<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11057" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11057?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T11:34:05+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42023">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c1ffccdcbf77aa7f812f987b3859fb92.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e23ac08d9d523218e0e915d3fa3af2f6</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="34888">
                  <text>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

d
, '

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

I
I

L--------------------------'-~------------~-..!

• 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

�Thursday, June 21, 1991

Commentary
Th~

Daily Sentinel
lll Couri Street

Pomeroy, Ohio ·
DEVOTED TO T HE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

·~TIMEDIA.INC.
f,tOBERT L. WJNGE'M'
Publlalier

CRARU::NE ROEn.JCH
. Geiler.. Manaser

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assls~t

Publlaber/Coatroller

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspa()e{ Publishers ,Association. ·
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subj!!CI to editing and must be signed with
name, address and te.lephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues , not personalities.

·

Environmental efforts center
on recycling: Ruckelshaus

1
I

By LISA CORNWELL
Associated Press Writer

Indians fear fouling of lands by gold min~s
.

WASHI.NGTON ·- Indian• at Council has aaked Interior Secre. the Fort Belknap Reservation in tary Manuel Lujan to forbid such
remore ·norlhrrn Montana are cele- exploration.
brating the renewal of life on The clash between man, nature
this week with an annual Sun and wildemess iD this isolated slab
Dance while miners next door of Montana is playing out at sires
sprinkle the earth with cyanide and throughout tile WesL In this modrend the air with blasts .of dyna- em-day gold rush, more than twice
mire.
· ·
,
.as much gold was mined last year
Miroing Operations have existed in the United States than was
ne~t door to the reservation ever mined dllring tile )icak of the orlgisince gold was discovered in the nal California rush in 1852."
Little Rocky Mountains about a
Minen are not only cutling a
century ago. But the Indians' reluc- swatch through scenic wilderness,
tant acceptance of their mining but are often ~the land for
~eighb.xs has turned to suspicion pocket change.
· heightened .
m recent ymrs. They 11ow fear tile public awareness about willlemess
expanding mine will ruin their · preservation, hard-rock lllinln fiCO
environment and poison lheir pco- DO stiffrr,repllliona or ovcnilht
pie.
.
than they did a century ago. the
Fedrral authorities have i~ powerful mining lobby has preconcerns about the plans by the served laws that allow .m inm 10
~an.~ c~~; to expand its purchase mineral rights on federal
acuve mmmg operauons to encom- w.cJs fer as liUle as $2.50 an acre.
pass JI!Ore than 1,~00 acres. The The U.S. governiJ!ent fails . to
Canadian-based fum also wants charge even royalties for exploita·
a~proval to explore for valuable lion of land that is the heritage of
mmerals on 25,000 more acres of all Americans. ~_st miners are
the Liule. Rockies. The _Fort ~- flocking to this
nap Indtan Commumty Tnbal
One of those fllliiS is Pegasns

~VELAND - William D. Ruckelshaus, fllrliH'r director of the U.S.
EnVIIOnmental Protection Agency, says efforts to solve the nation •s wasre
crisis are cenrering more and more on recycling.
·
.
"Recyclin$ has increased dramatically in the ~t two years " said
Ruckelshaus, m an address 10 the City Club on Friday. •The n~ber of
curbside recycling programs has gone from 1,000 nationwide in 1988 to
nearly 3,000 today, and the chsnges are revolutionizing my industry...
Ruckelshaus said bis company, a majOJ;" wasre dispoilal corporation
aims to be the nation's premier recycler. Howevrr, he warned that Obio
~ other stares mus1 not look at recycling as ju5lthe newest wasre-hall41iog panacea
.
.
· ''Recycling is porenlially a cornmereial and engineering revolutiqn and
we must go mto tt wtth our eyes open and focus on the economics of a
vast range of materials,'' said Ruckelshaus.
Forty-eight stares have enactediOIIIC type of recycling legislation and
no ~e should be surprised i! a mandatory rec~g law now before the
Oh10 legtslatore passes, s81d Ruckelshaus, cbief executive officer of
Brown-Ferris Industries.
·
· Wbile ~overnment can and should~ recycling along, lhe process
cannot be 'bludgeoned into bei~ by · SIJ!b!ICS dull do not take technology and nuutecs into account. ' said Ruckelshaus.
·
Despire an increasing reliance on recycling and overall wasre reduction, Ruckelshaus said waste disposal will always be.a JXOblern.
While he agteed that many existing landfills need to be Closed; he said
tiler, are 1101 being reDiaced rapidly enough.
,
.
. · .'01!f capacity shortfall is the ~51!~ of J!OiiUcal, psycholbgical and
1ilS111Utional forces that have lnade 11 1111:reBS11lgly difficult to locale and
open sites for waste facilities,'' said Ruckelshaus.
• That problem in tum has increased the exporllltion of wasre from 'one
state to another, and Ohio and other recipients of lh81 waste understandably are trying to limit those imports, said Ruckelshaus. He said the controversy will cauinue to grow until tile exporting stales are encouraged to
lJnd landfill sires within tlleir own boundaries.
. ··Another so1woo to 111e sbortfall capKity is to speed the pocess llr
which new sites lire created and permiaed. without ignoring environmen~ safeguards. \ ~ said Rucelshaus.
: . According ro Ruckelshaus, there are enough places in the country that
will accept waste disposal sites if the waste management industry
~es them in the right way and tries to form open and honest partnerships wilh tbe local governments.
1
; "We are creating a wasre system the way we successfully crested a
S)'stem of manufacturing, lllnsportation and communication, all of which
Was America discovered?
are a way of life now. If this young system is allowed to respond to the
Maybe
we'II get an answer at the
rOarket signals sufficiently, it will flourish," RuckeiShaus said.
·
1992
World's
Fair in Seville.
•
•
Tbe
question
is heating up.
.
Christopher Columbus is becoming
an empty vessel, .fillablc-upable as
a met~~phor for all things, both fine
•
and evil.
' .
.
By The Alloclatejl Press
"Yes," say the Spaniards; of
• "fooday IS Thursday, June TT, the 178th day of 1991. There are 187 clays · course America was discovered.
1 m the,~· .
. .
The title page of the guide 10 the
. ·: Today s Higblightm ~:
.
.
Seville Expo says, "In 1992, five
. • On June 27, 19SO,_President. Truman ordered the Air Force and Navr. hundred years will have passed
Into the K~ conflict followmg a call from the U.N. Security Council since the discovery of America.' •
f~ mem~ ~ons 10 help Soulh Korea repel an invasion from the North.
Discovered. By Columbus. Who
:· On this date.
.
.
was funded by the Spanish crown.
-: In 1844, Mormon leader Joseph Smuh was killed by a mob in And who did a grand thing by fmd~ IlL
.
.
ing the New World.
.
7, New York and BoSion were linked~ relegraph WllCS:
"No,' • say assorted provoca·
.• ln. 1880, au~-lecturer He!en Keller, who lived most of her life with· reurs, always looting for new ways
~Sight or bearing, was born m Tuscumbia, Ala..
•
to demonize the American experi•. In 1942, the FBI 8IIIIOUIICCd tile~ of Cight Nw saboteurs who ence; Columbus dido 't discover
'l1id been put ashore from a submarine on New York's Long Island.
anything.
,; In 19S7, more tlum 500 ~were killed wben Hurricane "Audrey"
The jargonistas of the Social
slammed through coa."taa Looua- and Tcus.
Studies Syllabus Review Commit: In 1969, the American homosellll!ll·rigbts movement was born as tee of New York State broke into
· pmons at _the SlllOeWall inl!· a gay~ m New York's Greenwich Village, Enlllish to politely maintain that
c~ed wtth/:,lice IIUel!lpang to raid the establishment
"to Native Americans, the Western
WIn 1973, orm~ WbiiC House cc;-msel John W. Dean told the Senate Hemisphere is not 'the New
.ater~ Conurutree about the eXJSICnce of an ·~enemies list" kept by World. It was the newly arriving
~White H~.
..
·
Europeans following Christopher
: In 1977, lll a 5~ .~StOll, tile U.S. Su~e Court struck down state Columbus who were new ... "
~ws and bar 8SSOCI8bon rules that bad _prohibited lawyers from advertisLess politely, it is said by others
i4g the fees they chat'ge for IOUbnC semces.
lh81 Columbus, his white male pals,
•
and their European successors,
;
were rats who stormed a place
•i
1
already inhabiled by politically and

'

II
!

l

I

.

arrested.

Today in history
J¥

;:

8

:

erry s

W ld
or

.•••
•

•

•

. . .•
.
. .. ...

•

•

' •
•
!.

::

4

.

II :r• • ::

~

tl

· · \.

::

:: •• ••

•

,,·.~

~

..,.

... ,,,.

•

•

•

FALLOUT
.......

•'

,.

-

"'"'

··~:.··:~1.,
·,,..,~ •• • 1 ..~ 'll.uil

••

•

'

•
•

•

musical comedy; rap, fiddling,
break dancing. Not by accident,.
, American music is the world's
most lisrened-to. Accordingly, the
audiences should be large and from .
evrrywhere.
One American dome in Seville
will feature a dazzling . 70mm
movie, funded by Gelieial Motors.
The second dome should get right
to the heart of the matter. It will
likely deal with the founding
American political documents of
liberty, which have shaped the
American past and are now shaping
the global future.
·
Five hundred years after Columbus lande4, a healthy global culture
is aborning, both 'politically and
economically. That new l!lobal culture is largely American-inspired.
· In this sense, Columbus was
neither a discoverrr ncr a desll:oyer; he was a uniter. By linking the
Old World 10 the New World, he
crealed the conditions for the establishment of the United States,
whose presence is changing the
whole world.
, NEWSPAPER
(C)I991
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Wattenbrrg, a senior fellow
at the American Enterprise Institute, i3 author of "The First Univerilal Nation," published by The
Free Press.

1787 WaS·a Very Special year_B_y_Sa_ra_h_O_ve_rstr._e_et

•
•

•

tlev-

wasanewworldandanewchance.
Perhaps the best way w handle
the question is offered by the U.S.
government:· •'No comment. ' '
Thus, the wQrd "discovery" is not
in the vocabularr of Frederick
Bush, U.S. Commt5Sioner General
for Seville. He artfully speaks only
of "the historic voyages" of
Columbus.
In the strange way that Washington often stumbles backward
into sound policy, the American
exhibit in Seville may end up celebrating just the right things.
The original plan, prepared by
the U.S. Information Agency, featured three new buildings. But a
powerful conJ:ssman, Neal
Smith, 0-Iowa, · 'tlite it. Fund-.
ing was delayed, and cut. Gone
were two of th4; buildings. (The
"Nina" and the "Pinta"?)
America, howevrr, is 1101 about
architectore. Two geodesic domes
that had housed earlier American
exhibits are being put back into service. A few Amencan corporations
have pitched in as sponsors. Fred
Bush IS waving his tin cup for more
suppon.
. In one spOtlight will be American live entertainment: professional, semi-professional and community poups. Mostly it will be music
Ame,rican-style: jazz, rock, country-western, gospel ,' bluegrass,

';...ll'"Cl•
-:.._ \: .

.n« .-,. 'I'\.'"""

By the time you read this, we
may have already had oW' yearly
neighborhood Fourth of July .(or
close enough to count) barbecue
and my lifelong friend Roy
Vahldick Jr. will have done something to hun himself.
·
That's the other surety of Hfe we
neighbon have learned to count on.
Just IS we know July 4 will roll
around again and one weekend
close to it we'D be out smoking a
pig in one of the fields along the
road where Roy llld I grew up, Roy
will be lakon to the emergency
room (or need to and refuse to SO)
before the night's over. Palt
epioodes have included somersaulting off the Liule Sac Rlvrr bidge
when a firecrackrr went off in his
hanll. falling off the sreps of 111 oldsubway-car-turned-fireworks-stand
and breaking bis antle pre-party,
and setting his handlebar moustache on iue cooting the famous
Vahldick fried potatoes on his
homemade bulk potato fryer and
then (and I'm 1101 mating Ibis up)
pi~ bis whole head into a bar- .

college, althoUgh tiier would have
loved a 11ood educauon. Both our
fathm tried to 110 10 college but
couldn't Mine fmally gave up uyina to support a family and pay fer
his schooling during the Depression,llld tbe coUese money Roy's
father had saved from boyhood
yean of naming a J1111er roure was
lost overnight when the banks
c:amaytheitconciJKiooofheaven: failed. Roy and I both went to colfreedom from politiclll tynllllly, arid lege. Our fathers made sure of it.
the MIIIQI 10 llllb CIIDUih 111011ey We ball haY~~ bad liiCft in the way
to keep their f-ili11 tree from of materills IIIII opponunity than
banpr. Neldler Roy nor I llad tbe our fatben, easier and elllier. How
advllii8Jel of thia country can )'OU not be influenced by being
)JretiCIIod 10 u. yet 111 ...,..w:•ation a beneficiary of that?
of tile miracle of what these poa~ reason Roy and I have.
immigrants achieved is IIOIIIOihing stayed' so cloae over the years iS
we've alway~ sharod.
our love or cynical polilical humor.
Maybe parenu don't need to His heroes are Mark Twain and
hammer home the virtues of a Will Rolen: mine's Malt Russell.
camtry when c:llildren hlw tile llv- Ro:y and I have had a lot of fun
inll bistmy 1euons Roy and I had. with politicians, but we've never
We were able 10 see lint-hand the 1011 our of awe at what they
increuing Jllllllllllily IIlii oppcwlil- aruble 10 do.
nity of ei:li Rix:sii ~e 11 1 ldon.
Bound (sometimes more sucNone of our fiiiJidplreou went to cCIIfully than others) by laws set
forth to protect our well-being and
rei of iced beer.
But these mishaps never spoil
anyone's fun, and especially not
Roy's. The Fourth of July is his big
holiday, as it is mine, and no silly ·
broken bone or chatted body part is
goin$ to ruin it for him. Roy, like
me, IS the scion of poor German
immigrlllts to whom two emezin,.
ly innocent pleasures made thu

Board OKs participation

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

Gold, the Canacthin parent firm of
Zortman Mining Co. In recent
years the mine has ranked in the
top 20 IIIOI!l productive gold mines my lime."
in the coumry. 1.- year it harvestPegasus spokesman Joh11 fitzed 109,700 ounces of gold and patrick told us that he questioned
652.000 ounces of silvrr.
JUSt how many Indians were
Like many gold mines, the Zort- opl'osed to the minin11, and he
mllll mine uses a cyanide solution claimed that the loudest noise the
to leach gold from ·heaps of ore~ Indians will bear from lhe mine is .
The earth is Slacked on a pad and tbe sound of llliCks baclcina up.
sprinkled with cyanide, which setOur associate Jim Lynch examdes to the .bOttom of the heap and ined stare and federal files on the
pulls the gold with it. Environmen- Zortman mine, as well as the comtal ha:tanll arise when the cyanide l'any's own reports. The record
seeps off the pad and into the earth. mcluiles unauthorized clearing of
The comp~~~~y, however, asserts lh81 the land, stacking ore 100 bigll on
the solution is safe and carefully the leacll pads. failing tQ f'ence off
handled. The Buroau of Land Man- toxic ponds and pads, and "parsisagemeill nods itS bead in. qree- ICDI problems" with .the amount of
ment.
cyanide draining into a nearby
Scott Haight, a geologist fer the gulch.
BLM, told us the·Zortman mine
The reservation has asked for a
bad.a fine environmental track grant from the Environmental Prolecord. "There's never been a seri- rection .Agenc;y so the Indians can
ous (cyanide) leak that I'm 'aware monitor their own water quality
of." We reminded him of the and don ' t have to trust anyone
55,000 gallons of cyanide that else's claims.
leaked out of the minin11 site in
BUSH'S HEALTH- President
1982. Haisbt,said that was "before Bush's thyroid problems have
caused concern around tile nation,
but it couldn't happen to a belter
penon. Bush has always been in
tune with bis body. He knows how
10 take care of it, and he responds
to its signals of distress. White
House sources tell us that Bush
normally drives himself 81 a fienet.
ic pace, but he knows when to stop
and doesli 't mind excusing himseff
from a social en~ent when his
body tells him 1l s time to go to
bed. He has always exercised vigorously and watched his health
cloaely. Now that he knows what
effect bis thyroid is having on his
body' he is not likely to push himself beyond what the doctcr or his
own body says is wise.
MINI-EDITORIAL - · The
chief cause of tile decline of Amrrica's businesses is the IIRied of corporate executives wlio have put
profits ahead of ethics. Many have
put: their own compensation abead"
of tile welfare of their companies.
They have made executive deci'
sions that fatten their own bank
accounts 81 tbe expense of tile companies they manage. Theyroulincly .
put today's profilll ahead of tomor· ·
row's products, and the logical
result of lh81 thinking is that lhrre
will be no more profits 10morrow.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicare,lnc.

environmentally correct natives.
The National Council of Churches ·
(surprise!) says 1492 was no discovery, but "an invasion and colonization ... with genocide, econom·
ic exploitation and a deep level of
institutional racism and moral
decadence." Thimks.
.
The Spanish Ambassador, Jaime
Ojeda, says Spaniards are gelling
ticked' off about the Columbusbashing. Spain, he notes, was
invaded by Rome, which then
astated Iberian civilization - but
no one cries for Iberia. (Many
Spaniards wonder .whether Chriscrunching is just another anti-Hispanic harangue.)
Ojeda is a descendant of Alonso
Ojeda, who sailed wilh Columbus.
He proudly says that 1492 was a
discovery and "a conquest." (But
how could something be ~uered
lh81 hadn't been previously disqovered?)
Who is right? Trash-America
revisionists have a point: The
hemisphere was populated before
Columbus; ~e was met by Carib
Indians. Various Native Americans
were indeed cruellv treated.
But Spaniards, and most Ameri·
cans, are also correct; something
great happened because of Columbus. For Westernen, who would
ultimalely shape, and improve, the
entire post-Columbian world, it

.
Coatinuecl from page 1
,sale of a counterleit corurolled substance.
. All ~ eight of the defendants have been rdeased on bood, and
Jury trial dares for thoae arrested have been set throughout the
months of July and August
The names of the defendants are being released IS they are

I

Fighting a not so Seville war_B____y_Be_nW._att_en_be_,.g_

.

r---Local briefs....- - -

Page.-2- The Daliy Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, June.27, 1111

liberty, they come together and
hack away at each other until they
reach a workable agreement. We
may not always fmd their decisions
to our liking, but at least they are
the opinions of the many and not
the few, and especially IIOithe one.
Nevrr in the history of tile wuld
has such an ambitious, egalitarian
. form of government been tried.
c~ the nature of man. I'm
smprised it s worked out as well as
it has. That, I believe, is owinll
mainly to the lilbt CIIDIIIUCtion of
tile CoiDdlt!tioL ']bole bon Nllly
did llllllelbina IJick in 1781.
'
I hope iD ibe fulllre 1 don't have
to report another serious mioh•~ for
Roy - at least no more senous
than the latest one, when a bee
climbed into his beer can, stung •
him on the ton11ue and almost
killed flim before we got him .., the
hospital. But it won't matter to
him, really. If he im't dead, he'll
be sluing on bis front parcll with a · ,
cold
of beer, in the only . ~X~UI~·
ay on Eanh he'd want to Hve.

'*'

P~cipation in ~ Southeastern Ohio Volunteer Education
Council and the ReRional Reaoun:e Centa: wbich provides assis·
~ce to c~ in special education MS
at the Tuesda
· rught meeting of the Meigs County Board o ~oo.
y
· The board also approved participation in the Tri-County c.eer
Developmen
. t Program and the Coali
. 'lion of Rural and Appalachian
Schools. Funding fees for all the programs were appovecl. ·
. A salary sche4ule for certified and non-certified staff was
approved, along with a developmentally handicapped course of
study and an exrension of the Adult Basic Education for the Jobs
program ~~isrered through the Depanment of Human Services.
AppropnatiOOS to covrr the cost of a conllliCt with the Washington Cotmty Board of Education for early childhood sttVices were
approved. A school calendar for the 1991-92 school year was adopted, as was the budget and appopriations for fiscal year, 1991-92.

m:::;:

'

The Dilly Sentinel-Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Williams fills Sy_racuse post
· Jack Williams has been named to fill the unexpiied term of Teresa Tyson-Drummrr on Syracuse Village Council.
.
Williams' appointment came at a special session of Council
Weclnesday night. There are 2 1/2 years remaining on the term
from which Tyson-Drummer resigned ufrer moving from the village. Williams is a formrr mernbrr of CounciL
.
During the meeting Council allocated $200 for the cleanup of
Snowball Hill Cemetery. Residents with relatives buried in the
cernetrry are being asked to contribure 10 tile upkeep. Councilman
Vaughn Fryar will aceept the contributions or answer questions
concrrnin~ work at the cernetrry.
Atrending were Kathryn Crow, Kenny Buckley, Fryar, and Jim
Pape, council members, and Mayor Eber Pickens, Oerk-Treasurer
Janice Lawson, and Chief of Police Jim Connolly.

Jury trial canceled
The jury trial scheduled f~ Meigs Coimty Coun on Tuesda&gt;:
. been canceled. Jurors need not report.
· '

has

EMS units make calls
"· Five calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs CountY Emergency Medical Services.
At 5:29 p.m. on Wednesday, Middleport squad went to Page
Street Charles Heck was taken to Veterans. At 6:37p.m., Middleport unit went to Fourth Street. Burwell McKinney was taken to
Vererans. At 9:20p.m., Syracuse unit was sent 10 Third Street. Carl
Weese went to Veterans.
On Thursday at 2:33 a.m .• Middleport squad went to Stare Roure
7. Edna Chrisman was transported to Holzer Medical Center. At
3:15 a.m., Pomrroy squad went to Powell Street. Anthony Perry
went~ Veterans.

More uncomfortable conditions ._on way .
By Tbe AIIOdatecll'rasl
A front movina acroiS eastern
Ohio Canada is
air eut from
on Friday won't be much hotter the Great I aJra • llmpiiiiUrel
than they have been, but they'll were expected to reach the 901
feel wone. The Nadonal Weadler throqhout New inJiatld, IS well
Service aaid moisture-laden as in Now York, Now Jersey and
southerly breezea are causina an Delaw...
increase m the relative humidity.
A coolina combination of
The culprit il a liup bigll pna- ·clouds and showm perlists in the
sure aystem coverlag 10011 of the
eastern half of the United States.
Forec:asten ay it will be reaponsiSouth Central Oblo
ble for hoc, hazy and muay WllllhTonight, 1001tly clear. Low in
er ~tile we !I end
the
Friday, partly sunny
No stliJiifiCtlllt rainfall appears and mid·60a.
hot Hiah around !10. '
likely before Monday.
Extended Rlrecut:
The record blgh tem)ICI'Iblre for
Saturda7
tltroup Monday:
lbis date 81 tile Colllmbns WOIIher . Hot and hazy
through the peristation was ' 101 degrees in 1944.
The reccrd low wu 4S in 1981.
Sunrise this morning was at
6:04 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:04
p.m.

drawinlti':

High temperatures around

South, which means mild temperalures alona with thundontorms.
Rain wu expected in Tenneuee
and llonhcm Georgia, with thundentorms from Louisianl to Florida.

Extreme heat wiS to continue
ovrr much of the PlainJ pan of the
Rocldes, and the ~a~thein and eat-

------Weather----od. A slight chance of showers and

thunderstorms on the weekend,
mainly in the north. Highs from the
upper 80s 10 the IJiid-905. And lows
around 70. Monday, a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
statewide. ijighs mostly in the 90S
and lows 65-10.
·

rrn Great Lakes.

On Wednesday , temperatures
I'CICbeclthe upper 80s and 90t .over
much of the Missiuippi Valley, IS ~
well as the central and southern
Plains.
.
In tile West. min fell early today :
in Oregon, nonhem California, ·
Montana and Idaho. SUI,IJIY skies :
prevailed in New Mexico, Col- '
oralio and Utah, with partly cloudy
skies elsewhere in the region.
unseasonably cool temperatureS
will spread across the Sierra Neva- :
cia range tonight, with snow likely :
at the highest elevations.
·
The hillb temperature for the :
nation Wednelday was 106 degrees .
at Prelidio, Texas.

Ex-Gallia superintendent leads drive
to stop redistribution of school funds

'

Hot, muggy weather WIS forecast fOI" tile Northeast as unseasonably cool ~empeiatures persisted in
the South today.

CLEVELAND (AP)-Admlnistrators of some olthe wealthiest

Area...

Continued from page 1

MEIGS COUNTY: State Roure
338 near Racine, De19ur is Stare
Route 124 to State Route 338,
approximltely eight miles.
MONROE COUNTY: State
Route 800, near Fly. Detour is I·77
to State Route 78, approximately
nine miles.
NOBLE COUNTY: State Roure
821, outside of Caldwell. Detour is
I-77 to State Route 78, appro ximately nine miles.
VINTON COUNTY: State
Route 328~ near New Plymouth,
Detour is State Route 56 to State
Roure 93, approximately 11 miles.
"On beh8lf of Goveinor George .
V. Voinovich and ODOT DirocUlr
Jerry Wray, District I0 would like
to wish all travelers a safe and
happy Fourth· of July," Dowler
said.

Pomeroy
Court news

school districts in Ohio are planning an organization to oppose
redistribution or their local taxes to
pooler districts.
Officials of fi vc CuyahoJia
County school districts met carDer
this week 81 the Cuyahop Coun!Y
superintendent of achools' offiCe io .
begin plans for the Alliance for the
Presenation of Local SchOol Funding.

The organization is a response
to proposals to alter scllool funding
byredistributing localtaxea from
wealthy districts to poorer ones.
Wealthier districts fear their residel!ts will no longer support paying
higher taxes for edlication if )lOOitl
districts are allowed 10 tap into the

local tax bases, an orpnizet said
"We feel it's necesllll)' 10 proteet the districts that are quality
schools and have a commitment to
excellence,'' said L. Neil Johnson,
an organizer of the Alliance and·
superinrendent of the BrecksvilleBroadview Hei11h11 school diatrict
in suburban Cleveland, find Conner
Gallla County Schools Superin~en­
dent.
Johnson said about I.S area
superintendents had been discussing forming the alliance for
several months, and about 30
scboQI districts in central and
southern Ohio have expressed
inleresl in it
The new group has scbeduled an
organizatiQnal meeting Jllly IS in
ColumbU. The wealthieat 20 per'~PRING

cent of the state's 612 districts will
be inviled.
Wbile tbe organization was
prompled partly by lawsuits chBI·
lenginf~ way the state supplements
school-district funding ..
the )Ximary concern of the alliance
is a bill now pendin11 in the stare
Senate.
•
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Robert R. Cupp, R-Lima, would
send half the future revenue growth
in business )*opeity llllles, intan~­
ble inventory taxes and utility
property taxes 10 the state to be .
redistributed amon11 poorer districts.
.
Cuyahoga County Superintend(lnt William Geslnsky said the .
alliance plans DO lawSuits.

