She said the
money was owed her for long
hours picking up after the couple.
Burke and McRaney said
Broughton wrote 35 checks wilhout
authorization on a household
account in her name.

COPYRIGHT 1991 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS ANC
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, AUG. 18, THROUGH SATUR·
DAY , AUG. 24, 11181, IN Pomeroy
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT OUANmtES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.
ADVE~nSED ITEM POUC't' - Each of these advenised items is reQuired to be readily availabN! for
sate '"· eac~ Kroger Stc~re, except as specifK:allv noted in this ad. If we do run out of an
advert~sed 1tem. we v.:•U otf8f v~ your choice of a comparable item, when evaililble,
~eflect•ng the sam~ savm~s or _
a r~lf"'chock which will entitte you to purchase the advertiSed
~tem at the advertised puce Wlthln 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per
nem purchased.

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Page4

Vol. 42, Non
Copyrighted 1991

2 Sectlono, 12 Pageo 25 c:ento
A Muttlmedll Inc. Newopoper

front of the Russian republic's parliament building, the site of massive anti-coup protests. He told lhe
crowd that the individual republics
of the Soviet Union must be
strengthened.
"This putsch has postponed the
signing of the Union Treaty but has ,
not ended it," he told the crowd
stretched in front of the massive
19-story white building that served
as the nerve center for the opposition during the coup.
"This is a lesson to all of us and
a lesson for the president of the
country, Gorbachev, also," he said.
"The last three dark days ... has
shown Russia cannot be safe unless
it has its own national guard."
Gorbachev did not attend the
celebration.
His first official act since Monday's coup, according to a repon
by Tass, was to fire Deputy
Defense Minister Gen. Vladimir L.
Govorov.
Tass, the official news agency.
said Govorov was being transferred
to unspecified other work. In his
place, Gorbachev assigned Col.
Gen. Boris Y. Pyankov.

Relatively iiule was known
about either man. Govorov, who
had held the post of head of civil
defense, had not been clearly associated with the couP. attempt.
Pyankov had been a mtlitary commander Siberia, based in Novosibirsk.
Early today, Gorbachev flew
back to Moscow from the Crimea,
where he had been confined to his
summer home by the forces who
temporarily ousted him from
power.
Gorbachev faced the task of
forging a new relationship with the
vastly popular Yeltsin and cleaning
house in the Kremlin.
Emerging from three days of
isolation - cut off fro m his allies
at home and abroad - Gorbachev
wasted no time in thanking Yeltsin,
the man who frequently criticized
him but led the fight for his return.
''Here is my res~tlo the Soviet people, and spectfically, to Boris
Yeltsin , the president of Russia,"
Gorbachev told Soviet TV. Tens of
thousands of Soviets answered
Yeltsin 's call to strike and rally in
protest of the coup.

U.S. Grade

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FIRE SCENE - Firemen were on the scene
or this trailer fire about an hour Wednesday

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arternoon. There was heavy fire and smoke
damage to the Paul Perry trailer hnme.

'

Lawmen net 466 more marijuana
plants in Meigs County Wednesday

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stan
Law enforcement officers seized
466 marijuana plants and executed
two more search warrants in Meigs
County Wednesday in the continuing eradication effon .taking place

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this week.
Meigs County Sheriff James
Soulsby reported that officials now
have enough evidence to seek
grand jury indictments on three
people.
The search warrants were executed in the Boston Hollow area of

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GORBACHEV RETURNS • Russian Prime
Minister Ivan Silavev (lert) and Mikhail Gorbachev smile togetber on tbe tarmac at
Moscow's Vnukovo airport shortly arter Gor-

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SfORE TO CLOSE • ProMtt's Store and Recreation located
on State Route 124, Portland, will close its doors on Saturday.
Gordon Proffitt has operated tbe business for 17 years. He plans to
hold a liquidation sale on Saturday, Sept. 7. Among tbe many who
will miss the store lJ longtime Sentinel carrier, Otis McNutt, wbo
took this picture. Since the store is midway on McNutt's delivery
. route, he bas enjoyed a daily break with the rolks at Proffitts.

Olive Township and in Salem
Township on County Road 4, but
no arrests were made since the
owners or residents of the properties were not at home. Soulsby
said.
Earlier this week a search warrant was executed at a residence on
Carpenter Hill Road in Columbia
Township where 69 marijuana
plants was found in a nearby field.
No arrests were made there either,
it was reported.
As of Wednesday evening a
total of I ,405 marijuana plants with
a street value of more than $1.5
million had been seized, according
to the sheriff.
He said that searches will continue throughout the month but
probably not on a daily basis.
The raids are being conducted
by the sherifr s deparunent, Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Investigation,
and the Ohio National Guard. Ear·
lier this week the Ohio Depanrnent
of Natural Resources and the Federal Drug Enforcement Administration had been in on the action here.
Wednesday four helicopters
were in use in the search for marl·
juana plants. In all of the searches,
Sheriff Soulsby explained, once
locations are spotted from the air,
the ground crews move in to take
the plants.
However with the apparent
move of some fVOWeTS to indoors,
· helicopter sighungs are not the dis·
covery factor they were in years
past, the sheriff said.
Prior to lhis week's search about
I ,600 marijuana plants had been
eradicated earlier this summer in
Meigs County.

• bachev's plane touched down early Thursday
morning. He was returning l'rom his Crimean
holiday retreat arter an abortive coup in
Moscow. (AP)

Coroner states cause of death
in Mathias murder proceedings
By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Staff

Holly Farms
Breast
Quarters ............ Ib.

