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                  <text>Pomeroy--Middlepon,

Wednesday, September 18, 1991 ,

ZESTA
CRACKERS
1 LB. POUND

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Monday thru Sunday

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Page4

99&lt;

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH

WHITNEY

PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT.

PINK

SALMON

Vol. 42, No. 96
Copyrighted 1991

Sale of mines option being explored

PUCO to rule Tuesday
on AEP clean-air plan

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NEW OFFICERS - New orricers For tbe
American Heart Association's Meigs County
Division have been elected by volunteers For that
group. Pictured. 1-r, are Susan Gerkin, division

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chairman; Sandy Iannarelli, president; Dr.
Wilma Mansfield, president-elect; Rhonda Dailey, secretary and Millie Midkiff, treasurer.

Sandy Iannarelli to head
Meigs AHA board of directors

CAMPBEll'S
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A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

1991

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CJ..r tonight Low near 40.
Friday, sunny. High near 60.

2-18-24-38-43-46
Kicker:526487

-;-he volunteers of the American
Heart Association's Meigs County
Division have elected the board of
directors for the 1991-92 campaign
year. The officers are Sandy
lannarelli, president; Dr. Wilma
Mansfield, president-elect; Millie
Midkiff, treasurer; Rhonda Dailey,
secretary. New members were also
elected to the board of directors .
They include Besty Horky, Jeanette
Thomas and Alice Wolfe.
Additional board members
include Donna Carr, Bob Hoeflich,
John Costanza, Joan Tewksbary,
Dan Morris, L. Scott Lucas. Denver and Nora Rice, Ida Diehl and
Linda Haley.
An overview of activities for the
1991-92 fiScal year were presented
by committee chairmen and voted
for approval by the Board of Directors along with the 1991-92 rules
and regulations.
This year one of the main focal
points of the AHA is women and
heart disease. Heart and blood vessel diseases combined claim nearly
500,000 women's lives each year,
compared with fewer than 220,000
for all forms of cancer. In 1989,
heart disease accounted for 37 percent of all female deaths reported
in Ohio. When this is compared to
36 percent hear1 related deaths for
men, it clearly eliminates the myth
that heart disease is just a man's
disease.
"Women, and men too, must
start on an individual level, reduc-

"There are such discussions unclear. Perhaps more importantly,
underway but they are just that- there is great uncertainty about the
effect, if any, the ruling will have
discussions."
That was the response of Mar- on the utility company's oft-stated
shall Julien, vice president of Com- inclination to abandon use of highmunications, AEP Service Corpo- sulfur Ohio coal.
PUCO spokeswoman Beth Vanration, late Thursday morning in
response to questions about rumors dawalkcr emphasized the state
circulating in Meigs and Gallia agency has no authority to order
Counties that the Meigs Mines are AEP to adopt one clear air compliance plan or another.
being sold.
The Dispalch quoted PUCO
"We have said we will explore
all options in seelting a workable Chairman Craig A. Glazer as saysolution to the clean air compliance ing the agency will "review the readilemma. This is just one of the sonableness of AEP's planning
options being explored,"Julien process to see that AEP efficiently
1mplements a long-term least-cost
said.
Locally the rumor has been that plan for meeting the requirements
AEP is discussing the sale of the of the Federal Clean Air Act."
The PUCO opinion and order
mines with Consolidation Coal Co.
will be the culmination of a process
The Public Utilities Commis- that included several hearing s
sion of Ohio will rule Tuesday on around the state. While state reguan American Electric Power clean lators cannot force the company to
air plan that leans heavily toward adhere to a specific clean air plan,
they do hold the big stick of rate
switching to out-of-state coal.
According to an article in Thurs- enforcement.
"If they choose a method differday's Columbus Dispalch, what the
regulators' decision will be is ent than what PUCO recommends

and down the road they determine
it is not the most cost-effective
dec ision, they might not be allowed
to recover the costs connected with
it," Vandawalker said.
AEP officials have said on several occasions they estimate
switching to low-s ulfur, out-ofstate coal would be less expensive
in the long run than installing costly air -cleaning scrubbers that
would permit continued use of
high-sulfur Ohio coal.
AEP spokesman Michael
Mahoney had no comment on the
pending decision.
The utility ha s said keeping
open the option of installing scrubbers - something the PUCO asked
the company to do - will cost
AEP as much as $50 million if a ·
decision is postponed until March
1992.
But AEP' s decision could come
well before that. The company has
a Sept. 30 contract to buy coal, but
the bids have already been extended twice.

Commission discusses purchase
of breathalizer; issue tabled

PRESENTED PLAQUE • Dr. Wilma MansField, past presi·
dent oF the Meigs County Division oF the American Heart Association, was presented a plaque on Tuesday in recognition of herdedicated service to the AHA. Presenting the plaque is Division Chairman Susan Gerkin.
ing the risk factors in their own
lives and within their families.
Then they can take the fight into
the workplace and out into the
community as a whole to make the
difference," said Sandy Iannarelli.
Various resource materials are

available to help raise awareness,
including a brochure and videotape
specifically on the subject of
women and hear1 disease. For more
information contact the Speakers
Bureau Chairman Bob Hoeflich at
992-5292.

$6.5 million liability award argued
CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP) - cd $6.5 million in the death or her had been contrac-ted to perform the
A power company and an insur- husband, Michael D. Pasquale, work on cables at the huge power
ance firm told the state Supreme after he accidentally cut into the plant so it was responsible for damCourt on Wednesday that the other wrong power cable at Ohio Power ages resulting from the accident
was responsible for paying a $6.5 Co.'s Philip Sporn plant in Mason
Ohio Power asked the court to
million award in an electrocution CountyonAug. l9,1987.
overturn a Mason County Circuit
case.
Ohio Power attorney Timothy Court order of Feb. 6, 1990. The
Daphne C. Pasquale was award- Miller said Pasquale Electric Co. order precluded Ohio from suing
Pasquale and its insurance company, Travelers Insurance Co., to
have them pay for the damages.
The trial court ruled the accident
occurred between written contracts
executed on June 26 and Aug. 25,
1987, and was not covered by
either.
Miller told the justices, howev Moderate !lamage was incurred to two vehicles in an accident on
er,
that the accident work was covWest Main Street, Pomeroy, late Wedncsda;Y afternoon.
ered
by an oral contract that
According to the report of PW~eroy Police, Ronda K. Justis was
allowed
Pasquale to shift its worksouthbound on West Main Street when the vehicle she was driving
ers
to
the
area of the cable. Miller
was struck in the left side by a car driven by Cynthia Siders, Galcontended
that any damage was
lipolis Ferry, W. Va. Siders was reportedly in the bridge left turn
Pasquale's
responsibility.
lane and was attempting to move into the outside right lane when
Ohio required contractors to
the collision occurred. There were no injuries nor citations.
provide proof of insurance and to
hold the company harmless in the
event of any accident, the court file
said.
But attorney Michael Farrell,
representing Travelers on behalf of
A Racine youth received minor injuries as the result of a one-car
Pasquale Electric, said there was no
crash on C.R. 30 in Sutton Township Wednesday night.
contract and that the worker had
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
been moved from one project to
Highway Patrol, Dee A. Canter, 17, of Racine, was westbound on
another as a stopgap measure.
C.R. 30 and lost control of her car in a curve. The car went off the
Michael Pasquale, 23, was temleft side of the roadway, struck an embanlcment and overturned.
porarily working for his uncle's
Canter was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital where she
company. The line he was cutting
was treated and released for minor visible injuries.
was supposed to have had the
Damage to ~anter's 1980 Chevrolet Citation was listed as heavy
power shut off.
and disabling.
Ohio Power said the line he
Canter was cited by the patrol for failure to control.
sliced was 27 feet from the one he
Continued on page 3
was supposed to have been working on.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel Nt'll'li Staff
The purchase of a breathalizertype apparatus by the Village of
Middleport was discussed when the
Meigs County Commissioners met
in regular session on Wednesday.
The board reviewed a letter
from Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman, in which Hoffman indicated
that the village was in the process
of purchasing a new machine
(which tests blood alcohol content
by breath) to replace the village's
current equipment. The machine
now in place within the Middleport
Police Department is no longer
operational and cannot be repaired.
The cost of the new machine,
according to Hoffman, is estimated
at $5,000, and Hoffman has
tequested that the county assist in
the purchase since the sheriff' s
office also uses Middleport' s
equipment.
The county has a mutual aid
agreement with the Village of
Pomeroy in which the county provides jail space in exchange for
breathalizer equipment use. However, the status of the Pomeroy
machine was not know yesterday
by the board.

· Hoffman 's letter stated that the
village had performed 35 BAC
tests for the county so far this year.
Hoffman has suggested that the
county pay $2,000 toward the purchase price, which amounts to
$5,000 after a $1,000 trade in.

Hoffman did not indicate in his
letter if other villages were asked to
help in the purchase.
The commissioners tabled
action on the issue until they could
meet with Sheriff James M. SoulsContinued on page 3

Government says ·
trade deficit widens
WASHINGTON (AP) -

The

The June imbalance had been
the country's best trade showing in
cally to $5.9 billion in July as more than eight years . Many
imports of autos, clothing and other economists believe that record will
consumer products surged, the gov- not be challenged for some time to ·
come.
·
ernment said today.
The Commerce Department said
They are forecasting that the
the gap between what America U.S. deficit will climb for the rest
sells overseas and what it imports of the year as Americans regain
shot up 55.6 percent £rom a revised their appetite for imports while the
June imbalance of $3.79 billion.
growth in U.S. exports slows
It was the largest trade deficit because of weakening economies
since January and reflected the fact overseas.
Such a development would thai imports jumped 6.2 percent to
$41.16 billion while U.S. exports, threaten the Bush administration' s .
which had fallen in the previous economic forecast for a sustained ·
two months, advanced a more mod- eco~omic recovery , propelled by
est 0.8 percent in July to $35.27 contmued strong growth in ex pons.
billion.

u.s. trade deficit widened dramati-

Local briefs

Wreck causes moderate damage

Patrol probes accident

MOTOR VEHICLE ACCIDENT • Tbe
Racine Volunteer Fire Department responded to
this one-car accident Wednesday at 7:06 p.m. on
Morning Star Road. Tbe driver, Dee Canter, ·
was transported by Racine Squad 28 to Veter-

-

~

ans M'emorlal H011pltal after the fire department
removed tbe windshield from the car and
applied braces and a back board. Canter was
treated and released at the hospital. (Sentinel
photo by Dennis M. Wolfe.)

�Thursday, September 19, 1991

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OH 10 Weather
Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 19, 1991

£7lJI1ll1liSSilJil••• _c_on_ti-nu_ed_r_ro_m~pa~g-et_______________________________________

Friday, Sept. 20
. Accu- Weather~ forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatwes
MICH.

The D_aily Sentinel
111 Court Sbeet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO 11IE INTERESTS OP 11IE IIEIG8-IIIASON AREA

.MULTIMEDIA, INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ControUer
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words king. All letters are subject 10 editing and must be signed
with name, address and telephone number. No unsigned leuers will
be published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
personalities.

With no money for agenda,
Bush, Democrats spar
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
WASHJNGTON - With a theme of putting Americans flfSt, and new
candidates 10 push it, Democrats arc trying to make domestic policy into a
cutting issue against President Bush in 1992- but they've got some
problems 10 confront along the way.
For one thing , while Democrats contend that Bush has no major
domestic agenda, their House and Senate majorities have not been able to
come up with a broad domestic program.
And if they did, there would be no money to finance it The 1990 budget commiunent signed by both parties precludes the use of any defense
or foreign aid savings to bankroll new domestic programs this year or
next.
That leaves both sides talking in slogans and selling goals. a contest in
which the better soap box is a major advantage. So the message from
Bush and the While House is the repeated claim that the admirustration
has a broad and challenging domestic agenda but Congress won ' t approve
it.
Bush complains of " a Dem ocratic-controlled logjam of legislation" on
domestic concerns like crime and tran sportation.
" There's something wrong when we can push foreign forces out of
Kuwai t but we can't get domestic programs through Congress," Bush
said last week.
Congressional Democrats say they want action on health care, on education reform, on middle income tax cuts, on economic revival and more,
but there is no opposition consensus on specific measures to deal with
those concerns.
The most pointed and specific issue at hand now is an extension of
unemployment insurance to replace one Bush signed but would not implement A bill to force extended benefits faces a Bush veto, and while it
probably would be sustained, the economic issue will be drawn more
sharply in the process.
As the House dealt with the measure on Monday, Democrats contrasted the administration's opposition 10 more jobless pay at home with its
~tension of foreign aid abroad.
·· " This country needs leadership on domestic issues too," said Rep.
O~vid Price, D-N.C. " America is suffering the effects of an economic
recession and our president is oblivious to it.''
- ·The administration contends that the recession is ending and the econciny is recovering.
: The debate about spending on foreign aid and defense while there's a
tight lid on spending at home is one that will mark the 1992 campaign.
-"I intend 10 put the priorities of Americans flfSt," said Sen. George
Mitchell of Maine, the Democratic leader, outlining his priorities for the
faU finale of the congressional session.
· That was a theme shared by two rival Democrats who declared over
the weekend that they were candidates for the nomination to challenge
Bush.
::" !·'think it's time 10 s!art investing in America," Sen. Tom Harkin of
Iowa said Monday as he launched his campaign for New Harnpshine ·s
IC~~doff presidential primary. "quit SIJilnding so ':'luch money abroad, quit
wasting our money, and s!art mvesung m the mfrastructure and m the
pe(&gt;ple of this country."
.
.
.
.
_
· Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wtlder S31d he IS.runnmg for prestdent to
''put America first, to begm the J?rocess of geUlllg the economy movmg
again, to put us .on a path that. wtU attack federal .spending, to be~n .~e
process of relievmg the regressiVe tax burden on mtddle class famihes.
-There are now three Democratic candidales, with at least three more
lil¢1y to join the race this fall.
Jfheir demands for change and for action at home will inevitably collide with the 1990 budget deal that set ceilings in three spending catcgoties, domestic, defense and international aid, and forbid the shifting of
funds from one to another.
Under those rules, which apply until afier the 1992 election, it is going
to be difficult for Democrats to raise a meaningful challenge to spending
priOrities.
}larkin uied last week, proposing to transfer just over $3 billion in
future defense spending to domestic programs next year. "Do we s!art
inVesting in solutions w our nation's pressing economic.problems, or qo
we continue to pour btlhons of dollars mto the substdy of Europe s
defense against a now non-existent Soviet Union?" he said.
His amendment was rejecled, 69 to 28. Democratic opponents said it
wo)Jid have undone budget discipline. Harkin and SelL Paul Simon, D-111.,
did coax through another amendment, proposing a new look at budget prioriiies.
That won' t be the last call for an overhaul.

Berry's World
I

j

8l&gt;U5Hi A.NY Goot&gt;
C.Q s LATELY!

•
IToledo I sg oI

Does pork barrel extend to nuclear cleanup?
WASHINGTON - A com~y
faci ng a multimillion-dollar
cleanup of nuclear waste on its
property began giving big campaign contributions to Rep: John
Murtha, D-Pa., last year. Wnhin a
few weeks, Murtha started pushing
for approval of $30 million in taxpayers' money for what was supposed 10 be a private cleanup obligalion.
Murtha, chairman of Ihe
Defense Appropriations subeommittee , processed the expense
through his committee, even
though environmental cleanup is
not their bailiwiclc. Now that the
expense has been approved,
Murtha says the government had to
chip in to speed up the decontarnination process on the propeny, and
it was an allowable defense
ex pense because the radioactive
waste was buried on the site when
the nuclear fuel plant there was
under contract to the Defense
Department.
The compan y is Babcock and
Wilcox , which owns a closed
nuclear fuel facility in Apollo, Pa.,
15 miles northeast of Pittsburgh.
The former owners buried radioac live wasle on the land long before
Babcock and Wilcox bou~tht it in

1971 , according to government
records. The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission says Babcock and
Wilcox and the former owners both
dumped low enriched uranium iniO
a nearby river. Babcock and
Wil cox claims the amount was
within allowable limits.
But Apollo residents worry
about what lies under their ground
and lurks in their water, and they
have been waiting for years for
Babcock and Wilcox to decontarninate the area. Apollo is in Murtha's
district and residents have sought
his help in cleaning up the mess.
Help came after Babcock and
Wilcox began giving money to
Murtha's campaign .. Until las! summer, the last carnpatgn donauon he
had received froiTI Babcock a~d
Wilcox was $500 m 1982. But tn
the last two years, the company's
political action committee has
given Murtha $4,500, according to
federal election records reviewed
by our associate Scott Sleek.
.
The flCSt donation was $1,000 tn
May 1990, followed by another
$1,500 in July 1990. By Seplember, Murtha had mtroduced hts
measure to help pay for the
cleanup. The political action commitiee ~ave him another $2,000 last

spring..;,spokesmen for Murtha and
for the political action commuiee
said the contributions had nothing
10 do with Murtha's legislation.
Babcock and Wilcox thinks the
government should share the costs
of the cleanup because the dumping was done while the plant was
under contract w sell nuclear fuel
to the Defense and Energy department s. But ev en the En ergy
Department says that just because
the government was buying from
the plant does n' t mean the taxpayers are responsible for the company's dumping. .
The cleanup ts expected to cost
$60 million. Babcock and Wtlcox
says it has spent about $20.5 mtl hon of ti S own money so far.
Murtha chums he ]JUShed through
the federal contnbuuon because the
company couldn't afford to do the
job quickly. " I was concerned that,
the longer th e cleanup took , the
greater the risk to the commumty
might be,' ' Murtha has said.
.
If the cleanup process ts gomg
too slowly and the~e ts potential
danger to a commumty,_ the Nuclear Regulatory Commtsston has the
right to impose a deadline on the
company, without chipping in publie money 10 get the JOb done. The

'IOU'VE BEI:N WIT~ US
IOYEARS AND 'IOU'VE

GENERA"TeD

NEEDLES~

REFoR:IS, 'IOU HAVEN'T
EASED P~DUCT\VITV AS
E~PEc.TED AND 'IOU'VE
COST US THOUSANDS OF
D&lt;tLARS ...WHAT IXJ lt?U HAVE
TO SAY FOR YOURSEL-F.?

By Jack Anderson
an d Dale Van Atta
go vernment could al so go to the
former owners for help.
The NR C is suppose d to be
oversee ing the cleanup, but some
Apollo residents are womed that
the agency won 't be tough enough
on Babcock and Wilcox. Others are
just happy to sec the cleanup final ly move forward.
The federal handout to Babcock
and Wilcox sets a dangerous precedent, according to Richard Condit
of the Government Accountability
Projec t, a watchdog group in
Washing10n. "It gives the message
that if you do any business with the
government, then the govern men l
will give you a little hand, " Condit
said. " But if the government ts not
liable, taxpayers don't want their
money going for the cleanup.''
SLOW LEARNER - Mikhail
Gorbachev came back from hi s
vacation in the Crimea with on e
foot still mired in the past. Had it
not been for Boris Yeltsin' s insistence, Gorbachev would have
replaced the coup conspirators with
cronies of a similar stripe. He initially opposed any crackdown on
the Communist Party because he
stiU figured he could reform iL But
Yeltsin demanded a clean sweep.
Gorbachev has had no choice but to
accept Yeltsin's demands. But he
will have to be watched carefuUy to
make sure he is not maneuvering
behind the scenes to dilute the
refQnn process so he can placate
the hardliners who still remain in
government
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
Food and Drug Administration is
looking into yet another way that
medical care can be manipulated
by a profit motive. The FDA is
in vestigatin g a dru g maker ,
SmithKline Beecham , for allegedl y
" priming" doctors - givmg them
a free dinner and money to ltsten to
a spiel about a ne w drug that has
not yet been approved by,~e FDA.
Dru g companies call 1t consulting" with the doctors, but the FDA
should put a stop to it. A doc tor
who takes personal freebies from a
drug compan y cannot convincingly
claim to presc nbe dru gs based
solely on the needs of the patient.
Copyright, 199 1. Umted Feature
Syndicate , Inc.

A chant for the politically prosecuted
If there's a man-made thing as
fast as God-made lighming, it's a
newly coined catch-phrase making
its way through the ranks of ideologues. At the moment, the fad
phrase that's fast becoming a Vedic
chant in right-wing circles is
" political prosecution" - as in
what is being done to poor Ollie
and the Iran-contra pranksters.
Who knows where the incantation starled? I flCSt noticed it in a
June 18 editorial in the Wall Street
Journal. Congress and Independent
Counsel Lawrence Walsh were trying "10 crirninalize policy disputes
(Om)," said the Journal. Shutting
down Walsh 's operation "would
send the message that political
prosecutions (Om) have no place in
this country."
Then came Oliver North him seU:, in an article in the Washingwn
Times of July 16: "As long as we
continue to have special prosecutors ... we're going 10 have political
trials (Om) . ... The result is the
criminalization of policy differences (Om)."
Then carne conservative columnist Patrick Buchanan, writing
about the guilty plea negotialed by

former CIA official Alan Fiers,
who admitted he had misled
Congress: "The left has sought to
criminalize politics (Om)."
Now comes Spear to tell you
this is hurnbuggery of a high order.
Yes, Democrats would lilc:e to put
Ronald Reagan and George Bush
in a cauldron of their own snake oil
and boil them up w a bright pinlc.
Yes, the Republicans would like 10
paint the Democrats as faint-beaned persecutors of patriots. But
those are the narrow aims of narrow-minded pols. Let them bleat 10
their hearts' content There's much
more in it for you and me.
What the average citizen should
understand is that the Iran-contra
affair is a seminar in the meaning
of Democracy. Like Watergale, it
is one of those painful and expensive exercises we must periodically
endure 10 reinforce the crucial lesson that the price of freedom is
eternal vigilance. Painful because
well-intentioned but fanatical people inevitably end up getting hurt.
Expensive because investigations
and prosecutions don't come cheap
(Lawrence Walsh's critics say he

has spent more than $35 million; he
says it's closer to $25 million).
This government belongs 10 the
people. We express our will most
direclly through the Congress 87 percent of which faces the voters every two years. The Con~ss
forbade assistance to the
Nicaraguan contras. Oliver North
and his unelected gang of chauvinists thought they knew better,
defied the Congress, conducle"d
their own foreign policy and then
strove 10 obsi!Uct investigations of
their activities. That is why they
are being prosecuted. Not for political reasons but for clear, concise,
well-defined legal - indeed, constirutional - reasons.
Now comes Clair E. George, ex.
chief of the CIA's covert operations, who has been indicted on I0
counts of lying and otherwi se
obstructing congressional and
grand jury probes. Everyone who
knows him well seems to agree that
he was a courageous and dedicated
defender of American interests. He
served in Africa, in Beirut dwing
the civil war, in Greece where he
replaced a station chief who had

By Joseph Spear
been assassinated.
But George apparently believes
that Congress ought to keep its
nose out of intelligence matters. A
fanner CIA official put it this way
10 the Washington Post: "Does
Clair George have a strong view
that Congress is not competent to
be entrusted with (secrets)? You
bet ... And if he's given the authority to deny (secrets) to the
Congress, he'll deny it with great
enthusiasm.'' Robert Gates, President Bush's nominee for CIA
director, was quoted in a 1990
biography of the late director
William Casey as saying that
George and Casey had a similar
aUirude: "Don't tell Congress anything unless you're driven to th e
wall."
And what docs Clair George say
about the charges that ha've been
brought against him? He says he is
yet another ' 'pawn in a continuous
drama of political exploitation.''
Om .
(C)1991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

So what's to be dissatisfied about?
The latest Gallup Poll tells us
that American workers' "job satisfaction" has slipped several percentage points over the last two
years. Pollsters blame the recession, but I think that !ells only a
small part of the swry.
I realize the recession has to be
a facwr. Businesses have cut back,
some of us aren' 1 doing the jobs
we 'd like to do because the market's tight, and others of us are
doing more work and staying
longer 10 do it. Yet a large number
of us who are marking lower jobsatisfaction ratings on our surveys
have jobs in the fields we uained
for at salaries that let us have a lot
of the things we want. I can't
believe a slightly dampened economy accounts for all our dampened
enthusiasm.
Every whack I take from a
recession seems so much less than
the ones my parents took from the
Depression. I have a better job than
I dreamed I would have 20 years
ago when I was in college, and
even working at the career of my
choice is a luxury that my parents
never had. They dropped out of
college in the Depression and got
the best jobs they could, but they
didn ' t dream of giving up that
security to chase after careers
they'd have liked better.
Yet you can't help but notice
that the survey results are accurate.

