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10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

M ournzng parents can recover
Dear Aaa Lande111: The letter
from the lady who Wll deviiSiated
by tile loss of her dausbtu has
haunred me e- Iince I read il. I,
100, 1oS1 my only dlugbra- in a car
accident wbe111 druat dri- hacked
onto Ill inlmlare llilbWiy. She was
8 years old, lhe ligbt of my life. My
son, a beautiful, talented boy. abo
died in the IUie accidmt. He was
15.
Not long after. my bulband of 20
years decided that be hadn't bad a
chance to experience life becanse
· we married young. He suggested
that we ·uy an "open marriage." I
atlmlpted Suicide twice. Two ))S)'·
chiatrists laler,l wu still miserable.
Fmally, a psycholotlilt 11 a local
menial hcallb clinic helped me gel
my life in order.lleamed lbat I had
never ftCOwred from the death of
my children. When the divorce
fmally ~ five years later, I WIS
ready for iL I got a collqe degee
while ,working full-time . That
was nine yean ago. I now teach
school and gel to love ZJ kids every
day.
·
My life is exciting, chaUcnging
and 1lusy lw-a•lll(' I made the choice
to quit holding a self-pity party for
one. I vowed to justify my ~istence
by helping others. The woman who
wrote to you should do the same.
Sh~ could read to the blind,
deliver meals to lbe elderly, visit a
veterans hospital or a nursing
home and dedicate those services in

slletherncn:r
.OOab
.ot;~~~:W.me1h

.::=
•

~ oounselin All
.....-'6

g.

therapisls iial't right fer aU people.
If you feel you II'CII't being heanl,
so to IOIIICOne who llJrena. This
woman eerllinly blithe ClpiCity to
love, and 10 many people need her.
- J.L., COLUMBIA, B.L.
.
DEAR J .L.: Thank you for
writinJ. Your ldW is fuU of conSlnlctive suggestions. I would like
to add anolhet. Tbele is a wonderful
oqanization to help para11s who
have suffmd lhe tragic loss of a
child. It is cslled the Cornpassioiwc
Friends, and it can he a sodsend.
The naticna1 headquartas addmls is:
P.0. Box 3696, Oak B'rook, Ill.
60522-3696. Anyone who wants
information should write and enclose ·
a long, self-addressed, stamped
envelope. A $1 donlllion to help
defray costs would' be sreatly
appreciated. Those who have joined
say the healing begins at once. Trust

me.

Dear Ann Lande111: You were
not entirely wrong when you spellcd
Jan Peetce's name "Pierce. • Here's
the true SIOI')': He was bon! Jacob
Perelmath and first .performed
as Pinky Pearl, with bis Society
Dance Band. 'Roxy' Rothafel,
pioneer in lbeattical enlertainment,
changed Jan's name to John Pierce.
Jan didn't care for that lllime so Roxy
suggested Jan Peerce.
Sara, Peerce's younger sister,
married Ricbard Tucker, one of
the world's greatest tenors.
UnfOitllllalely, a professional mis-

understanding arose between Jan
and Richard and they rarely spoke
to each other after thaL Shortly
befonl Sara 1'ucket passed away, she

Ohio River's history comes
to life in June 28-29 play
"Life Along The River," an tanl as a major roure to the west for
original Dlay written and F.Oduced settlers, how sreamboats began to
especially fQr the festivtties sur- use the Ohio River for transponarounding the "Always A River" tion and entenainment, and how
exhibit, will be performed Frirlay today, the Ohio River is one of lbe
and Saturday 81 3 p.m., and Satur- best roures for industrial transport&amp;·
day evening at 9:30 p.m., on the lion plus serves as a source of
main stage at Tu-Endie-Wei Park, recreation and pleasure for many
Point Pleasanl, W.Va.
people.
The cast of "Life Along the
Produced by the Point Pleasant
ijigh School Speech Team, and River" includes Stacy Beller as
undCr lbe dirccbOn of Point Pleas' !larrator; J eb Hockenberry as
ant High School Drama Coach "Chief Comsralk," Brandy Bllrkey
~ Morse, lbe anthology person- as "Mary Ingles," Tracy Hartley as
alizes the history made in this area "Colonel Plug;• Jennifer Hesson as
and along the· Ohio R'iver. "Life "Mrs. Nicholas Roosevelt," AshanAlong the River" focuses on the ti Gholson as "Louis Talbert,"
importance of lbe river, historical Heather Rulen as "Mrs. Tom
events along the river, how the Greene," Matt Wedge as "Billy
river has affected the people who Bryant," Dani Wehmeyer as a paslive on it and bow the people have senger on the Delta Queen, and
affected the river. The characters Sreve Jones as ''CapL C.H. Stone."
and costumes in the production
The play was researched and
promise to brlnll an authentic and written by Chris Ball, Donna
nostalgic llrlt into the lives of))C9- Shinn, Dani Wehmeyer, Leslie
pie who lived along the river from Gault, Darlene Russel, and Chris
the I 700s to lbe presenL
. ·Wentz. .
Researched and Written by Jerrie
"Plan to ailend one of the perNeal's Advanced Placement · · formances of Life Along the
English Class, the play emphasizes River," said Morse. "Everyone will
the reasons why the Ohio River has learn more about our community's
become one of the nation's most . heritage and culture, one which all
important waterways. It also delin- people in our area should be proud
cates how the river has been impor- of."

Joppa Church holds dinner
Friends and members of Joppa
Church bad a carry-in dinner
recently honoring the church's pastor of 10 years, Seldon Johnson,
and lhe new pastor, Brenda weber.
An inscribed Bible signed by all
present WIS presented to lbe outgomg pastor and a gift of cash to Ms.
Weber.
The United Methodist Women
. met tec:ently at the borne of lavina
Brannon with eight members pre-

senL
Margaret Grossnickle presided
at the meeting and Mary Harris
presented the program.
Several monetary mission
appeals were·given priority.
~ e~joying the evenilig and
paructpatmg were Cindi Durst
Gladys Dillon, Opal Harris'
qenrude Bass, Mary and Tim
ns, Margaret Grossnickle and lbe
hosress.

Har:

Johnny Carson's son
killed in car crash

Ann
Landers

---ANNLANDEBI
UUflol.oo .tow•

ere.NiwiJ ........ ''

confided in me lbat Jan Peetce was
lhe 1R I I .aisl she had .,_heard,
and believe me, she had heard diem
all. Sam made a big effort but she
was never able to patcb up the
differences between her brother and
her husband.
Wi.Jhout a doubt, bOll) men were
giants cpera in their day, and sad
to say, the world will have to wait a
Ion&amp; lime to be.- and 1ee the likes
of another Jan Peetce or Richard
Tucker. -- ALBERT SMITH,
QUBBBC
WIMI I:QII you fWe lht perSOII who
has rewrythbtf? A1111 Ltwkrs' uw

of

bookkf. "Gem.s,"isitkalforaflilhlstand or cojf~~ talk. "Grms" is a

colleclio11 of An11 Landers' most
requested poems and essays. Send a
st/f-oddres$td, IOIIf, bllliness-size
envelope and a cMd: or monty order for $4.85 (this includes postal~
and hcutdlillf} to: Gems, do AM
Ltwkrs, P.O. BllZ 11562, Chicago,
IU. 6061].()562. (/11 CliNlda, send
$5.87,)

Father-son
dinner held
The faitier-son dinner was held
recently at the Bradbl!fY Church of
Christ with a fish fry in which fiSh ·
was provided by Wally Russell an
side dishes and desserts were provided by lbe ladies of the church.
Prizes awarded during the program went to Darrell Brewer, Gary
Bates, Larry Haynes and Calvin
Bates.

. Members of the South Bethel
New Testament Church of
Reedsville .recently hosted at baby
shower for AI vena and Orville Hill.
·. Prizes ~or games were won by ·
Joyce DaVIS and Evelyn Well. The
door prize was won by Jane
Coates.
Those present were Linda
Bentz, Josephine Myer, Lila Van
Meter, Kathy Stone, Helen Davis,

Riggs OU grad

Fernwood Club iscusses county bi azr .:

Suzanne Warner presented tbe
program at the recent meeting of
1be Fernwood Garden Club lleld at
her home.
.
Mrs. Warner prepared a rock
planter using concrete, sand and
Spagbnum peat moss with CftOII8h
water to make it the consistency of
cottage cbeese. After mixing, she
poured the mixture into a plastic
lined lamp sbade and a plastic lined
box. After curing for three weeks,
the planter will be
to use.
Ida Murphy prestded at the

leldr

meeting and read a poem, "Love
Poem to My Farmer" and all
repeated the Club Collect.
For devotions, Thelma Giles
read "Old Treasurers" by Agnes
Bond and "Reunion" by Julia Jett.
For the roll call, all responded
by narniq an 1111usual planter and
named were CCI'IIIIic llliinals, coffee pot, a shoe and driftwood.
It was liOred thlt the fall flower
bulb callllog had been received and
orders should be in by July 15.
A discussion was held on the
two flower show for the county

fair. Fernwood will llle clelt ~
the Monday show and each o111e
present will prepare one of ~
entries fer the next meeting.
·
The next meeting will be lillY
16 at 1 p.m. atlbe Zion Church c;if
Christ wilb Evelyn Thoma as hOlt·
ess. For the roll call each is tO
name a favorite garden. Suzan!IC
Wamer will have devotions and lhe
program will be "Xerioscaping." •
Also present were Kathry)l
Johnson, Tbelma Giles, Bvel~
Thoma, Wilovene Bailey and
Marge Purtell.

Buckeye Boys State elects officers
After ieveral days of enthusiastic campaigning, the S5th American Legion Buckeye Boys State
moved statehood w1th the inaugurstion or the 1991 Oovcmor. Ohio
Supreme Court Chief Justice
Thomas Moyer was pr~sent to
administer the oath of office to all
elected stare officials during the
inauguration ceremony.
The mock government session is
being held on llle campus of Bowl- .
ing Green State University.
.
Immediately following lbe genera) election all city, county and
state offices were operatinJ.
Participants from Meigs County
with the offJCC Iiley are holding in
the mock government are: ·
Charles Mash, son of Charles
and Susan Mash, Pomeroy, who

ing as chansollar aid of administration.
Chad J. Wise, son of John and
Pam Wise.- Racine, who attends
Southern High School, is serving as
police and fue chief.
Jason Amott, son of Bill and
Stephanie Amott, Syracuse, who
81tends Southern High School, is
serving as Boys State highway
pstrol.
Mark Stanley, son of Dan and
Shirley Stanley, Pomeroy, wlio
811ends Meigs, is serving as a bank
leller.
Darin Log11n, son of Ron and
Kay Logan, Middleport, who
attends Meigs. is servmg on city
council
Jeremy Heck, son of Susy and
.

Elizabeth Davis, Jor.ce Davis ,
Frona Riffle, Julie Rtffle, Betsy
and Dyana Hawthorne and Laura
Guthrie.
Hostesse ~, w~re Elaine Syden-

IT)ilt and the door .prize was won by
Luke Lowery.
The favors of baby bassinets
holding mints were made by Mrs.
Carol Stump.
Cake, ice cream and beverages
were served to Andy and Debbie
Miles, Luke and Lester Lowery,
Roger, Charidine, Chris and Debbie Attire, Bileen Bowers, FnuiCCS
Eskew. J.R. and Linda Laudennilt,

slricker, Evelyn Well and Texanna
Well. Sending P.fts but unable to
attend were M1lton Miller, Faye
and Jim Watson, Linda Damewood. Do""• u'" Lany Welch,

O'DELL'S

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SAU PIICES II IFFECI' tliiouai·

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Vol. 42, No. 38
Copyr!Qhled 1981

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A MuiUmedll Inc. New1peper

Nineteen arraigned on drug charges
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
Arraignment pnx:Cedings were
held before Metgs County Commoo Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
on Tuesday for 19 defendants, all
arrested Tuesday on dru~ charges.
A total of 41 secret indictments
were handed down on Monday by
the Meigs County Grand Jl!l)', and
the 19 individuals arraigned Tuesday were arrested almost immediately after law enforcement officials were sent out to serve the
indictments.
Other arrests and arraignments

are expected to continue on
Wednesday and throughout the
days ahead.
According to Roger Brandeber•
ry, Coordinator of the SECO Task
Force. the indictments are the result
of lhe largest undercover drug
investigation in Meigs County's
history. Brandeberry also stated
yesterday that the investigation is
one of lbe largest ever conducted in
Soulbeaslem Ohio.
A statement released by Meigs
County Sheriff James M.. Soulsby
and Prosecuting Attorney Sleven L.
Story describes the SECO Task

Force as a multi-jurisdictional drug
task force which works in SoulbeasJ.em Ohiq with several participating agencies.
. ·
The lask force is funded by
grant I!IOnies through the Governor's Office of Criminal Justice
Services and the granl is administered ~Y Gallia County Prosecuting
Attorney Brent A. Saunders.
Brandeberry reported yesterday
that 27 uniformed officers assisted
in lbe arrests yesterday, representing the Meigs County Sheriff' s
Department; police departments
from Rutland, Middleport,

Pomeroy, and Racine; 11nd Keith counts of lrafficking in marijuana;
Wood and Terry Ha'!Vk from the Ron Bachrel, Pomeroy, two counrs
Ohio Department of Natural of trafficking !n marijuana; Rick
Resources.
Stone, three counts of aggravared
Arrested and arraigned yester- trafficking in cocaine and three
day were: Vince Stone, Pomeroy, counts of sale of a counrerfeit conon two counrs of aggravated lraf- trolled substance: Tom Stone,
ficking in cocaine; Eric Mitchell, Pomeroy. three counts of lraffick·
Rutland, lrafficking in marijuana; ing in marijuana; Ty Herman, Mid·
Carl "Sly" Hughes, Pomeroy, two dlepon, two counrs of aggravated
counts of traffiCking in marijuana; trafficking in cocaine and three
Joey Thomas, Middleport, two counts of sale of a counterfeit concounts of lrafflcking in marijuana; · · trolled substance; Charles "June"
O.,eg Becker, Middleport, two Walker, Middleport, two counts of
coiillts of lrafflcking in marijuana; aggravated trafficking in cocaine
Beth Gloeckner, Pomeroy, two and two counts of sale of a counrer-

.Riffe says coal vote
~ tied to GOP votes
burn Oliio 's high-sulfur coal Bl~g. voted against it
Associated Press Writer
instesd of cleaner cos! from olber
.Later, the Senate passed irs verCOLUMBUS - A Senl!te- states.
sion, sponsored by Sen. ~obert
; passed bill designed to help Ohio•s , They could claim tax credits for Ney, R~Barnesville. Although it
: utili~es burn·Ohio coal and comply up to 20 percent of the cost of differs in some ways from the
· with the Clean Air Act will not installing scrubbers to reduce the House measure, Riffe said he
; pass the House without support sulfur content or smokesiBCk emis- thinks most of the House's 61
: from 20 Republicans, Speaker sions. The savings would be JliiSS:ed Democrats would support iL .
· Vern Riffe says.
along 10 consumers who o~~
The speaker singled our Bless:· Rilfe, D-Wheelersburg, referred would be billed for the remammg ing as leader of the GOP opposition
: Tuesday to a long-studied bill, up cosrs.
· and charged that Bennett is orchesfor amendments and a vote today
Democra~s said. Blessing and ttating it for political reasons.
by the House Public Utilities Com- olhen are Withholding support so
Blessing denied iL "That's an
mittee lbat ordinarily would send it ~eycanb~Democrarsforelec- absolute fabrication .... 1 have
10 the House floor.
Ulctty ~ IIIC~ that tl'e Clean never talked·to Bob Bennett about
But the speaker said Rep. Louis A!£ Act IS ."~It!!!!.. to reqwre, ev~., ~this bill," he said.
.·
illesslilf1r. of Cincinnati, and l!lll Wl~OIIt die bill. .
. . .
He said Republicans planned to
ers in the 38-member Republican
.. ~ey are playmg games Wtth offer some amendments today "to
House caucus are playing politics us, Riffe said.
clean UJ? the tangu1111e and some
with lbe bill at the urging of Ohio
He acc~sed OOJ!' Ho~ mem · other lbmgs." .He Slid ·lbat if the
Republican Chairmail Robert Ben- bers of trymg to avotd poliueat fall· amendments are accepted, Republi- ·
. nett. .
ou~ from a f~ actlbat, was con· cans would vote for it.
Bolli denied iL Blessing accused C:CJVed by. ~SI~t Bush s RepubBennett said he had not talked to
Riffe of "in absolute fabricaqon." bean llllmi,n.istrstion. .
Blessing about the bill and that he
Riffe said he told Minority
The utihues committee. recOJ!I- does not have time 10 get involved
Leader Corwin Nixon of Lebanon mended passage, of ~ similar btll in legislation.
·
that he wants 20 votes "and he's tw_o w~ks ago, but Riffe refused to
"I didn't even know there was a
working very hard on it.' '
bnng tt 10 a vote of lhe full .H~ problem with the Ney bill," BenThe bill, among other things, because all of .the co':"mttte~ s nett said. "Sometimes. people give
includes incentives for utilities that seven Republicans, mcludmg me more credit than I deserve."

feit controlled substance; Mike
Shoemaker, Cheshire, two counts
of sale of marijuana; Kim Kauer,
Racine, trafficking in marijuana;
Rick Taylor, Long Bottom , trafficking in marijuana; John Blake,
Middleport, aggravated trafficking
in cocaine, lrafficking in marijuana
and sale of a counterfeit controlled
substance; Nick McKnight, Mid·
dleport, trafficking in marijuana;
Gaya Tuttle, Racine, ttafficking in
marijuana; Jeff Grueser, Racine,
lrafficking in marijuana; Janet Carnahan, Racine, lnlffickin~ in marlContinued on page J

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

By ROBERT E. MILLER

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The Legislature could face its
longest work week this year as a
joint conference committee lries to
reach a compromise on the stale's
$27 billion budget bill, legislative
leaders say.
Meanwhile Tuesday, a SenareHouse committee prepared to
resolve differences on Senate
amendments to a voter-approved
housing bill lhat were rejected by
state representatives.
House Speaker Vern Riffe said
he wants at least 20 GOP voles
before hC will let the House vole on
a Senate bill helping Ohio's utilities comply with the federal Clean
Air AcL
· And Gov. George Voinovich
received a Senate bill that would
give legal standing to " living
wills" and create a system of dealing wilh dying patients who did not
have the documents.

Riffe, D-Wheetenburg, said he
and · Senate President Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, were optimistic about an agreement on the
state's two-year budget before
Monday, lhe sran of the next fiscal
year.
.
Riffe said lhe House would be
willing 10 work into the weekend 10
prevent a crisis that otherwise
would occur if there is no bodget
and lhe stare lacks lbe aulbority to
spend money.
House Finance Chairman
Patrick Sweeney. D-Cteveland,
heading the joint committee,
described the progress as slow and
said tight revenues are a major
problem.
House and Senate memben both
made substantial changes in the
budget that Voinovich sent the
Legislature in March. Among the
issues are turning over the operation of Ohio's liquor stores to pri·

3 escape serious injury in wreck

2afL ...

2 S.Cdon, 18 Pea• 25 ~en••

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 26, 1991

,.----Local briefs--...,

MULCH

3 FOI 9"

•••

Thursday, hot, humid,

Page4

Compromise sought on state budget

a•

•oRTHo

Low tonight in mid 60s.

'

Joey Bush, L.G. Bush, Arvilla
Freclrer, Brenda Woodrow.
A decorated teddy bear Cake
was made by Alvena's mother, Lila
Van Meier.
·

Semi·transparltlf. Over 30 colors
of solid Clld deck ItaiM in sttKk.
Clllck our low prlcn.

Made of corrosion rtsistant
galvanized stttl

Pick 3:380
Pick 4:7978
Cards : 2-H, 9-C
8-D; A-S

r

Betty Spencer, Elizabeth Duffy,
Margaret Holmes, Annette, Nicole
and Chris Tucker, Marcia Wells,
Gen~vieve ~ell, Ruth Young,
Melvm and Olive Smilb, Eli711J!Cth
ll)d Naomi Ohlinger, Pat Thoma.
Ed Venoy, Brenda 11nd Megan
Yenor, and Pauline Kennedy. Sending gifts were Charles and Martha
Hoffman and Sherrie MighL

BGS continues
Campaign slogans, songs and
promotions of all types have been
the scene at the Ohio American
Legion Auxiliary's 45111 Buckeye
Girls State.Govemment Seminar. ·
The mythical two party system,
Federalist and Nalionalist, have lbe
set the campus of Ashland University in motion. Elections and
appointments of.City, County and
Stale government officials, school
board members and judges have
been completed.
Sarah Duhl, who attends South·
em High School, has been appoint·
ed to the office of City Attorney
and resides in the Girls Stale City
of Sherwood, Nickoson County,
and belongs to lbe Federalist party.
By practical participation she
will face the functions and problems of government as well as
rights, duties and responsibilities of
American citizenship. Each sirl
holds an office on one of the three
~ovemment levels actually carrymg out her specifiC duties.

.Reds belt
Padres; LA
beaten

r.'~.

Meigs, is serving as a lawyer. !"- ,
Heading lhe list of outstanding ·
speakers which includes lhe following Stale' of Ohio elected omcials: Mary Ellen Wilbrow, lreasurer; Thomas E. Ferguson, auditol';
and Robert Taft, secretary.
•
Olber speakeu are Robert H~fi.
designer of lbe Fifty Star Flag; ~.
Larry Moles and Father John
Kempf, past national chaplain Of
lbe American Legion.
·t
The keynote .speaker is Randall
Gardner, representlllive to the General Assembly. Tile commence'
ment address will be given by Congressman Michael Oxley. Gardnei,
Oxley and Moyer attended Bucl::•
eye Boys State and are members of
the Buckeye Boys State Hall of
Fome.

Smith baby shower held at PCC
A baby shower was held recently 81 the Pomeroy Church of Christ
for Tracy Dawn Smi!h, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smilb.
. Charldine Alkire and Pat Thoma
decorated the church tables and
colorful balloons were used from
lhe llble holding the gifts.
· ·
Pat Thoma conducted games
and prizes were awarded to Chris
Alkire, Andy Miles, Linda Lauder-

Ohio Lottery

""
attends Meigs High School, is serv- Mike Heck, Pomeroy, who attends

. Lisa J. Riggs recently graduated
wtth honors from Ohio University
with a Bachelor of Science Degree.
While attending college she was
selecred as a member of the Outstanding College Students of
America and is a member of Phi
Upsilon Omicron National Honor
Society.
She is lbe daughter of Mrs. Paul
Kloes, Syracuse, and David Riggs,
Pomeroy. She is the gnmddaughrer
of Mrs. Srella_Aikins, R\llland, and
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Riggs, Pomeroy.

Church group meets

'

Tuelldlly, June 25, 1911

Congregation hosts baby shower.-----

CAYUCOS, Calif. (AP) instantly of internal injuries, he
.Entertainer Johnny Carson's son said.
was ki11cd when his car went over
an embankment on a rural road,
aulboritics said today.
Richard Wolcott Carson, 39.
was thrown from his 4-wheel-drive
vehicle in Friday's accident, said
Officer Russ Johnson of the California Highway Patrol.
· The Evangeline Missionary
Carson was driving on Cayucos
Group
of the Pomeroy Church of
Drive when he was apparently disChrist met recently at lbe home of
tracted and the car went over a
Sherrie MighL
124-foot embankment, Johnson
In the absence of the president
said.
Linda Laudermilt conducted the
The narrow roadway is a service
meeting. The opening prayer was
road adjacent to Highway I near
by Charldine Alkire and devotions
the beach community of Cayucos, .
were from Acts 11-26 on Chris180 miles northWest of Los Angelians
was by Sherrie Mi&amp;ht
les.
Roll call was on fathers and
The coroner's office conflfllled
officers reports were given and
Carson was the son of the enterapp!Oved.
lainer.
Canis were sent to Anne Turner
Johnny Carson could not be
and
Marjorie Kappte.
immediately reached through bis
Pat
Thoma and Charldine Alkire
aaome or the "Tonight Show" at
y
lid'
were
planning
the baby shower for
NBC'I Burt.rk IILIOI.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bill
Smith.
Ricbanl c..on
of three
Charldine Alkire had the misCanon adult children.
sion study. The fifth Sunday hymn
· JollniOII laid the hilly, scenic
sinjl will be held at the Tupperi
area owrlo&lt;tlq the ocean is popuPlains
Church.
lar with ardsll.
Elaine Kelly was presented a
"It appean u dlough he wu ·
Devotional BooJC since she is
talclng pliotop'lpbs. There was
1eavma
the IIIU.
camera equipment alongside the
The
July
mmin, will be held at
road," he laid. "It appears his
lbe
home
of
Linda
AJdermilL
attention wu jaat diverted. He
Refreshments of five cup llllad,
travelliiJ at a blah rate of
angel food cake and beverages
speed or c:aaelealy. ''
were served by the hostess to tliOic
Canon' 1 vehicle laMed on its
named
and Debbie Alkire, Bileen
top in a c:oacrere calvert, Iobnson
Bowers,
Eva Dessauer, Beuy
said. Carson . apparently died
Spencer and Janet Venoy.

-·t

...

