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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.
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Apple, IBM join forces
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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;

'· '

\.

�---- -- -- --~----------------..------...-------

~ursday, July 4, 1991

Commentary
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE'll

.MULTIMEDIA, INC
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER ot The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspape~ Publishers Association.
LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300

words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned let!ers wtll be pubtlshed. Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues. not personalities.

Are the bad old days back for
the 'Mistake on the Lake?'
By The Associated Press
CLEVELAND (AP) - There are times when it seems this Lake Erie
city's bad old days are back.
Once known as the "mistake on the lake," Cleveland struggled in the
1980s to create a new image: a Rust Belt city pulling itself out of the dol·
drums with an ambitious downtown building program and a public relations blitz.
·
New skyscrapers and upscale shopping centers sprang up. The Cuyahoga River, which had been so polluted it caught rue in 1969, was
cleaned up. Cleveland was touted as a comeback city.
The Hartford (Conn.) Courant wrote in March of "a $j billion down·
town renaissance in a factory town that has rolled down its sleeves, fastened a lie under a white collar and stepped into the 21st century."
But Cleveland still has publicity problems:
-Thirty cunent and former Cleveland police officers were among 4 7
people arrested in late May in a two-year FBI probe into alleged police
protection of gambling.
-Mayor Michael R. White drew national attention in May when a
grand jury swnmons was delivered as he was host of a reception for the
National Conference of Black Mayors.
Tbe grand jury was investigating real estate dealings in which White
was iD'Volved. In the end, White was not indicted.
-Cleveland beat seven other cities for the right to be host of the Rock
and Roll HaU of Fame, which at the time was scheduled for completion in
1992. But fund-raisin!! problems, location questions and squabbling
among Cleveland's vanous boards and agencies have delayed the project
lime and again. The opening is now set for 1994. ·
-The city's schools are in such bad shape that former Mayor George
Voinovich pledged during his successful gubemataial campaign last year
that the slate would take them over if he were elected. He has since Joned
down his pledge, although he stiU plans mcxe slate control for Cleveland
schools.
Tbere have been other national embanassments.
In addition to the 1969 ftre, the Cuyahoga also burned briefly in 1936
and 1952. The city went into default in 1978 under youthful Mayor Dennis Kucinich, who was dubbed "Dennis the Menace."

Letters to the editor
Darker side of 'Choice'
Dear Editor:

There is a darker side of
"Choice" · the one the abortion
industry and the liberal media
would just as soun ignore.
When the abortionists portrays
in the media that abortion is a deci·
sion between a woman and her
doctor. they skirt the real issues.
The sorrowful truth is that many
women feel coerced into having an
abortion because of the fear .of
abandonment. For instance, a boy
friend or husband threatens to leave
her unless she has an abortion. In
all too many cases, he leaves anyway.
Whose "Choice" is it then that
the woman has an abortion? Is it
the urging or peers, society, IX' even
the coWJselors at a money-making
"women's health care clinic"?
Can you imagine an investigative reponer telling on the 6:00
news about the very real possibility
of the ''SSSS amounts of kickbacks
for abortion referrals". In any other
case, a doctor's license would be
revoked for giving kickbacks,
would it not? It's cash up frmt, no
records. No taxes???
Yet another darkside - many of
our doctors have no "Choice" in

pertormmg abortions. They are
forced to go against their conscience because of "policies".
After 17 years of legalization of
abortion, years marked by
increased poverty and violence,
abortion has not been the solution
to the social ills of our country.
What about the physical and
psychological risks associated with
abortion? Are the numbers of
deaths reported in the media. (The
Center for Disease Control has the
reported numbers.)
There are Crisis Pregnancy Centers all over l)le stare, run by volunteers and privately funded. Have
you seen any media coverage of
their good works?
The "fetal tissue" the "Choice"
people call it, has a heartbeat after
18 to 21 days of growth and brain
waves between 5 or 6 weeks. Have
you heard this reported?
Why are the "Choice" people
afraid to say the "A" word-abortion? Does "Choice" cover up the
fact that an abortion stops a beating
heart. Come on media report the
darkside.
Alice Click
Box 233
Mt Alto, W.Va. 25264

Cited for bravery
Dear Editor:

I would like to praise two people for bravery, Joyce Taylor and
Susie Knapp, together they got four
people oot of an overturned car.
I'm glad to know that there are
people who still care for other peo-

pie.
A job well done Joyce and
Susie.
Bill Knapp
Box 134
Syracuse, Ohio

Spend tax dollars at home
Dear Editor:
As an American I've seen many

,
I,
I

proposals in my time and have seen
administrations voted in office and
out But as we still live the ReaganBush years we have seen thousands of Americans laid off work.
We now can see what the presi·
dent and our elected Congress and
Senate can do fiX' the workers here
in America • raise our taxes in
every area, but say we haven't
raised taxes.
. But what do our elected gov.
ernment officials think we are,
fools. 1 don't think so. We see bii·Jions of doliars cut from our pro:grams 81 home in America and our
]'resident give billions and still is
;giving away w·foreign countries.
·What e~ happen to keep America
'going.
·
·
· Instead we're paying the way
'for every other country in the
world. Can't they get out and wort
:and put their minds together like
.America did in the early yean. So
for America,l for one will say stand
~·

I.

up now and vote them out ol office.
America needs people that will
cast their vote for the good of the
people who voted them in office so
our own country won't fall apart
it is in so many places across this
great nation. So I guess America if
we are to ever see jobs and America grow and be a great country. we
must push to see our Congress and
Senate spend our tax dollars at
home and pass acid rain bills that
put Americans ·out of work. If
America is the only eounty going
to clean up the air then why should
we do it 81 all When Japan cleans
up, America will clean up. We
have enough -Americans out of
work for now so America let's
speak out before our elected Seoate
and Congress put us out of work.
So go vote and put them on the
streets to find a job.
Yours truly
Floyd H. Cleland
Box 144-F
MiddlellCI'l. OH 45~~

as

"

Pag~2-The Dally SentJnet

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

EDITORS NOTE: This is the
rinal NEA release by Robert
Walters. Syndication or tbis rol·
umn is being disrontillued.
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Dur·
inj! more than 14 years of writing
thiS column. I've never relied upon
the overused fi1St person pronouns
- "I" and "me" -or any other
device to refer to myself.
I'm now breaking that rule.
That's because this is my final
column and there's no other way to
properly say goodbye to the syndicate a nfdwspaper editors - and
most importantly, to the ~ders of
those newspapers- whose support
and encouragement have been so
crucial to the success of this column.
I eschewed references to I and
me because I thought it was pre·
sumptuous and unnecessary to proclaim what "I think" or "I
believe."

ARE

I was convinced that the column's readers deserved the most
compelling arguments and thoughtful analyses I eould muster, not my
baseless opinion or unfounded
speculation.
Thu S? . 7 ."w3z 4 2 q7 6:mns
included a substantial reporting
component as part of an informal,
unstated deal with my readers:
If! (a.) eould show them that I'd
seriously examined an issue, and
(b.) was willing to provide them
with new information on the topic,
they'd respect - and perhaps even
accept- whatever modest judg·
ments I had reached on the matter.
From some readers came disagreement and criticism. Others
offered support and encouragement I hope I established a bond,
based on mutual respect, with the
people in both categories.
During most of the last decade, I
strove to do something else with

the column that I believed was
equally (if not more) important to move it "outside the beltway,"
away from Washington and into all
of the nation's regions and states.
That's because I was convinced
that the most imaginative, innovative and creative work in almost all
forms of human endeavor isn't
being done in Washington (IX' New
York) but in the thousands of communities, large and small, west of
the Potomac (and the Hudson).
Veto power - political in
Washington and financial in New
York ~ is too readily available and
too often exercised m those cities.
Buuoo little of significance originates there.
Reaching that conclusion has
l!een especially iinportJint for me
because I was born in Manhattan,
lived most of the fi1St half of my
life in the New York area and lived

~

DEN

REAI1tFOR
(Oh\8AT?~
'

most of the last hillf of my life in :
Washington.
:
An ambitious schedule of travel ·
that's taken me to all 50 states has :
given me an appreciation of both :
the similarities and the differences ·
in the cultural, social, political and :
other values embraced by this :
country's inhabitants.
·
Moreover, when reaching out
those people to better understand·
their cares and concerns, their:
hopes and fears; their joys and sor: : .
rows, I' m especially proud that I •
was able to shed my New York and:
Washington preconceptions.
Before I embarked on that
odyssey, I invariably .had only .a
cynical reaction when hearmg
banal claims and jingoistic assertions about the United Slates, such
as declarations thiu it was "a great
nation" or proclamations that it
was somehow better than other
countries.
I'm still offended by such platitudes, but I've come to enthusiastically celebrate the simultaneous
diversity and consonancy of the:
people who inhabit the nation's big;
cities, its sprawling suburbs and its·
rural communities.
:
In my efforts to examine,:
explain and interpret what was.
occurring in one venue to people;
livinJ! el3d here, I sought always too
be mmdful that colwnns from Min-:
nesota or Mississippi had to be:
reported and writren in a manner
that would make them compelling;
to editors and readers in Montana:
and Michigan.
•
There have, of course, been dis-~
appointments and frustrations. Bu~
they have been minor and few in.
comparison with the pleasure and:
fulfillment the column has proJ
duced for ..rne - and, I hope, for:
the editors and readm of newspa-:
pers throughout the eounlry.
It's now time to move on tO:
other ventures, but I'll always cher-:
ish the memories of a unique.
endeavor that provided so many:
opportunities to meet the uncom~
mon people living everywhere iO:
this special land.
•

Unn lhow high t.mperaturM br lht dey' .

w:

f!RoNTS:
..,......... ...tL.&amp;. ~
~ COLD

· ®~-&lt;&amp;&gt;

, HIGH

the delivery system is inefficient,
Secretary of Health and Human
and 35 million people have no Services Louis W. Sullivan is
insurance coverage. What to do? already on record in favor of "the
The myriad of proposed sqlutions prese111 private/public health syssccm to break down into three catetern (as) the pnmary means'' of
gories:
delivering health care. Any govern!. Paste, paJch, linker and jury- ment-financed system, he says,
rig. This .is the opti&lt;l!' favor:e&lt;J by woul~ _create "long waitiJJg lists
eonservauves and - tf pWJdits are for cntical procedures and de facto
reading the tea leaves right - b~ rationing."
!~Je Bus.h administration. It is a typThe truth is tha4 the "free martcally Republican, market-based ketplace" already rations care
ap_proa~h that calls f~r retaini_ng
mainly to those who can _afford it
pnvate ms~ce earners, ,P~vtd· and the Bush-Sullivan "reforms"
mg tax credits to mduce mdiVJduals would provide but a partial solution
to ex~ the\f coverage volun~- to this single problem: It would
ly, laXIJlg some employer-proVIded induce a percentage of the uninheal_th cove~age as mcom~ and sured millions to buy coverage. Primaking II e8Sier for small busmess- vale carriers would still be skimes to buy health coverage at reason- · ming off as much as 33 cents of
able rates.
' every health dollar. Doctors and

They're back! With Justice
Thurgood Marshall's resignation
we have another appearance of our
favorite political rap group, The
Metronomes!
Recall: Last year it was said that
the political metronome was swinging, political cycles were cyclinj!.
and we would see a Democrauc
renaissance. (Yes, Democratic!)
Kevin Phillips, ostensibly a
Republican, had brought forth the
boule "The Politics of Rich and
Poor." Democrats swooned.

Phillips saw the metronome worlcing: tick, tack, tick, lOCk. eonservative,liberal, conservative, liberal·. It
was the moment - the exact
moment! - for a liberal toe~.
Phillips said Republicans sank the
poor and middle class: they would
pay ft¥ iL
Today a different cycle stay is
promoted. The media blandly tells
us: Here's Thurgood Marshall,
great man, fought for civil rights,
became pan or a liberal maj()"jty on
the court, but now - watch the

Today in history
By The Associated Press
.
Today is Thursday, July 4, the !85th day of 1991. There are.J80 days
left in the year. This is Independence Day.
Joday's Highlight in Histay:
On July 4, 1776, the Continental Congress adopted the Declaration of
Independence.
On this date:
In 1802; the United States Military Academy officially opened at West
Poin~ N.Y.
In 1826, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson - the second and third
presidents of the United States - both died, 50 years to the day after the
Declaration of Independence was adopted.
In 1831, the fifth president of the United States, James Monroe, died ill
New York City.
·"·
In 1862, En,lish clerl!yman Charles L. Dodgson (betrer known as
"Lewis Carron ') began mventing the stay of Alice in Wonderland for
his friend Alice Pleasance LiddeD during a boating trip.
In 1872, the 30th president of the United States, Calvin Coolidge, was
born in Plymouth, Vt
·
In 1917, during a ceremony in Paris to lloJtor the French hero of th.e
American Revolution, the Marquis de Lafayeue, U.S. Lieutenant Colonel
Charles E. Stan toil declared, "Lafayette, we are here!'' (a sentiment often
mistakenly attributed to GeiiC2iil joiUJ J. Prnhing). '
In 1939, in a farewell speech 81 New Yorlc's Yankee Stadium, baseball's "Iron Horse," Lou Geltrig, called himself "the luckiest maD on the
face of the CB!!!J·"
·
In 1942, thC musical review "This Is the Army," featuring songs by
Irving Berlin, opened'81 the Broadway Theater in New York.
·
In 1946, the Philippines became independent of U.S. sovereignty.
In 1959, America's 49-star Oag, honoring Alaskan stalehood, was officially unfurled.
.
In 1960, America's 50-star Oag, honoring Hawaiian statehood, was
offiCially unfurled.
In 1966, 25 years ago, Presi®nt Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Freedom of Information Act, which weal in!-'J effect tho following year.

I

oo

SJoiOM'RS

r----

fWN

m

~

T·81CRUS FJ.UIIRIES

oo

1H0W

E.7.l Q
ICE

~
e..:..J

•

'

~
Searing temperatures in North-

Local briefs----.

