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                  <text>Psp• Dl Sooct.y nm• sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport

'hlllpoll., OH

Point Plea•nt.

wv

June 2,1991

Lakers win
•
openertn
NBA finals

Subsjdized wheat program has cost more than $700 million .
BJ DON KENDALL
AP F - Writer
· WASHINGTON~_ It has ·
coat more ~.an $7 million .in
export subsidies to sell the Soviet
Union huge amounts of U.S. wheat
at cut-rate _prices, Asriculture
Deieblkii.t tiJ1R1 show.
The subaidiea for the sale of
wheat to Molcow make up more
thin 20 penlelll of the tolal of $3.27
bllli011 apent for "bonuses" to ·
exporters since the Export
Bn~ement Program, or EEP,
. , _ ~ ~ ag&lt;!·
·
. : "Subltdized Jl'81li sales are not
JIIIl of the cumnt ~troversy over
~
futther .credit guarantees
10 the SOvlc:t UDIOII can buy U.S.
food p'Oducts. The EEP operation
!I!JeiiiOI involve credit. only subsidiaed, reduced JXices for specified

commodities.
AlthOOj!h the department regularly publishes upd•w fipres on
~ quanti!Y of a dozen commodines, UICluding grain, that have been
sold to about SO counuies, dollar
figures for specific coonuies have
been scarce.
The disclosures, as of March 14,
were included in an impact analysis
of EEP operations that is pan of
some regulatory changes that are to
be adopted soon.
An announcement of the study
was made last week by the department's Foreign Agricultural S.ervice, which said copies were available upon request. ·
.
Except for the specific dollar
amounts by country, most of the
general information in the report
has been available before. Howev-

.

er, the analysis does provide sane
additional USDA perspective on
the,!~~~!.~~the
. · findinlls of a
ACWRWJ.,

•
.
ihan 18 million tons of wheal during the period EIIYJK was third 11
$3S6.1 million for .8.4 millioa tonS.

.
pelll Cominimity and other in!Mia•
tiooal sellersThe exporter&amp; then are givep
bonUIIII of pemment-owned surSaudi Arabia was lhe larllesl plus commodities to make up for
buyer of feed grains- blrley acHing wheat, for example, at a
under tbe EEP arrangement, wjth reducod price to Russia or 81101ber
around $200 million in bonuaes fmign buyer.
paid for appollimalely 5.8 million
In the six years or EEP operatons.
lions, the bonus 'VIIuc- subsidiea
Under the prosram, private· - of the commodities ~raneel
exporters can sell specified com- from slightly less than$
· on
modi ties to desi11nated foreign in the 19'86 ~rear 10 . than
coontries at lower jl!ices in order 10 $l.dbillion in
1988, the report
881
meet competition from the Euro-

sales have been heavily suhsidi:wt
by the EEP operation since it
beg~.the $3.27 billioo
' 10
. subsidi'es

review of the EEP conduct- ·paid since EEP bean on May 15,
ed by USDA and the Office of 1985, wheat and flour acconnw
Management and BudJet, awe- for $2.61 billion, or 80 ~ as
gale exports of the 12 commodities of mid-Mardi. The Soviet Union's
sold under the EEP are likely to share of the wheat anbsidy total
hhave ~!' '!u'g~A thanb they wfoohld w~~-$of70237.4.3 m!tltl.ion for the purproav!..'::'.·~ .~~ .=,! :;;c,c 0 1 e c•...,
jDI m
metric tons.
...-- u"' •..,.....
China W.S SIICOIId ll$468.4 milWheat, wheat flour and barley lion in EEP benefits, buying more

recent

URGE SELECTION

Pick 3:093
Pick 4:7815
Cards .: 3-H, 9-C
3-D; 2-S
Super Lotto:
1-9-13-16-27-45
Kicker:799844

Page4

•

YOUR DENT
. URES JN ONE D' .&amp;..,.
~.1.

Custom Fitted Dentwn In One Day A1 OUr Teays Valley Oftlce
By Our Profesalonala And Trained Stalf.
Made In Our Dental Laboratory By Qualltled Technicians.

beliew th8t 52 percent of Ohio was

House vote due this
week on coal bill

•

For Aa Appolatmeat or IDfol'lllaUoa.
Our Regular Serolce Is AvaOahle At AU Offices.
SAD llAY &amp;~CD Oft JlEUllfBit .AND RJ:PAIII81

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.

SMAILADD1I'IONALCHARGE FOR SAME DAY SERVICE

Welt~'-.
Vlqlnla Dental lea tlce

.aatiatactlon Ia aaured with Roak of Ag~~a.
Open Mon., Tues.• Thurt. • Fri.I:OO a.m. 'tll4:00 p.m.
Other Houra by Appolntment-1183-1588 or 44Ci-U21

wuua. V. Bell, D.D.S., Inc.

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMI!'NTS
1115

•sJ .....,.. A

.

DENTURES START AT $134 PER DENTURE! '

Rock of Agta offer• you a choice of 8 different colored
granltea. Whatever your requirement&amp; may be, complete

5131 DAVIS CREEK ROoiD

IDIP!I'INIFOIKRD.

~:.=:~=~-

103i QJ.IRRIER STREeT

P:•:~:~:!Qa[~~m:a:lk~)to~the~~~m~t!ili~at~:::;;:~;; ~~--~~~=·:::·;;·;::·~;;;;~r:;•·;...;:·;J;J~J::::::•;.-,::•::~;:0&amp;:~..~::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~,.
-. ......

2 ·

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GRADS••• YOU'RE REALLY
THE ''CLASS'' OF '91 !!!.
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GETTING READY - These three senior
girls were busy ''hllckstage" preparing ror Suo· day night's oommencement
exercises at Eastern
.

High School. Pictured, left.lo rilht, are Lisa Perdas, Andrea ClelaJid ud TobJ HilL
.

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Forty-two .Eastern seniors
receive diplomas Sunday
By BRIAN J, REED
· Senlillel News Sbllr
The Baslem Hi~ School Class
of 1991 received diplomas on Sun-

We're
Proud
Of Our
Graduates!

NATHAN HANSEN

Gallla Academy Hlp School
Ohio Valley Foodland

CBARLES DAMRON
Pt. Pleuam High School
Pt. Pleaaant Foodland

· JESSICA RAMM
Pt. Pleaaant Rlgh School
Pt. Pleasant Foodland

PLUS THESE NOT PICTURED
• JEFF RA TUFF-Gallipolis Food land
•COLLEEN WILT~ Twin ~ivers Foodland
•TERESA OLIVER-Twin Rivel'8 Foodland
•ALAN DILLINGER-Wellston Foodland
•DAVID HAYES-Wellston Foodland

I

BilLY MORROW
Marshall \JDlversl&amp;y
Pt. Pleasant Foodland

WELL
DONE!

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Ma~

BACCALAUREATE ADDRESS- Rev. S...... Ha
811, pulelr of the SL Paul (Toppers Plabll), Chester ud Allred Unlted
·MetbcJdlst Church pve the INiccalaareate llddrell at Iuten IIIah
School's combined baeealaureate ud commeneemeat exerclles Clll
Snnday nlgbL Her address, "llriends iDcl tile Fatw e", streaed the
importance of maintaining friendships after graduation.
some of these friends you have had
for years at Eastem High School.
But you will meet new friends and
you can build strong relationships
with them. Don't ~et so caught up
with accomP.lishmg your career
goals .or bu•l.ding your personal
fmancial empD"C that you uae people or !ose sight of the value of
friends JUS! as people who love you
and believe in you."
"Friendship," Hausman said, "is

baaed on honesty, opeMess, vulnerability and love. It's not easy.
Growing a·friendship takes time
and pain. It takes bein8 misunderstood for another's good sometimes. But sometimes it means
being given ~ when you cannot face life alone.
Leigh Anne Redovian addressed
her classnuues rlther than the audience in her Salutatorian Address, in
Continued liD pqe 3

injured when car overtur~s

A Middleport man suffered
minor injuries Sunday after the
truck be was driving flipped over
on Meigs County Roiid 3.
Robert W. Richmond, 19, was
IIIIISpOf1ed to Holzer Medical Center by the Meigs County EMS following the accident He was treated
for contusions and abrasions and
was later released, a bospi tal
spokeswoman said Monday.
Accordlns to a report, Richmond was 10ulhbound and aJIPII'antly l!Jit control of bil 1981 Ford
Courier piek-up truck. He went off
the left side of the roadway and his
vehicle OVe&amp;llliliCid.
· The accident is lllill under investiption by the Glllia-Meip post of
the SIIID Highway PatiO!.
Two Long Bottom women suffered miiM)f injuriea alter the car
they riding .in - lllrDCit by
another on OlcDr Township Road

COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) The llllie Department Qf Health has
told ibe Obio Houle tbat money it
will consider
to set up a

who have measles in this state than
we do about people who have terminal liver Clllcer," she said.

.

· tight~~~ Walsh, D.Ober-

mencement exercises, most wearing smiles despite the smothering
heal
Diplomas were awarded to 42
seniors by School Bean! President
S. Ray Karr and Superintendent
Richard D. Smith. M118ic was provided thr!&gt;ughoot the ceremony by
the Eastern Band and the school
choir, under the direction of
William Hall and Margie Bartee,
respectively.
The Invocation and Benediction
were given by Rev. Lanra Shreffier
of the SL John and SL Paul Lutheran Churches.
Rev. Sharon Hausman, Pastor of
the Alfred, Chester, and St. Paul
cruppers Plains) Uniw Methodist
Churchea delivcm:l the Baccalanreate Address, and likened real-life's
challenges to those experienced by
the cast of the recently-concluded
television drama, "Thlrtyso~M­

114 Sanirday.
Andrea L. Cleland, 18, and her

passenger, Viola L. Cleland, 41,
were both treaW ·at the scene of
the accident by the Meigs County
EMS. A third passenger, Holly A.
Cleland, 13, of Long.Bottom, was
uninjured.
.
According to a report from the
Gallia-Meigs rost of tbe State
Highway Patro , Andrea Cleland
was eastbound on TR 114 when a
westbound car wenl left of center
in a curve. The second car, driven
by Roger E. Watkins, Jr .. 2S, of
Pomeroy, struck Cleland's car in
the left front. Cleland's car then
went off the ript side of the roadway, 8lnlCk: a tree, and ovenumed
onto its side. ·
Watkins - llllinjanlc( He cited for driving left of...-.
A Pomeroy woman waa cited
for failure to control followin&amp; an

accident on State Route 1 Sunday.
Vickie E. Billingsley, 37, was
cited after she failed to make a
right tum onto the U.S. 33 exit
ramp and struCk a pwdrail off the
right side of the road. Accuding to
report from the Oallia-Meip post
of the State Highway Patrol,
Billinpler iijJp81CIItly lost control
of her vebiclll on wei pavement.
She - lot injured.
'
A Shade man - cited for failure to control Sunday after he
SII'UCk a ditch on U.S. 33.
Nick
was cited
after he
y lOit conuol of
his 1977
C-10 in I left
curve. His wlticle lllid off the rl&amp;bl
side of die IOiidway. lllllCk • road
sip, aad then went into a deep
ditch.
King was not injured. Ho waa
allo citccl for failure 10 a llfetybeiL

=20,

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attempts !0 modify the measure.
"Franldy, there are a lot of people, I believe, that would like to
find a way to support it,' • he said.
Hickey voiced support for one
change which would replace references in the bill to "unborn child"
with the tenDS fetus or embryo.
Luebbers' bill would require a
woman to certify in writin11 that
~pecific information about aboruon, including the physical and
psychological risks of the procedure, had been given to her in
advance.
As currently wrinen, the measure would require the Ohio
Department of Health to publish
material that would include "information on the presence of a heartbeat, the presence of brain waves,
the capacity for movement, the
capacity to respond to stimuli, and ·
any relevant information on the
possibility of the unborn child's
survival.''

Ohio House to vote Wednesday .
on statewide cancer monitoring
Slltew~

~ifl~

"Some people found the show
depressing as it dealt with common
problems for most young adults ·career, parenthood, fidelity, cancer
and even death," Hausman said.
"Otliers felt like the writen of the
show were listening in on their
talks Widl friends as they wrote the
conversations between the characters - and listened in to see if there
were solutions for crises they were
facing."
Hausman also discussed the relevance of the seniors' class motto
("We meet as strangers, we leave
as friends. We hope to meet again
so our friendships will never end.)
"Making friends is one of your
most critical tasks as you grow into
adulthood." she said. "In all honesty, you will lose contact with

By JOHN CHALFANT
Rep. Robert Hickey, D-Dayton,
AWM'IIted PreeiWriter
said as many as 2S amendments
COLUMBUS - StBte repmlCII- might be considered by the panel
tatives are expected to vote this he heads before it decides Tuesdsy
week on a bill intended to protect whether to recommend the measure
jobs in the state's coal fields from for passage by the full House.
threats poaed by federal clean air
In the Senate, a final week of
regulations.
hearings is planned on the HouseThe House Public Utilities passed $27.1 billion, two-year stBte
Committee meets Tuesday to act budget bill. Senate President Stanon the mCIISl!i'c, which would offer · ley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, said a
financial incentives to utilities vote eould occur June 12.
which install anti-pollution gear
Senate action would send the
needed' to bum die state's bigh-sul- measure to a conference committee
fur COil\.
with the House to work out differA vote by the full House is ences before the July 1 start of the
scheduled Thursday.
new fiSCal year.
The coal indusuy 1.1 pushing for
The abortion information bill,
a ~~ which wo!"'f ~urage sponsored by Rep. Jerome Lueb!ltilibes to ke;eP ~ummg Ohio coal ben, D-Cincinnati, would require
~ of SWI~g ~ cleanet supthat women seeking abortions be
. plies from ou~de Ohio.
. . given specific information about
In other ~· the H~ CIVil risks and alternatives to the proceand Commercial Law Committee IS dure at least 24 hours in advance. .
preparing to vote qn an informed
Hickey said there will be
consent abortion.bill.
·

'. oaQ!.....

tlting".

CHRIS RATLIFF
Gallla Academy High School
Ohio Valley Foodland

1 • lion, 10 ,.,.. 25 c.lll.
A llllltlmedla Ina. Neweplper

1991 .

CALL TOLL II'REE 1-800-926-0028

'!IIIII It either adequate or surplus

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Clear tonight. Low in 60s.
Thesday, sunny. High in
80s.

.---------------------•

Field.
Cl!nliJiuedfromD-1
.
···--------------~----------~----with active air circuhition the
leaves will fall as if it were autumn.
llliiiiiOistiR.
There are .no chemical controls roc
Molt tepOitels feel that the com petiole boren at this time.
c:rop 1.1 off to a very good start in
Remi11der: 'The Gallia County
the bulk of the Com Bell. If the Cattlemens Association will hold
~urrent moist weather pattern, in its annual meeting on Friday
!he majority of the U.S., persists evening, June 28 ai the Bob Evans
Into mid-summer, an excellent Shelter House· at Rio Grande.
1991 ~ c:rop is likely.
Advance tickets are currently avail"Ma!?.le Petiole Borer" is usually able from Association Board Memftlii'Oi'Siblc for green leaves falling bers, the office of Allan Boster,
from maples this time of year. D.V.M. or the Gallia County
Dlltnql: by the borers weakens the Extension Office.
.

Ohio Lottery

lin, said representatives were
expected to vore Wednesday on her
measure that would create the Ohio
Cancer Incidence SurveUlance System.
The J:~ulation-baaed registry
would
the diSC!Bse by recording whore patients live and the
kinds of cancer they have. Much of
the computerized information is
believed to be U:Pt individually by
hospitals, but u not compiled
statewide.
The Hoose already has included
$490,000 for the program in its
version of the next state budget
which is pending in the Senate.
David Yost, the health department's deputy director for public
affairs, Slid funding had not been
contained in the budllet submitted
by Gov. George Voinovich.
"We su~ the administration's posuion that in this tight
budget year we have higher priorities, not that this is not worth
doing. We're not oppose~ ~ the
idea, we're opposed to the ummg,1
guess," YOSI said.
MS- Walsh said the department
did not seem to think there was a
problem with cancer in the state.
"We know more about people

MISSING - Cecil Dale
Jl!bnston, formerly or
Pomeroy and aow a member
of tbe \1. S. Navy, bas beea
reported missing by official&amp;
He was last seen Ia
Charleston, S.C., on Friday,
May 24, driviag a 1984 Ply·
month Horizon, red or burgundy In color. Anyone witb
information pertaining to
Johnston's wllereabouts
. should contact the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
at 992-3371.

Yost said Dr. Edward Kilroy ·
the department director, told sena:
torS working on the agency's budget that the money included br. the
House fell short of the $1.6 million
. .
to~vely
~~
syaem. .
Kilroy suggested the Senate
should instead use the $490,000 to
restore cuts made by the Hoose in
other hel!lth department operations.
Ms. Walsh said the money
yrould be adequate to start her regIStry program.
"The Ohio chapter of the American Cancer Society has pledged
$100,000 to help defray th~
expeues. So reaDy there •s going to
($590,000) IIYiilable," she said
Ms. Walsh said Ohio is one of
six states that does not operate a
similar registry.
:
"What happens because of the
lack of this statewide registry is
each individual hospital keeps itS
own tumor registry about cancer
patients that they're treBling at that
hospital, but we have no idea, fot
instance, whether there is a hi!lbei .
incidence of a certain type of cancer in one area than.should be by
its general populatiOJi," she said.

The bill would require docton,
dentists and hospitals beating cancer patients to report each case to

the department, either directly or
throuih existing local registries.
The information wopld be confidential.

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Commentary
WASHINGTON- Wben it
comes to protecting the environment in Antarctica, the United
States may be days away from supportinJ! a position that could lead to
the piiiiJC of the world's last pris·
tine envuonmental laboratory. The
outcome will tum on how two warring offices within the ·State
Department settle'their differences.
In April. representatives from 26
countr1es all signatories of the
Antarctic
attended a meeting in Madrid, sPa;n, io negotiate a
proposed ban on mineral exploita·
lion in Antarctica After nine days
of grueling talks 1 compromise
was worked out wherein the n:pn:sentatives agreed to a dmft p'OIDCOI
calling for a mining ban lasting a
half-century Even then the ban
could be lifted if all the ~urrent 26
signatories to the protoCOl agreed.
The protocol was vieWed as a
major breakthrough, since JaJ~~;~n,
Germany · and recently Great
Britain reversed their previous
positions to endlne a 50-year ban.
But today as the representatives
are ~g out the details at home
before returning to Madrid to sign
the final draft on June 23 it
appears that the United State; is
having second thoughts about the
Madrid.protocoL
Despite solid support for the
prot6col by all other nations pre-

111 Court Sh·eet

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREIITS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

fiMU..TKDIA.INC.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geoenl MaD&amp;Ker

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aselataat PDbllaber/Cootroller

Treaty

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
'

LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he less than 300

words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will he publlshed . Letters should he In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities .

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Townships get clout at
last, but with limits
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By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS- Some.of Ohio's 1,318 townsl!ips soon may he passing laws under a landmalk bill that Gov. George Voinovich is expecled to
sign in a few days.
More than a decade of lobbying went into the bill as some townships
burgeoned from U1ban sprawl without authority to pass even minor laws,
except with specific legislative approval.
Townships are the unincorpa11red areas of counties, usuaUy extending
from city suburbs or between municipalities.
.
Michael Cochran, spokesman for the Ohio Township Association, says
IJIOSt are rural, but some .have populations of 20,000 m- more. One- Colerain in Hamilton County - has 60,000 residents.
The bill that emerged from the Legislature list week will·let voters in
townships decide if they want self-government, similar to that of charter
. cities but with certain exceptions.
.
As a result of political maneuveriiiJ in the Legislature, Ohio's 1!1111
lobby inserled an amendment prohibiting townships from regulating
ftn:arms. And drafters also denied them the power to levy new taxes or
create new criminal laws and penalties.
Generally, their laws may not conflicts with those of the state.
Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, expressed concerns that toWnships may
set up speed t111ps as a means of raising revenues from traffic ftnes.
Others worry that once townships have ~wer to pass laws, it won't be
long before they ~t more involved in proVIding services and will be back
in the Legislature asking for the power to tax.
· W~IC~ WOUL.~ I&lt;EI5P
Sen, Richard Schafralh, R-Wooster, who sponsored the bill in the SenMi
CSOIN&amp;
ate, discounled the possibility of speed traps because the state sets limits
'TO
eo&amp;.L~G~
on state highways which run through townships.
Cochran agreed, saying "there's a state law on iL" Pfei(er said the
question is not that clear.
Cochran said if townships did set speed limits, "Why not? The people
who live in townships are not second-dass citizens and thty have a right
to elect representatives who will do the wiD of the people."
Cclchran conceded some townships would like to have l!le same
authority as cities to seekineome IIXCS. B1:11 he said a majority of the
elected toWnship trustees do not want it "and I don't think it (a bill allowing taxation) could pass the ugisJ•tun:."
Under the bill, at least two of the three trustees in a township would
have to vote to plal;e the isaue of self-sovemment on the balloL
Cochran does not think time will ptllllit billot issues this year. The bill
wiD not take effect until September; the d'adliPC for certifying Novembet
issues is in August.
.
"Next May, that could be another story," he said.
He said he expects perhaps 20 to 30 townsl!ips to use the law at fust.
and that these will probably will be larger ones in Hamilton, Montgomery,
Wbcn I moved to San Francisco
Lucas, Summit, and ~ning counties.
in September 1989, I was of course
weD aware that its municipal politics were, to put it jlently, exotic.
But I wasn't plannmg to run for
mayor; I was interested in the
weather, tbe scenery. the restau·
rants and the other well-known
.create numerous construction jobs charms of the City by the Bay. and
Dear Editor:
.
In the near future American and help the ecOnomy in Southeast· these aasuredly haven't disappoint·
Electric Power must decide emOhio.
ed me. ·
Coal
miners
have
proven
to be
So it has been simply as a
whether to install scrubbers at their
concerned
citizens
who
support
bemused
observer· that I have
Gavin Power Plant or transport
many
worthy
causes
in
our
surwatched,
for
the past 18 months,
western and or eastern low sulfer
rounding
counties
such
as
the
Unitthe
antics
of
the San Francisco
coal into our region. If the decision
ed
WI'J
Campaign,
Childn:ns
SerBoard of Supervisors, whose meetis made to swirclt to low sulfer coal ·
it would eliminate over I,200 jobs vices and Life Right, just to name ings must surely constitute the
most comprehensive collection of
in our area and have a adverse a few.
We would like to .take this psychopathologies since the Mareffect on our local school districts,
local vendors and many of om- mer- opportunity to thank our many sup- quis de Sade dined alone.
I won't bon~ you with a descripchants. Ohio coal miners are the porters. All efforts made to help
economy in Southeastem.Central, with the installation of scrubbers tion of their antics, being shrewd
will he gn:ady appreciated.
bids for the votes or the various
and Eastern Ohio.
,
Sincerely, minorities ~hO hang out around
The social cost of losing the .
Gene Oiler, Pmident .town takinjl advantage of Jhe
Ohio coal miners are going to be
Dave
Lawson,
Vice President matchless climate and the relaxed
devastating. Not only will scrub·
Local1886 United Mine Workers mm-es. One recent ordinance, howbing save coal mining jobs, but will
ever, offers a splendid illustration
of the 1 "''ous Law of Unin\CIIded
Conscqu,:nces, which as you know

sent in Madrid, the Bush administration has yet to endorse the JliiCL
CO!Igressio~al.sourcea argue tluit
resaSiance w•thm the State Department poses the primary threat to
tile protocol, since the decision will
weigh heavily witb the adminjsttalion.
Although environmentalist faclions -within the State Department
are said to be behind the protocol.
heated opposition contmues to
emanate from the Economics
Bureau, which environmental
groups, including Gn:enpeace, cite
as t!'e s~n.gest pro·d'velopment
faction w1thin the agency. The reasoning behind their stance is that
by giving each of the 26 nations a
veto power over lifting of the 50.year ban, friendly or unfriendly signatories ~the~~~ could~ the
future se~ously hrmt U.S, options
m Antarcuca.
~ut, the tenuous stance taken by
factions of the State Department
has many congressional leaders
perpl~x~ ~d even angry. For one,
the muung industry appears to have
litde _intere~t in ~ntarctica. CongreSSional mveSUJators say they
have not been lobb1ed or even contacted by U.S. petroleum or mining
t;ampanies. That may have something to do with a report _by the
Offlce of Technology Assessment
arguing that "there are no known

'lt.OM

By Jack Anderson.
and Dale "an Atta ,

oil, gas, or mineral de_posits in
Antarctica of commerc1al value,
'I
and furthermore, th~ teehnology
rt
;
docs not presently eXISt to recover
f ·.
minerals m the harsh environment In, a May 16 Jetter to Secrew-y o ';
of Antarctica."
State _James Baker, several con-· •
Moreover, since last October, gress!,onal members argued that .
two laws have been passed declar· th~y are concerned that the U.S. ;
ing that it is U.S .. policy tb pursue w1ll. (now) walk away from the_'',
. an indefinite or permanent ban on envm;mmentally_ protecuye "'!~a· ••
commercial mineral development sure.s !" the Madrid Protocol. ... A t
activities in Antarctica. Both dec1s1on to scu!tle the pro!,ocol '
enjoyed widespread bipanisan sup- "would \Je flaunung U.S. law OOC' :
port as well as the backing of major congreSSiona! staffer told us..
~
environmental groups.
If the Umted States ~ules !0 ,
. Con~dential State Departme~t reject the agreement there IS. certam
mstructions obtamed by our asSOCI· I? be an outay _among the 1i1tema- •
ate Dean Boyd show that, in ~ing (!Onal commumty•. and mm-e than •
to the April meeting, U.S. negotia- likely the nego~uons would_ col- .
tors had liale intention of comply- lapse. \Yhat ~es many e_nvll'?"· ing with the congressional man- mentalists IS that th~ reJecUon •
date. In a May 13 hearing, Sen. · would make_ the U.nued S~tes ·~
Albert Gore, D-Tenn .• ace~ tbe stand al?ne m the mternataonal ·.:
State Department representative at commuruty as the co~try that .Put ·
!~e Madri~ meeting of ignoring profit above the planets protecuon . •;
tbe clear mtent of Congress _and .
the president" by urging his counf ~~ SHOT~ be C~~:! •·'•
terparts at Madrid to ~~pport a
urn:~ o rt . · latel ,:
ftxed 20- to 40-year mmmg ban,
. SJlCI! g more nme
Y
instead of the indefinite ban called defendrng ~1s perso~ ~nances
for by Congress.
than regulating the nation s corn- .
Although the compromise pact mercia! banks. ~t month,_ Clarke ''
endorsing a 50-year ban evenlllally came under f1re after . It was :.
resulted,_ and . whic~. congressional rev~ed that he was an active trad- ::
offices v1ew as cons~tent w1th U.S. er 10 Junk bonds a'!d stoe~ that ·
Jaw, many have theu: doubts that ~ould pose a potential confhct of
Washington will Jive up to the deal. mteresL ~Iarke w~s the ~nly o~e
·
among h1s peers m the fmancaal ~~
· regulatory community who had oot •.
placed his personal finances in a ..,•
blind trusL He ftnally did after the
adverse publicity. Now Clarke, is &lt;":
about to set grilled again. The sen: t'
ate Banlcing Committee is Irolling "'
whether Clarice may have received ,.:
$5,000 in legal fees and was a
shareholder in a Louisiana fmancial '•
institution secredy controlled by a f:
man ultimately convicted of massive fraud at a different bank. ' Investigators do not believe Clarice ·•
had any direct involvement with
the man, and the episode occprn:d '
before Clarke became comptroller ·•
in 1985. Clarke says he never met'.'
or represented the person.