VAll H f.INEMA

h. ~
-~~

h .~

IIIITIMEES SATVIIDAY I Sllfi~Y
loiM.IIN NIGHT TUES~Y

.; 4fi 45?4

NOWPQY!NG

••

•

"

'

:t&lt;

.I

PH0£1( CAT( '
Ill

DROP DEAD FRED
PG
AND
JOHN CANDY
Ill

Shirley Cole and Curtis Ward,
both of Pomeroy, wore fined on
three charges each when they
news-~.;.._ appeared
in the coun of Pomeroy
ONLY THE LONELY
Mayor
Ricbard
Seyler Tuesday
PG
Veterans Memorial
Trrry.
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS .
Births, June 26 • Mr. and Mrs. mght.
• Gerald Mo~re, Lon~ Bottom; . Ernest Butcher, a daughter, Apple
Burwell McKmney, Middleport; Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph MaJ.
Cole was fmed $50 and costs fer ' '""----------""""'
Charles Heck, Mtddleport; and colm, a daughter, Rio Grande. Mr. lack of insurance, $63 and costs fer
Danny Robson, Pomeroy.
and Mrs Fred 7 - f t 5011 w st failure to control ber veblclc, and
WEDNESDAY DISC~GES . Colwnma, W. v-;:'""''' a
'
e
$375 and COSIS for DUI. Ward 'W8S
fmed $53 and costs for dlsoulealy
- Jacob Schuler, Freda Bing, and C
rt •
ElvaGrueser.
·
OU neWS
ccinduct, $88 and costS Cor COIIIIIlll•
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
ing alcohol under the age of 21,
,
Discharges, June 26 - Beverly Divorces, dissolutions JII'8Dled
and $313 and costs for resistina
; Cunningham, Cleveland Howard,
Divorce actions have been flied · arrest.
Seth Large, Mrs. Charles McManis in Meigs County Common Pleas
and daughter, Joshua Mor11an, Ola Court to Martha L. Wiseman from
Others fined . were Daniel
, Quick, Thoma Sharp and Grace Evan D. Wiseman, and to Maiy S. Kennedy, Rutland, $43 and costs
assured clear distance, and c~
Erwin from Gregory 0. Erwin.
Actions for dissolution of mar- Reitmire, Jr., Pomeroy, $43 and
riage have been granred to Clyde E. costs, stop sign violation.
Forfeiting bonds were James
Sayre
and Janetta R. Sayre, and to
Wilma C. O'Brien
Barbara L. Knapp and Kail L. Wesley Cooper, Garrison, Ky., $46
Wilma C. O'Brien, 66, died Knapp.
speed; Thelma Jeffm, Pomeroy,
.
Wednesday, June 26, 1991 at her
$47,
speed; Patricia McCurdy,Lail·
Cases dismissed
residence.
caster,
$47, speCd; Michael RusThe Meigs County Common
She was a former secretary at Pleas Court has dismissed the case sell, Racine; $63, squealing tires;
Battelle Memorial Institure.
Sandra Salser against Richard Joan McQuaid, Oalllpolis, '$49,
She was preceded in death by of
W . Salsrr. Also dismissed was the speed; Steven Bachner, Middleher mother, Mabel C. Griffm.
case of Farmen Bank and Savings port, $48, speed; Edwin Brian Ash,
Survivon include her husband, Company
Racine, $63, expired registration. I
versus Paul Dailey.
Charles F. O'Brien ; one son,
Charles Kevin O'Brien of Columbus; and father, Gamer C. Griffin
·of Alfred.
Funeral services will be conmember who wishes to participare
Weekend services
ducted 1 p.m. Sunday at Ewing
in
the contest should contact the
Special
services
will
be
held
at
Funeral Home. Burial will be in
Meigs
County Extension Office.
the
Red
Brush
Church
of
Christ
on
Burlingham Cemetery.
deadline
is July 30 at 4 p.m. ·
Enuy
Bashan
Road
on
Saturday
at
7:30
Friends may call at the
Llvestoek
PrillConteat 1et
p.m.
and
on
Sunday
at
10
a.m.
and
Schoedinger East Chapel, 5360 E.
:rite
annual
Li
veatock
Princess
6
p.m.
With
Denver·
Hill
of
Fosler,
Livingston, Ave., Columbus, from.
Contest
for
the
Meigs
County
Fair
W.Va.
as
the
speaker,
Public
invit6-8 p.m. Friday.
is
set
for
July
18
at
10
a.m.
at
lhe
ed.
In lieu of flowers, contributions
Meigs
County
Extension
Office,
Olnn.
e
r
out
planned
may be made to MI. Carmel HosMembers of Shade Rivrr Lodge The deadline for applic8tion is July
pice, 793 W. Stare St., Columbus,
and
their spouses will go to Sebas- 8 at 4 p.m. Applications should be
43222.
tians on Saturday for dinner. For turned 10 to the Exrension OffJCe.
reservations call 98S-4434 or 992AA meetin&amp;set
The Daily Sentinel
A 12-step AA meeting will
7519.
begin Sunday at 7 p.m. 81the J'Il'A
ReJUiioa plaDned
(VSPSUHtll
The Hayman-Biriam reunion offiCe, 117 West Second Street in
A Dl¥ ..loll of Multimedia, Inc.
wiD be held Sunday at Forked Run Pomeroy.
State Park. A biSket lunch will
Rabbltlllow
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Frt&lt;ta y. Ill Court Sl .• Pobegin
at
12:30
p.m.
Games
and
Southeast Ohio Rabbit
J'he
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pubentertainment will continue Breeders. Association will sponsor
ll! hlng Company/Multimedia. Jnc..
Pomer oy. Ohio 4 ~769. Ph. 992·2156. S,.
throughout the afternoon. All an American Rabbit Breeders
cond cl ass postage paid at Pomeroy,
friends
and relatives are invired to Association sanctioned show on
Oblo.
Saturday beginning at 9 p.m. at the
auend.
Member: The A11odated Preis, In·
Rutland Civic Center. The show
Boerd meetilla rtldleduled
land Dally Prrn Alsol"latlon and I he
The Hocking Valley Conununi- will continue thrOughout the night.
Ohio Newspaper AssotiAUon . Nattopal
ty Residential Center Board will Call Sandy Carnahan at 949-2?97
Adveortlltna Representative, Branham
Ntwspaper Sales. 733 Third Avenue ,
meet July 17 at the Quality Inn for infonnation.
New York, Ntw York 10017.
Hocking Valley in Nelsonville
Plaa lund drive ·
' 1 ddr011 chanl(el
POSTMASTER; Send
from 11 a.m. to I p.m. This meet·
Yard and bake sales to pay for
to :111• Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St..
·ing was originally scheduled for uniforms for the Racine Onoles
Pomeroy, Ohio ,:mil.
July 10.
Little League team of Racine will
SVII8CIIIPTION RATES
be held next week by parents of the
ar cant« or M.. • a.ute
One Weei&lt; .... ........ ...... .................• J.60
team
memben. The /::c1asale wil
Reritw COIIlmittee 10 meet
OnP Month ............... .. .......... ......1$.95
be
held
Monday and
y at the
The regular HVCRC An:hiiCCI
One Year ................................. S83. 20
residence
11f
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roger
Review Commiaee meeting schedSINGLE COPY
Grace.
405
Fourth
St
.•
Racine
.•
PRICE
uled~~=~:
hal
been
canceled
Dally ................................... 2! O!nll
from
9
a.m.
to
The
bake
sale
and
fer July 17 at the
(c.)
TRADITIONAL ~aiel •769
y only from
Sublerlbers not detlrlnr to pay the car·
Quality Inn Hockina Valley in ~el· will be held oa
LA·Z-IOV- QUEEN SIZE SLEEP SOFA
rlf'l' may remit Jn adva nce dlrfct 10
sonville at 10 a,m. The comtruttee 8 a.m. to noon in front of tho H0111e
Dilti~ lllloNcl. 1 time• oty~e with o kick .
The Oally Sentinel on a3. 6 or 12 mooth
National
Bank
in
Racine.
. meets regularly the second
balls. Credlr Will be (iven curler e•ch
P - - " · motc:hOCI . . ona on lltO&lt;hl&lt;l bll&lt;:k.
woek.
Wednesday of each month at 10
Memorial servlc:tt
a.m. at the Quality Inn and the
No •ubilcrtprlons b)l moll permiHod In
Memorial sorvicea for Johnny
areas where home carrier .eervkfo II
fourth Wedneaday of each month at McKenzie will be lleld tonifhl
a valijlble.
the office of Panich and Noel (Thunclay) at 7 p.m. at tbe Bwmg
- 1 llllllierlplleolo
Architects in :Athens.
Puneral Home by the Fraternal
lool!le Molp CMillr
4·H
Demoaatratlon
Contest
Order of tile Bagles.
13 w..tcs ... .. ............................. m .M
set
26 Weetu ..... ....... ...................... $13.11
Clarlllcatlaa
52 Woekl ... ..................... ..... ..... IN.'If "
The annual .._H Demonsaation
Janis
Camlhan-King of 48439
O.lllole llolp CMlllr
Conlell is set fa- Alii. 6. The con- Karr Road, Racine, wu not the
13 weetu .... .... ........... ............... auo
26Weetu ... ..... ............... .. ......... lll.!tl
tell will be held at the Senior Citi- person amated on a dnq charge
52 W..tcs .................................. MtO
.
zens Center at 10 a.in. Any 4·H Tuesday.

----Hospital

lA·Z·DOY' SIGNATuRE u··

·Area death-

--Meigs announcements--

5£:a.

•

l

.,.

!

.'

'

'

'699

.aiel
77" CONTEMPORARY

(q.)

LA-2-BOY. QUEEN SIZE SLEEP SOFA
AStyle tnll ltll nllh 1Nfkl fOr Yeflltl!lty and
oomton. ~ICCIIbl)' t.tlorea, It futurn comer
bOIIters, trim Nnts and lu•urious CUihiOnln'

(CIJ 81" TRANSI~ ICIIel

'889

ond-

LA·Z·BOve QUEEN SIZE SLEEP SOFA
~

t&gt;llrWI 01 OOI!IOi&lt; ... ll)l ~

....... With I

-

-

incj tomfoil

""""IOnlntl.

flU PAI. .O
FID DIUVIIY
HOUISIIA&amp;Y t YO S
..HYtYOI
nw.s

•••unc
. .

,.......
\

'

,iii}

446-1041
'

J

'

'

�..

Sentin~l

The Daily

Sports

Homers by Scudder, Duncan give Red~_ 6-2 win over Pa~res

Thursday, June '0, 1991 ·
Page-4

-

Three ex-UNLV stars picked
in first round of NBA anadraft

By BILL BARNARD
AP Basketball Writer
NEW YOJU( (AP) -The NBA
could have held its draft in April
and not much would have changed.
The Big Four in the spring ~
Larry Johnson, Kenny Anderson,
Billy Owens and Dikembe
Mutomlio - was still the Big Four
. Wednesday night.
The projected second tier of four
players - Steve Smith, Doug
Smtih, Luc Longley and Stacey
Augmon- wenrS-6-7-9, with
only Mark Macon sneaking up a
few spots to break the pattern.
The four centers projected as the
best in the first round - Mutombo,
Longley, Rich King and Stanley
Roberts - went exactly in that
order.
iohnson was the No. 1 pick of
the Charlotte Hornets, winning out
over Owens among the team's
management because of the aggressive play he displayed 81 UNLV the
last two years.
"He came up No. 1 in most of
the categories thai we were looking
at, but the big thing about Larry
Johnson is his competiliveness and
his leadership, and he's a winner,"
Hornets player ~rsonnel director
Allan Bris10w S81d. .
Johnson was the first of three
Runnin' Rebels taken in the fust
round - another expected development ...:.. and four were taken in
the first 29.
.
Augmon went to Atlanta with
the ninth pick the Hawks &amp;a~uired
earlier In the day from the Los
Angeles Clippers m a deal for Dol:
Rivers. Greg Andlony was ~elected
12th by the New Yode: Knicks and
George Ackles by Miami with the
second pick in the second round.
Owens, from Syracuse, was
favored by New Jersey player per-

man,
he'D need them with the
Nuqets, 20-62 Iasrseason with the
worst defense in the NBA.
"I am a great defensive player," said Mutombo, who turned 25
on Tuesday. "This will bring
defense baclt 10 Denver."
After Miami picked Michigan
State's Steve SIDlth, Dallas selecied Mi~souri fgrward Doug Smith
and Minnesota took New Mexico's
Longley, Denver used its second
choice Ill take Macon.
. The ~.ts. who acquired the
eighth pick m a deal m.t aent guatd
Michael Adams to Washington,
appeared 10 commit Ill using shooter Chris Jackson at point guard.
"We looked in the draft to get a
nice l:lllance of inside-outside, and
THESE ARE MY BOYS - UNL V bead
we got exactly that," coach Paul
coach
Jerry Tarkaalaa (rar rlallt) takes 1
Westhead said.
moment
to bask In tbe 1Iory fllluMq three or
. Between Augmon at No. ? and
bls
·recent
alumni -Stacey Au.1 moa, Greg
Anthony at !ITo. 12, Orlando took
forwant Biian Williams of Arizona
lOth and Cleveland grabbed guard
TerreiiBrandonof&lt;Qgon 11th.
After Anthony 'was taken, it was
forward Pale Davis Qf Clemson to
Indiana, center Rft:h King of
Nebraska to Seattle, Seton Hall's •
Anthony Avent to Atlanta, Chris
Gatling of Old Domi!Uon lllld Victor Alexander of Iowa State backto-bact to Golden State, Kevin
B~ of Southwes.t
to
Milwa~ee. Louuv•~e s LaBrad-.
ford Sm1th to Washington, John
Turner of Pbilliptto Bouton, Eric
Murdock of Provide_nce to U~.
Syracuse's URon Etlia to the Clippen, Stanley Roberis of LSU lllld
Real !'tfa~d. to Orlando, North
Carolina s Rtck Fox to Boston,
Shaun Vandiver of Colorado to
Golden State, Mark Randall of
season.
·
Kansu 10 Chicago and North CarMutombo also has excellent olina's Pere Chifcuu to Sacramenrunning ~ aild stamina for a big to.

sannel director Willis Reed and
coach Bill Fitch, but the Nets'
ownership wanted the flashy
Anderson, believing the sophomore
point guard from Georgia Tech is a
better drilwing card because he was
a high school hero in New York
City.
·'
·A Kenny Anderson comes
atong only once every 10 years or
so. We looked 81 next year's draft
and felt' there was only one point
guard, and there were 81 least three
No .. 3s {forwards)," said Joe Taub,
a ~monty o~er of the Nets.
"They told me they wiulted me
right along," Anderson said. "AU I
can do is go in with a great attitude.
There's a lot of work abead, but
New Jersey has a piece of my bean
now. "
·
"I guess we didn't make the
decision until this afternoon, but
when we left, there wasn't any
blood on the carpet," Fitch said
Wednesday night. "Joe's a very
convincing guy, and he was an
Anderson guy from the get-go. But
this wasn't a Joe Tanb decision, it
was a Net decision."
Sacramento which coveted
Anderson with the third pick
because the Kings are alieady loaded with young forwards grabbed
Owens.
'
Denver did what was expected
with the fourth P.ick, grabbing the
best center avallable in Georgetown's 7-foot-2 Mutombo.
Despite not playing basketball
until be was a senior in high scl)ool
in Zaire Mutombo averaged 15.2
points,' 12.2 rebounds and 4. 7
blocks as a senior for the Hoyas
jllld was selecled as the Big East's
defensive player of the year last.

•.

'

'

.,

•

lyJOEKAY
APSI*'ISWrlter
CINCINNATI (AP) - An
unlibly poup of power hitlln bas
the Cincinnati keds climbing
again. .
Scott Scudder and Mariano
Duncan hit solo homers Wednesday night as the defendina World
Series cUinpions went silt 'ames
over .500 for the fust lime Ibis season widla 6-2 viCtory over the San
DieloPadres
1'be Reds· (38-32) have started
overwbelming teams with their varied off- the same way they did
d..-illa die b tWo IIKIIIthS of their
championship season last rear.
They've sccnd S9 runs in the1r last
10 ~· betriiJg .294 as a~'We've been scoring a lot of
runs lalely. It's really easy to pitch
· with 1 four- or five-run lead," said

Scudder (3-3). "We've been getting the big bits. That's the way we
won last year, the way we'ie winning now."
The home run bas been a significant factor - Cincinnati Ills five
consecutive multiple-homer game.
What's strange is the places they're
coming from .
Their last four homers have
come from players with a combined total of six bomcn Ibis season: Jeff Reed (tint career grand
slam), Herm Winningham, Scudder
and Duncan.
Scudder's first career homer
started a four-run third inning
Wednesday night off Dennis Rasmusst11 (3-2) and left the right-han·
dcr in shock. Scudder, just 6-for-S2
(.liS) lifetime when he came 10 the
plate, couldn't believe what be saw
wben a 1-1 fastball left his hat.

~

•

I
I

Sc()rch()~lrd

I
'

Alltbony a11d Larry Jobnsoll ~R) - become
nnt·round picks in Wednesday night's NBA
draft. (AP)
·

l
j

''••

In the majors,••

1

SAVES-Aaailofa. Minn•aca. 20;

EcUalor. Ooklond, 20: !Unoy, Coolifo.

nia, 19; Reardon , Bollon, 19; Moat·

AMERICAN LEAGUE

•'•
•
'l•

East I)Jvfslon

T-

WLPd.

T......,

GB

··-···- 40 32 .!556
··-····- 36. 3' .!522

s-

z

112
........... 34 36 .486
5
..... :n 3 7 - 6112
Now YOlk
....... 30 37 .448 7112
· - ....... 'EI 42 .391 11 112
:14 44 .353
u
-

I•

c..- -

I

West Division

,'

T-

•
'

WLPd.

M

"'

31 ...563
......... 39 32 :549

3 l{l

T...
........... 36
Seaalo
........... 31
o:Jiioqo
......... 35
KaaaO a., ....... :n

4112
!
5 112
·7 112
11

'•

OUllnd

''

,

GB

....... 44 21 .611

...... ,,, 4()

Cetif

'

Ifliisiana

30
33
34
38

J-4!

.!31
.5117
.457

Wedn...ay•s results

a.-..t,....-...-

l

Doaaili.Mil-7,13 . .

'

Today'l&amp;lllles
(AU llllllts EDT)
S01ale (Hans~C~a 4-2) at Chlcaao (Fer·

I'

- , .7),1oll! p.m,

'

T-ci.i. OOanoal·l) .. -

(T-U), l:l!p.m.
t.

.

·,

...

-r(It,_ 4-4) at o.tJ.and (Hawkinl
] ,1, .,..

~).

NoW" York (Ttylor 1--2) It Bolton

~7-1),

'
u

7:35p.m.

ac.ncry, ,K inAa Cil&gt;:· 14: Jllf Ruuoll,
T-,14:0loao.III!Dm-.13; D. Wan!,
Toronto, 13: Thiapoa, Cbicaao, 13;
lknke, Tacmto, 13.

National Lncue

B~TTINO-T. O~ynn,

San _l?i!JO,
.36C; S.....t.Lao Allaola. .327;Stn heilclo, .327; 0. SftWh. St. Louil,
.325; B~o, HOillton, .322.; Jose, SL
LoW,.
- . .......... .312.
RUNS- . FOII!Indcz, s.. Dlel", 50;
B•llcr, Lao
49; 1•-· Now

YOlk.

=-

JZ:.!';., 46; s!:_""f.;;'"-~

~- OwJDo. San Oioao. 44.

RBI-L.k, l'bllodoli&gt;IUI. !4; W. Cllllt.

S.. Fnocilco, !3: Joliaa.a, New Yml&lt;,

53; Judice, Allanta, St ; McOriff, San

D!jfo.;.:9; O'Neill, Clac:laaaU, 46;
Morillal,46.
.
HJTS-T. Owyaa, San Dioao, 1P6;
S......t,Lao - · 88; T, ..........._
San Dioao. 14; Mco.e, San Pn.ac:Uco,
11; Saaitbera, Cbicaao,ll; JON, St.
Lauio, 79; Calilooal,
llCliJB1J!S--Ja Laula, 20: ......
11, PIUJbo.... 19; ManU, Cloc-11,·
11; NcReyaolda,.New York, 11; T.
Owyna, Saa Dieao. 11: L. Ooaulez,
Houstaa,17; J1.11tice, Atlaw, 17; O'Neill,
•CindnnaU,17t·SaodboJJ, Chlou~.l7.
TRIPLES- . Owym&gt;, San llicso. 8;
fclclu, San Franciaco, 6; L. Gonzalez,
Hou.1.011, S; Colcmaa, New YOlk. 5; M.
Th
St. LaWa. S: 6110 dod- 4.
HbCE"RUN'S-Johnaan, New Yorlr:,
16; MeGrilf, San Dieao, 15 ; G. Bell,
OU.caao, IS; O'Neill. Clntlnnatl, 14;
Gam,AIIama, 13:
Now YOlk, 13:

c

---71.
sc

-YOik!,-1
Seaalo 5. Cloiooao4
CeHf 's 10, C... O.ty S
Tor.te 5, Mi:rm a 2
Toa. I , Oololaooll

•'

.

·~ (MIIIdtl ;J-2) .. Clntlud

(Moll N~ 1131 p.111.
M i l - (BoOio l •7) II Doaoit (0\d9-3~ 7:35 p...

s-.,

W. Cluk, San. Ftanciaco, 12; SaadberJ,

Oli£0JO· 12.
=U!N-BASES-Oo11om. M....,.

11, 36; Nixon, Atlaat1, M:.Deshielct.,
MOidl'Cal, 33; Coleman, New Yolk, 31:
Lankford, St. Louia, 20; 0 . 3mith, SL

LoW. 19: c.w..... ""'"'-t, 18.

Pn'CIIINO (6 - ) - W i l l i , Pllll,.t, LIM, 3.42; C~lltr, SL
Louio, 7·2. .718, 3.44; R. Martinez, Lao
,10.3, .769, 2.67; IIIIo. Clndof.Z,.7SO,ZM;Oiavino.A.WU,ll·
4, , 33, 2.13; Sampon, Montreal; S-2,
.714, A.lO; AJOII&lt;&gt;, St. Laula, S·2. ,714,
5.48 .
. STJUIEOtrfS-Cono. Now Yom, 961
Gll..... Allwl, 91; G. Modd1111., Chico·
bu'Jh,

*

,,

TontlputM dilling

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East DlvJJion

288 PC Compatllle
Sale

Ill"
43...

10%Coupon

.....

Reg.

YOu Pay
Only

39511

Monitor extra

LpW AI UO Per Month•

..You
Pa
Onlyy

',

'

• 640K Memory • Built-In MS-oose

"""Y-'No-.

1211·11102

'

I

10% Coupon

21)4_"

~:.:v

,....,_,
'

• Attractive on Any Desk
• Redial • Hl/l.Q/011 Ringer
143·313

"""Y--- _...

.,...
PIUCBON

6215

said.
·
And wba did Belle thinlt llboul
1111 aium~ Jelllnl, He wouldn't
uy - at tela 110110 the media. ~
has re1u1ec1 to talk 10 repouen m
Cle¥ellnd since be duew 1 t mba'I
at 1 bocld« duri1l&amp; a JIIIC on May
II.
.
Grea Swindell (4·6), who has
f

suffered all year from a lack of Bwts' ninth homer of the season in
offcmsive support, had no com- the sixth. Howe aUowed a single
plainta after the Indians' biggest and 1 double to the first two barters
mning of the season. He allowed he faced, then aot the IICiltl nine for
four runs and 10 hits in silt innings. his second save.
"This has been a long time
Roberto Kelly led the offense
coming," Swindell said of the out- against Mike Gardiner (3-2) with a
burst.
two-run single.
· After Belle's two-run double,
Angels-10, Royals 5
Brook Jacoby followed with an
The Angels made it easy for
RBI single and Felix Fennin added Mark Langston, scoring silt runs in
a run-scoring single for a 4-0 lead. the top of the fust to complete a
Mark Lewis and I erry Browne three-game sweep at Royals Stadiadded two-run singles before um while setting an American
Belle's RBI single.
League record with their 13th
In other American J.eague straight errorless game.
games, it was Toronto S, MinnesoLuis Sojo had a two-run double
ta 2; New Yodt S, Boston I; Cali- as the Angels routed Mark Gubicza
fomia 10, Kansas City S; Texas 8, (3-4).
Oakland I; Detroit8, Milwaukee 7
Langston (11-2) won his fifth
in 13 iMings, and SeaiUe 5, Chica- straight decision despite allowing
go 4.
·
five runs in eight innings.
Blue Ja71S, Twins l
Rallltrll, Atllletlcs l
Toronto cooled off baseball's
Steve lluechele's three-run
hottest team beblncl David Wells' triple keyed a six-run seventh
pill:hing lllld Joe Caner's hitting.
inning• .
Wells (?·S) allowed seven hits
Oakland led 1-0 after six
in eigllt · · , losinl his shutout innings, but Buechele put Texas
when chiii"Cavls hli a two-run lhead wid! Ilia biiCS clelring lriple
homer. Can. went 4-for·S with to lefl&lt;aW« off Gale Nellon.
two doublel, two singles and two
Kevin Brown (6-5) overcame
RBIS I I the Blue 1ays snap1,1ed his own wildnesa - he walked six
Minneaota'•!lyme winntng - and allowed just one ron and
streak at the Metrodome.
four hlts in aeven innings.
Yaak rr 5, Red Sax l
naen 8, Bre1ters 7
Scott Slndeaon allowed six bits
Delmit ""'~ 111\'WQII lead in
in six lnnlna• and Steve Howe the elpth IIIII ninth lnninp, but
won In tbe 13tb on Travfa Frypllebecl tbnJe sc:cnlea illninga~
Sanderson gave up only .ellis
(See AL oa Pap 5)
1',•

St. LaWa

,.........

Now YOlk
-

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

Chico10 . .........

,.

W
..
31
31
33
32
30

L
27
32
32
38
39
41

Pd.
GB
.600
.543
C
.515
6
,!5117 6 1/2
.431
12
.394 14 112

W L
LocAnploo ...... 42 21
Cllld-d - · 31 3Z
35 33
S..lJioso ...... ,. 31 36
S•Fnricilloo ,..... 31 41
H......,
..... ,... ·21 C3

A,_ . .. . . .

Clad-.....

Huny-No--

Pd.
GB
.H3
.543
4
.!36 4112
.46! 9 112
.451- 10 1/2
.423 12112

Wnt Division.

T-

• Ideal lor Shop or Kitchen
• Removable for Portable Use
116·117

_

l'bilad.lpln• "'""

Wedlllllla&amp;'~:-lts

, .

,

I

qt 7, CllllllrtO-•

z

.. NowYaoi7.-C

Admoa!.-2

SL l.oalll4,l"'11 td IJI '• l'
S..Fnnmaco3,LocAnpl&lt;o :!.II;,.

......

ro3495

'
•
'

Wednesday algllt'a aam.e aaalnst tile Ylaltlna
Baltimore Orioles, wllo lost 10-4. Belle c:ame
back later In tbt Ianing and llingled' In anotller
run to belp tile lndlau aeore .lllree of tllelr nine
runs in that frame. (AP)
".

Belle's part in nine-run rally
gives Tribe 10,-4 win over O's
By The Alsoclatecl Pral
Albert Belle is alive and well
lllld living in Cleveland- ~Pin·
Belle, banished to Class AAA
Colorado Springs oil Juno 6 after
not running out a double-play
grounder, returned to the lndiiDS'
lineup Wednesday night and Wast·
ed no time making nis presence
felt.
He had a two-run clooble in his
first-at bat and an RBI single in his
second - both in a ninC·run flfSI
inning thai led Cievt:land to~ 1().4
victory over the BakimOIC Orioles.
Cleveland III8JIIIIa' John McNamara hopes Belle, who still leads
the Indians with nine bomen and is
second with 30 RBis, is back to
SIIY·
The victory snapped CleveIand's five-game losing streak and
was tbe Indians' fourth in 21
games. Tbey were 2-15 without
Belle, who bit .328 with two
homerS and 16 RBis in 16 games in
the mlnon.
"Hopefully, being in Colorado
Sprinp be Ills his conflclence b1ck
lllld be'll start hillina," McNarnlll

,
•·

7"

HURRY IN! BARGAIN HUNTER'S PARADISE!