Minor fire reported

One person has all six Super Lotto numbers

EMS has five calls

CLEVELAND (AP) - There

was one ticket sold naming all six

Five calls for assistance were answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Wednesday . .
At 9:05 a.m. the Syracuse sqllad went to Third Street in Syracuse for Bob Louks who was taken 10 Camden Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, W. Va., and at 11:01 a.m. the Middteport went to 473
Broadway St for Michelle French who was treated but not transported.
At 3:40 p.m. Pomeroy went to State Route 143 for El':a Grueser
who was taken to Veterans, at4:29 p.m. the Pomeroy W11l went to
the Pomeroy Cliff Apartments for Kaml Smith who was li'IIIISpMed to the Holzer Medical Center; and at 6:44 I'.ID- the Racine squad
transported Brenda Randolph from Third SL m Racine to Veterans
Memorial.

numbers drawn in Wednesday
night's Super Lotto game, when the
jackpot was $4 million, the Ohio
Lottery said. .
It was not known early Thurs·
day whether the jackpot wmner had
opted for annual installments or the
cash discount, officials said.
Tbe winning numbers were 16,
18, 21, 24, 28, 31. .
The Kicker number was
139655.
In Pick 3 Numbers, the winning
number was 066.
In Pick 4 Numbers, the winning
number was 1363.
In Cards, the winners were
Queen of Hearts, Six of Clubs,
Seven of Diamonds and King of
Spades.
Sales in Super Lotto totaled
$2,839,070. Kicker sales totaled
$461,289.
The jackpot for Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing will be $4.
There were 90 Super Lotto tick·
ets with five of the numbers, and
each is worth $1,000. The 3,525
tickets showing four of the numbers.are each worth $69.
In Kicker, no players had the
exact six-digit number to claim
$100,000.

--Area deaths-died in 1976.
He was preceded in death by a
brother, Roy Chester Cartw~ght
· Walter Glenn Cartwright, 63, of during WOrld War D, and a SISter,
Cookeville, Tenn., formerly of Evelyn M. Nicholson, in 1991.
Mason and Clifton, died Tuesday,
A retired supervisor with AEP,
July 2, 1991, in the Holzer Medical where he had worked for 40 years,
Center.
he later worked at the Cooke
Born Jan. 17, 1928, in Clifton, Nuclear Power Station in ,Bridgehe was a son of the late Herman R. man, Mich. A U.S. Army veteran,
Cartwright, who died in 1963, and he attended the First Baptist
Jessie (VanMatre) Cartwright, who Church in Cookl:ville.
Surviving are his wife, Eileen L.
(Johnson) Cartwright; two sons and
The Daily Sentinel
daughters-in-law, Lionel B. and
Cindy L. Cartwright of Nashville,
(USPS JUt•)
Tenn.,. and Eric L. and Debbie A.
A DlvlltGII of Multimedia, lac.
of Brogue, Pa.: two sisters, Marcel·
Published every afternoon, Monday
Ia L. Chapman of Midd!CJIOI!. and
through Friday. Ill Court St., Po·
A. Malguerite Darst of Point Pleasmoroy, Ohto, by the Ohio Valley Pubant;
a brother, Ralph T. Cartwright
lishing Compony/Muttlmedta, Inc..
Pomergy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Seof Punta Gorda, Fla.; and one
Cond class postageo paid at Pomeroy.
grandson, Paul F. Cartwright..
Ohio.
The funeral will be Saturday,
' Member: The Associated Preu, In·
1:30 p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
.land DaJiy Prtss Auodatlon and thf'
Home with the Rev. Larry Gilland
Newspaper A.uo:latlon . National
and
Rev. Glenn Rowe officiatinJ!·
Ad~~~:~~ Representative, Branham
~·
saleo, 733 Third Avenue,
Burial
will be in Kirkland MernonNew York 10017.

Walter Cartwright

One Month .............. :.. .. .. .. ...... .... H-95

One Year ...... ........ ..... ........ .. .... 183.20
SINGLE aiP1'

.

PRICE

Dolly .... ........ ........ ... ............ 25 ~nts

, .,.i!u~crlb&lt;..-1 not d,.lriDil to !"'Y the cormay remit ln advance ~rect· to
Dolly Sentinel on a 3, 6 or l2 month
. Credit will beetven corrl..-each

No IUbocrlptlons by malt permitted In
areu where h.ome carrier .ervlce II
~v~ble.

lllalllloi.,_lpllaH

I"'Jdo.I(Oip Coo!lll)o
Weeki .... ..

or

.IIJe ~~IJ car was~ qf~ ;

"tempco Industries Inc;, whtch
makes steel and other inetals.

L.A. STORY

I
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524
'

I&lt;

13.00
13 . 00
BARGAIN ICATIN[[I SATURDAY I SUNDAY
BARGAIN !tGHT TUE SDAY

" '. "" "

UTI

l' W!' '

I

NOW PLAYING

TOOAI 7 ,10,9 ,40
FRIDAY 7, 10,9 ,40
SAT .1 ' JO,N0,7 ' 10,9,40
. su~ .1 : 10,3:40,7 :10,9:40
l«lN. • THURS . 7, 10,9,40

~

'

'

,

,., •.wn. Ill W&amp;Au ltiii!T .

(

SCHWAR ZENEGGER

TE~~;~~~~~11 2
JUDG M ENT Dr\Y

H

KEVIN COSTNER

Rost-N"l-Iooo
_, a
l!i!·ill
1'HIMS

1«1 ,ASSES. Ill IARWAIII •IQIT .

TOOAI 7,00,9 , 30
FR!OAI 7,00,UO
SAT .1 ,00,3 ,30,7 ,OO,UO
!UN .1,00,l,J0,7 ,00,UO
!ON • THURS.7,Q0,9 , JO

I
I

•NOTIONS

'

•FABRICS
•CRAFTS ·
•PAnERNS
•MACHINES
· •SCISSORS

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE
Goldstar
Samsung

funai
Symphonic

~aundesign

··

KTV
Philco

Zenith

said.

Police 4isP.atcher Papla Bundact said telidenll in a five-bloc((
aroa of the loudaout Ohio city
were oVIIC!JIIed Tile lffecred ·area
is a mix iDdUirial and residen- .
lial buildings.

Livestock report

'

plant," forcing the evacuation of
about ISO resi.dents, authorities

rail1~an , oi!I'Comll 'fh,I:D..q_~ar .

'I

1-3-6-3
(one, three, six, three)
Cards
Queen of Hearts
Six of Clubs
Seven of Diamonds
King of Spades
Super Lotto
16-18-21-24-28-31
(sixteen, eighteen, twenty-one,
twenty-four, twenty-eight, thirtyone)
Kicker
1-3-9-6-5-j
(one, three, nine, six, five, five)

Continued from page I
lot.
Although his claim ror benefits .
was granted by the workers' compensation system, MTD appealed
and won in common pleas court.
The court said the company did not
creare a special hazard that present·
eil an increased risk of injury to
employees. An appeals court overturned the decision and said
Rabatin was entitled to benefits.
Justice Herbert Brown, writing
for the majority, said the only issue
was whether Rabatin's injury arose
rrom his employment
''As a general rule, an employee
with a fued place of employment,
who is injured while traveling to or
rrom his place of employment, is
not entitled to participate in the
Workers' Compensation Fund
because the requisite causal connection between the injury and the
employment doe s not exist,"
Brown said.
He was joined by Chief Justice
Thomas Moyer, and Justices
Robert Holmes and Craig Wright.
Justices A. William Sweeney ,
Andrew Douglas. and Ms. Resnick
dissented.
Justices unanimously issued a
public reprimand to former Morgan
County Court Judge Ralph Dye Jr.
The Ohio State Bar Association
recommended the reprimand after
Dye resigned as a judge on March
GaDipolis Stockyards Co.
I and said he wo,uld never again
Juoe 29, 1991
serve
as a jud~e in Ohio.
Medium Frame, 1 &amp; 2 Steers:
The assoctation said the com250-300 lbs .. 9450-140.00;
plaints against Dye involved his
300-500 lbs., 93.00-106,00;
service as a judge, and that there
500-700 lbs., 74.00-103.00;
were no problems in regard to his
700-Up 76,j0-88.00.
practice or law.
Medium Frame, 1 &amp; 2 Heirers:
Dye had been accused of viohlt2j0-300 lbs., Sj.00-100.00:
ing
the Code of Judicial Conduct,
300-500 lbs., 80.00-96.00:
including lack of order and deco500-700 lbs., 75.50-89.00;
rum in the courtroom .
700-Up 68.00-81 .00.
Justices said evidence showed
Butcber cows:
Dye principally used the county
Utilities, j3.50-62.50.
courtroom as his private legal
Canner/Cutters, 57 .00-down.
Light weight low grade cows, oFfice and that furnishings, including two mollhte"d animal heads ,
47.00-Down.
made
it resemble a law office more
Heiferetres, Up to 73.00.
than a courtroom.
Holstein Steers and Bulls:
The court's disciplinary panel .
300-800 lbs. 80.00-111.00.
found in 1990 that Dye once inrerButcber Bull:
·
Fupted a hearing for a defendant
Utilities, 66.00-70.75.
whose birthday was approaching
Canner/Cuuer, 57.00-68.50.
and
sang a couple of bars of
Veal Calves:
"Happy Birthday."
Choice/prime, 92.50-lOj.OO.
Medium, 85.00-94.00.
Springer Cows:
600.00 &amp; down.
Cow/Catr Com.:
1050.00-down.
Baby Calves:
200.00 &amp; down.
FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY
Butcher Sows:
400-600 lbs., 47.50-51.00.
DON'T TELl MOM THE
Top Hop:
220-250 lbs., 49.50-51.50.
BABY SinER'S DEAD
Butc:ber Boars:
AND
39.00-41.50.
Pigs by Head:
18.00-38.00.
446-1088

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

residents evac.,.ated

-~~~=~g:~-:

(zero, six, six)
Pick 4 Numbers·

Court...

STOREWIDE

15.0 New Lexington

. ca- Wednesday night near a metals

().6-6

- West: Albuquerque 68;
Anchorage 55 drizzle; Boise 71:
Casper 56; Fairbanks 57; Great
Falls 61: Honolulu 76·

20°/o OF-F

Frien~ may call at the funeral
horne Friday, 2 10 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

after chemfc~lleak

The two Kicker tickets showing
the fi1St five digits are .each Worth
$5,000. The 46 with the first four
numbers are each worth $1,000.
The 413 with the fi1Sl three numbers are each worth $100, and the
4,230 with the first two numbers
are each worth $10.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,366,482.j0, and winners will
receive $496,602.
Pick 4 Numbers players
wagered $272,236 and will share
$147,200, and Cards players bet
$53,235 8!ld won $14,230.
Pick 3 Numbers

caused minor street flooding, said
Bryan Tilley, a National Weather
Service meteorologist.
About 2,200 Fort Worth custamers briefly losl electricity.
The first tropical siorm of the
season promised to fizzle withoul
hitting land, said Lixion Avila, a
hurricane specialist at the National
Hurricane Center in suburban Coral
Gables, Fla.
Tropical Storm Ana, packing
top sustained winds of 40 mph, was
over the Atlantic Ocean off easrem
Canada and moving away from
land, Avila said this morning.
Other re1,10rts as of 4 a.m. EDT ·
(atmosphenc conditions for most
cities not available):
- East: Albany, N.Y ., 67;
Atlanta 76; Bos10n 58; Buffalo 71
showers: Charleston, ~ -C :, 77 hazy:
Chattanooga 73: Ctncmnau 75
hazy: Cleveland 70; Detroit 70;
Hatteras 77 showers: Jacksonvtlle
79; Key West 80: Knoxville 70
foggy: Macon 76; Miami 78: New
York 65: Philadelphia 68 : Pittsburgh 72: Portland , Maine 51;
Richmond 75 foggy; Tampa 80 ;
Washington, D.C .. 74 foggy.
-Central: Birmingham 74; Sismarck 56; Denver 59: Des Moines
63: Fort Worth 74: Indianapolis 70
showers; Kansas City 67; Little
Rock 72 foggy: Louisville 76;
Memphis 73; Nashville 74; New
Orleans 82 foggy: North Platte j5;
Oklahoma City 72; Omaha 61:
Rapiil City 58: St. Louis 69: MinneapolisSt. Paul 63; San Antonio
77.

I

a!Gardens.

SVlJ8(18U"ftON RATES
~» BJ Cant• or M.._ a.•e
One Week ...... ...... .... .... .. ...... .. .....$1.60

Apple... _c_on-'-tl_nu_ed_rro_m-'p:....a::...ge_1_ _ _ _ __

Hospital-news

Minor damage was incurred in a ftre early Wednesday evening
to a house owned by Mary YoWJg, 742 East Mains~. Pomeroy. .
According to a Pomeroy fueman, the ftre staned m. a uash can m
an upstairs bedrOom and spread across the room causmg damage to
the walls and several pieces of furniture. Damage, however, was
confined to the one room.
Seventeen Pomeroy firemen arrived on the scene at 5:32 P·Jl!·
with two pumpers, a rescue unit and a squad and were there until
6: 15 p.m. Middleport also dispatched a truck to the scene.

