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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

Reds close
JJ.pme stand
with win

Pick 3:442
Pick 4:6109
Cards : K-H, 6-C
Q-D; 7-S
Super Lotto:
1-2-10-11-24-43
Kicker:
854640

Page4

Low tonight ln70s.
Chance of rain 40 percent. High Thesday, 90.

•

a1
Vol. 42, No. 39

1 Section 10 Pages 25 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 1, 1991

Copyrighted 1991

- ..

Two-dozen

•

military bases

to shut down

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... . . ... ·...

FORT ORD FACES CLOSURE· Traffic nows through the
main gate of Fort Ord., Calif., Sunday morning. In Washington, D.
C., the federal base closing commission voted to close Fort Ord,
along with U. S. Army posts in Massachusetts and Indiana as part

measures designed to reduce military expenditures in the post-cold
\'Iff era. Ford Ord employs more than 16,000 military and civilian ·
workers. (AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush is expected to ratify an
independent commission's recommendation that the military close
two dozen bases from Maine to
California, an administration official says.
The official, who spoke on conclition of anonymity, commented as
the Defense Base Closure and
Realignment Commission on Sunday night completed a day -long
series of votes calling for lhe shutdown of major Army posts, the
Philadelphia Naval Shipyard and
three strategic bomber and refueling bases .
"We are clusmg oases today
that affect American defense enarmously," said commissioner
Howard "Bo" Callaway, a former
secretary of the Army. " We are
doing it for the good of the country
to save money."
The cuts made by the commission were from a list recommended
by the Pentagon, which is facing
declining budgets and plans to
reduce the siie of.the military force
by one-quarter over the next five

Announce theme for Rutland July 4 parade
The crowning of the Meigs cents, those attending the celebraCounty Junior Fair King and tion will be able to cast their ballots
Queen- will be added to the annual for that ~ward. " . Entries for the annual cake dec- .
FO'tll'tlrOf July celebration in Rutorating
and pie baking contest must
land this year, and the traditional
parade arid ox roast are on slate
once again as well.
The,parade will begin at 10 a.m.
at Depot and Brick Streets and will
proceed through town to Salem
Street
The theme of the parade this
year is "Pride and Respect for lhe
American Soldier", and the Rutland Volunteer Fire Department
plans to salute Desert Shield veterCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ans in the parade. Any veterans of Officials of the state's wealthy
the Gulf War who would like to school districts are planning a lobride in a special unit are invited to bying strategy as deba:e heats up in
do so.
the Legislature over how the state
As always, children are being funds Ohio:s public schools.
welcomed in the parade, too.old . The Alliance for the PreservaYounasters are invited to enter as V uon of Local School Fundmg IS
wilkil'lg units or decorate their bemg formed by suburban sc_hools
bicycles and motorbikes for the m Cuyahoga"County and wtll be
panide.
soliciting members statewide after
Several bands are scheduled to meetin~ V.:ith central and southern
entertain as a part of the ox roast, Oh1o dlStnCIS on July 10, organtzer
including Dee and Dallas and The L. Nell Johnson satd.
White Hills Band The main attracThe all18Dce plans to seek memtion for the day, The Country Mis- berships at $5,000 a di~trict. from
filS, will take the stage at6 p.m.
the 136 wealth1e_st d1stncts m the
Beef sandwiches, hot dogs and state - those w1th a property_tax
sloppy joes will be served at lhe ox base of at least $75,000 per pup1l.
roast, and games and a dunking
. The debate ~t puiS nch school
machine (operated by the Meigs d1stncts agamst poor ones 1s
Band and Flag Corps) are also expected get louder m the_nex~few
planned. Bingo will get underway weeks as a Senate committee conin the park following the parade Siders Senate Bllll70.
and will continue all day .
The proiJOsal by Sen. Robert R.
An open car show will be con- Cupp, R-L1ma, calls for a gradual
ducted, with registration beginning sh1ft of state and local tax dollars
at nool'l. Top 20 trophies and a Peo- from wealthy to poor schools.
pte"'s Choice Award will be preA House -Senate conference
sented at.the show. For a cost of 25 committee is debating tlfe state
u&lt;.'

be in by I p.m. with judging to follow shortly thereafter. The pies and
cakes wiD be auctioned at4 o.m.
Work sessions to prepare the
beef for the ox roast are continuing

at the Elementary School each
night beginning at 6:30p.m.
.. Information ori the parade can
be obtained from Lilly Kennedy at
742-2861.

Rich Ohio school districts
gear up for funding ·debate
budget, which t~d strip the
state's wealthiest · 'cts of a third
of their state funding.
Johnson said his group is concerned about separate lawsuits filed
by lhe Cleveland Board of Educa- .
tion and the Ohio Coalition for
Equity and Adequacy of School
Fundin~. which claim Ohio's funding pohcy is unfair to poorer districiS.

between school resources and stu-dent achievement. The group hopes
to show that more money will not
automatically buy better students,
Johnson said.

A recent Ohio Public Expendi·
ture Council report said that 64 per·
cent of Ohio children attended
schools spending less !han the perstudent state average of $4,338 in
the 1989-90 school year. School
The alliance contends current spending statewide ranges from
school funding laws are constitu- less than $3,000 per student to
tional, but could be made more more than $10,000.
equitable without stripping allocaThe Itport also said primary and
tions to richer districts.
secondary public education is an
"We want to use our money to $8.4 billion business annually in
inform the Legislature and the pub- Ohio. The state provides 47 percent
lic about the other side of the of all school money. Local money
issue," -(ohnson said. "We don't makes up 50 percent, and federal
want to go to court and put our dollars provide about 3 percent.
money into that black hole."
Cupp's bill is designed to narJohnson, former superintendent
of Groveport Madison Local row the gap between rich·and poor
School District, is now with the districts gradtially by required sharBrecksville-Broadview Heights ing of half of all local commercial
tax growth and by phasing out
district near Cleveland.
The alliance also plans to com- mechanisms for state aid that
mission a study on the relationship widen lhe gap.

years.
More than 80,000 military and
37.000 civilian workers would be
affected by lhe closures.
Cary Walker, a commission
. spokesman, said tabulation of the
expected financial savings was not
expected to be available until later
today.
Bush has until July 15 to accept
or reject the recommendations or
ask for further revisions. The officia! predicted the president would
ratify whatever the commission
did.
"He 'II be lobbied, no doubt,
he'll be lobbied very heavil~, " said
the chairman of the com~il&amp;'sion,
former Rep. James Courter, R-N.J.
" Hopefully, he'll accept our rec ommendations."
Given presidential approval, lhe
list would then go to Congress,
which has 45 days to approve or
veto the list, but is prohibited from
making any substitutions.
The commission ' s decisions
spelled gloom in communities
already suffering from the economContinued on page 3

Major U.S. Military Bases Recommended
for Closure or Readjustment*
·"·-·-~iii ····
/

rJ :·orz-:· - -; !

..

. .. ;

........
..

-.

:··

··{

... . .. •.

Some smallflr Installations
cited for closuro or readjustment 8/'9 not listed.
ARIZONA
1. Williams Air Force Baaa, Chandler
ARKANSAS

MICHIGAN
17. Wurtsmlth Air Force Base,
Oscoda

2. Eaker Air Force Sua, Blytheville

MISSOURI
18. Rlcharda-Gebaur Air Reserve
CALIFORNIA
Station, Kansas Cily
4. Fort Ord, Seaside
NEW JERSEY
5. Sac111mento Army Depot
19. Fort Dlx, Wrightstown
8. Long Belch Naval Station
OHIO
(Long Beach Shipyard will remain open) 20 Rlckenbacker Air Guard Base
7. Tualln Air Station, Tustin
· Columbus
'
8. Castle Air Force Base, Merced
PENNSYLVANIA
COLORADO
21. Philadelphia Naval Shipyard
9. Lowry Air Force Base, Denver
22. Philadelphia Naval Station
23. Naval Air Development Center,
FLORIDA
Warminster
10. MacDIII Air Force Bau
SOUTH CAROLINA
INDIANA
11. Fort BenJamin Harrison, Indianapolis 24. Myrtle Baach Air Force Base
12.Grlosom Air Force Base, Peru
TEXAS
25. Chaaa Field Naval Air Station ,
LOUISIANA
Beeville
13. Englend Air Force Baee, Alexandria
26. Bergstrom Air Force Base,
MAINE
Austin
14. Loring Air Force Bue, Umestone
'1:7. Carswell Air Force Base, Fort
Worth
MARYLAND
15. Harry Diamond Lab
1

3. Fort Chaffee

MASSACHUSETTS
18. Fort Devane. Ayer

'A s of

1:30{ m. EOT; 7/1/91

'

Source: Department or Defense

---Local briefs---- State begins new fiscal year with temporary budget
No one hurt'in accident
No injuries were reported following a two-oar accident at the
intersection of S.R. 7 and C.R. 5 Saturday afternoon.
According to a report flied by lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Sylvia Neece, 57, of Pomeroy, was southbound on
C.R. '5 when she pulled onto S.R. 7 and into the path of Tracy
Green, 2.1, of Cheshire, causing Green's 1983 Nissan to strike
· · Neece:s 1986 Oldsmobile.
· Damage was listed as light to Neece's Oldsmobile and as moderate to breen's Nissan.
Neece was cited by the patrol (or failure to yield.

..

~

Ammon aTJ'ested on theft charge
Thomas D. Ammon, also known as Fred M. Ammon, was
reiumed to Meigs County on Friday afternoon from Jackson County, W.Va., after wai":ing extradition ..
According to Me1gs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Ammon
is charged with thefL The charge was flied in Meigs County Court
by William Stuckey of Royal Oak Resort. Ammon is accused of
~ing six'Lifestyle'Mem!Jership packets.
.
A'mmon is now housed m the Me1gs County Jail.
\,

.

,

R~eds.ville thefi repo_rted
· · Orman Mays of Reedsville reported to the Meigs County Sheriffs Department on Thursday that jewelry was taken from his residence. According to Mays, the time· of the theft is not known.
Continued 41n page 3

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The state began a new fiscal year at
12:01 a.m. today with a temporary
budget in place to keep the government running while legislators try
to resolve differences over a twoyear spending plan.
Gov. George Voinovich on Saturday signed into law an interim
budget that provides for state agencies to operate at spending levels
about 3 percent below what they
were for (he old fiscal year, which
ended at midnight Sunday.
Voinovich said he was disappointed that the Legislature failed
to reach agreement on a two-year,
$27 billion budget by the deadline.
"However, I am pleased that the
Senate acted in time to adopt an
interim budget and that the House
responded favorably," Voinovich
said in a news release.
·Voinovich issued the statement
Saturday after the House, meeting
in an unusual weekend session,
approved 8S-8 the Jemporary budget that the Senate had adopted the
night before.
'·

Passage of the interim budget
gives legislators more time to
resolve remaining differences over
the two-year spending plan. It also
allows welfare checks to be distributed to about 275,000 recipients, and keeps the state from techniciilly defaulting on its debt.
House-Senate conference committees will continue to meet on the
state budget bill, and on separate
budgets for the Ohio Bureau of
Workers' Compensation and the
Industrial Commission of Ohio.
Both agencies also are operating
under one-month interim spending
plans adopted by the Legislature.
Voinovich said he was encouraged the conferees would continue
to meeL
.
" I am confident that with strong
leadership in the House and Senate
and a continued commitment on
'the part of the conferees to reach a
final agreement, a permanent twoyear budget will be adopted," he
said.
The Senate surprised the House
. by approving the Jemporary budget

Friday night, less than three hours
after House members had been sent
home.
House Speaker Vern Riffe, DWheelersburg, said the weekend
session, believed to be lhe Legislature's first since 1985, stemmed
from a lack of communication.
"I regret what took place (Fri day), but it happened," Riffe told
the House.
•'And in order to make sure that
we did have a budget in place, that
there be no doubt about people
receiving checks ... rightfully due
them on Monday, the decision was
made by the Senate, without consultation with the House, that this
take place," he said.
Riffe said he and Senate Presi •
dent Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, met privately for 45 minutes
before the Saturday session and put
the problem behind them.
"We made an 11greement ... that
he and I from here on will talk
directly ... so that there will be no
more misunderstandings or lack of
communication," he said.

Voinovich on Sunda y signed
into law a separate two-year, $3.2
billion budget for the departments
of Transportation and Highway
Safety. The bill provides money for
an additional 100 State Highway
Patrol troopers and $7.5 million a
year to the Department of Development to build access roads to new
developments.·
· ODOT's budget of $2.8 billion
will continue funding for lhe 7,600employee agency. The department
receives most of its money from
federal and state fuel taxes.
·Voinovich also signed into law
two health care bills that have
received· notice more because of
their effect on the state' s open
records law than the revisions they
make for hospitals.
The governor si$ned one bill
that strengthens medication reporting procedures for patients in mental hospitals. Attached to that bill
was an amendment that would have
closed to the public virtually all the
business records of publicly OW!Ied
Continued on page 3

:_"-; .

.•

If•

�Commentary.

Plge 2-The Dally ~ntlnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Otilo
· Monday, July 1, 1991

. ,..

t

Monday, July 1, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Much-needed rain headed for Ohio
.

r----Local briefs...----.
Continued from page 1

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
Dll VOTE D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

General Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller
MEMBERofTh e Assoc iat !'d Press. Inland Daily Press Associatio n and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
A

.,

LETTE RS OF OP INIONare welcome. They should be less than300
words long_All letters are subject to !'dillng and must be signed with
ilame. addr ess and telephone numbPr . No un signed letters will be publi shed . Letlers s hould bP in good tas te. a ddress ing issues, not perso nali ties.

Secret meetings no new
adversary to news media
By BOB
.... LEWlS
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Without so much as a question, a measure that would
have put business records of publicly owned hospitals out of the public's
reach slipped through both houses of the Ohio Legislature this month.
The amendment had been tucked inconspicuously into an unrelated
health care bill at the urging of hospital lobbyists during a legislative
committee hearing at the Statehouse.
The measure was on its way to Gov. George Voinovich for signing
iniD law when a reponer spotted the amendment and sounded the alann.
Government effons to take public business behind closed doors is
nothing new, but there is 'growing acceptance of it among the public,
according to joumalis.ts, their lawyen and people who study the media.
' 'There does not appear 10 be a large public lobby out there pushing for
public access," said Steve McDonald, a Columbus lawyer who specializes in freedom -of-information cases. " It doesn 't seem ID be a burning
question for most people.' '
Tom·Schwanz, an associate professor of journalism at Ohio Slate University, said studies indicate it's not just that the public doesn't care.
' 'A lot of this is not only apathy, but actually suppon for secrecy. Why
that is. I don't know." said Schwanz. who teaches classes in communications -law.
" We frequently say that the reason the public does not suppon openness in a particular issue is that they don't underStand the isswe, but I think
that is a serious misjudgment of the public," he said.
A public resentful of the press does nothing to discourage special-interest lobbies from trying again ID restrict Ohio's b!oad public records and
public meetings laws.
Some journalists say the profession itself is much to blame for alienating the public. The media have failed ID show why open government is
important and often alienates the public wjth its behavior, according to
two Ohio editors whose newspapers have gone to court to fight for open
records.
I
" I don 't believe people don't .want their rights protected. They're just
resenting an arrogance by the press that does not become us. They resent
press arrogance as much as they resent politic~ arrogance,'' said Clarence
Pennington, ediiDr and publisher of The (Fostoria) Review-Times.
His newspaper battled a local hospital in court for live years before
winning its case before the Ohio Supreme Court to force disclosure of
public records.
But battling for the public's right 10 know is IDugher when journalists
are viewed as being needlessly confrontational, Pennington said:
Perhaps journalists have been too abrasive or strident in asserting
·rights they enjoy under Ohio laws, said Paul Knue, editor of The Cincin' nati Post.
'
: "I think for some reason, the public is mad at us. I think maybe they
·see us as rude, insensitive and only interested in creating a scandal,"
i Knue said. ' 'I think somewhere, the volume level on what we do needs to
· be turned down a notch.' '
; His newspaper and other news organizations· fought in court 10 obtain
:public records from the Hamilton County-owned Drake Hospital, where
·nurse's aide Donald Harvey poisoned 26 patients.
' Had the hospital records measure been in effect, neither newspaper
would have prevailed in court, according to David Marburger, a Cleveland lawyer who represents both publications and other media clients in
ope~~- records cases.

Berry's World

Fis·h ·and wil-dl-ife auction ·a bad·idea
WASIDNGTON - Where can
you get a deal on a snakeskin pillow, or a python purse, or a
crocodile watchband? Try the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service , the
agency charged with the oversight
of endangered animals.
In an auction on May 25 in Fon
Wonh, Texas, the agency sold 941
exotic animal skins , boots and
handbags and netted nearly
$113,000. The items were all confiscated because they were imported iUegally, but instead of destroying them, tlte Fish and Wildlife
Service stoked the appetite for
them by auctioning them off.
None of the items sold at the
most recent auction came from
endangered or extinct species, but
most were made out of animals on
the " Appendix Two" list of the
Convention on International Trade
aild Endangered Species. CITES is
the international treaty that governs
the trade of endangered animals.
The "Appendix Two" species are
defined as " not presently threatened with extinction, but may
become so unless their trade is regulated."
The sale or possession of animal

pans,in that categpry is not illegal, can be found.

_
but bringing them into the country
The Fish and Wildlife Servtce
without export permits from their .. said lhe scaly anteater boots were
n.W.ve countries is. In many cases, · seized because they had no export
produc!S that can be legally sold in paperwork at all. It is easy to see
the Uruted States have been tllegal- w!!-y.. According 10 jhe trade montIy-smuggled out of a foreign coun- toring office of the World Wildlife
try that bans their expon.
Fund, scaly anteaters are prohibited
We commend the Fish and from export by nearly all their
Wildlife Service for doing an countries of origin because those
aggnessive job of rounding up the countties fear depleting the species.
boOty, but that's where our admiraNot only did the Fish and
tion stops. Few animal conserva- Wildlife Service have no qualms
lion groups think it is a good idea about auctioning off the rare skins,
for the 'federal government to it did so with enthusiasm. The inviencournge people to wear boots or tation to the auction boasts of the
carry purses made out of rare ani- quality of the goods. The 76 pairs
mal pans.
·
of python skin shoes are described
The Fish and Wildlife Service by the auctioneer: "l'v'e seen some
!Old our associate Dean Boyd that of these and they are beautiful."
they are doing no such thing The invitation lists "244 dried butbecause most of the animal parts terflies, and 103 glass cases with
are readily available on the Ameri- beautiful butterflies inside them;"
can market anyway. But, average a hippo skin described as ''the
shoppers would be hard pressed to most unusual item of the sale," and
fmd a srore where they could pick an alligator skin briefcase that has
up 45 pounds of catman lizard "combination loeks, and is fitted
scraps or a hippo skin. The federal on the inside.",
auction included 138 pairs of scaly
Hundreds of skin-hungry cusanteater boots, and there are few tomers showed up. They bought 33
places in the United States, other python skin· purses, 66 crocodile
than a federal auction, where those watchbands, IS snakeskin lounge

By Jack Anderson

and Dale Van Atta

in a permanent state of uncon sciousness for at least one year,
two doc10rs, including an expen in
comas, could certify that the person
would never recover. Again, there
would be an appeal process. "Ter- Law in Ohio has occurred for well
minal"· is defined in the bill as an over a decade. Now, if Governor
irreversible and incurable condition Voinovich signs the bill as it
and one from which death is likely approaches his desk, Ohio will
to occur within a relatively shon become the forty-second state in
lime if life -sustaining treaunent is the United States to recognize Livnot administered. Conditions ing wms.
If you have any questions about
caused by diabetes arc excluded.
As an additional safeguard, if the the Living WiU Law, or if you have
patient is in a persi~tent, uncon- any other thoughts or comments on
scious state, the Living Will and these or other issues that face our
next of kin of the patient cannot General Assembly, please don't
authorize the withdrawal of nutri- hesitate to call upon me by writing
tion and hydration unless autho- to me, State Senator Jan Michael
rization was specifically .given in Long, c/o The Stateho~. Columthe Living Will document.
bus, OH 43215 or call me at (614)
Attempts to adopt a Living Will 466-8156.

Sen. Jan M. Long

Why foundations have liberal bias
.·

Every year the Capital Research
Center in Washington issues a
repon on the previous year's benefactions by America's leading philanthropic foundations. And every
. year conservatives shake their
heads in resigned incredulity as it
uanspires that foundations created
by such crusty old entrepreneurs as
John D. Rockefeller Sr., Henry
Ford, Andrew Carnegie and
Andrew Mellon have given mil lions of dollars to projects and
organizations explicitly designed to
undermine we principles of free
enterprise and just about every
other ideal dear to the hearts of
these long-dead founders.
How doe s this happen ? The
Capital Re~earch Center commissioned a study of that question by

, By William A.-Rusher

Professor Stanley Rothman of
Smith College's Center for the
Study of Social and Political
Change. The study has now been
published, and it is an eye-opener.
In the ftrst place, Rothman and
his co-authors conflflll the observation of the Capital Research Center
that public affairs grant-making
does indeed display a disproportionate liberal bias:· ·Foundations,
they assert, have helped create
entire political movements, especially on women 's, minority and
environmental issues.
To quote the study: "Of the
more than 4,000 public policy
grants given by 225 large foundations (those donating more than SI
million a year) in the late I980s,

just one dollar in five went to con- the wealthy·,
servative causes.·'
That much, however, we already
Our private enterprise system.is
knew, thanks to . the Capital generally unfair ID working people;
Research Center's own annual
The main goal of U.S. foreign
.repons. Where the Rothman repon pohcy ts to protect American busi(which is entitled "The Culture of ness interests;
Philanthropy") breaks new groun.d . We need a complete restructuris in identifying the source of the mg of our basic institutions.''
underlying impulse to spend founPut miUions of dollars in the hot
dation money on liberal projects.
little hands; of people with_views
"Philanthropic foundations,"
hke that, along with instructions to
the repon asserts, "grew out of the spend it, and do you need to be !Old
Progressive Era's faith in scientific what happei!G?
planning for a better society. Their
Accord~ng to the report, the
~
belief in improving the 'world by "ten most liberal grant-giving
C&gt; '"' bJ NEA. 1ne ' 1
solving social prob!ems has trans- foundations in the country" are:
lated over time into influencing Ford Foundation MacArthur Faungovernment - usually, it is dation, Rockef~ller Foundation
claimed, 10 benefit th~ dispdvan- Carnegie Corporation of Ne~
1aged. To be 'good,' especially as • York, Shell Companies Foundadefined by leading writers of the tton, Andrew W. Mellon Founda1960s and 1970s, is to create liOn, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation,
'
~By The Associated Press
experimental pilot programs that Exxon Education Foundation,
can wage and sal__acy earners.
~
Today is Monday_. July I, the 182nd day of 1991. There are 183 days _ In 1966, 25 yallrs ago, the Medicare federal insurance program went Carl be taken over by government' • AT&amp;T Foundation and American
f left in the year. Thts ts Canada Day.
The trouble, according to the Express Foundation.
1010 effect
r
l'oday's Highlight in Hisuxy:
report,
starts with "the recruiunent
One shrewd old mtiltimillionaire
In 1968, the ' United States, B.ritain, the Soviet Union and 58 other
: On Jtily 1, 1867; Canada became a-self-governing dominion of Great nations
~hom
I knew, setting up a·foundasigned the NutlearNQnproliferation Treaty.
·, .
·
r
0 ·public policy expens as staff and
tton bac~ in the 1960s shortly
: Britain as the Bri'tish Nooh America Act united the provinces of Ontario
1969, Britain's Prince Charles was invested as the Prince of Wales independent reviewers" for the before hts death, inserted .in its
: Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.
' in aInceremonr,
at Caemarvon Castle.
·
foundations. ·'These experts are charter_ a =uirement .... t _the ~run' On this date:
drawn from elites that, to a remark- d
~ ;~
u~a
"
In I980, ' 0 Canada" was proclaimed the national anthem of Canada.
: In 1535; Sir Thomas More went on trial in England, charged with treaatton (whtch initially would be
In
I
98~. more than 2,000 couples, members of the Unification Church. able extent, exhibit beliefs very dif: son for rejecting the Oath of Supremacy.
were mamed m a mass ceremony at New Yorlt: 's Madison Squaie Garden ferent from traditional American named lifter him) must change its
; In 1847, the ftrst national adhesive postage stamps in the United States by the church's founder, the Reverend Sun Myung Moon. values."
name in 20 years. When asked
: were issued
__
The
repon
analyzes
the
views
of
~by_. he replied, ''ijecalase by then
In 1983, R. Buclcminster Fuller. the inventor ind philosopher who
11 will be doing ihings I don't wam
; In 1863, the Ctvtl War Battle of Gettysburg began.
1,830
members
of
the$e
elites
who
desiglled the !leodesic dome and peached technology as the salvation of
: In 1898, during the Spanish-Amel'ican War, Theodore' Roosevelt and humanldnd, died in Los Angeles at age 87'.
name assoc'··-..
were questioried by Rothman and• myAt.
"""" wt'th,"
; his "RQII8h Riders" waged a victorious assault on San Juan Hill in Cuba.
his
colleagues.
They
"believe,
for
.
luck
would
have it, his faunTen years ago: Returns from Israel's election the day before showed a example, that:
• In 1916. Dwight D. Eisenhower married Mary ("Mamie") Geneva
dauon
now
about
25 years old
close contest between the ruling Likud bloc and the opposition Labor
· Doud ill Denver.
Government should provide 8 and duly renamed - ill still in the
· : In ·1932, New York Governor Ffllllklin D. Roosevelt was nominated
Sl8ndll'd of living to all hands of people the old gentleman
for Today: "Americans are benevolently
about guannleed
: for president at the Democratic ~onvention in Chicago.
.
Americans;
wou!d have approved of, and still
Canada,
while
Canadians
are
malevolently
well-informed
about
the
Unit: . In 1943, "pay-as-you-go" income tax withholding began for AmeriOur
legal
system
mainly
fav_
o
rs
servmg
conservative JliiiPOSCS· But
ed5tatcs." - J. BartletBrebner, Canadian bisiOrian (1895-1957).
'
the old boy Icnew the odds.

------Today in history------

~bought

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.

