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                  <text>Pag~8-Sunday 11mes-Sentlnel

June 28, 1992

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

Reds sweep
Atlanta, hike
division lead

Martin Marietta stock rises in uncertain day on Wall Street
By CHET CURRIER
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - The slOCk market was mixed Friday in an atmosphere of uncerta1nty about
prospects for the progress of the
economic recovery.
Trading set its slowest pace in
more than five weeks.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials slipped 1.60 points to
3,282.41, fmishmg the week with a
net loss of 2.94 points.
Advancing issues JUSt silgh ~ y
oulllumbered declines in the daily
tally on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Big Board volume carne to an
estimated 154.44 million shares as
of 4 p.m. EDT, down from 182.31
million in the previous session and
the lightest total since a 149.83
million-share day on May 18.
Interest rates have dropped of
late in the credit markets. In Fridafs activity those markets were
quaet and ttendless, leavmg yields
on long-term Treasury bonds at
around 7. 77 percenL
Among Big Board slOCks, Digital Equipment lost 1(2 to 34-1/2.
Olivetti of Italy said Dig1tal had
signed an agreement to acquire a
stake of almost 10 percent in
Oliveni.
Bank issues, one of the market's

Federal National Mortgage climbed
1-7/8 to 59-5!8 and Federal Home
Loan Mortgage was up 1(2 at 377/8.
Martin Marietta rose 1- l/2 to
51-3/8. The company raised its div Idend and approved plans for the
repurchase of as many as 8.2 million of its shares.

best-perfonning groups in the ftrSt
half of 1992, were mostly higher
again. Citicorp gained 3/4 to_211/4, trading at new 52-week h1ghs;
BankAmenca 1-1 /4 to 45; Chem•cal Banking 7/8 to 37-1/8; Chase
Manhauan 7/8 to 27- 1{2, and J.P.
Morgan 1-7/8 to 56.
In the mortgage-finance sector,

British Petroleum's American
depositary receipts were up 1/8 at
48-1/2 in active trading, leveling
off after a 6-poinl slide Thursday,
when R.B . Horton resigned as
chairman and chief executive.
Symbol Technolog.es fell 3-1/4
to 18-3/8. In a statement il sa1d was

U.S. banks voice support for project
stock scandal said its top Indian
official was taking a leave of
absence.
On Friday. he became the fourth
top bank official in India to go on
leave as the government invesu gates the $1.1 billion scandal, the
worst in the history of India 's
financial world.

By Tbe Associated Press
MOSCOW - Some of the
biggest American financial instirutions said they would sponsor a
retail banking project in Russia,
where many people still prefer to
store their rubles in mattresses.
The Russian-American Bankers
Forum said Friday it would also
help Russia develop a market for
government securities and an interbank market to handle big money
transacuo ns electronically. The
Forum IS an umbrella organization
for central banks and private fman cial institutions.

PARIS (AP) -Fearing that the
deadly "mad cow" disease may
spread to humans, France ordered
32 over-the-counter drugs containing caule tissue off the markel.
The Health Ministry commu nique announcing the withdrawal
Friday called the move " preven -

BOMBAY, tnd1a - A British
bank w1th Indian branches that lost tive."
hundreds of millions of dollars in a
Bovine

Outdoorsmen ...

Spongiform

Encephalopathy, the so-called mad
cow disease, is an incurable and
fatal brain ailment that strikes cat-

issued in response lO negauve mar- some analysts reduced their ratings
ket rumors, the company projected on the stock.
Sequoia Systems, another Nasan increase in second-quarter profdaq
issue, dropped 1-1/8 to 8-3/4.
its over results for the first quarter.
The
company said iiS earnings for
Lotus Development, traded in
the Nasdaq over-the-counter mar- the quarter and fiscal year that end
ket, dropped l/8 to 18 -1/4 . The next week would fall significanlly
stock fell 5-5/8 points Thursday short of the peak estimates on Wall
after the comput.cr software compa- S1ree1.
The Nasdaq composite index
ny said its sales and earmngs for
dipped
.32 10 547.88. At the Amerthe secood quarter will fall short of
ican
Stock
E.change, the market
expectations.
Microsoft. down 2-1/4 Thurs- value 1ndex was down .11 at
day, fell another 3- 1/410 66-3/4 as 374.04

TOKYO (AP) - Shareholders
bellowed "You fool!" and
"Quit! " at the president of a scandal-ridden bank and demanded that
Japan's largest telephone company
do something about its plunging
stock price.
But most of the 1,824 Japanese
companies that held annual meetings Friday pushed through their
agendas in about 30 minutes, giving stockholders little chance to
comment on a year of poor profits,
tumbling slOCk prices and frequent
scandals.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Suprem e Coun today gave states
sweeping new pow er to re stric t
sions of a Pennsylvania law mak mg abortions more difficult to

obtain. But, by a 5-4 vote, tl1 c coun
said sta tes may not outlaw all abortions.
The court fell one vote shan of
overtum•ng its landmark 1973 Roc
vs. Wade ruling that legalized abortion nationwide.
"Though abon10n 1s conduct, ll
\!TIT

'' The reservations any of us
may have in rcaffuming the central
holdmg or Roc arc outweighed by
the explication of •ndJvidualltberty
we have given combined Wilh the
iorcc of stare decisis," O'Connor
sa1d.
Stare deci s is, Latin for' ' the
decision stands," is a judicial doc -

Pomeroy, OH. 45769
614-992-2136

'-

"

R/5

Automatic trano., air cond., AMIFM

399 W. Main

Pomeroy

Th• Store with "All Kinde of Stuff' lor Pels, Stables, Large and Small

Animala, Lawns and Gardent.

1 sr Anniversary
Sale Continues!

$

8888

drive, air bag.

SUPPLY co.

AND
992-2164

1992 CADILLAC BROUGHAM
V-8, loaded, rear wheel drive, only $
f

24 76 3

5,000 mlleol

and will opuote rrom tbe parish!s-{)ffices on
Condor Street in Pomeroy. Here, parish volunteers Mary Bowles, Betty Reibel, Helen Partlow
and Mae Young sort some of the donated items.
(Sentinel Photo by Brian J. Reed)

SHOP PREPARED • Tbe Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative Parish will open ''The
Parish Shop" on Wednesday, offering clothing
and household items at thriO shop prices. The
new shop will replace the parish clothing bank,

DON TATE'S

1991 CHEVY CORSICA LT
aterao, bucket 1eat1, front wheel

·"

R&amp;G FEED

IT'S NOT OVER,
TILL IT~S OVER!

Parish Shop to open Wednesday
8y BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Changes m the clothing bank
operation at the Me1g s United
Methodist Coopemtive Par1sh arc
des igned to beuer serve JLS patrons
and increase the number of people
se rved .
"The Parish Shop" will open on
Wednesday, offering clean used
clo thing and househ old items at
mcxpensive prices. It will operate
from the second floor of the parish
headquarters on Condor Street m
Pomeroy. Hours of opcralion w1ll
be the sa me as the cooperativ e
par1sh office, Tuesday through Fn day from 9ao II a.m .

The shop was recently remod eled. thanks to the cfforLs of two
Un ued Methodist work camps, and
local volunteers. Walls were built
and new carpeting install ed, and
more work is set for completiOn in
the ncar future.
The clmhmg bank was origmal ly designed to provide free clothing
10 needy familie s, accord1ng to
Rev. Roger Grace, director of th e
parish. He sa1d that the changes
were made hccausc pride prevents
many needy families from laking
advantage of the se rvi ce Most
needy families would prefer to pay
"ya rd sa le" price s for clothin g
ucms, as opposed to acceptin g a

.----Local briefs---.
~ :!':"'~-

~.

-

-~ .-

•

-·
-

-, '
!

Automatic, air cond., Y-6,
power windowe, crulee,
much more. CM532.

,,,

•rw 1992 GEO METRO
NOW ONLY..................... $7509.00

., Addltloouot $400

1992 PRIZM

~·, oi&gt;

"'-

.'.1'. i · I "

I rt, ,

f

i

'&gt; To d

t ,,

4X4,

5.7 V-1, Ilium. w.-,
• • 1dr lrim, tit I crul11, AMIFM

- · two-tono pllln~ P. win. I lockJ.
118RP.....--......................$1t,505.00

NOW ONLY..._ ........... $17,751.00

nma auy.r ., Acld!Uonot$400

'

The Middleport Rec rcauon Department will offer sw1rnmin g
lessons, session II, at th e Middleport Munic1pal Pool at General
Hartinger Park 'on Monday, July 6. The price of the _lessons will _be
$12 per child, or if more than one child from a family w111 _parllc•pate, $10 for the second and $8 per child thereafter. The um es of
the lessons will be as follows : Sw1mmcrs (Advanced only) , 9 to
9:45 a.m., Monday through Fnday; Intermediate, 10 to 10:45 a.m .;
Advanced Beginner, lito 11:45 a.m.; and Beginners, 5 to 5:45 p.m
Lessons will continue for a two-week period. For s1gn up and
add lUonal information, contact the pool at 992·2177.

AM!FIIallroo, run.

Five hurt in two-vehicle crash

Auto., lllr cond., cruln, puloo wlp-

111u1 bl..,

•

IISAP............................... SI5,85t.OO
NOW ONLY................ $13,498.00

IISAP................................. $18,262.00
NOW ONLY........... ......$15,999.00

~. Much more.

Five people were tran spo rted to Veteran s Memonal Hospital
after a two-vehicle crash at the U.S . 33 ramp from Ohio 7 Saturday
at approximately 10:15 p.m .
According to a report from the Gall•a-Mc1gs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, a car driven by Shawn P. Price, 18, Long B0110m,
atlempt.cd 10 turn left onto Ohio 7 from the U.S. 33 rnmp and was
struck by a northbound vehicle on Ohio 7 driven by Debra J. Tillis,
39, Rutland. The vehicles slid off the right side of the road and
Price's car struck a guard nul, th e patrol reponed.
Price and two passengers, Robert M. Bauer, 19, Long Bottom ,
and Jerry L. Hayman, 19, Pomeroy, were lransported to VMH by
the Gallia County Emergency Medical Semce.
Tillis and her passenger, John M. Roush , 21, Rutland, were also
transported to VMH.
.
Price, Bauer and T11lis were released after bemg treated for
minor injuries. Roush and Hayman were held for observation, a
hospita I spokesman reported .
.
Damage to the front and left-rear of Tillis' 1991 GMC Safar• van
was listed as heavy and disabling. Damage Ill the front, top, bonom
and right side of Price's 1985 Chevrolet Monte Carlo was also listed as heavy and disabling.
. .
A brake defect in Price's car was listed as the contnbutmg fac10r
in the wreck.
Price was cited by the palrol for driving under the influence and
failure to wear a scat bell.

I

WhHe DI•mond ell1erlor, Y-8,
lelther -lng.

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl
991 CHEVY

r··"
Tc.

I

NOW ONLY..................$12,311.00

lfrlt92 CHM EXT. CAB PICKUP

''"

II:

' :.pr·ed
·trrr':-· d j, " 1 1rr1·r, ·d
S1 102700
1•1

$12,990

IISAP...............................$12,0102.00
NOW ONLY................. $1 0,851.00
tat Tlrnollupr., Addl1lonal $4011

SAVEl SAVEl SAVEl

1992 CHEVY S-10 PI(KUP

Swimming lessons offered

4X4, 5 opeod tr.,.. bright red,

Ful podilod vinyl root, gold oma_,llll on lea- -ng, Doloo
Iloilo-. c.cttt.c otylo.

mtrroro, P. locko. Why will!?.
118RP. ...............................S20,na.oo
NOW ONLY................$18,499.00

Automatic,
air conditioning.
HURRY!

v--. ..... "-· •
oond., orutoo, tilt..-. Nice.

IISRP................................. $13, m .00
NOW ONLY................St2,589.00
lot Tlmolluyer"" AcldlUonat $4011

~

1992 OLDS. CUTLASS SUPREME

992 CHM WMINA SEDAN

Nd tuto. Irina., cruiM conlrol,
llr cond., P
. loclls, lift whMt, Y-1, Int.,.
mn.ct wiPM'I, arton:IMMI.

.,... AIWFII CUHlll, crulM, otoc-

A special meeting of the Meigs Local School Disuict' s Board of
Education will be held Wednesday at5 :30 p.m. at the Board of Edu cation meeting room to consider finance~ a11d other business. The
meeting has been called by the trcasun:r of the hoard, Jane Fry

1992 GEO TRA&lt;X!R COIMRTIIl!

o.m.t

--"" ,,

$11,990

4 Door, air concltlonlng. 5 opood
tr .... , 4 cyt. Depondllbto
IISAP........- ............... _ ...$11,115.00
NOW ONLY.... ............ .$1 0,126.00
Ill limo lloapr., • I ....... 1400

Competition blue, 5 opeed trona,
AM'A11Weo, llir cond., uve gM.
IISAP. ................................... $8380.00

Meigs board to meet

~

1992 CHEVY LUMINA
8 Pa11engers. automatic, air
cond., AMIFM stereo, cruise,
tilt, V-8.

In au cx uaodmary move, Justice
David H. Souter, who did not wntc
a se parate opinion in the case.
spoke Irom the bench after O'Con nor announced the court's ruling .
"To ovcrule (Roc) would subvert the court 's lcgnimacy beyond
any reasonable question," he told a
courtroom aud1cnce. " Ir th e court
were undermined , the country
would also be so ... Roc has not
proven unworkable in pr..1cti cc."

i'

P.O. Box 339
Tuppers Plains, OH. 45783
614-667-3161

79 90

opinion.

uinc aimed at g1v1ng stability to the
law.

.

P.O. Box 626

so,.

Tu~sday, hi~h

in mid·

1992 CHM FUlL SIZE PICKUP

4X4, I opOICl trone., lllvwldo trim
lllr oond. orutoe • Ult, AWFM ·-~
Ilium. whoak, P. wlndowo •loolta.

4X4, u v--. 5 opood - · · 1ro1t
whlto..
IISAP......................... - •.$12,117.1111
NOW ONLV.••• _._ .....$11 ,749.00
111 nmollupr ., Addllctnal$400

M8RP. ................................St7,1CML.OO
NOW ONLY................. $15,673.00

I, itlssle Fret Slles and Smite
2. FriiMiy CNIIIIU5 Slaff
3. Awar4 W'Innlnl Senke Departmelt.
4. Conven1111 on Sift Fnondnt

s. "'-•""" Ctlt1111111 s.tliadlon

The court upheld these disputed
prov1sions in the Pennsylvania law :
- Women seeki ng abortions
must be told about fetal development and alternatives to ending
their pregnancies. Abortion rights
advocates call the information an
" anti-abortion speech."
- Women must wait at least 24
hours after recc1ving that mformation. The high court had struck
down as unconstitutional a similar
walling-period law in 1983.
- Doctors arc requi red to keep

detailed records, subject to public
disclo sure. on each abortion per·
formed .
- Unmamed g~tls under 18 and
not supporting themselve s arc
required to get the consent of one
of their parents, or the perm1ssion
of a state JUdge who has ruled that
the g~rl see king an abortion is
mature enough to make the dec• sion on her own. The court prcv1 ·
ously had upheld similar laws 1n
other states.
But the court struck down. by a

5-4 vote, proviSIOn ol the Pennsy lvan ia law th at requ1rcd marncd
wome n in mos t cJ:-.cs 10 tell th c1 r
husbands about th en pl;_tns for an
abonion.
The rul1n g, conta mcd in f1ve
separate opin1ons by a fra gmented
court, furthcr eroded Ihe landmark
Roc vs. Wade rulmg that 19 years
ago established ahortion tt.s a fun damental constitutional nght .
But today' s decison dH1 not
exp l1 cllly overturn. or cvc11 ahan llon . the 1973 rul~ng .

RAC steelworkers return
to work following dispute

~' '
. i ·~ '

Route 7

$

docs not foll ow that tnc state JS
cn tll led to proswbe it in all
instances," Justice Sandra Day
O'Connor sa1d in the court 's main

992-2136 For More Information

211 Wast Second Street

Tonighl, cloudy. Low in Ihe
mid 60s.

1 Section, 1 DPages 25 eenlt
A Multimedia Inc. Newaoaoer

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Monday, June 29, 1992

so ~

&amp; Savings Company

Automatic, air cond., 4 door, AMIFM
otereo, bucket oeato, rear delogger,

218887

abortions, as it upheld most pro vi -

F:tt•tners
.Member F.I)J.C.

Kicker:

CopyrlgMed 1992

Purina.

Your Bank fnli(e: ...
. .a * .....a

8-9-16-22-26-33

Page 4

Court falls one vote short of outlawing abortions

•4 Nights Lodging •Presley's Mountain Music Jubilee Theater
'76 Music Hall and The Albert Brumley Show
(Include• 6 Meata and
•Lowe's Music Show Featuring Loretta Lynn
Top Country Muaic
Entertalnero)
•Mel Tillis Theater Featuring Mel Tillis • And Much More
Deposit of $50 by July ~eservallons to be paid In full by July 24.
at

981
Pick 4:
1178
Super Lotto:

Vol. 43, No. 40

For tUI /-.red.s . Ill a.l! IJ.lR\'' ,J
J!l'~ th .mJ ,'m-h.,!l• .:1

AUGUST 11·15 - 0 little Nashvillen BUNSON, MISSOURI

Call Joanne Williams

Pick 3:

===-=

~e .

The Farmers Bank Invites All Its; ~~
:- ~-ii~~~~
Customers To Two More Fun Filled Trips

(Contined from D-1)
new block building was constructed and now houses any army surplus item you might want with the
exception of weaponry.
The surplus outlet sells only
genuine military items inc luding
combat boots, jungle booLs, shins,
jackets, camouflage articles of all
types, sleeping bags, trench coats,
rain ponchos, duffel bags, ready to
eat meals, gloves, socks, blankets.
canteens and much more.
The items sold ar c lo ca ted
through ~overnment sou rces and
much of tl coming from the south.
Mrs. Wilson says 11 has taken a
while lO find JUSl the right SOllrt:eS
to provide her with what her cus10111etS wan!.
According to Mrs. Wilson. the
business seems 10 be a htt wtth
hunters, campers. scouts and out·
door enthusiasts.
For funher information on articles available at Wilson' s Army
Surplus. contact Mrs . Wilson, or
her son, Tom Wilson, who asstS LS
in the operauon , at992-7093.

Ohio Lottery

6. Owner Referral Bonus Prill) ram
7. Unadnrtlsed Strvlte Spetials
I. Aller HIIUis Senkelkop Off
9. 1'nflllonal Collision Repair
1o. rr.. Estinat•
I

•

handout, Grace sa.td.
Prices will range from a dime 10
$2, Grace said, but in an attempt Ill
clear out excess inventory, the shop
will offer clothing for $1 a bag for
the fi rst few weeks of opcrauon.
According to Grace, the shop IS
open to anyone, from the "poorest
to the n che st perso n in Mei gs
County." He emphasized that the
parish would continue to offer free
clmhmg on an emergency bas1s to
needy families, those families who
have suffered losses (such as house
fires), or who have been forced Ill
leave their home s be cau se of
domestiC disputes.
Proceeds from sales in the shop
will be used for its operation,
Grace said, and any excess proceeds will benefll the many out reaches of the pansh. Eventually,
Grace said, the parish hopes to hire
an employee to supervise th e
shop's operation.
In the meantime, "The Pansh
Shop" will be staffed by th e
parish 's team of willing United
Methodist volunteers. Betty Dean
of Chester, who served as the coordinator for the clothing bank, will
co ntinue in that capacity for th e
new operation.
All 1t.cms offered in the shop arc
donated to the pansh, and Grace
said that donations will still be
accep1cd, allhough he urged all
donor s 10 wait until mid -July to
bnng ilCm.s in. He also stressed the
1mportancc of calling the office
before bringing in donations, since
the office is not always open to
accept the clothmR.

Sale of new homes
down 5.6 % in May
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sales
of new hom es fell 5.6 percent in
May, the fourth stra1ght decline
that left sales at their lowest level
in eight months, the government
said today.
Although sales rose in the
Northeast and South, they dropped
elsewhere, including the steepest
plunge in nearly 10 years in the
West.
The departments of Commerce
and Housing and Urban Development said sales of new homes
totaled 501,000 at a seasonally
adjusted annual rate, down from
531 ,000 in April to the lowest level
si nce last September's 499,000.
Many analysiS had expected an
advance of about 4 percent.

•

8y MATI HARVEY
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP) Hundneds of Unit.cd Saeelworkcrs
today ceremoniously marched back
to their jobs aft.cr a 20-month labor
disput.c
with
Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp.
Family members and union supporters watched as the marchers
chant.cd "Union, Uillon" and
"Scabs ou~ union in" as they went
inside the plana gate lor the f1rs1
time since Nov. I, 1990, when their
previous conlracl with the company
expired.
"This is grca~" said [rvinc
Greathouse of Spencer, a 30-year
employee. "We're glad to be back.
We just hope everything goes OK,
now."
Workers clutched boxed lunches
and talked about their most recent
shift as they stood in line to punch
the time clock.
"Everybody's excit.cd about re establishing jurisdiction in the
plant," said United Steelworkers mtemational Vice President George
Becker.
Union officials carried a banner
that read, "One Day Longer,"
referring to a vow by the 1, 700
union members to outlast I ,300
replacement workers hired m
December 1990.
The last of the now-fired
replacement workers were seen
lcavmg the plant at 7 a.m. Some
made obscene gestures to show
their bitterness at losing their JObS
because of the union sculcmcnl
"I kind of felt like it was my
job," said replacement worker Rob
Hill of Gallipolis, Ohio.
By then, union supporters were

already wawng at me paam
entrance to grcctthe St.cclworkcrs
State troopers dott.cd the plant
boundaries on West Virginia 2. No
violence or disruptions were rcJX)r·
ted.
Among the wcll-w•shers a1 ~1c
gale was L~thcr W. Weatherholt, a
union plumber from Parkersburg
who had come to the gate 10 watch
the rerum of h1s father, Luther J.
Wcathcrho II.
"It is dcfinit.cly a vie1ory for
unions everywhere," said the
younger WcathcrholL "It's a shame
the economy has driven people Ill
do such low-life things. If the
economy was righ~ there wouldn't
be any scabs."
The union's contract with
Ravenswood was scheduled Ill be
signed later today in Charleston.
The t.cntative sclllcmcnt was announced May 27.
"We're glad to have the situation
behind us and are now looking
forward to offering a quality
product at compeouve prices,"
Ravenswood spokesman Pat Gal lagher said today.
The Steelworkers took out a fullpage advertisement today m The
Charleswn Gazelle, Point Pleasant
RcgJstcr, and other newspapers Ill
salute the union workers. "V1c10ry
at Ravenswood for all working
people. Solidarity Works '" the ad
said.
The dispute m the Oh1o Riv er
town of 4,100 had closed businesses and divided families with a bit·
tcmcss that won't soon heal.
The
St.cclworkcrs
aargcted
Ravenswood Aluminum's customers, and many took their busi -

ness ctscwhcrc, mcluding Lhc huge
Stroh's Bn:wcry. Ravenswood
Aluminum's sales dropped from
$701 million m 1989 to $491 million last year, according to coun
documents.
The Steelworkers also turn ed a
spotlight on the activities of fugi tive financier Marc Rich, an in ternational metal s trader wanted in the
United States on charges of racketeering and consp tracy.
Media reports have linked RJCh
to Ravenswood Alum mum, and the
union focused on Rich "to get h1m
to usc h1s influence to get that
company to deal with us
honorably," Becker said.
1l1c turning pomt for the
Steelworkers was an Easter
weekend
shake up
on
the
Ravenswood Aluminum board of
directors. The newly formed board
f~rcd Boyle and hired a former
general co unse l of the National
Labor Relations Hoard to resume
conl!act talks.
"Somebody brough1 th1 s about
(because)
the
Ravenswood
managcmcm was not willing to get
rid of the scabs," Becker sa1d.
At the end, R1ch issued a news
release laking credn for the se ttl ement
When the new agrccmc m was
announced , Ravenswood was days
away from defaulting on a $71 mii IJon debt payment
The company wa.' fanng an added $100 million liabiln y for back
wages 1f a judge 's pendmg decision
upheld a Nalional Labor Relations
Board rul1ng 1hat th e company had
engaged 111 an Il legal lockouL
W1thout a scuJcmcnt. the banks
~ id. there would tx.: no cred it.

One killed, 300 injured
in California earthquakes
YUCCA VALLEY , Calif. (AP)
- Desert residents. many without
water or electricity, rode out
unnerving aftershocks overnight to
two powerful earthquakes that
mjured more than 300 people and
killed a child.
Sunday 's quakes - one of them
Califorma 's s tron~cs t in 40 years
- opened a 43-mtle fi ssure in the
dese rt , buckled highways, caused
fires and hcavil) damaged dozens
of hom es. Yct another quake shook
the Las Vegas area this mornmg.
Ce ntered cast of Los Angeles ,
the JOlts were felt in Phoenix and

La'l Vega". People in New MexiCo
and [daho reported .;;w&lt;Jy1ng blmds
and water sloshin g 10 sw tmm1n g
pools . There was no maJOr damage
1n the Los Angeles area .
"I was m bed, an d 1he whole
lhtng sraned shak.mg, ll JlLSI kept
shakin g and shakin g. I gra bbed
ahold of my dog , 1t was the onl y
th1n g I could think of." Kurt
Schauppncr, news ed1tor of lhe H1 ·
Desert Star new spa per 1n Yuc ca
Valley
The Califom•a lnstllulc of Tech nology m Pasadena co unt ed hun ·
Continued on page .I

It has been reported to The
Daily Sentinel that Eric Heck
and Burl Kennedy, both 1991
gradual"' of Meigs High School
stationed at 29 Palms Marin~
Base in Calirornia, were awakened early Saturday morning by
the earthquake that shook that
part of Calirornia. Nobody at the
base wa.s injured by the tremor
according to Heck's mother.
Heck in lhe son of Mike and
Susie Heck, Pomeroy. Kennedy ls
the S&lt;ln or Perry Kennedy, Har risonville.

Pomeroy police have busy weekend
Two accidents, a possible breaking and entering and several incidents mvolving juveniles were
investigated by Pomeroy Police
over the weekend.
At 4:41 p.m. Friday at the intersection of Main and Court Sttccts
Kellie Anne Truelsen, 21, Bashan
Road, Racine , driving a 1974
Chevrolet owned by Bessie Priedel,
backed from a palking place into a
1977 Ford truck driven by Kelly
Marcinko, 18, Pomeroy. The car
driven by Truelsen struck the front
left fender of the Marcinko !ruck.
There was light dama~e to the left
front quarter of the Priedle vehicle,
and to the left front fender of the
Marcinko truck.
Truelsen was cited for improper
backing.
Guy Shuler was charged w1th
DUI and failure to maintain

assured clear distance followin g an
accident at 12: II a.m. Saturday at
the intersection of Nyc Ave . and
East Main Sa. Shuler , driving a
t9R 5 Plymouth owned by Jan
Roach , stuck the rear of a car driv en by Ryan Davi s, 18, Athen s.
when it stopped for a signal light.
The car driven by Dav1s and owned
by Alice Johnson, Alban y, had
light rear end damage . There was
no damage to the Roach car.
Richard Hamilton, Sr ., who
rcs1dcs m the Village Green Apartments reponed that somcume
between Thursday and Sunday, his
apartment was entered and his
father' s watch valued at $1,200 and
$500 in cash were taken. He said
when he returned home Sunday he
found the door unlocked and the
items mis sang . The incident
remains under invcsugauon .

•

Several juv enil es have been
cited 10 Meig s Co unt y Juvenile
Co urt by Pomeroy Pol icc on
charges of brcakmg curfew, trespassing , and dJsturbmg the peace .
At I :0 1 a.m Thursday four juvc ntles were arrested on Spring
Avenue and on Friday at 3:38p.m.
police again responded to Spring
Ave. where mvesugauon continues
into a possible assaull. Two juveniles there were charged with
assaull.
Friday, police responded to a
call at the Donna Young residence
on Old Chester Road, Pomeroy, A
dog owned by Tim Davidson had
reportedly broken loose and
auacked her pet lamb, killed her
tame rabbit, and fought a neighborhood dog. Police called lhe. dog
warden and the dog is confin!XI to
the Meigs County dog pound.

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN'J'ERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L- WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION ..,. welcome They sbould

be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to cd1ting and must be signed witb name,
address and lelepbone number. No unsigned lettm will be published. letters
should be in good taste, ltddrcssing lssues. not persona1ities.

