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':i

••
september •• 1QQ1-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv

•

•

Browns

Another scandal hits Washington '"?[

CONTEsT WINNER • Sllcy Tripp was the
wfaaer of a televlsloa givea away by Buttons
aDd Bows In Pomeroy for lis Graad Re-opening
followla1 the store's relocation to the rorner of

Court aDd Mala

Pldilrecl preseatlllg the
televisloa to Mrs. Tripp aad ller twiDs, Mepa
and Amber ,Is store owaer, Vicki Perren.

N·ation's jobless rate s(uck at
.6.8 percent; recovery stalls
WASHINGTON (AP)- America's unemployment rate failed to
budge. from 6.8 percent in August
a employers balked at hiring many
new workers, the government
reported FridayThe medtocre employment
report is clear evidence the recov00' ha sralled, several private analysts said.
These economists said signs or
~ wealcness in the Labor
Department report indicates the
U.S. ~Y is in danger of sputtCring back into recession.
The White House had an upbeat
~nicnt of the numbers, noting
~.the 6.8 percent rate in Au
I,
while no improvement over fufy.
jvas still lower than June's peak of

Kennedy, 0-Mass., chairman of the
Senate Labor COmmittee.
. lloskin predicted a lower jobless
lllte in the future, and suggested the
Federal Reserve Board could do
more to stimulate the recovery with
an increase in the nation's money
supply.
. The Bush administration's stand
on extended jobless benefits has
not changed, Boskin said. Bush
might be itllle to go along with a
"sensiblt" extension if Congress
found a way to pay for the $S.2 billion·pallkake, he said.
''Believe me ... I, the president
and everybody in the administration has great concern for any
American who wants a job and
who does not now ' have one,"
Boskin said.
The August jobless rate had
been expected to stav the same or
worsen slightly because employers
apparently are not sufficiently confident of an economic recovery to
hire wOiters back.

1 percent

. President Bush's chief econom-

k: ll(lviser. Michael Boskin, also

lli4 a Labor ~ent survey of

bljSilless establishments showed
that.industries added a modest
numller of jobs last month, with
payrolls srowing by 34,000.
The data showing 300,000
fewer people working, and the
SIJilC ·number dropping out of the
~ foll:c, was reported in a sepa.-.~ Labor Department survey of
~ds.

· "We haven't said the economy
• hcllthy, we've said it's improvillg," B~kin told reporters at the
White House.
. While the jobless llltc remained
frozen in August, so did the num..- of A,J;nericans who were out of
work. The jobless total remained

_ NEW YORK (AP) - lust as
white knight Warren Buffett took
his Salomon Inc. rescue mission 10
Washington, Wall Street was hit
with another episode of alleged
, Chllllini by an equally big name:
Shearson Lehman Brothers Inc.
Buffeu had no sooner apologized to a congressional panel for
Salomon's bond-market transgres·
sions, when Shearson chief
Howard L. Clark Jr. owned up 10 a
possible stock -trading violauon at
hiS company.
At a time of year when
investors' thoughts normally tum
macabre with nightmares of past
October market debacles, the sudden proliferation of scandals provided one more reason to worry.
Whether the coincidence of the
two siwations signaled a significant
deterioration of market ethics or
just a passing storm was unclear.
But there was a definite trend
toward baring the soul.
Buffeu gave the penance movement momentum with his Washington appearance, in which he
described Salomon's Treasury market manipulations as "inexcusable." He promised full cooperation with federal agencies invesligating the bond-trading scandal.
Buffett's
straight-arrow
approach was mirrored by Shearson's Clarlc;despite varying circumstances.
In the Salomon case, the company admitted breaking the rules for
bllldin~ on U.S. Treasury securities
and Sild high officials, after learn-

Along with a modest payroll

recession began in July 1990.
"Obviously it takes some lime
to get back where you were before
the recession, but the economy is
clearly improving," Boskin said.
"It's on the right path." ·
"Today's unemployment fig.
ures show that the recession has not
ended, and that ~pie are hurling
and need help,' said Edward M.

the latest repon revised the peyroU
numbers for July to show that
73,000 jobs were losL
A household survey showed that
total employment .dropped from
116.7 million to 116.4 million in
August. That decline did not boost
the jobl¥55 rate because nearly an
identical 300,000 pe9ple left the
labor market, probably giving up
hope of fmding work.

~xports spur cigarette production
the repon said. "The drop seen in
consumption is in response 10 higher prices, anli-smokmg activities,
further restrictions on where peo~le
can smoke, and declining social
acceptance of cigarette smoking.''
Wholesale cigarette prices
increased 14 percent during 1990

and retail prices 10.5 percent, the
reponsaid.
"Projections call for a continued increase in cigarette exports in
1991, which wiD continue to offset
a declining domestic market and
lead to increased production," the
rcpon said.

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
American Plywood Association
and the A$.riculture Department
plan to b~t.Ild a three-story apart·
ment house in Japan to demonstrliiC
the usc of U.S. wood products in
building conSII'UCtion.
The project; ~ailed Super House,
. is designed to ~emonstrate the
advantages of woOd compared with
.
\:

Rtglstratlol Recpirtd ., 1:30 A.M.

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State pleased with
response by local
EMA following drill
ardous material emergency. A
tabletop "dry-run" exercise or the
drill was conducted in August.
According to Leonard Eliason,
who acts as the Public lnfonnation
Officer for Meigs County'S Local
Emergency Planning Commission,
the supposed chemical spill
involved 40,000 pounds of
acrolein, a liquid chemical which is
poisonous if swallowed, inhaled or
absorbed through the skin.
To make pretend mauers worse,
heavy stonns were reponed to have
plagued the area and tornadoes had
been touching down in the Meigs
County area for 36 hours prior to
the chemical spill.
The Racine Volunteer Fire
Department was at their station
participating in the drill, which
involved radio communications
between their station and the Emergency Operations Center at the
Meigs Emergency Medtca l Services headquarters on Mulberry
Heights.
Meigs Emergency Management
"Girl Scouting is fun, friends Agency Director Bob Byer superand excitement," said Shirley vised the activities of his local
Cogar, Meigs service unit advisor team, and several state-level evaluCor the Black Diamond Girl Scout
Council, in announcing a membership kickoff.
Girls, kindergarten' through high
school, are being recruited this
month for current troops and troops
which are being organized. Leaders
and assisumt leaders are also needed, Mrs. Cogar advises. While girls
may join troops at anytime during
the year, there is a special emphasis
A Henderson business received
on enrollment in September.
extensive
damage and a Mason
Mrs. Cogar advises that leaders
mother
and
daughter were left
are needed for troops at Syracuse,
homeless
by
weekend
rues. accordRutland, Salem Center, Tuppers
ing
to
reports
from
the
Point PleasPlains, and Salisbury, and anyone
ant
and
Mason
Fire
Departments.
interested in volunteering should
Firemen were called out Saturcontract her at992-2668.
day
at 5:14p.m., according to a
Brownies are girls ages six
spokesman
from the Poinl Pleasant
through eight, or in grades one
Fire
Department,
to Neville Autothrough three; jumors are ages mne
motive
on
300
Wilson
SL in Henthrough II or grades four through
derson,
where
the
garage
area was
six; cadettes are ages II through 14
blazing.
or ages six through nine; and
The spokesman stated the threeseniors are girls ages 14 through 17
bay
garage was destroyed, along
or in grades nine through 12. Meigs
with
four vehicles that were in the
County also offers a daisy rroop for
garage
at the lime of the fire. Six
kindergarten children, ages five
other
vehicles
were damaged, the
through six.
spokesman
said.
Brochures on the scouting proIt is believed that the blaze
gram will go out into the schools
began
in one of the vehicles that
this week.

By BRIAN J_ REED
Sentinel News Staff
The spill of a highly toxic chemical at the William R. Ritchie
Bridge at Ravenswood, W.Va. on
Saturday morning was purely
hypothetical, but the response of
Meigs County's Local Emergency
Planning Commission was very
real, and is already being commended on-site by state officials.
The 1991 Ohio River Exercise,
conducted through the Title III
Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act, was planned so
that county, state and federal representatives could gain a deeper
understanding of their roles and
responsibilities during a real haz-

A.'DILE'IES BACK TO PlAY!

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Firm plans new building in Japan

Patriots

stf4

Sat.. Sept. 14, 1991
lnltlatlott 4:00 p.it.
Dla•r • 6:30 p.m.
Band • 1:00-12:00 p.11.
Tickets· CaD 446·3812 or 446-3364

Jain ot 34,000 worlcers last month,

I. 7 million· higher than when the

ing about it, delayed telling author· blamed for IJiissing·obvious dat)a~
ities. Shearson, by contrast, signs flashed ~y the Bank of CI'C!dit
aDegedly fiddled with the price of a and Commerce International. ·~;
stock, ConAgra Inc., to make a
A new congressional report~n
new stock offering by the COIIIJ?l!ny the worldwide bank .scandal
more attractive. Shearson satd Jt federal officials failed to pur~uo
coopelllted fully with investigators investigations or BCCI and ble\1(
from the New York Stock chances 10 nip its illegal activities
Exchange as soon as the possible in the bud.
";
violation came to light last DecemRegulators in the United S~ll\5\
ber.
Britain and other countries sll~t
In the shadow of the Salomon down BCCI in July amid alle~a
turmoil, Shearson decided to go lions of Dervasi ve fraud, laun~n$
public about the invc:Stigation since of drug money and support of ter11 claimed "new information" had rorists. The new report by a Hoi)~
forced the suspension of two exec- subcommittee said U.S. officia~
utives who supervise stock uading.
knew about BCCI' s activities !W .
At the congressional hearing on early as 1983.
,
Salomon, held the day before the
Also during the weelc., federat :
Shearson incident was disclosed, prosecutors announced the indicl- :
federal regulators were chided for ment of former BCCI officials ahd-·
shoddy police work in the markets. Colombian drug lords on charges; :
Daager Signs Ignored
of conspiring to launder drug pro(. ·
The government also was · its through the banlc.
· ,: ·

GALLIPOLIS SHRINE CLUB
Amual Hllbilly Hog Roast

.Greg
Smith

blank

~~

Montreal sweeps Reds

day's ''reai" exercise, which placed a hazardous
materials spill on the WiUiam R. Ritchie Bridge
at Ravenswood, W.Va. (Sentinel Photo by David
Harris)

PLANNING FO~ DRILL - Much planning
went into Saturday's SARA Title m Ohio River
Exercise, including a tabletop exercise in Meigs
County on August 10. Here, local and state officials took part in that August dry-run of Satur-

Membership
kickoff held
for Girl Scouts

ARC aids Pity Me victims
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Once lliain, the American Red
Cross ha's "cOme "f!f the rescue of
displaced residents of the Pity Me
area, several monlhs after a land
and rock slide made their homes
uninhabitable.
The Red Cross has purchased
real estate on behalf of four of
those residents, allowing them to
relocate from rental housing Q
which they have occupied since the
early-May slide Q into permanent
homes.
Sam Underwood, who along
with his wife Alma, works as a
Family Service Technician for the
Disaster Services Division of the
American Red Cross, reports that
three vacant lots and a lot with a
house have been purchased and
two other candidates for similar aid
are being considered by the agency.
The Undcrwoods, who work out
of their home in Fairmon~ W.Va.,
are prohibited from disclosing the
names of those who received this
latest Red Cross assistance. or tell
the location of the properties purchased.
The Red Cross first stepped in
to help those Pity Me residents in
need shortly after the May 4 slide,
when a temporary shelter was set
up in Middleport. Several days
later, those residents displaced by
the disaster were moved into the
·Mason Motel in Mason, W.Va.
In June, the process of finding
rental housing was begun, with the
Red Cros s paying the first (and

sometimes the second) month's
rent and necessary deposits.
The process of purchasing permanent homes for these residents
began in late August.
According to the Underwoods,
not all disaster victims are eligible
for such extreme assistance. A fullscale investigation is conducted in
each individual disaster victim's
case, and all other available
resources must be exhausted before
the Red Cross will step in and purchase real estate.
Used by the Red Cross as a "last
resort", the Additional Assislance
division of the Red Cross will only
assist with property purchase when
personal, community, county and
state funds are no longer available.
Such aid, the Underwoods
reported, can include the purchase
of land for the use as a trailer lot,
purchase of existing structures for
occupation and, when applicable,
the re-building of homes damaged
in a disaster.

Masonjire leaves two homeless

Henderson business
damaged by fire

EPA's water quality
standards questioned
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
scientist is questioning U.S. Environmental Proteclion Agency
reports that there arc cancer:causing disinfectant byproducts rn tap
water.
" I don't think water pollution
has ever caused any cancer," said

Nine hurt when ·vehicle
runs into Ohillco crowd
Spurgeon identified the driver of
WELLSTON (AP) - A car
into a crowd gathered along a the car as Francis Laner, 79, of
crty street to watch a parade Satur- South Webster.
Larter, his wife, Bonnie, 73,
day, injuring at least nine people,
also of South Webster, and a third
city fire and police officials said.
People were gathered at the passenger, Lora Kendall , 93, of
city's main intersection as the Portsmouth, were treated at Oak
Ohillco Festival parade passed by Hill Community Medical Center
around 7:15 p.m. when a car in a about 10 miles away and released,
convenience store parking lot said David Hammons, a registered
surged into the crowd, officials nurse at the hOSJ?ital.
Tammy Basrl, 20, was admitted
said.
''I was shooting pictures and to the hospital in good condition
heard some screaming, and when I with a bruise 10 her right leg.
One victim, Beverly Lackey, 43,
turned around I saw this cream-colored car flipping onto its top out in was taken by helicopter to Grant
the middle of the street," said Medical Center in Columbus, about
Clifton Spires Jr. , editor of the 60 miles north, where she was
reported in fair condition with lacWellston Sentry.
Spires said wiblesses heard a car erations to her legs.
Lori Lackey, 23. was trealed at
accelelllte and turned to see 11 running through the crowd. The car hit Medical Center Hospital in Chillia concrete trash receptacle, flipped cothe for minor injuries and
onto its hood and came to rest in released.
Heidi and David Kisor, both of
the middle of the street, he said.
Police communications officer Jackson, and James Dickerson
Jim Spurgeon said a mechanical were treated at Holzer Medical
malfunction apparently caused the Center in Gallipolis and released.
·
accjdent, but the case remained Spurgeon said.
under investigation.
S~~Cd

)

In the case of the homes in Pity
Me, the Red Cross has classified
the structures as being located in a
"hazardous situatio·n·. and are
therefore, by their standards, not
worth rebuilding.
"The land and structure are
being purchased and improved by
the Red Cross," Sam Underwood
said. "If the homes located on the
disaster site could have been
improved or repaired, that would
have been done mstead."
"However, given the condition
or those homes, that is something
that we (the Red Cross) did not
wantlo get ourselves involved in,"
he said with a chuckle.
As for the two other victims
who have applied 10 the Red Cross
for assistance, the Underwoods are
unable to promise that they, too,
will receive new homes at the cost
of the Red Cross.
"We are," Alma Underwood
said, "unable to make them any
promises."

1

ators were on hand to observe the
operation.
While no official evaluation has
been made of Saturday's exercise,
immediate response on both the
local and state levels was very
favorable.
"Based on the evaluators' comments, Meigs County 's exercises
went really well, and mere importantly, much was learned," com mented Facilitator Lloyd Bokman,
who also represented the EMA of
Ohio althe Meigs County drilL
Local participants in the drill
included Byer; Eliason; Emergency
Medical Services Representative
Joe Struble; Racine Volunteer Fire
Department Representative John
Holman; Zane Beegle from the
Meigs County Health Dcpartrncn~
Sheriff's Deputies Scott Trussell
and ,Mark Boyd; Transportation
Officer Bob Ord; American Red
Cross Representative Rita Fields
and EMA Runner Todd Smith.
David Horton and Jim Seddon
were on hand from the local amateur radio community and Bryant
Continued on page 3

Bruce N. Ames, a biochemist and
molecular biologist at the University of California at Berkeley.
''Environmentalists
and
researchers have whipped up this
hysteria, and everybody is afraid of
parts-per-billion of something
while they're still drinking their
coffee," Ames said in a story in
The Columbus Dispatch on Manday. "By the time you get to partsper-billion, you might as well forget about i1."
Ames said the problem is that
almost all of the research on water
quality has been based on mice and
rat studies. which give high doses
of compounds to a few hundred
rats and then use the ensuing cancer rate to calculate human cancer
rates. Ames is trying to discredit
the procedure.
Disinfectant byproducts are
water pollutants created in the
treatment plants when chlorine is
added.
The newspaper said EPA has
calculated that disinfectant byproducts are the single largest cancercausing agent in water. But the
actual risk from those byproducts is
only about 100 cancer cases a year,
and less than 1 percent of au cancers nationwide, the newspaper
said.
Environmentalists hailed Ames
in the 1970s after his research led
to a precedent-setting standard called the A-mes Test - used to
ban some cancer-causing agents.
However, Ames now argues
there is a "background noise"
level of carcinogens in nature, and
it may be pointless to reduce other
cancer risks

RECRUITING SCOUTS • Several ,scouts
were on Krogers patio Saturday to teD the story
or scouting. Brochures were distributed and a
video on scouting was shown. The scouts also
worked on crart projects to show an activity of
the scoutinll program. Here Andrea Neutzling,
l

was being worked on in the garage.
Although the fire damage was
contained to the garage, the store
section of the business received
smoke and water damage. The estimated damage to both the building
and vehicles contained in the
garage was $300,000.
A spokesman from Neville's
reported this morning that the business is open, with both the minimart and gas pumps being
reopened Sunday. The wrecker service is also operating.
The building is owned by Virginia Thomas, while the business
owner is Jim Neville.
The Point Pleasant Fire Depanment sent 18 men to the blaze with
three engines, an aerial truck and
Continued on page 3

Tara Norman, Jennlrer Norman, Jennller Heck,
Melissa Houser, and Bethany Cooke, ~rom tbe
tert around the table, work on crea~mg lire·
works on paper, using a st~aw blowmg te~h·
nique with colored water. ~hrrley Cogar, se~vace
unit administrator, supervtsed the craf't project.
'•

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·commentary

___

. _ _____ _ __________ _____ ___ __________·-· ------------ ·-·--·------- -

Monday, September 9, 1991

P.li'ge-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 9, 1991

Ill Court street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVO'lED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARBA

a~

~fi'MULTIMEDIA.INC
ROBERT L. W1NGE'M
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers· Association .
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less thanJOO
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name,·addre-ss and telephone number. No un signed letters will be pub-

lished. Lellers should be In good taste , addressing Issues, not personalities.

Air cargo hub could turn
. area around, officials say

WASHINGTON- The children 's toys that find their way
under Christmas trees in future
years may "glow in the dark," but
not necessarily for recreational reasons.
If the Nuclear Regulatory Commission gets it way, radioactive
wastes could be recycled into consumer goods ranging from toys,
belt buckles and cosmetics to shotgun shells, fishing lures and frying
pans. Consumers will not find a
surgeon general's warning on these
products. That's because the NRC
at this point has no plans to man·
date labeling.
The policy was put on hold after
creating a fuestorm, and the NRC
is now engaged in something it
calls "consensus-building." But, if
it is ultimately implemented, the
United States would be allowing
levels of radiation that are 10 times
that suggested by international
standards.
An NRC spokesperson told us,
"We do not take actions that do
not protect public health and safety." But the Environmental Protection Agency paints a different picture. ''We believe this is ... not protective of the public health, "
according tq_ one internal EPA
briefing papel' obtained by our
reporter Nick Budnick.
The battle pits the environmen-

By MITCH WEISS
Associated Press Writer
TOLEDO- With the opening of a $58 million Burlingwn Air Express
freight hub at Toledo Express Airport, local officials say the Toledo area
is poised to become a regional transportation center.
''This project is the fust of what I see as many shots in the arm for our
area and the timing could not be better. The project will have a tremendous positive impaft on our economy," Mayor John McHugh said.
. McHugh, whose city's economy fallen on hard times recently, said the
·, Burlington project is an important phase in northwest Ohio's emergence
as a regional distribution hub.
In the last five years, Toledo has lost thousands of manufacturing jobs.
. · 1bc last two years have been especially hard with more than 4,000 jobs
· either eliminated or moved to other U.S. cities with lower labor and utility
. costs.
For 75 years, the city' s economic health has been tied to the automotive industry. There are a number of auto assembly plants and parts factories in the area
Local leaders would like the region 's economy to diversify.
William Prebe, a consultant and former chief economist for Dana
Corp. an auw parts giant, said transportation could be the key to the area's
turnaround.
Because of the city's proximity 10 the Great Lakes, major highways
.. and railroads, the Toledo area could become a light-assembly and redistribution point, as well as a transportation hub, he said.
Gary Failor, president of the Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority,
, agreed. He said Burlington, which began operations at Toledo Express on
Wednesday, will give the area a much-needed boost.
Burlington has hired 800 people, mostly for pan-time positions.
The port authority financed the project for the Irvine, Calif.-based
company.It built a sorting center and terminal and leased it 10 Burlington
for 22 years. It also expanded its main runway at the airport
Burlington had a temporary hub in Fon Wayne, Ind., which will close
· Scpl 16 when the company begins its nighttime opemtion in Toledo.
·· 1bc next step is attracting another transportation company to the area,
. he said.
Toledo is one of the seven finalists to become a Midwest hub for the
Postal Service's overnight and fli'St-class mail network.
The Postal Service wants to buy or lease an 83-acre site, including 56
acres for aircraft parking and taxiing. The site has to have access to interstate freeways and local highways.
The project would create 550 jobs.
The Postal Service will make its decision Sept. 16.
Failor said he is optimistic about Toledo's chances because the airpon
has room to expand. It also has quick and easy access to major highways,
including Interstate 80, which is the only highway between New York and
Chicago that allows trucks to carry three trailers.
The breakup of the Soviet
"It would be a tremendous boost to the local economy," Failor said.
Union
into a series of separate
"And I think we have a good chance."
sovereign republics presents the
Pentagon with one obvious problem: What is happening, and what
may happen, to the Soviet Union's
30,000 nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles?
According to reports, about
Dear Editor:
one thing, there's no place like
25,000
of them are physically withI want to thank the girls that Meigs Co. I've been to the Eastern
in
the
territory
of the huge Russian
work in the Meigs Health Dept. states, Florida and Colorado and
Republic
headed
by Boris Yeltsin.
··The ones I know are Joan Tewks- ones in between and I'm always
Another 3,000 are in the Ukraine,
. berry, Carol Tannehill, Phyllis glad to get home.
"·Barks, but all of them are very
Sincerely, some 1,500 are based in Kaza· nice, helpful. listen to you and talk
Dorothy Baker, khstan, and the balance are scatto you. I really appreciate them.
Long Bouom, Oh 45743 tered among Byelorussia, the Baltic
1bc road improvement at Kerr's
P.S. The night before my broth- states and elsewhere. Many of them
·=~~dt"l's great, no more backing up er went to the service, years back, are in underground silos, aimed
computer precision at targets
:t 90'-trueks can ~et around the comer there was a big full moon, he had with
in the West (and no doubt also the
:J iall.liO sillliig m traffic way back to me drive home so he could look at Far
East).
.+~'s; ··
the moon on the river all the way.
As
far as is known, the Soviet
~ ' I'll agree with Fred Crow on
Beautiful!!
system for controlling these
weapons is similar to our own :
authority to fire one requires the
approval of a series of officials,
going up through the chain of coml
By The Associated Press
mand to the defense minister and
~.
~oday is Mon~y: Sept 9, the 252nd day of 1991. There are 113 days finally the president of the Soviet
' '"left m the year. Thts IS Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year.
Union. Gorbachev. like Bush, is
accompanied everywhere by a

tal watchdogs of the EPA against
the nuclear power industry lap dogs
of the NRC. The nuclear power
industry clamored for this change,
and by some estimates, stands to
save up to $100 million each year
from this cheaper form of waste
disposal. The Nuclear Information
and Resource Service, a public
interest group, estimates that the
savings would be $1 per year per
utility customer - a pittance they
suggest consumers would gladly
pay 10 avoid danger.
The controversy will come to a
head when the House Energy and
Environment subcommittee holds
hearings this week. The debate
dates back w June 1990, when the
NRC adopted a policy euphemistically titled, "Below Re~ulatory
Concern.'' The NRC raiSed the
level of certain less dangerous
forms of radiation to which humans
could be subjected, abdicating any
regulatory oversight foc lower levels.
Under the policy, about 30 percent of the nation's low -level
radioactive waste could be disposed of in a variety of common
outlets, including sewer systems,
incinerators and ordinary landfills
where it could seep into drinking
water sources. Radioactive waste
also, for the first time, would be
allowed as recycled material in

consumer products.
In dec1ding to deregulate the
waste, the NRC has developed a
complicated formula of risk and
reward, of cancer and health . It's a
math in which humans are represented by decimal points and statistical probabilities. Even staffers
within the NRC have found thts
reversal of nearly four decades of
policy banning radiation for consumer goods a disquieting develop·
ment.
Environmental groups are up in
arms over the notion that any level
of radiation would be disposed of
like an old newspaper or p1ZZ8 box.
Bill Magavem of the U.S . Public
Interest Research Group called it
"linguistic detoxification. They're
talcing a dangerous substance and
pretending that it is safe."
The NRC policy doesn't go into
how the recycling and dumping
p·ractices will be monitored .
According to one EPA source ,
"lbc whole matter of implementation is a big mystery." Environmental groups don 'I think it will be
possible to enforce the new rules.
due to the difficulties in measuring
radiation levels.
The NRC believes that people
will only be subjected to a limited
number of these newly "deregulated" areas or products. Environ·
mentalists wonder what happens

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and hi&amp;h

Showers and thunderstorms are
in the forecast for the next couple
days.
Sides will be partly to mostly
cloudy tonight with scattered showers and thunderstorms. Lows
tonight 65 to 70.
An approaching cold front and
increased moisture across Ohio will
bring scattered showers and thunderstorms Tuesday. By Wednesday
fair weather will be returning to the
slate. Highs Tuesday will be 80 to
85.
Record high for this date was 95
in 1939; record low was 39 in
1883.
Sunrise Tuesday will be at 7:06;
sunset at 7:51.
Around the nation
Showers and thunderstorms

•

IToledo I as• I

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

IMansfield I as• I•

for those in contact with an array of
low-level radioactive consumer
products or those who live and
work near reactors, hospitals and
research and industrial facilities.
If the NRC has its way, communities may find themselves paying
huge sums to clean up the radioac tivity in their drinking water. The
proposed NRC regulations could
lead to a level of radioactivity in
public water supplies that violates
the EPA drinking water standards.
It wouldn't be the first time the
government spoke oUt of both sides
of its mouth, and the taxpayers paid
the price for the doublespelik.
WHITE HOUSE COUP? Are coup-plotters stirring in the
White House? Such a scenario is
qllietly being discussed in corridors
of power in Washington. Of
course, this would not be a coup of
the Kremlin variety. Rather, it is a
Washington-style coup, and what's
at stake is proximity to President
Bush, management of the 1992 reelection campaign and the jockeying for position before the election.
Last month, the first sltirmishes
flared at a political meeting held at
Camp David. White House Chief
of Staff John Sununu is being fingered by the media as the one who
tried to purge three former Bush
aides from the list of invited guests.
The friction comes from the fact
that the White House is run by
Sununu, but the campaign is peO·
pled by old Bush buddies from previous campaigns. The old guard
salutes Secretary of State James
Baker, the field general of two previous Bush campaigns, not Sunu~u .