Among people with good jobs and
salaries that have remained relatively stable, we sure seem to be
enjoying our work less. I do a lot or
business on the phone with other
professionals who have pretty good
jobs, and some of them use their
phones as instruments of violence
rather than convenience.
I get to the office in the morning
and messages ane waiting on Voice
Mail : A fourth of the callers are
mad that they couldn't get to my
actual body instead of a machine,
another group are mad that the
Voice Mail made them wade
through so many steps before they
were allowed 10 leave a message.
Sometimes there are two or three
messages from the same person,
wailing in a voice that sounds like
it surely must be coming from a
person hanging in thumbscrews
and being poked with hot irons,
demanding 10 talk. to me as soon as
possible. As oflen as not, when I
return the caiiiO the whiner, it goes
unanswered.
When some of these folks actuaUy do get hold of an actual person,
they'll be defensive or paranoid,
sort of a " You're not going 10 give
me what I need, are YO\!, so I'd better get the first shot in, so when
you disappoint me I can at least
leave you wounded" attiwde.
Go out on errands during the
lunch hour, and we 've just changed

weapons, not techniques . Now
we're behind the wheels of two-ton
death machines, and we still want
blood if we can't turn across traffic
as soon as we want, or someone
cuts in front of us a little closer
than we deem appropriate.
My perspective may be skewed,
but I think a lot of us have lost it
altogether. We ' re spoiled ro11en.
My mother's been dead 15 years,
but after seeing what she went
through on her job, I sure wouldn't
relish explaining 10 her why I had
so much "job dissatisfaction" in a
career that at least provides me
pleasarii challenges and lots of
things I like 10 do. I'd rather wade
through that stack of pink phone
messages and talk to those whiny
callers any day.
I'm not the only one who sees
this job-satisfaction drop as due in

Sarah Overstreet

tion.' '

(C)J991
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Today in history
By The Associated Press
Today. is Thursday, Sept. 19, the 262nd day of 199 1. There are 103
days left m the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
. On Sept 19, 17~6. Pre~ident Was~ingiOn 's farewell address was pubhshed. In 11, the fust chtef execultve of the United States advised
"Observe good faith and justice toward all nations. Cultivate peace and
harmony with all."
On this dale:
In 1777, American soldiers in the Revolutionary War won the first
Battle of Saratoga over the British.

{)

{)

PA.

~

.a

• [ Columbus [ 56°

I

~4
Showers T-srorms Rain

Flurdes

Snow

Via A$sociatttd Press Grapl-icsN el

Ice

Sunny

Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

C 199 1 Accu-Weather, Inc.

-------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight , mostly clear. Near
record low around 40. North winds
5 to 10 mph. Friday, sunny. High
around 60. Johnson updated to
increase the chance of rain this
morning.
Extended forecast:

Saturday through Monday
Fair with a warming trend .
Lows Saturday from the middle
30s to the lower 40s, in the 40s
Sunday and from the middle 40s to
the lower 50s Monday. Highs Saturday in the 60s, from 65 to 75
Sunday and in the 70s Monday.

--Area deaths-Dana Wyant
Dana F. Wyant, 69, a resident of
the Overbrook Nursing Home, died
Wednesday, Sept. 18, 1991 in
Veterans Mcmonal Hospital .
She was a homemaker.
Born Nov. 10, 1921, in Mason
County, she was a daughter of the
late Millard and Retta (Lieving)
Roush.
Surviving arc four daughters,
Mrs. Com Jewell and Mrs. Ruby
Capehar~ both of Pomeroy, Mrs.
Barbara Harris and Belly Foster,
both of Middleport; two sons, Russell Robinson of Pomeroy, and Eddie lhle of Letart; two sister.;.
Vi vian Phelphs, Athens, Ohio,
Frances Kerns, Hartford; two
brothers, Walter Roush of Columbus. Jay Roush of California;
se veral
grandchildren,
greatgrandchildren, nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death
by two daughters, Nellie Thornton
and Judy Robinson, five brothers
and four sisters .
The funeral will be Friday, Sept.
20, I p.m., at the Foglesong
Funeral Home with the Rev. Margare t Robinson officiating. Burial
will be in the Union Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today, 6 to 8 p.m. Pallbearers
will include Wayne Capehart.
Ri chie Thornton, David Capehart,
Ronnie
Capehart,
Lawrence
Powell. and Terry Powell.

Norma Andrews
Norma Mac Andrews, 55, of
Route 6, Box 234 in Fairmont ,
W.Va., died on Monday, September 16 , 1991 as the result of
injuries sustained in an accident in
Morehead City, N.C.
Born March 3, 1936 in New
Martinsville, W.Va., she was the
daughter of E. Dorena Polls and
the late John Cecil.
Besides her mother she is survived by four daughters , Vicki
Pratt, Pennsboro, W.Va.; Carla
Heslep, North Lewisburg; Lois
Micheal, Dublin; and Jodi Zohnd.
New Martinsville, W.Va.; four sisters. Melba Long and Dora Lobo,
Ne w Martinsville, W.Va.; and
Joy ce Po stlethwait and Carol

The Daily Sentinel
(US I'S 14:1-86()1

•
pan to altitude. In hi s new book,
"The United States of Incompetence," Philadelphia Inquirer Editor Art Carey chronicles some of
the ineptitude and chwlishness in
the American workplace. He say s
we' ve crealed " an adver.;arial cynicism that helped kill the American
work ethic," and we ' ve lost our
pride in a job well done. The examples he cites make a good case for
his charges.
• Frankly, I think a week or two
spent working under the conditions
our parents and grandparents did ,
and maybe a good kick in our
rumps, would go a long way
toward curing " job di ssatisfac -

•

IMansfield I 54° I•
IND.

A Dlvlllon of Multlm@dla, lnr .
Publl shec.i every aftern oon , . Monday

through Friday , 111 Court St., Pome-r oy, Ohio. by the Ohio Vall ey Publishin g Co mpany / Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomt-roy, Ohi o 4 ~769. Ph . 992·2156. Second cl ass postage paid a! Po mt&gt;roy.
0~1 0.

Mt"mbf&gt;r : The Associ ated P ress. In ·

la nd Da ll y Press Associa tion and thE'
Ohio Newspaper Association . Nationa l
Adv£' rtls lng RPpresent atlve, Branha m ·
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenu e .
New York . New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send addrt'Ss change5

IO 1lte Dally Sentinel, lll C0uo1 St .. I
P&lt;&gt;meroy, O~lo 457il!l.
SUIISCRIPTION RATES

By Carrier or Motor Route
One Wrek ....................... .......... .. $1.6()
Onr Month
................ .. .... $6.95
Om• Yfar ...
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SINGLECOPV
PRICE
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Subscribe-rs not d es iring to pay the car rier may remit In advance direct t o
ThE' Dally Sentin el on a 3, 6 or 12 m onth
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by to determine the feasibility or
the purchase of a county-owned
machine.
Other business
A request from Hoffman that the
county appropriate $2,785.78 10 set
up offices for the Meigs County
Metropolitan Housing Authority
was tabled.
The offices for the county-wide
board have been established in
Middleport, with Jean Trussell having been appointed as the dinector
of the authority. Accordin~ to discussions held by the commiSSioners
yesterday, the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development.
through the local program, was to
have provided start-up funding for
the program.
Meigs County Engineer Phil
Roberts reported that staff from the
Ohio Department of Transportation
would be on-site at county and
township roads 10 review damage
and repair plans roc the roads damaged by increased traffic due to the
closure of the YeUowbush Bridge.

The bridge re-opened on Mon- residents in Flom.
day after being closed since early
The funds for that work, which
began
earlier this week, is being
last Spring.
provided
through Community
Due to complaints from township and county officials, ODOT Development Block Grant funds.
pledged w help in repairing those Four customers will be receiving
roads damaged by the increase in new water service because of the
installation.
traffic.
In other action, the commissionDon Poole, Manager of the Tupers:
pers Plains/Chester Water District
- discussed ongoing renovation
reported, by letter, that the syslem
was preparing to provide water to work in the courthouse and at the

By The Associated Press
Ohioans can expect fall like
weather for the remainder of the
workweek.
Clear slcies and a relatively calm
wind tonight will provide near
ideal conditions for the mercury to
fall to near record levels over the
entire state except the northeast
corner near lalc:e Erie. Lows will
range from the mid 30s to near 40

LlJCa[ briefs •••

su~cr lptlons

Five were fined and nine others forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were Ronnie Plumley, Galhpohs, Ferry, W. Va, $88 and
costs consuming alcohol under age 21 , and $63 and costs , open
flask;' Tony Lee Johnson, Gallipolis, $88 and costs, consuming al~- ·
hoi under age 21, and $63 and costs, open flash; Anthony Smtih,
Pomeroy, $113 and costs, public intoxication; Tammy QUIUen, Rutland, $48 and costs, speeding; and Dwayne Qualls, $88 and costs,
open flask.
.
.
Forfeiting bonds were Lore tt~ Holsmger! Mtddleport, $63,
expired registration; Elizabeth V.:tllford •. Rac~ne, $43, speedmg;
Waller Wears, Pomeroy, $63, expired regtstranon; ~h~ Siewan,
West Columbia, $63 and costs, failure 10 display regiStrabon; Della
Shrede, Racine, $49, speeding; Danny Salyers, Pomeroy, $63, no
valid registration ; Charloue Coon, New Haven, W. Va., $~3 .
expires re$istration; Jeffrey Wetherholt, Rio G~e. $63, squealmg
tires; Chnstopher Smith, Syracuse, $63, operaung under suspen sian.

Natural Gas, Stone Container
sign stock purchase agreement
oil and gas exploration and production company in Easiem Ohio, and
holds interests in producing wells,
undeveloped acreage, gas pipelines
and other assets. The acquisition
properties and operations closely
match the core business of National
Gas: natural gas production and
distribution.
Financing of the acquisition will
be provided primarily by a bank
loan and the balance by iniemally
generated funds. National Gas has
received a written commiunent for
the bank loan.
Closing is anticipated to occw
on or before September 30, but is
subject to various conditions. If the
closing does not occur by October
31 , either party may terminale the
agreement.

-Meigs announcements--

Hospital news

VETERANS MEMORIAL
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
- Margaret Johnson, Racine; Minnie Thompson, Mtddleport; Agnes
Mowery, Pomeroy; and AI va
Tiemeyer, Middlepon.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Audra Arnold and Donna
Williamson.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Sept. 18 - Stacy
Black, Joshua Burnell, Kimberly
Ervin, Christina Freeman, Marjorie
John son, James Marquis, Julie
McClain, Darlene Perkins, Mrs.
Russell Saunders and daughters,
Murble Shelton, John TiLley, and
Gertrude Wise.
Births Sept 18 - Mr. and Mrs.
Randel Christian, daughter, Oak
Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Willet,
daughter, Crown City.

a v a ~lpbl e-.

Mall Sublcrlptlon•
ln11de Melp County
13 Weeks . ................................. $21.84
~ Weelcs .
. ............. ....... . $43.16
52 Weeks .....
·....... . $84.76

degrees over the entire stale except
over the northeast lalc:e counties
were lows will be in the lower 40s.
There will be plenty or sunshine

Stocks
Am Ele Power ................ .30 1/4
Ashland Oil ......... .............30 3/4
AT&amp;T.. ...................... ......37 1/2
Bob Evans ......................... 17 3/4
Charming Shop.................. l9 1/4
City Holding ..................... 15 3/4
Federal Mogul.. ................. l5 5/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ............... ..42 7/8
Key Centurion ........................ 15
Lands' End ........................ 191/4
Limiled Inc . ...................... 26 3/8
Multimedia Inc .................. 24 1/2
Rax Restaurant .... ................?/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ............. .. 39
Shoney's Inc ..................... 17 1/4
Star Bank .......................... 22 1/4
Wendy Int'l... ...................... 8 1/2
Worthington Ind . ..............29 1!2
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes pro~ided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewi of Gallipolis.

on Friday. But the north wind will
hold afternoon highs in the upper
50s to near 60 degrees over the
entire state .
Record high for this date was 97
in 189 5; rec ord low was 40 in
1901.
Sunrise Saturday will be at 7: 16;
sunset at 7:35.
Around the nation
The Plains and north-Atl antic
seaboard got a reminder that winter
is just around the comer and tern peratures plunged and rain pe lted
parts of Main e, New Yo rk and
Pennsy lvania. But across much of
the South and West it was still a
red-hot summer.
Freezing temperatures chi li ed
the Dakotas and Wyoming before
dawn today and frost warnin gs
were issued for pans of Nebraska,
Minnesota and Wi sconsin , whil e
snow was forecast for Michi gan.
But across much of Florida, California, Nevada and even Oregon
temperatures in the 90s were fore'
cast.
While it was snowing in Duluth ,
Minn., on Wednesday. the Iemperature climbed to 93 in Reno, Nev.

Squads respond to 8 calls
Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to eight calls for assistance on Wednesday and early
Thursday morning.
On Wednesday at 3:39 p.m. the
Pomeroy unit went to Township
Road 296 for Morine Gorell who
was transported St. Joseph Hospital. At 5:31 p.m. the unit went to
Bunernut Avenue for Kenny
Lunsford who was treated but not
transported.
The Middleport unit at 6::07
p.m. went to Meigs Jumor Htgh
School for Brian Keith Long who
was trealed but not transported.
At 7:06 p.m , the Racine Fire
Department responded to a motor
vehicle accident on Mommg Star
Road in which Dee Canter was
taken by the emergency squad to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Bashan Fire Deparunent at
7:13p.m. was called to Portland on
a repon of downed power lines. A
spokesman from the Portland area

reports that area was heavily darnaged by storms that moved througl1
last evening. Large sized hail fell,
trees were topped and power lines
were downed.
Early this morning (Thursday)
the Racine unit, at 2:03 a.m. went
to Mile Hill Road for Twila Clark .
who was trealed but not transported.
At 2:43 a.m. the Middleport unit
responded to South Second for Lisa
Haynes who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
The Pomeroy unit, at 9:14 a.m., .
went to the Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center for Thomas
Hayman who was taken to Veterans.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

•'. •. '

Names omitted
day at 6 p.m. at the town house. All
members are ID'ged to attend.
Smorgasbord dinner
The Long Botwm Co'mmunity
Association will have a smorgasbord dinner on Sept 28 at 5 p.m. in
the Long Bottom Community
Building. Cost is $5 for adults and
$2.50 for children under age 12.
Desserts and drinks are included in
the price. Several meats, homemade noodles , lots of entrees, salads, etc., will be available.
Guest speaker
Margaret Robinson will be the
guest speaker at.the Old Bethel
Free Will Baptisi'Chureh at Route
7 and Story's Run Road on Saturday at 7:30p.m. Special singing by
the Happy Praise Singers from Barboursville, W.Va. Pastor Ralph
Butcher invites the public.

Omiued from the Floyd Cummins obituary in Wednesday's edition of The Daily Sentinel were
several relatives who preceded him
in death. They included a son,
Bobby, a daughter, Shirley, a
grandson, Corey, three brothers,
Homer, Herbert and Howard Cummins, and two sisters, Ruth Kesler
Circle and Florence Canaday. He
was also a member of the Letart
Methodist Church.

MIDDLEPORT FIRE
DEPARTMENT
CHICKEN. BBQ
I

SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 21
SERVING STARtS IT 11:00 A.M.

DINNERS $3.&amp;0
1/2 Cblclcen, Baked Beans.and RoD
1/2 CHICKEN ONLY $3.00

·-··--------------,

···--------------,
LARGE

s

PEPPERONI PIZZA

by mall permitted In

areas where homt&gt; carrier SE'rv lct&gt; Is

continued from page 1

Five fined in Pomeroy Court

Kover. Cortland; one brother, Gene
Cecil, Camron, W.Va.; and five
grandchildren.
·
Besides her father, she was preceded in death by her husband.
Clarence W. Andrews, who also
died as a result of the accident on
Monday.
Services will be held Saturday
at I p.m . at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Robert Sanders officiating. Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
National Gas &amp; Oil Company
home on Friday from 5-9 p.m.
(National Gas) and SlOne Container
Corporation (Stone Container)
Clarence Andrews
have signed a stock purchase
Clarence W. Andrews , 53, of agreement, according to a news
Rural Route 6, Box 234, Fairmont, release Wednesday.
W.Va., fonnerly of Meigs County,
The release says National Gas
died Monday, September 16, 1991 will purchase for $10 million in
as a result of injuries sustained in cash at the closing of all of the outan automobile accident near More- standing stock of Stone Resource
head City, N.C.
and Energy Corporation (Stone
He was an electrician and a coal Resource), a wholly-owned subminer.
sidiary of Stone Container.
He was born in Middleport on
National Gas &amp; Oil Company is
Oct 2, 1937, the son of the late a holding company based in
Clarence A. Andrews and of Mar- Newark Ohio. In part, it serves the
ga ret Mae Eskew Andrews of villages of Racine, Rutland and
Pomeroy.
Syracuse with Natural Gas.
In addition 10 his mother, he is Approximately 1,100 commercial
survived by a sister, Mrs. Roger and residential customers in Meigs
(Susie) Karr, Chesler; two brothers, County are served by the company.
Raymond L. (Megan) Andrews of
Stone Resource operates as an
Chester, and James R. Andrews of
Florida; four step-daughters, Vicki
Prall, Pennsboro, W.Va.; Carla
Heslep, New Martinsville, W.Va.;
Jodi Zohnd, New Martinsville, Arts Council to.teach sketching
The Middleport Arts Council
W.Va.; and Lois Micheal, Dublin;
will offer a sketching class. No preand several nieces and nephews.
Besides his father, he was pre- vious sketching instruction is necceded in death by his sister, Mary essary. The instructor is P.J. Harris,
Alice Wayland and his wife , and the cost is $25 for the class.
Norma Mae Andrews, who also including all materials. The class
died as the result of the accident on begins on Thursday, September 26
through October 24 at 7:45 p.m.
Monday.
each
session. To regisier, call HarHe was a veteran of the U.S.
Navy and he attended the Pomeroy ris at 992-2451, or call Mary Wi se
at992-2675.
Church of Christ
Services will be Saturday at I Southern Local Board to meet
The Southern Local School
p.m. at the Ewing Funeral Home
Board
wiU meet in regular session
with Robert Sanders officiating.
on
Monday
at 7 p.m. at the SouthBurial will be in Beech Grove
em
High
School.
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the fun eral Potluck supper
home on Friday from 5-9 p.m.
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens will hold its three-month
birthday potluck supper on Tues-

Department of Human Services;
- approved a fund transfer for
the DHS;
- moved their next regular meeting from Wednes day to Fr id ay,
September 27 at II a.m. so th at
comm issioners can attend a meeting with the Governor in Marietta.
Prese nt were Co mm iss ioners
Ri chard E. Jones, Ma nn ing K.
Roush and David Kob lent z, and
Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

Fall like weather forecast

WeE"k .

No

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-3

Only

99-

e

Offer good only ot Pomeroy &amp; C.WpoU. Storeo
Pickup or DeUvery

Outside Met~ County
13 Weeks.. ....
.. ............ $23.40
~ Week s ............................... $45.:i0
52 Weeks ... .... ..
.. .......... $88.10

'

l

- ---~--~--------~--------------.-...............................................................JL...................IIIIIIIIII....II._......................................................................................~~~~rr~ ·

''

~·

\ '

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, September 19, 1991

Meigs looking to break losing streak against Miller Friday ·

Thursday, Sept!!mber 1 9, 1991
Page-4

.

By. DAVE HARRIS
Sentmel Correspondent .
One _way o~ another a streak will
end Fnday mght at Mtller High
Sc hool m Hemlock. Tire Meigs
Marauders 0-3 .on the year and 0:2
m the Tn-Valley Conference Will
try and br~ a four-game losmg
streak t!Jat mcludes a 29-7 loss to
Belpre rn last season's fmal game.
On the other side of the co in ,
Miller will be trying to defeat the
Marauders for the fust time in the
school's ~~tory after nine meetings
on the gndiron.
Miller ts 1-2 overall and 1-1 in
the Tri-Valley Conference after last
weeks 23-22 wm over the Federal

Atlanta keeps pace with L.A.;
Giants hand Reds 7-2 defeat
By The Associated Press
hitting the .good pitches I made," matched his career high for victoThe Braves couldn't have put Bones said. " They weren't hitting ries, allowing three runs and seven
this one away much earlier.
the ball hard, but they were putting hits in seven innings.
Atlanta, in danger of falling I it in play. They found the right
Ro~er McDowell gave up an
1(2 games behind Los Angeles, got spot. There's nothing I could do RBI smgle in the ninth to Casey
hits from seven of its first eight about that."
Candaele before Steve Wilson got
batters Wednesday night, scoring
Dodgers 5, Astros 4
Rafael Ramirez to hit into a gamefive runs in the first inning. That
Mike Sharperson hit a go-ahead ending double play.
was enough for Tom Glavine, who single in the seventh inning off Rob
Cubs 4, Mets 1
became the first 19-game winner in Mallicoat (0-1) and Eddie Murray
New York was mathematically
the majors, leading the Braves to a hit a two-run horner.
eliminated in the NL East as Greg
6-4 victory over the San Diego
Mike Morgan (13-9) won his Maddux (12-10) pitcped a five-hit•
Padres.
third consecutive decision and
(See NL on Page S)
"It's a big win, with everything
that's happened the last few games
and the pennant race," Glavine
said. "This took a little pressure
off."
Atlanta had blown a I 1(2-game
lead over the Dodgers in the NL
West. This time, they kept pace,
0
remaining a half-game out as Los
REG. $20.00
NOW
Angeles beat Houston 5-4 on the
West Coast
The Braves were fired up,
''probably because of the two
$29.95 VALUE
NOW
&amp;
games we lost in San Francisco,"
said Lonnie Smith, who singled on
the first pitch of both the first and
second innings.
$29.95
NOW
Glavine (19-10) allowed three
hits in the fust seven innings, then
allowed two runs and four hits in
the eighth. Alejandro Pena got
$30 &amp; $40
VALUE NOW
Benito Santiago on an inning-ending groundout and frnished for his
ninth save.
In other games, Chicago beat
New York 4-1 , Piusburgh beat St
Louis 6-5, Philadelphia beat Mon&amp;
treal I -0 and San Francisco beat
Cincinnati 7-2.
Ricky Bones (4-4) was hit hard
in the fust inning as Terry Pendle&amp;
&amp;
ton bounced into a run-scoring
double play, Sid Bream hit an RBI
single, Greg Olson hit an RBI double and Rafael Belliard hit a tworun single.
IN THE HEART OF POMEROY
"I was feeling good, but they
were swinging at everything and

By SCOTT WOLFE
and Jack Hewitt have won two
Sentinel Correspondent
events each, but no one has won all
:': The United States Auto Club four to get the bonus.
(USAC), sanctioning body of the
Races a re at 7:30 each night
!.ndianapolis 500, will hold its with Sunday's program beginning
biggest small track event of the at 2 p.m.
year at Earl Baltes' famed Eldora
Eldora is located on S.R. 118
Speedway in Rossburg from Friday north of Rossburg, near Greenville.
IO Sunday.
WVMS results
. The event features four diviAt Mineral Wells, W.Va., Chris
sions. all of which pay $10,000 to Diddle of Racine grabbed the lead
:win with UMP Late Models and on the opening lap from the pole
'D.irt Champ cars running Friday, position and never looked back en
·119n-winged sprint cars and midgets route to his fourth straight feature
Saturday evening, and four big fea- win at West Vir$inia Motor Speed·ture events in each division on Sun- way in the Sern1-Late Model diviifay afternoon.
sion.
:··, A special bonus has been added
Cautions on laps two and eight
tQ give extra incentive to a driver. kept the field close, but Diddle had
:tr, he wins in all four divisions he no trouble pulling away on the
Will win an extra $10,000 bonus. restart Kirk Isner ftnished second
;'l'his means a driver must not only with Mike Young, Porky Shores,
!l'~ fast, but also very versatile to
Don White, Eddie Clendenin and
rutit the different driving styles of Ed Shuman rounding out the top
..,anous cars.
positions. Heat winners were Isner
·::. Those stars seen weekly on Sat- and Diddle.
'urday night thunder will be comCharleston's Doug Hall won the
~ling for USAC National points,
Late Model event over Mike
especially in the sprint division, Faykus from Prosperity, W.Va. ,
where Eric Gordon holds a slim Butch Hartman, Greg Stevens,
lead over Robbie Stanley. USAC's Andy Bond, Henry Hornsby, Ken
only four time, National Sprint Car Riddle, Bobby Davidson and Jim
Champion, Steve Butler is still in Cobb.
the hunt, along with Donnie
Another local driv er, Rick
Adams, Stevie Reeves, Brad Mar- Williamson of Rutland won a UMP
:vel, Greg Staab, Jeff Bloom, Bill modified heat along with Jack
:Rose, Joey Saldana and Jim Keek- Kress. Williamson, who was
er.
injured slightly in a wild ride at
Indianapolis 500 veterans John- Portsmouth, made a great comeny Parsons and Tom Bigelow are back to finish third in the feature
:always on hand, while Indy veteran behind Kress and Andy Bond
·and local personality "Lightening
Williamson was on Kress's tail
tarry" Dickson will be on hand in much of the way, but a late pass by
!he Dirt Champ Cars. Dickson is Bond put him third.
{rom Marietta.
The next event at WVMS is Sat; Other drivers expected are Jack urday night; Sept : 21 for an
Hewitt, Terry Shepherd, Byron Enduro, while the next racing event
Reed, Frankie Kerr, Kevin Hunt- is the ALL-Star Circuit of Champitey, Ricky Hood and others.
ons sprint cars on Sunday after.. The late Rich Vogler, Larry noon , September 29. Please note
Rice (now an ESPN commentator).

