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                  <text>Page-DS-Sunday llmes-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

-Business briefs-----.

()h io Lotterv•

Browns win;
Bengals lose
third in row

Gallipolis targeted for new office
CiNCINNATI - Howard McPher ~ on, regional director for
RE/MAX of Southern Ohio, announced recently that the regional
franchising team plans LO further expand real estate offices in the
Southern Ohio area.
Co lleen Gibbons, the regional franchise marketing con sultant,
has targeteD several communities. includtng Gallipoli s. for opening
RE/MAX offices.

L

Pick 3:
314
Pick 4:
8927
Super Lotto:
8-23-29-33-42-46
Kicker:
714095

age4

Star Bank president to retire
CINCINNATI- Samuel M. Cassidy. president and chief executive officer of Star Bank, and executive vice president of Star Bane
Corporation. has announcoo he will retire Dec. 31. He will be succeeded by Jerry A. Grundhofer on Jan. :. 1995. Cassidy remain on
the board of directors of both the bank and corporation.

\

\
IIONORED - Dale Kautz
of Chester, was recently recognized as "Outstanding Dealer
of the Year" within his sales
district by DEKALB Genetics
Corporation. "This award is
presented annually at our district sales kickoff meetings,"
said District Sales Manager
Mike McBride. "As an organi·
zation dedicated to doing what
is good for the farmer,
DEKA.LB gives the award to
recognize outstanding sales and
service on an ongoing basis by
its dealers," McBride added.

JOINS HMC STAFF Holzer Clinic announces the
addition of Joseph R. Freeman,
D.O. to the family practice
department. Dr. Freeman is a
1967 graduate or Pomeroy High
School. He earned his Bachelors' of Science in Premedicine
from Ohio University in Athens
and his Doctor or Osteopathy in
1991 at Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine. Dr.
Freeman completed his Internshi p and residency with Doctor's Hospital in Columbu s,
Ohio. Board eligible in family
practice , Dr. Freeman is a
member of the American
Osteopathic Association and
the American College or General Practitioners in Osteopathic
Medicine.

enttne
OVERALL BEEF BREED CHAMPION • Mary Martin, of
the Raccoon Rowdies 4-H Club, exhibited the overall Beef Breed
Champion and Grand Champion Polled Hereford female at the
1994 Gallia County Junior Fair. She is shown with Holleys Pebbles
HB6C

Local photographer's
work displayed at
international convention
Three prinls created by Randy E.
Huudashelt of The Image Gallery in
Gal lipolis were recently accepted into
the general col lection of the I 03rd
International Exposi tion of Photography.
Houdashelt 's work wa' on display
at the Denver Con vc~ ti on Center. in
conJunct ion with Professional Photographers of America 's International Convention, PPA '94 "Expanding New Horizons."
Houdashelt 's three award winners
and more than 2,500 other photographic works constitute the world 's
largest annual ex hibit of professional photography gathered si multaneously under one roof. More than
6,000 en tries were submitt ed to PPA
. for entry into the exhibition. The
images were judged by a panel of 70
eminent photographers.
In recognition of the achievement,
PPA members receive a merit cer: ti.ficate for eac h entry accepted into
: the colleclion. which can be applied
: toward the Master of Photography
:.degree granted by the association.
Founded in 1880, PPA is the
~orld 's largest association for Pro-

fcssionalltitage -Makers. Headquartered in Atlanta, the organi zation provides ed ucational programs and
establishes standards of professional performance for il s more than
14,000 indi vidual members and 214
aflili ated organizations worldwide.

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) - The figurehead president of Haiti pleaded for calm when Amerian troops land today to enforce an agreement thai
will oust the military leaders and restore ex.iled President Jean-Bertrand Arislide to power.
The last-minute accord, reached Sunday after
President Clinton ordered American parattoopers into
the air, halted a land, sea and air assault by American
forces.
The capital was generally quiet after midnight, but
there wa1 scattered gunfire earlier after an American

There's a great way to supplement
your group medical policy to cover
extra hospital expenses.
Ask About Health Insurance
The State Fann Way

Continued from D-1

NEW STAFF MEMBER.
Holzer Clinic announces the
addition or Shailen Mehta ,
M.D., Physiatrist, to its physical
medicine and rehabilitation
department . Dr. Mehta will
join physiatrist Daniel Black,
D.O., in providing health care
in the area or sports and rehabilitative medicine, and in the
Holzer Medical Center's rehabilitation unit. Dr. Mehta
received his Bachelor or Arts
and his Doctor of Medicine
from the Univenity of Texas.
He completed bls physiatric
residency at Baylor University
Medical Cepter in mid-1994.

Vol. 45, NO. 116

CALL:

planted soon, so they can develop a
root system and continue the formation of next year's flower buds.
Tulips and hyacinths can be planted
up un til th e snow fli es or th e
ground is to frozen to dig . The
extension office has an excellent
fact sheet on how to plant spring
bulbs. Give us a call at 992-6696 or
stop by for a copy.
Jom tne tun at the Animal
Herbfcst held at the David Diles
Park in Middleport. Experience the
various uses of herbs and everlastings on Saturday, Sept. 24 from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m.
Hal Kneen is the Obio State
University Extension Agricultural Agent ror Meigs County.

CAROLL
SNOWDEN
342 Se&lt;ond Ave.

Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4S18
L1 kc a guuJ neighbor, St&lt;J tc Form

1:-.

has been lead engineer for techrtical products and was the Ohio area
hardware aod software district service manager. Rusty also worked
as the lead Applicon engineer for
the APP group for two years and
helped develop the initial implementation and guidance programs
for Applicon.
Wigal will handle all company
phone support, quality assurance,
documentation, and training for all
of North America
Vance Di~gins of Applicon
said, "We beheve Rusty will lend
an exciting complement to our costomer-driven orientation. He has a
strong technical engineering background, and brings with him an
excelleD! track record or working
with our customers in the field"

there ...

MIAMI (AP) - Haitian exiles blockoo a street in disgust after
learning that the Unitoo States had given Haiti's military leaders
until Oct. 15 to relinquish power.
"They have to leave now. Now. Now. Now! " screamed Samedi
Floruil, one of about 75 people who blockoo the slreet in the city's
Little Haiti neighborhood for two hours Sunday nighl
In Miami, which has the largest Haitian exile community in the
United States, many people were clearly disappointed with the deal.
They calloo President Clinton and former President Carter hypocrites, and chanted "Cedras must go," referring to Haitian leader
Ll Gen. Raoul Cedras.
The crowd listened to Clinton announce the accord on speakers
outstde the Haiuan Refugee Center. Instde. about 150 exiles were
crammoo in front of television sets.
A separate group of more than I 00 Haitians prayed in Creole and
held hands at the Philadelphia Church of God.
Many didn't understand English and were expressionless until
one man yelloo "Oct. 15" in Creole. Then their expressions turnoo
lO shock and anger.
" It's not fair LO leave them there, not even until tomorrow. They
should leave now," Simon Ville yelled.
"Cedras kills people. Cedras will keep killing people." said
Louis Dargent. "I want Cedras LO leave right now."
Arsene Omega said he was convinced that Cedras and his supp&amp;lets will ooly make trouble 4uring the weeks they have left m
power.
"This is not a solution. We need der.tocracy restored today not
tomorrow," he said. " What guarantee do we have that they 'will
respect this OcL 15?"

stAll fAIM

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1994

Man captured in Pomeroy
after escape from Mason jail

I ESTATE WACCMil

A Middleport man who escaped is pushed throu~h ,"Soulsby said.
from the Mason County Jail Satur"We had a Up that he was walkday was arrested this morning after in~ across the bridge in a red sweat
he walked across the Pomeroy- sutt, just like he was wearing when
Mason bridge, according to Sheriff he left the jail," he added. "He
James Soulsby of the Meigs Coun- admitted who he was as soon as he
ty Sheriff's Department.
was arrested and we had no probJackie Lee Smith, 19, Middle- lems with him."
port, was seen walking on West
Ini\ia.lly, Smith said he would
Main Street near Foodland in not waive extradition papers to
Pomeroy when he was arrested by return to West Virginia, Soulsby
the sheriffs department , Soulsby said. Smith had been wailing in the
said.
Mason County Jail pending his I·
On Saturday, Smith had starved 15 year sentence for burglary.
At press time, Smith remained
himself so he could squeeze
~~!!_!!th~e;_!u~·n!ry_;spac~~e~w~h~e~re:_~~ood~~in~th~esheriffs custody, he addoo.

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delegation headeD by former President Jimmy Carter
ended two days of intense talks with Ll Gen Raoul
Cedras and Brig Gen. Philippe Biamby, army chief
of staff.
The generals who toppled Aristide in September
1991 backed down in the face of overwhelming military might and agreed to let American forces enter
the coun try peacefully to oversee the transfer of
power.
Haiti's HI-year-old president, Emile Jonassant,
went on television just before midnight to anno~nc e

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racy.
There was no immediate comment from Aristide,
who has been living in exile in the United States
since the coup that drove him from power. The
agreement did no1 name Aristide or say when he
would return.
Although Arislide is revered by much of Haiti's
impoverishoo majority, there were no displays of
pubtic jubilation at wocd of his promised rerum.
Thousands of people fled the capital in recent
days, anticipating violence

Robbery
suspect
arrested
in Illinois
A West Virginia man who
escaped from the Middleport jail in
June, and lied to authonlies about
his involvement in a rest-stop robbery and his name, was arrested
over the wee_kend in Illinois. Meigs
County Sheriff James ~oulsby said
Steven Do~glas Marshall. 31, of
West Columbta, W.Va., had pleaded guilty under the name of "Steve
Johnston" to a fowth de~ felony
charge of theft and thtrd degree
felony charge of falsification
before Common Pleas Court Judge
Froo W. Crow IlL But Soulsby got
CROWNING A QUEEN - Melissa for the honor. Pictured at lef't is Kyla Sellers, tbe
an anonymous tip that Marshall's
Dempsey, center, was honored as the Middle- runner-up and Miss Congeniality. See additional
real name was not "Johnston" as he
port River Festival Queen by lasl year's queen pictures on page 3 today. (Sentinel pboto by
originally
had claimed.
Penny Aeiker Saturday. Five contestants vied George Abate)
Marshall will now be chargoo
with a ftrSt degree felony aggravated robbery, second degree counts
of felonious assault and burglary
and fourth degree felony charge of
escape, Soulsby said. He will also
likely face perjury charges for
lying to the judge.
facturing processes, including by Caperton rejected a proposal by
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
"If he waives extradition he 'II
incineration and paper manufactur- industry and some administration
be back soon," Soulsby said. "With
- Gov. Gaston Capenon' s support
ing that use chlorine-based bleach- officials LO weaken the state's dioxhim and (David) Persons back in
for a proposed pulp mill is a step in
custody we're all cleared up here."
ing.
the wrong direction by an adminisin and water pollution laws.
Even low doses of dioxin can
The arrest is satisfying because
tration that has otherwise done a
"Those were enormously
cause cancer. reproductive disor- important steps and they were clear
Marshall tried LO hide his criminal
good job reducing dioxin levels,
record, he added.
ders and developmental problems, statements that we are not going
environmentalists said.
"Eventually I knew he'd show
according
to
a
draft
of
a
U.S.
Envidown the toxic palh," Grubb said.
State officials said the $ 1.1 bilup
someplace," Soulsby said.
ronmental
Protection
A~ency
study
Grubb
and
other
environmentallion mill in Apple Grove would
The sheriff leamoo Marshall had
released last week .
meet tough federal guidelines for
ists have caUoo on Capenon to ban
an extensive criminal record with
State Sen. David Grubb, D- pulp mills that release dioxin. such
dioxin and would bring hundreds of
convictions in Illinois and Georgia.
Kanawha, said last week that West as lhe proposed operation in Mason
jobs to depressoo Mason County.
Marshall escaped from the MidVirginia has tak.en imponant steps County.
Apple Grove lies near the Ohio
dlcpon Jail by riding up the dumb
toward limiting dioxin under the
"The governor has concluded
River, about 40 miles northwest of
waiter into the night dispatcher's
Caperton administration. Grubb that the dioxin that will be releasoo
Charleston.
apartment
June II, Soulsby said.
also is executive director of the will not be a danger to anybody · s
But environmentalists said the
There
he
removed
his jail clothes
Citizen
Action
West
Virginia
mill could use alternative technolohealth," Caperton aide Will Carter
and
put
on
the
dispatcher's
son's
Group.
gies that are safer for the environsaid Friday. "If he thought th e
clothes.
Caperton
has
signed
bills
that
ment.
amount of dioxin being released
He then walked out the front
ban construction of commercial would be a danger, he ·wouldn' 1
"West Virginia's Legislature
door wearing a black Chicago
medical waste incinerators and suppon iL"
has been on the cutting edge in limBulls t-shirt and roo sweat pants,
municipal solid waste incinerators,
iting dioxin," said Tom Degen of
The state has granted the mill
the
Middleporl official said. He
Grubb said. Caperton has also proposed by Parsons &amp; Whittemore
the West Virginia Environmental
stole
the dispatcher's car keys but
workoo with lawmalt:ers to make it of Rye Brook, N.Y., two of three
Council. "The big difference is
did
not
tak.e the car, she added.
difficult for commercial hazardous permits it needs to begin operating,
there's a project on the table with
Marshall
was involved in the
waste
incinerators
to
open
in
West
the pulp milL"
mcluding a water-pollution permit
alleged
two-by
-two clubbing and
Virginia
Dioxin and several similar toxic
that regulates dioxin.
'
robbing
of
Athens'
Danny Norman
This
year,
a
task
force
appointed
compounds are produced by manuin June at a U.S. Route 33 rest stop
m Bedford Township. Meigs County Prosecutor John Lentes had said.
. . First sentenced to three years in
)atl on the theft and falsification
charges, Marshall would have like!Y se_rved between 10 and 17 years
m J3tl on the amended charges with
Hundreds of onlookers filloo the diesel fuel spill with "booms."
The stemwheeler "Jean Mary" .
convictions
It is not known how much fuel he added. in Illinois and Georgia.
has been raised from the depths of banks of the river, many arriving as
the.Ohio River and owner Georse early as 8 a.m. to view the sight escaped from the boat, but the
Also linked to this incident is
Douglass of Westerfield, Ind., s3ld that many felt sure they would owner did have approval from the James
Burcum. who remains in the
Sunday the boat will be back in never have the opportunity to see West Virgmia Division of Environ- Meigs County Jail pending a trial.
mental Protection LO lift the 125time for the Pomeroy Sternwheel again.
Marshall's arrest could affect Bur·
Jeff Sweeney. conservation offi- ton boat.
Regatta in early October.
cum's
case. Soulsby said.
The "Jean Mary" was built in
The boat was raised about 2:45 cer with the West Virginia Division
p.m. Sunday by a convoy operated of Natural Resources, said crews 1981 at a cost of $2.3 million and
by Pittsburgh Marine Salvage . ran ahead of schedule all day. A has six bedrooms and baths, a
Company. It was scheduled to be commercial diver worked for mahogany paneled living room.
moved to 0 -Kan Marine Repair in hours , in up to 25-fcet water to formal dining room and is air conGallipolis toady, where it wiD take hook cable to the sternwheeler ditioned and heated.
The craft had been ttaveling LO
approximately three weeks to from the three cranes that came
from Pittsburgh. Members of the regauas along the river throughout
repair.
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
The 87-foot sternwheeler sank Mason Volunteer Fire Department the summer, Douglass said, and a Umtoo States, after rapidly losing
Wednesday after apparently hitting were also on the scene to assist had just come from the Marietta ground to overseas compehtors just
with efforts and to contain the Stemwheel Festival.
a spike off the Pomeroy levee.
four _year~ ago, has dramatically
regamed Its leadership in mariy
tmportant technologies, says a
study released today.
"In those areas where we were
federal authorities for allegedly lag~!ng\,we have improved our
CULLODEN, W.Va. - A Gal· Manor complex.
lipolis man underwent surgery in
Arrested in connection with the being absent without leave from poslhon. a survey by the Council
Cabell-Huntington Hospital Satur- shooting was Eric Smith, 23, the U.S. Army base at Fort Ben- on Competitiveness found . "In
day after he was allegedly shot in a "Charleston. Smith has . been ning. Ga.
those areas where we were strong
dispute ben: earlier in the day.
charged with malicious wounding
State police said Smith was was we have ma!ntained OlD' strength."'
The hospital would not disclose and was beld in the Cabell County helping a woman move into the
The findings follow 'Other signs
details on the condition of Jonathan Jail over the weekend, pending a apartment when Games reportedly of a resurgence of U.S. competiGarnes, 22, when contacted this bond hearing.
arrived and an argument between !•veness. Just two weeks ago, for
morning.
State police said Smith allegedly Smith and Garnes ensued. Both mstance, the World Economic
West Virginia State Police said shot Games with a .380-caliber pis- went outside the apartment and Forum in Geneva reported the
Garnes was shot in the right side tol, according to a story in Sun- began fighting until Smith alleged- Untted States ranks as the world's
below his rib cage during an argu- day's HuntingtOn Herald-Dispatch. ly pulled out the gun and shot Gar- most competitive nation for the
ment that escalated into a fight out- WOWK.-TV of Huntington report- nes, according LO the Hera/d-Dis- first time since 1985.
side an apartment at the Culloden ed Sunday thai Smith is wanted by palch.

Environmentalists say paper
mill step in wrong direction

Gallipolis man shot in W.Va. altercation

""

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A Multimedia Inc. N-•paper

U.S. regaining
competitiveness
in technology

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'Jean Mary' undergoing repairs;
will return in time for regatta

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614-44&amp;0902 or 614-992-2133.

~

he had signed the accord and asked his "Haitian
brothers" to maintain calm. "You may go to sleep
knowmg that there wtll not be any invaston," he
5ald.
"I don' t know what's goi ng 10 happen," said Brutus Talma, a hoicl security guard. "Only the Haitian
soldiers know if they're going to make trouble for the
American soldiers."
He echoed the uncertainty about what happens
next in Haiti, a desperately poor Caribbean nation
wracked by violence and with no tradition of democ-

Haitians bitter over delay
in military rulers' exit

Gctlllpols, Olt.

Wigal receives promotion
REEDSVILLE - Applicon Inc.
of Mason , Ohto recently
announced the promOilon of Rusty
Wigal, son of Ralph aod Lorr:a!ne
Wtgal of ReedsvtUe, lO the postbon
of Custom~r Support Manager.
North Amenca
Rusty has spent many years in
the computer programming business, ~orktn~ with CAM/CAD
apphcauons wtth some of the most
respected names m modem technology. He has been the computer
consultant for both Truesports and
Rahai -Hogan Indy Car teams in
Columbus, helping develop the
new Chassis designs and engine
components for the teams.
Wigal joinoo Applicon in 1984
after graduating from Marshall
University with a computer science
degree. Over the past ten years. he

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 19, 1994

Copyright U84

Last-minute accord halts invasion

It's time ...

AWARD WINNING PHOTOS - Randy Houdashelt of The
Image Gallery in Gallipolis is pictured above with some of his winning
photographs. Three prints created by Houdashelt were recently
accepted into the general collection of the 103rd International Exposition of Photography and were on di•play at the Denver Convention Cen·
ter.

70s.

•

Local Angus breeder recognized
BIDWELL - Champion Hill, Bidwell, owns two bulls listeD in
the 1994 Fall Sire Evaluation Rcpon published by th e American
Angus Association.
Issued in both the spring and fall, the new repon features the latest performance information available on more than 3,400 sires.

Low tonight In 50s, clear.
Tuesday, sunny . Highs In upper

: . ,...

~==¥~=-J
1900 Eastern Ave•

Gallipolis, Ohio

'JEAN MARY' RAISED- The sterawbeeler "Jeaa M•rv"
raised from tile bottom or the Ohio River about 2:45 p.m. Sunday
after It saak last Wedaestlay. Cre\118 worked tbrougb the moralng
and hundreds or people ftocked to the banks OD both tbe Ohio and
West Vlrtrlnla sl!les to wateb. The boat wUI be repaired at the 0Kan Marfne Repair in GaUipolis.

Continued on page 3

I

�ndav.~eptember

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

fiMULTIMEDIA,NC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lban 300
words long . All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
oddms Wld telephone number. No unsigned letten will be published. Letters
sbould he in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

New driver's license may
raise privacy question
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Driver's licenses take on the luster o'f credit cards
next year with a hologram on the front, a digital photo of the motorist and
a magnetic strip on the back.
Ohioans may want to ask: What's on the strip?
With the new design, the state is trying to prevent fraud m use of
licenses and state identification cards.
The state is switching from standara camera film to take motorists'
pictures to a digital imaging system. That wiU allow the Ohio Bureau of
Motor Vehicles to maintain electronic file copies of the photos.
The security features also include a multi-color hologram lil&lt;e those on
credit cards, and the magnetic strip containing certain infonmation.
The bureau said the only data approved so far for encoding is that
which now appears in print on licenses. Thai would include name.
address, Social Security number, height, weight, age.
Assistant Registrar Franlc Caltrider ~cknowledged there is room for
more data.
.
"Actually I was quite amazed to fmd out that a significant amount of
infonmation can be placed on there," Caltrider said.
A motorist's driving record, for example. Or criminal history. Or medical infonmation. Or welfare eligibility.
Caltrider said the bureau is not proposing such uses for a license.
"But since it has become the most common form of identification, it's
been proposed by other persons that perhaps it, might be .sui~?le for other
state business, for tnstance, tf we dectde tf that s awropnate, he S81d.
Initially, the coding will meet only the needs of the bureau.
"I lhink in pan we will be guided by the govelllOI''s office as to other
department needs,'' Caltrider said.
The prospect of ruming licenses intr mobile government filing cabinets is worrisome for Kevin O'Neill,legil director for the American Civil
Liberties Union of Ohio.
"Privacy concerns have exploded in t~e computer age," O'Neill said
Most infonmation the government collected about people used 10 show
upon paper.
"But with the advent of computers this information suddenly is no
longer confmed to one location, and therefore its confidentiality is much
more vulnerable to breach," O'Neill said.
One recommendation for the new licenses came from the Ohio Task
Force to Reduce Gun Violence.
It wants to use the cards for an instant check system for handgun buyers to replace or augment the current system of telephone calls and manual computer checks.
Whatever happens, Caltrider said individuals should know what information is encoded. "And they should have the means by which to correct
infonmation that's not entirely accurate or is, in fact, wrong,'' he said
The ACLU's advice: no more data.
•'Our inclination would be to see the information contained on the strip
be confmed to that public infonmation that has traditionally been found on
the face of one's driver's license," O'Neill said.

Letters to the editor
The debate issue
Dear Cllttor:
I commend Cong. Ted Strickland's call for a series of debates in
every county in the 6th District It
is refreshing to see an incumbent
willing to parti~ipale in a public
discussion of hts record wtth hts
opponent
I am distressed by candidate
Frank Cremean's attempt to limit
the number and scope of these
debates. He has demanded the right
to include a panelist of his choosing and also a follower of Ross
Perot Does Mr. Cremeans feel that
he needs some "friendly" forces
amongst the panelists to ask him
"friendly" questions?
Mr. Cremeans has suggested
debates to be held in Marieua,
Chillicothe, Ironton and Wilmington only. Why not Gallipolis,
Pomeroy and Jackson, too Does he
intend to rely on his "homefield
advantage" to carry the local area?

Does he fear that debates held
locallY. might hurt his hometown
appeal? Should voters elect a candidate based on his residency
alone?
The race for the 6th Congressional seat promises to be one of
the tightest contests in the counrry.
Either candidate has a very real
possibility of representing us next
year in Washin$ton. Voters in
every county of tilts district deserve
the opportunity to see and hear
these two candidates standing sideby-side debating the issues.
We should not have to depend
only on slick paid political advertisements or prepared press releases
as our sole source of infonmation
on the candidates seeking such an
important office.
Sincerely,
Floyd E. Wright,
GaUipolis

Berryls World

"Will the last person to leave Cuba please turn
out the lights (assuming there is power).'

'

,

-

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 19, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Sept. 20
Accu-Weath~ forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

WASHINGTON - For almost didn't do or even know anything
a decade, U.S. postal officials tried about."
to stamp out drug use in the ranks
McDonald says he was set up by
by planting informants in post an infonmant working for the Postal
offices around the country. Today,
some workers who were falsely
By Jack Anderson
accused in these stings believe they
deserve more than a Ieucr of apolo·
and
gy: They want their jobs back.
'
Frank McDonald, now a South·
Michael Binstein
em California factory worker, was
a stock clerk with the U.S. Postal Inspection Service. And a Superior
Service when his life was thrown Court jury agreed with him after
into turmoil on the morning of June the prosecution failed to get its
26, 1986. As he was clocking into story straight. According to
his job, McDonald was arrested by McDonald, the informant used
two postal inspec!Drs who charged money provided to him by postal
him with selling drugs to a co- inspectors to buy drugs on his own,
worker. Moments later, he was telling his superiors they were
carted out the front door before a bought within the postal service. In
crew of television cameras.
many cases, the buys were set up
McDonald insisted he was inno- so that postal inspectors didn't see
cent. "I told (the postal inspectors) the transaction .
they were crazy and they had the
In the wake of his acquillal,
wrong person," he explained to a McDonald assumed he would get
congressional panel last spring. his old job back. But the Postal
"They threatened me with every- Service had other ideas. He was
thing they could think of, but noth- forced to go before the U.S. Merit
ing they could say would ever Systems Protection Board for reinmake me admit to something I statement. This lime, an adminis-

trative law judge believed the
informant, and denied reinstate·
ment. Adding insult to injury, the
Postal Service docked hts retire·
ment account for the $5,000 that
they say he was paid for the drugs.
Across the country, undercover
informants working for the Postal
Inspection Service have left a trail
of innocent victims like McDonald.
The problem, one congressional
investigator told us. was a policy
known as "collars for dollars" :
The more arrests informants produced, the more they were paid.
In Cleveland, 19 postal employees and one private citizen were
arrested on drug charges after the
postal inspectors hired convicted
felons as workplace informants .
The informants had devised a
scheme where they used post office
money to buy drugs from hired
impostors, who would later split
the proceeds with the informants .
Innocent employees were then fin gered as the sellers.
When news of the botched
Cleveland operation became public, postal inspectors insisted it was

MICH.