Three people escaped serious injl!l)' following a two-car acci·
dent on Bedford Township Route 145, in Meigs County, Tuesday
afternoon.
According to a report by the Gallia-Meigs Post of lhe Stare HiJ!hway Patrol, Jean Delph, 50, of Rutland, was southbound on t:R.
145 in a 1977 Pontiac when she saw a northbound car driven by
Gary Nutter, 23, of Gallipolis. Delph applied her brakes, sliding into
Nutter's 1974 Chevrolet lruclc.
Nutter and a passenger, Brian Eblin, 19, of Bidwell, were not
injured. Delph was ttansported to Vererans Memorial Hospital by
lbe Pomeroy squsd where she was treated and released.
Moderale danlage was sustained by bolb vehicles.
Delph was cited by lhe patrol fer failure to yield ll)d not having
' 1m operators license.

Man hurt in Gavin accident
An employee at the James M. Gavin plant suffered minor
injuries Tueaday when bcSiinto a boiler he was repairing.
is, was taken to Holzer Medical
Russell Leifheit, S9,
Center by the Oll1ia County MS following lbe accident around 7
a.m., a hospital spokeswoman said.
According to reportS, the man was working on the boiler that
Condaued on page 3

••
·'•

r

vate agents and a plan to end a discount given retailers for collecting
the sales laX~
The House voted 92-1 10 reject
Senare amendments 10 the housing
bill. Some of them go against the
inlent of voters who authorized the
bill last November, said Rep.
!'.rtchael Verich, chief sponsor of
the measure.
Verich, D-Warren, objected primarily to the deletion of language
channeling certain assistance to
low-income groups, the failure to
put money into a Housing Trust
Fund and lhe removal of anti-discriminatory language.
Riffe told Minority Leader Corwin Nixon, R-Lebanon, he· wants
lhe 20 Republican vores on a proposal that includes incentives for
utilities 10 continue burning Ohio •s
high-sulfur coal inslead of switching to cleaner coal from other
states.
.
Utilities could claim tax credits
for as much as 20 percent of lbe
cosl of installing scrubbers to
reduce the sulfur content of
smokestack emissions. The savings
would be passed on to consumers
who olherwise would be billed for
the remaining costs.
Riffe repeated claims that some
Republicans were withholding their
support so that Democrats would
be blamed for electricity rate
. increases that the Clean Air Act is
certain to require, even without lbe
bill.
Senators accepted 32·1 House
changes lbat completed legislative
action on a measure that would
authorize adults to prepare documents lbat control decisions about
life-sustaining treatment. They
could specify whethet they wanted
respiratm or other lrellment in the
event they are lemlinally ill or perc
manently unconscious and no
-longer able to make informed decisions.
It would allow cenain family
members or a guardian to consent
to the withdrawal of treatment from
people wilboutliving wills wbo are
dyins or who had been unconContlnued oa page 3

DEFENDANTS BOOKED -Nineteen deft•·
dants were arrested, booked and arraigned at
tbe Meigs Couuty Courthouse on Tuesday
morning after the Mei1s County Grand Jury

bladed down 41 drul-reiated Indictments. Here,
Meigs COUDty Sheriff's Department lnvesdaator
Robert Beegle books defendant Kim KauiT.

Meigs board approves camp dates
Rick Ash was given approval to
conduct a volleyball camp, July 1519, at Meigs High School at Tuesday night's meeting of the Meigs
Local Board of Education.
The board adopted a resolution
to join the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Resource Center which
provides resting and olber services
for special education students.
Robert Snowden was nominated
to the executive board of the
Southeast Region of the Ohio
School boards Association and
Morgan Malhews was accepted as
a tuition student for the 1991-92
school year.

Mason mayor
recount ends
in deadlock
A recount of ballots in the
Mason Municipal Election has
ended in a tie for mayor candidate
George Nichols, and wrile·in can·
didare Richard Ohlinger.
According to Lois Test, town
recorder, lbe recount was declared
a tie at lbe end of the evening Toes·
day, with a tally of 131 for each of
the candidateS.
Following the June 11 election,
lhe unofficial count was 132 for
Ohlinger, 131 for Nichols. After
the election canvass. Ohlinger
gained a vote, making lbe tally
133-131.
At Tuesday night's recount, the
intent of the vorer was questioned
on IJIP.rDximately 25 balloti, with
council members voting whether to
accept each ballot or DOL From the
25, Te.t said. two were not accepled for Ohlin8er. making the vote a
tie.
Test added all five council
members were preacnt.
James Casey. Point Pleasant
81torney, wu preacnt at the meeting to ~relent Nichols. Casey is
very famili• with. lies in the elecContlulltd on paae 3

A discussion was held on how
money is being handled from the
various school activities. Jane Fry,
treasurer, reported that the law
requires that monies be lurned into
the treasurer within 24 hours afrer
they are collected. The superinlen·
dent was instructed 10 direct letters
to school offiCials who handle any
activity money, including those
who collect from the pop machines
in the schools to abide by the 24hour ruling.
Approval was given to a temporary arpropriation for the remaining o the 1990-91 fiscal year
which ends June 30. This, accord·
ing to Fry, will :·clean up" funding
variations. Another temporary

appropriation will be adopred for
the 1991-92 school year at a meet·
ing next month once figures have
been _secured from the Mei~s
County AudiiOt on what the disUlct
can expect in lhe way of tax
money.
At the suggestion of Board
Members Jeff Werry and Robert
Snowden, money for transporting
junior high and high school students to athletic and olber activities
will be considered for inclusion in
the new temporary approprialion. •
Attending were Supt. JameS:
Carpenter. Treasurer Fry, and
Board members, Snowden, Werry;
Larry Rope, Richard Vaughan, anlf
Robert Barton, president.

Southern seniors shine in
Ohio Proficiency Tests
Southern High School seniors outscored lhose in both Meigs and
Eastern High Schools in lhe Ohio Ninth Grade Proficiency Tests
given in March 1991, according to a repof! from the Ohio Depanment of Education.
At Southern 61 percent of the 57 seniors taking the lest pjlssed ·
all four sections. At Eastern where 33 took the test, 52 percent
passed all four sections, while 81 Meigs, only 34 peroenl of the 138
seniors passed the leSIS.
Swewide 54 perw,1t of the seniors J!8.SScd all four rests, wilh 87
percent passing ~g, 78 .pe,rcent wnnng, 65 percent mathematics. and 81 percent ctttzenslup.
In the rests 81 Soulbem 7S percent of the seniors passed mathemalics, 95 percent reading, 98 percent citizenship. and 82 percent
writing.
.
At Eastern, 73 percent passed "!~• 88 percent reading, 91 percent, citizenship, and 76 percent wnnng.
.
Only 47 percent or the Meigs seniors passed lbe malb rest, with
89 percent passing reading, 77 percent citizenship 111d @ percent
writing.
" Seniors were not required to pass the teSt in order 10 receive their
diplomas.
This year's ninth graders are in .the first class lhat will be
required to pass all four profiCiency rests in order to receive a diploma after Jufy I, 1993. They took lhe tellS in November 1990, retook
the ICSIS they failed in Man;h. 1991, and will have opponunitles 10
retake failed tests six more limes before IIIey lllldlllh!
State law required all lOth. lltb and 12th arade students to take
prorteicncy tests one time in March 1991 to provide baseline data to
the Ohio Department of Education.

�VVedoe8da~June26,1991

. Commentary
Ul C..rt Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERJ111TS OF THE MEIGS.MASQN AREA

. t/JMU.TMEDIA,INC.
CHARLENE ROEJ!1..1CR
Geaeral Maaacer

Pabllaber

PAT WHITEHEAD'
AuiKaat Pub! IIIIer/ CoDtroller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspape{ Publtsber:s Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than300 ·
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unslgne&lt;! letters wUI be published. Letters sl1ould be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Ohio child care law
called best in nation
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Alsociated Prall Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Slale lawmakers are expected to put the
finishing touches on a child day-care bill that will atlraet about $50 mil' )ion in new federal money and double services now available to Ohio's
, working poor.
Mark Real of Columbus, director of tile Ohio cbaplet of lhe Children's
' Oefense FlUid says the bill is the most comprehensive of any state, yet
.:simple enough lhat a rela!ive can be paid for services.
. He helped draft the mC~~SUte, which sjems in pan from •passage in
-~ lasl yeat of two new federal programs - Child Care Development Block Grants and some amendments to Title IV of the Social Security Ac:t.
. Ohio Sl8llds to receive a $28 million block grant and to qualify for an
,additiooal $13 million in Social S«urity 11181Ching funds 10 provide care
for children of parents faced with pospcc:rs of going on welfare.
, Real said Ohio will get an addilional $10 millioo in federal money to
: · jJrovidc day care for welfare parents wbo can qualify, under an uncontcst;. ed provision in Gov. George Voinovicb's poposed budget. by getting ·a
·: job, going lo school or enrolling in a job-b'aining program.
,. The Senate added ill approval to the House bill las! week. Rep. Jane
&lt;Campbell, D-Cieveland, the chief sponsor, said the House will accept
. Senate changes. sending the bill to Voinovich for his expected signature.
Major provisions of the bill provide for a streamlining of the child care
funding system so lhat all JllogJanls can be areated as one, including pro,
; grams run by schools, Real said.
.
~.
Those who qualify by being on Aid to Dependent Children, or by earn.: inglc:ss than ~veny-level wages (about SS.SO an hour), can oblain a cer: tifiCBit that will be acc:qxed at any cenlet licensed by the state.
· Real said there currently are aboUt 3,000 licensed cenletS in Ohio, but
~ ; only ·300 of lhtm accept poor clJi!dreiL ~ expects that as a result of the
, · bill, the number accep1ng poor children will double to about600.
;
He estimated tile bill will provide day-care for aboul20.000 children of
· the wtning poor who now receive no services.
:
Relalives, neighbors or others can qualify for a license simply by sign:: inf a S~B~eD~ent saying they have not been convicted of child abuse or any
1: c,hmes against children. Real said these individuals' homes will be
· inspected by county departments of human services after 60 days and
:: then, once a year.
The bill povidea for rates approximately equal 111 those charged by pri. · vat.e providel1 in the SMJe area, as detmnined by a survey. He estimated
· that the county dqai bnents will pay about $70 for five days of care.
'

.~Letters

••

•"·•

to editor

Apprecilltes support

..•••

;
Tbe Joppa United Methodist
;: Wonien are using the paper to
extend a message of thanks and
r. gratitude to all wbo helped make
i our recent yard sale a success.
:Our goal is the purchase of lS
: 10-foot-JQog padded, used church
•. pews. Sales were held all around
: · yet many from the area donated
; crafts, clothing and time. They

•
••
•

bought libenllly-with tile slalement
so often bean!, "Keep the change.•
May god richly bless you for
wbalever you did.
Ours was a labor of love. You
who helped in any way are much
apprecialed.
Thanks again
Joppa U.M.W.
Lavina C. Brannan, treas.

!..• Today in history

:
.
By Tbt Alsociated Press
.
::
Today is Wednesday, June 26, the 1771h day of 1991. There are 188
:: days left in the year.
-.;
Today's Highlight in History:
~
On June 26, 1963, President Kennedy visited West Berlin, where he
r was greeted by more than a million of the divided city's residents. In a
; speech, Kennedy made his famous declaration, "Jch bin ein Berliner" (I
~ · am a Berliner).
r: On this date:
!· In 1870, the fust section of Atlantic City, New Jersey's Boardwalk.,
:~ was opened to the public.
·:
In 1900, a commission lhat included Dr. Walter Reed began the fight
: • against the deadly disease yellow fever.
' ! In 1917, the fust troops of the American Expeditionary Force arrived
t in France during World War I.
In 1919, the fust issueoflhe New York Daily News was published.
·:
In 1945, the charlet of the United Nalions was signed by 50 countries
: • In San Fnn:isco. (The text of the charlet was in five languages: Chinese,
'. En&amp;lish. French, Russian and Spanish.)
In 1948. in response to lhe Soviet block•de of West Betlin, lhe United
: swea IIIJIC)UIICed it would increase its daily cargo flights to the western
sec~« of die ilollled German city.
In 1959, President Eisenhower joined Britain's Queen Elizabeth lhe
Second in c:cmnonies offacially opening the St lawrence Seaway.
In 1975, citing what she called a "deep and widespread conspiracy"
agaial II« pcmmena. Indian Prime Minister Jncfua Gandhi declared a
state
-~::r
Inof
1m:
J;C,o.,te were killed when a lire sent toxic smoke pounng
througll die~ County Jail in Columbia, Tenn.
In I9?9 hea¥yweigbl boxing cbampiqn Muhammad Ali confumed to
.reporterS
be'd leal a lea« to the
Boxin~ Association resigning
• his ti~e IIJIDIIId dlirtiiiiiiOIIIICed.reatement was indeed final.
• In 1989 ill a plir of dedrs,the U.S. Supmne Court ruled thai the
: death ~may be lmtaed for munleras ~ ~illcd their crimes
: as young ilf811 16. _, for meotally retarded killen as weD.
- Ten yean qu: Coawvllive Democrau joined Republicans in the
·House of~ 1 J''* ~President Reagan's package o~ ~get cuts, a
. . die
-controlled Senate passed a similar

WASHJNGTON - Ordinary Febl•y 1989, wben they decided
citizens are often recruiled by fed- to 10 to die FBI after they were
eral narcotics agents to help set up aslrcd 111 batljJillt marijwma by the·
stint! operations - but many are owner ol the amcting company fmfinding lhat often theY are as badly which dtey wod:ed. The FBI per·
srung by tile government as the iar- suadcd them to work unden:over
geted drug kingpins.
for tile bureau. Soon tile couple
Tbese citizens are ptomised was distributing muijuana to II
money and safety but too oJten different SillieS, all tile wbile pro- .
wind up with neither. Their ~ viding the FBI with information
ments are never in writing, and co!ICCied by recordioB devices.
their government handlers view
The couple developed second
them as· money-hungry snitches. thoughiJ aflllr a mootb of underYet in seYCI'al cases we examined. OO¥ec work, but it was 100 late to
tllese men and wo.men perfonped turn bact: Their identities had
like unsung heroes in tbe war already become blown to sevellll
against drugs.
major ~ dealers ~round tbe
Our associate Dean Boyd countty
at lbe time tlley were
learned of one case involving a in fl11811Cial straits. The wife told
husband and wife le8lll in Texas. us, "The only cblllce that we bad
Over tbe course of nearly a year was to Slict with diem (FBI)."
tlley delivered evidence on at least
One of their most harrowing
33 suspects, and transported over e~ialccs bepn when theY were
half a ton of marijtam .00 ~ direcled by their FBI bandlers in
of dollars in drug money for the Sao Antonio to deli- a tmckJoad
FBI during their infiltralion of one of marijuana to tingpins in Bronx,
drug ring. But they have yelto see N.Y. Tbey were told thai prior to
a cent of the $85,000 lhey were tile deliYCI)' they would rendezvous
promised as a reward.
with FBI agents a few miles outTheir ordeal dates back to side the ciav who would teep a

f.

.·

'Yorld

a

c••

EMS units answer 8 calls

By Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta

watchful eye on lhem during tbe
sale.
The couple dido 'a realize they
were ~ in10 a bureau crossfire, spar
after agents ,in San couple to be relocated to safety.
Antonio learned that thm New Today, more dum a year and a half
York countapariS planned to seize later, only a handful of the dealers
tile pot and bold the couple as goy- have been Clpi1DM. and the couple
emment witnesses . San Antomo sliD fears danger. They lack JI'Ot.ecbelieved the arrests would have ·tion, are in fmancial Slraits and are
shat-cin:uited their own prospects still wrangling with the FBI over
for a larJer bust down lhe load. · the promised money.
The couple claims that San
"! have never in my life felt
Antonio agents _- unwillinS, to lose such con(elllpt or loathing for anyconbOI over lhe case - deliberate- one ... as I feel for the Fin," the
ly deceived their New York coun- · wife lllld us.
·
lrlpBitS by staling thai the bip had
FBI officials in Washington
been abor1ed. allhough in trulh lhe apparently told them that their
couple was en route to their desti- check was being cut by the San
nation. However, it was not until Antonio office. Tbe couple suslhe couple was 100 miles outside peers lhatthe embanassment genthe city with a truckload of pot that erated by their complaints to FBI
IIley were notified lhey would have officials in Wasbinpln bas embitto meet the dangerous buyers on tered San Antonio agents, who are
their own.
now sitting ou the paperwork_
After lhe head of lhe drug distriVictor Gonzalez, an FBI superbution ring was convicted in visor in San Antonio, refused to
September 1989, it too1c monlhs of comment on the case, but said the
waiting and sevellllleuers to FBI couple's payment "is still being
Oirector William Sessions for the negotiated with Washington." The
FBI in Washington also declined
comment
EYES ONLY - U.S. intelligence officials continue to receive
· reports underScoring lhe predicament facing Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev. The latest
infonnation suggests lhat hardliners have tight.ene(l tlleir grip over
the Communist Party, the Red
Army and tbe KGB. Those old
guard elements want to oust Gorbachev and restore a Stalinist state.
The reports also tell of Gorbachev's confrontation wilh three
colonels who told him to his face to
fue refonners ~ or face impeachmenL
.
MINI-EDITORIAL - American cities are becoming killing
fields of crime. Even those fortunate enough not to have been victimized are victimized by fear of
crime. A new J!OII shows that one
out of every five Americans has
experienced violent crime, and
only 15 percent say they reported
the crime and an 8JI'CSI was made.
Nearly 75 percent of the public say
lhey lack confidence in lhe courts.
Law and order may overtake tbe
economy and foreign policy as !he
burning campaign issUe of 1992.

Eight calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services on Tuesday and early on Wednesday morning.
. On Tuesday at 10:29 a.m .. Rutland station went to New Uma
ROlli at the Roger Holman residence for a stove fire.
At 12:04 p.m., Middlepon unit went to State Route 7. Mabel
Smilb was treaied but not uansponed. At l :23 p.m., Pomeroy unit
wedhl White Oak Road for a car accident Jean llelph was taken to
Voterans Memorial Hospital. Gary Nutlet and Brian Eblin refused
treatment. At 3: 13 p.m., Syracuse .unit went to Perry Run Road.
Gerald Moore was taken to Veterans. At 5:03 p.m., Tuppen Plains
squad went to Eden Ridge Road Charles Barnhart was taken to SL
Jo~ Hospital. At 6:29 p.m., Pomeroy units went to Foodland for
a child swck in a siiOpping can. Matthew landers was areated but
not~- At8:3l p.m., MiddiCjlO!t squad wenato Overbrpok
Center. Stanley Roush was taken to Veterans.
On Wednesday at2l8 a.m .. Pomeroy to Powell Street for Anthony Perry to Veterans.

A recipe for confusion ____c_on_._cla_r_en_ce_M_ill_er
A dash of compassion, a pinch
of idealism, a smidgen of national
security, a touch of commercial
concern, and a heavy dose of political self interest, and what you have
is the recipe for this year's foreign
assistance authorization and appropriations bills which were passedby the House of Representatives
this past week.
While I'm no isolationist indifferent to lhe needs for global coop. eration and preservation, I at lhe
same time feel that our attempts to
be a responsible partner in world
affairs, as reflected by these two
bills, are 100 often marred by illdefined and ill-conceived policy
provisions; provisions that often
serve to compound problems rather
than correct lhem. A case in point
is a provision contained in this
year's. bills that will continue to
provide assistance to Israel for the
purpose of relocating Soviet Jews
to Israel. In that our government is
very concerned with the continued
resettlement of these emigrants on
lhe West Bank, resettlements contrary to the best interests of the
world community that is seeking to
fmd a peaceful solution to the long
standing Arab-Israeli conflict, an
ammendment was offered to the

foreign assisumce aulhorization bill
that would, in effect, cut off U.S.
assistance for such relocation if it
was determined that Soviet Jews
were being reseuled in these occupied lar)ds.
U.S. policy on this questiou is
unequivocally clear. The Administration in no uncertain terms has
said that it is stronRiy opposed to
the continued settlement of the
West Bank and lhat the emigration
assistaiJCe being provided Israel by
the U.S. is not to be used for such
resettlement. Yet what docs the
House ol Representatives do when
it is aslted to stand up ou the question? It predictably C.pitulates to
the pressures of political self interest and overwhelmingly defeats
this amendment by a vote of 378 to
44. By 80 doing, it sends a message
to the Arab world that, though we
as' a country talk a good game
about wanting a just peace in the
regiou, we expediendy continue to
turn our back on the transgresSIODS
of our close ally, Israel, transgressions that only serve 10 further
undercut any serious hope for resolution of this volatile siwation.
Beyond this question, there
were countless other concerns I had
regarding the passage of these two

foreign aid measures. The authorization bill which totalled $25.4
billion in federal foreign assistance
covers a two year period with
$12.4 billion for 1992 and $13 billion for 1993. The bulk of the aid,
some 10.7 billion is targeted fo~
Israel and Egypt and takes tile form
of both military and economic
assistance. As w1dl most past foreign aid legislation, the Congress
again has taken a micromanagemen! &amp;ppiOach by incorporating in
the bills a loa of foreign policy
decisions that should rightfully be
left to the President Such actions
as the incorporation of a $20 million grant to the United Nations
Fu~d for Population Activities,
wh1ch effectively overturns the
President's Mexico City Policy,
and the congressionally inspired
restrictions placed on aid to Pakistan, Jordan and India are sure to
encounter opposition from the
White House as will conditions
placed on prospective aid to the
Soviet Union.
Given the growing intemationai
concern about arms saies, lhe bills
shift foreign aid funding away from
security assistance and towards
economic assistance, a develop- .
ment I feel is very positive. At the

same lime, I'm concerned that with
the foreign aid legislation, just as
wilh most domestic legislation, we
try to be all things to all people. As
an illustration of this point, the
aulhorization bill calls for furnishing-$7 million to lhe Agency for
International Development for the
preservation of the African ele·
phant Granred, we on this side of
the aisle should be concemed with
protecting our party's symbol, but
aren't there higher human priorities
that we could be spending these
dollars on?
. I said at the outset, w~ile we as
a country have an important global
role to play, I lhink these bills, as
enacted by lhe House, do a disservice to many of the Administration's stated foreign policy goals.
By t~e earmarking of billions of
dollars, by the . mandating of
numerous and redundant reports,
the House has ooce again uswped
the prerogatives of the President to
effectively shape lhe nation's foreign policy. In conclusion, I feel
the bills are a boondoggle of benefirs for die few at lhe expense of
the many and in toto make for a
recipe for continued confusion in
the arena of international politics.

law

DEPU'nES DISPATCHED· These
taforcement alllclals
met at Meigs Hlgb School before belntl sent oat to arrest 4I delen·
dants in a major drug bust In Meigs County an Tuesday. Twenty•
sevep untrormed amctrs from several agencies assisted in lht
work, wblcb is txpeCted to coatinue tbrougb tbt week.

---Area
deaths-hnnie McKenzie
Jo,

.
dMK .
Johnnie Raymon
c enz1e,
74, of 110 State SL, Pomeroy, died
. Wednesday, June 26, 1991 at Veterans Memorial Hospital following
an extended illness.
Born on Dec. 7, 1916, at
Wilkesville, he was the son of lhe
late Michael McKenzie and Berlha
Tracker McKenzie. He was a
retired custodian.
Mr. McKenzie is survived by a
great niece and her family with
whom be made his home, Brenessa
and Larry Phillips and children,
Brenda, Amy, Erica and Autumben, a
brother and sister-in-law, Ro rt
• and Mary McKenzie•. Co111mbus; a
sister, Theria Hendrix, Pomeroy •
another special niece, Mary K.
Greer, Long Bottom, and two s!sters-in-Jaw, Dorothea McKenzie,
Pomeroy, and Louise McKenzie,
Columbus; along with sevellll other
nieces and nephews and greatnieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was pre· ceded in death by his parents, his
wife, Alma, four brothers, Donald,
James, Cleo and Ottie, and two sisletS, Kathtyn and Rutba.
Mr. McKenzie was a veteran of
World War II and was !IJJiem~ of
Drew Webster Post 39, Amencan
Legion. He belon~~ to the Fraternat Order of the
les. He serv_ed
at one lime ou the P~mero~ pohce
force, and was acuve w11b the
Pomeroy Fire Department and
emergenc~ squad. .
.
GraveSide servtces w11l be held
at Jl a.m. Friday at. Riverview
Cemetery. Gary Hines will offici-

tlblel.

But not all huauen are illlellli·
live. lr'odeed, die ptiMrielder in one
of the 111011 c:elebrale4 aeeiden&amp;al
slayin&amp; ~~recent
Don-

aid Rogerson, is a devoted father;
conscientious scoutmaster and
hard-working grocery store produce manager.
The remorse-filled Rogerson
says he will never hunt again. A
companion says that immediate! y
after realizing be was responsible
for a tragic accident, Rogerson
kneeled beside the prone, fatally
wounded victim and cried out :
"I've shot a human being. Oh God.
Wby does God allow this to happen.''
Killed by a single shot from
Rogenon's hunting rifle was Karen
Ann Wood, a 37-year-old mother
of one-year-old twins living in Hermon, Maine, a small town near
Banp. She was shot while walking m lbe woods 130 feet behind
her house at mid-afternoon.
Wood was wearing a dark blue
COli and white millells at the lime.
RopiOII says be mistook the mittens for a deer's tail- and some of
his defenders assign part of the
blame to Wood for what they char·
ICfaize as dangerously ir.applopii-

*lllire·

re-s.