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MINI-EDITORIAL - The ·
DemOcratS may ftnally have hit pay ··
dirt in terms of finding an issue •.
around which to rally the country: .:
health care. It is bankrupting Americans at an alarming clip, and is j
badly in need of fixing. The U.S.
spent about $660 billion on health
care last year, or more dian 12 percent of the gross national product.
That ftgure is more than tw1ce what ;
was spent in the early I 980s.

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Welcome to.o·u r 'City of Refuge'

Letters to the ·editor
Appreciates support

Today in history

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By The As&amp;oclaled Press
Today is Monday, June 3, the I54th day of 1991. There aic 21 I days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On June 3, 1965, astronaut Edward White became the fllSl American
to "walk" in space during the flight of Gemini IV.
On this date:
In !621, the Dutch West India Company received a c.haner for New.
Netherlands- now known as New York.
In 1808, Jefferson Davis -the ftrst and on(y president of the Confederacy -was bOrn in Christian County, Ky.
In 1888, the poem "Casey at the Bat," by Ernest Lawrence Thayer,
was first published, in the San Francisco Daily Examiner.
In 1935,1he French liner Normandie set a recml on its maiden vO)'IIIC,
arriving in New York after crossing the Atlantic in just four days, 11
hours and 42 minutes.
In 1937, the Duke of Windsor, who had abdicated the British throae,
married Wallis Warf~eld SimJIIOII in a civil ceremony in Moms, Prance.
In I 948, the 200-iooh reflecting telescope at the Palomar Moillllain
Observat«Y in Califcxnia WM dedicated.
In 1963, Pope Jobn XXIII died at the ap of 81, endiJI&amp; a papacy
mmted by innovative refcirml within die Roman Catholic: Chlllda.
In 1982, brlcl's am"'s-dor to Brillin, Shlomo Argov, - shot and
critically wounded outside al.aldoa botel. Tbe n•aui!Wi011 aaempt wn
followed by llnlel's invuloa of l...et.l1011.
In 1983, (Joalon Kabl, I mlliiMM tax ~ W8llled in tho ~
of twO U.S. mDiaJI in Nol1ll ))eko!a, Wllldlled ID I Jill bllde witb Jaw.
CdibCfliiiNII oft!c:W• ..., Smilbville, Alt., that also claimed die lite of
La.waace County Slllriff 0e11e l' ahewt.
Ia 1!185,1my A. Wldlwadl- WI ted by the PBI, ICC ullld of beiDa
pld ofalf11_rinl • Jed by 1o1m A. Walkerlr. (Wbi1WIXIb Wll laler-.

,..55.

ieaced
Ill 365
Ill 1989
llla'l

Teo ,.is 1110=

'be Vllfi:ID tine

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leldilr, AYIIOillb Ruholl... JCbnmeini, died.
Jallll Pad If left I Raile bolp.illllllll idiiaodiO
lllrlbe !!'*Dpl 0111111 lite. ·.

William A. Rusher

decided, would refuse to participate
in this diny game. The ordinance
provides for disciplinary action
.
against city employees who COOJ?· lion, it failed to notify INS, which "
erate with INS in any way, and this would have arrested him immediwas followed up with a series of ately pending deportation. Seven• ··'
administrative orders, directives · teen days later the convict killed a' '
and memos putting further teeth in man.
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the basic decree.
It isn't hard to see that what the ':
UnfOitunately, as reporter Andy Supervisors have inadvertently :;
Furillo ~ndy told ~ o~ the done is, in effect, send an enpved -~
San franCISCO Exammer, tbmgs invitation to every alien m the '
haven't worked out quite the way United States who has an immigra- '
tbe Supes intended. One assistant tion problem (including dangerous - •
district attorney was "called on the criminals) to come to San Francis- .'-'
carpet" last y~ for: dari_ng to ask co, the "City of Refuge."
·;
INS about the 1~m1graUon status
In Feb11181}' 1990, San Francis- "
of au accused ch~d molester.
co's then-police chief, Frank Jor- ·~
The INS, wh1ch arrests ex-con- dan m-dered officers not to "assist -·
victs who re-enter the United States or cooperate with any (INS) inves-' '!
after be,mg depm-led, ~ also ~n ligation, detention, or arrest proce.. ~­
told by the San FranciSCo Shenff's dure," on pain of disciplinary-·'
Department that it will not allow action. (The only exception - one
the service to put such people in required by stalll law - was ~, '.
San Francisco jails even temporari- cases.) It will give you some · ' :
ly.
of the atmosphere down at City"
Perhaps worst of all, when San Hall when I tell you that Jordan is·· ',•
Francisco lasi year released a con- now running for maym-, as the lone •
vicled Cuban drug dealer on proba- "conservative" in the race.
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Makeup flap makes airline look bad
People all over the country were the mascara-less stewardess who'd
seeing red when they learned that saved a baby from a burning plane.
Teresa Fischette's un-n:d lips got
But what I'd really like to have
her ftred from her job at Continen- seen is a parody of the meetillg
tal Airlines.
where Continental brass decided to
You've probably heard.of Terri implement the "makeup rule."
by now: Her attractive face was
If it was like any COI]lOI'ate bigplastered across newspapers all wig meeting I've ever attended,
over the nation after Continental there were probably several men
fired her from her job as a ticket there with nose and ear hair that
agent in Boston. Her offense? She made them look-like the Wolfman
refuled to comply with the airline's stanins to change, ·and with eyenew_ appearance code, which brows that gave them a "weird scirequlied that all women employees entlst" effect. There was also probwho work with the public wear ably one middle-aged woman
mlkeup. (You may rcmembet Con· whose foundation had slid down
lin!llltal trom the 1982 bi'QIIhaba into her wrinkles and caked and she
whae che CODIJli!I1Y came out with was only there ,to save the ensem •
a weiJ)u chan thit allow~ male ble from appeanng to be a "!afia _of
employee~ coneidembly men 11p11e ol~ men will! emn~ noe hairs dieUrel lnd taddlebap than female tating ~-policy to women. .
OIIIJ'to, 111)
ADa if it's like any CEO conAkPIICheao tluafe!!edalaw· clave l,'ve ever witnessed, the
Hla. Centlnealal reblred her, but expens1ve co!ogne under all the
110( ..0
commenia- three-piece swts probably sme)led
1111'1111111 bid a lleld day. Syndicaled . lilcc ovearipe lacquc:J thinner, and
col•••al• Ellen l'JoocfnF quipped bid ' - ' J)lllnll on Slrolli enough
that (',catlncntaJ "wiped aome egg to choke 1 line of passengers
off ill f8ce. • 11'J Leno parodied the blclred up from the ticket counter
caae in a atit on "The Tonight to the hagpp C8IOUiel:
Show" that hid a Playboy-center·
"'t hal come lp my ~lion~·
foldllli tligbc attendant_replacing . one of tbe men begBD m an pou-

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Sarah Overstreet · :
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nous tone "that some of our female
employees are not wearing make'I
up." (Shocked gaSps.)
"You don't mean ... enlarged w~armg makeup signifies some-.. :·
pores and blond eyelashes RIGHT thtng else to the CEOs: a willing·· '
IN FRONT OF THE CUS- ness to try harder to loot attractive ~
TOMERS?" another CEO asked. to men, and a deference to the :
Then, as a horrifying thought wishes of what they think men· :
dawned on him, he asked, "What want women to look like.
•
about the women with acne?"
This incident has brought
"Yes, I'm afraid that's righi. nental dangerously close to the bad · '
Some of our poor passengers have old "Hi, I'm Teresa, fly me" days ;
been exposed to the insult of You'd think that with their tcrrift~ :
uncovered pimples and pock marks money problems, they'd have bet- !
on these women's faces["
ter things to do.
,;
If the thought of that conversa''.
lion isn't outlandish enough, a gaze
••••
at Teresa Fischette' s face make.
'
whit haDPCned even sillier. She'has
·"'. :
dark eyelashes and eyebrows, the
The planets move rapidly,' :'
kind most of us need makeup to among
the stars because they are ,
have Her face is radiantly blelnish· much nearer
to us. Tbe stars are· :
free: the way most of us hOIJC to also in motion,
some of them ac :
appear with makeup. What 1t all
tremendous
speeds,
but they we so '
boils down to is that Continental far away that their motion
doeiDOt :
fim1 Fischette even though she has change their apparelll posldftns
in · ,
naturally whal they wanted her to
heavens sufliclcady fer~ . •
wear makeup for in the liist place. :the
to perceive llill c:baage in a llii1BI8 :
When people who loot like lifetime. The very ~~ea~oac 111r II' :
Tereaa Fiacbeue obviously don't about 7,000 tillle'l 81 far away 81 :
need 111ateup to look atuactive, the most distant plancL
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decreeS that if you set out to drain a
swamp, you will wind up "up to
your- m alligators."
It seems tluit in October 1989,
by a vote of 9-{),the Supes (as they
are called locally) declared that
henceforth San Francisco would be
a "City of Refuge." Speciftcally the
ordinance prohibits the ''use of city
and county resources to assist in
enfOitCIIlCnt of federal immigration
Jaws," except where required by
state or federal Jaw. Mayor Art
Agnos, ever alert to the iron rule
that success in San Francisco politics is a matter of being Flakier
Than Thou signed the biD.
. The roniantic notion behind the
ordinance was a conviction that
America is awash with innocent
refugees from homelands where the
political and/or economic condilions are unendurable, and that the
mean old lm~on and Naturalization Service 1s beating the bushes trying to find tbese poor souls
(who entered this country illegally)
and deport them to Fates Worse
1ban Death.
San Francisco, the Supervisors

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Betrirloo hia parents, be was preceded in cleath by hia lister, Mn.
Dial (Eupha) Keefer; his twin
Myrle Griffin, 86, Route 2, brother, Cecil; other brolbers,
Coolville, died Sunday, iune 2,
Wilbur,
Oelqe; half.
1991 at the residence of bis dlugb- sislrn,
Mrs.
(Ocle) Keefer,
ter, Bulab Martin, New Philadd- Mrs. Han~
) Jtoelcr, Mn.
phia.
Oeorse (Orbie) Webb; an iafant
He- born Mrudi 28, !90S in aliter, FBDDie; li14 half brothers,
'ri1PPers Plains, the 1011 of !be late Otho IIIII NelDa.
Heiben and Millie Wigal Griffin.
Mr. Blslell auended the Eqle
He wn the owner of the Newbury
Conunllllity Cbun:b and Sand and Gravel Company and a Ridae
a .cliarter member of the Chester
. farmer.
• Church of the NIIZII'Cne. He held
He is survived by five daugh- many offices in both cbun:hes. He
ters, Evelyn Shartle, Dayton; Joan was also a mcmbel' of the CarpenBrakefield, Hi1lsbom; Balah Mar• ters Local 899 of Parkersburg,
tin, New Philadelphia; Lee I anrler. W.Va.
miD, Belpre; and Pam AlkiDson,
Funeral scrvicell will be held on
Parkersbur$, W.Va.; ~;~tree sons, TUCiday at
EwiDa Funtnl
Myrlc J. Griffin, Coolville; Robert Home with
olficilt·
Gr!ffiri, Las Vegas, Nev.; and Oaay ing: Burial will beOrate
in Chester
Griffin, Romney, W.Va.; 21 gmnd- Canett:ry. .
cbildren, 3g great ~bildren;
Friends may call It the fUilerll
IDd one brother, Millford Griff"tn, . home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
Coolville.
.
p.m. 109 p.m. 011 Moaday.
Services will be held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the White-Blower Clarence Rider
Funeral Home in Coolville with
Pastor Gay E. Griffm officiating.
Clarence B. Rider, 72, a resi·
Burial will be in the Torth Ceme- dent of tl)e Bidwell comlilunilr,
~rlends may call at the funCral died Sunday, June 2, 1991, 10
home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
•9 •9• in
on Tuesday.
Kanawha County, W.va., son of the
late Henry and Leoda Frances HoiKay Logan
is survived by his wife,
Mn. Dwight (Kay) Logan, 76, Oretba Amos Rider, Bidwell,
of Pomeroy, died on Monday, June
hom he married N 10 1984
.
'de M etbod'1st · He
w was a iedied coe1
on av.
· 3, I 99 1 at R 1verst
miner' and a·
Hospital in Columbus following an World War II vetera11, having
extended
illness. She was a house- served m
· the . . Atmy.
•
wif~
Mr. Rider is also survived by
She was born in Michigan on one son, Freddie, Pomeroy; a fosDecember 26, 1913, the daug~ter ter son, Joel Freeman, Gallipolis;
of the late Charles and Aorence one brother, Homer Rider,
Harr So~h h b d Louisville, Ky., a foster daughter,
Survivang are er us an • Linda Nowell, Pomeroy; five
Dwijlht Logan of Pomeror: a grandchildren and five foster
daughter, Mn. lack (Shirley) Cox, ........._..... Athens; a son, Dwight "Skip" (Bar- &amp;--F;u.-.;pions survive, David,
bara) Logan, Alban{? and one sis- Timmie, MiJde and Rickie NeweD;
ter, Bulah Smith, olumbus; six fom-·stepdaugbters, Bonnie Isaacs,
children, and three great-grandcbil· Connie Ramey, Rose Newell and
~·
Delores Thomas. .
Besides h~arents, she was
Funeral services will be held
preceded in d
by three siaters Wednesday, 11 Lm., at the McCoy
and three brothers.·
-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton.
She was a member of tbe o,der with Elder Sherman Johnsoo officiof Eastern Sw and White Shrine ating. Burial will be in Gravel Hill
and attended the Enterprise United Cemetery.
Methodist Church.
FrientJ.fuernaJ. call at the funeral
Funeral arrangements will be horne on .
y from 6-8 p.m.
announced by Ewing Funeral
Home. Burial will be in Cherry Paul Withee
Ridge~In lieu of owers, donations
Word has been received by fammay be made to the Meigs County
fthe death 0 fPaul L
•
SeniorCitizensCenter.
ilymemberso
Cb I B' II
r~:!:o~ Md., formerar es ISse
Y He is sur~ived by a brother,
Charles L.'Bissell, !10, of Route Charles M. Withee, Pomery; Bernice Kanfmari, SL Pt.ceaSburg; Fla.;
1 in· Long"Bottom, died on Satur- -Helen
Poner Chillicothe· Harold
day, J~ne I, 1?91 at Ve!erans Dewhurst 'Rutland· ' David
Mcmona! Hospital followa!: Dewhurst, New Haven, w.va.; and
extended_ illness. He was 8
. . Bill Dewhurst, Greenville va.
Township 'I'ru.stee from 1954 to · He was
:eded in cb.th b his
1978, ~ workedkas a
~ parents a
Cliff and sis·
cons'"!c:taon wor er an a sc oo ter v·...ian.
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bus driv~r ~or the Eastern Local
Fu~eral arran ements are
ScboolDistricL . S
WV
incomplete at this~.
Hewn born m .pencer, • a.
on Decembet 6, 1910, the son of
the late Hiram E. and Frona Naomi Williams

Myrle Griffin

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The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

--Area ·deaths--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 3, 1991
,, ••
fl.

U.S. stalling on Antarctic treaty ·

The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

Page--2-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, June 3, 1991

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l::le;

Bissell

~ survived by his wife, Mar-

· Naomi Williams, 70, Route 2,
Coolville, died eirly this mcxning
Mn. Sheldon (Helen) Garverick, (Monday), June 3, 1991 at her resi·
Lexington, Ohio, Mr~. Roy F. denc~
.
(Frona) Riffle, Long Bottom, Mn.
Funeral arrangements will be
Curtis
(Ada)
Randolph, · announced later by the Wh"tte
SpencerviUe, Ohio. Karen Wheeler, · Funeral Horne in Coolville.
Gallipolis, and Naomi Hawes,
Long Bottom; eight sons, Charles
(Dannie) BisseJI, Long Bottom, Leonard Massar
Roger Bissell, Pomeroy, Delben
Leonard D. Massar, 83, Belpe,
Bissell, Canal Winchester, Doujllas
Bissell, Tuppers Plains, Dw1ght died Sunday, Juno 2, 199 I, at St.
Bissell, Reedsville, Glen Bissell, Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg,
Long Bottom, David Bissell, W.VL after an extended illnels.
Born in Meigs County, he wn a
Bridgepon, W.Va., and Robert Bissell, Chester; an aunt, Mrs. Sam son of the late Charles Massar and
(Edie) Bailey, Spencer, W.V!!-; an Corena DeVore Massar. A 1927
uncle, Mylo Spencer of Spence(, graduate of Chester High ScbQOI,
W.Va.; one sister, Mary Offett, lie was a member of the First
Tuppers Plains, 4 I grandchildren; Luthe11111 Church in Parkersburg,
34 ·great·granck:hildren: and many W.Va., the Belpre Masonic LocJsc
No. 609 and the Ancient Ar:cepted
nieces, nephews and cousins.
Sc:onish Rites of Columbus. He
wn a cluRter membet of the Millwright Local No. I 755 and he Wll
The Daily Sentinel
a past president of the Widow and
Widowers Club in Parkersburg,
(liSPS lfH•J
A DlviiJoll of Multimedia, lae.
W.Va.
.
He is survived by three daugh·
Published every aftern0SJ11, Monday
ters, Virginia Dishon, New Lexingthrough Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy. Ohio, by lh• Ohio Valley·Pubton; Dorothy Lackey, Utica; and
lilhtna Companyt Multlmedta, Inc.,
Janet Prather, Belpre; one son,
Pom..-oy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. s.cond class postage paid at Pomeroy •
GeotJe Massar, Linle Hocking;
Ohio.
one SISter, Arvilla Fn:cker, Tuppm
.
Plains; five granddau&amp;hlerl and one
Mmtber: 'l'tle AssOCiated Press. In·
land Dally PreAs A:.uoclatton and the
grandson.
Ohio Newspa_per AJioclatlon. Nallonel
In additi011 to bis parents he was
Adverttstnc Representative, Branham
Nf'W'tpaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
preceded in death by bii wife,
New York, N.W York 10017.
Marie Catherine Belyus Manlr, in
1973; one siaulr, Benlab Williatns
POSTMASTER:
send · - chan""
to 'lllo Dilly s.ntlnel, 111 Court St.,
and one bnldlcr, 01uta Manlr.
'PUmeroy, Ohio cmt.
Scrvicel will be held Wednesday
at 11 Lm. at the Leavitt Puner.
8IJJI8CIIiP'nON RATBil
IJ Clll'rler or -..- Rollo
al Home in Parkersburg, W.Va.
OneWHit .................................. JUO
willl Rev. JaniiiS F. Kinsler offic:Jat.
On• Month ................................ .$6.!1!1
One Year ................................. 183.20
ina. Burial wiD be in the MIIRr
Family Cemelery In Meip County.
SINGLEonPY
PBICII:
Friends may call at ihe funeral
Dally ................. .. ...... .... ..... . 2! C.nto
horne 011 Mondly from 7-9 p.m.
Subocrl...,.a not d•lrlnl to poy thocai'·
and Tueaday frilm 2--4 p.m. and 7·9
rter may remit in advance clreet to
p.m.
Tho Dally 8eatlnelon • 3, 6 or 12 monlh
baoll. Crt!dll will ho liveD &lt;11118' each
MoQiic. memarial setvir:el will
WHI&lt;.
be beld 1'laeldly evming at 7 p.m.
Nq oublcl'lpllolll by mall permllttd In
at lllef! alllome.
II'HI whem home earrl• lfi"Yk't II
Ill Ilea of fiowen ccintributioal
,.;...n,b....
may be made to tho American Can-cer Society.
'
bllllelllelpc..I;J
garet Singer Bissell; five daughters,

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13Weeb .............. .................... m.&amp;l
:II Weeb .................................. MUI
112 Weeb .................................. IM.'It
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Oollllle1llelpo..IJ

uw-.................................. 11uo

2t1 Weeb ......................................IIJI
112Weeb ....................................
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Nanb C&amp;rolina'slllle moao is
Quam Videri," wbicb
means "To be ratber tban co
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1HE BIG MOMENT • Tbe IDODieDt IIDally armed tor Jared
Spencer a•d 41 cttber araduall.ng seniors fro!D Eastern HIJb
Scboollut Dilbt, • Eaatei'D beld Its 34tb IDDUal CODIIDencement
exere._., Here, Spe~~m rec:elves bls diploma from Snperiutendent
Richard Smltb ud BCIII'd President S.lUy Karr.

.

Hay tire among 19
k
d
.
b
d
wee en runs y squa s
A hay fire was among the I 9
calls for assistance ~swered by
units of Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services over the week·
end.
At 12:08 p.m. on Sallliday, Middlepon squad went to Overbrook
Center. Carolyn Casto was taken to
Veterans Memori_. Hosl_)ital. At
12:32 p.m., Pomeroy ilqW1d went to
Aatwoods Road. Ry10 Powell was
taken to Veterans. At 1:57 p.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Mulberry
Avenne. Helen Miller was transported to Veterans. At 3:29p.m.,
Syracuse unit went.to Hubbard
Street fm- a hay lire. At 11:02 p.m.,
Racine squad went to Fourth StreeL
Charles Johnston was taken to Veterans.

Road. Robert Richmond was taken
. to Holzer. At6:45 p.m:, Middleport
squad went to Cole StreeL Barbara
Harris was ~sporled to Veterans..
At 8:23 p.m., Syracuse squad went
to Rose Valley Road for an electrical fire. At 8:41 p.m ., Syracuse
sql!ld went to John Street for Billy
Roush. He was treated but not
transporled. At I 0:41 p.m., Middlepon squad went to Overbrook Cen·
ter. Mary Eblin was taken to Veter-

ans.
On Monday at 2:10 a.m., Rut.land squad went to Meigs Mine 31.
Dennis Pearce was taken to Holzer.
At 2:49 a.m, Rudand squad went
to Meigs Mine 3 I for Carlos McKni&amp;ht. wbo was taken to Velelans.

s

d
t 1· 26
Pom~y :.:it ~entato R~k s~s
Road for a bam ftre at the Cre·
means residence. At 1:34 a.m.,
. Chester fire deparunent was.called
to assist. At 2:5 1 a.m., Pomeroy
squad went to Hemlock Grove
Road. James Cunningham was
treated but not transported. At 7:44
a.m., Middleport squad went to
. South Second Avenue for Homer
. Moodispau,h. He was taken to
Holzer. Medical Center. At 11:37
a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Second Street. Lula Young was taken
to Veterans. At 3:14p.m., Racine
squad went to Manuel Rliad Ed.it!t
Manuel was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 3:59 p.m., Racine
and Syracuse units went to Bucktown. Road and Letan for a fuc at
the Woodrow Hall residence.
At 6:04 p.n_~., Rutland sq!'ad
went to -an accident at New Lama
0

Power outage reponed (local
brief, 23 ms)
.
.
Approximately 3.00 customers
of Columbus Southern Power in
Meiji:S County were without electricuy overnight. Those Meigs
County customers were. among
1,500 an the A~~ Reg1on that
~ere without electric•ty_on Sunday

FINALLY. Susie Kimes Is pictured bere ncelviDg ber diploma from Elstem Local Superintendent Richard Smltb and Board
Preside•! s. Ray Karr at eGmmencement exercises on Sunday
DIJbL Susie was active tbrongbout her sdlool years in tbe award·
wiam.iDIICbOOI band.

Forty-two...

