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                  <text>Page-D8-5unday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant , wv

September 15, 1991

Sludge seen helpful in
cutting lead levels in soil
WASHINGTON (AP) - Spil in
urban gardens and yards may contain dangerously high levels of
lead, but an Agriculture Department agronomist says mixing composted sewage sludge with the contaminated soil may reduce the danger.
Rufus Chanev said he has found

Campaign being
well-received

•

RESERVE CHAMPION DULL- Whites_ton~ Farms, Aldie, Va., Champion Farms, Galhpohs, and Edward Tillman, Powhatan, Va., all
shared ownership of this reserve grand champion bull at the 1991 Maryland Slllte Fair Angus

show in Timonium. First named the reserve
junior champion, the bull is Whitestone Potential 071. He is an April 1990 son ol" Jacs Hudson.
(Photo by American Angus Association).

Farmers to make less money this year
WASHINGTON (AP) - Farm crs w111_make sli ghtly less mon ey
th ts year th an 111 rcco rd- sc um g
1990. the Agn culturc Department
reports_
.
USDA srud Wednesday that net
~ash mcom c for 1991 IS forecast
down 5 percent from the 19 90
record of nearly S60 b1ll1on. whdc
net farm 1ncomc IS down abou t
onc-temhfrom $50 b1111on . Unl1kc
net cash mcomc, net farm tncom c
tncludcs dcprcctauon costs for farm
butldmgs, equ1pmcnt and machm cry.
.
. .
USDA blamed the d1p 1n farm
carntn gs on lower gra1n cas h

receipts for farmer s in drought - many parts of the Com Belt.
st n cken area s, and on slump ing
But corn prices have jumped,
datry pnccs. Datry rece ipts will be the department said, and should
dow n an cst1matcd 12 percent. it compensate for yield decreases.
sa1d .
Wheat cash receipts, however, arc
Th e forecast for government expected to fall 16 percent from a
support payments remain s at S8 year earlier because production is
bdl,on to S9 btllton.
expected to decline 26 percent.
Total crop receipts arc forecast
Total livestock and dairy
at3 percent above the 1990record.
receipts arc expected to slip 3 pcrU.S gra1n supplies ha.vc tight· cent from the 1990 record, USDA
cncd considerably from midsum- said.
~n c r fore casts, USDA said. Corn
Led by labor expenses, shortand soybean producuon forecasts
term interest expenses and seed
arc well down from earlier projcc- costs, this year's production
uons, due mamly to the drought in
expenses arc forecast up 1 percent.

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
U.S. Meat Export Federation says a
worldwide campaign to stimulate
demand for U.S. beef is being well
rc cc i ved by foreign buyers as
domestic caulc prices continue to .
han g below 570 per hundred
pounds.
"In virtually all markets , we
were able to intensify trade contacts and promotions already under
way," said the group's president,
Phii"Scng.
Seng said U.S . beef and veal
exports, including variety meats,
were up 21 percent in the first six
months of 1991 compared with the
same period a year earlier.
The federation's steps to promote beef include a meeting with
the Korean Livestock Products
Marketing Organization. a quasi- ·
governmental buying agency for
South Korean beef imports.

Greg
Smith
Says:

New shortening developed from soybeans
WASHINGTON (AP)
Efforts to develop new uses for
soybeans have resulted in such
products as a new vegetable shortening made entirely of soybean oil
and soy-based printing ink.
The new shortening appeared
last December on the she! vc s of
li ,OOO stores in California and it
could be available nationwide nex t
year, says the Agriculture Department's Farm line magazine.
Ten stat es have legi slati on
passed or pending that requires the
usc of soy ink on all printing jobs
contracted by the state. the magazine said in a recent edition. Thev
arc Illinois, Minnesota. Missouri.
Ohio, South Dakota , Wi sc onsin.
South Carolina. New Jersey. Iowa
and Arkansas.
: Roger Tclschow. president of a
printing firm in Silver Spring, Md ..
tllat uses soy-based ink. said it benefits the environment in th ree
~ays : it is non-volatile. wh1 ch
;ncans it will not evaporate and
fclcasc toxic ch cm1cals; it is a
l"encwablc resource. unl ike
:jlctroleum
which forms the basis of
,..
~

tooking for something
J,ew to munch on?

..
•·

WASHINGTON (AP)- Lookffig for something new and different to munch on?
·: Not to worry. says the Agricui Jural Extension Service at the Uni1/crsity of Tennessee Institute of
1\gricuhure.
:. Coming soon to your groce ry
90rc arc hot dog rolls navorcd wilh
mustard and fruit-Oavored iced tea
in wide-mouthed boulcs. Flavors.
(~c extension service notes. incl ude
lemon. orange. raspberry . lemon mint and tropical.
· Also showing up soon will be
antelope meat, which th~ extension
service notes has only I 27 calories
and 2.3 grams of fat in a threeounce serving. And there's going to
l!_C microwave popcorn in six colors
-:-but only one color to a bag.

.-

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i1'''
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. . :,,JJ.&gt;
''f .

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.

ATTENDS SESSION Gary L. Darry, Gallipolis, .
recently returned from Jackson Hole, WY, where he spent
three days updating his
knowledge and experience as a
_senior carpet inspector. Barry
is the owner or Special Care
Cleaning &amp; lnsurance Repair
service ~allipolis . •

other inks; and it washe s out of
paper easily when it is recycled.
Soybeans arc one of the nation's
most important crops, earning
$10.93 biii10n for U.S. farmers in
1990, compared with $13.62 billion
for corn and $6 .84 billion for
wheat.
But th e American Soybean
Ass ociation says that in the last
seve n years , U.S. soybean farmers
lost more than S2 billion in annual
revenue to export competitors.
Soybean promotion efforts may

that when recycled sludge is mixed
with contam inated soil, it " binds "
lead and prevents its absorption by
plants.
The mi xture lowered lead
uptake in lettuce, a vegetable particularly vulnerable to soil lead, by
as much as 64 percem compared
with leuucc grown in soil wnhout
com posted sludge, Chancy said.
"This may be a rare opportunity
to have one wasiC product ncutmlize another probl em," he said
Monday. ··or course. the sludge
used must have only low levels of

lead. cadm1um and other metals.··
Chancy . who works at a l~b 111
Beltsville, Md., said, "It's iron ic
because I began the sludge research
concerned about the dangers of
lead and other metals in the sludge
itself. I ne ver expected sludge
could make soil safer."
Before choosing a garden spoi,
he said, urban vegetable gardeners
should ha vc the soil tested. Don't
plant leafy vegetables - in which
lead tends to conccnuatc - in soil
that contains 500 or more parts per
million of lead.

Truckers leaving Texas
asked to check for killer bees
WASHINGTON (AP ) day .
Truckers leaving the Rio Grande
A dozen Texas counties arc
Valley of Texas arc being warned quarantined to prevent the intento check their cargo for unwelcome tional movement of the bees out of
hitchhikers: "killer" bees.
the area where they have been
Swarms of Africanizcd honey- detected.
bees, unlike domestic honeybees.
Almost 140 swarms of Africanarc known to "abscond" in late izcd bees migrating from Mexico
summ er or fall , or, Texas agricul- have been trapped and destroyed in
ture offic1al Paul Jackson describes Texas since October 1990. Most of
it, ·'just pick up and move.··
the swanms have been in Starr and
The bees· tendency to flee Hidalgo counties along the Rio
threatens to help push the species Grande. More than 1,400 traps arc
north ward from South Texas, said set up across South Texas.
Jackson, chief inspector of the
Texas Apiary Inspection Service,
an agency of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station.
In the last month. two swarms
614-221-0888
of the bees were discovered on
tr~cks ncar Corpus Christi, Jackson
ATTORNEY·•·LAW
sa1d.
8 East 11'1104 Strett, Suite 900
One of the swarms came in on a
Coluntus, Ohio
natbed truck, hidden ncar the spare
w e; the other came north with
some cotton-picking machinery.
992-6417
" If you find bees around a
II\ POIIIIfly With
truck, the od~~ arc ltlatthcy may be
Afncantzcd. Jackson said TucsllTTORNEY D. MICHAEL MULlEW

BANKRUPTCY
LW.CENNAMO

LOCAL CONSULTATION

'

Page4

'92 Model
Buicks and
Pontiacs Now
On Display.

ATHENS. Ohio (AP) - South ·
cast Ohio could attract big landfill
developers who would have free
rein if a waste management plan
isn't in place by June, said the hc:td
of a solid waste management district in the region .
Lance Wil son said south east
Ohio's wide open spaces and rela tively cheap land arc attractive to
landfill developers. The di strict
covers Athens , Gallia , Hocking,
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton coun ties.
"We could really sec this area
being prostituted for mega -land ·
fills," he said.
Athens County Commi ssioner
Roxanne Groff said her county
wants to pull out because the plan's
financing is inadequate and reli cs

Point Pleasant

SO MORE

USED
CARS IN
STOCK!

INTERESTING SOUVENIR - Pat McKnight of Pomeroy is mighty proud of this replica Turkish loom. It was presented to Pat and
her husband, Leon, by Meigs County natives

David and Mary Hayes, who, until recently,
served in the U.S. Air Force in Turkey. The
loom is personalized with the McKnight ' s
names.

Report calls for overhaul of
child support system in Ohio

1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM LE
SEDANS

1991 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE
CONVERTIBLE

Auto . trans .. air cond. , stereo. cruise. tilt
wheel, rear window del. Bumper to
bumper warranty at no extra charge .

Auto .. air cond., p. windows, stereo .
Loaded . Bumper to bumper warranty at no
extra charge.

$8888

$10,900

1990 CADILLAC DeVILLES

1991 BUICK REGAL SEDANS

Leather interior. power sat. both sides.
door locks. loaded. Bumper to bumper
warraty at no extra charge.

Air cond .. cruise, tilt wheel. power
windows, stereo, fully loaded. Bumper to
bumper warranty at no extra charge.

$18,900

$12,900

1991 PONTIAC Le MANS

1991 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX
SEDAN

Auto .. air cond .. stereo . Three to choose
from . Balance Factory Warranty. Bumpet
to bumpr warranty at no extra charge .

Power windows. locks, cruise. stereo. tilt
wheel. Bumper to bumper warranty at no

$7,900

$11,900

1988 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
GTA
Local car. 37,000 miles. Showroom

1987 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88
ROYALE SEDAN

condition. Bumper to bumper warranty at
no extra charge.

extra charge.

Power windows. locks. cruise. 92
Roadmastet trade. Bumper to bumper
warranty at no extra charge.

$7995

$11,900

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
near 70. High Tuesday In mid·
80s.

Landfill plan a must
before June: Wilson

DIANA CHENG
(304) 675-2337

I

t Section. 10 Pages 25 cents
A Mulumedia Inc. Newspaper

Vol. 42. No. 93
Copyrighted 1991

Direct Shipment To The Orient

soon be funded under soybean
checkoff legislation in the 1990
farm law, the article said,
The Soybean Promotion
Research and Consumer lnfonnation Act included in the law provides for 50 cents out of every
SIOO of farmers' soybean sales to
be checked off to pay for promotion and research programs. The
money will be shared equally by
mtc soybean organizations and the
new United Soybean Board.

32 percent, according to USDA's
New England Statistics Service
Division. The stale produces about
40 percent of the world's cranberries, and growers there cultivate
approximately 12.500 acres.
"A cranberry bog full of ripe,
red berries SCI against the surrounding upland foliage is one of New
England's greatest vistas," said
Jeff Carlson, executive director of
the Cape Cod Cranberry Growers'
Association.
In New Jersey, the crop is
expected to be up 16 percent,
which would set a record for the
state, the third-largest producer
after Massachusetts and Wisconsin.
And in Wisconsin, the crop is
ex pccted to be up 6 percent. Wisconsin growers devote approximately 10.000 acres to cranberries.
According to USDA's Agricultural Statistical Service, this year's
harveSt is expected to total 1.8 million barrels in Mllssachusctts, 1.47
million barrels in Wisconsin,
375,000 barrels in New Jersey,
205,000 barrels in Oregon and
162 ,000 barrels in Washington
state.

Pick 3:363
Pick 4: 0716
Cards : 9-H, 6-C
2-D;A-S
Super Lotto:
11-16-24-32-44-46
Kicker: 636626

FOR
WILD
DRIED
GINSENG
ROOTS

This year's cranberry
crop looking good
WASHINGTON (AP) - Cranberry producers have begun harvesting thi s year's crop and may
bring enough berries out of the
bogs to avoid last year's holiday
shortages.
Th e Agriculture Department
forecasts thi s year's crop will climb
17 percent to more than 4 million
barrels. A barrel weighs about I00
pounds.
Production over the last couple
of years, however, has declined by
about 17 percent. so this year's
in crease brings the cranberry harvest back to the levels of the late
1980s, said David Farrimond, general manager of the Cranberry Marketing Commiucc in East Wareham . Mass., a part of USDA.
Extreme weather reduced Massac hu scus' crop last year by about
30 percent. Supplies were very
light at Thanksg1ving and virtually
non-existent at Christmas.
The shorta ge had some irate
consumers trying to guarantee supplies th1s year dtrectly with farmers. Farrimond said Wednesday.
Thi s year' s Massachuseus harvest, however. is expected to be up

Ohio Lottery

Browns
defeat
Ben gals

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Several steps are necessary., includin!f3'filster way 10 establish paternity, in Ohio's efforts to overhaul
its child-support system, the Chi!·
dren's Defense Fund says in a
report that was to be issued today.
The report recommends fi vc
steps that Defense Fund Director
Mark Real said were specific and
practical and would address the
growing problem of poor children
born out of wedlock. Some of the
steps would require legislative
approval. he said.
One of the recommendations
would be to simplify voluntary
paternity by making it a one-step
process outside coon. and allow a
signed birth certificate to serve as a
way to establish legal fatherhood.
The report says Ohio's current
process requiring a court appearance is cumbersome and deters

many fathers. Legally establishing
paternity is a prerequisite for
obtaining a court order for child
support.
Also, paternity units should be
established in hospitals in all counties with doubie·-digit rates of outof-wedlock births, the report says.
Those units would include paternity education in pre-natal, nutrition
and teen-parent programs. The
units should be established first in
the seven urban counties in which
62 percent of the state's out-ofwedlock births occur, according to
the report.
A third step would be to provide
genetic tests, which are 90 percent
federally reimbursed, for contested
paternity cases in child-support
enforcement agencies and couns.
Another recommendation would
be to decide contested paternity
cases in administrative hearings

Thomas says he wil_l
uphold death penalty

and allow court appeals only after
the administrative process has been
exhausted.
The fifth step recommended in
the report calls for immediate computerizing of local child-support
enforcement agencies. State agencies. especially the Ohio bureaus of
Employment Services and Workers' Compensation. should be
required to establish computer links
with local child-support agencies
trying to locate debtor parents,
according to the report.
The report comes at a time when
Ohio's record in collecting support
for an estimated 1.4 million children is called one of the most
pressing issues confronting the
state.

Youths invited
to participate
in contest

Southeastern Ohio young people,
grades six through 12, arc once
said. "Philosophically, there is
WASHINGTON (AP)
again
invited to submit entries for
Supreme Court nominee Clarence nothing that would bother me per- the 1991 Appalachian Ohio Peace
Thomas said today he would sonally from upholding (the death Prize Anthology. a regional art and
uphold the death penalty in appro- penalty) in the appropriate cases."
Thomas was nominated by Pres- writing project
priate cases.
Teachers and principals of 15
ident
Bush to replace the retiring
Thomas' comment, on his fifth
counties
arc receiving information
day of testimony before the Senate J usticc Thurgood Marshall. who and instructions for submission on
Judiciary Commiuce, means that opposes the death penalty under all thi s year' s theme "If You Want
his confirmation would give the circumstances.
After grilling the conservative Peace. Work For Justice."
high court, for the first time in
Ten of the original poems, stodecades, nine justices with no abso- judge for four days last week. sena- ries.
essays, drawings and music
lute objections to capital punish- tors still don't know "what the real arc selected
for publishing in the
Thomas
will
do"
on
the
Supreme
ment.
anthology.
Each
of the ten authors
Court.
one
key
committee
member
Thomas. in response to a quesor
artists
will
receive
an award of
tion by Sen. Arl en Specter, R-Pa .. says.
$50 and be recognized at an awards
ceremony on Dec. 8, 1991.
This is the eleventh year for the
project. which was begun by the
Athens Friends Meeting (quakers)
and is conduc tc~ thi s year by th e
Appalachian Peace and Justicc NetThe annual popcorn sale of the Mcigs-Gall ia-Maso n Distric t.
work.
Boy Scouts of America, got underway today and will continue
The Appalachian Peace and Justhrough Oct. 18. Proceeds from the sale will go into general operattice Network is a grassroots organiing expenses of the district. The scouts will be selling buckets for
zation, promoting nonviolent ways
$5, microwave packages of five for $5, caramel tins for S6. and 12
of solving human problems, servpackage microwave, regular or light popcorn for $10.
ing schools, churches and community groups throughout southeastem Ohio for the last six years.
Everyone is invited to participate through contributions for the
Investigation into the death of a Point Pleasant man that apparproject, $10 for individuals and $50
ently commiued suicide sometime Friday will continue, according
for organizations, and by encouragto a spokesperson with the West Virginia State Police.
ing youth to panicipaiC their origiJohn William Long, 20, died Friday of a self-inflicted gun shot
nal interpretations of the theme.
Contributors will receive an antholwound to the head. He was discovered in the TNT area by an
ogy. All money contributed to the
employee of the McClintic Wildlife Station Friday evening. accord ing to the spokesperson.
Peace Prize Project will be •used.
solely for the projecl
Foul play is not suspected, the spokesperson said .
Entries and contributions should
Long s body was transported 10 the West Virginia State Examinbe sent by Oct. 31, 1991, to
er's Office for autopsy following positive identification by his fami ly.
Appalachian Ohio Peace Prize, 18
North College St., Athens, OH
Long was a pan-time guard for the Mountaineer Power Plant in
45701. For more infonnation conNew Haven.
tact Bob Gridley at 592-2608 or
Continued on page 3
Don Dudding at696-1055.

too hcav li y on revenues fr om out of-s tate wa ste. She said Ath ens
Co unt y's recyc lin g programs arc
more advan ced than others in the
distri ct
" We're not putting any blame
on anyone or pointing fin gers. But
we JUSt feel we arc not going to ge t
3 full y impl emented plan," Ms.
Groff said .
Wli son said th e Ohio Environ mental Protec ti on Age ncy will
dec ide whether Athens County can
pull out and form its own wa ste
distri ct.
County official s have failed to
reach a consensus on the in gred ients of the plan to regulate waste
disposal and landfills in the area.
The proposed plan calls for:
- Developm ent of three land -

fill s wi thin th·c d1str1Cl. Th e AthensHoc kin g Reclamation Center ha s
proposed an cxp:msion of iLS land fill on Ohio 33 in Athens County;
Mid -American Wa ste Sy stems
wants to build a landfill north of
McArthur in Vinton County. and
Sand Hills Coal ha s proposed a
landf•ll outs ide Well ston in Jackson
Co unty.
- Implementation or ex pansion
of seven curbside recycling program s with 17 drop-off sites. Four
or fi ve employees would be hired
to implement a rec ycling education
program .
- Financing for the plan from
landfill tipping fees. Proposed perton fees arc $1.25 for waste from
in si de the di strict, $2.50 for Ohio
waste from outside the di strict, and
$3. 75 for out-of-state was te.

Air raid sirens are heard in
Zagreb first time since WWII
ZAGREB. Yugoslavia (AP) Air raid sirens wailed in the Crootian capital for the fir st time sin ce
World War II, and fighting th at
continued into the night left more
than two dozen people dead.
The pounding of Croatian positions Sunday by Yugoslav tank s.
uoops and planes followed Croat ·
ia's blockade of federal garrisons.
The blockade marked a dramatic
escalation in the fightin~ that has
claimed more than 400 ltves since
the republic declared independence
June 25 from Yugoslavia.
Croatia claimed Sunday that it
had seized thousands of army
weapons. It expressed impatience
with efforts by the European Com munity to end the fighting between
Croats and ethnic Serbs guerrillas.
who arc often aided by the federal

arm y.
J cts st reaked ov er Zagreb on
Sunda y. prompting the air raid
sir ens and police to clear th e
streets. An all -clear sounded two
hour s later, and Zagreb officials
said the aircraft had been reconnai sance planes . More planes were
heard higher over the city laiC Sun day night
Extra steel barricades were put
up around Zagreb's government
buildings, and tank traps and other
barriers were fortified. Older residents recalled World War II bombing raids, and some remained defi ant
"We arc not afraid. When you
are in your own home you can't be
afraid," said Nikola Pribanic, the
37-year:old watchman at a house
on Mhanoviceva Street, as he

rushed people into an air raid eel·
lar.
The Croatian Defense Mini stry
reported air raids on small airfields
1n Scnj. 75 miles away on the Adriatic coast; Varazdin. 40 mile s
northeast of Zagreb, and on the
Adriatic island of Hvar.
The Yugoslav air for ce said it
had destroyed 18 small planes that
it claimed were used to smuggl e
arms.
Throughout the republic, at least
26 people died in a 24-hour period
ending Sunday night.
Croat forces - after weeks of
se tbacks in fighting with federal
troops and rebellious Serbs living
in their territory - claimed Sunday
to hav e captured more than 400
federal soldiers and a large cache
of arms.

Athens city workers go on strike
ATHENS, Ohio (AP ) Garbage collectors and other city
service workers went on strik e
today after union members rejected
the laiesl contract offer.
Robert Turner, a representative
of the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal
Employees, said union members on
Sunday voted down the proposal
39-6.
Turner said the city wants the
right to fire any city worker after
30 days illness. 60 days on a leave
of absence or 90 days after a work related injury.
He al so said the city wants all

employees in certain departments
to have a commercial driver 's
license even if they don't dnvc city
vehicles.
The union represents about 50
city workers , includmg parking
attendants and employees in th e
street repair, water and sewage
treatment departments.
A representative of the city was
not immediately available for comment today. A message was left
with the mayor' s office.
The Athens County Transit bus
system says the system shut down
bec au se of the strik e. It say s its

drivers won't cross the lmc s of
striking workers.
Police Chief Rick Mayer said in
a statement parking meter en forcement and other parking attendants ·
duties would continue.
The workers' contract with the
city expired Friday. Negotiations
began in early August. A State
Employment Relations Board official mediated during bargaining
sessions.
Private garbage collectors will
be hired if the strike lasts more
than a week. and supervi sors will
opcraiC water and sewer treatment
fa cilities. c•ty official s said.

r---Local briefs-____,
Scout popcorn sale begins

Foul play not suspected

COMPARE
OUR
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ANYWHERE

Our Service Dept. Is
e1ulpped wl.tli the
atest technical
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service fechnidans.
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31 YEARS 01 DEPENDABLE SERVICE!'
BUICK-PONTIAC

SMITH

1

1900 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SIGN OF THINGS TO COME - This pic-.
turesque sternwbeeler, moored at the Pomeroy
levee late last week, is expected to be at the Second Annual Big Bend Sternwheel Fesiival in
October. The Princess Margy and Captain Pete

Grassie of Dunbar, W.Va., were homeward
bound from the Marietta Sternwheel Festival
and took lime to visit Pomeroy, where 22 boats
are scheduled to arrive October 12 for the local
festival.

•.

•

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 16,1991
Page-2-The Dally s&lt;&gt;rmn..r
Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio
Monday, September 16, 1991

Ill· Court Street

1

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L
I

1

!

,,I•
1

I

'

Tuesday, Sept.l7
Accu-Weathe..e forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH

About the time the 99th poten- the bemghted stupidity of the elec- should be as eagerly received by an
tial Democratic candidate torate. How could anyone follow electorate waiting on a barren shore
DEVO'l'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON ARM
announced that his hung 10enail such an obvious Pied Piper, he in 1992 as H was in 1932? Who rs
would keep him out of the 1992 would fume, a man of little intelli- willing to blame just about everypresidential campaign, I finally fig- gence who counted on a jaunty grin one and everythmg for its near- Democratic Party.
~~MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ured out what Lhe Democratic Party and mellifluous voice to disguise fatal condition except itself?
That is not a message that
has become. It's my Uncle Don. h1s cheap demagoguery?
conventional
politician wants
The Democrats, of course, and
ROBERT L. WINGETT
who died not long ago in his 80s.
My immediate family was not as recently as three years ago they carry to the party faithful. What
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Publisher
The comparison has nothing to exactly knee-jerk Democratic, Dad were dcludin_g themselves that their required is a different kind of
General Manager
do with his death, particularly smce and Mother having backed Wendell failures were transient. When the senger with a different message
PAT WHITEHEAD
he was a vigorous man right up to Willkie, Thomas Dewey (in 1948) next election came round, they a Barry Goldwater in De&lt;mocra&lt;tic
Assistant Publisher/Controller
the last. It defmitely has nothing ·to and Eisenhower in 1952, each man would say, the voters would drag is one way to describe it.
do with his politics, true-blue and time for a different reason. But emerge from their long sleep and party establishment has to
A MEMBER or The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press AssoRepublican as befitted a man of his they supported the social welfare restore the rightful order of things. crushed in order to save the
cia tion and the American Newspaper Publishers' Association.
education (Yale) and class (upper). legislation that FOR had pushed It had been a nighunare, but night- The party's platform has to be
The comparison is with his state of and believed he had saved the mares passed with the dawn.
cally restructured, not to ablmd&lt;Jr
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than300
of
the
period
mind
for
most
nation
from
the
excesses
the
the party's core beliefs but to
Then
came
the
landslide
of
words long All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
between 1933 and 1968, a time in · Republicans had encouraged in the 1988, wrought by George Bush, the them form and thrust appropriate
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pubwhich, by Uncle Dan's lights, the 1920s. Uncle Don was the object of world's least charismatic politician. the last decade of the century.
lished. Letters should be in good Jaste , addressing Issues, not persona II
tles
United States took leave of its col- considerable intra-family humor. It He wasn't Ronald Reagan . It
That's what happened to
lective senses. The Democratic was easy to see him as a funny, wasn't George McGovern and his Republican Party, which is why
Party 's hegemony left him as out-of-date political dinosaur longhairs taking their lumps from a last laugh was Uncle Dan's.
bewildered as he was apoplectic.
whose extinction was certain.
second-term cinch, Richard Nixon. team stopped trying to be "me-totO~
He could not bring himself to
Flash forward to 1991. Who's It wasn't Jimmy Carter, preaching ers." They stopped crying
blame the Grand Old Party for rts whining now about "That Man," malaise and disdaining politics, spill mille. They took a close
long decline. Incapable of accept- in this case the ageless actor with reeling
under the triple shock of at the voter$' concerns and
ing that the Republicans' problems the optimistic air and shallow phi- inflation, unemployment and aged tbeir programs to reflect
lay in themselves, he looked else- losophy who was the master com- America held hostage.
of them. In the process, the ~..... •.
By ROBERT E. MILLER
where for answers. He found them municator? Who blames the votAssociated Press Writer
No, now it was unavoidable. Eastern Establishment, which
COLUMBUS, Ohm (AP)- Ohio's 1,318 townships w!ll have the in the devious strategems of "That ers? Who still believes that the Scapegoats need not apply. The nurtured Uncle Don, was crushed.
authority to adopt a limited form of home rule government under a law Man," Franklin D. Roosevelt and same message in the same bottle Democratic Party's enemy was the He didn't much care for that part,
but he loved the results.
that takes effect Tuesday. But it may be next year before any of them do
Not long ago, a man in Florida
so.
wrote me an angry letter, protesting
The law contains several requirements. The biggest is approval by
what he described as the self-satislocal voters, and the only election left this year is in November.
fied
vacuity of a talk show on
. Brooke Cheney. spokesman for the Ohio Township Association, says it
which
I had participared. He listed
: rs possrble that one ~auld submrt a proposal then. But because of planning
a few things we might have dis· and other consrderauons, he doubts any wrU try untill992.
cussed, but didn't like
· "We expecl that about 20 wiU pursue it next year," he said.
scandals, a
Cheney said that, with some exceptions, most of them are larger townshrps that have budgets brg enough to meet other requirements in the
insurance fund, the ~~~~L~;~:::~~~~
doliar savings and loan
stature, such as mamtarrting a police force and hiring a law director.
BCCI, double-dip rece:ssion,
The bill prohibits townships_. among other things, from imposing new
looting of pension
taxes to pay for addrtlonal semces that they could provide under the bill.
They will be able to levy finances for violations of their ordinances, up to
Sununu's civil
rig~lts~;f;~1~~t
...
$1,000.
Mosbacher's
census
the October surprise, the
Cheney said the new law has restrictions setting townships apart from
drug war, the appalling
chartered ClUes that are gtven freer rem under home-rule provisions of the
Ohio Constitution.
of our babies, the health care or.•"• •
our crumbling ecology .... "
"That's why we arc calting this !united home rule. There's been a lot
of confusron about that.·· he said.
He was right in more than one.
His list would be a great platform
The law says townships cannot d1sturb stare annexation laws or local
for an opposition party as well as
government ordinances affecting sewer or water servrces. It also prohibits
· townshrps from enactmg cm~tnallaws, rncludmg gun controls. They may
talk show, assuming eilher had thc1
not mterfere wrth laws admmrstered by the state Division of Wildlife.
taste for getting down to the nitty-l
Cheney said the bill may be vague with regard to possible conflicts
gritty. Given the abundant targets•
between townshrp laws and those of other local governments, and it may
of opportunity, the Democrats' fail -:
be necessary at some point to seek coun interpretations.
ure to take the offensive simpty j
Generally, howc;ver, he said he thinks city ordinances would prevatl.
underscores the obvious, as does,
The township association has been holding regional seminars across
the timidity'(lf the party's most!
the state to brief local trusrees on the statute. They indicate there will be
likely candidates. As Harry Tru- '
no rush to hold local elections.
man once said of the Republicans)
The (Toledo) Blade reported last week that at a seminar in Lucas
they don't care where they'rC:
County, Marily~ Yoder, a trusree from Springfrcld Township, said, "We
going, they just care where they've:
don't have a police dcparunent I don't think we can handle it."
been. Think of it as Uncle Don'sl
Deane Allen. Sylvania Township trustee, was quoted as saying that
revenge.
while there arc questions about home rule that need to be answered, "For
our constituents, we are going to look into it."
Township officials say most of the inrerest in the new law is around
some of Ohio's larger cities that have experienced urban sprawl such as
Cincinnati and Akron.
'
The curtain has now risen on the belated influx of highmindedncss.
final act in the drama of Supreme Rather, it will be because the charCoun nominee Clarence Thomas. actcr and significance of Clarence
The Senate Judiciary Committee Thomas will have become unmis- ly noble (Sen. Kennedy, for exam- blunders as Ard to .ramrlles with ;
has begun its hearings on his nomi- takably clear in the Senate hear- ple, who weighs these matters Dependent Children, which vtrtual· 1
nation, the anti-Thomas lobby has ings.
between midnight pub crawls in ly destroyed the black family struc- :
kicked off its $3 million campaign
It isn't merely that Clarence Palm Beach). But even the Senate's turc in America).
:
to "Bork him," and conservatives Thomas has suffered, starting his most abandoned opportunists arc
Even so, Clarence Thomas l
arc fighting back as best they can.
lrfe under circumstances of abject experts at detecting the way the stands forth as a man who never for '
Ever since President Reagan's poverty and rising, step by step, to wind of public opinion is blowmg a second endorsed such a "solu- !
nomination of Robert Bork in a position of real eminence 1n -and acting accordingly.
tion" to the problems of America's ;
1987, which the liberal left defeat- American socrety. Plenty of AmeriThe real losers, if Thomas is blacks. He has fought fiercely for :
ed by dragging a supremely well- can blacks have suffered as much, ultimately confirmed, will be the their right to equal opponunity, but •
qualified nominee through a bam· and some have risen as high.
black "leaders" who long ago has rejected every effort to treat :
yard mud-bath unprecedented m
What makes Clarence Thomas made a Faustian bargain with them as cripples. And he has :
the history of judicial nominations, so noteworthy is the fact that he did America 's liberals to be their life- demonstrated, in his own career, •
there can be no confidence that the not choose 10 construct and pursue long political ragbab1es in return the success that can be achieved by :
confirmation process, now or in the his career on the theory that, as a for the right to administer a crip- an able black who refuses to spend I
future, will be conducted with any- black man, America owed him spe- pling dole to their fellow blacks.
his life as a "handkerchief-head" !
thmg approaching the dignity it cial attention or special help. All he
Let us assume they were con- (to return professor Derrick Bell's :
deserves. The Senate will be a long ever asked -and this he demand- vinced that this bargain was the compliment) on the plantation of •
time living down its disgraceful ed- was an equal opportunity to best that could be struck, in the Amcncan liberalism.
!
performance on that occasion, compete.
Interests of the black community.
To liberal blacks, such indepen- ;
whether Clarence Thomas is conUnless I miss my guess, the dig- Lei us assume they genuinely dcnce is hugely offensive; for it to •
firmed or not.
nity and power of that position are believed they had earned the praise be rewarded by elevation to the:
Luckily, it seems possrble that at going to have a profound impact on (and the far more tangible rewards) Supreme Court would be utterly '
least a majority of senators, this the national television audience showered on them by the l•bcrals imolerable. Clarence Thomas
time, will turn a deaf car to the watching the Thomas hearings. for striking il. Let us assume, even, and through him, black Americans I
snarls of Norman Lear and h1s lcft- Some of the senators on the com- that there was somcthmg to be said generally - must be taught that 1
hberallobby. If they do, 11 won 't be mittee can hardly be expected to for that diaboli cal dole (without there rs no salvation save through :
because they have experienced any appreciate a sentiment so thorough- forgetting, however, ~uch appalling liberalism.
:
We shall sec.