•LADIES FLATS, HEELS &amp; CASUALS

$6°

•LADIES LEATHER JOGGERS

$6 $12

•MEN'S LEATHER JOGGERS

$15

In the majors . .-

gets to him In time to nail Scott during the
fourth lnnillg or Wednesday night's game in San
Francisc:o, which the Giants won 7·2. (AP)

Atlanta (Avery 16-1) at
(Bcldlcr 9-8), I 0:3S p.m.

Loi Angc!CI

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eaattm Division
\\' L PeL

Team

Pin.1burJh
SL Loois
Cllicago
New YOl:k

......... 88 58 .603
... 16 69 .524
......... 71 15 .486

....... 70 76 .479
PhilMwoddohio ....... f/1 77 .473

oouul

.........

64

il

441

Western Dlt~blon
Ttam
W L PeL
Loo AnrJ.. .. .. 84 63 .S71

Alilnlll
...........
San Diego
.. .,
ClndnnatJ --~
San Francisco .....
HollltM

13
74
70
68

......... ~9

Se.attle (Dd.ucia 12-10), 10:35 p.m
CD

AMERICAN LEAGUE

1! .5
17
HI

T...,
Toronto

GB

.568
.SOJ
••79
.466

.5
10
13.5
15.5

17

.404

2A.5

12
79
75
69
62
61

6S
67
70
7S
83
8S
49 95

.558
.541
517
.479
.428
.418
.340

GB
25
6
11.5

19
20.5
31.5

Western Dlvlllon

Tum

W L Pd.

CD

Minneaou
..... 17 60 .592
Chicaso
.... 81 66 .551
TCAU
........... 76 67 .531
Oalr:Jand
. ...... 76 70 .521
KanauCity ....... 74 71 .510
Seattle
........... 74 71 .510
California ......... 72 72 .500

Wednesday's scores
Chicago 4, New Yolk 1
Philoddphio I, Monueal 0
Pittsburgh 6, SL Looi1 5
At.lanta6, San Dieao 4
San Frandtco 71 ClndnnaU l
Los Angcle~ 5, Houston 4

6
9
I0.,
12
12

nina~

Clnelud 3, Detroit 1
OUc.ao 6. Oakland 0

Monnal (Bam01 4-6) at .Philadelphia
(Ashby 04), 7:3S p.m.
St. Louia (Olivare~ 9-5) u Pittsburah
Chicaao (Botkie 4-8) at New York

10), 2. 6:05 p.m.
Ka.nJu City (Awicr 11 -9) n Seulle
(KN&lt;gcr 10. 7), 10:05 p.m.

(Cone 12-13), 7:&lt;10 p.m.

Atlanta (Smohz. 12- 13) u Sa n Dieao
(Bcncal3·10), IO:OS p.m.

Friday's aames

Friday's games

New Yodt (Sandcr1on 15·9) u
001too (Clanens 16-8), 7 :35 p.m.
Baltimore (MIIackl 9-8) at Cleve-

Chicaao (Sutcliffe S-4) at Montrea l
(G1rdner 1-10), 1:35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Greene 11·7) •t Pius ·

land (Otto 1-6), 7:35 p.m.

'•

Milwaukee (Pleu c 1· 7)
(f•n•r.• 11· 11), 1:35 p.m.

St. Louis (Cannier 3-3) at New York

(Scl&gt;owol&lt; 34), 7:40p.m.

at

Detroit

C•lifornia (langaton 17· 7) i.l Chicago

U-•l 11 Hou slon

(Fernandez 8-12), &amp;:OS p.m.
Tctu (Boyd 2·S) at Minnesou (Nea·
gic0·0),1:05 p.m.

(Bowtn 4-4), 1:35 p.m.

San Fnnciaeo (Buitell 10..10) Jt San
Dieao (Ru:muucn &amp;.12), IO:OS p.m.

Nallonal Leaaut

ATLANTA BRAVES - Announced
that Pat Corrales, fim. bue coach; Jimy
Williams, third blse c01ch; Leo Mazzone,
piLChln&amp; coach; Clucnce Jones, batting
caach; Jim Beauchamp, dugout coach;
and Ned Yost, bullpen coordinator, will
be reuined.

Football
National Footb•ll League
Placed

Pat Beach, ti~t end, on iDjured reaerve.
Signed James Coley, ti&amp;ht end.
LOS ANGELES RAMS - Placed
Robcn Jenkin~, offensive tackle, on in·
jurod acne. Signed Bea Thcmu, defcn·

MIAMI DOLPHINS - Si1111e.i !om"
Pruitt, wide recr.iver. Placed Fred Danks,
wide receiver, on injuted reserve.

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS -

Tonight's games
California (Finley 17-1 and J. Abbott
1&amp;9) at Tuu (Ryan 1\).6 and Brown 9-

(Smiley 18-1), 7:35p.m.

CLEVELAND INDIANS- N111med

Rick Bay execullve vice pre~ ldrnt, drecllve Od. l.

sivc tackle.

California at Tc.xu, ppd., rain
T010111oS, Scaule 3;f2 inninp

(Oro" 9-10), HIS p.m.

Baseball
American LnilJe

lNDlANAPOUS COLTS -

KanJu City 1O, Minnesou 4
Be~ too 7, Baltimore .5
New York 2. Milw1ukee I. 10 in-

Tcxlay's games

Transactions

135

Wednesday's scores

Clndnn.U {MJtn 6.11) al San Fran.
eilco (Heredia 0..1),3:35 p.m.
H®Stoa (PoftUJal 10.8) at LOI Anaclea

Clnclnnall (Rijo

Eulem DIYIIIon
w L Pel

........
..........
Detroit
.. .........
Milwaukee
.......
New YID:
.......
Baltimore ........
Cleveland --~

a......

19
23.5

63
73
76
78

bwgh (Tomlin 8-6), 7o3l p.m.

Toronto (Scottlcrnyre 13·8) at Oak·
11-12),10:35 p.m.
Kanus City (Boddicker 11 · 12) at

land (Wd&lt;:!t

Traded Jcuc Solcman, linebacker, to the
Tamp• Bay Bucanccn for a 1992 fUth·
round dnfl pick.

PHILAELPIIIA EAGLES - SiJIIICd

Roy Orccn, wide RCC:i't'cr.

PHOENIX CARDINAlS - Signod
Stan Gelbau~. quarterback, and Anthony
Edward&amp;, Wtde receiver. Placed Mucua
Tumcr, .. fety, on injurcd n:a:ave. Wiivcd
Amod Field, wide rocciver, Waived Jeff
Bridcwc:ll, quanerblct, fran the practice
COlter. Signed Willie Wlight, linebacker,
to the pm:t1cc lOiter.
SEATILE SEAHAWKS - Si,nod
Cun Singer, uck.le, and Bernard C ark.
linebacker. Placed Edwin Dailey, guard,
and MatcW Coctoa, lineback~. on injured

""""''·

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SEPTEMBER 24, 1991
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members will leave from the Peoples Bank in Point Pleasant at 7:30a.m. on
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Nelsonville. Danny Lewis a 274
Prank Blake leads the Maraudpound senior tackle is out for at ers ground attack along wtth tallleast this week with a torn groin back Mike Cremeans. Quarterback
muscle. The Marauders are also Jeremy Phalin has thrown 399
still without the services of return- yards in the three losses. Shawn
ing starting center Steve Swatzel, Hawley and Kc v in Mussc r arc
Swatzel injured a knee in preseason Phalin 's favorite rece ivers.
drills and it is unknown when he
Kick-off for Friday night's conwill be back.
test at Miller High School is 7:30.

that the World of Outlaws rain date
originally sc heduled for Oct. 16
will be on Oct. 3 instead. Meigs
Countians holding tickets must use
them on Oct. 3 for the Outlaw
show.
.-----------,

KARATE CLASSES
Starting Fall Quarter
Thurs., Oct. 24
6:00p.m.
At Carleton School
Mick Howell· lnstrudor
For More Information Call

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problem, the injury bug has also
bitten the maroon and gold. Mei~s
has lost the services of co-captain
Robert Yonker for the rest of the
season. Yonker a 5-10, 190 pound
guard/linebacker that came to
Marauder country with outstanding
credentials from Louisiana suffered
a broken wrist in last weeks loss at

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(Continued from Page4)
10, increasing his record against
~r for his fifth complete game and
increased his record against th e the Expos this season to 4-0.
Dennis Martinez (10-14) lowl\-1ets to 4-1 this season.
his ERA from 2.40 to 2.35,
ered
'
Pirates li, Cardinals S
taking
'the NL lead from CincinCecil Espy hit a sacrifice fly in
nati's
Jose
Rijo (2.39). Martinez
the ninth off Willie Fraser (3-2) as
Pittsburgh rallied from a 5-0 deficit gave up seven hits, struck out five
and reduced its magic number to and walked two.
Giants 7, Reds 2
Vx·The Pirates, who scored two
Trevor Wilson pitched a fiveFuns in the fifth and three in the hitter and hit a two-run single in a
three-run sixth inning.
~ixth, increased their NL East lead
Wilson (11-10) won for the sevto a season-high I I 1/2 games.
Roser Mason (3-0) pitched I 1/3 enth time in eight decisions, strikinnmgs of perfect relief for the vic- ing out five and walking two in his
first complete game since Aug. 4,
tory.
1990.
Phillies I, Expos 0
Jack Armstrong (7-12) gave up
• Terry Mulholland (15 -11)
four
runs and six hits in six innings.
~itched a two-hitter and strur .c out

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and .are scoring an a~e':88e of 27.9
points a game and gmng up only
9. 75 points a game. Two of the
opponents are ranked in the top 25
in Division n in the state in Vinton
County (22) and Gallipolis (23).
Plus the uio 's only loss was by
Nelsonville who lost 44-22to Jackson, the lronmen are ranked 13th in
the state polls.
For Meigs the problem all year
has been turnovers, the Marauders
have turned the ball over 21 times
in the three losses with nine of the
turnovers turning into touchdowns.
When the Marauders have been
able to hang onto the ball, penalties
have killed good field position.
If that is not a big enough of a

NL games...

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Hocking Lancers. The Falcons will
feature a run and shoot offense to
try and take advantage of the talents of 6-0, 195 pound senior quarterback Shad Watkins along with
senior running backs Brian Eveland
(5-1 1, !65) and Rich West (5-10,
175). Eveland in last week's game
rushed 11 times for 64 yards and a
touchdown along with catching two
passes for 68 yards and one touchdown . West, a two year starter
rushed 14 times for 53 yards .
Watkins was 5 of 13 passing for 84
yards, Watlcins threw for 712 yards
last season.
The Marauders three losses have
come at the hands of three teams
that own a combined 8-1 record

USAC race at Rossburg Friday;
~id~le captures victory at WVMS

EVERYTHING MUST GO

SCOIT NAILED - Tbe Reds' Donnie Scott
(6) prepares to slide Into home plate, but the
throw to Sao Francisco catcher Kirt Manwaring

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r

~®.::0.15, 1111

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~,-·,- ·~-·~·- - ----·-~--""--

�,,
Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 191 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eastern, Southe~n celebrating simultaneous winning records
By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The fourth week of high school
footbaD action is quiclcly approactlmg , and that gtves oCCl\Ston for
Southern and Eascem fans to celebrate. Both have winmng records,
somcthmg that hasn't happened
simultaneously too often over the
past couple decades. Eastern is 3-0,
and Southern is 2-1.
Of 709 schools now in Ohio
(that number has dropped from 768
circa 1980) only 147 currently have
3-0 records, and thus hold the
upper hand in gaining a play -off
berth. Among the 23 area sch~ls,
only stx are 3-0. Th1s IS quite a
feat, as Eastern has gained the elite
With a b1g wm over Wahama.
Now with its own network , the
high school Gridimn R~view. is
earned on three radio sr.auons wtth
WMPO
radio
in
Middleport/Pomeroy being the
flagship station. The program is
heard from 10-11 a.m. each Saturday morning and is hosted by Bill
Gray, longtime sports director at
WJEH-AM in Gallipolis. The program is sponsored by Ohio Valley
·Bank.
. F1ve team.s from Southea~tern
.Ohto have htt the state rankmgs:
:Logan, Vinton County, 22nd in
-Div. II; Gallipolis in Div. IT; . Jackson, and Eas_tern w1th 29 pomts 1s
19th m DIVmon V.
.
Commenung about his Eastern
.club, head coach Randy Chunlla
·stated, "We improved our play
·

since game 2 and played a very
good football_team, who has an
excellent coaching staff. Overall, 11
~as a gCJ?&lt;I ~in, but for us to conttnue wmnmg we w11l need to
improve in all areas."
Churilla indicated that there are
m•~or things the ~gles sti~l need
to tron out to contmue theu suecess. Both he and his team are
very confide~t. but he warns them
of overconfidence and •ts down falls.
. "If we continu~ o~ hard ~~ric mg hab1ts we wtll 1mprove, he
says."We cannot suffer a let down
no .~atter who our o~ponent is."_
Our offense d1d a mce JOb
keeping Wabama off balance. We
executed well at Urnes. Other
times we did not. Our defense also
did a good job untracking Wahama.
We made a few breakdowns and
they hurt us. Wahama has the
potential to make big plays and
they will."
Churilla continued, "Beating
Wahama was nice, but it is now
time for us to move on. We have
to keep in perspective that three
games do NOT make a season. We
can look at th1s two w~ys: I) y.re
can show up and play, JUSt hopmg
for the best; or 2) We can work
harder every day to prepare for the
upcoming opponent. I, myself, prefe~ tile Iauer. I am, not satiSfied, but
wtsh to get better.
In closmg he stated, "We need
to prepare every week. Our league
play begins this week and our

:Eastern volleybailers beat
.Southwestern, lose to Meigs
By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
. Eastern defeated visiting South-western in two sets, then lost a
:competitive match with Meigs in
·three rounds. Eascem is now 4-2 in
:me SVAC, while going 4-7 non:Jeague.
· Against Southwestern, Eastern
:sophomore Jaime Wilson contin:ued her great play with a nine
:POint, two ace, 8-9 serving effort.
:carrie Morrissey and teammates
.provided ~eat floor games as she
·was 3-3 w1th two points, senior Lee
:Gillilan I0-13 with 8 points and
:three aces, senior Amy Well, 7-7
with six points and two aces. Kathy
:Bernard one point (3-3), and Becky
:Driggs three points, all aces.
Southwestern was led by Stlelly
Williams with 6, Dreama Gilben
and Jessica Roactl with two each
along with one ace, Alicia Chambers three, and Monica Ehman one.
In spiking Amy Well led with
two kills and 4-6, while Gillilan
was 6-7, Bernard 6-8, Driggs 3-4,
Tabby Phillips and Shelly Metzger
each 2-3. All bad one kill each.
Wilson's accuracy was pinpoint
in seuing as she was 27-31 and
Metzger 4-6 from the floor.
Carrie Bartels' string of five
serves and four straight by Tricia
!laer gave Meigs a 15-7 win in the
fltSt set last night against Eastern.
Jaime Wilson proved to slay the
Marauders at their own game as
stle scored twelve straight to give
EHS a 15-5 win in the second set
· The last match was a barnbumer
as Meigs won 15-13 on two
straight serves by Baer that broke a
13-13 deadlock.
Wilson had brought EHS from
·behindll-13 with two successive
selVes. but a miscue put the ball in
·Jh~ hands of Baer who served two
great serves to win the game.

In tile season. 1 think the kids realize the importance of this g~e."
Gaul hope two successive wins
will be a key factor in tile game,
coupled with catching SV on a
down note. Gaul noted however
that ther, (Symmes Valldy) "wiD~
hungry. ·
"They've got a good team
again," he S-aid. "They are strong,
still very physical, have a sound
defense (a 52 alignment), and
offensively like to run two tight
ends and three backs in a power
offensive scheme."
"Our kids strength has
improved, we're well conditioned,
and strong, but that's what it takes
to beat a ceam like Symmes. Offcnsively, we want to go out and try to
do the same things we have been
doing ... sticlc to our game plan. Pass
and throw ... whatever they give us."
"SV is tough on the run. We
must stop their rushing game to be
successful. We've spent a lot of
time on this. We also want to continue to improve in all areas and
not Jtive up the bill: play. We've
improved on these things the last
couple of games."
Because this writer developed a
mtgraine prior to last night's practice session comments from a coupic SHS pl~yers wiD not be in this
week's story.
Gaul praised Michael Evans and
Russell Singleton for having some
good stats, but also praised the

league is very competitive. 199_1
has shown no consistency, nor panty. We also have excellent coaches
in the league and THEY will be
prepared. Any letdown on our par
may very well lead to adversity."
EHS senior James McDaniel
S-aid, "We think the s~n ~going
very well and we w1ll con111lue to
do welL Because of hard work this
IS :-vhe.re we expect to be at thts
poml m the season. As Coach
Chunlla always says, 'by our
efforts,_we wi.Dbe know~!"'
Semor M1chael Smith stated,
"We've played hard and we are
go~n~ to keep on, playing hard.
ThiS ts what got us here and thts IS
going to_ give us a fme season."
Chunlla Cited the battle of the
trenches as they key to the game
the o~er ni~ht. Offensively two
sustamed dr1ves (11 plays for 97
yards and 9 plays ~or 80 yar~s)
were keys and he Pnused tile entue
offenstve and defenSive un1ts.
Southern
. At _Racin~. the Tornad&lt;?es and
lik:cwtse theu fans are flymg sky
high. This week SHS !!oes. to
Symmes Valley, who desptte bemg
a tough football team, 1s wmless at
0-3.
.
Tornado head coach DaVId Gaul
stated, "We've had a good week of
pracuce and p1cked up o~ phystcal
condiuonmg a btL The kids seemed
pretty focused and confident. I
want them to be confident, but not
overconfident. Symmes VaDey can
be tough and this Will be a b1g
game for us, especially at this point

team and the team concept for all
their hard work. "A team effon has

led to our success.".
Both games begm at 7:30p.m.

Catfish Festival
Sellabration II

20°/o

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OFF

REGULAR PRICE

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Businesses!

Football '91!
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Excitement!

Prescription
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INGELS
FURNITURE, JEWELRY
and RADIO SHACK

992-6669
253 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

@.

992-2635

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THURS., SEPT. 19 THRU SAT., SEPT. 21

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MIDDLEPORT

Pomeroy

St. Rt. 7 at Five Points

992-6891

VALLEY LUMBER
555 PARK ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-6611

PA
12
15
79
54
38

Meigs had good ·all-around
games from Baer, Chrissy Taylor,
Kim Hanning, Mikki Meyer, Chris59
S-y Weaver, Bartels, Misty Butcher,
33
and Yvetle Young.
67
Baer ended the night with 8 plus
a 'good front line game, Weaver
Saturday's score
and Bartels bad six each, and Tay- Southern 60, Ironton St Joe 19
lor also had eight
Wilson led EHS with 21 and
Friday's slate
Gillilan had seven. Wilson was 22- Eastern at Southwestern
24 serving and was 18-39 setting. Hannan Trace at North Gallia
G11lilan had 15 kills in a 15-27 Kyger Creek at Oak HiU
night in the spiking department.
Southern at Symmes Valley

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INSURANCE
111 East Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2342

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Supply
CHEnER, OHIO
985-3308

23
26

27
23
31
24
31

..
24

27
27
40
26
2S
23
27
37
24
30
21
40
22
23

28

35
21
27
40

0

' Florid• A &amp; 1.4
• TennnaH Stata
COlumbia
0

Bolton u

South Carolina State
• Montane State
SE Mlaaourt
Concotd
SF. A1.11tln
Will Vlfglnra Tech
'Ma1ne
o Eutern Ker~tucky

.....

• McNee..
Nonl'l Te•as
Hofatra
' Troy
' Southern lllmou~
• Mgekl State
Tennea ..e Tech
Teua Southern
P111111 VieW, U
Chldtl
Delaware State
Lafa~tltt
0

Rtehmond
WOfthead State
Brown
Morgan State

,.•

22

14
7

20
14

17
7

22

•

14
17
0
17
14
14
20
7
21
13
"'21s
21
12
7
14
12
0

' Bat•

26
26
34
20

81oo~bur~

Olcklrwon, A

• Ouqv•n•

• Eellnboro
Inc! lana U., PA

33

31
35
24

·Ithaca
' Juniata
• ~coll1ng
' kktlebury

..

...

• N., Haven
• Plyi"'''uth

........,

Shlppenabl.lrg
Su14:1uthanr~a

Trlnily, CT
Tuha
Waahintn &amp; Jaffaraor~
Waynea rg
' W•t Cheater Slate
-'drtan
-'ahland
' Beker
Baldwtn-Wallace

llelo'

8aniCIIct1ne
' Carroll, WI
Central Arkanua
Central lillaaourl

Southern Connte11Cut

• Eul Slroudlbu rg
A_,, NY
O.aware Valley
Lebanon Valley

22
26
:rJ

Bowdoin

' Buttala U.
Clarion
Wuaa.chuaettt-Boaton
Wagntr
Kutztown
MOfavlan

-

c~~
27
Wldtntr""
26
24 • Grove City
24
Central Cor~nectlcUI
Olhor Gomeo - MfdWIII
21 ' Dttlance
24
CalHornll Stale
35
Ottlwa
37 'Hlram
40 • Grlnnall
20
23

28

...
27

·Coo

' Deyton
' East Cenlral Oklahl)ma
' Emporia Stat•
FrlertOt
Georg•towrl , KY
• Clust•vu• Adolph ut
Hlldlng
• Heldllllerg
' HIIIIOI.It
• lndlanapolll
• Kearney
• Mldwllttrn
• NE Oklalloma
Ntbr•aka Wealeyan
o Nonn Oakola State
o Nonn Oakola U
NW Mil101.1rl
o Saginaw Valley
'SE Oklahoma
Slou. Flllla
• St Arrbroae
St . Cklud
St. Jotlna. '-'N
0

Sl.M~KS

·St. No

. "'h"-Jv
Btlhlnt.

33
23
:rJ
23

Wonlelalr

'
'
'
'
'

Amherst

' lock HavMl

n

. sw MlnMIOtl. Stal8
• Wayne Stele , WI
w..tfTIII
W•tmlntter
· Wheaton
Wlllllm Jewell
• Wlnenberg

35
22

21
24
21
2&amp;
27

34

26
26
23

27
21
38
27

28

' Concordia. NE
C&amp;llh~
' SWOk h011'11
' Mltaourl SOYthern
lawrenct
Andwaon
Cam.ron
Mi11ourl Weat•n
' Ken._ w.. leyan
• Urbani
51. Olaf
· Iowa W111tyan
Mualdngum
Ferrll
St Joaeph a
Moorhead
E'langel
Arkana••·MOnllctiiO

MiUOUII V~iO~

Auguetana. S
SoUih O.kota State
Miaaour~Aoll•

0

23
26

Nortl'l•n Wlehlgan
Ouachda
• Oo.ene
N011hwood
o Nebru"'-·Om~ha
° Carleton
' Bethany, I&lt;S
Monlt'OI.IIh

22
:rJ
23

Va.tparalto
• H•tlngt
o Findlay
llllnolt We1leyan
• Central Mtlhod~t
Woo11er

26

24

28
23
23
24

..

31
24
27

Per~o~

Other Gomeo- South &amp; Sou1hweol

Albany, GA
Arkan111 Tech
Caraon-Ntwman
° Calav.ba
CW!tral State, OH
CW~tr•

Clark
Eat~ Texa•
·~ion
rnory Henrr
• Gl.ntner·Webb
Guilford
• JaciiiOnvllle State
Mllllll~ CollfOe
RIIOCIOO
Sacramento Slate
Savannah Stitt
• SlleQilet'd

a

Si"""7 &amp;I
Roc&lt;

o Texas

Tua~e

Unlon.KV
• Valdoata
' Weet Vlr~n1a Wealt~an
' WiMton al•m
Wof!ord
Ada~ Stile
c~ Poly

0

"'

27
42
27

23

24
23

35
38
23

28
33
28

24
24

28

22

..

33

23

28

' Llvlngaton
Ue1.4urry
• Wrngat•
Mara H~l
Alabama A l M
0

ou~n•

o J.C. Smith
o Southern Arkan1as
Fly.4tl'lllle
o ~=ter, VA
0

Hlfl1XIe!l-Sydney
W•tGecwg~a

• Hendwaon
Oavkllon
0

Abiltlle Christian
MorehouH
G5enviile
° Falrrront
Pori land Stale
• Monil Brown
• latT'b..rth
F'on Vall•l
W•t Vir~ nla State
VIrginia 11.11
o lenolt· Rhyne
0

Other Gam•• -For Wool

' Cai·Divil
o Humboldt
o laVtrAI
lewia &amp; Clark
• .. anlo Park
Wlllaapt
• NOfthern Colorado
Occidental
• Pacific LUiherar~
• R.cllanda
• Sen'- Bllbllra
• Southwn Ut•h
St. Marp. CA
Whitworth
0

....
23

"26

0

21

W•ttm State
• Sonoma
SAnta Clare
Alutl

21

' Pldl~

23
23

28
28

..
..

