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Tuesday, July_t, t9!u ~-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Education: the key to a bright futur~

i

It

Dear Ann Landers: I must cornmenton the Ietttz from "Homework
Blues,• the woman who complained
because her child had too much
homework.
As a substitute high school
teacher, I am disheartened and
alarmed by tbe poor academic
performance and apathy of our
students. Three hours of daily
homework is the norm. in Japan.
-~'.!NRU!~..NI a.
.aJic! three months of summer
vacation ts unheard of.
It is predicted that within a
decade, America will face a critical
~ of ~ti~ ~UstS and cngtneers, which bodes til
for the future of our country. It is
clear that American students 1leed
more work ~ less play.
.
If we fail to heed the warrung
signs, we will surely slip from our
role as a world leader to that of a
second-rate nation. -- B.C., CLARK,
NJ.
DEAR B.C.: I agree, but with
Lamar Alexal)der. u the new
secretary of ~ucatlon and Davtd
Keams as hu deputy, I am
optimistic that things will improve
~Y· Here'sanotherpaintof
vtew:
.
Dear _Ann Landen: The public
schools :n New Orleans are not very
good so I put my children in private
school. Believe me, Ann, just
because you pay a fortune for
private school doesn't mean it's

Quartet, The Children or God and Linda Jones.
Rev. James R. 'Acree Sr.lnvites tbe public. Pictured, 1-r, are Gary and Sandi Jones and Jamie
and Joe Humphrey, members or tbe Redeemed
Quartet.

FOURTH OF JULY EVENTS PLANNED Various activities and games are planned for the
Fourth or July at the Hillside Baptist Church.
Activities will begin at 5 p.m. followed by an
outdoor bymn sing at 7 p.m. featuring God's
Little Lambs, The Joyful Hearts, Tbe Redeemed

Modern Woodmen sponsor activity
.I

The Modern Woodmen of
Amenca, Camp 10900, sponsored a
Family Life Activity honoring
fathers at the Coolville Ltons Club
Hall recently.
The Woodmen's Creed was led
by Martha Elliott, Alfred, and
Ralph and Frances Henderson,
Coolville. Palriatic songs were led
by Shannon Breedlove and Tanya
Smilh, Coolville,
Congratulations were extended
to John Breedlove, Coolville, on
his appointment to Zone Eight
Chairman, Dislrict 13, Ohio Lions.
Breedlove is immediate past presi-

dent of Coolville Lions &lt;;lub.
Clare Woodey, recetved a 50year membership P,in and admis.:
ston to the MW A Half-Century
Club. Andy and Terri Hayes,
Coolville, were congratulated on
their recent we(lding. Invitations
were extended to members to
attend the forthcoming weddings of
member George Gilben, Coolville,
to Windy Burkirch, Little Hocking,
and member Donald filliott, Alfred,
to Orenda Cunningham, Guysville.
Marjorie Malone, Coolville,
presented a Family Life Activity
which emphasized the involvement

bellu.
.
.
After two years, I disoovered that

of all family members in "Recycling Reusable Materials" in an
effort to conserve the environment
Family fun contests were won by
Clarence Henderson and Warren
Elliott Alfred and Richard
McPhe~son, Belpre. Door prizes
were won by Ida Livingston
Sharon Smith and Sue Breedlove'
CoolviUe.
'
Proceeds of a "Summer Silver"
collection will be given to the
Torch Food Pantry Torch. Cheer
plates and cards wdre delivered to
shut-in members.

The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District held its regular
monthly meeting recently.
· Toptcs discussed included SumtVer Supervisors School July 28-30
in Dayton; the Meigs County Fair
llooth and Hay Show; and Soil and.
Water Conservation Day.
One multiflora rose cost-share

" Normally I hate looking at
other people's home movies, but
this will be different," said Meg
Marshall, one of lhe first guests toarrive at Bennett's Long Island
home.
In fact, the video - shot in living color - was a hit, garnering
applause and thumbs-up ratings
from the entire audience.
"The human body is so wonderful," said Donna RusseU.
Surgeons across the country
have begun giving out vid~~!tpes,

application was approved and one
approved application was approved
for payment. Those people with
approved applications are reminded
that upon completion of the treatment, theY. are to turn in their
chemical btlls to the Meigs SWCD
Office and report completion of the
practice.
Rex Shenefield was welcomed

religious tenet he shared with his
wife about SQStaining life as long as
possible. He said he realizes it
would take a miracle to cure her.
"It's the doctors' job to sustain
life. not to snuff it ou~" said Wanglie, 87, a retired lawyer. "You
recall what Hitler did in Germany?
He kiUed off all the elderly people,
the sick people, like they were
weeds.
"We seemed to have lost a lot
of our moral fiber in this country.' '
The Wanglies are devout
Lutherans. Mrs. Wanglie is a minister's daughter. Although they
often discussed the use of life-support systems, Mrs. Wanglie never
made her wishes known in writing.
Dr. Steven Miles testified that
the hospital was unable to find
another place to care for Mrs. Wanglie.
_
William Lubov, an attorney for
Mrs. ~Vf. anglie,. said he doesn •t
doubt that doctors at Hennepin
County Medical Center are compassionate. But he said they
shouldn't make decisions that
belong to a family.
"It's· a monumental clash
between individual rights and an
institutional decision-making process," Lubov said. "I just can't
imagine lhat we want to have our
life and death decisions made by
committee. ~ '

and some medical experts Uunll: it's
comforting for patients and their
friends to see what happens during
an operation.
Others are skeptical.
"Well, it's a free country and
people can do what they want,"
was the reaction of manners expert
Letitia Baldrige when told of Bennett's party. "Let me just say that I·
hope the food is delicious and that
it's served well in advance of the
screening."

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MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP)With a new $1 .8 million house
down the street from GIoria Estefan, rapper Vanilla Ice will help
Star Island live up to its name.
Ice also wiD have French singer
Michel Sardou as a neighbor on the
exclusive island in Biscayne Bay,

.

1

;.What AboUt

!

$1.9 mlllio"

1

I'

in the Classlfieds!

II

'

.

.,

I

It I

I

Partly cloudy tonight.
Low in 60s. High in mid80s Thursday.

Vol. 42, No. 41

2 Section a, 16 Pagoa 25 centa
A Multimedia Inc. N-•paper

Copyrighted 1991

.,

AEP chief executive

says c)loice is easy

PAVING TO BEGIN ·Pomeroy village omcials and Jess Davis or S.W. Dean Asphalt
Paving met on Tuesday afternoon at the Beech
Grove Cemetery to discuss the viUage's plans to
pave roadways there. Work is expected to begin

on Wednesday on the project, and cost is estimated at $15,000. Pictured, left to rigbt, are
Councilmen Bryan Shank and Thomas "PeeWee" Werry, Jack Krautter or the Pomeroy
Street Department, Village Clerk Brenda Morri-1 and Davis.

Civil rights groups say look at
Thomas' record, not his race
WASHINGTON (AP) Supreme Court nominee Clarence
Thomas in 1987 praised an essay in
which a conservative scholar
denounced lhe landmark high court
decision le~allzing abortion.
.
. TI)amas.:..comments, .made. in a
speech to the Heritage Foundation,
were_distributed Tuesday by an
abortion-rights group. The group
called on the Senate to reject
Thomas ' nomination unless he
publicly declares his support for
the Supreme Court's 1973 Roe vs.
Wade decision.
The criticism from the National
Abortion Rights Action League
came a day after President Bush
announced he would nominate
Thomas, a conservative federal

Plans for the annual Fourth of
July celebration in Racine have
been finalized.
The day will begin with a
parade at 10 am. Par.lde units will
begin assembling at 9:30 ca.m. at
Southern High School
FoUowing the parade there will
be a chicken barbecue at the Racine
Fire Department followed by children's games at 12:30 p.m.
The always popular "Anything
· That Floats But A Boat Race" will
be held at the park along with a
kiddie tractor pull. The pulls will
feature two classes according to the
. weight of the participants and three
trophies will be awarded in each
class . A $! entry fee will be
: charged to participate in the lciddie
: puUs. The pulls are under Lhe direc- lion of Ted Smilh and Dan Smith.
· Skydivers from Parkersburg,
W.Va., are scheduled to perform at
· 3p.m.
At 5 p.m. mud wrestling match. es will be held .by the Women's
Mud Wrestling Federation and at' 7
. p.m. entertainment at the park will
take place.

appeals court judge, to the court
vacancy created by Justice Thurgood Marshall's retirement.
The group distributed copies of
a 1987 speech in which Thomas
praiSCil as "a§l!.\~~ple of,
a~lying- i!lillllirllw" an essay in
wiiich Lewis Lehrman attacked the
Roe vs. Wade decision as conflicting with the Declaration of Independence and the Constimtion.
As potential opponents searched
for material to use against him ,
Thomas visited \)le White House
on Tuesday and spent about an
hour in the office of legislative
affairs, discussing preparations for
his confirmation hearings. As a
fiJSt step, the administration decided to recruit Kenneth Doberstein, a

Winners of Cincinnati Reds
tickets wiD be announced at 9 p.m.
and the day's festivities will conclude with ftreworks at I0 p.m.
The Racine Park Board wiD also
be selling food at Star Mill Park
beginning at 12:30 p.m. including
hotdogs or sausage, potatoes, salad,
baked beans, pies and soft drinks.
The board is asking for donations
of pies from area residents.
RACINE FOURTH OF JULY
ACTIVITIES
9:30a.m. - Parade line-up at
Southern High School
10 a.m. - Parade
I I a.m . - Chicken barbecue at
Racine Fire Department
12:30 p.m.- Children's games
2 p.m. - Anything That Floats
But a Boat Race and Kiddie Tractor Pull
at Park
3 p.m. - Afternoon skydivers
5 p.m. - Women's Mud
Wrestling Federation Matches
7 p.m. - Music at the Park
9 r.m. - Announcement of winnero four Cincinnati Reds tickets
10 p.m. · Fire works.

·. .--Local briefs---

are relocating

Ms. Edwards, who is the mother and her unborn child. It is a shame
of a 15-month-old child was to be we had to use this course through
arraigned Tuesday on ~barges of lhe judicial system, but it was the
drug abuse and child endangering only tool left to us."
WILTON, Conn. (AP)- By
in Lake County Common Pleas
LaTourette said he based his the year 2000 it's expected that one
Court. Both are fourth-degree decision on legal cases pending in out of every three employees relofelonies that ·carry six-month to other states and on one pending in \.1 cated by their companies will be a
five-year jail sentences.
Toledo. In the Toledo case, a · woman.
Lake County Prosecutor Steven woman was charged with child
Basing this estimate on a 10---.
C. LaTourette said he was aware endangering after the baby .was year market research study. Harvey
the indictment might raise sensitive born, but the charges were thrown Auger, president of PHH Homelegal and ethical issues. But he out twice because the Lucas Coun- quity, said corporate transfers 11f
maintained that county authorities ty court ruled a fetus is not a child women jumped 60 percent over the
were c:oncemed only about the Authorities in that case alleged the past five years and now account for
health1of Ms. Edwards' unborn mother's cocaine use caused the 16 pen:cnt of all employee moves.
child.
baby to. suffer seizures and other
Auger attributed much of the
gain to women attaining upper
"You couldn't take a spoon and · neurological disorders.
feed a baby crack_cocaine. We are
The Toledo prosecutoJ: now is !Danag_ement positions in ever·
asking for a legal determination asking the Ohio Su~e Court for mcreasmg number.
"Ten years ago," he said, "the
that you can't do that to a fetus authority to file clilld-endangering
number of women being relocated
either," LaTourette said. "We're charges.
was too small to measure."
not trying to make a socie\81 state-

.....

3-D; 7-S

.Village of Racine all set
for July 4 activities

LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
huge mural of Michael Jackson,
with a three-dimensioflal extension
of his arm, probably will be dis-

_.,

,.

played on the wall of a Hollywood
theater. But one critic says the idea
is hardly a thriller.
Tbe Hollywood Arts Council wants to construct the mural on the ·
65-year-old El Capitan Theater, _
which the Walt Disney Co. recently
renovated for $6 million.
"Michael Jackson is talented
and generous," said Robert Nudel-·
man, chairman of the Hollywood
Project Area Contmittee, "but he
doesn't fit with the building~"
Jackson, better known for his
singing and dancing, has appeared
in only one feature film, "The
Wiz," in 1978.

LONDON (AP) - Princess
Diana turned 30 with little pomp
but more circumstance than she
wanted.
.
The princess had wanted Monday to be "business as usual." But
others did not let her birthday go
unnoticed.
When she attended a lunch at
the Savoy Hotel for the benefit of a
children's hospice, she received a
giant birthday cake with 30 candles. She and 12-year-o1d Sharon
Caner, who has cystic fibrosis,
blew out the c;J!ndles in one try.
Prince Chili-les was at the couple's country home, where he was
host of a reception. He was resting
there because of back pain.

•

;_ .. •. .

Partly ( 'loudy

Page 4

onto the board to till the vacancy of
the late Rodney Chevalier.
The next meeting · will be
Wednesday, July 24 at 8 p.m. at the
Soil Conservation Service Office.
Those in attendance were Supervisors Alan Holter, Charles Yost,
Thomas Theiss, Rex Shenefield.
Others in attendance were Blair
Windon and Opal Dyer.

The Miami Herald reporied Monday.
He plans some changes in the
six-bedroom, six-bath house, said
the newspaper.
On the drawing board: ice blue
neon decorations, an aerobics and
dance studio, a recording studio, a
theater, half court for basketball
and a king-and-a-half-size bed
under ceiling stars that twinkle to
music.
Vanilla Ice is touring Europe
and the Far EasL His lawyer, Inaki
Saizabitoria, did oot immediately
return a call for comment.

···-

Pick 3:178
Pick 4: 0907
Cards : 7H, 3-C

1::

NEW YORK (AP) - Pete Rose
was not allowed to wear a professional baseball uniform in a TV
mooae about Babe Ruth because
he's banned from the game.
Producers of the film sought
permission from major league
baseball to use team logos and uniforms for the film, in which Rose
plays baseball great Ty Cobb.
"We told them, 'We don't want
you not to employ Pete Rose, but if
you do, he can't appear in a uniform because he is on the disqualified list,"' Rick White, president
of Major League Baseball Properties, said Monday.
"They suggested using hint in
civilian clothes to solve the problem. They probably changed a
marginal scene or two."
The film's executive producer,
Larry Lyttle, and its producer,
· Frank Pace, did not immediately
return calls Monday.
The film airs on NBC on Oct 6.
John Goodman of "Roseanne"
wiD play Ruth.
Rose was banned from baseball
in 1989 for gambling. Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti said he
believed Rose had bet on games
involving his team. the Cincinnati
Reds. Rose later served five
months in prison for cheating on
his taxes.
Rose discussed his gambling
troubles wilh NBC's Jane Pauley in
an interview that airs Sunday.
"It took me some time to find
out that I had a ¥ambling disorder," he said. ' I'm having no
problem with that right now, but
there's always a possibility that can
come back, so I have to guard
against that
"TJte whole situation saved me,
becafise, you know, I might have
ended up gambling everything. I
don't think I would have, but I
might have and that's scary to

Woman accused of endangering her unborn child More women ·
EASTLAKE, Ohio (AP) - A 28 in Eastlake.
ment Our focus is on this mother
pregnant Eastlake woman was
charged with endangering her
unborn child by repeatedly smoking crack cocaine.
The case could be precedent-setting in Ohio in determining
whether a 6-monlh-old fetus is enti·
tied to the same constiwtional pro.:
tections as a newborn or older
child. officialS said
Carla J. Edwards, 19, was arrested Monday by Eastlake police on a
warrant for falling. to appear in
court last May on a soliciting-forprostitution charge in Cleveland.
The two-count indictment
alleges that Ms. Edwards, "being
the parent of baby Doe, did create a
substantial risk to the ·health or
safety of such child by ingesting
cocaine" between June 9 and June

Ann
Landers

Names in the news-----;

Latest in home video: your operation
WANTAGH, N.Y. (AP)- The
friends who attended Karen Bennett· s last party got to see h side of
her they never had before: the
inside.
Bennet~ a 22-year-old financial
planner, threw the bash last week to
screen a videotape of her recent
gallbladder operanon.
The video was recorded last
month by a tiny camera lowered
inside her abdomen to guide the
surge9ns, who provide play-byplay commentary.

Sabo paces
6-3 Reds
victory

my daughter's teacher had never
been to college. I then put my kids
in a church scbool where they had
several houn of homework every
night I talked to the teacher and she
said the SIUdents had plenty of time
ANNLANDBRS
to do the worlc in class and that my
Ht.l, Lol Aq'elM
-SJD&lt;Icoleaad
kids were goofmg off.
Creai«nSpdlca&amp;e.''
I decided to take my kids out of
school and teach them at home. They
were more relaxed and happier ballet lessons. I learn abo\lt the real ·
fintballd,-and 11!11 very goocl.;
without the.P!mn,-ofcompetition. ·- wadd
in
math,
langUage and visual arts.
If they were havirig JXI)blems with
1t11
tutored
in French by a universitymath in school, they received a low
student
11!11
now in the Sixth gracre:
grade and went from there. At home,
French
book
while my friends at;
if they didn't Wlderstand something,
public
school
arc Slill in the grade;
we stuck with it until they did
five
book.
If you print this leuer, the
Northrop Frye, tbe .famous.
National Education Association will
scholar,
did not go to sdlool unlit
jump all over you because it is
the
age
of
8. After that, ·he regarded:against home schooling. But tests
it
as
"one
of the milder forms of·
show that home schoolers do just as
penal
ICI'Vitude..
And he is right:
weD or better than regular school
Home
schooling
allows
me to be the;
students.
way
eYeiy
child
should
be. Free. --:
Mter two years, my kids took an
A
KID
IN
CANADA
achievement test and they were
DEAR KID: If you area 10-year-:
above grade level in every subject
old
and wrote that letter without:
When we moved to Aorida. I put
help,
you are a great ad for homethem in a public school and they did
beautifully. I'll sign this -- IT schooling. Congratulations.
Do yo11 have questions abolll sa.
WORKED FOR ME
DEAR YOU: Wonderful, but it bill no OM to talk to? AM Lalukrs'·
wouldn't worlc for everybody. I'm booklet, "Sa and the Teen-Ager/
not giving home schooling blanket is franlc and to the poinl. Send ti
approval. Each situation requires self-addressed, long, busiiiUs-sizc
careful assessment Here's someone envelope and a check or money or-·
der for $3.65 (this includes postage
who agrees with you:
Dear Ann Landers· I 1!1110 years and halidling) 10: Teens, c/o Atui
Lalukrs, P.O. BOJC 11562, Chicago,
old. My mother~ me at home.
1U.
6061 1-{)562. (In CQIIQt/o, send
I have time to play with. friends. I
1!11 in a choir and take~violin and $4.45.)

Meigs SWCD holds regular meeting

Judge rules against doctors who
sought to unplug respirator of patient
investigate and act upon Helga
By TONY KENNEDY
Wanglie's conscientious, religious
Associated Press Writer
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - A and moral beliefs.·'
William Miller, an attorney for
judge on Monday turned down doc·
the
county-owned hospital, said
tors who wanted to unplug the respirator of an elderly, severely lhere likely will be no appeal.
. Doctors at the hospital routinely
brain-damaged woman despite the
yteld to famdy wtshes about lifewishes of her husband.
"I think she'd be proud of me," support systems. but rarely do famOliver Wanglie said when a judge ilies disagree when doctors recomgranted him p(jwer to make medi- mend terminating care, said Dr.
cal decisions for his wife of 54 Ronald Cranford, a medical ethicist
at the hospital.
years, Helga.
Doctors sought a conservator in
Doctors at Hennepin County
the
case because they believed
Medical Center had asked Dislrict
Wanglie
did not fully understand
Judge Palricia BeloiS to appoint an
independent conservator to decide his wife· s hopeless condition.
Cranford said it is morally wrong
the fate of the 86-year-old woman.
They hoped a conservator would 'to use a respirator on a severely
permit them to take her off the brain-damaged person who has no
machine that has helped keep her hope of recoverr.
"Society wtll have to look at
alive since May I990, when she
whether
it should support spending
feU into a persistent vegetative state
$800,000
for the care of someone
after a respiratory auack.
in
a
persistent
vegetative state
Belois ruled that such decisions
when
there
are
37
million people in
are best left to family members
thts
country
who
are under- or
when they are competent.
"Except for unconvincing testi- uninsured and without adequate
mony from some physicians and medical care,'' Cranford said
"Perhaps what you should do if
health tare providers at the Hennepin County Medical Center, there you want maximum care in this
is no evidence that Oliver Wanglie country is fall into a persistent vegis unable to perform the duties and etative state."
Mrs. Wanglie's medical costs
~esponsibilities of a guardian," the
have
been paid in full under the
JUdge wrote.
family
's insurance policy.
"He is in the best position to
Wanglie said he is holding to a

Ohio Lottery

District honored for bus safety
. The Eastern Local School Dislrict was one of three Ohio school
dtstrtcts honored with the Award of Merit from the Ohio School
Board Association for bus safety.
Accordmg to the June, 1991 issue of the OSBA's magazine
Copley Fairlawn City, Eastern Local and Urbana City school dis:
trtcts were honored for the 1991 school year.
. The .award IS gtven to bus fleets that have maintained a safe drivmg standard for three to four years.

··,

·.

Council meeting postponed
Due to Independence Day, S)'Iacuse ViUage Council will meet
orr July II rather than Thursday.

Beneficial to close Thursday, Friday
The .Beneficial finance office in Pomeroy will close on Thursday
and Fnday for th~ observance of Independence Day.
Continued on P.age 3

..
....__~--------~~------~~

former White House chief of/Staff
who shepherded David Souter
though the conftrmation process, to
help ~ith Thomas' nomination.
"We will review his record just
as closely as if he were not an
African•American,' ~ 'said Dr. BenjamTh L: Hoots, executive director
of the National Association for the
Advancement 'or Colored People.
But he also said that in deciding
whether to publicly support or
oppose Thomas· nomination, "we
have to compare what might happen if we go against him and he
doesn't make it; who will the president appoint?"
The abortion-rights group dislributed copies of Thomas' speech,
to the conservative Herita~e Foundation, in which he pratsed the
essay by Heritage trustee Lehrman.
"All persons cannot be
endowed both with the liberty to
take innocent life by abortion and
with the inalienable right to live,"
Lehrman wrote. Later in the essay
he referred to the abortion rights
granted in the 1973 decision as "a
spurious right born exclusively of
judicial supremacy with not a sin·
~le trace of lawful authority,
tmplicit or explicit, in the actual
text of history of the Constitution
itself."
On Monday, Thomas declined
to answer when asked his views on
abortion, saying he would not discuss any substantive issues before
his confirmation hearings.
Kate Michelman, executive
director of the National Abortion
Rights Action League, urged the
Senate to reject the nomination
" unless Judge Thomas explicitly
repudiates this legal philosophy
and clearly rec·ognizes that the
Constitution protects the fundamental right to privacy including
the right to choose."
Bush on Monday nominated the
43-year-old blade jurist, a member
of the U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit, to replace MarshalL
·
Civil rights groups will have to
decide wbether Thomas' record on
such issues is negative enough to
justify opposing his nomination to
succeed Marshall, the nation' s first
black Supreme Court justice,
Hooks said.
Thomas's humble beginnings as
the grandson of Georgia sharecropper. raised in a home without
indoor plumbing, would weigh in
his favor only if it seemed he had
drawn the right lessons from the
experience, activists said.
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said
anyone )Vho opposes Thomas "is
taking him on because they favor
quota$ at!!~ numerical preferences"
for mmonues.
Sen. John Danforth, R-Mo., for
whom Thomas worked as a legislative aide, defended the nominee's
commiunent to civil rights.
" Here is a person who knows
discrimination," Danforth, who
has tried to broker a co~promise
on civil rights legislation. told
reporters in St. Louis. "He has a
reaJ. commiunem to fighting injustice.''

-.

LEXINGTON, Ky . (AP) Uncertainty over the economics of
scrubbers is weighing in favor of
burning low-sulfur coal to comply
with ne-w..clean -air standards,
accordmg to the chairman of the
nation's ,second largest investorowned utility.
The choice has been forced by
provisions of the l990 Clean Air
Act that set new standards for pollutants, especially sulfur, which is
found in varying degrees in all
coal.
Coal from the Illinois basin,
which includes western Kentucky,
has particularly high levels of sulfur. Coal from the western United
States, like the Powder River basin
in Wyoming, has a lower sulfur
content and would allow utilities to
meet initial poUution standards.
The other method of complying
with poUution standards would be
to install devices dial remove the
sulfur from coal smoke, called
scrubbers.
"I really believe our industry
has the mind-set today to fuel switch to the maximum extent possible,"said Richard Disbrow, chief
executive officer of American
Eleclric Power Service Corp.
AEP, which is based in Columbus, Ohio. and operates utilities in
seven states with 20 coal-fued generating plants, has not made the
choice between scrubbers and "lowsulfur coal, bllt that day is fast
approaching, Disbrow said.
Many fear the result of that
choice could be a crippling, perhaps even mortal, blow to some
parts of the coal industry.
Disbrow said during the first
meeting of the Kentucky Coal
Authority that utilities have no
assurances that state regulatory
agencies will allow the recovery of
the costs of installing scrubbers.
And even if the costs can be recovered, it is usually not allowed until
after the scrubbers begin operations
year after construction begins.
Disbrow said utilities will likely
opt for lower sulfur coal initially
because it gives them more options
than building scrubbers.
"Because once you put the
brick and mortar together, you're
stuck for 30 vears," Disbrow said.

Chase ends in
wreck; two
are arrested
Two West Virginia men are in
the Meigs County Jail following a
police chase which took the subjects across the Ritchie Bridge at
Ravenswood, W.Va., and ended in
a wreck in Chester.
Meigs County Sheriff James M.
Soulsby reports that around I I p.m.
on Tuesday, West Virginia authorities began to pursue a yellow Pontiac Firebird foUowing a report that a
subject in the car had ftred several
shots in a Ravenswood trailer
court.
The subjects crossed the Ritchie
Bridge and headed toward Portland. After passing Harris Fagns in
Portland, lhe police pursuit ceased.
However, a West Vtrginia trooper
continued to follow the car.
· Meigs County Sheriffs Deputy
Robert Beegle, en route to a call at
Letart Falls, was notified by
R,avenswood Police of the pursuit.
Beegle then radiqed Deputy Ralph
Trussell, who was off duty, to head
for Long Bottom _
The subjects than headed for
State Route 7 via S.tate Route 248.
State Game Protector Keith Wood,
who was on State Route 248 and
w~ foll~wing the inci~ent on his
radio, watted for the vehtcles.
According to Soulsby, the car
came up behind Wood ' s vehicle
an.d attempted to pass by going off
the roadway on the right, up the
embankment and came back down
on the roadway, clipping the right •
front bumper of Wood's state vehicle.
The driver of the Pontiac failed
to stop ~~ the stop sign at the intersection of Routes 7 and 248 and
drove across Route 7, into thjllawn
of Rex Bailey; where the car struck
the comer of the Bailey home.
Continu~d on page 3

•

-'

"If you fuel-switch, you get aneth cr bite at lhe apple if your decisi11n
goes awry.'
'
The dilemma posed by lhe federa! pollution standards pits pans
of the coal mdustry agamst each
other as well as endangering the
whole industry, officials at the con-

ference said.
Many participants at the authoRty meeting, which included execO- ·
uves of some of the largest coal .
~ompanies in the nation, said Lhett
mdustsy had lost the public relalions battle leading up 10 the 1990
legislation.
·

THE CLOGGING SISTERS • Clogaing their way through
Elvis Presley's "GJ. Blues" at Thursday's July 4 celebration in
Middleport wiD be sisters, Love Batey, left, and Andrea Wist. The
patriottc sbow directed by Paulette Harrison will feature special
music by members or the Crossover Band, Richard Butcher
Sandy Butcher and Cheryl Walters. Servicemen attending wiD b~
recognized during the program.

Middleport ceremonies _will
start at 11:30 a.m., July 4
Fourth of July festivities in Middleport will begin with an II :30
a.m. parade carrying out the "For
God and Country" theme and conelude at 9:30 p.m. with a gigantic
fueworks display.
Bob Gilmore. president of the
Middleport Community Associa lion and chairman of the celebration, asks that all units for the
parade be in place at I I a.m. on
Ash Street in lower Middleport.
The parade, with Gen. James
Hartinger as parade marshal, will
move out at 11:30 a.m., proceed up
Art Lewis Blvd. to Gen. Hartinger
Blvd., out to Second St., and then

. on to Dave Diles Park where Lhe
trophies will be awarded.
. The evening program at the park
wtll begm at 6:30. Chuck Kitchen
will be emcee with Mayor Fred
Hoffman to introduce Gen
Hartinger, speaker. Entertainmeni
will include a palriotic performance
by the Shady River Shufflers and
the Crossover Band. The ftreworks
display will begin at9:30 p.m.
Other activities will include an
aU-day hymn sing at the American
Legion hall sponsored bY the Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post and a
fish fry at the Legion Park by the
firemen.

P~TRIOTIC PERFORMANCE · Tbese Shady River Sbul- ,
ners Mil carry out the "For .God and Country" theme or the Mid· .
dlep?rt July 4 cel!bration when they perform at 7:15 Thursday ,
eyen:ng at Dave Diles Park. The patriotic sbow will feature a 8 • •
c~l tribute to servicemen. Clogging to "Yankee Doodle Dan:l';.• :
wtll be, left to right, front, Ashley Hannahs, Andrea Krawsczyo ·
and Denise Cotterill, second row, Lara McCleary and Meggl'
Mc.Cieary, th~d row, Melissa Ramsburg, Sara Larkins, Susie Cot~
ter:U, and Jod•~ Sisson, and back, Daniel Young .

'

..

�,-··.

I

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DE\' OTE D TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-M4.SON ARE,\

~~MUlTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WI NGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A ME MBE R of The A\ sociated Press, Inland Dallv Press Associat ion and the American Newspaper Publishers Associat ion.