IToledo I 79' I

Hodding Carter

Pomeroy, Ohio

• 1

( lll lo wl'd"lf ~ '

Democrats are their worst own enemies

:0

i)
•IColumbus I 83' I

Showers T-siOtms Rain Flumes

South-Central Ohio
. Tonight and Tuesday, partly
cloudy with widely scatrered showers and thunderstonns. Low around
10. High Tuesday in the mid-80s.
Chance of rain is 30 pencent tonight
and Tuesday.
Extended forec:ast

jToday in history
I
I '

By The Associated Press
, Today is Monday, Sept. 16, the 259th day of 1991. There are 106 days
. left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
: Twenty-five years ago, on Sept. 16, 1966, the Metropolitan Opera
· opened its season in its new opera house at New York's Lincoln Center
: for the Performing Ans with the premiere of "Antony and Cleopatra" by
· Samuel Barber.
On this date:
In 1630, the Massachusetts village of Shawmut changed its name to
: Boston.
In 1638, the "Sun King" of France, Louis the XIV, was born.
In 1810, Mexicans began their revolt against Spanish rule.
• In 1893, hundreds of thousands of seUlers swarmed onto a section of
· land in Oklahoma lcnown as the Cherokee Strip.
' In 1908, General Motors flied its papers of incorporation in New Jer-

I '

I

I

: seyin 1919, the American Legion was incorporated by an act of Congress.
; In 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law the Selective
· Training and Service Act, which set up the first peacetime military draft
: in U.S. history.
, In 1940, Samuel T. Rayburn of Texas was elecred Speaker of the U.S.
•
• House of Representatives.
: In 1974, President Ford announced a conditional amnesty program for
· Vietnam war deserters and draft-evaders.
· In 1976, the Episcopal Church, at its General Convention in Min: neapolis, formally approved the ordination of women as priests and bish: ops.

•

f~~

In 1977, Maria Callas, the American-born prima donna famed
lync soprano and fiery temperament, died in Paris at age 53.
In 1982, the massacre of,hundreds of Palestinian men, women and
children at the hands of Lebanese Christian militiamen began in west
Beirut's Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps.

from the sponsors:
"The amount of free press we
got just swamped me,'' says L.
Brent Bozell III, executive director
of the Conservative Victory Committee. " ... It's safe to say we got
air time on news shows that would
easily cost in the millions. It just
stunned me.''
Bozell's group sponsored the
independent pro-Thomas ad in conjunction with the Citizens United
lobbymg group that was involved
in the equally independent Willie
Horton mug-shot video of 1988 _
the one that helped make George
Bush what he is today. The pro.
Thomas ad was, in fact, produced
by Larry McCarthy, a respected
and unprejudiced GOP ad-maker
who also made that original Hono~
ad.
Bozell and his eoUeagues made
two ads - 60-second and 30-seeond spots. He said that, after the
McLaughlin show aired , they
d~rded to spend a mere $30,000 to
au the 30-second spot _just
enough so Washington media folks
would think the ads were up and
runmng. The 60-second spot was
shown JUSt once - on John
M:cLaughlin's show. These right
wmgers bought snippets of 30-sec-

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

Wednesday through Friday:
Fair on Wednesday. A chance of
showers Thursday. Fair on Friday.
Cooler. Lows in the 50s Wednesday and Thursday and the 40s Friday. Highs in the 70s Wednesday,
65-75 Thursday and in the 60s Fri·
day.

....;. --Local briefs-----.
Continued from page I

Woman cited after accident
Donna Loudm, Point Pleasant, W.Va. was cited for improper
backing following an accrdcnt on the parking lot at McDonald 's
early Saturday morning.
According to Pomeroy Police. Loudin backed into the front of a
car driven by Debra Long, Henderson, W. Va. as both waited in the
order pickup line. Loudin was driving a car owned by Richard H&lt;mson. There was moderate damage to the Long vchrclc and none to
the car owned by Hanson.

EMS units answer calls
At 11:29 a.m . on Saturday, Rutland squad was sent to State
Route 692. Fred Oyler was taken to Vererans Memorial Hosp1tal.
At 12:09 p.m., Middleport squad went to the ball park for Wrlma
Cline, who was taken to Veterans. At 2:02p.m., Oyler was taken by
Lrfe Flight from the helipad to Grant Medical Center. At 4:37 p.m.,
Syracuse unit was sent to Hayman Road. Wayne Deaver was transpaned to Veterans. At 7:39 p m., Middleport squad to Hartinger
Park. Chris Oliver was taken to Veterans.
At II :48 a.m. on Sunday, Pomeroy unit went to Condor Street.
Adam Crouso was taken to Veterans.
At 1:16 p.m., Racine unit took Frances Knott from tile station to
Vcrerans. At 3:54 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to the Pomeroy levee.
Lori Roush was taken to Veterans. At 9:50 p.m., Racme unu went
to Bashan Road. Levena Hayman was taken to St. Joseph Hospital.
At 6:17a.m. on Monday, Rutland unit went to Higley Road for a
brush fire, and returned at 7 a m.

Divorces, dissolutions processed
A divorce action has been filed m Me1gs County Common Pleas
Court to Sherla K. Bryan, Cheshire, against Derry Bryan, also of
Cheshire.
An action for dissolution of marriage has been filed in the court
by Rrt.a J. Michael and Tony D. Michael, both of Pomeroy.
Dissoluuon actions have been granted to Kathleen M. Smith and
Gary Lee Smith; and to Willie Tony Jones and Shirley Ann Jones.
I·
The drssoluuon action of Sandra P. Snyder and James A. Snyder
has been dismissed.

"The Link" underway
A service called "The Link" (People to Places) is now underway
at the Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and Developme~­
tlll Drsabilities, made posstble by a $40,000 grant from the Ohro
Developmental Disabilities Planning Council through the Ohro
Department of Transportation.
.
.
The Meigs MRJDD board was asstgned as the lead agency, wrth
an advisory board of three agencies: Blue Str_eak Cab Company ,
Meigs Association of Retarded Cltaens and Mergs lndustrrcs.
According to Program Coordinator Robert Wood, early stages of
the project have been completed on schedule. '
'
"Transportation has been a tradrt&lt;onal barncr to success m the
community for persons with disabilities and elderly citizens," Wood
said. "Persons with disabilities can work if given ~roper supP?rt." .
The grant period is limited. Therefore the advrsory team rs obligated to try to continue services, possibly m a public system that
would serve all citizens.
Those interested in information about the program should con-

Once again TV ad gets free lunch
media-basher and bias detector during The Final Days, and who is
now the loquactous interlocutor of
"The McLaughlin Group."
In a repeat performance
McLaughlm provided the pro bono
launch pad - a full minute of his
Group's golden air time- for a
version of the controversial
Clarence Thomas ad tbat had yet to
au. Then he served as immoderator
for the discussion among the
assembled pundits (a panel on
which, yes! I too have performed.)
McLaughlin performed a similar
service in 1988 when his political
soulmates were desperate to introduce, gratis, their Willie Horton
mug-shot TV ad.
And, no surprise, the reaction of
the TV news industry was a stam.
pede, bigger even than the great
video rush of '88. The network
news sh~ws fell all over themselves to air lengthy segments of
the TV ad -again for free.
Let's pause now for a word
,_

Sunny

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

By William A. Rusher

The right-wing fringe folks who
gave us the Willie Horton Attack
Video have now honed a pitch for
Judge Clarence Thomas which
proves that - if you stoop low
enough in the TV ad btz - you
indeed can have a free launch.
The story behind the officially
independem commercral supporting Supreme Cour1 nominee
Clarence Thomas is really just a
rerun of how the Wingers conned
the TV industry into giving them
free time for slime in the Willie
Horton Follies of 1988.
Once again, they have conned
their way into millions of dollars
worth of free TV time - this time
with a sleazy attack video that hits
three liberal Democratic senators
on matters that hav(\ nothing to do
with Supreme courtship.
And once again, the Wingers
were aided and abetted by their
famous eo-conspirator: genial John
McLaughlin, who served as the
Nixon White House's designated

Ice

C 1991 Accu-Weather, Inc

-!

LENIN'S NEW TOMB

Snow

tact

"The Link" at 992-6681 or 992-6683 .

•

By Martin Schram :
onds only in the Washington, D.C.;.
markets of CNN and Fox.
But you've seen the ad eourte&amp;~
of network TV's free news shows."
"It's amazing .... ABC even did
two pieces on the ad in the same
news show," says Bozell. Indeed,
the network used portions of the ad ·
in a piece by White House corre,
spondent Brit Hume, and other
footage from the same ad in an
analysis by Jeff Greenfield, who
ended by saying: " ...and thanks to
news reports like this one, these ,
ads have reached an audience hundreds of times bigger than the one
the advenisers paid for.''
So then, why show it? Consider
the tree that falls in the forest: If an
ad was made, but wasn't aired
nationally because no commencial
time was bought. was it, in fact, an
ad at all?
The TV ne.ws industry must
summon lhe self-discipline to resist '
the compulsion to air any and all ,
news that wiggle!\. ·reu the story
without videos, if need be.
Quit giving freebies for political
ads when their only redeeming
pews value is outrage. Quit making ,
the same mistake, slime after slime.

educator with fellowship

-

-'

_,,.. .

secondary school teachers to incorporate more, and innovative, ceonomic education programs into the
curriculum.
A principal resource will be the
education programs sponsored by
the Ohio Council on Economic
Education. The Ohio Council on
Economic Education is part of a
nationwide group of state councils,
affiliated with the national Joint
Council on Economic Education,
headquartered in New York.
The JCEE is a non-profit and
non-partisan organization bringing
together leading educators,
economists, labor and industry representatives to enhance economic
education in the elementary and
secondary schools.
The JCEE works with leading
educators 10 create unique curriculum materials in the area of economic education, and is the largest
training organization in the country. Its school-based Developmental Economic E&lt;!l'cati9n Program
(DEEP) currently operates in more
than 2,600 school systems lhroughout the U.S.
..

By The Associated Press
Considerably cooler weather
conditions are being foreca st for
Ohio later this week a day or two
before the official arrival of fall.
By Friday, the highs will be in the
60s throughout the state, the
National Weather Service said.
That's in sharp contrast to the
warm and muggy conditions
Ohioans suffered as the week
began.
Forecasters said the cool Canadian air will be brought into Ohio
by an approaching frontal system.
Some showers and thunderstorms
are possible tonight and Tuesday
ahead of the front.
The record h1gh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP) An inmate who escaped from the
Chillicothe Correctional Institution
over the weekend remained at large
Sunday night, a prison officer sa1d.
Eugene Partin, 60, escaped Saturday, said Lynn Goff, prison
administrative assistant. Partm was
serving a life sentence for seconddq,'fee murder. He was committed
from Clermont County m August
1973 and paroled in 1983 , but
returned to the pnson on a 1985
parole violauon.
Prison officer Bobi McKeever
said Sunday night that no other
information would be avarlablc
until Monday morning.
Ms. Goff said prison officials
discovered that Paron was mrssmg
from the med•um -sccurity mstitu t&lt;On Saturday night when they con·
ducted a head count after inmates
were brought in from the prison
yard. She said investigators could
not immediately determine how
Partin escaped.
Partin is white, 5 feet 9 inches
tall, weighs 146 pounds and has
grayish brown hair and blue eyes.
He has a mole under his right eye.

station was 96 degrees in 1897.
The record low was 40 in 1916.
Sunrise this morning wa s at
7:13 a.m. Sunset will be at 7:40
p.m.
Agricultural advisory
Here's the lates: Ohio agncul·
tural weather advisory prepared by
the National Weather Service' s
Midwest Agricultural Weatber Service Center in West Lafayette, Ind .:
Much cooler weather is expected to begin arriving m Ohio on
Tuesday.
A 30-degree plunge in the highs
by late in the week may stress livestock.
Even though a strong cold front
&lt;Spassing through the state ton&lt;ght,
only scattered showers arc hkely .

Severe weather, including large
On Tuesday, the rain will he conhail, heavy rains and damaging
fined to the extreme soulh.
Temperatures will drop steadily winds, was forecast for the Great
from highs in mid-80s on Tuesday Lakes region. Tornadoes also were
possible.
to the mid to low 60s on Fnda y.
Rain was expected to extend
Overnight lows wrll dip 1nto Jhc
from the region south through IUi40s by Friday.
nois, Mrssoun, Okalahoma, Texas
Around the nation
The weather was chilly •n the and New Mexico.
Sunshme and highs in the 80s
West at dawn today, wnh read•ngs
m Reno and Salt Lake City cooler and 90s were predtcted for the.
than Anchorage, Alaska. High Lcm- West Coast.
Highs were forecast in the 60s
pcratures in th e Southeast co nun 1n
Mrnnesota, South Dakota,
ucd.
Temperatures over I00 wcr,' Wyomin~. parts of Montana and
forecas t for South Carolma. H1 ~ l1S North Dakota. In North Dakota,
111 the 90s with uncomlonabl e h&lt; ghs were predicted m the 50s.
hum&lt;d&lt;ty were predrcted today cast
The high temperature for the
of the Appalachians as far n01th as nauon Sunday was 102 degrees at
Boston.
Lake H'"asu C1ty, Ariz.

Senators refuse to extend lease
By EILEEN GUERRERO
Associated Press Writer
MANILA, Philippines (AP) In a vote that could spell an end to
nearly a century of U.S. mil1tary
&lt;nvolvemcnl in the Philippines,
senators today refused to extend
the Amencan lease for the vast
Subic Bay naval base.
President Corazon Aquino
prom1sed to call a referendum and
use "people power" to overturn
the Senate decision, despite claims
by senators and former allies that
she would undermine democratic
In stitutions she created.
The U.S. Embassy said in a
statement that the United States
will "stand fully behind the president in her continuing efforts to put
in place the new treaty."
It was the fust official sign tbat
Washington wtll back the referen·
dum idea and not begin leaving
rmmediately, as the Bush administration had earlier indicated. The
63 ,000-acre base is the United
SJates' largest in Asia.
About 15,000 anti-bases demon-

strators danced in the street outside
the Senate building after the vote
while 5,000 bases supporters ralhcd nearby, Jhe two sides separated
by not police. Boosters rnclud cd
Subrc workers from Olongapo wl10
stand to lose their jobs rf the Amer ICans leave immediately.
The lease agreement called for
the United States 10 pay Lhe Philrpr•nes $203 million annually to
keep its ships and 7,000 personnel
at Subic for 10 more years. Senators said the money was Inade quate.
U.S . officials already have
decided to give up Clark Air Base,
50 miles north of Manila, because
of damage caused by the June eruptions of Mount Pinatubo. Agree ment was reached earlier to close
four smaller bases, three of which
were handed over today.
The bases lost some of their
strategic importance followmg the
end of the Cold War. New U.S .Soviet cooperation following the
failed hard-line coup fwthcr lcsses
their importancc.

_Meigs announcements---

Revival planned
The Faith Tabernacle Church,
Barley Run Road·, Pomeroy, will
have weekend revival Thursday
John William Long
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly.
John William Long, 20, of Point Noah Callicoat is the evangelist.
992-5746 for information.
Pleasant, W.Va., died Friday, Sept. Call
Pastor
Emmett Rawson mvitcs the
13, 1991.
public.
He was a part-time guard for the
MounJainecr Power Plant in New Democrats to have potluck
The Meigs County Democratic
Haven.
Executive
Committee will have a
Surviving arc hrs parents, John
potluck
before
its meeting on
Ray and Emma (Logan) Long of
Thursday
at
7
p.m.
at the CarpenPornt Pleasant: a sister, Sheila Ann
ter's
Hall
in
Pomeroy.
Bring a cov·
Long, brother, Donnie Allen Long;
cred
dish.
All
are
urged
to attend.
and paternal grandmother, CatherMuseum
volunteers
needed
ine Long of New Haven.
A workshop for tbose inrerestcd
The funeral will be Tuesday,
in
volunteenng with the Meigs
1:3 0 p.m., at the Wyoma PenteCounty
Museum will be held
costal Church in Galhpolrs Ferry
Thursday
from 10 a.m. to 4:30p.m.
with the Rev. Charles H. Birchfield
Lunch
will
be provided and further
officiating. Burial will be m the
informatron
may be obtained by
Henderson Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Wilcox- calling Margaret Parker at 992en Funeral Home today from 7 to 9 3810 or 992-2264 .
Dodderer personal
p.m.
Jessie Dodderer is a patient in
the intensive care unit at Lhc Ohio
State University Hospital. Cards
may be sent to the hospital, lith
Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210.
Hymn sing
The Freedom Gospel Mission
Church, Stiversville, will hold a
PORTSMOUTH
A hymn sing on Sunday at 7 p.m. fea Portsmouth man who hanged him- turing the Conqueror's of Ripley,
self in his jail cell Saturday morn- W.Va. The public is invited to
ing died 10 hours later, a Scioto attend.
County Sheriff's Department Dance to be held
spokesman said.
The Royal Oak Dance Club will
According to an anicle in Mon- have a dance Saturday fro 8-11
day's Columbus Dispatch, a guard p.m. at Royal Oak Resort. Music
found Mark S. Diller, 29, hangmg will be provided by George Hall.
by his unifonn pants at 10 a.m. Saturday.
The jailer cut the man down and
adminrstered cardiopulmonary
resuscitation until medic s took
Veterans Memorial
Diller to the Southern Oh1o MediSATURDAY ADMISSIONS cal Center.
Donna Williamson, Rutland.
Diller d1ed in the intensive care
SATURDAY DISCHARGES unit at 8 p.m., the sheriff's
Fchcra Grueser and Clara Davis.
spokesman said.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Deputies had arrested Diller SatNone.
urday on charges of drsordcrly conSUNDAY DICHARGES duct and theft.
Cathenne Mccs and Howard Damron.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Drschargcs, Sept. 13 · Joshua
Super Lotto
Blackburn, Mrs. Joseph Calvert
ll-16-24-32-44-46
(eleven, sixteen, twenty-four , and son, Mrs. Jackie Delancy and
daughter, Mrs. John Duffett and
thtrty-two, forty-four, forty-six )
son, Jack Ervm, Audra Haffelt,
The jackpot is $24 milhon.
Tabatha
Hamson and Clyde Lan Kicker
nmg .
6-3-6-6-2-6
Drsc hargcs, Sept. 14 - David
(SiX, three , SIX, SIX, tWO , S IX)
Fisher, Vernal Holberg, Mrs .
Pick 3 Numbers
M&lt;chacl Hubbard and daughter,
3-6-3
Jon
McMillen, Rachael Morns ,
(three, six, three)
Angela
Painter and Mrs. Daniel
Pick 4 Numbers
Rhodes
and
son.
0-7-1-6
Discharges, Sept. 15 - Mrs. Lon·
(zero, seven, one, six)
nie McCoy and son, Mrs. Todd
Cards
McCreary and son.
3 (three) of Hearts
Births, Sept. 15 - Mr. and Mrs.
6 (six) of Clubs
Jeffrey
Mullins, a daughter, Bid2 (two) of Diamonds
well.
A (ace) of Spades

Area deaths

Portsmouth man
dies after hanging
self in jail

Th1s is an extra dance ami gucs1s
wrll pay SIS per couple. There is
no charge for dance club members.
Hymn sing
The Hazel Commumly Church
will have a hymn sing Saturday at
7:30p.m. fcaturtng the Dailey
Family Singers The public is &lt;nv&lt;tcd to attend.
Revival Wednesday
Revival scrvrces al the Ohio
Valley Church of God, Guysvrllc,
will be held Wednesday through
Sunday at 7 p m. nightly Rev
Brice Utt, Mariella , will be th e
speaker. Pastor Donald Combs
invites the public.
District Annual Day planned
The Athens District United
Methodist Women wlil hold rl s
annual meeting on Sept. 26 a1 the
First United Methodist Church at
New Lexington. Th e theme 1s
"Sounds of Children." The featured
speaker w1ll be Alice Fay, Mt. Vrc tory. She is act1ve m the work of
the United Methodist Women, and
1s currently servmg as Conrcrcnce
Global Concerns coordinator She
also serves on the commlltcc on
fmance, is a representative to the
regional school plannmg team and
serves on the Appalachian develop ment committee . Regi stration.
book browsing and coffee hour will
begin at 9 a.m. Reservation deadline ts Thursday.

.

~

Stocks
Am Ele Power .............. .. 30 1/8
Ashland Oil ...................... 30 1/2
AT&amp;T.. ................. ......... .37 3/4
Bob Evans .................. ..... 18
Charming Shop ................ 20 3!8
Oty Holding .................. 15 l/4
Federal MoguL .............. 15 5/8
Goodyc:uT&amp;R .......... ..... 415/8
Key Centurion .... .......... ... 15
Lands' End .. .. ................. 20
Limned Inc .. .............. ...... 26 1/4
Mullimedmlnc ... ........ ...... 25 1/4
Rax Rcstaumnt ................ .8/16
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .35 1/2
Shoncy's Inc ................... 17 1/2
Star Bank ................ .. .. 23 1/4
Wendy lnt'l.. ................ .. .. 8 7/8
Worthington Ind ............... 28 7/8
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Luewi of Gallipolis.

Th.- Daily Sentinel
I USPS lt$-9601

A Dlvltilon of

Multlmf'dl~t,

Inc.

Publl!'hPCI f'VPry afiPrnoon, Monday
Jhr ough Frtdav. 111 Courl S! ., Pomf'rov . Ohio. bv the Ohio ValiPy Publishing Companv ,Multlmt'dla. Inc.,
PomProv. Ohln4~7fl9. Ph . 992 · 21~ St&gt;·
cond clots!'&gt; p os ta~r paid at PomProy.
Ohio

MPmhfor Thr As socitttf'd PrPss, (n ·
land Dt~lly PrPs~ AssO&lt;'iatlon and the
Ohio Npwo;p&lt;lpC'r Association National
AdvHil s ln~
Nf'W~papror

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POSTMASTER· S«&gt;nd addrMs changE'S
to Thr Oullv SPntinE:-1. 111 Court St .
PflmPrnv. Ohio 45769

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Hospital news

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Twelve of the 23 senators four more votes than necessary opposed the agreement that would
have extended the lease on Subic.
ScnaJc Presrdent Jovito Salonga,
who cast the 12th vote, declared
' ' the treaty is defeated."
Opponents said they wanted
good relations with Washington but
believed the agreement was uncon·
stlluuonal, provided no firm aid
guarantees and infringed on
sovereignty.
"We want friendship with the
Umted States," said Majority
Leader Teofisto Guingona, who
opposed the agreement.

. 25 C('nfs

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Mall Suhserlptlon,.
lnskl@ Mel~ County
11 W&lt;'l'ks .
. ... $2184
26 WP('k!IO
$0 16
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. . ..... $84.76
Oubkle ,\bl~ County

1.1 Wl'f'ks
2fl Wrrks
52 Wrpk o;

.. $23.40
$4!§ 50

S88..W

THE

Lottery numbers

Ameritech honors RG
: Linda Bauer, an associate professor of education at the University of Rio Grande, was one of 79
eeonomic educators from the midwest recently honored with an
Ameritech Foundation Fellowship
award from the Joint Council on
Economic Education (JCEB).
·· Bauer, of Oak Hill, joined other
fellowship winners at a four-day
training institute in Columbus July
18-21, where they were exposed to
new ideas and techniques to help
them encourage teachers to place
greater value on economic cducauon in the classroom.
" S. Stowell Symmes, the institute
director, said Bauer was selected
for the fellowship "because,of her
proven leadership abilities and
strong commitment to the importance of economic education as a
curriculum priority for studimL~. "
Along with lhe other fellowship
winners from Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin,
Bauer will use the knowledge and
skills gained from !his Midwesrcm ·
Institute for Beonomic'EducaiOrs to
wor~ with local elem\lntary and

Fall-like weather forecast later this week

Chillicothe prison
escapee at large

W VA

Judge Thomas goes against the grain

Berris World

PA

e

IMansf•eld I 81 ' I• i)

Townships will go slow
on home rule power

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..6
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~

Try our 12 oz.
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treat.
It's on sale.

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Pt. Pleasant, WV.

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Call 304-67 5-1244 for Appt or Information

-

,..