.
Continued from pqe 1

whicb she emphasized the impor·
tance of family and friends to her
scbool success.
"Sitting behind me is a group of
people like no other anywhere,''
Redovian said. "Each person is an
individual...lhen: are scholars, athletes, musicians and other anistS.
Everyone here has som·ething to
offer the world. It is our responsibility to learn about 0\11' talents then
develop them and use them to
improve the quality of life of our
feDow human bei.nss."
"I have never been one to
believe that some people simply do
not have talent," Redovian told her
class. "I feel that these people have
not looked far enough into themselves to ftnd the talents that we
f!OS:!CSS· We can malic a differen~
m this world but we bave to get off
our bottoms and do it."
Redovian also emphasized the
need for risk-taking. "We must take
some risks to get things that are
jm~t to us accomplished,'' she
S&amp;ld. "If we went through our
whole lives without taking any
chances, we would never be able to
experience any of life's natural
highs."
Valedictorian Andrea Cleland
based most of her address on an
English assignment from earlier in
the year. "We were asked what
three items we would place in a
time capsule to represent tbe year

' mghtand~ymorrung.
AG:COrding to Columbus_ Southem spo~esman Fred Deskins: the
outage 10 the Tupfer~ Pla10s, ,
Chester and Rock pnngs area
resulted from heavy ra11IS and thun·
derstorms that arrived in the area
Lodge to meel
.
on Sunday ev~ning. Trees were
The
Middlepon
Lodge
No. 363
downed, and hne crews were at
F
and
AM
will
meet
Thursday
at
work restoring power ovemighl
7:30
p.m.
with
work
in
the
master
All customers have now been
mason d'gree.
·
returned to electricity service, with
Members
who
have worked
Meigs County service being
with
the
fellow
craft
teams are
reston:datapproximately8:30a.m.
asked tci aaend.
Refreshments will be served
the meeting.
after
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.. Easter•
Alumni
Tickets for the Eastern alumni
dinner on Saturday are on sale for
$7 per person at Hawk's Station
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS, SATURDAY, JUNE 8
and Keebaugh's Shake Shoppe in
SPONSORED BY POMEROY MERCHANTS ASSOCIA·
Tuppers Plains, Reed's Store in
TION
Reedsville, Baum Lumber and
· 10 a.m .• Parade, followed by Sandy Butcher singing "God Bless
Keehaugh's of Chester, or by mail
the
U.S.A."
.
to Carol Erwin, 46190 Drive,
11 to 11:15 a.m.- Lenny Elinscn, Introductions
Pomeroy. Tickets should be pur11: 15 co noon • Bank One Pioneer Coswme Contest
chased by Tuesday.
Noon to 12:30 p.m. - Rainbow Cloggers
The dance, beginning at 9 p.m.,
12:30 to 12:45 p.m. - Shirley Quickel and The Dance Company
will be $4 per person and may be
12:45 to 1:45 p.m.· Dee and Dallas
paid at the door.
1:45 to 3 p.m. -Civil War Drills
Further information may be
3 to 4 p.m. ~ Mud River Band
obtained by callintiJoAnn Francis
4 to 4:30 p.m. • Tbe Ohio State University Formation Dance
at667-378S m- Carol Erwin at 985Team
3958 after 6 p.m.
4 Co 11:30 p.m. • Mud ~ver B011d
Youtb club IICtivltles
The Burlingham Youth Club
ALL ACTIVITIES, UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED, WILL
Mode'rn Woodmen of America
BE CARRIED OUT AT THE STAGE AREA NEAR THE
Camp 7230 will have a bake and
INTERSECTION OF COURT AND MAIN STREETS.
food sale on Saturday from 9-5
THOSE ATTENDING SHOULO BRING A LAWN CHAIR
p.m. Chicken and noodles and
FOR TilE DAYS FESTIVITIES.
sandwiches wiD be available. There
OTHER ACTIVITIES DURING THE DAY INCLUDE
will also be a yard sale.
CRAFTERS ON COURT STREET, CONCESSIONS, A
Baseball picnic
TURKEY SHOOT BY TilE POMEROY CUB SCOUT PACK
There will be a baseball picnic
NO. 249 IN THE SMALL MINI PARK, AN ANTIQUE SHOW
BY RUSS AND HOPE MOORE IN THE LARGE MINI PARK
AND A BOOTH OF CHILDREN'S ACTIVITIES BY THE
LETART JUNIOR GIRL SCOUT TROOP. THE CIVIL WAR
DRILL TEAM WILL ALSO HAVE A CAMP SET UP
Soutb Central Obio
BEHIND THE MEIGS COUNTY COURT HOUSE FOR
Tonight, mostly cll:ar with a low
VIEW BY THE PUBLIC.
in the lower 60s. Light norlhe~t
'-----------------~---"' · winds. TuesdaAo mostly sunny w1th
--'"'"~"----Hospital news------- a hteS:::ror~ast
'
son, Kathy Rosa, and Mn:Keith
Wed•esday tbrougb Friday
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Wiseman
and
daughter.
Fair
through the period. Highs
SATURDAY ADMISSlONS •
Blrtbs
June
l
Mr.
and
Mrs.
mosdy
in
the 70s Wednesdar and
None.
Timothy
Cochran,
daUghter,
Point
Thursday
and 80 to 85 Fnday .
SATURDAY DISCHARGES •
Pleasant.
W.Va.
Lows
generally
in the 50s.
NOne.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS

sule."

In givi11g her classmates an .
agenda for the future, Cleland
urged them to persevere under
adversity.
"It is a time to say 'goodbye' to
our former status and 'hello' to the
new lifestyle waiting for us,~ Cleland said. "Just do not forget the
events we hold so dear and those
who will always have .a special
place in our hearts as time passes
by."

, Meigs announcements

Festival schedule

Weather

None.

199 I and explain why we chose
them,• Cleland explained.
Among the items suggested;
Cleland said, were a Cincinnati
Reds T-shirt (commemorating their
championship season), homecoming and spirit week keepsakes, and
the 1991 EQJ/tmtr yearbook.
"Not all items were derived
from £leas1D1lble events,'' Cleland
said, but were unforgettable ones
nonetheless. (The) negatives
ranged from the gas price hike to
personal problems. The one major
eveni that most of the iunes came
from was the Gulf Crisis."
"Who could .forget the yellow
ribbon," Cleland recalled, "the
sound of Lee Greenwood's 'God
Bless the U.S.A.' and the posters
and signs saluting the service pc:o.:
pie involved with the Gulf Crisis?
Surely, any of tbe items associated
with the war would have a rightful
and significant-place in the cap-

.

SUNDAY DISCHARGES •

Robcrt~ames.

Holzer Medical Center
Dlac....... May 31- Christop_he_r Burris, Darlene Perkins,
and Willllm Wellc-

. IUWyn Swain

cr

Dlacllaraes Ja•e 1 - SoliD
CoUey. Mn. Keith Coot and 1011,
Mn.lfcmiao Mayo and daughter,
Harold
Payne,
Geraldine
Schwager and Donald WyanL
llrtlll JIDie 1 - Mr. and Mn.
Wallr:r Krodel, 100, Oallipolis. Mr.
and Mr1. Robert Pbllllps, son,
Wellllon.
Dllellaaps Jue l - Clifford
Baldwin. Mrs. Robert Pbillips and .
'

'

~J

- (,

for al.l players at Eastern -High
School on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. ~t ..
Forked Run State Park. Bring a
covered dish and utensils. Awards
wiD be presenled.
Yard and bake sale
The Bethel United Methodist
Church will hold a yard and bake
sale on Thursday and Friday from 9
a.m. to 5 'p.m. at the corner of
Smith and Rock Streets in
Coolville.
Bible Scbonl
"Jesus and You at Camp Can
Do" is the theme for the Vac:ation
Bible School June 1'7-21 at the
Coolville United Methodist ·
Church. The school begins each
evening at 6:30 p.m. Classes will
be offered for age 0 through grade
12. The co-directors are Martha
Caldwell and Linda Frey.
Craft bouse to open
The Appalachian Craft House
will have a grand reopening Heritage Weekend on Friday and Saturday from 1I a.m. to 8p.m.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4514

.......

n.oo

7:.ZO,IJ20 DAIU
SAT/Slit MTIM'U
1:10,3:20
(~

, :10,1:10 ti'.ILY
SAT/SUN MTIICES
l : l0,1H10

II
-1

'\

ll I &gt;I

1

I;

.. I

�•

.

Mondat, June 3, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

•
•

.•..
'

...
•..

•.'
'·.
•••

.
·..
..
·.·

f

:: *·The ball skipped wildly toward
•• • •

: ·; · second baseman Maik Lewis, who
• • picked it up and threw to CandiOUi
: : m time to tag Fryman at home.
:
Caljdiotti got die beU&lt;'z of the collision, instinctively using a forearm
• 10 ward off the runner.
:"Ev~ I did was in self. : · defense,' Candiotti said. "It was
': ' almost lite I caught the baU and
• · _ there he was. Stini tbrew the
: : ground ball to second bue, and
then Lewis threw me a acrewball."
,. ; :
"That was 10111e kind of weird
~:~.: play," Skinner said.
The Indians woli tbeir third
:. • straisht, tbeir longest winning
'
streak of the seuon. Detroit has
' · • lost 11 of its list 12 road P.JIIes.
••.
including the list five Sllalght on
-: • •· the current ai_P.
• • · Candiotll (7-2) limited the
;&lt; ' T~CDI to three hits in eight imings,
• '• suilting out eight and walking two.
:::. He lowered his ERA 10 2.25.
. Doug Jones pitched a acoreless
• :
• • ninth for his sixth save, his first
. • since ADril 28. He yielded a llinsle
• · to Cecil Fielder but suuck out the
last two hiuers, Mictey Tettleton
and Pae lncaviglia.
"That's a big lift f&lt;r all of us,"
manager John McNamara said.
"He had 10 go right throufh the
bean of their order, too. I believe in

&lt;·

•

Middleport Mets .
win first two games

t·: .; a 2-0
The Middleport Mets are off to
stan hi local Pony League
• • action . .The Mets defeated the
Racine Reds 17-0 and Mason 10-0,
,.
both on outstanding pitching per-

: ; fonnances.
• •

In the opener against Racine,
; : . KoviD Whobrey pitched a no bluer,
:. • • Wilted one and II1'UCt out 12. The
.: : Mal hlh 16 hit 8111ck and stole
••· • elaht biles in the rouL
: • liCk Stanley wmtlhree f&lt;r four
• 10 lead the winners, wbile Jllce
;_;,. KIIFIII)', Dial NeWICIIIIUnd Gary
• • Sllllley idded &amp;wo hill .:h.
: :
ID• the win over ·Muon, New; : ICIIIIC, wllo ll" • od up die win on a
• • twO lllaer, Wllbcl five llld l1rUCk

•• 011110.
~•

R)'lll Rowe led the w1y with
~
twO lllfl. Jncb.Uq I double. Who• • llny lddod 1 double. The Mets
- • oatltk td to 11011 their ~ts

wldlline---=

: : b8ld
TCIIIJIIdloiJ ~.-:II had a
...... far ltllt ••

1\-

$

1

L Pot.
J92
II ..!91

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T - · ...........
Caltl 'c ......... 21 21
........... »:!!
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m _..... 25 z
Ooioop
. ....... 22 :14
---as, ....... 21

GB
1/Z

.571
t
.!131
3
..500 41fl
A71 5 1/Z

.431 7 1/Z

,.
I

·

Ooldoool7, ~0 4
M
t I, 1W1iu City 4
Seolllei:Z.T.... a

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No ·-

l'tltomu) 12.10, 7.21l, 7.~
16.10, I UO;
Srit Lopod (Brinltodooll) 6.40. T._

NftoY.... 7,Miwtalroo4

~ T.,.l',.. (Touboot)

M

1:56 .. 5.
Alao Racod·Loo-oo Eid, Socioty
BNu, IallumJDily, Abdul H••ovu,
Styldb !lao,
Quiltaol, Tima Aad

••4.XIDIIICily 1

Clokqo"' OUJ.d 3
Sooaliot T,.., ppd., nio1

_,,~·~p.m.
a.-~ 3-4)

(MOma !-5), 1:05 p.m.

at

--('I·'
) $221.110.
a-$4,2000m.!,.-.
T - . (7·5·1) $1,143.20.

Sooood
Malar Haaovar (Sizer) 7.20, 4.40,
3.20; 11i11f llolilo (Dolloy) 660, 4.~ To
H'" To Stop (llollan4) 4.AO. T_.l:.!6 I·

5.

Jlanioaoo.

tidod a-$3,500 OalmioJ814 C•n lion (But.IGa) 5,10, 3.60.
3.20; Tbulc y .. Doo!a (IIAIJaa4) 4.20,
4.00; TJim RoW (J'olhamuo) 1.10. Tim..
I :562-,,

Torcao•NnYOiil,-,:30 p.m.
Clokqoa1~7:35p.m.

SooaliatDooroil, 7:35p.m.

BaldmatettPof!i
oe•,I:05p.m.
T..... Csy, 1:3!1 p.m.
Mil-alOoldoool, 10:05 p.m.
lladl:ll ai.Califamil.,l0:35 p.m.

Allo _ . . . . . . . , . Ou1te. Owleoe'a
CJoadio,
Kub. R
Red, Jam LiaiOolo', Taoilvy - . ..

-n.ow...a.Bama

W L Pot.

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Now y....
....... 26 21 .!153
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St. LaWo .......... » %l Jo42 6 1/Z
:1! .!131
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11
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13

W.S* . . . . . »

in tbe lint bill' of the opening game of the NBA
ftnalll Sunday In Cbk:ago, wblcb the Lakm WOD
93·111 on a clutch three-pointer by Perkins with 14
seconds left. (AP)
.

)

'

W

.

.

Chang beats Forget to earn shot at .
Becker in French Open quarterfinals
match Tuesday, is second-seeded
By DA V1D CRARY
Boris Becker, playing some of his
Associated Press Writer
PARIS (AP) -For most of the best tennis in montlts. If Chang
favorites left in the French Open, gets by Bec:lce:, he migbt tangle in
· the high-pressure matches are yet the semifinals with Andre Agassi,
to come. For Michael Chang, another in-form powerhouse.
they're becoming routine.
·
Agassi ran off 15 straight points
Twice in three days, Chang at the end of the fii'St set to begin a
strode on to center court to find 6-3, 6-3, 5·7, 6-1 rout of Alberto
more than 16,000 fans rooting Mancini in their fourth-round
wildly for his rival. Each time, he match Sunday. His · quarterfinal ·
stuck to his game plan, kept his . m&amp;'!ecmt is unseeded Jakob
poise- and survived.
, a strong Swiss ~layer.
First it was Jimmy Connors,
The other four men s quarterfiwho rendered the crowd delirious nalists will emerge today from
with play that seemed impossible matches pitting top-seeded Stefan
for a 38-year-old. Cliang, half his Edberg against Soviet' Andrei
age, hung on until Connors, Cbertasov; American liJTI Courier
exhausted, withdrew after the against his un~ practice partopening point of the fifth set.
ner, Todd Martin; 12th-seeded
On Sunday, the opponent was Michael Stich of Germany against
seventh-seeded Guy Forget, French ceen-ager Fabrice San10ro;
France's best hope for a title, and France's Arnaud Doetsch
cheered on by hopeful partisan against Argentina's Franco Davin,
fans. Chang prevailed in four sets.
both unseeded.
The road ahead gets no essier
Is Chang, the winner here in
for lbe 19-year-old from Placentia, 1989, getting accus10med to huge
Calif. Next up, in a quarterfinal crowds cheering against him?
"I'm not getting used to it, but!
am preparing myself when I Imow
it might happen." Chang said. "I
try to concenlrate on the opponent
and the ball ...
In conuast to Chang, the tllP-

•a
.. Alltchmtllll
• 7 Pttct
•CompiCI

The Perfect Combo

Full-Size Eureka
Upright
• POWERFUL IIOTOII
• Diai·A-Nap' Clrpel
HelghtMJusllntnl

Loa~4,Ciooinnati

San JliOio 3 , - I
San FnnciKo :1, Alllnta I

::;.::OING $ 300

No~UM~Idi.M·W

.'

CLOSED SUNDAYS

.
..' .
•'
•
••

..

.•

.•
,.

O'DELL 7Me V1l11 LUMBER
834 E. Mm St., Pom•oy. OH.
882·81100
Mon.·Frl. 7·11:30; Set. 7-11

le M /mportMt AI The SaM"

·

I

,

Oobamo,
u..w.
ToAllo
Raco,--~
Slidt
Sam'o
1hochor
Cy,
Wub,Brell TCI'Wie, Brell"a Stoly.
Trii'ICia (1-3·4) $1,7:10.10.
- - (11-3) $97.10.
Ninlb Jtaco.S4,ooo o- n.o lll11 o.na

Major league leaders

......

Keowa.U.ee (Ccwea Jr.) 12.~ 9.40,
6.00; II 0.. (Stock) 4.40, 4.uu; C U
-(A..)4.60. ~1:.!5 l-5.
· Alao hcod.-Cn.rina Ra.Wirl, AbiGlulllf
Ab, R Runy Speaial, Mac·A·Doo Kid,

BATI'INO (136 otlala}-liona. Tau.
.353i MWilor, Milwaubt, ,:MI; Joyner,
Caliloraia, .345; C. Ripkea., Baltimore,
.:144; E. --lloattlo, .342.
Rt,JNS " IW. MilWIUPc. 3&amp; Polonia, Califomia, 36; Sloora, Tuu, 36; D.
H..-, Ooldand, 35; ea.-, OU·
land, 34; JltlmthQ, Twa. 34.
RBI-D. Henderton, Oatbntll, 39;
- · Ooaail, 31; Wia!lold, Callfomia•
31; Thom11, Chic:•JG, 31; Bntaan1k1,
B - . :!6; C.Jti!*-.
36.
IDTS Mol:itm, Mil~rauk.ee, 69; Puckett Miml•O\I, 66: Sima, Tuaa, 6S;
Pcoia.;a, c,Jil..,;,, 64; C. Ript"" Bllti·

~'/6.=-.,'T....,_ (6-,) II 11.40.
T•th Ra••·tiO.OOO JmitGcnal r-.

Bat-

A..U. StopJ..cot Na-.
Pod- (3-Z) $1140.
Jtaco.$2,100CiaimioaB 1 llawlt (llndloy) 2-4.60, 100, 5.00;

-.63.

Ad A T11 (fa•bon) 6.10, 5.40; Joltlonclo
(Owtlt1r.)5.10. T-1:57
Bliao, ltiA Woody,
c .......... McArtlwr, M I Apollo, Billy
Joo Power, OB'S Fillt Oaoice: Scmclwl·
WRTSuporfiCia (6-7-9-5) $4,493.60.

A1ao- -y

DOIJBLJ!S-R. Alomar, T......,, 16;
Whiu, T--. IS; C..., T.,...to, 14;

TRIPLES-MolitorJ MiJwautce, S;
- . . Calilomia, 5; 1.... dod - 3.
HOME RIJIIS-(;. Ript.,, Baltim...,
12; D. Hr•
Ooltln;l2; Dow. Jlo.
- . 12; C. Davia, M
I II; l'iddor,
o....d, 10;1-Baoflold,NcwYodt,IO;
Willllold,c,Jiloada, 10.
STOLBN IAJBS Pdrl• Calitomia,
II; R. l'ndS"'CCft, Oltl.u4, It JtaU.,
Chicqo, 15; O.Jia', 1lotnlil, 12; R. AII&gt;-

.

- - (6-7) $1:14.00.
Attenduce - 7,026. Handlo U30,716.

1

PITOIINO (5 -~.
Detroil, 5· 1, .833, 1.56; SlOI.tlamyre,
T_,oo, l-1, .133, 3.:11; 1!dcltJcoa, MID·
•·2. .100, 1.51; l'inloJ, Callfomia,

1-

u1

. n:;_z:~w;;::;.:z. .Til,
,81111011,13;
R.
lloaala, 69-,)1!111: Toau. .67:
Fa.Joy, Califomia, 6:1; Mcllo'ooD. Cbica·

p,6!.

SAVES-Ec:kenlilia~lan~. I~;

.........
- T....,to,
· 14; 12; Jeff
• Calif
......
13, 0 . Want,
R....U,
T....,l:z.

Scioto

TT:~ 1
;;:i11':m'1StNCI!.
- - ~3) $52.00. '

s.....t a.-n.ooo u.a Jaritati....l
~~a Raoll"' (SIHr) 9.20, 3.40,

2.60; In
2.~

no MIJOril)' (SCiiCCI) 4.00,

Sllwodloh (Millro) 2.10. T'tft!Ool :56

3-5.

Alao Racod·Pid&lt;Oita a...,.., C'Mon
~ ltano Machioo, Oyn..UC
~-

Natlolllll Leque

BA'ITINO (JM at bata)-T. o..,...,
Saa Oiaoo. .356; J.. o. SL I.Auia, .349;
S....... lao~ .:137; 0 . Satlrlt, SL
l.ouiill, .335; ......... Adlnla, .321.
RlJNII-T. P
I , S• lllofo, Yl;
Caloatao,lloot YGI!t, 35; -·Loa An·

- - (5·7) 127.00.

• 5.20; S.pr Vllla7 ~ (Walton) 7.40,
1.20; Grao4addy IUch (lloltoo) 1.20.
Timo-2.~4-5.

J. .up~•. 33; Yaall7te, Pitu-

31 Atlaola, 31; W.
-at-lunioo.
Sao P I :II; T. 0wym. Sao Diap,

S...nbRa0.$1,400~­

IUcbard NeJPilU! A (Twc'"le) I 2.10,
7.60; 4.~ Jlaivy Tallie (l'iobon) 11.00,
9.20; Win Sua B1pru1 (Pout) -4,40,
r-=1·5.
Aim -Papular CoJcd,- s...
·
lluoclullaa, OQ IUrlt, Tloata My

-

Rod. o o·s" v lora a.,...
(t-2-3) rn?.60.

J!ialllll

H "'Coimiq ,_,

- - (tloiiiM)!O.OO, 1.20.
4 .60; - . . . . . (Paul) 3.00, 2.40;
Swift .,._, .(lbaqla) :Z.S0. TJmo. I :5915.
'
Alto Raoed·Brecy Ide, Olle Sllot,

Slllltllaa&amp;-. ""'"-' n..x.;. ...
d'alica Til", Good N Puoy, Cbiob"'
RThf,:.Coi-:Z.I) $!26.10. .
....,_ (~2) $121.10..
.
Nillba-SI,IOOC...titioo r-.
Maobauao ••~ilorl uo. a.&gt;10,
2.:10; B~
I 3.60, 2.10; TN
BboeScoioc«(Foool)
T-1:56 ..5.
A1oo - - - - - . _ , ••

J!aoon.-

-.,C.. l'li&amp;ll. Abbe

WGI£MinS....V... """"-.

--

T-~3-6)$41.00.

,_(5-3) $11 .20.
TOOib .._$34,000 Jlatfiald PacioJ

AlaiUII)' _(1\'not~t) 43.20, 7.40, 3.20;
Awlamrt (MIIIor) 2.40, 2.20; Fino City
(Fcout) 120. ~~~5 l-5.

Abo Jtac:M· SI&amp;dden Bnlt)', CbairlllanoAhHaace, On The Doubt. Slal,

Pmiduu Maa, Pt10r Li, An Ohio

Cba-.

-(J-7)$12UO.

--11IJIJ~-

PCJ I . '"'ie (W-) 4.20, 2.~ L :;~
Cluly Ca• (lt...U) 3.40, •·
~-•

C....(Atllj4.00. Timo-1:591-.
A110 lace&amp;t--Uam 18ft)', I'M Oouia,

Tho-

Hai'PJ' AN Lull,
Boy, T Chlp.t-J..ow.Saotcb.JJ['SBa-. •

s.,.....

(3-7-6-1) $913.40.

(3-7) $16.20.
Att.eodaac:e - 3,291. HIDdll $319A49.

State basebal.l pliirings
COLU!oiiiUS, Olio (AP) -

ven:ity•a Tn.utmu Pi.eltl ud can~on••
Tburmu Muson M..,orial Stadiv.m,
Junc~9:

DMSIONI
ACe-

,,.Friday,....... 7 , - ('29-4) ... pa..
field (29-3), 9:30 ua.; Lynolt\IJil BNih
(22-10) n. YOIUiptoWit Boa~ (17·

10~ I p.m.
c-~P

.

Sa-r.I- I, I p.m.

DMSIOND
AIC-•

JllntR•M
Satw"daJ, June I, Wiluw of 817 Yi1·
lap Bay (26-6)-llqu &lt;l6-'l ..,.. (10

a.m. M&lt;a!4ar;....,..... b,..., hodarl
w . SIIDblnYiUe (26-7). 9:30a.m.; Woo ·
(lS..).w . c 1

I

w....._ (20-7). 1

t•

~J.-.9
lip
•• :30p.m.
DIVJSIONJp
AICa-

flniRound

-y.1.... 6, llamlboo a• (I !l-

...... (21-5),4::10p.m.
etu.plooololp
Pllday.-7.4::10p.m.

,.......

AtC'

Friday, I,_ 7, U,..I_... (111-9)
w . Sidoof Lillmlo (21-6), 9:30 Lm.; Ll&gt;
cu (11-1) vo. Ra:ltfoxd Padtway (2:1.5), I

bi.,,._p

......,.-1,4:30p.m.

.......
en

Transactions

B-baU

PI• .......... I
toouioo

Pnnlde

- . . , . . , CICietnCt ...

1992 IMIOII•.Sipd

n.ft:t ' lkrr~.
A'tHLETICS- Plaood

OAIU.AN

CWl Yot011o pi'*!, oo tho 15·day dia·
alolod Jiat. JtoOallool '"''' AI..U, ca-.
fromT_,.dlhaPacilloc-Loap.
TORONTO BLUE IAYS-P!acod

Don Stiab, pilob., •Ill• 15-day clio·
aWed U.. I I 111 "110 May 23,' R.ca1lod
Bob ~:::::::tr:7• t-, SynCUIO
oltho
.
........

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rllhe
Sculb Atlaodc Leopa.
M d

BulletbaU

Nalloull•$7'11el A;AI.....IoUUMOD
DENVER NUOGETS-Namod Tim

Leiwalte-vicaiOIWideot.

MIN!IBSOTA 11MIIBRWOLVBS-

Ne•.. Cbrb Wri&amp;IR \101 PNJidoat of
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LEGAL

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

au- Si. 1.oa1a,

61;0. -.k.Loala,56;T, P

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Sao~ SL Louil, 17; laoil·
1a ~ 14; row,.., s. Oloao.
14: 11. Moa1o, Cindo·l'l, I~

-..,A•
-.JS.
TIUPLII-T. 0.,., Saa .,_, 7:

'

The Tax Books are now open for the
June or Second Half Collection of the
1990 Real Estate Taxes. Also for delin·
quent tax. Closing date will be June
20, 1991.

lt ~j,~= *-.
~!... ill' I 1..-~

HOWAlD I. f l l .
MEIGS COINIY TIIA-

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:!,Cf.'

-Sports briefsGoir

WOBURN, England (AP) Seve Ballesteros built a sevensuoke lead through three rounds,
then coasted to victory with a 3over-par 75 in the British Masters
. on Sunday. Ballasle!OS, who won
the British PGA at Wentworth last
week recorded consecutive victories f~ the fllSI time since I 986.