1)

It's just going to aet honer.
That's the word from the
National Weather Service, which
says Friday could be die wii'DICst
day yet this year with a high
arnund9S.
·
Forecasters say some relief is
possible on Saturday if a frontal
system brings rain.
.
Nearly cloudless skies and
wind$ from tile soul\lwest will create hot and _d ry conditions on ,
Thursday with highs above 90 most
places ..
The record
this dale at
station wu

says it is going to get hotter

The record low was 48 in 1961.
Sunrise this morning was at
6:04 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:04
p.m.
Around tile nation
Rain SQ&amp;ked much ·of die South
early ioday and lhe northern Plains
braced for more hailstorms as
weather conditions were
and
humid for most of the United
· Slales.
Rain fell this morning on Florida, Georgia and Tennessee, with
showers forecast for Alabama,
Louisiana and Kenwckf.
Thunderstorms hai and strong
winds were f~ for the Dako-

warm

tas and Montana, with a thunder·

storm watch was in effect early
· today for pans of North and Sou!h
Dakota.
Montana was particularly hard
bit by lhundersionns Tuesday. . ·
Winds caused power &lt;?utages_1n
parts of the state, and bail lhe SIZC
of baseballs smashed Billings,
denting planes parked atlhe airpon
and damaging crops.
·
In the R~ky ~ountains, _a b!USt
of furnace-hke a1r was bnngmg
record high temperatures to Colorado. Tuesday's high of 100 in
Denver broke lhe record of 99 set
· in 1990, while the 95 recorded in

Colorado Springs tied last year's
record f!ll' the date.

Sweltering conditions were foreCI!St along the East Coast from Ney;
England to Florida, but temperatures along the West Coast ranged
from moderate to cool. Highs today'
were expected to range from tlie
60s and 70s in tile Pacific Nortb·
west to the 70s and 80s in California, hitting the 80s and 90s up and
down the East Coast and soaring
from~ 90s Ill over 100 across die
Soulh, Southwest and most of lhe
Midwest.

Weather
South Central Obio
Tonight, mostly clear. Low in
!he mid-60s. Thursday, sunny and
hoL High 90-95.
Extended rorec:ast:
Friday tbrouJb Sunday:
Friday, hot w11h a slight chance
. of thunderstorms norlh in lhe afternoon. Hig~s 90-95. Lows 65-70.
Saturday, a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the 80s
and lows in the 60s. Sunday, fair.
Highs in the 80s and lows in the
60s.

ate. Friends may call a~ lhe Ewing
Funeral Home from 2 Ill 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. Thursday.

Audra Jett
Audra William (Chic) Jen, 62,
of Route J, Little Hocking, died ·
Tue$day, June 25, . 199'1, at the
Charleston Medical Center inCharleston, w. Va.
Bom m
· Pitgeon, w.va., be was
the son of Clarence and Ethel
Browning Jett of Valley Fork, W.
Va. He was a self-employed watchmaker, a member of the Linle
Hocking Evangelical M11thodist
Church, and a veteran of the Korean war.
He is survived by his wife,
Arlene Kaye Brown Jett, Little
Hocking, twa daughters and a sonin-law, Jill Jett and Crystal and
Wayne Vogelsong, all of Little
Hocking, three brothers, Donald
Jeu of Parma, Willard Jett of Independence, Ohio, and Roy Jett of
Valley Fork, W. Va.; two sisters,
Donna Carte of St Albans, W. Va.
and Reva Whaling of Reno, Ohio;
and several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by a
daughter, Jennifer Robin Jett, a
son, William Carl Jett, and two
brothers, Delmer and Darrell Jett. .
Funeral services will be held at
II a.m. Thursday at the WhiteEthridge Funeral Home, l2S Lee
St., Belpre, with Rev. Carl
McPherson, the Rev, Ronald
Vogelsong, and the Rev. J!ICk Witbite officiating. Burial will be in
lhe Torch Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 3 to S and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

Veterana Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Ricky Johnson, Middleport.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Clyda Michaela Benny Nutter.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
· Discharges, June 2S • Henry
James M.
· Gilyard and. Soutbeutern
OFFICIAL HONORED • Joe Gilyard,
Bentz, Roderick Click, Irvin DenOhio
olllce
represent,ative
Don PbiDips. Soulsby
Director or tbt GDvti'IIOr's omce of Criminal
nison, Debra Dudding, Arthur
presented GUyard wltb an honorary deputy
Justice Strvlces, - bonored by Melp County
Gillispie, Ronald Jacobs, Leota
commission.
Gilyard was In Meigs County to
Sberllf James M. Soalsby and tbe GOCJS'
Jones, Patricia Martindill, Linda
oversee tbe arrest of 41 alleged drllg offenders.
Soutbeasttrn Ohio alllce Tuesday. Pictured, left
Mitchell, Daryl Salisbury, Harley
to rl&amp;bt, are PrOileeulor Sttvta L. Story, Sberill'
Thomas and Donald Willis.
·
Births, June 2S - Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Denais, a daughter, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. Mr. and Mrs .
Coatlnued from page I
WASHINOTON (AP) - United Ravenswood, W.Va., union offi- Michael Perkins, a son, Jackson.
juan a; Donald "Duke" Dailey, Steelworkers of America members cials said Tuesday.
The demonsb'lltion will focus on
Racine, two couniS of aafficking in will demonstrate in front of the
marijuana; Keith Musser, Pomeroy, Swiss Embassy on Wednesday to the dispute and the business practwo counts of a$Pivated traffick- draw attention to tbe labor dispute tices of Switzerland-based com·
ing in pre5cripbon drugs; Roben at Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. in modi ties traders involved in the
Am Ele Power ..................28 1/8
company, union officials said.
Scarberry, aggravated trlffu:king in
Ashland Oil ......................31 1/8
Ravenswood Aluminum chair·
cocaine; and Gene Mankin,
AT&amp;T .............................. ,.38 1/8
man Emmett Boyle announced in
Pomeroy, ttaffickin&amp; in marijuana.
Bob Evans ........................ 171/2
May he was buying out one of
All of those who were arraigned
Charming Shop .................20 1(1.
Continued
rrom
page
1
those commodities traders, Willy
yesterday entered pleas of not
City Holding ..................... 13 3/~
guilty, and trial dates were set in lion proC:ess. He and Kenton She- Strothotte. Boyle said the sale
Federal Mogul.. ................. 17 3/8
July and August. All of the defen- line, candidates for the Democratic would be effective July lS.
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ .33 1/4
About 1,700 United Steelworkdants excep for Jeff Grueser, Janet nomination for county commission
Key Centurion ....... ........... 13 3/4
Carnahan and Ron Bachtel were in lhe 1990 primary electiou, were ers members have been off lhe job
Lands' End .......................21 l/4
found indigent and were refmed to lied following the primary. The lie at ·Ravenswood Aluminum since
Limited Inc ...................... ,27 1/2
lhe Meigs County Public Defend- ended in a coin ross, wilh Sheline Nov. l irr a labor dispute. Union
Multimedia Inc ........... ......28 3/&amp;
winning the nomination. He was members say they were locked out,
er's Office.
Rax Restaurant ................. 7/l6
Names of ·the other defendants later defeated by Sadie Bailes, while company officials say the
Robbins&amp;Myers ...............29 7/8
union members were on strike.
are expected to be released as the . Republican . .
Shoney's lnc ................. ... .15 l/2
Ohlinger was not represented by
defendants are arrested and
Star Bank ..........................21
booked.
.
legal·counsel.
Wendy lnt'l. ............... ........9 3/4'
Acoording to Test, either of lhe
Worthington Ind........... ....25 3/4
Coatinued from page I
twO mayor candidates can now file
an election contest within the next sdous far at least one year.
SiliCic nJHJrll an lhl 10:30 a.m.
Marriage license tp'BDted
In other action, the Senate
10 days. If neither do me an elecquotts pro~ldlll by Blulll, Ellis
A marriage license has been tion contest, the decisiou may be approved 20-13 a House bill that
tmd Ltuwi of Gtl/1/po/is.
granted in Meigs County Probate made by the ross of a coin.
would prohibit common law marCourt to ·Danny Lee Shain, 47,
riages.
Racine, and Dorothy Anna Parsons,
45, also of Racine.
.
·Divorces, dlssolutloas I!Migbt
Divorce actions have been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Sandra Pebble Bell,
Pomeroy, against Douglas Brian
Bell, Racine; by Vonda Annette
George, Pomeroy, against Terry
Lee George, Rudand; and by Carl
E. Klaiber, Long Bottom, against
Tracy N. Klaiber, Long Bottom.
Actions for dissolution of marriage have been flied by Sue Zirkle,
Pomeroy, and Dainny S. Zirkle, also
of Pomeroy; and by Jennifer L)'lUI
Shinn, Chesler, and Joseph Lincoln
Shinn, Southside, W.Va.

Nineteen ...

Steelworkers to demonstrate

Stocks

Mason ...

Compromise ...

Court news

.R EJOICING LIFE

.
'

ELEMENTARY CBRIIftAI SCHOOL

AT

CHAPMAN s·H OES

GRADES: Xindn1arten thru 6th Grade

Hunting kills more than wildlife
uesr.ssed on their land.
imilar incidents are reported
throughout the nation as longstanding tensions between hunters and
homeowners are exacerbated by the
ever-sprawling development that
constricts the area in which highpowered rifles can be safely rued.
At the same time, hunters face
heightened hostility wrought by
cultural changes in an increasingly
urban society. Says one angry
property owner here in Wake
County:
"I've bad them shoot the Jocks
off my ptel, sboot the boUom out
of my boat, regularty tear down the
'posted land' sips and generally
treapu• on my property rights.
They dlink IIIII if lbele's a deer in
the woods, they ha'Ve • ri&amp;ht to iL ..
Adds a Mafne man: '"'be probltm is thai your dyed·in-tbe-wool
bunt.ers just believe they have an
inalienable riaha to hunt everywhere." Other Maine relidents
COtDJ)llin- ,....Idea huiWm have
left bullets lod&amp;ed In everything
from ataior rill to dinina IOQIII

B1 ne Aslocltlted Press

.

Hospital news

r--------------,

RALEIGH, N,C. (NEA) Michael F. Corcoran, executive
vice president of the North Carnli·
na Wildlife Federation, recalls a
panicularly appalling incidtnt in
which a deer hunter accidentally
shot and killed two other hunters.
The only penalty imposed upon
the man who committed the slayings was a $47 fine for ~sing.
" So it basically was Siso a
head,'' says Con:oran in ~Idly calculating the effective price paid for
each fatal shooting.
Those deaths occurred several
yean ago in Nash County, but the
carnage continues. During the
slale' s most recent bunting season
late last year, for example, a high
school science teacher in near6y
Wake County was similarly shot
and killed.
The teacher, a Civil War buff,
was exploring for artifacts in the
woods behind his home when be
was struck in the back by a
measure.
.
hunter's
bullet that appamnly filii
• Five yean qo: V*' illllellnd decided by ~ ~ ~ 3--~ IJI8I'8UI
struck
a
deer but then passed
: against a p1opoallbll .wid bave ended the D8IJOn s COIIIbtutional ban
through
the
animal.
on divorce.
·
AI
about
the same time. awo
: One year ago: Prahl Built, who bad campaiJ!Ied for oflioe on a
bunters
were
to death in
: . pledge of " no - ....,..
tMd dllllalt illc:reaiC8 '!"oald bave to be · Caswell Countyahol
during
a violent
·; included in any defil:k-idtt.,.. DICkale warted out Mth congressional
confronlllion
Mill
propeny
owners
· : negotiators. AfriCIII Nab«-' Culipus leader Nelson M.ldela 8ddreased
who
claimed
die
vicumJ
illegally
·
· the U.S. Congress.

Ilia

Continued trom page 1
was down for repairs when be slid 15 feet dowli lhe inside wall of
lhe boiler and injured his leg.
·

FBI informants get stung by employer

The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L. WINGE'l"l'

r----Local briefs...--...., Weatherman

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 26, 1991

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

STARTS THURSDAY, JUNE 27 AT 8 A.M.
SPECIAL THURSDAY HOURS 8 AM.-6 P.M.

STATE REOIITEUD
Meeta aU date • • • -

By Robert Walters
ment colored blaze orange.
"Hunters lhink that if it isn't flu~
rescent orange, it must be a deer,"
says ooe.
"I don't go down in lhe fields
after the (hunting) season starts
unless I've got on encugh orange to
attract a blind man's attention,"
says anolher.
Others fear even the brightly
colored clothing may not protect
them. "You don't go into the
woods fmm Labor Day until it's
time to get your C~as tree,"
says one Maine woman. "No
exceptions.''

·

Here in North CiroliDI, as in
other states, restrictions on discharging f1te811Qs close to homes
and other dwellings often arc
imposed by cities, counties and
other jurisdictioos.
But the distances vary widely,
from 300 10 1,000 feet. Moreover,
hunters too often life uafamiliar
with the local laws, the location of
nearby buildings - and the proximity of fellow hunten ad others·
in the woods.
'
(C)l991
NEWSPAPER
BN'IERPRISE ASSN.

"

Ita....,..,

TUI'nONFEE;
GRADES 1 THROUGH 61 $1,100 per year
PER MONTH BASISI
suo per ltlldent • lint cbllcl ollaaally
S88 HCond cblld ollaadly - ao% oil tuition
sss tblrd cblld ollamll,. - SO% on

DRESS FUTS,
CASUALS &amp;
SANDALS

DRESS
SHOES

CONNIE
NAlUilliZEI

CONNIE
NA1UIAUIEI

son s"n

son s'on

•60

JUNDERGARTENI
per atudent • per ,.ear
PER MONTH BASIS:
$60 per ltlldent - lint child ollamlly

GIOUP WMa•s

WOMEN'S

GIOUP

GROUP CIILDIEN'S

STIIDE liTE

•

TENNIS SHOES

WEEIOI

Nlll

1.991.-92 Book Fees
SIJO.oo Grades I· 6

165.00 Klnderprten

Jleeldratlon U Testlq FHs
RecJatratlon F.. tss.oo
Teltlnl FH 810.00. ·
For JDOnlnlonaadon, "'"bNchun aad -~1,
writ. oraD:
JJJ N. Second Ave. • Middleport. OH. 41'760
614-99S-fd49
I

!

IUIOI
DDS
· OllSSHO,DS

HANDBAGS

w•o•

THUISDAY
JUNE 27
•

T·SHIITS
O.U. S - - lAND
CONaU
7:00 P.M. on Court St.

ART IN 111 PAll

c....t st. - • ,. ' ,.•.

POMROY'S QIAun SHOI POD
I

'

�.·

wedne8day, June 28, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Navratilova wins record lOOth
match at Wimbledon Tue.sday

Wednesday, June 26, 1991
Pea• 4

By STEVE WILSTEIN
AP Tenall Writer
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Unable to explain her plodding
play on lhe grass where last she
danced so nimbly, Martina
Na vratilova turned to Greek
mytholoiY to tell her~·
"lfeft-likc Sisyphus,' she said.
"I had 10 keep pushing lhe s10ne
up. Aa soon as I lOt close to the
top, it came dowo apin.' •
Up IIIII down, in and out; tennis
· balls flew wildly oo Centre Coon
on Tucaday as the nine-time champion added another chapter to her
own Wimbledon mylh.
Her record 100th victory at
Wimbledon came nervously, 4-6,

Reed's first grand slam leads
Reds to 8-2 win over Padres
B;rJOEKAY
lhird-best'pitCh," Ried said. "I very well."
!bought he was going 10 bring ·the · Elsewhere in the NL it was St
AP Sports Writer
Louis 10, Philadelphia 9; New
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jeff gas. I was hx:ty."
Reed was the last one 10 know he
Beneswasmadathimself.
York 8, Montreal 5; Houston I,
had his first career graQd slam.
"I should have never thrown Atlanta 0; and San Fran&lt;:isco 9; Los
The Cincinnati Reds catcher Reed a change-up," he said.
Angeles4.
Reed's I21h CBreel' bomer made
was unaware !hat the bases wen:
c~ 10, Phillies 9
loaded when he drove a change-up it 5.{), and Ham W'tnningham folThings mUSl be going well for
from San Diego's Andy Benes over lowed wilh his fii'St ~r of lhe the St Louis Cardinals Ibis wsm
the right-field wall Tuesday nigbL
seasoo on a full-count fastball to They made three errors and still
''I tried 10 block it out of my make it.a six-run inning - the won.
Usually the Cardinals have 10
mind lhat there were runners on Reds' biggest of lhe season.
base," he said. "I trealed it like
That made it easy for struggling play (&gt;Crfect defense to get their
any otbcr at-beL I didn't know it left-bander Chris Hammond (5-5) vic1011es. and for much of the seawas a grand slam muill jumped on 10 win his second decision follow- soo they have. SL Louis even tied a
the plale and saw lberC ~ three ing five consecutive losses. He major league record by playing 15
guys wailiDg for me."
·
gave up four singles and four walks consecutive errorless games. May
over
six and one-third innings, a ' 24-June 10.
It wasn't V:::editated, but it
was decisive.
's scoond bomer ~rformance that encouraged lhe
On Tuesday ni&amp;ht. first baseman
of lhe season highlighted a six-nm mjury-depleted Reds.
Pedro Guerrero made two errors
· and Owe Smith another. But the
f'II'St iming off Benes !hat carried
abe Reds to an 8-2 victory, snapCincimati is counting on Ham- Cardinals had 12 bits and rallied
ping the Padres' three-game win- mond, Scott Scudder and Jack from a five-nm deficit 10 beat visit. sareak.
Armslrong 10 carry the burden with ing Philadelpbia 10-9.
"I guess we got luckY," Smith
llllf.Is there any way we can s.o starters Norm Charlton and Jose
said. "It's IIOithe first time we've
back and cbange that first inning?'' Rijo sidelined by injlll)'.
"I'm sure we feel the pressure a done lhaL Five runs is a Jot of runs,
Padres manager Greg Riddocb
bit," Hammond said. "If but we haven't quit yet"
little
said.
The Chicago Cubs ended a nine·
Scudder,
Jack and I do lhe job
Benea (4-8) wanted 10 change
game
losing streak - their loogest
one umpire's call and one pitch we're capable of doing. we can win
in
six
years - as Les Lancaster
because
right
now
we'r~
scoring
·
selcaionlhat decided the inning. ·
won
as
a·starter for the fust time
The Reds loaded the bases wilh . five nms a game."
Ibis
season
in a 5-I victory over the
The Reds have scored 53 runs in
one 0111 on a broken-b&amp;t single by
Pirates
at
Three
Rivers Stadium.
Bill Doran, a bunt single by Billy their last nine games - an average
Ozzie
made
up for his second
Hatcher, and a walk to Paul of just under sill runs per game.
in
three
games
by driving in
error
Keith Brown followed HamO'Neill. Benes got Hal Morris 10
pop out on a fuU&lt;OUDt slider, then mond and gave up an RBI single in four runs fot St Louis, including a
wentiO a full count before walking the seventh 10 Bip Roberts and a go-ahead two-run single in the
Chris Sabo on a pitch just off the run-scoring double in the eighth 10 eighth inning.
"They bounced back two or
comer of the plale, foran1 in a run. Tim Teufel. 81111')' Lartin drove in
Benes disagRled wilh the call by lhe Reds' last two runs. He hit in10 three times and we bounced back a
a fielder's choice with the bases couple of times," Phillies manager
urn~ John McSheny.
'!thought I bad him out," loaded in the fourlh against Benes, Jim Fregosi said. "It was almost
Benes said. "Sometimes you get and had an RBI single in the eighth like whoever batted last would
those calls, other times you don 'L off Rich Rodriguez.
win.··
But that wasn't the ballgame right , Benes lasted three and one-third
John Kruk had a three-run
innings,
giving
up
six
hits,
four
homer and drove in five runs for
lheze.••
That came two pitches later.
walks and seven earned runs. He the Phillies, taking the NL RBI
Benes got a strike on Reed, threw 42 pitches in lhe fust inning lead with 53.
who's been fighting off the flu for alone.
With the Phillies leading 9-7,
. two days. Even in his weakened
Benes hasli 't won since June 9, Tom Pagnozzj led off the eighth
stale, Reed was able 10 get around taking rwo losses and a no-decision . wilh a double and Jose Oquendo
on the next pitch - a change-up in his last lhree starts.
reached on an error when Kruk
"I really lhink I've thrown lhe threw behind pitcher Roger
inside and low, where he could
drive it
ball better lhan last year," he said. McDowell (3·5) on a grounder to
"The change-up is PIIJ!IIIbly his ''At times lhings just haven't gone first. Geronimo Pena pinch ran and
pinch-hitter Craig Wilson drove in
a run wilh a high-bouncing infield
single off the plate.
After Milt Thompson sacrificed,
Smith delivered a single up the
middle for his third hit.
Scott Terry (2-1), the fourth St
Louis pitcher, gave up an unearned
run in two innings for the victory
and Lee Smith worked the ninth for
his 191h 5ave.
The Cardinals had scored only
10 runs in their previous four
pmes and skipped batting practice
I!' an effort 10 end the slump. ,
Cubs 5, Pirates 1
George Bell hit a solo homer
and rooltie Rick Willdns added a
three-run shot, his first major
teague homer.
· The Cubs had only five hits off
starter John Smiley (8-5) and
relievers Vicente Palacios and Bob
Kipper, but reversed a recent trend
of low-run losses that saw them
lose four games by one run and
three by rwo runS during their losing streak.
.
The Cubs' nine-game losing
streak was their longest sin.ce a
club record 13-game slcid in 1985.
Giants 9, Dodgers 4
Orel Hershiser was chased in
San Francisco 's four -run fifth
inning and Mike Fel_der had five
hits and scored four nms.
Will Clark, who drove four
(See NL on Page 5)

The Daily Sentinel
IVIINII. . .I
A lito- of llloiii-L 1..,.
PubiiiiMd ....-y lft..,.ooa. Monday
thr'""" Frldoy. l1l Court St .. Pomeroy. Olllo. by tht Ohio Valloy Pub-

IUitltol Co...,llly/ Muhlmodla. Inc..
Pornoroy. Ohio 4511i9, Ph. 992-2156. s.coacl olus J&gt;OI1ac• paid at Pu""""oy.
0111&lt;1.

RESPONDS TO CURTAIN
CALL- Reds eatcller Jeff Reed
(34) waves to tile crowd from the
daaoat at Rlnrfroilt Stadium
.ner ~ a arud s1am -the
nrst or Ills career - off San
Die&amp;O plkller And;r Benes In the
nnt l118lq or T•esday aigbt's
ga•e, '11'1111:11 tile Reds won 8·2.
(AP)

"

•'

innings. Gregg Olson pitched a perfect 121h for his 131h save in 17
opportunities.
The Indians, losers of five
straight and 17 of their last 20, l~ft
16 runners on base, making life
miserable once again for starter
Rod Nichols. Nichols lowered his
ERA to 3.52, but his record is still
0-5 because tbe Indians have
totaled 12 runs in his seven starts.
"That's what I"m watching
every night," manager John
McNIR8ra said. "We have opportunities and we don't casb 10 on
them. How many men did we leave
on base? Sixteen?"
Doug Jones (1-6) entered the
game in the 121h iMing and took
the loss as his ERA rose 10 8.06.
He gave up a one-out single by
Brady Anderson,' Hom's two-out
RBI double, and an RBI single by
Randy Milligan.
"He really hasn·'t been effective," McNamara -said of Jones.
"But it doesn't come down to
pitching. Yeah, he's had sonie
problems, but we haven't had any
offense.''
The Indians rook a 3-2 lead in
the seventh on Mike Aldrete's
uiple off the 415-foot sign in center
and Chris James' RBI single. The
Orioles, however, tied it in the
eighth on Ripken's home run. ·
Hom gave Baltimore a 2.{) lead
in lhe fourth. ending a I-for-18
slump by hitting a two-run home

What malters most 10 you when it comes to propane?
Prompt delivery. Reliabilily. Safely. Energy-savings.
Knowledge and experience. Friendly, helpful delivery people.

Gl

R

41/2
411l
6

61/2
71/2
II

Owyan, San Dieao. U; L. Oooulez,
17; 11lltioe, Alltn~t,l7; O'Neill,
ClllclnttaU.17'r·SottclbaJ.CIUcai~I7TJUPL.IS- . Owyma, San Dieao, 8;

~U~7:35p.m.

Milwal.llr;M (Navuro 7-4) at Deboit
(Giblor 1·1). 7:35 ,....
Seanle (R.Job.n.aon S-6) at Chicaao
(Ouda 0-2~ 1:05 p.m.
.

CoiiiOIIIia (Lupton 10-2) II ltiUU
c· (Oulliola 3-3~ 1:35 ....
?oroato (Welb l-4f at Mienuota
(Oulhrlo 5·3),1:35 p.tn.
Teua (Bmwil 5-!li) .at OaJdllld (Moore
l-6), I 0:05 p.m.

Tburaday'apmes

•

Soaaleatc::'!Dcqo. l:Ofp.m.

