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                  <text>June23, 1181

OH Point

PARKAY
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SPREAD

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a1

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Vol. 42, No. 34

59
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American Electric Power Corp.
was challenged Sunday by the
president of the United Mine
Workers of America to stand up for
the people who have supported the
energy giant for years, back clean
coal technology and save the jobs
of not only 1,258 Meigs Mmes
employees but those of miners all
over Ohio.
"It's absolutely up to AEP to do
its part," Richard Trumka told
more than 500 people attending a
rally Sunday in the Gallipolis City
Park: "It's up to Af'.P not to take a
walk when it's their tum, to know
what it's like to be pan of the community that supports it. It's not ask-

ing for much; Stick up for the peo- Gavin with its energy source, ~ack·
pie who were there for you, stand ers of the SC!Ubbers have swd.
up for Ohio and a clean ~;Cal future.
AEP, which must conform with
And we won't stop until we have the dicrates of the Clean Air Act, is
that future."
·
considering either inSI8lling ·scrub·
· Speaking in ringing tones and to bers at Gavin or importing low-suicheers and applause from the audi- fur coal from western Slates to cut
ence, Trumka pledged that the sulfur dioxide emissions at Gavin.
UMW A and the legislators and ShoUld AEP opt for the latter, the
community leaders working to con- Meigs mines will close. The corpovince AEP to install scrubbing ration has until this summer to
technology at the James M. Gavin make a decision.
power plant in Cheshire will work
Trumka painted a gloomy ecowith AEP to,achieve that goal.
nomic and social picture of the
Installation of the scrubbers at immediate area and southeastern
Gavin will maintain the Jobs of Ohio in general should the mines
employees of Southern Oh1o Coal close. He also blasted the conCo.'s Meigs mines, which supply . tention that in place of the mines,

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SAYS IT IS TIME TO ACT • State Rep.
Jerry Krupinski, D·Steubenville, tells reporters
action must be taken now on the clean coal issue
during Sunday's coal miner's rally in the Gal-

lipolis Public Square. On rigbt talking to area
miners (wblte , shirt) is UMWA President
Ricbard Trumka,

Action must be taken now on
clean coal issue: Krupinski
.

'.

jobs .will be created in othe:r states
and industtial development offer·
ing the area's workforce lowerpayinj! jobs will take root, to
underlme his point.
He added that based on what
he's read and heard about AEP's
position on the issue, he believes
the corporation isn' t interested in
clean coal technology to make
Ohio's high-sulfur coal more
usable and environmentally safe.
"Let's talk about how much
families will be able to spend on
clothing, to eat in restaurants in
Gallipolis, to buy a new home, or
send their lcids to school," Trumka
said, his voice rising with emotion.

"Let's talk about an Ohio where will leave an Ohio to the future
more of our sons and daughters generation unlike the one its par·
pack everything they own into a U· ents left them, .the UMW A chief
Haul and go to Texas or Florida to said, "and that's why it's high time
- absolutely high tune - to fight
fmdajob.
"Why should that be?" Trumka back and Ieick the crap out of the
asked. "Because someone in a people who want to Ieick the ecoskyscraper in downtown Coliunbus nomic crap out of us."
Trumka, who has led the
decided to ignore research that
nation's
unionized miners for nearshows that clean coal technology is
ly
a
decade,
was the main speaker
good business sense. They chose to
at
the
rally,
in which community
ignore the one study, and that being
union
representatites and
leaders,
from tlle Public Utilities Commisstate
and
federallegislatott,
includ·
sion ot Ohio, which said that saving
U.S.
Rep.
Clare""c
!1,
Miller,
ing jobs is not only morally right, ·
spoke for nearly two hb\111,
but the cheapest route to go."
Miller, whose Tentll CongresClosing the mines and its cumu·
lative effect on the mining industry
Conlinued on page 3 .

Coal bill
awaits
action

MRS •. ALLISON'S

'

A lluiUmedlo Inc. Newop.oper

It's up to AEP to do its part: Trumka ·

ECKRICH

$

1 Section, 10 P~gM 25 cente

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 24,1991

Copyrlghr.d 19111

Cheese ••••••••••••••••~. $1 89
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF ·

•

•

~

Clear tonight. Low near
65. Tuesday, sunny.

A state legislator actively
involved in offering incentives
to utilities to use clean coal
technology feels action must be
taken soon on legislation now
before the House of Represenratives which could help save
Ohio mining jobs.
"We're running out of time
and something has to be done
this week," State R.ep . Jerry
Krupinski, D·Steubenville, told
The Daily Sentinel and Gallipolis Daily Tribune following a
rally Sunday in the Gallipolis
City Park.
Krupinslci referred to Senate
Bill 143, which cleared the Senate 32-1 and offers utilities a tax
break if they employ scrubbers
and other technology designed
to clean Ohio coal. The bill, cosponsored by Sens. RobertNey,
R-Barnesville, and Robert
Burch, 0-0over, goes to the
House Public Utilities Commit·
tee this week for deliberation.
Krupinski, himself a former
miner, led a special committee
which conducted extensive hearings on the clean coal issue. He
authored a House bill providing
breaks to utilities, but the bill
was blocked and no progress
was made until S.B. 143, which

.

•

incorporated much of Krupinslci's bill, was approved.
While
Gov.
George
Voinovich and House Speaker
Vern Riffe have voiced misgivings over the bill, Ney was optimistic last week that the bill
would gamer enough bipartisan
support in the House and win
approval. Voinovich said he has
unspeeified concerns about the
bill, but did give it his endorse·
ment
··
The bill and Krupinski's
work is considered a key to
keeping more than I ,250
employees at Southern Ohio
Coal Co.'s Meigs mining complex employed. Coal dug at the
mines is the fuel source for
American Electric Power
Corp.'s Gen. James M. Gavin
power plant at Cheshire. To
conform with the dicrates of the
Clean Air Act, AEP is currently
considering either scrubbers-at
Gavin or the the purchase of
out-of-state,low-sulfur coal.
"No one knows at this point
what the legislation will turn out
to be," Krupinski said, refming
to possible changes in S.B. 143
worked out in the House committee. "The legislation in its

present form will the be the
least-cost in terms of the overall
picture. If AEP doesn't choose
the least-cost alternative, they
will have to prove it to everyone. And I don't think they ean
do it if S.B. 143 is passed in its
present form."
Krupinski was also critical of
what he called AEP's "boycott"
of the legislative efforts. ·
"I think they've waited too
long to become a player in the
procedure," he said.
The Public Utilities Committee is to begin considering the
biU by the middle of this week.
AEP has announced it will make
a final decision on the use of
scrubbers or western coal by this
summer.
Krupinsld was one of several
speakers at the rally, organized
by the members at the Meigs
mines and community leaders.
The rally drew more than 500

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
&lt;;OLUM~US, Ohio (AP) Ohto's Legislature, which has
moved in spurts this year, swings
into full gear this week with a state
budget deadline approaching and
hearings scheduled on a variety of
other big bills.
A Senate-House conference
committee met behind closed doors
. !lllllt\&amp; at ~t lll!ft of-~ we4ell!l
6n the $27 billion, two-year budget. Progress was reported to be
slow, however.
The Democratic House and
Republican Senate approved vastly
different versions of the document
that the srate must have by July I in
order to pay its employees and
meet other ongoing obligations.
An interim budget, providing
exua time, has been mentioned as a
· possibility. But leaders called it an
undesirable option that could focus
national attention on Ohio and
damage its credit rating.
Meanwhile, the Senate Health
and Human Services Committee
scheduled its first hearing Wednes·
' day on a House bill requiring
women seeking an abortion to be
informed of risks and other options
at least 24 hours in advance.
Testimony is expected to be
limited primarily to a presentation
by the sponscr, Rep. Jerome Luebbers, D-Cincinnati, whose bill
passed the House earlier this month
with more than SO co-sponsors.
Rep. Frank Sawyer, D-Mansfield, who heads the House Public
Utilities Committee, said his panel
will hear more testimony and vote
Wednesday on a long-debated bill
affecting utilities and Ohio's coal
industry.
'
Under that Senate-passed pro-

·

CHALLENGES AEP • Richard Trumka, president of the
United Mine Workers ot America, told approximately 500 lndivid·
uals attending a miner's ·nlly in the Gallipolis PubUc Square Sun·
day that It is now up to American Electric Power Corp., to do Its
part to save jobs for coal miners in southern Ohio.

•

posal, utilities could qualify for tax
breaks by installing scrubbers per·
mitting the use of Ohio's high-sui·
fur coal instead of switching to
cleaner coal fipm other states.
Ohio's utilities are being forced
to consider those options as a
means.of complying w1th the federal CleAn Air Act, and the already
troubled Ohio coal industry says
the bill offers its only hope of survival.
In other matters this week, the
House Commerce and Labor Com·
mittee scheduled for Tuesday
another hearing and possible vote
on a bill prohibiting Ohio's local
governments from enacting gun ·
control ordinances.
As introduced, the measure
sponsored by Rep. ~ark Malone, ·

0-South Pomt, woul[J repeal exiSt· ·
ing ordinances in several Ohio
cities. Gov. George Voinovich, a
former mayor Cleveland, has indi·
cated he would veto any bill that .
repealed that city's gun law.
In other action, the House is
expected to reject Senate amendmen!$ to a bill allowing the state ~
and its local subdivisions to issue ·
bonds to assist in the financing of
private housing.
The !lOusing bill was authorized
by a constitutional amendment
adopted by Ohio's voters last fall.
Sponsors of the bill ho~ to reoolve
issues that include a dilemma over
the financing of a trust fund that
could qualify the state for federal
dollars.

Doctors are urged to cut health costs

CffiCAGO (AP) - Health Sec·
retary Louis Sullivan says Ameri ·
cans will push harder for nationalized health insurance unless doc tors curb soaring costs and improve
the availability of care.
"Unless we act now to meet
these goals, we could find ourselves with a critical mass of our
citizens demanding a total government takeover of health care," Sulbill we fashioned in the
livan warned doctors Sunday at the
House was carefully balanced
opening of t()e American Medical
and researched with all concerns
Association's annual meetin$.
in mind," Krupinski told the
"l doubt that many in th1s room
crowd. "The bottom line is, it
today would welcome that developwill be balanced and .fair to
ment," he said .
everyone."
Sullivan said health care
accounted for 12 percent of the
gross national product last year or about $2,500 for every man,
woman and child. The cost is the
highest in the world.
"As Americans, as well as
physicians,
we must be concerned
libraries.
that
conswning
ever larger portions
Anderson reponed that Exten·
of
ONP
on
health
care necessarily
sion Services·Librarian Leah Grif·
diverts
resources
from
other good
fith and he held a successful meet·
uses
for
example,
increased
ing with tbe Muslcingum County
wages,
savings,
capital
investment,
Library System to renew their
Books by Mail contraeL Andc:non research and development and
hopes to have contracts. for the human services such u drua reba·
OVAL Board to approve at the July bilitation, foster care and lamily
support." Sullivan aid.
meeting.
·Sullivan made a passing rofer·
A policy to eliminate staff
schedulinp: problems when Book- ence to AIDS when he called for
inc!QSed emphasis on individuals
Continued on page 3

accepting responsibility for their
own health, Including curtailing
sexual· practices that can spread
AIDS. He also cited improved diet,
childhood vaccinations, early pre-

natal care and elimination of illegal
drugs and tobacco as ways to
improve overall health.
AIDS is expected to be a major
Continued on page 3

~l!fi~

Area legislators support OVAL
An update on the funding crisis
for both the Ohio Valley Area
Libraries (OVAL). and the public
libraries was given by Eric S.
Anderson, OVAL director, at a
meeting held Thursday in Wellston.
Anderson reported that there is
strong support from area legislators
for both issues although the matter
S1ill rests in the hands of the Confere~ ~ommiuee. That commit·
tee IS composed of'three Senators

and three Representatives who are
worlcing on a compromise budget
which will be acceptable to both
the Senate and the House.
"The biggest threat to the
improvement of public libraries,"
Anderson comffi!lnted, "is taking
public library monies to fund State
Library operations." Anderson
asked Board memben to contact
tbe Conference Committee and
express the impact the proposed
changes would have on their

AND AWAY THEY GO! -Two racers In the ftnt Melp County Soapbox Derby fire out ol the blocks and bead dOWII the tr.ck In
the first leg o1 the nee Sunday in Middleport, wblcb Adam Brown
won. For the story 1Dd additional photos, see Pa1e 5. (Sentinel
photo by Brilll Reed)

�( r
'

.
Monday, June 24, 1991

Commentary
'T he .Daily Sent~nel
U1

'
eo.n Street

•-•nJ,Olllo
DBVO'I'BD TO TIIIIIN'JDII8TI OF THE MEIGS· MASON ABEA
.Ml.I.TMDIA.INC.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manaa;er

PAT WRI'I'EREAD
ArtJ

Iloll&amp; hllliUer/Controller

A MEMB£a of The Aaaoclated Presa, Inland Dally Press AssoCiation ad !be American NewiPAJII!{ Publishers Association .

LI:'I"I'I:IUI OF OPINION are 'lftlcome. Tbey should be less than 300
-1'111 10111. All ~ are lllbJeel to editing and must be staned with

..,.., 'U1- a4 ttlepkoDl aumber. No unsigned letters will be pub1....... Lenenlllauld lletaaoocl tute, addresalaglsaues. not personal!·
!leo.

:Letter.s to the ~ditor

---

'·-----------~----------·

Vll.NIUS, Lithuania - Soviet
Paratrooper Unit 450 is practicing
at a secret base in Russia for what
might be a second attempt to mount
a .coup against the democratically
elected government in this Baltic
republic.
.
The paratrooper unit, to~ether
· with key paratrooper divuions
from the City of Pskov ill Russia,
are being stolced by speeches 011 the
need.to suppress the national separatist movement in Lithuania.
according to intelligence sources.
The ~sence of these paratrooper divistons raises the specier of a
repeat of "Bloody Sunday" when
soldiers lrilled at least 14 unarmed
demonstrators in seizing a 1,100foot television tower last Jan. 14. It
was part of an overall effort to
muzzle Lithuania's independenceminded media. .
Lithuanians remember thai at

I :30 a.m. the paratrooper units in
light tanks and annored persoanel
carriers rolled up Cosmonaut
Avenue and up the hill 10 the
tower, which was roughly banicaded with cars, furniture and hun.dreds of unarmed human beings.
The stunned crowd hadn't expected
them to roll right over everything,
including demonstrators at the
front, without wiKoing. Among the
casualties was a high school senior
shot in the forehead, and a 22-yearold conscript in lhe Soviet Navy
who had just returned two months
before from submarine duty.
President Bush last week granted $1.5 billion in agricullural credits to the Soviets, who have asked
for approximately $100 billion in
aid. Baltic leaders are adamantly
opoosed to such a bailout until the
reform pr~s has sunk its roots
deeper, and believe thai the money
only serves to sustain Stalinist elements within the govemmenL
Radical reformist Boris Yeltsin,
who was recently elected the first
president of the Russian repul!lic,
was scheduled to meet with Bush at
coal to energize elecaic plants?
the Wbire House yesterday. Yeltsin
Both protect ratepayers 'by has backed the Baltic's indepenrequiring our elecaic utility compa- dence movement, and is the darling
nies to choose LEAST-COST com- of its people.
pliance measures · for Phase I
· The lurking threat of a move
(1995) emission reductions. These against the Baltics underscores a
Clean Air Act compliance plans paradox of perestroika: Even as the
would have to meet certain criteria Communist Party's iron grip on the
a1 a Publjc Utilities CQIIUIIission of vast Russian republic is breaking, il
Ohio review· to ensure they are rea- may reassert itself elsewhere in lhe
sonable and LEAST COST.
Soviet empire. The man at the cenBotll bills require the use of ter of lhe paradox is Soviet PresiOhio coal to. the maximum exrent dent (and, ironically, recent Nobel
possible, if such strategies arc Peace Prize winner) Mikhail GorLEAST COST. Both provide sev- bachev.
eral modest but important incenLast January, para11'00pefs were
tives 10 use Ohio coal, aimed at the iron hand of a long-developed
LOWERING THE COST of
installing Phase I compliance technologies. Taken together. the
incentives intend to make the continued use of Ohio coal an attrac·
live, LEAST COST option to meet
everyoae's concerns. Such incentives include:

Ohio. In an economic climate
which provides few high-wage
jobs, all Ohioans are concerned
llbout high electric bills their own
and their company's.
The strategies employed by
Ohio utilities to meet the new
Clean Air Act acid rain emission
limits also directly threatell the role
of coal as a vital link to the Ohio
economy. Ohio coal is an abundint, highly energy efficient. cheap
fueiiiiiii'CII to light our homes ud
offices and power our factories.
But market demud for Ohio-pro.
duced coal, with its high sulfur
ICid I'IID.
content, has fallen 44X due to the
WMn the U.S. Congreu acled · constraints 10 its use under the
on an initiative from President 1970 federal Clean Air Act.
Bulb llld FUI d die 1990 amend· Appalachian counties already sufmellll10 die Celli /lit Act liSt fall, fer from the effects of closed
, they AllUred dial we will have mines, where poverty ra1e increases
cleaner lir u aiiiP pra.
are much higher than in the rest of
Of special n the new the state, except for Ashtabula
requiiemalllto r.tuce sulfur diox- County. Ohio coal mining employide (S02) emlg!C. acid nin at ment was 14,638 in 1980, and
our 1lecttic aueratina stations, declined to 7,374 by 1989.
which wUI increue our ·electric
Despire Ibis decrease, Ohio coal
billa lind
011 die line. Ohio .remains a vital factDr in the state's
is •pA•wl 10 Pfll ' • men than ecooomy. The 1988 direct value of
iii llwn of 1111 Mh II 10 .uiicn Ohio coal to our state's economy
, . . . . 1 d•..-.
wu:
11M- It It dalltiw oiM&amp;I•
1111·
Product value (at the mine)
• d
•
I"W"JOIII m $1,027,000,000; Wages/salaries
' tw0 ;I
IIIII 2000).
$268,000,000.
ala ll'c
plull !llroulb the
A good wage job In lhe coal
uie of 1
et·blsed ll)'stem of i.ndustry, just as a good manufacemiaioo ~. This new ~s- lUling job, suppoats seveml jobs in
tem is the key to unclentandJDg ocher scctors, such as industry and
how acid rain controls will be retail.
: undertaken. An allowance is
In addition, coal accounts for
: defiued IS u audlorizalioo, lllocat- · $2.g billion of Ohio railroad reveel to a lllpred electric utilily unit, enues. Any abandonment of rail
10 emil- 1011 of sulfur dioxide I lines due to reduced coal produc~·
lion within Ohio wiD impact Ohio
1'llt allow I ;c I)'RIIII is inlend- qriculture and other indusuy.
ed 1e n4..:e CGIII of emiuions
Switching to Western low sulfur
cOIICI'OI 81111 tbenfore reduce rate coal raises several other economic
lnCJUICI. For example, 1 utili ly and environmental concerns. While
~y Ia .,med Ill OWII:CIIIIply inCllpensive to mine, there will be
by 11-'Y "'Kill emissjgu at I increasingly higher premiums on
generatiDI plul and apply the fuel and llaDSponation costs due to
exc Ill lllow~Ka 10 offiet emil- incn:ased demand, and there is still
siolw II u 1•1 plant, tbua avoid- lite issue of reliability of a fuel supinc •irion COidnll COltS at thll ply half a cootinent away. Long rail
Oilier pluL Allowanc" can be hauls and the need to bum much
ll1lded, IOid, or ' t.S in Order to more coal, because of its lower Btu
funller Ndtice cgap''E • COlli.
content, will mean higher carbon
Ia 1 !IIOI'C I)!Kific uample, dioxide and other emissions , conAmerian lillclric Power'a Gavin tributors 10 global warming.
pl-.11 a
c. Oldo, aow emill lncraJed demand for Eastern lOW•
500,1100 IIIII fJl S02 -ually. sulfur coal would also result in
Ulldlr die PIIISe I (1995) ernissioo acceleraUid fuel · .
cap Gavin ia allocated 160,000
Advocates w~ggest it is less
al1owlncei per year. Sc:rubben at expensive to switch to low sulfur
Ga•in would n4uc:e ill current coal to meet 1995.Pbase I deadlines
:amilliODI bf 9S11o, lowering its llld install scrubben for Phase ll
:cmiaiau 10 25.000 IIIIlS, lid po1n (2000) are ignoring the direct and
ilbly pner ae'leill thousancfl of very expensive costs of mine shutIP'Cill boaalllllowiiiCa. All of downs now and the subsequent
· ~ RC Ill I n s - c:ould COSts of opening new mines SOOR
be ued 10 mild~ COlli It after. We should all be asking if
the 11 oct. Plea •·•;ultd Obio this double bit of hundreds ofmil,pllnli in lbe AliP fYIIIIOI.
lions of dollars is io be borne by
· Coal suppli" about l/2•of the rarepayer and if so, is this reaDy
:Ohio '1 IIIIa! .ern n.cb. There cheaper than scrubbers in Phase I?
·ere
JII'OIIIilinl ciJan coal
Should a third of the state's pop1 c' 1'111'", but IIIeY wiD not be ulation, the mining country of
cCIIII lrcially ready for Pbase I Southern Ohio, bear the bruni of
cOJRpllaace deadlines in 1995. new federal acid rain requirements
Howewr, flue ps deaulfurization for the entire state? I know that
ayltAis, or Mscrubbers", are a whenever an entir~ industry is '
tnowa technoton and are threatened, it is essential for the
exlletiiDly c:flicient at ranoving95- Ohio General Assembly to
97 of die sulfur content in coli. reiJ)Ond.
AllllouP apellli¥e technology,
l sponsored House Bill 370 as a
~enaltben •ay be lite LBASTcarefully balanced, reasonable,
COST op1io11 under 1bo allowance LEAST·COST proposal in
. . . . .,...._
~use 10 all of these concerns.
Lui 11111aer, House Speaker This legislation would establish a
Vera JWr1110pPiMCI die implica- process fcir leSiing a utility compaliou of allele and llrinJent ny' s Phase I acid rain strategy
W r'
I tk far c"aner 11r 10 before the appropriate regulatory
Obio •d appoilllld IJie Ohio body, the Public Utilities CommisHolde Select c-iaee on the sion of Ohio, to ensure that lhe
Federal Ca.. Air Act, wllich I strategy is a utility's LEAST
lldW IIIIa ,.mllllllllll cllair. The COSTLY option, and provide for
Selac:t C..Uaee'a mucllte has the coatinued use of Ohio coal if
IIIIa 101wlp OlliD J:l'*d die envi- that is found to be consisrenl with
;wliill ' mJo M'l tile COlt this LEAST COST goal.
lbr Ill _. d" 1 ... 10 - Senator Robert Ney (R·DiSirict
V 1 CCIII II hJ fjia.- 20) inlrodncecl identicallegislatioa,
· 1fab 80 •I 1 ....,.0. of Sawe Bill143, in the Ohio Senate.
wlllltD•R • n taten, eiKiric There are some differences
will die wlwa tiw. new 1101· between the cunent subltitute bills
1111111 co Js1 n in ,.._ Olllo'a IUid the final version of a bill has
•
t 1 ;, -twa. IIIII llli· . yet to be determined. However,
d I A
. . . . ' II. .• 111011 o( the proviaiolll of both bills
ably IIUioa MCIIIl hlp electric in their cmrenl form are limillw.
... e I , wliclt iDIIIt . . . . .le
How do thele JXIlfJO'I'I• protect
wiD
$1111Dion Mans our environment and baluce the
lfiCIIIrinc CODAIHI aboul ODe· COIICCrns of those who pay for elecllalf ol lite elel:lric enaay 111ea in lricity ud diose who supply Ohio
a

a

·,,. - =
• •-•
!{'"
.,~....

