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~~;-~&amp;--:~Th~·~~Se~nu~ne~,==iiiiiiiiii;;!;iiiiiiii;;---:'N';"'o-ev-,~.d~e~n~c!!:e:!o~if~m!!!e~c~h~~~~~~i~ca-l';"'fl-;:;aw~-.~fi=-o-u-nd-;-:in-a-m-u_s_e_m_e...!n!!t~p!!a~r!!;k~J;-~i~d~e.!!!! •
Beat of the Bend....
. h.
by
Bob H0 eftlC
.
Everything old is new again.
About 30 friends and relatives
revived the old fashioned belling
for newlyweds, Harry Stobart and
Mary Sigman, Sunday night at the
couple's home in Racine. Not
eltllcdy being teen-agers, Harry and
Mary knew just how to react - it
was soft drinks and candy treats for
an of the panicipants. Harry and
Mary were married on Saturday

s

KINGS MILLS . Ohio (AP) tale examiners say they haven' t
found any moc:b~ flaws on lbe
Fliabt Commander ride from which
a Toledo woman fell to her death
last week.
Ohio Department or Agricuiiiii'C
memories thai I bold dear. You'll spokeswoman Carla Moore said
alwavs be my Father of the Year, Tuesday tbll investigatcn Sli11 are
Dad.'
.
...nn
-,-..,.. to delenninc the cause of the
June 9 acciclmt II the Kings Island
Nicely put, Nancy. And Dwight amusement (JIIIk. ·
Wallace, you keep smiling.
''If there was something that

Community Minded·
Supermarket

Meigs County young people 15 and under - are inviled to take
part in the annual fishing derby of
the Meigs County Fish and Game
Association this Saturday.
The annual event will be Sllged
at the association's clubhouse on
the Texas Road. Signs will be
posted and young people are to
provide their own fishing poles and
bait. Do nole, however, that minnows are not allowed for bait in the
derby. The derby will be from
8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. and lunch will
be served to an of the participating
young people. Best of all, there
will be prizes awarded winners in
designaled categories of the derby.

DL

I

•

Reds edge
Mets 7~6;
return home

Pick 3:641
Pick 4: 5742
Cards: 4-H, 7-C

3-D; 5-S
Super Lotto:

Page 41

16-19-23-27-33-42
Kicker:658013

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31

OPEN
MON.-SAT.
7 AM-11 PM
OHIO VAlLEY FOODUND OPEN 24 HOUIS

Vol. 42, No. 32

2 Socllonl, 12 Pogeo 25 cen11

Coprrtghled1881

A Uuldmedll Inc. Nowopaper

Conlinissioners
hear county
budget con~erns

Prices plunged becauae of lhe

warm wlnler and a supply glut.
Pric9 P"' 1, 000 cubic fsat
$1 .50 ~c:::::;:n-

SUNDAY 11 AM·7 PM

By BRIAN J. REEDS
Sentinel News Staff

1.40

. euvery

Ast-llldtJd
: "" ftlll N.Y.
• Mercan~/s

•: Exchsnge
May

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE
BEEF CHUCK

June

Sou..,: Bloomberg Flnlndol Mlrketa

AP

·columbia
:facing
·financial
•
t
'
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•
·
fi•
een
CQP('I
en
ern
z
·
n
zr('lt
Th
l
.: problems
,
'
l
M
•
S
b
D
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or
OX eTtJ"
annua . ezgs oan
Y
J

BONELESS

Chuck .Roas.t

ADDING FINISHING TOUCHES • Riek
Ramsburg, lefl, and Frank Smith, take Clll'e or
some finish work on their sons' .raeers ror this

'

p
I

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) One the nation's biggest suppli: ers of natural fas says it could lose
· up to $1 bil ion over the next
decade and might be forced into
banlauptcy court as a resu!L
Columbia Gas Syslem Inc. said
Weclne8day illl probletns stem.from
'contracts it claimed require the
company to pay excessively high
prices for gas.
Company offici&amp;ls said unless
they are able to buy out the contracts and convince banks to
restructure their credit, Columbia
Gas will face a major financial

LB.

I

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
After weeks of planning and
work, the starting ramps are ready,
the finishl.lt~ 'toue!Jes are being
made on die cars, and details of
conductinl the F'trst Annual Meigs
County SOilpbox Derby are almost
completed:
· The event will take place this
we·ekcmd~n General Hartinger

•

I .,

weekeud's First Annual Meigs Couuty Soapbox
Derby to be beld on Gen;Hartlnger Parkway in
Middleport.

I

~

Parlcway in Middleport.
Derby Director Roger Williams
advises that the Parkway will be
blocked off from Broadway to
·Beeeh·Street with Broadway closed
from Ash to Hartinger where
enttants in the IBCe will assemble in
preparation for going down the
ramps. Some bleacher sealiilg will
be available although those auending are advised to take lawn chairs.

.

I ., .

Several food concessions will be
operating in lhe park area.
Thirteen cars have been entered
in the race. The drivers and their
sponsors arc Amber Thomas by
Thomas Do-It Center, Adam
Triplett by lhe Meigs County Bilecrs, Stacy Gilmore and Justin
Roush by Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Le 111 ion . Josh
Continued on page 3

catastrophe.

•

•

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•

IPRIMDAiE .

Fruit
Drinks

KEEBLER
TOWN HOUSE
CRACKERS
-·--

IM•I •HIM •HER

~· HUGGIES

').:...:.•.,
r. •

~

'·· - DIAPERS

$
BOX

$

BOX

9

99

PAPER
TOWELS

ROU

MT•.DEW, PEPSI-FREE
DIET OR REGULAR

Pepsi-Cola
12 PA(I(

$

.12 OZ. CANS

The company, which supplies
gas to more than 8 million homes
and businesses in 15 staleS including Ohio, already has suspended its
dividend on cOmmon stock to cooserve cash.
The news sent the company's
stock phmging $13.75, or nearly 40
percent, to $20.75, afler a trading
halt thatlasled until early~
Wednesday. It was the most active
New York Stock Exchange 'iSsue
with 4.4 million shares changing
hands.
· The financial problems lie wilh
Columbia's principal pipeline subsidiary, Columbia Transmission
Corp. The subsidiary's contracts
wilh natural gas suppliers require it
to pay prices far exceeding the current spot market.
Gas prices have plunged recent·
ly because of the warm winter and
a IJlut or supplies. the company
Slid.
Tbe company said narura1 gas is
selling on the spot delivery marlcet
for S1.30 per 1,000 cubic feet,
while Columbia Transmission is
paying as much as $6.70.
Columbia Gas System, the par·
ent company, has given Columbia
Transmission until Oct. 1 to buy
out the contracts for about $600
million. Columbia Syslem offteials
were in New Yodc on Wednesday,
attempting to restore credit lines
Continued on page 3

99

program's equipmenl budget.
"It is conceivable," Dana's let·
ter stated, " that if this funding
·Members or the Meigs County shortfall occurs, the multi-county
Parks District presenled their goals program will not continue and you
· and budget expectations for 1992 at (the commissioners) will be forced
. Wednesday's regular meeting of to revert to your previous indigent
the Meigs County Commissioners.
defense system."
, Parks District Board Members
According to Jones, such a
Lloyd Blackwood, Jim Pape and reversion to old systems would nor
Charlie B&lt;UTCtt, along with District · affect services on the local level, as
Director Mary Powell reponed !hat the commissioners had directl y
during 1991, the district had paid Public Defender Charles
acquired two pieces of real estate- . Knight in 1990 before the multi·
the Sugar Run School property and county office was set up.
Jl8l:l of the former Foster propeny
. Engineer Reports
10 Minersville - and that thts acqui·
· Meigs County Engineer Philip
sition was expecled to jlelform well M. Robens and County Garage
as collateral for fmancmg of furure Superintendent Ted Warner were
ParkS District projects.
on hand to discuss the pending pur"We 're moving forward on our chase of a new tractor for the high·
projects," Barrett said, referring way depanment.
SJ?.CCifically to the completion of
The purchase is necessary
hilcing trails at Camp Kiashuta and because of difficullies with the
the planned construction of 20 existing Massey Ferguson tractor,
miles of trails elsewhere in the which has logged 5,900 hours in
county.
the field.
,
Barrett also told the commisA Case International and a·
sioners that the parks dist(ict Massey Ferguson tiactoi arc being
planned to increase their promotion considered for purchase by the
of Meigs County in other areas. A department. No recommendation
videotaped presentation has now was maae at the meeting and no
been compleled arid the exhibition action was taken on the purchase,
of this tape will begin at trade
Roberts ~ranted permission to
shows in 1993.
Pomeroy res1denl George Wright to
In a rclaled area, the commis· install a gas line under Leading
· sioners approved a transfer from Creek Road.
·
the district's.salary accounlto-lhe ·
According 10 Roberts, lhc sumgeneral expense account to cover mer job program at the depanmem
repairs on the Sugar Run School. is now employing three students
The funds were made available due for lhe summer, but he said that the
to the iUness and .pending resigna· futw:e of the program this year may
tion of the depanment's secretary.
be affected by the tiactor purchase.
PD Budget threatened
In other business, lhe commisln other business yesterday, sioners:
.
\...Ommissioner Richard Jones intro·
• appointed Susie Karr lO serve
duced a letrcr received earlier in the on the Meigs Board of Mental~
week from Ohio Public Defender Retardation and Developmental
Randall Dana. In the letter, Dana Disabilities to replace Beti.C Hoff.·
indicaleS that the Fiscal Year 1992· man, who has been appointed as
1993 budget for the Ohio Public interim superintendent of the pro-.
Defender program will be under- gram;
funded in lhe area of the multi• authorized Meigs Emergency:
county program by $34,271 in Medical Services to refurbish Mid1992and$79,383 in 1993.
dlepon'ssquad II;
·
Such cuts in the multi-county
• announced that a rally will be'
program .(which serves several held on Sunday al I p.m. in GalSoutheastern Ohio counties, includ- lipolis Cily Parle regarding thcing Meigs County, with local pub- Clean Air Act;
lie defender services) could result
Present were: Commissioners:
in the ultimale elimination of up to Manning K. Roush; Richard E.:
four contract attorneys, two assis· Jones, David Koblentz and Com:
tant public defenders and/or the mission Secretary Gloria· Kloos.

OSHA inspections will
begin next week at RAC

NICE ~ BRIGHT • Ten-year-eld David . blue ftnllb or bls racer in preparation ror • nn.
ish coat before this weekend's race. David's
Ramsburg under the Wltebrul eye of bls v•nd·
sponsor Is Wett Virginia VFW Post 9926.
rathef, Cliarlet Neulzllna, wllo Is act1¥e wltb tbe
local SoapbOK Derby committee, sands tbe dark

r---Local briefs
3 hurt in wreck

HI-DRI

Partly cloudy tonight.
Friday, high in mid-80s.

•

·. Weekly '
·. price for
· · July
1.30 . d

Nancy Wallace Woolard had an
impressive entry in a Father of the
Year tribute contest held by a
Huntington newspaper. Nancy
didn't win first place but she did
get honorable mention and her
entry published. Her father,
Dwi~ht, knows she's a winner.
Here s her entry:
"Dwight Wallace is better
known as 'Wally' to those of us
who know and love him.
My dad was 46 when I was
born. He was much older than the
other fathers but we still had a
close and loving relationship.
"My dad is the kindest, most
unselfish and truly humble man
I've ever known. He always
stressed honesty, integrity and
respect for others and was always
willing to listen and give advice, or
flelp someone less fonunate than
himself.
"He never stopped believing in
me when lie didn't agree with or
understand the choices I made. He
was never too busy or too tired to
rub my aching legs after a track
meet or massage my pounding
head when I had a migraine.
"My dad has suffered from dia·
beteS since 1948 and has lost both
legs and the sight of one eye
because or this illness. NevcrtheICSI!, be has overcome tbcse obstacles and even though he sees very
little he walkS every day with the
help of the two prostheses he
wears. He has remained cheerful
and optimistic throughout it all,
which is why he is respecled and
admired by many.
"Today, at the age of 73. he is
still willing to listen or even help
me balance my checkbook. I am
most fortunale to have the wonderful parents that I do and I thank my
dad especially for all of the fond

Dedication held

iion of the mechanical system, ;
el.eclric syiteql and pneumatic sys1em, and at Ieist as far as I'm concemed, ~ wasn't any obvious •
type of problem with those sys- :!
~ems,'' Rogers said.
~ : ·
The ride is shut down. After
state investigators and the ride •
manufacturer, lntamin AG of :
Sw,...._...,
"--'-" re.....,..
•--- ........
W&lt;al •~~o..o•-...,....., J
the park will decide whether tQ •
keep the ride.

Chiquita "Bananas

If you are not impressed at the
routing that you are being given on
getting to Athens these days what
with bridge repairs that are taking
place on Route 33, I have been
asked to remind you or an alternate
route · Roule 7 and then Roule 50
into Athens - and or course, reverse
the order to get back. A couple of
big trucks have ovenumed on lbe
recommended route - you might
just be interesled in the RouleS 7
and 50 alterilative.

I

D

related to a ride in the oatk's 2()..
year history. Kings Isfand is 20
miles nonheast of Cincinnati.
Two men were elecll'OCuled in
an Ulllelated accident the same day.
That accident also remains under
investlgatiOIL
George Roiers. a lawyer representing the woman's family, said
hC Watcuou
~--· Wui.o
~"- the Flight Commander capsule was taken apart.
"I'm not an engineer, but I was
present throughout an the examina-

Ohio Lottery

GOLD~N RIPE

A huge Thank You from Margaret Bailey, E. Main SL, Pomeroy
resident.
Marj!aret left her pocketbook ·
comainmg money and all of those
good papers that we an carry in a
shoppmg cart on the Kroger Store
lot Monday. Realizing when she
got home that she must have left
her purse in the cart, Margaret
immediately returned to the store.
It was her luclcy day - someone had
turned ber purse in at the offiCe and
she was able to recover it - much to
her relief. No name was given on
who was honest enough to tum the
poclcelbook in · but a big thanks
from Margaret whoever you are.

I

failed, we haven't found what
Caused it yet," said Leonard Cavalier, chief inspector ror the depart·
ment's amusement ride safety division.
The capsules have lap and
shoulder restraints that rau:bet into
place. Shoulder restraints have
mechanical backups, and the lap
restraint has two "-"'-.
-.1'• Cavalier
said.
It was the first fatality directly ·

BIG BEND ··· Your Locally Owned

af~emoon.

I .

199 1

0

Three Meigs County residents suffered minor injuries Wednesday after the truck they were riding in struck an embankment ,
Patriot T. Willbragel, 2, of Penland, Linda G. Lewis, 15, of
Syracuse. and Brian Wolfe, 18, of Syracuse were all transported 10
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs County EMS. All three
were trealed for minor injuries and laler released.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway P.atrol, Willbr8gel, Lewis and Wolfe were passengers of ·
Diane M. BUller, 19, of f&gt;ortland. Buder was westbound on Meigs
County Road 3~ when she IIJIIl8feDdy lost conttol of her vehicle and
went off the right side or the roadwar. Her 1979 Ford Ranger then
struck an cmbankmcntllld turned on tiS side.
Butler reponed to the state patrQI that a deer had run ·out in front
of her just prior to the accident
Sbe was cited for fallure to wear a safety belt and failure to use
child .restrainL

Country Music Night planned
A Country Music Band Show will be held at Eas1ern High
School on SllUI'day ~ • 6 p.m.
The event Ia IPOO'Ind bj the Balem Athletic Boosters in conCJM!I!arsdoa
3

· By Associated Press
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. willlet federal safety inspectors into its
Jackson County plant. company
off~eials said Wednesday.
·
Neither Ravenswood Aluminum
spokesmen nor officials at the U.S.
Occupational Safety and Health
Administiation would reveal the
terms of an agreement allowing the
inspections.
On May 23, Ravenswood Aluminum · officials barred OSHA

Jobs, education key to eliminate
poverty ··n southern Oh•·o.· Abel
Abel Said that children in Ohio's
"Poverty in Southeast Ohio will
continue lon11 after lhe publicitr, rural counties make up the largest
generated th1s week subsides,' portion of the stale's poor populaStale Representative Mary Abel tion and that new programs and
(D-Atbcns) said earlier this week less bureaucratic red tape are nee·
lrom Columbus, "and It must be a essary to help alleviarc the siruation
major part of a national domestic in the Appalachian region.
program u well u state reform."
"Jobs and education are key
The legislator was referring to a components to parents and children
Tuesday tolecast of ABC's "World · rising out of poverty." Abel said.
News Tonight,• which originated "otherwise the cycle Conti~."
Abel said, "II amazes me that
from Athens County. A sqmtnt of
the show focused on "Children of this nation ean pour billlons of dol·
Poverty."
Iars into the pentagon and have
. "It is a national disgrace tllll5.S every citizen pay lhousands or dol'
milllon childml in America, that's Iars for the Savi~ and Loan deba·
one out of eight, are livini in cle, but we can t find money to
poverty and hwiger, according to a help create jobllllld fund education
national survey by Community to end povcny," Abel said.
"I have lried to instltule innovaChildhood Ha:;r Identification
Project," Abel
. tive welfare reform," Abel said.

inspectors who were answering
complaint filed by the union and
company employees.
. The company said il feared lhe
agency was being manipulated by
United· Steelworkers Local 5668,
whose more than I ,700 members
are involved in a 7 1/2 monlh-old
labor dispute with Ravenswood
Aluminum.
The Stee! workers then a$ked
Congress to investigate lhe plant A
U.S. House labor subcommittee is
looking at the plant's safety and
health records, officials have said.
Under the agreement, OSHA
inspeCtors accompanied by a Steel
workers representative will conduct
a "limited mspection'' of lhc . ·
plant, said Donald Worlled~e. president of Ravenswood Alununum.
The inspections will probably
begin nexl week, said Kate Dugan,
a spokeswoman for OSHA in
Philadelphia.

pointing out that her House Bill
224 allows recipients to earn
income and ~ till receive enough
assistance to meet their minimum
standartl of need.
Proposed bill would
. "This rule change will be a great
benefit to many people who close hospital records
already receive assistance but need
to supplement those benefits. Pan
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) of the plan hits already been includ- Publicly owned hospitals would be
ed in the House version of the bud· able to close most of their financial
get bill," Abel said.
records to the public under a bill
Since unemplQyment and pover- lhe Legislature has approved, rep·
ty rates are higher in the Southeast- re~ntatives of Ohio news organiern rural communities than any· zations say.
·
where in the stale, including urban · Media groups Wednesday said
counties, Abel said the needs of the they opposed what the Ohio Newsrural population must be llddressed paper AsiOCiadon dclcribed as "an
if progress is to be made in com- lllh·hour amendment" to stop
bllinl poverty.
public oversight or city- and county-l'un medical facilities.

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·Commentary

l

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.,

WASHINGTON - The police
who guard the U.S. Capiro! let a
Pomeroy, Olllo
man carry a loaded .357 Magnum
DEV«n'ED TO THE INTEBESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
through ·a security checkpoint
lllllKlliced last month. The man was
arrested later in the day when
,•
.JI-U.TI~DIA.INC.
someone saw the gun. Oddly
enough, the Capitol Police seem
• ROBERT L. WINGETT
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
nonpfussed.
• . Publlaller
·
General Manager
A Capitol Police spokesman
told us that while the fo~ is "very
PAT WHITEHEAD
concerned about this incident"
,,
AMiaiant Publisher/Controller
there's no way to stop these incidents from happening on occasion.
• . . A MEMBER of The A$SOCiated Press, Inland Dally Press AssoHe added that there would be no
~ ·. elation and the American NewspaJ!e{ Publishers Association.
tightening of security at the Capiro!
.. ,
asaresuiL
•
LET'I'E;RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
We found that odd, considering
. ' words IOIIJI. All Jett"ra &amp;"! aubject to editing and must be signed with
how the police rea~;ted two years
· ' name, address aad telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub• IIIHd. utters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personaliago when we tested their security
ties.
and found it wanting. We carried a
plastic handgun inro the Capitol,
also unnoticed, and gave itro a senator. We wanted to illustrate a
· security problem that the police
defensively claimed did not exist.
They-responded by searching jour.nalists more thoroughly for a time.
j . Dear Editor:
.
There was even a note posted at
more.
some
of the guard desks to WalCh
;- .' My ftrst years were spent on a
for
Jaclr:
Anderson and his associHis
work
is
always
honest
toil,
: fann and I would like 10 spend my
ates.
·
From
early
mom
till
eventide.
; last days there. Uving on a farm
What we did was harmless. We
Plowing,planlipg, and lilling the
' ·.siva a person a respect for life, a
wanted
10 prove that a plastic hand·
soil,
'l ; BOIIJC of duty, a love of the wild
gun
could
be slipped iniO a governHis
hopes
and
p11yers
soar
high.
1 aild belief in a higber power.
~ . Farmers are independent,
Without him we all would suf.', .iltgged indiYidualists. They know
" how 10 get aloag and mate ends fer,
The peOple of eanh would die.
-1 ,11)eet. To Illata tbe ~groduce
There would be no food for the
' ~ inititltllve and · •
hungry,
··
~
,'
FIIDlen
!iva
with
the
elemeniS
1
' ;apd experience the processes or . If an the fanners would die.
• ijature- birth, love, death and
George Washington was a
;·_'
dwcllen depend upon the farmer,
And so was honest Abe.
r· ·Store for all tbere needs, seek artiliWe show them both great honor,
,:,:cial forms of emcnainment, go 10
Although they have long been
• their job wball they bllve one and
keep the mongage on the house dead.
.',paid up. City dwellers seldom
More power and peace to the
~ tcnow the taste of produce fresh
farmers,
a prden.
Let us lift our heariS in prayer,
• God moves through all of nature
That
God will hover over them,
~"i!nd is the powa- of life we experi •
And
give them a bountiful
,.,1,.ence
on
a
farm.
•
share...
•.
"Tip your baliO the farmer
. ,, When he comes to IOWII with his Poem from my Mountain Memo~ Slore.
ries by Alza Huffman.
Gayle Price
, • . Without him there is no larder,
He
is
the
IIIII
of
the
earth
and
,
.
·
1
111

co.n S&amp;reet

..
..

·Letters to the editor
About farm life

ment building without detection,
and we were right. The police,
courteously, did not auempl to
throw us in jail, so it is with some
hesilatioo that we rattle their chain
again, but here goes.
What Mark Alan Weissberger,
43, allegedly did last month was
not harmless. The .357 Magnum
. with a four-inch steel barrel was
simply .wrapped• n a aowel and
stuffed in a briefcise, accooling to
police accounts. Our sources say
that a Capitol Police offJCCr missed
the gun as it slid through the X-ray
machine. Weissberger allegedly
headed for a hearing or the Joint
Economic Committee, which was
chaired by a -lOr from his home
slate of. M.)'iand, Democrat Paul
Sarbanes. 'l1lll was where a woman
noticed the gun in the open brief-

ease.

Weissberger was charged with
illegally carr)'ing a gun on the
Capitol grounds, His briefcase
reportedly also carried letters to the
White House Ul'Jing the arrest of
several politicians, and tbe le,Uers
were signed "World President."
He a~ndy blamed Sarbanes
and o
for the loss of his feder·
al job. Weissberger is now in jail
while-his a110mey fights effOI'IS to

have him transferred 10 a federal
facility for a mental evaluation.
After the incident, a Capitol
Pollee spokesman !Old our Associ·
ate Jim Lynch, "We work as well
as we can within the parameters
that are set for us.''
From where we sit, those
parameters are preuy clear - lhC
police agency gets $65 million a
year from the taxpayers and in 111m
it ~rotects our lawmakers. That
isn 1 an easy job, but, given the fact
that there are two cops for every
member of Congress, it should not
be impossible either.
The force is headed by one of its
25-year veterans, Frank Kerrigan,
who has no illusions about who is
in charge. The Capiro! Police are
run by a committee of politicians.
It is the only police force in the
country that is exempt from freedom-of-information laws. Records
about crimes commiued in and
around the Capiro! Building, from
petty theft 10 drunlc:en drivinf. are
strictly conftdential, and that s the
way Congress likes it.
Congress has stymied Kerrigan's predecessors who ttied to convert the force from security guards .
and tour guides 10 real cops. Entire·
ly 100 much time is wasted on non-

~t).

.:r,om

.

~

-~~Excerpts of editorials
i

from Ohio newspapers

.
.
i
By The Assotlated Press
~ · Followingn excerpts of ediiOrials published reeendy in Ohio news' JlllllefS:
'

•

; RECORD-COtJlUER, Ravenna-Kent, June 14: What's in a name?
: Platty, BCallding 10 the vocers of Len~. who have dealt a blow 10
' one of the most cbcrisbed elemeniS of !herr Communist herilage by nar: rqwly~ mreJ~are their city's name 10 SL Petersburg.
; , Perhaps tl was nostalgia, a desire 10 tum back the clock 10 the days
t when the former inlperil1 city was home to the tsars, or maybe it was yet
· another sip of dzep smted fruslralion with the heirs of Lenin. Whatever
~ the reason, the narrow vote was a stunning repudiation - ' one which
r would
. have been unthinkable only a few years ago - of the Soviet

.

: re'n:.tefelaldwn is 1101 a binding one and, with a bare majority approv' in&amp; the chiDJe, it remaiaa 10 be seen whether the move to restore SL
, Pcton1Nq 10 tbc map after an absence of more than 75 years will be
by the ll-llepubUc's legislature. It is also unclear whether
~
llllionallegillaiiR must approve the change, which could make its
,. cbanc:es evet111101e doubtful ...
: Wballever the OUICOIDC of the present identity crisis, voters in the Sovi: et Unioa's secood city have sent a signal tO MOSCQw that nothing's sacred

(:r:::!
,' anymore.
I

~

THE A111ENS MESSENGER, June 13: President Bush's appointment

\ qf Robert Strauss as •bes•ador to Moscow is, on its face, a surprising
, c1epanu1e fJom dip!«xuric custom. But if the new envoy's central mission
: is 10 peddle die merill of Clpilalism 10 the economically befuddled Sovi-

. ets. the choice 1111)' 111m 011110 be a shrewd one...
: A QliiSIIIIIIIIII polkicel operative, Slrauss has built a repulation as the
: Demoaatie Party's problem solver -a man of unquestioned integrity 10
: call when a crucial deal must be negotiated. Similarly, business interests
•, have c:aJied on Strauss 10 cement such megadeals as Matsushila'.s acquisi! tfon of MCA Corp. For facilitating that merger alone, Strauss was Jl81d an
I S8 million fee ...
' M a fellow Teun and lonJtime friend of Bush and Secrelary of Slate
James Baker, SlraUIS can be expected 10 serve as a personal link between
01 KRmJin IDd the Wbite House. His savvy is likely 10 become a major
, . . .. WaslliltpJn'sdealinpwith Moscow.