'

TDQltollllf

••.1:15p.m.
r..... o...... !:llpJD.
New Yed: atBoaoe, 7:35p.m.
- s 1 C i n t l.... 7:35p.m.
Dotnlh, 7:35 p.ao.

to

n. Dsllly ...,tlool on 1 3. 6 or 12 mootb

be""'"' carrwr Hell

No su11Krlpl- by moll penn lilt&lt;! In
corri&lt;r oorvl&lt;o II

-~---.•w..u .................................. MUI

S and R Gas Service

..... CoouQ 12l.lf
uw--..................................

c,.....992-2943
,. Serwlca

,.

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

&amp;

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· -......... ......................... 10.50

-

Mil"u""''

on St. Rl 50 East, Athens, 592-1972

.

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NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eut Dlvlllon
Cl!'d•••U. 1,) ....
T- ~·
W L" Pd. , ~B"' "' ;o
SnWb. St. t.oail. • Daw Smilb, ChicaPill I p
- .. 27 .5f7
ao. 16o ~ s. ~ 14; •· Loas.. Louis .......... n 12 .536 4
- aru..,
PIUIIIam, u, Praaca, New
N..,. Yea
....... 36 32 .529 41/2

•'
'•

Cltka.lo

••
•

P~Waodphia

......... ]] 37 .471 81/2
......... 32 31 .457 9 1/2
....... 30 40 .429 11112

West Dlvlslun

. ''

WLPct. GB
.... Aap ...... 42 %1 .609
Clo&lt;tonad 37 ll .5lli
S
ssn Dlop ........ n 35 .SI4 6 112
Al!tnta
:.......... 34 33 .507
7
San Fnnciloo ,...~. 30 "1 A23
13
42 .400

Yea, 13; ltilch \fiilliama, l'llilldelphla,
12.

Transactions

-=
·-baD

T-

• '
•

......... 21

1••a

•

toJ-15 .

DETROIT TIGERS-Troded Don

Totdabt's pmes
(AU limes EDT)

S.. DJoao (Re•11- 3·11., Clodn·
uU (Scudiltr :lol~ 7o3S p.m.
Chkop (G. M1dd•1 6·5) 11 Pllb·
....... (Walk 5-t), 7o31 ....
MOatrMI (Gardner 3-3) 1t New Yolk
(V'oola 7-5). 7:40,.... .
Atlaftll (Smo I&amp; 2·9) at Houston (J .
J.... 4-5),1:35r;.
Ploil..Wplod ...... 2-5) •i St. LouiJ
(II. SmltkS-4~ :3lp.m.

.
(Bilek 6-6) ...... Atop

los ( l l - 10-3).10:35 p.m.

Tbunday'l pmes
Sullltao II Ondlutatl, U:35 p.m.
Moaooa[ II Now YOit, I :40 p.m.
C~JaaOIIPII I P, 7o!Sp.a
Allanlo lla-..,1:35 pm.
Philadelphia at SL Lcail. 1:35 p.m.

Petr)', ~. to die Allanw Brtves for
V"w:an ROM!io, in&amp;clde.r, and. lllilnod
R01ario to Toledo of the Inwnational
........ ..........chtm,piu:hCII', fiomTolldo.
MILWAUDI! BREWERS---Aclivaood
CaaciJ Malcloaaclo. uudidder, from the
15-day di.ubled liiL Sen1 Kevin BroWil,
pilch«, .. Dawetoflhc Amerl&lt;ul AaocildaD.
TEXAS RANGERS-Sent Joe Bitkcr,
pitcher, to CJtlahoma CBy of \he American Auociabon..

N-.tlAiauo
CJIICINNA1111EOS-IIoalled Gino
Ml•llll~ pllcMr, , _ Nllllvllle of tltt
A-o-llan.
HOUSTON ASTROS-Wslved Mad!
Mc:Ltmaa. MCOftcl t.anan, f~
at""a biln his .....,...,.... ~

Uld"'!

co(

FootbaU

Major league leaders

N1-Foo11JeUIAIIue

AlllertciD Leacue

BATTING-C. Ripken, Baltimore,
.352; ..... Otldand, .3:16; Mali!Gr, Milwauke~t .330:. Pucteu, ~ • .327;
Siorn, Teua, .326; &lt;bwnwell. Bolt.Oa,
.325; Bow. B....._ .32&amp;, D . - - .

••'

~~:z

Sp::r. or tilt Padfte Cout Leaa••·
Ph
...... Jeft'II"IOIIt lint b•eman,
... 11M l5-da1 -Jool 1111, rttrood!M

SL Lauls I0, I'IDl..telpiU 9
San nanciloo 9, .... """'""4

s.. -

Looce l'ulilb, ........ '-""'

CD:IVILAND INDIANS-aocallod

-t,A~O

•

CALlFOIU&gt;IlA ANOBLS-Actviotecl

Albert lelll, Glllfl It , from Colorado

New \'.a I. Mon110115

••

BALnMOU OR!
. ed Ed
Yteapino, . . .., ...,ad
him to
i!Ao-WD ollho- t...p.
diublod till. """"' Poll&amp;. ...
..... ""'15-doydlltblod till.

Tilesday'IICOftll

clad-u, •• 01oao 2
c - s. Pllkl au

•'

-

Dl!TRPrr UONS-Sianod lelf MJcil.
ci,-IKklc.
PHILADELPHIA I!AOLES-Sianed
Ron Ooetr., lillebaci:er, aad Roderick
Grave~, NMinl blc:t.

RUNS-I'olmoilo. T..u, ll; D. Hen·
_ - , Oltlm4, 51; Molilor. Milnukoo.

'

st: s-. r ..... 41; c - OUIM4,
41; fnDclo, Tau. 47; Puc:1u1U. MiMNG"·JlBI-Pieldor,
46; C.lliplun. ·
-56:
&gt;46. Tbom11,
Detroit,
ChioaJO, 55: Siam, Teall, 53; Cart.ct,
Toronto, 51; Winfield, Calilomia, 50;
Qnnse1 • T-. •9; C. Davia. wmn.o.

Mil--.

r-.

a close plily at ftrst on a bunt ID the sixth i!1nlng

IRATE INDIAN - Cleveland Indians first
base coach Mike Hat&amp;i ove (center) restrains u
Irate Chris James after JUles -called out 011

ofTaesda;r night's game again)it_tlie visiting Bal-

. timore Orioles, who woo 5-3 in 12 innings. (AP)

_(C_onun_·ued_from_Page...;..__;_4)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ •·

Boston Red Sox 6-4, Teltas beat inningsbefore yielding 10 Steve
Oakland 6-1, Chicago beat Seatlie Bedrosian. Rick Aguilera pitched
4-0, Milwaukee beat Detroit 11-3, the ninth for his 20th save.
and California beat ~ Qty 4Yankees 6, Red Sox 4
2.
The Yankees IOU~ up Roger
Clemens for 10 hilS, DDCiuding Matt
Twins 11, Blue Jays '
The Minnesota Twins spent the Nokes' lhree-nm homer in the fifth.
farst 3 1/2 weeks of June beatin&amp; up
Boston scored twice in each of
on the American League •s least. lhe first two innings against Tim ·
Now they're showing they can beat Leary (4-7), but Kevin Maas had
the big guys, 100.
an RBI single in lhe fifth before
The Twins went 20-2 against Nokes followed shortstop Luis
Kansas City, last in the AL West, Rivera's fielding error wilh a lhreeand Baltimore, Cleveland and the run homer for a S-4 lead.
New York Yankees, lhe bottom
"You hate to. give up a home
three teams in the East. But on nm, it ta1ces the wind right out of
Tuesday, in their fii'St game against you," said Clemens (9-5), who
an over- .SOO team since May .29. went all the way, slriltins out eight
they beat East-leading ToroniO 8-6, 10 increase his major league-leadending the Blue Jays' five-game ing total to 106.
winning streak.
Rangers 6, Alhletles l
"We haven't seen these guys
Dave Stewan. a 20-game winner
this year and we knew they were in each of the last four seasons,
lOugh," said Chili Davis, who hit contin~Je!~IO' sttuf!il~, surrendering
his 17th homer of the season.
stx nms m seven mrungs.
·
The Twins wasled an ·early 4.{)
Kevin Reimer's rwo-run single
lead but went ahead to stay in the keyed a three-run third inning and
sixth inning when Mike Pagliarulo Juan Gonzalez put lhe game away
hit a two,lllll':llomer off Todd Stot- wilh a massive three-run homer in
tlemyre (ii.:Jf ~
.
·lhe seventh. Stewart's ERA rose 10
That was enough for Jack Mer· 5.89 and he's allowed S8 earned
ris (10-S), who survived five-run, runs, the most in the American
six-hit fourth innintl to win his sev- League.
Jose Guzman (2·3), attempting
enth straight decision.
''All tfic critics and experts were 10 come back from shoulder probcomplaining that we were beatina lems, pitched a seven-hitter for his
up oo Cleveland and New York," farst coniplete game since Aug. 7,
. 1988.
.
Morris said of the Twins'
White Sox 4, Mariners 0
edly easy schedule durins;:
Jack McDowell pitched seven
June surge. "Well, New York beat
and
one-third scoreless inninga and
Roger Oemens IOniglll."
wound
up wilh a three-hitter and
Morris won for the lOth time in
12 decisions dating back to April
24. He gave up nine hits in seven

his first mJijor league shUIOUL
Scott Bradley ended the no-hitter wilh a solid sin$1e and Omar
Yizquel followed wtth a base hit.
Pete O'Brien added a one-out single in the ninth off McDowell (93),, who walked three and struck
out seven,
Robin Ventura and Frank
Thomas gave McDowell all the
support he needed with consecutive
home runs in the third inning off
Dave BUiba (0-1 ).

• Brewers 11, Tigers 3
Darryl Hamilton's three-run ·
double capped an eight -run eighth ·
inning.
Jim Gantner had a two-run sin- .
gle in the big inning as lhe Brewers ·
sent 13 men to the plate against
Walt Terrell (3-8) and_three _reliev- "
ers to tum a 3-2 game into a rout.
Bill Wegman (3-3) allowed five
hits in six innings.
..
Angels 4, Ro;rals 2
. Dave Gallagher's RBI grounder .. ·
broke an eighth-inning tie.
·
.

.,

..

Special of the Week!

FISH &amp; CHIPS
$164

a

NLgames••• ·

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
"At ,...,

w •• the , _ , . ,...... llrklle"

POMEIOY, OHIO

PH. 992·2556

...

--.--

F~~;::--~~---, -. .•-·-..
•

.....

(Continued from Page 4)
runs, and Greg Litton sparlced the
fifth with bases-loaded llits off
Henhiser (1-2).
Liuon's rwo-run double 10 the
gap in right-center field chased
Hershiser, making him the first
Dodger staner in 23 games 10 pitcb
fewer than six innings. The victory
went 10 rookie Mike Remlinger (20), who gave up three runs and five
hits.
Mets 8, Expos 5
Kevin McReynolds hit a grand
slam with two outs in the ninth
inning off Scott Ruskin.
The Mcts, who scored four
times in the first inning against
Dennis Maninez, did nothing more
until the ninth. Reliever Barry
Jones. (3-5) started lhe bottom llf
the ninth and rook the loss.
Alejandro Pena (4-0) pitched
one scoreless inning for the victory.
Astros 1, Braves 0
Pete Harnisch pitched a six-hitter and scored lhe game's only run
as Houston beat Tom Glavine ( 114) and Atlanta.
Harnisch (5-5) struck out six
and walked none {or his third complete game Ibis season.

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

..
..

CAMRYS
.-

-.

~· TOYOTA

Ostlatul,'J20.

..

SAVE$
UPTO

Dr. Susan Bishop Casto
Family Practice Physician
Pediatrics -and Adult Medicine

r..-.

~-2t;Wltlto.T....,.oo,I9;C.
~. Bsllimcn. II; 1/arpor,-

·.

'•,

•

•

MiM•e&amp;a, 4; Oladd1n, Mianetoca, 4 ;

, HOMB RUNS.....C...... T......, 17; C.
Devil. 'II Clll, 17; C.U.OO, W
J6; D. Hmd
'• Olk1uwl. 16; F"lll.dc,

·.

.

a.-

606 Professional Circle
Ravenswood

TOYOTA PASEOS

TOYOTA'S NEW
2 +2 SPORT COUPE

Doaoll, 15; C. IUpiiM, · - · 15;

i
..

Door.-..
- .·
y~ 14;
ld Calli
. .I•.· ""'
AS!I Pn!ndr, c.lifor.
:

a.
~. 27: a.
AI_,, T-uo, :M; loino!. £1"•1••

oil, 27:

%3: WhliO. T.....to. 16: a.....,. "•"
Y..... IS; P••~ T-1•.
PITCHING ( d.aaioM)o Prf••.
Hie
a 12-2. .151 l.JJ· h•P!:•·
CoUIDa. 10-2, .m. J-'41 MJ, Collr-.n-1, .716. SMc
tO-

ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS
-·ullvtcr

""cl:f.

';sl~V,f"~•. ~
3.71; ,,.._,.., - · ·-·· .727.

3.:11
STIIUOUTI~

sM. •
!Oio.,.. T-f71L,_,-.
H· lle1 . . ~ ft; Jllllt!r, Coll-

Located 5 miles East of Rt. 33

•.

19;c-,-.ll.
PITCHING (6 d....W...)-C-IU,
SL Louio, 7·2. .771. 3.53; R. Mulin...
Loo Anplu, I 0-3, .769, 2.73; ayo,
ClodmtiU, ~ .7st, 2.66; OJmae, A~
~on~~. n-4, .733. 2.13: s - - ·
5·2, .714, 4.11; A&amp;..,., Sl. Louil, 5-2,

19: IIJo, Clltdaaatl, hi_O. Maddoa.,
Chioep, 14: Hambch, Houtton, 75;
....
74.

••

a..-.

f.;,ul, IIJ:.,C.,;:ra,

~ 1~tzh~ ;.;:_. ~~

..A WINNING COMBINATION"

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

No" Yado, 33; Nixaa. A""'"'· 33; L.onk·

ford, St. Lauia. 20; 0 . Smbh, St. LoWs,

STIW!O~ """Yea. 96&lt;
m.-,~,91;-MnoYOit,

w,ll.
TRJPLBS-MoUior, MilWaukee, 6;
Polonlt, Calif..... 5: - · Clliotao. 5;
Mea.., Ianua City, 4; J . Alomar,
Toroe\0, 4: Siern, Teu•, 4; Pucteu,

....... Senlw
"2-5097

STOLEN u.ues CJria...., MCill:lll,

35; DoSbiolds, Montroal, 33; Colaulll,

n...;,-. ---

*Payments based on 180 months,
11.75% fixed APR and 10% down to
qualified buyers.

Ferrellgos

Gut1. A-. 1 3 ; - Now Y"", 13;
W. aut. Sat l'nttdlco.I:Z.

M2. 3.25
4 •.692,2.~

AS LOW AS $157.07"' .... MD.

COLE'S
MOBILE HOMES

Feldm', Saa Paacilco, 6; L . Ooaulez,
Hounaa, S; ColiiiLII'I., Now Yolk, 5: M.
~
SL Lowo, 5; 6 110tiod - · ·
HOMB RUNS-Johnaoo,
Now York,
15; 0. Bell, Cl\iCif.O• U: O'Neill,
ClndJnatt, 14J McOriff, San Difca. 14;

.714, S.41; l,.....ln. Clacbuwd,

\1,41.
Hfi1-C. Ripi:on, Bd i =o. 95; Pud&lt;•1\, Mina•ota, 90; Siena, Texas, 19;
Molir«,
II; -oilo. Tnu.
IS; C&amp;rw, TGIQDto, 15; Franco, Teus,
14.
.
DOIJBLES--&amp;. Alomlr. r ........ 23:
l'olmtilo.
21: c...r.
21 :

All prices include: Delivery &amp; set up,
vinyl Skirting, one set of steps, up to
20 ft. of material for each hook up,
tie downs, block &amp; 20ft. heat tape.
Sale Ends July 6th

,Sm

TonJabt'a aa7:35p.m.
lold-. (Bolloid 4-7) ., Cltolland

h .OO IMMJI MTIIEU SA'-' I _ ,
SJ.OO IMMAIJ 11111NT ~t

51:

o!ft;;:':
O'Neill, Cl•el•nau, 4';
C
• MoniiOII. 45; T. Gwynn. Son

11; McReyaoldl, New York, 18; T.

(Gonlia«3-l~

446 4514

. Rltl-W. Clark, Saq Francisco, S3;

KNk. l'hUtc!olph'o, 53; I~lltnta,

1

(AU lim• EDT)

••
''
•'

XX.,41

Teu~6, o.tJ.Md

New YcD. (Sude:non 7-3) at Ba.ton

,

J.-,

.
-s, a .....u, u ""'""'
Califomla 4, x-8 Cily 2

Chloaao4,SooaJoo
Mimao&amp;ll, TGrCIIIlO 6

; "

BATTINO-T. Ow)'llft, Su. Dieao,

.366; NeON, Saa Praacileo, .327;
s.....J.Los-.3%5; lliujo,lloul- .:!23;- .......3:12; ~0. Smldl.
St.~ •. :no; ........ ~ .311.
RUNi-T. F....-, !tot DioJo, 50;
·
-46;t...I""-.
Aoploo.New
:It- DolMoft•.
u.J,
Y..t, 46; SottclberJ. Cbi..ao. 45;
Alloola, 43;
S..a...i., t... .up., 43; T. Owym, Sto

51;~NowY.....

•

AL contests...

Notional lMpe

Di.... 4l; Mumy,LosAaples,4l,
HITS-T. 0"l'aa, Saa Dieso, IDS;
Som..., L o s - · II'&lt; T........du.
San Diqo, 13; lleOee, San Prtneilco,
10:. _Saaab~r:t· Chicaao, 79; Jo1e, St.
........ 71; caw-. MOota.l, 77.
D01J11U!S--.1-. SL Leuil, lO; a.ulo, Pl-rp, Itt MorN, Cl-1111,

Wlollold,Cdf-,4.

Dsllly ............................. .... .. 25 C.nll
, ...., ...... nat dslrtnc to pay tllerar-

-·JIIolp()MIIlJ

. ....

llow Yea 6. . _ 4
Mii-II.Dotnlh3

SPRING VAll f. CINFMA

EXAMPLE: #4304
1991 Carroitton 5abre 14x70 3 Bedroom
LIST PRICE ........................... $16,500
SALE PRICE .............. :.......... $14,395
Less fVJ Discount ...................... - 500
Total Sale Price ..................... $13,895

•

IINOL&amp;COPY
PaiCE

•niiiObl•-

,

"Tuesdaj•s 11:0res

nm. It came one pitch after Nichols
hit Ripken oo the top of lhe helmet
as Ripken aaempted 10 bunL
The Indians scored single nms
in lhe fifth and sixth. Alex Cole
singled, stole second and scored oo
Jerry Browoe's rwo-out single in
the fifth, and Sandy Alomar scored
froni third 00 Mark Lewis' groundout in the sixtb.
Baltimore starter Jeff Robinson
lasted five and two-third iDllinas,
allowing two runs and seven hits.
Nicliols weN eight imings, allowing tl1rce runs and eight hilS.
In other AL action, Minnesota
topped Toronto 8-6, New York
beat Roger Clemens and the
(See AL 011 Pqe 5)

It's that time of Jhe year again! Time
to sell all Display Model Homes. All
1991 homes are reduced for quick
sale. Mention this ad when you
come in and receive an additional
$500 OFF the already reduced price.

oDo YHr ................................. 113.20

-·
·--

WLPct.

44 n . .620
c.Jll'omio ........ :19 31 .Sl7
Ookland
......... 3!1 31 .Sl7
TaM
........... 35 30 .SSI
Seoale
....•...•.• n 33 .S29
a.icqo
......... 3l 33 .Sil
x...u Cily ....... :n 37 .464
u;,

LOOKING
FOR A DEAL-?-

IJ ConW•
--OsltWHit
..... ..... .... ................
.....$1.60
Oat Month ........... ............ ......... .$&amp;.\!&amp;

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

'

'

IVDICIIII"'10N IATIIII

-~~- Cn!&lt;ltt .01

.

•'•
••

.51tt.

advance &lt;tired

West Division
T-

'

When You Need Prompt
~le Propane Delvery...
Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive
Customer Service

WLI'd. GB
32 .509
3l .529 I Ill
36 .471
s
36 .471 s 1/2
37 .439 711l
41 .397 10 Ill
44 .343
14

.......• :19
........ C :16
.......... 33
Mil- ····- 32
N- YOit ...... 29
Baldmcn ....... %1
Cln- ~

Baltimore posts 5-3 victory
over Cleveland in 12 innings

POmli!ASJ'ER;
Solid · dtlftJ!BI
1o
1bt lllllly Sonlln&lt;f.
lU·Court
St. ,

rt.r may rtmll tn

T-

T·Doaoll

•'
THE FIRST YEAR MIDDLEPORT RED SOX- recady ,.. S«oad Place in die 12 teMl Big
Bend Youlll League, MI..- Lope T - I l t . Pla)'tl'l rro. bottom left to rigllt are Joel LJ11Ch
(Mascot), Jacob Smidt, M•t Yonker, Tro;r Brooks, Jordan Buck ~ot), 2nd row: Brandon
Werry, Ian Stor;r, Adam McDuiel, Mike Dorst, Tre'fOI' Buck, Jfllll Workman, Josh Lynch. Coaches
- Troy BrookS, Keith Lyucll, Ray Smitll.

Navratllova held to 2-1, but
after Reinach made it 2-2,
Navratilova went back to her
Sisyphean MrUggle.
(See WIMBLEDON on Page 7)

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eut DlviiiOD

•
•

Ne'WIINIP« SaJH, 733 Third Avenur.
Yort. Now York 111017.

Otdo

•

Ohio

climbed up tbe coni. IIIII dribbled
over, falling dead as a Slone out of
Reinach 's reach.

In tbe majors...

'
•••

..,..brr. The-' Auodatfd PrHs. In·
Jud Dally PrfOs A11octat1on 1nd tho
Olllo llrwspad;,~ltlon . Natfooal
AdWnllbiC
taltve, Branham

PUIIIIfiO),

••

1

6-2, 6-4, 11f•in• B1na Reinach. ·
lose - and abe - playing bldly
Defenclini men's champion Sre- caouab to lole in the fini round for
fan Edberg left for the second · the first lime since 1974.
slrBi&amp;bt day without a victory. He
"I was all over the place emoled 64,6-4, 0-1 against Mire Ros- lionally," Navratilova Aid. "I
set before showers soaked tbe eatne In lhinking, 'I'm really JOinl
courts apin.
to enjoy this occasion, defendina
Jobn Mc:Enrne, pleased by the- champ1on,' and the next thing I
gift of 13 double faUlts from Jaime know I lose the first aet."
.
·Oncins, survived a slippery outer
The court dried somewh~
court match to win 6-1, 6-2, 6-4. the third let, but now after a
Jimmy Connors and Jim Courier on her service in the rtrat game,
bolh were rained 0111 apiJL
·
Navratilova was thinking back 10
Only 28 of the 65 scheduled her loss at aae 17 and wondering if
matchea wen: completed, 23 went it would happen qain.
unfmiabed, and 14 never got UDderShe blew a break point in the
way.
second aame. but sfter getting
As well as Reinach played, it anotber sbe drilled a forehand
was Navratilova's match to win or return into lhe net cord. The ball

Scoreboard

'

By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Johnny
Oates doesn't mind putting in a few
extra hQurs at the ballpark, as long
as he gets results.
"The game was meant to be
played in nine innings. ButiO win,
I'd stay here all night," the Baltimore manager said Tuesday night
after the Orioles beat the Cleveland
Indians 5-3 in I-2 innings.
It was the founh scraight win for
lhe Orioles, a season high. The last
three have all come in extra
innings.
On Sunday, the Orioles swept a
doubleheader at Kansas City, winning 11-8 in 10 innings and 9-8 in
12 innings. The first pitch was
thrown at 1:06 p.m. and the last out
was made at 9:47.
Tuesday's game lasted just over
four hours.
" Just give the ballclub credit,"
said Oates, who is 14-17 since talcing over for Frank Robinson.
''Since I've been here, most of our
exciting plays have been in the last
few innings." ,
.
Sam Hom and Cal Ripten provided the excitement apinu Cleve. land. Hom· homered in lhe fourth
inning and hit the tie-lxealtin&amp; double with two outs in the 12th. Ripken sent the ~ 10 .extra imings
wilh a home run in the eighth, his
15th.
Until Sunday, lhe Orioles had
lost all five of their extra-inning
games.
"I'd prefer winning them in
nine innings, but these have been
big wins for the ballclub," said
Ripten, whose .352 average leads
the American League. "We had
lost a number of one-run ballgames
and extra-inning games. When you
win one, it creares a lillie momentum , a little confidence. You need
10 win a couple of games like lhis,
for confidence."
Mark Williamson (2-2), Baltimore's fifth pitcher, got the win
wilh one and one-third scoreless

PomeroY-Middlep0n

_

'

IN!

IIIII, 20;

Call273-8199

WINNER

Rt. Mllut I'WiteraiJUt1 W.Va. '"one ••.a122

for an appointment

.,

--·

'

PARTS
TOYOTA
TOUCH
AWARD

QEI'T.
NATIONAL
EXCELLENCE
AWARD
WINNER

'

-···-

..

··--·-

-

..