IND.

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to the editor

There's no place like Meigs County

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' Today in history
.

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Berry's World

ideally suited to the kind of world
in which we seem doomed to live
for the foreseeable future.
.
But, as you might expect,
Congress has stubbornly whittled
away. at every administration
request for money to finance an
effective SDI system. For several
years, the cuts have been excused
on the ground that the Soviet
Union, under Gorbachev was
plainly becoming less of a threat
every day. Why not usc the money,
instead, for such delightful purposes as the recent pork-barrel bi111
But now we see that the collapse
of the Soviet Union merely heightens the .danger. By the year 2000,
the United States will live in a
world in which this country's total
destruction may be less plausible,
but a _pamful nuclear strike by some
fanatJc wtll be far likelier than it is
today.
Congress ought to get its nose
out of the feed-bag and put Brilliant Pebbles up there, pronto.

sive unpopularity, however, he will
have little chance of surviving an
election, no matter the opponent.
One possible adversary might be
former Foreign Minister Eduard
Shevardnadze.
Perez de Cuellar has already
said he does not want to serve
another term; he would like the
release oj .the Western hostages in
Lebanon to be his final diplomatic
triumph. Having Gorbachev
replace him would give the Soviet
leader a face-saving way of removing himself from the scene. At the
same time, it would install at the
U.N. a secretary general with real
clout and important contacts.
It remains to be seen if the United States and the Soviet Union can
make this happen, but it is a real
possibility.
Bolstering Gorbachev's chances
is the fact that no real candidate to
succeed Perez de Cuellar has
emerged. Former British Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher put out
feelers about the job, but it quickly
became clear that she was unacceJltable to most larger Euro~n
nations because of her opposition

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy with
scattered showers and thunderstorms. Low near 70. Winds southwest 10 to 20 mph. Chalice of rain
50 percent. Tuesday, showers and
"· thunderstorms likely. High in the
· mid 80s. Chance of rain 60 percent.

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Thursday
and a chance of showers or thunderstorms Friday. Highs 75 to 85.
Lows in the 60s Wednesday and in
the 50s Thursday and Friday.

AEP truck in Sunday accident
The driver of a truck owned by American Electric Power was
cited following a two-vehicle wreck at the intersection of S.R. 124
and C.R. 5 in Salisbury Township Sunday afternoon.
According to report filed by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, the AEP truck, driven by Michael A. Kubachka,
37, of Shade, was northbound on C.R. 5 and failed to slllp at a stop
sign at the intersection of S.R. 124. The truck struck a car driven by
Rickie Causey, 34, of Reedsville, in the right side. Causey was eastbound on S.R. 124.
Kubachka was uninjured in the accident.
Causey was uninjured. However, two passengers, Rose Cause.y,
35, and Rickie L. Causey, 16, both of Reedsville, were transported
by the Miegs County Emergency Medical Service to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where they were treated and released for minor
injuries.
Another passenger, Christina M. Causey, 11, also of Reedville,
was uninjured.
Damage to AEP's 1988 Chevrolet S-10 Blazer, and Causey's
1988 Chevrolet Beretta was listed as heavy and disabling.
Kubachka was cited by the patrol for failure to stop at a stop
sign.

EMS units answer 5 weekend calls
,.,

Five calls were answered by units of Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services over the weelt:end
At I :55 p.m. on Saturday, Rudand squad and Columbia Town·
ship First Responder went to Mount Umon Road. Albert Swearingen was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 9:30 p.m., Racine
squad went to Fifth and Pearl Streets for Heather Proffitl She was
treated but not transported.
On Sunday at 3:53
p.m., Middleport and Pomeroy units went to Bradbury Road and
State Route 124 for a motor vehicle accident. Rose Causey and
Ricky Causey were taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 6:24
p.m., Racine unit went to Letan for Connie Morris, who was taken
to Veterans. At 7:13p.m., Tuppers Plains unit went to Lydia Road
for Ray Powell, Eric Powell and Shaun Roland They were treated
but not transported.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Congress that returns this week
won't much resemble the lethargic
group that left five weeks ago, as
lawmakers rush to respond to
sweeping changes abroad and the
start of the political season at
home.
But frenetic activity may not
produce legislative accomplishment
Hearings on President Bush's
nomination of Clarence Thomas to
the Supreme Court and of Robert
Gates to head of the CIA promise
to generate political smoke and
heat.
So, too, do the upcoming
debates over what role the United
States should play in aiding the
Soviet Union, or in pushing forward a Middle East peace conference or whether the country should
just pay more attention to Its problems at home.
A Capitol Hill investigation may
uncover whether Ame~ican officials played an unsavory role in
protecting the scandalous Bank of
Commerce and Credit International.
And another probe is ttying to
settle once and for all whether
President Reagan's 1980 campaign,
in its zeal to beat Jimmy Carter,
made a deal with Iran to delay the
release of the U.S. Embassy
hostages.
But behind those headline-stealers, Congress will struggle to complete this year what a few months
ago seemed to be a very modest
legislative agenda.
They've had five years to work
on it, but it appears unlikely that
lawmakers will pass a new national
highway and transpOrtation program before the old one expires on
Sept. 30.
1bc Senate has fmished its version, but House leaders last month

:. . Courtney Jones
·

In addition to those named in
...· TM Sunday TiiMs·StntiMI, Court:.. ney Jones was survived by her
maternal great-grandparents,
Woodrow Hall and Margaret Elias.
Jones died on Saturday, September 7,1991.

Clyde Barnhart
Clyde E. Barnhart, 57, of Green
.. Branch Road in Guysville, died
· eatly Sunday morning, September
. · 8, 1991 at Camden-Clark Memorial
.

The Daily Sentinel

·.

(liSPS llffll)
A Dtvlotoo ollllollt......, lac.

Pub! label) •very altornocn, ·Monday
throueh Friday, 111 Court St.. Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Vall@)! PubPomeroy, Ohio 15789, Ph. 992·%156. Se:

cond class

Ohio.

po~taa~

paid et

Pom~roy ,

Member: 'lb• A.laoctated Preso, Inland DaHy Preas A11oclat1on and the
·;.. Ohio Newopa~ A.osoctatton. Nottonol
~- · Adverttslna
rewntatlve. BranUm .
" Newspaper Sa et, 733 'Mtlrd Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
11 ,
•·' POSI'MASTER: 5end adlll'ell ChiD,..
• to The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St ..

I' . Pllrne&lt;oy, Ohio 15'71B.

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Hospital following a brief illness.
He was born in Frost, the son of
Roy Barnhart of Route 2 in
Guysville and Lennie Cripeen
Barnhart, of Route I in Guysville.
He was a 1952 Rome-Canaan High
School graduate and was retired
from 20 years service in the U.S.
Army. While in the military, he
served in the Korean and Vietnam
Conflicts and was awarded a Purple Heart and Bronze Star.
He was also a retired security
guard for the Athens Mental Health
Center, where he worked for 15
years.
He was a member of the
Coolville VFW and the Success
Church of Christ in R~~ille.
Besides his parentS~· he is survived by his wife, Susie Wiesmair;
two daughters, Debbie Dailey of
Louridge and Darlene Ashcraft,
Stewart; two sons, Roy of Tuppers
Plains and Mike of Guysville; two
sisters, Patricia Cougar, Guysville
and Phyllis Young, Stewart; and
seven grandchildren.
He ,w.as preceded in death by
two sons, Clyde, Jr., and Johnny.
Funeral services will be held on
Tuesday at I p.m. at White-Blower
Funeral Home in Coolville with
Joe Hoshltins officiating. Burial
will be in Carthage Cemetery,
where military graveside services
will be conducted. ·
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Monday.

Homecoming set
Eden United Brethren Church in
Reedsville will hold its homecoming on Sunday, September 22, with
a basket lunch at 12:30 p.m. Services wiD be held at 2 ~ m. with
Rev. Peter Martindale as speaker.
Special sin~g is also planned.

ceded in death by a sister, Lena
Guth.
Services will be Wednesday at
II a.m. at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church with Father Walter Heinz
officiating. Burial will be in the
Sacred Heart Catholic Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy on
Tuesday after 2 p.m. and until 8;30
p.m. A vigil will be held following
visitation on Tuesday at 8:45 p.m.

the bills to highlight Bush's antiabortion stance. During the recess,
the president vetoed the District of
Columbia's budget because it
would have permitted use of local
tax money to pay for abortions for
poor women.
Moreover, the Soviet upheaval
appears to be ending the budget
truce that Bush and the Democrats
reached last year. House Armed
Services Committee Chairman Les
Aspin, D-Wis., is proposing 10 cut
$1 billion from the agreed·upon
$292 billion Pentagon budget for
ne!'t year, and give that money to
the Soviets for humanitarian purposes.
Other Democrats say the Soviet
threat is now so reduced that billions more should be transferred
from defense to cover education,
health and other domestic priorities.
But at least one controversy
seems firmly behind them as the
lawmakers return - the Senate on
Tuesday, the House on Wednesday.
During the recess, Bush signed a
Democrats are using several of bill giving senators a pay raise.

Food shortages forecast
in Moscow, Leningrad
sumer goods to give in exchange.
You can't barter non-ferrous metals
for food," he said in an interview
last week.
Despite a near-record grain crop
of 235 million tons in the Soviet
Union last year, there were food
shortages. A U.S. mission in May
blamed earlier shortages largely on
spoilage and poor distribution.
"The bigger the crop the more
of it is lost," said Grigoriev .
"They lose up to half the vegetables. You can cut off my hand if
the overall loss is less than 30 per-

WASHINGTON (AP)- Residents of Moscow and Leningrad
are especially likely to face food
shortages this winter because President Mikhail Gorbachev 's central
government is too weak to force
farm areas to ship their products, a
Soviet specialist says.
"Rubles are worthless," said
Leonid M. Grigoriev of Moscow's
Institute of World Economy.
·'Trade now inside the Soviet
Union is by barter, and the areas
that get food are those with con-

cent.'"

The U.S. Agriculture Department's latest forecast for this year's
Soviet grain crop is for only about
190 million tons.
"There are about 25 million
people in the Moscow area," Grigoriev said. "It does produce some
food, but not enough. How arc you
11oing to feed all those people,
mcluding the tourists?"
Agriculture Secretary Edward
Madigan plans to go to the Soviet
Union thts month to assess how
ready the republics are to cooperate
with Gorbachev on food shipments.
· Grigoriev, 44, is a fellow at the
Was_hington-based Heritage Foundation, a conservative study group.
He brought with him unpublished
graphs to show how .food production has fallen in the Soviet Union.
Grain, he said, often was
trucked as far as 250 miles from
field to silos because the Soviet
policy was to get the grain into
government hands as soon as possible. That means the big state farms
and collectives have little storage
capacity.
.Other prospective S~'?fl&amp;ge areas
are more 1m)l9rtant poliucall y.

Revival planned
Eden United Brethren Church in
Reedsville will hold revival ser·
vices October 21st through the 27th
at 7 p.m. each evening, with Rev.
Bob Wiseman of Point Pleasant,
W.Va. as evangelist. There will be
special singing each evening.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONSBetty Carnahan, Long Bottom;
Brenda King,· Reedsville; and Ann
Davis, Middleport.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES.
Carolyn Atkins.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Oscar Price, Middleport.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None.

State
...
Continued from page 1

Lottery results

Henderson ...

were forced to withdraw their proposal in the face of near-certain
defeat. Despite strong backing
from Speaker Thomas S. Foley, DWash., neither Republicans nor
rank-and-file Democrats were
ready to back a bill with a S-cent-agallon increase in the federal gasoline tax.
A new highway bill is in the
works, but emergency legislation
may be needed to extend the current program after the deadline.
Another "must pass" bill for
the fall is a rewrite of the nation's
banlting laws. There's no light at
the end of that wnnel; even though
the effort comes at a time when
Congress is also being asked to
ante up $150 billion more in taxpayer money to cover more bank
and thrift bailouts.
And with only three weeks to go
until the start of the new fiscal
year, Congress still hasn't finished
most of the annual spending bills
that keep federal agencies in busi·
ness.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Sept. 6 • Carmen
Evans, Mrs. Anthony Fahrion and
Lybrook provided video services.
Acti!lg as Evaluators were Grey daughter, Justin. George, Naomi
.Kaylor of the New Haven, W.Va. King, Rebec.~ Mjtlone;&lt;Mlitthew
Volunteer Fire Department; John Maloyed, Mrs. Timothy MCClain
Byer of Columbus Division of Fire; and son, Deborah Moore, Mrs.
Benny Jones of the Washington Danny Porter and daughter, Merand Morgan County LEPC; Wayne cedes Sayre and Sheilla Whaley.
Discharges, Sept. 7 - Gary BumDavis of Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department and Bill Stricklen from garner, Raymond Cole, Felicia
Duffett, Gregory Shelton and DarAzko Chemicals.
Glenn McKee, Bill Haught, ling Thornton.
Births, Sept. 7 - Mr. and Mrs.
Madeline Welsh and Russ Chiodo
acted as controllers for the event. Patrick Perkin, a son, Hamden.
Discharges, Sept:' 8 ~ Zelia
Those-controllers were responsible ·
for relaying the details of the drill Coopick, Christopher Koontz,
Lynetta Levacy, Saundra Mullen,
to the participants.
and Myrtle Wireman.
Binhs, Sept. 8 - Mr. and Mrs.
Charlea Dailey, a daugbter,
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
jackpot in the Ohio Lottery's Super Simpkins, a daughter, Gallipolis.
Lotto game will grow to at least
$20 million for Wednesday night's
drawing after no one came up with
all six numbers picked Saturday
~tie.9u.t..h
..:.·
, !li~t wi th ,$.._1~ million. atstake. ..
... . Here.1~ ihe ~lections Saturday ·
'·
night in thC Ohio Lottery:
Katie C. Guth, 98, 138 Mulberry Sup~r Lotto
Ave., Pomeroy, died Sunday, Sept.
4-15·24-25-33-42
8, 1991, at Veterans Memonal
{four, fll'teen, twenty-four. twenHospital followina a IOtig.iU!Iess.
ty-five, thirty·th!'ee. forty-two)·
Boin Dec. ·3, 1892 in Hamilton,
The jacq,ot is $16 million.
she was employed at. the Guth Kicker ' •
Whitlock Bakery In Pomeroy and
7-3·3-7·3-7
(seven, three, three, seven, three,
also at Kroger in Pomeroy. She
waa .a m~ller llf the Sacred Jfeart seven) · · ··
Catholic .Oiiirch and was active in · Pkk 3 Numbers
church functions and activities.
2-6-9
Besides her parents she was pre(two, six. nine)

'

across the Florida penfnsula and 8.4 inches of rain Saturday and
Sunday, breaking a record of 6
south-central and eastern Texas.
Rain and thunderstorms associ- inches for a 24-hour period set in
ated with a stationary front extend- southeast Utah in 1970, said
ed ·from the central Gulf Coast to National Weather Service meteosouthern Illinois on Sunday. Rain rologist William Alder.
"This is the biggest thing docufell across nonhem Illinois, Wismented
in 130 years," Alder said.
consin and upper Michigan.
More than 2 inches of rain fell at "ll's been a super storm . That
Duluth, Minn., by midaftemoon ground is completely full of
Sunday, breaking the record for the water."
Hundreds of houses were flooddate of !.SO inches set in 1933.
Duluth got 3.57 inches on Satur· ed and a mudslide damaged six
day, a)so a record for the date.
homes. Showers were forecast
Showers and thunderstorms today.
associated with a cold front were
The high temperature for the
scattered acros_s Idaho, eastern nation Sunday was 106 degrees at
Nevada, eastern Colorado and Lake tlavasu City, Ariz., and Palm
western Nebraska.
Spring"s, Calif. Dodge City, Kan.,
Utah was battered by rain all reached 101 degrees, matching the
weekend. North Ogden received city's record for the date set in
1896.

stretched from Michigan southward
through Alabama early today,
while Utah braced for showers
after a weekend of record rain.
Thunderstorms were forecast
today in eastern Texas, northwest
Louisiana and southern Florida,
while rain fell in Idaho, Montana
and Wyoming.
Mostly dry weather was forecast
for the Atlantic Coast, the California Coast and the Desen Southwest. It was partly cloudy in the
Pacific Northwest.
On Sunday ni$ht, strong thunderstorms and hail stretched from
southeastern New Mexico to central Kansas and over eastern South
Dakota, North Dakota and western
Minnesota. Showers prevailed

-Meigs announcements--

·. ----Area deaths----

Robert]. Wagman
caller wanted to know was what
Komplektov had actually said in a
meeung with Deputy Secretary of
State Lawrence Eagleburger, and at
the. White House with Deputy
Nauonal Security Advisor Robert
Gates during the three-day coup.
~omple~v said that, as a professiOnal diplomat, he simply followed orders from Moscow to
deliver assurances to the United
Sta~s that the coup was enitrcly
and mternal matter, and that the
Soviet Union's foreign policy
would not change and all tiS foreign obligations would be·met.
However, State Department
sources describe Kompiektov's
mood as almost jubilant, and they
say that he went out of his way to
defend the coup plotters. At mle
point, he told Gates he was pleased
that normaicy would soon return 10
Soviet society.
The betting around Foggy BOttom is that Komplektov is not long
for Washington.

Sunny

Local briefs

.,

ll..ahlng Company!Mu1tlmedla , Inc.,

to the European Economic Community.
Any of the five founding members of the U.N. - the United
States, Soviet Union, Britain,
France and China - has veto
power over the new secretary general. The only problem might be
China. However, as Soviet president, Gorbachev has made recent
ovenures to China's leaders, and
they probably would not object
The real question is whether
G';J"bachev would do talce the job.
Gtven the state of the Soviet
Union, U.S. analysts believe he
very well might find the offer
attractive.
The State Department is buzzing
about a call that Secretary of State
Jim Baker reportedly received from
a high-ranking aide to Mikhail
Gorbachev. The topic of discussion: Soviet ambassador to the
United States Viktor Komplelaov.
Within moments after the Soviet
coup failed, Komplektov went
before a press conference to
express his delight that Gorbachev
had been returned to power.
However, what the Baker's

Ice

------Weather------

Could Gorbachev be new U.N. head?
WASHINGTON (NEA) - In
the wake of the failed Soviet coup
and the rise of Boris Yeltsin, the
latest rumor here is that the United
States will support a move to have
Mikhail Gorbachev succeed Javier
Perez de Cuellar as secretary general of the United Nations.
This is not just one of those idle,
end-of-summer runlors that seem to
surface in the nation's capital every
year around Labor Day. On the
contrary, the possibility of Gorbachev moving to New York is a
matter of active speculation being
discussed at the highest levels.
In many ways, the move would
make perfect sense. Even if the
Soviet Union survives as a single
entity, Gorbachev will have to call
national elections within the next
18 months. This election would not
only be for the Soviet parliament,
but also - for the ftrst time - for
his office.
It is unclear if Boris Yeitsin
would run for Gorbachev's job.
With the Soviet Union on the verge
of brea)(ing apart, Yeltsin may
already hold the most important job
around. Given Gorbachev's mas-

..
Snow

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Congress to return this week

W. VA.

01S91 Accu-Woolhor, Inc.

By William A. Rusher
republics involved . President
Yeltsin has suggested that Russia
would be willing to accept any mis-siles currenUy located elsewhere
and some of the other leaders {e.g:
Mr. Kravchulc of the Ub'aine)llave
atready indicated that that would be
fine with them.
But while that might to some
degree localize the problem, it
would hardly eliminate it Nor does
it suggest what the United States
ought to be doing about the 15 to
20 other nations, including some
very ugly customers in the Third
World, that are expected w have
the ability to construct nuclear
weapons by the end of the cenrury.
Here is where a system of
space-based satellites, of the relauvely inexpensive Brilliant Pebbles
design, would be of inestimable
value. Circling the earth, on the
alert for the launching of any missile anywhere and capable of
destroying it long before it can
reach its target, such weapons are

''' '

Showers T-storms Rsin FlurriH

Where is SDI when we need it most?

~ . Letters

.

~

MINI-EDITORIAL - The riip
in the air you feel has less to po
with the arrival of September and
the change of seasons as it does the
beginning of the professional football season. Football has recenily
become a classic example of sports
imitating life. It now requires pinstripe lawyers, not zebra-shirted
officials, to figure out the rules ,of
this very simple game in which
passing, catching and kicking are
key. The most egregious example
is the instant replay rule. Games
now have long gaps as officials'
. calls can be appealed and reviewed
by NFL officials with instant
replay monitors. Just anotl\er
example of our litigious society run
amuck.

briefcase containing certain computer codes that he must activate to
transmit the order to fue a missile.
(It was this briefcase that was taken
from him during the coup, and
returned afterward.)
American officials, including
President Bush and NSC Director
Scowcroft, have been at great pains
to assure the American people that
at no time, either during the threeday coup or otherwise, have Arnerican surveillance satellites or our
other intelligence facilities detected
the slightest indication that the
Soviet missile force was being
readied for action of any son.
So there are no rational grounds
for the hysteria that any mention of
nuclear missiles automatically triggers in some of our more loosely
wrapped citizens.
At the same time, 30,000 is an
awful lot of missiles, and recent
events have forcibly reminded us
just how fast a nation's political
leadership (and therefore The
Briefcase) can change hands.
Similar thoughts seem to have
occurred to those currently in control in Russia and the other

'

•I Colurrbus I as• I
.

- ---

Showers, thunderstorms in forecast

Tuesday; Sept. tO.

NRC too soft. on recycling radioactive waste

·-··----·-· · --

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel

,

.

Continued from page 1
one rescue truck. Also assisting
were the Point Pleasant EMS and
Mason County Sheriff's Department
The Mason Volunteer Fire
Department was called to a house
on Martin Stteet, Sunday, approximately 6:15 p.m., where a house
owned by Bill Zuspan was ablau.
The house was occupied by
Yvonne Gill and her daughter,
Jodi.
According to a fue depanment
spokesman, the blaze was brought
under control within a shon time
after arrival. The structure received
extensive damage, the spokesman
said, and the contents were a total
loss. No damage estimate was set.
Following a preliminary investi·
galion, the spokesman said the file
is believed to have started from
grease on the stove. The grease led
to the quick and extensive fire
spread, the spokesman slated, and
were contributing factors in the
quick fatigue of the ftrefighrers.
One fuemen, Kevin Sparks, was
transported to Pleasant valley Hospital, where he was admitted. A
few fuefighters were treated at the
scene for heat exhaustion by the
Mason EMS, according to the
spokesman.
The fire official added that
although the building was insUred,
the contents were believed not to
have been insured.
Gill, an employee of the Town
of Mason, and her daughter, a student at Mason Elementary, are
staying with her mother in Mason.
Anyone wanting to help go doorto-door this evening in Mason to
collect money for lite Gills should
go to the city building at 6 p.m.
Assisting Mason at the scene ··
were the New Haven Volunteer
Fire Dcparttnent, the Mason Police
Department and New Haven Police
Department.

Gas prices inch up
LOS ANGELES (AP)- The
price of a gallon of gasoline at the
pump rose about one-third of a cent
m the past two weeks, according to
a national survey.
The Lundberg Survey of 13,000
stations Sunday attributed the slight
increase to weakening motorist
demand and a dip in wholesale
prices.
The average price for all grades
of gas at full- and self-service stations Friday was up 0.29 of a cent
to a little more than $1.25 a gallon,
the survey said.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

__.......

Somuhing (jooa's fll{ways Coofjng fll t

I MASON FAMILY

RESTAURANT
' .. Located on At. 33 bellde t.!Uon Exxon and Malon Motel, Muon,-WV
Sunday ti1N Thursday

&amp;·30 am to pm · Friday &amp; S.udoy e·30 1m 11

H OMESTYLE LUNCJI SPECIAI A'i
Monday Friday, 1 I a .m . to :J p .m.

MONDAY • Meat Loaf, Choice of Potato, Soup and
Salad Bar
TUESDAY· Stuffed Peppers, Choice of Potato,
Soup and Salad
JN_EDNESDAY • Phil!y . ~ndwich with Onion Rings,
· ·'
. SJ!MJHn9 ~lad Bar ·
•..
· THURSDAY --.. Chlcken ·SaiKfwlch .w1th French Fries,
_ ·-· · Soup and Salad Bar
·
·FRIDAY • Fish Dinner, Soup and Salad Bar
TlJUDAT

a THURIDAT, CIIILDUII UKDD 1:11 &amp;AT I'D&amp;

FROM CIULDUII'IIBN11. (EXCLUI)ES DRINK &amp; DESSEill1
UIIIT l CIULD PBR ADULT

1

.

•

�Monday, september 9, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday, september 9, 1991
Page-4

Expos complete sweep of Reds; L.A. leads Atlanta in NL West
MONTREAL (AP) - Rookie
third baseman Bret Barberie saw it
coming.
Montreal reliever Barry Jones
got Chris Sabo to hit into a game·

ending triple play Sunday as the
Expos beat the Cincinnati Reds 4-2
to complete a three-game sweep.
"I hit into one to end a game in
the minors once, but I never turned

CAPTURES FIRST, SECOND- The East·
ern No. 1 Pony League team took first place in
the Big Bend Youth League's West Division and
finished second to Syracuse Hubbard's Green·
bouse No. 1 in the Big Bend Youth League
Games. Kneeling in front are (L·R) bat boy
Mark Jones, Brian Bowen, Je" White, Jason

one," Barberie said. "It's funny
because just before Sabo hit it I
was thinlcing it would be nice 'to
end the game that way, but I never
it expected it to happen."

Sheets, Tyson Rose and Joey Coates. Behind
them are coach Paul Brannon, David Koenig,
Matt Bowen, Jared Ridenour, Matt Martin, Wes
Arbaugh, Randy Kaylor and coaches Leonard
Koenig and Wes Arbaugh. Not pictured are
players Pat Newland and Robert Reed.

Scor·eboar·d
In the majors ...

Centrtl DlviiJon
""""""
....... 2 0 0 1.000
CLEVELAND
I 1 0 .500
Pittaburxh ......... I I 0 .SOO
CINCINNATI
.0 2 0 .000

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eulem Dlvlllon
W L PeL
..... 81 55 .S96
......... 71 64 .526

Team
PitubwJh
St. loW~

CiUa8o
New Yodt
Philld~p!U·

Moot...J

......... 68
....... 65
.. . .. 65
........ 5!

6!