1"":·:
i
lin.
'

•

• ~&lt; "

AICRON BEACON JOURNAL, June 13: Well, thanks 10 all the pre~ ~· only two manbers of Congress will be going 10 the big
~~Show this month, according 10 the Wall Street Journal.
•· : 1 he die pn111 blew the wbiltle, a delegation of 100, including memlji'NIU .a aide&amp;, Will s1atDd 10 go 10 Paris 011 the taxpayers' tab,
« JW.II~ M» MhFMil 1D CMI' $1 million.
:•: W• wiD ihed no sad tears for those who had second lhoughiS and
~ipd-ocl to -.y home.

~=·

~Woday in

history

By Tile Alloc:lated Press
Today iiTIIunday, June 20, the 171st day of 1991. There are.l94 days
left ill die )'fill.
Toda!'•
in Hislay:
Two
J'M aco. 011 June 20, 1791, Kin¥ Louis XVI of France
X ¢11 '10 flee lila country in the SO&lt;alled "Flight to Varennes," but

=

:::'labl

. . e.ak

II--

01 tlila dill:

.

.. 1632. .... a.,tilb Crown granted the 8CCOIId Lord Balllm~ settle_.. rflbla 10 • - ~ Cllcsapeake Bay, most of which would
' - lllo a
11 MlryJaniL
Ia 1754. ill ...._ 1 J1V1P d Brililh soldias were C8lllllled llld imprisoned lu 5 ••i• cd IIIII pined IIOIOriety as the "81act Hole of Calc...._" ..,_ 111110 men died.
la17112,0..,w~o:ld the Gmt Seal of the United Stales.
Ia 1837, Q.e. VICiarla -ded the British t1uone followU., the
ot•~~~~:~e. Kill wa. IV.

..,.

s

Ia 1863, Well Virginia l- •IC the 35th Slate 10 be admitted 10 the
Uaiaa.
.

1l:•'

I

. II

· Friday, June 21
Accu-Weather• forecast for

Capitol police need a wakeup call

•

police duties, including chauffeuring members of Congress around in
Lincoln Town Cars, a job that pays
generous overtime.
If the recent episode did not
prompt some soul searching by the
police, then a history lesson should.
On March 1, 1954, four angry
Pueno Rican nationalisiS fucd 30
shot~ from the House gallery and
wounded ftve congressmen. Seven
years earlier, Ohio Sen. John
Bricker was shot at and missed
while walling from bis office to
the Capirol. The gunman was an
• ex-Capttol policeman and the joke
that made the rounds at the time
was, "Thank God ... they don't
know how 10 shoot"
After the most recent i.nCi~nl, a
spokesman for Sarbanes told us
that the senator believes that the
Capiro! Pulice do a good job, but
the system isn't foolproof. That's
true. But this incident s!tould be
seen by police as a wake-up call,
not as an unavoidable occurrence.
The worst enemy of the Capitol
Police is not terrorisiS or nuts or
even journaliSIS. It is complacency.
THE NEW BUSH - White
House sources have tipped us off 10
watch for George Bush's new tack
with Congress. In the past, he has
bandied Congress with1bipanisan
good humor. But his political
advisers have now urged him to be
more COf!lbative, in t.he style of
Harry Truman, and, to confront
Congress head on. Already, his
criticism or Congress is taking on a
sharper edge.
MINI-EDITORIAL - It was
with a heavy bean that we read that
many members of Congress decided 10 skip their annual junketro the
Paris Air Show this week. It seems
that bad publicity about the 1ravels
of the high-flying White House
Chief of Staff John Sununu has
spooked all lawmakers. Now they
are being more circumspect about
where they go and who pays the
bill. But the Paris Air Show? It was
always a dirty. job, but someone
had to do it. And members of
Congress claimed it was so productive because they had a chance to
scope, out the mililary hardware of
other countties. We can't imagine
how they will be able to make
weighty decisions about how many
billions 10 drop here and there on
toys for the Pentagon if they
haven't eyeballed everyone else's
toys.

Does your boss ever 'spy' on you?
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (NEA)
- One of the most memorable
;telephone calls Mary Williams
received while working as. a telephone reservation agent for United
Airlines in this Los Angeles suburb
cam~ from a man distraught over
hts SISter's death.
"He was crying," she recalls.
"He explained that he was in San
Diego and had 10 fly to his sister's
funeral in upstate New York_ but
he wasn't sur.e he had enough
money for a plane ticket."
· Wtlliams says she purposely
spent extra time with the caller
auempting to calm and reassur~
him, then make reservations for the
trip .. Because United did not fly to
his destination, she secured him a
seat on an airline that did serve that
city.
At the end of her shift, Williams
says, ~he was summoned ' by a
supervtsor, rold that her work had
been monitored and criticized for
her petfonnance. "I was told 1took
~long with him -that I was los·
mg revenue for United."
The airline refuses to discuss the
incident.
·
"We never discuss a personnel
mauer," a United spokeswoman

says ter~e!r- .. We have no com- sion."
menton tL "
Those especially susceptible to
. Notwithstanding the com)l811y's such surveillance include people
s1l~nce on th!l mauer, _Wtlhams'
who wo~k for airline, hotel, renJal
claims are typtcal of the mcreasmg- car, mall order, insurance, telely frequent CO!ftplaints heard phone and credit card companies as
lh~ul!hout the nabon on th~ II?U·
well as federal, sJate and local govblmg ISSue of corporate monnonng emment departments and agencies.
-often done secredy- or office
Although secretly listening to
employees.
.
others' telephone calls is generally
A 1987 study conducted by the prohibited by law, and even police
Office of Technology Assessment, offjcers are required 10 secure court
a congre.~ional_agency, co~cluded 'warrants 10 engage in the practice,
that ~~. mtenstly and c~~uqus· employers can do so whenever they
ness . of emplore~ momton~g- of wish.
an esttmated 6 million to 10 mtllton
They insist the practice is needpeople "raises questions about pri- ed to insure that workas adhere 10
vacy, fairness and quality or work high service slalldards. But virruallife."
.
ly all monitoring emphasize quantiTh.e National Associauon of lative rather than qualilative meaWorking Women esbmates that Jar sures in handling customers on the
more employees co~d be subject to telephone. Thus, spending extra
~or~place survetiiance today:
time helping those who have diffi·
Wtth a _computer~ed workforce cult _problems is pen~lized while
now ~pmg 50 rrull10n, as many as deahng summarily wtth others is
26 mtlhon worker.; may be under rewarded.
electronic SCrutiny."
.
Directory assistance operators
. That Cleveland-based organtza: employed by telephone companies
lion, also known as 9to5, says throughout the country, for examuncounted thousands or "employ- pie, are allowed an "average work
ers listen in on telephone calls, time" of slighdy less than 20 seccount (Computer) keystrokes and onds to handle each inquiry. They
time transactions without their can be disciplined if they regularly
employees' knowledRe or oennis- exceed that figure.

By Robert Walters
Some companies even moniiOr
their employeef actions during
meal, coffee and bathroom brealcs.
Conslallt surveillance, claim some
employees, has led to serious physical and mental health problems.
Among the complaints collected in
a 9to5 survey:
"It's a nightmare. Everyone
knows how, many seconds you
spent in the bathroom. It's, like
kindergarten," says a clerk
employed by a Rhode Island dala
processing company.
"If you didn't do 10,000
keystrokes an hour, you didn't get a
raise. One woman was being fired
for not being fast enough," says a
woman holding a similar job in
Ohio.
" I couldn't function and
couldn 'I relate to my family," says
an airline reservation agent in California who claims she suffered
from a surveillance-induced "job
stress nervous breakdown.''
"Electronic surveillance," says
the AFL-CIO, "invades workers'
privacy, erodes their sense of digni·
ty and frustrates their efforiS 10 do
high-quality work by a single
minded-emphasis on speed_''

What about personal responsibility?
By Sarah Overstreet
Several years ago, whe~ 1 was
domg research for an arttcle. on
Premenslrjlal Syndr~me, m~dtcal
experiS told me the dtsorder ts due
to fluctuations in hormone produc·
tion that ~ur in many _women or
child-bearing age. Thts tmbalance,
they said, can cause unpleasant
physical symptoms, as well as
mood swings that range from mild
irrilation to suicidal tendencies. _I
talked with women who srud thetr
lives have been changed by treatment for PMS.
.
1thought at the time tha~ the dtscovery or the malady and tiS treat·
ment was a mixed blessing: Sufferer.; would be helped, but this new
knowledge would be a ready 1001 in
the hands of anyone who wanted 10
use it against women either individually or collectively.
.
However, I didn't expect 11 to
become a 1001 for women to use 10
excuse illegal behavior. Silly me. If
Dan White could use a "Twinkie
defense" -he claimed he wasn't
responsible for killing Supervisor
Harvey Milk in San Francisco
because of a sugar imbalance

brouldtt on by eating too many s~g-

ary foods -_then any extenuaung

ctrcumslallce ~s fatr_game.
.
br. Geraldine RIChter, an orthopedic surgeon from Centreville,
Va., recently used PMS as an
excuse. for kicking a state trooper,
according to an Assoctated ~ress
repon. The AP account IS an mteresun~ one:
.
Rtchter doesn't ~m like su~h
an ogre when you realt~ that while
the '!Ooper was arresun_g her on
susptcton of drunken drivmg,. he
reportedly w~ ~ aboullllk!ng
her three chtldren tniO protecuve
custody. Mo~ mo~ are ternfied
of havmg !herr children taken from
them. .
But The AP reported that
Richter's blood-alcohol level was
found_ to have been ~-13 pc~c~nt
(0.10 IS legally drunk m Vugmta),
and for crymg out loud (no pun
intended), her defense was that she
was s~ering from P~. .
Fairfax General Dtslrtcl Coun
Judge Robert Smith found her not
guiltyofanyoffenseintbeease. .
. Personally, unless the trOOper IS

p~ysically ~orting a citizen, I~·,
thmk there s any defense for~~mg a s'i'te trooper. If t~e~e ts, tt
sure tsn I PMS. Bu1 that s JUSt one
example or the ridiculous alibis
defense. atto_rneys _have presented
for thetr chents tn the last few
years. .
. ,
Fedenco . Ma_c tas, at.torney
a!Wbuted hts chent s cnme killmg a couple w1th a machete.to a cleft palate that _left Mact~s
unable to nurse a,t hts mother s
breast. Then there s the guy who
says he ktlled two bank tellers
~use he ~ up ~ the Depresswn and dtdn t '!"an~ his chtklren to
suffer the depnvatmn he dtd. Or
the. fellow who claims h~ w~ only
acllng out the tratiS of h!S H~c
culture - "male machtsmo! ' hts
lawyer call~ 11 - . when he killed a
Dallas pollee o~ftcer. Or the guy
who says he killed because of
''TDC stress syndrome,:' which
was brought 011 by his !Javmg spent
most of htS adult life tn the Texas
~ent of Corrections. Or the
killer who ~lames h!s crime on
JlOSHraumauc stress disorder from

ihe Vietnam war, although hisservice during the war was on a ship
that never made it near Vietnam.
·J guess you can't fault an atrorney for trying anything that might
aid a clienL But if dte couriS hadn't
acquitled or given reduced sentences 10 some defendailiS because
of these so-called e•tenuating circumstanees, the attorneys wouldn't
be trying iL In our elTon 10 be jusL
our court systems have allowed
defenses that are just stupid.
.
And PMS? I'm afraid Judge
R!lben Smith has opened the door
to a rash or hormone defenses,
because 1don't think it will be long
before researchers establish that
men suffer from honnonal swings.
100. My friend has an "X" marked
on her calendar every six weeks, so
she'll be ready for her male boss'
regular-as-clock-work tirade. Preuy
soon in addition 10 machismo, posttraumatic stress disorder and physical defonnity, some lucky fellow
will be able 10 plead the hormonal
ravagesof"NMS"-nomenstrual syndrome- as 1 defense.

conditions and

MICH.

•

IToledo I as• I

By Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

The Dally Sentlnei-P~~ge

3

Clear skies forecast .over Ohio tonight

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Thursday, June 20, 1991

The Daily Sent~nel

•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, June 20, 1991

IMansfield I 87•1•
IND.

PA.

•I Columbus I 87• I

••

By Tbe Associated. Press
The National Weather Service
says mostly clear skies tonight
should give Ohioans a chance to
see the planets Venus, Jupiter and
Mars in their unusual alignment in
the western slcy.
WMIIK!rwise, it will be another
muggy night with practically no
winds and temperatures remaining
in the 70s.
It will be more of the same on
Friday with highs around 90. 'Jbere
will be a chance of showers or
~under.;torms in the soudi.

The recQrd high tempenlture for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 97 degrees in 1888.
The record low was 45 in 1914.
.Sunrise this morning was at
6:02 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:03
p.m.
Around the nation
Rain fell across the Pacific
Northwest early IOday and thundersrorms struck North Dsk.ota.
Thunderstonns also were forecast across the northern Plains and
the East Coast from Virginia to

Florida as much of the nation faced
a hot, humid day.
··
Flash-flood watches were· in
effect for parts of South Carolina,
Virginia and West Virginia, and
intense thuridersiOlTl\ activity a)so
was forecast for Montana.
Thunderstorms Wednesday sent
hail crashing down on parts of
South Dakota, Oklahoma and
Kansas.
Nearly 3 inches of rain fell on
Dayrona Beach, Fla., during a six"
hour period Wednesday night.
Sumter, S.C., got about .2 inches;

W. VA.

Flurries

· lao

Sunny

Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

Jacksonville, Fla, got 1.25 inch~;
and Houston got 1.08 inches C!n
Wednesday.
.
·
. Ex~ept for the Pacific Northwe,st
and Canadian border states, where
highs should hit the 60s and 70s,
hot weather was forecast every·
where in the continental United
States IOday.
:
Highs were expected to reach
the 80s across New England, ttie
mid-Atlantic states and most of tile
Midwest, the 90s in the South and
parts of California, and I00 to II 0
in southern Arizona, southern Ne)W
Mexico and southwest Texas.
··
Record high temperatures wete
· recorded in Maine and Alaska Qn
Wednesday. The Banow, Alaska,
high or 65 degrees broke the city's
33-year-old record for the date by 7
degrees. It was the warmest day
this early in the year that Barrow
has ever experienced. The high of
. 87 In Caribou, Me., tied a record
set in 1955.
The high for dte nation Wednesday was 109 degrees at Buckeye,
Ariz. '

Thirteen ..•

C19SI1 Accu·W..,thtt, Inc.

Continued from page 1
Hodges by Valley Lumber, David
Ramsbury by the VFW ~6. West
South Central Ohio
Extended forecast:
Virginia, Matthew Smt_th bX .t,he .
Saturday through Monday:
Tonight, panty cloudy with the
Middleport Chiropracttc Chmc,
Fair on Saturday. Chance of
low around 70. Friday, partly
Danielle Peckham by the Circle. H
cloudy with a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms Sunday
Auto, Kyle Norris by the ~o!'le
showers and thundersronns. High and ·Monday. Highs mostly in the
National Bank, Racine, Joe Hill by
80s. Lows in the 60s.
85-90. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thomas Do-It Truss Plant, Brent
King by Middleport Dairy Queen,
and Steve Brown and Adam
-~
.,
Brown, personal sponsors.
·
The actual races will be l)eld
Continued from page 1
beginning at I p.m. on Sunday.
Each or the cars will go down both
junction with "Super Weekend." ·
.
·
lanes and there will be double eliin·
Admission 10 the band show is $2.50 for adults and $1 for sill·
ination. Trophies will be awan!ed .
dents.
in a ceremony following the rates.
Bands to perfonn include Country Horizon from Parkersburg,
The winner of the Middleport
W.Va., and Free Country featuring members from the Eastern Dis·
derby will .go 10 Akron on Au¥. I0
triCL
10 participate in the Internau9nal
A square dance will begin at 9 p.m. with Melvin Cross as lite
car completed and ready for the race well before
UNDER CONSTRUCTION • Brent King's
Soap Bo~t Derby.
caller.
tbe preUminaries on Saturday. Here be saws out
racer. for Ibis weekend's First Annual Meigs
While the main event will not be
RefreshmeniS will be available and all proceeds will be used to
a part for Ills racer wbk:b Is sponsored by Dairy ·
·County Soapbox Derby was sliD in tbe CODstrucheld
until Sunday, derby activities
.fund the athletic program for the 1991-92 school year.
Queen. The main event or the derby will take
tion sta1e Wednesday afternoon at tbe prage or
will
begin
oo Saturday. From ~ to
place at 1 p.m. on Sunday down Gen. Hartinger
Charles Neutzling on Leading Creek Road. Tbe
10:30
a.m.
there will be driver regParkway in Middleport.
·
12-year·old with some assistance from bis par·
istration and fmal inspection. From
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Don King, plan to have tbe
10:30 10 II: 30 a.m. there will be a
safety meeting for the drivers, and
Changes in the repair schedule on U.S. Route 33 10 Athens·have
Continued from pag~ 1
from noon 10 3 p.m. t!lere will be
~_;___been annoum:ed by the Marietta office of the Ohio Deparunent of
practice
runs on the race track.
Transportation.
·
·
Time
trials and heat placements
·
with their bankers.
Such credirors have no collateral company set nlliW'al gas prices six
According 10 OOOT Communications Officer Karen Pawloski,
will
be
held
at4 p.m.
··
Morgan Guaranty Trust is the and are usually among the last to months a year, valued at least $24
the bridge located at th~ "Y" on U.S. Route 33 will not open until
In
conjunction
with
the
Soapbox
lead bank, said Robert A. Oswald, be repaid during a bankruptcy pro- million over the next 10 years, the
Saturday, instead of on Thursday as was announced earlier:
Derby activities, the Oldies But
Columbia
System executive vice ceeding.
anticipated life or the wells.
Additionally, OOOT will not close the bridge located two and a
president and chief ftnancial offi''What we have at the parent
Columbia Gas System is head- Goodies Car Club will have a
half miles south of the "Y" until Monday.
cer.
level is not a business problem . quanered in Wilmington and is one "cruise-in" from 6 10 9 p.m. in tile
·
"We're optimistic we can lalk The pipeline company has a busi- or the largest natural gas systems m park area.
with our banks aild avoid having ness problem and we believe that the United Slates Columbia Transour parent file Chapter II," once that problem is corrected, we mtsston has 18,000 miles of
The Daily. Sentinel:
Oswald said. "I'm optimistic they think our pipeline COMJI!!RY· as well .pipeline that sells ·natural gas
will
respond.
We
have
a
very
long,
as
all
the
other
(substdiaries)
will
wholesale
in
13
Slates
and
the
Dis"Creation of countywide 911 emergency telephone systems
(VSPI! 1411·tiiJ
solid relationship with these~- .be in good operating condition," met of Columbia.
could become a reality in our rural Southeastern counties with the
A. Dlvllhlll or Multimedia. lne.
I think we will be able 10 show the Croom said.
Columbia Gas of Ohio is the
passage of a bill that adds an alternative mOihod of funding the
parent
company
is
responsible,
.
.
O_n
Tuesday,
Columbia
Tran~­
,Published every afternoon 1 Monday
largest
of the five gas companies in
tmplemenlation and operation of a 911 system,'' according _10 Slate
through: Friday, 111 Court St .• Po·
with
a
shon-tenn
liquidity
prob!'"ISSlon
settled
~
6-year-old,
laws!"t
the subsidiary.
Representative Mary Abel (D-Athens) a co-sponsor of the bill.
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub!em
not
a
long-term
solvency
m
federal
court
m
Columbus,
Ohto,
Spokesman. Roger Morris in
House Bii1418Jiives flexibility 10 county commissioners 10
ltshlng Company/ Multimedia. Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Seprobiem. ••
ftled by ~ul 8~0 producers in the Columbus said the parent compaeither pass a resoluuon assessing a special assessment on improved
cond clau postage paid at Pomeroy,
A company that files for protec· Appalachtan regton. The JIW!Iuc:~ ny's problems have had no immeproperty parcels, or placci the issue before voters in a primary or
Ohio.
lion under Chapter 11 of the U.S. sued the company for lowenng tiS diate impact on the Ohio business.
general election.
.
Member: The AssOCiated Press, Iit· ,
Bankruptcy Code can avoid paying payments over. the ;ears an_d they
A provision in the bill allows the assessment, if approved, 10 be
land Dally Press Auociatlon and th'e
credirors until it comes up with a stood to recetve 115 mtilton.
used only to' pay cosiS of 911 systems. Costs for 911 systems
Ohio Nf'Wspaper Association. National
Advertising ReprHentatlve, Branham
reorganization pllin.
Under l_erms of t~e .agre~ment,
depend upon population, present operating centers, equipment and
Newspaper ~res, 733 Third Avenue,
John H. Croom, Columbia Sys- . Columbta Transmtss_to!l will pay
stafftng nee4s and contract arrangements with local telephone serNew York. New York 10017.
..
tern chairman, said the buyout is t~e producers $32 mtlh~n f~r lhe
.vice providers," Abel said.
POSTMASTER: Sfnd ack!rels chan~
preferable to a Chapter 11 filing difference bet,ween what 11 p&amp;Jd and .
Approximately 40 counties have 911 systems, while 44 do not,
to The • Dally Sonllnol. ll1 Court St.:
Am Ele Power ............ :.....28 318.
.
because the natural gas producers the producers pnces.
and four counties are in the implemenlation process.
Pl&gt;meroy. Ohio f57119.
Ashland Oil ......................311/8
would be unsecured creditors.
The seulement also gtves the
AT&amp;T............................... .37 5~
SVB8CRIP110N RATES
By CArrier or Mo&amp;or RGuae
Bob Evans .......... ,............. !? 7/
One Weet ....... , ........................... St.60
Channing Shop .................21 518
One Month .................. .. ......... .... $U5
One Year ................................. 183.20
City Holding .............·........ 14 3/4
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered
SINGLE COPY
Federal
Mogul..
................
.18
seven calls for assistance on We;lnesday and early Thursday.
Funeral -services will be conduce
PRICE
Goodyear
T
&amp;R
.................
34
1/8
At 8:37 a.m. on Wednesday, Racme squad went to Ponland
Chester Coif
Dally .......... .............. ........ ... 25 Cents
ted
Saturday
11 2 p.m. at Foglesong·
Key
Centurion
..................
13
1/2
Road for an auro accident. The squad transported Linda Lewis and
SubecriOOrs not desiring to pay !he car·
Lands' End .......................21 3/8
Chester "Chet" R. Coif, 70, of Funeral Home. Burial will follow
Pattiot Willbargelro Veterans Memorial Hospital. Diane Buder was
rler may remit In advance direct to
in
Sunrise
Memorial
Gardens.
Limited Inc. :.....................27 7/8
Mason, died Wednesday, June 19, .
The Dally Sentinel on a~. 6or 12 month
treated but not transported. At 9 a.m., Syracuse squad responded to
Friends may call the funeral
basis. Credll will be given carrier each
Multimedia Inc . ................28 3/S
1991, at Veterans Memorial
the scene and 10011: Brian Wolfe 10 Veterans.
week. ..
home
Friday
from
7
to
9
p.m.
Rax ResJaurant .................23/32
Hospital in Pomeroy.
At 6:38 p.m., Rutland squad went 10 Meigs Mine 2 for Alvin
No subscriptions by mall permltiPd In'
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... 31 1/8
He was born December 13,
Smith, who was Iaten 10 Veterans. At 10:12 p.m., Pomeroy squad
areas where home carrier service II.
Shoney's Inc ..................... 16 3/8
1920, in Canandaigua, N.Y.. son of Bernice Fry
went to the police department Keith Musser was taken !0 Veterans.
avallablf'.
Star Bank ..........................20 1/2
the late Augustus and Dosie Coif.
At II :44 p.m., Pomeroy squad wentro Crew Road. George Lemley
MAll 8ublcrlptlonll
Bernice E. (Edwards) Fry, 74, of
Wendy Int'l.. ......................9 5/8
' He was preceded in death by one
was taken 10 Holzer Medical Center.
l'nelde Mel~ Co•nty
Worthington Ind . .............. 25 518
13 Weeks .................................. l21.1K
On Thursdar at 3:30 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Lincoln _ daughter, Deborah Higley; one Pomeroy, formerly of Mason
County,
died
Wednesday,
June
19,
~ Weeks .................................. !43.16
brother,
Ernie
Coif;
and
one
Heights. Claudia Michaels was taken to Veterans. At 3:52 a.m.,
52 Weeks ..... .. ...................... ..... SBM6•
1991,
at
Overbrook
Center,
MidStock
reports
art
/he
10:30
a.m.
grandson.
Columbia Township ftre department wentiO Greer Hollow Road for
Outside MolAl County
.'
·
quotiS provided by Blunt, Ellis
13 Woeks ................. ................. 123.'4((
He was a retired employee of dleport.
a contained structure frre at the Boyer residence.
26 w..k, .................................. 145.50
She was ·a daughter of the late
and wewl of Gallipolis.
Michigan Oven in Romulus,
52 Weeks ........... ... ................. ... S88.40
James L. and Willie Vemena (RolMichigan.
Survivors include his wife, Be- lins) Morgan.
ArrangemeniS are incomplete
. ssie McGuire Coif; one son,
and
,will be announced by CrowTimothy of Clarence Center, N.Y.;
Hussell
Funeral Home.
cede the meeting. Ret'reshments five stepchildren, Chuck McGuire
Hymn .sing planned .
There will be a hymn sing at the will be served and new members of GaUipolis, Mary Wysong or
Faith Full Gospel Church in Long aie welcome.
Columbus, OH, John McGuire of Greg Pridemore
Mason, Patty Bennet of Henderson,
Bouom on Friday at 7:30p.m. Rev. ·
Quartel'lo perform
Steve Reed invites the public .
The Blaeksron Gospel Quartet . and Jim.McGuire of Gallipolis; two · Greg Pridemore, 32, RL I, RadRefrehsments will be served.
from Alabama will perfonn at the sisters, Evelyn Sharp of Marion, · cliff, died Wednesday, June 19,
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church on N,Y., and Carol Morteson of . 1991 in a bridge constructiop acciHomecominglre11nion planne!f
Wednesday at 7 p.m. The public is Naples, N.Y.; two brothers, Ken: dent in Lincoln County, W.Va. ·
Descendants of the late Albert invited 10 allend.
neth of Newark, N.Y., and l.elll of
AmuigemeniS will be made later
and Eliza Hill will have a home- .
Canandaigua; . 18 &amp;nl!'dchildren; , by the McCoy-Moore Funeral
. coming and family reunion on June
Country nl&amp;bl slated
and seven ~t-J!I'Wldchtldren.
Home in Vinton.
30 at Star Mill Park in Racine. A
Country Music Night will be
carry-in dinner will begin at noon.
held at the Louridge Community
. Center on Sarurday from 6 p.m. 10
Free clothing day
midnighL AU ba. nds are welcome
GaUlpolis Stockylll'ds C!).
Butcher Bull:
.
The Gallia Meigs Community and refreshments will be available.
Utilities, 66.00-70.75.
· Junr 15, 1991
Action Agency will have a free
Medium Frame, 1 &amp; 2 Steers:
• :.Cf!iner/Cuuer, 57 .00-68'.50.
clothing day on Monday from 9
Veal Cahet:
·
·
250-300 lbs.. 94.50-145.00;
Emerson
Sylvania
Funai
Goldstar .
a.m. to noon at the old high schoo.l
Choice/prime,
92.50·105.00.
300-500
lbs.,
93.00-106.00;
Veter- Memorial Holpital
Symphonic Shintom
building in Cheshire.
Magnavox .
Samsung .
Medium, 85.()().94.00.
500-700 lbs., 74.()().103.00;
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
Sprla&amp;er COM:
700-Up 76.50-88.00.
Multi Tech GE
KTV
Soundeslgn
• None.
.
Band pl'llctk:e
600.00 &amp; down.
Medium
Frame,
1
&amp;
l
Heifers:
WEDNESDAY
DISCHARGES
Scott
RCA
Summer practice for Mei11s
Philco
Zenith
Cow/Cd Com.:
250-300 lbs., 85.00.104.00:
High School band members wtll • Amos Fultz, Dorothy Roush,
1050.00-down.
300-500 lbs., 80.00-96.00;
resume· Monday from 9 a.m . to Henry Deaner.
Baby
Calva:
500-700 lbs., 75.50-89.00;
noon. This practice is in prepara- HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
.
200.00
&amp; down.
700-Up 68.00-81.00.
tion for the July 4 parade in RutDisehargea, June I9 - Margaret
Butcher Soft:
Bntcber cows:
land and Middlepon. For funher AmberJier, Robet1 Bates, Kenneth
400-600 lba., 47.50-51.00.
Utilities,
53.50-62.50.
Boster, W"tllilm Buaa, Sheny Ferinformation call 992-7141.
Top Hop:
Canner/Cutters,
5.7
.00-down.
rell, Lewis Hughes, Eric Miller and
220-250 11111., 49.SO-SI.50.
Light weight low grade _cows,
Coin club to llleel
Phyllis Rusself.
Buldler Boan: ·
47.00-Down. ·
POMEROY, OHIO'
391 WEST MAIN STREET
Th OH KAN Coin Club will
Birdu, June 19 • Mr. and Mrs.
39,00-41.50.
·lieifmttes, Up 10 73.00.
meet Monday at Burkett Barber Larry Hedrick, a son, Pomeroy.
992-3524
Pip by Head:
Steen and Buill:
Shop in Middlepon. Social hour Mr. and Mrs. Jason Massie, a son, Holateln
18.00-38.00.
300-800 lbs. 80.00-lll.OO.
and trading session _II 7 p.m. Pfe· Oallipolis. .