Voinovich, Riffe
fall short of war
over sin tax hike

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 29, 1992

WASHlNGTON (NEA) - The
Pentagon has gone on a near-war
footing. Generals, admirals and top
civilians have met behind closed
doors to plot strate~. As they view
i~ the very foundation of the republic is at stake.
What IS this looming calllstrophe?
Congress is debating whether to
allow civilians access to mililllry
golf courses.
Earlier this year, the Bush
administration launched a major
attack on perks enjoyed by members of Congress. These included
free medical care, prescription
drugs. cut-rate food, haircuts, irems
from a subsidized stationery-store
system and healih-club memberships. Members of Congress saw
these freebies largely ebminaled.
This did not make many 10
Congress very happy. So now they
have laken aim at the tens of millions in taxpayer dollars spent on
similar perks for the e.ecuuve
branch.
Take lunche s. for example .
Most federal agencies maintam a

Robert]. Wagman
subsidized executive dinning room
while lower-level offici&amp;s must eat
in the cafeteria with ordinary
bureaucrats, or worse, pay for their
own meills in one of Washington's
many ovapriced restaurants.
By way of example, recently the
Treas ury Department's executive
dinning room offered a menu of
broiled lobsler tail, roasted potatoes. asparagus and poached pear
with raspberry sauce. Diners,
which included high-level Treasury
officials and $Uests - mostly
political appotnlees making in
e&gt;cess of $80,000 a y~ - were
required w pay their own way.
The tab for this meal - which
would have cost about $35 in a
nearby restaurant -was $4.75.
The tab to taxpayers: about
$ 150,000 a year to subsidize the
Treasury Dining Room.
Labor Department spokesmen
insist that the $5 per meal charged
in its six -table executive dining

room covers all costs of operation,
including the cost of food and the
salaries of chefs and waiters. The
Transportation Department says it
isn't sure about costs in its executive dining facility because it is
operated by Coast Guard personnel. A Justice Department
spokesman says that Attorney General Wilham Barr and his guests
pay for all food at breakfast and
lunch in his eight-seat privale dinning room. Taxpayers, however,
pay all the salaried employees there
and for "official" functions.
Congressional investigators estimate that taxpayers are paying at
least $4 million a year to subsidize
exec utive branch meals. and this
does not include the cost of the
While House's famous "mess," or
the five executive dining rooms in
the Pentagon - two for civilian
leaders, one each for the Army.
Navy and Air Force. Last year the
Army dining room cost S400,000.
while Navy executive meals cost
$1 million.
In addition to meals, taxpayers
arc charged about S18 million to

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Assoc:illttd Press Writer
COLUMBUS - The ~lalionship between Rep'!blican Gov. George
Voinovich and Democrauc House Speaker Vern Rtffe ts more sttamed
than at any lime since Voinovich became govema- almost I 8 months ago.
But each has resisled ~umnes to declare all-oot war and as the
week ended expressed contlllutd willingness to work with the ~er.
.
They have different ideas about how to deal w1th. the stale s financw
problems. The difference~ surfaced when R1ffe wtthheld Democratic
voles and killed Vomovtch s bid to mcrease taxes on alcohol and IObacco.
Voinovich at first smoothed the refusal over. But in response toques- lions, he said Riffe refused because of concezns of losing 1he House in the
November elections.
. ..
. .
· "N I
Asked if Riffe showed "political cowardice, VOtnoviCh saul,
o.
wouldn't say thaL" He said his proposal was "a Republican tax. It was
my tax." The Democrats need 001 have been "frigh!ened to death," he
S8lte said polls showed Ohioans would accept "sin taxes" to relaiD vilal
services. There would have been no political damage to euher pany. suggesled Voinovich, who plans 10 ordet $370 millmn in spending cuts thiS
week that will mainly affect OhiO's htgher educanons~stem.
Voinovich implied that the cuts are the respons1bthty of Democrats,
although they say th.e public.knows 1he governor .sclecled tlxl cuts and that
increasingly expensive Medic3ld, not the umverstbes, caused the defiCtt.
Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, reacled to the governor's comments by S:S.Y~g
he is coo vi need that Ottioans do not want a tax lllcrease of any kind. I ve
never played politics with the budget. " he added. .
However, he said he gave Vmnovtch a commument to pass a w
increase "or whalever is needed '· if there is a S520 m1ll1on delict~ as projected by 1he administration, ''on down 1he road." . .
. .
.
Riffe accused the governor of refusing 10 bend m his negotiattons w1th
legislative leaders He said he proposed raising taxes on the ncb, m addition to or in some combmatton with alcohol.and tobacco tax mcrease.
"He would have no part of it," said Riffe, who went on to compare
Voinovich with former Repobhc311 Gov. James Rhodes. He S31d Rh~es
would JiSien to the Legislature and when ~.announced somethmg, 1he
leaders were standing right there beside him.
.
Voinovieh was Rhodes' lieutenant governor before hecommg may~ of
Cleveland. Riffe noled he also served m ~e House m the 1960s. He
should know how things work around here.. R1ffe S3ld.
Asked if he was implying VOinovich IS a slow Ieamer, the spealcer
said, " No. I didn't say that." Is the govern~ playlllg. some pohltcs?
"You·d have to ask him !hal I would hope not, Rtffe sa1d.

Mother questions rules

Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH

subsidize dozens of health and fitness centers in most federal office
buildings, and more than S6 million
to provide 288 cars and 190 chauffeurs for federal agency execuaves.
Sen. Dennis DeConcini, DAriz .. has introduced a bill that
would drastically cut these perks: It
would prohibit taxpayer substdies
of executive meals. sharply reduce
the numbtr of federal e•ecutives
enlided to cars and drivers, forbid
subsidizing fitness facilities, and
require all on-sill: medical offices
to charge for health care.
Reporledly, however, what has
the military establishment up-inarms is the bill's proposal 10 open
up the 280 golf courses operated by
the Pentagon and Veteran Affairs
Department to civilian golfers who
would pay competitive greens fees.
Active-duty military personnel
- usually limited to officers and
retirees - pay fees in accordance
10 their rank. Supposedly, taxpayers pay only about $6.5 million a
year to subsidize these facilities.
But 1he actual figure is much higher if you count salaries of the
active-duty personnel who staff
many of these golf courses and the
operating funds hidden in various
base and unit recreational budgets.
By one estimale, if the courses
were opened to civilians paying
market greens fees, the government
would take in more than SIOO million annually.
The DeConcini bill would also
limit the use of 1he more than 250
private aircraft owned by various
federal agencies by disallowing except for the president - any socalled "mixed trips" in which
executive branch members combine business Lrips with personal
Lrips. It has long been recognized
that a Cabinet secretary's staff can
find something offiCi&amp; for the boss
10 do for a couple of JK&gt;urs when he
or she wants to take a Lrip home, go
fishing , or visit one of the kids at
college.

Can we talk about race? Probably not

have one thing in common. Both
defined a whale of an emouon bruising issue in this duller-than wallpaper presidenti&amp; campaign
And both made cowardly usc of
a woman as a scapegoat to make
their point.
The media are now busy wannIy commending Clinton for making
rap singer Sister Souljah 1he obJect
of our disaffections after she was
quoled in The Washington Post as
saying, "If black people kill black
people every day, why not have a
week and kill while people?''
The Clinton-SoulJah imbroglio
surrounding graves which have raises several points of contention
Dear Editor:
much more than what is alleged
where most blacks and whites part
allowed.
Two years ago~ when my son,
company
.
There are three trustee s, (of
Jeremy Guinther died, I made him
First, if Clinton felt so strongly
a promise that as long as I was which are new) now. It appears Mr. about Souljah 's caricatured, but
alive his grave would be kept clean Hill has led the trustees of the fnghtening call-to-racial arms, he
and always have beautiful !lowers. township for several years now : should have condemned tl on the
But there IS one Letart Township and I hope these new trustees can day (May 13) when The WashingTrustee, Don Richard Hill, thai has look into what he and 1he cemetery ton Post published it . instead of
g1ve n me a lot of difficul!y over care taker are doing . It would be waiting for a month 10 hustle Jesse
nice if there was equal JUStice for Jackson 's co nvention with his
1his from the stan
Sunday, (June 21), which was all the graves of loved ones.
phony indignation. And if he had a
To my knowledge, so far I have problem with appearing at a con Fathers Day. my mother made her
every Sunday Lrip to the cemetery not broken any rules or laws (or
10 find his flowers had been laken whatever they may call them) .
up and his cross' were missing. Hundreds of graves are more trouShe. therefore, called Clarence ble to take care of than Jeremy's
Norris (cemetery care taker) to find (which I lake care of mysell). I do
out what had happened . He said aU the trimming around everything
and wash down his marker every
there had been complaints.
Jus1 three weeks ago, I was hopUpon investigalion we found week.
ing for an elec torate and a cam Anyone can go and sec that his paign that would rise above considout that Don R. Hill was the one
pI
01
IS kept trimmed and neal We
who had complained. Mr . Hill
erations of narrow self-inlereSl and
look
at it as though thiS is the leas: do the ri ght thing . Three weeks
alleges that the township trustee
minutes verify that only one we can do for Jeremy now. There is later, it is mcrea~ingly clear that it
arrangement of flowers are allowed a trustee meeting July 6. which I was a nruve hope. As in the presiper grave. As of yet, this has not plan 10 attend. I hope if anyone else dential elecuon of 1988, the apparbeen able 10 he localed in any min- has had any trouble like this they ent object of the e.en::ise in 1992 is
utes. so I can see exactly what it will be there also.
to dnve up the opposition's negasays. Also, there are many other
Carol Guinther tives. At the end of thai road lies a
hollow victory for the wiMer and a
net loss for the country. But it is an
irresistrblc exerCISe so long as no
one is able or willing 10 provide a
coherent vi sion behind which a
By The Associated Press
Today is Monday, June 29, the 18lst day of 1992. There arc 185 days majority of the people can rally.
The cou nter-punchers have
left in the year.
already
proved remarkably suc Today's Highlight in History :
cessful.
According
to recent polls,
On June 29, 1767, the British Parliament approved 1he Townshend Revthe
number
of
people
with a negaenue Acts. which imposed impon duties on glass. lead, pam~ paper and
tive view of Ross Perot doubled in
tea shipped 10 America. Colonists bitterly proresled 1he Acts, wh1ch were
less
than a month. The incumbent
repealed in 1770.
president,
George Bush, and the
On this dale:
Democratic
challen$er, Bill Clin In 1776, the Virginia state constitution was adopled, and PaLrick Henry
ton.
continue
10 decline in 1he estimade governor.
. .
.
mation
of
their
countrymen. It is
In 1941, Polish statesman. pllllltSl and composer Ignace Paderewsk1
not out of the realm of possibility
died in New York at age 80.
In 1946, British authorities arresled more than 2,700 Jews in Palestine that the favorable rating of all three
men combined could, by Novemin an attempt to stamp out terrorism.
In 1949, the government of South Africa enacled a ban against racial - ber, be lower than President Bush's
ly-mixed marriages, and suspended the automatic granting of clbzenship standing at the conclusion of the
Gulf War.
to immigrants.
.
.
.
.
Some of Perot's problems were
In 1954,1he Atomic Energy Commission voled agamst re -mstatmg Dr.
inevi!able once his background
J Robert Oppenheimer's access to classified information.
· In 1966,-the Uniled StaleS bombtd fuel storage facilities near the North became clearer to the public . He
could not forever remain an empty
Vietnamese cities of Hanoi and Haiphong.
In 1967, 25 years ago, East Jerusalem was annexed by Israel, which vessel into which each voter could
pour his aspirations and frustra removed barricades separating 1he Old City from the Israeli sector.. .
In 1970, the United Stales ended a two-month mtlitary offensive mto tions. No one can be all things to
Cambodia
. all men indefinitely.
But, JUSt as he has claimed,
In 1972 20 years ago, the Supreme Court ruled the death penalty, as It
is evidence of an organized
there
was being 'meted ou~ could constitule "cruel and unusual pumshment."
smear
campaign behind recent
(The ruling prompted stares to revise their capilal punishment laws.)

Letters to the editor

Tuesday, June 30

Robert Wagman is a syndicated columnist ror Newspaper Ent~erpr~ Association.

Those two peas in the campaign
pod, Dan Quayle and Bill Clinton,

Chuck Stone
vention with Sister Souljah, he simply should have declined Jackson's
invitation .

Second, Souljah's expressions
of anger have widespread suppon
among blacks. That's why several
black ministers have spoken out in
support of her. One of them, the
Rev . Calvin Butts , the distin guished minister of New York
City's Abyssinian Baptist Chun:h.
has invited Souljab to his church.
Third, CliniOn is wise to try to
keep a politically discrtet distance
from lac kson - although it was
foolish to delibtrat.ely offend him.
Jackson whom I have always considered a liturgical superlly has a
history of jerking candidates
around if they don't kiss his egomaniacal ring. But Jackson sllll
comes the closest of any single
black national leader to articulating
whal Alex Haley called "the core
experience" of black people.
Editorials in the mainstream
media have lamented the silence of

black leaders m condemning SoulJab. But suppose they did condemn
her. Who wOtild listen?
According 10 a recent study
sponsored by the Robert Wood
Foundation, inner-city blaaks aren't
listening to black leaders or black
role models. They're listening to
rap singers.
When black elected officials,
clergypersons and civic leaders do
speak out against what they believe
is antithetical to black community
interests (for example Clarence
Thomas· nomination 10 the
Supreme Court) and their point of
view is rejected, white media
moguls in places such as The Wall
Strttt JourMI gleefully foam at the
mouth.
Historically, the white media
have always coddled "pasteurized" black leaders who !ell white
America what it wants to hear, but
have shunned tell-it-like-it -is
blacks. But when young blacks violently revolt, a traumatized America admonishes its pasteurized black
colleagues, "Why didn't you tell
us this was going 10 happen?"
Many blacks in positions of dual

Today in history

Hodding Carter III

,

I

a..

PA

INO

•I Columbus I 82' I

•

responsibility have always spoken
out on black-on-black crime, the
community-destroying drug culture, the imperative 10 register and
vote, the iniliarive-debilitating welfare syndrome and, most imponant
of all, the need to get a good education . Unlike Quayle and Clinton,
they don't do this only during political campaigns.
Clinton's denunciation of Sister
Souljah is not new. In the '60s,
white America delested Malcolm
X, while black America adored this
magnificent man. In 1966, whites
accused blacks of racial divisiveness for embracing Black Power.
But the problem with today's
national debate on race, whether it
is triggered by Quayle or CliniOn,
is that only the white power structure defines the debate's parame ters . As long as that onc-sidedness
e&gt;ists, honest dialogue cannot survave.

In the meanume , can we talk'
Chuck Stone is a syndicated
columnist ror Newspaper Enttrprise Association.

poses whtch they respect, much
depends."
A presidential campaign should
he and occasionally has been about
the articulation of common purposes. When such powerful themes are
absent, lesser ones prevail. Turning
the old admonition on its head,
today's politicians live by the
creed, "If you can't think of anything good to say, say something
negative."
It is not as though recent history
Jacked examples of the power of
ideology and ideas. Ronald Reagan
is not one of my heroes, but in
1980 he offered clear convictions
and was rewarded for them . A
great totalitarian empire was leveled in the 1980s by the grander
dream of freedan.
In 1992, where are the ideas?
Where is the vision? Most of the
country's political creativity seems
to have been diverled into the perfection of negative campaigning.
But our problem is not that we
don't know what we dislike. The
problem, to paraphrase Lippmann,
IS that we don't know or can't
articulate what we like and want.
That is the task of leadership, and a
presidenti&amp; race is the place for it
to emerge. Until it does, smear,
innlltlldo and half-truth will be the
common currency of a political
process.
(Hoddlng Carter Ill, former
State Dtpartmeat spokesman
and awanl-willlllag reporter, editor and publlsber, Is presidtlt of
M1inStreet, a Washington, D.C.·
based television production company).
I

By Tbe Associated PrtSS
The sunny and mild weather on
the weekend will quickly btcome
just a memory in Ohio, forecasters
said.
A fronlal syslem IS expecled 10
bnng increasingly warm and humid
conduions to the Buckeye State,
with a chance of shower.; or thun dersiOrms every day untillhe weekend, the National Weather Service
said.
By Friday , high temperatures
most places will he around 90.
The record-high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 100 degrees in 1934

while the record low was 48 m
1923. Sunset tonight will be at 9:04
p.m. and sunrise Tuesday at 6:06
a.m .
.
Aroand tht nation
Showers were scattered along
the oct dlCill Pacific Coast today as
cool air blew into 1he West
A thunderstorm rumbled over
San Antonio early today, left over
from powerful StomiS that dumped
lalge hail in Texas and Oklahoma
on Sunday.
Cool air fran 1he Pacific Ocean
helped produce showers early
today in Seattle, Spokane, Wash.,

Portland, Ore., 31ld Pendle!Dn, Ore. JU &gt;I JOmmutes Sunda] m Tallahas·
Temperatures were expected to sec. Fla., causmg street tloodmg .
be IS degrees below normal in
Yakuaull, Alaska. hil 74 degrees
parts of Northern Calif om ~a. and Sunday, breaking the record of 72
cool weather was n pected up the fo r the date.
The hi gh temperature 1n th e
coast to Washington.
Skies were cloudy across th e na110n Su nd :iy as 114 a1 La ke
lower Mississippi VaUey. and thun- Havasu C1i)' , Afll .
Tempe'"1ures wday were fore·
derswrrns were expccir&lt;:l lo con lm
cas
t Jn the 60s and 70s along th e
ue in ihe area.
Pac1fic
Coas t and m th ~ north ern
On Sunday , thund erstorm s h11
Plain
s:
1n 1hc 70s and &amp;Os ac ross
the Texas Panhandle and Okla ·
the
Eas
t,
Grea t Lakes rcg10n an d
homa with strong wmd and large
hail - up to 4 1(2 mchcs m diam e- cen tral Pla1m . 1n th e 90s 1n the
southern Plam s: and over I00 m
ler near Brownwood, Toas
An inch and a half of ram fell 1n the desert South wesl.

One
killed...
Continued from pagt

I

W VA

Showers T-sronns Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Sunny

Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

01992 Accu-Wealhe', Inc

V111 Associa/ed Press GraphaNet

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, becoming cloudiness
with a slight chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Low in the mid-60s.
Chance of rain is 30 pereent. Tuesday, showe rs and thunderslorms
likely . High 8~85. Chance of rain
IS 70 percent.
Extended forecast:

Wednesday through Friday:
A chance of showers or thunder slorms each day and becoming
more humid. Highs north around
80 Wednesday, warming to the mid
to upper 80s by Friday . Highs
south warming from the mid-80s
Wednesday 10 around 90 by Friday.
Lows each morning mainly in the
60s.

Five killed on Ohio highways
By The Associated Press
Five people died in separate
traffic accidents in Ohio over the
weekend, the State Highway Patrol
said. One of 1he victims was riding
a motorcycle.
The patrol counted fatalities
from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
GEORGETOWN - Angel
Treadway, 8, of Hamersville, a passenger in two-vehicle accident on
Ohio 125 in Brown County.
WAPAKONETA - Joyce 'ZA:rrelli, 43, of SpeocerviUe, in a one-

vehicle accident on a township
road in Auglaize COttnty.
SATURDAY
BEDFORD HEIGHTS - Eric
Me Kenzie, 13. of Cleveland, a passenger in a one-car accident on
lnlerstale 480 in Cuyahoga County.
STEUBENVILLE - Thomas
M. Verhovec, 39, of Rayland, who
was operating a motorcycle on
Ohio I 52 in Jefferson County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
DELAWARE - Carol I.
Scheufler, 50, of Manon. in a twovehicle accident on U.S. 42 10
Delaware County.

--Meigs announcements-

Dirty campaigning make us all losers
believes he is fully wed.
Neither man gives any evidence
of understanding that what the people desperately want are not geshead! ines about his alleged mi s- tures and !~point plans, but faith
deeds. Orchestrated charges have thallheir president IS a penon aniace om panied and prompted JOur - maled by conviction and big ideas.
nalistic exposes. Occasionally, you Pc:rot's initial skyrocket of populargel the feeling that the legendary ity was fueled primarily by the
master of Republican hardbalf. blind faith of millions of AmeriRoger Ailes. is in a fetid cavern cans that he might be such a leader,
scmewhere, rubbing his hands and and their corresponding lack of
chortling gleefully as each timed belief that either Bush or Clinton
salvo is launched against Perot's could be.
flank .
As was written in Proverbs ,
"Where there is no vision, the peoThe president and Gov. Clin10n ple perish," and what can be said
arc reeling from self-mfl1~ted and of the people applies with equal
less visible blows. In !hell' cases, force to those who would lead
the voterS are indicating that famil- them. When candidates appear to
iarity breeds contempt. Each man be blank slates upon which meshas reshaped his baste message .in sages arc written, erased and
order to regain control of the poilu- rewritten according to the polls and
cal dialogue. Each man has lost the limes, negative campa1gns have
ground despire the effat
an implicit mandate.
Almost 70 years ago, Waller
Or perhaps it is because of 1he Lippmann wrote a passage that is
effon. which has been 100 studiedly eerily applicable to 1992:
political, "too cute by half," as the
"From what soun:e come these
English say. The president has the unmanly fears that prevail among
unfortunate appearance of a mari- us, these dark forebodings, this
onetle whose wires are all on diJ- despairing impotence? What is it
play . His handlers decide that that has shaken lhe nerves of so
to~gh Lalk may make him seem
many? It is the doubt that exists
moce presidenti&amp;, and so he lurch- among the people. There is the
es up 10 the podium, delivers his doubt that there exists the trust in
hard-hitting lines with awkward each other which is the first condiinlensily and ill-timed gestures. tion of intelligent leadership. That
then lurches off. On another stage is the root of the matla'. The particthe governor makes a 90-dcgree ular programs that we debate so
tum with his economic message, angrily are not so important The
denies he has done i~ then talks in fate of the nation does not hang
knowing del8il about the inlricacies upon them. But upon the power of
of a program to which no one the people.to remain united fa pur-

Hot, humid weather forecast later in week

OHIO Weather

Pentagon mobilizes to combat perk wars

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 29, 1992

Trustees to med
The Rutland Township Trustees
will meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m . at
the Rutland Fire Station.

Area deaths
Ethel J. Drake
Ethel J . Drake , 58, Sum mersville, W.Va.. died Friday, June
26, 1992, at SL Frances Hospilal in
Charleston, W.Va.
She was a homemaker, a member of Pearson United Methodist
Church in White Water, W.Va.,
and a member of Clifton Eastern
Star No. 157.
She was born December 17 .
!933 in Clarksburg, W.Va. , the
daughter of the late Lester and
Jessie Swiger.
She tS survived by her husband,
Ja mes C. Drake , Summersville ,
W.Va .: two sons, Thomas (Debra)
Drake of Racine and Timothy
(Debra) Drake of Bridgeport.
W.Va .: one daughter, Carol V.
(T homas) Lester of LaCrosse,
Wts .. two sisters, Esther L. Blount
of Martin 's Ferry and Wilma M.
Waterman of Marieua; one brother,
Robert P. Swiger pf Miller and
five grandchildren, Christy, Jamie,
Tina and Christopher Drake and
T1ffany Lesler.
There are no calling hours, but
services will be held I p.m. Mon day at Kirkland Memorial Gardens
with Rev, Steve Atkinson officiating . Burial will be at Kirkland
Memorial Gardens.

The Daily Sentinel
(U8P811~

••err

Publiahed
al\emoon. Monclay
tluwlh Frida~ u Caurt Sl., l'uoiWIO),
Ohio by t.h.e Ohio Valley Pabliahina
Companr!Multlmedia Jae., Pomeroy,
Ohlo 411769, I'll. m-2tlt6. s..o.d d . .
JaLap paid at Pomero), Ohio.
Member: 'I'M ~ated PTMI, abd Ula

Ohio Newpap.r AMociati•, Nation&amp;)

A4Yerti.tn1 Kepn~eotatiYe, Branham
Ne:w1peper SO., 713 Third. Aftnue,
New Yort. N... Yortl0017.

POSTMASTER' &amp;old dla._ 1o
The Dally S.ftltnal , 111 Cou.rt Sl.,
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Legion to meet
The Racine American Legion
Post No. f:Hl wiD meet Thursday al
7:30 p.m. at the post home .
Refreshments served following the
meeting.
DorA to participate in parack
Chester Council No. 323,
Daughters of America, will participate in the Racine Fourth of July
parade. Line-up forms at 9:30am.
at Southern High School. Any
members willing to assist should
contact Mary Kay Holter at 9492960.
Golr scramble
There will be a golf scramble
sponsored by the Eas!em Athletic
Boosters at the Riverside Golf
Course in Mason, W.Va. on Sunday at I p.m. Entry fee is S35 and
those wanting to participale are
requested to contact Ron Hill at
992-6858 or Bill Hannum at 985 4244.
Revival
Revival at Hazel Community
Chun;h, Dewiu's Run Road, Long
Bouom, will be Thursday throu~h
Sunday. Pastor Rick Weaver will
be the speaker and Pastor Edsel
Han invites the public.
Wildlife program
Keith Wood. Meigs County
Game Protector, will present a program on wildlife regarding endangered species at the Meigs County
Public Library Wednesday at 2
p.m.
Library dosed
The Meigs County Public
Library will be closed Saturday in
observance of the Fourth of July .

dreds of af1ershocks of dtmmishing
strength by ibis morning. The
quakes measured 7.4 and 6.5 on the
Richter scale.
Scientists warned there was a
SO-SO chance of aftershocks
c.cceding 6.0 on the Richter scale
m the coming week.
A quake measunng 5.6 on the
Richl£r scale was widely felt in the
Las Vegas area at 3:14a.m. today ,
residents reported. The quake cen tered 70 miles northwest of Las
Vegas was not an aftershod&lt;, said
Willis Jacobs. geophysicist at the
U.S. Geological Survey in Golden,
Colo. No inJunes or damage were
immediately reporled.
Fear of aftershocks kept people
on edge, Ellen Mihalc1k said as she
used a video camera to record the
cleanup at a Yucca Valley supermarket.
" It shatters the nerves," she
said.
The stronger quake rumbled
across the desert at 4:58 a.m . Sunday . Centered six miles north of
Yucca Valley, about 110 miles east
of Los Angeles, it ripped cracks in
highways and homes. destroyed
water systems, caused fues and lefl
500,000 people temporarily with out power.
Damage was heaviest lfl the
high desert towns of Yucca Valley.
Landers, Joshua Tree and Twentynine Palms, and in B1g Bear, a ski
town in the San Bemardtno Mounllllns.
It was California ' s strongest
quake since a 7.7 jolt near Bakersfield in 1952. That quake tilled 12
people and injured 18. A quake of
7 on 1he Rich!fl scale is considered
a major earthquake, capable of
wides~ btavy damage.
The second quake hit at 8:07
a.m. and registered 6.5. It was cen tered six miles southeast of Big
Bear Lake in the San Bernardino
Mountains, about 20 miles west of
the flrsljolt.
Three-year-old Jo seph Btshop
was killed when a ch1mney collapsed in a Yucca Valley home. He
had come from Newburyport.
Mass .. with his parents, who were
attending their 20-ycar high school
reunion .
San Bernardino County had 269
injuries, 24 of them serious. sheriff's spokesman Jim Bryant said .
River side County reported 84
IRJUries.

COLLAPSE - San Bernardino Countv fire f'ighttr Mike McGhee stands on a dumpsler
looking over damage done to the Yucca Valley
Bowl in Yuca Valley Sunday. A sidewall on the

structur e collapsed Hflcr a 7.4 Richter Scale
eart hquake struck in the southern CaliFor nia
desert tm·"'"· 120 mil(· ~ l'a ... r of l.os 1\ngrles. (API

Democrats' platform shows
how fragile party unity is

of broken barncrs and overcome
WASHINGTON (AP)
Democrals 11e bragging about their oppression. and who leads a w~ca l
unified pany this year. but it:s a party constiruency.
Democrats ' hopes to w1n Ihc
fragile unity, with roiling tensions
presidential
elecuon after so many
underneath.
Bill Clinton has preuy much losses also is helping Clinton keep
worked out convention roles - or the lid on potential conniCts. The
non-roles- fa- the men he defeal- plaiforrn he wanted and gm depam
ed in 1he primaries. Hc'U avOid 1he from some liberal Iradnions and
protracted haggling that made ca n be read as an acknow ledge ·
Michael Dukakis seem like a men! of 1he party ' s big ·govern ·
ment, spcnd·mon cy past. He's per·
hostage to Jesse Jackson in 1988.
The signals from the Clinton suadcd the party such a departure is
camp are clear. The primaries arc th e onl y way !D wm
The divisions lurkmg below Ihe
h•SIOI)' and any also-ran who wants
surface
Oared up only a few um cs
favors has to make it worth Clin Saturday
a1 a national platfo rm
Ion's while.
committee
meeting.
In some ways 1992 IS easier
Gov . Pete Wtl son sig ned an than 1988.
When New York Mayor Dav1d
emergency declaration for the two
Paul Tsoogas and Jerry Brown. Dinkms tried to add a racml bal counties, opemng the door to state who will be coming lO the conven· ance requirement to an end orse ·
aid.
tion with 553 and 613 delegates
The San Bernardino County respectively, have lillie in common
Sheriff's Department called in Ideologically. They were unlikel y
Unit s of the Me1g s County
extra officers to guard against loot- to join fon:es even before Clinton
ing. The Red Cross opened shel- worked out a deal with. Tsongas Emergency Medical Serv1 ces
ters.
that effectively dtvlded and con · responded to 10 calls for i!SliiStancc
over the weekend and early Mon ·
The quakes cut water service to quered the pair.
5,500 homes and businesses, about
No raual overtones cloud the day morn mg.
On Saturday at 12:58 p.m. 1hc
half the customers in an 80-square- plans this year as Clmton tries lo
Rae
me unn went to Pearl Srrcet for
mtle area. Trucks delivered water assert control over his party and
Alana Wilson who was 1akcn 10
to many places.
convenuon. Unlike Dukakis with
People in the hamlet of Landers, Jackson, Clinton doesn't face a los- Vetcrans Memorial Hosp!lal.
AI 4:2 4 p.m. the Ruil and un11
near the epicenler. were advised to ing candidate who also is a symbol
we
nt to Higl ey R1dgc Road fur
boil drinking water. Hundreds
Nora
Ca rroll who was taken 10
flocked to damaged stores for botPleasant
Valley Hosp11al.
tied water. wh1ch was rationed at
The Rutland unn. at S:2X p rn .
some markets.
Vttel"UUS Mtmorial
was called 10 Wel ls Run Road for
At leas t 5,000 homes in San
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS · Krt stoph c r Gutnthcr w hn wa ~
Bemard1no County were stiU withEva
Schreiber, Middleport.
transported to Holze r MediCal (e n
out power early today. said Chuck
SATURDAY DISCHARGES - ter.
Duncan, a county disaster planner.
Thelma Mayo • .Bun Men and
At9:28 p.m. the M1ddlcportunll
Pamela McKinney.
went 10 Overbrook Ce nte r for I:&gt; a
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Sche1ber who was taken to Vctcr·
None.
ans.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
The Racmc untt went to Route
Cart Moore.
33H and Bhnd Hollow Road al 9:30
started them 10 1989. Troopers
p.m. for William Rife w ho was
have checked 12,858 vehicles and HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
treated but not transported .
Discharges, June 26 - Margaret
have made 104 drunken driving
The Pomeroy F11e Dcpartm cnl
Allison. Roger Boyer, Evelyn
arrests as a result.
Since the checkpoints were Dean . Mrs. Ronald Dickens and
declared legal by the U.S. Supreme daughter, Gladys Haner, Estill JusCourt in 1990, their use h.as tice, Mrs. PauJ Rodgers and daughter, and Rhonda Stump.
increased, the patrol said.
Buths. June 26 - Mr. and Mrs.
Thiny-eight staleS and 1he DisAm Elc Power
.J I 3/4
Brian
Decker . a son. West
trict of Columbia permit roadside
011
........
.
.. 26 3~
Ashland
Columbia, W.Va. Mr. and Mrs.
checkpoints.
AT&amp;T...
........
.......
..4 2
An annual average of about ~ I.Jwin, a son, Gallipolis. Mr.
Bank
One..
.......
.
44 1!2
31,000 drunken -driving arrests and Mrs. Chriswplter McClellan, a
Bob
Evans
..
........
.
..
17 1/8
have been made in Ohio since daugh!fl, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs.
Charming Shop................. 27 7/8
Richard Mount, a son. Bidwell. Mr.
1987, the patrol said.
City Holding .......... ....... 19 1(2
and Mrs. Herbert Redman , a son.
Federal Mogul...... .. ..... 17 3/8
Thurman. Mr. and Mrs. George
l/4 Goodyear T&amp;R .......... 67 7/8
Smidiberger. a son, Racine.
Key Centurion ................... 19 3/4
Saper Loao
Discharaes, June 27 - Hilda
Lands£nd
.................. ....... J2 3/8
8-9-16-22-26-33
Adams, Mrs _ Brian Decker and
Limited
Inc.......
........ .. 22 1/4
(eight, nine, sixteen, twenty- son, Mrs . Newt Jones and son,
Multimedia
Inc
.................
.27
two, twenty-sis, thirty-liRe)
Joshua
Lawhon,
Charles
Rax
Restaurant...
..........
.
..
7!8
The jaclqn is $4 mi11.io1L
McPbetm. Mrs. James Miller and
Reliance
Electric
...............
17
Kkker
son, Mary Robinson , Janice
Robbins&amp;
Myers
....
..
..........
I 5 1/4
2-1-8-8-8-7
Swann, and Mary Woolf.
Shooey's Inc ..................... 20 5/8
(two-one-eight-eight-eightBuths, June 27 - Mr, and Mrs.
Star Bank ......................... 37 3/4
seven)
Guy Jarvis, a daughter, Gallipolis.
Wendy lnt'l.. .. ................... II
Pitt 3 Numbers
Discharges, June 28 - Mrs.
Worthington Ind ................ 22 518
9-8-1
Ernest IJwin ad son, Mrs. ChristoStock reports are the 10:30
(ninc-eiaJ!I.-,)
pblr McClellan and daugh!fl, Mrs.
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Pict4Nambcn
Richard Mount and son . Mrs .
Ellis and Loewi or Gallipolis.
1-1-7-8
George Smithberger.
(onc-ooe-seven-eight)

eel So was an cxt cn s •vr !1 st or

po!ll iCJ I and gove rnm en t reform s
prom01cd by Jerry Brown, lcad1ng
one of h1 s support ers to observe
Ihat ··nothing bold has come out of
1h1s - and yet there arc some polls
, hnw1ng Bill Clinton runm ng th11d
1n 4H sw tcs.· ·