9.5

13

71 .478

16

71 .478
77 .430

16
225
GB

.l
B

10.5
13.5
19.5

Saturday's results
Allan\a 6, New Yod: I
Chicago 2, San Francisco 1
Montreal 7, Cincinnati S
Hou.~tM

6, Pbiladdphia 0

Sunday's scores

W
....... 83
Chico&amp;•
......... 75
Oallind
......... 74
Tuu
........... 71
K'""' CiLy ....... 70
Colilomio ...•.... 6S
S..nle
........... 68

'

I

,I

II
ll

.... l

.568
.l29
..526
.478
.444
.404
.32A

GB

l.l
6
12.5
17
22.5
33 5

Pel.
.606
.l43
.536
-~26

.lll
.lOO
69 .496

CD

! .5
9.5
II
il l
14.5
15

Bay 20

Dcuoil23. Orccn 8oyl4
Miomi 17 ,lndi.onopolil6
l.oo Anseleo 1Wnol9, New Yodl Gianta 13
Minneacu 20, Atlanta 19
NewOdeuii7,KaruuCity 10
Pbocni&amp; 26, Philoddphio 10
Bolfolo l2, Pillobw)h 34
San Fra.nc:Uco 34, San Dieso 14
Lot Anaeles Raiders 16, Dc:r!vcr 13
Seattle 20, New Yolk Jeu 13
lloua!Ofl 3t, Cincinnati 7
Wuhinaton at Dallas, 9 p.m.

Sunday, SepL 15
Miami 11 Detroit, I p.m.
Now EnJ]and 1t Piwbutgh. 1 p.m.
New Yodt Gianll at ~ic:ago, 1 p.m.
Philadelphia 11 Dallaa, I
Pboeniltl Wuhingto'l, p.m.
Tampa Bay •~ Orern Bay, I p.m.
San Franciloo It Minnelou, I p.m.
Clndnnall at Cleveland, 1 p.m.
Sc.aule u Dmver, 4 p.m.
Atla.nt. at San Dicto, 4 p.m.
Buffalo at New Yodt Jcu, 4 p.m.
lndianapolia at 1M AnaeJa Raidcta,

f.m.

p.m.

Monday, Sept. 16
Kansas City It Houaton, 9 p.m.

In the MAC ...
Conrerence
Overall
Team
WLTPct.WLT
BGSU
...... 1 0 01.000 1 1 0
Miami ... ........... 1 0 0 1.000 I I 0
W. Mich.......... I 0 01.000 2 0 0
C. Mich. .. ........ 0 0 1 .SOO 1 0 l
01110 UNIV. ..0 0 1 .SOO 0 0 1
Toledo
... 0 0 0 .000 0 1 0
Ball St. ........... 0 1 0 .000 1 1 0
E. Mich. ........ ...0 I 0 .000 0 2 0
Kall Sc ........... 0 I 0 .000 0 1 0

Saturday's results

Toronto 4. Cle'fdand 1
Oallind 3, Deoroi1 1
Kanau Ci1y 7, Baltimore 4
Minnc:.ou 3, New Yolk l, I 0 inninp
Chi.caao 11 , Teua6
California 1, MilwaukeeO

Sunday's scores

Ball St. l3, N1vy 10
Cmt. Mic:hi_1an·27, SW LoWiaru. 24

PurdLtC 49, E. Miohiaon 3
Kanna 30, Toledo i
Kentucky 23, Miami, Ohio 20
W. Michi.an 3!5, Akron 12
w. vu-pua 24, Bowlin&amp; 0rccn 11

This Saturday's games

Bt~~ton

17, Seanle 6
K.anua City 3, Baltimore 2

E. Michia•n It Miami, Ottio
Ball St. 1t Teu~ Chritliln

Toronlo 11, ClevtiJad 5
Oakland 7, Detroit 4
MiMCIIOU 6. New YorkS
Texu7 , 0tittao6

Can. Midli&amp;an 11 MichiJan SL
Kmt St. at N. Carolina St.
Tcnncuee Tec:h at Ohio U.
W. Mic:hi8'" "Florido Sc

California I, Milwaukoc 0

TooJcbt's comes
IOI&amp;cm (Hf.lketh 11-3) II Cleftland

(Blolr :1-1), 7•t5 p..,.
New Ycdt (Sand. . aa 14-8) at Balli"""" (Milodti 1-1). 7:35p.m.
- ( ! ! d o N ().t)" """"Coy
(BodcticlL•11 -10),1:35 pm.
Chit.aJO (Femanda 7-12) at Oakland
(Dodiq :1'2). 10:05 pm.
Teua (Boyd 1-4) at Ctlifomia
(Lanpon 16-7), 10:35 pm.

Tuesday's games
New York (Plunk 2-3) at Btltimore
(llhocb 0.2&gt; 7:35pm.

Boaton (Clemen• 14· 8) at Detroit
11·9), 7:35p.m.
Sealtle {Holman 12-13) •~ Toronto
(St&lt;Mll&lt;myool3-6), 7:35p.m.
Ctmtlld (Na11 l·ll) al Mllwau·
k11 (W..,..oll.f), 1•15 p.m.
(I'UW11

Minn•«~ (.AndCPOn 4-8) ll KanA.

Saturday's Ohio
college football scores
Midwest lntercoUeglllte Conr.
Alhland 30, Valpvlilo 7

Non·conrerence games
Albion 35, 1lenio&lt;ln 14
Bro&lt;&amp;port SL 23, TilCUL 22
Cernril St., 87, O!.e)'lley SL 7
O.yooo 42, II"""' 0
Ddian" 30, Manc:hcur 7
F~t~dllly li, Hope 14
Kantu 30, Toledo 1
Kcn1Ucky 23, Miami, Ohio lO
Kenyon 40, Wilminatoo 12
Mount SL Josepb 32, RG~&amp;Hulman 27
Ohio Sc 38, Azizono 14
,.,. s.. 81, Cincinnau o
W. u;,..;.,. 35, Akron 12
w.
lA, Bowlina 0rccn 11
Y-wn SL 24, Edinboro 0

v;;;:!.

Ci1y (Oubioao H&gt;. 1:35 p.m.
Cbic:•ao (Housh 1-1) u Oakland
(1\loolo tJ.I&gt; 10:05 p.m.
Teua (J.e Guzman 1().5) at Califoc,.;, (K. Abbou ().0), 11),35 p.m.

Saturday's prep
football action

In the NFL ...

Akron Bllchle155, Cle. Eul Tech 0
Akron Manc:1101 ...3. Liobon 0

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
t:u~m~Dl•lllon

TW
Blllfdo
......... 2
Miami
...... .1
• New &amp;l&amp;lond
... 1
- N.r .1..
.. ...... 1
. lndiwp&gt;lil ......0

L
0
1
1

T
0
0
0

Pd. PF P~

t.OOO
.500
.500
t o .500
2 0 .000

17
••
16
29
13

65

41

T1
33
33

0.. SL Jarwj1» .3. Sanduakr 7
0.. llni•enilt 31, Gilmau 2

Columbil2l, Doylcftown 17
Cortltnd Lakeview 11, Hlwken 14
Don'lillo 2A, Bei!We SLlohn 0
Delph• Jctrcnm 33, Lima C.U1. 0
Erie (Po.) Colhodnl21, Cin. Moellul9
Erio (Po.) Toch 14, y...,poown S. 8
Fl. F.,. 21 , PodaL Ci1y (W.Vo.) Donohoe
7
Fottoria SL Wmdelln 41, Giblonbur&amp; 0
Oanway 46, Tu.K&amp;nwu Cath. lO
Kernan Ridee 44, B. Clinton 21
l...&amp;lr:e Catlt. 55 , Cle. NDtre Dame-Cathedral Lotin 14
Mcllonold 44. Soulhem Loco! 0
Mirutet 69, Daytm Jclfcrsm 1:1
Richmond 1111. 30, Lowellville 0
Roc:l: lfil120, PorumOI&gt;lh NOlno Dune 0
Sc 1lauy 43, Yellow Sprinp 0
Sebtins63, SOUlhinJIOO 6
Steubenville C1lh. 14, COihocton 7
SLmbwJ 21 , Concaoo Vall. 6
Tiffm Ctlven 2.5, Dream Slrit.ch 0
Tol. Scott 18, Harper Woods (Mich.)
NoucDamc 13
WeUtcm (W.Va.) Madonna 28, Welllton 1
C11h. 1

0 0 1.000 44 34

... 1 I 0 .SOO 33 37
.... 1 I 0 ..500 48 30
......... 0 2 0 .000 22 34

LM AnaeJea Rama at New Orleana, I

Saturday's results

I

26
l9
29
43
37

4p.m .

Bc.IOn II, Selule 10

:l

ll
23
26
17
33

Tonight's game

LEAGUE

L
l4
63
64
64
66
68

26 14

45 0
29 33
30 29

Clevtllld ZO, Nnr Engltnd 0

Eultm Dh·lllon
W L Pel.

~

PF PA
50 2A

Sunday's scores

We~ttrn Dl~lllon

I

34 60

a

Zanaaville Biahop Ra.ocnru 12, Fisher

Otic:~ao 21, T•mpa

Tuesday's games

Team

Central Dh1alon
........ 2 0 0 1.000
Dctrool
...... .... ! I 0 .SOO
MinnCIO!:a
...... 1 I 0 .500
Grcc:n Bay
...... 0 2 0 .000
Tams- 81y
.... 0 2 0 .000

A~lniO

Monuul (Oatdner 8-9) at New York
(S&lt;hamk 2-3), 1:40 p.m.
Loa Anaeltl (A. Martinez 16-9) at
ClndnnaU (Rijo ll-4). 7:JS p.m.
San FrancUco (Bwkeu 9-9) at Atlanta
(Avery 1~1), 7:40p.m.
Piuaburah (Tomlin 1-4) n Chicago
(Sou:liffe 4-4), 8:05 p.m.
San Ditao (R.umuacn S-1 1) at Houa·
too (Deohaioo 5-12), 8:35p.m.
Phil~delphia (&lt;mene 9· 7) ll St. L.ouia
(Cormier 2-2), 8:35p.m.

I

Eutern [MviJion
W L T PeL
Phomio
.. . ... 2 0 0 1.000
Dallu
.......... 1 0 0 1.000
WuhinB'O"
..... 1 0 0 1.000
N.Y. Oion10 ...... 1 I 0 .500
Philldelphio ...... 1 I 0 .500
Team

New Orlean•

Piu.1b.arab (Smile, 17-1) at Chicaao
(locluon 1-5). 2:20p.m.
La Antelt:t (Btlche:r 9-1) al CJndnnall (1\IJm 6-ll), 7:35 p.ro.
San Francilco (Black 10-14) at A\lant1
(Smoltz 11 · 13), 7:40pm.
Montreal (Btmca 3-6) It New York
(Cone 12-11~ 7:40p.m.
Stn Dieao (Ba1C1 11 · 10) ·~ Ho..ulOn
(Pozwa~ 111- 7), US p.m
Philadclphi.a (Aahb, 0-2) at St. Lou.ia
(Ouvua1-5), 8:35p.m.

;I

44 40

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

LA. Rama
San Franciaoo

Today's games

......... 79 60
.......... 72 64
Daroit
.. .. ....... 72 6.5
Milw1ukce
...... 65 71
New Yodt
....... 60 15
Baltimoro
........ S5 81
CLEVELAND
44 92

51 30
2A 20
33 60

Western Dlvllloo

Monlrul4, Cincinnati 1
Lot Anaele. S, Pittaburgh 1
Athnta "1, New YorkS
San Francisco 4, Oticaao 3
Philodclpruo 5. HOUJtOO 0

Team
Toronto
Boo""'

Wutern Dlvblon
Denv,.
........ I 1 0 .500
Kanua City
..... ! I 0 .500
LA . Raide:Js
... 1 I 0 .500
Seattle
.......... ! I 0 .!iOO
San Dieao
...... 0 2 0 .000

ChiCIJO

Lot Angela !i, Pitubwgh 1
San Dieao I. St Looia 0, I0 inninga

~MERICAN

2A
26
72
75

GB

500

Watern Dh·lllon
Twn
W L PeL
Loo Anlel" ...... 77 60 .56Z
AL1on10
. 76 60 .559
SolNnCDiegoATI....... 69 68 304
INN
.. 66 70 .485
C
San FnnciJco ...... 63 73 .463
HOUILon
... 51 19 .419

77
34
60
21

a...tont~lill . 9,myr;,

Alhubula SL Jolon 21, AJhllbllll 10
Avon ll, Lwhcnn W. 3
llcochwooc12J,Pamol2
BrecUvillo 26, NormaldylO, OT
Bucbyo Looa134, Bcllain&gt; 0
c.,.., Moltinloy 21, c - cn..o.t 0
c..... s. 19, Caalal C.llo. 16
C1o. Conlnl Codtollc 30. Slukorllu. 6
0.. OlaMllo t2. E. a...tond Show 6

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (1\P) - Sciolo
Downa ruulu for Stlurday . Wea~her
clear, mck fUl
Pint Rac:o-S2.,.SOO Condition Pac:o.
A'a Style (Taubert) IS.40, 6.80, S.20;
lzo Skipp« (Prickett) 6.00, 4.60; Di=tion Firider ($We. Jr.) 1.40. Timo-1 :S7 35.

Abo Raced -Fluent Lobell, Society
Beau, Del Bone, Weapon, Crown Time
Roc.ll:y, Falcm.'al.&amp;ir, Billy Velvet.
Tril""' (1-&lt;1-2) $1,443.40.
Porfoc:IO (1-4) St7.10.
Soc:ond Roco-$4,000 Oaimina Pocc.
Bold Tonk (llv Mil101) 15.00, 6.60,
4.60; Stool (Siz01) 5.80, 3.80; Swill Lcpd (HuLOn) 6.80. T"""' I :56 2-5.
Alto Rlc:od·lbd COMoc:ti.on, J J Romu., Shannon Freedom , Trim Rebel,
Choalholi&lt;,lnLI'jrily'olW.
Porfoc:IO (8-2) $71.60.
Thin! Ro~3,500 a.;,ru,1 rBum To Run (Cn:u) 5.20, 3.20, 3.40;
Good Trim (Dv MillO&lt;) 5.00, 4.80; Cob
Cnood (llowk) 7.20. Timo-1 :512,5.
Aho Raeed-Bow Wow, Mosher
Hanover, Night Court, TN Blue Scooter,
Eomo Kuh. ScnlCh-All Mock.
TriiCCIO (6-9-2) $518 .60.
PorfCCia (6-9) $27.80.
Fourth Rtc:e-$10,000 lnvitttion•l
Handicap Pace.
Nukes Himaelf (McKnijht) 3.40,
2.60, 2.20; ThW\dcr's Imaae (Dv Miller)
2.10. 2.20; My Toy (Pner Jr.) 2.40.
Timc-1 :S4 4-.S.
Aho Rac:ed -Ari1tocrat Hanover,
Bavaro, Tbau Adam.
Pori- (4-5) $8.00.
ruth Rae»-$4,000 Condition P.ce.
Quick Brown Fo• (Crou) 11.00,
4.40, 4.00; E1plolive Sound (Noble W)
3.40. 2.10; Leliish AlmohWil (Polhun"')
5.80; Tune-1 :56l-5.
Allo Rtcod-J T Dr«, R Rusty Spe·
eitl, B1ron'• Luc:ky Star, Ri•in&amp; EaaJ.e,
ShiMon Swift. Manh1uan Beach, )Ullin
Slrinp.
fn h•lf Twin Trifecta (2·1·7)
1139.00.
Pori- (2-1) $24.60.
SUch Rac:o-$3,000 Condition Pice.
S1cody Roll (ilowk) 7.80, 5.00, 3.60;

Caroliln• Sun (Lona Jr.) 8.00, 4.20; C U
At.u (At.u) 3.00. Timo-1:56 )..5 .

Allo Raced-Rickey PlfiOM, Deadly
Breeze. Ironkid, Ric:h Rte•e. Button
Gwinnat. Ch.arlia Bamie.
Trilccu (5o4-2)$12A.60.
PorfOCIO (l-4) $44.80.
Sevanh Ro~6,000 Open Pooe.
Millo Tomu (Bolyud) 22.60, 5.!0,
4.40; Fil'lt City (MoiJeyev) 2.80, 2.40;
Z.phod Boeble 810l (Sizctr) 3.20. Timo1:561-5.
Allo Raccd·Alphcua, Rtque Bogan,
Jack Your Jaw, Sam'a BrodJc:r Cy, Super·
«&gt;ne~ ...... Lo&lt; or Li&amp;lunins.
Tril""" (6-1 -9) f255.40.
No winncn Twin Trifoc:ta. CaayO\'a!1,62280.
Eiahth Raco-$74,300 Jua Prmew For
3YO C"oll Po...,.
l01tin Kin (Coven 1•.) 30.60, 8.60,
3.80; An:one Honovcr (McKnialn) 3.80.
2.40; Surt The Fire (Moiaeyev) 2.20.
Timo-l:.Sl.
Alto Raced-Radium Hanover, Ben
Ben, &amp;chaiver fliah1. Mid Ohio, R.tfloa
H&amp;nOver.

Trilecto (5-7-3) $11240.
Pc:dec10 (5-7) StO.OO.
Ninth Ra~$74.300 Jua Preview For
3YOm. CoiL p,.,....
Pntciouo BllMy (1\loileyev) 220 (win
beuin8 only); Sllllmin lea• (Dv Mil101);
ThiJ Cams For You (Brookl). Tunc-1:52
3-5.
Abo Ro&lt;Od-Dcal Dim:t, Rovcn Col~
A01t Alaun, ThunclcrtMll, foctvaw.
Tril"" (3-4-7) !85.20.
Paf- (3-4) $4.80.
Tenth Raoo-$72,300 Jua Preview For
3Y0CoiLPtoeon.
Nobloo ROIUm (Noble ~ 5.80, 3.20,
260; Ono Bad Boy (Borin 3.00, 2.20;
lnteJ1mtor (Ackerman) 2 . Tune-I :S3
4-5.
A'11o Raccd- Makjna Pltnt, Ni,ht
Time W1trior, Ariltoctl Lobell, Quu:.k

s....

Pc:dCCia (6-2) $14.80.
Elevanh Ro~2.800 Cloiminl Ptooe.
Charlene'• Chtrlle (BUJ.ton) 84.80,
23.80, 9.60; Brook!Y!l SpUII (Sizctr) 31 .40,
11.80; Cuy'o y.,....... (Moioeyev) 6.20.
Time l:S&amp;~S.
Abo Roc..t·MK·A·Doo Kid, Hobby'• l!ooon. Doocon Ifill, M R Rockey,
Roklarub - · lB l!oood, Wily Would
IU..
Soped""" (5-4-2-t 0&gt;.S64Jl4.10.

Dennis Martinez ( 13-9) gave up
five hits , struck out three and
wallced none before Mel Rojas, Jeff
Fassero and Barry Jones fmished.
And what a finish it was.
Hal Morris led off the ninth with
a single and Fassero then walked
pinch-hitter Eric Davis. Jones
relieved and Sabo hit a grounder to
Barberie.
Barberie stepped on third to
force Morris and threw to Delino
DeShields at second to force Davis.
DeShields then made a quick pivot
to get Sabo at first as Jones picked
up his II th save.
"It was a perfect ball for it,"
DeShields said. "It was hit hard
and right at him, so it was like tum·
ing an around-the-horn double
play, excer,t he happened to step on
third first '
For Jones, it was a relief pitch·
er's dream come true.
"It happened so fast that it's
hard to believe," Jones said. "I
guess it only happens once in a
career, and today was the day."
The victory was the Expos·
eighth in nine games, and sent the
Reds to their seventh loss in nine
tries.
"It's unbelieveable," Reds
manager Lou Piniella said. "I've
never seen a game end lilce that.' '
Jack Armstrong, making his
first start since returning Friday
from a month in the minors. gave
up nine hits and four runs in six
innings. Armstong (6·11) has not
won since July 2 when he beat

Atlanta, losing five consecutive
starts since then.
The Expos scored three runs on
four hits in the first inning. Barbene started things with a one-out
single and scored when John Van·
derwal followed with a triple. Larry
Wallrer's single scored Vanderwal.
Walker went to second when
Anostrong made a throwing error
on a pickoff attempt, and scored on
Marquis Grissom's single.
.
Jeff Reed hit a two-run homer m
the second, but the Expos scored in
the bottom of the inning on
DeShield's sacrifice fly.
Elsewhere in the NL it was Los
Angeles 5, Pittsburgh I; Atlanta 7,
New York 5; San Francisco 4,
Chicago 3; and Philadelphia 5,
Houston 0.
Dodgers, Braves win
It looks like the Dodgers and
Braves arc headed for a showdown
in Atlanta next weekend.
This weekend could have been
critical, but Los Angeles took three
of four at Pinsburgh and the Braves
swept a three-game series at New
York. So, the Dodgers still have a
one-half game lead in theW est.
"This definitely was a big lift to
us, especially the way we've
played on the road in the second
half," winning pitcher Milce Morgan said Sunday after beating the
Pirates 5-1.
The Braves battled back from a
4-0 first-inning deficit with Tom
Glavine on the mound to beat the
Mets 7·5. Dave Justice and rookie

Brian Harper hit home runs.
Morgan won for the ftrst time in
a month and Kal Daniels had a
three-run pinch double for Ihe
Dodgers at Three Rivers Stadium.
The Pirates were held to two
runs in the ftnal two ~ames of the
series, with Morgan (11 -9) giving
up eight hits, striking out eight and
walking one in 6 1/3 innings.
The Dodgers, now 3· 1 on a key
1 I -game, I 0-day road trip that
winds up in Atlanta, took a I ·0 lead
in the flfst on Darryl Strawberry's
single off Bob Wallc.
Before a soldout three-game
series in Atlanta, the Dodgers play
two games at Cincinnati and two
more at Houston. The Braves
return home Monday for two
games against San Francisco then
Iwo with San Diego.
Giants 4, Cubs 3
Pinch-hitler Kevin Bass tripled
off Greg Maddux (10-11) with the
bases loaded in the seventh inning
and scored on Mike Felder's sui·
cide squeeze as San Francisco beat
Chicago at Wrigley Field to snap a
six-game losing streak.
Winner Trevor Wilson (10-9)
gave up seven hits in six innings.
Pbillies 5, Astros 0
Terry Mulholland pitched a
three·hllter as P.hiladelphia beat
Houston at the Astrodome. Mulholland (14-11) pitched his sixth complete game and fiCSt shutout of the
season. Rookie Ryan Bowen fell to
4-3.

Pittsburgh mayor supports Pirates'
brass in endeavor for new stadium
By ALAN ROBINSON
AP Sports Writer
PI'ITSBURGH (AP) - Board
chairman Douglas Danforth said
Friday the divisioo-leadin$ Pirates
would have drawn constderably
more than 2 million fans Ibis season if they already were playing in
the proposed Oernenle F'teld.
Piusburgh mayor Sophie
Masloff surprised civic leaders and, even, some Pirates' officials
- by proposing Thursday that a
new 44,()()().seat, grass-fteld base·
ball stadium be built by 2000. The
Steelers would continue to play at
Three Rivers Stadium.
Danforth said Three Rivers is
adequate, but has never been filled
to its capacity of 58,279 for a base·
ball game. One reason is because
many of the outfield seats are at a
poor angle to and are far away
from the playing field, a problem
that's 001 so acute in football.
"As everybody knows, we're
going to draw more than 2 millioo
... but we should be drawing
more," Danforth said. "There are
teams below us in the listings
(standings) that will draw more

Meigs golfers
win tri-matches
The Meigs Marauder golf team
increased their record to 22-0 last
week by winning two tri -matches.
In the first maiCh on Wednesday at
the Meigs Golf Course, Meigs
defeated Gallipolis and Southern .
while in the second match Meigs
defeated Point Pleasant and
Waharna at Riverside in Mason.
In the win over Gallipolis and
Southern. Meigs placed all six
golfers in the 30s in a total team
effon to card a team score of 147.
Gallipolis finished with a !50 and
Southern had a 180.
Jay Harris and Adam Brealdron
of Gallipolis were co-medalists
with a one over par 35. Tim Peter·
son had an outstanding round for
Meigs with a 36, Phil Hovatter and
Jay Cremeans both carded a 38 and
John Bentley and Adam
Krawsczyn each had a 39.
In the match at Riverside, the
Marauders had a team score of 159,
followed by Point Pleasant's 175
and Wahama's 210.
Phil Hovatter took the medalist
honors for the third time in four
matches with a 37, Hovatter is
scoring at a average of 37.5. Other
Meigs scores include John Bentley
a 39, Jay Cremeans a 41, Jay Harris
a 42 and Adam Krawsczyn a 43.

than we will .... Three Rivers 'is
adeQuate, but not ideal.' '

The Pirates set their single-sea·
son allendance record of 2,049,908
in 1990 and are cWTelltly ahead of
that pace.
Danforth said that if Chicago
and Baltimore can raise the money
for new baseball stadiums, •'then
we should." But funding figures to
be the chief, and certainly not the
only, stumbling block.
Masloff said Clemente Field
could be completed as early as
1996, but opposition to the stadium
was voiced by several civic and
stale leaders within hours after its
proposal.
Raising the funds will be a
major problem in an economic eli·
mate that likely will see the city
laying off hundreds of municipal
employees this fall. And, just last
month, the state raised taxes by
more than $3 billion.
Masloff already has said the city
can't raise the funds, as it did to
build Three Rivers Stadium in
1970. Gov. Robert Casey isn't
about to start campaigning for a
new stadium tax mere weeks after
ramming through personal and
business tax increases so hu$e they
have attracted national atlentron.

Uc.k7..1M6U.

By HOWARD ULMAN
AP Sports Writer
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)- The
Cleveland Browns were sinking
fast since going to the AFC cham.
pionship game two seasons ago.
They had the NFL' s second
worst record last year. They lost
their opener this year. On Sunday
they played the team with last sea·
son's worst record. A loss to the
Patriots would be devastating.
"Going into next week's big
game against Cincinnati, we defi·
nitely didn't want to come baclc
being 0-2," quarterback Bernie
Kosar said.
He needn't have worried.
After a slow start, the Browns
broke a scoreless tie 36 seconds
before halftime on Kosar's 7-yard
touchdown pass to Leroy Hoard
and bent the punchless Patriots 20.

0.

New England looked a lot more
like the team that went l-15 last
year than the 16-7 winner of last
Sunday's season opener at lndi·
anapolis.
"I don't think the loss is a step
backwards," Patriots head coach
Dick MacPherson said, "but it was
definitely something that stopped
our momentum."
Whenever the Patriots did something good, they quickly did something bad. They had horrible field
position, starting consecutive second-quarter series at their own oneyard line. They had four turnovers.
Their deepest penetration was the
Cleveland 26-yard line and they
fumbled the ball away on the next
play.
Against a secondary missing six
injured players, the Patriots'
Tommy Hodson threw for only 95
yards. Their 143 total yards were
fewer than they had in any game
last season. And they went 29 con·

By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Midway
through his U.S. Open championship match against Stefan
Edberg, Jim Courier was down a
set and on his way to losing another when he hit one of those shots
tennis players dream about.
"I really clocked a return right
at his feet and he hit this volley:'
Courier said. "He hit it right at the
'T.' The ball just bounced in the
comer and spun away from me. It
was one of those shots that you see
on the tapes that Laver made 20
years ago. Not too many players
are going to make that shot against

Danforth said he knew of
Masiofrs plans several days ago,
but other Pirates officials were sur·
prised by the proposal. Some even
called media outlets to learn details
after word of the pllin leaked just
prior to a ~loff speech.