------Weather-----

......

Local briefs... ----.

Bridge repair schedule adjusted

. Columbl•a··---===:..:.:.=:::::...:______

911 service subject of bill

.

-

Stocks

·EMS .units answer calls

___.Area deaths.__

Meigs announcements

----Livestock report----

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE

Hospital news .

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

..

HOME ENTERTAINMENT cENTER~

n

"-

�Thursday, June 20, 1991

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

With Baerga's bat in full effect,

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Thursday, June 20, 1991 ;
I

Reds top Mets in 7-6 squeaker;
Padres hand Pirates 6-5 defeat
Dy DEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Rob Dib-

I

ble threw his fus t wannup pitch the
way he always does, high and hard
with arms and legs all ove r th e
place.
. .
Dibble's first pitch of the game
was al most the same - a fastball
so fas t that the many in the crowd
of 22,206 actually gasped. His last
pitch was much different - a
slowed-down slider that fro ze
Howard Johnson for a called strike
three and finished Cincinnati 's 7-6
victory over the New York MetS on
Wednesday night.
" We did Ollf best under the circumstances," said Mets manager
Bud Harre lson, whose team was
behmd most the game, "and then
they brought in the monster."
Di bble has spent much of this
season de.nying he is a monster,
despite separate suspensions for filing a fas tball behind Houston 's
Eric Yelding and for throwing a
ball into the stands. His slats, however, are really scary.
Dibbl e is perfect in 19 save
chances. He' s tied with Dennis
Eckersley for the major league
lead, although the Oakland relief

ace has had two more opportunities.
In 34 and ~vi a- thi rd innin gs,
Dibble has struck out 56. He's
given up only 22 walks, walked 12
and has a 1.30 ERA. And, even
with a reputation for being crazy
and wild, he has not hit a bauer; he
only hit' one .in 98 innings last season.
Still, Dibble knows the value of
pitching inside, especially at nearly
100 mph. He made Garry Templeton slnp rope in the ninth innmg,
then struck him out on a weak
swing.
" I hate questions like that,"
Dibble smiled, sort of, when asked
whether he tried to intimidate the
Mets:
Dibble relieved with two outs in
the eighth with a runner on first
base and tOO· Reds protecting a 7-6
lead. He ended the inning by striking out Mark Carreon,looking.
Dibble fanned Templeto.n to
start the ninth and broke Gregg Jefferies' bat on a weak popup. But
Kevin McReynolds, who singled
home the go-ahead run against
Dibble on Tuesday nigh~ again singled, bringing up Jo.hnson.
"You look for that matchup,"

Myer·s captures sprint
division in Saturday race
•

•
By SCOTI' WOLFE
:. Sentinel Correspondent
•: Rac ing was so close at K-C
Race way in Alma Saturday
e,vening that it took sevetal replays
of th e video a tape to determine
tffat Caldwell's Ronnie Myers was
tne winner of the sprint division in
an exciting photo finish.
Mye~s. ·a former Meigs County
native with many relatives sliD living in th e county, was the early
r4ce leader, fending off charges of
Charlie Fisher and Harry Garrett in
1~ early going. With about six laps
remaining, Chargin' Charlie Fisher
powered by Myers on the inside as
the two rubbed wheels coming off
·the low groove in turn No. 4.
Fisher went on to a near straight
away lead, when Myers rode the
cashion, then formed a slingshot to
the inside groove in order to gain
ground on the flying Fisher.
; By the final lap Myers had overhpulcd Fi sher as the two ·battled
side- by-side to the finish. As the
duo exited tum four they rocketed
by; the llagstand nearly dead even
to. prompt a review of the tape in
&lt;!~tcrmining a winner.
• Following the open wheel
chargers across the line were Garr ~ ll . Ma rietta ' s Dave Dickson
w~ose in-laws reside in Pomeroy,
Daryl Daugherty, Dave SneU, Dave
Fisher. Jim Harble, Nelsonville's
Rlek Holley, and Chris Reedy.
Heat winners were Dave Fisher
and Rick Holley.
In the Late ·Model Division
Wheelersburg's Delmas Conley
made it two wins in a row as he
outdi stanced Jeff Houser to the
checkered flag.' Jackie Boggs, picking up a new ride in the Wyant
Motorspons Hover Chassis of
Well ston, claimed third, Scott
Kitchen was fourth, Donnie Kennison fifth, Marty Horton sixth, Greg
Stevens, Racine's Scott Wolfe in
the Eber's Gulf-Anderson's Home
F ~'rni s hin gs #14, Steve Daniels,
Duane Ackley, Aaron Scott, Skip
W.atcrman and Doug Hall.
: Heat winners were Doli Clark,
. D~ lma s Conley, and Skip Waterman.
·:Barr y Bragdon of Wellston and
Cal'! Coleman won the Street Stock
heats, but it was Mike Wilson who
claim ed the gold in the feature
event.
:Wilson edg ed Coleman , Ron
Williams of McArthur. Bragdon,
Br1an Conkel , Dan Aldridge Jr.,
Barry Brisker of Oak Hill. and
Richard Trego.
;This Saturday night the All-Star
Circuit of Champions Sprim cars
will invade the fast 3/8 KC oval for
th~ second lime of the year.
•Thi s is part of a three race series
on: the All-Star tollf, which begins
wiJh a Friday night event at the allnew Portsmouth Raceway Park, a
Saturday stop at KC, 811d the fmal
leg at The Ohio Valley Speedwav
in Lubeck, WV, just south of Parkersburg.
At Skyline Speedway last Friday night 35 of the fastest latemodels in the country invaded on
the STARS national tour.
Bob Pierce of Danville, IU., took
the lead on the 14th circuit from
Donnie Moran and held off late
race charges from Chub Frank and
Bob Adams, Jr. for the win. King's
Mountain North Carolina Driver
Freddie Smith was fourth and Mlkc
Balzano fifth, followed by another
local, Larry Bond.
Bob Adams Jr .. taking his tum
in the open wheel modifieds survived a late race crash that eliminated U MP points leader Jack
Kress. And y Bond assumed the
lcud but Adams took Bond on the
swrt' and went on for the win.
Rutl and 's Ric k Williamson is

..

currently third in points behind
Kress and Bond in the UMP series
as a result of his steady top five finishes.
·Williamson stiuted racing modifieds last season and is one of the
series top prospects.
Racine continues this Friday at
Skyline Speedway in Stewart.
All-Stars invade Ohio Valley
At Lubeck, W.Va., the All-Star
Circuit of Champions Sprint Cars
will invade The Ohio Valley
Speedway in Lubeck,' WV on
Route 68 south of Parkersburg this
Sunday, June 23 at6:30 p.m.
This will be the fust time for the
sprints in two years at the Speedway, where Kenny Jacobs won last
time out Jack Hewiu plans on running his sprint and late model at
this event as well as at the all-star
show S_aturday at KC Rdceway in
Chillicothe. ,
•
· The Ali-Stars are at KC Raceway Saturday . It is located
between Waverly and Chillicothe
on Rt. 23 at Alma.

Harrelson said. "Power versus
power."'
Dibble threw a fastball pas t
Johnson, threw a ball and then got
Johnson to swing and miss at a
c!lfVe. After a foul and another ball,
Dibble caught Johnson looking at a
slider that caught the outside corner.
"It was a ~ood confrontation."
Reds manager Lou Piniella said.
" One of the best home run hitters
in the league against the best relief
pitcher."
The Reds won the fmale of the
three-game series and denied New
York its first home sweep of the
season. While Cincinnati finished
6-3 on its road trip, the Mets lost
more than the game.
David Co.ne , the Mets ' most
consistent starter in the last month,
left in the sixth inning because of
muscle stiffness in his right shoulder.
' 'I felt it in the front part of my
shoulder in the fourth innin~ and it
got progressively worse,' Cone
said. "It went to the back of my
shou lder, and I was laboring and
struggling, and I couldn't go any
more.
" I don 't expect to miss a start.
Some exercise and I'D be OK. ''
Cone (6,5) left with two outs,
runners on first and second and
New York leading 4-3. Without
him, the Mets were not OK.
Super sub Chris Jones batted for
Jeff Reed and sliced a two-run
triple off Rich Sauveur. Glenn
Braggs followed with an RBI single that made it 7-4.
Jones is 4-for-5 as a pinch hitter
and 9-for-14 overall in nine games
of his first major league season. He
has n' I go lien a whole lot of
chances - he's a 25-year-old outfielder and-.js not likely to break
into the staning lineup - but has
made the most of th.em.
"A lot of things were going
through my mind when I went up
there. Stay back. Be aggressive,"
said Jones, batting .643. "I told
myself, 'Shut up, just hit the ball.
I'm not trying to shock the world. ·'
Piniella is impressed with what
he's seen.
"I like him. He goes up there
and takes his swings,' ' Piniella
said, "mther than going up there
and taking {litches and not getting
the bat off h1s back.''
Kip Gross (1-0), acquired with
Randy Myers in the trade that sent
(See REDS on Page 5)

a.....,

W

•'

I 1/2
4

.. .........

!leo•.

Cbloaao. 74:
s"' Diea•.· 12: JUr.
- - 6 9.
SAVES-INbbte. Clrtd"nall, U; Lee
Smith. SL Louia. ti; Dave Smilh, Cbica·
ao. 16; J , Landrum, PIUtbnah. 13;
Fraa"o, New Ycnk, 13: l.alf•rt•. San
llietto. t3: Williaml, Plilladelpltia, t t: I.

WedneSday's scoru

l

'•

Minnoo'"' I, Batdm.,. 4
"Calilomi14, Milwaukee 1
Sotlllo4,lloolao 3
New Ymtr: 3, Tbronto 0

l

I
.I

!:le•elond .. Cb.._ 3
Oallind 5 o....u 4

Howdl, Loo Anp, ll.

tc.n.u c;i, u, r .... l

TonJebt's games
Oakland (SteWart 4-3) tt.Boltoa (Oar-

-3-1), B5p.m.

.

California (Finley 10· 3) at Detroit
(Ooblerl·l). 7:35p.m.
Now Y""' (Louy 3-6) ll TGl'CIIID (SIDlllom,.,. 7-2). 7:35p.m.
Teua (Brown 5·5) at (.'IJicaao (Me·
Dowell 8-3),1:05 p.m.
· _S uttle (Holman 7-6) at Milwaukee
(Nmno 64),1:05 p.m. ·
Baltimcn (Ballud 4-7) at Kanau City
(Boddjcl&lt;ed&gt;l), 8:35p.m.

Marauder head ,basketball coach Phil Harrison,
his starr and members or the Marauder basketball team.

Transactions
Bueball
Amtrlcan Lu&amp;ue
Ai..-suilpended Hal McRte, Ken1aa
O ty ~··· far two &amp;tme~~ roc bumpina
umpise Dale Scou in aaamo on J1U1o 6.
CALIFORNIA AN&lt;JEU.-lii&amp;Md Batty Lycu, e~tc:her, to a minor-leap CO'!·
tl"'c:t, and auiancd bizn 10 Edmonton of
lho Plcll!o Cout t.eaaue.
CHICAGO WHl'tE SOX- Nomocl
Rir.k R£mck rnanascr ofVIDcouver of lhc
Pac:ific Cout Luauc and Jlime Oan:ia
manaaer of Saruou. of the Oulf Coaat
Lllauo. Siped Ron Kittle, da:if.:llecl

Friday's games
Minnolcxa at New YOlk. 7:30p.m.

California at Odroi.t, 1:35 p.m. 1
Cleweta.d at Toronto, 7:35 p.m.
Oallind "Boaon, 7:35p.m.

TCUI ., Chi~. I:«&lt; p.m.

~

BabiatcnatK.an.lu Oty, 8:35p.m.
Seattle MMilwaukee. 8:35 p.m.

hittcr-fust bateman, 10 a minor oaaue .

cantrac1, and u.ipDd him 10 VancouYcr
oftbo Pocifu: C-Lap
.

SEATTLE MARINERS-Sianecl
Da:mond Rclaford, infielder, and II·
aiaaecl blm to Tempo of the Arizona

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Dhlsloa
WLPd.GB

Pllllburah - - :It lJ -'29
SL Louia .......... 3.5 29 .547
Now Y""'
....... 33 30 .l2A
Chicaao
......... 3! 34 .477
M...-1
......... 31 34 .477
Ploilide4iUa ....... 28 37 .431
.t•t'1l l

.\~ :1"

l
61/2
9 112
9 Ill
12112

'TfiXAs

RANOERS-I'lao:od Geno Po.
1nlli, oald&gt;ar, oalho IS ..toy dillbled !ill.
·l'url:huod l i t o - .a Inn Roc~Dauoz,
oald&gt;ar, r- Tulia olllte T..,. Lolli""
Natloll•l Wau•

CHICAGO CU~S-Sl3ned Teny
Adami. Hoot«Tiinidad ond Scott WCU.,
pitdl.•, and Thomu Wlltcr,lil'lt bllo-

L Pet.

W

Loo AnJd..

.. ....
Clndnnad .._
Adm..
........... .
Son lliett• ........
Houo1a1
.........
San FrmciJco ......

G8

39 25 - .609

Wednesday's scores

1 .
Alllerlt:1111

MINNESOTA TIMBERWOL~S ­

FootbaU
Nallonal Foalblll l.tal•
MINNESOTA VIK.INOS-Named
Scot! StudweU uail&amp;aat to the president

rorola)'euolaa-.

PlnLADELPIIIA EAGLES-5i..ecl
N1o1D NcJlarricsla, Tim Wlllan, Paul 'Mc-

RBJ-Fieldcr, Detroit, :55; Sierra,
Teua, 49: Tbom11, Chicaao. 48; C.
Davial Minne1ota, 45; D. Hondez"'In,
Oakland, 4S; Baialll, Oakland, 45: Win·
1111'S-C. Ri...... Bal-117: Pudc -

I

B(SK£TBAL!
I

!

KEVIN COSTNER

RoBIN "floOD

YOlk. 1:2. .771, 3.5l: Finley, Cal;lomia,
10-3, .769, 3.81 ; Key, Toronto, 10·3,
.769, 2.45;.McDo...U. Chioqo,l-3, .727,
3.59; OulliWal, Ooboil, 1-3, .727, 3.19.
STRIKEOUI'S......cltmenl, 8CIIIan, 91;
Jtyart; Teaa, 92; Finley, Califonaia, 14;
. R. lolmon. Scallle. 13; Candlolt~ Clo,..
: land, l3i Swindell, Cle•eland. 71; ~c­
Dowell, aucaao. '"·
SAVES-Eckonley, Oakland, 19: Harvey, California, 17; Ap!en, M.innelou,
t7· Roardon, Bolton, 17; Monlaoea-J,

OF ROME CORN AND TOMATOES

K~... OIJ, 14; Jeff'~, Tu.u, 1_.;
ThJapen, OU..,o. 13.

HOMIGIOWN

GREEN PEPPERS •..·--·····-··········-3 FOI 1°

BLUE LAKE STRINGLESS HOMEGROWN GREEN BEANS

Di. ... 304.

RUN$-T. Pemandez, San Dieao, 41;
Butler, Lao Anrl•· 45: DeShiclcla, Monueal, 43· Jutticc., AUant.t, 4!; SIIIIML l,.ol
, Anpl ..·, 43; Sandbaa, Chicaao. •3: T.
Ow)'ftn, San Die.o, l2; John10n , New

HD• .

IDAHO

Yolk. 42.

52 29

RBI- Juatice, Atlanu, 51; Johnaon,
New York, 47; W. Clut. San Pranei.lco,
46; O'Neill, Clntlanall, 451 KrU,
Philadclphi•, 44; Murny, Loa Aaael.ea,
44: Meariff, San Die~, •42: Calieron,
MonlloaL 42; T. 0..,., Suo llilto,42.
HITS- T. Ow~na, San Dieao, 91;
' Sunuel, Loo Alllolao, II: T. - - ·
San Dieao. 19; Wco-. lan PrancUoo,
-~ 78; Sandbera, Chlnao, 73; lou, St.
Looil. 72: Calilanal, """'"""" 11.
• OOUBW....J- SL Louia, :10; . . . .
Ia, P I - I ll
A-~ 17; L
Gonutao.
I
I
'
161
oaii,J'' T. ' " - Sanlllap, l6; ..,._

SWEET

CANTALOUPES.......- ......._,_,..,.....OHLY 5129

EA.

I-

SPECIAL -MRS. WAGES -SPECIAL

PICKLE MIXES
611HDS

s••• pkl•
lEG. '1.79

'

TOMATO

''

6 KINDS
$169
lEG. $1.69
pkt- $2.09

'

''

"""'*'·

...,.•,

FARM MARKET l

L....!·~·~•:a::'!•:••~sr.:·~•:••:•:•:•!~!a:••:•____J i
•

I

o._, " boll. Coicqo, t6.
TRIPLI!S- T. o..,.. Sao 11ioao 1:

F...... SID FraftcllcO, 6: L. CJoonlol,
l; Col-. Naw Y... 5: M.
' Thom..... SL Loull, 5: 1M. l'lliladtl·
l r-• ,'-AI--.
o-·--~
4: T. - ·
.....Suo Diqo•• .

•

-·

HOME aON!I-1-. Now Y""',

IS'; O'Ntlll, Clncta•ed, l.tJ MGOriff,

'

l

1... ,..., ~l. &gt;-"'·oll'l'
\

'·f'i' .. '

-4

,1•'1""" .......

al1er rebllt,

I Cl
11W811,

:-.:.

MIWII

H•&amp;!;!!

4.40:

Alloltaoad-MWeAndC.._,~ Vatu·
IW),H=' wboanc:hcn,i.CR

sb&amp;eDilc

Pnolou1

Droam, HIU'1 Spaocly Ruth.

ik:alllb-!Adl.-a,..

.

2~
....

- - ( -9) 121.20.
l'iN&gt;Raoo-St,600
Why Would I Uo (Rieale) 7.60, 4.80,
4.:10; Ridllnl N - A rTutcooo) 7.20,
4.00; Miancly (C""') 5.60. T;m.. U7 3·
l.

Caimin' """'·

......

Allo Ractd·Sparklin&amp;_ E1cort, Swlca

Dio. Wlleolinl Buon, Eacon Lad, Bo
Seo1a Billa, B......., Olipp&lt;o, TIIJ'I'Oflce

G.

Ill hall Twin Tlifacu (1·9-l) SICll.OO.

J'wf- (l-9) 173.90.
Si1dl ~13,000C t 'rion Ploo.

(R......,

Dawa 11lo ltoo4 Apin ~) 3G.IO,
1.00, 6.:10;- ~
4.00,
3.10; Rooky W a- 13.10; 'finiO. t :lB·

.9. . ••

45.

Allo -·~ p Olarllo, IIIIo'• Dnam.
SIUna, G 11. 8opr V.U., Sp!d, XF a.....

lie.

•

spc,--

Trif- (6-1· 3) SI.SI7.60.
- - ( I &gt;I) 191.40.
-a-41.100 CalaUaPaco.
v lila• ~ Dl) 4.60. CIO. 4.20;
6.20,5.10: Bo DoU

.... -'Ziff

II 'I

Alto bold-No U~~GaW. low Wow, J

BATTINO- T. Ow,..n, S1a Dieao.
.363; MCOee. Su Pr.an~i•~o, .339;
Stmuel, Loa AnJclel, .329; Jon, St.
, Lou.it, .323; Bigu&gt;, HOWitdll, .317: I•
dee, Atlanta, .l"D4; T. Fernandez, San

0

Ql.

Lwrut 12

I-(MIIIa}4.1&amp;~,'t-I:S7·:ZS.

Natloaal !.ape

Nl'&lt;t (;#l'MI\6
{Po- ~
Ill MSSU . 1(1 UIIU II lll'.llf.

TOMY 1:00.1 :30
FRIDAY 7:00 ,i :3G
!AT. I :00 ,l :30,1:OO. l : 10
IUN .1:00,3 :30, 1 OO, j 10
MOW~ • 1HUAS. 1;00 • JO

13: Cotto. Se~ttJc, 13; Petti~, Tc.au, 13.
PtTCIUNO (6 Dccilio111)- Ericbon,
tdinnaota,ll·l. .846, 1.~1; Lanpton,
Califomia, 9-2. .118, 3.,0; Stoal.myre.
Tvronw 1·2. .TIS, 3.13; Sandlnon, New

Joe Hill, Jason 'Frecker, (back row) Chris
Roush, Cass Cleland and Josh Witherell. The
trophies were sponsored by area businesses.

BAKED POTATOE$.................10 LB. BAG

~·

zo· Cuyler, Oclroll, 13; White. Toronto,

J!o,...

~.,......

Fourllt a-$23,230 t ... pkini.Oeon
For ZYO Filly Trot.
·Neulf (Xetly) 2.60.2.60, 2.20:
llamo (Waploo) 6.00,
Still
' (Koopi) 3.60.
T.-2:013-S.

16; D. Hcndenon, OU:land, 15;
Oakluul. 14: Fielder, DooU~ 14: C. Rip-

ken, Baltimore, 14; Bufield, New Yodr.,
14; D=, Octroi~ 13: Winl\old, California, 13.
STOLEN- BASES- R. Hendu1on,
' Oakllnd, 26; Polonit, C11ifornia, 23;
Rainel, Oica&amp;o, 23; R. Alomar, Toronto,

~10:

6

I

Trif- (H-4 Ml.OO.

ean.co.

•

ToltiCI ~) 4.40,

99c sale price
· 30c mlr's reblle pttr ql ,

- - (7-3) li.IC).

R. Alomu, Toronto, 4; ·SiiiR, Tu.11, 4;

I

1bild Rac:e.Jl,OOO Cooclilion Pooe.
t.opo (C.,.. Jr.) 5.20, 3.10, 2.60: Li·

(Sid)l.OO. Timt-t:S6. Allo
Raced-SUck Au Wbialle, Cltaic Sed.
&amp;caul, Alche. That's All, McBee R01d .
Sc:nw:b.Qaapa~l Wufiold.

Puclz:ctt., Minneaota,4; 13 ~lied with 3.
HOME RUNS--C. O.Yia, Minnetotl,

•

5 39
SNOW WHITE CAULIFLOWER................... 1

-

Soaule, 16; lkrpu, Minn-., 16.
TR.IPLES- Molitor, Milwaukee, 6;
Polonia. California, S; Ram, CUalao, 5;

I

5

lilt-

(5-6) $10.60 .

-

ett, Minnuota, 85; Sierra, Tc:xu, 84;
Molitot, MUWiull:ec. 84: Palmc:Uo, Tuu,
81: 0 . Hondenon. Outand, 79: fnnco,
Tcxu, 'TI.
OOUBLES- Palmeiro, Teau, 21 ; R.
Alomu, Toronto, 20; Carter, Toronlo, 18;
B-. B-. ti: .Whi10, T......,I7;C.
Ripkc:n, Baltimore. 17: Qonulez, Teua,
16; GriffcJ Jr., Sca~llc, 16; Reynold1 ,

.'

AWARD WINNERS - Individual award
\\'loners at last week's Marauder basketball
camp include (front row, L-R) Jeremy Pierce,

c-. spoec~, Cootr. My~~~oa~-.

field, Califmtia, 4S.

I

1991 r;J.Mr

Lea&amp;ue

nCIOll, .. l.

'
'·

\Rll.·mm

COIJUMBUS, blato (AP) - Seioto
Downa ttlllltl for W..tneld1y, Juftie 19.
Wlllb«-...... luL
PintR.-.SI,IOOCooclilioaPooo.
M~,,'''"' (Wallin) 6.10, 4.00,
3.00: I
•1 Muo (Homta) 4.20, 3.40;
While HaD Mn (Miller)4.60. T-1:56 ·
4-l.
A1ao Rload.C-.y Tn-. m llud.
Pef_Jrino Pota, Loan Review , Worthy
Stlto, l'nob Babd,l{anau KmabL
Tri!ecta !9-Z.I) StlS.IO.
- . !9-2) $29.20.
SOCODd Jlace.$23,230 Tomrt'"•Al
For 2YO Filly TnL
s- Nice ~ 3.40, 2.40, 2.20;
Imped'..U.., ()'ld&gt;la lD) 3.00, 2.40; Star
....... (W.....) 2.20: '11oteo2:00 t-l. •
Alao R•cad·Yant.e Uhr. . , D D' a

Ripton, Baltimore,
.351 : Molilo&lt;, Mll,.aukoe, .336: D. Hen·
der~ on, Oakland, .333; Siona, Texaa,
.332; a..... Ookland. .nO; E. Maninez.
Seattle; .32.8; Puckea.., Minnemta, .32.8.
RUNS-Molitor, Milwa\lkcc, 48; D.
Hcndcncn, Oakland, 41; Palrnmro, Te.xu,
46; ean.cco, Oak:land, 46: Siena, Tuu,
44: Riynoldl, Sottlle, 43: ........... Min·

'

.- .