I

I

rMm

I

••J

.lr'
I

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

•

rile-.._

•'

By The Auocllled Preu
Forec.,ters say Ohioans will
enJoy one more clly of cooler ud
drier weather before hot and humid
conditions rewm.
The National 'Weather Service
forecast for Tuesday calls for mostly sunny skies and highs ranging
from the mid-70s to mid-80s. After
that, !here will be at least three
straight days with temperatures in
the 90s.
Overoighl lows today were a
pleasant mid-50s to mid-60s and
dippc;d to near 50 at Ydungstown.

IMansfield I es•l•
IND.

fear it will be paid again in the loss
of life and freedom.
CRACKING A COCAINE
CARTEL~ Pablo Escobar; the
king of Colombia's drug cartels,
has agreed 10 surrender to Colombian authorities. Officials in
Colombia are proclaiming this .
development as evidence of their
advances in the war on drugs. But
some U.S. officials say that Escobar is no longer the top cocaine
baron in Colombia and the violent
Medellin cartel, which rerrorized
Colombia for years, has been'
eclipsed by \Ui~ter competitors in
that country.
obar wiO jmbably
still be 'able to manage his drug
business from his plush estate
where he has a11reed to be
"jailed." But his rem of violence
has probably come to u end.
MINI-EDITORIAL- After
more than a year-long investigation
costing lllll.payers $2 million, the
Senate is dragging its feet on acting
on recommendations by the Ethics
Committee in the case against the
Keating Five. Only Sen. Alan
Cranston, D-Calif., faces dis'ciplinary action for his role in going
to hal for former savings and loan
executive Charles H. Keati11g Jr.,
who donated nearly .$1 million to
Cranston and his political causes.
The Senate must vote on action
against the former Majority Whip
but is showing reluctance to disc;ipline one of their own.
Copyright, 1991, Uniled Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Qa ,
•I Columbus I 67"1

It's up to ...

..,-------Weather----South Central Ohio

Tonight, mostly clear. Low near
.' 65. Tuesday, partly sunny. High
. hear 85. Chance of rain 20 percenL

..

.

.

:- ,.-· --Local briefs--.,.

Police probe weekend B&amp;E

,.

A brealdng and entering 'at the Stanley Lambert residence a1 103
Peacock Ave., Pomeroy, over the weekend is under investigatioo by
Pomeroy Police.
According to the report, several items were taken from the house
!IRd the back of a piclrup truck parked in the driveway. Items missmg include three extension cords,- some car pieces, a 13 inch
wrench, 40 foot of copper pipe, and a Homelire weedeater.
Police are also investigating a bicycle accident which occurred
on West Main Saturday. Owned by Chris Rayburn, Pomeroy, the
bicycle had front wheel, handlebar and fork damage when it was
struck by a van pu]Jing from a parting place. Police said that Rayburn had parked his 6icycle in front of Kelly's Comer, and that
someone moved it into a parking place several feel down from the
comer in front of the van.
·

'

Man cited in l-ear wreck

-Using the market-based
allowance system and advanced
technological means to LOWER
COSTS of pollution controls.
-Lowenng the capital costs of
scrubbers by (I) jmviding for earlier
recov!l':Y of conslruction costs; (2)
qualifying for SJl.CCial cletn\:iation
expense; ud {3) lower· inlerest
bond rates.
-Removing current regulatory
impediments lo siting scrubber
landfills.
-Elt8lllining statewide socioeconofl!iC impacts if the utility's plan
displaces Ohio coal. Although
harder to measure, these costs are

The record high temperature for
this date al the Columbus weather
SUition was 97 degrees in 1914.
The record low was 46 in 1982.
Su11rise this morning was at
6:03 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:04
p.m.
Around the natioll
Rain feU in the Northwest quar- ·
· ter of the naticn early today, while
a wide band of mostly clear slries
stretched floom Arizona to New
England.
It rained this morning in parts of
Nebraska - which has been bat-

.

A Porlland man was ciled for failure to control Sanuday evening
foUowing a one-car IICcident on Chesler Township Road 126.
Michael L. Conley, 24, of Main Street, was cited after his car left
lhe roadway and struck a tree. According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs post of the Slate ffi~~bway Patrol, Conley was southbound
when he drove his 1986 Ponuac Grand Am off the left side of the
roadway. The vehicle then sllUck a tree, resulting in moderale damage to the car.
.' , C09Jey was not injured~. His passeoger;..James L. Allen, 39, or
Portlliid, was also unhurt

The Lancaster Republican
issued a call to "crown coal Iring"
and "end our self-imposed appeal
to foreign oil barons, who view us
as easy pickings."
"My message is as emP.hatic as
it is sincere: save jobs," Miller said
''Coal is the key to success, not to
failure. There are many things in
the aean ·Air Acl I suppon, but I
cannot support any bill which puts
our miners 001 of work. I wiD con•
tinue to keep
.
coal and your J'obs at
the center of everything I do. You
will be remembered."
U.S. Rep. Bob Wise, O.W.Va.,
unable to attend the mlly, sent a letter which was read to the crowd· by
Jack Fowler, Cllecutive vice presldent of the Gallia County Community Improvement Corporation,
who was master of ceremonies for
. ••• .
theevenL
. Continued from page 1
, In the letter, Wise said work
mobile runs are cance1ea was : needs to be done to re-tool the
adopted ~ proposed by lhe person- Clean Air Act, but felt the region
net conumttee.
and mining could stilt' come out
Paul Stenson, representing the ahead.
Nelsonville Public Library was
"If the decision is made to
approved by the Board to attend the switch to technology, thousands of
American Library. Association jobs will be saved," Wise said "It's
Annual Conference II! ~ta Delli important not only for the local
week. Stenson Y-'111 JOm Jay economy, but in malting our nation
Brusharl from Sctoto &lt;;ounty as less dependent on foreign energy
OVAL Board representanves.
sources.•
Established in 1973 as the first
The crowd also heard from Stare
state·fWK!ed reB!onal pablic library Rep. Jerry Krupinski, Dsystem m Ohio, today OVAL Steubenville who authored a
a.dmin!slers lhr!lugh local public House biD offering tall. incentives
libraries a vanety of programs to utilities employing scrubbers
designed to improve and extend and State Sen. Roben Burch, D;
services to \ocal residents.
.
Dover, co-sponsor of Senate Bill
. O'fA~ 1s made !!P of pub he 143, which offers lhc same breaks
libran~ m the counues of Athens,
to utilities, which passed will! nearHockmg, Jackson, Law.rence , ly unanimous support. That bill is
Meigs, Pickaway, Pike, Ross, presently in committee in the
Scioto and Vinton . ~he OV ~L House. (See r,elated story).
Board of Trustees, which conSISts
Krupinslri said coal is critical to
of one trustee from each member the energy security of the nation
public library board, determines
policy, controls finances, and
makes final decisioa on what serContinued lrom page 1
vices wiD be offeled.
Wanda BbUn Mfves on ~he issue at the ~yenUOII.
Whether AIDS-infected healthOVAL Board and represents the
Mei&amp;s County Public Library.
· care workers should face wort
restrictions is among the issues to
come before the 300,()()().member,
AMA 's policy making House of
Delegates. It is also to dis~uss
whether docton should have regular AIDS tests.

D octors...

We need to continue our investment in clean coal technologies to
bring them to commercial acale. In
lhe loag run, we can use our native
fossil fuel more efficiently, more
economically, and give much beUer
protection to our air and land ud
water than the Clean Air Act acid
rain mandates leqUire.
I hope this letter is helpful information for you to understand the
complexity of 1be issues ud the
importance of legislative ICiioa to
addrw all c:oncems. Public policy·
maten need ... informed electorate
who can join them in support of
choices that benefit everyone.
Thank you for your time ud
can~ful consideration of this maatr.
Please feel free to contact my
olfice 11 (614) 466-3735 uy questions you may have.
Jerry w. Krupinski
Slate Repesenwive
98th House DiSirict

Am Ele Power ..................28 1/8
Ashland Oil ..................... .30 7/8
AT&amp;T.............•....•••...••.•.•.•37 7/8
Bob Evans ........................ 17 S/8
Charming Shop.................2! 3/4
City Holding .....................14 3/4
Federal Mogul ................... l8
Goodyear T &amp;R .... ............ .33 1/4
Key Centurion ................. .13 3/4
Lands' End ........ ,..............21 518
Limited Inc....................:-.-:28 318
Multiinedia inc .................29 !(2
Rax Rcstaurant .................9/16
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .32
Shoney's Inc ..................... 16
Star Bank ..........................22
Wendy int'l... .....................9 7/8
Wonhingwn Ind...............26

First Amendment - down,
but nOt OUt
ByJosephSpear
If I were to give an award for
lhe Survivor of the Century, the
unconditional, straight-out, handsdown winner would be the First
Amendment 'I? the U.S. C~nstitulil!n. I ca~ thmk of no Object aruma!, mineral, vegetable or plastic - which has withstood such an
u~relieved onslaught from politictans, wowsers and do-gooders as
these 45 precious words.
AI the tum of the cen~, a rash
of federal and state. sed1bon laws
were pas~ to. curtail the crusades
of labor ~ruon1sts. Then carne the
1917 Espionage Act, then the 1920
"Palmer raids,." and .~bscenity
laws, and warume sedi~on laws,
and McCarthy, and atomic secrets
laws, and gag laws, and the Pen ta~on Papers, and student censorsh1p- and stop me before I retch.
Still, somehow, the First
Amendmeni stands, a bit bloodied,
butalive.
. Now come the '90s and an
mtense movement on the part of
''politically correct'' persons to
!&gt;an speech that hurts peoples' feelmgs . .Seventy percent of the
nation's colleges have adopted
"speech codes" thai prohibit the
utterance of nasty remarks related
to race, gender, ethnicity or sexual
preference. The University of Connecticut, for example, auemptedto
ban "inappropriately directed
laughter, inconsiderate jokes.
anonymous notes or phone calls
and conspicuous exclusion from
conversations." (The code was
modifted, fortunarely, as a result of
legal actions.)
aosety related to speech codes
are the now-ubiquitous hate-crime
laws that have been helped along
br unscrupulous politicUUis grubbmg for votes. What's safer thai a
foursquare position against hate?
There are numerous models of such
laws, but in essence they punish
criminals more harshly when they
are motivated by bias.
It goes withou! saying th~t

Today in history
.

By The Associated Press
Today is Moriday, June 24, the 175tll day of 1991. There are 190 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On June 24, 1948, Communist forces cut off all land and water routes
between West Germany and West Berlin, prompting the Uniled States to
organize a massive airlift of supplies into the city's western sector to
counter the bloclaule.
On this date:
In 1314, the fon:es of Scotland's King Robert I defeated the English in
the Battle of Bannockburn .
In 1497, the fint recorded discovery of North America by a European ·
IDI* place as explorer John Cabot, on a voyage for England, sighled land.
probably in present-day Canada.
•
In 1S09, Henry vm was crowned king of England.
.
~

Stllck reports 11n the 10:30 11.m.

quOits proPidtd by Blulfl, Ellis

"

ATTEND RALLY· More than 500 people
attended Sunday's "save lbe coal miner's job"

11nd Loewl of Glllllpolls.

rally In tile GalllpoUs Public Square.

-------Area deaths-- Meigs EMS answers 11 calls

•

land, died Sunday, June 23, 1991,
at the Veterans Memorial Extended
'
UniL
'
~, Jestie Grace Molden,
86, Rut- Care
·
Born
in Dyesville on Oct. 20.
•
J 904, she was a daughter of the late
Thomas and Priscilla Amos Price.
She was a homemaker, a charter
member of lhe Veterans Memorial
Hospital Auxiliary, the Meigs
County Senior Citizens, and the
.Carleton Board to meet
Rutland Church of Christ.
; · The Carleton CoUege Board of
Trustees will meet Thursday at
, 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Munici·
She is survived by a cllushter,
. pal Building. All members are Dorothy Nicholson, Coolville; two
granddaughters, Mrs. Carter (Car•Jll'ged to attend.
olyn Sue) French, Kissimmee, Fla.;
' Racine AwdUary til meet
The Racine American Legion and Martie Jean Nicholson, Largo,
Auxiliary will meet Thursday at Fla.; two great·""""sons, Wayne
7:30 p.m . at the post home. A and Pat s~;"b;;u. ot Kissimreport will be given on Buclteye mee, Fla.; a btolher and sister-inlaw Arlie and Margaret Price, WorOrris State.
thington.
Women's FeUowabip to meet
The Meigs County Womon's
Besides bel" parents she was preFellowship will meet Thunday at ceded in death b)&gt; her husband,
7:30 p.m. at the Hemlock Grove Ernest Molden ill Oct. 1973; three
Church of ChriSL A lady~s qUIIIUit brothers, Chesler, Carroll and
will perform. The public il invited Orten Price, two sisters, Janice
Hutton 111d Lillie Belle Carpenter,
to attend.
ud a son-in-law, Dale Nichollon.
Plcaic planned
· The Racine American Legion
Servicea will be held WednesPost 602 will sponiOI' a picnK: on day at 1 p.m. 11 Fisher Funeral
SIIIUiclly at 11:30 Lm. ll die 11011 Home with Rev. Bill Carter and
home for memben and families. Gene Underwood officiating. BuriThe
I will fumisb diD melt and al will be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
Members brine a CO¥ered
home
on Tuesday from 2-4 p.m.
Clisb. All membe11 aro urccd to
and
7-9p.m.
IIICild

·Jestie Molden

:·.Meigs
:announcements

c!rin:.'
!).

.

·- - - -

A rea

Stocks

--------------------~--~~~~~
· insensitive people are obnoxious for burning a cross at the home of a
boors and racists are abominable black family. The perpelrator has
creatures. But should the First already been tiled for assault. The
Amendment be watered down lo hare-crime charge is exira punish~et at them? There are very few
ment for the nature of the ac1.
mcidents of hale-mongering that
Sitting on the current Court are
cannot be addressed with laws that a black. a justice of Italian exlracdo not infringe on free speech ti!l'l, at least one of Irish ancestry.
trespass, arson, open-air burning, F1ve have authoritarian tendencies.
defacing public propeny, disturb- Will they be able to put aside their
ing the peace, nuisance, zoning and personal peeves and serve the
time, place and manner resaiclions. peater callse of freedom by declarWhy abuse the Constitutioo?
mg speech codes and hate-crime
. Think on it: Any restriction on laws unconstitutional? Do they
speech would require that someone have the guts of the late Justice
be anointed to make iud11ments as William 0. Douglas, who wrote
to what iS acceptable. Where would these words in a 1949 case involvthe line be drawn? Would a person ing a Catholic priest who incited a
who speaks against affirmative riot by attacking "atheistic, comaction be hauled in for making munistic Zionist Jews (and)
racist remarks? Speech is either Negroes" :
free or it isn't. There are no in. "A function of free speech
betweens. The price of freedom is under our system of government is
tolerating the offensive.
to invire dispute. It may indeed best
Recently, the U.S . Supreme serve its high purposes when it
Court accepted a case thai address- induces a condition of unrest, crees all these issues and the possible ates dissalisfaction with coaditions
outcome curdles the blood of those, as they are, or even stirs people to
like myself, who regard the First anger."
Amendment as but a step removed
Will this be the assault that does
from Holy Writ. R.A.V. v. St. Paul. !n the First Amendment? I'm prayinvolves a white teen-ager who was mg -wherever it's constitutional
charged with a hate-crime violation to do so, of course.

r

sissippi, Alabama, Georgia, Aorida
and the Carolinas.
High ICmperatures were expecteel in the 60s and 70s in the Northwest and New England; the 70s in
the Great Lakes region, along lbe
California coast and in most of the
Northeast; the 80s through most of
the Midwest, in the mid-Atlantic
states and in the Centtal Plains; the
90s in the South; and over 100 in
southern Arizona, southern New
Mexico and the Texas panhandle.
The high for the nation Sunday
was 107 degrees at Presidio, Texas.

Continuedfrompagel

real.

-Providing a savings to ratepayers through a utility excise tax
credit for Ohio coal. This modest
lax credit, has to be balanced
against the potential loss to state
income if more mines close, both
in terms of lost payroll lllll.es and
increased costs of unemployment,
rettaining, welfare, alid health and
· pension fund lossea, as weD as the
loss of jobs in other sectors.
A much discussed issue is
whether AEP will continue to operate its ·company-owned mines, such
as the Metgs mines, which supply
coal to the Gavin planL The decision to close these mines and
import out-of-state tow sulfur coal.
or to install scrubbers that will
allow the mines to continue operating, is a decision the company will
have to make. It is my hope that a
fmal bill would encourage AEP to
install scrubbers at the Gavin plant
as a pari of their compliance Slrate·
gy, for without them the Meigs
mines wiD close.
Abandoning coal as a fuel
source is to turn our backs on
Ohio's second (next to willa") most
abundant native resource. America
11M more coal !han the Mideast has
oil and gas. Our industrial society
should be energized by our native
fuels and be less dependent on foreign oil. Such a public policy protects our national security interests
by makinl! America less wlnerable
to the whims of Middle East dictators and potentates. .

tered for weeks by severe thunder8nd in parts of Idaho and
California
·
. On Sunday, the Southern Plains
took a thunderstomi beating. Golf
ball-sized hail was reported in the
Texas panhandle and winds gusting
up to 62 mph were recorded in
Oklahoma.
Forecasters said storms were
likely later today in Washington
state, Oregon , Montana, North
Dakota, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming,
Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas,
Texas, Ken~. Tennessee, Misstorms -

sional Disaict includes Gallia and
Meigs counties, criticized passage
of the Clean Air Act as its stood,
noting it "grabbed both the baby
and the bath water" and reacled too
.strongly to the claim that acid rain
- which Gavin has been accused
of contributing to signiflClliltly _
is the primary cause of environmental distress in lhe eastern states.
A
· 1 d
congreSSiona stu y was to
Ice · Sunny PI, Cloudy Cloudy
prove that aciq rain was not the
hazard it's been cracked up to be,
Miller said, "and Congress, as
usual, in its rush to please everyone, ended up pleasmg no one. I
Extended forecast:
voted against the Clean Air Act,
Wednaclay throulh Friday:
and if it were trolled out again
Fair. Highs in the~- Lows in
loday, I would oppose it just as
the 60s Wednesday and 65 -75 strongly."
Thursday and Friday.

Oiila.d.

a

put"

.._

plot, prol)ably by the KGB and
apl'!llved by Gorbachev, in which
strife was sown using non-Lithuanians, with the milirary then moving in on cue to restore order.
That's the consensus of political
officials here, as well as intelligence sow:ces in Washington. '
The Soviet Defense Ministry
warned on Jan. 7 that they would
be sending elite paratrooper units
to Vilnius - but for the purpose of
rounding up draft dodgers. The
next day, a pro-Soviet group made
up of hardened Communists from
among the substantial minority of
Russians and Poles here tried to
storm the democratic Parliament
during a rowdy demonstration
against price hikes. They were successfully resisted by pro-independence demonstrators a1 the scene.
Then-Lilhuanian Prime Minisrer
Kazimier Prunsldene was meeting
with Gorbachev in Moscow. As she
was leaving the Kremlin,. he
.instructed her to "Go back home
and restore order. Otherwise I will
be obliged to do the job myself."
She asked him whether she could
assure her people that force would
not be used against Lithuanians.
"You cannot give them any
assurances that I have not given
you," he told her ominously.
Her government fell on her
return when the parliament rejected
200 to 300 percent price hilces: In
the confusion, Moscow seized the
moment. The timing was perfect all
around: President Bush would soon
be distracted with the Jan. 16
launching of the war against Iraq
and would continue to need Gorbachev' s support.
The price Lithuania paid for that
U.S. suppon was steep. And many

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-3

Hot, humid weather heading for Ohio

r

Soviets trying t,o tighten grip on Baltics

Area'sfuture at stake! ·

Dear Editor:
' As die Obio lclillalure JelpOIIds
: to lbe- fedenfCielll Air Act, I
: believe it is esaealial dill you and
· your r ':n bi1IC llflliJbt informatioa 10 mer- your uadentanding
of die eoUIIIiiiiidy compkulid diffi.
c:ult lllua.illvolYed ill dlele diacus' sioas.
'Ibis leae, is lila&amp; llld I've tried
10 slice it 125 different waya. but
eacl pill ia IS impodaDIIS die othen. I . . you 10 biSr wilb me and
Miuully " ..... priDdrla it ill ita
eERiy IS I service 10 yoar laden
ill iiillf'llt of legisJ"ive action oo

01110 w~:dlli•

Page 2 The Dally SenUnet
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, June 24, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units answered 11
calls for assistance from Saturday
afternoon to Monday morning.
On Saturday 81 1:08 p.m., Middleport squad responded to the station for Robert Forrester, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. AI 9:09 p.m., Middleport unit
went lo Cole Street. Julie Farley
was transported 10 Veterans. AI
II :55 p.m.. Pomeroy squad went to
Locust Street Christopher Rayburn
was taken to Veterans.
On Sunday at 12:45 a.m., Middleport unit went to South Second
Street. Homer Moodispaugh was
trealed but noi transported. At 7: 16
a.m., Moodispaugh was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. At 11:49
a.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Stale

MILLER CRITICIZES CLEAN AIR ACT • Cong. Clarence
E. MUter, Lancaster, R-lOtb District, crilicizec! passage of the
Clean Air Acl as It sllnda during Sunday's coal miner's rally in
the Gallipolis Public Square.
and said ii "seems absurd to ignore CIO, while Fowler praised Bill
these rich resources as it lies in the Oiler of the UMW A Local 1886
ground, untapped. • While the political action committee for his
Clean Air Act is admirable in pur- work in supporting scrubbers and
pose, its provisions place an unfair for organizing the mlly.
burden on southeastern Ohio and
Union speaters voiced support
its way of life; he added
was also· voiced for worlcers
. "If we don't respond positively, involved in labor disputes at
there won't be anyone left to enjoy Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. in
all !his clean air, and a legacy will Jackson County, W.Va., and at
be lost." Krupinski said. "This is O'Bieness Memorial Hospital in
ludicrous, and we will not let it Athens. A number of United Steelhappen ... We simply cannot be put workers of America members from
down into the grave the federal RAC attended the mlly.
government has dug for us."
Burch noted that the eyes of
every conscious working person in
The Daily Sentinel
the state were on Gallipolis Sunday
' (USPS 14Mt0)
and will shift their focus to ColumA Dtv ..IOII or Multlmedhll,lne.
bus this week as the House prepares 10 vore on S.B. 143.
Published every afternoon, Monda,Y
through Friday, 111 COurt St., Po·
"Miners in eastern and southern
mero)', Ohio, by lhe Ohio Valley PubOhio worked long hours to give
lishing Company/Multimedia. Inc.,
people in Cleveland low-cost
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21:16. Second class postage paid at Pomeray,
mdustrial power." Burch said.
Ohio.
"Without you, there would be no
Member: The Assodated Preu, In·
industrial giant called Ohio."
land Dally Press Association and rhe
Slate Sen. Jan Michael Long, DOhio Newspaper AlilsoclaUon . National
Circleville, urged unity and comAdvertising Rfpresentatlve, Branham
NNspap« SalE'S, 733 Third Avenue,
mitment to win lhe batlle for scrubNew York, New York 10017.
bers, while State Rep. Mary Abel.
D-Athens, said every voice IS needI'OSTMASTEII: Send address chan"""
to 1'11• Dally Sentinl!l, Ill Court St ..
ed 10 demand thai AEP "let us
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
know what you are planning to
do."