•

IToledo I 7'1' I

an isolated incident. But congres.
sional investigators soon discovered many similar cases around the
counrry. The Postal Inspection Service did not return our calls, but
officials say they are no longer
using undercover infonmants.
"There was never, from aU the
people we interviewed, any evi·
dence that drugs were a problem,
or had existed, prior to the infor.
mant coming in," John Manes, a
F!orida lawyer who defended a
group of postal employees in West
Palm Beach against similar
c~arges, told our associate Jan
Moller. Though all 19 of Mattes'
c!;ents were acquitted, several have
yet to be rehired.
Rep . Bill Clay, D-Mo., has
sponsored a bill that would help
compensate the many victims of
these bogus stings across the country.
WfLD PITCH- Rep. Jim Bunning. R-Ky ., won 224 games as a
m;ijor league pitcher, but he recently threw a wild pitch as he tried to
halt the baseball strike.
Last week, Bunning and Rep.
W_ike Synar, D·Okla., sent a "Dear
Colleague" leuer to all House
members promoting their plan to
end the strike by repealing part of
baseball's anti-trust exemption.
"Don't give up on the baseball season," the leuer read. "We in
C1ngress arc in a unique position \
to get the players back on the field,
w'tcre they belong."
Then came the miscue: "There
are many people who can tell you
exactly where they were when Don
Larson pitched a perfect game or
Rocky Thompson hit the 'shot
heard round the world,"' the leuer
continued. "Let's not deprive our
nation of any more memorable
moments."
Perhaps Bunning's memory
isn't as sharp as his once-mighty
curve ball. Every baseball fan
k.r.ows that it was Bobby Thomson
- not "Rocky Thompson" w~o hit that famous . home run .
Serious fans might also recall the
curect spelting of Larsen's name.
Jack Anderson and Michael
B:nstein are writers for United
F"JIIure Syndicate, Inc.

Cruel and usual punishment _ __
police officer. (1bere was no other
criminal activity on her record.)
The sale took place at the residence
of her uncle, Nonman Little, who,

NatHentoff
according to t!Je dissenting opinion
in the Court ot'l\:ppeals, was "running a major drug-selling operation
in Harlem."
The 17-year-old "had grown up
in a variety of places and under
several different custodial arrangements" until she was employed by
her uncle. Her drug sale to the
police agem qualified as an A· I
felony because it weighed 2.3
grams - less than one-tenth of an
ounce over the next lower level
crime.

On a plea bargain, she was
offered four years lo life, but she
insisted on her right to trial. She
was convicted. The penalty for an
A-I felony is a mandatory indeterminate sentence, with a minimum
of not less than 15 years. The maximum is life imprisonment
The trial judge, Juanita BingNewton, rebelled. The minimum
mandatory sentence, she ruled,
would be cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment. Instead. she sentenced
Angela Thompson to eight years to
life. The judge acknowledged that
the legislature had decreed a

tougher minimum. but she added:
"I think it is still the law of this
country that the punishment must
fit the crime." After all, this was
"a single transgression of the
law."
The case went up one level to
the Appellate Division. A majority
on that bench also refused to go
rigidly by the book, and upheld the
lower sentence of the trial judge.
S~id appeUate justice Sidney Asch:
"A system of justice which
mandates a 15·year prison sentence, as a minimum, on a 17·yearold girl, who was not cared for by
her parents and (was) under the
domination of her uncle also mand~tes a lifetime of crime. And
imposes on the community, upon
re!ease, a woman who may be incapable of anything but criminal
activity. If we do not attempt to
rehabilitate such young people, we
condemn ourselves as well."
Again, the prosecution appealed
this lower sentence in the name of
the people. The New York State
Court of AppealS agreed with the
prosecution. The Chief Judge,
Judith Ka~e. is an often compassionate junst who has written some
notable First Amendment opinions,
ar:tong others. In this case, she was
prrt of the majority that overturned
the lower courts and resentenced
Angela Thompson to a mandatory
minimum of 15 years to life impris-

Ol'ment
Writing for the two dissenters,
Judge Joseph Bellaoosa said of his
majority colleagues - who have :
locked up Angela Thompson for at
least 15 years - that they have tied
themselves to "the will of the legislature. A will expressed more
than 20 years ago as part of the
frustratingly
decried,
yet
intractably OfCrative, Rockefeller
Drug Sentencmg Laws."
But, Bellacosa added, "It is
judges who bear the singular awe·
some duty of facing defendants in
open court on the day of reckoning
to declare the law's sentencing
ju-lgment."
Joseph Bellacosa is often
d'scribed as a conservative: Chief
JLdge Judith Kaye is decidedly
regarded as a liberal. It was Hellacosa, however, who tried unsuccessfully to remind his colleagues
that "constiwtional adjudication is
a ·lynarnic, evolving process- not
a static set of revered relics.'' And
A.:gela Thompson will become an
ur...-"eVered. relic . .-. :~
""' t" 1
;!I
Nat Hentoff Is a nationally
renowned authority on the First
Amendment and the rest of the
Bill or Rights.
(For informatioa on bow to
communicate electronically witb
Ibis columnist and others, contact America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ext 8317,)

Radical surgery won't cure Haiti
As this is wriuen, Gunga Dan.
Rather is in Haiti, ready to pretend
he is a working reporter when the
American invasion occurs. Nothing
could be more indicative of the
pseudo-seriousness of President
Clinton's first major venture in
muscular foreign policy. Wrong on
every count, an invasion of Haiti
represents (I) a forced march back
to the future, (2) an expensive,
demeaning exercise in presidential
damage conuol, or (3) both.
That is not the way it is being
presented by the president and his
earnest minions, none of whom
apparenlly have the strength of
character 10 resign in the face of
terminal foolishness. America's
credibility is at stalce, they say.
Belief in our commitment 10
human rights rests on a decisive
blow. What we intend is simply the
restoration of the democratically
elected president of Haiti, JeanBertrand Aristide, 10 his rig~lful
place, a venture endorsed by the
United Nations.
All this is said with a straight
face by men and women wbo have
kowtowed to China's aging IOOIIitarians, warned as Bosnia, a
sovereign member state of the
U.N., was hacked to pieces, and
hemmed and hawed while the
genocidal butchers of Rwanda did

their work.
Let it be stated categorically. It
is not American credibility lfutt is
at stake in Haiti. It is Bill Clinton's.

Hodding Carter Ill
What's more, overthrowing Haiti's
tinpot dictators will do nothing for
either.
The president's credibility was
all but shredded when the vessel
carrying American forces turned
around and ned from Port-auPrince, while a ragtag gang of
thugs rioted on the docks. If force
was going to be used, that was the
time to use it, in the face of deliberate physical provocation and the
express repudiation of a solemn
agreement. It should have been
done quickly, efficiently and without bombast. It would have been
justif18ble on almost every count,
backed by the American people
8Jill supported by Congress.
Now it is months later, and
squashinJ the nasty little men who
run Haib will not easily erase that
painful picture, made all but
ineradicable by time. What it will
do is revive memaies of older, no
less painful images. Cold-blOoded
interventionism -and that is what
this slow-motion invasion is -

'

was once a U.S. specially in the
Western Hemisphere. Ronald Reagan renewed the patent for such
famous victories in his invasion 6f
Grenada, population 140,00, over a
decade ago. Bill Clinton's foreign
policy was supposed to be different, a new policy for the post-Cold
War era. Some difference!
But !here is more than one similarity. President Reagan, following
in a direct line of precedent from
his recent Democratic and Republican predecessors, stoutly resisted
congressional involvement in his
overseas adventures. Democrats
protested, claiming correctly thai
the Constiwtion gives Congress the
power 10 declare war. Lo and
behold, however, Bill Clinton, antiwar protester of the 1960s and
I 970s, is a born-again Reaganite,
and the Democratic congressional
leadership meekly acquiesces.
Congress is not to be let in on the
decision-making (though, as with
aU of the president's positions, this
was subject to change late last

Bush were president. As with
thieves, there is apparently no
honor among partisan politicians.
What's the hurry? We are a
great power. We could afford to
wait, llghtening the screws week by
week, intensifying the pressure,
ensuring that the Haitian cabal
fhally understood that their old
paymasters and mentors across the
Potomac in Washington could no
longer protect them. Whatever the
expense of an embargo, whatever
the suffering of the boat people and
the embarrassment of the refugee
holding pens at Guantanarno, nothing can match the cost, suffering
and consequences of an invasion.
None of this is to argue apinsl
the use of American power m the
pursuit of Dl\tional defense, peace
or the requirements of international
law. There are times and places
that dictate its use, as in Bosnia a1
several points over the past two
years. Large issues, such as the
mlegrily of a nation-stale in the •
face of external aggression, require :

week.)

bold StepS.

Parenthetically, the less said
about Republican hypocrisy on this
score, the better. "Let us vote, let
us vote," they clamor, just as they
clamored with equal volume
against similar Democratic
demands when Nixon, Reagan and

Hodding Carter III, former ;
State Department spokesman
and award-winning reporter, edi,
tor and publisher, is president of
MainStreet, a Washington, D.C.based television production eom- ;
pany.

'

•

IMansfield 176' I•

~

IND.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Mild, dry weather expected to cQntinue

OHIO Weather

Postal sting ensnares innocents

Nelson Rockefeller, the late
governor of New York, is rememhered by many in the art world as
an enthusiastic, sophisticated collector. For many New Yorkers in
prison, however, he is remembered
as the author of the 1973 Rockefeller Drug Sentencing Laws,
whose harsh mandatory minimums
helped lead the way nationally to
reducing judges • discretion in sentencing.
Some years ago, I asked Gov.
Mario M. Cuomo if he might try to
move the legislalure to malce those
laws more humane. He said he
didn't think the legislature could be
budged. But, as a political leader,
shouldn 'I he rry? No comment Nor
certainly is there a chance now to
make the Rockefeller drug laws
more flexible when fear of crime is
chronic.
Recently, several lower court
judges in New York did take the
risk of softening a young woman's
long prison tenn because they were
appalled at the damage the Rockefeller law would have done to the
rest of her life. Their attempt failed
when they were reversed by the
Court of Appeals, the state's highestcourt.
What has happened to Angela
Thompson is hardly unique. In
1988, when she was 17. she was
arrested after malcing a single sale
of crack cocaine to an undercover

19, 1994

PA.

By The Associated Press
Mild, dry conditions are expect·
ed to remain in Ohio through mid·
week, the National Weather Service said today.
Temperatures will be seasonal
or slightly above. Daytime highs
wiU be mostly in the 70s. with lows

at night mainly in the 50s.
No rain is expected at least unnl
Thursday.
The record high temperature on
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 97 in IB95. The record
low was 40 in 190 I.
Sunset today will be at 7:34

Youngstown

p.m. Sunrise Tuesday will be at
7:17a.m.
Around the nation
Scattered showers lingered from
northern Florida to the Carolina
coast, and rain fell in parts of the
Rockies today, but dry weather was
expected across the rest of the
nation.

New England was dry and cool
after a weekend cold front blew out
to sea . Highs were expected in the
50s in northern Maine and 60s in
southern New England.
Highs in the 70s and sunny
weather was expected from the
Great Lakes region through the
mid·Atlantic.

·

:
:
•
:

~
-¢- •I

Columbus 178'

I

W.VA.

~,~,~~~~ (f •
•

Showers T·stonns Rain

0

·:-

Flumes

eta

.,.

Snow

Ice

Sillily Pt Cloudy Cloudy
01994 Accu -Weather, Inc.

Via Associalfld Press GraphicsN91.

-----Weather----South-Central Obio
Today ... Mostly sunny. High in
the middle 70s. Northwest winds 5
to 10 mph.
TonighL.Clear. Low around 50.
Light and variable winds.
Tuesday ... Mostly sunny. High
75 to 80.

Extended forecast
Wednesday ... Fair with lows in
the 50s and highs in the 70s.
Thursday ... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows in the
50s. Highs in the 70s.
Friday ... A chance of showers.
Lows around 50 and highs 60 to
65.

PET PARADE- Jordan and Adam Shank won the best-derorated category for the Middleport River Festival's pet parade.
The rain didn't scare away the animels and owners, although the
outfit the Shank's dog "Snowball" wore might have. (Sentinel
photo by George Abate)

U. S.... Continued from page

--Area deaths-Pomeroy, he was the son of the late
Worthie and Samantha Hysell
Johnson.
He was a coal miner, conFriends here have received word
struction
worker and had been
of the death of Louis F. (Bud) San- employed by
Meigs Local Schools.
ford, 77, of Worthington, Saturday, He was a member
of the Ohio
Sept 17, 1994, at his home.
Association
of
Retired
Employees,
He was a retired fire chief of
and
attended
the
Bradford
Church
Sharon Township Fire Department
of
Christ
with 38 years service, and was well
He is survived by a daughter.
known by many EMS and ftremen
Ruth
Barnhart, Middleport; two
in Meigs Coun.y.
sons
and
daughters-in-laws, MauFuneral services will be held at
rice
and
Margaret Johnson,
10 a.m. Friday at the RutherfordPomeroy,
and
John and Karen
Corbin Chapel, 515 High Street,
N. J.; four
Johnson,
Chathan,
Worthington, where friends may
grandchildren
and
four
greatcall from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday
grandchildren.
and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. ThursBesides his parents, he was preday. Omission of flowers has been
ceded
in death by his wife, Frances
requested by the family but memoHarrison
Johnson, two sisters, Ada
rial contributions may be made to
Johnson
and Eulah Evans, and a
Hospice at Riverside, Children's
brother,
Herbert
Johnson.
Hospital Burn Unit, or another·
Services
will
be held at 11 am.
charity.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Elber Johnson
Home, Pomeroy. The Rev. Peter
Tremblay
will officiate and burial
Elber M. Johnson. 85, Pomeroy,
died Sunday, Sept. 18, 1994, at the will be in Bradford Cemetery near
Middleport. Friends may call at the
Darst Group Home, Pomeroy.
Born on Nov. 15, 1901, at funeral home Monday, 7 to 9 p.m.

The Council on Competitive·
ness recalled that in 1991, it had
found the United States weak or
losing badly in one-third of the 94
critical technologies driving the
U.S. economy. Future trends were
not encouraging, it warned.
"That report showed how
America's technology edge had
eroded in one industry after anoth·
er, casting doubt on the comforting
view that technology was Ameri·
ca's ultimate comparative advan·
tage in world markets," the council
noted.
Since then, "there has been
clear, visible,
measurable
progress," said retired Adm.
Bobby Inman, a council senior
adviser.
"Industry, government and uni·
versities are all pursuing new

louis Sanford

Squads answer seven calls
Seven calls for assistance were
answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service over the weekend. Units
responding were as follows:
POMEROY
4:19 p.m. Saturday, Mulberry
Avenue, Beverly Hill, transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
7:42 a.m. Sunday, Children's
Home Road, Elbert Johnson, dead
on arrival.
8:40p.m. Sunday, Eagle Ridge
Road, motor vehicle accident, no
transports.

MIDDLEPORT
3:36a.m., Saturday, Turner's
Run, Cathy Smith, Holzer Meilical
Center.
12:50 p.m. Sunday, Pearl Street,
Stephanie Jones, treated but not
transported.
8:30p.m. Sunday, Fifth and
Palmer, Raymond F1elds, Holzer
Medical Center.
RACINE
3:44 a.m. Saturday, Tanner's
Run, Cathy Smith, treated not
transported.

Meigs announcements
Bloodmobile coming
The Red Cross Bloodmobile
will be al the Senior Citizens Center Wednesday, I to 5:30p.m.
There is a spectal need for 0-positive and 0-negative blood.
Committee to meet
The Bedford Township Volunteer Fire Department committee
will meet at 7 p.m Tuesday 111 the

township hall. ·All townsh.ip residents invited to attend.
Support group to meet
The Alzheimers and Related
Disorders support group will met
Wednesday, I to 3 p.m at the
Meigs Multi-purpose senior center.
Emphasis will be on women's
health issues.

Gavin worker critical

A Gallipolis man is in critical
condition this morning after falling
60 feet from a water tower Thursday afternoon al the Gavin Power

The

D~y

Sentinel

(VSI'S UJ.Ht)
CVCII')' aft.CII"IOOD, Mooday tbroup
Itt Court St., 1'1&gt;0110y, Ohio, by !be
llt!lo Volley l'lltltilllllll Co-y/MutUmoclll
toe., Po. .oy, Oblo 45769, Pb. 99l·llS6.
._... ..... pold .. PoiiiOIOy, Ohio.

Publilhod
Jlr!~y.

-.Tho _...... rr-,

lllld .... Ohio

Newt~~~~* AllodltioD.

POI'I'MU'I'IIt Sead .tctr.l OOIT'8CtioDI to
The Dally SeaUatl, Ill Court St.,
I'UDolo)',lllllo 4S769.

., c.rw--IIUIIICIIPI10111 uns

o.woot. .................................................$1~
OooMoiOII .............................................. $6.9l

01o Yw ................................................. $13.20
S111CU COPY PRICE
Dolly ................................................... :15 c -

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MAJLIIUIIICIIPI101118
13W-. ................................................$ll.l4
26W-. ................................................$43.t6
l l -...............................................$14.76
a.-O.OOWOG. . C..,
1 3 -................................................$13.40
26 ........ _, ...................................$45.50
ll ..............................................111.40

Plant in Cheshire.
Robert Gor~on, 38, was transported ~Y Gallia. Counl.)" Emer~:;:­
cy Medical Servtce to Holzer
teal Center, then flown by HealthNet emergency helicopter service
to Cabell. Huntington ltospital in
Huntington, W.Va., ~here he was
admiUed to the intenSIVe cane umt.
Gordon reportedly snuck steel
beams as he feU and landed on concrete.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..............................30
Akr.o ....................................... 59/5/8
Ashland Oil ........................... .35 7/8
AT&amp;T ....................................55 1/8
Bank One ...............................313/4
Bob Evans ........................--.21 3/8
Champion lnd ........~..............13 3/4
Charming Shop ..............................!~

City Holdlng ...........................3!118
Federal Mogul .........................- ..25
Goodyear TatR .......- ........-.34 3/8
K-mart ....................................18 318
Lands End ..............................20 718
Limited lnc .............................lO 718
Multimedia Inc ..................... 311/8
Point Bancorp .........--..--....... 19
Reliance Electric

-----·----..25

Robbins &amp; Myen.-................- ..20
Sboney'slnc ............--.....-.14 1/4

Star Bank ...........- ............-.44 118
Wendy lnt'l........................-.15 112
Worthington lnd ....................lO 112
Sto&lt;:k reports 1re the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Advest of
Gallipolis.

RA VJNG OVER RAILROADS - Six·year-old Angie Queen
of Pomeroy enjoys a display by the area model railroad club during the Middleport River Festival Saturday. The Railroad Club of
Southeastern OhiofMeigs Division sh&lt;&gt;wed a number of different
sizes or trains and realistic layouts. (Sentinel photo by George
Abale)

BASKET BUILDING - Shirley Huston of Syracuse said she
has been creating baskets for the last 15 ye.ars. Here, ~uslon w?rks
on a basket away l'rom the raiD of the M1ddlepor~ Rtve~ Feshval.
Although she's been busy witb numerous craft.~, mcludmg woodworking and nower arranging, Huston said she really enjoys bas·
ket weaving. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Beat of the Bend ... ~. .
by Bob Hoeflich
Meigs County Bikers are warming up their Harleys for the 9th
annual Meigs County toy run
which has been set this year for
Saturday, Oct 8.
The Meigs Countians will
undoubtedly be joined by area
biker enthusiasts for the annual run
which will begin at I p.m.Bikers
will start gathering on the Pomeroy
parking lot at 12 noon .
This year the price of admission
has been increased because the
number of kids the bikers helped
last year more than tripled. Organizers of the ride, however, don't feel
that the increase will be detrimental
since it is a charitable event. Admission this year is a new toy worth at
least $10 per person or $10 a single
and $15 a couple.Those paying
cash can do so at the door.Participants arc asked not to bring stuffed
animals this year and aU toys are to
be brand new.Also participants are
being asked to take non·perishable
food items for the local food
bank.The Meigs County Health
Department will again this year
take applications for children needing toys and help.
Stops for the ride include
Kelly's Komer, the Blue Tartan,
Mizway with the ride concluding
with a party a1 the Watering Hole.
Three bands will be featured at
the party this year, begin~ing at 5
p.m. and they are Desnnauon Blues
from Columbus and two local
bands, Bad Habit and Charlie Lily
and the Poorside Band.
In previous years, the bikers
have helped many children, 525
just last year, as well.as making
donations 10 commumues m the
county for activities to benefit children of the respective communities.This year, after the bikers buy

for the children, the community
project will go to the Middleport
Save the Pool fund.ln previous
years, this amount has been $1,000
and organizers are hoping to do al
least as weU this year for the community project.Containers will be
placed in the various business
houses later to help with the project
and several other money-making
projects are planned.T-shirts will
be sold on the day of the ride and
potluck refreshments will be served
at the party.
Anyone needing fur!l'.er information should call 99'2-2242, 7422081 or992-7739.
Shirley Stobart Roberts of Lexington, Ky., writes that the members of Racine-Southern High
School Class of 1954 really
enjoyed their reunion this year and
parttcipants are busy planning a
picnic for the class on Memorial
Day weekend in 1995.
On hand for the '94 reunion, the
40th for the class, were Ron
McDade, Gallipolis; Lowell Salser,
Los Angeles, Calif.; Norman
Roush, Charleston, W. Va.; Brian
Simpson, Baltimore, Ohio; Dale
Johnson, Wadsworth, Ohio; Larry
Wolfe, Racine; Marlene Clark Hill,
Gahanna: Joyce Hart Manuel,
-Racine; Loretta Davis McDale,
Gallipolis; Bonnie Badgley Simpson, Baltimore; Alice Fisher
Wamsley of Pomeroy; Shirley
Shivley, no address listed, and, of
course, Mrs. Roberts.

1

strategies," according to the report,
''Critical Technologies Update
1994." The council is a non·profit
organization of leaders in business.
education and labor and is headed
by Paul Allaire. chairman of Xerox
Corp.
"Companies are in the midst of
restructuring to eliminate ineffi- ·
ciency and boost innovation, the
federal government is developing ·
policies to support civilian technology and competitiveness needs and
universities are struggling to redefine their educational and scientific ·
missions to foster U.S. competitiveness more effectively,' the
report said.
It said infonmation technologies
remain an unsurpassed strength of ·
the United States
·

Twelve people killed
in weekend wrecks
Hy Tbe Associated Press
Ohio recorded 12 traffic deaths
over the weekend, with two acci.
dents accounting for five of them,
the State Highway Patrol said. A
wreck on Sunday killed three people after one on Saturday had
claimed two lives.
The patrol counted fatalities
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
BOWLING GREEN - Willow
M. Vanvorhis, 71, of Bowling
Green, in a two-car accident on a
city street in Bowling Green.
CARROLL TON - Juanita M.
Kuester, B5. of Richmond, Marie S.
Poole, 94, of Richmond and Lela
G. Riuenhouse. 77, of Bloomingdale, in a two-&lt;:ar accident on Ohio
9 in Carroll County.
SATURDAY
BATAVIA- Mark J. Stang,
21, of New Richmond, a driver in a
three-vehicle crash on U.S. 52 in
Clenmont County.
SHARONVILLE- Charles D.

Goorman, 50, of Cincinnati, and
Rick A. Wirick, 29, West Liberty,
in a six-vehicle accident on Inter·
state 275 in Hamilton County.
CELINA - Allen E. Harruff'
Jr., 23, of New Bremen, driver in a
two·car accident on a Mercer
County road.
BATAVIA Darrin J.
Coppedge, 27, of Felicity, driver in '
a one-car accident on Ohio 133 in :
Clenmont County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
WARREN - Harold A. Bowser, 72, of Bristolville, driver in a
two·car accident on Ohio 305 in
Trumbull County.
FOSTORIA - Heidi A. Hill, .
II, of Fostoria, hit by a pickup :
truck while riding her bicycle on a
Seneca County road.
·
PORT CLINTON - Tonr. Wit- ·
sun, 31, no hometown avatlable,
passenger in a one-car accident on
an Ottawa County road.