CANDO CoriiiTIIII

... . .. .. -.
~

·-·

�Commentary

Monday, September 16,1991

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 16, 1991 ·

UIIIO

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By The Associated Press

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and

The Daily Sentinel

About the time the 99th potentia l Democratic candidate
announced that his hung toenail
DEVO'I'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON ARM
would keep him out of the 1992
presidential campaign, I finally fig~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ured out what the Democratic Party
has become. It's my Uncle Don,
who died not long ago in his 80s.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The comparison has nothing to
Publisher
General Manager
do with his death, particularly smce
he was a vigorous man right up to
PAT WHITEHEAD
the
last. It defmitely has nothing to
Assistant Publisher/Controller
do with his politics, true-blue
Republican as befitted a man of his
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assoeducation (Yale) and class (upper).
ciat ion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
The comparison is with his state of
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 300
mind for most of the period
words long. All leiters are subject to editing and must be signed with
between 1933 and 1968, a time in ·
name , address and telephone number. No un signed letters will be pub·
which, by Uncle Dan's lights, the
llshed Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·
United
States took leave of its colties.
lective senses. The Democratic
Party 's hegemony left him as
bewildered as he was apoplectic.
He could not bring himself to
blame the Grand Old Party for its
long decline. Incapable of accepting that the Republicans' problems
lay in themselves, he looked elseBy ROBERT E. MILLER
where for answers. He found them
Associated Press Writer
in the devious strategems of "That
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio's 1,3 18 townships will have the Man," Franklin D. Roosevelt and
authority to adopt a limited form of home rule government under a law
that takes effect Tuesday. But it may be next year before any of them do
so.
The law contains several requirements. The biggest is approval by
local voters, and the only election left this year is in November.
Brooke Cheney, spokesman for the Ohio Township Association, says it
: IS possible that one could submit a proposal then . But because of plannmg
· and other considerations, he doubts any will try untill992.
· "We expect that about 20 will pursue it next year," he said.
Cheney said that, with some exceptions, most of them are larger townships that have budgets big enough to meet other requirements in the
statute, such as mainUtining a police force and hiring a law director.
The bill prohibits townships, among other things, from imposing new
uaxes to pay for additional services that they could provide under the bilL
They will be able to levy finances for violations of their ordinances. up to
$1,000.
Cheney said the new law has restrictions setting townships apart from
chartered cities that are given freer rein under home-rule provisions of the
Ohio Constitution.
"That's why we arc calling th1s hrMed home rule. There's been a lot
of confusion about that.·· he said.
. The law says townships cannot disturb state annexation laws or local
government ordmances affecllng sewer or water services. It also prohibits
townships from enacting criminal laws, including gun controls. They may
not interfere with laws administered by the state Division of Wildlife.
Cheney said the bill may be vague with regard to possible conflicts
between township laws and those of other local governments, and it may
be necessary at some point to seek coun interpretations.
Generally, how~ver, he said he thinks city ordinances would prevaiL
The township association has been holding regional seminars across
the state to brief local trustees on the statute. They ind1cate there will be
no rush to hold local elections.
The (Toledo) Blade reported last week that at a seminar in Lucas
County, Marilyn Yoder, a trustee from Springfield Township, said. "We
don't have a police department I don'tthink we can handle it."
Deane Allen, Sylvania Township trustee, was quoted as saying that
while there arc questions about home rule that need to be answered, "For
our constituents, we are going to look into it."
Township officials say most of the mtcrest in the new law is around
some of Ohio's larger cities that have experienced urban sprawl, such as
Cincinnati and Akron.
The curUtin has now risen on the
final act in the drama of Supreme
Court nominee Clarence Thomas.
The Senate Judiciary Committee
has begun its hearings on his nominauon, the anti-Thomas lobby has
kicked orr its $3 million campaign
to "Bork him," and conservatives
are fightmg back as best they can.
Ever since President Reagan' s
nomination of Robert Bork in
1987, which the liberal left defeated by dragging a supremely wellqualified nominee through a barnyard mud-bath unprecedented in
the history of judicial nominations,
there can be no confidence that the
confirmation process. now or in the
future , w11l be conducted with anything approaching the dignity it
deserves. The Senate will be a long
time living down its disgraceful
performance on that occasion,
whether Clarence Thomas is confirmed or not.
Luckily, it seems possible that at
least a majority of senators, rhis
time, will turn a deaf ear to the
snarls of Norman Lear and his lcfthbcrallobby. If they do, it won ' t be
because they have experienced any
Ill· Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

Townships will go slow
on home rule power

the bemghted stupiCIJty of the electorate. How could anyone follow
such an obvious Pied Piper. he
would fume, a man of little intelligence who counted on a jaunty grin
and mellifluous voice to disgui se
his cheap demagoguery?
My immediate family was not
exactly knee-jerk Democratic, Dad
and Mother having backed Wendell
Willkie. Thomas Dewey (in 1948)
and Eisenhower in 1952, each man
and time for a different reason. But
they supported the social welfare
legislation that FOR had pushed
and believed he had saved the
nation from the excesses the
Republicans had encouraged in the
1920s. Uncle Don was the object of
considerable intra-family humor. It
was easy to see him as a funny,
out-of-date political dinosaur
whose extinction was certain.
Flash forward to 1991. Who's
whining now about "That Man,"
in this caSe the ageless actor with
the optimistic air and shallow philosophy who was the master communicator? Who blames the voters? Who still believes that the
same message in the same bottle

should be as eagerly received by an
electorate waiung on a barren shore
in 1992 as it was in 1932? Who is
willing to blame just about everyone and · everything for its nearfatal condition except itself!
The Democrats, of course, and
as recently as three years ago they
were deludin,g themselves that their
failures were transient. When the
next election came round . they
would say. the voters would
emerge from their long sleep and
restore the rightful order of things.
It had been a nightmare. but nightmares passed with the dawn.
Then came the lands!Jde of
1988, wrought by George Bush. the
world's least charismatic politician.
He wasn't Ronald Reagan. It
wasn't George McGovern and his
longhairs taking therr lumps from a
second-term cinch. Richard Nixon.
It wasn't Jimmy Carter, preaching
malaise and disdaining poli tics,
reeling under the triple shock of
inflation, unemployment and
America held hostage.
No. now it was unavoidable.
Scapegoats need not apply. The
Democratic Party 's enemy was the

Berry•s World

:0

IManst1eld I 81 ' l•i)

Democratic Party.
That JS not a message that the
conventional politician wants to
carry to the party faithful. What is
reqUJred is a different kind of messenger with a different message a Barry Goldwater in Democratic,
drag is one way to describe it. The·
party establishment has to be
crushed m order to save the party.
The party 's platform has to be radically restructured, not to abandon
the party's core beliefs but to give
them form and thrust appropriate to
the last decade of the century.
That's what happened to the
Republican Party, which is why the
last laugh was Uncle Don's. His
team stopped trying to be "me-too:
ers." They stopped crying over
spilt milk. They took a close look
at the voters' concerns and packaged their programs to reflect manY,
of them. In the process, the party's
Eastern Establishment, which had
nurtured Uncle Don, was crushed.
He didn't much care for that part,
but he loved the results.
Not long ago, a man in Florida
wrote me an angry letter, protesting
what he described as the self-satisfied vacuity of a talk show on
which I had participated. He listed
a few things we might have discussed, but didn't like housing
scandals, a ncar-bankrupt deposit
insurance fund, the muhi-billion1
dollar savings and loan bailout, ;
BCCI, double-dip recession, "The:
looting of pension funds .•
... Sununu's civil rights sabotage, ;
Mosbacher's census shenanigans, :
the October surprise, the phony !
drug war. the appalling death rate !
of our babies, the health care crisis,;
our crumbling ecology .... "
;
He was right in more than one.:
His list would be a great platform •
for an opposition party as well as a ~
talk show, assuming either had the:
taste for getting down to the niuy- :
gritty, Given the abundant targets':
of opportunity, the Democrats' fail- ·
ure to take the offensive simply ~
underscores the obvious, as does:
the timidny '(Jf the party's most ~
llkely candidates. As Harry Tru- ·
man once said of the Republicans. :
they don't care where they're i
going, they just care where they've:
been. Think of it as Uncle Don 's;
revenge.

i)

~ Today

in history

By The Associated Press
Today is Monday. Sept. 16, the 259th day of 1991. There are 106 days
. left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History:
; Twenty-five years ago, on Sept. 16, 1966, the Metropolitan Opera
· opened its season in its new opera house at New York's Lincoln Center
: for the Performmg Ans wJth the prem1ere of "Antony and Cleopatra" by
· Samuel Barber.
On this date:
In 1630, the Massachusetts village of Shawmut changed its name to
: Boston.
· In 1638,the "S un King'· of France, Louis the XIV, was born.
· In 1810, Mexicans began their revolt against Spanish rule.
In 1893, hundreds of thousands of settlers swarmed onto a section of
: land in Oklahoma known as the Cherokee Strip.
· In 1908, General Motors flied its papers of incorporation in New Jer: seyin 1919, the American Legion was incorporated by an act of Congress.
; In 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed into law !he Selective
· Training and Service Act, which set up the first peacetime military draft
; in U.S. history.
In 1940, Samuel T. Rayburn of Texas was elected Speaker of the U.S.
; House of Representatives.
: In 1974, President Ford announced a conditional amnesty program for
· Vietnam war deserters and draft-evaders.
· In 1976, the Episcopal Church, at Jts General Convention in Min: neapolis, formally approved the ordination of women as priests and bish: ops.

•

.,.
•

media-basher and bias detector dur- from the sponsors:
ing The Final Days, and who is
"The amount or free press we
now the loquacious interlocutor of got just swamped me," says L.
"The McLaughlin Group."
Brent Bozell Ill, executive director
In a repeat performance. of the Conservative Victory ComMcLaughlin provided the pro bono mittee. " ... It's safe to say we got
launch pad - a full minute of his air time on news shows that would
Group's golden air time - for a easily cost m the millions. It just
version of the controversial stunned me."
Clarence Thomas ad that had yet to
Bozell's group sponsored the
air. Then he served as immoderator independent pro-Thomas ad in confor the discussion among the junction with the Citizens United
assembled pundits (a panel on lobbying group that was involved
which, yes, I too have performed.)
McLaughlin performed a similar in the equally independent Willie
service in 1988 when his political Horton mug-shot video of 1988 soulmates were desperate to intro- the one that helped make George
duce, gratis, their Willie Horton Bush what he is today . The proThomas ad was, in fact, produced
mug-shot TV ad.
And, no surprise, the reaction of by Larry McCarthy, a respected
the TV news industry was a stam- and unprejudiced GOP ad-maker
pede, bigger even than the great who also made that original Hono~
video rush of '88. The network ad.
Bozell and his colleagues made
news shows fell all over themtwo
ads - 60-second and 30-secselves to air lengthy segments of
ond
spots. He said that, after the
the TV ad- again for free.
McLaughlin
show aired they
Let's pause now for a word
d~ided to spend a mere $3o:ooo to
atr the 30-second spot - just
enough so Washington media folks
In 1977, Maria Callas, the American-born prima donna famed for her would think the ads were up and
Iyric soprano and fiery temperamen1, died in Paris at age 53.
runmng. The 60-sccond spot was
In 1982, the massacre of hundreds of Palestinian men, women and shown just once - on John
children aJ the hands of Lebanese Christian 11'\ilitiamen began in west M_cLaughlin's show. These right
Beirut's Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps.
wmgers bought snippets of 30-scc-

The right-wing fringe folks who
gave us the Willie Horton Attack
Video have now honed a pitch for
Judge Clarence Thomas which
proves that - if you stoop low
enough in the TV ad biz - you
indeed can have a free launch.
The story behind the officially
independent commercial supporting Supreme Court nommee
Clarence Thomas is really just a
rerun of how the Wingers conned
the TV industry into giving them
free time for slime in the Willie
Honon Follies of 1988.
Once again, they have conned
their way into million$ of dollars
wonh of free TV time - this time
with a sleazy attack video !hat hits
three liberal Democratic senators
on matters that hav~ nothing to do
with Supreme courtship.
And once again, the Wingers
were aided and abetted by their
famous co-conspirator: genial John
· McLaughlin, who served as the
Nixon White House's designated

·~

Chillicothe prison
escapee at large

W VA

Showers T·storms Rain

Flumes

Snow

Ice

Pt. Cloudy

Sunny

Cloudy

C1991 Accu·Weather, Inc

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight and Tuesday. partly
cloudy with widely scattered showers and thunderstonns. Low around
70. High Tuesday in the mid-80s.
Chance of rain is 30 percent tonight
and Tuesday.
Extended forecast

Wednesday through Friday:
Fair on Wednesday. A chance of
showers Thursday. Fair on Friday .
Cooler. Lows in the 50s Wednesday and Thursday and the 40s Friday. Highs in the 70s Wednesday.
65-75 Thursday and in the 60s Friday.

r-----Local briefs--Continued rrom page 1

Woman cited after accident
Donna Loudin, Point Pleasant, W. Va. was cited for improper
backmg following an accident on the parking lot at McDonald' s
early Saturday morning.
According to Pomeroy Pollee, Loudin backed into the front of a
car driven by Debra Long, Henderson, W. Va. as both waited in the
order pickup line. Loudin was driving a car owned by Richard H&lt;m·
son. There was moderate damage to the Long vehicle and none to
the car owned by Hanson.

EMS units answer calls

Divorces, dissolutions processed

blunelers as A1d to t-amJIJes with :
Dependent Children, which vrrtual- •
ly destreycd the black family struc- :
lure in America).
;
Even so. Clarence Thomas :
stands forth as a man who never for ;
a second endorsed such a "solu- !
tion" to the problems of America's :
blacks. He has fought fiercely for :
their nght to equal opportunity. but •
has rejected every effort to treat :
them as cnpples. And he has :
demonstrated , in his own career,'
the success that can be achieved by :
an able black who refuses to spend t
his life as a "handkerchief-head" !
(to return professor Derrick Bell's :
compliment) on the plantation of •
American liberalism.
:
To liberal blacks, such indepen-:
dcncc is hugely offensive; for it to ·
be rewarded by elevation to the ;
Supreme Court would be utterly :
intolerable. Clarence Thomas - i
and through him. black Americans :
generally - must be taught that •
there JS no salvation save through :
liberalism.
:
Wc shall sec.

A divorce action has been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to She1la K. Bryan. Cheshire, against Derry Bryan, also of
Cheshtre.
An action for dissolution of marriage has been fLied m the court
by Rit.a J. Michael and Tony D. Michael, both of Pomeroy. .
Dissolution actions have been granted to Kathleen M. Smtth and
Gary Lee Smith; and to Willie Tony Jones 3fl.d Shirley Ann Jones.
The dissolution action of Sandra P. Snyder and James A. Snyder
has been dismissed.

"The Link" underway
A service called ''The Link" (People to Places) is now underway
at the Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and Developmentnl Disabilities, made possible by a 540,000 grant from the Ohto
Developmental Disabilities Planning Council through the Ohio
Department of Transportation.
The Meigs MR/DD board was assigned as the lead agency. with
an advisory board of three agencies: Blue StrcJk Cab Company,
Meigs Association of Retarded Cit1zens and Meigs Industries.
According 10 Program Coordinator Robert Wood. early stages of
the project have been completed on schedule.
.
"Transportation has been a tradJtwnal bamcr to success tn the
community for persons with disabilities and elderly citizens," Wood
said. "Persons with disabilities can work if given proper support"
The grant period is limited. Therefore the advisory team JS obligated to try to continue services, possibly in a public system that
would serve all citizens.
Those interested m information about the program should con tact
"The Link" at 992-6681 or 992-6683.

By Martin Schram :

Ameritech honors RG
educator with fellowship

onds only in the Washington, D.c.;.
markets of CNN and Fox.
But you've seen the ad courtes.}"
of network 1V 's free news shows:
"It's amazing .... ABC even did
two pieces on the ad in the same
news show," says BozelL Indeed,
the network used portions of the ad ·
m a piece by White House corre,
spondent Brit Hume, and other
footage from the same ad in an
analysis by Jeff Greenfield, whp
ended by say in~: " ... and thanks to
news reports hke this one, these
ads have reached an audience hundreds of times bigger than the one
the advertisers paid for."
So then, why show it? Consider
the tree that falls in the forest: If an
ad was made, but wasn't airtltl
nationally becaqse no commercial
time was bought, was it, in fact, an
ad at all?
'
The TV news industry must
summon the self-discipline to resist ·
the compulsion to air any and all .
news that wiggl~. ·Tell the story
w1thout videos, if need be.
Quit giving freebies for political
ads when their only redeeming
~tews value is outrage. Quit making ,
the same mistake, slime after slime.

1

Linda Bauer, an associate professor of education at the University of Rio Grande, was one of 79
economic educators from the midwest recently honored with an
Ameritech Foundation Fellowship
award from the Joint Counc1l on
Economic Education (JCEE).
.. Bauer, of Oak Hill, joined other
fellowship winners at a four-day
training instiwte in Columbus July
18-21 , where they were exposed to
new ideas and techniques to help
th~m encourage teachers to place
greater value on economic education in the classroom.
'· S. Stowell Symmes, the institute
director, said Bauer was selected
for the fellowship "because. of her
proven leadership abilities and
strong commitment to the importance of economic education as a
curriculum priority for swdenL~ ...
Along with the other fellowship
winners from Illinois, Indiana,
Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin,
Bauer will use the knowledge and
· skills gained from !his Midwestern
Institute for Economic Educators to
wor~Q; with local elementary and
.

.'

' / .

..

~

CHILLICOTHE. Ohio (AP) An inmate who escaped from the
Chillicothe Correctional Institution
over the weekend remained at large
Sunday night, a prison officer said.
Eugene Partin, 60, escaped Sat·
urday, said Lynn Goff, pmon
administrative assistant. Partin was
serving a life sentence for seconddegree murder. He was committed
from Clermont County in August
1973 and paroled in 1983 , but
returned to the prison on a 1985
parole violation.
Pri son officer Bob1 McKeever
sa id Sunday night that no other
information would be available
until Monday morning.
Ms. Goff said prison officials
d1scovered that Parun was missmg
from the medium -sec urity institution Saturday night when they conducted a head count after inmates
were brought in from the prison
yard. She said investigators could
not JmmedJatcly determmc how
Partin escaped.
Partin is white, 5 feet 9 inches
tall, weighs 146 pounds and has
grayish brown hair and blue eyes.
He has a mole under his right eye.

Area deaths
John William Long

At 11 :29 a.m. on Saturday. Rutland squad was sent to State
Route 692. Fred Oyler was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12:09 p.m., Middleport squad went to the ball park for Wilma
Cline, who was taken to Veterans. At 2:02p.m .. Oyler was taken by
L1fe Flight from the helipad to Grant Medical Center. At4:37 p.m.,
Syracuse unit was sent to Hayman Road. Wayne Deaver was transported to Veterans. At 7:39 p.m., Middleport squad to Hartinger
Park. Chris Oliver was taken to Veterans.
At 11:48 a.m. on Sunday, Pomeroy unit went to Condor Street.
Adam Crouso was taken to Veterans.
At!: 16 p.m., Racine unit took Frances Knott from the station to
Veterans. At 3:54 p.m., Pomeroy unit went to the Pomeroy levee.
Lori Roush was taken to Veterans. At 9:50 p.m. , Racine unit went
to Bashan Road. Levena Hayman was taken to St. Joseph HospitaL
At6:17 a.m. on Monday, Rutland unit went to Htgley Road for a
brush fire, and returned at 7 a.m .

Once again TV ad gets free lunch

LENIN'S NEW TOMB

dian air will be brought into Ohio
by an approaching frontal system.
Some showers and thunderstorms
arc possible tonight and Tuesday
ahead of the front.
The record h1gh temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

•I Columbus! 83° I

By William A. Rusher
ly noble (Sen. Kennedy, for example, who weighs these matters
between midnight pub crawls in
Palm Beach). But even the Senate's
most abandoned opportunists arc
experts at detecting the way the
wind of public opinion is blowing
- and acting accordingly.
The real losers, if Thomas JS
ulumately confirmed, will be the
black " leaders" who long ago
made a Faustian bargain with
America·s liberals to be their lifelong polllica l ragbabics in return
for the right to administer a crippling dole to thw fellow blacks.
Let us assume they were convmced that this bargain was the
best that could be struck, in the
interests of the black community.
Let us assume they genuinely
beheved they had earned the pr3lse
(and the far more tangible rewards)
showered on them by the ltbcrals
for striking it. Let us assume, even.
that there was something to be said
for that dtabolical dole (w ithout
forgetting, however, ~uch appalhng

C&lt;;&gt;nstderably cooler weather
condJuons a~e bemg forecast for
OhiO later th1s week a day or two
before the official ani val of fall.
By Friday, the highs will be in the
60s throughout the state. the
National Weather Service said.
That 's in sharp contrast to the
warm and muggy conditions
Ohioan s suffered as the week
begF~;ecasters said the cool Cana-

•
lraledo I 79° I

Judge Thomas goes against the grain
belated influx of highmindedness.
Rather, it will be because the character and significance of Clarence
Thomas will have become unmistakably clear in the Senate hearings.
It isn't merely that Clarence
Thomas has suffered, starting his
life under circumstances of abject
poverty and rising, step by step, to
a position of real eminence in
Amencan society. Plenty of American blacks have suffered as much,
and some have risen as high.
What makes Clarence Thomas
so noteworthy is the fact that he did
not choose to construct and pursue
his career on the theory that, as a
black man, America owed him special attention or special help. All he
ever asked - and this he demanded - was an equal opportunity to
compete.
Unless I miss my guess, the dignity and power of that position are
going to have a profound impact on
the national television audience
watching th~ Thomas hearings.
Some of the senators on the committee can hardly be expected to
appreciate a sentiment so thorough-

.

MtCH

Hodding Carter Ill

Pag~

Fall-like weather forecast later this week

Wt ' .tfl11 •1

Tuesday, Sept. 17

Democrats are their Worst own enemies

The Dally Sentinel

secondary schoolteachers to incorporate more, and innovative, ceonomic education programs into the
curriculum.
A principal resource will be the
education programs sponsored by
the Ohio Council on Economic
Education. The Ohio Council on
Economic Education is part of a
nationwide group of state councils,
affiliated with the national Jomt
Council on Economic Education.
headquartered in New York.
The JCEE is a non-profit and
non-partisan organization bringing
together leading educators,
economists, labor and industry rcpresentati ves to enhance economic
education in the elementary and
secondary schools.
The JCEE works with leading
educators 10 create unique curriculum materials in the area of economic education, and is the largest
training organization in the country. liS school-based Developmental Economi&lt;; E4ucati9.n Program
(DEEP) curren!ly operates. in more
than 2,600 school systems throughout the U.S.
\

.

John William Long. 20. of Point
Pleasant. W.Va .. died Friday, Sept.
13, 1991.
He was a part-time guard for the
Mountaineer Power Plant in New
Haven.
SurvJving arc h1s parents, John
Ray and Emma (Logan) Long of
Point Pleasant: a sister, Sheila Ann
Long, brother, Donnie Allen Long:
and paternal grandmother, Cathcrme Long of New Haven.
The fun eral will be Tuesday,
I :3 0 p.m.. at the Wyoma Pcntc ·
costal Church in Ga llipolis Ferry
with the Rev. Charles H. Birchfield
officiating. Burial will be in the
Henderson Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Wilcox en Funeral Home today from 7 to 9
p.m.

Portsmouth man
dies after hanging
self in jail
PORTSMOUTH
A
Portsmouth man who hanged him self in his jail cell Saturday mom·
ing died I 0 hours later. a Scioto
County Sheriff's Department
spokesman said. ·
According to an article in Mon·
day's Columbus Dispatch, a guard
found Mark S. Diller, 29, hangmg
by his uniform pants at 10 a.m . Sat·
urday.
The Jailer cut the man down nnd
administered cardiopulmonary
resuscitation until medics took
Diller to the Southern Ohio Mcd J·
cal Center.
Diller d1ed in the intensive care
unit at 8 p.m., the sheriff's
spokesman said.
Deputies had arrested Diller Sat·
urday on charges of disorderly con·
duct and theft.

Lottery numbers
Super Lotto
11-16-24-32-44-46
(eleven, sixteen , twenty-four,
thirty-two, forty-four, forty -six)
The jackpot is $24 million.
Kicker
6-3 -6-6-2·6
(six, three , six. ~IX,IWO, SIX)
Pick 3 Numbers
3-6-3
(three, six , three)
Pick 4 Numbers
0-7 -1-6
(zero. seven. one. six)
Cards
3 (three) of Hearts
6 (six) of Clubs
2 (two) of Diamonds
A (ace) of Spades

station was 96 degrees in 1897.
The record low was 40 in 1916.
Sunrise this morning was at
7:13 a.m. Sunset will be at 7:40
p.m.
Agricultural advisory
Here 's the lates: Ohio agncultural weather advisory prepared by
the National Weather Service 's
Midwest Agricultural Weather Servtce Center in West Lafayette, Ind.:
Much cooler weather is expected to begin arriving m Ohio on
Tuesday.
A 30-degree plunge in the highs
by late in the week may stress l!ve stock.
Even though a strong cold front
is passing through the state tontght,
only scattered showers arc likely .

1

On Tuesday, the rain will be confmcd to the extreme south.
Temperatures wtll drop steadily
from highs in mid-80s on Tuesda y
to the mid to low 60s on Fnday.
Overnight low s wJll dip IIllO the
40s by Friday.
Around the nation
The weather was chtll y 1n the
West at dawn today. with rcadmgs
in Reno and Salt Lake Ctty cooler
than Anchorngc, Alaska. High tem peratures in the So utheast conlln ·
ucd.
Temperatures over 100 wcr~
forecast for South Caroltn a. Ht ghs
111 the 90s wtth un comfo rtabl e
hU1TI1d1ty were predicted today cast
of the Appalachians as far nonh as
Boston.

Severe weather, including large
hail, heavy rains and damaging
winds, was forecast for the Great
LJkcs region . Tornadoes also were
possible.
Rain was expected to extend
from the region south through Illinois, MISsouri, Okalahoma, Texas
and New Mexico.
Sun shme and high s m the 80s
and 90s were predicted for the
West Coast.
Htghs were forecast in the 60s
1n Minnesota, South Dakota,
1Wyomin~. 1 pans of Montana and
Nort h Dakota. In North Dakota.
h1 ghs were predicted in the 50s.
The h1gh temperature for the
nation Sunday was 102 degrees at
Lake Havasu City, Ariz.

Senators refuse to extend lease
By EILEEN GUERRERO
Associated Press Writer
MANILA, Philippines (AP) In a vote that could spell an end to
nearly a century of U.S . military
mvolvement in the Philippines,
senators today refused to extend
the American lease for the vast
Subic Bay naval base.
President Corazon Aquino
promised to call a referendum and
use "people power" to overturn
the Senate decision. despite claims
by senators and former allies that
she would undermine democratic
insti tutions she created.
The U.S. Embassy said in a
statement that the United States
w1ll "stand fully behind the prcsJ·
dent in her continuing efforts to put
in place the new treaty."
It was the first official stgn that
Washington will back the referendum idea and not begin leaving
Immediately, as the Bush administration had earlier indicated. The
63,000-acre base is the United
Stales· largest in Asia.
About 15,000 anti-bases demon ·

strators danced in the stree t outs1de
the Senate buildtng after the vo te
wh1lc 5,000 bases supponcrs ral lied nearby, the two sides scpw-atcJ
by not police. Boosters mcludcd
SubJc workers from Olongapo who
stand to lose their jobs tf the Amertcans leave immediately.
The lea se agreement called for
the United States to pay the PhJllppmcs $203 m11lion annually to
keep its sh1ps and 7,000 personnel
at Subic for I 0 more years. Senators said the mone y was inadequate.
U.S. officials already hav e
decided to give up Clark Air Base,
50 miles north of Manila, because
of damage caused by the June eruptions of Mount Pinatubo. Agreement was reached earlier to close
four smaller bases, three of which
were handed over today.
The bases lost some of thclf
strategic importance followmg the
end of the Cold War. New U.S Soviet coopcrauon followm g the
failed hard-line coup furth er lcsses
their imponancc.

_Meigs announcements--Revival planned
The Faith Tabernacle Church,
Batley Run Road·, Pomeroy. will
have weekend revival Thursday
through Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly.
Noah Callicoat is the evangel ist.
Call 992-5746 for information.
Pastor Emmeu Rawson invites the
public.
Democrats to have pollock
The Meigs County Democratic
Executtve Committee will have a
potluck before tts meeting on
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy. Bring a covered dish. All are urged to attend.
Museum volunteers needed
A workshop for those interested
in volunteenng with the Meigs
County Museum will be held
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 4:30p.m.
Lunch will be provided and further
mformation may be obtained by
ca lling Margaret Parker at 992381 0 or 992-2264.
Dodderer personal
Jessie Dodderer IS a paucnt 1n
the intens1vc care umt at the Ohio
State University Hospital. Cards
may be sent to the hospital, lith
Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210.
Hymn sing
The Freedom Gospel MissiOn
Church, Sttversvillc, w1ll hold a
hymn sing on Sunday at 7 p.m. featuring the Conqueror's of Ripley.
W.Va. The public is invited to
attend.
Dance to be held
The Royal Oak Dance Club w!ll
have a dance Saturday fro 8-11
p m. at Royal Oak Resort. Music
wt ll be provided by George Hall.

Thts is an extra dance and gues ts
wJll pay $15 per couple. There is
no charge for dance club mem bers.
Hymn sing
The Hazel Commun1ty Church
will have a hymn sing Saturd:1y at
7:30 p.m. fcatunng the Dalley
Family Singers. The public "in&gt;~t ·
ed to attend.
Revil·al Wednesday
Rcvtval scrvtccs at the Ohio
Valley Church of God, Guysvt ll c,
will be held Wednesday through
Sunday at 7 p.m . nightl y. Rev
Brice Uu, Marietta, wtll be th e
speaker. Pastor Donald Combs
invites the public.
District Annual Day planned
The Athens Di strict United
Methodist Women will hold tt s
annual meeting on Sept. 26 at the
First United Methodist Church at
New Lexington . The th eme JS
"Sounds of Chi ldren." The fea tured
speaker will be Allee Fay, Mt. Vtc ·
tory . She is act1ve m the work of
the United Methodist Women, and
JS currently serving as Conference
Global Concerns coordmator. She
also serves on the committee on
fmancc, is a representattve to the
regional school plannmg team and
serves on the Appalachmn development committee. Registrati on.
book browsing and coffee hour wtll
begin at 9 a.m. Re servauon dcad hne is Thursday.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
.,,.~\"1:' ':/~~·

446 4524

BARGAIN IIATINEES SHU~D.I.~ &amp; SU'IJ.I.Y
B.RGA IN NI G~T M SOAV

Am Ele Power ................. .30 1/S
Ashland Otl ..................... .30 1/2
AT&amp;T .................... .373/4
Bob Evans ............ ............ 18
Charmmg Shop .................. 20 318
C. ty Holding .................... 15 1/4
Federal MoguL ................ 15 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .............. . AI 5/8
Key Centurion ................ 15
Lancls' End ..... .. . ... . 20
Ltm1tcd Inc ....................... 26 1/4
Multimedia Inc ........ ......... 25 1/4
Rax Rcstaumnt .................8/16
Robbms&amp;Mycrs ............. .35 1/2
Shoncy's Inc .................... 17 1/2
Star Bank ..................... 23 1/4
Wendy lnt'L .................... S 7/8
Worthington Ind . ............. 28 7/S
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewi of Gallipolis.

Th .. Daily Sentinel
tUSPS 14:1-HOt

A

Dlv~lon

of Multimedia. Inc .

Puhll shf'd PvPry aftrrnoon. Monday

through Friday. Ill Court Sl.. Pomrrov. Ohto. bv lhP Ohio Va iJ Py Publishing Companv t Mul1imE'dla . Inc.
Pomrrov, Ohio 4'l7fi9, Ph . 992-21!')6 Sf..

cond

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paid at PomProy,

Ohio

MPmhPr Thf' AssochttPd Prf"ss, In land Dalh· Prr~~ Association and thp
Ohio Nt•" s p&lt;~pt•r Assoc la llon Natio nal
Advf'rtlsl11~ Rf'pr('sf'nta rlvf', Branham
Npw,.papPr Sa lps 7.13 Third AvPnUt',
Nrw York Nf'w York 11l017
POSTMASTER Sl'nd addr£&gt;Ss chang('S
ro Thf' Dull\' Sf&gt;n!lnE&gt;I. Ill COurt St,
PomProv. Ohio 45769.
~l!BSCRIPTION RATE.~

By CarrtPr or Motor RoutP
Onf' Wf'E'k .
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Subsrnbf'rs not deslrinR 1opav thPcar .
rlf'r m.1v rPm it In advanCE&gt; dlrE&gt;ct to
Thr Dall.v Sf'nllnPI on a 3, (i or 12 month
bas1s CrPdlt will bt&gt; glvPn C'orrlt&gt;r rach
Wf'f'k
No su bscription s by mall p&lt;&gt;rmltt(&gt;d In
arf'u s whrrf' homr rarrlf'r st'rVIC'f' Is
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Mnll Suhserlptlon"

FRIDDY'S DEAD

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

Stocks

Da1l v

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Donna Williamson. Rutland.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES •
Felicia Gruescr and Clara Davis.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS None.
SUNDAY DICHARGES •
Catherine Mces and Howard Damron .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dt sc hargcs. Sept. 13 - Joshua
Blackburn, Mrs. Joseph Calvert
and son, Mrs. Jack1e Delancy and
daughter, Mrs. John Duffett and
so n, Juck Ervin, Audra Haffclt,
Tabath a Ham so n and Clyde Lannmg.
Dtschargcs, Sept. 14 - David
Fisher, Vernal Holberg, Mrs.
M1chacl Hubbard and daughter,
Jon McMillen, Rachacl Morri s,
Angela Painter and Mrs . Daniel
Rhades and son.
Discharges, Sept. 15 - Mrs. Lonntc McCoy and son. Mrs. Todd
McCreary and son.
Births, Sept. 15 - Mr. and Mrs.
Jeffrey Mullins, a daughter, Bidwell.

Twelve of the 23 senators four more votes than necessary opposed the agreement that would
have ex tended the lease on Subic.
Senate Pres1dent Jovita Salonga,
who cas t the 12th vote, declared
" the treaty is defeated."
Oppo nents said they wanted
good rclauons with Wa.shington but
believed the agreement was unconstitutional, provided no firm aid
guarantees and infringed on
sovere ignty.
"We want friendship with the
UnJtcd States," said Majority
Leader Teofisto Guingona, who
opposed the agreement

1 00 I 00 DATU

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~~

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CHILD 'S PLAY J
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1 GO,t tO DI!Hf SAT / WII Moll l 10 [P4 - Il )

Inside Mel~ County
1.1WrPkS
26 WPC'k ~
)2 WC'Pk!O: .

. ..

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$21 .84
$43 16
.. .. , ... . .. $84 .76

Oul!iklf Melp County
11 Weeks . . . . ... . . . . .. . $2340
2fi Weeks .
. .... . .. .. .. $45::50
~2 WPPkS
. $88 4Q

THE

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Try our 12 oz.
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treat.
It's on sale.