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.·•'

, . . Copies of the I 991 l!om\'Z!&gt;Y' ~le_p~9"e -4ilet1Pl'Y are ·bei_ng
· · .. ' deb~· to area customers; said€ary·Sates,..Pomcroy local sc:mce
manager for GTE Telephone Operations. •

Gif~:~mt::e :~~:!iMt~~~~~~)~: I-t sho11_1d c.all

The directory provides listings for customers in the Pomeroy,
piUows, 40 pairs of tegu lizard slcin
shoes and other items. One of the
crocodile handbags went for
$1,050.
.
The money nlised by the auction
goes to pay rewards to people who
provide infonnation leading to the
seizures of more animal coiuraband. We know that the Fish and
Wildlife Service is severely under- .
funded to adequately CQ(JC with a
SI billion-a-year trade an illegal
wildlife, but auctions are n~t the
way to solve the budget problems.
ThiS is one time .when we wouldn't
mind seeing government assets
wasted in a big bonfu-e that would
send a strong message to sellers
and buyers.
PRECIOUS RESOURCE Americans are using up their drinking water faster than it is· being
replaced Concrete ·and asphalt are
blocking good-quality water from
re-entering the grotll!d. 1be water
that does seep back in is saturated
with contaminants from storm sewers, farms and mines. More than
65,000 dams have changed the free
flow of waterways and desttoyed
natural habitats. Sen. Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., will introduce legislation authorizing a comprehensive
review of U.S. water resources.
That could result in rationing, reallocation and restriction of water
resources, and in fines for those
who waste water.
MINI -EDITORIAL - 'Insider
trading has become· rampant on
Wall Street. Ivan Boesky and
Michael Milken just hawened to
ge! caught But othet violators are
stiU cbealing and geuing away with
it. The greed of the 1980s has lingered into the 1990s, and it hurts
everyone except the select few on
the take. An investigation into illegal practices in Pentagon procurement has already brought convictions of five corporations and 41
individuals. The pervasive climate
of selfishness has done more than
rob the government and private
institutions. It has eroded U.S. productivity and sapped the spirit of
honest workers.
Copyright, 1991, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

General Assembly.passes living will lawOftentimes, I have been asked medical deci sions in his or her
by many different people: "How behalf, if necessary. The Living
can I write a Living Will?" _ My Will could also describe the condiresponse has been that Ohio does tions under which a person wants
not have a Living Will Law.
life support withheld. The bill also
Now, however, it appears' that sets out requirements for physiOhio has moved one step closer in cians in complying with Living
adopting Living Will legislation. Wills or the family's wishes, and
This past week, the House of Rep- gives them immunity from criminal
resentatives passed Senate Bill I, and civil liability and professional
and moved it back ID the Ohio Sen- disciplinary actions.
ate for concurrence n its amendIn addition, the new law will
ment s, which took place with cover instances in which a person
almost a unanimous vote. Thus, has not lawfully written a Living
Senate Bill I , is Ohio's version of a Will. For instance, if a terminally
Living Will Law.
ill patient had failed to execute a
Under its provisions. an Ohio Living Will, any family member
resident would now be able 10 law - could give consent to disconnect
fully execute a Living Will docu- life suppon if the patient were inca•
ment The Living Will would allow pable of responding . Then any
a person to designate, in advance, other family member could appeal.
another individual who could make
Funhennore, if the patient were

Phone directories in mail

Letart Falls, Ponland, Racine and Rutland exchanges Listings for
Chester are also included.
Bates said an extta free copy of the new directory can be piclced
up at the Phone Man located at 238 W. Main St in Pomeroy or 16
W. Washington St. in Athens.
The Pomeroy store is open 9:30 am. 10 1 p.m., and 2 p.m. 10 4
p.m:, Monday thru Friday (except holidays). The Athens store is
open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday thru Friday.

•

Two dozen ...

continuedrrompagei

ic recession.
were at stalce.
,
.
"We know there are literally
For others, the news was good.
thousands of families affected by Alabama Gov. Guy Hun~ said the
this," said Mayor William H. Hud- commission's decision to spare
nut of Indianapolis, home of Fon Fort McClellan in Anniston, Ala.,
Benjamin Harrison, one of the which the Pentagon had wanted to
bases targeted for closing. "A lot close, made Sunday a "great day
of them are going to find them- for Calhoun County and all of
selves without work and going 10 Alabama.''
The panel decided to keep the
feel abandoned by the governbig
naval training stations in Orlanment."
do,
Fla.,
and San Dieg6, as well as
Harrison includes the 1.6-million-square-foot Army Finance the Long Beach Naval Shipyard,
Center, from which all paychecks open.
The only naval air station closed
for active and retired military perwas Chase Field in Texas, where
sonnel are mailed.
Also scheduled for closure were the presidential airplane lands
Fort Devens in Massachusetts: Fon ·when Bush goes·quail hunting.
Ord in California, which employs S~ were Whidbey Island Naval
more than 16,000 civilian and mili- Air Slation, Wash., which the Pentary personnel; and the Sacramento tagon recommended closing, and
the air stations at Meridian, Miss.,
Army Depot in California.
Mayor Edith Johnsen of Marina, and Kingsville, Texas, which the
Calif., near Fon Ord, said, "We are commission had earlier considered
a one-company town. It's going 10 shutting down.
The panel voted to keep Fort
be tough,"
Dix
in New Jersey open
Sen. John F. Keny, D-Mass.,
said he was "disappointed and
angered" by the panel's decision to
close Fort Devens, where about
9,000 civilian and military jobs
Veterans Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS Jean Taylor, Mason, W.Va.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES None.
Am Ele Power .................. 28 5!8
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Ashland Oil 0000 00 0000 000000 00 oo ..30 7!8
Homer Moodispaugh, Middleport.
AT&amp;T.oooo oo ooooooooooo:.. oo .... oo ... 38 5/8
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Bob Evans .... oo .oo ... oo ........ oo18 1/4
Chester
Wells and Bonnie Brewer.
Charming Shopoo .. oo•oo·oo--... 21 1!2
City H,olding .. oo ................ .l3 1(2
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Federal MoguL .... oo. oooooooo .. l7 1/8
Discharges, June 28 - Jeffrey
GoodyearT&amp;R ................ .33 1(2
Baughman, Deana Brown, Mrs.
Key Centurion .... 00 ............ 14 3!8
Ernest Butcher and daughter,
Lands' End -------oo---oo·oo .. oooo21 1/8
Amanda Coburn, Brittani CumLimited Inc. ______ 00 _____00 __ 00 __ .28 1/4
mons, Carol Hayes, Beverly Lewis,
Multimedia Inc. oo.oo-oooooooo .. 27 1(2
Mrs. Joseph Malcolm and daughRax Restaurant oooo• oooooo ..... J/8
ter, Sharon McGbee, Joseph Miller,
Robbins&amp;Myers .. oo .... oo .... JO 1(2
Mrs.
Michael Perkins and son,
Shonev's lnc.oo _________________ .l5 5/8
Linda:,Saunde,s, ;,Sheena_~~~.
,. •
2
Star BBnk oooooo---- --- ---00·00· ---- 0 1/4
Forrest Van Meter. Karen WarnsWendy Int'Loo ........ ... :..... oo9 7!8
ley, Lowell Weaver and Donald
Wonhington Ind. -- --oooo ...... 26
Willis.
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
Births, June 28 - Mr. and Mrs,
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
Steve Donaldson, a son, Long Botand Loewi of Gallipolis.
tom; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hiestand, a son, Gallipolis.
Discharges. June_29 - Mrs.
Steve Donaldson and son, Mrs.
Orville Hill and son, Dustin Hill,
Debbie Lundy, Mrs. Michael Morris and son, Lawrence Roe, Diana
Swisher, Joseph White and Sonia
The Southeastern Ohio Board of Zuspan.
Realtors held their monthly meetBirths, June 29 - Mr. and Mrs.
ing on Wednesday at the Ponderosa Randy Robson, a daughter, JackRestaurant in Jackson.
son; Mr. and Mrs. Steve Metzler, a
The meeting was opened by daughter, Oak: Hill.
Vice President Pat Cochran.
Discharges, June 30 - Danielle
A repon on the 30 hours &lt;;ontin- Baisden, Mrs. Edward Hiestand
uing Education classes held m Gal- and son, and Carroll Teaford.
lipolis was given by Roma Wood.
Births, June 30 - Mr. and Mrs.
Cochran informed the board Roben Starcher, a daughter, Wellabout a meeting sponsored by ston; Mr. and Mrs. Steve Williams,
Columbus Southern Electric he a daughter; Jackson.
attended in Columbus.
The program was given by
Howard Bozman, Broadview Mengage Company, on "FHA 203K
Continued from page 1
Reliab Loans. He also aw!ll'ded a
hospitals.
door prize to Rorna Wood.
He also signed ano~ biU conNea
Henry
gave
a
brief
repon
'
on the progress of the MLS Com- taining language repealing the
closed-records amendtftent. Lawmittee.
The next meeting will be July makers added the corrective mea22 at Dale's Restaurant in Gallipo- sure to a bill authorizing administtative changes at hospitals after an
lis.
outcry by Ohio news organizations
opposed to the records changes.

By The Associated Press
6:06 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:04
·
Forecasters said much-needed p.m.
rain is c'lming to Ohio 10night and _ _
· Around the nation
Tuesday. . ~~- _ __ ~~'-'--' __ , , ~.,.._ .JYiiD! ·~~therr~llllll~ to "-!~-· -·some of the rain' may be in the "Nonhwest IRIS morn mg. Temperaform of thunderstonns with locally tures in some cities around the rest
heavy.amounts.
of the nation reached into the 70s
Varlable cloudiness was the rule · even before dawn.
over Ohio last night. Some light
. Washington, and Oregon
fog formed in the south. Earcy matched Sunday s 60--degree ternmorning tem~ratures ranged from peratures at 2 a.m.
the mid-50s at Youngstown to midClear slties were expected over
·70s in Cincinnati.
the Pacific Coast and temperatures
It will be mug~ tonight as the in the region were expected ID rise
.winds shift to a southerly flow_ another 10 degrees through the day.
Scattered showers and thunderBelow-average temperatures
storms will produce locally heaVy were expected to continue in the
rain. Lows will range from the Great Lakes area. Upstate New
mid-60s nonh to the low 70s south. York and New England were
On Tuesday, highs will range from expected to bask in sunny skies,
the low 90s south to the mid-80s low humidity, and temperatures
north and showers and thunder- slightly below normal.
storms will be likely.
Sultry conditions w~re forec~t
The record high temperature for for the rest of the mtd-Atlanuc
this date at the Columbus weather coast, where readings neared 100
station was 98 degrees in 1953. degrees on Sunday.
_
The record low was 44 in I988.
A cold front south of the regton
Sunrise this morning was at

Hospital news

Stocks

Realtors meet

State ...

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services uruts responded 10 I 8
calls for assistance over the weekend.
At 12:46 p.m. on Saturday,
Pomeroy units went to Peach Fork
Road for a tractor ftre at the Don
Smith residence. At 1: II p.m.,
Syracuse squad went to Bridgeman
Street. Velma Teaford went to
Holzer Medieal Center. Jean Hall
was treated but not transponed. At
3:26 p.m., Middlepon unit went 10
Locust Street. Larry Rutter was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospi181. At 7:09 p.m., Racine squad
went 10 Trouble Creek Rood. James
Hinkley was taken to Holzer. At
10:17 p.m., Middlepon unit took
Doris Haynes from the station to
PICIISI!IIt Valley Hospital. At I 0:36
p m ·Middleport squad went to
S~uih S'econd Street for Homer
Moodispaugh, who went 10 Veter-

Published t&gt;Very afternooo. Monday

through Friday. Ill Court st .. Pomeroy. Ohto. by the Ohio Valley Publlshlng
Compan~ tMultlmedta. Inc.,
Pomeroy. Ohio 4~769. Ph. 992-2156. Second ctass postag• patd "' Pomeroy.
Ohio.
Membt&gt;r: Tite ASsOCiated Pre!S. tnland Dally Press AssOCiation and the
Ohto N•wspaper Association. National
Advertising Rtpresentatlve. Branham
Newspaper Sales. 733 lltlrd Avenue,
New York. New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address chanR&lt;tS
to nte Dally Sentinel. Ill Court St..
Pomeroy. Ohlo4571D.
SUIISCRJPTION RATES
By Carrier or Molor Roolr

On• We•k .......:........... -.............. suo
One Monfb ..
....... .. ........ 16.95
On• Year .. .............. .. .. ..... .. .. 183.20
SINGLE coPY
PRICE

Dally ................. ,................. 2 ~ C.nls
Subscrlbt&gt;rs not desiring to pay the carrler may remit in advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Credll wUI bt&gt; given carrier each
w..k.

ans.

------Weather----South Central ,Ohio
Tonight, variable cloudiness
with a chance of showers and thunders!Orms,' Some rain may be locally heavy. Low in the low 70s. A 40
percent chance of rain . Tuesday,
partly cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstonns. High
near 90. A 50 percent chance of

Brent Wilson of Racine, has
been selected for an IS-month
enrollment in the Civilian Conservation Corps.
The Ohio Deparunent of Natural
•· Re'sdurces: Division of Civilian
Conservation, announced Wilson's
Selection noting that he has already
suceessfully completed the Corps'
Training Academy and is now
scheduled to begin work at the
Zaleslti facility in Vinton County.
The Corps offers an excellent
.opportunity for 18 to 24 year old
men and women to receive on-thejob training in areas lilce carpentry
and landscaping. Corps members
receive compensation at the federally mandated minimum wage during their enrollment
.
They also have the opponumty

Meigs County received
$806,733.61 in state school foundation subsidy payments for June,
according to a repon from State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson's
office.
The Eastern Local School Disbict received a total of $145,289.11
in basit and transportation
allowances, less $5,458 for school
employees retirement and $18,677
for state teachers retirement. The
net payment to the school district
was $121,154.1 I.
The 10ta1 of the basic and transportation allowance coming to

Extended forecast:
Wednesday through Friday:
A chance of showers and thunderstorms each day. Highs 85-95
Wednesday and in the 80s on
ThUrsday and Fri~y. Lows around
70 Wednesday and Thursday and
in the 60s Friday.

Meigs Local in June was
$444,121.30 less $14,118 in ·school
employees retirement and $54,056
in state 1eachers retirement, leaving
a net payment to the district of
$375,947.30.
The Southern Local School District's total amount of basic and
transportation allowances was
$165,114.99, less $7,297 in school
employees retirement and S19,860
in state teachers retirement setaside, leaving the net payment to
the district of $137 /]57.99.
The direct allotment to the
Meigs County Board was
$52,208.21.

--Meigs announcements-

Yard sale planned '
The Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
will have its annual yard sale on
Saturday on the Ohio side of the
Ravenswood Bridge. Rain wiU cancel the sale.
Legion to meet
The American Legion Drew
Webster Post No . 39 will meet
Tuesday at the post home for
installation of officers. Di,nner will
begin at 7 p.m. followed by meeting at8 p.m.
to earn high school eq_uivalency Dance slated
Patriotic Blast will
degrees as well as train m optional be Harrisonville
held Friday from 7-10 p.m. at
areas like computer operation, the Harrisonville Elementary
office skills and technical ttaining.
SchooL Admis~ion is $1 . Music
The CCC serves the state by will be provided by a disc jockeymaintaining its paries and recreation
areas. The Corps also involv.e s The dance is sponsored by the Haryouth in litter prevention cam- risonville PTO.
eligibility
pai$ftS and highway beautification Benefit
According to the Veterans Serprojects. Over the past 12 months, vice Office, widows of veterans
the CCC has responded with relief who have not remarried since the
efforts at seven natural disaster death of the veteran may be eligible
sites, including the Shadyside for benefits from the Depanmeht of
flooding.
Veterans Affairs.
Infonnation on the Ohio CCC
Further information may be
program may be obtained by con- obtained by conlacting the V~ter­
tacting the Ohio Department of ans Service Office, I 14 Mulberry
Na!Ural Resources, Division of Ave. in Pomeroy, or call992-2820.
Civilian Conservation, 1855 Foun- MisSionary service
tain Square, Building H, Columpus
The Harrisonville Holine ss
43224.
Chapel, Route 684, Pomeroy, wiU

have a misstonary meeting
- R on
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. wtth ev:
Steve Shover and family. Pastor
John Neville invites the public.
G~~~e ::g~t Coun~ Pomona'
Grange will meet Fri ay at 7:39
p.m. at the Rock Spnngs Grange
HalL Annual inspection will be
given plus degree work. Hemlock
Grove Grange will serve refreshments.
Corn Festival slated
The Olive Township Volunteer
Fire Deparunent will hold the First
Reedsville Com Festival on Saturday beginning at noon.
Fresh com on the cob, charcoalgrilled pork and other food will be
served through 8 p.m . with three
bands and several games also
planned.
The fire house is located in
-ReedsviUe just off the intersection
State Routes 681 and 124.

PNRC to host day for disease research
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center will be hosting an
Independence day celebration to
suppon research for Alzheimer's
Disease and other disorders that
afflict the elderly.
· A picnic will be held at
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center on Wednesday from 57 p.m. Cost for the meal is $5 per
person. Following the picnic games
wiD be played. Family, friends and
the general public are welcome to
attend.
Proceeds will go to the Unicare
Foundation, a not-for-profit foundation established to further charitable, educational and scientific
activities in the health care field.
Over the past six weeks, grants

through the foundation have supported important research at Harvard Medical School on early diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease, an
Alzheimer's information and referral center at Texas Tech, and
awarded a research grant to the
French Foundation for Alzheimer's
Disease.
A portion of the funds raised _by
the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabiltlation Center will go to the Met~s
County Senior Citizens Center m
support of its Alzbeimer Chapter.
For funher information contact
Pam Triplett at 992-6606.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

•

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KEVIN COSI'NER

"HooD

can
H. Norman Schwarzkopf achieved

tickets with five of
h -the six
nh winning
$1 087
numbers, and eac ts wo
. .
The 11,072 tickets showing four of
thenumbersareeach wonh$73.
1
In the Kicker game, one payer
had the exact six-digit number and
can claim $100,000.
The nine Kicker tickets showins
the first five digits are each wonh
000
84 -th th f ' f
$5,
The
WI
e trst our
numbers are each worth $1,000.
The 980 with the ftrst three numbers are each wonh $100, and the
9,698 with the J irst two numbers
are each wonh $10.
Pick 3 Numbers
4-4-2
'
~
)
(oour, our,two
Pick 4 Numbers
6-I -0-9
(six, one, zero, nine)
Cards
K (ki ng) 0 f Hearts ·
6 (six) of Clubs
Q (queen) of Diamonds
0

$
. 24

rnakJ the aifferenct!

Join us
in ma/:Jng Jlmerica safer

the rank of general of the United
States Army Nov. 23, 1989.

Winning jackpot ticket sold Satilr day
CLEVELAND (AP) - One
ticket was sold naming all six numbers drawn Saturday night for the
$24 million J'ackpot in the Ohio
Lottery's Super Lotto game, the
Ionery announced.
Each jackpot winner will be
paid in 26 annual installments of
$923,076 before taxes.
The winning numbers were I, 2,
10, II , 24and43.
The Kicker number was
854640.
In the Pick 3 Numbers game,
the winning number was 442.
hi the Pick 4 Numbers game,
· the winnin~umber was 6109.
th In the
game, e Winners
were the King of Hearts, 6 of
Clubs, Queen of Diamonds and 7
of Spades.
Sales· in the Super Lotto game
· the
IOta led 59 •367 •768 · Sa1es 10
Kicker glune IOtaled $1,076,860,
The jackpot for Wednesday's

rain.

Meigs county schools
receive subsidy payment

Wilson selected for corps post

, " =~t,to . drawing i~. w: ;m. ~~r~ Sq;e~sea::"u!t Spad~
,av~. :'-~~''1[; ·:;-~;.,~~~4."'i~;:,;, .,_, l&gt;i:ll;., SAI_el )il':tli,e~~3-;tluritbem -, .. ·- 1·2,1o.I·l-2.4.43 ,,, ''
game lOWed $1,390,068. ·
(one, two, ten, eleven, twenty· ' 'M.ns.....,.tpltotls
1
~ Weet&lt;s .~~~- ~~~- ~~Y- ... 121.84
p· lien thNe two other daily gameeds, four, fo~y-tl!rec:)
J'
26Weelts .. ... .. ...... ..... oo .............. S43.16
tc 4 umbers p1ayen wager
TheJaclcpotts
rn. ton .52 Weeks ............. ,.. , ................ 184.76
$282,671 and will share $144,300, Kicker
13 Weet&lt;~~·--~~~-~~ ... 123.40
· and Cards players bet $59,762 and
8-~~-0
_
_
,26 Weeka .. ... .................... .. ......_. S45.:tO
won 518,690.
(etglit, five, four, stx, four, zero)
52)Veetta ...................., ....... ., .... St18.40
There were 237· Super Lotto
.~

took Chester Wells from Veterans
to Grant Medical Center. At 1:14
p.m., Middleport s~uad went to
South Fourth. Martm Bolin was
treated but not transported. At 4:13
p.m., Tuppers Plains squad went to
Calaway Ridge for George Cremeans, wbo was taken to SL Joseph
Hospital. AI 6:12 p.m., Middleport
went to South Second for Homer
Moodispaugh. H.e was taken to
Veterans. At 7:55 p.m•• Syracuse
squad went 10 State Route 124 for
Ella Quillen, who was taken to
Veterans. At 8:50p.m., Syracuse
unit weflt to the station and transpaned Ashley Cremeans to Veter-

On Monday at 4 a.m., Racine
squad went to Bucktown Road for
Courtney Jones, who was taken to
Veterans. At 4:41 a.m., Pomeroy
squad responded to Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabililation Center for
Blanche Jones, whO was taken to
ans.
On Sunday at I :30 a.m., Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 5:18
Pomeroy squad went to U.S. Route a.m., Racine unit went to State
33. Marty DeMoss went to Veter- Route 338. Jay Lance was taken to
ans. At 10:42 a.m., Rutland squad Veterans. At 5:21 a.m., Pomeroy
went to Vance Road for Ronnie unit went to West Main Street.
Hubbard who was taken IO·Holzer. Mary Bumgardner was taken to
At 12:45 p.m., Grant Mobile Unit Veterans.

~~.!~~~~~~i~~~~ ::;;~:~.\~ t~

.;

threatened the upper Mississippi
Valley with some flooding. Thunderstonns also were forecast from
the mid-Mississippi Valley to the ·
southern Roekies -and rains w.er.e
expected 1D end a wann spell in the
Plains.
The·Lower Mississippi Valley
and the Midwest were expected to
be sunny and hot.
The high Sunday was I 09
degrees in Palm Springs, Calif.

was expected to bring thunderstorms and suong wi~. A drop in
tem~fl!l~. ~as anuctpated from
_ilotl_li\in Vu-gm13 to New Yorkted.
Thunderstorms were expee to
roll _mto the ~~~-- parts of Texas,
Flonda and VtrgtJita.
Rain was fo~t over pans of
Nonh Dakota, while ram and !hunderstorms were anuctpated for
Minnesota, Wtsconsm and Iowa.
Heavy ram and thunderstorms

Squads have 18 weekend calls

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Monday, July 1, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

By ROB GLOSTER
. backlog of matche-s durmg the
AP Sportll Writer
opening five days returned briefly
~IMBLEDON, England (AP) on Sunday. But it did little to
- 1tmmy Conn~lrs was the star, dampen the enthusiasm of fans
but he had a supporting cast o,f • who stood in line overnight fot
thousands of young fans on a very tickets ther normally cannot get.
unuaditional day at Wimbledon.
The AI England Club reluctantThey applauded the ballboys ly agreed to break tradition by
and belled out soccer songs. They playing Sunday because of the ttaf~
counted each stroke out loud dur- fie jam of matches.
ing warmup$. 'They hoUered "Jim"The committee are determined
m~, 1im-mce" at a player twice
this should not be seen as a precethelr '!lie.
.
dent," said Chris Gorringe, the
All m the staid Centre Court sta- club's chief executive. "It was
dium. And on the middle Sunday forced upon us bl, the extreme
-:- a rest day at the tournament weather conditions. '
since 1877:---.. .. · .......... __
Though Connors lost his third" The atmosphere was great .round match 7-6, 6-1, 6-4, the fans
today," Connors said after limping exulted in his gutsy performance.
out of the tournament in straight Connors refused to quit despite
sets to Derrick Rostagno. "It was a injuring his leg in the fll'St set.
different crowd, not the traditional• 'For somebody who was not
supposed to play Wimbledon, to do
ists giving you the 'Jolly good.'''
The rain that had caUsed a huge this well is really a lot of fun," said

P&amp;g!!--4

Cincinnati tops Houston 5-4
Reds tighten NL West
race in series despite
depleted pitching staff
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jeff
Reed somehow managed to hang
on, just like his team.
The Cincinnati Reds catcher
held. onto the ball when Houston's
Eric Yelding bowled him over at
home plate Sunday to get the crucial out in a 5-4 victory over the
Astros.

The Reds' seventh victory in
nine games completed a costly
homestand. Second-place Cincinnati lost four starting pitchers to
injury, yet managed to tighlen the
National League West race.
"We' ve hung in there tough,"
Reds manager Lou Piniella said.
No one was tougher Sunday
than Reed, who had the wind
knocked a1. of him but stayed in
the game'"Mter preserving a 5-4
lead in the eighth iming. The play
protected a lead built on power.
Bill Doran. Billy Hatcher and
Paul O'Neill hit solo homers in the

Scoreb6ard
25; White., Toronto, 18; Cuyler-, DeU'Oit,

In the majors ...

16; R. Kelly, New York , IS; Franco ,

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
T...
w L Pel.

B,...,

T010111o

........... 43
............ 37
............ 37
Douuil
.. 14
Milwaw.koe
........ 33
Now YOlk
Bahiman
.......... 30
a..d ---24

33 .l66
36 .l07
37 .lOO
19 .466

4.l
l
7.l
7.l
IU

38 .465

...

43 .411
.333

a ...

GB

17

West Division
Team

W

L Pet.
31 .592

GB

............. 39 31 .SS7
........... 41 33 .SS4
..... 41 34 .547

3
l
35

Mmnoo&lt;&gt;u

......... 4S

Tu.•

Colilomio
Ook1ond

Chicoao

........... n

Seoale

.l21 s.s

3S

............. 39 36 .l20
1Cooou Ci&lt;y ......... 33 40 .4l2

l.l
I O.l

Saturday's results

?'7:

National League
BATTING- T . Gwynn, San Diego,
.., . ~57; Jc.e., SL Louit, .332; PrJ\dleton, At·

NC., fa 9, Milwaukee I

lant1 . .327; McGee. San FranciJco, .324;
Bi.gj.o. HOUlton, .323; Samuel, Lol An·
ad,., .321: 0 . Smith, St Louil, .l l ~
RUNS- BuLler, Loa Angelea, 52; T.
Femandc:z, San Die&amp;o, 50; JoMaon, New
York, 49; Sudbera, Chicaao, 49 :
DeShields, Moauul, _.7; Stmuel, Los

Ta• 7, Calilorni• 4, 13lnninp

AnJdCI, 46; 0 . Smidt, Sl l..a.lil, 46.