POSI'MASTER: Sfnd address changes
· to The Dally Smtlnol, Ill Court St ..
POmeroy, Ohio 45'189.

em California were forecast to con·
tinue, and warm temperatures were
expected around most of the nation.
In the Northwest, a cold front
was expected to reduce near record

heat to 111Qre seasonable levels.
The California heat has been
blamed for four deaths, including
three prison inmates.
1n the San Francisco Bay area,
the blazing sun melted several
miles of pavement on Interstate 80.
Afternoon highs of 105 to 115
degrees were common Wednesday
in the usual hot spots of the southwestern deserts. The mercury
soared to 112 degrees at Sacramento, Calif., and 115 at Redding,
Calif.
·
Death Valley, Calif., was the
nation's hot spot Wednesday: 125
, degrees.
Rain was expected in the Midwest in Wisconsin, Minnesota and
Iowa.
Scattered thunderstorms were
expected in New York, Ohio, '
North Carolina Alabama and
Florida.
'
Thunderstorms also were forecast for parts of New Mexico and
Texas.
A 49·year-old man in Fort
Worth, Texas, was killed by lightning Wednesday as he kneeled by
his mother's graveside, frre offi.
cials said.
The storm dwnped up to I 1/2.
inches of rain on Fort Worth and
Arlington in a two-hour period, and

IBM recently announced vencomputers, woUld form a separate
venture to develop a software sys- tures with Wang Laboratories Inc.,
tem that would challenge Lotus Development Corp. and
Microsoft's popular Windows pro- smaller technology concerns.
gram.
Apple announced an alliance
Apple and IBM also plan to with Digital in 1988 that resulted in
share other techilology, including the introduction last year of softthe Apple-designed software sys- ware that lets a Macintosh link up
tem called "Pink," which is still with Digital machines.
"You're seeing a lot of compaunder development. Pink is aimed
at m_aking Apple's user-friendly nies that are supposed to hate each
Macmtosh comouters even eas1er other sitting down at the same table
to deal now," Gillin said. "Comto use.
The deal between Cur.rtino- paq hates IBM, Microsoft hates
based Apple and Armon , N.Y.- IBM, Apple hates IBM. And
based fBM also includes shared use Microsof1 bates Apple. And on and
of a new family of computer chips on. This trend of sharing is really
amazing to see."
designed by Motorola Inc.
If industry standards develop,
What makes the Apple-IBM
announcement so unusual is that analysts say, the cost of comppters
the companies had long been bitter and software will drop because the
focus will be on competitive pric·
enemies.
''Tbey 've made a big deal about ing rather than on building the most
going in different directions and innovative product
now have decided the competitive
situation is desperate enough so
they should hoth lead the industry
in the same direction," said Paul
Gillin, executive editor of COmput·
VETERANS MEMORIAL
erworld, a trade weekly in Fram·
Wednesday Admissions: Roben
ingham, Mass.
Couch, Pomeroy: Junior Hunt,
But even before the alliance, Long Bottom: Richard Fin law,
mM and Apple had been expand- Pomeroy; and Elva Grueser,
ing relationships with other com- Pomeroy.
puter cofnpanles.
Discharges: None

Meigs County Engineer Philip Roberts presented his department's 1991 Summer road prognun when the Meigs County Corn·
missioners met in regular session on W~~ay.
.
.
Tbe program will povide fiX' hot-mtx pavmg, eold·mtx patching
work, bridge repair and guardrail~ on ~ty roads._
.
Hot mix worlc. the most expens1ve type of pavmg and repau, will
be applied to 10.6 miles of county roads this swnmer at a cost of
$208,954.43.
.
Those roads scheduled for hot mix are School Lot/Salem Road
(2.78 miles), Sand Hill Cemetery Road (.37 mile), Hospital Hill
Road (.6 miles), Jeffers Lane (.37 mile}, Bradbury Road (2.20
miles), Eagle Ridge Road (.j mile), Oak Grove Road (1.98 miles)
and Roy Jones Road (1.8 miles).
.
50 eounJy roads will receive some type of eold-mtx treatment,
IOlalins 143.29 miles costing $397;184.05. ,.
..
.
···
Sii(rrepati'S oii''R~''ROaiJW"KHH~Rbail are slated
for completion this year, and two bridges will be replaced m Rut·
!arid Township.
Disc-ussion on the specific projects outlined in the repon present·
ed yesterday will take place 8111CXt week's meeting, allowing the
board the opportunity to review the report.
.
Present were Commissioners Richard Jones, Manning Roush and
David Koblentz, and Qed Mary Hobstetter.

Businesses that eould not afford .
it would pey a tax into a govern- ·
ment fund that would finance coverage for the uninsured.

By 'rbe Assoc:lated Press .
Scattered thunderstorms are
forecast statewide tonight. Skies
will clear overnight with thunderstorms ending from west to east.
Lows will be in the upper 60s to
near 70 degrees.
Friday will be a linle eooler and
less humid. Afternoon highs will be
mainly in the mid-80s with etenty
of siiiiShine. The eooler air will not
last long as warm and muggy eonditions return for the weekend.
Record high for this date was
104 in 1911; record low was 47 in
1968.
Sunrise Friday will be at 6:08:
sunset819:04.
Around the nation
It
hot J I F urtb · th
East ;:. abefore ~ s~
tbi~
morning with tempemtures in the
high 70s in much of the region.
Tbe day started with showers in
Boston, Indianapolis and Anchorage, Alaska, and rain was expected
to fall on many a holiday celebralion before Independence Day was

ro:

u

IVNN"f f'T. CLOUDY CLCXA)Y

Commission has brief session

dards.

By Ben Wattenberg .

LOW

~

· South Central Ohio
Extended Forecast
Saturday tbrougb Monday:
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
Fair on Saturday and Sunday.
chance of showers or thunderstorms. Low 65-70. Cljance of rain Chance of showers and thunder50 percent. Friday, mostly sunny. storms Monday. Highs In the 80s
High in the upper 80s.
or low 90s. Lows in the 60s or low
70s.

hospitals would still be making
inefficient use of leclmology.
·
2. Play IX' pay. This is the mid-:
die-of-the-road option favored by:
such Democrats as Sens. Tedo
Kennedy of MassachusetlS·and Jai
Rockefeller of West Virginia, by a:
few moderate Republicans, by the •
American Medical Association, by :
many big businesses and by a few ·
labor leaders. It would require all :
private eompani~to provide health :
insurance that meets fedeml stan- ·

metronome-theeourtistuminga
comer, it's the start of a new ideo- -=----------!:!logical cycle, and the conservatives
·
get a tack-lock.
rights and voting rights, Medicare
Missing are the words and health research, a sharp cut in
"because" and "and." Cycles elderly poverty, and prudent envi- .
occur because voters get angry at ronmentalism.
one party and because the party at
Then liberalism took a wrong
which they were formerly angry tum. Liberals endorsed reverse dis-.
has reformed.
crimination, listened to the siren
Phillips' cycle-meistering was song of no-growth environmental-wrong. The poor and middle class ism and sounded isolationist
Voters revolted. Non-liberal:
did not sink: ·new census data
shows that clearly. Vorers are not presidents were elected. They nomangry at Republicans: pro-GOP mated their own ilk for the court.
sentiment is high. Democrats have The court changed. It wasn't
not reformed: V~ting "No"
the cycles: it was interlinked cause and
Gulf and "Yes" on quotas (I sim- effect, with change in the eourt on:
plify) is ideological aleoholism, not a delayed fuse.
.
sobriety IX' reform.
.
EJ. Dionne's new book offers
Similarly, the eourt isn't becom- some insight. "Why Americans:
ing conservative due to tick·tock· Hate Politics" is a work of analytiery. The apparent metronome is cal genius, with, alas, an inconclu~
sprillg-driven by what happened. sive conclusion. Dionne explains:
Cause-and-effect is one law that lucidly and readably where the libhas not been overturned.
erals went wrong. (''The m&lt;XIIIisni
Tbe eourt, and Marshall, went of the left blinded it to the Iegiti-;
o~eiboard. That's a big reason why mate sources of middle-class.
Marshall is being feted, but not anget. ")
:
replaced, by a like-minded succesHe·notes that conservatives also
sor.
went wrong. Both sides are stil~
· Marshall and the court did won- locked into flamboyant symbolic:
,derfulthings - long ago. Mar- rhetoric, he says, ignonng red
shall's challenge to segregation problems. Both sides must reform. :
· was a landmark. The one-personIt is neat intellectual symmetry.:
one-vote decision helped democra- Too much so: it is moral equivalency flourish.
cy, an on-the-one-hand/on-the·.
But eourt liberals went too far. other-hand view almost as mecha-.
Busing, qiiotas, criminal-eoddling nistlc as the plain geometry of the
and abortion were e!lcouraged. cyole-spinners.
:
Capital punishment and school
· But a healthy majority of~
prayer were made mcxe difficulL
(wisely) do not-accept the Idea that
There-are pros and cons about conservative sin$ are equal to liber·
tbese issues, but two aspects are · at sins. They believe that some
oommon: Justices often made law egregious liberal ideas are bum·
based on conscience 110t statute, mers, preventin
· ·
and the new law was often law that
That's why~~ losing.
voten didn'tlike.
why non-liberal presidents keep
The pattern also played out in · appointing IIOII·Iiberal J111lices, IJid
elective polilics. There was a time whl our politics loots like, but
.·
(listen up, young Republicans!) isn I, a metronomo.
when liberal Democrats did great
' The hand on this metronome
things. Kennedy-Johnson liberal- won 'I swing back until liberals
ism of the 1960s yielded civil reform. ·

rn

~----Weather-----

By Joseph Spea~

Marshall law hurts Marshallites

STAnoHARY

VAIAI_...,I'Nn~

Creating a better health-care system
By statistical analysis, I have
determined there may be as many
as seven people in the United
States who do not think we need to·
reform the health-care system. The
rest of us believe it is imperative.
.The only problem is, there are
2H4 million opinions as to how
we should go about iL
It could even become a hot issue
in the 1992 election campaign.
Democrats have introduced reform
legislation in hoth the House and
Senare. The 1988 Republican platform declared that "every family
should have the security of basic
health insurance," and George
Bush the candidate mouthed suppon for that notion. Bush the president has avoided the subject
Most of us know the basic problems: Health-care costs are soaring,

WARM

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Scattered thunderstorms forecast for tonight

The Aceu-Weather" forecast lor noon, Friday, July 5.

The first and last of 'I' and 'me'_ByRo_bertW-alters_

The Daily Sentinel

ROBERT L. WINGE1T

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J'_he Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, July 4, 1991

Thursday, July 4, 1991
•'

After beating Navratilova Wednesday,

Capriati will face Sabatini in semifinals

By STEVE WILSTEIN
AP Tennis Writer
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- Jennifer Capriati became the
youngest semifmalist ever at Wimbledon with a 64, 7-5 victory over
Martina Navratilova that spanned
two days,
Navratilova double faulted on
III8ICh point and Capriati moved on
to face Gabriela Sabatini. Steffi
Graf and Mary Joe Fernandez meet
in Thursday's other semifinal.
Andre Agassi reach the men' s
quarterfinals with a 6-3, 3-6, 6-3,
6-4 victory over Jacco Eltingh,

while Boris Becker beat Christian
Bergstrom 6-4, 6-7, 6-1, 7-6 on
Coun I.
Two Frenchmen , Guy Forget
and Thierry Champion, also moved
into the quarterfinals by beating
Americans Tim Mayotte and Derrick Rostagno.
John McEnroe also made history by getting slammed with the
biggest fine ever at Wimbledon for
verbal abuse - $10,000 for a
string of obscenities he launched at
a linesman Tuesday.
The 34Jear-old Navratilova
succumbe to nerves and poor
serves, as the 15-year-old Capriati
ripped returns and groundstrokes
past her.
"I hope that tll.,e gods are with
me so I can come back next year.
I'm not hanging it up,' ' Navmtilova said in a weak voice. "I still feel
that I have some really good tennis
in me. I just don't know how much
of the heart is left. It's been
tough."
Unfazed by the woman she calls
"The Lege," Capriati intimidated
her by charging boldly five feet in
front of the baseline to hammer

seco11d serves_
"She had to move in so she
could get it on the fli'St bounee, it
was so short," Navratilova halfjoked. "When I didn't get my fli'St
serve in, I was on my heels. That
certainly dido 't help on my second
serve. I was so afraid of her return,
I ended up doublefaulting, which
was a total sin."
She hadn'tlost before the semifinals at Wimbledon since 1977
and hadn ' t missed a final since
1981. No one except Steffi Graf
had beaten her here during that
stretch.
" When you get older you 11et
more nervous," Navratilova SBJd,
scoffing at the notion that Capriati
should have felt more pressure. "It
should get easier, but all the other
players say the same thing."
"I was totally focused,"
Capriati said with gleaming eyes
and a broad smile. "I was so anxious to go out there and play my
best tennis. I had so much desire in
me, that I just dido 't think about it.
"No one expected me to win. I
had no nerves, and she had everything to lose."
Capriati everied the second set at

Alomar brothers, Sabo named baseball All-Stars

By JIM DONAGHY
AP Baseball Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Maybe
All-Stars aren't quite what they
used to be.
The American League ll:alll has
two starters hitting less than their
weight - Oakland's Mark Mc&lt;Jwire and Cleveland's Sandy Alomar Jr.
Los Angeles' Darryl Strawberry, voted to the National League's
starting outfield, caine off the disabled list Wednesday hitting .224
with acven home nms and 26 RBis.
That's better tluui McGwire; he's
. hiaing .I 97.
There are some nice stories,
though, that \viii unfold in Toronto's SkyDome next Tuesday night
American Leaguers Sandy and
Roberto Alomar on Wednesday
. became the firsllrothers elected to
· the All-Star game's starting lineup
since the balloting was returned to
the fans in 1970.
"It's a big lhrill, not just for me
and Sandy but for my whole family," said Roberto, the Toronto
Blue Jays' second baseman. "I
always dreamed of playing with
Sandy in the major leagues and I
thougbt this season I'd only get a
chance to play against him. But he
was the designated hitter when we
played Cleveland, so I never got to
steal on him."
Ryne Sandberg of the Chicago
Cubs was elected the NL second
baseman and led all vote-getters
with 2,526,747.
Seattle outfielder Ken Griffey
Jr. paced the AL this yev with
2,248,396 votes. Ken Griffey Sr.
was selected to three All-Star