Names omitted
The names of two relatives of
Hilda V. Durst Smith of Middleport who died Friday, Sept. I 6,
1994 at her home, were unintentionally omined from the obituary
in the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Fisher Funeral Home, Middleport,
reports that other survivors included Grace Durst, a sister·in-law, and
Shirley Smith, a daughter-in-law.
Funeral services were held at I
p.m. today at the funeral home with
burial in Riverview Cemetery.

7: 1'&gt;.~:\ 'i

TIMECOP
r»J.LY

1Wr.SAT/&amp;Jrt . 1~15,J:1'i

(RI

THE N£HT KARAT£ KtO
... ....u

... .......... ,. " "'"'

7:10 , 9: 10 l»ill.Y ._T . SAT{SUU:IO, J:\0 IPCI

NATURAL BORN KillERS
oo r....,
, ., P&gt;S . u

""&amp;IIOC..O i o

"1: 00.9:10 DULY ...1'.SAT/9.JII.I:OO,l:l0 (RI

FORREST &amp;UMP
1:00, '1:30 UII.ILY MT.SIIT/!iUI.I:OO,J:JO CPCHI

IN

THE ARMY NOW

7:10,9:20 l»dl.Y IVI'I'.S\T/D.1:10,l:2fl (PC)

!HI LHTU RRSCRLI

1; 20,9;10 ~ILY lt'T.5o'IT/:ut.1;20 ):10 (K,;J

THE MRSK
1 ;20, 9: JO lliULY MT.SM'/9.11. 1 :20, J: J0 lPG\ ll
CO~NO 800NI Ct-IAALIE SHEEN 11'1
"'t'EIU'ItNAL VELOCITY"

AVAILABI.E!

A 40 year high school graduation reunion again reminds me that
time's moving right along.So to the
class and the rest of you, let me
say: "Enjoy yourself, it's later than
you think", and do keep smiling.

----Hospital news---HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Sept. 16 - Helen
Trout, Mrs. David Williamson and
son, Mrs. Randy Young and son,
Robin Jonas, Dorothy McManaway, Mrs. Robert Starcher and
son, Sandra Willet, Emma Gibson,
Katherine Gardner.
Births'-- Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Turner, daughter, Oalc Hill;
Mr. and Mrs. Scou Sperry, son,
McArthur.
Discharges Sept. 17 - Jessi91

Willet. Mrs. Christopher Turner
and daughter, Marilyn Canter,
Shane Rose.
Discharges Sept. 18 - Mrs.
Scott Sperry and son, Samuel Hatfield, Mrs. Glenn Adlcins and son,
Ashley Cherrington, Leslie Shepherd.
B(rtbs- l1r· and Mrs,. Glenn
Adlcins, son, Vmton; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Smith, son, Racine.
(Publlsbed with permission)

Straigftt- fJ'uckf,r &amp; ~usn
:Funeral J{ome
Ravenswood, WV- (304) 273-2152
Preneed - Atneed - Postneed
SERVING JACKSON p.HV.) MASON p.NV.)
and Meigs (OH.) COUNTIES
JOE ROUSH
.
RUSSELL STRAIGHT

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Monday, September 19, 1994
Page---:.t

In NFL action,

Browns blank Cardinals; Patriots keep Bengals winless
By BARRY WILNER
AP Football Writer
After three weeks and three
losses, who is more shellshocked:
Buddy Ryan. Wade Phillips or Jack
Pardee?
It' s been a tough beginning to
the season for those three coaches,
whose teams have self-destructed
and are 0-3. Their divergent per·
sonali ties - from Ryan's bombast
in Anzona to Phillips' friendly
demeanor in Denver to Pardee's
stoicism in Houston - haven't
made a difference.
Ryan promised the folks of Ari·
zona a winner at long last. Instead,
after a 32-0 loss Sunday at Cleveland, the Cardinals are in familiar
territory, even if Buddy is not they are the only winless team in
the NFC.

Denver, picked by many to win
the AFC West behind a vastly
improved offense, once more was
clueless on defense. I err Hostetler
picked apart the Broncos for 338
yards and four touchdowns in a 4816 romp, Denver's worst home loss
since 1968.
The Oilers, who won their last
11 games in 1993 to win the AFC
Central, are going in the opposite
direction with a stagnant offense.
They fell 15-7 10 Buffalo on Sun·
day .
Ryan isn't giving up on his new
team, even after sustaining the ftrst .
shutout of his six -year coaching

career.
"I don't think anybody quit on
me today ," said the truculent
Ryan . " I pulled a couple of guys
because they just didn't have that

look in th eir eye that I want to · las has a chance to ~o 3..() tonight at
see.' '
home against DctrOll.
The Broncos haven't had that
The Chiefs beat Atlanta 30-10;
look for some time, with six the Dolphins knocked the I ets from
straight defeats. The latest was the undefeated ranks 28-14; the
their lOth in II meetings with the Chargers did the same to Seattle
Raiders since Art Shell became the 24 -10; and the Giants took. Wash Los Angeles coach.
ington 31 -23.
" This game wasn't even close,"
Also on the NFL ' s " Throw Phillips said . " I still believe we backs Weekend," with team s
have talent, but we'll have to re- wearing vintage unifonns in celeexamine everything now."
bration or the league's 75th
So must the Oilers, whose anniversary, it was San Francisco
offense has disappeared without 34, the Los Ang eles Rams 19;
Warren Moon (traded to Minneso- Philadelphia 13, Green Bay 7;
ta) and with replacement Cody Pittsburgh 31, Indianapolis 21;
Carlson injured.
Minnesota 42, Chicago 14; New
While the losers lamented, the England 31, Cincinnati 28; and
winners just wanted to keep things New Orleans 9, Twnpa Bay 7.
going so well. Kansas City, Miami,
Browns 32, CardiDals 0
San Diego and the New York.
The Browns (2-1) got their first
Qjants remained unbeaten and Dal- shutout at Cleveland Stadium since

1983, stopping the Cardinals on the
2 with one second left
Vinny Testaverde, stung by six
interceptions in his previ ous two
games, ran for one touchdown and
passed for two more, including an
81 -yarder by rookie Derri ck
Alexander.
Raiders 48, Broncos 16
At Denver, where the Broncos
have lost five of the last eight, Jeff
Hostetler threw for 338 yards and
four touchdowns as the Raiders ( 12) continued to dominate lhe Broncos. Los Angeles has scored 123
points in the las! three game s
against Denver.
For the third straight game, John
Elway threw an interception that
was returned for a touchdown, this
one a 15-yarder by corn erback
Terry McDaniel in the fourth quar·

te' .

Bills IS, Oilus 7
At Hou ston , Steve Christie
kicked five field goals and Bruce
Smith had four sacks for Buffalo
(:i.- 1). Houston is 0-3 for the fi rs1
time in 10 seasons.
"Kicking indoors is a lot easier.
1 practice in the wind. But once I
hit the first one, I felt like I was
gelling into a groove,'' said
Christie, whose overtime field goal
in a !992 wild card game beat the
Oilers 41-38 and capped th e
biggest comeback in NFL history.
Chiefs 30, Falcons 10
Joe Montana got his seventh
victory in a row in Atlanta , the
other six coming with the San
Ftancisco 49ers. It lifted his career
record in ·starts against the Falcons
(See NFL on Page S)

Seventh-grade Marauders beat Belpre 32-8
ULlh St. 5 (Ohio) u
W. Michigan 23,lowt St19

Football

Saturday-MAC
Akroo 11 W. Michigan
Bowling Grcm at E. Michigan
Kent 1L Cent Michigan

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Eutem Dhillon
Buffalo .... .

N.Y. leu

Ohio at Ball SL

.!!: 1. I U f4

ll;l.

3 0 01 .000 91

63

2 I 0 .667 '6
... 2 t 0 .661 62

6.5
l3

Non-conrtrence-SaL
Miami (Ohio) It Michi&amp;IJI St.

I 2 0 .333 76 76
I 2 0 333 101 lOS

Big Ten standings

Miami .. .

lndian•polil ...
New Englarwi ...

Central Dh·illon
CLEVElAND .. 2 t 0 .661
PituburR)l ......... 2 I 0 .667

10
57

37

CINCINNATI .. 0 3 0 .000 l8

51
86 .

HoUilOO ............ 0 3 0 .000 45

SO

Welten DIYkloa

Kuuu City ...... 3 0 01.000 14

44

San Dieao ......... 3 0 01.000 88
. Sc:aulc............
2 1 0 .661 16

S4
40

L.A. RaidCl11 ..... 1 2 0 .333 71 98
Denver .............. 0 3 0 .000 12 110

Conr.

Iuw.

Pc::nn St ...........2
lnditna ........... 0
Mjchigan .... . 0
Pwdue...... ...... 0
lowa ................. o
Minneaota.. ...... o

0
0
0
0
l
t

01.000
0.000
0.000
0.000
0.000

o.ooo

lllinoi.s .............. o o 0.000
Ohio Stat.e ........ O 0 0.000
Wi.conlin ...... 0 0 0.000
Northwe~~t.em .. 0 0 0.000

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eutem Dlvlalon

.lJ2 ~o ~~~
~~
ot.ooo 46 z,;

o.11u................

P!UloddpiW ...... 2 1 0 .6lil 66

57

Wuhing100 ...... 1 2 0 .333 68
Arizon&lt; ............. 0 ) 0 .000 29

66

Central
Minnco... ......... 2
Duroil ....... ... ... . t
Chloaao ............ t
ar-t Bty ...... I
Tamf» 81y
I

83

33
31

2 0 .333 l7
2 0 .333 37
2 0 .333 40

11
47
40

95

51

AllanLI
LA R•IN ......

l 2 0 .333 69
t 2 0 .333 46

74

T7

New Odeant ...

I 2 0 .333

75

50

Harvard 39, Columbia 32
Hofsua 30, Fordham 20
J...hiah 41, Bullolo 19
MuUt 37,1ont19

Muylond 24, w.. V'UJPnl&lt; 13
Mu..ch~i~CUI 32. Holy Crou 0
M"""""lh,NJ. 20,1'1c:o0
New Hamplhin II, J~r~a Mad.ilm 24

RDbcrt Monia 24, Cent. Connuticut
St.l1
SoCJOCIIIoon Z2. SL Pnncil. Pl. 13

...
•·
.,.......
"\:·
~·s..·

...

South

...•' .
..· ~.
-

'~

•'"~- .
••••••
.
••

.. .
:t·

.......
··
..
.'-:.
."··..
•••

.bl.lXU

1~07
1.490

1
2

t.376

)

1.336
1.311

4
6

1.262
1)JXJ
8. Arilon&lt;(1) ..............2·0.0 !,Ill
9. N~Damc. ............ 2-1 -0 l,OS4
10. Auburn ................. .3·0.0 947

l

12
Maraball34, Georgia SouWcm \3
Maryville. Tam. 19, Davidwn 14
McNCCIC St. 21, Ccnl Mansa1 7

... o

SIV.nah SL 41, Tu• Soulhcm 14

Souoh Cuo!inl 3t, Laoilill1a Toch 6
Souohcrn Mia. 11l. Momphio 3
Soulhcrn U. 19, Miu. Va.Ucy St. 0
T..n.-Martin 14,Lanc 6

11

lll

17
10

17. Wuhington ....... .. .. l-1-0

484

19

12
14
16
18

...... 2·1-0

444

13

\9. Southem CaJ ......... I-1-0

396

20

20. 0100 ST ............. .2-J.O
21. Ol.hhuno ..... . .... ...2-J.O

340
331

23
Zl

22. Wullin&amp;ton SL ......2-o-0
23. Tc:nnc:uet. ............ .1 -2-0
24. N. Cuoon• St.. .... l-0.0
2S. lndiana ......... . . .....3-0-0

261
221

Z4
IS
2l

Troy St. 19, SW l..ouiJ.iant 20
y; . . 9, a.nuo. 6
T'arolin. 42, Cilldd 38
W. Kcnwcky 21, Auttin Peay 3
WillWn .t Muy 2!, Fwmm 26

w

Midwest
Bowlin&amp; Onlcn ~9. Navy21
Blllull,GoootCI&lt;&gt;wn,Ky. 21
CalL Midli&lt;on:Jo, E. MidUpn 29

Clacinnoti 11. Miami (O!Uo) 17.U.
Drake 14, San Dieao 9
R. Dlinoil45, Lock Haven 10
IDinc:U 34 , N. Dlinoia 10
OliniCU SL 17, W. lllinoia 0
lDGiana St. 63, W. V'uptia Tocb 0

Othtl'l ttct:lvln&amp; •o&amp;a: Kanan Stale

86, B•ylor 64, lliinoU 58, Calcndo State

38, Virginia 23, Karuu 17, Georgia 13.
SynCilK 13, Brictlam YCilDJ I. Utab I.
S&lt;anbd 6. Dub 2,
MU:mpn 2.
BOWUNG GREEN 1, G~ Tech 1,
HtwtU I,LSU 1, S®lh Carali.na I.

w,....,

IaniuS!. 27,Rwe 18
""' 32, Akoal t6
..........
40.s.. Diet• St.t7

MAC standings

Miuny SL 23, SH MiooouD 16
N.lowt 12, SW Milaouri SL 7
Nobnili41J, UCLA 21
21' MidUJIIR St. lll
Ollio SL '!1, l'iluburJh 3
l'lrioo 49, 8.oJI SL 21
Tolodo47,
~~!.;
VUpmiJO 9.
' . 6

-Dome

0..-all

.!!: I. l ll 1. I 2o1.
01.1100 3 0
01.1100 2 1
Ot.l100 2 t
01.000 I I
0.000 2 t
0.000 0 2
0.000 0 2
0.000 o 2
0.000 0 3

Boll St....... -..... 0 0
0
MumL..... - •.. 0 1
E. Mido. ........... 0 1
Akoal._ ..........

o

o.ooo o

2

l

0
0

0
0
0
0

W. MichipD 23, lows SL 19
Youn&amp;J'Own SL 13, E. Kenmclr:y 6

0
1
0

Southwest
Alabama 1], Atbnsu 6
8tyior 14, Clkl.Uca'Ja SL 10
Pmdo v..w 10
- . ; t 6 , t........ O
N.w Muico SL 23. Taut-PJ Puo 22
calohonu 11, r .... Toch 11
S..llouota&gt; SL 11, Anplo St. 7
Swlhom Melh. 34. New Muico )1
Staphm F. A•lin 40. Sacruna..ta St.

.._..3',

o

Salurday'• KOrH
MAC

C...L Midlipo 30, E. MidoipD l9

tt..l2, Akn&gt;n 16

......

~

Bowtina In- 59, N~ 21

Clodanod 17,1&amp;ml (&lt;JIJD) 17, ...
....... 49,11a111L 2t
Tolodo47,~ 17

lhwkc:n 2S,IndepcndCI\l 6
Hu41on Watcm Rcsem: 36, Unliy,
W.Va3

.

Ironton l7, O..y. Bdmont8
Unooln W. 42, Gilmour 40 (01')
Lowdlrule l4. Soothinaton 211
Marion Harding 20, Calion 0

Mcn;cr lB, Slwplvillc 6
Middlewwn fmw:ic.k 14, Cin. Rc.tding
7

NcllooviiJo.Yod&lt; 16. Porumoulh W.7
Newuk C.lh. 34, Jnhn~LOWTI I
Obedin 21 , Lulh&lt;nn w. 8
Onnae 23, Univenity Sdlooll7

Panna n, Cle. Rhodca 20
Sand~~oaky SL Marys 14, Tifftn Calvat.

0

Sh&amp;ker Heighu V, LU.ewood 16
Shaw 52, E:"Toch. 6
SL Henry 35, Lima Cath. 1
SteUbenville Ca.lb. 14, Martina Ferry 0
Sylvan.ia Soulhvicw 6, Tol. WliLe 0
TUICIRWII Ctth. 14, Bridpport 13
Unul~ 20, Akron E. 12
Waterford, Mich. 24, C.rdintl Stritch

t)

Zanc:&amp;Vi.llc R.o.ocruu 21, Me:ip Etlllom7

Transactions
BasketbaU
N•Uonal Bukttbal Aaloc ..Uon
CHICAGO BULLS : Si&amp;ncd Ron
Htrper. guard. to a fivo-yeu conttlct.

DAlL4.S MAVERICKS: Sisned Tony
Dumaa,guud,toa rour-yeueontnct.

FootbaU

Tcmc:uee SL 41, Moreheld S1. I 0

T..,._Tect.20,Somford7
UT-OuiUnO&lt;lp 47, OltdDc:r-Wcllb 23
To'NIOI"I Sl 41 Delaware Sl II

107

eo.l.

Cm«ton Vall. 6, NewcomclltOwn 0
O.y. Mcadowdale 59, Sprina. SBJth 6
Guf~d Hu. Trinity 14, Beachwood 6

MiaiAippi 11l. VU&gt;dabillt4
NW Uuiaiana lS, N'w:holb SL 1
North c..,lino 49, Tulone 0
S. Carolint St. 37, Qarlelloa South·

I

16.Wloconlin . .......... .l+O

181

E. T~SL31, VMI21

Evuuville 3S, ~y. Wedeyan T1
Florida 31, Tmnmacc 0
Aorida SL S6, Wake Forc~t 14
0ooroi1 70. NE l..wioiom 6
Gnnihlin1 SL 87, M"''tn SL 12
1ndwY l9, K"'!Uclo.y 29
Jackaon St 3S, Florida A&amp;.M 34
JacUonville St. 21, Ala.-8i.nning.ham

7

911
1&amp;6
181
661
615

01110 ............... 0

Col. Wauenon 53, Col. Academy 0

Aibnlu St. 41, S. lllinoi.a 14
Aubwn 30. LSU 26
Cent t-1orida 41, Belhuno-Cookman

9

II . Altbama ................ l -0-0
12. Tc:ua A.t.M ..........l-0-0
13. Nonh Carolina ......2-G-0
14. VirJinil Toch ...... .. J-D-0
IS. TCIU .....................2-Q-O

w. Mid&gt; ........... ! 0
BOSU ....... ..... ! 0
c. Midi............ ! 0
Ka~l................. l 0
To!edo ..............o o

CantDn McKinley 11 , Louisville 14
(01)
C1c. Calholic 18, Clc. ND-C. 7
Clc. St. Iflati\11 2.8, Tal . SL Fnncia11
Col . Linden-McKinley 25, Mtrion
Ctth. 6

0

11

nconlo u ol Sq&gt;&lt;. 11, IOUI pomo buod
oo 25 p&lt;i.ntl for 1 fua r,llce vote through
one poi.nl few a 2Slh p ace vot.r.. and list
week'I final ranking:
Lut

Is1111

Cansoo Cath. 7, Wamn Kennedy 0

Alc.om St. 39, Al.ab.mt SL 1
Appo.UdUon S&lt; 45, N. Corolino AU

Hae are lhe Top 25 teama in the AaJo.
cl11cd Prcu coUcgc football poll, with
fin:t·pltce votca in puanhcact, cum:nt

•

Bdlliro '!I, lldiooo 21

Yale V, Drown 16

AP Top 25 college poll

;' •

Saturday's action
Akron Calh. 7, Warren Kennedy 0

s,....,...37.R.....,36
V'UJPni&lt; Toch 12. Booton Co11qJe 1

Mondty, SrpL 26

•

Ohio H.S. scores

Sl Pl:ta-'1 23, Siala ZZ

Denver at Buffalo, 9 p.m.

I

Non-conference action
Chicago 29. Cue Wettem 27
Dof~.~.nCC 34, Adriat! 14
OrOY~ City 31, Bluffton 7
Mount Sl.Joacph 21, Malmc 14
Urt.n• 28, Manchetta 13
Younptown SL 13, E. Kcntuc.i.y 6

Rhode t.w.d 27, Norlheut&lt;m 11l

New f.naland tl Detrott. 4 p.m.
New Orleana at San Fnncisco, 4 p.m.
PiUJb.qh "Suule, 4 p.m.
Su Dicco at LA. Raickn., 4 p.m.
Olicago at N.Y . Jell, Bp.m.
OPEN DATE : Arizona, Dallu, N.Y.
Gl&amp;nu. ~ iladelphia

~

Wmm.ina1c:r, Pa. 17, Flndlly 14

w.,...

ON aNNATI at Howton, 4 p.m.

I, :

Mid-States Football As.llllC.

PMo 27.
7
PMo SL 61,t""' 2t

s.....,. Sept.l!
ALlanta at Wuhinatcn, 1 p.m.
a..EVEU.ND It lndianapolia, I p.m
LA . Ram~ at Kanau City, I p.m.
Miami tl Minncaou, 1 p.m
Tampa Bty tl GIU2I Bty, I pm.

---.

A•h.land 3S, Michigan Tech 7

Vill4flov• lt (01}
Duqucane l, Oaoqaown, D.C. 0
Eut Carolino 31, Tempi&lt; 14

Week 4 slate

'

Midwestern
Intercollegiate Conr.

Dclawa.n~l8,

Detroit at Dallu, 9 p.m.

\

Assoc. or Mldellsl Colleges
Th(llllat More 35 , Wilmington 'l7

Buffalo St. 31, Caniaiw 6

Tonight's game

.. '

hf.ricw

East

San Franciac:o 34, LA. Rama 19
N.Y. Oi.anu 31, Wuhingtm2J
Kanaaa City 30, ALiuw. 10

'

0

BoolmU.31,Mm•U
BuckncU 32., S. Connoeticu1 7

Miami 21,N.Y. l&lt;U t4

'

Kenyon 2S , Oberlin 0
Ohio Wesleyan 21, W001ter 10
Wincnberg 38, Earlham l 0

Major college scores

Olicaso 14

18. UCLA ...

Alleghmy 42. Ocnisoo 0

0
0
l

Colondo at Mi.~
Miami, Ohio at Mic:hlpn State
MimeiOLI st K.an.u ~lite (n)
RulJCD at Pam State
Putduc • N0011 Ouno
HO\llton at O!tio Su.t.e

LA . R&lt;idcn 41 , Dalvcr t6
San Dieao 24, Setule to

'x_

North Coust Conference

o

lndld\.1 at WUccmin
Iowa tl Ortaon

New England 31, CINCINNATI 28
New Orfcanl9, Tunp 8ty 7

llll;gd
1. Flaid.o (33) ........ ..... 3-0.0
l NcbmU (20).......... 3·0.0
) . Aorido SL (3) .......... ).().0
4. Michi&amp;an (I) .. ........ .2.()..0
S. Penn S"t. (3) ... .......... 3-0-0
6. Miomi (t) ................2-0.0
1. Colondo .................2·0.0

o

C.W. Pool 21. Wqncr 17
Colga1e 20, Dutmoulh 16
Coriiectialt 36, Richmond 21
ComeU ll, Princdon 16

ll

r .... Chriltion 3t, tu..u 21
FarWnt
lloiH SL 17. Navoda 21

The Little Marauders jumped
out on top early in the game when
Zach Meadows scooped up a fum ble and dashed 25 yards for a score,
Roush added the extra points.
Roush then returned a punt 45
yards for a score and his second
extra point of the game gave Meigs
a 16-0 lead with 3:24 left in the
first period. Roush then added a 35
yard run and a IS -yard scamper to
build to the Marauder lead. Meadows added the extra points on the
last two td's one on a run and
another on a pass from Aaron Van-

lnwagen.
John Hill added 22 yards to the
Meigs ground game in eight carries. Jimmy Yeauger added three
carries for 20 yards and Meadows
two carries for 16 . Vanlnwagen
was one for three in the air for
eight yards, to Grant Abbou.
If Roush didn't do enough on
offense he also led the Marauder
defense with eight tackles and and
interception. John Ambrose, Tangy
Laudermilt and Yeauger also had
good defensive game.
Meigs (2-0) will race Alexander
in Albany on Thursday.

Other Ohio
college scores

. .., Saturday's slate

Buffalo 1S, How:ton 7
AU.ladelphia 13, &lt;men Bay 7
Pitubuzah 31, lndianr.pOOa 21

Isllll

0
0

Obto Athletic Conference

a.EVELAND 32, AtWm 0

'.

ll;l.
0
0
0

Baldwin -Wall.aoc 21, Heidelberg 6
Ctpi.tal 23, Ohio Northern 17
Hinm 21, Mullin
2D
John Carroll 21.
14
Mount Union 29, Ow:rbein 0

S.fuday's scores

Mimcao~a 42,

0
0
0
0
l
1
1
I
I
I
2

Saturday's scores

Watern Dhillon
San Fnnciloo ... 2 l 0 .667

l
3
2
2
2
2
2
2
I
I
0

Penn State 61, IO'Io'a 21
Now Dame 21 , Mic:hiJan State 20
Ohio State '1:1, Pitubw)h 3
IUinDil J4o, N. lllinW 10
1ndwY l9, Kal-y 29
Colondo SS, Wilocmin 17
Mimmota 40. San Diego State 11

Dlvlalon

1 0 .661 62
1 0 .lOO 34

Ownll

.!!: L I .!!: L I

Michigan St ... 0 0 0.000

~aun. .