Baltimcn 7. 801\a'l 3
Doli-dl ,
4
T..-o4,Seoale0
Ook1ond 6, JCooou Cily 3

a........

Cloic-olol,~4

RBI- W. Clark. San Francisco. 56;
Johnaon. New York, SS; Kruk, Phlladel ·
ph.ia, 54; Junice, Alltnll, Sl; McGriff,
San DieRQ, 50; O'Neill, Clnclnnttl, 47 ;
Calderon, Montrea1 , 47; M\Ullly, 1m: An·
ge.let, 47.

Suoday's scores
Ballim""' 6, B - 4
Oolnll14, Clo..a.lld I

r-6. s.a~e 1
Mmnoo&lt;&gt;u :1. auc.ao o

N.w Yodr. I, Milwaukcc6

Tu•

HITS- T. Gwynn, San Oieao, 11 _0 ;
Samuel, 1.01 Anselm, 92; J01e, St. Low,
87; Ctlderon, Moouu..l, 86; T. Fc:mandcz,
San OicJO, 85; Sandbc:ra, Chicaao. 85;

2. Calilami• I

Oakland 3, tt..u City l

Toclay•s camos
(All limes EDT)
Soaulo (R , Jobn1on 6 -6) at Toronto
(W.U. 9-4), LJS
Ckft~Mld (Sw ndell4-6) at N"' York

f.'"·

(S.-1-J), 7:Jt p.m.
l)eaoit (Gakaler t -1) at Baltimore (Me:·
Donald 2-3), Hl p.m.
Boston ,(Clemens 9-5 ) at Milwaukee
(Navarro 1-4).1:05 p.m.

Chicoso &lt;Ooma D-3) ,, Minn..... &lt;P.
A - 2-0), I:OS p.m.
KaMa Ci1y (Boddiokcr 6-6),,ot Ookl1nd
9:1l pm.
.
Teut (Brown 6-~) u California
(iAnplon 11 · 2), IO:ll p.m.

(llowkinll-4~

Tuesday's pmn

Clt\'llud 11 Ntw York, 7:)0 p.m.
~Ill

Baltimore. 7:3, p.m.

MiruaGa 11 Tmomo, 7:3' p.m.

Cbicoa•

........... 14

41

5.44.
6
6.5

.4l3

Ill

M.......
.......... 33 42 .440 Ill
Pl&gt;lladolpiUa ........ 32 43 .417 14.5

West Division
T.....
L.- Anad'* ........
Clod ... d --Allon&lt;o
.......
San Oi.eao
Son Fmuouco ........

Wllct. CB
45 2'1 .601
41 l3 .!!4
37 36 .507
31 39 .494

4
7.l

8.5
Ill

33 42 .440
.......... 29 46 .317

H""'""'

TlliPLES-- T. _Gwynn, San Dieso, 8:
l.onkfonl, St. Lou&lt;o, 6: Folder, s,. Fnn-

cisco, 6; L. Gonzalez, HOUltOn, 5; Kruk,
Philadelphia, 5; Colcrntn, New Yod: , 5;
M. Thcrnpion, SL Louil, 5.
HOMJ!RUNS- Johnson, New York,
17; O' Neill, Cincinnati, 15; McGriff,
San Dicao. 15; G. Bell, Chicuo, 15;
Larkin, Clntlnnall, 1•; Gant, Atlanta,
'13; Mitchell, San Franei.aw, 13; Broob,
Ne-#1 y od:. 13.
STOLfN BASES- Niion, Allant1, 31 :
Griaaom, Monbool. 37: DoShidcb. Moo-

ford, St . Louis, 21; Calderon, Montreal,
20; 0 . Smith, St Louil, 19.
PITODNO (1 decilioru)- Cupcne:r,
SL LoWs , 1·2, .TIS, 3.3~; R. Martinez ,
Loa An&amp;elea , 10·3, .769 , 2.67; Rljo,
Clndnnall, 6·1, .75t, l .66; Glavine., Atlanu, 11-4, .733, 1.06; Sunpm, Mm\lal,
5·2. .714, 4.71; P.J.teloa, PltUburah, S.l,
•114, %.91; lrOWIIIIna. Clnc~n•ll, lD-4,
.114, 3.49; Ago.to, St. Loui1, S-2, .714,

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Ttam
WLrcL Gl
Pll-IJl --- C5 27 .U.!
SL Laail ............ 40 ·34 ',,.I
New Yod&lt;
........ 39 34 .534

McO~ Sa.n Fnm:iKO, 84.
DOUBLES - Joae, St. Louia, 23;
Bonilla, Plltlburah, 111 McR~ynold1,
New Yod:., 20; T. Owynn, San Oiqo, 19;
L. Gon..ulu:, Houlton, 18: Morrh,
Clndnn•U, 11; bile, SL l...aJ.i.J, 17; Jus ·
lice, Atla:nt1, 17; O'Ntlll, Clnclnn1t1, 17:
SUidbuJt, Chicoso. 17.

treat. J4; Coleman, New Yolk, 33; Lanll -

801\al at MilwnkGC.. I :OS p.m.
Oakland 11 Tea.,, l :]j p.m.
KaMU City at C&amp;W'onu.a, I0:3' p.m
Chicaao at S..ule. I 0:3S p.m.

.·

Tu.u, IS .
PITCIDNG (7 dec'i sions)-lansston,
California, 11 · 2, .846, J.SI ; Ericklon.
Minneoolo, 12-3. .800. 1.83: Fmley, Califomio,ll-l •. 786,3.72; Koy, Torcnto,ID3, .769, 2.30-, SLott.lc:myre, Toronto, 9-3,
.7,0, 3.13; Sandenoo, New York, 8· 3,
.127, 3.69; Henneman, Dd.roit, S·2, .714,
2.96; Klinl&lt;, OUI,.d,l - ~ .714, 2.67
STRIKEOUTS - Clemens, Botton,
106; R. Johnson, Scanlc, 102; Ryan,
Tmu,
'!"=Dowell, '?ti~go, 96; Fm ·
ley, Califoaua, 96; CandtoUJ., Toronto, 89;
Swindell. Clt:nland,l6.
,
SAVES- Eckenley, Oalr.land, 22; Har·
ve.y, California, 20; Aguilen~; Minnesou,
2()-, Reardon, Botton, 19; Obon , Balti ·
more, IS; ~.Chic•go. IS ; Jdl" Russell, Tuu, If"

STRlKEOl!J'S- Cooe, New York, 99;
Glavine, Allanta, 91; G. Maddux. Chica-

so, 94: Ooodt.n, New York, 92; Rljo,
Cincinnati, 84: Benca, San Dicao. 81:
Homiach, Houaton, 78.
SAYES- Dibble, Clnclnn1l~ Z2i Lee
Sm.ilh, SL Loui.J, 20; Dave Smilh, Chica·
go, 16: B. L•ndrum, Plllsburah, 15;
Franca, New York, IS; Lcffens, S1n
Diego, 14; Mitch Willianu , Philadelphia,

13.

Transactions

16.l

Baseball
American League

Saturday's results
Chieaao 6. SL l..oWI4

BALTIMORE ORIOLES- Activated
Ben McDonald, pitf;:hct, from the IS-day

--6,Cinclnnall2

New Yad&lt; l,l'bilodelpllio 0

Pllllburah 1. Monlrall
L.- Anp 2, A&lt;lon1.1 I, II inninp
Son Fnncilco 6, Son Di..o 4
PlllaburJh 1, M~treal I
l'llilodolpl&gt;ia I0, ~ow Yod 9
Ciltclnull 5, Houston •
Chicaao 7, SL LooU 4
San Franeisco 8, San Diego 7. \0 1n·

.....

1M Anadca II . AW.ntl4

Toclay's games
(AU limes EDT)
New Yorlr. (Viola I ·~ ) 11 Montru l
(Gonlncr :1-4), US p.m.
Sl Louis (B. Smitll 6-4) at Philade.Jpbla
(Ruff.. 1-0). 7:3l p.m.
PlltJbu1h (Walk 6-t) 11 Clllcaao
(Cutillo ...). 1:15 p.m.

Plbllurwll II Chlaoao,l:lt p.m.
New Ymll ot MOIIUW. 7:3l p.m.
St Louil 01 l'bilodelphia, 7:3l p.m.
Clndnud 1t Atbnta. 7:4t p.m.
Loll Anadaat San Dieao, IO:OS p.m.
Howton 11 San FtanCllco, 10:35 p.m

Major league leaders

..

Amerl&lt;ao League
BA TTINO -C . Rif:lr.cn, Baltimore,
.355; Siena. Tc:1u, . 37; M:olitM, Mil·
wau.ltoo. .334; Joyner, Califomia, .326;
o.Jr.land, .326; Puc..keu. Ninneaa-

au-.
ta,

.321'; Fnnco, Tau, .323.

RUNS - Molitor, Milwaukee, 59:
Pa1meito. Tout, 55; C. Ripken, Baltimore, 5.; Siena, Teua , S3; Funco,
T1111, .5~endcrson, Otk.land, ~3;

c-

..

d,Sl.
RBJ-Fielder, Detroit, 60; Thomu,
CIUCIJO, 57; S~ma, Tell;', 5~; Carter,
T_,IO, 54; Winllold, Calif011110, H: G.

..._,,,c. Dorio, Mlm-.,li:C.
kon,Bollimoao,.!l.

Vaqlln, MilwaYk-. 52; Joyner, Califor·
Rip-

HITS-C. lipkcn, Baltimore, 103;

Sicrn Tea••·

99;

Gardiner, pitcher, oo the IS-day d.istblcd
WL Recalled Dt.ryl Irvine, pitcher, from
P1wtuc:ket of !.he Intcm•tiooal Lague.
CALIFORNIA ANGELS- Optioned
John Orton, catcher, to Edmonton of the
Ptcific Cout Letaue. Recti'led Mark
Davia, outfielder, from Edmontoo .
CLEVELAND INDIANS- Optioned
Jerr Muto, Infielder, to Colorado
Sprlnat of lhe racine Cout Le•aue.
Rec:•lled Regie Jerfenon, nnt bueman1 from C.nton-Akron of the Eut.

nnU•aue.
MINNESOTA TWINS - Placed Dan
Gladden. outfielder, on the IS·day dit·
ablcd lill Rcr;allcd P1ul Sorrento, ftnt
bueman, from Portland of the Pacific
COUI

Leosue

OAKLAND ATHlETICS- Oplioned

Johnny Guzman, pitcher, to T1coma of
the Pacific Coast Laauc. R~a_JJ~ Scott
Hemond, infielder, from Tac~

Tuelllay'sgamn

.•

Luau~

BOSTON RED SOX- Ploccd Mike

Sunday's scores

..

disabled list. Optioned Craia Worthina·
I.IYI, third bueman, and Joce Meu, ('ileh·
cr. to Rocheater of the lnternltlonal

Molitor, Milwalllr.ee,

97· hcbtt. Mianecota, 9.5; Palmeiro,
T - 93; - · T~ 92: Joyner, Colifoonio,
T....... 91.
·
· OOUILEJ-a. Aloalor, Toron10, 24:
c.-. T..-a. 24: l'llmoim. r..... 23:
Whi~e, T........, 22:
21: c.
Rifbo. B•H .... ;10;-slam, T..., II:
c - Ookllacf. II: Jlo7ool*, S.llle,
11: llan&gt;or, Mia :c•,IL
TlJJfLBI-Molitor,
7;
Palonlo. Califamia, 61ll-. T.... -

NaUonal Le•aue

Rms- Pl~eed Scoll
SCudder and Gino Minulelll, pltchen,
on the U -dar dl••bled llal. lteulled
Tim Llyan• .nd Kip Crou, plt.ehtn, ,
trom NuhvilJe of the Amerk•n Aaod-

~~CINCINNATI

•Uon.

MOI'll'REAL EXPOS- Optioned Bill
Sam pen, pitcher, to lnditnapolil of lhe
American Auociation . Rec:aUed Steve
frey, pitdtcr, fn:m lndianapolil.
SAN DIEGO PADRES- Acli"&lt;cd Ed
Whiuon. ~
· lch!flr, from !he 15-day diJ·
abled lilt
·oned Tim Scou, pildler, to
Loa v..., the Pocifoc C..1 Leo...,

Baaketball

Naa011111 B•ketball Alaoclallon
BOSTON CELTIC$- Si&amp;ned Rick
Fot, forwatd, IO a mulri-year contrlct.

Hockey

Na!lonalllockey!Aqut
CIUCAOO BLACKHAWKS- Silll'ed

John Tonelli, lefi wina.

ST. LOUIS BLUES- Sianed Adom

Oate~,

Mil•!'*"·

10," Wlile, T-. s : - a....,
Mim-.

5:6uollod-4.
HOME RUNS--C. Dorio,
I 9; Caaloco, OUI&amp;nd, IIi IWM, 0.
troit, II; D. H•detson, Oeklaod, 11;
Cortor, T-10, 17: C. Rlpt.,, Boltimon. 17; WinllaW, Califoonio, 16.
STOLEN BASES- R. Hendenoo,
OM!and, 29: Folonio, Califemla. 77: I .
Al~r. Toranta. 25; RainM. Chicaao.

i

Mallon shoots 10-under-par
to win LPGA Championship
By DAVID GINSBURG
AP Sports Writer
BETHESDA, Md. (AP) - Now
that she's third on the LPGA
money list and has won a major
tournament, Meg Mallon is ready
to assume a spot among the prominent nanJes in women's golf, right?
"Not necessarily," she says. "I
still feel like I have a long way to
go. I see someone like Beth Daniel
and Patty Sheehan and I see that
it's going to take a little while to
get to their level."
Maybe so, but on Sunday, Mallon went head-to-head with golfing
greats Pat Bradley and Ayako
Okamoto, and emerged with lhe
LPGA Championship. In one of ihe
more memorable duels in the history of the tournament, Mallon sank
a 10-foot birdie-putt on the 72nd
hole to snap a three-way tie.
The victory in the $1 million
tournament was worth $150,000
and gave her a season total of
$308,298 . It is by far the mosl
money the 27-year-old Mallon has
won in a year since joining the tour
in 1986.
.. I'll go and stare at the monex
list for about an hour next week,
she said. "That will be my oppor-

____ -----

..... ._... _

MEIGS
RESIDENTS
........... _....,_ COUNTY
,..._.. ...
-~

Would you like to purchase a SOx 100 ft. build.ing lot in a good location for only suoo?
Would you like to build a new home and pay
no real estate taxes for IS years?
Would you like to have up to .ssooo FREE
for site improvements on your building loti

Save time and energy with a
STIHL Brushcutter.
Lightweight, yet powerful, it
tackles weeds, grass and
brush with ease.

-----

If you do, Contact Jean Trussell, Housing
Specialist, for further information.
Phone (614) 992-6712
23 7 lace Str•t, Mlllllltport VIllage Offictt
1'11111 aenlee Ia provided llmilllllllle Joint eftorta of the Vlllaae
of Middleport and the Oonrnor'1 (Illite ol Appal.-cllla.

cenlcr, to a t•o-yeu. contnct eJ.·

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has.
scheduled local public hearings in Phase II of
Case Nos. 90-EIIQ.Et·FOR and 90-659-EL-FOR
lo review the reasonableness and adequacy of
lhe planning process for compliance with the
t990 amendmenls 10 lhe Clean Air Acl bY Ohio
Power Company, Columbus Soulhern Power
Company, and lis parent company, American
Electric Power. Local public hearings will be held
al the following dates, limes, and places: Thursday, July 11, 1991, sessions al 2:30 p.m. and

'

YES! -Meg Mallon raises her arms and her voice in celebration
of ber winning the LPGA Cbampiooship at tbe Bethesda Contry
Club In Bethesda, Md., Sunday. She edged Pat·Bradley and Ayako
Okamoto by one stroke to win with a 10-under.par 274. (AP)

ON STfHL BRUSHCUTTERS

w

6:30 p.m., at Cily Hall Council Chambers, 3rd
Floor, 8 East' Washington Street, Alhens, Ohio
45701 : Wednesday, July 17, 1991 , a19:30 a.m ..
allhe offices of lhe Commission, 180 East Broad
Slreet, Colu'l'bus, Ohio 4326&amp;-05'!(!; Thursday,
July 18,1991, at 2:30p.m. , al City Hall Council
Chambers. 218 Cleveland Avenue S.W., Canion. Ohiu d4702 . Alllnteresled members of the
public will be given an opportunily 10 be heard
al the local hearings. Further informalion may
be oblained by contacting the Commission.

OFF

tunity to enjoy this a little bit, but
then I still have to play some golf.
We still have baH the year to go."
The fmish, Mallon said, was the
stuff dreams are made of. There
she was, puuing on the fmal green
with the title on the line while the
rest of her threesome, Bradley and
Okamoto, looked on.
There was a huge gallery, too,
as well as a national TV audience.
A lesser player might have tensed
up under such conditions, but Mallon was too focused to think about
just how inlense the situation was.
"What a way to finish a golf
tournament," she said. "It's a
dream being in that situation, and I
felt like I was in a dream . It's the
type of thing you think about as a
kid ... I was concentrating so hard,
I guess, that I didn't really realize
the magnitude of what was going
on."
The three leaders starled the day

at 6-under and were 9-under going
to the fmal hole, a 379-yard par 4.
After Okamoto and Bradley made
the fairway in good shape, Mallon
hit her tee about the same time
someone in the nearby parking lot
honked a hom.

"The breaking ball is gone,"
Gooden said. "And there was no
speed on the fastball. I'm not a
machine ... just got to keep working hard."
Once, the Mets were almost certain to win with Gooden - his
126-52 career record is the best all- '
time percentage (.708) of pitchers
withal least 1,500 innings. Now,
though, he's become the very symbol of the Mets' season of inconsistency.
Gooden (7-6) gave up seven
runs on nine hits and two walks in
four and one-third innings. Sit
Campusano, Steve Lake and Dickie
Thon all hit bane runs off the onetime ace, whose ERA climbed to
4.39.
"There's nothing wrong with
Dwight's ann," Mets manager Bud
Harrelson said. •'Thon and Campusano hit breaking balls and Dwight
didn't have any control of it. He's
been hit hard for a month."
In his last nine starts, Gooden
has given up 8.7 hits and 4.7 runs
per game. He was saved from a
loss in his previous outing when
Kevin McReynolds hit a two-out,
grand slam in the ninth inning.
Thon, Campusano and Lake
began the day with a combined
total of three home runs, all by
Thon. Gooden had never allowed
three home runs in a game until
two weeks ago, when Atlanta
roughed him up. 1
The Phillies finiShed with a sea·
son-high 17 hits, three by John

ly, but ninth ·seeded Jennifer
Capriati had to overcome a mid match collapse to defeat Wiltrud
Probsl6-3, 1-6,6-3.

ing Gabriela Sabatini and Arantxa
Sanchez Vicario, into the fourth
roun"d.
Most of those women won easi-

/
•'

"That's the Jack Morris of the
old days," Chicago manager Jeff
Torborg said.
Chicago's three-game winning
streak ended a. the While Sox lost
(or just the second time in 10
games. Jack McDowell (94) lost
for the fll'St time in six starts since
May 30. He gave up three runs and
nine hits in seven and one-third
innings, struck out five and walked
one.
"It's nice to win .again," said
Kent Hrbelc of the Twins, who hit a
run-scoring double in the eighth.
"It's tough to lose a ball game
when your pitcher goes out and
throws a shutout.''
Yankees 8, Brewers 6
Alvaro Espinoza capped a
seven-run seventh inning with a
two-run double.
New York trailed 6-2 before
Don Mattingly hit an RBI single
off Bill Wegman, Kevin Maas a
two-run double off Mark Knudson
and Matt Nokes a ganJe-tying single off Mark Lee (0-3). Espinoza
followed with his double.
Greg Cadaret (2-3) pitched four
and two-third innings and Steve
Farr got two outs for his lOth save.
Rangers 2, Angels 1
Jose Guzman (3-3) pitched a
two-hitter for his second straight
complete game. He struclc out 10
- his most since April 7, !988 and walked five.
Both hits - Dave Winfield's
16th home run and Max Venable's

J,

...

52 5. SELECTED UNITS
POMEROY HOME
-&amp;AUTO

Morris.
The Mets pecked away against
Danny Cox (3-1) and relievers
Roger McDowell and Mitch
Williams. Howard Johnson hit a
two-run homer, his 17th, in the
ninth before Williams finished for
his 13th save.

RETURNS VOLLEY - America's Zina Garrison, last year's
Wimbledon singles runner-up, returns a volley from Sweden •&lt;;
Maria Strandlund during their match Sunday at Wimbledon. Gar·
rison woo 6·3, 6-3. (AP)

Dodgers 11, Braves 4 •
Orel Hershiser survived a shaky
five innings, and Los Angeles
banged out 13 hits and took advantage of six Atlanta errors.
Hershiser (2-2) gave up nine hits
in five innings - eight in the first
three - and three runs while saiking OUI five .
The Dodgers, who scored three
unearned runs against John Smaltz
(2-10), trailed 3-2 before railing for
six runs in the sixth inning. Kevin
Gross, who had an RBI double in
the eighth, pitched the last four
innings for his second §ave in lwo
nights.
Pirates 2, Expos 1
Barry Bonds singled home the
tiebreaking run in the seventh
inning.
John Smile] (9-5) ended his
four-game losing skid. He struck
out a career-high 10 in seven and
two-third imings, and Stan Belinda
finish.ed for his sixth save.
Dennis Martinez (9-5) lost. He
pitched seven innings and gave up
seven hits, including singles"by Jay
Bell, Andy Van Slylce and Bonds
in the sevent)l for a 2-1 lead.

AL games ... (Contin~fromPage4)

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6-4, 6-4, 7-5 victory, only the third
time he has mana~ed a two-set
comeback. It was hiS 200th Grand
Slam triumph, second onlv to
Jimmy Connors among active
men's players.
"You can say a lot of things
about me, but don ' t say I quit,"
Lendl said. "That's the bottom
. "
Ime.
Three-time champion McEnroe
and two-time winner Edberg both
won in straight sets and are scheduled to meet Tuesday in a replay of
their 1989 semifinal.
"I'm the big underdog, so I'll
just go for broke," McEnroe said.
"He is playing quite well, but I am
capable
of beating him. I have
1
bealen him enough times to know
that I can do it."
Defending champion Martina
Navratilova and top-seeded Steffi
Graf led II seeded women, includ_&lt;_C_on_tin_u_ed_fro_m_Pa-=-ge_4_:_)- - -

Price
Explosion .·

-

the 38-year-old Connors, who had
wrist surgery last winta'.
"I've done my duty here. I've
given this place everything that
I've had to give. I broke my back
for them. I didn't mind bleeding
and doing whatever it took to play
my best tennis, and now I still like
doing that. But this is just all gravy
forme."
There were plenty of other
things to cheer - I van Lend! rallied from two sets down to win,
John McEnroe and top seed Slefan
Edberg advanced to a fourth-round
clash and 16 other seeded players
also won.
LendJ, a seven-time semifmalist
whose bid to win Wimbledon has
turned iniO an amual crusade; nearly ended his 1991 campaign in a
second-round match against MaliVai Washington.
But he !~!bounded for a 4-6, 2-6,

NL games...

Detroit pounds Cleveland 12-6

lei'IJioft throu&amp;h the 1994-9j ICUU'I .