24

:rJ

28

27
24

23
34

23

Wh""'U ,OR

Clf,t.-nont
• Cokwado Cotteg•
ManU to
Pomona
Llnllek:l
0

San Dllao u.

Cal Lut.heran
Mooo
Hayward
Eaatern Oregon

•

23

24
12
10

""7
10

12
10
21
14
7
21
14
7
21
7
14

"
"
13

14

13
7
7
0
14
13

"•
•
21
10
1•
0
20

22

20
23

7
14

24
22

s
14
7
10
17
17
21

20
20

- rrtlJ"'"'~'I'
DISCOVER WHY
j.,."'
PEOPLE SAY,
ftnrl)JI•
~~

We hove the
Serlo you wont
in the size you need
at a price you'll like .

ANDERSON'S
992-3671

Pomeroy, Ohio

WARNER
HEATING
AND

COOLING

f'IIAIIE ..
SALES • SERVICE.

INSTALLATION
Furnaces
Air Conditlofton
Hialf fffirioncy
fn•gy fa,lng Htat Pumps
lopain All Mok11

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Super Efficiency

17
17
21
13
13
14
13
7
10
10

"
"'

6

""7
"7
13

•

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20
- 20

12
7
13
14
7
17
17
21
7
20
10
21
13

"

20

10
17
21
12
14
14
7
22
s
14
17
13
21
7
14

IAWLINGS-COATS

Fisher
Funeral Home
IIUCE RSitll • 0.11tr o,.rator
I

MIDDLIPOIT

992· Sl41

CROWS
Family Restaurant

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-5432

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL!
BAKED PORK CHOPS &amp;
DRESSING

SALAD, ROU and
CHOICE OF POTATO

$525

FOR SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 22 and 23

Peoples

''

30

•

Other Gameo - Eul
45
CO.. lin
24
Spring!iekl

' Al'-gl'ltny
' ArT'Itlrian International

THE BOB HARMON PRO FORECASf

TRACTORS and
RIDING MOWERS

Baum
lumber

SEPT. 21· OPEN 1:30 TIL???

G«K,tla Southam
Ora Nng
H&amp;rvlld
Holy Croaa
Howard
Idaho
lllinoil State
Indiana State
Jackson State
Uber1y
Mauaehut•u•
Middle TWII\aiUe
M iuiulppJ Valley
Montana
Nl'llda-Aano
New Hlfl1)thire
Nlctlolll Stile
Nar1hern IOwa
S•m Houtton
Samford
Sollthern U.

· Tenn ·Chananooga
• Towson
o VM .I.
Villanova
• Wllttrn Kentucky
• Yale
o Young11own

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3301 or 985-3303
SATURDA~

..

'
'
'
•

·cATFISH FESTIVAL

&gt;

Sat., Sept. 21 - Major Colleges- Dlv. 1-A
28
Georgia
14
• Alabama
SW Louisiana
• Arl&lt;ansas
21
14
28
Kenl Slate
13
'Ball Stale
27 ·Missouri
14
• Baylor
• Bowling Green
24
Cincinnan
14
27 • Anzona
17
California
• Cenlral ,.,..chigan
21
Akron
20
• Clemson
34
Temple
7
• Colorado
23
Minnesota
10
Colgate
· Duke
35
7
Easl Carolina
30 ' Central Florida
10
31 ' Syracuoe
13
Florida
Fmsno Slale
34 • O!eQon Stale
10
' GeorQia Tech
21
Vtrgtma
17
• Hawcui
Pac!lic
35
6
33 • Illinois
27
Hout~ton
Kentucky
• Indiana
23
17
23 • Wtsoonsin
14
Iowa Stale
• Kansas
38
New Mexico Stale
7
• Kansas Stale
Northam IllinOis
21
26
24
Vanderblll
15
'l.S.U
42 • Eastern Mich•gan
6
Loui•iana Tech
31
Was! Virgima
7
• t.laryland
Alkansas Slale
' Memphl• Slale
33
6
42
OhioU
• Miuissippi
6
Nevada-Las Vegas 21
27
• Mew Mexico
Nonh Cwolina
24 'Army
10
Nonh Cwolina Stale 26 ' Wake Forest
10
24 • Fullerton Stale
17
Nonhridge
Miclligan Stale
13
'Noire Dame
23
21
NW LouiSiana
23 • Texas-EI-Paso
Wash1ng1on Stale
38
10
'Ohio Stale
Utah Slale
7
"Oklahoma
40
31 'Utah
10
Omgon
Bngham Young
17
'Penn Slale
28
24
Nonhwestem
21
• Rutgers
24
San Diego Stale
31 • Air Force
13
San Jooe Stale
33 • Long Beach Slate
Colorado State
21
• South'n MiSSissippi 22
• Southam CaJiforma
24
Arizona Stale
23
20
TC.U
27 ' Oklahoma State
• Tennessee
M1ssissippi Slale
13
20
• Texas
Auburn
17
20
13
Texas A &amp; M
26 · Tulsa
RICO
22
'Tulane
23
24 • South Carolina
20
V.P.I.
Washington
31 • Nebraska
17
• Weslem MK:higan
Toledo
20
22
William &amp; Mary
7
26 ·Navy
24
Texas Tech
22
' Wyoming
Major Collegeo • Dtv. 1·AA
7
Alcorn
• Alabama Statt
23
o AppalachiAn State
Jamn Mad1son
23
27
• AutUn Peay
K•ntuck'WSuate
Eaat.,n aahinoton
10
27
• 9o~&amp;e Sude
10
Bucknell
37 o Fordham
21
• Connecticut
27
leh.gh
13
24 • Princeton
Cornell
PennayNan1a
Oattmuuth
13
28
Delaware
• Rhodel•la~
10
20
17
• EutTennehM
23
W•tern Carolina
Eaatern lllinolt
10
o Wuna~ Sta&amp;a
o Ellzlbreth City
Knoxv le
20
26
• Furnn
47
PreabJ1erlan

..

•

For All Your Prescription and
Sundry l\'eeds See Us"

THE BOB HARMON FORECAST

.

Gold star
Samsung
Soundesign
Zenith

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-7

106 N. 2nd, Middleport

SVAC grid standings
(Overall)
Team
W L PF
Eastem .................. 3 0 93
North Gallia .......... 3 0 47
Southern ............... 2 I 107
Southwestern .......:2 I 42
Oak HiD ................ 1 2 48
Kyger Creek ........ .1 2 27
Hannan Trace .......0 2
8
Symmes Valley .... 0 3 14

Thursday, September 19, 1991

882-2136

BUFFAL0 ............ 34 ••TAMPA BAY.......... l7
Bucs have won four in a row over Bills iacluding last match-up in 1988, 1llow-scoring 10-5 upset win, T. P.
holding Buffalo to 39 yard&amp; rushing ... very remote upset chance here.
• •DENVER............ 28 SAN DlEC0 ............ 20
These AFC Westerner• •plil in head-to-heads in '90, Denver losing first game in S.D., 19-7, then winning al
home behind QB John Elway, 20-10, breaking ~ix-game losing street.
DETR01T............ 21 • 0 INDIANAPOLIS ............ 20
Colts lead close aeries with Lions 17-16... Detroit came back from opening 45-0 lo81 to Washing«on, healing
Packers 23-14 ... Colt• lost fu-s11wo games to Patriots, Dolphins.
HOUSTON ............ 31 • •NEW ENGLAND ..... ........ 13
Patriots have dominated Oilen in past len years, winning four of five ... Houston won last in 89 ... Dick
MacPherson, new Pat coach, anxious lo pull shade on '90 1-15 record .
• •KANSAS CITY............ 23 SEA'ITLE............ 20
Seahawks swept 1990 series with Chiefs, firsllime since 1978... Seallle won fint game 19-7,then rallied in
second on Dave Krieg lo Paul Skansi TD pail as time expired 17-16.
L.A. RAIDERS ............ 20 • 0 ATLANTA ............ 17 .
Falcons trail Raiders in short series 2-4 ... Allanta broke L.A. 4-game winning streak in '88 in game of FCo
with 12-6 victory... Allan !a lost opening two games of aeason.
• •MIAMI ............. 24 GREEN DAY............ tO
In 6 meeting•, Packers have yet to find way to heal Dolphino, Miami winning 23-20 in '89, G.B. tying game
with 53 seconds remaining, Dol phs winning with FG in last 6 oeconds.
• • NEW ORLEANS .......... 24 MINNESOTA ............ l7
Saints don 'I wan I repeat of laal year's malch-up in Minnesota, QB Wade Wilson leading Viking• to big 32-3
win, completing three TD pasoes ... Vike defense forced 5 turnovers.
NEW YORK GIANTS ............ 21 • •CLEVELAND ............ 13
Brown• have won 12 of last 14 meeting• with Super Bowl cihlimpiod Cl'aiito, but N.Y. favored to win first
oince 1969... new Drown coach Bill Belichick out to reverse 3-13 '90 record.
P11TSBURGH............ 26 • 0 PIIILADELPIHA ............ 24
Theoe old-time intra-olale rivals first met in 1933 . .. Steelen lead aerie• 42-25 ... in 1988, FC in final minut&lt;
gave Eagles thrilling come-from-behind squeaker win 27-26.
• •PHOENIX............. 27 DALLAS............ 23
Ia fu-st meeting last fall, Cards ohut down Cowboys, holding them to eingle FG, winning 20-3•.. Dallas
rocked Phoenix ia second match-up 41-10, RB Emmill Smith ocoring 4 TOo.
• •SAN FRANCISC0 ............ 30 L.A.RAMS ............ 20
Last fall, RBIDI upset49ers in S.F. in ht meeting, jumping to 21-7 halftime lead, winning 28-17 .. .later,
49ers returned favor, RB Dexter Carter leading them to 26-10 win.
WASIDNCTON ............ 27 • •CINCINNATI............ 20
These two have mel juel five times since 1970, Ben gals winning lao I meeting in '88 in OT, 20-17, enabling
Cincy lo win AFC Central title .• Skine whitewaehed Lion• in opener 45-0.
• •CHICAC0 ............ 20 NEW YORK JETS ............ IS
(Monday)
Bears hold 2-1lead in brief serieo with JetJ, tea1111 having met in '74, '79, '85 ... common opponent thio
season was Tampa Bay, Chicago beating them 21 -20, N.Y. winning 11&gt;-13.

MIDDLEPORT
992·5627

QUALITY
PRINT
SHOP

255 MILL ST.

MIDDLEPORT

992-3345

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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llllllllilllllllllillllllllilllllillilllllil••••....................ill...lilllllti.....................................................,.......!I...L'll ~ ...

i.

...

L..

'-

'-

.

...........

-

-

�ber 1

Page fV The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Quit enabling 'Mr. Bicycle'
Dear Ann Landers: Someone
very dear to us is married to a
man who refuses to grow up. He IS
old enough to be president of a
company but th.e most. important
thing 10 his life IS not hiS wife, his
children or his job. It is his bicycle.
Seven years ago, th1s couple
moved !,0 a warm climate so "Mr.
B1cycle could tram year 'round.
Whtle there, he had three bike
wrecks which resulted in a broken
collarbone. a fractured lmee and
manY cracked ri~ . Because of his
th)unes. he hasn t worked for two
years and has landed m bankruptcy

coun.

. .

.

They are now h vmg w1th our
fnend's. parents .. Allhou.gh "Mrs.
B1cycle . IS working two JObs, thelf
mcome IS snll low enough so that
they are ehgtble for food stamps.
Mr. B1cycle ts snll not employed
which isn't surprising because he has
never been 'enthusiastic about
working. He quit a good job last
year aft~ four days because he sa1d
14 d1dn.t pay enough. The real
~n IS that the JOb cut mto h1s
SIX hour a day trammg schedule.
Th1s man IS no 1di0L He has a
college degree and olher professional
certJficauons. It seems lhat he lacks
the great American work ethic and
there IS always someone around to
~cue h1m -- mamly h1s w1fe.
. So, Ann, got any good tdeas to
~elp change this situation? Mrs.

Bicycle may listen to you even if
her husband won'L -- DISGUSTED
AND OUMBR)UNDED
DEAR 0 AND 0 : Mrs. Bicycle
should look in the dictionary for the
word, "enabler." That's her She
should lhen get some counsem;g and
decide whelhc:c or net she wants to
spend the rest of her life lilce this
(maybe she does). The decision
should be hers so stay out of iL
Dear Ann Landers: I have been
dating the same guy for eight years_
Two years ago he gave me a
diamond ring and we decided to get
married. While making our wedding
plans we suddenly came face to face
wilh the financial realities of life and
decided to wait until we had enough
money to buy a lillie house.
Our relationship is going well. The
only problem is my parents. They
get upset whenevec my ftance and I
go out of town together. 1 have told
them that we sleep in separate beds
but that 1sn't enough. My moth~
g1ves me these long-winded lectures
about how it isn't right since we are
not married_ Ann, I'm 25 years old
and haven't lived with my parents
since I was 18.
This has caused many arguments .
and !here are times when my mother
and I don't speak. How can I teU her
that she's living in the Dark Ages
without hurting hec feelings? I Jove
my parents but when it comes to my
personal relationships, I don't believe

Ann
L~nders
ANN LANDEI!S

"1111, Lao AqelM

'l1meo
er.-.s,...
........
llyodeMe -

they have the right to make us feel
guilty about spending time togetOO'
out of town. Tiley have no idea what
we do when we're in town, so why
should it matter to them what we do
when we're traveling?
I know my parents read your
coltJmn. Will you please give me
some advice before I lose my
temper and say something I will
regret? Thanks, Ann. -- D.S.,
GREENSBORO, N.C.
DEAR GREENSBORO: A ~­
year-old woman who has not lived
at horne since she was 18 and is
engaged to a man wilh whom she
has been going for eight year11 should
not be discussing her sleeping
arrangements with her mother or
anyone else. Keep your lip zipped.
Should anyone bring up the subject
of your sex life, simply say, "Thai
topic is not one I want to raik about."

Revival to be held

Trinity Church announces plans
The Trinity Church of Pomeroy p.m. the Community Choir, under
will sponsor a bazaar and luncheon the direction of Lois Bun will preduring the Big Bend Stem wheel sent a salute to lhe Stemwheel PesFestival on Oct. 11 and 12.
tival in song at the Trinity Church.
The bazaar will be held both The program will last approximatedays from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and the ly 45 minutes.
luncheons will be served from II
a.m. to 6 p.m. Many crafts will be
available at the bazaar including
Christmas ornaments and other
decorations.
The luncheon each day will
serve chicken and noodles, sloppy
joes. ham salad, potato salad, cole
slaw, desserts and homemade ice
cream. The flavors of ice cream
will be vanilla, peach, pineapple,
banana and lemon.
On Friday evening, OcL 11, at 7

The Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church will have revival Monday
through Sunday, Sepl 29 with Bob
Mead. Pastor Paul Taylor invites
the public .

BUY ONE, GET ONE
1/2 PRICE SALE!!

Buy One Boys' Fall Shirt or
Pants at Regular Price, get
the other for I /2 Price.

Queen pageant
In conjunction with the 1991
Big Bend Sternwheel Festival !here
will be a queen pageant on Oct. 10
at 8 p.m.
Entrants must be between the
ages of 16 and 19 and be a Meigs
County ResidenL
The winner of the pageant will
receive a $100 savings bond.
. Anyone interested in participatmg m the pageant should contact
Pamela Newell, pageant director at
the Meigs County Chamber 'or
Commerce Office, 992-5005. The
deadline for application is Sept. 30.

(Same or Lesser Value)
Friday &amp; Saturday Only

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS
POMEROY

100 EAST MAIN

ner. "

Th e former Evangeline B.
Cooper, 68, was a widow and
mother of eight ~own children.
Badour, 69, was divorced from his
first wife and a widower in his second marriage with nine children

and six stepchildren. The children
range in age from 29 to 50.
Mrs. Badour's oldest and
youngest sons walked ber down the
aisle and a granddaughter, an
ordained minister, performed the
ceremony.
"We didn't know what our
friendship was leading up to,"
Mrs. Badour said. "But everything
just seemed to fall into place."

Correction

tan."

•I

The purpose of the organization
is to create a better understanding
between people and lhrough volunteer community ·service to make the
area a better place to live and work.
National representatives assembled with the residents explaining
abo··~ ~';c service group after which

wilh the intent of having sex.
Last month, a neighbor used a
home video camera to tape the pair
through window blinds while !hey
made love in the bathroom of their
ground-floor condominium. The
tape was given to police who
arrested lhem on felony charges of
lewd and lascivious behavior in
front of a minor because youngsters could see them from the pool
nearby.
Prosecutors decided ~ainst lhe
felony charge, which cames up to a
15-year prison term, and instead
filed the misdemeanor charges.

lndudes
Color Monitor

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

The Home
PC That's So
Easy to Use
It Guarantees

Success!

Reg. Separate
Items .. ..
Less Coupon ...... .

LowAa$20
Per Month•

• TaMY"' 1000 RL Home Computer
• 3•k" F~~ppy Disk Drive

L-

-

---

pon,~nocast'lvaJue . Voidwher

"One white glove," Michael
says. "Covered wilh rhinestones."
It's weird and wonderful stuff.
all this, deftly written by AI Jean
and Mike Reiss, and culminating
with a mad-dog crowd of reporters
and Michael Jackson fans at
Homer's home and a surprise birthday present for little Lisa.

S.te 149 95
·

"Price of 1d for 111 cepi1alleuer s 11 doutlle.pnce of 1d cost

'7 point line type only used
'Sentinel is not rnponsible tor errors afler first diV !Check
tor erron tirtt daov 1d runs in pepefl Cal, bf!tore 2 00 P m

dav aher publicl'tion to mike conection
'Ads thlt must be paid 1n advance are
Happy Adt
Card of Th.,ks
Yard Sales
In Memonam

el•o appear in the Pt Ple•ant fteg•ster and the Gallo
polls Oail'f Tribune, reectHng o111er 18.000 homes

Coupon has no
cash Yllue. VO+d

where prohibited

by law. Offer
expires 9/25/91

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
liJESOAY PAP,EA
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

I
1

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M SATURDAY

FRIDA'( PAPER

-

200 P.M . MONOAV .

-

2 00 P.M TUESDAY

- 2 ,00 PM WEDNESDAY
- 2 :00PM THURSDAY
-

SUNDAY PAPER

2 ·00PM FRIDAY

~ Speallerpbone
Regular Price .... . 199.95
Less Coupon · · . -100.00
YOUR FINAL

Area Code 614

Mason Co . WV
Area Code 304

446 - Gall•pol•s
367- Cheehire
J88 - V.nton
245 - A•o Grande

992 - Middleport
Pomeroy
985 - Chester
843 - Portland

675 - Pt Pleasant

256 - Guyan

0151

Regular Price ..... 219.95
Less Coupon . ... _ 70.00

Regular Price ..... 169.95
Less Coupon .. . . - 70.00

by 11•. Offer
expires9/25!91

YOUR FINAL
COST 1.0·1125

AnENTION
FIREWOOD
SELLERS
Hardwood Slabs
For Sale
Great Price!
CALL

OHIO PALLET CO.
992-6461
9 -1-91- 1mo.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE ·
- Ouftet' work

-Elocttlcll ond Plumbing

Over 16 Words
S4.00
.
.20
56.00
.30
$9.00
.42
813.00
.60
51 .30 /doy
.06 / doy

Merch and ise
61 - ~ousehald

52 53 64 55 66 67 S8 -

59 -

Goodtl
Sporting Ooodl
Antiques
Mise Merctlandtse
Building SupphM
Pets for Saht
Mu .. callnsuumentl
Fru1U &amp; Veg•abiM
For Sale or Trade

Form Supplies
&amp; Liv es tock
61 - F11m Equipment

&amp;2 - Wanted to Buv
63 - L•vestock
64 - Hay &amp; Gra•n
65 - Seed S. Fert •ll.ter

Real Estale

36 - Real E1tate

247-leurt Fall s

895 - LeUrt
937 - Bufhlo

667 - Cool~,~ille

7, - Autos for Sale
72 - Trucks for S•le
73 - Vans S. 4

vyo ·s

74 - Motorcvcl•
75 - Bo•t s &amp; Moton lor S•le
76 - Auto P1rU 6 Ac ceUofl•
77 -- Auto Repair
78 - Camping Equ1pmenf
79 - Campeu &amp; Motor Homes

36 -- lott I. Acreage

Wanted

l;tMJild
41 - Houses for Rent
42 - MobileHomet for Ren t

-Roofing

43 44 46 46 -

Farms tor Rent
APJrlment for Rent
Fu rnished Rooms
Space for Rent

47 - Winted to Rent
46 - Equ&lt;omo"' to• Ronl

81 - Home lmprovemenu
82 - Piumbing &amp; Hut•ng

83 - Eitca"lting
84 - Eieetricel L Flefrige... tion

(FREE ESTIMATES I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Ponwoy, Ohio

•VINYL SIDING
•~LUMINUM SIPING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

CHESTER
COUNTRY CLUB
Golf
lessom (6) .... 155.00
Ntw Grips ............ $4.00
Woods ................ 122.00
Irons .................. $14.75
REPAIRS
Used Irons .._......... $S.OO
Used Woods ........ $7.00
AWAIDS
8-9-1 mo. pd.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building
EVDY

SAT. NIGHI
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

Factory Choke
12 Goutt Shoftull Only
Strictly lfthrttd

INDIPENDEIIY

CAIPR ClEANIU
anti nll FLOOI CAll
•Reasonable fhtea
•Quality Work
•Free E1tlmateo
•Ctrpet Hal Feat Dry
'

•High Glo11 on Tile
Floor Flnl1h
MllltEWIS, Owner
Rl. 1, Rllflanll, OH.

742-2451

3-14-'91-tfn

85 - General Hauhng

THE

'GROOM
ROOM

,

1-----------------1.