BELLE OF THE RALLY - Tbe IDdlau'
Albert Belle, playlaf Ilia flnt pme for die Tribe
:since coming out o tbe Clall AAA parptory,
puts some solid wood oa tltill Bob Mn.al plkll
:ror a two-run cioullle Ia tile ftnt laalag or

T............

Under-cabinet B&amp;W TV
Reg, 8111
Sale 8111

Today'apmes
(All tbnn EDT)
San 1J1oao (Mol- J.l) 11 Clo&lt;ln·

uti (Arwtrolta 4-f), Ul.15 p.a
Pbilr hlpht• CO.... 5-G) 11 S1. Louil
(Hi116-!),1:35 p.nl.
Montreal (8oycl3a6) at New York
(Coao ..,~ biO p.m.
Cllk:a.. (CuiHio f ·f) 11 P-•'lh
(Dr- 11-1), 713! p.llt.
Atlanta (Leibnndt 6-S) at Houa,on
(Podupl6-3), 1:3$ p.m.

)'rld8y'acames

SL Louio MChioaao. 3:20 pJD,
LaoAI'I...IItA-2,5:-IOp.m.
-~~~11,7:3Sp.IIL

- . . .. ~7&lt;35p.in.

~llN.wYock.7:40p.m.

,,

PORTABLE RADIOS
AND RECORDERS

1

San Pnac:ilco at SanDie&amp;o. JO:OS p.m.

Major league leaders
AmerlcJin Leacue

-·Mil·

BATTING-C . Ripken, Baltimore,
.350; a.u-. Oolllao4. .333:
waut-, .333; Sic.!!a, Teo~, .325; E. MartiDe&amp;, S.:.ule, .324; Greenwell, Boston,
1.11
,324; ~ MiTXIF 11, .324.
....
RUNS-Moli1or, MUwauktt, S4:
~. TaMr..SJ; D. 1111 I•GD, Oak·
lood.!l: ......... 49:""-. T-.
• ., eo-, Oolllao4. 41: Wblto, y..,..
• 10,4'7· C.ltipll... B - . 4 7.
1Uii-Pield01, Dltr&lt;n~ 51: Thomu,
a.ica..., 55; Slem., Teus, S3; Can.,
Toromo, !3: C. Daril, Miaa.-o~a , 50;
Winfield, Califomia, SO; Ooudtz,

...

10, 19; Gooden, New York, 89: Rlj01
Clad ..,,,II; Hamisch., lkwtcn, 7S;"'R.

Maotinez;I.Aoo
-·
75.
SAVES-Dibble,
Claclnnall.lt;
Lee
Smilh. SL l.cioll, 19: Dno Smilb. Chico·
ao. 16; B. Landrum, Pltllburah, 14;
Franco, New York, 14; Lef!~rta, San
[l;qo, 14; Mid! Wil!Wno, Philoddpllil.
12.

Transactions
Baseball
.

''

'

Arittrk:an Waue

CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Tndod
Ondy Ifill. piu:bor. 101!10 CloYollnd lndi·
1n1 for' Rober\ Penon, pileha', UJip.Dd
Penon to Soulb Bond of tho Midwe1t

DETROIT TIOERS-Sipod Iuotic
""'"'~
Thom-.
pitcher,

IIIAiuaipod him 10
Briotol of tho A~chWI La
NEW YORIC YANKEEr-Traded
Steve Acltint. piu:ber, to tho Ctucaao '
am. for OIYid Roario, pitcher, and utipecl.1ltosario lO CokmbuJ of lhe ldter-

notioo'Hil'M

o!.,EAHaaio,p==~•=
._.,od

liolond
l!anU 10 Colpy ol the
Pocific Coui !.Mil'*.
TI!XAI RAN&lt;lEIIS-Am.......t Mill!

P«kowek, pilCh«, haa eluted waivers
and will be ua:iptod outriJ,ht to Oklahom•
City cl the American A..ociation,. Placod
Muio Diaz, infielder, on the IS-d.aJ dil·
•blod
liiL Rocallod
&amp;om Otlobcma
City.Ouy Onoat. - ·
TORONTO BLUE JA YS-Siged

Theodo.o Lons...W. W.1 "-'": Jooo

SUva, Kenneth RobiaiOD and Adam
M.inmhotp~~. pildlen, Md Rict.y Cro·
.n., outfi&lt;lds.

Nllloul t..aue
~ ~
I
CHICAGO CUBS-A.,ipod Sieve
AAinl, pitaher, to low" ot.the lun4dcen
Aaaocinion. Placed Danny Jtckaon,
pitcher, on the 15-day di aablcd lilt
retroactive to !June 20. RecaUed Frank
Cutillo, pitcher, from Iowa.

HOUSTON

ASTROS~

CUn

Sc:ilillios- pitdlcr, 10 Til...,. of tho Pacil\o
Cout IMpc.. Activa&amp;od X.vier Heman·

de&amp;, odd&gt;... ,.,... tho l~·doJ d!Hblod lilt.
N8W YORit MI!Tli--Upaonool Rich
S.Uvcur, pitdler, to Tiawata of lbe Inlemationali.Mpe. Purehuod lbe cattract
ot Komn r ..... Uofioldoo, ,_, Tidowa~~~&lt;.

PHILADELPIDA PIIIUJI!S-SiJnod

Tylo&lt; a-, pild&gt;or, ond IHipod him 1o
B~~avil!ohhoNowYOik~~~

ST. LOUIS CARDIN

.

oinlild

W'illiefnler, plrdlm", Cll wa.ivcnfram die
TDRinto Bt. )a,_. Moved Frank DlPino.
pilchor,- lho 1!-doy diablod
10
1M 60-Uy dioablool U.L Opd- .....
0.0., J*d-, 10 Lcoilrillo
ielll~
'

u.,

"'lho -

BasketbaU

'

Nll&amp;olal··k•"ll.taJaiiJIIH
GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS-

Traded \be riahu to Lanu:.t Suocben,
pard. u. lA• hrllaad Trail Bluen f•
•econd·I'Oiand clraft pich ia 1995 and

1999.

HOUSTON ROCUTS-Tndool die
ri&amp;hll to JC..ut~ IID&amp;heJ, fonrard, to die

Cle:v.-.1 Ca..U.. fGt 1 15'96 aec«wwftllll!d dnl\ pllllud Olhor.....ulonliono.
LOS AIIOBLES CLIPPBlS-Ac·
"Doc" Rlv•, 6'!l'd. tho A - llo..U
for 1 11191 lint·......
.dnft ........ 19!!3 .... 19M-.).
.....r dnllpiot. Tra.W
Oar-

-

m-

=·

'IV-

ilod,
- ..
.- 1996 .or.1997
-

Roa...tbo rtpto
10 _
T,..
p!lld. ... ,....
__
_

',

pick.

· FoodlaU
1'1-POOillllll.oliUo

DAllAS cowaovs- T..dod Rioh
Oloowlca. ipl 11111. 10 doe N"' ~
Paa:iou fCII an uaclllclOIN 1992 4nfl

---·AX:-·

••

Cheek Your Phone look tor tile Radio lhaclt ltcn or OHler Neareat You
SWITCIN.l TIMII'ULil ........ """'"' 111111 tooo IOd pu1ot iMs -

· io 11t11 haYing only t&gt;U1M (IO!ary dial)
iMI. W I - ....1., MI. Moat

cao ....
Nollor""""_,,_....,.__...,.._
.._DGS_hm_Coi!J.
iMs,,..

""!CIS IIM'lY AT PMIT!CII"ATING ITOI'IEB AND DEALERS

,,'

.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-6

Pameroy-Middlepon, Ohio

''
•"
•

•

-··

P'j!j IISIUROH STEBl EAS-Apool

lC

comnn ,_, with JarJ OlaYIII:y,

.

a

He'd never hit a homer in the
two-bit shutout.
"The ear infection messed up five doubtes and a lriple. Tom Pagminor Jeaaucs,.either.
,
Mitchell, who hadn't played my focus," Mitchell said. " It had nozzi drove in three runs ind pitch- ·
"I'm dennitely no power since June 3 because of an injured me leaning to the left a little bit. er Bryn Smith, Ozzie Smith and
tlueat," be said. "My job is
to right knee, entered the game as a They gave me some antibiotics. It Todd Zeile had two RBis each.
put the ball in play or bunL I m not pinch hitter in the ninth and popped
helped out a lot, b11t
still a little
Bryn Smith (6-4) won for onlY.
up there as a btg RBI man.
out to second. Two innings later, he woozy."
the second time in seven starts, giv"I couldn 'I believe it I had kind hit his 11th home run of the season
Jeff Brantley (2-1) pitched the ing up six hits and a run in silt and
of a numb feeling. I'll have to off Crews (2-1).
lOth inning for the Giants, suiking two-third innings.
watch it on televisioo to 1\et the full
"I was looking for something out Stan Javier to end the game
Mets 7, ExpoS 4
effecL It was pretty thrilling run- hard that I could drive," Mitchefl with Brett Butler on third.
Frank Viola survived a shaky
ning lflllll'td the bases after hitting a sai&lt;t. "He started me off with a
Martinez allowed three hits in start and five hits by Marquis Grishomerun.''
fastball up and away, and then he nine innings, struck out seven and som.
One out later, Duncan hit his threw me a slider for a strike. In wallced four.
Viola (8-5) gave up three runs
second bomer of the.season, ending that situation, I never thought he'd
Cardinals 14, Pbillles 1 ·
and 10 hilS in seven innings. John
a 6-for-56 slump.
· throw me a baU thai I could pull.··
Pat Combs (2-6) wallced five of Franco got the flllal out for his 14th
It was downhill from .there for
Mitchell missed Tuesday' s silt barters he faced alld 22 of his save.
San Diego. A throwing error by game because of a stomach disor- 27 pitches were balls.
Mark Gardner (3-4) gave up five..
catcher Benito Santiago let in the der and an ~ ear infection.
SL Louis had 16 hits, including
(See NL on Page
third run and set up another later in
the inning. And a fielding error liy
second baseman Paul FU'ies led to
an uneilmed run in the seventh,
when Chris Sabo and Bill Doran
had RBI doUbles. ·
The Padres .had committed just
one error in their nine previous
games before coming to Cmcinnati.
They've made three while losing
. the first two·games.
The Padres haven't had an offday without travel $ince May 6,
and are playing like it.
"It's been two-and-a-half
years," martager Greg Riddoch
said wearily. "How long has it
been, or how long does it seem?
We can use an off-day. We've got
some tired trOOpS now. I'll teD you
what, as hard as they've played, it's
no wonder they're tired."
'
The Reds are feeling invigorated. They were gloomy last week
when they lost starters Norm
Charlton and Jose Ri)o to injury.
But Scudder and Chris Hammond
have fiUed in nicely by winning the
first two games of the series against
San Diego.
"It's up to us, really," Scudder
said "It's up to us to step forward
and show we can do iL I think we
thrive on thaL Every time I go out
now I feel comfortable." .
Scudder aUowed four hits over
silt and one-ihird illnings, including a two-run homer by Fred McGriff
in the fourth, IUs 15th. Reds manager Lou Piniella decided to go to
\
his bullpen after Scudder gave up a
bome run w1tb teammate and No.l bitter Marl·
CELEBRATES FIRST HOMER - .Reds
one-out single in the seventh.
ano
Duncan, wbo also bit one out In tbe tblrd
piteber
Scott
Scudder
(left),
tbe
winning
pitcher
. "Scudder pitched with confiinning.
(AP)
in Wednesday's 6·2 victory over vlslth•l San
dence," Piniella said. "We just
ptego, celebrates cracking bls first major league
dido 't want to let him go roo far.''
Randy Myers came on and gav~
up a pair of singles to load the
bases, then got out of the threat by
getting Tony Gwynn, the leading
hitter in the major leagues, to
ground out. Myers .allowed one
more hit while closing the game for
his sixth save.
Scudder a.ne away with a cherished troPhy - the ball he hit for ·
the flfSt homer by a Reds' pitcher
since Tim Birtsas did it July 2,
1989, against the New York Mets.
"That's ~oing on my mantle,"
he said. "I ve got the balls from
my flfSt win and my first save. Jbis
home run ball is going to be the
one I put at the forefront of my
mantle and show off to everybody
who comes over.''
In other games, San Francisco
edged Los Angeles 3-2, SL Louis
routed Pliiladelphia 14-1, New
York beat Montreal 7-4, Pittsburgh
beat Chicago 7-6, and Atlanta beat
Houston 3-2.
Giants 3, Dodgers 2
It didn't lake long for Kevin
Mitchell to show what he means to
the San Fl'llleisco Giants.
Mitchell, in his f1tst game since
coming off the disabled list, home·
red in the 11th inn in~ off Tim
Crews on Wednesday mght as San ·
Francisco beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers 3-2 for its sixth straight
victory.
"Coming in here and winning
two games against the Dodgers
wben they're been playing so well,
and beatins their best pitchers has
to give us a lift," Giants manager
Roger Crai~ said.
Matt Wllliams tied the game in
the ninth inning with a two-out,
two-run homer off Ramon Martinez, who was one out away from

Just

I'm

AL games..
(Continued from Page 4)
man's RBI single.
Detroit hit three homers, including Mickey Tettleton' s second
roof-clearing shot 81 Tiger S~
in five pmes, and led 7-2 enrmng
the eighth. But Willie Randolph
singled in two runs off reliever
Paul Gib10n to make it 7-4 and
' Paul Molitor hit a three-run hOmer
off Mike Henneman in the ninth to
tie the game.
However, Milwauke~: did not
get another baserunner. John Cerruti .(l-2) pitched three perfect
innings and the Tigers won it on
Fryman's single off Julio Machado
(0-2).
Marlaen 5, Wlllte Sox 4
Mike Jackloo praerved Randy
I otwoo'a ~lrd •r.raiaht win by
strildJig out Clrlton Fisk with the
bases loaded 10 llld die game. .
Tbe MariDen went ahead 5·3 in
the sixth oa RBI singles by Jay
Bubner aad Henry Cotto. Tim
, . . . had • llBI aialle off RUIS
SWill IIICI JICUm walked Prank
Tbomu before fannins Fisk on
tbnJe • bel.
(6-6) aUowed just three
hits, includinl Fisk's two-run
homer, in six and two-third
U.inp. Ramon Garcia (0-3) wu
the loser.

1:

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

~!;::~~-~~~'.~~~~~~,~-~-Retail..
19,302.60
0,178.00
In
.....................................................
1

Free.Tank 01 Gas .......................:......................0.00

�Baer signs with Ohio Dominican
ODU baseball coach Paul Page
stared, ''This is ·the kind of young
man we want in the program. He
has good athletic ability, good
skills and sttong family support,
which is important in the success of
an athlete especially at the coHege
level."
Dominican head basketball

Andy Baer, son oC Bill Baer and
Jocelyn Bailey, signed a national
letter of intent to play baseball and
basketball. at the Ohio Dominican
University Wedn~y at his home.
Baer excelled in both basketball
and baseball at Southern, earning
all-district and aU-state honors in
bo~ sports.

m·lm bledon. 's mw-tourney
:,1

break threatened by rain
By ROB GLOSTER
AP Sports Writer
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- · 1be incessant rain that already
has wrecked a couple of Wimble·
don tnlditions now is challenging
one of its most hallowed rituals: the
mid-tournament break.
.
All England Club officials have
mandsted for more than a century
that, "On the seventh day, we
rest''
But a backlog of matches
caused by three dsys of miserable
weather could call that commandment intQ question.
"At Ibis stage it is 100 early to
decide if we will have to play 011
the middle Sunday," said chief
executive Chris Gorringe. "It has
never been done in the past and of
course we have bad this sort of
weather before. ••
Yet Wimbledon librarian Alan
Little, who has been at the Grand
Slam event for 46 years, said he
cannot recall such soggy weather.
"I can't remember a wetter fii'St
three dsys," Little said. "This is
certainly the wettest start we've
ever had' '

~k:!:~~m~~t.~lc! ~=:

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

Leave fireworks to the pros this fourth

SIGNS Wim OIUO DOMINICAN- Southern Jll'ldaate Andy ~
Jlaer, SOD or Jocelyn Bailey and BW Baer, slped blsJetter or lnteill ;
to play basketball and baseball at Obio Dominican University :
Wednelday. Pictured are (L·R) ODU baabaD coach Paul Page, ·
And7 Baer, IDd ODU bead baskelb.U coach Ed DIGeaova. Beblad :
them are Jocelyn Halley, Soatbern baseball coadl Mldt Wlnebren~ ·:
ner, SHS basketball mentor Henrie Caldwell and BW Baer.

O'DELL$
JJIIU JUlY 7f6

Football camp set for July 15

Marauder football
camp set for
22

PHARMACY
TOPICS
BY YOUR

SWISHER LOHSE
.
PHARMACISTS

CHROMCRAFT

Chromcraft stands for quality, value and features. Heavy gauge stHI; heat, stain, scratch and
moisture resistant tops. Extremely comfortable
chairs.
Stop in and take a look at this qua6ty line of
dining tables and chairs.

SPECIAL PRICING!

Artificial bane. grown' In a jar, may aoon be available to repair
frlctu-. Reuarchera at Harvard Medical School and ather
18boratorlea are mixing compound. from protelna and ceramic
materlalt that would patch the break untR new bone formed.

•••

N- advanc• In medicine keep ua on our to•. Make ua part of
your hulth are team et ...

..................... llll'lllllty

.,,......11/.........
......... hiaeli hrnc.... ct-.

ln-1•1
Waterproofing
CHII.

8•• ....

U• on ~ 1111180nry,

atuooo.

\' .

f,

•

O'DELL JiM-va~M LUMBER

. " J/\

IME.IWNST.

·

POMEROY, •2-111111

Mon.-Ftj. 7-1:30; lat. 7-5:00

Wa ..../1
a

leya 'lllat&gt;

PETERS-REVINGTON

solid wood tables. See the .charm and grace of
yetteryear alive today.
·
Tjme-honored construction, finish techniques and solid oak are brought together to
give you furniture of enduring strength and
lasting beauty.

An•arson's

•••

•••

OUI LO•n PIICE
' OFTIEYW!

lntro•ucto Sale Prices!

CARPET SALE

Hard work may be mare effectlvethan fun and gamea In aha king a
bH mood. re-rchara It the Unlveralty of Virginia found.
Pavchologillts got beat reaulta motivating partlcipanta to expend
effort on Intellectual taaka.
8ynthatlc vitamin A product aeema to ward off tumore In the
eame head and neck ar• where an old cancer hai been traeted.
Dactorut tile Unlveralty of Texaa M.D. Anderaon Cancer Center
wam that laotretlnaln haa aome nvere aide effecta.

11.11

DAYS

DINING ROOM OCCASIONAL
FURNITURE We're
TABLES
very excited about this new line of

""'nnlng a trip abroed? For healtll alem and information on
health NC~uirementt, call the U.S. Public HMith Service'• Communle~ble DiaNn Center hotllne, 1-(4041·332·4559.

•••

.-

PUBLIC NOTICE · .

June 29, 1990, at 10:00 a.m .• a public sale will e
held .at 106 Union Avenue. Pomeroy. Ohio, to
sell for cash the following collateral:
.
1985 Chev. Celebrity S.W. . 1G1AW36W8
The F.armera Banlc and Savings Company. Pomeroy. Ohio,· reserves the right to bid atthissale.
,,and to ~ithdraw. t"a above collateral prior to
sale. Further. The Farmers Bank and . Savings
Company reerves the right to reject any or all
bids submitted.
Further; the above collateral will be sold in the
condition it is in with no expressed or implied
warranties given.

LAUNDRY SPECIAL
AUTOMATIC
WASHERS

-:-2 sfl"d
-6 crclt
-tt.~r dutr
-lorge capacitr

SALE

ELECTRIC
DRYER
-Large copacitr

$42 9

BUY THE PAIR
FOR ONLY

-4 crcle

-3 ttmps.
-Heawy duty

SAlE

$339

S68800
Dtlivtrtd &amp; S.t-up . ·

BANGOR, Maine (AP) Stephen King. creator of nightmar·
ish fantasies, is donating $1 million
10 build a field of dreams.
The best-selling 11uthor sa'id
Tuesday he is building a bas'l!ball,
field and donating It to his home
city, a gift ~eel to case a short·
age of fun:s1ze diamonds for
youngsters in Senior Little League.
"It's not on a par with .world
peace or ending hunger here in
Bin&amp;or," King said. "But I was
Uiught that charity begins at

FamilY.
·Medicine

23

9 Different Styles of
Quality Carpets Are On Sale.
U you're thinking about new carpet
for any room of your home stop by
or give us a call. We'll be glad to
measure and give you a free
. no-obligation quote. Try us for
quality carpet, friendly sale.speople
and low prices.

ANDERSON'S

FURNnUREi's APPLIANC~S.~_ TV'S, FLOOR COVERING
STOlE HOI : l•n•y t:30·11GV: TU11day•Sil..r.y t:30-5a00

.Thursday, June 'P, 1991
Page-7

People in the news

Ohio·University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

=·one error and had
stolen
Baer was equally valued as a
· After three dsys of Wimbledon, pitcher. where he fanned 105 in
the rain was winning 134·46; only 5~ innings from his bard
Instead of the l80 matches that throwing left-handed windup.
should hav~ been completed at that Teams scored only 10 earned runs .
point, only 46 bad been finished.
on 14 walks and 30 hits. Baer post·
"It's not quite critical, but it's ed a 1.32 ERA.
geaing close to that," Wimbledon
Bacr was first team aU-SV AC,
referee Alan Mills said. "It's obvi- first team all-State, Southeast Dis·
ously been a very frusttating and · trict Player of the Year, Ohio High
depressin~ dlrce dsys.''
School Coaches Assoc. State All·
But Mills said he still hopes to Star team member and all-state.
avoid playing this Sunday and is
In basJcttball, the former South·
optimistic the tournament can end em star led the Tornadoes to two
as scheduled on July 7. He said it SVAC championships (1988-89
could be comp~tcd on ~e even ~ ·and 199()..91 seasons), one league
the first round IS not fm1shed lll)til runner-up fmish (1989-90 season),
Monday.
. .
, sectional championships in the % average and hit lll oC 315 three
-~than playmg this Sunday, 1989-90 and 1990-91 s~asons, a Pointers for 35.2 %.
Mills said he y.oould pzefer 10 make district second-place fmish in the
Baer ended with 296 rebounds,
ether moves if the rotten weather 1989-90 season and a district 160 steals, and a 79.5 % at the line
continues- such as cuaing men's appearance in the 1990-91 season.
(249-313).
.
doubles matches from best-of-five
Baer, a three year starter averHe is fifth on the aU-time Southto best-of-three sets.
aged II 3 points (250 points) as a ern scoring list behind Larry Price,
"It is not just the tenilis that is sophomOre He hit 65 of 146 for Duane Wolfe, Kent Wolfe and Carl
to. be ta!'en.}nt? consideration,:' 44.5 two ~inters, hit 20-54 for 37 Wolfe.
~s srud. It IS all the domesuc 'percent three pointers and hit 60·71
He is second on the all-time free
thmg~ that ~ave to go on and be
free throws.
throw percentage list with 85 perorgaruzed w1th all the conttactors
His junior year be avef8$ed 18.6 cent as a sophomore, and sixth as a ·
ft!ld the Sleo,y;uds and ballboys and points for a total of 445 pomts, hit· junior. He is tied for eighth in most
lmespeople,
ting 112 of 212 two pointers for points scored in one game with 39,
52.8 percent and hit 33 of 101 three and 11th on the aU-time SHS list
PQinters for 32.6%. At the line he with 449 in one season.
hit 122 of 153 for79.7 percent with
Baer won the free throw award
62 steals and Only 47 turnovers.
three times at SHS, was ·a three
movement stillS, proper stance and
In 1990-91 his senior year he time all-SVAC selection, a two
start-up, instrucuon in centering, scored 447 points for a 20.3 aver- time aU-district i3 pick and a twopassing, ticking. cau:hing and line age on 104 of 183 for 56.8 percent time Southeast District AP selectechniques. Campers will be chal· and 58•160 for 36.2 percent three tion.
Ienged 10 raise your expectations in pointers.
As a senior he was AP specialplay, conduct and sportsmanship,
He was 67-89 at the line for mention all-stare, UPI third-team
and instruction in the mental and 7S .2 percent, with 27 offensive all-state, runner-up Division IV
physical aspects of the game will rebounds and 100 defensive Player of the Year in District 13,
be given by guest speakers and rebounds, and 64 steals.
represented Pistrict 13 in the
films.
.
For his career Baer had a tolal North-South All-Star Game at Ohio
Students should bring football 1,144 points for a 16.5 average, hit· Slllte University's SL John Arena
shoes, tennis shoes, gym shorts, ting 281 oC 541 atrernpcs for a 51.9 and was the 1990-91 SV!t,C MVP.
shirts, lind soclcs.
Each camper will receive a T.
shirt, and 'certificate of attendance ·
as well as a strong basic knowledge
NOTICE is hereby given that on Saturday,
of the game.

The first annual Eastern Eagles
Football Camp will be held for
grades 5·9 during the week of July
15 ~ 19 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at,
Easrern High School.
The camp will be open to both
residents and non-residents of the
Eastern Local School District. To
secure an application or for more
information please contact the
Easrern Athletic Booster Club, in
care of head varsity fll!ltball coach
Randy Churilla, Eastern . High
School, 38900 S.R. 7, Reedsville
OH45772. •
The entty fee for the camp is
$20 wbich sbould be made payable
to the EHS Alhlelic Booster Club.
Refer to a future c.dition of The
Daily Sentinel of Sunday-Times NL games..
Sentinel for an applicatilln or send
the following information and entry
(Continued from Page 5)
to Ch11rilla: .name, gradc,.age, nms811d !Ieven hits in five innings.
home, address, home .P~· emer·
Pirates 7, Cubs 6
g~ncy phone and sh!f! s1ze along
Barry Bonds and Jose Lind
wll.h .a parenJRI!ac~ldent re,~;a~e · .homered in.a five-run third inning,
notiCe. The applicauon deadlme IS Bob Walk remained unbeaten and
July ~ · .
,
.
Jay Bell went5-for-5.
.
Highlights ~~the camp wdl be
Walk (6-0) allowed six bits in
!'0!1-:00ntact '!rilling, f&lt;X!" ,and flex- seven innings. Bill LandrUm got
1b1hty runnmg techniques, and lhrd outs for his 14th save in 14
chances. ·
Pittsburgh trailed 3·1 before
Bonds' two-run, two-out homer in
the third off Greg Maddux (6-6),
July
who gave up six runs and seven
hits in four innings.
The 1991 Meigs Marauder FootBraves 3, Astros Z
ball Camp will be held July 22-26
Terry
Pendleton went 4-for-4
at Meigs High School.
and
scored
the go-ahead run. ·
The camp is open to boys enterWith
the
score tied 2-2,.Pcndle·
ing grades 4-8. The cost of the
ton
led
off
the
eighth with a double
camp is $30 for 15 hours of
off
Jim
Clancv
(0·2). Jeff TreadinstruCtion and a maximum of $50
way
then
singled
home the lead
per family.
·
run.
For late registration and inforMite Stanton (3-1) allowed one
mation you can contact Marauder
in one and one-third scoreless
hit
bead coach Mike Staggs at Meigs
Juan Berenguer finished
innings.
High School at 992-2158.
with perfect relief for his 11th save.