Squads respond to 10 calls

Hospital news

Underage drunken drivers
responsible for fewer deaths
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State officials say the number of
traffic deaths involving underage
drunken drivers has declined significantly in the five years since
Ohio's legal drinking age was
raised to 21 in 1987.
Ohio Depanment of Highway
Safety statistics show the annual
number of such fatalities has
decreased 45 percent in that span.
In 1987, 1,772 people died on
Ohio streets and roads. Those
deaths included 795 aloohol-relaled
cases, 155 of which involved
underage drinkers. Four years later,
1,584 fatalities were reponed, of
which 586 were aloohol-relaled and
86 involved underage drunken
drivers.
The department estimated 200
more people would have died in
Ohio accident.'~ since I987 had the
drinldng age not been raised.
The State Highway Patrol said it
will set up two sobriety checkpoints in northern Ohio over the
July 4 weekend in observance of
National Sobriety Checkpoint
Week, which began Sunday.
The chec.kpoints will be the 27th
and 28th condueled smce the patrol

men! of puhilc -sc hoo l cho1 ce.
Lou1 s1ana State Chairman l1m
Ilrad ] sa1d he was concerned thai
could he construed as quotas.
Mary Frances Bell). a member
of the US . CommtSSion on Cl' li
R1gh1S, funou sly called h1 s usc of
1h:11 word "rcprchcnSlhle'· and sa1d
hardly any one a1 Ihc mecung had
l1lack kids 1n sc hools w1th no le&gt; l·
books and ram fall1 n): through the
roo f
But the amendment was defea t-·

Stocks

Lottery numbers

,

wJ s cal led to the Route 7

~md

B

tn[)J'\.'&gt; at \ 0 :20p.m . on J motor

\L'Il tC k acudc nt. Unt b from Mtd·
dkporl. Syr:tcuse :md Rutland were

c:illcd

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Th e

trzmsporlcd Shaun

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Pnc·c and Dcioiolc Tliii.SIO Veterans.
I li e M1CI:1 lc pml unit look Jerry
I la yman to Vt· trr4.1ns. ThL' Syracuse

un11 transiHHic·d M1kc Rou sh to
Ve teran' anl1 thr Rutland unll
tr:.n sJXIIIed MICky Hauer to Veter·
ans
On Sund.1~ J t ) ~H a.m . th e
Porn cro-. un 11 wa'\ cJ IIcd to the
l )n mcrn~ \111'.1n,e J.nd R.chJhillta
uon Ccm cr lor \\/alter Rou~h " -ho

tak en h 1 Vctc.rans.
The Tupf1&lt;TS Plams uml al 7 Ill

w :~ s

a.m. wJLh l&lt;crdsvd lc Fnst Rcspon·
clc r wen t 10 Jorpa Kood lot HcrmJn

Grossnll'kle v. ho was transported to
Camden CIJT k Mcmonal Hosp11al.
AI I:56 p.rn . the Tuppers Plams
un1t :~nd Reed m ile First Re;pondcr
v.crll Ill Ro ute 7 in Tuppers PlantS
for Kcl Sedwick who was taken to
Camden Clark
AI 7 )5 p.m 1hc Pomeroy F11c
Orp:utmcnt went to the Kro ger

r:trkln g 101 on a car f1rr Bill Scar ·
hrough wa.s the owner

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rOIIIWIKS/I'WlOII!IIl 1" "A LEMul: Of Mil 11r

• •••••••

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Molidar, June

a.

1•

,..

manager Bobby Cox said. "But
there's a lot of games lefL I'd take
four games out at the All-Star
break. But I'd rather be four
ahead."
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Montreal 9, Pittsburgh 0; Ch1cago
5, Philadelphia 3; St. Louis 3, New
York 2 in 11 mnings; Los Angeles
8, Houston 2; and San Diego 7, San
Francisco 3.
Cincinnati scored three firstinnin g runs to end Tom Glavine's
Invincibility at Riverfront Stadium
- he had won all eight ca reer
starts there - then rallied for the
victory after Atlanta tied 11 at 4 in
the top of the eighth.
Bip Roberts led off the eighth
wtth a single off Mark Wohlers (01) and advanced on Barry Larkin's
sacrifice . Saba, who had an RBI
double and solo homer off Glavme.
followed with a single to snap the
tie. Sabo later scored as the Braves
failed to turn a doubl~ play on
Morris' potential inning-endin g
grounder.
Norm Charlton (3-0) got th e
victory despite giving up the lead
tn the eighth and a solo homer in

season_

in the eighth inning or Sunday's National
League game in Cincinnati, which the Reds won
6-5. (AI')

ROBERTS SCORES- Cinci nnati 's Bip
Roberts (len) dives in to score in front or Atlanta
backstop Damon Berryhill on Chri&lt;; Sabo's hit

" We lost three games - that's
three games in the standtn gs ...

the mnth to Greg Olson.
Dodgers 8, Alitros l
The Dodgers. shaken fumt Cllolr
bods by two early·moliRing Cllf"A.
quakes, beat Houston 10 llllrlt liDtt
of four at the Sl3l1 of a cltit&gt; llKlld
22-game homestand.
Bob OJeda (4-4) earned to&gt; iilfll1
victory in six starts dating bad m
May 26, allowing two runs Jlllil1u
hits in six innings. M11cb Wdl!la
and Eric Kanos each dro~e a Pr&gt;O
runs for the Dodgen.
Willie Blatr dropped to l'l-3
Padres 7, Gialllli 3
AI San Diego, Fred McGrtiff JJDd
Tim Teufel each hit two--nlll lllllgles to help Padres roobt lira'*
Seminara.
Semmara (3-2) gave q liblw
runs on five hils over siJ. ~
Giants Slal1er Jolm lllllial (5-5&amp;
gave up four runs and fuur II:Ju; "'
four innings.
Expos 9, Pir-t
At Olympic Stad.ium. Bnu
Barnes pitched five-hit balllimr S
1/3 innings and Larry Wa1tor ~
two home runs.
(Set NL on Page 5)

Cleveland slips past Toronto 7-6
by th e time they move into thw
new stadium in 1994, the Blue Jays
have th e personnel to win it all
now . The weekend games could
have don e a lot for them because
second -place Baltimore lost twice;
instead , the Blue Jays ' lead in the
AL East remains one game.
"When something like this hap·
pens , I don't care if it's Cleveland
or the Oakland A's," satd Duane
Ward (3-4), loser of both games
·'Anybody can get you at any time,
and Cleveland has gouen me twice
in 1':',0 days. Believe me, this is no
fun.
Ward entered Sunday's game in
the bottom of the eighth after a solo
home run by teammate Jeff Kent in
the top half had put Toronto ahead
6- 5.
But Ward walked pinch -hitter
Alex Cole. who was sacrificed to
seco nd before Sorrento delivere&lt;l
the fourth pinch home run of h1s

By CHUCK MELVIN
CLE VELAND (AP) - Each
time the Cleveland Indians' longrange plan seems about to disi nte·
grate, manager Mike Hargrov e
fmds reason for hope.
Saturday and Sunday, for
instance, the Indians ended their
six-game losing streak by boating
the first -place Toronto Blue Jay s
tw1c e - 6-4 Saturday night on
Sandy Alomar's eighth-inning stn·
gle and 7-6 Sunday afternoon on
Paul Sorrento's two -run pinch
home run in the eighth.
"' When you're trying to do what
we" re doing here and you hav e
young ballplayers, you need confi den ce and you need that boost to
your morale, " Hargrove said .
'"Li ke Sandy getting that two -out
h1t. Those thing s do a world of
good for your confidence '·
Unltk e the lnd1an s. whos e
unspoken goal ts to be compcuuvc

career.

"I 've had success at .n.." Smr·
rento said . ·· Last yc:..ar 1m w
Twim;. that was my role, llllll B6jJ
well. You just have iLl&gt; plqllOi~
yourself mentally from die 1lidll
inning on.' '

With Cole at second base.. Smrrento's aim was a base llt:il tldtit
would score the lying l'UII . WarL
however, left a sbder qp lOO bijjlltil
the strike zone.
""I guess it hit my bat n llbr
rtght spo~" Sorren10 said.
Before Saturdlly. Wart llod
made 13 Slrlligtu scmekti ~­
ances, covering I 8 1/3 innlllJll'
· 'I guess this is wby llbcy .cll1l ill
a humbling span,·· lie !iBid. ··~·
job is to go out ther• and ~
them, and I di&lt;m "t."
Dennis Coot staRed for ~
land and yielded three nm1i 1111 tnt
f1rst on a solo homer by l« Cantor.
(See TRIBE 011 Pagr 5!

U.S., Brazil record knockout wins over Cuba, Venezuela
By JIM O'CONNELL
PORTLAND, Ore . (AP) There was never any doubt which
team was the best in the Tourna ·
ment of the Americas . Now it"s
lrnown who's the best of the rest.
On the day the Dream Team
debuted with an expected rout,
Braztl again showed it can handle
the rest of the fteld. thts umc with a
128-8 1 rout of Venezuela.
The United States beat Cuba
136-57 Sunday tn the first major
mternatLOnal compcuuon Wllh
NBA players- who lived up to all
the hype and bolhng wtth a fast ·
brealt exhtbition that stamped them
No. I, a real no-braincr.
Then aloog came Brazil. playtng
defense and showmg much more
depth.
""This is the strongest Brazill3n
team in recent years," Brazil cooch
Jose Medalha satd. ·'Our physical
comdition is good and our abthty
and experience has been enhanced
by our tnternational results. Our

end the rundown during Sunday's American
League game in Clev.land , which the Tribe won
7-6. (API

In

31 42
31 &lt;W

the majors ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE

w

L

Ptl.

St i.P.Ju

42 n
36 ]7

S68
49]

Ouc;;a&amp;u

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47Q

Plu.hdelptua

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4~11

Te•m
Pmsbu.rsh

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Sa lu rdav's scort''i

\ew Yorll 8.Ctu u.go 7
Mtnn erou 12. 01lland ~
Kansn C11y 2. 81 lumo rc 0
CU : VELA.\U6 . l'u-romo ·l
f'4 U om ,a 1. Seattle 1

Wr11lnn Di¥bion

((NCI:'-INA"n
AU1n11

San l.&gt;lego
San Fnncuco

44 28
41 J3
40 ~~

611
B3

4
~ '

19

466

\ () ~

33 G2

44()

12~

10

UQ

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llou&amp;too
l.os Angela

~'14

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C1NONNAllll. Manu l
Ne• Yolk 2. St lnu1~ l II tnnlnf!~
Plul•delphu ~ . Oncago4
1\ttJburg.h 12 . 'rlmuad •I
1/ronlln 5 La An~elcs I
San ~nnctKn \ ~~n Diego 1. l 0 m
nm~l

ALlan

LAH

Ansde~ ~-

\.Is

Hou11on 2

S1n l)leso 7. San h•nc~~Cu 3

York (Gooden S-IS) at ChJ ctgo
(Jacbon }-J), 2:20 p m
Montreal (N1bhob. S-6) 11 Ptul1 dd
phil (Mulhnlland 7-4), 7 J5 p.m
ONONNATI (Swindcll 7-2) u lloo.u
ton (IUnuach ] - 7), SJ5 p.m
Pinsburch (Cole 0 -0) •t S1 l.ou ti
(TowUbu'Y 8-2). 8.l5 p m
Allm• (Smoltz 3·5) 11 ~ian 1-'r anca co
(Ri&amp;bc&amp;u 1 -~ ). 9:15p.m
· ~ Oter (Eillnd 0-1) '' I,()II Ange1M
{C•ndiow 6-6). 10·35 p m

Tuesdaf• game&lt;
Alltnt• (Bidecki 2 -.3) 11 San Func;;uco
(Wi.llon 7-5). ] :3~ p.m
MonU'GIIl (Hill 7-4) 11 Ptuildelpht&amp;

W".uiuno M). 7.35 pm
Now YcQ (Whi~unt 1-3) 11 ChtcaiJ"'
( ~bddux 8-1),1 :05 p.m.
C INC INNATI (lhmmond ~ ))tl
HoosiOO (J. Jona 3·1). u~ p.m
Piu.•bufJh (Dnbl'.:k _5· fi) 11 St l.ouu
{Comuer 1-S), 8.3S p.m
Saa [Mp (Hum 7- ~) al lx• Angdr..s
(ManinR 4-4), 10:)5 p.m

AMERICAN LEAGUE
[ulfff! [)Mdon

w L
44.l&lt;l

BaJtimoro .
Milwau.ltee ..

4)

NewYM:
Booloo
Odro!l .

cu:vu.AND

)I

l8 J4
.Yi 38
. )4 37
.... 34 41
... . 30 45

P•L

400

Wt'llcrn Division
Minn~~~~u.a ... .. ... ..4] 31
.511
OU:lMd .... .. ... ....43 ll
..581
TUII ........... ' ..42 J~ .SCS

0Dca1o....

Catiromia

..

.J6 J6

)2 42

· - · - - -- -

GB

j9j
j!l

521
416
&lt;79
453

.500

4)2

~ames

\1 tlw aulee ( H~ w ~ &lt;IJ 11 lh lumo~
c:..h lack l ~ ~ 1. 1 )') r m
lcH&lt; (W,u ~ - 6 1 • t l orlTlto (St,ch J

By SCOTT WOLFE
Solinel Cormpondeot
Becoming the ftrSt repeat winner of the year, Grayson, Ky. driver
Jaclue Boggs claimed the 30-lap
Late Model Mid-Season Champi·
0011hip at ChillicOihe's K-C Race·
way SatJUday ntght, while Frcmml"s Mark Keegan became the
!li:tdt different Willner in sill tries in
tile companion Sprint car champt·
IJilship.

Portsmouth's Barry Bragdon
ct:umed his third straight Street
Sax:i main.
AlltJctpaung the fine racmg
acnoo that was to come, a large
'."ilwd saw tile season· s large st
fteld of cars competing for the
Mid-season crown.
In the exciting Late Model main
Charlie Seymour jumped onto the
oar1, lead, but seasoned veteran
Delmas Conley made the outside
pa.'ls for the first of si• lead
d1anges.
On the following ci rcuit
Cbarlenon, W.Va. driver Rod
Evans overhauled Conley, but Conre,. returned the fa.or to lead lap
four.
011 tile next tow-, a massive pile1111 saw xveral cars tangle, sending
Malik Frazier, Craig Leist and Ron
~ hard into the wall and out

I

5

I

8l
II l
14 l

lS

6

II

-- - -

7 - ~)

\hl wull&gt;ce (l.lo~111 ~ &lt;l ) i l ll•lurnme
(o;;utchifc 9- 6), 7 15 r m
lcxu (H ~,,.-n \I~ ) 11 l"''"ilo (WcUs
ll),l35pm
Ch iU!O ( ll th h~rd 6 4) II C LF.VE ·
I.AND (Bruchcr 1 21 7 35 p m.
OU.bnd (Wekh t\ 41 n Sunk (Del..u
m ) . 4). 10 · 0~ p.m
MllVlcwLI (l{n.tcgcr 7 2) .11 Ca lJomu
(VilCTI 4-&lt;6), lQ )5 p m

~ajorleagueleaders
Nat ional Ln~ue
HATTING - Kru.k, l'hdadelJ•h , ,
372, VanSlyke, Pmsburgh, }4()-, Gw )'Tl n.
S•n D1c:go, B2 . Grace:, Ch1cago . 117.
~ cf".rnfr, San Dttf!O, 122. Sheffie ld . Sar

w

rlart, San Fran&lt;,c ro

J 14
BIJ&amp;IIl , l~ouuon. 51
Gwynn, S111 Diego, 52. Gnuom. Monv-e
al . 49 , T Fernandez, Sa_n DIC:J OL49 .
RoOOu. CJNONNATI, 47 , Bond,, PIUI·
bursh . 47 : Hollin• . Ph d adelphu . 44 ,
Kruk. PbJJadelphu. 44, Pendlelon , At·
l•nLS , 4&lt;4 .
RHI - 5hc:ffleld . San Oie~;t~ , S4 ,
D•uhon, Philadelphia , ~; Mumy. New
York. SO; Pendleton , Atlanlll, 41. Mc Griff. San DittO. 48 ; Gant. Atlant.t. 46,
RU NS -

Dawam,

O!.icaao. 45

HITS -

Gwynn. San Dieao. 95 ,

Pendleton. At!mta. 94. KruJ:, Ph tla.ld ·
rhu. 92: Shdlic:ld, Sm Ll•egn, ~9. f1un ·
L.lfl. l1hllld clph1 • . &amp;I , v.nSlyke . Ptll.' ·
hurgh , 87, T. fem~n dcz, San Dkso. Rl\
OOUBLES - Duncan, Ptuladclphu .
22, VanSlyke, PtUJburA}l, 20: Gnuom ,
Montfll.ll, II; Btggio. Jfaus1on, II ; Wal
lach, Montte~l. U ; Finley , HOUilort, 17

W Oadl:, San FnRCllco, 17; Prndleton .

...

1-800-488-DRUG

1.1nrt:•n. ChiCago. 7 2. ns. 2.94. Tom ·
1.,, l1 tl l!hu rgh . 10 4. 714. ) 32.
l...c,hrandt. Athnu . 6-3. M7. 4.0M
STRIKI:OlJTS
Cone., New York.
l }f. , S hman dc l . ~e""' Yo rk, 101:
&lt;;m.,lll., At.l•nll , 104, Dubcl. , P1W.burah.
K~ . R'l"· Cl .\ C(.\1\All. KS. G MadduJ ,
O •,, clgo. K·l . 1\ \lur;l , San Dlean, B
SAVES
C'h n hon, C INCINNATI,
17. Lee Smtih. S1 l .OUIS, 17; D. Jona ,
Houston . H\ Mn .:h Wilham• , Ph.iladel r htil . 16. Myr.n. San Dte&amp;o. 13; Wenc ',and. Mon tr~:al. 12. Belinda , PU.uburg.h,
i l . Dthble. n:-..:C!NNATI. II; Franco,

.11 "-jew

30pm
DeU"011 (Groom 0 21 at llo\ton (Ou
1hner }.8). 7·35 p m

DlCJ:O, 3\h ,

2.12;

-··

"''Te . Oakland, 50, E. Mlrtinft. S&amp;anlc,
41. Moht.or. Mllw1ukcc.. 47.

RR! - Fiddcr. Occroil,

~:

mtce Apnl 26 when Chns Haney

fo prevent and fight drug abuse,

the Americ '

yo u need the facts. You can get them

Mc&lt;hrue,

Oa kla nd, 63. Puclr.ctt, Minne1oll, 60 ;
Thom11, Chic• so.
48 : Ju•n Gonulu:, Tc:ut, 41 ; Belle,

( ll'ter, T oronlo, 49;

O..EVElAND, 4R, Tmlettft, Dmolt, 4&amp;.
HITS - Pucl•u. Minnctoll, l OJ :
[hers•. CLEVELAND. 90; Fryn11n. lk-

Council

tor~

Educ•tiaa

from us.
The American Council For Drug Education

Fight drag .brur .,;,J,J-_

trmt, S7; Mack, Minnr.aot~, 87, R. Alo-

mar. Toron1o,

3~ .

Sterra, Tcxu, SS: Moh-

101', Mil""'lukCI'.:, ss

DOUBLES - I!.all.

~r.:w

is a nonprofit organization

York, 2.S; E.

~art • ne:r.. Seattle, 23; Jefferies;, K~ruu
Ctly, 21: t.hutnal)'. New York, 21.
Reimer, Tuu, 20; Joyn•. KllltiS Ci1y,
20: Ycutt, Milwaukee, 20.
TIUPl.ES - Andrnon, BaJtimon:, 6;
OcvertiUl, B•llimmc, ~. R. Alom1r,

Tmonto, 4; White, Toronto, 4: Pud:c:tt,
MinnOIOla, 4; 13 ate lied wilh 3.

dedicated to informing the
public about the health hazards
of drug use.

HOME RUNS - McGwift., Oa.k.land,
26; De.u, Dw-oit , 21; Juan Gonulez,

Teut, 111; Tenleton, OeuoU, II; Belle,

CLF.VELAND. 17 ; CanRCO, Oakland .
17; Fieldcc. Dauoil, 16.
STOLilN BASES - Lallon. ClEVE·
UNO. 30: Polon i•. C•h.fomi•. 26; R.
Hern.lcnoo, Oalland, 26; Anderson , Haiti ·
rnore, 2 4 , l. 1 ~li1 C h, Milwa ukee, ll;
Koobi•uch. ~l in -,es OIA, 21. Ra10CJi, O.ICt ·
go.l l

Call for more information and a
free catalog of educational
materials for children, teenagers and adults.

PITOU NG { ~ dccuJons) - Ju1n Guz.
ma.n. Toronto, 10-J, 909, 2.13; Krueaer.

Mmneaout , 7-2. ns. 183: Flc:rruna. Seatlie. 10-3, ?ft9, llS: McDowe.U, Chieaso,
10-3. 7ft9.

lP

··- - ---- - --

(Continued from Page 4)

flcu SL l.Duos. Mel RoJas got the
lilst IWO ours to fmtsh the combmcd

American League

Knohlauch, M.annctoQ, S6; Mlclt . Mitlncsoll , 53: Ph1l lip•. Detmi.t, Sl: McO-

NL action ...
Barnes ( 1-1) gave the Expos

BI'IITI.\lJ -- R Alomu, Toronlo,
H6, Puden. Mt nnr.t.oll, .ll4: Molnor .

Mt)wallkee . 321. BordJck,Oatllnd, .312:
E Mml!l el. s~ ule . .312; Hll'pa, Min·
nc:.u lll. 112, Knoblloch, Minnaota, .307
J.o: L. .~5 - Pucke n , M1nneaota, S1 ;

Mark Keegan, in the All -Pro

llletr fir'lt win by a fifth starter

\'cwYoTt.,\1

~ames

Evans again toot command as
lie 31111 Conley wagered an all -out
bank for tile top spot. Conic y' s
IIIQUlll Jllmped tile cushion and
"""'I off tile backchute, sparking a
&lt;barge from last to third at the fin ·
ISfL
Jaclue Boggs '" his ow n Ray ·
bUB. used a smooth line to over·
llanl Evans on the eoghth lap, then
afll:f repelling several bids from
hms 'ICom! a run-away victory at
l'inislt
itacine"s Scott Wolfe. in th e
Ml:llla1ald's of Gallipolis-PreciSion
AlltOmotive-Mark's Auto Sales
il'li4. arne from 20th to ninth place,
M a lllst-lap slunnish and trip over
tk r...trbute nullified the bid.
P'.IUI Coyan was founh followed
~, Seymour, Chuck Waddell , Jon
0!111an, Greg Stevens, Kenny
Oiri5ly 31111 Gwy Dreilbedts.
He:H winners were Don Clark,
I:Jeiie Boggs and Charlie Seymour.
lilmmie Kennison won the B-Main
ooer llyan Markham for the last
IWO IF.IIISfer spots ro the feature .
l!lelmas Conley had fast time of
14:551 .

-

lc ,..,bbur y, !it l.oUi i, 8·2, 800, 2.02,
f du•ne, 1\1\lnla, I I "\. 7 86, 2 82,
S. wulriell. CI)'-;CIX\IATI, 7 2. 718, 3.07;

'r'nrk(San der~m6 ~) . 7

~

HtU~ o. JI Cl.uLOn,

(9
d ccu10 ns)
1l~n.l.hc.1d , C l/'oi C I~~~~ ll. ~-1, 889,

(IJ.-" 0 :' 1 11 \;cw Ynrlo.
t l . &gt;t. r~m 2 2) , /l.(lrm
lktro1l (r ananl 6 SJ at lloston (ll es
lwh)-1 ) 7\Spm

Kanua (lty (Cuh101

hnlcy . Houston, IX.
PlTC IIl:\ (;

l'll)

Tuesda)"s

Today's ~ames
N~w

T..,.
Toronco .....

\~.

I&lt;

Ch•u go (\1rDowell 10 ~ ~ •t n .FVl·
I.J\ 1'\ D (SnHider 56). -; 35 p m
Oakl1nd (S tewafl I \ ) 11 ~e a lllt
(l·lcmm g \0-)), I 0 O'i p rn
.VLnn~:~ou (fap1n1 : ~) 11 ( al•fomll
(\ lfLiev 2 /), 10 3~ rIll

O!Kago 5, l"h&gt;ladelptlla 3
51 l..nt.us ) . N~w York 2. II tnnmp

Shdfu: ld. San

S lOLES BASES - Gnuom, MM ·
UC.il, J ~ . [&gt;e5htdW., Mon t~\ . 26, Lank ·
fl)nl. St Lou•!, 23 . G1nt, Atl•nU, 2 1.
l &lt;:"'"· S1n Fnncuco, 111, Rohens.
l I,..;CI'.~Arl. 20 D Sanders, 1\Ll&amp;nla.