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
any acilon, Including rocolpl
The following ware 10• ol verllted complalnta, any
celvedlprepared
the Ohto further
person may
obtainond
notice
of
Envlronmentel by
Protection
actlono,
addiAgency ~OEPA) loot week. Uonal lnlormatlon. Unles•
Eflacllve doteo o! final olharwlu provided In
The Daily Sentinel is in
actlonl lnd luuenct dllll Notlceo of parllculor
need of 2 May 27th
of propoaed acUona end of tctlono, oil communication•
draft octlont ore alated. 1hall bt 11nt to: H11rlng
papers. If you have
Final action• may be Clerk, OEPA, P. 0. Box 104~,
OH., 43268-0149
one please call
I"" 1n wrII1 ng, w11hi n Columbua,
tppta....,
Ph ..(614) 844-21t5. Consult
' IO&gt;datt-oUI!a.aeao..M·IIII8 0 C
5 d OAC
992-2155.
· n6tk!e; fo .Tilt"'Envfionment: · R Chap. 374 •n
~~~~~~~~~~::::===~ al23GBoord
of Review,
Am. 300, Chopa.
3745-47 end 3746·5
E. Town
SL, Columbul,
for requlramanla.
OH., 43215. Notice of any
Propooed luuance of
appealahall be flied with lht modlflc•llon of NPDES
1 C8rd ot Thanks
1 card or Thanks
director within 3 day•. Permit Condlllona.
Power Compenv
Propou d ac II one w111 Ohio
301 Cleveland S.W. POB 400
become
!Inti
unlen
•
writTHANKS TO
ten ad)udlctllon hearing Canton, Ohio
rtqUIII II tubmltted within IUUI Dote: 09111/91
OUAUTYCOAL
30 dayt of tha lllutnct Receiving Watera:
COAL CO. &amp; BEN date; or lh• dlroctor revta- Ohio River
ti/Withdrawa the propo1ed Facllhy Deacrlptlon:
EWING FOR
action. Any penon may
Power Plants
SPONSORING MY 1ubmlt commonll ondlor a Permit No.
mtttlng reg1rdlng any draft
01B00019'ED
$50.00 SAVINGS
acUon wlthln 30 dtya of lht PurpoM of Mod-Delato flnal
dlte Indicated. "Action", aa effluent llmlla for outfall
BOND AT THE
1991
uaed above do.. not 01 B00111002. Deleted 11m•
1991 MEIGS
Include receipt of a verified piing alation 01800019002
camplllnt.lhlgnlllcant pub- and dtacrlptlon of locotlon
COUNTY FAIR.
lie lnltrllt ex1111, 1 public 1110 deleted Item B.
Billet Renae Pooler
mttdng lillY be held. At to ·(9) 19, 1tc

99!.,

~----

:

MEN, SEE OUR LARGE
SELECftON OF PAN-rS,
ARROW SHIRft AND
SCHOOL JACKE'rSe

Spedal Thanks to
Facemyer Forest
Products for
buying my lamb at
the
Meigs
Counly Fair.
Bdlee Renae Pooler

ERS
MIDDLEPORT

•

Complete Grooming
Far All Brltds

EMilEE MERINAR .
Owner &amp; Operator

614-9f2-6820
Pomtroy,

-------Public Notice
ELECTION

.tlqJ\!&lt;E·Wtttr
TileLE~J~'Cllilo 80ffind

SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Fadory
9-IHfn

WHALEY'S

'BISSELL
BUILDERS

AUTO PAnS

Speclaliling In
Custom Fr-• Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAm &amp;
MODElS

USED RI.ILROAD TIES

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

992-7013
or 992-5553

"" Rtasonable Prices"

01 TOU flEE
1-100·1•1-0070

or le1. 949-2860
Day or Night

PH. 949·280 1

DAIWIN, OliO

NO SUNDAY CAllS

7 / 31 /' 91 tfn

&amp;·12-90·tfn

4-16·16-nn

BALLET, TAP &amp;

USED APPUAIIICES

JAZZ CLASSES

90 DlY WAIIllln
WA!IUI!-$100 up
DIYI!-$69 up
IEFIIGERATO~l-S 100 up

AGES 3 and UP

IANGIS-Goo- Det. -$ 12~

THE DANCE
COMPANY

CONSTRUCTION
992-6648 or

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915-3561
Across from Post OHict
POMEIOY, OHO
tO/a0/'19 lfn

9-6-1 mo.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

TRUCKING AVAilAill
FRIEl5TIMAns

992·7458
a..21-01 1 IIICI, pd.

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
949-2168
9 / 9 / 91 / 1 mo. pd .

8·28·91 · 1 mo. pd .

GUN SHOOT

AU MAliS
lrflll It In Or We

FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN

Pick Up.

IEII'S APPIIAIICE
SEIYICE

Convertible Tops,
Carpets. H&amp;adlinar
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Rapair.

Will do handWIIh, WIX I C:IIIM·

In g.

Wt Make Great M1tches. C1rol 's
Slng111, P. 0 . Box 5846, Attotana,
OH 45'101.

Giveaway

4

•CLUB

1 malt dog pilrt Collie and

Shophotd, I yr old, 8t4o44t-1021.

Begins Sept. 15
Every Sunday 12 Noon
Factory Guns Only
9/9/91/2 mo.

1-mllt Lab Retriever, 1-ftmale
Golden Rotrlever both house
broken. 814-7112-2445
4 Malt Kllltnt. 5 W1ekt Old, 2
Gray, 2 Beige. Th8y Are Eallngr

614-446-7140.
30 hard back " Reader Oigost"

booltl, 304-773-5652.

W.H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

5 tMiutlful hlalthy kiUens, 304-

57e-2393.
8 WHk Old Klttene , 2 Wt'lllt , 1
Yellow, 1 Tiger Striped , , Cal\eo.

If you're in need of
Mobile Home Ports
or Accessories ...

MAIN ST., MASON, YA.

SEE US FIRST!
992-5800

1-(3034)·
773-9560

RT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO

,_

614-367-7126.
7 WHk Old Puppl11: Will Be
Small Dog1, Mother Part lhl81

Ap10. 114-387-0187.

wook old · pupplos, port
Austr1ll1n Shophotd, 304~754156 oflor 7:00PM.

8

Cocklr Spaniel. Call 614-448·

0485 AHor 5p.m.

Female Dog, Spt~yed, Shota,
Mixed Bread,
Good
With

8 / 19 / 1 mo. tfn

mo. pd .

Children, Nteda Room To Run.

614-446-1271 After 6p.m.

N1w /n. ·
Stoek/1

Fr11 To Good Home! Small
Mlxod Brwd Puppies. Prelerra~y To A t-lomeln "The Country.
614-:Jn-2552 .

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS ontl
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

FrM to good home,
yr olci
malt house cal, neutered 1nt1
declawtd, netde Iota of love

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

e

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

BENNETT'S

ond ollonllon, 814-1192-2008.

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;

514-1192-2232

~~. holrod

Loca..d On Safford School I d. off Rt. I 41
(614) 4U-9416 or 1-ll~a-1172-591~1

,..._______...;.________,I
an

.
'

Kitten• and c1t1, 111 colors, on•
calico, 304..&amp;95--3688.
~

COOLING

Is Your Roof Ready For Another vsear o f 1"
Now's The nme to Find Out.

·

GlvHWI)'· Gerbllt &amp; Hamater•,

dSnow?

kl«on,

304-67~

Motchlng Couch And Cholt. 614.256~106.
Monross, Bor Springe, Hoad
And Foot Boardt, Raila And

Slots, cou Aflor &amp;p.m. 304-m14

33.

'

ii/':'!' ,!::'~:~.~~~~~

CALL JACKS ROOFING &amp;
CONSTRUCTION
992 •2653

·

,

Pupploe to glvoawoy. tnS
Bulovlllo Pika.
For Old &amp; New Roofs, Shingles
Toor down old wood •- ••otr
Repairs, Gltlers
~=:;c~~::~l.•l•. mull cloo~
·
lldtrt
·
•
R
moc1
U 9 an 8
8 ng
Whitt Ftmalo 'SomoyiCI. Hoa
We Guarantee Your Satisfaction
soon Spodo. &amp;14-m-284&amp;. ·FIIEESTIMATIS
JOSlPH D. JACKS
Whito mothot cot, 4 whllo 1 •
""• block klltono, 111 tong holr, 30~·
''---------~-----..;...;,..1
885-31)13.
.
:
t'

a

n

Conaarvadon Comml11lon
will cause an tloctlon of
IUpervlaorooflhtMelgiSall
and Watlll' Con181'Yali!Jn Dl"'
trlct to be htld In •-dlnce
with Chllpllr1515 oflhtOhlo
Revloecl Code et llefgt Hlah
HOME CREEK ENTERPRISES, INC.
School o~ October 22, 1H1
(A VI!IIIUI&lt;' of J&amp;F ( on l rocling and K&amp;J ( onllruclion)
a! 7:17p.m.
Nomln•• 111: Joe Bolin,
Dozer, Bo&lt;khoe, Trrn&lt;hing War~
Bill Holcomb, Meroo Jtffere,
and Rex Shentfltld.
Utililil~\: wulr.t, gus, sewer, elr&lt;ltic
Nomtnadona will be au:- ·
Custom ond LocJ Hon1r1
capttd from the floor at the
Ume of election. Two
R•·nwdPiing ond Gelll'lol Conltclilnlrl
vlaora are to be alacltd. You
vote at the •nnutl mConnnt~t&lt;iul D£:vr:lopnwn!
abltnltt bellot
)r'l' 111 nboul Snn1hin1· Roorn SoloiiUfll,
lillY IIOUNCIIrom
Conttrvadon D11trlct Jirn; hf!ol!l-99'11
Gn·11 Rnikv 99! 68 1 0
Office.
I .

tu,.,.

no

(9) 12, 18

3 Announcements
Now Open, Pomeroy Car Wash',

MICIOWA E
OVEN IEPAII

A&amp;B
COMPLRE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

Announcemen1s

FREE ESTIMATES

16141 915·411D

316/90/tfn

(614)
696-1006
6-6-'9t

Downspouts

VERY REASONABlE
HAVE REFERENCES

POMIIOY, DIIIO

WORK

ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting.
let me do it for you.

117 E. ltcellll St.

BACKHOE

PH . 614-992-6691
9·1I ·1 mo. pd.
Howard l. Writesel

Across Frotn Post OHlct

DOZER and

liceneed and Bonded

LINDA'S
PAINTING

992-5335 or
915·3561

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING:
Limestone, Dirt,
Gravel and Coal

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDSCAPING
WATER and SEWER
LINES

up .

FHIZEI!-S 125 up
MICIO OVENS-$" up

992-6289

69~·6864
1·14·'81-tfn

91919111

Choke Only

Middleport Ohio
tl-14-lfn

SLACK
992-2269

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

1:00 P.M.

539 Bryan Place

Ill~

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

GUN SfiOOT

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251

21/J MI. outside

ll -14-'90 rtn

86 - MobiloHomeRepoi•

You'll Come Up Aces With
BULLETIN BOARD
The C/assi(ieds

742·2421

CEDAR

- Inter.., • Exterior
Pelntlng

Time

&amp;iijdl94'

OPEN
TuHdoy th1u Soturdoy
10:00 am-6:00pm

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

CLUB

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
•lnauletlon

FREE ESTIMATES

- Concrete work

•

Low Ae S15
Coupon nas no

667-6179

RACINE GUN

J&amp;L
INSULATION

lutland on New
Uma ld.

Tran sporlation
21 - BusinMS Opportunitv
22 - ~onfY to Loan
23 - ProiM~oc.a l Serv•ces

676 - Apple Grove
773 - Mason

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

cash value. Votd
where prohibited

985-4473

~~~~~~~~..l l l l•.ltlt~·-~~..~4·9·-.fo•'•'·~·~·. IIII~~-~:~~-~V~p.hoi''•"•'Y......~

Auto-Reverse Car Stereo

PoWIIflll 2-Way Speaker

16 - FiadtO. TV &amp; CB Rep a"
17 - Miscellaneou s
18 - Wanted To Do

458 - leon

II

.... Monlho

1 1- Help Wan!ed
12 -- Situa t•on Wanted
13 - lnsurance
14 - Butiness Tratn tn g
16 - Schools I In struCtiOn

31 - Homu"torSale
32 - MobtleHomes for Sale
33 - Farms lor Sale
34 - Bu!iineu Bu~dtngs

It f R
,,.,
esu H Fas f

14985
.,.,,.....

Empl oyment
Serv1ce s

882 - New H1ven

949 - FI.cine
742 - Fiutland

379 - Walnot

YOUR FINAL
COST

&amp;- lost 1nd Fo~o~nd
7- -Yard S.le!Piid tn advance )
8 - Publie Sale&amp; Au ction
9 - Wanted 10 Buy

oGaragts
•Complete
lemtdt}lng
Stop &amp; Contpare
FrH Estimate•

l·ll-tfn

Rate

STEWART'S
GUNS I SUPPLIES
tiUY tSEU oYIADE

9·13· '91-tln

Me•g• County
Area Code 614

Gellia Count'(

643 - Arabie D•tl

SHOP OUR NEW FAll AND
WINTER MERCHANDISE
WHILE YOU ARE IN TOWN
FOR THE CATFISH FESTIVAL!

5- Happy Ads

will

II

Cerd of Thanks
ln Memory
Annoucements
Giveawav

Olllow H011111

NQ SUNDAY CAW

Announ ce menIs
1234-

BISSELL I BUllE
CONSTRUCTION

PH. 949-2801
· or 111. 949-2860

Rat• are tor consecutNe runt . broken updr,'l will be ch•oild
fnr ear.h rlw as 11parate ads

•A c lessil•ed edven•sement pieced'" TheDe•lv Sent.nelle• ·
c;;ept - d•sified display , Busin~1 Card and legal not1ees)

jotiOit'in{! telephone exchunf!eS ...
Low As S15

6

10
Monthly

•Recefve t .60 discoun1 for 1d1 paid in 1ctv1nce
'free ad1 - Givuwty end Found ads under 15 wcords wtll be

Classified puf!es .corer r he
Per Month.

t

outside Meigs , G1llia or M110n count•• mull be pre·

run 3 dl¥1 at no ch•ge.

Words
16
15
15
16
15

3

paid

------J

8 Pf'uulunad b)! law. Otter expires 9/25/91

'

~ Ads .

59990 I
'

Davs

Business Services

"•• ..... lult
"frft l!latlmete1"

RATES

POLICIES

I
-200.00 I

• 24 Easy-lo-Use Lifeslyle
Applications

_.. -.."'

CLOSED SUNDAY

.. .. 799.90 I

HALf PRICE!
CM -5 " ' ' " Mon 1
•-' "'· Reg. $299.95. 125·1043

Cou

8 A_M_ until NOON SATURDAY

I

YO~~~~AL

125·1450/1043

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

.,

LADIES, S-rOP IN AND
SEE OUR NEW FALL
DRESSES,COA'I'S
AND JACKE'I'S.

Oh, well. At least Homer's new
friend at the cuckoo's nest is a nice
guy, and sympathetic ."Pcople
thought I was crazy for the way !
dressed,'' he says. Homer asks how
that was.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Beatitudes for friends of the disabled were read by Carrie Grueser,
Faye Wiggins, Enna Roush, Mary
K. Roush, Carolyn Salser and Edith
Sisson.
·
Others taking part in the readings were Kathleen Scott and Evelyn Hollon. The leader also read an ·
article from Response Magazine
titled "Peace be Still" and closed
wilh prayer. Carolyn Salser read "I
Have Noticed."
Refreshments were served by
Edith Sisson and Mary K. Roush .

questions were answered to help
better acquaint lhe residents with
Ruritan, its history and objectives.
The Racine Ruritan, as it will be
named, at least temporarily, was
formed with Paul Harris assuming
the office of temporary president. ·
Mary Ball is the temporary secretary and treasurer.
Plans are being made and details
established for Chaner Night on
Oct. 15 with time and location to
be announced.

truly ugly 300-pound white man in Iars for the first minute, 50 cents
a mental instituion. No matter that for each additional minute.''
the man says he's Michael Jackson.
Or that he teaches Homer to do the
Homer still loves to watch TV
Moonwalk. Or that both are in a and roar at an "America's Funniest
mental institution at the time.
Home Videos" ripoff as it shows
It's fine, silly stuff, and gets "man breaking hip." But he does
Matt Groening's gently satirical seem kind of somber watching lhe
cartoon shots at Life in America final segment, called "baby with a
nicely under way for its lhird sea- nail gun."
son.
"Awww," he says as he hears a
You' II be happy to know that soft thump indicating baby did
Homer's extended-tooth family is wrong.
just as flat weird as ever. His wife,
The real woes occur when Ban
Marge, still has a towering blue fills out his falher's psychological
'do. Lisa, now approaching age 8, profile form. It gets Homer comstill plays very good tenor sax. mined to the mental institution
Maggie the baby still commits diagnosed as suffering from "~
pacifier abuse. But No. I son Ban persecution complex, extreme paranow is achieving things.
noia and bladder hostility."
He has discovered exciting new
'It is there that he meets a 300900 numbers on cereal-for-kids
pound
white Michael Jackson.
packages, and calls to hear recordings of Krusty the Clown saying:
All this is a little complex, but is
"If you haven't asked your par- due to an accident in whi ch
ents' permission, naughty, naughty. Homer's white shirt comes out
But Krusty forgives you. Two dol- pink in lhe wash. Pink makes lhc
evil boss at the nuclear power plant
snarl that employee Simpson is a
"free-thinking anarchist.'

Classified

In a recent anicle of the Wildwood Garden Club that appeared in
Tuesday's edition of The Daily
Sentinel, the name of Evelyn Holter
should have appeared as Evelyn
Hollon.
Mrs. Hollon, not Mrs. Holter
received 21 ribbons in the Fai;
Flower Show with seven ribbons
on frmts and vegetables.

Ruritan comes to Racine
. The public meeting on Tuesday
in Racine was held for the purpose
of receiving information relative to
the feUowship, goodwill and community service organization. "Ruri-

NEW YORK (AP} - In
tonight's season opener on Fox's
"The Simpsons," Homer Simpson
asks Intle Ltsa to fill out a psychologtcal proftle form his company
demands of him. He's no good at
those things, he says.
Only if you listen to my poem
she replies. He then hears this:
·
"I had a cat named Snowball.
She died , she died. Mom said she
was sleeping. She lied, she lied.
Why oh why is my cat dead?
Couldn't that Chrysler hit me
instead?"
Stuff like this cheers you up and
makes you realize that there is
some good in this world.
It also takes your mind off
rumors that Michael Jackson is a
guest voice in. this first episode. A
Fox spokeswoman says she can't
comment, having been sworn to
secrecy. But gee. a voice in this
show sure sounds like His Weirdness.
No mauer that it' s attached to a

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- A couple
arrested after being videotaped
through a window while they had
sex in their condominium pleaded
innocent Wednesday to separate
misdemeanor charges.
Janet Paddock and Alfred
Stephens entered written pleas in
county court to three disorderly
conduct charges. A pretrial conference was set for Oct. 15.
The charges accused them of
swimming in a condo pool with
Paddock partly nude, having sex in
the condo hot tub, and locking
themselves in a ladies restroom

S'f'IJREW

Forest Run UMW meet
The Forest Run United
Methodist Women met recently at
1hc church with Edith Sisson presiding. She opened the meeting
with a reading, "Price of a Smile."
Roll call was answered with a
meditation. Officers gave reports
a11d 52 sick calls were reported.
, Mary Nease was the program
leader using the topic, "Women
Differently Able." Its purpose was
to help the UMW deal with things
that cannot be fixed. She read a
poem, "With Faith." Scripture was
from Galatians, John and Mark.

'The Simpsons' start season
with Homer in quiet place

Sentlnei-Page-9

The

Ohio

Couple in surreptitious sex video
plead innocent in other case

2 marry, combine huge families
MUSKEGON, Mich. (AP) 'the marriage of Francis and Eva
Badour lhis month makes ''The
Brady Bunch " look like a small
gathering.
: The two retired and widowed
Muskegon Heights residents
brought together 23 children, 47
grandchildren and 14 great-grand~)lildren. .
: The couple, both in their late
60s, say they weren't looking for
tove when their 17-year friendship
4eveloped into something more last
winter.
: . " In facL I said I wasn't gening
married again," Mrs. Badour said.
" Then Francis asked me out to din-

1991

Thursday, September 19, 1991

I

'.

~

.

'

Found- Sit.

mo~ngln,

kajo on Cour1 St.

1-

o1
.:

Found. Shott .... lrod Potclngool
on Morning Star Road, Racine.
c:allii4-M..2112 oftor 5:00pm. •

Ooldtn Orovhowld, Wllh Other
Dltllncll.. Footuroe. Yory Sid
Nltdo Hor OWnor. Vlclnlly: Lilli
lulllkln Rood. PIHII Coli 6
258~331.

In Rocuprlnqo, oroo, 10:
moll RICI Bono Coonhound • 11o
tomato 8ugto,l14·1192·583e ·

Loll

I

�Page-10- The Dally Sentinel

7

SNA FU® by Druce Beattie

Yard Sale

44

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

(Two)

th• day before the ad It to run.

Sunday edhlon - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Mondey edl11on • 2:00#

p.m. Saturdly.
Frldly And Saturday, Rt .141 Half
Mll• Past R1dlo Stallon.

8:00 ·4:30p.m.

Loll Ul Children Cl....othn, Sile
0-8 Yeare , Ladles , Men• Wean 1
Old Olah, What Nota. Rana
Avenue, KantUSP-

Ctothaa,

Ohio. All U111hloo Paid. 814-388tt148,

2 Bedroom Apartment, 122
Fourth Avtnut, $2751mo. $200
Deposit, Water Included. 614·

Toya,

Double Stroller, Household.

441-o42tl8 To 4p.m. Wookdoya.

Ttlt pkone PlonMr Club Garage
Sale. Big Variety! Friday 20t~ l? In Addlson On Rt.7.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
5-Famlly, Thursday and Frldsy
~ - Routo :13, A- Hill Rd.,
Pomeory. CarktCon'l . Rain or

:r:rrnent• For Rent, 614-446-

BEAunFuL ~PARTIIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 1528 Jackoon Plko
from $102/mo. Walk to ehop &amp;

_11_ _H_e..:lp_W_a_nt_ed_ _

shine.

AVON I All Arua I Shlr1ey
Speara, 304-Ci75-M21.

Otlvor St. lllcldloport, ThurFrl t-??, Twin btd complete,

SHOW DIRECTOR
National Rooort llorlcetlng Fhm

778

dehumidifier, glaiiWirt, limps,
bedaprucll, nk:k-nackl, cur·
taln1

All Yard Sileo Mull Ba Paid In
Advanea. Ooadllno: t :OOpm tho
day before thll ad Ia to run,

Sunday odlllon- 1:OOpm Friday,
Monday
odltton
10 :00I.m.
Saturday.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Poaraon Auellon Comptny,

full lime auctioneer, complete
auction aervlce. LlctnHd Ohio,
West VIrginia, 304-173-5185.

S.tka Motivated P..-.on For

Booth At CATFISH FESTIVAL,
813-833-«176, m•44z
TELEMARKETING lrom your
homo $20/hr. or more pooalbla.
"Succus Koy" lnctudsd. Dilallo
24/lv. 216-455-:1213, ut. 11~.
Wanl.ci motivated UIMperton,

$2fli,OOO. to $52,000. fll'llt yMr.
Training provkled, uperienc.
prwtorm. Sond ...umo to Box
P-5, % Pl. Pn. Ro;1•!~1 200 llaln
St., Point PIM"'!nl, ••· 25550

32

Wanted to Buy

Wanttd all junk and acrtp mtt·

01, 304-895-3036.
Wanted to b&lt;oy, Standing tlmbor,
Bob Wllllama i Sona 614-ttl2·

Looking For A Doal? Conaldor A 882~568.
Bank Redolmod llobllo Homo.
$500 Down wnh Aprrovod B-h StJWsl, lllddtopon, Ohio.
Credltl Orwat &amp;ettctlon

Situation
Wanted

baby-ah In my homo In tho

Pomeroy aru, 114-182-1723 at-

tor 5:00pm
Business
Training

14
Rot,.ln

NowtiiSoulhoollom

Wanted To Buy: Junk Auloe,
Scr1p Metal And FIN Removal Bual,_ Collogo, Sllrlna Vlltoy
From w..t VIrginia. 814-441· Plaza. can Todly, 114-441-4367fl
Ro;laloratlon fi0.05.12liiB.

0012.
Top Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S. 18 wanted to Do
Colna, Gold Ringo, Sllvor Colna, ~~~~---:-:--:-:--:-:­
Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin Shop, BUill Hog Sonloo. Raooonablo
1St Sacond Avonua, GalllpoUo.
Ratao. NO Jolo To Smalll 114371-2842.

Goorgoa Portable Sawmllli don~

haul yow loa• to tht m II jult

WtaVtr 304-382-~5.

•nytlme

Amazing Monty Making Pl1n B~
PASE Corp., Inc. Attire In 10
Monlhll FrMinformatlon, Wrftt:
O&amp;A Sllpplloa, O.L. Or A.C. Har·

Will Do lronlnga And Sowl~g.
Good Roflroncio. 814-448-7851.

Ply,

E.xetlltnt

Ext 571.
Ralundod.

Btntfht,

407-2t2--4Jt7,

Trantportatlon,

tlo.m.·IOp,m. Toll

CABLE TV .lOBS
No oxporlanco noc-ry.
11t50Jhr. For ln!ormatton, eall1·

900-731~262,

exttnalon 8952.

Ftnanctal

21

Business
Opportunity

INOilCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
ncommondo IIIII you do bull• - with pooplo you know, and
NOT to aond . . _ through tho
moll until you hovo lnvoatlgotod
tho olfwrlng.
Anonlonl Styling Salon For
Salol Primo LocoUon. Coli 1144418103, .,. 441 1311.

8:00am-9:00pm, 7 daya, 112.85
IH.
cannery worura/AIIalul hiring
men!VIIomtn. Up to $600".

•lz•

14x70,

3
Bedroom, Total
lie 111 elect, full car·
Etoctric, l12,ttl5. Nowho,. Etao w/ahowtr,
potsd,
HUD
occptsd, 304-4175Bu1 Elooa Homo cantor. Coli 1· 6200.
For rent· N1w 1 bdrm apt, fum

34

Business
Buildings

31

189882.
CANNERY WORKERSJALASKA
Hiring lloM¥-n. Up to 1100
woakly. Tranaportltlon, Hou•
lng. CALL NOW 1·206·731-7000
Exl. 1617B2.

ABSOWTELY MUST SELLII
Asducsd To Soli: 2 Story 3br
Comer Lol In Choohllw, Ohio,
Eolcollont Condition. Flanancjng
Avollablo With Pay Polnto. 1104'
11:124858, 1104-1132-7170, 114-367·

lng

In

Gallla

And

Count!••·

Jackaon
Minimum

Quallllcatlona, High School
Diploma, Exporlonco Ooalr.d,

Btntflt• Offered. Send RHumt

To: · F. ~.C.T.S. AI. 2 Box m.A,
Bldwoll, OH 45614. By Saptsm·
bor 27th, 19111. IIIFIH, E.O.E.
Domlno'o Pizza o! Pomoroy now
taking appllcatlona.
EARLY INTERVENTION SEA·
VICE COORDINATOR NEEDED
FOR PRE-scHOOL CHEERS
PROGRAM.
Quallflcatlono:
Ro;lllorsd Nu18o or
. -9ocal Worlulr wHh bacholor'o
do;,.. or becholor'o dog,.. In
apoc;lal
oducallon,
Ntty
childhood oduc:atton or rotolod
pro-.
oomputtr
knowlodgo. Plld ll\l&amp;rtartt u
lunda .,. -.lvod. PART-TIME
COUNTY
COLLABORATIVE
GROUP
COORDINATOR.
. Quallllcatlono: Familiar with
aorfy lntorvontlon/hOinn sducatton ogoncloalarant writing and

Homes for Sale

0849.

