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Pomeroy llddllport - e'llpolla,
Ott Point P-.nt, WV

Volunteers assist with Raccoon Creek

Broslo11...

rro. 0-1

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Depanment plans to
. begin a $16 million program to
check on pesticides· in fresh tru'its
and vegetables.'
',
Agriculture Secretary Edward

_Ohio Lottery

Reds
sweep
Phillies

Pick 3:955
Pick 4: 3017
Cards: 10-H, 6-C
9-D; 4-H
Super Lotto:
2-4-6-22-34-43

Page4

Kicker:
619687

Madigaa said Wednelday that tbe
federal-state c~~ PIOf"81U
was developed wt!h the EDVIIOD·
menlal Protection Agency and the
FoOd and DrUg Administration Ia
detennme the needs of diose federal B~~C~~cies,

Low tonight in mid-60s.
Thesday, partly cloudy.
high in mid-80s.

•

'·

It
111uchto
,youhappy

eqw~.
· dT -sh"trts
Parbctpants recetve

Campanella. ..

ued

·Ag department to check on pesti cides ·

l

and certificates and prizes were
provided by McDonald's, Long
John Silver's, Kentucky Fried
Chicken, Captain D's Seafood and
ODNR-Division of Watercraft
Lunch was sponsored by
Krogers, Ohio Valley Foodland
and Reiners Bread and Pepsi Warehouse. Members of the American
Legion Vinaon Post 161 prepared
the lunch wbich was served at the
headquarters for the day in the historic Ewingaon Academy.
The workers collected trash
along the streambank and cleared
an area near the EwingiOn Bridge
to develop an area 10 put canoes
into the creek. Exposed tree
brlmchea were cut 10 belp prevent
debris building lip and causing log
jams. Another project is planned
for the fall.
This is the beginning of a five
year plan which . will eventually
reach the Ohio River.

c •'

erosion, BCSI Mlliaaemen! Prac- lmtion ~- These ideas~
tiCII (BMP) were developed IO be IIICd in small WOOd loll ami
combll alai problema.
'large logging operations. All log·
Low cOli Wiler diversion t.ech- ¥ers and woodland owners are
Diques sucb as waaer bars on log- mvited 10 attend this infonnative
ging roads, proper stteam cross- session.
ings, and broad-based dips will be . For. more information conaact
demoasuaaecl aad discussed on Cindy JenkiJis,Dislrict Forestec for
lduallogging'sites. Boah ROOd aad the Gallia SWCD office at 446bad examples will be uscdfor lllus- 8687.
•.

COIIIUnce S. Wblte
Galllll SWCD
GALLIPOLIS- Recently, four
volunteers assisted with the cleanup project in the Ewington and
Vinton area of Raccoon Creek
acouts, FFA and 4-H members,
North Gallia High School reachcn
Gallia County Bass Association
members, members of the ViniOn
Post 11 of the American Legion,
the Vinaon Fire Department and
Gallia County Lilla" Control.
.
The Raccoon Creek Improvement Committee would like to
expresS their tllanQ for all the support given, for the Gallia County
BMS standing by in case of an
emergency and Bob Evans Farms
Canoe livery for the use of their
.

June 18, 1lltl

ASSIST WITH IMPROVEMENT PRO·
JECT · Voluntee~s recently assisted wltb lbe

AMonth

Hill girls to exhibit cattle ·at1991
Eastern Regional Junior A!Jgus show
BIDWELL'. Sarah Lynn Hlil
and Neenah Kay Hill, Bidwell, will
exhibit Angus cattle at the 1991
Eastern Regional Junior Angus
Show at the Virginia State Pair·
grounds in Richmond, Virginia,
June 21-23. repons Richard Spad-

Coallaued from D-1
dent of AmeritrusL
Edward J. McKeon has been
8AJOillred chief executive office~:. in
addidon 10 his position as president
at Star Bank, N.A., Cleveland,
usuming the responsibilities of
Campanella. McKeon had been
Jftlldent and chief operating officer o the bank sinee April. 1991.
WASHINGTON (AP)- NutriPreviously he wu executive vice tionists have long advocated that
president and senior lending officer people eat leaner mest; but a recent
at Star Bank, Central Ohio in beef
industry survey shows that the
Columbus.
most po~ular grade is still
"choice, ' not the less fatty
"select/'
WASHINGTON (AP) - In
The study was conducted to
some places, the wheat plants sim- help cattlemen provide the kind of
ply drowned out. In other areas, mellt that packers say is most profmseca and diseases reduced yields, itable.
the AJriculture Department says.
It showed 67 percent of ~kers
The net result: shl!f}ily reduced asked
for low choice, wuh the
winter whca! yields this year.
other 33 percent
for high

er; executi~ vice president of the of369 htat aoeompeae forcllampi-Anleric:an Anpl Associalion. . ' O!IIblp honor$ belng awanlcd.

Sarah, a junior momber of the
Americ:ID Aqus Aaocialion with
heedqulrtenln SL Jo~eph, MisIOI!ri, is one of 160 young Angus
~ who have entered a lOW

Ncll"e'l; • junior lllllllber of the
American Angus Assoclllloa with
headquarters in St. Joseph, MisfiOIIIi, is oae of 160
Angus
llrceders who have en
a lOIII
of 369 head ro eomp ne for champioasllip hoaon bdDB awaaded:
,
. Clieryl Pulbnoii, Sand SJnw
Okllboma, will judge dlviBlia lot
bred-and-owned lieif!Jr~1 bulls
COW-calf pain, owned IICilenl and
.
chQice. No packer preferred select registered Angus ~teen.
orprimo.
The Neath :Jest Repm( Junior
Prime beef, the fattest grade and Angus Sbow is sjloniiDred b)' 'the ·
often most tender, is usually American ·Angus Associatimi and
reserved for restaurants. Select is the Virginia Junior Alqus AMociathe new ~ that nutritionists are tion. It is one of four regional
advocatmg as healthier on the junior Anps lhowa tbo nalional
heart
.
orpai'lalioa
year for
. Ronnie Green, assistant profes- its ~Y'f active .Juniar Angus
sor of beef cattle breeding and members in the Unilof Slllea. '
genetics at Texas Tee~ University,
· who conducted the survey, said the
findings don't mean there isn't a
market for select curs. ·

\\'tth wi: 1\..."&lt;il'k J&gt;L'W Al:rord Nlf thn:i:. tilt:r or live 1car.;;
l..ewJ: PIW.un. di; distincmc J9lJI
Pltto;, IW'II ha~ the. i,xion ru
Aaml LX c:11 mtkc 1a: 1\'1\'
ll:v :f til: end ol\mr lease. The
him: H.r ,~. litdt:. . . cffl.'fCndi SIXI!l. sl111'hilc it lllliV
In fal.t.aiiAL·uwd Oup:s, i'•:r- Ill! lllkc nllK:h to rrnkc: )lilt hap~
DuiiS ;ud \\~JR! &lt;:an 111M' he.
)llll don't have muc:h tirrc, cit'-.-r.
k,:a.11!d ;~cxm.m..t.· falllr..di: rJtt'S.
ONDA
Wth link: nr Ill tkM'n rxiyrrcm.

Y::J

...

Americans still like
their beef 'cho.ice'

Wheat yields down

.,

'19900*

Raccoon Creek cleanup project Ia the Ewlnaton
and Vinton areas. (S&amp;WCD photo)

m

'Pay-ni• bUild on eo monthl with
l at paymentlnCI MC:~~ty dtiPoalt of 1400.

Athf!n6

.or:••n-*

,,

HONDA

810 E. STATEST.- ATHE~S. OH -594-8555

.

WEEKEND

SPECIALS!
-JUST ARRIVED.

'

1991 GEO MDIO
Red, auto, air conditioning,
,AM-FM stereo

1991 GEO 4 DR.
Silver metallic, air,
auto. trans, AM-FM
stereo.

1991 CHEVOuT
CAVAL&amp; I.S. 2 DR.

•gg

'1

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White, air, auto. trans.,
AM-FM stereo. bo!IY color
styles wheels, extra aharp.

1991 CHEVROLET

LUMINA EURO
Red, air, auto., power
Wlndtt»WS, power door lOCkS,
AM-FM stereo 8t more.

Automatic, air, at1r10, rear wiper &amp; defroat, light
package, power at•rlng &amp;brlkes. 13281

1991 CHEVROLET
ROYALE "88"

4 Dr, power windows, power
door locke, AM-FM atreo
w/ca118tte, air. 80-40 ~eat.
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GENE

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CHEVROLET~LD$MOIULE•GEO

1616 -lTJBIUie UIIIJIOUS. 1614,441 M1J •1·1· 111 . . .
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"

Americans
continue to
flee .base ·in ·
Philippines
MANILA, Philippines (AP) thOusands of U.S. military dependents were leaving bases covered
with the ash of Mount Pinatubo
today, but Filipinos confronted
monumenlal chores that began with
securing clean drinking water.
Raymundo Punongbayan, director of the Philippine Institute of
Yulcanology and Seismology, said
the volcano was "simmering
down" after a week of violent
eruptions.
He said he might recommend
reducing the 25-mile danger zone
around the volcano but would wait
until an aerial inspection of the volcano. But he cautioned that
Pinatubo still remained a threat.
The Philippine Red Cross said
at least 101 people have been killed
RIVER SWEEP VOLUNTEERS - This
Englneen and the Division of Litter Prevention
since the 4.795-foot volcano began
volunteers
worked
along
the
riverbank
group
of
and Recycling. Pictured are Melba Eblin,
spewing ash, steam and super-heatin Pomeroy on ·Saturday as part of the Third
Kathryn Miller, Elizabeth MUler, Chris Wray,
ed rocks June 9 for 'the rust time in
Ohio
River
Sweep,
organized
by
tbe
Annual
Lilly 1'9well, Bruce Teaford and Angie Teaford.
(iOO years.
Over 200 people volunteered county-wide at
Most of the victims were killed . Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission
(ORSANCO),
in
cooperation
with
Environ,
other
sites In Middleport, Racine, Syracuse,
in a huge explosion Saturday that
Protection
Agencies,
the
U.S.
Corps
of
menial
Long Bottom and Forked Run State Park.
dumped ash as far as 375 miles
away. 'The damage was aggravated
by rains, and scores of buildings
collapsed in nearby towns and
cities.
At least 20 people were missing
' today. Relief efforts have been
complicated by impassable roads
.::,~r ~~~t ~~un~ed air'Toils&gt;ofbifsh"&amp;n;it detirls as ~11 ''sion of Litter Preveii1iolfali1iRecr-'~ area"' '·'·· · "
·Kenny Wiggins, direciOr of the
Defense Undersecretary Eduar- as several hundred bags of garbage cling.
do Ermita said food was in short were collected along 57 miles of
The sweep encompassed the Meigs County Litter Control Prosupply in the ·affected areas ani) the Ohio River on Saturday morn- entire length of the river from Pitts- · gram, stated the event was a real
water supplies had been polluted ing during the Third Annual Ohio burgh, Pa., to Cairo, Ill. which is a success and everything went like
cloclcwork.
by ash. Officials ordered Manila's River Sweep, organized by the total distance of 981 miles.
Participating in the sweep in
Among some of the unusual
fue department 10 lransport drink- . Ohio River Valley Water Sanitaing water to aowns hit hardest by tion Commission (ORSANCO), in Meigs County were 225 volunteers items collected were a parking
the volcano.
cooperation with Environmental who worked at sites in Middleport, meter in Pomeroy, a wallet and
In southwestern Japan, a vol- Protection Agencies, the U.S. Pomeroy, Syracuse, Racine, Long checkbook in Middleport, bed
cano that claimed at least 39 lives Corps of Engineers and the Divi- Bottom and the Forked Run State springs, tires and commodes.
earlier this month burst back to life
today, sending a torrent of hot
rocks down the mountainside and
spewing ash over a hot springs
resort. There were no reports of
" casualties from the latest blast of
Mount Unzen . .Volcanic experts
luive said the eruptions of the two
volcanoes are unrelated.
WASHINGTON (AP) - More month, or $358.80 a year, are being federal Health Care Financing
· The U.S. military began evacu- than 2 million poor, elderly Ameri- needlessly deducted from 2.2 mil- Adminislmtion, said some rmdings
ating all 20,000 dependents from cans are needlessly paying $29.90 a lion to 2.3 million Social Security in the Families USA report did not
the Philippines on Sunday. Many month for government health bene- checks.
seem reasonable, although the
had last week fled Clark Air Base, fits they're entitled to get for free,
These poor, elderly people also agency had not had a chance to
10 miles east of Pinatubo, for Subic an advocacy group said IOday.
may be needlessly paying $728 a evaluate iF in detail.
Bay naval base, about 25 miles
"The problem is that you dQn't year for Medicare deductibles and
"We think that we have, in fact,
south of the volcano.
get the benefit if you don't apply the rtrSt 20 percent of doctor bills. responded to the legislation in a
Chief Petty Officer Jerry Moore for it," said Ron Pollack, executive
reasonable way." she said. HCFA,
said.
said three ships- the U.S. cruisers director of Families USA Founda- theInfoundation
California, for example, 89 which oversees Medicare and Med.Long Beach and Lake Champlain tion. "The government has percent
of those who are eligible, icaid, has sent instructions to
and the frigate Gary - sailed from neglected 10 notify people of their or 225,000 people, aren't receiving regional offices about how to phase
Subic this afternoon. He said four new rights."
in the new sssistanee, she added.
the benefit, the foundation said.
others - the aircraft carrier AbraThe non-profit group said that
To be eligible for the Medicare
"We call upon Health and
ham Lincoln, the destroyer Meqill, under the congressional budget Human Services Secretary Louis buy-in, senior.citizens must have
the frigate Ingram and the oiler agreement a~ved last fall, older Sullivan 10 ensure that the elderly incomes below $6,620 a year and
Roanoke - were leaving tonight Americans bving below th.e pover- poor get the protection they less than $4,000 in assets. Couples
. with about 5,000 more dependents. ty level no longer are required to deserve from fast-rising, unafford- qualify with annual incomes below
pay out-of-pocket costs for Medi- able Medicare costs," Pollack said. $8 880 and less than $6,000 in
'
'
The Americans were sailing for care coverage.
Families USA is an advocacy assets.
Cebu, 350 miles to the south,
About 4.2 million senior citi- group that works on behalf of
The protection will be extended
where they will board flights to the zens qualify for the so-called Medi- senior citizens and their families.
to seniors with incomes up 10 110
United States.
·care buy-m, but more than half
Gail Wilensky, direciOr of the percent of po_veny in 1993 and 120
The weeklong eruptions have aren't receiving it, according 10 a
percent in 1995.
dumped IOns of ash on Clark and study by the foundation.
Subic and made it impossible to
Therefore, it said, monthly
use their airfields.
Medicare premiums of $29 .90 a

Meigs has 225 volunteers show
up for River Sweep project ·

Former Ohio resident killed
RAEFORD, N.C. (AP) .- A
Fort Bragg Special Forces captain
died Saturday after the. small
biplane that he worked on and flew ··
8s a hobby crashed near the HokeRaeford Airllort
.
The singie-engine plane Oown
by Capt. Judd Michael Herman,
formerly of Fosaoria, Ohio, stalled
shortly after takeoff. clipped a pine
tree, flipped and landed nose-rust
in a vegetable garden, about 75 feet
b,ebind a house.
Herman, 29, was rushed by
ambulance to Cape Fear Valley
Medical Center in Fayetteville. He
died in surgery at 3:35 p.m., a hospilal ~said.
Carol Campbell said she was
watching television when the plane
crashed in ber garden shortly
before noon.

"It sounded like a car hit the
boom!" Ms. Campbell
said. "I saw the tail Slicking out in
the garden. I said, 'Oh my Lord,'
called 911 and went back there."
The red-white-and-blue plane,
pine~-

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1 Section, 10 Peg" 25 cent•
A lluiUmedlo Inc. !'l•w•pap•"

Pomeroy-Middlepori;'"Ohlo, Monday, June 17, 1991

Poor, elderly paying some benefits
needlessly according to report ..

LS.I. 2 DR.

XE, 4 door, automatic, tih, power steering &amp; brakes.
tinted glass. power mirrors, 36 MPG. h482

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Vol. 42, No. 30
Copyrlghied 11W1

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called "Super Scamp," was still
intact, with its sheet-metal wings
bent and its propeller and wheels
partially imbedded in the ground.
Brendan Kluge, an Army specialist at Fort Bragg and a student
pilot at the airport, said he saw
Herman at the airport and
described him as "a meticulous
mechanic."
Tim Thacker, co-owner of the
Raeford Aviation Inc. parachuting
center at the airport, said Herman
bought the experimental, homemllde plane a year and a half ago. ·
He wolbd on it as a hobby and
flew it for the rtrSt time at the airpurl last Sunday, Thacker said.
Thacker said Herman a ticensed
commercial pilot, had been having
mechanical problems with !he
plane.
"I /"ust asked him yesterday
when could fly it,'· he.said, "I
saw it was pulling out some black
smoke, which indicates 10 me as a
mechanic that it was running rich.''

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OU senior from
Newark crowned
1991 Miss Ohio

MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) Margaret Renee Autherson tapdanced her way to the crown of
Miss Ohio at the Renaissance Th~­
ater.
The 21-year-old Ohio University senior was a double preliminary
winner. Judges awarded her highest
marks for talent on Friday night
when she performed her song and
dance rouune 10 Sammy Davis Jr.'s
"Fabulous Feet" from the movie
"Ta Dance Kid."
~n · Wednesday night, Ms.
Autherson won the swimsuit clivision in a red swimsuit designed by
former Miss America Cheryl Prewitt.
Ms. Autherson. of Newark,
wore the banner of Miss West Centtal Ohio Sarurday during the final
competitions. She said she has been
competing at the Miss Ohio preliminary contesrs since she was 17.
Ms. Authenon said she will take
a year off from her studies in
advertiSin~ management 10 fulfill
her obligauons as Miss Ohio.
· ~

Baker heads
to Germany
today for talks
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State James Baker heads for

Gemtany IOday for discussions on
the shape of a European continent
newly united by the fall of communism.
The cornerstone of Baker's trip
is the rust annual meeting of foreign ministers from the 34-nation
Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe. The or~anization
includes European countnes, Canada and the United States.
Baker is scheduled to meet with
Soviet Foreign Minister Alexander
Bessmertnykh later in the week to
try and resolve differences over a
treaty slashing both sides ' longrange nuclear arsenals. Settling tlie
remaining differences would pave
the way to a summit between Presi. dent Bush and Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev.
In a late addition to his schedule, Baker is hoping 10 arrange a
quick stop in Albania, which
recently emerged from its communist isolation and began sharing
power with the country's political
opposition.
The United States and Albania
signed an agreement last March to
normalize relations after a bitter
52-year esttangement.
' Because oHts self-ilnposed isolation and severe human rights
abuses, Albania is the only European nation that is not a mem her of
CSCE. But it has asked to join the
organization and the United States
is willing 10 support the move if the
government continues democratic
reforms. a U.S. official said.
The two-day CSCE meeting,

which begins Wednesday, will
focus on fleshing out several barebones instiwtions formed last year
at a summit where the organization
celebrated the end of Europe's
·Cold War division.
·
"We're trying to tum tho theoretical umbrella tha! unites Europe
iniO a practical organization," said
one U.S. official.
Last November, Bush, Gorbachev and other CSCE leaders
met in France and decided the
organization's focus should be
expanded to include political and
economic concerns as well as
human rights issues.
AI this week's Berlin meeting,
leaders will discuss setting up a
mechanism for a country 10 call an
emergency session of the CSCE to
.mediate conflicts. The country's
request ·would have 10 be supported
by either five or eight other members.
The foreign ministers are also
expected to discuss the economic
inequities between the wealthy
West European members and Eastern European countries struggling
to move from inefricient centtalized economies to free market capilalism.
AI~ on the agenda are genCJ:al
· diSc!l~sions 011 futtite cuts of European, American and Canadian
troops deployed· in Europe by
NATO and others deployed by the
virtually deflirict Soviet-led Warsaw Pact. The 16-nation Western
alliance alread~ has decide·d to
halve its 1.5 million troops, and
more cuts are expected.

Court makes it more difficult.
for prisoners to win lawsuits
WASHINGTON (AP) - The · dard of proving malicious intent.
Supreme Coun today made it mo~
Justice Byron R. White, in a
difficult for prison mmates 10 wm partial dissent, said, "The ultimate
lawsuits challenging unfit prison result of today's decision, I fear, is
living conditions.
that serious deprivations of basic
By a 5·4 vote in a case from human needs will go unredressed
Ohio, the justices said prisoners due to an unneces~ and meanwho claim conditions are so bad ingless search for deliberate indifthey amount 10 cruel and unusual ference.''
punishment must prove offlctals
"Inhumane prison conditions
acted with "deliberate indiffer- often are the result of cumulative
actions and inactions by numerous
ence.''
The dissenters said the ruling officials inside and outside a
means inhumane conditions will prison, sometimes over a long periprevail whenever officials can od of time," he said. "In truth,
make a case that they lacked intent sinlply is not very meaningmoney to improve matters.
ful when considering a challenge to
Rejecting arguments by the an institution."
He was joined by Justice Harry
Bush adminislmtion, the court said
the state of mind of officials who A. Blackmun, Thurgood Marshall
pemtit unfit pri~on conditions mpst and John Paul Stevens.
be considered in such lawsuits.
The four dissenters joined the
Justice AniOnin Scalia, writing court in overturning a federal
for the court, said inmates must appeals court ruling that said
prove officials acted with deliber- inmates must prove officials acted
ate indifference but - in a partial out of malicious cruelty to win
victory for the prisoners - said such suits.
they need not meet a stricter stan-

TRUCK OVERTURNS • Scipio TOWII!Iblp
and Pomeroy Emeraenq Medical Senlc:es units
were called to the Kent ol thll accldeut on Stale
Route 681 on Sunday evenln~o Tbe truck, driven
by Ferdinand Schwartz, overturned wblle

j

detourlna around work on U.S. Route 33 near
Atbeu. Sebwartz was treated but not transported by EMS staff members. (Sentinel Photo by
David L. Harris)

�Monday, June 17, 1991

Commentary

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Page--2-The Dally Sentinel ::
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,
Monday, June 17, 1991
·
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Oi j 10 Weather
Tuesday, June 18

Forecast sunny skies for Buckeye State Tuesday

Accu-Weather•·forecast for

The National Weather Service than an hour. Several siles in
says it will be mostly clear tonight Washington County reponed 1 1(2
across northern Ohio with partly . 10 2 inches of rain.
cloudy skies in the south. Lows are
The rain caused some flooding
expected to mnge between 55 and in those two CQUllties, with people
60 in the north and between 60 and being evacuated for a while along
65 in southern Ohio.
portions of Ohio 550 in washington
Partly sunny skies are forecast county.
for Tuesday, with a slight chance
Skies became mostly clear
of showers and thunderstorms in across the central portions of the
the east central and south central state after midnight and were partly
regions. Highs will be in the 80s.
cloudy in the northern and southern
Variable sky conditions pre- extremes of the state.
vailed over the state this morning, · . Areas of fog have formed early
along with some fog.
this morning over portions of Ohio, ·
It was mostly cloudy across with the worst con&lt;litions in the
Ohio as the night began. Showers Zanesville area, where visibilities
and thundei-storms moved through · was zero at 5 a.m.
the southeast portions of the state
The record high temperature for
last evening ahead of. a cold front this date at the Columbus weather
and dumped heavy amounts of rain. station was 97 degrees in 1936.
At Clarington.in Monroe Co!ln- The record low was 44 degrees in
ty, 2 1(2 inches of rain fell in less 1980.

~

MICH.