SVIIIICRIP'nON RATES

Also speating at the mlly was
Mark Canfora, BarbefU)n, director
of lhe Ohio Coal Industry Suppliers
and Vendors Associatioa, who told
the crowd that the loss of the Meigs
Mines and the resulting effect on
mining in Ohio will be disastrous
to the numerous businesses that
support mines.
Canfora said mining generated
more than $1 billion over the last
I0 years for support services ranging from trucldn~ to legal services.
In 1990 alone, mminll crealed $100
million for those services.
"We will not stand for a loss
lilce thai," Canfora said.
The crowd 11lso heard from
George Curtin and LaiTy MitcheU,
staff representatives for the AFL-

Street. John McKenzie was talcen
to VetelllllS.
· At 2:24 p.m., Tuppers Plains
unit was sent to Coolville Road.
Daisy Caner was transported to
Vererans. At 3:56p.m., Racine unit
went to Apple GrovCsDortas Road.
Tessie Wolfe went to VeteranS. AI
10:13 p.m., Pomeroy to Butternut
Brian Nite to Vetenms.
On Monday at 1:18 a.m., Rutland squad went to Mei~J!~ 2.
Fred Ward was taken 10
• AI
3:23 a.m., Middleport squad went
to Custer Street for Penny Pridemor, who went to Holzer Medical
Center.

Hospital news
Veterau Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Fred Jividen, Laldli, W.Va.; Lois
Pauley, Pomeroy; Jacob Schuler,
Portland; Herbert Shields, Racine.
SATURDAY DISCHARGESBarbara Butcher, Oneida Ward,
and Alfred Russell.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
John McKenzie, Pomeroy.
·
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Marjorie Kapple.

11

•

By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .......... .... ...... .......... ..... $UI()

One Month ....... .... .. .................... 16.95
One Year .......... .... .'................. . $83.20
SIN()LE COPY
PRICE
,
Dally .. ....... .......................... 25 Cents
Subscribers not desiring to pay thf.&gt;car .

rter ma y remit In advance direct to
The Dally Senllnel on a 3, 6or 12 month

basis. CredU wtll be gtvpn carrier each

Wl'ek.

No subscrlpllolll! by mall permUted In

areas where home carrier service Is
avaU~ble.

Mall SallltrlpUon11

lnolde Melp Coullly

13 Weeks .. .... .. ..... .. .... .... .... .. .. ... 121,64
26 Weeks .................................. $43.16
52 Weeks ....................•••.. ........ . $84.76
Outolde Melp Couoly
13 Weeks .... ......... .. .. ................. 123.10
26 Weeks ......... ............ ........ ..... $45.!0

52 Weeki .... , ..... .... ...... .............. 188.10

�---------'

. -

...--

.. .

_

- ....

-- -..

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

Monday, Jurie 24, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Carter's bat propels Toronto
to 3-1 victory over Cleveland

Monday, ~une 24, 1891
Page 4

Reds beat Expos 8-4 to stay six games out of first place
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer

CINCINIIIATI (AP) - It's
crunch time for the defending
World Series~
The Cincinnati Reds ended a
mi.terable week of baseball Sunday
with an 8-4 Yictary over Monaw
thai left them six
behind Los
Angeles in the Coal Lesgue
West.
.
.
The Reds lost starters Norm
CharitOn and Jose Rijo to injuries
lasl Week. leaving tbeir l'llWion in
· a shambles. Manager Lou Piniella
said the Reds' play the next two
weeks will decide whclher they get
a chlnce to catch the Dodgers in
the second half.
· "The Sllek:h bef&lt;n the All-Star
break is JOing 10 dicwc whal hap.
pens the rest of the year," Piniefia
said. • 'The next two weeks will

either keep us in ~ Ia sustain
something or make It extremely
difficult. Things could slip away
very easily right now."
Nothing's coming easily for
them right now. so the victory Sunday was as much a mental boost as
a chance to hold their ground with
Los Angeles.
. Bill Doran's bad-hop basesloaded biple highlighlf;d a five-run
seventh inning thai OY'eicame Tom
Browning's wUdest performaace.
Five pitchers combined on a ragged
five-hitter - they walked 10,
including a .career-high seven by
Browning in five innings.
The Expos, in their best streak
of the season, couldn't capitalize
against Browning. The resulting
loss was only their second in I0
games and gaye them a split of the
four-game senes. .

Sc()rCh()ard
In tbe majors...

I

T-13.
PITCHING (6 deeioioao)-Eriwao,
w;~_..., 11-2, .146, l.SI;
Calilamil, 10-2, .ll_3. 3.34; S!aat""!,_,
r....... &amp;-2. .100. 2.96; FWoy, Calif...
t0-3, .7fH, :1.79; x.,., r ....... t0-3,
.769, 2.415; ot~ccr.aa, DM:n:.it. 9·3, .7SO.
3.71; WeD oii,Cbioqo,J-3.. 727. 3.49.

6

STitlltEOilfS...a.a.....
· 91;
a,..,
T - 97; R.
SOOD!o,
93;

iAn-.

AMERICAN LI!AGUE
iuiDI.W.

T- ·
T..alo

W L Pd.
-······· 31 31 .S!H
1......... 36 31 .331
IMnlit
.......... 33 3S AI.!
M i l - ·--· 31 :!6 .063
Now Yodt
..... 2:1 :!6 .431
· - ....... 26 41 .311
Cla'#-UC.354

...• .

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• •
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.

Oak1aad
.........
Catif ' 1 .:H .....
....,......

rl:1lioaJo

...........
..:......

E-o at)' ......

.

ClaclaaaU. .311; 0 . Smith, St. Louil,

RUNS-T. - · S1n Dioto. 50;
81111«, .... ....-. 41; DoSbioldl, - uul, 45; 1...,_,, New Y..t, 4S; S..dtMq. Chicaao, .t.S; Jllflice, Atlan~a, 43:
Samuol, lAo AnpJ.. 43; T. Owym, S..

Can ·· .tO, Debui13
Ia'"
ot,~aa.,.o
Clliap3, T... l

SoaaiOS.-0

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T-3,~1

loltialan II. !tutu City I, I 0 ill-

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I•B&amp;ltir-CR 9.ltalu Cily I, 12 ia.niap.
Mii-S.-2

- 4 , CalifCIIIIia 3, 10 .......

Today'• I -

~ (Nqf J-1) .. Tonloto (Key '

1W,). 12:351- at OJrl hca 11-l)lt Now YOlk
~

1-2), 7:30 ,,_

(IW.aaia &amp;.3) at C!i. . . (Hil&gt;1oaoi4-6),1:0!J&gt;m,

CdW • ~ 10.3) at ltanw City
(W-1-0).1:35 p.m.

,.....,.._

.
•

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STOUlN-BA~­

TGaiiOan · m,I:O!Iip.m .

_._ 33; Colanon,
· Now Y..t, 33; NWn. A.._, 33; LaakfOid, St Louil, 19; c.w...... Moouul,
18; 0 . Smith. St LaW&amp;, 17.
et. 34; DoShioldt, _

Colifooaio .. ' - aty. 1:35 p.m.
Ttu~llo.t1Md.l0:05p.m .
·

.

.

•

NATIONAL LEAGVE
Eat Dl\'llloa

-·26--

T-

W L Pd.

Gil

Pill
s..
LoU.. .......... 36 31 .331 4 lfl
Now Yaalt
....... 3S 32 .322 5 lfl
......... 33 :!6 .4'71 I If}.

= ...
/ '

31

31 .449 10 If}.

...... 30 39 .43S II lfl

WettDivllloD
T-

W L Pd.

GB

Loo Allploa ...... 42 211 .611

ctoclooiol

-

-

36 32 .529
........... 34 32 .515

'

Atlaota
S..lllop ....... .' 36 34 .514
Sata Fmc - c ...... 19 41 .414

7

7

_..,.1

M

tw11 CIMI.al4
f~ ' "•3 JO ' .
Now Yodt\
2 • wnnp
Diop 4, u..;, 3

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

SiB Pm

I

l l, Cllioqo l

T........ _
S• Diap (l'«onon 2·1) at St Louio

(Tt: bb' fJ 6-2).1:35 p.m.

,.. .,...Tllllday'llllDta
"C'

All-.·-

7%35 , ....
~·'"
$1l35p&amp;
Now Yolk. 7:40p.m.
I

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....

7

I:JS p.m. .

- ,.....:: &amp;!'Ci!!~ ~~l.~o:35
"'
. Major league leaders
•

"'"' ...

-~

t

BATflNO-c. llipk... Baltialoro,
.350; Iaino•. Oulood, .343; Slorro,
T..... .32:1; Molitor, Milwa...., .321;
.327: ....ott ......
auo&amp;a, .326; D. Hatdenon, Oakland,
,325,
RUNs-D. Hond.,,.., Oaltlond, 51 ;
Palaazo, Tuu, 49; Sian, Teu1, 48;
c - , Ooklaod, 41; MaliiOr, Milwau·
.he, 41; FleW•, Delrait. 45; Pr•nco,
T-.45.
JII-Fiel4er, Detroit, 56; Siena,
T...., S!: C.., T..,..., SO; Tllomu,
49: D. lltnlllaa,Oiklmd,47;
Wiatfeld, California, 47; Oonulez,

o-...u. ·-·

I

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T--.-.c.Drril.tr

a,46.

111'1'1-C. ....._. •w
. 93; Sier·
n, T. ., II;-...-. WU...ou, 17:
- . . . . _ N; C.., T....,to,

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n;D.HI , • •

wa.

a,ll:&amp;oq..-

to,IL
TIUPLIS-Molitor, Mil"aNM, 6;
,_., Clllf-. 3: ....... OU...,. S;
kaa~1 Ci~.

4: R. Alomar,
To.ato, 4; JIG'rl, T1111, 4: hckeu,
•

•

BOMB IUNI-e-, T....,..., 17;
CMJ 1. o.w.,.. I': C. DIN, MiA ~

..... 16; D. P

- · - . 15:

t

, Oe!d·M

16;

Doar. Doni~, 14; c.

iUpt!ll. . - . 14: · - · - ·
NOwY-.14:
I'IO'L.IIP"I'f-IIU•~mll--,..
l'll'hlcnlliOf, Cdfarala, 21; a. &amp;.4..soa. Oillad, %6;

-.a.-.

By RALPH BERNSTEIN
AP Sports Writer
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) Beth Daniel says she will count on
the same ganie Plan for this week's
LPGA Chanipionship thBt she used
to win the $750,000 McDonald's
tournament.
"The key on thai course is hitting the ball long," Daniel said
Sunday after earning $112,500
with a four-stroke victory over Pat
Bradley and Sally Lillie.
"Obviously, I have to feel real
good going in," Daniel said. "I'm
starling 10 hit the ball well."
She said ~he particularly likes
the Bethesda, MeL, Country Club,
where she will he defendmg her
Iitle.
.
"It's tough and challenging,"
she said.
·
Daniel firiished Sunday with 3under-par 68 for an 11-under 273 at

the 6,~89-yard DuPont Country
Oub.
She said the longer a golf course
plays, the more advantage she
enjoys. She then referred to the wet
conditions at DuPont, where it
rained Tuesday and again Stmday.
"I love it wheil the course is
soaking wet and the ball doesn't
roll anywhere," she said. "I hit a
lot of long irons when Pat and
Sally were using woods.·'
Daniel had complained after lhe
third round that she wasn't chip- ·
ping well and that her game was
mconsistent, even though she was,
only two strokes off the pace. She
even joldnglhi=ested she ought
to see a psyc
.
Instead, she spent Saturday
evening at the p!IIClice tee t8Jking
with caddy Greg·Sheridan about
her swing.
"I asked him what it looked

Smi&amp;h. SL LaWa, II; Dive Smith, Chi.ca-

... 16; Ldf0111, Son o;._o, 14; B. Landru•, Pltt•burab.L p;, _f~a.nco, N'ew
YU1k,13; W'lllianu, nW.aa.pnia.12.

- .........

Transactions

CAUFORNIA ANGI!LS-S;pod Ed uardo Paa., tint buanln, and Ulipod
him 10 B.U. ofoboNOilh_...._

CIBCAOO WH!I1! sox~ Joey
Ccn, ialieldor, on tile 15.-clay di,.blcd
lilt. Recalled Warren NewJOD, pitcher,
from Vancouver of tbe Pacific Coan

Jim Btu-.. pltcllw, Cram tlto SNulo
Mari.aral u a.D~ lO he umed law
. in 1M deal inY · Mik&amp; Blowen and
aAiped him to Al ny of tbo Eutem

~TTLE MARINERS-Activated
-ablodn...-.
pUdMo, Cram tlto!S-&lt;Iay ....
lill Soia Pat RiCa, .-r-. ID Cal·

P'1.of_ tlte l'lcilic c... ........
TI!JtAS RANOBRS-Piaced Denny
Walllq.-.ao -ooal&gt;lowalv•.
Activald Jack 'hlb '1)1~ filll b&amp;lem&amp;n-•••'1' u ... from dae l5-day4ilabledliaL

like. I can'1 see it I can only feel it
Sometimes what you feel is not
what is happening.
"I was able to get a thought,"
she said, declining to specify Sheridan's advice. ''I took thai real good
thoughtiO the range."
·
Daniel's victory enabled her to
pass Betsy King and Nancy ~z
and move into second place behind
Bradley on the all-time LPGA
money winnil)g list. Bradley has
earned $3,707,690, while Daniel is
at $3,245,930.
The $112,500 first prize also
allowed her to move into aecond
place, $9,195 behind Bradley, for
the year's moaey-winning list with
$352,448.
Daniel, 34. who was VOted Play·
er of the Year in 1990 with seven
viciOries, won for the second time
litis r.ear to join Jane Geddes as lhe ·
t.our s only double winners of 1991.
Little, who 11:11 by two points
after the third round, shot a 74 Sunday and Bradley a 71 to fmish Bt
277.
Michelle McGann and Ayako
Okamoto each had final-round 70s
and finished tied Bt 278, one stroke
ahead of Kristi Albers, 69, and
Tammie Green, 72, who led after
the first round with a course record
7-under 64 and shared the lead
after 36 holes.
Daniel took a one-strolt:e lead on
the front nine after sinking a 10foot birdie putt at No. 4, while Little luid two bogeys.
Daniel bogeyed the lOth to slip
intb a tie with Lillie. Both birdied
the lith, then Little ::Jeyed No.
12 and Daniel took a I she never
lost. Daniel took all the suspense
out of the tournament willt birdies
at Nos. 12 and 16 for the cushion
over Lillie and Bradley.
Bradley. who started the final
round one stroke off tbe pace,
trailed by the same margin after
nine. She never could mount a
charge, however, falling put of
contention when she missed a fivefoot putt for a bogey at 14.

Nlllloul._

the--

ST. LOUIS CAIIOINALS-I'urchaaod
ol Bob MoC1wo, . . . -. Ot&gt;

23: R.Yodt,
-·
20; I. lloii;;J'i~!
15:T
W~ilo,
T - 15: ...,._,.,..,..., IS; c-,
loaldo,J): - · Tuu. 13: p.....,,

.

JIOTl&lt;llllJ

Footblll

Na_._,.....,.
LOS ANG1!U!S IINOI-Toaolod Todol '
EJik, ...-,lOb M I ·Ia Nonh Stan
for C!luU.I HuddJ. atm1maa· Rudy
Oilhoa, - l l a t ~ ..........
andlfdalk
. . . . . . . ~miL

8.,...,

MINNBIOfA NtiR11I STAB-Trad·
od Da,.
Mf
• to ... VIII•

-

YES! - Beth Dulel pamp1 ber list iD celebration of ber birdie
on tbe 16tb bole In lbe flDalrouDd or tbe McDonald's LPGA Cbamploosblp Sunday ill Wllmillatoa. Del. Deale! sbot a 3-under-par 68
to wiD tbe touruameat by lour strokes. (AP)

r~------------------~----~ ·
J(HIN A. ·WADE, M.D., Inc:.
PLEASANT YAWY HOSPITAL

N1!W YOU: ISI.AMlBRI-Tradod
CraJa Ludwi&amp;. d4 .,.." to lhe MiaNaab '11.1• . . d • ........,
dMI \Ju&amp; illo ia•ol¥M ~ VUCOUY•

EAR, NOSE &amp; THRO'AT
GE_NERAL ALLERGIST

c-.

VANCOUVER CANUCD-Tradod
TGm Karnn. dellelmlft, 10 tiM Now
Yodt oi port of a .-way_daal
dllt lllo iPetl..t d. Mml•ou Nardi

1

"WE NAVE NEARINS AIDS"

446 4)14

---

(304) 675-1244

Allison... _&lt;;..co_nu_·nued_rro_m_P_ag.;....e_4&gt;_ _ _ _ __

r11

to .I fUll.

~

TIIEIDAY .. '111U118DAY, C'BU "PBI'I UnD&amp;R 12 !tAT J'RU
ntoll CBU Mll'f'BIDI'IV, (EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSER11
UliiT 1 CHILD PER AIKJLT

our ORDDS AVAri aii E (SCUJ778-83ih

SENIORS GET

lO'Mt

Sunday aftenooD. Pictured are (L·R) parents
Don Olney, Melanie Olney, Adam ,Brown and
~ale Brown. (Sentinel photo by Brian Reed)

DE!lBY CHAMPION- Soapbox Derby
WiDDer .Ad•m BrowD aDd bls parents took a
moment to pose with bls wlaalng Soapbox
Derby car aner the presentation or trophies

RACERS HONORED - These racers in the Meigs County
Soapbox Derby were honored on Sunday aner the race for their
participation. Pictured with the second-place winner's car are
(front row, L·R) David Ramsburg and Kyle Norris. Ia the back row
are Steven Brown, Adam Brown, Justin Roush, Joshua Hodges,
Adam Triplett, Matt Smith, Brent King, Stacy Gilmore 'lnd
Daalelle Peckham. (Sentinel photo by Brian Reed)

I

VI~ • MASTERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRESS

ACCEPIED

was our third, so it's real sweet."
Unlike Allison, Stricklin had his
. hands full at the end, holding off
Mark Manin for second place. Dale
Earnhardt, lite defending champion
in this race and the series point
Ieider, finished fourth despite a
sick engine, and Ernie Irvan was
fifth.
The only yellow flag of lite day
c;ame out on lap 35 because of several pieces of debris in the second
tum. It was the only thing that
slowed Allison down Sunday.
Earnhardt, the defending and
four-time Winston Cup champion,
added 18 points to hts lead over

Ricky Rudd, who was eighllt in tite
race, and now lesds by 138 after 14
of 29 eveniS. Allison remains sixth,
trailing Earnhardt by 248 points,
but is only 39 behind third-place
Darrell walbip:

-

HERE!AlAlf
.FORE" YOU
IN TNf'
etACCiflfDADC

· .Marauder football
camp set for July 22

THUBSPAY • Spaghetti, soup &amp; salad
FBIPAY • Chicken Sandwich, French Fries &amp; Soup
CARRY

Adam Brown of Gallipolis is
Akron-bound following his victory
in Sunday's M~s County Soapbolt. Derby in M' leport Brown is
the son of Dale Brown and Don
and Melanie Olney.
Taking secood place honors yesterday was Mallbew Smith of Middleport. He is the son of Rev. Fnmk
and Sue Smith of Middleport
The derby yesterday was the
flfSl of what tS hoped to become an
annual affair, fully sanctioned by
the All-American Soap Box Derby
based in Akron since 1934.
Time trials and practice runs for
the race started on Sallil'dliy afternoon, with double elimination nms
down General Hartinger Parkway
beginning on Sunday afternoon. In
conjunction with the derby, a
cruise-in was held by the "Oldies
But Goodies" car club on Salllrday
night.
Other participants in the race
were David Ramsburg, Kyle Norris, Steven ·Brown, Justin Roush,
Amber Thomu, Joshua Hodges,
Adam Triplett, Brent King, Stacey
Gilmore and Danielle Peckham.
Corporate sponsorship of regulation cars made it posstble for 12
racers 10 participate from lhe biCOU!IIY area. Businesses patticipBting 'were; Thomas Do-ll Center,
Meigs County Bikers, Feeaey Bennell Post 128, Valley Lumber,
VFW Post 9926, Metgs County
Chiropractic Clinic, Circle H Auto,
Home NBtional Bank, Thomas DoIt Truss Plant, and Dairy Queen
Brazier.
Soap Box Derby Director Roger
Williams will accompany Adam
Brown and his family to the International Soapbox Derby Racine in
Akron on August 10. That contest
will be carried live on the ESPN
cable sportS network.
Meigs County REACT provided
traffic control for the event, Aardvark Sound donated sound equipment, Middleport Trophies and
Tees donaled stgm and Tom Reed
acled as announcer for the event.

'-

I u

stil) don't feel comfortable enough
with lite curve 10 throw it in key
situations. Bui with the groove I'm
in righl now I don't plan on making
any changes. I'll suck to the fastball.''
MacDonald has yet to ~ti ve uo
an earned run in 11 innings since
being recalled from Triple-A Syra·
cuse on June 2.
Tom Henke gave up one hit and
a walk in lite ninth, but used a double play en route 10 his 13th save in
13 opportunities.
Candioui (7·6) gave up IWO runs
on nine hits over six innings, struck
out ihree and walked two in his
fourth straight loss.
"The last four games I've lost
I've been throwing pretty well,"
Candiotti said. "If I'd ·won maybe
two, I'd be happy. But to lose four,
I'm about as frustrated as you can

geL"

Candiotti said there's no mys·
about the Indians recent slide.
" We're not a good ream," he said.
"We're a bad team and we're playing like iL"
tery

.

t:l.~~~ IFII-:11~

"

Jlrigh t 1&lt;len!

Soapbox Derby

' ••

.

line is winning and I'll give up the
personal stats for a win anytime.
Despite the accomplishments,
all the 50,275 fans could muster for
Ctrter was a brief standing ovation.
•"There's no doubt the fans here
are subdued," he said. "But lltat
doesn't bother me. As long as
50,000 keep showing up for every
game I'm not about to complain."
After Mark Lewis touched
reliever Jim Acker for a run-scoring single io pull the Indians even
at 1-1 in the top of the sixth,
Manllel Lee drove in the go-ahead
run with a sacrifice fly in the the
seventh.
·
John Olerud forced in the insur·
ance run with a bases-loaded walk
off reliever Mike York for a 3-I
lead in the seventh.
Bob MacDonald (1·0) became
the fourth pitcher 10 earn his fust
major league win in Toronto over
the last six pmes.
·scou Kamieniecki and Jeff
Johnson picked up theif fust in IWO
New York Yankees' victories and
Juan Guzman got his first in the
Blue Jays' 4-0 victory Salurday.
MacDonald ( 1-0) struck OUIIWO
over two and one-third innings of
hitless relief.
"I got the win with one pitch,
the fastball," MacDonald said. "I

Brown captures
Meigs County

$1 .10 IMMII .TilliS Un.IIY I SC.t
Q .IO IMIAII IIIMT MSIIAY

TUESDAY· Beef tips &amp; noodles, soup &amp; salad
WEDNESDAY • Chopped Steak, mashed potatoes,
gravy, choice of veg~nable

I

Smith or Middleport at the first Meigs County
Soapbox Derby in Middleport Sunday anerDOOD. (Sentinel phot by Brian Reed)

'.

