<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11115" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/11115?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T06:01:52+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42082">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/8dded84a6d2c17588fbd717f10c34da6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4e4324d27163060c1c26ac4dba4efefe</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35063">
                  <text>...----------.. .

---- -- ---- - ·-----~-~~--.......------------

Page 14-The Dally Sentinel

awaited a third operation today to
stop internal bleeding.
West, 58, suffered a ruptured
liver and spleen Friday when the
car she was riding in crashed on the
way to a Grand Ole Opry perfor-

Soul- singer released from prison

mance. Two operations failed to
stop the bleeding. She was in critical but Slable condition today.
Police said the driver of the car,
George Thackston, lost control
while driving 55 mph in a 25 mph

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif.
{AP)- Soul SinJa: Ike Turner was
released from pnson Tuesday after
serving more than 17 months for a
drug conviction.
Turner,
to return to
Los Angeles
his release

zone.

Turner and his ex-wife, Gram·
my Award-winning singer Tina
Turner, performed together as the
Ike and Tina Turner Review, producing such hits as "Proud Mary"
and "River Deep, Mountain
High," before divorcing in 1976.

from the California Men's Colony
West Facility, said Associate Warden Larry Kamien.
He was jailed in March 1990
after pleadmg guihy to cocaine
charges. A jury convicted him of
two drug misrnedeanors.

Ohio Lottery

Country
•
stnger
dies

wednesday, September 4, 1991

Poineroy-Middlepcirt, Ohio

West remains critical as fans offer blood
By RANDALL DICKERSON
Allodlled Press Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Fans of Dottie West orrered to
donate blood to the hospital where
the critically injured country singer

-.---..-.----·-----~-,c· •

Pick 3:067
Pick 4: 0241

Cards : 2-H, 4-C
A-D;4-S
Super Lotto:
7-18-22-33-34-35
Kicker:738940

Page 8

Low tonight In 60s. Partly
cloudy. Friday high In 80s.

Vol. 90, No. 236

Copyrlghtod 1991

AOWRTISED ITEM POLICY- Each of these advertised items •s
required 10 be readily available !Of sale in each t&lt;rogcr

Meigs Commissioners
ratify solid waste plan

.'

Store. except as specifically noted in lhis ad . If we do run
out of an advenised item, we will after you your choice of a
comparab6e item. when a\'atlable , rdflect•ng the same
savings or a Hunched whtch wtll entitle you to purchase
the adven•sed 1tem at the advemsed puce wir~in 30 cJays

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News SlaiT
The fii'St step toward approval of
the AGHJMV Solid Waste Plan in
Meigs County was accomplished at
Wednesday's regular meeting of
the Meigs County Commissioners,
when the board ratified the plan.
The plan must be ratified by
boards of county commissioners in
four of the district's six counties
(Ai11ens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson,
Meigs, and Vinton), and then be
approved by 60 p:rcent of the population of the district, through the
district's township trustees and village and city councils.
Commission President Manning
Roush, who also serves on the
AGHJMV board, strongly encouraged his fellow commissioners to
approve the plan . He also urged
township trustees and village councils within the county to approve
the plan when it comes before them
in the days ahead.
The plan may not pass as easily
in certain areas of the six-county
district. Athens Count{, which
makes up 33 percent o the di strict's population, has Uueatened to
veto the plan due to a change in its
language addressing tipping fees.

Only Qne vendor : oupoH w•ll be acce pren p er •h !n •
pw c ha ~ud p~~. Ohio Kroget Store.

COPYRIGHT 1991 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. SEPT. 1, THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, SEPT. 7, 1991 . WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

oo Krogerlng for low

l

"Warehouse Prices" on the
Items you buy the most. Look
for the special •._ave More
· Than A LOt'' signs
throughout the store and
stock up on the savings! .

I

t

I

FIRE SCENE • There was plenty or action
but not too much rire at this Fisher Street,
Pomeroy, residence or Patty Laudermilt
Wednesday morning. The lire was attributed to
a wood burner and damage was limited to the

FLour.-

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
-- - · · :,Ttte-t,ew
of POmeroy wql
collect a $6,
a-year salaiy now
that Pomeroy Village Council has
approved raises for council members and the mayor.
The third and final readings of
resolutions adopting those raises
were approved by council when
they met in re$ular session on
Wednesday evenmg.
The motion to approve the resolution raising the mayor's salary
was made by Councilman Bill
Young, and was seconded by Beuy
Baronick, with Bryan Shank casting the only dissenting vote.
Mayor Richard Seyler is currently paid $3,600 for his duties as
Pomeroy's part-time mayor. The
job will remain a part-time position
when the new term begins in January.
Bruce Reed made a motion, seconded by Larry Wehrung. to raise
salaries of council members from
$25 to $30 per meeting, and the
salary of the board president to
$40. Presently, the president of the
council also receives $25 a meeting.
Baronick voted in favor of the
raise as well, with Shank, Young
and Thomas Werry voting against
the resolution. Mayor Seyler broke
the tie with a "yes" vote.
A resolution that would main tain the clerk's salary was also
approved unanimously. That
salary, approved earlier this year,
was set to expire at the end of the
clerk's present term.

'txt::

NET WT 5 LB 2.27 kQ

With Low Prices. And More ...
r•••••••••• KROGER COUPON • • • • • • • •

Split Chicken
Breasts

II

Pound

GOLDEN CORN, SWEET PEAS OR
GREEN BEANS

·

.,.,.-~

1 Stokely's Finest

•

:

Vegetables

1

14.5-1 5-oz.

I

I
I
I
I
1

NONRETURNABLE BOTILE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
CAFFEINE FREE COCA COLA CLASSIC,

Diet Coke or
Coca Cola Classic

Coca Cola
Classic

I1

12-Pek 12-ol. Ceno

c

BUY ONE
1-LB. PKG.
LIGHT BEEF FRANKS OR

Oscar Mayer
Beef Franks
GET ONE

Macaroni _&amp;
Cheese Dinners

GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless
., Ribeye Steaks

$ - ..

t:Dtw. &amp;0111111111.

sm 1-SAT. SEPT. 1. 1111

IN lHE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
REGULAR OR UN SALTED

Deli Style
Chips

ltiEW CROP U.S. NO. 1

Round White
Potatoes
10-lb. Bag

c

14-oz.

ZIU. BAG • • • t1.11

CHUNK LIGHT

Chicken Of The
Sea Tuna
l125-oz.

7.2Hz.

1
I

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

.J
~--·························-:Jf

FREE!
KRAFT

LIMIT 5 CANS WITH COUPON &amp; t1D.IIII
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

·~j

2-ltr.
U.S.

Cans

~

Eagle Thins
Potato Chips
1-oz.

Far
'

Coundlman Larry Wehrung
Revllali7Jition program
Council discussed a proposed also voiced his support of the plan,
but stated that more businesses
downtown--re~itali¥tion program
and what their role would ·be in the would have to get involved, too, in
order for it to be successful.
project at last night's meeting.
A meeting was held last week
While no financial commiunem
between county and village offi- from council is being solicited at
cials and merchant's association this time, Wehrung also urged
representatives, and as a result of council to avoid committing funds
that meeting, Reed stated that he for any purpose. The fact that part
felt a joint commiuee should be of the necessary funds would probably have to come from the village
formed.
That committee, according to coffers was also discussed.
AGHJMV Plan
Reed, should consist of both counThe Village of Pomeroy became
cil members and concerned merchants who would be directly Meigs County's second body to
involved in the projecL Reed stated approve the solid waste plan of the
that council should be selective AGHJMV Solid Waste Manageabout who js appointed to that ment District last night. That
board, stressing the importance of approval follows that of the Meigs
working with business people who County Commissioners, who also
gave their approval to the plan on
would "get the job done."
"Unfortunately," Reed said, Wednesday (See related story).
That plan $OCS before councils
"Pomeroy's business people are
seeing their businesses dying and and township trustee boards
they see this program as their only throughout the district for ratificahope. Those cities who have had tion in the days and weeks ahead.
Four boards of county commissuccess with similar projects have
sioners
in the district's six counties
emphasized the importance of a
-Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson,
supportive city council."
"If (this project) is to be suc- Meigs and Vinton - must approve
cessful, we have to get involved," the plan, as must 60 percent of the
Reed continued. "Any grant fund district's population (the populaapplications must come through tion represented by each council
and board of township trustees
this board."
Mayor Seyler also stressed the approving the plan is added up).
Other business
importance of council's involvePomeroy
resident Roger Manley
ment in the program.
"In order for this thing to be a was on hand at last night's meeting
success," Seyler told council, to again discuss the possible annex"there has to be more effort on our ation by Middleport of a portion of
part than there has been in the pasL Rutland Street. Residents there
I'm for supporting it I00 percent."
Continued on page 3

Local briefs

BUY ONE
16-0Z. LOAF KROGER .
Super Kids
Hero Bread
GET ONE

Wreck damage moderate
Moderate damage was incurred to two vehicles in an accident on
East Second SL, Pomeroy, Wednesday morning.
According to Pomeroy Police, Rodney Clonch, Langsville, driving a truck owned by Andrew Phalen, had stopp:d on the right side
of the street to discharge a passenger. Shirley Hubbard, Pomeroy,
traveling east on East Second, was passing the truck when Clonch
pulled out into her path. He was charged with failure to yield.
There was moderate damage to the right side of the Hubbard car
and to the left side from the front to the driver's door of Lhe truck
driven by Clonch. There were no injuries in the accident which
occurred at 10:02 a.m.

FREE!

Board hires substitute teacher

LIGHT ICE MILK OR

Brayers
Ice Cream

Tonya R. Cummins was employed as a substitute teacher at a
recent meeting of the Eastern Local Board of Education. She, as
well as all substitute teachers, must be certified.

Curtis B&amp;E investigated

%-Gallon

$

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that the department is investigating the breaking and entering of the Sam Curtis
residence of Apple Grove-Dorcas Road.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis had been out of town for a few days and
ConUnued on page 3

18
SAVE UP

For

attic. There was extensive smoke and water
damage to the bouse owned by James Stump.
Both Pomeroy and Middleport Fire Depart·
ments were on the scene.

For

If the plan is not ratified, SCS
Consultants, the fmn hired to write
the plan, must must then re-write it
and the approval process mus t
begin again.
Gallia County's commissioners
are expected to vote on the plan at
their meeting tomorrow.
If the plan is ratified, it will be
sent to the Environmental Protection Agency for final review , and
will be implemented if the EPA
approves it.
Issue Two
A meeting for local government
agencies who are interested in
applying for Issue Two funds has
been set for September 12 at 7
p.m., according to Meigs County
Engineer Phil Robert s. Roberts
serves on an Issue Two committee.
The meeting will be held in tbe
Meigs County Common Pleas
courtroom.
The amount of Issue Two
monies that will be available as
grants will be reduced in the local
district by 17 percent this year.
According to Roberts, that 17 percent will be used for loans and
credit enhancemenL
Other business
Projects now underway at the

county garage include striping of
all new paving projects (and other
road s not pav ed thi s year) and
grader patching on County Road
65.
According to Highway Garage
S uperintcndcn t Ted Warner,
30,000 tons of paving material
have been used in Lhe county's various road paving projects in 1991.
Hot mix paving is now nearly completed, with Sand Hill Road in
Long Bouom to be paved in the
ncar future.
In other business, the commissioners:
- reappointed members of the
Local Emergency Manag ement
Planning Agency;
• discussed remodelin g work
underway in the Meigs County
Courthouse. The front office of the
auditor's office is now completr'.d,
except for carpet installation and
delailing work, and the front office
of the probate and juvenile court
department will be completed by
Thursday . Other work in those
offices will then commence.
Besides Roush, Robert s and
Warner, those auending the meeting were Commissioners Richard
E. Jones and David Koblentz, and ·
Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

Pay raises are adopted by council;
Pomeroy mayor's salary set at $6,000 Study sees bankruptcies

ENRICHED~

U.S. GRADE A TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

2 Secllono, 12 Pogeo

A Mulllmedlo tnc.llowopeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, September 5, 1991

TO*

hitting million mark this year
WASHINGTON (AP) Bankruptcies likely will soar to a
record I million this year in an
increase worsened by the recession.
a private study predicts.
In the 12 months ended June 30,
some 880,399 American consumers
and businesses filed for bankruptcy, up 21 p:rcent from the previous
year, the American Bankruptcy
Institute said Wednesday.
Samuel J. Gerdano, executive
director of the institute, whose
members include lawyers, accountants and others in the bankruptcy
business, said the pace of filings
for the rest of this year should be
enough to bring bankruptcies for
calendar 1991 to I million.
He noted that bankruptcies have
increased in every year since 1985
and said the record likely would be
broken.
At a news conference, Gerdano
said the recession clearly contributed to the increase, although he
noted that filings have risen even in
years when the economy wa s
expanding. They rose 13 percent
nationally in the 12 months ending
June 30, 1990, and 8 percent in the
12 months before thlll.
"The ultimate cause is the level
of personal debt, " Gerda no said.
He noted that consumers' total

debt, including home mortgages,
represented 62 percent of their
annual disposable personal income
in 1983 but 83 p:rcent in 1990.
''The only way the recession
can push you over the edge is if
you are already sitting on it," Gerdano said. "The bankruptcy boom

is here to stay unless Americans
reduce debt load or the credit
industry alters its practices or
both."
The biggest increases in the
most recent 12-month period came
in New England, the region hardest
hit by the recession that began last
summer.

School strikes continue in
Trumbull, Lorain Counties
By JEFFREY BRODEUR
Associated Press Writer
Some parents of SheffieldSheffield Lake school district students say they will picket school
offices and board members' homes
in support of 140 striking teachers,
nurses and speech pathologists.
The parents are angry with what
they said was the school board's
lack of action in the two-week-old
strike, group spokesman Ken Nehls
said Wednesday.
Because teachers have been
ordered by a judge to keep pickets
to a minimum of two per driveway
at school buildings, Nehls, the
father of two children in the I ,000student system. said his group
would beef up their ranks.

"There's a crisis going on
here," he said. "And we're going
to be out there letting them (school
officials) know we're disappoint'
ed."'

Parents were asked at a Wednes:
day night rally to keep their children home until the strike is
resolved. Some 250 adults and 100
children auended the rally.
Meanwhile, in Trumbull County, two picketing Niles teachers
were slightly injured Wednesday
when they were struck by cars.
Niles Classroom Teachers Association Vice President Diane
Maselli said her hip was hun in the
incident and Marlene Bufwack suffered a hand injury.

Pugo's wife
dies in hospital
MOSCOW (AP) - The wife of
Interior Minister Boris Pugo joined
her husband in committing suicide
the day arter the collapse of the
coup Pugo heiJ?ed lead, government officials S3ld today.
Officials had until today said
only that Mrs. Pugo was "gravely
injured" and hospitalized after she
was found on Aug. 22.
Deputy Russian prosecutor
Yevgeny Lisov announced her
death and also dismissed sp:culation the two were murdered, saying
they both left a suicide note be£ore
shooting themselves, a weekly
newspaper reported.
An Interior Ministry official,
who spoke on condition of
anonymity , confirmed today that
Mrs. Pugo had died but would not
say when or where.
Mrs. Pugo, whose first name is
not known, was found when police
carne to arrest her husband, officials have said.
Pugo, 54, was also found dying
of a gunshot wound.

VILLAGE RECEIVES DONATION· Tbe
Meigs County Bikers recendy donated $1,000 to
tbe Village ot Syracuse ror purchase or a merrygo-round at the municipal park. The money
from the bikers was raised during tbe group's
annual toy run. Pictured are Syracuse Mayor
Eber Pickens and Councilman Minter Fryar
witb members or the Meigs Cl!_tlnty Bikers,

Sherry Swisher, Adam Triplett, Clyde Triplett,- • .•
Pam Triplett, Carolyn Gilkerson, Charlie Gilk-- • •
erson, Mel Swisher, Erika Meadows, Jo Frye,~- : - :
Kathy Meadows, Jan Slater, Nancy Woolard, : -:·
Toni Givens and Brenda Davis. The Meigs • · ~­
County Bikers are currently making plans ror
~:
this year's toy run to be held Oct. 5 with proceeds to go to the Village or Racine.

li
·,

.,

•·

.· ~

llllilllrillllilillilillliillllilllll..IJIIIIillilllilliltiilillillltittlillilllillil. .illi............:..c.· "! .. •'

.. "'li:' ("'

~

'If

~ /!1::

... f

1

~

�Thursday, September 5, 1991

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARHA

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER at The Associa ted Press. Inland Dally Press Associ a t ion and the American Newspaper P ublisher s Association.

,

LETTE RS OF OPIN ION ar e welcome . They should be less than 300
word s long. All IPiters are subje-c t to editing and mu st be signed with
namf' . address and telephone number. No un signPd letters will be pub lished . Lett en sho uld bf' In good taste. addressing iss ues, not personali ti es .

l
~

.

I

Excerpts from other
~ Ohio newspapers

'
I

By The Associated Press
Following are excerpts of editorials published recently in Ohio news. papers:
: THE REPOSITORY, Canton, Aug. 27: Eileen O'Brien uses her expe: ricnce as an example when she talks about women getting the short end of
· ibe sticlc when it comes to treatment for heart and stroke problems.
·· For years doctors told her that the pain she was complaining of was
caused by stress. Doctors told her she couldn't have heart problems
because she was too young and a female.
Then her heart stopped beating during a routine hospital test. Ms.
O'Brien, now 33, underwent triple bypass surgery. She now is medical
director of the Columbus Goodwill Rehabilitation Center and educates
others about the problems women with heart problems face.
.
Her effort is part of the carnp31gn to get the medical commumty to
realize it has shonchanged women for years and the bme for change IS at
hand ...
Ms. O' Brien says that some women and medical professionals don ' t
realize that heart disease is just as much a problem for women today as it
is for men. It's time to spread the word about this lciller, and get the same
level of treatment for women as for men.

f'

THE BLADE, TOLEOO, Aug. 29: When it came to handling the Persian Gulf crisis, President Bush seemed thoroughly in command of the situation. The dramatic events in the Soviet Union. though, seem to have
: reduced him to the role of a carping bystander.
: His pronouncements indicate anything but happiness with what
· appears to be the beginnings of democracy in a land that has lcnown httle
: but harsh, dictatorial rule. He seems acutely distressed by the reduced sta. tus of his recent summit host, President Mikhail Gorbachev, and in some
· ways paralyzed by the fact that he no longer has an opposile number to
deal with ...
. The President is entitled to his vacations. However, something always
: seems to happen when he goes to the so-called Kennebunlcport White
; House. Then Mr. Bush tries to maintain his recreation schedule and his
• official schedule, doing justice to neither. Entertaining foreign heads of
: state is not what the ordinary American does on his vacation.
. Mr. Bush would do better to schedule his vacations as the workload
pennits and return to the While House when a crisis erupts - or at least
not try to work and "recreate," as he calls the leisure thing, at the same
. time. Maybe he could curl up some fall weclcends at Kennebunkport with
. a good history of the Russtan empue and take ume to look at the fall
leaves.

•

!

I
I
I

Letters to editor
Salutes patrol, others

'

'

· Dear Editor:
A while back, I read a leuer in
your paper concerning the State
Highway Patrol.
The writer seem to express the
: belief that the patrol was no where
· to be found when needed.
: On Friday, August 23, I can tell
: you exactly where the patrol was.
They were busy on Rt. 35, West
of Rio Grande, saving my daughter's life.
Not only were they one of the
first at her accident. They handled
the situation in such a manner that
: she had a chance to live through a
: terrible accident.
· They also settled a very upset
: father and gave him the strength to
· 1dentify her car.
Then they took care of all the
details of the accident so he could

go to Columbus to be with his
daughter.
The unsung hero's of that day
were the Stale Highway Patrol, the
off duty nurses from Holzer Medical Center, The Rio Grande Fire
Department, The Life Flight Crew
from Grant Hospital, The Gallia
County Rescue Squad and the
many people who took time out of
their lives to save hers.
All of these people are tied
together in a group to do a very difficult job, serve the public.
Instead of being ready to criticize any of them when the public
they serve get's out of line.
Let's take the time to be thankful that they are there, trained and
ready when you need them.
Mindy's Grateful Dad
Roger Colvin

Give credit where credit is due
Dear Editor:

This leuer is in reference to an
article on the front page of the Sentinel, Aug. 27, 1991, where Sheriff
. Soulsby gave credit for the capture
: of two fugitives to his wife and
· Don Dye.
: I think some credit should be
· .given to the Lawrence Hayman
;Family and the several deputies
·who responded to a call from the
Haymans.
· Around midnight Lawrence

Hayman spotted the second fugitive {who escaped when their car
wrecked) trying to steal a bicycle
from the Hayman residence and
chased him toward Co. Rd. 28 and
Co. Rd. 31, then notified the sheriff's department of his location.
resulting in his capture about a mile
or so from the Hayman residence.
Bruce Bissell
34500 Bashan Rd.
Long Bottom, OH 45743

A class act
· Dear Editor:

·

On Wedne sday, August 28,
· Meigs High School hosted the
· annual Tri-Valley Conference high
school golf tournament at the
: Meigs Co. Golf Course near
: Pomeroy. Over 40 area high school
·.golfers competed in the event.
:. After the match, the Meigs golf
·~tpam was able to provi&lt;!e a cook: ollt dinner for all golfers, coaches,
-and bus drivers. The dinner was
. :p_ossible because or the generosity
: 'and efforts of many local business:·ts dqd golf learn booslers.
·;- Providing food for the dinner
:·were Danny Crow of Crew's Fami.:1y Restaurant, Jim Soulsby and the
:Meigs Athl. Boosters&lt;Dick Warner
·of Krogers, Powell's Super Value,
· .McDonald's, Pat Hill of C.G. Bis-

cuit Co. and Ben Ewing. These
businesses arc to be commended
for their support of young people
and Meigs High School.
Cooks and servers in the 95°
heat were Bill Childs, Jack Slavin,
Rita Slavin, Ben Ewing, and Celia
McCoy. Course marshals were
Dick Rupe and George Nesselroad.
Special thaJW go to Paul Simon
and Pat O' Brien for the access to
the Meigs County Golf Course and
facilities.
It is because of this kind of support that Meigs Hip! has 19 players
on the golf learn, IS currently 18.0,
and continues to be recognized as a
"class act" in the TVC.
Sincere thanks to all.
John Kr.twsczyn
Meigs Golf Coach

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Mic;ldlepon, Ohio
Thursday, September 5, 1991

Atlanta bank may have diverted funds to Iraq
WASHINGTON - Congressional investigators conducting a
probe imo how Iraq fueled its military machine are following a trail
that leads to the doorslep of some
prominent American corporations.
Employees of the Atlanta
branch of the Rome-based Banca
Nazionale del Lavoro are the focus
of the investigation into the diversion of strategic materials to Iraq
from the West. BNL, along with
other banks, received billions of
dollars in federally insured agricultural credits now suspecled of helping to subsidize Saddam Hussein's
warefTort.
Some employees in BNL's
Atlanta branch already have been
mdicted on charges of defrauding
the bank bY. illegally extending
some $4 b1llion in agricultural
guarantees, export-import credits
and unsecured loans to the Central
Bank of Iraq . Iraq managed to
divert millions of these dollars to
purchase weapons parts from the
Uniled States and abroad.

Moreover, evidence now being
pieced together by congressional
mvestigators suggests that some of
the parts and tools Saddam
required to construct weapons of
mass destruction such as the
"supergun" may have been
financed indirectly by American
taxpayers.
Rep. Charlie Rose, D-N.C .,
charged that, "II is absolutely clear
to me that without the flow of federal agricultural loan monies to
Banca Nazionale in Atlanta ,
weapons procurement by the Iraqi
war machine would not have been
possible."
Our associate Dean Boyd fol lowed one of the money trails that
started in the fall of 1988 when
BNL employees issued an allegedly illegal $12 million letter of credit
to Associated Instruments Distributors. Baghdad cabled shipping
instructions to BNL for the parts
Associated Instruments was to purchase with the letter of credit.
Armed with $12 million, Asso-

~ iT MY it·1:~GiNar;ot-J,
H~f?f\';er, of? ;s THiS ~N
eSPecitlLL'{ ViDL,e.NT

SUMMe.R?

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

ciated Instruments then began looking for companies that exported
these goods and quickly found two.
In May 1989, it extended $2.7 mtllion to the hug~ German metal working firm Krupp- Widia, and deal. Some of that money was
$8.5 million to a second German deposited in an account at Bank of
firm. In carrying out its end of the Credit and Commerce in Montreal,
shipment, Krupp turned to Ken- Canada, now the focus of a major
nanetal Inc., a Pennsylvania-based financial scandal.
Fortune 500 company that proNow both Kennanetal and Assoduces the specialized metal cutting ciated Instruments are under investools Iraq was hunting for . In tigation by the U.S. Customs SerAugust 1989, parts bought from vice for their role in the sale of
Kennanetal's German subsidiary these and other products to Iraq.
were added to a shipment of related Although Commerce Department
goods, and sent to Iraq.
officials corroborale both KennaneNash Rehman, president of tal and Rehman's assertion that the
Associated Instruments, denied export of these particular parts to
allegations that his company served Iraq was legal, congressional invesas an Iraqi front. Bu~ inlemal com- tigators are looking at the leuer of
pany documents we obtained show credit used to finance the shipment,
that Rehman 's company and two which is cited as fraudulent in the
other individuals, whom Rehman BNL indictment.
only identified as "Iraqi nation als," reaped nearly $1 million from
OVEREXPOSED- During the
the illegal $12 million letter of quiet recess break on Capitol Hill,
credit in return for brokermg the one Senate staffer decided to borrow the office camera It's usually
used to photograph the senator posing with constituents and children
from back home. The staffer took
the camera home, and photographed his girlfriend in what
were described as "acrobatic positions." The absent-minded staffer
returned the camera to the office
without removing the film . The
Senate office that develops official
film - apparently stunned by the
shots - called this ~cular senator's office and advised that someone in authority report immediately. The forgetful staffer is now
without his pictures- and his job.
MINI -EDITORIAL - President Bush gets A-plus marks on
foreign policy even from
Democrats. But in the aftermath of
the coup and counter-coup in the
Soviet Union, questions should be
raised about what Bush knew and
when he lcnew it. Our own sources
inside the CIA saw the coup coming months ago. Yet Bush continued banking U.S . foreign policy on
one man, Mikhail Gorbachev,
whom his own advisers thought
was hanging by a thread.