American Legion
· tourney dates posted
The American Legion's Eighth
District will begin its double-elimi·
nation, post-season tournament on
Monday, July IS at three locations
in Athens County.
July IS action _
. The flCSt game of the flCSt round
· will pit McArthur and Glouster at
4:30 p.m. at the Glouster villa$e
park field. The second game w1ll
have Athens and Lancaster on tap
at 5:30 p.m. at Athens High
-· · School's Rannow Field in The
. Plains, and also at 5:30p.m., the
: third J&amp;me will feature Wellston
· md Pickerington at Dalton Field,
IQCated on West State Street in
Athens. Gallipolis and Meigs will
plaT in the fourth .game of the day,
which will stan at 7:30 p.m. at the
Glouster village park field.
July 16 games
At Glouster, second-round
action will put the winners of the
McArthur-Glouster and the Gallipolis-Meigs P.Jlles in Tuesday's
first aiDe, which will be stan 8l 4
p.m. The losm of those games will
· lOSS lhe fii'Sl pitch at 7:30p.m.
At The Plains, victors of the
Athens-Lancaster and the Wellston-Pickerington games will
square off at 5:30 p.m., while at
· Dalton Field, the losers of those
games will fJ!CC each other.
The losers of lhe Tueiday games
will exit lhe lllllmiiJienL The borne
tcaniS will be determined by coin
flip after tile second round.

games, the last time in 1980.
More on family reunions ...
Last year, Sandy Jr. of the
Cleveland Indians became the flCSt
rookie catcher ever voted to the
starting team and Roberto was
selected as an NL reserve with San
Diego. The second baseman's offseason trade to Toronto put both
brothers in the same league.
Add their father, Sandy, who
was on the AL team in 1970, and
the·Alomars joined the DiMaggios
(Joe, Dom and Vince) as the only
family with three All-Star members. They are the seventh brother
combination to make the A'll-Star
ll:alll, starting with Joe and Vince
DiMaggio in 1941.
Roberto Alomar, who beat out
Texas' Julio Franco at second base
by 95 1,058 votes, was traded by
San Diego along with Joe Carter in
December to Taonto for fli'St baseman Fred McGriff and shortstop
Tony Fernandez.
Sandy Jr. beat out 43-year-old
Carlton Fisk of the Chicago White
Sox at catcher with I ;367 ,734 votes

ROBERTO ALOMAR

to998,340.
The rest of the AL infield has
McGwire of Oakland at flCSt base,
Cal Ripken of Biltimore at shortstop and Wade Boggs of Boston at
third.
The AL starting outfield is Griffey Jr. and Oakland teammates
Rickey Henderson and Dave Henderson.
The NL starting infield also has
some familiar faces with Will
Clark of San Francisco at first base,
Sandberg at second, Ozzie Smith of
St. Louis at shortstop and Chris
Sabo of Cincinnati at third.
The starting NL outfield is
Strawberry, Andre Dawson of
Chicago and Towy Gwynn of San
Diego. Strawberry, however, has
. already said he will not be going to
the All-Star game in order to rest
his injured left should&amp;. He led all
NL outfielders with I ,393,009
votes, followed by Gwynn's
1,381,602.
"I thought if I was going to
make it, that I'd make it as a
reserve," Gwynn said. "I really
didn't think I had a chance. But I

SANDY ALOMAR JR.

guess it helped playing at home the
last three days of balloting.''
San Diego's Benito Santiago
was selected as the NL starting
catcher for the second straight season, this time with 1,751,399 votes.
He was unable to play in last year's
game at Wrigley Field because of
an arm injury.
Sandberg, hitting .300, injured
his right hand in Tuesday's game at
Wrigley Field and his status is
uncertain.
Smith, 36, was elected the NL's
starting shortstop for' the record
ninth consecutive year. He is batting .313 with 29 RBis and 20
stolen bases. As usual, Smith 's
defense has been almost perfect
Ripken, who leads the AL with
a .348 average, will be making his
ninth straight All-Star appearance.
He got 2,060,109 votes to Chicago's Ozzie GuiUen's 623,125.
Boggs was voted as a startec for
the fifth time, and Rickey Henderson is going to the All-Star game
for the lOth time.
·
Reserves and pitchers will be
announced today.

CHRIS.SABO

West concerned about memb(!rship policy
of LPGA tournament's host country·club
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - LPGA
golfer Lori West says she's concerned that the country club hosting this wedc's tournament doesn't
admit women as members but she
doesn't want to complain too loudly.
''It seems odd that they would
want to hold a women's tournament here," West said Wednesday
about Highland Meadows Golf
Club in Sylvania, the site of the
Jamie Farr Classic.
West said the issue is a doubleedged sword. She and other golfers
are u~set that women have been
discnminated against at some
country clubs. But if they complain
too much, they could alienate host
clubs and 'clamage the Ladies Professional Golf Association tour.
"We can't go out and cut our
throats," she said. "We're trying
to do the best we can in trying to
promote women's golf."
The (Toledo) Blade reported
earlier this week that Highland
Meadows, a private course in suburban Sylvania, bars women as
stockholding, voting members.
They aren't allowed to sit on the
club's board of directors or attend
annual meetings.
,
The club is one of two CO!JrstS
on the 1991 LPGA tour· with such
exclusionary practices.
·
The LPGA said that after this
year, it won't ·conduct any more
tournaments at courses that discriminate against women and
minority groups.

The Farr Classic, in its third mean, this is not secret infonnayear at Highland Meadows, raises !ion. The CIA is not keeping it
money for area charities, with the quiet.,' ' he said_
Fare said he didn't know about
club also receiving some money.
Highland
Meadows' policies.
Club and tournament officials have
"I don't inquire. My function in
decli11ed to discuss how much
this tournament is to be the host, to
money is involved.
.
The four-day tournament, which bring people together, to bring
begins Friday, raised $1 OO,&lt;XXl fa- · celebrities in, and to help the
LPGA and the charities, and to
charities last year.
Tour player Patty Liscio also make this a great event for the city
of Toledo," he said.
criticized the ~licy.
"It's not ngbt at all. It stinks,"
Liscio said. "I don't think women
should be banned from anywhere.
It's like a club being closed to
black membership.''
The Gallia County unit of ihe
Several telephone calls to club
president Thomas Bloomer weren't American C81)cer Society will hold
rerurned Wednesday.
its annual tennis tournament from
Bloomer has said he would dis- Sawrday, July 6to Sunday, July 14
cuss the situation with the member- at Forest Mullins' tennis court on
ship, adding that the club is open to He~e Avenue in GalliJ9is.
Tbe entry fee is $15 for the fli'Sl
change.
Fare, the actor from Tol~ who event and $10 for each additional
lends his name to the tournament, event. A new can of tennis balls is
said he supports correcting injus- also required. All entries must be
accompanied by payment of fees.
tices at golf courses.
Registration forms can be
But he also said he was upset
that the story appeared just before picJced up from tournament chairman Brant Pauley at 446-4~8.
the tournament's start.
"I have no argument with cor- from committee ·members Donnie
recting an injustice, none whatso- Hencjricks in Syracuse, Jim
ever. My argument is the timing of Osborne (446-9284), Danella
it to hurt the tournament," Parr Greene at the p.o. Mcintyre Pad
District office in the Gallia County
said.
"This is a great event for the Coorth_ouse (446-4612, exL 256) or
city. You could have waited until at lheACS office (4.*7479).
All players must report to the
afterwards. You could have done it
long before the tournament. I tennis court half an bour before the
start of their fust match.

MARTINA-KILLER - America's Jennifer Capriati, 15, celebrates her two-set victory momenrs arter beating Martina
Navratllova 6-4, 7-S In Wednesday's Wimbledon quarterrlnal
match. Tbe win aUows Capriati to take ou Gabriela Sabatini - a
two set winner over Laura Gildermeister Wednesday - in tbe
semifinals. (AP)

Judge orders reinstatement
of former head football coach
CINCINNATI (AP) - A high
school football coach fued last y~
for making a racial remark to his
players must be reinstated and
given back pay, a judge ruled
Wednesday.
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Judge Norman Murdock said
the Cincinnati Board of Education
acte!f illegally in firin~ Dennis
Holthaus from his coachmg job at
Aiken High School.
The judge said Holthaus must
be given back his former Aiken
head coaching job or the flCSt head
coaching opening in the Cincinnati
school district. Holthaus first was
suspended from his coaching job,
then fired last year after making a
racial remark to black members of
the footbaU ll:alll.
In July, a court referee ruled
Holthaus should be reinstated and
be given back pay. But the school
board in December voted to reject
the referee's recommendation.
Murdock on Wednesday agreed
with the referee.
He said in ilis opinion that he
found Holthaus' remark "in
extremely poor judgment and in •
bad taste ... wholly unacceptable
even in its context"
But, Murdock ruled that the
conditions did not amount to
immorality, as defined by Ohio
law. He said the Board of Education therefore acted unlawfully in
terminating Holthaus ' coaching
job.
Murdock, noting that the Aiken
High head football coaching job is
filled at this time, made a threepronged ruling: Holthaus must be
offered the head football coaching
job at Aiken should it become
vacant; if the Aiken job does not
become vacant, Holthaus must be
offered the first head football
coaching job which becomes
vacant in the school district; and,
until then, Holthaus will remain in
his present assistant coaching job at
Aiken.
John Concannon, the school
board's lawyer, said he disagreed
with Murdock's reinstatement
order. Concannon said the school

;Braves' 17-hit assault helps
them to 8-6 victory over·Reds •

By TOM SALADINO
.·
AP Sports Writer
,
ATLANTA (AP) The
•· · Atlanta Braves were starved for a
win and desperate for some runs.
' · J~ff ~lauser, with a little help from
his friends, responded.
·
Blauser keyed a 17-hit attack,
equalling the Braves' season-high,
and Atlanta ended a four-game losing streak with an 8-6 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds Wednesday
night.
"I hate to say it was a must
win," said Blauser, wbo had three
hits, including a homer, and drove
in two runs, "but this is as close as
it comes to a must-win situation."
The Braves had been within 4
1/2 games of National League
West-leading Los Angeles after
winning theJ&gt;pener of a doubleheader from'1he Dodgers last Friday. But they then dropped the next
three games of the four-game
series, and lost 6-3 to the Reds
Tuesday night to fall 8 1{2 games
back.
"All those JlliiS ... I didn't know
what to do," said Braves' manager
Bobby Cox. "We haven't scored
this many since the middle of June
(a 9-2 win ar Philadelphia June 19).
Toni$ht. when we got men on, we
got hits- !hat's the difference."
"That's something we haven ' t
been doing lately;" said Blauser.
"This sbould be a big boost confidence-wise. Hopefully, it will sbow
up tomorrow. That's the key.''
The key Wednesday night was
that the Braves got in front early by
battering Reds' starter Tom Browning for 10 hits and five runs in four
innings, said Blauser.
"That's what we were doing
earlier in the season, but not of
late, .. he said.
The Braves jumped on Browning for three runs in the opening
inning on five consecutive hits, a
single by Terrr Pendleton, who
extended his huting streak to I 0

4-4 by breaking Navratilova. At
breakpoint, Navratilova's vaunted ·
volleying skill failed,.u she put a
forehand volley into the net.
Capriati saved a breakpoint
against her in the 11th game with a
backhand lob in the corner that left
Navratilova helpl~ly at the net
Navratilova's bid to put the set
into a tiebreaker bogged down
when she doublefaulted to 0-30,
after Capriati slammed a forehand
winner on the flCSt point of the 12th
game.
Capriati got two match points at
15-40, bUI Navratilova saved them
both. At deuce, Capriati drilled a
backhand return within a foot of
the line for a winner.
In the men's quaners, Becker
next plays Forget and Agassi goes
against Wheaton, who beat Ivan
Lend!.
"With his type of game on this
surface he can really have a good
day and beat anybody, so I' m
expecting to have a tough match
out there," Agassi said. "I think
it's going to boil down to how well
he's serving and how well I'm
rerurning_

board and superintendent have 30
days to decide whether to appeal.
-The amount of Holthaus' bact
pay remains to be determined, Concannon said.
Holthaus contended in his lawsuit that his contract for coaching
was wrongly suspended because
the board failed to establish
grounds for his firing . Holthaus
argued he had not been found
guilty of violating board regulations that would give the board reason to fll'e him. Holthaus flCSt was
suspended from his coaching job,
then fired.

In the majors ...

RUNS -

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Twn
Toronto

......... ::

-...
T-

3~ .~~

GB

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

r ...

ODcaao

o.kloncl

S..Uie
K.anau City

'

'f'

E U

44
45
40
41
42
39
....... 34

GB

33 .m
34 .~10
33 .548
35 .S39
36 .538
39 .~00
42 .447

2.5
2.5
5 1/2
9.5

I, Baltimore 2
New York 3, Cle,..ond 2
Toronto 4, MimCIOlt 0
Bostm S, Milwaukee 3
OokhndS,T,...O
Ctlilomia 4, K.ar.u City 3
Cbica.. 3,Scaalo2,12inninp

Today's games

.

10.3). 1~35 p.m.
Baltimaro (R. Smith 4-1) a1 New York
(l.loluuonl-3), ! :OS
I&gt;oetnri.t (Meachttn -D) at Borton (Duwin 3-!5), 6:05 p.m.
Chi~;aao (Hibbard 6·6) at S~aulc
(DeLucia 6-5). 6:35 p.m.
Mltwaukee (Hu•t. a.t) al Cltwland

r.m.

H

(N~~7:35p.on.
(Moore 9-6)

l l TClU (Aleun·
der4-l).J:35 p.m.
K.tn1u City (Appie:r 4-7) at California
(M&lt;Caalrill?-9), 9 p.m.

Friday's games

JULY 4"!

Teun
W L PeL
Ph!Obutah ......... .rl 21 .627
SL LaWa
........•. 43 34 558
New Yod&lt;
....... 42 34 553
Cbicaao
......... 35 43 .449
MOdiOli
...~ ..... 33 45 .423
Phlladclphia ······· 32 46 .410
W
Loa AnaciOI ••.... 47
Clnd•na~ --- C
Allan11
., ......... 38

,'

,'
•,

GB
5 •
5.5
13.5
15.5
16.5

L
29
34
37

Pet.
.618
.!13
.507

GB

5·
8.5

San Dieto ........ 38 •U .481
San fnnciJco ...... 33 44 .429

I 0.5
14.5

Houa...