Nurse
becomes
victim
of
military
justice
The Daily Sentinel By Jack Anderson

WASHINGTON - A pregnant
Air Force nurse was recently senPomeroy, Ohio
.
tenced 10 six months in a military
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
prison for taking a drug that her
dentist prescribed for her.
The case of Capt Carla Lancastt,~MULTIMEDIA. INC.
er sheds more light on the bulldog
mentality of a military justice sysROBERT L. WINGETI'
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
tern and its prosecutors who somepublisher
General Manager·
times appear 10 value a conviction
over common sense.
••
PAT WHITEHEAD
At this writing Lancaster siiS in
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
the stoclcade at Lackland Air Force
Base in San Antonio, Texas, five
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assomonths pregnant and hoping that
ciation and the American Newspape{ Pub!lshers Association.
the Air Force will have a change of
heart. Her crime was this: When
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
she
suffered some pain from a hip
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
injury
last year, she went to her
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pubmedicine cabinet and swallowed
lished. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.
·
two leftover pain pills from her
wisdom-toOth surgery. In the mili·
tary justice system, that's apparently illegal use of a controlled substance, and now Lancaster, who
wasn't pregnant when she toOk the
drugs, faces the prospect of giving
· birth to her baby in the military
prison at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan.
By JOHN CHALFANT
Her court martial was bizarre
Associated Press Writer
and severe enough to concern top
COLUMBUS - The state gasoline tax is going up again, just in time milit!""_Y bmss. The. case is being
for summer vacation.
.
scrullmzed by an ass1stant secretary
The Ohio Department of Taxation has notified dealers statewide that of the Air Force, the offices of two
the tax will go up a penny to 21 ceniS per gallon July I.
The increase will genemte about $55 million annually to help finance
highway and bridge construCtion and repair. Additional I cent increases
•
·
are possible next year and in 1993. 1
.
The Legislature authorized the gasoline tax boosiS in 1989 under a formula that provides fOr an increase based on higher coSIS of construction
and fuel consumption levels.
The formula allows the tax to increase no more than I cent at a time.
"If we calculate the formula and it doesn't take it up 10 a full penny. it
wouldn't increase," Pabicia Rupich, director of legislation and communications in the tax department, 5a,1d in an interview.
But a formula increase of less than 1 cent can be carried over to the
following year and accumulate to the penny level.
"This is the first time that we're calculating the rate under the formula
since the mid-1980s," Ms. Rupich said. "There may be an increase July
1; 1992, and again in July 1993."
In fact, the Ohio Department of Tnmsportation is counting on revenue
from next month's boos~ and another in July 1992, in its $3.3 billion budget. The Senate is to vote on the budget this week. ·.
The tax increase formula is based on·a federal mainten;mce index that
compares current repair costs with 1975, the base year. ConsumJl!ion lev. els also are compared with 1975 levels.
.
"I think the idea ... is that we're trying to adjust for intlationary. cosiS
and changes in consumption so that the tax generates roughly the same
amount as it would have in 1975 but adjusted for inflation," Ms. Rupich
said.
Law allows for formula-driven increases 10 continue only through July
1993.
'
Michael Cull, spokesman for the transportation deparunent, said the
increased revenue would allow for repair of neglected highways.
"It will allow us to maintain roads which a few years ago, when we
were under-funded, were not maintained to the level they should have
beeo." Cull said. "Consequently they deteriomted and had tO be rebuilt
sooner thao we would have liked.''
Taxation records show 5.7 billion gallons of gasoline were sold in
The latest batch of Richard
Ohio during fiscal year 1990, and the state tax on it produced $970.9 mil·
Nixon's
secret White House tape
lion.
The state gasoline tax dates from 1925 when it amounted to 2 cents per recordings has been releasedgallon. It remained less than a dime until1981, when it rose to 10.3 cents and just in time, toO. He was down
per gallon. The tax reached 20 ceniS per gallon in 1990.
10 about half a dozen enemies, by
As of April I, Ohio and 14 other states had gasoline taxes of at least 20 my counL But the new revelations
ceDIS per gallon. Nine states impose a pe~ntage sales tax on gasoline ought to stem the slippage a bit,
maybe even recruit a few new
sales in addition to the ceo IS-per-gallon rate.
Gasoline prices fluctuate, and motorisiS may not pay much attention to bashers to the cause.
It's not easy, keeping a grudge
a 1 .cent change in either direction. Experience with price boosts during
the Persian Gulf War indicateS even substantial increases do not dissuade going against The Trick. A quarter
of the current population - 64 milmotorists from buying fuel.
"We saw during the war that people were swirching from the higher
or resigned
so -wasn't
even
grade gasoline 10 the lower end to help save money," said Janet Ritter, ·lion
born people
when he
the presidency 17 years ago. Then there's
public affairs coordinator for the AAA.Ohio Auto Club. ·
Ms. Riuer said a sluggish economy and fare wars among airlines also the American propensity to forgive
could affect travel plans. A Memorial Day survey indicated less tmvel and especially to forgeL And Nixon
.wu planned by personal vehicle while air travel was up a lit.tle from the himself has been laboring mightily
to rebuHd his image, to make us
previous
year.stil· 1 travehng
· but maybe usmg
. al ternate means, depending wonder why we got so worked up
"They're
about Richard, the innocuous intelon what they consider to be the best value," she said.
lectual, in the rust place.
For years, he sat under his
banyan tree in northern New Jersey, cultivating the aura of an elder
statesman as he dispensed snippeiS
of wisdom to visiting pundiiS and
By The Associated Press
scholars. Then he wrote another
Today is Monday, June 17, the !68th day of 1991. There are 197 days memoir, seeking to dispel the
left in the year.
.
"myths" that had been constructed
Today'• Highlil!ht in History:
about him. Last year, he opened a
On June 17, 1940, France asked Germany for terms of surrender in private "library'' in Southern CaliWorld WarD.
fornia, in which the real Nlx.on
On this date:
story is !Old through "interpretive
In 1775, the Revolutionary War Battle of Bunker Hill was fought as exhibitry.'' In the meantime, he has
more than 3,000 British bOOps launched an attack on more than 1,000 continued his fact-gatherin~ trips
American soldiers near Boston.
abroad, his multi-page, smglespaced letters of advice to President Bush and his occasional
"seminars" to lawmakers and
mandarins
in Washington.
•
As a result, normally reliable
Nixon halers have been falling like
tenpins. A new book, "Silent
Cour.: The Removal of a President ' by Len Colodny and Robert
Gettlin. putports 10 show that the
•
real culprit behind the .Watergate
•
burglary was White House counsel
John Dean. Respected New York
Times columnist Tom Wicker has
written a sympathetic review of
Nixon's career. Another Times
columnis~ Anthony Lewis, recent••
ly described Nixon as "progressive." Former CBS newsman
Daniel Schorr, once investigated by
Nixon's FBI. ran into the former
· president on an elevator, shared a
few laughs, and exited with amicable relations restored.
But just as lhe blarney was get. ting dlsJUStingly deep, Richard
Nixon hunself, u he has so often
done in the put. rode 10 the rescue.
Some 60 hours of secJetlf recorded
White House conversauons from
1971-1973 were released by the
National An:hives and once . . .
we heard the pmnoid, vindicuve,
spiteful, caustic, coarse, ruthless,
"THAT'S IT! THAT'S ITI It wu IM White
brutal
Unindicted Co-Conspirator
HOUMI WATER tMt made 11H1 do .0 of those
in
vulgar
discourse with his top
bMI tfllngl•..
•
aides.
111 Court street

State gas tax to go up
one cent on July 1

inspeciOI'S general, the ~ echeIons of the military's judicial system and a member of Congress.
Lancaster was a nurse at the Air
Force's Wilford Hall Medical Ceoter in San Antonio, which bad
experienced a spate of drug thefts
last year. Employees were tested
for drug use. and Lancaster's test
carne up positive for Demerol and
Tylox on Sept 27. Prosecutors initially charged her with stealing the
Demerol and ''wrongful" use of
both drugs.
Lancaster's auomey argued that
the Tylox was rightfully hers as
prescribed by her dentist and that
she had been framed with the
Demerol. Witnesses who testified
in her defense said they believed
someone tried to push the blame on
Lancaster by slipping Demerol into
a soda she drank before her drug
test.
As for the Tylox, Lancaster
freely admitted in court that she
used her old prescription.
After a four-day trial last month,
the military jury dismissed the
charges relating. to the Demerol.
· But the jury bought the prosecu·
tor's argument that Lancaster had
trampled all over the law by taking
her own Tylox out of tum. What

she did amounted to use of a controlled substance for something
other than the reason that it was
prescribed.
Lancaster was dismissed from
the Air Force with the equivalent of
a dishonomble discharge and sentenced to six months at Leavenworth. At 27, sbe had a stellar
·rec.ord .as an officer and a nurse.
She now hopes to come up with
new evidence that will get the conviction reversed before she is sent
to LeavenwOrth.
Our associate Jim Lynch has·
learned that her auorney David E.
Wheeler may have that evidence.
Prosecutors hinged much of their
case against Lancaster's character
on an allegation that she waylaid a
dosage of pain pills that was supposed to have gone to one of·her
patients. Wheeler ha5 now found
that patient, a 73-year-old woman.
We have seen the patient's affidavit in which she states that she
did receive the drugs LancaSter was
supposed to give her.
~ep. John Conyers, D-Mich.,
has written to the Pentagon's
Inspector General saying be is
"terribly concerned by the appearance of irregularity and possible
vindictiveness in this case ... "

------~--------~

OIL FIRES RAGE
ON... KUWAIT'S

••
,.,..

KUWAIT

EVENING NEWS

DENOCRACV STALLED...
SADD4M t,US~EIN'S

IMAGE BOL~TERED ...

J'tiORE KURDS DIE ...
AND AMERICA
CELEBRATE5 ANOTHER
VIC'R:JR'V PARADE.

Today in history

Berry's World

off," he said. We heard the former
leader of the free world waxing
anti-Semitic. "Aren't the Chicago
Seven all Jews?" he asked.
So once again, the amnestic
American people are reminded of
what Richard Nixon and Watergate
were really all about: gutter politics
and immorality. Yellowing clips
from flies of yesteryear l~t at least
two dozen crimes committed or

IManslield I 84•1•

and Dale Van Atta

Nixon :b ashers find new ammunition ·
We heard the Sage of Saddle
River suggest that someone take a
look at George McGovern's
income tax files. "Goddamn it,"
he snarled, "snealc in in the middle
of the night." We heard Mahatma
Dick's enthusiastic response to a
proposal that Teamster "thugs" be
recruited to beat up peace demonstrators. "They've got guys who
will go in and knock their heads

•

IToledo I 87•1

A spokesman for Lacldand Air
Force Base told us there is more to
the Lancaster case ti\Jin there
appears 10 be on the surface, but
said he could not comment candidly on the case: Asked if he thought
the sentence was too severe, he
said, based on her conviction, CapL ·
Lancaster could have been sen- ·
tenced to confinement for five
years.
.
Not surprisingly, the drug thefts
at the hospital continued after Lan- •
caster left and another nurse is '
going to trial this month.·
Meanwhile, Lancaster and her
husband, Jack, an enlisted man in
the Air Force, worry that without
her salary they will r11n out of
money. She spends her time writ·
ing a chronology of the curious
events in hopes it will help win her
freedom.
CLOSE CALL - American
soldiers in the Persian Gulf were
lucky that Saddam Hussein .
couldn't, or chose not 10 unleash.
his chemical arsenal on them. An :
investigation by the Gpneraf
Accounting Office shows that the
troops were ill prepared to deal
with a chemical attack despite their
fancy suits and gas masks. Onethird of the troops deployed had not
been through the requi_red four
hours of ttaining in protective gear.
One-founh had never done their
jobs while wearing the gear, and ·a
third said they doubted they would
survive a chemical attack because
of their lack of training.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
Bush administration's education
policy is proving that truth is
indeed stranger than fiction. Federal cutbacks in education have
resulted in a diminishing of the
quality of schooling in direct pro- ·
portion to the inflated rhetoric ·
coming out of the Education
Department. The teacher of the
year in Minnesota was laid off;
along with the teacher of the year
in California. America is losing its
best and brightest to budget cuts.
The Education Department should
remember that even before reading,
writing and 'rithmatic, a school
needs !Cachers.

•

By Joseph Spear.
considered by the man and his minions: Theft, flight to avoid prosecution, malicious mischief, exmion,
embezzlement, falsifying governmcnt documents. campaign fmance
violations, contempt of Congress,
contcmpt of court, peljury, conspiracy to commit crimes, illegal wine·
tapping and bugging, and on and
on
·

r===::~=======T-==::======T========:r=========
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
PubliC.Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Melgo County Boord
ol Comml11lonero llocciOPting bldo lor the purchaH ol
certain rul property •• deocr!- below.
lido ohall be NCeived In
the Melgo County Commlaoionero
Office.
Meigo
County CourthouM, Pom·
eroy. Ohio. 41719. untH
July 18, 1991, at 4:30PM.
Tho reo I property will be oold
to the hlghellt reoponolble
bidder. Tho property to bo
oold lo:
PARCEL NO. 1: The following dttcribed reelntete,

oituoted In tho Townohlp ol
Columblo. In the County of
Meigl and State of Ohio, to
wit:
The aouthwett corner of
the aouthweat quener of
Section Number Thirty-Two
(32) In Townahlp No. Nino
(91 of Ronge No. FiftMn (1 61
nf the Ohio Company'•
PurchaH conteinlng Forty
(•OJ aer11 more or 1111.

Aloo the following doscribed reel ntete, commencing et the northwett
comer of Section No. Thirtyone 1311. ol Townohlp No.
Nine (91, !Iango No. FiftMn
(111). olthe Ohio Company'•
PurcheH; thence Nit Forty
(401 rodo: thence oouth
Forty (401 rodo: thence woot
Forty (401 rodo; thence
north Forty (401 rodo to the
place ol beginning. contoln-

,•.•.

ing Ten t101 acrea more or

Excepting from the Forty
1401 acre tract ebove d•

ocrl-. one (1) rod. Sixteen
I1 81 foot wide on the out
aide. being o right of way,
now owned by Louis CottrHI
end wife.
PARCEL NO . 2 : Tho lol·
lowing doocribod real-to,
oituatoln !ht County of Vln·
ton, In the townohlp ol Vlnt~n and In tho !!tate ol Ohio,
tO• Wit:

Being tho Ohio Company'o PvrchaH. and being
tho oouth half of tho
ooutheoat quart• of Boctlon
No. T- (21 of oald Forty
(401 ocreo ofl the _ , .,d
ofooldprtml--byE.P.
Davie to Lttncltr Cottrll.
AIIO the nM1!I hall of Hid
10utboo1t quorlrofoald Bectlon No. Two 121 ..._tlng
what E. P. Davia oold _,d
doeded ta ........ Cottrlt
.,d John Man. containing
(701 acreo, -r• or

-••Y
.....

Aloo Thirty (301 earn of!

tho north end of tbo Milt holf
of the aoutheaet quart• of
Section Two (21. Townohlp
Nlne(9!. Ron go SlxtMn (1111
In the Ohio Company'•
Purcha...
AI.O a emlll riact of land
ah:ueted in the Rove named
Townlhlp end County, con·
teining • apring of ltock we~

tor deocrlbed oolollowo. be·
lng tl tho north ond of tho
Hilt one-hell of
the
ooutheoat quorter ol Section
No . Two 121. of Townohip
Nino 191. of Range Sixteen
(11). and In the
Ohio
Company' a PurchiH.
Tho above doscrlbtd reel
elltate being the oouthooot
quartor of the oouthoolt
quarter ol Section Two (2):
and the northeoot quoo;tor of
the aouth . .et quarter of

Section Two (21.
Deed Roferonco: Volume
183, Pogo 105 and Volume
214, Plogo 239, Malp
County Deed llacordo. Vo·
lume 83. Page 1174 end Yo·
lumo 131. Pogo111, Vinton
County Dood llacordo.
The Boord of Commlo·
alonere rMV reject any bids

and ro·advortlll thlo prop·
orty ..,til all ouch property 11
oold cw leo led .
Terma of peymant era 11

lollo-: 10% of r,urchoH
prlco pold lmmod ototy by
caoh or bank chtclo. Romain·
lng belonco duo within thirty
(301 doyo ol nlo.
Melr• County Boord
o Commit81onera
111117. 24; (7) 1. I. 4tc

Public NotiCe
PUBLIC NOTICE
A r-letlon olltobllahlng
Ucen... and Permtt FHI in
the Meigo County GonO&lt;ol
Hoahh Dlltrlot.
A ,...,lotion edoptlng for
Copltl o1 Vital
llooordo, Priv8te Wetor ooyotomo. Food Barvlco ()poraMlllufectured Homo
Perloi.Cam,..-o.lwlmrnlntl POOIL Mid Spoo,
Tlloreforo. uncltr authority
of
-'lono
37011.24,
3701.01. Mid 3701.21 ol
tho Ohio Rev- Code. Bolt
ordlrecl by the lloorrd of
Health of Melli County
a.... H•hh Dlllrlct tt.t
tho following ...,_no In
,.,_.,. to
,..
be
edaptecl.
leotlon 1. A. Food a..
3732.01 0.11.
C.; 370f.21.021 O.A.C .
Food lor¥loe Oporat-

c-

-L

viet..._....

without drive through win ~
l&amp;lting CIPI•
cit'-••• followa:
(Number of Soato, Llconoe
FH. end State Portion!:
0·24- '81.00- 116.00
25·99- 086.00 - 115.00
100-199- '116.00'15.00
200 or more- '140.00 115.00.
Food Service Operotlono
with drive through windowa
baud on ...ting Cllptteitiea
aolollowo:
Number of tNta, llcenH
fee, ltltt portion:
0-24, 1811.00. 1111.00
25-99. 185.00, $16.00
100·199. 111e.oo. t'1s.oo ·
200 or more. 1140.00,
115.00
NOTE: On o• after July
24. 1991, Churchoo and
Hoapttalt are to be licen11d
according to the tutlng Ca·
poclty Catogorito In tho
teme menner 11 other Com·
mercial operatione.
B. Mobile Food Service
Operationa:
(Type, Llconoe Foe. State
Portion) :
Aetum to Commltaionary
Doily, 11&amp;.00, 115.00 .
Do not return to Commit·
Daily. 115.00, 115.00.
C. Vending Mochlne Loea .
tion/Commll•arv :
Food Service Operation :
(Type, Licenn Foe. State
Portion):
Location/Commiaury,
118,00, 14.00.
D. Temporary Food Service Operatione:
Type: Each day of Operation .. 0 Uc:enM Fee, 0 State
Portton .
Type: Whole
Event,
116.00 Lleon• Foe; OStato
Portion.
E. Non Commercial Food
Service OpO&lt;otlono:
Type: School, Gov11mtn·
tal. '33.00 llcenoo foo. 10
Stoto Portion.
Type: Non Profit Vouth
Joint Vocatlonol
Group,
School, 133.00 Llconoo
FH, 10 Btota Portion.
dOWI bleed on

••rv

F. Plan Review end Water

Sornploo O.II.C . 3732.01
IAII1 I
Food Service Plan llovt.w: poraontogo ol UconH
Foo, 10 IM.
G. Wator lamplaa: Boctorlologlcal WotM Bamplo,

no.oo F...

H. Dotlnquoncy Foe of 25
pOICIIII If ot - - by
4:00P.M .. Morch 1 ol•ch
- · · (Mobile Food Sorvicoo
IXtmpted.l

SECTION II. Ohio II.,_, ·
tlonot Vehicle Perko, ,..,...
tlonol Comoo and Combined
Park/Campo 3733.04 0.11.
C. 3701.25 O.A.C.
Feeo by loto/opaco' capaclty:
50 Iota/ IPOCOI or ltiL
188.00 Iicon• foe: 125.00
state portion.
More than 50 Iota/
IPICII: Fee will be 1111.00
beoe IH plus IOC lor Nch
lot over 10 Iota.
loctorlologicol Wattr
Sample: FM 11.00; 1211.00
Sttto Portion.
,
SECTION Ill: Manufactured Homo Parka 3733.04,
O.R.C. 3701 .27 O.A.C .
FHo by lot/apace capacIty:
•
60 loto/opaceo or ltto,

1&amp;5.oo n..... toe: 1211.oo

1t1te portton.
More than SO
Iota·
lopoceo: fee will be 1511.00
beoo foe pluo IIOC lor ooch
lot """' 50 Iota: 1211.00
ltate portion.
Bacteriological
Water
Somplt, e5.00 licon11 let.
SECTION IV: Prlvoto Water Syotomo 3701 O.R .C.
3701 .28 O.A.C.
A. Appllcatlon/Pormlt:
1. Now Private Woter lyo·
tem serving 1 tingle f8mlly
dwelling:
1111.00
IM:
121 .00 ltoto portion.
2 . Now PriVate WaterSyo·
tom
oervlng
o multi·
family or Commercial Build·
lng: t85.00 toe: 121 .00
State Portion.
8 . 1. Aitorotlon ol 1 Prtvoto Woter Sylltom Hnflnga
lingle dwelling: 121.00 In:
10 State Portion.
2. Alteration ol o Privota
Water Syttem HrYing • mul~
tl-femlly or Comm11clot
Building: 13&amp;.00 lee: 10
St1te Portion.
C. Wat11 Houltro Vehlcloo
Roglltrotlon ond In-tiona: FH
per Vthlclo
120.00: State PortiOn tO.
D. ll it lo dotonnlned that 1
Private Wotar Byllom hao
begun prior to obtaining 1
permit to clrHI. or lllttrotlono
hevo begun on o Prlvote Wa·
ter lylltorn before e pormH
hel Obtained. e toe ol
120.00 lhall be ooieued to
tho oritllnlll """"" teo.
SECTION
V:
Public

!Continued on Pogo 71

WANT ADS Ill
. ' ' ,

" Drt!l•nP

~-· I\WIIUO

IND.

•I Columbus I as• I
W.VA.

Showers T-stonns

Ice

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cl991 Acou:Woelher,l,-.,,

Via Associated Press GrsphicsNet

____..;..___ Weather----South Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low in
the mid 60s. Chance of J;ain 20 per·
cent. Tuesday, partly Cloudy with a
slight chance of showers and thun·
derstorms. High in the mid 80s.

Chance of min 30 percent.
Extended rorecast:
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair through the period. Highs
each day from the mid 80s to the
low 90s. Lows in the 60s.

EMS has 11 weekend calls
.UniiS of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered
11 calls for assistance over the
weekend.
On Saturday at 12:25 p.m.,
Pomeroy unit went to Welchtown
Road. Raymond Landers was transported to Veternns Memorial Hospital. At 1:38 p.m., Rutland squad
met Beverly Holley at the station
and transported her to Veterans. At
5:42 p.m .. Racine squad went to
State Route 338 . Henry Lemley
was taken to Veterans. At 7:04
p.m., Scipio Township Volunteer
F.ire Deparunent went to Pagetown
for a camper flre at the Price resi,
dence.
On Sunday at 12:19 a.rn., Middlepon squad went to Locust Street
for Richard Ord, Jr., who was
transported to Veterans. At 11:39
a.m .. Middleport squad went to

Peacoclt Street for Ciirl Roach. He
was taken co Holzer Medical Center.
At 2:17 p.m., Syracuse squad
went to Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center. Ralph Ours
was taken to Veterans. At 3:29
p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
PNRC for Ralph Russell. He was
tninspotted 10 Veterans. At 4:41
p.m., Racine units went to State
Route 124 fCI' a motor vehicle accident. Gordon Warner was taken 10
Veterans, Lori Maynard was treated but not transported and Adam
Triplett refused treatmenL At 5:13
p.m., Pomeroy units went 10 State
.Route 681 for a tmctor trailer accident. Ferdinand Schwartz was
treated but not transported. At 5:34
p.m., Scipio ToWNiiip went to the
scene of the lractor trailer accidenL

Killer put to death in .Texas

ATHENS WOMAN STRUCK BY LIGHTNING· Nancy
Worthing, 44, Athens school teacher, is carried toward ambulance
by EMS perso11nel after beln~ struc.k by lightning at a rally of

CINC~ATI

Democrat committee to meet
· The Meigs County Democratic
Executive Committee will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy.
Hill reunion planned
DescendaniS of the late Albert
and Eliza Hill will have a homecoming on June 30 at Star Mill
Park in Racine. A carry-in dinner
will be held at noon.
'

Ohio.
· Member: Thr Associated Press, In·
ta~d Dally Press Assoclatldn a nd the

Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address changrs

to Tht Dally Sentinel , 111 Court Sl..

Pomeroy, Ohio 457~ .

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•

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(AP) -

"He has been reliable, punctual,
non-complaining and eager to be of
service to the students and to the
school communities," Good wrote.
"He has frequendy been the fust to
arrive and the last to leave the
schools. Mr. Rose has been a definite asset in our schools. •'
Rose finished his work in the
public schools last week, and is
completing his 1,000 hours of community s~rvice at a youth center.
U.S. District Judge S. Arthur
Spiegel ordered Rose 10 serve five
months at a federal prison camp
and to perform the community service at the schools for failing to
repon income on his taxes.
Rose expects to complete his
community service at a LeBlond
Boys and Girls Club \ly the end of
June and then to move to Boca
Raton, Fla., with his family.
Good said he did not tell Rose

----Hospital news·---

Meigs announcements
ure~uard trainin~

L1feguard tratning will be
offered at London Pool in Syracuse
beginning Tuesday through July 3
from 6-9 p.m. nightly. The fee is
$45 and participants must be at
least IS years of a~e to register.
Further inf~rmauon may be
obtained bv calli nil: 992-9909.
Association to meel
The Southeastern Ohio Rabbit
Breeders Association will meet on
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension
I
O(flce.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
the selectiOns Saturday night in the
Ohio Lottery:
Pick 3:

955
Pick4:

3017
Cards:
10-H; 6-C; 9-0;4-H
Super Lotto
2-4-6-22-34-43
(two, four, six, twenty-two, thir·
ty-four, forty-three)
The jackpot is $8 million.
Kicker
6-1·9-6-8,7
(six, one, nine, six, eight, seven)
Milllonalre!JIIhe Month
• (Winning serial numbers from
3-of-6 Super Lotto tickeiS)
$1 million: 124-01921728-161
(one,two,fourzero9one,ninc,two,one,seven,two,ei
ght- one,six,one)
$1,000: 149-08293031-147
(one,four,ninezero,eight,two,nine,three,zero,three
,one one,four,seven)
$1,000: 144--02879432·201
(onc,four,four·
zerotwo,eight,seven,Dine,four,three,two
two,one-zao)
.)

striking workers rrom 0'Bieoe5s Memorial Hospital at the Athens
County Fairgrounds Saturday. (AP)

Athens woman is
struck by lightning

Rose model worker, ·educators say

Educators say Pete Rose was a model
HUNTSVILLE, Texas (AP) - more executions than any state worker as he performed hundreds
.
of hours of community service in
A killer who had been on death with capital punishment.
A fedeml appeals court Sunday the city's public school system.
row for 17 years was put to death
Rose's supervisor
. s have .sen.I a
by lethal injection early Monday evening cleared the way for the
for the murder of an antique-gun execution when it dissolved a stay letter to baseball commissioner Fay
griutted by a federal judge earlier in · Vincent pmising his work at five
collector. .
Jerry Joe Bird, 54, was p~o· the day. Shortly before midnight inner-city schools. The former
nounced dead at 12:21 a.m., about the U.S. Supreme Court refused 8· Cincinnati Reds star helped physi·
cal education teachers the last five
12 minutes after the lethal drugs I 10 block the execution.
Justice
Thurgood
Marshall,
who
months as part. of a federal coun
began 10 flow. He was put to death
opposes
the
death
penalty
in
all
sentence
for cheating on his taxes.
for the 1974 slaying of a Harlincases,
cast
the
sole
vote
for
a
stay.
Assistant
superintendent Cecil
gen-area gun-collector during a
Bird,
a
death
row
resident
since
Good
told
Vincent
that Rose lived
burglary at the man's home.
up
to
his
baseball
1974,
had
earlier
been
denied
a
nickname,
Bird mouthed " Hi" to his
The
letter said
commutation
of
his
sentence
or
a
"Charlie
Hustle."
mother from the death chamber,
postponemem
because
of
ill
health.
Rose
got
to
school
before
teachers
declined to give a final statement,
He
had
been
hospitalized
for
and
students,
had
coffee
brewing
then said: "That's all. Go ahead.
nearly a week after suffering a when staff members arrived, and
Stan things rolling.''
siroke
June. 9. He was returned on inspired·studeniS.
Bird became the 40th person
He told studeniS to work hard
executed in Texas and the !47th in Friday 10 death row, where he has
and
to expect success, the letter
lived
longer
than
all
but
one
Of
the nation since the U.S. Supreme
Texas'
345
condemned
inmates.
said.
Court in 1976 let states resume use
of the death penalty. Texas has had

·Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Sr., Po·
meroy. Ohio, by th£&gt; Ohio Valley Pub·
ltshlng Company / Multimedia, Inc.,
PomerQY, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,

..

High temperat·ures today were
forecast to be in the 50s and 60s in
the Northwest : the 7Qs. in Ihe
Northern Plains and New England:
the 80s in· the Central Plains, the
Midwest, the Great Lakes region
and in the Appalachians; iii the 90s
in !DOSt of the South and along the
mid-Atlantic coast; and over 110 in
the SouthwesL
The high. {or the natiol) Sunday
was !07 degrees at Laughlin, Nev.

Cloudy

(USPS 1411·9110)

'

of the .East Coast and parts of
Texas.
Rain fell early today in pans of .
Maine and was expected later in
Washington state, Montana,
Wyoming, the Dakotas, Nebraska,
Colorado, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, the Carolinas and Virginia.

~....@\

A Dlvilloa of M•ltlmedla, Jae.