Gowan, Raymond StVIJII tnd Michael

r-.linebaw...

BATTI~O-C .

\

(~

tonight. You can 't gtve up on tjtese .
guys." .
• The Pirates, who have the best
record in the majors, beat th e
Padres 3-2 on Monday and 3-1 on
Tuesday. San Diego is 3-4 record
against the Pirates this season.
" The th ing is, especially the
way the events of the game transpired, back and forth and back and
·forth, you wouldn't know that that
team was 17 games over .500 and
we were .500, would you?" Padres
mana~er Greg Riddoch said .
" Every single game, except for ~
blowout in Pittsburgh (an ll-0 victory June 8), has been real light.
" Win or lose, you've got to feel
great about playing the Pirates the
way we played them. (Pirates 'manager Jim) Leyland told me today,
he thought we were the best team
they've played. I asked him if he
checked the records.' '
Riddoch wasn 'I around to see
Teufel 's second clutch hit of the
game. He was thrown out for arguing a play at the plate in the top of
the eighth inning, when the Pirates
went abead 5-4.

Namccllimmy Rod~ roach.
•. NRW YORK KNICKS-Named Pam
IWril dit&lt;iooor o1 mllkedna.

Major league leaders

I

13 .00
13 .00
BARGAINNATINE£S SATURDAY I SUNDAY
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY

John 'Fmnco to the Mets, pitched
two innings for his first major
league victory.
Todd Benzinger, who earlier
tripled and singled, hit 811 RBI double in the seventh that put the Reds
mance.''
· ahead 7-4. Jefferies htt a two-run
Nichols, demoted to the bullpen homer in the Mets' half.
after going 0-5 in silt starts, said,
Paul O'Neill ·hit a two-run
" I was in ~ groove. When I carne homer, his 14th, in the third that
in the game with a lead I felt like I gave the Reds a 3.0 lead. The Mets
was part of the team. I was able to scored four times in fourth off
contribute. My heart was pounding. Chris Hammond, capped when
I got the confidence back that I lost ·· Kevin Elster stole home as part of a
when I was taken out of the rota- double steal.
tion.' '
Padres 6, Pirates.s
· Nagy left after five innings
When you're the San Diego
. because of an upset stomach. He Padres. winning one of three gam\lS
gave up seven hits and all three against the Pittsburgh Pirates isn't
Chicago runs but two of them were bad.
unearned because of errors by
"It's good to be competitive
Baerga a1 third and shortstop Felix with the team with the best
Fermin in the third inning.
record," Tim Teufel said after his
Carlton Fisk, who doubled in a two-run, two-out single in th e'
run in the third. sinJtled in another eighth inning gave the host Padres.
in the fifth. But that was all for the . a 6-5 victory Wednesday night.
White Sox after Nichols took over.
"It was a nice win ," Teufel
He gave up a double to Ozzie said. "We won a game that they
Guillen in the sixth but Guillen was seemed like they've been doing all
thrown out trying to stretch it into a season long, coming from behind.
triple . .
Pittsburgh almost ctid it to us again,

Scioto Downs results

II'

Baseball
NEW YORK (AP) - Kansas
City Royals manager Hal McRa.e
was suspended for two games for
bumping umpire Dale Scoll during
the 12th inning of a·4-3, IS-inning
victory over Texas at Kansas City
on June 6. The American League
said McRae has indicated he will
appeal the suspension, so it will be
delayed until the appeal can be
heard.

. z"n •• ._
W
. -'-----=-.-:.----.,.--

Basketball

Montreal at Clnd.nnallt 1:35 p.m.
HOUMnat Philadelphia, 7:3S p.m.
New Y~ 1t All.rna, 7:40p.m.
San Oic&amp;o It Sl Louil,l:35 p.m.
Plltlburah at 1M AIIJI:..... 11:35 p.m.
Chicaao at S1n FrancUco, 10:35 p.m.

'

Sports briefs

Reds

Greg Hibbard (4-6) tool: the
loss. II was his third in his last four
decisions. He was shalcy at the start
but pitched well after the thicd
inning, allowing only Baerga 's
homer in the fifth.
The game attracted 34,666 and
gave the White Sox 1,017,154 in
29 dates. That 's the earliest they
have hit the million mark. They
reached a million in 1984 after 42
games.
(Continued from Page 4)

National BukllbiU ~lallon

Friday's a•mes

,~ ~aBALl .

Joey Cora beat out a bunt single
in the ninth and was sacrificed to
second but got no farther as
Nicbols wrapped it up.
Torborg call ed it "a crazy
game, not well played in the early
innings but it was a good game at
the end. Every time we win a game
we say that's the one that will turn
us around, but we can't seem to get
it done. But we'll keep r:rying."

~ANGELES DODGERS-P!acecl

Montreal (De.nnla Martinez 9-4) at
Clndnnad (RUo 6·2), 7:35 p.ra. ·
· HC1U.Ilm (J. loaet 4-4) at PhUadclphit
(Co• 1-1), 7:35 ~.m.
New York (Oobden 6-5) '' Allanta
(Smoltzl-8), 7:40p.m.
C!!ic-8" (Loncaw :I.. I) at San m..:;,.
co (Kimlinprl~). IO:OS p.m.
l'lllllfurP (SmlleJ 1-3) at Loo A '" (II. Mll'llnalt-3~ ltolJ p.m.

_ MARAt1lER

to concentrate and not swing at bad
pitches. Yesterday I got two walks.
Tonight I got two walks, so I
wasn' t swif1$ing at hi¢ pitches."
Baerga smgled in a run in the
fust inning and walked and scored
in a two-run third when Brook
Jacoby singled in a run and Luis
Lopez doubled in another. He hit
his eighth homer in the ftfth inning
to provide the margin of vi~tory.
Starter Charles Nagy (3-7) w,as
the winner. Sluup pitching was provided )ly Rod Nichols, who
allowed Ol\lY two hits and no runs
over the last four innings to earn
his fust save.
"He was super," McNamara
said. "You can put all the adjectives you want in that perfor-

Jdf HamitiDn. 1hizd bucnun, oo tho IS·
~y dillbkld 1iaL Plm:hue the oontnc:t of
Butch Davi1, outfielder, from Albu ·
- · ol!ho Pacific Cout Lupe.

Tonl&amp;bt's a•mes

mour, (back row), Coach L.J. Mitch, A.J.
Vaughan, Scott George, Cass Cleland and Corey
Yonker.

By JOE MOOSHD..
AP Sports Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Carlos
Baerga will not soon be forgotten
by the Chicago White Sox. .
The 22-year-old third baseman
from Puerto Rico ended a perfect
two-game series Wednesday night
by driving in two runs with a home
run and a single , drawing two
walks and scoring two runs to help
lead the Cleveland Indians to a 4-3
victory that ended a six-game losing streak.
Baerga hit two home runs, drove
. in four runs and drew two walks
Tuesday night in a 6-5 loss to the
White Sox.
"He had Babe Ruth-type of production in Ibis series." White Sox
manager JeffTorborg said. "He's a
good hitter and you' D hear a Jot of
him in years to come."
The three borne runs in the twogame series gave bini eight for the
season, one more than he hit last
season as a rookie, It was a little
surprising since he had been
benched over the weekend .for a
lack of hitting. .
. "He's just a baby," Indians
· manage~ John McNamara said .
' ' He was only hitting about .150
for a while so we sat him down
Saturday and Sunday and we had
the day off Monday. The rest did
him some good."
The rest, Baerga said, allowed
him to do some thinking.
"When you have a couple of
days off rou stan thinking about
what you ve been doing wrong,"
Baerga said. ''I took some extra
b'atting practice and I'm trying to
stay back on the pitch. I just have

aNCNNA11 REDS-e.n.ct up Xelllt
Brown, pitcher, from Nuhvllle of the
American Auociation . Placed Norm ·
Clad,.., pildler, "' lite 15-dly U.blod
lilt.
HOUSTON ASTROS-Sil"od Mil:e
~. dUrd buemaa, and auilftod
him to the A•he,.-iUe of the CarOlina

341 3t .531
5
32 30 .ll6
6
34 33 .S07 6 112
2l 40 .315 14 Ill
2S 41 .379
IS

Alion,. 9, PhiWielphio 2
SL Louia 3, Son FranciJeol
-3.-1
Clndnnatl71 New York'
Saa Dleto 6, Pllbborah s
LooAnaola 9, cn;..l. 8

CAMP CHAMPS- The Bulls won the 1991
Marauder Basketball Camp team championship; Team members include (front row, L-R)
Vince Broderick, Matt Baret! and Justin Sey-

Cleveland posts 4-3 win over Chicago

.....

West Division

'

J

GB

cwro.n;. ......... 3S 29 .547
4
-·
........... 3.5 29 .547
4
KauuCily ....... 31 32 .492 11!l
Chioaao
......... 30 32 . a

•

. ...

L ..._

......... 31 'ZI .SIS
33 21 .S50

Olkland

•'

446 4524

.36.5

....... 40 26 .606

r....

.I•

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA

tl, 33; Coleman, Now Yodc, 33: MUon,
Atlmll, 31; DoShicldt, M011tnal, 30;
L.tSfard. St. Louia, II: ~. Maauotl. 17: 0 . SoWb, SL LeW, 17.
PITCHING (6 Dcciaiont)-Sampcn,
Montieal, !'i -1, .133, 3.83; Glavi.Do, At·
lanta, U-3, .786, 2.11; Ctrpeater, St.
tow., 7-l. .771, 3.16: R. MUtlooz, Loo .
Anp1o1. 10.3, .7fll, 2.74: T...UW.,.. St. '
I.GWo, 6-2. .7l0, 2.72: ......... - ·
6-2, .750, 4.04; RQo1 CIDCIIIIIII, '·2,
.750,2.12.
STliiKEOt.rrS-&lt;ono, N.,. Yodt, 96;
Ola.U.., Admta, 86: Ooodon, Now Y"""
83; RUo. Clnclan•tl, 1t; 0 . Maddu:a,

' 1n
10

:1t .371

Mioooocu

••

land, who was presented an award
spon sored by King Hardware .
Dave Tate Chevrolet, Oldsmobile,
Cadillac , GEO spon sored th e
Offensive Award , won by Josh
Witherell.
Cleland also won the Outstanding Camper Award , sponsored by
Bank One .

i)a~rafA,tl ,
All~­

...... 29 34 A60 •
4
....... 'ZI 33 .450 41/2

WestDivlllon

l

There were 41 campers who
took part in the 1991 Marauder
Boys Basketball Camp . The
campers were instructed in all fundamentals in the week long camp
by Marauder head basketball coach
Phil Harrison, his staff and mem bers of th e Marauder basketball
team.
The Bulls (Vince Broderick.
Matt Baret!, Justin Seymour, A.J.
Vaughan, Scott George, Cass Cleland and Corey Yonker), under the
coaching of Marauder senior-to-be
L.J, Mitch, won the team competition.
Individual awards sponsored by
area businesses were also awartled.
Jeremy Pierce won the Hustle
Award, sponsored by PDK Con struction . Joe Hill won the Free
Throw Award, sponsored by Dave
Tate Chevrolet, Oldsmobile, Cadillac, GEO, Inc. The Defensive
Award, sponsored by Farmers
Bank, went to Jason Frecker. The
P.I.G. champion was Chris Roush,
who was presented an award sponsored by Farmers Bank. The oneon-one champion was Cass Cle-

33 30 .524
......... 34 31 .S23
........... 31 33 ..... 2 Ill

a.-... .-. .-. 23n · 40

'••

Marauder cage camp draws 41

0.., AlliDia, 12; W. Oak, Sao
.
.., 12; 1-. Aw... tt: - .. New
York, II: M•opby ,' P!IUidtlp&amp;ia, II :

GB

..........

Mllw..UO
Now Y""'
a ......d

I

OUTSTANDING CAMPER- Cass Cleland won the outstanding camper award sponsored by Dank One in the 1991 Marauder
basketball camp. With Cleland is Marauder head basketball coach
Phil Harrison.

San D~jO, 14; 0 , Boll, Chica.:·-!!;

EutDty~Roa
. WL ....

T..-o
Doorait

''

CAMP DRAWS 41 - The 1991 Marauder
DasketbaU Camp, held last week at Meigs High
Sc!10ol, drew 41 campers. The campers bad
instruction in all aspects or the !{&amp;me by

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

~

··· -

lllf1IMI W~RRnHIY

W l•n, Crowe Time OUy, Araold,
~. BIU)'-

Trif- (1-l-:l)Slii,OO.
No wiDDIII Twin Mew.. Carryover-

t0.971.SO.

89! .

Jllaltlla-43,000 Cooclilion -

B&lt;iullabilh, (Oriamooo) 3.60, 3 .00,
2.46; Bal&amp;on Owiaaelt (Moaan) 3 .10,
1.20; ,..
m
1.20. nm.-1 :,,.
:IS.
Alao R•eed · BOII or The Road,
lakewia, OJPJ lt01e, Nachaa, Suday

&lt;P*r'&gt;

()oil,

-l!flry.

From

1l
48.......

T - (3-4-7) 16110.

'Iliff

- - (3-4) Sl6.00.

Niadl -123,230 T... p.u..-Geen
Par 2YO 1'1111 TtoL
•

-

IIIII\ (Xoopl) 5.60, 5.00. 4.40:
~)$. 10. ~~ ,.,, .

o.,a. CF..WJr.) 140, 3~ Mull Ncoo
Alto leoe4· ....dowbranch OlOtJ,

=;-=~1J!'"I!toilco,

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

T - (I·Ulll6UO.

'..,oo;&lt;t-j119AO.

r.-

••nxew1...._

--Of
u:.

Ed I ' -

,__lt.) 4.40, 3.60,

2 . 6 0 ; - - (1-Jr.) 6.00

,__,_tc-)1.10. n..l:,.t-

l.

Alao
t a t , - J,
l.ootM Ia IIJio,- - . Oaoo

A

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

1111

.

..,, 10...---

mar ,...,. dut to

a.

StOle houra: 1:30 0.111.10 I p.m. II_, "'"""" Fl'lelly,
1::10 Lm. to 1 p.m. S..nloy, onctl 0.111. to 5 p.m. Sul'lelly

GALUPOUS

b.~;fa"·'fll.lO.

- - 3,312.~12.71 ..

, • .,~ ...

-

·~. f

•• • •

.,

;

....

. • · 7"1""'11 "

+-.-

·~t~~~

•

�Thursday, June 20, 1991

Program helps farmers fight · Catholic group urges more
famine by curbing crop losses door-to-door evangelizing
.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Thursday, June 20, 1991

'. Page-s

Community calendar
-·---··~-~
··----------·------·-·-~~·-----·~·~------~---------·--------------------·--·"-·--···--""
Col!lmaaity Caleadar items reunion on Thuzsday at 7:30 p.m: at Kenya, East Africa, will speak at

appear two days ~Oft u event
aad tbe day of tbal eveaL llenls
must be rea!lved wei Ia adVIIIlCe
lo assure publicatioa Ia lbe calelldar.

THURSDAY

CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School classes for preschoolers
through teens will be held at ML
Hermon Church through Friday
from 9:30-11:3() a.m. daily. Call
• Julia Will at 985-4344 to regislt:r.
COOLVILLE -"Jesus and You
- at Camp Can-Do" is lhe lheme for
- Vacation Bible School at the
· Coolville United Methodist Church
beld through Friday at 6:30p.m.
. nightly.
•
RUTLAND • Vacation Bible
• School at the Rutland Freewill
: Baptist Church will be held
:. through Friday from 6-8 p.m.
.• nightly. Public is invited.
•
POMEROY • Bible school at
the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route
• 143, Pomeroy, will be held duough
: Friday from 6:30-8:~0 p.m. nightly.
Rev. Victor Roush mvttes the pub• lie. Ca11992-29S2 for informaUoo.

.·.·

POMEROY - The Meigs County Democratic Executive Commitlee will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
: • at the Carpmlers Hall in Pomeroy.

I

the New Haven Library.

FRIDAY
. TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dance at the
Tuppers PlainS VFW auilding on
Frtday from 8-11:30 p.m. with
music by the Alvin Chutes Band.
Air conditioned building. Public
invited.
.
REEDSVILLE -"Super Wecli:end" will be held at Eastern High
School on Friday, Saturday and
· Sunday. Featured will be baseball
and softball games, yard sales and
bake sales, draft horse field day
exhibition on Saturday at 10 a.m.,
chicken barbecue Saturday and
Sunday at 11:30 a.m. and country
music show on Saturday at 6 p.Jil.
Public is invited.
LONG BOTTOM - There will
be a hymn sin~ at the Faith Full
Gospel Church m Long Bottom on
Friday at 7:30 p.m. Rev . •Steve
Reed invites the public. Refrehsments will be served.

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
port Church of Christ wit have its
Vacation Bible School kick-off
parade on Saturday from 11 a.m. to
noon.

THE PLAINS - The Zion COmmunity Church, Route 682 Lower
:
RACINE· The Racine Ameri- Plains Road, The Plains, will have
•. can Legion Post 602 will meet a hymn sing with the Old Time
;, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Refresh- Religion Singers on Saturday at 7
: ments will be served following the p.m. Rev. Eddie Boyer invites the
public,
meeting.
''
,

NEW HAVEN · ·Wahama High
School Alumni Association will
hold an organizalional for the 1992

•

.,.·... . .
~

SUNDAY
HEMLOCK GROVE • Pam and
Paul High{iled, missionaries from

ByMITCK WEISS
AJsodated Press Writer
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
- Flocks of grain-eating birds,
locusts and other pests sttll pose the
greatest threat to African farmers •
fields, scientists and agricultural
specialists say.
Although drou ght has caused
hardships for many African
nations,
vertebrate pests - birds
.
mtce and rats - cause the most
damage; said E.K. ·Byaruhanga,
director of the Zambia-based Inter· ·.
naliooal Red Locust Conrrol Organizati.pn.
Twenty percent of the world's
crop losses are caused by vertebrate
pests.
Byarubanga is among the representatives from II African nations
attending a five-week class at

·southern bands hold picnic

Thomas Walters, Southern
the Hemlock Grove Christian Instrumental Music Director,
Church on Sunday at 9:30 a.m. A praised all his students for their
potlucli: dinner will follow services effort and hard worli: during the
at the Grange Hall.
past year in his farewell speech 81
the combined elementary, junior
POMEROY - Chip Wooders high and high school band picnic
meet Sunday, 2 p.m., Roadside held recently at Star Mill Park in
Park 011 Route 33. Anyone interest- Racine.
ed is invited to allend.
Walters also thanli:ed the boosters and parents for all th.eir help
POMEROY - A 12-step AA during the year.
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
Edna Hunnell, president of the
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West boosters, 9CIIIed pllques to WalSecond Street in Pomeroy.
ters aad avtd Deem, asststant
diJec:tor, and thanli:ed them for their

t

Chester Council323
announces work session
A worli: session for state session · rally she had attended and it was
projects was . announced for announced that on 1une 29 the Past
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at the ball CouncilOrs and Deputies will have
at the recent meeting of the Chester a picaic at Wilson Park on Route
Council No. 323 Daughters of 50.
America.
A _poducli: supper preceded the
Erma Cleland read "Risk
meeung which opened with the Taken" and the meeting closed in
Pledge of Allegiance, pledge to the · regular form.
Christian flag and the singing of
the ftrst stanza of the Star Spangled
Attending were Esther Smith,
Banner.
·Dorothy Ritchie, Elizabeth Hayes,
Ada BJSSCll, Mac McPeck, Laura
It was announced that Goldie Nice, Sandy White, Thelma White,
Kracli:enburger and Margaret Doris Grueser, Opal Hollon, Lora
Am berger were in the hospitil and Damewood, Faye Kirli:hart, Erma
that Doris Koenig has a new grand- Cleland, Eva Robson, JoAnn
son. The death of Pauline Moriarty. Baum, Alta Ballard. Evere11 Grant,
Guiding Star Council No. 124 was Betty Young, Helen Wolf, Bulab
noted.
Maxcy, Mary Holter, Gcnieve
It was stated that the books will Ward, Goldie Fredrick, Mary Jo
be audited on July I at the home Of Barringer, Ethel Orr, JnZy Newell,
Ethel Orr at6:30 p.m.
Iva Powell, Charlotte Grant and
Erma Cleland reported on the .Doris Koenig. ·

dedication to the students.
Elementary students receiving
certifiCIIIeS were Chris Ball, Tracy
Card, Anita COllins, Jason Counts.
Jonathan Dailey, Ashley Davis,
Matthew Evans, Suzanne Evans,
Danny Fisher, Hillery Mae Harris,
Amber Hayes, Kenneth Hayes,
Kristen Hensler, Janie Hill, Misty
Hysell, Josie Jarrell, Trudy Justice,
Brian Kimes, Kara Kmg, Joe
Kirby, Jason Lawrence, Tara Norman, Thomas Powell, Chris Reitmire, Amy Rizer, David Roush,
Josh Roush, Jennie Scarbeny, Jessica Theiss and Amber Thomas.
·Elementary students receiving
certifJCBtes and band pins for special effort were Frances Adkins,
Brian Allen, Emily Ouhl. Jesse Litde, Raquel Maddux, Jennifer Morris, Jennifer Roush, Kim Roush,
Jessica Sayre, Vanessa Shuler,
Evan Sttuble and Ranetta Wheeler.
Junior high and high school
awards were as follows: seventh
and eighth grade certificates and
first and secood year bars - seventh
grade, Jennifer Cummins, Tassi
Cummins, Jason Fitch, CJ. Harris,
Jessica Hatfield, Jason Hudson.
Bobbi King, Jennifer Lawrence,
Bea Lisle, Sammi Sisson, Kelly
Swisher, Karyn Thompson and
Craig Wolfe; etghth ~ - Crystal
Day. Claudette Renmire, Becky
Stobart and Amy Wood.
Eighth graders receiving certificates were Michael McKelvey,
&lt;:;hristy Dill, Heather Smith, Janeua
. Thompson and Robert Thompson.
Ninth graders receiving certificates, bars and letters were Jaime
Counts, Daniele flensley, Brandi
King, Amy Moore, Leah Matson,
Stephanie .Sayre and Rhoncla
Spaun.
. Tenth graders receiving certificates, bars and band pins were

Corey Hatfield, Emily Shain, Mary
Smith, Seth Stobart and Chris
Weaver. Tenth graders receiving
cer.tificates were Bethany Ba~s .
Aleasha Cusler and Kristy Rizer.
Eleventh graders receiving certificales, b4lrs and band pins were
Jacli:ie Hayes, VclisS8 Hunnell and
Michelle Stoban. Receiving certificates were Dee Canta', Terri Hayman and Rebecca Wiles.
Special certificates and pins
were presented 10 Christy Dill ,
Stephanie Sayre and Michelle Sto·
bart, solo ;md ensemble; and
Bethany Bass, Jaime Counts ,
Christy Dill, Stephanie Sayre,
Mary Smith, Becli:y S'tobart and
Michelle Stobart, all county band.
Special recognition went to
Stephanie Sayre, Racine American
Legion Bugler; Velessa Hunnell,
marching band field commander;
Dee Canter, Jamie Counts, Daniele
Hensley. Leah Matson and Kristy
Rizer, majorettes; Aleasha Custer,
Terri Hayman, Emily Shain, Mary
Smith, Rhonda Spaun and Rebecca
Wiles, flag corps; Roberta Maidens, auxiliary director; Lori WaJ.
ters, majorettes; Missy Stewart,
flag corps; Ruth Shain, auxiliary
advisor; Loretta Smith; LiS8 Wiles
and Tara Rose, auxiliary helpers;
Edna Hunnell, band hoosier president, and Sara Duhl, concert band
piano accompanist.
Those not receiving their awards
are asli:ed to contact Edna Hunnell
at 949-2338 or Ruth Shain, 2474965.

.

.THIS
WEEKEND

MEIGS COUNTY

"Lillie BIB Mu"

SOAP BOX DERBY

James Madison was the shortest
man to serve as ~~resident of the Unit·
eel States. He was 5 feet 4 inches tall
and weighed .just around 100 pounds.

....•
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..

SOAP BOX DERBY
SALE DAYS

•'

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DEBBY
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SALE 'DAYS

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FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

These Fine
Middleport
Merchants Invite
You to Shop ·In .Their
.Town and to Attend
The First Annual
Meigs County Soap
Box .Derby

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IN OUR LADIES DEPARTMENT

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YOUR COOL!

Support The
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MEN AND WOMEN'S

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..•

alienated them. said Ms . ·aura .
Where there was abuse, "we apologize for the church. Those things
have happened," she said.
Members of other religions or
Christian denominations are
encouraged to immerse themselves
in their own faiths. and the
unchurched are invited to learn
about Catholicism, Ms. Gura said.
· Typically, non-Catholic conF·
galions in an area about to be vtsit·
ed are contacted before a door-todoor campaign and asked to pray
for the evangelization effort, she
said. .
Catholic evangelists don't
engage in "sheep-stealing" - the
tenn used for those who try to lure
members from other churches, Ms.
Gura said.

friends, neighbors, co-workers Wld
acquaintances.
"They may try harder," said
Marsha Whelan, the council's vice
president. ''It is that part that we
have tali:en from the Protestants.''
"'wimessing.
U.S. Catholics traditionally have
"You know what we hear?"
not
been active evangelicals.
said Carol Gura of suburban Cleve"It's
been a very privatized
land, who has been walking neighborhoods in that area. "It's about faith,'' Ms. Gura said. If someone
time you Catholics got around to · wanders into a parish church, "we
don't even do welcoming well.''
this;
That changes where Catbolics
The National Council for
Catholic Evangelization, meeting plunge into evangelization and find
all week in suburban Sharonville, their faith and self-confidence
defines witnessing as a continuing strengthened, and they report an
process by which Catholics nurture amazing openness from people
who open their doors to them, Ms.
their faith and offer it to others.
Whelan
said.
Evangelism, somewhat new to
Even
inactive Catholics want to
Catholics, emulates smaller denomtalk,
frequently
explaining what
inations that actively reach out to

CINCINNATI (AP)- Roman
Catholics are being encouraged to
increase their evangelical efforts as
part of a growing movement to
spread the gospel with one-on-one

2 LITERS

AT
GENERAL HARTINGER PARKWAY
IN MIDDLEPORT

..•

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

Part of the training involves
field trips. The participants recently
visited Toledo to see how the city
runs its rat control program. They
also have visited northwest Ohio
farms.
The Presbyterian Hunger Foundation contributed $25,000 roward
the conference, which was put
together by William Jackson. ·a
Bowling Green profeSsor emeritus.
In the late 1960s, Jackson identilied the "super rat," a large rodent
that is immune to many poisons.
Locusts have been one of the
greatest threats to African fields,
often traveling in great swarms and
destroying neatly all vegetation in
sight, Byaruhanga said.
"These are dramatic pests.
Wben they come, it's disaster," he
said.