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Suite 112 Valley Drive
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Call 304-67 5-1244 for Appt or Information
'•

AI port!Cipofing Doiry Queen~ Skw•
Da1ry Outen· storft art prOUCI ~ olthe Chtktrtn'a M•rKie Ne!Work
TelethOn, wtiiCh btntlitt leal holpitals lof ChiiOren
C~ DO

Cor,11881

®Reg VS Pit Oft .MIO,QCop "

�--T· -

---

-

_,.... ,_

·- - -~

- -

·• •

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

The Daily uo§!..~!!~~~

Sports

Florida State remains AP poll
leader after 58-0 triumph

Page--4

Southern Tornadoes run over Ironton St. Joe 60-19
•

I ,
I

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
IRONTON - The Southern Tornadoes posted their biggest victory
in quite a while as they whirled to a
60-19 non- leag ue victory over
Ironton St. Joe here Saturday
evening in Ironton.
This is reported to be the biggest
SHS win since 1978, when Southern (6-1, because of an abbreviated
season) defeated Hannan Trace 550.
An elated Coach David Gaul
said, "I really praise the effort of
these kids tonight. We've already
seen a tremendous improvement in
these kids over last year. I just want
them 10 continue 10 improve."
Last year, Southern edged Iron ton St. Joe in five overtimes as
opposed to this year's cakewalk.
Gaul continued, "I praise our
defensive effort and likewise our
offensive effort I praise the seniors
for their leadership and the younger
players, who played most of the
second half, who did a good job
when they got the opportunity to
play."
Gaul especially praised his
defensive linemen Shane Circle,
Kyle Wickline, Robert Kimes, Sam

Shain, and Jaime Proffitt; linebackers Jamie Smith, Ron Wagner, and
Nick Adams; and defensive backs
Trenton Cleland. Mike Evans. and
Tucker Williams. "All played really well ", he mdicated.
Southern scored first in the air
on a twenty-fo ur yard Michael
Evans to Jeremy Dill TD completion at the 5:09 mark . A Kenny
Rizer was good for the 7-0 score.
Moments later after the SHS
defense shut down St. Joe, Evans
threaded the needle to another
receiver, Nick Adams for Southern's second TO aerial of seven
yards. The kick was void and the
score was 13-0 at the 3:20 mark.
Following a very long punt
return by Tucker Williams, Evans
himself put SHS on top 20-0 at the
11 :14 mark of the second quarter,
when he burst into the endzone on
a q uartcrback sneak ; the score 20-0
following the Rizer kick.
An interception runback of 57
yards by Jason Mallette put St. Joe
on the board, 20-7 after Andy Clay
pounded the ball through the
uprights at the 10:39 mark.
Southern's next offense came
from its workhorse Russell Singleton, who scored three times before

halfttme on runs of 19,20, and 70
yards . Singleton added the two
point conversion on the first , but
the kick was blocked on the second, and a bad snap on another, for
a 4 1-7 halftime lead.
Singleton and Evans saw only
flfst hal f acuon , while many SHS
sta rters were limited to defense
on ly as Gaul substituted freely the
second half.
In only one half of action Singleton and Evans rac ke d up
impressive numbers. Singleton ran
I 5 limes for 175 yards and three
TD's plus seve ral other return
yards. Singleton posted his thlfd
100-plus yards game. Evans passed
for two TD 's and ran for another.
going 9-14 for Ill yards in the :tir.
In the second half, Trenton Cleland pounded through the St. Joe
defen se on a two yard plunge for a
47-7 SHS lead. The kick attempt
was void, the score 3:48. At the
2: 10 mark in the third frame Nick
Adams had a fumble recovery
return of 25 yards for another SHS
score, and after another bad snap
the score stood 53-7.
Finally, with 5:36 left to go in
the game, Jason Mollcttc scrambled 22 yards with the kick no

Braves hike NL West lead
with 9-1 romp over Dodgers
By The Associated Press
After a big success at home. the
Atlanta Braves are taking their
ftrst-place show on the road.
Atlanta beat Los Angeles 9-1
Sunday to take a I 1{2-game lead
over the Dodgers in the NL West.
The Braves stan a seven-game trip
tonight in San Francisco and play
three more against Los Angeles
next weekend at Dodger Stadium.
After Friday's 5-2 loss to the
Dodgers , some suggested the
young Braves might be feeling the
pressure against the battle-tested
Dodgers. But Atlanta overcame an
early deficit on Saturday to beat
Los Angeles 3-2 in II innings.
·'There was a lot of pressure
this weekend, so it was mce to be
able to relax and enjoy the game,"
Atlanta's Terry Pendlewn said.
Despite losing the last two, the
Dodgers returned home with a 7-4
road trip to play their final 18
games in California, 13 of those at
home, the others at San Francisco
and San Diego. The Braves, who
have won ntne of 10, have 19
games remaining.
"They beat us solidi y, so all we
can do is go home and start over,"
Los Angeles center fielder Brett
Butler said.
The Braves took care of things

from the start against Ramon Martinez (16-11) as Sid Bream high lighted a five-run ftrst inning with
hi s second grand slam of the season.
Steve Avery (16-8) pitched a
four-hiuer and had a shutout going
until Stan Javier's RBI single in the
ninth inning.
Avery allowed a leadoff single
to Butler in the first innin~ before
retiring the next 15 batters m order,
a streak that ended when David
Justice dropped Jose Offerman 's
fly ball in right field for an error.
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Philadelphia 8, Pittsburgh 3;
Cincinnatt I0, Houston 0; St. Louis
7, New York 2; Montreal6, Chicago 5 in I 0 innings; and San Francisco 7, San Diego 2.
Phillies 8, Pirates 3
Tommy Greene (11-7) pitched
five-hit ball over 7 2-3 innings and
struck out nine.
With the score tied 3-3 in the
sixth, Charlie Hayes led off with a
double off Randy Tomlin (8-6) and
went to third on Steve Lake's single. Hayes was out at the plate on a
fielder's choice, but Greene singled
to load the bases. Kim Batiste then
grounded into a force play as Lake
scored the go-ahead run.
Cardinals 7, Mets 2
Ray Lankford became the first

Weibring wins Hardee's title
of 13-under 267 on d1c par-70 Oakwood Country Club course.
Azingcr almost tied Wei brin g
on the final hole. But Azingcr's 45foot birdie putt lipped the cup and
rolled 4 feet away.
"I thought, 'This putt is worth
about $30,000.' And if I hit it a
foot softer, it goes in. I just hit it
too hard," said Azinger, who fin·
ished with a 68 and 268.
Jacobsen shot a 65 to tic
Azinger at 268. Each earned
$88,000.
Norman , the second-round leader and by far the gallery favorite
during the week, finished with a 68
to tie Leonard Thompson and Scott
Hoch at 269. Thompson shot a
final -round 67 and Hoch 66.

J.Iow top 25 fared over weekend

I·
I

t,

2.
Giants 7, Padres 2
John Burkett {10-10) gave up
one run in eight innings and Steve
Decker hit a fluke bases -loaded
triple.
Defending NL batting champiOn
W1llic McGee went 4-for-4 for the
Giants, raising his average to .3 11,
and drove in two runs. Dennis Rasmussen fell to 6-12.
Expos 6, Cubs S
Pinch-hitter Mike Fitzgerald
drew a bases-loaded walk: from
Bob Scanlan in the lOth inning as
last-place Montreal beat Chicago.

recovery run . Jamie Profr.tt was 231 receiving , Jeremy Dill 2-34 for
oneTD,andTuckcrWilliams 1-13
and a kickoff return of 81 yards for
a TD.
Jamie Proffiu, Sam Shain, Nick
Adams (3 recoveries), and Ryan
Adams had fumble recoveries.
SoULhern had 9 ftrst downs, 198
yards rushing and punted just once
for 35 yards.
Southern trav els to Symmes
Valley next week for the SVAC
opener for both clubs.

SCORE BY QUARTERS:
Southern
13 38 12 7-60
IrontonSt.Joe 0 7 0 12-19
Statistics
s St. Joe
First downs
9
5
Rushing yards
IOI
198
Passing Yards
123
25
Total
321
126
Passing
Comp/Att/lnt.
9/14/1 5-9
Fumbles/lost
OAJ
2-2
Penalties
2/10 8-65
PunL~
1-35 4-27

Redskins rout Cardinals 34-0;
Browns slip past Bengals 14-13
By The Associated Press
A change of cities hasn't had the
slightest effect on the Rcd sk ins Cardi nals series. Washington domi nated when the Cards were ba:;cd
in St. Louis and docs so now with
the team in Phoenix.
So forget all that stuff that happened the first two weeks of the
season, when the Cardinals were
beating up on people. Reality set in
on Sunday.
Washington 34, Phoenix 0.
"Fo r us to match with the
Skins. we have to play an error-free
ga me, and we didn't ," Phoenix
coach Joe Bugel said.
The Cardinals had forced 13
turnovers in beating the Los Angeles Rams and Philadelphia Eagles.
They added two against Washington but gave up four, including a
p_ass intcrcepuon that Wilber Mar-

&gt;nail returned for a touchdown.
" It's three wins, nothing more
than that ," Redskins coac h Joe
Gibbs said. " We have to see if we
can handle prosperity."
In other games, it was Ch1cago
20. th e New York Giants 17;
Detroit 17, Miami 13; Pittsburgh
20, New England 6; Philadelphia
24, Dallas 0; Green Bay 15, Tampa
Bay 13; Minnesota 17. San Fran cisco 14; Cleveland 14, Cincinnati
13; Atlanta 13, San Diego 10; the
Los Angeles Raiders 16 , Indi anapolis 0; Denver 16, Seattle 10;
Buffalo 23, the New York Jets 20
and New Orleans 24, the Los
Angeles Rams 7.
Kansas City is at Houswn Monday night.
Earnest Byncr ran for 109 yards
and caught passes for 51 more as
the Rcdskins dominated after going

ahead 14-0 on the first two possessions.
Wilber Marshall intercepted two
passes, the first stopping a Phoenix
drive at the Washington 8, the
other being returned 54 yards for a

TD.
llrowns 14, llengals 13
Matt Stover's fourth field goal,
a 45-yarder wtth four seconds left.
gave the Browns a win. The difference in the game was a secondquarter safety, when Cleveland's
James Jones brought down James
Brooks in the Cincinnati end zone.
Broncos 16, Seahawks 10
John Elway threw a 61-yard TO
pass to Ricky Nattie! and David
Treadwell kicked three field ¥oals.
Seattle rallied on John Kasay s 28yard field ~oal and Jeff Kemp's TO
pass to Bnan Blades, but Denver's
defense finally settled it by forcing
four incompletions.

'

All it took for the University of
R10 Grande volleyball team to win
the championship of the Fairmont
State (W.Va.) Invitational over the
weekend was a little confidence.
"We really needed this weekend
because the kids were feeling low.
Now they know they can do it,"
Coach Patsy Fields remarked. "Our
inexperience really came around
for us."

What impressed Fields the most
was that every player made a contribution as the Redwomen worked
their way out of pool play on Friday into the title tilt on Saturday.
The series of wins boosted the Redwomen to 7-4 on the season.
Rio Grande defeated West Liberty, 15-10, 15-7; Wheeling Jesuit,
15-4, 15-3; and Glenville State, 152, 15- 1 to j!Ct out of the pool not

everything.
Things were different with Handley right from the beginning. His
only previous head-coaching experience was at a Nevada high school
m the 1970s. He was ready to leave
the profession to attend law school
as recently as 1990. He was an
assistant under Parcells for eight
years, but he was much less consumed with the game. He thought
the Giants could benefit from some
loosening-up. Some of them,
apparently, think otherwise.
The first to speak up was Parcells' prize pupil, Lawrence Taylor.
The game's ultimate search-anddestroyer co mplained things were
too "free -spirited" in trainin g
camp and maybe more discipline,
Parcells-stylc discipline, was called
for. And then were rumblings about
Handl ey's decision to give th e
starting quarterback job to Jeff
Hostetler over ihc rchabtlitated Phil
Simms, about Handley' s preparation and his play-calling - right on
down to hts choice of shirts on th e
sidelines.
By the time Sunday's 20-17 loss
was in the books, there wa s so
much soul-searching going on m
the Giants' loekcrroom that a psychiatrist could ha ve stumbl ed
1n side and found a life' s work.
Right now, Handley's players arc
still pointing thCIT fin gers inward.
But if things continue going sour,
somebody else is going to slllrt
catching the blame.

Southern golfers
post big victory
MASON - The Southern Tornado Golf team recently posted a big
win at the Riverside Golf Club in
Mason , where they defeated Big
Bend rivals Ravenswood and
Waharna.
Southern won 159, Ravenswood
had 170, and Wahama had 174.
Southern individual IOtals were
Bracken McFann 38, Mark Allen
41, Brent DcCosse 39, Michael
McKelvey 41, and Chris Ebcrsbach
50.
Southern's record stands at 6-6
on the season.

only on the strength of the offenSive work of senior Teresa Zempter
and sophomore Bill ina Cooper, but
also from the younger players.
Against West Liberty, Zemptcr
po sted six kill s, Cooper four,
Michelle Spears three and Tiffany
Neff two, while Neff added fiv e
serving aces. Dcfcns1vely, Spears
was credited with seven digs and
Neff had five, while Cooper
recorded five block solos.
The Wheeling match saw
Zcmpter with five kills , CQ.oper
four , three from Neff and two from
Spears. while Andrea Hedges supplied three serving aces, and Cooper and Robin Sharp each had two.
Zemptcr had two block solos while
Spears and Cooper each had four
digs.
Against Glenville, the team
" played a really good game,"
Fields said, as Cooper netted six
kills and Zcmptcr had five. In addition, Cooper and Zempter each had
five digs and Zcmpter posted two
block solos. Shelley Wray chipped
in with three serving ac es and
Cooper had two.
Seeded second in the tournament . the Rcdwomcn went up
against what Fields called a "super
team" in West V1rginia Wesleyan,
but the result went all the way for
the Rio ladies when they handed
the Lady Bobcats losses of 15-12,
15-5.
In one of the team 's best defensive cffons yet this season, Cooper
led with 16 kills and Zempter had
!3, while Spears added five, Neff
four and Sharp three . Spears also
contributed three serving aces. with
two each from Zempter and
Hedges. Spears, a junior from St.
Pans, led the defense with seven
digs. while Wray and Cooper had
five ap1ccc. Cooper had four block
solos and Zcmpter ch1ppcd in with
three.

The Rcdwomen will be back
home Thursday for a 6 p.m. quadrangular match with Cedarville,
Concord (W.Va.) and Alderson Broaddus (W.Va.).

DOWNING CHILDS
MUWN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 S.lllld St., ,_..,.,
TOURINDEPINHNT
AGENTS SEIY•G
-GS COUNTY
SINCE 1161

Sometfi.ing (jootf's Jil{ways Coofjng Jilt

MASON
FAMILY
1
RESTAURANT
Located on Rt. 33 beside Mason Exxon end Muon Motel, Muon, WV
Sul)day thtu Thursday, 6:30 em-10 pm; Friday &amp; S,aturday, 6:3011111-11 pm

HOMESTYLE LUNCH SPECIAL'i
Monday 1-'rida_y. 11 u.m. to :J p .rrt .

MONDAY· Grilled Ham &amp; Cheese, French Fries, Soup
IUESPAY • Spaghetti with Garlic Bread, Salad
WEPNESDAY · Mushroom Burger, French Fries &amp; Soup
THURSPAY- BLT, French Fries, Soup
FRIDAY· Philly Sandwich, French Fries, Salad Bar
'111UDAY a 'I'IIUJI8D&amp;Y, CIIILDUJf UJmBR 121tAT J'IID
PKOII CIIILDUJf'SIDinl. !EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSER'O
LDirl' 1 CHILD PER AD1JLT

Cleveland
team happy
after win

Scoreboard
W L
Mon..
........... 82 61
1..oo An 8et.. . .... 11 63
San Diego
73 11

Eatl Dhillon

W L

Toronto
B011on
Deuoit
Milwaukee.
Nc.wYM

Balumorc.

Cleve!Jnd

.... 81 63
.. 71 66
. 15 68
.. . 61 14
. 61 81
.. 6(1 83
........ 47 95

Pel
563

GB

53S 3 1(1.

l2A l 1/2
.47512112
.430
19

.42020 1/2
.331

33

W eal Dhllion

W L

MinncloY

Chicago
Tuu
Ookland

.. ... . 86
.. 79

s8

66

...... 76 66
......... 16 68
K.an111 City ....... 12 10
Scaulc
.......... 72 70

Califonua ......... 71 12
Sunday'•Gama
Ba.himcre 4, Cleveland 3
Oakhnd tO, Toron111 S
Seattle 14, Kansu City 7
Milwaukee S, Detroit l
Te.x.u 4, Minncldl 2
Chi&lt;IJO 9, c.tif0Jnil2

Pet. GB
597
l4l 7 1/2
535
9
.528
10
.l(J)
13
5(1)
13
49714 l (l

B~ton S, Now Ycd 4
MondaJ'I Games
Milwaukee (Auaua ~7) at New Y adr.
(foylo.?-9), H:J p.m

Baltimore (Muuina 3-4) at 8a&amp;ton
(Boltoo 11-7). 7:35p.m.
Ka~ City (Gubicu 8-9) at MiMesot.l
(foporu 14-8), 8:05p.m.
Toront.o(Key 1~-IO) 1\ SeatUc (Holmtn

13-13),10:05 p.m.
Only I""'" od&gt;Cduk4
Tutldiy'• GIUMI

MilwaukM: (Ba.1o 11-10) at New York
(l'onoz l -3). 7:30 p.m.

Baltimcxe (Mcu 5-10) at 801ton (Mar·

1011 5-3), 7:35p.m.

Dcuott (Tc:rrcll12·10) ll Oevcland
(JO&lt;ICI 2-7), 7.3l p.m.

&lt;&gt;Uland (Oarlins 3-3) at Chicago (!lib"'"' 9-10), 8.05 p.m.
IUnu&amp; City (Sabed\agen 10-&amp;) at Min·
nCIOll (MomJ 16-11), 11:05 p.m.
California (Lcwill-5) at Texu (Bohonon 3-2), 8:3!1 p.m.
Toronto(Guzman 7·2) at Seatllc (Han·
100 1 -7), 10;3.5 p.m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eaat DMaion
W L Pet. en
Pi!Ubwgh ......... il 58 .594
SL LouiJ
........ 75 67 .528 9 1/2
IS
Ctucago
......... 70 13 .490
16
New YaD.
...... 69 74 .483
Philaddploio ....... 67 76 .469
"
Montreal
........ 63 79 .44421 w.

-1 Saturday's

ClnCIMitl ......... 70 73
San Fr.ncis.co ...... 6S 78

PeL GB

m -

.l63
.l(J)

I 1/2
9 1/2

490
455
406

- 13

Florida 35, Alabama 0
Florida St. 58, W. Michigan 0
Furman 31, Libeny 7
Howard U. 28, Florida A&amp;M 21
Jackson St. 41, Tennessee St. 19
Louisiana Tech 21, Montana II
Marshall 70, Morehead St II
Miss. Valley St 30, Lane 13
Mississippi St 48, Tulane 0
N. Carolina St. 47, Kent 0
NE Louisiana 21, Georgia
Southern 13
North Carolina 51, Cincinnati
16
Richmond 19, Rhode Island 10
s. Illinois 21, Austin Peay 17
Samford 31, E. Tennessee St 6 .
Syracuse 31, Maryland 17
Tennessee 30, UCLA 16
Vanderbilt 14, -Southern Meth.
Virginia 17, Navy JO ·
Virginia Union 46, Q~bling
St. 37
•
~_. KentuCky 14, Murray St 0

12

By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - After
getting blown out of one game after
another last season, the Cleveland
Browns felt good just being close
at the end.
Monday'a Gam•
St. L...ouil (Hill 0-9) at Philadelphia (DcWinning made it that much bet),.w 1~5). 7:35pm.
ter
.
Chicaao (F.C..tillo 6-4) "Piuabllfgh
"The thing I'm probably most
(Z.Smilh 14-10), 7 :3l p.m.
H00o11t.an (Harnilch 9-9) at San Diego
happy
about is. I think we're a
(O.IIuria 5-l), 10.05 p.m.
good team again," linebacker Clay
ALlan~&amp; (McrckCI' S-3) 11 San FrancLJCo
(Hickmon 2-1), 10:0.5 p.m.
Matthews said Sunday after he
Cincinnati (Scudder S-7) at U. Angeles
watched Matt Stover' s 45-yard
(ltcnhiocr 6-2). 10:35 p.m.
Only pmouchedwcd
field goal with four seconds left
Tueaday'• Gunea
beat the Cincinnati Bcngals 14-13.
Monue&amp;1 (Haney 3-4 and Nabtloll. S-7)
" Now, we're going to be in
a1 New York (Yaung 2· 1 and Caslil.lo 21). 5:10p.m.
every
game, and that's so much
St. Lo.Us (fewlr.&amp;bury 9-11) at Phila~el ­
more cxciung as a player - even if
phia (Brantley 0-1 ),7 :35p.m
Chicago (Bielecki I 3-9) at PittJ~rgn
you lose -just to be around for
(Dnbek l 3-13), 7.35 p m.
four quarters," Matthews said. "I
Houatoo (Kile 7-9) at San 0\cgo (llurst
think this team's going to win a lot
ll-7), lO:Ol ~mCUicmnau (Drowrunal4·10) 11 Los An·
of them ."
gelea (OJcd• 10.8), 10 3S r-m
The outburst of emotions in the
A~lanta (Lc.ibrtndl 15-1 ) at San Francuco (Dladr. 10-15), 10·35 pm.
Cleveland locker room was probaWeekend Sporta Transactions
bly overdone, but it was under By The Auoclated Preu
standable in light of the Browns'
BASEBALL
Amerlan Le1pe
franchise-worst 3-13 record last
KANSAS CllY ROYAlS-ActJvatseason. The win improved them to
cd Mike. Madulanc., caLCher, rnm the 15·
2-1, while the Bengals dropped to
da y disabled lill. Announced the retire·
mcnl of Warren Cromanic, daig~~aled hi t·
0-3, their worst start since 1985.
'" SEAnLE MARINERS-Recalled
"I know that everybody down
Rich Ament, infielder; Petn clr. Lennon.
in Cincinnati picked us to lose,"
outfielder; Dave f1emin&amp;, pitcher, and
Cleveland coach Bill Belichick
ChriJ Howard, catcher, rrom Calgary or
the. Pacific Cout League. Purch11ed lhe
said. "They picked us to finish last.
contract of Alonzo Powell, outfielder.
Everybody picked us to finish way
fnm Celguy.
behind Cincinnati. Sam Wyche
TORONTO BLUE JA YS - Signcd
Dave Parlr.er, dclignatfld hitter
may
be right. He said it would be a
National L.eque
three-team race in the AFC Central.
HOUSTON ASTROS - Rmlled
Kenny Lo!Um ond Guy Coope•. outfield·
I don't know. But we go out on the
en; and Jeff Juden and Brian Williams,
field and we expect to win."
p1tchtr1, from Tucson of the. Pacific Coa.n
League.
Stover kicked four field goals,
and another attempt was aborted by
a bad snap. But the difference in
the game was a second-quarter
safety, set up when Brian Hansen's
5 !-yard punt pinned the Bengals
Wake Forest 40, W. Carolina 24 inside their own 5-yard line.
Penalties on three straight plays
Winston-Salem 13, N. Carolina
pushed
the ball inside the CincinA&amp;T 10
nati
I,
and
on third down, James
Wofford 15, Citadell2
was
tackled by Cleveland
Brooks
MIDWEST
rookie
James
Jones in the end zone.
Cent. Michigan 20, Michigan
Cleveland
led 5-3 at halftime.
St. 3
"We
were
kidding, 'Who got
E. Illinois 30, E. Washington 12
the
RBis?'"
Matthews
said.
E. Kentucky 49, SE Missouri 7
Cincinnati, which had the worst
Illinois St. 25, Akron 3
Indiana St. 35. Cent Missoun 6 turnover ratio in the conference,
continued its fum blinj! ways by
Iowa 29, Iowa St. 10
giving the ball away twtcc early m
'Kansas 23, Tulsa 17
the third quarter. Harold Green's
Kansas St. 41 , Idaho St. 7
fumble at the Cincinnati 46 set up
Miami, Ohio 29. E. Michigan 3
Stover's
42-yard field goal, and
Michigan 24, Notre Dame 14
Eric
Ball
fumbled
the ensuing kickMinnesota 26, San Jose St. 20
off,
setting
up
a
38-yard
kick by
Missouri 23, lllinois 19
Stover
moments
later
that
made it
N.lllinois 22, Arkansas St. 21
II3.
N. Iowa 45. Au~ustana,S.D. 22
''Turnovers kill you. We had
Nebraska 71, Colorado St. 14
our turnovers again," Wyche said.
Ohto St. 23, Louisville 15
The Ben gals ' offense, slowed
Ohio U. 35, Tennessee Tech 14
by the loss of receiver Eddie
Rice 36, Northwestern 7
Brown to a slight shoulder separaSW Missouri St. 7, McNeese St. tion last week, finally carne alive
3
late in the third quarter. Boomer
Wisconsin 31, W. Illinois 13
Esiason directed a 90-yard drive
SOUTHWEST
ca pped by a 26-yard touchdown
Angelo SL 55, Prairie View 0
pass to Tim McGee on the third
Arizona St. 30, Oklahoma St. 3
play of the fourth quarter, geuing
Oklahoma 40, North Texas 2
Cmcinnati
wtthin one.
Oregon 28, Texas Tech 13
The Bengals scored again on
Sam Hou ston St. 37, Texas their next possession, taking a 13Southern 6
11 lead on Jim Breech's 36-yard
Texas A&amp;M 45, LSU 7
field goal with 6:4lleft.
Texas Christian 22, Ball St. 16
FAR WEST
Cleveland got the ball for the
Air Force 24, Utah 21
last time at its own 12 with 3:09 to
Arizona 28, Stanford 23
play.
Barlor 16, Colorado 1~
Kosar, who had thrown seven
B01se St. 48, Long Beach St. 14
incomplete passes in his previous
Cali(ornia 42, Purdue 18
eight attempts, executed the twoFresno St. 34, Washington St. minute drill superbly, starting the
30
drive with an 8-yard pass 10 Reggie
Hawaii 35, New Mexico 13
Langhorne and keeping it going by
Idaho41, SW'Texas St. 38
handing off to Kevin Mack for a 4Nevada 45, NW (ouisiana 14
yard gain on fourth-and -! and
Sacramento St. 19, Montana St. throwing an 8-yard pass to
17
Langhorne on third-and-4 .
" San Diego St 55, Pacific U. 34
Southern Cal21, Penn St. 10
Belichick had told Kosar they
Texas-El Paso 22, New Mexico needed to get the ball to the CincinSt 21
nati 35-yard line 10 give SlOver a
UNLV 23, Oregon St9
realistic chance. The 60-yard drive
•' Weber St: 43, N. Ariiona 38
put the ball at the Cincinnati 28
Wyoming 28, SW Louisiana 15
with eight seconds left
Hoonon
......... 58 RS
Sunday' a Camet
Philodelpltio 8. Pitt&amp;b"'lh 3
ALla.n~a9, Lol Anaelca I
Cincinnati 10, Houaton 0
SL La.tiJ 7, New Yolk 2
Monuoal6,0ticago.S, !Oinmngs
San Francitco 7, San Dicso 2

college scores

By The Associated Press
EAST
Army 51, Colgate 22
BasiOn U. 10, Towson St. 8
Georgia Tech 30, Boston College 14
Holy Cross 22, Massachusetts
20
Lafayette 42, Buffalo 21
Lehigh 32, Fordham 7
New Hampshire 21, Connecticut
16
Northeastern 15, Maine 14
Pittsburgh 26, Temple 7
Vtllanova 40, Bucknell 0
West Virginia 21. South Carolina 16
SOUTH
Alabama St. 19, Southern U. 16
Alcorn St. 38, Alabama A&amp;M 0
Appalachian St. 24, VMI 19
Auburn 23, Mississippi 13
Bethune-Cookman 38, Morgan
St. 6
Cent. Florida 12, Valdosta St. 0
Delaware 28, William &amp; Mary
. 21
Delaware St. 33, Youngstown
St. 29
Duke 42, Rutgers 22
East Carolina 20, Memphis St.

11

les Coliseum Saturday night. The Trojans
sacked Sacca tbre~ times in the first quarter.
USC won 21-10. (AP LaserPhoto)

.

P.hjor Laaue Butball

The Rio ladies then advanced 10
the championship round with California State University (Pa.), then
unbeaten in 15 stans. California
handed the Redwomen at 10-15
loss in the opening match, but
Fields' crew came back with wins
of 15-2, 15-13 to net the tournament crown.
To do this, Zcmpter fired in I 8
kills, Cooper 17, Neff six and
Spears four, while Spears and
Hedges each provided 10 digs in
defen se . Sharp and Neff each
added eight digs and Zempter had
seven, while she and Cooper each
had six block solos.
'They played super defense, the
thmg they hadn't been doing up
until then, but they just didn't let
the ball hit the floor," the coach
said.
"I felt they showed a lot of character after that one loss to come
back and take the tournc y," Fields
added."! was impressed with them
because they wouldn't quit, and
because they were a fun team to
walch."