,

Sunrise this morning was at
6:02 a.m . Sunset will be at 9:03
p.m.
Around the nation
Temperatures in the middle
Atlantic states were in the 70s
before dawn this morning, signaling another day of record·brealcing
heat in the region.
High temperatures broke records
from New Jersey 10 Washington on
Sunday.
The downtown Baltimore reading of 100 degrees broke the previous hi$h of 99 set in 1957 and the
Atlanuc City, N.J,, reading of 97
·broke a 1957 record of 95. Washington's 98 also broke a 19 57
record of 97 degrees.
Also, severe thunderstorms
accompanied by hail, damaging
winds and heavy_rain pelted much

. --.~

The Daily Sentinel

·
'

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Mrs. David Henry, a daughter, Gallipolis'.
Discharges. June 15 - Gina
Bryant, Leafy Chasteen, Judy
Denais, Sally Donaldson, Scarlett
Glass, Janet Hanley, Allie Holley,_
Mrs. Donald Parsons and son,
Nancy Powell, Melissa RoberiS and
Dorothy Wilson.
'
Births, June 15 • Mr. and Mrs.
John Fink, a son, Pomeroy. Mr. and
Mrs. Dwain Hendrick, a daughter,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
•
Letan.
Discharges, June 16 - Mrs. John
Discharges, June 14 • Lawrence
Bond. Curtis Christian, Jean Cole, Barcus and son, Mrs. John Fink
Wanda Crabtree, Mrs . Glenn . and son, Rita Malone Carla Massie,
Hoselton and daughter, Christopher Betty Meadows, Pauline Reuter,
Koontz, Mrs. Larry Leonard and Joyce Rumley, Robin Shamblin,
daughter, Presley Roush and and Mrs. Bill Smith and daughter. ·
Births, June 16 - Mr. and Mrs.
Bernadine Steinebrunner.
Robert
Galloway, a son, Point
Births, June 14 • Mr. and ·Mrs.
Pleasant,
W.Va. Mr. and Mrs. Milce
Frederick Bennen, a daughter, VinGillies,
a son, Point Pleasant,
ton. Mr. and·Mrs. Roger Bryant. a
W.Va.
Mr.
and Mrs. Leslie Stapleson, Patriot. Mr. and Mrs. John
'ton,
a
son;
Crown
City.
Barcus, a son, Middleport. Mr. and

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Eber Pickens, Portland, and Kristy
Rizer, Racine.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES None.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Ralph Ours, Pomeroy.
·
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None. ·

--Area deaths-Mary Pauley
Mary Elizabeth Wakely Bilcher
Pauley, 72, 570 Pearl Street, Middleport, died Sunday, June 16,

1991 , at Veterails Memorial Hospital after a brief illness.
Arrangements
will
be
announced by the Bigony-Jordan
Fun·eral Home in Albany.

about his letter to the baseball commissioner. Rose has been banned
for life for illegal gambling, and is
barred from baseball's Hall of
Fame while he's on tlie permanently ineligible list.
He's eligible 10 apply to Vincent
for reinstatement at any time.
"I am writing in the hope that
our experience will be of .interest
and assistance as you ultimately
consider his future in baseball,"
Good told Vincent

Stocks
Am Ele Power ........... :......28 3/4
Ashland Oil ...................... 32 1(2
AT&amp;T................................37
Bob Evans ........................ 18
Charming Shop .................22
City Holding .................... .14 If2
Federal Mogul .................. .!? 7/8
GoodyearT&amp;R ................ J3 3/8
Key Centurion .................. 13 lf2
Lands' End ....................... 21
Limited Inc ....................... 29
Multimedia Inc.................28 118
Rax Restaurant :.................9/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ...............28
Shoney's lnc.................... .l6 7/8
Star Bank ..........................21 lf2
Wendy lnt'l........................9 3/4
Worthington Ind ...............25 3/4

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
woman struck by lightning at a
weekend union rally in Athens was
in critical condition today.
Nancy Worthing, 44, of Athens,
was in Riverside Methodist Hospital, suffering from electrical shock.
Wonhing was treated at O'Bie·:
ness Memorial Hospital in Alhens,
then transferred to Riverside,
where spokesman Mike Haught
said she was in crilical condition
today.
Ms. Worthing was struck during
a thunderstorm Saturday about
12:30 p.m. at the Athens County·
Fairgrounds, Athens police said. .
She was attcnding a rally in support of members of the American
Federation of State, County anct
Municipal Employees who are on
strike against O' Bieness.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 45Z4

~ •

•.

U.OO IMU.III IIITIME:S ~lUDT I saMMY
$3 . 00 IAII&amp;Alll IUfitT TUESMV

JUIIIM ,_ 10

~

FIUOI'Y thN THUR$~YI - - - J

lriJ

,uMMf~'

~100H ,']I~(OM['' ~. ''

(IT\'
SuCklRS

Stock reports are tlte 10:30 a.m.
quotes prov14ed by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewl of Gall/poUs.

Sometfiing (jooa's .'llfways Cookjng J1 t

I MASON FAMILY

RESTAURANT

Locatad on Rt. 33 beSide Mason Exxon and Mason Motel, Mason, wv

.

llOMESTYI.E LUNCH SPECIALS
Monday Friday. 11 ct.rn. to 3 p.m.

MONPAY- Bar·B·O, French Fries &amp; Soup
TUESPAY- Creamed Chicken Over Biscuit
WEPNE~PAY - Chicken Livers, mashed potatoes,
gravy, soup &amp;. salad
THUBSPAY • Mealloaf1 mashed potates, gravy,
choice of vegetable, soup &amp; salad
FBIPAY • Hamburger, French Fries &amp; Soup
•

'11JUDAT a TIIURIIDAT, CIIILDU:If tnmBil lll EAT FilE&amp;
J'ROII C!lll nap•aiiEJIRI. (EXCWOES DRINK A: DESSER!l

'f

(I

�-·-··-·~-___,........._-.

-··

,.

Monday, June 17, 1991

·

=.1\vins slip past Indians 4-2 in 10 frames for 15th straight win

Monday, June 17, 199f
Page;.-4

By BEN WALKER
AP B-ball Writer
OK, so the Minnesota Twins
aren 'I beating any great teams Jate.
·ly. They're still winning, aren't

-

. I

Reds beat Phils 8-6 to sweep
: three-game weekend series
PHn..ADELPIDA (AP)- It didn't seem to matter
' which uniforms the Cincinnati Reds wore in
Philadelphia over the weekend, since the results were
the same.
The Reds wore their 1957-styled outfits to help
Philadelphia's Nostalgia Day activities Sundny and
· came away with an 8·6 victory.
It was their fourth win in a row, their seventh in
• eight outings and the first three-game sweep at Veter: ans Stadium since August 1979.
"We wore old-fashioned uniforms and it was an
old-fashioned game,'' said Reds manager Lou Piniella. ''A lot of hitting on both sides. When you win
three in a row here, you know you're playing good
basehall ••
Cincinnati snapped a 6-6 tie with two unearned
runs in the ninth. With one out, Glenn Braggs
reached on shortstop Dickie Than's error and went to
second on Chris Jones' single. Paul O'Neill w~ed
to load the bases and Reed followed a fly ball to left
field off Roger McDowell (3·3).
Hal Morris was walked intentionally before winning pitcher Randy Myers {3-4) beat out an infield
single to score Jones.
The Phillics bad taken a 4-0 lead in the third
inning, but the Reds scored one run in ~e fourth and
tied the score in the fifth when Braggs hit a three-run
homer off Phillies siBI'ter Pat Combs.
" I knew he had been throwing high pitches and
was getting behind," said Braggs. "I figured he
wanted to get the farst pitch over."
Combs did, and Braggs, now 4-for-5 against the_
left-bander, hit it 431 feet over the fence in left-center field.
·
·'They told me before the game that I was 3-for-4
off him, but I was real surprised when I looked at the
stats," Bra~s said. "I don't ever remember facing
. him before. '
Combs allowed four runs and four hits before
leaving the game in the fifth inning. He walked seven
and struck out seven.
"That's the bcst .faslball he's had all year," said
Phillies manager Jim Fregosi, whose team has lost
. seven of the last eight games. "I'd rather see him
· · wild and aggressive rather than be timid.''
·
: Fregosi was ejected in the bottom of the fifth after
: an argument with fmt base umpire Terry Tata.
In the top of the inning, the Reds' BllflY Larkin
was called safe on a close play, and in the bottom of
the fifth the Phillies Wally Backman was doubled off
on another close play.
.
"I thought Larkin was out and Backma11 had his
hand in," Fregosi said. "We talked about it, and
obviously I didn't last long." ·
Larkin had a single and a horne run and has now
hit in eight sttaight games. During the slreak he has
had 15 hits in 29 at-bats.
Elsewhere in the NL it was Montreal 7, Atlanta 6;
· · Houston 5 New York 4; San Diego 4, Chicago 2;
, Los Angel~s 7, St. Louis 2, and Pittsburgh 4, San
· · Francisco 3.
·
• · Nixon steals record six bases -When the great_
base stealers of our time are mentioned, the name
·Otis Nixon doesn't come up very much. That's all
changed, though.
·
Nixon set a modem National League record Sun·
day when he stole six bases in Atlanta's 7-6 loss at
Montreal. He tied the major league record set twice
. by Eddie Collins of tbe American League's Philadel·
phia A's in September 1912.
"I didn't realize anythin' until you guys just told
me," Nixon told reponers. •And I don't know who

Eddie Co!Hns is. I figured it would be Rickey Henderson &lt;X" somebody like that wbo set the record."
Rickey has his record for all-time steals, and
Vince Coleman, Lou Brock, Davey Lopes, Tim
Raines, Willie Wilson, Ron LeFlore, Ben Caffipaneris, I oe Morgan, Maury Wills and Luis Aparicio have
all stolen the show along the way. But Otis Nixon?
Last season, as an Expo. Nixon set a record for
steals in the fewest at-bats, 50 in 231. Admittedly
that's a pretty obscure achievement. But now Nixon
is in the big time.
·
·
The previous NL record of five steals in a game
had been accomplished five times, the last by Tony
Gwynn of San Diego on Sept. 20, 1986. Prior to
1900, the start of the modem era, George Gore of
Chicago and Billy Hamilton of Philadelphia each
stole seven bases in the NL.
Nixon was acquired by the Braves from Montreal
just before the start of the season and leads the club
with 32 steals. He singled in the ninth and stole second and third, but was stranded as the Expos swept
the three-game series.
Montreal's Dclino DeShields snapped a sixth·
inning tic with a two-run double and Ivan Calderon
contributed three hits and an RBI.
"Nixon put on a clinic out there today," said ·
tbe Re~ 8-6 to sweep the ~ame week·
ESCAPES TAG- Philadelphia's Wally
Grissom, who stole two bases himself.
end series. Both teams wore 1950s-style nnlBackmaa {6) escapes the tag or Reds catcher Joe
"It's not something you think about when you're
rorms In observance of -the Phlllies' Nostalgia
Oliver aod scores the run on Rickey Jordan's
playing, esp:ccially since it's my game to run whenDay. (AP)
single to left field in the third inning or Sunda}"s
ever I can, ' said Nixon, who hnd three singles and
National League game in Philadelphia, whtcb
Scored two runs.
Bill Sampen (4-1) pitched two innings in relief for
the victory and Barry Jones got the last three outs for
his fourth save. Mike Stanton (2-1) was the loser.
· Asllos 5, Mets 4 - Houston won a srzies in New
York for the firSt time since May 1984 as Made Portugal and two relievers held on to beat the Mets.
Portugal (6-2) pitched six innings and gave up
three runs and seven hits. Jim Corsi worked two
By STEVE WILSTEIN
the 72nd hole of the U.S. Open to. after putt.
'
innings and AI Osuna finished for his fifth save.
AP Sports Writer
blow certain victory, he stood alone
Payne Stewart lay stretched out
Houston took a 5-3 lead with three runs in the sevCHASKA, Minn. (AP) - Two among the lengthening shadows at on the trainer's table, gelling his
enth inning off Frank Viola (7-4) on five hits and a hours after Scott Simpson bogeyed Hazeltine National rapping putt chronically aching back and neck
sacrifice fly.
massaged, while Simpson worked
Dodgers 7, Cardioals :z- Bob Ojeda pitched a
on the practice green and driving
four-hiuer for his first complete game in two seasons.
range to prepare for today's playOjeda (6-4) ouldueled Ken Hill (6-4) for the secoff.
,
.
ond time in 12 days, walking three and strilcing out
"I'll go lift weights for a few
six.
hours. Do some Zen Buddhist med. . Gary Carter put the Dodgers ahead 3-2 with an
itation. Levitate," Simpson
RBi single in the sixth, and Eddie Murray hit a threequipped before grabbing a bucket
run homer in the seventh.
of
balls and a half-dozen clubs.
Padres 4, Cubs :Z - Jerald Clark, replacing the
"No,
I'll do the same things I norinjured Fred McGriff at first base, hit a two-run
mally
do - hit some balls and fmd
homer in the sixth inning.
out
why
I'm pulling shots every
Clark, who has five RBis in the lasnwo games,
once in a while."
· ·
hit a I-I fastball from Greg Maddux (6-4) over the
Each
bad
his
chances
to win
left-field wall to give the Padres a 3·21ead.
.
Sunday,
and
each
wasted
opportu·.
San Diego rookie Jose Melendez (2-2) pitched
nities as the tension built hole by
seven innings, giving up two runs on six hits for the
hole.
Simpson led by two strokes
victory. Larry Andersen finished for his second save.
with
three
holes to go, but closed
· Pirates 4, Giants 3- Mitch Webster's run-scorbogey-par-bogey.
Stewart could
ing triple sparked a three-ron, tie-breaking rally in
have
won
by
sinl!ing!,
~g putt on
the sixth.
''
18,
but'
he
rollecrtlie
Dtw
five teet
Bob Walk and two relievers combined on an
past
the
cup.
·
eight-hiuer.
They preferred to settle the issue
Walk (4-0) won his founh game in five starts,
right
away, in sudden dealh or a
allowing three hits in five innings. Bob Patterson and
British
Open-style four-hole match.
Bill Landrum fmished up. Landrum survived a twoBut
USGA
rules call for another
run single by
Leonard in the ninth to gain his
round
of
18
today to break their
13th SIIVC.
282
tie.
Jay Bell had a solo home run off Giants starter
Friends and rivals, they played
Bud Black (6-6) in the fourth.
the fourth round in intense heal and
constant pressure as if no one else
mattered. They'll play the ftfth the
same way, $235,000 10 the winner,
half that to the runnerup.
Rarely speaking to each other
and never to 'the crowd, they
marched side by side for four hours
$150,000 Edgbaston women's don," Edberg said "And it's more
to produce matching 72s.
grass-coun tournament, her !55th enjoyable going to Wimbledon
Only Larry Nelson, who shot 68
career title.
after a good win like this."
to trail by three shots, came close
_Edberg, ranked No. 1 in the
Wimbledon begins June 24.
among the 63 other golfers on the
world, defeated American David
Wheaton, a big server from
course, but he never seriously
Wheaton 6-2, 6-3 in Sunday's Lake Minnetonka, Minn., was outthreatened.
final , winning the title without gunned by his Swedish opponent.
Stewan and Simpson siBI'ted the
drom!n~ a set in five matches.
Six times in eight service games
day four strokes ahead of Nick
'Thts is the best I've ever the American' had to survive break
Pnce and Scott Hoch, and five
played in the run -up to Wimble- points, dropping his serve three
strokes ahead of another group.
times.
Stewan took the lead fmt on the
Wheaton;who needed courtside
par-5 third hole with lovely, high•
treabnent for a slrained hip muscle
{See OPEN on Page 5)
at 2-2 in the second set, praised
Edberg's service retmn.
"That was the best part of his
OUT OF THE ROUGH defeat Winfield 9·1 in action on game," he said. "I tried to vary my
Payne
Stewart chips this shot out
Thursday evening. Meigs plated serve a lot, and do ao; many differol
the
rough
to the fifth green in
the runs on a triple by Terry Reuter ent things as possible, but he just
Sunday's
final
regulation round
and hit batter, singles by Dill and seemed to read it."
of
the
U.S.
Open,
whk:lt resumes
Heck and a double by Brown.
"I'm not going to win Wimblc·
with
sudden-death
aetion today.
Winfield scored a single run in don with Stefan playing the way he
Stewart
went
on
to
par the bole.
the fourth inning, but Meigs put the is and with Boris (Becker) and Ivan
(AP)
game out of reach in the bottom of {Lend!) there as well. I must anathe inning. Winning pitcher Mike lyze what I have to do to try and
Vance led off the inning with a improve," Wheaton said.
walk, and Hamori singled before
Earlier Sunday, Wheaton fin·
Stewart launched a three-run horne ished his semifinal match, defeal·
run to break the giune open.
ing another Swede, Anders Jarryd,
Stewart, who led the- winners at 6-3, 6-4. The match had been halt·
the plate .with two singles and the ed Saturday by poor light with
home run, was assisted by Hamon · Wheaton ahead 6-3, 4-4.
(two singles), Reuter and McGuire
In Birmingham, England,
(one triple each), Brown (double) Navratilova defeated Natalia
and singles by Finlaw, Heck and Zvereva 6-4, 7-6 (8-6) 10 regain the
Included: Cleaning
Dill.
title she captured in 1989. Ranked
Oiling
Meigs hosted Chillicothe on fourth in the world, Navratilova
Saturday. Details of the double- didn' t drop a set the entire week as
Adjusting
Same Day Service
header were not available on Sun- she moved within two of Chris
Greasing
day evening. Meigs will host Park· Evert's record of 157 tournament
All
Parts
Extra
ersburg on Monday evening, Gal- titles,
lipolis on Tuesday and Marietta on
"I should break the record if I
Thursday. All the~ will begin stay healthy," she said. "I wanted
at 6 p.m. and wtll be played at match play, which I got, and I'm
Meigs High School.
{See WINNERS on Page 5)

In the majors. ••
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Dlvtsloll

WLPcLGB
........ .. 33 Tl .550
T....,..
......... 34 29 .~
1/2
.......... 30 32 .414
Mll...... 27 33 .450
New Ys
....... 25 33 .43t
7
lbllimcn
......•. 22 38 .367
11
Clowla4
........ 22 38 .367
11

t

West Dlvlslo11
WLPcLGI
··•··•· 31 25 .603
......... '5I 2l .597
1/2
3
- ········· 32 2.5 .361
c.-. ......... 33 21 .l41
4
. •.......... 33 29 J32 41/2
g.icaao
......... 29 31 .413 7 1/2
Kalllu Clly .••.••• 29 31 .483 71/2

Oo1dald
Ta.•

SatUrday'aresulm
(AU limes EDT)
)lootatl3, c.tifomia 3
Ballimolwi,T010111o4
MUW.ube6.0Ulaad4,lasamc
OU1anrd 7, Milwaukoe 3, 2nd aamc
MiMooOLI 11, CllwoW.d 7
Kanau Qt)' s·,OliCI&amp;O 3
T...,4,NewYs 3
S..ttlel5, D.aoit2

Sunday's scores

aa... 2. Califcmi.a 0

~ 4, O..oliAd 2. 10 inninp
llollim«el3,T..-ol
lansu Clly 9, Cbicoao 4
Milwlllkeo 11, OU1aild 7
Ddrai17. SMnlc 3
Tcs.u 4, New Yc;d. 3,1S inninp

Blown chances for victory Sunday
mean 18 m.ore holes in U.S. Open

Tolllgbt's games
(AU limes EDT)

(An-~ It llaltimono
(Milocki :1,.2~ BS p.m.
California (Lanauon 7-2) at Bo1t&lt;in
(llouU :1-6), 7:3S p.m.
.

Oakland (Moon 1-4) n MU wa!Jkee

( A - 4-2), 8:05p.m.

Klnau Ci&amp;7 (Gordon 4-4) at Texu
(loBafiold 3-1), 8c3S pm.

Tuesdloy's games
Mion.cu •Bikil:110a, 7:35p.m.
S..ttlo a B - . 7:35 p.m.
o.Jdand at Dc:boit. 7:35 p.m.
New YGI:k at TCII'OI'I1o. 7:35p.m.
a...laad 11 Cbicaao.I:OS p.m.
California u Milwallkoc.I:OS p.m.
K.anau City at Texu, 8:15p.m.

NATIONAL LEAQUE

The Meigs American Legion
team won three slrlighl games last
week defeating Glouster in a twinbill {7-3 and 5-2) on Wednesday
evening and they defeated Winfield
9-1 on Thursday evening._ Th~ victories gave MeigS five wms m the
last seven contests and a 6-9 record
on the season (before Saturday's
Chillicothe game).
Andy Baer scattered eight hits
over nine innings and Shawn
Hamon slammed a ,two-run homer
• to power Meigs to a 7-3 win over
Glouster.
Eric Heck and Jason Wright led
Meigs at the plate with a double
and a single, Terry McGuire added
two singles, Hamon added his
home run, Tim Bissell, Randy
Corsi a11d Baer added a single each.
Baer struck out six and walked
four to pick up the win. Charlie
Gatchel was the losing pitcher.
In the second game Meigs plated three runs in the seventh inning
to break 2-2 game and defeat
Glouster 5·2. Wright tripled with
one out in the seventh inning, and
Chris SteWllrl drove in what proved
to be the winning run wilb a single.
Matt Finlaw fol.lowed with a single,
and Stanley scored both runners
with a double.
,
Terry McGuire, Mtkc Vance
and Jeff Durst combined 10 'pitch a
four-hitter, striking out six and
walkina three. Day was the loser.
Wright, who led t!Je way with
two sillliel and tbe tnplc. was followed 6y Stewart (two alngles),
Staaley and Brown (one double
CICh) and F'malw (single).
Meigs scored five runs in the
second inning and went on 10.

,.
,.

j

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,,
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JCHIN A. ·WADE, M.D., Inc.

M-2,Ailuoa0
SL t..ou;, 5, .... Anpl• 4

,.'

EU, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL
ALLERGIST .
'

H®llon (Delhai.et 2·6) at Mot~treal

"WE HAVE NEARINI AIDS"
-

(304) 675-1244
- - ....,.___
-- ·'

(Boyd 3-6), 7:35p.m.
AllanLI (Avery 7-4) 11 Philadelphia
(Onoono 5.()), 7:35 p.m.
Cinci.nnlli (Scucfdu 1-2) at New Yadl:
(Du-lina2-4), 7:40p.m.
Pinaburah (Dnbck 5-7) at San Diego
(Hws1 7-3), 10:05 p.m.
.
.
St Louil (0Uvua 0-1) 11 San Francia·
"'(D. Itdoinoan 3-5), 10:05 p.m.
.
ChicaJO (Bolkie 3-5) at Lo• Anaelu
.
(Mona"' 6-5), 10:35 p.m.

Tllt8day'sgames
Houaonat MmtrW. 7:35p.m.
A...... lll'IIUI ....~;I, 7:35p.m.
Cin&lt;:U.uli11New odE, 7:40p.m.
Pi..t.qh 11 San Dicao. 10:05 pm.
OliCI!SOI1LoiAnpl~,l0:3Sp.m.

St Louilll SmFIIIICIIOO,IO:ll p.m.

·'

Major league leaders

,.

BATTINO-C . R.ipkon, Baltimore,
.359; E. Martinez. Se~Ule. .3ol2; Molitor,
Milwaukee, .336; Sima, Tuu, .335;
Baine~ Oakland, .335; D. Hendenon,

Amerlcu Leque.
'

..

I

'

'
' '

'.

Oakland. .327: Pudut~ - o u• .321.

RUNS-D. Hcndenon, Oakl1ncl, 47;
Molil.or Milwaukee., •5; Cansoco, OU·
land, 44.; Pabneito, Tuu, •2: Sier:ra,
Tou~ 42: Roynoldo, Solido, 42; White,
T....._40.

IBI-Fl.el4er, Detroit, Sl: lllomu,

Chimao. "'; D. l&amp;.l~raon, Olklan4. 45;

•
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••

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••

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•••

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•••
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Houlkll5, New Yod4

San Dioco4, Cbiu101
.... AnaelCI 7, SL LoW 2
PiOiblql&lt; 4, San Fnncio&lt;O 3

Tonight's games
(AU Umes EDT)

•'

786 NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDUPORT, OH. 45760
(614) 992-6491

Sie'a Tau, 4t; C.., Ta«no. •l; C.
Ripll.;,, Baldmoro. 43; BU.., Ookland,
43; W'mfiold, c.Jilomia, 43.
JilTS-C. llipt"' ~ 1.1; Moll·
tor, Milwa~. II; Sierra, T11.11, 10:
Puctlll. Mia: una, 79o Catw, Toronto,
75: a.,.owo. S..alo, 74; D. ............
Ooolll.tll4. 74.
DOUBLES~ Alomu, T...,10, 20;

Palmeiro, Tuu, II; CUW, Taroa&amp;O, II:
White, Toronto. 17; Bogt, Ba.tcn, 17;
· Oonzalez, Teaal, 16; R•JDolda, Su.u.lc.
16; C. RiJ*..,Btldmoro,l6.
TRIPLES - Molltor, Milwaukee, 6;
Pcoloni~ c.tifomil,5; Rainoo, Cbictao, 5;
Siem, Te111, .t; !\dOlt, MinaeiOU , 4:
13 &amp;J'I Uecl wilh 1
HOME RUNS - D. Hendenon, Oat·
land, iS; Fielder, Dectoil, 1•: C. Davia,
Minneaou, ••~ Canaec:o, Oaklaa~. 13;

Dew, Doua1, 13; C. llipl&lt;..,, Hollimon.

13;Bufitld,Nowfodt, 13.
STOLEN BASEI - R. H•nderson,
Oakland, 25; Polonia, CaUfornia, 23;
Rainea, ~10. 21 : R. Alomar. Toro.uo.
11· C\lyl• Deuoil, ll; WhiLe, TOf'CII'IWI,
13: Caao. S..W.,13; - · T•~ 13.
PITCIUNO (6 ...,_)-Encklm,
· 10.2, .m, UO: Key, T....,.
.., 11).2. .133, 2.36&lt; ~ Calilomll.
8-2, .100, 3.57; _ , . . . T_.., 7-2,
771 ) 13· Stndenoo, Now York, 7·2.
·na' 333-'l'lnlor. Cll1lconit. 10.3, .769,
iII:~- 9-3, ,750, 2.21 •
· riuulo~. B-. 95:
Rru. Teau, t2; ~. Califontll, U;
R-s-lo.IM.,windoll,O....
1.;., 71;
76: Clll·
-a-toad, 76.

MoDowoU. . ....

IAVBI-Bck•ni•J, Oaklead, ll;
ApUaa Miaa..ote, 11; RNrdon,
B - J1;-,Collf-15; Mall·
1..,111. - Coytl4; Jtff Ruu~n,
T..... t4: D.
12: Tlli&amp;·

w-. -

-~·z.

Nlltloul L npe

,.•••• ·*'-.....
••

.

BAT1'1No-T.! i5w , Saa Ditao.

~

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.33;-l-, IL

A-.

r .-..326;
......,.,12;1.....

~m-.

_

.Sffi..

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9 ; . . . . . .310.

agq::T. •

y.,._

-·Mon......

Pre-Wimbledon winners .••

&lt;:)pen •.•

Sa11day's Kores
M-7.Ailmla6
CU!ciruwil, Philodelphia 6

UZOIS IllY II DIOPPED OFF IN ADVANCE

PUASANT VAlLEY HOSPITAL

Saturday's results
s., IMto 6, Cbica1o 2
s.. PnaciJco 4, PiiUI&gt;IuF 0

.

Cincinnati 3, Pllilldelploia 1·
New Yelk. 6. Houam 0

TUESDAY,· JUNE 18th
4:00 'til 7:00 p.m.

.

' WLPd.
GB
...... 36 25 .S!IO
33 21 .S41
3
Aol.noa
........... 31 21 .525
4
s.. Dio&amp;• ........ 33 31 Jl6 41/2
H'""""
....•.... 25 37 .403 11 1/2
Saa Francisco ...... 2:5 31 .397
12

c - .........

a

.

est Division

.... Anae*

$395

.

W LPiL
GB
37 22 .627
SL Lwii ......•... ~ 29 .525
6
New Ys ~
.517 61/2
Chicas• ......- ··· ··. 311 29
31 .500 7 112
MomNa1
•.....• 21 34 .452 10 1/2
Philadelploia ..... :16 36 .419 121/2

. l'itubu.ah ..... ,...

Shaver Repair Clinic • AU Brands

•

East Division

,.