�\

'
Page 6 The Dally Sentln.el

Wednaadlly, June 26, 1111

PARKAY .
JUMBO 1·
SPREAD
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Monday fhw Sunday.
8 AM-10 PM .

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The Dally Sentlnei-Paga-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~x-Buckeye

~

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
~ COLU¥BUS, _Ohio (AP) -.
t: Tr~g Lee IS I~okmg forward to
~ bemg taken. m the NBA draft
-.; Wednesday, ~ust so he can repay
t: h1s mother.
!~ ·:rd like to throw my mom a
Cadillac or a Benz, dependin~ on
~; what she wants," Lee s;tid With
~ laugh.
; ~ has the highest hopes of any
•I.; Ohio coU~ge player - and proba;:- bly the best _chance - of being ·
•• select~d toRight when the NBA
..;_ holds Its annual draft.
~A year ago, Lee was just another
··: high .s chool All -American who
~ hadn't met ~xpectations in coUege.
"' After starnng at Cleveland St.
~; Joseph !'Jigh School, the 6-foot-8
. ~· Lee. failed to meet academic
·~ reqwrcments as a freshman at Ohio
~ State and~ out his firSt year.
,- He dido t do all that much the
; next two seaso_ns, either. He started
": four of a possible 61. games, aver:· aging less than five points a game.
He was hardly lhe stuffNaA teams
swoon over.

a

Lee likes chances of being taken in tonight's NBA draft
But Lee avorqed 11 .2 points score but not too many can
5.6 reb~unds a aamc u a rebouiMIIIId play ·defen.,,'' Carter
semor, shoouq 58 percent from llid. "After a wbile 1n tile NBA.l
. the field, for a team that wu can elflblleh myMif u • offenranked as high as No.2 in the polls.
Then he made a good showiq In
the postseasOR camps and tryouts
" lthinkwhatpmcinthecklor
was my senior season," he said.
" But I didn't get a good look by
myself until ihe postseasOn. I was
comfonable with what I could do
and I showed them (the scouiS) my
game and all of my faceu.: •
!-ee said it is his versatility
which may get him drafted: he can
rebound inside, shoot outside and is
a good passer. ·
.
Perhaps the only .t wo other
Ohioans to even be considered in
the draft we Lee's teamrnato, Pe,ry
Carter, and former Ohio State
1urned Otterbein player, James
Bradley.
Carter, also 6-8, is in the mold
of NSA power forwards such "
Charles Olikley in that his resume
leans toward defense and rebounding instead of high-flying offense.
"Just abput everybody can

sivo threlt."

an~

Carter CllliC 10 Ohio swc from
Maine Centrallnltituto with tho

abi1l1t or 1 sevllllb-plld-

I

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scored 12.3 points a game arid led
the te8J!! in shooting (.581) and
reboundmg (8.4 a game) for the
founh year in a row.

er But by the time Ohio State fmished its 27-4 season last year,
Carter was better than average. He

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STRUGGLES FPR WIN - Martina Navratilovil struggled
through $Ome Iess·than-stellar play &amp;lainlt South Africa's Elna
Reinach during their first-round Wimbledon mate• Tuesday at
Wimbledon, England. Navratilova won 4·6, 6-2, 6-4 to win her
lOOth match on that court. (At') I

~Wimbledon...

,.,

r

&lt;ContinuedfrornPageS)
'

~: Sisyphus, the lrickster king pun!:ished in Hades for cheating death,
•·:was condemned to rolling a huge
b tone repeatedly up a hill, only to
f:bave it roll down again as soon as
; ,he had brought it to the sum miL
~ Navratilova only had to find a
~ to get the ball over the net and
pit there.
.
;· Broken twice in a row to 3-4,
~ Navratilova trailed 30-0 on
' : lteinach ' s service in 1he eighth
·game.
· •, "I thought I might lose the
! wl\ole match," Navratilova said.
•' 'I wasn't going to give up until the
~match was over. She's serving with
; pew balls, 4-3, and she plays two
poiniS and I'm in bOOble. But
.1 just thought about making her
1play the ball and she fmally missed
l·afew."
: Navratilo_va played both tho.se
•first two pomts cauuously, whlle
:Reinach charged boldly and put
lboth away with backhand volleys:
' But Reinach then made a crucial
;mistake, dumpin~ an easy forehand
' approach volley mto the net.
l "I guess when it really got to
' the punch, I got scared.:' Reinach

said.
That was all Navratilova needed
to regain her poise and courage.
Navratilova won 12 of the final
13 points to secure the victory.
Top-seeded Steffi Graf had no ·
such difficulty beating Sabine
Appelmans 6-2, 6-2. Fourth-seeded
Arantxa Sanchez Vicario beat Barbara Rittner 6-1,6-2. Mary Joe Fernandez, No. 5, beat Petta Kamstra
6-2,6-4. Zina Garrison, No. 7, also
had an easy time winning 6-3, 6-3
over Sara Gomer.

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992·5627
u -

'

•

�Page-8-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy MiddlePort, Ohio

Wednesday, June 26, 1991 .

Wednesday, June 26, 1991

+

Poineroy-Middleport, Ohio

Leukemia victim'sCrai&amp;·dream comes true

DEAR READERS: Last .year I opera1e on
Kluge brought the
began receiving tons of letters enlire Shergold flmily 10 the Unilcd
telling me about a 10-year-old Statel 10 they oould be present for
English boy who had a malignant the IIIIP'Y.
brain ~- Hi$ wish was to be in
Then I called Marion Sbergold in
the Guinness Boo~ of World l4ndon ShciOidmetheMprywas
Records for r=ving the gJeate&amp;t a gJelt success and lhat Cnia is
number of get-well cards. The boy's doiDs beaulifully llld is expected 10
name is Crlig Sbergold.
live a full life. She IIJo Slid, "This
SevenllllDIIlhs 110 I read a piece is lite a fairy lale. 'l'hiDp lite this
in the (nil llying Crlig's dft:lm don't lo&amp;ppeol ia real life. Mr. Kluge
had become a reality. He ~ is a sainL • In her marvelous British
another English lad, a leukemia IICI:elll, Mnl. Shergold said excitedly.
victim, who had received 1,000,265 "Tonight we are having a God Bless
cards, which put him in the Guin- America party. About 150 people
ness Boot of World Rccards.
are coming 10 celebralc Cmig's great
Marion SheiJold. Cmig's mother, good fo:tune.•
•
.
. IIIUIOUilCed that he had received 11101e
Now, dear readers, this lovely
than 33 million get-well Clllds from siOry turns a little sour. I just
aU over the world, including cards received a request from a wellfro~ former President Reagan, known Cliicago man, liking me to
President Bush, Margaret Thatcher .public:ize the fact that the aame lad
and Mikhail Gubachev. She said who broke the world's record for
her family is very grateful for get-weD ants would now like 10
the overwhelming generosity but break another world's rccord -- this
now she hopes people will slOp time for collecting the most ·
sending canis. 'Unfortunately," Mrs business ·canls. This man is one of
Shergold said, 'we are still rcceiv· dozens of affluent, high-profile
· ing thousands every day and have Americans who are faxing and
no place to store them. • Meanwhile, chain-lettering their friends on
I continue 10 be swamped with beiWf of.Crlig's ,'new project. • In
requests from readers asking me to the cbain leuer, Craig's name is
print a plea in my column for more . . misspelled, his qe is given as 7,
canis.
when actually he is II, and the
.I decided 10 follow up on CJaig's address is incorrecL These errors
SIOry, so I contacted the Make-A- set off the alarm signals in my
Wish Foundation which had worked hescl.
. with the Shergolds. The people there
Chain letters themselves are an
told me that John Kluge, a Virginia abomination. I never read them. nor
billionaire, arianged for a brain would I foist them on anyone, much
surgeon in Charloaesville, y a., to less ask my readers Ill keep the chain
•

Ann
Landers

---ANN LANDERS
01

-I,IM"-fel•

Creakn S,dr.att ••

going.
Wha:t's more, Marion Shergold
wants everyone 10 know that the
Shergolds did not ask for business
canis and they do not know what 10
do with the 10,000 that ~ aniving
daily. While they gJellly appreciate
the kindness of the AmericM people,
they ubd that I please help put a
~II? uu,s weU-.-ililg effort that
IS f!lmiDII illto I niahtmlre- Soooooo,
10 all the good-hearted people who
may be incUned 10 IICnd a business
card, please don't
I would IIJo ~ Ill point out that
your businea card, which most
likely lists your phone number and
address. could faD into the wrong
hands and become pat of the mother
of all mailing lists. Sbarp.cyCd seam
perpelrators, always on the alen for
sucl:ers, may figure if you'd fall for
this, you'd fall for anything.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Residents ask, 'What
aboui New Hampshire?'
LACONIA, N.H. (AP) - The
movie "What About Bob" was set
at Lal:e Winnipesaukee, but Sj)me
New Hampshire residents are
miffed that It was filmed 500 miles
away.
.
The comedy starring Bill Murray and Richard Dreyfuss was
filmed at Smith Mountain La1:e in

'

~

'
.

y· ..

~as disallPOinted in the way
it portrayed the Lakes Reg ion ,"
sa~d Charlene Joyce, chairwoman
of the New Hampshire Film Commission. ' 'This is a really beautiful
place, and they made it lool: taclcy.
From a visual standpoint, it was
really poor,..

GOOD USED
WASHEIS, DIYEIS,
IEFIIGEIATOIIS, IVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. IANGES

COUNTY .
APPLIANCES

627 3rll Awe., Gallpolls
PH. 446·1699
HOUIS: I &amp;.M.·6 PJI.

...

. . ..

'.

: Video camera catches woman
.attempting to suffocate infant

"You 'can see .that the child is m
HOUSTON (AP) - A hidden
video camera in a hospital room distress," he said. "The arms and
·; recorded a mother twice trying to legs are flaying about and then the
suffocate her 7-moJJth-old daughter hands and legs slow down until
· in an apparent attempt 10 get atten- they are motionless." The mouth
was covered about I 1/2 minuteS in
tion, authorities said.
Cathy Lanell Knighton, 23, was each incident, he said.
Officials said Ms. Knighton cur· arrested Monday in connection
with the incidents earlier this rently is undergoing psychological
month at Texas Children's Hospi- evaluation and is suspected of havtal, where the infant was admitted ing Munchausen 's syndrome by
for apnea, a disorder in which proxy, a condition where parents
breathing ceases.
cause the illness in a child to gain
, Ms. Knighton was charged with sympathy or attention.
In regular Munchausen's syntwo counts of injury to a child.
.Bond was set at $20,000.
drome, named for an 18th century
"On the tape you can clearly German adventurer known for
see (Ms. Knil!hton) place her hand exaggerating his exploits, people
.over the chifd 's mouth and push make up illnesses in themselves 10
:down," said Sgt. Bill Staney of the get attention.
· Houston Police Department's juveThe child is in the custody of
:l).ile division. .
chi1d welfare authorities.
•

new low t&lt;;1r cigarette.
When you want more flavor.
A

' ·'

Judge refuses
bid
to"",...reduce
...
... r
.
Christian Brando sentence
· ~--~

•

~·

SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP) of actor Marlon Brando, father of
-' A judge Tuesday refused to Cluistian and Cheyenne.
Christian Brando, 33, pleaded
reduce Christian Brando's 10-year
prison sentence for killing his sis- guilty to voluntary manslaughter in
Febtuary. He claimed he shot Drolter's lover.
Superior Court Judge Robert let in a struggle over a JIID: ·
The use of a gun m the crime
Thomas made his ruling without
commenting on arguments by added four years 10 Brando's senBrando's lawyer that there were tence, and his lawyer, Robert
mitigating circumstances in the Shapiro, sought to reduce that porfatal shooting of the Tahitian tion of the penalty.
He argued that Christian's use
boyfriend of Brando's sister,
of
the gun was mitigated by "an
Cheyenne.
honest
belief that he was proteCting
Dag Drollet, 26, was lcilled May
his
pregnant
sister.''
16, 1990, at the Ll)s Angeles estate

1.
2.
3.
4.

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7.
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Chee111 (R)
Evening Shade Special (RS)
Murphy Brown (R)
Primetime Live
Roseanne (R)
Wings (RP)
Movie: "Miracle Landing" (R)
60 Minutes (R)
Coach (R)
Rescue: 911 (R)

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ONLY

�The

Sentinel

June 26, 1991

Ohio

::Montana mother allegedly
iplans·daughter's rape

Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio

Wednesday, June 26, 1991

Coalition official says .group
of wealthy districts can help

.

.

·WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port Church of Christ will hold
Vacation Bible School through Fri·
day frOm 9:30 a.m. to noon claily.
Theme is ·"Be Strong and Courageous. Guest spealcers. Classes for
ages three tluough eighth grade.
K

COPYRIGHT 18111 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. JUNE 23. THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, JUNE 29, 18111, IN Pomeroy
'
.

.

WE RESEftVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.
.
AIIIIIIWilBII'IIIEI'-E.och of thele ldwniMd !lema io required to bo reidlly 1¥11- for
ulo In lOCh Kroger Slllfe, o•cept ao opocHicelly noted in thio ~. H ""' do ..., out ot 111
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Hem 11 the -lood pnce wllh., 30 diYII. Only one vendo&lt; coupon wilt bo occ;epted-

-'llblo.

••m purchaaod.

FIRST PLACE TEAM • Tbe first place team
at the recent. Big Brothers/Big Sisters Charity
Clil'rside Golf Tournament consisted or, 1-r, Tom
· Moore, Earl Thomas, Lynn Sheets and Ji111

!'..,..,. .

w. va.

The Harrisonville Order of the
Eastern Star. held its inspection
recently with Worthy Matron J~t
aild Bolin and Worthy Patron,
Charles King ill charge.
.
The Deputy Grand Matron Betty
Schenkel was introduced and invit·
ed to sit in the east
The grand representatives, Mar·
garet McNabb to Maine and Leona
McCutheon to North Dakota were
presented and welcomed to the
east
All the worthy matron and wor. thy patrons. of other chapters as
weD as worthy matrons and worthy
patrons of HarrisonviUe Chapter,
aU 50 year members, all those having grand appointments, all those
having held grand appointment~ .

sternwheel
Regatta*
sweepstakes Package For 2 Includes:
•Hotel Accommodations For 2 Nights
•A Ride On A Sternwheeler
•VIP Seating &amp; Backstage Passes To The
saturday Kroger concert. ·

,•

one Trip To Be Given Away At Each

Participating Kroger Store.
"No purchase necessary. You need not be present to win.
Kroger employees and their families are not eligible
to participate . .

..
'

.
"Silver Platter" Fresh
Center Cut

LOS ANGELES (AP) - ·Prothe chic from the geek isn't
.as easy as it used to be at trendy
Southern California night spots: A
judge says the Vertigo nightclub
cannot turn away customers
because of the way they are
dressed.
Administrative Law Judge Mil·
ford A. Maron's order Friday
requiring an open admissions poll·
cy was the' latest in a series of set·
backs for clubs that base admission
on hip attire.
Vertigo was called into court
after employees turned away two
~ting

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Kroger Pimento

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Kroger Regular .
Tea Bags

Advil
Tablets

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Thompson White
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Bottle

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By BRENDA C. COLEMAN
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Trimming
dietary fat to no more than 30 per·
cent of calories consumed would
add only months to the lives of
average Americans, researchers
said in a new report.
The report, published in
Wednesday's Journal of die American Med1cal Association, was
immediately dismissed by advo·
cates of low-fat diets.
Thirty-seven percent of the average American's calorie intake is
fa~ whereas a maximum of 30 percent is recommended. Consuming
excess fat raises the likelihood of
developing coronary hean disease
and cancers of the breast, colon and
prostate.
.
Yet reducing fat to 30 percent of
calories would put off death for
only about 2 percent cf the 2.3 mil·
lion Americans who die each year,
said analysts led by Dr. Warren S.
Browner of ~ University of California School of Medicine, San
Francisco.
"This 2 percent benefi~ equiva·
lent to an increase in ·average life
expectanCy of three to .four months,
would ICCrtle chiefly to people over
the age of 65 years," the authors
wrote.
"These results may be disappointing to those who believe that
following a healthier diet will protect them from early death," the
authors said. ·
Dr. Margo Denice, assistant profes~r of internal medicine at the
Center for Human Nutrition of the
University of Teus Southwestern
Medical Center, sai- 'he report is
"interesting from a population
standpoint, but It should not be
used to make illdlvldual dc'Cisioos.
"One of die problems is this
concept or 'average,''· she said in a
telepbone intaview from DaUas. .
!ow-fat diets don't necessarily
help everyone, but they act like
insurance policies to pay big bene-

BUY ONE

ONE

I

,,

report and gave Harrisonville a
good report on their wort. She also
thanlced the officers for her lovely
corsage and for dleir courtesy ~d
kindness extended to her.
She called die worthy matrons
and worthy patrons who had been
attending her inspections to the
East and presented them each with
a flower. She al~ gave a scationery
of a horse to Brent Chrislian as he
had attended all die inspections.
She then gave Ruth Christian a bell
with a rose for the same reason.
Bob Reed gave the table bless·
ing before the group entered the
dining area where they enjoyed
potluck refreshments and feUow.
ship.

••

undercover inspectors from the
state's Alcohol Beverage Control
Board. The board said in its cornplaine that the club was violating its
obligation, as the bearer of a
license to sell alcohol, to admit the
general public.
'' Sl\td policy is nothing inore
than a smokescreen for blatant dis·
criminatory behavior with an awesome potential for abuse; a verita·
ble 'wolf in sheep's clothidg,"' the
ruling states.
Joshua Kaplan, the attorney representing the nightclub, said Mon· ·
day that the cl~b will continue to

•

t

RI)TLAND • The Blaclcston
Gospel Quartet from Alabama will
perform at the Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church on Wednesday at 7
p.m. The pu)llic is invited 10 attend.
'

THURSDAY
POMEROY • The Meigs United
Methodist Cooperative J?arish will
have a clothing day on Thursday
from 9 a.m. to noon. The parish is
located at 311 Condor Street in
Pomeroy.

RACINE • Vacation Bible
SYRACUSE - The Carleton
School at the Racine Baptist College Board of Trustees will
Church will be held through Fridlly meet Thursday at'7:30 p.m. at the
from 9:30a.m. to noon,
Syrac11se Municipal Building. All
members are urged to attend.
SYRACUSE • The Asbury
l)nited Methodist Church in Syra•
RACINE • The Racine Ameri •
cuse will hold Vacation Bible can Legion Auxiliary will meet
School through Friday from 9 a.m. Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
to noon. The theme is "Jesus and home. A report will be given on
You at Camp Can Do. Classes for Buckeye Girls State.
age two years throu~ junior high.
Public invited.
.
HEMLOCK GROVE • The
Meigs County Women' s FellowBRADBURY· The Bradbury ship will me,et Thursday at 7:30
Church of Christ will have Vaca- p.m. at the Hemlock Grove Church
tion Bible School through Friday of Christ. A lady's quanet will per·
from 9-11:30 a.m. daily. Theme is form . The public is invited to
"Jesus and You at Camp Can Do." attend.
All young people invited.
POMEROY • Free clothing day
KENO • The Keno Church of will be held at the Salvation Army
Christ will be holding bible school in Pomeroy on Thursday from 10
through Friday from 4:30.6:30 p.m. a.m. to noon. All area residents in
daily. Children in grades kinder- need of clothing are welcome to
garten through hi~ school are wel- come.
come. The theme is "Jesus and You
at Camp Can Do."
FRIDAY
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
POMEROY • The Wildwood Senior Citizens Center will have a
Garden Club will meet Wednesday square dance Friday from 8-11
at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Betty p.m. at the sc~ior center. Music
will be provided by the Happy Hoi·

fits - including staving off death
or debilitating symptoms -in
. individuals prone to heart disease,
she said.
Denice al~ criticized the study
for failing to talce into account that
for every American who dies of
heart disease , four others have
heart disease symptoms that could
be caused by too much fat in their
diet.
Robert Pritildn, ~n and successor to low-fat diet advocate Nathan
Pritildn, said in a statement Tues·
day that Browner and his col·
leagues ''studied the wrong diet''
" Repeatedly, studies have
shown the 30 percent calories from
fat diet is still too high in fat to produce benefits, and actually worsens
heart disease, breast cancer and
other lifestyle-related conditions,"
he said.
Pritikin, like his late father,
advocates a diet of no more than 10
percent calories from fat
There is a lot of evidence showing such a diet can help you live a
longer and healthier life, said Pri·
tlkin, director of Pritilcin Longevity
Centers and author of "The New
Pritildn Program."
Denice said such restrictions are
~ limiting that most people can't
follow them and that limiting total
fats to about 30 percent is suffi·
cient. She said she focuses on limit·
ing saturated fats, primarily fo.und
in meats, dairY foods and ttopical
oils, and advises patieals to cat no
more than 7 percent ru 10181 calories in saturated fala .
Browner and his colleagues
arrived at their conclusions by
using national data to sort and
quantify deaths from fat-related
diseases by levels of current fat
OOIIIUIIIPiion llld fedlnl ellimatel
of blood cholesterol levels in the
populationD'
• • f · h
•
1e1ary
at. 11 t e mam
raw
material in the body's muufacture
of cholesterol. Elevated levels of
blood cholesterol are considered a

Reunion planned
The Wolfe/folcir family ~ion
will be held at the home of Ken·
neth Wolfe on White's HiD Road
oJi July 7 form 10 a.m. to midnight
Friends are welcome. Gospel and
country music will be played . .
Bring a coveted dish.

Boosters to meet
The Southern Boosters will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
high school. All coaches and advi·
sors ru junior high and high school
should attend. Plans will be made
for the fair booth and faD sports.

operate as usual while he appeals
p~anned
the decision. He said that the ruling
There · will be a tound and
violates free enterprise rights.
In a similar case, the Mayan square dance at the Tuppers Plains
nightclub was ordered by a Los VFW Building on Friday from 8Angeles municipail coW'I judge last 11:30 p.m. widl mus~ provided by
October to pay damages to four CJ and the Country Gentlemen.
people who sued the club, claiming
they were kept out because they
didn't fit the doorman's image of
SEVIERVll.LE, Tenn. (AP) "cool."
.
The police officer who pulled
Last November, the Florentine Vince GiU over for speeding ended
Garden$ nightclub in Hollywood up with free c~cert ticlcets after he
agreed to end its "skirt night" pro- let the country smger go.
motions, in which women were
"I was doing SS, maybe 65 or
admitted free . Two men filed a · 70" in a 45 mP.!J zone, the Gram·
)awsuit.
my-winning Gill said after a con·
· cert Saturday at the Gatlinburg
Convention Center. He also laclced ·
a driver's license, which he said
was stolen earlier this year.
Gill~whose hits include "When
I Call Your Name," told
Seviervil~ Officer Ron Blalock he
was rushing to the concert
chief contributor to heart disease.
They essentially built an equa·
tion, plugged in lifelong reduced
levels of fat consumption and for·
Craft sj&gt;aces are available at Sw
mulated conclusions based on
Mill
Parle durinR Racine's Fourth
interaction of the data.

Dance

Gill gets ticket

Report: cutting fat to 30 percent
would prolong lives only months

FREE!

'.

all honored masons iind Dorothy
Ann Stout, representative for the
OES Home were presented and
welcomed.
Marjorie Rice and SteUa Atkins
received their 50 year pins present·
ed by the conductress, Pauline
Atlcins after she gave a resume of
their work for the chapter which
was outstanding.
Evelyn and Cliff Hauch served
as protem candidates for the initiation.
Jane Wise, the organist, sang a
solo, "Consider the Lilies" in honor
of the worthy matron and the 50
year members.
The deP,uty grand matron, Betty
Schenkefmade and interesting

Chic vs. geek: judge strikes ,
down dress code at trendy club

.'

.'.•

Osborne. The second BBIJiS 11otr tournament or
the year Is scheduled ror Sept. 14 at Franklin
Valley Golf Club In Jackson.

Harrisonville OES inspection held

The 1991

Milhoan-.

K

~

Register To Win
, A Trip To

Communi.ty calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear two days herore an event
and tbe day ot that eve'llt. Items .
must bt received weD in achance
to usure pubUcatlon In the calendar.