MONPAY • Beans &amp; Com bread

OOUYRC_.u~~adlre.-••J

...................... NowYodtlo-

FrttlfllJ.

THE BIG MOMENT - Tbls was the steae
at the finish line as Adam Brown of GaUipalis
left, took tbe first place position from Matt

'

SPRINli VAll q t:INFMA

Locllld on RL 33lllllde Malon Exxon and Mason Motel, Mason,
Suncll!r
IIOMEST'r'LE Llll\'('11 SPECii\l.S

Tilll pitdlor, IOl.oaimllo
aftlto~-. SAN FRANCSCO GJAN'I'S.-.Activat..
ad lovio Mitcholl, outfiol.... tlto
.~..,., lia. Opoooad Rlct .......
•· oudlelder, lO Plloenil ollhe Pac:ific
C.... IMp.
-

Hockey

laps on the two-mile, high-banked
Michigan International Speedway
oval, leading 82 of the 1ut 107 laps
and beating Sbicklin to the finish
by a substanlil111.7 seconda.
.
"The car drove perfect, like it
was on a rail out there, except
when I was behind him," Allison
said. jabbing his thumb Bt Sbicklin.
"The car really drove a lot better
out front. so that's where I bied io
stay."
Bobby Allison, retired from
driving smce a near-filial race crash
in June Of 1988, was thrilled with
his team's best finish since it was
formed at the start of the 1990 season.
· "We're looking forward to the
day when we can get thai Buic;k in
l'ront of thai darned old Ford with
Davey driving it," he said. "Butit
was a really neat day today.
"Davey has been a lot of plea·
sllie to me along the way, and I've
talked to Hut about that I told him
on account of that, I just want him
to beat Davey by a little bit- but I
do want Hut to beat him."
Donnie Allison, also a former,
driving star and now crew chief for
rookie Stanley Smith ·- yet anoth·
er member of the Alabama Gang
-said, "Davey's my nephew lind
I love him. Hui's my son-in-law
and I love him, 100. I can't pull for
one ot the other. But, bumper-to·
bumper, wheel-to-wheel, I might
pull for Hut because he hasn't won
yet"
,
In any case, Sunday's race,
slowed by just one early caution
flag for four laps, was virtually all
Davey Allison as he averaged a
track record 160.912 mph, breaking
the mark of 157.704 set in August
of 1989 by Rusty Wallace.
The sizzling show on the cool,
sunny afternoon was viewed by a
record MIS crowd estimated at
90,000.
It was Allison's third Winston
Cup vic;tor¥ of the season - all of
them commg since a non-points
win in The Willston, a rich all"star
event six weeks ago in Charlotte,
N.C. He won $90,650 Sunday, giving him and car owner Robert
Yates a lata! of $642,950 in prize
money during thai period.
He had won two races each of
the ~Yious four years.
' We've been hung up on this
thing about winning two races
every year," Allison said. "This
(See ALLISON 1111 l'l&amp;e 5)

I MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANTwv

a-,...-.
.... _...._

Na-.JPOOIIIall .......
DALLAS COWBOYS-Siped Ken
W'illil. pll....d ....... to. l'"'"yeu c:mtnct.

"Whoever bas 10 deal with them
from this point is. ia for a buzz
saw."
The Reds came away looking
forward to an off-day today to
regain theif bearings after the tough
week.
"With everything that's happened to us lately, it's nice to have
a day to just sit and relax and
enjoy," D&lt;xan said- .

Somttfling (joorf's %ways Cool(jng Jtt

CINCINNAlliU!DS--Iipod Muk
........... ltidt - · pitdlon. 0,
..... !tip
10 NuiiWio of
tlte.A mmcao-.
NEW YOIIII: MBTS--Ioat Mark
Dower. pilollao. _,.. .. Tklowat&lt;l of

·

20;

0

Daniel uses long strokes to capture
$750,000 McDonald's tournament

86; RIJo, Clada•aU, U; 0 . Maddux,
OUcqo, "'' San Di~ 72; llu.......- - · 69; Hunt, s.. l&gt;iooto, (B.
SAVES-Dibble, ClndMIU, f9; lAo

.......,, Tuu,

,.-. T-. 2\i.f.
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T-.ls: c.
._._».
..
_
...... 11.'
J$

ahead of the No. 12 in Sunday's
Miller Genuine Draft 400 &amp;hat
made Allison smile, though. It was
the memory of a day in February of
1988 when that car was ahead of
him Bt the finish.
"I think everybody knows I ran
second to thai No. 12 Bt Daytona a
couple of years ago," he said,
referring to the day his father
Bobby beat him in an emotional
and dramatic duel in the Daytona
500.
"That is still the highlight of my
career, even though we've won 11 ran.••
races now," Davey said. "Dad •s
Allison wouldn't be telling any
not in the car any more, but it's tall tales, either. His Fon1 Thundernice to see thai car finish second.•'
bird was ahead on I07 of the 200

Olivine, Atbnta, 16; Gaadcn, Now Ycd,

OOUIILIII-II. Aloaoar, T""""'· 22;

Mtla..

Sunday's second-place finisher
was Hut Stricklin, connected .to
Allison in just about every way bul
blood.
Stricklin, who turns 30 laday,
drives for Bobby Allison, is married to a daughter of Davey's
uncle, Donnie Allison, and has
been a friend of the 30-year-old
Davey's since their childhood in
Huey,town. Ala.
' Davey and I were having a
blast out there," said Stricklin,
whose runner-up finish was the
best of his three-year Winston Cup
career. "I was joking a couple of
weeks ago at Charlone about
Davey and I finishing one-two. It
didn't happen thai day, bul ... DOW
I've got to fly an the way back 10
Alabama with him and listen to
him talk about how good his car

,_....

Amerkaa Le.pe
•

Speeding 10ward a remrd-breaking .
victory, Davey Allison saw the No.
12 Buick in his rearview mirror and
began to grin.
.
It wasn't the fact that he was

Rita, pi-. toT- of tlto ..._.__
ali...Mpc. Acti.vatilld Mat. Leita, pildllr,
fn&gt;m t!io 15-&lt;la diub1ed lill
NEW YORk YANXEES-Acquiml

IAoAoaoiaoZ.-'1111

•

By MIKE HARRIS
AP Motorspm1s Writer
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP) -

Loaoflnorr TICIERS -Ooci- Kevin

.. DiiF, ... t..oo.- 2

going to make iL' "
He didn't have 10. Morris fol·
lowed with 1D RBI double 'to com·
pletc the q)Jy for an 8-3 lead. Wallach bit a homer off Rob Dibble,
the first be's allowed this season, in
the ninth fer the final run.
The Expos impressed Doran by
gaining the split
"They're playinJ extremely
well, they really are,' D&lt;nn saicL

TORONTO (AP) ...;_ There have
been three constants ai SkyDome
over the ~ four games; They've
all been sellouts, the Toronto Blue
Jays ha,ve won all four and Joe
Carter has homeml Bt least once in
eachgame.
.
Carter belled his major leagueleading 17th home run of the season, a fmt-inning solo blast lltat
gave him five in the last four
games and II for the month as the
Blue Jays sent the Cleveland Indi.ans to th\lir ·15th loss ill 18 games
with a 3-1 victory Sunday~
"I wasn't gomg to let a fastball
get by me," Carter said. "(Tom
Candiotli) probably would have
18unted me for years if I did. If
he'd thrown a curve or a knuckleball he r,robabty would have struck
meout'
Carter's feat tied two club
record that belonged to a guy
whose name still rings a bell
around these parts, but with each
homer becomes easier to forget.
The 11 homers in lhe month tied
George Bell's·club mark set in May ·
and June of 1987 and his homers in
four straight games also tied Bell's
1985 club record.
"The records don't mean a
thing," Carter said. "The bottom

Allison captures checkered· flag in
Miller Genuine Draft 400 Sunday

B~~~ebaU

' ... Olicaao 3

. . fp

some of them out there lasl night,''
Piniella said. ' 'Who !mows?''
Doran watched the hq) wilh disbelief, thm bied to get 10 full speed
as he rounded first. Thoughls of an
inside-the-park grand slam went
through his mind briefly.
"I saw the ball land and bounce
over his head," Doran said. "I
thought about it unlil I got to second base. I said, 'I don't lltink I'm

S.Ol •
SliUitEOIJTS-C- Now Yodt, %&lt;

. S.hlrlbly'• raullx
lAo Aoaolao ...

-:.

..

PITCHING (6 dooiliau}-Gia.U.., At·
Uinta, 11·3, .786, 2.11; Cnpentcr, St.
t..MI, 7-2, .778, 3.33; R. MutiDa. Loo
Aaplet.I0-3, .7(8, 2.73; Towbbory, St.
Louio, 6-2, .7SO, 2.72; Rlje, Clndnnld,
'-2, .7!1, 1."; Sampat. --~ S·2.
.714, 4.11; A-. St. LaW&amp;, 5-2, .714,

14

......... %1 42 .391 IS Ill

-

. buqb,4; K.ruk,.Pbibdclphia,4; CendMe,

•- SanDieF,4.
HOME KUNS-.IobdsaD, Now YCIIk,
IS; O'Neill, Claclnud. 14; McOrit!,
S1n DiaJO, 14; G. Boll, ChiCIJO, J4:
Oolll, Alllllll, 13;
Now Yodt, 13;
W. Cat, Sao Fnn&lt;:ilc:o, 12.

•a-

I

79; Sandbara, Chica~9: Calderan,
Moo...., 76; J - St
, 15.
OOUBLI!S-J01e, St Louio, 20; 8onJ1.
Ia, Plltabuflh, 11; McRe)'!lolcla, New
Yolk. IS; T. 0.)'1111, San Di..o. II; L.
Gonzalez, HOUitoG, 17; Jlaticc, Atlan.t.l,
11; Morrl1 1 ClnclnaaU, 17; 0"Ntlll 1
Clndnoall, 17t•Smdboq.Cbicaao,17.
~ . 0W)'nn, S111. Di.ep, 8;
Felder, S1n Franoi.aco, 6; L. GcmZalez,
Houdon, S; Coleman, New Ymt, 5; M.
Thompian, Sl Louil, S; 1. Bell, Piw·

-4iT.F

Mil-..
- . 7:35p.m.
,.,
••• &lt;.'111 ....., 7=35 .....
Now Yodt
7:35p.m.
s-lo • Cllicap, 1:05 P"'-

.

Johru:Oft,
Now Yadl:, Sl; W, C1a4, S111 Fnmci8co,
49; Kmt, Phil;:~•· 41; O•N•III,
Clodo. .u, "'
· , S.. Diop&gt;, 46;
T. Owynn, Sm Dioto. 4S; Mlurlf, Lcioo
An...... 411.
H"O"S-T. OW)'rm, San Dicao, 103;
Somuet. Lao AnP., IS; T. Fom111dez,

San Dioao. 12: Meaco, San Francisco,

2nolcC.6,TOIII5,10ianiolp

.

.

R11r-Sualicc, Atlantl, St ;

SUDCiay'aac:ores

•

•

Nalloall Leaeue
BAniNO-T. Gwynn, San Dieao,
-369:
s.mu.t. .....326;
....-.
.326;Houlton,
-·
San FranciJco,
Bigio,
.319; Joae, St. Louit, .319; M•rrla,

.311.

Oak1aad 4 , - 2

•

SA VES-Ecbnley, Oakland, 20;
Apilera, Minauota, 19: Reudoa,
Bo11oo, 19; Haney, Cllifomia, 11 ;
M•&amp;aemerY, IaAIU Cit)', t•; JtdfRustell, 1ezu, '14; D. Ward, Toroato, 13;
~.Cioicqo, 13.
.

S.turday'• raults

.-

'.

fomil, U; McDowell, Chicaao, 14:

s..-,a..-.n.

WLP&lt;L
GB
T1 .609
39 30 .565
3
!1 31 ,.S4.t 4lfl
31 31 .344 4 -lfl
34 30 .33t 5 lfl
:!3 33 .soo 11f}.
32 3S .471
9

a-t,OuloodS
T -... Cia t • t
If
r 4,NewYcD3

..

.

C-~ C..olud, N; Flnloy, C.li-

7 If}.
11
U

....... ~

all

Ui:

.

'

4 If}.

WettDlvlaloa
T-

I-

ma.

Gil
-

"I'm real ~y with the way
we're playing, manager Tom
Runnells said. "I'm very encour·
aged with the team's overall play,
its attitude. its approach to the
game. If we take that appna:h the
rest of the way, we'llpi OK."
They luid plenty of chances to
win the series against Browning,
who hadn't walked more than three
batters in any gsllle this season.
Walks set up the Expos' first two
runs, on Bret Barllerie' s sacrifice
fly and Tim Wallach's single.
Winless Expos sl8rter Brian
Barnes also struggled through five
innings, giving up a two-IWI homer
to Hal M&lt;ms and a solo homer to
Glenn Braggs. But Barnes ~ot a
reprieve wben the ExJ!O:Ilied tl 3·3
in the sixth 011 Barberie's RBI double - his first msja-Ieague hit off Ted Power.
Randy Myel'S (4-5) pitched out
of a bases-loaded lhreat to end the
sixlh, and the Reds. sent eight bat·
ters to the plate in the seventh to
beat Bill Sampe!! (5-2).
SamJl!ln btl Chris Sabo on the
wrist With the bases loaded 10 fon:e
in the lie-lxeaking run. Doran then
came off the bench and lined a
pitch thai took a bad hop over the
head of charging right fielder Dave
Martinez and rolled to the wall for
a bases-&lt;:learing triple.
There are no seams in the artifi·
cia! turf where the biple landed, so
it was anybody' s guess why the
ball bounced so high. Piniella said
it must have hit something laying
on the turf.
·
"Paul O'Neill usually chews
those seeds. Maybe he dropped

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--0

ll!lf family.
For !ale zeJistration and inforawioll y01 1*1 c:oaiiCt Marauder

·. head COICb Mike SIIIP • Meiss

HiP Scllool• 992-21!11.
'·)

MUWN MUSSEl

INSUUNCE

111

s.u• St.. Pu •r.r

1011 .........
AGIII'IS SDWIG
•

CIIUBE
UIIDORUim.
,,,,,,,,,,,~

W"klg lp•~l•ltl
AVAILABLE ANYTIME THRU THE DAY
MONDAY:
Cabbage Rolls. Fried Potatoes,
Applesauce
TUESDAY:
Swedish Meatballs Over Noodles.
Slaw
WEDNESDAY:
Hot Roast Beef, Mashed Potatoes
&amp; Gravy
THURSDAY:
Lasagna. Tossed Salad. Garlic
Bread
FRIDAY:
Cream Baked Chicken, Mashed
Potatoes &amp; Gravy, Corn

!ONYA'S

COUNTRY
I&lt;ITCHEN
(forlllll'ly IDUntry lltchtnl
Aero•• from Home National Ia'*

RACINE, OH.

,\
"

e 1990 American EltcltiC Power

,.
)

..

.

Never go near a downed power line. If one
contacts your car, stay inside until help
arrives. But if you must evacuate the car,
jump clear to avoid -contact with the car and
ground at the same time. You'll find more
life-saving facts in our free safety booklet.
Call us. 000-0000.

949·2324

•uc01m
•a1a61
•I

AOOWIID
POWBI
YOU

IONYA '$ COUNTRY 1&lt;/TCHEN

DOWNING CHilDS'

The 1991 Melp Marauder Foot·
ball Camp__w_lll be held July 22-26
at Meigs HiJII Sc:hool.
The camp is open to boys entering grades ·4-8. The cost of the
camp Is $30 for 15 hours of
inslruclion .00 a maximum of $SO

FYIIJTOIDI

•
•

•
'

•

'•

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r

'

Monday, June 24, 1991

Monday, June 24, 1991

Business Services

Classifie

. . . .111ft'