3 Bsdroom Houao, -mont,
Outbuilding. 1 Aero Land. 12
llltao From Galllpotlo. 614-2561172.
3br A Fromo On 1 Al:n Woodod
Lol. 827,500 Will conotdor Land
ConlriCI WHh Roaaonabla
Down Plymant. 114-2S8-1989,
114-:u&amp;-1505.
Country uttlng, 4-BA home on
1·112 ICI'M of a.ncl. In ground
~fllorago building. 8l4-ttl2·

uc..-

Flvo Star llor1gago, FHA·V~
Convamlonal Lolna, Brian
VlaHott~ Loan Offlcar, 304-11753117. .
GOVERNMENT HOMES From 11
IU Ropol~ . Dollnquont Tax
Propenr. Repouenlcn•. Your
A,.o 11 805-il2o1000. Ext. GH·
10181 For CuiTont Ropo Llot
HOUSE FOR FREEII Mull movo
ott 1.. In lllddl_,_ FlU In
baoomont, Hod and otrow. llusl
or;a_!!IUtloNclirtcal
Ulllt. alan oont111Ctl 2·BR, UJVO LA,
OA, Bath, hoa now roollllld Qui·
SEND RESUME FOR EITHER tor,
ooppor and PVC ptulllbPOSITION TO: CHEERS, 81 lng,now
nood aomo worl&lt;. You pay
Stall Stroot, Galllpotla, OH for tho
onovlng! Only Nrlous
4511:11.
oallonl can 814-1112·2071 after
EARN MONEY Roodlng .-1 7:00pm.
$30,000/yr. lnoomo PolonUal.
Dotalls. (1) 105-1112-8000 Eolt. v. NfW Havon on 3rd StrOll 111
brick, otory and hall, 3 b.d.
10189.
room1, b&amp;atmtnt, brwzway,
Eaoy World Exeatlam Payl ob- o•,.go and 1arvo tot, Somervllla
aombll Producto At Homo. can Roalfy, 304-47&amp;'3030 or 875-3431.
Toll F,.., 1-8011-417-6568, Ext. Rio Orondo. 2 Boclroom 3 Lola,
:113.
LR, Lorgo "'· Dr, 1 ii2 Batha,
Eloctronlca Tochnlclan, Ex· VInyl Sldlnt. 2 Cor Ga,.go, CA,
porioneo Required. Good WoriJ- Jacuzzi, $51,000. 814-245-112111.
Ing CondHton. Full Tlmo. Apply
At : Bob'a Etoctronlca, Uppor 32 Mobile Homes
Routo 7, Galllpolla, Ohto.
for Sale
Exportoncod Hair Styllal Wantsd
Apply At Holr Hlglllloh1a, Al:r- 100159 lot w/14x70 Sh..l%, 3-BA,
From
Bob'•
'lltclronlcl, 1·bath, gao, In Syrocuoo on corKanauga~ Golllpotlo. llanagoro ner ~. 114-112·3817 or tt2·
LlctnM Pr... rrtd.

n&amp;4.

HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED: 141110, 2 Bodr_,, -H251.
Glu,.ntood $fill Woak Pluo
Moral Plld Vaeauono. 114-441- 1m VonDwko 14xnt lloblla
72t7. .
Home, 114-3111054, If No
Anowor 114311 11011.
Homo hoaHh can, pollont ~rs1
ho- · - · ononda. CortiiH.H.A. wlrolonnooo. 114-llf.
5211
Lady lor hoooMWorll, mull bo
abla to drlvo, nose! to do • · lilt Clayton 141110 molollo
,.ndo no omoklllll or dnnklng, homo, oontral ak undorpon·
write Box C.18 %Pl. Pn. Ro;li- ~ 1112 bllho, Oiiltlng fin, ore
tor, 200 Main 91., Point PI-nt,
rudy fao ocoupanoy, 304WV 25550.
171-4804 foo4w-. 4:00 l 1:00
Pll,

holp lor oldortt lorly In hor
homOL".Irolwonea, Raclno .,..,
- ·- · 114-l82-i&lt;237
p_.y POSTAL JOBS tt1.l'II814.110A1r. No oxp. nooclod. For
oxam and oppltcatton ln..., oil
1·216-tlll-15n7.,.10pm 7aayo.

2-bclrm mobllo homo, 12182 on
1.51 - · - lot,114-115-3151
- r ~...
110,500.00
Bank Ropo! 10114 llrlploco,
oothodnl calllnao. Muot 1011
lmmodlalolyl Co11"1- 4117571
iok lor Art or Todd.

Oualllod oxporlonood ....... I::---;:...,;;;..;.;.,;,:.:;:;-,.,.-- -rotary, IIIII or pori tlmo, cal For Salo: 1871 llobMo Homo,
for dot1lleo, 304411-1842.
12115, 3 Bsd,_.., I-H03t.

'

"

.

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Avo,, Galllpotla. Ctoao to
Coun Hou11. 1 room, 2 rooma,

or unlurn, In lllddtoport, 614!lg2-6225 or ttl2-5304.
Fumlahld Aptirtmtnt, 1 Bedroom, Water h id, $275, 112 MUe

Eaat 01 Portor. 114-3118-11963.
3 roome. 4 room1. All nlcel~ Fumlahod Apanmonto, 1br,
decorr.ted. air condldonlng, $225 U111hloa Plld. 120 fcKJrth
your water &amp;:
bill are paid. Avo, &amp; 1107 Socond Avo, Ga~
Make. your choice now. No llpotlo. 114-444-4416 oftor 7p.m.
quotn over the phont1 you
mu11 1M them. Phone JOI' 1n Fumlahod apt. 107 2nd · Ga~
oppolntmonl. 114-446-7699 day, llpolla. t BR, $225L u1llhloo paid.
81~18 after 7 p.m.
446-9539 ovo.

aaw.,.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Lots l acreage available tor
new home cona1ructlon on
Ra~bum

Roed. Paved ro1d,
water,
reaeonable
r11trictlona. Complttl Inform•

tlon mallod on ,.q1»at. 304-11755253, John D. Goriach, no
s lngl•wldt tralltrl, pllaH.
40 Acre Farm In Ohio Township.
TJmber, 1479 #Tobacco a....
Some Farm Equipment In·

cludtd. tll4-25H892 For Ap-

pointment

Land In Syracuao Call Aftor
5p.m. 814-446oiV41.
Mercer

Bottom

Sub-dlvl•lon,

one acrtt Iota, Rt. 2 frontage,
price reduced, city water, 30of..
!571-2338.

O.J. Whho Road, 2 Al:rn
Wooden Building Lot, Roady To
BuUd On. Rnlrlctsd. $7,!100.
et4-245-95U
Trallor lol for rent on Ntw Lima
Rd., waterJuwar hook-upe. 814-

1'12·2421

Rentals
41 Houses lor Rent

182~568.

Nor1h 4th1 lllddloport, Ohio. 2
bodroom tumlohocl opt, d-h
and raforonoa roqulrod, 304-882·
2561.
Small 1br Apar11Mnt 1 7 Court
81-, KHchon Wltn Stovo,
Rolrlgorator, f1151mo. Pt..
Dopollt, Ulllltloo, Rolonnco.
IM-+16-4121.
Vory Ntoo Garage Apar1mont,
lncludu Garage, 8240/mo.
DIDoolt Roqulrocl. 114~48-2174,
Boiwoon lp.m. And 10p.m.
Furnished
Rooms

3 btdroome, attached garage,
ck&gt;M to llor18, achOolt &amp;
hoapltal. Box P·17, % Pt. PU.

Country llobllo ·Homo Spaca. A.
Wator. 114-371~254.
Country llobllo Homo Pirie,
Routo 33, North of Pomoroy.
Lota,_rwntola, polio, aoteo. Coli
114--·1'171.
Trailer Lol For R1nt : Kanauga,
$711/mo, 114-446-41412.

Roglator, 200 Main St, Pl. PU,
WV25550.
3br Foncod In Yard, Locotsd
Rodnoy Vlllago 11. $330/mo. 614448-6114.

Traitor Spoco For Ronl: 814-4461052.

4br, 2 Bath&amp;, Doubltwldlln Alo
Grandt Ohio Area. 814-24W588,

Merchandise

Anyllmo.
Avallablo Sllndly, 2 BR country
hou.1 ttova, refrigerator. No
pete. Reterencn, dtpoeh. Send
rsaponoo: Box CLAOII2 c1o Gal·
llpolla Dolly Tribun~'-825 Third
Avo. Gatllpollo, OH 4DO:It.
NICI 3-BR
Butternut Ave.
Pomoroy. Por11ally lumlahod.

51

Almond 30-lnch Tappan goa

rr.nge, elock, llmtr, no wasteful

pllolo. Almoot now, ttso. 814-

ft:Z-71111

bath &amp; 112, references, dtpoeh,
INH, 814·992-5130

Rear 238 Firat Avtnut, Small
2br, Khchen With Stove And

Rolrfoorator. No Pslo. Roflroncoa llnd DopooH. Ues Plua
U1111tleo. 114-446-411211,
Small 1br Stovo l RalrtgorotCH
Fumlthed, Wuher I Dryer
Hook-up,
$225/mo.
Uoo
Dopoa~. 1 Montha Loaoa. 142
Fourth Avo, Galllpotla, 114-4483887.

42

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

2 bodrom1 traHor, • - l walor
lumllhod. Rolorwnoao, Also
t,.llor opoco. North AI. 1 l.ocuot
on right, Pt. Pit. 304-4752·BR lurnllhod, good ctoan
condht;; ~ yard, obovo Now
Haven, 4 2-24M.
2-BR mobllo homn, lumlohod,
walhll'l.,_, aJr, 114-H:z-4100.

2br llobllo Homo Rolonncn
And DopooH Roqulrsd. 514-21161122.
3-BR mobile homo lpjii'OX. 3-ml
from Pomeroy or .lllddloport.
814-112-1858

52

Sporting Goods

-

llodol Block.hawk Ruaor
357 llognum; REM 223 RDII
With BliOhnott Scopa. can ao
Saon At 150 And Ewlngton
Road, Or Phono1114-31~.

53

54 Miscellaneous
Extra Good Uft Cholrl$210. 114241-6152.
2010-John Deer Bulldozer, hay
blodo, 1111100. 814~47-4181
:z:r Tandom oqulpmontlcar
all 11001, vory ..... $1200.
114-245-11122 aftor lpm.
27" ton opood bllul. $76. 21 cu ft
nlrlgorator $421. Wator Soltonor $145. Sail Df'OIIOI mowwr
$45. cantral air cOnd" $471. 304175-2811.
3 pc bod100111 ouHo, good cond,
8225.00 814-271ol211l
Air Condl1fonlng 220 2:1 000
BTU, One Fuol Tank. Ono hr·
~"' Grin. Gu, UMd 1Wo
Tlmoa. 114-246-11071.
Baby crib comploto, otrollor,
ptor pon, w1lkor, ear aut, high
chair, antique twin bid com·

,,.,lor,

pltte, antJqu. wnhy whh atool,

304475-4541.
&amp;abr, Swing, Boby Walkof, High

Chi I, Coll614-441-oo20.
Buy or ,.nt coppor aPPio buttor
kattla, 15gallon 7, 30~1717.
Cedar wardrobe, 1!ml Ford LTD,
both

••c cond, 304-4Y..1808.

Concreto &amp; ptutlc oaptlc tonlco,

Ron Evana Enttfi)IIMa, J•ek·

ton, OH 1-ION37..tW.

CRAFT SUPPLIES
Hand Modo Cnfta
Straw w,..thl, drisd lloworo,
basktll •nd more. Trt County
Sporto Shop, Point Plooaont,
3b4475-2918.
Craftmallc electrtc twin btd, IX·
tra long, nev• wtd, exc tor II·
dony or Invalid, 111 llnono In·
eluded, 304-175-18:12.
For Salo: Frick 0.0 . Sow Milt,
$1,000. 814-371~240.
For Solo: Saara I Ft. Pool Tabto,
$450. 614·367-7287.
Howard Showc... Commercial
Fr11zer 49cu. ft. $2500.00 Alto
approxlma111~ 300 pr~vlously

vlowod movloo, 114-1112·2103
Hulky Homo Lho 1nd McCul-

loch chain 11w1 muked down
Stpl. Salt. Sldtra Equipment,

Hondarson, WV. 304475-7421.

Household
Goods

lngarsoll Rand Air Comioooor,
Modal HI On Sin 1 Axlo
Traitor With Hooa, Upf11 ht Sand
Blutar 500 lb. f1,800; Two 1
Inch Drivo Air lmpoe1. Sold
Togotnsr Or Soporoto. 114-4460440, 814-446-0S13.
Land ol Canaan Ski·WIIk , 304-

882-3335.
Antiquo Wood-Coal Cookllovo
Warm~ Ovon, Wotor Tonk. 1144413 .
.

Lorga Load All Hard Wood
Flrawood, e14-255-8308.
Montgom•ry Ward Btl TV dlth
w/all flardwar. for hook-up. 304-

~~":!it~:&amp;",..~· 304-

773-11118, 8:00 11115:00.

Bargoln ~PPIIanc• 10 Daya
Only. Froat · Frao Rolrlgorator
Woo11110 Now 11!1; Wuher Woo
$121, Now $91 And $75; llony To
a.- From All Ar. Gau,.ntood. Skaggo Appllaneoo, 114441-73111.

1150.00, 1!118 Yamoho TT225
dlr1blka, $800.00, Alvoroz gultlar
$200.00 814-MS-4128.
Pol11blo changoabla lottor olgn
$258. F,.o lallanldollvory. Plao·
tic lottora $47.50 box. 1-800-5333413 onyllmo.

Colorlc
R1ngo
wlbuln-tn
mlciOWIVO ovan, 2yn old, $300.
Ooublo-wldo rslrlgo,.tor, !lyra
old, $500. Olhor lumnwo lor
oolo. 114-ttl2-6042
Corpol tx12 $50 l Up! Salo On
All Ou1- carpot: $3.81 l
$4.1111; KHchon Corpa~ 17; VInyl
111111 l lll.ttt. Solo On AJI carpol In 8tockl Mollohan Corpoto,
114-448-lll44.

_appllit,_,

County 'Applla- Inc. Good
T.V. 1110. 011111
1 o.m. to 1 p.m. llon.-811. t14441·11f!,. 127 3rd. Avo. Galllpolla, uti
Extra nlco king olzod watorllod.
lllnor8d hndb11rd wllh ~~­

- EJthl
nMih.IIOO.
11t -••• 0015.uildor·
F~

7 po dining room oot.
m. 304-47WS47 or r78-IIH.

Plash: 4~ gallon w•ter tank

Recondhlontd Waaherw, Oryere.

Guarsntoad prompt JIOIYico lor
111 makH, modolo. Tho Waohor
011/0I Shoppo. 11-4-448-21144.
UMd Homelltt •w, 18" bar,
good cond, l14-ttl2-2014
U1ed utellhl equlpm1nt, Including, whole eyatem wlltl
dteodtra, receiver~~, dl1h and

docodars. 814-11112-1173,

55

Building
Supplies

Block, brick, - • lllpoo, wtn·

dowl, llntele, etc. Claude Win-

till, Rio Granda, OH Coli 114245-612t

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and 511~ 9i1oP-Pot
o, 'llyloa.
lame Pol Food "Ooalor. Julia
W~bb. Coli 114-448-o23t, 1-800352.0231.

=;:;--::-:::'::'-:--':::-:t--:::::-:= · Grooming. All
IIHcholl Rood, 70x14, 2 Bodroom, 2 Bothe WMh Expondo,
$250/mo. Pl.. Dopoolt; l'ax14 3
B-m, 1 lath, USC/mo. And
o.-h · Rolonnooa Rl(lulr.d.
call • - e,.m And lp.m.
114-141-2111.
llobllo ........ flltnlohod, utiUtl•
pald 1 no polo, 3-fnMao ...,.h
llldalapor1, AI t 1-bdnn IIJI,
lumllhod, utllhloo pd, I!WeJ.
0811

oholr, brown
Ullholollr.d - r , good oond,

Qold oouclt l

J64.77N121.

Good air tlghl Wonn llornlng
bumll, , _ antoo. Burno
..-togo, f1GO, · - QOOD UliD APPllANcEI

,.,.... .... ~. ...

. . . _ tllyalo,

UpPer Rlvor IIi.
8tono
.CNOIMotol. Cll ,_t-7311.

;r-'-!'J

•.... -

.,.-.,.-...,.-,..--

-,---

7 Pupplaol 112 Auotrollan
Shor.hard, 112 A..trallan Blue
Hu er. From Working Par.nta,
$50 Each. 814-448-n57 Aftor
4p.m.

I month old malt Sla•m• cat,
doclawod and ahota, $50. 304175-53111.

BORN LOSER
"'WfCH CH'INSKI

F.D.R. SA&lt;O,

. 1'&gt; LA'T'It.l'
'I'I':R rtE !

The Dally Sentlnei- Page- 11

" Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiQ.__ .•.

Television
Viewing

I'U.. B€THE

''~E AA~E

00/ER~

60iC.H CAPIN5KI !

1-klnllll&amp; TO

eur

F£f..R
fEAA IBW'

•

THU .. SEPT.

.....o.

8:1111 ~ D (I)

(J)

i1J Nowo

miiM, taU over paymental 114-

TIIAT DAILY
PUULII

0 Rearrange
lette rs of
four JCrombltd words

• 'I· t I I
low to form four simple words.

19

6

EVENING

1987 Nlaoan 4x4, black, loll

a

ill)

Ll K

0 D

(l) Club Connoct
~ Reading Rainbow Stereo.

~-1~~

2 ...1 A-.1S-,-1-.-0

1h -

0 18C.rtoon
Nlghl Court Q
Expreoa

il)

73

vans

TI-{ERE'S A
D06 IN THE HALL!

71

AKC Booton Torrlor Pupploa,
514-H~-~251.

Autos for Sale

)

AKC Aoglot- 14 Wook Old
Whlto Fomala P-o. lluot Solll tm Morcury llorqulo, 400
1150. Coli Botwoon tlo.m. &amp; enlnge, e•c cOnd, no ru.t, 3Q4..
~- Work Numbor: 114-441- 882-3715.
1m u.-n 4dr Town ca~alr
AKC Roglotor.d At&gt;rlc.. Malo Condhton, $1,200, Or Boot unorl
Poodlt Pup, 12 Wooko Old. 1100. 114-441e'JII04.
614-3811-11811 Aftor 5p.m.
1177 Corv'!'~J allvtr/sllvtr,
Drsgonwynd C.Hory Poralan, $8885. 114-247... 81,
SlamtH and

Hlm~~layan

(I) (J)

74

Motorcycles

1!il85 Honda Aebll 1.300 Mil••·
For Sala Or T10do. f1,200 Or
Trado Equal Vol~». 614317·7410. ·
1887-VF 700 Magna Honda:
Bought new laat )'Mr. Excellent
condition, $2500, 814-H2·5170

8

Andy G11f11111

by f1ll ,ng in t he m1ssing words

deve lop from sfep No. 3 b elow.

PRINT NUMBERED LE11 ERI IN
THE SE SQUARE S

t)

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LET TE RS
TO GEl ANSWER

SCRAM-LITS ANSWERS
Bauble - Guilt - Known - Osprey - TROUBLE
Aquote lrom a famous comic, "If you have no charity
in your heart, you have the worst kind of heart
TROUBLE."

NO RT H
• A97

BRIDGE

FRANK AND
~

ERNE~T

7:30~·

JIOPirdyl

. J6 4

c

Chicago Cubs at New York
Mats (L)
(I) Entortalnment Tonight

tA H
• 8 53 2

. Q 10 7

• 53

a

a
a

So 1 Star Stereo .

1D ESPN'o SpeedWMk
.

~ALLEY OOP

cro1an,. .
7:351]) Siniard and Son
8:1111 ~ G 1121 Cooby Show
(Season Premiere) vanBSsa
reveals she'o engaged to a
maintenance men. Stereo. r:;l
(I) (J) D MOVIE!: 'Tho Jenl
of 1111 Nile' AIC Movie
Special lPG)
Sler!IO. r:;1
(l) ()) Nolah~
RIHIMmed The resldenls of
Ravendale join forces to
revitalize their neighborhood
and eliminate crack houses.
(1 :00) Stereo.
iiJI 1121• Top COpo An
oH-duly oftlcer faces an
armed bank robber; a new
designer drug. Stereo. r:;1
liD II Till Slmpeona (Season
Premiere) Homer Is
committed to a res1 home.
Stereo. 0
(IJ) Murder, She Wrote
Jessica reopens a
16-year"l!ld murder case. (R)

t,DD)

.. JF THEY SEE 'IOU
RLINNING ...ROUND

Uii.E TH ...T, YOU MIGHT
liE MISTI'IKION FOP.

THE ENEMY!

0

~

I FU:L UK£ ~ ·s
A ~ f"R:,U.,JD
ffl/Jf4i;.. MJD I'M
WAITIU::. FOR 1HE

On Sligo Steteo.

1D Co1te11e FOOibiH Virginia
at GaorgTa Tach (L)

QtP!Int1Newo

liD Thll'l My Dog
8:05 CD MOVIE: Moatblllo P1r1 II

1RAP £U)R 1Defal

t Q

SOUTH

~tereo . Q
(J)
Mimed... With Children

i1J1 WhMI of Fortune r:;1
112) D Fomlly Feud
~

.10 762

EAST
.J8 4
. A98 54l

WEST

PHILLIP
ALDER

(I) Mejor Le1gue lleaeblll

{1.; ,, .

9-1!1·91

. KQ J
• 10 4 l 2

7:051]) lleverly Hllbllllea

. KQ 10 62

•··

tKJ 986
.A K9

The Houdini
coup

Vulner able Both
Dea ler · South

By Phillip Alder
An expert's ra te of play is proper·
tiona ! to the chances of his contracf lf
he is doomed to de fea t. he slows down .
ofle n to a standstill (s itstilJ?). He hates
to go down a nd hopes th a t before the
last trick has been played. th e re will
still be some chan c.e . howe ver r emote.
tha t his ca rds will metamorphose .
But if the contract has some chance.
the ex pert will gel on with the ga me.
hoping the possibility becomes a n
actua lity .
Cover the East-West ca rds in the di agram. When West leads a low trump
to your 10, how do you continue?
Norlh's one-no-trump res ponse was
lorcing for one round. His subsequent
jump to four spades showed a lim1t
raise in spades (about 11 points) with
three lrumps and probably a r elatively balanced hand . South dec ided that
was enough for a sla m .
Things look grim. You ha ve at leasl
one diamond to lose, and probably a
club loser. Easl did well to retain his
spade jack at trick one. Now you hope

South
l •
3t

West
Pass

Pass
Pass

6•

North
I NT
4•

Eas t
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Openin g lead: • 3

it will fa ll as you lead the s pade kmg
and overta ke with dumm y's ace . lf it
docs fall, the s pade nine becomes a not her dumm y entr y. Unluc ky - the
jac k lives. Now you lead dummy's
heart king, rulfin g a wa y E a sr s ace.
a nd dra w the last trump. What next?
You have no dumm y ent r y. leaving
you but one hope: Lead the dia mond
king from your ha nd . Fma ll y some
luck - the diamond queen falls si ngle·
ton. The diamond 10 becomes a gua r anteed dummy entry, and you bring
home the s la m.
West sa1d tha t next time he would
lead the diamond ace a nd anothe r dia mond. Do you belie ve him ? I don 't.
@ 1ttt. NEWSPAPER £NTEAPRISE AIIN.

lPG) (1 :55)

8:311 CD D 1121 Dltltfellt World

(Season Premiere) Dwayne
plans to surprise Whltiey with
a ring. Stereo. C
liD II Drexell'l tl11a
(Premiere) oraxen has an
Important In-class evaluation.
Stereo. D
A1111rfcan Mulle ShOP
Stereo.
liD You Alked for It
9:00 ~ D II)) CheerS (Season
Premiers) Sam and Rebecca
try 10 becOme parenls.
Stereo. C
(l) II) M"yoleryl A mother's
obsessive love for her son
resu~s In !ragady. D
ill) 112111 Trlalo of Aoola
O'Neill Rosie defends a
handicapped man charged
with killing a girl . Stereo. 0
liD II Bevatly HUll, 80210 A
black lamlly moves Into the
netahborhood. Stereo. 0
(IJ) MOVIE: R1rte91del (A)
(2:00)
NlllhVIIIa Now

a

WHATS AN AI::RY'LIC,
AND WHY 00 'rt:iU HA.ve

10

FOR$-ET I EAID
ANYTHIN~.