'•

Al1o ••oed·Loan Review, Nachaa,

36; C..,._, Moetnal, 35: lohuGD,
Now Yoolt, 3!1.
HrrS-T. o;ran, Sen Dl•ao, 1!;

Davis is onlr. 4-for-23 with one Bobby Bonilla then suuck out, but ·
RBl, nine strikeouts and no exua- Bonds doubled 10 left for the ~o ­
ahead run and then scored on Mitch
base hits..
"We had a chance to close the Webst.er's single to make a winner
gap, but it's better to be where we out of Bob W&amp;lk (2.0).
Greene allOwed five hits in six
are than six or seven back," Davis
said. " We have to play bener base- innings with eight strikeouts and
three walks.
ball and se&lt;re some more runs."
Cubs 4, Expos 3
Errors by catcher Reed and secRookie Cedric Landrum's twoond baseman Luis Quinones helped
the Dodgers score a pair of out, two-run single in tbe ninth
unearned runs in the third inning kept th.e Cubs perfect in six games
and build their lead 10 3-0 agsinst against the Expos this season.
Paul Assenmacher (3·2) worked
Jack Armsuopg (4-4). Armstrong
· allowed six hits and three runs, one two innings for the victory while
earned, in five innin~s.
. Dave Smtih pitched one for his
Reed had three Stogies, his sec- 13th save and ni!lth in his last nine
appearances.
Oiid three-hit game in the series.
.,
Doug Dascenzo started the win"I feel good right now. and it
doesn't really maller who's pill:h- ning rally with a double ·to center.
. or what ballpark I'm in," Reed Luis Salazar was then intentionally
"I want to play and 1 want to walked by Scott Ruskin (1-1).
hack when I'm up there. I'm in a After pinch-hitter Greg Maddux
groove right now, and when a suuck out, Mark Grsce walked to
guy's in a groove, the ball finds a load the bases befo~e Landrum
lined Ruskin's first pitch up the
hole for him."
The Dodgen~ were fortunate as
In other National League games middle.
far as Snwberry was .concerned Clrdiuals 3, MeiS 1
Sunday, it was: Pittsburgh 5,
team physician Dr. Frant J obe, Philadelphia 3; Chicago 4, Monue·
Milt Thompson did more than
who performed the MRI exam, al3; St. Louis 3, New York 1; San enough to soften the injury to Carfound no serious damage and Diego 3, Houston 1; and San Fran· dinals' starting right fielder Felix.
S uawberry could be playing as cisco 2, Atlanaa 1.
Jose, thompson, who repla~ Jose
early as next weetend.
Saturday night after he shghtly
Plntes 5, Phillles 3
The Dodgers have taken four of
a groin muscle, had the
strained
As the Pittsburgh PirateS' sueak
the fii'St seven games of their SCI- kept going, Tommy Greene's came game-winning hit in lOth that night
son series asainst the third-pllce toaend.
and his two-run aiple was the key
Reds, who uaii the Dodgers by 3
The Pirates won their ninth hit in Sunday's victory.
1/2 games and the second-place straight game Sunday, 5-3 over
Bob Tewksbury (4-2) allowed
Atlanaa Braves by two games.
five
hits in pitching into the ninth,
Pl!iladelphia, and Greene, argunbly
"Aftu we beat the Reds two of the league's hottest pitcher, saw his
and his last hit was a double by
three in their o'wn parlc last week- scoreless streak end at 29 innings.
Dave Madagan which became the
end, letting lhem come in here and
only
run he allowed when Gregg
Barry Bonds had a two-run
take three of four from us would be homer in the sixth and a run-scor- Jefferies singled off reliever Lee
a wasb," Belcher (6-4) said after ing double in the ninth as Pitts- Smith, .who earned his 13th save.
pitching two-hit ball far six innings burgh matched its longest winning
· Padres 3, Astros 1
and allowing eight hits in eight and streak since July 1988 and beat the · Adam Peterson combined with
two-third innings.
Phillies for the sixth time in as two relievers on a two-hitter.
"Certainly, we would have many games this sesson and 12th
Peterson (2·1) allowed a leadliked to have won lhree ourselves, in a row overall.
off homer to Steve Finley in the
but we'D take a split and hope for a
Greene had given up just five fust inning and then $ave up one
'good road aip.••
hits without a run in his last three hit over the next six mnings . He
The Dodgers MlJlOI1ed Belcher srans. one a no-hitter over Monue- struck out four and walked two.
with 1 mateshift lineup that includ· al. The streak ended when Bonds Mike Maddux went one and one·
ed right fielder Chris Gwynn and hit his sixlb homer of the season to · third innings before Craig Lefferts
Gary Carter, who were a combined tie the game 2-2.
finished for his 12th save.
.
2-for-31.
The Padres scored on Benito
"You get ftred up more agmnst
Carter started at rust base for the hot pitcher," said Bonds, who Santiago's sixth ho!'ler o~ the y~
Eddie MIUIIy, who was given the has 18 bits in his last 43 at-bats. in the second, a ftelder s chmce
day off following Saturday night's "He made us alitile nervous in the grounder by Fred McGriff in the
10-ianing 6-5 loss to the Reds.
beginning. He's an outstanding lbird and Tony G:ovynn's RBI sin"I didn'tlook at that as a real pitcher who throws very hard."
gle in lbe seventh.
bad omen going into the same,''
· . Giants 2, Braves 1
The Pbillies managed a 2-0 lead
said Belcher, who suuck out eight against staner Doug Drabek, the
Trevor Wilson (2-4) allowed six
and became the 27th straisht second run scoring. on a two-out hits over eight innings and Dave
Dodsers starter who has failed to . single by Greene in the second.
Righetti pitched a scoreless ninth
pitch 1 complelc ~· •'Eddie and
Bonds tied it and the Pirates for his second save of the season.
Snw are great b1g league players, briefly grabbed the lead in the sevThe Giants broke a tie in the
but Chris Gwynn and the other enth on an RBI-single by Andy eij!hth when Mike Felder walked
Van Slyke. The Phillies tied it in With one OUt, Stole second, went to
SJIYS are big leaguers too." .
Crews retired Todd Benzmger the eighth on a fielder's choice third on a wild pitch and scored on
on a grounder with two men on for grounder by pinch-hiller Dale Mur- Willie McGee's sacrifice fly to
the final out pf the game to earn his phy.
right,
Philadelphia's hard-throwi!!i _,..JookOoe. ba4 two of the Giants'
second save and Sam~ had three
hits and two :lmls to ruse his aver· reliever 'Mitch Williams (0:3) start· three hits off starter Pete Smith,
ed lhe ninth und Van Slyte had a who carried a 1-0 lead into the sevage to 337.
. Reds cleanup hiller Eric Davis one-out swinging bunt single. ent11.
singled his last two times up and
scored his team's only run on a
two-OUt ninth-inning single by Jeff
Reed. But in his seven games
against tbe Dodgers this year,

DMSI()NJV

II

\

Pint·

· ::"..:Ji:irinp
in di• 64c.h BoJI Stale
T•-nr• a Oldo l111e Uni·

.

Third -si.IOOCondllica Pace.
Miator falcon (Noble U1) 9.00, 6.40,

~-· 34; r..·;.~~!i.!
ey,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

Do... AIIUlll f« Suday, June 2. W•lh·
• clMr 1nC:k rue.
Fial ~S:Z.OOO~Troo.
~ 7.00, 5.20, 4.00; W'oo·
""KiD&amp; (lli-.o) 9.00, 6.40; OaiCWay
Linda (lllaoaa) 9.00. Ta...2:02 3-5.
Alao Raced· Bill'• Sldpper, DW!e Ac·
tioa, AlCKI SpM4, Ole Cajua Moon,

. z-

S..2. .100, 3.61; Cmfod, (]avelaDd.1-2.,

l!li.IO.

BOSTON UD SOX-lip lao Mar-

Sundey'al'tllllbl

IDU,T~l2.

1

I·'·

a.....

n........ OUJao4, 14: 4 ... tied

(7-~)

....,_ (7·3) $73.110.

IZ) w. S..Wvu Blaalt Rlvar (21·J?)t I
p.m.; ~-llaodoy (25-7) ... &lt;;old·

llao'aTWti.., (AOo&lt;) 6.&gt;10, 2.10, 2.10;
Thundor'a !map (CowOD1r.) 2.10. 2.10;
Robalo (Pa-Ir.) 2.20. Tlmo-1 :54.
Allo Ra*· CJaw H••m•r, Millen

with 11

1

.. ~.,.,. s-n- Jllfler. The Bale

Scwalltltaoo-$3.000 Cocutitien Ptoe.
Staod Up (Pian&gt;o) 21.10, I 1.10, 7.00;
c.,.. Tloaa Roclt1_(C...Ir.) 20.10,
· 9.40; Tomacon (Vaa RbociOD) 6.40.
Time-1:57.
A11o Raood.{)pul lloi, Willy GoooJe. 1
A,_, Diooclioo Aodw, 0 K Spualty,
Dootinatioo Fin&lt;. I,.. Plain Bill
2n4 half Twio Trirecta (1-9~ !)
$25,461.10.
Trii'ICia (1·9-3) $:1,591.10.
Eipb a-$4,000c-J-Pal p (Todol h.) 16.60,1.40, 6.20; Way Parlay (lloUaod) 5.&gt;10, 4.40; Ricll
~(Smilb) 11 .60. n-1:56.
.

.·

New YG aCincillllati.1:3.5 p.m.
San Fmnc:itoo It PiuiiMah. 1:):15 p.m.
Plliladtlphir d Allu~~o 'f:40 p.m.
San llUio aC!oioqo, 1:05 p.m.
Moaalll atllauaoa, 1:3, p.m.
Loa ........ ot SL t.o.ia, 1:35 p.m.

D.

Sllkl11161

Located 5 Miles East Of Rt. 33
on Rt. 50 East, Athens 592-1972

Trii'ICia (I -4-5) M3.60.

AmtriCIIII Leslut

•Gscoarm ·

COLE'S MOBILE HOMES.

.

Tuesday's.-ee

~

Open Mon. thru Sat.
9 em-&amp; pm

$25.00.

Sidt
Stoady RoU (C....) 4.40, 2.10, 2.40;
Gna4o (W.-) 2.10, 2.40; S -·
d - e&amp;-l 2.10. ~I :.!5 1-5.
Aloo ~ 1'ri!z Jtincado, B
C Bnmo. Bit Seu. !me± J R AJiAo.
tlo.
'

Today'spmes

YOU INDEPIII.IIII
AGINTS sav•G

co,. By And See John Smllh Or Dick Cole

-oc:,;;u.000 0poo D,_,
....,_ (1-4) $12.40.

Cbicoao4.-3
Pi ; ps;·N• :;;r··3
St. Louli 3, Now Y I

'-or

For The Right Homt For You, '

.!100 3 1/Z
.367
10
.360 10 1/Z

Suadey's resullll

.

If You'v. Been W11Ung

3

Cjocjnncj 6,

·INSURANCE ·

FEATURES INCLUDE: 3,bedrooms, living room,
family room, Study, glamour bath, 2 X 6 WBIIS With
R19 insulation in the walls and ceiling, dormer,
steel front door, cottage rear door. frost-proof exterior faucet, sculptured carpet with deluxe pad. self-·
storing s10rm windows, Sandstone fireplace, mini
blinds, · 20 cu. ft. side-by-side refrigerator, Pots·
crubber dishwasher, black onyx range, microwave,
and much much more.

I 1/Z

.!110

San1Mto7.-2

JE}~~M~~1R~~K~:· ,

.

II

,10 .....
w::r. 6, New
y .... 5. 10 ...r:.
Loo AqoJca 5, I 0 illoiltp

DOWNING OIILDS :
MUWN MUSSER

1760 Squar9 Feet

Allo Raed-Sir Boaudem•JU•· B•lla&gt;pr Jlanowor, WUdwood PowJao, C...
oliaJ SJm,
- - (6-3) $95.60.
FiNI a-$:1,400 Coatlitoa ......
B•yaa BJ (MJJ«) 8.00
. , 3.10, 3.00;
Ml' ~ 5¥1) 4.00, 3.00; Tabooma
(Tbomai) !.1 • Timo-1'57 3-5.
AIIORa.ed·RBi&amp;l'ldly,la-,
Noltila Bay, s......J!.Siyle, Cuy'o TJ.a,
nau, lea aw.ce..
l•bai!TwinTtifecu ~1 ·3) $16.70.

Gl

1'ct.

.571
.54!

:::r:·
;;:;:.::.o'l,-

~
INTRODUCTORY $3
·
7
995
SALE PRICE.........
'.
·c.,.,.. ,•.

L

San Fnncilco I, Adaftla 2
............ 5, ...
3

3, 6-0.
.
The other top women all won in
straight sets, lncluding secondseeded Steff! Graf, third-seeded
Gabriela Sabatini and No. 4 Mary
Joe Fernandez. Arantxa Sanchez
Vicario, the 1989 champion and
No. 5 seed this year, and sixthseeded Jana Nov0111a of CzechosJo. ·
vakia, also won.

JUST ARRIVED

:a

Saturday's finals

'
seeded women have moved into the~
quanerfJJlals with liale hassle from •
crowds or opponents.
, .
Defending champion and No. I
seed Monica Seles wu the first top
woman 10 lose a set in the IOurnlment, but she rebounded 10 defeal
an injured Sandra Cecchini 3-6, 6-

111 S.GIIII St.,

Bare liCk Writat (Miller) 4.10. 3.60;

Ra-aloaD Clbamaa) 5.40. T-1:54

· West Division
Loo Aqo1oa ...... 28 21
Atlanta . ........... 25 21
SaaJlio&amp;o ........ 26 25
Clnc:lnooli ......... :14 :14
' Houo""'
......... II 31
Saal'noclaoo ...... II 31

w

Ttifecu(f4=00.
....,_(1-6)
.
Fouldta-H.OOOCJa- ......
'lllall Ada~) 13.10, 7.60, ~

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eat DlvlsloD

NOT THIS TIME, MICHAEL - In .I! con·
fronlltlon of former Nortb Carolina teammates,
Chicago point guard Michael Jordan watches
.L.A. Laker forward Silm Perkins blocks his sbol

'

, . , _ (6-3) $54.20.

TIMiday's pmes

'•

'

Aloo Ra.ed·BWI Td, C I'S Doadoo·
t«, J 1 kanw., lim'• Tn.cUr:laa. Fdlky'•

v.-

Tloor.-..
..... o-c.
tnr-

81'S

no~o.

ToniRbt's pmes

'

·

Fial a-12,400 Coo4iiiDn-

T - (Eoy 7-2) 1! New Yoclt 0....,.
3-4), 7::10r_JD.
Docro;l (£....07.5)" Clooolan4 (Naill'
1·5),7::!5pJD.
Ooldoool ~ 1·2) 11 Cllico10 (Hi·

,...

.

Scioto
Dowaa ruultsfor S•turday, Juae I .
Weaobar cloudy,""'

z

.

Saturday'a nsullll

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

~ 3,Dc&lt;rail
Celj' 'a7,T.w~G1

,.,•

1-5.
A1ao - - ,...,,lllllrjr N $po.
cia~ Aponouc., Oypay Jolidoiab~ t1 R

Scioto Downs results

c.-au. T""""" a

'

-·Coati·

Wlcltor Clo•• (Marl'•) .10, 5.ao;
GoJdio- (SIWIDt) 4.60. Timo-2:01

a.-3.-1
Mil-6, New Yodt 3
c...lood 3, o..i1 I

,.' '

AIL FUTS OF
liDDING PLANTS
NOW$300 EA.

982·1771

'7.J:: rt6J

......... 2P 20

OotJ.od

• •

THIS WEll ONLY
June3tll

SYRACUSE, OHIO

3
4
AU ' 6
.313 7 1/Z

.4S7

a.-5.-1

FINAL
CLEARANCE SALE

HUlBARD'S
GRDNHOUSE

3

SlllldaJ'I ruulbl

*79•
a··

SAVEteo ,

Jo40

Wat Dlvlllon

'

MIIJITY MITE•

·

.

•

·.

.:t~7
PRIC• .

.419
.419

•

LOOKING FOR A BIG HOME? ....

~~

........... :!! 25
M i l - ...... :!! .25
Now Y....
....,. Zl 25
CloooJoM ........ 19 :zr
1 - . . . . ......;, II ' 2P

Gl

Saturday's flnall

Candiotti executes run prevention
in Tribe's 3-2 victory over Tigers

• •
"I'm plina to lelld that tape to
• · Ronnie Loa. He'd be proud of it,"
' - . Candiotti said.
Fryman was on second base
• • . with two outs when Lou Whitaker
: : · squibbed a ball off the end of the
· .-. bat just to the left Qf home plate.
; • •• Calcller Joel Skinner pounced iln it
: ; but then slipped as he threw to fii'St

Jola

:zr

six:

'

W L Pot.

-.......
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win.

.

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•

2S=history.

years against me," Clemens said.
Clemens (7-3) allowed three
runs and eight hits in eight innings
and wlilked one. The most interesting statistic w.as tl!e low Slrikeout
total.
Clemens has lost to Texas,
Dclroit and Baltimore while beat·
ing only the New York Yankees.
His previous-low suiteout total
was four in the loss to the Rangers
on May 18.
"When Roger doesn't win, it's
big news," Bos10n third baseman
Wade Boggs said. "He's suppostd
to win every time out and we're
supposed to get him a lot of runs.
That wasn't the case t.oda ,"
The loss dropped 3Iemens'
. career record after Boston defeats
to 71-20. The Red Sox bave lost
eight of their last 11 overall,
including three of four in the weekend series against Baltimore.
"I thought he threw great. He
had great control," catcher John
Marzano said. "A couple of bloop
hits hurt him. Other than that, he
threw very weD. We just clidn 't get
him any runs."
Roy Smith (2-0) gave up one
run and three hits in seven;rL?J
innings, suuck out two and w
none. Mark Williamson finished
with perfect relief for his second
save.
Baltimore, which bas won five
of six, took the lead in the second
when Joe Orsulak singled and
scored on a triple

AMERICAN LEAGUE

'·

Dodaen aot aolid pitchins

Reds 4-1 StmcJax, and earn a split of
their four-pme weekend series,
ling from Juan Samuel to beat the but two significant post-game
developments overshadowed the
game.
'
At the same time the Dodgers
were preparing to send Darryl
Sllawberry 10 the bospitll for an
Jlalo'• JM.a. Sia·
MRI exam on his achiJ18left shoul~ Oraod, ST..tlio'o Soilcll, Tuoiabod
der and reliever Tim Crews for an
ultrasound scan on his lower
T - (4-5-6) Sl19..!0.
- . (..5) SI:IUO.
abdominal
mUicle, the Reds had a
P..ab'
DIOOC. ' i Ta
much more pleasant announceDa-•a Colt cBOattr Jr.) 6.60. 5.00,
2.10; - .... ()(dla) 20.20, 4.:10;
menL
(lo8Daol2.60. 'l!ooM-2:04.
Shortstop Barry Larlcin and secAlao
ond
baseman Bill Doran will be
Clliol, Laoly -lliioim activated
from the disabled list by
sn.oo.
.
. PllthRIOo.$1.400~- ' '
Tuescllly when the Reds begin a
NIJbllc• ·(JU!Iab~) l7.00, 7.'40,
seven-game homestand, the team
6.20: tJralo'-o em (I
tl 12.60,
said.
5.20; ..... (Pao) 4.:10. 'l'lo!.-2.-0D.
AJoo I xd lao 0 B.....E T ~
"As long as we stay within
Har Buaay. Eellu, lloiben Woru.
.
striking
dislance, we're going 10 be
a.•aNJa,bal•balf~ ~ nM-9) 1467.21l.
fine," Lattin said. "Everybody in
(lo.5) 1125.611.
this league has hit a hot streak
:iWba-$1,100~T - (AtaoliO
4.40, 4.20;
for us, and we're due to hit
The

from. Tun Belcher and timely hit·

ca..--.

In tbe majors...

••
'·
'·
••

green light to shootany time he gets iL"
AP Sp lli II Wt lttr
Jordan had his shot. Twice.
CHICAGO (AP) - SliD Perlda1 CIIDe to Los
There were 24 seconds left, and ~o led 91AngeJea wilb die ori&amp;ma IX beil'lliD Ullderlchiever, a
89 in the first rtnals game in its
J&lt;r·
good playa- who dldn't do enough 10 help his ttam
dan's 15-foot bank shot from me ri t swirled around
win.
the rim and bouiteed ouL Pettins re
.
·
On Sunday, he acbievecliiDIDethiog remarkable.
A(ter Jordan missed a~ain with 4.9 seconds
.With one perfect tlne-point shot. he overshadremaining, Los Angeles Byron Scott got the
owed both Mictlael JOidu llld Magic Johnson in the
rebound, was fouled and sank the final point with 2.7
exciting opener .IX the NBA fiDIIs.
seconds to play.
·
The unexpected hero
Lakers an unex"The wrong North Carolina guy made !he shot,"
pectod 93-91 .vicloly over ·
.
said Jordan, who was a college teantmate of Pemna
Neilbcr lelia led by IIIOI'C thin seven points. The
and James Worthy with the Tar Heels.
Llbn' ~lad wu die bige8t in the last 10 minGame 2 of the best-of-seven series is Wednesday
ut.ea. ne lelld c:ha . . d hands six times in that span
night in Chicago.
,
u Jordln llld 1oh!IIO!! lOok lllrna making big plays.
"I just said, 'Oh, no' when he shook loose and put
But it wu Pakins, 1 forward and backup center,
the shot up," Johnson said of Jordan's final attempt
who ~t the Lakers on lql92-91 with his three-~t­
"Michael is a number one. scariest person in the
er with 14 seconds 1m They held on as Jordan s 16NBA at that time in the game."
.
footer from the left hit the rim but bounced out wi.th
Perlcins, who made 18 of 64 regUlar-season three4.9 secondl to so.
.
.
pointers, would be far, far down that list But John"I was wide open," said Joman, who led all scor·
son drew the double team from Bill Cartwright,
ers with 36 points. "It fdt good."
.
found Perkins open and passed to him.
"When I let it JO. I feared it was going to be
Jordan had 12 points in the third quarter and has
blocked,'' laid Pemna, who scored 22.
led Chicaso' s scorers in all 13 playoff games. He
His six yean in Dallu were forgeuable. He averadded 12 assists and eiJ!ht rebounds. Scottie Pippen
aaed 14.4 points during thoSe regular seasons.
had 19, but no other BUll scored more than
]orLut Aug. 6, be signed as a .free asent with the
dan and Pippen were saddled with five foills down
Laten.
the suetch.
Peltins baa developed into a more complete playWorthy had 22 for the Lakers. Johnson got the
er. In the first quarter, he had three baskecs off post·
29th playoff uiple·double of bis career with 19
up plays and two. three-pointers. And he had SIX Of
points, II assists and 10 rebounds. He missed his
the Lakers'last seven pomts.
.only field goal attempt in the first half but was 4-for"What we've come 10 fmd out since we had him
4 in the second.
is wllll a good low-post player he is,': Los Angeles .
Chicago made 23 of 39 shots in the ftrst half but
head coach Mike Dunleavy said.
.
15 of 41 after that. The Lakers took only 66 shots,
He also' has confidence with Perkins on the
tying an NBA record for fewest lttempts since lite
perimeler.
.
24-second cloclc was adopted in 1954, but outscorecl
"That;s his shot," Dunleavy said of the gameChicago 28-14 from the foul line.
wilmer. "He can make three-pointers. He's got the

the man. He's. proven he can do
iL"
.
·Loser Frank Tanana (2-S) kept
the Tigers even until the seventh
inni!lg, when Turner Ward walked
and scored on consecutive singles
by Felix Fermin and Jerry Browne
f&lt;r a 3-2 Clevdand lead.
"Anytime you can give up two,
three runs, you've pitched a pretty
ood ballpme,'' Tanana said. "I
eept the 6allclub in it. Tom was
tougb. You knew it would probably
be a low-acoring game. We didn 'I
play well defensively and I lbink
tblt ended up ~ coaling us the
same." ·
Each 1eam allowed an unearned
run, and the Tiprs' earned run also
. was llinied.
DeaoitiCOred a run in the ftrSI
when Wbiralrer reached on an error
by first baseman Brook Jacoby,
went to second on a wild pirch and
scored on Cecil Fielder's single. In
the third. Milt Cuyler tripled on a
ball that should have been cut off
by center fielder Alex Cole, then
ICOred on Whitater's sacriftce fly.
The Indians scored an unearned
run in the third. They loaded the
basel on CII'ORI by Alan Trammell
and lncaviglia sandwiched around
a single by Fermin, and Alex Cole
followecl with a sacriftce fly.
Skinner singled home a run in
the fourth, lying it2·2.
BroWIIC staned in left fteld for
the second time in his career.
McN811181'8 said he would keep tty·
ing to find playing time for
Browne, who has been displaced
by the rookie Lewis at second base.
"He's something lite a .285
lifetime hiller," McNamara said,
referring to Browne's .284 averase
in · two seasons since the Indians
acquired him from Texas. "We've
80110 flllll him some at bats."
In other games, Baltimore
downed Boston 5-1, California beat
Toron10 7·2. New York beat Mil·
wautee 7-4, Minnesota beat
Kansas City 4-1 and Chicago beat
Oakland 4-3.
Oriola 5, Red Sox 1
Roger Clemens doesn '1 seem so
unllealable these days.
After starting the season with
six sualsht wins, Clemens has lost
three of his last four starts. Balli·
more won 5-1 Sunday as BOlton's ·
ace struck out only three, his SCI·
son low.
"They're an aggressive team.
They ha~e been the last couple of

league West Division Iitle to the
CinCinnati Reds, they might loolc
bllclc to June 2 as a turniJ1c point.

........'·

Br HOWARD ULMAN

By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
..
CLEVELAND (AP) - Indians
rigi!t-binder Tom Candiotti, a Californian, spends his offseason rooting for the San Francisco 49ers. He
·· · countS several CUilellt and former
members ofthe NFL ream as close
friends.
.
Tlie ISSOCialion paid off Sunday
wben Candiotti, covering home
plate, tnocked down Detroit's
Travis Fryman on an eighth-innins
play that preserved Cleveland's 3-2

LOS ANGELES (AP) - If the
fll'Stil:!::,.Los Angeles Dodgen
filld
va loling the National

•

Perkins' clutch trey pushes
Lakers to 93-91 win over Bulls

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-6

Belcher, Samuel propel L.A. Dodgers to 4-1 win over Red~

Monday, June 3, 1891
Page 4

----------~----------------~----------~--~~~========

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

·BUY FROM AN L.P. GAS
DEALER WITH EXPERIENCE
NOTICE:

OUR LEVEL BUDGET PAYMENT PLAN WILL BE
STARTING IN SEPTEMBER FOR QUALIFIED CUSTOMERS ONLY.
ALL SIZES OF TANKS AVAILABLE

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

,.