19 "'
"'

&amp;JST'eiN'ql R&gt;c~«r-tm. NeW&gt; -...ea t11

&lt;P

Product liability: A legal process in need of improvement
If one recalls the details of the
1964 Presidential campaign, they
will remember that Barry Goldwater made a practice of voicin~ his
criticism of a program he d1dn't
like directly to an audience supportive of that program. He went to
Tennessee to rail against T.V.A.,
the government-owned corporation
responsible for much of the electric
power production in the Tennessee
Valley. He went to St. Petersburg,
Florida, one of the nation's most
popular retirement communities, to
speak out against some of the programs of particular benefit to th~
elderly. This frank and forthright
practice, while viewed by some as
an exercise in principle, was ·unfortunately viewed by most as political suicide.
I am reminded of Mr. Goldwater's tendency to go eyeball to eyeball with his detractors by the
recent appearance of the vice-president before the American Bar
Association convention in Atlanta.
Vice-President Quayle appeared
before the convention to make an
appeal on behalf of the Administration for reform of the nation's civil

justice system. In the course of his
remarks, he made some very pointed criticisms of the legal profession, remarks that for the best part
were met with little enthusiasm on
the part of his audience.
As chairman of the President's
Council on Competitiveness, the
vice-president has been very concerned with the detrimental impact
many of our civil justice practices
have had on our nation's ability to
compete internationally. Citing
statistics that indicate that individuals and businesses in the U.S .
spend more that $80 billion annually on direct litigation and higher
insurance premiums; and as much
as $300 billion annually on indirect
costs related to civil actions, the
vice-president appealed for reforms
that would free up much of these
resources for more meaningfu1 purposes.
Noting that our country is home
to 70% of the world's lawyers, 300
for every 100,000 inhabitants,
while such other economic powers
as Japan have but II lawyers for
the same number of inhabitants, the
vice-president rhetorically asked

Co.ng. Clarence Miller
those m attendance, if it was
because of this high concentration
of legal professionals in our society
that we currently have 18 million
new lawsuits processed through our
system annual Iy.
The major reform~ the vicepresident proposed included limitmg punitive damages, making the
losing side in a civil action suit pay
the winners legal fees , enacting
new rules governing the use of
expert witnesses and streamlining
the pre-trial fact-finding process
lcnown as discovery.
As one who shares thevice-president's concern as to the impact our
country's litigation mentality is
having on our nation's ability to
compete internationally, I recently
joined in cosponsoring a bill aimed
at bringing fairness to our nation's
tort laws as they penain to product
liability. I view the current patchwork of state product liability laws
as a major impediment to expanded
domestic and international commerce on the part or our country's

manufacturers. In the past, product
liability reform has often been cast
by its critics as being anti-con sumer.
I think such charges are little
more than a smokescreen by those
that most directly benefit from the
high cost of litigation. Because of
the myriad of conflicting product
liability laws currently confronting
a prospective manufacturer, many
producers duck potentially lucrative markets because of the aceom panying uncertainty surrounding
the regulations that have to be met
in getting a product to market.
I think we owe it to our workers,
to our manufacturers, and to the
consumer who ultimately has to
pay an inflaled price for the product he or she purchases (because of
the related costs of insurance and
litigation) to brin~ uniformity and
fairness to our nauon's product liability laws and in the process take a
big chunk out of the case load currently confronting our nation's civil
courts.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3 ..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local briefs... -_,. September-like weather predicted~~u~b~:e::aiOhio

Continued from page 1
when they returned on Wednesday had noticed that a back window
had been broken out of and the bedroom ransacked.
It was reported that jewelry, a VCR, glassware and coins and foreign currency were taken.

Pleasant autumn-like weather is
being predicted for Ohio through
the weelcend.
The National Weather Service
said cool and dry conditions should
prevail until early next week.
Temperatures are expected to
climb to around 80 during the day
and drop to around 60 at night.
The record high temperature for
this dale at the Columbus weather
station was 99 degrees in 1954 .

EMS units answer three calls
Three calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services on Wednesday.
At 4:37 p.m., Middleport squad went to State Route 554 to assist
Gallia County on a motor vehicle accident. Carl Ward was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. At 8:26 p.m., Middleport unit went to Mill
Street for Freda Bing, who was trealed but not transported. At 10:12
p.m., Middleport squad responded to North Second Street. Osbie
Martin was taken to Holzer.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. 29 7/8
Ashland Oil ..................... Jt t/4
AT&amp;T .......... ......................39 3/8
Bob Evans ...................... 18 3!11
Charming Shop.................. 20 3/4
City Holding .............. .......15
Federal Mogul.. ................. l4 1(2
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ .40 3/8
Key Centurion ........ .... ...... 14 3/4
Lands' End .............. ......... 20 1/4
Limited Inc ..... ..... ............ .25 5/8
Multimedia Inc . ... ............. 26 5/8
Rax Rest.aurant .... ............. 1(2
Robbins&amp;Myers ........... ... .33 1(2
Shoney's lnc ........ ......... ... .17 1(2
Star Bank ..................... .... 22 3/4
Wendy lnt'l... .................... 9
Worthtngton Ind ............... 28 1/4
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quores provided by Blum, Ellis
and Loewi of Gallipolis.

Meigs announcements
Homecoming planned
Homecoming at the Vanderhoof
Baptist Church in Coolville will be
'held Sept. 22 with basket dinner at
noon and afternoon service at I
p.m. with special singers. Cecil
Morrison, pastor, inviles the public.
Revival plans
Revival at the Vandcrhoof Baptist Church in Coolville will be
held Sept. 18-20 at 7 p.m. nightly
with Wallace Smith, evangelist.
Cecil Morrison, pastor, invites the
public.
Crusade for Christ
"Crusade for Christ" revival will
be held at the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene, comer of Mulberry
and Union Ave., Sept. 16-22 at 7
p.m. nightly. There will be different speakers and singing groups
nightly. Pastor Glen McClung
invites the public. The crusade is
sponsored by the Meigs-GalliaMason Counties Crusade for
Christ.
DAV to meet

Abandoned car damaged
A Chevrolet automobile owned by Michael Beaver of Dexte.r.
which has been parked along Howell Hill Road for two days, has
had a rear passenger window smashed out, according to Sheriff
James M. Soulsby.

Tuppers Plains theft probed
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department received a report on
Wednesday from Robert Burke of Tuppers Plains that three tool
boxes with Craftsman tools were taken from his outbuilding.
Burke reported that pipe wrenches and steel traps were also
taken. Entry was believed to have been made through the roof.

LCCD issues bill extension
Due to computer problems, the Leading Creek Conservancy District's water bills, due on the lOth of September, have been extended.
According to a district spokesperson, those bills are now due on
Seplember 16.

Pay raises ...

mountams. dropped golf ball-s•ze
hat! near B1g Bear Lake.

The record low was45 in 1988.
Sunrise this morning was at
7:02 a.m. Sunset will be at 7:58
p.m.
As far as the rest of the nation is
concerned:
Rain fell at dawn along the
Atlantic coast from Maine to
Washington, D.C. Several cities in
the Midwest were fogged in.
Thunderstorms Wednesday
night over the Southern California

The Disabled American Veterans and Ladies Auxiliary will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall, 124
Buuernut Ave. in Pomeroy.
s otta ~planned·
PThe Wellston Ohillco Society is
presenting a baseball and sports
card show today {Thursday) from
4-9:30 p.m. at Saint Peter and Paul
Parish Hall, South Pennsylvania
Avenue, Wellston. Admission is $1
per person or $2 per family. Hourly
door prizes will be awarded.

Not long ago, the Urban Institute's Policy and Research Report
published a synopsis of a study by
two of its researchers. Two paragraphs laid out the dimensions of
this unsettling reality. First
''The gap between rich and poor
in this country has been growing
since the beginning of the economic slowdown in 1973 and has continued to widen despite the post1982 economic expansion .... The
current recession will compound
this trend, and will hit hardest those
already suffering most from
income inequality - households
headed by females and those headed by blacks and Hispanics .... The
poorest black and Hispanic households aciUally lost 30 to 40 percent
of their incomes between 1983 and
1987 {during the Reagan boom)."
Then:
"These trends stand in stark
contrast to those of the 1950s and
1960s when standards of living
rose dramatically for both the poor
and the rich. During those len-year
spans the percentages of both white
and black persons in poverty
declined by half. From 1953 to
1963, and again from 1963 to 1973,
a young man moving from age 25
to 35 could expect his inflationadjusted earning to rise by more
than I00 percent. In contrast, the
same young man passing from age
25 to 35 between 1973 and 1983
experienced a real earnings rise of
only 16 per cent."
That is one version of contemporary conditions. Another was

offered in July by the Center on
Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal think tank in Washington.
Using recent data from the Congressional Budget Office, a repon
from the center claimed that average after-tax income of the top 1
percent of all households rose by
122 percent between 1977 and
1988. That's a jump from $203,000
to $451,000. (As a comparison,
average pre-tax family income in
the United States is just over
$30,000.) The after-tax income of
the poorest fifth of households
dropped by 10 percen~ and the second lowest fifth lost 3 percent.
Dunng the same period, incidentally, the number of famiUes with two
or more wage earners grew substantially, which helped dampen
what would otherwise have been an
even more dramatic contrast.
The very poorest got it in the
neck. From 1970 to 1991, the average Aid to Families with Dependent Children benefit "declined 42
percent in the typical state"
according to the report It went on:
"In fact, AFDC benefits have eroded so sharply that the average value
of AFDC and food stamp benefits
combined has now fallen to about
the same level as the value of
AFDC benefits alone in 1960."
That figure goes a long way toward
explaining why the United States
has more children in poverty than
any other industrialized nation. The
others don't allow children to slip
through the social welfare safety
net. In the United States, the

0 0

•••••

0 •••

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

' · , : ..

I.UCAIN MTtMUS UT1JDT &amp; SUNDAY .
BA~Ifll

NIGHT TUESDAY .

l6r ryft.

...., ltp.

Ukr lr'6t1nc'b,

V.I.

WARSHAWSKI
A,............ _... __ ....., __
lo

SEPTEMBER'S SAVINGS
AT

ANDERSON'S

Continued from page 1

have voiced their interest in the
annexation.
Pomeroy council members have
expressed no opposition to the proposal, but are not willing to pay for
the necessary legal work. Manley,
however, has staled that the Village
of Middleport has pledged to pay
any costs involved in the process.
Werry announced that the
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department has agreed to assist in the
cleaning of the pond near the
Beech Grove Cemetery, which is
infested with algae. The chemicals
necessary for the work is on the
way to the village, and Werry said
that he and other firemen would
begin work on the clean up as soon
as possible.
Wehrung commended the street
department for its drain replacement work on Lincoln Heights and
sidewalk installation on Lincoln
Hill.
Council also:
. discussed various street
improvement projects, including
guardrail repair and replacement,
parking meter repairs , p_otholes
needing patched and res1denual
areas needing cleaning;
- discussed the recent enforcement of the village curfew, and
voted to post signs concerning that
curfew;
- discussed possible Community
Development Block Grant Fund

projects;
- approved a $1,000 transfer
from the general fund for payment
of PERS premiums for the clerk;
- approved the mayor's report
for floes collected in August in the
amount of $2,810.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONSRicky Johnson, Middleport, and
Floyd Cummins, Racine.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Maria Pellegrino, Delcie Phalin,
Violet Wriggleman, and Rebecca
Ward.
Weanesday Admissions: None
Wednesday Discharges: Warren
Steans and Juanita Chapman.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 11:1·9!10)
A Division of MultlmHta, Int.

Publlshe;i every afternoon . Monday

through Frida y. 111 Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio. by the Ohio VaiiPy Publishing Company/Mult imedi a, In c ..
Pomoroy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992 -2150. s..
cond class postag e pa id a t Pom f' roy,
Ohio.

Member: Th e Associated Prf'ss, Inland Dai ly PrPSs Assocta !lon and th eOhio Newspaper Associ ation. Nat ional
Advt&gt;rtising Repr(&gt;Spntattve, Branha m
NPw spapt&gt;r Sa les, 733 Third Avenue.
N&lt;'W Yo rk . N{'w York 10017.

ELECTRIC DRYER
-LARGE CAPACITY
-4 CYCLES
-3 TEMPS

$289°

AUTOMATIC WASHER
-PERM·PRESS CYCLE
-4 WATER TEMPS
-LARGE CAPACITY

$349°

0

0

POSTMASTER : Send addrf'Ss r han!i::es

to Tht&gt; Dally Sent in el. 111 Co urt Sl. ,
Pomt'roy, Oh.k:l 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES

By Carrier or Motor Roult'
On(' WN•k .
OnP Month ..
On P Yrar ..

. .. . SHiO

. ...$6.95
.. .... SS3.20

SINGLE COPV
PRICE

.. .. 25 CPn ts

Dally

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Sept. 4 - Norman
Bahr, Rose Baker, Stanley Bush,
Mrs. Larry Canter and daughter,
Lela Cooper, Elizabeth Gillenwater, Robert Glandon, Othella Hughes, Travis Jarvis, Angela Malone,
Mrs. Timothy McDaniel and son,
Wilma McGraw and Mrs. Nelson
Pryor and son.
Births, Sept. 4 - Mr. and Mrs.
Anthony Fahrion, a daughter,
Shade. Mr. and Mrs. Timothy
McCain, a son, Wellston.

ROPER LAUNDRY SPECIAL

SubscribPrs not dt&gt;S irln .ll i Opay thPcar rier ma y r Pm\! tn advancP dlrt'ct to
The Daliv Sen t in el on a 3. fi or 12 m on th
ba sts_ Cr.edtl wlll 1x&gt; givl' n r arripr Pa ch
WE'&lt;'k .

No su bsc riptions by mall permllled In
areas where t\9mt&gt; carr it'f s&lt;'rv\cC' Is
avallpble.

Mall

Subscription~

ln~lde

Mellr.'l Count)'

13 WePks .
26 Wee ks.
52 W{'(&gt;ks .

. $21. R4
$43 l li
.. .. $84 .76

Outside MeiRM County
13 Weeks..
26 WE'f'kS ....
52 W(&gt;('ks .... ...

.. ...... $2.1.40
. .. .... $-15.50
. S8R t0

SERTA
II "IW~
••I
guJPI•
DISCOVER WHY

SALE!!

J,,.'