¥rl

Meigs AL nine beats Glouster,
Winfield
in weekday action
'
'

they?
·
·
innings.
,
·
day in a 7-for-42 rut that had big league start.
.
inning scored John Russell from
· "None of 'em are easy, man,"
The Twins' streak is dJ4: longest dropped his average below .300,1lit
Royals 9, White Sox 4
first base as the Rangers beat the
Kirby Puckett said Sunday after the in the: major leagues since Kansas a two-run single in the fifth off
Terry Shumpert homered during Yankees for dtcir sixth slrlight vicTwin§ won their 15th straight .City won 16 Slllighl in 1977. The Kirk McCaskill (6-7).
an eight-run secopd inning and tory. Diaz' s double in the gap in
game, beating Cleveland 4-2 in IO American League record is 19, set
Tigers 7, Mariners 3
Kirk; Gibson connected for the sec- rillht-center ended a 4-hour, 24·
by Chicago in 1906 and tied by
Cecil Fielder hit his 14th home ond straight game.
·
mmute marathon.
New York in 1947: the major run.
The Royals knocked out Alex
Joe Bilker (1·0), the sixth
league mark is 26 by the New Yorlc
Fielder hit a two-run homer and Fernandez (2· 7) with lbeir biggest Rangers pitcher, earned his first
Giants in 1916.
Skeeter Barnes homered for the inning of lbe season. Shumpert hii major league victory with four hit·
MinnesOta also took over sole second time in three days since a two-run horner, George Brett hit less innings. Lee Guettennan ( 1·1)
Bu&amp;llw, 1M Ar1f11-, 43; Dan. d 11 M_al
. •.
possession of firSt place in the AL being promoted from Triple-A a two-run double and Danny · took the loss for New Yock.
- . 41 ; s.-.. au.oao. 4 1 ; West for the fmt ume since 1987, Toledo. Both players conncicted in Tartabull had a two-run single.
·Texas SIBI'ter Nolan Ryan led 3Adaa,39;C-NewY..t,39;MoGriff. San Ditao. 39; T. Gwynn, San·
when it won the World Series. The the third inning.
Ra•gerS 4, Ya•kees 3
2 before giving up a game-tying
Dicao.39.
Twins have done it with seven vic. Pat Rice (1-1) lasted only two
. (15 innings)
·
homer to Kevin Maas leading off
RBJ-JWitiCC, Atlanll, 41; W. Clad;,
tories over Cleveland, three each and one-third innings in his second ·
Mario Dii\Z'S double in the 151b the ninth.
'San Franeiaco, 43; O'Neill, Cincinnati,
42: Mc:Griff, San Di.cao. 42; T. Gwynn,
against New York and Baltimore
San Diea;o, 41 ; Jotuuon, New Yodl:, 41;
and two over Kansas City - all
Calderon, Mont:ral, .-o.
·
teams below .SOO. They begin a
HITS- T . Gwynn, San Dieao . 94;
Somuol, .... Anaoleo. 71; T. Feri!111deo,
tbree·game series tonight in Balli·
San Diego, 72; MeGee, San FranciJco,
more, and play four times next
72; J01e, St La.lia, 69; Calderon, Mtttreal , 69; lwtice, Atl1nta, 61; Sudbeta,
weekend at Yanlr.ee Stadium.
0Ucoao,6t.
"We know that sooner or later
DOUBLES-I- S1. LoW, 19; Bonil·
II; Pilllblarah. 18; luolico. Alllnu. 17: L.
we're going to lose. It's inevitable.
Gonzalez, Ilouaton, 15; O'N"rill. Cincin·
But hopefully we 'II continue to
n11i, IS; Mdtoynaloh, Now
15; T.
play good hall and go from ~re."
&lt;l'A"f'U', Son DieJo, 15.
TRIPLES-T. Gwynn, San Dieao, I;
said Puckett, who homered tn the
Felder, San Francisco; 6; L. Ooualez,
road viciQry.
.
Houatoll, 5; Coleman, Now York,~ ;
Xmk, l'llilldel(!ltia, 4; ~- HOWIOft,
The Twins moved one-half
4; M. Thmt.-m, St I..oui1, 4; T. feman·
game ahead of Oaldand, which lost .
dez, San l)icgo, • · ·
·
HOME RONS-McOri!!, San Dieao,
to Milwaukee 11·7. The AL East
14; O'Neill, Cinclnalli. 13; Joluuon, New
also
has a new leader. Boston flipYodl,l3: Be~. ChiCJIO. 13: Otn1, AI·
larita , 12; W. Cluk, Su. Fran.c:ilco, ll ;
flopped back into firSt place, beat·
Dawaon, Oticago, ll .
ing California 2-0 and going oneSTOJ..EN'-JJASES---Oris10111., MOI'Ittehalf game ahead ofTcxonro. a 13-8
al , 33; Coleman, New York, 33; Nixon,
Atlanu, 32; DeShi elds, Monueal, 21;
loser
to Baltimore.
l..al*fotd. St. Louis. 18; Calderoa, Mon·
Cleveland
lost its fifth straight
UW. 17; 0 . Smilh, Sl Lollil, l7.
PITClDNG (6 deciaiOili)-Catpcnlet,
game and has dropped I 0 of 11.
SL LouU:, 7·2, .718, 3.116; R. Martinez, ·
The Indians tied it in the eighth on
Loa Anaeles, 10-3, .769,174; Glavine,
Felix Fermin's RBI single, but the
Alllnu, 10-3, .769, :1.37; l'olm&amp;al. H""·
tal, 6-2. .750. 4.04; Rijo. Cincinoali. 6-2.
Twins
bounced back in the I Otb.
.750, 2.82; Smiley, Piuab"'JII. 8-3, .77:1.
AI
Newman
drew a one-out
3.62; Tewksbury. SL Lauu, S· l. .714,
3.04.
walk from Shawn Hille§aS (2·1)
STRIKEOIITS-C- Now Yodt, 91;
and took third on Puckett s single.
&lt;loodal, New Yolk, 13; Rijo. Cincinaali,
78; Glavine, Allant.a, 7~; 0 . Maddux,
Chili Davis hit a sacrifice fly and
c;tncaao, 74; Bene~, San Di~o. 67; HarBrian Harper added a run-scoring
nilch, H_.,., 63; R. Martmez, .... An·
single.
.
.
...... 63; Dennio
63.
SAVES-Dibblo, Ciocinaau, 18: Dave
Aguilera
(2·2)
got
the
VIC·
Rick
Smith, Chiuao, 16; t..o Smilh, Sll.oWI,
tory despite giving up Cleveland's
15; B. Landrum, Pittlburt.h, 13; Fnnco,
Now York, 13; Lcffertt, !hn Dieao, 13;
tying run .
Wmiomo,l'llilldelpblt, ll;J. Howell, ....
In other games, Kansas City
Mplet,l1.
beat Chicago 9-4, Detroit defeated
Seattle 7·3 and Texas beat New
Scioto Downs results
York 4-3 in 15 iMings.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Scioto
Brewers 11, Athletics 7
Down• reaulta for Saturday, June 1!11 .
Greg Vaughn hit a grand slam in
Weather, 88 and Clear. Track, Fut.
Fim Race-$2.400 Condhion Plcc.Dathe bottom of the ninth inning and
tination Fint l,l{awk) 24.10, 1.20. 4.40:
drove in six runs, leading MilwauAbdttl H111ovcr (Czoa) 5.00, 3.40; Op111
Dei (I'Wbe:rt) 3.00; Timc-l :!S6 3·5. Allo
kee over Oakland.
Raced-Lot 0£ Liabtnina , Del Bone,
Vaughn connected against Gene
Cary'• T:raaUitl, Keyatone Lucky, Time
American League game at Cleveland's Munlci·
OOPS! - Minnesota catcher Brian Harper
And Tido, R Dultem, Majeltie PM. Tri·
Nelson (0-1). The Brewers loaded
pal Stadi11m, which the Twins won 4-2 in 10
loses
the
handle
on
the
ball
as
the
Indians'
Felix
feCII (4·10·6) 1422.80. Perf.... (4-10)
the bases on a leadoff single by Jim
innings. (AP)
·
1117.40.
.
Fermin scores in the fourth inning of Sunday's
Second R.aco·$4,000 Over The Hill
Gantner and two misplayed bunts,
Gana hoe. Kecwuakee (Cuven Jr.) 4.20,
and Vaughn hit the f1rs1 pitch for
2.60, 2.40; "'""' "''"" Man (Orilmore)
his 12th home run.
2.80 2.60; R Runy Special (Routzonj)
(ContinuedfromPage4)
3.00: Time-t :.5S. Allo RacGd·Shoraco,
Mark
McGwire
hit
two
home
Quc:u:al, C U Atet, ltX.'S Baby Maaic.
runs and drove in four runs for the healthy and I'm not tired. If I can saved ·two match points to beat Stich of Germany 6-4, 7-6. Both
- - {7· 1) $1.10.
Third l•ce·S•,ooo Claimina. Pace .
come through EastbolJ!lle without Dutchman Michie! Schapers 6-1, 3- matches had been rained out on
Athletics.
Manarlbnover (Sizer) 10.10. 4.20, 3.40;
pulling anything, I'm ready for 6, 7-5 and win the Co~tinental Saturday.
Bed Coanootion (Holland) 4.40, •.oo:
Orioles 13, Blue Jays 8
Wimbledon."
In Florence, Italy, unseeded
Grass Court Trophy tennts tournaThank You Doua (Ala) 5.10; Timo-1~6
Joe Orsulak's pinch-hit grand
3·5. Alao Raced·To !{(a To Stop, Mi&amp;tcr
Navratilova
is
the
top
seed
for
a
Thomas
Muster defeated Davis
ment
Sunday.
slam in the seventh inning decided
Valiant, Banyan Bay, J J Romu., Billy
tournament
scheduled
to
start
today
Earlier
in
the
'day,
Saceanu,
22,
.
Cup
teammate
Horst Skoff in an .
Deli.._ Trif..., (7-2-4) $323.10. Pwfectt
a slugfest.
(7-2( 41.60.
.
in
Eastbourne,
England.
aU-Austrian
final
Sunday to win a
ousted
fourth-seeded
Jakob
Hlasek
Cai Ripken, Raddy Milligan and
Fourth Raco-SS,OOO Open Pace. My
Zvereva
was
not
surprised
by
of
Switzerland
6-3,
3-6,
7-6
(7-5)
·
clay
court
tournament.
· Toy (Pavcw Jr.) 10.10, 6.20, 3.», Bavaro
Leo Gomez also homered for Balti(_....) 7.40, 3.40; FU.. Oly ( c.-) 2.40;
in the semifinals and Schapcrs
Muster, 23, needed nearly three .
more. Joe Carter hit a home run, her loss.
Tw.. 1:l4 3·5. All• Roo:od-Soop Look N
"I
might
beat
her
on
grass
when
hours
to beat the tournament's No.
eliminated second -seeded Michael
two doubles and drove in four runs
Li-. S1ylllh Evid.,co, Zapllod Beeble
she's
60
years
old,"
said
the
20I
seed
6-2,6-7, 6·2.
Brox, WildwOod Fowler. PCdoc&amp;a (5·2)
for Toronto. ·
196.20.
year-old
Soviet.
"I'm
sure
I'll
With the score tied at 8, the OriFd\h Race.$2,400 Coodition '-co. Trim
Robel (BU11on) 6.60, 4.80, 4.20; Anp
oles
loaded the bases in the seventh never beat her before then. I was llJ.~.
_&lt;~C~o-nt_in_u_e_d_fr_o_m_P_a~ge__4)____________
TNO Tan 0'1uborl) 6.20, 3.60; Caopu,.
on singles by Bill and Cal Ripken out there wondering why she
Date (Covon Jr.) 3.00: Time· I :56 l · .S
Alaa Reced-Swift le&amp;llll.d, Direction
and a walk from Duan Ward {0·3). wasn'\ winning 6-2, 6-2."
Finder, Nakila Bay, Tabooma, 0 K
Both women had to play semifi· arcing third shot two feet from lbe An approach shot left him 30 feet
Gomez singled home the go-ahead
Spunky, s....,..t;.Siylo, S..... Of Thun·
pin that he tapped in for a birdie.
der. Twin Trif..., (1·10-2) $23.10. P..
run and Orsulak, batting for Bob nals earlier in the day because of But he gave the ndvantage back on shy of the pin.
Meanwhile, Stewart renewed
, _ u -tO) S4t .oo.
.
Melvin, followed with his first rain on Saturday. Navratilova won the sixth when he drove into the
Sixth Racc-$4,000 Condition Pace.
himself
with a bottle of orange
hers in 57 minutes against Brenda
career slam.
CJny Nulleo (Herm111) 13.00, 6.20, 4.20;
rough
on
the
left,
hit
a
low
shot
juice and powered a drive 30 yards
Schultz of the Netherlands 6-3 , 6-2,
Tenacon. (Vaa Rhoden) 11.00, 5.40;
Red Sox 2, Angels 0
into the rough near a bunker on the past Simpson's up the middle of
Maahouon Beach (Sizer) 4.00; ;..,...1~5
while
Zvereva
upset
second
seed
Tom Bolton scattered five hits
4:5, Allo Ra&lt;*d· Specd Of Liafaur.il!ol,
right, chipped to I0 feet and two- the fairway. Going all out, Stewart
Bl'S QuinJo1. Sloannon Swift, lmt Shod!·
in eight innings and Jeff Reardon and defending champion Zina Garput his second shot on the short
putted.
·
. .
u, A'S Sl)'le. TrifOCII (6-3·7) S4!19.10.
completed Boston's major league- rison 2-6,7-6 {7-4), 8·6.
hd.... (6-3) 160.60.
Simpson saved par by ch1ppmg fringe 30 feet past lhe pin, leaving
In
Rosmalen,
Netherlands
,
Seventh Race-$3,000 Condition Pace.
leading seventh shutout.
in a 30-footer from the fringe on
a chance to win the tournament
War Stu (Miller) 4 .80, 3.40, 2.80: Jull
Wade Boggs, who began the Christian Saceanu of Germany the fourth hole, then lied the score him
Plain Bill (Geyer) 4.20, 3.40; Billy Velvet
with one ~ong putt:
(PaVer Jr.) 7.00; Time· I :56 3· 5. Abo
with a birdie on the seventh.
Raced-Society Beau, Bia Seaa, Cro,..n
With fans crowding the ropes
Time Rocky, No Reueat, Licenu To
Stewart went first and missed
R.aco, Navajo ExpMU. R.• Town. Twut
and
watching from rafts and kayaks
Trifoott (6-2..4) $i. 210.20. Perf..,. (6-2)
his
chance, rolling the ball six 'inch·
on calm, silvery Hazeltine Lake,
$19&lt;&gt;20.
.
The
entry
fee
for
the
camp
is
es
left of the hole and S feet
The rmt annual ·Eastern Eagles
Eiahlh Racc ·$6,000 Open Pace. Bare
Simpson birdied the lOth with an
Bact Wril« (Millot) 4.00, 3.40, :1.80; Sir
$20
which
should
be
made
payable
beyond.
Simpson then sent his putt
Football Camp will be held for
eight-foot putt and took a two·
BoaudGITiaau• (Holllnd) 4.60, 3.00;
10
the
EHS
Athletic
Booster
Club.
six
inches
to the right and three feet
grades 5-9 during the week of July
SIOidlllDll (lhwk) 3.20; Timo-1 :54 2-S.
stroke lead that he held until the
Also Jbced-Supereonduaor, R.a'tlenlfal·
past
Refer
to
a
future
edition
of
The
15-19 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at
16th.
coa,Clawhamm•, W•Herl.ilo. Tritceta
Daily Sentinel of Sunday-Times
Slewarl, taking plenty of time,
Eastern High School. ·
(5+2) m.-w. Pafocu (H) 16.40.
Stewart had blown a four-foot
drained
his last putt .to make par,
Sentinel
for
an
application
or
send
Nillth Raco-$3,200 Condition Paco.
The camp will be open to both
birdie putt on 15 but was playmg
Chairmanofthedance (Paver Jr.) 6 .40,
the
following
information
and
entry
and
Simpson
followed by completresidents and non-residents of the
aggressively, booming drives and
2.60, 2.60; Ballcnaer Hano.... r (Crou)
ing
his
bogey.
to
Churilla:
name,
grade,
age,
Eastern Local School District. To
2.40, 2.40; Rickel P1noa~ (Holland)
charging at the pin on every hole,
4.20; Timo-1~5 3-5. Allo Roced-Spood·
secure
an application or for more home, address, home phone, emer- to keep pressure on Stmpson, one
in&amp; Baker. Mantova Hanov•, C'Mon lb.
information please contact t~e gency phone and shirt size along of the calmest competitors on the
Sllnd Up, Shipwnteked,. rnr.... (t -2·5)
$125.10. l'edeclt(l·2) 11.40.
Eastern
Athletic Booster Club, 10 with a parcntal/ac~ident releas_e men's tour.
Tmtb Race-$10,000 lnvitationel Pace.
care
of
head
varsity football coach notice. The apphcauon deadhne ts
Thwutw'o .lmtp (C.... Jr.) 5.40, 2.60,
Finally, Simpson blinked.
1.10; Dee'• Tullioo (Aoar) 1.60, 2.20;
Randy Churilla, Eastern High July I.
He drove to the rough on the
Thill Adam (Mauaer) 2.60; Time· l :56.
Highlights of the camp will be left, pulled his s~ond shot fat to
School, 38900 S.R. 7, Reedsville
Alto lttced·Didl Almthwll. Robt1o. Pw·
non-contact drilling, form and flex· the left rough short of the gr~en,
fecu (4-5)$11.10.
OH45772.
.
.
Elonalh R1oo-S!,lOO Claimina PK&amp;
ibility running techniques , and then chipped weakly to the fnnge
AU Mack (Hawk) 4.20, 3.20, :1.60: Tell
movemen! skills, ~ stance _and 30 feel from the pin . Two putts
Mo Now N (Oriimarc) 4.00 3.00; B J
Hawk ( BndJ.y) 7.20; Timo-1 :57. Aho
swt-up, 10strucuon m centen~g, later, Simpson's lead was down to
Raced-1 Bia Padar, C'aulaac'a Charlie,
111
St........,,
passing, kiclcing, catching and line one.
ReceWiy Duke, lam Li,tttnin', Willina
teChniques. Campers will be chalTo WJn, Tantivy Hanonr, Pan Tht
It shrank 10 nothing on the 18th,
YOUI .IIPIND1111'
Wonl. Suporf..,. (2·1-7·4) 11,014.60.
lenged 10 raise your expectauons 10 when Simpson pulled his drive to
Pafeclt (2-1) 126.00. Alloodln&lt;&amp; 6,111
lGINIS SIIY.G
The 1991 Meigs Marauder Foot· play, conduct and sportsmanship, the left rough, then d~mped an ~0Htn41o $601,971.
ball Camp will be held July 22·26 and instruction in the mental and yard shot into the fatrway to gtve
Transactions
•
at Meigs High School.
physical aspects of the game will himself at least a view of the green.
SINCI11161
The camp is open to boys enter· be given by guest speakers and
Anwrk:an Uaaue
ing grades 4· 8. 'The cost of the . films.
·
CAUFORNIA ANOELS- Ploced
camp
is
$30
for
15
hours
of
Students
should
bring
football
Lance Purilb, ca&amp;dler, m &amp;he IS-dl)' dil·
•bled lilt, retroactive to June 10. Roc•Ued
inslruction and a maximum of $50 shoes, tennis shoes, gym shorts,
Mib Fetten, pitcher, and John Onon ,
shirts, and socks,
per family,
.
.
eatcher,from Edmonton of \he P1citic
For late registrauon and mforEach camper will receive a T·
Colli~
OUCAOO WHITE SOX- AnnounC6!1
mation
you
can
contact
Marauder
shin,
and certificate of attendance
tM tellpalion of MarviJ Foley, maru~ao-.
head
coach
Mike
Staggs
at
Meigs
as
well
as a strong basic knowledge
~ Yancw'tlflf d lhe Pacific Coa~t Leaaue.
Named Moe Dnbowwkr interim manaau.
High
School
at992-2158,
of the game.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS- Placed

Score board

.:Edberg, Navratilova win Wimbledon
:. tune-up tournament championships
LONDON (AP) - Stefan
Edberg and Martina Navratilova
showed they are ready 10 defend
their titles at Wimbledon, the
year's third Grand Slam tourna• ment
· . Edberg captured the $500,000
· Queens Club grass court tennis
tournament foc the first time, while
Navratilova was victorious in the

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-6

. ~~~~------~--------~~==~~~------~~--~~~~---

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, I• Dltp. 46:

Football camp set for July 15

DOWNING CHILD1
MUWN MUSSER

INSURANCE
s..-

Marauder football
camp set for July 22

•Gscoum

-'"·Oft

Guy Shoffidd, lhird
&lt;lie 15·
dey diaabled lilt. Acti.,.lad Darryl Harrill·
toll, oud"IIBldor, from the l5"41ay di.&amp;abled

1ill.

MlNNllSOTA TWIN$-Activaled lu·
n1or Orlio, .,od&lt;or, from iho 15-doy dJo.
ablad HJt . Optioned Lenny Webater,
cttdt., 10 Port.laad ol tbe PacifK: C011t

Loa~

YOJtK YANK£ES- Plooed

Milia w;a, pildM&lt;. CXIIht !Hoy dlolbled
liit., nuo.ctlvt; \0 June 14. 1\archued tM
coattac:u ot Scou K.amien.leck.i, pitcher,
and Carl01 Rodriauez, infielder, from
CohnlNI ollht ln...I ...... IAa.....
OAU.AND ATIO..I11CS-A.cti'tlated

=to

_ ..... _ ~- t-lht ll-4ay
di11bld. ti.L optionod BNc. Wahon.
Tacoma of the Pacific Coaat

Natlo11al Leaaue

ATI.ANTA BRAVES-Ilf!lod Rick
......... piO.U.. s- Donny ............
&amp;.Wir, 10 RW •moa' ollhe.lntntttional

Tw YORK MITS- PIIcod Via,.

Co'-··

oa&amp;fill.... - &amp;1M 15-oa,. IIlia·
obW 111L Adlnlod Kliab Millor, inllol4• · - lhel5·do• dlNbledlill.

fiSH FOR POND SIOCKING
DELIVERY WILL BE; Thuraday, June 20
POMEROY·R.&amp;O. FEED &amp; SUPPLY
2:30-3:30 p.m., Phone 992·21114
GALLIPOLIS-RIVER CITY FARM SUPPLY
4:30·5:30 p.m., Phone 4411-2985
Friday, June 21
BIDWELL·BIDWELL CASH FEED STORE
8:00.11:00 a.m., Phone 3811-11688
MINI UM ORDER OF 25 FISH
WE FURNISH YOUR HAULING CONTAINERS
TO PLACE AN ORDER CALL Tim BTOU AB0VJt OR CAU.:

1·1110-241-2615
Jor..rt .. Ml ... It .. fiNt4 It IMtltJ

FARLEY'S FISH FARM
IIIIa I
~ ...... 72421

SEE SUGAR RUN FLOUR ..
MILLS FOR ALL YOUR
LIVESTOCK AND GARDEN
SPRAYS
•Insect Repellents and Killers
•Garden Dust ~nd Spray
•Weed, Grass and Brush Killer
•Livestock Spray

SUGAR RUN MILLS

110 MLIIftY AVE.
992·2115
..

!