M.7 l ~p m

Sundaf s srores
Monli'C-&amp;I 9 l'msburiJl 0

I-lOM E RUNS -

\ ! LulU. I I

ru., ~- Del.rnlt 4
\.hnncwu 10. Ooi.1and 2
\ca ttle 9. C:aUio mt~ 2
l"'hKago 6, New Yn!X 3
To nig ht '"'

7. Ah cu . St. Loo11.6: OfJcrman,lol An~cle!. ~- Do:: Sille idl, Montrul, 5 :
\',nS iykc, I'\Lubo.lrWJ. ~

al. 13. Dauhnn P~'ll ladelph tl , 12. Ma tt
Wtlhi m1 . San Franct.~cn. II. Pendlaon,

('IJ-:VFI A,._TI 7. Tomrlo f)

1\a"'u

USE YOUR
PHONE TO SOLVE
ADRUGPROB
•

Allanll. 17, Dau\100. Philadelphia, 17
TRIPLES - D Sande11 . Atlant1. II ;
Fml~y. ll ouuon. 10: Buller, U. Angdc&amp;,

ll1cgo, I~- Bond~. PLttsburgh, 15, Mc Gnff. S1n Dl~go. 14 . L Waller. MooYC-

Sund~~· ·~ &lt;.,(.' Ore~
\t,] .,.lt.U.CC:9 , Raum ~
Kan.\u C11y fl. Ha l: :m&lt;lrr ;

Sat urda y'!ii .~ores

O~C1NNA n 6,

liS
12)

1\ oslon ~ - Mt.lwa~cc 1. ]1tnntnp
Tcus I 0 Dw otl S

l&gt;l~i1ion

Eul•m

425
.113

-·. -·

---

IKHnl s. ··second , we're &lt;JII here

w brought Mexico (0-1) within

w: ll ch lhr great NBA pl:iyers play

:nul it wouhl he an honor to h~IVC' a

rh:!llcr 111 pby the U.S . tc.am .··
Tml:ty. the United States play s
Canad&lt;1 and Panama meets Cuba on
Group A. In Group B, Uruguay
pl:tys Puerto Rtco and Me•i co
faces Brazil.
United States 136, Cuba 57
The minutes and potnts were
even for the U.S. team as 10 of the
players played between 18 and 21
minutes and nine had eight or more
poonts. Charles Barkley led the way
with 22 points, Clyde Drexler had
20 and the reboundmg was as one sided as the score with the United
SLates holding a 41-25 advantage.
Puerto Rico 64, Mexico 58
Pucno Rico (1 -1) led 58-43 with
4:54 to play when Mextco, which
shot 27 percent for the game (20
for 73), finally started hitting from
the outside. A desperation 3-pointer at the shot-clock buzzer by Jose
Arroyos, his only field in II shots,

6(). 58
wtth I :03 left.
Puerto Rico mtssed on i IS next
possession, but Mexico was unable
to convert and Puerto Roco scored
four points in the fmal 13 seconds.
llrazil 128, Venezuela 81
Rrazil shot 63 percent (52 for