PAINT(T~

a

HOW IS JU6HAID
COMIN' ALONG IN
SCHOOL, MISS
PRUNELLY?

8 Larry King Uvel

8

ALL THAT YOUNG-UN
DOES IS SET AN' STARE

. tinces governing you in the year ahead.

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

1;:.·

Sopt. 20, 1991

Y.Ou may

enter into a rather unique ar-

rangement' with an eKtremely talented
individual In the year ahead. This Is an
Individual you've known for quite
awhile, but only on a casual basts.
QIQO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) usually, you
a&lt;e lasteful, artislic and imaginative .
But lhese splendid qualities might be
dOrmant today, causing you 1o dress or
do things in a garish manner. Gat a
jump on life by understanding the influ-

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) You might
bend over backward to assist someone

who !ails to acknowledge your efforts.
However, you mustn't let this individual
sour your impression of the world .

Be sure to state your zodiac sign.

ARIES (March 21-April 18) Someane
you recently met is willing to use influence on your behalf. but your indifferent

appoint a friend who holds you in high

SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22) Being

attitude could begin to make this indi·
vidual think otherwise . Be appreciative.
TAURUS (Aprii20-Moy 20) It's important that you dress and conduct your-

yourself will be much more becoming

self in harmony with those with whom

than trying to emulate the manner of

you·re involved today . Setting yourself

another today . Remember: We never
walk as gracefully in someone else' s

apart in any distinct manner would be

s hoes.
SAGinAAtUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You
might be a lad Insecure and eager for
approval from others today . Therefore,
11 may be diHicult for you 10 discern be·
tween slncerily and flattery t~at Is used
lor ullerlor purposes.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jon. 11) You
may have to wreslle wl1h the temptation
10 spend beyond your means today.
Keep In mind lhe bills will eventually
come due, so be sure lhat whalever you
purchase Is worth the deficit.
AQUARIUS (...n. 20-Feb. 19) People
you treat with consideration will respond lavorably toward you today . But
those you Iorge! 10 say " please" or
" 'thank you" to may stiH you in thecour·

GEMINI (Moy 21..June 20) You may be
inclined to follow the path olleast resistance in bolh work and play Ieday.
What you'll achieve, if anylhlng, is apt to
be of little slgnlllcance.
CANCER (Juno 21..JuiJ 22) Carefully
check the credentials of anyone you
permit to handle your finances today.
An individual who Is unskilled or unquali!led could deptele your resources.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) S-Ing an
associsle wilh undeserved acltnowl·
edgment today could eslabllsh a bad
precedence. This individual might begin
to expect the same trealment as otandard procedure, without upgrading
performance.

nipulated o r taken for grant ed .

cl

tesy departm e nt .

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Be mindl~l of
behavior today that could severely dises teem. This buddy dislikes being ma·

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Legal·ald org.
5 - puzzle
11 Monster
13 Circus animal
14 On the ocean
12 wds.)
15 Optic part
16 Yearned (al.J
18 Bad
19 Aug. lime
20 Comedian
Caesar
22 Hall of bi
24 Etching lluid
26 One (Fr.)
29 Hotmone
producer
3 I Marsupial
33 Arbor
35 British city
36 Conlalning a
certain gas
37 Is nol well
39 Language
suffix
40 Swill aircrafl

(abbr.)
4 1 Type of bean
43 Piece ol land
46 Berea
49 Wall
52 Connocllon
54 - ratings
55 Anoinl
56 Threw
57 Cave (poet.)
DOWN
1 Moslem title
2 Municipality
3 Emil coher·
ent llghl
4 Continual
5 Happiness
6 Indignation
7 Taunted
8 Serb, e.g.
9 - - wanl
for Chrislmas
10 Great China

counterproductive .

1121

13
17
20
21

Food fish
Allllne Info
Drink slowly
Peraon loved
to ea:cesa
22 Furze genus
23 - a: not any

o!

12 Browns

25
26
27
28

Mine producl
Employs
Unclolhed
Prlnltr's

meaeurea

29 Mall cenler
abbr .
30 - - I say
't!""""'"''..,.'l'"""'"''..,.l""'"nll"'1 32 Young tree
34 lllumlnaled
-+--+- t-+-;-; 38 Ower (prof.)
40 Peddlea
....-+-1--t-t--t- +-1 42
Actress Gam
43 Mother's
staler
44 Ono of lhe
Muses
45 Feels sotry
aboul
46 Lair
47 Ogle
--1--t-i 48 Fodder ltor·
ago atructure
.,....+--t- 1-+-t 50 lbaon
ChiiiCtor
51 j8ob and
Carol and
· - and Allee
53 Aller
dtductlona

Premiere) Joe and Brian find
Helen working at a strip joint
Stereo. Q
tO:DII~G i1J Flath 'n Blood
(Preview) Rachael searches
lor her parents, but she finds
a brother. Stereo. Q
CD Mlljor League Baoeball
Atlanta Braves at San Diego
Padres (L)
(I) (IJ ,Prt1111 TTrrte Uve
stereo.
ill)

....,.-- - - - - -- - -- - Send lor Virgo's Astro-Graph predictions today by mailing$ t .25 plus along,
sell-addressed, stamped envelope to
As tro-Graph, cl o this newspaper, P.O.
BoK 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101 -3428.

St;erecrow 1nd Mro. King

9:30 ~ G 1121 Wlng1 (Season

OUT TH' WINDER t!

w-.

*"'}H

Complele lhe chuckle quoled

a"'-,tlno

•r&amp;,·

--2717.

.

IIJI The W1nort1

I*

-

.

1D SpartaCinllr

:

-h.--

.

'-~-.L..-L-...1...-'--' you

Hoopltol CeH In (1 :DO)
0 MlcGyver Q

814-441-3144 aftor 7 p.m.

--

_

S'tereo. ll
iiJ C1mcl'en Cllrll Memorlll

loavo mooaago.

,113.

.

a.n-ttonQ
1121D E..-lnmont Tonight

ktlttns.

•h•

I0

~-T,....:.-.,.,.,.....,,,........,..,....:.~,5,.---1

ID Up CloH
11J1 New Zorro Stereo. Q
6:351]) Andy QriHitlt
7:1111 ~ D Wheel of Fortune Q
(I) Nlaltt Coull Q
(I) lnildt Edltlori D
(l) ()) MlcNoiiJLehrer
NewoHourQ
(J) D Clndld CII!Mrl
i1J1 Current Aff1lr ~
II]) D Star T..tc: The Nexl

~

1m · Cfvyolor Cordoba, 1·A 75 Boats &amp; Motors
Condition! 1110 Chov. Drivo
Ftmlll mlnlatu,. dachahund. 3 Homo, ROll..- U111hy Traitor,
for Sale
Can Ba Saon AI 1110 ~na
old. l14-388-1482.
Ewlnaton Rood Dr Phono 114- 12 Fl. SNra Boat And Tralltr,
With Sooto. Price: $400. 614-441·
Flan Tank, 2411 Jackoon Avo. 318~.
0811.
Potnt ,....,., 304-171-2013,
lull llno TIO(IIcal ,::1oabl!ds, 1171 Chryolor ConloiJo 380, 1m Flbor Form mt. Sid Boat,
au1o, , _ ovorytlllng, $1400. 100 Horoa Chryolor Outboord
arnallanlmoloondo
,
daya 114-112·21115. anor 5:30pm, Sharp, .With Traitor. Rod An~
For Silo: Fomolo 2 112 Yoar Old, Olll304-175-tl55,
"
SllworL$2,1100. 514-44154440, 114i
Toy Poodlo, AIIShola, N-r.d.
441.0013.
.
11110
Pinto,
Exoollont
Condition.
Aoldng $100. 114-44W152.
83,* lllleo, Good lllloago Por 1883 Saa·Riy SRV 210, 21 ft,
Pita and
oallng
rabllla Gauon. $1,200 Aftar lp.m. 114cuddy cabin, v.a. Ex. cond. Coli
ld,.oa;d~~urnonn Aobbltory, 441-0208.
8,114-4 ....
'
3o447
11181 Iuick Rogal UmHsd,g~d
Roglalarsd Block And Whlto, AII-I'II
ca-o, AC,
76 Auto Parts &amp;
Uvor And WhHo, Dllmatlon contl, 71,000 mlln, $1,700. 304Pupo For Balo. Roocly October 175-271111.
Accessories
3rd., 814-446-17111.
11183 Buick Skyhawk, $500. 304- Budoot T10nomlulono, Uood I.
175-7103.
rebulit, atartlng at $IIi Auto
57
Musical
Porta. 514-24~5171, 114-37911183
camoro,
nona
•
looko
2283.
.
Instruments
good.114-'1112-2317"' 1112-2:1111.
For Sail: Ana Sauphono, Ea·
New 911 tanka, Onl ton trucll!
collont Condlllonl 114-3711-2131 11183 Oklo Ootll 18, 304-475- whoolo, " radii ton, lloor mat a,
otc. R l .R Au1o, Rlploy, WV. 304·
Aftor4p.m.
372-38:13 or 1.a00-:ln'8581,
11114
Colobrlly,
4dr,
~J
At;,
PS,
Gutter w/e~~M. 21·112' camper,
1
toteh ..., ahotgun, croaabow, PB, Extn Ctoonts:J....,, can Af. RobuiH 250 cu In Oldamoblij
twlp.m.
814-4411-1244.
ongl".!t 30,000 mlloo, oxo MnCI,
traitor. 114·1'12~445
304-67ll~8114 ,
'
Two 1 Yoar Old Conn Tnompola. 11114 Cutlaao Cion Dlooal
Loodsd, 11,000 Mlleo, Ail Wanted To Buy: Good UIIOII
$300 Each. I~IIH400.
O~glnal, Su!'r Cloan, Aoldng,
Hardtop For J•p C J 7, 114-44682,100. 114 Hl-2301.
2308,
\
58
Fruits &amp;
11114 Dodge Arloo, 18,000 milia,
V~getables
campers &amp;
good running contl, 30W75- 79
Connl!'(l P-hoo now avallabla, 11110.
Motor Homes
alao Banlttt p..,. and Pruna 11114 Plymouth Conquoat, 2800
Pluma lator In Auguot. catt 1· Turbo, I Spood1_.Approx. 50,000 1W88 Torry Taunoo Tnvol Traitor.
800-447-3760 lor pnooo. BOB'S llllao, Block WM
Gr.y lntorlor, 23 FL Awning And Air ConMARKET, Muon or Galllpotla, 114 441 4431.
ditioning. EolcoHont Condhtonl
OH.
Phono: 114-446-8282.
.,
11114 Plymouth Rotlant, a ..o, 4
Half Runnar Baono, $7.00 A ~. PS, cruiM, air, fronl whHI 20 Fl Winnebago ct- A iiOU(
Buohol. Pick Yow Own. Flvo d~vo. f1,400. or tlllclo, 30W75- Homo Dodgo ·Powar.d. llon'y
New Pana, Runa Good LoW
Horao Powor Tllor. Coli 814-446- 3:124.
Mlln. Good Condhlonl ie,ooo.
4581.
1184 Z-28 Comoro, r.d, T~opo, 080. 814-446-4171 AHor 5p.m.
Pick your -n. S5 a buahol of 5.0 IHor ...., loadadJ hiih
hell runnor and otringleoa miSM, new tlrw, and a clr.o- For aalo- fold down Skampor
DOd blana 2nd hOUM above tlonol whoolo, ohorp, $3400 abo Compor 814-ttl2-5702
iho Roclno b.im, 114-24H142
uk lor DIYid. 114-'1112..:18021 '1112·
3154
Services
11181 Dodgo Sholby , Charger,
Farm Supplies
turbo, S tpMd, 70,06o mil•, 28
mpg, ohorp, aporty, 82,150. 304- 81
&amp; Ltvestock
Home
17&amp;'5301.
Improvements
11181 Nlooan 300 ZX, loaclod, T·
topa, 1Uthor~400 mttoa, oxBASEMENT
61 Farm Equipment
cot~. _f!d
$8,000. !lrm
WATERPROOFING
304ol-..76.
Unconditional llfttlmt guaran18G IIF Traelor, Sharp! With I
Foot Buoh Hoa, S4,15o; 50 IIF 11181
Oldomobllo
Cutlaoa too. Local roro,.ncao lumlahtd.
WHh Now I Foot B..h Hoa, Sllpromo llrouaham All Ext,..l Free Hllmaln. Call collect 1·
13,1111. Ownor Will Flnanool
Low 11a.-1 Excoltont ConcU· 614·237-G488, day or night.
218-4522.
Rogtrt BaHrnent Wattrproqttoni 114-444053.
!ing.
11$4 100c lntornatlonal Dozor, 1881 Fonf LTD Broughom 4-0R
tuna g~1 fl-wly bladoL wlnch, Sadan. Baautllul flmlly car. AC, Bonecutltr"l Handyman, do Ill
114-W.Z-.-.-4, orl82-385o
odd Joba, painting, rooll~ buildv.a, 121111. 114-182ol71t
Ing, 3o4oi7H7ll5 oak lor Du1ch.
.fannag Cub tractor wlwoodo 11187 Covollor RS, 111,500 Or
bally mower, plow and dloc, Boot Ollor. 614 441 1421.
Complalolloblla Homo Sot.U.,S,
t111Ctor noodo gao llnlc f1,200.
Repalrai Commedcal, RMidtnalao uoad 5ft lluaM!og. 304- 11187 Chovy Covallor, 2 o-. tlol lmprovamonto. Including:
Bluo, PS, AC, AIIIFII Co-ts, Plumbl':cc!;,.ectrlcal. lnaunnc.,
875-1071.
Clolnl 114-24W321.
Clalma
sci. 814-256·1111. .
For Silo: Corn Plcko,., 1 And 2
Row Whool Dloko, Pickup Dlok, 1817 Horizon 82,100. 11185 llor· cunla Home lmprovernanta:
Whoat D~llo, Bquo,. Baloro, cury Lynx 1100. 11185 cavallor v..,. Experlenee On Older l
Ulllhy Traitor, Horao Trallar, 11100. 11184 Trano Am $2,500. Newer Homtl. Room Addhkma,
Standard Bred Colt, Howe'1 304475-2440.
Foundation Wort&lt;, Roollng,
Form llochinory, RL 124 And 11M bluo Conlco, good oond Wlndowa i Skiing. F,.. EO&lt;
lily- Road, Jacklon, Ohio. now 11,.. l braMo, 10,000 tlmatoal Roltroncn, No Job T•
114-288-11144.
Big Or Smalll614-441-0225.
•
mlleo, 111,100. 304-112-3511:
Jlm'a Fann Equipment, SR. 35,
0 &amp; E Conttructlon Gansral
Wool Gallpotla, 814~6-;777; 1118 ChoYJOiol llontto, 4\000 ContractOr, Roofing, Concrete,
p - wln- Gentrttl Repalra, General C:O..Wldo aotoctlon now &amp; uood linn mlloo, Air tractoro l lmptomonto. Buy, -doon, 2.11illr ¥4 onglno, atrvcUon, 814-l88-1088, FrM &amp;aotl, trodo, 1:00-5:00 woakdoya, $5,200, goodMnd, 30W75-l510. tlmatool
Sal till Noon.
11181 Pontloo Orond Am LE,
E I R TREE SERVICE. Topping,
Ono 12120 ft Palz olio unloador, ou1o, oteon,_~looo mt, _wall Trimming,
Trtt Aemov•l, Htdgt
304-475-430I.
..tntalnod, ..,_, 814-14~f77
Trimming. FrM Eltlmateal 614o11181
&amp;-10
Blozar,
Tohoo
pock·
'
Two 20x80 a motll oltoo, dlo- ogo. Low mlloo. l.oodod. Ex. 38J-715T.
mantet.cl, make good gr~ln oond. 114-448-7231 or IUvo
JET
..,
blna, 304-176-4301.
Ao,.lton Mota,., ropalr.d. Now
mrnage
i ro-bulft motors In atock, RON
63
Livestock
111111 Plymo.. h Laaor, AIIIFII EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800::----:--;:--;-.--;--::;--;:-:--::-::= caoaotta, AC, 5 Spood, 114-246- 152J-1528.
'
G10do Hcllloln Hollon, $900 5537.
Ron'a TV Sarvlco, -lallzlllll
Each. Bm To Umoualn Bull.
For Silo: 1877 Fonf T·Bird, In Z.nHh aloo oorvlclng motJI
114-245-8528.
.,.hor branda. Houoa calla, 111&lt;1
Good Body, Now Tl...,
Ro;lalnd Morgan Stud Horlo. Rodlo - · llolor WoriJ.
oomo appllanco ,.pain. WV
.
Colt 114 44H076 Waolulnda Coli Saturday And Sllndoy 304-171..23118 Ohio 114-448-2454.
Only.
Morning, 114 4411076.
Root work 1nd other homt
•
Aiding - . 2 yr old Boy For Sail: 11181 Chovrolol ropalro, 304-1175-:11110.
...... 3 yr old Gahod Golding, Coprlco Eototo
47,000
814-ttl2-n14
lllloa. L.oododl lluot Sao To AI&gt;- Saptlc Tank Pumping $110~Gallla
P18Ciatol $8,50G. 114-441-4565 Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
F - Coif Salol Thur.day Sap- Aftor4p.m.
Jacklon, OH 1-800-13H528.
lombor 111th ot IJI.m. Athena
Davie
Stw· Yae
Service,
Uvootock Salaa. canto AccopGoorgao Cr.ok Rd. Parto, auptsd Stanlng 4p.m. On Wsdnoo- 72 TNcks for Sele
day Saptombor 18th At 4p.m. 75 GMC pickup, Compor Spa- pllao, pickup, and dollvory. 114cattlo Accaplod All Dey cial. 484 ona. 400 turbo trano. 441-0214.
Thundly. Haull1111 Anllabla. dual tanlul. $700. 814317-7128.
Will build patio covoJW, docko,
Conal.a_nmonto Wtlcomol 114ecrMMd roomt, put up vtftyt
592-2322, I!Wtll-3531.
1871 GIIC Chovy, 3504nglno, 1ldlng or tr•ller aklrtlng. ei.\overt.ultd, 300-c:lun~tlon cam,
'
WhHo laggor ohlclulno ..75 conta 501-Ufl, 314 ton, twln-ataeka, 245-6li5l
304·773-1121.
.
82 Plumbing &amp;
1871 lnt-lonal Plck.Up, runa
Heating
good, 1310. -2-1824
Transporlat10n
Carttr'l Plumbing
1m Chow. c.eeJ 427 Enafno, s
and Haatlng
llpood, With 1o Yord ""Tntllt
Fourth and Plno
71, Autoa for Sale
Compoctor loci, I CyllnGalllpolla, O~lo
doro, ll¥cll8ullo Pum'p, And
1141 ...... aood -ion, Extra n ... On w- AOtJng 114-446-3188
82500.00,
~
8UIIomut, $7,000 Or Trado For Equ11 VIII».
7114-341J-7217.
Pomeroy. OH
1154 Fonf VIctoria, 2 dr, ..... 11111 lnlornottonal 11100 aortao
Electrical &amp;
~~· - b l a . $700114- olnglo oxto, ,loa truck. nono 84
f1000, 814-245-11122 ollor
Relrlgersuon
1118 Cliovollo, ...... boclyRaaldantlal or oommorclal
on~-. 307 auto, 88 hood, 1171 Cho,_ llolllu W19on.
Hllolt, ,_f.nclc, runo gOod, wiring, new llrVlce or repalra.
-good, 1100. 30W714324.
looko goodL.I.!'!!&gt; AC. John Master UetnNd elec1r1CIIn,
1170 a-Mo. hlglt ......... Knwoayn,
Rldonour EtOC1rlcal, 304-476'
rnance 350, ,... OUilOii't lidlrior,
17118.
1171 lnt01111tlonal Tranlllw II
-hood,
· atrlovorythlng llfuo
now or nbull
oloo - . ntodol 4071111 400 c.... ff7
Upholstery
1172 llollto Codo nlco - . mlno, .... - . $1000, 114-1115- ::::=~=~-:-:..........,_
f1100.00obo 114-elt-7'111
' IISI4 aftor Spm.
llowr.y'a Upl1olotonng IOfYic.
~~
•--•
y1 4 lng tri county aroa 28 yu ... T"1110
4
0
1111 Corvotto Sttngnl1 ~t
-'"1"'" ••-.
&lt;.:1.
boot In lumlturo upholoto~ng.
o .... T·T - $8,100. 4
apood_,_ !did llttlo truck, $115. Coli 304-676-4154 '"' froa ..,.,
8450 Evonlngo 5 To lp.m.
324•
tlmatea.

I

a Aec Newo Q

(l) Wild Amerlcl Stereo. Q
()) 3-2-1 Contact Q
all 1121D CBS Newa Q
II]) D

I0

The husband sighed, "A
. . . . . .
,-- - - - - - --, budgel is just a pl an for
BEKURE
methodically going ----·. "

8:30 ~ D i1J NIC Newa Q
(I) I Drum of Jeannie

11181 Plymou1h Mini-Van. Fully
equipped, excellent condhlon,
~,.:r lulpt, $7000. 114-H:Z·

11111 Conono Stingray 350, High
Plrlorntortoo E!llllno, 4 Spolcl,
T-T- Now n,.., Whllo On 1817 Chevy Silverado, PU,
BloclL ~1CI!I!.MIIeo. Good Con- WO. 814-448-3813.
dhlon! 1,.....
..7104,

I1--,.1-:.-

World Todly

11J1 Rln Tln Tin, K· B COp
Stereo. Q
8:051]) Too CIOH lor Comlor1

188G Joop CJ-5, $2,100, Good
Condition· Now 4 Whoolor 350
Yamaha W1rrtor, 814-256-1020. ,
1888 Dodgo caravan LE, 7 pao.
unger, every option, 10,000
mltao, nlco cond, uklng $5,150.
304oi7H308. ·
Pets lor Sale

a

The newly married couple

J

KREJ Y
"' had gone to an accountant to
-r.I,-TI-rl-1~ ~ get help with lhelr finances.

1D Tlloloughlnd Dlge1t

~EV!

&amp; 4 WD's

1tl0 Ford Bronco XLT 4x4, AJr,
AIIIFM cauono, 202, v-a Motor, 18,000 111101. $3,ici!. 114448.0440, 814-441.01112.

56

1y I

(J) AndJ Grllfltlt

ttl2-6347

tumhwe, hut. ., WMI.tm &amp;

WoriJ boola. 114-446-3159.
VrRA FURNITURE
114-446-3158
UVING ROOII : Soh! l Choir,
11ttt.OO·
Rocllno•
f1UOO;
Swlvstllackor, SIII.Oo; Colfoa l
End Tabloa, 1111.00 Sot.DINING
ROOII: Tabla WHh 4 Poddod
Chalro, $141.00;_ Country Plno
Olnotto WHh DOnch And 3
Chat,.,_ 121111.00; llotcf!l_"ll 2
Door "Hch $341· Or 1581.00
Sat; Oak Tabla, 4M2 With I
Bow
BacK
Ch8Jrw,
$821.00.BEOROOII: Poll• Bod·
room SIJHo (5 pc.), $348.00; 4
Dntwor Qtoot, $44.85; Bunk
Bod, 8221i_Comptoto Full lion
Sa~ 1105 .... Sat; 7 pc. Codal
Bsdroom Sullo, $8tti.OO.OPEN:
Monday Thru 9olurda~ '.:;m. to
&amp;p.m., SUnday 12 0
Tltl
!!p.m., 4 lllleo 011 7 On
Aouta 141 In Contonary,

TNcks for Sale ,

18M Chov. 112 Ton 42,000 Mlloa.
PS. PI, Auto, Trine., HeiYJ
Duty Roar Stop Bumpor, 8sd
Unor" Excallont CondRtonl 114441-7281.
1t87 Bronco U, 2 whool d~v4,
auto, k»eded, exc. ~o::'dz11,00CI
ml, oaklng $8300, I 1
1117 Ford Rangar, 4 cyl, I
ovordriY!J. oxc cond,

Vl'rtt Fumttura

Merchandise

•-..!',

72

Solo l Chair, $11.10 Wook;
Rocllnor, $5.47 Woak, Swlvol
Roclulr, $3.13 WMk.Bunlc Bsd
Comploll 11.41 -k, 4 Dntwor
~. 13.21 Wook; Pallor Bodroom Sllno, 7 pc., $11.17 Woak,
lnctudoo 8oddlng.Country Plno
Dlnotto Wlh Boneh l 4 Cholro,
110.M Wook.OPEN: Monday
Thru Saturday, lla.m. to Bp.m.,
Sllndoy 12 Noon Till 5p.m. •
Mllao Off AOU1o 7 On Rou1o 141,
lnContonary.
S.1r1 Kenmorw dryer tsl. Solar
DOOI covor 15x35, $30. 30oH75B495.
SWAIN
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 82
Oliva St., Galllpotlo. l Uoad

llodom 1 B a - ~mont.
114 411 Q310.