Low tonight In 60s. Friday,
partly sunny. High In the 80s.

Gorbachev returns to
power; arrests made
MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev
returned to power in Moscow today
and Boris Yeltsin, who led massive
protests against a failed coup, said
the men who ovenhrew Gorbachev
were being rounded up.
Although Gorbaehev was back
in the capital, the day of celebra·
tion belon$ed to Yeltsin. The Rus·
sian prestdent spoke to tens of
thousands of cheering supporters at
a rally a day after lhe collapse of
the three-day coup by hard-liners.
Yeltsin earlier told the Russian
republic's parliament that police
under his control had arrested four
of the eight plotters, including the
man who seized Gorbachev 's job,
Vice President Gennady Yanayev.
Valetin Stepankov, Russia' s
chief prosecutor, told the parliament that a fifth, Interior Minister
Boris Pugo, killed himself when
police went to arrest him. A sixth
member of the conspiracy was in a
hospital and the other two were
reported to have parliamentary
immunity.
After his parliament speech,
Yeltsin appeared at the rally in

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· Jurors listened intently Wednesday 111. a.Columbu&amp; mediCJII expert
as he ~xplained the. deaih of 12year-oJd Gallipolis girl allegedly
murdeled by a Kanauga man.
In tlie second day of testimony,
Franklin County Deputy Coroner
Larry Tate spoke about the autopsy
he helped perform on a corpse
identified as Stacey R. Lucas last
October. Lucas' decomposing body
had been found in an abandon strip
mine on Oct. 12, 1990.
William A. Mathias, 24, is
charged with the kidnapping, rape
and murder of Lucas on Oct. 6,
1990.
Coroner testifies
Even though a stab wound to the
chest perforated her left lung,
Lucas died because of a severed
artery, Tate said. He testified that
although she was stabbed in two
other places, the wound to the right
side of Lucas' neck was Ielhal.
"The wound extended 1-2/16
inch in depth ... " Tate said. "It severed the common carotid anery and
then entered lateral ponion of the
larynx." Blood from the artery then
flooded her throat, ca~ing her to
asphyxiate, he said.
Other stab wounds were found
in her chest, below her left nipple,
and also to the left side of her neck.
Both wounds, he said, could have
been inflicted by a screwdriver or
similar long, thin instrument.

Tate also noted that a vaginal
smear performed on Lucas detected
sperm . He said that although the
sperm was present, there "was no
definite tear, abrasion or hemorrhage" of the vaginal area
He testified that a toxicology
test of Lucas' blood revealed .06
percent per gram of ethanol. The
ethanol could have been present
due to chemical decomposition or
due to drinking, he said. Ethanol is
the alcohol-related substance found
in beer or wine.
Videotaped search
Jurors also viewed a videotape
filmed by a former Gallia County
deputy of a search of Mathias'
trailer on Perch Street in Kanauga.
Former Deputy Chip Kirby
made the tape of Mathias' residence during a police search. In the
recording, officials tum over a carpet mat to reveal a flathead screwdriver. Police also ftnd wet clothes
in the bathroom sink and a soiled
T-shirt and toothbrush concealed
under the sirtk.
Kirby and Gallipolis City
Patrolman Stephen Wilson also
showed the jury their photographs
of the strip mine where Lucas'
body was discovered.
Motion to suppress
At end of the day, Knight and
Lentes made a motion to suppress a
videotaped statement William
Mathias made to police after being
arrested Oct. 12.
In the recording, Mathias
appears to have requested an attor-

ney after signing a constitutional
waiver of rights. Although Gallipolis Investigator Mike Tucker and
Chief Deputy Carlos Wood told
Mathias they could not speak to
him after he made the request ,
Mathias continued to talk to the
two officials.
After viewing the tape in the
courtroom, Judge Cox said he
needed to study the law regarding
the tape and the rights waiver.
"I don't think there is any question where you need to research what area," Cox said. "It has to do
with the timing involved when a
defendant makes a request for an
attorney. I thirtk it is obvious that
the defendant made a request for an
auomey.
"The question is, did he then
later waive the right to counsel?"
he said.
If the judge rules that Mathias
constitutional rights were violated,
the videotape will not be admitted
as evidence.
Saunders said he was d isappointed with the motion being
made in the middle of the trial.
"I thirtk lhe motion was untimely under the rules, but the judge has
lhe discretion to hear it and we will
follow the judges ruling," he said.
"I don't think it is unusual to
have it done at this point," Knight
said. "Before any statement is
admitted into evidence to the jlll)',
a judge has to determine if it ts
admissible."
In a phone interview Thursday
Continued on page 3

•

ERADICATION CONTINUES- The Meigs
County Sheriff's Department continues their
assault on Meigs County's marijuana barvest.
In addition to the 107 plants on Monday and 832
on Tuesday, anotber 466 were confiscated
Wednesday. Tbe street value was set at $1.5 mU-

lion by Sberii'r Jiines Soulsby. Tb' 'ndlcatlon 1s
a cooperative effort or the Oblo Bureau r1 CriJb.
inal Investigation, the Army National Guard
and the MelliS County Sheriff's Departmeat.
Here, Sheriff's Deputy Joe .Fields Is seen wltb
one or the plants confiscated iD Bedford TOWD·
~~

·~

~

~

-•

;

-"
.!'

.......•

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