PEOPLE SAY,

rrt!J

SERT A PREMIER COMFORT
1 YR. WARRANTY

~~- $88

~~~- $108

SERTA SUPREME ULTRA
(!:It

10 YR. WAIIANTT

TWIN

EA. PC

$11 9
u Ci

169
1354
5

FULL EA. PC.

QUEEN SE1

. SERT A PERFECT SLEEPER
1S YR. WARRANTY
FULL SET
~UEEN SET

$399

Is U. S. society also disintegrating?
The rapid disintegration of the
Soviet Union is an outward and
visible result of a long-festering
cancer. Ignored and untreated for
decades, it finally metastasized.
The .United States is not threatened
by any comparable calamity in the
near term, but here, too, official
denial of societal disintegration has
postponed remedial treatment that
might avert more serious consequences.
The good news in this country,
unlike the Soviet Union, is that
only a minority of the people are
affected directly by the problem.
The bad news {or non-news) is that
it is an all but invisible minority, as
outside the central concerns of this
government as were the democrats,
freedom lovers and disaffected
nationalities of the Soviet Union to
theirs. In America, of course, the
minority in question is comprised
of those in poverty, disproportionalely black, brown and female.
Their condition, after heartening
progress in the 1950s and 1960s,
has steadily worsened for almost
two decades. It has done so in good
times and in bad. Like the annual
deficits and the cumulative national
debt, things have gone worse for
the poor no matter how the economy was described. When things
sltpped for ~veryone, they sl!pped
even more for the bottom thud to
quarter of the population. When the
overall economy improved, benefiting the majority, the improvement didn't trickle down to the bottom rungs.

Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
the low 60s. Friday, partly sunny
with the high in the low 80s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday througb Monday:
Fair. Highs in upper 70s to low
80s Saturday and Sunday and in the
80s Monday. Lows in mid-50s to
low 60s.

489

Hodding Carter Ill
national government in Washington for I0 years has been infested
with idealogues who boast of their
successful war on "the poverty
class."
A nation with growing social
and economic disparities is a nation
asking for trouble. If a rising tide
sinks some boats instead of raising
all, those who are most threatened
lose their connection and loyalty to
the system that tacitly condones
their plight. Where that leads can
be seen among inner-city youth, as
alienated from their nation as any
Latvian is from the Soviet Union.
Without erecting prison walls
around them, society cannot forev er restrict the consequences of
gheuo poverty to the ghettoes.
To paraphrase something John
F. Kennedy said 30 years ago, a
society that cannot help the many
who are poor cannot protect the
few who are rich. To quote the U.S.
Catholic Bishops' pastoral letter on
economic justice, published m
1986, "That so many people are
poor in a nation as rich as ours is a
social and moral scandal that must
not be ignored."
(C)l991
NEWSJ&gt;AJ'ER
EN1ERPRISE ASSN.
Hedding Carter III~ former St.ate
Department spokesman and awardwinning reporter, editor and pub·
lisher, is president of MainStreet, a
Washington, D.C.-based television
production company.

IMPERIAL

55 Years Of Traditional Circus

UNDER THE BIGGEST BIG TOP ON EARTH
What others say about the BIG ONE ...
The show has numerous uan.....
and each of them is senutional
Mllwauk« S.nlenlal (WI)
·
•

Canon

The CiraJ~ came to town. h wu a clus act. Tlle only thing
"cheap'' about 11 was lhe price o r admiuioo.
Chickasha Star (OK.)

Turrung thetr hcad1 from ring to c"cit.ing nng tt was thei r,
ftnt look at a fu.U -nedged circus ..
Sedallc Drmocrat (\10 )

Milford Times

&lt;'"n

Lake Forrest Star ( t L)

The Acta

we~

good, in [act outstanding
PorterYllle Roport.er (CA .)

SUNDAY

coated wall
coverings. the most
exciting innovation in
all paper since

30%

strippability. Easy
clean and durable at a
value price. The latest
in colors and designs .

OFF

MAGAZINE
•

,

,

lh story came to Lfe: as the mani..,c C &amp; B Big Top rai sed
Wtlh th e help c f elephant power.

WE STOCK CONGOLEUM VINYL CUSHION FLOOR

C &amp;.B's Ll..lcrued and di'o'crse group makes an c;w:otic

world come alive.

Wallpaper

Featuring Teflon
,.

,

~mel dauJM the audaence I w11 caugtu up 111
'

HL!'iDREDS OF PATTERNS. MOST
ARE PRE-PASTED, WASHABLE.

And

lh o.;~h C trcu~cs

for lhc most p.Jrt may ha'o'C become
thing of the pasL.thc yean have treated this particular
circus well .

1

12 FT. WIDTH -15 PATIERNS

Loraine Journal Tempo, (OH.)

September 8th
Show Times 2:00 &amp; 4:30 P.M.

SALE $549 SQ. YD.

Gallia Co. Fairgrounds .

Gnrll Alhllalritt AGIIts: $7.00
11 &amp;yotllglt. $4.00
• pu!Witd on lllclldiJ: Mlll $8.011, 11l younger $5.00
(Prall!lld SNts, Addltlrittll cllqt, Tlclrlll ~l'lded only nlhl Big Tap On Show Day.)

• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .liilillilillilillilillllilill•~'l.'X' ~ · \_ ·IIo. · ~ "\. ...

,\._"'to!\..

'

�.,

Page

....

4 The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 5, 1991

· Thursday, ·September 5, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Defending TVC champions visit Meigs in league opener
By Dave Harris
The defending champion Vinton
Co unty Vikings invade Bob
Robens Field to do battle with the
Mei~s Marauders this Friday
evenmg in the Tri-Valley Conference opener.
The Vikings are coming off a
co-championship season last year,
tying the Nelsonville-York Buckeyes for the TVC title with a 7-1
(8-2 overall) conference mark. The
Marauders will be trying to break a
three year losing streak against the
Vikings after Meigs won the first
five games in the series.
Coac h Jack O'Rourke welcomes

back 17 letterme n including 16
seniors from la st season, to go
along with a very strong sophomore class.
In the season opener last week
the Vikings used a strong ground
game in defeating Zane Trace 27-0
in a contest that was marred by two
Vikings being ejected from the
game. Overall Vinton County was
nagged for 15 penalties good for
150 yards, 34 more yards than
Zane Trace's total offensive out put
for the game.
· The offensive line for the
Vikings average 204 pounds,
helped the Vilcings to average over

si~ yards a

carry -in the win. Dusty

averaged an unbelievable 28.2
yards a catch. Last week the senior
pulled in both of the passes for the
Vikings good enough for 44 yards,
including a 31 yard scoring toss
from Patton.
The defense is also strong led by
two year starter Brian McCollum a
5-10:'175 fjouilil tacae, he'if]oined '
at taclde by 5-10, 246 pound junior
Tim McManis and Caudill at
defensive end. If the Vikings have
a weak spot it is their defensive
secondary and it's lack of ex perience.
Jeremy Phalin and the Marauders might try and talce advantage of

Adams (5-10,170, jr) led the
Vikings with 76 yards in only four
carries and two touchdowns. Aaron
Walters (5 -6, 180, sr) added 69
yards in 14 tries and Jason Snider a
6-1, 218 sophomore fullback added
55 yards in nine canies.
Quartertfa~l"Tmi"Pli!Uirr only
had to go to the air nine times with
two completions last. week but that
doesnUt mean that the Vikings
doesnUt have a passing attack. The
Vikings return 6-2, 240 pound
tight end Jason Caudill. Caudill
was an All-District performer for
the Vikings last season when he

Middleport to host catfish tournament

I'

The Middleport Recreation
Depanment will sponsor a Catfish
Tournament at the American
Legion Pond at Rutland, Ohio on
Saturday, September 7 and Sunday,
.September 8, 1991. The tourna-

ment will be a two day affair and
cash prizes will be offered. The
Tournament starts at 8 a.m. and
ends with the weigh in at 6 pm. on
both Saturday and Sunday. Check
in and rel(istration will be from

'

'

I'

j'

class, semi-late models, was
claimed by Jr. Abels from
Ravenswood, WV _
Wolfe is sponsored locally by
Andersons,Eber's Gulf, Adams
Farms,and Precision Automotive of
Darwin.
Andy Bond leads the UMP
modified division over Doug
Henry, and Tim Smedley. Rutland's Rick Williamson, who

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Here is the weeldy fishing report as
provided by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources:
CENTRALOIDO
HARGUS CREEK LAKE Early morning is. a good time to
fish for largemouth bass. Try using
night crawlers, rubber worms or
minnows fished in shallow water in
the upper end of the lalce. Use night
crawlers or chicken livers fished
along the bottom at night to talce

I

one.
Tina Ramsey had 8, while Carmen Detty, Jody King, Stacey
Jenkins, Crystal McKenzie, and
Tabitha Davis each had one each.
Despite a good effort, Eastern's
reserves dropped to 0-2, dropping
games to Federal Hocking and
North Gallia.
After winning the first game,
15-11, Eastern dropped the next
two 14-16 and 8-15.
Jessica Radford scored eleven
points, Michelle Schultz had 10,
Becky Driggs 7, Marilyn Kibble 4,
Kathy Bernard 2, and one each by
Heidi Nelson, Lisa Golden, and
Wendy Rach.
April Kidwell and Cecilia
Spencer had ten points each, Mary
Grimm had 6, Julia Gallaher had
five, Terri Washburn 9, and Ary
Tholin each had three.
Against North Gallia, the Lady
Pirates won 15-3 and 15-1.
Dawn Coffee led North Gallia
with nine points, Nikki Meade had
6, Cassie Petrie had 6, Tracy Ward
had five, and two each by Martha
Stapleton and Angie Saunders.

Scoreboard
AMERICAN
LEAGUE
East Division
W

Toronto

Dcu&lt;&gt;it

L

Pet

..... 75 60

.556

"'" 71 62

o.....

Mitwoul:co
New Yodt
Baltimcn

Cleveland

.. .......

68 64

..... 6l 68
....... 60 72

........ 54 79
........ 44 88

(T•pani 13-7), I :Ol pm .
Chie•ao (Alvarez 2-2) It TellU (Ryan
9~).B5

GB

.534

3

s1n
.489
9
.45513 1n

.li5

.406

20

In

.33329

West Division
W

Minnclooa

oucaao

L

PeL

....... 80 54

.597

.........

12 62
TDI.II
... ······· 70 62
Oal&lt;land
'"""" 71 63
Kanw Oty ....... 68 64
SUale
........... 68 65
Cllifomil
......... 6.!1 68

GB

..537
8
.530
9
.530
9
.5l.S
II
..Sill I 112
.43914 1/2

TYeldiJ'aGarnt~

California 2. 801\011 0
B&amp;Uimore I, ToronLO 4
KanJu City I, Chi.CIJO 0
Milwaukee !i, Oakland 3

To.•!i,NewYM I
Seaale I, Dclroit 0
Only P'"'" od\oclul&lt;d
WednlldaJ'I Garne1
801ton 2, Cali!twni1 0

Toronto 3, Baltimore I

Chica&amp;o 4, Xanlu City 1
Milw1uice 2, Oakland 0
Cleveland a, MiMC!IOll4
New Yodt 3, Tc.u~2
Onlypmcai&lt;IICdlll&lt;d
Tllurtda1'• Gama
Kanau City (OubicZ.I 1-7) at Chic:1go
(HOIJI)I 7-1), I~ p.m.
Sc.Ule (Hanlon 7-7) 1t801~m

7:ll p.m.
T.,...o(Xcy 14-1) 11 OeYeland (Nogy
1-11), 7:ll p.m.
Ookllnd (Moore 1:1-1) II Dewit
(Tonanoll-1), 7:35p.m.
(QcrncnJ 14-S~

Only P'"'"
-fridly'l
Gl-

~ City (Saballal"' 10-7) 11 Ballim..-.(M»aaiM ~.7 : 33p.m .

s-loac.._l0-7)11B(Y-I 3-l), 7:)5 p.m.

T - . CJu.OIImln l-2) II O..eland .
(Olio 1-l), 7:ll p.m.
Ookllnd (Wdcllll-10) 11 Dewit (Tcr..U 10-10), 7:35p,m.

"""YIIl(fojb7-1l11-.

p.m.

Mil••ukce (B01io 10-9) 1t C&amp;lifomia
(Gnhc 1-7), 10:35 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W
PilllburJh
Sl. Lwi1
Chicaao

L

""'"" 80 52
.......... 71 61
......... 66 61

New Yom
....... 65 61
PIWadd,ru. ....... 64 69
M..,...l
......... S5 77

PeL
.606

GB
-

9
.49614 1/2

.5JS

.48915 112
.48 116 1n
.417
25

West Division
W

L

Loo Angcl&lt;o
Athnta

""" 74 "

....... 73 60

Cincimuti

........ 66 61

San Dieao ........ 66 61
San Franeiaco ...... 62 71
H001ton
....... .. SS 71
TutlldJIJ'• Games

Pel
.556
.549

CB
I

.496

8

.493 g lf2
.466

12

.414

19

channel catfiSh.
O'SHAUGNESSY RESERVOIR - Try the upper end of the
reservoir along the west side to
talce crappies. Use minnows suspended beneath a bobber and
fished at 2~ feet. Wonns, chicken
livers and stink baits work well in
taking channel catfish along the
east shoreline.
NORTHWEST OHIO
UPPER SANDUSKY RESERVOIR - Fish minnows along the
bank around weeds and brush to
talce crappies averaging 7-10 inches. This same shoreline cover is a
good place to talce bluegills when
using worms and larval baits. Try
the upper end around shoreline
cover to find largemouth bass.
CLEAR FORK RESERVOIR
- Troll large crank baits near the
islands and the dam to talce muskellunge. Try deeper water away from
the islands to talce crappies. This is
a good time of the year to take
channel catfish averaging 14-24
inches when using night crawlers
or chicken livers.
NORTHEAST OIDO
MOGADORE RESERVOIR Look for weedy cover and areas
with submerged structure to find
bluegills. Fish near the bottom with
small worms in shallow water
without a bobber. Brown bullheads
averaging II inches can be talcen
along the shoreline.
FINDLEY LAKE - Use
worms or larval baits to take
bluegills averaging 7-9 inches.
Look for shallow water areas with
weedy cover and submerged brush
to locate largemouth bass. Some
crappies averaging 10 inches are
also caught from shoreline this
time of year.
SOUTHEAST OIDO
LAKE HOPE - Largemouth
bass from 10-20 inches can be
taken in shallow water around the
upper end of the lake. Many shoreline areas are good places to fish
for bluegills and sunfish.
JACKSON CITY RESERVOIR
- Good to excellent numbers of
popular game fish are present here.
Try trolling small crank baits to
talce walleye up to 30 inches. Look
for largemouth bass in areas with
fish concentration devices. SunfiSh
and bluegill are of average quality
measuring 7-II inches.

The Meigs Marauder volleyball
team under the direction of head
coach Rick Ash have jumped out to
a 4-0 record in this young season.
The defending Tri-Valley Conference champions own a 24-{) regular
season record over the last two seasons.
In the first match of the year,
after dropping the fl!St game 12-15
to Vinton County, but the Marauder spikers came back to win the
final two games 15-4 and 15-8.
Kim Hanning led Meigs going 15
for 15 serving with five aces and
five lcills, Tricia Baer was II for 11
serving with four aces, five kills
and two assists, Chrissy Weaver
was I 0 for 10 serving with two
aces, seven kills, one assist and
three blocks. Misty Butcher was
eight for eight serving, Nikki Meier
was seven for nine serving with
five aces and II assists. In the
reserve match Vinton County
defeated Meigs 15-8, 16-18 and 15-

Meigs increased it's marie to a
perfect 4-0 with a 15-11, 15-10 win
over Eastern. Hanning was a perfeet 16 for 16 serving with seven
aces and six kills, Weaver also had
six kills and Meier added 10
assists. For Eastern Lee Ann
Gillilan was five for six serving
with one ace.
Meigs won the reserve contest ·

In a battle of undefeated teams
at Federal Hocking, Meigs defeated
the Lancers 15-7, 15-8. Meier was
nine for nine serving with two aces
and 10 assists, Baer was 10 of 12
serving with five aces. Yvette
Young added five lcills. In the
reserve contest, Meigs won by
scores of 16-14 and 15-11, Pullins
led the reserve with si~ points,
Henderson added five and Bobbi
Butcher four.

~c.
'Q'Jnelers
lll E.

DIIIJ pmo IICbedulod

~(l)oi-ID-4)11-

(Iilmlldll-1~ 1:35 p.m.
SL Louil (TcwbboiJy 9·9) 11 Son Di'F
(B- :t-3), 10t31 p.m.

Meln, Pomeroy

Visiting Ohio Valley Christian
fell to Southern in a tight contest
last Thursday, according to a report
submitted Wednesday.
The Defenders were blown off
the coun by the ~acine ~xtet 15-3,
but rebounded w1th a spiking frenzy in game two to win 15-7 and
send the match into the crucial
third game. Ohio Valley jumped to
an early 6-llead forcing the Tornadoes to call an early time out. After
re-grouping, the Tornadoes pulled
within one at 7-6.
The Defenders surged ahead
again to mount an 11-7 lead but
missed two consecuuve serves and
allowed Southern to once again cut
the lead to one at 11-10. After battling for two hard fought points to
go up 13-10, Ohio VaJley let victory slip through thell" fin~ers m giVing up the next five pomts - three
on penalties, one ace serve ~d one
regular point. Oh10 Valley s serving stats showed semors Beih
Blevins and Jenny Hughes with
!leach, followed by Pam Holley
(five), Meredith Pollard (two) and
Cindy Sheets and Anna Hamnclc
with one each.

I~ 1M 0! IM&lt;ll Silt

IPihCIOit tl ~ WICI ft IUI!IOiiltll d1M9IM tunlo'1l I'U'
10 ,,_,~ &gt;Mftolll.. t &lt;II~PN"""'ol &gt;lllulllltf. ltl fillwiNI~

*"

tliolooot on ~ 31

$0 Admrtttd lUllS I117.132.H400: lilell~rH. 1151Jee.IM.DO: S\lriiM
S27442.7SBOO I~ U1.481 . 17JDO . ~IIlii. S61J31.1fi'DII: HIIIIMil

S30..a2.~.00. Ciprlll ll.CQl.(Xl(I.OO IH WITNESS WHEAEOf. IIIM Jilfalllll
"'bw•btd my n•r11t l n d - my Mal to Ill .~ •..., 11 ~ Olllo.
dl'; '"" dllt ~ Fat~t_ Sup! oiiiiiU&lt;tra rJ Ol&gt;oo )USIJ

lh••

S1a1e ol 01'110 rltl)tl1mtnl oll-tnet. C«&lt;•hctlt 01 Cotrlpilarce-fl'll ~n
OIIS9'* !ii.C*&gt;nltrdfnl of irlluttrQ olll'll Slllt o1 01110 I'IMby ct!1 hn IIIII
IIIAS!IIoCHUSfm fiOf:IINTY • Ufl INS CO ol lloADn. 5I-. of IQs·
~1\vM!ts. nas ~ ""'n,,..,_ ot "'" Slllllllfllcalllt • c llld • Who• •ZIIld~I&gt;I\Q~'ItCI!nt'III'M!IDI!II'W&gt;III"**II•Iti~MIIIstol

oftt.ufl tiCI in hnn:olll COIIdoiiOII 1\ IIIOwll 0y .. IIIWII.IIIII*!Nnl tl tiM blln
II"*'-' 0t1 o.ctmlil&lt; 31 !11!10
IIJ57J04JIII.IO; l.JIO'I...
S9050!11901100 Su&lt;plu1 IMUn ~DCI. ,._.,., ...1.217.11M.OO: fJ4111101'
'"'" SM11107J.!.20C '"'••- ~ .111 .'40.00 C:tpbi, IU.OOJIQDOC Iff
Wllt!ESS WHEREOF 111M ,.,....,.,IUCllcrGci"'Y IIWI'IIIIIICCII.IIldmryNII

'-'""'*' ....

,.Otlllolld II Cdur110115 01'10 lftoiOiy tlld IIIII
""

6

()!

Glor9' Feb41. $¥jll olll'llul·

Orioo IUIOI

STRIDE WITH
YOUR
GUIDE

PRE-FALL CHAIN SALE
BUY 1 CHAIN AT THE
REGULAR PRICE
Comfort I Ultra

Good while supplies last.

Middleport
C 1991 Reebok lntematioru.l Ltd.. All RilhU,IIeMrvtd.

GET SECOND CHAIN
FOR

ssoo

HURRY! ONLY 2 DAYS LEFT!

POMEROY HOM.E &amp; AUTO
'

606 EAST MAIN

'

992·2094

POMEROY

~

I

N. 2nd Ave.
992-5627

ball," commissioner Fay Vincent
said. "He is, among other things,
responsible with Judge (Kenesaw
Mountain) Landis for saving our
game after the Black Sox scandal
of 1919. He is surely the most
famous player in the history of the
game and will remain so for generations to come. This change allows
Roger Maris to receive the recognition he deserves."
Vincent, the committee chairman, pushed to reverse the_ decision
made by former commiSSioner
Ford Frick, who ruled on July 17,
1961 that Ruth' s record of 60
would stand unless it was broken
within 154 games, the length of the
pre-expansion schedule. Maris h1t
59 in 154 games and connected for

No. 61 in the final game of the season.
.
"Obviously, it's great," sa1d
Roger Maris Jr., a son of the former New York Yankees star. "I
never felt it should have been put
there to begin with."
Maris who died in 1985, had
felt slighied by the asterisk, which
doesn't really exist. Baseball's two
record books, published by The
Sporting News and the Elias Sports
Bureau, have listed Ruth and Maris
next to each other.
"I didn't make the schedule,"
Maris once said. ''And do you
know any other records that have
been broken since the 162-game
schedule that have an asterisk? I
don't"

White's views were at odds with
dollars are traveling from Ohio
down to Kentuclcy and New Castle, those expressed briefly by a representative of the rest of the harness
Pa.
'·we might look upon that very racing industry.
favornbly, at least introducing legDon Hoovler, president of the
islation," he said. "They've got to Ohio Harness Horsemen Associatell us what we can do to help tion, said he spoke for breeders,
them."
horsemen and other harness tracks
Michael White of Raceway Park - with the exception of Raceway
in Toledo said establishing off- Park - in opposing the expanded
track betting was a necessity for an wagering.
industry in which attendance has
SVAC grid standings
been slumping.
"People will not come back to
(OveraU)
the racetrack just because the raceW L PF PA
track is there. We have to go out Team
0
and get these people .. T_he way Eastern .................. .! 0 20
6
things are right now th1s mdustry Kyger Creelc ...........l 0 14
7
will not return back to the glory Ndnlt Gallia .......... .! 0 14
12
days of those years past," White ~outhw~tem ........ .1 0 14
Southem .................o 1 20 40
said.
'
He also supported a chan~e m Hannan Trace.........o 1 o 13
state law which would allow Inter- Oak Hili .................O I 0 13
track betting, a system in which Symmes Valley ......O I 0 33
patrons of tracks where live racmg
Saturday's final
was not being conducted could bet
North Gallia 14, Trimble 7
on races televised from elsewhere.
Friday's games
Hannan at Eastern Hannan Trace at Alexander
Kyger Creek at Wahama
North Gallia at Green Local
Waterford at Southern
Ross SEat Southwestern
Unioto at Svmmes V~llev

Southern beats OVCS spikers

01ft9*1, ~ oll'*lllaoiiiiiS. olelrwl ,....,.,_ IIIII
1.0\'Al AIIEAICAN LSI N1 CO t1 MoOoil, Slalt d Ala!MI. "'- ~ w!lh

Fitness, a guide for a healthier you, complete wtth
a One-Year walking log.

FrldaJ'I G••
San Fnncilco (Hiclunon I..Q) It Chica·
,. (Culillo l-3), 3:20 l'm.
Loo-(llMa!Unozl6-9 and
Ko.O...l-9) III'IIIIIMib (Tomlin 1-4
ud Z.Smil!IIH0),2,H5 p.m.
Cindmad (Scuddor l-l) 11 Manreal
(llaao)' 2-4), '1:35 p.m.
Aliuu tMen;br 4-3) II Now Yodt
(WbildiW116-IO), 7:&lt;10p.m.

COLUMBUS,Ohio(AP)The chairman of a legislative committee looking at problems of the
horse race industry said he is willing to examine inter-track and offtrack betting as a posstble soluuon.
Rep. Barney Quilter, D-Toledo,
heard testimony Tuesday about
· e~panded wagering from some of
the state's thoroughbred and harness tracks.
..
The session followed viSits by
committee members last week to
. Turfway Parle in Florence, K~ ·•
where inter-track berung IS permn: ted, and to an off-track betting out. let in New Castle, Pa.
· "The thing that impressed me
more than anything else is _that I
. took a look around the parking lot
: in both of these facilities and I was
· just flabbergasted at the number of
. Ohio license plates ... at both of
these," Quilter said. "I would say
one-half of the license plates w7re
from Ohio at both of these facilities. Which means to me that our ...

bul. Orloo. IIIII &lt;It)' lnd Oh, - . Ftlbt, 5.lpl o i l - oiOft,g, IMOel
S1111 111 Oll.o Cltpl,_ ol l"""ane.. c.ttaltol ~Tilt un-

Th•nd•y'• Came
St. LouiJ (B .Smilh 11·1) It San Diego

(llurio 4-4). 4:0l p.m.

NEW YORK (AP) - Babe
Ruth, the most famous name in
- American sports, has been dropped
from his hallowed spot in baseball's record book.
An eight-man panel - the committee for statistical accuracy voted Wednesday to remove the
mythical asterisk ne~t to Roger
Maris' 61 home runs and to drop
baseball's greatest power hitter
from the most hallowed section of
the record book.
Ruth, who hit 714 home runs,
lost the career record when Hank
Aaron pasSed him in 1974 en route
to a total of 755.
" This decision does not diminish or demean the contributions of
Ba!Je Ruth to the game of base-

15-13 and 15-4. Erica Robie led a
total team effort with eight serves,
Jessica Radford led Eastern with
three points.
Meigs will host Miller on
Thursday evening at 5:55, year in
and year out the Lady Falcons have
one of the best teams in the anea.
So Thursday evenings game could
be a test for Meigs.

FREE Mini Class Ring Charm with Purchase of any Gold Clas, Rmg.

Slall ol Ooloo. Dtpel!flllfll oii-IIQ. Ctrli!QII ol ~fill lltiM!S9'*1· ~ o/1-olllltS.. o1ar., hniiJcetlrfltl; IIIII
.lo\CI.SON N&amp;TlOMAi. LIE INS CO al LMIIInf. SliM a1 ~- "- ~
1~11 tilt tiM ol flit 51.. ~ 10 ~ IIIII• fUtllonncl d.lmg tilt Nlll!l
rtl/10 traniiCI '" l!ltlllllt j• WQIIflllf Du..,_ ol inlutMct Ill fvllnNf
wndtiO'IJI ..,_,by q ....... -.mtn~IO " - M1 .li;IIIMI 111 C......
ll 111!1(1_ ~-·MJ.~O). ~ftll.llt.127.2111.00: ~ ·
plul. $«)1,431.58300. 1ncomt.I3.110.12'MJ0: ~~ IMJ318ji(J
N,. luetl. $4!l.lli.YOOO. Clptll. 111100~110 N WITNESS WHEREOf.
I ""' ntrti.W*li'.IIKJIIIIO "''' fiiiM hi Ulllld my MIIID bl.m..d a Q:t.lm.

len '' "-'1 Dy il tnnual 1111_,. ID 1\M

first half, the P_irates got on the
board when semor _tatlbac_k Dann
Smith connected with Jumor ught
end Rob Canady on a 71-yard
touchdown pass play about halfway
through the ~U"d quarter.. Following a two-pomt conversion pass
from junio~ quarterback Charles
Peck to semor fullback Casey Staton, the Puates anchored the wm
when Staton, who also plays
linebaclcer, intercepted a R_usty
Richards pass and returned It 25
yards for a touchdown 55 seconds
into prime time.
.
Green Local- a 12~ overume
victor over Chesapealce last week
- will see if Nor.th has what 11
takes to start a wmnmg _streak when
the Bobcats host the Pirates 10 the
former's home opener Fnday mght.
The U)l·and -commg Eastern
Eagles, wmners of thell" last three
~ames, have_ a good shot alextendmg their wmmng _streak 10 their
home opener agamst a Hannl~n
team that lost a heart-break:mg
12 dcciSt?n to Southwestern m the
Wildcats home opener.
Tim Bissell has shown once

Mythical asterisk removed
from Marris' 61 homers

Meigs swept Alexander 15-4,
15-4 to run it's record to 2-0. Hanning was 13 for 14 serving with
three aces, Meier was nine for nine
with two aces. Meier and Yvette
Young had four kills each and
Meier added four assists. Meigs
won the reserve match in two
games, 15-8 and 15-7.

WOMEN
Buy any pair of Reebok®Walking ~hoes wi~h the
Energaire®System and walk off wtth Walkmg t~

s, St. Low. 3

Jc1

5.

Wedn..Uy'a G•m•
Phtabtqh I, San Franci.tco 3
M.....ol8,Adonta4
Cindnnali 5. PIWadelplti• I
HOUJIOll, New Yad: 3
San llleao l, Otieoao I
Loo Aoacko

Prizes will be awarded for
longest drive, closest to the pion,
longest putt, and a hole in one on
hole #9 where the fl!St player to hit