SATURDA)', JUNE 22 and
SUNDAY, JUNE 23

•-

.•

Bowling Green SJate University to
learn how to cut those losses
thrnugh pest control.
Biologists and scientists from
various U.S. agencies, have been
teaching the course on Vertebrale ·
Pest Management.
The goal is to increase food production and the quality of life in
developing nations, such as
Mozambique, . Senegal and
Cameroon, university spoli:eswoman Teri Sharp said Wednesday.
African researchers have been
studying the behavior, biology and
ecology of the vertebrate pests.
They also have been trying to .
develop pest control techniques.
Upon returning to their countries, the researchers will train oth- ·
ers to establish pest control pro·
grams
local workers.

FIRST ANNUAL

... .

SOAP BOX DERBY
SAlE DAYS

The Daily Sentlnet-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

(

�Sentinel

Thursday, June 20, 1991

Coal dust tampering fines now top $6.5 million

Annual dance recital held at SHS
"19 - Dance • 91" was the title
of the lith annual dance recital
presented recently at Southern
High School .by BatbBI11's School
of Dance, Syracuse, under the
direction of Barbara lawrence.
To begin the show, the 58
dancers made their stage debut fer
the evening by entering to "Hello,
Hello."
In red, white and blue sailorstyle costumes Cherissa Barnes,
Brigette Barnes, Natalie Roush,
Elizabeth Russell, Carrie Crow,
Lori Sayre, Jennifer Walker and
Katie Jeffers perfcrmed a song and
tap dance to "I Never Had. It So
Good," and to dance to "On the
Good Ship Lolli ."
· In royal blu~nge costumes,
Traci Heines, Meredith Crow, Stacie Reed and Whitney Haptonstall
~ormed advanced tap routines to
. 'Put on a Happy Face" and "You
Meant the Werld to Me."
Melissa Maynard and Jennifer
Bamban IJ('Zfonned a tap dance to
"That's What I Like" and a jazz
danco to "Romeo."
"¥ou're Never Fully Dressed
Without a Smile" was a tap dance
performed with hula hoops by
Anna Story, Molly Heines, Autumn
Th001as, Janey Hill, Morgan Mathews, Heather Dailey, Autumn Hill
and Stacy w'tlson. This same group
later returned to do a iazz dance to
"Beach Boys Medley."- In a two-piec:e black and silver
'costume, Christy Hawkins J?erformed a jazz dance to "Manl8c"
and a tap dance to "You Can ~ t
Hurry Love."
.
Representing various countries

with a variety of props, Allison
Story, Krystal Penninj!tOn, Holly
Broderick, Stephame Wilson,
Whitney Karr, ·Erin Hartson and
Delana Eichinger tapped to "Small
World" and later to "Do It One
More Time."
In fluorescent-glo colors for
black-light, Amber Hayes, Carrie
Hartson, Melody Lawrence, Jodi
Roush and Heidi Legar tapped to
"Everything Old is New Again."
Fer their jazz number they presented the 50's look, performing in
poodle skirts to "Rock Around the
Clock."
In purple sequin costumes, teen
dancers, Linda Chapman, Heather
· Franckowiak, Anna Chapman and
Kelly Satterfield did a fast tap
dance to "Forty-Second Street" and
"If My Friends Could See Me

Now."

In lacy white costumes, Tiffany
Barnes, Sarah Ball, Erin Struble,
Amber Snowden, Alison Hays and
Jennifer Lane performed a jazz
dance to "Uooer the Sea" and with
umbrellas, tapped to "Rainy Day
PeQple."
Jessica Chapman, Jennifer
Lawrence and Rayan Young performed advanced tap routines to
. "The Entertainer," and with top
hats and boas for props, a medley
of broadway songs entitled "One
and More."
Complete with leis and hula
skirts, four to.six year olds Amanda
Hoyt, Emily Hill, Jaynee Davis,
Erica Poole, Beth Wilfong, Mindy
Chancey. Angela Wilson, Chelsey
Wood and Jeri liill performed to
"Hula Baby." They also tapped aild
sang tri "Three Little Fishes" and

"We Are Here to Please You."
Shelly Winebrenner, assistant
dance teacher for Barbara
Lawrence, performed an advanced
tap routine to "Holding Out for a
Hero," and tapped with Ms.
Lawrence to "'tap, Till&gt;."
A dramatic )llllrionc production
number involving au dancers, was
performed to conclude the show. A
medley of songs such as "God
Bless the U.S.A.," "Dixie," "Yankee Doodle," "America," and
"Yankee Doodle Dandy," played as
each dancer precisionally returned
to the stage with a flag in hand.
All dancers received a certificate. Special recognitioo was given
to the 21 students who have dance
for five or more
Receiving f1ve-year trophies
were Kelly•Sauerfreld, Carrie Hartson, Autumn Thomas and Erin
Struble.
Six-year trophies went to MoUy
Heines, Morgan Mathews, Traci
Heines, Rayan Young, Jodi Roush
and Amber Ha)'f'S.
Seven-year trophies were !?resented to Heather Franckowiak,
Christy Hawkins. and Melody
Lawrence.
Receiving eight-year trophies
were Anna Chapman, Linda Chapman, Jessica Chapman, Meredith
Crow and Heidi Legar. ·
Stacie Reed received a nine-year
trophy; Shelly Winebrenner a 10year trophy aild Jennifer lawrence
an 11-year trophy.
The students then presented
Mrs. Lawrence with balloons, a
vase and a gift certificate.
The dancers will be performing
at the Meigs County Fair.

The Midnight Cloggers recently
performed II show productions in
Pigeon Forge and Nashville, Tenn.
during the week of June 9. Ten
shows were performed at Dollywood and one feature performance
was given at Opryland USA.
Dollywood hosted the "Smoky
Mountain Clogging Classic" which
featured a clogging competition
and clogging ell.hibilions. The
event presented over 500 clogging
exhibitions.
,

After the group's performances
each day, team members were able
to visit Dollywood's shows and
attractions as guesiS.
During their performance at
Opryland USA, approximately 500
guests viewed the show. This was
•

•

'

the group's second performance at
Opryland.
The Midnight Cloggers will be
making a special appearance on
June 29 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
in a parade for "River Days" at II
a.m.

Agriculture students conduct tour
What are Treflon, Bravo or Senclor? What are their functions?
Why does fertilizer have numbers
lik!l6-24-24? What role does \)'ater
play in the development of plants?
What are suckers? Weeds?
The answer to these questions
and more can be learned when one ·
is enrolled in agriculture education.
Students from the Southern
High School Agriculture class
recently conducted a vegetable tour
viewing the farms of Aaron Sayte,
advisor; James Adams, principal;
and Jim O'Brien.
The students discussed the vari.ous practices used such as herbicide control of grass using the
chemical Treflon or controlling
broadleaf with Senclor;
The Racine FFA members concluded that the biggest asset for
growing crops this year seems to be
water. They observed four different

LOS ANGI;:LES (AP) - Just
bCcanse Data is a machine doesn 'I
mean he can't haye a singing

career.

Brent Spiner, who plays the yellowfeyed lllldroid on the televi$i0n
series •'Star Trek; The Next Generation " offers standards from the
1920's through the 1950s on his
new cassette "01' Yellow Eyes Is
Bact."
·
"I'm a real fan _of Tin-Pan
All~y." Spiner said. "M.Y father
had ·the best record collecnon ... so
basically I ate dinner with Frank
Sinatra and Rosemary Clooney.''
Spiller produced the albwn with
DenniJ MCCadhy, who has written
the music fer many of the episodes,
and Wendy Neuss, the series' associate produetr.

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Grindley is now stationed at
Charleston, S.C. Naval Base where
he specializes in welding and ship .
rep&amp;ll'. He made Third Class Petty
Officer this month.
He.is 1989 graduate of Southern
High School and is married to the
former C$'11) Seidenable, da.1111hter
'of Tonda Salser, Pol!leroy, and
John Seidenable, . Middleport.
Grindley is lhe son of Linda Grindley, Racine, and the grandson of
Cora Grindley, MinersviDe.

J) \ ~ .\ lJ IJ "\

Cook returns

. ~·_;1~\~• ~}j

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FRI.-SAT-SUN.
BILL IIURRY
IN

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CHRISTOPHER GRINDLEY

PH

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TOPICS~

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In tho• 11 rllk, aar re..-chera II the e&amp;mp HID lledloll Centar,
Halll1x; Nov1 Scotia. Doctor'elupervlalon II ~

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enothar rea10n young...,• ahould not emoke: young 11110ker1
14 tlmae llkelr to lbuM llcohol, 32 times llkell•r to UM
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2 .00 p M . WEDNESDAY
2 '00 p.M. THURSDAY
2 00 PM . FRIDAY

15

16

Monthly

Ov~r

Small grain harvesting and hay
curing should make scrne progress.
Afternoon humidities may only
drop to minimums of around 50-65
percent south, but may drop to 4550 percent ncrth. Very spotty wetting may occur Friday over the
south. Rainfall amounts should
average .25 inch or less. Chances
of thunderstorms may increase
across the state Sunday and Monday with a frontal system over the
Ohio Vauey.
Spraying conditions will be best
over the north and cen~ wit!J a
lesser chance of wetting. Wmd

speeds should average 5-15 mph.
HQt temperatures may be unfavorable for application of certain
chemicals.
.
Corn producers should keep
watch for European corn .borer
activity the next few weekS. Meanwhile, potato leafhoppers may be a·
problem in alfalfa fields.
Much above normal temperatures for the period Tuesday
through Saturday of next week may
stress livestock and crops across
Ohio. Rainfall .for the 6-10 day
period is forecast to average close
tonormal.
·

.

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Announcements

16 Worda

.20
.30
.60
.06 / day

4

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5 Happy Ails
6 Losl and Found.
7 V•d S.telpa•d in advance)
8 Public: Sale&amp; Auction

36

Real Ellate W.med

41

Houses fGf Renl
Mobile Homes tor Rent
Farms lor Rant
Apartment fo1 Runt
Fumt.h4td Ruum1

42 .

E111 ploy lllt:nt

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4" ·
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S1:rv II.P.S

t:/a.~.~iji1•d /W/{f'.~ ~'''' '''' lltf'

11
12
13
14
15
16

:{ollowirr!{ 1"'''l'h' ;,,. r•xclwr~ 1{1'.~ ...
Galli&lt;~

Mtu)s County
Atea Code 614

Coun!y

Area Code 614
"46 Gallipoli~
367 Ch•hfre
388 Vinton
245 Rio Grande
256 Guyan D1s1.
643 Arabia Dial.

Mill:sDn Co. WV

Ant a Code 304

99? MrddlttpOI'l
Pomltfoy

986 Ctt•ter
843 PortlltnQ
247 Lel•rt Filllls
949 Ruine
742 AuUand

3"19 Wllnut

675

47
48
49

klsu~ance

lu1in•s Tr•imng
Schools • lnsuuclmn
Radio. TV &amp; ca R1:1p41n

17

MIICIIIIMtlfOUS

W•nted To Do

75

Wanted to Rent
Equtpment tor Aunt
For Le•e

76
77

56

7 8 Ciimprng Equ tAm em
C;~mpers It MotOI' Horne~

Services
81
82

Home ln1prowrnenh
Plumbrng &amp; Hao11111nu

83
8"
85
86

Ea&amp;e.w•t~ng

Elechicallt RelttgUJiltlon
Gu'n..-•1 Hauhny
Mobtlu Hunt c R ~pau
87 Upholstery

Pets for Sale

57. Musical lns lrumtJnts.
58 Fru111 &amp; Veg"'•bl•
59 For l•le or Trade

21 Busineu Opporlumtr
2 2 Mon.., to han
23 Ptol•sron~ll SttlliCit$.

Boa11 &amp; Molars for Sill I:!
Auto P•ns &amp; ACe:• .otto.
Auto Aeparr

79

51 HouMhold Goods
62 - Sparling Goods
53 Ant~ues
54 Misc. Merchandise
55 Building Suppli•

Pt. , .........

895 Letart
937 Buffalo

71 - Autos to• Sale '
TrU~s lor S&lt;~tle,
13 Vt~ns Ia 4 WO 's
1 A MoiOtCVCI U1

12

Mer cha ndise

458 Loon
576 Apple Growe
173 Mill son
882 New H1ven

Transportation

46 Space tor Rent

HelD W'Ntud
Stluallan W .nled

18

61 ·- Farm Equ~pmont
62 W~nted to Buy
63 livestock
64 H•v &amp; Grain
'6!i · Slled 81 f11rteltter

l;fDill

W..,ted 10 8uy

Supplies

6 liVUSIUCk

. Jl . Hon1es tor Sale
32 Mobile Homes for S&lt;tle
33 Filfms fo1
34 Businen8uildings
35 lois &amp; Acre~ge

GivUWIV'

9

Farm

Real Estate

1 C1rd of Th.-,ks
2 In Memorv
3 Annoucemenu

.42 '

Rltles arc fot c:onsec:uhva runs. brokenupd..-sw•ll beth•ged
tor eKh dill¥' as sep ar•le iids .

667 Cooi"Ville

Business· Services

PUB:UCATION

W. H. MOBILE.
HOME PARTS

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Public Notice

PubliC Notice

'PUBLIC NOTICE OF
BUDGET HEAR lNG
A budget hetring will be
held tt7:00 p.m. on July I.
1991. otthe Roodnllle Fire
Stotlon. The mooting lo lor
the pu.,.,.. of Hlocu- of
the propoood budget of OlIve Townohlp. Alllntertllod
cltlzono will hovethe' oppor-·
tunlty lo give wrkttn or orol

1100 Welt. two Koehler modol 130 -·~ htnd
lontomo
vthlole
..-nted choroor. Koehlei
benory conditio-. 2100
watt porllble ..-elot. M~ .
nlmum Bid 110,1100.00.
1 - 1941
SEAGRAVE
OPEN CAl PUMPER with:
100 OPM two ...go lt1·
ll'tvt pump, 200 gtllon Ill·
tlmtttd) wottr tonk. 24' t•·
tonolon leddor ond 14' 10of
leddor-bo1h
wood. 10'
p•• pole. plok heod

comment.

The budgel will be ovtlloble lor public lnopectlon tl
the home of tho clerk oflor
July e. 1991.
Kilt A. Young. Clerk
·
Olive Townohlp
61298 Ooble Pltce
f Reedovllle, Ohio 41772
18) 20. 11c
· PubliC Notice
'
'
, PUBLIC NOTICE
Bidowlll beroctlved ttVII·
It 1 Holl- 237 Roco St..
MYddloport. Dhlo. untll4:00
P M J tv 8 1991 lor the
. . u
.
following detcrlbed equipment:
1- 19'78 CHEVROLET STEP
VAN, with tho fallowing
equlpmonl: Aluminum body,
incl)tding oluminum Inlintf ond ln.,lttlon, olellng

~ P~~··i= =~

•

' •.
......
•~·••

,....

.

••••

traat baldneaa, doclora u• bal~ to g111dually IINII:h heir·
portloria nf the - l p 10 they can oover halrlaaa eree-.
reported In the Journ11 of th• Amerlolln
A-lation, atr1teh11 tlw lkln during aurgerr to.IYOicl big

By Tile Aslodated Press
Here's the latest Ohio agricultura1 wealher advisory prepared by
the National Weather Service's
Midwest Agricultural Weather Service Center in West Lafayette, Ind.:
A high pressure system should
bring most!~ dry weather 10 Ohio
through Friday. A weak trough of
low pressure .near the Ohio River
may produce a few widely scat·
tered showers and thunderstorms in
southern Ohio on Friday.
The livestock safety index will
pusb into the danger _category. in
southern Ohio on Fnday, where
highs will be near 90.

•'

' "1•

446-1088

2 .00 PM. TUESDAY

~
~

,&gt;

R

Weather good for grain harvesting:·

•r

.

MARRYING MAN

16

6

10

BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE

'•

WHAT ABOUT BOB? ..•'.,
.....,
GP
IN

BEFORE PUBliCATION
11 OO' A.M. SATURDAY
2 00 PM . MONDAY

were ijK1iana, Maryland, MonlaJla,
New Mexico and Wyoming, which
au of had totals of less than $8.000.

$89,000; Utah, $86,000; and Oklahoma, $11,000.
Other states with mines cited

• The Area's Number ·1 Marketplace

'
$4.00
S6.00 .
$9.00
$13.00
$1 .30/ day

15
15

1
3

.,:;

~

KIM BASINGER

million; Virginia, $748,000; Tennessee, $498,000; Illi!loia,
$496,000; Alabama, $193,000;
Colorado, $113,000; Ohio,

.

Rate

Words

Days

:BULLETIN BOARD

•·

•

BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

II8ICIIIIIIL
M .
Abo bonored were . artan

-

DAY
COPY DEADLINE
· MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
W£0NfSDAV PAPER ,
THURSDAY PAPER
t-HIUAY PAPE.R
SUNDAY PAPER

Grindley completes training

cy's Mine Safety and Health
Administration.
Du Pont and its Consolidation
Coal were followed on the list by
Rochester &amp; PiusbUI'Ih Coal Co..
. which was lined $740,000.
Rounding out the top 10 were:
Amax Inc., $22S,SOO; Occidental
Petroleum Corp., $187,000; Zicller
Coal Holding to., $175,000; Walter Industries Inc~ S1S2,000; Penn·
sylvania Power and Light Co.,
$141,000; Mapco Inc., $123,000;
Ashland Oil Inc., $123,000; British
Petroleum Co., $121,000; Sun
&lt;;:ompany Inc., $1~1,000; and
BethlehCII! Steel Corp., $92,000.
Each coal company can appeal
the fmes.
West Virginia mines were hit
'the hardest of the 16 states
involved, with the l!llal of tampering fines at $1.6 million. Mines in
Kentucky were fmed $1.4 million;
followed by Penn~ylvania, $1.2

RATES

IO tnakt~ COirti~IIUII

"
'A cl.sss•llctl advcrltsornunt placed m The Oo:utv Sm•tn1t!'lle•
cepl
clantht..od ,hs~l;ty . Busllll!SS Crud ;uul h.1Jal ·nohces )
w1ll i1lsu o~ppttilf 111 th~ PI PitH.! ant R~u-lite• and the 6allt
puhs Oou\y T11bune, ruo.chlfl~l ovm 18,000 hom~

KEITH A. COOK

FLAG PRESENTATION- A na1 presentation was made
recendy 10 Carleton School/Meigs ladustries by tbe Racine American Legion Post No. 602. Acceptin1 the flag is David Milliken,
right, general manager or Meigs Iadustries. Presenting the flag is
Elmer l'ickeus, left, commander or Post 602 and Lawrence (Fred)
Scarberry, adjutant.

afttlr pubttCIIIion

"Ad'l that must be patd '" advilncu ant
Card ol Thank !a
H11ppy Ad~
lu Mcmodam
Yard Sitlt.~

The Midnight Cloggers

•••••••••••••••
L---------------~
1r---------------,
Sausage Biscuit 1 1r--~------------,
Ham Biscuit
1

'

d~

completed his basic training on
Sept 1,1989,.atGreatl.akesNaval
Training Center, Great Lakes, Ill.,
and graduated with honors.
He completed his HT "A"
school at Philadelphia, Pa., on Dec.
22, 1989, and passe.d welding
school at PCKtsmouth, Va., in July
1990.

WASlili'!GT.ON (AP) - A
1991 Jefferson Award went to
Defense Seaetary Dick Cheaey on
Wednesday for his role in winning
the Gulf War, and philanthropist
Robert Macauley &amp;at the award fer
helping those die war turned into
refuJ::·
uley is founder and chairman of Americ:ares Foundation,
which hu given S3SO million in
hUIIIIIIillriln lid to needy people
around the world, inc:ludinf Iraqi
Kurds and people in BtnaJIIdesh.
Tile nardl were made by the
Americlll Institute fer Public Service, tbe orgtnization said in a
Wrigbl Edei!Dift, president of the
Children •1 Defense Fund; Wendy
Kopp, preaident of Teach _for
Amarica; the llle Sen. John Hemz,
R-PL for a llfelime of service; Frodis c~ all 11-year-old student
from HyiUIVille, Md., who belps
tutDr English to Hispanic children·

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-21511
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
'Ads o utstdll M u1g1; Galli&lt;~ or Masun co1inties must be prll
pa1d
•nftccivt: S.50 dtscounllor adf piud ni advt1ntc.
,
•free ads
Giveawt~y and Found ads und~ 15 w~rds w1ll be
wn 3d.,-~ at nu ch•ge.
• .
'Puc:l! of ad tor &lt;~II c:apit1llemus •s doublu pncll: of ad cost
'1 pbml hnu typo only ust:d
·
,
'SenlltU~ •s not rttspotl,lble tor fl rrors attm lu st dH';' . !Chcck
tor enors tint day ad runs m p&lt;~pml C11ll b efo re 2 .00 p .m

HT3 Christopher Alan Grindley

Spc. Keith ftt. Cook; recently
returned home from Saudi Arabia
where he has been since Dec. 27,
1990. '
He is stationed at Fort Riley,
Kan. and was welcomed home by
his mother, June Floyd, Racine,
with 11 pany. The cake was decorated in red, white and blue with the
words "Welcome Home Keith."
Attending were his uncle, Dave
Haught, Wellsburgh, W.Va.; Mrs.
Jeanie Haught and daughter,
Wooster; Joshua Wiseman, Point'
Pleasant, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Friend; Amie and Travis,
Pomeroy; Linda Grindley, Racine;
Lee Floyd, Racine; his mother,
JUl!e and Orland Floyd, Racine; his
wife, Jenny and their children,
Ashley and Cody Allen, Kansas.

Consolidation Coal Co. of Pitts·
burgh, owned by Du Pont, was
slapped with the largest fine $770;000. Thomu Hoffman, vice
president for public relations, said
the company would appeal "every
one of the citations.''
Merely dropping the air samples
can make them appear to be tam·
~ with, Hoffman said, and that
'only deepens our outrage at the
manner in which the secretary
decided to deal with us ... making
big ~iDes, holding a news conference, acclising au of us of 'being
addicted to cheating."'
Though the Labor Department
issued the coal dust citations in
April, the specific assessments
were not maifed until this week, the
agency said.
The $6.5 million total - up
from the department's original estimate of SS million in fines - was
the largest on record for the agen-

Classifie

••

Sayre wflea the dau recendy coaducted a tour ~
at the farms or Aaron Sayre, Jim Adams and ' !
Jim O'Brien.

OBSERVING • Lori Sayre observes the
''sunny" tomatoes ot Jim O'Brien with Southern
FFA members Michelle Friend and Stephanie

People in the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Comedienne Roseanne Barr haS her love
letters back and has settled her $3S
million lawsuit against the Nati9nal
Enquirer and the Star.
Miss Barr and her ht~sband,
Tom Arnold, sued the supermarket
tabloids for publishing the auegcd- ·
ly purloined love letters, written
before they were married.
Terms of the settlerne.nt weren't
diselosCd. Miss Barr and Arnold
would only say in a statelllent
ISsued Tuesday that the agreement
was,"satisfaci(Ky."
•'The Enquirer and Star bave
returned the letters to Miss Barr
and Mr. Arnold and stated they
were sorry for any distress caused
to Roseanne and Tom by this incident," 'the couple's publicist,
David Bi'okaw,liaid in a statement.
Star editor Richard Kaplan's
office in New York said there
would be no comment
"We continue to maintain our
right to publish material that we
believe. has been sent to us legitimaiely," National Enquirer editor
and president lain Calder said in a
statement "However, we do sympathize with the distress felt by
Roseanne and Tom at the loss of
the letters, and are sorry they were
upset by this incident''

WASHINGTON (AP) - Coal ·
companies that allegedly tampered
with dust samples inrcnded to protect miners from black lung disease
are ll!ji!trfined a record $6.5 million,
Secretary Lynn Martin
said today.
The labor Department sent out
penalties this week to some 800
coal mines, Martin said,
The fmes stemmed from a 20month investi$alioq Martin
announced in April. Agents uncovered widespread fraud in the coal
industry and about 4,700 alleged
instances of tampering with dust
samples, the secretary Sllid.
Coal industry off~eialll have crit. icized !he government's actions,
saying no evidence existed that the
air samples had been tampered ·
)Viih. The -problems .could have
come -from shipping, handling or
outdated eq'!iJll!lent, industry officials have Slid.

rears-

Qollywood perfom1ers return

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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len-!
, .: SO" wide dou·
w•• 14 1 '
.

ble ,..r doon. 380 CID
goaollno on gino, H,.D. outo!""lie! trtno.. ~ otMr·
'"'I· H. D. po- brtkto.
110 -IAice Nevile t~tf·
notor, 10,00011 OVW. tu•l~
try ""' aprlnfll, H.D. ohocko
fronltnd - · · H.D.'tltblllzor
ber, II ..w rldltltlrll, 8800
.lctuol mho by F· D · olnae
,_,
THE
ALSO INCLUDED IS
FDLI.OWING FIRE ' DEPT.
EQUIPMENT: condy tPPio
redlmiDII ptlnt, gold Sc-·
lite trim. code 3 lghl btrL
Fodotll rnodtl 14 bttaonoon
-·· IYont ond lldt fltohlng
livhiL Foderol PAZOO - ·
two-roof mounted ttltllghiL

54 MISCtlllntOUS
Merchandise

If you're in nHd
of Mobile Home
Parts or
Acceuories...
SEE US FIRST!

992-5800
. 11. 33 WEn OF
DARWIN, OHIO

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

•x:e, 3-10'x4'' herd euctlon

g,,.,, $,ultl1

hooo tnd etrtlntr, 2W' Wyt
tnd 2W' Sitmeoe. 800' of

30 SESSIONS $30

2'h" hoH, 300' of 1Yo"

hoH; 210' of%" hoot. Thlo
pump•

wu

repowwred In

949·2826

1970 With • n- 413 CID
Chrytlor induotrlol engine,
uolng the orlglntl 4 _..t
lrtnomi-n. It woo rto·
torod In 1181. Aloo Included
In the ~· lo the origlnol
operotor • monutl ond ftc·
tory photogrtphl of the
tnook when new - Et·
tim ted value a4ooo to

TACIIIYIW ID.