By MIKE DENNISON
... She said, 'I'Djust have to raise it couldn't have children and she
By DEB MARTIN
"We would hope that aU school filed a similar suit
Associated Press Writer
myself." ·
asked the daughter to sleep with the
Assodllted Preas Writer
districts would cooperate in bring·
He said his group is not a threat
LIVINGSTON. Mont. (AP) four days later, the 30.year-old boyfriend," Park County AIIDIIIey
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A · in• about a system that meetS con· to the proposed Alliance for the
Doris Parsons was chaUing in her neighbor was arrested and charged Nels Swanda! said. "The mother representarive of school districts swutional rests and is a benefit to Preservation of Local SchoOl Fund·
dini ng room with her next-door with arranging the rape of her own talked the daughter into it, from trying to change way Ohio funds aU students." Piuner said
ing.
· neighbor when the visitor dropped daughter.
.
what we could.discover."
education hopes all districts will · PiUner is a lawyer for the Ohio
The wealthier districts ~ creal·
. a bombshell : Her 11 - year-old
Authorities said the mother of
Four days after her arrest, her coopenuerowardlhatend.
'
Coalition for Equity and Adequacy ing the lobbying group to oppose
daughter was five·months pregnant. three, physically unable to have boyfriend, Ronald L. Smith, 34,
Nick Pittner said Tuesday he of School Funding. Six member giving some of their local tax
Yet, as Parsons remembers, the more children, arranged a sexual was picked up in Butte on June 11 thinks a group proposed by wealth· school dislricts charge in a lawsuit . money to poorer dislricts. Some of
•woman didn' t seem upset
encounter between her live-in and charged with rape. Under Mon· ier districts «;;pposed to giving some that the formula. for funding those districts fear that their resi" I'm sitting here with tears in boyfriend •nd her 11-year-old · tana law, girls under 16 cannot of th~ money to poorer schools schools hurts rural and iMer-city dents will not support higher taxes
my eyes, all tore to pieces," Par- lwanse she wanted another baby.
legally consent to sexual inter- actually could helP get a more bal- dislricts and Violates the Ohio Con· for education if pou01 districts are
~son
__s_sw_·_d._·_·vv
__ith__her
__
. n_o__
ern_o_n_
·on
__
. ____
.._T_h_e _m_o_t_he_r__
s a_i_d_t_h~at__sh_e___~
____. __________~~~--~~~~sy=stem~~o-f_fimdml-=
·~·~~~~=m=··=uon=
· ===·TiwC~velan:d!d~ian~~~thas~~al~l~o~wed~to~g~et~~~m~e~ru~·~~~~~

SUPPORT OUR TROOPS OVERSEAS &amp;
.._"'"-"RETURNING H~MEI

Tlle Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

low Boys from Athens, Cosi is $2
per person and those attending
shoul_d bring 111acb for the snack
table.
·
CHESHIRE · The Blaxton 's
Gospel Singing Group from Alaba·
rna will perform at the Old Kyger
Freewill Baptist Church in
Cheshire on Friday at 7 p.m.
RIPLEY • The Liberty Mountaineers will perform at Slcateland
in Ripley on friday .
. TUPPERS PLAINS • Round
and square dance at Tuppers Plains
VFW from 8 p.m. to 11 :30 p.m.
Music provided by CJ and the
Country Gentlemen.
. LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
Full 'Gospel Church in Long Bot·
tom will have a hymn sing Friday .
at 7:30 p.m. featuring the Dailey
Family. Pastor Steve Reed invites
the public. Refreshments will be
served.
SATURDAY
The Hazel Community Church between Long Bot·
tom and Portlaild will have a hymn
sing on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. featuring Debbie PoweU.
•
PORTLAND ~

•

RACINE • The Racine American Legion· Post 602 wiD sponsor a
picnic Saturday beginning at 11:30
a:m. at the post home for members
and families. l\oieat and pop wiD ~
furnished and members are to brin$
a covered dish.
KANAUGA • The Liberty,
Mountaineers will perform at the
D.A.V. Center in Kanauga on Sat;
urday.
•

-Names in the news...:..
, NEW YORK (AP) - When
Lea Salonga got a letter from hllf
father describing the devastating
eruption qf Mount Pinatubo in her
native PhiliP.pines, the star of
Broadway's ' Miss S~gon" decid·
ed she had to help.
The 20-year-old Tony winner
and other "Miss Saigon " cast
members will perform a benefit
concert for the victims this Sunday
- their usual day off.
The 4,765-foot volcano began
erupting June 9. More than 300
people have been killed.
.
"We feel something has til be
done for these people," she said.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Nicolas Cage, star of "Ratsing Arizona" and "Moonstruck," raised a
damaging ruckus in the $3,500-a·
month Hollywood apartment he
shared with actress Christina Fulton, his ex-landlord claims.
El Royale Apartments filed a
breach of contract and negligence
lawsuit in Superior CoW1 on June
20. The lawsuit claims about
$15 ,000 in damages.• including
flooded floors, damaged doors and
holes in walls.
Cage, in a telephone interview,
said he and Fulton left the apanment in good shape. He bought a
$1.5 million home in the Hollywood Hills last year.
"I think it's just a classic stOry
of someone being in a public position who gets sued for money," the
26-year-old ac10r said.

ATLANTA (AP) - Darryl
McDaniels, a member of the rap
group Run-DMC, faces charges of
aggravated assault and battery after
a brawl at a nighiClub.
McDaniels and another member
of the group, Raymond White, bodl
27 and from New Yorlc, attacked
two bouncers at Club 112 early
Sunday. police said
The two men, who were performing at the club, were earlier
charged with dtunlt and disorderly
conduct, battery on an officer and
damage to property.
Tbe additional charges against
McDaniels were lodged Tuesday.
Officer J.P. Spillane said about
15 people entered the llnlwl, which
caused $4,000 in damage. A
bouncer apparently suffered nerve
damage, he said.
McDaniels and White posted
bail of$1,800 each Sunday.
NEW YORK (AP)- The 11·
year marriage of novelist Kurt
Vonnegut and photographer-writer
JiU Krementz is e':J in divorce.
Vonnegu~ 68,
· be and Krementz, 51, will sbare custody of
their daughler, Lily.
Vonnegut wrote "Slaughterhouse Five" and "Breakfast of
Champions."
It was Vonnegut's second marriage. His farst ended in divorce in
1979.

MOSCOW (AP) - More than
4,500 people representing all religions in the Soviet Union are
expected to attend seminars run by
Billy Graham in Moscow next
·
of July activities. Cost is $10 per month.
Graham has preached in the
space for the entire day. Call 949·
Soviet
Union three times before.
2656 or 949-2692 for information.

Craft spaces available at Star Mill

BANK ONE PROUDLY PRESENTS

Thursday, June 27

7:00P.M.

Court Street1 Pomeroy 1 · Ohio
The Public Is Invited To This FREE Concert
Bring Your Folding Chairs For An Evening of Relaxation
and Beautiful Sounds.

()NE

.Whatever it takes:
BANK ONE. ATHENS. NA

ML~·r FDIC.

-.

,

�' I

Page

12-TheDallySentlnel

.•

Wednesday, June 28, 1891

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

,

June 26, 1991

Ohio
PubliC NOIIce

'
'' .

Call Sentinel

CLASSIFIEDS!
992-2156

Blade .Or 7 Bone Cut

'
. I'

•

Beef

·:•

..••••

,.
,.•'

BULLETIN BOARD ·oEADLINE

,.•'

4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE

·:,,'

lb.

P1 BLICATION
1

'
,.

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

,.,.,.
Sweet &amp; Juicy

Fresh Southern

. ,•'

PUIUC NOTICE
, NOTICE Ia hereby giY_,
on lotunloy. J,... 29 •
1810. at 10:00 o.m., 1 pub·
lie aole wUI be held II 106
Onlcin Av.,..o, Pomeroy.
Ohio, to aolffor cooh the fol·
~~-~ coii1Wol: ·
1181 Chew. Colebrlly IW.
1G1AW311WI
; The Fo.....,. B•'* ond
I8VInp Compony, Pom•·
~. Ohio. Naorvn the right
lo bid II thlo aole, ond to
!VIthdr- the 811ovo collo·
lerol prior to ao1e Further
The Fo...,.,. Bonk· .,d aov:
the·
!ng1 c""'f'f''Y ....,"bldo
·
1
right to reject ony or II
~-tel. ·II
, Further, lnw above co • ·

. .'

..

.-.''

. ..

...
...
' '

res

-,

'
11

'

HalpWanted

. HELP WANTED
TOMATO PICIEIS
AID PACIEIS .
All NEEDED

Vanilla, Neapolitan, Chocolate, Fudge Swirl

Your .Choice of Flavors· Mega

AT1HE

PAUL HILL FAIM

ce · ream
Pil\ .l11sl 7!1

uun _FALLS
CAll

.•

1·2C7·2012
AFTEI 5 P.M.

\1 1111' Clw!'ko111

owe·s

24 Pack
12 oz. Cans

Per faaUy , . _ w... 0 10

i

Wheaties

·

98

I

I

18 oz. Box

·'

UrNotdtlaltl-e.
IEC. VI: E8oh ful·tlme
employee oflhe VNioge, lnoludloli fuH·tlme houoly rote
ompio-o. _ , be onllllecl
durint Noh - · lfter the
firot.,....to· -holf.
•·
tlon. uclu...,. legel

conflict with thlo ordlnonco
••• herebv NP•Ied.
SEC. xu, Thetllll full· lime
hourly peroonnel ohall lie
pold on eddlilonol lh,..
oento 13 centol per hour for

--ay

- SEC.
··D•Y·
IV: Tllot aold olllwll beln lfflct on ond Iller
July 1. 1111.
IE(: . V: Eech fuU . time
~mpioy• of the Vi liege ohlll
be entitled to tick lone In
the emount of - ond one·
fourth (1 14) doyo per month,
_,d """" be _,titled IO IC·
crue oold oiclllllve,.tohundold tw.ty (1201 d..,..
Upon retirement Nch em·

Public Notice " ·
terol will be oold In the con·
dillon II Ia In with no ••·
preued or Implied worron·
tin glv.,,
·
181 28, 27, 28, 3tc:

Public Notlca
OIIOINANCE
NO. 1240-91
An Ordinance to eoteblloh
Vllloge Jodbo ond W,!!~.
llotn, on Htll"' -..•
holdoya. vecotlon .,d olck
leave.
Bo II ordolnld by the
Council of the Vlllogt of
Middleport utollowo:
SEC. 1. That the following
Wlge _,. II hereby
-pted for l'"tlio¥- of
the Vllloge of ~'ildleport.
Chief of Pollee. t2000.00
permanth.
,
Aulatont Chief of Pollee.
additional 40e per hour
llegulor Patrolmen:
Over 1 y•r •rvlce. te.78

14.26 per hour
llellefDiopotcher, t4.42 per
hour.
Bwlmmlno lnotructor (pluo
10"' of owlmmlng leooon
f-1. 14.10 per hour
H1ed Life o-d. 14.110 per
hour.

Cuotodlan, 111.10 per hour.
Income Ta• Admlnllllrator.
11800.00 per m011th.
Publla lranoportatlon Coordinator.
n.eo per
hour.
Mlni· Golf Manoger ... t4.60
per hour
. Extra Help.
Mlni·Golf,
t4.21 per hour.
E-mlc Oevlllopment Dl·
rector, t7. 78 per hour.
Moyor, t7000.00 per 'fltr.
Ciorl&lt;·TroaouNr, tiiOO per

upon req- from the of·

01111 (10"'1 of el eccruld ond

~. wtth

t.otld ....,.,... Vec8tlon

lime lhall mean MCh 1 2·
month period following the
fim fUH y- of .,ploy·
ment.
IIC . VIII: That a group
holllitol .,d mldlcol lnour·
onaellf4n be llfOvidld lor 1111
full-lime employ- of VHioge of MlddtPOrt who
IIIICt, In wrlllnf 1D pottlc·
IINM In tho •me. ond that
the PNrnium therefore be
paid by 1111 VUiege up to the
amount of the PNmlum
quottdlor tho - t con·

v-

..-y. Emplar ...

flfl•n or moroy-o of
ohell be entitled to
three weeko
with
PlY !lOeh-r.
SEC. VII: Eech employN
of 1111 Village .,tllltd to vo·
CMion lholl UMihe VICotion
lime In 1111 y•r of the .,111.
lemont or lhlll be pold lor
ony unulld portion of VICI•
lion II ihllir -oiling wige
rote ot the lime of payment.
If otthe .,d of ony year ony
.,ch ~mploy• hoo accrued
ony UrNotd ,...llo~ lime,
the

c--r-.. ,.,

•

='~~.,.

treat.

IEC . IX' Thllalffull·lime
.,ploy- dotlrlng ID par·
tlclpoto In tho pion ohall file
an election with 1111 Clerk
wlthlnt., dayol10) ofltrthe
tfloctlve dote of thlo ordl:

nence.

Italian Bread

'''

-~•

payment to tho em·
ployeo lor ouch unulldllme
within thirty d..,. 130) ofler

USED APPUAICES
.. DAY Wuutm

.or

C:tMw.llt

.

SIGNS

by tldr HIO*"'tll

B._.~r by

-,

I

• 675-69'2~ '

TII·COUIITY
SAIRATIOI

SEPTIC TANK PU-G
POIT·A·.IOIIf

-··

Houolng
Spoclallll
t18.000.00 per 'fllr.
SEC. II. That -roterlal,
clerical end/ or booldl-lng
NCOrd keeping hourly em-

Real Estate General ·

UIMIIS---$12! ., ·
fiiUIIS-S12S ., ·

•R•aonlllle Rattt
•Quality Wolti
•F- Eatimat11
•C.raet Haa Fall Dry

Time

1100 OVIIIS-SJt .,.

UALITY

P~

WASIIIIS-$100 .,

1-PIIMII'r
CAIPIT CIUIIIS
aiiii11U nooa CAH

DIYIS-~.., .,
......ATOIS-S 100 .,

.

UN'S APPUANCE
SEIVKE

I

1

9t2-5135 er 915-IUl
acr.. frt111 PMt Offici

'

.,
.,
.,

Pkg.

FOIEYER
BRONZE
TANNING

•

.

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

30 SESSIONS $30
949-2126

10-11-1 ••.

6/ 2/'91/1 •II.

..........

985-4473
667·6179

JI"UI . ,.......................................

'
I

I

.•

'

'u

-·

~· .

NAY£ IUYEIS WAITIIIG FOJ HOUSES IIAD PIOPEITIES
OF AU KINDS. LISTING UllfiEIITLY IIEEDED. FOI A"GDDD
DEAL", AT THE lEST PRICE AND PROMPT ACTION, LET US
NEAR FIOM YOU!

NEillY£. ClElAND .......................................nZ-&amp;191
11ACY MIIAIO ..........................................Mf..2431
JEM TIUISELL.............................................MI-1110
JO HIU .......................... ,; ............................. 1--4411
OFFICE .........................................................112·2251

All

lreeds

614-992-6820

992-6215
11·14·'90 lin

W. H. MOBILE

WE DO

flEE ESTIMATES

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

t

•

•

•

·BENNETT'S

JAIIU msa
992·2772 or
742·2251

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

131 Bryan

•742-2321
6/22/lfn

Announcements

3

MO.U HOME
•AnNo'
COOUNG

Announcamanti
CHINESE KEIIIPO

KARATE

•••••

Lldt.d On Seffn Sdteel ld. Iff lt. IC1
161CJ4C6-9416 er 1·114»·171·5''4

Middleport,

BUILDERS

,,,.,

AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
F.. NACES FOR MOllE &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES
•

1·14-'81 -llft

I•·

IJJJJfl&amp;lt
•

. CEDAR
CONSTIUCTION
992-6648 or
698-6864

•20 Y11ra Experience
•Ou1llty Homee and
CUI1om Remodlllng

.

•

FULLY INSURED
ESTIMATES

FREE

ROOFING

~ TROMM

3-ll·lfn

•

•Siding
•Painting

AND EYEIYTHIIG UIDEIIEATH

NO SUIIOAY CAUS

•

•Roofing

If you're in ntad
of Mobile Home
Parts or
Accessories ...
SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
IT. 33 WIST OF
DAIWIN, OHIO ·

"" 949·2101
· or 111. 949·2160

•

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs

HOME PARTS

........ hilt
" f - Eltlmottt"

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•

IFREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM .SIPING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•

- Concme work
-Aooflng
- lnf... lor a bterior
P1lnttng

Owner &amp; Optrator

•·•·'11·1 mo.

•Rooftng
•lnaullltlon

-Eiectrie1l 1nd PtumblftQ

EIIIIILEE MERINAR

992-3432 or
992-2403

•Ropllo.,.ont
Wlndowtl

Clu- tlarllng now. Learn IIIII

-whlleyau - , . ......
..... ,....ovayour• phyolcol abiiHin. lor -

coli Jay 5-10 p.m. 114-'IQ.
2141.
Clorlellano

lot Cloepel lll•la

a-p, -.e111o111U after 1:00.
Frw !lingle lullllln, Pereoollll
ada.
- · 1o: OH
~-•·3-,t'o.
114, -llloft,
I

BOB JONES
DCAYATING
DOZER and

loot

RIDUCI' burn oil Ill .....
tau OPAL. AVI-""'
II
PMh.Orug.

lt&amp;Wrlm- - POOJ.
• Baouutulllwround~
IIA'IKI ·Doy.-k. Monlh, orSeuon
IPICIIIC
u4 ITAOII Per Root

-

BACKHOE
WORK

.....
Hew ·

(614)
696·1
I

For

310 last 2nd St.

I

- Room AddltiOna

-Gutter work

Co~l1t1 Grooming

POMEROY
BOWUNG

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl lldlng

CARPENTER SERVICE

GROOM
ROOM

Open Tu11., Thure.,
Fri., Sat. 7:30 p.m .

u-111.1-10.1l·lflo.

11·5-tlf.tro

YOUNG'S

POOLt~!~HIJII

2111 MI. eutsl•
lutlaMieftlltw

1£ NEED USTINGSI IF YOU WANT TO IELL .. SEE USI W£

8·4-'111·1 mo.

8·1 2·10·1fn

742-2421

HOUSES•LOTSIIFAIIM8
COMMERCIAL
We Need Llallnpl

992-7130

5-31·'10 ""

USED RAILROAD TIES

OPEN
Tu•dov lhru Sotuni"Y
10:00 om·II:OO pm

NEW LISTING- Lots are hard to find but we have avaolable
10 Ill them! All have 50 ft. frontage with minimum depth of
!57 ft. sewer and water av11lable. located in the village of
Recine. YOUR CHOICE! $2,500 each lot.

FREE ESTIMATES

SHRUB &amp; TREE
Till and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269

..UY •SIL1 eTIADI

205 N. SKend Str•t

IIIDDLEPOIT, 01110 457.0&amp;
Olfi&lt;t "4·9U·2116
HOME 614-992-SU2
DOmE S. TUINP, IIOIP

IO'"fe DISCOUNt TO
SEIIIOI CmZENS

Fn~ldltMtes

STEWAft'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

8· 10-'91- , .

•Slabs

Stop I Cucu+••

4-21-11 · 1010.

(614) 985·4110

•Patio a
•Driveways

•c-,tete

992-7458

VERY REASONAILE
NAVE IEffllNCES

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks

•Ga......

FREE ESnMATES

·painting. ·
let me da it for you.

. ~. -

BISSElL &amp; BUllE
(OISIIUCTIOI

---·

Take the pain out of

1 2·3"1 ·IO·tfn

.........

ACADEMIC
AWAIDS
GOLF USSOIS

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAI
CONSTIUCnON
992·6641 or
698-6164

We 8oyW11ot We Oo.
WeDci-Weloy.

OH.

llliiiiOR • DYIRIOI

110 JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

614·992·2321

TACDIYIW ID.

uc••·

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Home R1palre
•Roofing "
•Siding
•Painting

S6 y..,. Eopeoleoaoe

TIUCIJNG AVAILAILE

LETART- Itt You11Low It-: Just right 1Qr afamily. Has 4
bedrooms, dininl room. new kttchen cabonets, new range,
and entire horne has been remodeled nicely - mside and
.out. Nso hes a view of the river.
$24,900

~POMEROY,

217 1.

949·2168
• •• . mo. pd.

Hand Tufting ·
Cullom Drapee

BISSELL
.UILDERS

NEW LISTING- Lookong for a housing srte or mobile home
lot? This sole has 100ft. frontage and located in the village of
Racine. Sewer, water and electric hookups on site! BeautWul,
level lot tor $7,000.

992·5335 ar
915·356 I
Acr••• fr~~~~ .Polt OH:Icel

FREE ESTIMATES

.".......,

aMS1U, OliO

SNOWVILLE - Sllows TLC - A40 acre farm that IS all rof·
lins cleared pasture land. Approx. 20 acres fenced. large
metal bern, and an ommaculataly clean 3 bedroom newer
home wrth free gas, equipped kdchen,~8~T~n~esrl~8(;o

KEN'SSEIVICE
APPLIANa

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

IU·Ie. S.CeRd

JOliN I. TIAFOID

MIDDLEPORT - REDUCED! 6.77 acre Executive Buildmg
Site. High on a hill overlooking the beautiful Ohio Rover. If
lOu w1nt a superior homes~e ..,caH for details. Reduced to
$19,500. MAKE OFFER.

,_EliDA,
112·DAIIUIE Pf,WAIT ........................................112-fiiS
• lAilY IIITCIIEI ........................................... ta.. mt
SHEIYLIALTO................................ ........ H7.cMZ1

i

.[

·

UPHOLSTEIY

Sl.....

RACCOON CREEK - A nice campong lot wrth electric and
Grey wate• d1sposaf. Showers and bathrooms really close,
also has a frontage on Raccoon Creek tor a boat deck. Really
nice.
JUST $5.900

AU MAlliS
lrilll It In Or We
PI 1r U
c P•

Gutters
Downspouts

11 Mllll•'"'

lepalr, trophies,

NEW LISTING- Roll Rd. L1banon Twp.- 350+ acres VA·
CANT GROUND. Own« may spirt some acreage. Call tor de·
tails.

ROOFING

•R emodeilng and

CUSTOM GOLF
QUIS

NEW LISTIIIG - Plltt1 Fork- 40 acres of vacant ground
w~h barn. 10+ tillable, 17+ pasture. 13+ tomber some land os
fenced . Old oil well on the propert,y also. ASKING $25.000.

MICIOWAYE.
OVEN IEPAII

1 14 81 1

BULLDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDCLEARINO.
WATER and SEWER
LINES

·•IDDLEPOIT- Hltt to JQir !111111?- It will be un·
neces•ry _due to the unique landscapint Ill this 7 yr. old
home on Miff Street. Has2 to3 bedrooms, also has Illat wra·
p-around deck with belutdul view for entertamm1 fnends or .
maybe you'd like to just Irick back ••:~~f·FOI MZ.900

forCe from end after Juty 1,

NEW -- REPAIR

11110

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

MIDDLEPORT - Historical lookins corner s!ore. Has 6
apartments up and another store down. Start your own bust·
ness. Has tots of room and has an income. CALL FOR MORE
• DETAILS.

retrooclive to Moy 1, 1911 .
SEC. XV: Thlo ordlnonco
thall tlike effect end be In

Wrfttsll
.

HnaniL.

Gtota on Tile
Floor Flnloh
ME LIWIS, ow..
lt. 1, lot...... OH.

CUSTOM llllT
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES

L£TART - lllint1nmce FrH Exterior - 4 bedrooms, 2
beths, 3 silting porc~es . and a dmmg room. Noce bog level
yard. Fenced irea w~h ~arn tor anomals, and a little house
for children. Price was $42,500. REDUCED TO S3UOO

SEC. XIV: Tluot tho poy

ecale for lifegu~rd• end ~1 nl·golf, extro ~elp ahall be

"lroph.

ettigh

6 POl sss

per hour,

Leu than 1 yeer _,Ice,
... 87perhour ·
Pert lime
patrolmen,
11.67 per hour
Poololng Mot• Peroon (leoo
than
1 yNr tervlcel ,
t4.211 per hour .
Poololng Mot• Peroon/ Alii.
lee. 1ov• 1 y - oorvlcel.
· til. 711 per hoUr. '
s - Employ_,
·
o - 1 'i•roorvlco. t8.08
per hour.
Leu than 1 .,..r _,tee.
t4.211 per hour.

GOLD RIDGE- DOUBLtWIDE ONLY- Adeal too good to
be true - A 24x48 Patriot mobile home that has 3 bed·
rooms, two full baths, a family room, and a livong ~oom. Nso
has a real nice woodburner. This lovely home won t last long
at this low price. Owner will pay $1,000 towards the cost of
moving.
$16.900

1

councU
thell determine
~hich employee• ere cleaalfied •• full-time emplov••·

k=======~r.:=::::::;;;;;;~rr==;~==~:;ilir:::==;:::==:;r-=::;~~;:::;:~;

9 900

•

ca.••·

BEC. X: That aolarlod om·
ploy- who dD not olect to
participate. be peld M utro
t1 00.00 per month In tddl·

lholl

lltCUtive full -time aervice to

tho Village.
SEC. XIII : Thel vMiage

Bust· ness Services

LANGSVILLE - Look at this nice I\! story home that sit on
approx. 31 ·acres, It has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, h_
eat pump,
and wood burner. Some of the land os tillable, plus 11 would be
a•real place for hunting. It has adug well plus aspnng. Hey,
thos 1s a great place - Come take a look. ONLY $4 •

Freab From The Oven

1-.