CUP-KISSING TIME came for Sweden's Stdao Edberg, who
celebrates his 6-2, 6·4, 6·0 win in the U.S. Open finals over Ameri·
can Jim Courier Sunday. Tbe victory was Edberg's rirst in this
tournament. (AP)

Eastern spikers record wins

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Jackson for a 65-yard touchdown
pass play with eight minutes left in
the game. Jackson beat the defend·
ers up the middle and ran 45 yards
after the catch.
The Patriots "had an excellent
(defensive) front seven," Kosar
said. "We wanted to be patient,
mix it up and mix them up . .. .
When we had the opponunities to
malce the big plays. we took our
shots at them."
New England, down 7-0, had a
very big play, a 61·yard Hodsonto·Fryar connection that moved the
ball to the Cleveland II early in the
third quarter. It was nullified by a
holding penalty against guard
Elbert Crawford.
"We can' t play football like we
did," MacPherson said. "Football
is a game of field position. no
turnovers and no mistalces.
" Every time that there was a
chance to get a break and get an
uplift, it just seemed that something
took it away from us."
In the matchup of roolcie coach·
es brought in to tum around sttug·
gling teams, Bill Belichick got his
first NFL win, while MacPherson
suffered his first loss even though
his team was a slight favorite.
•T d be surprised if our team is
worried about other people's
expectations," Belichick said. "I
thought our offensive backs played
well. They were maligned coming
into the game."
The Browns rushed only 14
times for 32 yards in their opener
but gained 113 yards on 37 carries
Sunday. With top rusher Kevin
Mack sidelined by an ankle injury,
they were led by Joe Morris with
70 yards on 20 carries. That helped
them hold the ball for 37:33 to
New En~land's 22:27 .
Moms, the New York Giants
career rushing leader, sat out the
1989 season with a broken foot and
all of 1990 when no team signed
him.
"I was elated by my own play,"
he said, "but I still have a lot of
work to do."
So do the Patriots.
"Good teams are able to bounce
back from losses," New England
defensive end Brent Williams said.
"Next week (at Pittsburgh) we're
going to have to pay attention to
the details and make sure that all
the little mistalces that we made this
week that killed us don't come
back and kill us."

Edberg U.S.
Open men's
champion

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The Eastern Eaglettes of Coach
Pam Douthitt, despite fielding a
very young team, have been doing
quite well, as they posted a win
over league foe North Gallia, while
suffering a loss to Oak Hill.
Eastern defeated North Gallia
15-11 and 15-11 as Carrie Morris·
sey had a game high ten points
with one ace and a 13·14 night
from the floor. Amy Well followed with seven points, two aces,
and a 7-9 night; Lee Gillilan was
perfect at 10-10 and six points,
Jaime Wilson was 9·11 with six
points, and Becky Driggs 2·3 with
one ace and one point
Kathy Hager led North Gallia
with seven points, Darna Twyman
and Julie Stapleton each had five,
Heather Sprague three, and Beth
Salisbury two.
Eastern spiking saw Gillilan go
1·9 with three lcills, while Morris·
sey (4·6). Well (2-3), and Tabby
Phillips each had one kill. Penny
Aeiker was 2·2 and Metzger 2-2.
In setting Wilson was 13·21 and
Metzger 5-9.
Douthitt commented, "We
played good defense and had real·
ly good night at the net. Carrie
(Morrissey) ·and Lee (Gillilan) did
a good job serving. B_oth have
done well the past two mghts considering the hot gym temperatures
we have been having."
Oalc Hill defeate4 Eastern 15-6
and 15·11. Jennifer Ramsey led all
scoreis with 18 points fill' the I.ally
Oaks and had orie ace. Tara Fisher
. had thlee, Jci Chapmi!R one; Stacy

!______ . ,,.
·~·

secutive plays without a fust down
from late in the first quarter to
early in the fourth.
The Browns were 3-13 last year
and led the NFL with 462 points
allowed. Still, they managed their
first shutout since their 1989 sea·
son opener.
"We didn't take them lightly,''
New England's Irving Fryar said.
"Our team can't afford to talre anyone lightly."
A week earlier, the Patriots had
broken a 14-game losing streak.
The Browns lost their opener 26-14
to Dallas.
"We wanted to run the ball
well, somethin~ we weren't able to
do last week, ' said Kosar, who
completed 15 of 22 passes for 187
yards and two touchdowns. "The
key for us was scoring before the
half. At least we got seven points.
We felt if we hadn't scored before
the half, we'd have let them off the
hook."
On the Browns' next to last
series of the half, they had a fourth
down at the Patriots one. Tackle
Paul Farren, an eligible receiver,
caught Kosar's pass in the end
zone, but cornerback Jerome Henderson stripped the ball away.
"I guess catching the ball is
tougher than I think," Farren said.
His teammates had no trouble
on their next drive that began at the
Patriots 45. Kosar was 3-fQr-3,
including consecutive completions
to Eric Metcalf of nine and 13
yards, both for first downs, to the
II. Hoard then rushed 4 yards and
caught Kosar's scoring pass on the
next play.
The Browns then scored on
three of their fust four second·half
possessions . Matt S!over kicked
field goals of 30 and 32 yards,
malcing the score 13-0, and Kosar
hooked up with rookie Michael

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Cleveland Browns blank New
·England in 20-0 bout Sunday

Some civic leaders were unhapPY because a new baseball stadium
was proposed with 20 years of debt
still remaining on Three Rivers,
which isn't scheduled to be paid for
until2011.
"I don't think we're dealing in
the real world. The whole thing's
bizarre," councilwoman Michelle
Madoff said.
Also, Masloff, who is on the
Pirates board of directors, proposed
the new stadium just six
after
the city sold $20 million m revenue
bonds to keep the then fmaneially
desperate team in town. Council
president Jack Wagner said a new
stadium on top of the financial
bailout doesn't make financial
sense.
"The city has made more of a
public investment to keep baseball
here than any other city in Ameri·
ca." Wagner said. "We are in difficult economic times. We have to
maximize the use of our dollars,
and this is not the way to do it."

TOURNAMENT MVPs- Eastern No. l's David Koenig (lert)
and Joey Coates were named co-MVPs or the Big Bend Tourna·
men~ in .which the junior Eagles went 5·2 and won four games on
the dtamondfest's final day before losing in the finals.

The Dally Sentlnel-Page--0

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Adlcins seven, and Jennifer Adkins
one. Each had an ace.
Penny Aeiker led Eastern with
five, Amy Well four, Jaime Wilson
and Carrie Morrissey two each, and
Metzger one.
Gillilan, 6-9, had three kills,
Well was 2-4, and Tabby Phillips,
4-5, with one lcili. Jaime Wilson
was 6-13 setting and Metzger 5-12.
"We did not pass well and had a
hard time retummg serves. It could
have been a different game if we
had played harder early, " said
Douthitt.
Against Federal Hoclcing, who
had a very well balanced attack
seven girls deep, Eastern lost15·13
and 15-6. FH was led by Jeni Pierson and Teresa Hines with si~
each, while Beth Morgan tallied
five.
For Eastern Metzger had seven
with three aces. while senior
Gillilan had four points and an 8-9
serving night.
Carrie Morrissey was perfect
from the serving stripe (8-8) and
had three points, Soph. Jaime Wit·
son had two aces for two points,
Amy Well had two poins, and
Tabby Phillips one.
Eastern spikers were led lby
Gillilan, 5·8, with two lcills; Metzger 4·5, Jaime Wilson 3-3 with
two kills, Amy We118·13, one lcill;
and Tabby Phillips 4-7, one kill. In
settinf Gillilan was 15-21 and Wil·
son· I -15.
Douthitt stated, "We played
good in the fiCSI game, then missed
a lot of serves in both games. In
the second game we just fell apart.

''

me.'

1

Edberg, though, would make
shots lilce that all day in a 6-2, 6-4,
6-0 romp that was close to flawless. Later, he recalled the return
that had left Courier flabbergasted.
"That was a nice little shot," he
said. "No, actually that was one of
the best volleys I had in the whole
match.''
And then he remembered anoth·
er.
"I hit a smash on one of the
brealc points and how I got that one
back I'll never understand because
I had just got my racket up and it
just ended up being a winner.''
Edberg left the 21-year-old
Courier very few optiO)lS. He
pinned him at the baseline, beat
him to the net, administered a thor·
ough thrashing to a player who had
not dropped a set in this tourna·
ment until Sunday.
After one dazzling Edberg
return, Courier looked at a fan in
the crowd at the National Tennis
Center, perhaps hoping for a suggestion, some help, anything.
The man merely \shrugged. He
had no answers, either.
"I was hitting some great
shots," Courier said. "He was
coming back with shots that made
mine look like I don't know what.
So it was a bit discouraging at
times, when 1 would hit those good,
solid returns as hard as I could,
right at his feet, and he would come
in and hit an angle winner."
It began goinJ downhill for
Courier in the thtrd Jame of the
fust set. Edberg put him in a love40 hole and eventually broke his
service after 20 points and 15 min·
utes. It was hard work for a single
break, but it set the tone for the
match.
Edberg came into the Open as
.something of an enigma. He hilS
never played well here, usually
eliminated early.

•

MORRIS STOPPED - Cleveland Browns
running back Joe Morris (center) is stopped by
New England linebackers Vincent Brown and
Eugene Lockhart (left) after Morris caught a

short pass during the second quarter or Sun·
day's AFC game in Foxboro, Mass., which the
Browns won 20-0. (AP)

Houston downs Cincinnati 30-7
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - The
field was fast, the sky was clear.
the temperature was in the 70s. For
the fust time in a decade, the Hous·
ton Oilers' most dreaded field felt
like home.
Son of an Astrodome North.
The Oilers turned their field of
broken dreams into their private
playground Sunday night, beating
the Cincinnati Ben gals 30· 7. War·
ren Moon led a 90-yard touchdown
drive in the fourth quarter, and
Lamar Lathan returned an interception for another score a minute later
to put an end to their Riverfront
nightmares.
The Oilers (2-0) had lost 10 of
their last II in Cincinnati. 'I'!Wy' d
been blown out their last four
~ames there by a combined 186-62,
mcluding a 41-14 drubbing in the
playoffs last year.
The schedule makers gave the
Oilers a break this year: their visit
came early. so they could avoid the
cold, wet weather that usually
awaits. It made all the difference.
"We got a dry surface. It was
like playing in the 'Dome," said
Haywood Jeffires. whose 22-yard
touchdown catch put the Oilers in
control. "When we get Cincinnati
in the ·Dome. we defeat ·em. ll
was the same atmosphere today.''

For a change, the Bengals (0-2)
were the ones self-destruciing on
Riverfront's artificial turf.
The Bengais fumbled into the
Oilers' end zone on their ftrst pos·
session, setting the tone. Cris Dishman stripped tighi end Rodney
Holman as he surged towards the
goal line, then dove on the bail to
end the threat.
From that moment, both teams
sensed this one could be different.
"We were due for a break up
here," Moon said. "Usually those
things go their way . We got a big
break by them no! scoring that first
drive, and I think it took a lot of
wind out of their sails."
Their offense barely Ireaded
water the res! of the way.
Cincinnati's only score came on
Boomer Esiason's 18-yard pass to
Lynn James in Ihe third quarter.
The Bengals' once-potent offense
has scored jusi 21 points in their
two losses.
"This is very disheanening.
very disgusting,'' Esiason said.
"We're used to hearing about
the Bengals' offense being high·
powered," receiver Tim McGee
said . "We have to bring that
back."
The Oilers also sttuggled in the
fust half, getting just a pair of field
goals from Ian Howfield. But the
second half belonged to Moon and

the Oilers' run-and-shoot
Allen Pinkett ran 31 yards for a
Iouchdown on the Oilers· fust possession of the second half. Pinkett
wound up with 101 yards - his
second consecutive I()(). yard Ram e.
After Esiason got the Bengals
back to 13· 7 with his only touchdown pass, Moon passed for all the
yards in a 90-yard drive that took
the life out of the Bengals. He hit
Jeffares in stride down the left sideline for the touchdown.
"That took a lot out of their
defense, and their offense was sitting on the sideline getting cold.' '
receiver Drew Hill said. "When
Esiason came back out, he didn ' t
look the same."
Esiason threw a high pass that
deflected off McGee's hands and
into Lathan's arms. He found an
open lane down the left sidelin~.
and the Oilers knew they'd fmally
ended their Riverfront misery.
"We' ve waited a long time for
this one," Moon said.
The Oilers always seemed to cull
into dead ends at Riverfront. and
figured the early trip this season
would be a good measure of their
growth. They ' ve now blown out
the Los Angeles Raiders 47-I 7 and
beaten their biggest AFC Central
rival on the road . Ne~t they play
Kansas Ci1y in the Astrodome.

Redmen kickers post first victory
Victory - the farst of the season
for the University of Rio Grande
soccer team - was a long time
coming Saturday.
The Redmen defeated visiting
Mount Vernon Nazarene 3-1 in two
overtimes, providing them with
their first win in the Mid-Ohio
Conference and District 22.
The hosts had posted their first
goal in the opening period on the
work of Ricardo Campbell, sophomore midfielder from Kingston,
Jamaica, and held their own until
the Cougars deadlocked the score
late in the second half on a goal by
Chip Wall, with assist from Hiroto

Maisufuji.
The Redmen were unable to
make any headway in the fir st
overtime, but team captain Barry
Saunders, a sentor from
Jamestown, broke through with II
minutes in the second e~tra period
to break the tie. Earle Manley.
another of the Redmen recruits
from Jamaica, iced the win with six
minutes left on an assist from J.C.
Circle, freshman from Nitro, W.Va.
"It's a win, but I think we didn ' t
gel it done the way we should
have," Redmen Coach Scott Morrissey remarked. "What I mean by
that is, we didn 'l play up to our

Rio's Peck places first in race
The University of Rio Grande' s
Renee Peck placed first in the
women's division race of the Marshall University Cross Country
Invitational Saturday.
Peck, a junior from Baltimore,
Ohio, completed the 5-K course in
18:09. followed in second place by
West Virginia University's Erin
O'Reilly at 18:31.
It was the first meet of the season
for Rio Grande's men's and
women's cross country teams.

Marauder boys'
CC team wins meet
The Meigs Marauder boys'
cross COWltry team recently came
in firSt place in a tri-meet, while the
girls' learn lost a dual meet.
The boys defeated Marietta and
Athens in the tri-meet at Athens
High School. With 28 runners talc·
ing place in the meet, P.J. Chad·
well carne in second place, Nathan
Baloy finished fourth, David Swanson eighth, Bill Toundas ninth,
Chris Sloan II th and Bobby Johnson 13th.
Athens defeated the Lady
Marauders in the girls meet. Placing for Meigs was Katrina Turner
(sixth), Elizabeth Downie (sev·
enth), Heather Franckowiak
(ninth), Missy Sisson lOth and
Allison Gannaway 11th.
Mei~s will take part in the Wai·
ren Invitational on Saturday, Sept
14th.

Also placing for the Rcdwomcn
were Debbie Gray, 29th , 20:42 ;
Tina Kelley, 31 st. 21:21 ; Ginger
Smith, 36th, 22:41; Crystal Patrick,
37th, 23:28; and Angie Cress, 38th,
24:12.
.
In the men's race, Mark Cline
was the fir st to place for Rio
Grande when he finished the g. K
course lOth at 26:07. The race was
won by Jason Bodnar of the University of Pittsburgh ai 25:24 . For
Rio Grande, Chad Benson was 27th
at 27:03, followed by Brant
McLaughlin, 40ih, 28 :44 ; Hugh
McLaughlin , 45Ih, 29 :28; Dave
Fembacker, 47th, 30:32; Courtney
Hutchinson, 48th, 30:55; and Doug
Home, 49th, 30:59.
The teams return to competition
Sept. 14 for the Ohio University
Invitational, where they will face
OU, Marshall and Bowling Green
State University.

potential. The hardest thing for a
coach to do is to get a team to play
like it's their last game, which Is
hard to do when the team comes in
assuming ii's going to win."
·
The Redmen auempted 20 shots
on goal to the Cougars' 22, while
goallceeper Jim Egnor was credited
with 10 saves at the net to the vi sitors' four.
.
"I was a bit disappointed in the
decisions made, bu1 that goes bac}:
to being lackadaisical," Morrissey
said.
.
However, the win is expected 11&gt;
give the Redmen (1-2) an edge
going into its meeting at home wiih
Wheeling Jesuit Tuesday at 3:30
p.m., representing Rio Grande''
second game or the season witO
WVIAC opponent. Rio Grande
hosted Alderson -Broaddus tasl
week and suffered a 4-2 loss, bUl
put up a strong offensive and
defensive effon against the visitors.
Of the Wheeling game, Morris·
sey said. "We'll have our hands
full."

DOWNING CHILD1
MUWN MUSSER

INSURANCE

111 Secollll St., Poiwof

TOUIINDEPINDINT
AGENTS SIIYING

•Gscoum
SINCE 11161

SHOP MONDAY NIGHT
UNTIL 8:00 P.M.
AT

ANDERSON'S
DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO

c 1I' I ,\J M &lt; J N I l 1\ Y ~~ I ( ; II I

Ill H I' f\1

•

�Monday, September 9, 1991

The Daily Sentinel.

By The Bend

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

B u 8 ine s 8 Services

Classified

Monday, September 9, 1991
Pag~

YOUNG'S

Social Security
Women with Medicare cove~e
should know that Medicare wtll
now help pay for the cost of Pap
smear screerung for early detection
of cervical cancer. Available since
July of last year, this coverage can
save lives by increasing access to
this effective method for detecting
cavical cancer at a stage when it is
more easily IJ'catable.
Before the change in the law,
Medicare paid for Pap smears only
for patients who were being IJ'eated
for certain medical conditions,
including certain forms of cancer.
But now, Medicare will help cover
the cost of Pap smear screenings
once every three years for all
women who are enrolled in Medicare medical insurance. In addition,
·Medicare may help cover the cost
of more frequent Pap smears for
patients who are at a high risk of

developing cervical cancer.
Medicare will pay 80 percent of
the approved charge, after the beneficiary meets the usual medical
insurance annual deductible ($100
in 1991).
It is important for women to
take advantage of this Medicare
provision. The American Cancer
Society estimates that 13.500 new
cases of invasive cervical cancer
will be diagnosed this year. Six
thousand American women will die
of the disease in 1991 alone. Pap
smears can help reduce this number.
If you have questions about
Medicare, Social Security or Supplemental Security Income, call 1800-234-5772, or the local number,
592-4448. The Athens Social Security Office is located at 221 1/2
North Columbus Road

'

Bowmans to perform Sept. 20-22
The- Rejoicing Life Church, municate. They minister nearly 300
Middleport, will have special ser- times a year.
Their children, Tiffany and
vices with The Bowmans on Sept
20-22 at 7 p.m. nightly and 10 a.m. Luke, join in singing at many of the
services.
Sunday.
Pastor Michael Pangio invites
Blaine and Christine Bowman
share God's word through anointed the public to attend these special
music and preaching. He is known services.
for his humor and ability 10 com·

The Rutland Garden Club presented its annual flower show
recently at the Rutland Methodist
Church as pan of the program for
their open meeting.
The theme "Salute to Ameriflora" was carried out in the anistic
arrangements. The show was
judged by Mrs. Joe Bolin, Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs judge
who gave many comments as she
judged the show.
Mrs. Robert Canady captured
Best of Show for her arrangement
in "Performing Arts," a modern
arrangements showing motion.
Cheryl Jewell received Best of
Show in junior artistic arrangement
"Around the World Carousel."
Sarah Dawn Jenkins received
the junior horticulture award and
Pauline Atkins the senior horticulture award
Artistic arrangements
Winners in the artistic design
classes, listed flfst through fourth,
respectively, were "Quincentennial
Jubilee," using five flowers with
greenery, Pauline Atkins, Neva
Nicholson, Pearl Canady and Eva
Robson.
"O.A.G.C. Gateway Garden,"
mass, Eva Robson, Pauline Atkins,
Margaret Bell Weber and Octa
Ward.
"Discovery Pavilion," in a vertical manner, Eva Robson, Margaret
Bell Weber, Pearl Canady and Octa
Ward.
"Performing Arts," modern
showing motion, this was the spe·
cia! class, Pearl Canady, Octa
Ward, Eva Robson and Pauline
Atkins.
"Japanese Tea Garden," in oriental manner, invitational class, six
arrangements were displayed by
guests but not judged. Comments
were made by the judge.
Junior artistic
"Around the World Carousel,"
favorite design , Cheryl Jewell,
Kelly Dalton, Jametha Wilford,
Sarah Dawn Jenkins.
Junior horticulture
Marigold - Sarah Dawn Jenkins,

Rachael Morris, second and third,
and Jametha Wilford.
Roadside flowers - Gabriel
Jenkins, Rachael Morris, Cheryl
Jewell and Sarah Dawn Jenkins.
Senior division
Hybrid tea rose - Eva Robson,
all four places.
Any other rose - Carrie Moms,
Kimberly Wilford, Eva Robson and
OctaWard.
Zinnia, large flowered, one stem
- Pauline Atkins, ftrst and second,
Eva Robson, third and fourlh.
Zinnia, small flowered, one
stem - Pauline Atkins, all four
places.
Marigold , large flowered Pauline Atkins.
Gladolia - Neva Nicholson, Eva
Robson, Pauline Atkins.
Any other annual - Pauline
Atkins, first and second.
Celosia, any variety, one stem Pauline Atkins, Kathy Dalton,
Pauline Atkins, third and fourth.
Container grown plants
Africa violet - Pauhne Atkins,
first and second; Dorothy
Woodard, third and fourth.
Foliage houseplants - Pearl
Canady, Dorothy Woodard, second
and third and fourth.
Flowering houseplants - Margaret Bell Weber, Pauline Atkins,
Dorothy Woodard, third and fourth .
Cacti and succulent - Binda
.Diehl , Dorothy Woodard, Pauline
Atkins, third and fourth.

The. annual Sane reunion was
held Sunday at the Syracuse Park
with 46 attending.
The next reunion will be held
Aug. 30, 1992 at the Star Mill Park
in Racine.
Attending were Allen and
Emileen Sayre, Brenda, Clarence,
Jimmy and Brian RandOIJ?h. Mike,
Sandy and Kristi DaVIs, Pete,
Roma, Kim and Katie Sayre, Don

and Betty Sayre, Rhonda,
Kameron, Kylie and Kayanna
Sayre, Mrs. Guy (Betty) Sayre.
Dave, Becky, Rachael and Nathan
Sayre, Lloyd, Paula, Chad and
Belinda Sayre, Helen Hill, Kathy,
James and Adam McDaniel, Roger,
Debbie, Terri and Devon Hill, Ron
and Eric Hill, Richard, Wendy,
Ashlee and Amber Hill, and Mark,
Sharon, Jill and John Matson.

Doctor treats MD from personal experience
CINCINNATI (AP) - Dr. John
· Quinlan says one of the hardest
parts of his job is telling young
people they have muscular dyslrophy.
Those occasions often rekindle

.. .

the pain he felt at age 15 when he

found out he had the disease.
But because he has had the disease for 18 years. Quinlan can
share little coping IJ'icks with his
patients, such as how to get up
from a chair when muscles won't
cooperate.
He also thinks patients find it
easier to talk to him about their
emotions and fears.
"I know what it's like to go
through the tests," Quinlan said.
"I know what it's like to have 12
needles stuck in me. I know what
it's like to have it done ri~ht, and I
know when it's not bemg done
very courteously."
Quinlan, a neurologist, has been
a teacher and researcher at University of Cincinnati's College of
Medicine for four years.
He is one of the doctors who

PLACE WINNER ·: ~- Ashley Hannahs, age eight,
: .. · d"augbter of Chuck and Rhonda
:: H.annahs, Pomeroy, competed
recently In the West Virginia
., CloaJng aud Hoedowa Champi·
. :: O.sbip held at the Charleston
· · Chic Center. She captured fii'St
:::~~: p.I8ce in the buck (l'eestyle com·
- .. petition. Music for the competi·
, . • don was provided by a live blue
'.:· gra11 band aDd 15 participants
·· tompeted In the class for children aae 8·10 from Ohio, West
· • · VIrginia, VlraiDia, North Caroli: ·: .a'a anc1 South Carolina. Hannahs
' :: , __~ fiy.e u .a r member o_f t~e
, .~1 Rl¥11' Sliu111irs. She JS. piC'· . tutid with Garland Steel, dtree'tor ottite competition.

mon type ot dysuophy that weakens the upper arms, shoulder girdle
and face.
For the past five years. he has
used a motorized scooter to get
around.

treats about 1,000 patients a year at
Muscular Dysll'ophy Associationsponsored clinics at the University
Medical Center and at Children's
Hospital Medical Center.
Quinlan has facioscapulohumeral muscular dysll'ophy, a less com-

Searchers find modem
trash among old shipwreck
CAPE HATTERAS, N.C. (AP)
- Scientists aboard a research ship
mining for gold on the ocean floor
know firsthand that IJ'ash dumped
in the sea doesn' t go away.
They have found all kinds of
garbage while plumbing the depths
of the Atlantic Ocean 160 miles off
North Carolina for gold that sank

with the SS Central America 134
years ago. They have a picwre of a
cola can and a well preserved
newspaper among debris of the
wreck that's more than I 1!2 miles
below the ocean surface.
"It's kind of disgusting. You
can see it everywhere. It points out
the deep sea is not a good recycling
place," said Charles E. Herdcndorf, an Ohio State University
oceanography professor who is
working with the expedition.
Herdendorf runs the adjunct science program for Columbus-America Discovery Group. The project
brings visiting scientists to the Arctic Discoverer search ship to conductcoopendiveresearch.
The expedition is in its third
summer searching the wreck of the
Central America for an estimated
two to three tons of gold coins, bars
and gold dust.
'·

BJH class of '58 plans reunion
A reunion is being planned by
the 1958 Bradbury Junior High
graduating class.
Members of the class were
Carol Little, Decky Hawley, David
Reed, Larry Eblin, John Manley,
Everett Michael, Charles Taylor,
Dale Roush, Benton Eblin, David
Searles, Danny Little, William
Sprouse, Bill Lynch, Wallace
Reuter, Wesley Kilkey, Mike Lit-

RATES
Days

tie, Marjorie Burt, Sandra Taylor,
Jean McGlone, Jeanette Eblin, Jean
Snyder, Jean Casto, Olive Milliron,
Jeanie Manley, Doris Eblin, Keith
Aeiker, Carol Wise, Catherine Russell, Donna Lee and Nyoka Van
Cooney.
Those interested in planning the
reunion should call Jean Snider at
992-7303 or Keith Aeiker at 9854408.

Words
15
15

1

3
6
10
Monthly

. Rate

S4.00
16.00
$9.00

15
15

Over 1 5 Wordo

.