�17,1991

~P=a=g~e==&amp;==T~h~e~D~a~ll~y~Se==n~tl~ne~I~~~=:~====
., ~====~::~--~--~P~o:m~e:r~o~y~~:•l:dd:l:e~~:rt~,~O:h~l:o____________________________________:M~o~nd~a~y~,~Ju~n~e~17~,~1~99~1;

Rutland Alumni holds 62nd annual reunion
YOUR
SOCIAL SECURITY
•

By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager, Atbens

Does your child have a Social
Sec urity number? If not, you

should be aware !hat Federal law
nb w requires !hat most children
have a Social Security number.
: One of the provisions of the new
law is that 1991 tax returns, to be
Ciled by Aprill5, 1992, show the
~oci al Security number of any
ehild claimed as a dependent who
reaches age one by the end of this
y'.ear. Previously, Federal law
~uired a Social Security number
fer any dependent age two or older.
It is easy for a parent 10 obtain a
Social Security number for a child
!f he or she has not already done
so. All the parent has to do is con·
tact !he locaJ Social Security office
to request a Form SS-5. It's a sim·
pie, one-page form that can be
completed in a few minutes.
A person applying for a number
for a child will need to sujmtit evidence of the child's age, identity,
and U.S. citizenship or lawful alien
status. The person also must pro·

The 62nd Rutland Alumni was
held recently wilh approximately
350 people 81tending.
vide evidence Qf his or her own
Jim Fink gave the invocation
identity.
and the gliest speaker was 1im YenA public birth record may be nari, a coach for several years ai
used as evidence of age and U.S. Rutllmd.
·
citizenship for a person ~rn in !he
One alumnus from the class of
United States. Anolher document · 1922 attended !he reunion.
to eslablish identity, such as a med·
Meigs High School seniors were
ical record or day care recOrd, may welcomed to the event and anniverbe required. If !he child was born sary years recognized were 1941,
outside the u.s., a birth certificate 1951, 1956, 1961, 1966 and 1971.
n d us · · ·
Speakers for the classes were
d~.::
~ ~ t~~~':: Mary K. Davis Holter, 1941;
of age, identity, and lawful alien Charles Barrett Jr., 1961; George
status. The application lists exam- Rice, 1951; and Mike Nicholson,
pies of documents !hat can be used.
1966.
Once we have examined tbe
Scholarships were presented to
documents, we will give them back Aaron Sheets, Kristen Slawter,
t the applicant and issue a Social Norman Scott Matson and Ken
Security card for the child, usually VanMatre.
wilhin two weeks.
·
.
Two red and black Rutland ~
You can apply for a card for a which used to fly at Rathburn s
newborn right m tbe hospital in all Store were donated by Leo Morris.
states except Alaska, California,
The Rutland Garden Club and
Connecticut, Oklahoma, Arizona Junior Club arranged flowers for
. and Rhode Island.
· the tables and Boy Scout Troop
We urge all parents to get Social . 240 served !he catered meal.
Security numbers for their children
A tribute to all veterans was
before !he end of 1991 80 Utat they held and those·attending sang the
do not have to worry about this school song followed by a benedicmatter when !hey get ready to file lion. The dinner ·was followed by a
their tax returns in 1992.
social time and dance.
New officers eleCted were Ron
Rife, president; Linda Haley, vice
president; Patty Clark, secretary;
and Marjorie Pretty Rife, treasurer.
Any correspondence throughout
the year may be sent to the Rutland
Alumni Association, Box 125, Rut-

C:::

Classifie

George, Marlene Goff, YvQnne Margaret Parsons, Bobby Pape,
Goff, Mildred Grate, David Grate, Harry :Plummer, Judson Price, Paul
Maxine Griffith, Rosanne Kitchen and Rose Pauerson, Joe and Sandy
Goff, Sam Hicks, Donna Higgins, Phill ips, Tim Priddy, Shirley
C.E. Hewitt, Charles Hess, James Smith, Mildred Riley, Dorothy
Hewitt, Mary K. Holter, Raben and Rathburn, Geraldine Reed, Ronald
Evelyn HHI, Evelyn Houdashelt, and Marjorie Rife, Richard Rife,
June Hysell, Marlene Hoffman, George .Rice, Pauline Rife, Arnold
Jimmie Hobbs, Nancy Haddox, Riggs, Harold 81)d Marjorie Rice,
Dana and Bernice Hoffman, Linda Carol Pierce, Richard Peyton, Jobn
land.
Some of the alumni and their Haley, Loretta Hoffman , Donna Stanley, Earl Stevens, Catherine
Jenkms; Joyce Johnson, Sharon and Rex Shenefield, Harrietta
gues~ attending~ Gladys Ams·
bary, Vernon: Darrell 0 . Burson, Jewell, Jean Kennedy, Burnie Showalter, Jobn Soulhem, Berlha
Weldon Bartrum, Sharon Barton Knapp, Carrie Kennedy, Lillie . Shenefield, Janet Sigman, Gerald
Benschaler, Bob Barrett, Charles Kennedy, Lurene Kennedy, James Saxton, Shirley Simmons, Deborah
Barrett Jr., Bette Biggs, Jack Bar- Lanning, Rusty Little, Kenneth . Shiflet, Harry Snowden, Bennie
ton, Arian Barton, Kay Baer Longstreth, Larry Long, Douglas Slawter,,Robert and Judy Snowdeil,
Bulles, Dwight Brown, Elviria Long, Gene Long, William Lam- Robert Searles, Jobn Stanley, Irene
Barr, Jim Birchfield, Roger Black, bert. Robert Long, Sue Little, Larry Tom, Elena Thompson, Doris
Andy Barton, Ronnie Black, Joe Montgomery, Robert Musser, Betty Thomas, Jim and Eleanor Thomas,
and Janet Bolin, Marie Birchfield, Musser, Sherri Might, Carl and Barbara VanMeter, Lowell Vance,
Thomas Brewer, Bill Brewer, Gar· Ja:net Morris, Louise Milam, Betty Van Matre, Greg and Shirley
net Bachner, Ellen Brooker, Dana Claude Montgomery, Virginia Van Meter, Manha and Jim VenBarton, Paul Browning, Ancil Michael , Joan and Bruce May, nari, Ester M. Warner, Bob WickCross, Daniel Cremeans, Patricia David Morton, John Moore, Ken er, Norman Will, . Woodrow
Carson, Martha Chapman, Patty Matson, Leo Morris, Keith Mold- Wilcox, Denzie Welsh, Jane Wise,
Young Clark, Jim Bud Carroll, en, David Martin, Sharon Pratt, Margaret West, Kimberly Willford,
Phyllis Rice Chandler, Joan WiUiam McCOrt, Henry McKnight. Lee Williams, Eleanor Williamson,
Corder, Virginia Carson, Jim Dyer, Loretta McQuaid, Daniel McDon- Joan Wolfe, Raymond Wilcox,
Willis Dillon, Darlene Dill, Clyde ald, Dorothy 'Nicholson, Mike Ann Webster, Dorothy Woodard,
Davis, Maxine Dyer, Opal Dyer, Nicholson, Delma Nelson, Goldie Linda Will, Don Ward. Gary and
Nell Ann Rice Dickens, Marcia Nelson, Edwiti Nelson, Orion Nel· Anita White, Sharon Wise and
·
Denison, Melanie Dudding, Rufus son, Virginia Nelson, Gloria Oiler, Frank YounR.
Dillon, Catherine Domigan, John
and Jenea Hayes Dyke, Helen
;
English, C. Patrick Eads, Vernon
Alvis, Joetta Eskew , Margaret
Plans are being made for the Zilinople, Pa., by way of Baltimore 1
Edwards, Walter FaUlCIIu, Eugene
Theiss
reunion. This will be the in 1843. A daughter, Emma, and :
and Katie Fink, Jim Fink, Leta
to bring the family two sons, Henry and Herman, were •
first
attempt
Fetty, 'Sharon Ferrell, Vickie Fer·
born in Peimsylvania. From !here
rell, John Grate, Richard Grueser, together since 1946.
Lubert Von Theiss, a Lutheran they mQved to Ohio and Alben .and ,
Mike Grate, Fred and Avonell
· '
minister with his wife, Louise Berlha·were born.
The
reunion
will
be
held
at
!he
'
Marie, and their three children,
Star
Mill
Park
in
Racine
on
July
14
1
Julian, Agnes and Lena, immigrat·
with
a
covered
dish
dinner
at
noon.
'
and Vonda See Walburn, Jeff and ed from Wetter, Germany , to
•
Guyla (Roush) Walburn, Maurisha
I'
Walburn, Kristy Miller, Melissa
.
LEGAL
Walburn, Penny Koci, Cindy
Slater, Melody Walburn, Peter and
Romaine (Haright) Walbum, Betty
Haught, Tammy Walburn and Tim
••
Arnold, Mike and Sherry Walburn
Stengel and Lynetta, David Walburn, Mary and David Taylor and
April, Dane Walburn, Dale and
'I
Marjorie Clarke Walburn, Dennis
•
and Doris Rice Walburn, Tracy
Walburn, Harry and Arbrutis Wal.'
I
burn, Eber and Doris Walburn
t
Lewis, Dawn Monk, Em Reubel
and their granddaughter, Kasee
Dawn Parsons, Raymond Lee and
•
Mary Lou Montgomery Walburn,
l'
Greg Walburn, Crystal Valentine
HOWARD E. FRANK
and Aleah, and Kristin Walburn
Stack, Julie Taylor and son,
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
Michael, and Andy Wheeler.

la!Jd, Ohio 45775.
Decorations for the event were
carried out in a red and black
theme with cQpies of pictures
around the wall from year books
from 1923 to the present. Place
mats featured pictures of school,
the .school song and pictures of
some teacher who taught at Rut·

run 3

.

BmLE SCHOOL PLANNED • Pastor James R. Acree Sr., min·
ister at Hillside Baptist Church in Pomeroy, is pictured with the
clowns that will be at the church's Vacation Bible School which
begins today.

Hillside Baptist Bible school slated
Vacation Bible School will be
held at Hillside Baptist ChW'Ch on
Route 143 in Pomeroy beginning
on Mol)day throufh June 21
between !he hours o 6-8:30 p.m.
'·· .

nightly.
The !heme for !his y~· s school
is "The Light Show the Way
Through the Door to the Shepherd."
There will be clowns and pup·
pets each day. Vacation Bible
School is for all children ages 3-18.
There will be no nursery available
during this time.
For transportation call 992-6058
or 992-6768.

Birthdays observed

DRYAN HARRIS

New arrival

~ Paul B. and Kristine M. Harris
arc announcing the binh or their
son, Bryan Scott Harris on May 8
at O'Bieness Memorial Hospilal in
..,_lhens. :This is also the birthday of
his paterrlal grandmother.
The infant weighed eight
pounds and three ounces and wa8
21 and one-half inches long.
: He will be baptized June 23 at ·
Sacred Healt Catholic ChW'Ch.
• Paternal grandparents are Paul
E. and Marylyn A. Harris, Racine.
MaJema1 grandparents are Barbara L. and William B. Smith,
Jacksonville, Fla.; and Vernon C.
alld Sharon Iseli, Beltsville, Md.

A birthday party was held
recently in honor of Paige and
Wyatt Musser at their home in
Racine.
Paige celebrated her fifth birth·
day and Wyatt his second birthday.
Enjoyinj! the "Little Mermaid"
and "Cookie Monster" cakes were
Jeff and Anita Musser, Mary and
Bill Porter, Mark Porter, Misty
Swisher, Diana Carpenter, Kara
King, Chuck and Maria Knopp,
John and Teresa Porter, Charisse
Knight and Kelly and Christopher
Dawkins.

Chester UMW
meeting

held recently at Krodel Park in
Point Pleasant. W.Va.
Attending were John Harrison,
John M. Harrison, Amy Harrison,
Laura Rowley Harrison, Danny
Harrison, Margy Haning, Dave
Boudinot, Norman Wood, Jean
Wood, Lois Wyant, Kenny Wyant,
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wolfe and
Jessie, Myrtle Wolfe, Leah Paxton,
Sonny Hunt, George D. Hunt ,
Wilbur and Tillie Rowley, Wilbur
Jr. and Charlotte Rowley, Jackie
Paston, Tracie Chattin, Clirf and
Maxine Hunt, Rod and Norine
Brown.

In the service

Navy Hospitalman Apprentice

0eorge M. Martin, son of George

M. Martin of Roure 2. Lelart, WV,
rcc:ently reooned for duty at Naval
Jlollpi181, Newport, R.I.
lie is a 1989 graduate of St.
Albans High School.

PAIGE and WYA'ITMUSSER

1 Card ot Thanks

-

.......

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

Thl famHy of lvl
""Kay.. Logen wish
to thank Ill of their
friends and n•ighborti for all the food.
prayet'l. Cllrd• end
villlts. AIID tl11 ladles
who priPaNd end
aervld the food an
the day of 1entiC111.
Nifty $titcherw for
purchasing 1 book
far Pamtll'Dy Ubrary
in mtlf11Dry of K1y. It
11 · lmpo•lble to
thenlc 81Ch lnd ev·
ery one who
10
aupportiw
at th1 .
time of our
Kay
will be miaald by
many.
Thanks to
Rev. Kethryn Rielly
far hlr heart sooth·
ing wordl. Allo Ew·
ing Funeral Homa.

I

~ Mid~

'11111 " " ' " .................. &amp;lie ..........: : lite Vtlap
.... tile 0.._.1 CJIIkle ef ""lllc'\o.

\

..•
·•
i•

·'
"

'·

rlll 'll llry:nt'lli
St'l vII.""

45
46
47

F~ r nis h eO Rooms
Space tor Rent
Wapte d to R&amp;JJ t

48
49

Equlpmem t or Ront
-=or l a•e

8uain•• Tr.tnHI9

71 Aut os for Sill u
72 Truc ks to • Sui t: ·
7J V &lt;~n • &amp; 4 w o · ,
1A M o t orc:y ciUI
75 Bua t1 &amp; Motors lut S•l tt
7 6 Au to Pa r ts &amp; Ac:c•sor•l,llli
· 71

lnst ruc:ttu n
R • dio. TV &amp; C B R ~t~p~tu

Serv1ces

5 1 Househo ld Goo ds
52 · Sporting Goods
53 An11q+.~e 1
·

Miacellllll WU a
Wamed To Do

Bu1in• s Opportu.mty

81

Mt.lSICallnl trurn ttnls
Fru111 &amp; Ve g vu •bl •
For Sale Of Tune

H ttal tiiU

.
f:let1rocM S. R t~~ lr MJti'Utlron
Gu n tir;tl H11u lmy
M o b1 l11 H ome Re: p11rr
U p ho lsttH¥

84
8&amp;

Pen lor Sll e

58
59

Ho m11t lrup•o.,..u m en t 1t

82 Plumbm g &amp;
83 htiiNi t ing

M 1sc. M arch and1se
Bu•lding Su ppli•

55
56
· 57

7

Cil n1p1ng Equ lpmlltU

79 Camper10 &amp; M otor Hon 1Us

Merchandi se

SchOols•

Auto Rep1111

78

86

87

Business Services
YOUNG'S ·

POMEROY, OHIO

* PICIUC IIULTZR and ITAGE Por Rent
Scrvlnl Brukfut. Meals , and Snaclu

IIIIIUDiftiT •

II. I,

742·2451

3·14·'91·tln

SIGNS
· ~~rby

r-------Til coum
~

6/12/'91/ I o.

SAIIIITAnGN

51· P11C T"•NK PU"""'••e
....,
POIT-A·JOHN IINTAL
742-2188
1·23· 1 mo.

ACADEMIC
AWARDS
GOLF USSONS

pd .

~=======
"
· Public Notice

6 FOI 155

SECTION IX:' A oomploto
toat of thll Rogutatlon mey
bo abtilnod Of vlowed ot tho
Ofllco of tho Mllgo County
Board of Hoohh, P-ay.
Ohio.
II) 17. t tc