Theo~ vehlclh con be In·
opectod ol281 Rtce ltrtel,
Middleport, Ohio, by aonttctlng Flrt Chief Jllff Dortl
tl 11 4·882·7332 or 11 4·
992-7318 tflori:OO P.M .
Tht 1179 Chevrolet wll
be r-HdiO tht IOCCHiful
blddtf upon dtllvory of the
new tnock 10 the Middleport
Flro Dept. ochldultd lot July.,.. ••tv All(llltt 1111.
Tho 1s_41 SNII'tvl will be
tvolltblo lnwnedlel.ty .
lido mutt be ciMrly
marked which vthlole they
ore lor
The Vlllllfll of Middleport
rellfVtt the right to rtlect
ony .,.. oil bldl ond towtny lnlormtl~ltt In bidding.
Fred H - . Moyor
vm~
·
of Middleport
27
Ill 20.
• tc

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

111~

'

Til-COUNTY
SANITATION
smiC TANI "'IIIPING

POIT·A·JOIIN IIITAl
742-2&amp;611 '

4·23-t mo.,._

. ctCAtlflt

SIGNS
by

tt&amp;

"''"tlttlf

.~rby

. --~UALm

, Po1111 PI Ill • • 11H9'l~ I

tODAYWUUm

)

•cao oVIIIS-$79 .,.
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992-SUS ar 915-3561
Acren Fr• Past Offkt
POMEIOY, OHO
10130/'19 lin
·- .. ··:;..._ ....
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

CAIPII
and flU PLOOI CAll
•Reeaoneble R...1
•Outllty Work
•FrH Ettlmetet
•Ctraet Htl Fttt Dry
flme ·
•High Olo• on Tl..
Floor Flnlah
Mltlf IIWIS. Ow. .
II. 1, lutlo.W, OH.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"FrH Ettlmtteo"

PH. 949·2801

or les. 949·2160

"At leosonoblt ,ricH"
Pl. 949·2101
or ln. 949-2160

Day or Night
NO SUNDA HALLS

NO SUNDAY CAUS

3-11·11•

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER 1nd
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME SITES.
LANDCLEARINO.
WATER 1nd SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAILAIL£
FREE ESTIMATES

MICIOWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

•RemodeUng and
Home ,Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•P1Intlng

a&amp;&amp; IIIIlS
lrl111 It In Or We

Pldl Up. ·

FULLY INSURED
FlEE ESTIIATES

liN'S APPLIANCE

CEDAR
CONSIIUCIION
992·66.a or

991·5335 or
915·3561

.........
,,,,.,..
-·1·14·'11-tln

Hewanl

san1a

k - p,.. hit OHio
t17 I. s-.t St.
I'OIIIIOY, OliO
S/1110/1111

NEW ....:.. REPAIR

0• left~ Sell... U. eff lt. 141
(6141
446-9416 ., 1·-oi71·St67
.
. 4-21·11

614·992-2321
We lty Whtl Wt Do.
We Do Whtt Welty. ·

Po1111roy,

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding

Open Tuea .. Thura ..
Fri .. Set. 7:30 p.m.

•Replllcem..,t
Windows
•Roofing
•lntullltlon

POMEROY
BOWLING

........

STEWAIT'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPL~ES
..UY •SBl •1'1ADI

-fteem Addlttons

-o--n
- EI-"'-1 ond Plwmblna
-Conorete work

-Roofing
- 1 - • E•IWiot

,.........

(FREE EITI"ATEII

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

ll-1t-lln

11·14·'90 Hn

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

IISSW &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUCTION

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

•C•.,..••

st., a c...,.,.

2112 MI. ouhide
lutlc.td on • •

915···73
667·6179

u-

5-31-'90 lin

SPEt:;IALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs
'

'

201 N. Stc... Street
-IPOIT. 0110 4576t
Olflca 614-·92-2116
IICIMf "4·tft·5"2
DOTTIE

CARPENTER SERVICE

539 Brytn Pltce
Middleport. Ohio

6-1·'11-1 mo.

LIND 'S
PAIItTING

1111111101 • •, . .
FREE ESTIMATES

Tob the pain ..t of

. palnfinl.

do .It fer you.
VEIY IEASONW
HA VI IEFIIINCES

Lit me

1614) 91S·C110
.

sr•ot cmzau

FAEE ESTIMATES

992-7130

1-12-IO·Ifn

ROOFING

TROMM BUILDERS

FBIISTIUtiS

•20 YMI'I Experience

•Quality Hamt1 and

Cuttom RemodeHng

742-2321

1/ZZ/tfn

DOZER and
BACKHOE
. WORK
(614)
696·1006

C1111plagls Falftlly Fun
. rtr:JrTJaa-N .. POOL

AND EVIIYIIING UNDIINEATI
I

•·10·'11 · 1 'mo.

BOB JONIS
EXCAYAnNG

1K DIKOIIT TO

USED IAILROAD nES

*

• llcoutlful Swrll&lt;llldlnp
RAT£11· Dey.~. Monlh. or Scuon
PICIIIC -.Tatu4 tTAOII: Por . . .,
• Cel T"'t'))en - Pottlea

·-

• KIICI8H ROW GN11
Slnlnlllrultfut. Mealo. ond Snacu
C lOY

.

YOUNG'S

992-2772 or
742-2251

992-3432 or
992-2403

'·

CEDAR
CONSIIUCDOII.
992·66·· Or

JAMES IEESIE ·

310 last 2nd St.

~ k ll L • tr
WWiU::

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

10-11-1 n

POOL!t~!I.Ljl(Hifllll

6·11·'t1·t mo. pd.

. . ... ..... . . .... ... ... ............
Llcat••

Hand Tufting
Cuttom Drapea
36 y .... Eaperlente

614-992-6820

7U-2U1

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

.....,.,.

IU•h. S.CIIIIII

&amp; Operator

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

WE DO
•o•u HOME
~::::

Owner

OPEN
Tueodty tllru Stlurdly
10:00 tm·li:OO pm

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

'' Mliifl1"'

MERINAR .

Gutter,
Downspouts

FREE ESTIMATES
9·9·2168

AIR CONDITIONERS - HEAT PUMPS and
FUINAas FOI MOllE I DOUilEWIDE HOMES

BENNETT'S

L Wrlmll

ROOFING

992-7458

4·16-a&amp;·lln

. EMILEE

•Remodeling and
Home Aepalra
•Aoo'f lng
•Skiing
•Painting

UPHOLSTERY

Complete Grooming
For All lrteds

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

IACIIII, OH.
6/ 12/'91/ I mo.

BISSELL
.UILDERS

GROOM
_ROOM

WASMIIS-$110.,

DIYtl-$69 .,
llfiiGIIATOIS-$100 .,
U118ES-Ioo·Boc.-S12S ., ·
fftiUII-$121 .,, · '

6 FOI S55
CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS
Repair, Trophies,
Si•agt
JOHN T. TEAFORD

THE

USED APPUANCIS

ACADIMIC
AWARDS
GOLF LESSONS

.....•

.

�SNAFU~

Announcements

by Bruce Beattie

32

Apartment
for Rent

Homes

for Sale

3 . Announcements

-

IITf 'N' CAJlLYLE~ by Larry WriPt

KAII.CTI

c1u- 111111ng - · uom eo11
• - wltl!o you llhapa up lll)d
view co!l Joy 5-10 p.m. 114-1112·
2541.
.
Stop At Ex-or Oil Co. 131
Eoll Main ~~rw
tun Service &amp; IIMI Gooollno.

~--

Fumlohad mobllo homo, 1 milo

Sccttlo~
~

town. o11.taaldnt river,
Not Sun- !Dr Chlldron, Plio,

below

lO • J,.

North 4thluMidd-, Ohio. 2
bad room mloltod apt, dopoall
and , . , _ raqulrld, - . .
2161.

2-401.
White cat, blue eyn. hid thole,

apoyad, 304-t75.U~.

AVON • All or-, Coli Msrllrn

WNv., 304-.182~2645 .

Antwer phonH locall,- for
Notlonwldo Co. lull I pa~-tlmo
6 Lost &amp; Found
or will tralnl hl~ng 1-lllly
• FOUND Whha HuolcoJ typo dog, IR!ramaly high wagoo, Sat.SUn
not1)0 trcou T-In, Cntalta, 11am·Spm, M·F I ::JO.e:pm, 114·
Ohio on tag, , . _ coli 304-t'll- 881·2011.
. 4012.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

Excatlent
Pty,
Btn~lh1,
407·zt5..7100,
Found:
A Whtl•,·-·~·tal
WNr
Brown~
Collar. Transportttlon,
Vlcln!ly 01:
goo c - Ext. 571. 8o.m.·10p.m. Toll
Rolundocl.
• Rood. 114-441-7003.

AVON I All Aroao I Slll~oy
Hill Undor Shohor. May Be Soon Spoora, 304-t'll-14211.
• At Tho Gollloollo Dally Trlbuno Cor~oro Noodld: Tho Dally
Office, 825 Third AvMue, Gal· T~buno lo building 1 !lot or
: !lpo!lo.
poltrltlll carrlm. If you IN at
Found: Lower River . Road • At. ..... 11 yea,. old, depencllbll
21e Aroo. Small TM Famllo Doo a.,d would IIQ to Nm your own
Bind In Right Eyo, O.anga cor. tpt~ndlng money, call to hlye
: Found: Eye Gl..... On Mound

llr, 114-441..MI3 1t1., Sp.m.

rour 01me put on our

e~rrler

1111. Golllpollo Dolly Trlbuno,
FOUND Krogaro I Cond01 441-2342.
, StrNI; 1:ockar Sponlot, blond,
EARN MONEY Roodtng Boeke!
I feme .. 114-182-3418.
hO,OOOiyr. Income

Potential.
LOST, block I wh!la IOfclor Cof. Datallo. (1) 80S.812-IIOOO Ext. y.

llo, opoyad, tomato, loot May 24
front Hurricane. WV, coukf tie In
u ..on Countv. If you hevo• 1ny
Information pie.,. contact the
M..on Countr Anlmel Shetter,

REWARD.
Loot: Malo aotdan btondo
cocker opanlet. t.lmoufloiJO! col·
tar. Vlcln!!y of 110 I Hood Rd.
114-388-8311.
304-t~458.

7

Yard Sale

10188.

EASY WORK! EXCELLENT Poyl

Ov• 250 com,.nl.. need horn.

woril•lldlll~butoro

NOW! Coli

for •mazing record~ mnugt;

Got. paid liom homal 114-432·
liN. Ext. GOT.
EASY WORK! EXCELLENT pay!
OVer S50 companlee n-.d
ho-kora/
dlllrlbutoro
NOW. I CoiiiOJ amazing raconlad

m1111g1.

Gtf

PAID

FROM

HOMEf.,._.32..lN oxt TDS1.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yanl Setal Mull Ia Pold In
Advance. DEADUNE; 2:00 p.m.
tho doy balwo tho ad lo to run.
Sunday ad!llon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday ldMion · • 2:00
p.m. Saturdly.

Hatp Wonlod, No llporti!ICO
necnNry. Some experience
helpful. Apply •nvthM 1ft1r
12:00 ... k.ya, Dub Clunert,
1151 Second Avo. Gollpollo.

Moch1nlco And· Body Paroons
-.,_ An lhlfto Avolloblo.
Col lf4.44..PART.
MEDICAL HELP: RN or LPN lor

chlt1 audit lor Pomatoy ....
Mon-Frl, no ...ewndil or
Juno 21-22,Mloc.
-..,1mlco,
h·
-. clothoo,
Second holldoyo,
- " pock- • _ , . toJ•.IiolhouiO - · North Clalllo High PItamy, 421 Chillicothe St., Sula

School, S.A. 1110. e:~ to 5:~.
Mftchall Rood Drlvowoy Booldo
Log Cobin. All Woy Up Hll. 11-4.
Juno 2111.
Moving Bola: Thurado_y Frldoy,
S.turdoy. Infant Cor, llko Soot,
Swlna Sat, Fum!luro, Toyo, Pfc,
n'c ,.able, 422 Htdgtwood
D~ve.
.
.
SUper Ga~ge IWI: Mtny, Many
ttemel Frklar, June 2111. Sl

Scottlona, Naitltup.
.
Yon! Bole: -lng Bole! 115
LaGrando Sotuntar, - a d
Ho"lthokl Artielel l Clothing.

Yard Solo: Scottlono N-up,
F~doy I Sotunlay.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
. Yard S1ta, 202 High St, F~ ond
S.t. Curtalno, badopraodo1
clolhn,
TV'a.
b11eboara
hNitrl, matwial and mlwc.
Yard Sa.. ,

o._en

tlze hide-a·

bad, toble lomp1 bar otoolo ond
morw. 3203 Jacuon Ave. June

20,21,22.

103, Portamouth, (14 4SIU.

NNd ototlon ottond, Pomorvy.

Wrllo - · or opptlcollon to
CJioDalty -Ina! Box 721P,
PomerOy, 011 ·
Now -opting apptloatlona lor
a pa~.flmo LPN oriel 1 part.tlmo
All lor • 100 bad oldllad nurolng
locll!!y. MUll ba l IIcon'
ood In IIIIa of Dltlo. ADaty In
poroon 11 Scanlc Hilla tlloiroing
Cantor 311 Buckrldgo Rd., Bid'
won, OH. No p!1ono colo plooaa.
Ownarloporllor wMh tractor,
mu.t hive wet IM, we (IUpply
traitor, 1~ aok lor
1111.
Wlnlad: iltporlancacl Rapolr
Toohnlclon. · Mull Ia Ex·

=:C'. ·~~~~~.:,OO:.,~v~

Equipment.
-..
Sand
Anuma Or Work Hllloty To:
CLA 071 c/0 Gallpolta Dally
Tribuna, hs Third Avonua, Clal·
llpollo, OH 451;11.
Wantad: Sarvlca Tachnletan lor
Heating. I
Air Cond.111lng/Rotrlfllrollon. !xporloncad.
S.nd Ao....,.: eta 0111, cJo Go~
llpollo Dally Tribuna 125 Thltd
Avonua, Glilllpollo, 0114!11131.

12

Situation
Pomeroy,
Wanted
Middleport
Noadod: Room &amp; Boord In Cla~
&amp; VIcinity
=1•, FOf 'IV Yaar Old boy
-:-.._-:Fa-ml~t:":"y,-J7.'u::no:-:-14-~22
;;;;-0po;:;::::n-;1;;;
111 1 olng Clantloman, lf4.3e7·'13lll.
Dark, 2·mMH out uadlng Crook Wollad: Rollablo to Inoft At. 7 -lntarlor, Etc.
IIIII now roof on houoo In
Bold·Knobb-S!IviNVIIa Rd. at ::~~:;~: lf4.446.77211
Perry
Run AcfMI from
comotary. Thur·Fri-Sal, n-?? 14
Business
Lota olgoodlol Ralnllhlno.
F~. and S1t. Juno 21 &amp;32. 453
Training
~G;;;ra;:;n.:..
t st
.:...:..,M,-Id_ll_o-':port
;:-.=;;;-;=I Rllraln
-IIISouthalotom
Frldar, Juno 21 (8:00-4:00) Buolnoao Collage, Sflrlng Volley
L1urol Cliff Ad, Naar Blg Wltoot. Plaz.o. Coli Todoy, 114--431TII
Ragllloratlon Jt80.05.12711B.

p .o o p l o

.

Ml'-7111.

Top Prien Fat: All Old U.S.
Colna, Gold Alnaa. . Dlomond.o1
lllvor Co!M, ltirllng, ao10 Will build plllo COVOII, dockl
Colna. M.T.S. Coin. lliop, t!l1 ocr- roorno, put up vtii;!
oldlna "' trollor eklnlng. tiol:
Socond Annua, Gallpolo.
245-An

Employment Serv1ces
11
Help Wanted
t300.00 A Doyl ..._.. ,.,._
12.00
- ·to·
Porn
-~hln,
fwdotollaSA 111,
A-viii, OH 45772
$300/DAY
PIIOCE8StNO
PHONE, ~ At Homo.
Poo,&gt;lo Call Vou To O.dor. Fot
Info 1-~117 E•t. 1122.

Will .... lor _ , In
my h o m o _ . . . , . . .
lld,l~ll.
Will do bobyolttlna In a.a1t1r-.
Addlaon .....Hllve
Pralor · ....
Toddttra.
11t.wae.
(811)3e'l·lV11.
Will Clo Bobyolttlng In My Homo.
Maluf!, Raaponoltilo, AduM. 11+
441·2ocZ.
Would Like To BobpN In Mr
Homo, Excolont Oulilffloatlonal

.,. 441 0804,

1131ove.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Bualnooo lor Solo Dairy lor ond l,ota i ...-go ovollablo lor
Raal1urant, !Ill food, hot food new home conltructton on
I oalod bars. St AI 124, 1 mi. oil · ~ Rood. Pavad road,
Rt 7 tGWarda Rutland, call 114- cou~
wet•, . reat01111ble
1182-2414 «1112·2370.
,.llrlcirlona. CotnP!It• tntormo·
urgo Loco! v.nctlng Aouto For lion IM!Iad on - ·· 304-t75SolO. Will s.n An Or Pa~. 12U, Johrl D. a..tach, no
Aopaot
luolnMO
Socwo l i n g - tralr.ro, ploaoo.
L.oeatlona. Above Avwagt In· 121 ....... Albanj, 011 Matgo Co,
come. 1-IOC)..M0-18113.
Ill mi...,.. rtahti, exc. hUnting,
llontal Ptaporty, Houoo I . 4 aaklng .-a.llllll11• ... 1240.
mobllo on ono Parco!, LDTS FOA SALE In Clllllpollo
good oond!llon, g.- tocatlona, Forrr. WIH accapl tral~!!y
oppru ftOO par month Income, Wllor avollabto. Phona
75Will Nturn lnwllment In 5 2722.
yao10, Now Havan 304-182·2411
At. 35 W.·1 112 sc. tot, tl5,000; 8
VENDING AOU.TE: Clot Rich ocroa, Sti,OOO; (unrntrlctod).
Quick? No Woyl But Wo Hava A
Good, Staadv, Allordabto, BuoJ. - · Tanno. (114)245-1441.
n-. Won1 l.oaL 1 -284 · Fot Bole: - · bank propony In
1311
Mo-. S04ol'7S:NSI.

22 Money to Loan

Rentals

LOANS BY IIIAIL
Up to ...000 Foot! Solloloctlon

Real Eslate

41 Houses for Rent
3br -

112 Milo Fr- CHr

tl:':'.:n

t300imo • S.Curtrr
. 814-4-1 aftor
lp.m.
41Rhouoolwrantorsata.
31 Homes for S8le
Plontz Subdlvlolon. 114-4463 or 4br ~ B o - . CA. 0271.
112'Acra Lot, ar- C!lv lchool 14 a - o - n . ovaltabto July
Dlot~cl, C1ooa To T-n, I
1200. month. -urlty
Hoopnat.l41,000. 114-441-41211. 111.
dopooll ._trod. Cltlzano No·
41. terM, moclam 4 badroom ,,_, Bonk, ~80 '"'·
homo, rr. goa, HS,OOO linn. 10«53.
614-441-16112.
Form Houoo $300/mo. Kyger
4br, 1 112 Story Fr Hoa. Full ~ Araa,i_,_County Wlfor,
Baumont, 2 Bothe• CA, ~ lludaa Gao. ....,..... Showing
To Town O..d and St-, -T 1~110, 114-311J.712f.
Prlcad To Sallll14-44..7122.
Fat Rani, two _ _ , houao.
BldwoA Ohio: 3 lodl-11- Colllf4.44W414.
1 Acra Mota 0. UN. 111,000.
304-428-5330.
"""" houoo, L111rt, porlor
young coupla, SOWtWOU.
Brick Ranch: 3br 2 Bothe, Eel·
In Kllchon, LA, Fli, Loundry, 2 42 Mobile Homes
Cor Attached Garage, Fronl And
Back Porchal,. urga Pallo, FA
lor Rent
Fumoca,_ CA 24ft. Abova
Ground Pool Wtth T r - Doell. S - - • air
Llndocooad With Baautllul corJCI, 2 balha, I built/on,
tencod;
TrMI, Shruba, 1 Ac,., 4 MIIM ~SmMaaflomPLPM,
Frvm T-.. City Schoolo, Vary J300, 304-t111-78U.· 1400. .-!clapoalt.
Private. 114-446-4HI.

oo-

Crall Modular, SM Our New

Dloplay. French CRy Mobllo
Homn, Goltlpollo, OH 114-44
8340.Loa home In countrr, 11acr•, 3
~room, 2112 bathe. POOl, oatol·
llt1, Hrn, 3()4.18J.3tll.

For Soto By Ownar: Ouatny
Bdck Ranch Cl- To Holur
Hoopbl. 4br, Full Buornont
urga Shadad Lot. lf4.4441-GM7
attar 5p.m.
Froo Block Foundation With
Each c,.ot Modular $3,500
Valuo. Llmftad Tlrno. Franch C!lr
Mobile - · Clalllpollo, OH
et4-44f.8340.
Aaducod To Sail: 2 Slaty 3br
Comer lot' In ChMhlra, Ohio.
E•cotlont Condllon. 804-132·
058, 804-832·1'1111.

Schuh 14x70 With h20 Ex·
Dtllldo,_ 2br1_2 Sotho, CA1 E100~
lont .......
ton. ,....,n C!ly
Mobllo Homoo. 114 Ill 11340.
Would ~ka to riiiCH'I a
"1821"'
hoUM, beautiful

location 51 ocrao, At. 33 North
call owner, lf4.H2·1121.

32 Mobile Homes
tor Sale
72 mobile homa 12lltl, IXC
cond, ... 000. colt oftwi:OO 3Q4.

:.:36.

•s

OFfiCE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Ava., Goltlpollo. Clooo to
COUrt HouN.. 1 room, 2 rooma,
S-4-.Ainlcoly
da:ualed, tlr conditioning,
your wotor &amp; btl ora pata.
Mo• your now. No
quoiN .... tllo Dhono rou
mull - !hom. Pftono lor on
:=n~me~·•· 114-441--7111 d.,.,

!114-em

:-8--:P:-u-:-b-llc_S_a_le--118 Wanted topo
Wilt Bobpft In My Homo fiH.3M4.
&amp; Auction
Anr.lmo.
Rodney
Aroo,
;;;::-:::::==.::;::~~~I Ra • - Av1lloblo. Alllhlno.
Rlok Poanon Auction Compony, Coli eM-245-5711.
lull limo ouctlonoar,
~=:-;=::::--;:;:=~=­
auction MrVk». LlcenMCI Ohio, Dodrill., Prlv•t• Home Cere.
WMI Vlrglnlo, 304-773-5'1811.
Have Room In My Homo FOf Tho 141110, two - - mobllo
Coro ot Eldorly, Man • Womon. homl, »t.e71--',71U.
rw aolo,
Colt 114-31N1113 Anrtlmo.
1m 11a1111o 9 Wanted to Buy .
1~1 bad-•.'
Georg• Portobto Sawmill don't ..
W1..ad I 0 .,_ St
-•·
andlng llmbor, houl your to tho m1u Juot
'
·
Bob Wllllaii!O &amp; Sona 114-112- call 304-t71-1U7.
1041.
111aCotJH111dor-lo-•2
lA Cll- .,... N Paart ...
111i'JI p ~ pa, 11Ue:l 1030.
Wanted to lluy, Wllhlr a dryer Mloo Pauta'o Day Carl Contor.
Solo,
offotdobto,
chlldcara.
M
·F
In worldna ociMIItlon, con oftor 4
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. •
~10.
p.m. lfol.ln-1
11M
- ·all2 otac,
bad,
_llonolon
--~ bat'•N
,..,
Boro..,
aft•
·
Drop-Ina
Wlllad To Buy: Junk Autoo WelcOme. 114 4tl 1224. NIW In- Md .,.,, 30W111-717l
w!!h or without motoro. Coli font Toddtar Core, 1114-44N22'1.
Lorry Llvoly. IM.JN-1303.
1111 1o1tu1 14.matA 2 lalha,
Will to do -~~~ond block Plua Don, . FWlntad To Buy: Stlndlng Tim· wortc, other odd
, frM •
City . lloblta - · ,,......
bar, Top Pricaa Paid For Wh1!1 tlmat•, 304
Ook I Aah. Coli aftor 7p.m. m .
-

c-

e

k,_,

Claurantaod • . _ , Sarvlca.
1 - 411lii271U5 loa.

~~;;~~;"'~·===::;~==;:~=;=~~

Furnlohad 1 . !IIIIo From C!ly

Llmi!L On Lorga Privati Lot.

1210/mo.

SocwMy Dapoolt.
Aotaroncao. lf4.4441-2231, 114-

44414!1111.

HouM T,.llor tor rant, 2 BA, aH
otact., part. turn. ~h roq.
114-'1112-2014.
.
lloblta homa In Syracltu, 1!50
pluo utUHioo, dopcolt

":t".:.

I

.QStoriMI2-1732.

Traitor !Dr rent, 304·773-5225.

44

Apartment
torRent

1 A 2 Ballroom Apartmenta.

Stova, Aotrlgarolot Fumlohad.
114-44..3140.

1 bd fum . opl~-~ bd traitor, all
utll!lloa, tum. - 1 -k, &amp;141141-2!21. O.R. camping, lull
hook-up lor camper or tan!.
1br A,_rtment, APJtllan011 Fur.

nloltad,
1
Biock
From
Downtown. Coli 114-4-31.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATE!!, . 531 Jockoon Pika
from 11nmo. Wllk to ohoo a
movloa. Coli 1M 441 25M. EOH.
8-h St-, Mlddtaport, Ohio.
One room eHic~:CJ apC,

,....,encn and

dt

, 304·

turnlohad

smoll

8824511.

Complatatr

s•·

houoa lor 1 or Z pooplo. No

1225 pluo utUI!Ioa. 814-M..

•.
Cottaga tor rent, ruml•,_d, AJC,
corpot, good nolghborhood~
polo, PI'. Ploooant, wv 1·
171-1200.
;;Dow;:::no::;:to;:I,.:-;F;::ur::nl:;:o:;:h::ad~A;:G::n::-.
moni. W terPald,t3001mo. 275
Da-• 0
,.....,. No Palo. 11 Codor
Sl-. 11WII-IN3.

Furn lohad 4 Roo mo I Both.
Cloon.
No Polo. R.,.,.,.. a
Dapoan R....,lracl. 114-44..1tl8.
Fum!- Aplllmant, 1 Bad·
,_., ml/mo. Utll!lloo Pold,
107 Second, Galllpotlo, lf4.441.
4411 oftor 7p.m. '

PHIPPS"' by Joseph Farris

-=

-·

-·

Fruits &amp;.
Vegetables
ou-tn FruM Farm: Jull off
If Albany .,....._
lA 111 12M.
.,_..n 11AM-7PM.
TO!IIet 11 olliW-Ioa, appiM

58

'

r

....

1D Tbara oghlnd Dlgell

AN AUTI-IOR CAN'T
I~II~K· OF AN'r'TI-IIN6
TO WRITE, I-IE'U.
FALL ASLEEP AT
lollS TYPE ~RIT'ER .. J::&gt;

Chtvelie I ipMd, 40,000 miiH
~SM.
'

IIIWoddT. . ..

BUT IT ISN1T 1/ER'(
COMFORTABLE

SOMETIMES ~EN

Cora, -

(II) Our House

1:05 (I) lewltdoecl
(I) I ~Of

(l) WlldAat•lua Stereo. ~

(1)3-2·1 Cont8ct ~

!l:c..c:-~
1D Up Clole

6:35 (I)"""' Gllllltlt
7:00~· OWMBIOfF-

(

dow c1b,

ItA! voo·~ GOT 10 ~

DO YOU 'llllUK MY HAIR
WOOI.O !&gt;TILL. LOClK .
~TRIIJGY IF

I

KIDOIOO M£!

r COT 1n

WAfi~'T /AA~Rif:D

'(V,SI'fRDAY!