Monday, June 3, 1111

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'Pity Me' or 'Epitome' ? How

Classifie

do you spell that town's name?
By BRIAN J, REED
How do YOU speD lt?...Is it
"Epitome"? Or do you prefer ''Pity

Me?"

Stories in Tile Daily Sentinel
about the recent rock slides and
ptop«ty damqe in the 1m1 below
)ll'OIIIpled some real
livelr 'ioos as to the COirCCl
spelling of the name.
Originally, I tried to evade the
issue by calling it "Hobson" but
that just didn't float wilh Meigs
Countians who know the communi·
ty as "~Me" (CD' "Epitome").
'"That s not Hobson," IIley told
me, "it's beyond Hobson."
One retired railroader who
worked in !he area staled that he
remembered a road martm' ldenli•
fyiog the COIIIliiUIIity as "Epitome"
while another stares that "Epitome"
evolved, later, into ''Pity Me."
Whatever the "correct" reference, I think I may go back to call·
ing the neighborhood Hobson. I
can spell that one•.

Middles

•
.•••

.
.,, .
••
'

,.

.r

.~ · SPEAKE~ •

&lt;;urt Heady of tl!e 'frt.County

Career Educadoa omce spoke oa the role of

partae"hips in eel utadonal .relona at ·the rerog·
nitloa lunc:heoa Friday for Pomeroy Elemeatary
Partners.

•

Schools can benefit from partnerships
•• "Partnerships are where educa·

ti.Onal rcfonn will COOle froni", pred(cled Curt Heady of the Tri-Coua·
tr, Career Education Program, when
he spoke ·briefly Friday afternoon at
a ' recognition luncheon for
Pmneroy Elemenrary PartnerS. ·
: In his comments to representa·
tiyes of the 15 businesses who have
participated in the program this
year, Heady said that a !W push is
o~ for partnerships between
S&lt;!hools and businesses, profession·

als, and agencies across lhe state.

Becky Triplett, sixth grade
teacher, and Linda Varnock, third
lmlde teacher, initiated lhe program
lor Pomeroy elementary students.
All six grades participated by visits
to the various business locations
and offi~s of lhe partners during
the year.
The luncheon was held at
Gilmore's. Attending were repre·
sentatives of Triplett Engineering

You're a big belpi ... Your
response to a request for inform•·
tion on T. Ies10 Iones has provided
much informatiou on one of Meigs
County's more successful nativea.
I'm sure that Pennsylvanian Steve
Correia will be able to use any of
the information lhat you m1ght
have regarding Mr. Jones for his

doclorllte res elldl. If you have anr. by !he bank for a look al the ery
such infonnation, you can relay at critp copy. Tbe drawinss offer a
to me here at Tile DaUy Sentlul fannerifts loc* at old PouiCioy.
and I'll Jl8ll the wool
So Loq..Jt is wida pal rearet
lncidentlll , Mildred Banprt of
that
we say goodbye to Nancy
the WelshJmoricaa Heritage
Museum in ·&lt;&gt;alt Hill reminds me Gard, who bas worUd in the &amp;ant
that Mr. Jones was came to the area office of TM .Dtllly S1nti11tl for
from Walel, not Wbalel, u I stat· some time. One of those people
who will do or say jaat llboi;U •Y·
ed. But I knew thad
thins (on a dare), Nancy will cer·
Vacatloa Bible SebooJ ...The tainly go down as 0110 of lboae all·
Riverview Community VacatiOn time areal c:o-WOiken.
Nancy, 'you're 1 lot of fun.
Bible School will get underway
next Monday, beginning at 6:30 Don't go tar, and come back often.
p.m. and running dlrougb Friday And Walda out for diose "two-byuntil 9 p.m. each evening. The pro- twos". They'D get you eveaytime!
gram is s110nsored by the
What a great loas Ted Reed's
Reedsville Church of Christ, the
Eden United Brethren Cbureh and death is to our commUDity.
the Reedaville/Lon1 Bottom
One of my aU-lime favorile stoCh11r1e of the United Methodist ries is ooe dW Mr. Reed told me
Church. Classes will be Open to shortly after I ~ to work at the
prescboolets through and including . ncwlljJIIIC!l.ltseems that he and my
adults, and everyone is welcome to late fadler (no rdalioD. by the way)
left Pomaoy for the Second World
attend.
War 011the lillie day. It was not I
Jaterestln1 ...Joan Wolfe at happy day for them, or their
Bank One in Pomeroy .I lls acquired falherB, whO spell! the rat of that
some interesting sketches from Sunday afternoon in the Farmers
Pomeroy's early days, and just in Bank, crying for theit departing
time for this weekend's HeritaJe sons.
.
Both he and my dad enjoyed
Days. The skeldles were drawn by
a nverboat caparin who made them telling thlt one. It's a great story
while stuck in ice in the ri-. The and th!ly were two grea1 people.
oriJinal skelches are the possession
of Roben Titus, but you can stop
Have a good week.

Services, Clark's ·Jewelry, Krogers,
Rick's Fire and Safety, Dr. Larry
Kennedy, Veterans Memorial flllol.
pital, Chateau Be8uty and Tanning
Salon, Pleasers, Crew's Steak
Hoose, Ewing Funeral Home, Powell's S11per Valu, Bank One,
Farmer's Bank, The Daily Selltine),
John Costanza, Meigs County
The Chester Council No. 323,
The Lord'i Prayer and pledges .
Board of Education office, 'P at Daughters of America, met recent· to the Christian and American t1lgs
O'Brien, auomey, ID1 Kenny Utt, ly at the lodge hall with JoAnn · were given in unison. There were
certified public accountanL
Baum, councilor, ~ding.
31 memben preseat.
It was announced that JoAna
Baurn had injun:d ber left arm and
that she has a new~
State Session will be held Aujl.
18·21
at the Travel Host Inn m
All-academic team for 1989, 1990 Kenneth Matson graduated from Marietta.
Registration will be held
and 1991. She also was a cbeet~ Rutland High School in 1966.
leader: .
~
Matson plans to study matheSlawter's father, Ben, was a matics at Ohio University.
1964 Rutland High School gradu·
Matson has participated in the
Bill.
Governor's SchOlars Program and
Another recipient, Iared Sheets the National Honor Satiety and
The mother-daughter banquet of
of Po!Deroy, is lhe son of Jim and was a delegate· to Buckeye Boys the Reorganized Church of Jesus
Jennifer Sheets. His father gmduat- State.
Christ of Latter Day Saints was
ed from Rudand High Schapl in
Ken E. VanMatre, Middleport, held recently 8l Ponderosa in Rip1962.
is a 1991 graduate of Meigs High ley, W.Va.
Sheets is a member of 4-H, School. He is the son of Mr. and
Attending were Juanita Wells,
National Honor Society and com- Mrs. Harvey VanMatre. His molh~ Tammi Causey, Anna McHaffie,
petes on Meigs High School's er, Betty 08rk VanMatre is a 1967 Maxine Sellars, Rath Bradford,
Football and Wresding teams.
graduate.
Freda Ferguson, Golda Radcliffe,
He will attend John Carroll Uni· VanMatre lias enrolled at Hock- Lucy Taylor, Janice L. Danner,
versity where he will study pre· ing College, where he plans to Sandy DeMoss and Dorothy
med.
study Fish and Wildlife Manage· Spencer.
Nort'll,ll)! Scou Matson, a. 1991 menL
Gifts were given to oldest moth·
p'aduate of Soulhern High School,
At Meigs, VanMatte was active er, Lucy Taylor; youngest mother.
as another of the scholarship's in Teen Institute and was a member Sandy DeMoss; and most children,
recipients. He is lhe spn of Mr. wid of the school wrestling tearil.
·
Dorolhy Spencer.
Mrs. Kenneth Mat~on of Racine.

·River,boat trip planned by D of A

Seniors awarded Rutland alumni scholarships
•

; Four graduating seniors are lhe
re-':ip'ients of $200 scholarships
frpm the Rutland High School
Alumni Association. The IBIIes of
~ recipients were announced at
Sdturday's alumni banquet, which
w~ attended by some 300 Rutland
g¢iduates. The scholarships were
made possible by donations from
Rutland alumni.

•

~~boree

Kristin Slawter, the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Slawter of Middl~n, was one of the scholarship
recipients. Slawter is a 1991 graduate of Meigs High Schoof who
plans to attend lbe University of
Aleron. She is a member of NaliOII·
al Honor Society and Student
Council, served as an office assis·
tant, and was a member of the TVC
•

to be held by ·
Long Bottom group
:wi",

~;. The LonJ Bo~ ComJllllllity, ,.,, Jh~r~
be .~n ice cream
Association held 1ts monlhly meet· social 011 Jlily I3 with mernben to
ing recently at the commUnity (;C!n· donate 90 pounds of supr. Six dif.

W.

• ··Melody Robens presided and
!he led the group in lbc pledge and
Lord's Prayer. The group sang
"Happy Birthday" to Betty YOIUig.
The meeling opened with mern·
bets naming a favorite lhing to do
over lhe summer months.
•.; Mae McPeek read the secretary's reP."rt and Alta Ballard !be
treasurer s report.
· The ~ discussed purchasing
· ~ceiling fans for the building.
' · It was decided 10 hold a "down
h{)me jamboree" on the first Satur~ of every month and Lyle Swain
iS rn charge of the activities.

ferent flavors of ice cream will be
available. To assist, contact Mrs.
· Roberts at 91!5-4275. Ice cream
willbemadeJuly 10.
The boats for the May meeting
wee Harlan and Alta Ballard.
Hoaresses for the June meeting
will be Phyllis Larkins and Janie
Fitch.
.
Members attending were
Melody Roberts, Mae McPeek,
Alta and Harlan Ballard, Ada and
Kenny Bissell, Betty Young, I lillie
Fitch and Brandi, Phyllis and
Dorsel Larkins and Delores Hawk,
reporter.

.

Mother-daughter
banquet hel4 .

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POliCIES ,
uut5Kiu Mvtyi. Galh~ or Masun counties must be fN'II
P&lt;lld
'Rccetv1: $.&amp;0 dtscount tor 11dr p~~id,.n adw;~ncu.
•frH ads
Gi11eaway lind Found ads uflll"' 1tiwords will be
. nm 3 d;1fs at nu c h•gtt
'Pucu ot itd for all caprull Iemus ts dou~ u pttce ot a·d cost
1 Ads

charges a fee for services available
free of c:haJge from Social Security.
Reports have come in alleging that
this company, located in WashingSeveral parents of newborns in ton, D.C., has charged $15 for
th.e Athens area have apparently nelping to process Social Security
fallen prey to a company that number apJillcaliDDB for parents of

newborns.
Some people have reponed
sending in the SIS fee but gelling
nothing in return. Those who do
not receive these services will get
less that what Social Security ~
vides at no cost whatsoever. This is
because only Social Security can
process applications for Social
Security numben •.
. The easiest way to ga a Social
Security number is to· apply at the
hospital where the child 11 born.
Pamats whO have selected a name
for their baby can authorize the
State of Ohio to send birth iilfonna·
lion to Social Security to issue a
number.
• All the parent has to do is cbeck
a biotic on the birth information
form that is sent to the Ohio
Bureau of Vital Statistics indicating
that they want this done: Tbe State
send a computer tape to Social
Security in Baltimore, Md., and
Sooial Security cards are issued
from there. It usually takes about

;,~the Oatly S1mltrut1 (u cept
classtfu:d &lt;h~PiiiV . Busllhl!liS CArd ;mcllt."U&lt;tl notice~)
wdt a\su app~.;w •1 lht: Pt Plu•Cint R~Jt5hu •nd thw G.ah
..oils Datly Tnbunll , 'lliiCiunu 011ur 18 ,000 honnt5

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPV DEADLINE
11 .00 AM SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
2.00 PM MoNDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
2.00 PM_. tuESDAY.
WEDNESDAV PAPER
2.00 PM. WEDNESDAY
THURSDAV PAPER
~HI DAY PAPER
2'00 PM . THURSDAY •
. SUNDAY PAPER
2 00 PM. FRIDAY

PubliC Notice
FmHA office.
NOTICE OF
· Tho olato of nomtnoeo for
ELECTION
FmHA county commlltoe
Tho Fu.-. Rome Ad·
mlniMrotlon tFmHA) county arollttecl In tho
below.
committee olectlon thlo yoor Tho qulllfl-na of parwlllbohlldonJuly 1.1811 . oono voting ore dHCribTho bollot below rnuot be ed In tho ''V- Cortlln·
flllld out. del....,ed ond lion 8tmmant." for 1urt1tor
Information roganli"' votmailed and NceiYed or rt·
tumed In ...,.oon, to FmHA, Ing ond votl! eligibility, 10233 · AlbMy
Rood. tho County Ofiloe lilted
Athlno, Ohio 4&amp;701, notlo· above. FmHA tleatlono ore
tert._n July 1 . 1911 . 1fy~u open to ell eligible - do not vote In peroon you without. regard to NCo,
ohould man your bollot In· color, ,..lglon, netlonel orl·.
olda a blank -elope gin. IQI, poAtlaol affiliation,
marked bel lot to anoura a ••· morkol otatuL - Md/or
crot bello!. Thlo blank anva· hondicllp.
lopo ohould be plaaecl lnoldo
U.l. DEPARTMENT OF
tho llt'lelope you u• to moll
AGIIICULTUIIE
your bollot. Your name and
FAIIMERI HOME
eddron muM be l.glblo an
ADMINIITRAnON
the outor -ope. Folluro
BALLOT FOR COUNTY
to provide thlo lnlormotlon
COMMin'EE MEMBERISI
will rondor your . b.lllot In·
valid. Only - b.lllot moY be Stole !Nome) OHIO
voted In ...,.oon or by mall by County tNemo) ATHENa.
MEIGS, VINTOn
any vot•. Vot11 in envelop eo containing more than C1ndldtltw:
CECIL OILLOGL Y
one aboet)toe ballot wMI not
GENE HINES ·
b.l counted. Bolloto and anvolopeo may oloo b.l ob· Only·vote for one candld1te:
talnod from your local

a

from 1-4 p.m. on Aug. 18 and
reception for the State Councilor,
Esther Smith, will be held at 7:30
p.m. On Aug. 19 at 9:30 LID. there
will be a boat cruiJe and luncbeon
aboard the "Valley Gem." Mate
reservalions for lbc boat uip with
Erma Cleland, Box 23, Chester,
45720 llY Aug. 14. On Au,. 20
from 8:30-11:30 a.m. there will be
the official opening of the 97th
Slate Seuion. A Good FeU~
Banquet will be held that evening
at 6:30p.m. foUowed by a punch
reception at I 0 p.m. On Aug. 21
lhere will be a business meeting
from 8:30-11:30a.m. followed by a
state councilor's luncbeon at 12:30
p.m. Tbe business meeting will
continue from 2-6 p.m. and officers
will be installed.
The District Deputies and Past
Councilors' Club picnic will be
held Jtme 29 at 12:30 p.m. at Wil·
son Park on Route 50. All lodge
members are welcome.
·
Erma Clclaad anaoWiced that
Greta Riflle, a m lla, ~ a
S1,000 schol~~rshil;l from the
Daughters of Amenca National
Board.
.

'

Ganeral
•
:

•
:
;:
)

:
·'

•
'
•

•''

..
Prehomecoming
•
"
s'er\Jices scheduled

"

· · ··- .

bold at the Rutland Community
dhureb 011 New Lima Road toni&amp;ht
(Mooclay), Tuelday. Thunday and
Priday al 7 p.m.
' Tbe theme of the service ia
"WWlll Hath God WJOII8bl TJwouah
die Bilek SegJliCilt ~ Rgdead'l"
. Fb ho eel will be lbc Bl,_., lbc
WBII%01, the Warner• and the
Gr11111. Lriw'oo and odlln.
• H(llllet II"""II lllr'lice will Sun·
clay, June. 9, at 3 p.11. A ....._ trill
bl beld • 1 p.m. llld llle ..,....
will bl Bllber Mle w......

•

...,_..

379 Wllnul

916

·,
,

Ch•IM

143 Portl.-d
24? Lettrt F~l5

1
newer
level home m great
1 - has basement. 2 car gar·
age equipped kitchen .
cou~. cent~al heat &amp;air,
3~ acres and those are only a few olth1s homes mept1onal
teature! Call to make your appointment to see th1s home .. lfs
priced at $69,900 - Owner wants to sell and w1ll .consider
any reasonable offer.

'

;

POMEROY - 21ots with possibildies! Septic &amp;electnc ava.il·
able. Many shade trees. ASKING $3,500.
r

LONG BOTTOII- Total electric home onth 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, beautnul deck for private and quiet moments. 1.35
acre only 10 m1nutes to Rav,nswood. Many add1t1onal lea·
tures. Call lor deta1ls. $59,000.
RUTlAND TOWNSHIP - Now you can do it all! farm , fi~h.
hunt or just set bKk and relax ... and never lem home wnh
this gentle1111n's farm located on !OJ acres w1th 2 story_m·
sulated home stocked pond, large barn, cellar house, 2500
lb. tobacco bise.lncludes additional.lraileJ hook·UP lor ren·
taL FREE gas &amp; royalties! COME TAKE A lOOK! ASKING

MISSIONAaES: Ill LONGMIIIS

•

$63,500.
VERY AFFORDABLE - This recently remodeled country
bungalow located close to Chester would make a great star·
ter home, retirement home, summer home, .rental home or
your home! 2 to 3 bedrooms, garaae, equipped litchen. all
for ONlY $14,900.
'
.
.

•

TillE TO SEll YOUI HOUSE AIID LOTT TRY OUR SEIVICE,
WfiE REAllY Non WAIIT A lAIGEI. Flll£1 PlACE? WE

CAll FIID ON£ THAM AN AC£1 SIIAWI HOlliS AI£
L1Sl£D. TOO. COli£ 01 11h.Wfll DAZZLE YOU!

Special Music by IY•gellst Gary Edntunds

•'
'

•aaY Nov••

HENRY E. CLELAND .............. 912·8181
. JEAN TRUSSELL ................. .. 148·2110
JOHILL ......................... ........ Ill 4411

PASTOI, JAIIES IDSD

TRACY BRlNAGER ................ 841·2431
'
..

I

...... ,.

OJIPICE ................................. .

882·2211

6,
62
lil
64
65

41
42
43
44
46
46
~7
48
49

Hou•• tor Rtnl
Mobile Homes tor Atmt

S1
52 63
54
56

Houwehold Goods
Sporting Goodl
AnhQUtl
Mile. Merch¥tdl&amp;e
Building Supplt•

Plt~...nt

458

LIIOn

676

Appe Grow.

IIIIIIIIBII
21

2 2 Mon.v 10 Loin

937

23 Prot•lional Setvic•

Buffalo

li"t!llocll

Hty &amp; Gr•tn

Selld • F.nrhllt

Tran sDo rlal1on
71 Autos tor S.au
72 Truclu lot Sale

Fatms tor fhnt
ApS11fl)R tot RUit l
Furnithtd Room&amp;
Space ·lor R•nl
W~m1ed 10 Rent
Equ!pmen' for Runt
For LtMt

73

Vans&amp;4WO ' s

1A MotOf_c vcl•
7&amp;
76
77
78
79

,
Bo•ltl &amp; Motor s to r S ltllit
Aui o Parh&amp; Ac c• sGftW
Auto Aep;ur
C11mpmg EqutpnunH
Cii mpets 6i Motor Homtn.

81
82
83
8i4
85
86
8 7'

Homt l"'provemtr-. "
Plumbmg &amp; Hlllltng
E ac ~eling
·
Eltdrieal &amp; Reh~g..-•ho u
Gunllftl Hauhng
Mobde Home Rep•i•
Upholslery

56 Pets tor Sth
67 Mutinllnslrum..,ts
58 Fruils &amp;. ~·o ..•~ •
51 For Sal• or Trade

Bulin•• oP... tunitv

882 N.w H•nn
Btl let.,t

F11111 EQYtpmunt
Want•d to B••v

667 Coolville

,..._ detach lhlo notice be·
..... -CEIITIPICATI0!\1
· bello!.
VOTEJII
STATEMENT
lubpen W of Port 20114 of

Titlo 7, Code of F. . . ol
Rlll*tlono roqulreo that all
allflble votoro .lor FmHA

county or . . . committee

11-n• moetthelollowlng
ollglbltty Nquira-nto: t•l

'* ,.,....,,end or(b)-hwe
· ·their
of
fllrmoro;

principal firming oparotlon
within tho oounty or oreo for
whic~ tho llaction If being
hold.
By oubmlttlng thlo bellot. I
ottoot thet I milt the cr~oria
to vote.

Business Services
IIIIIPIIIPII,

1-enl L Wrltllll

ca•ncw•n

ROOFING

•• nu PLC!OI CAll
•A..aonebte Jlllt"
•Ouellty Work
Eltimlteo
•Carget Hao Foot
Time
•High Olon on
Floor Flnl1h
MillE LEWIS. owlt. 1, hlllnd, ON.

NEW. - IIPAII
Gutter•

•F,.

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
P•lnting
FREE ESTIMATES

INSULATION

WHAIIY'S
AUTO PAllS .

I

S)lldoll•llltl Ill
Custe•F,_• ..,.,

•VInyl Siding
•Replroeement
Window•
•Roofing
•lneulrotlon

II

de-

the

1 card ot Thanks

We wllh to thaN! II
who helped us In anyWilY di.B'ing the Hlnea
· end deeth of our
loved one. E. Roscoe
Hulon. ThriNis IIIPIc:Wy tD the Staff of
OVII bi ook Centlr for
thalr loving ca.. of
111m, Dr. WwiiiMII
end the llllff of v..
tiraDe Memorial HOI·
pita! and lleo Dr. Jack

Uvil•. To II who
kept him In their
pa.-, the on•
who vlllted l*n end
em~
him cards.
TheNce to all who
em~ nouu11a, cards

IIIII

IIIP«&lt;illly the

food far the meel
II 1111 Chi_, FIN
Department Build·
lllf. Thanka to Batty
Bl~e~kwood for elnglflt and to Rev. Cerl

Hlalta end Rev. ~
Hel II -~ for 1helr
OCIIIIDing - - and
l'unerel
H - for thllr - ·

tD Ewing

viDN.
God blfll eeeh one.

1'111 Hollon Family

.......

WE DO

auum '
,,~.
Pick Up.

TROMM BUILDERS

SilVIa

992·5335 or
915-1561

..... ,,.. .... Offlicel

NEW • USED PARTI
FOR ALL MAKU •
MODELl

JAMES KDSD
992-2772 or
742-2251

992·7013
or 992·5553
011'0&amp;1. . . .
1..........
DAIWII, CillO

531 lryen Plec•
Middleport.
'

111/' !I ....