CUSTOM GOLF
CLUIS

5
Adl
~~~~~~~~;

-DAfOIS-$101 .,
IMGIS-...-IIoc.-$US ., ·

FIIEZEIS- $125 .,

II...... Coclo.toiWred•

w: •••• or welsnful. ,._

..... ~. . . . . . . . . tho

Jw17, 1117.
111111.•1..

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·~

'·"

....

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..

'•

....., ...

1·4-'81 -1 mo.

IIIICIOW.VE
OVEN IIPAII

•

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•

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•

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•

•

•

•

•

•

•

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BENNETT'S

•

•

•

•

•

•

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MDIILI NOME
•anNG &amp;
COOLING .

located On Saffonl Sch10l 111. off lt. 141
1614) 446·9416 ., 1-800-172-5967

'· ~

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

205 N. SocotMI Str111
lt1DDLEPOIT, OliO 45760
Offko 614·992·2116
HOME 614·992·5692
DOmE S. I'UaN£1, IIOUI

•LIGHT HAULING

HOUSES•LOTS. FARM I
COMMERCIAL
w. Need Ll otlnpl

ll·l-10.111

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EXCAVAnNG
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK

AU IIADS

lrhlt 1t 1R Or We
Pidl Up.

Complet• Grooming
For All lretds
EMILEE MERINAR

KIN'S APPLIANCE
SIIVIU
tt2•SJ3S or
tiS·U61

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...... ,,.. ,.., Offkt

614-992-6820

2171........ St.

PHIIOY, 01110

•-roy,

.17, 1!117:
Wty 111111111 by
arandc~INm: A1111ndll.
Su••: llnblnd,
W.,. E. Mljho1n.
"IN MIMORIAM"
Oar otlllr. lUll IIUIOAI

•~

992-7130

GROOM
ROOM

311/90/tln

W.l. MOIILI
HOME PARTS

(614)
696-1006

1·1·'91

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'

I

·,

.... ... ,., .. ,. .....
_

PnllltiiAtiS

•20 Y•fl lxportenc•

eQuality Homoa ond
Cuetom Remodlllng

IT. II 11111' Of

liLA;~;~~;~
. . .......,

TROMM BUILDERS

992·5100

....,..

'

/Jt•

....

,,..

OliO

.....

,_

ROOFING

AIID EVDY1'111NG UIIDDNEATH

Parts or
Acctaorilt...
SEE US FIISTI

loll •• '"' ....... ,...,,

· -~

WE DO

If yeu'ra In naad
of Moltil• Home

In•• • ......,. ......

o.l ..

FREE ESTIMATES

THE

Jllll

~Mt

...........

•

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
usm RAILROAD TIES

1· 12-90-ttn

•R1mad1ling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•P•Intlng
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992-6641 or
691-6164

1·14· '11 -lfn

.

~

,..,. 1(0 todi.J'

ITS EASIER ltOT TO SELLIT YOURSELF! TO FlU LEAK YOU
NEED A PLUMBER. TO SEll A HOUSE OR PIOPEITY, All
EXPERT IS REQUIRED- ONETHAT WlllSAVEYOU 1111.
HEADACHE AID ENDLESS AGOIIl ... CAll US TODAYI

-~~~~

•

piMII Sltld htf I Clrd.

J• 24, 1911 was tile day
sill was bom In ·Maip
Cotlnty... Ciarl E Wells, 11
Hillflale Sl., Hiflitdtfe,
llcll 4t242.

to _ .... 1711.01 "
1711.11. .......... of tho

\/.. .

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUILEWIDE HO~S

If you - - tills litdy

"""' .....
........
JudlaiMnt

..

•Slabs

1o-,. DISCOUNT TO
SINIOI ClnZENS

99l-S3U or 915-3561.
Acr.. ,,.. PM! Office
POMIIOY, OHO
10130/'11 1111

.......... lltloll .. .....

111111
• - ud unll
fllltlltl.Itolle....,..-cton
..... . . . .,. - " ' ,ltldge-

•Driveways

'

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

legod. Any llltlllettl
by lho ltiOrd of• •lollllon of

,.

-·-

•Patios

IICIO CMIIS-Sit .,

CJCJ2-7458

ltttlfflfllf.

~t!&lt;Rc .. tr:

•SidawBikl

DIYIS- 1".,

CLOSE TO TOWN- COUNTII' SEniNOI Recently remade·
led! floor plan home. 3 bedrooms, e•tri farge silltnadeck for
enjoying the summer evenings - greatforentertaining! This
home can be yours for $29.900.

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

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE

WAIIIRS-$101 .,

tho ...... vlolotlan ...

HENRI' E. CLEIAN D,, .............................. ...... 992-6191
TIACY .I NAGER .......................................... Mt-2431
JEAII TRUSSEll.............. ......... ......................Mt-JO HIU .................. ,,, ,... ....................................
OFFICl .........................................................tii·ZIH

5·10·'91·1...

USID APPUAJIICIS
to DAY WAIUffTY

diHotor o....,..ncy oondl·
tlon o r - · no pro-utlon
fo• violation of ony ,.... ...
tlon or ardor odolltod purIUint to ..,ion ~101.20. 2
In Mlmory
3701.21 , or 3701.22 of tho :..,_.;;.;_;.;;.;.;~.:...-Rw~ Code ..U bl11~------------~
plooe untl tw-.ty diYI llftor II
. In IOYilll mtmary of
111ch board of - t h hot notilled tho peroon ouiiJoot to
HELEN l. MILHOAN
.,ch rogulotlon or oocler of
wllo Pined 1•y 4

IUOh PIOIIGUIIon lhll ..
OOMIMR•III wtlln. within

Lima Ill.

Cltlml, 0110

COftMII&amp;,Iniolble . . . . .. or a

r •&lt;atloner...-lo-

742-2421
2t1J MI. outside
Rutland on New

JOHN T. TEAFORD

FREE ESTIMATES

8· 10· '91 - 1 mo. pd.

OPEN
TuHdoy thru Saturday
10:00 om·ti:OO pm

Signatt

TIUCIIING AYAILAIL£

(614) 915·4110

..UY •SEU •TilDE

lapair, Trophies,

BULLDOZER end
BACKHOE WORK ,
HOME SITES,
LANDCLEARING ,
WATER and SEWER
LINES

HA YE REFER£NCES

STEWARt'S
GUNS &amp;SUPPLIES

..

EXCAVATING

FREE ESTIMATES

Estlmat••
915-4473 .
667-6179

11-14·Hn

HOW~RD

Take the poin oUt of
· painting.
Let 1111 do it lor you.
VERY RUSONAII.E

frH

TACDIVIW ID.
IACIII, 01.

•

1m1101 • IXTIIIOI

ec-pllte
..._dell..
Stop I co..,ar•

949-2126

PoV11 Pltasanl · 175-69".!• \

639 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

LINDA'S
PAINTING

oaa,....

30 SESSIONS $3 0

~UALITY

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742 -2251

4-16·86-Hn

efllowH-• .

s....,s,.,,,

tldr HIOW'ltl(

by

PH. 949-2101
or 111. t49-2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
CONSTRUCTION

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Windowo
•Roofing
•lnaulation

"AI Reasonable Pric01 ..

992-3432 or
CJCJ2-2403
a-4·'81 ·1 mo.

aut..n4, OH.

INSULATION

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

310 East 2Rd St.

MilE LEWIS, Ow,..

J&amp;L

BISSELL
'BUILDERS

POMEROY
BOWLING

•H lgh Gfo11 on Tile
Floor Flnloh

3-li·Hn

11-14·'90 tin

Op1n Tues.. Thurs. ,
Fri .• Sat. 7:30 p.m.

Tim~

PH. 949-2101
or Its. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY CAUS

Pom•oy, Ohio

POOL~~~~HIIIE

•R . .aonable Rateo
•Ouetlly Work
•Fr. . Eatimatea
•Carlltlf Hoo Faot Dry

ctutlut

E••pt in~.. of •n em•~
gancy ondongarlntt tho pull·
lie holhh oou.,. by an opf.
clemlp, on ln-louo or 1

tan

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

ARCADE

·12-31-110-otn

-··

-

*niiDNO

CAIPR CliAIIIS
oncl nu fLOOR CAll

llew HiillleolvHt
"Free Ettlmetea"

Pllntmt

(FREE ESTIMATES!

; UI~IIP NOW OPBN

II""'" -

,.tory

- Interior l Exterior

, Rcwllono • Oet Togcthen - Parueo
:

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

- Electrical •nd Plumbing

- conoreu work
- Roo fino

* CAMPilfQ
· Beautiful Surroundings
RA'IES • o.,..Week, Month , or Scuon

t92·66'U or
691·6164

SECTION VIII : Ohio Ro·
vloeol
Code
S.Ctlon
Bf.
3708.19 Penoltloo:
Whoevor vlolotoo -tlon
3701.20. 1701.21 . Of
3701.22 of tho Rwlted
Coclo or any a&lt;dor or ,..ulo·
tlan of tho boord of hoelth of
I olty Of
dl•
trial oclopted In flllfiUiniO of
auch ..atlone. or Interfere•
wtth th• eaecution of 1uch
on ardor or oogulotlon by ~
mombor of tho -..or por·
oon 111-lzod by tho boon!.
oltoll bo llnod not more
thMt ono hundred doHoro or
lmprl- not more than
ninetY deya, or botll. NO por·
oon - 1 bo lmpr- fOf
tho • • offonoe un- tho
oflldovlt upon whloh tho
lo lnotMuted
proiocutlon
contalno tho ollogolion thot
tho oflenoo lo o ouboequorn

_

- Outt .. work

0Pik1'0 TD II'WUC

•R•madeling and
Home Repaira
•Roofing
•Sidil)g
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

dollora.
SECTION VI : Vltol Ro·
co.._ Blrtho/ Dtotho: Corti·
fled Copy F10 t7.00; ltote
Portion U.OO.
SECTION VII: Should ony
.,.-lon of thlo regulctlon
bo ctoelared uncanltltutlonol
Of lid lonny -•on. tho
re......,dor of thlo ,..ulctlon
oltall not bo offectod thor·

NEEDS SELL- THERE'S JUST TOO IUCH
- This home needs 1 family! 4 bedrooms, I 'h baths,tamoly
room, large dimng room, living room - lull ftnished base·
ment w/study, bedroom or playroom, and utility room. New
AC unit. 2 car gar1ge,large front silting porch. Also some new
carpeting and all drapes stay with thts very mce · well kept
home. Large lots' MAKE OFFER $47,900.

-Room Acldltiont

NJ:Jif THIS SEMOIV ·- POOL

--~---·~10~-1~~-~~~~ ~ ~·=Q=O~~~CO~UR~&amp;E~~~~~~~--========~

!Continued 'flam Pogo 21
Swlmmlnt Paolo. Public
lpoo Md llplalol Uoe:
17~ 1 ~1a1~~~~. 01, ORC
Typo: Public Pool. . .1.00
t.o, UI.OO ltltto JIOrt(an.
Public Spa, •••. 00 teo.
•21.00 oteto pontan.
Spoalol UH Pool, •11.00
t.o. tZI.OO 11810 portion.
2. Additional Public Paolo.
Public apao, end lpoclll
Uoe Paolo, operoted by tho
Foclorol govommont. ltltto
govommont, or 1 County.
City, Townoltlp. VH ...o, or
tu ou-rted prlmoov or H·
condory ochool, which to
locatod on tho ...... s.vot.
.ond/ar within tho • Confined oo tho ftrat It·
conOid pool. OPO, or opoclll
ueo pool, oltlll bo ohlfled an
eddltlonotltai.OOI tw.,tr·
flvo dolloro. ltoto Portion
will bo f21:001 Twontv·Fivo

•VINYL SiDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

CARPENTER SERVICE

Wo l e y - W. Do.
We Do Whot We Soy.

Public Notice

L£TART- I ftoor frame cozy home, 4 rooms. l'hbath, sheds,
garden space and ri ver frontage great for summer getaway,
f~hing cabin or comfortable home. ASKING $7,900.

II

Tr dns ortation

Mobi le Hom es hu Rt=nt
fa rm s tor R rtn t
Apiirtmeot for Rern

2 2 Monev tO Lo1n
23 Prot•11on•l Serv ic~ttt

.. .

Real Eatate General

POl £ROY - Avery nice comfortable home has 2 to 4 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, carpet and full basement and nice yard.
ASKING $27,000.

.

21

H1w.,1

Let•r1
Bufll!lo

CONSTRUCTION

RAINBOW RIDGE- 16.82+ acres with mobile home. Furn·.
ture, woodburner, shed: Property tS located in Eastern
School District. ASKING $16,000.

.

" NW~~

65

42
43
44

Si1ualioft Wanted

Llv lltSIOCk
Hay &amp; G ram
Sued &amp; Ft: rt +lllttr

64

I;IJDM

54

BOARD
. .

PH. 614·992-2554

rooms. bath, nice ltrepial:e in Irving room and 1 fam1ly room
w~h woodbumer mthts full basement. I car garage tn base·
ment also. Equopped kitchen and satellite d1sh top oH other
features 1n this v~ry nice home sitting on approx. IOO'x200'
lot. ASKING $36.900.

..,

bon
Appt e Grove
MMon

Have chlorine and bad taste
removed with an in-home
bottled water appliance.
FREE 1-Week Trial of Demo
Unit. No obligation.

'•
•
''

..

PI Pt e••nt

458
!176
773
882
895
937

30 PEOPLE WITH BAO
CHLORINE TASTING WATER.

I

'.

675

WANTED

••

I

M•cksl.pOrt

1~

CEDAR

MAIN

\

992

Ch•hir•
Pa~Mtoy
Vinton
. 985 Ch•ll•
Rio Gflnde
843 Port~Md
Gu.,.IJ Oist. 247 L"'" fills
- ~flbia Dill. , 949 R1 cine
Wllnut
742 Rutl•d
6e7 CootviHe

17

614·991·2321

992-2259

I

446 GalltpoUs

16

Mid.
t
lpll'
Hand Tufting
Cuetom Drape1
36 \' ooro l:oporlonc:t!

•
'

21 5 Upper River :d.- R.t. 7
(~cross from tl.e Airport)

cO . wv
Aru Code 304

Mnun

113-... Sec..id

•

237 lao Strllt, •••1. .rt Vlllp Offlc"

1&lt;1
15

6J

Hou ..s tor R ent

13 lnsurttn ce

,~~"""
UPHOLSTDY

I

GALLIPOLIS

12

6 1 f11r m Equtpmuot

6 2 Wanted l o il uy

41

11 HelD W8fltlld

,,

Thank You

----If, you do,· Contact Jean Trus•ll, Housing

tt.ppy Ad s

6 lost a nd Found.
7 V•d Sll t lfiaid 1n a dlll n cel

ctm•·r tlw

Metp Co..nty

M o bil e Ho m e$ lor So~l e

33 fofr m 1 for S al e
3 l Businuu 8 u~dlnos
JS lots &amp; Acre age
36 Real h t1t e W.nte d.

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

Dwight Logan
1nd Family

- · , . . . _ . . . , _ _ ...............

c.w•..,.v

5

Hon1 61S lor Sale

32

Pubtrc Sale • Auc t ~ n
9 W.-.t-' to Buy

Ar.. Code 114

367
388
246
266
643
379

.

w•
lo•.

••
•
'

31

8

Area Cod• 614

G111i 4 C ounty

~ BULLETIN
.
---- -

!

Phont (614) 992-6712

.60
.06/ day

:ru//uwiiiJ.{ 11•11'1' htillt' t•Xl'lumg1•.~ : ..

2:00PM TUESDAY
2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 .00 PM THURSDAY
2 goP M. FRIDAY

l

Specialist, for further information.

Clu.~.~ ifit•d fla!{I'S

DAY B EF ORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM . SATURDAY
2 00 PM . MONDAY

.

-

Would you lib to purchase a 50x100 ft. building lot in a good location.for only 13500?
Would you lice to btlild a new hamt and pay
no real estate taxes for 15 yean?
Would you lie to han up ta •sooo FREE
for site ill!pronments on your ltullding loti

P.rogram res_cheduled
: Tbc Wildlife Pqtllll scheduled
a&amp;:dlc Moi&amp;l County PUblic Library
in Pomeroy for Wcdaesday bas
~n posl)IOIIed and rescheduled
for July 20.

I

Card ol lhnk1
2 In M• mory
3 Annouu m.,t 1
4

.42

F.1r111 Supplies
&amp; L1ves1uck

Real l sld te

t

RMes ato to r c:onM cuiive tuns. broMftypd.., s Wttl be ch•gld
tor e adl diiW • • s eparat e adl .

Votrd S ot! LOS

SUNDAY PAP£R

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
I

·.20
.30

'

..

A post-gracluauon party was
held recently for Jason RidenOID' at
his home following graduatioo at
Eastern High School.
Attending were Sadie Trussell,
Pauline RidenoUr, Marilyn and Bob
Trussell, June, Jim and J-t Ridenour, Susan and John L. Ridenour,
Sandra, Richard, Chad and Chris
Kerns, Mary Grace and Ronnie
Cowdery, Betty and Joe Lieving,
Sh~ron Hausr1111n, Maye Mora,
Maida and Don Mora, Rick HyaeU,
T)'son Rose, Jared and Roberta
Ridenour.

~llll rJ 111 fill~ liS

Ov9f 11 Wor•·

14.00
•
16.00
19.00
1 13.00
tl .30 t day

on nu charge

COPV DEADLIN E
· MONOAV PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEONF.SOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
tHIUAV PAPER

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, 1.991.

Graduation
party held

10
Monthly

'A clilliSIIrod ;ulvert iiUinl Unl p l.act~d m Th e Oa1ly Suutuot!lle"
ceyt
cl asstli lKI tlt SPIII\'. Bu smcn C,·u d a nciiUU iiii'IOir Ct:S)
woll ,rl s o .tppear 111 l ht: Pt Pl ccasant Rt!'urs tc r and the G11 lh
. puhs OOIIIy Tr iburw. rll' iiCtllll \1 U~U I 18.000 huu,es '

•

• "Women Differently Ab~" was
the title of the program presented
by Mrs. Rulh Karr and Mrs. Mari·
Iyn Spencer at the recent meeting
of the Chester United Melhodist
Women.
The pwpose of !he~ was
to help UMW deal wilh "things
!hat can't be fixed," and 10 recognize the equality of all God's children, who are all diffetently able.
Scripture was from Galatians 3:2829.
The group sang the hymn, "God
. Will Take Care of You" wilh Betty
Dean as pianist.
A list of Beattitudes for Friends
of the Disabled was read.
Several stories were told of
handicapped people and members
were asked to 1magine what it
would be like to be handicapped.
The pro8flllll closed with prayer.
Mrs. Mae Young presided at the
meeting with 13 members present
and 77 sick and shut-in calls report·
ed.
.
.
Sbaron Hausman thanked the
group for its $25 donation to the
Heart Fund.
Thank you notes were read from
Tammy Barber, lhe Mable Erwin
family and the RO!ICoe Hollon fam·
ily.

. Reunion
held
The Hunt-Price reunion was

d~ 5

h1 Mcmor•am

'

Rete

15
16
16
16
16

6

'Pu ce ol .Jd t01 all-c aptlalletlers IS d o uhlu p11 ctt o l Bd coS\
' 7 pu out lm t~ type only u stMI
·
' Senlul t... +S not f e spo n ~ rbl e tor .eu ors ah m . tintl d lt{ !Ch uck
tor e n urs fi rs t day ad ru n s 111 paper}. C11 ll b efo re 2 ,0 0 p 111
ctifal att r~• publt c a tiou t o m ak " COHt!CI+U it
.. .
'Adl th at m ust til! patd m illd \l i111 Ctl ilfll
C ;nd of lh anks
H 01ppy Atl~

l

Wonk

1
3

Goveaw .Jy lt nd Found ads u ndt.'f 1 &amp; w uul s wrll bu

"f n !l! 01d s

Theiss reunion planned

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL ESTATE OWNERS

Days

POLICIES
• Ads uu1 s •d u Mc •gs, G;t lltil o r M uun co1mt ies n nu;t be prto
paid
,
·

Walburn reunion held
On Memorial weekend a
reunion was held for !he family of
the late Raymond Walburn and
Mary liarrison Walburn, now a res·
ident of Overbrook Center. The
event took place at Jackson Memorial Park in Vienna, W.Va. and was
organized by Dennis Walburn.
The dinner grace and meditation
on "Tomorrow" was given by !he
oldest son, Raymond tee Walburn.
Following dinner, !hose attend·
ing enjoyed picture taking, games,
remimscing and looking at photo
albums.
,
Attending were Mark and Kim
Walburn Moreland and children,
Bradley and Kayla, Ivy See, Blaine

RATES

TO PUCE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
"Rtn: ~ ll $ 5 0 diS.CO\Int fo r adf piUd 1n ;Uht ijll Ct!.

• The Area's ·Number 1 ·Marketplace

.~

...

·~

...

.

- ..

-"··
..

742-2321
&amp;/ 22/tln

1-niLWrtfelll

ROOFING
NEW-RIPAII
Gutter~

Down1pouts
Gutter Cleaning '
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

CJ49-2161

• . , • ••• , ., .... ell.

�~ge

B

The Dally Sentinel

Announce rnent s

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

31

SNAFU® by Bnce Beattie

JUT ' N' CARLYLEtl by Lury Wrtpt

44

Homes for Sale

Monday, June

Fony,

WV.

()"

1112 Chao1y s-10, -

Roduco~ 8um oH Fol. WhHo You

'72 mobile . home 12X85 exc
cond, 11,000. call oftlf 4:00 304·

Pllormacy.

O~L

Ani- AI:

Mobile Homes
fOr Sale

11541114.

12a50 · - l e Homo, Panlally

Fumlahod, 114-317-0518.

eona_ll" tor rerw, tumlahed, AIC,
carpot, good neighbor'-'!, no
~•1 Pt: Ploaaanl, WY 1-304·
17&amp;-11200.
f
Downelalre

Fumlahecl

73

Apirt•

1m 12150 Flomln10, 2br, Gao
F - , Hawty Pilnlod Root,
Slovo a Aatrijorotor lncludod.
$4,000. ........m4.

'

1flll Kirkwood 12x10 Total
Elactric, Aacond~lon Llka Now,
Zbr, &amp;5,1150. 114-445o0175.
im SkYtlna lloblla Homo, ln-

aluct. Several Extl'llll 11~
ZI03.

Employment Servtces

1N4 Monalon 141110,

w. ...od: Expo- Ro"""

-ncod

IIUol 8o Ex·
In Aaltlf10rollool leo
lltc:lllnoa, Chllloro, And iiVAC
Equlpmont.
Ptoooo
Sond
Aoouma or Work Hlotory To:
CLA 0'18, Clo O.Uipollo Dolly
T~buno, 125 Third Avonua, 0.~
Upollo, ON 45UI.

S3110IDAY PROCESSING
PEOPLE
lie, opopd, ~!!,- lily 24 PHONE OROEAII
· CALLYOU.
fron"! HUnicllne, WY1 COUld til In
lltoon County. II JOU hovo ""Y NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
EXTENSION p.
lnlormotlon ploOM • - tho 1-I00-311U242
2732A
lltoon Cou ...yREWARD.
Anlmol - · ·
:104-17W451.

, LOST, bloek l whlo Bardor Col-

.

LOST· Whllo tocod holllr on
Rldgo Run about 3 wko
114-111'4314.

AVON • All "'"'!cO~. Coli
w
..... 304-&amp;12-...1.

II~

-

llt~lyn

14

Business
Training
-IISouthaaotorn
Rllraln
Buol._ Collogo, S - Valley
""""·Call T... y, IM-44ii-4317H
Roglot-lon -*12l'IB.

m.-,. -

,..m.

..

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
Rlcii.PM_,Auctkln=,
run tlma..me..
- -Llc1nMd
· com to,•
aucUon

wanted to Do

Goo- Portable Sawmill, don,
haul your logo to tho m1ll luot
ooii304-&amp;7S-1t57.
llloa Poulo'a Day C.ro Conlor.
Solo, a H - . chlldcora. ll.f
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Af10a 2~10.
Batora, aftor · Drop.lna
waloomo. 111 441 8224. HaW In·

Eam Extra llonayl Wa train,
ALL Yanl Boloa Muot 8o Paid In WOrk ~ own houra, k_, curAd-. OEADUNE: 2:0G p.m. ,... (ob. 24hr 216-156o:l213
tho cloy ... _ tho od Ia to ...... Eal.111
Sundlly odlllon • 2:00 P.I!IFrldoy. llondoy odHion • 2:0G EARN IIONEY A-na - 1
Potantlal.
8aturdar.
Dotolla. (1) IGHI2-1000 Ext. Y·
10111.
' ~-----------------Pomeroy, ·
EASY WORK! EXCELi.EHT Pari
Middleport
o-uoc_..nood_
- r l b u t c n HOWl Call
&amp; VIcinity
tor unalna .r .cant.d m ruge.
" 4.fomly, Juno 14·22 Opon till 1711.
Ool~--~En GDT.
Datil, 2-mHol out Loadlna Croak
EASY WO~KI EXCELLENT poJI
_'' btl At. 7 - · - · Efc.
. Glganllc Yard Sat., Eielorn a- S50 00111ponto, nMcf
dlalnbulwo
High Sehool SotUrdoJ l SUndiJ -NOW! C.H tor-ma
-.lod
· l oJI.IM 22 end 23, t:DOam

;;o..E"''"~,:~ ~~

lint Toddler CO.., 1114-4414227.
PI- Loooono For Sonouo
!loglmor Sludanla. Hall An
HoUr LoNon Ia: S4.ao, 304-4&amp;1·
1f8l

--

wm .....,... -konclo It your
houu or miM. Have ,.ter.neea.

co•-·

build patio
dacka,
IC,_ted JOOIM, put ... vinyl
aktrttna. 114-

Wll

=.,r. ,,.....

WII oara 1lor aldorly In
my
·
AlllholllllfO
....,.
toil, 11W17-11H.
Wll Do Bollyolttlr,lgln llr Homo.

llti~'!'LIIaaPonallila,

441-inl62.

Adun. 114-

Will Do G-.1 -cloanlng.
SUO Par Hour. Gallpolla ArH.

Exportanced In Cor 114 441 1401.
· - lilotollallon And ..._ .
Bonrlco And lnolallallon. Apply
Ftnanc1al
In P - AI Bob'o Elocbcwlico,
Gallpolla.

.,Woot VIrginia, 304·77W7P.

Business
9 Wanted to Buy
Opportunity
· uu to buy
non ·.:~•
INOTICE I
dryara. . Wh
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSIING CO.
GE. Hotpollll, llaytag.
'I
. . . . . . thllt you do tH.f8l.
; :114-441-2144.
nooo with_.. JOU k,_1 and
NOT to_,. -lllrougn tho
.liMfi Chain Longlll F -. 114moll untH you hi.. ln-Tgatod
~ ~~~41~~~~~~~~~~·~-~~·~~~·------­ KUWAIT SAUDI ARAliA BAH- tho ollorlng.
RAIN: ll~na Sl7,100 • S1SO,OOO
: JJaod llollllo Home, 114-4* yrly.
ConatRICtloniOII
•JI171.
RallnoryiW-.
:":'1¥1~nt:...,..to-:~---,hoo-m---::H~
o,-:II-:-:1:-0.::-:15 llachlnloa&lt;1:1c.
Tran-•·
tlon/Houolng. CALL 1·2GI-731. ........
·1121.
7000 Ext. 11l7W4.
: ~wa~-::..:-,t.;.o;,:buy.:.-:,Slia.;.ndl=n-g"'um:::-:-::-,
' Bob WI- l Sona '11WII2· KUWA~ ~ WORKERS Mhur'a Chain Link F.nco.
NEEDiiil: S35.0G l Up Por Hour. Re.ldlnUal, Commercial. ln.
Tax Froa. Both Sldllod l U - d...rlal, Fraa Elll-aol Com• .W.- to buy, _,., a d.,.r lod Fot Into. Coli 1111-7JS-550!5 plato lnotallatlon. Phone: 114:_ ~ wortdna oondiUon, call Iller 4 EII. K-tH.
314427l
\- •,.m. l..........,1
!Milo l.oc.ol VMclng Routa For
':!':wa~-=,:-:;;To~IIUJ
;.c.:.:--;-Junk
--:-""CA=
ut oa llachonlco And Body'
J Sail!. Wll Sail AD or Port.
Naodod. All 8hlfto A
Rapoot
Buol-.
Sacura
:· with or ,.._ • LOftY LMIJ... , . 1301.· Call C.M 114 Ul MAT.
l.oeat~. Above Aven~ge In·
como. 1-eoo-840-11813.
• - - To ...,, ......... 'Tim- P-rey.
_ , o1-nd,
appllcaUon
to l.ocol Pay Phone Routo. lluot
bar, Top Pak1 Fot Whho Wr11o -ion
Oak l Alit. Col aflor 7p.m. 1141
CloOoiiJ -.... Box 7211', SaU Oulcldy. -~··
317-mt.
_P_om_,.,_or-"-,OH
_ 4S7111
___ •______ Ranta! Pn&gt;portJ, Houaa l 4
1
mobile - . . on Parcel,
good condlllon, good loc!ttlono,

w-. •
K-.
1

:......

::=.:

---------•---------l•pprox
1100 per m.,.h Income.
'
Will return
In-mont In 5
.yaara, Haw Hovan
Want to:
VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich

.. PIN donn EXTRA

CA&amp;H?I!

Quick? No Wayl But We Have A
Good, Staacly, Altontablo, Bual-

. -. Won1 Loot. 1-eoo-:1141:113.

22

Money to Loan
LOANS IV IIIAIL

to 11,000 Full lotlolocllon
Gaurantaod.
lorvlco.
UOO 411lliZ7SUitoo.

Up

-lot•

ReJI Estate

waohor and dryar, 304-4711-7e77.

1ltl SchuH 14117e, :lbr, 2 Balha,
Pluo Dan, SIYI S2,00G. FNnch
~o. llobllo Homaa, 114-4*

A-

Knox 1111, 1-ow~ 2 bldaoom,

31

Call our olfice for paid lA adeonce Nile a! '

,.,1

dopollt

Homn for Sale

101 4br Flnlahod · - · C A .
112 Aona Lot. or- C:My lohool
Dlltrtot, CIOM To ~f~ l
Hoapltol. S4t,OOI. 114-4
21.
lllr, 2 F.- ...... Room,
Puinp, I IIIIH Frono HotIOI'o, -From Galna
H.S., RUIO, .... ttl 01'01.

"

Clean. No Pet1. Retw.nc. &amp;
Dopoalt
Raqulrod.
114-441-1811.
Fumlahod
4 Roomo
• Both.

=~-="~~..;

=.

ri:::;:=~====T===~~~==~
54 Miscellaneous

107 SacOnd, oaUipollo, 114-441-

4411aftar 7p.m.
Fumlahod EHtCiancy, $150
UtiiHioa Paid, Sllara Bath, 7V1
Fo~h, Galllpolla, BM-448-4411

after7p.m.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 !Md-

room apartment• at VIIIQI
Manor
and
Rlvoroldo
Apartmantaln llkldloport. F"""
S1f!l. Coli 814-182·7787. EOH.
Mod8m downtown, 1 BR, com·
plato kitchen. CA. 114-441-0131.
Upotal,.

Unlurnlohed

ment. Utllltln P•kt No

300 Fourth Avenue.

45

-=

1,000 btu o l r - S1SO. 304HI-3114.

Bllakelball
4 !rich ' Gal· - Plpa, 114 441 421:1.
lolona G 14H Huakay Rkllna
- . , Lawn I Gardin, 52 Inc~
Cut. E1cotlant Cond~lonl ''"·

Itt.

.

Roome tor rent ·.W.ek or monlt,.

8 •._ _ _ __

FNits &amp;
Vegetables

or -

ot-

tw. 1ft. Polio Door, S1SO. 114-

FJrm Suppltes
&amp; Ltvcstock

2411-t147.

"F01 IIIIo: 2 Lola In v.taran Bocllon ot O.Y. !~amory O.r-.
Call 814-441-0121,

\._.W6AK. LUMPS?

•

-.bodyotaal5.

e

..

~-·~

1111 DodOI IWdlr, 4X4, exo

-

· &amp;5,500. 30&gt;H'II-51117 an~

... vema•age.

441-1121.

1177 Y..,.ha 4GO, Haw nraoL '&amp;

317-0581.

2 ·-oom mobllo homo· nlca
..t ,..

quiNII, no polL IM-1112-254\
2 llod,_,, good .....

conll~

lion, Utili por month - Haven
304-11:1.- anytlma.
I IR l,.llar, IIIII Croak Ad.
S2SOJmo. SlOG ...... 114-311'
0434.

44

411r, 1 112 llooy Fr Hao. Full

Apartment
for Rent

-· 2o.ct
BolhoL_C:"•
C10M
To
Town,
U~D Street,

- T o SaiH 1114-44'"7122.
...... Ohio: a ladloom HoUM
111on or Loaa. S11,ooo.
304-4Z..IIDI.

Blrtl Dog Pupo, 114..-41-8420.
Dog and Col groomlna all
apaclall11d In POodlo
g""'"'lng, 12 yra axporlanca,
304-t7H:I32.
Dragonwynd C.Horr Porolan,
8 1 - and lftmolaYM ldltono.

1113 Honda Shadow. s,aOG
llllaL Llka - I Atklng St,'IOO,
114-319-2127 aftar 7p.m.
1184 Font F-150, ahort wheal
baM, otap aida bod, 300 6 efl,
aaklng 12,300. 304-1175-!1173. ,
llopod, Llka now. 1~ mllao.
Paid l511, will toll tor $375. 614·

HE~i'J' A NIW Jcl Nf) OF ONION THAT
...- (;{lOW~ II(&gt; TO 'J.S FoVNPJj 6VT

• See&lt;lp

'T"AJcf$ 10
YtA~$ TO l&gt;i'liLOp.
IT'J c.At..LEP A
1r$LOW LEE~ •:
IT

t;.llt),"'f' l'/j1-~1'.1·

·•

.,~._

Ina CIRi-.

-·

From Orlando, Fill. (T)

t&amp;:&amp;IIL . . . . Moue.

laundry
- . ho traah pickup, o1r cond.,

to I t - I . . -.. :104·1'71-

Mualcal
lnstrumenta

,

8C1DIIftte
1:00 (J). 0 ....... Prince ..
Ill Nt Will lllUka Hltlll out
for • ~ on the town. (R)

Sino.

(J) MOYI :

On ... Una (R)

(2:00)

Ill ill·~

MICOyver heiPI Ill old
high-~ IWMihNrt who
le lbuMd. IR) S...O. D

(!) l'lre on

the 111n11 Culfina
have uNCI mylhl 8l1d
legendlal 1 - o r

~=~Ins

iMajora•llljorDeciThe
to

trlot be
apontaneou1 by planning a
tell-minute ll(p. (R) Slereo.

R....,,..,.w.-c

l1111 Croeby Clamb•~

Comedtene Norm Croeby
8l1d Boll Hope join ITIUIIclll
1111111 8l1d ...-Jnera to
kick off .,. 1111 Croeby

I

Oolsl -.

Nalklnll Celebr1ly
TOUI'f1IIMflt. 11:001

aw~~~r•llllgWorld

B8nafool Chlmpionlhlpl
from Port St. Lucie, Fill. (R)

.• Q87S

.8654
+K JOB e

+J9U

u

SOUTH

••

.AKJI072
+7

The Springboks
may spring back

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weal
Pus
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Soot•

By Phillip Alder
South African players haven't com-

peted in world bridge championohips
since 1180. However, this situation Is
likely to change if South Africa is readmitted to the International Olympic
· Committee.
On today's hand from a South Afrl·
can tournament, decide how you
would play in six diamonds, West leading a low trump.
North's temporizing two no-trump
was forcing ' after his partner's jump
rebid. Tben South drove Into tbe slam
via Blackwood.
Deelarer won the first trick with
dummy's diamond queen and led a
spade back to bls king, East ducking.
South crosaed to dummy with a heart
to lead the second low spade, but East
rose with the ace and gave biJ partner
a spade ruff to defeat the slam.
South does no better to draw trump&lt;
before 1olngto dummy for tbe second
spade lead; East ducks tbe ace twice
and must collect two spade tricks.

••
2+
3+
4NT
e•

Eall
Paaa
Pus
Pus
Pass
"Pau

-..
••
ZNT
••
s•
Pus

Opening lead:

+4

'---.,-----------~---....,...

.

The cOrrect play · is to preserve the
diamond queen In the dummy. Win
trick one in band, cross to dummy
with, say, a heart to the ace, and lead a
spade to the king. Return to dummy
with a club to the ace and play tbe second spade.
·
U East wins, the spade suit Ia estal&gt;
llsbed. U East duckl, declarer wiDS
with the queen and ruffs a spade with
dummy's diamond queen. He returns
to hand with a ruff, draws trumps,
concedes a spade to East's bare ace,
and claims.

e0 lllagun
PlllawNe••
(1'1 I of I) (2:00)
0 lla11am lllolaom

1:30(2)•

..... left out when her bell
lrttlnd lbandont her. (R)

s.reo.c

Ill

a ........, .......

naporter'a ln-deplh llllcll

I

1M

about Jack prOVII too
rl'lllllng. (PI 1) StereO. Q
1:00 (J) • 0 ••ut~~~~tta ad of
... I I - (PI I ol2)' NIC
Montlly Night at ..........
00
'God
llleu ... CIIId'AIC
........, ~Movie (2:00)

rMO&amp;.

INVITING-~

1:) ~

HI mEtEit-.1 10 .JOit-.1 "THE

FRceNDeHIP Cl 118 ...

s-:c
(!) (!) WMitiirl-~0Dri111189DIDnllll Hong

Kong 11 the third 1etge11
financial oenter In .,. world.

s-.a

aFYI agang• llloroeclto
MwfiiiJ . . - . Thl
buy

tell-minute ChrlllmU glltl. ,

~::..~.~.nm.

Wnallllll
• Nallhvtlll Now Sttreo.
w-·~'"' INch
Yoi!IJIIII FllllllngO Hilton
snootout lnvllllklnlllrom

BARNEY

a
UH--PAISDN II

Reno, N1v. (T)
IBI.aloy ICing Uvel

I WA5--UH-·TALKIN'
TO

THATDNI

t:30

OUT YONDER!!

aWooda talka
• l!venlng
..,..
to hl1
lnd

The World Almanac~ Crossword Puzzle ·
ACROSS
1 Change color

or

4 Oparabr

Verdi

a Am not (II.)

12 Brown ohldo
13 Chlmn1y

14- ,~.
genuo
15 811 ely algnll

12 wda.l

Anoworlo

38 Pun, e.g.
38 Downtown
Chic at a
40 Study
41 11181 In de. v1lopmenl
44 GOOIJ
45 Cal 111embllr1' 81en.
46 Perform

Pna-

Puuto

1111111

4(1 Scandinavian

capilli
51 01 1 IHIIn

17 !lent

18 Slangy
alllrmellve
18 FluiiJ 11i111
21 Acltel1
Arden

membrene

22Cheractertollc
24- Johnny
21 lndlcallane
27 Thr""
bltldld
ermldllo
28 Name
31 W. Colli coli.
35AdviH

53 Nollrom a labor group
55111111
ma....1r11
55 Bomb 111~
Ufll (II.)
57 51, Rom1n
58 Abominable
enowm1n
58 Iaure•• ot
me111
80 "•••rlheleu

10ft

1 111441nva-

•lan date

2 Chrlalmll
3111adtiblaeef
4 CIO Pllllllf
5--my
he1rtln Sen

hla latlwr· ln·IIW llboullllt
women. (R} Stno. Q

10:00 (J) .....

(!) (!) . . . . In ... Paolllc

Thl Amerlcln llr1d JIJIIMH

economlotare~Q

111
a • Northem
A New York ClociOr

I

culture IIIOCk In Allllkl. (R)

aSetttng
A~Mt~oa'l eup ·•
Sail lot Sin [)(ego:

kHchona,
loolh100ma,
m1~
room
addltloM,
roollng, i!dtng. lnatallotlono, 11

Rlllectlorll of 1970

ASTRO-GRAPH

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

_........, appllcotlona lor

Mleon At

.K IO's

+KQJ76

.and Vallly Pakov uplar1l
... Kamciralkl wlldemell.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Electrical &amp;
Refrlgenatlon

. . . I .. , . ,

you ..-I li-o ICICIII lltulllane In
.,. ,.... ahead could tum out to be big .
·to you In the --CIII world.
milk• Cll1aln your relation-- .
lhlplh8VI llrm IOUndlllane betar11 you '
blain naqullltng ' - '·
. . . . (lllr 21.....,.•1 Unlorlunat•
ty, -~~ with whelm you'H be lnVGMd today miGht be. ~lnld ..
· you nto call .,.lhoiL Thll comblna· Peop(e

-

EAST
+A 10 9 2

New York Mall (L)
• . . . . . . Sino.

lHAVEf ~- 17
e 111t a., NIA. 1nc.

-

84

ALDER

WEST
+8 3

laMbell Cincinnati Reels 11

, ALLEY OOP

3347.
yra; u:perienoe, MllrnaiM, 3Q4..
,
1114 T·llnl, E1callant Cond~ . 17!1-2UG.
lion, S_harp,l2,700. 114 448 1111·
Ron'a TV S...lco, opodoi::'J
In Z:.nhh oloo -•na
11M IulCk Canlury, Loadod, other llrMdl. HoUM calla, a1110
Auto. AJr, Till, CruiM, Very A..... aoma appliance ,.,.,,., WY
able. Hao Warra,..y. Good Up To 3114-1'18-2354 Ohio 114-441-2454.
11• 4• 1144 .tt•Tp.a
'!'.~. ~- S121 Por llonth. Septic Tank Pulnl!lna li!!LGolna
...... Tonk, ..._
AYO. l,._..nn, 114-441-'lt04.
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
JacUorl, OH 1-..37-t121.
1DII
Chryolar
LIBoron
GTS,
-.... llno- .1'leploal
. . . 11!4-171-21113.
..... blnlo,
Auto. Air, auMIOI. U300j 1111 Dlvl1
S.W·VIC
S.rvlca.
-a, Auto. Air, 13100; 1•H La Gn:~ Cf'IM:
Ad. Partt, t~
lltna,
Auto.
Air,
hiOG.
114-2&amp;1·
HAPPY
JACil PLEA
plloa, pickup, ond delivery. 814-potonlod
_liARD:
_ _All 12711.
441-11214.
- l n l h o _ .. _ _
TICIDU or IXTUIMATORS.
82 Plumbing &amp; '
· .............
MEHTALLY
Ul'll R lIIMRON0 I'UD
Heating
l 8UPPLYI14 1a11114.
· Cortar'a Plumbing
ondHHIIna
Fowlh anci Plno
Dolllpolla, Ohio
114-441-3at

-do.

PHILLIP

Ill a • !nllllllltMMIII
Tonight Stereo.
Ill. llltlll'l ,......,
Ill Wheel .. , . _ Q
liD ........ Lllgut

a world eup .... Siding

"'~"

NORTH
+H

.AJ942
.Q3
+AQ5 3

IJ)IIIjar Ll 18111 laaebll
Atlanll Bra- II
Phlllelllphla Phllllot (l)

St-.

1eat Mumang •• 1•. ~75-

SQUA~ES

BRIDGE

7:30[Jl!£~1Q

,.

J::

ml,_, PW, cruiM, ·PO, 304-171-

IN

. . Dad to daughter, " What have you done to your
hair?" Daughter, "I've just teased II a little." Dad, "
Teased ill You've driven It CRAZY!'

215-5873• .

3011.

No. 3 below.

SCitAM LITS ANSWIRS
I -• ~
Quartz - Haven - Knack - Rosary - CRAZY

,

11

Mobile Homes
for Rent

lETTE~S

11114 Yamaha 2110
ac Rlnnlng cond, $450. 114-

-.i...,c::",..Y

42

hod'"' my,_"''

P~I NT NUMBERED

. '.
·'
~~- bike,

=·

-=

I

lngs. Now 1 know that the
· hardest tears to bear are the

Motorcycles

·-••vary. - ..-

=-

•

•

•u•

boot•.

.,,t-T-1T.,,~,~,2r"11--t

.._..._....._._..._............. you dt¥Oiop front ...,

......

f-

I
5
I i Mit r II
- ~-- ~r.~-~_r-1 ....J.--J~

•

TICWEK

. rl,---r-u-1,-w~(--NI-N~I.....,I ;;,~~;·:~~h~;:

-- ...-

81-.

four acrombled -.:!1 below lo form faur almple -.11.

'-·-'"·....ol."-.L
.
-

'""""· nso. et4-371-Z127 """
7p.m.
1181 Honda 1100 Cullom, Low
1111-. Excallanl COndhlon.
114-44f.4213.
.•
1112 Yamoha 110 V-Twtn I
Vain, DOHC Shalt brt.., Walar
Coolacl, 6823 lllloa, SIIOO. &amp;14'

· Concrota &amp; plaotlc aopllc tai!U, 12M. Tuaa-llun U.II-7PII.
Ron Enno Enta-., · Jack·
Tomltoel, ..IIIWtMrrlee, appl•
oon, ON 1-.6:17-4521.
lAmlohproduclo.
Flbanllaoo carnpor Top~ ExCII-

s. _____

6·----7,__ _ __

S8

' Ohar~G"fiO leiters of IN

T_,...IE_DTrjt-id

6ETTHETWO

1115 Chevy S·10 Blazar, ~
Spoad. 811111&gt; ..-lngl M,- .
114-317·7231.
,.
111111Gdao Caravan van. 14100.

74

Ounrovln FRI• farm: J... oH
IR lit oul ol Albany I , . _

Ianl &amp;ndlllon, ASO

Apartment avalllbl• lor 2 or 3
conetructlon · workera 304-182-

Musical
Instruments

Him- Splnnat Chu~h organ. Good CondHion, S700. 114311'7254.

1,...._..._

Ar.rt·

Furnished
Rooms

2541.

57

Merchandise

.

6- 11

Wt.!ERE'D VOU

r;·

1-------

4-------.....
5,__
_ _ __

••

9

1

'•

all -...., call ..,.-992-1021 or Starting at S120,mo. 0..1111 Helot.
75 Boats &amp; Motors ·
. For Bolo: FUll Flgu...._ Plua 8lu 61 Fann Equipment
114-1112-7107.
114-441-8510.
lor Sale
Wadding - . , (""""x Slu:
Looldna !'or
Houo- ;;SI;:aao=p:;:on::g-:rooma::=::-w::l;;;lh:-:co=o:;:,,di::'ng. z.t..21) 0 I C IIIUof•. VIctorian 11ft. Trt-Axlo Flatbod Troller'
lna? COnaldar A Clayton Alao lroDor • - · AI hook·upo.
With 2 11111th Hlloh, Fot All 11• Alnkar V-206, V-II lull ca~­
14i7U_L 3 I ada oc::~•l. Tot1l Coli aftor 2:0G p.m., 304-7'13- ·
Fonn UNISlOO. IM.ue-f724.
vu top. $11,500. •xc concl. wfth
Train,
·
V
Uno,
Chuol
With
Llaii
Llr9h
l
-.... .,,.... .... Elooo 5&amp;51, U.eon WY.
lnllor, 3114-171-1571 or 175-42311.
. . _ . , Aaklng Prtco: s:m.
Font Tractor With 1ft. Buah
Conlar, 1-114-77:1-1220.
114-441-7140.
~.
2000 Ford Dloool 1it0 4HP. Y1rntha Boat ._otor,
46
Space
lor
Rent
.~.111; Lola llt!dal Excatlo,.. CondHion, •500. 81:'O.E. air_.._, 22.000 ITU, Bupor
oncl . - Iota.
135 II.F. ,ooo; JD D1ooo1 4414435.
Plica roducod. Plrono lloblla Homo Pork, good Condblon, 114-111:11-211117.
Shan&gt;. S4,oso· 2 • 111 WhHa,
;;3117.="=-:-=:-:- --= Country
Routo
33,
North
ol
Po
..
roy.
1000 BarUner V_., with cubby
SPECIAL tactory to you. 1111 Lota. renttlt, ~rte. aaln. Clll I f uton 1400 Round ·-~ 11,110. Ownor Wiit Finance, 114- cabin,
leaded, S17,000. or taka
$SOli; 11711 CY ow •-tl22.
two or thraa liod,_ 14X'IO 114-1182-JII"/I.
over paymenta. 30•-CI75-58SII5. '
- . -.oplatoiJ oat up, In~~.21J14Ja;-,...:.~·';l D-11 Allla Cholmbara tractor Gamotlahor 14ft Tri-Hull,
eluding oldrtlntl. till downo: hoot
~ -..., Haodo oh OU 0
wnh tront and lcador "'""
15hp 08 motor, gal·
tapo and allpo. S13,ii?.OG
Merchandise
Ring and Jack Shall. Graotor ~-~ muat Mil SZOOO. Ol.o 114- tlbarglaoo,
vanlzlld trailer, bow mount
(cholco ol colora) Call 1-eooetada Ia lncludod1 PI'ICo: S200. tla-T170 - - ..7 pm
otoctrlc Til, 304-671-352l
721-4o4&amp;1or -111.
114-351'·'1230 attar op.m.
For Sola: Squara Balan, HaJ
st.
Household
Kenmore eleCtric drr-t, good 81-, ·11-ora. Rakao, PTO . HAIIILTOH WATER SPORTS '
33 Fanns fOr Sl!le
SUIIIIER SPECIALS
Manu,. Spnaaclor, Gordan Trac·
cond,I75114-'J112-2101.
Goods
tor l Equlpmant, Utllhy Tralllr, 1011 Kawuakl Jell Skl1, 150 x ~
2 houMa.,31 ocroa, 112 milo oH
Raybum HOld. Bam and 3 out· 1 Y•r Old Solid Ook Dlnlna Lumbar. Walnut a Charry. Olhar Flald Roody EqUipment. • Q,775; ISO SX • Q ,l75; 110 SX
Sa- &amp; planed. Alao ba... -.·o Form llaChlnory, Jack· • h&lt;FZS. U.od Jot Slda Starting
bulldl"fiO. :1044711-2401.
Room SuRa, lncludoa Pia Solo, board. 'Ciaing, *· eu ul 1038. oon, 011 114--4.
AI: t995. - 11110 Ba(a lloala,
2 Solid Wood lor
1 Yaar
34
210 Est 350 llagn\tm S1B,SIIo;
Business
Old, hO Each; 1 Fl- Lamp. I Mu,.ay Riding Lawn - r For Jlm'e Fa~~-...1 SR. 35, 18.1 SVR V8 Opon Bow N,SOO;
Y- Old, S71; Entottalnmonl Bolo: 11 hp, 3t1 Inch CUI, $350. .... Gal
I
114 •4t Sill; 11tt Cobia 11.5 Cuddy Cobin.
Buildings
Unn, SSG; Wood Choat, 1 Yaar • ,. 4411471.
Sl\500. Financing ~willable.
Old, SlOG, 1114-44.._ aftor
Proelorvlllo, Ohio 114-116-718i.
·
.
.
.
•
lmpio"*l~L
Buy,
R-hloMcl-ra,Dryora.
Foror L.oo All
4p.m.
0111, tloda, I :ON:OG -daya,
101100, WOUld make
Guorontaocl prompt aarvlco lor Sol.
111176 Auto Parts &amp;
clluoch,
C.rpol S4.0G. Yard l Up; VInyl all nlcel, rnodlla. nw Waatwr
to 11011, lccotod Galllpolo h.H l
Ylnt. Porcft Tu~. DryorShoppa. 114-441-2844.
Accessorial
Fonv. 304-t'IH332 or 1'800- SUI l SS.M Yard. llollchan
63
Livestock
752·7111.
SIGNS: P-blo .llahlod '!'""·
Bu- Tranamllolono, Ulodl l
~.UPf10&lt;
R!"'d, 114- wllon~ UOf, F,.. tat· 1ltl 1411. Horoo l llock Trollor, .....-rN. - atanlna at •11; Allto
OFFIC&amp; -CE FOR LEASE on
.SI,IM; IJ8ool 2- Tnlhar Porto. 114-2411-54n, 114·3'/P1-.o
2nd A.._, Clolllpollo. CIOM to
IIIII; IJ8ool 11ft. llooll Troller,
AppHollCO Inc. Oood f47.50 boL 1~:1-:1413.
2283.
•
Court ...,_, 1 room, 2 room1, County
11,211. 114-2114122.
ulod
appll..,...,
T.V.
8oiL
Ooan
Sroomo,4raomo.AIInlca1J 8 Lm. to I ·p.m. Mon.-811. 614- StOll plpo ldool lor culvert, 111
.-.tad, air -ltlonlna, 441-11M, 117 :lrd. Avo. Ga~ efz•, c:all from 1:00 to 1 :00PM. Pair I yaoor Bolglan galdlnao, 79
campers&amp;
lorm loom call 114-112·
your Wat•l .....,. bill are paia. llpollo, OH
Collalf"VIIIa, WY 304-372-a4011.
Motor
Homes
lltu your cholco now. No
Surplue, 1nny t.tt.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ..
Approx. 100 lbo. 1171 cem,-r 27 ft, good cond
mouna- clclhlng (,..tal Wall Foci
-""r~""PC'"Iory:~ W.ahora, d,.,., rotrlpoloro, ourplua
clOthing
h.
por P· For lutohortng. 114-441-8243 . ale, TV amanna, now 11r01, .,11
rongaa. Sloa111• AJ&gt;illancao, menl). Sam -vlllo"a._loo- EYonlngo.
·
- - · 114-441-'lell dOJ, Uppor
cvntalnod, 304-t7~2453.
'
44&amp;-1131en.
AI- Ra. ·BaaIda stono
BIIndlt"!,.,:- Otllco. Pri, Bot,
c,.ot llotal. Call 1114-44e-7311.
1813 Toyoto motor homo, Mil·
Sun.
:00 PM daya,
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Tran sporl n11 on
cont11mid, awing, rMHI hitch,
houn cal llaloro 11:0G AM. 304LAYNE'S FURNITURE
IISY on gu, tow miiH1$10,200
Loto • . . _ ... a.bla tor COmplota " - lumlahlngo. 2'73-5155.
114·1185-4418
Houra:
lion-Sal,
1-5.
114-441now ""- •-ruction on
Uoocl Paorlm aaa plu.a o•ln 71 Autos for Sale
Rayburn Road. Povod ,...d, 0322, s mlloa out Bulovlla Rd. SIOO.OGI14-lll2-2011.
1187 Coachman Clltaic 30'
Fraa Dallvary.
motor hom.. e.ooo miiH,
COUniJ
wotor,
-lctlono. eom,.tolo lnlormaWATER WELLS DRII.LED: 1111, 1t84 Chovollo SS 354, 3311 hp, lcadod with aotraa, U2,00G. will
PICKENS
FURNITURE
llon ulod on ~. :104-171ro-bla •mea. 114411-1311. nooclo work, $1,100. 304471- tl'oda. 304-372.a4011.
·125:1, John D. Gerlach, no HouMholdNawNaod
5173
lumlohlna.
112
mi.
alng-ldo lrallera, ,.._ _
Whirlpool,.trlaorator, axe cond, ·-== ·-=-----:=--:,..,.---:- 1111 T,.vll Trallor1 32' 0. Bod Ft.
Jarrk:ho Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WY, $300. :104471-15rl or 171-4231.
1HI c.-ro 310, mint oond, KHchon, Lg. Air a Rat2 . ~rlcod
1101110G' l :IOOlltSO' Iota on ooll304-&amp;71-1480.
SUnblnl noodo arlbtramo. To Sell, ChHipuke, Utt, 814Bond Hill Rood, 3112 mllol to Aotngarator Slclo X Stela, 55
•
314 hp water pump, 304471- 1184-6:121.
Building
Point P-111, public watar I Avocido,
3131.
Glbeon,
1111;
Itt. - t truck oo= IIHpa
. ..,, cable TV. echool bua
Supplies
At~ator, adr. FroM frM, Ice
11171 VW Buo: Body Good, 4, good condhlon I
·2l!l7
atop, 1-h pickup, :104-171- Maker.
Nice, Sll&amp;i Refrigerator,
137S.Coll
114-441-4141
attor
I or
3014.
Block, llntato,
brick, -ate. c
wln- on tt~t~tkulda.
2dr, White, Frolt Fr. ., 115; dowo
WinLOTS FOR SALE In Galllpolla Elactrlc Rango, 30 Inch, Whha, ,.,., Rio Grande, OH Coli 114·
Servtces
Forry. Will accapl trallora, chy SIS; Electric Ra!IQ0 1__ Hoi'VOII 245-112\
11114 - · and tm Chow.
Oold, S1SO: Hotpolril naahar I
'
llaUbu, both
aood - · 304411-1111
.. 304"-t75-4-.
.....
21:12. - · - · Phone :104-171- llryor Sal, $150 EICII~=I~poot 56 Pets for Sale
Wtiahor, U5· AI
With
81
Home
Fot
Rlvor loonll proparty In ouarantaal Sbglfl Appllancoa, :'1 &lt;Fa::m::.:::,.:-:AK::::c:;8::_:::~::
:-::::::m~.:::-~. 1171 Font T-, -lnl...,
01
Improvements
lluon.:104-TIWOL
114-441-7311.
cOlor, txtre nice. I
'J.
•
=:~:.l&amp;':.~lon,
AEHT20WN
Groorn and Su- Shop Pot 1177 -·ng, now- paint, low
~~~
Rentals
Grooming. All tnida, olytao. ~~,. -n, St,IOO. :104\1're Fumhura
lama Pol Food Dooler. Julio
Sola l Chair, S1UO Waak; Wobb.
Coli 114-441-11231, 1-eooRacllnar, S5.47 Wook, Swivel 312-11231.
1m 01t1o cutlaoo, :104-t'le-3841.
41 .HOU181 fo r Re nt
AocUr, .3.13 Waak.Bunll Bod
Complota &amp;5.41 WMk, 4 Drawor AKC roglotorod 4 month old im Cocllloc Fltalioeod, aooc1
Zbr l.ooalod 13 Wh~• Choat, SUI Wtak; _ . , Bod·
A - 8tovo l llolrlfiOralor , _ Suha, 7 110, 111.17 Waak, lomalo R-ollar. Shoto l wor- car. ·*1111!'Yllua.
, or'frotEqual
114mod. Good pup. 114-31'141133, For Pick-up
Fum-.
mam., SlOG lncludaa -lng.c:oun~r Plno 3ti'JI.JII22.
CUnla Home lmprov.menle:
2!11-1443, blwn. I a.m.· I p.m.
llopoalt. 114-441o31711.
Dlnelto Wllh Boncll I 4 Chalro,
Yaara Exporlonca On Oldar l &amp;
SIO.N WooiLOPEN: llondoy AKC
Raalatol'od
lr11tany 1m Chryalar Conlobo 31o, Nawar Homoo. R - Addhlono,
14 Bunlalta Addn, avollabla July Thru Saturday, tun. to lp.m, Sponlolo I Wooko Old, I auto, runo aood hN robuiH Foundation W&lt;Ni&lt;, Rooting,
111. 1200. rnonthh -url1y Sunday 12 Noon Til lp.m. o Montho Old, 2 Ytar Old. 114-317- trona, g,..tlntiiloi, groat car, Wlndowo l Siding. Froa l;iclopoolt rwqulrod. C !zane No- llilao OH Routo 7 On Route 141, 72311.
11500. Doyo 114-182·2155. Attar
lloilal ....... 304-875-44111 oot. lnContanary.
~::-~.=r;w:;:;.~ To
1:30PII, ooii30447UW.
SOar A.
AKC raalatorod oockar aponlal
pupo. l&gt;odlgrood l llmlly 11111 S.larl Station E l R TREE SERVICE. l~
Fann S30Gimo. Krll"r
aoelalllod, raody now, 814-441- wagon, I Po._, Runa Trimm~. Trel Aamaval,
Gocid, Air Condhloriod, C:loan. Trimming. Fraa Eotlmatoal I
CNak
W.far,
3171
lludoaG.oL
- . ,._na
114-441-2124.
31l'7115T.
'
-T 114-441-3710,114-311'7124.
AKC llaalol8rod - · lllnlaJET
turo Collloa. Bobla and - · · 111111 Splr:!!....,auto, po, pi&gt;, n.w
S llanltoomail 2 loolha,
1*317-11212.
pollll, 14,wu ............. good Aarollon IIIOora, -ll'od.!
Bradbury Rood,
lddlopott,
coiiiM-tta-3703.
l ro-bulft -ora In otock, R
Ohio, 304-f75-3134.
1!112 Cutl- SUpramo, H,OOO EVANS, JACKSON, 011, 1