Colorado 5S . Wiscm.1in 11
Colorado SL 28, Brigham Yollrlg 21
Premo St. 2A, Ot-egoo St. 14
H.wali 21, CaliftXnia7
Humboldt St 23, C1l Po!y-SLO 19
ld.aho48, UNLV 38
LouiJvillc 25. Arizona SL 22
Monuna 49. E. Wuhinglon 29
N. Ari.:tma41 , 1dahoSt.19
Northwe.tcm 14, Air Force 10
Paciflc 21, SW Tuu St. 7
S. Uuh 41, WCilcm SL,Colo. 26
St. Mary's, CU 4S, Sm0011 St. 21
Stanford Sl, San J01e St. 20
Ullh 34. (),qoo 16
Weber St 41, Mmwu SL 13
Wyomin&amp; I 7, Tultt1

This week's slate

NFL standings
Iuw.

CS Northridge S2. UC Davis 13

Meigs jumped out to a 24..() fmt
period lead and rolled to a 32-8 win
over Belpre in seventh grade football action last Thursday evening at
Middleport.
Marauder Justin Roush continues to demolish opponents. Roush
carried just three times for 74
yards, all three carries went for
touchdowns. So far in the season,
Roush has carried the ball nine
times for 256 yards (28.4 yards a
carry) and five touchdowns. He has
also added two (ouchdowns on a
punt returns.

National Football Luaw:
NEW YORK JETS : Waivad KeMy
Shedd, wide receiver. Siped Tuinetu
Alipate, linebtcker, from the practice
aq\Jid.

Hock•Y
National Hotkey ........

ANAHEIM MIGHTY

DUCKS ,

SiiJled R111dy Ltdouccur tnd Don McSween, defcruemm; John Tanner, &amp;Oil-

lender; Denny Lambert 1nd Dcaa E"wcn,
left wingc:n; and Shtun Van Allen, center, to multiyear oontaaa.

BUFFALO SABRES ' Siped Pot Ll·
Font.r.ine, &lt;:enta, to a fivo-year eontncl
t.JI.t.c:naicm.

CHICAGO BLACKHAWK.S: Rauunod l!ri&lt; t..Compto. 1d\ wift&amp;, to llull
of the Quebec: Major Junior Hockoy

L.a..~
DAUAS STARS: Aa1iped Robin
o....... JeJf a. and On.rll Marshall, r•.
warda; Trnia Richank, 4cltii'IM'IWl, and
Mumy Pcnandc&amp;, ra'laldcr, 50 Kalarat·
zoo of lbe ln\Cmauontl Hockey Letpe.
RdUmod Junie l..an&amp;mbrunnc:r, center, to
Peterborouah of tTte Onllrio Hockey
~a

Would You
Rather
Advertise To
People Who
e Looking
Or People
Who Are
Shopping?
•

Newspaper readers don't look at newspaper ads to be
polite. They aren't browsing for the sake of browsing. Or just
poking around to kill some time. They're looking cause they
want to buy.
In fact, 71% of newspaper readers say that's where they
turn for shopping advice. It's their medium of choice for information on where to shop and what to buy. So it's no surprise that they also rank as the best customers for products
as diverse as appliances to credit cards, investment adviee to
wine. Pretty powt;!'ful stuff, that newspaper advertising. It
not only enables ·
you to reach a
very desirable
audience. It allows
you to do it when
they're in the
mood to buy.
Give us a call at
992-2155

....

HARTFORD WHALERS : Si,nod
Marek Malik, dof..-nan. to 1 muhiyeu
c:ontnc:t. AMounc:ed lha1 Jeff O'Neill,
center, hu )aft c:tmp_ •z:ad rotumod \0
Oudpl! or tho Ontuio IIOC:Uy Lot au~

MONTREAL CANADIEN$: AI·
tigncd Brent Bilodeau tni Chri1tian
ProoU, de(..._ t o - o{ tho

Amaioaot H&lt;&gt;&lt;key Looi"-

I'IIILADELI'HIA FLvms,

Aim_,!

Ana Brimonio. Milot 11o1ut, r ..... S'lltdwilh •nit Bob Wilkie, deten~craeo. aDd
R)'Ill Sittler, loft wiq. to ~~&lt;ahoy ol tho
Amori&lt;on lloclt Lot
ST. LOUis"kL~ Auipod !off
Bttten, del'enatrna.n, and P.trice Tmlil,
forward, to Poori1 ol tho letGmalioa.a1
LetJUO.

The Daily Sentinel
"It's the best way to close a sale",
I

Monday, September 19, 1994

The Dally Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By posting 21-7 victory,

Zanesville Rosecrans drops Eastern from unbeaten ranks
Two unbeatens came together,
but one went home with a mark in
the loss column. For Eastern, it was
a lon g ride home Saturday night as
Zanesv ille Rosecrans (3 -0) handed
th e Eagles (2· 1) a 21-7 defeat in ·
what was one heck of a high school
football game.
Dubbed as a "must see" game, it
was eve rything the fan could hope
for; exce pt if you were an Eastern
fan.
Eastern head coach Dave Barr
said , "The lcids played hard to stay
at 6-0 for three quarters. This was a
game of m1ssed opportunities for us,
but we were up again st a good,
ph ys ica l football team . I give our
kid s credit for being able to bend,
but not break. We made some big
plays defen sively. The score was
certainly no indi cator of the final
outcome."
Eas tern led 7-6 with 11 :53 to go
in the game.
Zanesville scored first in the ftrst
qu arter wh en Sam Cronin bl asted

through on a two -yard run. That
completed a 10-play sustained drive,
anchored by six Cronin carries. In
that dri ve he picked up a big chunk
of hi s 35 first quarter yards. Z· R
tri ed a fake ki ck and th e pass
attempt we nt out of the end zone
incomplete, the score 6-0 at the 2:58
mark.
Eastern
had
several
opportunttJ es. On th e fir st
possession, Ryan Buckley caught a
pass in the flat and as Barr says "had
on e br oke for a T D," but the
Zanesv ille defender caught his heel
and tripped him up. Still Buckley
gained a big 50-yard gainer. EHS
turned it over on downs.
Later, EHS was in the shot gun
and had Bissell in the end zone wide
open. Jason Sheets tipped the 'Jail,
then a defender tipped the ball just
before it hit beyond tile outstretched
hands of Charlie Bissell.
In the sec ond quarter, Eastern 's
Travis Curtis had a wide open field
in front of him. but pressure from

the defense caused him to drop the 1 yard s and EHS go t an other first
ball.
down, but a couple of penalties
Z- R threa tened in the second pushed th e ball back. Bowen was
quarter deep in Eastern territory, but forc ed to punt . It ti&gt;ok an Eas tern
the EHS defense held and Z-R roll as it rolled inside the 15-yard
turned 11 over on four downs.
line. Cronin tried to return the ball
Eastern played great defense in and fumbled. Barr said, "We had
the thtrd quarter, keepmg Z.R deep good punt coverage. Th e hit s
1n thetr own temtory most of the sounded like guns going off . I don ' t
frame. Eastern threatened agam but know who got it , but the whole
could not score.
team was around "
EHS was in the shot gun late in
Eastern took over on the Z-R 14
Jhe third o n . a 12 -yard run by with a great r hance to score, and
quarterback Bnan Bowen. He .rolled possibly pull off the win , but the
to the nght, then facmg a blttz .. he Bishops' defense pressured Bowen
had 10 scramble left. Meanwhile, into a fumble and Zanesville got the
Curtis worked way open and carne ball right back.
back to the ball for a three-yard TD
Z-R marched down the fi eld
reception to make the score 7-6 with caught EHS in a blitz, and Croni~
11:53 left m the game.
.
ran 35 yards on a draw play up the
EHS kicked off to Zanesvtlle. middle . The kick was good with
EHS had them thud and long, but 1:58 to play in the game. Eastern
Shawn Shawger caught a 35-yard got a nice return from Sheets and
halfback touchdown p~ to give Z. pulled off a couple ftrst down~. but
R a 14-7 lead as Cronm ran m the penalties stalled the drive as tim e
two-point conversion.
ran out on the Eagl es.
Sheets returned the ball to the 50
Sheets ran the ball six tim es for

only 12 yards, but had a good all·
purpose night for nearly 200 yards.
Bissell ran it three times for five
yard s, and Buckley one tim e for
three yards. Bowen led all rushers
with six carries for 35 yards.
Buckley caught se ven passes for
98 yard s in a goo d indi vidu al
perfonmance, and Otto had two fo r
12. Curtis caught two ror 15 and a
touchdown. Bissell caught one for
sev en yards and Shee ts ca ught
another pass.
Otto had an intercepti on return
fo r 15 yards.
For the winners, Cron in had a
tremendous night with 21 carries for
158 yards . Brad Barcla y had 14
carries for 74 yards. Cronm caught
two for 42 yard s, and Shawg cr
ca ught thre e for 70 ya rd s an d a
touchdown .
Bow en co mpl eted 13 of 33
attempts for 128 yards passing and
had one touchdown in additi on to
tw o punts that roll ed wi thin 10
yards. One of those came at the start

of the rourth quarter.
Barr concluded, "At one point,
we could have easily been up 21..0.
We made some big plays, but we let
so me get away. We carne up against
a tough football team. Cronin has
my all-state vote. He's a man. He's
one of the best natural runners I've
seen. I th ink this was a good test for
us. Now we have to loo k to next
week."
Quarter totals
Rosecrans ............ 6 0 0 15 = 21
Eastern .................O 0 0 7 = 7

Statistics
ZR
Department
E
13
First downs .................... 10
Rushing atl.-yds....... 16-49 41 -258
134
Passing yards ............... 128
392
Total yards ................. .. l77
7-12
Comp.-au .......... ~ ...... 13-33
I
Interceptions thrown .......0
2-1
Fumbles-lost ....... ......... l-1
5-40
Penalti es .................... .4-30
6-35
Punting-avg ............... .8-37

Childers, Wireman, Isner &amp; Adkins among Skyline winners
STEW ART - Parkersburg ,
W.Va.'s Jason Minnite was well on
his way to his first Skyline Late
Model feature win , however, the
young talent got a litlle anxious and
St. Mary's Bill Childers took
advantage of the opportunity to
take the win Friday night at Skyline
Speedway in Stewart.
Kirk Isner took: the Limited Late
main, Roger Wireman claimed the
modifieds, Dan Walker won the V·
8 Pure Stocks and Grumpy Adkins
took the Four-Cylinder Pure
Stocks. Nearly I 00 cars were in the
pits.
Thirty-two late models were in
the pits, prompting a 16-car consi,
four heats and a 20-car feature. In
the excitin~ Late Model main, dash
winner Mmnite jumped into the
early lead over high-flying Chuck
Harper. Harper then dropped out
early, leaving Quaker City's Tye

Long and Childers in pursuit
Minnite was flat out flying in
his home-owned 1121 Rayburn
Chassis. No one was going to catch
the up-and-coming star as he raced
well ahead of the pack for the first
20 laps. Then with five laps to go,
Minrtite got crossed up, but rccov·
ered in time to salvage a third; too
late, however, to stay ahead of Bill
Childers and Tye Long.
Long pressured Childers up
until the checkered flag, but
Childers was able to hold on for the
lead.
Track champion Bob Adams Jr.
won the second heat, but a dragging brake, glowed a bright red and
melted the center out of his right
rear wheel.
Jeff Woods in the Don Wood
Rayburn was fourth, Dan Morrison
fifth, followed by Bobby Mossor,
Mike McDaniel, Ryan Markham,

Andy Bond and Leroy Ferguson.
Other heat winners were Jeff
Burdette and Buckwheat Shutts .
Aaron Fleming took the consi over
Andy Bond and Ryan Cline.
In the long -running drama
between Kirk Isner and Ed Yenham, Isner played out the plot and
carne home the hero ahead of an:h
rival Venham. Roger Garnes was
third, Todd Smith fourth, Chris
Stott's in T.R. Cullums car fifth,
rookie Lonnie Darst in his first
time out sixth, Roger Cozad, Mithc
Brunton, John Williams and Brian
Conkel.
Heats went to Cozad and Isner.
The modified main went to
Chesapeake's Roger Wireman followed by the up-and-coming Tim
Tribby, Keith Btlls, Kirk Isner, Bob
Adams Jr., Jeff Cunningham, Steve
Huntley, Donnie Nething, Allen
Hibbard, and Ron Williams.

Heats went to Wireman and
This week will sec Skylin e
Davey Groves.
Speedway will host one of th e preDan Walker in the number 42 mier regional events in late model
and 3/4 car won the V-8 Street racing, the Annual Skoal -Harvest
Stock feature over Rod Cunning- 50 paying $2,500 to win for Late
ham, Evan Chichester, Jay Rutter, Models, $200 to start. Al so troFrankie Roush , Ed House, Brett phies will be awarded in all other
Irwin, Mike Pumey, Jerry Lemley divisions. Then on Saturday, Oct. I
and Don Ross. Ross carne off the S!cyli~e will host the Pure Stock
tail a lap down to get back in the Nationals, another season-ending
top ten after suffering an early flat b:ggie for V-8 Pure Stoc ks, Four
tile.
Cylinders and Modifieds.
Heats went to Dan Walker and
SUMMARY
Evan Chichester.
Late models
High school junior Grumpy
Dash: Jason Minnite, Chu ck
Adkins claimed the win in the Harper, Tye Long, Bill Childers,
Four-Cylinder Pure Stocks. Adlcins Jeff Woods, Dan Morrison.
defeated Mark Frost, Doug
Heat: Jeff Burdette, Ryan
Boudinot, BiU Doran, Tony Roush, Warkharn, Mike McDaniel, Ryan
Kurl Stacy, Keith Zimmerman, Cline, Aaron Fleming, Brian Eaton,
Sleve Roberts, Earl Reeves and Chris Smith, Mike Sampson.
I ason Ashcraft.
Heat: Bob Adams Jr ., Bobby
Heats went to Mike Baker and Mossor, Larry Bond, AI Flohr ,
Adlcins.
Dick Grimm.
Heat: Buckwheat Shutts, Leroy
Ferguson , Bobby Keith, Dave
Willoughby, Rod Erdy.
Consi-Aaron Fleming, Andy
Bond, Ryan Cline, Mike Sampson,
He lost the finals of the 1979 Brian Eaton, Chris Smith, Rod
U.S. Open and the 1980 French N~well, Greg Mitchell, Dave
Open. In one of his finest matches, Willoughby, Rod Erdy.
Feature: Childers, Long, Min Gerulaitis rallied to beat Roscoe
mte,
Woods, Morrison, Mossor,
Tanner in the semifinals of the
N:cDaniel,
Markham, Bond, Fergu 1979 U.S. Open afier trailing by
son.
two sets and down a service break.
Limited Lates
Heat: Roger Cozad, Roger Gal'·
He won the Italian Open in 1977
and 1979. In 1977, he lost in the
Wimbledon semifinals, falling to
Bjom Borg in a five-set tiebreaker.
He won the 1975 Wimbledon doubles title with Sandy Mayer.
In 1979, he won four tournaThe University of Rio Grande
ments and five or six Davis Cup
men's cross country team finished
matches to help the United States second out a field of nine teams
retain the tille. He played on the
Friday in the Wright State InvitaU.S. team from 1977-80.
tional, earning 56 points behind
first-place Morehead State, which
Gerulaitis, No. 4 in the world in
netted 37.
The women's !eam was fifth out
1984, won 27 singles titles and nine
of II teams with 133 points. The
doubles championships and had
University of Toledo took fir st
career earnings of more than $2.7
million.
place with 38.
"We're running well up front,"
Gerlaitis is survived by a sister,
Rio Grande Coach Bob Willey
Ruta, and his mother, Alodonna
commented. "We need to close the
door better with our four and five
runners. We're plagued by injuries
now and not running as we should,
Lovesy and Andi Rolston each had but we'll look for brighter things at
six, Lynn L'Heureux and Angine the Rio Grande Invitational."
Dennsons each had five, Tracy
Individually for the men's team,
Worley two and Misty Markham Scou Wenger placed second overone.
all in 25:46 behind Berea College's
In spiking, Jenny Cun&gt;!iuns was Henno Haava (25: 10). Also placing
14-14 with seven kills, Jess Codner for the Redmen were Mark Benhad five, Andrea Moore four, nell, fifth, 26:37; Chris Smith,
Sammi Sisson three while going ninth, 26:57; Chris Davisson, 15th,
14-14, Renee Turley three, Brianne 27:15; Bobby Hunter, 30th, 28 :10;
Proffitt two and Jonna Manuel one. Hidemitsu Maeda, 39th, 28:49;
Sammi Sisson had II assists, Andy Schorr, 40th, 28:57; and Bart
going a perfeet 29-29, a great feat Goble, 72nd, 30:53.
for handling the ball nearly thirty
In the women's race, Rio
times. Moore had a great nighl as Grande's Ann-Marie Hynes was
well, gaining four assisl'l on a 20- third overall at 19:45 behind Tiffin
University's Beck Cook, second at
21 effort.
Receiving-wise, Norris was 15- 19:38, and the University of
16, Amber Thomas was 8-10 with Cincinnati's Julie Snyder, first at
a good defensive perfonnance. Sri- 19:12.
Hynes was quickly followed in
anne Proffitt was 8-9.
In the reserve contest, the Tor- sixth place by Tricia Cunningham,
nadoes won 15-6 and 15 -12 to 20:51; Kara Ulmer, 21st, 21 :31;
remain undefeated in eight tries. Jennifer Reyer, 51st, 23:24; and
Teresa Davis, 63rd, 24:37.
They are 6..() in the TVC.
Wright State marked the second
Amber Thomas led the Tornadoes with 16 points, Cynthia had race of the season for Rio Grande,
five, Emily Duhl five and Keri · which opened Sept. 10 at Ohio
Caldwell four. For Alex, Larric had Universttv's invitational. Both
nine, Lanning three, Starling three,
and Russell, McCabe and King one
each.
Brianne Proffitt had four kills,
and Cynthia Caldwell and Amber
lbomas each had two kills.
Jenni Roush said, 'This resave
team plays together so well. I am
very proud of them."
The freshman teams played only
.two games and the set ended in a
tie. Southern won 15-5 and Alex
claimed a 15-4 win.
Por Southern, Jenny Friend had
•
nine \)Oints on eight aces, while
Valene Cundiff had five, Crystal
Barnett three and Jenny Roush two.

Gerulaitis found dead at friend's home
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP)
- Vitas Genulaitis, a free-spirited
tennis professional who won the
1977 Australian Open and later
became a broadcaster, was found
dead at a friend's home.
An autopsy on the 40-ycar-old
was scheduled for today. Police
said there was no indication or suspicious circumstances when they
found Gerulaitis' body Sunday
afternoon at a friend's home.
Gerulaitis played tennis last
Wednesday in Seattle on the Champions Tour, a circuit for men's
players 35 and over. He withdrew
from the event the next day
because or a bad back.
. "The whole tennis community
is going to be in shock and really
saddened," said fonner player Tim
Mayotte, who played golf and tennis with Gerulaitis this summer.
"He brought heart and enthusiasm
and life to tennis, and dial's really
rare.''
An excellent shot-maker who

played tennis and partied at Manhattan's nightclubs with equal flair,
Gerulaitis reached the No. 3 rank·
ing in 1977 and made the fmals of
the U.S. Open and French Open in
1979 and 1980.
He acknowledged using cocaine
during the late 1970s and 1980s
and said his drug use and late
nights undercut his ability as a
player. He was treated for substance abuse and was implicated,
thou~h never charJ(ed, in a cocainedealing conspiracy in 1983.
But for all his excessess, Gerulaitis remained a durable and
imposing player, outlasting many
opponents not only with deft volleys or drop shots, but with strength
and perseverance.
"He was an incredible talent,
quick, scrappy, had a good fore hand," Mayotte said. "But he
didn't have thai one big weapon. I
think he maxed out on his talent."
Gerulaitis, who left the main
tour in 1985, worked a week ago

for CBS at the U.S. Open as a studio analyst He also played in lhe
men's 35 and over doubles event
during the toumwnent.
"That's a very big loss for tennis because of Vitas' personality
and his play," tennis star Michael
Chang said. "He was very easy
~ing. All the players were able to
]Oke around with him. He was very
easy to talk to."
Chang spoke Sunday night after
losing an exhibition match to John
McEnroe in Berkeley, Calif.
McEnroe, who knew of the death
before laking the court, left immediately after playing and issued a
statement through the ATP Tour.
"I won this match for my buddy
Vitas and I'm too disuaught to talk
about it," he said.
A New Yorker with shaggy
blond hair, Gerulaitis enjoyed some
or his best moments at the U.S.
Open, a tournament not far from
his birthplace in Brooklyn or his
home on Long Island.

NFL action ...

touchdowns and two interceptions.
Faulk, who was held to just 61.
49er.. 34, Rams I9
Montana completed 28 of 39
Bam Morris, Poster's rookie back.At Anaheim, Cali£., Steve up, had one TD and set up another
passes, with tosses of 13 and 34
yards to JJ. Birden. The Chiefs are · Young went 31-for-39 for 355 score, helping the Steelers over3-0 for the ftrst time since 1966, yards and two touchdowns, I erry come a 14-0 Indianapolis lead.
w"en they ended up in the first Rice had 11 receptions for 147 Vikings 42, Bears 14
yards, John Taylor had seven for
SLper Bowl, losing to Green Bay.
At Chicago, Warren Moon final·
103 and tight end Brent Jones had ly hit stride, completing 22 of 29
Dolphins 28, Jets 14
At Miami, the Dolphins con- six for 60 for San Francisco (2·1). passes for 236 yards, and getting
trolled the game from the outset Deion Sanders, signed last week. as plenty of help from Terry Allen
a free agent, made his debut for the and Cris Carter. Moon sparked an
and the Jets wilted in the heat
Terry Kirby rushed for a career· 49ers, but had little impact
auack that had just one touchdown
Jerome Bettis rushed for 104 before meeting the Bears (1-2).
hijlh I00 yards and the Dolphins'
Allen, who had two touchdown
inJury-plagued defense intercepted yards and a 2-yard TD for the
runs, gained 159 yards on 22 carfour passes by Boomer Esiason. Rams (1-2).
Eagles 13, Packers 7
ries for Minnesota (2-1 ). Carter had
Dan Marino fmished 23-for-31 for
Reggie
White's
return
to
eight
his nine catches for 79 or
289 yands and two scores.
Philadelphia
was
a
disappoinunent
his
86
yards
in the ftrst half. Jake
The quick start bodes well for
the Dolphins, who made the play· for lhe star defensive end, who was Reed caught seven for 90 yards.
Patriots 31, Benpls 28
offs six of the seven previous times double- ~~p,le-teamed and had
only three
es. He did, howevAt Cincinnati, the Bengals fell
they began 3..0.
er, draw three holding calls on to 0· 3 as New England ( 1-2) kept
Chargers 24, Seabawks 10
up il'l offensive onslaught
At Husky Stadium -the King- tackle Broderick Thomas.
Bill Romanowski, William
Drew Bledsoe had a club-record
dome's roqf is being repaired San Diego moved to its best start in Puller and Burt Grossman, three · fourth straight 300-yard game,
13 years. Stan Humphries and veterans brought in to replace going 30-for-50 for 365 yards .
Tony Martin Ieallled on 8 99-yard deparled free agents White, Clyde Michael Timpson had 10 recep·
touchdown pus and Stanley Simmons and Seth Joyner, led a lions for 125 yards and Ben COllieS
·
Richard ran back an interception 73 defense that had six sacks, two added 108 on eiahL
interceptions and a forced fumble
Salall9,1iUCCIIIlftn 7
yands for a score.
for Philadelphia (2-1). Green Bay
At Tampa, the Saints defense
Gluts 31, Redsldus 23
made 8 ltlrlliiiOUDd aflu two weak
The host Giants rode the vma· is 1-2.
Steeiers 31, Colts 21
efforts, allowing just one touchtility of Dave Meggett, replacing
At
Pittsburgh,
with
the
Steelers
down. In its rust two losses, New
injured Rodney Hampton in the
backfield. Meggett had two sh~rt decked out in garish unifonns rep- Orleans (1-2) yielded 68 points.
All of the Saints' IICOI'ing came
scoring runs and a 16-yard TD resenting the 1933 Piusburgh
. pass, his third in as 01any career Pirates football team, Pittsburgh on field goals lly Morten Andcnen,
tries - all against the Redsk.ins (1· oulgained Indianapolis (1-2) 500. from 43 yards twice and from 31.
179,led by the ground game.
The Buccaneers (1-2) missed a
2) •
Barry
Postel
ran
for
179
yards,
54-yard
field goal as time expired.
John Friesz hit 32 of 50 for 8
upstaging
Colts
rookie
Marshall
career-high 381 yards, with two
to I4-5, including 12ofhislast 13.

or

Kevin Haught, John Williams.
Heat: Kirk Isner, Mitch BruntGn. Ed Venharn, Chris Stotts.
Feature: Kirk Isner, Ed Venham,
R:.ger Garnes, Todd Smith, Chris
Stotts, Lonrtie Darst, Cozad, Brun·
ton, Brian Conkel
Modifieds
.
Dash : Roger Wireman, Tim
Tribby, Keith Bills, Kirk Isner.
Heat : Dav ey Grove s, Steve
Huntley , Bob Adam s Jr. , Ron
Williams,

Feature: Roger Wireman, Tim
Tribby, Keith Bills, Isner, Adams ,
Jeff Cunningham, Huntley,
Nething, Hibbard, Williams.
V-8 Pure Stocks
Heat: Dan Walker, Gary Elder,
Kim Wright, Rod Cunningham,
Heat: Evan Chichester, Steve
Bigley, Don Ross, Jay Rutter, Brett
Irwin.
Feature: Walker, Cunningham,
Chichester, Runer, Frankie Roush,
Ed House, Irwin, Mike Putney,
Jerry Lemley and Don Ross .
Four-Cylinder Pure Stocks
Heat: Mike Baker, Mark Frost,
Earl Reeves, Bill Doran.
Heat: Grumpy Adkins, Kurt
Stacy, Keith Zimmerman, Steve
Roberts.
Feature: Adkins, Mark Frosl,
Doug Boudinto, Doran, Rony
Roush, Stacy, Zimmerman,
Roberts, Reeves, Ashcraft.