the golfers ace wins the choice of a
car-from either Smith-Nelson
Motors in Pomeroy, Middleport
Ford, or Don Tate Chevrolet-OldsGeo in Pomeroy.
For sign-up information please
see or call Max Whitlatch, 9923730, Bob Damron 992-7241 , Jim
Asbury 304-669-3226, ext 3125 or
Bob Green 304-773-9527.

year in Mason, W.Va.
Donnie VanMeter's White Falcon squad - a 36- 13 winner over
Hamlin in its home opener - is
voted very likely to send the Bobcats' seven-game winning streak to
ex tinction. With veteran starters
such as sen ior quarterback John
Johnson, senior running back Brent
Larck, junior running backs Carl
King and Rocky Stewart and junior
Oanker Travis Johnson on hand, the
Falcons promtse to g1ve KC as
much trouble as they did last year.
In that encounter, the Bobcats
needed a fourth -q uarter fumble
recovery from nose tackle (now
linebacker) Scott Newell to edge
the Falcons 27-21.
Spealcmg of comebacks, North
Gallia needed one to shake off an
early 7-0 deficit and beat Trimble
14-7 in the SVAC's lone Saturday
ni ght game- only one of two
suc h encounters SV AC teams have
sc heduled this year (the season
finale between Eastern and Southem at Racine on Nov. I will be the
other).
.
After being held scoreless m the

Off-track betting could be one
solution to help horse race industry

Atlanta 4, Monuul I

Cincinnll.i I, Philadelphia 5
New Yc.k 6, Houston I
San Dieao 4, OUcaao I
to. Anaelet S, St. Low. 4
Pitublqh S, San Francisco 3, 10 U,.
nina•

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OV~ News Staff
The opemng week of the 1991
football season saw the SVAC
brealc even agamst the world with
four wins and four losses in the
first week of non-league play, and
part of the reason was a pair of
losses by two of last year's top
three teams.
Oak Hill and Symmes Valley,
who fin~hed co.-No. I and No. 2,
respecuvely, fell to Coal Grove
(13-0) and Rock Hill (33-0),
respectively, in road games. The
Oaks will be loolcing for their fll"st
points of the season in Friday's
home opener against Minford - a
45-6 road victor over Alexander
last week- m the frrst game of a
three-game home stand, while the
y ikings will do the same when
they entertain Unioto.
Among the conference winners
was defending co-champ Kyger
Creek, whose 14-6 home victory
over a banged-up Federal Hoclcing
team has since been forgotten in
Ji ht of the next challenge awaiting
Coon's crew - the Wahama
game, which will be played thi s

weeks game in nine carries, Cremeans and Blake also gives the
Marauders a threat in the air coming out of the baclcfield for Phalin.
The Marauder defense will have
to do a better job stopping the
ground game, in last weeks loss to
Gallipolis the Blue Devils picked
up 341 yards in 56 carries. The
defen se is lead by linebackers
Robert Yonker (5-9, 189, sr) and
Cremeans and 8 lalce a( cornerback.
Blake intercepted his school record
14th pass last week and added a
fumble recovery.
Kick off for this weeks TVC
opener will be at 7:30.

Meigs volleyball team unbeaten

Ohio weekly fishing report

.Eastern junior high
volleyball team is 2-0
EAST MEIGS-The Eastern Jr.
High School Volleyball team is
currently undefeated with a 2-0
- record after wins over North Gallia
and Oak Hill.
Eastern is 2-{) in the SVAC.
After North Gallia took a 15-9
lead in the first game, Eastern came
back to claim the match 15-6 and
15-7.
Brandi Reeves led the way with
10 points, Patsy Aeilcer had II, Jessica Karr had 8, Rebecca Evans 6,
Nicole Nelson one, Martie Holter
2, and Amana Milhoan one.
For North Gallia Karl Aldennan
had ten points, Erin Dee! had 8,
Erin Conley had six, Elizabeth
Vass 3, and Barbie McMillin one.
In their second game against
Oak Hill, Eastern won 15-1 and 1512.
Brandi Reeves again led the
way with 9 points and four aces,
while Patsy Aeiker had II points
and one ace. Jessica Karr, Nicole
Nelson, and Amanda Milhoan each
had one, while Rebecca Evans,
Martie Holter, and Beth Bay each
had two, and Crystal Holsinger

recently boul!ht a beautiful new
car, is runmng fifth in points
behind Mark Graves.
Bob Adams, Jr. is running
eighth in the modified points
despite running only part time in
that division.
Phil Davis in the Whaley's Auto
Parts car is third in the sportsman
division behind Kevin Haught, and
Dick Grimm.

Kyger Creek, NQrth Gallia to face tests vs. Wahama, Green

Golf outing slated Sunday

MASON-A Golf Calcutta will
test). Registration on tournament
be
held at 7:30 a.m. at Riverside
date will be $17.00 and $7.00.
Golf
course on September 8, 1991
There will be a 50% payback for
with
proceeds to go to the Chilboth categories with 25% of the
dren's
home and foster child prototal pot going to first, 15% for secgrams
in this multi-county area.
ond and 10% for third. Fifty perccent of the total pot will go to the The event is sponsored by the
Big Cat winner and only one win- Southern Ohio Coal Company.
Minimum bid per team will $50
ner will be named.
with
payout being 75% between
For further questions please call
fl!St,
second,
and third places. 25%
The Middleport Recreation Departwill
go
to
the
children's home.
ment at 614-992-6782 or Dennis
First place will pay $800, secMcKinney at 614-742-2279.
ond $400, and $220 for third.

7:30-8:00 a.m. Pre-registration
entry fees per person will be
$15.00 (Most weight equals the
two day total weight with a $5.00
fee optional for the Big Cat con-

Adams takes commanding lead for
Skyline Speedway championship
BY SCOTT WOLFE
Bob Adams, Jr. of Racine, is
well on his way to becoming the
Skyline Speedway track champion
for the seventh time as he recently
took a co mmanding lead (4740
: points) over Larry Bond (4220
· points) from Coolville, Ohio.
Adams, driving the Doll Brother's Stihl Chain Saws/MeDonaids' /J .D. Drilling sponsored
machine, has won two features this
season, but has consistently fin ished in the top five.
Third in points is Coolville's
Andy Bond in the York Construction car, while another Racine driver, Scott Wolfe is fourth, and Mike
McDaniels fifth. Bruce Dennis,
Rolando Esparza, Mark Dickson,
Bobby Davidson, and Kenny Johnson round out the top ten.
Wolfe, the track champion in
1983, and Harold Redman in 1988,
have been the only other track
champions si nce Skyline began
running Late Models regularly in
1983. The year prior Skyline's top

the inexperience in the secondary.
Phalin despite having an off night
in last weeks loss to Gallipolis still
threw for 151 yards and two touchdowns. Shawn Hawley is Phalin's
favorite receiver, last week the
senior tight end pulled in three
passes for 48 yards including a 27
yard scoring pass. Speedster Kevin
Musser gives Meigs another deep
threat, Musser pulled in Phalin' s
other scoring toss, a 55 yarder.
Robby Wyatt also gives the
Marauders another threat in the air.
Frank Blake and Mike eremeans leads the Marauder ground
game, Blake gained 60 yards last

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Junior Meredith Pollard led in
hitting going 20 of 25 with II lei lis,
while Blevins hit 9 of 10 with nve
kills and Pam Holley 13 of 18 w1~
5 kills. Overall the Defenders htt
53 of 67 with 26 kills. In the passing department, the visitors were
. led by Holley (24-29). Nikki Saun. ders followed with a 13-of-18 per. formance. Morgan Wolfe led_all
Southern servers with 11 pom_ts
followed by teammate Mercy Hill
with 10.
. .
Southern also won the JUnior
high match 15-8, 1!2-15, 15-9. Ai!tY
PolJard ,Jed the Defenders,l·l, w1th
18 points andl3 aces, whtle assrst-

ing in the win were Anesa VanMatre (seven), Nan Williamson (five),
Ginger Franklin and Rachel
Cochran (one each). Sammi Sisson
led the Tornadoes with 16.

PHARMACY
-TOPICS
BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS
For woman troubled with hirsutism, a combination troatmont of ttutamldo and oral contraceptives can clear up tho oxcna hair within
seven months, according to a study at La•al Unlvoralty Researcll
canter In Quebec. Drugs block t~•. ~cllon of androgens In tho body.

·
•
•
·
·
ff
each to secure
agam that he s Eastern s stalh!Jn p~cked ~ 0 ~~~vement will be
out of the backfield, as the semor ~ e eviC rya' ainst Ross Southeasttatlback scored two touchdowns
ec ~ 8 the Highlanders wiU
3!1d rncked up 1~ yarosbfanlcinn
2~
~~; ~~~i~ home opener Friday
nes m the Eag es 2o-o
g_o
. ht
Waterford_last week. But sen_IOr mgl ·So tbern getting better? Perfullback Mike Hoffman (l7_carnes, h s 0 ·nee the Tornadoes who
75 yards, one TD) and semor runa~s ~ ~dn't score in doubl~ digmn$ back Terry McGutre (mne 1i~ Jntil Week 3 (a 32-24 multi carnes, 60 yards) have shown that
·me victory over Ironton St.
concentrating o,n Bissell can be ~ve)rt~cd the trick in last week's
hazardous to one ~defense.
_ 4
loss 10 Fort Frye. This
Southwestern s w~n ~ve~ Han
week's opponent will be an angry
nan -;- which halte 1 e ~mes Waterford squad still in searc h of
gang s six-game losmg stre its fl!St points of thC season.
brought out qualtty efforts from
The Tornadoes have put junior
some ofre rl~llldG7besuc~~~ Russell Singleton, one of la st
1 Y 1 .rt.
JU~tor tal bac
year's tight ends, at fullback, and
gamed106 yards on 22 carnes.
the 6-2, 195-pounder responded to
Senior fullback KeVIn Gill:~~ his new assignment with 123 yards
who gamed only Six yards 0
on five carries and one touchdown .
mght, showed w~at he ;%~ld d~ With senior ti~ht end Jamie Proffiu
With his hands, as. e snar four~! and junior w1de receiver Jeremy
Aaron McCarty s P~~~s S~~ior Dill catching senior quarterback
yards and a touchd , ·
h Michael Evans' passes as expected.
wide~ut Stev~ Davis s lon~~~~r ·~e placement of Singleton in the
- a our-yar er- was g
n
another ~u~~~~w~d ~~C~v
defense, A
P

1

1

carf

i:

'rt.io

a

&gt;

LeBeau doubts
if Oilers will try
to control ball

&gt;~~y-

CINCINNATI (AP) - Bengals
defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau
says he doubts the Houston Oilers
will attempt a ball-control game at
Cincinnati Sunday.
Houston's
run -and-shoot
offense, known as the Red Gun ,
attempted 639 passes m 1990. No
other NFL team topped the 600
marie last season.
"It's a great offense, but it's a
high -risk , high-gain off~~se,"
LeBeau said Wednesday. They
have people spread out all over,
and the ball is almost never m the
hands of a guy who weighs 200
pounds.
"More things can happen than
when you're just handin~ the ball
off-tackle. The possibility of a
turnover is probably a little higher,
so you have to make taclcle_s a~~
force them to conunue execuung.
In the AFC, only the Cleveland
Browns had more giveaways than
Houston in 1990.
Houston gained only 22 yards
rushing in itS 40-20 loss at Cmcmnati last season. But the Oilers
rushed for 113 in their 48-17 victory at Houston, and avernged more
than five yards per carry.
"The thing happening now, the
evolution right in front of your
eyes, is the run part of (the runand-shoot)," head coach Sam
Wyche said. " It's becomin~ a very
sound and very productiVe run
offense."

CHILDREN'S LEATHER SHOES
INCLUDING INFANTS' FIRST WALKING SHOES

30°/o OFF

FRIDAY and
SATURDAY

CHAPMAN SHOES
Pomeroy's Quality Shoe Store

HIGH MILEAGE·All SEASON
WHITEWALL
185/705RI4
195/70SR14
205/705R14
215/705RI4
215/705R15
225/70SRIS
235/70SRIS

backfield gives ~vans an~ther pair
of hands in the J'ornadoes progrcss1on toward the run -and -s hoot
offense. Can an offense featuring
four receivers and fullbaclc with
the knack for catching pigskins be
far away?
Don Saunders' Hannan Trace
Wildcats, owners of a nine -game
losing streak, will have two weeks
to nurse the wounds they will surely get against Dave Boston Jr. 's
Alexander Spartans Friday ni~ht
before beginning the league pon on
of the slate against North Gallia1at
Vinton on Sept. 20. The Spanans
arc hungry for victory, especially
considering what Minford did to
them in their home opener.
The Wildcats, victims of a 13-0
whitewashing by Ironton St. Joe ,
need offense badly, because they
totaled 152 yards (1 34 rushi ng. IR
passing) against the Flyers. Only
Symmes Valley (97 total yards)
and Oak H.ill (59) dtd worse agamst
their initial opponcniS.

$55.00
$57.00
$58.00
$60.00
$61.00
$63.00
$66.00

SPEED RATED·
ALL SEASON
BLACKWALL
P11S/70TRI3
185/70TR13
185/70TR13
195/70TR14
205/70TR14

$42.00
$44.00
$46.00
$50.00
$51.00

PREMIUM-All SEASON
WHITEWAll
$45.00
P175/BOR13
$47.00
Pl85/80R14
$50.00
PI85/75R14
PI95/75R14
$57.00
$54.00
P205/75R14
P20S/75RI5
$57.00
$59.00
P215/75RI5
$61.00
P225/75RIS
$64.00
P235/75RIS

--------------------------·---------

FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
.----------------------------PARIS lniA
If HIID!D

SEE US FOR All YOUR UNDER tAR NEEDS

Orthodontlsls have como up with a naw gimmick to maka
youngster• happlor to have tholr teeth slraighlanod - plastic braces
In bright, hot colors.

•SHOCKS •STRUTS •CV JOINTS •BRAKES

Boron dollcloncy alfocta general alortnosa and roacllon tlmts, •
rauarchor with tho u.s. Dopanmant of Agriculture reports. Apples,
Pearo grapoa and carrots may bo bettor aourcea than aupptomonts.

•CHASSIS PARTS •MUFFLERS

...

I

t

t t

To dr up a drippy nou that haa no obvloua cau10 - doctoro call ~
non-~lorglc chronic rhinitis- an asthma drug, lpratroplum bromldt,
naa shown promlu In toll aln Denmark and at St._Louis Unlvoratty
of Medlolno. Atropine also aetma to Inhibit mucus production.

...

Altergy or no allergy, you'll find rollol from uncomfortable anllflos
and eneezae at Swlahor-LohiO Pharmacy.

SWISHER LOHSE
Ph~.nmacy
........ MeC't4e·tLIA.

et.... Mia I. Ph.

--"" Mon . .......
~~ ·
Ull 11.1111.
II 1:00 P.""
· - IO:OO,o..... to 4:00 , ,.._
HIIICRiniONI
I'll. tl2-alll
1. .....

· frl... a-leo
o,.. !II!!!'!'!

I...-:~

,_.oy. OH.

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
600 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
992·2094

Sale Ends 9/14/91

••

.,

�..

o I

,

•

i"

I

I

--....
The Dally Sentlnei-Page-:7 ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Thursday, September 5, 1991

/

Esther Smith reported on the
State Session for the Daughters of
America when the Chesler Council
No. 323 mel at the hall.
During the State Session. Opal
Hollon was appointed to the State
Credential Committee and Charlotte Grant was appointed to the
State Publicity Committee.
JoAnn Baum presided at the
meeting in which the Star Spangled
Banner was sung and the Lord's
Prayer repeated. The scripture
reading was from Acts.
The death of Bonnie Landers

was noted as was the death of Lora terly birthdays and potluck dinner
Damewood's brother-in-law. Mar- will be held.
garet Amberger's father is in the
Auending were Jean Fredrick,
hospital.
Ethel Orr, Thelma White, Mae
Belly Biggs is the new District McPeek, Ada Bissell, Marcia
Deputy and there will be a district Keller, Pauline Ridenour, Doris
meeting on Oct. 5 at Chester at I Grueser, Mary Holler, Sandy
p.m.
White, Charlotte Grant, Opal HolThe Past Councilors Club will lon, Lora Damewood, Faye
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the Kirkhart, Erma Cleland, Mary Jo
home of Marcia Keller.
Barringer, Bulah Maxey, Kathryn
Erma Cleland read a poem, Baum, Evereu Grant, Betty Young,
"Remember." JoAnn Baum read a Elizabeth Hayes, Esther Smith,
poem, "I Have Noticed."
Alta Ballard, JoAnn Baum VirThe nex t meeting will be quar- ginia Lee and Jean Welsh. '

Community calendar
i

.'•

••
•I

'

.,

St. John Lutheran Church,
3344 I Pine Grove Road, will celebmte its annual Harvest Festival on
Sunday.
Ronald Shreffler will be the
guest preacher at the II a.m. worship service. Shreffler is a graduate
of Trinity Lutheran Seminary and
is awaiung call in the Southern
Ohio Synod of the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in America. He
presently is interim associate pastor
at Emanuel Lutheran Church in
Marion. He is a Pomeroy resident.
Morning worship will be followed by a potluck dinner on the
church grounds.
The afternoon progmm, begin ning at2 p.m., will feature "A Visit

Page-&amp;

Esther Smith speaks to Chester
Council on D of A state session

•
•

St. John Lutheran to
celebrate annual festival

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in tbe calendar.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Revival at the
Full Gospel Lighthouse in Pomeroy
will continue through Friday. The
public is invited.
REEDS VILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet
Thursday at 7:3 0 p.m. at the
Reedsville Fire House.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Ladies Auxiliary of the Tuppers
Plams VFW Post No. 9053 will
meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
LOTTRIDGE - The Lottridge
Community Center will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. The public is
invited to aucnd.

horseshoe tournament on Saturday
at 9 am. at the Fellowship Church
of the Nazarene in Reedsville. Singles and doubles events $4 each.
Double elimination. Cash prizes
awarded. Call Cindy Mayle for
information, 985-4420 .
TUPPERS PLAINS - Ladies
Auxiliary, VFW Post No. 9053,
will have a bake and yard sale
across from the Farmers Bank in
Tuppers Plains on Saturday beginning at 8:30a.m. Donated items
may be given that morning.
DARWIN - Descendants of
Emmell, Lou, Carl and Corbell
Manley; Mertie Aleshire, Ed and
Lena Little and Nan Frazier, will
meet Saturday at the Route 33
southbound park at 4 p.m. Bring a
covered dish. For further information call Nancy Neutzling at 9926052.

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session on Thursday at6:30
p.m. at the Rolland Fire Station.

MASON · Bend Area Gospel
Sing on Saturday at 7 p.m. at the
Christian Brethren Church in
Mason, W.Va., featuring the Ladd
Family, Narrow Way and Reflections. The public is invited.

RACINE - The American
Legion Post 602 will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Members are
reminded that 1992 dues should be
paid.

LONG BOTTOM - There will
be a hymn sing at the Mount Olive
Community Church in Long Bottom on Saturday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites the public.

CHESHIRE - Women Alive
will begin fall meetings on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Kyger Creek
Clubhouse. There will be a devotional speaker and Pat Roush will
demonstrate doily making. Mem bers bring a salad item for the salad
bar.

POINT PLEASANT - The Liberty Moutaineers will perform at
the Senior Citizens Center in Point
Pleasant on Saturday.

BURLINGHAM - Revival at
the Word of Life Church in
Burlingham will be held Thursday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly.
Rev. James Hobbs is the evangelist. Special singing by New
Covenant Singers: Hall Family
Singers and more. Public invited.
FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
County Pomona Grange will meet
Friday at 7:30 p.m . at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. Judging of
contests will take place. The
Racine Grange will host.
RUTLAND- The Church of
Rutland will have a gospel sing Friday at 5 p.m. at the Rolland Civic
Center. The public is invited.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Pythian Sisters of Rockland Temple No.
615 will have a rummage and bake
sale on Friday and Saturday from
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Tuppers Plains
next to the post office.
RIPLEY - The Liberty Mountaineers will perform at Skateland
in Ripley, W.Va., on Friday.

POMEROY - There will be a
gospel concert on Saturday at 7
p.m. at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church in Pomeroy with
Russ Spencer and the Southern Hill
Singers. Pastor William Williams
invites the public.
NEW ENGLAND - There will
be a dance Saturday from 8 p.m. to
midnight at New England, between
Guysville and Stewart, featuring
Lenny and Skip. Cost is S2 per person with children under 12 free.
POMEROY - "The Adventures
of a Two-Minute Werewolf' will
be shown at the Meigs County Public Library in Pomeroy on Saturday
at 2 p.m. The movie will be shown
at the Middleport Library on Monday at 7 p.m.
SUNDAY
RACINE - The seventh annual
Chapman and Myrta (Kerwood)
Hill family reunion will be held
Sunday at Star Mill Park in Racine.
Bring a covered dish for dinner a I
p.m.
PAGEVILLE - The DilcherReeves family reunion will be held
Sunday at I :30 p.m. at the

Pageville Town Hall. Bring a covered dish.
WASHINGTON, W.VA.- The
55th annual Buckley reunion will
be held Sunday at Du Pont Park in
Washington, W.Va. beginning at I
p.m. with a potluck dinner .

SATURDAY
HENDERSON - The Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance Saturday
from 8- II p.m. at the Henderson
Community Center in Henderson,
W.Va. Dave Stuthard will be the
caller.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
meet Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
grange hall. Potluck refreshments
will be served following the meeting. All members are urged to
attend.
REEDSVll..LE - There will be a

Rev. Bill Sciscoe will be the
special speaker on Friday at 7:30
p.m. at the United Pentecostal
Church on South Third Street in
Middleport. The church is celebmting the lOth anniversary of Rev.
and Mrs. Clark Baker as minister at
the church. The public is invited to
attend.

Ladies golf news
Fourteen women and two guests
were in attendance at the Tuesday
Morning Ladies Golf League at the
Meigs Golf Course.
Winners after 18 holes of play
were Margaret Follrod, low gross;
Mary Bowen, low net; Norma
Custer and Margaret Follrod, lied
for low putts.
There will be mixed scramble
on Sunday, Sept. 15 with tee-off
lime at 4 p.m.·It will be a potluck.
The group. will hold its closing
season party on Monday, Sept 16
with ICC-off at 4 p.m. Members in
the league are requested to sign-up
by Sept I0 if planning to attend the
closing day party.

MCMA to meet

WINNER-· Lll Hart, Racine, rigbt, was the winner or a
given away by BiD Haptonstall or Sears Home Appliance and
Ironic Store, Middleport. The grill was given away at the 1991
Meigs County Fair.

MIDDLEPORT - Homecoming
at the Bradford Church of Christ
will be held Sunday. A potluck dinner will be held at noon . There will
be special speakers and singers in
the afternoon.
CHESTER - The Orange Christian Church will have its annual
homecoming on Sunday. A basket
dinner will be held at noon and
special afternoon services will be
held at 1:30 p.m. with music and a
speaker.
WOLF PEN - The Russell
Reunion will be, held Sunday at the
home place on Wolf Pen Road with
basket dinner to begin at I p.m. Jed
Russell, Oregon, will be auending.
PORTLAND - Homecoming at
the Freedom Gospel Mission on
County Road 31 will be held Sunday featuring the Reflections Trio
and Debbie Powell. Dinner at
noon. Pastor Roger Willford invites
the public.

MINERSVILLE - The Min ersville United Methodist Church
will have its annual homecoming
on Sunday. Sunday school begins
at 9 a.m. with church at 10 a.m. A
carry-in dinner will be held at
noon. There will also be an afternoon program. The public is invited 10 attend.

$4 900 OVER INVOICE SELLS LOTS OF NEW CARS
AND TRUCKS••• BRINGING US SOME OF THE VERT
BEST PRE-OWNED VEHICLES AROUND!
LOOK AT JUST A FEW!!!

1990 FORD TIEMPO
4 dr .. front whHI drive. 4cyl. drive, factory air cond ..

autom8tic trana .• power atetring. powr brakes, power
windowe. power door locka. tilt steering wheel. cruise
control, AM/FM radio. Local Owner.

PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
STOCK #19331

2 Door, front wheel drive. 6 cyl. engine, factory air
cond., auto. trans .. PS. PB, PW. Power ooats power
door locks. tilt whoel, cruloe control. AMlFM cas·

setta. •tereo tape, bucket seats, rear window defogger.
One Owner.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Funai
Symphonic

KTV

Philco

Emerson
Shin tom
Multi Tech
Scott

Sylvania

Magna vox
GE
RCA

STOCK #115441

e cyl.. ltlndard trlnl .• power ateering, power brak~··
AM/FM radio, radial tireo, 'h ton pickup. long w1de
bed, rear atep bumper,.gougu, olidlng rear glan. One

owner.

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

HOME ENTERTAINMENT (ENTER
391 WEST MAIN STREET
992-3524

POMEROY, OHIO

The Mtnersville United
Methodist Church will have its
annual homecoming on Sunday .
Sunday sc hool begins at 9 a.m .
with church at 10 a.m. A carry-in
dinner will be held at noon. There
will also be an afternoon program.
The public is invited 10 attend.

Special service planned
Pine Grove Bible Holiness
Church, Rowlesville Road, will
honor grandparents on Grandparents Day Sunday during the 9:30
a.m. service. All grandparents are
given a special invitation to attend
the servtce by Richard George,
Sunday school superintendent, and
the Rev. O'Dell Manley, pastor.

SAVINGS BOND WINNER - Marvel Petry, Middleport, rigbt,
was the winner of the August Sweepstakes at the Middleport
Sundry Store. Sbe received a $500 savings bond. Presenting the
bond is Brenda Wolre, store manager, and Kristi Richmond, assistant manager.

Tire explodes,
kills man

STOCK
#115161

Goldstar
Sam sung
Soundesign
Zenith

Minersville UMC
homecoming set

First birthday

CHESTER - Chester Church of
the Nazarene will hold its homecoming on Sunday. Regular morning services. Covered dish dinner at
noon. Afternoon services at I :30
p.m. featuring the Bissell Brothers
of Meigs County. Pastor Herbert
Grate invites the public.

vice.

test should allow doctors 10 begin
therapy more quickly so they can
stop early labor and prevent premature births!
"It seems to be good at distinguishing between irrelevant contractions and those associated with