Merchandise
5I

Household

Goods
Corpot 14.00 Yonl I Up. Vlnrt

$UI I 14.88 Yanl. Pote~ Turf,
$3.1111 &amp; . ..1111 Yord. MOllohan

Corpoll, U - AI- Rood, 1144441·'11144,

County Apptlonca, Inc. Good
uNd oppllancaa; T.V. loll. Open
8 a.m. to I p.m. Mon ..Sat. fM44..111!.1. 127 3rd. Avo. Ga~
llpolll, utt
.
CIODD

USEO

APPUANCEII

Wllhel"', dfJW'8. retrlprlton,
rongao. Slu!gp
Uppar AI- Rd. IMido Stono
Croll Motet. eon 1114-44..7311 .

Arliil-•·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complata hotno lu~

w. ,........,

Moura: lion 811,
0322, 3 mlloa out Bula- Rd.
,,.. Dollvlfy.
PICKENS FURNITURE

Now/Usld
Houuhotd lumlohlng. 112 mi.
Jarrlcha Rd. Pl. PI-nt, WV,
call 304-t75-1•10.
RENT20WN
114-446-315. '
Vl'ra Fumhul'l

Chair, tiUO WINk·
Rocllnor, 111.47 Waok, Swivil
Rocker, IUS Waok.Bunk lad
Complato 18.41 W•k. 4 DroW.r
Choat, $3.21 WINk; Pootor Bad- .
room Sullo, 7 pc., tiU7 WMk,
lncludoo laddlng.Country Plna
Dlnono W!lh Boni:h • 4 Chalro,
ltO.N WMk.OPEN: _ ,
Thru S.tunlay, eo.m. to lp.m 1
Sundlp 12 . Noon TAl Sp..., •
Mlln 011 Routo 7 On Routo 141,
Solo I

In Centenary.

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
Olivo Sl., GaiMpollo. Now i Uood
' tumttura, heel:.,.,
a
WOfk booto. 1-311111.
VI'RA FURNITURE
6f4.4U.3158
LIVING ROOM: Sola &amp; Chair,
tiiii.OO· Racllnar
fMI.OO·
Swivel Rockor, IIII.Oo; CoiiM i:
End Tobl", ....00 Sai.DINING
ROOM: Tobto With 4 Padded
Chalrl, tMI.OO; Counlry Pine
Dlnotta WMh Bonch And 3
Chalro1• $2111.00; Motclll,. 2
DoOf "Rch, 13U· Or 11111.00
S.t; Dak Tibia, 421112 Wltlt I
Bow
Back Pol!or
· Chalro,
IIUOO.BEDROOM:
ladroom Sullo (5 po.), 8341.00; 4
Drawer Choll, 144.115; Bunk
Bod, 1221i.Compllll FuR Man
s.t ttoe.w Bot; 7 pc. Cadlr
Bidroom Sullo, IIIII.OO.OPEN:
Monday Ttwu Soturdo~o'."nm. to.
lp.m., SundoJ 12
Tin
Sp.m., 4 ..... 011 Routo 7 On
Aouto 141 In Cantanary.

w........

53

Antiques

-. u-.

v.

-on

1500; 111'11 cv 500
llotorcycta, ·250~ Aiding
Lown
·n'""
10
-.-o
OIIO
Ring ond Jock Sholl, GraBiocla lo lncludod, Prlco: 1200;
114-317·7230 oftorlp.m.
Lumbar: Wllnut I Cherry.
81110.,- I planM. Al:o: ......
board1CIUtg, IIC.I14 44i 11038.
A-.dlllonad -hlro, 01'fer8.
Guarantoad .....,.. ..,leO tor
all
Woahar

M-.

••o:.

Fot Bolo or Trade. Equlpn!Or!l
fw Cui&gt; IIICfor, 2 p i -

rfgllf I

=· . . .

camoullluga otothlng (-of
lllrpiUI ciO!IIIng $3. par 00" ~_P!~ Horolord bull

~on::·~= ~:W.i14 ~:r.J::: Ex·

~ ,S4.

Sun. =-::oo PM othor
ttoura 01n barwo n:oo AM.

:m.uea.
WO-

H

&amp; Gra In

ay

~-

- ... Allalll
0.·
ond
• Rollo
..........,... J04.UNOII.

Md Dryer, . - - · - . ! -

lng cond.l14-tft..3ilft

WATER WELLS DRILLED: lull,
..-

....... . ,......7311.

- - Ratrlrraro!O&lt; Uka
- · lluno Good,'t250. tf4.246MH.

55

Bu!ldlng
Supplies

71

Autos for Sele

=·

CUt-.

571-2101.

1171 llunbtrd ..00 O.B.O. lf4.

441-4M:I.

Pa_...,,

1110 Pontiac Sata~ Station
Wlgon, I
Auno
Cl ~o: • Air CondKI-, Cloan,

rw •to, tt00 aa,

gi';.e:.'':l1

51

4

2124.

-n.

•mi.

·--· .

so Galton 0aa Hot Wllw -·~ 57
ttOO. · - - ·

Musical

MIO·t:ASI' (Q:FEREJ.X:£
jfj(lll· fl~5 caJ'Tt.ST

2213.

;

~=---~~
~

••

Instruments

tiM Thundorbtnl Elan. v...
Loodod, ....... Doyo : · =~anlngo: lf4.441.:1571 or

::::::::--::::::::-:::::--:::::
lloctrlc Gul1r1: tiOO 1200
1000 BTU window air con. llch. thgatlabll t144il..71141.
1N7 Dodrre 100 Mld·Sizo Cor,
dMionar, e 112 I 10" ta1r1o - ·
12" band - · 114 112 1155 or . , _ plano, m . 204-e'll- nn, Air, ll'ooko 14,500; Sail For
1112·7!1113.
2tiC
13.200· , ... Chryolor uloron
QTi, ttn, Air, 12,100. 114-25112111.
1111 Pontiac Trine Am, black,
...ry option, ..c oond,
- - . 111,100. 304-112-2111!
oil. 12YII or IOM78-Slll2.
- , _ v.e Only 1,500

.......,. •• ..,r.

lpoorl, Lnd dlonAII Opl-. Ex·
Condit ' Hal ,

111,000 rally.

P-r

msm-,

v•.
Troln War·

Cd lf4.441.

1711, ,,........- .
1110
Lumlno
lu_,.
-nd .-._ whna wlth rilyol
btua Int., loaded. ~~- car.
eon 11141 +11-4012 u1. 4145, .a.
Allor 5 (1141 717-4230, aak tor
Cody.

e

ll1i e True Colen Leiter and

Terry come to Kille's
rescue. (A) Stereo. C
til Amerlcen Music Shop
Stereo.
9:00 (J) e 0 C..._ Rebecca
htrlpa Vera get a job working
as a hat-check girl. (A)
Stereo. C
o.brlel'a
Gabriel's Investigation of
Victoria's Iaiiier polnllto his

Fn

gul~~~:reo·
~ believes
w
Morse

r---.,r..

a IOYe

rlt

led to murder.

(Pt 2 of 2)
(!) Myetery At long lUI,
romance Ia In the air lor
tnapactor MorN. (PI 1 of 2)

:X: &lt;S-1\/E UP...
WHAT?

"

Services

RE 16-NING-

I

KNE:W ID.\lsee
!TUP.

i

!De llrOken llldgea
. Tho Bedges are asllgned 10
protect a money lrlunderer.
Stereo. ~

ll1i •

8t

Beveoty Hille, 10210
Brandon worrlei that a frlen&lt;l
may have murder on his
mln&lt;l. !Rl Stereo. Q
Ill MOVII: Cop (FI) (2:00)
illll N1eh... Now Stereo.
a:a Top Rank loxlnl Junior

Home

Improvements I
'
All typoo of maoonary, brlc,,
block and Ilona. F,.o U:
tlmatao. 304.n3-1550.
·
BASEMENT .
WATERPROOFING
•
Uncond!llonol . tltotlma gu1ral\·
IN. Loco!· rotaroncn lumloltOII.
FrM aotlmat-. Coli couoct , l·
114·237-0411, doy or nlgl!t .

WeRenwe~htbOUtAicky

A•ra 8aMmtn1 W.ttrpteQ:

tlng.

YO'RE DOIN'

:

iiU flY DUTY ?

Cunlo H- lmptOViomorlf~
Yaara Exporlonctt On Oldl~ 'I
Ntwer Hom... Rcfom Addttlon'Foundatlon Woril, Rootlrwi
Wlndowa I Skiing. Froo r.

YIP--ALL

YOU?

US

CITIZENS

GOT TO DO

AN' FACE UP
TO OUR CIVIC
DUTY!!

BESIDES--

I COULD

use

TH' MONEY

OUR PART

tlm1tnl R1terenc•, No Job Te
Big 0. Smolll 514-441-0225.
'

E I ATREE SERVICE. Tol!lllntii
Trimming, Traa Romov11, Hioclg4

Trimming. FrM Eltimatet! 114.
317-7Hr '
~.

kftctlona, bathrooms,
m~
room addhlon1,
rooting, ~lng, lnotallotlono, 11

'''

yn exparlence, Htlmttn, 304..

ASTRO-GRAPH

~lallxlna

In Zenith 11ao urvJclna moal:

other bFIIndl. 'HouH calft, 1110

ooma sppllanco raoolto. _,wv
304-tl't-l!UI ot&gt;lo eM-141-.084.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Saplle Tonk Pumotng 110~,Gallls
Co. RON EVANS lNTEAPHISES,
Jockoon, OH 1.aoo.e:l7..121.
Davlo
--Voc . llarvlco,

tl '

OtDrpl Cnek Ad. Parta, aup.
plloa, pickup, ond dolvory• • ,..
44.0214.
- ·

82

June '21, 1111

114-441-3888

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

llaoldolllal

or

""""·
Mellor now
Ucanood

•llactrltlon.
IWPIIro.

R -. Eloctrlcal, 30W71-

87

• '

Upholstery

uarn....,. (lfow.aa

·'

c.-.

-ray'l Uphotll!flnl ....,.._
lng trl _ , . • • 2 1 - T(lo
In tuniltura UPf\OIIIIrlng. •
Coli 304.e71-41114 lor r..o tlmotM .

I

bOth J0tHM11 end _,,, too eertouaty
IOdfiY, 1rtenc11 won't be too appraclative
ol your company. II you partiCipate In a
pleUui'Uie puriUII, to It tha1 you
don't apolllltlnga lOr others.
LIIIIA (lept. ~. II) Let the old
adtlge, "The 111181 things in life are free,"
IMIMI u your ulam lor behavior tOday.
Avoid 1111)' type ol l~t that
- ' I money.
ICOE 10 (Oet. :1M No•• 22) The rulee
you 11111)1 have to play by IOdtiY arw!lkety
lo be eolllllllheel by others. Alalatlng
and ODmlllilnlna. though, will only make

A oubatanllal amount of the financial
sir- you've experienced •-tly
J.cipka like 11 will be alleVIated In lhe yew
'.elieed. Romantic and IOCial trends
Cbuld also 1ae a pleUBnl upturn.
'CANCIII (,._ 21-.llllr 22) Don't lei
. ¥0Uf' curiOSity get the bet* o1 you tolhlnlf dllficun. Dec. :n) There
day and cauM you to tJecorM irwolved
-In the comptlcallona of a frland, Once . ..hll c1110118 .... you may not hOld
lr!....,sed, you may have no time lOr your88lf In the high regard • your
)our own tnt.,..ll.
get a Jumll r .... do. For~ ol mind, 1ru11

,.

commarclll

17M.

on life by underl!andlng the Influences
which are govwnlng you In lhe year
ahead. Send lor Cancer's Astro-Clraph
predictions !Odtl)l by maHing $1.25 plua
a long, 1811-eddreuec:t, ttamped envelcipe to Aalro-Clraph, c/o lhiS _ ,••
per, P.O. Bo1 91.28, Cleveland, OH
4•!01-3428. Be sure lo stale Yo&lt;Jr zodl·
ac llign.
LIO (.I!IIJ 23-A,.. 22)1n order to pta·
cale another, you may -uree to do
something &amp;g81nat your better Judgment IOday. You're bell• olf oaytng
"no" than malng uncomfortable

commn"*"•·
VIRGO CAug. 11-hpt. 221 n rou rae

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Codor'o Plumbing
ondH-.,
Fourth ond Pfna
Golllpollo, Ohio

84

Meyers (14·1, 10 KOs) ve.
Donald Alllton 11 4·2·1, 0
KOs), 10 rounds, from
Atlantic City, N.J. (L)
Ill Larry King IJvel
9:30 ())
0 Wlnga Sibling
rivalry resurlece1 between
Brian an&lt;l Joe. (AI Stereo. 1;1
(J)N10:00 ()). aJ) Slllerl Cleorgle
remains stole as her son Is
hOsllilallzad. Stereo. ~
(I) Major LMgue .........
Chicago Cube at San
Francllco Olanta IL)
CIJ &lt;ll._1'111MIIIM Uvt
stereo. t;1

e

(l)

JET
,
Aeration Moloro, rapolrad. Na
a .....,,. motot1 In otock, itili
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1 537·11528.
~

87H440.
Aot&gt;'a TV Sorvlco,

SOUTH
tlO 53
Y K Q 8 7 6,

w w•

Motor Homes
·:
1112 Cotoalr, 22 ft. trauot trallor.
Uke now. Z uta, fullY oatt-cootolnad, owning, douhta olnkl.
1M3 Toyola mo!Of

11171 l'onl llallon wagon1 _!08
Jonaa St, Apt, D, 304-t'll-l....
IVlll Nova ond 11171 Chov.
MoUbu, tioth aood cond, 304·
QQ:;;,_;;;;;;n,~ond;;d'iStiQ•Di;Pi;t,:"'illti;;c;j;p:iiPali;i 4111-1111 or :J04:f71-4211.
01_,..., AI - . tm Ford Totino, aluminium
Pi1 Food - · autta
...._ C11 114 t41 -~~ 1o100o . -... 3111 W, aood conclltlon,
.ttooo """ 114-'M2·22112.
.
- 1- 1
w
204.e75-384!.
S - PI ppl 1 ptn lftd milt.._ 1171 Dide
-~~~~ T-.114111 1710.
1171 Cadl118o Awhs ad, · aaoct
AICC ~ ~- lomolo car.-· IOUnd. 1900. or Trada
For Pick... of Equal Vatuo. 114Md mila.
Crloay Dol. 251-1443, lltwn.to.m. • I p.m.
. 11111 Flrablnl, good cond, 304-

~-

AA?WIWR 'rtf IIJ ~

ludaot Tranamloalono, Uood I
rabull, otartlng at 118; Auto
Pano. 114-245'11177, 614-379-

.

• J 5 42

t96

Stereo.~

hotno, ......
eontMnld, awing, ,...., tlheli,
- · ss Sill, 121 hp, ouy ori - loW miiM., ti0,2\IJ
. . . . 1!,800. 304-t'llem.
·~·
~P Compar Shol 72 ll!&gt;d!f,
!171 VW Buo: Body Good, itarcraft, whh Cenv11, JUJP.
$371.Cd 114-4411-4141 aftor • or o.a.o. ef4.2!11,11M.
.
DftM.Unda.

EAST
.J98764
• 10
• 8 53 2

PrlmiNIWI
8ltogun (PI 4 ol 81 (2:00)
1:30 ())
aJ) Different WOild
Dwayne'l gradlt drop
becaUN of Whitley. (A)

:1"

Block, brick, Dlpoo, wfn.
.
lnlola,otc.CiaildeWJn.
1aro, Rio Grandi, OH Colt 114245-1121.
56 .._..
for Sale
·
,...,.

WEST
tJ08754 3

8
0

frM)

12500080. 114-441-«104.·

.2

+K9

palrolman pura..s a suspect
In a high·speed chase. (AI
Stereo.~
.
ll1i. The Simp.
Homer's long·lotl brother
returns as a mllionaire. (A)
stereo. Q .
0 .....,, lite Willie Q
Ill On -.ge Stereo.

2757.

campers &amp;

ALDER

IIICroaltre

;-:=.%,..A

........ goOd cond. ·~

79

PIDLLIP

··.

their oplnlcins, not yours.
CAI'RICOIIN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) There
are Individuals who will haip advance
your aelf·lnlerests loday and olhers
who aren't In a poslllon lo do so. Aegardlelo ot who delivers, Ireal everyone
equally.
.
AQUARIUS ,...... IO:fell, 11) TWO lm·
portant objecltves can be achloved lo'
day, provided you don 't trip ovor your
own-· Try not to tat your ego get In
the WfiY oiiOUIId methods end tactics.
PIICIS (Pelt. 21 Mr rob 21) Conditions
In general are rather favorable tor you
IOdfiY, lru1 you mey view things from a
negative penpective- !Melhe edge
off your opportunHiee.
·
.--1 ,..._ 11·Aprtl11) You'll be a
eullcome addHion to soctal invOlvementa tOday, provided you don'f uN

any occaa10n to -

• a platform lor

furthering your peraonat ambl11ons.

Keep ~hlnp tight.
TAUIIUI (Apr1121-Mar 21) Individuals
w1to truly know you will - nothing but
good In you toelly. Unlortunatety, the
lault-ftndfra may be tltoee wlto ere In
the polltlon to give your~ uplra·
lions a booll.
.
,.. I (..., 11.,._ 21) Aa long u
you ... lnduetrloua and prOductive todtl)l, Lady Luc:k w11 ,.,..., In your cor- · HDWIMir, II you llart to alow down,
lhe'allkety to throw In 111e towtl.

1·%0-tl

Open !rom Rlnt, Mich. (L)

~

Boats &amp; Motors ~ :

- . . Wolghl 100 lito. · - ·

+Q74

On the Waterw•r•
(!)tlradaltawon

=·

tao- _., -·

Mama's Flinlly

tKQ J2

(J) •

. Braves (L)

lllllaogo, Bxcouont Condlllcln.
114-441-4283.
,.

Surptuo, army

-btl

IIIQNI:
q
- wllollaro

Y A9 3

8:00 (J) e Ill C:OIIW Show The
· Huxtable men try to lind a
way lo Wlllch loolbal while
moving. CR) Stereo. ~
(I) MOVIE: The
Dlaappaarsnc. of Flight 412
11 :30)
(I) &lt;lle Fl1her Dowling
Myaterlu Falller Dowling
doesn't believe a W01111n
killed her llarw:e. CRI Stereo.

· ·
1811 Hondo· 1100 Cullom, Lciw

!Ia·
121f.
FrM -,.._
t-ltv.y. - l c llllora
·
- - ~ 1 -~~
- ••• ••••
.,.,_.,.., . plpo ldaal rw -~. all
atzoa, ooll trom 1:00 to e:OO PM.
Cotllgovlllo, WV 304o:mto8401.

_....,-.Tho

Drr• 8hoppe.l1t 111 2144.

Ill. l!nlarllllnment

7i35 (I) Major LaiQf!e BltaalleA
New Vorl&lt; Meta II Atlanta

...,.-1125.

- •-lon

NORTH

.AKQ

Tonilllt Stereo. ~

illll WMel Of F - ~

•

.
tor Sale
·•
HAMILToN WATER SPORTS '
bar, 10xl0' houoa traitor !rome, 2
SUMMER SPECIALS
:
.... 1231. 304-f71.21117.
1991 KawaAkl Jal Sklo, 850 • •2
..,.._.. Farm EaulpMnt, ,aR. 35, • ,3,771; 150 sx ·13,1175; 110 sx
Oontoollo, tM...H777; • $3,721. Uoad Jot Sklo Stoning
now I - finn At: $11115. Now 19M Bolo
• - I lmplornonll. Buy, 210 ESS 350 Magnum 118
;
112
;
aoll, - · 8:0N:OO - y o , 1U SVR VI ()pori S.L 1111 Noon.
1891 Coblo 11.5 Cuddy eoiol,
lt1,500. Fl,_lng j(yalllibto.
ProctorviAo, Ohio 114.aae-7tte.•
_63~~Liv=est-.O~C~k=-.:­
::::
Auto Parts &amp; ·::
!Ill 1411. I Stock Trollw, 76
lUll;
Uaod
2
Traitor
Ill!!;, Uaod 1e1. ltocll Trollar,
~essorles • :
11-. lf4.2U.e522.
11'1 Ttuolt oampar, ataopo 4, loll
• - h Qtd Horatont lull. Ap- oontalnad, tully oqulppad with

BRIDGE

lllie M•A•s•H
til le 1 Stir Stereo.
a:a leNw P8A 8owllng Fllnl

pte,:.?,. Draw
dloc;

tall; toy off p101r,

SCJIAM.UTS ANSWIIIS
'"'"'
Poncho - Rusty - Quilt - Dactyl - TROPICAL
I called a friend who had mo.vad to the southeast.
She sounded blue. "It's nothing," she sighed, "I'm just
having a TROPICAL depression :
'

S e a - end Mrs. King

(I)

~::-::~':--::':-,-'"""'.r
1Vlll Yomaha 200 otraot bib,
oxc ntnnlng cond, 1350. 614·

75

PiiNT NUMBEiED LETTEiS IN
THE SE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
10 GET ANSWER

7:30 ()) • .0 Jeopafdrl ~
(I) Bewitched

,,

MQtorcycles

e

7:05(1) The JefleriOnl

- H .....,... btociO

1HZ Font Eocort Station
Buy or HI. Rlverllil AnllqUII, 1,,._~~~-~~:-::~=:-:: Wagon, aood · atk:ker, run•
1124 E. Moln St-, - : : t·.,. lind Col g - . a al good, :iool-t'll-5721.
Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 1.01. to 1:
- - In ,.,_
:GO to. 1:00
. ~ , . ., 111 .,..,,.~ 11112 Monte Corio, 221 v.e,
2
_ _, lnd Spoltar.
Looka
Auno
Good!
12,200.
Lg. Ook Tobia. &amp;310; 1-a 11ac1o Drag Mylld eonory
"""" SuMo, tm. 114-115 liN. 8 1 - lind Hlmolopn ltltt-. lf4.446.7021.
114 . . . . . . . . . 7 ,......
11112 Otdo CUtlo• Claro 4 Dr.
Loodod. Nice cor. 111100 0,8 0.
54 Mlscellanaous
114 411 0204.
Merchlndlae ·
1M3 Dide H, Good Cond!llon,
High Mlloo, St,700. &amp;14-2!111•,71.
12113 It gro&lt;.ndowlrnmlnt
pool Ootnpto!l, - · _ . , In'
111,1 T·llrd, . Ex-nt Condl·
eluded, now,
304 lila
tlon, Shlrp, 12,700. 080 1142524.
441-1
2 Choice toto In Ohio Valloy
1115 TrOnwmil T·t-, AC, Ill
MI"*Y CoM
-.·
nufto
1ft.
power, llaNO. ~m.
clutlad.
_..
tH noon
Iuick Conlury. Loadad,
I -rio r.no, 11121112, pluo Stud llarvlco Auto, Air, TU!, c....,o~'J' Aol~
Malo obto.
Hal Wornnly.
Up To
......-.. 2 opood Intake, ... - W i t h , _ · 4001.
~0::. ~1100. tl21 Par Mollh.
.......
2
boa
22122.
. 711, eM-441-7104.
111-2771.
Uood Appox. 1 moa. Llko NoW!

.,.
,.,

'

III~IM

(II)

1188 Altro vtn, ;I;Oot.&amp;75·233i . ~

Fot lata: Com- Sat 01 Bunk Datrvlt Dloaot Modal 4A7!!135RD
11111... And Bo1 1n Stottonary IEI!IItno Mountlnll
'Toke 011 PTA'
Good CoudMion; 11 WMh OM lriclt lllrlo IIIIo, Good c-t. 11121. - 7 Groc- M 112"
11M PuB-1.Wotor-To-Watar Haal
lion; ~ - · and lrldla,
Good Cordtlonl Col 304 458 Ex..,...., fluolt llullon Slo~, &amp;
1187:
Aut--no Bllo!Y llhut.OOWn. ·
Col 114 411
wrtr.: G.B.
1000 Round Bolar, :::.-~.304,
llpolla, Ohio

r&amp;~~~"-~
~~
ID'8portiCenter

s.--

"'"'119'· ·

. ~115..=-·~
II)

'

a-.

JNnnte

w we AIIC ,._... ~

~v;dJ.~~b

•

QNICNnra~

1:30(J)e

.1.