"'c-.

s-.s-.

fifth inning off Pete Harnisch (5-6)
to put the Reds ahead 4-1. Doran
also singled home a run in the sixth
off Harnisch, who saw his earned
run average soar from an NL-leading 2.01 to 2.32.
The three-homer splurge gave
Cincinnati eight multiple-homer
games in its last nine. The Redshave 74 home runs for the season,
trailing only Chicago in the NL.
The Astros responded with a
solo home run by Luis Gonzalez
and a two-run homer by Jeff Bagwell off Chris Hammond (6-5),
who went six innings to win his
third straight decision.
Rob Dibble relieved Randy
Myers in the eighth wilh Gerald
Young on third and Yelding on
second, two oul and the Reds leading 5-l Bagwell lined a single to
right thai scored Young, and Yelding tried to follow him with the
tying run. O'Neill came up throwing.
"I knew the ball was on !Mget I
didn't know if it was going to beat
him or not," O'Neill said. "All I
did was throw il and hope.''
Yeldin~ beat the ball, but made
PREVENTS TIE - Reds catcher Jdf Reed
iting Houston Astros, wbicb the Reds won S-4,
a bad dec1sion. He could have slid
(in background) ate some of Eric Yelding's dust
but Reed held on to the ball after tagging out
in safely as Reed reached t91ward
at home plate in Sunday's game against the vis·
Yelding in the eighth inning to prevent the tie.
right field to take the tllrow .
Instead, he ran him over and was
called out by umpire Dutch Rennert when Reed held on.
Yelding had expected Reed to
('
block the plate and decided
DETROIT
(AP)
The
Cleve.500
mark
for
the
first time since I want to be at .500, or a game
halfway down the line he'd run him
land
Indians
figure
they
came
withJune
8.
over,'' Anderson said. '• Now, if we
over.
in
inches
of
a
win.
The
Detroit
.
"This
just
shows
that
what
goes
have a decent road trip, we can do
"If I would have slid, I would
Tigers
figure
t)ley
seUied
the
score.
around
comes
around."
said
Mark
that."
have been safe," Yeldin~ said.
The sagging Indians outhit Leiter, who worked out of a basesThe Tigers play three in Balti"But I was already commmed to
Detroit
12-6,
stranded
II
and
hit
loaded,
no-out
jam
in
the
ninth
for
more
and four m Boston before the
hitting him."
into
three
double
plays
on
their
his
frrst
career
save.
"They
swept
three-day
layoff. Clevebind goes to
Nonetheless, the Astros argued
New York for three games, then
that Reed never tagged Yelding. way to a 4-1 loss at Tiger Stadium us, so it felt good tq,sweep them."
Leiter relieved Paul Gibson in rewrns home for four agaiilst MilReed lay on the ground for several on Sunday afternoon, giving
Detroit
a
sweep
of
the
three-game
the
ninth and got two pop-ups and waukee.
minutes trying u;&gt; catch his breath
series.
a
groundout
In other games, Minnesota
while Houston manager Art Howe
The
Indians
have
lost
four
"That
has
to
be
our
best
save
of
blanked
Chicago 3-0, New York
argued with Rennert and was eject- .
straight
and
21
of
25
since
sweepthe
year,"
Tiger
manager
Sparky
beat
Milwaukee
8-6, Texas beat
ed.
"Did Reed tag him while he ing the Tigers four straight May Anderson said. "Bases loaded, no California 2-1, Oakland beat
one out, and no one moved up.··
Kansas City 3-2, Baltimore beat
was laying on top of him?" Howe 31-June3 in Cleveland.
"We
had
our
chances,
and
we
The Tiger defense also sparkled, Boston 6-4, and Toronto beat Seat·
said. "No tag was made. Just didn't do anything with them, "
turning double plays whenever tie 6-1.
because he held onto the ball
Cleveland
manager
1o1m
McNamaTwins 3, Wbite Sox 0
starter
Walt Terrell (4-8) needed
doesn't mean he's out."
ra said. "We got guys on base. one. A Detroit defensive gem
The
Minnesota Twins, who
"He never tagged me. I know
then we hit into three double almost prevented Cleveland's lone began June with a 15-game winthat for a fact ," Yellling said. " I plays."
run.
ning streak, ended the month with a
didn't feel a tag and I'm pretty sure
Detroit scored two runs in each
W
i
1h
runners
on
first
and
third
victory
that broke a four -game
I got the plate."
of the f11st two innings, but with a and one out in the third inning, sli!le.
·
Reed had the wind knocked out couple of breaks, Indians starter
Jack Morris won his eighth conof him and felt dizzy, but finished Rod Nichols might have gouen out M1ke Aldrete hit a bouncer over
second that was headed for center secutive start with a six-hitter as
the game. He didn't know whether of it unscathed.
field.
Minnesota beat the Chicagp While
he made a tag or not
In the first inning, Lou Whitaker
Bul shortstop Alan Trammell Sox 3-0 Sunday. The victory gave
"I don't remember anything, " came up with a rumer on first. and
he said. ·'The fll'St cogent thought I hit a high flyball down the right- got to it and nipped it with his the Twins a 22-6 record for the
had was just to breathe. I couldn't field line. Right fielder Mark glove to Phillips at second base. month, the team's best June ever.
"It was a great month," Morris
breathe. I didn't know what was Whiten settled under the ball. but it Phillips barehanded it and stepped
on second for the force. His relay said. "It went from being a battle
going on.''
tapped off the foul pole for a two- to fust was an instant too late to get to get over .500 to fli'Sl place, and
Reed also expected Yelding to run homer.
Aldrete and end ihe inning.
we did it in one month. We're
slide.
In the second, Detroit had run•
'Our
defense
did
what
we
needhappy where we're at and now
"I wasn't planning on a contact ners on fii'St and second when Tony
.
ed
it
to
do,"
Leiter
said
.
we're
going to try to stay there.··
play," he said. "I thought he'd Phillips hit a fly ball to left field.
the
three-g
ame
Anderson
said
Sunday's
crowd at the
slide because (, was up and had to Chris James turned the wrong way.
winning
streak
has
the
Tigers
in
Metrodome
saw
Morris strike out
reach for the bal.t. I wasn't r.re~ couldn't recover, and the ball sailed
good
position
with
seven
games
three
and
walk
one in the 25th
' for h1m .not.to..sbde. I wasn t set.
over his head for a two-run double. left until the All-Star game.
shutout of his career.
The Astros figured they eventu"I jusl couldn't catch a break
"Going into the All-Star break,
(See AL on Page 5)
ally would have won the game if early on today," said Nichols after
Yelding slid, if Reed dropped the his record dropped to 0-6.
ball or if Rennert agreed he missed "Whitaker's ball goes a couple
the tag.
inches one way, it's foul, a couple
"We have a weU-rested bullpen. inches shorter, it's an out. Then,
At that point, they've used Myers maybe James can catch the ball.
and Dibble," Howe said. " I felt ' If and I'm out of that inning."
we get even, we're in the driver's
Nichols is no stranger to hard
seat'"
"'I
luck. He has a 3.71 ERA this seaIn other games, Philadelphia son, but he's winless in nine starts
edged New York 10-9. Los Ange- and is currently on an !!-game los~Jrl!i.~i' '·
les routed Atlanta 11-4, Piusburgh · ing streak dating to September
beal Montreal 2-1 , Chicago rallied 1989.
past St. Louis 7-4, and San Francis"I j~st can't think about the
co defeated San Diego 8-7 in I 0 record,"
Nichols said. "I just have
innings.
to
keep
doing.
my job, and my time
Phillies 10, Me15 9
will
come.
I
just
need to get a couWhat's up, Doc?
ple wins, and get the wiming feel Dwight Gooden again broke ing back."
down, and so did the New York
While the Indians bemoaned
Mets on Sunday , losing to the their
fate, the Tigers basked in the
Philadelphia Phillies 10-9.
sweep and exulted in reaching the
(See NL on Page 5)
... . . - . . . -_ _ _ _ _ _ _. _ _

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

McEnroe, Capriati, Graf am&amp;ng winners at raucous Wimbledon

Monday, July 1, 1991

/

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:. I~

:~'1
·......
.

two-out single - came in the fifth
inning.
Kirk McCaskill (7-9) gave up
both runs and six hits in seven
innings, struck out a season-high
eight and walked two.
Athletics 3, Royals 2
Jose Canseco hit a three-run
homer. Mike Moore (9-6), Rick
Honeycutt, Gene Nelson and Dennis Eckersley combined on a fivehitter.
Moore gave up two runs and
fow hits in five innings and Eckersley got three outs for his 22nd
save in 24 chances.
Tom Gordon (4-6) gave up three
runs and five hits in seven innings.
Orioles 6, Red Smc 4
Carlos Quintana, a first baseman
making his fll'St outfield start since
May 30, 1990, dropped Cal Ripken's fly ball in the sixth inning,
allowing two runs to score.
With the score tied 4-4, Joe
Orsulak singled off Joe Hesketh (21) and Bill Ripken got a bunt single
off Dennis Lamp, who then struck
out Mike Devereaux and pinch-hitter Sam Hom. Cal Ripken followed
with his flv to right

HE WENT THAT-A-WAY!- That's what Detroit shortstop
Alan Trammell (top) seems 'tO be indicating moments after retiring
the Indians' Mike Aldrete and firing to first base to nail Albert
Belle to complete the double play in the fifth inning of Sunday's
game io Detroit, which the Tigers won 12·6. (AP)

SHOP MONDAY NIGHT
UNTIL 8:00 P.M.

AT

ANDERSON 'S
DOWNT OWN POMERO Y, OHIO

OPEN MOND AY NIGH T ' TIL 8 P .M .

'91 OHIO
RIVER SWEEP ....

THANKS, MEIGS COUNTY
FOR A IOi ••• WELL DONE!
REFRESHMENTS FOR VOLUNTEERS PROVIDED BY:

RKERSIsaac Walton League of America. Inc .
'it
Forked Run Sportsmen's Club
Meigs County Fish and Game Association
Forked Run State Park
u. S. Corps of Engineers .....
Employees of Racine Locks and Dam
En:~ployeea of Belville Locks and l:iam
Country Critters 4-H Club
Kid Konnec:tion 4-H Club
Full Houae 4 -H Club
Meigs Industries (Carleton School)
Leta,rt Brownie• No. 1004
Letart J ~ Girl Scout• No. 1290
'Middleport Brownie• No. 1264
Middleport Girl Scouts No. 1261
t~_lter Brownie• No. 1067
Middleport Boy Scouts No. 246
Pomeroy Boy Scouts No, 249
-Cheater Boy Scout• No. 236
Middleport Elementary (Grade 4)
Employees of Bank One
AIIO, many Pulllic Official• and
Individual Citizens ...

ATHENS PEPSI COLA BOTTLING CO . KROGER COMPANY
(Cheshire WarahouMI
.. Dick Warner
. . Henry Thrapp

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
.... Vera Crow

PLEASERS RESTAURANT
. ..Jim Hill

BIG BEND FODDLAND
. .. Brent Eaalman

PIZZA HUT

... Traci Adam s
SUBWAY
RESTAURANT
... Kathy Bogg s

FORKED RUN BAIT &amp;
TACKLE CONCESSION
... Rufu s Cline

FIVE POINTS EXPRESS CARRY OUT DOMINO 'S
... Mike Roberts

.. Margaret Swift

MEDIA COVERAGE .
Charlene Hoeflich and Staff at the Daily Sentinel
Lenny Eli1aon and Stoll at WMpo AM -FM Radio

Union Avenue &amp; St. Rt. 7

WHEN YOU DEPEND ON TOOLS

---------

DEPEND ON

Pomeroy, Ohio

.·· .:e.. .- . - --h... • .

STIHL
I

fu,..d

ly:

Ph. 992-6360

Ohio Dtpot lmant

of llelonol ._,,."
. ,........,. to... rt
~. qtloO tmiOI

,.,.llll4W

•

.
j

MEIGS COUNTY LITIER CONTROL

POMEROY

..

GH'1f ¥. WIMYiclt, Gt"'nor

Frilll111 S. lochhthtr, Dirodor

••

.,..

'

I

'II
~'

�\

The Daily Sentinel ,!

By The Bend·

~

Monday, July 1,1991

Monday, July 1, 1991

.Past incident should stay in the past

By Brian J, Reed

Congrat ulations ... Kudos to
Champion Adam Brown and all of
the other participants in last week's
Meigs County Soapbox Derby.
The weekend was carried off
without a hitch. Sportsmanship was
the order of the day and we can be
truly proud of the dedication of all
of the race participants, lheir parents and of the community's participl!Jion.
Let's not forget lhose responsible for the successful event Roger
Williams, Jim Pape and the failhful
few who hel~ on numerous committet;s, the mdividuals who volunteered their time on race day and
the businesses whose finances
made the race possible were all
TI~UL Y responsible for a great
weekend and a memorable experien&lt;;e for lhe area's youth. ·
As al.ways, most of those
responsible for carrying off che
soapbox derby are also active in
other community events as well.
But, that's lhe way it goes, right?
As I've said before, we should all
look at lhe dedication of these fine
citizens and use it as an example.
You are all to be commended and
thanked.
· 'Good luck in Akron, Adam andilDOSI importantly, have fun!
·Chaoges •••In the July issue of
the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce new.sletter, President
Dr. Nicli: Robinson speaks of che
two tides of change taking place in
Meigs County.

Dr. Robinsot:trepo.ns that the
rust wave, that of vtsible changes,
are those like the soapbo]!: derby
and the upcoming Big Bend Stem·
wheelers Festival which will help
to put our community on lhe map.
Secondly, Dr. Robi~son speaks
of the undercurrent wave, that
being pushed ·by the chamber and
its membership. Some examples of
this "wave" are upcoming programming from the chamber, the
Ohio Department of Development's visit to Meigs County and,
of course, the work of the very dedicated Elilabeth Schaad, the chamber's executive director.
"You can eilher be a Participant
and pan of the solution or a nonparticipant and part of the problem", Dr. Robinson says.
Strong words? Yes, but sometimes that's just what it takes.
Suppon the Chamber of Commerce and its activities. If you are a
member of the chamber, be lin
active one! Auend its meetings,
participate in its programs and
VOLUNTEER!
If you are not a member of the
chamber, maybe it's time to consider becoming a pan of it. There's
room and work for everyone! Your
Chamber of Commerce is doing
great things for the people and the
future of Meigs County.
Now, maybe I should get off my
"soapbox" (!) and bid you a good
week!

·YOUR
SOCIAL SECURITY
•'

By Ed Petenon

: Social Security Manager in
:.
) Athens
. I received a call recently from
ari Athens County resident who
was j~ turning 65 and had a questiqn abOut Medicare.
;Atter answering her question, I
asked her if she was planning to
fite for'· Social Security benefits.
Sbe told me that she had not
pl!lnned on filing since she was
warking full time and did not think
she would be entitled to any Social
Security.
;I did some quick figuring and let
her know that, even !hough she was
working full time, she was about to
lo.se a sizable amount of money
fr9m Social Security by not filing
an application th1s year. How
mjlch? Over $5,000!
. How i:an Ibis be?
:wen; the main reason is that in
I~ there was a significant change
in•the way earnings affect Social
Security benefits for people 65 and
oltler. Because of this change, a
ndrnber of people who olherwise
w~uld not have been eligible for
bonefits can now receive some
mOney from Social Security.
you are between the age of 65
arid 69, you can earn up to $9.720
in . )991 and get all your Social
S~urity benefits. For every $3 you
eaJD over the $9,720 limit, $1 _is
wilhheld from your benefits.
Before the change in lhe law, lhe
withholding rate was $I for each
$2: of earnin~s over the limit. This
m;ans there s ·a good chance you
mtght be due some money from
Social Security if you work this
year even is your earnings were too
high before lhe change in the law.
{F!)r beneficiaries under age 65 lhe
withholding rate is still $1 for each
$2 of earnings; if you're 70 or
older, the earnings limits do not ,
apply.)
Whether or not you can get benefits depends on your estimated
eainings for 1991 and your Social
Sei:l!fity benefit amount. But even
people who will earn in the neighborhood of $40,000 lhis year might
be. eligible to receive money from
Sqcial Security if their monlhly
benefit is high enough.
Here are my suggestions if
you're bctwc:en 65 and 69 and have

:u

TH'·E.BLUE
.,TARTAN
'·-~3

S. THIID ST.
.MIDDlE POll, OHIO
WE AlE

QPEN DURING·
OUR
RENOVATION·
,'

not yet filed for Social Security
·benefits:
First, get an estimate of your
monthly benefit amount from
Social Security and then multiply
by I2 to fmd out what your yearly
benefit will be. We have a form
you can use to get this estimate. It
usually takes about two weeks after
you send it in.
Second, determine your estimat·
ed earnings for 1991.
Third, divide your earnings by
three. If the answer is less than
yom yearly benefits figured in step
one, then you're probably due
some money from Social Security.
Of course, we 'II be happy to
help you figure out if you're due
any Social Security this year. More
importantly, if you want to file a
claim for Social Security benefits,
call our office right away. The
entire application process can be
handled over lhe phone. Our number is 614-592-4448. We are at 221
1(). N. Columbus Road in Alhens.
lhJngt~arebuzzln' ln

lhf'

~TAOS

Dear Ana Landers: I am now 43
years old but I am writing about an
incident ihat happened 15 years ago.
Atter.drintingtoomuchataparty
at my sisler's house, I knew I was in
n&lt;i amdition to drive home, so I
spent the night on the couch in her
living room. In the wee hOurs of the
morning, I dtint my aistu's husband
awakened me and we had sex. I
. wouldn't cxacdy caD it rape, but it
was the next thing to it.
I didn't saeam because I didn't
want to frighten my little llieccs and
nephews who wae asleep upslain.
The next day I told my best friend
what I lhought had happened. She
advised me to ltcep my·moulh shut
lwanse it would only cause trouble.
To be perfcaly honest, Ann, I may
have ~the whole thing. There
is no way I can prove that it actually
happened. I 10011: my friend's comments seriously and decided to say
nolhing.
·
Two weeks ago !BY sister .caught
h~ hus))an~ chealing. ~he •s ~w
filing f~r divorce. He ·~ denymg
ev~ and says she IS crazy. I
bcb~ve I could hel~ h~ case by
telhng a~ut ~e !~ctdent that
happened m the1r JiVJRg room '15
years ago. I need your advice, Ann.
Please re11 me what to do. •• LONGTIME SECRET KEEPER IN
GREEN COUNTRY

Tennis star
faces lawsuit
FORT WORTII, Texas (AP) Martina Navratilova's former companion maintains she didn ' I time
her lawsuit against the tennis star to
interfere with the Wimbledon
championship.
"There· s never a good lime for
somelhing like chis," Judy Nelson
said. "I tried everylhing I could to
have it done before Wimbledon."
Navratilova, 34, was served
with the lawsuit the day before she
left for England, where she is seeking her record IOih singles title.
The reigning Wimbledon singles champion contends Nelson
timed the lawsuit to disrupt her
com;enlrlltion and pressure her into
a settlement
Nelson, 45, said she had aied to
negotiate with Navratilova since
the player ended their seven-year
relationship in April.
Nelson sued Navralilova June 4
for half of what the tennis star
earned during their relationship.
Nelson's attorney, Jerry Loftin,
estimates those earnings could
reach up to $,10 million.

. DOWNING CHILD1

MUWN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 S.lllld St., PuiiMDY

YOUI

'IIDEPENDENT
AGIN'I'S SEIYING
MaGS COUNTY
SINCE 1R61

SONYA'S
COUNTRY 11./TCHEN
AVAilABLE ANYTIME THROUGH THE DAY
MONDAY:
Meat L!Jaf. Mashed ~:»otatoes &amp;
Gravy, Fried Cabbage
TUESDAY:
Cl)icken Uvers, Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy. Green Beans
WEDNESDAY:
Spaghetti &amp; Meatballs, Tossed
Salad. Garlic Bread
THURSDAY:
NO SPECIAL-OPEN 6 AM-2 PM
FRIDAY:
Hot Roast Beef. Mashed Potatoes
and Gravy

SONYA'S
COUNTRY
11./TCHEN
IForrntrly llountry llitdltnl
Across from Home Notionol Bank
RACINE, OH.
949-2324 .

,,

0

~

...
.

Public Notice
NOliCE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbue, Ohio June14,
1881 ·
Conlred Setee ~Apt Copy

UNIT·P::fc:~RACT

s.

BRZ-5302 111

lid propoUla wilt be
at lhe office of the

~

Dlreotor of the Ohio
Depart111en1
of
Tranaportollon, Columbua,
Ohio, undl10:00 A.M., Ohio
Standard Time, Tueaday,
July 11, • 11111, lor
tmprovem11111 In:
Malga County, Ohio, lor
Improving aectlon MEG·
143-14.74, Slate Route 143
tn Colunlbla Townahlp, by
grading, draining, paving
with a1ph1lt concrale on a
bllumlnou• IIISINGale bne
In put, r.. urfaclng with
10phllll concrete In port 811d
by oon•trucllng: Bridge No.
IIEG143·14n ·a three open
conllnuoua reinforced
concnte alab on reinforced
concrete capped pile
abulmenll 1nd p1era (1p8111
32 l•t • o lnchea • 40 '"t •
0 Inch ... 32 feel • 0
lnchee; roadway 32 feel • 0
lnchn between guardrail•),
over Laadlng Creek. ·
ProJect lan)lth • 350.00
lin. f•t or o.oae mile
Work length • 816.00
lin. fill or 0.155 mile
Pevem1111 width ··Varin
Th1 Ohio Department of
Trlnaporl•llon hereby
nollfta• all blddera that 11
wll affirmatively ln•ure thlll
In •nr oonlrtct •1\tered Into
pureuan1
to
lhla
1dverllaamenl, minority
bualnau enterprlua will be
aflorded full opportunlly to
aubmll bkl1 In reaponae to
thl1 Invitation and wilt nol
badllcrlmlnated agalnll on
the ground• of rtce, color,
or nallon11 origin In
conlkfar•llon lor an award.
"Minimum !llage rates lor
lhla proJeot hne
predetermined ••
by tsw and are ael
the bid propoul." "The
ael for completion of lhla
work shall be ael lor"th In
the bidding propoul. •
E1ch bidder ahall be
required to ftla wllh hi• bid
• cerllflld check or
cuhler'l check lor an
amount equal to live Per
cent of hla ·bid, bul In no
evant mora than filly
thousand dolll'l, or • bond
lor len per oant of hi• bid,
payBabldledlo the Director.
er must af19ly, on
the proper forma, for
qulllflcallon 11 leaat len
d•y• prior to the dale eat
lor opening blda ln
aocord•noe with Chapter
5525 Ohio ReviHcl Code.
Pl•n• •nd apeclfloalloM
are . on file In the
.
Dapartment
of
Trajtapor11tlon and the
office of tha Dlalrtct Deputy
Dlreolc!f.

The Director reeervea
the right to raJeot •nr and
au bld1.
,;
JERRY wru:t
DIREtTOR OF
TIWISPORTA1'10N
(1) 24, (7) 1

1Q:30 AM. TIL
2:30: A.M•.
I IW ~·

DEAR L.T. SECRET KEEPER: would have had a devastating efftel
Testimooy,offc:rcd lSye~WSafil::rdlc on my life. If you arc not concemed
fact. by a woman who was drunk about your own health and welfare,
and "may have been dreaming' please think about mme.
would not belp anybody's cue VfSY . I urge you to go out and buy
yowseif some retlectivc clolhing or
much. My advice is to teep quiet.
Dear Au Lucien: The follow· a Strap-on light, a better yet bolh,
ing is an open 1euet to die·jogger I and use them when you jog afttr
almost hit while driving home in the dark. And please consider staying
rain last night :
·
off the busy Slrect IJ!Id stick to the
. Dear Sir: You may Julvc tbouiht side roads when the visibility and
your whirc shin provided sufficient foociitg IR as poor as they were
visibility for motorists, but you . last nighL If you won't do these
should know that 1 could not see lhings fa yourself, I hope you will
you 81 aD Ulllil you were right in do them for that llice person who
front of mo, even though I was going almost kiUed you last night. ••
a little slower than the speed limit. NORA P. IN YOUR CITY, USA
r~-uentt
Ilea
·
DEAR NICE PERSON: You've
d;~stJ; ~~:::: Written a terrific letter. I couldn't
chance to react Had there been have said it bella'.
Gem of the Day (Credit Rev. John .
enough.pmc for me to react, the car
direaly behind me and ,the car in Richardson, president, DePaul
the oncoming lane wopld have University, Chicago): Engraved on
forced me to mate a terrible lhc tombstone of a busy waittz: ~God
. split-second choice - either I hit yoo, rmaDy caught his eye.·
What's tht truth about pot,
get rear-ended, or have 1 head-on
cocaine,
LSD, PCP, crack., speed
crash. I doubt that I could have
lllld
downtrs
7 "Tilt Lowdow11 011
missed you had 1 swerved to the
Dope."
has
llp-ttrtht·milllUe
il(orright. Finmalely fa botl1 of us you
ltllltioll
011
drugs.
Stlld
a
self-ad·
were able to catch yourself
drustd,lo11g, busilltu-sizt tln'tlope
before you feU into the path of m
car.
Y lllld a check or MOney ordtr for
You probably think chat your $3.65 (thi$ illCIIUks postage and
safety is a personal issue and that it handling) to: Lowdow11, c/o Ann
hasnoimpactonanyoneelse. Well, f...an4ers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
I'm. a very sensitive person and 1U. 60611-0562. (!11 CIINida, send
killing or seriously injuring you $4.45.)

"

Public Notice ·
The · Budget
of
Leba_non Townahlp will
bll available for public
ln•pectlon July l thru
July 10, 19111( batwttn
the hours o 4 and 6
P.M., at the home of
Township Clark, Dorothy
A. Ro81-arry, 30348
V11ley · Bella , Road
RaO~ohlO 45771.
'
(7) 1 - , '
.,

Ann
Landers
_s,_..,..
...
Aacel•
ANN LANDERS
•••••• Loe

~I
.~,,
-

...

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

i

Cl'ellcn87Ddleo&amp;e."

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

America's oldest
teenager tells age

POLICIES

"Ads outsrde Me•gs . Galli a or Mason t:o unt•• must be pre ·
paid
"Aac....,e S 50 dtscounl for ads patd on ad\lance
'Free ads - Giveaway and Found ads undl!l' 15 wt:&gt;rdl wdl b e
run 3 d..,s 11 no ctl•ge

DALLAS (AP) - A prosecutor
curious about Dick Cark 's age took
advantsge of an opportunity to get
the truth - the whole truth and
nothing but the truth - from
America's oldest teen-ager.
. Cla!k, host of "American Bandstand," appeared last week in fed- · ·
era! court as a character wibless for
a defendant in an investment fraud ;:
trial.
When it came time to crossexamine Clark, Assistant U.S. ·,
Attorney Bob Webster was ready ··'
to grill !he entertainer-producer.
"Since I have you under oath,
my wife told me to ask, 'How old
arc you?'" the prosecutor said.
"Sixty-one," Clark replied as
jurors broke into laughter.

!01 errou f1rst d-v ad runt •n paper) Call b!!fore 2 00 p m
d ... lf\!1' publtCIIIOn 10 make COfreC110n
..