alarms.
preterm
delivery," said Dr. Charles
If approved for routine use, the
J. Lockwood, who studied the lest
at Mount Sinai Hospital in New
York.
Its maker hopes the test will be
approved by the U.S . Food and
Drug Administration some time
next year and says it will cost about
$25.
In a study published in Thursday's New England Journal of
Medicine, Lockwood reported the
test to be about 80 percent accurate.
The test was developed by
Adeza Biomedical of Sunnyvale,
Calif., which helped pay for the
study with the American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Foundation and the Revson
Foundaliom
Doctors ~ay the test will be even
more
useful if it also reveals which
J.T. EVANS
women are at high risk of premalure delivery before labor stariS.
Although research on this question has not yet been published,
"there is high probability that will
J.T. Evans, son of Debbie and be the case," said Dr. Andrew E.
Jay Evans, was honored recently Senyei, chairman of Adeza andwith a party in observance of his principal inventor of the test
fitS! birthday held at the campsite
of his maternal grandparents, Tom
and Judy Werry.
A Baby Mickey's First Birthday
theme was carried out and cake and
homemade ice cream were served.
Attending and sending gifts
were Jay and Debbie Evans, Tom
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP)and Judy Werry, Ann Evans, Har- A tire exploded and killed the 73lan and Eileen Wehrung, Eleanor year-old man who was repairing it
Werry, Dorothy Evans, Walter and at a garage, authorities said
Virginia Wears, Carolyn and Don Wednesday.
Thomas, Becky and Trevor Depoy,
Augustus Nichols apparently
Fonda, Michelle, Danielle and overinOated the tire Tuesday night
Heather Thomas, Janet and Carl before it blew up, sending pieces of
Morris, Tim Faulk, Christy and rubber flying into his head, face,
Amber Blackston, Craig, Sherry chest and elbows, authorities said.
and Erin Chapman, John Arnon,
Ray and Maye Elliott, Bill and Mildred Hudson, Chuck, Rhonda and
The Racine Volunteer Fire
Ashley Hannahs, Vic and Mazie
Department
Women's Auxiliary is
Hannahs, Dave and Kelli Ballard,
selling
homemade
icc cream. Cost
Pauleue Harrison , Jennifer Fife,
is
$1
per
pint
and
$2
per quart. FlaJessica Schuler, Dennis and Pam
vors
are
chocolate,
vanilla,
banana,
Wolfe. Howard Mullen, Tom C.
pineapple
and
cherry
nut.
Call
Werry, Jane Wood and Ralph
Alana
Butler
at
949-2227
or
Scott
Werry.
Hill at949-223I to place an order.

The Meigs County Ministerial
Association will meet at 9:30 a.m.
on Wednesday at St. Paul Lutheran
Church, 231 E. Second Ave.,
Pomeroy.
The Ministerial Association is
open to any clergy in .Meigs County. Monthly meetings include special programs, fellowship, and
planning of ecumenical functions,
including the community Thanksgiving Eve service, community
Lenten service series and the opening worship for the Meigs County
Fair. The association also acts as a
clearinghouse for transients and
those locally who are in need.
The Ministerial Association
president is Rev. T. Glen McClung.
pastor of the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene.

1986 vw JEnA nou 111152
4 door. front wheel drive, 45 cyl., factor air cond.,
auto. trana.• power steering, power brakes, power

wlndowa, cruise control. AM/FM radio, nareo tape.

Ice cream available

Sonya's Country Kitchen
Ftldtg Night
Pte·Footbtll Speeitl
CHILl &amp;·
CHEESEBURGER
$300
We Now Have Pizza Made
Fresh When You Order.
FREE DELIVERY
AVAILABLE IN RACINE,
SYRACUSE and
DORCAS AREA
Come In After The Game
and Get A Pizza To Take
Home or Eat ln.

Sonya's Country Kitchen
National lank
RACINE, OHIO

Across From Home

.....

139

4

1995ea
1

nPGII
l'llllllill

1•uFF

IST20SO

$2 74 sale pr1ce
-$1 50 mtr's rebate

24 .:~.=:~~.:.::::'"
~
f':.-

1

L1m1t 2

ClLo~~

AC M:l
II fltM'I

s45""·~~i
......
tJ.

tnc'u&lt;leSmunter(domesttt or•mport)
edlaust pipe ano tall ptpe

Or purchl,sbtety

~ ......... . ........................117

B9c sate pr~ce

·3 50!
m!rs relbal~

.,.,t.-:"""......"...............'14

c

v~"os'

UHliME 'II~RRAMT"I

alter rebate

umd 16

ACM:I
!IIIII I ...

...........

.
S

Sl 09 sale prtce

s:;o mtr'sI rebac\e Vou• '""

III:IIIIcl

...........

n ••

after

to IOUI competHton Wt fntrQ lht

L1m11 16

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
Store houro: 1:30 a.m. 10 I p.m. llondiV througl\ Frldoy,
0:30a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. S.ndov

GALUPOUS

-

~

The next meeting will be a grab ·
bag sale to raise money for ARD. "':
All members are to bring a bag valued at $1.
.I
•
There will be a yard sale on Oct ·
I and members are urged to bring :
items for the sale to the last meet- ing in September.
.
The next meeting will be Tues• ·,
day at the Carpenter's Hall in .
Po meroy with weigh -in at 5 and .
meeting at 6 p.m.
. -.

' Pearl Knapp was the best weekly loser and Linda Grimm was the
runner-up at the recent meeting of
Ohio TOPS Club No. 570 held at
the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.
Ola Sinclair was the best KOPS
loser and Pearl Knapp won the fruit
basket.
A presentation was made about
food addiction.
The group discussed raising
money for Area Recognition Day.

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON (AP) - A new test
can accurately reveal whether contractions during pregnancy are truly
the start of labor or simply false

RACINE - The Carmel United
Methodist Church will have its
homecoming on Sunday. A potluck
dinner will begin at I p.m. with
afternoon services at 2 p.m. Rev.
Kenny Baker invites the public.

PINE GROVE - St. John
Lutheran Church, 33441 Pine
Grove Road, will celebrate its
annual Harvest Festival on Sunday.
Ronald Shreffler will be the guest
preacher at the I I a.m. worship ser-

'h•

TOP CHEERLEADERS • The Meljcs Junior HiJII Cheerleaders
placed second at tbe Parade of the Hills Cheerleadmg Competition
in Nelsonville. Pictured, 1-r, are, front, Tara Grueser, Whitney
Haptonstall. Second row, Jenny Ervin, Amber Bennett, Cynthia
Sandy and Amanda Musser. Back row, Teresa Simpson, Heather
K!night, Nikki Bentley and Megan Clark. Not pictured were Kim
Crites and Suzzanna Henderson.

New test distinguishes
false labor from real thing

POMEROY - The Wood
reunion will be held Sunday at the
home of Virgil King, 38858 Smith
Road in Pomeroy. Picnic lunch at
noon.

MIDDLEPORT - Rev. Bill
Sciscoe will be the special speaker
on Friday at 7:30p.m. at the United
Pentecostal Church on South Third
Street in Middleport. The church is
celebrating the lOth anniversary of
Rev. and Mrs. Clark Baker as minister. The public is invited to
auend.
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will have a hymn sing on Friday at 7 p.m. featuring local ralent
Steve Reed, pastor, invites the public.

Special speaker

from Katie Luther." Martha Leach
of Kettering, will portray Katherine
von Bora Luther, the wife of Dr.
Martin Luther, the founder of the
Luthemn church. Mrs. Leach has
portrayed Katie Luther at churches
and at conventions all over the
United States and also has done
portrayals of Martha of Bethany.
Noah's wife, the Woman at the
Well and Elizabeth. The afternoon
program also will include a hymn
sing.
Rev . Laura Leach Shreffler
invites the public to attend. She is
pastor of St. John and St. Paul
Lutheran churches.

TOPS, KOPS announce winners

m~~~~~
11 , 1111

•

�Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 5, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Country singer Dottie West dies Mother sentenced to 15 years in prison
By Sl(IP LATT
Associated Press Writer
NASHVILLE , Tenn. (AP) Dottie West, a poor girl who reaped
riches as she helped pave the way
for women country music singers,
died Wednesday from injuries sustained last weekend in a car accident. She was 58.
She spe nt her last days singing
and battling bankruptcy. She filed
for protection from creditors a year
. : ago, listing more than $1 million in
debts.
West, best lcnown for her 1974
hit so ng "Co untry Sunshine,"
severely damaged her liver in Friday ni ght' s accident, whi ch
occ urred as she was en route to perform at the Grand Ole Opry.
Two operations failed to stop
the bleeding, and she died during a
third operation at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
Dr. John A. Morris Jr., West's
surgeon, said the singer knew what
kind of fight was ahead before the
. most recent surgery started.
"She wasn't able to talk. but she
was aware of her condition," Morris said.
Encoura~ement and offers of
blood donauons rolled in after the
accident.
"While some people sang
words, she sang emotions, ·· said
Kenny Rogers, who sang a series of
duets with West.
Singer Tammy Wynette said,
'She paved the way for so many of
us ... us girls.''
Wes t's career spanned more
than 25 years and yielded solo hits
inclduing " Here Comes My
Baby," which won country music 's
!liSt Grammy Award in the female
vocalist category in 1964.
The melody from "Co untry

Sunshine" was widely used in a
Coca-Cola advertising campaign in
the mid-1970s.
Her late 1970s du ets with
Rogers produced a series of hits,
including "Every Time Two Fools
Collide" and "What Ale We Doin'
in Love. "
"If it had not been for Dorothy

Marie, La rry Way ne would've
probably been a bad lawyer somewhere in Houston," country singer
Larry Gatlin said, using their given
names.
After Gatlin sent West a demo
tape with eight of his songs , she
sent him a one-way airline ticket to
Nashville.
West's car broke down as she
was headed to the Grand Ole Opry.
An 81 -year-old motorist stopped
and gave West a ride. Police said
DOTTIE WEST
the driver e&lt;ited a ramp too fast
and the car flipped, injuring both.
Despite her success, earnings
West was the eldest of 10 chil- from her ca reer declined in the
dren in a poor farm famil y in 1980s an d she had amassed more
McMinnville, 75 miles southeast of than $1 million in debts by 1990.
Nashville.
She owed $703,000 on a house
She began songwriting in 1961 , loan, $1 10,000 to a form er manager
starting out with other struggling an d va riou s amounts to bank s,
artists, including WiiUe Nelson and retailers and lawyers.
Roger Miller.
Th e IRS held an auction of
West's ima~te was molded by West's belongings during the annuhigh-heeled boots, skintight pants, al Country Music Fan Fair in June.
low-cut blouses and western hats. West attended, sifned autographs
Despite a rather racy persona, she and bid on some o the items.
once told an interviewer that she
West was married and divorced
turned down a duet with Kris three times. She had three sons and
Kristofferson on "Help Me Make a daughter, country singer Shelly
It Through the Night" because the West, who teamed with David
lyrics were too suggestive. Eventu- Frizzell for the 1982 country hit
ally she made the record.
"You're the Reason God Made
West recalled in a 1989 inter- Oklahoma."
view how hard it was for a woman
Funeral arrangements were
to break into country music in the incomplete.
early 1960s.
"I don't think they felt girl
singers sold tickets," she said.

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich

I

If you have a little energy left
after the long , hot summer, you
might want to motor up to nearby
Reynoldsburg this Saturday.
Reynoldsburg is the home of the
Tomato Festival. Shucks-seems
like that should be in Meigs County. Well, at any rate, this Saturday
the National Kidney Foundation of
Ohio will be sponsoring the All
Ohio Chili Cookoff in conjunction
with the festival. How do I know
that? Well, Paige Smith Cleek told
me and she's been an active volun·. teer with the NatioqhK:~
· Foundation stn~e·'· moVflrg Ill
Columbus from someplace or other
down South-Atlanta, maybe-a
year ago.
The chili cookoff is the biggest
· fund raising event of the foundation for the year and some 60 cook. ing teams will be taking part in the
competition . The team with the
best chiU wins a trophy and airfare
for two to Los Angeles , Calif.,
where they will represent Ohio in
. .the World Championship Chili
' Cook-Off.
From noon to 3 p.m. the teams
do their thing, then once judging
: begins at 3:30 p.m. you get a
chance to sample all of the chili.
At 6 p.m. an auction will be held
to sell the chili created by the contestants. By the way, Mary 0 ' of
: Music in Motion will be featured
·performer throughout the day and
will emcee.
If you see Paige Saturday give
.her my best. Did I mention that
she's the daughter to Tom and
. April Smith of Lincoln Heights, ·
Pomeroy?
Remember Sharlee Whittle?
· Well , she was probably Sharlce
Neuman then.
Sharlee of Scottsdale, Ariz., was
named Educator of the Year by the
Central Arizona Middle School
Association. She teaches English
at the Carson Junior High in Mesa.
· A teacher since 1957, Sharlee
before going to Arizona, taught in
schools at Syracuse, Belpre, Worthington and Hilliard and received
outstanding teacher of the year
honors at Hilliard on one occasion.
She also was a Martha Holden Jennings Scholar.

--

Among the prized possessions
of Ruth Carsey is a well-preserved
:copy of the Rutland Hi~h School
Yearbook , The Cavalier, from
194 I. The yearbook belonged to
her father, the late Thurman
Carsey, who was a member of the
- Rutland Senior Class that year.
There were only 28 members in the
·graduating class but the yearbook
·shows quite a variety of activities
for the students. Everyone could
lay claim to some kind of fame in
those days of the small high school
- wasn't all that bad.
1 noted that classes in one
.Colwnbus school were postponed a
couple of days because the school's
air conditioning system was down.
Meantime, our kids have baked in
- the classrooms so far. What was
that you were saying about equal
distribution of school moneys?
And speaking of school, a personal note to;mswer quite a few

inquiries that we ' ve had. Yes.
after some bad months , we are
resuming our photography business
this month having done very little
since January as the result of ill ness.
After the last hurrah of Labor
Day Weekend, I hope you're smiling.

of running for the high school
cheerleading squad. That in turn
would have given Shanna Harper,
Mrs. Holloway's daughter, a better
shot at the squad. Shanna did not
try out after her mother's arrest in
January.
Both girls, now 14 and high
sc hool freshmen, were in court
Wednesday.
Terry Harper sa id he reported
the matter out of concern for the
Heaths. In the ensuing investigation, he secretly recorded conversations he had with Mrs. Holloway in
January.

service as part of probation.
" By giving Wanda Holloway
probation, you're not saying that
what happened to Verna Heath is
righ~" defense lawyer Troy McKinney said. "She can't make it right
from a prison cell. There's no

By SUSAN FAHLGREN
Associated Press Writer
HOUSTON (AP) - A jury
Wednesday sentenced a suburban
homemaker to 15 years in prison
and fined her $10,000 for trying to
hire a hitman to kill the mother of
her daughter's rival for a spot on
their school's cheerleading squad.
Prosecutors had asked for the
maxim urn life prison term for
Wanda Holloway, 37 , of Channelview, who was convicted Tuesday of solicitation of murder.
Hours before begin sentenced, a
sobbing Mrs. Holloway begged for
mercy.
"I think that this trial has been
enough punishment for me, "
Wanda Holloway said, sobbing on
the stand. "I'm totally humiliated.
... l would love a second chance."
Mrs. Holloway was convicted
Tuesday of solicitation of capital
murder in attempting to hire a hitman to kill Vema Heath. The crime
carried a possible sentence of five
years to life in prison and fines up
to $10,000.
Holloway had no previous
felony conviction . That made her
eligible for five to 10 years' probation instead of prison.
Assistant District Attorney Mlike
Anderson told the jurors the only
thing worse than Mrs. Holloway's
crime would have been if Mrs.
Heath and her daughter, Amber,
were killed.
" If they were dead, it would be
a capital murder," Anderson said.
The penalty for capital murder is
life in prison or death by injection.
Defense lawyer Troy McKinney
advised jurors they could recommend counseling and community

way."

The key witness against Mrs.
Holloway was Terry Harper, brother of her e&lt;-husband. Harper has
testified his former sister-in-law
wanted him to find a killer.
He said Mrs. Holloway believed
killing Amber Heath's mother
" auld compel the girl to drop out

Save At Dan's This Friday an
Saturdav

ISA
WANT AD

run 3 d-vs at no ch•ge

• Pri ~

of ad tor atl c apital tat te rs'' doubl e P"Ce o f ad cos t

•7 potnt line type only u~ed

•Sentinel is not respon sible for errors atte1 first diV tChedt
lor arrc!tn first d11y ad runs il"l p~arl Catt befOre 2 00 p m
diJf lhl!ll" publt cah o n to milk a c orrection
• Adl thlt must be paid in advance are

2. Designing Women (R)

15.0
14.8
14.5
13.7
13.7
13.4
12.5
12.2
12.2

3. Murphy Brown (R)
4. Cheers (R)
5. Coach (R)
Who's The Boss? (R)
7. Full House (R)
8. Nor1hern Exposure (R)
9. In The Heat Of The Night (R)
60 Minutes (R)
Ratings points are the percent of 92. t
milliory TV households; shares are the
percent of households with sets on.
(R) = Rerun
·

23

NBC

ABC
8.9

4 - G IVfWIIY

Farm Supplies

Servtces

&amp; L1ves lock

12 - Situltion W•nted
13 - lnsurence

- 2'00 P.M . WEDNESDAY

16 - Schools • lnstruct•on
1 6 - Aidio, TV. CB Rept~r
17 - Miscel llneou 1

63 - llll!ltOCk
64 - H•v &amp; Gra1n
65 - Seed &amp; Fertilt.ter

- 2 ·00 PM FRIDAY

18 - W•nted To Do

-

2 ·00 P .M TUESDAY

- 2 00 PM THURSDAY

Transport ali on
21 - Businen Opportunit y
23 - Prot•~onel

71 - Auto s for Sale
72 - Tru cks lor S11e
73 - Vons 6 4 VV0 "3
74 - Motorcy cles

Slfv1ces

Real Eslate

75 - Boea &amp;

M11on Co , WV

Area Code 6 14

Area Code 614

Area Code 304

31 - Homei .tor Sele

675 - Pt Pleas•nt

32 - Mob•lt Homes tor Sale
ll - F1rm1 fo r S1le

458 - leon

34- Busin•s

576 - Apple Grove

35 - lots &amp; Acre1ge
36 - Reel Estate Wanted

367- Cheahire
388- Vmton

992 - M•ddleport
Pomeroy
985 - Chester

245 - RIO

843 - PorUtnd

773 - Mnon

247 - Letart Falls
949 - Rictne
742 - Rutllnd

882 - New t'h1ven
895 - Letlrl
937 - Butfllo

Cir~nde

l;fi1ijJNd
41 - Houses ror Rent
ol2 - Mobile Homu for Rent

49 - F= o r

81 - -Home lmprovemenu
82 - Piumbing &amp; Haltin g

Low AI $25 Per Month •

Notebook PC With 31/z" Disk Drive
7~og0o
699~.:::95 Save s100

S699

Low As $25 Per Month •

• Tandy 1000 RL-HD •25-145111082or 1o13

W _
25 3530

• Tandy 1100 FD • Word-Processing Software
• Spell-Checker • Includes DeskMate®Software

Save $200 on 1000 RL· HD With Color Monitor. Reg . $1199.90 .

N25-1451/104311082 or 1013, Sole $999.90

.

New and used items, shelving,
used tires, greetin~ cards, store
merchan ise.
Charles Mclain Residence,
SR t 24, Racine, Ohio

CBS

HERE'! A

NBC
8.6

PIIGne Answerer

CD Stereo System

Cut 30%
6995~~5
N43-399

• Voice Actuation

Desk/Wall Phone

100 Off

5

HALF PRICE!
Rog .

Reg .
199.05
Eacll 140'1131

309.05
113 1242
Low AI Sl!i Ptr Month •

Low At 115 Per Month.

• High-Speed Dubbing

• Huge 15" Woofer

20% Off

1995

Rog .

24.95

Tone/pulse

d~ahng

.FORf YOU
IN THE .
elACtlflfD A0t lj-'?~"~r,. :;::r~'j
11

Almond , 143.- 539
White, 143·540

Help Wanted

A
Rewarding
Career ...

Memarex'" VCR

Save 550

39995 .~~5
t 1e-e19

Low A• 115 Per Month.

• Four Heads • Stereo

Mas1s

extra
Long

Range
lf15·1718

I

City or
Suburb1n

4988

"15·1712

• Reduces "Snow"

• Connect 3 Rooms

Laptop

Business

129990

Save 130
5

14995 2~5
126·2821

.

'
'
~ -----·-"

__,..

,..;:~

.

-700

. 12-Hour Shifts Available. Excellent
benefit package, including shiftdifferential.

5

~::wr:.:~~
Shack

~~- ~ · ·

Long-term Care Experience Preferred.

PC

All-Purpose Printer

-$1299 ~~1:vs:
Off

1

or

125-3506

Par Month•

Neareet You

'OIIb Interest aoo no payment unti~ January 1~ on approv~ RSVP accounts with single ticket purchUHtotalin
$50.00 or f iC!''· FolloWir\Q the no tnterest ~riod. any rema1mno !&gt;;lance is subjed to a finance charge of up to zf~
APR. deJ)!nding on ~ur state of resiCier'ICe (SOC minimum monthly finance charge). Reier to vour RSVP M:c:ount
Agreement . Offer ¥alid Auoust29 rhrouoh September 28. 1991 .
Most banery-~red eQuipment excludes batteries. SWITCHABU TONE/PULSE phones work on bottltone and pulse
l1nes. Ther.elore. mar~as having on~ Plllse (rotary dial) lines. you can st~l use services r~iMQ tonts. FCC registered.
"" · We servioe wilat·'C!,~
Not lor com or pany 1
PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING

Sale Enda9/21/91

Where ~oted

.UVII&amp;Jii-Term Care Nursing
R.N. Charge Nurse
Positions Available

20MB

Means

••_,

5995~~5
143-218

This PC

-Cut

40%0ff

2488

,. STORES AND DEALERS

I

Apply to Terri Halley, R . N.,
Director of Nursing
Pleasant Valley Nursing Care Center
Point Pleasant, WV

(304) 675-S236

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ES7A7E
AUG7101

ANJIOUES
(Antique Pool Tabla), beautiful Brunwic:k billiard tabla. walnut
peart inlay with leather pockels, oak desk, wicker chair, 24
drawer oak marble top store cabinet, cedar chest, music
cabinet, child's piano, Bulcher Block turfM!Il[Ws, 3 pc.old
metal and wood rocking horse, nice glassware, Haviland a
place setting, Ruby goblets, Fosloria cream 6 sugar, 12 place
setting Havilandchina89pc., egg basket, stone jars, 8 pocket
watches 2 key wind, old coins, pictures, cooooo clock, A&lt;h.
swifts box, Pianlers nul chopper, Toledo scales, old slore
scoops, books and more.
HQUSEHOLD and MISCELLANEOUS
Sofa, BroyhiU loveseat and chair-country blue, Lane wall
hugger recliner, chairs, 3 pc. coffee table and end tables,
Zenilh 25' color console lV, tables, hall 1199, s pc. dining
room suite, 5 pc. wood dinette, cornerboolh type dinette sol,
oak finish, chest and dresser, bunk beds, maple bed, 4 pc.
While French Provincial bedroom suite, baby bed, black 6
white TV, Maytag washer &amp; dryer, Kenmore 18 cu. ft. chest
freezer, Melmac set, pitcher, cubar, high chair, playpeo,
lamps, afghans, linens, stereo, mirrors. selo/ encyclopedias,
records, Perrin camera, nice cookware, Bunn coHee maker,
ice cream maker, rugs, set of left-hand golf clubs and bag,

Realistic 40 channel CB. girls bicycle built for IWo bike,
aluminum ladder, gas grill, lawn and garden tools, wooden
pump and more.
AUTOMOBILE; Nice 1965 Chevy Impala Convenible, 2
door, 327 motor, 93,000act miles. Car sells with reserve. Will
sell al t 2 110011 .

AVcnONCONDVCTEDBT

RICK PEARSON
AUCTIONCOe
LUNCH

Convertible Tops.
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST., MASON, WV.

1-(304)773-9560

Do]er, Backhoe, Trenching Wor k
Utilities: water, gos, sewer, electric.
Custom and log Homes
Remodeling ond General Contracting
Commercial Development
See us about Sunshine Room Solariums
Jim &lt;lifford-992-720 1 Greg Bailey 992-b81 0
Q

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding

s 1 ~10

MASON, WV

773·117811

EXECUTIUX: ltAREN L BROWN
CAIE 0. 2'700

•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-22S 1

tht Classified Section 1

992·7458

Announcements

S.2MH 1 rro. pd .

SunriN MUHUm

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Vinyl
siding, Painting,
\ •
an d Home repairs
667·6681
After 7:00 p.m.

tmopd.

7-1j

APPAlACHIAN
WATER

BENNETT'S

MOBILE HOME

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Loc11tod On Safford School ld. off lt. 14 I
(614)

446-CJ416 or t-800-872-5CJ67
· ·29·91

- Room Addition•
- Gutttr work

CISTERNS, ETC.
1,625 GAL- $35-$45
Rt. I, 8011 71·A
RUTLAND,
OHIO 45775·9626
7·24

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

CARPENTER SERVICE ·

HAULING
POOlS,

614-742·2904

ANTIQUE SHOW

tmo

- EI•C1ric•l 1nd Plumbing
- Concrete work
- Roofing

- Interior a Exterior
P1lntlng

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE

2 cut• long haired ktnens, 304·

675-3431 after 6:00 PM.

3 month old AKC Springer
Spaniel puppy, 304-875-4074
b•twe•n 5:00 &amp; 10:00 PM.

8 month old fom11e halt
Austr1llan Terrier 1nd Wlrdtn

Ttrrlor, blk ond tan, good with
children, 3D4·8D5-302V.
Fre1 hay In fllld, 1 milt from
PDinl PIIIIIRI, 304-875-28e..
Mother Cat To Qlveeway. 814·
446.Q25D.

Lost 8o Found

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Owner &amp; Operator

FOUND· 1 male miKid 2·3 mo
old puppy on Mulberry An.

992-621 s

Pomeroy, Ohio
t I· )4.'90 lin

ATTENTION
FIREWOOD
SELLERS

On Site lnstaDatlon
frH Estimates
742·2656

CALL

•Remodeling and
Homa Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

FULLY INSURED

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR

CONSTRUCTION
992·6648 or
698·6864

OHIO PALLET CO.
992-6461
9·1·91 - lmo.

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS
If you're in need of
Mobile Home Ports
or A((essories ••.
SEE US FIRST!

992-5800
IT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO
8 / 19/ 1 mo . tfn

11·14-·tt ·tfn

614-992-6820

Pameray, Ohio
Hl·!l·Hn

B••n"

Found: Small Fem•l•
In
Th1 VInton, ONo Aru. Ca 814·
388-8609.

Yard Sale

INDEPENDENT
CAIIPET CUANEIS
and TILE FlOOR CUE

•Reasonable Rates
•Quality Work
• Free Estimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
Time ·
•High Glosa on Tile
Floor Finish
MIKE lEWIS, Owntr
Rt. I, Rutklncl, OH.

742-2451

3-14-'91-tfn

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006

6·6-'91

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
til houoa on rlghl en SA 248,
Sot. Sopt 7th, 8:0G-e,00pm,
aomtthlng fer tvtryonel

3-Fomlly, Sopt. e-T, 1-mllo from