":".'J'

o•

~m,=-~
~~~=

'm'1112. 1U7 Cuttan
Havon,

72 Trucks for Sale

•

(J)CIIarllelnChlrge~

1110 ClMC pickup truck, s WI•·
~ part• or ·r erttor.,
1300. or bH1 otror. 304-171S8'13.
;
11172 Chevy plck·up, 112 ton, 3d7
ong, auto; po/pb, radio, runl.
goOd 114·112·211111.
.._
. .
. 1183 Font Aongor pickup. Nlct·
U200 080. 11~-448-0204. , ,
Rooms
., rm ,') upr: ··· (,
1814
Fotd F·150, ohot1 whl'l
Commocloro
M,
monMer,
dlac
Aplll- avoltabto lw 2 or S
&amp; Ltvestock
boaa, llop oklo bad.~,300 6 cyl,
conttrucllon worUrt 3Q4.I82. drlvo, Okimoto •0 color prinlllr
aaklng 12,300. 304-t10:5873. •
.....
011711.
J!l- ' - - · tm.
3.
•
61 Fann Equipment
1880 Chovr 8-10 T1hoo, $9,50~.
- · rw
rant.or month.
Stlllllf
II $120/mo.
GoiUo
Ho!ol. Cotnptoto KMchM: 2011. 01 o4000 Ford Tractor With 1ft. Buoh fully loadoil, coli bolora 1:30 &lt;ir
t'
114 , 1510. .
KR- Co-o, X Slda Hog, 12,510; 2000 FOld Dlaoal ... ., 5:00, 304~-2010 .
Ao~otor, DW, Goa Range
- " " 13,1115; Lila Modal 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's , v
S!Oijllng w!lh c:oc*lng. With .,_ lavll M'c 01ava, Super
131 M.F. Mil,5110; JO Dlaoal
Alao lrallw
Atl--upo.
lharJI, 14, eo;..2 • 111 With,
Traolt ~~. All Colt
after 2:00·p.m.,
3Q4.7'73o ~814-44
1aa Ford conve,.lon van, '*•
Ill!, ....,. wv.
ee,1110. o.ma. ..ut - - · '"" cond, nice lnalde, ucrttlca tor
Concrato &amp; 'ptaotlc oapllc tanko, 251-tl22.
Ron EVInl EnterPrtue •. Jilek- Allee Cholmoro 12 hp, Riding $5800, blua book $6800. 614~·
46 Space tor Rent
2001.
' ·~
_,, 011 . . _ . ,..528.
·
Hoo:
42
Inch
Mowing
Counlry MobUe Home Park,
H1ri Plow Dille, 1986 JMp CherakM, 4 wheel
Camper Top..~cot­ o.ek, Hu Aolollllor,
Routa 33, North of Pomoro,:. Flboraleoo
Ah $100. d~vo.~, 4 crl, 304-1175-3795 oflor
tant
Cl'ondnlon,
1250
Or
Of.
Lola, rwnlalo, porta, oaloa. Coli tar. .111. Pallo Doot, t1150. 114- 114381 11501.
•=30 ~Ill.
.'
lf4.f182.Jit111.
24HM7.
1987
Dodaa
Aaldlr,
4x4,
.
c .
0.11 Alllo Cholmboro tractpr
cond,
U,!lllo.
304-675-511117
and
urgo troller lot, lou lhon milo
wMh front ond loader "'""
out Sond Hill Rd, An!!atlon fur· cond!llon.
FOI' oalo, e
~··
muar Mlll2000.' 0bo 114- ltave
235 orGood
·114- 112·1170
nlohad, 304.e75-lU4.
...._
..7 ...
441-4112.

54 MlscellsriiOUS
Business
Merchlndl•
Buildings
Upotalra Unhwnlohod ADar1- Boualbll
4 Inch CJal.
For Sola or UIH All otoot bldg man!.
Utll!lloa Paid. No Palo. · v-ad Plpo, 114-441 1213.
501100, mako
300 Fourth A.. nua.
church, •rwhouee, body
•
Cotnmon:lol
Snoppor
Prlood 10 oall, , _... Clllllpot • 45
Furnished
Forry, -5-5332 or 1o800Lownmowor,
5 oh.
•
latlo
roar batt75.00
..,....,...
752o?'l11.
34

Business
Opportunity
INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
rocommando that you do buo~
naao with
you
ond
NOTtoHnd-=tho
mall ullll ,you haita ln..., ad
tho otlorlng.
·
21 ,.., old lnlerMIIonot ....
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tor llotlvatad, Enlrgatlc In'
dlvlduata. FuM and port-tlmo
--·Phone 814 ....2·2!154.
Arthur'• Chain Link Flnco.
Anldolllal, Commorclal, lndUotrlal, F- EotlmoiMI c .....
ptoto lnotaUotlon. . PhoM: 114-

w

1:00 (J) •
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v..

ea.uee.

THU., JUNE 20

........

TUTMILY
PIIILII

EVENING

UIU 25,0Cit mlloo,
loadt/d,
14,585. 1NT Pltlmouth Trtamo&lt;5
apood, . 11 1~ 11117 C'i
lluw alr/oond f7, •
11111 Mulla_ng, outo, 1lr, 4~0 .
mlloa, 13,21111. 1113 Chevy •10,
4x•,
anglno, ti,IM. 1112
Fotd RangerS opood- d~ro
$3,415. Cltry81ar load~
$3,4115. 111114 l'onl Bronco , 5
opaad $3,11115. 1U7 Chevy

CA. If4.4U.G331.
North :lrd St, Mlddl-', Ohio, 1
badroom tumlahad opt, . . - .
- ond clapoll raqulrad. 3Q4.

21

•

'lx·
Cot-.
DOrtloM:
e:so..m. 1:30p.m. sown;,.;

Rio laiMcie. Itt 441 IOSI

$315010AY PROCESSINCI
Pound Pupploo, Maloo I
Fomaloo, HOlt lluo Hoator • ? PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE
· VII Chockad, Vacclnotod, Wor.
CALL YOU.
mod. Froo To Good Homo, 114- NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1~2M-0242 EXTENSION p.
4441·1310.
2732A
U..,t corpot and pod, 304-t?s.

. II~AIIIfaiMJ

411000 MIIM, Cll- Kopt,

truh pick-up lllld. 123~/~no. No
Plio Allo, 2 BR ,,._._ In

accop~~ng

(JIJIF... .,...~

-lant

Nlghtlmo: lf4.446.2127.
• ;
Public Bole: Juno 21!h, 2:30p.m.
of 1 1 • Chevr CiiV.U., Zdr,
111,000 ..~~ Bonotl·
clot Olllco, Slv• lrldgo Plaia.

Mooon Apartmonto. Equal....,..
-Inti Opp., off app11c111ona
rw
cond., r.undry
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8828.

' f0!.'!50lo'i·

114·

The Dally Sentinel-Page 11

Television
Viewing .

"'f:P A(#IN AmiiYlll

••

l'or Bole: Et!lra Shofp 1111 !roc
Z 21. V.., I ~. Ovor·~o.
Loadad With Every Opl....

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INo" N,OOO; 1tu Ford

247~.

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Autos for Sale

Ellondod · Cob,
nocro........1111112.

MillY
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AI lloblo- In Slock, ltM. Colt 114-tn·7llt 1011.
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llobtla ptotoltl-. CA. Stille 1131.
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llpotlo . .. _ • ..rna., •II• •

W&lt;&gt;fll out. '"""""" your _
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71

COIIVITTES:

. Pomeroy-Middl~port. 9hlo

:PORN LOSER

•

""'-.. !'~'!...

1117 - . 1ti!D Charwplon, Furnlohad Etflcloncy, SliD
UtttniM Paid, 1a1o, lV1
IOW1fi.JIIU.
F-h, Golllpilllo, 111111 1. .
tft11'7p.rn.

CHINESSE KEMPO ·

4

Mobile

'Thul'8day, June 20,1991

Thursday, June 20, 1991

Pomeroy..:...Uiddleport, Ohio

Pag._10-The Dally Senllnel

s.an.tt~r

tA

Table presence
to the fore

• A J 10 8

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
South

By Pblllip Alder

West .

,.s•

North
2 NT

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Besides his technical edge, the ex·
Pass
pert has another advantage over a
&amp;Y
Pass
weaker player: table presence. This is
Pass
Pass
·a seemingly extrasensory perception
that helps him to "divine" or "feel"
Opening lead : • 2
where the cards are lying. It is hard to '
explain table presence, but often it is
no more than drawing the correct con·
elusion from an opponent's unexpect·
.ed hesitation.
One of Britain's greatest players
ever: the late Maurice Harrison-Gray, en hearts? As he was an expert, he
couldn't have been thinking of. doudid brilliantly on today's deal. If you bling with all live missing trumps.
wish to test yourself, cover the East· There would be no percenta~e in doing
West cards and pick your line of play
"
in seven hearts, in view of the fact that that. He must have been thinking of
East, a good player, tranced apprecia· sacrificing in seven spades at the fa.
bly before his final pass. West then led vorable vulnerability . This suggested
he was short in hearts.
the spade two.
Backing his judgment of the posl·
South took a slight risk in bidding tion, Gray led a low heart from dumEa t' 10
seven, but he ~xpected the contract to my al trick two collect'
depend on a finesse at worst.
.
•
mg
s s .
The "normal" play alter South·wins , At tr1ck three, he led a low he~rt from
the spade lead in dummy is to cash hand ~nd I messed dummy s nine:
dummy's heart ace, picking up the When tl held, he claimed 13 tricks.
. trump suit lf East has all five or If three spades, live hearts, four dla.
.
monds and one club.
West began WIth a smglelon 10 or
© ,,., ,.• .,.,..
•a oN.
jack. But why did East pause over sev·
'

ENT••-•

•.

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 ur,oata

8 5 alld IIICk•
Iawed
11 iletal
dtc:oratlon
13 Strange
ptriOR (II.)

14 Lawrance of
15 Very earlr
CZ wda.)
16 FaiN hair
17 Printing
miChlne
11 Accounting
agcy.
20 Bullet
22 Put
23 Make a con·
tented sound
24 Seream
26 Shaped with
tool
28 Your end mr
30 Chap
31 Feminine
garmenl

Anawer ta Prnlou• Puzlle

32 Annapolis
· grad
33 Every 1even
dayl
36 Alltclld

manner

39 Fighting
equipment
40 Author
Tol1tor
42 Order ol
wheln
44 Detochable
colter
45 Strikebreak·
ero (1).)
47 Watch
pocket
48 Actor Pater
50 Bring Into
harmony
52 Evening alar
53 Aviation hero
Chuck- ·
54 Antique car
55 Teke away by
force

DOWN
1
2
3
4
5
8

Munchtl
Lightly
Allociltlon
Lawdeg.
Error
Acqulrta

women

Need Not Apply The role of
the nurse in American
medicine is examined trom
the CIVIl War to the preaenl,
using 111m loo~8JI8 and
Interviews. (1 :DO) ~
(f) Under Fire
!Ill lD Over My Dead
Sod)' M actor Nlto play
. Max In a movie hln&lt;lera 8
·murder lnvest~allon . Stereo.

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10:20 (Jj MOVII: White Ughlnlng
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I don't know what lise I could do bul pretend to
be an IC1or." - Aloe ClUinneaa.
Cl 1M I by NEA, InC. ·

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs girl scout news
Rachael Downie, a longtime 4H
leader in Meigs County. was honored recently when Girl Scouting's
Big Bend Service Unit selected her
as their Outstanding Wi:mtan of the
Year.
Th~ . Gi~l Scouts presented
Dowme wuh a plaque at their
annual mother-daughter banquet
held recently at Eastern High
School. .
.
The Gul Scouts selected Mrs.
Downie because of her dedication
to Meigs County's youth. She was
also recognized for her activity in
the county's Retired Senior Volunteer

Program. . .

.

·

Other award recipients at the
Girl Scout banquet included S8!11h
Johnson, leader of Middleport's
Cadeue !Uld Senio~ Troops, as the
outstanding leader m Me1gs Coun·

ty. Mrs. Johnson has been in the

scoutin~ program since members of

her Semor Troop were Brownies.
Johnson and fellow adult leader
Marge Chapman, also of the Mid:
dleport Seniors, were recognized
f~r 10 years in scouting, while Ann
S1sson, of the Pomeroy Brownies
was recognized for 15 years of
adult membership.
Girls Sherry Johnson and Linda
Chapman, Middleport, and Misty
Newell, Chester, were also honored.
for 10 years of membership in Girl
Scouting.
. The evening's program on
Meigs County history was presented by Mary Powell.
Another highlight of the evening
was .the disbibution of door prizes
of flowers which were donated by
local flower shops, nurseries and
greenhouses.

•
•

Yal. 42, Na. ~
Copyrlghl8d 1111

Ross and Marie Norris recently
their 70th wedding
anmversary at the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
A party was altended by the
Norris' family and 30 fellow residents. Bill Bias, administrator of
PNRC. presented the couple with a·
70-year plaque honor the occasion.
Mr. and Mrs. Norris were married May 20, 1921. They eloped
cel~brated

Boys as young as/seven took
year-old
girt
turns raping lrfI
.
.

l

MOTHER AND DAUGHTER • Denise Holman of Middleport
and her daughter, Melissa, were among the many moms and Girl
Scout daughters at the annual Girl Scout Mother-Daughter Banquet held recently at Eastern High School.
·

OU"TSTANDING WOMAN •
Rachael Downie was honored
recently by Meigs County Girl
Scouts as the Outstanding
Woman of the Year at Girl
Scouts annual mother-daughter
banquet held at Eastern High
School.

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Presa Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
House Republicans on Thursday
expressed continuing concerns
about a bill encouraging Ohio's
coal-fired utilities to install scrubbers to meet anti-pollution requirements of the Clean Air Act
Rep. Louis Blessing Jr., R-Cincinnati, claiming to represent the
views of a m~ority of the 38 House
Republicans, said ther are not
ready to vote for the bil despite its
endorsement by .GOP Gov. GeoJXC
Voinovich.
"We're going to offer a lot of
amendments," he said. as hearin~s
on the Senate-passed bill began 10
the House Public UtiHties Committee.
Speaker Vern Riffe, DWheelersburg, scrapped a House
version of the same bill last week
for lack of GOP suppon.
.
He said the St.te version,
whidl cleared that cliiniber 32-1,
will not pass the House without a
substantial number of GOP votes; ·

Gtesf

OLD HOUSE TO BE RAZED • This old
bouse im Third Street iD Middleport wbreb bas
been vacant for many years and an eyesore for
the neighborhood is comiug down to make way
for new construction. Using Appalachian
Regional Commission site development monies
the viUage is baviug the bouse razed and the .lot

Selection!

. developed for a Farmers Home Administration
loan applicant who will be building a bouse
there. Another house on High Street wiD also be
torn down to make way for new construction.
Tbe buyers or both lois will benefit three wayssubsidized interest from F11A, lot clearance and
development, and tax abatement for 15 years.

·Three state mines to appeal fines
By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Three of five Ohio coal mines
fined by the U.S. Department of
Labor for allegedly tampering with
dust samples intended to protect
miners from black lung ·disease
plan to appeal their fines.
The government sent out a
record $6.S million in fines this
week to opetators of 847 U.S. coal
· mines who allegedly cheated on the
dust samples, Labor Secretary
Lynn Martin announced.in Washington.
The fineS stem from a 20-month
investigation Martin announced in
April.
Agents
uncovered
Wid~. fraud in the coal industry, fmding about 4,700 alleged
instances of tampering with dust
samples. she said.
Five Ohio· mines were fined a
total of $89,100, the department
said. Among them were two und~r­
ground mines in Meigs and Vinton
counties. owned by Southern Ohio
Coal Co., a subsidiary of American
Electric Power. AEP's Meigs No.
31 was fined $4,500 and Meigs No.
2 was fined $25,600.
Other Ohio mines fined were
Quarto Mining Co., a subsi~ of
Consolidation Coal Co .• of Pittsburgh, owned by DuPont, $45,900
Oglebay Nonon, Saginaw Mining

::.··

Wll31 Pa)l Morer

Co., $11,700; and Ohio Valley
Coal Co., Powhatan No. 6 mine,
$1,400.
Both AEP and Consolidation
said they would appeal the fines
and citauons.
Coal industry offiCial criticized
the government action, saying no
evidence 'existed that the samples
had been tampered with.
Consolidation was slapped with
the largest fine-$770,000 .
Thomas Hoffman, vice president
for public relations, said the company would appeal "every one of
the citations."
Merely dropping the samples
can make them appear to be tampered with, Hoffman said, and that
"only deepens our outrage at the
manner in which (Martin) decided
to deal with us ... making big
headlines, holding a news conference, accusing all of us of 'being
addicted to cheating
B.J. Smith, a spokeswoman for
AEP in Lancaster. Ohio, said: "We
regret the Department of Labor
didn't work with us to check into
this issue or allow us to help them
investigate before fmding us guilty
in the media"
AEP s~ the National Coal
Assi)Ciation s call for an independent investigation and to checlc for

---Local briefs---

1•1 RINGER 114'

B.reaking and entering investigated

Suggested Retail.,,.. ,.........'1 o, 178.00
".......... '' :, " ........ ""'' ........ ',9,302.60
Of Gas., ........................ :.,,........ ,, ......O.OO

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that the department is now investigating the breaking and entering of the Ray.
Andrews residence on State Route 248 at Chester.
According to the repon. the house was entered between I p.m.
and 5 p.m. on Thursday, A videocassette recorder, compact discs
and jewelry were reponed missing.
An agent from the Bureau of Criminal IdentifiCation and Investigation is being called in to assist in the investigation.

Coolville man injured in accident
Kenny Bragg, 19. Coolville. was aansported by Tuppers Plains
squad to Camden-Oarlc Memorial Hospital following an accident in
Tuppers Plains.
According to the accident report, Bragg and Jim Fox of Lottridge
were working on the exhaust system of a pickup ·truck. Bragg was
under the truc1c and asked Fox to start the truck. The truck was startContinued on page 3
I

their regular meeting on Wednes- rural areas to use Issue Two monies
day and agreed that devoting ail of to e~ttend . water service in areas
the CDBG monies would be unusu- currently without rural water seral and could create problems with vices. Such expenditure of Issue
other agencies and communities Two money is now a violation of
who could use money from the the Issue Two guidelines.
CDBG program.
According to State Senator Jan
"However," Commissioner Michael Long's (D-Circleville)
Richard E. Jones said Wednesday, office, the proposed legislation
"this is a good project."
· . would allow for the use of 20 perAccording to Jones, House Bill cent of district Issue Two aJioca35S - which is currently in the lions to expand existing rural water
committee stages - could offer an systems.
alternative to the CDBG funding
A similar bill passed the House
option. ·
last year but did not make the SenThat bill, if passed into law by ate in time, according to Long's
the House and Senate, could allow assistant, Scott Elisar.

I

"We're hopeful that it (HB 355)
can get through both the house and
senate before this session is over."
State Representative Thomas
Johnson (R-New Cpncord) of Ohio
House District 96 introduced the
legislation. and according 10 Elisar,
Senator Long is supportive of the
bill.
"Not only would the legislation
be an opt!Ortunity for Scipio Township residents, but we have similar
instances throughout the dislrict,"
Elisar said Thursday. "Getting new
waterlines is .extremely difficult
due 10 the lack of federal and state
programs that exist."

Blessing says House Republicans
still not .ready to vote on coal bill

ANDERSON'S SUMMER
CARPET SALE!

/

By ROBERT LEE ZIMMER/ F1'31Jcis asked bim if he was guilty
Associated Press Writer
of
DECATUR, Dl. (AP) - Thiee
~lj:
·
bo.ys as young as 7 lOOk tums m~o ICe said he and the others
auacked the girl May 30 after Jurmg a 10·Year-old girl Biter Juri g mg her to one of their houses while
her to one of their hoUSes, prosecu- no one else was borne.
tors said,
I
Prosecutor Susan Moorehead
"Sometimes we just shake our said wilnesses saw the 12_year-old
heads in disbelief and wond~r- puU do~n the girl's pants and have
m.ent," sw,'d, State's Attorney r """' se a1 1nte
·th h •
F1ch1er. We need to find1:U
xu
rcourse Wt . er 'wlfile
where they learned that behavio'r if she was yelling and screaming and
we're going to change it"
.,
hiDing at the other children."
The oldest of the boys, a1 12Police said each boy took tums
year-old, pleaded guilty Wednes- ~:f~:hJ.ul while the others
day to rape and was led~ay to
Two boys who came by the
juvenile hall in handcuffs.
could house saw the attack and notified
get up to a month in juve . . bali at one of their aunts, who went over
sentencing June 27.
db
Prosecutors said they aJso plan an roke it up, prosecutors said.
b·
h
The next day one of the boys told a
to nng c arges agaytst the other s.c~.ool counselor, who called
boys, both 7, but t!Jal they are too
u
~il~~r receive atiy time in juve- po The judge rejected a defense
The 12-year·old an.swered quiet- request that the hoy he released to
ly, "Yes sir," when Judge Paul M. his parents.

vice into the Pageville community. with their last project. Those (unds,
By BRIAN J. REED
According to Poole, a study combined with $100,000 from the
Sentinel News Staff
The first steps have been taken ordered by the Scipio Township CDBG funds would require the disin an auempt to get rural water ser- . Trustees has been completed, and bict to borrow another $126,000.
"Pageville area residents have
vice into the Pageville area of Sci- preliminary cost figures indicate
that a grant amount that is higher bied to obtain water service from
pio Township.
A Jetter received by the Meigs than "normal" will be required to any water system that would proCounty Commissioners from Tup- reach Scipio Township with the . vide water to them over the years,"
rural water service.
.
Poole said. "I realize thai to dedi·
~ Plains-Chester Water District
·General Manager Donald Poole
"Our most recent cost estimate," caul all of the CDBG funds coming
requests that the commissioners Poole· s letter states, "came to about to Meigs Couniy for one project
can cause
a lot of problems,
coosider allowing the TP-C Disbict $302,()00 to complete the job."
but
I
am
o
the
opinion this would
Poole
stated
that
if
the
project
to receive all of the monies from
be
a
great
benefit
to all that it
the Community Development were undenaken, the disbict would
would
affect"
'
apply
for
funds
through
Fanners
Block G.ranl Fund for a year in
The
commissioners
held
brief
ordere to extend TP-C water ser- ,Home Administtation as they did
discussions regarding the request at

lou

'

! •• '

and were married in Parkersburg, ·
W.Va., then toOk a train from Rutland to Columbus for their hOneymoon. He was a fanner and a state
. OUTST~~IN~ LEADER •• Shirle,Y Cogar, at len, dir~tor of
highway worker. She was· a homeG1rl
Scouting s B1g Bend Serv1ce Un1t, presents Sarah Johnson
maker.
with an award for Outstanding Girl S~out Leader in Meigs CounThey have five children, Carroll · ty.
Norris, Virgil Norris. Mary Margaret Weaver, Opal Betz and
Eleanor Oace.
·

A Uulllmedlo Inc. Newopoper

Steps taken to get rural water for Pageville .

ROSS and MARIE NORRIS

Couple celebrates 70 years

2 S.Cdono; 14 Pogeo 2S cento

...

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, June 21, 1991

irregularities in the government's
testing procedures.
·
"This a widespread indictment
of the industry that has not yet been
proven," Smith said.
The government requires coal
mine operators 10 take about
92,000 airborne dust samples each
year. The tests are conducted by
usinl! a samplinl! pump to collect
dust from the mine air in a sealed,
pre-weighed filter cassette about
the size of a silver dollar. The cassette is then submitted to the government.
The amount of dust coUected on
the cassette filter is used in determinin~ whether an opemtor is in
compltance with the dust standards.
In April, Martin said some mine
operators had been blowing or vacuuming out some of the dust before
submitting the samples.

Miners' rally to
start at 1 Sunday
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio (AP) United Mine Workers President
Richard Trumka wiii be anlong
those attending a rally scheduled
for Sunday to generate support for
Ohio's coal industry, the union
said.
The union is trying to soften the
impact that the federal Clean Air
Act has on coal miners, Bill Oiler, a
representativ!l of the UMW political action · committee, said
Thursday.
An immediate goal of the union
is persuading American Elecbic
Power Co. to install smokestack
scrubbers at its Gavin Power Plant,
about seven miles north of Gallipolis. Scrubbers or other polluti:d!fhting equipment would be
n
under . federal guidelines
sllould Gavin continue to bum
Ohio's high-sulfur coal.
If AEP switches to lower sulfur
coal from out of state, about 1,300
jobs at a Meigs County mine likely
would be lost
Oiler said Ohio Senate-passed
legislation that would give credits
to companies for installing scrubbers would help save the jobs.
The rally is set for I p.m. at the
Gallipolis city park.

Riffe accused Blessing and
others of playing polities with the
bill in a bid to blame Democmts for
future increases in elecbicity rates.
Rates are expected to rise as
utilities recover hundreds of millions of dollars in compliance costs.

The bill gives tax credits 10
utilities that continue to use Ohio's
high-sulfur cOB!, instead of switching to cleaner coal from other
states. Scrubbers would be need to
be installed if Ohio coal was burned. The tax credits, $1 for each ton
of Ohio coal used, could be
Republicans denied the ctuuxe claimed until they reached 20 per·
and said their concerns are real.
cent of scrubber costs.
Meanwhile, Sen. Robert Ner. RNey's biU provides for low-cost
Barnesville, said despite Bless1ng's financing of pollution abatement
comments,
he
anticipates ;~~fment through the Ohio Air.
Republican votes. "I'm com- Q 'ty Development Authority. It
municating with the leaders. I'm also includes an accelcraled pennit
optimistic," he said.
proceSs for the disposal of scrubNey, testifying before the House bcr-genemted waste. '
committee, said he hoped there.
Blessing declined to elaborate on
would be few changes in what he the GO,P amendments except to say
tenned "a delicately balanced bill." some of them will address
provisions requiring utilities to
He said it represents more than a comply with the act at the least
year of work that included exten- possible cost.
.
sive hearings by a special House
Voinovich endorsed the Senate
committee, headed by Rep. Jerry bill June 14, but later said he has
Krupinski, P-Steubenville, and some concerns about the tax
- consultitiODJ \lf!lh-•ejliesentati\!08- · credits. They would not take effect
of the IXllll, manufacturing, utilities until199S, the Clean Air Act's firstand other industries.
·
phase compliance deadline.

State budget committee meets
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
legislative .conference committee
has learned of a $316 million to
$450 million gap in a proposed $27
billion dollar state budget, but neither lawmakers nor budget officers
saw the shortfall as a crisis.
"This is a large problem but not
an impossible one 10 solve. It must
he .addressed tJu:ough lower spending, increased revenues or a combination of the two," Gregory
Browning, director of the Office of
Budget and Management. said
Thursday.
Browning, Gov. George
Voinovich' s top fiscal officer, said

it could be $316 million, while
Dennis Morgan. director of the
Legislative Budget Office, predict·
ed it could reach $450 million or more, if legislators oppose
Voinovich's proposed conversion
of stale liquor stores to private
businesses.
While the conference committee
worked to reso.Ive House and Senate differences over the bud~et.
about 100 people rallied agamst
proposed cuts in welfare and
reduced funding for predominantly
black Centtal State University.
The demonstration against budget cuts prompted chants by

protestors of "Stop the War, Ann
the Poor." Many protestors wore
T-s hirts that said "Impeach
VoinovichNow."
The Ohio Coalition for the
Homeless spoke against a
Voinovich plan to abolish the $300
million-a-year General Assistance
program. Then Centtal State supporters demonstrated against a Senate plan to cut $7.1 million in the
Wilberforce university's funding.
Voinovich said he would work to
restore the money.
The proposed budget also
brought opposition from a coalition
Continued on page 3

Raising limits for discharge of pollutants into
Ohio River questioned by environmentalists
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Raising state limits for the discharge of dioxins and other pollutants into rivers wouldn't sigtlificantly affect most West ViJginians,
supponers of a proposed $1 biUion
pulp plant told a public hearing. ,
But environmentalists who attended the state Water Resources
Board hearing Thursday night said
easing the limits for pollutants
would open West Vuginia residents
to higher cancer risks.
The maximum-allowable amount
of dioxin industries can discharge
into state rivers is .013 parts per
quadrillion or water.
Developers of the proposed Apple Grove Pulp and Paper mill want
the limit boosted to 1.2 parts per
quadrillion.
"There is no riRht or wrong
number for dioxin, ' said Steven
Schatzow, a Washington, D.C., at·
tomey rera:nting Apple Grove
Pulp and aper.
"The risk assessments for the
best estimate of dioxin vary in three
of four orders of magniblde," said
Schatzow. a former EPA admi=:d and Virginia have both
boosted the maximum-allowable
dioxin limit, he said.
Dioxin is a toxic byproduct of
pulp manufacturing that is suspected to cau!IC cancer.
Thxicologist Russell Keenan,
who spoke on behalf of Apple
Grove, said few people eat fish
from the Ohio River. A maximumallowable limit of 2.1 10 14 pans
per quadriUion for dioxin would
still be safe, he said.
Retaining the lower limit could
hurt the state's economy, said
David Flannery, an attorney

representing the West Virginia
Manufacturer's Association.
"We cannot afford the luxury of
adopting more restrictive requirements," said Flan~, who
works for the law linn Robmson &amp;
McElwee,
"We are concerned that the

(.013) value cannot be justified by
current scientific dsta." he said.
About 60 people attended the
hearing at the state Capitol.
One, auomey Stuart Cal weD of
Charleston, wd people who eat
fish caught in the Ohio River would
be eight times as likely to get cancer if the state raised the limits.

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