' They should
LETTERS OF" OP INION are welco me.

he less th an 300
word5 long. AI! Jpflers ar e subject to E."ditlng and must be signt"d wi th

name. address and telephone number. No un signed letters will be published. Letters should be in good taste. addressing issues. not pe rso nali-

Ties

Scrap tire problems
addressed in bill

...
I

I

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - State legislators may enact a law to help ease environmental and health problems caused by old tires tossed into streams and
diiChes around Ohio.
The House approved without dissent last week a bill to regulate collection and storage of scrap tires, as well as their disposal in landfills or
waste recovery facilities.
Rep. Wayne Jones , D-Cuyahoga Falls, the measure's chief sponsor.
said the need for the bill is demonstrated whenever piles of tires catch
fire, become eyesores or pose threaiS to public health.
He mentioned a tire fire in Lancaster that plagued the surrounding area
for months and said similar problems have been reported in other states.
Jones also cited studies showing that piles of old tire piles are a breeding
habitat for mosquitoes, and therefore, for disease.
He said about 120 minion discardr.
He estimated that 34 percent of the discarded tires are collected for salvage and 20 percent are put in landfills. ''We don't know what happens to
t)tc other 46 perccn~ " Jones said.
- The bill, described by iiS sponsor as " a comprehensive management
program that is needed by the state of Ohio," was sent to the Senate,
.where iiS sponso,r is expected 10 be Sen. Roy Ray, R-Akron.
: Jones and Ray have been working for several yean; to come up with a
;plan the state can afford.
• To finance the program, the biD sets a $750 registration fee for trans:pona!ion of tires. The fee is renewable every three years but exempiS
ticensed salvage dealers.
It sets a SO-cent fee on every wholesale-to-retail vehicle title transaction and a 25-cent-per-ton fee for tires disposed of within a county, with
the disposal fee split 60-40 among townships and counties.
. : Another provision would make public health the first priority when the
:0hio Environmental Protection Agency decides whether to clean up a pile
-or tires. It also would specify that the EPA's cleanup of a tire dump-is reasonable and necessary to guard against damage to a property'
. The bill allows property owners to sue anyone who creates a tire dump
on his or her property and sets criminal penalties for anyone transporting
J!lore than II tires unless the haulers are registered by the state.

'

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Wednesday, July 3, the !84th day of 1991. There are 181
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 3, 1863, the three-day Civil War Battle of Gcnysburg, Pennsylvania, ended in a major victory for the North as Confederate troops
retreated.
On this date:
In 1608, the city of Quebec was founded by Samuel de Champlain.
In 1775, General George Washington took command of the Continental Army at Cambridge, Massachusetts.
In 1890, Idaho became the 43rd state of the Union.
In 1898, the U.S. Navy defeated a Spanish fleet in the hart&gt;or at Santiago, Cuba, during the Spanish-American War.
In 1930, Congress created the U.S. Veterans Administration.
In 1950, American and North Korean forces clashed for the first time
in the Korean War.
In 1962, Algeria became independent after 132 years ot French rule.
In 1971 , 20 years ago, singer Jim Morrison of The Doors died in Paris
at age 27.
In 1976, Israel launched its daring mission to rescue about 100 passengers and Air France crew members being held at Entebbe Airport in
Uganda by pro-Palestinian hijackers.
In 1978, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled the Federal Communications
Commission was within its authority to reprimand New York rndio station
WBAJ-FM for broadcasting a George Carlin comedy routine.
· In 1979, Dan White, convicted of voluntary manslaughter in the shooting deaths of San Francisco Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, was sentenced 10 seven years and eight months in prison. (He
served five years.)
In 1988, the USS Vincennes shot down an Iran Air jetliner over the
Persian Gulf, killing all 290 passengers and crew, after the crew of the
Vincennes erroneously identified the plan~ as an Iranian F-14 fighter.

I
SECONDHA.I'lD
SMOKING SECTION

qr;.._~
jl) 1991 by HEA. Inc ,

..

Congress' revolving door is still turning
WAS-HINGTON - Former rent House and those who quit after
Congressman Ronnie Flippo is the 1990 election are exempt
Apparently, interest groups and
enjoying the fortunes of failure.
When the five-term Democrat businesses are willing to pay big
from Alabama ran for govema- last money for someone who is fresh
year -and lost. he was out of a job. out of the seat of power. Flippo, for
Now he is making more than he example, is earning more than
would have as either a member of $150,000 a year from clients
Congress or a governor, and he's including Aema Life and Casualty,
working for himself. Aippo started RJR Nabisco and Norfolk and
his own consulting business in Southern Corp.
According to lobbying records
Washin~n, selling his experience
on Capttol Hill to interest groups reviewed by our associates Scott
and businesses that will pay top Sleek and Jan Moller, Flippo's
dollar for a former mover and shak- company, R.G. Flippo and Associates, helps clieniS with tax-related
er.
Aippo is one of a few members matters. It is no coincidence that
of Congress who quit or lost re- Aippo focused on tax issues as a
election bids last November but member of the House Ways and
never left town. After they toiled Means Committee.
Republican Arlan Stangeland
for years in government service,
the most important thing on their lost his re-election bid in Minnesoresumes is the message between ta last year. But Stangeland isn't
the lines - that they know their standing in the unemployment lines
way around the good-old-boy net- today . He is a lobbyist worlting on
work.
an issue that was one of his pet proUnder a new "revolving door" jects during his last year in
ethics law, members of the House Congress. Stangeland the congresswho leave office must wait a year man got his fellow members of
before lobbying on Capitol Hill. Congress to approve a federal
But there is a big loophole in the turkey research lab in his district.
law. It only applies to members Now Stangeland the lobbyist is try·
who took office after Jan. I of this ing to get federal funds to cover
year. That means most of the cw-

ongoing funding for the facility .
His client is a local development
authority.
Republican Tom Tauke tried to
move up from the House to the
Senaie last year, but Iowa voters
said no. Now Tauke has teamed up
with another member of Congress
who lost his seat last year, Democrat Doug Walgren of Pennsylvania. The two of them own Tauke,
Walgren and Associates, specializing in medical research, recycling
and telecommunications clients.
They both have experience in those
issues from their committee assignments in Congress.
Jim Courter, a Republican,
resigned his New J_ersey congressional seat last year and, until May,
was a $3,000-a-month lobbyist for
Grumman Corp., a major defense
conlraetor. Courter wisely dropped
Grumman as a client when he
agreed to chair the Pentagon's
base-closings commission, which
will be another nice line on his
resume. Courter used to sit on ihe
House Armed Services Committee.
Democrat Marvin Leath, a former member of that committee
when he represented Texas in
Congress, now represents Martin

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
Mariena, Textron and General
Dynamics in Congress. Leath
defended lobbying· as a worthwhile
profession, and told us that concerns about (ormer lawmakers
using their influence are
overblown. "It's really not the
good-old-boy network that it's
made out to be," he said. If those
defense contractors didn't hire
Leath for the connections he made
while in Congress, perhaps they
hired him for his prior credentials.
He was a salesman, a high school
coach and a banker.
lobbyists argue that it's more
than just connections. BecQming
hot commodity on the Washington
schmooze network is hard work.
Stangeland told us he is having a
difficult time drumming up business. ''The argument that congressmen are worth their weight in gold
when they leave office is a bunch
of malarkey."
TIMID POLICY - The American economy is shadowed by massive personal and federal debt
fueled by leveraged buyouts,
excessive real-estate loans, government spending and the savingsand-loan bailout That has brought
regulator pressure on banks that
have tightened up their loan policies. President Bush could take
bold actions to correct the course of
the economy, but he is listening to
his political advisers who tell him
not to jeopardize his popularity by
doing anything controversial. That
means the recession is not likely to
be over soon. There will be a brief
economic spurt this fall, but it will
be followed by a deeper economic
slide. By election time next year,
Bush may be wishing he had li stened to advisers who were a little
more daring and creative.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
American economy is no longer
producing high-paying ~obs for
unskilled, blue-collar workers.-But
the American education system
keeps churning out under-educated
graduates suited for the jobs that no
longer exist. Close to 40 percent of
Japf.!ese and German workers have
the skills to compete for high-tech
jobs. Only 20 percent of.American
workers have those same skills.
The solution is to emphasize math
and science skills in our schools so
that when our children grow up,
they aren't frozen out of the job
market and our country isn't frozen
out of the international market

a

Achieving eq,uality is tricky business
Since I was a teen-ager I've
been hearing men ask, "What do
women want, anyway?"
I came of age at the same time
as the women's movement, and I
have witnessed a good long line of
perplexed men. But I've never
blamed them for being confused,
even when I've wanted to run my
car over a few of them. Society just
doesn't change overnight, and you
can't take a guy who grew up with
things one way and make ,him
immediately understand why things
ought to be different, even if they
ought to be.
So I've always been prelly sympathetic. First, as I said, I understand why they're confused. And
second, to tell ·ern the truth, we're
kind of new at this women's liberation thing, too. We don't always
know what we want, either.
This conundrum has been wellchronicled in the media: One repon
talks about women soldiers'
demand for equal treatment in the
armed forces, and another shows
women railing against the possitility that women may face the same
combat as men. One magazine airs

a junior-high girl's fight 10 join the percent. Something empowering is
boys' football team, while another happening in women's colleges.
lameniS the double bind a career
Mills students won, and Mills
woman faces when she also wants remained exclusive. Then the Perto be a mother.
sian Gulf War brought the issue of
This past year must have been equality in battle to the ediJorial
especially tough for the already- pages, and women fought each
confused. A little over a year ago, other over the issue as ferociously
women students at Mills College in as they fought men who differed
Oakland, Calif., protested vigor- with !hem. And in late spring, 8ously when trustees wanted to year-old Margo Mankes went to
improve the school's financial pic- court seeking the right to attend
ture by turning MiUs' undergradu- Boy Scout camp. Her lawyer·
ate progrnm from women-only to argued that the arts and crafts at
co-ed. The students argued, and Girl Scout camp bored her, and that
some statistics give their arguments keeping her out of Boy Scout camp
power, that co-educational educa- was causing her psychological
tion tends to produce women who harm. But a federal judge refused
"learn their place," or who at least to force the Scouts to admit her,
learn well the idea that they saying that the matter would better
shouldn't expect to achieve equally be decided at a trial than at an
with men.
emergency hearing.
One example cited by Mills stuIf Margo or some other girl wins
dents is that nearly half of the the right to attend Scout camp, it's
women now in Congress are gradu- not hard to conjecture the question
ates of women's colleges. That that would form naturally in the
statistic becom~ even more stun- mind of one of the already-con ning in light of the fact that the per- fused: If a little girl gets into the
centage of all women who graduate Boy Scout camp, and then grows
·Jrom all-female colleges is only 2 up and goes to Mills College, will
she be willing to let her male

By Sarah Overstreet
campmates in, too'! And if she
doesn't, and one of her campmates
has his bean set on being educated
in one of Mills' programs because
he thinks it's better than other
schools' programs, will refusing to
let him enroll al Mills cause him
psychological harm?
We're facing the same p~ilo ­
sophical dilemma with calls in the
black community to segregate
black children in superior schools
so a.) educators can combat some
of the societal influences that give
black children an inferior education
and b.) to keep the children from
inferring feelings of being second
class, as so often happens in predominantly white schools. It is discrimination by race, yes, but what
if it's for a good cause?
Our society has undergone vast
sociological changes over the last
20 years. Correctly balancing the
rights of self-determination and
free association against the legal
guarantees of equality and non-discrimination is going to take a while
lon~er.

Which road should Democrats take?

Berry's World
I

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 3, 1991

"How d'ya like that? For years he grew marijuana .... Now we're set to
move on him and look- lettuce and red bell peppers ... "

! Today in history
!

I

Wednesday, J4ly 3, 1991

't

An extremely interesting debate guish themselves sharply from the
is being conducted among Demo- Republicans, and offer policies that
cratic leaders over the right direc- are recognizably different
All this, as I say, is keenly remition for their party to take if it is to
niscent
of the battle waged between
restore its fortunes. I am watching
it with considerable sympathy, for liberal and conservative Republithe Republican Party conducted a cans (roughly, the Rockefeller and
very stmilar debate itself, years Goldwater camps) during the late
I 950s and early '60s. As a conserago.
vative,
my sympathies are with
on one side is the Democratic
Clinton,
Robb and the DLC, on the
Leadership Council, consisting of
same
theory
that prompted The
relatively conservative DemocrniS
- Gov. Bill Clinton of Arkansas New York Times to prefer Rockeand Sen. Charles Robb of Virginia, feller over Goldwater: If he prefor example - who believe the vailed", the parties would be relaDemocratic Party must shake off tively similar,· and The· Times
the control currently exercised over would be in the hapjly position of
it by various powerful special-· winning, whichever pany won the
.
interest groups and come to be general election.
But I must admit that. in purely
identified instead with the family
values that are dear to the hearts of strategic terms, I think Metzenbaum, Simon and the CDV have
the American middle class.
On the other side is the Coali- the better of the argwnent There is
tion for Dembcratic Values, repre- little profit for any party in merely
. sented by such staunch lib«als as saying "Me too." As long as conOhio Sen. Howard Metzenbaum servative principles continue to
and IIJinois Sen. Paul Simon. They command strong public support,
argue that it's folly for , the and the Republican Party continues
Democrats to try 10 ape the Repub- to espouse the!R. the voters will
licans: If the American people want keep on putting Republicans in the
conservative policies they will vote Oval Office.
But no lease on political life is
Republican. The Democrats' only
hope, as they see it, is to distin· . eternal. as the conservative Repub-

•

By William A. Rusher
licans so brilliantly demonstrated in
breaking liberalism's long hold on
the White House. First, they did
their homework
economic theo·
ry, until they could speak knowledgeably m:xJ confidently about the
benefits of a free market. Then they
identified 'themselves with the concerns of the " social conservatives," who were formerly
Democrats and independents but
were prepared to vote Republican
to express their support for the
"family values" and related causes. The result was the great coalition that has put the Republicans in
the Oval Office for five out of the
last six presidential terms.
The trouble, from the standpoint
of the liberal Democrats in the
CDV, is that it is going to be devilishly h;lrd for them to imitate the
conservative Republican feat. The
only economic theory that they
might conceivahly turn to as a rival
of conservatism's enthusiasm for
(ree enterprise is some form of
diluted socialism (in American
terms, governmental activiSm), and
as luck would have it socialism is

on.

,_

badly discrealleO, JUSt now, as a
solution for economic problems.
Nor does any substantial segment of the Republican coalition
seem ready to break loose and join
the Democrntic Party. Republicans
who favor "abonion rights" may
be uneasy with their party's policy
on that issue, but it is far from clear
that they are ready to switch parties . Moreover, there is increasing
evidence that legalized abortion is
not a "killer issue" for its opponents, provided their opp&lt;?sition is
seen by the voters as pnncipled and
sincere.
So the De;nocrats may simply
have to wait, opportunizing on any
issues that float by, until something
talces the American people's minds
off the great issues on which they
agree with the GOP:

Thought for Today:
"Our ignorance of history catises us to slander our own tinles. • Gustave Flaubert, French author
(1821-1880).

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local briefs...

Rain should not interfere with fireworks

Continued from page 1

By The Associated Press
The weatherman should cooperate with most communities in Ohio
planning Fourth of July frreworks
displays tonight and Thursday
night Forecasters say there's only
·a slight chance of rain both nights.
Daytime weather will be basically unchanged: warm and humid.
It could be a few degrees coofer on
Thursday.
Some thunderstorms are possible Thtirsday afternoon and could
include brief heavy downpours.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 101 (legrees in 191 I.
The record low was 50 in 1968.
Sunrise this morning was at
6:07 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:04
p.m.
By The Associated Press
Rain and thunderstorms prevailed over much of the nation
early today wbile the West Coast
remained dry lfitd clear.
Rain fell early today in North

Parade change announced
The Fourth of July Parade in Rutland will proceed from Brick
and Depot StreeiS, through town, to Beech Grove Road.
It was originally announced that the parade would end at Salem
S,treeL

Two-car accident investigated
. A two-car accident on Mile Hill Road in Letart Township was
1nvesugated on Tuesday evening by th~ Meigs County Sheriffs
Department.
According to the accident report, the accident took place near
Mt. Monah Church. Larry E. Powell, 22, of Racine, was northbound in a 1982 Plymouth and was struck by a southbound vehicle
driven b~ Sue Grace of Racine. MFs. Grace's 1984 Mercury skidded
on the shck road and the rear of the vehicle went sideways into the
Powell vehicle.
Racine fire department and squasd were on the scene, and transported a passenger, Tim Powell, to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Racine fire truck damaged in wreck
The Meigs County Sheriffs Department repons that a ftre truck
was damaged in a Monday accident.
The accident took place at II p.m. on County Road 28. According to the report, Troy Rife of Racine was backing the Racine Volunteer Fire Department tanker out of the lane at a ftre scene to let
another piece of ftre equipment out of the drive. The tanker then
drifted back ahd struck the right rear fender of a 1991 Ford truck
owned by Roger Manuel, a member of the ftre department.
Light damage was sustained by both vehicles.

Walter Glenn Cartwright of
Cookville, Tenn., formerly of
Clifton and Masqn, died Tuesday,
July 2, 1991, in the Holzer Medical
Center Emergency Room.
Arrangements are incompfete
and will be announced by the
Foglesong Funeral Home.

Forrest Van Meter
Forrest "Buck" Van Meter, 69,
of Route 3, Racine, died Tuesday,
July 2, 1991 at his residence fol lowing a brief iUness.
He was a state highway worker
and township trustee for many
years. Born on Dec. I , 1921 at
Portland, he was the son of Jake
Van Meter and Maud Brewer Van
Meter.
He is survived by a daughter, Jo
Ann Crisp, a grandson and his
wife, Alan and Kimberly Crisp,
and a step granddaughter, Miranda
Simpkins, all of Racine.
Besides his pareniS, he was preceded in death by his wife, Audrey
Beaver Van Meter, five brothers,
four sisters, his mother and fatherin-law, and a sisler-in-law.
He was a member of the
Bethany United Methodist Church,
a World War II veteran of the U. S.
Army. and a member of the Disabled American Veterans. He was
active in the Southern Local School
District basketball program.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home. Kenny Baker will
officiale and burial will be in the
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday and 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Friday. In lieu of flowers ,
donations may be made to the
American Cancer Society.
'

heid an Associate Degree in lndl!strial Management from Marshall University. He held an ICS
Diploma-Machinist. He was a U.S.
Army veteran serving in World War
II as a Staff Sgt. He was also a
member of the Minturn Lodge #19,
A.F. &amp; A.M., and the Beni Kedem
Temple.
In addition to his mother, survivors include his wife of 44 years,
Viola Elizabeth (Kayser) Darst; one
son, Robert David Qarst or Point
Pleasant; three daughters, Susan
Murphy and Mrs. John (Calhy)
Wilson, both of Point Pleasant, and
Mrs. Melvin (Donna) Baumgardner
of Coshocton, OH.; one sister,
Sally Darst of Point Pleasant; and
seven grandchildren.
Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Thursday at the First
Church of the Nazarene in - Point
Pleasant, with the Rev. Larry Burns
and the Rev. Joseph Godwin
officiating. Burial will follow in the
Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleasant.
Vi~iting hours will be held at the
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home Wednesday from 2 to 9 p.m.
The body wiU be taken to the ·
church one hour prior to services.
Those wishing to do so may
make donations to the First Church
of the Nazarene Building Fund.

Ada Bowen

South Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
slight chance of thunderstorms.
Low in the upper 60s. Chance of
rain 30 percent. Thursday, partly
.-.. nny with a slight chance of thunderstorms. High 85-90. Chance of
rain 30 percent.

Chase ••• Continued from page 1
The driver, later identified as
Tommy Cornell Phillips, 24, of
Ravenswood, climbed out of the
window and fled on foot. He was
later apprehended near the scene

(USPS 145-9001

EMS units have 12 calls

and taken to the Meigs County Jail.
A passenger in the vehicle, Rick
Asbury, 30, of Hurricane, W.Va.,
was arrested at the scene and was
also transported to the jail.

Two vehicles were damaged in
an accident on North Second SL. in
Middlepon Tuesday afternoon.
Middleport Police reported that
Carol Cantrell, Gallipolis, opened
the door of her parked van into the
path of a car driven by Marjorie
Walburn, Middleport. There was
heavy damage to the left side of the
Cantrell van, and moderate to the
right side of the Walburn vehicle.
There were no citations in the
accident which occurred at 2:05
p.m. Tuesday afternoon.

Aame Fellowship to meet
The Flame Fellowship Chapter
will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m . at
the Faith Full Gospel Church in
Long Bottom. Hazel Life, Little
Hocking, will be the speaker. The
public is invited to attend.
Hymn sing
There will be a hymn sing at the
Faith Full Gospel Church in Long
Bonom on Friday at 7:30 p.m .
Refreshments will be served and
the public is invited to attend.
Smorgasbo{d dinner
There will be a smorgasbord
dinner at the Lottridge Community
Center on Sunday from noon to 2
p.m. The cost is 45 for adults and
$2.50 for children under 12 . The
public is invited.
Cheerleading camp
The Waterford Varsity Cheerleaders will sponsor a cheerleading
camp on July 22-24 from 9 a.m. to
3 p.m. at Waterford High School.
Squads and individuals from Pee
Wee on up are invited to participate . New cheers , chants and

SCHOOL CLASS RfNGs

thr o u ~n Frida y.

Comp any!Mull !mE&gt;d la. tn c ..

Licenses granted
Marriage licenses have been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to Charles Edward Meadows, Jr., 26, Mason, W.Va., and
Charlene Marie Cadle, 20, Middleport; Roy Walter Dowell, 48, Rutland, and Mary Sue Engle, 49,
Portland; Ralph Stoney Settle, 36,
Racine , and Charlene Elizabeth
Black, 36, Racine; Harold Leon
Nutter, 47, Tuppers Plains, and
Rita Ann Nutter, 46, Tuppers
Plains: Charles Oshel Neal, Jr., 22,
Middlepon, and Joy Belh Stobart,
20, Racine; Timothy Allen Coats,
31, Racine, and.Linda Sue Willcinson, 42, Racine; Chad Lewis Taylor, 19, Syracuse. and RebeC"ca
Dawn Evans, 20, Racine; Gregory
William Cunningham, 22,
Pomeroy, and Lisa Jean Darst, 18,
Middleport; Randall David
Markley , 29, Pi ckaway County,
and Frankie Charles, 40, Pomeroy;
and Paul Eu gene Evans , 56 ,
Racine, and Avonelle Aleshire, 51,
Pomeroy.

BY YOUR

SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS

Aspirin and alcohol are a bad combination . even on a full stomach,

cond cl &lt;iss pos tage paid at PomProy.

according to research reported in the Journal of the American Modi ~
cal Association . Aspirin seems to inhibit the stomach'S ability to
break down the alcohol, so more of it goes directly into the bloodstream .

MPmbE'r: ThP Associall:l(l Prrss. In·
land Dail y Pr PSs Assoc!a li on and !hr
Ohio New spaper Associ ation . National
AdverrtslnR: Reprt?SE&gt;ntatlvl?. Branham
NPwspapl?r SalE'S, 733 Third Avenu£',
NPw York . Nrw Yo rk 10011 .

ON

POST'MASTER: Send addrPSs chang£&gt;S
to ThP Dall v Se-ntinel. 111 Court Sl. .
Poi'TIProy. Oh.to 45769.

MIRAGE

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor RoutE'

&amp;SHANDELL

On e Wp(lk ..

....

. ... .... .. $1.60

Shandell

OnP Mo n!h ..
... .. .. S6. 95
On&lt;' YPar .. .. ..
.. SR3.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
... 2S Ct&gt;nt s
Dally .
Subscr ibers not drsi rin~ 1o pay thN'ar rlt&gt;r mav rf"mil In ad van ce dir ect to
TheDativ St&gt;nlln el on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Cr.f'dit will be given car rier each

Remember your high
school days with
sparkle and style.

IOK YeUow Gold

Wt"E'k .

No subscriptions by mall permitte-d In
areas wh err homE' carrier _.rv lcE" Is
ava llablf' .

Capsaicin, made from hot peppers, seems to offer rei tef from arthritis
pain, say researchers at Albert Einstein Colfogo of Medicine. Topical
use of pepper -packed cream cut pain by a third for those with osteoarthritis, by more than half for tho rheumatoid arthritis group .

Mirage

OFFER ENDS AUGUST 24.

t99t.

OFFERED EXCLUSIVELYBY

R. JOHNS, LTD.

dances will be taught. Cost is $1 5
per person and participants must
contact Patty Wagner on or before
July 15 at 614-749-3108.
·
Vacation Bible School slated
Vacation Bible School for children will be held from July 8th to
12th at First Presbyterian Church in
Middlepon from 10 a.m. to noon .
Lunch is provided and all children
are invited.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
I&lt;H~I·~::~•!

446 ·4524

U .OO BAfiGAIII I¥.TIHE£S SATURDAl l SUNDAY
U . OO lARta !N

NI~T

TUE SM V

7: 10,9 : 30 Ml l Y
SAl/SU N AATJ NH S
I : 10 .1 :)0

'"
7: 00,9 : JO DIII LT

sAr's.uN MA_rJ Nm
] .00 , 3 . )0

~~- Il l

I

KEVIN ~OSTN ER

RoBIN
Hooo
r.&lt;l OI THI.'o'ti
•usm . lla..~I•-IGII'I .

7 ·20 D#I I LY
'i.AT/'i.LIN "'-'Tlfri[ [S

I :20

I ; H~

''1'1.

' \

I

\ l'i'

1\\ ~ \ 1
',.

k. l '· r1[· I t t L'

All medication that you inngest - even toothpaste - carries an eKpi·
ration date. Now's a good time to clean out your medicine cabinet
and discard old drugs and other old health products .
Clean out the medicine cabinet - then resto,ck at Swisher-Lohse
'Pharmacy . Make us your health headquarters.

SWISHER lOH5E
Ph;Jr moe y

can mal;g tfic difference'
Join us
in mding Ylmtrica safer
MADD welcomes men,
women, and young people
who are concerned and want
to do something positive
We all need each other
if we are to win this fight
for our precious live s!

CALL NOW!

992-5277
Our First Meeting Is
JULY 10, 1991
At 1:00 P.M. AT

Health Recovery
Services, Inc.
lOlA W. 2nd Steet
Pomeroy, Ohio

Mall Subscription&amp;
lnshte Melp County

t J Werks ..... . ..
.. ........ $21.84
26 WPeks .... .....
.. ·.. .. · U 3.16
~2 We ek s .................... ... .......... $84. 76
Out!lide Melp County
13 Weeks ..... ...... . .
.. 123. 40
26 Weeks ....... . .. .. . .. ...... U5.5052 Wel?ks . ~.. .. .... ..
.. ......... $88.40

'.
'I

II

I

PHARMACY
TOPICS

Pomt&gt;rov. Ohi o 45769. Ph . 9~)2 - 2 1 56 . Se-

Ohi o.

Moore residence . At 4:59 p.m.,
Rutland squad was sent to Nelso n
Road for David McDonald , wh o
was taken to Grant Medical Center
by Life Flight. At 7:01 p.m ,
Pomeroy squad went 10 Dark Hollow Road . Dale Riffle was taken to
Veterans. Racine ~lion , at 7: 12
p.m., went to Mile Hill Road for an
auto accident. Tim Pow e ll was
taken to Veterans. Sue Grace was
treated but not tran sport ed. At
II :02 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
Mechanic Street and tran sport ed
Anna Baxter to Veterans.
On Wednesday at 2:28a .m.,
Pomeroy unit s went to the
Pomeroy levee for a vehicle n:cov ery. At 5:13 p.m. Pomeroy squad
went to Pomeroy Nur-.sin g and
Rehabilitation Center for Ruth
Holmberg. She was taken to O'Bicness Memorial Hospital.

,'. I

A genetically engineered human protein seems to cut significantly
the death rate from septic shock, which is an overwhelming infection
of the bloodstream. The drug was given special FDA approval for .l'se
in the Persian GuH war .
)

A OIYL'IIon of Multlmt"dll\, Jn,·.

Plains, along the Califorr.ia coast
ami the lower Great Lakes region;
in the 90s throughout the Midwest.
the mid-Atlantic region and the
South; and over 100 in central Cali fornia and the Desen Southwest.
The high temperature for th e
niuion Tuesday was 118 degrees at
Borrego Springs, Calif.

__ Meigs announcements_

Middleport Court Vehicles damaged
in accident

Publ l shro rvc ry aftrrnoon . Monday
111 Court Sl. . Po·
m eroy. Oh io. by lhf' Ohio VaiiPv Pub·

Beckley, W.Va.; 94 degrees in San
Francisco; 109 degrees in Tucson ,
Ariz.; and 58 degrees in St. Paul,
Alaska.
.
High temperatures today were
expected I&lt;) be in the 60s and 70s in
the extreme Northwest and the
upper oGreat Lakes region; in the
80s in the Nonheast, the northern

UniiS of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded
to 12 calls on Tuesday and early
Wednesday.
At 8:18a.m. on Tuesday, Syracuse unit went to .Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehab Center for Iva Guess,
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Ho spital. At 9: 5 I a.m ..
Pomeroy squad went to Sumner
Road. Carl Findling was taken to
Veterans.
At 12:01 p.m., Syracuse unit
went to Richard Road. Helen
Hysell was taken to Veterans. At
12:23 p.m., Racine squad responded to College Street for Russell
Extended forecast:
Radcliffe. Radcliffe was taken to
Friday through Sunday :
Holzer Medical Center . At 4:08
Warm and dry through the peri- p.m., Syracuse unit went 10 Welchod. Highs in the 80s Friday and town Hill. Tammy Klein was taken
Saturday, then mid-80s to low 90s to Veterans. A!4 :18 p.m., Bashan
Sunday. Lows in the 60s Friday unit was called to Perry Run Road
and Saturday, then mid-60s to low for a structure fire at the Gary
70s Sunday.

HOUSE DAMAGED • The borne of Rex Bailey at Chester was
damaged '!then a Pontiac Firebird, driven by Tommy Cornell
Phillips of Ravenswood, crashed into it late Tuesday night. The
wreck ended a bigb-speed cba~e through Eastern Mftlls County
which began in Ravenswood. Bailey, and a p~nger in the car,
Rick Asbury, are now housed in tbe Meigs County Jail.