!&gt;-.echitter .
The lOss snapped a personal sixpme winning streak by Pirates
SllKli:J Randy Tom~n. who gave up
r...e runs in six innings. Tomlin
~ t0-4) lost 111 an NL East opiXJnent
00. tile fusl: time in nine: decisions.
C.tJs S, Pili liies 3
i\t Wrigley Fteld, Frank Castillo
(6--61 gave ap four bits and three
..-..m in 8 2/3 innings and Ryne
Solndberg dwbled bane two runs.
Cllrl 'k'illing (6- 5) entered the
pme •ith a 2.28 ERA, second·
kst ill tile NL. He gave up five
Nll!lllll ~en hits in five innings.
C•diaa113, Mt1s 2
AI Buscb Stadium, Gerald
Pmy"s two-out, bases-loaded sin(k ofr Jobn Franco in the lith
IIIIIIDi lifted SL Louis over New
Ylilli
i'trry, who scored tile tying run
• tile llllh inning, singled sharply
D ll!ft field 10 score Craig Wilson ,
••
ted wit• two outs. An
·
cjgnal1 walt 10 Milt Thompson
..a a •all: 10 Rich Gedman loodcd
lite&amp;-.
Wianer Mike Perez (5-I)
......., ODe lUll in I 213 innin(lll.
1k Mers rook a 2-1 lead in the
~~~pQ( tile lOth on Bobby Bonilla's
IWHEOing oouble, but the Cardirul51ia&amp; ill the ilottDm of tile inning
atpime Franco (6·1) on Bernard
Gillef s '13Crifice fly.

Cylinder head Schnee Chassis #X,
took th e lead from defending
champ Ronnie Myers on the third
circuit then held off a hard-charg ·
tng Rodney Duncan at the f1nish
for hi s first win at KC Raceway
this season.
On the sixth circuit, Piketon's
Jim Nicr bam:! rolled at least twice
in tum Lwo, then lmded rtght side
up and continued down the
backchute, losmg just one position
m the bizarre affair.
Boone Davis lost a wheel on the
13th lap, then the race continued
green to checker with Keegan and
Duncan pulling on quite a show .
On the 29th circuit, Duncan passed
Keegan . but Keegan recovered
with a turn three pass to secure the
win . Mike Bowling was third, followed by Myers , Mark Goodnetsch, C.J. Holley. David Snell,
Steve McCann, Noer and Greg
Foltz.
Fast tim e was se t by Mik e
Bowling wllh a 13:028. while heats
went to McCann , Duncan and Keegan. Nier won the consi over Steve
Bider.
Barry Bragdon conttnued ht s
winning ways with another big win
in the Street Stock divtsion. Brian
Conkel took the early lead, but
M1ke Wilson stormed by to lead
the next two passes. Bragdon put
the #77 on top on lap four and
never looked hack.
Wilson was second over Bob
Callahan. Dean Osborne, Bill
McElfres h. Bnan Conkle, Roy
Coder, Perry Sm1th . Roger French
and Steve Bobo.
Heats went to Barry Bragdon
and Carl Coleman .
KC will not race Saturday m
honor of Speedwcck, but will
return w1th the "Freedom 40" for
Sprints. paying $5,000 to win. on
Saturday, I uly II .

83), wh1le hold11tg Venezueb (I -I)
to 35 percent (30 for 85), including
just 25 perce nt m the second half
(II for 44) when 11 blew the game
open and led by as much as 122·70
Canada 87, Argentisa SO
Bill Wennongton had :'4 poonts

and 12 rebounds to IC&lt;Jd Canada ( J.
I) less than 24 hours after its crush·
ing at -the-buzzer loss to Cuba
Argentin a (1 - 1) did scare Canada ,
gettong wtthin 79· 77 wtth I :24 left.
But Ron McMahon made two free
Lhr ows one sc&lt;.: ond lalcr anct

Argcntma

w~t s

never closer.

At Wimbledon,

Becker, Edberg among final16

By STEPHEN WILSON
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Stefan Edberg strolled into the
fourth round without losing a set.
Boris Becker ran the gauntlet, bare·
ly surviving a pair of tough chal·
lcnges.
The fanner Wimbledon champi·
ons arrived in the round of 16 v1a
different paths - Edberg droppin g
only 22 games m three matches and
Becker losing that many m each of
his last two contests.
For three-time champion Beck er, who had not played much
before Wimbledon becau se of
injuries and early-round losses. the
workout has been helpful though
not necessarily relaxing
Frazier.
"Now
maybe it's time to win a
Second Heat: Jackie Boggs ,
bit
quicker."
he said after a 6-4, ) .
Greg Stevens. Jay Jenkin s. Ron
6,
7-6
(7-5),
7-6 (7·5) defeat of
Adams.
Thlfd Heat : Charhc Seymour, Amencan Bryan Shelton on SaturGary Dretvbeldi s, Rod Evans and day . "Now I've played enough sets
and points and games. I don't need
Jon Osman.
a
long match any more JU St to get
B-Main: Donnie Kennison,
10
shape for Wimbledon ."
Ryan Markham, Brian Wolfe, Rob
It was the second straight stru g·
McCoy, Clark Van Hooten. Joey
gle
for Becker, following a 4-6. fl.
Dunseith .
4,
6-4,
3-6, 6-3 defeat of Martin
FEATURE: Jackie Boggs, Rod
Evans, Delmas Conley . Paul Damm 10 the second round.
Edberg, the second seed. ha s
Coyan, Charlie Seymour. Chuck
spent
much less time on court, winWaddell, Jon Osman , Greg
ning his third-round mat.ch 6-1, 6·
Steven s, Kenny ChrisLy , Gary
0, 6-2 over Grant Stafford. Also
Dreilbeldis, Donnie Kennison ,
strolling into the round of 16 were
Ryan Markham , Tim Coleman,
thtrd see d Mtchael St1ch, th e
Scou Wolfe, Kenny Johnson , Don
defending champion, and fifth seed
Clark, Mark Frazier, Craig Leist,
Pete Sampras.
Ron Adams.
Top-seeded Jim Couner dtd not
Street Stocks
make it as far as the lourth round .
FIRST HEAT: Barry Bragdon,
Mike Wilson Jr., Mike Shell, Bill loson g ho s bid for the Grand Slam
wtth a 6-4, 4-6. 6-4, 6-4 loss to
McElfresh.
Russian
qualifier
Andr ei
Second Heat : Carl Coleman,
Olhovskiy.
Bnan Conkel, Bob Callahan, Brian
Courier, who won the Au sHammond.
tralian and French Open s earlier
FEATURE: Bragdon. Wilson.
Callahn, Dean Osborne, McElfresh, this year, was seeking to beco me
the first man to sweep all four legs
Conkei,Roy Coder, Perry Smith,
of the Grand Slam since Rod Laver
Roger French, Steve Bobo , John
Reeser, Howard Newman, Bob in 1969.
Instead, Olhovskiy became th e
Denney, Barry Brisker, Fred Hardfl~t qualifier in Wimbledon history
borger, Jerry Bragg, Carl Coleman.
to knock off a top seed and earne&lt;l
Dave Greeno. Brian Hammond.
a match against John McEnroe in
Richard Trego, Rtchard Johnson .
the round of 16.
"'It' s a totally differen t menWII ·

Boggs season's first repeat winner

*

Scoreboard

defense has tmprovcd grcllil
Before we had five or stx pLt y,.;,
who had to play most of the tuu r
Now we have 12 players."
Those 12 almost assured themselves a trip to the Barcelona
Games with the victory which fol lowed the opening 23-point win
over Pueno Rico. A split of its final
two qualifying-round games would
virtually assure a semifmal berth
here and that's all that 's needed to
reac h the Olympics.
In Sunday's other games. Cana·
lia beat Argentma 87-80 and Puerto
Rice downe&lt;l Mexico 82· 76.
The top team in each fiv e-team
pool receives a bye m to the scmifi ·
nals. while the second- and third·
place finishers meet in the quarter·
finals for th e right to advance. It
seems the United States and Brazil
have earned those days off.
"First. our goal here is 10 qualt ·
fy for Barcelona, that's the most
tmportant thing , .. said Mar ce l
So uza. who led Brazil with 26

AI K-C Raceway,

ofdleraa:.

WAITING lor Toronto's Joe Carter to slide
into second base is Cleveland shortstop Felix
Fermin, who stands ready to make the tag to

The Dally Sentlnei-Pa~5

Pomeror-Middleport, Ohio

In the Tournament of the Americas,

41

Cincinnati edges Atlanta 6-5
to notch weekend series sweep
By The i\ssociated Press
The Atlanta Braves ca me LO
Cmcmnati over the weekend pOised
to make thetr move. The only move
the Brav es made, however. was
farther away from the first-place
Reds.
Chri s Sabo drove m three runs,
including th e tie -breaker with an
eighth·mning single, as the Reds
swept the Braves for the seco nd
time thi s season at Riverfront Stadium with a 6-5 victory on Sunday.
·' I think there was a lot of hype
to these games. That's good - it's
fun," Reds ftrst baseman Hal Morns said . "'People don't believe it.
but we· ve tried to take the same
approach to every game. It's a b1g
wm, but I don't think 1t"s any more
important than our game Monday
in HousLOn."
The Reds rebuilt their lead over
Atlanta to four games in the NL
West wtth a lopsided three-ga me
sweep, outscoring the Braves 2512 . Cincinnati is 6-0 against
A~anta at Riverfront Stadium this

IIDiidlit, June 29, 1992

Tribe wins ...

1y , because I'm probably more the
favorite now than going tn as a
complete underdog (against Couri ·
er)," McEnroe sa id after a 6-3 , 6-4.
6-4 victory on Saturda y over 16th·
seeded Dav1d Wheaton . "'But at the
same time, if he's capable of boat ·
ing Jim Couroer, he's capa ble of
beating me."
All fourth -round matches were
scheduled for today. tncludtn g a
couple of men ' s s lu gfests fourth -seeded Becker aga1nst No .
14 Wayne Ferreira and No . X
Goran lvanisevic facing lOth -seeded Ivan LendI.
Edberg wa s to fa ce fellow
Swede Henrik Holm , a qualifier ,
and Sampras faced Arnaud Boctsch
of Fran ce . Stich was due to face
Wally Masur and 12th -seeded
Andre Agasst had a match set
agamst Chnsttan Saceanu .
But th e top men' s match lor

mo st Wimbledon fans was to be a
Centre Cou rt enco unter between
ninth-seeded Frenchman Guy Forget and unseeded Jeremy Bates, the
first Briton to reach the fourth
round at Wimbledon sinc e 1982 .
Th e top two women's seeds
were sc hedu led to face Americans
on the fourth round. Top seed Mon ICa Seles was to play Gtgi Fernan dez and seco nd seed Stcffi Graf
who needed thr ee Iough sets to
overco me Mariann de Swardt on
Satu rda y. was to meet Pany Fen dtck.
FendlCk ousted lith -seeded
Jana Novotna 6·3. 6-3 on Saturday.
No. 3 Gabnela Sabal!nt had a
match set against Kristin Godndge.
No. 4 Martina Navratilova was to
face Yayuk Basuki of Indonesia
and s!Xlh·seeded Jenntfer Ca priatt
was sched ul ed to pla y Naoko

.

SawamaL'iU of Japan.

-------Sports shorts-----Conn ie Price -Smith won th e
wome n"s shot put at 62-6 l /2.
Regona Jacobs won the 1,500 in
4 03 72 and PauiSue Plumer also
made the team. finishing second.
Jtm Spivey took the men's
1.500 1n 3:36.24. Steve Holman
fonish ed second . Holli s Conway
won th e htgh JUmp tn a meet-record
7-R l/2
Track and field
INDIANAPOLIS (API - U.S.
Olyrnpt c Co mm!ltee voted to
request that suspend ed sprtnter
Butch Reynolds be allowed to
co mpete in the Summer Games at
R:trcclona.
The USOC c.ecutive committee. unanimously accepted a subcommittee' s recommendation to
submit Reynolds' name as a mem ber of the U.S. Olympic team once
ht s name is provided by The Ath letiC Congress.
TAC's e,;cc utivc comm1tt cc
vo ted un an1mously Saturday to
Jackie Juyner -Kcr sce won 1hc support Reynolds. The IAAF sus long jump at 23 feet. 2 3/4 tnches. pend ed Reynolds for two years
Gwe n Torr ence took th e 200 on aft er he allegedly tested posittve
22.(13. fa.llcst m th e world 1h1s year for stcro1ds at a mcc1 1n August

Track and field
NEW ORLEANS (AP) Michael Johnson beat Carl LewiS
on the 200 and Gail Devers quali ·
fled for ·th e Olympic tea m '" the
I00 dash and I00 hurdles as the
U.S. Olympic trials ende&lt;l Sunday.
Fa ol10g to mak e th e team were
Roger Ktngdom, Greg Fo ster.
Mary Slaney. Steve Scan and Dan
O"Brien.
O'Brien mt sscd the dccathalon
when he failed 10 clea r the pol e
va ult Saturday
Lewis fini shed fourth tn the 200.
behind Johnson, Mike Marsh and
Michael Bates.
Devers hurdled on 12 55 sec onds, the second-fastest ever by an
American. and second-fastest this
year.
Joinin g Devers on th e team wcrr
LaVonna Martin and Lynda Tal ·
bert Martm fintshcd at 12.7 1 and
Tolbert 1n 12 .74, both personal
boSIS

I '1'10

(Continued from Page 4)

hi s 15th, and a two-run shot by
John Olcrud, his eighth of the year
and third in three days.
Cleveland came back with five
runs in the ftrsttwo inmngs agrunst
Jack Morris, who had won his previous five starts. Kenny Lofton
slartCd both innmgs with bunt singles. and Morris· first pitch to him
his third time up nearly clipped
SUMMARY
Lofton
in the knee.
Super Sprints
'"Do
I think he threw at him1
Fast time· Mike Bowling
Yeah.
I
think
it was one of the most
13028
bush
league
things
I've seen," HarFirst Heat : Steve McCann , Ron
grove
said.
""There"s
no cause for
Myer s. Mike Bowling. Tyke
something
like
that.
Kenny
was just
Kistler.
Second Heal: Rodney Duncan, doing his job."
"Tell Mr. Hargrove I was JUSt
Ken Kimbler , Ri ck Holley and
doing
my JOb," Morris responded.
Greg Foltz.
""It
was
a sl1der inside. If I'm gmng
Third Heat: Mark Keegan, Mark
to
htt
him
, I'm gomg to hit him .
Goodncish, David Snell and C.J .
I'm not gomg to miSs. I was throwHolley.
B-Main : Jim Nier, Steve Bixler, ing the ball mside."
Jim Thome's two -run st nglc
Roger Mo ss barger, Jim Dewey
capped
Cleveland's four -run first .
Cas~ e.
and
Carlos
Baerga had RBI singles
FEATURE: Keega n, Duncan.
in
each
of
the
first two mnings.
Bowling, Myers , Gootlneish, C.J.
The
Blue
Jays
tied it at 5·5 m
Holley. Snell, McCann , Nier, Greg
Foltz, Rick Holley, Dave Dickson, th e se venth on Carter's two -run
Ken Kimbler, Mike Imler, Randy smgle. and Kent put them ahead 6·
Fink, Charlie Fisher, Boone Davis, 5 with his eighth-inning home run
off winner Steve Olin (2·3).
Rick Cordell and Tyke Kistler.
After Sorrento homered, Eric
Late Models
Plunk
pitched the ninth and earned
FAST Time :Delmas Conley
his first save since 1989.
14:55 1
In other games. Texa s beat
First Heat : Don Clark, Chuck
8-4, Minnesota trounced
Detroit
Waddell. Delmas Conley, Mark
Oakland 10-2, Kansas City beat
Baltimore 9-2, Seattle stopped Cal·
ifomia
9-2 . Milwaukee beat Boston
Home run derby, card
9· 3 and Chicago beat the New
show set for Saturday
York Yankees 6-3.
There will be a home run derby
and sports card show in Racine Saturday.
The events will be sponsored by
the Racine Youth League, Inc.
EAR-NOSE-THROAT
The home run derby begins at I
p.m. at Star Mill Park with four age
groups for boys and girls. Prizes
will be awarded ui the winner.~.
IOAID aiTifiED
At the Racine American Legion
SPICIAUZING IN
Hall, tile group will sponsor a
sporLs card show with a $.50 •Ad~ &amp;
admission and door P.rizes.
These events wtll be a part of
•Recumnt Ear Infections
the Racine July 4 celebration.

There's o~y one individual in this picture
who can t oo something about drug abuse.
1

JOHN A. WADf, M.D. INC.

lWRGY

P•tric Allergy
•HecrfatAJds

DOWIIING CHILDS
IMIWIII MUSSEl

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111 S.C11d St. P•eroy

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· To help, yuu need facts. And you can get them
from w.

~

........ of SUI&amp;
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MIDICAII ASSIGIIIIINlS A&lt;aPnD

675·1244
~lit Yllly •• Pl.

That's right: Spot can"t prevent or fight drug
abwe. But everyone else can, including you.

The American Council for Drug Education is a
nonprofit organization dedicated to informing
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alcohol, marijuana, cocaine, crack, lllhalants.

n

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steroids, prescription drugs. hcroon,
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Cal l today, to ll -free. for more information and
our free caralog of affordable pamphlets , videos,
oonklrrs and or her educatio nal material for ch il dren . teenagers and adulrs .

the American
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for Drug
Education
Fight drug alnut with fllrb.
1-800-488-DRUG

�Monday, June 29, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Public Notice
VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
ORDINANCE NO. 1259·92
AN ORDINANCE
PROVIDING FOR THE
ISSUANCE OF $25,000 OF
NOTES BY THE VILLAGE
OF MIDDLEPORT OHIO IN
ANTICIPATION OF THE
ISSUANCE OF BONDS FOR
THE PURPOSE OF ACQUIRING A FIRE TRUCK
FOR THE VILLAGE , AND
DECLARING AN
EMERGENCY.
WHEREAS, thlo Council

Monday, June 29, 1992

Page-6

•

Letter receives a large response
Dear Ana Lllaclen: The letter
from "Any Parent, Anywhere "
really got 10 me. She told of a
co-woR:er who couldn't take any
more time off, so she brought her
sick child 10 wort with her.
By being selftsh and inconsiderate, thai co-worker may have saved
a day's pay. but by infecting other
employees, she cost them, and the
company, a great deal of money.
mine fmally accrued
A friend
enough vacation time and money to
take a one-month trip 10 Europe last
summer. Mrs. Co-Worker brought
her sick child 10 the olftce. and my
friend caught the child's mumps.
He spent over three weeks in the
hospital and had to worry about
becoming sterile.
Because Mrs. Co-Worker didn't
want to lose her day's pay, my friend
had 10 use his accumulated vacation
days as sick leave, and the money
saved for the trip went 10 pay his
hospital biDs.
I know we are in a recession,
but what gripes me is the selfish
attitude that Mrs. Co-Worker's pay
is more important than anyone else's.
-- EL SEGUNDO, CALIF.
DEAR EL SEGUNDO: That
letter created a fircstorm or pro and
con essays. Here are two of them:
Dear AnD Landen: The woman
who said working mothers can't
afford 10 get sick made mt sick.
I believe a special place in hell
should be reserved for people who
bring children into this world and
then can't care for them. The only
thing wone is a socicly that allows
this sort garbage. As soon as the
childrm ba:ome a drag these poople

or

WILLIE WANNABEES? ·Mickey Hinkley,
crnte r.
the winner of the Willie Nelson look:il ike ('&lt;Jn tcst at Irving's Bi~ Stop restaurant
rl'H'nl l)· in Farm ington, Me. Hinkl ey, who was

""s

chosen by diners and employees, competed with
.John Conley of Jay, Me., left , and Reggie
Palmer of Rumford , Me., for the right to be
~rand marshal in th e Franklin County Rodeo
P"r"d e. (AP)

Older persons wanting or needing to
work shouldn't have to lose benefits

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

"11&gt;!11, .... Angel..
Tlm&lt;~S)IIdkoltand

Crnten SyndJcak"

optional time plan to help parents
have the nexibility they need .
Employees could work an hour or
so extra whenever they wished and
accumulate time to take off [or
whatever reason they wanted -private time, vacation, sick time or
personal bu siness. The employees
loved the fr eedom it offered .
Moreover, th ey did not have to
worry about losing pay if they
were out of work after their

vacation or sick days had been used
up . We even allowed them 10 work
on an occasional Saturday if they
arranged it ahC&lt;ld of time.
Unfonunately. although we were
told that a volunlafy arrangement
like this was legal , the government
recently made us come up with two
years of retroaCtive ovel1ime pay,
which almost cost us our business
and, of course, would have put our
employees out on the street.
It's time 10 change some of our
labor laws so we can have the nexibihty we need and want. -- N.C.E.,
ST. PETERSBURG. FLA.

ma11:imum maturity of the
bonds lsaued therefor is ten
(1 0) yean, and of notes to be
issued In anllc:lpatlon t~ereof

DEAR ST. PETE: You've wnuen

Is llheen (15) years;
WHEREAS, nolea hereto-

llmes called !he "ProJect");
and
WHEREAS, !he fiscal olllcer of

years, and certified lhallhe

lore Issued are about to
mature and should be r•
newed in the amount of

$25,000; and
WHEREAS, this council
anticipates that debt service
on such notes and bonds will
be paid from the general

revenues of the VIllage (!he
··Revenues"):

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT
ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT (herelnolter
called the "VIllage"),
COUNTY OF MEIGS, OHIO:
Section 1. That it Ia nec-

essary to lnue bonda of the

Village In the principal
amount of $25,000, lor the
purpose of acquiring a fire
!ruck tor the VIllage, Includthe bonds, notea or other
evidences of lndebtedneu,

'

other tn:es, a direct tax an-

year and with retpect to tuch

nually, not len than !hot other mauera •• appropriate
which would have been le,. under Secllon 265(b)(3).
led II bond• hod been luued
Section 10. Thai the VII·
wllhoul tho prior laaue of the lage Clerk, as fllcal officer of
Notea ; aald tax ahall be and the VIllage, It hereby directed
Ia hereby ordered computed, to forward a certified copy of
cerllfled,lovled ond extended this Ordinance to the Coun1y
upon the In duplicate and Audllor .
collecled by th•ume oHI·
Section 11 . That II Is
cer1 In the same manner and
at the same lime that taxes
for general pwpoaes for each
of aald years are certified,
extended and collected; pro·
vlded, however, that in each
year to the extent the Ravenun or olher moneys are

hereby determined and recited that all acta, condltlona
and things necessary to be
done pr&amp;eedent lo and In t~e
luuing of the Notes in order
to make the aame legal, valid

or

call 011 "society" (that's )'1111 and me
or, in this case, Caponae America)
10 take over the load.
The idea that corpolalions would
be ahead by allowing more sick
lime oiT for these parents is a crock.

bear lnlernt at the rate of

lour per centum (4%1 per
annum, auch Interest to be
payable at malurlly; shall be

daled Juno 1, 1992; ahell
mature June 1, 1993; thall be
designated "Fire Truck Ac-

amounl ollhe Revenues or
olher moneya so av8llable

and approprlaled. Said tax
ahall be placed before and In
praference 10 all other Items
and for t~a lull amount

therool.
The funds derived from
said tax levy hereby req ulred
or from the other described
sources ahall be placed in a
aeparate and distinct fund

conatltutlonal, will have been
exceeded In the Issuance of
aald Notes.
Section 12. That ills found
and determined that all for·
mal actions of this Council
concerning and relaling to
lhe pa11age of this Ordina nee
were pa..ed In an open
meeting of thla Council, and

collecled on the same, shall

such formal acllon , were In

be Irrevocably pledged lor
the paymenl ollho principal
and lntoreal of the Notes, or
the bondt In anllclpallon of
which they oro laoued, when

meellngs open lo the public,

and as lha same fall due.

In compllance with the law,

Including Sec!lon 121.22 ol
tha Rovlaod Coda of Ohio.
Section 13. That this Ordinance It hereby declared to
measure
for the reason that the public
peace, health, safety and
welfare of the Inhabitants of
the VIllage require the lmm~
dlale iasuance of the Noles
to aupport contracts relative
to lhe Project, and to provide
for the orderly financing of

Secllon 8. That this Coun- be an emergency
cil hereby covenants that it
will restrict the uae of the

proceeds ollho No tea hereby
authorized In auch manner
and to such extenl,llany, as
may be necesaary aher lakIng lnlo account reaaontble
expectatlone al the time the

bonde'· under Seellona

103(bX21 and 148 of the inter·

the ProJocl, and shall !aka
eHect Immediately upon its
passage .
Fred Hoffman , Mayor
Brian K. Conde,
Clerk· Treasurer
(6) 29 , lTC

Notes tor Inclusion In the
transcript of proceedings,

tetllng lorth the facto, estimates and clrcumslancea
and reaeonable expectallons
pertaining to the use of the

Section 9. That the Noles

are hereby detlgnated aa
"qualllled lax-exemplobllga·

by lhe purchaaer; and thoU Uona .. to the extant permitbe payable eo to both prlncl· led by Secllon 265(bl(3) ol
pal and interest at the oHice

ol !he Village Clerk or ot a
bank or trust company which

the Code. Thla Council find a
and determines that the reasonably an11clpaled amount

Is a lC!1Jal depotllory or a ol qualified lox-exempt obli-

correspondent of a legal

gation•

(ol~er

than private

8tc

1---------Public Notice
NOTICE OF
PUBUCATION
IN THE
COUMON PLEAS COURT
OF
UEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
BIUY JOE TROUT,
Plaintiff

notice

which

will

b•

publlahed once each week
for tiX (6) IUCCtiiiVt
weeko. Tho lui publication
will be modo on July t3,
1992, and tho lwenly-olght
(28) daya for answer will
commence on lhat date.
In caae of your failure to
anawer or otherwiee
reapond ia required by the

Public Nollce
NOTICE OF SAL£
By virtue of on Orcltr of
Salt iuuod out of the

from euch aale, except any

premium or accrued lnterosl

Being in Fraction 35 .

Beginning aouth 922.67 laet
and oatt 480.36 IMI from
'he northweet corner of
Fraction 35, at an Iron pin;

lhonco north 17 dog. 2t'
oatlt80 ,_t to an Iron pipe;
thence touth 72 cltg. 39'
oatt120 loot to an Iron pipe;
thonco oouth 17 cltg. 2t'
weal 180 IHt to an Iron

plpo, thance north 72 dtg.
31' wool 120 fttl to tht
place of beginning,
containing .SO acre. Being
l.ol No. 19, • ohown on plat

thereon, shall be paid Into
lhe proper fund and used tor

diviaton.

Except aU Legal Right of
Way.
Relorenco Deolr Volume
t57, Page 709, Utlgt
County

Deed

Recordt.

REAL ESTATE APPRAISED
AT: 172,333.00. Tht real
eatate cannot be aold lor
leta than two-lhirdo tho
appraiud value.
TERMS OF SALE: Caoh
on delivery ol deed.
Jamtt U. Souloby
SheriN of Melg• Counly
(6) t5, 22,211, 31&lt;:
RE-BID NOTICE
County, will offer for aale a

Marc Quinn, Sr., whoae
laat known addrHa waJ In

t97a Chevrolet Von, Sorlol
No. CGL258U1654a1, to oell

The Board of TruatHii of

Letart Township, Meigt

•Ia.

Sealed bldo will bt

accepted at office of clerk

until 7:00p.m. July 6, 1992.
Bido will be opentd ol lhia

I

eat aha II be translerred lo the

Your hand, we cannot

bond rollrernenl lund to be
applied to the paymonl of
~rlnclpal and lntorell ollhe
olealnthemannerprovlded
by law.
Section 6. That !he Notes
shall be !he lull general obll·
gallant ol the VIllage ond !he
lull faith, credll and revenue
of !he VIllage are hereby
pledged lor the prompl payment oltho aamo. The prlncl·

touch.
Today there will be no
gllta or cake
For the one we loved

pal amount received from the

8

sale of banda anticipated by
the No lea, and any excea a

lund rttulllng lrom thelaau·
anceolthtNoteo,ahalllolhe
extent nec:eaaary be used
only lor the ratlrement of the

Notn 11 maturity, together
with lnteroat thereon and lo
hereby pledged lor tuch
purpooe.
!lectlon 7. Thot during !he
porlod whllo the Noteo run,
there aholl be levied upon all
ollhetuable property In tho

10 much.
For In a graveaide
ooftly aleeplng
Whore the flower•
gently wava,
Lies the one we love
10 dearly

ut

W

h

om we could

not aave.

God alone knowa how

much we mlaa her,
At He count. tha teara
we ehed;

For He whlapered "She
It only 1leeplng.
You loved one Ia not
dead .•
Sadly mleaed by
children and
randchlldran

••

WANTED: Full time office worker to work In
1 utility offici In Melge County. All phalli of
ucnltlrllll skill• will be requiNd; IOIIIIl fDnn
of ICCOUntlng degree Is a mull. Pay Is negotiable, full benefits package 11 ofleNd. You
must have office experience, Computer
aldlls will be requlNd al1o. Lifetime employment a posalblllty, If the right peraon Is
found. Plane reply to The Dally Sentinel,
box729D.

INa Sunday Calls)

~~=======:::!======21=1=219=2=~
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- !11 Us Do It F, r..•

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR
flEE Esnruns
HAVE REFEIEIKIS

1987 Forest Park 14 x 70 mob1le home 3 bedrooms . central
atr, 110 acre of land. large garage , 2 carports, porch Ot-1
SA 124 close to RuUand . REDUCED TO $25 ,000

NEW USnNG- Spring Avo.· A greal home lo siM oul rn
or use as rental for added monthly 1ncome. Feature 5 2 bed·
rooms . N.G
full basement w1th uttlity &amp; garage , applt·
ances. and aUic on paved street $19 ,900

F.f'.

6/411211 ... pd.

RACINE MOWER
CLINIC
P.O. ltai94-Wal• ALy
UONf, OHIO
(f....ty EAitlt ........
Eojotl

PARTS &amp; SERVKE
Mowers • Gait Saws

• Weedeaters
614·949·2804

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR
ALL MAKES
Bring II I• Or Wt

Pltk

Includes a patio. ASKING $18,900
SR 7 OUT OF CHESTER· 1979 Barringlon Mobrle Home
14 x 70 wrth 3 bedrooms. 1 1/2 balh, deck, appliances,

JUST OFF FOREST RUN RD.-On Block Plan! Ad A qu•le.
older 1 floor frame home with vinyl siding , 2 bedroom s,

large front porch , carpon. Pretty setting. $24.900 Make an
offer.

REEDSVILLE- One story Ranch style located al R1ggs
Crest Subdivision. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, allached garage,
e!ecrnc F.A. heat Very nice home . Owner anxiouse to haW!

thiS sold. ASKING $39,900 GIVE US AN OFFER'
YOUR 11 HOMETOWN REAL ESTATE COMPANY!
READY TO HELP YOU WITH ALL YOUR REAL
ESTATE NEEDS. GIVE US A CALL TODAY!
HENRY E. CLELAND...........................................99H19t
TRACY BRINAGER...... ..................................!...949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL. .............................................949-2660
OFFICE ............................................................... 992·2259

u~.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
985·3561

FREE ESTIMATES
NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING
"Satlefutl•n

:•
!

Tyttt

Will••• ""•Y

•

'
•' - N-

omea-Peta-WIIdllfe
Motoreycles·Eic:.

G

,' .......

'MeruU1ws

5-14-92-lla

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

TEAFORD GOLF
AND TROPHY

5IW1

Cualom Paintings

20 Yrs. hp.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Cv! tom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp;USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOLL fliEE
T-800·848·0070

-Gutter' Work
~loolrfcal

and Plumbing

-Roofi119

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE
949·2627 or
1·100·837·1460

949·2671
UCINE, OH.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES

e~g~~~~J~s'

HAULING: Limestone
Dirt, Gravel and Coal'
Licensed and Bonded

PH. 614-992-5591

European, South

American ,
Japanese
High
School Exchange Studentl Ar·
riving In August Beeome A Host
Famnyi American
lnlercultural

Student Exchange. C.1ll Kathie
216-650-9619 Or 1-800-Sibling .
Call Your Date: Meet Someone
S!*=ial! Dial 1·900-737-4444 For
Dating, Romance And Fun
$1.J91~in . All Lrt..tyles. Age~
18.- Gala Call 215-896-98111 {Oiat
S'l'slems Ot1lce).
Coma Celebrate Tho 30th An·
niversary Of The Mountain Stale
Ar1 &amp; Crah Fair July 1-5 At
Beautiful Cedar Lakes Ripley
W\1. For Information Call 304:

31'2·7000
Divorce $68' And Bankruptcy
$1&lt;10· ~o&gt;Jars C~ildren , Prapar1y,
O~e .S tgnature Divorce, Military,

M1ss1ng
Spouse,
Etc ..
·uncontested And
Excludes
Go&gt;J'I Fus Call Toil Free
(9a .m.·9p.m .),
1-800-547-9900
Budget Oi&gt;Jorce.
Free Adult Talk Una.
~ - 714~62-1037

Uve , On• On One

Houselu;eping

Included

dooriOuldoor

In:

Pool s

.Whirl.paols ,

Saunas, Lighted
rennis Courls, Pun tng Greens.
Go!! Packages Available Free

Brochure: 1-800-448-5653
Reduce Sale And FeS1 Wrth
GoBesa Caplets And E·'Vap

RHklent1411 &amp; Comrn..-ctr.l
FrME ..ImM•

Time
Share
Unhs
And
Campground Mflmberships. Cis-

6-26· '92-Un

CHARLIE'S
SMALL DOZER
WORK, DRIVEWAY
WORKaad
LIMESTONE

DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONABLE RATES

992·7553
POMEROY, OH.
6-26-'92-lfn

Reward at1ered tor lntormalion
or return of :2 female whi1 o
Husky puppies stolen !rom our
!a rm June 21st, 614·992 ·5144
David Mon.
'

tress Sales. Cheap!! Worldwide
Sglecllons. Call Va ca1ion Net ·
worM US And Canada 1·800736 ·82~0 or 305 ,566·2203 Free
Rental
lniOfmat•on
J05 ·563S586.

Whitewater lnlormalion 1-$00782·RA n Trips For All Groups
Flo ats . Whilewater
Fl!lhlng

White Walt~r lnto~atlon P O'
·
243. Glean Joan, WV 25846

4

Giveaway

Blad &amp; white fem ale bobtail kil ·
len , 614·992·2219.

House Cats Onl'l' 1 Male , 2
Females , 7 Weeks Old, Halt

H•mala..,an 614-446-4922.

Regist ;~;d .

Aott -::
w:--.'""
u,-r - To
Giv&amp;away Mean, Great Watch
Dog 614-446·8089

Slfawberl')' plants, llve varielin

FOREVER BRONZE
TANNING
RACINE
30 VISITS FOR 130

Call lor Appointment

CAIPEITRY
PlUMIIIIG, Wl~tiG,
CUSTOM IUtlT
lATHROOM
VAinJES

A Won.dertul Family Experience.
Scan~mavian,

Diuretic At Fru1h Pharmacy.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
'992-6715

KERWOOD$
HOME REPAIR
SERVICE

3 Announcements

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal

Offer Good Thru
July 31, 1992

3· 13·92-lfn

Announcements

Myrtle BeciCh Resort Vacalion
Rentals, Oceantront Condos

a Exlarlor

Pomeroy, Ohio

Refereace Availa•le

DARWIN, OHIO
7/J1f91/lln

412192/lfn

-Room Addition•

614·7 42·2328
6-t8-dn

614-992-2242

PalnUng
(FREE ESTIMATES)

0.

c••

Welcome Slates
$20.00

-lnlarfor

992·3838

6 Lessou s60.00
Repai',
Trop.les, Plaqles
..d Badges

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CARPENTER SERVICE

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
ond ffiACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSlEUS,
HOUE SITES and
TRAILER BilES,
LANOCLEARlNG,