nt!lhborhood, """ l

Tum your clutter into cash,
Sdl it the ea&amp;y way... by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place your cla,itied qd todgy!
15 words or less, 3 days, .
3 pgpers,$6.00

bod-

Bank
R~lolmod
llobllo
Homoo, Many AI SlOG Down l
Tau O.ar Paym-. Fraa Sal
Up &amp; Dallvory. Call Eto• Homo
Wantod: S...lco Tachnlclan lor Cantor At, 1-eoo-118N711.
Hoollng l
Air Condhlono
Mobile Homaa In Stock,
lngllla!rlglratlon. Exlllllancod. ~I Sand R""mo: Cia 079, Clo Gal· Aoducod. Bla Sovlngo On All
llpolla Dally Tnbuno~,l25 Thlnl 1m llodalall'ranch Chy llobllo
Homoo,l14-441-1340.
Avonuo, GalUpollo, On 45131

1B

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

·a

rooma and Nit., 111 111c,

Tochnlclon.

•'

MON.. JUNE 17
01111 'TV lilllng Inc. Ft Wid!. ,..

n....

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

111011.

raqulrod, no poll, 114-in-2211.

i•

•

11171 ~ Vari Gc:, 1 -;

mont. Walor Pold, •3001mo. ~
Dlpoaft. No Poto. tt C.*r
Stroot. 114-354-11113.
For rant, 1 llod.- apottmant,

1225 utiiHioa Included,

•
·'

~~,b~

atter7p.m.

c

Slop AI Excalolor 011 Co. 131
Eie~ ...,., St- - o r . tor
l u l l - . Rool Oooollno.

'
'

The Dally Sentinel-Page

-· ·

Shoclla, lrakao. And llolor.
Only 4,000 llllaol 114-a71-zti't

32

Fruth Phann1q.

'

or Me. 304-372-1310 Ripley, WY. , ~

""

oul·

Rod'"'" your_ Welalll
_ • Tau
·
Dl.t
Pion"
EVap Dlu•otlc. AYaHablo AI:oncl
Frulh
SlooP, tau

-- ·-· ...

Television
Viewing

1111 t::hovy 112 ton, 307 V-II
112,001 actual mil•, aood tlrO!f'
l bodv, Mil g .... , ltOG 114i;
lll2-37d3.
~
1m lntomallonol, 17ft nat atoll '
llod, (1100 lcod atar), gooc!
oOnd, h ,SOO. wllltrodo lor Ool_t14

0

Nollcl, No HunUr)Q or Tn.rps t
I!'Q on tho Sandy l..eW Fo~ 1

.

17CAIJ 'bu seAT~

1154 GIIC pickup IIUck, I cab, tor pone or rorot-,
SSOO. or oHar. 304-1175,
5871.

254e.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

•

-

Announcements
CHINESSE KEMPO
KARATE
Ciao- otartlng . -. LNm Mil
dotonco while you -po up and
w&lt;Ni&lt; oul. • - • your "*llol
• phyalcal ollllftlaa, lor - view col Jay ~10 p.m. 114-'l'Q-

Giillloollo

a~Gnday, June17,1991

•

12 Jrucks for Sale

3

-louo
""""""
... ilotod. !Iandy
LawiL

17, 1991

Ho•••·

~,

tlon ciluld opel! trouble. Know wher8 Ia
laok lor ramttnee and you'll lind 11. The
Altto-GI'IPh Matchmlker lnslllllly reVMII whk:l1 llgnl are ramanllc8lly perhlcl for you. Mllll2 pluealong, ..tt-111·
dr.....:l. etiiiiPid anvelope to
Matchmlker. c/o 11111 - · P.O.
Box 91428, ~. OH 44101-3428.
CAIICIII (oiUM 21_......, Zl) EthOUglt It ml(lhl be dltllcun tor you to
.,... up to your mlellk• today, dolendlng them - ·• Iller the fact that you
wwe wrang. Don't make axcu- mlke emends.
LEO(...., ZI-AIIt- Zl) Your lndUIIrloua
tntantlona n productive plllla could
go by the board1 today - 11 _ , .
ant'- you to pvtlclptlte In -hlng
1111111 mare anJoyable. Don't be Wllk·
willed.
VIIQO
Zl)ll'l
not
to lll8blllh OII(ICI._ tor youNII!thll
may be dlllleult to achieve today. YrNt
tii18C(ty n pai(IIIOI ml(lhl not be up
to PllfOmllllll.,. lUll.
~ , ...... II-ODt. . , Don't get 111VGMd """ 111 lndlvldull who .......
you IMI a ltlfte uncomtortal* ta be
around today. There ml(lhl be Julllflca-·
lion lor your r.llnge.
.
ICCJE 10 (Cal. M lluu. Zll There'l 1
p · -a-roe
- you
may
ol,.....
to
_,..
.• -type
.,.lelyllty
ola frllntltoday. Kyou do. you may not

(Aile-··-

·v

-t

e' World NeWI
""• the ..Uitl you get.
IAGITTAIIIUI (Nov. Z1 Doc. 21) You
_,., be In .,. mood to lel your com·
panlana do your thinking lor you loday,
but )I cauld happen - II you chOGM tile

wrang IROcilllane. Placid, unclemllrld·
lng typel . .lt you lila belt.
CAI'IIICOIIK (Doc. 2WIIn. ttl You
may mentally 1111Qnlfy lhe megnltude Of
you h8VI to do today 8l1d end up
minimizing the ellortl you'l exert. Thla
11 not 1 formula for ach""'lment.
AQUAIIIUS (,.._ »Fait. 11) Under
moet
you'ra not a pol_ . . . Individual, bullhll mlghln'l be
t... toclay. Try not to demand !ram oth·
en what you wouldn'l Willi demanded
lram you.
PIICie (l'elt. 30 "n 011.10) Try(ng to
lleer • rnkklle oounecould -•ely dilUte ~ lhcllvenlll today. Bometlmel, H'l to l!llke • lllnd, If 1t'1 .,. wrong one.
, . . . (...,... :111-Aprtl ttl Kind wortll
a gentle~ are a muatln dialIng wllllltlbol dlr- today. A eoll IPpraeoh not anly turnelll away
It
corupii•IDI. .
TAUIIUI (...... 30 1111 30) You'na not
likely to mlrlll(ll ~-today
• pruc1ent1y • your frllntlly .,.,....
-*1. Tbel'l probably why lhlllndtvkiUII !Ia H lnd you don't.

cln:ulllo-.

-h.

tD 7DD C1ull Will Pat
llaUrtean

10:11(1) MOVII!: 1111r Two 11118
(PG) (2:00)
10:30 (J) llljar Lugue lallbal
. Chleego Culllll Lol

~t+~(L)

•

tt:OO&lt;Jle

nChala
Ill Ill• a · a•

M:t::
·~·
us:::~~~~

• 1111 en.., Clz-hlh
Comedlent Norm CIOiby
and 11011 Hope join tilullca)
11'1111111111 Zllllrtllnn (D

Clolllf

=Ooll
·n

kick off "" 1.1

. TOUIIWIMII.
NlliiNI
(I

aa....,..

1

Ill 11:10~

I

IIICIIIIIrL ICing

a 1'lnltiM . _

a==~

. . . . I ....... C81

~a::o·Q

...... Tllllllftl

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Clphlr CW'tPfOO'MII . . _..., lrolflquol I l bJ .._.. ..... petl ftf pr...m,
latft let* 1ft tr. .... ltencll fOf ........ ,...,..
J.

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GLTOWI'TC

TI'XYWC~KVOI

MLKCT

MY P .I 0

TPZIWLVW.

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IIIIPWOYK

IIIY.I.ILKT •

PREVIOUS SOI..UTION: "I'm anly lilty-elgllt lnd Jut! beginning. By the
lime. I am ..... AJ, Brltleh ftlrna wll rule tho world." - lAW Gilda.

I

:

.