Ada D. Bowen, 80, of Apple
Grove, died Tuesday, July 2, 199 1,
at the home of her sister, Marie
Donahue, following a long illness.
Four were fmed and five others
Born June 23, 1911 in Yawkey,
forfeited
bonds in the court of MidWV, she was a.daughter of the late
dleport
Mayor
Fred Hoffman TuesJ.W.
and Johanna
(Hardy)
day
nighL
Montcas~ c. She was also preceded
Fined were Kelly D. Winter ,
in death by her husband, Harry M.
Nitro,
W. Va., $10 and costs, runBowen in 1988, three brothers and
ning a stop sign; Julie L. Maxey,
four sisters.
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, expired
She was a member of the Glen- operator's
Robert Darst
license: Shirley Cole,
wood Church of Christ and also at- Pomeroy, $100
and costs, assault;
Robert "Bob" Curtis Darst, 68, tended lhe Westside Church in Ricky B. Reeves, Pomeroy, $425
of Point Pleasant, died Tuesday, Pomeroy, OH. She was a retired and costs and three days in jail ,
July2 1991 , athisresidence.
dietary supervisor at Pleasant Val- physical control of a motor vehicle
He 'was born July 27, 1922, in ley Hgspital with 14 years service.
while under the influence of alcoHenderson, the son of Gladys Erma
Survivors include a son, Charles hol or drugs, $10 and costs, no
(Kelly) Darst and the late Roben , • MoniCas~e of Apple Grove; two motorcycle endorsement. and $10
Carr Darst.
' ' sisters, Marie Donahue of Point and costs, operating a motorcycle
He was also preceded in death by Pleasant and Juanita Hazlett of Ap- ·without eye protection.
one granddaughter, Ginny Wilson, pie Grove; a brother, Ray
Forfeiting bonds were Michael
and two half-brothers, Miles and Montcastle of Arizona and several L. Lambert, Rutland , $5 I, speedJames Darst.
nieces and nephew s.
ing; Robert N. Foreman,
He was a retired maintenance
Service will be at 1:30 p.m. Langsville, $60 on squ~iqg tires
supervisor for the Ohio Valley Saturday, July 6, at the Wilcoxen and $60 on fictitious tags; Donald
Electric Corp., Kyger Creek Plant, Funeral Home with Pastor Landon R. Motley, Gahanna, $60 on runCheshire. He retired in July 1987. Hope officiating. Burial will be in ning a stop sign; Clayton B. Nagle,
He was a graduate of Point Pleasant Beale Chapel Cemetery, Apple Gallipolis, $460, physical control
High School's Class of 1940 and Grove.
of a motor vehicle wh. ile under the
Catting hours will be on Friday, influence of a alcohol or drugs;
July 6, from 7-9 p.m. at the funeral Richard E. Stoeker, Jr., Gallipolis,
home.
$60, running a stop sign.
The Daily Sentind

li s hln~

Dakota and Minnesota, and thunderstorms rolled across Texas,
Louisiana. New Jersey, Delaware,
Maryland, Virginia and the coast of
North Carolina.
Thunder.&gt;torms were forecast in
the Great Lakes region and central
Aorida.
Hot, dry weather was 10 continue along the West Coast, with .cooler temperatures in the Pacific
Northwest.
The Northeast was cloudy early
today, with scattered showers in
New England.
On Tuesday evening, thunderstorm winds gusted to 62 mph at
Mobile, Ala. High winds caused
damage in Kentucky, Arkansas,
Indiana. and Texas.
Large hail fell at Walton, Ind. ,
near Mobile, Ala., and near Col orado Springs, Colo. There was
golf ball-sized hail near Mayfield,
Ky.
High temperature records for
Tuesday included 89 degrees at

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

--Area deaths-Walter Cartwright

The Dally Sentlnei""""Page-3

.,

.

�•• '

Wednesday, Ju

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

:New Yorks beats Cleveland
8-5 for fourth straight win

Wednesday, July 3, 1991

Page-4

Cincinnati downs Atlanta 6-3
...\

By TOM SALADINO
AP Sports Writer
ATLANTA (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds are rolling and
Barry Larkin says there's no secret
ingredienL
The Reds swept to a 6-3 victory

1·

Scoreboard

In the majors ...
. ·r·
'

I

I
l

-I

Tuesday night a·ver the slumping allowed only four hits in seven
Atlanta Braves for their seventh innings, striking out four and walkvictory in eight games.
ing one.
It was the ninth time in the last
Chris Sabo supplied the big
blow with a three-run homer and 10 games that the Reds had hit at
Mariano Duncan lidded a solo shot least two homers in a game.
while Jack Armstrong (6-6)
" That's a good recipe. If we
continue to do that, we'D be okay,"
said a smiling Larkin, who had a
single and RBI in sending the
Braves to their fourth loss in a row.
"Everybody started out slow,"
'
OeShield•, Montreal, .
Louia, 47; Samuc.l, Loa
Larkin
said of the-defending world
Gwynn, Son Diogo, 46.
•
champions, who have now won 16
RBI - Johnton, New York, 58; W.
C!adt, s.., Fnncio&lt;:o, 17; Knok, l'hilldd·
of 22. "We got pitching early, then
phil , S4; l111tice, Atlanta, 51; McGriff,
we slarted hitting and the pitching
S.n Dieao. 50; Bondt, Plltsburah, 49;
Mumy, l...ot: AnaeJca, 49.
wasn'tthere.
IDTS - T. GwyM , San Dieao. 11 2;
"But now we're getting the
Samuel, l...ol Anaelca, 93; C&amp;ldcron, Mm·
pirchin~ and the hitting. Everybody
trW, 90; J01c., ~l. Louis, 8tr, Sandberg,
Chicaao, 89; ~- fcm•n dcz, San Oic8o,
is cliclcing now," he said.
85; O.lkll, OUcaao. ss .
.
Larlciit, who had hit five homers
DOUBLES - Jo1e, S t. Louis, 24 ,
Bonlll•, Plltaburah, 11; M c R~yn old s, "
in
his
last four games before TuesNew Yolk, 20; T. Gwynn, Stn Diego, 20;
day night and was the National
Morrlt, Cincinnati, 19; L. Gon.u lez,
HoultOn, 18; Zeile. SL Lwit, 11; Jwtice,
League player of the week, relinAtllnta , 17 ; O'Neill , Clnc:lnnatl, 17;
quished
the hilling role to Saba
Sandq, Chicago, 17.
against
the
Braves.
TRIPLE.'i - T Gwynn , San Diego, 8;
Lankford, St. Lou is, 6; Fr.lder, San FranSabo, who now has six home
ciaco. 6; L. Gonzalez, Houston . 5; Kruk.
runs and 22 RBI in his last 22
Philadelphia, 5; Coleman, New Yotk., S;
M. Th001peoo,St. LoolJ, 5.
games, turned a 3-1 game iniO a 6HOME RUNS - Johnson, New York,
1 rout wilh his 12th homer of the
18; O'Neill, Clnc:lnnall, 15; McGriff,
San Dieao. IS ; G . Bell, Chic ago, 15 ;
season off Braves' left-hander
Gant, Atlanta, 14; Larkin, Clnclnnltl,
Charlie Leib!lllldt (7-6).
1~; W. Cl ark , S•n Fran cisco , 13 ;
"Sabo hits everybody," said
Mitchell, S~n Franciaco, 13; Sandberg,
Olicaao. 13; Brcx&amp;s, New Yor:k, 13.
Larkin.
"l:le can just hit."
STOLEN BASES - Ni• on, Atlanta,
"He's done a heck of a job for
40; Gruaom , Montreal, 37; DeS hields,
M0e1t:real, 36; Coleman, New Yodr. , 33;
us in the cleanup spot against left·
Lankford, St. Louia, 21 ; Calderoo, Monies," said Reds' manager Lou
treal. 20; Bondt , Plltaburah, 19 ; 0
Smith. s, Louil. 19.
•
Piniella of Sabo. "It seems like he
PITCHING {7 deci.siona) - R. Mu·
likes it there."
tine:&lt;, Loo Angel... 11 ·3, .786, 2.l8: Cu·
Sabo hits in the No. 6 spot in the
pm1tcr, S1. Lou.ia, 7-2, .778 , 3.26; Rljo,
Cincinnati, 6-l, .751), 2.66; Gllvine, Atlineup
against right-banders.
lanta, 11-4, .733, 2.06; Sampcn, Mootrc.a.l,
"It don't matter where I bat,"
S-2, .71 4, 4."1 1; Greene, Philadelphia, 5-2,
."114, 2.74 ; Palad01, Pltuburah, 5-1,
said Sabo, a man of few words.
.114, 3.10; Brownlna, Clnc_lnnall, 10-4,
· ' Sometimes you hit good and
.114, 3.~9; Agoato, St. Lowa, 5·2, .714,
l.44.
sometimes you don't. That's base-

AMERICAN U:AGVE
Eut DI•Won
w L PeL
Tum
....... 45 33 .m
Ton&gt;n1o
....... 39 l6 .I:W
Boo""'
...... 38 38 .100
Dotroi\
....... l l 38 .479
New Yodl:
.. 34 41 .413
Milwaube
...... 31 44 .41 3
Baltimore
Clntland
--- l4 !0 .Jl4

GB

4.1
6
7.1
9.5

l ~i

West Division
TWII
Minneoda
C.tifomia

W L PeL
. 41 11 .sn
......... 43 33 .l66

Te.u
Chicaao
Olkllnd

... .... 40 32 .ll6
........ 40 3l .533
.. 41 J6 .532
39 38 .506

Selulc
Kansu City

34 41

GB

I
2
3.5
l.l
5.5
9.5

.4S3

Tuesday's results
Ocuoil4, Baltimon: 3
Toronlo 4, Mim~ 3

a.

New York CJeveland $
BOlton 14, Milwaukee 4
Te•u 9, Odland 6

Califomil 10, K.tn.~~~ City 3
ctue.ao S, Seattle 4

Tonlcht's games
Dc:uoil. (Tanana '-6) at Baltimore (Milaeki 4-2), , ,31 p.m.

Cleweland (Boucher~) at New Ycrl:
(Kiliiii•Mckll-1), 7:31 p.l"'.
Minne&amp;Oll (Andenon 4-6) at Toronto

(Cuulioui 7-7~ 7:31_p.m.
801tm (Hmia 4-7) at Milwaukee (Au gull 6-3), 1:01 p.m.
Otkhnd (Stcwut 5-4) at Tcua
(Barfl&lt;ld J.2), l :ll p.m.
Chicaso (Hough S-3) at Seattle
(Knqor 5-J), 10:05 p.m.
Kanlu City (Aquino 1·1) at California
(Finley 11 -3), lOll p.m.

Tbunday's R&amp;me•
Minnelca It Tcnmo, i2:3S pm.

Baltimcn ~t New YcD , 1:0.5 p.m.
Deaoilat Baauu, 6:M p.m.
Cbi.CIIJO at Solalc, 6:3S p.m .
MllwuU. •• ae.ta.JKI, 7:35p.m.
Oakland at Tuu,l:35 p.m.
K.ana.u City at Cali!cma, 9 p.m.

Transactions
NATIONAL LEAGUE

BasebaU

East Division

Ttan~

W

PltiOo'l~

GB

42 l4 .551

I

34 .S41

S.S

ll 42 .455
31 44 .429
32 45 .416

12.1
14.5
!5.5

ablod list, E.ric:bon retroactive to June 30.
David We~t, pitcher, from the
30-day disabled liu. Recalled Jarvia
Brown. outfic.lder, from Portland o£ the
P,eific Cout laJUC. ·

GB

N•Uonal Lu.aue
ODCAOO CUBS - Optioned Shnm
BoWc, pit.chcr, to Iowa of the American
A11ociation. PLirchucd the contract or

41

West Division
Tum

W

L Pet.

LooAna&lt;J«

...... 46 29 .6!3

CladDU.

-- G

AtlaAta

Amulca• Lt•aue

L PeL
--- &lt;16 11 -'11

SLI..ouu
. .......
New Yat.
......
Chiu1o
.........
Monu..l
.........
Pbi!•delphlo .......

33

4

.561

.. ......... 37 31 .500

San Dieao ........ 31 -40 .487
Son FnneUoo ...... 33 43 .434
HouoiAlft
.... ..... 30 46 .391

8.5

9.S
13.1
16.1

Tuesday's results

lWINS ~ Placed Scott
Ericbon, pitcher, md Gene l.adUn, outfielda-flftt bueman, on the 15 -dly di&amp;·
~sarA

Tociay's eames
Plll•••rah (Smith 1-6) 11 Chtuao
( L a - 4-l~ l:lt p.m.

New Yost' (DarlinJ 4-S) at Montreal
(lhnol!.~· 7:31p.m.
St
. (Olh'uel 1-1) It Ptillldclphia
(Dd&lt;SIII 5-J), 7:31p.m.
Claclnli•ll (lrownlna1t-•&gt; •• At·
toato (A..~r·5~ 7:4t,....
l.ol An
(Ojoda 6-S) at San Diego

r·m.

(ilwll""' • tOOl
HOUI&amp;on. (Doellai• 2-1) jl San ~ ­
co (Bu.d:ou ~-4), IO:OS p.m.

Tbunday's games
Plllll&gt;uJ1h al Chkl... l:t5 p.m.
New Yoli 11. Monuul, 7:0S p.m.
SL l..ouis at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
CIDdauU al M1aJW1, 7:11p.m.
Lot Anaclct at San Diqo, tO:OS p.m
IICNAon 11 Sail Francilco, tO:OS p.m.

Major league leaders
American League
BATIINO - C. Ripken, Baltimore,
.348; Molitor, Milwaukee, .334; Siem,
Tn11, .333; Puckett, Minnaot1, .329;
Baincl, Oakland, .326; Joyner, CaWomil,
.321; o-owdl, · .323.

RUNS - Molitor, Milwaukee, 59:
Pllmciro, Teu1, 57; C. Ripk.cn, Balti-

mom. SS; CaniCICO, Oakland, S4; Fran;o,
Tcxa1, 54; D. Henderaon, O&amp;kll.nd , 54;
Siczn, Toaaa, 53; While, Toronto, S3 .
RBI - Fialder, D«toit, 62; Thomu ,
ChictJO, S7; Sierra, Tu.a1 , S6; Joyner,
Califomil, S~; Ca.rter, Toronto, SS ; Winrield, Califomi•. S5 ; C. Ripken , B• lti ·
mD~.S4 .

HITS - c. Riften. Baltimore. 104:
Siem, Te111, 10 ; Molitor, Milwaukee,
100; P\lckeu, MiMcaciu , 99; Palmeiro,
Texu, 96; Jayncr, California, 93; Carter,
Toronto, 93; Fnnco, Teu1, 93.
DOUBLES - R Alorrw, Tormto, 2.5;
Cuter, Toronto, 24; Palm.ciro, Teua, 23;
While, Tetont.o, 22; Boaa, BOitoo, 2l;·c.
Ripken, Blltim&lt;n. 20; Rood, Booon, 19.
tRIPLES - Molitor, Milwau.kee, 7;
Polonia, California, 6; R. Alunar, Torooto, S; White. Tonno, S; R.aincl, Chicago,
S; 6 ut~ tied wid! .f.
HOME RUNS - Carueco, Oakland ,
19; Fielda, Detroit, 19; C. Davia, Min nc.ata, 19; C. Ripken., Baltimo~. II; 0 .
Hendenon, OU1and, ll; C~.tter, Toronto,

11; Ja~e Barfield, New Yod:, 17; Win field, California. 17.

STOLEN- BASES - R. HcnderaDn,

Olk.land, 30; Polonia, Califontia, 27; R.
Alomar, Tororuo, 26; Raine., Chic•&amp;o,
25; Whi\e, Toronto, 19; Cuyler, ~uoit,
16; R. Kelly, New York, 16; Fran co,
Tau,l6.

PITOUNO (7 decia:i001) - L&amp;nptoo,
CaWomia, 12·2, .157, 3.45; Erickton ,
~. 12·3, .100. !.81: Fin!oy, Cw·
r..u.. tt-3..716, 3.72; Key, r ........ t03, .769, 2.30; S10t!.lanyrc. TotOI\\0, 9-3,
.150, 3.13; Sand~on, Ne~ York, 9-3,
.7l0, 3.69;
o...n, S-2, .714,
2.14; Klillk, Oul•nd, l-2, .714, 2.67:
'I'IUG*o· C!Uc•ao.l· 2, .714, 3.19; OuiH-.Doball.ICJ-.4• .714. 3.74.
STRlX.l!OtrrS - Cle:nu:aa. Botton,
114· J. Job110ft, Soaule, Ill; Ryan,
102; NcDowell.
96: fin.

n.m.......

rW..

auc.ao.

Calil'om.U, 96i1Candioai. Torm10, 19:

s.... a...-,IL
- J!ctenloy,
1.-

SAVES

Ou!and, 22;

Ct!lfomia,~ero, Min·
,_,lO; Reudoa,
19; Jeff Rilltell, Tel_,, 16; 0!1011, Baltunor~, 15;

Hln'oy,

!01111..-,, "-"t Cly, IS; T1Ug&gt;on.

Chicaao, tl.

.
National Leque

BA l'TINO - T. Owpuo, San DicJo.
.319; J - St Louil, .332; ~· AI·
- · .3 2 6 ; - " " - .324;
Biglo, H -• .322; SMI!uol, Loo Anr!o!,}lO; c.lderao, MoniiOII. .317.
RUNS - BUller, Loo Anploo, 54; T.

F......... S111 Dieao. S&amp;, - . N..,
York, 50; Sandbera, Chie•ao. 50;

.'

ball."

The Braves recently have not
been hitting.
Atlanta hit three home runs two off Armstrong and oile off
reliever Ted Power - but all were
solo shots. Ron Gant hit his 14th in
the fifth, Mike BeD got his first in
the seventh and Terry Pendleton hit

mara.

"I like what I've seen of our
young players, but our pitching did
not shut them down," McNamara
said. "Pitching has been our probREADY, SET, GO!- Cincinnati pitcher
Jack Armstrong (right) sprints out or the batter's box after laying down a sacrifice bunt that
moved teammate Paul O'Neill to second base, as
No. 8 in the ninth.
"We got three home runs, but
we didn't have anybody on base,"
said Atlanta manager Bobby Cox.
''Three home runs generally will
win for you every time.''
But it didn't and the Braves
found themselves at .500, the ftrst
time Atlanta had slipped that low
since May 5.
Otis Nixon swiped a pair of
bases for the Braves and now has
40 on the season, tops in the
league.
Braves' catcher Mike Heath suf·
fered a laceration to the forehead

Speed, defense keep homerless
Cardinals in hunt in NL East

Activa~

Llddie Renhoc, pitcher, from Iowa.

PHILADELPHIA PHJLLJES - Ex·
tended the QOIJ.tract of Loe Thcmu, gcner·
a1 m~n~ac.r, thtouJh \he 1994 aeuon.

PtttolloqlllJ, C~leaiO 4

New Yod&lt; 2. Mai.W I
St Loui16, l'llilodolpllia I
Clodnnad f, Atlallto3
Loo ""~'~'" 4, Son Dieao I
HeN~ too I, San francilco 4

By JIM UONAGHY""
AP Bl!S(!ball Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Yankees are staning 10 think
big.
For a team that finished 67-95
ilist season, thinking big means
reaching the .500 mark at the AllStar break.
The Yankees improved to 35-38
Tuesday night with an 8-5 victory
over the Cleveland Indians. It was
New York's fourth straight victory
and their seventh in eight games.
"The most important thing to
happen in the first half of the season is that this team now believes
in itself," said Don Mattingly, who
had two hits to extend his batting
streak 15 games. "There was a
time this season when I couldn't
say that."
The Indians, meanwhile, have
lost six straight and 22 of their last
25. All the losing has left Cleveland with a 24-50 record, 19 games
behind first-place Toronto in the
American League East. After 74
games a year ago, the Ind.iaits were
. 37-37 under manager John McNa·

.

STRIKEOliTS - Cone, New York,
lOS; Glavine, Atlanta, 98 ; G . Madduk ,
Chicago, 94 ; Gooden, New York, 92;
RUo, Clnclnn•tl, 16; Bene., S&amp;n Dieso,
81: Harnisch, Howton, 71.
SAVES - Dibble, Clndnnall, 11; Ute
Smith, St Lou.is. 22; Franco, New Yor:k.,
11: Dave Smith. Chicago, 16; B. Lan. drum, Plttlburah, 15; Leffert•. San
Diego, 14; Mitch Williams , Philadelphia,
13.

BasltetbaU
National BuketNU A,.odatlon
l!TAH JAZZ - Tcndcnd a qualifying
em~ to Jeff Malone, guud.

FootbaU
N•Uonal FootbAll Leaau~
LOS ANGELES RAMSPahu.k01, offerwive lineman.

Siancd Jeff

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) - Scioto
Down• reaulu ror Tueaday, July 2.
Weather, 86 and clear, track rut
Fim Raco-$1,400 C.iming Pice.
Bca A Lancer (Cook) 6.40, 4.20, 2.40;

Dnrmatian (Fout) 7.00, 2.60; Sue Rhc.a (
Miller) 210; Time-! :S9.
Alto Racod-Pam'• Tar Baby, Hw Bun·
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Pafccu (6-3) $39.20
Scc:ond Rlce-Sl.IOO Con.dition Pace
Cncker Jockc:t1&lt; (Fool) 6.40,1.80. 140:
Tuncl&lt;SI (Ricale) 18.00, 7.00:. C.ndy Su·
per t... g (Bwb) 3.00. Tune-1.19-35.
Aho Raced -Bunn y Love,O G, Land
Span, Tre11uremater, My Tender Trap
Scntm-Mezmaid.
Paf.... (6-4) $43.00
Third Raco-$1,400 Ci.limina Pace.
Moonlia.ht RDyce (Noble: 111) l4 .20,
6.20, 3.60; Strollina Snitch (Atc:r) 3.60,
2.&amp;0; E.,tcm Skipper C (Junice) 2.40;
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Alao Raced -Set The Hoot, Already

Gone. Hollywood Sl""• Eu!y Ou, O...y
Tomar, Bater Field Bandit, Brady Joe.

Trifocu (4· 1-10) $!04.40.
Palccu (4-1) $33.00
Fourth Roc:o-$!9.!200hio SU.. Sllkc
for lYO.Coh Trot.
OJ Giddyup1o ( Ron!r.in) 2.80, 2.60,
2.40; Rowdy Rougen (Hannon) 8.20 ,
3.80; Trot For Joy ( Kaufm•n) 3.00 ;
Timo-1 :58-35.
Allo Rlccd·Actloocc:r, GB Arnics Uptown, State Me, Bal·Be.llo, Rocky Daile

By R.B. FALLSTROM
AP Sports Writer
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The ghost
of Roger Maris is giving SL Louis
Cardinals' power hitters a run for
their money.
Maris hit a record 61 home runs
in 1961 , and the way it's going he's
got the entire Cardinals' team beat
for the second time in six seasons.
Through 75 games, near the midpoint of the season, they've got
only 23 home runs to trail the
major leagues.
That's only five more than Minnesota's Chili Davis. At this rate,
they 'II have trouble topping Cecil
Fielder's 51-homer season from
1990, let alone challenge Maris.
Think about it
"I never think about it," Cardinals manager Joe Torre said with a
sigh. "It's a waste of time. I'd
rather think about something useful, something I have control
over.''

Torre has guided the surprising
Cardinals into contention in the NL
East without a big banger, combining airtight defense with timely hit·
ting and team speed. But he's as
wistful as the next manager about
buildi~g a lineup around, say, a
Reggie Jackson.
"Of course, you'd like to have a
guy, one swing of the bat and you
score a run," Tone said. "We
don't have anybody capable of

that"
'
Instead, Pedro Guerrero leads
the team with four homers, and
went from May 18 to June 25
between dingers. This, from a guy
who hit 32 home runs in back-toback seasons in 1982 and 1983,
and hit 33 in 1985 for the Dodgers.
Guerrero blames it on spacious
Busch Stadium, which caused him
to retool his swing for the gaps
rather than the fences.

lem."

·Atlanta catcher Mike Heath sprints rrom behind
the plate to get the ball and throw out Arm·
strong in tbe second inning or Tuesday night's
game in Atlanta, which tbe Reds won 6·3. (AP)

One of !he Indians ' young play·
ers, Carlos Baerga, went 4-for-4
with a double and a home run five
rows deep into the upper deck in
right field .

and a sore neck when Larkin
crashed into Heath while trying to
score in the seventh.
Heath left !he game, but Braves'
trainer Dave Pursley said the catcher was checked by the team physician and was all right. Heath was

NL action ...
kel't pace with a 6-1 defeat of
Phtladelphia, as did third-place
New York with a 2-1 vic lOry over
Montreal.
In a match of NL West alsolllliS, Houston topped San Francisco 8-4.

July Savings Spe,etacular

Dodgers 4, Padres 1
For once, Ramon Martinez
wasn't the only player knocking
out the San Diego Padres.
The Los Angeles Dodgers righthander allowed six hits in seven
innings Tuesday night in a 4-1 victory over the Padres. Martinez
improved his season record to 11-3
and his career mark against the
Plldres to 6-1.
While Martinez was knocking
over the San Diego balling order,
the ,Padres' Benito Santiago
knocked out his own manager,
Greg Riddock, with a batting helmet thrown in the heat of anger
after groooding out in the sixth.
"It got Greg in the temple. It
was a prelly good whack," said
coach Jim Snyder, who was
pressed into service as manager
when Riddock went to the club·
house.
"Benny's disturbed about it. He
feels terrible about it," Snyder
said.
Santiago appeared upset. over
the incident and the auenuon tt
drew to him.
"I don't know what hap~ned. I
don't want to lallc 10 anybody," he
said.
Martinez (11 -3) allowed six hits
in seven-plus innings to get viciOry
No. II in his fourth try and march
Atlanta's Tom Glavine for the NL
victory lelld.
Martinez is 6-1 lifetime againsl
San Diego, winning six straighl
since a 1988loss, and is 3-0 at Jack
Murphy Stadium.
Martinez "got his changeup
over when he needed it," said NL
balling leader Tony Gwynn, who
had two hits 10 improve his average
to .359.
Brett Butler extended his hitting
streak 10 16 games with a run-scoring infield hit during a three-run
Dodgers uprising in the second.
Butler whose streak is the
longest c~enl run in baseball, .is
three shy of the longest streak tn
the majors this year. by San Francisco's Willie McGee.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
LADIES
O

SHORTS~ &amp; TOPS •••••• 25 Yo OFF

MEN'S

LEVI SHORTS............ 25

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BOYS' &amp; GIRLl'
290

Second
Awe.

Midcltpurt,
Ohio

Legion standh_tgs

.

(Includes July 1 games)
(OveraU)
Team
W
Pickerington ........... .......... 21
Lancaster .......................... 24
Wellston ............. .............. l4
Gallipolis ...........................8
Meigs ............................... 12
Athens ................................7
McArthur .......................... .3
Glouster ........ ... ................. .3
(League only)
Team
W
Lancaster.... ........ ..... ...........7
PickeringiOn .. ................ .....9
Wellslon .. ...................... .....6
Mei$s ............... .............. ....5
Gallipolis ......................... ..4
Athens ........................ ...... .. 2
McArthur ........................... 2
Glouster ..... ........................ !

THE

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OUCH! - Cleveland shortstop FeUx Fermin
(right) experiences severe discomrort af'ter gel·
ting a chestrul ohpikes rrom the New York
Yankees' Mel HaD after HaD broke up a double

play possibility in tbe rourth inning or Tuesday
night's game in New York, wbicb the Yankees
won 8-S. Jesse Bar1'.eld, who bit into the fielder's
choice that retired Hall, was sare on the play.

_&lt;_Co_nu_·nu_ed_fro_m_Pa..:...ge_
'4)_ __
Butler was safe on a two-out
chopper to shons10p Tony Fernandez. Alfredo Griffin was running
on the pirch and made it 3-0 when
he scored from second, sliding in
under the tag after Santiago was
pulled off the plate by a high throw
from first baseman Fred McGriff.
Dennis Rasmussen (3-3) contributed to his own downfall by
walking three bailers in the first
IWO innings, and each scored.
Pirates 13, Cubs 4
Gary Varsho paced Pittsburgh's
22-hit auack with the first two
homers of his nine-year major
league career. He also had a lriple
and a sacrifice fly and drove in six
runs.
Bobby Bonilla and Mike LaValliere each had four hits and Andy
Van Slyke hao a homer for the
Pirates.
Doug Drabek (7-8) allowed nine
hits. Shawn Boskie (3·8) allowed
II hits and eight runs in three-plus
innings.
Cardinals 6, P~illies 1
A singles-hitting team against
the rest of the NL, the Cardinals
have become a power-hitting club
against Philadelphia and Tommy
Greene. The Cards lit up Greene
for two homers in a victory last
weekend at St. Louis and duplicated the feat Tuesday night. Ray
Lankford and Pedro Guerrero
homered on consecutive pitches in
!he fourth inning in support of Ken
HiD (8-5). who has beaten Greene
(5·2) twice in a week.
Mets 2, Expos 1
Dave Magadan singled home
Kevin Elster with two out in the
ninth inning.
.
Elster walked leading off the
ninth against Barry Jones (3-6) and
was sacrificed to second. After an
intentional walk and a fly ball ,
Magadan lined a 3·2 pitch from
Scou Ruslcin in10 center. Alejandro
Pena (5 -0) pitched the eighth in
relief of starter David Cone, and
John Franco worked the ninth for
his 17ih save.
Astros 8, Giants 4
Jeff Bagwell homered and drove
in four runs and Mark Portugal (74) improved his record again st San
Francisco to 8· 1 by scattering five
hits over seven inmngs.
The Astros scored four times in
!he second inning against lefl-hander Bud Black (6-7).

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In the American League East anything could happen.''
Baerga hit his ninth home run
with two outs in the sixth to move
the Indians,w-ilhin 6-3 . But the
Yankees came back with two runs
in the sevenlh off Jesse Orosco on
Barfield's 17th homer and Roberto
Kelly's RBI single, his third hit.
''We know that if we play good
ball this week we will be in good
shape at the break," Yankees manager Stump Merrill said. " We are
playing one game at a time and we
are cqntinuing to grow."
Elsewhere in the ,Al!l~n
League, it was Bos10n 14, ~wli~­
kee 4; Detroit 4, Baltimore 3;
Toronto 4, Minnesota 3; Texas 9,
Oakland 6; California 10, Kansas
City 3, and Chicago 5, Seanle 4.
Red Sox 14, Brewers 4
Rick Dempsey, well known in
the baseball world for his raindelay impressions of the game's
greats, was fooling around again.
Only this time it hadn't rained,
unless one counted !he shower of
hits - 22 to be exacl - that had
fallen from the Boston Red Sox on
(See AL on Page 6)

'

Alto R1c:ed-Happy-N-Me, Conttlnce

Alao Jl•eM-Timotby Ridae. Denim
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' Oypoy Pari1 &lt;Ri&lt;lle) 2.10. 2.10, 2.20;
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Kelly~ Fllcoa (A*) 4.40; Tim•2:0!.
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Oiltod, B•'r B l.iltonina, Pan Ann. Sopelf"" (H-10.7) $2,194.80.

"It's a struggle, sure," McNamara said. "But they're working
hard and we' 11 be better off in the
long run." ·
Cleveland, in a constant state of
change of late, gave Mike York (01) a chance and he gave up four
runs on seven hits over 4 1-3
innings in his first American
League start. York was acquired
from Pittsburgh on May 16 for outfielder MilCh Webster.
Wade Taylor (4·2), making his
sixth major league start, gave up
three runs and eight hits in six
innings. Steve Howe, hit hard. gave
up two runs in the eighth inning.
Steve Parr, the fourth New York
pi ocher, got the final two outs for
his lith save.
Trailing 2-1, the Yankees scored
two runs in the fourth inning on
Man Nokes' long two-run, two-out
single and lidded tluee more in the
fifth 10 take control.
"I knew when I l s warming
up in the buUpen the gs· weren' 1
there," said York, wh had the flu.
''Throwing once in seven days, I
knew I wasn't going to be there. I
lried to keep us close."
Mattingly had .a run-scoring
double in the fifth, Jesse Barfield
an RBI single and Nokes capped
the inning with a sacrifice fly for
his third RBI.
"We can see we are close to
.500 now," S81d Nokes, who had
two of the Yankees' 15 hits. "We
know we're playing hard and the
breaks are starting to go our way.