DRIVEWAYS INSTAllED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

leSSDIS $12.50

"SPECIAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road

YOUNG'S

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

985-3961

. 'l(ptfiryn

•

Cu~r~ntttd"

Tromm Builders

Across ,,.. '"' Oflko
217 E. S.Cto4 II.
POIIIROT, ONIO
3123192/lln

A REAL Cute Homo located on Pteasanl Ridge- 1 112
story wilh 3 beti'ooms , on two lots of 50 x 100 each

I J

QuaUty Hi Efficiency Air
Conditioners, Heat Pu1111~s.
Furnaces &amp; Now

lol.-t6p•.lMY•Mossap

Ah• 6p.a 614-915-4180

(614) 11112-6575

4-4-92-tfn

REDUCED! OWNER WANTS THIS MARKED "SOLD"!

'

CONSOLIDATED SECURITY SYSTEMS - ~JAYMAR
51. Rt 5811 Weal • Gallipolio, OH
Quality
Phone 446-9595 or 1 (800) 365-1229
Stone Co.
SATELLITE T.V. SIZEDFORLIMESTONE
SALE
Al,.,rhed Dealen for:
(all61 4-997-6637
Toshiba • Drake •
St. Rt. 7
Unlden • Panasonic
Cheshire, OH.
112/lln
Sales·Service-Estimates I _ - - - -~---'1

USED RAILROAD TIES

ASKING $18,000
Help Wanted

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

BILL SLACK
992·2269

central air, 12 x 16 storage burldmg on approx 1+ acre

11

COMMERCIAL ami RESIDt:NTIAJ.
FREE ESTIMAD:S

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

992·2259
608 f~ST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

11 11:n 1na:nltl.

B£1r£RBrO£SIGN

Hew Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

tho right io reject any or all

;=;:;,~;;;~:;;::::;

Approved M-la&lt;tured
Housing Procluris.

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

blda.

In Memory

IN MEMORY OF
EUGIA "Nanny"
JOHNSON
We cannot eend a
birthday card,

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

IITrDTUrDIIII

Water Heaters.

time. The trusteH rHerve

Real Estate General

the purpose aforesaid and
lor no olher purpose, and tor
which purpooeaald proceeds
areherebyapproprlaled.Any
premium ond accrued lnler·

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

of propoood Bourn Sub-

amount of lax -exempt obli-

2

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

Ueiga County, Ohio, In tho

vs

accepted, and the proceeds

CALL (614) 446-9971 (KELLY)

c••• of Government Nat-

Biela con bo otnl to olflco
of clerk ot 2323a Hill Rd.,
Racine, Ohio 45771 (6141
247-3125.
Board ol Truataeo
William D. Grohom,
Chriatopher T. Wolfe,
Don R. Hill
accrued lnlereat, to Peoples cerllflcatlons on be halt ollhe Marc Quinn from Marc
Bank, Middleport, Ohio, In VIllage with reopecl 10 the Quinn, Sr. to Billy Joe Trout Clerk: Joyce White
anticipated
(6) 15, 22, 29, 3tc
accordance wllh their offer reasonably
to purchaae, which Is ~ereby

519.95 A DAY AND UP

Common Pleaa Court of

upon a Judgment
lhtrtln
Connolly,
otal., Dtfend.,la,
rendered, being Cue No.
11-CV-132 In uld Court, I
will oHor for aale altho front
door of tho Courthouot In
Pomeroy, Molga County,
Ohio, on tho 20th dey ol
July, t992, II 10:00 a.m ., the
lollowlng Ianda and lentmenlo, loca1od at Pomeroy,
Ohio 4576t, with the moiling
oddrea• ol 45080 Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. A complolt legtl
detcriplion of the real
otlala iro aa followo:
Situated in tht Counly of
Ueiga, in the Stole ol Ohio
and In the Townahip of
Chesler.

OH., WV. &amp; H.U.D.

AUTO RENTAL, INC.

Oh1o Ruloa of Civil
Procedure, ludgmont by

BECKY S. mOUT, ET AL
Dtlendenl
CASE NO . D-OR-t23

depotltory ol tho VIllage, as acllvlty bonda) which will be the ttalt of Colifomla, you
clttermlned by the VIllage luued by !he Village during ert hereby notified IIIII you
lhia calendar year does not he.. boon namtd deltndMl
Clerk.
Secllon 4. That !he Noles and the board hereby cove- In a legal tcUon tnUUed
ahall be executed by the nant• that, during such year, Billy Joo Trou~ plaintiff,'
Mayor and !he Village Clerk, the amount of tax-exempt ven Ul Becky S. Trout,
may bear lhe corporate seal obllgallono laaued by the dolandanl. Thlo acUon heo
of the VIllage and shall ex- VIllage and detlgnaled as boon Mtlgned Clto No. Kpreu on lhelr taceslhe pur- "qualified lax-exemplobllga· OR-123 and It pending In
pose lor which !hey are ls- tiona for auch purpose will tilt Court of Common PIMa
aued and that they are la- no! exceed $10,000,000. Tho In Utlgo Counly, Pomeroy,
aued purauant lo this Ordi- Village Clerk and other ap- Ohio 4576g.
propriate officers, and any of
The object of thia motion
nance.
Section 5. That the Nolea them, are authorized to take i1 to change the permanent
shall be sold, at par and such actions and give sue~ cuttody of Paul Quinn and

Business Servi·ces

1---------T:.,.:.,:_::_::..,:::.,,.:::..,:::,T_::=....:=:.::__:_::_;::..:~.:::______

lwonly-eighl (2a) dtya al1er
tho 1111 publication of thil

that all deliberations ol !his Ional Uorlgage Auoclallon,
Council and of any of lls Plainlill, va. Richard L.

and, togelher with lnterosl commlUeea lhat resulted in

proceeds thereof and tho
quisition Bond Anticipation provlolona of !he Code and
Notes , Second (1992) Re- regulations lhereunder.

newal"; •hall be l11ued In
such number• and denoml·
nation• at may be requeated

are required to
anawer thla molion within

and binding obligations of deteult will be rendered
!he Village have happened, agalnal you lor the relief
available lor the payment of been done and performed In demanded in the motion
such Notes and bonds and regular and due form as re- cit ted.
are appropriated lor such quired by law; and !hat no
Larry E. Spencar
purpose, the amount of such llmllallon or lndebledness or
Clerk ol Courll
lax thall be reduced by the taxallon, either statutory or (6) a, 15, 22, 28; (7) 6, 13, 6tc

expense of delivery of bond• nal Revenue Code of 1986,
or notes, seJvlce chargea of •• amended (the Codel and
!he paying agent, legal serv· tho regulallona preacrlbo&lt;j
Ices, and obtaining an ap- thereunder and will, 10 the - - - - - - - - - proving legal opinion.
exlent po ..lble, comply with
Public Notice
Section 2. Thalaald bonds all olher applicable provl·
PUBUCNOOCE
shall be dated approxlmalely olono of !he Code and tha
Tht
Boord of Trutt- of
June!, 1993, ohall bear lnler· regulations thereunder to
es t al the estimated rate of retain the FedeJal income tax Or-• T-nahlp will hold a
elghl per centum (8%) per exempllon for Interest on the Public Hoorlng July 6 at
annum, and shall mature In nolea, including any expen- 6:30p.m. II tht home ollhe
substantially equal annual or di1ure requlremenls, lnvest- clerk, Patricia Calaway lor
semiannual installment• over menl limitations, rebate re-- the Budget ol Orange
a period not exceeding ten qulremenll or uae restric- Townahlp for 11193. Ragular
years alter their laauance.
tions. The VIllage Clerk or mttllng will aloo bo conSection 3. Thatltls hereby any other oHicer having re· ducted at lltla lime.
Patricia Calaway,
determined that noteo (here- aponslblllly with respect to
Clerk
lnalter called the "Notes"lln the Issuance of the Noles Is
46686 Guthrie Rd.
the principal amounl of aulhorlzed and directed to
Cootvllla, Ohio 45723
$25,000 shall be luued In give on appropriate cerllfl·
(614) 88S.3860
anticipation of the !nuance cate on behalf of lhe Village
of sa ld bondt. The No leo shall on the dale of delivery of the (6) 28, 28, 30; (7) I, 2, 3, 5, 6

Contest deadline set

I

d~~!~_Notlce

Public Notice
Public Notice
Village, within applicable gallono to be lsoued by the ..
llmllallons, In addlllon 1o Ill VIllage during this calendar
You

Ing lhe costs of advertising debt Ia incurred, aa !hat they
the nollce of sale, prlnllng will not contlllute "arbitrage

""le,

j

Village hu estl-

Projecl is at leaat live (5)

Festival activities finalized

Langsville man receives
Fellowship from Regents

t~e

maled thai the Ilia of !he

a provocative letter with a solid
closer. Tbc case you've made for
changing obsolete laws is excellent.
Bravo!

tives on Apnl 9th, a Social Security income source. They were unable
beneficiary age 65 to 69 will be to accumulate savings and have ~t­
Pr,Jduc liv c older persons who able w earn $12,000 in !993 with- Ile or no pension income.
For those in this group who are Any business is beuer off with
wc&gt;n t or need to work should not out losing any benefits.
have w choose between restricting
The most recent Soc~al Socurity capable and have the desire 10 work employees who show up for work.
earn in gs or loswg earned Social Administration (SSA) estimates above the current earnings limit. -- J.H., LAGUNA NIGUEL, CALIF
Sec urity be neflls, according to suggest that 770,000 workers 65 the ability to improve their ecoDear Aan Lalltkrs: I read with
flllracc B. Deets. exec utive diroctor through 69 and 170,000 dependents nomtc position through increased intcreSI the letter from the woman
of the Amencan Association of had their Soc1al Sec urity benefits earnings would make a consider- wbo CQIIIplaincd aboultoo few days
Retired Persons.
either partially or fully withheld able difference.
of sick leave for working mothers.
Some oppose a change in the
Inc reas in g th e Social Security because of exce ss earni ngs. Sill I
Her solution was for the employer
; r m tn ~s limit is long overdue.
others dtd not elec t to apply for earnings limit because they say it 10 give more free days otT. Often,
·n,e earnings limn, or rctrrcmenl benefits beca use of th e earnings would help upper income benefi - "the employer" is a struggling small
tr•l. lrmus !he amount Social Sccu- limit.
Ciaries. However, the House passed business that cannot afford 10 pay
rrty recipients can cam withoutlosIn addition to those whose bene- change is targeted 10 help moderate sick leave 81 all, much less more
and middle-income older Ameri111 ~ bcncfi1s. This year, beneficia- fits are reduced by the limit, or
than the average.
" '' ' age 65 w 69 lose one dollar for those who never file for benefits, cans who work not out of choice
My husband and I own a small
cwrv lhree dollars earned over the nume rou s older workers carefully but out of necessity.
electronics
company / with 40
For these people, even a modest
avoid the test by holding their carnlirnrt of $10.200.
employees.
We
came up with an
r hose who work beyond age 70 mgs below the limit. Many arc increase in the earnings limit would
p!Cscnll y face no earnings limn. moderate- in come older per son s have an immediate and beneficial
l 1r11kr Lh\· earnings hmil provision who rel y upon Social Security ben - effeel. Moreover , the penalty of
Public Not Ice
Public Notice
Public Nollce
Public Notice
p.r· ,cd by the House of Reprcsenla- efi ts as their primary retlfc menl lo s ing $1 for every $3 earned
applies only to income derived
RICHARD A. METZGER, el 04986.
IN THE COURT OE COM·
llnu to the cenler ol the
The grantors herein In the
at., Defendants
liON PLEAS, MEIGS
road; lhon«~ South 7-112deg.
from wages or salaries. Investment
gran1ee1 herein, their heirt
COURT
OF
COMMON
COUNTY, OHIO
En! 10 roch and 22 links;
income doesn't count. This means
and uslgnt are to have •
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY ,
Sl8r Bank, NA, Tri·Stalt
thence South 6 dC!1J . Easl 51
1he widow who needs to work 10
right-of-way over aald
mutual
OHIO
Cau No. i2-CV... 2 F.K.A.
rodaand 10 link&amp;; thence East
rlghl otway herein described,
gain extra income is penalized
In
pursuance
of
an
Order
award
s
ceremony
will
be
held
at
5
Star Bank Gallipolis
to the piece ol beginning,
lc"tiV ll tes for !he Fourth of July
together with all adJacent
while the " upper-income" wealthy
PtalndH
.vs
containing
19.33 acres, more of Sale to me directed from property
p.m.
:rr the Vrllagc of Middleport have
owners, their helra
said Court In the entitled
The parade wtll form on Ash professional is free to derive
Harley W. Eblin, Sr., Et AI or ltu.
and aulgna . All property
hce n ftna lizcd and announced by
action,
Citizens
federal
Bank,
Dtlondanta
EXCEPTING 2 acres and
income from stocks and bonds.
ownera are to share In lhe
Huh Gi lm ore. activities coordina ~ Street at General Hartinger Park
SHERIFF'S
SALE
OF
REAL
931100
of an acre aold lo K &amp; a Federal Savings Bank, maintenance expenlea u
We
should
look
at
the
issue
and will pull out at 5 p.m. The
ESTATE
MRailroad lor a rlghl ol way . Mi ami, Florida v. Richard A.
1\ \[.
from th e working benefici-ries'
In purtuance to an Order
EXCEPT one acre prevl - Metzger, et al., I, James outlined herein .
Th e Mctgs Cou nty Soap Box parade will proceed to Dave Diles pers pectiv e. They are trying to
Stroot address: 43285
an
awards
ce
remon
y
Park
where
of Salt directed to meln tht ously conveyed to James L. Salsby , Sheriff will expose to
i'c rhy will bcg m at noon at Gener·
Frank
Road, (Roule 3,
cope
with
changed
economic
cirsale at public auction on t~e
octlon, 1 wll Schuler.
.11 ILtrtrn pc r Park . Ttme trials for wtll be held at 6 p.m. with trophy cumstanc es - especially higher abov....,du.d
Wildwood
Ellateo), Pam·
oHer lor u1t ol public aucAll oU, gn , mineral royal· front sleps of the Courthouse
prcsen1ations.
eroy,
Ohio
45769.
tile dc·rh) wi ll be thi s Sunday with
of
Meigs
County,
Pomeroy,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff- health care costs and lower interest t~n. It the front door ot the tl" tnd rentels under any Ohio, on August 3, 1992 at
Parcel No .: 03.00642.000
wc rg h-in at R a.m . and tri als at
income. What other options do Court Houae tn Pomeroy, •D•ting Maaet thall belong
Current
Qwnertare: Richman
will
gtve
a
welcom
e
at
6:30
10:00 A.M . ol aald day, the
ll•&gt;o n. Charlie Neull.hng has coor these moderate income beneficia- Ohio, In 1M obovo-named aboolutely to !he Granlees.
ard A. Metzger and Monla 5.
p.m.
at
Dave
Diles
Park
follow
ed
follow
ing
described
real
escounty, on Augutt 3, 1gg2, al
SUBJECT lo all ease·
tlm:r tcd 1his cve11t and is calling on
Metzger.
by c nt.erlainment by the Lee Broth- nos have to make ends meet or to 10:30 o'clock a.m., the tot- menta, highways , leases and tate :
:t li)OIIC who wou ld be willing to
Said premlsea Ia apprepare
for
a
time
when
ill
health
Situated In Cheater Towntowing deacribed rtiiMiate mineral reservsllon s, if any ,
praloed 11 $55,000.00, and
v~)l u ntcer their time dunn~ the race ers at 7 p.m.
or
advanced
age
force
them
out
of
s~ip,
Meigs
County
,
State
of
altualtd In tht Counly ol ol racord.
The Shady River Shufners will
cannot be aold lor lese than
1111 Jul y 4. If tnterestcd 1n volun th
e
work
force?
Uelgt and State of Ohio, toRoler011ce Deeds: Volume Ohio and being In Section 5, two--thlrda of that amount.
8:30-9:30
p.m
.
fol
perform
from
Jcc rin g conlact Ne utzling al 742 237, Page 729, and Vol um e Town 2 North, Range 13 West
The I louse passed change does wit:
Terma of Sale : Caah or
lowed by a mas sive fireworks dis\()10. The wtnner of race will go
TRACT
N0.1
:
311,Pagt445,
MelgtCoun1y , of t~e Ohio Company'• Pur- certified check accepted .
no
t
affect
the
long
term
fiscal
chan and being described
on to A kru n lo compet e tn !he play to conclude the days fesuvt - inl cg rity of the Social Security
The following doacrlbod Ohio, Deed Records .
10% down on the day of the
tics.
rul
altueled In the
Property addreu : Rout e as follows :
nJtJOnal compct1tion .
aale. The FUll purchaae
Trust
Funds.
Individuals
who
conBeginning
ala
poln!Soulh
VH..geoiAulland,Countyof t1, Ulddloporl, Ohio 45760.
Fu rth er mformation on a ny of
Also du nn g the day there will
price shall be paid to tha
unue
10 work pay additional Social
25
Rods
(412.51eet)endNorlh
Properly appraised al
Uelga and Stall ol Ohio:
SheriH
within 30 days from
lw :t cor show spons ored by the activttics may be oblaincd by con- Security taxes . As the Delayed
PARCEL 1: Being oll ol TRACT NO. 1; PARCEL 1: &amp; 89 deg1ees 59' 42" 1048.07
Oldi es Aut Goodre s Car Club on lacting Gtlmore a1 992-6 128 Soap Retirement Credit - the increase Lot 18 of S. Rulland In Sec- PARCEL2 :$5 ,000.00; TRACT !eel and South 5 degreea 45' the date of aale and on failure
to do ao, lhe purchaser shtll
S•ll ilh Scmnd Street which will he Box Derb y info rm auon may he given to those 65 through 69 who
lion a, Town 1, Range 14 of NO 2: $21,000.00 and canno1 11 " Easl191.4le&lt;!land Soulh be adJudged In contempt of
ch) 'l d to 1r .tfl1c from fisher Funcr- obtained by ca lli ng Ncu1zlin g at do not collect their benefits the Ohio Colllplny'a Pur- be told lor lesa !han two· 7 degrees 29' Welt 64 feel court Deposit to be waived if
742-3030.
chllaa,
tllcepi331MI oft the lhlrds ollhe appraised value. and South 4 dC!jJrOOI 08' Weal sold to lhe PlaintiH- Citizen•
.i\ !IP!ll t' to f·am il y Dolla r . An
becomes actuarially fair, the earn- Southolcltofl.otlholdtoF.
121feol and South 7 dC!jJreeo
TERMS OF SALE
45'
East 50 feet and Soulh 82 Federal Bonk, a Federal Sav·
ings limit will have no effect on the
R. Duft,_andGamec DunfN
Tho success lui pur·
lnga Bank, Miami, Florida.
11--02·22.
chaaer, aa aoon at his bid is degrees 15' West 64 feet and
Trust Funds since the additional
Jameo M. Soulsby, SheriH
Soulh
4
dC!jJreeo
08'
Wea1121
Relertnc.ltmaclttoVol- accepted, ohall be required
work effort wiU be credited in any
Meigs Counly, Ohlo
ume 126 Page 385 Utlga to dopa all on 1he dale ol sale, feel and South 1 degrees 45' (6)29 (7) 6, 13 ; JTC
event
County 0... Recordt.
In Clllh or by certllied check East 50 feet and South 82
Adoption of the House passed
PAIICEL 2: Btlnil 33 feel payable lo the Sheri II. len degrees 15' West 186.5 feet
liberalization in the Social Secwity oHihtSouthtlcltofloUiof percent (10"41 ollhe amounl from the mid point of aald
Public Nollce
earnings limit helps those older South Rutland and being In ] ol tuch accepled bid, but In Section 5 North line, said
Lang
sv
il
le,
Thornton
Thornton
of
;\ M,·igs Co11 n1y man who grad·
workers who want to help them- Section a Town 6 Rengt14 no tvtnt leu !han Thrae polnl ol beginning being
PROBATE COURT OF
u.llcrl lr nm the Un ive rsity of Rio ts a 1982 graduate of Mcrgs High
selves, is good for the economy, Olllo Cor~pany· 1 ' Purchue: 1 Hundred Dollars ($300 .00) marked by an Iron pin; thence
MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Reference Ia made to Vol- normortthanTenThou sa nd Soulh 82 dC!jJrOOt 15' Weal
Grcrnrk 111 Mav wr th a bachelor's SchooL He attended Rio Grande and does not harm Social SecuriESTATE
OF VlRGENE
I 38.5 loet along the SoulhELLEN ELBERFELD,
d c. grl~~ 1n ru1. noml cs has won a from 19 82 until !984 andre· ty's fmancial soundness. It is time umt 136 Page 110 Uefgs Dollsro ($10,000.00). The erly aide ol a 50 lool wldo
County cie.d Recorda.
unpaid balance ol t~e purDECEASED
Gretdllal c/l'rol css tonal Fellow ship entered the msutution m November for the Senate 10 act
Together
with
all
tht
opchase
price shall he due and access AfW to an Iron pin ;
CASE
NO. 27496,
1990
to
obtain
ht
s
bachelor's
!rom the l!hto lloard of Regents.
purt.,anC&gt;ts and htredlt.. payable to the Sherlll within the nce South 14 Degree• 34'
DOCKET
13,
PAGE 386.
I he r c ll o-.ISIHp . which awards a degree. Hi s wife. the former Lisa
monla thertunlo belonging, thirty (30) days from lhe dale 14" Easl 299.03 feel to an NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
but subject to ellltgel high- of the oonllrmatlon of tho Iron pin, creating tn Iron pin
m:tx imurn of S1.500 annually for Clin e of Point Pl easant , is also
OF FIDUCIARY
A
contest
to
select
Little
Miss
waya.ndzonlngreatrtcUona. 11le. Th• purchaser shall be at 214.02 feet tor reletencai Rovloed Code, Sec. 2113.08
two years of graduate or graduate enrolled at Rio Gmndc, maJoring in
OMd ReferlftCe: Volume required lo pay Interest on !hence Norlh 63 Degraea 59
Firecracker 1992 wiD be held dur•on June 17, 1992, In tho
p10kss ion:tl s1 udy, wa&lt; awarded to elementary education .
307,
Pagl «t, Utlgs County atld unpaid balance at eight teet East 1aa.51eel to an Iron Motgo County Probate Court,
ing Fourth of July activities in RutDe nni s L. l ltomton of Langsville.
Dttd R-rdt.
pere&lt;~nt(8%) per annum from pin; !hence North 25 dC!jJreea
Caao No. 27496, Raymond c .
land.
T hn rn1or1 wi ll bec om e a graduate
TRACT NO. TWO:
the date of conllrmallon of 28' ,31" West 249 .6~ feet to Elberleld, Routoll, Pomeroy
The contest is sponsored by
The following clttcrlbod the aelt to tho dale of pay· !he point ol tbe beginning, Pike, Racine, Ohio, 45n1 wu
a ~&lt;:; t '\~Jll a t Ohio University in the
Holly's
Dolly's
and
is
open
10
any
retl n ..u., eltu.-ecl In the ment of the balance unlesa containing 1.01 acrn, mora appointed Executor of tho
f:dl. workin g toward a mas ter's
Meigs
County
girl
between
the
To-hlpoiRutllnd,County the balonc:e shall be made or leas.
{kpec m l,u."i incss adm inistration .
Described below lo !he ea1atoo1VIrgene Ellen Elbor•
of Uelgs and State of Ohio: within tight (8) days from tho
ages of ei~l and 12.
centerline olen accen right feld, deceaeed, ltte of Route
There JS a $5 entry fee and dead- Baglnnlng at tht Norlhetot dato of ult.
1, Pomeroy Pike, Racine.
In a letkr rnforming Thornton
comer ol !lectlon No. tl,
JAMES M. SOULS BY of waylothtabovedncrlbod Malga County, Ohio.•
line
for
entry
is
July
1.
To
enter
of h1s :mard , Regents Chancellor
Town I ondRango14;thence
Melga County Sherilf lot ;Beginning at 1 point North
Robert E. Buck,
call
Holly
Williams
a1
992-2834.
Dr. Elar nc H. Hairston congratulatSouth SO rodo· lh.,._ Wut
D. DEAN EVANS 7 degrees 45' Weal 25 tool
Probate Judll"
from
the
point
of
_
b
eginning
Participant• will ride in the 44 rodt ond 1t Nnkt to lflt
PlalntiH's Attorney
n l him and encouraged him to conLena K. Netltlroad, Clerk
of
tho
abow
dncrtbod
lot;
Fourth of Joly Parade in Rutland on cent• of tht , _ . thence (0) 28; (7) 6 , 13; 3TC
tin ue al a n institution of higher
thence South 82 tfogroeo 15' (61 29 (7) 6, 13; 3TC
a
noat which will be provided by Narll 13 cltg. &amp;tt '12 rod• - - - - - - - learning in the Slate.
Woat2S3,f ftWI{SO foot wlti•!--::---:----Holly's Dolly's. Judgmg will fol - and 3 lnl!a; ihenot North tO
Public Notice
RIW to thlo point); thence
Public Notice
" I wis h yo u every success as
rod• ..d 22 llnltt; ..,_
South
'85
degree•
36'
53"
1--:...:..:..:....::...:..:.:.:::::__
low
the
parade.
you pursue your educational goals
lH THE COURT OF
Wetl85.11te1 (changing lo •
The winner will receive a cer · Narll 23 dag. W•l12 rode;
PUBLIC NOTICE
and look forward to your continued
-Narll$-1/2-., WHI COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
40 loot R/W lo lhlo couroe) :
10
Holly's
Dolly's
as
well
tificate
Tho Zoning Board ol Ap·
,. ..,. .,d 241nu; thence
pan icipation in Ohio's outstanding
thence South 82 degreoa 15' peala wUl meet 11 !he PomCOUNTY, OHIO
as a crown, sash, freslt·water pearl E..l to .......... ol blllfl,..
sy.s1c m of higher education, "
SHERIFF'S SALE, REAL
Wetl 99.4 teet and toulh 58 eroy Municipal Building, 320
bracelet and a trophy. Runners-up nlnt. con18inii'IQ 11.M octet, ESTATE, CASE NUMBER
degrees 01' 30" Wool 291.5 E11t Main Street, Pomeroy ,
J 1 : tir~ton s.1 id .
mort 111 lut.
wi Ureceive jewelry.
11 w: · · · -· ry ni ce to gel thi s
82·CV-a5
feet to the centerline of
Ohio at7:00 p.m. on Wednea·
ALSO, the following root CITIZENS FEDERAL BANK, County Road C-26.
:IW.ti d, ~CL.t U S C it will help in
day July 8, 1892 to conduct
tolat•, beglnnln.a at the
A ,EOERAL SAVINGS
The bearlngtln tho obove butlnen and hear requ'efled
The calves of gray whales are
al lowing me to contin ue my educaSoulhtatt oorl* of Stctlon BANK, UIAUI, FLORIDA,
deacrlpdon ore booed on 1 apptals.
about 14 10 16 feet long at birtb and
ti o n full -time and obtain my
No. 11, Town I, tnd Range
PlalntlH,
ourvty by Harold D. Whaley, {8) 28, lTC
weigh between I ,500 and 2,000
14; ~~- North SO rode;
M1l A," Thornton said.
Vt.
Reglttered Surveyor No. 8DENNIS L. THORNTON
pounds.
thenoe WHI U rotlt ond 3
The son of Wil~arn and Minnie

ll y IIORACE B. DEETS

has ~eretolore determined to
acquire a fire truck for the
VIllage (hereinaf1er aome-

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bas•an Rd.,Rodle

6-28-'92-1 mo

37906 SA 7, Pomeroy, Oh, 614~

985-4257 June bearers and •v•r
bt-818~

Three kitt•ns , litter trained
read.., to go, 614· 992·3717.
'

6

Lost &amp; Found

FOUND r.d nylon jack.,- at ball
fie ld, 304-675·1333.

Found •m-.:-,_.,
-cl-lo,-:braw
_ n_ &amp;
black on neck }, lelga, near
Hoback Rd ., Racine. 614·9492644

Arnethylt
rln
Mar Tudor 8iscuft
parllmg lot, 304-675-1256.
LOST

w1dl~monrts

lost · Black IWhl!e ~cc-,..
-R.ad
To Calf, Mcxgan Center

FOR SALE

Agriculture
Lime

VALLEY INC.
Rt. 2
Millwood, W.Va.

304·273-5555
4-9-tfn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

•N ew Homes
t(iarages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

985·4473
667·6.! 79

~-------1~2~-5~-tl~ . t.L---------2·7·9_2·-Ifn~

6-IJ

Roy Sptrea R01d Area , Vintoi l.

614-388-9686

7

.

Yard Sale
Pomeroy,
Middlepon
&amp; VIcinity

437 Grant Street, Middlepon
June 30, July 1 &amp; 2, 9-?
'
All Yard Sal.. Musl Be Ptld In
Advanc1 . Deadline : 1 OOpm th•
dlty before the ad Is to run
Sunday tdltion· 1:OOpm Friday'
Monday
edition
10·00• m'
Satur~y.
· · ·

Bashan Read In lronl ol
~fe~OUSI, little O! fiYirything.
Carport nle, July 1, a, 3 9-1
Attch .. ruldence, Tyr• Blvd
Aacin~,Oh.
·
~rogo aolo1

823 V2 Ruo..ll
rool """''"' Heino,., Jut' 1-23, ICM, low prlcot.

July 3rd and 4th, Crow Rotd
Pom•roy.
clothn!

Clothea

'

clottlta'
'

~ary Layne's, top of Mlddlepon
Ill, watch lor tlgna June 30July 3rd. Rain cane•tl.
Porch 1111, block houH behind
laurel C!_ltf Church, July 2 &amp; 3_

�June

~The Dally Sentinel

Page

7

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Yard Sale

32

46

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Pomeroy,

1885 Wlndoor Mobile Homo,
like Now, Whh 401'1
Located:

Potlo.

Johnson•

Mobile

Homo Port&lt;. 304-lii:H:ISe.
1i81 Redman M X 70', 2 bad·

room, 2 t.th, large cioMts,
cent1111 •lr, 911 appliances, •x·

daybed

cept alec1rk: hot water, 614-gg2.
5802 after 5prn or IMva mes-

snowbladtJehalns,

.,... mble,

cur1alns,
garage door

..~· .. 6~7-8872.
199'1 Indies HouM,

opener

Hill residence, July 1, 9-7 46i60
SR124, Racine, just betow town

4br, 2 Baths;
Friendship 28x70 4br,

Duke 141&amp;5, 2 Bedrooms,
Furnished, CA, Undarplnnln!iJ.
But Ott.r 814-446-0782.

''

July 3rd I 4th, iam to"· Randy
Boston rtsldenca, S.R. 681 ntlt

car wash , Witch tot' signs, multi
lamlly sale with a wide range ol
1tems.

---------Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

"'
Hmmm now about a stat ue o t

r===========-1-===========l
You kneel •ng mstead "

11

18

Help Wanted

Drivers : KLLM 1 Inc . Cincinnati
larmlnal Ia Aadlng Equipment
Back yard pttlo sa5t, loft of And Long Haut Driver&amp; With
crafts, 111111 of everything, rain Racenl Tractor
Trader Ell·
cancels, Man I Tun, 2812 parlence. Call 1-#J00·9:15·55S6,
Meadowbrook Dr, Not Reepon· Monday-Friday.
sible tor Accidents
E•peritnced llat bed diiY~rs lor
interstate oparal ion,
appro x
500 mila radlaa, steady haul ,
Gallipolis
home most wMkands, top pa)' •
good equipment. Mu&amp;t be 25 yrs
&amp; VIcinity
of age with 3 yra varillabta arR
ALL Y1rd Salee Must Be Paid In axparltnca with COL license,
Advance . DEADLINE. 2.00 p m solid driving r.c:on:l &amp; work his·
the day belora the ad 11!1 to run . tory. Must pau road lest tnd
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m . drug scr..n Call 800-228-6658
Friday. Monday edit1011 . 2.00 tor ct.taila.
p m. Saturday.
Experienced technician n..O~.
Garage Sale July 1,2,3rd 416 tand rasuma lo . Box 7'13,
Burnette Road, Kanuaga, Guns, Pomeroy, Ohio or call 614-992Youth Bed, Washer, Chests, 2174 tor appoint~nt
Tabla, Chairs, Unans, Clothes,
Friendly Home PartlfS Has
Misc .
Openings For Demonstrators
July 1s1, Sanders Drive Gal· No Cash lnveslmant No Service
llpolls, 9-4
Antique Cradle, Charge Hlgl'l Commission And
Baby Items, 10 SDead Bike, lots Hostess Awards Two Calalogs,
Over 600 ll•m s, Call 1-800-488Of Clotttn And Odds-N-E nds!
1 ~3,

8-4

203

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auc tion Company,
lull time auctioneer complete
auctio n
service.
Ueensed
166,0hlo &amp; Wast Vlrgtnla, JD4·

c.,.,

9

Wanted to Buy

Don'l Junk It! Sell Us Your Non·
Working
Major
Appliances,
Color TV's , VCR 's, Mlcrowavu,
Atr Conditioners, Etc 614- 256·
123B

Old marbles, toys , com1c books,
lantams, pictures and furniture
Osby Martin, 614 ·992 - ~41
Standing l imber, Will pay ht1r
prlcn, ca ll Jarry Runyon, 614·

992 -2687
Used Mobi le
446-0175

Homas,

Call 6t 4·

Us.d sa t.s , good eoncl, opened
or unopen.c:l, 3Q4..882 -2079

To

Buy. Junk A.ulo!J
Wllh Or Wllhout Malon Call
Larry U~ely 614--388-9303.
Wanted

Top Prlcea Paid All Old US
Coins, Gold R1nga, Silver Coins,
Gold Coins. M T S Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenu•. Gallipolis

Employment Services
11

$J50fDIIy Proceumg
Phone Orders' People C11ll You
~Jo E•panenc• Ne cessary

315-733-6062
·A VON ' ALL AREAS! Shar• your
time with ut You 'll love th l
; ompany 1-600-992-6356.

worit yotJ do, the more you urn.
Just 20-45 mlnutu a day working at home, lou can earn some
very impt ess ve wa911. Kreger
Pubhsh1ng has a hst1ng of a
var1ety of dlttar•nt worll that
suits both man and women.
Bast of all, you work whtn you
want. (0,.. compa ny is paymg
SJ42 00 per wMk 10 usembta
a~m p'- plan! htng~m~ . ) For mora
Information and a F~EE hslin9
of over 60 campanili pruenlly
hiring , wr"• to Knger Publish·
lng, 309 lothrop St , OHMH,
Tauntan , MA. . 021'80 Kr9ger
PubliShing does requlrt $3 90
tor postage and handling lor
llttlng Ordtrs c..n not bt lilte-d
without postagt .and handling
Allow 3-4 d•y•

Night Managar Fast Food Restaurant. E1parlance Pttlarr~ .
Full-Tim•. lnsur•nca Avail a ble ,
Sand Resume To · Cl.A 225 , clo
Gallipolis Da lly Tribuna, 825
Third Avanua , Gallipolll. O H

Banaflts,

:ransportalion,
407-292-471\7,
; lit. !11'1
9a m -lOp m Toll

letunded.
WON

'

All

! Sh irley

Areas

ipears, 304-6 75--1429
and
hght
1ousekeapar tor a 9 and t2yr
old Ratarancas raqu1red, 614 185-4141 af1ar 9 OOpm
laby!Jitler

bnds wanted, accaplmg audi lon tap-as anar 4 00 PM Arnie's
3ports Lounge Gallipolis Farry,

\04-675-5789.

' loading /Unloading l()eadhaad
·Paid Ins
1-800-441 -1394

---

Dia!otic Technlwt n Cha ll&amp; ngmg
And Aawardmg Position As
Pat1 -T1m1 Clinkat D1al Technician In long Tern Care Dulits
Include Oavelop1ng Nutrtllonal
A.ssassments And Care Plan!J
Soma Travel May Be Requir.d
Potential For Fuii-Ttml . Apply In

Parson Or Send Resume To
Sc eni c Hills Nursing Canter, 311
Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell, OH
456 t4 .
Drl\llfS Go To Work

Immediately

R o;~dr unner Olstribullon Ser vices , Inc. TN-1 -800-444-6147

TX-t -800-285-8267

11-800-Jn·
51168 Competitive Pay New Convon tional s
Mtdlcal
IOantal
rvacallon Etc. Sign On Bonus

EOE .
Drivers Wanted
Souti'IW.. t
Motor Freight , Inc Starting
Team Pay 211" 1/2 Cents Per Mile.
Madlcalllife ln surence. Load·
ing/Unloadlng
Pay
layover/Stop
Pay
Satellite
Communications
E•c:•llent
Ban.tit &amp; Bonus Package. It You
HdVI 1 Year OTA E.:perienca,
Clean MVR &amp; AQI 23 Call
Todayl1-800-321 -20l4
Drlvors Wanted . U 9 . Xprell ,
Inc. Starting Tum Pay 28 1!2
Coni Per Mila All Convenllonal

Fleet. Satellite Communications.
Med4cai/Ufe
Insurance.
layovtr/Brtlilkdown Pay. Asslg·
ned Traetofl . If You Mave 1 Year
OTR Exparlenca. C..an MVR &amp;
M1nlmum Age 23 Call Vanguard
Management Service Today! I·

800-321-2084
Drivarl
parie nct

Raloc:ala And Make Ex callanl
Pay 1 Construc11on
Workers
Needed For All Phases Bonus
Plilld Living And Tra11el Erpen·
Ul Call N"ow' 40HWi 2140 E 111
1100, 9-8 EST

Rio Granda PoHc:e Department
Is Accapllng Apphcal lons For
Par1 -T1ma H1111p
Mu! l Hav&amp;
Ohio Paaet Officers Tram1ng
Apphca tions May Be P • c ~~ Up
From 9-3 Monday Thru Fnday,
At The RIO Gr ande MuniC ip al
Bwld+ng

Wanted : Flatbed
Paid

EI-

W••kly

loadedl~mply Mile s, Lite/Health

tnsunmc:a.
Bonus,
Rider
Program. Advanctd Distribution
Sysftm,
1-800-364-1047, 24
Ho urt, 7 Day• WHk.

Drivers : Do You Wenl Setter
Pay ? Oo You Want Mort Mllu?

Takmg appllc•t!ons tor cer1,fled
nurs1ng nslst an1 al lh e Cham b9f

ol

Commarco1Econo m1c

Dov Office, 305 Mam St Wed
July 1 from 1 00 PM ti ll $ 00 PM
Apply m person wln rt111c ahon
&amp; tdlllnlillcat ton Please d1rACI