•Ads that must be paid 1n advance are

Words

1

Happy Adt
Yard Sales

Rato
$4.00
$6.00
$9.00

Over 16 Words
.
.20
.30
.42
813 .00
.60
51 .30 / day
.05 / doy

16

15
15

3
6

15

15

COPY DEADliNE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDA" PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

fnr ear: h

rt.t\1 11

sep~rate

Announce men Is

Merchandtse

1 - Card of Thanks
2 - In Memor~

3 - Annoucements
4 - Giveaway
Ada
6 - l ost and Fou nd
7 - Yard S1le tp.a•d '"advance )
5 - Happ'f'

5~

57 - Mu•rcallnurum~u

58 - Fru111 &amp; Vtgl'!abl•
59 - For Sale or Tr1 de

9 - Want«&lt; to Buy

- 11,00 AM SATURDAY
- 2 00 PM MONDAY

Employment
Servtces

2 00 P.M TUESDAY

-

- 2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY
- 2 ·00 PM THURSDAY
-

2 00 PM FfHOA'I'

12 - Sttultlon Wanted
13 - lnsuran ce
14 - Busmess Tratntng
16 · Schoo lt &amp; lrtstruct tOn
~6 - Fl•d•o. TV &amp; CB Rep a••
~ 7 - MisceU•neous
1 e - W•nted T&lt;l o·o

Fum SllilllliP.s
&amp; Ltvesluck
61 - Farm Equ1pmen1

62 - 1/Vanted to 8lJy
63 - llvestock
64 - Hav &amp; Gr11n
65 - Seed &amp;. Fertiltler

lih@hl4611
follordnJ!

te~ephonP rxchanl!e .~ ...
Mas o n Co . WV
Me•v• County
Area

Aru Code 614

Co~e

614

388 - Vmton

992 - M•ddlepon
Pomeroy
985 - Chester

245- A10 Grande

84 3 -

256- Guyan Dist

247 - letart Falls
949 - Aa ~ne
742 - Rut land
667 - Coolville

446 - GIIhpol•s

643 - Arab•• DtSt

379 - WIInttt

'·

'

Port~nd

Area Code 304

675 - Pt PleaSint
458 - leon
576 - Appl e Grove
773 - Muon

21 - Business Opportun11 y
22 - Mon.., to Lo1n
2 3 - ProfMstonal Serv1ces

Real Estate
3 1 - Home:s tor Sal e
32 - Mobile Homes tor Sate

33- Farms tor Sale
34 - Bu smess Buddmgs
3 5 l ots &amp; Acruge

41 - Houses tor Rent
42 - Mobrle Homes lor Rent
43 - farms for Rent

44 - Aplrtment for Rent
45 - Furmshed Roo ms
46 - Space for Rent

tht Rucd+s Fast
Public Notice

47 - Wanted to Ren1
48 - EQuipment for Rent

49 - For leue

The sOuthwest come • of
PUBLIC NOTICE
Meigs County Boord the southweat quarter of

of Commiuionen ia eccept·

lng btdo for the purch..e of
cenoln real property as deacrlbed below.
Btda shalt be received tn
the Malg1 County Commlalfonon Office.
Meigs
County Courthouse. Pomeroy, Ohto, 411769. until
July 1B, 1991, tt 4:30PM.
Theorilol property wilt be sold

Section Number Thirty· Two

(321 in To\vnahip No. Nino
(91 of Range No. Fifteen 1151
nf

the Ohio Complr''ll'!l
Purchase containing Fonv

(40) acres more or 1011.
Also the fcttowing described real estota, commencing at the northwest
corner of Section No. Thirty-

one (31 ), of Township No .
to the highe8t retponaible Nine t9J, Ronge No. Flfteon
bidder. The property to bo (151. oftho Ohio Compony'o
Purchaaa; thence Mat 'Forty
ocild Ia:
PARCEL NO . 1: Tho fol- 1401 rods; thenco south
lowing deiCrlbod real estate, Forty (40) rods; thence wost
1Hualed In lhe T&lt;&gt;wnlhlp of Forty 1401 rods; thence
Columbll, In the County of no"h Forty (401 rods to the
Malg1 and State of Ohio, to place of beginning, containing Ten 110) ecr01 more or
wit :

7,

Autos'for S•l•
72 - Truck• for S1le
73 - Vans &amp; ~4 VVD 's
74 - Motor c vcle~

75 - Boltt S. Motors tor S11e
76 - Auto Paru$-Acc•sor l•
77 -· Aulo Repair
78 - Campmg fqu1pme"1

81 · H omt~ lmprpvemen1•
82 - Piumbtng &amp; Holling

83 - Eacaveting
84 - Eiectric•l &amp; Refrig.,ation

85 - Generel Hauhng
86 - Mobile Home Repan
87 - UDholsterv

leaa.
Excepting from the Forty
(40) acre tract above de·

scribed, one (1) rod, Sixteen

1161 feet wide on tho east
side. baing a right of way,
now owned by Louis Collritt
and wife.

PARCEL NO . 2: The tot-

lowing described real estate.
situate in the County of Vinton, in the townthip of Vinton and in the State of Ohio.
to -wit :

Being

the Ohio Co.m·

pany's Purch'u e, and baing

tho

oouth

half of the

.outheaat quarter of Section

No. Two (21 of uid Forty
(401 ecreo off the west end
of oeld promioe1 1otd by E. P.
Davis to Leander Cottrill.
Atoo tho north half of said

of the southeast quarter of

Section Two 121. Township
Nine (91. Range Si•teen 1181

·&amp;g.

(~·-•.

HOME 992-5692

- ~lli.i -

.· ·~......·•

[ftle(•tttletf ... (..... - - -

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTTIE.S . TURNER, BROKER
MIDDlEPORT - Rai!road St. - Mobole Home Only - A
well kept 1981 Bayvoew 14x70 mooole home woth 2 Ded
rooms. Has a loreplace. g!rden tub. central aor . Irani porch.2
bay wondows, vonyl underponnong, and a stora ge bu oldon g. All ·
for th e low proce of
$9,500.

in the Ohio Company's
Purchase.
Also 1 small tract of land
ah:uatad in the above named
Township and County. con·
taining a spring of atock wa ·
tar deacribed 11 follows, be·

lng at the no"h end of the
eaot one-hell of the

aoutheast quarter of Section

No. Two 12), of Township
Nine 191. of Range Sixteen
(181. and In the Ohio

Company' 1 Purchaae.
The above d11cribed real
estate being the aoutheast
quarter of the eoutheaat
quarter of Section Two (2);
and the northeast quarter of
the southeast quarter of

Section Two (2).

Dead Reference: Volume

· VANVILE - Red Hill Road- You've gollo see lhosone- A
3 lo 5 bedroom home has 2'1• oaths Alsohas a lonoshed base. men! woth a loreplace. an attached 2car garage, an m-ground
· swommon gpool. and a well equop ped kotchen .lt all ~! s on Ap·
prox 10 acres
ASKING $120.000.

I

RUTlAND - How can you beal a deal hke thos?Atwo story
home woth 3 oedrooms and a noce llallol. Aproce too good lo
pass up
ONLY 17,500
AlBANY - Awell ma1nlaoned 3 Dedroom home woth 2 1ull
baths. aor co ndotoon on g. woodburner. attached I car garage,
and equopped kotchen S1tlong on approx 2'1 acres woth a
stocked pond
All FOR $39,500
MIDDlEPORT- Alway s wanled a log home? Thos one os'approx. 10 yrs. old and has been remomdeled all over . Has 2
bed room s down and I loll bedroom up. Calhed ral ceo long on
tovong room . new large lront and reat porches. Great voew ol
the rover MUSTSEE TO SEE HOW CUTE.
$29,900
RUTlAND - Salem Street -Why look lon&amp;er? - There
are 3 bedroom s on thos I 'o slor y home on a 50x l40 tol. Has
newer heal pum p. skyhght. vonyt sodon g, and a pocket fen ce
lor prova cy. Seller has lett the area and Will NOT REFUSE
ANY REASONABLE OFFER. and may conSider a second mortgage.
$27,000
CLOSE 10 TOWN - Yet P1ivate - Thos 2' acres os easylo
mow. becau se ot os leveL Comes wolh large·lovong room and
donong room . At so has a lamoly room . 2 bedroom s. and central
aor condolonong.
$26,900

...

..
'i!

''

ROUTE 248 - Asecluded cabon wolh approx . 3 acres and all
on one lloor. Has a wrap-around porch. 2 bedroom s, large
open hvong room and kotchen woth knolty pone on walls and
ceoton g Approx 10 yrs..old.
$26.900
HAPPY HOllOW ROAD- lookong lor a pla ce to buotd 7 Then
yoo golta se e thos. Approx. lwo acres of noce layon g cleared
tand. Water and electroc avaolable. Agreat
PRICE AT $6.500
NEAR RACINE ON THE RIVER - An acrewolh a 24x40 metal
buoldong woth a deck and set sol paloo dobrs. huge shdong metal doors lor easy storage ol a camper or boat. Has sewage,
waer. and etett ric
·
PRICED AT $17,000
· BRENDA JEFFERS ...... ............... .... .............. 992-3056
Sll!RYL WALTERS .. .... ........~ ..... .................... 361·0421
SlniDY BUTCHER ........................................... 992-5371
.. DARLINE STEWARr ................................ ........ $92·6365

JOHN T. TEAFORD

t·4-'91 ·1 mo.

(Himl, OHIO

W. H. MOBILE

183, Page t05 and Volume
284. Page 239, Meigs
County oee·d Recordo. Volume BLI'age 674 •nd Volume 139, Po.ge 119. VInton
County o.. d 'Recorda.
The Board of Commisaionera may reject any bids

and re·advM1iae this prop·
arty until all such property is
aold or teased .
Terms of payment are 11

followl: 10% of purchaoe
price paid Immediately by
cash or bank check. Remain·

ing btlonce due w~hin thirty
(301 dayo of ule.
Meigs County Board
of Commisaionert

(6) 17, 24:1711, 8, 4tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of
S•le t.. ued oul of the
Common Pteu Court of
llelga County, Ohio, In lhe ·
cue of The F~erel Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation,
Plalnllll, va. For111
Gangwer, et 11., Defendants,

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

HOME PA.TS
If

yDu 're in need
of Mobile Home
Ports Dr
Accessories ...

BUllDOZER •nd
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDCLEARING.
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAILABLE
FREE ESTIMATES

SEE US FIRST!
992-5100
RT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN, OHIO

992·7451

• · 21·11 · 1 mo. d.

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
NO JOB TOD SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

USED APPUANCES

.. DAY WAIIliln·

WAIIIIIS-SIGO op
HYIS-,tvop
llfiiGOATOIS-S I 00 011
IAHGIS-O...U...-$125 011
fBEZfiS-$125 op
'
•oo OYINS-$79 011

CEDAI .
CONSTRUCTION

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915-3561
Across from Poll Office
POMEIOY, OHO
t0/30fl9 ""

992-6648 or
698-6164

Servtces

Aloo Thirty (301 ecrea ott
the north end of the out half

OFFICE 992·2886

992-7130

12·31 -IO·tln

loutheaat quartr of eaid Section No. Two (2). excepting
what E. P . Davia sold and
deeded to Leander Cottrill
and John Maark, containing
seventy (70) acres, mora or
leas.

· Real Estate General

Repair, Trophies,
Slgnage

79 - Campen &amp; Motor Homes

Public Notice

Public Notice

Tha

l r~nSIHJrl altnn

l;fiti1F1AI

896 - Letart

FOI S55
CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS

upon 1 Jud~ment therein
rendered, being 'C ue No.
,111.CV·531n nld Court, 1witt
offer for ••Ia 11 the lronl
door of the Courthouae In
Pomoroy, llelgo County,
Ohio, on the 26th dey of
Juty,1DII1, al 10:00 a.m., the
fQIIowlng Iondo •nd
Jenemlllll, IOCIIted II 42195
Enterprlu Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45788. A complete
legol deecrlptlon of lhe real
•lit• I• •• fotlowa:
The following rool nllte,
alluale In the Townahlp of,
Sall1bury, County of Malg1
and Stale of Ohio, and
bounded and dil1crlbed ••
fotlowa:
,
Situate In the well half
~ the norlhwoal quarter of
IIICIIOn-eight (81, Town. lwo
and l!ange lhlrt~en (13) In
llelg• County, Ohio, land

Public Notice
beginning allhe Junction of
Wytlyo Hill Avenue and lhe
Kerr'• Run Road; thence
South 39 314' waat along
the aoulherly tine of 11ld
Avenue 230· lett; thence
aoulh 50 114' e11t 135 IHI
to lho aouth tine of the well
half of lhe norlhweal
quarter of Section eight;
thence wtlh Jhe line north 2
112' e,ul 283 feel to tha
Kerr'a Run Ro•d 10 1 point
en Kerr's Run Ro•d which
11 toulh 18 314' uol 12 112
feel from th• point of
beginning; !hen.. wllh uld
road north ·1II 314' w••• 12
112 1111 to the place of
beginning.
Also, Jhe following
described r01l oallle, to·
wll: Situate In Jhe County of
Meigs, In the Slota of Ohio,
1nd In the Town1hlp of
Sallabury and bounded 1nd
described •• follow a:
In the we11 part of Jho
easl holf of the norlhweal
quarter of Section number
eight (8) of Town number
two (2) of Range number
thirteen (13) beginning on
whal Ia or whol Wll
Montague' a e••• line lhtrtytwo (32) rods aoulh from
tho norlheut corner of
what Ia or wh11 w11
llonlague'o tot •nd In the
center of lhe Athena Ro•d;
then .. 1oulh on what Ia or
whal w•• llonlague'l 1101
ttne twenty (20) rod• to a
alake; thence aoulh
aeventy·three (73) dtgreal
and olx (6) mlnuleo,
nlneleen (1&amp;1 rod• to •
ateke In lhe Atheno road;
thence •long the Athent
road north thirty-live (351
degr"' weal to lha place of
beginning, the a1me baing
One(1l•crn, more or lou.
Being the 01mo root
ntale conveyed to Chart11
E. and llulna Griffith by
~argorel A. and Charlao R.
McCormock by deed
recorded In Deed Book 164,
Page 050 of the Metg1
County Deed Recorda.
Reference Deed: Volume
277, p1ge 403, Melg•
County Deed Records.
Sold reel nlote has bean
aalgned the lotlowlng
Auditor'• Parctl Numbere:
14-004481nd 14.00449.
Properly Addreu 42195
Entorprloe Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Sold rut eolale hod
aubject Jc accrued real
e1tato 11xe1 for 1991 .
REAL
. ESTATE
APPRAISED AT: $30,000.00.
The real ••lllo cannol be
1otd lor teas lhan lwo-thlrdo
oppralood value.
TERMS OF SALE: Caoh
on delivery of dHd.
Jom11 M. Soulsby
Sheriff of Meigs Counly
(6)24, (7)1,8

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;SUPPLIES
•BUY •SEll BTIADI
OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10:00 am-6:00pm

LEGAL NOTICE
Buckeye
Hilla·
Hocking Valley Regional
Development Dlelrlct,
Route 1, Box 299 · 0,
Marietta,
Ohio
Ia
requesting propoula for
Aging Services In
Atltens, Hocking, Malga,
Monroe, Morgan, Nobll,
P•.rry and Withington
counllu. Tille Ill lunda
are available to provide
the following categorlea
of sarvlca1:
Con8regate
and
Home ellverad Meals,
0 .u ... t .r ' e a c h '
Transportation, lnHome
services, Legal Services,

•N•w Hames
eGarages
•Complete
le~~~acWing
Stop &amp; Cotnpart
FrH Estimates

lima ld.
5-10-11-tlrl.

985-4473
667-6179

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

C'lt4tlllt

SIGNS
by 'llc.k H101"'lt¥

B~rby
~UALITY

USED RAILROAD TIES
t ·12·90·tfn

Poirtt Pleasant . 67~91'

J&amp;l
INSULATION

MICIOWAYE
OVEN IEPAIR
ALL MADS
lrlnt It Ill Or We
Pick Up.
lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERV. ICE

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window•
•Roofing
•tnaulatlon

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251
639 Bryan Place
f-1 iddleport, Ohio
tl-14-lfn

992-5335 or
915·3561

Acreu ,,.. Pest OHice

217 I. SocoM St.
POIIIIOY, OHIO
.__ _ _ _.,:3;:,1;:;61,;:;90;:.1,;oH•::a
,---------.
.

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING

Howard L Writ.,.,

DOZER. an d

NEW -REPAIR

ROOfiNG ·
Gu«ers
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

BACKHOE
WORK

(614)

696 • 1006

949-2168
l · t4 ·'11 · t mo. pd.

L.._ _ _ _ __;6:;:·6:;,-',!91!J

$36,654
Monroe .......$36,084
$33,672
Morgan .......$31,633
$32,436
Noble .......$27,200
$31,205
Pe(ry.......$50,584
$37,695
Washlngton .. $100,442
$51,529
Please contact Cindy
Farson, Director/Area
Agency on Aging for a
ropoaal packet or
urthar Information, (614)
374-9436.

r.

(7) 1

BULLETIN · BOARD
.

.

.

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUr.t'S Dnd
FURNACES FOR MOilLE &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES
0

o

0

0

4

0

'

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNI.~
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

0

0

0

o

o

0

0

I

0

0

0

0

o

o

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

o

0

0

0

0

MOilLE HOME
HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING
locat.d On Safford School ld. off lt. 141
(6141 446-9416 or 1·100·112·JYI17

BENNETT'S

WE DO

ROOFING

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

TROMM. BUILDERS
FlEE ESTIMATES
•20 Yura Experience
•Quality Homes and
Custf)m Remodeling

742-2328

5/22/tfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

205 N. S.Conol Str•t
.DDLEPOII, OIAO 45 760
Office 6 14-992·2116
HOME 614-992·5692
DOTTIE S. l'UIND,IIOID
HOUSES•LOTUFARMI
COMMERCIAL
We Need Uellns•l

.......... ltollt
"Free Eatlmatea"

PH. 949-2101
or les. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY

11-1-10-tllo

FOREVER
BRONZ.E
TANNING

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVKE •
- Room Addition•

s••,, s,,,,,

- Gutter work
- Eiectrie•l and
- ConCNte won.

!FREE ESTIMATEII
V. C. YOUNG Ill

949-2826
TACI!EIVILLE I D.
IACIIIE, OH.

992-621

s

P-oy, Ollie

6/121'91/1 mo.

It -14-'90 lin

BOWL

A&amp;B
COMPLRE AUTO
UPHOLSTDY

POOLTYIDIO MACIIIII
Open Tuea., Thura.,
Fri .. Sat. 7:30 p.m .

Convertible Tops.
Carpets. Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair .
MAIN ST., IUSON, WY.

POMEROY
BOWLING

310 East 2nd St.

992-3432 or992-2403

1-(304)·
773-9560

1-4.- '81 -1 -

BISSELL
BUILDERS

-

ol Ml~~"'"'

UPHOlSTEIY

213···--

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At l.asonobl1 Pri111"

•t•••,ett
Hand T11ftlng
Cuatom Drapee
36 Ynn Experlenee

PH. 949-2101
or les~ 949-2160

61C·992-2321

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Wo B•y Whet We Do.
We Do Whet We Say.
10·11-1 •o.

4·t6-16-Hn

LINDA'S
PAINTING

•Remodeling \lnd
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
eP1inting

flm.OI • m11101
FREE ESTIMATES
Teke the pain out of
·painting.
let 1111 dD it for you.
VEIY IEASQNAILE
HA VI IEFERENCES

(61C)

Pfumltlnt

- Aoofln1
- lnterkH A E•terktr
Polntlnt

30 SESSIONS S30

S-lt-'90 lin

BILL SLACK
992-2269

.

Public Notice

BISSEU &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCDON

742-2421
21fl MI. outside
Rutland on New

.Health Strvlcu, 1nd
ol her aervlcu as
allowed under lha Older
A
me.r lcana
Acl.
Completed propo11ls
must be submitted by
August 2, 1991 .
Funding Ia available
for the 1992 program
year In the following
amounts:
·
· (All Countlll)
Dlscretlonary......$64,684
Legal Sarvtcea... $1~820
MEALS
SEI{VICt.S
, Athens ....... $74,825
$44,421
H kl
$41 617
oc ng....... '
535•206
Melga. ......$46,835

$to6kll

6

104tf. DISCOUNT TO
SENIOI CinlENS
FREE ESTIMATES

36 - Real Estate Wanted

882 - New Haven
937 - Bufhl o

- Household Good8

52 - Sporting Oood1
53- AnHQues
54 - Mrsc M erchandrse
55 - Buildtng Supph•
56 - Peu tor S1lfl

Now I•·

ACADEMIC
AWARDS
GOLF lESSONS

ads

8 - Publ• c S1l1 &amp; Auctton

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs·

Rat" are for c:~ nucutNe run s. broken ul)deys will be ch 1rged

1 l - Help Wanted

G1ll11 County

•,

Days

•A class1f•ed ectvert1sement placM 1n Th11 Daily. Senlln!!l le.a. ·
cept - classified d•splll'f . Business Card IMd legal not1Ce!l l
will also appeer 1n 1he Pt Ple•ant Register and the Galt.
pohs Datly Tribune. reachmg ove1 18 .000 homes

367- Ctleski•e

RESOLUTION 603.91
BE IT RESOLVED by
the Council of the VIllage
of Pomeroy, all members
concurrjng:
That
the
Clerk/Treasurer of the
VIllage of Pomeroy,
charge oft-the following
checlla frqm the books
due to being over cine
~ear old. The following
lal of checks will be
held In ucrow If. at•a
Jatar date any checka
n11d to be reissued.
• 992-2259
Thlala an amendment to
the January 7, 1991
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
minutes.
1·8-85
Howard
Frank
General
146631 $122.00
, 5-7-86
Mark M..-t
General ~243 ·
11.56 [;
/
7·16-86
Watlrwork
Water 1485021600•00
s. 14• 86
Bob
Thompson
Water
148612
5.00
12·8-86
Bob
·Thcimpaon
Water
148045 .
15.00
7·22-87 Rose Zaunl
G. Malar 1149960 .25
ROOM GALORE! 3 bedroom~ family room, HI baths, large
8·19·87
James
kotchen, basement, I car garage! Also, woth this nice tri-level
Saulsbury
Water
home there's an 8'115' shed with etettroc already inslalled
t50015
5.35
- noce large lot and close to everywhere' All THIS AT SUCH
2·1-88
CommunMy
AGREAT PRICE' ASKING $49,000. Make an offer'
Mutual Genel'll 150635
98.80
2·1-88
Col'llmunlty
•.
Mutual Street 50635
22 80
2 1' ~a a
Co
• ....,
mmunhy
Mutual General 150§35
7
Community
1.ae
Mutual Water 150635
50.54 ·
3-22-811
Melga Tire
Water 150844
103.85 .
6·21·88 · Quality
Print General 151152
85.00
8-2-88
·Food Shop
Gelltrll 151312
ADD A TOUCH OF ELEGANCE TO YOUR LIFE .:._ with this
206.48
beautolul Colonial Home located in Middleport! Has level lot,
1-4-89
Blue Croaa
orate tru1:oc studio with skylight, 2 car garage, well rnGeneral 152695
sulated.
roence the elegance - COME SEE• ASKING
2114.52
1 • ag
Bl c
I $49.900. After you're enchanged .. MAKE AN OFFER'
.....,
ue ross 1
sueet 162695
COME ON IN! Thisonvotong hom~ is perlecllor acouple woth a
839•40
chold or lor older individuals. The one lloor plan home lea ' ·1-4-89
Blue Cross
lures 2 bedrooms. I bath. nice kitchen cabinets and a nice
Walar 152695
1 lronl porch to relax on. located on quiet street, some neogh 823.80
bors buLnot ,too close. Come on on, let us show you around.
3-21-89
Star Bank I We know you llleel at home. ASKING $19,500.
Water 152144
2000.00
HElP! Thos home is beggin~ for some attention and tender
5·3-89
Wlnana
lovongcare. 26.2 acres in the country. 6 rooms 3 bedrooms
. Gllf'ltrll 152253
pnvate &amp; secluded. With your help (and some hammer &amp;
S6.60
naris, etc.) Thos abandoned home can have a votal sturdy life
' . 6-7·S9
Ashland
woth you! $28,0'!1l. MAKE ANOFFER'
Bulk SUaat 152450
1.60
COMMERCIAL BUILDING IN POMEROY! large oHice/show10-4-89
Ashland
room w~h huge drs play window, lots ol storage space. Nice
Billk Sewer 152809
rooms up starr~ too, lor possible meeting room, additional of24.25
·
lice
space.. maybe convert onto an apartment for added in1 ~~eo
B
come' Unhmoted posgbohtos with a little work and a tittle
·1.,.. "·
ank On a
lmagonaloon! $19,900.
Gllf'laral 153160
107.55
Total of $8301;85
NEW LISTING- REEDSVILLE -A great lottie place to get
Thfa
.·resolution
away from 11 all! I ~ acre block home with 2 bedrooms 1
pasud June 3, 1881.
. balh, screened porch and garden spot. ASKING $11,900.
Branda Morris,
Cl~trk/Treaa.
TELEPHONE, TELEGRAPH. TELL TRACY- SHE'll TELLEVRichard D. Seyllr, Mayor
ERYBODY .. .THAT SHE'S LISTED YOR HOME! AND IN NO
Larry Wehrung, Pres.
TIME FIAT... YOUR SIGN WILL READ "SOlD"!
·
(7) 1
WANT TO SElL? CALl US NOW! THE WEATHER IS HOT AND
------SO ARE OUR BUYERS! WE HAVE PEOPLE EVERYDAY lOOK·
Public Notice
lNG FOR PROPERTY! WE NEED LISTINGS FOR ALL AREAS
OF MEIGS COUN,IY. If YOU'RE SERIOUS ABOUT SELLING
YOUR HOM~ OR l:ANDGIVE US A.CALL WE GETTHEWORD
Llgal Notlca
The
VIllage
of
oun
·
·
Syracuae will hold 1
WE NEED LISTINGS! If YOU WANT TO SELLSE£ US! WE
Budget Hearing for
HAVE .IUYERS WAITING FOR HOUSES NAD PROPERTIES
Fiscal y.., 1882 on JulY
OF
All KINDS. LISTING URGENTLY NEEDED. FOR A"GOOD
11., 18111,' at 7 p.ni. Afl
DEAL". AT THE BEST PRICE AND PROMPT ACTION; LET US
r.. tdanta, Including
HEAR FROM YOU!
Senior Cltlzana, 1rt
wllcome to attend •nd
HENRY E. CLElAND ....................................... 992-6191
-comment.
TRACY BRIIIAGER .......................................... 949-2439
Janlca Llw.ort
JEAII TRUSSELL ...:......................................,.94t-z&amp;60 ·
Cllrk·TNIIUr&amp;r . . JO:Hlll ................................................ ,....... 985-4466
Vllllge of.Syracull
OFFICE ........................ ................................. 992·2259

·.

•sentinel is not responsible for errors after fti's t dav !C heck

Classified paf!e.uorer the

Estate General

(7) 1

"Pfl ce of ad for all capjta l lfllters '"double puce o f ed cost
• 7 J)Omt line type only used

C1rd ot Thenks
In M e mor~am

RATES

10
Monthly

SUNDAY

-------------Real

Public Notice

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

•

I

iness Servi es

Classified

;:::=========::;::;;;;;;;;::~=----:--~-.........;.---------------~---.:P:=ag::.e.....;:~ - ..

Consider this ...

The Dally sentlnei-Page-7

FULLY INSURED

FREE ESTIIIAT£S

CEDAI
CONSTRUCTION
992-6648 or
698·6864

985·C110

t ·10-'91· I mo. pd.

1· 11-'lt . tfn

IIIDIPINDINT ·
CUPIT CUAIIIIS
and nLI fLOOI. CAll
•Reaaonalif. R•taa
•Quality Work
•Fru Eatlmatea
•Carpet Hu Faat Dry
Time
•H igh Olou on Tile
Floor Flniah
Mill lEWIS, ow,.
II. I, lutla"", OH.
742-2451
3-J4.'91·tln

CDmplttt Grooming
FDr All lrltds

EMilEE MERINAR
Dwnar &amp; Operator

614-992-6120
Poftllf'or. Ohio

1·11-tt-111

Camplagls Family Fun
NEW THIS SEASON ..

POOL

OP'&amp;IIf TO T111 PU'IUC

CAIIPJNC • Beautiful SurToundlrt.g5
. RAlES ·Day, Week, Month. or Season
PICftiC aJULTIR •rtd STACie Por Rent

Rcwllon• · Oct Tocc:thcrs • Patties

. BAUM·CALDWELL'S
ANNUAL YARD SALE
JULY I. 2, 3
Nea~y new clothong, shoes. toys, baby
tied, YOtllh bed, storm 'doors. end ta bles. etc. Qne mile south of Tuppers
Plains, OH. on SR 7.