81g Wh"l on NlyiOfa Run Rd .

R•ln C.nc1ltl

4 Family S1pl 1-7, 4-mllt out
Now Lima Rd, from Rullond.
Watch for olgno, ot polk, a..

Wood
e-F1mlly, Thuro-Fri behind
Lodge In Aoclno, Donnlo Hlllo.
Rain

or Shlntl

All Yard Saln Must B• Peld In
Advanc1. O. . dllnt: 1:OOpm lh1
day before the ad 11 to run
Sunday edition. 1:OOpm Friday;
Mondey
ldltlon
10:00a.m.
Saturday.

Bid Yard Salol8op1. e-7, 8:00am5:00pm, Grog Eblin, Laurel Cliff
Rd., Pomeroy.
Big Yard Sole, boiWMn Darwin
&amp;lP, lit hOUII off o1681, on TR
247 Charry Rldgo, watch lor

1lgns, Sept 5+7.

Friday Sopt. 8th Jewelry,
clo1hi!J TV adopjor, Mloc, CR 28

Ttxat Hd, r~~ln or ahlne

Frtd1y.Saturday 112 milt up
Ballty Run Ad, oH 124, nice wJn-

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
All MAlliS

Howard L. Writesel

USED APPUANCES

ROOFING

WASHfiS-$100 up
DIYIS-$6v up
IEIIIGEIATOIS-$100 up
IANGES- Clfl·OOL-$ t2 S up
IRIEZEIS-$1U up
'
MI(IO OV!NS- $79 up

Iring H In Or Wt

NEW-. REPAIR

Pick Up.
KEN'S APPLIANCE

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

SERVICE
992-5335 or
985-3561

Acrou Fro111 Post OHict
217 I. Second St.

POMIIOT, OHIO

3/6/90/ tfn

'BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"41 Reasonable

Prices"

949-2168
7·16·91· 1 mo . pd .
WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS
Sptcloliling in

Custom Frome Repair
NEW &amp; USlO PARTS
FOR ALl MAKES &amp;
MODElS
992-7013
or 992-5553
01 TOll

nu

1-800-148-0070
DUWIN, OliO

71 31 1 '91 lfn

90 DAY WAIIANn

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 01 915 -3561
A&lt;roll from Post Offill
POMEROY, OHO
10/ !0/ '89 tfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSEll
SIDING CO.
New Hilllleo lullt
"F reo l!ltlmatae"

PH. 949-2101
· or Its. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY CAW
3-ll·tfn

ltr clothing I much mor..

Garogo S1lol Sopt. IH 8:00am-

6:00pm. Furniture, email appUancll, ttltvlelone, houHhotd

good1, giiiiWIN, bookl
toward Park1Nburg. Tum loft 11
· Molg1 Countr Gall COUNI. Sign

cameras crathu, mlac. Route 7

112· mlll from Pomeroy. Go 2·
miles.

G1r1511 Sale! Sept. H, &amp;.4 at
Rlggi(Ortlt above E.. tlm at

Joe Bowere rnldenc•. Drapes
1quarium'
Elec:trolux twelper, chlldren·l
clothn, tabte and chaiP"', Wardl
microwave,

IWHper.

Olganllc, Sept 1-7 1:00-??, entl·
que1, glrll end womene cloth11
thrll WhHI bik1, CUrtlilll, 101~
of mlec YMd 1nd new Th
Banke, flm left pall wh11eya
grocery, watch for ligna.

Moving S1lol College Ad, to
(t-hldo-1-bod)1 rllnofto tabloo
water Hd, tw1n •net double bed'
lllno O,S, dlahao, hooter 114:

SytiCUII on Sept. W. Couchn

1182~851 .

•

Soturtll~, Sepl. 1 at Oavld
Sponcar 1, glrle clothoo, toyo
lnlelllvlllon with
g1moa'
houoahold h1me, mlec.
'
Sopt,llh Children'• Home Rd
at liyHil'o and Buck'l, olgno ii
Big WhMI and LIUNI Cllll Rd
Gun, knlfoo, braN 111111 dllad

181'1,
boat

lool~, 1·HP motor, motor
1nd trailer, clothll 1nd In·

llquo1.

Several family y1rd Hie, S.pe 7·
.8 from 1:30am un111 ??, Rutt.nd

American Legion.

TRIM and
REMOVAL

GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

e-12-90-tfn

Giveaway

4

6

Hardwood Slabs
For Sale
Great Pri,e!

STEWART'S

USED RAILROAD TIES

45701.

EMILEE MERINAR

lnstalhn.s Cellular
Phom, Car Stereos
or Radios, CB's

SHRUB &amp; TREE

BILL SLACK
992-2269

OH

7

or Its. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
.

We Make Gr11t M•tch•. C1rol'1
Slngl11, P. 0 . Boa: 5840, Athens,

(FREE ESTIMATES)

Business Services
Golf
lessons 16) .... •H.OO
New Grips ............ $4.00
Woods ...............}22 .00
lrons .................. $14.75
REPAIRS
Used Irons ............ $5.00
Used Woods ......... $7.00
AWARDS
8-9-1 mo. pd.

Charlaston Civic Ctnler, Sept. 7
&amp; 8, Sot11 : 00~ : 00PM Sun Noon
till 5:00 PM. 50 dillON, 15 dllferent statu, $4. admlulon .
Children under 12 frel.

7 Kittens, 5 WHkl Otd To Good
Home. 614~r.10 .

YOUNG'S

4-16·16-tln

CHESTER
COUNTRY ClUB

in

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAILABII
FREE ESTIMAUS

3 Announcements

PH. 949-2801

TERMS: C.h or Oteck will LD.
Not A01p0111lbtl For Accldtnfl Or Lou Of Property
Uconnd I Boncleclln
I WY 161

Little things
art Worth A lot

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

539 Bryan Ptaca
Middlepo rt, Ohio
11-tHfn

111'/1-rL

LOCATED AT 1711 NORTII 3RD STREET IN
MIDDLEPORT, omo. WATCH JI'OR SIGNS.
THE ESTATE OF THE LATE EVERETT L.
BACHNER WILL BE SOLD.

RaCH't . 4 R,3 baths,2 rcrages. renled I BR
apl Proe;rty inctooes 4, OO sq. ft . farm bl~.
all614·992-7104 lor Appt

YARD SALE SEPT. 6-7

-~
8

COMPLnE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

87 - Upho lstery

SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER7, 199
10:00 A.M.

owner financing of
to 8M(, of purchase
amount may be posSI e lor qual,tngperson
to buy ve~ nice large home on 1h acres 1n

20MB Hard Drive Home PC

8 3-E•CIIIIting
84 - Eiectric al &amp; Retrio••tion
85 - Geneul Hauling
86 - Mo bile Home Re pa1r

leas e -

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

for Sete

79 - Campen &amp; Motor Homes

Bu~dmgs

47 - Wanted to Rent
48 - EQu tpm ent for Re" l

· THE

M o t or~

76 - Auto Perts &amp; AcceUOflel
77 -- Auto Repe1r
76 - Ctmp ln g Equ1pment

45 - Fu rn ished Ro om•
46 - Space for Fhnt

Get ResuJtc Fact

s200 Off

55 - Bu ildmg Supplu•
56 - Pet s for S1lf!
57 - Mus• c•l lnnrument s
58 - FruiU &amp; Vegaubles
59 - For Sal fl or Tr1de

E111~1luymenl

43 - Farm• for A tnt
44 - Apartment for Ren t

PC COMBEST-SELLING
I'IITIIUS IN AMERICA

(A vcnlure ol J&amp;F ( ont ralling end K&amp;J (onstrullion)

M~trch•ndts e

54 - M•s c

S - H1ppy Ad s

6 1- Ftrm Equipmern
&amp;2 - Wanted t o Buy

SATURDAY
- 2 '00 PM MONDAY

667 - Cool v~le

OVERALL RATING
CBS
9.0

3- Annoucement s

Me1g1 County

643 - Artbt• D1st
379- Wtlnat

ABC

20
29

51 - Household Good ~
52 - Sporting Good•
53 - Ant •ques

Glllll Count¥

256 -G uVIn D•ll

NBC
ABC

CBS

Merchandise

1- Card of Thtnks
2- ln Memory

14 - Busin•s Tr11ning

- 1LOO AM

Jollou·inf{ 1elephon'f' exchanp:es ...

CBS

22

Announcements

9 - Winttd to Buy

446 - GIIIipo!ts

.60
.06/ dav

A ates are tor consecutNe run s. broken up d avs wtll be ch~rged
tnr e•r.h r11N 11 sepaute ads

Yard Sales

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

.42

S13.00
s1 .30Jd•v

15

22 - Monlrt' to Loen

CBS

ABC

15

In Memonam

•A cl•uifi41d advertiSement pl•ced '"The Daily S e nt1nel le~t ·
cepl - cl•sified displl"f. Busin~s Cerd end legal not ices )
,vi11 also_1ppear in tke Pt. Plt••nt Register 1nd the GalltpOIII DIIIV Tr•bune. reackmg over 18. 000 homes

A&amp;B

$9 .00

7- Yard Sale (p11d m 1dvancel

Cla ss ifi ed paf'eS .corer the

ABC

24
25

15
15

8 - Pubhc Site &amp; Au ct•on

bl!

27
25
25
25

3

Happy Adl

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FR IOAX PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

TANDy•

JOSlPH D. JACKS

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES, INC.

HI-.

1 1- Help Wanted

I

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·2653

We Guarantee Your Satlsraetlon

Rete
Over 16 Word•
S4.00
.
.20
86.00
.30

6- l ost and Found

PRICE REDUCED'
Parbal owrer financi~iv9~ble. The jrce
has been reruce d to , $77,90 and

16.3

Words
16

Card of Thanks

COPY DEADliNE -

PEORIA, Ill . (AP) - Labor
Day took on a new meaning for
Carla Lawrence: She spent the holiday in labor and gave birth to
quadruplets at St. Francis Medical
Center.
All four girls were doing fine in
the neonatal intensive-care unit at
the Children's Hospital at St. Francis, hospital spokesman Chris Lofgren said Tuesday.
The babies were about I 0 weeks
premature and delivered by Caeserean section, Lofgren said. Their
weights ranged from 2 pounds, 12
ounces to I pound, II 3/4 ounces.

1. Roseanne (R)

Days
1
10
Monthly

SUNDAY

• Rec-..e I 60 d• scou nt lor ads paid'" advance
•free ads - Gn,eaway and Fou nd ads u nder 16 wc&gt;rds w•ll b e

Quadruplets give
special meaning
to Labor Day

nme

FREI ESTIMATES

RATES
6

•Acts outs•de Mat gs . Galha or Mason count 1M must be pre ·
paid

(Some Sizes Sold Out)

Is Your Roof Ready For Another Year of Ice and Snow?
Now's The
to Find Out.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

POLICIE

BOYS' BASIC PRE-WASHED LEE &amp; LEVI

Business Services
For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles
Repairs, Gutters
Building and Remodeling

Classified
C

SIZES: Jr. 1-lS, Misses 10-20, Girls 7-14

$1199

THE BEST
HOUSECLEANER

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

SUNSET BLUES &amp; CHIC JEANS

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-9

Pomeroy-·Middleport, Ohio

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21 Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.

20°/o OFF

SIZES 1-14

Thursday, September 5, 1991

IIUY oSILL oTIAOE
OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10:00 am-6:00pm

742-2421
21/1 MI. outside
Rutland on New
Lima Rd.

5-tO·'tt-thl.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes

•Garages

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

o(ompltte
le1110tWing
Stop &amp; Compare
Frft Estimates

985-4473
667-6179

---

LINDA'S
PAINTING

5-31 -'90 tfn

Take the pain out of
painting.
let me do it for you.
VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

16141 915-4180

8·28·81· 1 mo. pd .

Ge t Quick Resu lts! Plaef! A S5 Per OCJy ·Bulletin Bo{lrd· A1lvertisement In Tlw D{lily Sentinel Classified Seetion.

Yard Sail, Sopl.

S, 11-1,

Ruotlc

Hllla, June St., Syr~cuat .
Burkhamtr'l and Connolly'•

Wlnt1r clolhu, excan.. blkl.

A•diP Shaok Computer, boby
lt1ms.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
2 Family Yard Sale, nlco
Ia',. 1nd topo, bobr formu11,
lntamll w,ron, 2t cana. Frl &amp;
Sot. At. 12, 1-rd Lion, 1 mllu
wornen'a clothlna, alzu 3-12,
!rom Point

Pl-.

Garaao llle, Thura, Frt, Sot. A1.
.2 Noilh, Eclwd ChapelwoAodd t:OO
11• ?. 10~ clolhH1 _

bur·

""· . . , _ , . 111001 _,.,, 304-

t'II&gt;S524.
Yerd Bote, tot J011M It Thuro,
F~. So\ Solll. 5,1,7. Chlldl'lrt
ctothll IIII.X end Up,

�Page-1.0-The Dally sentinel

7

SNAFU® by Brute Beattie

Yard Sale

pt , Pleasant
(

&amp; VIcinity

..............

R e n tal s

-

Lota

-ol p_....,,
Port,

Loto, ........ parlo, 114-1112·11170.

·

river, nice ftdy lot, S300.
month.3 - withand QOnll", Haven,
S200. montfi.3 bod,_, ronch In
1101-nd E1111ao 2 balho,
Olrllll", $475. month.D.;plel-lwo
llory wHh full buomenl,
00r11110, aood location, $400.
month.2 Dodroom eompl~:.
,.me deled
home,
.
month.Homootoad
Aoahy,
Broker, ~11-8540 and 304-

"*"

Large Variety hema, Pncea Low!

~T.Ir

5 F1mlly: S1turdly Only I C.n.
11n1ry
TownhouM.
8:00

Children, Aduh Clol-. c..no,
Ratoador, Hunling ltomo, Booh,
Homolntorlor,llorol
Family Solo: Clay TownhouM
R!. 7, 218. September llh I 71h.

ti

L,r111t

w-

Gowno, Wadding~•a-n, Baby
Clot-. Winter And Summar
Ctothn. Thurllday,
Friday,
"&lt;H·tur•-y.
u.
ALL Yard Salla Uult Be Paid In
Ad
D£••u
••nco. NE: 2:00 p.m.
~h:~:,r ba~~on'ho. od2
p'".mn..
Frida~. 11;;d.y -~·~on·-. 2.00
-·
p.m. aturday.
Eureka, 3 Family Yard Salol
Aeroao From Gattlpollo Dim.
Friday Soplomt..-1, 1tll1.
Gorago SOlO: 587 Jay Drtvo,

.'!.to

Friday And Saturdly. Drapertn
&amp; Rodo, Storm Coon 1 llotat

Folding Dooro, Gl~o Clolhao
Slzo 4 I 5.
Garage Solo: 8 Till 5 Thurlday
And Friday. l..olo, Baby Clolheo,
Good School Clolhao. IIIICIIIanoouo Wuh Tubo, Chootnu1
StrMI.
Garage Solo: Friday 9:00 HIIMop
Drive, Off Neighborhood Rood.
Fumhurl, Car S..ta, Ctothle,
Baby, Adune.
Garage Sale: Friday And Satur·

day, fl.5. 112 IIIIo OUt Goorgao
Crllolt Lola Of IIIIC. lhlntl.
Garaao Solo: Junction Rt.7 1
218. Thuroday1 ~rklay; Soptomt.. 5th, llh. LCKO Good Clolhlng!N.
Soptomt.. 8th I 71h. lla.m.·
4p.m. Boy'o Clolhao 10.12, Cllrl'o
Clolhao H . AIWII Radio,
TroadmUI, Coftao Toblo, Drlpoo,

Misc. SeaMt: Drive Ju• Off At.
35 On Rodney Pike.

r==========-r:=========1
Help Wan led

Corrtoro Naodod : Spend 30 To
45 lllnuloo AD~ And Elrn 125
To 150 Pw oak Dollvortng

~-.:r'-Op\':"'v"~

2

B

1

1
US neSS

Opportunity

BUIIneee And Elm Your OWn

Spondlng ~I lclool For
Aoltr.d , . , _ 0 supp~eonom
Y- lncomo And Enrcloo AI
Tho Soma lima! For llorll Infonnatlon Contact: Tho Ga~
ttpotlo Dolly Tribuna, lf4.445.
~2; Pomeroy Dolly Sorrtlnot,
614-1112·2158; Or Tho Point
P I - Rogt.tw, ~5-tl33.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
ExceUenl
Pay,
BenefHI,
Tronoportatlon,
407-2i2-4Jit7,
Ext 171. llo.m..tOp.m. TOll
Aofunclod.
AVON I All AINo I Shlrtay
Spaor11, 304-675-142i.
Bobyolttw daJ'I. for I yr old boy,
30WI2•3554,

CABL£ TV JOBSNOW 1-:zoe.
7311-7000 Ext 1111781.
EARN IIONEY ANding Bookel
$30,0001yr. lnc:omo Po4ontlal.
Dolo! to. (1) 8011-1162-1000 Ell. Y·
10111.
Exeoptlng oppllcatlono for tu~
lion ...... Ohio Compoloney
Nuroa Aid Ctuo, upon
tlon of ctuo, atudant will bo
ollglblo for employment at
Ponwor Nuralng and Rehab
Corrtor, 3675Q Aoekeorlno• Ad,
Pomeroy, OH 1,._1102-esoe.
E.O.E.

com,.

AVON • All ar01o, Coli llarllyn
Wuv.r 304-882·2645.

FREE JOB TRAINING OHIO AND
W.Va. YOUTHS. Arw you lnla,_
tod In training In health occupation ouch 11 LPN1 Nurolng •
llalant, lladlcal Mllatont
and
medical niCOrdo eloriiL Aloo,
training In lloklo. Young
women and man 1S..21 yNra
old. Oul of oehool, dropoulo or
groduatao cornolnlo Pl. Pl. Job
Sorvteo, 221 Sixth St Point
P I - , WodMiday Sopt. 4,
10:oo.m to 3:00 pm, u tor Job
Corpo rap.
OALLJPOUS JOBS Not Advor·
5SO Jay.:,:•, Frldly, 1-? Truck tlaod In -.,..,..... All Typoo,
Alm•,
m. C.nnlng Jarw, 1 - . 24 Hour Aoc:ordlng. 1·
Men And MlMM Clolh.e, Iliac 1011-2811-2245.
hemal

L£ADS

LEADS

LEADS. Apo

Yard Solo: I :CJ0.5:0G Friday And potntmont Sot, Coli Wodnooday
Slturdly. 171 Second StrMI In lhru Frklly, f.!i Slturdly, 1-1.
Crown Clly Boyond Balloour1.
S14-44f.3014.
Yard Solo: Friday, 118; 5 112 lion to worlt In ratoll bUIIntla.
lllln SOI.Ch St. Rt. 7, Balow Go~ lluot bo 1o matt public and
II polio.
hovo oomt moc:honlell ability!
par wook. P.O. Bo1 72t.
Yard Solo: Friday, Saturdoy1 _11-5. ~AS
Women.,
M1a..
MIK. A,Porno....,,OH.
Swuteral 544 S.Cond Avenue, Wonted mollvatod IOiooporoon,
No El~y Sotaol
$21,000. to 152,000. flrot yoar.
Y1rd Sale: Frid1y, September Training provklod, oxportonca
lth, 1-3. 532 Jockeon Pika, .,fwricl. Send reeume to Box
Chlldr~~no Clolhao, I
Toyo, P-5, 'II. Pl. Pit. Rogi~!t 200 llaln
Stroltw, Changing Tablo, Girlo 54., Point P1NIInl, wv. 25550
Blcyelo, Chair, Chlln Sow I Etc. Wlnlod motivated oalooporoon,
Yard Solo: llloc. Homol Soplom- $21,00452,000 1ot ywar, training
bor lllh, • 71h. 9 111100 s.w. Of provided, eapM.nce pn~t.rr.cf,
Nnd reourna to Dolly Sontlnot
Galllpotlo On Al.141.
PO B01 728B Pomaroy, OH
Yard Sail: Solurdoy, Soptombor 4570
71h, 10 A.ll. 419 Loko Drtvo, Alo
Gr11ndo, 4 Fomltlesl T-, llan &amp; Wlnlod: llollvotod Soloa Po..on
Womon'o Ctothao Houoohold, • 128,000 • 152,000._1~1- Yoar •
Wooden Cr11ho, Porch Swing, Training Provided. uporloneod
Preferrid. S.nd Aaaum. To:
Glider, Buoboll Cordo.
Bo1 CIA 010, elo Galllpotlo
Dlllr Trlbu~ 1 S21 Third AvoniHI,
Public Sale
8
Gatdpotio, UH 45831.

par month, 814-941-2521.
t bath Hannan Trace

3br

-··
1 udl
~mo. waahorldryor
net "0 water.
114Schoolo,
hook-up,
44 1
;:_ -::"-:·:-'do-+-'"-·-:--=-:-:--:s.,.g 1br Stove &amp; Aolrlll"ralor
Fumllhod, Waahor &amp; ~or
Hook•up'
1-••mo
00
~
•
Dopooh, I llontho Laaso. 142
Fourth Avo, Galllpotlo, 114-446-

=366
=~::--::~==-=--:::--c-:--

Okt LMm To Run Your OWn

Thuroclay, I Friday. Satllombor
5th I lllh. fl.5. 23 Vlnlon Avenuo.
Thuroclay, Friday, 1 IIIIo On AI.
218, Dtoilwo-. Child,.,.. And
Aduh Clothing, Etoc:trte Wlro,
Shadow llan, Buoboll Corda,
Old Colno, Lawn Boy .._.,,
Aoc:ordo, I Track Topoo, Iliaci
Yard Slle At Rt. 1110 &amp; 854 At
Porlor On September 5th, lth. 1-?
Yard Solo: I IIIIo Out At. 211.
Thuroclay And Frldly, 1-? China,
School CtCIIhlng, LoCo Of Iliaci

&amp;Auction

_182=-2_405.,..,..-::--:--::---....,--.,.
;;-BA 2 •-h t p
~ • - · n omoroy, -110

" I'll really miss Harry ... he knew
how to set the VCR ."

11

g MliH Ou1 St. At. 218, Aerou
From s-•-~. ~-fto, Formal

homo,- tho

IN011CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHIHO CO.
rocommondo that you do IIWInooa lllflh people you"'- and
NOT to ..nd money through tho

mall untU you hovo lnvaotll!alod
tho offotlng.
Arthur'• Chain Unk Feneo.
Raoldlnllal, Commorelat, Indullrlal, F- ElllmiiHI Com.
~· lnolallatlon. Phone: 8144'Zn.

For S.le: loc1l RMI:•urant.
Good BuolnHo And Location.

Reply To: P.O. Bo1 11'/)!L Go~
llpollo, OH. All Aoplloo w111 B•
Confldlnllal. Sortoua tnqulriH
OniJI
Vkloo Store For Soli, IRw Aorrt,
Colt 304443-11104 Up To 10o.m.
To 5p.m. Aok For Roy.

Smlll 2br, 231 Rur Firl1 Ave,

KHehon,
With
Stove,
Rolrfaorator, 12111limo. Ptuo
Ulllltlioa, Dopooh, Roforoneo. No
PolO. e-48-4!1211.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

12160

2br, Air Condhianlng,

Water Paid, $240/mo.
Dopoolt. 114 446 01185.

Plua

2 bdrm trailer fot rent In RaciM
$175""'" 814-9411-ZOZa.

2 DR unfumlsMd near Holur

Hoophol. No.r."· $171 mo.
Water lnclud . $100 dopoolt .
114-446-3817.
2 fumlahod moblla homoo, 2
bedroomo, 1200. I 1250. pluo
utllltloo, $100. dopooh. 304-6756512 or 8711-31100.
2·BA mobile homl, fumlshiCI,

w-/clr)W, llr, 114-1112-6800.
2br Fumlohod, 2br Unlumlshod,

Real Estate

31

On Cor1 Mill Aotd, No Ptt1.

Homes for Sale

Dopooh Aoqulrad. 114·245-5022.

3 Bodroom Houoa, With 4 l..olo
For Salo. 814-388-9315 Conaldlr
Land Conlrlel.
5 room lnd blth, r.tuced tor
quick lllo, Honclorllon Stroot,
Handoroon, WI/. 304-t75-14111&lt;&gt;&lt;
·-7523.

2br Mobile Home, Aeler•nce

For ull

bJ ownar,

3-BR home

with carport, 11133 obovo
ground -'• 101112 otorao•
6!dg., chain link faneo on Lourot
C11H •d. Colll14-fi2-t3M.
For Solo Or Trllda: 3 Bodroom
B~ck On 1 Aero Lot In Kygor
CriiOk School Dlotrlet. 24128
Ga"''l" And Oulbulldlng. Coli
614-4411-t484.
GOVERNMENT HOliES From 11
IU . Repair). Dollnquorrt Tu
Prop.rtr. Fl•pa ... ee~ona. Your
Aroo (I 105-oM2-. Ext. QH.
10111 l'or Currant Aopo Uol
GOVEANIIENT HOliES From $1
(U Repair). Dollnquorrt Tax
Propertr. Aapoue..:aon.. Your
Area (1 805-182-. Ext. QH.
10111 For CurTOnl Ropo Uo1.
HOUSE FOR FREEl! lluot move
oH ICII In llldcloporl. Fill In
bawm~~nl, ned and .anw. Mwt
olgn eonlraetl 2-BR, Largo LA,
DR, Bath, hU now 1001 and gut·
tor, now eoppar and PVC ptuinblng, naocl oomt work. You pay
tor the movlnal Onty urioua

ealloral Colt 8f4-9i2·2071 ahor
7:00pm.
Lovely 8 yr. ofd home In Roma
1ru, Proctorville. 2 BR, 1 bath,

2·112 - garago with rlvw vtow.
Eldorly porllriiO naocl 19 Nil,

may fln1nce. 157,000. 304-4213757.

Mobllo

Homo

And

Double

G1rage On 1 Acrw. Lata In

011~

tlpollo, Ohio. lmmodlato Oe·
eupancy.l14-4411-t340.
Price Raduc.ci: Mobile Hom•
On 112 Aero. Rt. 2, Nonh Of
Point PloUont. E1eellant Condl·
llont Prlvala. FrtnCh City llobllo
Homn, lt4-t45-t340.

And DopooH Aoqulrod. 614-2511·
1i22.
3 Bedroom Mobllt Home On

Bob McCormick Road. lf4.445.

Mi.
Country Tr1ller Lot For Rent, AU

UIIIIIIOO And Watt. Glllla County.
513-311V-IaM.
Tr1Uer loC, 80' x 100'
lloctrle w11or lloekup,
llpotlo ~orry, 30t-875-3216.

44

Apartment
for Rant

1br ApaJtmont, 1 EHielaney

Ap.~rtment,

CioN lo UnlvereUy

Of Rio Orondo. 514-3811-9146.

2 bdrm apt In Rec:lne, lmmedl111
oc:cupancy, e.ell d1y 614-t92·
21!1 or evening• 6 WMk•nd•

814-Jit2·2972.

2 Bedroom Aper1m«rt Aero.•

From Unlvorahy Of Rio Granda,
Ohio. All Ulll~loo Paid. 114-38119141.
2 bedroom opt abova Hotzor
Clinic of Woat VIrginia, 814-441151116.
:r;rmonta For Rant, 814-446BEo\UTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 531 Jaekeon Plko
ftom $182/mo. Walk to ohop I
movloo. Collll4-445-2518. EOH.
Complatoly Fumlahod Small
HouH, No Petl, Yard, Plua
UIIIHiao. 1235/me. 814-4411-0338.
EHicloneJ, llovo, r11f1 bath
-~~1 .a/c: Ill elect, lUll Ar•
I'&lt;UD oecplod, 304-675-

=·

51

CoU

11111 otda Dalto U, 12,000 lllloo,
Al1 P-r. Air, Excetlont Condition. 814-4411-4225, Aft• 4p.m.
1187 Yugo, 20,000 mlloo, tiC
gu mlloago, 4 aOMd. lronl
whaol drtvo, tt,'/00. 3CIU75Nel.
1818 Lincoln r-n Cot, l.oaclod,
43,00G MIIH 1 1 Owner, Excellent
Condition! 814-441-41157 Ahor
5p.m.

Goods
3 Ploc:o Colonial Uvlng "-"
Sullo, With Coflta/End Toblao.
Exeoliont CondHionl 1300. 114446-11161 Ahor lp.m
Baoutlful ootid oak china
coblnot, 1 yr. old, 1950. Ook pta
..,.. 1 yr. Clld, $3110. · 1000 ahor 4 p.m.

All OUtaldo Carpet: 13.11 •
$4.11; Kll&lt;'*' Corpo~ 87; Vlnyt
13.11V I $4.11V. Soil On All Cor·
pot In Stock! lloltohon Corpoto,
614-4411-Jit44.
Soora

Portablo

cu. Ft.

72 Trucks for Sale

-~
!:!,,"''#

Dlohwuhor,

$250. Colorle Etoc:trle Aango,
$100. e14-448-GU1.
Couch
Chair, Good Condhonl
lt5G.It4-445-1754.

e "'' -, NEA.IPic.

r~~~~======1==~~=~==~11171
Read

Thru Saturd1y, ...m. to tp.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
lllln Off Route 1 Ort Aouto 141,

In Conte..ry.

Seltoldor II Watorbod Quaon

2·3 Roll lloloreyelo Traitor.
Good Condition, 114~411-7554,
Ahorip.m.
Stoncllng
Timber,
Tracy
Johnoon Loaalna. can Ahor
7p.m. 114-317-ll~.
Uood Plano, (CCnoelt Or Spinal)
For Collage Studanto SOn, Coil
Ahor lp.m. Or Wookando, 114448·772i.
W1ntld IJI lunk 1nd acr1p met~
at, :JOW05.j031,
Wanted to buy, Standing limber,
Bob Wllllama I Seno 114·1102·
5449.
Top Prien Paid: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Ringo, Dilmondo
Sllvw Colno, Stifling, Gold
Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop, 151
Soeoncl Avenue, Goltlpotlo.

Employment Services
Help Wanted

t5 TO 25 liEN AND WOllEN

or mora
Formu·3
Wo oro
mtn and

women, to partJclpata In our
weight Iota program, for advor·

llalnt p u - . 11 you q~
you Will bo opoelllly monll
,
througlt:ovt your wolghttooo untU JOU hovo riiiChod your goal
Wllgltt. Your after oleture will
than bo ~- lor ottl&gt;mlloton to our corporate odvortillno dtpartmonl, for pooalblo
- tnd _....ton., tltota wtto
participate In tttla opoelal
P""Grun, you will rocolve 1 atonl!lCont ..vtngo all our repwr
pfOI)run prtea Coil Today l14441-4.....
Eiporloncod flat bod drlvoro
-~~
,
_ , 11 uat •·~vt 3 Yrll over
tho oxporlance, gOod drlv·
1ng ,_,d, lllltlt woilt hlllory,
be 21 yra of .... P - tz.toat
100 221
and roM fOlio.
·
Flatd Adverllolrtg Dlrecton
17.00/Hour. WindoW Aod Siding
lpoelohloo. 1.-TAY·WASS,
Cm.t2771·

ClassiDeds!

f'ondoro,

.,,oao.

·2841.

11110 Chevy 112 Ton. ehorl Sod,
305, Au1omlllc, 1515. 114-44f.
0233.

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

61 Fann Equipment
50 IIF Trlelor With Ptowo And
CUHivllor And 5 Ft. Buoh Hoo,
13,550;_185 11F lull Trlel« With
1 Ft. •lnllhod llowor, 15,350.
Owner Will Flnanco. 614-2881522.

Ghol Ortndor And lll10r. 1143711-2370, 114-:J70.2t45.
In, Cub, CUMintor, Side
.,.._, 1 FlOw Toboeco hltor
With CUttlvltor. NH ll5 Tobocco
81"-. 114 441 4101.
Jim'• F..., ~'"'::'4
:'ir"';
. Will GaiU
,
- - - I l*d finn
troetoro I lmpltmonto. Buy,
Mil, lrodo, I :CJ0.5:00 waolcdayo,

4

Sol.dl-.
Wo hove hod 1 aood Juno and
July rnontho ol trallng and
, _ to ..., . - oqulprnt&lt;tl.
IIF 235 42ltp lllflh ROPS
$41 ~. IIFIII - . t 12hp lllflh
l.vw FrMmln INdM' 11,100.
IIF215 d,_ 12hp wllh cab
11.000. Doutz d,_ llhp
t'dih c:o1t 87,500. A.C. 1140 d,_
41hp, 4 - drtvo, 4 ~
Vllvo,
v~ $8,850. JD
goo
A
.'!..... e:JIOPY• FAT 1 wto,
OIC t.... $4,000. ~ 7045,

~ ~okdou.e,r~=

lroetor 1710, 24hp diooal., 4
whaol drtvo wllh all h•d loodor
' Dozer,
$8,500. John Deere SSOc
e way hyd bladlo, ROPS wench,
r11ar lUI hyd, aood Under CW•
rtago $1a,ooo. ltoohrlng modal
1350, 40hR Kubota dl- okld
llaor loodlr1 2 buckoto 17,500.
Hollona modal 355 grlndlr
mix• 100bu eurronl modtl
$4,100. Formhond grlndlr ml10r
modal h5 whh com lhotlor
$1,100.
Doutz·AIIIo
modtl
SII45CA 7h llno dloc mower
conditioner 3pl. Demo 15,100.

Dlccd•N, Receivers. Ollh I o.utz KM21 7ft *um model
:.O..=•::•=d'='"=·~I..:,14-;_IIS2;.:.:-41..=:.173...=..._:-:--I $1,418. Coull K11221, ~·1 dJUm
mower tt,10G. 2 - rooliond 471
UMd Ulotlho oqulpmonl, In- Nina loci hoyblntl S2,20G. oaeh.
eluding, whole aywilm with 0no Holland 488, 8ft

~

1183 Ford F·1110 wllh Jull r11bulll
motor, Dwight Bokor ~
3131
_:,:-:7';:--:-;:-:---=:-:--::-:1184 Ford E1p1«• Pick-up. Y.f,
Good Condlllanl With To-.
114-441·1411, 114-258·12711.

73

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

1m Dodll" Yon, 311~"'· For
llora Dotollo, 114-38
.

1m

Dodge V1n, rune good,
$1,500. gOod cond, 30f.e75o
4584.

FRANK AND ERNEST

1i87 Ford Aero Star, XL, &amp;Rw:·
llliH, $8,iOG Or Boat Offer. 814- ·
3811-9032.

=.,..,___Motorcycles
,.....,=,.::,.,..---..,-

74

.•iic's..aoo.' ,_ =

r.:::'~oek'!r"~:;.'&amp;o; ~~, =~r.
~"':' .=. ;::·~c:.
IOJIIO 'hoo · - oo Co I
2

.,...r

":! ~~....400,:,:: ~~

and gata $1,100. Thrao now 1c1oo
modit 323 picker~~, 1 row, good
eond, tt;nlo. uch. One naw
ldu moeol 325, 2 r... narrow

ptckor, 12 rott huutno bod
$4,000. Now Hollond 770 choppar 2 row hood, now knlv01,
13,500. Now Hollond 711 cttoc&gt;cr~ row hNd cunwnl modo!
' 1. ThriiO~Su":,500'7t7 chopptrl,
row ••od $1
. ooch.
Thrill 2 boolar 1orMt boltoo
from tt,200.1o $1,100. 9/a hove 7
Jown and gordon _ , from
12 to 17 ~p loR over at coot
tlrleoo. Kaoflrt Sorvlee Cantor
il. AI. 17, Point Ploooant ,;;;!
Rlptoy Ad, 301 lltl-'lr/11.

=1-1"•

63

.

fVI fl'n'f'

''·

THIS

Toilet riP&gt;

15 A /ZEA/...

Of'/f

f"'t•MAN 'f PfOf&gt;OflANTJ

ti80 Honda C8-750K, ue concl,
Juot tuned up, now llr~~~, - • I
bottary 30t-e75-11172.
'
'
1i63 Hondo Shadow 500, 010
cond, 304-417H117.
1i84 Hondo Shadow, 6,800 ~