The Daily Sentinel

\ByThe Bend

coach Ed DiGenova stated, "I am
looking for him to contribute
immediately next year. We arc
excited to have him. It's rare to get
a two sport athlete of this caliber at
the college leveL"
In leading Southern to a 14-10
baseball season, Baer had 46 hilS in
only 91 at bais for a .50S batting
average. He had 21 singles, 11 dou·
bles, eight triples and~o:x home

home.~'

Question: My children have can cause serious damage if it goes
been ttying to convince me that off while still in someone's hand.
they are old enough to have fire.
An obvious method for prevenworts this 4th of July. I'm worried · lion of these injuries is to never
· that they may get hurt. Do you light ·any ftrework while it is in
h8ve any suggestions? .
your or someone else's hand. Put
Answer: Your concern for your the fuewodc in a~ holder or
children's safety is j~ed. Most on a solid surface. Light the fuse,
states have laws restricnng the sale, preferably with a long matcll, then
possession or use of fireworks. . run-run-run. Reme~Dber that sky·
These laws have been written rockets and other fueworts go up
because of injuries produced by into the air. Fuses are unprefireworks . Fueworks arc best dictable. and sometimes they wiU
enjoyed as a spectator. If you or set off the skyrocket in an instant
your children decide to set some , instead of allowing the usual severoff at your home, there are a few al second's delay. If you are leanthings which you should keep in ing over the rocket when this hapmind.
·
pens, the rocket goes into yeu
llijuries from fireworks are usu- instead of into the sky. Stand to the
ally d!le to burns. explosions. fly· side of the firework and use that
ing fragments or from falls in the long match;
.
,
dark. The location you choose for
.Firecrackers are a perenni.al
your flleworlcs should not be ncar favorite because that "BANG" is
any combustible materials, and the exciting. and it sure gets every·
surface should be free of obstacles one's attention. But firecrackers are
so that your risk of triP,Ping and not all fun. Those which use a
falling in the dark is mmimized. small amount of powder will make
You should always select clothing a nice bang and cause only a burn
which is light in color to help pre- if they go off in the band. Larger
vent someone else from accidenlal- firecrackers will blow fingers to
ly running into you, and the materi· pieces. If the firecracker is lit on a
a! should be safe around sparks. All gravel driveway, it will send gravel
fueworts require "f~" so caution shrapnel when it goes off.
must be used to prevent burns.
I like fueworlcs, and as a kid I lit
In Ohio the only fireworks my share of firecrackers, Roman
which are legal are those which candles, skyrockets and sparklers.
will NOTgo "BANG." Sparklers, But remember; the excitement of
smoke bombs and sruikes are about fueworlcs should not overrule sen·
all that is okay. With these, the sible safetY precau,ions. Children
major danger is from burns or falls. need training and supervision in
The wire inside a sparkler gets very order to use low-powered flrewotlcs
hot as the sparkler burns. The wire safely. Major fireworks should be
stays hot after the sparkler has left to the professionals. Review
burned out, but young children your stare's laws about fueworks;
often don't realize this until they then, you and your children malce
grab that hot wire ad burn their . your decision together. If you use
hand.
proper precautions, there's no reaFirewodcs laws are not strictly son why this Independence Day
enforced in many areas. I have seen can't be a safe and exciting liiJie
~ .several places selling small ,fire•
for r,ou and your family.
, crackers, skyrockets, Roman can•Family Medicine" is a wecldy
dies and similar items. In other column. To submit questions, write
states, like Missouri, the law allows to John C. Wolf, D.O.-, Ohio Uni·
tl!e sale of all these. The explosive versity College of Osteopathic
· force necess•ty to make a "BANG" Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
or to propel a rocket into the sky Ohio, 45701.

King's contractor planned to
begin soliciting bids m order to
have the field ready for play next
spring.
King. 43, author of such novels

as ''Misery,'' ••carrie,'' and '
','Cujo," is an avid baseball ran,

N:gW YORK (AP) - Mary
Alice Williarns, one of Cable News
Network's anchors when. it began
11 years ago, may return to CNN
from NBC News.
"Exploratory tallcs" are under
way, a CNN spokesman said
Wednesdsy.
Williams joined NBC News in
1989, initially as an anchor on
NBC's new CNBC cable network,
then as co-anchor of the since-an·.
celed "Yesterday, Today and·
Tomorrow" series. She now coanchors "Sundsy Today."
"NBC has no comment" on
whether Williams will return to
CNN, said I&lt;atherine McQuay, an
NBC News spokeswoman.
Williams did not rewrn a telephone
call for comment.

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL· Cblldreu
attendin1 Vacation Bible Sdtoot at tb.e Middle·
port Cburch of Cbrlst Ire partlcipaliDg in 1 new
program tberc wberc students are constantly on
the move from place to place to keep tbem busy.

The lbeme is "Be Stroniland Courlgeous.'' Tlie
children bear stories about Estber, Joseph,
Joshua, David and Mrs. Noab. Here, cblldren
are learnln1 about Esther. Tbey will also learn
aboul the Grundy Mountain Mission, make
erarts and participate In reereatlonalaetlvities.

New arrival
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) Sillger Jose Feliciano and his wife,
Susan, have a new baby.
.
Jonathan Jose Feliciano, weighing 9 pounds, 11 ounces. was born
Tuesday at Park City Hospital.
The Felicianos. who live in
Weston, also have a daughter, 2
1/2-year-old Mcliasa.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mal·
colrn-Jamal Warner. a star of "The
Cosby Show," will expand his
fledgling directorial skills next
week when cameras roll on "This
Old Man ...," a short film about a
dsy in the life of an elderly man.

Bissell re-deployed
PFC. JOnathan E. Bissell, a 1990
graduate of Eastern High School,
has recently been re-deployed to
Southwest Asia, 'for an Indefinite
amount of time for service in Saudi
Arabia. This is the second trip to
Saudi Arabia for the son of Mr. and
Mr§l Glen R. B,isseU of Lona ~Ot·
rom.
,
Friends and relatives may write
to him at: Pfc. Jonathan 1'\. Bissell,
288080-99?1, Operation Desert
Storm, 539th HEMCO, KKMC,
Saudi Arabia, APd New York,
~.Y. 09734.

ALL-SCHOLASTIC AWARD· Aaron B. Sbeets, a graduate
of Melp HJ&amp;b Scbool, Will presented tbe Franklin B. W8lter All·

JONAmAN BISSELL

Scholastic A-rd for Melp County at a recent luncbeon beld in
Columbus. Here Fraalilln B. Walter, Olllo's superlnteodent or
pubUc Instruction, left, presented Sbeell wilb a plaque as Meigs
County Superlntendeots or Sebooll, Jobn Riebel, looks on. Sbeets
was seltcted for tbt a-rd ·from nominees from ·a n tbree higb
schools by a co•mlttee or educators on lbe buill or grade pofnt
average, ACT/SAT ~~eores, letters or recommendation, a personal
IIOBI statement, awards, and activi~es.

Up and down weight can be deadly
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
,-\P Science Writer
BOSTON (AP) - Yo-yo
dieters, who go through life taking
off weight and putting it back on,
appear to significantly increase
their risk of dying from heart disease, a study concludes.
.
· Being overweight clearly raises
the chance of heart trouble, but the
new research suggests that failure
to keep off the flab might be just as
bad.
"People should take dieting
seriously," said Dr. Kelly D.
Brownell. "They should try to
ensure that chances of success are
high before they begin."
The study found that the risk of
dying from heart disease is about
70 percent higher in those with
fluctuating weight than in those
whose weight stays reasonably
steady. ,

Brownell, a psychologist at Yale
University. was senior author of the
study, published in Thursday's
New England Joumal of Medicine.
Di. George Blackburn, a diet
expert 111 New England Deaconess
Hospital, said he will ask the
National Institutes of Health to
reconsider recommendations that
everyone achieve ideal body
weights, even when they are obese.
· '"The Brownell data are enough
for us to say, 'Let's not do any rad·
ical dieting until we sort this out,
because we might be worse off
than if we did nothing at all," • he
said.
Blackburn said people should be
especially careful about trying to
lose more than 25 pounds or 10
percent of their body weight.
"Don't panic if you've lost 25
pounds and put it back on," he
said. "But if you've done it twice,
you shouldn't do any more in this
area without professional help. ••
The potential dangers of up-anddown weight have become a subject of c011cern ovet the past few
yars. Until now, however, doctors
have warned against the habit
largely because of the risk that
dieters will put back on more
pounds than they take off.
Browncll's study raises the ,PC?Ssibility that they might also bcig!Ucn their risk of heart disease, the
nation's No. I killer. PeC!ple arc
often urged 10 take off weijht • a
way to prevent hcll1 dile'lc

"It's hard to underestimate the
importance of this paper," commented Dr. David Williamson of
the U.S. Centers for Disease Ccinttol. "It raises an important public
health issue. An association
between increa.sed mortality and
weight loss and gain is very seri-

ous.''

have fluctuating weight if they had
one or two big weight losses and
then put it all back on again or if
they stayed relatively slim but had
many smaller ups and downs.

No trace of arsenic found
in Taylor's remains

While tll.e}atest study provides
circumstantial evidence that yo-yo
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)dieting is harmful, it stops short of
answering several important ques- Tests show that President Zachary
tions, such lis how much - and Taylor was not poisoned by arsenic
how frequent - weight fluctuation 141 years ago, a medical examiner
is bad.
.
. said today. apparently dispelling an
In an editorial in the journal, Dr. author's theory that he was assassiClaude Bouchard of Laval Univer- nated.
"It is my opinion that Zachary
sity in Ste. Foy, Quebec, said the
study's conclusion "is likely 10 be Taylor died of one of a myriad of
controversial and to nurture the natural diseases which would have
debate that began a few years produced the symptoms of gas·
troenteritis," said Kentu~ Medi·
agq."
'
·
cal
Examiner Dr. George N1chols.
The study considered people to

lOK

VARSITY

YELLOW .
. COLD
COMBO

Grcat dt•!'l i~n ~ .
from Yl'!'tcrycil r
m tl kl' ll t om L'·

bm;-k. VM~i t y
&lt;'l nd Mcmt1ry h.Wl'
lt ,, II ... 'V tlU I'
pt..·r~(lnal nnmL',
m n:.cot namL',

MEMORY

cl ctivitv c ho ic~ .
,~;r.,du ~tion. di1ti.',
, h,lkc (lf ~t•m·
stone t1nd more!

HURRY I THIS OFFER EXPIRES AUGUST 24. I'I'll.

Enjoy sizzling summer aavings as we make
room for new, fall merchandise. It' 1 Picway's

Summer Clearance Sale. Choose from eelected
summer fashions for the l'unily at the lowest prices
of the II!Uonl Hurry In for beet seledion-they won't
last long at these prices! Selection varlet by etore.

OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY BY R. JOHNS, LTD.
s.le enda July 21.

OHIO

•

Mott 11orea open
....... and Sunday..

RIVER PlAZA- GAWPOUS, OHIO
UPPER RT. '7
'I

�•

Sentinel

Baer signs with Ohio Dominican
Andy Baer, son of Bill Baer ancl
Jocelyn Bililey, signed a national
letter of intent to play baseball and
basketball, at the Ohio Dominican
University Wednesday at his horne.
Baer excelled in both basketball
and baseball at Southern, earning
all-district and all-state honors in
both sports.

ODU baseball coach Paul Page
stated, ''This is the kind of young
man we want in the program . He
has good athletic ability, good
stills and strong family suppon,
which is important in the success of
an athlete especially at the coDege
level."
Dominican head basketball

~

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Wimbledon's m id-tourney ~~:ic~~'f~~~~.o:'i.Jf~::::
23
break hreatened b"
rain
=·one error and
stolen
J
Baer was equally valued as.a

I
i

By ROB GLOSTER
AP Sports Writer
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- The incessant rain that already
has wrecked a couple of Wimbledon tr;~ditions now is challenging
one of its most hallowed rituals: the
mid-tournament break.
All England Club officials have
mandated for more than a century
that, " On the seventh day, we
rest"
But a backlog of matches
caused by three days of miserable
weather could call that command. ment into question.
·
·
"At this stage it is too early to
d~ide if we will have to play on
the middle Sunday," said chief
executive Chris Goninge. "It has
never been done in the past and of
course we have had this sort of
weather before.''
Yet Wimbledon librarian Alan
LiUle, who has been at the Grand
Slam event for 46 years, said he
cannot recall such soggy weather.
"I can't remember a wetter fmt
three days," Little said. "This is
certainly the wettest stan we' ve
ever had."
·

· After three days of Wimbledon, · pitcher, where he fanned I OS m ·
the rain was winning 134-46. only 53 innings from his hard.
Instead of the 180 matches that throwing left-handed windup.
should have been comp~ at that Teams scored only 10 earned runs •
point, only 46 had been flllished.
on 14 walks and 30 hits. Baer post·
"It's not quite critical, but it's ed a 1.32 ERA.
getting close to that," Wimbledon
Baer was fust team ali-SVAC,
referee Alan Mills said, •'It's obvi- first team all-State, Southeast Disously been a ·very frustrating and · ttict Player of the Year, Ohio High .
depressin~ lhree days."
School Coaches Assoc. State AllBut Mills said he still hopes to Star team member and all-state.
avoid playing this Sunday and is
In basketball, the former South·
optimistic the tournament can end em star led the Tornadoes to two
as scheduled on July 7. He said it SVAC championships (1988-89
could be CCllllpleted on time even if and 1990-91 seasons}, one league
the fmt round is not flllished until runner-up finish (1989-90 season),
Monday.
• sectional_championships in the .% average and hit 111 of 315 three
Rather than playing this Sunday, 1989-90 and 1990-91 seasons, a pointers for 35.2 %.
Mills said he would prefer to make district second-place fmish in the
Baer ended with 296 rebounds,
other moves ·if the rouen weather 1989-90 season and a district 160 steals, and a 79.5 % at the line
continues- such as cutting men's appearance in the 1990-91 season.
(249-313).
doubles matches from best-of-five
Baer, a three year starter averHe is fifth on the all-time Southto best-of-three sets.
aged 11.3 points (250 points) as a em scoring list behind Larry Price,
"It is not just the tennis that is sophotnare. He hit 65 of 146 for Duane Wo1fe, Kent Wolfe and Cat!
to be taken into consideration,!' 44.5 two pointers, hit 2():.54 for 37 Wolfe.
Mills said. "It is all the domestic percent three pointers and hit 60-71
He is second on the all-time free
things that have to go on and be free throws.
throw percentage list with 85 perorganized with all the contractors
His junior year he avef8$ed 18.6 cent as a sophomore, and sixth as a
and the Sle~!!II'ds and ballboys and points for a total of 445 ~mts, hit· junior. He is tied for eighth in most
hnespeople.
ting 112 of 212 two pomters for points scored in one game with 39,
52.8 percent and hit 33 of 101 three and lith .on the all-time SHS list
pointers for 32.6%. AI the line he with 449 in one season.
hit 122 of 153 for 79.7 percent with
Baer won thC free throw award
62 steals and Only 47 turnovers.
three times at SHS , was a three
In 1990-91 bis senior year be time all-SVAC selection, a two
movemen! skiDS,~ s1ance .and
stan-up, mstrucuon m centenng, scored 447 points for a 20.3 aver- time all-district 13 pick and a twopassing, ticking, catching a line age on 104 of 183 for 56.8 percent time Southeast District AP selectechniques. Campers will be chal- and 58-160 for 36.2 percent three tion.
lenged to raise your expectations in pointers.
As a senior he was AP specialplay, conduct and sportsmanship; · He was 67-89 at the line for mention all-state, UPI third-team
and instruction in the mental IIJid 75.2 percent,· with 27 offensive all-state, runner-up Division· IV
physical aspects of the game will rebounds and 100 defensive Player of the Year in District 13,
be given by guest speakers and rebounds, and 64 steals.
represented District 13 in the
flbns'.
.
For his career Baer had a total North-South All-Star Game at Ohio
Students should bring football 1,144 points for a 16.5 average, hit· State University's St. John Arena
shoes, tenni_s shoes, gym shorts, ling 281 of 541 auempts for a Sl.9 and was the 1990-91 SVA,C MVP.
shins, and socks.
.
Each camper will receive a T·
shin, and certificate of a~ndance
as well as a strong b&amp;Sic knowledge
NOTICE is hereby given that on Saturday,
of the game.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medir;:ine
~'

\_ ""'

Marauder football
camp set for July 22

..•

_..

.Leave fireworks to the pros this fourth

'

"N_·,

~llLnD

SIGNS WITH OIDO DOMINICAN -Southern IJ'Bduate Andy '
Baer, son of Jocelyo Balley ud BDI Baer, siped lill,letler ot intent ;
to play bask.etball and bueball at Obio DOIIllnlcaa University ;
Wednesday. Pictured are (L·R) ODU baebaD coach Paul Page, ;
Alldy Baer, ud ODU bead basketball coach Ed DiGeiiOVL Behiad .
them 11re Jocel711 Bailey, Soutben brnball caach Mick Winebren; ;
:
ner, SHS basketball illelitor Howie CaldweD IIJid Bill Baer.

O'DELLS
1HIU iU&amp;r 716

'Football camp set for July 15
The fmt annual Eastern Eagles
Football Camp will be held for
grades 5-9 during the week of July
15-19 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. at•
Eastern High School.
The camp wiD be open to both
residents and non-residents of the
Eastern Local School District. To
secure an application or for more
information please contact the
Eastern Athletic Booster Club, in
care of head varsity football coach
Randy Churilla, Eastern High
School, 38900 S.lt 7, Reedsville ·
OH45772. ,
The entry fee for the camp is
$20 which should be made payable
to the EHS Athletic Booster Club.
Refer to a future edition of The
Daily Sentinel of Sunday-Times
Sentinel for an applicalion or send
the following information and entry
to Churilla: name, grade, .age,
home, address, home phone, emergency phone and shin size along
with a parental(ac~ideat rejc;~e .
notice. The applicauon deadline JS
July 1.
Highlights of the camp will be
non-contact drilling, fmn and flexibility running techniques, and

98
12
~
·
OUI LOWEST PIICE
...,_
II.It

41g•w... r..al•"'ucelelt_CI....t

PUBLIC NOTICE

NLgames ..
(Continued from Page 5)
runs and ICVen hits in five innings.
Pirates 7, Cubs 6
Barry Bonds and Jose Lind
hOm~ iJI,a ijve-run lhird inning,
Bob Walk remained unbeaten and
Jay Bell went 5-for-5. ' .
Walk (6-0) allowed six hits in
seven innings. Bill Landrum got
three outs for his 14th save in 14
chances.
Pittsburgh trailed 3-1 before
Bonds' two-run, two-out homer in
the third off Greg Maddux (6-6),
who gave up six runs and seven
hits in four innings.
Braves 3, Astros 2
Terry Pendleton went 4-for-4
and scored the go-ahead run.
With the score tied 2-2,,Pendleton led off the eighth with a double
off Jim Clancv (0-2). Jeff Treadway then singled home the lead

The 1991 Meigs 'Marauder Football Camp will be held July 22-26
at Meigs High School.
The camp is open to boys enter·
ing grades 4-8. The cost of the
camp is $30 for 15 hours of
insD'UCtion and a maximum of $50
per family.
·
For late registration and infor- ·run.
Mike Slanton (3-1) allowed one
mation you can contact Marauder
hit
in one and one-third scoreless
head coach Mike Staggs at Meigs
innings.
Juan Berenguer finished
High School at 992-2158.
with perfect relief for his 11th save.

PHARMACY
·TOPICS
BY YOUR
SWISHER LOHSE
.

CHROMCRAFT
•

•

Stop in and take a look at this quality line of
dining tables and chairs.

Artlflciel bone. grown In 1 jar, mey 100n be wellebte to repair
tr.cturea. Re•eerchefl at Herverd Meclcel School end other
llboretorlee ere mi~lng compouncll from protein• end ceramic
meterlet. thet would patch the br~ek until new bone formed.

•••

N- advanc11 In medicine keep u1 on our toll. Make u1 pert of
vour lt•hh cere tNm at ...

.
.....

ENAMEL

Coati•

8.. ...

1991 ..L
.'

U.. DR wood, 1111180nry,

....01111.

O'DELL ·Jh,t,-'Y~.
U4 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, •MSOO
Mon..f'rj. 'i'-I:JO; S.l. H;OO

PETERS·REVINGTON

solid wood tables. See the .charm and grace of
yesteryear alive today.
Time-honored construction, finish techniques and solid oak are broUght together to
give you furniture of enduring strength and
lasting beauty.

AUTOMATIC
WASHERS

-Htavy duty.
-large capactty

SAL£

EUCTRIC
DRYER

$429

BUY THE PAIR
FOR ONLY

-Large capacity
-4 cydt
-3 fillips.
-Heavy duty

Sale Prices!

CARPET SALE

LAUNDRY SPECIAL
-2speed
-6 cycle

RUST

Anderson's

App~l

•••

••••

Waterproofing

SPECIAL PRICING!

Hard work may be mofl effective then tun and game• in lhaklng a
bed mood, ,._rchers at the Univ.,.lty of Virginia found.
Pl\lchologllll got bell re1uh1 motivating participant• to expend
effort on intellectual t11k1.
'
Synthetic vitamin A product 111m1 to ward off tumors in the
11me heed end neck arM where en old cancer hal been treated.
Doctortet me Univeulty o.fTexa1 M.D . Ander1on Cancer Center
wem that IIOI18tinoin he1 tome MVere lide effec:t1.

1·0

,

Planning a trip ebroed7 For health at- and Information on
heahh requiremen... Clll the U.S . Public HMhh Service'• Com. municebla Dii•M Center hotUne, 1·1404)-332-411118.

•••

11'14111

DINING ROOM OCCASIONAL
FURNITURE We're
TABLES
very excited about this new line of

Chromcraft stands for quality, value ond features. Heavy gauge steel; heat, stain, scratch and
moisture resistant tops. Extremely comfortable
chairs.

PHARMACISTS

9 Different Styles of
Quality Carpets Are On Sale.
If you're thinking about new carpet

SAlE

$339

for any room of your home stop by
or give us a call. We'll be glad to
IIIHSUrt and give you ci frte
. no-obligation quote. try us for ·
quality carpet, fritndly salespeople
and low price$.

568800
A DERSON'S
Dtlivwtd I Stt-up

FUIINITURE, APPLIANC~SL ~~Ia FLOOI COVEIING
SIOIIIIOIIS: MIR. . f 9:30.._; T

- ------· ·

' OF TIE YUI!

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

.

June 29, 1990, at 10:00 a.m •• a public sale will e
held .at 105 Union Avenue, Pomeroy. Ohio, to
sell for cash the following collateral:
1985 Chev, Celebrity S.W. 1G1AW36W6
The Farn1ers Bente and Savings Company,' Pomeroy, Ohio, reaervu the right to bid at this sale,
and to ~ithdraw tf!e above collateral prior to
sale. Further, The Farmers Bank and Savings
Company reerves the right to reject any or all
bids submitted.
Further, the above collateral will be sold in the
condition it is in with no expressed or implied
warranties given.

...

BANGOR. · Maine (AP) Stephen King, creator of nightmar·
ish fantasies. is donating $1 million
to build a field of dreams.
. The best-selling autbor said
Tuesday he is building a b~ball .
field an4 donating It to his home
city, a giftdesi$Jied to ease a short·
age of full-s1ze diamonds for
youngslerS in Senior Little League.
" It's not on a par with world
peace or ending hunger here in
Bangor," King said. "But I was
taught that charity begins at
home."'
King ' s contractor planned to
begin soliciting bids 1n order to
have the field ready for play next

Family
Medicine

had

t_

The Daily Sentinel

\ By.The Bend

coach Ed DiGenova staled, "I am
looking for him to contribute
immediately next year. We are
excited to have him. It's I8I'C to get
a two sport athlete of this caliber at
the college level"
In leading Southern to a 14-10
baseball season. Baer had 46 hits in
only 91 at bats for a .505 batting
average. He had 21 singles, 11 doubles, eight triples and six home

t·Scitvr•t 9:30·5100

Question: My children have
been trying to convince me that
they are old enough l(l have fire.
works this 4th of July. I'm worried
that they may get hun. Do you
have any suggestions?
Annrer: Your concern for your
children's safety is j~ed. Most
states have laws restrictlllg the sale,
possession or use of fireworks.
These laws bave been written
becapse of inJuries produced by
fireworks. Ftreworks are best
enjoyed as a spectator. If you or
your children decide to set some
off at your home, there are a few
things which you should keep in
mind.
·
liljuries from fti'eworks are usually dpe to burns, explosion~. flying fragments or from falls m the
dark. The location you chooSe for
your ftrewQ~"ks shOuld not be .near
any combustible materials, and the
surface should be free of obstacles
so that your risk of trip_Ping and
falling in the dark is mmimized.
You should always select clothing
which is light in color to help prevent someone else from accidentally running iqto you, and the materi·
al should be safe around sparks. All
fm:works require "ftre," so caution
must be used 10 prevent burns,
In Ohio the only fireworks
which are legal are those which
will NOT go "BANG." Sparklers,
smoke bombs and snakes are about
all that is okay. With these, the
.major danger is from burns or falls.
The wire inside a sparkler gets very
hot as the sparkler bums. The wire
stays hot after the sparkler has
burned out, but young children
often don't realize this until they
grab that hot wire ad bum their
hand.
Fireworks laws are n\)t strictly
enforced ill many areas. I have seen
~ several places selling sm~l fire•
- crackers, skyrockets, Roman candles and similar items . In other
states, like Missouri, the law allows
the sale of all these. The explosive
force necess8ry 10 make a "BANG"
or to pmpel a rocket into the sky

can cause serious damage if it goes
off while still in someone's hand
An obvious method for prevention of these injuries is to never
43, author of such ·novels
light -any firework while it is in as ''Misery,'' ' '·C arrie,' ' and
your or someone else's hand. Put "Cujo,' ' is an avid baseball fan.
the fuework in a proJM:f holder or ..
on a solid surface. Ltght the fuse,
NEW YORK (AP) - Mary ·
preferably with a long lllllcll, then Alice Williams, oile of Cable News
run-run-run. Remember that Sky- Network's anchors when it began
rockets and other fueworks go up II years ago, may return to CNN
into the air. Fuses are unpre- from NBC News.
dictable, and sometimes they will
"Exploratory talks" are under.
set off the skyrocket in an instant way, a CNN spokesman said
instead of allowing the usual sever" Wednesday.
al second's delay. If you are leanWilliams joined ~C News in
ing over the rocket when this hap- 1989, initially as an anchor on
pens, the rocket goes into you NBC's new CNBC cable network,
instead of into the sky. Stand to the then as co-anchor of die since-can-.
side of the firework and use that celed " Yesterday, Today and·
long match;
. . Tomorrow" series. She now co- .
Firecrackers are a perenntal anchors "Sunday Today."
favorite because that "BANG" is
"NBC has no comment" on
exciting, and it sure gets every- whether Williams will return to
one's attention. But fuecrackers are CNN, said Katherine McQuay, an
not all fun . Those which use a NBC News spokeswoman.
small amount of powder will make Williams did not rerum a telephone
a nice bang and cause only a burn call for comment.
if they go off in the hand. Larger
firecrackers will blow fingers to
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Malpieces. If the firecracker is lit on a colm-Jamal Warner, a star of "The
gravel driveway, it will send gravel Cosby Show," will expand his
shrapnel when it goes off. .
. fledgling directorial skills..neJ!t
I like fireworks, and as a tid I lit week when cameras roll on This
my share of fll'ecrackers, Roman Old Man...," a short film aliol!t a
candles, skyrockets and. sparklers. day in the life of an elderly man,
But remember; the excttement of
fm:works should not overrule sensible safety
&lt;:hil~n
need
trainingprecau!ions.
and superviSion
tn
, ,
order to use low-powered fueworks
safely. Major fueworks should be
PFC. J&lt;inathan E. Bissell, a 1990
left to the professionals. Review graduate of Eastern High School,
yotir state's laws about ftreworks; has recently been re-deploye~ .to
then, you and your children make Southwest Asia, 'for an tndefmtte
your decision together. If you use amount of time for service in Saudi
proper precautions, there's no rea- Araliia. This is the second trip to
son why this Independence Day Saudi Arabia for the son of Mr. and
can't be a Safe and exciting tiiJie MQ. Glep 11-, Bissel). of Long Bot·
for you and your family.
·
. tom:
.
.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
Friends and relabves may .wnte
column. To submit questions, write to him at: Pfc. Jonaduut E. BtsseU,
· to John c. Wolf D.O.-, Ohio Uni· . 288080-9991, Operation Desert
versity Colleg~ of Osteopathic Storm, 539th HEM~O. KKMC,
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, Saudi Arabia, APO New York,
Ohio, 45701.
.
N.Y. 09734.