16.5

.. .... 31 46 .403

Tcxu, l6.
PITCHING (1 dccilions) -

.-\dania I, Clndnnad 6
Sl t..ow.4, Ailladcldlil 3
Lo&amp; Anpl.• 6, San Dieao 3

HOUI\00 9, San FranciKoO

J

.•••

Snutil, St. Louia:, 49; DcShieldl, Montre•1, 47: Van Slyke, Pllhburah, 47;
Samuel, LOI Angda:, 47.

RBI - Johnaon, New York. 60: W.
Cluk, San Fnnciaco, !57; Kruk, Philadel-

phia, ~; Juttice, Atlanu, Sl; McGrifr,
San Dieao. SO; Mumy, l..ol Angdea, 50;
londl, Plltaburah, 49 ; Guerrero, St.
Louit, 49.

At this price, you can keep
your head above water,too.

P."'·

.•

Serving All Your Legal Beverages and Hors d'oeuvres

Stn. Dieao. SO; _SandberJ, ~ic.ago , 50; 0 .

Strawberry, out since June 18
with an inflammation in his left
shoulder, said he; didn't think twice
about uncorking the throw.
"I saw the third base coach
wave him in, and I just let it
loose," Strawberry said.
Brett Butler had three singles to
extend baseball's longest hitting
streak to 17 games.
Ojeda allowed nine hits including solo homers by Benito
Santiago, Darrin Jackson and Jerald Clark - while striking out fl ve
and walking three in beating Bruce
Hurst (9-5).
Pirates 11, Cubs 7
Andy Van Slyke's two-run
homer - his third in three games
- and a three-run shot by Orlando
Merced in ~ five-run eighth inning
powered surging Pittsburgh.
Zane Smith (9-6) got the
Pirates' their seventh victory in
eight games.
Les Lancaster (4-3) retired the
first 10 Pirates before Jay Bell singled in the fourth and Van Slyke
followed with his ninth homer,
erasing a 1-0 deficit.
Mets 4, Expos 0
Ron Darling had a strong game
and Howard Johnson a two-run
homer.
Darling (S-5) allowed two hits
in eight innings. He struck out four
and walked three in his 99th career
victory. The only hits given up by
Darling - who did not allow a
runna to reach third base - were
singles by Dave Martinez in the
second and Spike Owen in the
eighth. Alejandro Pena pitched a
perfect ninth, strking out two.
Kevin McReynolds hit a twoout single off rookie Chris Haney
(0- 3) in the first, and Johnson followed with his 19th home run.
Cardinals-4, Phillies J
Pedro Guerrero had a three-run
homer and four RBis, and Omar
Olivares pitcbed well.
The Cardinals trailed 2·1 in the
fourth inning when Ozzie Smith
doubled with one out and Todd
Zcile walked against Jose Del esus
(5-4). Guerrero followed with his
sixth homer.
Olivares (2-1) allowed four hits,
striking out a career-high eight in
seven-plus innings.
Astros 9, Giants 0
Jim Deshaies pitched eight
innings and Luis Gonzalez had a
three-run homer and five RBis.
Deshaies (3· 7), winning for the
first time in eight starts with a fourhitter, retired the flCSt 10 batters he
faced and finished with three
strikeouts and two walks.
John Burkett (4-5) was again
victimized by a lack of offense.
Casey Candaele homered and
scqred twice.

'~

~+ •. ,,

' !J
'r''·•'-''

BEATS WIDE THROW- Atlanta's Ronnie
Gant (bottom) slides bead first into second base
to beat the wide throw from the outfield to Reds

second baseman Mariano Duncan in the first
inning of Wednesday's game in Atlanta, wbicb
the Braves won 8-6. (AP)

New York edges Cleveland
3-2 for fifth consecutive win
re,~rse

NEW YORK (AP) - Steve
Fare is very aware of the American
Lea~e schedule.
' We didn't want. to play 25
innings tonight, we have a day
game tomorrow," said Fare, who
used 14 pitches to close out the
Indians in the ninth inning
Wednesday night as the New York
Yankees posted their fifth straight
win, 3-2 over Cleveland.
"I'm going to keep that ball
outside or inside, but on the
black,'' said Farr, wbo admitted he
got away with one mistake.
"The second pitch to Belle was
a lot higher than I wanted it, but he
missed it," Fare said.
Belle hit his II th homer in the
seventh inning, and Mark Whiten
opened the eighth with his fourth as
the struggling Indians erased a 3-0
Yankee lead, but still suffered their
seventh straight defeat.
Scott Kamieniecki (3-1) allowed
the Indians only three hits over the
first seven innings, and the third
was a double by Sandy Alomar Jr.
that was originally ruled a home
run.
"I don't know how he can

it," said Alomar, whose
third· inning drive struck the top of
the left field wall and bounced back
on the field while third base umpire
Rick Reed ruled it a home run.
But after a protest by the Yan kees, and a consultation with home
plate umpire Joe Brinkman, Reed
reversed his call and Alomar was
sent back to second base.
"Everything's not going our
way. He (Reed) said he made a
mistake. He called the ball too
early," said Alomar.
When the umpires examined the
ball, it showed a streak of blue
paint from the top of the wall.
A solid relief performance by
Doug Jones, who pitched two and
two-third hitless innings, gave the
Indians a shot, but Fare retired the
heart of the Cleveland order in the
ninth, striking out Belle to end the
game.
New York built a 3-0 lead with
the help of homers by Steve Sax
and Roberto Kelly off Indians
starter Denis Boucher (0-5).
Sax led off the Yankees first
with his fourth homer and Kelly
opened the sixth with his lOth.

CARPET
SALE

SERTA
SALE

Don Mattingly followed Kelly's
homer with a double that extended
his hining streak to 16 games. Mattingly then moved to third when
Jesse Barfield grounded out to
shortstop Mark Lewis.
After Boucher walked Kevin ·
Maas, Jones carne on to face pinchhitter Mel Hall, whose sacrifice fly
to left scored Maaingly to make it
3-0.
Mattingly's move to third was
one of the keys to the game.
"It was borderline, but I wanted
to be aggressive,'' said Mattingly,
who moved to third as Indians
shortstop Mark Lewis threw out
Barfield.
After Whiten's homer, Brook
Jacoby singled to left off Habyan,
but pinch-runner Jerry Browne was
picked off by Habyan. Alomar then
hit a soft fly to right for the second
out, but Lewis then beat out a
bouncer up the middle and Cadaret
relieved Habyan .
Cadaret struck out pinch-hitter
Glenallen Hill, and when righthanded hitting Chris James was
announced as a pinch-hitter for
Mike Aldrete to open the ninth,

BERKLINE
RECLINER
SALE

SYLVANIA
TELEVISION SALE

VINYL-FLOOR
COVERI~G SALE

METAL
CABINET SALE

., WHIRLPOOL
APPLIANCE SALE.

LIVING ROOM
SALE

OPEN STOCK
BEDROOM SALE

Today'saames

1

••

RUNS - Butler, Lo• Anscle1, 56;
Johnson, New York, !51 ; T. Fernandez,

hits."

PIU1b11r111 (Tomlin 3·3) al Chk•ao
(G: Maddn ..6hl:t5p.m.
New Ycxk (Whltehu.m 4-4) at Monua.l
(l)uneo 0.3), 7jjl p.m.
SL Louil (fcftabw"y 6-4) at J'ha.dd·
phil (MulhallaAd6-1),7:0l p.m.
Cladantd (KI. Grou J.t) at Alllnta
(P. Smllh 1·1), 7:11
Loa Anacleo (Moapn 9-l)ll San Die&amp;•
(0. !Iuria H), IO:Ol I'm .
"""""'(KUe 1.2) .. s.. Fnncilco cr.
Willm 4-6). 10:05 p.m.

'
•'

"D.J. RANDY SMITH" AND
STAFF HOUSE ROAD

lenu, .328; Bi&amp;Jio, Hounon , . 327;
McGee, San Francuco, .324; Samuel, Lol
Angele~, .311; C•1deron, Montrul, .)14 .

Frlday'sa:omea
New Ycrk tt Phi1adelpftis, 7:35p.m.
M•-lal .............. 7:3.1 p.on.
ChodonaU al.-.., 1:35 p,on.
ODcaco at St.. Louil,1:35 p.m.
Atlanla • Loa Anploa. 10:351'"'San Diopll Stn fanciloo, 10:3.5 p.m.

. Major league leaders

5 MILES SOUTH OF SILVER BRIDGE
ON ST. RT; ~ GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV

America [.ape
BATI'INO - Co' Ri..... Baltim01e,
.341: Sierra, Tea•• .3.~1: Moli1«, Mil·
waUN, .SJO; IU.1 outaa•, .326;

· laJaor, Calllonai.l, .l2S; Clrwawall,

B•llll, .:W:~.~· .32:1;

When Dexter makes a shoe,
they go overboard one
verythlng. Everything, that is.
except the price.

~7'f'te

I '

'

SHOE.PLACE
219 N. SECOND

'·

'

Langnon,

Cllifomit, 12·2, .8!57, 3.45; Ericklon ,
Minncaru. 12-3.. 8110, 1.83; FUtlcy, Cali·
(omit, 12-3, .800, 3.73; Key, Toronto, 10.
3, .769, 2.30; SloU.lcmyrc, Toronto, 9· 3,
.7!50, 3.13; Sandenon, New York, 9· 3,
.7SO, 3.69: Hrnnanan, Ddroit. S-2. .714.
2 . 84 ~ Klink, Oakland, 5·2, .714, 2.67 ;
ThiJ,pc:n, Chicaao, 5-2, .714, 3.79; Gul ·
licbon, Detroit, 10-4, .714, 3.74.
STRIKEOtrrS - Clemen•. Bo1ton,
114; R. Johnson, So1ttle, 113; Ry1n ,
Tcxu, 102t Fmlcy, Ctlifomi•, 101 ; McDowdl, Oricl.ao. 96; Candiotti, Toronto,
96; Swladell, Cleveland, II.

San Francisco 0.
Dodgers 6, Padres 3
Are those tile Los Angeles
Dodgers or the New York Mets
threatening 8' runaway in the
National League West?
Actually, they're Dodgers who
learned something about winning
as Mets. But it's hard to tell the difference these days:
Former Mets Darryl Strawberry,
Juan Samuel, Gary Carter and Bob
Ojeda were the heroes Wednesday
mght as the Dodgers beat the San
Diego Padres 6-3 to increase their
lead in the west to fl ve games.
- Strawberry had a hit and
scored a run, but his big contribution came on defense.
- Samuel hit a three-run homer
as the Dodgers built a S-0 lead.
- Carter had a run-scoring sin·
gle and a solo homer while extending his hitting streak to I I games.
- Ojeda pitched six and twothird innings for his seventh victo·
ry.
Strawberry threw out Fred
McGriff at the plate in the seventh
inning when the Padres were staging a major threat
''Darryl made an outstanding
throw," manager Tom Lasorda
said. "That changed the complexion of the game as far as I'm concerned.
''Instead of two runs down, they
were three runs down . Also, he
should have had about two more

Wednesday's scores
Pll.......h II, Chlcaao 7
Now York 4, Monuul 0

.,

Presenting

STOLEN BASES - R. Henders on ,
Oakland, 30; Pr!lonit, Califomia, 27: R.
Alomar, Toronto, 26; Reinee, Chictao,
1j; White, Toronto, 19; Cuyler, Detroit,
16: R. Kelly, New York, 16: franco,

National Leaeue

:'

OPEN AT 3 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK

22t Bogp, B01ton, 21 ;

Rocd, BOlton,_20; C. Ripke.n, Baltimore,
20: llm&gt;er. Minn...... :zo.
TRIPl.ES - Molitor, Milweu..kee, 7:
Pol.onia. Californil, 6; R. Alomar, Torm·
to, '; White, Toronto, S; R.ainea, Chictgo,
S; 6 ate tied with 4.
HOME RUNS - Ctnteco, Oakland,
20; Fielder, Dewit, 19; Carter, TOI'Oilto,
19; C. Devil, Minneaou, 19; C. RiPktn,
Baltimore, \8; D. Henderson, OU1and,
II; JCNC 8uf1Cld, New Yolk, 17: Win -

BA ITlNG - T. Gwynn, S•n Dieso,
.356; Joac, St. Lou.U, .328; Paulleton, At·

West Dlvl11on

ACS tennis tourney
slated for Saturday

99; Palmeiro,

20; Reardon. BOltOn, 20; llugpcn, Ch.ict·
ao. 16; Jeff Ruuell. Tens, 16: Olson ,
Balti more, IS ; Montaomrry, Ka~uaa
Clly,U.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division

Twa

OPENING

Minner~ota,

SAVES - Harvey, c.lifomis, 22; Eck enlcy, OU.l1nd, 22; AI(Uil~. M.inacl~.

Baltimore u New Yodt, 7:30p.m.
Ddro1t tt Bolton, 1:Jji p.m.
Mllwaubo al Cle,.land, 7:35 p.on.
Minoa,.. •• OUcaae. 1:05 p.m.
Oakland at t.nna City, 8:35p.m.
Ctlifomia u Tuu, 8:35p.m.
Toronto 11 Sanlc, 10:35 p.m.

290 SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

100: Pu.ckell,

Te1.11, 97; Carte.r, Toronto, 9!5; Joyner,
Califcmit, 94; Franco, Toxu, 94.
DOUBLES - R. AJornar, Toronto. 26;
Palmeiro, Tuu, :24: Carter, TOI'tldO, 24;

field, C&amp;lilonria, 17.