··The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
DIYI

Wordl

1

11

3

I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
y

~~~:~i

111

6

15

10

11

Monthly

~ ~••ooivo • .10 cliloount fOf ad• ,-ld in HYance.

.
- GiveWifll( and Found . . unctw. 11 wonttwill bt

1- Card of Th•k•

·~011 .. ed for •" CIIP"-II«tllrl it cloubl• price of .-c1 co.-.
'7,..,... lifto typo only - -

2 - tn M.mory
3 - Annoucemtntl

ro. ••or• 1fttJ fifot·d.., . !Child&lt;
fer.,,.,. tint ..._itrle
tl*r a4 '""•
paper) , Cell befOre 2 :00p.m

•lontinolla-

4-0iveowov

in

I - H1ppy Adt
1-Lolt tnd Found
7 - Y•d Sllelplid in •dvancel
1-Pu..:ic late &amp; AuC;tion.
1-Went• ICJ luy

dW tft• publicttion to m•• COfrec1ktn.
•Ads thlt mutt M lltlid In ldvtnc:t "'

Hjppy Aft

Y1rd Ill•

u .oo

. 30

t9.00
a13.oo

.42

b. 1, llltlont OH.

.eo

11 .30/ doy

AllllllU II 1.1:1111: II~~

at no ch•oe.

In Mtrriotlirn

111

o,.r 1 5 WorM
.
.20

Aile
14.00

742·2451

.01/ day

Mer ciJ,IIIdlsv

Ho-nl

11 - Ho~.ttehohfGao•

!i3-AnHqutl
1•- Milc. Mtfch~~t~dite
11-luildi"O Suppli•
1t- P111 for Seht
17- Mu'lliclf l"ttrumanta

the

Grounds. The camp ofre~"J
cluince ror pis to
participate iD excl.tln1 actiYitles, wilile working
on badges, crafts, games and sports. Tbe program teaches girls new skills and helps them
gain self-confidence.

LEARNING OUTDOOR SKILI:S • Girls
attending the 1991 Summer Day Program,
"Rappln' with Nature," for the Black Dinmond
Girl Scout Council participated In a variety of
activities ranging from scaven~r hunts to building campfires. Here a fe'lt or the girls retrieve

COPY DEADLINI DAY llfOAE PUILICATION
MONDAY PAPER
. .~ 11 : 00A . M . SATURDAY
TU£SOAY PAPER
· ' - 2:00 P.lo1 . MONDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- Z:OO , .M . TUEIDAV
THURSDAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M . WEDNESDAY
FRIDA~ PAPIR
- 2:00P.M . THURSDAY
SUNDAY PAPER
- 2:00P.M . fRIDAY

items 'from their ditty bags which keep thl•gs
high and dr1. Pictured, 1-r, lll'e Jennifer Norman, Brown1e; Staey Brewer, Bradbury,- Fly-up
Junior; Allison Story, Salisbury, BrOMllel aud'
Nancy Pickens and Kimberly Marcinko, Tup·
pers Plains, Brownies.

Getli• County

•

Contemporary Living
{

Cindy Oliveri
, Meigs County Extension Agenl
Home Economics
• Shopping for credit in today's
market can be confusing. You may
be tempted by frequent letters or
ielephone calls offering you credit
cards with varying credit lines,
interest rates, fees, and even
il!lprovement in your credit rating.
~orne credit card promoters are
offering "gold" or "platinum" canis
for people with no credit or bad
credit. Be wary of these cards
which sound like gel;leral purpose
cards. They may allow you to buy
only merchandise from spcciali~
catalogs.
·
~ •· Marketers of these "gold" or .
"platinum" cards often promise that
rou can improve your credit rating .
llY participating in their credit card
program. It is rare, however, that
you can improve your credit rating ·
or quality for a major credit card by
obtaining these cards. Furthermore,
even if you establish a credit record
l"ith these companies, they may not
report to credit bureaus as
promised. Their credit cards rarely
help witb securing other credit
Watch out for:
• Up-front fees without notice
of other charges, such as for merellandise catalogs. Find out total
costs before signing up for such a
c;ard.
·
• • Usc of 900 or 976 exchanges
which you must call for further
i)lformation. You could pay as
much as SSO for additional inforIllation. Find out the cost of the call
before dialing the number.
: • Misrepresentation of prices
lind payments for merchandise
which can be charsed on the cards.
items offered in these specialty catlllop JCIICilllly require a payment
Of a cash deposit before the rest of
11\0 cost can be charged. The cash
deposit is often the amount that the
company paid for the item. Find
out how much you can charge and
h~ you wiD pay.
• • Promises of gelling a Visa or
Mastercard after having their
";&gt;td" or "plalinum" card for only
I'

'

a f!)w months. they Cll1! get you a

secured Visa or Mastercard, but
you could get that on your own. A
secrired card requires a deposit of
$300 to $500 in the bank, which
acts as seeurity for a credit line of
the same amount These companies
generally do not n:pon,to a credit
bureau, so paying your-account will
not help build your crcdit •rating.
Call ·the credit bureau to find out
whether the credit card company
repons to them.
_There are no "easy"·solutions to
a bad credit that is based on accurate information. Be ·cautious of
any schemes to improVe your credit
rating. Time is req11ired to trase
accurate negative uiformation in
your credit file. Most items s&amp;ay in
the file for 7 years, bankruptcy
stays for I 0 years. If you were
denied credit, contact the credit
bureau within 30 days. It must let
you know the nature and subsrance •
of all information contained in the
credit repon. If there is an error, try
.to correct it by contacting the creditor. You may file a statement
telling your side of the story which
will become pan of your ftle.
Here are some tips for building
good credit:
• Open a checking account and
a savings account This will give ·a
indication o( how you handle
money.
• Apply for a line of credit or a
check overdraft plan with your
checking account.
• Use your savings account as
collateral for a small loan to purchase a needed item and be sure to
pay back the Joan as agreed.
• Join a credit unioo where you
work.
• Get a co-signer when filing a
credit application. A creditor may
agree to a Joan or a charge account
if you have a fmancially responsible co-signer.
• lnquire about lay-away plans.
A store may allow you to use layaway plans when it is unwilling to
extend credit .inltially. After you
have made regular payments, the
store may consider granting you a
regubw charge account ,

Soci!ll Security.
.
By Ed Petenon ·
There are special rules that
SociafSecurlty Manager In
apply if you receive cash tips in
Atheu your job. They niust be reponed in
. ' Summer employment counts for writing
to your employer within 10
Sc:icial Security.
days after the month ends if tlley
. Many_YOUOjl people With take a amount to $20 or more.
summer job this year, many for the
more information about this
first time. If you are one of them, or For
anything else about benefits or
there -are some things you should taxes under Social Security, caD 1- .
lqtow-about Social Security.
800-234-5772. The people tllcre
First. of course,- you need a will
glad to hefp you . The
So·cial Security card. .I imagine Athensbeoffice
is located at 221 1(2
almost all of you have one already. N. Colum&amp;us Road,
592-4448.
But, if ·r,mi do not, just call us at
our tQII-free. telephone number, 1, 800-2345-SSA. For best service,
· call between 7 and 9 a.m. or S and
, 7 p.rn:
While. you work in 1990, a lillie
GOOD DEED BEADS • Each time a lood deed ls comp~ at
· over se~en and one-half cents is
Summer
Day Camp ror girls In the Black Dlamo•d Girl Scout . ;
, deducted from each dollar of your
Council
a
member receives a colorful bead to add to her coDectlon.
' pay for Social Security taxes. Your
Pictured
adding
their beads to their name tap are Robia Donollue
·employer pays a mau:hing amount.
and
Kelly
Dalton.
The day camp was held over the Weekend at the .'
These 18Xes hell? finance monthly
Meigs
County
Fair
Grounds with approximately 65 girls·attend· · .
·retirement, survtvor, an disability
in
g.
benefits (or about 40 million Americans, as well as the hoapital insur. ancc part of Medicate· for most
Public Notice
Public Notice
older people as well u those with
Public Notice
PubliC Notice
long-term disabilities or permaoent
,
I
kidney failure.
.
NOTICE OF SALE
Situate In the weal half Sallobury end bounded. and Mlate conv•~ to Cll••
SomCilay, benefits may also be
E. and Maxine Griffith by
By vlnue of an Order ol ol the norlhweel querter of described •• followa:
paid to you and memben of your Sele leeued out ol lhe llecllon elght\8), Town two
In the weal part of the MorgaN! A. 'and ~·- R.
family if ypu have credit for Common PI••• Court ol end Range lh rteen (13) In eaol half of the northweet McCormack·. by· deed,'
enough .work under Social Securi- llelo• County, Olllo, In the llelge County, Ohio, end quarter ol Section number recorded In Deed Book 114,
of The Federal Home beglnnlna lithe Junction of eight (8) ol Town number Page 110 of the ll.•lo•
ty. In 1990, rou earn one Social ....
Loen llonpge CorpoNIIon, Wyl~• HTU Avenue and lhe two (2) ol Range number Coun~ "-Ida.
S_ecurity Credit _for each $S20 of Plaintiff, n. Foreet Kerr • Run Road; thence · thirteen (13) beginning on
Re .
Deed: ,Volu,. .
)'.our annual eanunp, up to a maxi- a.na-, el ll, Defwldanta, South 3$ 3/4" weal along what le or whet Wll 277, P•o• 403, , Malo•
mum of four credits for the year if upon • Judgment therein ·the eoulherly line ol eald Montague'a eaat line lhlrty· County DMd Rtocirda.
Slid reel •lete haa bMri
your annual earnings total $2,080 · renol•.-.dlnbelno c... No. Avenue 230 teet; thence two (32) ~oda aouth lrom
11-cY-63 11lcl Court, I will eouth 50 114" e ..t 135 '"' the northeut corner of aelgnld the - following
or more .
for •••• It lhe front lo the eoulh line of the weal whll 11 or whll we a Auditor'• Peroei Numbwe:
All of your covered wages and offer
door of the CourlhouH In half of the northweel Montague' a lot and In the 14-00441 end 1&gt;HII441.
self-employment income are Po•eroy, Melge County, quarter of Section eight; center of the Athena Roaol;
Property Addreaa 42111
rei:ortlcd under your name and · Ohio, on the leth oley of lhenM wllh the line north 2 then.. aoulh on whit Ia or Enterprlae RoM!, Pomwoy,
Social -Security number on a life- Juty, 1111, et10:00 a.m., the 112' out 283 feet to the whit wee Montague'• 1111 Ohlo4578t.
lende
anol
Said r•t . . t1t1 had
time earnings~ Your entide- following
_ _.., loCIIIIed 1142115 Kerr'e Run Road to 1 point line twenty (20) rode to 1
ment and the amount of your future Enterprleoi Aoaol, Pomeroy, on Kerr'a Run Road which elake; thence aouth aubJect to accrued real
1•1.
benefits'wiU depend on the acciua- Ohio 41711. A oomplete II aoulh 18 3/4' ••t12 112 aeventy-thrH (73) degreel . eatatell-lor.
REAL
ESTATE
leal
fro•
the
point
of
end
elx
(8)
mlnu111,
cy of that record.
lepl dJJIIIpllcM of lhe I'NI beginning; thence with aald nineteen (Ill rod a to 1 APPRAISED AT: 130,000.00.
About ever}' three years, you 1111111111 •• folowa:
road north 11 314" well 12 atake In the Athena ro1d; The re11 _, ..,. cannot' be
should request a jlenonal earnings
The foUowtna,.., ....... 112 r. .t to the piece of thence along the Alhene ootd for Ina lhln two-thlrda
and benefit esttmate statement _alluata In the Townehlp ol beginning.
road north thirty-live (35) theappniMd value.
S.llebury,
County
ol
llelge
TEAMS OF SALE: C1eh
A
leo,
the
following
c~eg,_
well to the p i - ol
(PEiiES) to ID8kc sure your record
and
Stale
of
Ohio,
and
on
dlllvwy
of deed. '
deecrlbed
r111
eel
ate,
lo·
.
beginning,
the
..
me
being
is correct. You can get a free bound... end ol-lbed ••
M. Soulaby
J1111•
wll: Situate In the Coun.ty of One (1) ICI'II, more or 1a10.
PEBES re,quest form by calling loll-:
Sh..ff ol llelga County
llolga, In the Stile of Ohio,
Being the aame reel

• •

and In the Townahlp of

Att1Codo304

.t•I:-Otlli. .i•

112- MicHiepon

171- Pt. Pie•'"'

211-Guyon Diu

1·3- ANbla Diat.
371- Welnot

Pom•ov

91!-Ch•llr
843-Pordlnd
24 7 -lltl"l'l f1U1

171 - Appl• G•ovt
773-•.t.•on

SI•I-Raeint
742-Rutlend

···-ll181t
!137-lufl .. o

·-.. - · ..

34- Butin•o Buildings

112- Ntw H•en

S~e

41 - J:touMI tor Atnt
42-Mabil• HomH far Aen1
•3-Fann• for"'"'
44- A'*'menl tor Alnt
•e-Furnithed Aoomt
•1 - lptc:• tor Rent

o17-Wenttd to A1nt
41 - EquiDment for Rent
41 - For Leae'

..

...

.

.•

7!-la.lt &amp; Motors for Sale
71 - Auto
&amp; Accauori•
77- -Auto Aep1ir

p.,,,

,

79-Ctmpers 6 Motor Homn

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
992-5335 .,
915·3561 .

Acrou ,,.. Pad Office

S1:rv1ces

POIIIIOY, OHIO

PubliC Noltce

PUBLIC NOTICE
Th&lt;l Melga COUfttV Board
of Comm~-•la occapt·
lng blda for tile pulllh- of
certlln reel property •• d•

Townahlp ertd County, can·
ufnlnt I eprlng of lloclt WI·

tc~ibJd

bllow.

lido ahroll be flllolwd In
- the Melga c-tv CommieIlion.,.
Office,
Molta
County CounhouM. Pomeroy. Ohio, 41718. und
July 18.1181.114:30 PM.
Th&lt;l rMI property wMI be aold
to lhl hlgheet ,...,...,..
biddM'. The prapaJtt to . .
aokl Ia:
PARCEL NO. 1: The fo~
lowing deecrllld rulllloll.
oltuoled In lhl Townahlp of
Columbia. In the County of
Melge 11td Stoll of Ohio, to
wit:

' Th&lt;l IOU1h- of
•the IOU1h- quarter of
&lt;Section Number ThirtY-Two
132) In Townahlp No. Nine
' Ill of Renge No. Flfl-115)
nf the Ohio Co-·a
Purci)IM oontolnlng Forty
1401 .._more or ,__
Alao the f o - g daacrlbed rut - • · com, ,_,.,lng ot the nart-11
co.- of Seotlon No. Thirty·
one (31). of T-ahlp No.
Nl111 (8), llen11 No. Flfl•n
'111), oflheOhloc-·a
PurchaM; t11enw 1111 Forty
1401 roM; the!tcl aouth
Forty 1401 rode; t""- Will
'Forty 1401 rode; 'north Forty 1401 rode to lhl
~ of beglnnlnt. conulnlng Ten ltOI ocrea mote or

'"""*' IPt Loula Coltrll
and wlfo,
now

ad,..,--

PAJICEL NO. 2: Th&lt;l fof.

lowing ...... II
litulloln the COUtltV of VIn-

ton, In the to-"lp of VInIn lhl s.- af Ohio,
to-wit:
.
Being lhl Ohio Compony'• Purch-. lltd being
tho -.ih half of ~
aout-1 quart« of Seotlon
'No. T- 121 of lltid Forty
aft the end
(40) ofuld pr1tnl11 laoldllyE.P.
Ollila to l.elltdar Cottrll.
Alea the - - half of .....
IIOUiheaat quartroflltid he'- No. T- 121 ••_..,..
what E. P. DMIIa ealll Mil
duded to ' :•er Cottrll
end John M-. cona.lnlng
......... !70) ..
ton end

'

Bring Your Folding Chairs For An Evening of Relaxatidn
and Beautiful Sounds.
'

.....

Alea Tlllrty 1101- off_
the north end of the - l l l l f
af the IIIUtMut ~ of
Section Two Ill To--a;

'

I

NIIMIIIl • .._lbit.,lr,
ln ... OhiD Conlp ......

,.,......

&amp;&lt;WK ONE, ATHENS, NA M-mber FDIC

•• dJecrtbH •• foUowa, be~

-

one-hell

af
the
.......,... quarter of Seotlon
No. Two Ill, of Townahlp
Nl,. 111. of 1111111 Sbl•n
(111. 111d In the Ohio
Comt~any'• Puroh . ..
Th&lt;l
- • being the IDUiheoat
q - of the IOU1heoat
quart« of llecllon Two 121;
end the northlettt ....- of

•bolt• .....,..... ,..,

tile
- - . . - of
~Twof2).

Doed 11.-ce: Volu,.
183, P.,. 105 end Volu,.
214. 1'111 231, Mol11
COUnty Deed A-da. Volutne 13. , ... 174 end Volutne131.....e111,VInton
County Deed 11-daTh&lt;l 8.-d of Commla_mey,..enybldo
end re-lldvertlae thla property unll IIIIUoh PI'OIIII'IV II

loki or tolled.
T.,_ of ptiDIVVmmet
..nt ore u
followa: '"" af purche11
price peld ' lmmedllloly "'
-"ct--.llemain-

13-Eac:•ttint
84-Eiec:t:•lc.. Retrtgerttion
11-0.n••• Htuling ·
liS- Mobile Home Repait

17-Upholltery

ctuatLIIt

SIGNS
by

•taln:

..... County, Ohio, for
l•provlno 11otlon MEO·
l&lt;la-, ••741 ~late Route 141
In C . . • T-lhlp, by
II'IIIIIJII, llt'lllniJII, paving

The children of
Moyford and
Wilma Harrio,
Lott8 Bouom. Ohio,
would lilt~ to rhank
lilt rhe /ri~rub and
family who joined
Jhem in rite
. celebration of their

... aaphall-• on •
....

•

•

........

111 pllt, r•tUiaOing wllh
J
In pert ....
lilt .......... llrfdgl No.

hill•••

....,&lt;la-,477 • I lhiajlfllll
oeflllnuoua reinforced
...... eiU on retnforold
oeMrtte ••:~:~: pile
1,1. II II IIIII
1 (. . . . .

50rh Wedding

12 1111 • 0 IIIIMI· 411 leel •

0 llloiiN • 12 feet • 0
AIIG I 1111111 -.t of 111111 llllhel;nllw11 12 leel ·0
allunld In tile ............... .IIJIIJie • I llllltllfdralll),

,I

t

0

I

I

I

t

t

WE DO
lOS N. Sacend Slraat
.IIIDOLEPOIIJ, OHIO 45760
Ofllca 6U-992-2116
HOME 614-992-5692
110111

I

I

I

t

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

t

0

~·

"

Anniveroary.
They rftrl/y
enjoyed i r.

0

0

0

t

I

I

t

~:~~:o'

ROOFING

AND EVERYTHING UND.RNEATH

.TROMM BUILDERS
FlEE EStiMATES

•20 YNrs

Experience

742-2321

•Quality Hom"

We Need

I Ol'fe

I

Lecatetl 011 Saffanl Scheol ld. off lt. 141
(6141 446·94U or
7

Cuatom

&amp;/ 22/lfn

Camping Is Family Fun

~:::;;;

N'EW TlflSIIEMOIV-- POOL
OPEN TO 1111i PUIIUC

CAKPIIIG - Beaut~ul

·&amp;.n-oundii\QS

· RATES - Day. Week. Month. or Seuon
*PICNIC IHil.TIJt and ITAC&amp; for Rent
Rcw1.1ona • Cet Togethcn • Partlea

DISCOUNT TO
SENJOI
FREE ESTIMATES

cmzns

PUIDIIG

xrra1a1 JIOW OPitll

llcrYtntl Breakful, Meals, and Snacks

992-7130
11·4-'91·1 mo.

ARCADE

•

CIOLP

llltARBY

ACADEMIC
AWAIDS
GOLF USSONS

•Remodallng and
Home Repalra
•Roofing
•Siding
•Paint!ng

6 FOI 155

el Mliil•'"'

UPHOLSIEIY
213·110. S.Cellll

NO JOB TOO SMAll
FREE ESTIMATES

CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS
lepalr, Trophies,

Slgnage '
JOHN T. TEAFOID

Mlddlapett

CEDAR
CONSTRUcnON

CHiml, OHIO

Hand Tufting
Cuetom Drapa1
36 Yuu Experienee :

'614·992-2321 :

992·6641 .or
691·6164

We Boy Whet We Do.
We Do Whet We Say.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
CONS11UCnON .

'

1H1·10·tln

BOB JONES
rEXCAVADNG
DOZER and
BACKHOE ·
WORK

lt1llltOI • m11101
FREE ESTIMATES

Tab the pain out of
• painting. '
let me do It for
VEIY IUSOH.&amp;IU:
HAW IEffiENCES

rou.

(614)
696-1

(614) 915·4110

1·10-'111- t'mo. pd.

lh1s Well maintained 2 story home thai
I
Ill balhs, family room, 2 car garage, new A/C unrt, new
paper m kitchen &amp; dining, family room and a bath. large
front Sitting porch. All drapes go wilh this very bnghland cherry home. Decorated mostly with mauve, blues &amp; peach.
REDUCED TO $46,900.
.
IUW LISTING - Pi.ns Fork- 40 acres of vacant ground
with barn. tO+ tillable, 17+ pasture, 13+ limber some land 1s
fenced. Old oil well on the property also. ASKING $25.000.

NEW LISTING :._ Roso Rd. Lebanon Twp.- 350+ acres VA·
CANT GROUND. Owner may split some acreage. Call for de·
tails.

MIDDLEPORT- REDUCED! 6.77 acre Execut1ve Bulldmg
Site. High on a hill overlooking the beautiful Oh10 R1ver. If
yow want a superior homesile ...call lor detailS. Reduced to
$19,500. MAKE OFFER.
NEW LISTING - Looking for a housing site or mobde home
lot? This s1te has 100ft. frontage and located In the VlllaJe of
Racine. Sewer, waler and electric hookups o~ site! Beautiful,
level lot for $7,000.
NEW LISTING -lots are hard to find but we have available
10 111 them! All have 50 ft. frontage with minimum depth of
157 ft. sew• and water ava1lable. located in lhp viUap of

Racine. YOUR CHOICE! $2,!ill0 each lot

WE llfED LISnNGSI If YOU WANT TO SELL.. SEE USI WE
HAVE IUYEIS WAITING FOI HOUSES NAD PIOPEITIES
OF ALL KIIIDI.LISTIIICI URGEITLY NEEDED. FDI A"GOOD
D£Al", AT THE lEST PRICE AND PROMPT ACTIOII.LET US
HEAR FIOI YOU!
HE lilY E. CLELAND ....................................... 992·6191
TRACY IRINAIEI ................ :.........................MI·MJI
JEAN TIUISEU............................Il ..... : ........ .MI-2110
JO HILL ............ ,................................:.......... H....U
OFFICE ....... :.......................,................. ,........ 992-Zist

10·11-1 ...

•NewH•Gal'tlgla
•Complata

. htMde\int
Stop&amp; ca....-o
fna latllwatas

915·4473
667·6179

5-31-'90 lin

- - ···

J&amp;L
INSULATION

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TIIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING
l'ultlr

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
WlncloWI
•Roofing
•lneulltlon

g.,,,,.,

BILL SLACK
992·2269

949-2826

992-2772 or
742-2251
639 Bryan Place
MlddllfiOrl, Ohio
11-14-lfn

USED RAILROAD TIES
1-12-10-lfn

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME liTES.
LANDCLEARING,
WATER and SEWER
LINES

•IUY

asru ei'IAII

OPEN
Tundav thru Saturday
10:00 em-11:00 pm

742·2421
21/1

TRUCKING AVAILAilE

TACQIVIW ID.

MI. ouhl•

6/121'91/11110.

YOUNG'S
- lltoomA.ddltiont
-Ou""' wortc
- lloatrlul •nd Plumblnll
-COtiONte work

- ftooftng

- lmwlor • Ext..-ior
Pointing

Pomii'Oy, Ohio

POMEROY
BOWLING

TH(

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES I GARAGES
"At laa_a.la l'ricH"

St.

PH. 949·2101
or 111. 949·2160

992-3432 or
992-2403

Day or Nltht
NO SUNDAY CAUS

310

last

2nd

1·4- '11 ·1 mo.

'-""""'!~~o!IO·.vo•

.

11-14-'90 lin

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Open Tuea .. Thura.,
Fri .. Sat. 7;30 p.m.

SERYIC~

CARPENTER

V. C• .YOUNG Ill
992-6215

l·t0-'11-tm.

ROWL

OH.

IACINE,

!FREE ESTIMATES)

Rutl•tlon New
LIIIIO ltl.

PooLfYIDIO MACHINI

$30

30 SESSIONS

JAMES KRSEE

4-21·11 - 1 mo. d.

Buclo• HMrtno

_

I

t

Publlo Nodoa of

A budgel'-rlnll wll be
hold 117:30 p.tn. on July I,
1111, at the Middleport
PubliC Noltce
VIllage Council ahlmbera,
_:.=:;;.:::..;;:,~~--1 237 Race 81., lllololleport,
· NDTlCE TO
Ohio. The l!ll!'lnll Ia for Ill
CONTIIACTORS
purpoee af ollaauaelon of
STATE OF OHIO
the prop aNd 1•2 buolgll
DI!PARTIIENT OF
ol the Vllega of Ill U I a1t.
TRANIPORTATION
AI~ lnter..led ollluoll will
Colu..._, Ohio June14, have the opportunlly to
1111
give written or oral
ContnotS.IM Legal Copy comment. Tile budget will
No.11-a1 ·
be nalleble lor pulll!c ,
IHT PRICE CONTRACT
lnar,eollan at lha mayor • 1
IRZ-AOZ (1)
olf oe alter Jul' I, ,111[
..... propo1111 will be bel•een the houri of 1:00 ,
naalw•at the ollloe of the •·•· and 4 p.m. llonolay ,
Director ol the Ohio lh""'''h Friday.
Deparlment
of
· Jon P. luck
Tl'llna]IOfllllon, Columbua,
Clerii·T-urer
Olllo, untU 10:00 A.M., Ohio
Vllllll ollllddleporl
llantlarol Time, Tueaday, (I) 24
July 11, 1111, lor

..,.,

0

BENNETT'S

992-SUS or 915-3561
Acrea Fr1111 '-It Office
PIIMEIOY, OHO

992-7458

Public Noltce

Commlula-•
(I) 17. 24; (7) 1, I. 41o

11

0

MOilLE HOME

FREE ESTIMATES

=::-~;::-thirty
Counly ._..

lmpto

t

11 ... -Homelmprowm.,t•
82- PhJmbing &amp; H•lling

ProJect fenglh - 350.00
lin. - or 0.0118 mile
Work length • 818.00
Un. fMI or 0.15$ mHe
,._.,, width • V11rl..
The Ohio Depertment or
Real Estate General
Tr~neportlllon
hereby - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " ' nollflea all blddera that II
wiN lfflrtnldvoly lnaur~ · lhet ,__ _ _ _ _ _ __....__ _- :
In any contract entered Into
pureuant
to
thla
edverlloement, minority
buaiMea .,terprt~· will be
elloroled lui opportunity to
oubmll blda In reeponae to
lhll Invitation end will not
· be dlacrlmlnllld IIQIInal
thegrounda ol ra~~~~~~~~~
or national o
-olderatlanlor
"Minimum
lhla proJect
'-·-.q~j,;;;;
predetermined •• "
by law and are 111
Ill bid propoHI." "Tile
..t lor complollon ol thla
work ehlll be aet forth In
Ill blclollng propoHI."
Each bidder ahell be
NqUired 1o tile with hla bid
1 carlllled check or
allhler'a check lor an
amount equal to live -Per
cent ol hl1 bid, but In no
event more . than lilly
lhouHncl clolllra, or a bond
for ten per 01111 ol hla bid,
payable to the Director.
Bldoler mull apply, on
the DrODir forma, for
qualification 11 lelll ten
d1ya prior Ia the date eel
for o penlng bide In
accordance with Chapter
5525 Ohio ReviHd Coda.
P1111e end apnllloedo•
are on Ill• In the
Department
of
Tranaporlallan anol the
office olthe Olatrlct Deputy
Director.
Tha Director raeerv•
the right to reJeot any and
elbkle.
JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
(I) 24, (7) 1

Ina 11 the north •d of the

I

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

316/90/111

I

PubliC Notice

•

·•Sidewalks
•Patios
•DriveWl!YS
•Slabs

0- LMcllna Creole.

.

IICIO IMNS-$79 .,.

AUIIAaS

PubliC: NotiCe

--

...,

All CONDmONEIS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOI MOIU &amp; DOUIUWIDE HO.S

:::s.s-'Si:i".;'12~.,

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE

lrl111 It .. Or We
Plclt lp.

72 - Trueks tor 5•1•
73- V•n• a. 4 vyo ·s

78 - CIImp lng f;quipment

. . .WTOIS-$110 .,

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAII

217 I, SeeotMl St.

THIS 1"x 1"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
-· AT f5.00 PER DAY

(8)2A, (7).1,1

I,

71 - AutOI to'

31- Lau &amp; Acru1•
31- Rell bute Wanted

•

The Public Is Invited To This FREE Concert

'

32-Mobile Hom11 tor S•l•
• 33-fefms for Sll•

. BULLETIN BOARD DEADLiNE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
Pl!BLICATION

Thursday, June 2 7 7:00P.M.
Court Street,' Pomeroy,, Ohio

'•

.

-.

E•.. ptlng ""m 1111 Forty
1401 ••• ............
ocrlbed, onelll rod. Sl•_,
(111 - o n lhl Mat
oldo. being • right of way.

'•'

Tr~nsport~l1on
7~ - Motorcvc:l•

BULLETIN
BOARD
. ,.

1· 14-'11-1 mo.

13- Livlltoek
&amp;•-H•v &amp; Grein
&amp;&amp;-s ..ct &amp; F•,tlil••

by 'l.l,;/c HID111'ltl(

leu.

'

ASI-Ltan

8·et RttaJtt · Fitt
.'

··~lc•

· 31 - Homn.tar Sale

167-CootVIIo

BANK ONE PROUDLY PRESENTS

'

23-f'fot.tiOAII

M110nCo.• WV

Are• Code 114

r---------,-----'-----,--------..--------

.

Melfi County

Ar.. Code 614

317- Ch•hln
311-Virtton "
z•t- fltfo Q,.nde

WANT
. ADS
WORK!

· . CLEANING UP· Preparing your ~ camp aad cieanmg ~p at
a self-made work station are part or the fun experienced by girls In
,.the Black Diamond Girl Scout Council at their Summer Day Pro' gram held at the Meigs County Fair Grounds. Pictured, 1-r, are
; Sherry Johnson, Middleport, Senior Girl Scout; Camilla
1 Yoacham, Racine, Fly-up CadeUe; Dlanoe Jones, Racine, Fly-up
Seulor Girl Scout.
; Cadette; and Linda Chapman, Middleport,
'

21 - IUiin•o Dppottunitv
22- Montr to Lot"

following telephone exchanges ...

·

''

11-ll••m lqu:.,metu

1 &amp;- l~hoOil &amp; lnst;uetion
11-A•dio. TV &amp; c;1 Repair
17-Misc:tlllniOul
11 - Wtnted To Do

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

&amp; lrvr•slot.k
12- Winttd 10 luy

Classified pa,es.cot'er the

YOUR
SOCIAL SECURITY

'

f.llll' Slliiiiiii'S

14- lusin•• Training

WASIIIIS-$110.,

DIYIS-$".,

L. Wrltwll

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

V•e••bl• _
!59 - Far Slit or Trede

1 1- Help Wanted
1 2-Sttuetio" Wented
t3-71n•ut"a"CII

New 1•ltuk/1

tollAYWAIUinY

NEW -REPAIR

~•-Fruill &amp;

,)PrVII'P\

USID APPUAIIOS

ROOFING

12- -lngQoo..

lrlltiiiiYIIII'III

SUMMER DAY COO • T'"* Meigs County Brownies are but a few of the participants in
- , the 1991 Black Diamond Girl Scout Council's
: Summer Day ,Program; ''Rappin' with Nature,"
: held this past weekend at the Meigs County Fair

3-14·'91-lfn

"••••• for conMCUtW run1, broken updi#/IWitl biChMgiCI
fnr •ar.h tt.w 11
•

... ... Oeflit Of M•on counti.;. rnut1 be pr•·

C.rcl of Th_,k,

•RM-Ible Ret•
•Ouellty Work
•F- E1t1mat•
•C.raet H11 Faat Dry
Time ·
•High Olo10 on Tl~
Floor Flnlah
MilE lEWIS. Ow,.

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CAU 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

l

CAIPIICliA•IS
•IIIII '11.1 FLOOI CAll

'

ryn

The Dally Sentinel- Page 7

OhiO

GROOM
ROOM :
Complete Groomingfor All lrltds ·

EMILEE MERINAR .
Owntr &amp; Operator .

614-992-6820
P-oy, Ohia

2·11·11-111

Ill

•,

W. H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

•VINYL 81DINO
•ALUM INUM II PING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION ,

If you' r1 !n 111td
of Mobile Home
Parts or
Acct..,ill...

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

"F- Eatlmat•"

P1L 949·2101
· or a... 949·2160

NO SUNDAY CAW
l·ll·IIR

SEE US FIISTI
992·5800
RT. SJ WIST Of

Dow•

'IHbune Cl&amp;Mifiede
Home of

GREAT BUYSt

•o

•Ramodallng and

Homa Repelra
•Roofing
•Siding
•P1Intlng

FUllY INSURED

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR

CONSTIUcnON .
992·6641., .
691·6164 '
1·14-'ll·lfll

TII-COUtm

SAIIITATIOI

~me

TANIPU.al

POIT·A·JOIIIIIIITM.
742-2111
4·11·1

"

.

�Monday, June 24, 1991

__ Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bnce Beattie

WtiJ.O-O-O

•'

Monday, June 24, 1991

31 ttomn for sale

44

. _ For hh In Town On
T1ilnll
..,Root,
" '· Low
VInyl
~

can~

KIT 'N' cARLYLEe br Larrr wrtaht

Apenment
for Rent

•

Codw.

To leN: 2 ltw, 3br
Conw ...,. In Choohlno, Ohio.

Cl.ASSFJED
ADS

A llk:ra, 'Tll61Ee

._ded.

........

MON., JUNE 24

•

01111 N I.MnglnC. fl Worlll, TX

CORVETTE':

-1132·

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-8

Television
Viewing

I~DANiaa.~,

1tt0
LLnlna
lu.-.art
OIOIMIII ofloct.l, whho whh torll
biUI lnL,
Aw10111t cer..
Coli (114)446-4012 .... 4141, ....
After I (1141 717_.230, 111&lt; tor

'Rm II I

..._
Condition.
. . . . . . Ill 7110.

BORN LOSER

71 Autos for sale

aao·•.

yoo?

Pomeroy-Midd~~. ~1!.1«?.

114-247·

M,U,11,72,111,11,11P
4111.

EVENING

32 Mobile Homes

AnnouncrmPnls

l=·~'irQ
~;.;:

PIUNJIT'i:

R

'' How do I fove

3 Announcements

I
_E.,.T.....,I_B
__~~f~
~
r

w Clle 1111 a •

1:00 I]) •

for Sale

.thee?" he said.

"Let me count
the ways."

y.;_,l4-ll

h-1
1 ..,..,...;.,
N,-A ;,..i

Ster110.

~-~=
a

"Five, ten, fifteen,
twenty... "

_,...F

People who wolk diligently
and save their money expect
~~,:;:;~;:::::=·~ that SQme day they can pay
r
their taxes In one -~--- ·

I I I I

!

WOrld Todlr
.OOurllouaa

1:05 (J) lawttctrect
1:30 I])

e

I

~ &amp;•.=s':r2.Q

L

8

C!l 3-2·1 c - t Q

!I:C.,~Q

1.11 Up CfoH
..35 (J) Andy QrtHtth
7:00 ~
iiJ Wheal ol Fortune

-····

Over

350

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

. dlotdbutoro
2 - And Whho K111ono Aloo, NOW!
C.ll tor emulna r1e0rdad
2 Ony/WIIho Pllvtul K111orw To
m~~~~go. Clot PAID FROM
Qood~ll14 441-0317.
H011Er114-432 ..79tloxt. TDSt.
aBuell Aabblla,I14-:IY.1232.
GREAT POSiliONIIt
3 Kilt- to giVNwoy, 1-t14-H.. NEWill "Cookln" Fun Uno 01
Kltohon
n-. llonogoro
- am.
Noodod. WI Troln. W-y In·
3 OUtoide I W- Old Klttono como. Flo&amp;lbll Houno. Excotiont
'•
To Cll.,.owoy.I14-M1·1107.
CorMr ~unhy. 1~
'•
14
Business
N«: Roatot- I llonlh Old 0124.
0....... thophord F_.lo. 114- Help WOIIIod, No IIPiriontl
44Hm.
..
Training
necnury. Somt 11~riW1ct
•.
APfiiY ont~tlmo oftor Aotroln
-ttiSout~otom
Aultrollon Dog, 1 YNr hllotul..
12:00 weekcliye. Duli.t Cleantra, lull-~. s~ Voter
~.Ciood W.tch Dog. 114-311- ..........., ..... Clolllpctlo.
P -. Coli T~
1317fl
Roglotorotlon
motl.
.
,,. Fill For Pllto: 25" Z.nhh T.V. Lk»nood A I H AgontoNoodod
Immediately to woik mtdiclrt,
114-211-1721oftor I:GOp.m.
hNthh ond lito morllot. 304·lS7·
2lS7 .. 1-800-457-1003.
18 Wanied to Do
Will lobph In lly Homo
Needed: •SoiMollt Fof Lawn •nr.lmo. . A!idrior
Ar110.
llllntono,_,llow Low"tTrim a Ro oroncH AnHoble. All Shlfto.
'
Edgo. P.._. Roopond o: lo• Coiii14-24M711.
~""k oncl tin, hthot Rood.
Cll 011, c/o Clonlpctlo Dally
BaS Thtrcl Avenuo, 01~ Blllh Hag Sorvloo. Rouonobh
SUper !log Cl Ant.IM-446-78lll. Tribune,
Rotoo. No .tob To Smotll 114llpoti8, Ohio 41131.
3-2.
--loolloaleRotri~Of
And IIDctllrn .... Stcmi, ·lcllh
Doddll'a Prlvl"' Homo Core.
Hove Room tn IIY Homo For Tho
. . . . . Or Con Uoo For
Por1Mnoi17 112 Y•no Old. Aloo,
Core Of Eldootr, lion I Women.
..... eo• · With s- Pod·
Coiii14-31Wth A.,tlmo.
Pl~~lmo oftlco poolllon In Point
dlng,IM ..- .

,.

PI- -

Lost &amp; Found

6

hove piNII'!I

"'"=r· :=1,

::,:or

'1.·

1:n

=

..

,. . . --r.-;--·--··

0r1-·•

==. .,.....::-= =
HelpWinted

-:.c::rr..:~:J

·-VISAIIIC
qoallt)&gt;
"" 110
onil-·odnncoo.
1·

10041W0110 Ext. 2524.

2001.

pOO.OO .. Dayl phone
•• homo lor ........ oond
12.00 to Pom D;;,hla, IR 111,
AI I dJVMte, OH 45772

hOIIIO.\Y ·

PROCESSING
PHONI, Ordoro At Homo.
Pooplo Colt You To Ordor. For
Into ,_,.._17 Exl 1122.

ORDERS! PEOPLE
caLL YOU.

NO EXPER•NCE NECESSARY.
· - - 2 EXTENSION p.
2732..

Fill Clift, coN 1-tM.ell-4370.

·

~-Colt lllrltyn

- v · - · - S.

""""""
tor
Co. 1\111 locltty
I put~lmo
.. . . ..... hiring 1-otoly

_,......., hl.;h

wov-.

tot.SUn

=-;·ir.:;: ,,.,.,,..,, 114·
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

-

Pay,
leneflla,
Tr11 IJI Jrtltlon,
40'7-2Mo~.!
IUS' ..

Ext.

m.

to.m.·10p.m.

Too

A - I A" A,_ I Shlttoy

....... 304-t1S-142tl.
Contini -

: Tho

Detty
llot of

18 build..., •
.........
-lf'r.;-·
llul 11 ,..,.
oki,Fdlble

11111-llllto...,rour.. ho..
-'' . Mloo
pur·on...
- to01rrlor
.... Clrttlpotto Detty , . _ ,

••aa

....

RoiH mo,ooo • ,_ In&amp;.'::::

.

UIIIIIIOIIIY -.a - ·
&amp;:4!.'
I",, •lnootno
l'otontlol.
•a aaao
EJt. y.

.....,ltul :114 -room Forwr
Whh A ........ 3 lo-o
~- Onr A llollbh
DOtrc"od Clonop, Wott 8tocfcod
Pond. 'ST Aoni 1111.. Prlood to
hi AI: ,.~100.00 Conloct .lm
At WHY
RooiiY AI:
11Wfl2.t141, or 114-112·11f4.

Bullness
34
Building•
OFfiCE- FOR LEA8E on

,....r .... -lonlri!i.
..........-.--u,.
~-~

_..

,..,..

Slate Farm lluMum Dnctor:

poroon whh good ,..bol ond
wrl11on llklllo, who . - . pubtlo

~ -

over:.

nrgatlobh -

tlon.

51

HOUI8hokl

Goods

• boloro 11:00 All:
Premium Altrttlo ~ho 0..
Silo-type _ _ UHCI4ot . ohWd 0111• onc1
• Rotta
a montho, 11200. .. biii oltot, WATIII ftLLI DRtWD: loot, ond -IOWS7401t.
304-t71-11:10.

a..--.
:,::..:::=:::..---:=iihleny,OHeiC~!,..,,~·
Ilk~
1M ••"e'iio." .. '
eon-olol - :1/4 111111 lOUth
of · - lrklao on ut :11, 304f11.llt21 or~
lij;i~;;~~'i;;i;:-;::;.;;;

Lala I .. .,... For • •· Lind
Conlroot, lf4.li1741M4 oftor

=,.....,----'--

_lp':::.m=.

~

IDT'i -·
FOR ... Ll

In Clollpctle
ony. nnl ottltil trll~ ... fty
wotor ovolhble. Pliono
71~2;..:722:::;'..:...._ _ _ _ _ __
AI: ss W.-1 112 oc. 1o4, $11,000; 1
ecr11, 111.000· ,t;'::'"~l
'
·- '
· T - (114
41.
Fot hh: R,.., bonk IMOPIIty In
llooon. -~.
F

PtlntE
OZll.

5S

71

Building
S&amp;.wllel

-r

-v-. · -

S...H houoe, ...,.1111, porltr
roung coupb, -s-:1011

42 Mobile Home•
for Rent
11111 14&amp;70 2 - - mobli8
, _ on 1 ocno lol. fltrono 304-

111-7111.

=·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Cotnptole l\lmi8hlngo.
Hourtt: Mon let; N . 114-4410322, 3 mlloo out lulovllo lid.

am 400, 4 borrlt,
11110., $1200.00, iiM-8124631.

F111Datlvery.

IIIYIIa Dteliw..,.., Gold l:olor, Good C.nciUon,
$100.114-441-7tl2.

N/ID Cottto ctw.Diori ~~-~-.
.......,.
••

PICKENS I'UIINITUIII

01101 111.7.
N«; . . . . , _ Cooloertponlol,

..........

...

l'oo rhotcl
112 WY,
mL
.Jerrloho
Rd.-~~~·
Pt. PI
rt,

=-"• rb~ H -

Solo •

R:=;

~ - h . .,.,..

114 112 8104.
$11.10 _ , . _ ,.,.,_, 11 loot

VI'rll fumlt.,.

2!-3

,~

llookot, 1111 - - lod
Co-npllll ...'" - .
Clioll, tut - : - - - -

-lultt:~:::-.
In+
dn
Pine
Dlnolto With leriOtr I 4 ~

~.

r.~:::.,oo-

- h .......... . _ . . Ohio•

One ,......

elllalenay

lnd .,...,

- ..... -·led--·

UVINCI 1100111: a Choir,
$111.00;_ . - ·..·~1141.00:;:
End T•-· 881.00
.DtNIIO
ROOM: T - Whh 4 Plddod
Cholro, 1141.00; Country Plno·
Dlnorto Whh Bench And 3
Cholroo. 1288.00; Mota~ a
Door "hch 1241· or
.DO
Bet: Dak 1'-. ibdz hh •

*

.....

y,..,i!!,.

......
-of
,.....................

flw:iiiiWNI

-..at......
••"""-' OoiiiiOI ............
c.... DON. Corti
Palnl
Pt-.~ .

Wullld:

II:~Did

,._.,......

~-

•r

p.m,_!undly 1:00 to 1:00. p.m.
114·-aat.

54 -..llcellaneou•
MerchandiM

.......

8110

IJtllloo Pllrl, 11m llli, '101

==: ~,.'\:~"":'v~

=.:''rn*. 1M 4• ,.,.

'

ALLEY OOP

az •

1000 ITU -

dltioner,

a 112 a r

olr . _

1tll

.......... ,....... ........ 3
,.._ lid. Goed ......,, w1tt run

...,...,.._'JIIa.
Lobrot
wrt.... •...w••
1101.
.,

1171 .......... 1100 0 .1.0. 114-

441 4
.:;,,:..::,:112.:=::--::'-::--:-::-..,.-.,....1181 Otdl Cut- 350 Roclflol,
o r - oftot.

J::: -;'z$1.200·

.......

''

e

1172 COI'Iiolr, aa 11. trovot troiiOr.
Uk1 new. 2 11te, full¥ lilt-ea.

1:30 IIDl ale Flttltlly Man Jack

1172 28 ft. Prowler compor, ~II
both, olr concl., 304-1'15-1111. ·
1185 Prrtonrlno popo~~p, ol-,,

'

hat problems In his romantic
~~~~~~ of Jill. (PI 2) Ster110.