~g.

·- -

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL· Childre•
attendin1 Vrcatlon Bible School at the Middleport Church or Christ are participating Ia a new
program there where stuclelits are coastrDtly on
the move from place to place tQ keep them busy.

The theme is "Be Stroog imd Courigeoua." Tlie
children bear stories about Esther, Joseph,
Joshua, David and Mrs. Noah. Here, children
are learning about Esther. They will also learn
about the Grundy Mouataia Mission, make
crafts and participate Ia recreational activities.

New arrival
BRIDGEPORT, Conn. (AP) ..._
Singer Jose Feliciano and his wife,
Susan, have a new baby.
.
Jonathan Jose Feliciano, weighing 9 pounds, 11 ounces, was born
Tuesday at Park City Hospital.
The Felicianos, who live in
Weston, also have a daughter, 2
1/2-year-old Melissa.
.

•
•
'

.•

•.

Bz's·sell ,.e-deployed

•

ALL-SCHOLASTIC AWARD· Aaron B. Sheets, a gralluate

or Melp H(&amp;h School, was presented the Fraaklln B. Writer All-

Seholastlc Award for Meigs County at r recent luucbeoa held in
Columbas. Here Franklin B. Waher, Ohl~'s superlatendeat.of
puhUc instnctloll, left, presented Sheets wtth a plaque as Metgs
CIMIDty Superlatead"'ts or Sc~Js, Jolm Riebel, looks 1111. Sheets
wu nlected for tlit award from nominees from all tbree high
schools by a committee of educators on the basis of grade pofat
averase, ACT/SAT IC«ts, letters or reeommeadatloa, a persoaal
goal statement, awards, and actlvllit$.

Up and down weight can be deadly
By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON (AP) - Yo-yo
dieters, who go through life taking
off weight and putting it back on,
appear to sigmficantly increase
their risk of dying from heart disease, a study concludes.
· Being overweight clearly raises
the chance of heart trouble, but the
new research suggests that failure
to keep off the tlah might he just as
bad. '
.
"People should take dieting
seriously," said Dr. Kelly D.
Brownell. "They should try to
ensure that chances of success are
liigh before they begin.''
. The study found that the risk of
dying from heart disease IS about
70 percent higher in those with
fluctuating weight than in those
whose weighJ stays reasonably

Sleady.

Brownell, a psychologist at Yale
University, was senior author of the
study, published in Thursday's
New England Jomnal of Medicine.
Dr. George Blackbum, a diet
expert at New England Deaconess
Hospital, 'Said he will ask the
National Institutes of Health to
reconsider recommendations that
everyone achieve ideal body .
weights, even when they are obese.
"The Brownell data are enough
for us to say, 'Let's not do any rad·
ical dieting until we sort this out,
becauie we might be worse off
than if we did nothing at all," ' he
said.
Blackburn said people should be
especially careful about trying to
lose more than 25 pounds or 10
percent of their body weight.
"Don' t panic if you've lost 25
pounds and put it back on ," he
said. "But if you've done it twice,
you sltouldn't do any more in this
area without professional help.''
The potential dangers of up-anddown weight have become a subject of concern over the past few
years, Until now, however, doctors
have warned against the habit
largely because of the risk that
dieters will put back on more
pounds than they lake off.
Brownell's study raises the JX?S·
libility that they mtJht also hetglu·
en their risk of heart disease, the
nation's No. 1 killer. People are
often urged to lake off weight as a
way to prevent heart diwse.

"It's hard to underestimate the
importance of this paper," commented Dr. David Williamson .o f
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control. "It raises an imponant public
health issue . An association
between increased mortality and
weight loss and gain is very seri-

. ous. ,,

have fluctuating weight if they had
one or two big weight losses and
then put it all back on again or if
they stayed relatively slim but had
many smaller ups and doWJIS.

No trace of arsenic found
in Taylor's remains

While the latest study provides
circumslantial evidence that yo-yo
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) dieting is harmful, it SlOPs short of
answering several important ques- Tests show that President Zachary
tions, such as bow much - and Taylor was not poisoned by arsenic
how frequent - weight fi\ICtuation 141 years ago, a medical examiner
said today, apparently dispeUing ~
is bad.
In an editorial in the journal, Dr. author's theory that be was assasst·
Claude Bouchard of Laval Univer- nated.
"It is my opinion that ~hary
sity in Ste. Foy, Quebec, said the
Taylor
died of one of a mynad of
study's conclusion "is likely to be
natural
diseases which would have
controversial and to nurture the
debate that began a few years pr.oduced the symptoms of ga~­
troenteritis," said Kentucky Mediago."
,,
The study considered people to cal Examiner Dr. George Ntchols.

VARSITY

lOK
YELLOW .
GOLD
COMBO

G r\.•at dt..'!'i ~n " .
from :V l'!'tc ryc&lt;~ r
makl• n Cnm('badc V.u:-itv
and M~morY hiH'i.'

il all ... Y l~ ur

Enjoy 1izzHng summer saving&amp; as W1l make
room for new, fall merchandise. It's Picway's
Summer Clearance Sale. Choose from selected
summer fashions for the family at the lowest prices
of the season! Hurry In for best selection-they won't
last long at these prices! Selection varies by atore.

pcrSt mi'\ 1 ni'lml'.

ma:-cut nam ~.
acth:ity chokl',
).': r ,,dutttion dntt.',

MEMORY

dwicc l)f ~l:! m ~
~otu nL~ and mort'!

HURRY ! THIS OFFER EXPIR ES AUGUST 24, I'I'll .

OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY BY R. JOHNS, LTD.
Srle ends July 21.

Moat 1tore1 open
nlpu and Sunday..

,

omo RIVER PLAZA -

GALLIPOLIS, OWO
UPPERRT. 7

I'

'I

I

�Page B The Dally Sentinel

Ohio

.·

~

Thursday, June :rr, 1181

Thousands of troops,
families wait for
their homecoming

.

'

~Th~.u~~~d:2~·,~J~u~"e~~~·~19~9~1------------------------------~Po~m~~~y~M~Id~d~~!~!rt~,~O~h~lo~~--:_~----~------------2n.~· ~O.~Iy~se~m~IM~I:P~,~8~8
'
Complied by:
. MOBILE, Ala. (AP) - Amy this fall, hoping for ' career in
Miss Goodman succeeds last Okla.; Lianne Johns.en of Green
Ellllllopae Hilllteba Coop
Goodman, an 18-year-old Califor- international business.
.
year's tilfebolder, Sara Martin of Bay, Wise,; and Angie Kim of
Recorder, Melp Couaty, Ohio
nian, received a $30.000 colleg.e
For her dance routine, she Illinois, who liiOCI her scholarship Ames, Iowa.
,
scholarship in becoming the 1991 a striking kimono and held gold on music and Slsvic languages at
The stsge performance bC the · Doqlss Chapman and Sadie M.
A.metica's Young Woman of the · fans m
· each ,,....,
•--~ w'""··
.Northwestc1111 Uruvenny.
· ·
"-;&amp; T Chap•...., ~"'".omung
·. cOntenders .in the Mobile ivic Chapman• ·76A• 10 ·~·
Year.
·
the CJ•ssiw J8pllllCSC dance caUed
Miss Goodman was among SO Center, wilh aeiDr Dick van Patten'
aad,Sherry S. Chipman, Rut· : She emerged from a congratula- "The Flower."
.
contestants in tho 34th annual .as master of ceremonies. culminat.
tory huddle Wednesday night with
She saicl it was a "~ treat" scholarship competition. '11!e run- ed a year of natioowide competi- · Bernard W. Hudson and Patty
49 other contestsnts - beaming to~ her Japanese herita&amp;e with . n~ru for the title was .Nicole ti · 1 ·
h' h L. Hudson, pt. lot, to Tammy S&gt;
·•- contestantS and the audi·
on mvo
:vmg some 26 '000· 18
Stumbo and Wl'llwn' B. "~tumbO,
one minute, crying the next
the ou..,..
tz, 18, of Ke~. Md., who school
seniors
"I had no remote Idea I was ence. ' She said. her mother, ·•u~ received a $15,000 scholarship.
. Th ·
rr'
.
Minersville .
.._,
·
elt pe o.rmance .mcluded a
"'
A.Patte
A•-'d .....
Ann Goodman, came 10 the United
Five other 18-year-olds received ·salute to Deaen SIDrm troops.
~ .ancy ·
non """ , ......,
Slates l'rom lll)Jillla age 9,
smaller scbplarships. They were . ~. girls are judgecl on scholas- Nancy Ann Patterson, dec d, to
said after receiving tile title.
"I've visiled Japan eight cr nine Lea Mack of PickeringiDn, Ohio; tic achievement, creative and per- · Harold Paumon. Sutton. .
·
Tl)e Sl!nia Rosa High School times in my life ID study Japanese Sarah Jean Lee of Waipahu, forming arts, fitress and presence .
James Cornell and.Berruce Corhonor. student said she wiU spen.d dancing," she said.
Hawaii; SliCy Fortner of Hodgen. and compos~
nell, pan:el, to Henry W. Doerfer
t,he $30,000 scholarship at UCLA
··
and Andrea I, D(let1or. Pomeroy
vrn.ge. ·
manland
·

.~~~:~:r~~,~~ari

e=

· fOrme."

These weeks have not been so
joyous for the 55,000 American
troOps sliU serving in the Persian
GWf, or for dleir families. Cleaning
. up after war is a lot less glorious
than celebrating die peace.
"The military .isn't making
headlines anymore," slid Kathy
Gill; a staffer • the Desert Storm
Comm11nity Resource Center in
OrlaQdo, Aa. "Is there going 10 be
~pie still out

Classifie
I

.usn:
~ose

CIICirmOUJ vic!Ory cclebntion giYCII

the nearly SOO,OOO U.S. li1XIPf who
began returning stateside shonly
after die war·ended in Febn&amp;y.
"And their families aren't
enJoying ihe festivities either,"
swd Sll!ldY Thunberg, whose 20ear-old son is still in the 11ulf.
·we·~ feeling left out, alienati:d"
LL Col. Jack Samii, a Pat!Bfon
spokesman, said the remainmg
U.S. forees pobllbly will continue
tricliling home dlrough .November.
"Meanwhile, tbe}''re over there
in an iaolated litualion away. from
home," Samii Slid. "And my time
a soldier is away from home, be's
lonely. It's very importantiD stay

POliCIES , .
'Ads outsido.Mengs, Gallia or Muon countie&amp;
l)o~~d .'

'

• All 'Springs'
So"d Color Sheets
~ All Juvenile Bedding.. ". .
• AI Ftanklin. Spelling AidS

Still, milhatf suppon groups
report volunreer m.- and donations hsve fallen off pec:4ritioully.
"It's a weakness in u.s Americans,'' said AI Soltesz of Opcnlion
Mustsrd Seed in Latham, .N.Y.
"We say to Ounelves,
gotten
mine home.' But those kidS over
·there now are having it rougher
than when the shooting was on."
That's why Soltesz and other
volunteers keep wrapping up care
paclc.ages, sencling otl letters and '
answering calls fiOm lonely spouses who in 'aome cuea haven't seen ;
their loved ones in many; many
months.
"We aetleuers from die service
~le over there saying, 'Please
don t forget diose of us that are still
here."' Soliesz iaid.
On .lhe homefronl, families still
separated are· tired of waiting;
while the ones reunited are often·
troubled by money or marital problems and readjusting 10 normal life.
"These people need support in
the aftermalh as much as they did
during the war," said Gay Jacobson, whose ()pontiol) Yellow Ribbon in San Francisco expanded to

'I've

, ·'.

'

e

AI Amll Faclll ~:~
tl~ not tnc

e

~ -'

.

'

·

' .

• AI RetutlrtY Priced 99
3Ma~and scotch Ta,e

..
. • AI. Autefite · d .

+

s••rk
Plugs an
, .
.... ..-., tune-Up Parts

,e

AutORI.n••
·
• 4 Pk. oependablll
UgbtbUllls
·
• All Kenco Truck
Accessories·

.•
''•

•

•

The family of Cia·
riH'Ice p, Gru•er wloh
to exprna our ainc:tra

'

.J:

•

I

·

Take an aildl\lllnal J.5 '~

:n·~ 'rcwren's apparel!

on CLEARAMCEl&amp;IIIS ' o •

'

1 dy reduced prices

save ~P. to 3Q 1o ~

O% Off

.our ong•nal pnces•.

'·

' 83
LIMITED TO STORE

•

.GALLIPOLIS

.NOT ALL STYLES IN ALL

.

lil]~.

I

"-·

l

I
I

I
l

•

''

i

'·~­

-yjjij'N c.: Rc .. " :

205 N. S.CIIIIil Slrlll
IIIIIDI.Ei'OIJ, 01110 45768
. Offlct 614-9t2-2116
IICIMl 614-992·5692
DOY1ll S.

Af'IIIE ,

LETAir PAW
CAU.

•

'
I

1-147·1012

I

Ann s P.M.
.. t '

A"'"

72 lfUC:kl for' So~~le
13 Vans&amp;4WO ' • ·
7!C r,totortych•·

. •'
,.

, 75.'' Boet1:. MOtors IDr So1ht
76 Auto Parts &amp; Aca: as~i• ,
77 ' · Au•o Aepa11

78 . Camplng.Eflu•pment
78 CW!mper&amp; &amp; ~otor Hon11~!1i

MerchandisB

Serv1ces

61

HOU•hold 'GOOdt
IZ ..... Spot ling ,Goo•
53 AnttqUil
54 . Misc. M ltc"andi•e
56 Building Suppli•

81 · Homtlmprowmtnh
82 ~~ Piumbing

6 He•~~nu
·
84 Electricll a Aelrlgwithon

66 Pet1 lor Sale

Proi•StOnal S.,vicwt

E~«:.w81inQ

83

86 Gun•el Hau ltny

17 Mulic .. ln1truments
58 Frurll &amp; Vegtll:abl•
, . ·~9 For Sale Of Tude

of MINff,.,
UPHOLSTDY
211-... i-11111

Mllidlt,.n

.Hand Tufting

....
614-992-1328

Cultom Drapti

S6v.... ~x,...

BISSELL I lUilE
CONSTRUCTION

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE

•Sidewalks ·
•Patios
•Driveways
•Siaba

oo.,...•.

•New Ho•s

. _...,

ocompllte

Stop I ColllpCire
,,.. EstiMatn ·

1Ollf. DIKOUNI TO .
· SE..OI ClnZEIIS

985·4473

FREE EITIMATU

86 ,Mobil• Humu Rep11H
87 Upholtterot

GROC)M

TRIM and

llmRt - UniiO•
FR"E ESTIMA1ES

ROOM

REMOVAL

4.800 sq. ll'!orm bldi

Con1ple·1e Grooming

For

Br..cls
EMILEE MERINAR .
Owner I{ Operator

614-992-6820
Pomtroy,

CONSTRUCTION
992·66.. Oi'