I f

5cn1nC Brukraat, Meals . and Sn.acks
AllCADI:

TII·COUMTY .
ulnA

noll

SErnc: TANK~~~~-­
. POII'f~-10111 liln'M.

742·2188

4•21·1-.

•

�·,;,.on~y,

Page

~The Dally Sentinel

34

Business

45

For Llast: Commercial Build·
lng, 2,000 oq. ft . so. Rl 7,

Rooms lor rent • weak or month

CHI~~A~~PO

CMotlano lor Gotpot Muolc
GJOUp, 304-415-7453 oftor 5:00.
Froe Slngla Bullolln, Poroonot
adl. Wrttl to: J.S.~. ~.0. Box

64

164, M111lllon, OH

4

"Sorry this is 62 years late. We found it on
an airmail plane a museum was restorong "

pt , Pleasant

&amp; VIcinity
Handlc:ap
Rummage
Fund
Raisor, 12 Burdtlll Addn, 8'00

tilt 5:00. July 2 and 3. Spon·
tc)fed by M.C.A.R.C.

Yard Sale, Jutv 2,3,4. 2618 112
Madison Ave. Children• &amp;
aduHs clothing, 30 gal gas water
heater, misc .
Yard Sale, Tue, Wed, Thurs, Frl
July 2,3,4,5. Lots of goodlos
504 Holloway St, Henderson,
WV. 9:00-5:00 PM.
PubliC Sale

8

&amp; AUctiOn

Rick Poarson Auellon Company,
..;__ _;:,_...;,;:..;_;_:::__ _ _ 1 full time auctionMr, c:omplttt
3 Fr111 Kltterw I Mother Cat. tuctlon aarvlca. LIC.nted Ohio,
Colleo. 814-367-7044.
Wttl Vlrglnlo, 304·773-5765.

'

wk old 811111 Hound/Colllo
pup,_ to , - homo, 304-8823321
Conning larw, 304-4115·7653.

Frlgldelrt auto. washing machine for parts, 814-992~2607.
Gormon Shtphord collie puppill, troo to o good home, boOn
wormed, 5-wMkl old, 8144435421.

9

Wanted to Buy

Caah
For Mobile Home:
Repairable Condltlcn, With Lol.
Ctoae To Gellipolla. 614 -388·
9001, anytime.
Uttd Mobllo Homoo, Call 614·
446.()175.

Wanted to buy, Standing timber,
Bob Williams &amp; Sona 614-992·

~~~~~~~---154
-~49~-~~--~~~­
GIYNway·
30ft. of CB Antenna, :-:-:
Mutt Take Dow'n, 114-388-8780.
Wanted to buy, waehtr &amp; dryer
In working coridltlon, ctll atter 4
KHtono lo glvo owoy, 304-e75- p.m. lt4·112-41tl03.
7154.
Wanttd To Buy: Junk Auloa
with or without motors. Call
6 Lost &amp; Found
Lorry Llvoly. 614-388-1303.
Found Golden RllriiYtr, mill, Wanted To Buy : Stondlng Tim·
300
Spring
VIIIIY
Lane, blr, Top PrieH Pold For Whllo
Pomeroy. 814'-ti2-41Hl.
Ook &amp; Ash. Gd aftor 7p.m. 614·
Lott-Mola,
bloeklwhlttigroy 367-7511.
mlxtd-Auttrian oh•p dog lypo' atub tall-In the JIUI Cr11ek Employment Services
oroo, coli 814·742-2605 or 112·
6647.
Lott: Malo Cocker Sponlol. Goldon On Top, Bu~ Color Undtr·
nNth. Loot In Gogo On At.325 l
RU41. A••rdl 114-3'n-23t7.

7

.

Yard Sale

Gallipolis

$350.00/day proctssing phone
orders! People call you. No tx·
pertenct nec:t~sary. 1~0.2550242 Extension P-2748A.

3 Fomlly Monday &amp; Tuaoday, 9 l
4. Clotnts, Toys, DlshH, Misc.
111t Chatham Avenue.
4 Fomllloo: Boby Bod, Baby
n - . LHIIt BH 01 Everything!
123 Founh Avenue, 9-5, Sunday,
Monday, Tutodoy.
ALL Yord SIIH Must Bo Paid In
AdvtnM. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day blfort lha od It to run.
Sunday odhlon • 2:0b p.m.
Friday. Monday odllion • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

Eunkl Communi1y Vud Sales:
Friday, July 51h, 9 till 6, Antique~, Toott, Houethold Items,
Ml•~lantoua

Go- Solo: July lot, 2nd, 3rd.
180 llouoh Lint, 1 IIIIo OK
St.At.7 ChHhlro, OH.
In Fnonl 01 Hlglty'o Borblr
~L u - At. 7, Sundoy 6130
Thru •~day, 715.

Juty 2nd, lid, 1:00-? Clolhoo,
ledepreadt, Curtains, Fabric,
Antiquea, Furniture, Odds &amp;
Endt Coli 114-&amp;12-7163 112 IIIIo
Out Ot Conltrvlllo On 279. Shlrlty Arrowood.

J

JOBS IN ALASKA-Hiring. Enory
Le~el. $600 • WHkly. Construction, Canneries, Oil Fltlda.
CALL~NOW 1-206-7'36-7000 El&lt;l.
1617B6.
POMEROY
"ASSEMBLERS NEEOED"
Immediate openings. No IX·
perltnc:t neldld. Full/Part-time.
Call TC!ILL FREE 1-800-743-5921,
8am-10pm 7 dlyl.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excelltnt
Pay,
Benefits,
407-295-7600,
Tran1pot1atlon,
Ext 571. 9a m -lOp m Toll
Refunded.
AVON I All ~roas I Shl~oy
Spoor1, 304-4175-1429.
Domino's Pizza of Pomeroy now
taking applications.
EARN MONEY Atodlng Booksl
$30,000/yr. Income Potential.
Dilallo. 111 805-962-8000 Ert. Y10189.

Easy Work! Excellent Pay! Asnmble Producll At Home. Call
For lntormaUon. 504-641 -8003
E•t. 313.

161

Middleport

&amp; VIcinity
810 South Soeond Middleport,
July 1 through I, Iota mite.
Big Yord Solo In ChHitr bloldt
Sum.,.flold'o AHiouronl, July
t-2, 9to 5.
Ju• :1-4 from t-5 children,
lldlel, mena 'Clothing, mlac:,,
Whltohlod
,..ldtnee,
A.YIIIt.
July 1-2·3. from •9-4 at 244 Mul·
blrTY Ave, elolhH, bodo, mloc.
July 2-S, yard 141t bthlnd Aut·
lind 0,_ tchool, rnld.nce of
Roy O'Dell.

e

AVON - All aroas. Coli Marilyn
Woaver 304-882-2645.

IIOitdoy, Tuttdly, 1-5. Linwood·
GREAT POSITION!!!
Off Llkt, Rio Orondo. Girls NEW!!! "Cookln" Fun Lint Of
Clothing, Toyo, Chair, Tano, Kitchen
Hems.
Managers
Dlthn, HouMhold.
Nlldod. Wo Train. Wukly Income. Flnlblt Hours. Excellent
Moving: lnelde Oaragt, Monday, CarMr Opponunlty. l·BOG-487Tueaday 1-4. 1.4 MRH Out Rt. 0924.
180, To While Road, Watch ·For
Signa.
Home Health Aides
Companion AidH
Supor Yord Sail: July 111, 2nd, Positions.
tor home htallh
3rd. Aatortod Houoohold Ar- ald11 andopen
companion aides in
llciH And Clolhlng~ 5 Mlloo
Plke, and Jackson
Will Of ChHhlro, un 51. Rl. Gallia
counties. Ouallfltd' candidates
554.
will possesa·"1 yr prior exT.. tday, Wodntsday, 9-? 167 perlenceln hnllh care "Reliable
Woo&lt;lond Drlvo. Clolhn Col- lranaportallon•Ablllly to work
lt&lt;tlbiH, And Now Craft homol lndependtntly"Availabillly
on
some
WHksnda
LeU of Qoodltol
&amp;
l'lenlngsFamlly Nursing SerVOid Solo: July loll 2nd, 1 Milt vtcu It a home hNHt'l agency
Out Bladon Rood Off At. 7.
urvlclng SOuthern Ohio. We ofrelmburuYord Sola: July Itt, 2nd, 3rd. liB ter:"MIIugt
wag.,
Milo Off U.S. 1iltl, on Floyd Clork mtnt"Corripetlllve
(ltarting at $4.50/hr)"Contlnulng
Rood.
llduc:atlon·Fitxlblt
Yord Sal~ : Jull. 111 2nd 3rd. 18, KhedullngCatl for fur1htr inFourlh SUM • 81dwtl1, Ohio. formation or apply In person et:
Family Nu,.l~ Servicn137 W.
-hlng For Evoryonol
~~ :,t;;~~~t~l.c:othe, OH
Pomeroy,

Muni-Fomlly, July 3, Juno St,
Ruotlo Hltlo, Syrocuoo. Start
upotaht -or. outdoor rodwOoa NtH, canning jars, curtelna, hc»Wtwtrtl, Hoover, out·
chalro, bod- com modo,
walklr: Olriltmas decorations,
g11 g~ll, Wlblr grill, electric
bton•tt, clothing.
Noutzllng'•, ,.." St, Syraouoo,
llrot tlmo thlo yoor, tlo3, MonT..o, oomothlng lor ovoryonol
Yord Salt July
Pomoroy Plko.

~3, . 43707

lmmtdlale employment. Need 8
rtprntntatlve with nut ap.
Pll/tnco I poroonollly, trolnlng
provldod, 614-112-6486 for appointment end Interview.
JOBS IN KUWAIT/SAUDI· Hiring
$37,500-$150,000 yrly. Contlruc·
tlon/011
Rellnery/Welderit
Mechanlcll£tc.
TranaportalloniHoutlng CALL 1-206·7367000 Ert. 1617W5.
Now Acetpllng Applk:otlono For
Part-time Htlp llnle caeura
Pizza.

Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab
Ctnttr has Immediate opening
for part-time LPN or 'AN".
Previous experience In longterm care prtftrrtd. Will conalder ntw gr1duatn, 111ary
based on year1 of experience.
COli Corol Konowalokl, AN OON
tor lnltrvltw at 614-112.&amp;601.
lllnorltloo urged to opply E.O.E.
Wanted: Serylce Techntclan for
Hoatlna l
Alo Condlllonlng/Rarriger•llon. E1perlenced.
S.l¥f Reaume: Cia 071, Clo Gal·
llpollt'• Dolly Tribu"!t. 825 Third
Avonuo, Galllpollo,"" 45631.

14

Business
Training

'

At1raln
NowiiiSouthuttom
Yord Solo, oomelhlng for Bull- Colltfll, Sprtna Valloy
IYI!Yont, 715 !lveamorw St, Plua. Coli T~ ~14-441-436711
UII'IAI..wwt Jut¥ t-~.\

·

18

Wanted to Do
Will Babysll In My Homo
Anr,lme
Rodney
Area.
Re arences Avtllable. All Shifts.
Call614-245-5786.

Bush Hog Service. Reasonablt
Rates. No Job To Small! 814379 •2942 .
Dodrill's Privata Home Care.
Have Room In My Homt For The
care Of Elderly, Man Woman.
Coll614-366-8193 Anytlmo.
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
hauiJ.\(ur · 1~\s lo lho mill jusl
call
'4,'ry· s1.
Interior and exterior palntlng , 10
yro oxporlonco Root pointing.
Hand washing houses, trailers,
windows. Odd jobs. Roloroneos.
FrH nHmatn. 304-675-2708

a

Miss Paula's Day Cart Center.
Safe, aMordablt, chlldoart. M·F
6 am. • 5:30 p m Agts 2Yt-10.
Befort, aHer school. Drop-ins
welco!J'Ia. 614-446-8224. New Infant Toddler Care, 614-446-6227
Will babysll In my homo
Wltkdoyl, 3 112 and under, $'10
par day, 614-992-7327

Will babysit weeklnds at your
ho~ae or mint. Have relertn~es .

614·992~903.

Will build
sc:rHned
siding or
245·5657

ptlio covers, decks,
rooms, put up vinyl
trailer skln lng 614·
'

Will ca,. tor bed p.alient In my
home.
Rtasona~e .
Above
Raclnt on 1~4 . 614·949-2392.
Will Co General Houst CleanIng. $4.50 Por Hour, Galllpolla
Aru. &amp;14-446-8406.
Will do sewing, afteratlons and
mending , Appointment only.
304-675-7624.

_1_1__
H_e-'lp_·_W_a_n_t_ed
_ __
-,soo
CREOIT CARDI
••
GuarantMd ume day approval!
Alto quoHiy lor NO dopoolt
VISAJMC and cash advance1. 1·
800-2711-2000 Ert. 2524.

&amp; VIcinity

Loll

a

&amp; Acreage

.

Call attar 2.00 p.m., 304·773·
Space for Rent

0

Country Mobllt Home Park,
Routt 33, Not1h of Pomeroy.
Lots, rontals, parts, salaa. Call
614-992-11171.

0

ARE '{OU GOING TO STAV
HOME Tl-115 SUMMER ?

.

I THINK SO ... LAST
SUMMER I WENT

TO

ICr. .gt IVIilabll for

---'--

-

OAK!

8:051]) eewneltecl
6:30 (]) D 1DJ NBC Newe 1;1
(!) I Dr. .m of Jeannie
CD CIJ D ABC Newel;!
&lt;D Wid AmeriCa Stereo. 1;1
Cil 3-2-1 Contact 1;1
!IIJ ID) CIS Newel;!
1Ill18 WKRP tn CinCinnati
@Up Close
6:351]) Andy Qrffflth

1988 Ford F-150, 4 Whaal Drive,
614-446-7205.

Merchandise

e

Household "
Goods

25 acrea, rural water available,
localod on Broad Run Road,
Now Haven, 128.500. 304-773-

&amp;', Andy Griffith

lnllde Edition 1;1
&lt;D Cil MacNelt/Leh,.,
NewsHourQ
!IIJ IDJ Current Affair 1;1
l!ll 18 Night Court 1;1
iiJ MacGyver 1;1
@ SportoCenter
l2ll Moneyllne
&lt;Ill Scarecrow end Mre. King
7:051]) The Jeffe110ns

R.,..l_..,.. kw\

17MB

Financial
21

'
Business
Opportunity

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommtndl th1t you do busl·
nHI with pooplo Y"" know ond
NOT to aond monty lhrough lho
mall until you have lnvtstfgltld
thl offering.

Arthur's Chain Link !=.nee.
RHidlntlal, Commercial, k'l·
duatrlal, FrM Eetlmatnl Complete Installation. Phone: 814384-41277.
Hulth Probllmo - Mutt Sail
Vending Route, 17 Pepsi m•c:hlnll, Gatlla A Meigs, tmallln·
Vlltmtnt, 304-e75-5112.

Large Local Vending Route For
Solo Will Soli An Or Po~ .
Rtp.at
Bu1ln11s
Secure
Location•. Abovt Average In·
como. I-B00-940-ll883.
Local Phone Route. COmpiny
:~r.rt . Sell Quick. 1.aoo-t9S-

-

local Vending Route' Company
Support Sell Oulck. 1-800-6954044 .
Vtnding Route: For Sale. Cash
Busintss. Hi9h Traffic Local
locations. Hottnt Mac_hines On
Markel 1-800·234-2651.

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

3 0&lt; 4br Flnlshod BaoOmonl, Cf.,
1/2 Acre lot, Green City School
District, Clote To Town, &amp;
Hospllal. $49,000 614-446-4426.

3br House 25 AeNI, 1 milt
From Town, 614~46-1340 .
Houle For Sale In Town On
Third Avenue: 3bf, New Vinyl
Siding, Ntw Roof, Low $20's.
614-379-2787.
House With 1 J/4 Acre, Lltan,
WV. $10,000. Call Collac:l, 614·
669-3515.
Lyona AddiUon In Mason,
quallly built, 4 bedrooms, 3
baths, eutlom eat In kitchen,
DR, FA, 2 tireplacH, CA, 1 acre
lot, More!! ! 1117,500. 304-173-

5681.

On the river, 2 BA possible 3rd,
2 112 balh. 3 car garaga
wlcarport. 1.75 acrtl plus. Gallipolis schools. Owner looking
tor otters. 216-235-9295.

e

Mtrcer Bottom Sub-dl~lslon,
one acre lote, AI. 2 frontage,
price reduced, city water, 304·
576-2336.

Wanted

1986 Kowoookl Nlnl• 600R. Now
Englno, Now Rur Tiro, $1,500:
614-448-1536.
~

7l:l
M.AI=E lOTH fNr&gt;t MilT,

ul

75

Boats

f1NA£.Ly MANA(;iD

,A.p.IP NOW % FINP r

&amp; Motors

for Sale
Houses for Rent

18 Foot V-Hult, iO HP, Ml~uot
With Ac~naorln, Auna
$2,250. 614-256-6490.

3 Room Hou'u, Loc:ated 1011
Third
Avenue.
Stove,
Aolrigorator Furnished. Dlposll
&amp; Aotoroneo Roqulrod. 6t4-446·
1:!32.

1965 Bayllnor, 19 ft, 125 hp, UOO,
open bow, n.mnlng cove,., n"'
mourlng cover, akle, tube, kn~
boord, nko now, $6.500. 304-773'

3br 1 1/2 Bolhs, Clly Schools,
HAt
Pump, CA,
Kitchen
Cabinet, Electric Stovt, &amp;
Refrigerator. Reference &amp; By
Appolntmanl Only I 614-446-3907.

63

New Horu And Stock Troller,

7 Yoor Old Woll Broke
A&lt;mA Gliding WHh 7 Wotttm
Ploosuro Polnla. 114·:z884522.

64

5 room house: 44 Oll~e St., Gafllpolla. $275/mo. lnqulrt at: 918
Second Avenue.

55

for Rent

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
plua oil utllltlos, $100. deposil 1 Qli..,e St , Galli poll• New &amp; Used
304..e75-1137 between 5:00 ana furniture, heaters, Western &amp;
8:00 evtnlnga.
Work bools. 614-446-31~9.
2br Located In Evtrgreen,
VI'RA FURNITURE
$175/mo. 614-446-3697 or 614614-446-3158
245-5:1:!3.
LIVING ROOM: Solo &amp; Chair,
$149.00;
2br llobllo Homo $200/mo. $200 $199 oo- Roc:llnor,
Swivel Roc:kor, $99.00; CoffH &amp;
Dlpooll, 614-367-7802.
End Tablot, $89.00 Stl.DINING
Fumlahed, 2br, Water Fur- ROOM : Tablt With 4 Ptddtd
nished, Total Electric:, Halt Mile Chelra, $149 00; Country Pine
Eut of Porter on 554. 614-388- Oin1ttt With Btnch And 3
Chairs,_ $299.00; llllehlng 2
VV63.
Door t1ltch, $349; Or SSR OQ
Mobllo Homos For Rani. Sol; Oak Tabla, 42x62 With 6
Reference And Deposit Re- Bow
Back
Chalrl,
quired. 614-446-0527.
$629.00. BEOROOM: Potter Bod·
room Sullo 15 pc:.), $349.00; 4
Trailer tor Rent, In country near Drawer Chosl, $44.95; Bunk
Rutlond. 614-892-3027.
Bad, $229; Comploll Full MaH
Sol, $105.00 Sol; 7 pc:. Codar
Apartment
Bodroom SullO, $899.00.0PEN:
Monday Tliru Saturday, h.m. to
for Rent
15p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
5p.m., 4 Mlln Ott Routt 7 On
1 l 2 BA opts.: Fl~l Avo. 614· Route 141 In Centenal}.
446-ll221.

44

For rtnt, 1 bedroom apartmtnt,
$225 utllitlll Included, dtposlt
roqulrod, no poto, 614·912·2218.
Fumlshod 4 Roomo '-' Balh,
Upstairs, N~ Pets, Rtt.renc:e &amp;
Ot-lt Roqulrod. 614-446-0444.

Nicely Fumlshtd Apartment,
1br, next to Ubrary, parking,
central heat, air, reftrenc:e r•
qulrod. 614-446-0338.

_

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

···~- · -

~

N! I p/&gt;1,£ ,I

e

i

7-1

52

Sporting Goods

Golf Carl, $375; Also Go-Cart ,
$100. Call elter Sp.m 614-388·
8737.

53

Antiques
~~---=:,..:..-:---:--:--Buy or 1tll. Rlvt~rlnt Antlquet,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy
Hours· M T.W. 10·00 am to 6·00
p m , Sunday 1·00 to 6·00 p m
614-992-2526

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

10 HP Jacobsen 42 ln. cut riding
mower. $590. Rototi ller $90. 61~
446-41568.
10 hp riding mower 1ooks rough
runs good, S1SO t1rm 304-615·
4382.
10ft black mesh Unlcten Satellite

w/ln· hous1 and remote control,
304-4195·3694.
17 cu. ft. trost-trM retrldgerator
$135 614-992-3709
1978 Olds Cullass, V-8, $500
New 5pc. Solid Wood Llvlng
Room Suite. $400. Marantz,
Stereo Systtm With Speakers,
$75.00. 614-446·6734.
2 pes ol beige nylon carpet,

12x14 ea, 2 windows Wlalum
triple track storm window,
32x42, 1 pr of lander mount
towing mirrors, 125 H of used,
Birch flooring, 614-195·3605.

D. fit

1985 Flblrgloss baso boot with.,
tf'llltr, 55 hp Yamaha out-board,
wall kopt, 304-675-1616.
;

1986 Bomber Base Botl, 150 :
Mtcury Motor, used very little_..
614·112-7880.
~
22 Fl. Sta Ray (228 Mo~) on,
Trailer. SIHpt Six, Hard Top, •
With Full Gaily. $8,500. X.COnd.'
614-4-136.
', (

~-I-r-j.,.,Rilv;...,.:.f_,.sl--1~~
T I 0 0 1 ~~
1-....--T-,r.,--~
a
~
I
1
1
1
~!
I

The guest speaker had
been long winded and very
cond es cending.
One
man
.
•
•
•
.
.
commented that there were
..----------------. times when silence has the
loudest----- .'
~-,1':-s~lr-lr--TI...:....TI--1
Complete 1ht chuckle quoted
.
•
•
•
_
_
•
by l.llmv 1n the ""ss'ng words
L---1-...t..-L-....L-..L......J you develop from step No. 3 below.

if

I

Gl E N0 B

~

71
==--.,.,-.,...,.,..,==-

76

'82 Chlvette $300. 304-773-5011.

Accessories

56

'110 Rod Ford Probe, vory good
cood, want to buy h(fne must
Mil car, 304-875-1864.

1 Chevrolet 8 ft. truck bedsld,,
passenger side, $50.00. Call 614!
992-6125 after 5 p.m.
· ·

1118 Comoro, good ohopo. 1980
Sunblrd nMdt aubtromo. 304875-3931.

4 eyl Datsun motor, 5 speed
transmission, 68,000 mlln $175. .
Easy Lin Car hitch $100. 304576-2817.

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All brHda, atyle• .
lama Pat Food Dialer. Julie
Wobb. Coli 614-446.()231. 1-B00352-0231.
2 AKC roglttorod Shlh-lzu puppin, 1 malt $175, 1 tamale $200.
304-lll2·m7.
.AKC CoUie Champion Bloodline,
3
Montha
Old,
Famall,
Houuborktn, 69 Bladen Aotd,
01101 Ro.7.

AKC Ftmalt Boaton Ttrrilr,
Wormed &amp;' Shots. 8 wka. Old, 4
112 Months Old, AKC Regltttred
Rotwelltr Female, 814·36NMi33.
AKC Mlnlalura Daehahund Pup.
plts,.S WilkS Old, 614-446-85110.
AKC Rogltttrod Coektr Sponlol,
lhots, wormed, hlahh guaran'"· 304-1175-2193.
For Solo; AJ(I; Rtglalerod
Ftmale Cocker Spenlel, Chlckena.
Aabbita,
Golden
PheaAntl, Hena, Turilaya, 1141112-3118
AKC Will Hldl\lond Aog. Tornor: molo, 2·17".! yro. olcf. $100.
814-256-1165.

Dog ond Col grooming oil

brMdt, opoclollzOd In POocllo
grooming, 12 yre experience,
304-4175-41332.

000 BOAROING. Going on
vocttlonl Lllvt your do(j with
mel Loving caro. Plloso book
11rly, Allvenawood, WV, 30427:1-5572.
Orogonwynd Coftory Portion,
Slam... 1nd Hlmaltyln khtena.
814-448-3844 oftor 7 p.m.
Floh \onk, 2413 Jockton Ave.
Point Plto14nl, 304-875-2063,
full llno Troplcol lith, blrda,
small animals and aupplln.
Poodla pupplos, AKC Champion
Bloodline, llny loy, 614-667-3404.

Autos for Sale

1977 Uncoln Mark VL A·1 c:ond,
new Mtchllln tlrn, 11,200. 304773-1113hftor 5:30.
1977 Pontiac Flr~~blrd, ssoo. 614446-7651.

$750 Or Boot Oflor. 614-446:!319.

1m LTD, Bad Trsnsmiaslon,
$200, G.B.O. 114-367-7026
1180 Chevy ChtVIlll, 4 opotd,
43,000 original mltn, new tlr,a,
run• gooct; $500.00 814-992-1175.
1180 Chivy Monll Ca~o. all
power, exe eond, lnaide and out,
wUI trade tor truck and pay cffforonco, 304-G75-4437.

Dunrovln Fruh Farm: Juat off
SR 681 oott of Alblny 814-611162118. Tuo•Sun VAM-7PM. Homo
grown tomatoea, corn and
gi'Mn beans. We accept Food
St1mpa.

Farrn Suppl1es
&amp; Livestock

1

------~-----------1974 Coachman Highland Park ,:'

1985 Ford LTD Brougham,
46,000 mil11, $3,000. or bill offor, 004-892·3455.
1965 S-10 Blaur, V-6, 5 Spotd,
&amp;ir, Tin, Crulae, Very Clean,
$5,300. 814-367-o1:12 aftor Sp m

1986 Dodge Oay1ona, dur
damage to from and, $900. Morning•'304-576·2514.
1966 Thundooblrd Elan. V-B,
Loodod, $4,115. Dayo: 614-4460404, Evenlnge : 614-446-4576 or
446-1752.
'

1989 Chevy Cavollor, Z-24,
loaded ,take over PIYmtnls.
1991 Chovy-Covallor, lie, ps, pb,
AMIFM eaosolto. &amp;14·112·2912 or
1112-2773.
19e9 LincOln Mart VII: lltlalll&lt;
blue whh nevy leather lnttrlor,
loaded, exc:. cond. w/ extended
warranty. 22,000 original mlln.
Over $32,000 new, Asking
$17,000. Coli 614-441.0200, II no
tnawer, le"" mKtege.

::.!:a;,

8Ft

Sllda~n-Truc:k

qulppod with lit downs, good•
eond. 614-992·2157.
'

~
1,

:·

B1

_,.

,.

Home

~::~... a3n~-~~ti:So. FrH

ea- ~

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Uncondlllonal lifetime guarart'
111. Local rettrtncll turnishi&lt;t.
Frae estimates. Call collect . 1...,
614-:!37-0488, day or night ,.
Aogtrs Ba11ment Waterproo- ~·
fing.
;;

BARNEY
POKIN' FUN AT

FLATLAND
TOURISTER II

THAT

IDle

-=-':.,----::---:-----:- '•
Cunls Home lmprovamenta: ·,
Ytara Experience On Older &amp; ;,
Newer Hom11. Room Additions, ·'
Foundation Work, Rooting, •
Windows 6 Siding. FrH Es· '
timates! References, No Job To ~
Big Or Small! 614-441-0225.

.,

JET
,
Aeration Motors, repaired Naw •,
&amp; re-built motors In atock . RON •
EVANS, JACKSON ,
1·8011- ',
537-9528.

'?H·

Ron's TV Service, spec:lallJing
In Zenith also servicing mosl
other brands. Houae calra., a~o
acme appliance r:epalrs . WV
304-576-2388 Ohio 614-446-2454.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Rooting, painting and accas:
10ri11.
Good
work
tor
reasOnable prlcn. Don't WJit
call guaran1ttd low. 304-67511154

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Saptlc Tonk Pumping SilO, Golllo
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jackson, OH 1-600-537-8528.

«l

Davis
S.w-Vac
Service,
GoorgM CrHk Ad. Po~o, I "At
plies, pickup, and dtllvery. &amp;14-

'

446-42114.

Will do romodollng, rooting
building, . trot trimming onil
Nmoval, houM painting. For
frM Mlimat•, Clll Gitorge at 14
814-112-5752.

,82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

July 2, 1991

Corter's Plumbing
ond Hull~

·-

6'..\:

~:J~

614-448-3688 .

84

Electncal

&amp;

· ,,

1711.

.

An area where you have tAken paons I\)
gam special expertise looks hke it w 111
be a profitable one tor you on lhe year
ahead . What you know could put you
out In front of !he p,ack.
.
CANCER (June 2 t.Juty 221 This Is a
goOd day to take on assignments that
challenge your Imagination aod creativyou should be more than equal to
the task ol tackling a variety of endeavors. no matter how difficult Know
where to look for romance and you'll

' Y.

9:00 (]) 8 @ MOVIE: 'Min
Agelnat the Mob: The
Chinatown Murder1' NBC
Mondoy Night lithe Movies
(2.00) Stereo. Q
Ill (I) 8 'Nipofeon end
Jonphlne: A Love Story (PI
2 of 3)' ABC Mondey Night
Movie (2:00) Stereo. C
&lt;D Cil American Meators
Helen Hayes discusses her
long career and her personal
life . Stereo. Q
!IIJ
Murphy BroMurphy's mother arranges a
double date for Murphy and
herself. IR) Stereo. r:;J
iiJ WWF Prime nme
Wreetflng
13 Neahvllle Now
ID Women'a Pro Beach
Volleybltt From Manhattan
Beach, Calif. (T)
a Larry King Uvet
&lt;Ill Seeuty end the Baaat r:;J
9:30 !IIJ
Deeignlng w - n
Charlene buys a haunted
house and hires the
Sugarbakers. (R) Stereo . r:;J
10:00 &lt;D Cil Crfsio In the Arts:
· Polltlca, CenaorU!Ip and
Money Pulitzer prize-winnong
playwrights Edward Albee,
Joseph Epstein, Adollo
NOdal, Robert H. Knoght,
Anne G. Murphy, Alan Sears.
(t ·OO) Stereo.
Ill ID) 18 Nortflem Exposure
A flu epidemic sweeps
through Clcaly and ruins
Joel's plans. (R) Stereo. Q
lilla Star Trek
ID Suiting Bells Beach
Classic from Austrella
World Newa
(I)) 700 Club With Pet

1121a

..... "'

Carpentry and At modeling of alt
eons, 1.614-,..2-1400 or 992-3440 ~
anytlmt.
"•

llf'V..,_

Trucks for Sate

•

Camper,,

Refrigeration
".;;
Soli: 11114 T-llnl, Aodl
With 111ttoo -.oat, a Ellro
--lal
or ' oom::::Jial:.•
Aui~AJoO, ._. . Olfor. 114- wiring, IMIW
or N;it,;. 1
446-3
•
· .llolltr Uconaod oltctrlelan.
Rldanour Eloctrlcal, 304-415:•

72

1121a

1111p1 4, aalf cont1lnad, tully . ..

Improvements
~.......!:..-::-.-:__:_~~ ,.
All types of masonary, brick, ..

1184 Lincoln Mark VII 8111 Blass
Edhlon, All Opllona, High
Mlloogo Vary Good Condlllonl
Sao To Approc:lotol Only, $3,400.
614-446-6137.

iolm

8:30 (]) D
tho House A
college graduate returns
home to find a lather and a
h1gh-schoot sweetheart who
have plans tor him. (0:30)
Stereo. r:;J
!11J
Family Men JBck
and Joe go to a marriage
counselor to halp stop
diSagreements. Stereo. r:;J
12!1 On Stage Stereo.

camper, 35 h . with tip-out, ·'
apartment sited appliances~~
$4,500. 614-941-2361.
•

1164 OOdgt Omnl, $800. 614368-41872.

19110 Nlooan Sontro sport co~po.
5 aPMCt, AM·FM CIIUIH, air.
61 Farm Equipment
19111 Chovy s:r, 4 whtol drivo
Tahoe, AM·FM CIIHIII, 5
1!50 Otlvor otolll, Excotllnt • apood, air, bod llnor, 304-4175CondHion, S4000.oo, 1-4114-742- :.":,:;•o=-,
. o----::--,-----,30114.
19110 Plymouth Sundonct~; 3,000
les 111-y F . _ Troctor, Actuol 111111. Air Condhlonod,
Whh Hydroullc l:oodar, '!1,350il· Automatic Tronomlaolon, Aoor
lntomttlonol Lalo '"' H
Otlrolt, Uke New, Asking
~"lt.!:i:o\Ji.~·
$1,500. lt4-441!-mo.
.
S2.3l5; Anll Cham.. D 17 19111 Exglo Tolan Block S.pd,
Dillal W111t Plow cunlvllor And 4,400 Millo, Aak~ $1,500 or
Groin Drill, SUIO. 814 211 1522.
::!i~· 8141212, 1141800 Ofl"r lroctor with big
.....,, "'"'· 1111 ~k
Forv- troctor wflh
olty
froril tncl loodor., $4880. 8040
AC dltHI 13180. IN Fold Whh
p~1 cuntv~':iiJrodtr btodt,
S21oo. Lilt
40 HP Long
d-1, Ql50. Ownw will fin-

best offlr, 304-882·3455.

- - - - : - - - - - - - - ::

Upright plano $50, oloo: blnjo.
614-146-4144.

&amp;

~~--~----~~~·
1968 Fan 18ft camper, $1,000. or 1·

1983 Plymouth Horizon, run1
great, new sticker, $650 304&amp;75-6347.

1988 LeBaron Conv. 2.5, Auto,
Cruise, Tilt, All Powtr, AC,
40,000 Mlln, Red, Black, Mag
Whtolo. $6,000. 614-446-7414. after :Jp.m.

Fruits

Motor Homes

@ Freeh Prince of
Bel Air Philip tries to even
the score with a group of
pool hustlers. (R) Stereo. C
(!) Major Le1gu1 BaHIIaf(
Pollsburgh Pirates at Chicago
Cubs (l)
CD CIJ G MacOyvor
MacGyvar helps a woman
try1ng to save her father from
blackmail (Rl Stereo. 1;1
&lt;D Fire on the Rim
T echnologiCBI onnovatoons aod
in preparatoons for natural
dosasters Stereo C
(!) Adventure Jonafhan
Maslow tourneys to the
Daroen Gap . 1;1
!IIJ ID) Mefor Ded The
Marine Corps· borthday
coonc1des woth Elizabeth's
birthday. (R) Stereo. C
1Illl8 MOlliE: 'K-IIOOd' FOX
Night 11 the Movlel (2·00)
Stereo. t:;1
i1J Murder, She Wrote
13 On Stage Stereo.
ID World Wator Skiing From
Fort Worth, Texas (T)
PrfmeNewe
&lt;Ill Buuty end the Ba111 r:;J
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Meydly II 40,000
Feel (2:00)

a

'.
..

&amp;

Campers

goOd, 304~7S-5728.

1988 Flreblrd Formula, 1 Onwer,
32,000 Milas, Mint Condllion
Extro Sharp! Mull Sao, $8,500
614-446-6751, 614-446-7604.

Vegetables

i

Ford Eacort Station
W1gon, good sticker, runs

Needed: Musicians tor Chrlltlan
Rock Band. ~u11 be on IIAI tor
Qod. 304-815-5'145, IIIVI mn·
aage.

58

-

1982

Instruments

.M usical

&amp;

Bud9:et Transmissions, Used_:•
relxuH, starting at $99 , Aul4
Parts. 614-245-5677, 614-378,... .
2263.
.. ~ .

.:.lm::..:~C:.ut::.lo-.-.-s-up_r_om-,-.-1-0W_n_er, 79

1987 Plymouth orlton 12,200.
1986 Pontiac G nd Am auto
$2,500. ChovrOio lruek $800.
304-4175-2440.

57

Auto Parts

7:351]) Andy Grfflth

a:oo (]) D

lind ot The Astro-Graph Matchmaker
1nstantly reveals which s1gns are romanl!cally perlecl lor you Mail $2 plus a
long. self-addressed. stamped envelope to Matchmaker. c1o thiS newspaper. P 0 Box 91428. Cleveland. OH
44101-3428
LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) You may be able
to profit 1n some manner bo,th today
and tomorrow from an undertaking
orogonated bY anolher However. lhos
opportunoty may not wail around too
long for you to get involved .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Excitong new
developments in your social involvemenls are possible at this time. A new
acquaontance .will be the catalyst who
ushers In the changes.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Be extreme!~
conscious of pulling forth your best effort over the ne11 lew days: your talents
and capabilllies will be more readily
recognized !han rewt~rded.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOv. 22) You' re In a
good learning cycle for activities that
reqUire both mental and muscular attro. butes. NQW Is the lime 10 take lessons to
upgrade your got11ng or tennis skills.
_SAOITTAAIUB (Nov. 23-Dec:. 21) You
could '?.EI ralher fortunate both tOday
and tomorrow tn flnallz.l ng situations
thai are lonanclally meaningful. ,Be method1Cal1n what you do. but don t "'B~te
too much tome.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-JIUI. IU) Open
the lines of communocaiiOn today wlfh
people who are pertinent to your immediate plans They should be more receptive 1han :.Jsual to what you have to
otter
AQUARIUS (Jell. 20-Fob. II) Several
s1gns could be quite lucky in theor rnatenal afta~ts a1lh1S hme Fortunately. you
happen to be one of them, you ' re even
numbered among the front-runners.
Good luck'
PISCES (Feb. :ZO..March 20) It's best
not to delegate to others ass~gnments
lhst you're more capable of handling
than lhey are Your chart shows greater
progress is l1kely when you call the
shots.
ARIES (Merch 21• Aprll II) You could
be In for a pleasant surprise In this cycle
when you finally receive reparations for
two obligations you had iusf about written ott. Unexpected trends are stirring
In your favor.
TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20) You have a
marvelous faculty today for getting
friends to do what you want them to ·do
while ll)aklng them think 11's their own
idea. Fortunately, your Intentions will be
honorable.
O!MINI (May 21-June 201 You're Mkafy
.to make more significant career atr!des
today th•n you will tomorrow. This Is
not a time to postpone what you're capable of accomplishing now.

•
•

Ie

PRINT !&gt;lUMBERED LETTERS IN
THES£ SQUARES

6 UNSCRAMBLE
ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANS'!)'ER

..•·
('
('

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

' -t8

Notary - Judge - Chirp - Offend - GRAND
"I've never had a personal secretary," the lady
informed her new employee . " That's great," the secretary laughed, "you 'll think I'm GRAND!"

NORTH

BRIDGE

(])a

e

Baoo boot. Bosl offor. 614·9f.l;.'
3595.
...;

dowa, lintels, etc. C)aude Win-

tere, Rio Grande, OH Call 814245-5121.

2 bedroom trailer, $225. month

Conago tor ront, fumlshtd, AIC,
carpit, good neighborhood, no
pete, Pi. PleaHnl, WV 1-304&amp;75-8200.

Transportation

Building

Block, brick, - r olpoo, win-

2 bedroom mobile ' home, large
private lot, w/central air, Gaf.
llpollo Forry orea, 304-675-1226
after 5:00PM.

C.ntentry Area 2br, $235/mo
No P1t1; Rio Granda Area, 2br,
S:!351mo. No Pota. 614-446-8036

&amp; Grain

Supplies

10x55 2 bedroom mobllo homo.
Raelno oroo. 614-992-5658.

882-2566.

Hay

Hoy lor 141a, 304-773-5165.

Mobile Homes

BOlCh suatt, Mlddlapon, Ohio.
ttllc:lencv apt,
,.r.,.,nc:n and deposit, 304-

Livestock

!1_..~5;

4br Houaa In Rio Grande Area.
Available Augutt Itt . 614-441·
0629.

One . room

Tfif~E'f A
I•G GAp IN T'/4(