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1991

Wed

it"

SWEET VICTORY - America's Mary Joe
Fernandez celebrates her Wimbledon quarterfi-

nal victory over Spain's Arantxa Sanchez
Vicario, who feU 6·2, 7-S. (AP)

171

The winner in 1988 and 1989,
Graf has a long way to go to catch
Navratilova, but does not lack
ambition.
"I'll try to make it MY court,"
she said.
The Centre Court was hers for
66 minutes as she totally dominated seventh seed Garrison with
sledgehammer serves, precise volleys and lightning passes from the
baseline.
Garrison had one service break
in the match, but was already 3-0
down in the fiTS! set She was never
able to follow it up.
The American won only three
points in the opening three.games
as the top-seeded Graf took an
immediate hold on the match.
Garrioon, who won in three sets
in last year's semifinal, recovered
to take a 0-40 lead on the German's
serve. Graf saved two break points
before planting a backhand into the
net for a rare break.
While the Centre Court crowd
sensed a Garrison comeback, Graf
turned up the intensity.
She broke Garrison again in !he
next game and then served out to
love. On her second set point, Garrison played a shon. angled volley,
' but Graf got to it and hit a crosscourt winner.
Games went comfortably with
serve to 3-3 in the second set as
Garrison matched Graf for accuracy, if not for j,ower.
The American had a break point
for 4-3, but fired a backhand just
wide. That was her last chance,

of Letart, W.Va., wbo came in third with a time
of 7:49. Behind tbem are Amy Skinner of Gallipolis, the first female to cross the finish line
(8:11), and Point Pleasant's Jeff Maynard, the
first Mason County male to cross the rmish line
after the top three (7:50). (Photo by Judy Morgan)

AL contests...

,_&lt;_co_nti_nu_ed_fro_m_Pa_ge_s&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ __

the Milwaukee Brewers.
The 41-year•old Dempsey, who
hadn't pitched since ~igh school in
1967, allowed three hits and a run
in the ninth inning as he mopped
up for Milwaukee's beleagured
bullpen in a 14-4 loss Tuesday
night.
"I was just trying to throw it
over the plate," Dempsey said. " I
probably could have thrown it
harder. Treb (Milwaukee manager
Tom Trebelhorn) told me to go out,
have a good time and don't hurt
yourself."
He didn't, and even if he had, it
wouldn't have mattered by !hen.
Ellis Burks, Mike Greenwell
and Luis Rivera led Boston to season highs in hits and runs.
Burks hit a three-run homer his seventh in the last 20 games
and lOth this season - and had
four RBis. Greenwell had a hit in
four consecutive innings, including
his sixth homer. Rivera had four
hits and three RBis.
In Milwaukee, the victory went
to reliever Dennis Lamp (3 -1), who
replaced Torn Bolton in the fifth.
Boston scored four runs in the
fourth of Mark Knudson (1 -2),
winless since opening day.
Blue Jays 4, Twins 3
A bases-loaded single by Rance
Mulliniks in the ninth inning gave
the surging Blue Jays- who overcamefourerrors - the victory.
• Mulliniks singled to center off
reliever Steve B~os ian after the

Blue Jays had"loaded with bases
with none out against Terry Leach
(0-1). Devon White had an infield
single and took third on a hit to
right by Roberto Alomar before
Leach walked Joe Carter intentionally.
Tigers 4, Orioles 3
Cecil Fielder hit a long homer to
tie Minnesota 's Chili Davis and
Oakland' s Jose Canseco for the
league lead and added an RBI single, helping Bill Gullickson win his
lOth gam e for Detroit.
Fielder's 19th homer, measured
at 440 feet at Memorial Stadium,
gave the Tigers a 4-0 lead against
Jeff Ballard in the ftfth inning. Ballard (4-9) has lost his last 11 decisions at home.
Gullickson (10-4) gave up seven
hits and a walk in five and twothird innings in matching his victory total for last season in 32 starts
with Houston.
Rangers 9, Athletics 6
Rafael Palmeiro hit two homers
for the second time in four games,
and Texas beat Oakland as Nolan
Ryan set another record.
Ryan - who had a no-decision
- struck out Willie Wilson to end
the fourth inning, setting a major
lea gue record with hi s 22nd
straight season with 100 or more
strikeouts. That broke a tie .with
Don Sutton.
Steve Buec he le 's two -run
eighth-inning single off Gene Netson broke a 6-6 tie to give Texas its

-----Sports briefs,--_,.,;,.-Basketbaii
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Chicago Bulls will sell approxj mately $45 million of offtcially
licensed merchandise following
their victory over the .Los Angeles
Lakers in the NBA Finals, more
than double the previous NBA
record;
. The previous high of $22 mi!·
lion was set last year after Detro1t s
victory over"I"'rtland, the Pistons'
second straight championship.
NBA Properties has projected
more than $1 billion in grospelails
sales of licensed merchandise for
the J)3St season.
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) Nolan Ryan of the Texas Rangers
became the first pitcher to strilc:e
out 100 or more batters in 22 consecutive seasons.
Ryan struck out Oakland 's

Willie Wilson on a 1-2 pitch in the
fourth inning of the Rangers' 9-6
victory for his lOOth of 1991 and
third of the nil!ht, surpassing Don
Sutton's mark of 21 straight seasons with 100 or more suikeouts.
At 44 years and 5 months, he
became the second oldest pitcher to
fan as many as 100 in a season .
Phil Niekro had 149 strilc:eouts at
age 46 in 1985 with ·the New York
yankees.
TORONTO (AP) - Scott
Erickson, one of the favorites to be
the American League · s~ tarting
pitcher in next week ' s All -Star
Game, was placed on the 15-day
di sabled list by the Minnesota
Twins with a sb'llined right elbow.
Erickson, placed on the list
retroactive to Sunday, leads the AL
with a 12-3 record, a 1.83 ERA and
three ~hutouts in 16 starts.

fourth straight victory over the-·
Athletics. Rick Honeycutt (0-2)
was the loser.
Angels 10, Royals 3
Max Venable had three hits including his first career grand
slam - and Jim Abbott continued
to pitch weU.
Wally Joyner and Dave Parker
added home runs.
Abbott (7- 5) allowed two runs
and eight hits over six innings.
The 34-year-old Venable's frrst
home run since Aug. 10 and his
first extra-base hit at home this
year keyed a five-run second
inning against Mark Gubicza (3-5).
White Sox 5, Mariners 4
Ozzie Guillen 's RBI double in
!he ninth inning gave Chicago the
victory after Carlton Fisk ·had tied
the score for the White Sox with a
two-run pinch homer in the eighth.
Guillen 's double off Dave
Burba (0-2) scored Craig -Grebeck»
who opened !he ninth with a triple.
Melido Perez (4-4) got the victory with two and one-third innings
of relief.

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT
STORE WILL
BE

OPEN
4th of JULY

9:30-5:00

Take AShopping
8ralc Daring the
CllellraiiM!
SUPPORT LOCAL
MERCHANTS

107 MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT
II

CINCINNATI (AP) _ The
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. is seeking
U.S. Food and Drug Administra·
lion approval for a fat that can be
used to lower the calorie count of
soft candies, such as chocolate
bars.
The company said its product,
caprenin, has !he characteristics of

cocoa butter but has 140 calories
per ounce, compared w1th about
2~0 calories per ounce of other
com~on fats. . .
Ssnce caprensn 1s made from
fatty acids contained in other common fats, Procter &amp; Gamble IS hopmg _to speed up _FDA approval by
asking ceruflcauon of capremn as

an ingredient already recognized as
safe.
FDA approval is just one step
toward the product poss1bly showmg up m candy bars. P&amp;G also will
have to convince candy makers that
caprcnm tastes good enough to nsk
theexpenseofm arkeung 11.

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) _ A
carpet cleaner entered a written
plea of innocent Tuesday in the
slayings of two female University

of Aorida students. .
Alan Robert Dav1 s, 29 , was
indicted June 26 on two counts of
first-det'tee murder in the deaths of

Eleanor Anne Grace, 20, and Carla
Marie McKishme, 22.
The women were found stran gled m !herr condommmm June 7.

.
,
d
yy rztten p 1ea 0 znnocent ente re
1

TIT ,

";;--:~~~;~~~~i~~t991

· THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
SUNDAY, JUNE 30, THROUGH SATUA·
DAY, JULY 6, 19111 , IN Pomeroy

IIIII

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITI ES . NON E
SOLD TO DEALERS .
I1UI POLICY- Each of these advertised itoms is required to be rea dily ava ilable for
ule in each Kroger Store, except a9 specifically noted in this ad. If we do ru n out of an
edvertiaed item, we wiU offer you your chotce of a comparabte item , when availabte ,
reflecting the same livings or a raincheck which w~l entitle you to pu rchase the advenised
item at the advertised price within 30 days. Only one· vendor coupon will be accepted per
hom purchaiOO .

Red, .Ripe
Whole
Watermelons

ALL STORES

Open Normal
July 4th.

OPEN AT 3 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK
Presenting

Each

"D.J. RANDY SMITH" AND
STA.FF HOUSE ROAD
Serving AII ·Your legal Beverages and Hors d'oeuvres
..

. .

.

.

:::::

5 MILES SOUTH OF .SILVER BRIDGE
ON S:r. RT. 2, GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV

Sometfiing (jooa's Jlfways Coofjng ;It .

I MASON FAMILY
Located on Rt. 33 beside Mason Exxon and Mason Motel, Mason,
Sunday thru Thursday, 6;30 am-to pm ; Friday &amp; Saturday 6 ·30 am-11

The Qallia County unit of the
American Cancer Society will hold
its annual tennis tournament from
Saturday, July 6 to Sunday, July 14
at Forest Mullins' tennis court on
Henkle Avenue in Gallipolis.
The entry fee is $15 for the fmt
event and $10 for each additional
event A new can of tennis balls is
also required. All entries must be
accompanied by payment of fees.
Registration forms can be
picked up from tOurnament chair·
man Brant Pauley at 446-4608,
from committee members Donnie
Hendricks in Syracuse, Jim
Osborne (446-9284), Danella
Greene at the 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park
District office in the Gallia County
Courthouse (446-4612, ext 256) or
at the ACS office (446-7479).
All players must report to the
tennis court half an hour before the
start of their fmt match.

paint over.billboards last July 10 in
a predomt~antly black netghborh~ nf!U" ~IS church..
Th~ 1 s.~ re_a1 vtctory for ~
commuruty, S81d Pfleger, 42. It
was. the aleohol_and tobacco CO!"·
parues and !he billboard eomparues
that '!!ere on tnal here., .. And they
lost.
.
Pfleger accused the comp~ues
of targebng poor, mner-ctty netgh·
borhoods. Andy Knott, a
spok,esman fo~ the Cook. County
states attorneys office, S31d prosecutors had no comment on the verdiet. ,

JULY 471!

RESTAURANTwv

slated for Saturday

ov~r several billboards to protect
children.
. .
A legal expert .satd It was
remarkable tha~ ~ ~ury accepted
the ~ense, which IS based on old
En~~h C?'!lm~n law.
,·
Abolibomsts, suffragettes, the
temperan~e ,movement, Green.
Peace, ctvil nghts gr:oups, nuclear
pmtesters ~n~ pr~-1ifers have all
tned to use 1!• S81d Gerald Rosenberg, an asststant professor at the
University of Chi~o. "But it's a
~ defem;~ '!!ld 11 s unusual for a
Jury to buy II. .
.
Pfleger admuted smeanng red

GRIND
OPENING

ACS tennis tourney
ONE MILE RUN WINNERS - These are
tbe winners from Saturday's One Mile Run,
beld during tbe "Always a River" celebration in
Point Pleasant; W.Va. In the front row are (L·R)
David Cox orGaUipolis, who took second with a
time of 7:09; Point Pleasant's Tim Scarberry,
who won with a time of 6:35; and Larry Gibbs

By MARIO FOX
Associated Press Writer
CHICAG_O (AP) _ A jury
accepted a pnest's argument that he
defaced liquor and tobacco billboards to keep children from drink·
ing and smoking and acquitted him.
A Cook County jury deliberated
about an hour Tuesday before fmding the Rev. Michael Pfleger innocent of three counts of criminal
damage to property a misdemeanor.
'
Pfleger, a Rom an Catholic
priest, said he smeared red paint

Club.
"I'm a lot ~lthier, I'm a lot
more eager than I was last year,"
Graf said. " I am much fitter and
better concentrad on the court.'' ·
In the semifinal , Graf faces
fifth-seeded Mary Joe Fernandez,
who downed No. 4 Arantxa
Sanchez Vicario for the frrst time
in four meetings, 6-2, 7-5. Aftet'the
first three games went with serve,.
Fernandez, from Miami, won four
games in a row from 2-2.
Sanchez then had three break
points in the opening game of the
second set, but Eemandez hung on.
The American broke for a 4-2
lead and squandered two match
points at 5-3. Sanchez fought back
to 5-5, but lost the next two games
and the match.

since Graf made her pay by breaking Garrison for 5·3 with a thun deoous smash. •
She carved out two match points
with powerful serves, but Garrison
saved the fmt with a winner down
the line.
Graf did not waste the second
chance. Barely a yard from !he net
she slammed another smash into
the ground as if she were trying to
bury the ball.
·
This was a !liff.erent Graf from
the player who 1~ Garrison last
year. Then she was troubled by a
sinus problem and her father's
well-publicized paternity suit that
eventually proved unfounded.
This time it was a power-packed
Graf that swept Garrison off the
grass court at the All England

The Dally Sentlnei- Page- 7

friest acquitted in billboard
P&amp;G pushing for approval of lower
defacing case with unusual defense calorie cocoa butter substitute

Graf'knocks off Garrison in two:.
·sets in Wimbledon quarterfinals
By ROBERT MILLWARD
AP Sports Writer
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- For more than a decade, Wimbledon' s Centre Court has been
like a second home to nine-time
champion Martina Navratilova.
Steffi Graf is out to make it
hers.
Fitter, healthier and more confi·
dent then when she lost to Zina
Garrison in last year's semifinal,
' Grafb!med on the power to avenge
that defeat, 6-1 , 6-3 in Tuesday's
quarterfinal.
Then she turned her attention to
Navratilova.
"She has won nine championships and has been so dominant
here for so many years," Graf said.
" I don't think she owns the court,
but she is doing awfully well on

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

pm

HOMESTYLE LUNCH SPECIALS
Monday ·Fric.l.uy, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m .

MONPAY- Meatloaf, Choice of Potato, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
TUESDAY -A Philly with French Fries and Soup
WEDNESDAY - Stuffed Green Peppers,

Register To Win A Trip To

,

CARRY OUT ORDERS AVAILABLE (304) 773-5321

•Hotel Accommodations For 1 Night.
•A Ride on A Sternwheeler
•VIP seating &amp; Backstage"Passes To The
saturday Kroger concert.

one Trip To Be Given Awav At Each Participating Kroger Store.
"NO purchase necessary. You need not oe present to win . Kroger
employee5·aml"their families are not eligiOte to participate.

U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED

Kroger
Pork &amp; Beans

Genuine
Ground Chuck

15-CJL

Pound

8

TUESDAY 6: THURSDAY. CHILDREN UNDER 12 EAT FREE
FROM CHILDREN'S MENU. (EXCLUDES DRINK &amp; DESSERT)

SENIORS GET
10% DIS&lt;;OUNT

sweepstakes Package For 2 Includes:

Split Chicke
BreastsLIMIT
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Choice of Potato, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
THURSDAY · Lasagna with Cole Slaw and Garlic Bread
,FRIDAY- Turkey Club with French Fries &amp; Soup
LIMIT 1 CHILD PER ADULT

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Whole BBO
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PER MONTH BASIS;
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S88 second child ollamlly • ZQ% oil tuition
sss third child ollamlly • so% oft

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Springdale 2%
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1991-tz Book Fees
$6s.oo Kindergarten

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PER MONTH BASIS:
$60 per student • lint child ollamily
SIJO.oo Grades.I· 6

Polar ·Pak .
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IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
(1.75-LB . AVG. AFTER COOKING)

Kroger
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For more lnlormatlon, lree brochure and manual,
·
Wlite or call:
· 3U N. Second Ave. • Middleport,.OH. 45760
614-99Zofd49

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:wednesday, July 3,·1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnel- Page- 9

The Daily Sentinef.

By The Bend

STOCK

.

YOUR

Wednesday, July
3, 19!11
.
..
Page-8
•

VIF dinner helc{

Beat of the Bend....

The S.O.S. Group for the Blioo
and Deaf recently hosted an apprer
ciation dinner for some "Very
Important Friends" (V.I.F.) in the
lives of their children.
· ~
Each child in the group was to
select at least three people from
their lives that have made an
impression with them. The grou~
then sent invitations to these people
to attend a dinner at Rio Grande
Elementary School.
Each V.I.F. received a certificate and badge from the child who
sent the invitation.
The group also presented a
.. plaque to Ann Boy~ •. the Rio
Grande Elementary V1s10n Units
Teacher, for aU the help and support she has given the group.
They also hlld a fund raising
project for tickets for two to ride
the West Virginia Belle with Evelyn Boggs of Bidwell as the winner.
After the dinner there was special music and singing by Charles
Burgey.
·
Also receiving certificates and
badges but not present were Dr. I.
Kim, ·Linda Bauer, Dr. Wilson
Bowers, Braden Richards, Debbie
Moore and Dr. Patrick BaU.

by Bob Hoeflich

By BOB HOEFUCH
I guess I won 't have to worry
about your having a good Fourth of
July.
There' s a choice of activities all you need is the energy to lake
them all in.
Racine, Rutland and Middlepon
will be holding their annual community events throughout the day
and in Chester John Teaford will be
staging an aU-day celebration at his
Chester Kountry Club beginning at
9 a.m. - contests, games, music -.
So enjoy!

Roben Tewksbary, Middleport
resident and the Pomeroy barber,
underwent catherization and angioplasty &amp;\ Riverside on Dec. 14,
1990 and ts doing weU. His brother-in-law, Dennis Saelens, also of
Middleport, had a quadruple
bypass at Riverside in February,
199 I, and is progressing.
Richard Freeman, 1610 lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy, underwent a
triple bypass on Oct. 12, 1976 at
Ohio State University Hospital and
in August, 1988, underwent angioplasty procedures at the same hospital. His wife, Alice, underwent .
quadruple bypass surgery on July
20, 1990, also at University Hospital.
Mrs. Carroll (Addie) Norris of
Syracuse underwent a q_uintuple
bypass and aneurysm repau at University Hospital on Nov. 12, 1985.
Her brother, Victor Wolfe, had a
triple bypass at University; another
brother, Austin Wolfe, underwent
angioplasty and a third brother,
Tom Wolfe, had problems but his
doctor determined that the veins
had provided their own bypass and
surgery was avoided.
Dorothy Ritchie, Racine, has
had her share of heart surgery three times, in fact. She had a
mitral valve replaced in October,
1979: the mitral valve and aortic
valve replaced in May, 11187, and
then a triple bypass in December.
1987. Dorothy says she's getting
along okay now.
Jim Vennari , Seneca Drive,
Pomeroy, whom you athletic
enthusiasts remember well, I'm
sure, had a triple bypass and his
aortic valve replaced with an anificial one on Dec. 21 , 1982 at the
Cleveland Clinic.

It's time to stan advising you
about all - well, hopefully all - of
the Meigs residents who have
undergone heart procedures and
surgery. It's amazing how many
there are so the listing will have to
be done over a period of time.
Milton Roush of Syracuse in
October, 1990, had bean catherization and angioplasty procedures at
Riverside Hospital in Columbus.
Milton was asked to lake pan in the
study of a new drug, angio peptin,
and as a participant gave himself
injections twice a day for 10 days.
He returned to the hospital two
days after completing the injections
and everything was okay . He
returned to the hosl'ital April 24,
this year, and agam everything
checked out okay.
Eight hospitals are involved in
the study in which Milton is participating and he was the IOth person
involved with Riverside to take
pan in the program. Riverside now
has 72 participants. From aU indications at this point, the new medication is waking well.
Mary G. Pickens of South Second Ave ., Middleport, had the
angiogram lind angioplasty proceSo there's a first listing - and
....~--~ure at Riverside in April, 1987.
that's
only the tip of the iceberg.
Mary has had yearly stress tests
and x-rays of the bean since then Those on it surely can keep smiland her arteries are still okay. ing.
Mary's pleased.

Comrriunity calendar
Community Calendar Items
appear lwo days before an event
aod the day or that event. Items
must be received weD io advance
to assure publication iD the caleodar.
WEDNESDAY
PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wedllesday at 6 p.m . at the
Pageville Township Building.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Ladies Auxiliary
No. 9053 will meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. rather than Thursday so
that the Founh of July may be
observed.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Law Enforcement Explorer Post
meet Wednesday at4 p.m. at
the Meigs County Court House.

will

HARRISONVIT.LE - The Harrisonville Holiness Chapel, Route
· 684, Pomeroy, wiD have a missionary meeting on Wednesday at 7:30
p.m. with Rev. Steve Shover and
family. Rev. John Neville invites
the public.

APPRECIATION DINNER· An apprecla·
tion diDner was hosted recently by the s.o.s_
Group ror the Blind and Dear at Rio Grande
Elementary School ror the students' "Very
Important Friends." Pictured, 1-r, are, rront,

The Deputies and Past Coun cilors Club of District 13, Daughters of America, had their annual
picnic at the Wilson Parle on Route
50 recently.
A carry-in dinner was held at
12:30 p.m. and the blessing was
asked by Betty Spencer, a member
of Guiding Star Council No. 124.
Erma Cleland presided at the
meeting in which the Lord's Prayer
and Pledge to the American Flag
were given in unison.
Minutes of the December I990
meeting were read by Bette Biggs,
secretary protem. The treasurer's
repon was given by Thelma While.
Newly elected officers are Enna
Cleland, president; Opal Hollon,

VICTOR MCKAY

Bake and yard sale .set

Receives degree

PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE

30 THRU JULY 6,

New arrival
Mr. and Mrs. Marc Fultz are
announcing the binh of a daughter,
Danielle Kathryn, on Father's Day,
June 16, at Mt. Cannel West Hospital in Columbus.
The infant weighed seven
pounds and six ounces and is 19
and one-half inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Bernstein, Oak·
wood.
Paternal grandparents are Mr:
and Mrs. John Fultz, Middleport
The couple has another child at
home, Benjamin Joshua,' age 21
IIIOIIthS.
.

GROUND
BEEF

1991

10 LB. PACKAGE

•

$1490
GROUND
CHUCK

$
10 LB. PACKAGE
19
1
Chuck Roost .••..••• · 1
$J690
US~A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF "· $
R1beye Steak .,...... 499 CHICKEN
~

USDt CHOICE BEEF

$
DRUMSTICKS
269
Cube Steak ..••.... ~~~
10 .LB. PACKAGE

Bette Biggs, Guiding Star Council,
Syracuse; Beulah Maxey, Marcia
Keller, Opal Hollon, Ethel Orr,
Erma Cleland, Mary K. Holter,
Thelma White, Sandra While, Eliz.
abeth Hayes, Esther Smith and
grandson, Joshua Ridenour.

Thursday Night Is 1/2 Pri&lt;e Night
At (row's

BUCKET

ECKRICH SLICED
CHICKEN

(

Leg Quarters ••••••'!. 49
"USD~ CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
$l 79
Rump Roost •••••••• ~ .. .
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTT0~ $ 4
·9

Pepperoni ·· ~ ··········
3 OZ. PKG.

99(

LB

•

CHICKEN
THIGHS

$590

Round Steak ••••••• 8~ 2
KAHN'S
·
·
La$149
•.
W1eners •••...••••••••. ~

..

!I

ASSORTED

PORK CHOP
10 LB. PACKAGE

$1]90

IOINING ROOM ONlY)

FRESH

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

728 WEST MAIN

q92-5432

PORK STEA

POMEROY , OHI O

10 LB. PACKAGE

.. ...........................
·'·

BOB'S MAR

•

~~

Watermelons •••••••
EACH

$3 99

FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk .~ ....... ~!'~".". $1 59

Select Tbe Best Tasting, Freshest Produce Ia ,._n

KRAFT

II Reasonable Prices ..• Satisfaction luaruteed!

PEACHES

OHIO VALLEY HOMEGROWN

TOMATOES.

LARGE HAMBUI(GER SIZE
39
19

Gwron!MJ,IJm!!!Nn~o~• "'

ROUND STRIPED 20 LB. AVG.................
S299 EA.
ROUND. STRIPED ,25 LB. AVO................. H_,.,,.,5399 EA.
H . . . .. . .

59(

Sweet &amp; Juicy, Tree Ripened,
Red Ha,en Freestones
99 3314 LB. BASI:&lt;ET
LB.

$1

Yard sale planned

12 PAK

Largest Lopes In Town!

. ' s 99
EXTRA LARGEJUMBO.......... 1

Velveeto ••·····••• ·~~.
BAN?Un .·
•
$1· 99
Frted:Ch1cken ••••...
2

2 LB.

1/4 Mile Nofl!l ol, PoiiiiiJ-IIIIOn Bridge
-.on. wv. 304-773-5721

llondly.s.tunlly, • _. pm, SundiJ, ._. pm

1801.

$1 79'

Good Ooly At Powlll's SuptrrYolu
Good Jun~ 30 lllnl July 6, Jn I
· linit I hr (ut!OIIIII' , -

.

PEPSI-COLA
PRODUCTS
PAK 12 OZ. CANS

$519

COTTO NUL£

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL · 7
PIIG.

9(

Good Only At Powoll'1 Suptr Valu
Good .,nt 30 thru .,ly 6, 1991
!inlil ·l' hr (ljltomtr

MORTON SALT
260Z.

·10(

Good Only AI Powoll 's Suptr Valu
Good June 30 lhl'l! July 6, 1991
· Umit 1 ~r (ustomtr ·

~~

JI

!I

MIKE-SELL

POTATO
CHIPS
11 OZ.

$139

EA.

JIF
PEANUT BUTIER'

$1· 390

S2.19 -

Ice ·Cream

Sweel &amp;Juicy Jum'o Indiana Supentar Cantaloupes

llondly-SIIIInlly; l111ripm, Sundly,11...a pm

-·

DEBBIE

$399

KEMP'S PAIL

24QO Elallm Avtnue (Acton lrom KMirtl
Gllllpolll, Ohio • 114-44&amp;-1711

f

Sna,ck Cokes ••••••••• 69 (
LITTl~

CANTALOUPES

PRICES GOOD THRU JULY 7, 1991

\

$ 90

10 LB. PACKAGE

Bu'.' one dinnPr menu item at regular prite and receive
the second of equal or lesser value ut 1 2 PRICE.

SALEMCENTER - TheS~r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~:
...•••
. . . . .~~~~~~~~~~.~~~c~
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
meet Saturday at 8 p.m . at the
grange hall located on County
Road 1 near Salem Center. Judging
of all photography and an contest
will be held as well as all junior
crafts. A potluck supper wiD follow
the meeting.

News notes

"'

Fish fry set

•
Th~re "will be a fish fry on
. The Faith Gospel Ladies Circle · Thursday, July 4, sponsored by the
will have a yard sale, bake sale and Middleport Fire Department,
car wash on S~y at 10 a.m. at beginning.ar. 11 a.m. at the rue stathe J?oDy R~ restdence on Route tion. Firewbtks begin at 9:30 p.m.
124 m Reedsv1lle.
at the Dave Diles park.

Pool tourney set

,_

vice president; Betty Spencer, secretary; and Betle Biggs, treasurer.
Esther Smith, a member of
Chester No. 323 and state councilor
of Ohio spoke briefly. She asked
for aU members in District 13 to be
present for the District practice on
July 13 at I p.m. at the Chesler
LodgeHaU.
Opal Hollon won the door prize.
The club's Christmas dinner and
party will be held Dec. 7 at 1:30
p.m. at the Quality Inn in Nelsonville. A $3 gift exchange will be
held.
Erma Cleland read a j&gt;oem, "It
Never Hurts."
Attending were Betty Spencer,

10 LB.
MEATS LE

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

District 13 D of A holds annual picnic

Victor J. McKay, M.D.,
received his medical degree from
HARRISONVILLE - Har- the University of Cincinnati, Colrisonville Patriotic Blast will be lege of Medicine, at the June gradheld Friday from 7-10 p.m. at the uation ceremonies of the medical
Harrisonville Elemenwy· School. schooL
Admission is $1. Music will be
Dr. McKay is the son of Dr. and
provided by a disc jockey. The Mrs. Joseph D. Mc!Kay. Warren,
dance is sponsored by the Dar- and the grandson of the late Mr.
. {isonville PTO.
and Mrs. G.V. Rupe of Bradbury.
He will begin his residency in pedi- .
SATURI)AY
atries at Kosair Children's Hospital
POINT PLEASA'Nr - The Lib- in Louisville, Ky., in July.
eny Mountaineers. will perfonn at
He was honored at a reception
the Point Pleasant Senior Citizens in Warren recently by 150 friends
and relatives including Mrs. Rose
Cenler on Saturday.
Reynolds, Mrs. Clara Conroy, and.
REEDSVILLE - The Olive Harold and Dorothy Conroy, from
Township Volunteer Fire Depart- the this area
ment is sponsoring the Reedsville
McKay and his parents are well
Com Festival on Saturday begin- known in this area. His father is a
ning at noon and continuing until 6 Rio Grande .and Ohio University
p.m. Fresh com on the cob, char- graduate while his mother (the forcoal grilled pork and other dishes mer Ann Rupe of Bradbury) graduwill be available. Three bands will ated from the Holzer Hospital ·
perfonn on stage and there will' be School of Nursing.
several games.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Various activities
and games are planned for the
Founh of July at the Hillside BapPORTLAND - The annual Vantist Church. Activities will begin at .Meter Reunion wiU be held Satur5 p.m. followed by an outdoor day at 7:30p.m. at the Melvin
hymn sing at 7 p.m. Rev. James R. Lawrence Farm on Stiversville
Acree Sr. invites the public.
Road in Portland. Hot dogs wiD be
served. Bring a salad or dessen,
MIDDLEPORT - There will be tableware and soft drinks.
a fish fry on Thursday , July 4,
sponsored by the Middleport Fire
Depanment, beginning at 11 am.
at the rue station. Fireworks begin
There will be a pool tournament
at 9:30p.m. at the Dave Diles park. at The Locomotion (fonner Elberfeld' s Warehouse) in Pomeroy on
FRIDAY
July 20 at 9 a.m.
TIJPPERS PLAINS - The TupThe registration ree is $2 and
pers Plains VFW Post 9053 will participants must pre-register
sponsor a dance Friday from 8- before July 13 . There will be a
11 :30 p.m. at the post home. Music boys and girls division ror age calewill be provided by the Country gories, 13-15 and 16-21.
Grass Band. The public is invited
Trophies will be awarded and
to attend.
the to\irnament will be conducted
until completed.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
County Pomona Grange will meet
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall. Inspection
will. be held and degree work will
Norweg'ian explorer Roald
be performed. A special deaf pro- Amundsen announced iD 1912 he
gram will precede the meeung. had discovered the South Pole on
Hemlock Grange will be the hosts.
Dec. 14, 1911.
The ironclad ships Monitor and
Virginia battled in 1862 to a draw
at Hampton Roads, Va., during the
American Civil War.
.
The rtflit U.S. cruise missile was
The Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints tested in 1984 over Western Canawill have its annual yard sale on da
The inventor of the telephone,
Saturday on the Ohio side of lhe
Ravenswood Bridge. Rain will can- Alexander Graham BeD, .was born
in 1847 in Edinburgh, Scotlantl.
cel the sale.