!='~·~·~~~=~
c:••"tlll•
.....
•

SIGNS

Ohio, to otll for - h t,. fo~
.

~~~~~';'w~·brlty sw.

by t:Lc:k

"""''"'¥
b

Tho Formers lank lf!d
B~
Sov!ngl Company, Pomo·
f
roy. Ohio. ~-o• the right • ' ·
to bid ol thl• 1ile. end to .
UALI.TY
wlthdr- tht aboVe collaterol prior to oolo. Furth•. . I ~~~!!!:!!.:!~~.

Y

~

lngt CO~IIft\l - · tho
right to
ct any or all blda
IUbmitted.

TII·COI.!NTY
SANITAnON

t,.

SIP1K rANI I'UIIIPING
POif·A-JOHN IENTAL

..
INDII'INIIIIf •

CAIPD CIIA.R$
ond nil FLDOI CAll
•Reatoneble R••••
•Quality Work
•Fr• E11tlmate1
•Ce'lJIIt Hu Felt Ory
Time ·
.
•High Gloto on Till!
Floor Flnl1h
Mill lEWIS. Ow•
II. 1, l .. loNI, OH.

742·2451

3·14-'91-lfn

may be uselul1il dell!lmllli!tlhe vllue olllle lnteresl beint sold.
DESCRIPTION OF PROPERTY: LOT HI:
SMALL IOJSE I.OCATBl AT 152 DC MOll ST.. MIDIX.EPOI!T, IJiO.
PROPERTY MAY BE INSPECTED: 152 DIAMOND ST., MIDDLEPORT, OH.
45760, OUTSIDE INSPECTION ONLY, UP TO DATE OF SALE.
PAYMENT TERMS: Deterred paymenl as foHows: $500.00 ON SALE

DATE. R£MAINDER IN 10 DAYS.
FORM OF·PAYMENT: AI payments must be by cash, eertnll!d check,

mh~efs or treasurer's check, or by 1 United Stiles pos!JI. b1nk, e1·
press, or ltlecrtph money Older: Mike ehetk or money order PIY•ble lo

.,,,.,, $~1111
30 SU$10NS $3Q'•

lepalr r Trophies,
Sign age
., I

949-2126
YACDIVIUI ID.

JOHN T. TEAFOID
Clllml, 01110

-~=:...-;;;;;......

.• HOWARD
IULLbOZER 1111d
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME SITI!S.
i..ANDCLEARINO,
WATER end SEWER
. LINES

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GWGES

"At._.....

•FIREWOOD

Pnt......

PH. 949·1101
or las. tct-2160
· Day or Night
NO SUNOAf CALLS

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
8·12-aO-Ifol

CARP(NTER SfRVIC(
-~---~

. EXCAVATING

•ui~DEIS

...

I--::::::-::=:-=-:-=--, •
YOUNG'S

'

BISSELl ·

•LIGHT HAULING

..

-~--"'

-EIHiriOal onol Plullllllifto
-con--.wor~~

-Roofing

1

~.

.

-Interior • !xtwjor
Polntlnf

(FREE ESTIMATEal

Y. C. YOUNG .III

TRUCiiNG AYAWLE
FRI!E ' ESTIMATES

992-6215

992-7451

' 4-21-81- I mo.

.....,._ ·-·
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING·
. •BLOWN IN
INSULATION

STEWAU'S
GUNS I SUPPLIES
•IIY eSIU e1'11ADI

BISSELL ..
· SIDING CO.

OPEN

. J&amp;l

• •• II.......
"FrH Ettlmllt~"'

742·2421
21/J ........
RutlaiHIH lew

PH. 9C9·2101
· or las. 949·1•60

...........

NO SUNDAY CAlLS
1·11-tln

1-10·11-tfll.

POO~fYIDIO IIACIIIIII

INSULATION
oV,Inyl Siding

'

Tuuday thru S•turdty
10:00 em·II:OO pm

BOWL ·

• •R•Iil•cement
.Windows
•Rooting
otn•u,.tlcin

Open Tuea.. Tllura.,
Frt .• Sat. 7:30 p.m .

'

POMEROY
BOWLING

· JMIU DESEE
992-2772 ...
742-2251 .

1.
.,

310 Iaiit 2nlll St.

992-3432 or ·
. . 992~2403

1131 lryan
Middleport.

1-4-'11·1 mo.

I

How•niLWrltftll

ROOFING

NEW -REPAIR
Gutters .

Downspouts
·Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949·2161

DITIS-tt¥ 'II
llfllliiiATOIS-$ 100 111
IMIII--IIic.-$11t 111 .
FIIUIIS-$111 ., _;,
11&lt;10 0¥1111-$79 .,

KEN'S APPUANCE
S(ltVICE

. I

W.H.MOIILE
HOME P.AITS ,

::-3-~-:--..,.ciu-nce_me_nt_s_

If you're in need

n:w TIIIIIU.UOI'I- POOL

... -~011

PICNIC IIIDLTD and •TAG&amp; For Ronl
~-

I

lluolo

..... ~It - - · , . _...
- . Woflo to: .u~,~O. loa

·RA'IES ·Day. Week. Month, or SeUon

Acceaories...

~

j

-p.I!IW7I-JIIIalwi:OO.

CAKPIIIG • Bcoutllw Surroun~lngo

Parts or

SEE US FIRSTI
992-5100
IT. 3J WIST OF

Cllrlatll,. lor

OPIR 'to 1'111 PVBUC

of Mobile Home

1·14·'11-1 mo. pd.

.JUS • tii·IS•1
992___
_ ...... Office
1
1
the "lnlemat Revenue Selv~".
· - ""'
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: TERRI mHERilLF. 1005 E.
PGMIIOY, OliO
sTATE STREET, ATHENS. OH. 45701. TELEPOONE N !614) 593-8679 l&amp;..~~~..,;lD,.;IIO;;;_;I'I..,..Itt..,•i&amp;.
I.

BIOIZE .
TANNING .

1•4-'81-1 mo.

'

PAINTING

ACADEMIC
· AWAIDS
GO~F lESSONS
6 FOI 155
CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS ·

992-7130

667·6179
' s- 1·'90 tf

--·

(6

Furt,.r.
obovo colla·
••ol WHI .,. oold In t ... condition It Ia In with no orpre-d or Implied werronlloo glvon.

71 ·'Autos tor Sale

Farms tor R•nt

le••

ljililliifill
2l

T1 ~nsporlal1on

Holl .. s tor Rent
t
MObile Hom" tur Attn I

4 ·7 W1~ted to Rent ·
48 · Equipment tor ·Runl ·
~9 for

17 Mllcetlan..a\. I·

937 Buffalo

61 ·· Fa;m Equtpmool ·
62 Wanttd to Buy
63 llvltltock
64 Hay &amp; Gr1in
;65 · Seed &amp; hrlthnr

,.

·~

46 ·Space tor Rent

12
i 3·. lnsu~aoc:e
14 ·Busin•s Tr•lnMl~ ·,
15 Schools &amp; tns1n1ctron
11 . Radio, tv &amp; CB Repau

21 lusin•• Opportunny
22 Money 1.0 Lo1n

W~n.ted

,· IRiilldl

44 ·: Apartm~t tor
45 ~- Furnished Rooms

HtiD Want.6d
S ituatlrtn Wanttel

112 New Haven .
895 Lel•t

We Sty What W. Do.
We Do Whet

l.at 1111 do it for you.
VEIY IIASCIHAIU
. ~AVE IEFIIINCES

The Forman Bonk end Sav·

R..l Estttt

~

~3

.SHRUB I Till

, NOTICE
l1 NOTICE
hertby glvon
PUBLIC
that on aotunl-v. Juno 28,
. 1810. ot 10:00 a.m .. • publie ulo will .,. held at 101
Union Avenue. Pomeroy,

Mobil• Homet. tor So.ltt .
ftl'rms tor S .. e
Bu1inen Buildings

36

Pt. PleMMIII

742-2151111
Wife. Clara; Son •
Ill 28. 27. 21. 3tc
~-23-1 mo. pd.
daughter-In-lew.
Roger • J•nllt;
'GriH'Idchlldren,
au·uas
Roglna MIIYer•.
lrlltl
It Ill Or We
McCoy,
NOTICE
OF
Suun F1111ter,
JllciiU,.
oooPUIUC AUCTION SAlb**
Jennifer oru ..ar;
UN'$
AIIPI.IANCI
. Dep1rt111•1 ol tht Trt•ury-lllltr~~ll Rt..nue Strviee
'Grut-Orendchlldren.
Under Ihe authority in lntern1l Revenue Code Section 6331. the prop·
SIIYICI
Jenna MIIYerO. . erty
described
below
has
been
seized
tor
nonpaymenl
of
internal
rev·
9ti·SJJS
or
Jimmy Foater.
eue tms dUe from: ROBERT'!.. &amp; MARY M. WALBURG, 6395 S. PARK
PL. POWELl. 011. ~065 .
. .
•
The property Will be $Old at public IUCiiOn as provided by lntem11 Re-·
venue Code Section 6335 and related regulllions.
DATE AND TIME OF SAL.E: 071t2/91. 10:00 A.M.
11 Help Wanted
PlACE Of SALE: MEIGS COUNTY COURTHOUSE. E. SECOND ST., PO· ~----......-~
'
MEROY. OH. 45769.
.
t-~~~~~~
TITlE OffERED: Only the l'llfll1111e. andinll!eslollhell!payer listed abOve. rr
in end 10 lhe proparty Ml be oflered lor Sill. If requested, 1he lnlemll Rt·
HELP WANTED
venue Service willlunillh infolillltion about IJ(ISIIIe encumbnmces. which

TOMATO PICIEIS
AND PACIUS
All NRDED

•
,."

11

/; li&lt;I'SidCk

35 loti • Acre1ge

Enii.lllyii'Pnl
SPrv1ces

458 leon
676 Appht GroM
773 Mason

.

Tlti the pain aut of
' • painting.

tbwlng collaterol:

J2
JJ
3I

6 lost ~d Found.
1 V•d ltlt!Piid in advance) ,..
I Publ.iC &amp;111 &amp; Auctton·
9 W.nh.t to Buy
•
1

''

F,·rrn S•1ppi 11:S

Jl - Homn tor S•le

,,

3 Annoucements ·
• Give...,.y
.5 Happy Ad1

U••

•, I

.,

.,d h.nfelt thanka to
relatlvu .,d frlendl
f,Or llo-rt. carda •nd
food, •nd to tho..
'fllhO gave memorial•.
to St. John Luthar•n
~hurch. Special thllnka
to P - Laurt Shnlffler and " - Mldcilell~
for tl\eir
comtordng warda.
, Thank you to every•
one who helped In any
way with ' P111\'8rt,
-vmpothy end kind·

PAUL HIU fAIM

Silver Bridge Plaza

67&amp;

949 Racine
7.t2 Rutl•d
667 Coolville

CEDAI

• All Clock Radio Phones
•Select Televisions
• All Microwave ovens.
.• All Nintendo®' Sega, ~
All Sandwich Makers ..
Genesis®, Gacme Yes: : AI Flshing Supplies
Video.Game .. ·a 1
All STP Oil Rtters
•
xes
•
·
·
d/.t Setect stereo .BoombO
. . ''
'
.
'
,

916 Ch• ...
143 Pooland
247 ltt1n Falls

We Need

PUblic NotiCf

'

•

. • All Mlno\tl, Vlv\tlr • , .

'
''

·

379 W.tnut

992 Muldl.,ar1
Pom•oy

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
·
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOO SMALL
FlEE ESTIMATES

1 ~ Card of Thanks

1 , C1rd .fitt:Th~k•

2 In NemOry

Malon Co., WV
Area Codel04

Call 614·992·7104 for Appt

mympus 35MIIl cameras
• AI Sesame street/ . .
Starlt' Bolli . ,
• A" Pl\ntlng Calculators ·
. Fum~ure not Included
·
.
Matle Calllrl
O\snev:.!OV
, ~oy Department ·
5
e All LUll • l)lal soap
• M\Ckey
nt Minta .
SOld in ln..... ' · . ·
.
e EnUre .Stock it ·
1 • Cllgln LiqUid e tee.- Muta
. • AI v:r Bath Soap
turtle~ camefl,.
Raztrs • Bladnot. ,~Udell
or P
.
,AI ouracell Batteries
Etectric razors
.
.
•
AI
Dynatnm
.
•
· .
e AI LJCIIs' Brai
·
e AI Ctldren's VItamins
e AI Mlft'S IJCkiiiS®- T~
Pants and ShiltS

•

388 Viftlon
246 RiG Grandt
251 Guvan Ois't.
t4l Ar1bia Din

DAY BEFORE PUBLICAHON
11 .00 A M . SATURDAY
2 00 P M MONDAY
2.00 PM. IUESDAY
2 .00 PM . WEDNESDAY
2 :00P.M THURSDAY
2 QO PM . FRIDAY

.· PRICE REDUCED!

PrQilerty includts

. 89.00
$13.00
•1.30/day

Area Coile 614

446 Galtpoht
367 Ch•hite

PartiJI owne~ liniiiiCinfe~'~a!R The pioe
has been reouced to. • $n.900 ond
owner fin1ncing=u 1o 80% ~ purthJSe
amounl m11 be
· e fOr qualilying to buy ~ niCI! lfl!! homeon 3~ oc:res in fta.
c11~ 4BR. 3 baths,&lt;! l•aces. r!nled 1BR opt

'

AI v-'Aud\tiCD

.e

.

~..-

qui!-claim deed cl releas!e. tO David
W. Armprieste~ and Kathryn E.
Armpriester, Me~~~;s. ·.

Rt:o l Eslale

1, Wanted To Do

Ritchie Residence, .
Tyree Blvd., Racine.

''

.

•e,oQ

•ios cOun1v .

Gania.Counly
Are• Code 614

BIG YARD SALE
JULY l &amp; 2
9 A.M . ...

•

Richard Lynn Smith and Vera
Smidl, Reedsville.
R.
Esther R. Riggs, nlc.a Esther .
Lines aDd Harofd V· Lines,l*Cd,
10 Esther R. Lines and Harold V.
Lines
' . . 'OUve.
.
.
Eloise Bell and Kathryn Bell
Gunther•. 44A, to Frank Cleland
.
M Oeland s
4!::~Layh and ,._.,:,,,!'!;D.I'.ayh,

10

Number l Marketplace

~ nnoun cern enls

" . . 20
.
.30
'' .42
.110

foll'owing l••lf'/lhiJm• ••xdtml/{1'.~ .•. .

I

· ·

•

S4.1l0

( :/a.~s(fi«'ll tiag••s l'ot'l'r ·till'

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

',·•

Ar~a's

• The

41
42

BULLETIN BOARD

AI Fall Pa,er .

t~am~Btlild,

EnUre St~k BDys'
Wundllls 3 Pk. G\ds
- 8-18 Lei Jeans ,
Print Panties · ,
• Entire Stock Boys
e Entlre Steck G\ds ·
4•18 ·Rustler Jeans
7-14 oenlm Jeans
• AI car aattedes
.
e G\ds' 6 Pk. terry ..
.~ AI VlslORS Cookware
SJ*l seeks
kS
e ·AI Beach towelS
. ·e Gli\S' 3 Pk. Rlb PS~mas . e AI PhltO AIIUI,IS
e AI aoys' 4-18 a,..
.
·

.
e

COPY DEADLINE ·
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THUR'SOAY PAPER
~HIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

16
16

·Ov9~ 15 War•

A1.te

.05/ d~y
Monthly
Ratn 11'0 tor contlcuhvt runs..lwoktn upd..,swrll btch•ged
tor eiCh dl\' •• sep..-ate adl.

be pre ·

·A claisrtrcd advertisumunt placctlro The Oarly ~unt•n_,. {llr.
cept
dan•tlud d••Phrt. Bt•sinuu Card mul 't.'U.l notiCitlil
w1ll ~tlso etpptrdt 1n the PI Pluar.o.nl Renrs'tcr o.nd lhe Galli
pul1s Oarty Tt~burtu, •eachmu o•u• 1"8 .000 honttl$

e 1 Pit. Ge. o~sle~
e AIKriCO Car · · ,
e .AU toddler Den\m Jeans .' Stereos • .St~~akers
..
e AI
WatcheS e AI Auto security ClubS, ·

&amp;nblssed .• AI Men~\ ~1~:che®,
!*nii'Wirl sets
"'~0 . Lie® ·Jeans · r:
4 pk. bonUS

Rum-DMC singers
charged in brawl

by Profile Record~.

3
6
10

·.-

g Shier Hos\erY .and
. , · sbltr £n111Y swrs

:':c. W*

e

clj:J asbelonged
srolen.

a 11111eme111 iaued

AI NOrdh:Ware,
kin
sterlll. AnchOr ':tesg
M~crtwave ACCIS ,;

e

The car he was
to the bank and was ·

die two llid in

e

~ 16 Per::::. .

Missing West
VIrginia banker found

ldlledTuesday.
"We ~Y deny aU die
1.1111&amp;1 r, bat iiDder 1be adviRm~t
of kicaJ counsel, we can't make '
any fauller COIIUIIelltlllhil dale." ·

•Bart $impso~ Phone ..
• All computer sottware
•Language Translator', .
•

the American spirit."

ATLANTA (AP) - Darryl
McDaniels, a member of the rap
group RuJt.DMC, and a member at
the group's stage crew denied
charges Wednesday of 8JIIllvated
assault and battery SlCIIUlliliJ from
a brawl at an Atlanta nightclub.
Police invesligaiDr [P. Spillane
sail! McDaniels and Raymond
White, both 27 and from Long
Island City, N.Y., attacked two
bouncers at Club 112 early Sllllllay.
Sl)iJlane said IS people became
involved in die fighting, a bouncer
suffered apparent nerve damage
and the brawl did about $4,000
worth Ofdlmage.
The two men, who were perConniJI&amp; 11 the club, wae oriJinally
charged widl drunken ind dison)cily conduct, simple battery on a
polkle officer llld eriminll damage
10 propeny. The Olbet charps were

1 '

"'" J d.-ws at no ch•ge.
"Pric~r of •d to• all capital let ten 11 double pnar ot ad co&amp;;l
•7 point llin11 typt! only used
•
~ svntrnulrs not respon1iblelor errors ilhm' first di¥ . IChvck
lor ~rrors first dllt ad "runs m pap...,) . C.all bttlore 2 :00 p.rn.
d~ alter pubhca'Hor•to makH correclion
'Ads tha' must btl pa•d •n adv~nctr au: .
Card ol ThanlltO
Ht~PP'¥ Ad"
In Mu,mor•ara'
VIMd Sitlt.os

..

·
.
Leona Smilh, nlc.a Ruth. parcels,

..

.

Wordl
15
16.
16

Qays

S.60 discount lor adC paid rn Ol!llvilncu.
' f t ee ads
Giveaway and found ads undet 15 words will be

behind them... .

Las Vegas.

·~ust

··•

·

•

...
\

· Village.

RATES

'

'Rcc:ervr~

r.

·WESTOVER, W.Va. (AP)- A
bank president who disappeared
more than a month ago froril West
Virginia has been found in Nevada,
stste police said today.
.
William E. Coleman, 51, was
located in Laughlin, .Nev.
COlliman was last teen ·May 13
when he left ~ Westover DIRk,
saying he had a 1uDc:b appoinlmcnt.
Police initiaUy feared be WIS the
victim offouhlsy, but then concluded he had simply left town
after lnlcing his liJDIIUie on credit
card receipts from Ohio, Texas and

.

TO PLACE AN AD CALl 992-2156 . ..
. MONDAY. thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
,
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY.
CLOSED SUNDAY

sliD in the Middle East
fear they'D be too late ID altend die

ing the war:-;ribere•s aU this elation in tenns of homcroming. But
tb81's hype, and it's wearing down

Thomas Serey, elal, sheriff:a
deed, tO Christopher E. Tenogha .
anclJeila R. Tenoalia, Pomeroy ..

a

By LESLIE DllEYFOOS
AP Nalioul Writer
The Gulf War is long over; .
ancient biSIAJl)' lied up widl yellow
ribbon and poiJM»•ted'by 1be lalest
~ 10 welcome bollle vetrnlnS
ofthe43-day blilz.
.
But James Lee Bellon, a .Navy
petty officer, is now fighq IIIIOlherwar.
··r~ so burned out llld angry u
everydlmg," be wro1e in a fCI:CIIt
letter to die wife be. bun't seen in
six months. "Wben I
you
better hold me light,
you
have a lot of bad to make inro good

two dozen chilnten nalionwidC dol-

Meigs property transfers

California girl wins national scholarship title

"

.

lloP At lx.WO. 011 Co. ••
lxol .,... ...._.,, lor

O&lt;t Toccthcn- Pattlu

JDJIIRG
IQIIO!ii&amp;lf ll«n!' OPitll

lult ...................._

.
~ Bnold'u1. Meals. and Snoc~
Allllo\Dit

4

GIYIIwiY

1 ....: 114 ........
• ..... _btO(Itll,logttre '

· - ,,,., .· -.....,...,..
=.:,.,. ·=··
BENNETT'S
........ - -

~~.ln. ......,.

oRamoclellng •nd

Horni·Aepo.irs

•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY IISUIED
FREE ESTIMATES

CIDAI

CONSIIUmON
991-6648 or
698-6864

101 JONIS
EXCAVAtiNG
.·DOZU and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)

696·1

'

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT I'UM'S and
FURNACES FOR .MOilLE. &amp; DOUILEW1DE HOMrS

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

........
a
2-

• -

old.J 'Ctlloo,

.

1 '•

._................*.

l'lrl Ctlllt, Port .......,..
' lllltd .......... 12
Old,
-. . . . -~-Tifll.
Old

4F.....

MOIILIHOMI

IIA11MG' .
. COOUIIG

Locatlll On Safford Sd1"' Ill. eff lt. 141
(t'4i "'·tC16 or 1·•Doi7J·St~~~

·WE DO

ROOFING

-IL,Ro.t-011. __,
,.....,
FOUIID: , _ . _ .. Lift,
........... btl ........ , _ , .......... Hounol. TJI.
Oeler.............

l'no ...... ' TUlly, I C.tloo, "
Wit......,..

Malo .... ,.,.nCII, . , . _

=.:=.--

... Coli .... .,,....., ..... '

AND IVIIl'IIIIIIG UNI.NIA'III

.TROMM BUILDERS·
RIIISTIMAUS

•20 Y•l'l hPirlence
•Quality Homea end
Cuetom

Remodeling

lp.m. 1111,..

II

•. _'

~·

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

·-

,,

I'GUNII: 01111__ -

.

"'Y oo.tol '

Loll &amp; Found

8111/lfll

742·1JI.

.

...... ·:
1111, '

0.'/.I.IM-...... wttl ~.....

•

�•

0--The Dallv sentinel
35 Lolli Acfllgl

'

HIGh SChool 11M" rlna,
_ .. ~~-~- pl. ~
1114214 :00.
.
Loll: IIOC:k Pft lun Vldnlly:
M..,l* I ~z. ~ Frlondly.
414-1101.
Call AI, t

_...,

....

73 VIM &amp; • WD'I

Houlehold

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

Goode

"" vw -

0

1 , 1 ......

···-

-

-~............... ...;
-...
....
..._ ... -m.
.

Yard Sale

74

Road Ott 771, .W . llonlallllft9

IDI'I 1'011 IALI In Golllpollo ·

:.:.1:~ m

1722.

7 • ooMI-:
tloft. ..... 't..,t - Chi.

A-.

:lnl. -

An111

Pumllt.n

~~;

1.110 e21a (I) &lt;lla •

Ill .....

oe

-7721.

-v...., Y•180bJ,;,Twl•
•
DOHC Shaft
, W-

-

Ilia

~.

MUMt.

Her Jove affair had
She threw herself
encied. She didn't · in front of a
want to live.
Zamboni.

112:1 Millo, 1100......

111111

-'ai ...,..,

-·

p.m.&amp;OIUnlay.

D Tltara c14wtl OlgMt

She threw

I.. I

L AVUT

8 Wtllld Tatlor

There are two kinds of song
lyrics today. Those you
understand and those you •
rl~0.:-'N~F~E~M-:T:--..,, wish you ···-··,.
.

OOtlr..,_
1:01(1) llwllaloecl
1::10 e21a 111 NIC ..... Q
(J) fDr8iM Of

herself in
frontof,a
sl&lt;ateboi:trd..

- M o l d .......
-forporloCIOIIy,MMJI.

Frtday• ........, oclftlon • 2:00

J....... '

!ti·
Mt."1.:.2.
Q
lti &amp;
,..,'\CotltloC
Cl
Rl!.r~Q

Ill Up ClaM

1:31(1) ,.,.., . . .
7:00~. Ill Wllool ol , _
Fllday

a

*"

!i¥!=Q

Salunlay, Juno 21th,

·21th. ............ m.

'£(' .....,,

Toyl, Clllld,.na Clolhoa, C....
lalna,llc.
.

Ga.- Bolo: Frtcloy Thru
T...a.y, S.R. lllol, 2 112 MIIM
Fromi'Ot1er.
.
aaroaa sa1o: Thuroclay, Friday

Poaltlon
Avoll.oblo:
C.•
llonagoor SUpoNioor • Whl
Provldt SUpoNiolon For C...
... _ _ , Taam .- . , .
~. 4 Family Smal Boya,
Olrlo. Dlohoa, Sp..oclo, Mloc. With EonollonoiiY DIII...W
In A Th,.. Ceunty
Fllrflold Ac,.., Fa!.- Cen- POflu!otlon
AN•.
Will
. . ReQuhd To
tanary flood.
PrOYklo SOnia Dlrocl - . _
Jay Drtw: Paltc Lana T - Mini- Uoonouro Roo- Ia
Poito, llanday ' ,......, 111, LPC. P - An LPCC Or USW.
:Ind. Air CG!Idll~ti, ..... llltory ~....... Moll-To

par

Kanaugo. Bebv a

-

~~.u.

Aduft

.

torRent

Youlh Crlolo Center, To
Provldo Dl- Cent Far
Child,.. In Cri- And Shift Bu-

Pomeroy,
Mlddllpon
&amp; VIcinity

'Drl_..

poNiolon

For StoH.
qul....... o:• Valid

fie.

31 HomH for Sale

. . , _ , Flrot Aida And CPR
Trolnlllg; Aaaoaloto Oat,.. Or
Big
Yanl
Solo! 1WD
C&lt;11o!1o Courio WOlle
C!Gihaa,an41quaa.-. mlao•• With YM,.
Concontrollon In Social
Juno 21111 , :ltln, loll on C..
RdJI befDN AI 1 'dl Part.

3 .. 4br Flnloilodll-~

112 Mro Lot,

Dlllrllll, ~ To T - I

:.:,.er"==v=::=

&amp; AUction
- , . __ _ Company,
tun 111M...._
- -Lloarwd
· oomplole
auction
Oltlo,
Wall VIrginia, -nwm.

· .9

wanted to Buy

. w.om.
Utad -

- . Call

=

-~IMMa.
- W

'*

WonlociiO buy, •-na tlmliat,
' lob Wllllama I Sona '114-182·

.....

Cant-,

Cer Mluhocl

u

-

CorporatloM.

Dllilltpn..,.

Pooolflon, AI- - - . " You
Cen Do "· ..... U.o A ,...._
And
,.
_C..•
_ 01.11ter:
1 - -Plonnocl
Ohio,

To lluy: Slandlna Timbar, lOfl Prt- Paid For'WhHo
· Oak I Aah. Call after 7p.RI. 814• 31'J.1'111.

Plonnocl

45'111!. · Altn:

Top For: All Old U.S.
Colno, ~ AI- Dlo~
Sllvtr Colnt, Storll!'ll,
Colno. M.T.S. Coin snop, Ill
SOcoftdAvonuo, CloHipollo.

ICioy

~

,

p,,....

~-....

Alklno.

luy or .... 11. . 1no Antlqwo,
1124 L lloln .._, P - .

Hotn: loi.T.W. 10:00 e.m.to l:tiD
~= 1:110 to 8:110 p.m.

54 Mlsceii81180UI
Merchandl18

wv.

17 liZ ft. · - 0 - - IIAUTIPUI. APAIITioiENTI AT Firm.-.....81011. - ·

In Ooolllpollo:
- Wolo
- IUDCIIT PRlCII AT ' A lion.
E..._~Mlonl
'aollawt PIM
To 8ohoolo ..,.., l'lrk. .._ UT~ •

o.. ....,...1114-Uite!l

I......

W.nlocl: Uoocl " - o'oa
...._ Cd 114 4tl108, 114=
:J7NIII.

L,_ Addlllon In
. . .ty buill, 4 b

-

_.,._,Wolloto .....
...... c.lll'it •• 1111. 10M.
~ - h . - . • . ' I rt, Ohio.

........
.... In
DR, FR,·
2 fLu»hnn,
CA.~~~-.
1 .,.

:;.,Moral!! tn~eoo. 3114·77:1-

Employment Ser&lt;~ces

R.. ....
=:.-....

-IM4.
olla.lti ....... - · ·

~lnl.....!*
171-1-or
2

z··

for Sill

Opllono, Hlth
-loltl

Dynomork

ll1tllna

==--.
.
.
...
==-·-, . . . .
58

Ut*loo Plld,

U:ch .,,

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

_

Auliltnotlc

PI,

AcCIIIOrkll

llwaelulan.UMOmll•
luw Ull Cer. llltoh $100.

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

.

v.-.

-. ........

r 11111 'lti~Jtlil
&lt;''• L l~t·' '1, k

81 Finn Equ!Jiment
141 11:11 11hlll

IRttn•,. tor

1117 ......... l'l....nl T·Toa,

~ 117,0001~7t24
- · - after
ly
'l!f'&amp;'rlRinl.
I::JIIII.m.orl14o441-.
1117 .. . . . . .._ lollloofa, COli
aft•lp.m.IU ttl lilt.

--Patio

-·-·

Avonuo,_lutly

..........., 4 - . air, :u,OOO
- ; 111110. :JOM75-

camperw&amp;

,
.i

-

...... (2:00)
1.-01(1),.,.., . . .
1::10 ala 0 DlhNnt Wtllld

Dwaynelltdhloalallmale8
aand tltelr frtand ID ...
Peraian Gulf. &lt;RI ~~~an~o.
&lt;ll Mljar Ln11• l111bd
Atlanta Bravtl It HoultOn
Aatrol (L)

a

'11P·Of·"TME ·
ICEeeRG' ~.S

10 &lt;XJR

IIlla TM CcoloN s.r.o. Q
• Mill- MUIIo lltop

e:oo ala

!IJ CIIMN Carll vtes
for lholilll of Mill Bollton
Blnnlld. (RI Stlf'lo. Cl
aJ &lt;ll a a Mere ..v. Bird
u- hll ...., u a oap ond
e con to calm an unatablo

. both exc cond, 304- ,

~ma,:l:=Q
· ID
Cll
llutllf)Oie

· Cllflncll ony
of
~ to droWn hll wife. (Pt 1

'

'

af.,111tt1tr
... ~~
A_...
8

Scrv1ces

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Home
l
Improvements · :

'IF 'it1l W1eH 10 A '-OlD
THEel! IMPE:NDINS
CATASTROPHse.:.

All l~paa of muonory, brlclcl
block and •one. Free W.

·-··-~
BASEMENT
WATERPIIOOFINCI

O.rlltt,.
Awllnll a ... llflllnlld for.
euoaM11 101 In lite fleldl of

drama, geme/audloncl

participation, talk, children
ancl epeolale. Haat: Bob
Barker. (2:00)
Cl
IIlla llvtt1r 1111. lOttO
IINnda. tiled OIIChoOI ancl

s-.

~

1

I
Unconditional ll..lmo IIIII""'
t11. Local ,.,.enc• tumilheclj
. - . day

colloot 1
.. iol~l

!!..- - -

Wotorpr-1

....

__

hon'te llfl, lltOYtl out on hw

own. IRI s-. Cl

0 MOVIIi P'ltoll 01 tho lf1CII
(2:00)

.
";il

D Top 111nk lloxin(l USBA

~:Eddie Coal

Cerponlryond Ro.-.....
- . , 1..14-'JII:Z..- or ld-:1441

...,..,...

..__

(14-0, 12 KO.l ... Johnny

BARNEY

Vaaquez (15-i, 9 KOo), t2
roundl, fratll IAI Vagu (ll
8 LM1Y King Llvtf
1::10 ala o WlniiBnan p1o11
to c:hlngt Htltn'a mlnQ
1bout dlting p1tot1_ (RI

PAW WON'T TAKE
THESE YALLER
PILLS, NURSIE !!

&lt;

RaafL•

Wll•
Purlln
,NIA
__
, - .,..
....r

-RF
...,

tr GIUF14111J To .... .....

114

....................
., ..
-71117.
-

...... 1~!.!!od-·

.2=.•. .:-

'IU4.

-

olmoltoo,-.Tho-hor

One bedroom 1pert...,. In Mkl-dlopolt, ond toll ....lor,
AC. 1221.00 • o.lllll, ...14o

lli4117wll:l41it
OM II J - : &amp;JII In Pelnt

1D

......,....... '.

Orr-It JF I 114 t•IM4. •

ecoe,J

83

ahead. Send for Cancer's Aatro-Graph
prtdlciiOnl tOday by mailing $1.25 plu1
a lOng, 1111·-.ldrened, •tamped ..,. .
lOPe to Aotro-Groph, c/o lhla - a ·
per, P.O. Box 91428, qe.eland, OH
44101-3428, Be sure to state yourzOdl·

Sorvlco,

CI'Mic ltd. Parte, awp-

I.Jvllloelc

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

..

Cutlg•••WV~ .

'IWD-DI--thlo
,..,., hoMr Md

33 Farme for Sale

nnnwv •

......... 11111.00, t ........

· o~

F- tor - . tltoiOir and II

--·-,.-~

WA'IIII WILLI DIIILLQ: 1111.

....................*'

.......... ~ IIMonl ....

34

•.... t: .......... ""'

w

Bullnlll
BuildingI

..............
- -

LotoiiW

IIMiit. I

CIA'IOI- 1'011 LIAII .,

-171t.
51
Building

a-.4-Mitl!*r

8141PIIII

__1.. ,_. , Ill....... _

....
- ..
c:-~'Fir•"o.
..... 1._1~

ol!ll,

M

~

Jt
uhtaL
...... _ _ _.No

..... -

yrt

Rwl .. l611

•

~-...... I' hllli

.... phena, you

-

~.. D-Ill, 4 • 4

:"'
35 Loll &amp; Ac.-ge
For toll: ........ prl p•.., In
. . . . . . .?7WIII.

\

Electrlcel &amp;
Refrigeration

'i

.. ..,.....

llftLIMfllal
llectrfclen,'

......._ ......... ~
1711.

oo, ,..,...1112. 87

......... tll1

..

Upholltery

IOW7f.

I NT

••

wbett declarer takes a losing flnesae,
Pau
the deleoder llllould consider ducklna
biJ wilmer If It is clear the declarer
Opening lead: • A
will repeat the to-.
Why? Perhaps declarer, tbinkln&amp;
the fn- has won, will mlaplace an·
other blgh card. Or he will attack an· · er and thinking everything was hunky·
other lllllt. later repeatlag the flilesse dory, cashetl lhe club ace. West's
wbett llllDIII will ca~~~elhe contract to spade dllcard catlled South to palllt!
Crt1J11ple. Or declarer's communlca· He turned to the dlainonda fineS~Ini
tloas are ruined. Today's deal lllus- . the · q-n. East ducked 'smoothly.
' trates tbe lut of theM polllbilltles.
Having worked aut South's ~and from ·
South wun't awe what to bid over the blddlq. East Nw tllat If be won
four clubl, 10 be took a allot at a slam, with tbe kiD&amp; the coatract would
boplng Ilia partner would table a ella· make euUy. '
JDODd boaor.
Declarer continued with a diamond
Welt led tbe beart ace, wbleb wun't to tbe 10, happy for East to ruff. But
a good cboice. Wben a player jumps to wben · East produced the klag and
a liam witbaat using Blackwood, It is swltcbed to a spade, South's world col·
aormally becalllt! be has a void. And lapaed. U lie drew trumps, be would
llel'e tllat VOid bad to be 1n beal'll. Tbe have left and wouldil't be able to
spade 10 would have beeD a wller unbloet the dlamondl. u lnllead be
sel~.
led a diamond to dummy's ace, East
However. East rescued hll partner. would ruff and euh the IP!Ide klag to
Declarer ruffed tbe beart lead, and defeat the slam.
now baviDJ a dllcard for biB spade 1•
·e~-. ._....., ..,... 1 •• • ...,

••

The World Almanal Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 12', Roman
4 Actrtoo Sue
8 Bualntll
dofk:lt
12 2100, Roman
13 Cent•• or
lhleld
14 Sttp- -1
15 Soul (F!.I
16 lolelal
lotltntr
17 AuthOI EmHe

18 Arab country
20 Avidly
22 llountalno
24 Franch
negative
25 ldetllatlc
2e City In Utah
33 Cun~ed bane
34 Cut ahort
38 Emerald !ale
37 St.lde
31 AuthorVonno,ut

Anewer lo PrHioa 'ullle

41 Illuminated
4a Abottod
44 Part of chow
main
46 Wldo ohoe
tilt
48 105t, Roman
49 Pubic
nrvlct
.53 Sprtad apart
57 Slngor - Te
Kan1wa
58 Stag
60 Calif. ai11ine
dtollnltiOn
6t -lacktt
62 lol•tarino
63 Biblical boat
64 loltlllcal work
65 Enticing
66 Btaldea

5 Entortalntr
-Sumac
6 Acting award
7 Bonballer
-Ryan
8 Cougndrop
11- - .obout
10 Window part
11 Don'l go

DOWN
1 Dec, holiday
2 Typo of play·
lnt marble
3 Champagne
bucket
4 Crackpot

In• 'r,A

. . :::.

coureg~GU~IIft and orlfllnll

~kup, and dollvary, IM·

Rldlntl-aOUih-for

=~=·==,=.

--Voc

Nor"

Seo"

=:a~·.:

Clood
lor
allltprlcei.Oon'1wah
~ low. »H7f.

Oaa~

By ...wlp Alder
. It is a good general principle that

Jollph"&amp;r;Lky·e

·.

Raaandii...,W.hlrl,~
~ . . . . for

,.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

f..~. ............ Uwe

til ,...,

o . . . lood

tQH732
.AK973

s-.
"":E~.(R,

1

~~~ and

..