~~~-----------1566~7~·------------~

Fumi•hed Apartment, 1 Btd· 2 Rleoh 25 Fn MochiOH $900
room, $:!35/mo. Ulllhlos Paid, Each For s. ... Contact 014-446607 Soeond, Gallipolis, 1114-446- ' 7619 boo-n 8:30a.m. 6 5p.m.
4418 after 7p.l;fl.
8ft. Star Pool Tobia, $450 HideAodueod To Soli: 2 Story 3br -Fumlahld
All A-Bod. Now, &amp;300 614-367·7267.
Etllcleney,
Corner Lot In Choshlro, Ohio. Ulllllln •Paid, Short Balh,
Excollont Condlllon. 904-932- $125/mo. 919 Second Avenue, A CARIBBEAN BLOWOUTI Wt
overbought crulooo, Florida lo
6959, 904 -932-7670
Golllpollo, 614-445-3945.
~
the Bahamas, on 1 luxury liner.
Fuml1hed
Effk:lency,
$150 5 dayo, 4 nlghto, $2211/eouplo,
Ulllhln Pold, Sharo Balh, 701 Hoter paid, ~o gimmlckl. Tick32 Mobile Homes
Fourth, Gallipolis, 614-446-4416 ets good 1 yHr. 404-451-HOB.
alter 7p.m.
for Sale
Baby crib, ltroll~r1 ear Mit,
living. 1 tnd 2 bed· walker, plly pen ana olhlr baby
·n New Moon 2 bedroom Gracloua
room apanmenls at Village llomo, oak tablo, O!lk drum
mobile home 12185, tJic c:ond, M1nor
end
Riverside table, 304-675-4548.
$4,500. 304-895-3664.
Apottmonlo In Middleport. From
Concrete 6 pllstlc Mptlc tanka,
19'71 Brookfield 12xl0, Fur- $196. Call614·992·7787. EOH.
Ron Evans Enterprl11a. Jacknlohod, 0.8.0. 814-441-1211.
Modtm 1 Bedroom Downtown, eon, OH 1-800.537-8528.
Complete
Kitchen,
Carpel,
1174 Carriage hou.., all tloclrle.
Dour, 500 International $3500
2 BA, 2 balh, 12x65, $8(100 or Control Air. ~14-446-oJ39 .
Coli 614-388-9341.
1r1d1 tor mo1or home. 614-«6- Fumis~ mobile home, 1 milt
1511.
below lown, ovorlooklng rlvor. Full Soze WHiom Soddlo I
Polo, CA. &amp;M-446-0338 .
Hoavy Duly Soddlo Stand, Uttla
1984 Manalon 14x60, all tltclrk,
2 bodroom, 2 lull bllha, AC, North 3rd St, Mlddtaport, Ohio, 1 Uaod, Ex. For 4-Hor, 114--448W/0. 304-4115-7677.
bedroom fumlahtd apt, referen- 3687.
cM and depoeit required. 304· Like new, braM with glau top
1185 Rodman H01111. 14x70, 2br, 882-2566.
octagonal dinette, Mlh tour
2 bllht, Mony Ertrooll!lutt Soot
=laterad chllre 114-892·
814-446-6605, Lllvolloooago.
North 4th. Mlddlopo~. Ohio. 2
bedroom lumlohod opt, dapool1
Knox 198t. 1-owner, 2 Mdloom, ond rofor11nce roqulrod, 304-892· Lumber: Wolnut &amp; Pherry.
111 electric, call 11442·3021 or 2568.
Staoonod I plonod. Alto, 1&gt;1•
814-112-7107.
board, cooing, ate. 81~-4411-8031.
Ocun
Front
Condo
:'irtlt
Now 1111 14x80 throo bodroom
INch ' Area. 2br, 91,.
6, NOlii.(Uill:,t.ll 91,.. $&amp;.00, New
2 lull bltho, ohlnglt roof, vlnJi WM.Iy Rtnlol. 614-44&amp;-1~ .
1 Denim Joeka..1f&lt;&gt;r S20.bo, Work
oldtng,
oho.ct... ,
ClopotOd
ohi&lt;MIGhout, 111 dryWIII tnoorlor Upttolro Unlurnlohod Aport· Ponto for $1.00, F~-Solj132~.\";
oncl J.bov wlndoo. $t7,H7.00. mont. UtUhlto Paid. No Ptto." ttmut Ave. Pomeroy, roM 'W'4
t':•ll t..aftft.~.ll:

:r

19aV Honda Mogna 700 CC,
collont Condnronl Vary Lo-1
Mlloago. Aoklng $2,700. 614-44t,
0200, l.aave MHuge .

Rentals

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES" · 536 Jaekoon Plko
from $tl:umo. Walk lo ohop l
movln. Coll614-446-2568. EOH

I

cN0 p

+K J 3 2

7-1-tl

.Q8

• Q 7 53
+A 7 2

a

Would Like To Rent, Or Purehau, On land Contract • 3 or
4 Bedroom Home or Farm. In
Hannan Trace School Dl1trlc:t.
Plsooo Conloet : 814-256-6305.

4-bodroom In Mlddloport, $200,
1-bldroom In Pomeroy, S150, 2bodroom In Pomeroy. ullllllas
pd, $285, 6t4-ll2-41782.
Apt tor rtnl BHCh Street Nlddftpon, Ohio, 2 bedroom lur·
nlshltd, dtpoall and reference,
304-882-2566.

H0

m

Real E$1ate

1br Apar1mtnt, Appliances Fur·
nlsheCI,
1
Block
From
Downtown. Call 614·446-4639

I

2
1}----,lr--;,1,-;-,lr.--:.,lr--.lr::-1

@ Jeopeldyl 1;1
(!) Bewttched
CD ID) Entertainment
Tonight Stereo.
, CIJ M1me'o Femlty
!11J Wh"l of Fortune t:;t
IIlliD Johnnr B... on 1M
Loon
13 Be e Star Stereo.
ID Jet Skiing From San
Doego (R)
l2ll Cro11llre

7:30

For Salt: River bank property In
Mason. 304-713-5651.

42

CIJ D

(I)

675-11121 or 30H37-34n.
Lola I Acorogo For Solo. Land
Contract. 614·1'17-3044 after
:6P~·::m:_.- - - - -- - -

41

0

Reorrongo len.ro of tho
.
f011i ocromblld words below 10 form four almplo words .

7:00 (]) U @ Wflftl of Fortune

5681.

36

e

Shooting Qeme

- --

-

n

l2ll Wortd Todey
&lt;Ill Our House

1982
Volkswagen
pick-up,
dltstl, wtlactory topper, 6
spHd, AC, tape dtc:k, $2,700.
304-675-2637.

0

F1Wor1n

lilla AnciJ Griffith
i1J C.rtoon ElpteU
1D Star Shot Ctey Terget

.. AND TI-lE POOL, At.ID
THE LAKE AND TI-lE

CAMP,

AND FELL IN LOVE ...

1971 Ford pickup. 302 V-8.
$1.200 OBO, 304-882·22t5

0

rv L•s tmc;~ II'IC

6:00 (]) D CD CIJ D !Ill 1DJ
@News
(!) Chillies In Chii!P 1;1
&lt;D llegrlosti IIIah 1;1
Cil RHCIIng Rllnbciw 1;1

7- 1

1979 Ford 4x4, $1,800; 1989
Chevy 1 Ton Dump, $1,100; 1981
Chovy 112 Ton, $2,295; 1S70
Chovy V2 $500. 614-367-7267.

5651, Mason WV.

•

MON., JULY 1
() 1991

IAMI

~y

EVENING

197V Chevy Pick-up, 1 112 Ton~ .4
Wheel Drive+ New Rebuilt Motor,
Good Solid ruck, 614-3711-11887.

SIHplng rooms wl1h cooking .
Also traller s~act . All hook·ups .

51

•

'

·'

Trucks for Sale

1-:=======~tT:::::::::::::::::::"j Commercial
lett 314 milo ooulh
of Sliver Bridge on US 35, 304·

Giveaway

s

Lots

Roybum Rood. Povod road,
county
wa1er,
r.. aonabll
,..strlctlona. Complete Inform•·
lion mailed on requelt. 304-en5253, John 0 . Gtr1ach, no
alng ....widetr~lltrll , please.

Announcements

Clas . . lttrtlng now. Learn Mlf
dofonct whllo you thopo up ond
wort oul. Improve yoor moQjal
I phyak:al abllltln, tor lntarview ~II Jay 5-10 p.m. 614·742·
2548.
CHINESE KEMPO
KARATE
Ciao- ttartlng now. Loom soli
dol.,.. whllo you ohopo up ond
won out. Improve your mental
I phyolcol obiiHioo, lor Interview ootl .Joy ti-10 p.m. 814·7422648.

35

Starting at $120/mo. Galltl Hotel.

614-446-9560.

72

••••

r::~::~' S~\\4\\}A-c!&amp;~~s·
Hh4
CLAf
POUAN

Television
-rviewing

1978 Ford 2~. 4 Whool Drlwo
Pick-up, Good Condlllon, No&gt;
Rust, $2,000 Firm. 614446·152~•

new home construction on

Announcements
3

304 ~882·

2566.

46

Jhe Dally Sentlnei--Page-9

1976 Toyota Pickup, SR-5, IOO'g
bod wllh cap. $1100. 614-44§1'17•1.
u

Apinmant available lor 2 or 3
construction worktrs

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on

IItke your choice now No
quat• over the phon., you
mult Ml them. Phone lor an
oppolnlmont. 614-448-7691 doy,
446-t53Vovo.

Wright

Rooms

Choshlro, Ohio. 614-367.0138
2nd Ave , Gallipolis. Close to
Court Houflt. 1 room, 2 rooms,
3 rooms, 4 roomt All nicely
decorated,
air cond111onlng,
your water &amp; HWit bill are paid

Classifieds
446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Lany

Furnished

Buildings

1,1991

Mor-;day, July 1 , 199i

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

July

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST
+94
• ? 10 9 7

+ Q tO 8 7
•

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32

• J 10 9 4
+KQ9

+8 6

+J

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10 53

,.

SOUTH
+A 6 5
• A 6 54

Guess
the end-position

+AK2

+8 6 I

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder

Soulh
I NT

Bndge can be extremely frustrat ·
ing at times. You know you can make
your contract - if only you can work
out which opponent holds a key card
How do you f1gure it .out' Sometimes the btddtng (or lack of ot) wtll
tell you At other times the play will
be indicative. But if neither of these
factors 1s any help, go with the odds or guess well.
_A gainst three no-trump. West led a
low club. (A low one is usually a better
choice than the jack if you don'! have
J -10·9 or J-10-8.) East won With the
club queen and continued with the
king, declarer ducking twice in dummy. East's club nine now went to dum·
my's ace.
Declarer played a spade back to his
ace and a spade to dummy's jack, and
cashed the spade king, East discarding
a heart. Next came three rounds of diamonds, West now throwing a heart.
Declarer would make the hand if he
guessed which opponent held the heart
kmg . If 11 was West, dummy could exit

2.

West

Pass
Pass

Nortb

2+

3 NT

Openong lead

..

East

Pass
All pass

+3

woth a spaae, leavmg West endplayed,
forced to lead away from the heart
k1ng at trick 12.'11 il was East, a diamond exi! would endplay him one
tnck earlier. Wh1ch was the right
play?
The point-count gave no help. The
split was 6-7 or 4-9, but neither opponent would have btd m etther case.
The distribution was the key . West
was known to have begun with 4-3-2-4
shape and East with 2-4-4-3 . This
made the odds four to three that East
had begun with the heart king. Declarer exited with a doamond, and justice
was done. East did have to lead away
from _the heart kin~

The World Almanalcrossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Jlnelro

33 Spray•

1 Allen country
6 Tremble
11 Coal type
13 NoveHil J1ne

36 Punch aerver
39 Citizen40 Aalronauts'

"all right"
42 Grein
WWtt area
45 Goller Sam

«

14 Army
comm1nd
' (2 wds.)
15 byed
16 Rested In

'

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47- Got a
Secret
48 Gtlrnpted

~flair

17 Subdued
19 Mode of
(auff.)
2D Sneke's
aound
22 Comrlde
23 Angered
24 Accelaretea
26 Ship worktr
28 Prtnter'1
me-roo
30 Houn
lddltlon
31 Allow to
32- de

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50 Melding
52
53

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end•
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54 Heurda
55 Tela

DOWN
1 Suppreto
2 Sler In Aqulle
3 - fly

7
8
9
10
12
13

4 - - toll
5 Aelll
6 Tobecco
chew

Naval abbr.
Qerb
Sherper
Stopped
Do farm work
ArUat'a
workahop

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrity Cipher c ryptogrem1 are crllttd from quotallonl by I*"''us people P" ' and present
Etch letter In the cipher stands lor anothlf Tcday '• clw A ,qutN• AI

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PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "People In the llrHI slltl call me Popeye and
The French Connection waa flff- years ago." foiaottrnan. '

a-

_;

• - · 114-281-8822.