SACCA SACKED -Penn State quarterback
Tony Sacca (19) is upended by University or
Southern California linebacker Kurt Barber
(98) during first quarter action at the Los Ange-

By tiM: Alloclaled Preu
AllTlmaEDT
AMERICAN LEAGUE

Redwomen volley-ball team sweeps
crown of Fairmont State tourney

Giants' Johnson: It's time to
fight or take blows rest of year'

CHICAGO (AP) - Some of
ZsaZsa Gabor's eight husband s
enjoyed a longer honeymoon than
new coach Ray Handley may yet
fi nd with the New York Giant.s.
The NFL season had barely
begun wh en Handley wa s
mformed, and none too gently, that
his shirts were too wild and his
play-calling too conservative. And
that was before the defending
Super Bowl champions beat the
Chicago Bears every place Sunday
except on the scoreboard.
"I've seen a lot of people start
off slow - in track races, in horse
races, and still come back and
win," Giants linebacker Pepper
Joh nson said. "Well, this season
JUSt kicked us in the butt.
" A lot of the guys, mcluding
myself, never faced anything like
th1s. So now it's kind of gut-check
time. Either we fight, " he added,
''or we take a lot of blows the rest
· By The Associated Press
13. Nebraska (2-0) beat Col- of the season."
· How the top 25 teams in the orado State 71-14. Next: vs. No. 4
Until this season, about the only
Associated Press' college football Washington, Saturday.
Lhmg most of the regulars in the
14. Iowa (2-0) beat Iowa State Giants lineup could remember
poll fared Saturday:
• I. Florida State (3-0) beat West- 29- 10. Next: vs. Northern lllinois about self-doubt was being forced
' to read "Hamlet" in junior high.
em Michigan 58-0. Next at No. 3 Sept. 28.
Michigan, Sept. 28.
15. Auburn (2-0) beat Mississip- That was because under former
2. Miami (2-0) did not play . pi 23-13. Next: at Texas, Saturday. coach Bill Parcells, who left the
16. Alabama (1 -1) lost to No. 6 bench for the television booth
Next at Tulsa, Sept 28.
3. Michigan (2-0) beat No. 7 Florida 35-0. Next: vs. Georgia. before the season began, this club
Notre Dame 24-14. Next: vs. No. I Saturday.
was taught that fate was something
Florida State, Sept. 28.
I 7. Georgia Tech (1-1) bea t yo u controlled, and that if you
4. Washington (1 -0) did not Boston College 30- 14. Next: vs. worked hard enough, she was as
play. Next: at No. 13 Nebraska, Virginia, Saturday.
likely to desert New York as the
18. Michigan State (0-1) lost to Lady in the Harbor.
Saturday.
5. Penn State (2 - 1) lost to Central Michigan 20-3. Next: at
Parcells was usually as subtle as
Southern Cal 21-10. Next: vs. No. 7 Nolle Dame, Saturday.
a sledgehammer in his dealings and
Brigham Young, Saturday.
19. Ohio State (2-0) beat during eight seasons in New York.
- 6. Florida (2-0) beat No . 16 Louisville 23-15. Next: vs. Wash- he built the Giants in his image.
Alabama 35-0. Next: at No. 22 ington State, Saturday.
They kept drafting bigger and bigSyracuse, Saturday.
20. Texas A&amp;M ( 1-0) beat LSU ger players and kept grinding and
• 7. Notre Dame (I-I) lost to No. 45-7. Next: at Tulsa.' Saturday.
grinding on both s1des of the ball
~Michigan 24-14. Next vs. No. 18
21. UCLA (1 -1) lost to No. II until opponents wore down enough
·Michigan State, Saturday.
Tennessee 30-16. Next: at San for the one run, the one turnover,
8. Clemson (1·0) did not play. Diego State, Sept. 26.
the one sack, the one play that
Next vs. Temple, Saturday.
22. Syracuse (2-0) beat Mary- decided most football games in
9. Oklahoma (1-0) beat North land 31-17. Next vs. No. 6 Florida, their favor.
!texas 40-2. Next vs. Utah State, Saturday.
Everyone else in these passSaturday.
23. Baylor (2- 0) beat No . 12 happy times doubted Parcells' tac10. Houswn (I-I) did not play. Colorado 16- 14. Next: vs. Mis- tics except his players. And you
Next at Ulinois, Saturday.
souri, Saturday.
only have to recall him repcatmg,
11. Tennessee (2-0) beat No. 21
24. Pittsburgh (3-0) beat Temple " Power football wins games!"
:UCLA 30-16. Next: vs . No . 25 26-7. Next at Minnesota, Sept. 28.
over and over amidst the turmoil of
:Mississippi State, Saturday.
25. Mississippi State (2-0) beat last year's Super Bowl celebration
-· 12. Colorado (I-ll lost to No. Tulane 48-0. Next: at No. II Ten- to remember that even at the end of
- ~3 Baylor 16· 14. Next: vs. Min - nessee, Saturday. ~
the road, he was still working to
nesota, Saturday. I
cement his hold on everyone and l
COAL VALLEY, Ill. (AP) D.A. Weibring doesn't like to be
called a choker, so he became a
worker. And after losing the lead at
the Canadian Open last week .
Weibring became a very hard
worker.
It paid off this week with a victory Sunday at the Hardee's Golf
Classic.
"I came back and worked on
my swing in Bloomington last
week, and I carne here confident,"
said Weibring, who rallied from
four shots down 10 charge by Greg
Norman and seven others and win
by a stroke over Paul Azinger and
Peter Jacobsen.
Weibring had seven birdies and
a bogey for a 6-under 64 and a total

'

St. Louis rookie to hit for the cycle
since 1918 and Rhea! Cormier
threw a complete game in 93dcgrce heat.
Pete Schourek gave up six runs
on nine hits in 4 2-3 innings.
Reds 10, Astros 0
Jose R1jo pitched seven shutout
innings for his sixth straight wm
and Mariano Duncan led a fourhomer attack.
Rijo (14-4) extended his mastery of the Astros by scauering six
hits and striking out seven in 88degrce heat. The right-hander has
an 8-1 career mark against Houston. Rookie Chris Gardner fell to 0-

good, the score 53-13.
On the ensuing kickoff young
Tucker Williams rambled 81 yards
on the return for a great kickoff
return and TD score. The Rizer
kick was good and the score stood
60- 13.
With JU St four seco nd s left.
Andy grabbed a reception of two
yards for a 60-!9 score, while the
PAT run was void.
Nick Adams had four receptions
for 33 yards and one TO, wh1lc
having another score on the fumble

•

17

2A

I

By MICHELLE LOCKE
Associated Press Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Afler California fell out of the
rankings on Halloween 1977, some
didn't give the Bears the ghost of a
chance to fight their way back. But
two high-spirited vicwries changed
that.
Califom1a (2-0) moved to No.
24 in the Associated Press college
football poll after beating Purdue
42-18 on Saturday, following a 8624 rout of the University of th e
Pacific a week ell!'lier.
Florida State remained No. I on
Sunday after beating Western
Michigan 58-0 and Tennessee,
Nebraska and Iowa moved into the
top I0, while Notre Dame dropped
out of the elite group for the fir st
time in three years.
Miami, Michigan and Washington stayed right behind the Seminoles, while Florida moved up a
spot to fifth after a 35-0 defeat of
Alambama, which dropped out of
the poll from 16th.
Cal coach Bruce Snyder said the
ranking was a pleasant surprise.
"Obvio~'s kind of flattering. We haven t been there in a
long time," he said.
The two victories gave California its best start since 1982.
Snyder said that Cal came from

behind in both its games this sea son, but figured the real attention
came from the scoreboard-poppwg
resu lts.
" We feel like we've got some
real weapons on offense.'' he said.
And he credited a strong defense
with the six turnovers agamst the
Boilermakers. Four o f the
turnovers gave the Golden Bears
field position within Purdue's 30yard line and led to 26 points.
Tennessee (2-0) Jumped f1 vc
spots to sixth following a 30-16
victory over UCLA, and Nebraska
(2-0) rose four places to ninth after
routing Colorado State 71-14. Iowa
(2-0), which beat Iowa State 29- 10.
went from 14th to lOth.
Notre Dame (1-1) fell from seventh to II th after losing to MIChigan 24-14. It 's the lowest ranking
for the Irish since the second regu lar-season poll in 1988, when they
were 13th.
Southern Cal's 21-10 up set of
Penn State had a major impact on
the Top 25, dropping the Nittany
Lions (2-1) from fifth to 12th and
movmg the Trojans (-l-1) into the
rankings at No. 22.
Flonda State (3-0) received 47
of 58 first-place votes and I ,436
points from a nationwide panel of
sports writers and broadcasters.

M1am1 (2-0), which humbl ed
Houston 40-10 Thursday night, got
e1ght first-place votes and 1,345
pomts. Michigan (2-0), Washing ton {1-0) and Flor~da (2-0) eac h
received one first-place vote.
Oklahoma ( 1-0), which beat
Nort h Texas 40-2, Jumped from
nmth 10 seven th . Id le Clemson (10) rcmamed eighth , with Nebraska
and Iowa roundmg out the Top I0.
Notre Dame IS lith, follow ed
by Penn State, Auburn, Baylor,
Texas A&amp;M, Ohio State, Gcorg 1a
Tech , Syracuse, Co lorado, Puts burgh, Houston , Southern Ca l,
Mi sSISs ippi Sta te, Cali fornia and
Gcorgw.
Georgia (2-0) was last ranked in
1989 .
Baylor (2-0) soared from 23rd to
14th after clipp1ng Colorado 16-14,
cnd1ng the Buffaloes IS -game win
streak at home .
Texas A&amp;M (1-0) Jumped from
20th to 15th following a 45-7 rout
of LSU.
Co lorado ( 1-1) fell seven spots
to No. 19 and Houston ( 1-1)
plunged II places to No. 21.
Alabama, UCLA and Mich1gan
State dropped out of the Top 25.
Michtgan State, 18th last week,
was beaten by Central Michigan
20-3 . UCLA was No. 21 last week.

Fielder and Canseco display
home run power over weekend
By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
The best race in the AL isn't in
th e East or West, at least not yet.
The be st one is betw een Cecil
Fielder and Jose Canseco.
Fielder and Canseco each put on
power shows Sunday .:s they continued to chase for the major league
home run championship. Canseco
connected twice, including a grand
slam, for a total of 41; F1clder

Thompson
records second
•
•
seniOrs
WID
CONCORD. Mass. (AP)- It 's
taken Hugh Delane "Rocky"
Thompson 27 years to get th e
attention of the professional golfing
world. But now that he's done it,
he may be the most entertaining
player on the Seniors Tour.
How many others win a tournament and crcdtt a "light and
sound'' machine for the victory?
"I put on the headphones and
hear relaxing sounds, I put on the
glasses and see relaxing colors,"
said Thompson, whose 70 on Sunday lifted him to a one-stroke vic tory over Bruce Crampton in the
Digital Seniors Classic.
"I'm completely calm , far more
relaxed than I've ever been in similar situations," Thompson said.
"This win puts me on the U.S.
duPont Cup tea m and mean s
megabucks. ''
Thompson had already reac hed
the megabuck category, with hts
second Seniors victory this year
pushing his earnings to $355,472.
During his years on the PGA Tour,
Thompson's best money total was
$20,685 in 1968.
After Thompson, the mayor of
Toco, Texas, rolled in a short birdie
putt on the 18th hole for the win .
he introduced John Gartner, hi s
personal relaxation specialist, and
the machine he said helped him
win.
Thompson, who said he's been
ex perimenting with the little known machine for the past four
years. carded a 205. 11-under par
for the 54-hole tournament.
Crampton had a final-round 68
for a 206 total.
Lee Trevino shot an even-par 72
on the Nashawtuc Country Club
and wound up tied for third with
Mike Hill, who closed with a 68.
Jim Colbert, the first -round
leader, had a 70 for a 209, tied with
AI Geiberger, who had a 73.
Defending champion. Bob
Charles finished eight strokes
behind Thompson as 26 players
among the field of 78 broke par for
the tournament despite two full
days of drizzle and sometimes
heavy rain.

homered once, and leads with 42.
''Cecil will beat me by about
four because of the home park differences," Canseco predicted after
tying his career high with six RBis
in Oakland's 10-5 romp in Toronto.
Ca nseco reac hed the 40-mark
for the second time , having hit 42
in 1988. It'll take more than that to
beat Fielder, who followed up Saturday night's 520-foot shot out of
Co unty Stadium with a 420 -foot
drive in Detroit's S-3 loss to Milwaukee.
Canscco went7 -for-13 with
three home runs and I0 RBis in the
three-game series against the AL
East leaders. He hit a two -run
homer in the first mning and hi s
third career slam, including two in
Toronto, in the ninth.
Fielder, who led the maJors last
year with 51 homers and 132 RBis,
is again tops with 123 RBi s.

Canseco is second with Ill .
Elsewhere, Boston cut Toron to's lead to 3 1(2 games with a 5-4
victory in New York, Texas topped
Minnesota 4-2. Chicago beat California 9-2, Seattle trounced Kansas
City 14 -7 and Baltimore defeated
Cleveland 4-3.
Canscco homered in the first off
Todd Stott.lemyrc (13-8). Then in
the ninth, after the Athletic s loaded
the bases with no outs, Canscco
met reliever Jim Acker with his
second slam of the season.
Red Sox 5, Yankees 4
Roger Clemens got thrown at,
but not thrown out.
Clemens (16-8) gave up four
run s in eight inning s, with six
strikeouts and no walks.
In the stxth, Clemens threw a
fastball that hit Matt Nokes below
the back of hi s right should er.

Marshall routs Morehead
HUNTINGTON , W.Va. (AP)
- Marshall had little trouble moving the ball agamst Morehead State
in a 70-11 victory , givi ng coach
Jim Donnan a chance to brag about
his quarterbacks , one of whom is
his son.
Michael Payton led the Thun dering Herd (2-1) to scores on each
of his five scr"ies.' while freshman
Todd Donnan led Marshall to three
scores.
"I was pleased with the way our
quarterbacks played," J1m Donnan
said following Saturday' s game.
" Michael and Todd both d1d a
good job for us. I th ought that
Todd's quickness was one of hi s
better attributes and he showed it
tonight."
Marshall dommated the game,
holding Morehead (0-2) 10 negative
8 yards in the ftrst quarter and 208
total yards m the game. More head's only touchdown came on
the last play of the game.
"Our defense JUSt sttflcd them,"
Jim Donnan said. "All around, our
execution was prcuy crisp.''
Payton threw two first-quarter
touchdown pass es and ran for

another, s parking the Thundering
Herd to 1ts most one-sided victory
since a 90-0 rout over Georgetown,
Ky., tn 1937.
His 30-yard touchdown run on a
quarterback keeper around ri~ht
end with 2:37 left in the first pcnod
made it 21-0 and all but ended the
game.
For the second straight week,
Morehead State was unable to
move the ball behind f1rst -year
quarterback Jeff King . The Eagles
lost 52-14 to Samford in their season opener.
" We knew they had a lot of
weapons." said Morehead coach
Cole Proctor. "I thought we'd play
them a lot closer than we did.··
Payton finished 10-of-12 for
164 yards. Donnan was 8-of-13 for
174 yards. King was 2-of-4 passing
for 4 yards for Morehead before he
was replaced by Steve Donato. who
was 16-of-29 for 152 yards.
·
Marshall kicker Dewey Klein·~
10 extra points set a school record.
The loss was Morehead's second-worst behind a 1927 77-0 loSs
to Morris Harvey College, now the
University of Charleswn.

'I

�Monday, September 16,1991

The Dally Sentlnei- Page- 7

~

__"'_,._·.By The Bend

,~. ~-

The Daily Sentiriell

Classified

Monday, September 16, 1991 ;

•

t======-============~~;;~~======================~~------~==~--------~h~g~e~~:

Your Social Security

Consider this ...
A big help .•. ln addition to the
slate and local officials who were
on hand 10 help OUI with the SARA
Title Ill Ohio River Exercise last
week, several Meigs EMS personnel also gave a hand.
According to Meigs EMS (and
Emergency Management Agency)
Director Bob Byer, ISO messages
and phone calls directly related 10
the exercise were handled by the
EMS dispatchers on duty last Saturday. Those able dispatchers were
Pam Imboden, Gene Lyons, Jack
Peterson and Bracy Kom.
In addition 10 helping out with
the drill, they also took care of the
office's re~lar business as usual .
and if you ve spent any time at all
in that office, you know that it's
not an easy job.
The dispatchers (who also
include Cindy Prater) are
ALWAYS there to help us out
when it is needed, so let's remcm·
ber them with a word of thanks .
for their work on the drill and for
their everyday effortS to lake care
of the community.
Attention
business
hopefuls ...lf you are thinking about
sl8rting a business in Meigs County, you might want to attend StartUp Basics, a small business workshop that could be a big help to
you.
Co-sponsored by the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce and
Ohio University's Small Business
Development Center, the workshop
will help you evaluate your business plan, and explain some of the
necessary paperwork involved in
sl8rting a small business.
Consider all of the information

you'll receive a bargain at a $15
registration fee. Pre-registration is
required and can be arranged
through the chamber office at 9925005.
Historic Headlines ... for this
week come from mid-September,
1968.
On the national news from, the
Gallup organization had just named
Richard Nixon a "shoo-in" for the
presidency, just a week after the
Democrats nominated Hubert
Humphrey on the first ballot at
their convention.
Locally , Governor James
Rhodes was to dedicate the GalliaMcigs Regional Airport in Gallia
County. The $200,000 facility was
Ohio's ftrstjoint-county airpJrt.
An 84-day strike at PhillipSporn Plant was set to end this
week after a new contract was
approved.
From the Seminel society secLion, we read that a group of "converted hippies" were testifying in
services at the Rutland Community
Church, (expounding no doubt on
the social ills of bell bottoms and
day-glo VW vans).
Certified Oil in Pomeroy was
selling regular gasoline at 30 cents
a gallon (and you could buy all the
cigarettes that you wanted for 29
cents), and the 1969 Dodge Monaco was described as "the car for the
man who wants a luxury car at a
standard car price."
And where was Gloria Stcinem
in 1968? Obviously, she was not at
her local Dodge dealer.
Take Care.

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received well In advance
to assure publication in the calepdar.
SUNDAY
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
will have its annual Rally Day on
Sunday. A potluck dinner will
begin at 12:30 p.m. and the aftern~n program will begin at 2:30
p;rn. with the Gospel Notes. The
public is invited to attend.
POMEROY • The Meigs County Genealogical Society will meet
Sunday at 2 p.m . at the Meigs
Museum.

McClung invites the public.
RUTLAND - Tbc Leading
Creek Cunservancy Di stri ct will
mee t Monda y at 7 p.m. at the
office.
RACINE · Ra cine Vill:tge
Council will meet in recess session
on Monday at 7 p.m. at the council
chambers.
TUESDAY
CHESTER · The Chester Council No. 323 Daughters of America
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
Quarterly birthdays, which were to
be observed and the potluck, will
be postponed until the Oct 1 meetmg.

POMEROY - "Start-up Basics,"
· RUTLAND - The Charles Reed a basic introduction to starting a
Hysell and Oscar Hysell family business, will be presented by
reunion will be held Sunday at Fon Meigs County Chamber of ComMeigs in Rutland with dinner at merce, Small Business DevelopI 2:30p.m.
ment Center and Management
Development Division of the Col·
- RACINE - The Gideon and lege of Business at Ohio University
Artcmesia Roush reunion will be on Tuesday from 6:30-9 p.m. at the
held Sunday at Star Mill Park in Chamber office, 200 East Second
Racine beginning at I p.m . with a St., in Pomeroy. The cost is $15 per
basket lunch. Relatives and friends person and pre-registration may be
are invited 10 attend.
done by calling the chamber oiiicc
at 992-5005.
PORTLAND • The annual
homecoming of the Morse Chapel
POMEROY · The American
Church wiU be held Sunday. Regu- Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39
lar morning services will be held will meet Tuesday at the post
and afternoon services begin at 2 home. Dinner is at 7 p.m . and
p.m. featuring the Conquerors of meeting al 8 p.m. All members arc
Ripley, W.Va. Rev. David Curf- urged to aticnd.
mllll invites the public.
LONG BOTTOM · The Flame
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff. Fellowship Chapter will meet
ington, Gallipolis, will be the guest Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full
gpeaker at the Naomi Baptist Gospel Church in Long Bottom .
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at Herschel Faccmycr, Nitro, W.Va.,
na.m.
will be the speaker. The pubk is
invited 10 auend.
RACINE • The James C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moore reunion
RACINE • The Southern Junior
wiU be held Sunday at the home of High Boosters will meet Tuesday
Larry and Patty Circle , Carmel at 7 p.m. at the junior high school
Road in Racine. Basket dinner at I in Racine. School year projects will
p.m.
be discussed.

I read an item about Social
Security in a recent financial col·
umn that gave me great concern. h
said that many widows experience
unnecessary financial hardship
because they don't know about the
benefits Social Security provides
for widows.
This is important to you too if
you are a widow and you haven't
started receiving Social Security
yet, or you know someone in those
circums1ances. I want to point out
that, although I refer only to widows, the law applies equally to
women and men, but widowers
represent less than one percent of
the total number of people who get
these kind of Social Security benefits.
The main difference between
the benefits payable to widows and
those payable to retirees and their
spouses is that widows can start
getting their Social Security benefits at age 60 rather than age 62.
And if a widow is disabled, she can
start getting her benefits as early as
age 50. A widow can also gu
Social Security benefits if she is
caring for the deceased worker's
child who is under age 16 or dis-

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

Dy BARBARA MAYER

For AP Special Features
Today's kitchen is busy - and
crowded - making renovation
more desirable, according to a
cross section of kitchen designers
polled by the Maytag Co.
Adult children returning home
to live with parents, grandparents
caring for young children, and the
need and wish to recycle kitchen
waste are crowding the kitchens,
the poll says.
Today's average kitchen measure s 9 feet by 15 feet, about the
same as five years ago. Not surprisingly, inconvenient layout, inadequate storage and countertop space
are among the major factors leading to a decision 10 renovate.
Maytag polled 100 kitchen
des igners and found that one way
consumers are coping with a busier
and more crowded kitchen is by
choosing appliances that cook
faster.
Microwave ovens arc now
placed in 92.5 percent of the
kitchens remodeled by those
polled, compared with 79.H percent
five years ago, and the demand for
convection ovens, which bake
faster than conventional ovens, is
growing.
The dishwasher, formerly an
optional convenience for many
consumers, now is included in
almost 98 percent of the kitchens
des igned by survey respondents.
The kitchen designers say more
people are asking for recycling
facilities in their kitchens so items
can be separated as they arc used.
This can be as simple as leaving
space for several containers or as
complicated as selling up a series
of vertical chutcs from countcrtop
to basement.
Designers asked to add a spm
for a quick meal often comply by
building it imo the kitchen's work
island.
Another trend: more kitchens
arc being designed for two cooks
(33 percent compared with 24 percent five years ago). Almost 70

percent of the clients have two
adults working full-time outside the
home, the kitchen desirners say.
Though they want all the high·
tech , labor-saving appliances they
can afford, most people want oldfashioned styling. Traditional and
country-style cabinetry and surfacing were selected by about 60 percent, and modem styles were chosen by about40 percent
The kitchen designers report
that 64 percent of their clients
select white appliances, instead of
the gold, green and copper colors
once favored, although black appliances are also finding growing
favor.
For the past four years, white
has been the most frequently chosen color for major appliances.
according to the Association of
Home Appliance Manufacturers
(AHAM). White trim on a white
background is interpreted by the
general public to convey upscale
sophistication of a de sign er
kitchen, AHAM says.
Electronic touch pads, a feature
made popular by microwave ovens,
arc now favored on a wide van ety
of major appliance s. such as
ranges, refrigerators, dishwashers
and laundry equipment. Unt il
recently, touch pad controls were
an option only on top-of-the -line
models.
"Ovcrdll, appliance promcs arc
sleek and uncluucred, free of
embellishment and overbearing
graphics. Metallic trim is used
sparingly and tends to be brushed
instead of shiny. Edges arc rounded
instead or squared," according to
the Ltade association.
The growing popularity of an
open kitchen that IS part of or flow s
into the living room is a maJor fac tor influencing the design or
kitchen appliances.
"With more of the kitchen on
view, consumers want their appli ances to visually blend with the
surroundings and to form a scamless line with the ki,~hcn cabi netry," says AHAM.

-Names in the news-

LONDON (AP) - Salman baseball in the 1940s.
Rushdie, under a death threat for
Once accepted for a part. Karn
" The Sal8nic Verses," said during asked to meet the Material Girl,
a rare public appearance that reli - who will portray a feisty outfielder.
able reports suggest that teams of
A security guard esconed him to
hitrnen arc still looking for him.
a trailer aild a woman .said, "Let
Rushdie was flanked by police me get my shoe on," Karn said.
bodyguards Sunday when he
"I recognized her voice and
arrived unannounced at a hotel to asked who she was ," said Karn.
POMEROY - The annual homeWEDNESDAY
coming of the Mt. Hennon U. B.
COOL VILLE - Revival at the accept the Writers Guild award for " She said. 'Madonna.' And I said.
Church (Texas Community) will be Vanderhoof Baptist Church in best childre n's book for hi s 'The real Madonna? Oh my God!' I
held Sunday. Sunday school will be Coolville will be held Wednesday " Haroun and the Sea of Stories. "
was in total shock. I was hoping it
Rushdie said the threat issued in wasn't her double.''
at 9:30: worship service at 10:30, through Friday at 7 p.m . nightly
following by a dinner at noon. The with Wallace Smith, evangelist 1989 by Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah
allcmoon service at 1:30 p.m. will Homecoming will be held Sunday· Khomeini is still very real. Khome- Comedian Leno hurt in
feature the Grubb Family of Gal- with a basket dinner at noon and ini. who died later that year. said
motorcycle accident
lipolis. Rev. Roben Sanders, pas- afternoon service at I p.m. with the book blasphemed Islam.
"I would like to apologize for
tor, invites the public.
special singers. Cecil Morrison,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jay
the
unusual manner of my appear- Lcno suffered cuts and bruises in a
pastor, invites the public.
ance here," Rushdie told the audi- motorcycle collision over the
POMEROY· A 12-step AA
ence
at the Dorchester Hotel. "I weekend, but said lie won't miss
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
SYRACUSE • The Third
p.m. at the JTPA office 117 West Wednesday Homemakers Club will would have liked to have been here work at guest host of the "Tonight
Second Street in Pomeroy.
Show."
meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the in a more ordinary way.''
Rushdie has been in hiding
Syracuse Park near the river. This
The 41-year-old comedian said
MONDAY
he was riding along Mulholland
is the fLtst meeting of the fall ses- since the death threat was.issucd.
POMEROY • "Crusade for sion. The group will make yearHighway in suburban Calabasas on
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP)- Saturday morning when he slowed
Christ" revival will be held Mon- books. Anyone may attend.
Jeffrey Karn, an extra in the to help a motorcyclist who was
day through Sunday at the
upcoming movie ''A League of stalled on the side of the road.
. Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
In the 1920s, John Steinbeck, wbo
their
Own," got a little extra attenat 7 p.m. nightly. There wiU be dif· went. on to become a Pulitzer Prize.
He was making a U-turn when
tion
from
Madonna.
ferent singers and speakers nightly. . WIDDLng novella!, worked u a bod car·
another motorcycle, driven by JefThe blind 23-year-old was one
·
d b h · rler. He wheeled 100-pound barrows
Th~ crusad.e ts sponsore . Y t.. e o1 concrete aton1 scalfoldiJII dtirln1 of 1,700 extras who competCd Sat· frey Flaherty, 48, of Hermosa
Meags.Oallia-~on counlles Cru- cooatructlon of New York's Madl.son urday for a part in a World Series Beach, Struck his bike, said Cali·
fomia Highway Patrol SgL Richard
sade for Chnst. Pastor Glen Square Garden.
scene for the movie about women's VJarton.
~
1

RATES
1

3
6

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
y

Words
16
15
15
15
15

Days

10

Month\Y

·Free

'"':

run 3

at no ch•oe

diV lflll' pubhtltiOn to m81te correction

•
•

Card o t Thanks
In Memor~am

..'
~

~

~

::...

..
:..
....•..
t
..'•c

COPY DEADliNE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP,ER
W£0NESOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDA~ PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

Classified

....
'!..
5
·ol

::.

Eslale

446 - Gallipolit

992 - M•ddl..,ort
Pomlt'oy
985 - Ct&lt;i•ter

675 - PI Pl11t1nt

32 - Mobile Hom• • for Sale
33 - F~rms tor Sale

247 - Letert Falls
949 - Rac•n•

937 - Buftllo

742 - Rutland
667 - Coolville

34- Business Bu~du1gs

.
BULLETIN BOARD

=
\

i

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. {AP) by the host's traditional hazing of
•
-The new Miss America, Carolyn Miss America guests.
"Hopefully, I won't have any ~
Su1.anne Sapp, couldn't stop smiling hours after winning the crown.
sarcasm from him, but I'll have a :
,
"This is just so exciting," Mi ss week to prepare," she said.
Sapp told reporters Sunday mornShe went to the beach for the ~
ing as she tried to stine a giggle traditional photo on Sunday with :
while photographers snapped her about a dozen photographers in
tow.
picture.
"Left ; right. left, go to the
An Old English sheep do~ made :
right," shq said. "Is thi s what Pres- friends with Miss Sapp, lickong her ·•
ident Bush feels like?"
face. Miss Sapp jumped in the air :
Miss Sapp early Sunday became as the cameras clicked away.
'
At a news conference later in ~
the first contestant from Hawaii to
win the crown.
the morning, she wore her 736- ·
She is expected to earn about rhinestone crown and sat at a table ·
••
5200,000 in appearance fees in between her divorced parents.
Miss Sapp, 24, of Honolulu, is a
addition to the $35,000 scholarship
and Chevrolet Corvette convertible junior majoring in political science :
and international relations.
she receives as Miss America.
She replaces Miss America ·
Next week, she is scheduled to
appear on "Late Night With David 1991 Marjorie Judith Vincen~ who .
Letterman" but said she isn't fazed plans to return to Duke University . .
to finish her last year of law school. _

THE

GROOM
ROOM

71 -- Autos for Sal•
72 - Tfuctu for S1le

tor Rent
tor Rent
Furn•shld Room t
Space tor Rent
Wanted .to Rem
Equrpmenl for Ren t
Fo r Le .. e ..-rp

49 -

614-9«12-6820
82 - Piumbmg &amp; He-''"9
83 - EIICIVIIing
.
94 - Eiectrical &amp; Refrigeretior~

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

95 - Generll Haul1n g
86 - Mobil• Mome Rep•"
87 - Upholslerv

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER 1nd SEWER
UNES

ACREATDEAl
IN
THE

TIUCKING AVAWII

flEE ISTIMATES

992·7458
1-28--81 1 mo. pd.

ClAlCIFIED AM

#1FABP41E8HF214627
1988 Corlica 4 Dr.

Great Pricel

CAll
OHIO PALLET CO.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Is Your Roof Ready For Another Year of lee and Snow?

Now's The nme to Find Out.

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;

CONSTRUCTION
992·2653

For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles
Repairs, Gutters
Building and Remodet.ng
We Gunrnntee Your SntlsJnellon
JRU ISTLMAT!S

JOSEPH D. JACKS

..

t-SI•.

BALLET, TAP &amp; ·~•
JAZZ CLASSES ·

GUN SHOOT
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB

AGES 3 and UP

THE DANCE
COMPANY

Begins Sept. I S
Every Sunday 12 Noon

992-6289

Factory Guns Only
9/9 / 91/2 mo.

11-14-tfn

..

9· 6· 1 mo.

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

·

3-11-tfn

MICIOWA~E
ALL MAlliS

Iring It

Pick Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIY.CE
Aao11 Fro111 Post OHict

USED RAILROAD TIES

POMIIOY, OHIO

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

9191 91 1 1 mo. pd.

992-5335 or
985-3561

I&amp;C EXCAVATING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING :
Umestone. Dirt.
Gravel and Coal
Licensed and Bonded

Custom Frame lepoir

REPAIRS

or 992-5553
01 TOU FlEE
1-100-148-0070
DAIWI' .. , OliO

8-9-1 mo. pd .

·~

Floor Finish
MIKE lEWIS, Ownar

Rt. I, Rutland, OH.

742-2451

g ., 1· 1 mo. pd .

(61 .... sss.oo
New Grips ............ $4.00
Woods ................ s22.00
Irons .................. $14.75

AWARDS

•Reaaonable fl atea
oQuality Work
•Free Estimates
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
Tima
•High Gloss on Tl~

PH . 614-992-5691

AUTO PARTS
Sptclallzlng in

Ulld lrom ............ $5.00
Used Woods ......... $7.00

INDEPENDENT
CAIPET CLEANEIS
and TILE FLOOI CAll

BUUDOIING

COUNTRY CLUB
Lessons

5·31 -'90 tin :

3/ 6/ 90/ tln

WHALEY'S

Golf

985-4473
667-6179

217 I. locentl St.

CHESTER

I

•New Homes
•Garages
•complete
lemodt}ing
Stop I Compare
Frtt Estimatft

Or We

f11

BILL SLACK
992-2269
8· 12-90-tln

BISSEU &amp; BUllE
CONSTRUCTION

OVEN REPAIR

3-14-'91-tfn

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

NEW &amp; USED PARTS
fOR ALL MAKES &amp;

MODELS

992-7013

CEDAR
CONSTRUCnON
992·6648 or
698-6864

'11 / '91 tin

IS · 1 • · '81 -tfn

Serial

#1 G1 LT61WZJY216622
1988 Dodge Doytona

W.H. MOBILE

Serial

HOME PARTS

183CA44K7JG328739
All vohlcloo will be sold
' 'AS IS'' with no warranty or
guarantees.
The tarmo of the sole ore
Cash.
The Home Natlontl Bonk
reHrvet the right to bid at

H you're in need of

Mobile Home Parts
or Accessories...
SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
IT. 33 WEST OF

the ule 1nd to remove any
or all vehiclet from the ule
at ey time.