1·BR, lumllhod oponmont
In lllddloport, 814-182-«221
Ntoo cloon c:urrontly . Ovolllbto
apl, 1 bodroom fao -.y, hondlcappod and dloablod. Rhr.r
Bond PI- :IOWI2-3121. E.O.H.
Comptotly Fumlohod mobllo
homo, 1 milo o•orlooldng
·
N9
Plto,
.....
114441.0331.
Nor1lt 3rd 91, llldcl_, Ohio, 1
bodroom fumlohod opt, rolonn- ond dopooM roqulrod. 304-

Thursday, September 19, 1991

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrighl

LAYNE'S FURNnuRE
Complolo homo lumlohlngo.
Hou ..: illor&gt;Sid, H. 814-4410322, I mlloo oul lulavUio Rd.
F,..Ootlvory.
PICKENS FURNITURE
NowAiasd
Houoahold lumlahlng. 112 mi.
.torrlcho Rd. Pt. Pt-nt, WV,
eatt30W75·1480.
RENT20WN
614-446-3158

Antiques
,...-.....,,..,,.:..,......,...,....Buy or ooll. R l - Antlql»o,
1124 E. lloln Strut, Pomeroy.
Houn: II.T.W. 10:00 Lm. to 8:00
r:t.:Z:l1 :00 to 1:00 p.m.

Roome tor rent • wN or month.
Starting ot $120/mo. Gallla Hotol.
111 416-95110.
Slooptng rooona whh cooking.
Aloo lrallw - · All hook-upo.
aftor 2:00 p.m. 304·7132br Unlurnlohod With StoYO. cau
Dtposh, RtftrtnCH, In Oal· 11151, ...... wv.
llpolla. No Polo. Coli •12, W,
46 Space for Rent
614-448-2411.
3 badrom1 homo clooa to
achoola and hoonltal, roloranco
and dopooi1.304-47S-31es.

Household
Goods

Fumlohod Eftlctoncy, $118/mo.
U111Mioo Plkl, S - Bath, 107
Socond Avo, GaiNpotlo, 114-4484411Aftor7p.m.
Graci- liVIng. 1 and 2 bodroom apartmonto .. Vlllaao
llonor
ond
lllvonlilo
Alllltmonto In MlddloiiOil From
$1111. Coll814-112·7'71t EOH.

45

Real Estate

w11kly. Trantportallon, hou•
lng, call now 1·206·731-7000 111.

CaH Manager, Full-lima, Wort-

One room ept, reference• and
dtposh, 304-02-2568.

SOt-Up And Dlllvoryl Coli Elaoa
Homo Contar, 1olll().l!8t-5711.
Comptsloly Fumlahod Small
Naw 1M2 14180 lhrea bedroom, Hou.., NG Petl, Yard, PIUI
2 tull bath1, ahlngle roof, vinyl U111Hieo. 1235/mo. -&amp;oe331.
siding,
ahuttera,
carpeted eonago, good for 1, carpotsd,
throuGhout, all drywall Interior .tovt retng, bath, queen
and 3-bay window. 117,8117.00. couch, AIC, total elect, 304-875can1-800-m-4045.
1042.
Now Clayton, Sharp ~~ A Tack, Etfleltncy, a1ove, ref, bath

county

oall30oH75-1l57.
Miss Paula'o Doy ca,. Contar.
Help Wanted
11
Salt, aHordlbla, chlldca,., 11-F
8 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agu ~10.
$350/DAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE Boforo, after achool. Oropolno
wllcomo. 114 441 822l. Noir InCALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. fant Toddler ca,., -H227.
HI00-255-(1242.
Will do bobyoltUng In my homo.
Prslonbly ogoa ~up Tuppor
11u
114-tl7-6155
AVON • All aro11, Coli llorllyn Plalno

voy, P.O. box 1443, Fairborn,
Ohio 45:124.
Attontlon! Earn Up To $500
Woakly Roodlng Boo lui And T.V.
Scripta At Homo. llony Roadors
N-dl Fuii/Port·Timo HI01·
484·7000 Exl. 2111. 24 Houri.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

FrH

e1o~-rn-122o.

12

MU.

Employment Services

mowlu. C.H 114-448-2588. EOH .
9HC:h Str.tt, Middleport, Ohio.
two bedroom tumlahed apt,
nltrancoa and dapooll, 304·

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Experienced nuru dulr.. to

9

ono bdnn 1pto unlllr·

2 Bedroom Apal'lmtnt Acron
From University Of Rio Grandt,

September 20th, 211t. t-3. Por·
llf'
Brooke
SubciiYIIk)n.

Chlld,.n'a

51

Apartment
for Rent

nlahsd, partial utllhlao pold,
d.....U and nloroneoa roqulr.d, 114-1182~0114.
1 &amp; 2 bdrm apt In lllddloport,
Utllll• Fum, cltp req, no pita,
814·ttl2·2211.
1br Apanm1nt, 1 Enlcloncy
~lllltmont, Ctooa To Unlvorally
01 Alo Grando. l14-31111-8941.

ALL Yard Saito Must 81 Paid In
Advanea. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

Friday~_Saturday,

Thursday, September 19, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Kno1o Landing

Karen faces prosecution for
the death of a teenager.
Stereo. 1;1
liD II Hunter Q

QtWorldNewl
liD 71111 Club With Pot

R.,_

10:30 CD D iiJ De1r John
(Preview) Kirk leads JOhn !O
believe they are long-lost half
brothers. Stereo. Q
(j) Newo
Crook lnd CllaN

a

11 :DO ~ D (I)
ONewo

(J)

D !Ill 1121•

II)Newtwlteh

liD~ Hall Stereo. Q

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IZIIIe
Tonlgltt

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Celebrt ty Ctpher cryp t ograms ar• cr eated fr om qwoi,I!On5 b y tamou s P*Qple pas t ltld p re senr
hch letter 111 t he ciph er st al'lds tor anot her TotJay 's cw U ftquals P

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11:311 (!) Mlgnum, p.l.

EduciiiOn: Nllllonll Eclue.
Golla

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1..111 Night Slereo. D
• Anteilcln MuiiC 1ltop

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The ric h widow cries with one eye and laughs
with the other ." - Miguel d e Cervantes .
l{l

1!19 1 by NEA . Inc

19

�•
.

Page-12 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, September 19, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bell Biv DeVoe member sued

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 calendar.
THURSDAY
POMEROY . "Crusade for
Christ" revival will be held through
Sunday at the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene at 7 p.m. nightly.
There will be different singers and
speakers nightly. The crusade is
sponsored by the Meigs-GalliaMason counties Crusade for Christ
Pastor Glen McClung invites the
public.
COOL VILLE · Revival at the
Vanderhoof Baptist Church in
Coolville will be held through Fri·
day at 7 p.m. nightly with Wallace
Smith, evangelist Homecoming
will be held Sunday with a basket
dinner at noon ood afternoon service at I p.m. with special singers.
Cecil Morrison, pastor, invites the
public.
GUYSVILLE- Revival services
at the Ohio Valley Church of God,
Guysville, will be held through
Sunday at 7 p.m . nightly . Rev .
Brice Utt, Marietta, will be the
speaker. Pastor Donald Combs
invites the public.
POMEROY • The Faith Tabernacle Church, Bailey Run Road,
Pomeroy, will have weekend
revival Thursday through Sunday
at 7 p.m. nightly. Noah Callicoat is
the evangelist Call 992-5746 for
information. Pastor Emmett Rawson invites the public.
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun·
ty Democratic Executive Commit·
tee will have a potluck before tiS
meeting on Thursdar at 7 p.m. at
the Carpenter's Hal in Pomeroy.
Bring a covered dish. All arc urged
to imend.
POMEROY . A workshop for
those interested in volunteering
with the Meigs County Museum
will be held Thursday from 10 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. Lunch will be provid·
ed and further information may be
obtained by calling Margaret Park·
er at992-3810 or 992-2264.

MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port Child Conservation League
will meet Thursday at the Rock
Springs United Methodist Church.
All members are urged to attend
this fllSt meeting of the year.

Retired Teachers Association will
meet Saturday at the Mason Family
Re staurant in Mason, W.Va. at
12:30 p.m. Make reservations by
call Mary Chapman at992-3887.

center on Sunday from 1·3 p.m. for
Eleanor Thomas, retiring executive
director, and to welcome Susan
Stewart, new executive direciOr.

FRIDAY
RIPLEY
The Liberty
Moutaineers will perform at Skate·
land in Ripley, W.Va. on Friday.

FIVE POINTS . The Royal Oak
Dance Club will have a dance on
Saturday from 8· II p.m. at Royal
Oak ResorL Music wtll be provided
by George HaiL Cost is $15 for
non-members.

POMEROY • A 12-step AA
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
p.m. at the J1PA office, 117 West
Second Street in Pomeroy.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
port Volleyball Tournament is for
new and beginning players. As this
is a coed 10urnarnent, at least two
women must be on the courts at all
times. Deadline for applications is
Friday. All should be mailed to the
Middleport Recreation Deparunent,
237 Race Street, P.O. box 165,
Middleport.

PORTLAND . The Hazel Community Church will have a hymn
sing on Saturday at 7:30p.m. fea·
turing the Dailey Fam ily Singers.
The public is invited 10 atiend.
POMEROY . "Call of the Wild"
and "First Easter Bunny" will be
shown at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy on Saturday at
2 p.m . and at the Middleport
Library on Monday at 7 p.m.

LONG BOTIOM · The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will have a hymn sing and
preaching on Friday at 7 p.m. Pastor Steve Reed inviles the public.

POMEROY . The Meigs High
School Pep Club will have a car
wash on Saturday from 10:30 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m. at McDonald's in
Pomeroy. Donations will be taken.

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER · The Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
hold their annual hayride and wein·
er roast on Saturday at6:30 p.m. at
the grange hall. The grange will
provide the buns. Everyone is to
bring wieners, marshmallows,
drinks and other snacks. All members, potential members and friends
are invited to attend.

SUNDAY
RACINE . Homecoming will be
held Sunday at the Mount Moriah
Church of God, Racine. Sunday
school will be held at 9:45 a.m. and
there will be a special program for
children at I I a.m. Dinner at 12:30
p.m. will be followed by guest
speaker, Pastor Randy Barr of the
Wellston Church of God.

KANAUGA • The Liberty
Moutaineers will perform at the
D.A. V. Center in Kanauga on Saturday.

Vol. 42, No. 97

Consolidated Coal Co.
confirms sale talks with
AEP are underw~y

SALE

o/o

OFF

BERKLINE .RECLINER
SALE
uality Berkline Wallaway
Recliners, Rock·O·Loungers
and Recliners.
Durable Fabrics
AS LOW AS

L8.

POMEROY · The Eight and
Forty Meigs County Salon No. 710 ·
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
home of Marie Boyd. Rain will
cancel the meeting.
POMEROY · The Rock Springs
Better Health Club will meet
Thursday at I p.m. at the home of
Agnes Dixon. Pomeroy.

AUDIO-VIDEO

POMEROY · The Pomeroy
Group of AA will meet Thursday at
7 p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church. For more infonnation call
992-5763.

Available At Mill Street Books
For Chris~mas Gift Giving

POMEROY · The youih groups
and youth choirs of Trinity Church
of Pomeroy will begin meeting
Thursday at 5 p.m. Parents may
piclc: the youth up at 6:30p.m.

ORDER DEADUNE 9/21/91

OM..iff 5tr!Ut .Q39oks

RACINE • The Village of
Racine will be flushing fire
hydrants on Thursday and Friday
evening after 6 p.m.

-END OF

...

*PEACH SALE

*

"Last Chance For
Sweet, Yellow

Freestone
Peaches ...

Fresh From Shenandoah

CRISPY APPLES
IN THESE VARIETIES•••
•Red DeUcloua •Macintosh
•Golden DeUcloua •Cortland

Can Or 1"1 uu Now
And Er\iol/ Them

$7 •98

JUST$

41 II SUPER SCREEN

5

249

*3-ln-1 Remote
*Color P.I.P.
•super Picture
Quality

SALE

5

1799

SALE

"'8:1Zoom
"'High Speed Shutter

$899

BUSHEL

25" COLOR

19" COLOR

CONSOLE

VATES COILARD8 • BIBB LETilJCE
. BROCCOU •
EARLY JERSEY WADJI'JELD CABBAGE

•ca&amp;le Ready
•Remote Control
•2 Cabinet Styles

TELEVISION

SALE

$499

•Remote Control
•cable Ready
•on-Saeen Display

Rt. 33 (1/4 mile north Pomeroy-Mason llrldge)
Mason, WV
Phone (304) 773·5721

-----------------

2400 Eastern Avenue (acrou from KMort)
Gallipolis, OH
Phone (614) 446·1711
@~IEOO

1

ID&gt;~VS ~

Wfifii!CI

STORE HOURS
MONDAY

ANDERSON'S

. 9-.30-S:OO

SALE

$299
.z

FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOR COVERING.

TUES~~:.DAY

•

CARNIVAL RIDES - Ten rides were moved
into Middleport's Dave Diles Park and the village parking lot on South Third Thursday in

992•3671

DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO

.

preparation for Middleport's First Annual Cat·
fish Festival. Rides will be in operation begin·
ning at S p.m. tonight and all day on Saturday.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Two southeastern Ohio mines
owned by American Electric Power
Co. may be sold to a Pittsburgh·
based coal company.
AEP and Consolidation Coal
Co. confll11led Thursday that they
are discussing the sale of AEP' s
Meigs County mines because of
federal regulations in the new
Clean Air Act.
"There are such discussions
currently under way, but they arc
just that," AEP spokesman Mar·
shal Julien said. "We have said we
would explore all options available
in seeking a workable solution to
the clean-air compliance dilemma.
This is just one of the options being
explored."
Consolidation Coal spokesman
Paul Kvederis would confllTil only
that the two companies have discussed the mines.
Union officials at both mines
were not available for comment.

Telephone messages left for them
Thursday were not returned.
AEP is the nation's largest coal
buyer. It is the parent company of
eight electric subsidiaries serving 7
million people in portions of seven
states. AEP has about 1,200 work·
ers it its Meigs County mines,
which supply coal primarily to the
Gavin power plant, also in south.
east Ohio. The plant burns about 6
million tons of coal a year.
Last month, 197 workers were
laid off at the Meigs County mines.
Julien had said the layoffs were
part of a plan to improve efficiency.
The company has said it is considering buying low-sulfur, out-of-.
state coal for the plant instead of
using Ohio's high-sulfur coal. Such
a change could put the Meigs
County miners out of work.
The law requires electtic utili·
ties to cut sulfur dioxide emissions
by 40 percent to 50 percent on

average over the next ·10 years to
reduce environmental damage from
acid rain.
AEP has said another option is
to install anti-pollution equipment
called scrubbers to clean high-sulfur coaL But the company has said
that option may be too costly.
.
The company had estimated
installing scrubbers would cost
$800 million, compared with $200
million for modifi cations to the
plant to accommoda1e certain characteristics of low -s ulfur coal,
including higher ash.
AEP has said that fuel switching
at Gavin may produ ce the lower
cost of compliance for electric customers .
A report by Jhe staff or Jhc Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
recommended that AEP in stal I
scrubbers at the plant in stead of
switch 10 out-of-state coaL
The commission is to issue its,
recommendation Tuesday.

Idled RAC plant worker
convicted in bo.m bing attack
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
-A federal jury convicted an idled
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
worker of conspiracy and another
charge in the bombing of a fellow
union member's home north of
Parkersburg.
Robert H. Buck II, a member of
United Steelworkers Local 5668,
was found guilty Thursday of con spiracy to possess and aiding and
abetting the possession of a bomb
in a March 4 attack on the home of
Eddie Piggoll
The jury, which deliberated
about four hours, acquitted Buck of
manufacturing the device.
Buck, 27, of Parkersburg could
be sentenced to up to 15 years in
prison and fined $500,000. Sentencing is scheduled for Nov. 18.
(em) Defense auorney William
Kiger said he was surprised by the
verdicts.
"I thought he would either be
acquiued of everything or found
guilty of everything. I'm not really
sure why they would find him
guilty of two counts but not of the
other one," Kiger said.
But Assistant U.S. AtiOrney Phil
Scott said the verdicts were fair.
"I think their verdict was supported by the evidence," he said.
Buck, who didn't testify in the

Athens city
workers return
to picket lines

CAMCORDER
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Middleport

93 Mill St.

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 cents
A Mulllmedla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 20, 1991

Wallpaper

Personalized
Hand-Painted Stonewear
by Village Traditions

TUPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. All
auxiliary and post members are to
meet at the post home.

Page4

IMPERIAL

POMEROY . The Meigs County Council on Aging will hold an
open house at the senior citizens

MASON · The Meigs County

Boyz II Men met Bivins back·
stage at a New Edition concert in

Clear toni ght. Low In •pper
JOs. High Saturda y In mid 60s.

ANDERSON'S ....

STIVERSVILLE · The Freedom Gospel Mission Church will
have a hymn sing Sunday at 7 p.m.
featuring the Conqueror's Quartet.
Ripley, W.Va. The public is invited
to attend.

HENDERSON · The Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance Saturday
from 8-I I p.m. at the H~nderson
Community Center in Henderson ,
W.Va. Tom Poe will be the caller.

tracl

Pick 3:680
Pick 4: 2097
Cards : 2-H, K-C
3-D; lO-S

Copyrighted 1991

REEDSVILLE ·Eden United
Brethren Church will hold its
homecoming on Sunday with a
basket lunch at 12:30 p.m. Services
will be held at 2 p.m. with Rev.
Peter Martindale as speaker. Special singing is also planned.

POMEROY • The Belles and
Beaus Wes1em Square Dance Club
will hold a dance on Saturday from
8-11 p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center with caller Bill
Bumgarner, Galloway.

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

REEDSVILLE - "Clowning
Through the Bible" will be present·
ed by the Christian Clowns on Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene in
Reedsville. The public is invited to
attend.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A
talent agency is suing Michael
Bivins, a member of the Bell Biv
DeVoe rap group, for more than
$200,000, chargin$ that he took
away one of its chents, Boyz II
Men.
Bird's Nest Production and
Management said in a complaint
filed Friday in U.S. Disttict Court
that it entered into a management
agreement with the members of
Boyz II Men on May 2, 1989.
The complaint said Bivins and
his company lured the group away
in the fall of 1989, even though
they were aware of the prior con-

Ohio Lottery

Jackets
edge
Cavaliers

Philadelphia and perfonned a song
a cappella for him.
.
• 'Bivins was so impressed by
the musical talent of Boyz II Men
that he offered to serve as their
manager," the complaint said.
Boyz II Men's contract with
Bird's Nest included four one-year
extension clauses that the group
could have chosen to employ, it
said.
Bird's Nest is seeking in excess
of $100,000 for interfering with a
contractual relationship, and more
than $100,000 for interfering with
prospective contractual relations.
Various officials for Bird's Nest
and Biv Entertainment, a Delaware
management coryoration Bivins
heads, either declined to comment
or did not return phone calls.

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Sttiking city workers were back on the
picket lines after agreeing with city
officials that a negotiating session
wasn't productive.
The two sides bargained for 5
1/2 hours Wednesday night until
city negotiators walked out No
new talJcs have been scheduled.
The sttike by 51 members of the
American Federation of State ,
County and municipal Employees
began Monday after their ·contract
expired at midnight Saturday.
Robert Turner, AFSCME
regional director, said Thursday
that the union made ~roposals on
several issues. Law Dtrector Garry
Hunter, the city's chief negotiator,
said the city made major conces·
sions on one issue.
The union's latest wage proposal is for 6.5 percent increases in
each year of a three-year contracl
The city has proposed increases of
6 percent in the ftrst year, 5.5 percent in the second year and 5 percent in the third year.
When ta11cs hroke down Friday,
the union was seeking 8 percent
annual increases.
.

.

trial, showed little emotion as the
verdiciS were read. Afterwards, he
was heard telling his parents, "It's
the best we could do."
U.S. District Judge Charles
Haden ordered Buck held without
bond pending a hearing next week.
He had been free on $10,000 bond
since his March 20 arrest
Piggott is a Local 5668 member
who crossed picket lines and
returned to work early in an ongoing biller labor dispute at the
Ravenswood planl
Authorities alleged Buck and
Ravenswood co-worker Gerald R.
Church Jr., also of Parkersburg,
drove to Piggott's apartment build·
ing the evening of March 4 and
threw a pipe bomb into the front
yard.
The explosion injured one
bystander and scatlered shrapnel as
far as a house across the street.
The prosecution relied heavily
on the testimony of Church, 27,
who pleaded guilty to being an
accessory after the fact 10 the
bombing. He could be sentenced to
five years in prison and fined
$250,000. He is scheduled to be
sentenced Monday.
Church testified that Buck
showed him a metal pipe bomb he

said he had made. He Said he then
drove Buck to Piggott's aparunent,
where he saw Buck light something, Jhen saw Buck's arm outside
the window and a sparkling object
skidding across a driveway.
Buck was not charged with
throwing the bomb into Piggott's
yard.
In closing arguments, Kiger
tried to persuade the jury that
Church was
But expert wit·
nesses testified that residue found
at the crime scene came from the
EASTERN TO COMPETE • The Eastern
evening for the big da·y. William Hall is the
same brand of gunpowder as was
Higb
School Marching Band will participate in
band's director. The marching band at Meigs
found in Buck's home. They also
competition
at
Gron
City
on
Saturday.
The
High
School will compete at Marietta.
said they found a map in Buck's
band
is
pictured
as
it
practices
on
Thursday
truck with the location of Piggott's
apartment marked.
.
The charges are Jhc most senous
yet to arise from violence and van·
dalism authorities attribute 10 the
Ravenswood Aluminum labor dis·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The board heard Warner' s be completed in August 1993.
pule.
Home State Savings Bank owner request at the Madison Correctional
Under a furlough, a prisoner is
The company's contract with Marvin Warner doesn't deserve Institution.
released during the day in cuslody
the United Steel workers union shock parole because of the seri.
"Warner will not be reconsid· of a halfway house to perform
expired Nov. I, sparking a dispute ousness of his crime, according to ered for shock parole ... unless new work and is returned to prison at
that has put about 1,700 workers the Ohio Parole Board.
information is presented to the night, said deparuncnt spokeswomout of work.
Warner, of Ocala, Fla ., was parole board or there is a modifica- an Sharron Kornegay.
The union conlends its members denied shock parole by the board tion of his sentence," the board
Home State lost $144 million
have been locked out of the plant, on Thursday. He is serving a 3 1(2- said.
when ESM Government Securities
company officials argue they arc year senlence for his conviction on
An inmate can apply for shock
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., collapsed,
on strike and have been replaced by charges s1emming from the Cincin- parole after serving four months, of
prompting a run on Home State
permanent replacements.
nati-based thrift's collapse in 1985. but only if the prisoner is a first· deposits. Ohio Gov. Richard
Warner, 72, was convicted in time offender who has never been Celeste ordered Home State closed
Hamilton County Common Pleas incarcerated before, if no aggravat- four days later.
Court in March 1987 of securities ed felony was involved in the crime
Warner was sentenced to 3 I(2
violations and of making unautho- and if no other JUrisdiction is seek- years in prison and ordered to make
rized transfers of money.
ing the inmate.
$22 million in restitution to the
Warner began serving his sen- state for his part in the thrift's failThe Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction said in a tence April 23.
ure. He began serving his sentence
news release that the parole board
The board said Warner will be April23 .
workers were on the scene all day denied Warner shock parole eligible to apply for a furlough
Warner works as a library aide
Thursday, cleaning up debris, brush because of the "magnitude of the hearing in December 1992. If it is at the minimum security prison
crime and the amount of money approved, he could be furloughed near London.
and trees along the highway.
involved."
in February 1993. His sentence will

Warner denied shock parole

Portland continues to
clean up storm debris
Cleanup from a storm wh1ch
struck the Portland community
Wednesday evening continued
today as resideniS sawed up trees
and repaired roofs.
High winds, heavy rain and hail
which hit the area about 7 p.m.
felled trees, took the roofs off several barns, damaged the roofs of a
couple of houses, and knocked out
electricity for more than three
hours. Columbus Southern Power
workers were on the scene to
rcs10rc electricity to about 50 farni·
lies who experienced outages.
"Short and severe" was li)e way
Portland resident Gayle Price
described what happened. He said
that the whole thing lasted only
about six minutes, and hit in a
straight swath along Route 124.
The storm carne out of the south·
west and the damage seemed 10 be
localized, Price said, going as far as
Rock Run down to the road which
goes to Spiller. He described it as a
freak stonn.
There was extensive damage in
the Portland Park, with a couple of
trees being uprooted, roof damage
to the storage building and picnic
shelter.
State Highway Department

or

PREPARING f'OR COMPETITION· It takes a lot hard
work, practice and dedication to prepare for tompetitlon by a high
school marching baad. Tbe Meigs High School Marching Band,

uader tbe dlrectloa of Toney
will compete Saturday in ·
Marietta. Tbe martblag band at Eastern High School will compete
at Grove City.

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