a6 Orr Stage Stereo.

.

81

-.

..

HO!I'Ie

Improvements '

tlmat•l Reter.cea, No Job ro
Bit Or Smolll 614-441-4225.

I HEERED SOME
FANTASTICAL
GOSSIP AT TH'
CARD GAME!!

l'N ALL
fAISII

IT'S ALL
COMIN' BACK
TOME

I FERGIT
WHO IT WAS
ALL ABOUT

NDWit

E I R TREE SERVICE. T1!
",
TrN Remove!,
•

IAmlllillfl.rlll

··--1101.
'-'.Y_

!?ell!!' Oiltel,

nloo cloon oor,

1187
Conllor, 11'!!1 AC,
4&lt;tr, Aulo, .... 4 Crt-....100.

T.... """'t&amp;'N, 114 4 •• a311.
1187 flllr-uth Hootzon 12,200.

, . . Pirnttoo

12.100.

Chlvratot

-loo

304-~.

11 Farm Equipment
- oav. - . ~~Cue •an, 14000.00, 1.f14.'N21014.

. . ._ , , . .UIDII

lrMtor,

=g=

am ...o

ononc~

truck 1100.

~ET

a ,...butn

-··
Ron'o

·

tUw

In otock, AQN
OH. 1~

~ACKSON.

EVANS,

TV

:"'..,.&amp;lonol

Roofing, pllllllng onc1 -

•r

1187
Flnoblnl T·Top
LOidod, ~ooo ....... ...,

,..,...,_, 114-MI-7124 ohor
2:30p.m. 01114-441-.
1117 ltlfMIIfl ..._ Ill~. Coli
IIIW lp.m. l14 441 IIU.
1111 lulok Plrll Avenuo.,~
-'- 4 mlloi: fi
' 1 1r, •

lltl4.

Davlo

Ou~

-·-;o:"J;;"~~olilovor 112
,.,_

-Voo

.

- •;

CfMic Rd. P1rt1, aup-

=a=•.

• Lllot:l
•1 •
fllr•-.114'

Chid- L - . luro

12

a

11'111118

Plumbing &amp;

Heating

::~t:;.'&amp;;;l.,~=~!: 84 Electrical&amp;
,.
fiwir Train w...
Refrigeration
;f· n4 ._ Col 114-Mt- '";idMiiif:;;~;;;;;iiii~.
a.ooo •

1;,;:;,:.:.IM;,;..:..::•:;,11.:.1M:.::..·....,......,. . .- !!lJ!! 111111 ., - . . c w
1111 ~ ...,_ ••r, a u - : : ' : : . ' ! ! - - W _ , . .
R.... ,"A::t..m.~ c;a ,;:; ~ u;:.'L,~-~.::
.

-

,tot. .. ,..,,

oolhlil
Iori:
1:101•.1:30fi.m.
NlghtliM: l14-44f.Z127.

I ;ltn rrto. luy,
rrl• yo,

I:ON:OO

(

________

June 21. 1.1

•

,...,

ss. ,., hh: lxtno ·~ 87

'Ji?'• ............... .....

,
•

ltock Ulla

.........,_n::·-

2111.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

~lc Tonk P...,..ng IIOLClolllo
Co. liON E-lNTERPIIISES

fJr&amp;lwp, ond dottvay. 1\4-·~~
304-1751111 Cut- lupnomo. otr, Hit, 2

if.:.0
:=
Bf

ASTRO·GRAPH

-fiMU ....Clood
tor
~ -Don't Will
0111 , . . . , . _ - · 304-t1$.

~lilon,Ottt-.e'ST.fl28.

..,.,
,
'

1\:''

Upholltery

~l":o=::: ~

~TliAng.

J04.171-4114 lof ~ ...
tlrnlloo.
·~

I.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

By PlrllUp Alder

w..r . Norlk

Build upon the toundlllortl you·.. firm·
ty eatablllhad In tho , - -.rd. You
- now In a much more tortun81e cycle
ll1d you trhould be able to do wtrat you
couldn't do prwtoulty.
CA~ (June 21"""" 22) II you ,...
to ~ blrlw•n today or tOMOrrow·
u the lime to trandle I potenttel rnonay•
rnaldng matt•, you may be wtae to do
nead8 doing .. promptly .. poae;.
ble. ~ where to took tor romance

and you'll find lt. 'rhe Astro-Graph
Matchmaker Instantly · - • which
signs are romantically perfect tor you.
Mall $2 plua a long, llllfl·addreued,
stamped envelope to Matchmaker, c/o
thll newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, c t land, OH 44101-3428.
LEO (Julr 23-AIIfi. 22) T_, to sat aside
11011111 quality lime today tor a pleeaurable endeavor. You're not Nkely to be
artuned to heavy arrangements, ao
ha.. tun and don't fight it.
VIRGO lAIII- 2J.IepL 22) Your greet·
est today Ia your ability to help
otherS 1\111111 their uplratlona. Give of
yourself generoulty; your time will come
later.
IJBIIA (lepl. 23-0cL 2J) An admirer
wtro 11 quite anxious to get to know you
batter may make an ~ura today. II
you are an unan.ctred Ubran. this
could turn out to be very lnt..,lng.
ICON 10 (Oct. 24-No¥. 22) Continue
to ln-lgate way1 of atrengttarlng
yOIA' ttnanclel poalllon today. There are
opportunl1iel liovwlng lboul that
could be maanll•tul - II properly

1....--- -------..J

.

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

15 Tart

A111wor to flnowtouo Pulllo

40 Former
president
42 Didn't utol
44 Call out
45 ActorVoight
46 Comp~~ra
49 Ru1111n
c1valrrman
53 Rage
54 Pertaining to
dawn
56 Put ori 10Hd
food
57 - code
58 Ere Infection
59 Sea bird
60Aetar- know
61 Hurl
62 Filed routine

5 Shout of
apptauea
6 Tears
1 - da France
8 --ar•d
g Ballet lear
10 trldtocen
jtwar
11 Stare

DOWN
1 Atlan chief
2 Type of grain
3 Tennle plerer
-NMIIII
4 HeavJ with
moiature

18 Tibia
·•
supports ~
21 Luxuriate
23 - La Douce
24 Taeta ca
to PI pop)
25 Now England
unlverlltr
26 - - ,,. ·.
Uooctfor ·
Love
.
27 Urflln 1111
28 Ntr¥0U4 ,
lplltmo

28uA" - - ·
11
1PPit"
30 Future
LL.Ba.' ...m
33 Actre~t ­

exploited.

IAGITTAJIIUI (Nov. 23-0.0. 21) This
could be a very ilnioYable day tor you
IOCIII!y. But lOr rnulmum ..joynwrt,
8vald IIII!CIIttng wtlli an acq&lt;lalnlance
Wlio Ilk• dealing In lntrtguel,. -

,,

time

38 Number•
41HomlngwaJ
43 RepiJ
··
46 Singer Tom:

1121• 11JNew1

.

(l) NawiWiilch
all. AI'HIIto Hall
0 Mllml Vice
• Orr ltlige

«•·

46 Singer - ·
lllnt\elll
•
47 Flower
·
48 llllltary cap
411tlflndl
50 Of alrcr11t
51 iln't 1ble to•
52- band
55 Ell (comb . •
torm)
•

D ltllflill Tonlglil

a

Moneylltre

aJI Scarecrow ll1d Mra. King

e

11:30 I])
0 Tonlglilltiow
Stereo.
C)) Magnum. p.l.