.._ __

Amy Jo Davis, Kara Adkins, Donny Boggs;
Christin Meyer and Adam Miller. Back row,
Ralph Stienmetz, Rev. Wesley Thatcher, Nancy
Burgey, Charles Burgey, Kathy Adkins and
Donald Miller.

REEZER

STORE HOURS
Monday 'tbi:u Sunday
8 AM· lO PM

PEPSI
COLA
· 2'LITER BTL.

89('

�.. _, ..

_.-

•

-....,-

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Wednesday, July 3, 1991

Ohio University
College of OSteopathic Medicine

Family
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Questioa : A lot !If people I
know have developed skin amcc:r.
Is this disease more common now
than it used 10 be?
Answer: Studies show lhal Ibis
year, one out of every seven Americans will develop some form of
skin cancer. The average age of
victims has dropped from those in
their 50s and 60S 10 people in dleir
20s and 30s. Experts say many
cases could be pr-evented by avoiding unnecessary exposure to the

sun.

'

•

• •

'

SCHOLARSH(P PRESENTED - Susan Houehins, right,
daughter of Steve and Vickk Houebins, Middleport, a 1991 graduate or Meigs High Sebool, is tbe sebolarsbip recipient or tbe Alpba
Omicron Cbapter o( Alpba Delta Kappa Sorority o( Women Educators which is presented to a graduating senior going into education. Pictured presentiilg tbe scholarship is Leah Ord, guidance
counselor at Southern High School. The scholarship is rotated
among the three high schools in Meii!S County.

Actress Lee Remick
dead of cancer at age 55

I

in her career, including a former
first lady in ·'Eleanor - In Her
Own Words: A Tribute to Eleanor
Roosevelt. " In "Nutcracker:
Money, Madness and Murder, "
Mi ss Remick st.arred as Frances
Bradshaw Schreuder, the socialit.e
who was convicted of persuading
her 17-year-old son to kill her
father.
She was boril in Quincy, Mass.,
on Dec. 14, 1935, to department
store owner Frank Remick and bis
wife, Patricia, an actress. Miss
Remick attended New Yort's Miss
Hewitt School and studied dance at
the Swobada School and with the
Charles Weidman Co.
Afla working in summer stock,
she made her Broadway debut at 17
as a wise-Q'll(king. teen-ager in the
1953 flop "Be Your Age." She .
enrered Barnard College that fall
but dropped out afrer one semester
to go into the t.heala again.
Her fWn debut came at age 22 in
1957's "A Face in the Crowd,"
directed by Elia Kazan and costarred Andy Griffith, also making
his film debut
Her pe,rfonnance in the 1966
Broadway play " Wait Until Dark"
delivered a Tony Award nomination . In 1974, she was cast in a
London production of ' 'Bus Stop.''
She worked exrensi vely in theater-themed television series,
among them "Playhouse 90,"
"Studio One," "Armstrong Circle
Theatre," "Robert Montgomery
Presents" and "American Invento-

By JOHN HORN
AP Entert.ainmeot Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Lee
Remick, an acb'ess who specialized
in portraying women in crises and
gained an Oscar nomination as an
alcoholic in " Days of Wine and
Roses," died Tuesday. She was 55.
Miss Remick died of cancer at
5:15 a.m. at her Brentwood home,
wi th family members at her side,
said publicist Dick Winters.
Miss Remick 's cancer was diag· nosed in the spring of 1989. She
: had undergone only physical tbera: py m recent months, Wmten 5ald.
· She was in frail health at one of
her final public appearances, a star
dedicated to her on April 29 on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame.
" This bas been a slow slide and
· it finally carne about," Winters
. said.
Miss Remick starred as an alco·
holic in the 1962 movie "Days of
Wine and Roses" ; a nervous wreck
in "The Women ' s Room "; a
nymphomaniac in "The Detec . ti ve "; and a woman who takes
: drastic measures to cover up her
- infidelity in a rernalc:e of "The Let: ter.••

Most recently , Miss Remick
st.arred as the unfeeling mother to
Marlee Matlin in the 1989 televi sion movie " A Bridge to Silence."
Miss Remick appeared in more
. than 20 llllltion pictures, including
· "A Face In the Crowd," "The
: Long Hot Summer," "Experiment
· in Terror," " Wild River?"Sancluary," " The Wheeler 'Dealers,"
"Travelin' Lady," " Anatomy of a
Myrder," "Tribute," and "The
Competition."
. · Her television credits included
· :'Tough"love," "Ike," "Misual's
: Daughter," " The Blue Knight"
: and " Jennie, Lady Randolph
Churchill."
: She played other famous women

.MAC to offer
:painting classes

When you plan to spend lime in
bright sunlight, proleet your skin
with a sunblocker or sunscreen.
Sunblockers get their name because
they actually block ultraviolclrays.
Products containing titanium and
zinc oxide are most common, but
these sunbloc1c:rs are a pasae-wbire
color when applied to the skin, so
some people won't wear them.
Sunscreens are usually invisible,
and work by absorbing the sun's
rays. The most effective ones cont.ain para-aminobenzoic acid, or
PABA. The numbers on sunscreens
refer to their "SWI Proleclion Factor." If you normaDy bum after 20
minutes in the sun, a sun protection
factor of 15 means you can st.ay out
15 times longer - about 5 hours
before you bwn.
Skin t.ans at different rates,
depending on the amount of darkening pro~eelive pigment its cells
can produce. Fair-skinned people
produce less pigment; therefore,
they need more pro~eetion against
the sun's rays. DermatologisiS say
for most skin types a sun protection
factor of 15 will provide adequate
protection . Some very light·
skinned people, however, should
use a sunscreen with an even
greater sun proleelion factor - say
a '1;22,"
Beware of products billed as
suntan "lotions," as they're usually
designed to just moisturize, not to
protect, against burning.

Q•estio• : I've seen some
adva1isements for suntanning parlors dW say their lights are "safes
!ban the suo." Would Ibis be a bella way 10 ges a suntan?
A - . A friend of mine who
is a c~er'o~Wlogist (skin doctor) bas
a saying that is applicable here. He
says, "There' s no such thing as a
healthy llll." I couldn't agree more.
The idea that a tan is healthy, sexy
01' beauliful is purely cultural. Back
a few hundred years ago, Caucasian women in some countries
used to wear makeup to give ibeir
skin a wbilel' look because a very
pale complexion was considered
the ultimate sign of beauty.
I agree with most experts oo this
subject who advise against use of
suntan parlors. Sunlamp rays, like
the sun itself, can damage skin
cells whether burning Occurs or
not. The Food and Drug Administration says sunlamps do increase
the risk of skin cancer, premarure
agmg, and damage to blood vessels
beneath the skin.
As tbe warm summer days bring
us back to ' pools and beaches, gctung a tan may seem lilce the fashionable thing to do. But remember
that caring for your skin now
means healthier, more attractive
skin for many summers to come.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Obio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens
Ohio. 45701.
·

MEN'S

bus trip Thursday

SUMMER

. The Mason Recreation Founda·
liOn 1s sponsonng a bus tr1p on
Thursday to the Reds·Pirates baseball game. Cost ts S30.. Call 7735992 to 773-5155 after 5.30 p.m. to
make a reservauon.

.

Reports have circulated that the
Carolco Pictures production
climbed to $90 million or even
s100 million. caroico. which bas
bad its own cash-flow problems,
has not confmned or denied any
figure. But the unofficial figure bas
beell placed at $88 million.
Acalnling to The Boston Globe,
Carolco sent a memo to Wall Street
anslysts delailing the movie's costs
and ~evenue projections. "The
May 30 memo put the actual C!JSI
of producing the effects-laden,
aclion-&lt;:rammed epic at a mere $51
million, about what the summer's
two otber biggest action pictures,
'Robin Hood, Prince. of Thieves
and 'Hudson Hawk ' cost, " tbe
Globe said.
Among the reporred costs: $15
million, including an $11 million
Gulfstream G-Ill jet, for
Schwarzenegger, and $5 million
for wrilel'-producer-4irectof James

Cameron. An additional $10 million reportedly was paid to Hemdale Film Corp: for rema_ke ri~.
. It is also esuma!Cd, accordlng to
the Globe, that Tri-Star Pictures
will spend $20 million to $25 million to market and distribute the
movie.
The first "Terminator" cost
$6.4 million and grossed $35 million in domestic sales. The sequel
would require a minimum gross of
more than $200 million worldwide
to break even.
According to The New York
Times, Carolco spent $1 million on
stunts alone, perhaps the lar~est
amount ever spent for stunts m a
movie. "Terminator 2" bas nonstop action and is filled with motorcycle chases, fights and well-coordinated leaps and jumps.
There's also a chase along a
concrete river bed involving a low·
11 ying helicopla and a huge truck
that flies off bridges. All went well,
Cameron said, exc-e pt for the
rollover of a huge tankec ll'Uek.
"Nobody was hurt. but it did go
past six of my seven cameras," the
director said. "We did get a .beautiful shot on the·seventh camera, and
we supplemented that with some
model shots and so on."

Phone directories are being delivered
Copies of the 1991 Pomeroy
telepbonc directory are being delivered 10 area customers, said Gary
Bates, Pomeroy local service manager for GTE Telephone Operations. •
Customers not receiving new
books by July 14 should call GTE's
toll-free service number (1-800232-2544) .
The directory provides listings
for customers in the Pomeroy,
' letaJt Falls, Portland, Racine and

Rutland exchanges Listings for
Chesler are also included.
Bates said an exua free copy of
the new directory can be picked up
at the Phone Mart located at 238
W. Main SL in Pomeroy or 16 W.
Washington St in Athens.
The Pomeroy store is open 9:30
a.m. to I p.m., and 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.,
Monday Thru Friday (except holidays). The Athens store is open 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday thru Friday.

SUITS, BLAZERS
&amp; SPORT COATS
REDUCED

30°/o

BURM.UDA
SHORTS

INSURANCE
111 S.lllld St., Pauuroy
lGEJnS SEIY.G

EGscoum
s•cr 11161

MEN'S

YEAR AROUND

STRAW HATS

PANTS
REDUCED 20°/o

I( Picnic With A !

REDUCED

30°/o

SPORTSWEAR
SHORTS, TOPS, SlACKS

LADIES'

I

.JEANS
30.0/o

30°/o

(.

LADIES'
DRESSES
REDUCED l/2 PRICE

•

Dear Ann Landers: 1really need
to vent my anger and frusuation
about a problem that is affecting
every~e. I am talking about women
and grrls on Medicaid who are
baving three, four and five children.
Most of these women bave no
hus~ands and no jobs, but they
conunue to have babies that the rest
of us bard-working people must
support. I work in an emergency
room so I see this every day.
Yesterday, a 21;year-Qid came to the
hospital, pregnant with No. 5. She
has had a baby every year since age
16, never married, has frequent
pel vic infections and bas never used
birth control.
The tragic victims are the cllildren. We are now seeing the third
generation of Medicaid families.
Something must be done now.
I know this sounds cruel but
~hy should bard-working, responSible taxpayers have to subsidize the
irresponsible, careless behavior
of these three, four and five-time
repeaters? If a woman is on
Medicaid, has had two children, is
not married, is not atrending school
and is not seeking employment, she
should have her tubes tied or be put
on birth control and not be rewarded
with more money with each new

baby.

I know all the equal rights people
out there are baving fits right now
but, my God, I see i! every day and
11 makes me sick. I have tallc:ed with
these girls myself. They sluug their

se~.

When Mom gave me the booklet,
I was having a rough time with a
relationship. I couldn't decide

love rhe fresh.made combination or juicy strawberrie!&gt;. naky crust.
special glaze. and whipped wpping. So piCk one up during

' .

Independence Day weekend. July 41h. 51h. 61h or 7rh

SHO.

NE~~

I
•

·

SlrawberryPJe

"'

•~

"""r:..k;;};'=Jl&lt;09k
a.--. , ~"'"'"""&lt;~or,
purdu&gt;&lt;d

.
end

Shon&lt;y ' Exp«,
welc""""
Amencan
. !he

328 Viand Street, Pt. Pleasant,

WV

-

I

I
•

LADIES'
JUMPSUITS
REDUCED

30°/o

OPEN MONDAY ·THRU
SATURDAY
9:30 .AM-5:00 PM

CWdl ~

.•

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

Ann
Landers
r\NN LANDERS
"IIIII, Loa J\nret ..
'nnl'" Synclcale and
Crea&amp;on Syndlcat.e.''

whether I should keep saying no
and risk losing my boyfriend to
someone who would say yes, or stick
with my convictions and take the
chance. You mail!e it clear that
giving in to hang on to a guy was
foolish because if that's the kind of
person he is, he's not wonh hanging
on to. You also poinle'd out that some
guys dump girls after they give in
because they lose interest, or worse
yet, they make girls feel cheap about
themselves.
So thanks, Ann, for helping me
keep my head together. You settled
a big problem for me and I feel 100
percent better about myself. -·
JAMESVILLE,.N.Y.
DEAR N.Y .: Thanks for being
so frank. Anyone who wants this
booklet can send a check or money
order for $3.65 (in Canada $4.45),
along with a long, business-size.
self-addressed envelope, to "Teens,"
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Bo~ 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562.
Gem of the Day: A college
education never hurt anylxxly who
was willing to learn something
afterward.

Captured by Iraqis during war,
CBS correspondent takes look back
By JAy SHARBUIT
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) _ CBS ·
" Bob Simon: Back 1o Baghdad, "
the e1ghth Gulf War documentary
in two months, airs Thursday night
when a large chunk of American
viewers will be watching July 4
fireworks and maybe a parade or
two.
Which is just as well. This is a
disappointing program .
That's a shame, given Simon 's
· fine, long record as a war corre·
· .spondent, particular Iy his brilliant
: .coverage of Nonh Vietnam's East·
. er offensive in 1972 after the pull·
· out of U.S . ground fortes.
Tllis effort just tries to tackle too
· much (an advance cassette of the
: show comes with CBS advising
. that last-minute editing will go on
until the broadcast, to keep the
show as timely as possible).
Simon and three CBS col·
leagues were captured by Iraqi soldiers in what he calls a "no man's
· land" on the Kuwait-Saudi border
on Jan. 21, shortly aft.er the Gull
· War began with American -led
allied air attacks.
:: They ·were imprisoned in
: · Bagdhad, where they were beaten.

tortured and interrogated through·
out the war. The .war ended on Feb.
28 . Iraq freed them on March 2.
Simon began work on the documentary after a short rest.
He 1ndeed w~m back to Baghdad, as the show s Utle says. But he
al so went to the other key Middle
East nations mvolved m the war.
It might have been wiser to confina the program to his own personal, tmpressmmsuc look bac_k, stanmg. It at the time he and h1s crew,
trymg to evade heavy-handed alhed
censors, set out on!herr own.. .
They went without mthtary
escort to see what he thought
would be a battleground 10 the
commg ground war. What happened to them before, dunng and
after theu capture would have
made a fascmaung program.
Instead,_ what you getts mostly
the B1g P1cture, a gnm, not- sogrand _tour of what has happened m
the Middle East smce the war, not
only'm Iraq , but also 10 Kuwrut,
Saudi Arab1a, lsrael and the Israeli·
occupted Wes_tBank.
Mt~_ch of II already has been
extensively reporred.
.
You mal' not be surpnsed to

LAS VEGAS (AP) - The
McGuire Sisters, who made music
history in the 1950s and 1960s,
then resumed their careers in the
1980s, return to the Las Vegas
stage Thursday.
·
The sisters -Phyllis, Dorothy
and Christine- last appeared here
in 1985, with George Burns at Caesars Palace. Since then, they have
continued to perform at venues
from New York to San Francisco.
The McGuires are just one more
name from the past returning to
marquees along the Las Vega.~
. Strip. ·

"We think there's a very sb'ong
market here for a wide range of talent," said Phyllis McGuire, who
has lived in Las Vegas since 1964.
"There's an audience out there for
our era just as there is for the new
comedians and singers, etc."
The McGuires burst upon the
American music scene in 1952 and
earned a string of··gold records for
liits such as "Sincerely," "Just for
Old Time 's Salc:e," "Something's
Gotta Give," "He," "Picnic " and
"Sugarlimc."
The sisters will perfonn at The
Deiertlnn resort through Sunday.

•

D

Travel by automobile

Travel by airplane , ~ain or bus
TOTAL: 22.3 million

1990
1991' ~
&lt;.

'.

••

'

•

• ......

•••

Page

learn that for all the United States
did in organizing and leading the
war against Saddam Hussein's
invading armies, little has changed
m the area, and Saddam remains in
power.
Srmon does at times provide sarcasuc hoosier shots for basically
old news. Narrating footage of a
Saudi parade, he says the defeat of
Iraq "was a great victory. Even if
Saudi soldiers did very little of the
fighting.
" It was a vindication of Saudi
strategy - pay and pray . Pray 10
Allah, pay off everyone. Get the
best defense that money can buy.
Buy American."
Vigorous reconstruction is under
way in Baghdad. Even the raceb'ack has re-opened. But 60 miles
south, where rebels rose up against
Saddam , there's still no power. no
potable water, and food and medical supplies are shon.
And even some Baghdad residents secretly say they are angry
that the United States didn'ttopple
the dictator. However, Simon adds,
"now, the moment ~as passed ...
they feel helpless and hopeless.
Life has returned to nonnal."

By Aileen Claire
NEA Food Editor
American wat.ennelons are coming into full season. One of the oldest fruits known to man, watennelon came by its name honestly - it
is 92 percent water. The other 8
percent is sugar, which malc:es it a
sweet and !efreshing b'eat
Watermelon originally wa s
grown m the middle of the Kalahari
Desert, as a source of water for
thirsty traders . Actually, this
"fruit" is a cousin to the cucumber
and ldn to the gourd.
Though its season runs from
May to November, the watennelon
requires a four-month frost -free
growing season. It is most successfully grown in warm-weather slates
with plentiful fresh or irrigated
water. Florida, Texas, California
and Georgia are the most popular
states for growing watermelons.
Cut melons fill the needs of
smaller households, but those w~o
buy a whole melon can still
"thump" it to see if it is ripe. A
npe melon produces a distinct hollow sound when thumped . Also

Caretta King praises civil rights museum
By WOODY BAIRD
Associated Press Writer
MEMPHIS , Tenn . (AP) - A
civil rights museum established in
the motel where Martin Luther
King Jr. was assassinated has
turned the sile into a place of inspiration rather than bitterness, his
widow said at a dedication cerem~
ny .
"From this day forward , the
Lorraine Motel will represent

!111

I

••

•

TOTAL: 25

million

organize a sanitatton workers '
strike.
"The bullet that stilled my husband's body unleashed his spirit to
this nation and into the world ,"
Mrs. King said. "His sacrifice has
become a redeeming force for
good."
The Lorraine had fallen into dis·
repair and was a haven for prostitutes and drug pushers when a citi·
zens group bought it at foreclosure
auction in 1982. St.atc and local
governments gave financial support
to the museum project.

something more than the site where
they slew the dreamer ,'' Coretta
Scott King said Tuesday night.
''Now it will also be a place
where his dream is being redeemed
on a daily basis, a place where peo·
pie can come to learn about a non·
violent movement to make real the
promise of democracy."
King was shot to death on a baJ.
cony of the motel by James Earl
Ray on Apri14 , 1968, as he helped

=---~------------~--

1. 60 Minutes (R)

2. 18th Annual Daytime Emmys (S)
3. Roseanne ( R)
4. Evening Shade Special (AS)
5. Coach (R)
6. Cheers (A)
7. Murphy Brown (R)
8. Empty Nest (A)
9. Family Matters (R)
Golden Girls (R)
Murder, She Wrote (R)

[-,.......,......,.,

13.3

32
25
24

12.7

22

12.6
12.5
12.3

22

CBS
CBS
ABC
CBS
ABC

23

NBC

22

CBS

12.1

25

11.9
11 .9

27
26

ABC
NBC

11 .9

21

CBS

14.1
13.5

r

The $9.2 million National Civil
Rights Museum opens Aug. 31.
"It is my fervent hope that the
National Civil Rights Museum will
not only serve as a historical focal
point but will also in spire people to
become involved in campaigns to
help fulfill the dream. " Mrs. King
said.

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

NBC

COUNTY

Z::ZJE'J~--L;:::========:;:l

APPLIANCES
627 lrd Ave., Gallipolis

OVERALL RA !)N~ .
CBS • NB Q./A~
9.6
8.7
8.

. PH. 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.
AP

BIG

THE HAGUE, Netherlands
(AP) - The husband of Queen
Beatrix has been hospitalized for
depre ssion, the government
announced Tuesday.
The German-horn Prince Claus
has a history of depression -linked
disorders. which were acknowl edged publicly in 1982.
The Government Information
Service said the 64-year-old prince
was adfl!litted to the psychiatric
department of Bronovo Hospital on
Monday. He was described as surfering from a "recurrence of complaints of a depressive nature.' '
The prince, a former West German diplomat, is highly regarded in
the Netherlands for his unassuming
manner and sense of humor .
NEW YORK (AP) - Sports
comm entator Howard Cosell
underwent further chest surgery as
part of his treatment for cancer, a
statement from his family con·
finned Tuesday.
Cosell, 73, who gained fame..
and notoriety ·on ABC's Monday
Night Football and as a boxing
announcer for many Muhammad
Ali fights, had a malignant tumor
removed from his chest on June !0.
He returned to the air for ABC
Radio a week later.

Gently toss watermeiQn, oranges
and Honey Mint Sauce to combine.
Garnish with mint. This kitchen tested recipe malc:es 4 servings, 81
calories per serving.
Honey Mint Sauce: Combine 2
tablespoons honey. 1 In teaspoons
lemon juice , I tea spoon finely
chopped mint and 1/4 tea spoon
grated lemon pee l ; mi x we ll.
Makes about 3 table spoons, 43
calories per serving.
WATERMELON AND
YOGURT
2 cups watermelon, cubed
I tablespoon lemon juice
In teaspoon grated lelll9n oeo(/
1n cup fruit-flavored or"v'Rrtiua
yogurt
Combine watermelon , lemon
juice and peel. Spoon yogurt into'
four bowls and top with watermcl·
on mi xture. This kitchen-lested
recipe malc:es 4 servings, 141 calories per serving.

•

SALE
FRIDAY, JULY 5th thru
FRIDAY, JULY 12th

SAVI·NGS IN
·EVERY
DEPARTMENT
SUMMER CLEARANCE
.

STOREWIDE
.

*GIRLS' DEPARTMENT *DOMESTIC DEPARTMENT
Travel destinations

s/.~

JU\!

~ Jl('f

1OOfo TAKEN OFF TOTAL SALES

8% lake ar,a

II% moootaln area - - -

Where travelers plan to stay
· 2% won't be slaying ovemlght
ti%Un~

•'~ct111ip

----.J

· ,o;r. ~":cOndo 01

vacatiOn-home
1~ c;amper; tr811er, A\lo;-..,:l,;}'

llilit

107 MILL STREET .
MIDDLEPORT

SHOP LOCALLY

..

~~-'-----..;..-----.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. _ _ , ; __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;;;...._

11

2 oranges, peeled , sliced and
halved
Honey Mint Sauce
4 mint sprigs

look for melons that are symmetri·
cal, regardless of whether they arc
round, oval or oblong. An uncut
melon will keep at room tempera·
ture for about a week. When buy·
ing cut melons, look for bright-col·
ored flesh with a fresh, ·finn texture
that does not look mealy or water·
soaked. Cut melons should be
refrigerated and eaten within two to
three days.
Although watennelon seed-spit·
ling contesiS are popular, especially
in states where watennelon is a sta·
pie crop, this sport would be
frowned upon in China. There, the
melons are grown more for their
seeds than the flesh; the seeds arc
roasted and sold like popcorn .
Growing in popularity is the 5- to
10-pound "ice box" melon that is
seedless. It has taken growers 50
years to successfully produ ce a
seedless watermelon . Also gaining
in popularity are the newer orange·
and yellow-flesh watermelons.
WATERMELON SUNSHINE
DESSERT
4 cups small wat erm elon
wedges

•MEN'S DEPARTMENT *WOMEN'S DEPARTMENT
*STUDENTS' DEPARTMENT *BOYS' DEPARTMENT

7% stalll or national park

Shoney's speoal s1rawberry pic make&gt; a delloous holiday 1rea1. You 'll

shoulders and say they need .more
money so they bave another baby.
The only medical care they get is in
our emergency room. Their teeth are
rotten (dentists in this area refuse
Medicaid p3lients) and tbey live on
junk food. Some days I go home
and cry.
Do I sound biu.er'l Well, I am.
Please, Ann, print this letter. Maybe
it will make a difference. .:
CONCERNED, UPSET R.N . IN
MICHIGAN
DEAR CONCERNED: l can
understand your anger but ihis is
America, not Nazi Germany. We
don't slcrilize women. What we need
is more federal and stat.e funds to
educare those repealers and give
them hope. They must understand
that the road they are traveling leads
nowhere. They also need basic instruction on birth control from nonjudgment.al social workers who
speak their language.
Dear Ann Landers: I recently
received your booklet "Sex and
the Teenager" from my mother. I
was very surprised. When sbe gave
me the booklet she said, "I think
you ought to read this." I was
embarrassed and rouldn't figure out
why she gave it to me. After I read
i~ I knew it was just what I needed
to make up my mind. I decided I
was definitely not ready to have

Founh ot July travel
(people traveling 100 miles or more from home)

BLOUSES

The Dally Sentinel

Sterilization is not the answer: Ann Watermelon desserts cool the appetite

Independence Day travel is expected to be up 12 percent over
last year.

I

REDUCED.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Travel oq the Fourth of July

REDU&lt;ED

,

Wednesday, July 3, 1991

----People in the news----

YOUI-EPEJIDEIIT

.~--·----~-~--~--------~•

: NEW YORK (AP) - Large icale corporate meeting s have
~me a long way from their onedme regimen of platfonn speeches
and colored slide shows as a result
pf advances in elecl!onics tech aolosy, notes a meetmg manageblent orpniZJ!tion.
- The most recent innovation in

'ned on ~;~ne
disc and
·controlled
by alighl)'t'eiglu
persoi1al computer.

minator 2: Judgment Day," the
sequel to tbe bit 1984 Arnold
Scbwaruaegger science-fiction
movie, opens Wednesday as perhaps the most expensive movie

4

Electronic advances spur
better business meetings

tal
.

By BOB THOMAS
A-a.ted Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - "Ter-

PA~TS
iEDUCED

DOWNING CHilDS
MUlLEN MUSSER

ry ,"

The Middleport Arts Council
will offer a children 's t-shin painti)!g class on July 17 at 10 am. for
children age 9- 13. The cost of the
class is $7.50 and paint supplies
:will be furnished. Marilyn Meier is
lite instructor and each.ehild is to
bring hi s or her own t-shirt. Call
992-5983 or 992-2675 to register.
: A mop doll c laf~ and mini-rriop
&lt;loll class will be offered by the
Council on Tuesday at 10 a.m. or
~30 p.m. Michele Garretson is the
itlsb'u&gt;tor and to register call 7422157 or 992-2675.

p..ooucing lntonnative.
multimedia
presentationsmeaningful
is the use
of laser disCS, !ICCOrding to executives at Ray Simon Inc ., a New
York-ba.Sedpt'oducerofmeelings.
,
&lt; One system tntegrates
SU'II Photos. compurerized ~i!nation tech niques and full·mottOn v1deo w1th
. attendant speci_al eff~ts, all con-

.'Terminato~ 2: Judgement Day'
producers spend big bucks ·

ever made.

MRF to sponsor
·

•

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

-- ------

_ _ _ _. . . . . . . . . . . . . ._ _ _ _. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....._ _ _. . . _ _....._ __ ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

..._ _

.._

. &amp;. .. "-

.._ &amp;. i; ... ._ .._ .._ ..

~

... ..

�Wednesda,y, ~uly 3, 1991
Page:--12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, July 3, 1991 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

F1ght1nq 111 Yugoslavia

Tanks head for Croatia after Army rejects offer

In Tuellday't hostilities. Slevenlans
launched a rodlet ambush on a federal
army unit near Novo Mesto: flghting
also broke out at border posts with Italy
and Austria: troops opened lire on a
crowd In Zagreb, the Croatian capitaL

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)
- Scores of federal tank s and
other armored vehicles rolled to
Croatia's border today after the
army command refused the truce
offer of battle-scarred Slovenia,
Croatia's panner in secession.
The armored column was dispatched from Belgrade, the capital
of Communist Serbia, the largest
Yugoslav republic. Its leaders
oppose Croatia and Slovenia 's
independence drives and hard-line
Serbs head the federal military.
The move came after a day or
fierce fighting in Slovenia and
threatened to dangerously widen
the conflict that broke out last week
after the two Westward -leaning
HerceoOi•inal republics declared their indepen dence.
So far, only Slovenia's territori iiloOI..__'--.....1 al force s have engaged the army ,
.------,
but federal troops killed at least
three people in Croatia on Tuesday
after angry protesters tried to block
tanks leavtng their barracks for
Slovenia.
Croatia's leaders today con-

UMMER!

demned lhe anny for the deaihs and
accused the military of trying to
drag the republic into anned conflicL
The fighting broke in Slovenia
on Thursday after territorial
defense forces seized the republic's
checkpoints on lhe Italian, Austrian
and Hungarian borders, and federal
units in the republic have been
frustrated and isolated by Slovenian militiamen using guerrilla tactics.
Yugoslavs and foreign envoys
fear Yugoslavia would collapse
into all -out civil war if Croatia,
which lie s between Soerbia and
Slovenia, is dragged into the conflicl
About II percent of Croatia' s
population is Serbian and there
have been widespread ethnic clashesJ!n the Serb-dominated eastern
reglon of Croatia, the second largest Yugoslav republic. Since
May 3, some 41 people have been
killed in Serbia-Croatian violence.
Slovenia was quiet during the
night, although there were reports

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 997-215b
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

.L BULLETIN

1 ti
15
15
15
15

3
6
10

Llo .&lt; .~i.fi••tl

Galh a Co unt~
Ar ea Co de 614
446

Galltpolt s

3 6 7 C h tllh•r c
388 Vmt on
24 5 R1o Grande
25 6 Gu van D•t t
643 Ar ~ b• a D1s l
3 79 W.a'nul

Big Kids an d Baby Program
lor 2 to 12 year olds who are
going to becom e big brothers or
bi g sister s.
Tuesday, July 9th, 630 P.M.
at Plll!sant Vally Ho spital
downstairs conference room.