In order to inapect any of
the above named vehlcln
prior to the oalt arrangemanu may be made by calling 949-2210.
191 16, 18, 18. 20. 4tc

DARWIN, OHIO
8 / 191 1 mo . rtn

Call Sentinel

CLASSIFIEDS!
992-2156

NEW LISTING - 2 story frame home, 5 rooms. 3 bedrooms. completely remodeled, includes most appliances
and central air plus a 16 x 24 garage and deck . ASKING
$37,500.

OPEN
Tueoday thru Snutdey
10:00 am- 6:00pm

·s

DINO·MITE
SAVINGS•••
I

WHEN
THE BEST TIME TO SELL? ANYTIME IS
RIGHT IF YOU CAN GET THE PRICE YOUR HOUSE
DESERVES. WE HAVE PEOPLE CHECKING
EVERYDAY TO SEE IF THAT CERTAIN HOME HAS
BEEN LISTED MAYBE YOURSI SOMEONE COULD
JUST BE ACHING TO OWN THE HOME YOU'RE
IN....NOWI IS THE TIME TO LIST AND SELL WITH
USI
HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................992-G191
TRACY BRINAGER ...........................................949·2439
JEAN mUSSELL......................... ....................948·2660
JO HIU..............................................................985-4466
.OFFICE.............................................................. 99~·2259

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

"'f' 1-(3034)·

773-9560
9 / 9 / 91 / 1 mo. pd .

YOUNG'S

Announcements

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
- R'oom Additions

3 Announcements

•IUY •SEll •TilDE

742-2421
2112 Mi. outside
Rutland on New
lima ld.
5·t0·'9l-tln.

Fatten yw wale!
wtth awant f\d
2

In Memory

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28
Factory Choke
12 Gaugo Shoteun Only

Strictly Enfontlll
9 ·13-'91 -tfn

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WAHANn

WASHm-$100"''
DltYR1-t$6t up
llfiiGDATOIS-$100 up
UNGIS-Got-0...-SI 25 "'' ·

In Memory Of
WILLIAM "Bill"
HARRIS
Died Sept. 1 4, 1978
Sedly mlaaod by Phylllo;
Children Mary_ Ann, Pot,
Becky ond Bill Jr. and
Grandchildren

fRIEJERS-$ US "''
'
JM(IIO OVENS-$79 .,.

lEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE

992-5335 or 915-3561
AcrMs From Post Olfkt
POMROY, ONO
10/a0/'19 ""

·'

- Outler wort.;
- Electrical and Plumbing

Now Opon, Pomoroy Car Wah,'

- ConcNte work

will do h•ndwaeh,
lng.

- Roofing
- lnterktr &amp; Exterior
P1lntlng

(FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill

4

992-621 s

Pom•oy,

w•• • ctun."

We Make Grut Mttchn. carol's
Slnglee, P. 0 . Box 5846, At~~
OH 457111.

Giveaway

3 Kittena, to re11ly good

11·14-'90 lfn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

J~r,

Lholr skills. H1(10.642·21170 ·o•.
304-117H010.
.)
GlvoliWsy: s uonlh Klttona.'
Gray Whllo Longhair. 1 Attoctlonats Black And Whllo, To
Good Ham.. l&amp;t•-448..0317.
KnahOilnd. 1-yr old, good'
watch dog. 814-1192-3~
.,

.i

VERY IEASONAilf
HAVE REFERENCES

Killona, Llttor Tralnod To G&lt;&gt;&lt;iJ
Homel 614-44&amp;-23'16.

(614) 915-41 ao
·9;,;1_
· t;.,;;;m;:;o·.::pd;:._ ,l
L _ _.;•;;;·2:.;:8.;

WORK
(614)
696·1006
6-6-'91

reeding Ieaton•

who with to lmprov•

painting.
let me do it for you.

BACKHOE

horn•r:

Cats : 2 Mele, 1 Femtle, I WMhl'
Old To Good Homol 614-446-

::·
prlv111
adullt

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and

• •t

llwkl old, 2 lamolo • 1 m'Lo;)
Sl4-e&amp;2-T1114
. .•

Ohio

--tl

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

DOWN RIGHT CUTEI - 1· 112 story frame home on 112
acre. Has 2 sheds, cellar. heal pump._sewing room. 2~3
. bedrooms. 1 car garage. drilled well Wtlh etly water available. beautiful oak trim. ASKING $29,000 .

A&amp;B
COMPLOE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

r--~..............

ONE STORY RANCH STYLE HOME - Located in Riggs
Crest Manor. Features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car
aHached garager elec. F.A. heal. partial basement A
REALLY NICE homel ASKING $42,500 Owner will
acx:epl reasonable ofter.

CLOSE TO TOWN - With Room 10 Move - Inside and
out! 2 story frame home with 6 rooms. 3 bedrooms on
3.88 acres. Carport. garage, bam. garden and pasture
space, some fenced. ASKING $29,900.

in the Classifteds%

. , '1

Malo grar strtpod kltton, to aooct 1
homo. 361-47~!110.
Mlnltture Dachshund, Male,
Froo To Good Homo! 614-2455828.

=u~M~W~I~Ih~A~I«~~77
0u~ln-~~0-n~h. ~
You Pick. 114-4o46--3722.

6

•

Lost &amp; Found

LOSTI 15" hubcap lor 19&amp;:1'
Buick Electra. Will qft., ·11
rtward tor h lf found! .,.....:
Cllll14-i82-5712.
' .J
Lost : 4 Af!gora

Goats, In

lh~,·

Aroa 01 Rl.14L And Graham
School Rood. 814-448-2841.

7

Yard Sale

' I

•

1=======:
Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

3 Long holred kill- e wkl ~' .•
yollow &amp;
1111 &amp; wllho, ~~
1•
blk, 304-t78'

wn:;,

clothl~a [
· · Jtona,
Iota 11oy1old··~-!
draporlet,
~de.
lur-

Go-

Bate, ' nlco

nMift, compound bow, mlic:•!
Tltlft Set~~. 19, 1:00-4:00, l.awlai

;;

:

!

NO SUNDAY CAUS

Public Notice

HEMLOCK GROVE - Ranch style home . 6 rooms. 3
bedrooms. Includes shed, barn. shop, cherry orchard,
garden space and lruit trees on 43+ acres. Adcilional
larm items nego~able in sale. ASKING $54,900. Come
see ....make an oner.

.

6 39 Bryan Place
Middleport. Ohio

1

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

ATIITUDES TOWARD THE BIBLE
1. Read it as God's communication With mankind.
2. Read it as being partly from God and part being
uninspired. (which vartes from religion to religion)
3. Read picked (carefully selected F&amp;G) Scrtptures. as
directed by a frtend. preacher. prtest, pastor, or etc.
I
•
I
4. Don't read It, but let others tell you what It says.
,.
(Many from the well taught In theology to the un'
learned claim a special connection wlth .the Lord.)
5. Many read what has been written by celebrities and
others about religion. (Tills Is subjectivity to the
'·
extreme.)
'·
6. Some people could not care less about the Bible.
,.
•'
The Westside Church of Christ reads the Bible as ,.r ,.•'
_..
the Ll)ord of God. (# 1 abotJe). if you are Inters ted
tn studying what the HeatJenly Father says and
teaches, bring your Bible and lecim with us.

992-2772 or
742-2251

ROOFING

PH. 949-210 1
· or Its. 949·2160

Serial

JAMES KEESEE

FIREWOOD
SELLERS

New Hillltts ltlilt
"Free E!ttlm•tea''

~1GKCT18R9HOe15448

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Wlndowt
•Roofing
•tnauletion

Howcrd l. WritMel

Hardwood Slabs
For Sale

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

1985 C.dilac El Dorado
Serial
#1GBEUS788FE876877
1988 Chevy Aotro Van
Serial
#1G8DM16ZXG8167889
1987 Muoteng LX 2 Dr.

J&amp;L
INSULATION

AmNnON

992

I

q S I n.u.

81 - Ho me lmpro,...menta

614-949-2210

PUBLIC NOTICE
On Saturday, September
21. 1991,at 10:00AM. The
Home National Bank. Ra·
cine. Ohio. will offer lor oale
at Public Auction on the
Bonk Perking Lot the following Vthlclea:
1987 GMC Jimmy S 16,
Serial

Dozer, Bmkhoe, Tren(hing Work
Utilities: water, gas, sewer, eledri&lt;.
(us tom and Log Homes
Remodeling and General (ontroding
(ommerdol Development
See us about Sunshine Room Solariums
Jim Clifford-992·7201
Greg Bailey 992-6810 ·

9-6-tfn

!-ll-tl·lf•

Contact Bill Nease At

Lager Beer and-or TuJiamore Dew
for consumption by (him)self and
rricnds in my memory around St.
Patrick's Day, until that time when
Father Bob joins me in my eternal
cottage.' ' '
To the Rev. Donald Brickman
of the Cleveland Roman Catholic
Diocese, Campbell left a small sum
for the annual purchase of tickets to
Blossom Music Center, summer
home of the Cleveland Orchestra.
And for the Rev. John Neary, a
retired priest, Campbell left his golf
balls and tees and $100 "to replenish his supply of both each spring,
in memory of my 1985 Hole in
One, which he has never been able
to match or boast of, lest he ever
forget."

12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

Owner &amp; Operator

79 - Campeu &amp; Motor Homes

RACINE FALL FESTIVAL
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS SPACE
FOR RENT, OCT. 4 &amp; 5

Public Notice

Starting Sept. 22

EMILEE MERINAR

78 - Ctmp•ng Equ•pm•n(

Pomeroy, Ohio

41 - Houses tor Rent
42 - Mobtle HomH lor Renl

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

73 - VIns &amp; 4 \'YO . ,

74 - Motorcy r:: les
76 - Boau &amp; Mot or• for Sale
76 - Auto Parts &amp; Acc •sor i•
77 -- Aut o Aepe"

Real Estate General

Priest's will instructs
frief;lds to enjoy inheritance

MO.LE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

· 4-16-16-tfn

Wante d to Buy
L•vestock
Hay &amp; Gra1n
Seed &amp; Fer tilu•r

l;fiti1Fll

.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE :
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

62 63 64 65 -

35 - Lotl &amp; Acreage
36 - Real Estau Wenhd

45 46 47 48 -

Cet Recufft Fast

••

.

R~al

43 - F~rmt

New Miss America ~
begins her reign

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

22 - Niontrt to Loin
23 - Prot•IIOPII Serv1cH

31 - Homei.tor S.l e

576 - Apple Grovl
773 - Maaon ·
882 - New Haven
895 - letart

NO SUNDAY CAllS

Transporlalion
21 - Butineu Opportunity

•U - A~1rtment

ALOHA FROM ATLANTIC CITY • Miss America 1992 Carolyn Suzanne Sapp, or Hawaii nashes the Hawaiian hand sign for
alhoa to photo~raphers as she poses on the beach in Atlantic City
Sundar mornmg. Miss Sapp is the first Miss America from ,. •
Hawaii, (AP)

.••

16 - Schoalt &amp; lnnruC1•o n
16 - Aadio. TV '&amp; CB Repan
1 7 - Misce!l•l'1toU I
18 - Wanted To Do

M .. on Co . WV

843 - Portland

PH. 949·2101
or les. 949-2860
Day or Night · ·

61 - Ferm Equipment

Area Code 30•

379 - W~nat

E
...""
'*E
:;)

11 - Helll Wanted
1 2 - S•tuat•on Wanted
13 - lnsurlnce
14 - Bus•ness Trammg

Arfll Code 614

Vinton
Aio Orande
Gt.JVIn Oist
Arabia D1U

"41 RtaiOIIGblt Prien"

Farm SUIJIJIIP.s
&amp; L1 vestuck

Meui• County

318245266643-

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

!56 - Build•ng Su~piiM
66 - Pets for Sal t~
!57 - Mua•c~ lnurument 1
58 - Frultl &amp; Vegtttbl•
59 - For Sale or lrtde

Ser v1ces

Are• Code 6, 4

458 - leon

·'BISSELL
BUILDERS

Employment

Gellia County

367- Ch•hire

(A venture of J&amp;F Contracting ond K&amp;J Conslruction)

4-29-91

53 - Ani iques
54 - M11c Mer chand•se

5 - Happy Ada

9 - Winted to Buy

pa~es .cot'er I he

.05/ dav

62 - Sport ing Goodt

8 - Publ• c Sale &amp; Au c11on

- z,oo

;$toeA//

Locahd 011 Safford School ld. off lt. 141
(6141 446·9416 or 1·100·872·5967

51 - Household Good'

2 - ln Mem o ry

3 - AI1noucement s
4 - Givuwa\"

Y1rd Sal•

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION
- 11 :00AM SATURDAY
- 2 ,00 PM MONDAY
- 2 .00 P.M TUESDAY
P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2·00 PM . THURSDAY
- 2 ·00 P.M FRIDAY

nn::,:nnalllll.

BENNETT'S

Merchandtse
of Thanks

Happy Ada

jol/ou:in[{ le/ephonf' exchan/[eS ...

..:.

We assemble at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.
on Sundays, and also at
7:30 p.m. on Wednesdays.
Our meeting house is on
Children's Ho111e Road in Pmperoy.
i·
You WUl·Be W~lcOmel
. .· 1· ,,

1 - C~rd

"A Clluified advertisement placed'" TneOail\" Sentmell•• ·
cept - cl•sified ditpl-v. Butin'\t Card 1nd lagal notiCII )
w ill lito appear in lhe Pt Ple•ant Register and lh• Galli
polis D1ily Tribune . reachino over 1 8 . 000 homn

•

HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES, INC.

,. seoarate ads

6 - Lost 1nd Found
7 - v.,d Sal e !PIId ln ldvii'1 CI! I

•Ads thl! must be Pl•d m 1dv1nce 1re

~

CUYAHOGA FALLS (AP) A Roman Catholic priest who died
last momh . figured that as long as
he couldn't take it with him, his
fellow clerics might as well have a
good time with his money.
When Msgr. Thomas P. Campbell died al age 65 he left three fellow pries ts money 10 be used
specifically on items such as beer
and golf balls, according to the will
filed Friday in Summit County Probate Court!
Campqell was pastor of St.
Joseph Ch)Jrch in Cuyahoga Falls.
about 10 ll)tlcs cast of Akron.
To the Rev. Robert Donohoe,
pa stor of Mother of Sorrows
Church in Peninsula, he left $1,000
'' to replenish his supply of Harp

d~s

•sentinet is not responsible t.or errors after fir&amp;t day !Check
tor •"oft tirst d8'W' ad runs 111 paper) Call before 2 00 p m

~
&amp;

.60

I 60 diSCOunt lor Ids paid'" edvan~e
- G•new1y and Found eds under 15 wCirdt wtll be

•Pric. of ad for all upitell,.tars " double pu ce of ad coSI
"7 point line lype only used

;

113 .00

91 .30 / day

Now /11- ·

tor conMcutiVe r un s broken updtrY s will be cherged

MetQI . Gallia or 1\hs on countt• mvst b e pre·

••1\
,,•·~

89 .00

Over 1 e Wordl
.
.20
.30
.42

Rete
S4.00
S6 .00

.llll:ll!llalll -

AIR
' CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOilLE &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES

•

ablcd.
If a widow starts her benefits at
age 60, she gets a smaller amount
than she would if she waited until
age 65. Although generally, the
fact that she gets benefits over a
longer period of time more that
compensates for the reduction.
A widow who has worked under
her own Social Security number
can choose to lake her widows benefits at age 60 and then switch to
her own retirement benefits at age
65 if it will give her more money.
A widow who remarries after
age 60 can continue to receive her
widows benefits. Widows benefits
arc also available to divorced
women if the couple were married
at least I 0 years.
To apply for widows benefits,
you will need your own Social
Security number and your hu sband's. You also need your biqh
certificate, marriage certificate a~d
the death certificate. A divorced
widow also needs to furnish the
divorce decree. If you need help
getting any of these documents,
you can call our office for information.
The Athens Social Security
office is located at 221 1/2 North
Columbus Road. The telephone
number is 592-4448.

Cooking up ingredients
in kitchen renovation

_,_

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

By Brian J. Reed
By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens

8 siness Services

. r·

··--- ...
~

~\.

.

Lano, Sondy Hgta.

..

•,

�MOnday, September 16, 1991
~The Dally Sentinel

Page

7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beallie

Yard Sale

41

Pomeroy,
Middleport

2br Un1urnlohod Wl1h Stove.
Otpooll Rotoroncoo, In Gol·
ilpolll. No Polo. can B-t2, w,
6t4-448-241V.

&amp; VIcinity

3 bedroom home cloH to
~ehooll and holphal, r.t.r•nct

All Vard Saln MU81 Bt Paid In
Advan~ .

O..dllne: 1:OOpm th•
day e.tore th• ad le to run,
Sunday edition. 1:00pm Friday,
Monday
edition
10:00a.m.

Merchandise

Houses for Rant

ond dopoolt.301-C75-3155.

51

Monday, September

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

wlbulh·ln
microwave oven. 3yrs old, $300.

Doubl....tdo rolrlgorotor, 3yro
old, $500. Olhor 1umlluro lor
1111. 814-62·5042

1117 Toyolo, 2 Whlll D~vlo
57,000 llllu, Air, Toppor, Bid
Unor, ti.OOO. 114-251·1203.
1181 louzu PU $3,185; 1118
Chivy S-10 P.U. $3,815; 1188
Ford F-150, P,!!1 $2,81B; 11JI
Ford Aontor, "" 114,71a· 11JS
Chovy S-10, 4x4, ilt.i $3,115· 1885
Chivy S-10 PU, $1,815· ' 1185
GIIC Jimmy Blazor, U)eS; 1183
CDodhlvy S.R10, PU, $1,515; 19112
•a• ompogo, PU, $1,485.
Bllr "uto 81111 Hlghwoy teO
Nonh. 114 445 5o55.
'
1100 Ford F-150, XLT Ll~ol, 414,
pw, AMIJ'II olor~, duol goo,
loodocl lruek, 17,000 ml, $1500
firm, 814-112-4225.

County Appllaneo, Inc. Good
Ulld opplllnCII, T.V. oolo. Opon
8 1.m. to e p.m. Mon ...Sit. 814~-1899,

llpollo, OH

627 3rd. Ave. Gal·

Flex StMI aofe, ch1lr, love ...t
$600. Queen IIZI box 1prlng1 I
mattrna (brand n1w) 1300. "304-

67&amp;-1431.
GOOD USED

APPUANCES
w..h.,., dry_., retriger•tora,
rongoo. Skoggo Apt&gt;lllncoo
Upper Alvor A~. BHiolo Slo,.;
c..ot Motel. can 114-445-73ll.
Hot Point dlohwaohor, au-

iood

•-11, •14 ... ..... cond, 1ntlquo
-Ann 10t1,
• ... ·~4.
LAYNE'S FURNIIUAE
eomp111o homo 1uml~l~.
HO&lt;Iro: M....Sot, t-$. 5
0322, 3 mille ...r Bulovllll Ad.
F- Dollvory.

~~·
14x70 ttvM bedroom tl'lllllr,
lorgo eounlry lot, Bud Chollln
Ad, Point Plt..ant, 304--eTS-3508 after 5 :00PM.

1988, 14170 mobllo homo, 30467&amp;-7188.
2br Mobile Home Rtltrtncn

And Dopooh Roqulrod. 614·256·
1922.

3-BA mobil• home approx. 3-ml

trom Pomeroy or
514-62·5858

:a

Public Sale

3br MobUe Home. Reference
And Dopooh Roqulrod. 814-441-

&amp; Auction

0527.

' Rick Purwon Auction Com pony,

For till Of rent tr'lllltr l 3 ICNI
SA 143, call oHor 5pm 304-882:
2004.

: full lime tuctlonHr, complete
, tuctlon Hrvlee. LlcenH&lt;I Ohio,
, West VIrginia, 304-Tn-5785 .

:g

good utod bicycle,
: evening• 0*247·2813
• Wanted all lunk and acl"'p mat·

' 5441.

: Wonlod To Buy: Junk Autoo,
. Serop llllol And F101 Aomovol
, From Woll Vlrglnlo. 814-441·
' 0013.

. Top PrieN Pold: All Did U.S. Wlntld: MOIIVIted Sllla Ptr80n
· Colne, Gold Ring~ Sliver Colne,
Gold Coln1. M.T.::t. Coin Shop,

151 Soeond Avonuo, Gallipolis.

Employment Services
Help Wanted

$2,500 CREDIT CAROl
.Guoronllld oomo doiloopprovoll
Aloo quollly tor
dopooH
VISAIIIC ond cooh odvone01. 1·
800-271-2000 EICI. 2524.
$3501DAY PROCESSING
·PHONE ORDERS! PEOPU
CALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
.

1-8&lt;l0-255-0242.

• $20,000 • $52,000 1at

v..r

0

Trolnlng P&lt;Qvldod. ~porllncod 814-448-G038.
Preterrld. Send R11ume To:
Box CLA 010, clo Galllpolle Rio Orondo, 3 Bedroom, 3 Lolo,
Dolly Trlbuno, 825 TOird Avonuo, LA, Llrgo Fr, Dr, 1 112 Bolho,
VInyl Siding, 2 Cor Gorogo, CA,
Golllpollo, OH 45831.
JoeiiZll, $51,000. 814-245-1215.
12
SHuatlon
32 Mobile Homes
wanted
for Sale
Dodrill'o Privott Nome Co,.:
Have Room In My Home For 1
Eldoriy lion And 3 Eldorly

Lldlu. 114-388-hll, S14-388-

112tl.

Fomolo Would Llkl To Shore
Homo With Somo Of Wl\1 ~~
Clro For Elderly Lody. 6 4
11801.
Pe.-.on or persona lnttrMted In

$4QO WllkiY Or llloro Stuffing
Envetopaa At Home. Ru.h $1.00

S.A.S.E. 110 To: D&amp;A Suppilo~ 1
P.O. Bo1 1443, Folrbom, OK
45324.
AVON • All ordoo, tall Morllyn
Wuvor 304-182-2845.
Amazing lllonoy llloklng Pion 8v
'PASE COrp., Inc:. Aotlro In 1~
Monthtl FrM lnform1tlon, Wrfte:
D&amp;A Supplllo, D.L. Of A.C. Hor-

• ~' P.O. box 1443, Falrbom

living on farm

a

holplng with

choret; Send ""'Y to: Box

CLAOII, e/o GolllpoUo Doll7.
TrlbunoJ.!I_25 Third Avonuo, Go •
llpollo, un 45131.

14

Business
Training

Rolroln
-111Soulhlll1orn
Buolnooo Colllgo, ~f"~ Volley
PII.ZI. Coli Todoy, I
-411711
Aoglotorollon .-127118.

; Qhlo 45324.
'
• Attantlonl Earn up To $500 18 Wanted to Do
: WMkly Rlldlng Booka And T.V. ;;:':'~~:-:::=_:_:-~~
Scripta AI · llony Aoodoro Buoh Hog Sorvlcl. Aouonobll
1· !jllclldl Fuii/Pori·Timo 1~1· Roloo. No Job To Smolll 514•3"·7000 Ext. 285, 24 Houro.
371-2142.
Child Coro Avoilobll In My
A!!STAALIA WANTS YOU
• C.eotllnt
Poy,
Bono111o, Homo. Coli 114-441-11413.
• Tronopor1ollon,
407~12-41117, Dozer tor hire, c:~::raton,
: Elt 571. lo.m.·10p.m. Toll 304-6711-2784 or
71138.
,Ratundod.
Goorgu Portobll Sowmlll don"l
~VoN I All Aruo I Shlrioy haul your loao to lhl m{U 'juot
:. .ep..,., 3044'75--142t.
coli 304475·1157.
:· Avon-Sto~ your own Buolnon HouH c'-nlna or ottlct cleal'to
, IlK Ch~llmoo. Roeolvo $20.00 lng, coli 514-812-3841.
, frM Avon Glftol can 514-611HouMCIIaning, wlndoWa, tall
• 4370.
yard wort ahd car clunlna.
~• ~~~~---------­
81 on TV many netdtd tor Ruoonobla rotn by tho jo6,
commerclala. Now hlrtng 111
I!JM. For calling Info e~ll 615- havo roloroncn. tall JlD'o
Cloonlng SlrvlcNJ lom-4pm
770-7111 oxl. T~37.
dolly 11814-141-:JOSr.
CABI.i TV JOBS
No explrlence
necnury. Mlee Peu..'t Day Care Center.
$11.50n1r. For lntorrn1tlon, et111· Sot., ollordobll, chlldeo,.. 11-F
100·137·e2621 extension 88S2. a o.m.• 5:30 p.m. Agoo :n.10.
8:00om-41:00pm, 7 doyo, 112.05 Botoro, after oehool. Drop-lno
wllleomo. 114-4464224. Intoo.
lam Toddllr Coro, 5t4-44W227.
Cooo llonagor, Fuii-Timo, Work- WIM Bobyo~ In My Homo, Juot
11111 In Gallla And Joekoon ott 180, On Bulovlllo Plko, Eo·
Countltt.
Minimum
And Atferencat. 114Ouollllclllono, High Sehool perience
4411-2845.
Dl'plomo, E1porltnco Dulrod,
Btntfha Offered. Send Rnume Will Bobyoll In II~ Homo Or
To: F.A.C.T.S. A1. 2 Bo1 273-A, Y0&lt;1ro,
Any11mol
Gol·
Bidwell, OH 45814.
Soplom- Upoiii/Kygor
Crook
Anlt.
bo&lt; 271h, 111111. 111/FIH, .O.E.
Aolorlf1CIII AvoHobll. &amp;14-448EARN MONEY Audlng BooMI 11284, or 114-441-1721.
$30,000/yr. lneomo Polonllol.
Dolollo. f1l 805-1182-8000 ~II . y.
Financ1al
111181.
:

J

Bl

E11y Work! Excellent Ptyl Aa-

oomblo Produc11 AI Homo. tall
Business
Toll FrM, 1-800-4&amp;7-6588, Ext. 21
313.
OpportunHy
HAIRSTYUST
NEEDED:
INOTlCEI
Gouronllld f170 Wllk Plul OHIO VALUY PUBLISHING CO.
llorol Pold Vocollono. 814-446- rocommondo lhot you do bull7287.
" - with -pll you know ond
NOT lo oond monoy through tho
KUWAIT, SAUDI JOBS
mall Un!:ll you havelnvntfgatld
S3$MOUA +I llor&gt;'Womon Now thooHorlng.
Bolng Hired. All Fllldo. Pold
Tronoptlrotlon. For Info tall t· 3bt Hou11 And luslnns. In
1102481~227 Ext. 2524.
Spring Valley Ana. Buelne..
11oM Your Plymomol AoKUWAIT, SAlJill WORKERS Will
klng $90,000. 814-«8-11210, 304NEEDED: $35.00 &amp; Up Por Hour. 575'!1105.
Tu Froo. Both Sklllld I Unokl~
loci For lnlo. Coli a15-770-SB05 Allontionl Styling Solon For
En K.f!IQ.
Solol P~mo LocoDon. can 114Need IOfntOI'W wlh exDII'ienca 446-. 114-4411..:W.
to wortc with oldorly lady, Mon.· FOR
SAU:
CHRISTIAN
Sot. I :OOorn-5:30pm. 114-62· BOOKSTORE ;rowing, rowtrd·
Ina ulnooo. Pllty roloco11ng.
22:17
514-384-2275, allor ·a 114-384PI~ limo Bobyol11or -od In 23412.
WOohirlglon SChool Dlllrlcl. 1
Hour And 1 Hour Allor Locol Vondl;\:;3'~, For Soil
- n c o Roqulrod. Choop.1. l.ocol P•y Phont A...ro. Big
Per1~1mo Cllfng lar ptr11ally- $$$. P~Cid Righi. t.eoa-t515•mbulatary __, .,.,.,.. In hir 111D.
home.
lncttidlll
light
ltouooQoplng. 11oM mume,
Real Estate
tncludlna · roll,._, o/o Box
ne-D, " " DillY
Ohio, 411tt.
31 Homes for Sele
SHOW DIRECTOR
Nlllonll R - lllrkollng Film
Snko llotlvolld Poroon For
Booth AI CATFISH FESTIVAL,
tl3-133-1375,1133-844l

-·-·
lc-.

Pol••ow.

'

-Inti.

Nlct 2 Story Houoo, Second
Avon•!. Goiiii)Oiil, 2 BothoJ.Now
301130 alock Ooroao, With o.;haln
Unk Fonco. ClooiTo Evorylhlng
In Townl Roody To llovo lnlol

(Two) one bdrm epee untur-

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNIIURE. 52
Olivo St., Golllpollo. Now &amp; Ulld

nlohod, par1111 utllhloo pold
and reterencu ~
qulrod, 514-112~014 .
1 I 2 bdrm opt In Mlddloport,
Utllltn Fum, dep req, no pete,
514·112·2218.
tbr Apa~monl, 1 Eftleloncy
Apo~monl , Cl- To Unlvorolly
01 Rio Orondo. 514-381-IIMa.
2 Bod.-n API~mim Acr-

From Unfve,.hy Of Rio Grand..

Ohio. All U111Hioo Pold. 514-38811141.

2br Furnlohod, Wolor, Hill Furnlohod. Wtlhlr, Dryor, C.rpo1.
No Polol 20 Gropo Stroot. 614-

446~544

:f:~mtnte For

Rent, 114-441-

lor 1hl Eldorly. Go~
ill Manor Aportmonta. J55 Buhl
1m Flomlngo 12x50 2 BR, goo llo~on Road. Dulenod lor lhl
tumoco1 carpollng, good cond. Sonlor CHizan (112 I Oldlr) and
Hondlcoppod poroono. Equal
$3800. 014-388-8724.
houolng
oppor1unhy.
Ap1m VenDvk• 14x70 Mobile pllcltloilo moy bo plc:kod up ol
Home, 8'14-3aa..0054, It No Spring V.111y Pt;r~ ~ Joek·
Anewer 114-388-8808.
oon Plko or ootll
441 8 30.
1m 14170, 2br, Don Ap- BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
plloncoo, Block. Skirting, Pordl. BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
Toto! EIICI~, Aodueocf, $15001 ESTATE!I1 . 538 Jocklon Plko
114 388 5381.
•
from $11Jilmo. Walk to ohop 1
11114 SehuHr 14ri5, 2 BA, oil movllo. Coll514-445-2568. EOH.
electric, underpinning, 2 por- Complotoly Fumlohod Smell
chol, outbuilding. Mull bo HouH, No Pete, Yerd, Plut
moved. 514-448-1223.
UtNIIIH. $235/mo. 814-445-4338.
1118 14170 two bedroom moblll Colllgo, good tor 1, corpotod,
homo, 304..75-7188.
atovt rth1g, bath, quttn elzt
AIC, lOIII l .. ct, 304-t75Bonk Aopol 10114 tl,.ploco COUCh,
11042.
colhodrol colllnp•· Mutt otli
lmmodlotolyl Col t-1100-488-71171 EHicilrley, otovo, rot both
Ilk lor A~ or Todd.
w/oho.,.r1 •ole all olocl, lull eorpotod, HuD occplod, 304-87&amp;Looking For A Otol? Conaldor A 1200.
Apo~rnonla

B•nk Reclaimed Mobile Home.