MinnCIIOlll (Wcat ()...()) 1t Tmonto (Key

8-13 &gt;16 143 6'11·\4 7-13

Ba~ti ·

more, 56; C.n1eco, OU1aruf, 5!5; White.,
Toronto. S4; franro. TCAu, 54; D. Htn·
d....._ Ookhnd, 54.
RBI - Fielder, Detroit, 62; Carter,
Toronto, 58; Thanas, Chicaso. 51; Sian,
Teua, S6; Joyner . Cthfomit. S6:
Cenaeco. Oakland , 56; Winf1eld, Calitornie, 56.
_HITS - C. Ripkcn, ~dtim~rc, 10!5 ;
Stem, Tcxta, 102: Molitor, Milwtukee,

Whlt.c, Toronto,
2

~~

Fit. comfort and long wear
make this one of Red
Wing's most popular shoes
for work.
0

~

Wednesday's scores

I •

C

4.5
6
7.5
10.5
13.5

West Dlvl11on
w L PeL

CalilonUa

Molitor, Milwaukee, 59;

Palmeiso, Tou1, S?; C. Ripkcn,

.......... 40 36 .526
........... l9 38 .506
Detroit
....... 36 38 .486
New YOlk
Milwallkoc
...... 34 42 .447
Baltimore
·-····· 31 45 .408
Cltweland
- - 24 51 .llt

M A 8

games, then doubles by Lonnie
Smith and Ron Gant, an RBI single
by Blauser and another hit by Brian
Hunter.
In the third, Gant and Blauser
hit back-to-back homers. It was
Gaol's 15th of the year and Blauser's sixth.
" I didn't feel comfortable at
all," said Brownin~, the first of
five Reds' pitchers. 'I haven't for
the past few games. I'm getting the
ball up and they hammered me."
" He was out of sync," said
Reds' manager Lou Piniella of his
left-bander. "He's been out of sync
for a while. He's drifting on the
mound and not staying back."
The Reds, however, got single
runs in the third and fourth on an
RBI sin~;le by Eric Davis and Mariano Duncan's run-scoring groundout
Cincinnati then lied it in the
sixth on a three-run homer by Joe
Oliver, his second of the year, off
Braves' starter Steve Avery (8-S).
Avery left after six iMings, but he
got the win when pinch-hitter Mark
Lemke singled in the go-ahead run
in the bottom of the inning.
"That three-run homer gave us
a jolt," said Blauser, "but we came
right baclc''
The Braves then added two
more runs in the seventh on Blauser's third hit, a single, Hunter's
triple and a run-scoring single by
Greg Olson, who broke out of an 0for-20 slump with a pair of hits and
two RBI.
Juan Berenguer came on to pick
up his 12th save by pitching the
frnal two lnmngs, g1vmg. up a run
in the eighth on a single to Glenn
Braggs, who had three hits, a hit by
Duncan and Billy Hatcher's sacrifice fly .
Elsewhere in the National
League, it was Los Angeles 6, San
Diego 3; Pittsburgh II, Chicago 7;
New York 4, Montreal 0; St. Louis
4, Philadelphia 3, and Houston 9,

Scoreb6ard
a.....

. 9\'1·14 9-14 h

The Dally Sentlnei-Pa~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,'

MIDDLEPORT

...

�•

Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy...:..&amp;11ddleport, Ohio

Thul'ldlj,

4,1891

' ,_§
Thursday, July 4, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

'/Am the Nation' touches everyone . Gulf War prompts
De1r Ann Landers: I fust read

July 4,
1776- ..
1991
''..

....
..

.. ,

,,

••

Davy CrocketL I am Lee, Grant, and
Abe Lincoln.
I remember the Alamo, the Maine
and Pearl Harbor. When freedom
called, I answered and stayed until
it was ovec, ovec. there. I left my
heroic dead in Aanders 1ields, the
rock of Corrcgidor, on the bleak
slopes of Korea, in the sleaming
jungle of Vietnam and the desen
sands of KuwaiL
I am the Brooklyn Bridge, the
wheat lands of Kansas, the granite
hills of VennonL I am lhe coalfields
of the Virginias and Pennsylvania,
lhe ferule lands of the west, the
Golden Gate and the Grand
Canyon. I am Independence Hall,
lhe Monitor, the Merrimac and the
Challenger.
I am big. I sprawl from the
Atlantic to the Pacific - 3 million
square miles of land throbbing with
induslr)'. I am more than 2 million
fanns. I am forest, ftcld, mountain
and desert. I am quiet villages and
cities that never sleep. You can look
at me and see Ben Franklin wallcing
down the streets of Philildelphia with
his breadloaf under his ann. You
can see Betsy Ross with ber needle.
You can see the lights of ChrisiiiUIS

this stirring essay many years ago.
It was wriucn back in 19SS by Otto
Whittaker Jr. of Roanoke, Va.
I've taken the liberty of updating
it alighdy, and I thought your
readen might enjoy iL -- M.T.•
FORESnm.L, CALIF.
DEAR M.T.: Thank you for
sendina the pe!fect piece for this
special day. Desert Storm has made
us all more appreciative of our
Anny, Navy, Marines ami-Coast
Guard. America is walking tall
again .

I Am the Nation
I was born on July 4, 1776, and
the Declaration of Independence is
my birth certificate. The bloodlines
of the world run in my veins,
because I offered freedom 10 the
oPircaed. I am the nation!
I am 250 million living souls and
the ghosts of millions who have lived
and fought and died for me.
I am Nathan Hale and Paul
Revere. I stood at· Lexington and
fired the shot heard around the
world. I am Washington, Jefferson
and Paaict Henry. I am John Paul
Jones, the Green Mouruain Boys and

town's
first parade in 25 years

I

iAnn
''
Landers·
1

ANN LANDI!R8

-IIJDdler...... s,.....,.. .
UJtll, 1M A. .el.

Olld

and hear the suains of •Auld Lang

Syne" as the calendar wms.
I am Babe Ruth and the World
Series. I am 170,000 schools and
colleges and more than 300,000
churthes where my people worship
God as they choose. I am a ballot
dropped into a box, the roar of a
crowd in a stadium, the voice of a
choir in a cathedral. I am an
editorial in a newspaper and a leuer
to Congress. I am John Glenn and
Neil Armstrong and their fellow
astronauts who whirl through the
spaces above my head. I am Eli
Whitney and Stephen Foster, Tom
Edison, Albert Einstein and Billy
Graham. I am Horace Greeley, WiU
Rogers and the Wright brothers. I
am George Washington CatYer,
Jonas Salk and Martin Luther King
Jr. I am Longfellow, Harriet Beecher

'

Stowe, Walt Whittnan and Thomas

Paine. ·

Yes. I am the nation and these are
the things that I am. I was conceived
in freedom and God willing, in
freedom I shall spend the rest of my
days.
May I always possess the integ·
rity, the courage and the strength 10
keep myself unsbackled, to remain
a citadel of fn:edom and a beacon
of hope to the world.
Confidential to my Sis in
California: Happy birthday, Dolll

Classified
p-d

•fute ..:Is

10
Monthly

~nn ou n ce m e nt s

Rate

15
15
15
15
16

6

Muon counliM must bt! pre

•Rectmt! 5 !iO d•scounl lor ;,df paul1n

.·

Over15 Wordo
'
. 20
S4.00
.30
$6.00
. ' . 42
$9.00
.60
$13.00
.06 ! dav
S1 30 t dav

Words

Days
1
3

.
()f

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M:
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClrOSED SU.NDA Y
POliCIES
•Ads oulsKitJ Me1g1. Gatlta

1 Ctrd of Tt'tlll'lks
2 In Memory

3
4
S
6
7
8
9

Rates arc lot consecu1N8fUR5. bfokenup dM¥5 wtll bedti!'Qed
tor e1Ct1 d~ n separate ads.

ad\l&lt;~n c c

Gt\lf!MWIY 11nd Found ads undt!f 15 words w1ll b~

*Prte:tt ol ad tor all UPttllleltt!fS IS doubtu l)fiCtl of id COSI
'7 potnt lme lypH only us.ed
'Swnl•td 11 not rllsponstbl~ lor en on ;&amp;ht!r ftr s l dw;o (Cht!ck
for errors first day ad 'runs 111 papurl Call belor e 2 00 p n1
d., ahr.r publtcatton to mak ~ co~reclton
'Ads that must be patd •n ad"ilnctr o.•:
Card of Thanks
H;~ppy Ad s

31
32
33
3•

Annoucemen1s
Give.w-1y
Htppy Ads
losl and Found
Y•d Sale IJNI•d '"ad\~ an co!
Public Sale &amp; Auchon
Want ad lo Buy

36

:lt 1//1 IWiflf.{ I 1'/l'flhl jill' I' Xl'h llllf.{l'.~ . ..

Y ilfd Sal us

'A cl•• thCit adverltlellh.."llt pi11C.:d 111 Th~ Oatly St:nln1t:4ltt•
c~l
classrlnJtl dt, plcry . Bltsmc:.s Card '"'d lt.-gdl noltcesl
t~lso "ppetM" w• lhc PI PtcCA.aul Reut:irilcr ilnd !he Gallt
pullS Oalfy lrtbunc. rcacttmg OVt.'f 18.000 hotmts

w•"

COP\' DE AOLINE
MONDA\' PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
W(ONFSOAY PAPER
THURSDAY flAPER
tHtOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

lilt'

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONOAY
2 00 PM TUESOAY
2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 .00 PM THURSDAY
2 ()0 PM . FRIDAY

11

HelD Wanted

12
13
14
1!;

Situlhon Wanted
Insurance
8\!'Jin"• TJ II0fl9
Schools &amp; lnstrucuon

16

R1d1o. TV • CD Rt!pt~u

17

Mtscetlanwus

1_8

Wanted To Do

GiJIIil Counl'l'
Area Code 1)14

Metgs County
Aru Code 614

Mason Co . WI/
Aru Code 304

446
367
388
245
256

Galllpohs
Ch•hHo
Vinton
Rio Grinde
Guv•n Oist

992

Pt Ple•anl
L11on
Apple Grove
Mason
New Hav111n

643
379

Ar•b•aDist

247
949 Ru.ne

6 75
458
676
173
8112
895

leiMrt

21
'12

W.tnul

742

937

Ouff~o

23

Mtddleport
Poml!fOY

985 Ch•ler
843

Portland
l11t•rt Faits
Rutland

"

61

41
42
43
44

•,

Farm Equ1pmoo1

6 2 W 1nted to Buv
63 li\lt!Uock

Acre~ge

Real E11111 WanUtd

I;Qj)l)l

~er vI Ces

etll't•r

Ho"'n for Sale
Mobtltt Homes lor Scel~
filrms lor Sflle
Businsn Butldmgs

3ft lots•

Em pl oy menl
Cln.~si.fit•tl flU!{~'·~

Fa rm Suupl1es
&amp; L1 v eslo~k

Real Estate

nm 3 darts. at no ch•ge

111 Mumof!am

high time they did," he said.
Vietnam veterans are hurrying
10 get their float ready.
It's a helicopter, made to onequarter scale from napkins, chicken
wire and wood, in front of a replica
of the Vietnam Memoria wall in
Washington. The front nd rear
rotor blades wiU whirl. M sic' from
the 1960s and '70s will are from
a tape playec.
On the float are ca ouflaged
packs, canteens, boots nd ammo
boxes.
"The helicopters were Vietnam.
They got your chow, yo water.
They lifted you to your ·rrerent
assaults and you got y self
hauled out on them after be
wounded," said Bob Wooldridge,
who served I9 months and two
days with the 173rd Army Airborne.
Townspeople, especially the old
timers, are eager. They think 25
years is a long wait for a Fourth of
July parade.

floats, balloons, color guards and
lots of red, white and blue.
A real estate company has
enlisted the Boy Scouts to help
plant 2,000 miniature American
flags along the one-mile parade
route. The Chamber of Commerce
offered ab()ut 2,000 free posters
reading "Welcome home ttoops"
along with an American ·nag.
Those are all gone.
Much of the hoopla is for the 90
or so Jasper County troops who
served in the Pasian Gulf War. But
it's also to honll' other vereransprimarily those who were in Korea
and Vietnam - who never got a
parade when they came home.
"Without a doubt the Persian
Gulf War and the return not too
long ago of those service people
has spearheaded all this," Mayor
Alvin Borthers said
"But this is going to be a day
where we're going to recognize
many, many others who haven't
been given their due. Maybe it's

By GREG SMITH
Associated Press Writer
NEWTON, Iowa (AP)- It
took a desert war and encouragement from President Bush, but
folks in Newton are preparing their
first Fourth of July parade in at
least 25 years.
They haven't forgotten how to
throw a patriotic bash.
There will be a band. 50 to 60

6C

Hay 1L Gra1n

65

St~ed

&amp; hrhh.n1

'•.

Trans ortalion

HOUMI tor Aent
Mobil8 Homes lor Rent
hrms tor Rent
Apartment tor At1nl

·.

71 Autos lor Salv
12 Trucks lor S&lt;~l'\
73
7r4

45 Furnithed Rooms
46 Space tor Rent
47 Wanted 10 Renl
48 Equipmenl for Rtml
.49 for le••

75
76

V&lt;tns&amp;4WD ' s
M01C)fCycles
Boills &amp; Moton tor S;~t~
Auto Part5&amp; Act e5SOttO!io

17 Auto Repirllr
71! Camptng EqutpRitml
79 Campen &amp; Motor Hom~s

Mer chandise
51 Houl8hold Goods
52 - Sporting .Goods

53
54
'IIBusin•a Opporluntly
Monav to lo•n
Prof• ..onal Set\ltatS

57
58

Anhque•
Mtsc. Mlfchand•se
8utlding Supph•
Pets fer Sale
Musicallnurumenta
Ftutl&amp; &amp; Veglltabl•

59

For Stale Of Tnrte

56
56

81
82
83
84
85
86
87

Home Improvement'
Plumbmg &amp; He•my
Eu:wating
Elet111cal &amp; AelugttJt~lton
Gunt!fJI H1uhnu
Moblltt Homo Allp ~m
Upt1olalery

..
.•.

667 Cool".tle

•

ervtces
'•
r.---~-......,-

HAVE A HAPPY AND SAFE

BULi..ET.iN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
Big Kids and Baby Program
for 2 to 12 year olds who are
going to become big brothers or
big sisters.
Tuesday, July 9th, 6:30PM.
at Pleasant Vally Hospital
downstairs conference room.

"THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE MANY FINE BUSINESSES"

Farmers
Bank
'---' &amp; Savings Company
F8

BAUM TRUE VALUE
985-3301

(HESTER, OHIO

.., · · ' Your Bank(M,J¥

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2104

POMEROY, OHIO

VALlEY LUMBER AND
SUPPLY COMP.ANY
992-6611

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY .
992-2506

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS
992-3785

POMERO,Y~

OHIO

,RESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669

INGELS FURNITURE

992-2635

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RAWLINGS-COATS
FISHER FUNERAL HOME

992-5141

Call 614-992-7t04 lor Appt

BROGAN-WARNER INSURANCE
992-6687

POMHOY, OHro

POMHOY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2115

992-3394

992-6491 )

RACINE, OHIO

992-6128

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

FDIC

~~ "'TJiii.
·· ~­
c ._ Rc .. "

SYRACUSE, OHIO·

INniiOI • m11101
FREE ESTIMATES

205 N. Second Str•t
lllllllEPOIJ, OHIO 45760
; Offkt 614-992-2116
HqMl 614.992-5692
DOniE S. TUINEI, IIOill

HOUSI!S•LOTSiiFARMS
COMMERCIAL
We Need Llotln8'!

1-(304)·
773-9560

In MemOry

LINDA'S
PAINTING
Take the ptin out of
• painting.

Let mt

it for you.
YEIY RIASONMLE
HA YE REFERENCES
(6141 915~4180
do

CARPENTER SERVICE ·
-ftoom Addttiont
- Gutter worll

.. Eioct•lcor

•"!

Plumblno

- ConCf'Mt wo;t

!FREE ESTIMATES I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

tODAYWAUAm

In Lovinallemory of
992-"72

. . . . . . OliO

Wt still celtblltt this
'Kill.dly.
You rt with usu the d1y

'

Whaf&amp;rittahe!

MIDDLEPORT; OHlo

'•

PHARMACY

',

'

ptby.

.. ·

As wt rtllinisce 1bout
yat, there's 1 tear in
MfY .,..
lfs ~pendtpct DIY.
clltlntion 111 II'OUnd.
Picnics, ptridt, )nd firtWOtts sound!'
1ut 110st of Ill it's your

biitllday. .
'
We love y01 more·thln
WO!'ds c:an say.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY

M.OM
'-cll'y inluocl by ·

)•r·

.. ,

your glrla end

gr.,clddl. '

Thlt leddle het done
rlllllY lepe;
Thirty-nine In feet;
He ,.,.y not •lway• tell
the tnith
.
But' I 'try to 1M •x•ct.
A llttll ..ot- lnolcltnt
Commenced • greet big
ftud.
.
It .11rowt1 HCh yeer It
blrlhd8y time,
And border• on the
rude.
One..mciN time •rouild
thl tNck;
~ext time - over the

. hill. '

liTh- he

,, Mllil'""

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE

Cultom Drepea

992·5335 or 915·35~1
Acrou From ro.tt OHkt
·I'()MIEIOT,· OHO

PooL'ft~~~HIIIE
Open Tue1., Thura.,
Fri .. S.t. 7:30 p.m.

PO..EROY
. BOWliNG

310 last, ~IHI St.

992•3432 or
992-2403.

1 ·4-'11·1 mo.

•New Ho11111
oGai'Cifll
•c-plete
le1110.Wing
Stop I Compare
FrH Estimate•

NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
8·14·'11 · 1 mo. pd .

STEWAIT'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

OVEN IIPAII

IIUY eSEll eJIADE
OPEN
TuHdiY thru Saturday
10:00 em-5:00pm

742·2421

21ft MI. ouhlde
Rutland on New

985-4473
667·61

949-2168

IN CONCRETE

•Sidewalks
•P•tios
•Driveways
•Slabs

30 SE$SIONS $3 0

614·992·2321 ·
Wo Sty Whtt Wt Do.

WtOoWhtt

SENIDR

cmzms

FREE ESTIMATES

TACIIIYILii ID.
IACIIIII, OH.

992·7130

•ALUMI~UM SIPI~O
INSULATIO~

AIR CONDmONERS - HEAT PUMPS ·and
FUINACES FOR MOilLE &amp; DOUII.EWIDE HOMES

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

.NETT'S
BEN
.· .

"~ree E:ttlm41tea''

PH. 949·2101 ,
or le1. 94~•·21t6Q

MoiiLI HOME

•AnNo 1
COOLING

LocatH On SaH~ Scheel. ld. off lt. 141
161C) «6·9C16 er 1·100-171·5967

NO SUNDAY

Camplag II Family Fun

WE DO

NEW nus 8&amp;\SON- PooL

RO'OFING

OP&amp;Ir TO !U PIIOUC

AND fYEIYtHING iiNDDNEA111

CAIIPI1IO - Beautiful SiuToundlngs
RATES- Day. Week, Monlh. or Seuon

· Kl'lCdll irow Ql't"
.
~ llrcakful, Mcalo, and Snacb . · ..
ARCAD&amp;

I

TR

.UILDERS

"At IH10naltlt Pricts"
PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949·2160
Day .or Night
NO SUNDAY

mo.

•BLOWN IN

PJCIUC IHI:I.ri:a ond I TAG I Por Reo&lt;
Rounlono- 0.1 Tot~clhc111 · Partlca
1'11111110 '

'"'Office

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

1O'"te DISCOUIIT 10

949-2826

"'·6641 or
691·6164

36 \' ear• Experlenee

5-3561

5-IO·'tHin.

g,,,, S,ult{l

CEDAI
CONSIIUCTION

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

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE
992·5335 or

U111a ld.

BRONZE
TANNING

FULLY INSURED
FR~.E ESTIMATES

Hand Tufting

uas

lrlq It In Or We
Plcll Up.

·'

•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

.BISSELL
SIDING CO.

AU

./
!

"'t\j"'·.

'ttome Ropelrt

UPHOLSTERY

·

•&lt;10 OVINS-$79 up

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
CONSliUCDON

DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK

614-992·6820
Pomeroy,

3-14-'91-lfn

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING

(614)
696·1'

Owner &amp; OJIIfator

•VINYL SIDING

21 3-llo. Second
llltltllopert

ranm.:_sus ·.,

Ill IWIJ,

- - - -.......t :··

y' ..'·

CORNELIA BUNCH's
Bithdly, July 4.
Thoucl! ,vu hne 'lone

THE DAILY· SENTINEL
. · .POMEROY, OHIO

WA!IIPS-S 100 up
DIYIS-)•Y op
afiiGIUTOIS-$100 op'
UIIGES- &amp;oo-lite.-$ 125 up ·

Complete Grooming
For All lrllds
EMILEE MERINAR .

742-2451

ROOFING

Pomtroy, Ohio
11·14-'90 tin

GROOM
ROOM

•Re81oqeble Rat••
•Ouellty Work
•Free Ettlmetee
•Carpet H11 Feat Dry
Time
•High Gloat on Tile
Floor Finleh ·
Mill LlWIS. owII. 1, lutllllll, OH.

Howonl L W~fllel

- "ooflng
- lnterkJr • Ex·tll'lor

Pointing

CA•n CUANIIS
ollll ftU FLOOI CA.

""d

YOUNG'S

THE

INDIPifiiDIIT •

W. H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS
If you're in
of Mobile Home
Parts or
Accessories...
SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
IT. 33 WEn OF
DAIWIN, OHIO

1· 10·'91· 1 mo. pd.

USID APPUUCES

•

..

1

. Poirlt PteiSanl • 675-692~ ·

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
&amp; Seet Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
IUIN ST~ IUSON, W'l.

112-2111

2

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
. -~

b.(UALITY

A'&amp;B
COMPlnE AUTO
UPHOLSTERY

HOME
·
NATIPNAL
BANK'~
949-2210
Member
992·6333

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRUTH PHARMACY

;