Rio Grande cross country
teams place in invitational

Southern sextets defeat Alexander in twinbi/1
Southern swept a varsity-reserve a 15-6 smoker in the finale.
fitt 6-8 with ftve points and a team
doubleheader Thursday night to
The whole Southern team high four aces. Amy Weaver went
boost its·overall record to 4-4 and shared in the spotlight as all con- 6-6 with four points, while Andrea
3-3 in the Tri-Valley Conference tributed in posting the key lea~e Moore went7-7 with two points.
by defeating Alexander's varsity win. Bea Lisle had 8 team·htgh
Coach Jenni Roush said, "Mter
gals 8-15, 15-12, 15-6 in an excit- nine points with a 14-15 serving getting down early, we kept our
ing three-game volleyball set.
night. Jenny Cummins was 7-8 composure and came back very
Like a fine wine, Southern got with seven points and two aces. well. I felt that Amber Thomas and
better with age; coming from a Kendra Norris had a 10-10 night Brianne Proffitt did a great job and
one-game set back to claim a hair- with six points and two aces. gave us a big lift."
raising second match, then blitzing Sammi Sisson was 12-12 with five
Sara Clark had a team -high
the Spartans out of competion with points and two aces. Brianne Prof· eight points for Alex, while Amy
-(C-o-ntin_u_ed_fro-m-Pag-e-:4:-)_ _ _...::__..;____ _ _ __

n~" ·

team s wi!i be idle next weekend
and arc Io compete again in the
annual Rio Grande Invitational on
Saturday, Oct I.

Alexander reserve
golfers defeat
Meigs, Athens
Meigs finished second in a
recent reserve golf match at The
Elm Golf Club. Host Alexander
won the event with a 179, one
stroke ti'ttcr than the Marauders'
180. Athens finished in third place
with a 193.
Sean O'Brien of Meigs and
Travis Rice of Alexander each
fired a 43 to take medalist honors.
Other Marauder scores included
Jarod Warner (45), Mick Barr,
Gary Acree and Steve McCullough
(all 46s), Joe Hill (48) . Other
Meigs golfers but with non-match
scores are Jacob Davis (47}, Matt
O'Bryant (50) and David Heighton
(51).
The Litlle Marauders now own a
4-2 mark on the year.

MHS Athletic
Boosters' meeting
set for Tuesday
The Meigs High School Athletic
Boosters will meet on Tuesday at
Meigs High School.
Marauder football coach Mike
Chancey will show films or the
Meigs-River Valley game and talk
about this week's game with
Wahama

.1,

er~

•

Correction
In Sanday's account of last Pri·
day's Meigs-River Valley football
game, it was mislakenly reported to
the Sunday Times-Sentinel staff
that Brad Davenport intercepted a
pass in the third quarter.
Mike Marshall intercepled the
pass in the third period.

E

GENERAL TIRE SALES
COMPUTER TIRE BALANCING

1614-992-71611

IHours M-F B-5 Sat8, 12\

.. 465 North Second Avenue Middleport, Ohio 45760

•

�Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Monday, September 19, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 19, 1994

Herbalists prepare for annual festival
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel news stair

..

The Rive r Valley Herbalists
Fifth Annual Herb Fest will be held
at Dave Diles Park in Middlepon
Saturday from I 0 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Herbal demonstrations will be
given throughout the day and displays will feature a vanety of dried
herbs and everlastings , wreaths ,
plants, swags and potpourris, all of
which will be for sale by the club
members.
The herbalists will also have on
display fresh herbs for seasonings
and teaS, as well as cookbooks, two
volumes of " Herbal Flavors" and
sample foods.
Also featured will be herbal cosmetics as well as dried arran~e ­
ments, along with baked goods, .JCI-

lies . vinegars, and mustards. all
made with herbs. Birdhouses and
baskets, many homemade, will also
be for sale at the Herb Fest.
Other features of the day's pro·
gram. according to Denise Arnold,
Herb Fest chainnan, will be a talk
by Hal Kneen, Meigs County
Exte nsion agent, entitled "Herb
Talk," and music at 2 p.m by Middlebranch, a local blue grass band.
The Middleport Arts Council
wi ll be serv ing refreshments,
Sharon Yencha will be featured on
her dulcimer in the afternoon, and
local artists are expected to have a
display, weather pennitting.
Mary Powell of the Meigs Park
District will have some brochures
and other literature available on
Meigs County and its recreational
opportunities.
The River Valley Herbalists was

founded in 1988 by Connie Hill,
current president, and has a membership of 40 persons from both
sides of the Ohio River.
Beautification with herbs is one
of their objectives and the club has
made herb gandens at Diles Park, at
the Meigs Museum, Blennerhasset
Island Mansion, Parkersburg,
W.Va., the River Front Park log
cabin in Ravenswood and the latest
project, a garden at Cedar Lakes in
Ripley, W.Va.
The goal of the club members
through their plantings is to preserve herbs and the knowledge of
their uses by our ancestors, sa id
Arnold.
Each month the club publishes a
six page newsletter for their members called "Our Potpourri" which
features an herb-of-the-month , an
herb pantry, book reviews, and a

lifestyle section.
A non-profit club , all of the
money raised goes back into the
community - new plants for the
gardens, or books on hems for the
library, Arnold said.' The Herb Fest
is the biggest annual fund raiser of
the group .
At Diles Park there are three
plantings, one around the flagpole,
the second a culinary whee l and
another along the old depoL
The wheel featuring cooking
herbs, oregano, dill, basil, chives,
parsley, and sal!e to mention a few,
has been fash10ned with railroad
ties for the :im and spokes.
Ornamental herbs are combined
with culinary ones for the others
plantings.
According to Arnold, Herb Fest
is designed to acquaint residents
w.th herbs and their many uses.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

•

GUN SHOOTS
START SUNDAY,
SEPT. 11, 94
1:00 P.M.
12 GAUGE
PREPARING FOR HERB FEST- With tbe fifth annua.l herb
fest less tblm a week away, members have been busy sprucmg up
the gardens at Dave DUes Park in Middleport. Here from ~he l!rt
are Denise Arnold, Sheila Curtis, Karen Werry, and Conme Hill.
The Herb Fest will be held Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

FACTORY COKE

•

gnn

New Mason Family
Restaurant
Home Cooked Meals

Man finds final resting seat behind the wheel of Corvette
Ann
Landers
"nm( Los Angel9s
Ttmes Syndtcate and
CroatOI'S Syndtcate"

Dear Allll LaDders: Everybody
in Irwin, PL. is 5liU talking about
something that happened several
week:s ago. My husband and I
thought it was extrnordinary but
cenainly nlll wrong or immoral.
What do you lhink:, Ann?
A man named George Swanson
told his wife, Caroline, lhat his last
wish was to be buried in his 1984
white Colvcue. Everyone said it was

the best-look:ing car in town. He
bought several piOlS in the cemetery
in anticipation of the event, but he
did DOl teU the cemeler)' staff what
he had in mimi. George's wife
declared that he had lived a
fabulous life and she was detMnined
to see to it that his last wish be
fulfiUed.
Geocge's ashes were placed in the
front seat. There was a large
bouquet of red roses on the hood
and only 27,000 miles on the
odometer.

The cemetery officials insisted
that the burial be private. They were
afraid that if it were an open
service, as most of them are, there
would be a mob of gawking
curiosity seekers and that hoards of

media would ovenun the grounds.
So, when the crane operators
lowered the "casket" into the grave,
only family and close friends were
presenL
My husband and I thou~ht the
whole thing was terrific. Not
everyone agreed . What do you
think:, Ann? -- R. AND D. IN
PITI'SBURGH
DSAR PITIS : I thi11k: it's
wondcrlui that Mrs. Swanson was
able to grant Geocge his wt wisiL
Unusual? Yes. Bizarre, maybe, but
it's what he wanted and it didn't
cause any harm.
George Swanson is not the fi!St
pmon who wanted to be buried in
his car. Yean ago, I wrote a column
about a man in Muskogee, Okla.,

whose last wish was the same as
Geocge's. That column appeared on
Feb. 25, 1974, and here it is:
Dear Ann Landers: fm DOl on
my deathbed, but I'm getting on in
years, and I realize I don't have too
many left. I beg of you DOl to think
I'm crazy or that rm putting you on.
My question is real.
I have a modest collection of
antique automobiles-- nOlhing great,
but a few of my favorites. The car I
love best is a 193 7 Dodge. It holds
so many pleasant memories that
whenever I look at that great
automobile, it lifts my heart and
makes me feel good all over.
What I want to know is this:
Would it be possible for me to be
buried in that 1937 Dodge? Instead

: For most peoyle •. the wo~ds
" 'summer school bnng to mmd
:;mages of hot classrooms, long lee: tures and lots of homework. However a group of teachers from
. $Outheastern Ohio and parts of
·west Virgmta, dtscovered that
:summer school isn't all that bad. In
:fact, it can be interesting and in formative when coal mining, electnct·ty and the environment are
involved.
: Judy Goddard of Washington
f,lementary School and Rick
·Edwards of Meigs High School
:were among 13 teachers who took:
:pan in "Spotlight on Coal," a three.day seminar sponsored by Southern
:Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Divi:sion.
: The program feature~ sessions
on geology. surface mmm~ ~nd
reclamation, underground mmmg,
:environmental concerns and safety.
In addition to classroom presen·tations, the teachers toured the
:Meigs Division· s underground coal
inine, its coal preparation plant and
the American Electric Power
(AEP) Fuel Supply Coal Lab.
· The underground mine tour,
which was one of the highlights of
the seminar, gave educators an upClose look at underground mining.
;The group observed. the lon~--:all
?peration and a conbnuous mmmg

The seminar panicipants represented II schools from Gallia,
Hocking, Jackson and Meigs counties in Ohio as well as Mason
County in West Virginia, according
to Jim Tompkins, vice president
and general manager of the Meigs
Division. The educators taught a
variety of subjects in high schools,
junior highs and elementary

The Community Calendar is
published as 1 free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events_ The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fundraisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
MONDAY
POMEROY - The Belles &amp;
Beaus Western Square Dance Club
will begin free fall classes 7:309:30 p.m. Monday at the senior citizens' center. Learners should
bring a panner.
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Athletic Boosters, Eastern High School
Monday, 7:30p.m.

COAL TEACHERS • Judy Goddard, third lrom right, a leather from Washington Elementary School, prepares to go on an
underground mine tour during the "Spot~gbt on Coal" leathers'
seminar. The three-day workshop, held at Southern C~l Compa·
ny's Meigs Division, gave educ:ators a better undentandmg of coal
mining, electricity and the environmemt. /
schools.
e~enfnce the educators gained,
"The past three days has been a
y alsq,received several packets
wonderful experience," said one o ·
ation, activities and ideas
teacher at the conclusion of the to take back to their classrooms and
seminar. "I have gained a lot that share with their students. S_eminar
will be very beneficial for my participants could also recetve one
classroom."
or two hours of graduate credtt
In addition to the hands-on from the University of Rio Grande.

Social Security is an independent agency
By ED PETERSON
Social Security Manager, Athens
History repeats itself. August
15, President Clinton signed historic Social Security legislation
using the same pen that President
Franklin Roosevelt had used to
sign the original Social Security
Act Aug. 14, 1935.
"For minions of Americans that
~gnature 59 years ago transformed
old age from a time of fear and
want to a period of rest and
reward," the President said as he
signed the Social Security Independence and Program Improvements
Act of 1994. The act establishes
Social Security as an independent
federal agency as of March 31,
1995.
Commissioner of Social Security Shirley Chater commented on
the

· nearly six decades since the pro~ was enacted. "When Presi ~elt

signed the Social Securi-

ty Act 59 years ago; she said, "it

would have been impossible for
him to conceive of a Social Security Administration that had 64,000
~ployees serving the needs of 42
!Jiillion ~le.
"Thu institution may have
changed in magnitude. And it is

now
changing in tenns of its place on
the federal organization chan. But
we still keep faith with Franklin
Roosevelt's original vision. Social
Security provides a competent,
comr.assionate helping hand to
poop e at the most vulnerable times
of their lives. That is a mission we
will continue to fulfiU. •
Social Security has been a pan
of a larger government agency
since 1939 when the Social Security Board became a component of
the Federal Security AJency. The
Social Security Admmistration
(SSA) was born in 1946. It has
been linked with the Department of
Health and Human Services
(DHHS) and its predecessor depanment (Health, Education, and Welfare) since 1953.
Donna Shalala, DHHS Secretary, said, "With independent agency status, the President is giving a
new level of recognition to SSA
and to aU those who m:eive Social
Security benefits and who suppon
this system through their payroll
deductions." In discussing the relationship between the a~encies­
past and future-she wd, "It has
been a long and satisfying relationship. ... Many of the relationships
and link:ages that exist among us
wiD be maintained. There will still

er.d January 19. 200 I. The law also
be a need to
coordinate the services provided by calls for a new position, Inspector
General, to be filled by the PresiSSA and HHS programs such as
Medicare and the programs of our dent. The Commissioner will
appoint a Chief Financial Officer
Administtation on Aging and the
forSSA.
disabled."
The act creates a seven-member
Reiterating their mutual combipartisan
Social Security Advisory
mitment to the customers both
agencies serve, 'commissioner Board. This Board is to meet at
Chater and Secretary Shalala issued least four times a year to review
a joint statement in which they "matters of policy" and make recsaid, 'The close working" relation- ommendations to the Commissionship between SSA and the Depan- er. The Board wiU not have a role
ment ... wiD be maintained. In par- in SSA operations. The President
ticular, SSA will continue to work will appoint three Board members;
with its HHS panners to ensure that the Speaker of the House and the
our shared customers ... continue to President pro tempore of the Senate
receive the same services through each will appoint two members.
SSA offices.... We are committed The Board members will serve
to serving the American people staggered six- year terms.
even more effectively in the years
ahead."
The 1994 act continues SSA's
responsibility for administering the
old-age, survivors, and disability
insurance (OASDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) programs. The independent agency
will continue to black lung programs.
To head the agency, the President wiU appoint a Commissioner,
and Deputy Commissioner, both
subject to Senate confirmation.
Each will be appointed for a sixyear tenn, with the initial tenn to

Racine Grange dinner to be served
The annual open dinner to be
bt&gt;Jd at the grange hall on Friday,
Oct. 7 wu planned when Racine
met Thursday night at the
bill.
The dinner to be served at 6
p_m. will be followed by a pig-in-apoke auction. ThoiiC attending are
to take a covered dish and their
own table .ervice. The meat and
bevai&amp;CI will be provided.

o-anae

The grange also scheduled a fun
ni~ht for Oct. 29 with a hayride and
wtener roast to tate place.
Dorothy Smith, master, preaided
at the meeting attended by 12
m :mbelll, four visitors and three
Yf uths. The charger was draped in
honor of a deceased member, Mrs.
Lucille Noms. Four new applications for membership were read_
The literary program was a col-

DEAR MUS: If you want to be
buried in your 1937 Dodge, you'd
beuer inf1I111 yllll' next of k:in, a
lawyer and a moniciarL Also, the
cemetery people should be notifiCCL
Each cemetery has its own
'constitution." If they agree, you
will need four or five plots to
accommodate the Dodge. The
cemelery people will also have to
obtain special equipment to lower

Daily Specials
Steaks, Sandwiches
Open Daily 7 am • 8 pm
Sundays 7 am • 5 pm
New Owners.

the car into the ground. If this is :
what you want, I hope you get iL ·
Gem of the Day: You can always ~
tell a true friend. When you've made :
a fool of yourself, he doesn't make ;
you feel that you've done a •
permanent job.

le.:tion of poems. Thel included
"F:emember When", • A Doll of
Y-,sterday", "The Rain Barrell",
":'be Washday Picnic" and
"Mamma's Apron".
It was announced that a potluck:
will be held at the next meeting of
Pomona Grange. Members were
invited to visit Star Grange on
Sept 25. Next meeting will be held
Oct. 20, 7 p.m.

DIYIIIIII CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
IISUUICE
111 81COi1tllt., Pomeroy

CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Board of Trustees, special meeting Monday, 7:30 at fire
station. Backhoe purchase to be
considered.
LETART- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 7 p.m., office
building.
TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - Fellowship
Church of Nazarene, Reedsville,
will host a revival at 7 p.m. Sept.
20-25. Leland Bud Allman win be
evangelist

Public Notice
NOTICE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
RONALO DIGANGI, WHOSE
RESIDENCE IS UNKNOWN:
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Courthouoe, Weal Second
. Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Konnetho Digangi,
Middleport, OH 45760,
Plaintiff
Caae No. 94-DR-38
Va.
Ronald Digangi, whoaa
realdence Ia unknown,

POMEROY - Big Bend Cloggers holds a beginners' class from
6-7 p.m. and intenoediates' from 7- ·
8 p.m. Sept. 20 through Nov. I at :
the Pomeroy Village Hall . For ,
infonnation, call 992-7853 or 9927795.

Defendant
Plaintiff haa brought this
action naming you ea the
Dolendent In the abovenamed court by tiling her
complaint on February 28,
1994.

Tho ob(oct ol the
complaint Ia to obtain e
divorce from you and the
demand It that uld Plaintiff
be granted a divorce from

RACINE - A support group '
for parents who home school will ;
meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at 28471
Bashan Road, Racine. Additional :
information may be obtained by ~
calling 949-3119.

youj that •

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - Third Wednes- '
day Homemakers Club, Wednes- ,
day, 10 a.m . meeting, covered dish
luncheon, noon, at Syracuse fire- "
house.

.

POMEROY - Red Cross :
Bloodmobile, Wednesday, I to .
5:30p.m. Senior Citizens Center. ,
Special need for 0 positive and 0 :
negative blood. Anyone over 17 •
can give blood.

reaaonable

dlvlelon of the pereonal
property be made; that a
raaeonable dlvlalon of the
morltal debit, If any, be
made; and lor euch other
relief aa may be proper In
law and/or eqully be
granted.
You are required to
anowor tho complaint wllhln
twenty-eight (28) dayt alter
the 1111 publication at thla
notice, which will be
publlahed once etch waok
for IIX IUCCIIIIVe Wltkl,

and the 1111 publication will
be made on October 24,
1994.

In ca10 ol your failure to

anawer

or

otherwlae

reapond at permlned by the
Ohio Rulaa ol Civil
Procedure within the time
alated, judgement by
default will be rendered
agalnat you tor the relief
demanded In the complaint.
larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of the Court ol

RUTLAND - Rutland Fire ,
Department Ladies Auxiliary, ·
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at the fire ·
station. Plans for the annual turlcey ;
supper to be made.

AHANDFUL

Common

Pleat, Melga County, Ohio
Courthoute, Weal Second
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
By: Mariano Harrlaon,
Deputy

OF CASH

THANA
GARAGE·FUL
OF STUFF

the highest bidder. The real

Public Notice
confirmation.

James M. Soulaby, Sheriff
Robert E. Lee, Attorney,
rights ol way rlghls ol
(614) 221·5216
possession and 1994 real (9) 12, 19,26; 3TC

estate taxes. Possession to
be delivered on October 1 ,

1994, providing the Court

has approved the sale. The

Administratrix olthe Estate
of Edwin Stanley Cozart aka

..
a

••

,. Complete Medical/Surgical Care
For Ear, Nose &amp; Throat lncludi

(9) 19, 26;

(10) 3, 10, 17, 24; 6TC

Administratrix

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE "

(9) 16. 1B; 2TC

of said Estate

Sealed proposals for the
reconstruction of sidewalks

Public Notice
In Racine , Ohio, wilt be
received by the Meigs SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
County Commissioners at
ESTATE
their olllce In the Meigs 27284 STATE ROUTE 124
County Courthouse, 200 COMMON PLEAS COURT,
East Second Street,
Melga County, Ohio
Pomeroy, Ohio, until 10:00
Case No. 94-CV-36
a.m. Oct. 7, and then al 1
Houaahold Realty
p.m. at said oftlce opened
Corporation, Plaintiff
and read aloud.
Vs.
Plans, specifications, and
Delton L. Garnes, Et. AI.,
bid forms may be secured
Defendants
at the office ol the Meigs
In pursuance ol an Order
County Commluloners In ol Sale from said Court to
Courthouse, 200 East me directed, I wlll offer lor
Second Street, Pomeroy, sale at public auction at
Ohio.
Melgo County Courthouse,
Each bid muat be Second Street, Pomeroy,
accompanied by either a bid Ohio 45769, on Friday, the
bond In an amount ol t 00% 14th day ol October, 1994,
of tho bid amount with a at 10:30 o'clock, the
surety oatlslaclory to the following described real
aforesaid Meigs County estate:
Commillionara or by
Situated In Salem
certified check, c.. hlero Township, Melga County,
check, or letter of credll State of Ohio, and baing In
upon a solvent bank In the Fraction 33, Town 8 North,
amount of not less than Range 15 Weal ol the Ohio
10% ol the bid amount In Compsny's purchase, and
favor altho aloreaald Molgo being doocrlbed ao follows:
County Commlsalonero. Bid
Beginning at the 40-lnch
Bonds
shall
be maple tree, Eaatt,a15 teet
accompanied by Proof ol and Nonh 519.75 toot from
Authority ol tho official or tho Southwest corner of
agent signing lhe bond.
Fraction 33; thence Weal
Bids shall be oealed and 345.80 teet to a 2D·Inch
marked es Bid tor Raclna: hickory tree; thence North
Sidewalk tmprovemento and 10 degreoa 58 minutes 00
mailed or delivered to: aeconda Weet 466.73 feet to
Melga
County e fence polti thence North
Commlaelonera, Melga 88 degraaa 1o minutes 15
County Courthouse, 200 aeconda Eest 434.62 teet to
Eoot Second Street, an &amp;·Inch dogwood tree;
Pomeroy,.Ohio 45769.
thence South 472.08 loot to
(9) 19, 26; 2TC
the point ol beginning,
contaJnlng 4.17 acres, more

ROBERT BISSEU
CONSTRUCTION'
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

915·4473

7131m TFN

estate will be sold subject
to ell leases , easements,

Laura Hazel Cozart,

ClliiOda, send $5.05.)

RUTLAND - Donations will
be accepted to help pay for Rutland's Haunted House during Halloween. Send donations to Rutland
viUage hall.

Public Notice

reason.

11562, Chicago,l/1. (X)(jJJ-{)562. (In

IS BElTER

mo.

any and all bids lor any

Is life paJsing you by? Want to
improve your social s/cills? Wri~for
Ann Landers' new boolckt, "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being
Lontly." Stnd aself-addressed, long,
busiMss-size envelope and a checJ:
or money order for $4.15 (this illeludes postage and l!andling) to:
Friellli.s, clo AM Lmtders, P.O. Bo:x

POMEROY - The FOE Auxiliary will meet 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Dues paid by Oct. I.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
· NEW &amp; USED PARIS FOR
ALL MAKES liiODELS
112·7013 OR
112·5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·100-848·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

Public Notice

Stanley Edwin Cozart
reserves the right to reject

-Community calendar-

Teachers attend
:·coal conference
section in action. "It was an eye
opener," said one enthusiastic participant after the tour. It's unbelievable the jobs that can be perfonned
underground."
The group also toured Ohio
Power Company's General James
M. Gavin Plant, located at Cheshire
and the AEP River Transponation
Division in Lakin, W.Va.
Most of the speakers and tour
guides were specialists from the
Meigs Division. However, some
speakers came from other AEP
operations. A representative. f~m
Central Ohio Coal Company JOmed
the group the ftrSt day for a presentation on surface mining and land
reclamation.
Representatives from the South. em Region of the combined operations of Columbus Southern Power
and Ohio Power companies, and
AEP Fuel Supply Department discussed learning resources that are
available to schools.

of a casket, I'd like to be sitting at
the wheel and lowered into the
grotDld. I can't see where it would
hurt anybody. I k:now it's WIUSual,
but it's something I want v«y much.
What do you think about it, Ann? MUSKOGEE, OKI.A

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
Tho Stale of Ohio, Meigs
County
No. 93CV144
The Farmers Bank and

Savings Company
Plelntlfl
VI.