I
\

,.,,.l'r

fiiiW'·'

t/11•

M e•gs County

M as on Co. WV
AreaCod eJ04

AreaC od e 614

992
9 85
84 3
24 7

949
7 42
667

M•ddl l$)ort
Po mttroy
Ches ter
Portland
letart fo. ll s
R acm e
R utlan d
Cootv•ll e

67 5
4 58
5 76
773
88 2
9 95

Pt

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

Cud o f Thanks
In Memor'l
An noucem ont s
G no' ea¥\l' ay
Ho~ppy Ads
l ost an d Fou nd

·'

WASHIIS-$100 up
DIYIS-Uv up
HFIIGIIAIOIS-$100 up
UNGIS- Got-aoc.- $125 up
fHfZEIS-$125 up
.
MICIO OYIN!-$19 up

by 'llck moMt~

I

I

· o~rby
• ~UALITY

I

j
I

Fresh

1

Point P!nsant · 67~9 :• ·

OFFICE 992-1!886
HOME 992-6692

I

(,•$..
..

..

Cll~&lt;•'*"-' ~ "~;;_ ';;;...

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DOTIIES. TURNER, BROKER

These

Great In
Fruit

· MIDDLEPORT - Riilroad St. - Mob1le Home On ly - A
well kept 1981 Bay~ew 14x70 mobile home w1th 2 bed·
· rooms: Has a fireplace, garden tub, central arr.front porch, 2
bay windows, vinyl underpinnin g, and a stora ge bu ildm g. Al l·
for th e low pnce ol
$9.500.

Flavorful

Peaches

·DAN VILE - Red Hill Road- You've got to see th1s one- A
3 to 5 bedroom home has 2'h baths. Alsohasa lim shed base·
ment w1th a firepla ce, an attached 2car garage,an ~ -g round
.swimming pool. and a well eQuipped kitChen It all s1t son Ap·
prox. 10 acres
ASKING $120.000.

Fresh Split

Chicken
Breasts

· Sprite, Diet Coke,
Cherry Coke, Caffeine
Free Diet Coke

Classic Coke
12 Pack,
12 oz.

Cans

RUTLAND- How can you beat a deal like lh1sl Atwo story
home with 3 bedroom s and a n~ ce fl at lot. Apr~ce too ~ood to
pass up
ONLY 7,500 ·

Elsie
Ice Cream

·ALBANY - Awell mamlamed 3 bedroom home w1t h 2 lull
baths. arr condit ioning, woodbum er. attached I ca r garage,
and equipped k1tchen. Srtltng on appro x 2'h acres w1th a
stocked pond.
All FOR $39,500
MIDDLEPORT - Alway s wanted a loghome1Th1s one IS approx. 10 yrs. old and has been remomdeled all over. Has 2
bedroom s down and Ito~ bedroom up. Cathedra l ce111ng in
living room , new large fron t and rear porch es. Great v1 ew of
the river. MUST SEE TO SEE HOW CUTE.
$29,900

Your Choice
of Regular
Flavors

RUTLAND - Salem Street - Why look loncer7 - There
are 3 bedrooms in thiS I 'h story home on a 50xl40 lot Has
newer heat pump, skylight . vmyl siding, and a picket fence
for privacy . Seller has left the area and WILL NOT RE FUSE
ANY REASONABLE OFFER, and may cons1dela second mort·
aage,
$27,000
CLOSE TO TOWN- Yet Private - Th is 217 acres is easy to
mow, bet;ause it is level. Comes wrth large living room and
dining room. ~ so has a fam 1ly room. 2 bedrooms, and central
air condit1ning.
$26,900

We Have All Yo·u r Fixin's
For Your Fourth of July .Celebration!

ROUTE 248 - Asecluded cabm with approx. 3 acres and all
on one floor. Has a wrap-arrund porch. 2 b!!(lroom s. large
open living rqom and kitchen with knotty pine on walls and
ceiling. Approx. 10 yrs. old.
$26,900

:

.'
. ' •.

••
•

•

~r

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

l;®ltnd
41
41
4)
44
45
46
47

51

H o useho ld G ood~

Want ttd To O o

62

Sparling Goods

51
56

Anltqu es
Mt sc M erc tl and1st:
Bu tld1n g Su ppi 11!S
PelS l o r Sal e

57

M ur.tcal ln s trum.ml s

S•tu a tro n Waru ed
ln 1uran ce

14
15
16
17

HI

Busm en T!itlllllt\1

Trans ortation
A11 to' l o r Sah 1
T}
Tr u ck s l o r S .!l t!
7 3 Vmn &amp; 4 wo · ~
74 M u tm c yc lcs
1':, Bthtl s &amp; Mul o t ) tur So~ l t:
76 A u t o Part ) 8r A t:tllS~Ot tt!!lo
17 A u t o R cp o~ 11
7 8 Ca n1p1n() Eq 11 tpmcnt
7!t C,tmper~ &amp; Mtt ur HU 1t11:~
71

Merchandise
54
55

8usm eu 0ppor1urutv

22 M on l!'y to l oan

5 8 f rwt s &amp;

Pr o f es!Unn al Sl!lv • c~

liijdlQ41
B 1 H o m ~:~ lmprovtun ent ~
Bl Pl umlltng &amp; H e.1t ii1!J
8) EllCaYif lln!t
84 Elet1 11 Cal &amp; R t! lflgt!fet lion
8 , G t!n t!lal Hauhny
86 M obtl tl Ho m e R ~ p iw
9 7 Uphols ltuy

V e~~abl ttS

For Sa l e or Tr ade

59

W a 111t.-d t o Bu y
lt vt!Hod•
Hay &amp; G r o~o n
St!cd &amp; F ~ tlrh o~c r

6~

Schools &amp; ln suuct mn
R adi O. TV &amp;o C B Ac p.m
M•sctHiantM&gt;u s

Heto Wantud

--·- -

992-5335 or 985-3561
Anon from Post Olfi&lt;e
POMEROY, OHO

CARPENTER SERVICE
- Room Addlttont

- Guner won:
- Electrical and Plumbing
- Concrete work
- Roofing
- Interior &amp; Exterior

Palntlng

UPHOLSTERY
21 3-Jio. Second
llitkfleport

Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes
36 Yean Expe.rlencf'

NO SUNDAY CAW

10·19-t mo.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER end
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME SITES.
LANDCLEARING ,
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAILABLE
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7458

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;-SUPPLIES

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING
Summ" Sp161tlt

992·b715

11·14·'90 lin

5· 1•· '91 -tfn

A&amp;B
COMPLUE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY
Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.

•BUY eSlll •TRADE
OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10 :00 am-5:00pm

742-2421

MAIN Sl., MASON, WY.

2112 Mi. outside

1·(304)773-9560

Rutland on New
lima Rd.

W. H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

If you're in need
of Mobile Home
Parts or

Accessories...
SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
IT. 33 WEST OF
DARWIN,

OHIO

NEAR RACINE ON THE RIVER - An acre with a24x40 metal
building wijh adeck and sets of patio doors, huge sliding me·
tal doors for easy storage of a camper or boat Has sewage,
waer, and electric.
,
PRICED AT $17,000

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

IRIM and
REMOVAL

BILL SLACK

992-2269
I

USED RAILROAD TIES
1-12-10-tfn

5-tO-'lt-tfn.

•New HoiWeS
•Gara.. s
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Frtl Estimates

985-4473
667-6179

5·31-'90 tin

30 SESSIONS

$30

949-2826
TACKERYILLI RD.
RACINE, OH.

•Reasonable Rates
•Quality Work
•Free Eatimetes
•Carpet Hat F11t Dry
Time . ·

•High Glo11 on Tile

Floor Fini1h
MIKE LEWIS. Owner
It, 1, luJIDnd, OH.

742·2451

3·14-'91-lfn

SERVICE
992-5335 or
915·3561

Across Fro• Post OHict
117 I. Second St.
I'OMIIOY, OHIO

GROOM
ROOM
Complete Grooming
For All Br"ds
EMILEE MERINAR .
O.wner &amp; G_perator

614-992-6820
Pomeroy, Ohio

2·11·91-Un

WE DO

POOLTviDEO MACHINE

Open Tues., Thurs .,
Fri.. Sat. 7 :30 p.m.

POMEROY
BOWLING
310 East 2nd St.

992-3432 or
992-2403 .

6 -4· ' 91·1 mo.

0 -4 -' 91 - 1 mo.

J&amp;L
INSULATION

BISSELL
BUILDERS

ALL MADS

Iring It In Or Wo
Pick Up.
KEN'S APPLIANCE

BOWL

992-7130

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

•Vinyl

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At RIHisonablt Prices"
PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

Siding

•Replacement
Wlndowo
•Roofing

•lntulation

lAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251
539 Bryan Place
Middleport. Ohio
I 1-14-tln

4·16·86-lln

l/6/90/ lln

ROOFING

LINDA'S
PAINTING

NEW -REPAIR

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING

lllliiiOI - mEIIOI

Gutters

Toke the pcHn out of

DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006

Howard L. Wrltesel

Downspouts

FREE ESTIMATES

• painting.

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

Lei me do it for you.

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168

HAVE REFERENCES

6/12/'91/1 mo.

THE

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs
I O"'o DISCOUNT TO
SENIOR CIDZENS
FREE ESTIMATES

3-ll·tfn

4- 29· 91 · 1 mo. pd.

INDEPENDINi •

CAIPIT CLIANEIS
and Till FLOOI (All

lltw HOnl" lullt
"Free Estimates"

We Do Whot We Soy.

Pomeroy, Ohio

ESTIMATES!

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949·2160

992-6648 or
. 698·6864

fFAEE

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

614·992-2321
We Soy Whot We Do.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

SHRUB &amp; TIEE

SHERYL WAL'IER$ .......................................... 367-0421
SANDY BUTCHER .........:................................. 992-5371
DARLINE STEWART ................!.. ..................... 992-6365

YOUNG'S

of Mlddi•P"'

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD- Looking for a place tobuild?Then
you gona see th1s. Approx. two acres of nice laying cleared ·
land. Water and electric available. Agreat •
.PRICE AT $6.500

BRENDA JEFFER$ .......................................... 992-3056

..

•
•

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE

I0/ 30/'89 tfn

Enjoy ·
I

90 DAY WAIUNn

SIGNS

Real Estate General

Southern
Peaches

&amp;2
6)
64

48
49

11

]]

6 1 Farrn EqtiiJHIIunt

Ho uses tor Rent
M obt l e Hom es fur Acnl
Farn1 s t or R ttnt
Ap al1m t.'f11 lor Re nt
Furn1 sh od Roo m:.
Space 101 R ent
W ant ed t o Rcut
Eq u1pme nt lo r Atm t
For l ea5e

USED APPUANCES

C'lt4t£11t

California
Nectarines

35
36

V M" d Sal e ( p.t l d .n adva u ~;;et

, ,•

California
Cantaloupe

H om Los lor S ate

M o U1I c Hom es tor So~ l t:
Fctrm s t or Sah
Bu s1n oss Hu1l dmtJ:.
lo t ~ r. Acreage
R ear 'E s t ;ll ~: W ant ed

Business Services

•

Delicious

31

32
33
J I

Pubh c S al e &amp; Auct 1011
Wantod t o Buy

12
13

21

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

'.

.•

Full of Flavor•

' 992-2156

Real Estate

Pl e as e~ nt

l eo n
Appl e G1011e
Maso n
N ew Haven
l et art
9 37 Buff alo

·'

~'

CLASSWIEDS%

Announcements

Employment
Services

follou •iiiK I •·l•pl11;,,. • ·x..l~rmp• .&lt; ...

J.

l

Ov ~ r 15 Words
Rat e
. 20
$4.00
. 30
$6.00
.42
$9.00
.60
$ 13.00
05 1 da y
S1 30 J da v

Words

Da-y s
1

BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DA&gt;¥ BEFORE
PUBLICATION

J

figure was far higher.
Th e army blamed Slovenian
forces for refusing to allow federal
troops to move back to their barracks in accordance -with provisions
of a weekend cease-fire mediated
by the Euro~n Community.
Croatia s Supreme Co un cil ,
made up of the republic's top leaders. issued a harshIy worded statement today condemning the federal
army for firing on protesters Tuesday outside the republic's capital of
Zagreb.
The Croatian statement said that
the tanks came out of their barracks
in " an arrogant show of force"
aimed at drawing Croatia into the
confli ct and accused the arm y of
violating lhe European Community
cease-fire.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Rat es ar c t or c:on secu t•-ve ru ns bf o ken up days wtll bec fl ill'ged
lo r each daw n sepa rat e a d s

BOARD

barracks, " Tanjug quoted A&lt;Jzic as
saymg.
Vasil Tupurkovski, Mace donia' s representative on the collective federal presidency, said Tuesday night that Slo veni a had
dropped its previous insistence that
federal troops return to barracks
without their weapons.
Slovenia's president , Milan
Kucan , said republican troops had
been ordered to stop all offensive
action after the Slovene leadership
accepted truce tenns after consultations with allies on the federal presidency.
The federal army , which used
artillery and air strikes against the
Slovenes, said seven to 10 people
were killed in Tuesday' s fighting
but Slovene reports ind icated the

RATES

Monthly

' i

of scattered shooting in northern
Slovenia, the Yugoslav news agency Tanjug said.
The 140- to 180-vehicle oonvoy
of tanks,. amlOr@
d personnel carriers and bUcks departed a Belgrade
suburb before dawn a stopped at
Croatia's border about 24 hours
after fighting had broken out anew
in Slovenia.
The federal anny appeared to be
acting on its own - beyond the
control of the central government
of Premier Ante Markovic and the
federal presidency, made up of representatives of the country's sh
republics and two provinces.
Slovene officials accused the
anny chief of staff, Gen. Blagoje
Adzic (Bla-GOH-yeh AH-djich), of
a coup.
On Tuesday night, he ruled a
truce proposed by Slovene leaders
and apparently endorsed by the
federal Defense Ministry.
" There is war in Slovenia and
truce cannot be realized, although
the Yugoslav Defense Ministry
wanted to return the units to their

Classified

••

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-13

Y£RY RUSONAilE

(614)

~ ). ~
IU'irnc10 Rc ;. n

~

985~4180

6 ·1 0 · '91 - 1 mo. pd.

8 -14· '81 - 1 mo . pd.

6·6·'9t

Camping Is Family Fun
NE:W'flas SEASOII' ·· POOL
OPIEif TO THI: PUBUC

205 N. Second Str11t
. .lfPOIT, OHIO 45760
Offico 614-992-2116
HOME 614-9U-5692
DOniE 5. TUINEI, IIOMER
HOUSES•LOTSIIFAAMS
COMMERCIAL

We Need ll1tlngo!
11·1-10-Hn

ROOFING

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

.TROMM ·BUILDERS
FREE ESTIMATES

•20 Yetra EKperllmce
•Quality Homea end

742-2328

Cuatom Remodeling

~ / 22/tfn

.·

CAIO'INC - Beautiful Surround ings
RA11:S - Day, W«k. Month. or Season
PICKIC SHU.nR and STAG£ For Rent

Reunions - Get Togclhcrs · Parti es

nsmNa

·~

KITCKEN NOW OPEN
Servtng Brea kfa.s t , Mr.al!. and S na ck.9
ARCADE

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUNPS and
FURNACES FOR MOllE &amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES
0

0

•

•

•••

0

•• ' .

0

•

"

0

••

0

•

0

•

•

••

•

•

•

•

•

••

ltOIILE HOME
HEAnNG '
.
.COOLING
'Loc11ttd On S,affcml School Rd. off lt. 141
(614-1446-9416 •r 1·100-112-stu

....

'

..

Now /ft.
Sloek/1
••

•

•

BENNEn'S

4-21-11

�Sentinel

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements
3

32

Announcements
CHINESE KEM~O
KARATE

5-~0

p.m. 614-742-

2546.
CHINESE KEM~O
KARATE

Apartment

Knox 1981, 1~wn11, 2 bedroom,
all electric, call 614-992·3021 or

For rent, 1 bedroom apartment

34

_$225 utlllllos Included, doposli

Whoolo. SB,OOO. 814-446-7414. If·

required, no pete, 814-192·2218.

ter 3p.m.

Modem 1 Bedroom Downtown,
Complete Kltch1n1 Carpet,

1181 Chevy Cavalier, Z-24,
loaded ,take over ptymanta.
1991 Chovy Cavollor, ale, PI, pb,

Complotly

AM!FM ctsntla,

Fum"hod

Business

446~338.

Buildings

wort out. lmprovt your mental

For Laau: ComrMrclsl Build·
lng, 2,000 sq. ft. St. At. 7,
Choohlro, Ohio. 114-317o01311.

North 3rd St, Middleport, Ohio, 1
bedroom furnished apt, rafe,.n·
CH and dapoalt required. 304-

·,J. physical abllltlll, lor lnler·
vlaw call Jay S--10 p .m. 614-742·

2546.

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nc1 Ava., Galllpoilo.
to
Court Houae. 1 room, 2 room•,
3 roomt, 4 rooms. All nicely
decorated, elr condhlonlng,
your Wiler I HWer billll'e pelc1.
Make your choice now. No
quotM over 1he ph0111lo you
muat HI them. Phone r an
appointment. 014-446--JitSI day,
448·9539 lVI.

c-

FrN Single Bulletin, P~taonal
ada. Wrlta to : J .S.O., P.O. Box
184, MISslllon, OH 44648

4

Giveaway

new
~==========-r:=========:-i lots

!192·2481 or !192·7405.
Full blooded Alrdals, tomalo,

spay•d, nHds good home In
country, 614·985--:1527.
Halt Colllt female puppy, 7 wks
old, 304~75-Jne.

8

..

p

18

ubllc Sale

&amp; Auction
Rick Pearson Auction Company,
lull lime auctlonaar, complete
auction Hrvlea. Licensed Ohio,
wast Virginia, 304·m·S7BS.

Molo Col Looko Uko Small Tlgor 9
Wanted to Buy
Noutored, Ok:lswod, All Shots. :::--.--.-:~.:.:.;=;,::.,::.:.:,...,--

814-&lt;44&amp;.3257• 614-24&amp;-9069.

6

Lost

&amp;

Found

FOUND small c:hllda ba:saball
Glove ltft at Napa Store last
Wad, Mizuno brand, 304-6752218.

Found: Malt Basset Hound,
Nur New ClmPIIIan C.metery,
Norttt Of t-lolztr Rosptl.ll. 61•·
446~047.

7

Yard Sale

Will babysit WHkands at your
house or mine. Have references.

Help Wanted

S350.00Jday r.ocesslng phone

July 41h, 8-4. 3.8 Milos Oul

Rt.141, Brown HouM On Rt. Fur- AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn
niture,
Truck,
Clothes, Weaver 304·882-2645.
t-louHhold ttem1, Watlt"bed.
AcllvltiH Aeslunt, Pleasant
5 tomlly carpon solo: 202 Valley Nuralng Care Center, full
Klnoon Dr. 41h, 51h, 81h. Adult, time, previous experience In
chlldrens,
clothta,
stereo, planning, recreation and craft
activities for tldarty. Valid
sprwada, curtains, misc.
drivers llcan1a required. Apply
518 Founh Avenue, . Friday, Perwonnel Otpl. Pleasant Valley
Saturday, Monday. Arts &amp; Craltt Hospllal. AAIEOE.

Su~lln, Blkos, Good Mlloriol,

All Yard Salta Mutt Be Paid In
· the day before tha ad Ia to run.

Call TOLL FREE 1·800.743-5921,
8am·10pm 7 days.

Sunday odltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Fridoy. Mondoy odhlon • 2:00

AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU

Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.

p.m. Saturday.

Big Garage Sale: 51 Madison,
bohlnd Plua

Hut.

Antlquoo,

Excellent
Pay,
Benefits,
407-295-7600,
Transportation,
Ext. STt. 9a.m.·10p.m. Toll
Refunded.

many loolt, Iron whHis, huntIng &amp;: fishing suppUn, C. B.a, AVON I All Aroos I Shirley
toys, clothes,ehaln uw, guns. Spooro, 304-875-1429.
2, 3, 4.
EARN MONEY Roodlhg Booklll
81g Yord Solo: Today thrv July PO,OOOiyr. Income Potential.
13. i to S. 424 Rand Ava., Dotollo. (I) 805·962-8000 Ext. y.
10189.
Kanauga , OH.
Eaay
Work! Excellent Payl As·
Eureka Community Yar'd Sales:
Fridoy, July 5th, I 1111 B, Anti· Hmble Products At Homa. Call
qutt, TDOII, HOUIIhold llama, Fot Information. 504.&amp;41·8003
Ext. 313.
Mlscallantoul
Eureka'• Annual Community Fiesta Htir Sllons, Inc:; NHda
Talented Stylists &amp; Managers
nrd sale: 7..,...,,
Immediately. Top Hourly llay
Commission,
Paid
Fridoy, 715191, 8-5. 631 A 634 Plua
LaGnnda. Water Bed, Lamps, Vacttlonl, Hulth Insurance,
Fana,
Heaters,
Clothing, C,..dit Union. FrM Educations &amp;
Incentive Prognms Available.
Hou11w1,..1, Mile.
Join The Fastest Growing
Garaga Solo: 112 Milo Out Family ol Hair Salone In The
OtorCtte C...ek. Friday, S.lur· Mldwellt &amp; Share Thtlr Suecesa.
day, f.l. SaH, Papper Collection, For A FanlasUc CarHr Future
Mlac Glau Jara, Baaeball WUh No Limits, Call 1-800-625Cordi.
6363 Ask For Myrna.
Garage Sale: Moving: Garage Full llmt, 7-3, opeNng1 tor carFulll July 5th &amp; 6th. 289 tillad nursing aulatanll, competitive wage acale, flexible
LoOrtndo, l-4p.m.
achldullng and benefhs avalt-Glgontlc 3 Fomlly Gorogo Solo: tbla. Coillae1 : Karla Hunter,
Solurdoy, July 8 Only. la.m.·
6p.m. Bsrgolno Galorol Clothing

• Man't,
Chlldr.n'a,

large Women'a,
Century Stroller

Boby noma, Vorlouo Houoahold
~-. Booko, Toya, Doprosolon
GIUI, Etc. 271 McCully Road
Jull Off Of Goorgos Crook
Road. 1 112 Mlln From ROUII 7.

Watch For Signs!
July 4th &amp; 5th. Thu.wdoy, &amp;
Fridoy. 24 Chllllcotho Rood, 111
Houso On Lon. t-5.
July Slh, Olh. Boughman Farm 7
112 lolllit Soulh of Golllpol 1s,

91.At.7, 9·1. Rain Cancela. 614258-41535.

Molher·Daughter s. ..: 50 Nsll.
VHS movln, blka, clothes, bed·
ding, drapes, curtains, jewelry,
glkfer, frMzer.

Pt.
&amp;

Pleasant
VIcinity

Handicap
Rummage
Fund
Ral..r, t2 Burdette Addn, 8:00

1111 5:00. July 2 ond 3. Spon·
110r1d'by M.C.A.R.C.

Yord Solo, July 2,3,4. 2818 112
Madleon Ava, Chlldrena I

aduhs clothing, 30 gal
hoatlf, mloc.

a•• w•ter

aducatlon•Fiaxlbla
tchadullngCaii for further In·
tormallon or apply In person at:
Family Nul"'ing Sarvieas137 W.
Water StreetChlllicothe, OH
45801 (614) 775·5463.

LPN, X·Ray technician lor local
physician office. Writt BoJI C·2
cLo .Point Pluunt Register, 200
Main StrHt, Point Pleasant, WV
25550.

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; VIcinity

O'Siane11 Memorial Hospital,

Friday.S•Iurday,
Wardrobe
table, chail'l, dr....rs, 11Win9
machine, bikes, mlac, corner
3rd-Rutlond St, Middlopon.

55 Holpltal Dr, Alhons, OH.
45701 Is accepting applications
tor
llcensecf
BOllER
OPERATORS lor 1omponry
~lton .

Contact

Paraonnal

Rentals

Yard Solo, July S, f:.?_?1 All slzu,
choap, :M8 N 3rd, -11por1.

Sond Roaumo: Cia 071, Clo Gal·
llpollo Dally Tribune, a25 Third
Avonuo, Galllpollo, OH 4!1131.

11mpj rMny m1eo.

.

&amp;

Air

CondHion-

Lots, ronlolo, pano, Olin. Coli
614·1192·11171.

Household

5 room houao: 44 Olivo St., Gal·

Upolls. $275/mo. Inquire at: 018
Second Avenue.

Corpot $4.00 Yonl • Up. VInyl
$3.1111 &amp; S4.18 Yard. Porch Tun,
$3.1111 &amp; $5.99 Yard. Mollohon

6 room house, relerenc:e and

448-~.

home. Reasonable.
Above
Racine on 12.4. 614·949·2392.
WUI Clean Housaa Apartments
or Offices. Also, Wm Clean For
HouH Showings &amp; Par1l11.
Relerencn Avallablt. 114-44«).
3388 Anyllma, Luve Ma ..agt.

Carpe\8, Upper River Aoed 1 614--

doposh nqulrod, 304-875·1090.
Small

2 8Rii

B homo

County Appliance

Syracuse,
refrencn
and
HCurhy dapoelt requlrwd, call
collect, 1-408-7'23-4702 ah11

21

GOOD

Croll Motol. Coii614-446-T.JII8.

10x55 2 bedroom mobile home.
Racine .,. • . 614·092·5858,

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY ~UBLISHING CO.

recommends that you do busJ.
nasa with people you know, and
NOT. to ••nd money through tha
mall until you have lnvntigatld
the offering.
Arthur's Cl1aln Link Fence.
Residential, Commercial, lndultriat, Fr" Estimate•! Com·
plclta lnstallallon. Phone: 614·
384-&amp;m.
Health Problams • Must Soli
Vending Route, 17 Papsi ma·
chines, Gallla • Meigs, small In·
vestmenl, 304-675-5162.
large Loeal Vandlng Route For
Salt. Will StU All Or Pa11.
S.C:ura
Repeal
Business
Locations: Above A~arage In· .
coma. 1..aoG-940-8883.
local Vending Route. Company
Oulek. 1-&amp;0o-695-

:~r.rt . Sell

Vtndlng Aoula : FOf Sale. Cash
Buslne!ll. High TraHic local
Locations. Hottest Machin•• On

Market. HI00·234·2651.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Complete home tumlshi~C ·
Houra: Mon-Sat, •s. 614
0322, 3 mllu out Bultvllle Ad.

2 bedroom mobile home, large
private lot, wrcen11111 air, Gal·
llpolls Forry oroa, 304-675·1!28
aher 8:00P.M.

FIH Dollvory.

PICKENS FURNITURE

Naw/Ueed
Household furnishing. 112 mi.

2 bedroom tr.ller on Redmond
Aldgo, $150. month, 304-8752352.

Jorricho Rd. P1.
esll 304-875-1450.

2-SA mobile home, centr1l air,
large lot In country, 614-84).
2br Air, Fumlahod Or Unlur·
nllllod. Very Nlco And Booutltul
River VIew In Kaneuga. Fo.tere
llobllo Homo Pork. 114-i*-1602.
2br Fumlshod On Cora Mill
Road, No Polo. Dopoall R•
qul.wd.
614-245-5622
Coli

In

2br Mobil•

Ou11n wringer waehlr, $7$. All
kinds
of
mlscalllnaou•,

Bob

McCormick Road For Ronl, 614·
448.0689.

household

Bedroom Mobile Home. S.c:ur ly
Rolorancaa Ra-

Mobile home, Syracu11il 2·BA,

Homes lor Sale

House For Salt In Town On
Third Avenue: 3br, Naw Vinyl
Siding, Naw Root, Low $20'a.
614·379·2787.

Lyons

Addition

In

oposll,

tor ottero. 216·235-9295.

Aaduced To Sell: 2 Story 3br
Comer LOI In Cheshire, Ohio.
Excellent Condilion. 904·9:12·
6959, 904·932-71i70.

32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

New Moon 2 bedroom
mobile home 12x65, axe cond,
'72

12x60
Schuhz,
2-bedroom
mobile home wlundar panning
and porch, good condition,
$3500, 614·1192·~194 .

1971 3bro, 12J70, 2 porchoo,
$4,500. 614-388-9770.
1962 14x70 2 BR, 1 both, CA,

;7ftx28ft. 11pando. Dick • un·

Apartment

Mllu Off Route 7 On Route 141,
In Centenary.

for Rent

1984 Mansion 141160, all electric,
2 bedroom, 2 f1.1ll baths, AC,
WID. 304-675·7677.

9440. .

Slngor

1br Apar1ment, Appliance• Fur·
nlshed,
1
Block
From

Troddla-Typa

Sowing

Macl11na, desk, 3-pc Old Beef·
room Suite, 614-992-7?45 or 992·
5716.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Ollvt St., Gallipolis. Ntw &amp; Uaod

dfeport, Ohio, 2 bedroom fur·
nlahed, depoe,lt and raftrence,
304-4182·2568.

furniture, ha•1er11, Wntem &amp;

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 5,38 Jackoon Plko

Work boolo. 614-446-3151.

VI' AA FURNITURE
814-446-3158
LIVING ROOM: Solo A Choir,
$199.00;
Aocllnor,
S14i.OO:
Swlvol Rockor, $99.00; CoHoo &amp;
End Toblto, SB9.00 Sot.DINING
ROOM : Toblo With 4 Poddod
Chairs, $14SI.OO; Couni'I Pine
Dlnollo With Bench
nd 3

from $'112/mo. Walk to ehop 6

movln. Colll14-446-2568. EOH.

Bosch Strol), Mlddlopon, Ohio.

One room eftlclency apt,
ret.rane•s and deposit, 304·
882·2588.

Cottage tor rent, tumlshld, AJC,
carpet, good neighborhood, no
pets, Pt. Pleasant, WIJ 1·304~

Chairs, $299.00; Uatchlng 2

Door Hitch, $349; Or $68l.OO
Sot: Olk Tablo, 42162 With 6

675-6200.

Bow

Doposlt Rsqulrod. 614-446-0444.

Nlcoly Fumlohod Apartmtm,
tbr, noxl lo Ubrary, parking,

Route 141 In Centenary.

1107 Socond, Golllpollo, 614-446-

.
Bath,
Avanue,

Chairs,

6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Thl
Sp.m., 4 Milts Off Route 7 On

Fumlahed Apar1mant, 1 Bed·
room, $235/mo. Utllltlat Paid,
All

Back

Monday Tlvu Saturdly, 9a.m. to

eantnl halt, air, reference r•·

qulrod. 614-441oG336.