SOUTH ·

10:00 ala o 0uan1um LNp
Sam lupllnto tho Hll of an

.....
...... .....
=-==.=:.:::

y.

+K5

.JB2

8-.Q

1

-.-

EAST

.K 7 53

• "J
-.

Duck declarer
into the soup

(abbr.,

• flllhV. . Now

llon'o TV lorvloo, _.,ilift&lt;l
In ·lenHio .... . . . . . . onoo'l;

l'vtOOIIIIL

111 - - - bt.

ePr&amp;m~M~wa

I

, ... - -... c.n

lit Cllt, ... Wlllll Q
.

On lltlae Stlf'lo.

0 MOVIE: Wlnp ol ""'

rnotei

mew.

URN IIIONIY _ , . . - 1

-

a Tllio llllltnmpDtliOIGnltllt SlertO.

-!on Matoro, nptOI!od. """
I -~~~ onoloro In llooll, RoM
EYANI. JACICION, 011. 1-IOGl

CA.I1t . . . . .

~

Sllreo. Q

~112==~==~~~~~·
1
....... - · . . _ 1,1100.•

81

.

a

=::..=.:: =.

W'•'*••

beloW loWn. owlfla altJng r!wr,

uo,-,..

e:a:::an

Ill D
Top'&amp;,. Tho
·rnunfer o f - vlctlma,ll
trllCIId to a Cllntlll. (R)

114

.

·--.

IPJ=·i-,.

1171 21 ft. " ' - camper,
blth, ~ oond., 30W11:1111. J,

-.'INUI.-

ta&amp;

lnveatlgates tho mvaterr of a
woman imperaonallng Steve.

I

... ,

WEST

.QI091Z
,.,.QJ1054

ALDER

• ....,... Dowling

.1''"'"'vEs rr17

"''*•

JET

tor Cltlldnn, P. .,

'

tm Coroo!r, 22 ft. 111on1 tro..t
Uloo . - . 2 ulo, ll!lly olll-oon.
Ulnocl, owntna. doublo
NIIIOOBO. 114~-.-.
·•

plololdlchen. CA. I - H .

Nol lultololo

..

l'outltlotlon WOlle. Roolkogl
I Siding. P"'!' ~
tiiMI•f Alflrene•.!J No Job Tq
INti Or Smoltl114-4,,.ozu. 1

tfll, Ceii-·T71t EOH.
llodlm de unlown. 1 IR, com·homo, 1 mlo

i
•.. ,

Curtlo Homo ...,.,..,_.....,
Y...aluptr- on-~

·
ond
.. .....
~In
llldtllooort.
,..,.

Fum- -

II

MotorHomee

PHILLIP

7:31(1) ...............
1:00 ala 0 Ctllllr .,_ CHH
plana hll and Clalr'a 27th
wocklng annlvenaiy
Cllltltltloo'i. (RI Stwlo. Q
aJ &lt;llaPdllrDowltc

1111 Fan 11ft O.,...r,~,ooo. "(
bllll:ott.r,~-44~.
), .

.

+A lOt

.QI084

eeraa ••

•

2f111illor 1:00 Plol.

.K 762

Hammond, Ind. (L)

ALLEY OOP

- - ilon,
'--II, 14,111.,.~.,.
Doyo: · -

•

f-!'1-tl

NORTH

•s•

Dlanlofi'IAiowllng
Hammond Open from .

.

~

BRIDGE

•llaiWs-.

1117 Coonan&gt; ....... Inti • Both
Dolen, IIIO.If4.44Nm.
•
4 cyt Dot.., motor, I ~

14ft,

Dodao
.._to
...... Oaytono
ond, iiilo, llor·

11W714440.

-·

1110

PI

1117 ~ Horlaon S2,200.
Piontloo Orand Am auto
t2,IQO. Clllvnol• INdo 1100.

. . 011vw 01n11. II a 1Rrnl
Cot1olllll .. .-.oo, - -

Utllltloo - . ...... ...... lilt
Fowth. Gllllpal... 111 ttl U11
Oftar7p.m.
GtHio• ...... t ond I W.

Cllny C.V,dor Tno 10,

•• i7l1o

-.IIO.t04471-tat.

107-.-......
1- on• rp.111.
llurnllhld

Frult1&amp;
Vlg. .biH

c.,...,

.....,._,, 1 . . .

~.

••;
•

Auto Pen•&amp;

1171 Coa;hnwl mini

,.z,

SCIIAM-lnS ANSWIIS
Knight - Banjo - Decoy - Mislay -' AS a KID
Alter my friends ~rthday J)arty she moaned, "Middle
age is when you wish you. could have some of the
naps you refused .to take AS a KID. •

~

.......

.....
-

-

!1ft.

ti.4DO,

I

... UNSCR-'MBLE IETIERS TO
V GET ANSWER
•

(J)a ......'aFainllr
Gl Wllool ol , _ Q
IIlla .llllllatt a. ..an 1M

-.M..

Lltwn

•o;:.o. Joe-.

=.. " ' """"

t•ll

•

=.-.. . .

-,

76

79

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS
IN THESE SQU-'RES

aa

T·T·.:= Rookaoocl Fold CJowri
, ..,,,.!~Air,
ea......
-.,_- - - - - - - - 'n••1
CMiftot: vwy ............
Mullcal
~
Thlo Cer Ia Cloon And ' ..... iibiatJ, 1-'JII·-· . '
Gnootl !!It~
lnltrumente
till , . . . . . _ Fold Down :
Sool$1,'1110. · - 7 2...
Cem':ioa
vwy nloo ohopo; ol· ;
Nndad: llllii*M..,ChrlaeiM
,,...
).00, 1~·7Q.2710. ' '
Aoall llond. lllull ... .., ftn lor
1111 3211. Trani Troller. Front r .
Cljod. - - .. ..... Kltohen Lg. Air I Aol. Qwon I
Sod, iiuc~ Moral Mull Soli! :
LTD
l_.,.m,
41,000 ....... 1:1,000. or Hal o~ $10,400.
e-.11321 ,
~·
tw,»WW244U.
a...opuloo, Ohio.
I
1MI Tr8l 1 llllil .T-t~ AC, all Crulu Air motor home, 34,000 ''
,...,, ........ "441-0177.
m~.,:O- Coachman 11a!lor, ~

=:-:a· -

~~With llrtaao
10
I I rw. Good COndition! 1:100
!llllli.o. · - Eoch.ll_...
Amana 11.000 ITU Air CenColt.ogoo for - .· tumlohocl, AJC,
IHI,IIIM- 71'111.
L.-.~~ ·
dHiofl!r, With Acllon A... • CendH!onl IUO. ~- · - - A v e . ~Pinta~, WY 1~ !ant
71:11.
1:12,100. tm HollY troller
, _ 4 .._.loth. Concroto a plootlo oopllc tonka,
$7,800...._
Cloon. Ne P11e. - . . . . . a Ron Evono
32 Mobile
I
o.p.l Aoqun.L -·1111.
oon,OH1_.
.

BusIIIIII
Training

Mid •
...._

.-.fMtW1»1.

cartrollor 17ft,

-

-~t To san: 1 • .., ur
Lolc:...~t040:::

="

ArM.

lloyo Drlwo, lllv..,_ 4 DII'Ma.No,_...tlt .......
I 112 Mtli8, on loricll,
fir p'ue, . ,... d. 301 . .
Col '. "
......... ......
-lol'toriiiMPio.No

Help.,Wanted

"t'I c

:.::-.... "=1.:
1111 M:d't
tlld
c-~1,.,
ar, .,,_.. d---........
Ne
• ..... - . ar,
~

11

t.'fnal
..,

nIt............
:v.i !!::..at'~cr
...., a
f:'
a ..

tr1 fuu
ct 'eel

Antlquel

ao·•.

- -· 1114-.L.eWt,
,110,000. Call ~ .....
IINIII.

,.,.

· :; 10.100

-~-VDIIIIIo•

Vlnyt

r

.

....... AI

....
-FarSololnTownon
ur, -

11,11110. 114-371-

Z'nollur,
- · • Cytlndoi,
IM0.11tMIIUI

-~

·
- Dl --...
Ohio, Ohio
311
Rlchltond
Alheno.

E.O.E4.8.P.

-

..... . . . lly Owner: Qulllly
lolcll Ronoli CINe To Hupll::. ~ ,uti IIIIIMilC
1 '-1. 114 111 OM1
~

Thlnl A..nuo:

Groot

1114 Qut!Oiil Claro .... S2,000,

~~~

can
do 1. -eend • 1 riiU,..
pooltlooo.
· " and
you

c.r,

o;1.o•.,.... .11172.

=...,........... b
-. :..:::.:"'....."".:...~

.

Ioiiar:

IIIIo_ ......

::z

-~-duo
ond
~tlonl.
Devalapne~lt

-

......... houtllul

lltdiOCNM, 1 ...........

=.-::;

Wonlod

-,

Moe 2 llllraam -TraHer u,.
Yard, Cernar olll.ontl Anti Poriill

PrMia. ett ttl • •
·FOR IALIIY OWNU 110 Pook
Dlln,- Pltlioont.IMOI\I '

--nd~-.

11t ttl .... -

Ololo Claro 4 Dr.
'--II.
- · $1100 010.
11t
UII2D4.
1114 l•k C.ntuty. 4dr,

,_And

I

'

11a FOfll a...t ltlllon
.._, .-.1 011cto., rune
goit1,11M-17N7211.

$].~-:....~
.... -·~·-l117:1.
Pram
......... Very 44

' W.nlocl to buy, . . - I dryer 0111o
- . ATTN: Kar - ·
..0.14.8.11.
In _.~~!on, call after 4
p.m. 114,
Rollo $11111,000 I yaar I n =
to
Wonlocl To luy: Junk AutOI -Ilona. Wto with or wlthoul motoro. c.n ~w!••: •Jo~:~
Lolly Uwly.IM :Ill IIGI.

Pooohaa, ~

ltolok Cant~=~ 4

- · otl0,11,200.

2

=,_~ft~=

Roloo $100,000 A Yoor In Prlvoto
llonollono. Wo Wonl To Oavelop
Clift Com-

i!Ji, Louiiilo;,

o....., P-, ,A

In Klahon, LA,

Sooldno Mcl'ortond
- Pike,
Inc., "2 Wnion
Cillo 458:1'1. EDEIM

A Cloot!t.Solid

-

Irick - : Jllr 2 lolho Ill·

l'lold• .....,.
Rwr,..To

g:,:, ..."-''Il
- •.....
Find -And

----~~-.
~tl,200.
- - ollot.

a:ooav.-.

A
9

aJ
lltllllalntllent
Tonight Sllreo. Q

22 Ft. Sao Roy 1221 Marc.) On
Trollor. ·~ ....... ~... loti,
With Fun 0011J. 11.-. X.concj.'

....... , _ - .
4 --'·
,1100.00 11MI2·717t.

-

4br, 1 112 Slooy ,r ..... , ..
- - · 2 ltithoL c;a, CINe
To
Town,_ ~ · """' - ,·
Prteoc1To_l_..7122.

Ph• 1Wo v... OfN:rd1ncllil

Public Sale

41,1100

IIOipltal. 141,000. 114 441t4211.

Big Yanl - · ""'! 1 I 2, 1:00 Experilnce Willi '1 ·un:lte
am,
Alt;ch6. rHMIIncti, T,..
BIN., RMina.
And E • - 01 Contlnu!!&gt;tl
Educ.otlon Rolotocl To Tho a.

8

o,_ CitY

171-7111.
2 load- troller, '12211......h
.... all utllftloo, $1011. ........
31M471-11:17 ......... 1:00 iiiil

Complete 1ho chucklo quoted
.
.
.
.
.
V by li!!lng In tho mlosl09 wordt
L-...L.......I-.L......L...JL-.J you dovolop from !lop No. 3 below.

Plrltll(ll

1117.

-=·--

.... 14K70 2 bldleolli MObile

homoonloc,.lot.-104-

1--n~&amp;-:.;lr-;l:...;.;,.l...:..."l'r-IA

Chicago Cuba at Plttaburgh

j

-r.

42 Mobile Hom"

Avolltoblo: Clinical ,..
_....., • Nooclocl For OUr

Clolhaa, Twlil Sod, ..... t-11.

can

(J) . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., ••

• - lloytlnor, 11 I, 1211 hp, 1101
open boW, runn~.,., new •
mourina
Ill bubo, llnM
boonl, Aka,_, $1,
. :104·~

lloFuMntl

I Is 1 ·•

IJIIclraotOW and Mrl. King

lr.! ::.:r.::il:,=nvO:~

W-ond c:.oro, Inc. o112 vtn!

'

7:01(1) Tho,..._.
7::1012). Ill Jaopanlrl Q

.......... tu
- . 1171
.Jollo-tehp v~ outboard..,.
trollo~vwy good cond, $2,toq.

ton P ...,_Clolllpollo, Ohio 41Ut.

EOI/M amplofor.

Rf:.S'*Q
1=:£

75 Boall &amp; Motors
, for Sale

••o

Coueh, 1m LTD .
I
Clolhaa,llol-Yard Solo: June 21th, :ltlh. Up.

I i yIf ,, HI 11
~~j ·

~~~s~~-

£.ooie, .,..

1 m - Goldon

I

RUNEEO

••

MotorcyciiS

11

UMI

M tHu.. JUN127 M

i

- . Julyah,w. • -

*

ALL Yonl ..... Be Paid In
DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day !he ocl lo to run.
SundoJ • 2:00 p.m.

....

Television
Viewing

CDDa.rrr'-I:J

Full ... -.J In n

...,_ - - SUb4-,
- _. 1o1.o, 111. a . ~-· ofty wot•.

FOI'Every-1

BORN LOSER

,

The Dally 8entlnel p

(l)a.IMIIICIIII!IIIQ

::.: ·'=• w·~ ;;;-:•:..::

4
Family:
_
, • Fed. y.Salurday,
Patrlol

. Pomeroy MiddlepOrt, Ohio

....... - · ' t i l

CouniJ Apptll,... N. GoOII
uoocl oprM
, T.V..... CIDM
........................ll.tM.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vlelnlty

~

1117 Forti f·180 414, 11000
Rongoor
414 . . . .
3114471-11111
after 1 p.m.

............ ~.-a, ....... .

.,..,.... Qol.
don on TOfl, ~ Undornooth. 1Mt In a- On RU25 I
RUI1. IINOtdl1~2317.

-

UOClI

MltiJMik:,

3ll4oi7NI22.

tlon-on D.Gulseto.ne
....- - ..........

Loll: ..... -

7

-·

..._I Ml _ll, I P tt trw
-.. .._ .... IIH •
........ 110011. ....... - .

LOIT, REWAAQ, a1t11 Eaolom

•

51

.

, June XI, 1991

June27 1991

Ohio

SNAFUelly lnce Beanie

Lost &amp; Found

6

--

~

•

llllllfOIIed' material clrcumatancea
· llhould bl 1n tho oiling for you In the
·ahold. a- ttte nexl lbl montho,
you OIIUid be IUOklor than uiUIIIn man·
e)'oftllllog
- 21.......,
·
CAIICIII ,..,.
221 Tftll oiiOUlei

be a ..,., .....,, day lor you - If you
11111 a mkldlo Ol·tr.roed altltudo and
Ill 411111ny _... HI _, - · You'H
. . . . how to adjutl to~.
Gila jump an ln. by undlr-.ctlnO thlo
.......,_ governing you In tho ~

'

'

ac: lign,
LEO (.IUIJ 2J.Aug. 221 Try to spend a

lltorltln II IXIIIIIned. (1 :00)
Cll UnCIIr l'1rt Tftll program
CAPRICORN (Ilea.. 2Nan. 11) Don't
lot thlo management 01 a paraonally lm·
r-~•1111101'­
IIDrlltl, focullna on tho
porlant mattw be ialcan over by anolh·
IIDrlltl btlhlnd 1M
W today, Working toget!Mir Ia accept.
In
a -mloao blond wtth
able, ho•a-. but only If obl'ctlva ore
actual lootloge of tho evtnta.
In twmony.
(0:301 .
AQUAIIIUI Colan. »Fab. 111 Your amI!Daiiii'TNit
bition will be eMily orouoed tOday, but
8Waott1Nin
the motor power required to achieve
0.,.. Club With ....
object- could be lacking. This might
·~Ifill?
be clue to an ablance 01 Mil·
tii:JO(il .....
conflellnc:e.
(!) Will ¥liP* llapaot
PIICII (,_ liiH' all 20) If you eo&lt;·
• Cratllllncl CheN
pact lrlencloto e11a1 with you onthullcally tocllly, you mutt firtl pro)ae:t
11:00 ala aJ &lt;~~•
o •
wwmth youretll. They willenatyze your ·
!IJNiwi
'
~ t h o - way you'll tlllatyzo
Cl)Nawaw I Ia
tltalrl.
I
Hill
Q
ANal (I!IIINh 21·Aprll 11) You call en, 011 ....
" - yow Image tOday by letting ,
frlendl know you're a very eaaylndlvld·
I VitTonlghl
.
ualta gat along with. Don't toe too ..toully.
0111-IIIIIMN.ICin(l
TAUIIUI (April 20 11a; 20) You may
11:11 (J) IIIOVII: llllllniYOIIt
11ne1 tho op
you've ~ hoping for
(2:411
to d.,_ alllllatllllllltlt with a doll

heldll-.

!IIIIo time outdoors tOday In an activity
that atlmulat• you mentally and phyol,cdy. h doeon't - t o be anything ertl'llllrdlnary or ltronuouo.
'111100 (Aug. 2J.IIepl. 221 Your greot811 attribute tocta~ 11 your oblllly to ef.
lectlwtly manage others In wayo they
won't feel that they're being monlpul.ol·
ed. 1'1111 Ia bec:au• your lnlonllono will
be c:onatructlvt.
laM (.,.. 2J.Ool. 211 Companlona
will be lrnpo 1111 d by tho examp~ea you
HI today. ~ you're loll--red. c.1m
and .. ~ with yourotllf, " ... aiiO
. put - I n liMo-"- 01 mlncl .
ICOftJIO Coat. IW!olr. 21) You may
find yourMII a lrtfle t - ... tOday lncl
In ....cl Olo allange of ecenary. StrOIIng
that'• ..,., ~m­
tltrough lite mall where you can UIIOb- 1111
~ at.rwo otherl could do thlo port~~•t to both ol you.
I ,.., 21..... ID) ~..
Jab.
you'W
~ llfliiiDUIIy . . be lOOking
IAGITTAIIUI (Hen. 21 Ilea 21)
Trlntll conU..U. to lovor you today out for yow Inlet- today, ....... your commerdal kwoltl.,.tla though tltlllnciMdull-'1 oonlw with
.,. 001-ned. Try to give thll . . . pri- you rwp-dlng Why. You wil e-n ot H
orMy, though you may hove other later,hOWI'Yel'.
ell llopmtt1ll tugging for onentlon. ·

•

Alr'V: SIMO.

I ..,...
,,

••oo
t...,.. n·• .. ._

..

•

11:• e21a 111 Tonight . , _
StaNo.

®"11-.pJ.
1D- MaL• JAt'l One
0110111

l:r'..:.L. ~:;~
l~:Jll.~cu
e Allol: M liiiiiiD'i...,

.

'

' II X I

CMI
XIIYII

HI P F

KXIPOV'H
TIIC
X y

OYICCIO

z

J

ZXY

IIV

XaiYIIHJXV . '

IIV

c.

K X D D.
J YI J V
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " Ptoplo I - , want me to b1 J .R.. to H'o
hord to dlooppolnl them." - Lorry Hagman.

.

•'"' -. ....

27

'