Robert M. Haley, el ol
Defendants
In pursuance of an Order

ol Sole In the above entllled
action, 1wilt oner tor sale at
public auction, at the door
of the Court House In
Pomeroy, In the above

named County, on Friday,
the 14th day ol October al
10:00 o'clock a.m ., tho
following deacrlbod real
estate, situate In the County
ol Malgs and State ol Ohio,
and In the Township ol
Bedford to wit:
Being a pari ol Section
32, Town 3, and Range 13 ot
the Ohto Company's
Purchase and beginning at

lt&gt;m&lt;

BINGO
EVERY THURSDAY
EAGLES
CLUB
IN POMEROY
6:45p.m.
Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
This ad good for 1
FREE caret
Lie_No. 0051-342

LINDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.
Interior &amp;
Exterior

Toke tile pain out ol
painting. lit uo do It lor
you. Very rNoon.blt.
Free Eatlmatea
Before 6 p.m. leave
meuage.
AHar 6 p.m.
614-985-4180 1124114

Umestone
Gravel &amp; Coal
Reasoaable Rates
Jot N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

a car.
Come
see
.
us at ...

GO·KART RA(ES
Every Salurday Nile
Hot Lops 7, Races 8
Meigs Co. Fairgrounds
NEW LOW ADM.
PRICE &amp; RACING
STRUCTURE
Spe&lt;fofors Sl; Under 12 Free
Pit Pcss Sb; Under 8, Sl
NO FEE TO RACE!
m-7717 or 742-2865

1112W2tln

HAULING

Let us take
the worry
out of
renting

8i2511tn

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
•Room Additions
•New Garagaa
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing
•Roofing
olnterlor &amp; Exterior
Painting also concrete
work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

Galllpolla, Oh.
Or Call Ua At 446-9971 and

QDALIYY WIIDOW SYSTEMS
• Custom Made

• Solid vinyl
replacement
windows

• Free Estimates
• $200 Installed

Call For Details
"VISIT OUR SHOWROOM•
110"Court St. Pomg~cy, Oilio
"Look for the Red and White Awning"

992·4119 AI Tronvn Ow1er 1·800.291-5600

WIIY92tln

"Lose Weighl Like "Crazy•

D. GEARY'S

Guaranteed
Loot Poundt and lnchet

AUTO BODY
992·2096
550 Pogo 8L, Mlckltport
Fr•Eatlm-

Natural Herbal Tablets

7121/lfn

the northwest corner of

Section 32, Town 3 and

Range 13 ot Bedford
Township. Thence south
with the westline ol Section
32 to lhe lnteraectlon ol the
woot line ol Section 32 and
Township Rood 14a. Said

Now Starting
Forked Run
Sportsman Gun

west line of section 32 also

Club

being tho west line ol a 39
acre parcel conveyed by
William Beal to Bobby
Vance and Drexel Vance

Gun Shoot

and recorded In Volume

255, Page 651, Meigs
County Deed Records,
thence In a ooutheaeterly
direction along the middle
ol Townehlp Road 148 to Ito
lnteraactlon ol County road
ta, thence In an easterly
direction following County
Road 16 to to east line ol
tho above mentioned 39

12 Gauge
Factory Only

ecre parcel. Thence north

along the aut line ot the

or lou, excepting all legal above mentioned 39 acre
right of ways.
parcel to the northeast
Subject to all eaaements, corner ol Section 32. The
Sealed bids will ba
received at the ol11ceo ot reatrlctlons, and conditions above described parcel
contains approximately 18
Little, Sheela 7 warner, 211 - ot record, II any.
Known aa 27284 Stale acres, more or lese.
213 East Second Street,
Property Addresa: 38136
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, and Route 124, Langsville, Ohio
Douglaa Road, Pomeroy,
will be opened on the date 45742.
Auditor's Parcel tjo. 13- Ohlo45769.
and at the lima ol the sale.
Said premises appraised
All sealed written bids 00639.002.
Appralaed at $20,300.00.
should have on the
at and cannot be eold for
Torma ol Sale: To be aold leoa than 2/3 rds ol that
envelope "Saaled bid ·
Cozart Eotato, to be opened tor not leu than two-thirds amount.
on 9/21/94 (or 9/2a/94)". ol the appraised value.
James M. Soutoby, Sheriff
Anyona lntereated may $3,000.00 cashier's check
Melga County, Ohio
attend the oale and oller only at time of sale. Balance
Lerner, Sampaon &amp;
additional bids al that time. coahler'o check only wllhln
Rothfusa, Attorneys
The property Is to be sold to thirty (30) days after (9) 12, 19, 26; 3TC
Public Notice

11

1

Card ol Thanks

HeartleH thanka lor
all the prayers for my
huaband during hla
lllneu_ For the
llowera, food, carda,
calla, and worda of
comfort alnce hla
death. Wish to thank
the Veteran'• Service
office, Raher Funeral
Home, and Paator
Lamar O'Bryant for
the aervlee and for
being there for me.
God BleaaAII
Franc:. . Hendrix

Help Wanted

WANTED: EMERGENCY RELIEF COMMUNITY
SERVICE WORKER posilion(s) available in Gall1a
and Meigs Counties. Hours: as scheduled/as
needed; some overnights needed . High school
degree, valid driver's license, three years licensed
driving experience, good driving record and
adequate automobile insurance required . Salary:
$4.74/hr, to start. Training provided. Send resume
to Cecilia Baker, P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH
45640-0604. Deadline for applicants: 9/23/94.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

9 to 5 Weekdaya
Evonlngo By AppL

~·

Envuoflamc of·~::~...
Hcatinca, Inc.

Pellet Slaves
386 State Rt. 160
w/Natlonwlde Ina.
Galllpolla, Oh.
446-7400
800·757-PELLET
7355

BISSEll BUilDERS, INC.
New Homes • VInyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions e Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·7643
(No Sunday Calls)

Hawley
honored
with
shower
•

2/U/I:lmn

Real Estate General

TREE TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

••

Ug.llt Hauling,

Jeri Lynn Hawley was honored
~ently with a layette shower at
the Meigs County Library in

Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mls_ Jobs.

~omeroy.

• Hosting the shower were
tammy Hawley, Nan Hennan, and
I!.inda Dunfee. A rocking horse
c.atre was served with chips, mints
~d punch.
· Games were played with prizes
going to Teresa Dunfee, Norma
Ratliff, Nancy Mullen, Leah Dun·
~. and Margaret George.
· Attending besides the prize winners were Coleen Dunfee, Nan
Herman, Tracy Patterson and
Tiffany, Judy Wise, Lori Haley,
Reva Mullen and Destiny, Nola
Swisher, Betty Sayre, Rose Dunfee, Margaret Ann Cox, Faye
Roach, Wendi Maxon, Michele
Whittington, and Juanita Thomas.
Sending gifts were Mae Swisher, Bill Davis, Tammr Staats, Tina
Hendrick:s, Lola Whittington, and
Marty Wolfe.

John A. Wade, M.D.
Salle Ill Valley Drive

Pt.......... wv.
Call 304-171-1244 lor Appl. ar lnfaraaaliall
Mtm.. r of 1tt1a PPO &amp; Federal Moful PPO

Bill Slack
992·2269

OFFICE 992·2259
MllOLEPORT- Locat8d on South 5th~-- Thia 1 lf.i! atory
frame home leatu"'a 3 bodrooma, family room, living room,
kitchen with ollice '""· utility a,.., built In book ohelvea,
ceiling lana, central air, NGFA het~ nice !toni porch, alao
back &amp; tide po~ehet. Cement wailea, privacy fencing, lull
b a - l Cuta place...Iota of room I
ASKING 528,000
PRESENTED BAPTISMAL CERTIFICATE- Carl Bailey,
middle was presented his certific:ate of baptism by the Rev. Pete.r
Trembiey pastor of Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church. Mr. Bmley was b~ptlud on Sept. 4 at the Pol!leroy Nursing and RebabiU·
tatlon Center where be now resides. Family members lncllllllng his
wife, Dorothy, pldured right, and employees attended the baptismal service.

Star Grange sets up for barbecue
'.

'

\

Minimum depolil: $500.00

''

'

...

·v~"~' ·&gt;:,.:

• "·W~ &lt;..;' ~ •' •

v

•

~

Minimum depoait: $2,500.00

YOUIIIMPEIDEII
IGEIIS IEIYIII
111111 COIIIY
SliCE 1161

.

Plans are underway for the
amual chicken barbecue sponsored
by the Star Grange 11778 which will
be held from II a.m.-2 p.m. Sept.
25 at the grange hall.
A variety of food wiU be available, including chicken, baked
beans, potato salad, cole slaw,
roDs, ~e. • · brownies and vari·
ous drink:s.
Legislative Chairwoman Eldon
Barrows reported on the North
AmeriCIII FRIC Trade Ageement.
Other upeomin' grange events
include an officer s conference at

for

jun1ors enjoyed potluck: after the
the grange haU at 7 p.m. Oct. I.
At the Meigs County Fair booth, meeting.
Recently installed as new offithe grange won second place_
Three subordinate members and cers of the grange are: master ,
two juniors participated in the state Patty Dyer; overseer, Ryan Wattalent contest. Kyle White, star son; lecturer, Vicki Smith; steward,
Junior grange, won fllSI place in the Larry Montgomery; assistant stew•
Junior vocal solo contest for the S ard, Rick Macomber, lady assistant
steward, Maxine Dyer; treasurer,
to 9-year-old category.
Peggy Smith, Chelsea Mont· Waid Nicholson; galdteeper, Chip
gomery, Chip Macomber, Rachel Macomber; ceres, Rachel Ashley;
Ashley, Whimey Ashley and Emily pomona, Bernice Midkiff; flora,
Ashley all participated in demon· Rose Barrows; and executive committeeman, Ray Midlciff.
strations at the Ohio State Fair.
Thirty-four members . and

MIDOLEPORT- Two un~ Apartment bulking. Both currently
"'nl8d! Great rwttal oppottunityl Good monlhiY income.
ASKING $13,000

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

SYRAa.JSE· Locallld al t.ae Circle- Ranch llyle frame home
wilh 3 badlooma al on one floor, carpoll, appliances, cable
hook-up, paved slrMt, good nei;ilborhood. Low maintenance

FREE ESTIMATES

RAQNE- Located on Third St...t- 2 river lronl lot., public
wawr &amp; aewer available, no lees paid. ASKING $11,000.00

NEW TRAVEL
AGENCY

949-2168

home &amp; lawn. IMMEDIAT!: POSSESSION! ASKING
$32,000 OWNER MAY ACCEPT AN OFFER!

SYRACUSE- Roy Jonta Rd. - 1868 Windeor Mobile home,
12X60 with a 10X10 added on room. Unit air, F.A.F.O. heat,
Syracuae wa•r. range, Mfrigorator &amp; hood. Approx. 112 .. ,.
lol
AsKING $12,000

Rlverbend Travel
Adventures

MIDDLEPORT- Bradbury Rd.- 2 atory lrame home on 5
acrae. Home Includes 3 bodrooma, 1 bath, cfoubla hung
windows, carpet &amp; woad looring. N.G.F.A. het~ C&amp;S electric,
LCCO water, partialy """"d1lad and 1rM goa.
ASKING $:15,000

701 Art Lewis St.
Middleport, Ohio
45768

Cl.ELAND-----....-.--..--..

Phone: 992-6926

WE NEED USTINGSII

HENRY E--11112-C111
TRACY BRINAGEA..----··--·-·----·--·IMI-2431
SHEARI HART-----·-..·---·---·742-2357
HENRY E- CLELAND 1L.-.......... _____,t1112-c111
KATHY Cl.ELAHD--------------·-112-41111
OFRCE-..-----·----------·112·2251

MANLEY'S
HOME
IMPROVEMENT
Roofing, Siding, ,
Concrete, Room
Additions, Etc . .-

P.O. Box 22q,Bidwell, '
OH4S614
•
(614)
388-9865
..._
_,•

.
......

_____

-·

�~The Dally Sentinel

Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Sep~ember 19, 1994 ·

Monday, September 19, 1994

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
Answer to Prevlou• Puzzle

41 Afr ican
antelope
42 Laborer
1 LP s peed
43 Contests
4 Slory line
8 Entertainer
45 Actress
Harris
Susan 12 c ry of affirma- 47 Comed ian
tion
Costello
, 13 River in Fra nce 481ce-T's m usic
51 Unlock
t 4 Mrs . Charlie
Chapl in
(poet.)
15 Bea st of burden 53 Lea th er ba nd
, 16 Bro adcasted
57 Ekcludabl.e .
. 1 8 Scent senso rs 60 Nest-egg lOlls .
20Medlcal suffi x 61 Places
~ 21 Wide shoe size 62 Actress , 22 1 get il!
Dr esc her
63 Halloween mo.
24 Naval oH .
· 26 Tensed
64 Epoc hs
30 Godfather
65 Long ago
author Mario _ 66 Bea uty and 34 Reagan 's son
Beast
35 X-ra y meas ure
DOW N
36 Fashion 's
Donna 1 Tatum ·s dad
37 Put up stakes
2 MeKi can monev
39C hange the
3 Ch urch serv ice
color of
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

44

Announcements
4

Giveaway ·

~

Boaglo Pupplos

tumlohod, utllhloo plld, 814-8112·
5304 or 6t4-8112-122a.

All rao1 111111, oortllhllln

3

llnt.3 FemafH , Wonnld: To
ood Home. 614-256-1448.

t111o .,.....,_ II oubjKI to
iho Fodeoal Folr Houolng NJ

Elect ric stove to glvo away, 614-

ol t 968 wi\ICt1 """"" • ltogll
IO odv' Oif'( poolorance,
lmhallon or ID:o:i1n'illlllol•
baed on roco,
rwllg!On,

1112-247U.

6

Lost &amp; Found
Brown &amp; White Dog
Long Hair In Wellston

Thk ,._

knowtir9'1 oocept

Rio Grande Area, 614-286·2732.

Our ..-

Found: ma le Beagle mix, tan
a nd bl ack, near Prne Grove ad
Morning Star Rd ., 614-94 g.. 3114.

11

lion
long with
Hol low
while
Rd .,on
Pomeroy,
throatnoes,
614-

~=========:i====::==::===:t

l oot : En glish Springer Sponlol,
blac k wllh whtte r..f, grH n coltar, CR 191 Roc ks prtnga area,
614-992-4111.
Lost : Red Do,. Coon Hound,
Morgan Center &amp; Long Branch

----'------Chrlatmae Around The Wor1d Wonted: loborwr Exporlonood In
Deeor And y 0111 , O.mon8t1tora Roofing &amp; Siding, MISt Hlvo
Noodod, Froo $300 Kit, Eam COL llcon11, Ply Storto At IIi
Full-Time Pay For Part-Time /Hr, 614 446 C!M 8 A.M. -'1 P.M.,
Work. Also, Booking Part'-•· Man -Fri.
614-245-5039.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Sales Muat Be Paid In

Advance . DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day betore the ad Ia to run.

Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition - :Z:OO

p.m. Saturday.
Moving Sale : 9117-? 78 Hubbard

St, Kanauga. Fumltul'l, Mort!

OuHnt lll Softalde Watarbed,
Beautiful Hoadbolrd, $350.

Pomeroy,

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Soloo Mull Bo Pold In

11

Help wanted

11

Help Wanted

Insurance

13

Domino '• Pizza of Pomeroy now ..;=~,:;.=.:;,==;-:---;::;­
h)ring, miSI hovo good 2 y•r AMERICAN
NATIONAL
IN·
d~vlng hlolory.
SURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGENT
Eam ThOUsondl Stunlng En- HOMEOWNERS 1 AUTO DtSvolopoo. Rulh $\00 And ll Soli
COUNTS
AddrMOed, Sto,_ E n -:
UFE &amp; HEAL'Ili
Name, Add,_, "ro: Halle b304 588 4257
~~-. P.O. Box 152, Applogrove, Woot VA 2~.
- - - -- - - - - Eam up to $1000 wookly oluffing 18
Wanted to Do
envelope~ at hom•, ltart now, ~,..,.....:.:.;=.:.::,.::..:.:~~-:-~
no-oxpor1onco,
rr...upplloo, Chlldcoro, rwglotorodlllnk, boot
frM-Infonnallon, no-obllgalton. care/ bNt ,.,... 304-e75-288SI.
Sord SASE: Coocodo Dopt-60
Now
P.O. Box 5421, San Angolo, Til Eapo,._d Oultorlol
GlvlnQ ~ooono In Tllero Homo.
711902.
For Moro lnfor. .don, 114-441Easy World Excollont Pori
oomblo Producto At Homo. Coli aor-l Molntononco, Polnl!ng,
Tot! Froo, HI00-467-65511, Ext. Yonl Work Wlndowo
~31.:::3 ·-.,---,-----,--,- ouaoro etaonod Ught Houling,
Eaporfoncod
outo
body Commorlcol, Roolcilnllol, sc-:
man,mult be •xptrienced li1 1~.
mig welding, Hllro Ciaoslc cora,
614-11411-2211
~V,::::!":',os.,
..
-~ln-11111,
:!OW75- llil
1

Ao-IOI==38:.·...,.':':"C:-:----=-=:w-

a..
......

~0.:0.:!'': '~"to".::. ~~:=r-o:or..~:IOI:t

COli

1

•

Your Gulrdlon Angol, will
Su _._ -•Mion- 1:OOpm Frldo•, . Co. 0-nt-n locotion. LoCo 01 ·-• '
A
llbiiHioo Qood Po I do~lng, _,,_ honMondor
odllion
tO:OOo.m. F:.r.:For Righi lrdlvlduol, ~LA
dlooblod, will ... 11114511·
Sotunloy,
Box 332, c/o Ootllpotil Dolty out,
Moving 1111 Sept. tl-21, 120 Tribune, 825 Third Avonuo, Oo~ Prolollllonol y,.. So1v1ce TopStole St., Pomeroy, 114-1182· llpollo, OH 451i3t.
ping 1 Trimming Hodao Trim505tl.
lmmedloto Oponlngo Avoltoblo mlng Stump Alrilovll ,,_ bFor Cortlflod Nuroo Aldoo, Full tlmol•l 1114 3511 Dill!, 11W117Pub liC
Tim• And Port Timo. New In- 7010.
&amp; Auct lon
ouranco Poeklg• Avolloblo1 sun Volley Nursery_ Scl1ool.
CompotiUvo Wogoo, Dllforont11 Chi-11-F lllm-'5:3tlptll Aaeo
Rick Pooroon Auction Compony, With Exporlonoo, SIQn On ~ Young Se'- Aao Ourlng
lull limo ouetlonoor, ccmpllto Bonuo Avolloblo, Equol Oppor- s . -. :J Doyo por ~ook lllrl'
ouctlon
sorvlco.
Ueonood tunlty
Empioyori Conllcl: !mum 114-44&amp;-35117.
166,0hlo &amp; West Virginia, 304- Plno- Core """'"· 110
•
773-5785.
Plnoc- Olivo, Golllpollo, Ohio
45631 814-4&gt;46-7112.
tw W...._ I Other Evenlo
Auction- Col. Oocor E. Click,
Colt Kevin 114 Cll 1811 Aftor 1
llconH f 754-114 &amp; Bonded, MAKE MONEY uolng ,..... com- p.m.
304~15-3430.
putor. 24hr. Info: 714-211-3311 I i~d;""'h;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;i;;;;Ji;;
ext. 1508
I Will do '*'- c6e1 ..111 ,._
Hoven • Pt Ptlllllllo,... :1049 wanted to Buy
NMCI Ext,. Monty? lte Fun I 182-3127 or •ve- rnge
Eaoy With Avon. CIU Dobl&gt;lo For
CIHn loto Model Coro 0. Dotollo, 814-256-t~.
Trucke, 1H7 Modele Or Newer,
Smhh Buick Pontiac 1100 Nood home cor. giver lor 24 hr
Elltttm Avenue, Galllpods.
care tor ~derly_ """· .,._..
,.ply Sopt 21 • 22, ~11131.
Dec:orated stonew~rt, Will tel~
Business
phonn, old lampe old lher· Port time oponlng for on odop- 21
mometers, old clock., a,.lque llvo
Phyolcol
Educotlon
OpportunHy
furniture. Riverine Antlq1.11s. Spoelallot ot Corlolon Sehool.
Run Moore, owner. 814·992· Mult have or be willing &amp;
INOTlCEI
2526. We buy estates .
ollglblo lo obtoln voUd Cillo OliO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Doportmonl ol Educotlon Phyol- rocom. .ndo lhlll
do bullDon 't Junk ttl Sell Us Your Non- col
Educotlon
Conlllcoto .,.. with peop1o rou '"-r ond
Major
Appliances, wlvolldotion
Working
In Adoptive PE. NOT to oond . _ tlwoughthe
Color
T.V. 'a
Refrlg.ratora,
- - by Soot. :le 11114 moll uniN you heve ln-lgotod
frMzers, VC~'a, Microwaves, Sord
ClrloCon Se'- i3tO Chun:ll tho ollorlng.
Air COndltlonera, Wuhera, to
St, P.O. Box 307, Syrocuoo, Ohio
Dryer1L Copy Machin•, Power ~EOE.
VENDING ROUTE:
Ott
Tooll, tte. 61,...256-1238.
Rich ~lciL WIH Ool A Bllldy
Port-time cuhlor, nNol bo 11
J &amp; O'• Auto Parte and Salvage, ,._ . otcL Cmrtonl'o o-r,, Coolt lncomo. Ptlcod to Soli. f.
~20-f782.
aleo buying Junk care &amp; tnacb.
HonclooSon,
304-773-5343.
POSTAL JOBS
Old cigarette llghlere, milk bot· Slort ~1 . 41 /Hr. For Enm And
tiM, fountain pene, ellverware, Appl....lon Info. Coli 1218) 78fl.
merble1, wtoneware, magulnee,
MOl Ext. OHSBt, 8 A.lol. 4 P.M.,
Star Ware and Star Trei hem•i Sun -Fri.
31 Homes
S&amp;le
O.by Martin, 814-992·1'141.
2 br. coltogo on Eoalt Rldgo Rd,
POSTAL JOBS
Wonted To Buy: Junk Autoo
lmmacullte conditiOn, TP water,
Wlth Or WHhout Motors. Coli lllorl ~1. 4tlhr.1 lor nom ond
-lcotlon ln.... coli 21fl.7811- f'O,OOO, paollblo - - llnono'
lorry lively. 614-388-9303.

Sale

8

F.AST
•A J H 7

HE CAUE.D 11
VIRTUAL C0MM I"TM£-NT

AT A QUASI INTIMAl£ lEVEL

• J I 0 987 6
H
•Q 8

1Dit Ford Tempo Ill wheol
drl'f'l , PW, Pl, PO, a\rtcond, )04..
17&amp;-4138.

SOUTH
.. 4 :l 2
• A K J 2
• A J 2

• A 5 Z

no-

South

... horoby

BARNEY

T,_ _..,.,_ ,...._

! NT

THEY'RE TALKIN'
ABOUT SNUFFY
DOWN AT 1H'
FEED STOR E

32 Mobile Homes

HE'S GOOD
A CHEAT AS
ENNYBODY

THEY'RE
SAYIN' HE'S A

NO-GOOD
CHEAT!!

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- t882 Chollongor t4xro Hu Two
1 Bedroom A"partmam. Undar·
pinning, 2 PorchH,
0.
Hlghool Bid BY. t~/30~04. Abooluto Solo! Don t Mloo Out! 614-

si!,aoo

448-4312.

51153.

'PEANUTS

Bedroome, W.lher, Dryer, Un--

1D8t Ford truck_,_ 302, PS,
PW, $2,500. 304-Gt5-23211.

45

4 Acreo 011 Adcloon Plkoi\ Corner
Of$14,000,
Ponum114-387-78tt
Trot And lour
Rood,

Fumlshed
Rooms
Roorna tw r.m · - o r - h .
Slortl"'l 11 1120/mo, 011111 Notol.
;ll~t4~4~411'~1188~D~-=-=:-::---:-

-ko- ono ocro lot with
eo trailer, wotor, oloctrtc ond
ooptlc, ~2,100. 114-1112-2157.

&amp;looping "-"" ttl Por Day.
eonotruction
Efflcloncy
Kltchon,
lounclry, 114-381-87:11.

58

~,._

Pumllltlnt. lndlon Com &amp; Sllllco,
t14-:l45-llil7.

•
=
36

Real Estate
Wanted

814-371-21110.

2:011 p.m.,

304-71WIIt, Mo- wv.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

T-

'

18110 Ford Rongor XLT, C Cytlft.,
dor, ALComotlc, Aolclng : 114,toe.
614 11111188.
.
18112 811-odo pickup, block

tlf

Plck.Up Porto Ftom Chov I Ford Bodo, Chov Cabo:
Ao- Shonbod, n -111
•• 11«45 0440,114-2111-410tl.

a.w

/

(

\

SAY~
· .:·:.·=,. ·:,·:=.:.·

MA,IliAGe IS A
TINO·y/ AY

AL..t TtiE
l'lfAl&gt;·ON
C-OLL-ISION .f.

~0.,
I" I"

PS, Auto. Crul11, Clood Condll

lion, tt,700 080 Or Tracll Fot
Plcfc.Up, 114 441 11028, 0. 114,.

-~--~
:::'"':.:.:·~.,·:.,:..:.:.:.:.;:..:.:.:,=---.,-211odroom- 41 Chllllcaeho , ~Homo lottt lor Nlll, ,.,....
41 Houses for Rent

441-7153.