Cttlttlllt

lSD APPUIICIS
,. NY WI8AIITJ

SIGNS

WAIIEIS-$110.,

MYIS-S".,

by tldt »!OitJ'ltl(

~~~~?v '
.

Poilt PIUIIIII •675-69:!' '

1100 OVIIIS-S" .,.

lEN'S APPLIANCE

SERVKE '

..2.5135 • 915-1561

au. ,_ "-' Office

1 card ot Th•nk8

I'OIIIIOY OliO

The femly of 0.0,..
SWell• - l d ... to
thank ell our frilnda.
femlfv. end neighbors

-lltDCHI't Addl.......

Plumbing

,_...

-Rooting

-Interior a l!xwior

•Siding
•Painting

NO JOI TOO SIALL
FIIEE ESTIMATES

CEDAR

coNmucnoN
992·6641 or
691-6164

IJ]!ru(J)

1!!1

12·11

Shop

.

CluoUledo

of Mllilt""

E. ROSCOE HOLLON
E. Roecoe Hollon,
98, of Chatter, Ohio,
died Seturdey, Mev
18. 1991 et Over·
brook Center In Mid·
dleport. following en
extended lllne11. He
w11 a youllg eohoal
teacher for e few yee11
and e retlrad fllrmer.
Born on March 4,
198S,InJaclcaonCoun·
ty, Welt VlrglrM, He
will the 1011 of the lrole
Je10111 end Mery c..to
Halon. SUNhllng - ~
1011 end rW11ht8r·lnlrow. Ed!Mri Mel Evolyn
Halon of Raclrw, Ohio;
e opeclrol dllught•·ln·
!row, Opal Hollon of
CheiW, Ohio; e dllugh·
ter·ln·lew. Vitglnle Hof.
lon of Columb!rL Ohio;
end e aon-ln-IIW, Arthur
lerr of MkUisport two

UPHOLSTDY
21 J·lo. Serllllll
lllrlrllepert
Hend Tufting
Cultom Drapes ·

,_.,,Ohio

AIR CONDmONERS • H£AT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOI MOilLE &amp;DOUII.EWIDE HOMES

... . ... .... ..... ... ..... .... ... ...
1614) 446-9416.,

'BISSELL
BUILDERS

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
IULLDOZEA and
.ACICHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
WATER end SEWEll
LINES

CUSTOM IIILT

HOMES &amp; GAIAGES
"At
Prices"
PH. 949·2101
....... 949-2160
Dor or Nitht

•-noble

TIUCKING AVAIWLE
fii,EE ESTIMATES

NO

992-7458
.

GROOM
ROOM
~·•• Grooming
For All ireeds

APPALACHIAN
WATER
HAULING
POOlS,

OHIO 41775·9626
614-742·29. .

pOIIIII'OYI

4·29 ·91 1 mo . od .

ACADIMIC
AWAIDS .
GOLf USSOIS
6 •oa
CUSTOM GOLf
CLUIS

•Remodeling and
Home Repaira
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

•ss

FULLY INSUII£0
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR

CONSTIUC110N
992·6641 or
691-6164 .

.........
...,....

IISSIU I 1..111

PIOFESSIONAl
SUNROOF ·
INSIAUAIION
Contact
STEVE WHITE

co•mucno1

eca•plete

......,1..

992-2269

tiS-4'473
"7·6179

' ' " llllliltea

992-6434

.Aft~~"~'"":.·

STIWAIT'·S
GUNS I SUPPLIES

...... '"' fiMI1tl,

Mr. Holon wee preolllflld In death by r-.llrst
wife, lhlrlll C.. Hal=
fan: mud wlff, hi
ICJmoa Halon; e ct.ugltNr, Opallerr; two 10111,
J - 0. enrl Dala•.
IIIII granclaon, . . _

742·2411
2111 MI. Hl'llt

- m.n..
llftll!!o!
..
...
Oii • •IY
• •Cltal
Wtttei
-~cr-

llwl

lipoiii,OH4

s.c.-..orr. .,.ltl
lOS N.

Streot
CillO

614·992·2...
-614-992-5692

. Ofllg

U..M

4

.

2 1M' . . . . . . . ...
SciN- wlh ........ 114-lltZ.
241Snlooler---.
•

Gil-.

I Kin- .To
-11,
Vlllolr, l White, 114417·7111.

•C..Wiponlel.tll
lllnd - y
...! Hell
.... l
1 Voor Old PM IUft "'!.~.

-~~.--,7-~­
.
._
lllnloluro
Cailla
1111.
, ... To
llooulillll
llook- Dog. , ... .......
=~
GoniiL ~

Chi-··'"
...
A - ........

,. . . ,

Puppr
To -=-~lo
.._ lllolhor
....Goad
Qo4.

don ltii-. 2
1141. ,,...

&amp;

.. Old.
..

Lost &amp; Found

l.ool: ""1811
IMimoiMI
on·end......
Leet ~fty:
Doia'l
- or porldng lot
lSI. I'M-101t.

7

Yll'dS.II

-----------Pomeroy,

Mlddllport
&amp; VICinity
ar.lf4111: 111-4 lalam Canler, liD orMHio • on rlfht 1fler
Ela:•••~hool

~·--

.........
on

124•.

JuMIIhru ??'I,_ ...........
·
fllllao. .
_
. lor
111. 1Mile ..rot
~~t~o~
...,ott
on
...... Rd. Woltoh lor otgno.

""'*...1«:=--u::n
=
........,. ........
llo 4 llmll, -

........ 1,1,11h.

-,;,'jjft

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

·I •

...... "' .........
e

Cauntv Ferm llurleu

IIIII e IIII!Mar ol 1118
M"'*'' 1111' I.U.I.
Churdl.

,.

·

Giveaway

.fntlnt

I

1041,-

•P.'JN• IIIII I·Yip
...... Arilllllo fiUih Drug.

NO SUIIIAY CAU.S

1-10.11-111.

e....-.~

..

ltodua. your wolghl-11.. "Now.

. ... t4t-tl01
" .... 949-2160

lutlaiiiiH llleW

.

~·

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM IIDINQ
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

..., •SilL 811111
OPEN
Tuotdtly lhru Seturdey
10:00 em•S:OO prn

3 AnnoullCIIMMI

~=doge to . . . . . ., ·~

IU1LIJID,

614-992-6820

Step&amp;c.......

1-12·10-tfn

1·1410·1171··J9j~J.

4-16-1&amp;-tln

CISTERNS, ETC.

Ow""' &amp; Operator

BILL SLACK
USED RAII.IOAI TIES

•

SUNDAY CALLS

1,625 GAl.-135-$45 .
.lt. 1, ... 71·1

EMiliE MERINAR

Sip...
JOHN T. TIAFOID

•FIREWOOD

and Merthl Clonch of
Pomeroy. Ohio; 11
grendchlldren,
34
OrNt • grendchldren,
14 great-greet·grend·
children. end e number of otep-grendehlland
nverel
dren
niece• end neph-I.

brollw.
Mr. Halon -

INitllfffllf.

. ., ....1-tfft

.,_.,bonne Marrllon

Dlelll, IIIII -

_,_

11·14-'90 Hn

614·992·2321

•LIGHT HAULING

1/22/tln

....... .o. Saffllfll Scheel ...... It. 141

992·6215

lepair, Trophl•,

SHRUB I TID
111M and
IIMOYAL

742-2321

BENNETT'S ~:::o'

V. C. YOUNG Ill

36 \" eare IExperlenH

Wa loy Whet We Do.
WeDoWhetWoloy.
10-lt-1 ...

flEE ESTIMATES

•20 YMrt Experience
_.Quality Ho111111 and
Cuatom Remodeling

MOilLE HO.

CPIIIE ESTIMATES)

•R emoclellng end
Home Rapalra
•Roofing

· PLUG IN ...

Halon.

CAIPENltl SEIVKE

4-28·11· 1 - ·

for their ldnrm., glfta
and P•r••· Spealrol
lhankl to R1111. rc.tt.rine Riley. May Ood
blea •ch 111d llllfltY
one of you.
Me Starcher

to Great
Buy•...

-IUTOIS-S 110 .,
·-1$---$115.,
·fiEIZIIS-$1U ., · '

YOUNG'S "
-ounerwortt
-1.ond
-con.... won

ROOFING

AID EVEIYTHIIG UNDDIIATII

1111'S APPLIAI!ICE

4-5-11-1 ...

J&amp;L

ltiMII

•ciOWAVI
OVIIIIPAII

949-2161

1tc

Admini1trator

\
,'

IRIUI.... Ctl

17 Mi•c•Uanwu s
18 W~led To Do •

773 Mtaon

949 R1clne
742 RuU.-.d

Pomeroy Vlllogo Council
Brandl Morrlo.
Clork/Tr..ouror
till 3. 10. 2tc

.•

67&amp; Pt.

Mobiht Hom.. for Sill w

14 lus•n•s Trein11l9
t!i Schools • 1nstructMJO
16 Ritdio, TV • CIAttP~ut

~bson Co . WV
' ANa Code :104

Mutdl.port

"Aopholt Bid".
All bldo mu11 include
t•mo of pey,.nt.
The VIU... Council rllarvH the right to roja~ ony
ond oil bide.
John A. Anderoon.

~

7:30P.M. NIGHTLY

•

992

Galllpoll$
Ch•IWe
Vinton
Rio Grande
GupnDist.
Ar•bi• Dial.

capt the tuccoulul bidder.
Hlo' chock or bond will .,.
held untl the contract or bid
lo properly uocuted try him .
Tho outolde of the ooelod bid

..

t

446
317
388
246
266
643

envelope ahould be merked

''
•

•

Code.,,.

be returned et once to all ex-

'•'

•

Are~

Thne checko or bond• will

I•

•

Me•gs County

cured.

:

i•

' I

GaMia County
Aru Code 61"'

Homd tor Safe

32

35 loll &amp; Acrel'jle
36 Real E.tate Wented

11 · Helo Went.d
13

31

3. ausin•• Butldtngs

.... .,., ....
LoJI '"d Found.
Yatd S .. e.lpa•d in advancet
Public SMe. Auction
WIAt_. to Buv

12 Situ•tion W.nted

followifll{ t l'lr•tlhrinr• I'XI'IIRIIKf'·~ ~ ..

occeptod. a contract or bid
will be ·ent•ecl Into and ho
performance properly oe·

Aho, IHIIENDILLS
Minionns to Papua New Guinea)

I

( :/ns.~ifir•tl fiRKr•s r·m•r•r t'lu•

penlod by • bond or cerlfied

•
•
1

(llsslonarles to Tal•an (a.,ltllc of China)

•..

5
6
1
8
9

F MIL ).J.JI,il~~s
c. lill.,luLk

33 F-•ms f01 Sah

4 Give.,av

:,1'VII~::l

chock In the oum of 5 per·
'c ent of their bid to the oetio·
fll~lon of VlllagoCounctl.eo
o guorentv !hot If the bid io

'
·•

..

PIIUt WBCL~S!_!2!_S!NO!!!II~H!1SI!!C~O!!•!,.__..,;M!I!!II!K~·~O!!tl!!l!.,,I!I!II!DJ

1 C~tdotTh..-.b
2 lnM.-mor,
3 Annouc.m . .ts

tllljlll,ll'liil

NrM, and mult be .ccom-

JUNE 5-9

' Prehomecorning services will be

.30
.42
.60
.06/ dov

•.

oompenv lnt•Hiecl In

VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH
ANNUAL MISSION CONFERENCE

·~ ·

$6.00

Rain ~o tOJ c:on•culwe run a. broken wp diYS wltl be Charged
IOJ •Kh· d~ •• separate ad$ .

full name of every person or

two weeks to receive the card once
Social Security receives the neces·
sary information from !he Stile.
Another way to get a Social
Security aumber for your newborn
is 10 call, write or visit any Social
Security office. We can send yoa
the application and you send it
back with an original copy of !he
child's birth certificate llld a docu·
ment showing identity. You will
also need tn provi* evidence of
your own Ideality. You should
receive a Social Security card in
about two weeks froni the dile the
application is subniitted. We'll
send the original birtb certificate
and identity ilooumenta back to
you.
If an organization wants to
charge you ror a Social Security
product or service, remember thai
your taxes have already paid for
our avicei. The Athens oflice is
located II 221 1/2 N. Columbus
Road and the phone number Is 592-

(304) 675-1244
·-

ow,. 1 fi Wordo
.
.20

$13.DO
$1 .30/ day

•••ri-d

•'

"WE NAVE NEARINS AID$"
.,.

10
Monthly

Rate
$4.00

$9.00

olgnoted by .Village Council.
All meterltlo ond equipmont ere to meet Ohio Oepertmont of Hlghweyo ope·
clllcotlono.
·
AMbldnroto.,.bytheton
In ploco end tho price per ton
oholl lnclu.dtl ell naceoNry
aloonlng. 8paclflcetlono of
!hoot-• to
oro
on lila In the office of tho Vlllego Admlnl11rotor, VII loge
of Pomeooy.
Eoch bid muot contain the

PLEASANT VAUR HOSPITAL

Spelllll' Siena, Mattie Holler Lawreaee, Rltll Karr Sellen aad
BettJ WllloD Burba. Back row: Claar._ Wolfe, Paal Payater,
Ralph Nelalcr. Carrol Norril ud Tommy Beeale.

6

V8rioUI

'

EAR, NOSE &amp; THIOAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

3

PUBLIC NOTICE
Soolod bldo will be recolvld In the offlaa of 1ho
Cloft, P0-1'0\' Municipal
Building, 320 Ea11 Moln
ltroat, ""'-ov·
Ohio
417111 un~H 12 o'clock
noon. Monday. June 17,
1181 for the following propoNI. .
900 tona more or 1111, of
Spec. 404 oophllt concrete
lnltlllled . with tooltcoot on

•'

4448.

1

Public Notice

••lot

· JOHN A.· WADE, M.D., Inc:.

• 50-YE.ut REUNION - nt RMIM-IolltHn H=Sc:bool
Clala of 1941 celebi ided Ita !Odl retmlaD naatJ:r, Atte
wwe:
;(l·r) l'roat, Mlldrtd MGrrls Swift, M.-, M. SW. Relllla
Mary
~Wolfe Ord, Marda A. Cordi Weill, Adelle Wolfe Norrll, Ruth

YBrd Sillt.':!o

•A class•fu!d alhlutll5t111lOnl ploac•:d

The best way to get a social security
number for your newborn infant
By Ed Peters011
Social Security Manager
lnAtheas

RATES
Words
15
15
15
15
15

D1y5

'Scnt1nt~

l.n Nh.:moJtam

--

• The Area's ,Number 1 Marketplace

'? ·poun lintliYPU only u$tld

rs not responsible tm ttrrors afhn lirst d.,- , IChii!C:k
, lor errun first dll'f ad runs"' papor • . Ci!lll bt~~lore 2: .00 p.tn .
dil¥' •hot p1ibh c ationto tnilkttcurractlon
'Ads. jthal muSt be patd rn advanCil afl :
H"PPV Ads
C1ud ol lhanil s

.,

••

�·: Peo•

a The Dally Sentinel

7

Yn&amp;ale

..' ,

June3,1991

SN.U'Ue ., Bavce Belittle

Television
Viewing

,,

,.
••

Pomeroy, .
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

.·

MQN., JUNE 3

•

.fH!M' · tv~ "1· 1: ,.,,

.34

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and AYo., Oolllpollo. CioN lo

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a1·
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.

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VICinity

:::.,::-:,:"';~u~nd~~~~.~..~~;:.""-:::..,:-.,:-._~ ,11

=-~-=xi!? Hond T~~

llrurdo, 71, :a, 41, I TIMkO,
a 11••· IIIIo - ·

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Adw-. DUDUHI: 2:00 p.m.
lho., ilolonl lho M lo 10 run.
~ .,.,.,. • 2:00 p.m.
lltndlv MINion • 2:00
p,ftl. hl!irlMJ. '
·
fll Yn. ltlt: !londoY, :lrcl,
:fllitdly, 41h)l=nMdoy 5th.
1:10.1/1 ,.._
•
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111o o..ndl ....,,., 1 • - 011
III.UI On Pint I t - In Rio
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v.loMt Wllth 'or llln•· Don't
lloo Thlo Onol
·
C!trllfl ltlt: 411 IUrntllt Rotd,
Kon4ilp. 10:00.,:00, ~uno I,
4th. 'umrturt, car ..... unona,
1
'"""' - !.. 41h. 7 111 Milot Corntr
111'
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; Itt ,

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·

44f·7117.

11o0tnt lor rant·- or month, ·
llorllnslll1201mo. Ollllt Ho4tl,
114 41J HIO.
. ·

73 Vanl &amp; 4 WD'I

&amp;o,

Wllnled to Buy

'HI, Coil! ...,.. ,., mort't. .;.....
.• , • .......... jlttltol - - . Onl~

. -. ..., .... '!r!· Old dtlil,

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114 '-'"'"'"""' In Alllono
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..., ···~. ,·. - "·' ··- -·
Potlllon Watkins Wllh
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lond Rlxptil..,..
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p,p,
213, Otll;!.'::
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2 Yoor Old.
tnd .....,_ o: lao Clo 077.
a1o Oolllpollt O.IIY Trlbu,.. IH
Third Avt..., O.lllpollo, 011
411:11.
Now lllrlng • - C.OnHiort,
l14-tl2 11140
· • '
.
.
PAIIT·TIIIE OfFICI POtlnON •
In P-"f, Cllnorol onloo ol&lt;lllo
n...., lnalud~:fdJpl"' '"~
book~pl
·
tor 1hlo
lob.
er nparlonce htlpo
lui. llu bo , ,..,...Ute lllld
tht ollltKy 10 htndiltmtt1 _ , . woll.
,.,:, ::,.,;:, ;~ ~.!!r~
Pomor"".
-,
Tourlo111 D1rta1or Oppollunhy:
Enlhuolttllc , Crulivo Wllh o.ood 1t'trbll And Wrl"on
lklll1, Who llotlt 'lllo Publlo
WoiL loaholoro
Wllh

•
'"'loll""

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=

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Will bulkl ,.UO _.,.,
roomo, ""' up
tldlna
..
a"'. trol~. illl~ln,.
241 -

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lftl I

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,.. lnlatmi!IIOft lend A lliAII
To MAO lulk M-o, P.O: ...
1733• PorltiWOUih, 01141111. ·

=~=·ndl1~o~""Nta!~'::.~ ~~~~·"-=~v.~=L~!•:

,,... 114,000. Doodllno For AP'
pllclllon Juno 20, lnlarvlowo
Juno :17-H. A-mo· To&lt;
CL.A 011no/o Oo
. 11""'1• · Dtlll
r·~
,...
..-J.~ 411
I mlrd Avtnut, '01
11
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T..... llftlll DIAICTOR: IMklng ·
lnlh-loyJ:'IIvt Poroon
:::. ~ Millo ~ ~~'/:~
Wtll, lto-,e lllttltt Willi
lookground In TOII!IIm Public
Rtltlfono. lolory
lo · 114,000, DoHIIno •• _,.
pllllllono June
lntervlowo
Juno ;rr.a, IIHurn&lt;! To:
Cit O'lt, o/o OolllfiOIIo Oollr.
Trlbuno~~l Thlrll Avtnuo, Ot •
Qpatlo,
41t:l1.
W.rwMI: boorloncotl ltrvloo
Paroon
For
Commtroltl
Rtlrtatrollon, HMIIng I Air
Condlllonl,. ~pply rn Ptroon

··"'
VEND.

"" "'

.,.

~;• ~:,'![! t:.'r'"l'~:~:

22

LOANI IY IIAI~

~:.:.r.:.o,::~=~~=~-:.
1400 411 '1112T II.H lot.

=

r.... ~
cr.'~ ~~~ ~~'.\1:
Ohio.
.; • ':..U.. .....,.. homel.
t1cWAHTID: Ptrl~lmt Uctntod
" •. 441o0!71.
"""'!" WoniM lo bur, ltondlng llmllor, Prtollool NurH (20 hroiwk) lor
IWO -llnllf ·~:~
W~h IIY
ontol
.. . .... - - • lono ..,..,.. lor 1441.
diHIIIIIIIoo In Ollllo ,
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ttoH
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mttllng;
or
11
Olhorwltf
WII!IIM To Buy: Junk Allloo
Currwnt . LPN
wllh • wllhoiA Col oohodulld.
L'-U, (lnl,rim Ptnn- Aootoo
Ltriy Uvtly. 114411-120t.
loblol,
OOPHIIINAPNUIO.
llole ...rd ,,....._, lrol;:::.~
vllld drlnl'o IJH- ond
driYI!I(I · roootd, good oom•
munlolllon lnd Ofllnlullon
oklllo, punoluol, ond" oble io
" PI~ ol 1 IMI!I required;
worlll'!t 101111 ptr•
wllh montol rtlordotlori
ond llovtlo"'""""'l dluiiiiiiiH
proiCI!'red. '"""' ...00/hour, 10
11111. lto!d to Ctolllo
lokor1 .~.o. lox 104, Jaakoon,
I 111ploylllt'ill S:•rVICP', OH
-40. Doollllnt lOt IP'
Plloonlt:, lllltl. l~ual Oppor·
lunh~ llllpiOytr.

·

71

~iiti lfOril ,_, U

Pliny, ft I
ronc 1 ._.'
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01r~--kJrii~~~"'k
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Lot41 •
..4,000• •
h liontt -

*·

1
1/IAoro Lol, Oroon Ch.JSor411rP1n-lt~-.CA

Dlltriot C'-' nt r.n. 1
11oop11lr. 14I,OOO. IM-4-.
alit Houtt 120,000 lloln llrttl,
e-n Cft~ r:.noM Yri 114441..211, f
. ·1111. '
4br, 1 112

·=

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.0_1l'"ow"'nl1.1tl.._~ ho~ Cf.11Ctooo
-.
11
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Prilod To lllf14-+llo'/12J,
,lolwoMio Aroo, . -oy. I
IIO!Y ~. KMIll.,_ l Clr-'l-. 1 ~
Ao
~ ...
· ,., I14-+41-21H.
In Oily: lbr, 4 bol.hli
Aoorn, '•ntlly lloorn
Roorn Wllh Plfktl
Cllrqa I . Conw
foll'lh • ltott. CioN
1!4-44f.Pii """
7p.m.
Nowly louiM 4 bod-m homt,
..
ono ..,., o y wII"!r...."""' qutil .,
lOr PHA,IOI
" Nl I.,,

•-ltnGt

lc-•·

BUll niSI
Tnllnlng

Rolroln

Homll for Sale

3 bodroom homt loi Nit, :1110
lloodoiObrook Dr, Pl. Pft, 104fll.all7.
3 Ill ho- on 11. Rt: 110 wo~h
1""100 ~-11 e•• ••• • 1
:Jii:eooi. "" ~·-~ or
3

....

14

31

Nowlltlouthoolltm

~~~Fr~~~,

32 Mobile Hom••
for Sill

~aglolortllon
~··
17 MIICellaneoUI

JOI TIIAINIIICI
~.lolllone
Ill oootp!od IIY
Licill
Union
No.
117.
..
~ •.•!!lll:!..nf•~·-tthlllvllolonl
- I plhrll
Trtlnlng
Cooti!IIIIO. July
July 1t, 11tl, ~·' lhry
, ...., 1:00AM::.:-· Will
Vlralri'- Job II
o OHioo, 114
flllh An, Hunllnlon,:, WV lOr
lliOirtool Appronllcoonlp Troln-

,.,.

1110 14xl0 21R, 2 llolho, 11'1'
11¥1111-, DOIIItnl oondMIOn,
whh -!1!11! cloak, \lndlrllno
~ I biociko lnoluded. tl+
1111.
1ITO Mobile , _ lOr Nil,
12110. 1 112 llolho..a btdroomt,

N,IOO. ~"'·

a

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N--·

\t.llollohon

ot ilolao - I l l 441·1111,
Volonno odllhlon. 'Tho vouN ond 11-'lt DH
1,.. hoo,._ lnak!dtd. ·JD4. ;:'"":;;,;:;::.•
771ofQ!,
. tltnl111 RooM Huloll, CUnto
· ·
Clblriill, IIOnd T - , I Olhor
10 ft. Lot 'ronil"' Ohio At. 7. fumNwol can a. Ai: 111
aoo
1'1. 11,000. Livtl. 114-211· Llnooln Pike, In Ctn!ontiY.
1110·
.
OOOO · UIID . APPLIANCII
Lolt H low u H,IOO. IYIIIoblt Wt-, .,.,., ..............
In ll•dowhlll lubdlvltlo~ 2.1 ro..-. IUIIIII ANI'o-nr,
miiH ... londhlll "Old, U - 11- Ita. ...ldo ltono
RIITAICTED IUILDIIICI, Croolllo4el. ceq 114 141 ,_,
lllo4IOO. .
L.AYNE'II'URNITURE
• - 1'011 •·LE
· · 1 ~....,.
n -lllpollo Compltlo , _ furnltl!lnaf,
forry. Will 1001111 11ol~~; oily Hollro: - . . , .... 114o446wolor onlilblo. Phono -.f711. 0122, 3 mlloo out luloYIIIe Rd.
2722.
,,.. Dtllnry.
Ont ••,. bulldlna lolt, nur
I~ lor Y- olns._.,t, 104~r:t,::'i
•
100.
241+111.
ror II'·
~: Rl Ytl ~~
-·~ propor1y 1n
PICKIHII'URNfTURI

=~·ultl.:.~ir.~

1111 oa o1 ono ~ or
_ ......
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=.:.-=

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k~-·- ~ Pl.
-•w-·
0111 ~-.

Building

w:r,:;

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......

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....... - - . - IIIII.
• J011 II AI.AIIIIA,II~·. lnlry
l.oNol. 1100.011 • • Corio
_....,
Clnnorloo~
CALL
,_.,..
1!11•.

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=

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.

=

·-2300.

.

1117
• euto., lW/elr,
120111; 11113 Clnller, 11110.,
11400. 114411-12'70.
.

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cam,.,._,

1,.
...........

,...

...... Will 2 ,_,.
_......
good

OYI!!~bll,

=

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IHiolone~.
All
1111 lkyllnt 14x71 I llod-ml, ,umlthOd
Ulliftill Pold. l,..r• lith, ·
2 llolhti, ~,._ .. lll- tiM/IIIo.
.,, . . _ A•tnuo,
14:11.
llloo PoUIO'o Dty Coro Conltr.
.. ,., aftonlabla, ·chllcleare. ,..., a .,,_,. .,..,er 12.000.
. ....... 5:30 p,m. ~ ~10.
leloro,me.after
- U24.
· Drop-lito
WilDa
IM 4.
NN 1ft.
l t i i i - C - -W22T.
lu~~~m~r Tutortna,
cenffled

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2004.

gndt f ..,
.

1-

llolwtll In .., .....
anru.... llod..., - . Will

-

ovolltlllt. Cllll'l444f.l'llll.

... •• 1401.

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oilonl~ hoN

rtfiiiMJII,~f2.

11)1-:r.hl
c:- Q
0
JV'II'Q

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Chow

"

.

0 SCIIeCrow and M,., King
7:05(1) Till Jeffe-1
7:30Cll,O Jeoparctyl Q

,,. j

,

•

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

.

I I I I I I I ll

FORI

.

N ht Court Q
• 1..-1nm.n1
Tonight Steroo.

Cil

~·

NORTH
1-1-11
+K2
.K108U

BRIDGE '

(1)'11 .,_a'o F""'lly
l1J) Whee
. . I of F-ne Q
II)
M"A"$"H
ill Be a Star Stereo.
· . IZJ Col!eie laoellall World
, Series from Ontaha. Ne~.
' (game 8) (L.) '
IB CloetliN
7:35 Cll. 119!1 Newhall
1:00 Cll G 0 Frelll }'IInce of
hi Alt cartton liilroduces
Wiil to his friends allhe prop

.•...
,.

12 ft . tlumlnton John boll . wllh

'

=::~'::~";."' -

~

'

14 1'1. 1lumlnurn llthlna - .
....., I lrolor. E1otllonf oondl·
llon.114416-1014.

:r

~, t_

'ell.IJTWANT
"JO /CNOW,

school. ~R) Stereo. Q

W/10 1&gt;0 X
'I LAMf'?

'

-

(J) MejOr L111111• lleoollaH

.

.

Olldand Alhlelies at Chlc8go
.
While So1 (LI
(J) Gieat e,, actllliGtrl
Cll Cfl SurviVal 11Mc181o Q
(I) G MacQyvet MacGyvor
linds himsell ieddlod wllh a
wagon load ol all)oroua ·

1111 11ft. ltyt~r capit Fono
Ill II', OulboitrdJ.....oUit, lklo,
lull~n AIIWII .. _
eon..,.

~~r.aoo·

women. (Rl Stereo. Q

_.,...,.r-•.

""~llEvening SliiiCM
([!) • ~IE: ·w-il $trelt'

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

loti • ....,"' 21 Pontoon,
aqul"" lor bolh boollns •

=~:

FOX Nlgld lithe M!Wiel (R)

'"

(2:30)

''

0 IIINuty encllhe ...., Q
8:06 Cll MOVIl: THI Pllol (2:30)
1:20 (J) • 0 liD110m lilloseom
d,_m, ol mailing Nlck'a

76

Auto Partll
Acct110rle1
1171 Oldl Cililol ......... lOr
pa~o. v.a..,_~l ....., 1100, now
Ntlolor .... Coli 30W71-11227
- I p.m.

..

girtlriend diHpplllll'. (R)

Staroo. Q

,.__,.

OJ) 0 · ·Majolr Dllll Polly is
hired aa a new odilor al the ·
Marine·baM newspaper. (R)
Stereo. Q .
18 On Stage Stereo,
9:00 (2) G 0 MOVIE: 'Faloe
Witnete' NBC Monday Night
II ltle MoYI.. (2:00) Stereo.