441.6 ahar 7p.m .

Farm Supp li es
&amp; Li vestock

53

Antiques

Buy or 1111. Rlvarlna Antiques,
1124 E. ·Main Street, Pomeroy.
Houra: M.l .W. 10:00 a.m. 10 6:00

Concrat1 I plltlic Hpllc tanks,
Ron Evan. Entti"Pf'IUI, Jack·

Farm Equipment

Conclnlon, $4000.00, 1-114·742·
31184.

aon, OH 1-800-437.052a.

unit. 304-675-1640 or 614-24590119.

Now TlrH, Haw point• ~.200:

7·1!2 HP boat motor. 614-446-

NSA
Water
Puriflrt
(BactarloatiUc) New Counter

C&lt;&gt;ndHion, a 112ft. 0 Woy Bloda,
$14,000. 114-3711-2773.

""'h.

Recondttloned Washtra, Dryera.
GUirantHd prompt IINicl for
all m1kn, m~ei1. The Wa1har
SIMI

Collagovlllo, WV 304·37.1-8405.

W11h11

a

Dryer, Works Good,

$175. 614-44~751.

Womans blk leather j1ckat eiza
omall, $110. purcholod Wlloons
Laalhar Shop, 2 yra old, 304882-21113.
Womono Ton Spood Blcyclo &amp;
Mans 10 Spood Blcyclo, Balh,
Now Condblonl 014·3117-0538 of·
tor 5:30p.m.

55

Building
Supplies

tlvltort,

Completely

HOlM I llock 1nllor·1991, 18 ft.
$2385. 5 yr. olcl AOHA Big Fancy
Rod Romo gliding. ShoWn wootom ploasuro, Big Sllnr Royol
ShoW oaddlo. 114-~512.
Jl01'0 Farm Equlpnonl, SR . 35,
Will GalllpoOo, 114-446-11777;
Wide IIIKiion, new a uaed farm
triCIOrt I lmpllmtnte. Buy,
ull, trado, a:00.5:00 wHkdays,
Sot. lUI Noon.
Trollor· Flolbod 8112. $250. 614·
3117-0581.

63

Livestock

76

Auto Parts

pasMnger side, $50.00. Call 6f4.
992-6125 attar 5 p.m.
:
Budget Transmlsalons, UHd 'l
rabuln, starting at $i9; Auio
614·245'-5877,

614·37V-

2263.

79

Campers

1Jt. IX'f0'T EJIW
AS!:: feR ~1Y '

&amp;

Motor Homes

ter.Cp.m.

sited

Boaglo ~upa For Salo; Holotoln
I GirNoy Holtor, 4 llontho Old.
614-268-1902.

lira, Rio Grando, OH Coli 614·
245-5121.
Pets lor Sale

'

19n 25ft. Com~r. Hoods work.
$800 Or Bost Oltsr. 304-6~
2425.

n

304-67~1028.

81

Pha•eanta, Htne, Turlleys, 614·

AKC Roglllt ..wd Golden Allrivor
puppl11, $250. each, 114-4418064 or 446-1387.

Dog ond Cot g._,lng oil

broodo, opoclallzod In ~oodlt
grooming, 12 yro tr~ri•'!"•·
304~75-&amp;332.

~\

--

BOARDING. Going on
vocatlonl Laavo your dog with
DOQ

Floh Tonk, 2413 Jackoon Avo.
Point Pllaunl, *"f71.2013,
full liM Troplcol floh1_ blrda,
amoll onlmalund oupptroo.
Hlmaylon Kll1orw, t110. $271, 4
Malls, 1 Fimolo. CFA Rogl•
t - . 114-441-1804 aftor 4p.m.

Mlnlsturo Sch,.uzor puPflloa.

=:.1:.~• .:eemrr·

good
Labadot,

1881 Buick Skylork, 2 doors, 2.5
tour cyl., meny now ~rto . $1100
or boat offor. 304-871-411111.
1991 Codolllc Cou~ DoV~

Ellc. Cond., every optiOn,

urso, 350, V-1, $1850, 6141719.

·

1111 Plr,moulh, Horizon} Need•
Tranem aslon Work, 11•-446-

1151.

1182

Pontiac

1·1000,

Aunt

Unconditional lifetime guaran;.
tH. l.oclll references tumlthad.
FrM ntlmotn. Coli colloc1 ,.
614·237-0488, doy or nl~.

'

·

Cur11a

Home lmprovemanla:
Yoaro Er~rlonca On Oldor ~

JET

I

HE'S TOTIN'
SAMANTHY'S

'

SCHOOL!!

retaonable prlcu. Don't walt

11154.

eougor, 71,ooo
Mlln, all-or, auto, volour lnl,
AC. Shorp Corl Run1 Goodl
$2300, 114·1112·2357 or 1112-23116.
1164 Oldo 98 Rogoncy, 4-dr
Sodon, llkl MW, ovory o~tlon
Inc., flclory CB1 ·low mlloago,
'· 307, v.a, S2850, 814-

441~2!14.

Will do remodeling, rooting
building, tree trimming an~

removal, houH painting . For

tree Hllmatu, call George at 1·
614-992-5752.

82

Plumbing

&amp;

Heating

Car1tr'a Plumbing
andHutlng
Fourth and Prne

Electrical

&amp;

......,.111 ·. ., --~~~
trrlrtng, ,_ _.. ... or -

1111 l'hlllrd F-ull~1 ~or,
32,0CIO Ulloo, Mini ""'""'ion.
Extra lltaral II!!LM,500.

• ,....._.,.,, 114-441-lWO.

Ma•r ' Ucartaod lloctrlclan:
Aldonour Eloclrlcol, 304-47$-

1788.

EAST

WEST

ALDER

• 10 75 4

.Q J 9 6

• A 10 7

+Jaa2

+10

+ K J 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 +9
SOUTH

+AQJ 62
• KI I
+Q 7 6 I
+A

The disappearing
trick

Vulnerable: East -West
Dealer: South

By Pblllip Alder

South
1+

In today·s deal, declarer seems des·
tined to lose lour tricks: three hea rts
and a diamond. Do you see how to turn
destiny aside?
North had been planning to make a
ltmit raise in spades . but he was
pushed into bidding game when West
jammed the auction with lour clubs.
(The vulnerability dissuaded West
from bidding live clubs.)
You win the club tead in hand and
cash the spade ace, West discarding a
club. Next you try the diamonds, cash·
ing dummy 's A·K. but again West
throws a club With !he heart ace hov·
ering over your king , you seem
doomed. But there is a way out of the
predicament. At trick live , lead dum·
my's club qu..,n. and if East doesn't
ruff, discard a low heart.
II West switches to hearts. it will
save you a heart loser. So assume he
returns another club. Ru!! with dummy's spade king, discarding your sec·
ond low heart. and run the spade ntne

West
1+

North
4+

Opening lead:

@

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 18lll's best
relationship work . Mail $2 plus a long, not to leave important matters that reself-addressed, stamped envelope lo . quire immediate atteritlon until later in
Matchmaker, c / o this newspaper, P.O . the day. With each passing hour. your
Box 91428. Cleveland, OH 44101·3428. chances of doing them ~verely
LEO (July 23-Aug. -221 J&gt;ace yourself lessens.
BERNICE
senolbly tod.ay regarding a required AQUARIUS (~an. 20-Feb. 191 Your
BEDE OSOL
task . Don 't attempt more than you can hunches might not be too reliable IO·
manage. and don' t do something on day, so to be pn lhe_sale side, don't put
your own thai needs an additional pair 100 much stock In them. You'll tare
much better relying more on logic than
of hands.
eer
VIRGO, (Aug. 23'-S.pt. 221 Everything
PIICES ( b. 20-March 20) A friend
will be ·OK socially today. as long
might make ome unreasonable, mate·
, you 're doing things you like. H
. · when the crC1Wd wants lo dq
et.hlng rial demands of you today. If caught off
else, you cou
.
temper- guard, you 're llkerY to act against your
batter judgment.
amental and reslstant.
.
uiRA (Sept, 23-0ct. 231 Keep outsld· ARIES (March 21·AprM 1t) Your Image
erB out Of your domestiC probi..,S to- could be a bit rrag~etqday, especlaHy It
July 4, 1tlt1
day. It you open the d~r. you could put • you behave In an erratic or inconsistent
a trl80!1 In an embarraulng position. manner, Don't mal&lt;e others uncomltlfl·
able by lorclng them ·to guess at your
An ambillous, financial goal _you've one,In WhiCh eld8a must be choaeri.
·
been nurturing could becol!'e a reality SCORPIO (Oct.
221 Be doubly lnlentlons.
in the year ahead. Slart now to culllvale tactlulln your dealing• with co-workers TAURUS (April 20-MIIJ 201 Frustra:cpntacts 'who can help YO\I achieve your tpclay. II y,ou are too assertive or bossy. llons you may have to deal with ·today
•objeC11ves.
.
you may end .uP dOing things on your are likely to be ot your own making. To
avoid thla, be methodical and try to plan
tANCER (June 21..,uiJ 221 It could owrt Instead of collectively.
·
. pr0118 Willi! today to slick with decisions .IAGITTARIUI (110¥, 2H)ec, 21) ~ave a lew steps •head.
you've previously ' tak"!' the time to tun and enjc!y yourMI!today, but
to QI!MIIII (Mar 21.....,. 2G) It you're
event...rth friends
.think through. Impulsive, IU1 mlnl!te re- do so u economically u poulble. "our lharlng some tYf)tl
. vlslona might work to your datrlment. ertravagartl lmpuleeil t:Ould be ralhar today, be au"e everyoM hu t~r· par·
' 'l'rylng to patch up a broken romance? strong and they mustn't. be allOWed to tlcular Uilgn~a spelled out In ad·
v.,:C.. If not, ch- COUld reaull.
rfhe Astro-Graph Matchmaker can help gain control .

,· ~--

--

/

you understand what to do t O make the

«l

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

36 Equine sound
37- Paulo
38 Nature spirit
40 Sesame
42 Cloae nolally
43 Barnyard bird
44 Stringed
lnslrumant
47 Guido's high
nota
49 Len slack
52 Burtllnward
56 SHd
57 Servlla
tlaUarars
58 Bold
59 All together
(2 wd&amp;.)
60 River In
Ireland

1 Cover (a
package)
s Coldntll
12 Duckllka
blrdl
13 Dlltant •tar
groups
t41cat5 Fixed In
position
t6 Splktl
18 Spoon bend·
ar- Galler
19 Denllat'o
deg.
20 Incorrect
(pre!.)
22 I cannot tall
26 SingerPlnza
28 Uzard
29 Fortune
32 Strong man
of myth
34 Term ot
addreos
35 Fronch yes

...

Answer to PreYIOUI PUIIII

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

DOWN

galling
sound
5 Tltooeln
office
6 Conatellatlon
7 Oonalrucllon
beam
(2 wdl.)
8 Type of goat

1 How much
wood- ... ?
2 Attired
3 Army
command
(2wds.)
4 Attention·

name
27 Author Gray28 Ttilnla player
Arthur29 Farm animals
30 Author Jean

M. 31 -colada
33 Go-between
39- MIICOI
41 Window 11at
43 Underworld
45 Direction
rovtllll
48 Do lntonalvt
r81aarch
48 Superman'•
Iowa
50 Fllll·rate
(2 Wdl.)
51 l!rldgo of San
Lull52 lnhlbltant
53 Next to Sun.
54 C1rd game
· 55 Language

wttov.

•rr

\,.,. ,

or

..

a Crook and ChaM

11:30W 8 101 Wimbledon
Hlghllglttl
·
(]) Magnum, p.l.
(l) AmlrlCI'a OelenM

eufffx

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Monltof
&lt;ll

r=:r:.
·ec-

8

CBI

'itereo

~:

9 Yala atudent
10 Actor Mineo
11 Regard
12 Maw Doal
program
17 Strike
21 Cryalalllne
gem
23 Ala24 Pelvic bones
25 Flnnloh first

11:00WG Ill &lt;ll8 1111 @e
il)) Newa
@ Twilight Zono
(l) NtWIWIICh
I!] Ill lt.runiO Hal Stereo. 1;1
111! Crime Story
8 Thla Country'a Rockln'
181 Spotll Tonight
1111 ScareciOW and Mrl. King

l

4J

1191 , NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A81N.

Robertaon

ASTRO-GRAPH

East
Allpass

to pick up all the trumps. Your losers
will be one heart. one diamond and one
club.
What happens if East does ruff the
club queen to prevent the throw-in ?
You parry that thrust by overru!!ing,
drawing trumps (which leaves dummy
with one spade) and exiting with a
heart - the king, if you are !Iamboy·
ant. The defenders take their three
heart tricks. but whoever wins the tast
heart trick is endplayed. tl it is West.
lte must lead a club , conceding a ru!l
and discard , so you don't lose a dia·
mond trick . II it is East. he has to lead
away from the J-8 of diamonds into
the tenace of dummy's nine and your
queen.

10:05 (J) MOVIE: Aaaaulnation
lPG 13) (2:00)

Jackson, OH 1-800-537-9528.

plln, pickup, ond dollvory. 114-

...

PHILLIP

8:00 W D 101 Unsolved
MJiteriel A lour-time
escapee is sought tor bank
fraud. (Ri Stereo. 1;1
(]) MOVIE: Apllta· Cltllltit't
A Caribbean My1tery (2:00)
Ill &lt;ll&amp; The Wonder YHro
Kevin gets Winnie Invited to
a_party. (R) Stereo. C
CD (!) Survival Speclelal;l
aJ) !12)
Rocky and
Bullwlnkle Bullwinkle .
witnesses a bank heist by a
dangerous criminal: the
Rocky and Bullwinkle Fan
Club holds an election. (0:30)
Stereo. C
liD G1 MOVIE: Dead of
Winter !A) (2:00)
111! Murder, She Wroto
Tltla Country'• Roekln'
@ Major League BaMball
Mapzlne
181 PrlmeNewt
1111 George waahlngton (PI 2
of 41 (2:00)
6:05 (]) MOVIE: A Force of Ont
IPGJ (2 :00)
8:30 (i) &lt;llD Danger Team A
pragmatic bookkeeper uses
state-ol·the·art technology to
become a promising
detective. (0:30/ Stereo. 1;1
~ !12) 111 Faml y Man Jack

10:30

J.J -91

• 832
+A K 9 3
+Q l

1111 700 Club With Pat

Soptlc Tonk Pumping $90,Golllo
Co. RON EVANS EHTER~•ISES,

Davia
Sew-Vac
Service,
Oeorgea CrHk 'Rd. Partt, au~

NORTH

+K 9 8 3

8111 Star Trait
9 World Nawa

call gutrantalld low. 304-875-

Golllpollo, Ohio
614-446-3888

M,IOO, good cond. 304-8711-1510.

BOOKS TO

Ael'ltion Mocora, repaired. Hilt
A r•bulh moloro In llock, R08
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1~
537·1528.

AC, IXC. cond., "500. 614-4.f.

:=:::~

LOOIC AT
.1U6HAID II

Nawar Homat. Room Additions.
Foundallon Work, Rootln~
Window. &amp; Siding. Frso Elo
tlmatul Aaftrancn, No Job Te

9682.
1883 Toyota CNoolda, loadod,
porfoet cond, 304-875-6132.
1914 Dodgo Omnl, $8110. 114·
388 .,872,
1984 Lincoln Mork VII BIU Bltos
Edlllon, All Optlono, High
MIIHgo VO!Y Good Condlllonl
Soo To Ar,'olol Only, $3,400.

~BARNEY

Aogar1 BaMment WltarprCM&gt;

Big Or Smolll614-441-0225.

Typist - Clove - Rebel - Atomic - BILL YET
Grandma said to teen, • When you think you have
gotten something for nothing you just haven't received
the BILL YET."

.-1

9:30 W D 101 Selnfeld George
persuades Jerry 10 move
after his apanment is broken
into. (R) Stereo. 1;1
Ill &lt;IJG Man In lite Femlly
Sal is unprepared when a
date takes a surprising turn.
Stereo. !;I
10:00 W D 101 Quenltlm ~eap
Sam leaps into the lite of
Miss Su9ar Belle to slop a
blackmarler . (RJ Stereo. I;J
(]) Newa
Ill (i) IIJ Equal Jultlct
Eugene betrays his lriends to
help his faltering campaign.
Stereo. I;J
(l) (!) Amerlcen Pie Stereo.

BASEMENT

Roofing, painting and ace••
aorllt.
Good
work
tor

·

I ASKED
FOR.

WATEA~AOOflNG

1983 Rollonl, 77,000 mi., PSIPB,

pm.

~TILL. KA.VEN'r
SENT .ME "THAT
NI$-IT L-IGHT

SAY MY

' ·1.

BRIDGE

a

$1300, 114·'N2·2838 onor 6:00

no rust, neadaaom• boc:ly work,

l""''lt...ll...Cll=iQ. 'rO..l

Improvements

ling.

SC~M-LETS ANSWERS

The Jofferaona

M.D. Vinnie pursues a letter
of recommendetion. (R)
Stereo. t;l
(!) (!) Moyert/Oren Lyonl
the FallltkHper Oren ~yons
talks about the pasl and the
future of Indian populations
and shares the stories .
legends and prophecies of
his people . (I :00) C
aJ) 11J ., 'Winclmllla or tile
Godl (Pt 2 of 2)' CBS Movie
Special (2:00) Stereo. C
!II MOVIE: Mattarl ol the
Haan (2:001 Stereo. 1;1
Nathvllle Now Stereo .
9 Larry King Uvel

Home

Ron'a TV Service, tpecltllzlnt
•n Zenith also Hrvlclng moil:
other brandt. Houu calls, aiM
eoma -.appliance repairs. WY
304-471-2398 Ohio 114-446-2454~

Goodl $27!1. 114-258-8251.
1813 Ford Ranger, rune good,

~eserb
86TT'E:R

PRA~.

Serv1ces

-=::.,7ei~.--=---=-­

AKC Fem•le Botton Tarrier, 1m C~llae Supreme, 1 Owner,
Wormod I Shols. 8 wko. Old, 4 $750 Or IHI Otfor. 614-446IR/2 MonthsF Old, AK.C Roglslo.wd Z311t.
ol,..1lor omolo, 814·3P-06331180 Chivy Monte Carlo, Ill
For Solo: AK~ Roglslo.wd - · · oxc cond, lnsldo ond oul,
Fomalo Cockor Spaniol, Chick- win trtdo for truck oncl poy dll·
ens, .
RabiMts,
Golden ~·· 304-475-4431.
1112·3168.

r

refrigerator, fumtce, double
.tnk, atovtloven, air cond, $800.
304-171-2321.
•

lamo Pol Food Doallr. Julio
Wobb. Coli 814-441-0231, 1-8QO.
Autos for Sale
352-0231.
AKC
noglllorod
Cookor 'Ill Rod Ford Probe, vary good
Spanlolo, 2 tomalooil 3 maloo, cond, wsnl lo buy homo mull
BuH ond Whlta wHh uH, $100. 1 1011 car, 304-875-6884.
wkl old, 111 wormed 1nd ehota, 11n Pontiac Flrablrd, $500. 614-

~ Andy GriHith

Christine gets divorce
papers. (R~eo. 1;1
Ill &lt;llD
le Howaer,

11181 SCimpor, 31ft. Long Fr!)lll
Kbch.,, Afr On Root, Full ~
lodroom lntoreom Throug
Now Horeo And Slock Trallor, 'Out,
Mull Solll Toko OW
$1715; 7 Yoar Old Woll lroka
•• ·
AOHA Golding Whh 7 Wollom Paymento. 114-441-1003.
PIHIUIW Polnto. 014·2118-1522.
Slldo In cam~r. balhlo-.

Transportation

~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSW ER

(~)

Fod. 114-446-9243.

Groom 1nd Suaply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All brHds, atylaa.

Complele 1ho chuckle quolod

by filling in the missing words
you de11e lop from step No. 3 below.

.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

9:00 W G il)) Night Coun Bull
goes to a matchmaker;

appliance ..

$4,500. 614·!149·2369.

.

\

hires a lriend ol his son 's .
Stereo. I;J
@ Major ~eague Baaeball

At-&gt;-(~ ..

11174 Coochman Highland ~ark
com~r. 35 n. wlth tip-out

aJ)Ir1ment

I

E S MA T y

,=-..;,;....:_:.r,.;_;.I;:B..:...,I,-j O

has ulterior motives when he

bot1 otter, 304·882-3455.

7 Sow•, 2 Boaro, 11 Shoato, 11
Plgo, 3 Pig Foodors, 4 Forry
ClltH, 14,500. 114+371-2805 af-

I

1-::-7.....

a

1 Chovrolot 8 ft. INCk bodsldo,

~lrtl.

The
man
using
the
automatic teller machine took

his
money
and
began
sneezin9 . Smiling he told his
.---------:--::--::---, compamon. "Guess I have
w ithdrawal ··-·-···."

5

e

Accessories

Refrigeration

. All Shifts.

'•

&amp;

Training

Area.

r

ms.

Business

Homo

~

&amp; Motors

1968 Fan 18ft camper, $1,000. or

1988 Chovrolot llfftto, 41,000
mlloa, Air condo P - win·
doM/Iodti, 2.11nor v• on!IIM,

\'

Boats

Rebuln,

John o..,. 450 DOzer txcellent

I

For Safe: M•rklt Steer Grain

Block, brick, HWII' l)lpae, win·
dows, llntell, ate:. C'1ude · Win·

56

you CAN IMAGINE
W/'fA'r A ptJLINP OF
c; up. E wou~ 1&gt;
C: 0 ST!

AtLEY OOP

Coolod, 6823 Milos, $900. 614·
387-0581.

75

S20.95···

fO
. .. " . .·· ~

11

for Sale

lops Gaurantlod To Flnor 5,000
Gol. Copaclly• Now 112 Prleol
014-448-4338,

COMf&gt; .,..,

&lt;:-

Valva, DOHC Shaft brlva, Water

For Solo: Fannall Cub Wfth Cui·

~
I 1 1 1G:' I

7:35 (]) Andy Griffith

Motorcycles

New mobile home, Z·V2 ton CA

~

181 Croaallra

AN OLJNCE Of f'IU~ENTfON

614-44.

1914 500c lnt11natlonal Dozer,
good condition, 1-114-092·2384.

r ,~I· \1

rD Mojor League Baaeball'a

f'I'1A{lMAC.Y

&amp; 4 WD's

tamut Ava. Pomeroy, from 10..
p.m.

I

a

PflEf'CfllpTtoN

windows, dlatel. 614-446-8044.,

V-Twln

1

Graatell Hila (0:301

1988 GMC outo ~SIPB AC
crulso, 1111. Lois Oloxlras. f1n1id

1982 Yamaha 550

5

RA YP T

LooM
Be a Star Stereo.

. Mlln. $5,900. '!tl0112.

1188 Dodgo Convon, 49,000

New J11ns-AII Slzn $5.00, New

L..
. ...JL--..1-.J.-.1-.....J" o

1965 EJ Comlno $3900. 1990 fl.
150 4x4 XLT· Larlon, olr, dull grri
tonk, po, pw,, pb1 12,000 m],
$11,500. 1D86 MOlal 8-2000 4
$3000, 814-992-5225.
\

FRANK AND ERNEST

MOMCON

6:05 (]) Bewitched

7:30 W G il)) Jaopardyii;J
(]) Bewitched
Ill 1121111 Entertainment
Tonight Stereo . 1;1
&lt;llD Morna'• Fomlly
aJ) Wheel or Fortune 1;1
liD 18 Johnny B... on tile

614-446-8751,

• I
I

7:05 (])

$5,500.
11104.

letters of the
scrambled words be·
low to form four simple words.

6:00 W D Ill &lt;llD Ill !12) Ill
il)) Newa
@ Cherieo In Charge 1;1
CD Club Connact
(!) Reading Rainbow 1;1
I!] Ill Andy Griffith
111! Canoon Expraaa
@ lnalcle lite PQA Tour
181 World Today
1111 Our Houae

1984 Nlsson ~lckup King Cob,

air, cover on bed, 5 speeG, per·
feel condition, 304-1'75-1132. 1

Miles, 1 Owner, Auto, Aft,
Cruise, Ster.o, New tlref,

lng!Rtfrlgaratlon. Experienced.

14

1984 Dlosll Ford 314 ton, 1~,
new~, low mileage,
$5,500. 61=-957.

auto,

UMI

Rearrange

Ill &lt;llllt Inside Edition 1;1
(l) (!) MacNeil/Lehrer
NewaHour 1;1
aJ) 1121 Ill Current Affair 1;1
(!]) Gl Night Court 1;1
111! MacGyver 1;1
@ SponaCentor
181 Moneyllne
1111 Scarecrow and Mro. King

Trucks for Sale
11171 Chovy Pick-up, 1 112 Ton, ·4
Whlll DrlvotNow Robuln Motor.
Good Solid ruck, 614-3711-8887.

74
Donlm Jaekoto tor $20.00, Work
~onlo tor S1.00, Fri·Sat, 132 But·

1-J

"'£trs·

WOlD

0 four

7:00 WIt il)) Wheel of Fortune

.

vans

PUIZLII

Sentlnei-Page-15

- - - - - - - ldltsd by CLAY l. POUAN

6:35 (]) Andy Griffith

Lanctr

$2,1;5. 1983 Chi;K 5-10 four
whHI $1,995. 1 fl Daytona

73

Lltootylor Rowor Sklor $125
brand now, Llfootylor 2000 Er·
gomotor Blko $85 Ere. Cond.
814-245-5887.

Roglot- YllloW
Roglllorod Labadot Aot~ovor,
tnlnod, _rtHtl good homo,
SBO 01• 114-11124681.
10ft black rntoh Unldon Solollho
dopoolla on AKC Aog.
wlln- houl:a and remote controt, Toklng
Boror pupploo. 114-246-N2J sl·
304-196-311114.
' " s p.m.

10 HP JoeobOon 42 ln. cut riding
mo,..r. $590. Rolollllor $90. 114'·
448-8568.

Dodgo

80 VW pickup. S1500. 614-446~7.
.

Couch, doop frMzor, Maytog
Alngar Woahor, 814·112·7212.

54

Merchandise

1987

1i88 Ford Ranger, XLT, Air, Fac·
tory Stereo Bedllner, 30,000

t550 Ollv11 . DieHl, Excellent

Fumlohod
EHicloncy,
S150
Utllllln ~aid, Share Bolh, 101
Fourth, Galllpollo, 814-446-4410

Miscellaneous

$4,95.

1188 F«d F·150, 4 Whool Drlv~
614-446-7205.

304.a82-37:16 daya ofttr 9:0CI PU
882-3246.

Malo Boror Pup, AKC, Vot
p.m., Sundoy 1:oo to 6:00 p.m. Chockod,
Roady To Gol $260,
814-IMI2·2528.
114 441 9081.

PHIPPS"" by Joseph Fartis

Tame BllckbamH $11. gal. Bring
contalnoN, 304-195-3830 Of 3()4:.
112-21114.

61

Galllpollo, 614-446-3945. •

S1116. Colll14-ll92·7787. EOH.

Dunrovln Fruh Farm: Juet ott
SR 611 0111 of lt.lbony 814-81111S298. Tuo•Sun IAM-7PM. Homo
grow~ tomatoea, corn and
grson boono. Wo accopt Food
Stompo.

BHuty Shop, 3 lllllons Ill •

$621.00.BEDROOM: Postor Bid· mel Loving car11. Pleue book
room Sullo (5 ~. ), $349.00; 4 ~~~~--· WV, 304DNWir Choot, $44,95; Bunk zn.;
·
Bod, $229; Cornploto Full Man Drlgouwrnct Clttery ,.liln,
Sot, $105.110 Sol; 7 ~- Codar I I • - ond HlrMioyan ldHOM.
Bodroom Sulto, $5!19.00.0PEN: 114-446-38§4 oftor 7 p.m.

Furnlahed . • Rooms &amp; Bath,
Upttalr1 No Pate, Aat.ranca &amp;

Utilities
$125/mo.

Monday

Sundoy 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4

Apt tor rtnt 8-h SINot Uld·

2 1!2 bat . 3 car garage
wlcarport. 1.75 acral plua. Gal·
llpoUs school•. Owner looking

WHk.O~EN:

$10.118

Thru Saturday, Oa.m. to 6p.m.,

5881.

On lho rlvorh2 BR posolblo 3rd,

Includes Btddlng.Country Pine
Dinette With Bench &amp; 4 Chairs,

Rutlond. 814.092·3027.

Downtown. Coll614 448 4638.

plotely carpotld, 304·882·2382.

Choat, $3.26 WHk; ~OIIor Bod·
room Suite, 7 pc., $16.67 WHk,

Treller tor Rent, In country near

baths, custom tal in kitchen ,
OR, FR, 2 lireplices, CA, 1 acre
lot, More!!! $117,500. 304·773·
Mayo Orlvt, Naw Haven, 90x125'
lot, 4 bedrooms, 1 V2 batt., 2
story, all brick, bac:k deck com·

Recliner, $5.41 WHk, Swivel
Rocker, $3.63 WHk.Bunk Bed
Complete 18.41 Wnk, 4 Drawer

qulrod. 614-446-0527.

Mason,

qualtly buln, 4 bedrooms, 3

Solo

Mobile Homes For Rant.
Reference And O.poalt R•

44

Dolbart

RENT20WN
614-446-3156
Vl'ra Furniture
A Chair, $11.10 Wook:

lncludn

Wotor. Phono: 614-446-1217.
S1501mo, pluo utllhln,
614·1M12-8581.

llomo.

Swlthar'e U11d Appllancaa,
Comer Rand and Parch Strut,
Kanauga, 614-446·7473.

FOR RENT • Porlly Fumlshodl 2

$250/mo.

S10

pipe ldHI for culvert, all
IIZH, call from 5:00 to 8:00 PM.

2br Mobile Homo $200/mo. $200
Doposll, 614-3117·71102.

Doposh And

4- rotrig $71.00 up 30" Amona
Radar Ringo , 1415.00. 2·25"
Zlnhh color corwolt. 1-19'" ACA
Color $110.00. Eloctrlc dryer
$51.00 up, Fl-ono, St0&lt;0 Middlopoft
-tuition churoh- 8,6..
good oho~, ull 000 . , oil,
... 114.fii2·Sl'14.

Aetrlger•tora, $125; autom1Uc
waahtrs, $95; electric dryare,

bumor, $75; 2 tloclrlc drop In
bumel"' $50 each: 5 hood tana
with lights, $20 Nch; I Spood

mll11

Dal

~© RQ{llA-

TIIAT DAILY

6:30 W G il)) NBC Newa 1;1
(]) 1 Dream or Jeannie
Ill &lt;llD ABC Newai;J
CD Wild America Stereo 1;1
(!) 3· 2·1 Contact 1;1
aJ) !12) Ill CBS Newai;J
I!] Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
@Up Cion

72

&amp;

Vegetables

Drylf Shop~. 114-441·21144.

a••

Evtrgr•n.