11165 Chevy Blozor 4114,
30C-47U813.

Merchandise

t30Dt.

Pa s~

Pass

Pass

Ope ni ng lead: "' 5

~

•il.
~

~

®

p

n

~

BORN LOSER

DID YOO SWITrn TO
DW'f COffEE, ~ l
A'&lt;v-..J

""

~ f&gt;.,T ~

Y~. BOT I ~fo..V£ IT

F'

.LP BEL~ CJr 1liE
s1~

e;m;c.rs

diamond ace. Eas t throwin g the spad e
d ec l are r w a s lo oki n g for hi s
ninth t rick . Sh ould h e duck a c lub ,
hoping for a 3-3 break? H er e. th at line
l eads to failure if Wes t win s the c lub
trick and switch es to the spade queen.
Alternativ ely, decl ar er could simply
lead a spade to dummy's king, pl aying
West for th e ace . But East' s noi se hi s bid - marked him with th e ace ,

mend
tost.
dummy
's lnine,
h edd lhe
We
So d ec
arer cas
pl aye
a didiaamond quee n and took hi s lwo top
cl ubs, endi ng in hand .
Wh en F:as t r etained two spades and
:three hearts, South continued with the
a ce and a n olhe r h ea r t. E as t h ad to
concede tric k 13 - and Sou t h 's ninth
- to dummy 's spade kin g.

Fmanc1al

rou

Won,

wv.

Flfll..-. Now Motor
$3,110; 20 F e r S roomo, booomont, roocly Oct

111, nMCI referencee, 3M-Ill- 0000

:::~

USED

Loodor, $2,510,114-~-11522.

•"- ••~•

-~

63

~1iti51
...

On Brldgomon Strooe,
Owned Br VII~ 01
At Munldpot
ric Property.
$3001Mo. fllut UtiiHioo I $300
-·-· Do-H. Conloct Moyor Pope AI ~-114-8112-3420.
-~·

K-$

s,.cuoe -

Duly

1 RogiollrM Anaua BU!t; 1

- d Cow, 211 'loving _,.

~.CIOIHon,I14-24Uti'l
u bla Hotoloin spr1- hloloro,

~-

W.ihor
~- ft .II!;

....

u.&amp;.

Livestock

t~S-25112.

-

2 112 .,. o1c1 . . . - po11oc1
~d bull "" ...., • --

Real Estate

Top . -

Pold: All Old U.S.

Col,., 0o1c1 R'- Sin c:omo.
Oold Colno. ILU. Coin

Shop,
1S1 -.cl A - GollipDIIL

Employment Serv1ces
11

Help Wanted

AVON I All Arooo I Shlrtoy
Spoil ... 304-67&amp;-14211.
All .,_._ AVON •rnlng llbllliH equat your copollllltlll,
.... procluet wfth olgfHIP,
Morllyn 304-82,2845 or 1-I0081124UeAVOIH CHRISTMAS NOW1
AVW~go .. -$14 Hourly AI Work
-Hot11e. Enjoy Flexible Houri,
Dlocounla, lind llonoiHa. Torrltory Opllonol1-aoo.JIIz.mL

Bu~

Trucklna

Componr Sooldng
CJTII Dihtoro, All Equip;
mont. MUol Hove COL'o And 3
y..,. ExpeiiMtea 11+281 1414

Fn&gt;m &amp;A.M. -GP.M.

Wonlod Plono T - r for
Boglnnorw
lntlrtllldloiM
Stlidlnto.Sot rou'ro .,.n houri.
Sord R•"""' to Studio E.
Muolc, 781 E. Sioto Btrool,
Athono, Oh 4!701

12

3 bodrcom, oil ollctrlc ........
Spring
Avonuo,P-...,,

130,000, 6*"2-2113 or 114882·7304.

379-21110.

Valid Drtvai'a Llcl,-.e, lhrwe
Llconlod Dltvlna Ex·
DOrlenc., Good Driving Rocont

F-.

~.

Wnltlr,

Color

T.v.

11llllltgotMar, llllc. . . . . - - .
WATER LINE IPECV.L: :114 Inch
2110 Pll tlt.N; I Inch 21111 Nl

lie-

........-.

=-·-~1

tunlrE~-

=··
Aoducod

etu11 c.- 81r.cl Br: ......,
Alclem, Platlrl.lm. lllriCIItn
Jol, And lion. Hollor Broko;
- ...ltd. lhown By Ap-

'• w-.

Building
Supplies

.. .,....._CINie__
llloolt,ilrlotc, _ _ _ _

~

Grindo, OH Cll 114-

~etsforSale

To

3

1,

Leon,

.......,__ 111 m :not A~~~&lt;
~:30 PJI. Wookdoyo. An,tlnW

Hay &amp; Grain

-

._

11o

79

Campers 1
Motor Homes

ClA~~IFIED AD~

$7,010, · -

14170 Nohluo Mobllo Homo .
ClntMI Air, 2 Bod-, 2
~-..... Condllon, 114-

WOlD
GAM I

I

GYNOBE

I 1I I I
1

I

I

DIFUL

[",

I I I

17

I e

Compl ete .•he chuckle quoted

_
.
by .f.llong m fke m1n1ng words
_.__,__ you develop f,om 51ep No 3 bel ow

PRINT NUM8ERED tEllERS I
IN THESE SQUARE S

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Escape - Enjoy - Newel- Victim - CASINO
"Things certainly aren 't like they used to be, " an old
t1mer sighed to a friend . "Today if someone is at a
soinninQ wheel it's probably in a CASINO."

•

Mlf.eonca&amp;n.d, air, ~ ~ u! ~
Ollllnl condition, $1,100, 114- •

-.-.-.. . . , _ . - . SUllo 12.00 por

Services

, .... 304-41"---

....... boloo .. mlxod hoy, ....
·~ on.Jpm.

~

81

Tr a11 spor1a11o 11

ASTRO-GRAPil

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

1994
Tuesday. Sept. 20 •

t23.100, ~ .........

Corilol, Lib -

PREVIOU S SOLUTI ON "I d1dn't go to him school I've kond ol evolved my own
method. lor good or bad." - (Doreclor) James Came ron .

117-aat.

potla, ltorago building, uti!My
room, near WIIPO radiO ....Iori,

~

S CHDSKC

;Tro'""nt~trol~lo.:r,.;,l.;..orry=Ro;:::_=--1-22'- ;

Onl-oom. vlnylo- on 112
..,., low utiiMIIo, goo heot,

-. -

J N D S )

•

to T""" ond -..rtli 114-44178H Anor lp.m.

THE

,JCUULS

UDSPDGOO

;:,;,.:.=~---------'~

~~~·

llod-

(TSDBKOKDP

N A L

cone( 304--.,

ft:

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1411110 1m Comptoory 2

D P

J 0 H T 0

0 K Y l J

wlcovor tw tlll3 Dodao :114·'

ton true~&amp;. $200.

Secluded TrJ..llw11.11 Acree 3-4
llodroomo, LR1 DR, Fomlty,
Kltdton, IJ!IIhr, • 112 Bolh, Fronl
ond Bock -u. Carport. Clooe

IN

Z A C

RL S J C P

NAl

. , UN SCRAM8lE l EITER S TO
GET ANS WER
•

.You'll be floating on a cloud
the buys you'll find in the
classifieds.

loml"""'"',
loc. ll.ir·
nn
... opplloncoo,
- .·
,. ole.
tor
3-boy ..........
'
puei"ic wotor, 151,000.

15111.

NAL

S K C ,

I

fR,O.I'CIS . YOU

Accessories

Bod-.,

3-4br..

cv

e

JUST

ASSUMEC&gt; 'I'OU WERE

FAANCI5 1

Aonch, 1112 Ac-, 3 Mllu F101n
City114-371-2343.
Se._, No
Conlroet,

Rt.

IT! ACREAl DEAl

2

OH I I'M SORR'c' I

LOOK LIKE A

Auto Parts &amp;

For Solo Br Ownor: 3 BR., 1 112
AYOII Wonta lndlvlduolo IIU- And Adlquolo ALComObllo tn- Both, 2,100 Sq. Ft. Ronch, 2
ouranco AoqulrM. Solory: f4.71
Iod In Elmlng " of14 lllr. No lllr, To Stoll. Training Pn&gt;vldod. Flros&gt;to-. Goo Hoot, Cont. A~.
Door To Door.l400 11151tt
Sond RMumo To CoCfllo Bo~1 Lortol o~... Wotklng Dill.,...
To HMC,
tas,OOO.
.. mont,
I _ s-.,
_ _ 11y
P.O.
Box 104, Jockoon, un .._.
Cotltlo,. NHdod: ~
4511-.
Oootllno
For
ApI &amp; 3. Moncloy TltrU
pllconto: IIIZIIM. Eq..r Oppor.
Frldolv, Goo Ph1o, In Vinton, 114388-tlnS.

FR/'o.IICI!; I

1,._.1324 Eveningo.

76

J C S N

cv

V 0 U L

448-

84

56

y..,.

TE&gt;I DOLlAR!&gt; SOUND!&gt; FAIR .
'1'0\.f VE GoT /'o. DE/'o.L. ,

v....

Oorago. Will conaiii'or Slnall
Wide en Down Pormont
dloon ArM, 182,000, h4-3173 Roome And Both WHh An Eatra lot tt3,000 114-448-410e, 114-

-.

Chomplon Form Anaua Bul, Z
Old, 114-44&amp;-"'7231, 114-

3 Bod-, 2 litho, Pump, Ga Furnoco 1 Aero,

7M7.

-

. . _ 1 ~ Color'
!V,,llk:rvwont;,C: 111'- M:
.......... • "11111 our

1

u

WANTED: EMERGENCY RELIEF
COMMUNITY
SERVICE
WORKER Pooltion lo) Avolillllo
In Golllo And Molgtl Countloo.
Houro: At SchOdulod lAo
Noodod;
Sorno Ovornlghto
NoodocL Hlah ~ o.a·noo,

-~~~~

NAl

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

~. 11447'11-ms.
Ina•··-~'

lng,l14-~

2114 Uncoln Avo., 2-3br., fully
corpolodi/ drapoo, -ldrJW,
choln
nk llnco bocllyord,
llonn wlndowa ::_nyt oldlng,
go,.go, 304-4175'

114 ll

Cipher c ry pl og•am s a rc c roa l ed h ::.m q,m tal ons by la mous people pa s: arJd presonl
Each lcnor ,,., 1hc c•pher slands lo r ~n o th o r f odJ;' 5 c!ut• G equiiiS V

K ' H

6

.... :

-.,.. Prlood -o1ono,·
Uoocl I rabuill, II IY- o~orto:

tor

11301 1111. WV548, llom-lpm,

,

!1•ij,i~ci.;~r
a~ittiY171L;f;-~.:'j-;;;;;,,:
2.1L_ouc_,lull topo, '
Mrici.,SIOGO. ~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
Co lc bn1~

4

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
_...,.,.,

36 Coa l oil
38 Terminate
40 Actor Brynner.
43 Symbolize
44 Cashew, e.g .
46 Dawn
goddess
48 Las so
49 River in Asia
50 Pocket bread
52 Spani sh river
54 Type ot squad
55 Crafty
56 Canape
spread
580oaft agcy.
59 Household
god

My new aerobics instructor
has the best personality . I
leave his class feel1ng better
because ne thinks that daily
r~--v-r_T_E_N-5--~~~~~~~s~- ~~~~~d always ln -

- · 30C-41U4tll ot -~

tllojookolo,

1 t Put on board
17 Moving truck
t 9S up
23 Actre ss Ali cia
25 Hea lth resort
26 Snare
27 First-rate
(2 wd s.)
28 Preposit ion
29 Taro ro ot
32 Wa cky

0 0 NU M
I
I
_ _
I_ _ I_ Is

11113 Hortoy Dovlcllon Ill, ....

Moooey Forgnon 65
t:tog &amp; IloilO $3,110; ---~..

9 Stockings
10 Arrow pols on .

33 Burden

Ph i llip A ld er

l sc~eon~

,~ THP..VES ~·I')

Von

11113 Aotro Eatondod
Loododl-12114.

m

7 Poured

8 Luau food

31 Pr od

•• . &lt;&gt; "'''"""
l-======~===;~...:.J~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~:..:.~.:.:_:.:~:..::~~~.!_.:_::~j,"ot

11165 11-10 4x4 Y-1, 4 &amp;.-;
$3,100. 114-441-1111511.

2 Bodroomo, 2 Botho Home For · - - - - - - - - Ront, Crown Clly, OiiiO, 114-2111111114,
51

~T,teT ·

Ttl AT AC.COIJNTS

1D8t Ford Yon 1 Cylinder, Pll,

l.lrgl lrllllr lot .. . . . ...

Pass

Pass

____________________-:----::-:---:--:-----, '

. FRANK &amp; ERNEST

~~:::_::_:=:.:.::::.,:

wllllver ~"';af.;~
exc.cond.
.
••-·

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

..........a..

01158.

:

1888 lvocco Dollvory TIUCk Wit~
18 Fl. lox $3,000, 114-448-410e;

w-w.-.
:=:~.;::....0:: ~:.:!.*1
__eou .....

Rood~ Full B o - . Corpolod,
Gu ~umao1, No Pete, •~

PI,

W~EN "fUEl{ SEE
WRITING LIKE
THAT, TliE't"LL
WANT TO
ATTACK US ..

IT 1-lELPS TO
PROMOTE
CULTURAL
UNDERSTANDING

18114 Chevy 70 Sorloo 2 Ton
Dump TRICk, 10 Fl. Dump, ExCIIIont Condition, 114-258-eODII.

Young coullll looking tw
proporiJ In llldclloport orN to
purchoM on tond -.troct, 46 Space tor Rent
reler..-.cee ev.llabll, I'M-112- 3 Room Ofllco 11u11o Wlh
27!3.
PrJ.In - . , Are
Proof Bltla. Col . . _ 11111itne
114 4112AI Or

Rentals

DO VOL'

WANT TO WRITE
TO SOMEONE IN
ANOT~ER COONTR'{
DONi EVEN

LC. Smith typewriter, SIO; 1148112-etl03.

llobllo Homo: tVJII All Eloclrlc 3

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

WfN

'65 Chovr- pickup, 112 ion,
aood condition, bod llnor; o1oo,

Pass
2•
Pass

3 NT

Pass

East

Smithtown, ~Y. am ended its noo se •
o rd i n a n ce w ith : " U nh ea l t h y n oi s
s h all i nc lude , b ut not b e li mited
th at noi se cr ea t ed by a dog barkin g
fift een 11 51 co ntinuous m inu te s."
At th e brid ge t able. luckily you don '
need 15 m i nutes' w orth of noise from
a n op ponent to g ain valuable in forma ti on. On today's d ea l. sen t t o m e by
St eve Nell issen of Ram sey , N .J , one
bid was suffic ient
Holdin g four h eart s, South s hould
d o ub l e E a s t' s ill -a dvi s ed o ve r ca ll
North mu st h ave som e points t o
Stavman with a h eart s hor~a ge . And
North isn 't forced t o pas s.
Wesl led th e heart five quee n, Jack.
t wo . South p layed a di am ond t o hi s
Jack . After w innin g with th e king. West
r eturn e d h is la s t he art : s p ad e li ve ,
heart si x, h eart kin g. Sou th c ash ed the

t888 Ookwooct ~r., 2 full both,
oxc. conct., JM,OOO. 304-'1~

2 Bodtomla, 121165 $8,100, 814245-01118.

Nort h

Pass
2•
3•

By

18110 14180 Cta~ 2bt., oil
- l c . Slt,IOO.
~1

Wes t

They bid,
they have points

lor Sale

dorplnnlng, Dock lnol. Ooocl
Prlco, 114-'387-G0511.

4 Arc haeo logist's
find
5 Fib
6 Sca ndina·, ian
capital

Vu l n er able : N either
Dealer: North

(ljlpOitUnlty-

f
d
··t m so yli:t d we spent a fortune re mrsh1ng the woo oor
Ooesn 1 1~ e sol 1nches around the rug look great? "

wtwhlt e, Bo wmans Ru n Rd area,

614-949-26 98.

Yard Sale

1088 Ford Tauru.. $2,100 Cell
114-44&amp;-7005 (Doytimol 0. 114&lt;
448-41325.
'

l'llonnod ttwroll-.go
odvortlood In tt1o
.,. avlllbte on an equal

lost · mala Siberian husky, black

7

1 IA£T A GUY U\ST tJIGH1
· \Vfb S\.8SE.STW U£ SEt Ci'i:l-1
OTHff&lt; ON ASEMI -SlU\DT a&lt;'iS IS

wtl nol

octve-matiofO&lt;_._
wllktt 1o n vtolollon ol tho llw.

Wllh Rod Sport o Po..lblr Brnt
l?og; Also Found Mi le Beagle In

RoaC, Reward! 6J4-388-B'Il2.

Mlloo, $1,700, 114-44&amp;-'1001, 114'
448 3ZIA.

ouch ...,.....,.,

Fo und : In Cent ervlll1 Aru Beige

~2-5~.

Fumlohed Enlcloncy, 101 Fourth
Avonuo, OolliDollo, ~115/Mo.
UtiiHIH Pold, 'Snore Both,l14446-44tl Aftor 7 P.M.

• Q9 6 5
•K 6 l :1

.EEK &amp; MF.F.K

..,.allon or - I o n.'

/Jackson Area , 614-388-9578 .

l ost : black 7 month old Dalmo-

•Q

origin, "' OIJ'f lrtonllorl to
make OIJ'f

Fo und .

Wl1h

9 19·94

4 KI 095

1187 Unooln Town Cor, Looclld 1
Extra Cteon, 114,000 AdUM

"'*"·
... ramlll atalut or f\lltk:JMI

Pi ck up load of pa llet s, Chartes

(Todd ) BuSh, Flatrock.

Autos lor Sale

, . . Olcll Iloilo • 1111,000 lllloo,
114-441-12114.

Two log onk:lonq oportmonto,

3112
month old
Austrlll an
Shophord, 304-l!75-J208.

Mixed

11

llulir
"!!rrnno - Unnwd
-

....,.,._

...,_Eioctrlool,

f~~~~~S

Matc hmaker insta.;tiy-r-;;;ai;;-;;;·hich
(Feb . 20-March 20) You are
sign s are romantically perfect for you . now in a positive cycle wh ere f1.nanc1al
Mail $2 to Matchmaker, c/o this newspatrends are concerned . You m1ght even be
per . PO . Box 4465 . New Y ork . N .Y . i!Cknowledgedtodaylorsomelhingwhich
101 63.
is long overdue .
LIBRA (Sept : 23-0ct . 23) Snap judg - ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) ~oday . tl you
ments made today might not be as per· &amp;how those w1th whom you re mvolved ·
captive as th ose of your mate . Before that what is good for you is also good for
deciding, lislen lo hi s/her inpul. II could\ , them. they're ltkely to be more cooperaprovide you with alternalives you've over- I tive . Parity IS the secret to success
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20) Keep a low
looked.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) The mea - profile today in an arrangement where
sure of zeal you display whole doong your yOU play a key role . You'll be more effecjob loday woll establish lhe to~e others tlv~ and still get !he acknowledgment you
1
will follow . 11 you want lhings to buzz . desire.
accelerate your pace.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Interesting
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You developments could be in the offing lor
· are likely to have more fun and feel more you at this time where your socoal !ole IS
at ease loday ala small galhering with concerned . However, you must not waot

Virgo has numerous enviable qualilies. In .lriends than participating in a large_ · 19! things or people lo come to yo~ . Seek
the ear ahead, these annbules could be group. Stay withtn your comfort zone.
t~ out.
.
acc~niUated. The revitalization of your CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) II your C~'NCER (June 21-July 22) The key for
better lraits enhances probabihlles for primaoy motivation lor gralllyong your ! eff,ectively dealing Vilth competotton today
ambitions is to provid e lor tho se you ·1s ,lo be more posotive than your adver23-Sept. 22) Somelimes love, you r c hances ol achievong your series. Don 't lei yoursell envosion anythong other than success.
.
we find ourselves in a position where we goals loday are strong.
ap a harvest from seeds we have AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Monitor LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Examone
:~ ':own . Be alert for opportunity , your behavior todaY by using !he special encf!3avors today in which you're presentbe
se thos might be your scenaroo inluilive -perceptions lhat lell you lhe ly onvotved, not JUSI on theor •mmedoate
lod~au Know where lo look lor romance prope r course ol action . Altertboughts co~\'Xt, but how they mesh woth . your
and yyou'll find il. The Astra -Graph will be less accurale and could even land ful!tr~. Plan ahead w•~ poeces t~allot.

..

~=::·(Aug.

• .~ I

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Land transfers posted
The following land transfers TPCWD, Olive, 50 acres;
were recorded recently in the office
Right of way, Adrian J. and
of Meigs County Recorder Emma- Helen M. Roberts to TPCWD, 50
gene Han&gt;ilton:
acres;
Deed, Grace M. and Walter
· Right of way, James and Shelba
William Wise to William W. , Wickline to TPCWD. Sutton, 64.50
Arlene C. and Evelynne M. Wise, acres;
Olive;
Right of way, Troy D. and
Deed, Lester D. and Frances I. Laura M. Guthrie to TPCWD,
Keaton to Robert L. Keaton. Chester, 1.2 acres;
Orange, 6.139 acres;
Deed, Jack K. Spires, Louise M.
Agreement. Lester D. and and Jackie L. Durst to Jackie L.
Frances I. Keaton to Roben L. and and Louise M. Durst, Sutton;
Patsy 1. Keaton. Meigs;
Deed, Ernestine Evelyn Price to
Deed, Harold E. Burt to Scott D. Samuel Lee Price, Leban o n
Litchfield, Salisbury parcels;
parcels;
Certificate , Chester Will,
Deed, Ross Junior and Gertrude
deceased, to Kathryn Hysell, Mid - W.. Stewart to John and Sheila
dleport parcel;
McKinney, Rutland Twp., 2 acres;
Deed, Charles M. and Jeaneua
Deed, Teresa K. and Robert L.
M. Miller to Community Bank of Birchfield to Three C Properties,
Parkersburg, Sutton, .198 acre;
MiddJeP?rt lot;
Affidavit, Clarence M. Murry,
Alftdav it, Emily Carroll,
deceased , to Beatrice 0 . Stewart deceased, and Rus sell Lyons to
and Judith K. McKinney, Middle- Carroll Harper,
port lot;
Deed, Marilyn Jo Lyons to
Deed, Evelyn Murray to Beat- C11arles E. and Helen Young, Midrice Stewart and Judith K. McKin- dleport half 10!;
ney. Middleport;
Deed, Ray E. Wellman to John
Certificate, Ralph Clifford Hill , Mitchell, Bedford parcels;
R. Clifford Hill, Clifford Hill,
Deed, Henry and Kay Hill to
deceased, to Pauline Hill, Letart Ronald L. and Deborah L.
parcels;
Williams, Letart parcel;
Deed, Wilbur F. Williams. et al.,
Deed, Rebecca J. Roush to
to Charles T. and Linda K. Edward R. Roush, Sutton;
Schoeppner, Bedford parcels;
Deed, John and Patricia Life to
Deed, Robert G. and Lucille M. Herbert and Belly Lou Barker,
Rhodes to Robert Michael and Chester parcel;
Sharon Lynn Rhodes, Letart, 3.20
Affidavit, Rufus B. Jewell,
acres;
deceased, to Evelyn F. Jewell, RutDeed, Harold E. Cart, et al ., to laad parcels;
Cllarles J. Stearns, Rutland parcels;
Deed, Edna M. Richmond to
Deed, John CourUtcy to Teresa same, Rutland, 1.2677 acres:
CourUtey, Orange, corrective deed;
Deed, Victor A. Bahr to Lila
Deed, Walter A. and Belly L. VanMeter, et al., Chester parcel:
Wilson to thomas E. and Sheryl S.
Deed, Clifford E.J. and Bonnie
Wilson, Chester:
C. Whittington to Jeffrey E. and
Easement, Edward and Ruby A. Rebecca L. Haning, Scipio, 1.76
Baer to state of Ohio. Chester:
acres;
Easement, Donald Burton and
Deed, Gary and Juanita M. GrifCarol Ann Diddle to state of Ohio, fith to Charles R. and Marcia A.
Chester;
Barren, Chester tracts;
Easement, Roy A. Holter. et al.,
Deed, Ernestine Evelyn Price to
to state of Ohio, Chester;
Natasha Rhae Price, Lebanon parDeed, Walter and Virginia cel;
Wears to state of Ohio, Salisbury;
Deed, Jackie L. and Louise
Deed, Edward and Ruby A. Durst to George D. and Lois E.
Baer to state of Ohio, Chester;
Scott, Sutton, 1.025 acres;
Deed, Lula Mae Quivey to
Deed, Nancy K. Joneth, et al., to
Arthur L. Quivey, Middleport lot;
M¢8d Corporation, Salem tracts;
Deed, Deborah Ann Rizer to
Deed, Nial E. and Virginia
Kenneth H. Rizer Sr., Lebanon par- S~lser to Allen L. and Carol A.
cel;
·
PqJe, Syracuse, .965 acre;
Deed, Delores and John R.
Deed, Orland D. Cremeans to
Tyree to James E. Barber Jr., Mid- Carol J. Cross, Rutland, 3 acres;
dleport lots; •
Deed, Gary L. and Connie K.
Affidavit, Roger and Debra Hill Scholderer to Mary Hart, Salisto Ellis and Phyllis McMillian:
bury;
Right of way. Earl Clickinger to
Affidavit, Shirley Guinther,
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Dis- dtceased, 10 Ruby Guinther,
trict, Bedford, .46 acres;
Pomeroy pan lots;
Right of way, Kenneth G. and
Deed, Victoria S. Rood to Bill
Shirley Sinclair to TPCWD, Bed- E. Buchanan and Carol Ann Sovel,
ford, 8 acres;
Orange, I acre;
Right of way, Mark D. and
Affidavit, Edward J. Wagner,
Melinda J. Miller to TPCWD, deceased, to Gloria A. Wagner,
Bedford, .46 acres;
Racine;
Right of way, Howard N. and
Deed, Gloria A. Wagner to BarKimberly L. Bahr to TPCWD, bara J. Leonard and Mary 0.
Chester, 9.4 39 acres;
Folmer, Racine lots;
Deed, Barbara J. Leonard 10
Right of way, Gladys Spencer to
TPCWD, Chester, 19.50 acres;
Mary 0. Folmer, Racine lots:
Deed, Mary 0. Folmer to BarRight of way, Fred E. and Ruth
bara
J. Leonard, Racine lots.
Smith to TPCWD, Suuon. 62

Monday, September 19, 1994

...---New merry-go·round____, Shuttle
returns

The students an_d teacbe~s ~I Carleton Sch~ls enjoyed the new merry-go-round last week
donated by the Me1gs Assoc1allon of Retarded C1tizeus (MARC). MARC provides activities and
matenals for mentally retarded/developmentally disabled children and adults. MARC meets at 7
p.m. at the Carleton School on the r...st Tuesday of each month. MARC will bold a craft sale f'rom
9 a.m.-4 p.m. Oct. 8 at the Carleton School. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Immigration sneaks way
in as issue in campaign
By WILL LESTER
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI- Florida Gov. Lawton
Chiles, who jokes these days about
being a "tired, old feUow," is trying to center his tough re-election
campaign against the youthful,
energetic Jeb Bush on the question
of experience.
Bush, the 41-year-old son of the
former president, argues that
Chiles' 35 years in office represent
part of the problem. Chiles' supporters counter that they have proof
that the governor's experience
makes him the best candidate to
continue to lead Florida.
For one frantic day in midAugust, the 64-ycar-old Democrat
worked the system about as quickly
as ,possible to avert a repeat of the
1980 Marie! boatlift that brought
125,000 Cubans to South Florida.
That influx overwhelmed police,
schools and other social services,
and the region didn 'I recover for
several years.
"I'm a product of Marie! One,"
Chiles said recently. "Bells went
off inside of me, man. (I thought,)
'This is starting all over again
unless you do something.'"
In Key West on the morning of
Aug. 18, the governor declared a
state of emergency and demanded
federal intervention as Coast Guard
cutters cruised into port, packed
with anxious Cuban refugees.

Attorney General Janet Reno
cautioned against being melodramatic earlier that morning. But
after a day of intense lobbying by
Chrles and other Florida officials,
she changed her tune.
By the next morning, President
Chnton had ordered the indefinite
detention of Cubans picked up at
sea, reversing the United States'
28-year-old policy of welcoming
Cub31J refugees with open arms.
Chiles and a contingent of
Floridians, including the influential
Jorge Mas Canosa of the Cuban
American National Foundation,
persuaded the president to keep the
pressure on Castro by transporting
Cubans to safe havens such as the
U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba- not to Florida.
"They said I was acting hysterically," Chiles said. "But just look
at how high the numbers went.
What if we had waited four or five
days?"
The number of Cuban rafters
swelled to more than 2,000 a day at
the peak of the exodus.
On Sept. 9, the Clinton administration reached an agreement with
Havana allowing 20,000 Cubans a
year to immigrate legally to this
country. In return, Castro agreed to
shut off the flow of rafters.
Bush has strong support in the
Cuban-American community; he
speaks fluent Spanish and his wife

is Mexican-born. While he doesn't
favor bringing thousands of
detained refugees to Florida, he
quick! y turns the debate to increasing U.S. pressure to topple Castro.
"The ~sponse has been to deal
exclusively with the rafters and that
is wrong," Bush said. "Chiles
seems to be viewing this as another
card to play in the political race
and that's a shame. This is too
important to lower to the level of
pditics."
But most every other issue is on
the table and many of them play to
Bush's advantage these days.
Many voters are fed up with
government, angry about crime,
nervous about taxes and unhappy
with the Clinton administration.
Democrats and Republicans are
involved in fierce fights for control
of the governor's office in the five
most populous states. Jeb Bush's
brother, George W. Bush, is challenging Democratic Gov. Ann
R:chards in Texas, another stale
with immigration woes.
Just last week, California's
Republican Gov. Pete Wilson aired
a television ad complaining that
Clinton has helped Texas and
Florida shut off immigration, but
left Clllifomia in the lurch.
Chiles has a $1 billion lawsuit
pending against the federal government to recover the long-term state
and local costs of immigration.

Right of way, Carl E. and
Arlene S. Parker to TPCWD,
Orange, 5.065 acres;
Ri~ht of way, Steve Miilhone to

Robbery attempt
leaves one dead

EdiUOD 0
~W
~-

-- --

~-

.

Retired teachers to meet
POMEROY - Meigs Retired
Teachers wi.U meet Sept. 24 at
Trinity Church for a noon luncheon. June Newberry, district
director, will be the spealccr.

Third Wednesday Club to meet
SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemalcers Club will
meet Wednesday at the Syracuse
firehouse. Programs and projects
for the coming year will be
planned. Covered dish luncheon at
noon, meeting at 10 am. New
members welcome.

~

-::.';::'"-_..

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1timtf ~ ~tntint
~uttbll!
levision
Te
Area
·
Listings and
It.'s
All
features.
k.
hiS wee
T
Free

-··
---·
........
..---·_
.... _
.........
-.. -··
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EverY Week
In Tbe.

~mtball

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(AP) - NASA watched uncertain
Florida weather today, hoping to
bring Discovery home after a tOday mission that included climate
research, robotic manufacturing
and the first untethered spacewalk
since 1984.
The space shullle and its six
astronauts were set to land at Cape
Canaveral, Fla., at 2:23 p.m. EDT,
but stormy weather was forecast.
NASA could send the shullle to
Edwards Air Force Base in California later in the day instead.
"It's been a great mission to
planet Earth," Mission Control
told the crew in this morning's
wake-up call. "I think it's safe to
say we've demonstrated a new
technology for studying our planet's aunosphere. Unfortunately, it's
time to return.''
"Well, you never can tell,"
replied commander Richard
Richards. "Maybe our planet's
atmosphere will keep us up here
one more day.''
Discovery pilot L. Blaine Hammond Jr. said the crew was looking
forward to some earthly pleasures
- showers, for one.
"It's pretty fatiguing up here,"
Hammond said Sunday. "I think a
lot of us are looking forward to getting home, getting a good shower
and some good old earthbound
things we enjoy.
"However, of course, I think
given another day or so to be up
here if we had the chance, we'd all
jump at it just because it's an
opportunity so rare," he said.
The astronauts, launched into
orbit Sept. 9, achieved everything
they set out to do. They released
and retrieved a sun-gazing satellite,
collected data on shuttle exhaust
plumes and assisted ground controllers with a weather-scanning
laser.
The high point was Friday's 7hout spacewalk by Mark Lee and
Carl Meade, using a slimmed-down
version of the jet pack employed in
the last untethered spacewalk I 0
years ago.
The new pack is intended to be
used as an emergency rescue
device for future space station
crews.
Lee described the spacewalk as
a once-in-a-lifetime "special
treat ••

"There's a mix between having
to concentrate very hard on maneu-

vers to make sure you do them
right ... and the exhilaration of seeing some sights that I'm probably
never going to see again and never
experience," Lee said.
A $25 million laser machine
spent more than 50 hours flashing
hght pulses at clouds, atmospheric
particles and the Earth's surface. A
telescope on board gathered the
reflected laser light for a study of
climate.

••
I•
••
••
-

.
"our
FREE
't MtSS &amp;I
•
Don.
t TV Tttnes•••

Announcements

Singles announced session
POMEROY - The next meeting for Singles in Agriculture will
take place at Darrell Foster's home
in Springfield, Sept. 24. There will
be a potluck dinner and dance
beginning at 5 p.m. Cost is $10.

Detroit hands
Dallas 20-17 · 19
NFL defeat
)!4

today

acres;

DAYTON (AP) - Authorities
said they are seeking a man in connection with a robbery and
shootout at a Harrison Township
coin shop that left one accomplice
dead and another wounded.
Sgt. Gary Curtis of the Montgomery County Sheriff's Office
said Sunday that Tyrone Ware, 34,
who has no known address, was
charged in Vandalia Municipal
Court with aggravated robbery.
Authorities were still seeking Ware
Sunday.
Terrance Plummer, 19, of Dayton, died during an exchange of
gunrrre Saturday at Es.tate Jewelry
and Coin, Curtis said. Paul Camp,
22, of Dayton, was injured in the
shootout with shop owner Jim
Williams of Beaven:rcck.
Camp was being held Sunday in
the Dayton-Montgomery County
Jail on aggravated robbery charges.
A county grand jury will review
the case, but authorities said
Williams, 47, probably will not
face charges.

,"ft,~~!.i;

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'Utinttt~~~

.

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...

Page4

Pick 3:
5-3-3
Pick 4:
5-1-3-8
Buckeye 5:
4-5 -15-19-3-t

.: ~

..

Low tonig ht in 50s, clt&gt;ar.
Wedn esda)', sunn)'· High near
&amp;0.

'

•

enttne
Vol. 45, NO. 87
Copyright 1994

1 Sectiono, 10 Pageo 35 cento
A Multimedlo Inc. N-opoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 20, 1994

House seeks QIJick withdrawal of troops
~~~~~dD~r~~~~~er
WAS