~

S.10. 414, lltzer.

ltock tnd 811- Wllh Rtd ll~p.
Ifill. :a.ooo Millo. Loodod wrth
Opllono .lnolutlna TohOe Pool&lt;·
lhOIO_,. ttrdllon. U.
111000. Cll 11W4t-1'231

. ~7371fter I p.m.
·
,.., Pontloo luNtlrtl LE, I ood,

~. AI&amp;'FII ...... c....a.,
Cloth lnltrlor, 1:S.700 Ill toil. 114o
t41 ••• ••-.. 4p.m.
.
-lno z.a~,. 11,100 or 0.1.0.,
1111 Under .........,, 114-24111177.

camptre&amp;

Iii2)' ABCIllMiniHfleo
;Baby M (Pt 2 ol
(2:00)
(I)

Motor Hom••
17112 ft lonnor Troller, olttpo 1,
""'l' . - oondldon IIIUtt Itt
lo tppreclalo. 11100. 814-11121144.
1m Alrolrotir! 11~, olr, ownlna,
..,000. 114-3,-2310,
1m o1mper 27 ft, ~ cond
tic, TV 1nfanno~- llrtt, ttil
oonltlnod, :104.ati44U.
iiTl' florol KtoiOn ....,...,~,..
~ ...._

•• 1710: 3

sr~reo .

·Cll

+a

...

.

PHILLIP
ALDER .

IAtEMENT

WATE~PIIOOFIIICI

Unoondhlontl llltlltno gu•ro"'
loo. Loool ,.,.,._ lumloltod.
,,.. 114111111•. can oo11ooi 1·
11442T-04111, doy or nlghl.
~OQOM ltHOitnt Wolerproo11... •
.
Curtlo " - lmprovomtrwtJ
Yotro Elporilnoo On Oldtr I
-er Hornto. Roorn AddMiono,
Foundlllon Work, · Rooll!!l;
Wlndowt I lldlntl. FIN Ej,
Umot•l lleltronooo, No Job To
Ill Or tmolll 114'441oGII21.
I a ATREI tERVIC£: TOIII&gt;Ing,
Trllnmlntl, Trtt llomoYtl, HOcleo
'Trllnmlnii. ,,.. ltllmoiool lf4o

BARNEY

,,
.•,

HE'S OFF ON

WHAR'S DOC
PRITCHART,
NUSS?

A FISHIN' CALL

-·OFF ON A

'

eALLtl
'

,..,.TIIr.

rwpolr; 20 ., tKp. 114-1414041.
JIT
Mrtllon lloloro, ropal...,, Now

~~.

Plumbing 6
Hilling
Clrtor'o Plumbing
lllldHIIII"'
F-hondPTno
Oolllpollt, Ohio

.,......

Electrical 6
Refrigeration
....._... er - - 1
lllrlna. or
llollii U-ud -rlolon.
- r, llta1rloo~ 304-t71·
1711.
.

84

·7~

••

• 52
• AJ 10

.J7 65

Vulnerable: Neit~er
Dealer: West

By Phillip Alder

South
· West
Norlb Eas1 '
One of the bridge world's most fam , .
1•
1•
I+ .
Pass
ous ligures. Charles Goren, dhld on 2 NT:
Pass 3 +
April 3 at the age of 90.
· .
3 NT
Dbl.
Pass · ·Pass
Pass
He might never have become a RedbL
Pass Pass
'
·bridge authority if it hadn't bee.n for a.JI
Open, ing· lead: • J
hostess who laughed at his bad play
. ,
when he was a faw student at McGill
'
University. ile resolved · that she . . .
. ..
wouldn't laugh agaiq.
bertson's honor-trick approach.
In 1933 he became a syndicated
Sitting East in today's deal, Gored
bridge columnist, and in 1937 he won worked out the right defense. West's
his first national title, the Board·a· bidding was lt'lld. but at least he found
Match Teams. Eventilally he amassed the best lead ~ the jack of hear~ cov·
30 national titles and was a· runner-up ered by the king and ace. Goren reo
21 times. And eight times (a record) he . tumed the seven·of diamonds, declar•
received the McKenney Trophy for er finessing the 10. West led his ~ond
· the most masterpoints collected in a heart, the nine. When Soutlf ealllMI fo~
year. In 1950 he was part of the vic· dummy's three. Goren saw the n\led to
torlous American team in the inaugu· lead diamonds a second time. He.ovel'
ral World Team Championship for the took the nine with his queen, 'even · I
Bermuda Bowl.
·
···· though this established three ·heart ·
But arguably Gorep's best move winners in the dummy, and fire&lt;!' back
was to adopt the point-count method his second diamond. Declarer ;tould
of hand eyaluation proposed by Milton cash only eight tricks .(four seades,
Work. Goren realized this was much three .heart$ a11d one diamond] anc
easier to comprehend than Ely Ctil· went one down.

·

(!) lillnl·Oragone·Taiwan

The World
ACROSS

Puzzle.
Anawer to Prevlo&amp;a Puule

39 Prong

'

Far~ow ·

8 Shot hOI8oln·
one
12 Tlllter
13 Attention·
soiling
eoun~

14 - colada
15 Cooking lat
18 Aclor Kruger
17 High echool

dtlnct

18 Eyte (ol.)
20 lnftnlla
22 Bullllll
playerMel24 c.~ or
smrntlllon
25 Groped
clumolly
29 Abigail Van
33 Greek letter
3o4 Jacob'• twin
36 Futkllout
11110
37 DloUnctlvt all

42 Tht ones
here
44 Scurry
46 Openlngo
48 Doclllne
49 Ltver

aupport

53 'Holy lntag ..
57 Jal58 Skirt part
60 Repuflgcin
party,
famlllarl~

81 Moon
goddtll

82 Shadee ·
83 La111ent
64 Film Cllllc
Poulne-

2 Metal
fllltntr
3 Cltnrt lrull
4 Dltclplo
""''
85 Okll.
Ancient
Ita~
tanflllllly
7 Unlnllng
B&amp;how

65 Blbllcll

88 Cnnor
(prel.)
·-~·

.

DOWN
1 Rum and ·
woter

NeWIWJIIch

9M_,.n,

"
•••

'

,,

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
\

'

:0

hePIJ .. IIDtm,IWt.., biiiiCtMawedt...
(AMI- :D-Iept.l2) II V'IU IIIOW a Cllly, ptO'IIUd you ..................

~to

cooperate today, people .
wllh
you'"
!lllnvoMid will do llle
.r-4,1811
- · Thllll • good llartlng polnl lot
•. H you're alerl tn1 onl•prltlng In lhe P'llllftt Ill a*1'-"'1.
· ~ ahead, you'll hawi an uca111n1 LIIIIIA ,.._ D-Oat. 1111 1n onter to
• chance at ftndlng a - l d IOUrceofln· grlllfy ~- . . . today, 11'1 ltnc:ome thai wiH blend c:ompetlbly with porlanl ltlat you get lr.whedln .,.,..
thing you --.n to be contrucllve and
your ~· mode Of-...
Cllfl!lll (Mar 11...-. II) A dllllcult -lhiflolle. Work ntUII have ¥81ue.
objeell...... be . . . . . . today, but ICQNTM) (Ottl. l!Me9. Ill Generally
you may l'llllciMIIM otller•lle ..,., not - - " " · ltiii'II!Oulll be a rm~~tr eniOYIIIIe day
you. 8orMitlln(l you
put'folth lhe lflatltiiOl I IIJ to out wlalmloul. You'H 11.- until tllellaM rn11M- you _,.lcatl,· ~-~~ "Y· ~ Wbln to IOOIC fvr ro- . 11 not llklly to 111111u.t HNif.

*

In I p I tdtnt. -

OGIIIIIioll t.llh In

yGKawnCI!II~IIIIIIe.

_
...
n·=·
awn

se ..........,.. cu
~==tareo. Q

1B llpolta Tllllif!l

52~

by I'Ood·

54 Ewtt glallt
IS Part of , .
IPIICh
58 Ba~ac:uda

11:35(J)C....,_Q
12:00 (I). Into the Nlghl
II) • Pllly Machine Wl!h

:-=~lllaer
ill Nalhvllle Now

..
0

I=::::~

(2).

580tdlpuf,-

.
loaat Q

h¥ld LenwuB IR
(J) MOVIE: Out . . . . llarM
(1:11111
l1J) Pllty Machlnl Willi Nil

0.

' 0 M C F

Ma

0 NIIIIA.RKint AC Dolcl)
Atltntl (FI)

_

......

·

!'WI'B

0 M ZF I

T F

..

..".

T F

T L U I N. L. J I ,

PDJFH

.

Soullltm Natlonlll 110m

,_

DHOG

ULH

CDJNLJI . '

H8ill Capy

1:to(l)ePaUurQ

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by,._..

WHIFJPBDDI

~·:t.. of Love
·ColwiNIIon
tt:al (i) a...,. c..-•011

-

CelebritY Clphef Ct'fPtogtftmt . . crMted ffOm Q\10\Miont
pr~C)Ptt. p,lli and ~1, T
Elld'l )elterln ttle Ciphll' ltllndi!OI' lnOf"*· r-,•t ~X ..,.W G.

11:81 (i) lllgli.ll
12:30
0 1.111 ..... Will

...,_~

... 'llillh - o1 , - lrllndl tfiOUIIIn'l
lllect your h •"" 11111:•.

SOn

5111iftollan
lood IIIII
5 t Narrow f:Gtino

=

lAid . . . . Ill Milke your

l!lday ~lng
10 • , . . may illeol. The lact
lllllllllllldllldllll . . .,gallklng

NklhUine Q

aJ Alterilo Hllll .

AIIG (MRII I1-APrll ttl Your per·
capllot• CI!UIII prO¥IIIe you with .,..,..
lllle MllilmtiiDR tod4IY IIIIICift't belleriVed tllrGutllt • INI cIll 01 lotlk=al
r11Unlftg. fo bl IU.:CIIItul, lhCJu9h ~

.

38
40 Slntplott
43 Be wrong
&lt;&amp;5 2100, Ro111111
'47 Anything
-+-+~ 411 Actor Peter

11:30(1)8 aJ Tonlghl8how
Stereo.
(J) Men Underco(!) l!..,..,..n ,..._,
(J) D

·
21

c:.';rte~dly

0 Scarecrow and M,., King

Con·

11
11

a:

27 Additional
28 Plalfol'lll
30 Cut of 111eal
31 81 .... Adlmo •
32 Come CIOII
35 Hookllle

IZJ la-11 Tonight

IA81TTAIIUe (*¥. 23411c. ~11

9
10

appreciMion
GIOIIf fabriC
Ad1111
grind ton
Blocke up
Dltolderly
crowd
Beglnnl.a g
ooclallte
Trial
College
group •

21 No

OMiemiVIce

dlliOIII are ~ly tavora'* today.
and you ohould teke advantage of tllese
trends. lie aura lo finalize 10 your saiiS·
tac:ilon any projeCt~ you bagln . ·
CAI'IIICOIIII (Dwc. 22-Jtrl, 1SI You
could ...., a -lily of acllvllllt 10 koop
you hiiiPY IOihly. Don'l be olrald 10 tllke
.on MVCI!'IIIIIIiiJn!Mnla, becaUM thia ill
one of 111ote r•e limes when mora Is
beller.
AQUAIIIUI (..... 20 Peb. 111 YoU&lt; pol·
olb1Ht181 lor pertonal gain lOOk ntoro on·
couraglng today than IIley may lOOk IO·
morrow. Don'lletlve any looee lhreods
dangNng eo you can trip oV« lhomlaler.
PilCH ( , . • " .uh 201 Wllal you

••

23
25

ill On Stage

· mance and you'll lind il. The AstroGraph Matchmaker lnetanlly revuls
which signa ara romantically perfect lor
you. Mall $2 plus a long, eell· ad·
dressed, stamped envelOpe 10 Matchmaker, clo •lhls newopaper , P.O. Box
91428, CIIMiand, OH 44101 ·3-428 .
CAliCO (.lunlt 21........, 221 Hyou don't
pracllc8 what you preach today. otllers
won't be Interested In your phliOIQphy
or auggeatlons. It's lhe example lhal
really counte.
lEO (.lilly 21-Aug. D) II IMIIIOOV81 you
to be ntoney· and/or comrnorclatly.
minded today: !here's a pooolblll1y you
could turn a prolll from a source otM&lt;
titan your _,., one. K- your .,_

.~

41 Acllete

1 Antelope
4 High Cl!dS

([!). Aroento Hall

'

I r..buln rnoiOf'lln lltock, RON

EVANt, JACKSON, OH. 1 137oll21.
Ron'o TV ltrvloo, -ltllllng
In Z'onllh olio oorviOing . HouH
..... _.._
_ 01111,.... wv
:104-a'IW... Ohio 114-411-2414. .
lepllo Tonk Pu...,.ng 110~011111
Cl. IVANIINTIIIPHIII8, ·
Jtokton, 0111. . .,.,....,
IIMII
-·Voo
lorYioe,
tea.., Crwek Ad. P••, eupollot. lll!&gt;kup, """ delivery. 114-

.AQ76

112)• 0 Newa
(!)

, ... plck.up Llwn mower •

.J9

Charles Goren,
Mr. Bridge

=

HtJUSI

,,

EAST

+lo87ns ··

SOUTH
+AQH

cheating on her. Stereo. Q
9WorldNewa
·
0 700 Club Willi Pll
Robellton
10:30i!D) (!2)(11 Clippart A
long-established barber shop
in a formerly elegant hotel is
the scene where employees
and customers shire tllelr
daily experiences lhrO'!!!h
revelry . !0:30! S1ereo. &amp;;I
II). M A'S H
.
at Crook and Chate
Major L.eague a.ebell'o
Grealell Hill (0:30)
10:35 Cll MOVIE: MacArtllur tPG)
(2:301
11:00 (I) • (J) (J) (I) • l1J)

Home
tmprovementt

WEST
+9
.KQH432
.A 32

idiscovers
t!2l Ill Q~ S~ Gayle
her boyfriend is

Serv1ces

82

C

+KQI098

laces a trans~ion toward
dentocralizaJion, Stereo. Q
OJ) Q21e Mutphy lltowli
Murphy inlervi-s a
comediah known lor his
sexist humor. (AI Stereo. Q
0 WWF Prime Tillie
Wrnlllng
at NaohYIIIe Now
IB Larry King LIYel
0 Beauty and lhl Baeol Q
9:30 l1J) 1121111 Deelgning wJulia becomes obsessed with
jogging. (R) Stereo. Q
·
10:00 m (!) Power In 1111 Pacific
Mer WWII, America aids
. Japan ·s economic recovery .

''•'"
.,

'"

81

.

0 Murder, She Wrcile
18 On Stage Stereo.
Uti P'oiiMNewa

For ltlo Or TrMio,
Look ft Ovtr, IItke Ut A 0..11
114-44f.4101, 114-:m.:rliiO.

79

.

:N!

Alpine .,. Noted - Valor- Remedy - I'M LATE
• 1need a new sweat suit.' announced the coed. • If
· 1wear my other cloths to jog In, peOple won't knoW I'm
exet'l:lsing, they'll just think I'M lATE:•

(J)

.'
..
&gt;h

3

SCIAM·LETS ANSWEIS

.

..

IZJ SportaCenter
IBM_,...

· 1144llo
• .,._
Hondo -.ng· 114-112·

_1,...

Wll Do Cllnonl ........nl....
.... ,., How. Glllllpollo Arti

:w::rc~ Affair Q

R=--z:::

.

-

Polled Htrolonl
luJio, 12o11 montho. Porfor·

..... . .·

,

e:.T'croor., ',;' p,;

(J) (I) llnllde ldlllon Q
(!) (!) ecNeii/Lihre•

=-

.....lllored

::mi:J' t!., Dtoltr."tri

·

·. ..

e

...... - ·
171-11A "'I7I4M7.
. -~
Utod •
,,._
41 HOUHiforRtnt
Dolun . Trollorl..
. ,..., Utod
loll , I Chtlr, l1i.10 Wtok' Wollll. ~-11 111 · · - 1 - 1111, ' il.atlt
•ook Wllh Took
Houu In ...lllllul Country 8tf. Rtollner1 11.4T WMk, lwlvll
-·•
1111 12ft
11"1•t14~1 HOI.
AO.ktr, U .U WHk.lllnk lid IN.o211.
1 t10o11 Wlln Dlvldtr,
C0nt"'"'oi H .41 W•• 4. Dr-r AKC 11-'-'erM llolo •-lith t17N OWntr Will ~ 114Pomoroy.l bdrlll Ptrtloll'l.::·
,....,
"'
1 II ..:!'"'Pu
-·-,."
"'""':~.r=:,~.riD
011111,
WUk; - e r ..... ~·" ...,.,
""'' """'· .. ..
, . ft
.
. . ,...uh'od. r=:d::":o.f.rr.t.Cu":ry
=~ .~;o:~;r"· W&lt;lnttod, 85 SMell Fartllzar
Collofttl IPII Dlnollt ,Whh lenoh I 4 Cholro,
•
l14-fll:l
SIG.If Wook.OPIH : llondty ::;...~~;::,.,
a,tot ••. AOI)IIio: Hou- • Aplt. llldo Thru lo1urd?o!.m, .lo lp.m~ lullo Qpon Cool IIIW a,..;
dltpo~.PO-.IJtw
HtYon. tundo&amp;12
Till lp.m.
Cloud ~ and 011111 •
~ 1100 - 1110 ·1114'112-7ll1.
RoUit 7 On Routo 141• Lint In Tho Unllid llot•l 1141ranspo rt .JIIOn
42 Mobile Homes
In Clnltnory.
....,...
IWAIN
fOr Rent
AUCTION a FURNITUfiE, 12 !lot ond Cll ,,.._l~lll
··
011vo11., Gtllpollo, New a uud .....,.{, opoolotlzld In
1e
1br Troller, '"~· Dtpoolll lurnM.,., htoltrt, W401tm • ='~ f'O ••.,.,._,,
Rlltr""* ..... ulrtd, No Poll. Work - .. 1-:1100.
2br Trtllor, llfltolonoy Apo~· Tobie • 1 ohtlrw (.,o:,nJ_;"h
llllftl. 114-441-4111.
IMIIoh:
Coli
114
12,
a ~ lllmlthM 1,.1111, on!lllmt.
d - • roau~-~ ·•lilt'- 1
VI'AA ,URNITURI
11 ,'3J~~
1201.
UVINO
I Chtlr,
alionbod....,,
1'!0'1 oiltn condlo SIH.OOL Rtollnorl l14t.DI!i
no~1·~1 .,;.... u-von lwinl "ockor, IN.vl!; Cot!M •
'"
""wEnd Ttbl•; lft,OO oot.DINIIICI
At • .,,
.a4llonyllmo.
AOOII: Tolilo . Wllh 4 Poddod
21&gt;r Mobile Homt, In Por1tr Chllro, 1141.00..
• Counlry Pint
Arot, You Poy All UIIIHIII end Dlntttt Wl1h • tnah And 3 Klllono til.., Partlln llolhlr
Dtpooh. f14-MI-tll2.
ChtlroH Ult.OD; llolohl,'l 2 ltlho,. ~, I wkt, llllor lrolnod. !l
llonttrt Tumod DOwn, Open leDoot·,rDthkc!!,.,.•lo~;-Ori215Nh.ool - 4 ....... 11,00410.00 IO
Now .
b11
llv • •••
W
good only. 114-112 1402
1
00
1AOOII
(lloop lryl"').
.
H~
::~~':"'Loo~tlon
~='e
00
IED
-Chtlltdro,
.
, .,.. . ,
:
•
Clttn, PriYolt Lol, 141 C - ,..m IUht (I po)1 1:141.00; 4
·ory Jumbo. Con-lontly Drowor ~. "4,f!; •.lunk
~IN, Proltr No Chlldron, Nc IN, 1221· Com,...lo rt~~l lloU
Polo All...d, 114-441-0130.
!-!, .1101.6o Ill; 7 po, Cldor
II)Uto,
Mobllt Homto,., Rtnl, phoilo ... _,. luht, Hti.OO.OPIN:
II4-44WIOI or 44f..IH1,
Mond'Y 'lllru lelurdoy, lt.jll. 10 Rot Ttrrlor PupDIIO "" loll;
lp.m., IU-y · 12 Noon TNI
11100. Doyt
AKC ftol Torrlei ' - • · 1 Yur 1::1\)PII, 0111
-ly ,.,odtild omtll 2 bod· fp.m., 4 1111• 011 lloutt 7 On Old.l144
...1111.
room trollti on 11 OOIN In 'Routt 141 In Conlonory.
1m Ford Plollt, olondonl,
Prlllo l'wk, 1 mlltl loot ol At. VI•= fl- Cover~: IS.H a
l!odr' lnd •nslnt . - oondl·
u 'on Colburn Rtf, proltr olnglt ••
k 11 aha A.
lion. Aoldng 1410. _.oblo.
or _,... 10 koop prd oi)d .... 1"4 11 01111144
•
" -r·
:104-alloiOII or 1Tio'lll11:
troller oiltn, con ovonlnso 11-. poto.ll -44f.
·
112_.'113.
1810 410 II 11-oil. Good
53
Antique•
'""d., 1,3,000 mi., 111,000.
Mullcal
44 Apa· !'lmtnt
L.oldtll. l ...- 5.
.
liuy at ot11: Rlvtrino Anllquoo, S1
lntllrumente
1124
1.
l!oln
llrool,
Pomtroy.
1110 ford Plnlo, Runt Oood,
for Rent
Houro: II.T.W. 10:00 1.111. 10 1:00
Oood Condhlon. Oooll Work
p.m,.!undty
1
:00
10
I
:!JI)
p,fll,
Cor. 1400. 114··.,.1144.
1br APII~IIItnt, Downllolrt.
llovo a ll•lfllt•llor '•mlrhN, 114·1fi·2521.
1ttl VolttfoUOO llllto. WhMe,
114.......1140,
RM lnltr r l,oodod, Ooroao
54
Mltcellaneou1
Ktpl, l14,too. 114-31f.l1114,
1br A,!. I#M Ullllloo. Woter ond
lnnlnso or WHkondt.
Merchandlee
Tro.th I'~ ~0 Plut Dopooll,
'" m 1....
Frultl 6
11H C:hovolte Saoolor, 1700..
10ft. lloth 11111114 Dlth; 10x10 118
304·77M011. .
abr pa!llti'Y lum-. 101 112 Wood OulbuJidlns on · lkldt.
Vegetables
looOnd AvtNII. UIINIIoo, Dot!. l14-21f.f011.
12101Jno, No poro. ~~
Dun,.., ''"" Ptlm: Jutl on
ol71.
121 Cull Cldtl L.O "'"""'' llllh Ill
... ol Alllony ll4ofll.
onow
bltdt,
.-IIKy
lroll~r. 7.A ...............
WI-71'11. ,....,
4 _,. IPOrtmtnl In lloolno, oil lltuoor'rllil. *"71oii1S.
~~- . ptlttlng, 0111 ,.,. 114lnd · honalne
.........
ll'ull ......
Alfiltfi
IIIN111 ovonll)ll a ........,. 2Tx4 ft. obon , ... nd r - ,..
pool.
Utod
I
moo.
11
yoor
,..,..
'JIINIII.
Nnty, tolar oover, winter oovtr.
Enrythlng lncllldN. lnlltiiOd IIOUNT'I ORIINHOUII. V2
lor.. lrMitd cloak, 12,100.•,... Illite up ... Olin Rd. • R.II. In lldwoll. 11WIIo
441.0311, 114-441.f114.
Ql4.8woo4 ,....,_, 14.00 Ono
:10" Oo""'l Elta1rlc Oot Ror::; Hund""; I Typoo T-101!, .71
Conte DOuri, 1-111no oo.oo
Elta1ronlc Pllol. Purchttod
Fobruory '11, Ex-nl Cond~ fill, Ptlunlet 11.00 Dolon, or 1IH Arlot K. 114-311 1512.
tloil, IIOvlng ond Cinno4 lltt, ~.00
l'ltL Olhor Pltnlt 1tll Dodoo Llnoor Tulbo voc.
duaadl
13.10.
1350; . lll.,_o,. T-,
1401 olloil14-t12.f200.
Sound Do~n Coblno4 11
ltii&amp;LII
rtw:
C..llnlrl
1111
Trwno Am, ... 000 'mllto, T·
Sltrto, 01111111, ..Trlok, , _, Opon llondoy 'IIIII!
lopo, olr, PW, Orlf...l Ownor,
A.ll./f.ll. Rtdlo, 1100. 1-1W· lolurlloy. N ;
0711.
·
· -.. Condftlori, ....... ....
..~.
To~lor'll
441o0177
Patc~tc;:i Rold,UII
,
.1... ChillY Clnlilr, 4dr, Air,
•••••errte.: Plak Your Own. PI, PI, A,OOO llllto. lo,11B.
0
Door, Llkt Now;.• -Coli Cltudo Wlntoro, 114·24f.
......
011 Hlefere For Nltunl Gee. uaa•.
11M Dodoo Orn!ll, 1.1 Lhtr1
'"
11WII-11113.
.
ll011dord ,.,.nornlotlon, oCondlllon I lllloott. 2nd
Cort-4m.
F." m S11prl11 '•
1... Dodat CoiL IIOIIItnt
" , I'..'~"·'Ot k
Condition. 11,100. -..wm.
, ... N~o., .IIIII~ RIOO;
C
.
O u o l o .
..
. .
.
. .
.
..

(1) 1 0...... o1 Jeannie

otll Ptl"" ...,P.
Umoulln 14 Kaw-kl OPZ 'lito. 114-lft.
htlltro. .
..110.
.
7711.
-~~ft. Oaa11notk Horto tnd . '::11:.,:10.,:-HD=."'UIII&lt;::-1:::CI,-oA~Ia"',l1"'1:":,100=·.,
~.
llock Trollor 12.011: 14 ft. - . 0.1.0., Loto Thtn 3,000 lllili,
And llock T....r Wllh Dr-lna IIIII llnd8f Worron1r; 1111 HD,
RoomJ. I2.JO!Ij Lolo 01 N110 I .1ut1 RooiOrlcl t1444H877.
IIMd TOOk. 1...211-1122...
Chi• ., month• cld. 75 Boatl &amp; Motore .
t14-:117·lllllf.
for Sale

supplies

lfTTERS

Ill •

HI;:,. DoYioon,

Kaw-

~Or;;;..,;,.;~,;;nd~~~~~·=;~;t,:,ttii,h;;op~Ptl.