$500 Down With Approved
Crodlll Grool Sollellonl FrM
Sit-Up And Dollvoryl Coli Elooo
Home Center, 1-800-581-5711.

Mobllt home tor aa11 or rent
vory nlco, unturnlohod, 14xl0
w/8128 expando, deck, under·
panning, centrel air, Included.

RENTZ OWN
514-44Wial
Vl'ro Fumlluro
Sola I Choir, t11.10 WMk'
Rocllnor, H .47 W11k, Bwlvol
Aockor, $3.81 W•k.lunk Bod
Complllo $8.41 -k, 4 Drawer
Choot,
$3.28 Wool; - · Bodroom Suho,
7 pc., $18.17 WMk,
lncludta Boddlng.Country Plno
Dtnotto WHh ·Bonch a 4 Chelro
$10.118 W11k.OPEN: llonday
Thru Soturdoy, la.m. to 5p.m.,
Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
IIIIH 011 Aouto 7 On Routt 141
rn Conlonory.
'
Solid ook chino eoblnol wnlghto.
Glau ahelvH. 1 year old. $800.
Ook plo oolo, 1 yoor old. $300.
Aftor 4pm 814 4458000.

deposit

: ol, 304-885.0038.
· Worold to buy, Stondlng Umbo&lt;,
· Bob Wllllomo I Sono 614-112·

PICKENS FURNITURE
NowoiJIId
Houoohold 1umlohlng. 112 mi.
::"'~~~. P1-n•. wv.

Apanmant
for Rent

Wanted to Buy

· Boyo

11

lllddlopo~ .

good cond., 1140.

Fumlahed Apartment, 1 Bed-

Pold, $2751.!!_2 llllto
Eoot "' Por1or. 114-358--3.
Fumlohld Apo~monlo, 1br,
$225 Utllhln Polcl 120 Fou~h
Avo, a 107 Second Ava, Gol·
llpolll. 114-448-4418 ollor 7p.m.
roomL.~otor

Prl..lo 101 Golllpollo, Ohio 304-

furniture, hutera, Wntem &amp;

Wortc booll. al4-448-31al.

' VI'RA FURNITURE
. 514-44Wial
UVING ROOM: Sola &amp; Choir
Stea.oo· Recline• $141 oo!
Swlvol Rockor, SIG.Oo; Colli.~ I
End TobiN, $81.00 Sot.DINING
ROOM: Tobll With 4 Podded
Cholro, $141.00; Country Plno
Dlnotlo Wl1h Bonch And 3
Cholro~, $2111.00; Melching 2
Door Hitch $34G; Or ~1. 00
Sol; Dok Toblo1 42x82 Wllh 5
Bow
Boc•
Chllro
$62G.OO.BEDROOII: Poolor B~
room Buho (5 pc.), $34G.OO; 4
Drowor Choot, 1144.1t; Bunk
Bod, $221; Compllto Full 11111
Sl~ $105.00 Sot; 7 pc. Coder
Bedroom Sullo, $81G.OO.OPEN:
llondoy Ttvu Solurdoy, lo.m. to
5p.m., SUndoy 12 N-. Till
~. m . , 4 MIIH Ott A...ro 7 On
Route 141 In Conlonory.

53

Antiques

Buy « 1111. Alvlflno Anllquoo

1124 E. Mtln Street, Pomeroy:

Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. lo 8:00
p.m,_!undoy 1:00 to 5:00 p.m.
814-w•-m8.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
1-Envi-Co,. (Rongor-2) oloottlo
wheel chair, power roUe, new

w/oll oqulpmonl, $1200. 114-1142·
3071 or 'M2·11~
15 Inch Gl~o llcycll, Purple
And Whho, Now 'flroo, $25.00
30447&amp;-1433 Aftor Sp.m . .
19!11 John Dooro Modo! 8
Aobuln, hcollonl Condhionl
Hyotor 4 Slog41 Fork Uh 3
Trolllr Alloo, &amp; Trollor Bod. 614448-2351.
~ohn 0tor Bulldozer, 5-woy
blodo, $0000. 514~47-4881

2T' ton opted blllo. $75. 21 cu n
rolrlgorllor $425. Wotw So~
, ..., $145. Soil DfODII .,....,
$45. Control air c:Oncr $475. 30417&amp;-2111.
270 gol. lull oil lonk, 304·773!1177.
•
Baby Swing, Boby Wolkor, High
Chair, C.ll814-441.0020.

Fl.llllahorl opt. 1107 2nd Gal·
578-2312.
I
llpolla. 1 BR, $2211L utNHiu paid.
Now 1992 t4180 throe bedroom ou 441 4410 1her r p.m.
2 lull bathohohlnglo roo!, vlnyi FL1111ohod Elllellney $115/mo
aiding,
• uttel'l,
carpeted Utllhlol Peld, Shoro 'Both lOY
throughout, 111 di')'WIIII lnltrlor ~ Avo, Golllpollo, 11i441ond 3-boy window. f17,117.00. 44t5 Aftor 7p.m.
Coii1-I00-1'2t-4045.
Oroclouo llwlng. 1 ond 2 bod- Clult., Ring, 1 C.rM, Dllrnond,
Now Cltlylon, Sharp Ao A Tock, room apertmenta at VIllage 24 K Gold. $500. 514-445-304G.
14x70,
3 Bedroom, Totel Menor
ond
Rl-oldo
EJoctric, f13,815. Nowho,. Eloo Apo~monto In llldcli1110r1. From Concrete • pl1ttlc •pUc tanka
But El110 Homo Cantor. Call 1· filii. Cell114-112·7781. EOH.
Ron Ev•n• EnltrprfMI, Jack~
5t4-m-1220.
oon, OH 1-8&lt;lll-637-8528.
1·BA, 1umllhld opa~rnont
In lllddilpor1, 514-62-4225
34
Business
Nloe olein cuiTMI:Iy tvallable
Buildings
ept, 1 bedroom for elderly, hanOFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on dleoppod ond dlooblocl Alvor
2nd Avo., Golllpollo. Clooo lo Bond P1 ..., 304-182-3121. E.O.H.
Court House. 1 room, 2 roome,
~ roomt, 4 rcomt. All nicely Complllly Fumlohod mobllo For Sill: IBM P.C. Duol D~vo,
lllonHor, Son~ P.R. 5000
decorated, air conditioning horne, 1 mill blfow tOW!\ OYira Color
Printer · lnllructlon BooM. S..
your water &amp;uwer bill are ptJid: loolllng rtvor. No Polo, ""· 614- Gtno
AI Clono Johnoon
Make your chok:e now. No 446~338.
qudtt over the phone you Nonh 3rd Sl,&gt;tllddlopor1, Ohio, 1 , Chlvrlool, Uppor Route 7, Go~
mu11 - lhtm. Phone lor on bedroom fumlsheclapt, refel"'n· llpolll, Ohio.
oppolntmont 514-441-711111 day en
ond dopooH roqulrod. 304- Guns, guna, aune, 304-675-6132.
446·9539ovt.
• 11112~568.

35

No~h

Lots &amp; Acreage

Lota &amp; a&lt;:raage avallabl• for
home conatructlon on
Rayburn Road. P1ved road,
county
w1t1r,
reeaontblt
r11trlctlons . Complete Inform•·
tlan mall-et on nqueat. 304-675-

41hlulllddlopon, Ohio. 2

bedroom mlshed epl, depoaft
and reflnnce r.qulred, 304-882·

•

1887 N"- 4x4, black, low
mll11, liM ovor poymonlol 81~­
H24347
.

Rangt

Rodney VIllage II . 1330/mo. 814446~14 .

Television
Viewing

00 'tOU THINK IF I UU.IW.K l'lb·lln'•IW
1.£ llj(,llf Be ~[..!!II'J.Il':

C!Wf'Nff."
I~ 1\liS Nf..

111t C:hlv~B-10, IIII.OOo 111111, 4
llndtr, Rally Whono,
.... ,..2 .. 30447J.tll45. •

polo, $2115". 304-458-1875.
3br Fenced In Yord, l.ocolod

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

~N.JIM

~,.,-.:!,_4

S - - - . 2110 N. lloln S1,
IUM, daposft, r.terencea, no

Solurdoy.

BORN LOSER

72 Trucks for Sale

Household
Goods

C.Jorlc

16, 1991

~ - ••

73 V"nS &amp; 4 WO'
"

MON•• SEPT. 16 •

WJNDOS
2

EVENING

1:oo m• w
ONews

CDCiubc-t

(I) Au Ill 'II "--nbbw Stereo.
I

SORRY. MAAM. THERE WAS
NO ONE TO STAY WITH MY
DOG TOOAY SO I ~AD TO
8RIN6 1-liM WITH ME ..

NO, AS LONG AS ~E
1-lAS SOME CRAYONS, ~E
WON 'T BE AN'(

~odey

Ql Woftd
UT-'tPiomiM

Merchandl

se

Uood utollltt equipment, In·
eluding wholl oyllom wllh
doeodoro, roeoiV'!!., dloh I
doeodor, 514·112-11rJ
Woodbumw wHh lrlplo llnor
l::i.I~:~~~'W~: Rowing

55

Building
supplies

Block, brlek, - • olpoo, wlndowa, llnte.le, etc. Cl1ude Wintort, Rio Gronde, OH Coli 114245-512t
Six oil o1111 bldga. Factory
doolo. ..... ..., .-. can
dollvor. Will orocl. 'TWo 301140
2,401110, 'TWo 501100. Coil noW
and nHrvt 303-74J..4810.

56 Pets for Sele
T1
0;;-room--ond-:--:Su:--~..:...-Sh,.,-:r.:-..,-ol

Transportation
Autos for Sale

1,800 mllu.L. robuiH onglnt:
$1,000. 304-er&amp;-1118.
1181 Kowaukl ZL 1100 otrool
blko, now ~~~~ory a luno

..

ylea.

on

7V28.

AKC Dobormon Plnoehor pup,
moll, h4-1142-3004.
AKC Aogtl1orod A»ricol llolo
Poodle Pup. 12 W11b Old. $100.
514-388-lllltt Aftw 5p.m.
Booutllul Boogll Pupo, 7 WMM
Old. $251 :r MollO And 3

~~-~.
C«vllll,

""

ettvor/oiltvor,

MIN.Il4-24l'ollfl.
1m Cldllllc EJ Doroclo. Good
Condhlon. $800. 114-2514278
Alllr4p.m.
'

up, eJC cond,

75-6858.

r-..

'

Roglllorod Block And W11ho,
Uvor And Whho, Dolmollon
Pupo For Soil. ANdy October
3rd., 514-441-1755.
Squlrrol dog, 3044711-11132.

!iT

Musical
lnstrumems

Trumpot tor - . 304-f78-4255
eolloltor 4:00 PM.

58

Fruits&amp;
Vegetables

cannl1111 Poochll now ovollalto Bartlett Paan and Prun.i
Plume Iller In Auguot. C.H 1·
800-447-3710 lor prlcM. BOB'S
MARKET, Muon or Golllpolll,
OH.

Farm Supplies
&amp;Liv estock
61 Farm Equipment
teo IIIF Troctor, SharD! With a
Foot Buoh Hog, $4,5$0; 50 IIF
With How 5 Foot Buoh Hog,
$3,1115. Chonor Will Flnoncol 5~
268.. 522.
1G84 500c lntornollonol DOlor
run• good, a.wa~ blade, winch'
814-62·2384, or 112-3851
'
For Solo: Corn Plcl&lt;oro, 1 And 2

Home OuHn wood cook stove Row Wheel Diaka. Pickup Dlek.
$200.00, woodbumer S250 oo Wheat Drtlle, Squere Battre
men'• Lev1'1 501 tlze 30w-321 Utility Trailer, HorN Trailer'
614-7112·2562
' Sttnderd Bnd Colt, Howe'i

1....

1114 , ...... h Conqueotc~oo
Turbo, SPIId1. ADDiox. ou,OOO
111110, Bilek With 'elroy Interior.
114 411 4431.
1$55 Ce111110 lroc, Buraundv.
Wl1h Rod lntortor. 15,500. 5*
3884353 Aftw 5p.m.
1155 Dodge Sholby Chlrgor
turbo, I opMd, 70,o6o mi1111 _Z;ti
m~s::.'rp, opor1y, $2,850. ..,._

8

.

1155 Ford Tornpo OL, Runt
o'= Body Good Condnionl
$1, . 814-38H047.
.
1155
Oldomoblll
Cutlloo
Supromo Brouahom All Ellrul
Low ~:11 ar,1 Excotllnt Condl·
tlonl 8
-4053.
1117 Horizllfl $2,100. 1115 llor·
cury Lynx $800. 1155 Covollor
$000. 1114 Trone Am $2.500.
304475-2440.
1817 Oldt Dtl11 81, 52,000 111111,
All P-r. Air, Ellctlllnl Cond~
lion. 114-448-4225, Alar 4p.m.
1151 Comoro AS Block u1,
grey Int. 37,000 ml111. All pwr.
ot&gt;llono, tronotor- 1 yr.

4

10,000 mile warNnty. TradM
-•plod. $5150. a14-44U381

or a14-4411-11114
1181 Chivy Borella, $3,115;
till Nl-n Sonlro 13.285; 1887
Pontile SUnblrd, 52,215; 1181
Chivy Collbrhy, $4~j 1887
P1ymoulh HorirOn, Sll!!IJ; 1881
Chivy C.valltr, $4,no; 1...
Chivy Clvolllr $1,4118; 1114

Form lloehlnory, A1. 124 And
2518.
Honda Power Plent EX-1000 Mtyhew Road, Jackaon Ohio
Ono Bodroorn Aportmont living Sako 30:05 Rlfll, $700; Sovogo 814·255-5144.
'
·
Room Fumlohod, Comploto 22 Magnum, $150; Boor ComChevy Camano $1,1118; 1W
JD 2010 Troctor Whh How Buoh Chevy
Kllchln Shi&gt;wor In Bolh, Gao pund. lr14-4411-8111.
Novo $1,585; 1155 Ford
Hog
$3,250i,_1355
Ollvor
Dlnol
Hfll,
Air
CondHion,
Woohor
And
5253, John D. Gorioeh no
Exp tt,585; 11113 Chivy Covollor
Howard Shvwcaa Commerc:lal With Plow, 1r1naport Di8G And
Dryer,
Good
Nllghborhood.
alngl•wldotrolloro, ploooo.'
$1""1.~&amp;; 11182 AIIC !IW $1,1115!
Roloronco And Dtipooll R• F-m 49cu. ft. $2500.00 Aloo Buoh Hog S5,150;_0wnor Will SW,
1113 . - Cu1- tt.llll; 1tu
•r,proxlmllely 300 previously Flna~ . f14o2M-IDZL
1-vacant lot In Middleport all qulrod. 814-448·1370 Aftor 5p.m.
Chivy Covollor $1,2115; 1114
\1 ewed movl11, 614-,.2-2003
utllltln 1nd 1·1torage building
Jlm'o Fann Equipment, SA. 35, Ronoun MH; 1i7l o.taun 280-Z
814·1G2·2807.
• Small 1br Apirtment, 7 Court
Slraot, Kllchon Wllh Stove, Husky Homo Lllo and lleCul· Will GIIIIIDOIIa, 514-441-1177T; $815. B&amp;D Auto SoiH, Highway
2 acre Iota, Union Road back of Rotrigoroto.r1• $185/mo.
Pluo loch chain oowo mortcod down Wldo oollc11on now a ulld llrm 180, Hor1h. 814-44HII5.
Sopl. Salt. Sldoro Equlpmant lroctoro a lmplornonta. Buy,
New H1ven, county watll', hard Otocioll, utllltloo, Aoforonct.
11118 Oldt Cu11111 Supromo
. Henderson, WV. 304-67$.7421. ' Mil, trldli, l:oo..5:00 wllkdlye,
614-445-4126.
lop rood, 304475-41551.
17,000 111111, 1 Owner, AIIIFM
Storoo1Couo111, ...- nroo
2nd Lllllo glrlo clclhlng. Llrgo Sot. 1111 Noon.
7t acrn, clty water, Hptlc, pi"' Un1urnllhld optr1mtn1
tranemlstlon. 304-175-1484.
One 12120 ft Patz tUo untoad•, · Eoeolllnt Condition Alldng'
ture and exc hunting, 2 mlln lloor, Pomeroy. 4-Room8, btlth.
$7,500 . 114-347~1. •
•
30447
No poll. Rotoronct ond dopoo~
from Kanewha RIVer, Leon
Anllquo Ubrory Tobit $100·
5-4308.
$2a,500. 304-458-1522.
• 614-62·2275 oHor 5:30pm.
' Ono
1111 Omnl A111or11011e AMIJ'II
Ono Antiquo Drop LOll 'Tobll'· T.O. Forg.- ttac1or,
Caaatta, $2,100; 1813 Q;vltlt,
$75i One Antique Bran ~aid' Urea In aooct condition 800
Booulitul Location For Homo. 2 Very Nlcl Oorogo API~mont
'
' 4 ~. AlllomaUc $4110. For
Acru 11/L, Frontage On 2 Povod lneludll Goroao, $240/mo: $400; ono Now Dohumldllllr 5M-ilt2-2875.
RoedL 2 llilll From Hoopllll Otpooll ltoqulrocl. 114-448-21114, Never Uted, $60; On1 New Sholl
Solo OrTrodllll4-2iiil-1270.
Voc Novor Utod, $50. 514-38?- Toboeeo SllcM For Boll. BhlrBot- 8p.m. And 10p.m.
And Golllpollo. CitY SchOoll
11401.
ponod 1 End, 22 C - Eoeh. 1111 Plymouth Horizon, 301(
City Or County W11orj
Both Endo 25 Cento Eoeh. 114- mllol, lie oond, $2,500. 304Sower Avolloblo, Gu. 5 4
45
Furnished
Po~oblo ehongooblo litter olgn 245-51g1,
511-2111.
3657.
$259. Froo llltlflldollvory. Pia• I;::::-:;:::=::::-::--~:-.~""7.'­
lle
1111oro
$47.50
boL
1400-533'TWo
20ri0
I
-•1
olloo,
dl•
1NI Pontile Grond Am Li,
Mercer Bottom SubdvleJon,
3453 ony11mo.
mont-, maM 8ood gn~ln ..-o, ollln, M.OOO mi., wo11
ocro loll, Rl. 2 lronllgo, Roomolor ront • wotk or month
blna, 304-1'75o4101.
moJntalnod, $7800. 1-t-2177
p~co rodueod, chy wotor, 304~:~Ia' 8580.
II $120/mo. Golllo Hotol: Rocondhlonod Woohlro, Dryoro. 1.;......;;..;.;..;....;;.;...;;~;_---•
578-2335.
GutrtlntHd
prompt Tho
Hr\'ice
tor , _
63_ _Llve-ock
oil mokn, modolo.
Woohlr
_ _..
_ _ _ __ 72 Trucks for Sale
O.J. Whllo Rood, 2 Acrn stooping raomo wHh cooking. · Dryar Shoppo. a14-448~144.
,Wooden Building Lot, Rood( r:o Allo trollor · All hook-upo.
Puro brood roglllorod Ur11011oln 1175 Petorllll -lonol 400
Build On. Roolrlotod. $7,1100. Coli oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·7'73- Uood Homollto IIW, 15" bor cow I con polro, COWl &amp; !""'f1f11ltlt ornoll block Rood
1151, Maeon WY.
114-245-8585.
good cond, 114on2-20M
' hilt.,., 1.,.......110.
13 . - trona., 411
• 114 3A-112t.
Uood
SoloiiHo
Equipment
InI :F::o:;od:;or.::.,::Co;.:.I:.IS:,:o=II..:I.:;Thu:::...rodoY
...,.-:8op- ....
46 Space for Rent
Rentals
eludlng: Wholl Syotomo 'wuh tombor 1111h at lp.rn. Athlna 1m 1n1orna11on11 T,.,....•r u
Country lllobllo H- Pork,
Docodoro, Roeolworo, Dloh • u-tock Sot• Coftlo ~ - . - · 800 Cumtod sta~lng 4p.tn. On w~
13, Norlll of P-roy. Docodtro. 514-H24tn.
11000, 114-1111~·ra. porta, ...... Coli
~·Ulld uloiiHo oqul.......,., In- doy StpltiMor 11th AI 4~.rl1.
41 Houses for Rent
I
·111'11.
ctudln
~,_.,_..
Co111o Accopltd All ller 1111 f.180Ford XLt llor1donl I
g, • · - oyotom with Thureclay. lflullng A..U-.
2 Bedroom, Ewlngton Alii. 114- Trollor ' - For Ront: 114-441- docodoro, rocolvoro, dloh ond Conolgn_,.. w-...1 114- ~.=u~{o;i'id, •••
381..710.
t0112.
docodtro. 114-812-11173.
5124322, 114 HI 31131.
new

()LJCfl f :r

H~__'rf /..IVIN6

IN A (2AT ffOL.f IN

""

~

HI~TtJNf ~

I

~

7:35 Cll Santoni and Son
8:00(l)e 0 F,.ah ""'-of
Bel Air Will and Clorlton 1ry to
help AShley make 1J81C8 with
a bully at school. Stereo. Q
C1l (J) MICOyver (Season
Premiere) MacGyve&lt; returns
a terrorist to justiCe. Stereo.

=~=~~·~-----------­
Auto Pans &amp;

e

Accessories
1881 4.:1-Vortoe onglno ond

g
Eat Smart Menu
planning and cool&lt;ing
(I)

tr1n1. CMA: of S.10 4-wftMklrlva.

Hps are
provide&lt;l; the changing role
or last food in the American
diet is examined ; short
course in food shopping is
given . (1 :00) Stereo .
l!ll D
Evening Shlcle
(Season Premiere) Wood and
Ava rear their loor kids. (PI t
or 2) Stereo. Q
I!]) e MOVIE: 'IIIH
AIIIIUdel' Fox Night at the
Movtn (2;00) Stereo. Q.
II) Murder, She Wrote t;1

-10.

e

1110nS18geS18180.
1D NFL Mondly Nigllt
Mltldi·Up
8PrtmaNawt

1D The L-.nd of PrinCe
Valiant
8:05 (]) MOVIE: Perry Mltaon: The
ca.. ot 1M Slnlater Spirit

sr.:,

f:i

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlllonol lltotlmo guoroh·

=-=
~

EEKLE AND WINTHROP

IM. Local ref.rencn fumlehed
FrM ntlmatM. Cell coiled ,:

6UT IF HEe601~
TO TRAVEL AT 500
.MILES AN HQ.JR ...

814·237-0481, doy or night.
Aog111 Bo-nl WotorproOIIng
Complllo Mobllo Nomo Sol..lJpo
RtPIIIr&amp;; Commerlcal, Rnlden!

HE:b ...Jt..l5T ,1&gt;6 oa;lN IT
WAeNTO'l"AAI~T tOWN

tlal lmprovemtnta. Including·
Plumbing, Eltctrlc=~~l. lnaurtnc~

Clllmo kcoptod. 514-251·1611.
Curtla Home Improvement•~'
Yuro bparllnco On Oldor I '
Nowor Homoo. Room Addlllontl
Foundotlon Work, Roollnd:
Wl-1 &amp; Siding. FrM Ei.
tlmatul Aotoroncoo, No Job To·
Big Or Smolll 514-441-0225.
0 I E Conotruction Gonorot
Contr1ctor, Rooting, Concrete

Conorol Aopalro, Gonerol eon:
otructlon, 614-388-0088, Froo Eotlmatlll
E &amp; A TREE SERVICE. Topping

Trlmmlng, TrM Removal, Hed~
Trimming. FrM Eltlmatetl 014-

387-7157:

JET
•
Aorotlon llotoro, ropalrod. Nrir
I ro-buln moloro In otock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON OH. 1-100537-1528.
•

CD (I) Ainer1cao a.com1ng

Immigrants trom around the
world bring an Increasing
diversity of cultures.
languages and economic
forces to the United States.
(1:30) Q
l!ll llill• Murphy Brown
(Season Premiere) Murphy is
forced to choose between
two men. Stereo. Q
II) WWF Pltme Time
Wreattlng
Ill Nlahvllte Now
0 Women'• Pro IIIIIch
Volleybllll Flamingo Hilton
World Championships from
Las Vegas (T)
a L.erry King Uvel
SctlrKIOW and Mro. King

BARNEY
RISE AN' SHINE,
AUNT SUKEY II
TODAY'S TH' DAY
WE 60 GIT
YOIE MULE / ~'­
SHOTStl

oomo applloneo ropolro wv
304-575~318 Ohio 514-44i245f.
Soptle Tonk Pumping $00 GoUla
Co. RON EVANS ENTEAPIIISES

..

~

'

Service

Goorgu Crook Ad. Par1o, ouP:
pll01, plekup, ond dollvory. 614448.0214.
Will build polio eovero, doeko,

Know where lo look tor romance and

ASTRO·GRAPH

Plumbing
Heating

Plumbing
andHooilng
Four1h ond Prno
Golllpollo, Ohio
814-446-388a
HEAT PUIIIP SIIH I Strvleo
304..7&amp;-3011 or 114-44H308. '

Auldontlll or commor&lt;:lal
wlrtng, new MrVIce or rwp~lr~.
llootor Ueoneod ollc1~clln
R - r Ellelrlcl~ 304-5.,:
1711.

85

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

•l

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

84

General Hauling

Will hout oond.fln~vol dirt ond
coal. 301 ... 3141.
•

ff1
Upholst
=.....,...;,.,..,..,.;.;.:ery~-~·a Uphotot~ IIOIVIo-

lng 1 r i - J - 28 yoora. Thl
In tumftu,. ~oolnt)
Cllll ' 3114475-4154 lar . . . . .

tlmatoe.

romant ically perfect tor you . M a il $2
envelope

&amp;

Co~or·o

you'll lind it. The Astro-G raph Matchmaker instantly reveals which signs are
plus a long, selt·addoessed. stamped

e&lt;:rMned rooms, put up yJnyl
;~~~ lrolllr oklrtlng. a14-

82

EAliT

WEST
. Q8 7

ALDER

• K 65

• K 97

• 642
• J 8 71
• J 10 9

• Q64
+ 874 2

SOU Til

.J5

+ A 43

Championships
in Europe
By Ph111ip Aldtr

t A K 10 3

+ AKQ6
Vu lnera ble: Ne11 her
Dea ler· Nort h

I

Soul h

Th(.\ greatl'st coneenlralton of
brodge pla yers os on Europ&lt;' And the
b1enn1al European Champoonsh1p · IS
the toughest tournament on the ronti ·
nent's calendar. Thos vear Austna won
in lhe Women's Series lor lhe first
t1me since 1936. a nd Great Bnta1n
won tn th e Open Sen es to r the first
ti me since 1963.
J ohn Armstrong. representong Bfll ·
a in 111 the Open . played today's hand
correctl y. The g iven auc 110n is a nat u·
ral one. but Armstrong and h1s part ·
ner. Gra ham Kirby . use the PrecisiOn
Club system. which led lo a seq uence
tha t persuaded West to lead a cl ub
rather than a diamond
Mmslrong knew thalli the heart fl.
ncssc was offs ide. ~:a s t would duck Ihe
king on the lorsl r ound Then 11 Arm·
strong r epeated the linessr a nd ll losl.
he would be unlike ly to get 1nto the
dummy to cash the estab lished heart
wonners. But he did reali ze lhat alle r
one heart lmesse. he would havr two
heart tncks avatlable Add that to
lhrce c lubs . two d1 amonds a nd two

2 NT
l t
l NT

W~sl

Nortb

Etst

Pass
Pa s."
Pass

Pass
3+
3•
Pas.'

Pas.'!
Pass
Pass
Pass

Openong lead : 4 J

s pades , a nd he had nine winners. •
Consequently Armstrong won the
c lub lead atld immedtately played the
ace a nd a nother spade. Eas t won wi th
the king and returned a club. Armstrong won in hand and ran the hea rt
jack . which East had to duck. Now
Ar'!'strong led his last s pade. estabhshong his ninth t r ick while he still had
the hea rt ace in the dummy as an
entr y.
Taking an ea rlier heart finesse
would ha ve r.isked West's winning the
forst spade tr1ek and returning a heart.
removmg
the
dummy
entry
pre maturely

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Anowor to P,..louo Puule

40 Hebrew
42 Actress
Dickinson
44 Did eat's
work
45 By the time
- - to
Phoenix
48 Looks at
48 Child
49 Number
51 Mound
52 Conclusion
53 Male dear
54 Singletons
55 Briny deep
58 Adam's
grandoon
57 Impudent

1 H~rvest
5 Builder's map
9 New Deal
program
12 Loading man
t3 Long limes
t4 Rowing tool
15 Parched
t6 News story
beginning
t8 Slick y stuff
t9 Nota20 Small ox
2t Kings
23 Eaperl
24 Repetition
27 Carul gran
28 Tree dweiHng
2g Land
me11urea
31 Actreu
aurolyn
33 Sovlel Union
(abbr.)
37 AciranArthur

DOWN
5 Statue boata
6 Money lonl
7 Feed the
kitty
8 11110 - tung
g Inventor
10 Awning

1 llorllllcallon
2 Change path
ot
3 Baltimore
team
4 Whale group

11 Bring Into
alletance
17 Boy
ttl Fenttnlne
gar1111nt
22 Art deco
Illustrator
23 Chlmlcel
IUfliX
25 Champegna
bucket
26 Decor1Uona
30 Long
.
rment .
32
lltuatiCI·
34 - Cl11ptl,
VIllein
35 Robbllr
38 Ruddtelt
37 Lyndon Johnaon
38 lllechlne
311 IIIHIIng
program
41 Dewn
toddell
43 Follower:

8

Ron'• TV Service, specializing
In Ztnhh also llf'VIclng moat
othtr: brtndt. HouM cellt, 1110

Rooms

"""Q

(t :55)

8:30 (l) e ilJ IIIOAOm (Season
Premiere) BlOssom seeks a
definition ot second base.
Stereo . Q
1111 C • Major OICI (Season
Premiere) Budget cuts
threaten to ctoee Camp
Hollister. Stareo. Q
Qll On Stllge Stereo.
1D SchUp Tatll
D IlliCit StiiWon Stereo. Q
1:00 (l) • 11J MOVIE: 'LMng 1
Lie' NIC Mondly Night II
the Movlea (2:00) Stereo. 1;1
(1J (J) e A8C Mondly Night
FootbiiU Chiefs at Oilers (L)
Stereo. Q

Home

S.W· Vac

PHILLIP

acro;...