~~~... NOTICE' TH~

1-ITil.f &gt;PI/Cff ON

Tfff f!OLlf~ CAl-L-

6M-,_Z~ '

tu1l mil.., $1800 firm,
2545.

.

. .

.._

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

_,..__T~,.._vf";-

9-5

\l)

'" , 111 ,.u. ~ne

14h atumn boat, 7 112hp Elgin.
ti82 Otdo Cutluo. 304-675-7f63
76

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

New ga t1nka, one ton truck
WhMli rachtOB floor mlta,

otc. R l AAuto, A{pioy, WI/. 304372·3i33 or 1.f00.~5.
Rail bug=YW onglno $850.
White fl
t - lOr
small pickup
. 304-t'/5-71130.

79

•

C.mpeJ for A5e, good condi-

tion, otaopo-e, very r111oonablo,
614-84$.5124.

'TRUTH OR
CPJ£R-UP'

PJ.JO
GfjJTIEM£1J ,TO 1t'L£VISUJ5
UW),v\f., LAO£S

~

Services

uw GM'l£ srw...

~

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlllonal Ufollmo guaran-

e

cr~

tM. Local nflftncN furiliahed.

F- aotlmalao. Colt cotloc:t 1·
814-237o04811, doy or night.
Wll•pr~

ling.
Carpentry 1nd Electrical s....
vic:n,
Fr~e
E111mltftll

~

M:ORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I CAN RUB MY TUMMY
AND ~T MY HEAD AT
Tl4S: S/&gt;ME TlME.

Aoaoonablo Ratnll 614-111154484 or 085-3888.
Comptatollol&gt;lto Homo Sai.Upo,
R•rn; eommartcat, R•ldontla lmprovomonll. Including:
Plumbing, Eloetrleal. lnouranee
Ctalmo Aecoptod. 614-258-1111.

TKA.T'LL.. EiE.T YOJ..l !';4.R
IN THAT DOet-EA.T- DO&amp;-

'MJR.LDOUT ~ERE.

WHEN WILL I L56.RN 10
KEEP THI~ Ll~ THAT

10 M"YSELF~

/

\

/

/i.

Uvesto.ck

o:~~~=-...;..-..,-,,_Yollor
horoo
traitor, uc. oond. 114-Jit2-2552.

BARNEY

c-n.c•

lno

Big 4 Horoo Ruotlor Traitor With
Ramp And Dreaolng Room,
15,950; May 3rd tiBS ADHA Sor·
r1111 llare, Good Conllnnallon,
Shown In Hahor By Small Child.
114-211-1522.
ONta: Nubian mother• &amp;
babloo, all pur11brlld, . _ with
_..114311.f548.

HOW ABOUT SOME
Ron'• lV S..vl~, apeclallzJng ·
In Zenith atoo OotVIclng 111011
other brllndL Houoo calla, aloo
ooma appliance rapalr11. WV
304-611·2318 Ohio 614-4411-2454.
Soptlc Tonk Pumping $00~Gallla ·
Co. RON EVANS ENTEAPHISES, .
.
Jaekeon, OH 1_,374521.

Davia

Transport ation

~

Sow·Vac

.

CARDS LUKEY?
I GOT A bECK RIGHT
. HERE IN MY BACK
POCKET

NEVER IN A
MILLYUN
YEARS!!

YOU CAN'T

BUT I'LL
PliCH YOU
SOME
HOSS SHOES

MARK
THEM
THINGS!!

Sorvtco,

Craolt Ad. Porto, oup-

Autos for Sale

=77~Hon~da.~3t:=,-=ooo~m-:l:-toa-.-good~

eond, &amp;100. or offlr, 3046'15-5454.
ill70 Ford 500 Folrtano, naw
tlrM I

$300.

u

battery, 302 angl111,

Ia.

304-675-5i58

IVInlnQI.

11171 Flroblrd, 350 ou1o, nuda
worlt 1400 obo, call 814-9i2·3113
oftwi:OOpm
ltmlllullang, e1eolilnl running
eond, 1800 obo, 114-MII-2115
1871 Pontiac Gr11nd Pri1, Aabulh
Engine, 3,500 lllloo, $1,100. 1144441.f101.
11171 Chryalor Cordobo 310
1uto, rww ~hlng, 11400:
~55. anor 5:30pm,

::r.'

tHI Clldlilae Coujlo O.VIIIo
72,000 llllot, Exclllont RunninG
Shape, $1,500. ·-~.
1Ha Olclt Cut- IJ'!'Ughom
~· PB, PW.J. PD.L. Cruloo, TIH,
~c111ont ......nlonl .laking
13,000. 30t-875-7158.
1813 otc1a Cotto II, 307 angina,
4KarooOnt
- · tiC
eond. 150,000
btu
opa-or,
304-e'/51041.
Chovy Bta- EI1Qino For Solo.

Will build polio eovore, diCko,

'*

ecrMMCI rooms, put up Yinyt

oldtno cw traitor akl~lng.
245-A57.
Will do remodeling, rooting,
building. tree trimming 1nd

remoVII, hou11 pa~lntlng, FOf
free .. tlmltl8, cad George 11 1~

ASTRO-GRAPH

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Fourth and Pine
Galllpollo, Ohio
6f4.445.38118
HEAT PUIIP Sotoo &amp; Sorvteo,
304-41711-3011 or 114-44&amp;-e308.
Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Anldlntlot or commorclat
wiring, naw aarvlca or r11patro.
llaotor Ueonoad lltetrlclan.
Rkllflour Eloetrleal, :JOW'/51786.

land . OH 4410 t-3428. Be sure to state

ARIES (March 21·April 19) You mtght

your zodiac sign.

not be able to resolve some of today·s
developments immediately, but you can
take measures to lessen their negative
impact. Challenges stimulate your inge·
nuity and resourcefulness .
\

Wo Do Hauling Anytime,
Anyptoeo, No Job Too Blg Or
Too Ultlt. Buomtnt CINnlng,
Gonoral Worlc, Any Kind. 114371-22711 Anytime.

tr.:'':::

something about which you feel strongly optimi stic . It might not work for thi s
individual. but it should for you .

rl

SCORPIO (Oef. 24-Nov. 22) Socially.

A

ouliook .
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23-Dec. 21) II you
lind yourself in a tight spot today. do not
lear. Adversity tends to strengthen your

try to do something different today with
friends other than those with whom you
usually pal around . Fresh personalities
will have a favorable effect on your

'Your

~'Birthday
Sept. 6, 1991

85 General Hauling

r;:ro.

•

stamped enve lope to Astra- Graph . c / o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleve-

day if , by chance, you have to contend
with some minor setbacks. Obstacles
are apt to be temporary while your mo·
tivation should be permanent .

sociate's pessimistic opinion regarding

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

lndHNUng

Straight 1-250 Horoo. 114-28887
1201.
Upholstery
.For Solo: . 1071 Ford T·Bird, ;:ll:::ow::ray:=;'o~U~phot::-."at':"ort-:-=ng~MrY~Ic:-·
Good Body, Tlr110, Atplna lng trl county oru :ze
Tho
Radio NooM llolor Work, 1300. ~ In fumll
Ill-"
e.g Sotu~y And Sunday C':ii' 304-47,..':: ~:,
llomlng, 114 ue 1011.
11m11n.

w;:,:

duce your hopes and expectations to·

tro-Gr aph predictions today by mailing

LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Ignore a n as-

Conor'o Plumbing

84

in the year ahead . !;end for Virgo 's As·
$1. 25 ptus a tong, s ell-addressed,

114·1112·5752.
82

.

1

2

I

I I

1

If--r-IT-r-AIJ-rrp-rBI_,p
I

P 0 W0 H

1

,...,.. lu.
-ri-TI
_,
~
.
.
.

t--,~,--r~~
5

.

L..--"F-E'--E_.M_A'--D..J

I I 1I
.

(I) D American
Detective A detective
searches for a cocaine
dealer In Portland, Ore. (R)
Stereo. !;!
Cll (I) Myottryl Capt.
Hastings and Polrot are
enjoying a cruise on the
Mediterranean. Q
1!aJ
Trielo ol Rotle
O'Neill Rosie tlnds old
grudges emarge when she
attends her class reunion. (R)
Stereo . Q
Beverly Hilla, 90210
Brandon is discovered on a
hit show, but his fame is
short·llved. (R) Stereo. 1;1
1211 Ntahvlllt Now Stereo.
121 Larry King Uvel
10 Scarec:row and Mro. King

az e

I

I' I

6

.

•

.

.

"You
aren't shy,
just
reserved ." my aunt lold my
spinster cousin . "I know," she

~-~~?~~~·

Be on the lookout tor several unusual
business proposals in the year a~ea~ .

Although they might seem lar-out. tt wtll
still behoove you to examine them In
~~h

d

. .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Bepl. 22) In to ay s tn·
votvaments, you may become frustrat·
ed due ·to an individual who IS usually
easy-going. Conversely, someone who
usually Is uncooperative may be your
prime ally. Get a lump on life by under·
standing the influe~ces governing you

resolve , and you'll discover that you' re
more than a match for spontaneous

complications.
CAPRICORN CDec. 22-Jan. 19) ll's besl
not to discard traditional methods to-

day in order to experiment with the new
and untested. Working with known
qualities enhances your probabilities
for success.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Fob. 191 This
could be a profitable day for you, provided you're not dealing In speculative
ventures. Make your bundle the old·
fashioned way - earn it .

PISCES (Feb. 2G-March 20) Don't re·

TAURUS (April 2G-Mar 20) Don't de·
prive yourself or your loved ones ot
pleasurable things today, even thoug~
they might cost a bit more . The eKpen~
ences engendered will be worth any
sacrifice.

GEMINI (Miy 21·June 20) Study important situations very carefully today;
what appears to be negative at llrst
glance may actually contain intrinsic
values. You'll lind this out only through
closer inspection .
CANCER (June 21·Julr 22) If you are
too materialistic today, you might not
be rewarded in proportion to your ex·
pectations. Look out lor your own Inter·
ests. but also be protective of those
with whom you're involved.
LEO CJuly 23-Aug. 22) Funds could
suddenly become available at thiS time
for something you've been wanting to
buy but thought you couldn't afford .
How this unfOlds could be rather
mysteriou~.

"but

reserved

0

Complete the chuckle quoted
by f , !lin~ in tho mi)sing words
you develop i rom step No. 3 below.

L--1---'--L-..L.-L..-..J

f9 PRINT NUMBERED

LETTER S I
IN THE SE SQ UARE S

~ ·"

SCftAM.I.ETS ANSWIItS

Induct - Labor - Annex -Queasy - USED to BE
The old man was giving directions to the confused
cab driver, "You have to turn at the corner where that
big cement post USED to BE."

NORTH
• 92
• K6 63

BRIDGE

t

A 75

PHILLIP
ALDER

EAST
+JI0 5 4 3
• Q 10 7
tl0943

WEST
+AQ7 6
• J 94

tKQJ62
.10

+a

SOUTH

+K 8

• A 52

Dangerous road
ahead

t6
+AQ 7 643 2
Vulnera ble: East -Wes t
Dea ler: Soulh

By Phillip Alder
When you have an honor blowing in
th e wind - for exampl e. king double·
ton opposite onl y low cards - )IOU
must try to keep off play the defender
who can lead through your unprotect ·
ed honor.
Cast your eyes over today·s NorthSouth hands . Against the contract of
five clubs. West leads the diamond
king. How would you play if you were
South ?
The bidding d1dn' t end in the best
contract for North·Soulh . but it is dif ftcult to get to three no-trump by
South. Nor t h's redouble showed 10 ·
plus points. South might have bid two
clubs over one spade, but amon g ex·
perts this bid indicates a sub-mini ·
mum opening. and South has a re·
spectable hand.
From the bidding. it is likely that
West has the spade ace. If so, there is a
risk that you will Jose one heart and
two spade tricks . Unless East unex pectedly has the spade ace, you need
to find hearts 3-3. But if East can get
the lead in hearts. you will go down,

So utb
t

+

Wesl
Obi.

North
lledbL

East
I

Pass

Pass

2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

5+

s ince he wtlt push a s pade thro ugh
your king.
How can you establish 1he 13th
heart while guaranteeing that East
ne ve r gets the lead ? The secr et is to
duck the opening lead in dumm y.
Win the second diamond , discarding
a heart. Next, draw trumps. cash the
heart ace. play a heart to dummy's
king and ruff a heart in hand.
If hearts break 3·3, return to dum·
my with a trump and discard a spade
on the last heart. If they don't break .
return to dummy with a trump and
lead a s pade. hoping East has the ace.
© 1111, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

®

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Light- leather
4 Bouquet
8 Afleclatlon
12 SaultMarla
13 Long
garmenl

14 Pl!lall
15 Sprightly
luna
. 16 Versatile
18 Sneak about
20 Speed mea·
sure (abbr.)
2 t Bishop's
province
22 Physicians'
assn.
24 Comparative
sufll1
26 Levelheaded
30 Bookkeeping

Answer to Prnloua Puule

36
37
39
41
42
43

Soap plant
Not suitable
Legal mafler
Nothing
-go!
Painting of
ocean
45 Workers'

assn.
47
48
51
53
57
60
61
62
63
64
65
66

Ribbed Iabrie
Fire residue
Canine cry
Cook In fat
Truck drivers
Go astrar
Makela
mistake
Tennis player
- Naatase
Cuckoo
Congeal&amp;
Shade trees
Gave food lo
OOWN

term

34 Chemical
ending
35 Express

1 Pronto
labbr.)
2 Awaken

3 01 aircraft
4 Ancient poet
5 Stringed
Instrument
6 Shut noisily
7 Young urban
prolaaalonol
8 Harper Valier

g
10
11
17
1g
23
25
26

Spherat
Auction, e.g.
Small aword
Over- hill .
Uaad to be
Arab garment
LP ap•ed
Author
Bellow
27 Anglo·Suon
oerf
28 In apple-pie
order

'111+-+-t

e

C2:25)
11:00 ()) D Cll Cll e all CD
IIJI News
® Twilight zID NewiWIICII
11]1 !~~ Hall Stereo.

~On ..::~tareo.

tall. . Tonight
1211porta Tonight '
Q

--+--+--t

29 Mualcal
lnotrument
31 Mrt. Charle1
Chaplin
32 Freudian 33 To! TV
36 Dttermlnea
value of
38 Greek letter
40 Organ lor
hearing
43 Quick raid
t4 Acct.
46- Veg11
48 Tropical fruit
40 Withered
so Stag
52 Toppled
54 Air dtltnlt :
org.
55 Prong
58 Novelltt
Bagnold
58 Future bka.
58 Border

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.ttbr•tv C ~phtf cryptogr1m1 lrt crllltd trorn qUOtltiOnl by IIITIOUI people. pas1 and preMtllt.
Elttl le11tf in the cipher lllndtiOt tnOUIIr. Tot»y 'J clue: Z fq~JIII K.

S I IV

S L

V I L

RFHKIREL

Clll Tend T
11:30 (J) MlgiiUIII, p.L
Cll A~AfM!Ioln Joumll
(I). NIQIIIIIM

ml"'t-+-t

HK

1;1

+

Openmg lead • K

(]]) m

9:30 (}) D IIJ) Wlnga Helen Is
forced to decide between her
two loves: music or Joe. (R)
Stereo. 1;1
10:00 ()) D IIJ) L.A. Law Sifuentes
represents a woman who
received an unneeded
hysterectomy.(R) Stereo. 1;1
(!) Newo
(Il (I)
Prime nme Uve
iltereo. C
ID Allvt J:rom Ott Canter
Stereo. C
(I) Alive J:rom Ott Canter
Stereo. C
1111 C . Vtrdlc:l A widow In
New Mexico accuses a
hunter of cold-blooded
murder.
llllm Stir T,.k
121 World Newo
10 700 Club With Pet
ROIItltiOII
10:30 Cll ()) New Ttltvlolon Q
IIJ T.WI CCont.)
ill Croolllnd ChltH
10:35(1) MOVII!: Wilking Till (RI

n -01

+K J 9 5

1;1

pUH, pickup, and dallvory. 614-

446.()214.

71

Amtllca'o Schoolo:
1 Damn? 1;1
all IIJID Top Capo A
policewoman handles her
tlrat hostage s~uation. (R)
Stereo. 1;1
11]1• The Slmpaona
Homer's boss falls Ill and
can only be saved by Bart .
(R) Stereo. 1;1
12!1 On Slllge Stereo.
1D College Foolbllll
Tennessee at Louisville (l)
121 PrimtNtws
Clll Thtl't My Dog
8:05 (!) Clath ol !Itt Champion•
Georgia Brawl Battle Royal
8:30 (})
11J1 Dllle,.nt World
Whltiey considers leaving
Dwayne and moving to New
York for a job. (R) Stereo. 1;1
llllm Parker Lewlo Can't
LoN (Season Premiere)
When Mlkay Is parentless,
his pals help him out. (R)
12!1 American Muak: Shop
Stereo.
® You laked lor It
9:00 ()) D IIJ) ChHra Sam locks
himself out of the house
while baby-sitting. (R) Stereo.

Who Glvto

tt84 Homtd Compor, lola of II·
l'llnlngl aJ.
llf 4:00pm.