�t'aQI

1 ot-1 ne DillY senunel

Poin• oy-Micldlepcjrt, Ohio

Thul"'ddy, June %7, 11111

Ohio Lottery·

Local primary .and secondary honor rolls

Easteru Higll School
FIBIICO Rom uno.
Fifth grade • Daniello Grueser, Heather Wilaley.
. .
The following students have
Fifth grade • Michelle Bissell, Mjche)Je Ramsburg, Ronnie Hirth,
Third pade - Bevedy Bwdetle,
THURSDAY
and
square-dance
at Tuppers PlaiDs
been named to the fourth nine Scott Dodson, George Miller, Lisa Russell, Scott Sellers, Amy Kim Conde, Tiffany Hilder, M.r·
MIDDLE.I'ORT.
The
Middle·
VFW
from
Bp.m.
to ·f! :30 p.JJI.
weeks honor rolL
Melissa Reeves, Jennifer Sigmon, Smith, Adam Thomas, Clay Crow, jorie Halar, Moraan Mathews,
port
Church
of
Christ
will
hold
MuSic
provided
by
CJ and the
Twelfth grade . Leigh Anne Jessica Wheeler.
Steven McCullough, Amy See, Anna Story.
Vacation
Bible
School
tJuough
Fri·
Country
Gendemen.
Redovian, all A's; Suzanne Clay.
Sixth grade · Lawa Arix.
Fourth grade • Lacy Banks, l'ri· day from 9:30 a.m. to noon daily.
Wayne ,Barnhart, David Anderson,
Andrea Cleland, Alyssa Eddy, AleMiddleport
Wendy Shrimplin, Wendi Daniels, cia Davis, Becky Johnson, Tamra Theme is ~Be Strong and Coura·
LONG BO'ITOM • The Faith
First grade • Andrew Baker, Lindsay Smith, Roy Powell. Jerica O'Dell.
sha Keney, Susie Kimes, Mark
geous.
•
Guest
speeJrns.
C1asaes
for
Full
G_ospel Church in ~ng ~Ol·
Murphy and Pany Parsons.
Trevor Buck, Zachariah Butcher, Clatt; Lauren Anderson.
Fifth grade • Myca Haynes, ages three through ei&amp;hth grade.
tom
will
have a hymn smg Friday
Eleventh grade - Jennifer Delana Eichinger, Michelle French,
Sixth grade • Paul Epperson, Heidi Lepr, Michael I.eiflleiL
at
7:30
p.m.
featuring the Pailey
Brookover, all A's; Sieve Barnett, Heather Fry, Erin Hartson, Corrie Shawn Fife, Whitney Haptonstall,
Sixth grade • Chelsie Dodson, . RACINE • Vacation Bible Family. Pastor Steve Reed invires
· . Tim Bissell, Jamie Brannon, Sabri- Hoover,Joshua Lynch, Tyler SleW· Michelle Johnson, Erin Krawsczyn, Jared King, Tim Peavley and Chris
School at the Racine Baptist the public. Refreshments will be
na Chevalier, Jill ChichesiU, Tina art, Sarah Blankenship, Erica Jessica McElroy, Stacey Price, Sra- Roush.
Chlllth will be held through Friday served.
•
Connolly, Lee Gillilan , David Bryan , H~ather Fetty. An~y cie Reed, Taryn Doidge, Tara
·
Meigs Junior HIP
from 9:30a.m. tn noon. ·
Gumpf, Mike Hoffman, Danny Fran~e. N1ckolas McLaughlin, Grueser, Shawn King, Leigh Mash,
Seventh grade - Amber Bennett.
COOL VILLE • Revival at the
Lawrence, Tony Maxey, Julie Rif- Montca Moon, Sarah Reynolds, Ashley Roach, Jodie Sisson.
Nikld Bentley, Ann Brown, Megan
SYRACUSE • The Asbury Carthage Chlllth in Coolville will
fie, Keith ·Spencer, Chrissy Sum- ' Jacob Smtth, Clayton Taylor, Tatll
Clark, .Phyllis Clark, Bethany Unired Methodist Church in S~· be held Friday and Saturday 81 7
D.H. I • Howard Eblin.
mers Alvena Van Meter Hill , Wyatt, Robby Bush, Rebecca
D. H. II • Jeasica Burton, Kim Cohee, Cynthia Cotterill, Ryan cuse will hold Vacation B1ble p.m. nighdy w1th Rev. Sam Ander·
Sherrl Wolf.
Smith.
,
Crisp, Melissa Erlewino, Michael School through Friday from 9 a.m. son. Rev. Billy C. Murphy inviles
Bush, Barbara Whittington.
Tenth grade • Nancy Gaddis, all
Second grade • Marjorie Brat·
Franckowiak, Jake Gannaway, Ali- to noon. The theme IS "Jesus and the public.
Rutland
A's; Jeremy Buckley, Chad Grif· ton •. Tern Brewer, Jason Cbaney,
son
Gerlach, Donald Goheen, Israel
First grade • R~ Kauff, Amber
fith Lisa Hoffman Nicole Jesstca Chapman, Bryan Cowdery, Snowden, all A s; Amber Ellis, Grimm, Angie Hale, APril Halley, You at·Camp Can Do." Clas,... for
• SA1\JRDAY
Kanawalsky, Kim Michael, Matt Jessica Cundiff, Caleb Jones, Leah Darrick Knapp, Melisstl Richmond, . Dorothy Leifheit, Nicky Mills, age two )'Wll through junior high.
Public
invired.
.
.
POR1l.AND
• The Hat.el Com-.
Michael Nancy Nally Sherri Morrow, Amanda Neece, Amy Gabriel Jenkins, Johnny Lentes, ' Tonya Phalin, Lori Russell, Tracy
munity
ChW'Cb
between
Long BotSmith A~brey West, Bobbi White. · Sarver, Brandi Smith, Ian Story, Kathy Walker.
.
Shaffer, Cindi Stewart, Dodger
BRADBURY
·
-The
Bradbury
tom
and
Portland.wiJI
have
a hymn
Nu;th·grade. Tyson Rose. Andy Kathy Tay!or, 'Yhitney Ash~ey,
Second grade • Zachary Bolin, . Vaughan, James D. White, Donnie Chlllth of Christ will have Vaca- slnjl on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. fear
Wolf, all A's; Penny Aeiker, Kathy Abby Harrts, Mtcha~l ~awkms, Derrick Bolin, Skip Dodson, Alin- Yost
lion Bible School througb Friday tunng Debbie Powell:
·
Bernard, Charlene Dailey, Dawn Derek Johnson, Came L1ghlf~t, son Hays, Bethany McMillan ,
Eighth grade - Sarah Andenon, from 9-11:30 a.m. daily. Theme is
.
·
Foley Wendy Rach Anita Lee Reynolds. Brooke Smnh, Beatrice Morgan, all A's; Justin · Joey Barren, Vanessa Compston,
RACINE · The Racine Americ
thomas, Amber Well, Jaime Wil· Rachel Taylor, Cassie Vaughan, Cleland, Billy Kennedy. Matt James Coun_ts, Tara Erwin, Ben . "Jesus and You at camp Can Do."
All
young
people
invired.
.
can
Legim Post 602 will SJionsor
son
Amber Vinmg.
.
Stewart, Nancy Wingo, Elizabeth Ewing, David Fetty, Kelley
picnic
Saturday beginning at 11:3ll
. Eighth grade • Jessica Rl!dford,
Third grad~ • April Blanken- Smith, Tiffany Priddy.
.
Graeser, Jered Hill, Heidi Huff.
KENO
•
The
Keno
Cblllth
of
a.m.
at
the post home fll' membeii
all A's· Brandi Barber Charles shtp, J.P. Bohng, Max Bratton,
Third grade - Tiffany Halfhill, man, Kim Janey, Emily Johnson, Christ will be boldina bible school and ftmilies. Meat and pop will\1e
Bisell, Susan Brewer, Ryan Buck· ~hley B.urton. Brant Dixon, Jen- Joshua Sorden, all A's; Sara Ihle, Adam Krawsczyn, Darrell Lee,
ley Jessica Chevalier Dina nifer Eakins; Jamye Hudson, Scott Ashley Miller, Michael Ramsburg, Kevin Lopn, Becky Meier, Sbilo through Fridly from-4:30-6:30 p,m. furnished and members are to brinJ
daily. Children in p-ades kinder- a covered diSh.
,.
coritbs Tara Congo Janet MeDon· Johnson, Jennifer Nease, Ryan Ryan Ronquillo, Shawn WMatlan.
Moore, Reuie Pratt. Adam Sbeets, gartell through high school Ire wei·
aid Hcldi Nelson iamie Ord Jeff Pierce, Davy Reynolds, Renee
Fourth grade • Matthew Justice, Brent Smitli, Brian Smith, KeUy
KANAUGA - The Liberty
St~them . Hono;able mention Stewart, Brandy Tobin, Ashlee Alyson Patterson. Missy Priddy, Smith, Dale Stewart, Juan Taylor, come. The theme is " J - and You
at
Camp
Can
Do."
will perform at ~
Mountaineers
David Johnson.
' Vaughan, Cassandra Will, Richard Shannon Stevers, ClaytOn Tromm, Slepbanle Thomas, Crystal Vaugh·
D.A.
V.
Ceo!«
in Kanauga on Sat.&lt;
Seventh grade - Rebecca Evans, Mw:Wt· Seth Baker, S_tacey Brewer, Robert Diddle.
f!ll, Michelle Ward, Amanda Well,
urday.
.
SYRACUSE
•
The
Carleton
Jessica Karr, Lauren Young, all Jan!e Compton, .Mmdy H~lley,
Fifth grade • Emily Fowler, all Melissa Wilfmg and Tonya Will.
College
Board
of
Trustees
wil!
A's; Brian Bowen, Jessica Freder· Chris Imboden, N1cbolas Michael, A's; A.J. Vaughan, Melissa
Meigs Hl&amp;h School .
BASHAN • Special service ~ ·
meet Thursday at 7:30 e.m. at the
ick, Jennifer Mora and Brandi Seth Rawson, Tommy Roush.
Williams.
Ninth grade - Lorri Ann Syracuse 'Municipal Buliding. All will be held at the Red Brush ·
Reeves. Honorable mention. Jeanie
Fourth grade • Jenni Howerton,
Sixth grade · Michelle Miller, Bumem, James Rylll! Conde, Trllci
Chlllth of Christ on Bashan Rollf
Cline.
T.J. King, Jonathan Roberts, Beverly Stewart, Morgan Vana- Danielle Crow, Jenod Keith Dou· members are mgcd to attend.
on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and on
William Scanlon, Sara Williams, man, Jamie Williamson·, all A's; glas, Amie Lynn Elliott, Tracy
Sunday 81 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. with
.
-RA:CINE
•
The
Racine
AmeriAustin Carr, John Davidson, Jessi- Chad Banrwn, Casey Booth, Eliza- Loriane Fife, Jconifer Danye F'Jllk,
can
Legion
Auxiliary
will
·meet
Denver
Hill of Foster, W.Va. as the
Meigs Local Honor Rolls
ca Johnson, Patrick Martin, Joshua beth Ellis and Jeremy Pierce.
Danelle Rae Gray, Jenimy Shain Thursdsy at 7:30 p.m. at .the post speaker. Public invired.
. The honor rolls for the fourth Price, Josiah Rawson, Melissa lfolGrimm, Meron E. Grueser, Dawn home. A report will be given _on
Salem Center
nine weeks in the Meigs Local man.
First grade • Chelsea Mont- Michelle Hockman, Heather Bess Buckeye Girls State.
CHESTER • Members of Sllad!:;
School District have been
Pomeroy
gomery, Kristy Puckett, all A's; Hudson, Melissa Dawn Jeffers,
River
Lodge and their spouses will
announced.
Filst grade • Carrie Abbou. Car· Josh Baas, Ryan Bates, Erin Bush, Brad A. Knous, Andrea Marie
go
to
Sebastians on Saturday for
HEMLOCK
GROVE
·
The
Bndbury .
olyn Bentz, Garnett Bonecutter, Jameson Johnson, Melissa Kirk, McDonald, Jason Dean Miller, Joy
dinner:
.For reservations call 985Counry
Women's
Fellow·
Meigs
Fifth grade • Rachel Ashley, Nicholas Bowles, Stephanie Josh Napper, !Crystal Pennington, Renee O'Brien, .Ann Marie Riftle,
4434
or
992-7519.
ship
will
meet
Thursday
at
7:30
Ginger Darst. Collin Roush, Jen· Chapell, Caleb Ellis, Kris Jenkins, ·Misty Puckett, )essica Schuler; Danielle J. Scott, Stepltanie Ann
p.m.
81
the
Hemlock
Grove
Church
nifer Vinning, Angie Baum, Chad Kimberly McDaniel, Christopher Mary Ann Schuler, Tom WJSC.
See, Denise Marie Shenefield, of Christ. A lady's quartet will per·
SUNDAY
':.
Hanson, Jenny Hayman. Nancy Neece, Shannon Soulsby, Matthew
Second grade • Robert Johnson, Michael John Sloan, Slephen John form . The public is invited to
REEDSVILLE
·
The
Hayman·'
.
Whaley, Matt Williams and Sandra Williamson, Jonathan Wilson, all A's; Kendra Cleland, Dustin Smith, Shannon Eugene Spawn, ·
attend.
·
'
Biriam
reunion
will
be
held
Sunday.
Young.
Heather Baxter, Elizabeth Bush, Erlewine, Jessica Marcum, Eric Matthew T. Stewart, Charles Eric .
at Fodced Run Stale Padt. A basket
Sixth grade • Libby King, Dar- Juley Eblin, Ashley Hamilton, Jes- Montgomery. Brad Ritterbeck and w~. Marlo Leigh Whire, Jason
lunch .will begin.at 12:30 p.m.
FRIDAY
.
rick St.Clair, Amy Clonch, AMa sica Roush, Nicbole Runyon.
Mwr Witheldl
Amber Roush.
Games
and entertainment will con-' .
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
Fink and Aaron Hockman.
Second grade • ShaMan Price,
Tenth grade .- Debbie Ann Senior Citizens Center will have a . tinue throughout the afternoon. All;
Third
lr8de
•
Orion
Barrett.
all
L.D.• Jobn Moore.
JU(itin Robson, Adam Shank, Betty A's; Steplianie Kopec, La1D11 Payne Alkire, Linda Louise Chapman,
square dance Friday from 8-11 friends ·ilnd relatives are invired to&lt;
D.H.. Brandon Johnson, Zinnia Wilson, Emily Stivers, Terra Bar- and Jeremiah Smith.
Le8nn Rae Cundiff, Kelly Ptitricia p.m. at the senior center. Music attend.
. Spears, Joshua Marshall. Charles ton, Andy Davis, Nicholas Det.Fourth grade • Andrea Dunfee, Doidge, Elizabeth R. Downi'e, will be provided by the HaJ!PY Hoi·
. Searles, Scott Autherson, Jenny twiller, Ashley Hannahs, Curtis Jessica
Pricldy, Rebd&lt;iah Smith and Nicoc Allison Gannaway, Mary A.
POMEROY: · A 12-step AA,
Geary, Shawn Leach and Calvin Hanstine, Chnstina Hirth, Sarah Bridgett Vaughan, all A's; G~. Randall Curtis Johnston, . low Boys from Athens. COst is $2
·Phelps.
·
Houser, Derick Johnson, Julie Michelle Grant, Lori Kinnison, Lori Jean Kelly, Kevin Andrew per person and those auending meeting will begin Suntlay at 7,
should bring snacks for the snack p.m. 81 the JTPA off'ICC, 117 West
flarr'-vllle
Kennedy, Andrea Krawsczyn, Kim Ritterbeck.
Lambert, Lorena Lynn Oiler, table.
Second Street in Pomeroy.
'.
First grade - Ashley Burbri4ge, Derek Miller, Chris Pickens, Alex
Fifth grade • Leigh Ann Canru- Stephanie Lynn·Price, Tammy Jo
•
Amber Haning, William Hannlng, Shuler, Brenna Sisson, Michael bury and Amanda Napper, all A's.
queen. Rusty Eug~ Triplett, Kit·
RACINE • Descendants of•the,'
CHESHIRE • The Blaxton' s
Jennifer Reeves, Stacia Sims, Stacy, April Stitt, Euva Stumbo,
.
Sixth grade • Adam Barrett, nna Ruth Turner.
late
Albert and Eliza Hill will have 1
Gospel
Singing
Group
from
Alaba·
Cindy Six, John Stanley, Rees Ashley Thomas Chris Ward.
Carrie
Harmon,
Tim
Eleventh
grade • Blllblm Ander· ma will perform at the Old Kyger a homccoming and reunion on SunJenny
Ervin,
Wyant
Third grade - Melissa Davis,
Andy Myers and Jo S1111dy, son, Tricia Daniell Baer, John Freewill Baptist Church in day at Star Mill Park. A carry-in
Second grade • Johnni Barley, . Jennifer Shrjmplin, Julie Spaun, Le~.
David Bechtle, Frank Edward
all A's; Robert Rillerbeck.
dinner will begtri at nooit.
Adam Bullington, Benji Call, W~sley .~oene, Adam Thomas,
Blake, Julianne ~ Buck, Ryan Cheshire on Friday at 7 p.m.
Salisbat')'
'
Christopher Dodson, Jonathan Mik~ Will181Dson, John ,Ambro.se,
'
First grade • Bobbie Burson, Keith Cowan, Mary Beth CreTUPPERS PLAINS -"The TuP.RIPLEY - The Liberty MounMaue, Amanda Pusolll, Sreve Sig· Jac~· B~. Charles ¥11is, Patrick Zach Davis, C.J. Estep, Levi means, Heather·C. Davenport,
mon, Dustin Smyers, Albert . Erwm, M1chelle Pamter, ~&gt;:an Gillette, Zacb Glaze, Ashley Dennis James Edmiston, Kyle . tainecrs will perform at Skateland pers Plains Churc~ of Christ wtll .
have a hymn sing on Sunday at 7
~:,rns. Patricia Wallter, Dawn ~Jier~tney Thomas, Chrisuan Hoschar, Jus tin Hoschar, Mindy FIIUSJ18IJ8h, Tara Michelle Gerlacb, in Ripley on f'riday.
p.m.
Robert Fosler, pastor, inviteS
O'Dell, Matt Snyder, Allison John Matthew Hagay. Stephanie
the
public.,
.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Round
Third grade • Kristy Six, Kyle
Fourth grade • Melissa Darnell, Story.
.
Kay Haggy, Mark Allen Haley.
Smiddie, James Stanley, Adam Kristina Kennedy, Kasey Williams,
Kimberly
Dawn Hanning, Mary
Second grade· April Blanken·
Walker.
·
Jonathan Wyatt, Jennife~ Heck,
Sarah Clifford, Sandi Gilkey, Ann Hawk, Philip Victor Hovatter,
. Fourth grade • Ja~on Preast, Jennifer Lambert, Sean Powell,.
April Lyrin Hudson, Don William
David Rusche!.
BGrace
1 ~:~~:yK~~a~:·cA~b~~b~yn Hubbard,
Hunnell,
Sheila Lattimer, Shawn
Midkiff,
•
Charles Marcinko, Tammy Jo
Miller, Heather Renee Mitchell,
Joseph Paul McElroy. Amy L.
•
McKinney, Jason Todd Reynolds,
Melissa Rena Rollins, Connie
Lucille Sauters. Mark ;J'heiss,
The annual picnic of the Mid· spOke of the many hats mothers
Michael Todd, Bobby Lee Vance, dlepon Child Conservation League ..,_ and presented a miniature hat
Christina Gail Weaver, Rebecca was held Sunday at !he home of with different color ribbons sym· . . ,
Wiles, Kathy Renee Williams, Bonnie and Stm Scott.
bolizing their office.
..
Robby Wyatt.
.
Following the DOtluck picnic a
Officers for the the new year are ·
Twelfth grade • Chase Cleland, meeting was conducted by Linda Linda Broderick. president; Helen • .
Mark A. Conley, Teresa Deem, Broderick, vice president. She Blackston, vice president; Nancy
Amber Eblin, Raena Eblin, Angie opened the meeting with the Pl~e Morris, secretary; Bonnie Scott, ,
' Elliott. Pam Haggy. Mandi Harris, ol Allegiance and "Mother s treasurer; Peggy Harris, reporter; ·
Resa Harris, ~indy Harrison, Prayer." Roll call was answered and Helen Blackston, historian.
James Arthur Howerton, Tara with "my favorite pasttime."
The meeting CIO$ed with the
Humphreys, Kelly R. Johnson,
Pixie Award presented to .l
annual
A layette will be presented to
..,
Cathy Lambert, Bronson Lauder- the Meigs County Pre-Natal Clinic. Linda Broderiet.
milt, Em111a Lee, Jesse Morris,
Another philanthrophic project · Members and guests attending ·
Mary Morton, Jeanette McDonald, that will be conducted by the group were Linda, Fraak and VincenL:
Missy Nelson, Spring Reed, Aaron is the "Liftoff" money to he col· Broderick, Nancy Morris, Jean and ;
Sheets, Kristen Slawter, Jennifer leered for terminall ill children.
Carl Gillipsie, Gallipolis; Kenny, •
Taylor, Amy Wagner, Stephanie
The theme for ~ new y- will Mary and Robert Harris, GallipPiis;
'
Walker, Amy Warth,Jenni Werry, be "Showers of Blessings" begin- Dennis Puckett, New Jersey, Ken ·
Teresa Wines, Darci Wolfe, Day- ning in September.
and Peggy Harris and the hosts, '
·
mond Wolfe, Brenda \\fright and
District president Jean Gillipsle Bonnie, Sam, Michelle and Becky &lt;
;
Stacey Young.
installed the incoming off'teera. She Scott.
•

a

I

Reds blank
San Diego
Padres

Pick 3:049
Pick 4: 1173

Cards : 3·H, 4-C
Q·D; Q-S
Partly cloudy tonighl.
Low in mid 60s.
Saturday high in 80s.

Page4

•
VoL 42, No. 38

2 Sec:llano, 14 Paget 25 cento

Copyrlgbt.d 1991

Lhota confers with picketing mine workers
By BOB LEWIS
Associated Press Writer
.
COLUMBUS - Pending state legislation to give
tax credits to power companies that bum Ohio coal
won't compensate for the C~Sl Of teehn.ology needed
to use it cleanly. an Amertcan Elecmc Power Co:
official says.
.
William J. Lhota, AEP's executive vice-prestdent
for operations, offered his assessment Thursday
when he emerged from a meeung at ·The .Colum.bus
Dispatch offices and encountet:ed a~\lt
Untted
Mine Workers union members ptckeung outstde. The
workers from AEP mines were in Columbus protest·
ing the ~ewspaper's editorials on the coal issue.

t5.

Lhota said during a cordial sidewalk debate with .
the UMW members that they would learn this sum·
mer whether AEP will close its mines and switch to
. coal from Wesrun stares, which bums more cleanly
than Ohio coal.
A biU pending in the Legislature would offer tax
incentives for utilities that continue burning Ohio
coal and install smokestack scrubbers to remove pol·
Iutants. Power companies have less than six years ID
bring emissions from their plants into compliance
with the federal Clean Air Act.
. "That bill provides for a credit of'$1 per .ton. We
bum about 6 million tons a year at our Gavm plant,

ENJOY LOCAL PRODUCE
AT ITS BEST

. ATTEND SOCIAL· Georae and ·N.. cy
Colllu, Tuppen Plaia, visited wltb Lt. Gover·
DCW Mike Dewlne alld 1111 wile, Fruit, dlll'lll&amp; tbe
u ..al Old Fashioned Ice Cream Sodal at tbe
DeWine home in Greene County. Over 5,000

.FIESIIIIOiraiMN

bom-:,ces

people rn. ac.- tbt state attellded tbe 10elal
this year. Ice ere-,
made by
Fnn DeWine ud her frlenclao
ren's PJIIes
and live entertainment were featured at the

HAlFRUNNER
Alii

A parade, fll'eworks, and enter- place by 11 a.m. in preparation for
tainment will highlight the July 4 moving out at 11:30 a.m.
The parade entries will be
celebration to be held in Middlejudged in several categories,
port.
"For God and Country" is the according to Bob Gilmore, chairtheme of the parade. Gen: James man of the Middleport Community
Hartinger (retired) will be the Association which is working in
grand marshal for the parade which conjunction with Middleport Vii·
will serve as the official welcome lage Council, sponsors of the cele. home to those who served in Oper- bration.
The trophies provided by Mid·
ation Desert Storm.
·
The parade will form on Ash dleport Trophies will be awarded
Street. move up Art Lewis Blvd. to from the new stage 81 Diles Park.
At 6:30 evening activities will
General Hartinger Blvd., out to
begin
at the park. Chuck Kitchen
Second, and then on ID Dave Diles
will
be
master of ceremonies .
Park where trophies will be awarded.
.
Mayor Fred Hoffman will intro·
The parade entries are to be in duce Gen. Hartinger who will

speak briefly. The national anthem

will be sung by Angela Teaford
while Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, ~ the flag at
the park. There will also be a 21
gun salute.
Evening entertainment will be
by the Shady River Shufflers and
the Crossover band. At 9:30 the
Middleport firemen will have a
fqeworks display.
Other activities will include an
all-day hymn sipg at the Ameri~an
Legion hall spOnsored by the Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post, and
firemen will have an ali-day fish
fry at the Legion Park.

WHAT A CROWD • Huadreds or people
enjoyed tbe de6ghtrul concert performed by the
Ohio University Communiversity Band on

School in Alhany on July 23 at
7:30 p.m. The group has recently
lowed nationally and performed in
Me)[ico, Clll8da and Hawaii.
In conjwx:tion with the group's
conttmporary Christian m11sic, is
Jhe UIC Of a 13 projector five screen
multi-media praenlllion.
"lftlide Out" is the group's lat·
est album end lhey recently record·
cd with Glry Paxton.
The COIICCrt is he and qlCn to
!he public. A fteowill offering will
be received for the group at the
COIICGL Impact's Ioc:al appearance
is spoiiJOI'cd and pi
11ied by the
Eut Athens Churcb of Christ in
~-- widllnl Cblirdles of
a;lii'Frier infOI"JJ"'im may be
obllined by calling 593-7414.

•

' .

I

Mn. Steila Atkins bas recently
returned from a trip to Minnesota.
She was met there by her son Gordon and wife Mary, of Mercer
Island, Wash.' They attended the

Revival 81 the Canhaae Chlllth
in Coolville will be held Priday and
Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly with
Rev. Sam Anderson. Rev. Billy C.
Murphy invites the public.

~:~~~~~:i~

Name
omitted
Ron Newsome, son of Frank

• • SID
C11 •••

YEllOW
liD HAVIll
n&amp;STOIIE

•2.99

u•••

honors from SL Jobn University.
Mr. lnd Mrs. Bob Alkire visired and JoAnn Newsonle, Five Points,
Tuesday evening with Mr. and was elected to the office County
Mrs. Charles Alldie, Rlcine.
· Commissioner In the citJ of
Miu Christine Harmon, Pon- McCaw in Elden County at Buckland, spent a few days with her eye Boys Slate, a mock governgrandparents, Mr. and Mn. Lou mCJU session held on the campus of
Chrilllllll. While here they visited Bowling Green State Univeraity.
Mf. and Mra. Jobn Bums and Mr. Newsome wiD be a senior at Eastand Mrs. Ralph Christian, Well- ern High Scbool.
ston.
His name wu UJ)intentionally
Mr. and Mrs. Dolig Bishop vis· . omitted from a pre\&lt;ious article of
ited her uncle in Columbus on others attending Buckeye Boys
Monday.
Srate.

liS .J

SJ.99

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

WELCOME HOME TROOPS • The Fourth
or July celebration in Middleport will include a
salute to those who served in Operation Desert

Storm. Banners or welcome have been strelebed
across the entrBDces to the village.

Eastern board hires substitute staff
members for 1991-1992 school year
Substitute staff members for the
1991-1992 school year were
employed when the Eastern Local
Sc.hool Board met in regular session on Wednesday.
Employed as substitute aides
were Susan Nutter, Darlene Buck·
ley, Joan Calaway, Patty Calaway,
Jill Holter, Diana Nelson, Teresa
Evans and Lila Van Meter.
Substitute secretaries hired were
Janet Life. Joan Calaway, Jill
Holter, Sonia Circle, Lila Van

Meter, .Diana Nelson, and Dorothy
Calaway.
Hired as substitute cooks were:
Inzy Newell, S.usan Nuner, Theresa
Marcinko, Darlene Buckley, Joan
Calaway, Patty Calaway, Sharon
Pooler, Cathy Clifford, Nola
Young, Linda Edwards, Ethel Lam·
bert, Sheila Spencer, Betty Jackson , Daphne Young and Mary
Rose.
Janet Life and Diana Nelson
were hired as substitute account

clerks.
Daphne Young, Jim Cowdery,
Sheila King, Charles Sargent, Ron
Wilson, ]ames Pellegrino, Gary
Holter, Pat Buchanan, Ronald B.
Grimm, Betty Jackson and Anna
Cremeans were employed by the
board as substitute custodians.
Employed as substitute bus
drivers were: Gary Dill, Arch Rose,
Edward Holter, Glen Easterling,
Rolarid Eastman, and Tom Dorst

Continued on page 3

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
government's chief economic forecastin$ gauge rose 0.8 percent in
May, 1ts fourth straight advance,
the Commerce Department said ·
today in a report $uggesting continued growth in the months ahead.
The department said the
advance in its Index of Leading
Economic Indicators was broad·
based, with eight of the II for·
ward-looking catejlories posting
gains. The index IS designed to
forecast economic activity six to
nine months in advance.
The index had risen 0.4 percent
in April, 0.9 percent in March and
1.1 percent in February, when tt
ended a siring of six losses stretch·
ing back to July. It was unchaged
in July.
.
Earlier estimates had the mdex
advancing 0.6 percent in April, 0.7
EXHIBlTING ARTIST • Jack Slavin was one or nine. a~tis~
percent in March and 1.2 percent in
who
exhibited works durin' the Pomeroy Merchants Asso;c•atton s
February.
in
the Park beld in conJunction with the Ohio University ComArt
The report came a day after
muniversity
Band Concert on Thursday evening sponsored by
Michael Boskin, chairman of the
Bank One. Other artists included Rhojeao McClure, Ron. Cozart,
Continued on page 3
Kim Krautter-Tbompson, Suzan Tboma, Joe Clark, Juamta LQd· .
wick and Marilyn Meier and Gail Hovatter or·The Hobby Horse.

Plans completed for
July 4 Racine activities

SWEn
CORN

swat

SOUTHCAIOURA

.CANTALOUPES

~~~
'

lG. SIZE

S1.49

'J.-o
SIZE

S1.99

•s.tt flllt. 2 •••10.00

{AGroMIIIIIIK-11111)
Gllllpollt, Ololo • 11....1711
....,,, . . pill

'I

'

'

.'
.
I

**Good Selection of Bedding Plants Still Avallabla••
:IIGO~A-

114 llllllollll ol

•'
•

•

••

Pw•s••mlrll9
11no1,

Thursday evening. The eveDIDg was tiear perfect
witb beautiful weather and fiDe music.

Leading
indicators up
0.8% in May

YEllOW

Group to perform 1Harrisonville note~ l Revival slated
"lmpal:t Brass and Singers" will

be in concert at Alexander High

but we're talking about hundreds of millions of dol· . oil, but you want to close it down."
Larry Ward, president of UMW Dislrict 6, which
. Iars in additional costs for scrubbers," Lhota said.
represents
about 4,000 mine workers in southeastern.
" You weigh the large costs against the $6 million
Ohio
and
part
of West Virginia, said lhe union felt
credit and you see that lhe least-cost opuon•s clearly
editorials
in
The
Dispatch unfairly supported AEP's
switching."
.
desire to switch to out-of-state coal. Pickets carried
Larry Vucelich, president of UMW Local 1810 at
signs saying "Does AEP Own The Dispatch?"
Powhatan Point, argued that the possible loss of the
state 's mining industry during a recession would
"Their editorials just say what AEP wants to
say,"Ward said.
.
cripple Ohio's econom~.
.
The Dispatch's news reporting on the issue has
"What will happen ts lhe.Wes~m s.tates wtll hold .
been fair. he added.
us hostage with their coal pnces, JUSt like Saudi Ara·
Robert Smith, editor of The Dispatch, declined to
bia with oil," Vucelich said. "The thing is, we have
comment on the prolesL
more coal here in Ohio than Saudi Arabia's got in

TENDER SNAP $279
lEANS
DOZEN

social.

.

General Hartinger will welcome
home Desett Storm veterans July 4

Middleport CCL
holds annual picnic

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

A Multlmldlo Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy·M!ddleport, Ohio, Friday, June 28, 1991

l

.

;

wv. • •-m-5721

RIVERFRONT EXIUBIT • The "Ahrlya A Rl'nl"' Ohio River
and and the American Experience Flolltlnl exhibit wiD be open ror
the public to lour Monday, July 1 aad Tuesday, July lat the Gal·

. . . . . . . . ..,, . . . pill

8undiJ,ti!Mpm

•

'

lipoils Riverfront. Tbe emlblt Is sponsored locaUy by Thomas Dolt Ceater. The exhibit Is In conjuactlon with tbe 26th Annual River
Recrealioo Feslival. Cost is $1 per person.

Plans for the annual Fourth of
July celebration In Racine have
been finalized.
.
The day will begin wllh a
parade at 10 a.m. Line up for the
parade will begm at 9:30 a.m. at
Southern High School
.
Following the parade there ~·11
be a chicken barbecue at the Ract~e
Fire Department followed by chll·
dren's games at12:30 p.m.
The always popular "An&gt;:!'ting
That F1oa1s But A Boat Race wifl
be held at the park along with a
kiddie tractor pull.
.
.
A special presentation dunng
the afternoon will be a sky div~s
exhibition.
At 5 p.m . mud wrestling matc~ ­
es will be held by the Women s
Mud Wrestling Fedention and at7
p.m. enrenainment at the park will
take place.

Winners of Cincinnati Reds
tickets will be announced at 9 p.m.
and the day 's festivities will conclude with fireworks at 10 p.J11. ,
RACINE FOURTH OF JULY
ACTJVITIFS
9:30a.m. · Parade line-up at
Southern High School
10 a.m. - Parade
· 11 a.m. • Chioken barbecue at
Racine Fire Department ·
12:30 p.m. · Children's games
· 2 p.m. · Anything That Floats
But a Boat Race and Kiddie Tractor Pull
at Park
Afternoon skydivers
5 p.m . • Women's Mud
Wrestling Federation MaLChes
7 p.m. • Music at the Park
9 p.m. •. Announcement of win·
ner of four Cincinnati Reds ticketS
10 p.m. · Fire works.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="311">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9602">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="34890">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="34889">
              <text>June 27, 1991</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3">
      <name>griffin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2966">
      <name>o'brien</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