,

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

All pets can be man's best friend
Dear ADD Laaders: Your response to the penon who wrote
about the cat on the power pole
sll!lwed your true calon. ( couldn't
believe it when you Slid no penon
should pve his or her life 10 save a
pet. WeD, you n welcome 10 your
opinicn. Here's 111inc.
.
I have had a WOIIdafu1 hone for
26 years. He is my best friend. I 1111
also attached 10 my goldfish. Most
people don't know that goldfish have
distinct penonalities. I'm devoted to
these wonderful little crealllrcS. If
either my bam or my house were on
rue I wouldn't hesitate one minure
1Q risk my life to save my pets, and
rm not asllamed to admit iL "" STAN
D., DANVILlli,ILL.
DEAR STAN: You and hundreds
of others. Keep reading.
From Ponsmouth, N.H.: I am 9
years old. My name Is Hope. I'm,
fed Up with you. Don't you knOw
that animals have feelings just like
human beings? How would you like
it if you wen: on top of a pole and
people said you wm:u't important
enough to save? Animals save
people all the time. They also lead
pccple who IIJe blind and fmd people
who n IOSL They deserve 10 be
helped no muter what and you
should have said so.
Piasblqh: People an: goofy. We
have a good II'CC surgeon business
and charge S7P nip. You wouldn't
believe how ~y calls we get from
folks who ask us 10 Ret their cats -and yes, their kires -· out of trees.
When we tell them what our price is

they yell into the phone, "Vie don't

care lbout the price, jllll get 0111 here

and do the job. Our kids IIJe aying
their eyes ouL• So we go.
San Jose: You (lllhelic, pampeled.
misguided ignoramus. The fact lhat
you have such a big followins (I'OYCS
that the majority of people ·an: as
dumb as you are. I am burned up
over your Slatelllent thai a human's
life is more valuable than an
animal's. Don't you know that we
IIJe all God's creatures?
· Dear ADa LaDders: · I am a
lieutenant with the New York City
Fire Department. I have been
with . the department for over 18
years and several times have had
to decline requests from people
10 rescue cats in II'CCS or en power
poles.
In roday's environment of tight
budgets and resource cutbacks, we
. do not have the units 10 devore 10
such missions. Can you imagine the
public outcry if a fare erupted and
,we lost a life because we were tied
up getting a cat off a power pole or
out of a tree? Incidentally, the
rescue of a cat in disttess is not
always successful. The sight of a
ladder has caused more than one
frightened cat 10 jump hundreds of
feet 10 its death.
Last and certainly not least is the
danger to the rescuer. A cat on a
power pole is in a hazardOUs area. U
the rescuer is · not careful or is
momentarily dislriiCted, he could
come in conlaet with a live wire.
This could · be fatal. Cats always

Ann
Landers

ANN LANDERS
" !ttl. Loo Aqeloo

'llmelllyodiCIIIe Uld

Creaton sr~cate . "

manase somehow to g~ down on
their own. Have you ever seen a cat
skeleton in a tree?·· PATRICK T.
REYNOLDS, LIEUTENANT,
NYFD
.
From Hartford: Ann, you sure
made a lot of ttouble fot me. In fact,
you broke up a budding relationship.
My boyfriend and I were reading
your column together •• the one
about risking your life 10 save a pet.
I then asked Ira, "If your house
caught on fare and I was in there
and so . was Blaze (his cocker
spaniel), who would you save if you
could get just one of us out?" 1m
said, "I have 10 be hoqest with you,
honey. I would save Blaze. I have
had him for seven years and I only
met you last February."
Do you have questions about sex,
but110 o~ to talk to? Ann Landers'
booklet, "Sex allll the Teen-Ager:'
is frank allll to the point. Send a
self-tMidressed, long, bu.siMss-size
envelo~ allll check or money order for $3.65 (this includes postage
allll handling) to: Teens, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Bo:d1562, Chicago,
IU.
(ln Canada, send

a

Wolf Pen community notes
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
attended the graduation of their
granddaughter. Becky Thoma,
daughrer of Mr. and Mrs. William
Thoma, Newark, recently.
Memorial weekend visitors )f
Mr. aKa were Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Sarver, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Sarver, Indiana. and Mr. and
Mrs. John Sarver, Jolm Robert,
Crown Point, Ill.
~· Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy,
Daniel and Steven, Daniels, W.Va.,
are spending some time with Mr.

and Mrs. ClWiey. Smith.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Kevin Knapp and family were Mrs.
Donna Roush and Bud Lavender,
Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Lavender.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah and Matthew, Texas Road,
were recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Haning and Ronald.
Krissie Sargent, Athens, is visiting for a few days with Guy Sargent and Jonathan.

Monday, June 17, 1991

. The Army is not covered by the . mean?" she ~!$ked. "Aren't you in
It has written its own danger when the Scuds blow up .
regulations to keep Women out of above your head?" ·
the posts most likely to be involved
Randolph was two miles away
in front-line combat - infantry, when 28 soldiers, including three
attack helicopters and some women reservist$, were killed in a
artillery jobs.
Scud missile auack on barracks in
Army women can serve in com· Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.
bat when their duties take them
Other Army women are relucthere, however. The Gulf War was tant to call for females in infantry
the first large-scale test of that poli· unitS. ·
.· ·
cy.
.
Most women don 'I have the
Barlean, a member of the 10 Ist physical strength or desire to join
Airborne Division (Air· Assault), the infantry, said Staff Sgt. Jenni
said she learned to be a combat Comley of a support unit for the
leader at West Point.
Green Berets at Fort Campbell.
"I used 10 sit back in class and
"If you ask them to crawl
say, yeah, great, but I'll never have through the mud and under barbed
10 do that," she said. "I thou$ht I'd wire and get shot at, they'd say no,
be siuing in Olclahoma divvymg up even if they are into women's lib,"
beans and bullets to send to the . · said com ley, who saw women solboys over there."
diers bring curling irons to the
More than 90 percent of Army desert
career fields are now open to
Maj. Gen. J.H. Binford Peay III,
women, according 10 the Pentagon .. commanding general of the JOist,
Women made up about 6 per· said the division's women percent of the combined U.S. forces formed ·"superbly." But Peay, who
sent to the Persian Gulf. Fourteen will be the Army's new deputy
women were killed, 21 wounded chief of staff for operations,
and two taken prisoner.
doesn't favor expanding women's
Army Staff Sgt. Christi Ran- com bat roles ..
dolph, 29, said women have earned
a shot at all combat jobs.
"What does combat really

Family attends Horton baptism
Opal Eichinger, Chester, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Eichinger and
daughter, Suzannah, Pickerington,
attended the Holy. Baptism services
recent! y of El~beth Diane Horton,
daughter of Laura and Jeff Horton,
Worthington.
The infant joined with her

cousin, Jennifer Marie Horton,
Renee Nicole and :Ashley Marie
Horton.
A luncheon was served in their
honor for relatives and friends at
the home of their grandmother,
Phyllis Horton, Worthington.

'

exterior and interior and described
its beauty and convenience. She
also distributed literature containing further information on the
home.
Birthdays for the month of June
were Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Reports of those who are ill
were given and get well cards were
signed for Nellie Sargent, Lois
Pauley, Alice Young, Zelia Taylor.
Iva Johnson and Amber Warner.
The worthy patron gave the
table blessing before the group
entered the dining area where they
were served refreshments by that
committee, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
King, Mrs. Anna Schuler and Mrs.
Charldine Alkire.

.Bowers hold annual reunion

l

TUPPERS PLAINS - The pers Plains; Brian Bowers, Nicole
descendants of the late Earnest Bowers, Laura Aeiker, Middleport;
~ and Adrit (Eichinger) Bowers
Morris Wolfe, Gallipolis; Jeff and
lfeld their fourth annual reunion Lou Wolfe, Chester; Leroy, Joyce,
~ntly at the home of Steve and Charles, Dianna, Britnee and
Kelsey Sauters, Pomeroy; Bill and
T101i Marcinko, 1'llm'zS Plains.
. . Attending were Eileen Bowers, Sandra Baer, Minersville; Steve,
Midd~ Wayne and Ada Rowe, Kelly, Brandon and Marcy Hill,
Mary tover, Sherri and Kayla, Minersville; Sonja and Mathew
Eddie. Angie and Mathew Mi£hael, Demo sky, Athens; Herman and
Jim, Arlene aad Bridgeue Barnes, Donna Bowers, Columbus; Shawn
Racbelle and Joshua Rowe, Johnny Hunt, Kimberly Walters and Jeff,
)tae Westley, Kelsey and Ernie Columbus; Nedm Tarvin, ColumSellars, Iohn and Susie Lyons, bus; Joe, Kay and Jay Proffitt.
Tiffany Cherissa, Steve, Cindy and Racine.
Stephen Sellars, all of Racine; Joe
The next reunion will be held
and Mary Bowers, Reedsville; Pam May 24, 1992 at the home of Steve
Stewart, Guysville; Steve, Tarni, and Tami Marcinlco.
Joshua and Joey Marcinko, Tup-

PHS class of '31 .holds reunion
Celebraling their 60th reunion, Lytle.
members of Pomeroy High School,
Letters and telephone messages
class of 1931, met at the home of . from absent members were shared.
Florence Smith prior 10 the alumm These included Kathryn Huber
banquet at Meiss High School. .
Duffy, Halifax, Ma.: Irene EbersAtrending were Mary Kathenne bach Powell, Parkersburg, W.Va.;
Baer Roush, Lawrence Blake and William Soulsby, Bay City, Mich.:
son, Kenneth, Parma; Mary Con- Elizabeth Titus Frisch, Fort Wayne,
way Mossman, Gallipolis, and Ind.; Chester Turnbull, Huntington,
suest Helen Boster; Geneva Duerr W.Va.;
and Wanita Young Bartch,
Hallerman and daushter, Jan Chesney, Norwood; Barbara Elberfeld Fremont.
Genevieve Well, who contacted
Lytle, Chillicothe; Mr. and Mrs.
members
regarding the reception
Charles Gloeckner, Jacksonville,
and
banquet
provided those present
Fla.; and Lula Russell Hampton.
with
an
updated
list of living memThey wen: joined at the banquet by
bers
and
current
addresses. Listed
James Hazelton, Mr. and Mrs. Olen
were
32
from a graduation class of
Harrison, Evelyn Qualls Woolfolk, 58.
Huntinaton, W.Va.; and Robert

CASSIE HUBBARD

Hubbard accepted
to Showchoir Camp
Cassie Hubbard, daughter of
Jerry and Kathy Hubbard, has been
accepted to participate in the 1991
Showchoir Camps of America, Ind.
She will be joined by over 300
students and teachers from a 20
state region. This camp is held at
Milliken University in Decatur, Ill.
on Monday through Saturday and
consists of a week of singing, dane·
ing, special concerts and workshops.
A final performance will be presented by the camp participants ~n
Saturday at I p.m. The concert IS
free to the public and is held at the
Kirkland Fine Ans Center on the
Mi!Ukin Campus.

In the service
Navy Chief Petty Officer James
G. Proffitt, son of Ruth V. Kes·
teron of Rutland, OH, recently
returned from deployment .to the
Middle East in support of Opera·
tion Desert Storm while serving
aboard the aircraft carrier USS
America, homeported in Norfolk,
Va.
Operation Desert Storm was the
largest deployment of U.S. military
forces since Vietnam. The operation was in response to Iraq's inva·
sion of Kuwait and threat to Saudi
Arabia.
A 1971 graduate of Racine High
School, Racine, he joined the Navy
in August 1971.

'Super Weekend'
slated June 22-23

A younger brother, Robert I.
Roush', Sun City, Ariz .. also ccle·
brated his birthday and wedding
anniversary with them on the same
day.

By BRIAN J. REED
McCluskey bid was submitted in
the
amount of $17,403.85 and Bob
Sentinel News Staff
Don Tate Chevrolet of Pomeroy McDorman's at $16,295.
submitted tlle low bid for a new
Police Chief JerrY Rought stated
police cruiser and that bid was he would begin to look for the
accepted at Monday ni$ht's regular police package (consisting of a
meeting of Pomeroy Village Coun- light bar, radios, etc.) for the new
car. No details in terms of delivery
. cil.
Three bids were received for the time were available to council last
·new cruiser, all of them for a 1991 night. .
In other "business, council
Chevrolet Caprice Classic. In addition to the Tate bid, bids were approved the only bid received for
received from Bob McCluskey paving materials and service for
. Chevrolet in Cincinnati and Bob this year's street paving projects . .
McDorman Chevrolet of Colum- s.w. Dean Asphalt Paving, Inc. of
Proctorville was awarded the con·
bus.
The Don Tate Chevrolet bid was · tract for paving at Beech Grove
submitted at $15,870.30. The Bob Cemetery and on several sttcets in

Rubberbandsrolled
into 100-pound ball

c

SOMERVILLE, Ohio (AP) It began taking shape 16 years ago
when Dale Gabbard picked up a
few rubber bands littering a
school's hallways, looped them
together and rolled them up in a
ball.
An estimated 400,000 rubber
·bands later, the ball weighs 100
pounds, and some of the neighbors
think:Gabbard's the oddball.
''I was a pan-time custodian at
the old Somerville School," Gab- ,
bard said. "I noticed there were a
lot of rubber bands on the floors in
the hallways, and I had to pick
them up."
.
. When he took them home, his
mother complained.
"One day she told me to ball
those up and get them out of her
way," he said. "So I did.
"Now I'm 32. But there were
about four years there when I
didn't work on it at all.''

NOTICE:

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

.

' • •.

A "Super Weekend" is planned
for Friday, Saturday and Sunday at
Eastern High School.
There will be baseball and softball games, a yard and balce sale on
Saturday and Sunday beginning at
9 a.m., a draft horse field day exhibition on Saturday at 10 a.m., a
chicken barbecue on Saturday and
Sunday at 11:30 a.m. , an country
music show and square dance with
four bands on Saturday at 6 p.m .,
and a hoop shoot contest on Saturday and Sunday.

•

&lt;

· ~.!":

SUPPORT FOR OPTIONS • Sen. Jaa
Michael Long (D-Circlevllle) .Peakln1 Monday
at tbe Regional Advisory Co11DCil OD Aging
meetillg urged members to convey tbeir support
for tbe Opdoas for Elders program to the Ohio
Legislature conference committee. That co~mit-

burg, W.Va., owned by Mid-American Waste Sysrems, Inc.
The district's two other faciliResidents of the Athens-Gallia- ties, the Gallia County landfiU and
Hocking-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton the Athens/Hocking Reclamation
solid waste district may be faced Center, would not have the capaciwith increaSed trash fees when two ty to take all of the distrtct's
of the district's four landfills close ·. gamage, he said.
this year.
Although the Gallia County
District Director Lance Wilson facility recently received an emertold the policy committee of the gency expansion 10 take 200 tons
AGHJMV district Monday night in of waste per day, the expansion
McArthur that the lifespan of two will last only 90 days. The ·
district facilities may expire l!efore Athens/Hocking site is permitted to
any new JandfiUs would be permit· take 400 tons of refuse per day.
ted.
The district had petitioned the
Wilson said that the Wellston Ohio Environmental Protection
landfill will close in 30 'days and Agency·10 allow them to construct
the Allied Landfill will c!oseSept. . three new 1,000-ton-per-day faciliL When the two close, m-distnct ties for use by the district But Wil·
trash haulers may have 10 take dis- son and Committee Chainnan Dale
trict waste to a landfill in Parkers- Neal told the ~IK:y board that they
'
By MELINDA POWERS
OVP News Staff

.

'

,.---Local briefs--.

Bridge will open Thursday

GEORGE GRA:rE-MANAGER .

STATE ROUT£ ·124

RUTLAND

- Discussed continuing comSpring Avenu~. owned by Bill filed several weeks ago, and the
Young, was being stored in a village has been unable to locate plaints about skateboarders and the
vacant house next door to the the property owner. According to police department's alleged refusal
burned structure. According to Morris, Village Attorney Patrick to investigate the complaints;
· Discussed an increasing numWerry, the house has .been con- O'Brien advised that a warning can
be posted on the structure and it ber of junlced cars and high grass in
demned.
· the village;
Werry stated that he had been in can be demolished after 30 days.
• Discussed the use of large
contact with the Meigs County
Improvements to the Pomeroy
Health Department concerning the parkin~ lot are still on schedule, dump trucks instead of pickups wid
garbage complaint and Mayor accordmg to discussions held last vans for routine village work;
• Approved a funds transfer of
Richard Seyler assured Werry that night. The village plans to re-install
village officials would investigate lights on the turrets of the parking $40,000 from the general fund to
the complainL
lot wall, and Seyler suggested that the street fund.
In addition 10 Seyler and Morris,
Investigation is continuing into the wall be sandblasted ll!ld sealed
council
members Bryan Shank:,
as
a
part
of
the
work
in
order
to
a complaint regarding an abanBruce
Reed,
Thomas Werry and
doned and unsafe structure on Ebe· protect the sandstone.
Larry
Wehrung
were in auendance.
Council also:
neezer Street. The complaint was

Residents may face higher fees ·
when district landfills close

A rally to show suppon ·for Ohio coal mining jobs has been
scheduled for Sunday, June 23 at I p.m. in the Gallipolis City Park.
Richard Trumka, president of the United Mine Workers, and
U.S. Congressman Clarence Miller wiD !\: two of the guest speakers
at the rally.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
and BOTTLE GAS

the village. The cost for paving will
be $33.95 per ron.
· In a related discussion, Clerk
Brenda Morris announced that the
Ohio Department of Transportation
has moved the paving of Main
Street to the Pomeroy/Mason
Bridge from 1992 to Summer,
1991. Brief discussion was conducted on the village's plans to
complere the paving project from
the bridge 10 the Pomeroy/Middle.
pon line.
Pomeroy resident Charlie Werry
discussed excessive trash and
garbage at a residence on Spring
Avenue. Werry also complained
that rubble from a burned house on

tee cOIDposed ot representatives from tbe llouse
and Senate are formulating a compromise bud·
get to be adopted before the July 1 deadline.
Cindy Farson, director or lbe Area Agency on
Aging, Marietta, seated, reported on tbe proposed phase-out or Options and the detriment to
senior citizens ~vices.

Coal rally planned Sunday

h~"t&lt;

....

'tol. 42; No. 31
. Copyrighted 111111

Long says, 'we're in a critical time
for senior programs in Ohio'

Lt. Stephen Decatur led a successful ra1d into Tripoli Harl&gt;or in
1804 to bum the U.S. Navy frigate
Philadelphia, which had fallen into
the hands or pirares.
The Benevolent and Protective
Order of Elks was organized in
1868 in New York City.
Dr. Wallace H. Carothers, a
research chemist for Du Pont who
invented nylon, received a patent in
1937 for the synthetic fiber.

BUY FROM AN L.P. GAS
DEALER WITH EXPERIENCE

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, n..esday, June 18,1991

Tate submits low bid for new police cruiser

News briefs

Harold G. Roush, Racine, and
his twin brother, Garen A. Roush,
celebrated their 80th birthday
recently at the home of Garen
Roush, Piqua.

80s.

1 Soodon, 10 Pill• 25 OMI8
· A lolulllmedlll lno. Newa.,.per

Ed Baer, Pomeroy, was the winner of an afghan used recently in a
fund raising project for the Precep·
tor Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority.

Roushs celebrate birthdays

Partly cloudy tonight . .
Wednesday, high in mid-

•

Baer named
afghan winner

HAROLD AND GAREN ROUSH

Pick 3:107
Pick 4: 3865
Cards : '7-H, 9-C
Q-D; K-S

Page4

le~islation.

Harrisonville 0 ES meets
The Harrisonville Order of the
Eastern Star held its regular June
meeting recently with Worthy
Matron Janet Bolin and Worthy
Patron Charles King in charge.
· Mrs. Bolin read a poem, "Give
.Me Lore the Love That Will Help
Us 10 Develop Together as Brothers."
Bernice Nelson received a 2Syear pin presented 10 her by Donna
Nelson,
·
• Tentative plans were made for
the inspection which is 10 be held
Friday. Refreshments are to be
Ji?tluck.
Dorothy Stout, a representative
of the Eastern Star Home, showed
pictured of the home, both of the

Stewart
U.S. Open
•
wtnner

Congress considering repealing laws
limiting women's combat roles
By CONNIE CASS
Associated Press Writer
FORT CAMPBELL, Ky . (AP)
- Army Capt. Michele Barlean
thought that being a woman soldier
meant she would end up "divvying
up beans and bullets to send to the
boys."
But during the Persian Gulf
War, she wound up leading a Chinook helicopter platoon of 42 men
who ferried enemy prisoners of
war, hauled howitzers and rescued
downed aircraft.
"I've been proven in combat,"
said the 26-year-old soldier, who
flew 53 combat hours in her cargo
helicopter. "I ' ve met that challenge.'
The war created new opportunities for w0 men to serve'in combat
. Now Congress is considering
repealing Jaws that limit women's
combat roles: .
A subcom~J~illee of the Senate
Armed Services Committee will
meet Tuesday to consider letting
the Air Force, Navy and Marines
use women io fly aircraft in combat
The full House already has
voted to allow, but not require,
those services to use women in battle.

Ohio Lottery

A bridge located just south of Richland Avenue which has been
under construction for the past two weeks will open Thursday,
according to John D. Dowler, District 10, Deputy Director for the
Ohio Departmept of Transportation.
.
Contractor on the bridge work was Alan Stone Co. The bridge
closed on June 10 for R:placement.
Another bridge locared 2.5 miles southeast will close after the
openins of the Athens bridge. Skinner Ccnstruction Co. will replace
the structure with a closure of up 10 45 days. Liquidated damages
have been set 11$1000 per day after the set closure.
·
The detour for the closure as set by the Ohio Department of
Transportation is U. S. SO 10 State Route 681, and back 10 U.S. 33.

Free legal service available
The Ohio Stare Legal Services and Southeasrern Ohio Legal Services provide free representation in civil matters to people who canContiaued on pap 3
.

.

'

'

were frustrale(! with the foot-~ ­
ging going on in the OEPA s
Southeast office in Logan.
"With the struggle that Gallia
County had in gettin~ their emergency expansion - It's a bureaucratic nishtmare," Wilson said.
"They are holding us hostage." ·
Wilson told the committee he
would wrire ·a letter to the Southeast office asking for an indication
on whether the permits for the new
facilities would be granted.
In other business, the committee:
• Reviewed revisions 10 be made
to the district plan.
• Scheduled public hearing dates
for questions and comments about
the plan. Hearings will be held on
July 15 in Hocking and Athens
Counties; on July 16 in Jackson
and Vinton Counties; and on July
17 in Meigs and Gallia Counties.
• Canceled the July meeting. of
the committee and scheduled the
next meeting for Aug. 22 in Jackson County.

.. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
"We're in a critical time for
senior programs in Ohio", Sen. Jan
Michael Long, told members of the
Rej!ional Advisory Council on
Agmg at a meeting Monday at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center.
Sen. Long was making special
reference to the possible phasing
out of the Options for Elders program which has been in operation
in 10 Southeastern Ohio Counties
for the past year.
The program has provided a
variety of services ranging from
home delivered meals to chore services to 700 disabled senior citi ·
zens with the recipients paying a
• portion of the cost. The purpose
· has been to make•it pcjssible for •
seniors to remain in their own
homes rather than go into nursing
.homes where the cost of care escalates.
Sen. Long reponed that the budget $pled by the Senate does not
include funds for the Opuons pro~am. He explained that the budget
IS now in conference committee
which will come up with yet another version which will then be sent
back to the House and Senate for
approval.
He said that the next 10 to 13
days are very critical and encouraged the members 10 initill1C a letter
writing campaign to the six members of the Senate and House conference committee urging Options
for Elders funding in their recommendations.
As explained by Sen. Long, the
. Senate version proJ?OSes the block
grant concept wh1ch includes a
phasing out of Options and expansion of PassporL
To qualify for services through
Passport, residents must be indigent or "medicaid eligible" while
under Options for Elders, seniors
do not have the stringent income
guidelines, because they pay for
services on a sliding fee scale or
according 10 their ability.
Also speaking 10 regional advisory board members was Cindy
Farson, director of the Area Agency on Aging, Marietta. She
explained the House and Senate
versions of the budget as they per·
tain 10 senior citizen programs noting that cuts in aid to independent
living programs we~ in both versions. A final version will come out

HONORED • Eleanor Thomas, director of tbe Meigs Couaty
Senior Center for the past 18 years, was presented a resolution or
reco1111ition 'from the Ohio Senate by Sen. Jan Michael Lona at :
Monday's Regional Advisory Council on Aging meeting Monday. :
Mrs. Thomas will be retiring next month.
of the conference committee but
then must go back 10 the House and
Senate for approval.
Farson SBJd that the House bill
calls for a 25 percent funding cut in
home services, a 14 percent cut in
transportation, an .18 percent cut in
home delivered meals, and a 24
percent cut in aging network programs, but provided money for
senior citizen facilities including
construction and maintenance.
The Senate version, however,
provided for the block grant fundmg which Farson said leaves funding "very unsure" because there is
no funding formula for specific services. She said final adoption of
that version could mean cuts of 12
to 66 percent depending on how the
monij:s are allocated. She
expressed concern that rural areas
might suffer a big loss of funding,
particularly if population becomes
a criteria of determination.
As for the proposed expanded
Passport program, Farson said the
prOROSal is to increase slots from
111 which the eight county area has
, ... w 10 100.
The 700 now being served
under the Options for Elders pro·
gram would be phased out over a

two year period. Farson said that if
Options is not funded, then intake
of new clients would be closed on
July 1. Five hundred of those
receivin~ services would be "disenrolled' during the first year and
200 during the second year.
Farson, as well as Sen. Long ,
stressed the importance of sending
a message of support for the
Options to Elders l'rogram to the
conference comm11tee members
this week.
Eleanor Thomas was l'resented
a resolution from the Oh1o Senate
by Sen. Long in recognition of her
18 years as director of the Senior
Citizens Center. Mrs. Thomas will
be retiring next month.
It was announced that Friday,
Aug. 2, is Senior Citizens Day at
the Ohio State Fair for residc"L' of
this region. It was noted thuL crafJ
items to go to the Fair should be
finished by July I so that they can
be picked up and taken to the Fair.
Farson also announced a training session to be held July 17 in
Marietta for new board members
and reported that a White House
Conference on Aging has been set
for 1993.

Rio Grande receives $50,000 grant to support
efforts between university, Meigs County schools
)UO GRANDE • Dr. Ray
Boggs, Vice President of Academic
Affairs, University of Rio Grande
announced today the Ohio Board of
Regents has awarded $50,000 to
the University of Rio Grande to
support a collaborative effort
between University of Rio Grande
and Meigs County Schools based
on the Community Education
Model.
Dr. June J. Slobodian, Coordinator of Graduate Education, University of Rio Grande, John Riebel,
Superintendent of Meigs County
Schools, Dick Smitb, Superintendent of Eastern Local School Dis·
trict, James Carpenrer, Superinrendent of Meigs Local School District, and Bobby J, Ord, Superinrendent of Soutjtern Local School Dis·
trict prepared the grant application
in order to respond io .the needs

identified by the Meigs Cou~ty
Strate$ic Planning Committee.
Umversity President Dr. Paul
Hayes hosted a straregic planning
committee organizational meeting
in November, 1990.
At that meeting Dr. Ray Boggs,
Paul Lloyd, Dr. Sharon Yates and
Dr. Ralph Shibley from the university worked with administrators,
teachers, staff members, business
and professional persons, and other
community members from Meigs
County 10 identify school district
needs.

The problems identified were:
low academic achievement,
high drop-out rates and lack of
desire to continue education
beyond high school.
Based on the needs identified
by the. strategic planning commit-

,

tee, a collaborative propusal was sity of Rio Grande provided by
developed to help students: recog· University of Rio Grande Departnize the importance of education, ment of Education instructors, conbecome aware of career opportuni- duction of a district needs assessties available for them, develop ment, and opportunities for the
soals and objectives that. will moti· strategic planning committee to
vare them 10 successfully complere form various task forces in order 10
courses that wiD ultimately prepare develop projects for implementathem for their choice vocation, tion Within the respective locals.
meet success Within the educationDr. June J. Slobodian, Coordinaal structure, interact with and
tor or Graduate Education, indicatreceive mentoring from successful ed
that the grant would provide for
career models, and remain within four Meigs County teachers to
the educational system until their receive graduare credit
career goals are assured.
In addition, Paul Lloyd, Dean of
The first year funding of the College of Education stated
$50,000 wlll provide for an in- ·
"More than one hundred
school coordinator from Meigs that,
young people will be provided the
County. development of a mentor10 spend time on a col·
ship program for Meigs County opportunity
lege campus and 10 recognize they
Students, a four week summer
are Caf?able of a~hieving a coUege ·
1992 inrervention program for 120 educa110n.
·
Meigs County Students at Univer•

,\ ;

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>pauley</name>
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    <tag tagId="6617">
      <name>wakey</name>
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</item>