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

.eo

CLOSED SUNDAY

Pomeroy, Ohio

Classifi ed pa[[es.corer th e
follou:in g telephon-e exchanges...
Gellie C o unt y

Me•g• County

M11on Co ., WV

Area Code 614

Area Code 614

Area Code 304

446 - Galltpolts

992 - Middleaon

07!5 - Pt . Pl1111nt

388 - Vinton

98&amp; - Cn et ter
B4J - Ponlend
247 - Letan Fall s

Z4e - Aio Granoe
256- GuYin Oist
&amp;43 - A,ebt e O•lf

949 - Rac•nt

379 - Walno t

576 - Applt Grove
773 - Miton

882- New Hev en
89!- L•t•n
937 - Bufftlo

742 - Fiuct•nd
667 - Coolville

1 - Card of Thenks

3- Annouc aments
4- Giv..wev
!S- Heppy Ada

6-Lost and Found
7- V•d Sale !DI•d •n 1dvance1
B- Pubhc; Slit &amp; Auc:t ion
9- Wentld to Buv

Situat•on wanted
1.3- lnturance
1 4- Bus•n•s Tremmg
15 - Schooll lo lnuruct1Cn
11 - Aad•o. TV lo CB Rep eu

1 7 - Mitc:ell•n~u 1
18 - Wenc•d To Oo

21 - Bu11n•• Opportunity
22 - P.lont¥ to Lo1n
23 - Prof•saoDal Strvtcn

R~al

Estale

31 - Homn~ rar S11e
32 - Mobile Homes for S•le
33 - Farms ror Sete

34- Busln•t Buridings

11

10 Buy

63 - Livfttock
64 - Hev &amp; Gratn
66 - Sted C. ~enili.1tr

42 - Mobilt Hom .. lor Rent
43 - Ferms for Rent

R.N. Charge Nurse
Positions Available

44 - Aoertment for Rent
45-Furn~thed Rooms
46 - Spece for Rent
47 - Wented.to Rent
48 - Equ tpment for Rent

49 - For L••• - ·

BEST OF SHOW -Pearl Canady received
of Show for her
arrangement In "Performing Arts," a modern arrangement showing motion, at the recent Dower shO\V oftl!e Rutland Garden Club
during its 0 pen meeting beld at'ihe Rutland Methodist Church.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
- Miss America Marjorie Judith
Vincent says she will continue to
speak out about the plight of battered women after her successor is
crowned Saturday.
"! would like to keep a fairly
high profile. I love being out there
in the community," said the 26year-old from Oak Park, Ill.
"They'll still hear from me."
Leonard Horn, the pageant's
chief executive, said the unattractive nature of the issue Vincent
chose to spotlight limited the publicity she received during her reign.
"Margie in a more quiet way
achieved great success," he said.
Miss Vincent plans 10 finish her
third year of law school at Duke
University.

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

SALSOMAGGIORE, Italy (AP)
-Martina Colombari's father
didn 't want her to enter the Miss
Italy contest because he feared she
would win - and he was right.
The 16-year-old, the youngest
of 60 contestants , was judged
Italy's top beauty.
Colombari still has her Barbie

FIREWOOD
SELLERS
Hardwood Slabs
for Sale
Great Price!

CALL

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

- -

DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Pete
Rose is building a luxury home in
Florida.
The house will be on three acres
overlooking a lake in the Sherbrooke Golf and CouniJ'y Estates in
Lake Worth, said development
owner Eugene Schear.
"He'll be putting in tennis
courts and of course a swimming
pool, and needs space for his two
horses," the Dayton Daily News
quoted Schear as saying Sunday.
The former Cincinnati Reds
star, baseball's all-time hits leader,
was banished from the game for
gambling.

1

POMEROY- Acomfonable home in a beautilul selling thai
includes two lots. The blick ranch home features 5 rooms,
2 bedrooms with finished basement and anic that could be
used as &amp;Pditionaf rooms. Fireplace. carpel &amp; hardwood
Hooring. 1 car brick garage with extra storage space overhead. Alllocared on a nice paved streel close to evel)'thing
in town I ASKING $45,000

Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat Including
Asthma, Allergy &amp; Hearing Aids

GREAT
Located on SR 124 between Rudand
and SR 7. This 1987 Forrest Pari&lt; Mobile Home with 3
bedrooms is oul of town yet close enough to be handy I
Added features with this home are 1.tO acre of ground, 17
x 52 garage with compressor, and 2- 15 x 52 carports!
Furnishings also lneludodl ASKING $32,500

John A. Wade, M. D.
Suite 112 Valley Drive
Pt. Pleasant, WV.

NEW LISTING I Vacant lollocaled on Main Street in Pomeroy. lmmodiota possession of this 60 x 100 loll ASKING
$3,900

Call 304-67 5-1244 for Appt or Information

NEW USTlNG· WELCH TOWN HILL· 1 floor plan frame
horne wilh 4 rooms. Hardwood &amp; carpet flooring. Includes
wood stove and fireplace situaled on two lots. ASKING
$17,000

..

TUPPERS PLAINS- 1 floor plan home, 3 bedrooms, firep.lace, woodburner, luU basemen!, t car garage, equipped
kilchon, sataiHre dish all on approx. a 100x 200 lot ASKING

$36,900

.

HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................002-8181
TRACY BRINAGER........................................Mt-2438
JEAN TRUSSELL ....................·........................MI-HfO
JO HILL...................................................,.........~s-4488
' OFFICE............................................................ .8fl2·225tl

card of Thanks

Thank You
We would like to express our sincere appreciation for the many
people who . showed
their kindness a nd
suport during the ill ness and death of our
father Homer B.
Moodlspaugh. We
would like a special
thanks to go to Holzer
Clinic In Middleport.
Holzer Medical Center
and staff. Dr. Linder.
Middleport Emergency
Squad. Fisher Funeral
Home, pallbearers, SentorCIUzens Center, Options for the Elderly.
Home Health Nurse,
Pastor Tom Runyon.
Scenic Hills Nursing
Home, Bowman's Home
Health Care, Our many
friends and neighbors
whosentflowers, cards,
food and kept us In their
prayers.
The Famllyof
HOMER

B.
MOODISPAUGH

In Memory

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
lemocWing
Stop &amp; Compare
Free Estimates

985-4473
667-6179

Every Sundoy 12 Noon
Factory Guns Only
9/9/9t/2 mo.

LINDA'S
PAINnNG
INTERIOR - EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

Toke the pain out of

painting.
Let me do it for you.

VERY REASONABlE
HAVE REFERENCES
(614) 985-4180
8-25·91-

1

mo.

pd.

USED APPUANaS
90 DAY WAUAIIITY

WlSHEIS-$ 100 ,.
DRYIS-$69 op
HFIIGIIlTOIS-$ I 00 up
UNGfS- Gat·R~&lt;.-$125

up ·

FIEEZUS-S US up
'
MICIO OVENS- $79 op

KEN'S APPLIAN(E
SERVICE
992-5335 ar 915-3561
A&lt;ross From Post Office
POMEROY, OHO

IM0/'89 tfn

0

.

0

•

•

0

0

0

•

•

••

pot, 6t4·992·5053.
Lost -White

•

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

male
Rd .,

cal ,

noar

Keeba ugh/Follrod
dam. 614-985-4463.

Lost : Blonde Pome ranian On ·
Georges Creek Road, Reward!

614-446-8908.

locqted On Safford School Rd. off Rt. 141
(6 U) 4411-941 II or 1-800-8177--5967

Reward! Los t: Set Of Keys,
VI cinity 2ndl3rd Avenue, ·Gal·
llpolla. Brass Key Ring ("M!k• "J

Yard Sale .

7

(A venture of J&amp;F Contracting and K&amp;J Construction)

Jim Clillord-992-7201

Greg

Galllpolls · ·
&amp; VIcinity
143 Second Avenue, Septe(n bof

9th, 10th, 11th. Kids, Adult
Clothes, Lots Of Mise!

5 Mlloo From Holrtr Hoopl!al On
Rt.160, Mondly·Thurodoy' 9-7.
Children, Adult Clothing, :Furni -

ture, Etc.

Bailey 992-6810

·

ALL Yard Salet Must Be Paid In

Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 ' p.m.

9-i I mo.

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

Chlldrens,

WO'mens

Rt.160, North

Country Lane, Box 208, Sunda y,

Monday &amp; Tuaod1y.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

For Old &amp;New Roofs, Shingles
· Repairs, G1tters
Building and RemodeRng

Big Yard Solo, Sopt 7,9,10. 10:00
till ? . Clolhea, cheap, Home Interior, bookll gi111W1re, furni ture, Iota m sc Items. 3 Mile
Creek Ad, out of Henderaon on
Rt. 35.

We Guarantee Your Satisfaction

FRIIISTIMATIS

Mene,

Ciothos, Mlocl

CAll JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992·2653

JOSIPH D. JACKS

Moving Sale, wood dining room
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;,;H:.;t,:•:,a suite,
bedroom eulte, gl111ware
L
(Oeprenlonj, (Holl), (McCoy!,

RACINE GUN

Howard L. Writesel

CLUB
GUN SHOOT

ROOFING

plus many other piiCII ot turn ture tnd other heme. 7110 mila
off Rt 2 on Hickory Chapol
R01dJ _gray houM on right. Look
tor For Sale" algna. Hours
8:00-4:00 Mon. lllu, Wid.

Ytrd Sale, 2221 Jefferson, Mon ,

Tues, Wed. Fumlt~e. crib, girts
clothes, slu 8-12, 304.01'5o4548.

NEW- REPAIR

12 Gouge Foctory

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Choke Only

949 -2168

1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
9-6-tfn

Pomeroy, ·.
Middleport :
&amp; VIcinity :
All Vard Sal11 Muat Be llald In
Advance, Deadline: 1:OOpm the

day before the ad Ia to run ,
Sunday ltdltlon- 1:00pm Friday,
Mondav
edition
IO:OOa .m.

9 / 9 / 91 / 1 mo. pd .

Saturday.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAIIAilf
JRII (STIMATIS

992·7451
B-28-QI1 1 mo. pd.

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
ALL MAliS
Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SERVICE
992·5335 or
915-3561
Acrou From Post Office
217 1. 5ocontl St.

POMIIDY, OHIO

3/6/90/tfn

992-6289
9-6-T mo.

Sept t1·12 D:C»-4pm, 238 lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, Lote ol artlclll and clothing, glvnwayFull tprlngt and mattress also
aoma clotfilng

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing

If you're in need of

Mobile Home Purls
or Accessories ...

So pt. 12·13·1 Flrll houso t'n loft

•Insulation

SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
RT. 33 WEST Of
DARWIN, OHIO

Rl.

639 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

6

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and

COMPLETE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops,
Carpets. Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN SY ., MASON, VA.

9

Wanted to Buy

2·3

Rail

Motorcycle 'frailer

Good Condlilon, 814-446-7554,
Aftor 9p.m.

WORK

Used Plano, (Console Or Spinet)
For Collage Students SOn, Call

(614)
696-1006

9/ 9/St / 1 mo. pd

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Poarson Auction Company,
full lima auctioneer, comploto
auc11on service. llctnt ad Ohio ,
West Virginia , 304-n3-5785.

BACKHOE

1-(30341·
773-9560

FU~J~IIure,

Side by aldt, 685 Gen. Hart .
Sept
G-11.
Curtain s,
bedspreads, clothing , Homo Interior, mis c.

11-14-tln

A&amp;B

Rlcllll.

btd,clothll, drapea , old things ,
misc. llamt.

992-2772 or
742 -2251

B/ 19/ 1 mo. tfn

338,

JAMES KEESEE

Aher 6p.m. Or Weekends, 614·

446-7729.
Wanttd 111 Junk and ec rap mel ·
ol, 304-895-3o36.

6-6."91

Wtnted to buy, Stendlng tim bar,
Bob Wllllomo &amp; Sono li.J.•·992-

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIPING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Hilmes l•llt
"Free l!'atlmateo"

PH. 949-2101
or le1. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

Specializing In
Custom Frome lepair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;

MODElS
992-7013
or 992-5553
01 lOU FlO
1-100-141-0070
DAIWIH OliO

7131 / '9t tin

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR .
Owner &amp; Operator

614-9«12-6820
Pomeroy,

•FIREWOOD

Second Aven~, Galllpoli •

Would Llko To Buy f1&gt;1&gt;acco
SUckol 614-387-7710. ' '. •

...

Employment Serv•ces

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

992-2269

11

992-6648 or
698-6864
:

USED RAILROAD TIES

· 4-16-86-tfn

COUNTRY CLUB

Help Wanted:

$2,500 CREDIT CARql
Gutranltld ume day epP,ovel!
Alao qUIIIty for NO tleposil

5·14-'91 -tfn

VISAINC tnd cath advances . 1·
800-2711-2000 E11t. 2524. •
AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"t1 Reasonable Prices"
PH. 949·280 1
or les. 949-2160
Day or Night ·
NO SUNDAY CALLS

.....

Top PrlcH Pold: All Oiii U.S.
Colnl, Gold Rlnao, Ol1010nd1,
Sllvor Colno, Stlflln~
~- Gold
Colno. lot.T.S. Coin s
, 151

FREE ESTIMATES

BILL SLACK

Wnvor 304-882·2645.

Carriera Needed: Spend ·Jo To

45 Mlnldoo A D1y And E- rn $25

Announcements
---------

3 Announcements

LITE &amp; RilE: No more dlotlng

wolght Iota progflm; 100%
natural. 814·31'D·24SD after 4:30.
We Make Great Malchn. Carol'l

Slnglo.!t P. o. Box 5846, Athono,
OH 45/Vl.

4

3-holf Colllo puppln 1nd tromalo Shaap Dog, 814-843-!165.

Woods ................ 122 .00
lrens .................. $14.75
REPAIRS
Unci Irons ............ $5.00
Ustd Woods .........$7.00
AWARDS
8-9-1 mo. pd .

homo, 304~75-203D .
4 Kltlono, 7 Wnko Old To Good
Homo. 614-4411-74'10.

4 killona, oil molo, 3 groy tiger
strip and 1 black, 8 wkl, to good

Clothing lor ontl"'' flmlly, PI'OIbytlrlon Church, lth end M1ln
SlrNI, Point PIOIIInl, OVIry
Tundoy tO:OO till noon.
To

Olveawty,

lormotlon Contoet: T~• Galllpollo Dolly Tribune, 114-44&amp;2342; Pomeroy Deily Sij1tlnol.
5l4-etl2·2tll8; Or Tho•. Point
Plnunt Roglllir, 304-f1'io1333.
ACTIVITY DIRECTQ,!!

·'

3 Puppies, P1rt Beagle, To
Glveaw•yl614o388o8611:

Klttene

I

To $50 Per WHk Dellnrln g
Newepepers. Great Opportunity
For Youtha At Leu t 11 Ye ars
Old. Ltam To Run Your Own
Buelnnt And Earn Your Own
Spondlna Monoyl ldo~ Foo
Retired Peraona To Sup mont
Vour Income And Exer e AI
The Same Tlmel For Mero ln-

EnergeUc And EnthueiQtlc ln-

Giveaway

Golf
lt!SIOnl (6) .... 155.00
New Grips ............ $4.00

L--------...J---------.L..--------~

you want it ...
you ·ve got it.. .

5449.

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED

REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

CHESTER

BALLET, TAP &amp;
JAZZ CLASSES

THE DANCE
COMPANY

on Chtrry Street In Syracuse,
Monday, Sapt.9lh through Wed .,
9-5 dally.

J&amp;L
INSULATION

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

6- 12-90 -tfn

AGES 3 and UP
2

3-14-'91-tfn

Begins Sept. 15

Business Services
AnENTION

742-2451

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

675-5236

doll, and when she goes dancing
her aunt accompanies her, the ltalian news agency ANSA reported
from this spa resort Sunday.
The long-haired blonde was
crowned Miss Italy on Saturday by
one of the judges, actor Alain
Delon.
"I was afraid she would win
and that her studies would suffer,"
her father, restaurant owner Maurizio Colombari, was quoted as
telling ANSA.

MilE lEWIS. Owllll'
Rt. 1, Rutland, OH.

GUN SHOOT

88 - Mobile Home Repau

Names in the news

••

MIICIIIIniOUI In-door Yl[d sa le

8? - Upholntry

Real Estate General

••••

BENNETT'S

5-31-'90 tfn

12-Hour Shifts Available. Excellent
benefit package, including shift·
differential.

81 · -Homtlmprovements

DOG"

I

Help Wanted

Services

SEARCHING FOR THAT HAPPY HOME? JUST SOME·
PLACE TO CALL YOUR OWN. A UTTLE PLACE TO.
HANG YOUR HAT, WITH YARD TO HOLD YOUR
CAT? COME ON IN AND TAKE A LOOKI WE'LL LET
YOU BREATHE!, WE NEVER PUSH! COME TO THE
PLACE THAT'll WARM 6 FRIENDLY. STOP RIGHT
HERE ...WFRE CLELAND REALTY I

SMinY'S IN POMEROY'

INDEPENDENT
CAIPn CUANEIS
and nLE FLOOI CAll
•Reasonable ~ates
•Quality Work
•Free Estimates
•Carpet Hes Fast Dry
Time '
•High Gloss on Til,e
Floor Finish

Long-Term Care Nursing

82- Piumbing 6 "••lng
83- Elcwating
.
84 - Eteetrlcll &amp; ,.efrig•non
815 - Generat Hauling

••

Friday. Monday edition :, 2:00
p.m. Saturday.
'

Long-term Care Experience Preferred.

41 - Houses for Rent

•

2:00PM FRIOAV

71 - Autos for Sale

I;DijlEld

•

-

72 - Trucka for Sale

77 - Auto Rep•i'
78 - Cimping EQu•pmtnt
79 - Campers 6 Motor Homes

•

the day before the ad Ia to. run .
Sunday edition - 2:00· ~ p . m .

·Rewarding
Career...

81 -Ferm Eqwipm.,.,

74 - Motorcvcl•
715 - Boett &amp; Moton for Slle
78-Auto Parts 6 Acc•101••

•

2 ·00 PM TUESDAY

A

7J - Vono • noyD ·o

••

-

- 2:00P .M. WEDNESDAY
- 2:00PM lHURSDAV

SUNDAY PAPER

Farm SUPilliP.S
&amp; Liv es tock
6o2 ~ Wanttd

•

5-10-'91-ttn

- 2,00 PM. MONDAV

lHURSOAV PAPER

JS - lots &amp; Acreage
36 - Re-' Eatete Wented

--~

nck•••.'"

742-2421
2112 Mi. outside
Rutland on New
Lima ld.

OA't' BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00A,M. SATURDAY

FRIDA'( PAPER

MIDDLEPORT- Avary nice affordable home that hes hed
some remodeling oomplotad. Features 3 bedrooms and
bath. Would make a wonderful starter homo. COME SEE I
ASKING $16,000

And you can bri~g your camera to J J!Is one.
Tht Cost is S1,~.oo$tilt"''

10:00 am-6:00pm

Transportation

..

Come Out On
TUESDAY, SEPT. 17 at 9:00 P.M.
And.Enioy The
INTERNATIONAL CALENDAR·MEN
It's aU in good fun!
The Place: SMinY'S of Pomeroy

Tuesday thru Saturday

Em_ployme_n_l

1 2-

•

Dozer, Backhoe, Trenching Work
Utilities: woter, gas, sewer, electric.
(us tom and log Homes
Remodeling and General Contracting
(ommerdol Development
See us about Sunshine Room Solariums

Yard Sel•

54 - Mite. MerchandiH
55- Buildin9 Supph•
58 - Pets for Setw
57 - Mutic: .. lnatNment t
58 - Fru•U &amp; Veg .. ebl•
59 - For $1le Of Trade

Serv1ces

•

•BUY •SElL •YIADE
OPEN

Heppy Adt

53- Antiques

11 - Hell) Wenled

••

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES, INC.

Card of Thenk•

MONDAV PAPER
lUESOAV
PAP.ER

!51 - Household Goods
52- Sporting Ooodl

•

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

In~ Memoriam-

WEDNESDAY PAPER

2- ln Memorv

•

Lost -cr11m color Him al aya n-cat,
Pearl St., Middleport . Chil d 's

Pioaao Call614·245-5000.

• A c;le..lfi.t edv•rt ... ment pieced •n Tht Oatly Sent.n• le•·
cept - cl•tified dit pley, Buain~a Card anclltgel not•ceal
will elto eppeer in ,.,, Pt Pte•ent ~egieter snd the Gall•·
polis Daily Tribune. reech•nv ovt~r 18 ,000-nom ......

Merchandi se

614-1112-2955

~

poid.

•AeceHe I 10 discount for ada ~·d •n adv•nc:e
'Freeadt - Giveaway and Found • d • under 1 15 word • w •ll
run 3 d•• at no ch•ge.
• Price of ed for •II CIIPitll IM1efl •• doubl a pr• ce of ad COli
•7 po•nt linetvpe ontv u Md.
• Sentine6 it not rftCIOntiblt for errors after firtt~·lfw ICheeK
for errors fir11 d., eel runs '" paper\ C all befor• 2 ·00 p m
dw aft• public .. 1on to m• e correct1on .
• Ads th .. must be P8i d in advtnct • •

----------------- /

Announcements

11·14-'90 tfn

•Adt outttde Meip, Gellia or Malon count•• mu st De pre·

COPV DEADLINE -

EXPLAINING • Janet Bolin, judge for the Ohio Associiadon of
Garden Clubs explains an educational exhibit at the recent Dower
show of the Rutland Garden Club during its open meeting held
recently at the Rutland Methodist Church.

992-6215

POLICIES

458- Loon

Pomeroy

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.06/ dov

LOST- 7 mo , femt le black lab,
Rulltnd &amp; Harrlaonville aroa,

hinting

. 30

"•'• are for c onMcutrve runt . br o ken up dey sw ill be ch•Ved
fnr eer.tl ttiN a • M Datete edA

367- Ch•hire

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992 -2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.

.42

• 13.00
11.30/ doy

15

.20

- Interior &amp; Exterior

Old

Lost &amp; Found

6

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

- Roofing

M.,.~~:::.~a:Hkl

614·446-4514.

"""'"'AIR (ONDITIONEIIS

- Gutter work
- Eitetrlcal •nd ptumblng

- conom. wort..

Educational displays
The Jade Junior Garden Club
prepared and displayed "Show and
Tell " exhibits of their work in
propagation and arranging.
Mrs. Vernon Weber also prepared an educational display on
"AmeriFlora '92" with hand out
material for all.
Door prizes donated by members and distributed by Dorothy
Woodard and Stella Atkins were
won by Jonni Lou Gabriella, Rita
Frazier, Allegra Will, Janet Bolin,
Maurita Miller, Linda Hensler and
Gladys Cummings.

Annual Sayre reunion held

- Rl&gt;om Addltlono

7

:wo

lffEifJfllll.

CARPENTER SERVICE •

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Rutland Garden Club
holds annual flower show

The Dally

Litter

Tralnad To A Good Homo. 614-

dlvlduol Noodld To Coonllnolo
Tho Aetlvhln Pr.. rom ·Fer Our
100 BN NuNing F1clllty. EducaPrep,~rttlon And Ex perltnce In Activity Pt~ra m­
tlon~l

c.,.
,PI¥:11ity
Wrin•h And

mlng In A HeaHh
Preferrtd. Excellent

Orol Communlc1tlon SkiBo EoMnli•l.

Thlo Poolllon OHoro A compotluvo S111ry, Unique hn1flt
Progrom, And Oppo~unl~ For
Cornr GrOW1h. For Piornpt,
Conlldontlol
Conold.,.tlon,

Pleue Forward R..ume, &amp;DCIUdln&amp; Sol1ry Hlllory To:
·'
Pomer~
Nuraln; • 1 And

Rohobflhlllon Contor• llo675'
Rockoprlngo Rood, Pomoooy
Ohio 4JTW. Attn: Bill Bill. ' '

448-3897.To Glvuwoy.
, ,JI !1111 To Good
Pupploe
CaM Manager FullaT1me,, VJolil·
Homo In Tho Country. 5t4·3711- lng In G11il11 And Joc!&lt;Jon
2552.
Cc:iuntlee.
Mlnbnum
Quollllcotlono, High Sohool
Dlplomo, Exporioncl !!f'ibod,
Bonalho Ollorld. ·sond Anuma
To: F.A.C.T.S. Rt. 2 Box .Jn.A,
Sldwoll, OH 4!5814. By Sol!l•m·
bor 27th, 1DI1. MIFIH, E.O.E.'

•

�The Dally Sentinel

11

SNAFU ® by Br uce Bea nie

Help Wanted

41

Scrtpta At Home. M1ny Audtra

Noododl FuiiiPort·Timo 1.ao1·
tu-7000 Ext. 2e8, 24 Houro.
AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU

E:xcenenc
Pay,
Bentfhe,
Tranapor1atlon,
407-282-47117,

8a.m.-10p,m.

AVON I All Aroao I
Spoora, 304-675-1429.

~.

LA, DR, SunnMMR,

mtnt, WID

Toll

hook~p,

~

no watw..

bldo, no fllllo Job .. ~flclllon,
roll $286.00mo, pluo dip, by oppo nt~S.. 222 N. Mkldllporl,
OH 21
3812
Nlco 3 bedroom houoo, double
g111111, lull -mont, 2617 Un-

Shl~oy

Avon-Start your own Buelneu
for Chrlatm... AICIIVI $20.00

ccln Ave, 3CJ4..e71-270l

Froo Avon O!Hol Coli 114-11984370.

Rur 238 Flrlt A\lenue, Small

2b&lt;~Kitchon

5I

5 ploco bedroom 111111, quoon
box •Pring• .-.d l'l'lllttr..., 3Q4..
875-5215.
Corpol 1112 150 I Upt Solo On
AI Outoldo Corpol: SUI &amp;
14.88; Khchln Corpo~ 17!· VInyl
$3.81 I 14.88. Sole On A I Coi'·
pot In Stock! Motlohln Corpoto,
.14-441-11144. .
Couch Choir, Good CondHonl
$150. 614-446-8754.
County Applllnce Inc. Good
uoed oppllonCH, T.V. olio. Opon
8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon ...Sat. 614448-1688, 827 3rd. Avo. Go~
!!polio, ON

81 on TV many nteclecl tor
commtrcllla. Now hiring all
ages. For casting Info call 615--

771-7111 axt. T-237.

" I guess it's a lillie ea,ly to hope school

-----1

WIIkl.

:,c:omo In And Chock Out Tho
Bonoflto Thot Wo OHor:
'TopPoy
•Groot Mlln
• 80% No Touch Frol~hl
·• Ponolon And Proiii.Sho~ng
Pl1n

-... lnauranct

Ouortorty

•
Guaranteed
Bonu-

' .Job Socu~ly

Pooltlono For Exporlencod
Drivtrw, Studenta And TriiMN
Aro Opon lmmodletoty - If You
QuolllyL On Tho SPGI Hl~"9·
·c:omo •roporod To Fll Out An
Application.