phone c all!! to Rod nay Ball at

KIMBER LY OUALIT&gt; CARE

1·

800-427-8899 ONLY
Tht Ulllm•l• Money Maio:~ng Ma
china Tht Ultimate Fundra1s1ng
Tool Is Crealin9 Hurodreds Ol
New 0ppor1unt11AS Wllh In·
credibly
High
Inc ome

Natlonwidll We Are Swamped
Wa Urgently Natd lnlell1gen t
Dedic ate d Peopl• W11h A Ne11d
To Maloti A Lot 0 1 Money
Fedolal MUSIC t -800-368.(1895 24
Hour Into
Tr uett Orlvsrt, $2.000 S1g n-On
Bonus For Sale, Ouahl1ed
Drivers With 6 Moot l-Is Ol R EJ.
jMrlance Tu i !IOf'I · Fre~ Trainin g
Avalttbla For lnupenen ced
Orivara Call Today! Com Trani

Tht Nawnt Machines, Waking A
Nlca Steady Cash Income 1·
800~53-8363 .

Wolff Tanning Bedt, New Com·
merl cti -Home
Units
From
$199 00 . Lamps , Lotions, Accu-

sonu Monthly Paymaru Low
As $18 00 Ca!l Today New FrM

Color Catalog. 1-800-228-6292,

Homes for Sale

297 Kallay Dr , Ga llipolia, Ohio

45631 Telaphone· 614-446-338S,
Price $52 ,000 00 living Room,
3 Badroomt, Family Room, 1
And 111 Bathrooms, 1 Car
Garag11 , Bnt:k Front Wl11'1 Cedar
Siding
Allant1o n Vel anna Home loans
To Purchase Or Rlllnanct 100"1r.
Purchases/90% Refmancas Up
to f144 ,000 00 Phone Claflnce
Phillips Mo r1gage Compa ny, 1615--684-1029

BEAUIIFUl HOUSE FOR SAl E
Historic:~ ! Area Corner lot · 816
Mam Sl P1 Pleasant W Va
Complt-l ely Renovated 2 Fvll
Baths . 3 Large Bedrooms , New
HVAC, New Carpal Avitllable
Juna 15 6t4 -446 2205

lo

Ocean,
2br Condo, , $1i'5,000 Wit h
Btnl.ltl ful
Golfing
Elev at or
Commumly
Memb41rship
Country Club Low P•r,mefli S
Use Vourseu6r Rant Br ckland·
mg t-800-438-3006
FORECLOSED &amp; REPO Homes
9elow Markl! Value Fantntlc
Savings Your Area 1-305-962·
8000 Exl H-9805 Fot Curr•nt

List
Mus! sell t o salt .. tstal8, 2
housn , S12 Flr~t St &amp; 12 Walnut,
both for S17,SOO Thru camo tar y
lois, K1rland Memorial Ga r d11n~

l04-675-t708
New

3 bedroom hou .. , tull
bii5ement , all eltc, city walar
hall acra land In Pt Ph $40,000
Wrtla PO Bo• l6Q, Pt Plenan!,
WV 25550, giving nama, addross and phone no.
N1 ce 3 bedroom uctlonal home,
2 beth!i , dining, living room &amp;
family room wl flraplact
1.9
acret . m~ y consider trade for
!arm or acreage, Somerville
Realty, 304-675-3030 or 675 -3431 .
160 Nor1h, 3

BR,

lfka naw
cond1t1on, $38,000 Call for appointment 614-388·9'115 or 388-

Sl'H
l room ho uM full banmant, lot
&amp;ox t50 , Cam de n Ave. 114 000

Wahraaa must be

•~parian c ed,

Two Story White Frame, 3 Br, All

Appliances, Mulberry
Chashirt, 614-367·n37.

Street,

Wanted someone to tu' down
old houte tor material 304 -675-

32

12x65 On 1625 AcrH, Addison
Pika , Ntwly Remodeled , Tolal
Electric, 116.~ . Negotlonabla,
614-446--3088 Attar 6p m

14

pinning 13,500 Good Condition
But Naadt Some Repair. 614·

14170 1i7&lt;4 Kerwood 3br Under-

245·56791
14170 ••c cond, 3 badroomt on
l)flvate acre , mtjor ar.pllancet,
lots of ertraa, App • GrOYe,

$14,500 304-S'Ifi -2783.

1982 Windsor 14x10, 2 bad·
rooma , CIA, Iotti elac, undet"·

:-:::::-::c-:--:---:--:-:-:-:---:-- ponnlng,
Will Babysit In My Momt Fen·
cad In Pity Area . Aatarences

Available. Rodney Area. Call
614·245-5887
call 304~75·105 7.

2 bedroom, AC, washer-dryer
$200

furnished,

plut

mo

rar &amp; dap, 304-675--4874

utlllll••·

2 BR furniahed or unfurnished.
til. Ovartooklng Ohto
River, Kanaugt. Clean &amp; quiet.
Foster's Mobile Home park 614Cabta,

446-1602
Ohio, 304-882-2904.

Apartment

ml~

by Zlmmor Corp,
b20 lrtatad wood porch , Bx20

alumn

awning

T.V.,

APPUANCES

S

'

() 1992 by NEA II'IC
_. ""' • I-=======::;==::;:;:::==::;====::;;:;:_~

rangH
. ktggl AppliancH, 76
.....

VIne Street!.: al1614-446-7398, 1·

r

Building

55

&amp;

raillnQ

w/ICI'OIIa, mig by Durabullf.
141116 bam 1tyta bldg , traat;d

wood, sverythlng axe cond,
mull sell Immediately,
owner, 304-67S.. !H49.

one

'"

Motorcyc les

AND THE
SEA50N5 GET
LON6ER AND
cONGER AND
LON6ER

.•'
''

'

n

Block, brk;k, . . .., pi~a, win·

don, Hnt..a, etc. Claude Wln-

Rio Gtando, OH Call 614SWAIN
245-.!1.21
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Oliva St., Galllpolla . New &amp; Used STEEL BUILDINGS:
Foctory
fumllura, heaten, Wntern
Work boots. 614-446-3159.

1 bedroom apt, good location,
101 Sixth &amp; Maln St. Newly
remod•led wl1tl naw applltncat
Utillllfl not lneludod, daposi1
rsqulred, 304-675-1131 Of 67$-

5!136.
2 Rooms &amp; Bath, Dawnst11rs,
Clean ,
No
Pets,
Quiet ,

Refer•nce And Deposit
quired . 614--446·1519.

2

Badrooma, Upstalra

mant,

Untumtst.d,

R•

Apaort -

No

Pets

614-446-2583
2 BR tpartmanll

In Mir:tdle~rt ,
newly ramodai.d , low u1111tl11,

no peta, $220 ~ month ,
deposit requlr.d, 614·992·2381
days

2bdrm apls., lotli electric, appllancn furnished, laundry
room tacllhlu , dose to school
In town. ApplleatkMl• available

Requl~ .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, !36 Jackson ptke
from $192/mo Walk to shap &amp;
movin. Cal\114-446·2568. EOH.

O.luu 1br, 2 Car Garage, CA,
Fil'l1 Av•, Gat11polls, $:185/Mo.,
O.posit &amp; References, 614-256-

1529
Fumlshad Apt
Utllltlu Paid,

Avenu•,

1 br, $235/Ya
607 Second

G~ll ipofta

614-446-4416

Attar 7p m.

Gracloua l!~lng 1 and 2 bedroom 1Pif1mants at VIllage
Manor
and
R1ver1iidt
Apartments In MMktl•port From
$196 Call614-gg2-7781. EOH
Large
Fumtahtd
Ef11c lsnc)'
Apartment,
lRtBR , Kit chen,
Dtnette , Bath, Central Meat, Air
Conditioning,
Radecofatad

Phone 614-446-2602

Lullury Oceanfronl/Oceanview
Condomlnuma.
2
Bedroom/Bath,

Private

Balcony,
Kll t hena, Pools
E•cellent Ralas . Ocaanlront
Vacation Rantal a Fr11 Brochure
Can 1-60().247-5459.

CCTV!HBO,

Myrtia Bead\, Motals From $45.,
Fr om
$79.
Condominiums
Ouanhont, Ocaanview Rooms,
Sult•s . Condominiums, Indoor
/O utdoor P~s . Whirlpools,
Close AmuHmenla, 1-800-331·
1'l13 / 1-80~28-0226 .

N. Third Middleport, Ohio , 1
bedroom furnlsh9d apt, dap A
r•l, 304-682 -25&amp;6.
New Hnsn 2 bedroom fur·
nished 1pl dep &amp; rat, 304·882·

2566
Newly Remodaloed 1br, UU!Itlll
Paid, S2951Mo. Deposit Re-

quired

614-379-2111

VI'RA FURNITURE
614-446-3158
Aent-2-0wn

2566.
apt,

ptld,

Iii living

$~50

mo,

304 .. 75-,3 116&amp;.
Sanibel &amp; Captiva Islands, Fl.
Any Budglll, Tropical Wildlife,
Wond-Famoua S..sl'lel.. , While

BetchH, GoU, Tannla. Cot-

Smaii1BR. apt. 7 Court St., Gallipolis. Kitehan wtlh ttova,

refrlgal'ltor, $195Jmo., utllhtte,
depoall, ret.,.ne• No Pats.

w-

61C-448-4Q26.

Washer And Oryllf' 117.68 WHk,
Bunk Bed Complete, $6.29
Wuk, 4 Dntwlr Chest $3,,2
WHk 1 Recliner $5.24 WHk,
Sofa And Chair $10.38 WHit

CASH

AND

CARRY

Ralriglfalorl Starting At 1399,
Reclfnara $149, 2x6 Sunk Beds 1

$9!1, Dlnlfta Sat wtth 4 Padd.a

~H

Ditlcount•

Odds I Endo,

Foro...,

s... m

1,200
To 20,000 oq. ft. Llmllod S.,pp1y
Mull S.U By 6130"-12. 614-4"-

0721.

56

Pets for Sale

lame Pel Food ONt.r
Webb . Ca ll 6M...t41-0231.

Julie

Alreda'- Pupa, AKC Aealstared,
4

Months

Old,

(xcallent

Chalro $129. OPEN: Monday

Thru S.turdlly &amp;AM. To &amp;P.M.

wMkt old, hn had first lhols,

CloNd On Sunday. LOCATED: 4 axll'll nlet, tl25, 1~1481'7 01
MIIH ott AOUla 7 On Route 14'1, 614-887-3156.
In Cenlanary, 114 Mit. On UnAKC Roglolorod lloogle Pupa,
coln Pike.
Wormed, Sholo Started, $50.
Call Stave, O.ya. 814·446-nT.il,
52 Sponlng Goods
Or 11+256-1611 Anyllmo.
Naw SI'IIPJMnl S.mt Prlces:
SKS Rill.., Whh Ace ...
$11! . .-.nningl All Staal
380 Pletol•, New $10!. Ammunl·
tlon Available Also. 614-446-1822
KH~ TryijWa'ra tn And Out
Alot, Or
op By AI · 2310
Entam A anue 10a.m . To
10pm

Collie Pupploo, Soble A Whho,
AKC Roglolorod, Ellcotlonl
Bloodllnoo~ Flrol Sho&lt;1 A EyH
Chocked. ~,;~h 614-883-2117.

Wlnchastar Modal VT Shot,un,
Old Mllllary Gun, VGC, S.nous
lnqulrin Only. 014-245--5823.

446-31« After 7:00p.m.

Antiques

Merchandise

1306
SFl. Cut-Iron, While Porcelain

Elltlf B~niM In June, also
aood lor 4-H I Folr projoc11.
~-4n.1m oft.. 7:00 PM.

~~

Mat. RonweU• for ula, f150, to

, gooclherno only, 014 -f1 2•11160 .

pupoloo, loyo ond
AKC, tteo mln~ture

t~~~eupe.,

Schnauztr tnd adult dogs, 614667·3404.
r:-7

1--800--537·1528.

Instruments

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

58

NN home grown cabbage, 1! a
crate, bring own eontainar, 614247~212-

Farm Supplies
&amp; livestock

plc:kup. 304-675-6452

$5,115, Route 7 North, Mariana

81+37'1-4151

cond, 1'100. 304--882·
-

Hollond hay blno, Now Hoi-

lind IUptf 7'17 forage harvntlf.
Gahl i:!l grinder ml1er. 304-27).

4215.

·-6-8273 -

LMI

Chane~~

to IH• tobacco

VCR, 5200; arolquo July 1 -line, - n · • Form
wtrdrobe $500; old coin wllf pe.y 21 cenll lor M..on
monoyj ~lrlo' bicycle A -~'!!! C..,nty Quota, 301-8:17-2011.

·-~-

Ap4o, 506 BU&lt;dtft• so, .:..::.-::W::Ch:-1~:-p-.,-:-.-..,-r---.=loo-,.-...
Polnl PieHl~,-~,..•.! and 2 ::bedroomt, ;JU~Htr5-20n after 7500 BTU, Anry Goovloln, 11+
~ · 00
11'12-6830.
PIIOIIo And Modal Cuhrlrt &amp;Inch
Thn1 10 Inch In Slack. Ron
45
Furnished
bono, Jockeon, 01\lo. 1-800Rooms
531-0528.
Full House Prlnlegat $1!0/Ma. S.oro 30' Inch halo - . lin
Including UUifti", Plut O.potlt .
1100· "' boll ol814-367-1001.

tow mllaage

S ~ 1 ·s

And

76

lAw

=·

Choloolorol

I ¥:"~ 13:'

'.
j

1969 314 ! on Chevy lor p&lt;~rt s,
350 motor, 4 spd nuw lues

Campers &amp;

(11)111

t974 Sell contained 24 f1 c am per, $2,200 304-675-:2949
fo ld out Co leman

EEKAND MEEK

ca mp e'

1987 Plymouth Aelitnt , 49,000
$2,500; 1988 Chivy
Sprint, 46,000 Mila I, $2,SOO 614-

22 n Airstre am l UI \lei 11 arlor, 6 14 ·

Mil•,

~erv.i.ce~ .

1981 Pontiac 6000, $3,500 . 1986
Mercury MarquM , $2,900 1986
OodQe 4ll4, $3,200 1986 Buick
Sky Hawk, $:2 ,021. 1985 Olds

Deha 88, $2,300

1986

.. . _

llool

Gai-

~::.:
Butts Thlo Y110r1 And Lui . Toke
Or Plcii.Up Oct-. &lt;111-

Home
Improv e m ent s
8A5EMEN1

Olds

Ciera, new motor, 12,995 1989
CllvaMir wtgon , $3,000. 1983
Pontiac Bonnevllla..t. 14,995 1985
Dynasty, $4,995. :scotty's Used

Ctr, New Haven , WV 304 ·R 82·
3752

1992 Votvo 940 , black! camel
leather interk»r, til options,
1,194MI., ri9hl side damage,
$15,250; 19SJI lnflnltl G-20, belgal
beige luther Interior, all op-

tlona, 16,530MI., front damage,
"-200, 198!5 Corv•tta, ellvar/ all~., leather lnteJior,
minor rtaht front

81

43,491t.tl ,
damage,

SBSOO ; &amp;1{-114g-2600 umll 5pm,
614-t4g..2644 1hr 5pm

72 Trucks for Sale
1917 Chevy Plcii-Up Stop Sldo,
400 Small Block, 4 sp.,.d, E• ·
c:el ..nt Condition, $3 ,000, OBO,
614 U8 8ot3.

WATERPROOFING
Uncond1ti ona t l i f~li me guaran
tea l oca l retaronc es lurm shod
Frea e!ltlmeles Ct~ ll collect 1
614-237-0488, day or ntght

Rogers

B a ~e m ent

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

W ~ tDrproo.

ling

- - - - ----

Curti•
Home imp1 o ~~~&amp;n1-;
Yaars bper1ence O n Older &amp;
Newar Homes Room Add1t 1on s
Foundation
Work,
nooting .
Kitchens And Ba ths Ftee Es
t im• tas 1 Relar•ncas., No Job
Too Big Or Small' 6t4-367-0S16

\\OJLD I BE
5TANDN5 HERE
IF IT HAD'?

JET
537-9528

Tank Pumping $90,

Co RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackson OH 1-800 -537-9526

1181 Chevy 4x4, Radi o Stlek,
Rlbull Trani, &amp; Hube 11,795
814-441-4141 Aher 6 P.M Or
Weekends.

Oavls
Sew-Vac
Serv~ee
Gaorges Cr&amp;alor. Ad Pnrts, s u p:
plies, pickup, and del1vary 614446.0294 .

1185 S-10

Lon~

Bed PS PB

1981 Ford Rtngar Club Cab PBI

PSI AMI FM, $3150. Como; wl

lighted Nnnlng bolrda , new

Will build patio covers d ~k-;
screened rooms , put up vlnyi
aiding or lra1!11r skirlrnq 611
245-9152

62

lool box, new ~lau topper, he
WI truck! 1!114-04g..204!. Of 614·

MD-2m.
1187 Ford Ranger XLI, V-6,
PI, AC, em/1m stereo,
long uea, Hbargl•u topper, dual

~:,':,~~=

m.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Automatic, Air, AMIFM Staraol
43,700 MI._, Runa like New

614-4"-1358.
IIIII Ronger XLT V-4, 5Spcl
42,000 llo&lt;f Liner &amp; Rallo, AMJ!:M
Cualte, PS, PB, E•cellenl
Condition, $5,500. 114-446-4292.

84

stamped envelope to
Matchmaker. c/o thi s newspaper , P 0

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

or

wiring , new aervlco or repairs .
Master Uctnsltd elactncia n
Ridenour Elaclr lut, WV000306

30H75-1786.

as

Some1imes tl pays to expertment but
not tn this time frame

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 221 You re presently 1n a cycl e where positl'o'e c~tcum ­
stances could elevate your nopes and
e llpeclalton s Don 't tmpose limitation s
on your new probabtllhes.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) Some •n terestlng changes couiCI be tn the offing
at this time where your social hte is con cerned New rnends may enter the ptc·
ture while undesirable acquaintances

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0ct 231 Substan11al

exit .

not

treat

you

achievements are likely irt this time

com marcIa I
'

frame It's a new ballgame, so give your·

June 30, 1112
Greater oppor1unltles. as well as larger
rasponsibllilles, are likely In your ch&lt;&gt;sen field ol endeavor in the year ahead
What you achieve Is apt to be free from
any alliance.
CANCER (JuM 21-.luiJ 221 II may be
necessary to assert yourself today In
meaningful situations where you're try·

lng to advance your long-range ln1er-

ests. However , forego aggression In
your soc1al mvolvements. Know where
to look lor romance and you'll find 11

you m•ght enter 1nto an extremely 1m ·
portant and successful partnership Cit cumslances wtll produ ce the umon.
events w111 suslam 11

Bo• 91428. Cleveland . OH 44101 -34 28
LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 221 Your compas sionate inst incts are eas1fy aroused to - AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 19) You'll be
day; you 'll see to it that those who need more producllve 1n th1s cycle tf you use
your help w111 get tl Unfor1unately. oln· procedures that you know do work
e rs
m1ght
c onstderately

E lectrica l &amp;
Refrigeration

A"ident lal

The Astra -Graph Matchmaker 1nstant1y
reveals wh1ch s1gns ar e romantically CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 19) The•e
perfect for you Mall $2 plus a long . self - are strong 1ndlcat1ons al lh1 s time tnat
addressed .

lonb, $4750, 6M-t82-58n.

1DH Dodge Ram 150 V-6,

,-,.:..T--;.,1,..:D:...,.:C_I:,._::N~--l~ QUIPP~~·

6

I' I I I

'---.l.-.-.L-1.._J,_...I_L_j

"One

friend

=
Ill

lllJ Block Stallion Stereo. Q
9:00 (I) Cl ((} 11 MacOyvor

self some constructive objeclives you

would not have dared to anemp1
previously
SCORPIO (Oct. 2+NO¥. 22) II you're altempling something new allhls lime, do
not be dismayed by the obstacles you
m ight encounter . lf you're consistent ,
everything will start sorting Itself out
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 211 In
your commercial dealings today , take
pains lo do lh1ngs In a businesslike
manner, so they'll produce the results
lor which you 're hoping . Immediate

events are related

to future events.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll191 You're capable ol handling a dl"lcult sllualion
wtlh considerable skill today, but you
must be careful that, once you satisfac torily resolve the matter. you Clon't re·
open It
TAURUS (AprH 20-May 20) This IS lhe
lime to disengage yoursell lrom non 'roductive concepts that have failed to
chleve your intentions. Success Is pos·
.lble with proper revision.
QEMINI (MaJ 21-June 201 S trlve to be
futuristic today where your finances are
.:oncorned. Don'1 think only ol gralilylng your lmmedla1e needs; consider
your raqulromenls down the line , too

(I) P.O.V.
(11)111 112)

two

oul of

C)

Complete lhe chv ck ie qvoted
bv ldlmg 1n the m,n, ng word ~
yov d eve lop fr o m s1ep No 3 be low

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
•"
Kettle - Nylon - Brawn - Omelet - NORMAL
A famous comic made lh1s comment co ncern1ng cowboys "Mov1e cowboys mystify me How can lhey 1ump

off a porch roof and onlo a horse . and shll s1ng 1n a
NORMAL vo1ce?"

NORTH
tK10852

BRIDGE

~!t - 01

• KJ 6 I
•a~

+ AK

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

E.\.~T

+6 4

.2

• QJ9
• Q87

.K QJIOJ

• 9762

+J 10 9

+Q 8761

SOUTH
• A. 7 3

Careless bids
concede contracts

•A. :09 ~ 3

• ~I
• ~ 32

Vulnerable North -Sout h
[)ea lrr North

Hy Pbillip Alde r
One of my least

~outh

lavonte

convr nttons ts the Unusual No-t ru mp . whtch

Wf'st
3t
Pa "
Pass
Pass

Ob l

descnbes a two-s utter. usually m the

:1 •

mmor.; Normally the pm us1ng this
b1d becomes the defendmg Si de Ahd
when thai happens. the dec larer has

4 ';T
69

extra mformatton aDout the he of lhe

2 NT

Pa ss
I+
~ •
Pa ss

Pass
Pass
Pa ss
Pass

+.I

Opemng lead

cards Often he will make at leasl one
tnck more than he would 1f he hadn 1
been g1 ven a free road map
Today s deal IS a typiCal exa mple
Cover the East-West ca rds and dec1de
how you would play 1n SIX hearts Wesl
leads the club Jack
After East used the Unusual No
trump, Souto doubled lo snow a good

E.u t

"' ortb
I +

dect ded t o learn more about the hand

He played a spade to the kmg and a
spade from tne dummy If East nad

ruffed m. he would have been trump-

hand. North's four dubs was a c ue-b 1d
prom1smg botn a good hand for hearts
and tne club ace (or vmd) South used
Roman Key Card Blackwood . learn1ng
Lnat North had one ace and tne trump
'lUng, but no trump queen
After South won tnc k one w1th dummy s club kmg. his f1rst mstmct was t&lt;J
play West for tne heart queen However. after leadtng a trump to th e ace. he

mg a loser If East had discarded , declarer would have faced a guess 10 the
trump SUit But when East lollowed ,
h1s smgleton heart became marked

South won tnck four w1lh the spade
ace, led a heart to dummy's Jack .
casned tne neart kmg , conceded a
spade tnck and claimed
Don't make a revealing b1d unless
you expect to become tne dec lanng
s1de

Tbe World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

36 Belwoan N.C.
and Ark .
J7 Sole
39 Ne~allve
answer
40 Before

1 Doc . holiday
5 Authorize
12 Papalocarl
13 Paclflc
illanda
14 Panama

An•••r

lo PrtYkMis

Puula

(pool. I

4 I Not freoh
43 Neighbor ol

paaaage

u.s.

15 llolaloal
16 Pro&lt;:eduro
18 Public
vthlcla
19 Rop.. la
21 12, Roman
24 Jump
2 7 Baromolric
pre11ur1 unit
28 Kind of
Income
29 Buono•31 For example
(abbr.)
32 tlmo - hall
JJ Plwol
34 Molrlc weight
(abbr.)
35 Mar

44 Oklahoma
mountains
48 Connection
52 Eaklmo boll
53 Anll-tmallpo•

aubatanc•

54 Anawtr

55 Vivid
56 Abolrocl
being

DOWN
1 Modlcal
pk:ture
2 le - auto
race
3 Wln9-1hiPtd
4 Plcko

5 Nurthebaae
6 - lelluco
7 Contltllatlon
8 Food 111.1
9 Comp111 pt
10 Family

12 Mil . ochool
17 Eloclrlcol
unll
20 Buvor Slalo
21 Aare 911
22 Gandhl'o
nation
23 EurC&gt;fMIO

"kknamt

1 t Take a moal

country

24 Swll1no11
25 FuoH:arrylng
ohlp
26 Trim ltrooo)
28 Soanco
oound
30 Evon (poet 1
34 Sh~ll horno
35 Attack
38 Sgt.
41 Vornloh
lngrodlenl
42 WOIMI\Of
ronk
43 Vermin

Stereo. ~

Plumb ing &amp;
He al ing

PI-, Mat Scenic: Drive, 1VVI Ford Comoncho pl&lt;:k up, 2 85 General Hauling
Vlnlon, 114-311-18~2.
whlol drl.., 3,000 mlloo, $9,000
Soml --Mono: M hondo, ,_*
__-a_11-871
__•_-______ We Oo Hauling Anytime
Anyplaca , No Job Too Blg 0~
aontlo. lfoke 10 hlmooo A ood- ,Too Little Baseman! Clean ing
Clio. fBOO.I1+361-7760.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
General Work, Any l&lt;lndl 61., :
64 Hay &amp; Grain
l-1;,.m;_Dod.;,.:.;,.go.:..;VI
..--nn-,,-50-lioo
__o::..m-11-••. 379-2278 AnyHm•
$1200, 11+"JI2-2S37 I or 8prn
Roomtlor rent · weak or monlh . s..1ng.., 1or ..,. aooc1 candl- Hay 1or - · Starting at tl20tmo. Ollila Hotel. lion, 135, 11+M2-~li.
-11, oquoro boiH uboloo
. up. 304- 1182 Ford Ecollno V•n E-150, 87 Upholstery
115-:IMG.
$8tl5. 304-67&amp;.2218.
61....1-0!180.
Mowrey 's Upholstering servic Ing trl county at l)a 27 yurs. The
Tandem
PCX-20,
28M
ColnSleeping roorM whh cooking. poUble, With llonMo&lt; ANI Print- Premium Allllfll0ro•1 _ rolll 1182 Fun Size Bluer, high bell In furniturll upholstering
Alao tra11er ~- All hook-ups. or; Apply 2C Whh Aaa-L $25. Motgln Fonn, Rt. :00, 304- mlloogo, r1011 good , $1100, lf4- Call 304-675-415 4 for fT Ge esCtll aftlf 2•00 p .m., 304·77'3-· 114_.4f-0364.
137-2018
1112-2077.
timates .
!651, Maaon WV.
loWly

,.,,.,,. ... _HITTER I!

Ca rter '!l Plumbing
Fo•Jr1h and P mn
Galltpol1s, Oh1o
614 ·1·16-3888

auto.1 P~,

W1thou1 lh1nk1ng my

a

Gallia

,_.,Ilion, $1,450. 614-446-8158

Topper, Good Condition, S2,30o'

~ a friend thai I would love lo
_ _ _ be young and foohsh agam

.

e

Septic

314 Ton 4 wo

OUR PIANNY PLAYER
IS OUT SICK BU T
WE GOT A

614-446-Tn9

1m Chnro6at

nn, Cruise, Raat Good

CHOIR PRACTICE,

Com

$250. 61+361-7760.
~o 1 Air

WE'RE READY FER
PARSON

Rahable Wallpa pe nng
martia l And Re stdonl ral
'Frae Estimat es
"Experienced
•oua!lty Work

c

e

BARNEY

Aerallon Motors, rapatred New
&amp; re-buill n'o! ors m stock, RON
EVANS, JACKSON, OH 1-800-

Problems plague Woad and
Ava s vis~lo the cabin. (A)
Stereo.
1!])18 Fa lly Wollll
i1J Murder, She Wrote Q
12!1CrookandCI!ase
PrtmeNewl
ID Prince vaHan( Stereo . Q
1:30 (2) D II) MOVIE: 'Return of
the Jedl' NBC Monday Night
at lite :?.'riel (PG) 12·301
Stereo.
Cll Cl Ill Amerlcon
O.tecUve O"iC8r John
Bunnell sets out to capture
an all~ drug dealer (A)
Stereo.
@l Ill
II Major Dod The
future ot Camp Hollister is 1n
the hands of a turtle (AI
Stereo. C
l!ll81 Major League
Btsebal Clncinnab Reds al
Houstoo Astros (LI
Major Leeguo Baseball

MacGyvar tries 1o protect a
Ha1t1an college studentlrom
e•lortion.(AI Stereo. C
1IJ (I) Oloty and H1e~
F~lllltml Oblenod
(1 ·00) Stereo Q
llallll 112)
Murpi\J Brown
Murphy Is jOined by her
lather aher the death or her
mother. IAI Stereo Q
i1J - F Prime nmo
WretUing WWF Champion
Macho Man Randy Savage
vs . Sk1nner.
12!1 Nathvtlle Now
urry King Liver
lllJ Scotrwcrow and Mra. King
9:30 Ill Major uague Baseball
Atlanta Braves at San
Francisco G1ants (LI
(II) II 112)
Grapovtne Fran
dates her college prolesll&lt;lr
and Joey falls for an older
woman Stereo Q
10:00 Cll C1 ((}II P - Jenni!!P
Reporting ( 1:001 Stereo. Q
1IJ 5haJI! of lite World

Home Remodeling, Vinyl Siding,
And Ovsrhang 30 Yoars E•
periencad Fr&amp;O Eshmatesl 614 446-0926

Ron·, TV Service !lpacrallllng
in Zenith also sarv1c1ng mosl
olher brands ~l ouse calls also
some apphanc&amp; repairs ' WY. •
304-576-2398 Ohio 614-446· 2454 .

1Ht 314 lon Chevy FOR PARTS,
350 motor, 4 apd ., new tires

I\.IOND6-Y MORNINGS

6EEM 10 61&lt;11'-JG OL-IT 1HE
wa&lt;6r IN PEOA...E

Hick 's Roofing Free Esl 1matn t
Phont. 614-38&amp;-8964

J W Conslruclion Room Ad
dltlons, Roots, DACks S1dlng
And AU Type!!. Of Ellterll'lr And
Interior Pa i11ting Will G1ve Low
Bid Licensed 6t4 245 5t94

1!2)e Evening-

a

245-9146

256~913

(I) Age 7 In H1e USSR A

look at how Sov101 children
view their society at a time of
braalhtaklng and devastating
political and economic
change (1 :001

Motor Homes

1988

Spor11Center
MontJIIne
lllJ The Wa11ona
7:OS Ill Sove~y Hlllblllleo
7:30 (2) D II) J..,..rdJI C
()) Major League Baaibell
Chicago White Sox at
Cleveland Indians (LI
Ill MOVIE: Forced
'TIOI!ge8nce (R) (2:00)
(I) Cl El!lfrlalnmenl Tonight
stereo..~ .
(I) Cl Moma'a FamiiJ
@)Ill WI1Mf Of Forlune I;J
1121111 Family Feud
12!1 So e Star Stareo.
NFL Super Bowl XXVI
Bl111erdl Champlonohlp Hall
ol Famars (AI
Croullre
1:00 Ill D II) Freah Prince of
Btl-Air W1ll1s suspended
after he stages a protest at
schOOl. (R) Stereo. Q
(I) Cl ((} II FBI: The Untold
Storiaa Two game wardens
are murdered by a deer and
~~ poacher. (R) Stereo

/1)

t a n ~s ,

bod y part s, o11e
wheels, radi ators ,
floor mats , etc 0 &amp; R Autl'l
Rtplay, WV 30~ - 3 72 J 9J3 or 1

79

_

I;!

a

ALLEYOOP

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

New gas

_

1~

Q

=

..... ,..__ .

Hercuhes Tra il er, In Excoll ont
Condit1on 1 6 14-388 97&lt;16

$2,400 J04 675 '1064

81+3N-2132.

KILLS FLEAS I
63
LIVeSlock
Buy ENFORCER FIN Killen Fo&lt; 1o Yoor 0tc1 Big AOHA Golding
Pat•, Home &amp; Yard. Guaranteed F01 a. 10 • ... ••
,.._11
E"octhrll Buy ENFORCER AI:
•
Ah•r
Browns Trvetwofthy Hardwar•, 4p.m.
State Aouta 100, Bidwell, Ohio.
!1 Y•r Old Mara, Broke To Rkle,
e.6 born ,,.,. bldg 1400. Gentle, $500 Firm. &amp;M-371-11885.
tm Rogont, o1 oloclrlc:, 3 bod- FrooZif llo•l, Hall Or Whole,
roomo,_ ~'!'1-fiiOnn l ng, 11&lt;16 l Gr11ln Foci, 814-256-8811.

bolh;

1987 Motlta Ctrlo,

1991 AS Ctmaro, V-8, loaded,
red, T·Topt , $9 ,600 l04-67S4331

Gannis Nutrltlon Products 1525
fNturing Amino Acid Body
KUBOTA
Building, welaht lou and fat
SaiH Per11 Service
bum.- farmuras. Available ••·
HURST tRACTOR SALES
elusively at Rite Aid Phtrmacy.
28 HP 4 WD NM6; 20 HP 4 WD
The Nf• way to diet .

$25 ""
anytime.

Yamaha Jel

l-OAN
APPl-ICATIONS

16000 finn, 61+192-3470

446-'1243

1on Milk Ttnk ComprH*»r,
Timer Box, &amp; .,...,s. 614-24$-

deck, :.MM-4175.&amp;.413.

4223.

Hor.a Qaa•neck TnU...-:
Good Cond~lon. C.n Be Uood

4

FIHor Doc:k Fence uddorl 600 •ord Wl1h Buoh Hot.
Elc. Do,;•t BolleYOII? 'c.11 BPI ' $3,100; 1M2 16ft. Slock Trallol',
1-800-648-1!123
$2,115. 614-286-6522.
John Dura Combine De Lnal
Gas Heater For In-Ground Pool. Milkers Vaewm Pump 425 O.i·

the line Grswtly, 13500 tlrm, 814992-5320.

AC, PS, PB, PW,

Power S.ata, AMIFM S1areo
Caueue. loldad! All Black,
,_,000 MIIH. $6,100. Call Pal
Bo)'l'r 614..,...6-"141'9, 614-446

61 Farm Equipment

Only $791.00 BNutlfut Above ' Ford 4000 Tractor With Aaka,
Ground 19X3114 Pool Includes: I Blt.lj, Mowing Mtt:hlne, 1.5,400;

Q,..vely riding lawn mower, 50"
cut, tns thtn 3 yeart okt, 1op of

Two 1990

aoo-2n-asas

1990 4dr Grand Prtx; 1976 Ford

low!TIIn's

2602.

Ptauure b oat wt 50hp mot or,
tralltr, 2-6 gallon tanks, hht
jac kots , 614-985-440 9

M~

Royale

Oldsmobile
V~.

/

BOATERS
Ma rino Serv ice N&amp;w Ma r·
cury Engines In Stock Parts &amp;
Accesso rie s In S l oe~. Fact ory
Tramod Servico 61'1 -256...{;160

8160, 614-388-8240.

Brougham

PUT IT T~l.r
WAY... T~~ 1-JOLF IS'
AT T~~ t&gt;OO!r ANl&gt;
:I'M wtAfliN6 A
COl-OtiNt CAl-l-~1&gt;
"tAU I&gt;~ POll~ C~OP ''
l-~T

JS

Clun,
Fully
L.oadld ,
All
Malntananc., Recorda 614·3881938

II

11117

lon truck

4-WO Constdering OHers On
19M Chevy 2dr Hardtop 614 -

Homecare Farmall M and Farmall H trac·
614 ..46-7283, l.aoo-451 6814
ton 197'9 halt ton Chevy

air

6l4-

463&amp;o,.nlngo.

Electric 3 Wheeled Scoolen In~ BruahhOQI, can dellwer, 814--843dooriOuldoor, Now A Uood. Uft 5216.

wall

$~ , 200 .

1985 Pontiac 8000

sa,soo.

heel-

Call &amp;14-388-9169.

1t85 Mercury Cougar, PSI PW,
AC, Cr8g1r apun aluminum

1889 Pontiac Flrabird Formula,
,.d wlgny intlfior, T-tops, all
po•r ac:eHOrias, 41,000 mil es,
304-t75-n56 or 675-

F0&lt; Collie 61+245-1040.

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS

1986 Sea Nymph Fish N' Ski,
70HP Evinrude W1\ h Tra1lar,
$5,500 Alld 29' 1986 Chri s Craft
230
Tw1n
Catalma
Wtth
Mer cru tsors , $40 000 6!4 -393-

Condhlon, $1,100. 614-446-4638 .

FOld Rongor XLT, S2 ,595 1988

Coud1, chair, coftw lab!., 2
O.re, Fertlllzar
lampe,
por1tbla
trpewrtt...-, 8Ft. John
Smhh.COrona. Antique ..wtng Sproadof Wl1h Food Bo• And
machlrte-Oak
cablnei·Whlta OM Elltn S.ad Boll, In
Vary good condhlon. 304-175- lint Shape' Good Tir• 614-2566518.
4038.

Chalrw.

1185 Ford Tempo 4 Door
Automatic, Nsw -T ires, Good

-=--:--:c--

teena~e pany 1

1 1 1 1

i1J MacOJver Q
=
a

t986 Kaw. Jet Sk 1 650-2, $1,5 00,
Good Cr&gt;ndltton, Ca ll Af1ar
Sp.m, 614-446~7017

11116,614-446-00l'O.

Musical

v•

Bo.-a 20" Huffy bk:yc:Je, hand
brake, axcallant condition, $60,
614-992-2428.

&amp; Plastic Septic
Tankl, Jat Aeralktn Tanks . Aon
Evans Enttrprl... , Jackaon, OH

t915 Buick Skyt..wk, Auto All
Brakes, Ell ·
hault System, Good Condition,
$1,495; Alto :l Push Mower!!, $40
Etch. 614-446-81!8

Power, New Tiru,

~
rI

Chlklrtn Q
@) ID Jaopardyl [;I
I!])• Star Trek
1121111 Entertainment Tonight
Stereo. C

1978 Baja 18' Opon Bow Boat,
170 HP Morcruisat, l/0, Equip·
ment , Good Conditton, $J,90 0
614-245-5585 A~ar 6P M

19N Olds Toronaeo, 614· 446-

Balhlub, 2 Of'OIHn Lavatorln
Wlth Fixturu And Counttr. 614·
446-8263 PM.

Concrete

Wha.. Drive. 614·388-8739.

World Today
1D Batman
6:051ll I Love Lucy
6:30 (2) 8 II) NBC New1 C
()) Now It can Ba Tolir
(I) Cl ((} Cl ABC Newo Q_
IIJ Wild Amartc:a Stereo Q
)ll Square One TV Slareo.

NewaHour

-rT_.,R,-;E:;_,::B__.:.:..H~~

(I) II Monied --· With

4256

141-G7l1.
1986 Audl 5000 S 1 Owner, Exira

Like Now Conn . TNmpot, And
20,000
BTU
WnlinghouM CIM Excel~ Conditton, Call
Hatvy Duty Air Conditioner, Ex· 81+24U457
callant Condition, $200. No
S Place living Room Suite,
Rocking Chair, Wood Frame
With Cushion•, $150 614--256·

1183 Mlfcury Lynx, $.550, 614 -

11'12-681'1.

5 ~ 1 boaL' trailer, 75HP
motor , 17 tt liborglass, 614 -985 -

Drogonw)'nd C.Hory: CFA Per...,. 6 SLarn~~a Ktnana. 614-

446~922 .

Checks. 614-446-4!N!:l

flrior, $1,000. 814...t41-0830

Report

a

(I) Cl lnalde Edllon C
IIJ (I) MacNelltLehniT

1965 Alla!l

Bud9e1 T ra n-sm1 ~s !ons, Used &amp;
rebuilt , s1art 1ng at $99 , fr ont
wheel dnY&amp; stiart mg at s w~ 00
6t4-:245-56n, 614-379-2263

1987 Original Wom Tanning Poodle
Bad, 20 lamps, 30 Min. Digital
Tlmar, Sale kty Lock Syst•m.
Hom~~ Or Comman:lal UH. Ex·
c•llanl
Condition
Asking.
14,000. It You UH The Bell,
Th!l T1nnlng Bed Is For You.
For Mort Information Call 614-

1978 M•rcury Cougar, new pa111
and new tlru, fairly good
shape, need• minor work. Me ko
ott.r, 114-192~2383 or 614·992 3331, must Mil .

Slarc raft Bass Boat, 65
HSP Molar 27 lb Thrust TrollIng Mol or, $2,500 614-446-4636

OoVM And PIQooniLS...rol Dl~

11ron1 Klndo.I14-31~JIIOI.

Gotden Relfhwer Pupa.
7123.

Miscellaneous

119HI66.

NIOATE

I I I' l

l

5

00 Night Courl C

16 Ft

S250 . 614-367-nso

Of

54

nbuilt engine, decent shape,
$1100; 1988 Ntuan Santra, ncellent condition, $2100 ; 6t4-

I

.

NASCAR Mld ..aoon

7:00 ~II lUI Wl!ool of Fortune

whMio. 'lory Sharpl Arnllrnl v~ .

1124 E

614-a92· 2526.

1m Ford 314 ton true~ utllhy
body, $1000; 1980 \,;ullan ,

I!JSmurloQ
=

=Up Close
lllJ Now Zorro [;I
6:35 Cil Andy GrilliH!

for Sale

$2315, 114--MG--2045 or 614· 949·
2879.

1111 Rlv«ine Antiques, Fish Tank, 2413 Jac:Qon Ave
P&lt;Nnt Pteaunl, 304-875-2063,
Main Straat, Pomeroy.
1\111 line Tn&gt;plcal fllh 1 blnll,
Hours : M.I.W. ~0 · 00 a.m. to 1:00
~~nail anlmalt and euppl....
p.m., Suodly 1:00 to 6 :00 p.m.
Buy

460 encJna NM DOOd, body has
Nil, 3fUT5..aa~.

1984 Buick Four Door, Ft ont

Bloodline, $15fl. 614--251-6413.

AKC Roglllored Ba- pupo, l'

53

$5,000 to $8,000. Must salt
$1,500. 304-67&amp;.50i1.

1ta2 Chevy Clprlea, Air, Cruln.
Graom and Supply Sho~Pel No Auol, , _ . Pllnl, 305 EnGrooming. All bieede, ttyl•s. gina, Nn E111haust , Eltcellent In ·

Glb•on Air..•ap, 24,000 btu

Nort l1 Fourth Sl . Middleport 2
BR
tum1ahed
lptr1ment
Deposit &amp; refaranee 304-882·
One bedroom
room, utiiiiiH

I

614

75 Boats &amp; Motors
_71;_--A.:.ut,.;_o..:s_fo;_r,_S,_,:a,le;__
1D67 CU.SSIC MERCEDES 25GS, coUeclot" value between

Q

11!1 112) Ill CBS NtWI
l!ll 18 AndJ Grilfltlt
iiJ Scooby Doo

~~c-c~~~c::-::-c1987 Honda 250x 4 Wheeler, E• ·
446-7644.

Cfi

RHdlna Rainbow
I!])• Full Jtouse Q

i

750 cc, BAsi 0 1-

Yamaha

fer 614-446-0782

cellent Condi\I OI\, $2, 000

Transportation

1171t Uncoln Mark IV, very good

Supplies

1982

•

EVENING

1980 Hor1da CA BO R Good
Shap~ . Pnced To Sell Call Bot
ween B·B 6 t4-379 2694

son...

(1 -800-572~423} .

for Sale

·-:c---cccc-::--c-·~­

Wanted to Do

2 bedroom trailer, $17~mo. plus
utlliUas, 614-992-3257

On thl Gulf, From Sl!O w.. k.
Sanibel ANIIy 1-800-5-Stnibet .

WE 'l l PAV VOU To Type Namos
And Addreaus From Hom a 1
$500.00 Per 1000 Ci111 -!K)0--8961666 ($1.49 Mln118yrt •) Or
Wrl1• : PASSE • 339, 161 S Un
colnway, N. Auron , ll MS42.

18

Mobile Homes
for Rent

lagu, Condos, btttM, Many

Mobile Homes

3249

Nowii'Southeast•rn
Bualnast Collag., Spring Valle)'
Plaza. Call Todlty, 61~·446-4367 f!
Ra gist•rallon 190·05- 12748

42

Deposit

apply In person Mason Family
Rest , Mason, WV.

Retrain

Nice eHic:lancy cottage, unlqu•
and bNutltul, 304-675-6042

at · Village c:ltMO Apia 149 or
call 614..092-31'11 EOH.
2br Utlllln Ptid , Second
Avenue , Gallipolia, $295/Mo

304-675--7711 ..ave musage

Then Call J.B. Hunl I-800-2JB- Georg•• PM able Sawmi ll, don'1
HUNT EOE!Subjoel To Drug haul your logl to tht mill just

Scr.. n.