G
..,
.
..
. .
HIN TON -:- The U.S. mtlttarJ occupaoon of H:uu entenng tiS
f1rst full day today likely wtll cononue through December and mto next
ear adm· ·strati
ffi ·al
Y • . 101 . on O tCt s say:
.
andPraeboostdentt Chlmtonllwoln plaudt,ts fro~dRepubhcans hand DemocraftsH -:-:
.
s m ts po ra mgs- •Or avo. tng an outng ltnvaston o atO
wtth a last-mmute peaceful scttlemenL
B 1 be~
th 1
f
hd
rr Mon da y, 1awn:'akers 0 f
u . ore e g ow 0 success a . worn
boUths ~arttes alreaHdy_ wAeredvof~cmg wPromeds aboJut thts nCew commhtunhen t odf
..• orces tn rutt. n urmer est ent tmmy arter, w o e1pc
f te th
tha
rted U S
k harpl
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C~~~~ adm~n~~:~~~! han~~~e of .fruti: · attac • s
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e
Cart
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leaders% satn ~e ;gr~~een: fo;'&amp;t1,~~~ s~':'d~c 10 10 s ml tary
wt
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W~ter

line flushing
'pigs' help to save
Pomeroy money

By JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stall
They are called pigs and,
according to Pomeroy Mayor John
W. Blacunar, they have saved the
village at least $200,000 in water
line repairs.
Last Wednesday and Thursday,
the "pigs" were inserted into the
Pomeroy water system between the
upper end of Minersville and Minersville Hill Road, said Blaetmar.
The pigs are made of a plastic,
foam-like material, some hard and
rifled, some soft, come in varying
sizes and are used to clean deposits
from water lines. The pro~t cost
the village about $8,000, BlaetUtar
said.
"It was either that or replace the
lines," Blaettnar added.
Blaeunar said the last water line
replace project cost more than
$200,000 dollars.
Water shortages last winter
started the investigation that led to
the cleaning of the water line, said
Blaettnar. The village thought it
had a restriction, but believed it to
be between Court and Plum siJeets,
he noted.
Water I inc repairs at Nye
Avenue and the recent installation
of a fire hydrant in Minersville
revealed a buildup of manganese
oxide in the Minersville area, he
said.
Manganese oxide is the substance that hardens Pomeroy water
and makes the use of chlorine
bleach impossible. "It's harmless,"
said BlaetUtar.
"It turned an eight-inch line into
a four-inch line," he said.
"We weren't getting enough
water from (the well field in Syracuse) to the reservoir to service the
village," Blaellnar commented.
"We need 240 gallons per minute.
"The volume has improved considerably," he said.
After the pigs were ran through
the lines, water flow was measured
at 350 gallons per minute, compared to the 200 gallons per minute
recorded earlier, Blaettnar said.
Water pressure in the line
decreased from 140 pounds to 120
pounds, he said. Higher pressures
are caused by restrictions, make the
pumps work harder, and are a con-

One of the_thtngs was that I was ashamed of my country's policy,"
the former prestdenl srud on hts return to Atlanta Monday n1ght.
Earlier Monday, the House voted 353 -45 for a resolution calling for
the orderly w1thdrawal of all American forces "as soon as possible..
.. .
.
.
· ·
W1th thts resoluuon we are not endorsing President Clinton's Haiti
policy," said Rep. Dave McCurdy, D-Okla. "I opposed an invasion of
Hattt and am equally concerned about the dangers of a long-term occupation ••
·
. .
.
The non-bmdmg resoluuon also offered muted suppon for Clinton and
pratsed Amencan forces on the groun~ for their "professional excellence
and dedicated patriotism "
·
.
·
.
For ~ts ~art, Cltnton defended ~t.s poli~y at a midday news conference,
saymg Thts IS a good agreement. He satd he hoped the Hruttan mthtary
wou_ld show good frutll and reasonableness "so that this will not be another v1olated agreement that the Umted States has to tmpose and enforce.''

Filming boat ramp

tributing factor to broken and leaking lines.
BlaetUtar noted wa1er flow may
increase to 600 gallons per minute
tf both pumps are used.
This has improved fire protection considerably, he added.
"It was money well spent," he
said.
Sternwheel fest plans
Council also met with Jim
Davis. president of the Pomeroy
Stemwheel Association, regarding
the Pomeroy boat launch and the
upcoming Pomeroy Sternwheel
Festival.
.
Davis recommended the village
-..,,,-1&gt;
~,}~·
.
.
,
.
~'
pi tce a metal piling in the water at
tt.~ comer of the ramp to prevent
ar ·;idents such as that which resulteo in the sinking of the stemwheeler 1ean Mary last week.
A piling in that location would
also prevent boaters from backing
their trailers off the side of the
ramp, he said.
Davis said the sternwheeler
sUtuck a portion of the metal form
used in the original construction of
the boat ramp. The metal runs
along the three river sides of the
ramp.
Blaettnar said the village has a
I -foot long, four-inch diameter
pttJC which could be used as a piling. Davis offered his assistance in
placing the piling in the river.
Davis also recommended the
. Workers from Commercial Diving Inc. or Chesapeake were
village place "no swimming" signs
m
Pomeroy Monday photographillg the area around the
at the levee, citing the potential
Pomeroy
levee, where it is believed the 87-foot paddlewheeler
d;•nger to swimmers posed by the
Jea!'
M_ary
struck a metal object Sept. 14 before sinking in the
metal form and the likelihood of
qh10
_R1ver.
Here, diver John Dixon of Gallipolis, holding a spebt Jken glass along the levee.
c18l
VIdeo
camera,
prepares to enter the river.
In addition, Davis requested
help from the village in cleaning
the riverbank in preparatiOn for the
festival, set for Oct. 6-8. BlaetUtar
said workers would begin the
cleanup Monday.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. for two charges of burglary,
Davis also noted a masquerade A Middleport man, who escaped according to a jail official.
party would be held this year as a from the Mason County Jail SaturSmith waived extridition to
new attraction to the festival.
day, is back in jail on an escape West Virginia after being captured
Other council action
charge, in lieu of $50,000 bond.
Monday morning in Meigs County.
In other business, council:
Jackie Lee Smith, 19, was Smith, who is five-feel, nine-inches
• Met with Sarah Fisher on cre- arraigned Monday afternoon in tall and weighs 110 pounds, had
al .on of a Hometown Pride group.
front of Mason County Magistrate escaped frqm jail by apparently
C mncil approved her request to Johnny Reynolds.
squeezing through a small window
surt the group and heard comHe was charged with being a in the door of his jail ceU, accord'Jlidints regarding a bar in the vil- sentenced felon escaping from jail.
ing to Mason County Sheriff Paul
la~e and bicyclists riding on the
Smith was sentenced last week to E. "Ernie" Watterson.
(Continued on Page 3)
one to 15 years in the penitenti:uy

Middleport man back in jail

Judge in O.J. case nixes dismissal request
By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES - Judge
.Lance Ito thought he had seen
everything in the O.J. Simpson
case. He was wrong.
On a day when Ito did the
expected - refusing to dismiss the
two murder charges against Simpson - he heard the unexpected:
Prosecutors said Simpson's secre-·
tary destroyed a document that
authorities had been trying to seize.
"Just when I think there are no
m&lt;I"C swprises ... " said Ito, on his
rust day back from vacation.
He closed Mrnday's hearing by
saying: "Is there anything else?
I'm afraid to ask."
In addition to the shredding revelation, prosecutors also gave their
most detailed theory about the June
12 killings. Deputy District Attorney Marcia Clark said that Simpson intended to murder only exwife Nicole Brown Simpson at her
condominium.
"When Ron Goldman showed

·'

up that was something the defendant didn't bargain for and there
was obviously a struggle," Clark
said.
Defense lawyers probably had
low expectations going into the dismissal hearing, a routine skirmish
that the defense usually loses. Ito
rejected defense arguments that the
prosecution's case was based on
sloppy and dishonest detective
work.
He also upheld an earlier ruling,
by Municipal Court Judge Kathleen
Kennedy-Powell, that detectives
acted properly when they entered
Simpson's estate hours after the
slaymgs without a search warrant
The ruling means that evidence
seized in that search - including
the bloody glove found behind the
guest house and blood drops on the
drjveway -:- probably will be
allowed at trial.
"Obviously, this bodes poorly
for the defense," said University of
Southern California law professor

J·

Erwin Chemerinsky. "T.he judge
thus far has not bought any of the
defense claims of police misconduct."
The shredding revelation was
another threaL
"It will be very negative on
O.J.," said Robert Pu~sley, a
Southwestern Universny Law
School professor. "It will say
clearly there was something resembling a smolting gun and they felt it
was necessary to destroy."
The smoking gun may have
been a boring pamphlet. Defense
lawyer Robert Shapiro said the
document in question was literature
on danestic violence that Simpson
was required to read after his 1989
wife-beating conviction.
But if the document was so
innocuous, why shred it? Its very
desttuction, Pugsley said, elevated
~he document fo a position of
unportance.

Simpson's secretary, Cathy
Randa, is scheduled to. te~tify

Wednesday.
Defense attorney Gerald Velmen argued in court that Simpson's
people are shredding a lot of papers
to keep them away from reporters
rummaging through garbage.
Simpson, 47, has pleaded innocent. Jury selection is to begin
SepL 26.
In offering her theory of the
m•trders, Clark said that Goldman,
a waiter at a neighborhood restaurant, was killed only because he
had stopped by the condo to return
a pair ol eyeglasses Ms. Simpson
had left at the restaurant. She said
the killer probably panicked and
fled, leaving a bloody glove and a
knit cap near the bodies.
After she offered the theory;defense lawyers pressed for more
details. Shapiro wanted to know why
Simpson would drop a glove in his
back yard, then duck imo his front
dO()r when he could have entered
through a m01e discreet side door.

Sen. John McCain, R-Aril, said top admini stration officrals told lawmakers m close-door briefings to expect a deployment of forces til at could
last into next February and possibly beyond.
Secretary of State Warren Ch · 1 h . k. M da ·
n s op er, spea mg on y ntght on
CNN said he believed US troops likcl w ld h v
· H ··
through the return of Prcsid~nt Anstidc a~d ~~ parl~a~~~:yc!~ctio~!'
probably in December
·
·
·
·
·
·
· ·
Chnstophcr satd tile Unned Nattons mtss1on, with a smaller u s for·
participatmg , would take over after two •o four months and would ;em·ce
in Haiti ''up to the presidential elections at the end of next year "
am
·1·h· s 1 1 ed 1 tak
·
·
·
1
c cna e P ann
o e up tis ow~ rcso uoon today. Senate Majori·
ty Leader George Mitchell, D~ Maine, c.rculat~ a draft praising Clinton
and the three-member delegatiOn he sent to Haiti last weekend: Can er
retired Gen . Colin Powell and Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga.
'

Racine Council
gives its approval
to enterprise zone
Racine Village Council accepted
the rural enterprise zone ordinance
in emergency session to allow for
tax abatements when it met recently in the Star Mill Parle building.
Council will replace a section of
tile along State Route 124 at the
State Route 338 intersection
according to SIIeet Commissione;
Glenn Rizer.
In other action, council:
• appropriated more money to
the fire fund to replace $700,000 in
fire equipment
• allowed the lire chief to buy
tires for one of the fire trucks.
• heard from Dal e Hart, who
spoke on the behalf of the Racine
Area Community Or ganization .
Han asked if the group could usc
the annex for meetings. Han and
the fire chief will meet to ensure
there is no conflict over the use of
the anne,,
• authorized the clerk to transfer
funds in the general fund to cover
the PERS payment for Councilman
Henry Bentz.
• approved Whitey Walburn of
Middleport to pave 200 feet of
sidewalk on Third SIIcet.
• informed a village resident that
the insurance company said wind

caused a lice to fall 011 a car, therefore releasing the village from liability.
• will sell a 1980 Oldsmobile
that was forfeited to the village on
a drtvmg under the influence
charge. Council set the minimum
hid for $300. Scaled bids will be
accepted until 4 p.m. Monday, Oct.
3.
• learned that yard sale signs
plugged area drains, Rizer said .
Anyone who posts a yard sale sign
should remove it so the wind does
not blow it around, council
advised.
• allowed Scou Hill to buy a leaf
vacuum to remove leaves. A chipper will also be needed since the
Ohio Environm ental Protection
Agency will no longer allow burning. Mulch will be available at the
park.
The next council meeting will
be at 7 p.m. Oct. 3.
Auending the council meeting
were Councilmen Robert Beegle,
Henry Bentz. Dale Hart, Scott Hill
Henry Lyons and Larry Wolfe:
Clerk Karen Lyons, Marshal Bill
Gilmore, Rizer, Fire Chief John
Holman and Bobbie Roy.

Hyatt plugs new jobs plank
in Senate seat campaign ·
CLEVELAND (AP) - Joel
Hyau would put his experience as a
businessman to work to bring jobs
to Ohio's cities, the Democratic
candidate for the U.S. Senate said.
Hyau, with U.S . Secretary of
Commerce Ron Brown at his side,
spoke Monday outside a downtown
building where he was holding a
fund-raiser. He is opposed in the
Nov. 8 election by Republican
Mike DeWine and Joseph
Slovenec,anindependenl
Also on Monday, Hyatt backed
out from a planned appearance
Wednesday at a candidates' forum
after the format was changed, his
campaign spokesman said.
Hyall said he would use his
e•perience as co-founder of Hyau
Legal Services Inc., a nationwide
chain of storefront law offices, to
bring jobs to tl1e state.

, "No program is perfect, but
lol erc are ways that you can
tmprovc the urban growth in inner
cities as well as suburban cities "
Hyau said. "And I am committ~
to those ways.
"Will there be mistakes made?
You bet. But Cleveland wouldn't
be what it is today if people didn't
take chances to improve its wellbeing.''
Hyatt said that his experience
makes him more qualified to create
jobs 1han DeWinc, whose political
career started in 1977.
"I grew up in a private sector
and understand what it takes to
start new businesses," Hyatt said.
"My opponent grew up in a public
sector and has gone from one political position to another. You can't
lind any production on his part to
(Continued on Page 3)

Hunting and Fishing
Day slated Saturday
The annual National Hunting and Fishing Day observation by the
Ken Amsbary Chapter of the lzaak Walton League will be Saturday
from 9-3 p.m. at the Izaak Walton Farm on Boy Scout Camp Road
near Chester.
National Hunting and Fishing Day was created by Congress in
1972 to recognize conservation achievements and contributions
made by American sportsmen. On May 2 that same year, President
Richard M. Nixon signed a proclamation creating the rust National
Huntiug and Fishing Day. Since then, each succeeding president has
designated the fourth Saturday in Septtmber as National Hunting
and Fishing Day.
Planned for boys and girls ages 8 to !8, Saturday's observation
will .include discussions o~. gun safety, hunter ethics, and turkey
hunbng and calhng. In addi!lon, hands un-type demonstrations will
.. be given in an:hery, _trap shooting: reloading, ca~oein~. black powder shootmg, fly fishmg, fish fiUetmg and .22-callber rifle shooting.
The e.v~t is free and lunch ~ill be provided at no char~e. Parents are mv1ted but are not required to attend smce superviston will
be provided by the Izaak Walton League of America.
Activities will be held rain or shine and door rrizes will be
offered. Drrecuons to the Izaak Walton Farm wil be posted iq
Chester.

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