Aogera IIMrNnt

1

&amp;:GO()) D Cll Cll D all CD
IIJI Newa
(J) Andy Grtf!Hh
Cll Club Connect
()) Rtldlng Rainbow 1;1
11]1. Andy Ortf!Hh
0 Cartoon Expreaa
ID Tltolouahbled Olgeol
121 World fodlly
Clll Rln nn Tin, K·t Cop
Stereo. 1;1
1:05 (!) Too CloM lor Comfort
1:30 ()) D 11J1 NIC Ntwa 1;1
(J) I Drum of Jeannie
(I) (I) D AIC Newa 1;1
Cll Wild America 1;1
()) :t-2·1 Contlct 1;1
all IIJID CBS Ntwa 1;1
11]1. WKRP In Clncln..tt
1D Up CloM
Clll Ntw Zono Stereo. 1;1
6:35 (!) Andy Grtf!Hh
7:00 ()) D College Foolbllll '91
Kannla Bass and Kerry
Garnett look at 1991 season
for W. VA.; Marshall U.; Univ.
of KY.; Ohio U. ; Morehead
U.; Ohio State U.; W. VA .
State; W. VA Tech.
(J) 11]1. Night Court 1;1
(Il (I) 8 lnilde Edition 1;1
1D ()) MtcNtii/Lthrtr
NewaHourC
all Cunent Attelr 1;1
IIJI. Entertlllnment Tonight
Stereo. C
IIJ) WhHI ol Fortune C
0 Welcome Bilek, Kolter
s,_c:.nter
121 Monevttne
Clll The Welton•
7:05 (!) Btvetty Hlllbllllta
7:30 (}) D KERA: The Firat Y.. r
A look at the first year of
education reform In
Kanltlcky's schools. (0:30)
(!) Andy Grtllllh
(I) En-lnment Tonight
Stereo. Q
(I) 8 Mtme'l Family
all WhMI Ol Fortune 1;1
11]1• To Be AniiCIUnctd
IIJID FamHy Feud
IIJ) JeopaniYI 1;1
0 Ttnnlt U.S. Open,
quarterfinals !rom Flushing
Meadow, N.Y. (L)
12!1 Be 1 Stir Stereo.
1D ESPN'o SpMCIWMk
121 Croaoflre
7:35 (!) Sanford and Son
8:00 ()) D IIJ) Coaby Show Tlleo
becomes a summer
counselor at a local
commun~ center. (PI 1XR)
Stereo.
(J) MOVI : I Dreem of
J"mlt(2:00)
(Il (I) D Fatlttr Dowling
Myoletlte Dowling Is helped
on a case by the ghost of
Sherlock HOlmes. (R) Stefeo.

I

R E v E ws

,,

g ())

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

1FII'I, 1~8-218t

81

lAIII

=

1i48 Joop. 114-4411-1340.

,._m____

ROOII: Toblo With 4 Paddod ,j,j ,..0,.
Chollo, $141.00; Couni'I Ptna
For rant, 1 bednJOtn '"'~"*". Dtnatto With Bench nd 3 5G p
f
S I
1225 Ulllllloo Included, clopooh Chotra,. 1201.oo; Matching 2
ets or a e
required, no polO, 1144i2·2211.
Door Hitch, 1:148; Or 1589.00 Q
nd Su
Sltoi&gt;-Pot
Oak Tobto1 42x82 With I 0
All t':.a., af~vloo.o.
Fum- 3 lloomo I Bath, Sot;
Bow
BacK
Chalra,
Ctaon, No Polo, Rlloronoo I 182V.OG.BEDAOOII: Poatot Bod· limo
Food O..lot ullo
~ Aoqulrtd. h4oi41-1Stl.
~:_~u~r,!
pe~4
~~·C:.j,:
~~231Col
614-445-0231, 1.f00.
32 Mobile Homes
Fum- 5 Room Aponll*llo,
'
• ,
All Ulllhtoa Pold, Downotlaro, Bod, 1228; Complola Full llaU AKC Booton Tarrlor Pupplto.
Wall GIOOI!Iod Individual For
for Sale
$2811/mo. 119 8oeond Avonuo,
1105.00 Sot; 7 pe. Codor Slra And Dam Show Dogo. 2
Dlgnlllod Saloo Poolllon. No Eo·
B -~Tttrsun.s~~~·oa,.OPENt : lloloo, 114-258.f2,.
ooitonc:o Aoqulred. llondoy • 100158 lol Wl14171l Shultz, $-BA, 114-4411-3945.
llo
•-Y u •w•-Y, ta.m. o
~riday, Satllombor 2 • lllh, la.m.
1·bfl1h, g1e, In SyracuM on cor· Fumlahod Apartment, 1 Bld- 5p.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till Baogloo, 1 yr old and running,
ner kll, 014-H2~3857 or lt2·
• 5p.m.l,........3014.
Wator Po~ ~~· 112 IIIIo 5p.m., 4 Ill too Off Aouto 7 Ort guorantaocl, $125. ~71i-2075:
1284.
Eoll ur Port•. I
111163.
llouto 141 In Contonary.
Como , _ pick OLt your AKC
14
Business
IiiilS Flaotwood, 14172, 3 bad- Fumlohod ApaJtmont, 1br,
Cocker
Spaniol puppy, ahoto
rooml,
2
batba,
fln~phu:::e, utility
52
Sporting
Goods
Training
Share Bath. 1Dt Fourth Avo, Got.
and wonnocl, r111dy Sopt. 1, 304room, c:antral 11r, $13,000. 304- llpotlo. tt85 UIIIHioo Paid. 114175-7122.
Thompaon Hawkln tS Cougar 1'15-8412 ahor 4:00.
448-4416 After 7p.m.
Aolr11ln
Nowlli-llom
wHh Gorman allvw... 50 cal.
Bualnno Cotloll", Sorlna Vallay 28a:40 3 Bedroom, 2 Bllhl, 3 Fumill:ed ban manto, 1br, matched oot· 22 LK orlalnal Dragonwynd Conery Porllan,
PIOlol. Coil Todoy, 114-4.11-438711 C1r Gar1g1, Thutn'lln, Okf 35 • 1225 Ulllllloo ~old. 120 Fourth Goldin 31 ls llorlln w[h • SllrMM and HlrniiiVIn khtene.
114 441 38H ahor 7 p.m.
Aogtotarlllon -1274B.
271, 114·2-5-fi1B2.
Ave, • 101 Second Ave, Qel· oeopo; 338 CS lla~ln 3().30; 700
A•mlngton
243
T11co
~~tope
4
Flah Tank, 2413 Jaekeen Avo.
llpollo.
114-4411-4416
ahor
7p.m.
HyLine 3511 1rlllltr, 1111 '88
pow.r; Thompson Contender Point P..... ,.., 304-6'J5.2013,
18 Wanted to Do
model, 1011 of a1tr11, $13,500. Fumllhod EHicloney, $175/mo. 45-410;
&amp; 22 bbl. tO Inch. 114- full lint Tropical lllh, blrdo,
;;WI;;II~Bo;;:;:byo:::;lt~;:tn~ll:;y-;-:Ho_m_o 304-1175-4475.
UtlltU11 P11d, 701 Fourlh Ave,
1m1ll enlmala and suppU•.
Anr.lmo.
Rodney
Araa. I.Doktno For A Doat? Conttdor A Galllpollo. 114-441-4416 Ahor 245-1449.
Ro oroneao Avollablo. Coli lt4- Bank Roelolmod lloblto Homo. 7p.m.
Poodle pupploo, toyw• and 101
53
Antiques
245oG887.
cupe, AKC Champion uloodllne,
Down wtth Aprrovod Fumllhod EHiellney, tl85/mo.
:-:--::----:--::--- S50o
Cootvlllo 114.el74404.
Buoh ~ tlervtce. Ao.-Jo Cradltl Craot Soloetlon Frao UtHIIIoo Paid, Sho10 Both, '107 Buy or 1111. Alverlnt Ant!Ciuea,
Aatao. NO Job To Smalll 114- Sot-Up And Dollvoryl Colt Elooa Socond Avo, Galllpotla, lf4.445. 1124 E. lloln Sti'MI, Pomeroy. WHAT'S SO DIFFERENT AIIOUT
Homo Conlor, 1.f00.511-571t.
Houra: II.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 THE HAPPY J~K 3-X FL£A
371·2M2.
4411 After 7p.m.
p.m 1 _~undoy 1:00 to 1:00 p.m. COLLAR? IT WORKSIII ConNow
1112
1t1110
threo
bedroom
Child eo......, ~~omo, ••· 2 full balho ohlnglo root, vinyl Graelouo living. 1 and 2 bod· 614-tm·2528.
tolna NO Synthollc Pvrl1h101da.
1
room lpiirtmenta It Village
For
Doaa &amp; Cola! J D NORTH
Dotlonco,
good
"'"""""'·
aiding,
onuttora,
eorpotod
baywl
ovonlngo,
llondoy·
1nd
Rlveralat 54 Miscellaneous
PROOUCE 114-4411-1933.
throughout, all drywall lnlotlor M•nor
F~tlly. - - rllao. Cllt 1nd 3-bly window. $1~rlt87.00. Apa~manlo In lllddloport. From
111111. Colll14-1102·7717. EOH.
114-MII-2t41or M8-2123.
Merchandise
Coll1·fl00.'129-4045.
57
Musical
Dunlavy Wolclng Shop. Wilt do New Cllyton, Sharp AI A Tick, Complatty Fumlohod mobile 16'x7' whlto flbargluo gorao•
Instruments
oman lObe anil monutacturo
home, 1 mile below town, ovtr·
14170, 3 Bodroem, Total -lno river. No PolO, CA. 114- door1 w/oponor I ramoto, $150
amall homo. 304-837-2733.
tor ooer, lt5G lot both Bundy AHo Sax, !lood Condl·
Electric:, t13,H5. Nowhere EIH 448.()331,
$275, 614-Jit2-21101 for tn/orma. lion! tf71. 814-44H754,
Gaorgoo Portablo Sawmill don't But Elaaa Hom• C.Rar. Call 1·
North 3rd St, lllddlaport, Ohio, 1 tlon lOSII.
houiJ.": toao to tho min luot &amp;14·m·t22o.
lowry Organ, Exc:allent Condl·
bedroom lumllhod apt, rotor11n· 2 Aoellnor Chan; 1 Rocking llol'lj Cllrf•nl Good Condition,
colt
111·1157.
- and dopooh r~oqulrod. 304- Ctlalr, 3 Sm~ll Lawn Mow.,.a. tt25. 114-2118-1616.
34
Business
Houuctaontno and office ctoan·
IIG-251111.
614-446-4508.
lng, llonday through Friday.
Buildings
lnltNmenla W1nted: 81rltone,
North 4th, lllddlaporl, Ohio. 2 Anlsta &amp; Cr•ftsmen, 12x24 Aho Ct1rlnet, 81u Cl1rtnet,
Aofotoncao, coll304471i-23113.
OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on bedroom fumlohod opt, dopoolt slatH SZ.OO 11ch, 600 lor.SSJ.SN, Concert FNnc:h Home, Tenor
llloa Pauto•o Day Corll Confar. 2nd Ava., Galllpotlo. Ctou to 1nd reference required, 304-882~ Call Bob Haoii"Jty, 614-9i2·5304
1
Slxophona,
B1rttona
So!l, affordobla, chlldcar11. 11-F Court Houta. 1 room, 2 roome, 2511.
So1op':':
l
Piccolo.
e ' ·"' • 5:30 p.m. Agoo :m-10. 3 rooms, 4 roomt. All nicely
Baby bed wlbumper plda, 3513, e
4 3301. 614-4411Bof0r11, ohot oehool. Drop-Ina dec:or111d, 1lr condHionlng, One
and
two
Mdroom shtate &amp; blanket•, ltroll.,
we&amp;come. 114-441-1224. NIW In- your w1terl HWir bill 1rw pa~ld . 1p1rtmenta tor rent . ktul tor (makaa bad), drfsolng toblo, like Pl•no For S1le: Excellent Condl~
font Toddlor Core, 114-446-41227.
M1ke J0\1' choice now. No 1m1ll tamlllee 1nd elngiH. 304- now, 304-G75-486i.
Uonl llovlng .lluat Soli! $100 Or
Baot Offlr. 114-441.()118.
Aleh'o ft-atcwallon, ••• •- quotn over tho phono you 675-2063 or 175-4100.
Buc:k
SIOVI
With
fireproof
Vlnt
·~·­ muat thom. Phone i'or an Ono Bodropm Apartment Living (UL limit), 1350. 304-805-3658.
1727. Are your foneao and diCke appolntmonl.
Uaod Conn Trumpol, With C...,
day, Room FumlWcf, Complete
lumtng black? I can ctNn lhom 44t·G113hvo. 114-441-1198
1150. 114-441·1101.
·
Bedroom
Suite,
Khehon Showw In Bath, Gao Complete
back lo tho original wood color
Hoot, Air CondHion, w-And Woodon C1othao Rook, I Palra Wonled: Rto""""'bto party to
and walarprool. Aloo, lnlarlor
Onw, Clo!&gt;d Nolghborhood. L1rg1 Women• JMne, 11~ . toke
on
omall
-.thly
I ;a:.:nd,;:.:.•Jt:;=or..:;tor:.;.!:pa=l::.n•::tng.~,.,--­ 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Roloronoo And D&lt;ipoolt R• ro81 L.oavo llnoogo.
~ymonta on fl:::3looloeiiiJ.
WIU BobvoM In lly Homo Off Lola I oc:raao• ovollablo lor qulrod. 114-4411-1371) Aftw 5p.m.
...,, l1llnti(IM
1111.
Concrato I plnllo Mpllc lanko,
Rt.1110 bn Butavlllo Pika. now homa conot"""lon on
SmaM
1
br
Apartment,
7
Cou~
Ron
Ev•n•
EntlrpriMe,
Jack·
Yamaha Alto Sol Good Co~
RolorOflCII and Elportoneol 114- Ray~um Rood. Paved road,
lion. CU, And CINnlng Equipwit~,
NIIOMble StrOll, KHchon With SICJYo, oon, OH 1-100-137-9528.
I ,':.;48;:,.=:2148;.=·......,..-.,..-,.,....,.,--- county
~olrlgtrotO&lt;
$185/mo.
PIUI
mont InCl.-! $150. 114-258rllatrlcllono. Comptala Inform•·
Firewood 130 load, opill1 1847.
Will Blbyoll In lly Homo Or lion
malted on r11quo11. 304-e'/5- O.DOIII, Utllllloo, Roforeneo. delivered,
Your11,
Anytlmal
Qa~
I~Z-18'111
~~n1.
5253, John D. GariiCh, no
IVInll'lgl.
tlpotii/Kygor
Crllok
Arlit. llngt•wldo
Y11n1hl allv• trumpet, $200.
tr11llora, pleuo.
Alflf- Avollablo. 114-44f.
For Solo: Good Uoad ACIIotlllor 5 304-41711-7128.
Furnished
ll01dowltiU Bubdlvlllon, 2.1 45
111124, or 114-441·1721.
Hora Powar, Aaar TIM New 58
mlloa ou1 Sand Hill Rood, hoo
Rooms
Fruits &amp;
Two 0 P1n1llntarlor Doorw, p,..
Will Do Babyolttlng In lly Homt. rllllrletod building ICIIO tor oalo
hungl Size: 32•10. 114-tlll-1272,
Rofar-, Rtooonobla Rlloo, II tow U $1500, and OM ICtl
Vegetables
A - lor ront · - 01 mOnlh. Evon ngo 6 Waokondl. .
Any Sltltll1t Ul U32.
toto lot olnglo wlcloo avalloblo Jtarlllf II $120/mo. Gallla Hotol.
Pooeltoo now avoUablo,
1144
. MIO.
.
Frtgldolrt Wloher, Dryor, Har· ConnJM
Will do cloonlrtt or offlet aloo, 30W71144110 or 8711-t10G.
VIII Gold, Llko Now CQnllllon, atoo 110n1o11 ....,. and p,..
cloanlng 114-1112.,211.
with cooltlng.
PI,_ later In A~: CaU ~
II•""'·
Sub-dlvlll«&lt;, ......ng Aloo trlllar opaee. All hook-upo. f125 Each Or 1200 Palr.1 ~~~~r IIOO-t41-37e0 lor
BOB'S
ICI'W kate, Rt. 2 frontage,
Or
WNklndl)
8
Would like to baby oM In fho one
Colt oftor 2:00 p.m, 304·7T.IIIAAKET, llooon cw Galllpollo,
A-oft School 11'10, :JOW'/5- prlea raclueod, cMr wator, ~ 58St,lla-WY.
OH.
571-2338.
55!1.

Bottom

'(OU !

good, body rout:,~::pt 2 -

s..a

Wanted to Buy

ACROSS T~E

'I'ARD iO GREET

Ramangina,
Charger,
whaol Dodge
drive, :111
.....4

doeotlorl, r-ra. dloh and hayblne 12,iOG. Loly rake TadSize, 811 AIMmb'-d, ;500 ~--... ~
dlt
bo -700 He Holland
Nogotlobl~
1~411-1ill0
ldJ
~.
114-8112.f173.
comm -·
w eond,
,
.. ...
~~.:.;.:..~==--~I
modal
baior,· good
1
~
,o.1
UMd utlllto oqut_,, In- S2,200. Holland modll 310
Selld Oak dining roem oulto eluding whola ayotom with batao ••• cond 13,100. IIF 124
eomtolo~llh
ufolt 1 yr. old, - , __
rocolver, dloh I eond,
bat• $2,000.
baler nc
•• 00 •
___
_d•_•_•d_•...;r,_•_$100. IIF
NowNo3
Holland
851
-4 · •
- • ., 4 p.m.
1 rou nd balea aiAo wrap new
SWAIN
55
BUilding
chain $5,800. Holland 851
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
round baloo Hyd wrap 15,500.
Olivo St., Galllpotlo.- I Uaod
Supplies
Holland 853 round bator
fumhuro, hoatoro, Woatom I :::--:--:-::-:-..:...:----:----~I eurront modal demo 191 500.
Worlt boeto. 114-4411-3150.
Block, brlclt, llfpaa, win- Holland 148 round DOlor
- · llntola, etc. ClaUde Win- currant modlt, vary aood
YI'AA FURNITURE
lora, Rio Orondo, 0H Coil 114- 17,500. Now Holland 325 l&gt;TO
814-44&amp;-3151
· 245-lt21.
m1nure'
$1,000. Hew
UVING AOOII: Sola I Choir, SIJ Ill otool bldgt. Factory Holland 513 ~dor 176bu,
End Tabloo, llt.OG Soi.DINING

~AVIN6

'(OUR 006 RACE

1171 Ford Pick Up, lupor-Cab,
au1omaUo trona., :181-englno,
PS, AC,I1200, 114--112-3121.

54 Miscellaneous
uood opplloneoo, T.V. Mlo. Open
1 Lm. to • p.m. 11on•.sat. 114Merchandise
448-teetl, 827 3rd. Avo. llpotlo, OH
GAF220 Pocket Comon. Uke
Howl Cooto About 1300,
For Sail: Uood Amana Sldo ~ Will Salt For ttoa. 1,._...752,
~~ ~~c"!J.,':,'i".,oa; &amp;14-44W781.
UMd Soanl 21 Inch T.V., 135; Huaky Homo Lito and ~
Craftaman SerCIII Sow 175; loch chain oiiWO marked - n
514-44f.7313.
Sopt. Silo. Sldoro E=-',
QOOD USED APPLIANCES Hondoroon, WI/. J04.417 21.
Wallhor'l, dryoro, rolrtgonlan, Konrnon~ air conditioner, 12,000
rangao. Skeggt Aollllancao, BTU, &amp;250. Duo-Thorm moblil
U - River Ra. Baolclo Stone homo hlmanca, 1300, 114-1102·
C- llolll. Coll114-441i-7308.
7043 oftar 1:00pm.
Heavy 3 pe living room oulto, Portablo chlngooblo loll• sign
ole eond, couch, rocker I choir, $259. Frat lotttrlldtllvory. Pin$150. 304-41711-1145.
tie latlar $4150 bol, AM S~na.
I.AYNE'S FURNITURE
t-100.533-:14&amp; 3 uplroa 1-10. '
Complotl homo fumlohlngo. RICOndftlonod Wuhell, Dryoro.
Hour~~: lion-Sat, 11-5. 114-44f. Guar11ntaocl prompt torVlee. tor
0322, 3 mlloo out Butovltto Rd. oil makao, niodtla. Tho Wuher
F- Delivery.
Dryer Shoppo. 1~1144.
Uvlng Room SuHt And 3 Solo (dUll to IU hoallh) Whore: CTabiH, Now Condition! 1200; 21 Ftatwoodo Ad: P-roy,
Dlnatto Sol" 4_ &lt;?hlllr Gtau Table Ohio. Have -hlng for
Top, Now """"Ilion! $200; G.E. ovoryonol (UtUo rlld flouM)
Walhar Runo Creal! $71. 114- Witch lor olgnol and 1
446.Z3saa.
112 1crw land. 21' -motor home,
PICKENS FURNITURE
11173 IIGB-GT car, 1tlflt Datoun
NowNoad
4-W/D pickup, motorcycloo,
• ••• d 1u ~~~~
mopoclo, 11111 Int. Scou1 ~WID,
Hou-NI
m~ ng. 112 m1. lluotang body, wNololllreo,
Jorrteho Rd. Pt. Ptoaoanl, WY, pick up truck (lost Int.), hlmleaii30W75-1450.
lure,
rolrfgantan, otov01,
Refrtgerltor ~one Frott mlcrow1ve, Met and othenwlu,
Fr110 $05· Ao
rata&lt; Uke riding ...-and Cll':j,&amp;•nlon
Now' Wlltto
· Kinmora atuH. All klndl of
and
waOh.r, wiil~a, ii'S; KIMIOI'o ondo, Fronch Provinlt lining
Dry•, Wlllto, $75; Konmoro room lUIIe. Juatcoma and -n
Wa-. Horvaot Gold, 105; G.E. llake on.r. Cllll14-1102·3122.
Dryorht Harvaot Gold, ll5; Sam Somorvlllo'l AmtJ Surptuo
Uprtg
F - . Whlll, I05i ~··- R-ndy lllo P- Ollie
~:~ f~~yr:.::."'Siz! Fri.'Sat:"'Su:. N~ I:OOP~
Dry- $15· S~o ~1 1 - 0 other tllyw howt 304-273-5855.
-·
'
· - ' (Jr eamouflaugo like blg our•).
Upper Rl- Aoa I
ll-7ll8. 1 urptuo renlil clothing. r1111
RENT 2 OWN
loalhor G.L boola.
614-446-3151
Vl'rll Fumfturll
Saara 100,000 BTU Gao fur·
Selo I Choir, $11.10 Waok; naco, Uood 1 Healing Suoon.
Roellnor, 15.47 WMII, Swlvll 61f..445.81M.
Rocker, 53.63 Waolt.Bunk Bod Twin Bod $150; Dr1111or Choat
Comptllo 11.41 Waok, t Dra•r Drawers 1100; Couch, 135;
Chaot, 13.26 Waolc; Poator Bod- Chell Draw0r11, 185; Air eon.
room Su~o, 7 pe., ttl.87 Waok,
dltlonor, 8t4-4411-3224.
lneludM Boddlng.Country Pine
Dlnotto WHh Boneh I 4 Chalro, Uood Satollho Equlpmonl, In·
ttO.IIII WooltOPEN: llonday eluding: Whole Sywtamo With
County Appllancaf• Inc. Good

AND

.:,304:=·7'1U121-=-....,-,~·-;-;:---:------:--:-

"""Iliff

EVERY NOW AND
ii4EN ... ONCE IN
A WHILE ...

COMING HOME .

1m OIIC Chavy 35Q.englna,
ovorheuted, 30o::fur~~tlon coro,
1101~111, 3/4 ton, twtiHiocko,

1

$200;

SOMETIMES ..

T14E BEST
TI41N6 ABOUT
SCI400L 15

Corpot h12 150 I Up! Soli On

,_,J....

•

THU .. SEPT. 5

WOlD

TIIAT DAILY
'UIIIII

EVENING

Household

Choat FrMZor, 20

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

Television
Viewing

-

3 bedroom

Of

per Hollow ANd. Twin Bed
Compl.. • Bop JNn.1_10. Reg.

NEEDED
111111 bo 25 poundo
overweight,
Wolahttou ConlOn.
toolilng for ovtrwolght

BORN ·LOSER

71 Autos tor Sale

•

In Pomo....,.
Socurlly """"" _.,od, 1141112·71112 ahor 4:00pm.
3bod-homoboekof. =-~:.wMh 1110. clopoolt.

3 Family: Soptomt.. 5th, 71h, 114. 11110 IIIIo Ott Rt. 1110 On K..,.

11

Pomeroy-Middlep~~ .OI!!CI .

1991

Merchandise
2·BA

3 Famllln : CtotMe, App, Fum~
lure! 6 uu.. Out M1; ~.5 MUM
On Rt.775, 815-6-7. g.?

9

5,

Thursday, september

,...... ~. 304-f71..73o41.

2 Fomllr Yard Solo: Soplamber,
4th, 5th. 5th. i :OOa.m. To
UOp.m. S.A. 7 South t IIIIo
Put Bladon Landing On Loh.

!1-5.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Space for Rent

Counlry
A - 33,- -

2 - - - 2mllooooA
Sand Hll Ad, biG. monlh,

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Signa.

46

41 Houaat for Rent

Yard Slle, Plaount Aldgo Road,
Galllpollo FeiJY, Frt and Sat,
i :OO till?.

Watch For
Ell'lrylhlngl

Thursday, september 5, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

E I U U

MGNDGLKK

LTEBIRDL
J N G

N J

NRL

I A N V 8 L 'G . '

LUUHK.
BICLUNEZ
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'll mltll Hollywood. 01 the twenty friends
thought 1 had, I'll mill the s11 I really had ." - Lauren Bacall .
() 1891 by NEA . Inc

5

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="314">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9605">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35065">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35064">
              <text>September 5, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