Home On

Merchandise

G:OO 304-182·2236.

gu, $75; whtte K.enmora
alaclric range, like new, S150;
electric r1nge, S75; S' chest type
doop truzor, $150; ponoblo
cpmpld wash•r. $'125; 2
double oven rangn, $95 each,
ga1 build In oven with drop In

$175/mo. 814-446-36117 or 614·
245-5223.

qulrwd.

Real Estate

WV,

575; gao dryora, $50; gss nn·

Evenlnga.

Located

~louant,

OuHn size water btd, $100. 1/4
k•ret diamond eluller $100.
Sound design atereo syll•m
$130. calal bltwHn 3:30 and

5286.

2br

Fruits

AP~LIANCES

USED

Walhe,.., dryara, ratrlgeratora,
rangu. Skaggs Applllncee,
Upper Alvtr Ad. Bnlde Ston.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Financial

58

Miscellaneous

448·1699, 627 3rd. Avo. Gal·
llpolla, OH

3pm.

42

Inc. Good

u.appllanca, T.V. •••· ONn
8 a.m. to I p.m. Mon•..Sat. tu.

In

54

qulpment In tralllr, moveable,

245·5657.

34,000

TJ.IEM SOMETHING ..

Suprema- t011ded 25,000 miles

$2,995.

5 dayo, 4 nlghlo, $221/couolo.
Holof ~lei, NO 1\:~~ko. Tick·
lis good 1 yoor.
. -.

siding or trailer skirting. 614·
Will care lor bad patlanl in my

1-----------,...-------;....--l

A CARIBBEAN BLOWOUT! Wo

Merchandise

Ranger

BOX OF COOKIES 1

1!1'87 Ford Rongor
1987
Plymouth
Trusomoo 11,195. 11NM Bronco II
4•4 $3,og5. 11187 Olds Cullou

-bought cruiMo, Florida to
tho lllltlmaa, on a 1111ury llnw.

0628.

1985 Aidman Homo. 14J70, 2br after 7p.m.
2 baths, Many Eldrasl Must SM.1
614,.,.46-6605, Leave Massage.
Gra~lout living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments It VIllage
3br, 1 112 Both, Locotod ~lno Manor
and
Alverslcle
Stroot, Nort To Holrhut. 614·245- Apa~rtmenta In Middleport. 'From

Hooting

Country Mobile t-lomt Park,
Route 33, North . of PCJ~"Mroy.

2 Living Room Subo, With
Toblos &amp;' Lampa. 814-446-35110,
614-258o1684.

mill CUb Tr1ctor w/Btlly mower be oHared wlemployment, mull
han telephone. Apply 11 Center.
E.O.E.
Jull H from f.S children,
~~-. men• clolhlng, mise:, Vlllaga Pizza, part time eummer
Whitehead
residence, delivery peraon nHded, good
R-vlllo.
hours, muat have own tn~nspor·
tatlon apply In person.
July 3-4, Roger Sponcor, SR 33,
lg .-menl lldiH CIOihlng, Wanted: Sarvlca Technlel1n for

lg&amp;om · alzoa. bidding, polo

Space for Rent

Goods

dorplnnlng. Vory nice. 614·2459020.

II not told baforo oalo.

46

51

OlriGI Nil, July H on SR 14:1 £.5.~ . 614·593-5551, Ert. 227,
1 mile off Route 7 at Delong's,
0:30-5:00.
Pomeroy Nursing Canter haa
O.Ogl Solo, July 8·7-1, 1-??, Rt. lmmac:llata openings for 'par;t·
?, boaldl Sloto Highway time and on call Nur11lng Astl•

uaraaa, cJol.hM and mlac:, Far- tant. Clln tor cartlllciflon will

Coll lftor 2:00 p.m.. 304·7735651, Mason WI/.

4br t-louH In Rio Granda Area.
Available Augutt tel. 614-441·

$4,500. 304-895-3884.

Now Accepting Appllcatlona For
Part-time t-lalp little ·Caesars
Pizza.

Mercer Bottom Sub-division,
one acre Iota, At. 2 frontage,
price rtductd, city water, 304·
571-2336.
For Sale: River bank property In
Mason. ~m..5851 .

SIHplniJ room• with cooking.
Aloo lrsrlor spact. All hook·upa.

Will build patio covsra, decks,
scrHnld roorn1, put up vinyl

3br House 25 Acres, 1 ·mile
From Town, 614-446·1340.

(llartlng at S4.50/hr)"Conllnu&gt;ng

COmmercial Iota 314 milt aouth
of Silver Bridge on US 35, 304·
675-11121 or 3~·937~347l

Rooms tor ''"I • waok or monlh.
Slortlng 111120/mo. Golllo Hotol.
614-446'9680.

2 Atrium Doors, 1 New, 1 UAd,

GREAT ~ITIONIII
NEWill "Cookln" Fun Llno Of

t-loma Haalth Aides
Companion Aldn
•PoeiUone open tor home hnlth
aidH and companion aides In
Gallla
Pike, and Jackson
counties. Oualltltd candlda111
will posseas:·1 yr prior ax·
parte nee In health care."ReU1blt
transportatlon"Abillty to work
lndepandenlly"Availablllly
on
some
wMkanda
&amp;
ennlngsFamlly Nu~lng Ser·
vlcH 11 1 home haanh agancv
Hrvlclng SoutMm Ohio. Wa of~
ter:*MIIaaga
ralmbu~•·
mant•Compelltlve
wa9u

25 acres, rural water available,
located on Broad Run Road,
New Haven, $28,500. 304·773-

Aportmont avolloblo lor 2 .,..
conttrue11on workers 304-882~3
2586.

Houses for Rent

31

hems.
Managers
NMdtd. We lnln. Weekly In·
coma. Aexlble Hours. Excellent
CarHr Opportunhy. 1-800-487·
0924.

no

Ford

\.lOW ABOUT HALF A

I 51-lOULD SEND

$4,495.
$3,485.

Furnished

41

ADON Overbrook Conlor 614992-8472.

Kitchen

5253, John D. G•rl•ch,
tk1gle-wldt tnlllrt, pleaH.

WV, 304-682-3752. 11183 Dodgo
Convortlblo Black SJ,195. 1988

1-614·

614-992·6903.

"ASSEMBL£RS NEEDED"

lmmtdlalt openings. No ••·
perienca needed. Full/Part-time.

road,

counly
wslor,
rooaonablo
rollrlcllono. Comploll lntormotlon mailed on raquatt. ~-675-

Tha·Doctor, Plaase Call Back.

~ME ROY

8oq 1, Glassware, You Name 11,

Pa~ed

5881.

3117·7518.

11

Ill

3711-2942.

Tho Lody Thol Callld 614·388·
8359, Thai NHdod A Way To

•on bahlrid oli:l Bidwell .chool, orders! P.op a call you. No ••·
perlance neceasary. 1-800.255·
51h, It h. Rain or thine.
0242 Extension P·2748A.

IG

Baby sn, clean nouSIIoHice,
care tor..alcklaldlrly, trained ex·
perlonCed nursing assistant,
have references, 3G4-675-9769.
Bush Hog Service. Reasonable
Rates. No Job To Small! 614·

Wanted To Buy: Standing Tlm·
Mr, Top 'Prleas Paid For White
Oak &amp; Ash. Call after 7p.m. 614·

Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity

Wanted to Do

Wanted to buy, Standing timbar, Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614·992- haul your logs to the mill Just
5449.
c:all 304-675·1957.
Wanted to buy, washer &amp; dryer Miss Paula's Day Care Canter.
In working condiUon, call af1er 4 Sate, aHordabla, chlldcare. M·F
p.m. 614-9'92-6903.
6 a.m . • 5:30 p.m. Ages 2~~0.
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos Belora, attar school. Orop·lns
with or without motor1. Call welcome. 614446-8224. New In·
fanl Toddler Care, 614·446-6227.
Larry Llvoly. 614-388·9303.

Employment Services

3 temily garage Nle: subdlvl·

Rayburn R01d.

Scotty'• Used Carl, New Haven,

One bedroom apar1mant In Mid·
dlaport, stove and refrigerator,

Rooms

LOOK ,! &amp;OT A LETTE~ FROM
AND PATW .TI-IE'r''RE
AT CAMP, AND THE'r' SAY
THEV MISS ME ...

MARCIE

Asking $3,500, Boat Ottor. 614·
446-3938.

WHkly Ronlal. 614-446-4993.

on
&amp;home
acr..conatructlon
ge available tor

'(

With Turbo, Sunroof, I Extn1

Oc.. n Front Condo My111e
Beach Ar11. 2br, SIHpa 6,

o.r•l•,

•

Mull Soli: 1!114 T·Bird, Rod/

.

Ac, S225.oo •
992-3887 or 992-331 .

or

over payments, 304-675-1376
leave mauaga.

and reference ,.qulred, 304·882·

WED., JULY 3
EVENING

1991 Skylork Bulck1 AT, AC, tHI,
4 tech A·l cond, J14,568 1 take

North 41hl Middleport, Ohio. 2
bodroom umlohod opl, doposh
2588.

•

1991 Eoglo To lon Block 5slfd,
4 400 Miln, AskJna 19,500 pr
Boot Ottor. 614-2!6·1252, 614·
258·1738.

882-2588.

45
FrM Puppln to good home, I
mixed Terriers, 10 wk1 old, 614·

1112·2773.

mobllo

home, 1 milt below town, overlooking river. No Pats, CA. 614-

Cia..•• atar11ng now. t..am self
defence while you aha~ up and

814·192·~12

The

Television
Viewing

-",,,

Crulae, Tilt, All Povier, A9,
40,000 Mllll, Red, Black, M~

Conlrol Air. 114-446-0139.

Pomeroy-Middlep~rt, 0.~!0

1991

Autosfor

1988 l.eBsron C&lt;&gt;nv. 2.5, Auti,

for Rent

3,

-:BORN LOSER

n

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wright

lor Sale

614·992·7107.
Now 1991 14rl0 thnoo bodroom
2 full botho1 ohlnglo root, vinyl
aiding,
an..,on, carpotod
throuGhout, oil drywoH lntorlor
and ll-bay window. $17,117.00.
Collt-800-721-4046.

Claaa.. ltarting now. L.aam self
defence whlle you 1hape up and
work out. lmpJOVI your mental
&amp; physical sblllllos, tor lnlor·
view call Jay

44

Mobile Homes

July

July

OhiO

Celebrity CIDhtr crypiOQtlml sre created from quot~lons t!y 1amou1 people , Pll t ana present
Each .. lt.r in thl d pher sttnels !Of another. Tod•y '$ CfW: R «111-'1 B.

1;1

of llte-Ct'IIM'

Late Nlglll Stereo. 1;1

aJ 8pott1Canter
9 Moneyllne •.
11:31 Ill ClteM 1;1
11:46 W 8 101 Tanlgltl ShOW

M' J
JLT.

M

FOLUUX

L

T E B

A E T

B

C 0 F X

·L
A LX

BILTV

SKJRUO

WLZZOZ

I E A

DE f

J X

Stereo.
12:00(1)811!10 lite Nlgltl Stwto.
(1]18 Pai!J·Midline Wlllt

Nle

Peepl••

Ill Tile IIIICIIIII•er
Ill NuiWIIIe Now
aJ lau.,nonlglll
' Ill lllwiHIIIII

D MOVi!Alle llllll~ld
F111111 WjOit*ll (2:00)

U I! E V :ot:

LTA

ILFAMT
PREVIOUS SO~UTION:
roguery 11 not tar off."

JX

B X

BLUGTB.'

"Where IH!Crecy or mystery
Samuel Johnsen.
C 191H by NEA, Inc .

beglnl,

vice

or

3

�-

_.,._

..

-

·~

"

-"'

-~~-..--.

---

.

.

"

Page-11;-Tne Dally ~ntlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

wednesday, July 3, 1991.:

National Anthem hard to sing for s9me' enjoyable fOr Othe~s .~

By ERIC HUBLER
When the bombardment stopped
Long befo~ 1931, ~hen f!esi- ors. A~ em~~assed Dewey told
"The tune runs so high that the asked Co~~ to rna!'e Amenca;
Associated Press Writer
before dawn, the story goes. he dent H~?Dver Signed a b1ll rnaki~g tl the prmce The Star-Spangled avemge voices in audiences can not • th~ Beautiful" the ~edna!::e~:.
BALTIMORE (AP) - It's hard knew his country had prevailed the nauonal anth~. the. Amepcan Banner." was..the ·real air, and sud- reach these high notes in places," w1th ','The Star:~pang
er . ~
to sing - and nobody seems to when he saw the tattered American people had made tt thetr nauonl!l denly, 11 was. The Na"Y and Army Mrs. LP. J\roCk of the Daughter:s reverttng to a mtli~ -m~. . :
know what a rampan is. But then, flag still flying.
scng.
.
both adopted it
··
of the American Revolution tesU- . And what about e . -to-s10g.
almost from the moment Francis
Key's poem was published in
In Hong Kong JUSt before the
- ~t took more than 11 yeais for fted in a letter. She a1sc argued, as. ISSue? It w_as settled 10 a 1 ?t~;
Scott Key scribbled it on the back The Baltimore American eight days Spamsh-Amenc~n War , Pnnce ~ar~Iand Rep. J. Charles did others, in fav~,r of a more Hou~ heanng, when a~:~:
of a letter, some Americans have after tile bombardment. Set to the Henry of Pruss1a asked Adm . L.10thicum to get Congress to make peaceful scng, hke Amenca the Amencan War.ve~ra: tes
. f;
been complaining about " The Star· tune of" Anacreon in Heaven," an George Dewey W,~Y '!te U.S. 1'!~'7. · the .song the .national anthem. Its Beautiful."
.
al h1~ ca~p tn u a, a pa!.~;
Spangled Banner."
English drinking song, Baltimore- played two atrS, Hail Columbta ments were debated at length durAttempts to change the nanonal mockingbirds learned ~~n~ · •
For some performers, singing . ans sang it in the streets and in the at morning colors and " The Star- ' ing-a hearing ·bf the House JuQicia- anthem continue . For 20 years , Star-Spangled Banner With lhe:
the anthem causes a tingle in the Uteaters.
Spangled Banner" at evening col- ry Commiuee in 1924.
Rep. Andrew Jacobs, D·lnd.. has troops.
spine and a lump in the throat that . : : : : . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;_.:,._ _ _ _ _ _~-~~-...~.:.~:.;.-----~~~;.;.........._ _;.._ _lllllll_~~------a
only a truly inspired martial air can
produce. One rousing rendition was
Whitney Houston 's at the Super
••••••••••••••
· Bowl.
r--W-E_W_E_L_C-:-0-M_.E---t
" I like the anthem," says singer
Jose Feliciano, who feared his
W.I.C .
career was over when , during the
1968 World Series, he angered traCOUPONS &amp;
ditionalists by spuming a marching
FOOD STAMPS
band and accompanying himself on
guitar.
" It's hard for just anyone 10
sing, but there's a lot of emotion....
1 think it's appropriate to be an
anthem because our country has
always been a fighting country."
The history books say Key
wrote the lyrics Sept. 14, 1814,
after a harrowing ni~ht pacing the
deck of a truce ship 10 Chesapeake
Bay. It was the height of the War
of 1812, when British sea power
threatened America's 32-year-old
sovereignly.
Key watched the British pound
Fort McHenry through the night.

BIG BEND

Ohio Lottery

Have a safe

Pick 3:066
Pick 4: 1363
Cards : Q·H, 6-C
7-D; K-S
Super Lotto:
16-18-21-24-28-31
Kicker: 139655

Fourth of
July

Partly cloudy toni ght.
Low in mid-60s. Chance

uf rain 50 percent.

Your Locally anrllnrlt&gt;pt&gt;nrlt-ntlv Own.-rl,
Communitv-Mindt&gt;rl Sup.-rmarkt&gt;t

It's fair to
ask Kentucky
to share costs,
TVA says
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Gov. Wallace Wilkinson says he is
willing to help the Tennessee Valley Authority defray some of the
costs of installing pollution-conbOI
devices on generating stations in
order to lceep them burning Kentucky coal.
But Wilkinson said he first
wants a look at the figures the utility is using to compare the costs of
installing scrubbers compared to
the cost of burning coal from the
western United States.
· Wilkinson and Oliver Kin$sley,
head ofTVA's generating div1sion,
held what amounted to a negotiating session during the irtaugural
meeting of the Kentucky Coal
Authority on Tuesday.
Kingsley said he would take the
governor's proposal to the TVA
board, but was reluctant to commit
to a full disclosure. Kingsley said
the utility is seeking bids now on
coal and scrubbers. " We don't
want to jeopardize the competitive
marketplace," he said.
Kingsley said the calculations
will not take into account the economic hardships Kentucky would
face with the loss of the TV A coal
business.
"ll's not a question of fairness.
It's a question of what is best for
all of our ratepayers," Kiqgsley
said.
.
The heart of the problem for all
of the industry is the new restriction on sulfur dioxide emissions
contained in the federal Clean Air
Act passed in 1990. Burning coal
produces sulfur dioxide, though the
amount can differ greatly depending on the kind of coal that is
burned.
Utilities across the nation are
having to decide how to reduce sulfur emissions, by either installing
expensive mechanisms to "scrub"
it from coal smoke or by burning
coal with a lower sulfur content
Coal in western Kentucky is
generally very high in sulfur. Coal
from the Powder River Basin in
Wyoming is low in sulfur, bu~ also
produces less heat when burned.
Kingsley said the decision is an
economic one.
"We do not want to go and buy
Powder River Basin coal," Kingsley said. "It is our least-cost alternative that we have."
TV A has proposed the state
share in some of the costs of
installin~ pollution control equipment if 11 pledges to keep burning
western Kentucky coal. In 1990,
TV A bought scme 18 million tons
of coal from western Kentucky about 40 percent of the region 's
entire production - and another 9
million tons from eastern Kentucky.
!Gngsley said the additional cost
of installing scrubbers to bum Ken- .
tucky coal should not be borne by
TVA customers in its seven-state
area if it would be cheaper to bum
Wyoniing coal.
,
•
Wilkinson said he is willing to
commit tbe state 10 assist TVA
because the loss of Ute coal business would devastate the economy
of the~
"We' ve got to know what il
takes u'rbecome competitive,"
WiJkinsoci said. "But we won't do
· it on heallay and speculation."
U.S. Rq~~ Hal Rogel'll, a member of the authority, said it was
sltort$ighted for TVA to ignore the
economic impact on western Kentucky.
. . '
.
"I don't think you're going 10
sell much ·eJcelricity in Wyoming
and if yoU dev.isliltc die economy
in Kentucky, I don't think you're
going to sdf mudJ elcclricity there
eithet," Rogers we!. ·. ·

Vol. 42, No. 42

July 4th celebrations honor Desert Storm veterans
By KAREN•SCHWARTZ
Associated Press Writer
Americans heedin( Presiden 1
Bush's call to make tins Fourth .of
July a tribute to veterans-of Desert
Storm held parades and fireworks
displays with a Gulf War theme,
and Kuwait even helped bankroll
one event with $10,000.
The celebration began early ,
with a number of marches and ftreworks shows getting under way on
Wednesday. Many more were
planned for today.
In Tallahassee, Fla., captured
Iraqi equipment was to be di s-

played al' a parade. "We said we
were $Ding to have a shindig, and I
think 11's going to be a wing-dangdo, " Gov. Lawton Chiles said
Wednesday 'as he cKmbed atop a
tank in front of the governor 's
mansion.
In Philadelphia. where the Declaration of Independence was
adopted 2 15 years ago, parade
organizers made last-minute
arrangements for today's activities
after Kuwait came through with
$10.000 to help cover the cost
Vietnam veterans planned to
exchange POW -MIA flags with
their Desert Storm comrades.

''This solemn passing of the colol'll day, authorities said. Several were " Thank you!" as the troops her home. " I've always been patriwill make our parade more mean- hospitalized, including children passed. ' 'The Fourth has alway s otic," she said.
In Edm ond , Okla ., 25 immibeen special, bul bein~ able to lend
ingful than any other," said parade ages I and 2.
grants
became Americans just in
After
the
allied
victory
over
lhem
emotional
and
moral
support
coordinator Roben McMahon.
Across th e country. mi~ions Iraq, Bush urged American s in during the war has helped make time to get in on the celebration.
also pre11ared for a round of good March to make July Fourth "a day this one even more special," she They took their oaths of ci tizenship, then held a Fourth of July picold-fashiOned fun, with barbecues of special celebration for our said.
Vietnam War veterans led a nic a day early.
and trips to the besch the order of reUtrning troopS ... a holiday they' ll
In Charleston, West Va, today 's
parade
in Omaha, Neb. Mayor PJ .
never forget."
the day.
almost took place witbcelebration
Morgan
said
the
honor
helped
Columbia,
S.C.,
did
just
that
on
Santa Monica Beach near Los
out
33
veterans
of the Gulf War.
make
up
for
the
lack
of
respect
he
Wednesday.
More
than
50,000
peeAngeles was expected to be
Military
officials
had mistakenly
said
the
S()ldiers
were
shown
when
pie
lined
the
capital's
main
thorjammed. The foucasl was for hot
sent them from Camp Pendleton,
weather, and a huge fireworks oughfare in a sea of red, white and they reUtrned from their war.
In Sutherland, Neb., this year's Calif., to Charleston , S.C. The
blue to honor returning uoops. An
show was scheduled for dawn.
An explosion at a fireworks estimated 5,000 soldiers paraded celebration also marked the city's West Virginia National Guatd sent
I OOth birthday. Debbie Soderholm a cargo plane to fetch the Marine
show in Chicago Heights, III ., past the cheering crowd.
placed
24 American flags outside reservists.
Avenell
Sloane
shouted
,
injured at least 11 people Wednes-

Soviets would like U. S.
cooperation on Yugoslavia

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day wlll be enjoyed by l,lrea residents as they
participate in parades and picnics in various
communities in the county.

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1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cenla
A lllulllmedlo Inc. Newopapar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 4, 1991

Copyrighted 1991

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - The
decision by rivals Apple and IBM
to share technology is the latest
strange-bedfellows alliance in a
computer industry struggling to
standardize its products sc that they
can be mixed and matched.
Industry analysts said Wednes-

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Soviet Union would welcome a
joint effort with the United States
to quell civil war in Yugoslavia
before the violence spreads to other
neighboring countries, Soviet
sources say.
A U.S. official said Wednesday
the Soviets had not a~hed Ute
Bush administration wtth a specific
proposal, but he indicated Washmgton would be willing to explore
cooperative steps to end the violence.
The superpowers already are
discussing the possibility of a
meeting scon between Secretary of
State James A. Baker ill and Soviet
Foreign Minister Alexander A.
Bessmertnykh. One Soviet official
said that could serve as a forum for
a joint statement on Yugoslavia if
the two sides can agree on a position.
"Their statements have been
very similar to ours," the American official observed when asked if
there might be common ground on
the issue. "There's always utility
in talking."
Both the U.S. and Soviet
sources spoke with the understand·
ing Utey would not be identified.
Senate Republican leader Bob
Dole of Kansas told President
Bush, meanwhile. the president
should consider appealing to Soviet

President Mikhail S. Gorbachev to
use his influence on Belgrade and
the Yugoslav army to stop the
fighting .
Neither the United States nor
the Soviet Union has much influence in the troubled country, which
has been a nonaligned communist
state for three decades and only
recently held elections that drove
the communists from power in
scme regions.
Dole also suggested the North
Atlantic Treaty Organjution estab·
lish a peace-keeping force that
would intervene, as a last resect. to
restore order.
In a letter to Bush, Dole said the
United States should "pressure
and, if necessary, compel". the
Yugoslav army and the government
of Serbia, the largest of the six
Yugoslav republics, "to halt their
violent crackdown on democracy
and human rights."
Baker on Wednesday expressed
growing concern that the fighting
between federal forces and Slovenian and Croatian militias would
burst into "a full-fledged civil
war" in the central European country.
Baker called on all nations to
consider suspending aid 10
Yugoslavia and imposing a boycott
on arms deliveries.
He rejected assertions that the

Bush administration had encouraged the army's crackdown by sup·
porting Yugoslavia 's territorial
integrity after the two northern
republics declared their independence last month.
"What we did was to make it
very cleat that we were concerned
that something like this would hap·
pen, and indeed it has," Baker told
reporters.
A senior Soviet official told The
Associated Press his government
has been confused in recent days
by an apparent change in the U.S.
position on Yugoslavia and is anxious to clarify where the Bush
administration stands.
He said the Kremlin would welcome a joint approach such as the
one taken in the immediate aftermath of Iraq 's invasion of Kuwait
last August, when Baker broke off
a hunting trip in Mongolia and
rushed 10 Moscow to issue a joint
statement with then-Foreign Minis·
ter Eduard A. Shevardnadze con·
demning Baghdad's aggression.
Under no circumstances, how ever, would the Soviet Union send
troops to Yugoslavia, even as part
of an international peacekeeping
force, the scurce said. The Soviets
supported but refused to contribute
troops to the multinational coalition
that drQve Iraq out of Kuwait earlier Utis year.

Court says panel can overrule
Ohio Department of Health

day's a~eement is a step toward industry,' : said Peter Kastner, an
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) eliminaung the way one company's artalysl w1th the Aberdeen Group
The
Ohio Supreme Court ruled
scflware often is incompatible with Inc., in Boston. "There's a grow·
Wednesday
that a state review
another's computers.
ing realization that nobody holds
panel
had
broad
power to overrule
"We are at a stage where no all the technological cards."
.
Ohio
Deparunent
of Health decione, including IBM, is strong
Compu_ter buyers who complam
sions
reP.:ding
expansion
of health
enough to fend off the competition about havtng to deal w1th a hodge·
care
facilities
statewide.
.
and dominate any sector of the podge of hardware and software
Justices
unanimously
affirmed
that can' t be easily mixed and
matched are driving the allianc e the power of the Certificate of
Need Review Board 10 substitute
trend, analysts said.
\ "Companies are recognizing its judgment for that of the departthat people work in.qtixed environ- ment in granting an application
ments and they're de'manding more from Timken Mercy Medical Center in Canton to operate an open
compatibility and more choices,"
Apple spokeswoman Brooke heart unit.
In other action, the court ruled
Cohan said. "Right now, Apple
4-3
that an employee injured while
feels that a lot of good technology
is being stalled because of a lack of on the way to work is not entitled
to workers' compensation benefits.
common standards."
Justices also ISSued a public repThree major alliances attemptrimand
to a former county court
ing to set industry standards have
who
once interrupted a hearjudge
emerged recently:
- The Advanced Computer
Environments consortium. or ACE,
formed in April. The group,
attempting ~() ·set standards for
PIKETON. Ohio (AP)- An
workstations, includes Compaq electrical problem ·that Jriggered
Computer Corp., Digital Equip- alarms ill a governm~t-owned uramerit Corp., Microsoft Corp. and nium plant reinforces residents'
Mips Computer Systems Inc . concerns
about their safety, the
Workstations are basically more head of a citizens group slid.
powerful desktop computers.
Vina .Colley, preshlent of Pilce- The so -called "open sys · ton Residents for Environmental
terns" movement led by Sun Safety and Security, asked the
Microsystems Inc. and started in compaity that operilteS the plant to
19.88 with its SPARC workstation
CP.Ife.an evac!Jalion plan for area
line. SPARC computer clones PJ'
res1dents.
mimic IBM and other machines. . About 64 workers were evacuatUnisys torp. signed onto this .ed from several buildinJ!S at the
group throughi technology agree- Portsmouth Gaseous Dtffusion
ments with Sun and American Plant on Friday when alarms
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. sounded. Wcrkcrs were allowed to
AT&amp;T, which recently-acquired return about two hours later.
computer mainframe maker NCR
Tiin MaiChett, spokesman for
Corp .• also makes the Unix soft- Martin Marietta Energy Systems,
ware system that can be used by said alarms went off when a con ~
SPARC,
·
lrliCtor ilwtalling a communications
· -The IBM-Apple pact. The system accidentally cut through a
two companies, which control conduit at the police headquarters
nearly half the markCJ for personal building.
'
Continued cio page 3

writing the majority opinion,
rejected the def.artmenl s claim.
"In its brie , ODH goes to great
lengths to convince this court that
its expertise in healtb care planning
requires that its decisions on CON
(certificate of need) applications be
accorded great deference,' ' Ms.
Resnick said.
She said there is nothing in state
law that ''justifies aggrandi zing
ODH's authority in the manner
which it requests."
In the workers' compensation
court.
An appeal filed by the Health case, justices said Edward Robatin
Department contended the review was not entitled to benefits for
board acted improperly by weigh- injuries received in 1985 while
ing evidence and could reverse going to work al MTD Products
decisions only if it found the Inc. in Oeveland. Robatin was hurt
depanment abused its discretion in in a traffic accident while trying to
turn into the company 's parking
denying the apPii~ation:
.
Continued on page 3
Justice Ahce Rob1e Resmck,
In g.to sing "Happy Biithday" to a
defendant
The ruling in the medical center
case stemmed from a 1987 application by Timken Mercy to establish
an open heart unit. The Health
Department rejected the request,
citing a lack of need.
The Certificate of Need Review
Board subsequently held a hearing
and approved the application. and
the unit was opened while the case
made its way through the high

Piketon residents want evacuation plan
Managers and other salaried
employees have been opemting Ute
plant since June 11, when a union
representing about 1,070 hourly
worlcers went on strike over issues
that included safety, seniority and
overtime.
Ms. Colley indicated that residents should have been evacuated
when the alarms sounded.
"If there's a real problem out
there, the residents have nowhere
to go. There's no evox:uation plan,'·
Ms. Colley said in an interview
published Wednesday in The
(Portsmouth) Daily Times.
."If an accident occurs, no one
wo.uld be safe for hundreds of
miles away," sbe said.
Ms. Colley said her group also
warit,s the company to provide a
daily report .on pllllt operations and
to allow a group member to serve
on .a plant advisory board.
Matchett said he has asked Ms. .

Colley to submit her requests in
writing. He said the company and ·
the U.S. Department of Energy,
which owns the plant, would
review the requests.
John Knauff, president of the
striking Oil, Chemical and Atomic
Workel'll Union Local 3-689, said residen ts should be concerned
about th'e plant operating without
hourly workers.
. "If il took them two hours to
find out that il was a false alarm,
then I think that's too long," he
said.

The company contends.the plant
is properly staffed and maintained
by qualified and trained employees
during strikes. It said ~ plant has
operated continuously since 1955
:__ even during six strikes, the
Jongesllastin' ~ days. .
1be plant 10 Pike County. about
70 ines south of Columbus, J'CIII9cesses fuel for civilian nuclear
reactors and the military.
\&gt;

'· '

\.

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