--,------~ending Roula Loc al. We Have

At

Air Condblonltt, Rab'!Citon,

MON., JUNE 29

()) CNIIlea In CNirgo Q
~ Square One TV Stereo.

1977 Yamaha 400 StrHt , New
Tlras, Ballery, &amp; Carb Roal
Good Cond111on, 614-379 -.2927

614--251--1657.

ma

for Rent

Fraazer , Step-In Cooler , lc11 Ma chma, Oispla}' Freezar, Table
And Chairs, Mi se Equipment
614-245--9033

Coaslal NC , 5 Md111

3 Place Bedroom Suite. $100.

St, $350 mo. ref &amp; dap 304-458·

Start-Up. 1-600-TI'S..UNET.

Inc. 1-800-759-6980, Oepl. A· 386

Business
Training

4 bedroom, 2 balhs, 914 Viand

44

Rtsl •u ra nt EqUipment Taylor
Soft Serve FrHUrt. 2 Door

8

112). II) ......

1977 Harley Davidson Spot1sl ar,
lots chrom&amp;, 4 over, good cond ,
$2,300 304-862-3453 al1or 4 00

PICKENS FURNITURE
NawiUtad

Own Home Inspection Buttness I.Dw Coli Training And
Suppl:es. Approximately 12,500.
Make
$1 ,500
Weakly!
"Housewasl'linf
Instructional
Video And Busmau Plan Avail·
able. Free Information Powtr·
wash , 1011 Bayview Overtook,
Slatford, VA 225.54, 703-720--3581

'01£ Tl*£ ~
Kl D'&gt; ro &amp;O 10
OCD I~ WH£~
THEIRI'AAEMT5
G6T TIR£0

UMI

&amp;:oowe (1)0 Clle diJID

614-992-51111

llka n. ., 304--87&amp;--2019.

House trailer tor Nnt, SR \43 In

31

See The Country And G&amp;l Pa 1d

'iaam Pa)' 27·29 Cants
"Single Pay 19·22 Cents
'H1gh Mileage Bonu s M1les
' Motel Layover

Making

Real Estate

For II' Palrlot Otfer!l Ou a 111y
Truck Driver Tramtng In Only 8
Weeksl Call
1-800 -188 1 !50
Fmanctal
Ass1stanco
Fo r
Ouahh.d Apph canl s

Covanan1 Transport
·sc hoot + 6 Mos OTR
'M in Aga 23

lnspecton

675-173'1

Toyota 4x4, ell:lended c ab,
topper, elltra tnas on nms, ex·
cellent condition, call alter 6p m,

Goods

USED

~0..

et:() 2

1986

Household

GOOD

Hf;'U.

304~75-2260
=-. ----

'•

11

Conol•-~ eo~-~
......, '-•N
'"'•"'' . Fo• B00-499-l4w .
..;lp'-'pol;_ro_m.;.•"';_'6;.M,;,.;-38~6-.;!19;.1146;:;.__ Kalvlnator dryer, gi'Mn. $75.
1 304~75-4064.
54 Miscellaneous
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Merchandise
Nlca mobile home space avail· Compl•te hama tumllhings
Hours: Mon-Stt, ~- 814-446- Upright treour, aooc1 cond,
able, call Mall, 1-aoo-837·3238
0322, 3 mUH out Butavilla Ad.
$125. Bulllf"'r pooll canlloble
FrM Del/vary.
com~natlon, 1180. 304~58-177!5
Rentals
Mahogany twtn beda, complele, or 304-675--12'11.

In Your Araa Start
Making Mona)' Now! Own You1

45631

Nurse Needed to prov1de 1n
home personal cara Auassmant and planni ng 101 adult
psychiatr ic patients Not to ex·
c"d 17 hrarwtc. Salary negolta bla WV llc an'\ft r!HJU HIIild
Prastara Canter , 213 Va lley
Drive, Point
Pleasanl, WV
25550 304-675 -2361 AA EOE

Mobile
Aeras,3bt
Avtltabl•Home,
July On
1st 3 14ll10
8
MIIea From Town On 218. Will

675-26WI or 675--5709.

Amer ica's Finest Log Moma
Manutecturar NMds Oual1ty
Wholesalers
Earn Excellent
Full Or Part -Time
Profits
Lifetime Warranty. Call Mr.
JonM FOI" Ftll Dealer Jnto 1·
800·321-5647 Old Timer l.Dg
Homn, MI. Juliet, TN
Home
$100,000

D

74

~:W:va,~=-123l.

SOlS£

Wao•- dryoro r•lrl-ot-o

2 houses Lewis St, Pl . Pit, 304·

Al1-&amp;~37-36n

Cue to the high cost ol blctory
space,
Insurance,
worker 's
eompenu!lon, and other company expenses, many com·
ptniM can save thousands of
dollars In production tlm1 with
J*)pla assembling vary simple
products sl home tor lham
Special skills or axpanonca oot

12165, Stove, Fridge,

Underpinning, Good Condl·
tlon, $3,200. Muat Moval 614388-868e

IT /N¥.£S 110

Ford Co nv Van, Ellcellertl
Condllton , Low Mtles, 614-256·
6338
~:--;;---;-::--- - ----:
1986 Ford Ranger 4r4 , 5 speed
XLT, loaded , ST X phg 1111 kit,
n•w tires , exh a nic e, $4,100

Merchandise
51

304

NOT TIII£D I
WHY IS IT TI M£
F~ II£ TO (,() rc

WOII

Television
Viewing

,.~'(

[~

.

1984

1010,

$$ Dial Fo r Dollars $$ Racaiv1ng
Flaym&amp;nts Of Real Esltta? We
Pay Mora For ContractsiTNat
Deeds . Call Nowll Skip Foss Et

AUSTRAliA WANTS YOU
Pay,

Business
Opponunlty
!NOTICE!

Reg1sterad

Help wanted

: . cellant

no IOIWif.

$5,995

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

any1.1me

Nice, cllln 2 or 3 ~room
ho•o, prwlor private -Ina .
614-HZ..2428, IHYe m1U191

[ CXJI.IT r:£T IT

Vans &amp; 4 WD 's

area ,

'

Household furnishing . 1f.ll mi.
Jerricho Rd. Pt. Pleasant, WV,
Clli 304-675-1450

OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SHING CO
recommend• that you do bu51 nass with peopll you know and
NOT to sand money throu9h the
mall until you have lnvast1gated
the offering.

4875 .

'

Retail Or Office Spew Av•llablt.
lafayette Mall. 6~222.

41 Houses for Rent

Financial

needed because Instruct ions
and matartals tre sent to you
Ahar you compl•t• wor~. sand
tl back for peym8Jfll The more

m-5785

Jobs,

Miss Paula • Day Care Canter
Sara, affordable, chlldcare M·F
6 a.m. - 5 :30 p.m. Ages 2\&lt;'t-10
Baton, af1er school . Orop·mt
welcome . 614-441).82:24 New In·
lant Toddler
614-446-6221

JOBS AVAILABLE
Driva,
off
Fourth
Avenue, ffM Ofg&amp;n, antiques, {S.Itriaa nnga batwHn S50l38! Weekly) Fvtl or Pat1-Time
home interior.

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wanted to Do

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21

1m

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1992

BORN LOSER
.....---.........

29, 1992

1984 Ford h4 Bronco XLT, lull
sin, bla ck, load ed sharpast In

1990

1914

Road , Rutland .

July

C...ntry Mobile H.... Part&lt;, Rt.
l3N, undat new management.

2·1!2

1869 Shultz mobile home, 12160,
2 bedi"'Oftll; 1112 porch, undtrponnlng, 2 AiC, o•c cond, 3041182-267'1.

July 1·2, 9.1m-4pm children and
11dult clolhlng, twin bed, misc.
Second houH, 33459 Happy
Hollow Road, off New Lima

73

Space for Rent

Balho, 6-6-1662.

July 1·2, 2ml. Was1 on S .R. 881.
Old and new Items, dothlng,
d.cor~~tlng hamt, 614·992·5083

Moving :
Kl11eon

2164,

Electric,

Umit Some larger ctothlng.

J

Fumlahad,

GarJge 1111, July 2-3, 9:00-4:00.
Above Entem Htah School
RlggscreS1 .
O.ryl
W~ra:

dothet, booka,

'l

Completely

'Mx75

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

R~liner,

Monday, June

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

29,

45 Toars
46 Typo of
cabbav•
47 Hl1¥1n1
48 56, Romon
48 Author
Fleming
50 Ond
51 Born

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION . 'I' ve oft en wished that I were harder and mora
callused and mOfe cynical than I am "
Bill Moyers.

�Page-10-The Dally sentinel

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
The Crossover Band has been
around for a while and I know
there are many fans out there.
As a fan you can provide a lot of
support for the musical group on
Saturday, July 4. Crossover will be
performing at the Washington
Carver Camp Grounds near
Charleston, W. Va. The band
earned the right oo take pan in Saturday's competitive event by being
one of 24 bands selected to participate Saturday. Incidentally, there
were over I 00 bands competing for
tho se top 24 spots in Saturday's
event which is called the True
Value Countty Showdown Contest.
Competition Saturday will sum at
10 a.m. and the winner will
ad vance to regional finals in Fair·
mont, W.Va.
If you're interested in being on
hand to support Crossover, you can
get the details by caUing 992-5371
or 367-0421.
Also Crossover has been invited
to perform at AmeriFiora in
Columbus at 2 p.m . on Sunday,
July 19, representing Meigs County . As I recall that is pan of Meigs
County Week at AmeriFiora .
Members of Crossover arc
extremely pleased to have been
invited to play at the Columbus
event.

Reunion.
Five years ago, Barbara attended
the reunion and upon returning
home wrote a letter criucizin g
Meigs High School where th e
reunion was held. Howev er, thts
time things were better. Barbara
writes:
"'What a Difference a Day
Makes"- l10w about 1,825 dayso
Five years ago I wrote a leuer
about the 'hot, dirty conditions,
lack of towels, tissue' we endured
while attending our alumnr
reunion-my 40th.
Well, this year, I was priVIleged
to auend my 45th reunion. It was
truly the be st one I have ever
attended . Thanks to all members
of the Alumni Committee for a
great job."

Tuberculosis skin tests will be
given by personnel of the Meigs
County Tuberculosis Office at the
Meigs County Fair.
However. vou mav no1 wantor can't- waH that long 10 get your
skin test since the Meigs County
Board of Health does require all
food handlers to have the test. So.
here's what you can do. You can
go to the Tuberculosis Office ,
localed in the Multipurpose Build·
ing on Mulberry HeighiS, Pomeroy ,
from 8 a.m. 10 12 noon and from I
Kerri Ann Beegle Mellick, to 4 p.m. any day except Thursday
Mansfield, has been named to the and get your skin test.
dean's list at Ohio State University
Now about the fair. The tests
for the spring quarter. Kerri, the will be given from 2 to 6 p.m.
daughter of Robert and Jane Bee - Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
gle, Racine, is majoring sociology Aug. 17, 18 and 19, at the tubercuand auended Ohio University in losis group's booth. If you have
Athens prior to her marriage to any quesuons give the office a call
Greg Mellick, of Mansfield.
at 992-3722.
Sometimes thmgs get a bit bet·

tcr.

At leas t that is the indicatiOn
from Barbara D. Roush Goodrich
who came here this spring 10 aucnd
the Pomeroy High School Alumm

Now we have this big dispute
going over whether Coke or Pepsi
will be poured at the Ohio State
Fau this year. I know the problem
is one of your maJOr concerns but
do keep smiling.

Doctors transplant
baboon liver into man
By CLAUDIA COATES
Associaled Press Writer
PITTSBURGH --- A dymg man
whose liver was destroyed by hepatitis B has received a baboon liver
tn the world's fiTSt such transplant.
The 35-year -old man , whose
name was withheld at hts request,
was in critical condition today after
Sunday's 11-hour operation at the
UniverSily of Ptttsburgh Medtcal
Center, spokeswoman Lisa Rossi
said.
The patient was an unsuttabl e
candidate for a human organ trans plant because the hepatitis 8 virus
infects transplanted human organs.
Doc10rs believe baboon livers may
not be susceptible.
Such animal-to-human tran splants could help relieve a shonage
of human organs for transplant, SCI entists say. Baboons are promtstng
because of their anatomical srmilartlies to man; they could also provtde organs as needed, spanng desperately ill pauents the need to waH
for a suitable human organ.
The la st known animal -tohuman tran splant was m 1984.
when a baboon heart was implanted in a baby at Southern Califor nia' s Lorna Ltnda Univcrstly Medt ·

By JENNIFER DIXON
AP Farm Writer
WASHINGTON --- Dogs bred
and sold by the nation's commer cial animal dealers may not be ge tting humane care because fed eral
mspectors aren't doing their JOb,
Agriculture Depanment investigators say.
Inspections arc sporadic and
many violators aren't being puntshcd, the investigators said in an
audit of the Animal and Plant
Heallh Inspection Service.
''APHIS cannot ensure the
humane care and treauncnt of anr mal s at all dealer facilitie s as
required" by the Animal Welfare
Act, concluded the audit report by
the USDA's Office of Inspecto r
General .
The breeding fa ctltu cs arc
" puppy mills" and "the govern ment is completely unable to
cope " said Paul G. Irwin , pres•dent ~f the Humane Society , which

recently obtained the report under
the Freedom of Information Act.
·'USDA should be called to
account for its slipshod methods
and the animals who have suffered
as a result," added Irwin, who said
the facilities produce more than a
half-million puppies a year.
The report focused on 4.300
facilities nationwide where animals
--- mostly dogs --- are either bred
or kept before being sold to pet
shops, research faciliti es, or for
hunung and dog racing.
The federal investigators
revie wed th e record s of 284
licensed vendors and regtstcrcd
research facilities in Illinois, lndtana, Missouri and Wisconsin. The
four states arc home to about 40
percent of animal care facilitie s
under the jurisdiction of the Ani mal Welfare Act.
The auditors found:
---46 facilities had received no
annual inspection.

HONORED - Jean Roush, front left, was
honored for ber years or service to the Meigs
County PubHc Library with the presentation of
a plaque by the board of trustees or the library.
Presenting Mrs. Roush her plaque Ll Pat Holter,

Fung satd I0 days ago lhat Pi u
researchers were developtng tec hniques and combinations of anti rejection drugs for use tn trans planting a baboon liver into a
human. The researchers prepared
by putting hamster livers into rats.
he said.

endar.

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun ty Veterans Service Commission
will meet Monday at 7:30p.m. rn
th e Veteran s Service Office in
Pomeroy .
RUTLAND - The Rutland Garden Club will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m. at th e home of Mrs . Jame s
Nicholson. The program wtll be

POMEROY · Band pracoce for
Metgs High School Band (including in co mmg freshm en) wtll be
held Monday from 9 a.m. to noon
at tl1c high school band room.
WEDNESDAY
CHESTER · Chester Garden
Club will hold a family picntc at
the Karr cottage wtth Dorothy and
Horace Karras hosts on Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. Around the table
disc us sion will be held savtng the
earth as well as an aucuon of gar·
den related items

Kevin Lee Crabtree, parcel, to
Dolphus Burke and Wanda C.
Burke, Pomeroy Village.
James Franklin Rhodes and
Irene Rhodes, 4.37 A, 10 Paula
Annette Ellis, Obve.
Dortha W. Brown and Edward
M. Brown, parcels, undivided inL,
10 Helen F. Wilcoxen, Lebanon.
Leading Creek Consv. Dist. ( 19
R!W).

Genevieve Swartz, parcels, to
Rowena Vaughan and Leo Loring
Vaughan U, Pomeroy Village.
Ronald K. Browning and Judith
E. Browning, lot 456, to Billy J.
Browning and Cheryl M. Browning, Middleport ViUage.
Gordon C. Proffitt, tracts, to
Central Ohio District Advisory

Board, Portland Village.
Marjorie I. Manuel, dec· d, cert.
of trans., to Jean Ellen Allen and
Janice Lisle, Syracuse.
William E. Grueser, dec'd ,
aflid. 10 Mary E. Grueser, Pomeroy
Village.
.
Basil L. Haynes and Dons
Haynes, 2A, to Helen M. Boggs,
Rutland.
James J. Crisp and Teresa Ann
Crisp, t0.1228A, to Glen T. Crisp,
Rutland.
Clarene W. Smith,'dec'd, cert of
Trans, to James Lloyd, Patricia
Bastiani, Jack R. Lloyd and B.
Miche Lloyd, Middleport Village.
Jaymar Coal Co. nka, Jaymar,
Inc. 67.87A., to Paul Stnlllss, Rutland.
Virginia Phalin (X), parcel, to
Homer Mills and Goldie Mills,
Pomeroy ViUage.

The so und generated wa s 150
decibels --- about as loud as a
stereo playing full blast. Outside
the acoustic enclosure. though , rt
so unded like a low hum to the
seven astronauts aboard Columbia.
Researcher s want to see how
liquid drops merge in weightlessness, especially when contaming
detergent and other materials that
gravtlate 10wanl the surface. These
matcnals, called surfactants. arc
used in cosmetics production and
oil recovery. which could benefit
from the space findings.
"You can do all the thinking
you want, but unul you ac tually do
the experiments you don '1 know
how it' s going to behave in space."
said Glynn Holt. a Yale UmverSily
physicist taking part in the experi meniS from Earth.
The spheres vibrated. wobbled
and lengthened tnto s~inning cylmders under the acousttc commands.
Some camcd any air bubbles; oth ers were seeded with plastic tracer
particles for easier view mg.
Scientists on the ground cheered
as they watched Jive vtdco of th e
experiments. They grew espectall y
excited when Dunbar combtned
two drop s rnto a sto gie, slowly
spinnin g sphere.
"That was th e flf st successful
coalescence in space ... Holt told
her.
The 13-dav night began Thursday and ends July 8. That' s tw o
days longer than the longest shuttle
flight to date, a 1990 sate llllc ·
remeval mission by Columbia.

president or the board. In back, 1-r, are board
members, Charles Blakeslee, Iva Sisson, Mary
Kay Yost, Pat Mills and Don Mullen. Absent for
the photo was board member, Wanda Eblin.

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Page4

Vol. 43, No. 41

Copyrighted 1992

Low 1onighl in mid 60s.

__.....___________ _
Wednesda) , hi);!h in mid-KOs.

Chance or rain 70 perct·rtt.

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Tuesday, June 30, 1992

A Multimedia Inc. NewaDaoer

Middleport Council
OKs AGHJMV plan
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
Middleport Village Coun ctl by a
4- 1 vote, approved th e plan of lhe
AGHJMV (Athens, Gallia, Hock ing , Jackson, Meigs, and Vmton)
Solid Waste Management District
at a meeting Monday night at Middleport Village Hall.
Votmg "no" on tltc re solution of
approval was Councilman Paul
Gerard, who has repeatedly
expressed opposioun to the plan on
the basis of cost. He mcnuoned at
th e meet ing a provision m the plan
whtch would allows the Environmental Protection Agen cy (EPA) to
put an assess ment on property if
landftll operatrons fall into defrcit
sometime in the future.
Meeung with Council last night
was Kenny Wiggins, a member of
the Management's Dtstrict cxec ultve board who, along with Mayor
Fred lloffman, urg ed Co un cil to

THIS OLD SCHOOL HOUSE - will be the
site of a children's museum if Sugar Run School
alumni and other concerned citizens conlinue lo
donate lime and money to a renovation project.

A fund drive is now underway, led by Mary
Powell, director or the Meigs Counly Parks Dislrict. (Sentinel Photo by Brian J. Reed)

Sugar Run School building
may get new lease on life
An abandoned school buildmg
in Pomeroy may gel a new lease on
ltfc as a children's museum tf current plans of the Meigs County
Park District materialize.
Acco rding to Parks District
Director Mary Powell, the Sugar
Run School buildmg. located on
Lasley Street. will be transformed
rnto a "learning playground. full of
choices that (will) encourage visi tors to pursue their own interests."
Donation s for the project have
been received from the followin g
individuals John F. Buchanan .
Irene Powell, Jennings C. Frsh.
Robert L. Hamm. C Anhur Ebersbach , Mr. and Mrs. Carl Neutzlmg.
Frances Elberfeld Rovcrc, Florence
L. Smith, Roy E. Miller. Howard
and Mary Hamm, Dora L. Cnspin.
Rachael Downie and Earl Elber feld.
A special program 10 rccognrze
donors has been established. Spe ctal pla4ues will be presented in
honor of those donating more than

$1,000. Gifts over $100 wrll be
recorded on a memorial plaque and
a registry wtllltst gifts under $100.
Addiuonal donations wtll be
use d to replace the roof on th e
building which, according to Powell, is necessary 10 stop th e dctcriorauon of the building . All dona lion s arc tax deducuble , Powell
sa id , and may be mail ed to "This
Old School House" , in ca re of
Eleanor Smith. 110 Butternut
Avenue in Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs
Marvm Burt, 315 Wetzgall Street .
Pomeroy; Linda Mayer, 25 Cave
Street. Pomeroy; or Meigs Cou nt y
Parks District. 200 East Second
Street, Pomeroy . More information
ts avatlable from Powell at 992 2239.
The budding wa s constructed
about 1875 to house grade s one
throu gh crght , Powell said. In 1929.
the seventh and eighth grades were
moved to Pomeroy Junior High.
and rn 1961. the budding was
closed.

COlOR S

• Values every day at R1te A1d
••Jill""!~

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~t.mie

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Meigs County land transfers
CompUed b1:
Emmogene Holstem Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio

- !56 were in vtolauon of th e
law, including 126 that had
received no follow-up mspec uons
in the required time period; 30 days
for significant deficiencies.
- APHIS renewed the ltcenses
of 49 factlities even thou gh the y
had outstanding violations.
Inve stigator s also visited 30
facilities. which were not identified
in the report, and found seven deal ers who had not corrected viola tions idcmified in three or more
inspections.
The most serious violation s
included inadequate vetennary care
and insufficient animal living
space. which jeopardized the health
and well-being of the animal s.
At one facility , investigators
found a dog with laceration s
around the neck and another with
an infected eye.
"USDA falls down on the job,"
said Rep. Charles Rose. D-N.C ..

Rite Aid Has The Hottest Values

Community calendar
" Herb s lor the Krtchen" and
"Roses."

By SUSAN HIGHTOWER
Associated Press Wriler
SPACE CENTER, Houston Astronauts aboard Columbia used
sound waves lu set water drops
dancing today, th e fifth day of
NASA 's longest shunle night.
Bonnie Dunbar spent her entire
shift Sunday sq uirtin g beads of
Ouid into an enclosed chamber, and
Eugene Trinh took up the task
today .
The floating, ptngpong-ball·
sized drops bounced around th e
chamber as sound waves frurn four
loudspeakers pushed th em back
and forth

thotJuly Savings

cal Center. The girl , known as
Baby Fae, died 20 days after devel opmg an antibody to the animal's
blood.
The man at Piu was being gtven
FK506, an experimental anti -rejection drug.
A laboratory-bred baboon was
killed to provide the liver. Doctors
removed the ammal's organ as lhcy
began operating on the man.
A Ptll hospital review board that
monitors the ethics of human
experiments approved the operation on Friday . The board obtained
the man 's consent after mformmg
him of the risks and giving htm a
day to change his mind .
"The risk is sure death . The
potential benefit is that they may be
successfully transplanted,' ' satd
Dr. John Fung, Pin's chief of transplantation.

Shuttle astronauts
bounce water drops

Agency not enforcing protection law
at breeding facilities, audit concludes

roos

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day or that event . Hems
musl be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the cal-

Monday, June 29, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

approve the plan. The mayor also
read a lcuer from th e Mcrgs County
Com missioner s urgmg suppon of
the plan which must be approved
by 60 percent of the population of
th e district through th e township
trustee s and city and village councils.

Wiggins desc flbcd th e plan as
"the best lor the ciuzens of the six
count res." He sard that if the plan rs
not ralrfred , then the EPA will
wnte a plan lor the di strict.
He sa id thatlhe plan places lunitations on out-of-state trash and
sets a guaranteed per ton dumpin g
fcc of $13 a ton plus a drstrrct fcc
of $1 50 for trash from lhc dtstrict.
$3 for out-of-drmict Lra sh. and
$4.50 for out-of-s&lt;..:tc trash
Provisions are also cont.amcd m

the reviSed plan 10 protect local
haulers. Wrggins said. cxplainm g
that big co mpanies won '1 be able to
co me m and outbid local haul ers

for trash mutes.
Also at the mccung was Roger
Manley of Manley' s Trash Scrvrcr
who enco ura ged Co un cil to
approve the plan . Asked by a coun cil member what he pays now to
dump at th e GalltpOIIS land frll.
Manley sa td Sl9.50 a ton. That
10cludcs the tipp10g fee . a slate fcc .
and a rcpalf fund for the road lead mg to the landfill. he satd .
Council Prcstdcnl Dewey Horton after slating that "while I don't
hke the plan, there seems 10 be no
alternative plan 10 place" made the
motion to approve th e plan. The
plan approval motion rccc tv ecl
"yes" votes from Horton , James
Clatwonhy , Judy Crooks, and Jack
Satterfield . Counctlman Wrlliam
Walters is confined to a Columbus
hosprllll Councrl al so gave a flfst
rcadin~ to a rcqutrcd ordmancc: on
the plan adoption with a four 10 one
vote. Gerard agatn votrng "no".

Pay hike possible this summer
for Middleport's employees

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
be about S13,000 a year. There was A motion to gtvc a ftrst reading to
some dr scussion as to whether the an ord tnan cc on the mcrcasc was
Sentinel News Starr
Middleport village employees villag e ca n afford the rai se for defeated by a two lo three vote
can expect a pay raise thi s summer employees Currently the lOla) pay - Cas ting the "no" votes were Paul
rf the revtsed pay ordinance whtch roll ts $420,000 but in addition to Gerard and Ja ck Satterfield. Both
A recen t rcunrun of school received a first reading at Middle- thatlhc vtllage pays the full cost of expressed concern about the elderly
"alumnt" was held at th e Trin11y port Village Council Monday night health msurance for employees at and low -mcu mt: rcstdcnt s of the
Congregational Church
rn is adopted.
an annual cost of $130,000 .
village and thw ability to handle
Pomeroy , and was. according to
The fir st rcadrng of the ordr - Lhc increase
The raise. recommended by
Powell. a success. A 70-ycar span Mayor Hoffman, calls for 10 cents nan cc provtding for th e ra rsc
Mayor Hoffman satd that the
of students attended the reun•on, an hour for all full ume employees. passed unammously by Council
vi llag e fa ces a "sucky sllu ation
and it was at thts event that initial plus an addition two cents an hour
No Waler Rate Increase
with th e water" and mdrcated that
discussion centered around '' chil - for each year of servrce.
Counc il . however. rCJCCtcd th e some work has to be done by Oc todren's museum .
The mayor satd the cost to the mayor's recommend ed water and ber to bring the system into com pl iRobert Snowde n. Greg Sheers. vrll agc for the salary increases will se wer rate increase of 20 percent
Continued on page 3
Doug Clelland, Lors Cle ll and , Don nie Ca ll. Mary Powell. Ra ben
Ramsburg. Roger Abbott. Marvin
Burt and Don Mayer were rccogni Lcd fur donaun g over 100 volun teer hours cleaning up brush 111 the
yard and laktng grapev rnes nff the
burldrng.
RAVENSWOOD, W Va . (AP) fly when th e company rchrrc s expect til at cvc rythtng ·:. go mg to
"Thi s has greatly rmprovcd the - At Raven swood Aluminum replacement workers.
go smoothly " nght away. he said.
appearance of the sue,'' Pow ell Corp .. th e ctvi l war is over. Now ,
" The scabs stole the leg nun atc
Uut Gallagher hop es unr on
said. "Thi s rs ju st the h cgr nnm ~
rcconslfuclion bcgms.
JO bs,' ' sar d United Stee lworker s worker s wtll help th e comoanv
Those who donate thcrr umc wtll
Many residc nlS of thi s Ohro ln tcrnatto rwl Vtcc PrcsH1cn t escape th e shad ow of default that
play an rmponant part rn the pro- Rrvcr town of 4, 100 beltcve a 20- Geo rg e Becker. "I thtn k rn the loomed over it whc n the scttJcmcm
ject. for they arc becumrng a part of month labor dispute at Jackson long-te rm conttnu liy of the plant . wa s reached.
hi stor y. To be ca rin g enough to Co unt y's larg est employ er will they'd be best served rl the y Jell
" The alum rnum market 1s very
give of oneself to help rmprovc th e change Lhctr lives forever.
them fir ed "
soft right no w. ·' he sard . .'' The
comm un ity is very admrr.tblc."
Mar shall Cox. 60. was glad
Company s pok.c s rn ~Hl PJI GJI hour ly and sa larted work ers arc
when he and oth er Untt cd Steel- Iagher anl!ctpatcs some turmorl
go rng to have to work toge ther 10
workers go t thc rr jobs back at
"We' r e not nJtvc cnou~h to
Continued on page 3
Rav e n~ wood.
Local 566R memhcrs set foot 10
the plant Monday fur the flf st um c
s10cc Oct 11, 1990, when lherr old
contract cxprred and I ,300 non Henn essy and Bub Sttvers, attend - un ron replacements were htrcd.
"Tim was a small , happy co med Monday 's meetin g to de term me
munrty.
' Cox sa rd . "Everybody
the StalUs of the situation and to sec
knew
eve
rybody and they would
what actiOn was bctng taken by
speak
to
each
olher.
council and lhc owner of th e prop "Hut
now
people don 't speak,"
erty.
he
sard
"
And
when they sec a
The mayor informed Hennessy
and Suvcrs that charges have bee n stran ger. they get scared. It 'll never
filed against the renters and that Ute b&lt;.' like 11 once was as long as we
lt vc ."
problem should be alleviated soon.
fl11rrn g th e dispute, Srgns
Ms . Hennessy submitted to
appear
ed along West Virginta 2 .
coun cil for conSideration the for the
matn
road lcadtng to the plant.
mation of a housing code for rental
Most deni grated lhe replacement
property. She provided one such
workers
a.s "scabs."
example using the codes already in
Replacement
workers' names
place for the city of Athens.
also
were
spray
painted on the
Mayor Reed agreed that rental
hrghwa
y.
accompanied
by threat s
properties tn Pomeroy are a probor
insulttng
phrases.
lem and that steps were currently
" I know several familie s that
bemg taken to create such a code
have broken up because of it," said
under the c:x.ts tin g LO ntn g ordi a woman who would only identify
nance.
herself as Peggy . "Father agam st
Council accepted a propo sal son .
presen ted by Rtc Wa sse rm an, a
" There arc JUSt a lot of hard
communications consultant from
feelings." said Ruth Nel son, anoth TMC, a co mmunicati on compan y er resrdent. "Famtltcs spill, fnends
based in Columbus. that wtll help split. The whole community's
reduce the long-diswnce tel ephone split ."
expense of the vtllage. Accordmg
Nelson, lik e many oth ers. tS
10 information provided by Wasser- wary of strangers. She answered
man the 10tal percentage of savings questions carefully and selectively,
would be 44.8 percent.
saying that both replaccmem work A mee ting is schedu led for ers and union members frequ ent
Wedne sday cvenmg at 7 p.m. al the store where she works.
Pomeroy Village Hall with MiddleBusinesses that catered to
port Mayor Fred Hoffman and the replacement workers arc now held
Board of Public Affatrs to discuss in contempt by some union workthe possi bility of JOint water treat- ers.
SUPPORTING GRANDPA • Tissa Frum, 12, traveled with
ment between th e two villages .
" I wouldn't go in busmesses
her
family from Seminole, Fla., to show support for her grandfa·
Mayor Reed encouraged any vil- that supported this company," Cox
ther
as he and other Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. employees
lage counctl member thai could 10 said. "I won't ever go in those
returned
to work Monday, ending a 20-month labor dispute
attend the meetin~ .
businesses.''
between
RAC
and the United Steelworkers of America.
Conlinued on page 3
Sparks are likely to continue to

Ravenswood residents begin to pick up
pieces as steelworkers return to work

Pomeroy Council accepts offer to
buy old Pomeroy junior high building
By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Slarr
Pomeroy Village Council. at its
meeting Monday evening, accepted
an offer from the Meigs Local
School Board to purchase the for mer Pomeroy junior high building.
Further details on thi s develop ment are unavailable and Pomeroy

~-Local

Mayor Bruce Reed stated
announcemeniS on thi s venture will
be forthcoming JOintly by the
school board and village council.
In other mauers, rental property
on Fisher Street that has been causing problems for other residents on
the street was discussed.
Fisher Street residents, Maureen

briefs-___,

Mine 31 out of commission
Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Mine 31 is temporarily
out of commission, due 10 a roof fall on the mine's be!Uine whtch
occured on Monday.
.
According to Butch Meier, Human Resources Supervtsor at the
Meigs Division, such a fall puts lhe operation"out of comf!liSSton",
and those miners working in Mine 31 are slaymg home unulthe fall
is cleaned from the belt! me.
The mine operation is expected to resume sometime on Wednesday, if progress continues, according to a SOCCO spokesman m
Lancaster.

Lawrence still critical
Howard Lawrence, 69, of Long Bouom. remains in stable but
critical condition at Grant Medical Center in Columbus followmg
an apparent armed robbery on Thursday evening. .
_
His address is Room 313 Intensive Care Umt, Grant Medtcal
Cenler, Columbus, Ohio.

Bookmobile geting ajacelift
The Meigs County Bookmobile is undergoing a face lift, according 10 Library DireciOr Ruth Powers, and those improvements wiU
cancel mobile library services this week.
The bookmobile would ordinarily have made slOps in the follow ing communities this week: Racine, Portland, Rutland, Dexter,
Bradbury, Tuppers Plains, Success Road, Keno, Syracuse and Harrisonville. Those communities will not be served this week.
Continued on page J

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