I

HOLIDAY l!ilj, (CIVIC CENTER)
EXIT 58 B, ut'FI-84
CHARLESTON, WV

~

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10TH,
1991
2PM l 7PM

l

WEDNESDAY,
11TH 11191
DAM THRU 2PM

f

SEPTEMBER

Unoblo To Attend? Col Mondoy
ThN F~doy, 8 o.m. To 4 p.m.
1-8011-733-2771.
CAST

matlon plaiN contact: King'•

Doughtora' Modlcot Center,
Normo Rico, RN, Director, Nuroa
Rocruhmont, 2201 Loxlnaton
Avo~ Alhlond, Ky 41101. 11011-"327·
41101. EIO'E. KDMC ... .A Plflen1
pnolllolon.
Wonted motlvotod ulooporoon,
$26,000. to 162,000. !!rot yoor.
Trolnlng p!OV-, UpiMflCI
proflrrld. Sond -.mo to Box
P·5,% Pl. Pn. Rogll_~!f'! 200 Moln
Sl., Point PIOiunt; wv. 25550

For ulo by ownor, 3-IR homo
wfth carpori, 1Bx33 obovo
ground pool, 10.12 llorogo
ldg.,_ choln !Ink ronco on Lourol
Cliff Hd. Coli 114-882-1311.
GOVERNMENT HOMES From S1
ru Ropolr). Dollnquont Tu
Proportr. Ropoouulono. Your
ArOI (1 805-11112-8000. Ext. GH·
10181 F C
t R ll
or urron lpo II.
GOVERNMENT HOMES From S1
tU Ropolr). Oallnquonl Tu
Mature, rHponelbll t.male for Property. RepoaeMlonl. Your
componlon ond mom'1 hllpor In Aroo (1) 805-11112-8000. Ext. GHthlllomo, 814-ll;z·2160.
10189 For CUrrent Ropo Uot.
CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
HOUSE FOR FREEl! Mull mouo
Hiring Mon/Womon. Up To 1600 off lot In Middleport Fill In
Wnkly. Tronopo"ollonL_Holll- -mont, oHd onilllrow. Mull
lng. CALL NOW 1·201-7311-7000 otgn controctl 2·BR, Lorge LR,
EXt. 1617B6.
DR, Both, IIIII now 1001 orid gut·
tor, n o w - onc1 PVC pluiltbW1nted: Mallvated Sale• Ptraon lng, need aome work. You pay
• $28,000 • $52,000• 111 Yur • for tho moving! Only Hrloul
Trolnlng "-!dod. .. porlencod colton! Coli 614-!l;z-207'1 oftor
Prolorrid. Sond Rooumo To: 7:00pm.
Box CLA 0110, c/o Golllpolll
DollY Trlbu!)!1821 Third Avonuo, Nouu, 5 ocrn, 4 bectroomo, 3
Galllpotll, Ull 48831.
1\111 bo~tho 32JJ481 two llvolo, 111
extru, c. r.auced for quk:k
12
Situation
ule,
,1100. 304-675-301H1.
Mobile
Homo And Double
Wanted
Ooroge On 1 Aero. Loll In Oo~
Ohio. tmmodloll Qc.
Dodrlll'l Prlvllo Homo Coro: !!polio,
Hove Room In My Homo For 1 ouponcy. 114-445-11340.
Eldlrty lion And 3 Elderly
Lodln. 114-3811-1183, 814-381- 32 Mobile Homes
11218.
for Sale
14
Business
1Vl'l Rogal, 12x60, 814-IIV2·23BO.
Training
1973 Kirkwood 12x85 On Rontid Lot. Good Cond~lonl $5,000.
Rllroln
NowtiiSouthullom 614-445-4872.
Buolnno CQIIIIII, SDIIna Valley
PIIZI. Coli Todliy, 8W-c4i-4387fl 1975 Fiootwood 14x70, 3br, 1 112
Botho1 With Woodburnor, Totot
Roglllorotlon 1190-05-121111.
EIIC1nc. $8,600. &amp;14-446-e075.
18 Wanted to Do
18t1 Sunohlno 14•n mobil•
homo (llko now) S1IOOO. oloo
Wll Bobyall In My Homo 130140
lot In town with gorago
Anr.lme.
Rodney
Arw1. opt rodono $17,000. Mull Sol!,
Ro lflncn Avoltoblo. Coli 614- 304-41711-4827.
245.a&amp;B7.
3 Bedroom, 2 Bathe, 3
Buolh Hog Sorvlc:l. Rouonobll 28x70
Glrtlgl, Thwman, Old 3S Rotoo. NO Job To Smolll 114- car
278, 114-2411-8182.
37t-2842.

Dour lor hln, •;/l.!'tls-"roolon,
mil.
304-87S-2784 or
11138.
a-goo Portoblo Sowmlll don't
Exeojlllng IOOiiclllonl for tui- hlul yow loll• to the mill Juot
tion lroi ONo Coln!*oncy colt 304-1175·1887.
Nuroo NJ C.., -_,.,.._
HouM cleaning or ottlce cleanlion
ol witt be
M\glble
tor· lfllpla
,.,......
II Ing, coll&amp;14-1182-354t.
- o y Nlft!nt IIIII llohob HouHCioonlng And ontco
Conter, :!mil
Ad, CIMnl"'l
Mondoy Through
F~doy. Roforencnl Coli 304o
y
.
ON
I
·
£.0.E.
675-2363.
Exportoncod ... b e d - Mill Poull'o Doy Coro Contor.
J&gt;oodod. MUll - I J'W- Solo, onordobto, chlldcora. M·F
lhl rood ......-. ....... t o.m. • 5:30 p.m. A1111 2~10.
lng ~ ollble hlolory, Before, atter echool. Drupoolns
be25f'WOIICII. P-druallll welcome. 8~4. New Inohd roldt011a. IC»2211151.
font Toddler Coro, 614-446-8227.
GALLIPOLIS JOBS NoC - - Rlch'o Rollorollon, 304-875liNd In Nowopopor. All Typo, 6m Aro your flncu ond dockl
tncomoo. 24 Hour R-11111- 1· tumlng black? I can clean thn
gQ0-288-2245.
back lo the original wood color
Eauot Opportunity Employer .

R&lt;ii:==

waterproof. Aleo. ln1erlor
lmmodloto Oponl"'ll Avolllblo and
For Corllllod Nw- Aldol. and exterior p8intlng.
Storllng Sollry SUO Por Hour. Will Babyolt In My Homo Or
Sign On Bonuo Avolllblo. C.... Youro,
Anytlmol
Go!·
toe! Suun Smllh, AN, Plnoc- llpottliKylllr
Crook
Aroa.
Cire Center, 170 Plnecr'Mt R•l•r•ncw Available. Ci'J4.446Dnvo, Golllpotlo,. OH 45e31, 114- 8624, or 614-441·1721.
441-7112.
Wilt Do Babyohtlng In My Homo,
Join 1 winning tnm 11 1 toodlr Morcorvlllo ArN. r14-256-6704.
In tho Flnonclit SO&lt;VIca Aronol
Being 1 nwmber of our COJto&lt; Will Do Bobyslttlngln My Homo.
eumer

fln1nce IMm

rnune

A•f•r•ncee, Reaaonable Ret..,

hiving 1 good ploco to llort. Any Shin. 6t4-446-4532.
Are you oolf mcllvotod, ....,. Will do house CINnlng or office
tlvo ond enjoy dullng wl1h otunlng 614-882-&amp;218.
piOIIIe? A ptuoont PlfiOIIIIMy
ond good phono okllle oro •
mull. Rnponolbllllleo Include
Financial
adlviUta rMited to crtcln, .....,

account rnan~gemenl and ~~&gt;
cauntlfl9. For lmmodlete oonlidorot!On, contoct Tlno Morgon
11 114-182-2111. Equol Qppor·
tUnny Employer. M·F·H. NonSmold"'l ond DNg-Froo Envlronmont.

"

KUWAII'ISAUDI JOBS Hltlnallen/Womon Mlny Fllldo;
Elaollenl Poy Whh Tronoportotlon Plltl. CoM Fw Dllollo 1~11-

, , . _ ExL K.u3.

KUWAII:( SAUDI JOBS
+ Mln(Wornon Now
11o1n1 Hlracl. AI Fllldo. Pold
T.....,.,..lon. For Info . Coli 1·
-~ Ex1. 2524.
KUWAII: SAUDI WORKERS
NE£Diii: 135.00 I Up Per Hour.
Tor F - loth Skilled I Unokl~
led For Info. Coli 115·7711-5505
~35~~~0\~R

ExLK.....
Pl"~lme

ooriJ.o.!nlervontlon

:f:tl•l~ 11-:,. ~operob:~

QllMMIDO eorly, lntlfVI'!ilon
epec!llol' ~neat·. poll lndl
•~ Mild ,....,. to, Mt,ao
MliAO/Dii, PO Box 3117,
Sy-, ON 4177i, Molao
IIJWO cia. not tiiKrlmlnoto, ln
.....,.._or..,..._ ond
empleifinllll on bMel of h•ndlcap,. NC.. color, CN.e d, natlonll origin, oox or ogo.
- o y POSTAL JOBS $11.711tM.IO/hr. No IIJI. noodod. For
o11m ontl opptlcotlon lnlo.1 colt
1·2111-111'15317on&gt;-10pm 7aoyo.

Wo- ~voted -~~~-.
~.011-W.OOO 111 ,...., troln~
PfOvldod, o~nco .,.,.r_,
"""" '"""'" 1o Dally s.nu...
PO Box 7211 Pornorov, OH
45711

•

_- o '

I

'

Pomerov...;...Middieport~ Olilo

.

Trucks for Sale

1977 Ford 1 Ton Dump TNC!t,
ExGOitent Condhlonl 114-288·
1058.
1978 Ford Pick Up, Super-cob,
automatic tranL, Hf~lne,
PS, AC, $1200, 814-IIV24821.
1979 lnt1maUonal T,_..ar II
ooml, modo! 4070B 400 Cum·
mini, oxc cond, 18000, 814-8853384 oftor 5pm.
1110 Chivy 112 ton, good cond.,

ru. z-oor .AW'rtll

14 · 92 · 7~ ·3· 13· 11. ·

s- }7 · 35-102. · 44 ·79 -

ME IN 11( RAT!

ON li!E Cll»&gt;T OF

" · 12· 12 . 88· 47· '10 ...

11 ·

zo-1- 81 · " · n+

.~r7"")

18 . l · 71 · '18- 11· 25· 33.. .

•

For All 2-1cre1, tl1t ground,

RutiWid Townohlp, 14x68moblle
horne, cky nter, e•r•gl, 2
bdrm, $11,000, 114-1112'2433

For Solo: 1872 Flntwood mobllo
homo.
Coli
114-882-11155
onytlmo.
LooklnJI For A 0..1? Conolder A
Bonk Rodolmod Mobllo Homo.
$500 aown wnh Aprrovod
Crodltl Graot So!IC11on Frn
Soi·Up And Dltlvoryl Colt Etooo
Home Center, NI00-58a-.5711.
N•w 1802 14x80 three bedroom.

2.lull bothlh ohlnglo 1001, vinyl
oldln~.
1 uttoro, corpoted
throughout, oil drywoll Interior
ond 3-boy window. S17,8rT.OO.
Coll1-800-7211-4045.
Now Ctoylon,.Shorp Ao A Tack,
14t70,

3

Bedroom,

Total

EIIC1~c. $13,!115. Nowhara Etu
But EIHO Homo Contor. Coli 1·
614-Tn-1220.

34

Business
Buildings
OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Avo., Golllpotlo. Clou to
Coul1 Houae. 1 room, 2 rooma,
3 100mo, 4 roomo. All nlcoly
docoraltd, olr conditioning,
your water I ltWir bill are pala.
Mak• your cholc. now. No
quotn over the phoneloryou

8848.

:crrnonto Fot Ronl. 814-445Aportnllnto for rent in Pomeroy
and lllddloport. 1-2 bedroom.
Colllrom 1 to 1. 814-!l;z-2403.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 131 Jocklon Pike
!rom $182/mo. Wotk 1o ohop &amp;
movloo. Colll14-446-2588. EON.
CompiiiiiY Fumlohld Smoll
Houn, N'o Poll, Yord, Pluo
U1Uhleo. $235/mo.IM-446-0338.

=·

Efflct.ncr, .ton, ,., blth
•-•ullc oil oloct, lull cor·
H D occptod, 304-675For RIPII· I bedroom 1111. 125

Colo Stroot, Mldcllport, 0H 614-

182·7511,
Fumlohod 3 Roomo l Both,
CIMn, No Pot11 Roloronco &amp;
~ Roqulroa. 814-441-1518.
Fumlohod Apo"mont, 1 Bed·
room,.JYoter P•_lcl1 $275, 112 Milo
Eoll "'Porlor.ll14-388-8863.
Fumlohld Apo"mon11, I br,
1225 UIIIR!eo Pold. 820 Fou"h
Avo l 1117 Socond Avo, Gil·
11ii0111. 114-446-4-418 oftor 7p.m.
Fumllhld opt. 1117 2nd Oo~
llpolle. I BR, $225• utllhleo pold.
114 441 4411 aft• 1 p.m.
Fumllhld EHicloncy, $165/mo.
U11!HI11 Pold, Shore Both, 1107
Second Avo, Golllpollo, 114-446C411 After 7p.m.
Oroclouo living. 1 ond 2 bod·
a.-rtmenta 11 Vlll1ge
1nd
Rlveralde
Apartment• In Middleport. From
room

Manor

$11111. Coll814-t82-7787. EOH.
Complllly Fumllhod mobllo
home, 1 mile below town over·
looking river. No P1ta, CA. 614oo
448.0338.
North 3rd S1, Mlddloport, Ohio, 1
bedroom lumlohld opt, roloroncn ond dopooH roqulrod. 304882-2588.
North 4th, Middleport, Ohio. 2
bed100m lumllhod opt, dopooh
and ref.,.nce Mqulrld, 304-882·

2568.
One Bedroom Aportmont Uvlng
Room Fumlahed, Complete
KHchln Shower In Both, Goo
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Hut, Air C:OndHion, Wuhor And
Dryer, Good Neighborhood.
Lole I ocraogo o..llablo lor Roloronco And DepooM Ronew home conltructlon on qulred. 814-445-1370 After lp.m.
21
Business
Rayburn Road. Paved road,
county
water,
reasonable Smal 1br Apartment, 7 Court
Opponunlty
reatriCtlou. Complete lnlorma.. StrMt, Khc:hen Wtth StOYe,
lion mailed on requeat . 304-675- Rolrigoroto,r1_ $let/mo. Ptuo
INOTICE!
John D. Gerlach, no Dopoitlt, o.nltkleo, Rolorenco.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. 5253.
614-446-41128.
racommonda 111111 you do bull· alngl•wlde trallera, pllaH.
nno with poopto you know, ond 1•VIconl lol In Mlddtopo~ oil
Furnished
NOT to aond money thtougn tho uti!Hin ond 1-11orogo building 45
mall until you heve lnvMtTgated 814-882·2107.
'
Rooms
the offering.
8 ~ern abav• H•nderson look· Roome tor rent • welk or month:
Arthur'• Choln Unk Fonco. lng - n ol volloy, $7.500. 304· S::~~~ ot $120/mo. Golllo Hotel.
Ruldlntlal, Commercial, Jn..
:6.:..:...:..::;858=0::·_ __ _ _
dustrlat, FrH EltlmltHI Com.. 578-2894.
plete Installation. Phone; 814· Como~tory toto In Grovel Hill SIHplng roomo wnh cooking.
384-sm
Comontory ot Chlohlro, Ohio, lltoo troller 1poco. All hook·u~.
S14-IIV2·2315.
.
Colt 1 l or 2:00 p.m . ,~
••• '
Attontlonl Styling Solon For
Solo! Primo Locoflon. Coli 814- Mtrcor Botlorn SUb-dlvlolon, 5651, M11on WV.
446-8103, 814-4411-I:JN.
one 1cre IOta, Rt. 2 frontage,
pt'lce r.ducld, city water, :so..; 46 Space for Rent
Pay Phone Route. Local Ar... li!a-2336.
'
Quick Solo. 1-800-234-11088.
Country Mobile Homo Pork,
O.J. Whho Rood, 2 AcrH Route 33, Notllt of Pomeroy.
VENDING ROUTE: 0o1 Rich Woodin Building Lot, Rudy To ~11111111, porto, ...... Coli
Quick? No Way! But WI HIVI A Build On. RHlrlclod. $7,1100. I
·11171.
Good, Studt, A , _ , Bull- 814-245-1585.
nOll. Won~ l.u1. 1-284VEND.
Wo hove j4) beout!M bulldlnll ~ Wanted to Rent
..Iotti.., 100 1150' each. Hu ltate 2 or 3 BR homo In Pomoroy
lflflrG""'h•P4Jc 1yotom, • - r
Coll8~1112-.-.
Real Estate
top (pold), County woter, ochool buo ond lrllh plclt up oYIIIoblo.
Merchandtse
llodullr hoinM oCCOjlled.
PI- Cllllor moro lnformltlon
31 Homes for Sale
Somorvtllo lloony, 30W75-30JO
2 bodroomo, lull buomant or17W431.
Household
5I
onctoud porch, gorogo, 222ii
Lincoln Avo. 304-1175-5301 or
Goods
Rentals
175-6416.
3 Bedroom Homo, $25,000. 814For Solo: OuHn Blu Bookcooe
445-8323.
W.llrbocl, WMh Droworo. 11441 Houses for Rent
441-7311.
3 bedroom hou11 on 10 acne,
400 ft. fronllgo, on Brodbl.rry 2 bedroom homo 2 mUll out Gu floor turnonco 80,000 BTU,
Rd. 7.12% pooolblo, 129,600', Sontl Hill Rd, biG. morlh gu floor fuiiiiiiiCI 101!,000 BTU,
211-38S-2388.
Nflrencea, 304-17$..7348.
' wllor ooltnor, 114-1112·2132.
muat ... th..,, Phone
an
appointment. 114-446-7108 day,
448-t539 lVI.

•

r

I
EV!NING

c•

8:00 Ill. (I) (J). Ill
IIJNowa

tho

t...

HOW DO '(OU TI-IINK YOU
DID ON T~E '' TRUE OR
FALSE '' TEST SIR 7

1

Overheard in lounge of big
1 office building: "The reward
for work well done is the
.
.
.
.
,..--------- -- ---,opportunity to ····--!"

::=~odly

0 Rln Tin Tin, K·l Cup
Stereo. Q

Ill

El E 12

.~ .,.I~s,. . .,IR,. .E_,I_A_E;I.,. . -fIt:io

glchclllldc~

'' 'f'EAI-l OR NOPE'' !

r

"'T
yl

g=CourtQ

1 Tf.lOUGHT IT WAS

LilA

~-1-rr. .oi_
. . M'""'r ~1 J

(I) Andy Grlttllh

(l)Ciubc(1) Rlltdlng Rolrtlrow Stereo.

(I)

I

ESTOHO

I

~....,;.~5-=,.:1i~lr:--;.;.1,..::.....,---l Q

Complete tho chuckle quoted
by lill l n~ In tho missing wordt
L-.....l.-.1........1'--..l..-"--' you develop !rom stop No. 3 below.

c.

.

.

•

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

•

UNSCRAMBLE lETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
.

1-1-1 Conlltct Q
C88 NoWa Q

all • Andy Grlllltlt
DUpClooe

.

.

.

1

II

I I
.

1D New Zomr Storeo. Q
1:35 Ill Andy Grlttllh
7:00 ~. 0 Wheel Dl Forluno

55

2 pc, 11111 piling, 12 n long, 160.
304-882·2708.
Block, b~ck, - • r t&gt;lpoo, wfn·
dows, Unlet., etc. Claude Wln·

toro, Rio orondo, OH Coli 614245-612t
Six al IIHI bldgo. Foctory
dulo. Muot ull now. Con
dollvor. Will oracl. Two 30140,
2,401180, Two 801100. Coli now
ond rellr¥1 303-'JII3.4860.

56

Pets for Sale

8 Wook Old Bird Doa Pupo,
Polnllng Brood. ChoopllM-256·
1671.
AUCTION
Olivo St.,
AKC Booton Torrlor Pupploo.
furniture,
Sire And Dam Show Doge. :Z
Work booto.
Motoo, 114-258-12111.
VI'RA FURNITURE
AKC roglllored Knlhond
&amp;14-448-3158
puflln, wOimocl ond lholl, 304UVINO ROOM: Solo I Cholr,e-:.:.75-3:::;:11::1:..:---:-:--:---:-$11111.00· Rocllno&lt;
$149.00; ~
Swlvot Rocker, $88.00; Colloo 1 Bugln, 1 yr old ond running,
End TobiH, $81.00 Sot.DININO guorontHd, $126. 304-875-2075.
ROOM: Toblo WHh 4 Podded Orogonwynd eonory Porolon,
Chain, tl48.00i Cou~Wry , Pine SlamiH 1nd Himalayan klllene.
Dtnotto With Bench And 3

Chllro,, S288.00; Motohlng 2 ,:1;.:11,.:4~11;..:38474::•:;:":;er:.:7;cp.::;m:::·:.._-:-­
Door "Hch, $348; Or S58t.OO Fllh Tonk, 2413 Jocklon A••·
Sot; Ook Toblo1 42x82 Whh 8 Point P!Noont, 304-875-2063,
Bow
Boc•
Cholro, lull !!no Troplcll lllh, blrdo,
$828.00.BEDROOM: Pootor Bod· !lmlll onlmolllnd ouppln.
room Sullo (5 pc.), $349.00; 4
Drowor Chell, 144.115; Bunk 0Poodupo,ll• P"I'Pielm,~~o~yo~lood•nd 1 ,~~.
Bod, $228; Comptoto Full Min
AKC Chi
H
••
Sot $105.00 Sol; 7 pc. CodorCool
·:;:;::•:;:ll::;le:,:814;:::-88:=~=.:;·==:-=
Bodroom Sufto, 8888.00.DPEN: =wH•- SO DIFFERENT 'BOUT
Mondoy Thru Saturclly, lo.m. to
Ao ~
A
&amp;p.m., Sundoy 12 Noon Till THE HAPPY JACK 3-X FLEA
5
COLLAR? IT WORKSIII C....
p.m., 4 Mlln on Route 7 On tolno NO Synthollc ""rllhroldo.
Route 14'1 In Centenary.
rr
For Doao l Colo! J D NORTH
PRODUCE 114-441-11133.
52 Sporting Goods
Remington Model 870 Wlngm•• While Pornoronlen, 814-llfl2-237l
ter. 281nch Moditled Barnl With ,
Musical
Slug Bomol. $300. 814-245-6047. ;. fiT
Instruments
Antiques
53
Bundy Ano Sox, ~ Cond~
Buy or ooll. Rlvorlno Antlquoo, tlonl$171. ....754.
1124 E. Main Straot, Pomeroy.
Fw
Solo:
Conn
Trombone,
$100.
Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 8:00
p.m., Sundoy 1:oo 1o 8:00 p.m. 114 ... 4111.
614·882·2526.
lnolrumonto Wlllled: Borftono,

54 Miscellaneous

~ete~~ a:.,.~T'!:;

=::=:s ~f*'· ~=

.,...,...,M,.....,e,..rc,..h_a,n_d..,lse,.....,_..,.. 1
8
16 Inch Glrio Bicycle, Purple 3513, I
·
And Whllo, Now Tlroo, $25.00 5S
F., •ItS &amp;
304-11711-1433 Aftor &amp;p.m.
• ..
16'x7' whlto llbe'llll•• gorogo
Vegetables
door, w/opener I remote, $150
lor door, $150 for opono• both Conning P-hH now avolloblo,
$275, 614-1112-21101 tor tnlormo· otoo Bortlll1 PNII and PNno
lion to 111.
Ptwno Iller In Auauot. Colt 1===:.....,,---,.,--,---::-1 1100-447-3780 lor pika. lOB'S
19S1 John Dooro Modo! B MARKET, Mooon "' Oolllpotlo,
Rebuilt, Excollant CondH!onl OH.
Hyllor 4 Stl~ Fork Lift 3
Treller Axloo, &amp; Trollor Bed.1114446,2369.
Farm Supplies
55 Gollon; 30 Gallon, 6 10 Oo~
&amp; Ltvestock
lon Aqu~rlume All With Power
Filters, Heaters, Equipment And
Fish. 1225. 614-4411-8471.
Chlldcroft beby bed convo"• to 61 Farm Equipment
youth bed, good cond, $250.
304-llllli-3841.
Wo hove hod • good Juno ond
Concroto &amp; plolllc Hptlc llnko, July montM ·of trodlng lnd
Ron Evans Ente~dHI, Jack.. need
Mil uMd
MF 235todlnol
42hp equipment.
with ROPS
oo=:n::_,O=H:.:.:.1-80::::04:=:31::..::12B=·:..__ _ 116,1100. MF1U dleool 82hp w11h
3 ooo Fr111111n loodlr 88,500.
Fl rawood 830 ...d' ··••
.,.... , UF281 dlllll 12hp whh cob
dollvorod,
814-11112·7810 17,000. Oautz 80011 . . _ 85hp
•v•nl"'l•·
wnh cob $7,100. A.C. 8140 dlllll
For Solo: 1971 Mobllo Homo, 41 hp, 4 Wheel drlvo, 4 ~IIVI,
Vory Good Condhlonl Aoklng, ·~C::, 11,960. JD
goo
14,000. 614-258-6237.
RO I
conopy, FAT I wto,
oxc tlroo 14,000. AC 7045,

For S1le: Good UMCI Aototlller 5 145hp, cab 3 double YIIYM, exc:
Horu Power, ANr Tine New tlr•, $12,000. Ford Compact
Two 6 Ponll lntorlor Doora, Pro- troctor 1710, 24hp dlllll, 4

hu"'ll S1zo: 32xll0. 814~41-1272,
Evon ngo l W..koncll.
F~gldolro Wuhlr, Orvor, Hor·
vat Gold, Ukl Now Condition,
$126 Eoch Or 8200 Polr. j~~;r
~-· Or Wookondo) 61
Huoky Homo Lllo lnd llcCu~
loCh clloln morkld - n
Sopt. Solo. Sldoro Equipment,
Hondoroon, WV. 304-6711-7421.
Konmora olr oondnl..,.., 12,000
BTU, $250. Du~Thorm mobile
homo lumonco, $300, 814-882·
7043 alter 9:00pm.

whool d~uo wHh oil hyd toodlr
88,1100. John Dooro 550c Dour,
6 woy hyd blldo, ROPS wonch,
roor oux hyd, aoor1 undlr cor•
mgo $18,000, ~dng mor111
1360, : ' : .KubGIII clllll okld
~~2 bucklll $7,1100.
Now HoHI;;;J moclol 3N Wlndor
mlxll' 100bu current model
14,eoo. Formhlnd plndor mixer
moclol 811 wHh corn oltollor
tt,eoo.
Doutz·AIIIe
morlll
SII45CA 711 llno tiiC rrtOWr
condntonor 3pt. Oamo 16,100.
Dlutz KM25 7ft •um mor111

=~:~2'::1!0:0:~7';

Nino loot hoybl.- $2,200. eoch.
New wedding gown and veil, Ono Hollend 488, 81
never been worn.J elze 1M2, hoyblno $2,1100. Loty rokl TJICI.
304-1175-5743 oftor o:OO.
dor combo $2,700. Holllnd
Port1ble chngtable letter algn
~
0
$258. Froo lllloro/dollvrrry. PIlle llltor $47.50 box, M/1. Slgno. boloo uc cond $3,eoo. IIF 124
bolor $2,000. MF No3 bllor oxc
1-8011-133-3413 oxplroot-111-at.
cond, seoo. Now Holllnd 181
Rocondhlonocl WaoMra, Dryero. round Iloilo outo wrap now
Hollend 881
OuorontHd p!Ompl III'VIco for ohlln 15,1100. oil mokH, modlle. Tho Wuhlr round bolll Hvd wrop 16,800.
Hollond N3 round bolor
Dryer Shoppo. 814-448-2144.
current moclol dlmo $81 ~.
Som Somorvlll'o Army SurD!uo Hollond 141 round Dlllr
bolfdo Saf1dyvlll Poll Ofllco current .....~ •orr __ aood
Fri, Sot, Sun. Noon, 8:00Pirl '$7,100•. Holland 3211l'TD
othlr dlyo ltotn 304-273-8811.
montn
...,..c11r
11.000.111bu,
(Jr comoulllll!llllkl big luYal · Holland 813 ~dol'
ourpluo rontol clolhlnllo 11~
......... 0.1. - ··
So.,. 100,000 BTU Gu F.,. ond 1ioJ1o $t,too. Thrn now ldio
noco, Uoed I Holling ' - · modil 323 P!l;kl~ 1 - . good
814-f45-l184. .
. -;..!:~:".
On4!