CD !uropaan Journal

..

Cll=-=Q

I. 'lwaa': ........ CIS

.;!r=·Q
1.11

.Orr
Ute

Ql ..,..... Tarrlglit
11 :35(1) ChiM Q
12:00CJ) . . . . . .

&amp;§1::~
With
•

............
OThl

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~Cipher c;rrP~oplflll . . ....., ffOI'n

•••'a"'

tty.,_. PtOIMI. p.n

Mel"'""'·

Eaoh lltW 1ft tM . . . . MlfMIIIOr lfiOIMlr, TfXMY'• OW: H..,_. Q,

'T

· LRFIYTFIL

CIIUVIO

1110

ASJUIY

TL

YDI

IUT!IOLI

YDI

COI'YDIO
~LKeiF

liN

NRO

Now

aJIIIIuty anclllie ...., Q

12:01 CJ)IIIIIDtllf Cleogrltpltlc
IJqlltnr
(I) Nlgli.... Q

,.,

'

Lomerr
36 - upon a

w

valuet In lite today are not likely to con·
IIIII of prOfit or commerce. To be truly
happy, let your tie8rl rule YQ~lr head,
even In your m81erlal attalra.
AQUARIUS
211-Fab. 11) Your
pleasant dlapOeitlon will make you ...,,_
come whet- you go today. You'll be
generoue with your compliments, but
you'rellkety to get many more In return.
PIICES(Fab. -....rctr 201 Thlala one
ot those daye Wilen challenges will
awak., your 1'8101.. and character. It's
a good time to llrt.. tor objectives you
prevloulty thought - • too dtttlcutt to
ach-.
ARIII (Marcil 21-Apr111t) Don't walt
tor companiOns to lnltlgate activities
today. Taka Clillrge of matters youraalt.
Your lnctlnatlont tor teaderthlp quality
you lOr the rote.
TAUIIUS (A!Irfl20 Mer 20) Thera Isn't
a n y - to lMI reluctant aboUIIIIU·
lng a gentle reminder to one wtro ow.
you ateghlmate obligatiOn today. This
Individual II u eager u you are to Clear
things up.
01. . . (Mer 21..1- 20) T-orte II
BIMIIIIal 't o your lUCCI II today. Be coopera!... - even ready to play a MC·
oriiWy role - II II will turtlier a cotlectlvelntereet.

I

:r

10:30(!) (J) Voloea From 11ie .....
II Claolr and ChaM
1.11 Burt. Maee•lne
1t :oo CJl •
Cll Clle 111

CAPRICORN (Oec. 22-.lan. 1t) The real

Eut
Pa111
Pau
Pau

How often have yo~ read that wben
1•
Pass 2+
the dummy is tabled, you should pause 3 NT
Pau Pass
and take stock? Countless times, I'm
sure - but do you always heed tbe
Opening lead: + 5
advice?
1
Now, no doubt. you will take time to 1
consider your line of play in today's ·
~no-trump contract. West's openIng lead is a low spade to dummy's sin· lead, so you should finesse the ~lub ·
gleton ace.
queen at trick two. If East covers with
When in no-trump, always start by the king, win with the ace and switch
counting your top tricks. Here you to diamonds. Your nine triclur will be
have four: two spades, one heart and ready to run.
one club. That ~ns you need five
Here West wins with the club king
more winners. The diamond suit will but be cannot hurt you. Whatever h~
provide fo'ur, and the {lith wm come. returns, you win the trick. and attack
from the clubs.
diamonds.
Which minor should you lead at
U you didn't play this hand correct·
trick two? To -~r that question, ly, don't criticize younelf too harshly.
COGBider bow you rm&amp;bt go down. The When the deal wu played in an e&amp;pert
rllikla Eut gainfng the lead early tournament in JH4, every declarer.
• pe;1hlrrg a spade throop your K·J. but one led a diamond at trick two
U We:.t bolda tbe q - with length, sufferlnc defeat. Tbe sole su~ui
plus another entry, you might lose five South led dummy's heart nine at trick
trlclls before winning nine.
two, which worked becatl!e East held
You must lry to keep East off the a beart honor..

R...,._

e.vtco, -lollzlng

In Z.nhh oho _..Icing moot
othlr lironclo. collo, oloo
nrpolre. WV
Ohio 114-441-2414.

=:e=.mta- €. .C..:.'o:.
iiJI.

-ono

Alr1tlon Motors, r•PIIrwd.

10 74

+A2

a

f•

onti

Time

Cuervo Gold Crown from
Boulder, Colo. (T)
QIL.arrr KJng Uvet
1D lleauiJ and llie leaal Q
t:301!1 azeaven~ng.,..
Herman taac:liea a subject he
knows nothing about: seK
education. (R) Stelilo. Q
10:00 I]) • Ouanturn Leap The
Leap Home: VIetnam. (R)
Stereo.
. Ill @ .Nf!or"'rllirll,.rermm Ea...-rre
Chrla meets a brother he
didn't know he had. (R)
SteriiO. Q
all. Stir Tretc
CD 8urtlrrg Manly Cfearwatlir
Cfaulc from Australia (T)
QIWorldNewa
0 700 Club With Pat

BARNEY
Cultla Home Improvement•:
YNro Exporlenc:o On Otdor • &amp;
Homoo. R- •ddttlont,
Founctorlon Work. Rooll!ig,
Wlndowo I Sklng. Fnoo lii-

eun roof AIIIP.M can,

.J

.Al07Z

Picking the right
suit first

16 Fencing
aword
17 Knock
18 Heckleo
20 Willie poplar
22 Etern•llr
(lllbr.i
23 AuthorLavin
24 Fibbing
27 -ball
31 I !~Ink, there·
tore - 32 Thin wedge
34 Show
attectlon
35 Gr"kmuoe
37 Coup d' 39 Eeplonago
org.

II N..twttle Now Stereo.

Trimming. Fr11 Eotlmotnl I .
12.:1011:
1114 ·
E1t«t. Automotlc,
4 SPIOII, 31'1-715T.
.

lluMwln FNit ,.,., o1urot oft

SOl!TH

.KJ4

az • Murptrr arown

1.11 Pro leacli Votleybell

Air, T·T•.r. Block
•Tlillo
Gtlv,
• 18 ...,.,
c ··"·
.......
Clr
Cloon
And
R11111 - I I 112.000 - · -tt,la0.114-MI-7241.

- Pllnt,I\IOO.•.._.1241.
1117 Choirot!!r.!.cyt, 4 IPIOII

.A 2

1 - Krlngle
5 NurHry bed
8 Trot
12 City In Hawaii
13 a-the14 Environment
agcy.

8WreatlfnG
WWF Prime

Trimm~.

FruH1&amp;
Vegetables

58

EAST

+1083

9:00 (I) .Cll. MOVIE: 'Devtd'

AIC - . . , Night Movie
(2:00) Slareo. ~
CD C!lllltlc Requiem The
BaltiC Sllltea of the Soviet
UniOn: Estonia, Latvia and
Ulliuanla. (1 :30)
ill
The
FYI group goea on • retreat
to regain a ..,... of
teamwork. CR/ ~110. C
II) Quantum
The Laap
Home; Vietnam. R) Stereo. ·

f.!l-11

+10862
.Q843

Marrll8a (4:00)

tllned, awnlna, double alnkt.
82500 010. IM-441-G:104.
I·

exc cond, $1,500. 304-175-1188.,
'

4001.

8271.

"""P:('Ior·
:=..":i~An.=

1fi'Y.€0
10:::£'rn£R
Ut:E...

Choory Connor TYtoo 10,
Til~
=.PI, Aulornotlo

·-=·· . . . -::..:=t

110: - 17 ou. "'

•

-

QM!modore H.~... mon•or. drive, Dtdmoto .., ~

o1errnr Lrnn ortlr'e - - .

25111 Anrtuat YlciOr
Awanll Hoet David Branner
and other cetebrltles hOnor
outstln&lt;llng allillles In 14
spom categories; trorn Las
Vegas. (2:00)
·
IIJ)l'ruh Prince of lei Air
Cousino WIH and Carlton
cortlpalll to wtrO cen plcil
up a data. (RI Stereo. Q_
0 Munlar, She Wro4e Q
Orr 1taae Stereo.
1.11 World W- llldlng From
Lakewood, Colo. (TJ
Qll'ritneNewa
aJI leauty and llie laalt Q
1:05 (J) MOVIE: The Rulet of

All typn of m11011ary, briCk,
T-ltnl, Exc:etlont Condlo
lion, Shorp, 12.700. 010 114- · block and ltone. · Free tstlmllll. 304-n:J.tsao.
4411. .

12" - · 114-88H411 ..
182·7113.

Ccincorlto I ptatll ...... tonko,
Ron .....
-.DH-..Pta

2213.

lonliiVUII, whfto

Coualr, v.e outo.toodld,
11.000 lllllooi, li4.lltN317 or
llt2.-.
·

table . . .

oon.r..

o•

11113 Toyolli C...Oido, loodod,

·~-

· Utllloo flllot. No ......

.. .

1881 cor troller. Phone 304-1751030 or f11.28H.

-... .. - ...,.........,. ........
=~'%?:i..'l'~·t.:!l ~=ti~jt .....,. --=. .
__,_,
....lr'ldl,

......
lend
, . _ Or Wcrll Hlotw, To:
CLA 11'11. .eio Clltllpctlo Dalty
Tribune, ta Third Annue, Oar.
llpallo,OH411a1.

MacGyver tries to stop a
developer from deapolllng
the tan&lt;!aeape. !Ai Stereo. Q
CD FIN on tile Rim Socletlaa
seek to predict earttrquakea
and volclnle eruptions.
Stereo. 1;1
C!l A.._... Writer Keith
Huxley trBCII the lootllepl
of hll latlier, TQm. C
IIDl
Malor .,., The
Major plans lOr qulet.time
when the women go
shopping. (R) Ster119. Q

.•

13300. :J04.8'7H132.

Lusnlliar: w..... a ~
.
letllnldlpllriod,.MM.illllj. A11oo CIMkc.ta 12 llP. !1N!ri1
Gruii .. ~1- · IW. '-"', ...... or4o.~ 1711. . _ 1111: 41 lnoli..........,
........... hliyCrtb.llltr- 111111, '11oo Hill Dti3'!
ond
........ a hdclnil ... ~ •I• did, 1410 li I ... ,. RoiG411ior, Q 1100.
A...-. In llklolte....,. '""" Orlglllll, 11111 ... ""' $110; 114 -IIIL
IIIII. Coll'--nft ICH.
..... ,_. lfdpmonl IR.

lqr lp •••.

Cll we roi8cOr-

SP.rv1ces

'"
.. Allilnv- . . -.,_...,
tAII-'11'11.
1i ' t n, .. Larr-. ........

1..._ 1 .... fiiiL

E-.or,

-loo

~~--..:2~tcl..:lt:....
. ------

S t u d - - .....
CoeUr Whh P - . 114-Mt-

Buy or 1111. I I - Anttot-,
1124 E.II.T.W
lloln. 10:00
· - ·o.m.
-to
"1:110
"·
Hounr:

--

;~
:.
....... ......,..,.

fie~,.,

CJ)MajorLaeguela...,..
Seattle Mariners at Chicago
White Sox (L)

Auto Pan• &amp;
Acce!ISQrles

=~·.r,:up. - P I 8, $8QO.

'* =~;:'W.f
oUM'II-.-..__ao..,..,
.... .._

......

'

•
- Tronom,..lono,
&amp;
nrliultt,
otonlng 11 _.:. .a-...
tfll FINiilnl, good .concl, 304- Pono. 114-2411'1177, 114-371-

7 On

Antique•

76

271t

nah
~. ~J:IIO:
liking Kl&gt;tlllcotlono Ot Troctor
Lob I t Htl
Fllilra,_e Com]llr Top~_E~ 1111
Trllltf IJrl_, PuHiflV Tonko.
opt.,
...... lent ~ton. 82111 Or Of.
lluot How 2 YNno Exjllrto-. 411r, 1 112 Story l'r Hu. Futt nr
«~, lv• tw. 1ft. Polio Door. $110,
In Pt.
And Cloon Drtvlng Rocord. ........... a liiN ca. Clooo both, nloo nel
ta.WI: Alia D !'I
Apply In Plrlon: Plorceton
TDaod
W:JIU..
- · , , _ 4 ,.__ ·a ...... a.. ,....,,
...... - - C u l l - A n d
~,. 4311 lt. lit. To
PriDed
To Wt
114 ttl
o..tn llrtl, U,IIO.IM - 1122
110, IMIIIpOiie, 011.
...... Ollie:. 1•4-11 ...... Cloon. No ,.... Rltw- • .,...., no ohllr, "-00 11, 11011o
Two put Umo IJIII'o noodod lor 1 ........... Or ..... t1I,ODO. Dlplell Rlqut-.114 411 n .
INtr f.'!!l .!!!'""'I
'flrur 1-414 . . ,..... 1:00 12 bid (!: II I to bo II trod) LCF *'4. . . . ..

-......

'.

pluH. II'f4..446.0M1 tfttr Sp.m.

8Fi Truoll comper, oloopo4, MH
contolrwd, tuttr oqulppod whh
tlo - . good oond. 114-m·

IBH.OO.IIOROOII:
. _ lutro Cl po.), Sltt.OD; 4
Ora- CMOI, 144.11· luntr
Can pi I ;'111 1111 Rea' I lid

fUrn.IMed
lor' , .. 2 poopll, No
8221 ptuo IIIIIMIM. · -

~':~111, l\lmi8hod, A/C,
....,....,had no
~. - n t . wv ,.3Q4:

WI Ttl
(ZfAI-IT'( •

tor lp.ra.l14481o1411.

•"""· 104-t71-11721.

-~--···

' w/0101 A email 1141.171L

'='

1fll '"""*rfMnl AC. PS, PI,
Tin,,_,,..,,.._ E1houot, ,...
Tlroo, E x - Strotret Coil .,,_

Cot F.• ..... Ill . ~.,;.
...:..:.,.:.,:'.:::;:...·-::--~-­
~·':!-In Piroclte 1112 E-n ~tollon
~ yn IJCPtrlence, W.p, aood atlcker, rune

!loll .....

AUCTION a FUIIINITUIII. 12
Olive ft., Ciotti..... - . Uood
fum...., - ... - - a
Wotk-1........,11.
VI'RA PURNITUIII

53

1br Atill~-.1 • .....,.,.,... Fu,...
nllhiCI, 1 lfock Froin
Dowlllown. Coil 1M 441 413t.
IEAUTIFUL AJIAIITIIENTS AT
IUDCIIT PIIICII AT ~ACKION

IN TOUC/f

-

.

79 . campers &amp;
....
n.
wtth nod tnrorlor, ..... rp, $1,200.
Motor Homes
. _ ...... lor ..... 1100 ... .:;,304
:::::-m-IH~:;.:.:o.':. =~=,.....-

-..........·-4-...... =:z.=
0111304-171-1410.
IIENTZOWN

t:o:. ':~=..,~

Apanment
for Rent

fq.uiprn~t

1181 Aoponcodo SEI
7,100 octuot mltoo, comptetoly
loldod. hriouo lnqulrloo onty,

''" T-

.A
•Jn

llle • IIW Stereo.

Ql Cro11flre
7:35 (J) lob Newhatl
1:00 I]) • MDVII: Hando (2:00)

I

c·1 1

NORTH

D International Outllclenl
Qrarrd l'ri1 From Augusta,
Ga. (TJ

n.ooo.

-· azt.io
==~~.l&amp;i.&amp;:::
lloiNirir Tlrru -Jia':nm.Tillto
fll.ra., tl!r!ldiJ a

44

am.
tm a..w. .Uh, 410 eng., MANY

Bo&amp;.JGHT AN AN$W91Nei
MAt:.HIN~ ••• ;r f&gt;ON'T /-1/(f
TO 8E I&gt;IFECTI..Y

\~lepl\onc:a

..

:111'0111.

·-a....fil
-· ~
325 ....
. •$1,100.

o•
Jolinnr l...on 1M
Laoaa

~

1112 Yo-ho sao V·TWirt a
Valve, OOHC Shtft brtn, Water
Cooi8d, 8823 111111, liDO. 114-

Autoe tor Sale

I IIIII II

PHILLIP
ALDER

iiDl WliMt Of FOf1una Q

::,llii::-Y:::...,.--.hl--:aoo::=--._--:-.bl:-::k••
ac running concl, $350. ~*
44UIZS
,
11a HoMo Clolctwtng, 1100 ~c.

'

.KQB63

Cll• Marna'• Family

Motorcycle•

16

Is

+QJ6 ~

az •

_11W114.;.;_;.;.;.;.·..:...._ _ _ __

114-182-7114.

~

BRIDGE

w
Entertatnmerlt
Tonfallt Stereo. ·

NEW MilTS. 1100 oi lEST Of'· ,75 B0at1 &amp; Motors '
NR. 304-f7NI!IAI'TERI pm.
for Salt
-lui~
......
lt.bllllhJJjathr I n - tm vw luo: - , Clood,
HAMILTON WATER SPORTS
1 - oftor I or
- . . - . IIIah .....-. UIO.CII
SUIIIIER SPECIALS '
on•aktnda.
Col .-711-s200 1111.
1ttt Kow-111 Jot lkio~ sao k 2
1fll luloll ~. 2dr1 ac, Auto, ·13,771; 110 IX • 83.17o; 510 ,SX.
,Coretlno Col1 ,... llltoo, ·13.~. Ueod Jot' llkle Stoning
, , _ ,..,. Condnoonl
Footw, At: ...s. - 1110 hjo B011t1,
210 ESS :110 iiOgmrm $18,100•
Chromo
Whlolo
Clorlgod.
C.u 1~:':'~ 18.1 SVR VI Opoii low $12,100;
2300.
'
1191 Coblo 11.1 Cuddv Collin,
m7 llurotong -_point, $1\10!1. Flnonolng .tivolldll.
~"":O."rre ololn, $1,100. 304- Proctorvttlo, Ohlo 6l4.eii-71N.

., .... 3111

-

tr~~=;;sf
Dtolrtot, Clooo To
I
HoetlttiL Ht.OOO. 114-4
w.

.....

Tr diiSpCI IJIIOI1

W'di!Waat. ...,8110.00.

SWAIN

lof nont or Nh,

Cempllllfr

31 Hom• for Sale

............, .... 2171.

Flbiiiii'VIoe. .........,.,_

tJ:ull~~~~~·
to~~
_ , 12
Tit Sp\m. •
-ott
floulo 7 Qr 141,
In Cent..,.

41 HOUHI for Rent
4 lA -

.."
..

rt

00 ltwftched

11• Chovv Ailro von, nrl~
VCR, Cl, 11r, cRIIal,
, 4.3 IHw ringlno, 38,000
mlloo, $11,100, ac oond, 304-

74

Hay &amp; Grsln

64

.._ I ....... l ..lllbh lor

IIMIII

· ....._,.,
I m'*.
Solory
,......,., oklti8
Dlodtlno
lof
Iori: July \ 1111• ..,..

ovoltobto It tho rglnll Stote Form 11.....,, 111.
1 ... 411, Point - n t . wv
:ISSIO. Phone J04.elS-t737.
R11umo roqultod whh oppollco-

=?;:.:-.t.:t_...&amp;:
t.. ": l'-otiror.; .

a_,
homeR -etructlon on
~,-m , ood. Poood nood,
.aunty
.,.,
•·r:nlb'i
-lono....Cotnpillol
lnformo.

lion moti8d on I'Oiq..... :104-flS.
aan, Jolin D. Oertlith, no
....••• .................
12 Acrn. Portly Wooded.
ltDIUdld. AI. 31. w. 121,000.

-·

Fot - · .... Oltor.
114 Wllll3 CoM- 10-7.

'

35 Loll &amp; Acnaage

Pto.- Po,.,..
thood of Southllol Ofllo, 311 pocloon••n.fDOdlollll._..
"-- ESTATES. 131 ': hn • Pille
lllchlond Av.,.., Athono1 Ohio WII-., ...__In
I
41'101,
Altn:· Koy
Atklno.
$1lilmo. to ohop 1
E.O.EJE.S.P.
_ l o r _ _ _ ... _
-·Colt 114 4412111 EOH.
tenor:

illlt•· '

~~~~- ~::rat SUIIottl Limbo And l l u l -

Merchond1se

:=:...:u::~~ ll.tr.
'&lt;

GET ANSWER .

1111 Scar- lnd Mrs. tong
7:05 (I) Tho ...,.,_,.
7:301]). IIJ Jeopaftlrl Q

='•:V.

.,. 4411140.

..... ,...,...,, ....... 4

'

4:30 ....

___ ,__
--- -- ......, ...........
.................
-- =·
=
pooltlon, ....,_ boood. It .,....
un tlolti HNI • 1 r..ume ancl

1

- d cyt, 30W11-3TII ohlr

1 &amp; 2 8Mroom ADM:NntL
Ilion, Rotrlgorlt,. ~umi8hod.

donottono. W. wont to
• good, . llojor Gift .....
pottn. We rwod to flnd rww
iloriOre """'"" lnclvld.. lo onc1

-ldng onth,.IHtlc croou.. .,.,., Ohio. .,......

$(1.00 to $(1.00 per hour. Avon

Not-

-d

~oa.. It You
Pooltlon,
- .. hood.
Con Do ft, lend U. A flllumo I - lor Bolo Dairy lw IIIII
A!"' Covot Loner: Ptonrwd - ....... ,.., food, hoi &amp; ulod ton. It 111124, 1 mi. oft
.......
OfAvon...
-Ohio,
311 llllhllnd
Athono,
Ill 7 - - llutl8nd, ••• Ohio 417Vt~ ATIN: Koy Atklno. lt24414 or 'JIIa-2310.

covor

hiCWAY PIIOCEIIIIIQ

A- · AI

w-

==lei

• - - -00. 114-"1112·

, . . ,..,. ~. 4 -

E.O.EJE.I.I'.

-

PHONE

m

, . . Fonl oonveralon van, nice
nice 1-,_'!,ICI'IIIce ,lor

'Coi'JIII H .OO Yllld I Up. VInYl
"-tl .l H.H Yon!. P01th Turl,
13.11 I ...II V.rcl. Malohln
=
·U-RtvwRaod, l14lnd Avlo.. llolllpottL Clooo to
Court_
HouH.
- ·...
a-~ County Apptlonoo tno. Clood
3
41 _
UHd opptloncoo, T.V. - · 0..
- l i d , ltr
o.m. to I p.m. llon ..Sot. 614a - biH ... JIIJCI. I441·1111!,.
I2T Srd. Avo. Go~
-oholoo
- lor,....
· No llpctlo,""
......
tho ........
muet-llllm.Piionol on
For Sole: lloytog_ Wringer
Toiling
Wntw, Dryer, 1101 lplfng Aiid

phonl -nollly ond bo oblo
to work wotl with tho public.
Computor lilllh holptul. Sond Lono'a Child Core: - t o lo1 C41 01rt1 , _ ~- For Child Core.
PtPol-· ftetllol:!!i.:IOO lloln lit, 'TWO~ hto. Allor do~ II,
. . , . _ , , ,.. 2118G.
Whh Loomrng ...,,v.,., eorPOIIIIIon :r,:1 Whh Qo1
tlllod I, Couf!I.J. CloOct
11o1oo Stong· ~· 111~ Roloroooa&amp; lo.fti.-I:JUp.m. lion·
lloofth
""~,..:;.:
dly Tliru
Potll[l',
0..11-lonl:
Pno,.,_ Ylnton Aroo.
1.
Olvtn To AN, And/Or LPN,
IIIH Plulo'o Doy Core Comor.
.:"'1111~~~ 8118, ottonllbh, chi-. 11-F
-~.:: 1011
~ I o.m. • 1:30 p.m. AVO! im-10.
7
Yard Sale
llllclllono .._ .. 0111 ~· t .......
1
•11•4 4ochocol41
..-: ~.....
Wool
_,
·wr come. 11
¥LALt.
---1]!,,_412VIn- tontT-CIN,I14-441-8227.
Pile., Gllllpall."""""' 41131.
Al&gt;tllloollono Should lloblh Homo _ . lor wah
Gallipolis
h
To' flood- At Tho tnd- toii304...,._12H.
••
&amp; VIcinity
=.:e:i':~ ~Jr..!· Will boflroh _....,. o t c.ntM, .,;:, houuormlne.·.-n........._a.
" ,':'
..:':LL~'J:::IIId-::-:t~o~h~o~~~~~-~..
~Pold=:-ln eton ot
,..,. •• 2e01 pt
1~1121101
~ iWWMIIOI. DIADLINI: 2:00 p.m.
- - "' orw.
. "' tho ... tho od .. "' ""'· POIItlon
Aviollliblo:
Cou Wit lrultrl potlo IOVWI, ~
......,. • 2:00 p.m.
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UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO

I'

Source - Grope - Etude - Victor - CURVE RISE
As a joke the students put a large dog at a desk.
Whan the professor saw the animal he quizzed, "Aren't
you afraid he'll make the grading CURVE RISE?"

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

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IN THESE SQUARES

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "We do not wont now and we · the humon voice with our film s." - D.W. Griffith.

.·

lholl. wrrnt :

•

�.

Page-1D-The Dally sentinel

Pomeroy-Mic:ldleport, Ohio

Monday, June 24, 1991

~~~~~----------~~~~~~~--~----------------~~~ ·

Consider this...
By BRIAN J, REED

New arrival

A good sta~.Things a,re B,!&gt;inB ·
really wen at lhe AppalachiiD qatt
House in Pomeroy. Joyce Gillilan
indicates that tlie grand opening
during Heritage Weekend ·was a
success and plans are rigbt on
schedule for ~ are you ready for this
- Christmas shopping season.
Meanwhile, the doors are sliU open
at the house, located on Buttentut
Avenue, on Fridays and Salllf(lays.