1188 Fold Aollfllr, XLT, Air, Foe1tl4 100o tlllornotltnat Dooor,, tory SlortO lodllnor, 30,000
, - coni!•lon, 1-614-fi2-:!3tl4.
IIIIN. $1,100:-11012.
FtrVUIOOI 30 ~~~- $1,100.
RruOhW....HM_,.__

vw

··80

pickup. $1500. 8~

I•

''
"

�Page-10-The Dally Sel'ltlne~

New Iowa law bans teens
from even possessing tobacco
By GREG SMITH
Associated Press Writer
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)- On
a mild summer night, IS-year-old
Sara Meeker and her friends like to
sit around shooting the breeze and
smoking cigarenes.
This week, the conversa tion
might not be as lighthearted as
before, because they'll be breaking
the law if they light up.
Anyone under 18 caught smoking, chewing or even possess ing
tobacco in Iowa is subject to fines
of up to $100 or a spell of community service. Teen-age smoki,ng
becomes illegal Monday, and Iowa
becomes probably the toughest
anti-tobacco stale in the union.
"I think it' s a bunch of
garbage," Meeker said. " I've been
smoking since I was in lifth grade,
when I was II years old. This new
law ain't going to change a thing. I
smoke, I'm addicled and that isn't
going to change."
Iowa's new anti-smoking law is
believed to be the toughest of. any

Monday, July 1, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

stale, said Carol Sipfle, director. of
programs for the American Lung
Association in Des Moines.
"Part of this law also has to do
with making ir harder for kids to
buy cigarettes in the first place:·
she said. " I think it will make a
difference, probably not a big difference, but we see this as progress
that needs to be made in small
s1eps."
Also taking effec t Monday are
measures in Virginia, Vermont and
Wyoming to raise the legal age for
buying cigarenes to 18 years, said
the Tobacco Institute, a trnde association in Washington.
Like spinach or booster shots, it
may be,.&amp;pod for them but that
doesn't guaran1ee kids are going to
like it.
" I want to get a prolest going in
the middle of the downtown mall
where we all can sit and chain
smoke, but everybody's afraid of
ge ttin g caught and paying 100
bucks,'' said Brian Hampton, 15.

"I know one thing, we won't
stop smoking. W~ just won't do it
in from of cops."
Police, too, are wary of the new
law.
"We are so busy out on the
street running down domestic calls,
robberies, rapes and accidents and
everything else, I really don'tknow
how they're going to enforce this,"
Des Moines police spokesman Sgt
Gail Dunn.
While on patrol, Dunn said he
took 25 trips a night on average.
"And if you told me, 'Well, in
between trips here, would you
mind stopping this kid for smoking?'l'd say, 'Right, yeah. Get a
life," ' said Dunn, a 23-year veteran.
Cedar Rapids Police Chief
William Byrne said that while
"overall intent of the law is good,"
the law will be difficult to enforce.
"I personally don't plan on sending
Jut roving smoking patrols," he
said.

NASA wants to prevent 'Doomsday
Rocks' from b.~ading toward Earth
By U ;E SIEGEL
Helin and Morri.$~n were among
AP Scienet' Writer
more than 160 astronomers, engiSAN JUAN CAPISTRANQ, neers and planetary scientists who
Calif. (AP) - Scientists say Earth gathered here Sunday for the Interis a sitting duck in a cosmic shoot- national Conference on Near-Earth
ing gallery of asteroids, and they Asteroids. The conference ·ends
are plotting ways to preven ~ a Wednesday.
"doomsday rock" from hitting 1he
The meeting is sponsored by ihe
planet. and wiping out much of NASA and The Planetary Society,
hl,!man•ty.
a non-profit group with 120,000
"We Wfult the public to know members worldwide.
there are these flying rocks out
Scientists say it's technically
there that may be a menace to feasible to prevent_catastrophic colEarth ," said planetary scientist lisions by placing huge rockets on
Eleanor Helin of NASA's Jet asteroids or exploding nuclear
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena bombs to nud'ge them o~ of
The chances of a big asteroid Earth's path.
striking Earth during any one
First, they want more money to
human lifetime are extremely build telescopes to search for
small. But so ·many people would · "near-Earth asteroids" -big
be killed that aay individual's rocks that cross Earth's orbit,
chances of dying this way are which are leftovers from the solar
between 1-in-6,000 and l-in- system's formation and may be on
20,000, said David Morrison, space a collision course with the planet
science chief at NASA 's Ames
"Earth exists in a cosmic shootResearch Center in Mountain ing gallery," Morrison said. " lt
View.
would be prudent to broaden the
"The risk that it will say on search so we can find out if there is
your tombstone, 'Killed as th~_..a doomsday rock out there."
result of an asteroid impact' if'
Such a collision "could happen
somewhat greater than chances tomorrow. It could happen any
you'll be killed in an airplane crash time," said Tom Gehrels, who.
- and much greater than being heads an asteroid-hunting project at
killed by fli'Cworks, tornadoes, vol- the University of Arizona's Spacecanic eruptions, nuclear accidents watch Telescope on Kin Peale. "If
or terrorism,'' he said
it does happen, society goes.''

By JEFF BARNARD
Associated Press Writer
OAKRIDGE, . Ore. (AP)
Rangers in the Northwest's national forests are chasing a new kind of
poacher: one with a drawknife who
strips bark from Pacific yew trees
to cash in on demand for a new
cancer-fighting drug.
"It's a damn waste," said Jim
Simonson, yew coordinator in the
Willamette National Forest. He
looked out over the naked white
trunks of 62 yews that were illegally stripped of their baric The
girdling kills the trees.
The ,bark is the primary source
of a drUg called taxol, which has
shown a unique ability to fight cancer by stopping cells from dividing.
It has proved effective in lests on
women with advanced breast and
ovarian cancer_
The National Cancer Institute is
so excited about the drug that the
government has pledged ro collect
750,000 pounds of yew bark a year.
That would produce about 55
poundS of taxol, enough to treat
I,250 people.
In a multimillion-dollar deal, the
government granted Bristol-Meyer
Squibb Co. exclusive rights to produce taxol from bark collected in
national forests.
Selling for $2.50 a pound, yew
CHECKING THE DAMAGE· Forest ranger
Jim Simooson, checks the damage done to a yew
tree after its bark was illegaUy peeled away by

poaches io the Willmette National.Forest in Ore·
gon. Bark from the yew tree is used in makiog a
new anti-cancer drug. (AP)

bark means easy money for some. taken by cutting down yews in
Logging restrictions to protect the areas slated for logging, or by scavnorthern spotted owl, a threatened enging logged-over areas. To prespecies, are making it tougher for vent poaching, Hauser estimates
loggers and millworkers to make a · how much bark should be coming
living.
.
in from legal peelers.
" As more and more people are
" To my knowledge,.there hasn't
laid off work, and mills close, we been any case of anyone who has
are expecting to see more crime approached us to sell bark that
problems on the national forests," wasn't taken with a pennit," said
said Carola E. Stoney, forest agent Dean P. Stul11 Hauser chief execuin Willamime.
tive officer.
"Of course, this deal on taxol
But it comes down to a matter of
has just taken the yew bark son of trust involving r.he Forest Service,
right to the head of the class. ''
Hauser and the collectors, Simon·
Bark that took 80 to 200 years to son said.
grow can be stripped in minutes
The government estimates 30
from as high as a man can reach to million yews grow on II million
about knee height. ·
acres of federal land in the NorthAuthorities have found no evi- wes~ but the trees grow so slowly
dence of a black market, though - yews reach 20 to 40 feet in
rumors abound, Simonson said. height, but an SO-year-old tree is
There also is talk that desperate only 5 inches in diameter- that no
cancer patients may be trying to one expects the bart to be able to
make home remedies. Si:nce taxol meet the demand for taxol.
isn't water soluble, it would be useLast week, however, ESCAgeless to brew the bark, he said. .
netics Corp. of San Carlos, Calif.,
Simonson said poached bark is announced it had produced taxol
probably mixed with legally taken from tissue cultures, a form of
bark and sold to the only autho· cloning. President Raymond
rized buyer, Hauser Northwest .in Moshy said that within two years
Cottage•Grove, a division of Haus- he expects to be able to produce
er Chemical Research Inc. of Boul- enough taxol to treat 5,000 people
der, Colo. It extracts the taxol and annually. More than 50,000 women
sells it to Bristol-Myers.
die of breast and ovarian cancer
Legally gathered taxol bark is
each year.

J

zation of doctors, also rejected
mandatory AIDS testing for doctors.
Instead it endorsed voluntary
testing of those at high risk of contracting AIDS, such as trnuma surgeons or those in areas with high
AIDS rates.
AIDS prevention for health professionals has come under scrutiny
since a Florida dentist, Dr. David
Acer, infected five patients. Acer's
case is the only known instance of
AIDS transmission by a health care
worker to a patient.
The nursing organi zation has
argued that compulsory, universal
leSting is not reliable because it can
take months for signs of the disease
to show up in the body.
Moreover, the estimaled $1 billion cost of testing could be better
spent on prevention, education and

treatment, the nursing organization
said.
Studies suggest that the chances
of infected workers passing the
viru s to patients are extremely
remote.
As of March, U.S. officials had
documented 40 cases of health care
workers · infected on the· job ,
according to the Centers for Disease Control.
The nurses also resolved to
develop a statement outlining, for
patients' benefit, infection control
procedures for health workers. Tbe
stalement would explain, for example, why the patient's nurse is
wearing gloves.
In addition, lhe nurses demanded the government provide annual
education to health workers on
AIDS, hepatitis and other infectious diseases.

Community calendar
Community Caleodar items
appear two days berore an event
and the day or that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.
·

.'

day at 7 p.m. The public is inviled.
WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 6 p.m. at the
Pageville Township Building. ·

TIJPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary
No. 9053 will meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. rather than Thursday so
that the Fourth of July may be
observed.

By SCOTT CHARTON
Associated Press Writer
KEARNEY, Mo. (AP) - An
explosion that killed Jesse James'
half-brother and maimed his mother was part of a plot by security
men to kill the .outlaw, a new fllm
alleges. For a century, the blast had
been considered an accident.
The documentary, "The Life
and Death of.JesseJames," blames
r.he Jan. 26. 1875, bombing on offi. cers of the Pinkerton National
Detective Agency, whom James'
gang had eluded for years.
Historians say James wasn 't
around when r.he explosion ripped
through his family's log fannhouse.
Eight-year-old Archie Samuel was
killed and Zerelda Samuel had to
have part of her right ann amputatect_.
Cited in the documentary is a
letter discovered recently in the
National Archi~es among late1800s papers of Allan Pinkerton,
head of the detective agency and
founder of the Secret Service. His
company, which once guarded
Abraham Lincoln, was then working for robbery-plagued railroads
and banks.
The lener, handwritten a month
before the explosion, was

addressed to lawyer Samuel Hardwicke of Liberty, a local contact for
Pinkerton. Although parts of the
lener are iUegible, the documentary
says Pinkerton gave Hardwicke
detailed instructions for a raid on
the fljml in the hiUs outside Kearney.r
At one point, the film says,
Pinkerton told Hardwicke: "Above
everything destroy the bouse.... Let
the men uke no risk. burn the •
house down."
Pinkerton also told Hardwicke
to have the raiders use ' 'Greek
fire,'' a primitive type of bomb.
Historians generally have agreed
that lawmen hurled two explosive,

devices into the house, but most
assumed that they were used to
flush James out or illuminate the
darkened building. They have speculated that one of the flare-type
devices accidentally exploded.
Instead of stopping the James
gang's robberies of railroads and
banks, the blast won public sympathy for the outlaw, according to the
film. It prompted an unsuccessful
push in the Misssouri Legislature to
grant amnesty to the gang.
James tived on until 1882, when
he was shot by a member of his
own gang.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
PLEASANT VAUEY ;HOSPITAL.

E~R,

NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

LOITRIDGE • The Lottrid~e
Community Center will hold 1ts
regular monthly meeting on ·Tues-

Pick 3:884
Pick 4: 5171
Cards : 10-H, 2-C
A-D; 5-S
Cloudy. Low tonight
in70s. High Wednesday
near 90.

PageS

.,
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tllesday, July 2,1991

Vol. 42, No. 40
Copyrighted 1991

1 Secdon, 10 Pogos 25 conto - ·
A Mulllmedla tnc. Newopoper

Pomeroy Council
finalizes Beech Grove
Cemetery paving plans

SPRUCING UP THE PARK • The depot
has been painted, the concrete slab stage
poured, and Monda;r arternooo the ftagpole was
gettinJ a coat or pa1nt. The work at Dave Diles
Park m Middleport ~ being done in preparation
ror Thursday's Cati'ISh J;estival. The depot bas

been painted light gray with BCCt'nts of a·darker
shade or gray and red. A tent will be put over
the concrete stage lor evening entertainment by
tbe Shady River Sbumers and the Crossover
Band.

AEP's Lhota to speak at SEORC
\Yilliaip J. {..bola, el!ecutive v.i&lt;:e

eastern Ohio will compete in a Calprest~l.RL~~c- - loway HandicaP Tournam.cnt.w.ill!,.
Power Servtce Corporauo~ . w111 a variety of prizes. Bill Childs,'
speak at the summer meetmg of popular golf professional from
S~utbeastern Oh10 R~810nal Coun- Pomeroy, will be the tournament
cil to be held followmg the annual director. Childs said the first 88
golf tournament July ll _at the Fair- golfers entered will play.
greens ·country Club m Jackson
Lhota has been with the AEP
County. .
System since 1965 w~en he joined
Lhota IS expected to comment the company as an associate transabout the current problem facmg mission engineer. He was named
the utility and Southeastern Ohio transmission and distribution engi·
concernmg the burmng of Oh10 neering manager in 1977 and later
coal and the installation of scrub- was named executive assistant to
bers at the Ohio Power Gavin gen- the president with responsibilities
erating plant.
.
in federal and state government
Bob Evans, president of the affairs . He was transferred to
SEORC, said that the golf touma- Columbus Southern and elected
ment _will begin _at 8:30 a.m. and senor vice president in 1983.
the dmner meeung_would begm
Lhota is chairman-elect of the
with a hospitality hour at 5:30p.m. Columbus Area Chamber of ComGolfers from throughout South- merce and a director of Huntington

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stall
Plans for paving at Beech Grove
Cemetery were finalized at Monday night's regular meeting of the
Pomeroy ViUage Council and work
is expected to begin on Wednesday.
/
Jess
Davis
of
S.W.
Dean
1
Asphalt Paving was in attendance
at the meeting and reviewed cost
estimates and time schedules for
the project, which will pave roadS
at the cemetery as well as several
village streets. Those streets scheduled to be paved are Spring Valley
Lane, Liberty Lane, Vale Street,
Wehe Terrace, Prospect Hill, and
Union Terrace.
Council members autborized
Davis to commence woik at the
cemetery when he completes work
m Mason County, W.Va. Davis
anticipates that work to be finished
by Wednesday.
The final decision as to when
those streets will be paved was not
made last night, pending approval
from Village Administrator John

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel
News Stall
.....

"'"~,

,.,)I.., ~ .

-~~'(+;-.~ ;

..

·~

lege, Executive Advtsory Board of
The Eastern Local School DisOhio University's CoUege or Busitrict
is ranked first among 115
ness AdminisiJ'8tion, and president
schools
in Appalachian Ohio in
of Capitol Square Renovation
students
who
proceed on to higher
Foundation.
education.
He earned a bachelor of science
According to statistics released
degree in civil engineering from
b~ the Ohio Board of Regents , a
Ohio State and a master of science
average of 63.7 percent of
degree from Massachusetts Insti- five-year
graduates
from Eastern High
tute of Technology.
School
go
on
to four-year colleges
Tickets for the dinner meeting
or
other
institutions.
That figure
may be purchased from -local compares with 48.2 percent
the
Chambers of Commerce, Tate Southern Local School Districtin and
Cline, Bernard Fultz , and Carl 36.1 percent in the Meigs Local
Dahlberg. Golfers may maJce reserDistrict
vations by mailing entries to School
The
figures were released as a
SEORC, Box 271, Wellston, 46592
of
the
Appalachian Access and
pan
with the entry fee of $42:50. Din· Success Project,
a program schedner reservations wiD close on July
uled
for
1991
-1992
funded by the
9. The dinner tickets are $I 5:
Ohio Board of Regents. The ~oal
of the project is to develop acuons
and pbins for increasing the educational success of the residents in
receipts for the year fell $63 mil- the Legislature acted. Voinovich Ohio's Appalachian counties.
lion short of projections, which signed the temporary budget Saturalready had been revised down- day night
Paychecks for the 132 members
ward by about $300 million over
or the Legislature, dated Wednesthe last two fiscal years.
"The reality is we're off on day, were released Monday after
revised revenue estimates. But certification by OBM, said John
we're happy that we have a betler . Conley, a spokesman for State
than expected fund balance," Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson. Legislative paychecks had been due
Browning said
Passage of a 3 1-day interim Monday.
Welfare checks were supposed
budget over the weekend by the
Legislature allowed the Ohio to have been mailed Friday for
receipt Monday, but wound up on
De~ent of Human Services to
m&amp;l welfare checks for July worth postal trnys at a warehouse until the
temporary budget was in place.
$74 million.
The department said 274,000 Human Services spokeswoman
checks to recipients of Aid to Susan Moning said State Highway
Dependent Children and 36,000 Patrol troopers provided extrn secuunder the General Assistance pro- rity.
gram were mailed Saturday after
Continued on page 3

State ends fiscal year with $135 million
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State government has started a new
fiscal year with a temporary budget
and $85 million more left over
from last year than officials had
expected.
The Office of Budget and Management said Monday that the state
wrapped up the old fiscal year at
midnight Sunday with a balance of
$135 million instead of the $50
million that had been forecast
Gregory Brownin,g, the OBM
director who is the top budget offi) cer for Gov. George Voinovich,
II3Ced the balance to federal reimbursements that were higher than
expected, and receipt of some state
tax money in June that nonnally
would have arrived in July.
However, overall st11te ta x

been posted on an abandoned
house on Ebeneezer Street. Several
complaints regarding health and
safety hazards surrounding the •
house have been filed with council •
and attempts to personally contaci
the structure's owner have been
unsuccessful.
In other business, council:
- reviewed a letter received from
a Columbus resident who owns
property in Pomeroy. The letter
writer wrote to complain about
abandoned cars that sit in front or ~
her propeity;
- heard a complaint from Council President Larry Wehrung
regarding increased speeding and
reckless driving on Lincoln .
Heights;
- approved the Mayor's Report
of fines collected for the month of :
June in the amount of $2,012.
Attending, in addition to Morris,·
Reed and Wehrung, were council
members Betty·Baronick, Bryan
Shank, and Thomas Werry. and·
Mayor Richard Seyler.

Eastern scores high in project

Bancshares, Inc., Ohio Chamber of
~c. OIUil.~-Col ­

Anderson. Council members were
especially concerned about paving
on Wehe Terrace and Vale Street,
as water line replacement work is
now underway in those areas.
The cemetery portion of the
work will cost the village an estimaled $18,000, and several council
members agreed to meet with
Davis at the cemetery ol\J'uesday
to discuss the project.
In other business, council agreed
to finance $13.000 for six months
through Bank One, Athens, N.A.
for the new Chevrolet Caprice
police cruiser, which will be purchased from Don Tate Chevrolet in
Pomeroy. The balance of the cost
of the car, approximately 2,800,
will be paid from the village safety
fund.
Police Chief Jerry Rought was
authorized to spelld up to $1 ,500
for accessories for the new cruiser,
including a light bar, a radio and
cage.
Clerk Brenda Morris reporled to
council that a demolition notice has

According .to Dewey Lykins, a ulty - place a high value in educaretired SuMrintendent of Schools liD' n "
·
·· fiom'SCio,-COIII!tY'.-..v'hOwi11 over: . ...
'facllfflll Eastern iW
a
see the project, the project was high number of seniors going to
prom pte~ by . a concern !hat college also indicates that the
Appalach180 residents_access high- school district is doing its job,"
er educatiOn at a s•gn•f•cantly Smith said "despite the economic
lower rare t!Um d~ other Ohioans.
problems ihat have forced us to
The project will survey vanous deal with less resources textbooks
segments of the popul~tion of and supplies."
'
Appalachtan Oh10 to 1denbfy barriAccording to Smith, Eastern's
ett to _educauonal ach•e:vement and rating in the study is made more
assessmg _htgher educauon. Groups significallt when compared to some
that are likely to be-surveyed are of the lower-scorin~ disliicts in r.he
school staff, ~tudents, parents and study. Belpre, for mstance, ranked
other adult res1dents.
II 5th in the study and Gallipolis
.~e project will also in~entory
City School District at 66th.
ex1sang programs and acuymes m
Smith also pointed out that Eastschools and colleges and m com- em outscored districts in wealthier
munity g~oups whi~h enhance areas like Wheelersburg (6) in1
access to h1gher educauon.
Scioto County and Milford (4) in
"We are extremely pleased with Clermont County J!liich are
E~tern's ra~ng,". Superinte~~ent included in the Appabchian region
R1chard Smuh sa•d Fnday. The despite their strong economic
results of the study show that the bases.
peopl~ in the Eastern district When asked whether Eastern's
mcluding .parents, students and facContinued oo page 3

"i'iie

suth

Banned by Federal law In 1966
due to large amounts of explosive
composhlon. They are not made
wilh the safeguards ollegal
flreworlls, and are very dangerous.

Cherry Bomb
Red, approx.
1' In diameter

M-80

-____,Local briefs---

\\WE HAVE IIEARINC AIDS"

.,, Sentinel
will publish Thur:sday
'
p

(304) 675-1244

The Daily Sentinel will publish a holiday edition on Thursday,
July 4. An early news deadline (9:30 a.m.) will be observed. The
business office will be closed. Normal hours of operauon will
resume Friday.

MONDAY
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Township Truslees will hold a pubLic hearing on the proposed budget
for 1992 on Monday at 7:30p.m. at
the Syracuse Municipal Building.
All intereSted are inv•led to anend.
The budget will be available for
inspection at the-clerk's residence
after that time.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Lodg~ No. 363 F and AM will
meet '1\Jesday at 7:30p.m. Refreshments will follow the meeting.

,,

'

Documentary: conspiracy behind
Nurses Association approves new AIDS policy deadly explosion at Jesse-] ames .farm
By MARGARET TRAUB
Associated Press Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)Like the American Medical Associalion before it, the nation's largest
organization of nurses has come
out against compulsory AIDS testing for its members and patients.
The American Nurses Associa·
tion approved the policy 577-13
Sunday at the organization's annual
convention.
"Compulsory universal testing
isn't reliable and it is extremely
expensive," ANA president Lucille
Joel said in a statement.
Delegates representing the
nation's 2 million regislered nurses
jnstead endorsed voluptary 'testing
as well as voluntary AIDS -infection disclosure by nurses.
Last week, the 300,00-member
AMA, the nation's largest organi·

Wimbledon
action
continues.

"We're talking about almost
unbelievable widespread death and
destruction" if Eanh is hit by an
asteroid wider than one-half to one
mile, Morrison said. Such a collision would have the power at least
77,000 atomic bombs of the size
that destroyed Hiroshima - and
probably many more, he said.
"If you've seen pictures of what
it's been like in the Philippines
with Mount Pinatubo erupting, just
imagine that happening all over
Earth," he said. 'The sky turns
pitch black. Temperatures drop and
kill crops. Most of us would proba·
bly starve to death.''
Evidence suggests a 6-milewide asteroid smashed Into E '
65 miiiion million years ago ,
killing two-thirds of all species,
including the dinosaurs.
Smaller asteroids pose a more
frequent threat. A 10-foot-wide
rock would kill thousands if it hit
midtown Manhattan, Helin said.
· Earth came close to such a collision. on Jan. 18, when a 30-foot. wide asteroid swept within I06,000
miles of Earth, less than half the
distance to the moon.
An asteroid one-tenth of a mile
wide blew up over Siberia in 1908,
leveling hundreds of square miles
of unpopulated forest with a blast
equal to 1,000 Hiroshima bombs.

Demand for can·cer drug
creates yew bark poachers

Ohio Lottery

Trash service to run Thursday
Manley's Trash Service of Middleport will operate its usual
routes on Thursday {Independence Day), according to owner Roger
Manley.
·
·

Waste grease spills .on highway
Some motorists may have encountered a potentially ·slippery situation Monday afternoon after a section of U,S. 33 iQ Salisbury
Township· was smeared with waste grease after two barrels of the
material fell from the back of a truck.
.
· .,
According !Q a report flied by the Gallia-Mei$s Post of t1ie State
Highway Patrol, Douglas Howard, 30, of ZanesviUe, was eastbound
on U.S. 33 roWiding a curve when the drums containing the grease
fell off tile back of the truck and onto the roadway causing the
grease to cover pans of the roadwav.
·
·
CQDtinued on page 3

SAVINGS•••
in the Classifieds!

\

.,

.\ '

,1,1 .

Red, approx. II 112 • in length

Kiddie tractor pulls
slated for Racine
During Racine's Fourth of July
celebration the Racine Park Board
will sponsor kiddie tractor pulls at
2 p.m. on Thursday at Star Mill
Park. ·
·
Two classes will be offered
according to the weight ·of the participants and three trophies will be
awarded in each class. A $1 entry
fee will be charged to participate in
the kiddie puUs.
. The pulls are ljll()er .the direction
of Ted Smith and Dan Smith.
The part board's activities are
possible due to contributions by
Eber's Gulf, Cross Store, Dr. Douglas Hupier, J.D. DriUing, Rose's
Excavating and Sonja~ s Country
Kitchen.
The park board will also be selling food at Star Mill Parle. beginnin.s at 12:30 'p.m. including hotdogs or sausag~; po!lltoes, salad,
baked beans, pies and soft drinks.
The board is asking for donations •
of pies from area residents.
·

1 .· I Permit flreworlcs of so~ type .

D

Do not permit fireworlcs of any type

IIDIID Have no flrellf.orlcs laws, except at county level
IZ1a Allow only sparlclers and other novelti6s

Must be labeled "Class c
Common Flreworlls". Afew
examples:
.

Firecracker
Paper tub6 of

'

.
gunpowder and orner
··
/ngiWdlents. When Ignited ...,.~
It explodes with booming noises.

,Spartler
Chemical coated
metal wire which
shoots out sparlcs

when ~pn!ted.

Roman Csnclle
Tubll with gunpo~r
charges separated by lnac,tfve
material. Shoots out a series
or sparlcs and colored names
with booming n'olses.

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