=·

=n

Uoed Sotollho E~ulpmont,,J~
eluding: Wholo Syotomo wnh
Dococllrl, Rocolvora, Dllh I
Dococlorl. 814-882..173.
UHd llloltho oqulpmont, Including, wholl oyollm wl1h
docodora, rocolvoro,_dllh ond
diCOdoro. 114-1182..17.1.
UHd iotoiKo oqulpmant, Indulling oyllllll tollh
d-ora, racolvo!J_ dloh I
docodor, ol4-882-11n

'::.;..r.::!.:;;'

::..:oo-~=

- .

:::::., 12

sc,iiiiil. m

·=~lng~'
m """""

61

Fann Equipment
110 MF Traclor Whh Plowo And
Cuftlvotor And I Fl. Buoh ~

r·~~::.:.=. T~t.!:'"~-

Dwnor wtu Ftnonco. 814-288-

~2.

$3,~ Tit... Iuper 717 cltoD-

- · 12- ......
$1,1100. ....
......
1'MII
fona!l,
..
- . . . - . ........ w,...-.7

Unlco

~II.

lcobenk Milk
Cooler, Ollival No. 75, VIC:.
pump,
814-1141-26110
oner
1:00pm.
Wont~ To Buy: UNd Ill PuDTvDI Buoh Hog, Coli 514-4414~4 AHor lp.m.

loMol Conlo&lt;

... At. $7, Point Pllullll
Ripley Rd, 30WIW8ll4.

iiiCI

TNic Tlto

O~Q

388-8032.

I om wonting to Iooft ot tho
areen and white Ford Bronco

74

Big 4 H - RUIIIor Troller With
Roinp And Drooling Room,
~HO; lloy :lrd 1188 ADHA Sor·
roU Mo.-., Good Conftnnlllon,
Shown In Hlftor By Smoll Child.
114-28111522
'
Elrcollent Bomtnthll Bull, 8
MontM Old, Double Tlmo • En, _ Brooding, Aloo, 1Mako
Good St- Projoct. 814-446311111, ~ Olllllplo.

Transportatton
71

Autos for Sale

11171 Dodge cor, folr ccnd., &amp;14182-2388.
1977 Ford LTD good mochonl·
col cond., gOOd tiody, $400, 814114U380.
1978 Ford LTD, Good Condition!

\

PICTV~U THEY W.AN,.
F~l'f iHf . HI..ICCJ-E

-

Stereo. Q

MacGyver ll(lhla hla

archnamaatl 11 an

oil--eon 1'111011. (R) Stereo.

~

till

all • .-oVII!: PMr ..._,
Tlto cu. Dl tho Notorlou8
Nun (2:00)
0 Murder, 8ho Wro18 Q
0n l18gl Stereo.
D NFL Montl8r Night

ton truck
whHIO ndlotora lloor mot,,
lie. Ri R A~, ~. 3043n-3933 or 1
. .
OM

5

a

M81ch-Up

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

BPiletwNcwa

1D The Llglntl Dl Pl'lnol
V8114111t

C.mper for ale, Good condition. aiMpa-6, very raa80IUI.,_,

1:301)).

614-843-5124.
HyUno 36ft trallor, toto '88
model, Iota of extraa, ti3,DOO.

.

illl

44tl'o81101.

moooogo304-6~ .

1982 Dido CutiHI $1,760. 304-

875-5301.

1982 Oldo Cuttou Broughom
PS, PB, PW~ PD.L. Cruloo, Tin,
Excellent conalllonl Alklng
$3,000. 304-875-7188.
1882 Pontloc orond Pri'!, T·
Topo, EloGirk: Wlndowo, I lllll.
$1,1100. 814-4411-2278.
1983 Co11111r0, v..,_ 1872 MOB
rellorobll, 814-t82-n84.
1983 Comoro, 'V-1, outo., good
ahape. rune good, $2300, 11..
1112·2357 00 'JII2·231111.
1183 Cutlon lupromo, good
cond, 8850. 304..82·211811.
1113 Oldl Dollla 88, Good C:Ondl·
tlon, 114-258-1171.
1183 Otdl 01111 88, 304-6754008.
1184 Collbrlty, 4dr, ~r. AC, PS,
PI, Extra Clean! $3....,. Coli Af.
lor lp.m. 114-448-12C4.
1915 Chov.- Collb~ty. 4dr, Y·
8 Excolllnl CondMionl Low
Mlloogol I Ownorl Fully Equippod. 11'14--448-2102.
1887 Dido Doftol5, 82,000 Mlleo,
All POMr, Air, Excolont Cond~
lion. 814-446-4225, After 4p.m.
1181 Chivy CoRico, IIC. cond,
no - n poymortt nllded, olgn
r.m.~'r over poymonto,
1981 Dolllo 88L~!l looded, 304lla-2678 or 511H1n0.
11181 Red Cutleoo Supremo
OldlmOIIIIe, Excollont Condl·
tlont a... Root, eo11 814-441·

:0200.'---=:-:--:::--:--:--:-=::-:For Solo: WT7 Ford T·Bird,
G- Body, Tlroo, Alplno
Rodlo Noono, Motor Work. $300.
eou Soturaov And Sundoy
Morning, 814 448 8071.

lo M True? Joopo For SC4
Through 11111 u.s. aovn Coli
Toll Froo 1-.c87-858llll. SL·
l(l

BASEMENT
VIATERPROOANO
Uncondii!OI)II llflllmo guorontoo. Locol roforencoo lumllhld.
Froo llllmotoo. CoN ootllcl 1·
614-237-0488, doy or night.
Rog.,. Ba•ment Watll'pre»-

Complllo Mobile Homo Sot-Upo,
R:rlro; Com-lcol, R....,_
II
lmpnovornonto. Including:
Plumbing, Eloctrlcol. lnouronco
Ctolmo ACCiplod. 114-258-1811.
Curtlo Homo lmprovomonll:
YNro Exporlonco On Older a
Newer Hornoo. Room AddHiono,
Foundotlon Work, Rooll"!!,
Wlndowo I Siding. Froo Eitlmatnl A1ferencn, No Job To
Big Or Smotll 114-441-o225.
JET
Aoro11on Maloro, ropolrod. Now
• ro-buln motoroln llock, ROH
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800131'H21.
Ron'o TV Sorvlco, _..tlzlng
In Zonllh 1110 IWVIclng moot
other brondo. Houn collo, oloo
oomo appllonce ropolra. WV
304-671-2388 Ohio 814-441-2454.
Sopllc Tonk Pumt&gt;lng 810, Golllo
Co: RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jocklon, ON 1-1100-637-11521.
Dovlo
Sow·VIC
SlfVIcl
Georgn Creek Rd. P1na, aup!
piiH, pickup, ond dlllvory. 814-

~TOFF

iHE

SCHOOL BUS.

Wll dO _ , . , . ,

roollng

bullclng, troo trt,;,lng 1 ~
re-..1, ....... Pllnl!nil. For
lno ••motoo, alii o-jO ot 1·
814-812-8?62.
Plumbing
Heating

Pootlrllll Redeklna II

Cowboys (L) Ster8o.
(!) (!) M8JIIqlilcl TIIMft
Helen Ia ltoundecl by Kan'a
creditors; Jack Ia dl81r1Cted.

=·

Murphy Ia MuiDhY
fonieclto.._
cl1ooae
IWO men In her life.

~=..~.e. Time
WNalllng

8 Nelfwllll Now Stereo.

D 8urtlng JuniOr

Championship from
C.lllomla (T)
King Uvet
1D Scar.crow end Mrl. King

e urrr

.BARNEY
NU.SIE II FETCH ME
MY SCALPEL AN' THAT
PLASTJCAL DOODAD

WITH TH'
FOUR·LEAF
CLOIIER
IN IT!!

Q
1:30 (J) Nowa
Ill C •

Doolgn~111

'

w-

Mary Jo decldet to bring 1
man wh&lt;l mugged her to
court. (R) Ster8o. Q

South

W~st

4•

Pass

North
2 NT
Pass

Opening lead:

East
Pass
Pass

+K

agement with the diamond two a t
trick one, East could play either the
fou r or the eight on the second round .
East may throw his higher ca rd as a
suit-preference signal for the higher
of !he two remaining side-suits
(spades here). So when East drops the
eight on the second round of diamonds,
West should find the spade switch.
if East drops his lower card, either
it is neut ral (no pre ference for either
suit) or it is asking for the lower-rank ing side-suit. Wesl mus t decide which .
Here he would treal it as asking lor a
club switch.
One word of warning. These signals
apply ohly if the de fender's ca rds are
useless. You mustn 't waste critical
cards.

~

.

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle

1 Syrin11e (el.)
5 Jekyll's
oppollte
I WWII area
' 12 Dlolanco
mo11ure
1 3 - - the
Mood for
Love
14 ~the Ieaton to be ...
. 15 Poke
• 16 Donaled
· nOne D•r- Tlmo
18 Catch In a net
• 20 C.voat22 11-bolt
23 Tlnl
· 24 Corantonr of
anointing
. 28 Indian nuree
· 32 Stnorlla'a
aunt
. 33 Nautical rope
34 Alrllno Into
35 Game •nlmal

Answer to Prevloue Puzzle

36 And 10 on
(abbr.)
39 Shipping unit
40 Look lor
42 Cute
44 I think, lllerelort- 47 Agnue48 With handl
on hlr•
51 Smal and
clalntv
55 Sea eagle
58 Hawaiian city
58 Hoarty laugh
59 Arrange
60- Roborto
61 Concollo
62 Sugar
63 Advloe
64 Dlallpated
man

dance
4 Molt unusual
5 Bure•u
6 Entertainer
-Sumac
7 Plungod
8 Adveraary
9 Coupd'-

DOWN
t Exeggeratad
promotion
2 Story
3 High-school

D Surt.r M~g~•lnil

10:00 (J) ..... LMtgul llllblll

(lb::-

ChicagO Wltlll Sox 81
Oakllnd Alhlellca
1110·~
Meggle'a boylrland Ia tiled
~~IS' utelllll dllh. (R)
all•Hu~~Wc

D Arnerlca'o Cup '12
Setting SaJI tor san Diego:

1988.
aiWartciNnl
0 700 Club Willi Pit

I

1111"11

FourthantiPino
114 448
Ohio

:Jt"...

HEAT PuMP Solei l Sorv!co,
304~0&lt;I14-4411M.

UOIIIIId

ASTRO-GRAPH

&amp;

Cortor'ndoHPiu!ftb!ng

w::-

1:00 Ill. 0 '-.cl faith (PI2
Dl 2)' NIC Monll8y Night at
!he MoviM 12.!~) Q
(I) (J) • Ale Moritl8r Night

i

Today's hand features an important
defensive technique tha t is overlooked
by most non-expert players. But i\ is
. easy to apply - as long as your partner watches your cards.
Cover the South and East cards in
the diagram. As West, you lead the di·
amond king againsl four hear IS: three,
two. five . Next you cash the diamond
ace: six, eight, queen. What do you lead
at trick three?
North 's two-no-trump opening is of
the modern variety , showing 20·22
. poiniS. South bids the contract he
' hopes he can make.
After West has cashed two top diamonds, his next play is critical. As the
· cards lie, if West switches to a spade,
· the contract goes down. But if he
switches to a club or leads a third diamond, declarer gels home, his spade
loser eventually being discarded on
dummy's long club.
How does Wesl know? By watching
East's cards. After signaling discour-

ACROSS

~

Will build polio COVIro, docko,
ocroonod rooma, put up vinyl
oldl119 "' tr~ltor oklrtlng. 114245-5887.

::::-:. ~o;-clll

:..==:

Etoctrlc:l~ ~

1188 Chevy s-10; 88,000 Ml!eo, 4 .
oPIId,•4 Cyll~ Roily Whooto, . 85 General Hauling
$3,000. 1144110i&lt;426, 304-8111·
1648
·
WIU houl 11nd, grovol dirt ·-•
1888 Rongor XLT 38,000 Mlloo COli. 304-885-3141.
'
~~
Aoklng, $4,000. 614-441-G731.
:r7::-'=..;;;~..:.::.......___

W.f739.

'rtlt.l

Vulner able: Both
Dealer: North

Reflections of 1987 and

Refrigeration

Nleoan 2 Whlll Drfvo Kina Cob,
s-tol Edition, l.oododT 814-

'rO!iL.L. SEe eN: 'M-IeN

448-o284.

~·
.! ~~~:mi;]iilv!~ I 84 . EleCtrical 6

19111 1-10 T - Fully t.oded,

.i

llng.
Corpontry ond Etoctrk:ll S...
Yh:IS.
Free
Eatlmatnll
Ruoonoblo Rollo!! 114-8854414 or 115-3888.

Mlotar

D8d,.

• On 8fltOe Stereo.
D 8c11uP Tilt
0 llaclc lll8llon

Home
Improvements

82

c ......

Major alka perm1881ort to
adoDIIIIe gina. (R) Stereo. Q

Servtces
81

O~of

M8111and lktln (Preview)
The boya perform on stage
with !he legendary
Temptatlonl. Storeo. C

814-24W064.

11171 Chryolor Cordobo 360,
outo, now IVIIYihlng, $1400.
doyo 814-112-2151. oller 5:30pm,
coii:J04.87W855.
1180 Plymouth Chimp; Oraot
Gu Mlloogo. Good Shopol Runo
Good! 2dr, Burvoof, Hltchbock,
$1,200. CoU Mork At: 814-361'
0411 B--··7p.m.
1881 - r y Collgor, mull 110,
good Cl!i._ '&lt;".!!.. ond leovo

IPIDialli Q
c(!) •8IA'Vl¥ll
l!venlng ......

Ava beglna labor and goes to
!he hOepblln I truck. (PI 2
of 2) (Rl Stweo. Q

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

"'11171='=Pon""""ttec,-G=-ro-nd-:-:P::-ri:-x,-=R::-o7bu'"""tn
Enalno, 3,100 Mlleo, $1,100. 814-

•Q•

.K 7 4

By Pbllllp Alder

(I) To lie A...--cl
(J) (J). llaGCirv.

1

304..76-44711.

+71
•Jt097 65

Those cards were
not so useless

... Air (Seuon Premiere)
Will and 1118 glllfrlentl get
!rapped In tho buemenl.

14ft olumn boot, 7 112ht&gt; Elgin.
1882 Oldo Cut!eoo. 304-6'75-7163

.109 2

SOUTH

Atlanta Braves (L)

14' boll, 40 HP motor ond tralloi.
20' boll, 115 HP motor ond

79

1:::-.:=Q

L'OO Ill. 0 P:mll Pl'lnol Dl

C1 IMI try MEA . Inc .

.K 1 2
+84 2

•s s 3

7:35 Ill ..... LMtgulllollbal
san FrMC!aco Giants at

Boats &amp; Motors
lor SaiB

New gu tlnkl,

•a

Tonight Stereo.
(i) .......... ,amlly

:s:::...

" TtlfY MV.fT HAVf THI
SIVIIF CA,/..f CDil'llJ&gt;AI'I
l HAvEl,

EAST
+K109 2

WEST
• 6 53
3

.AK J 109

D NFL Mondltr Night

TfLfscopf.

71ao After 5:30 p.m.
Kownakl Vulcon 750, $2,200.
304-875-4815.

76

PHILLIP
ALDER

(J) c•En~tl

1180 Honcle u Four Wheeler, 2
Whlot Drive, Ukl Howl Looo
Thin 100 Houra Aiding Time,
$2;!_00. 114-441-7705, Or 114-367·

114fi2·2315.

• 763
.A QJ 8

7:30~!l~Q

NAJA 5AY$ IT Wil-l- TAJcfo MANY YfA/lf ANt&gt; M4NY
Nl'£'-tON.$ OF J&gt;OI.tA~.I W GfT Tfff FIN/&gt; oF

1-1·11

.A Q

7:05 Ill ..,.,., ......