76

Sept. 17, 111111
The realization or a long-held dream
may occur lor you in the year. ahead.
This will be brooght about In part by a
loyal trlenel who will serve 6S a great
source or renewal tor you. The relation·
.
ahlp will 110 a happy one.
VIRGO (Aug. 28-Sepl. 22)1mltatlon IS
one ol the olncerast forms of flattery,
Yoo may learn today that - a l peers
WhO have b8ar1 o.,_.lng. you are toiI()Wing an example you recently set.

to

Matc hmaker . c/o

th1s

newspaper. P.O. Box 9t428. Cleveland .
OH 44101 -3428.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Vou are now
in a financial cycle where you could g~n ­
erate funds from several different
sources. Depending upon your level ot
in\lolvement. the amounts could be

rather large.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your onllu·
ence over your peer group is gro~ing
stronger. Friends from dil1erent walks
of life may soon begin 10 play helpful .
prominent roles in your affairs.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dic. 21) AI
thiS time, you're extremely adept al
working things oul so the ultimate re·
suits will not only benefit you bul help
thoS{! with whom you're involved.
CAPRICORN (Die. 22-Jon. 11) Circumstallces could begin lo slimula1e your
determination and will to win . When
these Inclinations become truly operative. Sllccess Is likely.
AQUAR1U8 (Jan. 20-Fib. 11) Be secre·
tive about your present ambitious Intention, becauBalt could work against your
best lntorests it you prematurely Up
your hand. Talk about events alter they

occur

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Develop·
ments co uld begin to draw you c loser to
three friends with whom you a lready
have strong. existing bonds . Each will
look out for the othe r's tn teres t s in con structtve ways.

ARIES (M•rch 21·April 19) Fulfillment
of your material objectives are lik ely to
take precedence over your other in ter·

ests today. Conditions look favorable .
provided you are pract1cal rather than
emottonal.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Your inlu·
i1ion can serve as a helpful guideline toda~ .

Dul il s houldn't be the dominating

Ideas on a respected adviser.
GEMINI (Mey 21-Juna 20) Be receptive
rather than resistant to changes today .
especially those Ihal directly affect your
work. Shif1ing conditions tend to work

on your behall. bul you must give them
a chance.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Character
judgments yoo make loday pertalntng
to individuals you're involved wllh
should be quite accurate. Give them
credence, even II you teel they' re a trltle
exaggerated.
LEO (""IJ 23-Aug. 221 Don't inhibit your
r'(laterlal motivations tOday, yet be careful nol to be too sell-serving or hurtful
toward others.

....

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l!ll a21e Dealgntng women
(Season Premiere) Allison
arrives and turns the world
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AWSA Water Skiing U.S.
Open from Sacramento,
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World Nawa
ID 700 Club With Pat
Robertson
10:30 (J) NIWI
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81

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Unfold - Crowd - Valet - Effigy - OFFERED
One woman to another coming out of exercise class.
"One thing about losing weight is that you can find it
again without a reward being OFFERED •

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LOOKS A LITTLE BIT
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1511 Aolno van, loodod, ..,..,

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�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 16, 1991

Researchers puzzled by boost in Fillmore fanatics push virtues
suicide rates for older Americans of our 'obscure' 13th president
By MALCOLM RITTER
AP Science Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Suicide
rates for older Americans ended a
30-year-decline with a sharp upturn
from 1980 to 1986, a federal study
rcpons. and researchers say the rcasons for the increase are unclear.
Rates for Americans 65 or older
rose 21 percent, including increases
of 42 percent for black men and 23
percent for white men .
"The rea son for that trend,
we ' re not quite sure of," but
maybe increases in social isolation
and longer lives with chronic ill ness played some role , said study
co-author Dr. Richard Sattin.
"All we can tell is that there is
an increasing lrcnd," said Sattin, of
the federal Centers for Disease
Control in Atlanta.
The increases occurred before
recent publicity about doctor-assist·
ed suicides and this year's publication of a best-selling suicide manual. Sattin said in a telephone inter·
view that when the study was done,

figures for 1986 were tfle most
recent available.
Updated federal figures for 1990
show a 4 percent increase over
1986 for people ages 75 to 84 and a
6 percent increase for Americans
85 and older. but an 8 percent drop
for 65-to-74-ycar-olds. For statistical reasons, however. it is unclear
how these changes compare to the
trends found in the new study.
Dr. Dan Blazer, a psychiatry
professor at the Duke University
Medical Center who studies suicide
by older people , said he had
expected some increase but not as
large as that found in the fed eral
study .
The study appears in thi s
month' s iss ue of the American
Journal of Public Health. It noted
that nearly 37:000 Americans 65 or
older killed themselves from 1980
through 1986.
Researchers said that within this
age group, the suicide rate ro se
from 17.8 suicides per 100.000
people in 1980 to 21.5 suicides per

I00,000 in 1986.
White men had the highest rates,
rising from 37 .2 suicides per
100,000 white men 65 or older in
1980 to 45.6 suicides per 100,000
in 1986. For black men, the rates
rose from 11.4 per 100,000 black
men 65 or older to 16.2 per
100,000.
White women 65 and older
showed a 17 percent increase to 7.5
per 100,000. There were too few
suicides by black women to produce a meaningful trend , Sattin
said.
Although youth suicide has captured much attention, experts say
suicide rates among older Americans arc higher.
Federal figures for 1990 show
13.6 suicides per 100,000 population for people ages 15 to 24. The
1990 rate for people ages 65 to 74
was 18.1 per 100,000, with 26.1
per 100,000 people for ages 75 to
84 and 22.5 per 100,000 for people
ages 85 and above

Other man is valuable to wife

•

l·

Dear Ann Landers: I have had
male friends, no sex involved, for
the last 25 of my 33 years of
marriage. Odd? Not really. My
husband, a wonderfu.I person and a
successful businessman, has never
made an effort to meet my emotional
needs. His life consists of work,
COOling borne to cal with the TV
turned on, and then reading the
newspaper in his comfortable chair
until bedtime. On weekends he
sleeps or performs business-relalcd
activities.
I was a gregarious person when
we manied and enjoyed being with
friends. All that ended lw:anse my
husband "meets pedple all week
long, and the last thing he wants to
do on weekends is socialize." When
be's home he says be needs peace
and quieL This means he eats no
dinners out and his social life is zero.
The way I see it, my husband
has a precious commodity which
increases in value as the years go
by. Me. In addition to my job down·
town, I've cleaned, cooked terrific
meals and nised three sons. I've
been my husband's sounding board
whenever be has needed a listening
ear. I never refuse to accommodate
him sexually, even though sex to
him is for his pleasure only.
After repeatedly asking him to
coosidet my needs and suggesting
that we bolb go for counseling. be
said, "I'm a happy man. I don't
need counseling.• So, I ooted for
the other-man relationship.
I've had several male friends over
the years. Io each case, we enjoyed
one another's company until he
found a woman to many. At that
point, another man comes along to
take his place.
My typical male friend is a

Beat of
:the Bend..
Cherry Ridge resident, Jim
Lucas, reports that Columbus
Southern Power has a couple of
good free offers going-but says
he talked to the company and pub·
lie response hasn't been all that
great
To take advantage of the offers
you do have to be a Columbus
Southern customer and a home
owner. Jim reports that the company will supply water saving shower
heads and water heater wraps free
of charge and will even do the
installation if you indicate that you
would like to take advantage of the
offers. To do so call l-800 28WHASH-and· by the way,
that's a toll free number.

I

"l

I

With fall upon us, Shirley
Quickel is opening her classes of
The Dance Company for another
year. This fall the sessions will be
held in Pomeroy and there will be
classes for all ages. Included in the
instruction this fall will be tap, ballet, aerobics, and jazz. Shirley's
new phone number is 992-6289.
Pomeroy Barber Mickey
Williams, an active member of
Drew Webster Post 39, American
·Legion, for years, was the only
Meigs Countian attending the
National American Legion Convention held this month at Phoenix,
Arizona.
It was Mick's fust visit to Arizona. He reports the scenery was
great and the accommodations for
the 18,000 Legionnaires attending
the convention were more than
adequate. Convention days and
some of the nights were very busy
for those attending. Mick is Division Four Commander and is
Eighth Distfict Chairman for the
Korean War MemoriaL
The year is moving rapidly

professional between 30 and 50,
unmarried, who is fed up with
women who have tried to trap him
into marriage when he's not ready.
While my current "friend" is not
interested in marriage or sex, he
ANN LANDERS
"lttl, Loe Aarels
longs for a relationship with a
11m,. S)'lldlcale ....
woman who is willing to listen
C..atonSyndl ...... "
to him, laugh with him and share
his joys and sorrows. In return,
he's willing to do the same - which wouldn~ be surprised if you wrote
is where I fit into his life. He again to ask what to do about a nice,
doesn't feel ~ because he platonic relationship that suddenly
knows I love my husband and have turned into a love affair.
no interest in getting a divorce.
Gem of the Day (Credit Josh
By now you must be wondering ·Feinberg, Indianapolis): Memo to
bow my husband feels about this. the rich: Go first class or your
Well, he says the other man in my children will.
life is a valuable commodity to him
Is alcohol rllinillg yolll' lift or IM
as well. It relieves him of spending life of a lovt!d oM? •Alcoholism:
the time and energy required to be a How to Recogniu It, How to DtaJ
friend to me. In tum, the freedom With It, How to Conquer It" can llll'n
he gives me ensures against having things around. Send a sel/
an unhappy, neglected, nagging addressed, long, business-size
wife. Perfect? No, but it suits me envelope and a CMCk or money
just fine . Care to comment? .. order for $3.65 (this includes
DOING TilE NEXT BEST TiliNG poslage and lrandling) to: Alcohol,
IN JACKSON, MISS.
c/o AM Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
DEAR NEXT BEST 'I'HING: The Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
design for living you have described CIJIUJda, send $4.45.)
may be just dandy for you and your
husband and the transient males who
parade through your life, but it is
nothing I would recommend.
It sounds to me as if you have a
sterile and meaningless marriage
with a man who is self-absorbed,
inconsiderate and totally disconnected from you. You say be is a
• wonderfu.I person" and that you
By ED WHITE
love him. I wonder why.
•
Associated Press Writer
I also wonder about a man who
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jencoosidets your cumot male comnifer
Gresham wears the customary
panion "a valuable commodity"
uniform
of gray shirt and green
because it relieves him 'o f the job of
pants,
but
she's not your average
being a friend 10 you.
park
ranger.
Keep my address handy. I
Instead of directing visitors
through the wilds of Yellowstone
or the depths of the Grand Canyon,
she shepherds White House tourists
though lines that seem to wind for·
ever.
And to keep the tourists happy,
Gresham, 30, keeps them entertained with church choirs, marching bands, jugglers, dancers, bluegrass singers and even a bagpiper
who once guarded London's Buck·
towards the last quarter of 1991 ingham Palace.
and as a result plans are being
She lines up the talent, makes
made for Veterans Memorial Hos- sure the amplifier is plugged in and
pital in Pomeroy to become a even has cold water ready for the
performer who may wilt in the cap·
smoke free facility.
At the present time, smoking is llal's oppressive summertime heat.
"It's a neat program," Gresham
permitted in the hospital lobby as
well as some other designated said recently as the crowds thinned
spots. However, as of Jan. I, 1992, in the early afternoon. "The enterthe hospital will become a smoke- tainment eliminates the frustration.
free institution with absolutely no What else can these people do
smoking permitted inside the build· while they're waiting to get inside
ing. The steps must be taken in the White House?"
order for the hospital to continue to
The performers have arrived
hold its accreditation standing.
from every state except Alaska.
Speaking of the hospital Sue They come at their own expense.
Zirkle, supervising registered nurse and their reward is a certificate
in the Emergency Room and signed by President Bush and an
Urgent Care Center, could have escort to the front of the line of
opened her own flower shop on White House visitors.
Sept. 5 when she was so well
Of course, there also arc brag·
remembered by friends and co- ging rights.
workers at the hospital on her birth·
Band members from Concordia
Lutheran School in Peoria, Ill., had
day.
their picture snapped with first lady
A new experience over the Barbara Bush. "Everybody was
weekend for Mrs. Sara Owen, going crazy," Gresham said.
After Labor Day, the traditional
Seneca Drive, Pomeroy.
end
of the summer tourist season,
Ycp- Sara took her first plane
trip ever. She accompanied her Gresham signs up local talent from
daughter, Mrs. Judy Mor~an, to Washington, M!u'Y.land or Virginia.
Boston. Judy who IS pubhc rela- The number of daily visitors drops
tions director at Pleasant Valley from 5,000 to about2,000.
"The next song is a sad song
Hospital in Point Pleasant was
about
a wayward criminal, Tom
scheduled to attend a hospital
Dooley,"
David Burger of Manasmeeting in Boston. Her husband,
sas,
Va
..
told
the crowd Friday as
Damon, was unable to accompany
her on the jaunt so Sara stepped in partner Alan Webb adjusted his
to keep Judy company. We hope guitar. "I want everyone to sing
you enjoyed historical Boston and along with the last verse."
the flight, Sara.

Ann
Landers

By SANDRA SKOWRON
Associated Press Writer
BALTIMORE (AP) - He
averted an international crisis over
bird droppings and helped install
the first cast-iron stove in the
White House.
Millard Fillmore hasn't exactly
electrified American history books,
but the 13th president has a dutiful
if slightly daffy group of admirers
who are brushing away the sands of
obscurity to preserve his memory.
The Baltimore-based Society to
Promote ResP.ect and Recognition
of Millard F1llmore likes its Mil·
lard "lite."
Every Jan. 7. the anniversary of
Fi II more' s birthday , the group
throws a bash in his honor. Invita·
lions are extended to the nation's
pre-eminent politicians, but in
seven years not one has accepted.
"We read all the regrets from
all the politicians," said Ra e
Rosen, of Randallstown, Md., a
freelance writer and the society's
coordinator. "This is one of our
main sources of humor.
" We're lucky they don't attend
because we don't want to be politically inclined," she said. " Mil·
lard's last party was the Know·
Nothing Party, and we want to
keep it that way."

Society members say they're not
out to ridicule Fillmore, just spread
the word about his accompli shments.
Fillmore's presidency was
tucked between those of the equally obscure Zachary Taylor and
Franklin Pierce. Devotees say th e
controversy earlier this year over
whether Taylor was murdered or
died of a stomach ailment was a
publicity boon for Fillmore, who
was Taylor's vice president.
An autopsy later ruled out mur·
der in Taylor's death.
Historian Elbert Smith, a retired
professor at the University of
Maryland , believes Fillmore
deserves better than obscurity.
Fillmore was a self-educated
man who became a lawyer, a New
York legislator and complroller and
vice president before entering the
White House in 1850.
He kept slave-state Texas from
invading free-state New Mexico in
1850, which could have sparked
the Civil War. He sent Commodore
Perry to establish relations with
reclusive Japan.
He refused to back American
traders who wanted to invade a
Peruvian island to obtain its bird
droppings, which made a valuable
fenilizer.

"He kept a finger on what was
happening," Smith said. "He was
honest and made intelligent deci ·
sions. He was a good president''
Fillmore's handling of the Fugitive Slave Act didn't please Northerners . .The law required federal
troops to capture fugitive slaves.
Smith said Fillmore halfheartedly
dispatched troops, but there is no
indication any fugitives were
caught.
Fillmore and his wife, Abigail,
didn ' t like Washington, so he
decided not to seck re-election in
1852. He changed his mind after
learning his party, the Whig s,
would nominate a candidate unacceptable to the South. But by then ,
it was too late to get the nomination .
·
In 1856, he ran for president as
a candidate for the Know-Nothing
Party, which was anti -foreign and
ami-Catholic.
The party had a following in its
day, but "the Know-Nothing Party
looks like a reprehensible party
today," Smith said.
The only state Fillmore carried
in that election was Maryland.
He lived out his years in Buffalo, N.Y., and died on March 8,
1874.

Ohio Lottery
Oilers down
Chiefs 17-7
Page4

ly with thunderstorms possible.

I

House visitors

Copyrl~htod

The West Virginia State Farm Museum will have a chicken barbeque and flea market on Saturday at the Route I , Point Pleasant
site.
Serving will begin at 9 a.m. and continue until 5 p.m. Anyone
interested in participating in the flea market at the Museum are
asked to contact the West Virginia State Farm Museum at 304-6753972. All buildings will be open and admission is free. The Museum is located four miles north of Point Pleasant just off Route 62.

GALLIPOLIS - Convicted rapist, kidnapper and murderer
William A. ·Mathias, 24, was transported Tuesday morning from the
Gallia County Jail to the Orient Correctional Center where he will
stay before being eventually transfcred to the correcuonal facil1ty '"
Lucasville.
Mathias was recently convicted of last October's rape, kidnapping and murder of 12-year-old Stacey R, Lucas of Gallipolis.
Lucas was sentenced to a total of 50 years for the crimes.

Prison escapee still at large
CHILLICOTHE (AP)- An inmate who escaped from the Chillicothe Correctional Institution remained at large today.
Eugene Partin, 60, escaped Saturday, said Lynn Goff, prison
administrative assistanL Partin was serving a life sentence for second-degree murder.
Prison spokesman Gary McCalskey said Monday night that
Partin had not been a~prehended.
Partin was committed from Clermont County in August 1973
and paroled in 1983, but returned to the prison on a 1985 parole violation.
Ms. Goff said prison officials discovered that Partin was missing
from the medium-security institution Saturday night when they conducted a head count after inmates were brought in from the prison
yard. She said investigators could not immediately determine how
Partin escaped.
Partin is white, 5 feet 9 inches tall, weighs 146 pounds and has
grayish brown hair and blue eyes. He has a mole under his right
eye.

EMS .1/.nits .answer 8 _t;alls

Out and Touch event wb.icih is billed as giving
support and unity for people with HI VI AIDS
around the world. (AP)

Eight calls for assistanCe were answered on. Monda~ and Tuesday morning by Meigs County Emergency Medical Semces umts.
At 9:41 a.m. on Monday, Middleport squad went to Page Street.
Jason McCormick was treated but not transported. At 9:50a.m.,
Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 31. Carlos McKnight was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 11:12 am., Syracuse squad went to
Southern High School. Ronald Wood was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
At 1:36 p.m., Chester and Pomeroy units went to Pomeroy Pike
for an accident Tim Frederick was taken to Veterans and Martha
and Amanda Smith refused treatment. At 2:24 p.m., Racmc u011
went to the station for Amanda Ward. Ward was lreated but not
transported. At 9:20 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Pleasant R•dgc.
Crystal Adkins was taken to Veterans.
On Tuesday at 2:44 a.m., Rutland unit went to ~eigs Mine 31.
Don Justus was transported to Holzer Medical Center. At 7:25 a.m.,
Racine unit went to Letart Falls. Floyd Cummmgs was dead on
arrival.

--

1 noticed that President Bush
was generous to the three Baltic
countries now independent of Russia-to the extent of some 14 billion dollars, according to the news
report I saw. And the cobbler's
children have no shoes. Do keep
smiling!

D of A to meet
CHESTER - The Chester Council No. 323 Daughters of America
wiJI meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
Quarterly birthdays, which were to
be observed and the potluck, will
be postponed until the Oct I meet·
in g.

I
•
I
•
BE ON THE LOOK OUT•••

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.

The Daily Sentinel

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
The decision to apply for Community Development Block Grant
Funds to demolish unsightly and
unsafe slructures was made when
Pomeroy Village Council met in
regular session on Monday nighL
Councilman Bruce Reed made a
motion to apply for $15,000 in
CDBG funds, and also suggested
that the village pledge a $5,000
match of local funds.
The action, which passed the
council unanimously, is a part of an
ongoing attempt by council to rid

13 callers across the nation on
King's late-night talk show.
It was the first time astronauts
have participated in a talk show,
although past crews have used ham
radios to talk to people on Earth.
"What really changed you when
you went up in space?" the first
caller, from San Antonio, asked.
Creighton said he gained more ·
respect for Earth.
"It tends to give you more of a
global perspective and an appreciation for the environment,"
Creighton said. "When you look
out at the horizon and you see an

Carnival rides or a car show,
contemporary or country music.
crafty items or catfish sandwiches,
residents will be able to find it all
at the First Annual CatfiSh Festival
to be held Saturday in Middleport.
The carnival will move in
Thursday and the rides will be
ready to roll on the first of three
days in the village by late afternoon. Advance tickets for rides are
already on sale at Video Touch and
Middleport Trophies. While the
single price of a ride will be $1
once the carnival has moved in,
there is now a half-price sale going
on. Strips of four ride tickets are
$2. The carnival rides will be located at Dale Diles Park and on the
village parking lot on South Second Ave.
This week Donna Gocrg or Ripley, W. Va. was added to the list of
entenainers for Saturday. She will
be doing contemporary fold music.
Goerg, lilce all other entenainers.
will perform on a flatbed to be stationed on North Second at Cole
Sueet Goerg will be performed at
6:30p.m.
The schedule of other activities
will include a pet show at noon
sponsored by the Meigs County
Human Society, the Ritz Band at I
p.m., the Midnight Cloggers at 2

ing, water plant, sewage lreatment
plant and city service garage to
three at each site.
Robert Turner, regional director
of AFSCME Council 8, said the
union and council agreed on the
limits.
At issue in the dispute is lan guage involving medical absence,
seniority, job descriptions, con·
tracting for some city work and
obtaining commercial driver's
licenses.
Negotiations began in early
August. A State Employment Relations Board official mediated during bargaining sessions.
"Everything we're striking for
is non-economic -contract Ian·
guage stuff," said Local 2403 President Bruce McLead, a city water
maintenance worker. "I think we
could live with their wage proposal. "

atmosphere that's only about an
inch thick, you realize just how
fragile this planet can be. We better
take eare of it''
The astronauts, scheduled to
return home early Wednesday,
released an atmosphere research
satellite that will examine the vanishing ozone layer.
Weather permitting, the shuttle
is scheduled to return to its Aorida
launcb site at 2:06 a.m. EDT
Wednesday. It wou.Id be the ninth
shuttle touchdown at Kennedy
Space Center and the fust one there
in darkness.

_......................____________________
f·

/I

the village of abandoned and
unsafe structures. Houses on Cave
Street, Condor Street and Cherry
Street have been targeted with
future demolition, but council did
not commit to dedicating any grant
monies awarded to those specific
projects.
Earlier this summer, a house on
Ebenezer Street was demolished
after all attempts to contact the
owner of the structure were unsuccessful.
Council discussed the expense
involved in paying village workers
to perform the demolition work and
discussed alternatives in future pro-

jects. According to Village Clerk
Brenda Morris, the work at the
Ebenezer Sireet site cost the village
over $4,000, and took three weeks
to complete.
Village Administrator John
Anderson told council that he felt
that the project would fall under the
CDBG eligibility guidelines. The
deadline for submitting potential
CDBG projects to the county commissioners is September 25.
Last year, the village received
$14,800 in CDBG monies. Those
funds were used to complete
improvements at the village water
department.

Other business
Anderson also requested a
change in the village ordinance
dealing with building permits.
Anderson' s request involved the
inclusion of the phrase "change of
mtended use" in the law requiring
building permil application.
This phrase would apply to a
change in type of business, as well
as the change from a residence to a
business establishment in the same
building.
No action was taken on Anderson's request, but Councilman
Tllomas Werry said that he felt the
Continued on page 3

Catfish festival slated

Discovery shuttle astronauts
featured on Larry King show
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(AP) - The slightly increased risk
of a nighttime landing hasn't fazed
the Discovery astronauts as they
prer,are today to return to Earth.
'There's a little more risk
involved in landing at night than in
the daytime," Commander John
Creighton told radio talk show host
~ King Monday night.
But Creighton said he was confident he and pilot Kenneth
Reightler would "brinf the shuttle
in right on the money.'
As the shuttle zoomed around
Earth at 17,500 mph, the five crew
!Pembers answered questions from

1 Section, 10 Pageo 25 cents
AMultimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy council to apply for
CDBG funds for renovation

Athens officials approve wage
increase to employees during strike
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - The County and Municipal Workers
City Council approved a pay raise rejected a contract offer Sunday
for city workers who are working and went on strike Monday.
during a strike.
\
The union had sought 8 percent
The ·6 percent wage increase is \ increases in each year of a threethe same as the increase the city year contract. The city offered
offered the union in contract nego· wage increases of 6 percent the
tiations.
first year, 5.5 percent and 5 percent
Mayor Sara Hendricker said the in the second and third years.
pay raise affects five employees Supervisors will operate water
three probationary employees who and sewer treatment facilities, city
are not permitted to strike and two officials said.
The council also approved a
other employees who chose to
work rather than strike.
S20,000 emergency contract with
The strike by garbage coUectors Sanitary Commercial Services, a
and other service employees private firm, for garbage collection.
entered its second day today.
Service-Safety Director Ron ChapMs. Hendricker said the city had man the company will begin col·
no plans to hire replacement work· lcction Monday. It was not known
ers.
how long the contract will be in
The council Monday night also effect.
voted to hire a private garbage col The city _al_so was granted a
Iection company.
court order hm•Ung the number of
Members of Local 2403 of the pickets at City Hall, the parking
American Federation of State , garage, Law Administration Build·

t7

ay, September CliP!, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, M

1991

Chicken cookout slated

entertained

Bob
Hoeflich

_J utsc}t.3

Vol. 42, No. 94

Convicted murderer transported

THAT'S WHAT FRIENDS ARE FOR • Pop
star Whitney Houston poses with children of the
Reach Out and Touch Choir in London's Hyde
Park Sunday. Houston appeared at the Reach

Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low
60-liS. Wednesday, showers like·

Park ranger

keeps White

Pick 3:757
Pick 4:6842
Cards : 4-H, 2-C
K-D;4-S

' band at 3 p.m.,
p.m., Crossover
Charles Lily at 5 p.m. and "The
Golden Melodies" by disc jockey
Lee Osborne at 7 p.m.
Emcee for the entertainment
program will be Chuck Kitchen,
who will be awarding prizes each
hour during the day. The top prize
to be awarded Saturday evening
will be a color television provided
by the Middleport Community
Association, sponsor of the festival.
Two $100 savings bonds provided
by Feeney-Bennett Post . 128,
American Legion, a $50 bond by
Central Trust, a micro-wave ·oven
by Dr. Nick Robinson and Dr.
Nancy Kime, and numerous merchandise certificates will be award·
ed.
A car show will be held on the
old PI ymouth lot on South Third.
Bob Gilmore, president of the
Community Association and chairman of the festival, advised that the
North Second from Walnut Street
to Mill Street will be closed to traffic beginning at 7:30 a.m. to allow
time .for .those selling food, crafts,
Continued on page 3

FESTIVAL T-SmRTS ·These colorful shirts will be made on ·
site by Middleport Trophies and sold at the Catfish Festival Satur- ·
day. Proceeds from the sale will go to the Middleport Community
Association.

Lawmakers call Thomas'
confirmation prospects good
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sena·
tors of both parties say Clarence
Thomas' chances for confirmation
to the Supreme Coun appear good
as the Senate Judiciary Committee
turns its attention to some 90 witnesses with varied opinions of the
conservative judge.
Thomas ended an exhaustive,
five-day job interview before the
committee Monday by expressing
gratitude for "the courtesy and the
fairness you've shown me."
Thomas then embraced his wife,
mother and sister and shook hands
with most of the 14 committee
members before leaving the ornate
hearing room where he repeated! y
had refused to discuss abortion and
at times had disavowed provocative
stands taken as a Reagan admini stration official.
Democrats continued to complain that Thomas, named by President Bush to replace the retiring
Thurgood Marshall, had ducked
too many questions. But committee
approval of his nomination
appeared likely.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, predicted that Thomas would win the
support of at least eight Judiciary
Committee members - all that arc
needed to send the nomination to
the full Senate.
One of Thomas' most vocal crit·
ics, Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, DOhio, agreed that committee
approval appeared likely when a
vote is takeri in about two weeks.
It also appeared, from the tone
of their questions, that two tradi·
tiona! swing members - Sens.
Arlen S~cter, R-Pa., and Dennis
DeConcmi, D·Ariz. - were leaning heavily toward voting for
Thomas.
As Thomas neared the end of
his testimony, Chairman Joseph
Biden, 0-Del., told him, "You are
going to be the judge (on a court)
with nothing to bind you but your
conscience.''
Bush telephoned Thomas " and

__

......._.

congratulaled him on the completion of his testimony," White
House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater
said. ''The president is confident
that Judge Thomas will be confirmed."
Leading off the confirmation
hearings' second phase, the head of
the American Bar Association' s
judicial screening panel said Mon day that Thomas was an outstanding, but not the most qualified,
nominee.
Ronald Olson, a Los Angeles
trial lawyer, said Thomas was rated
"qualified" for the Supreme Court
because he was an outstanding
nominee. But to receive the ABA's
higher "well-qualified" rating,
"the candidate has to be among the
most prominent members Of our
profession," Olson said.
Thomas did not meet that standard because of his limited ex peri·
ence as a federal appeals judge.
Biden said he plans to conclude
the Thomas hearings by Friday,
after taking testimony from numcr ·
ous groups supporting and oppos·

Meigs County will play host to a
murder trial beginning on Thurs day .
The trial of Athens Countian
David Losey, accused of murder,
will begin in the Meigs County
Common Pleas courtroom on
Thursday due to renovations taking
place at the Athens County Court·
house.
Losey was indicted by the
Athens County Grand Jury on May
23 of killing Donald McNaughton
of Glouster.
Athens County Prosecuting
Attorney Michael Ward and Assis·
tant Prosecutor K. Robert Toy will
represent the state in the jury trial,

____

............_..........

Sylvia Law of New York Umversity said Thomas " has staked
out a position thai is ex1remist" on
abonion and reproductive freedom.
She called his views "far outside
the mainstream or conservative
American political and judicial
thought. ''
Frank Michclman of Harvard
University and Thomas Grey of
Stanford University al so questioned Thomas' qualifications and
criticized what they perceived his
abonion views to be.
Speaking in support of Thomas
on Monday were Griffin Bell ,
attorney general in the Carter
administration; U.S. District Judge
Jack Tanner of Seattle; and Mary
Bush Wilson, a former chairwoman
of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People.

Murder trial to begin Thursday

"''

...._....__~

ing the nomination. The commutce
will not meet Wednesday due to
the Yom Kippur holiday.
Testifying Monday, three law
school professors voiced either
opposition to or concern about
Thomas.

.

while Public Defender ·Michael
Westfall and Jay Wamsley will
serve as co-counsel on behalf of the
defendant.
According to an Athens County
Common Pleas Court spokesperson, jury selection before Judge
Alan Goldsberry will commence on
Wednesday morning in Athens
County.
The Losey case is the first in
Athens to be moved into another
county due to renovation work of •
the Athens County Courthouse, aittt
was only done so because of the.
serious nature of the charges. Onc.e
a jury is seated, the trial is expected.
to last two weeks.
~~·

____......................_.._" _______________ _ ....___.._............,.
_

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