:1!~::..~~:_

=
-.

e

tho
tho

by

t...

111 o•ceeNeweQ

-=:-=,..-,.,...,-...,-..,..~

=1171· ,
..
_
000 .....

Professor to class: ·A
master can tell yotJ what is
eKJIIIC!ed of you, but a
. ~-~~~r. awakens your own ·

L....t..
....... -.L-....L.:-...1.1.-...1

Andy Gllllllll
8:35 Ill Andy Qrlffttll
7:00
·o WhMI o f F -

U,_ln -

55

WHtfAmtrlca

of.

.f-. J!..·

. THASUI

3-2·1 c -

I]])

u1 p..1.0 M
I.
1 ·16

:::·::::·:::::·=::·::_..:.,
ehue~lo quotod
I · ~? . I ·. I' I. 19 1O Coritploto
liillng In
mluing words
you develop from sttp No. below.
8 PRINT NUMBfRED I'
~·

8
~ ===~

,,

n. .

ler4-.

.300. 114- tJ00 Firm. 114-211-mt.

Ioree!.

• ~·
"'• 58 p_.
f S I
. . . Or a I

RINT 2 OWN

1117 Knoookl. KZ-710

. 5 ·.

8:30~~ GNIC"*"•Q

,, '...

TIN.
-:-::--==-::"""!=~~I
Livestock
--::;-;-;:;;;-::.=~=--;;;-==
1114 XL·1001!, CIGacr Condllon,
,.,.

· OOur"-Q
8:06(J) Blwltclled

11411
4
• Alllir p;m., tl4 Ill.IOU.
74 Motorcy
' Clll

- h1-. Coll.11+182...
. . .., .

'I

· 8 World Tocr.y.

OF Tl-11: REO SEA ...

~
. ~~~~~~
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5TUDV TI-lE PARtiNG

...•III!.'!J. ~· oo-1' 21,000
mllot, _..,_, ·
1811 ~ Ctro•on Ll. Fully
aqulppod, '"'1lonl .-~on,

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.......... t1,100.1-.11M. ·

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PIMUnt

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"""'"•112,100
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lion Nlild .. ....-. IQ4.fllo '"
' HOUHhold
54 Mltcell&amp;niOUI
e1 Farm Equipment
121!-_ Jolin D. Gtlttoh; no
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1.o1o o1 n1o1 11!111trftJ1Y olollltt, l:i~
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IHO'TIC"
OHIO VALLEY PUIU8HIIICI CO.
rooom"'"ndo lhel yau do buillnou wllh ....,... you know, ond
NOT 10 otild money throuon lhl
moll unlll YO!i hoYt lnv401TgiiM
lhl offorlng. ·
lit Wlnnttr 1 Whh Vondlna'o
top roduetrt I#M lnvott HIGh
Ct Allum. ........ 101111·
4441
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Arthur'• Chlln Link l'onot.
llooldtnlhll, Cornmorolol, In·
dwllrlol, ~100 lollmotnl Com·
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Aller -.,ce, !hal which AidOUI Huxloy.
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10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs community calendar
ponation call 698-3411 or 742- em Star will honor past matrons
2138.
- and patrons on Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. Officers are to wear chapter
POMEROY • The Eagles Class dlesles.
of the Asbury United Methodist
dar.
MIDDLEPORT - Past Matrons
&lt;llurcb will have a bake sale Mon·
day beginning 81 9 a.m. 81 KIOgers of Evangeline Chapter No. 172,
Order of the Eastern Srar, Middle- ·
in Pomeroy.
MONDAY
port, will meet Tuesday .at ~:30
POMEROY ·The Meigs Local
SYRACUSE - The Sutton p.m. at the borne of Besste King.
Band Booslen will meet at 7 p.m.- Township Trustees will meet Mon· Others.boMlses will be Sue Starr,
Monday at the liand room in the day at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Kathryn MitcheD and Jen Chesher.
high school. Parents are urged to Municipal Building.
Meat, drinks, rollS and table service
aamd.
will be provided. Other members
MIDDLEPORT - Bible School are to bring a potluck dish.
COLlJMBIA ToWNSHIP - The at the Heath United Methodist
Board of Trustees of Columbia Church will -be held Monday
Township will meet Monday at through Friday from 9:30-11:45
WEDNESDAY
7:30p.m. at the fire station.
a.m. daily. Classes will be provided
MIDDLEPORT - There will be
for nursery lbrough the sixth grade. a mop doD or mini mop doD class
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- The public is invited.
at the Middleport Arts Council on
port Garden Club will meet MonWednsday. Classes are available at
day at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
RunAND • Prehomecoming 10 am. or 7 p.m. Call Michele GarMrs. Arthur Skillla. 'The program, Sl'.fVices will be held at the Rutland retson, instructor, at 742-2157 or
"Nature's Way for Pest Control," Community Church on New Lima register.
will be given by Mrs. David Road Monday, Tuesday, Thursday
Bowen.
and Friday at 1 p.m.
REE.DSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet
LETART ·The Letart Township
TUESDAY
Wednes!lay 111 7:30 p.m. al the
· Trustees will meet Monday at 7
RIPLEY, W.VA.· The River Reedsville fli'Chouse. ·
p.m. 81 the office building in Letart. Valley Herbalists will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home of Juanira
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
CARPENTER - Five day ses· Comad in Ripley, W.Va.
Township Truste~s will meet
sion of bible school at Mt. Union
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the townBaptist Chmth will begin Mondiy.
ship
building in Pageville.
POMEROY • The Pomeroy
ClaSies at 9 a.m. daily. For lniDS- &lt;llaiJI« No.
Older of the East·
Com•anlty Caleadar lte•s
appear two daJSIIefore a neat
aad tile clay ol t11at neat. Items
recdftd wdlla · to aaure pubkaticlllln tile caJea.

••l!e

ANDERSON'S

FURNITURE

JUNE
FURNITURE

LIVING .ROOM SUITE
SALE SOFA

SUPER

AS
LOW
AS

$:499

BERKLINE
RECLINER
SALESALE PRICES
STARTING AT

$239

Arbaugh.
.
.
Erma Cleland, chairman of the
Good of Order Committee, had the

color bearers escort the chaner
members and their escorts to the
front of the COIJIICil room. AJl were
seated and thele were three-lighted
candles on the alrar.
Elizabeth Hayes was escorted
by her daughter, Esther Smith, who
read a poeni, "Dear Friend," and
presented her mother With a charter
member pin. Zelda Weber was
escorted by her sister-in-law, Doris

.

c~.

AJl members joined hands and
sang, "Bless Be Tie That Binds."
JoAnn Baum made the cake for
the anniversary. It had a small red
school house oo it with an American flag inside, a large American
flag and a small bible also accented

Roses,
dahlias
topics
of
Rutland
club
meeting
The Rutland Garden Club met
recently at lhe home of Dorothy
Woodard.
. Mrs. ;~oodard's devotions
tncluded Memorial Da( and "A
Day of Tender Memones." Roll
call was answered with "Have You
Seen a Bluebird." The collect and
creed were given in unison.
A report was made on planters
in the memorial park. Pearl Cana·
day, Margaret Belle Weber and
Pauline Aikins had cleaned the
weeda out and planted geraniums
and dusty miller.
It waa planned 10 tour Bob
Snowden'~ garden. ·
Tbc traveling prize furnished by
Neva Nicholson was won by Lynn
Benscholer. tdarRaret Parsons will
furnish the prize for the June meeting.
Pauline Aikins, Stella Atkins
and Marcia Denison furnished
flowers for the churches and other
orpnizations.

Dorothy Woodard had the
anangement of roses for die meet·
ing and Neva Nicholson won the
door prize.
For the program, Pearl Canaday
had an article on "Roses, A Oood
Start." She 8l8led lhat roses Ul!ll' t
the result of c:1re when blooms first
besin but the end product of consistent auenlion lbt besan even
· before plaoll werc in tile ground. A
dormant plaat doeln 'I have to be
J)llnled rilhtaway. It can be IIIOI'ed
lor a weel:: or more if tile rooa are
kept moist.
Neva Nicholson presented an
anlcJe on "Dahlias Win Bia in die
Fall." When autumn comes dahlias

bloom at !heir besL They are available in a range of heights fran onefoot miniatures to eye level heighiS.
· Dorothy Woodard presented an
article on the "Iris." She stated
their colors are mostly lavender
· ·
'

25" diag.

r ul111 1

•EX1l'a HNVV Grade

•12 Ft. Width oG~.

Brown. Gray •100% Olefin
Pile •3&amp; Month No-Fade
Warranty

REG. S9 .00 SQ. YD.

$2 S9

$6 9S~YD.
'

STORAGE CABINETS

Base Cabinets, Wardrobes, China
Cabinets and .Utility Cabinets.

.

.

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

:Nell Sl'U'MI.S
I 1

11 111

$119.00 ........ Sale $95.00
$169.00 ...... Sale $139.00
$209.00 .....-.Sale $169.00
$2 69.00 ...... Sale $219.00

'

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~

1' n•

MONDAY •Sauerkraut with Klelbatl, Com, Homefrles
TUESDAY· Uver &amp; Onions, Choice of Potato,
Soup &amp; Salad
WEDNESPAY: Stuffed Peppers, Choice of Potato,
Soup &amp;Salad
THURSPAY ·M•tloaf, Mashed Potato/Gravy,
·
Choice of Vegetable, Soup &amp; Salad
FRIDAY • Fish Dinner with Macaroni&amp; Cheese,
Soup • Salad .

="'T

s.69

a IBOW:~~~~:I:-:::~1~~

•Solid Alder and
Solid Oak

•Beautiful Fabrics
SALE PRICE FROM ONLY

$209

SemSsle
SemSsle
Sem$sle

scaled-down tall breaks and other inducements for
scrubbers.
.
. House Speaker Vern Riffe, D,Wheelersburg,
ordered the bill r~~written late last month, saying Ohio
could not aftord some tall breaks it then conrained,
such as crediiS for existing pollution abatement technology.
·
·
AEP spokesman Michael Mahoney said the bill is
being watched, along with some other unresolved
issues that may affect the decision thar AEP expects
to make in the next several months.
. •
The earlier AEP study was found lac:king May 1'1
because it isolated Gavin and did not include systemwide, long-range dara to document claims that
fuel-switching would cost less than scrubbers, the
PUCO said.
·
On Friday, AEP submitted an expanded study that

indicated fud-switching not only would be cheaper
at Gavin but also at 10 other generating units, based
on assumptions regatding federal rules that ·are not
yet adopted.
. The study said that stllrling in 1995 and continu- ·
ing for the next ~0 ~· the averag~ annual compli-.
· ance cost of swotchmg fuels at Gavm and the other
J&gt;lants would be $490 million.
II said the cost of scrubbers at Gavin would average $520 million, assuming the company would qualify for emission allowances that lhe act provides for
lhe use of scrubbers.
The emissions allowances could be sold or traded
to other plants.
AEP said it could see no evidence of a market for
the sale of aUowances in the act's Phase (, scheduled
to rake effect in 1995.
·

By BRIAN J, REED
da Morris, council approved writSeatlnel News Staff
ing off several ouiSIBnding checks.
Members of Pomeroy villaJJe The atnounts of the checks will be
Council voted to join the Ohto credited to their respecti~e
Muoicipal League's Workers Coot- accounts..
.
.
penaation Group Rating Plan when
C~uncil m.e'!lbers conbnued disthey met Monday night in regular cuss1on perwnmg 10 an abando~ed
session.
,
house on Ebeneezer Street wh1ch
The plao is estimated to save the · has .~n. declared a health .hazard.
village $6,510 in worker's compen- An mdiv1dual who was believed to
S~~lion costs per year. Such costs, .be a PJ'!l!Xrty owner ~ contacled
according to discussions held last regardmg the demohllo!' &lt;?f the
· night, have continued .to escalate in property, ~ut that person ind;i~
the past several years. Worker's that s~e did. not 0\!n lhe building.
Compensation cost the village The v~e IS now m !he process of .
$10000 last year and $16.000 this COf!IBCilllg _others beheved to bold
·
an mterest m the property.
'
year.
.
d
Upon the request of Police
Several otber ~~!~es. ~n
Chief Gerald Rought, council
schoo! boards have J01 sunllar
to check local outlets for
P~ man lllle!"pt to. reduce work·
on a window air conditioner Sccmpensa!"JJI claima.
for the Pomeroy Police
OD lhe.lllVM:e-oi:-W
h··A uartetS.-ACcord· '
iners who recently 11tc!ited the vii....,q
·
!age books and Village Clerk Bren-

BEDROOM
FURNITURE
25°/o.OFF

TURF SALE

1 Section, 10 P111111 211 O«&lt;ta ,
A MIIIII!Mclla Inc. "-'" P'l*

.Pomeroy Council to join workers
compensation group rating plan

OPEN STOCK

SALE MOAL .

· RESTAURANT

PUCO spokeswoman Sracie Gilg said Monday
lhat the PUCO will conduct hearings on American
Electric Power Co.'s report after determining the data
it requested last month, after lhe initial report, has
been provided.

Sq. Yd.

PORTABLE COLOR TV

yellow and white but hundreds of
exotic colors have been developed.
An iris thrives in about any climate. She srated not to plant them
in the middle of a prden.

SIBieS.

its Gavin plant in southeast Ohio or buy cleaner coa1
from other states to comply with the federal Clean
Air AcL
.
PUCO lacks authority to dicrate the decision, but
it can refuse to allow AEP to recover compliance
costs from ratepayers unless the ulili~y can sbow the
least expensive option was chosen.
The decision could be critical for Ohio's sagging
coal industry. A bill nearing a vote in the House
could provide economic and other incentives for the
use of scrubbers.
The House Public Utilities Committee was
expected to consider amendments and vote today on
a coal industry bill that apparent!)' ":ould provide

$
49
. SALE
5.

13" diag.
*Remote Control
*Great for Bedrooms,
Kitchens

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -The Public Ulilities Commission
of Ohio is reviewing a second study that says a utility
can best meet clean-air standards by switching from
Ohio's high-sulfur coal to cleaner coal .from other

I

CONSOLE COLOR TV
*Pecan or Pine Cabinet$
*Remote Control
•on-Screen Display •

'

AEP, which uses Ohio coal, must choose soon
whether to install poUution-conlf'Olling scrubbers a!

IN STOCK
PORCH .&amp; PATIO .

.

PUCO receives study; House panel votes

•16 Patterns
•12 Ft. W~
.•Easy Care Finish

*Stereo Sound
•on-Screen Remote
•super Set

I MASON FAMILY
11ondun I

CARPO
SALE
NOW
IN
PROGRESS

CONSOLE-COLOR TV

Somt.tliing (jooa's J11fways COQfjng JAtt

-1/0/HESJTU·:
.
.
U

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 4, 1991

VINYL
FLOOR
COVERING

27" dla•

Kathryn Baum was pianist for
the meelins.
Ice cream, cake and soft drinlcs
were served by the kitchen com·
miuee.
Attending were Mary 1o Bar·
rinser, Iva Powell, Octa Ward, ·
Bulah MaXey, Eva Robson, Marjorie Fetty, Betty YOIDIS, Kalhryll
Baum, ~~ Amberger, Esther
Smith, Ehzabeth Hayes, Mae
McPeek, JoAnn Baum, Betty
Roush, Faye KiJkhart, Lora Damewood, Op8I HoUon, Sandra White,
Ethel Orr, Ada Bissell, Goldie
Frederick. MaJy K. Holter, Bonnie
Landers, Pauline Ridenour, Zelda
Weber, Doris Koenig, Marcia
KeUcr, Thelma White, lean Frederick, lnzy Newell, Enna Cleland.

•

IN STOCK

SYLVANIA
TELEVISION
SALE!

D of A charter members honored
iL

PageS

c uolgh...S1M1

1-r, Elizabeth lfl)'ell, Zelda Weber ad Ada DisseD. Not present were Ada Morris aad Ethel
Arbaup. In tile back IIJ'OUDd Is JoAim Baum,
councllor of the Chester Couadl No. 323.

C~ar tonighl. Low in

mid-50s. Wednesday,
sunny. High in 70s.

VoL 42, No. 21

QUI ENT•r SIQCI OF WHIIiPOOL
AND lOPER APPU&amp;IIQS IS ON SALE ·

Koenig, who read a poem,
"Because This is a Special Day.H
Ada BiSsell was escorted by her
sister, Mae McPeek, who read a
poem, "May the Sunshine Warm
HerHeart.H
Beuy Roush, on behalf of the
council, presented the charter
members with a gift. Erma Cleland
presented them with Daughters of
America keychains.
Elii:abcth Hayes presented the
cooncil with five handmade ritual

Pick 3:912
Pick4: 0091
Cards : A·H, 7-C
· 8-D; 5-S

CHAIR

Electrk
Dryer .................... Sale $289.00
30" Almond
Gas lange •••••••••••• Sale $289.00
Large Capacity
Washer ................. Sale $339.00 '
14 cu. ft. Frost-Free
Refrigerator ......... Sale S5.1 9.00

The 57 Lodge Anniversary of
the Chester Council No. 323,
Daushters of America, was celebl'lled recently.
Charter members attending were
Zelda Weber, Elizabeth lflyes and
Ada Bissell. Other chaner members are Ada Morris and Ethel

Hearns wins
by decision in
12 rounds

SAVINGS!

and

. APPLIANCE SALE

CHARTER MEMBERS HONORED •
Three ellarter members atteadlnl the 57th
Loclp Almlvei'SIII')' (Jf the Chester CciuncU No.
323, Daughters ol Alllerlca, held rec:eutly, were

0 hio Lottery

OPEN HOUSE • RlbboD CuttlDg cere. mollles were held M...day at the ...., Beneficial
FiDa,llce headquarters at 196 East Secolld Street
In Pomeroy. Among the Beneficial representatives on balld ror the ribbon cuttlq aDd open
bouse were VIce President BiD Jones ~d Dis·

trk:t Manage~ Jim Price. The rlbboa was cut by
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler. The bulldlagls
owaed by .BID Childs, wbo wu represented at
the opeD bouse by Jolm Musser. Architect for
the project was PaDnlcb and Noel of Athens.
general &lt;;ontractor was Bului CoDStrudlon.

ing 10 Chief Rought, lhe unit now
in place is no longer operational.
Brief discussion was also held
on the possibility of installing central heating and air conditioning
throughout lhe villase offices, but
no action was IBkcn.
Council also:
• approved the mayor's report
for fmes coUected in the amount of
$2,911 for lhe month of May;
- discussed the need for weed
cutting at lhe former MG M Fami
City pro~y on West Main Street;
• approved a name change on a
liquor permit at 402 East Main
Street The permit will change from
Pearl's Exxon to P.M. Store, Inc. ·
Present were cooncil members
Betty Baronick. Bruce Reed, Bryan
Shank and Lany Wehrung;. Mayor
Richard Seyler and Clerk Brenda
.
,.........;......,:.,...,..,

Three•story
apartment
gutted by fire

· A three-story frame apartment
house on Spring Avenue, Pomeroy,
owned by Bill Young was gutted m
a lire early Monday evenin&amp;.
Rick Blaeunar, spokesman for
lhe Pomeroy Fire Department, said
that the ftre staned on the fnt floor
and ~uic:ily spread upwards. ·
· E1ghte·en Pomeroy firemen
resJ)OIIded to the call at 6:22 p.m.
to get things dorie," Voinovich
At the same lime, he endorsed wilh three pumpers, one rescue and
said at a news conference.
the continued. election of local two squads. Six emergency squad
. He distributed copies of letters school boanl members.
members were also on the scene.
being sent to school superinten"They do a good job. They're
Middleport and Syracuse were
. dents statewide urging support for close to the people," he said.
both called in to aSSISt With Midthe bUI introduced by Sen. Eugene
Waving his arms, slapping a dleport having one rescue squad
Watts, R-Columbus.
podium and raising his vo1ce on a and four men on the scene and
"I'm asking the citizens of Ohio couple of oecuions. the governor Syracuse, one vehicle apd four
10 write to their senators, write to strongly urged the Legislature lo squad members.
their representatives, and say, pass Wilts' bill.
II was reported that a 14-year'Give Voinovich the ball to cany.
His comments came one day old boy who lived in one of the
If he drops it, we'D throw him (lilt before the Ohio Department of three apartments in the building
and get somebody else,' " Education and other opponents of suffered minor burns to his foot
Voinovich said.
·
his proposal were to testify before
He said the current system lhe Senate Education, Retirement when he attempted to put out the
fut.C ont.onue
' d on page 3
effectively lies his hands in reform· · ~ Aging Committee.
ing education.
"I just want to get the ball in
my hand. And I don't have il, and I
want it. I want it desperately.... I
want to be known as the guy that
made a difference in education in
Ibis state;" Voinovich said.

Voinovich s(eps up campaign
to Joverhaul state school board
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich is stepping
up his campaign to replace the
elected State Board of Education
with one appointed by the governor, but he says voters should continue to choose local school boanls.
Voinovich returned 10 lhe SIBlehoose from a Aorida vacation to
deliver an unusually vigorous
defense Monday of a Senate bill
, that would implement his plan for
scrapping the current 21 -member
e!ected board.
.
It would be replace!\ by a nme-.
member panel appointed by him self and future governors.
"I believe Ohio should join lhe
other 33 states where the state
board members are &amp;J?POillted by
the governor. And I believe a state
board with fewer members will be
more accountable and more likely

Meigs schools qualify
for A.A&amp;SP funding

FIRE SCENE • Fire llarted OD tM
ol tiM WI threestory structare OD Spring Aveaue, Pomeroy, early Monday
eveol111 aad quickly lipread •pwarda. Tbe apartment bouse OWDed
by BDI Youag wu enJIU.Ifed wileD firemen arrived on tile sc:ene at
6:22p.m.

Study reveals Americans are
turned off by political process
=cs

By DON ROTHBERG
AP PoDtlcal Writer
WASHINGTON - Ameri-.
cans believe they've lost poli ucal power to lobbyists, PACs
.
Meigs County's three local ment ind accessing higher educa-' and the news media, aceordllll
school disuicts have qualified for lion, and to develop recommenda10 a study that also challenges
participation in the Appalachian tions for further research and possithe view that the electorate has
lost inltrest in the political proAccess and Success I'IOJect, funded ble demonstratioo pro_je(:ts.
cess.
One of the project activities is to
by the Ohio Board of Regents.
"They want to participate,
According to the Ohio Board of survey various segments of the
.
th ere IS
· no
Regents, the goal of the program is P?Pulalion of Appalachian Ohio to
b ut they be I1eve
to develop actions and plans for Identify barriers to achievement.
room for them in the politic!"
increasing lhe educational success Possible groups to be surveyed
process they now know,'' Slid
the study sJ)onsored by the Kctof residents of Ohio's Appalachian include teachers, counselors and
administrators, high school stu·
teringFoundalion.
c01011ies.
Made public today, the find· The projtct was prompted by a dents, parents and other adult resiin$s were based on opinions
concern that Appalachian residents dents. Another project activity wUI
votced during Interviews held
access higher e&lt;\Ucalion ala signifi· be to inventory existing programs
during the past 13 months in 10
canlly lower rate than do other and activities in schools and col·
Ohioans . Legislators, the Ohio leges, along with community , cities. The 10 focus groups of
Board of Regents and college groups, which enhance access for
about 12 people each were
administrators collaborated in students to higher education. ..
formed to mclude a cross section of age, race, income and
developing the projc;lc:t.
On a five-year average, 36 pereducllion.
The results of the project, cent of the graduates from the
according to the Ohio Board of Meigs Local District go on to pur·
The study, • 'Citizens and
Regents, could have a positive sue higher ed11calion. 63 percent of
Politics, A' View from Main
SIJ'eel America," fOUDd people
impact in the public school dis· Eastern Local's gtllduates go on to
"fruslllled and do-.: ..., ....,
tricll. since one of the objectives is ~f.e and 48 percent of Soothem
to develop actions and strategies
about the state of''th':'~unrni
's seniors go to higher educa,.f« inqJmv1nf edor~ acbieve- tion. .

political system."
People said they felt "P,ushed
out:' of the process by • lobbyists, ~lilical aclioo committees,
spec1al interest orfanizations
and the media.~· s a result
''citizens do not believe they
can make a difference in polities."
Many citizens questioned
why they bother voting and others S81'd they have sto~. At
the same time, they d1sputed
suggestions they were indifferenL
"It's not that people no
longer have a sense of civic
duty," said a man In Seattle.
"But it's that they don't have a
senaeofpower."
"People do care very much,
but they Clll't 11ee how they can
do an~':!flabout changing
things, •
another.
The feeling of powateaness
does not extend to involvement
in local issues which people
described as community
involvement rather thaD polilica.
"Communlt lnvofvement

=~:~~£~=in

"When I think of politics, f
think 0 f w bin
he ..
as gton, not re,
said a woman in Dallas.
People faulted the news
media for spendi~ too much
·
tune on personal~ · lea and not
enough on issues.
"They say lhat we hear more
about leaders' personal lives,
:~: : :!~gh~ ~en::
major public challenge,' ' said
thereporL
"I want to hear more about
the issues, not mudslinging,"
said a Des Moines, Iowa,
woman.
Polilicians were described as
rcmoordinaryteandc.,,~~dtink. in what
.......,.
"People in a public meetin~
may be listening to each other,'
said a man in Des Moines. "But
it won't make any differeDce to
(public officials) silting at the
table. They still do what they
intended to do."

1

A Des Moines woman said
the only time politicians pay
attention to people's concerns
"is around election lime."
. People r-edly exnressed
~..'""'
the view that public off'lcials lis·
tened to lobbyists and special
interest groups.
"How powerful is my one
liute vote if a PAC gave my representative $300,000?" said a
woman from Des Mo'utes.
"Ev~ing is spec_!al_interests," Slid a man m Phlladelphia. .

·

The focus group interviews
were conducted in Richmond,
Va., Philadelphia, Des Moines,
Dallas, Los Angeles, Seatlle,
Memphis, Denver, Boston and
Indianapolis. They luted about
two hours each and WllfC led by
a trained modenllor.
The Memphis, Denver,
Boston and lndlanapolia seasions were eondocted after the
Persian Oulf War, but the llll1dy
said ''The- hadabaoliiiiiiJ 110
effect on their thinking about
liticl."
•

c

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