Hch yMr of aoneecutfvt:

full -lime oervlce with the
Village of Middleport ond 1111
full·tlme ulery peroonnel
"""" be pold an addllionol
II•
dollaro lt8 .001 per
month for Mch ve•r of con·

1991 .
Paued the 1Oth doy of
June. 1981 .
:ec. XI: All onllnoncn In 1411 28, He
~--~----------~~--------------~----------~----~--------------_.________________

LANGSVILLE - Crouse Rolli -A very peaceful settmg tor
this 3 bedroom home. Sitting on appro.. 6.35 acres. One car
garage wrth storage and a noce screened in front porch.
ONLY $38.000

4 RoU

'

- . ""-' lor ., ·
gency oholl ori!ll. Sold
of utno houroto
be _..,.,td by 1111 moyer.
IEC. Ill: The followlnt oro
'-""" dooltoold .. '"'"' holldl'ft lor on full-time em·
pkrf- of 1111 Vlloao of
Mld.oport,
N- f•r'o
Doy: Momorllli D-r. lndependenoe Dey: ubor Dey;
Thon";t:"'ll Dey: the cloy
lflw
ankoglvlnf: Cllrlot·
mea Day;. Emploveo't Birth·
day: Veteran' 1 Day; PNII·

lion to the P,.oent aolerv
oolltdule. ond tho!ll em·
ploy- peld on on hourly
bealo who ·do not lllecl to
partlclpato In the ln.,r.,co
pion be paid on tdoltlonoiiO
011111 per houo. Any em·
ploy• mey atony time olect
to wlhdr- from tho pion,
and In .,ch ., IVent ouch
llleotlon lor w-owlll ohall
be filld In wrftlng
with the C -. Any omploy• who llieclt not to par·
tlclpateln the plan moy file a
.,"-'.,' election ID pat·
llclpale, and, If eccaptoble
to th1 lnouronQO company
on • nan· r•ted Uelt. 'then
ouch -loyN moy become
1 portlclpant In lhe P,len .
Ukowlll. any omploy!ll who
partlolpollo In the plan moy
file an election to withdraw
fro"' the plan. In which
- h i t woo•• or .,tory, al
moy be the
ohollbe adjulltd oa provided In thlo pa·

HOME 992·6892

•

\•

the .,d of the v-tlon .,....

OFFICE 992·2888

I
I

Soft N' Gentle
Bath Tissue

28-32 or
48 Ct.

ployeo oNH .. pold ftfly per·

·IWI-Ifl

I !:.~) ~~~-- - -,..,.,_ (oxclucllac- po allll~ed I
1.:__ _:::.s_r:_. ..: :.-:! ___ ~~)- ~~2f!l

Cozies Diapers

plo t • l be employed II I
mulmum of 311 houN per

'

Limit One 24 Pack

1
1

PubliC Not:ce

Pl. -949-2101
., .... 949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY UllS

'

. •

c•rno~o~y:
over 1 yeor urvtce. 11.01

PubliC Notlca

"At ltaiOI •"• Prlcts"

.

1
1

Meah.,la, tl.81 per hour

Public Notice

i

•'

r------------------,
General Mills

r.':.
"::~ 1 yaor oorvlce.
t4.21 per hour.

Public Notice

Real Estate General

Jumbo Roll

oun

Extro Help: . .
08
Ovor t v•r . . .~~:• • ••·

3

Public Notice

t:;."::'n 1 ~- ....,.....

Public Notice

Food Club Grade A Medium

Mif.J:::~~s.~~1 :

montha oorvlce). ~Miler . lleador (over:;,,,;•;
w.':h:,:'J· Bowoo• Dept..

' ''

'
,..

R..,..tlon
Director.
1710.00 per month.
Ufw G-do, 14.21per hour.
lecriiM'I to Mayor, 17.10
per hour.
Extra Clotlalll Holp (CierkT-.,rer), 18.12 per
hou"
Other Exira Clotlcal Holp,
'11.00 per hour.
VoluntFireman.
t100.00per-.
Council, t30.00 per meet·
lng (241
Preoldenl
of
Council.
t31.00 per mooting (24!
Board of Public Affelro .. .....
120.00 per meotlngl12)
Clerk •. Board of Public Af·
flirt, t1 030.00 pr mo'llh
lleoldont Olopotcher ... ...... ..
tiOO.OO per month .
Clerk, Water D.-rtment,
ln.o than 8 montho - ··
vice. t711.00 per month .
Clerk, Wiler Department,
.,._. I monlho oorvlce.
t1020.00 per month.
Water ond . _ Supt..
ti.IO per hour.
Water ond hw~ A~-

The Dally

-.n:a

• Oet Totet.hcn ~ Partlea

~ . . . ._ _ 011 c.. ••
1111 Main llf'Nf Poa111:or, lw

lullerviooo &amp; ANI Ootollno,

c

•ow

&amp;IIC&amp;D
OPU
..,.... - - · · Mealo, and Snacu

Giveaway

1 kill_,, IM-441-4-.. .

ll!ofo,-beopiH,I·-

11 ln. Ioria onol M ln. dlairoll•.
304475-17M.
'

....

-

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

•

�Sentinel

June

Ohio

.SNAFU® by BnKe Belittle

Giveaway

4

31 Hornet for Sale

• ..
. :m;=-"-.......

I-

2 Part Collie, Part Shaphard
lllxid Pulllliao, 12 Weoluo Old,
1~1M 1flerip.m.

In tlllllpolo; 0uo1tr Conotruo~':"f.}A
CoMttlonl -

30111 Kltlona
To CIIV-y. IIW41·1707.
4 Kill-: 2 Ala Bolllalla· a Old
,,..., For Motor. 1M 441 3303.

44

Apanment
for Rent

JUT 'N' CAlli.YLEe lly Lin)' Wnpt

-·

111'1 GIIC .....

--

2415 can tftlt ,

""'*- IIM-lQ.

llfliiO.OD,

Eltlclonn, 1110
UtWtloo Pold, Sllano lith, 701
Fourlh. Gllllpat ... 114 .... .,.

I
I~IIIII
I 1I 1I II
TINGKH

1-114-1'12·

a.., ..10 Tohoo, 11,100.

1u11J ioidtd, _. - . 1:311 or

1fter 7p.m.

oltor 1:00, . . . - . -.

e-.
p.m., Befort

2

3p.m. Doyw.
PuNM, I w-old, -r cuttl

L._ , _
_ _,_LJ.L-..1.-..L.__..:.

I

~·a-tea
AIC Nawa
Q ,.,
s...-.o.

3-2-1 Cent8cl Q'

ll!t,~Q

...

.

I

.

e

IJI•

NewlltourQ
§&amp;C:S'awQ

=~ ·

ALL Yltd StiM 111101 Be Paid In
~. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
till doJ llelooe till ill lo to run.
~ idRion • 2:00 p.m.
frldov.· lllandoy idRion • 2:110
p.lll. Saturday.

lmmldl ....y 1o won medlcwl.
-~~~ and lito ........ 304-JP.
2717orl~-.

'

18. Wanted to Do
Wilt

llalopH

t1

1111- llatno 700 CC, Ex;
CondRIOnl v.ry allllo- ·. -al!ll 12,700. 114-441·
0200,1MIVI Mil g·.
_.

luth Hclg Stntloe. Aa-blo
Ratao. Hi To Smtlll 114-

3"1'11-2142.

tlf LOo/'S /..ON&amp;tY.
/:fON 11

you $PLI'f

THE APAM1
•

from .._, ........

Churd.. .

•
Big
. Yltd
Salol
Ctol.......,.._,_,
mlac. ,
June ... ,· llln, teft on Co.

· . Rol.11 bofDN Roo- Park.
, llg Yltd - . July 1 I 2, 1:00
am, Ritch._ ~ TrN
Blvd .• - .

Laurol
Cliff lllc-'
Rd. Ia.-~~
. ...
Malina
.I .
,_
.June 21, 27, 1:10-1:00.
'

'llrglrH, IIM-77W111.

9

Wlnted to Buy

UOod

-Ia -.,

c;...

s -.Q

'1"1!1..:nm; IS

DR.~!

~~ Munllt, lite WIN C

lnttrvlewt wllh country stare,
including Vinca 0111. (1:00)

s-.

·18Prlm1NIWI
IIJl MbviE: A lall tor~
(2:00)
1:111 (I) Top
ancl Wllalee:

o-

~u-a:

Our l!nvlnltomant, Our

Volld · - · •
Llconto, Flrol And CPR

Sactlfllr The Hgments

Or

Colt 114-

44M175.
Wlntid to ...,., 9tandlng llmbor,
lalt Willi- I Sons 114-112·

1441.

Wlntool to ...,., I dryer
In ...............ion, coli- 4
,.,........... 1101.

Sc-

Worlo Or Payoa=Or
Hlgll
DIDI
ulvti-J
Pl.. Two Ytano 01
lal
Exportanco With ,._...,.,
And Evtdenct 01 ConUnul!'ll
Eclucotion Rtlalid To Tha IIi'
hlvlorll Be- Flold. Sllory
Nogotlablo. lltU Raoumao To
Slndro llcfartand Woodland
Conltnol. Inc, 412 VInton Plko,
Gllllpoi.._ Ohio 45e31. EOEIAA
Empta,.r.
Reltt 1100,000 A Y..r In PriYile
Donatio... Wt Want To Dtvatop
A Good, Solid 111101 Gift Ct.,.
palgn. Wa To Find JMw
llonon Among lndlv-11 And

E.O.E.IE.I.P.

317-mt.

'l'op

Prioao For. All Old U.S.
COtnl, Gold Ringo,

-a'::!

-Ina.

·~~- Colnt,
.Colna.
II.T.S. Coin Sllop, 1!11
_ . . ......... Ciolllpolla.

Wllnllll: Good 11oM LMae Doa
HouM. Cell 11t 441 ·1021,

nHIA

ete:

Employment Serv1ces

11

HelpWsnted

=

. , . . . A Doyl - - phone
··-lordllllloaond

RalttiiOD.OOO • r•• In.:'::
donltlona. Wt want to

I good,.~ lltjor Olft ...,.

tnd
-·~·poalllon, A - llltid. I you
con do M, ua • rnu1111 lnd
COVIt ltlltr: Pia!Wiool Paron-

lhood
ot louthutt
Ohio,.0hio
Sll
~~lind~!'!'""·
Atfttnt
1
-0•v
E'
~s-p"':
K•r
Nldno..
E. . ·~ . .

WIU DoHou11:clunlng In Ylnlon

Ohio

llunttno Python, 11 loll long

dh II f11!oon ....-.., and ..,;

Will do atw!ng, altrlllona lnd
mondlng. ,t,pjoolntmant only.

ltlrlao,1300. ~.

304~.

::~~""'· "'""
otdl Cut- c:~.. 4 l)r.
loldod. Nict cor. $1100 080.

Dog and C.t - * ' a on 114 441 oacM.
tnildl, IP U'JPI'id In PiDin.
~ , . tliiiiiJIII
................. ~0~4t-~ V-t, SZ,OOO,

Will ata(J- ~ _ , .
thtlr . _ or hooplfot at night,

304-171-1HI.

1111 Cillwy C.nllor

Tll~
· PI,

Tr

F llldllCial

21

l'lth To_.. 1411 I I
•~
Point .-.....
r n - ..

-~-1,

·nd-=-~

lui
........
...
..... Lllhua .,... 1 , ...., ~
~ Wldi DhiiCII'WI1

Bullnesa
41 Hou...·tor Rent

Opportunity
IHOTICII

--'"Y•=: :::'.!.
DIH. -=

OHIO VALLEV PUIUS- CO.

-MOTto-mol un111 you -

lilt

till-....

4111' In Rio Granda ......
Avollablo Auguat 111. 114-441·

1-

Poodle P' tztn, AICC Ctalm,lon

. _ . . , nytoy,IM-tll'MCM.