Motorcycles

traU~r,

NORTH
+A QJ 8

The Wallonl

~~~~~--~~
11181 Hondo V.el Mlg~J...!•OOO
mlleo, llklnow, 304-875-lllitll.

LIVe$tDCk

BRIDGE

=~
1D

thot II for 1111, colt 304-8758871.

75

63

88,1100. 814 4481447.
-ond~
12 to 17
·Ill , ovw II·coot

JMicn. K

(!) (!)

JD 2010 Tractor WHh Buoh
H011 SS~· 13e5 Oliver Dlnol
Whh Pl...,, 'rronoport Dloc And · 1987 Yomohl II 225 l 175. 114Buoh Hoa ~~i-Ownor Will 381'7243, 114-381'11473.
Flnonco. 11'14-.....,...._
11180 GL 11100 Oold Wlna, ExCIIJlm'o Form Eaulpmont~.sR. 38, IInl Condftlonl Extro Cltromol
Will Oolllt&gt;&lt;lll, 814-li-11777; &amp;,goo MIIIL 17,200. 814 441 1521.
Wldo Hllotlon now l uud lorm
troctora l lmplornonto. Buy, 1881 Yolllltho RTII, T-60 CC,
1111, lrocfo; 8:011-6:00 Wllkdoyl, Now, ~'4"~: KoDt, 2 Holmoto,
$1,8211.
8-88!3, After lp.m.
Sot. 1111 Noon.

=

Honond
2 ............ now ltnlvoo,

r*SO:,:W.::-'-=

(J)

PS, P!!L Air, CNIII, POMr
17,000. 814-4411819 After 3:30p.m.
1987 Ford AMo Stor, XL, Low
Mlloo, $8,100 Or Boot Ollor. 114L.ockl, ... -

~·'

SCitAM-LETS ANSWERS

Notary - Unarm - Hovel - Office - FROM HERE
"Are the fish running?" l asked the fellow with several
lines in the water. "They're running alright," he sighed,
"but away FROM HERE."

'1r..M8cNeii/IAinr
~QII!dlllon Q
[;&amp;.uftUc
Nlllf

1987 4.3L Custom Alltro Van,

Building
Supplies

Apanment
for Rent

2 lllclroom Aparlmon1 From Unl'llnllty 01 Rio orondo,
Ohio. All U111Hin Paid. 114-388-

MON.. SEPT. 8

~~ct·~TQ

And Dlpool Roqulrod. 614-4111,.OSZI
_._ _ _ __ _ __
Fumlehed, toto! otoctrlc, wotor
pold, no poll. $300 mo., 112 milo
Exit of Po"or. l14-388-8tllll.

1 I 2 bclrm 1111 In Mlddloport,
U111hH Fum, dop roq, no poro,
114-IIVl-2218.
1-BR ~utllltleo pd, lumlohod.
2·BR
le homo, utiiHin pdl
lumllltod, 3-112 mlln IOUih o
Mlddllporl on SR·7. 2·BR
opt.Mioon, lumlohld, utllllln
pd, 114-317.f811.
1br Aportmont, 1 Eftlcloncy
Aportmont, Clou To Unlvorollly
Of Rio Grondo. 114-3118-11948.
2 bdrm oplln Roclr11, lmmodlote
occuponqo, coli doy 114-182·
21S1 or ovonlngo I -kond•
814-1112-2972.

•O lour
Roarrango letters of
ocrombled wordt

(J) IIINMI Dl Joattnll

3br Mobile Home. Reference

44

~r

·

1:1• ·

~~--~r·--~·----1 :

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

S~tlot\lA-lt£~s·
::::
CLAY I . POLlAN _;:.__ _ __

'!Uf tAlLY
PUIILII
- - - - . : . . . . ..: 141to4

low to form lour tlmplo wordt.

new tim, new tr~~rw., new paint,

$1650 OBO, 814-182-8114.
1984 Ford Exptoror Pick-up. V-8,
Good Condition! Wnh Topper.
114-441·1411, 114-25142111.
19811 Chevy holt lon pickup,
36,000 mlln. 11180 Coc!olllc
Coupe Do Vlllt, 88,000 mlleo.
o304-88$-382t.

Dally Senll~ei-Page-9

The

Television
Viewing

~I-ll· 93·86-1H5·t9~

42 Mobile Homes

cthoro-

Tho Blggoot Poychlcko In 11111
. tndullry. Wo Aro CurrontiY
Hlrl"'l
Exporloncod
Truck
Drivora And Rocont Grado From
Trucking Schooto. If You Novo
No Expo~onco, Chock Out OUr
Poybock Driver School Progrom
Thlt Put• You On Tho Rood
Eomlng Top Dottoro WHhln 3

'

9, 1991
.MOnday, September
.

8:05 Ill Too CloM for Colnforl
8:30 Ill. 0 NIC Hewl Q

COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUC. ....__ _ _ _
w_o_ul_d_b_e_c_los_e"'df"d_u_e_l_o_s_n_o_w_.'_.
fOr Rent
TOR WANTED. Uvotn lnotructor T
,..,._,.-.....,,..,..-.,..,_.,...,_,.
&lt;-okdlp) nooded to tuch
2 bld100m Aohton Uptond Ad,
communlly ond poroonol oklllo
H I W
Hud -tod, no poll, 304-67511
to 2-odulll with toomlng
e p anted
31 Homes for Sale408
. ~8==·-..,..,--:---=:::--tlmHIItono In Molgo County.
::HolHII 1:301m-8::10om ond
Rl!lllterod Nurooo
5 rocm ond boih, roducod lor 2 BR mobile homo $245 mo..
3:00pm-8:00pm, , Mon.-Fri. or
tntoniiVI Core
quick ulo, Hondoroon Stroot, pluo utllllln, $125 dlpooll. In
othorwiH ocnoaulod. Slllp
Surgo'L
Hondoreon, WV. 304-675-1488 or tho country. 814-146-3611.
over required, doytlmo houro Klng'o Oaughtoro' odlcol Con- 614-446-7523.
mob!'· homH, 2
2 lvmt-•-•
~--• 11n~ ....~........ ter, Aah&amp;ana, K.,tucky, ll cur..
0 II· Innd-••• - rontly -king roglotorod nurooo
7br 1 Bath, 2 Cor Gorogt. 3 Loto bodroomo, $200. l $250. pluo
lk1llo I lolonll "'
· 111you whh uporloiico for our Inion- l Holt Aero, Bidwell. 814-441- utllhloo, $100. dopoolt. 304-675llkl to cook, uc~. lllrdon, olve coro ond IU'lllrf unllo. 0138
8512 or 875-31100.
raod or d~~!, wo ""'f!"uvo • lob Tholl oro ucottont oppor.
lor you!! WI ora
ng for tun111eo which.,. ovolloble duo 8 room homo, 2 llory, 2 botho, 2·BR mobllo homo, fumlohed,
JMIOP.. who can etWY other to 1 new aervlce of opon hllr1 unfinished baHmenl, 2 car washer/dryer, air, 114-H2-6800.
people who can tMCh -varloue
......1
od
gara9_11, out bldg, •lmoet 1n acre
itkltloto
111 crllllvo ourgory -ng 1mplomonl 11 lot, '45,000. 304-875-4464 or 2br Locotod In EVI'llrllfl. 814ond willing 1o work 11 port of on our g,_nl119 modlcol center. 675-5548 .
448-3&amp;97 After 4p.m.
c t.
HI h ochool 111- Expononco In coring lor cor·
-1111Ic oom. g
dlovaoculor our"'cor potlento F ood •
2br Talol EllctM, 1 V2 Mill
groo, d~vora !Ieonie, good driv- hot rut W ollor,..
ndl
latw I ~roo. Pornoroy. 2 From A-ttt:tlo, On St. AI. ••a,
lng rocord ond odoqullo
P · •
on outoll nft Story Homo. Now Kltchon, 01 _,_- d R 1
-R
oulomoblll covorago requtrod. bonolho pooklgo for th- lu
Bathroom • Corpoll"'l· 17
lrod.
n
• erenco •
qu rod. $250/mo. 114-446-3413.
Sollry: $5.00 por HR 10 llort. If limo pooHiono. For more lnfor· Acroo. 614-446-2361.

CAST Drlv.. Caeh Some Of

.

'

9,1991

31417.

CABLE TV JOBSNOW 1·201736-7000 Ex!. 1617B8.

E E.
til. ·0 ·
Domino'• Pizzo of Pomeroy now
. toklng opptlcotlono.
EARN MONEY Roodlng Bookll
$30,000/fr. Income Potonllot.
Dotollo. 11 805-11112-8000 Elll. Y·
10181.
EARN
THE
BIGGEST
PAYCHECKS
IN THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY

72

Ro

Roqulrocl: 114-441-0723.

lnt.,..ted caii1-800-531..Z302 no
toter thin ._13 -111. Alk for Chrte-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Household
GoDda

With Stove And
otor. No Polo. Roforon·
Cll
I Dopooh. Ue5 PIUI 0000 USED APPUANCES
U111HIIO. 114-446-4!1211.
W11hera, dryera. retrlgwatcn,
Sm111 tbr Stove &amp; Retrl~rator
n.ngn. SUgge Appliance•,
¥umlohod, Woohor I Dryer Upper River Ad. Bellde S1one
Hook-up,
$225/mo.
S200 Croll Motel. Co!IIM-448-7388.
Oapooh, 8 Monthl Luoo. 142
Fourth Avo, Golllpotlo, 614-4111-

Babraln•: My Home Only, For 2
Chlld...n. R.Uablt, Punctual,
Wanted Lona Ttrmlll Reftren-

-

Houses tor Rent

2-BR ...._ In Pomeroy.
Socurttv .._n roqulrod. 814182·7Sf2 after 4:00pm.
~~ 1-bllh. o.-h required
In Mraallporl, 114-Na-2607.
Newly red-od 2-bdrm

Attonllonl Eom Up To $500
WHkly Rudlng Bookl And T.V.

Ext. 571.
Refunded.

Monday, September

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Upho~ery

.._roy'o UPholll!f:lnl liMe~lrloountr- 211yNro. Tho
In lvmMuro IIJihOIItorln•
Col 304-875-tt54 for lroo .:;
llmot01.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

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Slpt. 10, 1891

: Several dynamic Individuals mlgh1 have .
a hand In providing you with new opportunities In the year ahead. They will also ·
participate In these Involvements, but In .
roles a bit larger !han yours.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S8pl. 22) Goings-on :
behind the scenf!!J..Iend to favor you lo- .
day, especially where your financial Interests are concerned. There are strong ·
· PoSSibiiHies for profitable developments Know where to look for romance 1
a'nd you'll lind 11. The Aslro-Graph .

Matchmaker Instantly reveals wn1cn
signs are romantically perlecl for you.
Mail $2 plus a long, self-addressed ,
stamped envelope to Malchmaker. c/o
this newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland. OH 44101 -3428.
LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0cl. 23) The best of
your charismatic qualities will be prevalent today. Those you'll be involved with
will find these attributes appealing and
help you fulfill your expectations.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-No¥. 22) Timing Is
exlremely crlllcal loday, and you'll innalely know when lo do lhlngs !hat will
help you achieve your mosl Important
objectives.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) You
could be luckier than usual today In significant involvements that Include close,
personal friends. Your rabbit's foot will

work for !hem as well.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-.18n. 19) Somelhlng extremely benellctal could devel·
op lor you loday, bul no! necessarily
along lhe lines you've been anllclpallng. A change tha1 transpires may even
be beller.
AQUARIUB (Jon. 20-Fob. 11) The besl
way to resolve a dellcale mailer today Is
by listening. The Individual who Is the
cause of the problem could provide you
with !he solution.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) Continue
lo look for new channels today !hat
could provide you wllh a second source
of Income. You're much closer 1o llnding them than you may realize.
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll11) You have a
secret admirer who, up until now, hasn't
been bold enough 10 express feelings
for you. However, there's a posslbllltv
1hls may all change 1oday.
TAURUS (April 20-Mey '20) Because
your crealivlty Is so promlnenl loday,
even mundane tasks will seem like play.
Try lo lind lime lo work on a project that
will beautify your surroundings.
GEMINI (M8J 21-.luno 20) Somellmes
unslruclured, spontaneouS evenls are
1he ones !hat !urn out lo be the most
fun. This could be true today, so don't
coniine yourself to an Inflexible sched·
. ule lhalllmfls your mobility.
CANCER (Juno 21-.IU" 22) This Is one
of those unusual days when you could
do more receiving !han giving. Sewral
Individuals are looking for ways lo repav
the kindness vou've shown them .In !he
past.
LEO (JUIJ 23-Aug. 22) EndeavOrs you
devote your personal allenllon to have
excellent chances ol producing the
types of end results you desire. Don'!
delegate_key aSSignments lo .o lhers.

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created trom quetaiiOnl by famous ~le, p111 and prehnt
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "When I open a refrigerator door and the light
goeo on, I want to perform." - Mlcl&lt;ey Rooney.

,,

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Erotomania: an obsessive love
By LAURA MYERS
Associated Press Writer
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)
Richard Farley nearly loved Laura
Black 10 death.
She told him she wouldn't date
him if he were the last man on
Earth . But for years he sent her
gifts, flowers and love letters any way.
She said, "Go away ." He
stalked her.
Finally . when she got a court
order to keep him away , Farley said
he became suicidal.
But instead of taking his own
life, Farley shot to death seven people he said carne between him and
the object of his love . And he
gravely wounded the 30-year-old
Black with two shotgun blasts that
destroyed her left shoulder.
Behavior experts say Black was
a victim of erotomania. a delusional, obsessive love.
Other targets of erotomania have
included actresses Jodie Foster .
Theresa Saldana and Rebecca
Schaeffer, experts say. The movies
"Fatal Attraction" and "Sleeping
With The Enemy" also depicted
erotomaniacal relationships.
''These obsessions can go on for
years but can tum violent when the
person believes third parties are
keeping him from his love object."
said Reid Meloy, a San Diego
forensic psychologist and author of
the forthcoming book "Violent
Attachments.·'
"There's often an intense love
and an intense hatred of this person, boxed off in separate areas.
The switch can come at any time,

especially if the object of love tries
to tear themselves away ," sa1d
Leonard Dank, vice president of
Behaviordyne Inc., a Silicon Valley
company that screens employees
for deviant behavior.
John Hinckley Jr. said he shot
President Reagan in I 981 10
impress Miss Foster.
In 1982, Saldana was stabbed by
drifter Arthur Jackson, who said he
wanted to be reunited with her in
heaven.
Schaeffer, a star of the TV series
"My Sister Sam," was shot to
death in 1989. Robert John Bardo.
awaiting trial on murder charges,
has said his feelings for her were
"uncontrollable." "I loved her and
I still do," he said.
Meloy sa1d everyday people
such as Black arc more likely than
celebrities to attract an obsessive
person.
"I feel almost compelled to be
around her," Farley testified about
his feelings toward Black. "The
more she tries to push me away , the
more I try to not have her push me
away."
Farley is on trial on murder
charges. His attorneys are arguing
that he didn't mean to kill Black's
seven co-workers at ESL Inc. when
he went to the defense contraciOr's
offices in Sunnyvale to see her m
1988.
Farley. 43. a computer specialist, had been fired by ESL two
years earlier for bothering Black. A
week before the killings she had
gotten a court order to keep him
away .
After she got the court order.

Monday, September 9, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Farley said, he decided to kill himself in front of her to make her feel
guilty. He said he "instinctively"
shot the people who got in his way
as he headed for her second-floor
oflice.
He shot Black, he said, after he
was "stunned" by her smile. He
said it was the same smile that
caused him to fall "instantly in
love with her" in 1984.
A fleeting smile, a lc.ind word or
simply being a revered figure is
enough to attract the attentions of
an erotomaniac, experts say. And
true erotomaniacs believe their love
is returned.
In New York, Diana Schaefer
was sentenced this year to two
years in prison for harassing a surgeon , Dr. Murray Brennan. She
sent him long lellers and believed
she was having an affair with him
- a falsehood she never shook.
" She still thinks she's just the
wronged woman and she ·doesn't
even admit there's a problem,"
said her attorney, Joyce David.
Psychologist Dank said a feeling of "incredible ownership" of a
love object by an obsessed person
ts common.
" They must have this other person to feel whole or they become
distraught," he said.
After Farley was arrested, he
wrote Black from his jail cell. He
had won her auention, if not her
love.
"When I go to the gas chamber
I' II smile for the cameras and
you'll know you 'll have won in the
end," he wrote.

Commun~ty
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must lie received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

calendar

503 Mill Street, Middleport. Call
992-3194 for further information.
The meeting concerns Meigs County's transfer station.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Garden Club will meet Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Carl Horky.

MONDAY
POMEROY · The Meigs Un it
of the American Cancer Society
will meet Monday in the conference room of Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 1 p.m. Dr. Dani e l
Whitely will be the speaker.

MIDDLEPORT · The Interna tional Order of Job' s Daughters
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.

POMEROY - The Di sab led
American Vctcrans and Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the hall, 124 Butternut Ave.
in Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Th e Salisbury
PTO will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
the school. Plans will be made for
the fall festival and open house at
6:45p.m.

POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance Club
will hold a "get acquainted night"
for couples interested in taking fall
lessons on Monday from 7:30-8:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy Multi-Purpose
Building. Call 992-2418, 992-581
or 773-5910 for information .
BEDFORD TOWNSHIP · The
Bedford Town ship Trustees will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the town
hall.
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
a special meeting of all Meigs
County trash haulers on Monday at
7 p.m. at Manley's Recycle Center,

POMEROY - Dr. Ivan Tribe, a
professor at the University of Rio
Grande, will conduct the first session of the "Heroes and Heroines
of the Ohio River Valley," a book
discussion program hosted by the
Meigs County Public Library on
Monday at 7 p.m. Half Horse, Half
Alligator by Walter Blair and
Franklin Meine will be the book
featured.
TUESDAY
RACINE - Racine Lodge #461
F&amp;AM will hold a regular meeting
on Tuesday at 7:30p.m. with work
in the E.A. Degree. All Masons are
urged to auend.

Redskins beat
Cowboys

POMEROY - The Ohio Ela Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
This is the first meeting of the year
and all members are urged to
attend.
PORTLAND - The Portland
PTO will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
the school.
MASON - Organizational meeting Tuesday, 6:30p.m., Mason
Family Restaurant, for are Youth
Leaders and Workers. The Fellowship for Evangelical Leaders of
Teens will be to aid and support
networking of Biblical youth ministries. Call Rick Harris, 949-2876
or 949-2323 for information.
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center.

Page-6..
Pick 3:022
Pick 4: 8025

I

jl

None of the 15 required hospitalization, but all were treated for
blisters, said John Parmater of
Columbus, editor of the association 's newslcuer.
Parmater ·was among 60 people
who lined up to walk over the ISfoot track of burning hardwood
coals.
"The objective is to have people
do something that seems impossi ble," Parmater said.
But when it was his turn , Parmater was one of 20 people who
backed away .
"I walked up there and said,
'That's not for me,'" he said.

,. . - ~- ·· Page 4

II
[

I

4

!

l

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Hundreds of children and adults proved
a receptive audience for body builder and filmmaker Arnold
Schwarzenegger as he hOnored a
fitness program for fourth-graders.
"I'm here to pump you up,"
Schwarzencgger, chairman of the
President's Council on Fitness and
Sports, said Saturday outside the
McKinley Memorial.
Youngsters stood and strained
their necks for a bcucr view of
Schwaneneggcr as he talked about

calisthenics.
Schwaneneggcr said he enjoyed
bodybuilding and filmmaking but
considers his role as head of the fitness council "'the greatest challenge I've tal:cn on."
He said he will visit all 50 states
to try to reverse the national tendency toward sicker, faller, slower
and weaker children. Schwanenegger plans to return to Ohio in
November for a meeting with Gov.
George Voinovich.

During his talk, Schwarzeneggcr
urged parents to spend more time
with their children.
"Take them out of the house to
sports events," he said . "Play
games with ihem. Make the whole
family fit."
To the youngsters. he said,
"Just between us, when you go
home and sec your parents in front
of the TV, tell them to get out. Say:
"Come with me. Let's exercise
together."'

Middleport council ok's
district solid waste plan

\

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A resolution of support for the
solid waste plan as developed by
the Athens, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Waste Management District was adopted by
Middleport Village Council Monday night
Middleport Council joins the
Meigs County Commissioners and
Syracuse Village Council in support of the plan. After passing the
resolution, Council then approved
by emergency reading the required
ordinance on plan acceptance.
Both measures passed by a vote
of five to one, with Councilman
Paul Gerard casting the "no" vote.
Gerard at last night's meeting and
at previous meetings has described
the plan as "a bad plan, in reality
voting a tax on our people, not
today, but down the road."
The district's executive director

PUBLIC SERVICE -In conjunction with
the hospital's community service pledge, personnel or Veterans Memorial Hospital were at the
Pomeroy Kroger Store all day Monday to eonduel a free blood pressure clinic. ln the photo,
Rhonda Dailey, director of nursing, checks the
blood pressure of Dick Warner, manager of the

.

National.weight loss chain fighting
lawsuits, federal investigations
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- The
president of a Montrose-based
national diet chain attributes his
company's plummeting profits to
the economy, but federal investigations and lawsuits have also played
a role, a newspaper said.
The Akron Beacon Journal
reported Sunday that Physicians
Weight Loss Centers, founded in
1979, has been forced to close
almost 200 of its 443 centers in the
last two years.
By 1990, total revenues had
dropped to $80 million from $130
million in I 988, and profits
dropped from $9 million in 1989 to
$400,000 in 1990, company
records said.
Physicians President Charles
Sekeres told the newspaper that the
company would emerge stronger
from its financial decline.
"We're a different company
than we were a couple of years
ago," Sekercs said. "We 'II be
doing some pretty innovative
things in the next six or seven
months ... . Our satisfaction index
with clients is very, very high."
But the company still faces an
investigation by the Federal Trade
Commission and numerous lawsuits.
The commission is investigating
advertising and safety claims made
by 14 diet center operators, including Physicians, the newspaper said.
A congressional investigation of
the centers' advertising claims said
some ads for Physicians promised
weight loss of seven pounds a week
for people following Its plans.
But after congressional hearings
in May 1990, the promised weight
loss was reduced to around two
pounds a week, although a current
ad for a 28-day weight-loss program challenges potential dieters to
"lose all the weight you want."
Sekeres, who created the com pany. also emphasized in advertising that the company's outlets were
under medical supervision, the

newspaper said. But critics say that
the clinics employed doctors for
only a few hours a week.
He said his company is being
unfairly held to a higher standard,
since many of his competitors don't
have phys1cians on staff.
Sekcrcs could not be reached for
additional comment Sunday. His
Bath telephone number is unlisted.
Another blow to the company
carne in June with the loss of a $I 5
million lawsuit brought by the parents of a Mobile, Ala., woman who
died of cardiac arrest while on a
diet recommended by Physicians.

II was the third wrongful death
case filed against the organization
since 1979, the newspaper said.
A group of Physicians franchise
owners also has charged that the
company was price-gouging on the
cost of food supplements. The
charge set off a series of lawsuits
and countersuits.
Sekeres said he was trying 10
respond to government concerns
about diet centers. He is one of the
organizers of a trade association
that will try to regulate itself, hoping to eliminate the need for government regulation, he said.

Pomeroy Kroger Store. Other nursing personnel on hand to conduct the clinic included Ruth
McGrath, Rosemar1 Young and Linda Ryan.
Jackie Starcher, diehcian at Veterans Memorial,
worked at the clinic conferring with residents on
various aspects or nutrition. Some 180 shoppers
and store employees took advantage or Mon day's free blood pressure clinic.

easing stress an anxiety that come with working
and living. The headset contains a headphones
that provides soothing music and special goggles
that shoots light patterns through lightly closed
eyelids. (AP)

I
•
I

•
BE ON THE LOOK OUT•••

Ravenswood files suit against union
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A Jackson County aluminum
plant involved in a labor dispute
with the United Steelworkers filed
suit against the union Monday
alleging the union stole and disclosed confidential infonnation.
The
union called
the
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. suit
frivolous .
The suit filed in Kanawha
County Circuit Court, accused the
union of illegally..obtaining a copy
of Ravenswood's 1990 financial
plan as prepared by accounting
finn Price Waterhouse.
More than 1,700 union employees have been off the job at the
Ravenswood plant since Nov. 1,
when the two sides failed to reach a
contract agreement. The union
alleges it was locked out of the
plant, while the company argues
that the union is on strike.
"At the end of January 1991,
newspaper articles appeared containing information about the business and finances of Ravenswood
which could have only come from

the (accounting report)," the suit
said.
'
"Union officials were quoted in
the anlicles as being the source of
the information," the suit said.
Charije McDowell, an officer of
United Steelworkers Local 5668,
which includes the idled
Ravenswood workers, dismissed
the suit as frivolous.
"It's just a smoke screen,"
McDowell said.
The suit seeks unspecified compensation for all losses caused by
the disclosure, as well as unspeci ·
fied punitive damages.
The company also has filed new
charges against the USW and its
Local 5668 with the National
Labor Relations Board (NLRB)
staling that members of the Local
have participated in, encouraged
and ratified picket line misconduct
at or near the picket site located at
the Union Hall on Rt. 2 South.
RAC claims it has documented
35 additional acts of violence,
which include harassing and threatening Ravenswood employees.

ran into parade spectators was not
malfunctioning, a State Highway
Patrol inspection showed.

---Local briefs.-----.
Slip to be repaired
A $206,558 contract for the repair of the slip at Pity Me has been
awarded to Shelly Company of Thornville by the Ohio Department
of Transportation.
The repair work is slated for completion by the end of May.
1992.

EMS units answer calls

School's back in session and in the excitement of the new school year,
many school-age children, especially the young ones, may forget to look
both ways when crossing the street or exiting the school bus.
That leaves it up to you as a driver, to be extra careful around schoolyards, neighborhood play areas, and departing school buses.
So remember ... when you see yellow, be sure to see red-as in red
alert. Let's all slow down and give our children the chance they deserve.
COUPLE ON HONEYMOON -Actor John Travolta holds tenderly his wire actress, Kelly Preston, while posing for photographers on the Deauville, Norma~dy Casino terrasse Sunday ~uring
a photo session. Travolta marrted Preston last Thursday mghl at
the Hotel Crillon in Paris. They were in Deauville to attend the
American Film Festival. (AP)

throwing rocks and other objects at
vehicles passing the Union Hall,
and placing jackrocks on the road
near the Union Hall. The new
charges cover a period of time from
May 16 through June 24.
RAC amended ilc civil suit
against the Local under the Racketeer Influenced Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) recently. The suit
was initially filed April 9, and at
that time, RAC charged USW
Local 5668 and 4 7 individual
defendants with conducting their
affairs through a pattern of racketeering activities, including violence and harassment against the
corporation.
A oress release from the company stated six more defcndrmts have
been added to the suit: Gerald R.
Church, Jr ., Marge Lewis, Mike
Asbury , Ted Stover, John Morri s
and Toby Johnson.
The suit and its arnendmCIIIS are
on lile at the United States District
Court for Southern Disnict of West
Virginia at Parkersburg.

The Daily Sentinel

Seven calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services on Monday and early on
Tuesday.
At 8:53 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Royal Oak Resort. Steven
Poner was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. AI II :21 a.m.,
Pomeroy unit went to Union Avenue and Wehe Terrace for Jim
Fisher, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
At 2:53 p.m., Middleport squad went to Overbrook Ce~tcr. Mary
Gilkey was taken to Veterans. At 6:20 p.m., Rutland umt went to
White's Hill Road. Panicia Mossman was taken 10 Veterans. At 9
p.m., Syracuse unit went to College Street. Oris Hubbard was ttansported 10 Veterans. At 9:12 p.m., Racine unit went 10 State Route
338 for Timmy Powell, who was taken to Veterans.
At 4:50 a.m. on Tuesday, Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine 2
for Raben Hensley. He was taken to Veterans.

Fire damage estimates made
Damage to a travel trailer and contents destroyed by frre ncar
Portland last week has been estimated at $2,000, accordtng to
Racine Fire Chief John Holman.
The trailer, owned and occupied by Keith Musser, was placed on
property belonging to Margie Jean Schuler on State Route 124 near
Ponland.
v1
According to Holman, units of Racine and Bashan o unteer
Fire Departments responded to the Monday frre: 13 firemen w~e on
the scene, and the cause of the frre is undetermined. Musser did not
have insurance on the trailer or its contents.

the Meigs County Health Department
Funding for projects
The downtown revitalization
plan was discussed by Bill Miller
following the meeting at the Meigs
County courthouse on the Community Development Block Grant
monies. There was some discussion
on declaring all or pan of the
downtown area blighted in order to
qualify for certain funding. That
recommendation came from a representative of Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Development
Disnic~ Miller said.
While no action was taken at
last night's meeting, it was decided
that the matter will be discussed at
the next meeting of council pending review of the downtown area
statistics. Miller noted that applications for CDBG monies must be
submitted to the Commissioners
by Sept. 25 .
Continued ~n page 3

Two former Meigs County residents, both employed with the St.
Johns River Community College in
Palatka, Aa., have been promoted
in their respective positions at the
college.
Sherry Abbotl has been promoted to Administrative Assistant to
the Vice President for Business
Affairs from her former position as
accounting technician. In her new
position she assists the vice president for business affairs in the
coordination of employee benefits
and payroll .
Kaye Walker, who was personnel assistant, has been promoted to
Administrative Assistant to the
Vice President for Administrative
Affairs. She assists the vice president for Administrative Affairs by
operating a central, district-wide
KAYE WALKER
human resources department,
works with the state legislature, graduate of Meigs High School and
federal government and other gov- St. Johns River Community Colernmental agencies, and in the lege and has been employed at the
EA/EO Affirmative Action activi- college since 1987.
ties.
She is the daughter of Gene and
Formerly of Pomeroy, Mrs. Ann Lambert, Flatwoods Road,
Abboll moved to Palatka in 1982 Pomeroy, and the daughter-in-law
when her husband, Dan. accepted of Bud and Grace Abbolt,
employed with the Seminole Elec- Pomeroy. She has two sons, Jason,
tric Cooperative, Inc. , She is a 14, and Darin, II.

SHERRY ABBOTT
Walker, who is a graduate of
Meigs High School, moved to
Florida in December, 1987 with her
husband, Larry, and sons, Brian
and Bradley. She began work at
SJRCC in January, 1988. She is the
daughter of Roy and lola Howell,
Laurel Cliff, Pomeroy. and the
daughter-in-law, of Violet Walker,
Route 33, Pomeroy.

AEP looking to establish Europe office
American Electric Power
announced Tuesday that it is hiring
a consultant to study the possibility
of establishing an office in Europe
to help businesses and industries in
its service area participate more
fully in the European market.
Dr. Calvin C. Berlin, a retired
career diplomat, will be assisting
the company and its affiliates in
assessing the need for an exportassistance office, designing a strategy for its operation and determining where it should be located. The
office could be opened in 1992.
C.A. Heller, President of AEPaffiliate Ohio Power Company,
commented: "We envision that this
office would focus on export
opportunities for our small and
medium-sized customers. This

Inspection finds no vehicle malfunctions
WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) - A
car seized after the driver claimed
he couldn ' t control the vehicle as it

at a prior meeting said that operating expenses for the district will be
about $2.5 million a year. Gerard
has continually contended that the
$13 tipping fee cannot generate
that amount and that the rest of the
money will have 10 come from
either taxes or assessments. He said
that the plan provides for operating
funds to come from one of those
sources if the tipping fees do not
create enough money on which to
operate the district.
Several of the Council members
while voting for the plan expressed
concerns. James Clatworthy said he
didn't want the Environmental Protection Agency coming in and setLing up a plan without the public
having a part in developing it,
while Dewey Horton's question
was "what are our alternatives?" . .
The plan provides for a dumping transfer station to be operated
by Mid-American Waste in Meigs
County under the supervision of

2 former Meigs women gain promotions

•
STRESSFREE - Wearing capsule-like headsets, Japanese office workers rest in reclining
chairs recently at Tokyo's Brain Mind Gym that
offers a relaxing time for those who seek help in

Tonight, doudy with statlered
showers. Low 60 to 65.
Southwest winds S to IS mph,
becoming northwesterly.

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

Vol. 42, No. 89
Copyrighted 1991

POMEROY - There will be a
rummage sale at the senior citizens
center on Mulberry Heights Tuesday
Thursday from 9 a.m.
to2 p.m.

Schwarzenegger gives children workout

10-C
K-D;3-S

Page 6

RACINE - The Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce will meet
Tuesday at6 p.m. at Sonya's Country Kitchen . The meeting is cosponsored , by Sonya's Country
Kitchen and National Gas and Oil.
Reservations are required. Call the
chamber office at992-5005.

Of the 40 who walked the coals,
25 crossed unharmed, said association secretary Tamara Andreas of
Columbus.
She was not among them, ending up instead with blistered feet.
This was the lirst lime the organization conducted a fire walk, and
it will be the las~ she said.
An Giser of San Francisco said
he thought fire walks were stupid,
but tried it anyway.
He got burned, but he took it in
snide.
"Five of us were siuing with
our feet in a tub of ice and drinking
champagne," he said.

Cards : 7-H,

Garden Clubs gather

15 get hot feet after walking on coals
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Fifteen people striving to put their
best foot forward at a motivational
seminar had to put their burned feet
on ice after strollmg across a bed of
burning coals.
In all, 40 people took the " fire
walk ' ' Saturday, part of a three-day
conferenc e of the International
Association of Neuro-Linguistic
Programming.
The association, which seeks to
build confidence and help people
realize their potential, said the fine
walk was an object lesson aimed at
teaching members to put mind over
matter.

Ohio Lottery

Portrait on display

Wellston Police Officer Jim
Spurgeon said today that the Jackson County Prosecutor's office was
reviewing the Jackson patrol post's
inspection and was considering
whether charges should be filed.
The driver, Francis Lartcr, 79,
of South Webster, and nine other
people were injured in the accident
Saturday during the Ohillco Festival parade.
Chief Tim Ackley said Lartcr
told police he thought the parade
was over when he started the car at
a convenience store parking lot
ncar the crowd. Ackley said the
accident occurred while there was a
gap in the parade.
"He said he started his engine
and the car started doing all sorts of
crazy things," Ackley said.
Ackley said a bystander's videotape shows that the car apparently
went into reverse, and the driver
tried to stop it from hitting glass at
the convenience store. The car then
swerved into the crowd.
People were gathered at the
city's main intersection watching
the parade passing by when the
accident occurred.
Clifton Spires Jr., editor of the
Wellston Sentry, said he was shooting pictures when he heard screaming. He said he turned and saw a
car flipping onto its top in the middle of the street
Laner; his wife, Bonnie, 73, and
another passenger, Lora Kendall,
93, of Portsmouth, were treated at
Oak Hill Community Medical Center and released, wd David Ham. mons. a registered nurse at the hospital.

office would be a fact-finding service for Ohio Power customers,
along with those of other AEP
companies in a seven-state region,
interested in exporting their products to the European community."
In addition to helping businesses
with export opportunities, the
office would also assist AEP customers interested in participating in
joint ventures or licensing agreements with European firms.
R.L. Evans, Ohio Power's economic development manager, said
that Dr. Berlin will begin the project by surveying the types of products and services that arc currently
being exported for the AEP service
area, and by determining what
expon assistance is currently available from government and private

vice area.··
During his 26 years in the U.S.
Foreign Service, Dr. Berlin served
in various capacities in the U.S.
diplomat missions in ltair..
Tnnidad, Argentina, Chile, Braz1I,
the United Kingdom and Mexico.
In the last four counnies, he served
as the senior commercial officer in
the respective U.S . embassies,
working on trade relations between
the host country and the United
States.
In his Washington assignments,
Dr. Berlin held the senior commercial positions in both the Departments of State and Commerce. As
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Foreign Operations in the U.S. Foreign
Commercial Service, he supervised
to U. S. Senator John Glenn for his the program being carried out by
continued support of family plan- U.S. commercial offices at I 25
ning and pro-choice issues. .
posts in 65 countries.
Atkins, who has been w•th the
If results of the consultant's
agency for over 18 years, stressed study are favorable, the European
the importance of those who h~!ped o(lice would be the second internaestablish the orgamzatton . We tional office that AEP has estabappreciate the advocacy and vision lished, Heller said. In late 1988,
created 20 years ago that has AEP opened an office in Tokyo in
brought us today. With that vision, an effort to attract new Japanese
we can look forward to servtng investment and create additional
southeastern Ohio women and fam - jobs within the company's service
ilies in the 21st century."
area.
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio is a private, non-profit
American Electric Power's eight
organization that provides family operating companies provide elecplanning and reproducuvc health tric energy to seven-million resiservices to women and men tn dents of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan,
eight southeastern Ohio counties.
West Virginia, Kentucky and Tennessee.

Planned Parenthood to
observe 20th anniversary
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio, of which Meigs County
is a part will hold its 20th anniv_ersary celebration and annual meung
at 6:30p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 17 at
the Ohio University Baker Center
Ballroom according to an
announcement from Kay Atkins,
executive director.
Ms. Faye Wattleton, president
of Planned Parenthood Federation
of America, will be the featured
speaker at the dinner. Wattleton
will focus on issues concermng
"Reproductive Rights in the '90"s."
Allending the meetmg wtll be
community agency representauves
and supporters of PPS~O. Pre_sentations and awards w1ll be gtven
with a special commendation going

I•
\,.

sources.
"The objective of the project is
to help our business customers survive and prosper in what is rapidly
becoming a global marketplace,"
Evans emphasized. "'Their ability
to prosper is essential to the economic well -being of our entire serc·

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