This is probably the best place
to respond to a Letter to lhe Editor
published in Tht Daily Stlllinel on
June 14 and a telephone call thatl
received from the letter's writer
regarding coverage of the rock
slide at Pity Me.
As the reporter who interviewed
residents and wrote the story in
question. I would like to state that
it was never my intention to inter- . Help! ...Tbe staffat National
view every resident affected by lhe Public Radio's All Things Consld- .
slide. Not only would this have ered and Morning Edition need
been senseless. but it would have our help, arid I think we have what
taken weeks. Given the timely it tilkes. .'
·.
nature of the subject, such exhausNPR Prod11cer Dave !say will
. tive interviewin~ would have .soon begin production· on a series
JOSHUA CLELAND
defeated lhe pUI]lOSC or writing the entitledi "The American Folklife
story.
Radl" Project," funded by the
Instead, I had hoped to relay the CorpOration for Public Broadcastdifficulties experienced by all of ing.
the displaced residents in lhe area.
:''The series," Isay said, "will
Obviously, I did not intend to celebrate lhe best human interest
imply that the Lemley and and folklore stories that the country
Anna Arnold Bennett, a former
Blankenship families were the only has to offer." ·
· Meigs County resident, received an
residents who were experiencing
The project, according to Isay. Association Degree in Child Develdifficulty receiving help and fin4- will teU lhe stories of ordinary -~ opment during commencement
ing housing. I' also think that most pte whose extraOrdinary tradi11ons exercises in May at Prairie State
·readers did not assume that from are on the brink of vanishing College in Chicago Heights, Ill.
lhe material presented.
Bennett graduated with high
· because of old age. Subjects can be
Kalhy Blankenship and Debbie the I~~St practitioners of some disap- honors' and is a member of Phi ·
Lemley were most available and
ttadition or trade or deter- . Theta Kappa National Scholastic
articulate in describing their plight pearing
mined hangers-on who refuse to let · Honor Society.
and lhat of their neighbors. In no age get in the way of some beloved
She i's the daughter of Mary
way was the story meant to co~n­ pastime.
Irene Arnold, Harrisonville. She
trate on lhe Blankenships and LernIsay says that he is looking for resides in Joliet, Ill .• wilh her hus·
leys. Instead, it was meant 10 shed the type of s.tories that take place at band. There she conducts a home
· some light on lhe difficulties expe- luncheonette counters and senior nursery school. She is alSo a gradurienced by all the residents - citizen ce11ters, in smoky back- ate of Scipio High School and Kenincluding the writer of the letter rooms and street comers.
. tucky Christian College.
and her family.
·
If you have any ideas. let me
Any other impressions received know,
and I'D pass the word.
from lhe story were strictly those of
the letter writer.
Take care.

Bennett receives
PSC degree ·

Friendly Circlepays
tribute to June.,fathe~s
At the June meeting of Friendly
Circle, Trinity Church, Mary E.
Chapman presented the program ..
ReadinJ.s. "A Paradox Calletl
June," • Gratitude for Dad," and
"MonLilllent Invisible" paid tribute
to June and Fathers. The offering
and prayer completed lhe prograin.
Gay Perriq presided at the business meeting when officers and
committee reports ·\YCI'C given.
Reports of the sick were made
and Mrs. Perrin expressed Bppiteiation to all who helped wilh projects and activities du,ring the past
month - ice cream ·making, the
social held over Herilllge Weekend,
dinners, a wedding recepti.on and
the Bible school held last week.
About 40 children from the participating churches todt pan.
After lho children's sermon on
Father's Day the Trinity children
sang the songs of the closing exercises on Friday.
. ·
ROSieS fiom Pat Holter's garden
were given to each father at the service. De-thorned, they were talren
to lhe men of the church by the

children.
.
Norma Louise, secretary, read a
thank-you note from Elizabeth
Graves fiom fmancial and spiritual
suppon. She alSo sent an informative letter concerning the work at
Mountain Top, Camp, Wesleyan.,
Tenn. The training for Mountain
Top staff has been completed. A
nine day training period fiom 6:30
a.m. to 12:30 each . nigln is an
exhausting expepence." Her staff is
comprised of three men, three
women and director. ·This ministry
has been extended to ·nonheastern
Tennessee this year near the·Kentucky border.
"
Mrs. Perrin offereil the closing
prayer.
A dessert course was served by
Mary Virginia l(autz and Clarice
Krautter from a decorated table to
13 members. Favors were charming angel orna111ents of lace and
ribbon made by Charlotte Elberfeld.
. The July meeting will be a picnic and vesper ·service at lhe home
of Alice Globokar on July 16 at 6
p.m . .

Alfred UMW discuss AIDS
Martha Poole led the program,
"Aids - A Worldwide Crisis with a

vice in Nigeria, Africa. The group
signed a birtliday canl for him.
CharlotteVan Meter gave the
closing prayer.
·
During the social hour Sarah
Caldwell served cake, ice cre11m,
nuts and soft drinks to lhosc mentioned and to Florence Spencer,
Osie Mae Follrod
and NeUie Park. .'
er.
The next meeting will be at lhe
church on July 23. Nina Robinson
will be hostess. A patriotic program
will be presented by all members.

Human Face," when the Alfred
United Methodist Women met
recently at the church. ·
All members participated in
reading discussion. Some conclusions were that more rescuch for a
cure isneeded and more prevention'
ecD:alion in sex and drug use.
Members ~2 sick calls
and during·the ·
session dis. cussed giving aid to the bible
school.
Martha Elliott presented the
prayer calendar ~leclion by Nina
dean's list
Robinson who was unable to
Pamela
Honaker,
Long Bottom,
attend. Mrs. Robinson chose Wal- has been nanied to the
dean's list
ler Erhele who is in Christian serfor the spring quarter at Hoi:king
College in Nelsonville.
Her name was unintentionally
omitted from a previous list. ·

Named to

Meigs students
named to Buckeye
Girls State offices

Campaign slogans, songs and
promotions of all types have been
the scene at the Ohio American
Legion Auxiliary's 451h Buckeye
Girls Slate Government Seminar.
The mythical two party system,
Federalist and Nationalist, have the
set lhe campus of Ashland University in motion . Elections and
appoinbnetits or City, County and
State government officials, school
board members and judges have
been completed.
Barbara Joan Anderson, who
attends Meigs High School, has
been appointed to the office of
County Board of Elections Deputy
Director and resides in the Girls
State City of Bacpm, Lenhart
County. and belongs to lhe Nationalist party.
Christina Weaver, who al so
attends Meigs High School, has
been appointed to the office of
County Board of Elections Member, and resides in lhe Girls State
City of Coit, Logan .county. and
belongs to the Fedenl1ist party.
By practical participation they
will face the functions and problems of government as well as
righJS, duties and responsibilities of
American citizenship. Each lirl
holds an office on one of the lhree
JOVCmment levels actuaUy carryJill out her specific duties.
'k

Hyperactive kids need special help

Jimmy and Srephanie Cleland,
Rutland, are announcing the birth
of their firSt child, a son, Joshua
Qavid, born March 16 at H&lt;¥zer
Medical Center.
He weighed eight pounds and
. four ounces and was 21 and onehalf inches long,
Matqnal grandpareniS are Dave
and Ginny Barrett. Salem Cenrer.
Paternal gnmdparents are Larry
and Bonnie ClelaJid. Rutland.

Ohio Lottery

ROCHESTER. N.Y. (AP) _
they can adjust well a1 home and '
Hyperactive children are often school and develop a positive sense
treated with suspicion by their of self-worth. ·
peers and prejudice by their
"They can grow 'lP to ·beco~
ncilhors, accading to a University creative, successful commumty
ofllochestcr pediatrician.
members," says Sulkes.
If children with Attention
But if these children don ' t
Deficit Hypen!Ctivity Disorder are receive appropriate help and ''are
eva11181Cd and treated apptop!iately, chronically scolded for poor behavsays Stephen s~ or Rochest17's ior and grades and rejected by their
SchoOl of ~ine and Dentistry, peers, they may become antisocia!, •• he warns.

Indians
drop 4-3 tilt
to Blue Jays
Page4

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MEIGS MUSICIANS • These Meigs Coun·
tians are partlcipatin~; this summer in tbe Ohio
University Communtversity Band. The band,
under the direction of Ronald P. SocciareUi, wiU
perform in Pomeroy· on Thui'sday; The concert

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beginning July 10.
The class will' cost $32 and will
run for eight weeks. Students will
need a pair of low-heel tap shoes
and loose, comfortable clothing is
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PHONE: ·992-2586

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blic. Music DirecSocciarelli will be
conduCting the band with spi:· · ·
cial guest conductor Charles·
Minelli.
Joan Wolfe and Millie Mid. kiff; co-managers of Bank One's
Pomeroy office, ·encourage area

~onald

residents to attend. They suggest
~ ~ttwn.chaira or blankets
for aung. .•

;

"We're proud to continue
this summer tradition and we
are looking forward to a lovely
evening," Wolfe said.

Supreme Court eases denial
of benefits to coal miners
breathing coal dust over a long
By MARK PAXTON
time . The fund is financed by
Associated Press Writer
CHARLESTON, W.Va- Coal assessments on coal producers.
The justices, siding with the
companies will have more leeway
in fi~ting black lung claims under Bush administration, said coal
aU .S. Supreme Cowt decision, but mine operators must be. allowed to
an induStry lawyer says the ruling show that disabled, or deceased,
miners did not suffer from black
isn't a major victory. .
lung
disease or that work in the
The United Mine Workers
mines
did not cause the disability.
union, meanwhile, says "deserving
The
decision ovenurncd regulavictims and their families" will he
tions
adopted
by the Department of
denied benefits because of the 7-I
Health,
Education
and Welfare,
decision.
which
had
said
the
only way the
Monday's ruling in cases from
Pennsylvania and West Virginia benefits could be denied is with
upholds Labor Department rules proof a miner is still working, is
allowing the companies to contest capable of working in the mines or
is doing comparable work.
black lung claims.
"It·s not a great victory except
"This doesn't do anything for
the coal industry," said Mark that it avoided some great wob·
Solomons, a coal industry lawyer Iems," Solomons said.
In
Washington,
UMW
who argued the case before the
high coun. "If the court had come spokeswoman Kirsty Smith critiout the other way, then we would cized the decision as unfair to black
have had a problem."
tun~ victims.
'The Supreme Cowt's decision
The case involves a fund the
federal government set up to pay ... paves lhe way for an.administtabenefits to miners who suffer from ti ve a~ency under theu so-called
black lung, a disorder caused by techmcal expertise to routinely

'

..L.------~--------------~~~~~--~--------~---------------------1 :
•

Those Meigs Countians
experiencing trouble locating
lhe former owner of the used car
they purchased or suspicion lhat
their car's odometer has been
tampered with could find such
problems eliminated when a
state-wide computerization of
auto titles program becomes
operational.
According to Ohio Department of Highway Safety Director Charles D. Shipley, the Slate
Controllina Board has authorized $7.89 million for the
Buteau of MOtor Vehicles
(BMV) to contract with Motorola of Cincinnati to begin a computerization program for car
titles.
·
"Currently, 24 counties have
automated titling sptems, n
Shipley said, "but they re not all
linked to the stale. Now, Ohio
clerks do the filing by hand,
which translates into 40 BMV
employees manually filing and

remev.ing 8.6 million titles per
year. The titles must be kept for
five years which adds up to 43
million documents on hand
annually.
The state has already spent
$5.5 million on a mainframe
computer that will connect
clerks of courts in every county
in Ohio. The I)CW sylllem wiU be
funded by a S I fee being col·
lected for each vehicle transaction. That fund, in place since
1987, has grown to over $12
million since the clerks of courts
began assessing the fee.
"We will begin implementation in February, 1992," said
Ohio BMV Re~trar Mitchell J.
Brown. "It wlll be tested in
Stark, Vinton, Lucas and Marion counties, and by the end of
1992, all Ohio counties will be
connected to the system."
Brown added, "The sysrern will
make it easier for the Ohio

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
Steps to secure funding for
housing site development from the
Ohio Department of Development
were talren by Middleport Village
Council at Mondat night's meeting
at village hall.
Council authorized Mayor Fred
Hoffman to proceed with • applicatiQn for $1 SO,OOO in Community
Development Block Grant monies
from the Department of DcvelopmenL
That amount combined with
$24,855 in village funds, part of
which would be labor or olher inkind services, would be used to
demolish the old Betsy Ross building and develop eight housing lots
on 'Fiflh and Palmer for low and
middle income families.
The village by resolution last
night allocalcd $9,955 for asbestos

Deparunent of Taxation to collect sales taxes on vehicles, and
abandoned cars will be more
easily tracked."
According to Meigs County
Clerk of Courts, the scheduled
implementation date for Meigs
County is March 30, 1992.
Clark County Clerk of Courts
Ron Vincent. a 14-year veteran
of the state system, says, "It's
the best thing that's ever hap·
pened to Ohio title departments." Vincent is past president of lhe Ohio Clerk of Courts
Association and was involved in
the original language for the
change.
"The new system will make
it easier to ttace former owners
of vehicles because a ~ or
lhesc owners will be mainrained
by the system. Therefore,
odomerer fraud and theft should
be reduced significantly," said
Shipley.

Hoffman.
He' went on to point out the
advantages to those who butld
there- a free lot,lhe $5,000 down
pay~~nt, _
and FB;fmers Home
Adintrusttauon low-mterest financing. The village also has a tax
abatement program which IJ!eans ·
lhat propeny taxes are not pwd on
new construction.
Plans to apply for two other
grants were also approved by
Council. An applicauon will ·be
ftled with the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources for $400,000 for
· lhe fli'St phase development of the
Leading Creek Rec.rea~on ~ark.
Total cost of that pro)CCt.ts esnmated to be over $1 million a.nd
includes development of the manna
and installation of a swimming
pool.
Copncil also approved a Tree
Continued on pageJ

.

Arrests·are expected today in
Meigs County's largest drug bust
Defendants in what is being
described as Meigs County's
largest drug bust.JIUlll*ted to be
·arrested beginning on Tuesday
afternoon.
According to information
released Tuesday morning by
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby and PrQsecutor Sreven L.
Story. the Meigs County Grand
Jury returned 63 counts against 41
Meigs Countians on charges ranging from trafficking in marijuana to
trafftekin' in cocaine and LSD.
Depuues of the Meigs County
Sberiff's Department were briefed
and sent out to arrest defendants
following a press conference at

Meigs High !;chool on Tuesday,
and the booking process of arrested
defendants waa expected to begin
at midday.
·
According to Story and Soulsby,
lhe indicbnents are lhe result of a
21-monlh investigation conducted
bylheSECOTaskForce,underlhe
direction of Story and Soulsby.
The SECO Task Force is a
multi-jurisdictional drug task force
which works in Southeastern Ohio
wilh several participating agencies,
including both the Meigs County
Prosecutor and the Sheriff. The
Task Force is funded by grant
monies through the Governor's
Office of Criminal Justice Services.

The grant is administered by Gallia
County Prosecuting Attorney,
Brent A..S.I\uMen·
'Fhe names of the persons who
were indicted are ·bemg withheld
pending their arrest, and will be
released along ·With specific
charges as the defendants are
arrested.
All of those. who were indicted
on Monday will be arraigned
before Meigs County Common
Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow.
Story indicates lhat as a result of
infomiation discovered during the
investigation, further investigations
and arrests may follow . .
.

Major construction project underway at
Farmers Bank and Savings Company
Work began last week on a
major constluction projectlhat will
completely renovate the Pomeroy
offices of Farmers Bank and Savings Company.
According to lhe bank· s Interim
President. Paul Klocs, the construe·
tion project will provide additional
offices and servtce .areas to accomodate existing staff. Also, an elevator wiU be installed and a basement constructed as a part of lhe
construction program.
"In keeping with Farmers
Bank •s ttadition of retaining local
business," Klocs said, "lhe low
local bid of A.O.K. Construction
Company of Cheshire was.accept·

said.

Solomons, wilh the Washington
law ftm1 Arter &amp; Hadden, said the
Labor Department rules were in
effect from 1978 to 1990, when
lhey were ovenurned by a federal
appeals coun.
"It simply preserves the status
quo from 1978 in upholding
Department of Labor regulations
that all.owed comr,anies to defend
black lung claims, • Solomons said.
"That's the way it was in 1978
and the way it was all lhe way up
to 1990," Solomons said.
Monday 's decision involved
BethEnergy Mines, Clinchfield
Coal Co. and Consolidation Coal
Co.

removal on the bakery building, a
requirement before lhe buil~g ca:n
be demolished. That allocauon IS
contingent upon state funding
being app~ved, ~~was noted.
In the fmancl81 breakdown on
lhe $174,855 project, as presented
by Mayor.Hoffman, $65,000 would
go into p~ purchaSe, $30,000
for demohtion of the building,
$10,000 for the site prep~~!Jn.
$4 000 for installation of utiliues,
$1' 600 for the surveying or the
eitiht lots, $400 for legal fees,
$2,000 for advertis~ft:d en'ineering, $11.300 for · e administration, $1,000 for lhe audit, and
$40,000 for the down payment lO
go to low and middle income families building on the lots.
"If we can get this project moving, it wiU mean w~ will be able to
get rid of an eyesore and put SOD!e
nice houses in there," said Mayor

'

ignore the will of the people as
expressed by Congress," she said.
''In the process. thousands of
deserving victims and their families
will be denied any assistance or
coml'flDSIItion for their suffering.
"In effect, the high court has
put a choke hold on constitutional
checks and balances as surely as
black lung chokes its victims," she

New system will eliminate many problems

You ~ the most important patie~t
~ will see today/
Announcing the Grfled Chicken
Sandwtch at p00tdpa11ng
C&gt;c:*y Q._,o BrozJer"

is sponsored annually by Bank· One, Athens,
N.A. Pictured, are, front row, Dawn Foley, Ryan
Cowan, Lisa MiDer, Derek Miller, Dave Bowen
and John Van Reeth. Pictured In the !iecond row
are Paul Sharp and Tony Dingess.

OU Communiversity Band
concert scheduled Thursday

SLIM•FAST

SUAVE SHAMPOO

Low tonight in mid 60s.
Wednesday, partly
sunny.

•

Grab that
camera·...

GILLEn'E
GOODNEWS/

Chris and Shelly Hutton, Rutland, are announcing the birth of
their first child, a son, .Corey
Wayne, on March 13 at Holzer
Medical Center.
The infant we'lglied seven
pounds and 14 ounces and was 20
inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Wayne and Juntce Adams, Rutland.
Pate(llal grandparents are Mickey and Rachel Hutton, Rutland.

Pick 3:060
Pick 4: 1406
Cards : 2-H, 9-C
S-D; J.S

"we are asking the customer's
patience while the renovation is
underway."
The bank's assets have
increased from $12 million in 1969
to $65 million to date, according to
Executive Officer Bruce J. Reed.
The project is expected to be
completed in December, 1991.

Plans for the construction have '
been underway for two years, and
accdrding to Kloes, the bank's late ·
president, Ted Reed, Jr., was active
in the planning stages. The building
was ftrst opened to lhe public in
April, 1969.
The bank also operates a branch
office in Tuppers Plains.

ed."

According to Kloes, Cheshire is
within Farmers Bank's toea! trading area. A.O.K. Construction's coowner, Dan Sayre, resides in
Racine wilh his wife and two children.
The firm began work on the
basement phase or the project early
last week by pumping out pea gravel from under the building. When
completed, the basement wiU pro·
vide a staff lounge and storage
space.
The elevator will be installed at
the bank's West Second Street
entrance and will be available for
the use of customers.
The second phase of the work
will move the president's office
and the booll:keeping department to
the second floor, where the proof
and computer departments will
remain.
On the bank's main level, an
additional teller station will be
added, bringina the total to seven.
A third customer service station
and a third full-time loan officer
will also be added to the main
level's customer service departmenL
"The object of the project,"
Klocs said, "is to set the bank better or,aniz.ed. Everythina we are
doing IS being done in order 10 help
our customers."
"However," Klocs emphasized,

),

PRESENTED TROPHIES • Melas Jualor lflah School students Kelley GrueRI', left, and Crystal Vaapu, were e:.,.esealed
tropblea r~!!f made ltralabt A's darbq: tbe put IC
1UJ'.
Trophies
b;r tbe MlddJeport·I'Gmero;r Rotary Clab were
r-ted to tbe atudellll. Tbe two alrllwtre llladvertently mlard
n tbe reeopltlon for academic exc:elleace duriDa tbe nnt annual
awards banquet stqrd recently at the school.

r.

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