44 Olivo 81., Oo~
t:171/tno, lnqulno at: 118
Avon...

~~~~~~~~~~

-

~-lOtion. Phona: 114- I'

111111 ltoviM
-Malo
Coollor
WMh l'lporo,
._
.

SIMn - . lolort, portor
you.. touplo, -~--·
42 Mobile Homes
torRent

to P• DOUthln, 111 111, Cl:t"'\l",.,.""l..t~ To
-.01141772
Your looat Ohio ..... 01
ElnploJU*"
Offtce..
...,...V
PROCESSING Comploto - S.wlc•
Oloerlptlona An
Avolllblo For R- At Tha
PMplo
PHONI.Col- You To ....Order.
-For
· OIES ottlaa. Dudtlnt For Aplnlo ~731-1117 Ex1. 1t:l2.
llllcotlona t. Juno 30, 1811. Pool·
lng
o-rlptlon It " '"''"""'
paG.IICII..,. ........... _ , Ptopll clll you. Ho n - A•ldlnl Supervlaor, Annu.l
Stllry • 117,2114 minimum.
Spacillilool
lldlla
and
11242 ExtoMion P-21111A.
Know11 dg1: ...n.....,...,t and
Supoowl-y tldlla, lntol"fiowlng
NIIGIDAV I'ROCESSINO

rv.

10,

AulOrnollc

Air, T·Tope llack
l Gr1y, 111
Cat IIW . - . :
Thlo Cor l o = Claon And

Allfll Clnotl111
Stall\'100.

-·7241.

'WE .511.~ aJ6

campers&amp;
MotorHomea

till T.....,.m, T-t-. AC, d
power, ....... 114 we-osn
Doctot Daytona door

1..

(I..) ~

IVITIJESS pQ)t£CrOO ~

1~ - · 2 2 f t . - lfllhr!

-·
2 ..... dou1M
futttr 1011-o~
t-..Md,
IWnlna,
alnkao~

...0110....~41 . . .

•

e:oowe c

-s,.ooo.
*· e--.
.

81

(IJ

'T0'-1 .JIJST CA.N'T PIN
THAT &lt;auV OOWN ON
AN'Y'Tl-IING-.

IXl6S 'l1-IE SUN RI6E

lllipo .. -~. (

IN THE" 1$'\Si AND

eET IN 1'HE WE6T':I...,.

\ __

Home .
Improvements

1111 Thundarblrd Elon. v.a,
loldod, 14,115. Dop: · - · Evonlngo: 1,....._171 or
441·1752.

PAW II WHAT
· ARf YOU 50
MAD ABOUT?

-; - ... .......

Nna
:=""
PINIMIJ

· llol-llun
1:3D-I:pm,
114-

~RAUA WANTS YOU

31 HomH tot Salt

Ia-.
'*"

___ .......,__
=.:-._.,
:..,.,.._"""l:,"':.J:.
lmum OUOiltlclllone: -

-~Ctrtl-.­

two JMIO
parionco.

OUptMIOfY

II•

1'011 IALI IY OWNIII110 Pork
llolw, Pelrll PI ;me, I .....,. S

:!i
...........
-·
...... .............. ,

-t·--·
==
.:a&amp;.il. ....-.
,., .. w
~

~ l!!fll1l, tlttln
~

-1.

lnli

OMw: ....-..
ltlalt IIINII Oloot To ~

'"'I '*IC
.........
'--"•••oetr
.......

......... 411r.

Owor 110 ..._,.. hOII'll I rtsrlt
NOWI Clll tor Ml

tUIIrfbulorl
:1,
na 1 d1d
~_,.OIL
TDIL
---~~~~­

j ,•

\
11

3110.

.

1 ' 2 lA opto.: l'lnol Avo. 114441 122L

' ',·

i
'1

I,

t

J

'

,., 111 T_, On
Tlllrll A -: •• Vlrlrl

~-·"--··
--1SHAIIe,loltlt,

WY. ttO,• . CoP - , t,.;

10:00WG 11J1 a . - Leap

ASTRO-GRAPH

~

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

wtndciw air con112 ~ 10" ltblo IIW,
IIW, 114-112·11411 or

•••,. •••• 1 111 ....

IIAI1' WORICl UCIUIHT ..-,!

44

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

'Z
Cillo

TlenlpDJ111kln,
•• • nt
Poy, 407.ztl..l800,
- · · · · lo lour raoro expo- In - ·
bt. 11'1. ll.m.·10p.m. Toll rtetlona or llw lnfuiWIIIIIIt,
,....,..~~..

'

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

ohlll.

lnd Ill,..,.... fw HIIM.

By ftlltlp Alder

3t

West
1+
4+
Pus

Pass

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

•J

ea~.::i.•
"-•1111
0 Sp 11

114 4•,

u"

'

Ohio

Ellctrlell &amp;
Refrlgll'ltton

JuMZ7,,..,

Set loftier goals lor youraellln 1111 year
ahaad; you'H have the clellre, delormlnauon and talent to achieve u.n. Cllal~awaken your better quallllaa and
lllhance your Nil-earn.
CANeD (Julio 21-.IUir 22) A mellor
you've concarneclllbOU11001ca Hke
It Ia going lo work oul 1ar bel1er than
you ever antlclpalecl. The flnll stuml!llng blocllo lo be oveo coma are apt to
~ your own Mlt-doublt. Trying to
)IlliCit up a broken romance? The Aalro-

Graph Malchmakar can help you Iinder·
aland whal 10 do to make the relatiOnship work . Mall S2 pluo a lOng, lei!·
addr11118811, alampacl envelope lo
Matc~makar. c/o lhlo newspaper, P.O.
Box 91428, CieYelancl, OH 44101-3428 .
LEO (.IIIIJ a-At~~- II) You haW-.
lent ch-to acNe,. your- Qb.
Jact'-todoy, but you may hiWIO giYa
an extra push In ord.-lo Kcalatatelhe
procaclure. Be~VIIIGO (Alii• ZS.IIpL 22) ~~~
wtth whom you're ..-.lly lnvoiYed
cennot be manlpulllecl but oan be COf&gt;.
vlncad through ioglaaii*IUIIIIOn. Play
up, not Clown, to IIIII ~­
~ (..,._II-Oot. D) Vour 11n1ne1a1
proepacte IOOic good toda!' u _. u
1omorrow, prOVIdad you don't axpact

acin Involved whO will Cllll the shots.
CAPIIICOIUI (Dec. 22.,en. 11) An en·
- - you're hopeful and anlhuted
about e~~n bnl be achiiiYed on your
own. Pllrtntn who lack your vision
could hinder till operallon.
AQUAIIUI (,.,._ :10 M. 11) Your In·
stlnell tor Mlt..,_allon are quite
k-today. MQ¥8 wt1h auurance In 111e
direction your lntuHIOn poinll you.
PIICII (Pelt. IIHII rch :10) A friend ol
long stondlng whom you'vo been MPS·
ratecllrom may .....,tor your lila again.
TMre'a a ~blllly you may gat conllr·
mat10n ol 11t11 today.
. . . (lllnlh 21-April 11) Ach!Mtg
your -II!OUid not be all !hal dllllcuH
loelay. And thOugh It may not be
obviOUI, oonatruc11Ya Chlngll wtll -

ry, you won't be lhOrlciiWigtlcl.
·
ICORPIO (Ocll. 1M Not. D) II you truly
believe your ldlou n IUperlor to your
• • clrt•' couu;pta today, don't hide
your llgltt under a bushel. C " - . .
you're coooect .
SAGITTAIIIUI (Now. II Dao. 111 You
may reap type o1 materiel or ft..
nanc:lll IIIMflt today ln. • Clrc:uftman. .. TMre cou1c1 be_• . middle par-

TA&amp;IIUI (April :10 111aJ D) AgrMmanto you enter Into today will ..,.
ce11ant prob8blllllaa tor long-torm auc- In liM! partlculara ....., .. Ute

moniawtwM!youd 11 ... Don't wor- mowein;ou&lt;!.-.

••

major1horne.

•1111• (lllaJ 21.,._ :10) You may
hiWIO draw on t h e - of otherl
toda!' In orelor to D ' - your own
andt. Tllll OOUkl prove mutually beMII-·
clll, l o r - you gain, they gain.

Nortb

Pus

s+

Eoot
!NT
Obi.

Pus

U you can see the rilbt play in today's deal, you must be in big denuind
Opening lead: • A ·
as a partaer at your local club. Without peeklq, cover the East-West
cards and dedde on your line in five
diamonds dollbled, West leading tbe
spade ace aad switching to the heart
two, WOD with dummy's ace.
West -.ns to be light in points for
.
.
his opealna bid. Perhaps be didil't pre- ' jack, you have only one . su~ful
empt beca- be 11aa four hearts.
play: You must Iead the club nine (or.
Somebow you must keep your mi· eight) and run .tt. The appearance of
nor-suit 10111!1'11 to cme. Tbe double tells West s seven ts no more than you
you that tbe trumps are surely 4-0· deserve.
•
nevertbel-. they can be picked up
East wins with the dub tO and then
without 1018 However if tbe clubs are returns a heart, wh1cb you ruff. You
4-1 , you wili need twO more dummy lead tbe dub ei~t to dummy's ~·
entries: one to take a lteCOild diamond a~d when West diSCards, you ~tmue
n - aac1 ooe to lead clube through w1th the club jack. U East doesn t eovEast. You -.n to be an entry lhort. er, you are tn the dummy to take the
Tbe rlebt play is to lineae the dla· trump lineae. U East"- cover, you
mood nine at trick three. Let's llllllllle can lead tbe club four to dummy's six
East playtlow, but wbeD you continue wblle East bas to follow Impotently
wllb the diamond ellbt be coven with w1th the f1ve. You flnelle in trumps
the 10, West dlscanllne' two spades.
and~';:!:",._.,... fMYill'mll ••111.
/t.fter winning with the diamond
·

The World AlmanacfCrossword Puzzle
35
37
41
42
43

1 Rhylltm
61nltndod
11 Embloldory
yam
13 Tray
14 Movie houaa
15 Trpa of
aword
16 Wood aorrel
17 The King-

Hum

Womanly

Spoil

Alcllntd
DelenH

.dept.

441nlurllte
47 lntprtaonlng
49 Showldlo a
chair
50 lonmedlatolr
(2 wdl.)
51 MaryMoore
52 Entltuolaallc

19
20
22
23
24
26

lnaec:llclde
Recruit
Ladl
Conlalntr
Coli ol yarn
Ore. tummer
lime
28 Old age
29 Thr01111h
3001Hncumbef
31 Eam
33 lntarmodlate
lpref.l

DOWN
1 The real2 Htath plant
3 Occupant ol
apartment
4 Farm animal
5 What'alen
6 - T...lung
7 llullcllng wing

8 Fllhlonphologropillr
Richard 9 Donkey
10 Joga

e

ta.OD to ta.OD por hour. Avon pnoparo rwporlo; obiUtr 3 or 4111 FII. .NCI
, _ Olft, ... 1...._..370.
CA.
lo
dtvolop and ·
m
...
,.
Lilt, carw-1
tlvo
_
.
,
.
rolallonahlpt
wtlh
JOel IH AlASKA-Hiring. Enlty
Dlolllot, Cteoo To Town, l
:
IMa 1800 • - . . . conatrucII tplll. MUOO.IM-441 4421.
vlaoro;
and
till
.......
lfUitllci
tloll, c...... bit Flotcla.
obiUtr to rocoaillzo CALL NOW 1-20t-731-'IIIOO Ext. condlllone
and ·l •U apprapltti
111111.
acuon, IIUM m oral IfNI wtift•
phonal loCIIIy tor ~municatkwle. _.UJIIIMIM
IW' • • Co. tutt • por!-tlma ••~ . - . In tho lEPTA canor •
lmmt,.attly
and -

..

Soetb

o

50Mf VARMINT--

to -

"'*'

Lany 10ng LIYal

1:05 (I) MOVIE: Ouyana TragMJ:
The lltory of Jim , _
(4:00)
t :30We
S.lnlold George
fHIS gull1y a !tor gelll~ a
busbOy flrad . Sttreo.
(J) (J)
Man In tile amlly
Sal !flea to reconcile wHh the
woman Ill lelt allhe altar.
Stereo. C
(l) Mra. Fanwtck Went to
Woshlt•lon During lour
terms In Congfftt, Fenwick
sets a high standard lor
ethiCs and is the lnapiratiOn
tor the honorable Lacey
Davenport. (0:30)
(I) Saaaatrao (0:30)

I HATE ITWHfN
I WAVE AT

PEOPLE ....i knawl1 ••• of hr.NMn
l'lltltkxle; knowlldgl of CIOrNC&gt;
llono and jill tt•ndl'*:
1 . - . - 2 WENSION p. knowttdgo .. . . . _.....
undar tt....tut ........_.
ability to . .,... '" OiMI

SpiCIII Songs lnd
commentarlta 110m tile latoat
hlladllnea are craatad to
point out some of !he
lunnlesl signs ollhe times .
(0:30)Stereo.
al 111e Jake ltld tile
F - Evldenctl arl... lhel
may clear a convicted
murdlrar's name. (R) Stereo.

a

BARNEY

.

OROIR81

tnd .,._d_; IIIIIMr

&amp;Ja~. ~~=iComectJ

~=E: The Paffact llrida

CAUYOU.
NO EXPEIIIINCI NECESSARY.
2732A

M.D. Vinnie joins the
Howaara on a lstlllr·son

a NaiiMia Now Stereo.

-'"
. - ......,.·-255PH0111

a
(J)• Doogla HnMr,

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

Spot
the singleton spot

ACROSS

Stereo.

- · M,oocr
tnlltl,'
bolh- ooind,'
'

=·.c;.
24ft,

112

1;1

loolbell
poolSlt'lt.
- ·Stereo.
troubltl
lor Jeff and
111g111 eo.t eu11
Illes to talk his vtalting
molher Into retiring. (R)

==-..=-...~~
;;:lt::;•::•:::ttor;;:::I:=PII;·=~=:::

Cnolot Air -

Threat Wlthoul Enemlea,
wa..- Ware, On tile Border,
On a Clelr Dey ancl Encl
Game UH compuler gr'lphlct
to aiUdy environmental
trwtdl. (1:00)
1:30 rn Clle Goo•~• Plllll
Jllon'a mother's marriage
appalll'lto be hladad lor

~ar~RJ£., Mill A

"''!

1173 • • . Otrnptr,
bolh, tlr -.10M71-'1111. 1
1171 Colchmon mini motor;

SL'IVIces

dlonogo to hnt tnd, fido. llor·
nlngol04-I'JI.aiM•.

,_,..
Unk Fa-.
Rtll.ntlol,Cltoln
Comnlllclol,
ln-rial, , _ Ettl-1 eo... 1 "!It~

~

48714

Hltthiond Ilea Tlfo tN2 Iuick CtniUIY Uml..... 4
rtor: . .lo, l-ll2 yro. ota." mo. - · -.11,200. 3IIM7Wt22.
114-2111-1111.
1112 Ford 1 - Station
A1CC -

WIH do Oftlct or houao IINni"l
onytlma. Coli 11(-1112-:1142 or
114-1'12-2437.
.

Southtulttn Probation TrutAfttrntllvo (SEPTAl can.
... 7 w. ~lnt Dr. Ntt-

-vtllt,

79

AN•. IM 441 1401:

pafgn. wa ,.... to ftnd now ,__nda thot you d o - .

:=.=.ot 1nc10:.,uo~lt

IAl e£T fi2Si Sl-lOT {rr ft4L

Will Do Gononl Houea Claon-

lng. fUQ ,.., Hour, Qolllpolla

Wlntlll To luy: Junl&lt; Auloo
wMh or motoro. can
LMty UYOIJ. 114 311 1303.

eo-tiona.
- II
Pooltlon, Att.no lttid.
You
Con Do I, Sand U. A Raoumo
.And Covw latlar. Plannid
Pt-hood Of - - Ohio,
'wontlll To Buy: 9tandlng Tl"" 311
Richland Avonjot, Alhont,
bor Top Pri- Paid For WilKo
Oiii a Aoh. cau oftor 7p.m. 114- Olllo 41101~ ATTN: Koy Atklno.

u'l:: (Al (2:00)

all Cetlbrlllat Ollalllll "XI

toeiltH • Nltdod For OUr
t4ouH Y&lt;Mh Crloil cantor, To
Provldo Direct
Cano For
Chlldnn In Cri- And Shll Sul*'lllan F• llaft. ,....
~

all A Tlnia to Cent (0:30)
~·MOVIE: Petfecl

A• ·-cua: 111 Stereo.

Pooltiona Ava!.-: Cllnlctl .U.

-..lalo

Clle The wone~ar v....

Ftoll Former British Prime
Minister Margaret Thall:her.

Two YMro Col'- Coolrio Work
WHh Conc-.lion In Soolal

• Rioll Pao--~.
• ·fuR lillie IUCI-, ~~
•uatlan ..-.. '-lean 11 d'
lo,
-

ca..

Su....,loor • Will

Management Tum W=
WRh Ematlonafty Olat
Population In A ThrH COunty
Anoa. Will Be Roqulrod To
Provldo 8omt Dlnoct Bervlea.
Minimum llc-uro Roqulrod Ia
LPC. Pnolor An LPCC Or USW.
Stlooy Negollablo. IIIII A-To
SOndro
llcFartand,
- • n d ()anlaro, Inc. 412 Yinton Pike~GtlllpoUa, Olllo Ul31.
EOEIAA omptoyor. .

Tra~;

Public Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

8

tAQJ 7 65
+At81

Kevin womes lboul his
relationahlp wllh Winnie. (R)
5101'10. Q
.
(!) Cll Tilklna Willi Dav1t1

tor lntiiMtw
· -E.O.E.
-·
lllnorltlo1
.........loiPflly
Provlclo SupotVIIlon For

·•lo

Mystwtlo A convicted
murderer of 1o1M' women Is
· sought; arrest ollwo
arwnlsta. Stereo. C
~ MOVIE: Hondo (2:00)

rn

EAST
+J 2
.QII
tKI032
+Q 10 53

SOUTH
+KQ

7:31 (I) 1011 NawMrt

elder ... gr t'nfN, ..,.,
on ,..,. of . _ - . .
Coil Coral Kanowllald, AN DON
Avoliabla:

+7

1:00 We GJ Un1olvad

-

Potltion
lllnlfiOr

.KJ8 2

(L)

Pro•- ••,.,- w• con-

Oland Yltd lalo, HOI Uncotn
Aw, - J , I:OOIIU 4:00.
Yltd 8alo. Thun I Fri, Juna 27
and 21. s...,. lomlliM .., _

ALDER

OC-'Ira

tlllft caN peelwMd.

&amp; VlclnHy .

...

+Al0986513

Ill Malar I e11g111 BaHIMII

Poo.,.oy Nonlnt and Rohab
Ylnl Stlo: , _ 21th, 2llliL Up- Conttr hlo lnllr.eo!lltt - l n t
~:u:•llflll· lalw I AcluH lor part-tlmo lPM or liN.
1 Twlft llecf'\ Mltc, 1-J.
In long-

Pt. Plluant

WEST

PHILLIP

a a. a 11ar Sttreo.

wttr

Nr

NORTH
+7
••\975 3
+981
+KJ 62

Wild

(J)

~

75 Boats &amp; Motors' ;-l
lor Sale . :,

I

rn a• E_...._..
1111 Whael of , _ Q
illle Johnny l ...on 1M

ool-

~Y filling In the missing words
you develop f rom step No. 3 below.

· &amp;RIDGE

Tonlllht Stereo. Q
Mama'a Faintly

"'Col
Re
"7!"'lh4-24W71111.
"·cII AvallaW..
llodnoJ Alllhlfla.
-

Complete tho chuckle quoted

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARE S

(J).

In 11y -

G

Leeway- Shirt - Hence - Relish - SWEATERS .
On a drive through the couolry we encountered 8
flock of sheep. I'm a IQOd hound 80 I saw lamb chops.
My friend is a clothes horse 80 she saw SWEATERS.·

IIJl lt:lfiDniW and Mre. King
7:05 (I) The Jetf.aona
7:30 aJ~~IDPIICI,I Q

lloglllorotion - - •·

I I

15

SCIAM-lm ANSWERS

lll~l.=-=1;1

Plu.. Call Todiy. 114-441-431711

~

- UNSCRAMBLE A&amp;OVE LETTERS
'1111'
TO GET ANSWER
.

(lj Andy Oriffllh

Rtlroln
Nowillsauthaaatorn
lutln- ~logo, Stlllna VIII~

party she moaned, "Middle
o age is when you wish you
could hava 80me of the naps
you refused to take -~ a ... _.

L -.L...-.L....J.L.....I.L.....L.-1

1:31 (I) Andy Orttll1ll
'
7:00
0 Whael 01 F . -

Business
Training

After my lrietids birthday

_M_l_A
_S_Y_...,I

r,- 1

fllrMm of ,........

Ill Up Ctaeit

Llc•••d A I H ApnliNeeMII

~:'"I

I ·I

1

~

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

B

I I .I

1:05 (I) lawllcliecl
1:30W. ONICNawaQ

l»l,;WilAT MEMORIES!

Loat&amp; Found

AJ

Y 0 D E C

•~· THERE'STHE 'I'ELLOW ONE ...
AND TJ.IERE'S TI-lE RED ONE !

1-ti4-1'12.z470.

6

0

Roorronoo Ionero of tha
lour o&lt;rambl..:l - d• below to form lour ~ mplt words.

tzaOO OIO.IM"MKIIM.
1110

~·· ·

_..;__ _ _;;;....;: WitH loy ClAY I . POuAN - ·

1t82Forlllllnalr. . . . .. Nice.

,_

f(]OJND: Fomalo . . _ on Un-

Television
Viewing

1171 Food ~ J02 V-1,
tt,JOO 010, . . . . .:Itt..
.
1ta2 DodaO Ram D-10, 4 'a 4

~fiiMiic WMhlnQ JMChine tor

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�Page-1

s.-:..The Dally Sentinel

WeclnttifiY, June 28, 1181

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, OhiO

Columbia Gas System Inc., freezes employees' wages
Wll.MINGTON, Del. (AP) Columbia Gas SySiem Inc. has tar· geted employ~ wages in a further
effon to accumulale cash.
The nalion'slargest gas supplier
announced Tuesday it was frtezing
wages for some workers while cutting others up to 10 percent. The
move is e~&lt;pected 10 save the company about $6 million through the
year.

These were no immedia!e plans

Columbia Gas closed on the
New York Stock E~&lt;change at
$18.12 1/2, up Sl rrom Monday's
closing.
Columbia, one of the nation's
largest suppliers of natural gas,
announced last week it could be
forced into bankruptcy because its
contracts with natural gas suppliers
require excessively high prices for
gas.

to tap into the company's employee

bene~ts package to find more cash,

he S81d.
About.B,OO? non-union employ·
ees' salaries will be affec~ About
3,000 employees are umon mem·
bers and Chaddoc:k said the ~mpany plans negottallons with the
groups. He ~ould not ~ay what
those negottations would mvolve"

The company cited plunging gas ·
prices due to a warm winter and a
glut of supplies for the high costs.
Natural ps is selling on the SPOt
market for $1.30 pet 1,000 cubic
feet, while Columbia's subsidiary,
Columbia Transmission Corp., is
paying up"? $6.70. . . . .
Columbta Transmtsston IS the
C?~pany's major pipeline sub&amp;diary.

Columbia Gas said it could 1o1e
$1 billion o- the ne&gt;&lt;t 10 years if
it can't buy out the conlniCII IIIII if
banlcs refuse 10 restructure its aedit
Jines.
·
Columbia officials began meet·
ing wilh bankers last week to reestablish the company's ,credit.
Chaddock said a fonnal Jliopooal is
e~&lt;pected to be made to the banks
this week, but he did not know

when it was • twtn!ed '
Columbia rl 1 a $10 million
bond payment Monday aad it
misled 1 SIS milljoo paymellllast
Thursday. Chaddock laid both
were sbon·leml loananill&amp;ements.
He would Dill say wby the PlY·
meots wc:re mired
.
He said
payment _IS due
July 8, .bul he declined to disclose
the anount
1

.mw

The move
lastpayment
week's ·· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
suspension
of follows
a dividend
for the second quarter. The suspension is expected to save about
•••••
'
$29.3 . million,
Columbia
spokesman H. William ChaddQCk
said.
.
"The system is ·not insolvent.
What lhe.system has is a cash-flow
problem and that is what we are
attempting to deal with," Chad-·
dock said.
Beginning July 1, hourly worker
salaries will be frozen, while nonhourly employees will see cuts of S
percent to 10 percent. Those with
higher salaries will take the bigger
cuts, Chaddock said.

BIG BEND

Natural Gas
.
Prices have plunged because of

.

,-------~---------~------------------------1

the warm winter and a supply glut.

l

Price per 1,000 cubic fest

iii;;;;;;;;,.,_,.~-==""

FOODLAND MEDIUM

I

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, '

RED &amp; WHITE

SEEDLESS
GRAPES

1.40

JUICY

FRESH

CALIFORNIA
STRAWBERRIES

•

Grade A Dozen Eggs

WESTERN
CANTALOUPES
GOOD THIU SAT.,
JUNE 29, 1991
UMit Ono FREE with Coupon and $10.00 loltlltlan.. PM·-

1.30

'I

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I

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• Weekly

• price for

•current
t.20 • delivery
As raded
· on lh9 II.Y.

I .

'
I

Pick 3:075
Pick4: 6176
. Cards : 4-H, 5·C
A·D; J.S

Super Lotto:
6-10-24-30-39-40

PageS ·

Health plan
proposed for
uninsured
Ohio residents

•
Val 42, No. i1
Copyrighted 1181

~ Secllono 12 Pageo 25 oen1o
A MulllmOdla Inc. Newopaper

lndus.trial
revenue .bonds
refinanced

Voters
should
decide:
Democrats

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
By BRIAN J, REED
group of Senate Democrats wants
Seatinel News Staff
Ohio's VOieiS 10 consider a consti·
Refinancing of industrial rev·
tutional amendment requiring the
enue bonds for the Kroger Compaelection of the Sl8le Boad of Edu·
ny was approved at Wednesdar's
cation by congressional district
. regular meeting of the Metgs
Sen. Robert Netde, D·Barber·
County Commissioners.
ton, and others said Wednesday
Abbou Thayer, a bond atrorney
thst they hop: not only to lock in
representing the company, present·
!he present system but to preclude
.ed the proposaliO offJCials, includpassage of Gov. George
ing the commissioners, Prosecutin,g
Voi!lovich•s proposal for the gov·
Attorney Steven L. SIOI')' and Audiernor to appoml the members.
tor William R. Wickline.
Nettle said.at a news conference
According to Thayer, the bonds,
he bas prepared a constitutional
originllly totalling $2.8 million, are
amendmeut that, if adopted by !he
being refunded to obtain a signifi·
Legislature and the state's vocers,
cantly
lower rate of interest for
will orotect the present system
Kroger.
.
from f'whims" in the future.
The
bonds
were
issued
in
1981
The Legislature is considering
to finance ihe addition onto the
Voinovich's plan to let him appoint
Kroger
srore on East Main·Street in
a nine-member boardiO replace lhe
Pomeroy.
Central 1htst acted as the
present panel, which consists of
trustee
for
the 1981 bonds, IIIII Sw
one member from each of Ohio's
ways
tO
die
loll
and mukbed areas to eut down
,
PROJECT
COMPLETED
•
A
joint
project
Bank
will
act
as trustee for the new
21 congressional districts.
on unslpdy weeds. Pictured are Jim Alldenon,
between
tbe
I'Gmeroy
Merchants
Association
bonds.
Voinovich contends lhe board is
Bruce aad ADI!Ie Swift, Bnce Teaford, l;ea Utt
and tbe Lioas Club Is 110w complete. Tbe two
In other business, the commis;
unwieldy IIIII is not accountable to
and
Dianna Lawson. Many otbers bave also
groilps have worked darlna die past few weeks
sioners approved a bid from
tbe governor, although he most
donated tbelr dme to complete die project. ·
to deftlop die IIJ'ell between MaiD Street and the
Asphalt Materials, Inc. for the pur·
often gets blamed for lhe shortcomparklna lots. Tbe area now features brii:k walk·
chase or bituminous materials for
ings of Obio's education system.
lhe month of July for use in the
His bill has stirred opposition,
mostly from education professioncounty's road projects.
·
.
.
.
Meigs County Engineer Philip
als who have shown up by the hunRoberts
attended the meeling an!l
dreds ·at Senate and House hear·
.I
e
announced
that 111e road program
ings. Their major point of con·
tention II that Ohioans would be
deprived of the right to vote for
Jar meeting ne&gt;&lt;t week.
those who 1e1 educatiOn policy.
l'lln:hue o( a !JeW II'IICtor for the
Nettle said lhe opposition has
prompted Sen. Eugene Watts, RBy ROBERT E. MILLER .
the staie's electric utilities burn Public Utilities Comrlttee. Chair· department that was dilcussed last
Columbus, .wbo is sponsoring the
Aaocllted Presa Writer
Ohio's high-sulfur coal and still man Frank Sawyer, D-Mansfield, week continues to pend while
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) comply with the federal Clean Air said a Friday vote is pouible bul model availability is investl41ted.
governor's bill, 10 rewrite his pro- '
posa1 so that voters would ralify the The House may vote this week, Acl
th!lt it could be delayed by other. Last week, Robens IIIII Supennten·
'Itwasrecommendedforpassage matters, such as a new state budfet ·dent Ted Warner presented infor·
governor's appointments from, 11 . possibly Friday, on a previously
designllteddistricts.
sidetracked bill designed to help 13·2 Wednesday by the House that faces a Sunday rldnighl dead- mation about models from Case
· International and Massey·Fergu·
line.
Sawyer's committee acted after son, although no decision was
five Republicans, who earlier withheld their support, voted with eight
majority Democrats to give the
,pi'OJ)OS81 bipartisan bllcking.
Speaker Vem'Riffe, D-WheelBy CHARLENE HOEFLICH . Ohio United Methodist Church church for the night prepare a hot ersburg, had demanded GOP sup. ·
supper.
·
Conference.
Seau.el News Staff
port for the bill, which could make
Youth
from
all
over
the
state"But
it
is
l)lOre
than
a
bicycle
It was apparent that they were
There may be a new twist 10 the
11
appear the Legislature - and not
hot and tired, but having a good trip," e~&lt;plains Meyer, "it's a time Lima, Columbus, Zanesville, Tole- Congress - forced compliance tie of votes in the Mason Municipal
do, Columbus, even. Indiana-are
time - lhose bicyclists that rode into for leanung." ·
costs that Ohio's electricity cus- Election for the office of mayor.
in this year's bicycle camp.
"God
in
Out
Midst"
is
the
theme
town Wednesday afternoon.
Following a recount Thesday evenFor Rev. Meyer and many of the tomers will wind up paying.
It was day five on the road of a of the four-time-a-day study sesing,
!he vote tally was tied at 131
said.
he
wants
assurances
Riffe
300 mile tnp for the 19 teenage sions which take place. At break· olher counselors, this is not a fll'St- of 20 Republican votes to bring the votes for each George NicholS, and
boys and girls and lheir 11 coon- fast, lunch, supper and before bed- time experience. Several have been bill to the House floor.
write-in candidate Richard Ohlintime the teenagers divide into on the trips five or sill times before,
scion.
ger.
Assistatlt
Minority
Leader
Their destination here was the groups for a study time guided by traveling through Michigan, Ken- David Johnson, R·CaniOn, said he
Both candidates had I0 days
tucky, Canada, New York, the
Pomeroy United Methotlist Church one of the counselors.
from
the recount to file for an elecdoes
not
know
how
many
of
the
38
Amish Country, and the Hocking
where they unloaded their sleeping
tion
contest,
which means the 10wn
House Republic~ms w'ill vote for
The color of the pennants which Hills.'
gear, carried in their fond and ~­
council
will
once again consider
Since they keep coming back the bill.
pared to enjoy an "overnight in are attached to their bicycles
the
ballots
in the election.
"We're having a caucus
denote which study group each for more, it's apparent that they
the air conditioned church.
However,
I
0
days
£rom the recount
(today)," he said.
.
Starting out fmm Portsmouth bicyclist attends. It also serves as a enjoy the trips and thst they count
will
pu't
the
date
a1
July S, four days
One or several last-minute
Saturday morning, th.e bicyclists way for counselors and other bicy· wonhwhile the time spent in Chris- amendments adopted by the com- after the new council takes office.
went to Greenup, Ky., then on to clists to keep track of each other on tian fellowship and teaChing.
only one council member
· The hot, humid days, the hard mittee, to help secure GOP support, Since
Huntington, Hurricane, and Point the road as well as' for chore
was
re-elected,
Charles Kitchen, it
requires utilities to list their clean·
Pleasant, spending the nights in assignments, lilce preparing the uphill pedaling, the occasional sick air
is
not
lcnQwn
how
the new council
compliance costs on monthly
btcyclist. lhe days away from their
Methodist Churches alonJ lhe way. meals and cleanup.
members will feel about the apAs for meals, tile groop usually· families-nothing seems to dis- bills and say that they resulted from proximate 25 ballots thst were
The bicycle trip or camp" as
federal
action.
Director Dennis Meyer, pastor of enjoys a light breakfast befcxe tak· cowage the counselors who sign on
Rep. Louis Blessing Jr., R- questioned during the recount
the Sharon Park Church in Lima ing off, buys l~h along the way, year after year for yet anomer bicy- Cincinnati, who refused to suppon
In !he event of the mayor's abcalls it. is Sl)Onsored by the West and then after getting settled in a cle camp.
the bill earlier, added thst and sev- sence, the recorder normally steps
eral other amendments which most- up to fill the position. In the event
ly were clarifying in nature. He lhat a mayor is not determmed by
said his chief complaint had been July I when the·new administration
that 'Democrats were rushin$ the lalces office, it is assumed that Lois
proposal and denying Republicans Test, town recorder who was
recently elected as a write-in, will
a chance ~ study or change iL
lalce the mayor's position until an
outcome can be determined.

H ou.se rea d y t 0 .vo· t e on•
et·ean .a ir comp11.ance b1·1I &gt; - =.:~~:~::':.!~::.

.Nineteen bikers take breather in
Pomeroy United·Methodist Church

ASSORTED VARIETIES

GLENDALE

SOFT DRINKS 2
•CHEETOS •DORITOS •FRITOS

FRITO LAY'S

$

CANNISTER
SNACKS

29

CAN

------------------· .,

'

·--------------·-- ---,
I

I

~~~.~~~~~
DIAPERS
i ~

~ fsN~NG~•u i

I FRUIT

~J

,,

------~-~-------&lt;·---

SPRINGDALE .

FRUIT
DRINK

32-45

$

COUNT

PEPSI- !

99
By One, Get One

FRE

COLA
1.24 PACK I

99
BICYCLISTS COME TO TOWN • It's
called I '111cJde _,.. ., tile Weat o.Jo Ualt··
eel Medlodllt Cblll'dl ftidt au8111y .,...... a
trip for tile youtll of die clludt. Wedaeld17
, ~ t1111 aroap • rived Ia .._.,, Tiley

.,_roy

spat tbe •Jald at tlae
Ullltad Mitllodlit
ClllltCb beiOre 1bcmDa oft tb111801111q lor GJil.

Upolil. Before "dtecklng Into" tbe cburcll dley
polld lor tills pletnre.

made as to which uactor would be

purchased.
The new tractor wi!l replace a·
Massey-Ferguson uactor which has
been e~&lt;periencing transmission
problems this season.
The commissioners appropriated
the last·half funds for the dog and
kennel funds yesterday. $3,164.63
was appropriated to the supplies
account, $2,000 to the claims
account and $3,000 10 the travel
account.
A conii'IICt for use of a Commu·
nity Corrections grant f91' I 9911992 was Hecuted by the commissioners upon lhe approval of the
grant's administrator, Teresa
Tyson-Drummer.
In other business, the commissioners:
.
• passed a resolution commit·
·ting the county's marriage license
fees to th~ operation of Serenity
House, a multt..county facility serv.
ing abused women;
• execured a lease between the
Middleport HousinJ Authority and
the board of commiSSioners for use
of property upon which a temporary Depanment of Human Ser·
vices building is located;
. • authorized the clerk to advertise the JllllllOSeil. 1992 county bod-

ge1 authorized advertisement for
bids for a new ballOI counting and
voter registration system for the
Meigs County BOard of Elections.
Present, in addition to Robens
and Warner, were Commissioners
. David Koblentz, Richard Jones and
~ning Roush, Clerk Mary HobStetter and David Spencer of the
county garage.

Mason election·may
have a new twist

Area road closures
are announced

I
I

.

Clear tonight. Low in
mid 60s. Friday, high
near90.

749802

Your Locally Owned,
Low-Priced
Supermarket!!

ODLAND

$1 .50

Ohio Lottery

Reds pull ·
closer to LA
after win

Motorists traveling through
Southeastern Ohio may fmd some
delays during the July 4 weekend,
according to ODOT District 10
Director John Dowler.
"Where there's growth and
improvement in our highway system, unfortunately, there's also
delays. Most of tbe m~ routes in
our nine-county district will have
all lanes open to traffic. The Dis·
trict 10 cl01ures are mainly on secondary routes," Do\yler wd.
The closures include the following rouii!S: ·
ATHENS COUNTY: U.S.
Route 33, 2.S miles 10utheast of
Athens. Derour II U.S. SO to State
Route 681, approllimately 24
miles; State Route 68S, outside of
Jacksonville. Detour II State Route
78 to U.S. Route 33 to State Route
13, approximalely 17 miles.
Coatillued on page 3

James

Casey,

attorney

for

Nichols. reponed Wednesday afternoon there were several questions
regarding the validity of cenain
ballots during the recount. He
stated approximately two-thirds 10
three-founhs of the ballots had
been counted Thesday evening,
when the council took a recess. At
thst time, Nichols was ahead by
seven votes. There were also only
four of the five council members in
attendance, with present Mayor
Agnes Roush absent.
.
Casey said during the recess;
Councilman Frank Zuspan went
into a separate room and aJll&gt;arently
called town auemey Ron Stein.
Casey added when he attempted to
see what was going on, the door
was slammed in his face. Nichols'
auomey said since he was "1101
privy" ·to what was said 10 whom
he assumed was Ron Stein on the
phone, he did not actually know
what went on, but when Zuspan
came back out, he said the recount
had been done wrong and they
were going 10 be recouniCd a
second time. During the second'
recount, two council membe11
swiu:hed their decisions on eight
ballots, with a council member who
came in late doing the same. This
tied the tally.

---Local briefs----Four more a"aigned on charges
Four more defendants were arrested and arraigned on Wednesday afternoon in Meigs County Common Pleas Court on drug
charges, lhe result of what is being desCribed as Meigs County's
largest drug bust
Arrested and arraigned yesterday were: Larry Rider, Rutland,
charged with traffiCkin~marijiiiiUI; Riclt Ables, Racine,lrafficlt·
ing in marijuana: John
, Middleport, traff'Jcltin$ in marijiiiiUI;
Greg Laudermilt. Pon"'tut, two counts of trafficlting m marijuana.
All four defendants entered p1eu of innocentiO the charles, and
were found indigent They were referred to the office of Meigs
County Public Defender Charles H. Knight.
A total of 27 Meigs Countians baw "been arrested on drug-related charges since Tuesday, the day lher the Meigs County Orand
Jury returned 63 drug-related ct.:'~ against 41 defendants.
Charges against the defendants inc!
lrlffitting in marijuana
and cocaine, tratlicking in prea:ription rnedicalions and LSI) and
Contlaued on p~p 3

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