11·5·10.tfn

POMEROY, OHIO

~~~--------~~~------~--~~--~
GRAVELY TIACTOI . HERITAGE.HOUSE/LOCKER 219
SWISHER LOHSE
.SALE$ AND SERVICE ;.· . OF SHOES
992-2955
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-2975
· POMEROY, OHIO. 992-5627.
.
• I

Public Notice

SUGAR RUN MILLS

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT . MIDDLEPORt TROPHIES·· &amp;JEES
.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

QUALITY PRINT·SHOP

.'
992-5432

PRICE REDUCED'
P1ll1ill ownerJ !Mlanfay~~~~~e The 1Jice
h• been ""uced to , $77.900 and
...., mlfldna=• 111 Ill% ~ purch~~e
-..1 ""'Y 110, · elor qualifyitlg Ill bort ~ nice 1111!! home on 31hcres in Ra·
c11e. 41111. 3 baths, ~~~1111"'1 ""ted I Bllapl
Property ildudes 4,800 sq. tt. farm bldg

....

DOWNING·CIIIDs.MUWN-MUSSER
INSURANCE

C,92-2342

POMEROY, OHIO

•LIGHT HAULING

.~~rby

8·1 Z·IO-tfn

Member F.O.I.C.

. VET·EIANS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EWING FUNERAL .HOME
992~2195

'

992-2136
POMEROY, OHIO
667·3161
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

SIGNS
' by t/.ck JftOW'lt¥

4TH OF JULY!!!
'

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

.BUILI)ERS
'
.

-.
I

J.&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replecem~nt

Wlndowa
•Roofing
•lneulltlon

JAMISIUSIE
992-2772 or
742-2251

1138 Bryiln
MiddlepOrt.

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER llld
BACKHOE WORK,

. HOME SITES.

·LANDCLEARINQ,
WATER end SEWER

'

7U·23il .
' 8/23/tfn·

. ..

'··

..,.
••...

...'

�...

----------,,
1991

Page

~

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcemenls

Knox 1111. , _ , 2 bldroom,

oil olectrlc, coli 11Wt2-3021 or
814-11112-'1'107.

defence while you ahepe up and
aut. lrnprcw• your menial
I phpk:ol obiiHin, for lntor·

won.

34

vllw coli Joy 11-10 p.m. 814-1112·

Business
Buildings

:11148.

Free Single Bulletin, Pereonal
iKia. Wrflo to: J.S.O., P.O. Bo•

Cliolhlrl, Oltlo. .,._,._

72

Giveaway

OFFICE SPACE FOil LEABE on

3 BnutiMCoto, 114-4411-0259.
4 boautllul pupploo, 304-&amp;J'S.
J133.

-·
1 ,..,..,,
!Court
roomo,
4 . All nlcoly
clocontlld, llr eortdlllonlng,

1m Chevy Plck· up, 1112 Ton; 4
WhHI Drlvo~ Now RobuiH Motor
Good Solid lr\IC:k, 8144711-!IUl '

4

2nd Avo., Qolllpollo.

1=========-r-========:1

ml•ld Torrloro, 10 wits old, 61._
llt24&gt;181 or llt2·71105.

Public Sale

14

Training

Full btooded Alrdalt, ftmtlt ,
home In

17

Hilt Colllo tornoll puppy, 1 wits 9
Wanled to Buy
old, 304.0711-3711.
==~.:....:~-::;.;;;...,-­
lloll Cot Looko Uko Small Tlgor Wonlld to buy, Standln\tlmbor,
Noutored, o..ctowld, AI Shoto.
William• &amp; Sono 14·9112•
11
114-4411-3267, 814-2411-1101111.
·
W1nted to buy, w1aher I dryer
In working oondlllon, coil 0 ~" 4
6 Lost &amp; Found
p.m. ll4-lt2.090:l.
FOUND omoll chlldo boooboll
gtove tth 1t N1pe Storw llll Wantld to buy: dehumldllllf'.
Wid, Mizuno brand, 304-8J'S. Evonlngo: 114·2411-8087.
22111.
Wonted To Buy: Stondlng Tim·
Found· Sm. light colored bar, Top Prtcoo Pold For WhHo
boaat•typo dog, lloclno 1,.1, Clok I Aoh. Call after 7p.m. 814·
.,...141-:nN.
387·7518.

:t:

;:.:..::,;~~--,-..,.--..,. I

Employment Services

· LOST dortc groy cat, tong hoir, 11

·1

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Help Wanted
$350.00/doy procooslng phono
ordtrtl People call you. No ex·
Dtrlence nece. .ry. 1400.25S.
0242 Eltonolon P-21118A.

AcllvHI•

Anlaant,

Pluunt

Valley NuNing CaN C.nter, full
prtvloua nperltncl In
· 2 Famllloo: Choir, Dllh11, Chlldo l(ml,
Tabla, Blackboard, l.ompo, planning, 111crutlon and c:,.fl

for otdoriy. Volld
Ctothlnv. FridiJ, Sotunfay, tl-5. actlvltloo
lk:on11 roqulrld. Apoly
l.oko Drive Subdlvlolon, Rio drtvora
Poroonntl Dopt. Ploaaant Valley
Grande.
Hospital. AMOE.
.
24 Honklo Avonuo, Gallipolis, Anawtr phonH locally ror
July 5th, Friday, lo.m..Sp.m.
Nlllonwlcll Co. lull &amp; part·tlmo
3 tomlly o•roae 1111: oubdiv~ or will troln, hiring lmmodlatoiy
, olon bohlrid olil Bldwlll ochool, txtl'llmely high wage1, Sat-Sun
11am~ 5pm, li-F
D:()()..5:00pm,
Slh, 8th. Rain or lhlno.
114-698-2081.
5 llmlty corpon 1111: 202
POMEROY
.Kinton Dr. 4th, 5th, 8th. Adu~,
'ASSEMBLERS NEEDED'
· 'chlktren1,
clolhN, ater.o,
lmmodlato oponlngo. No ••·
.;.JPNMII, cunalna, rnitlc.
pertence nHCIH.

FUIVPart~tlmt.

, ' 111 Fourth Avonut, Friday, C.till TOLL FREE 1.aot).111J.Itl21,
- loturdly, llondoy. Arll I Cnfto 8om-10pm 7dop.
luaollle, Blkol, Good llltarlol,
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
~ 11oGb, G&amp;alewan, You Nlm11t,
Excellent
Pey,
Btntflte,
fGoUI
Tronoportlllon,
407412-4111?1
:· ALL Y l l l l - - 8o Pilei In
lll.m.·1011.m. Too
~ ' llvancl. 'DEADllriE! 2:00 p.m.
· tho cloy boM tho ld lo to run.
AUSTRALIA \\'ANTS YOU
Sunday ldltlm • 2:00 p.Jri.
Poy,
BonoiHo,
Friday. llondoy ldHion • 2:00 Excollont
Tranoportatlon, 407·2115-'1800
~ ~ p . m . Sttur~y.
Ell. 571. 9o.m.·10p.m. Toil
· lila Clorogo Solo: 81 llodloon, Rofllnclld.
·
bolllnd Plzil ~. Antlquto,
many toofl, Iron whoolo, hunt· AVON I All Aroao I Shl~oy
lng I fllhlng oupptln, C.B.o, Spoa10, 304-&amp;l'S-142!1.
toyt, c:lothea,chaln uw, gune. Boby IHtlf e ·uyo 1 w11k In our
2, 3,4.
.
.
.
homo, ............ 814-4-1.
Big Yonl Solo: Todjly thru July
- 13. I to 5. 424 Rind Avo., lot&gt;Pmer: lly Homo Only, For 2
Children. Rtllablo, Punctual,
Klnougo,OH.
Roforonc:ll Roqulrld. lluot 8o
• f'rldoy, Nlco Clolhlo, PI• Slzo, Cloanllf4.441.o7.1f.
· UnlfrOcM, J - Ultll Glrll,
Homl ~~~~~IHiadl, Loll EARN MONEY Rlldlna Bookol
Nice Toyol ...._ Apartmont, $20,0001yr. lnoorno Polontllll.
DoloHo. f1) 8011-1112-8000 Ext. y.
llohlnd Offlco, Cl!llhlro.
10181.
• C!Irlvo Solo: 112 IIIII Out
--a.. CrMk. FrldiJ, lotur- Eur Worlll Elcotllnt Poyl Aodoy, J.l. 8111, ,..,_COIItotlon, .ftblo Producll At HomO. CoN
· 1111c JOn. Blltboi For lnlorrnotlon. -~­

t:..,.,!'J:

~~==·~~~~·~~- =ED=·~31~~~~~~~-

: tlorogo Solo: Moving: Clorogo Fllllo Holr Solono, Inc; N . Fultl Jllly Sth I llh. 281 Talontld Styllllo • Mlnogoro

~ ~ l-4p.m.

. Glalntlc 3 Family Gorago Solo:
· a.Turdoy, July t Only. lll.m.•
tlp.m. &amp;;rvolnl GlloNI Clolhi(IQ.
• lion o, Lotao Womon o,
. Children's, Corilury
.lolly ~-. Vartouo Hou

S=

::~f.".!: IE":k1zri~C:7'..:l

Jull Off •01 Goor YC Road. 1 112 Ill in Fr.!:'Route 7.
Wotch For Sigrllll

July 5th I 8th, 1:30 To S:OO,
Routo 114\ 454 LoGrando Blvd.
. Rlln 0&lt; Shl;.: Famii~Bib•
To lduHo,
., Bile
•o'
•
TV,

WlldMtM,

lmmodllllly. Top Hourty l'oy
Plut
Ccmml11lon
Paid
Vocotlono HIIHh !nouronco
Cnclt union. Froo Education• ,;
Incentive Progra.. Avlllobla.
Join Tho Fullll · Gtowln
Family of Holr Solont In
llldwoot I Sho,. Thotr Suc0011
For A Fonlaotlc Coreor Futuro
WHh Nc Llmhl, Coli 1.etJO.I25.
83113
Aok For llymo.
Full tlmo, 74, oponlngo tor Clf·
tlflld nurolng ooolllonu, com·
polltlvo .wag• ocalo, fllllblo
hod 11
d •· r
IC
u ng on -no Ito oval~
lb~. Contact: Karla Hunter
ADON OVorbfook Conllr 1t.:

TfJ

GREAT POSITION Iii
NEWill ''Cookln" Fun Llno Of
.July Sth, lth. 8aughm1n Farm 7 Khchen
hna. Managers
112 lllln South of Gailipotla, Noodod. Wo Train. Wookly In·
llother·Doughtor Solo: 50 Noll. 01124 ·
VHS movlo, blllt, clothn bed· LPN X R
h 1
dln~dra--, curtains, jowo
' lry,
' . ay tee nlc an for local
-·
physician ottlce. Wrtte Box C.2
gil ' lraozor.
c/o Point Ptnaant Roglllor 200
lloln Stroot, Polrit Ptoount' WV
255150.

'

Now Accoptlng Appllcotlono For

Pt. Pleasant

Port~lmo Help Lhtlo eo111,.

Pizzo.

Will plteod $100. otoatrlo guitar,
-~ ~~~ MW, MW ofringo,

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

"""'"' IYiillblo tor

l..olo I

:J04.11H't20.

, _ . . _ o-rvcllon on
Raybum Rood. Povld road,
Wltll",

Apartment
torRent

44

51

GOOds

_18;-...,w....:.a_n,..ted
;..;..,;.to:..,.,.D..:;o_ _
Will Babyolt In lly Homo

28 """' ....., IVIIIobll, North 41hlullldd'-'t, Olllo. 2
locltld m BJ&lt;IId Run RoaCI, bldraom mllhocl opl, dlpooll
~
Hoven, $21,1011. :104-77:1- anclii...

Rodney

Area.

Ro oroncoo Available. All Shlhs.
Call614·24.57""·
~ -

Household

NHOnllblt

reotrlctlono. Ccmpllto Inform• Nor\h 3rd Sl, llldcbport, Ohio, 1
tlon mallld on roq111ot. :IOW'II- bldroom fUmt.hod opl, rollron525!, John D. Garloch, no 001 Inti ~ roqulrod. :J04o
olng-ldo trolllro, ptouo.
liZ.

Anf.lmt.

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

-------158

Gibson Window AC, 220-voH,
ZS,OOO BTU, $250, 114·1112·2173.

5881.

2881.

WKM,......

~,HI•l ~·Up pli PS

&amp; [ IVC o iO Ck

Satiy all, clean houHJofflct,

earo tor olcklllcllrty, trained ••·
perllnced

nuralng as81ttant.
lllvo ,.,.,.ncn, 304.el'S-971ill.

Baby olttlng In my homo, 304-

llbysmlna In my homo, ocrou
ffom Nort~ Point School, lllvt
Bulh IMlg Sorvk:o. Roosonobll
Rotoo. NO Job To Smolll 81._
37114142.

53

Rrntals

welcome. 814--448-8224. Naw ln.

font Toddler Care, 61._.4~227.

41

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

patio covera, decka,

245-aMl

448·11144.

County Appliance,, Inc.

Above

Rlclno on 124. 81..,141-2312.
Will Clnn -oo ADI~monll
or otflioo. Aloo, Wtl Cllan For
HouH Showlna- &amp;

2llr lllobllo Homo On Bob
MoCormlolc Rood For Rent, 814-

Business
OpportunHy

448-..

INOTlCEI
OHIO VALLEY PtJBLISHINO CO.

r1commefldt; ttlat you do bual·

nus wl:h people you know, and

NOT to oond monoy through tho
mall until you hoqlnvntrvatod
tho oHarlng.
Arthur't

Chain

Link

2llr Air, Fumlohod 0&lt; Unfur·
nl-. Very Nk:o And &amp;ooutlful
Rlvlr V1lw In Klnougo. FoOitro
lloblll HomoPirfL 11-1102.
2llr Fumlehod 0!! Cora IIIII
Rood, No Polo. Doi&gt;ooft 11-.
autred.
1142411122
CoH
bonlngo.

F1nancial
21

441-181!,. 827 3rd. Avo.

P1rtll1.

Roforoncn Avollabll. 114-44113388 An~lmo, l.llvollooaago.
Will Do Clonoral Houoo Clnn·
lng. $4.50 Por Hour, Gllllpollo
Aroo. l14 448 8405.

Fence.

RMidlntlal, Commarclal, In·
Fr11 ElllmotHI Com·
pllla lnolallltlon. Phono: 814·
384.0277.

FOR RENT • Portly Furnl-1. 2
Bod""'"' lloblll Homo. Sooumy
Do-a And ........ _
Reo
qulred. mo.'mo.
lncludoo
Wotor. Phone: 114-4411-1217.
lloblll .._, 8¥ri!CUM 2·BR,
$150/mo, Dluo utlltloo,
11...11112-id81.
'

d.Po'iii

Go~

llpollo, '-"
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhort, dryoro, rolrlgorotoro,
rangoo. Skoggo Apjltloncoo,
Rlvor Ra. Bulclo Stono
Crall llotol. Coli 814-4411-13118.
LAYNE'S FURNITORE
Ccmploto homo rum~I~J:·
Houro: lion-Sot, 11-5. e
0322, 3 mlln out Bulovllll Rd.
FrM Dollvory.
PICKENS FURNITURE
NowAJeld
Hou11hold fUmlohlng. 112 mi.
Jorrtcho Rd. PL PI-nt, wv,
coll304-475·1450.

u-

au- IIIIo water bod, $loa. 1/4
korol diamond olullor $100.
Bound
dolllan
'"'""
$13a. colal
i&gt;ltwMn
3:3G
and

t:OO -·2238.

Vondlng R-: For Solo. Colh
BuoiMU. High TroHic l.ocol
Locoti9no. Hoftoot lllthlnoo On
ll~rkll. 1-234-28111.

;_

31

Apartment
for Rent

2llr Aportrnont. Wotor, Troilh,

~lor 'Fum~
I'l:~'le':IMO,

814-44&amp;-

~ P~ Solo; Hollllln

IIPiic llnllo,

Ron EYirla Entl- Joe-·
son, OH t-.a37.0528. ·
Couch, dnp ,....,., Ml~og
Rlngor Wuhor, 814-112·7212.
Llflllylor Rower Sltllr $121
brand ,.., Llflllytor 2000 Er-

=~~

"'

exc. Cond.

Now Horizon, Hollford,

wv.

FlnllhrOclucld,
,.w - 14. """'"
,_
1111:.flit
on

pllnto, llondly thru
Soturdor, l:oa 1111 e:oo.
Now mobl1o homo, 2·112 1m CA
unit. 304.f75.1840 or 1114-2411moll

DI.

RoconciHionecl Wuhlro, Dryore.
GYirantood """""' oorvlce for

:~.

, 4 !llontht Old. 79

For Soli: Morllol St- Grain
Foci. 8f4.4411.1243.

TransportatiOn
71

Autos for Sale

=::..,=-=~~-:-304~":~l_::-o:::~.;;.-~:a.;;."";;;,~~~-.:'.t-:d
MIICir,

.

11147 PtyfiiOUih Coupe; 1988 Fol·

con, 10th $3,200. 114-446-2t'l't
aner7p.in.

1110 Chivy llonto Corio, oil
~r, IIC Cond, lnaklll1nd out,
will trodo tor truck and pay dlf·

Ioiiar lllgn an. (Ply fiOif
bola- 3G clivi). Froi Ill·
tn/cllflvwy. ,Iaiiie IIIWI
147.50 bOx. 1..tiONJ3.3453
onJIImo. •

--l

- · 304-t71-4437.
2.5
hu cyl., ,..., , _ parte. 11100

on ..~~a~, - · Tho Wuhlr .1111 lulclc Sllylark, 2
Dryer'"-· 814 4• :1144.
., -

offar. IOW'II-4188.

n.

abed

vilih tlpooul,
applltinc...

1m IUic~c, 2dr cp LlmHid. Foe·
tCMJ Whlwl Air Runo Good,
l.oOicl Good $1,500 Firm. 114-1112.
'
Se rvtces
1111 Codolllc Coupe O.VIIII,
11111 plpo !dill for ·-~. ltl , Elo. Cond.'vovory opllon, now - - - - - - - - IIIZII, coli tram 1:00 1o 1:00 Pll. tlroo, !so, ... 11850, &amp;14-m·
Home
81
...81. l'l'tg,
Coltogovllll, wv Improvements
Uprtvhl ,,_er ,. c- """· 1111 Plymouth, Horizon, _Noodo
PlrtOct CondH1onl $300. 114- Tronomiulon Worll, 1,._
BASEMENT .
2411-8.884.
WATERPROOFING
.
UncondHionll ll"'lmo guoron.
111. Locol,.._,... rumFreo llllriicitH. Coli ootloci' l•
111:1. , . ............... go&lt;l!f, 11..,237-0481, · doy Of night.
no Nit, Mld8 80fM body work, Rog.. e.Mmont Woterproo$1:100, 114-1112-2131 aftOr 8:00 flng.
~llll

-··

Bul~

Real Eslate
'
., .

suppttta ·

o-ra

CD July 4111 Gala From the

lawn of the Gerald R. Ford
Museum, tht UnKad States
Army Fiald Band and
Soldiers' ChoNa perform an
evening ol petriollc musiC .
(1 :30) Stereo.
.
(]) Myateryl Rumpole
defends Tony Timson of
trying to drown his wile . (PI 1

of 6)Q

OUT OF CRUMPETS,

TEA SARVICE
ON TH' TABLE

TH'

WALDO

9 1

9:60 ([) MOVIE: The VIllain (PGI
(2:00)
10:00 (2) • 0 L.A. Law van
Owen represents a dying
friend in nlld or a kld"!Y

II is well·known lhat on July 4. 1776,
the Declaration of Independence was
s1gned. Less well-known is the fact
that aflerward lour of the signers
didn't go out on the town celebrating.
Intensive research reveals that John
Adams, Benjamin Franklin , Jobn Han·
cock and Thomas Jefferson retired for
a game of cards bearing a remarkable
resemblance to bridge. Today's hand
is the first one of the evening.
After Adams opened one club,
Franklin made an imaginative over·
call by psycliing one heart. Jefferson
knew a juicy penalty when he saw one,
so he doubled. This was passed back to
Franklin, who exposed his psych by
bidding his real suit. To clarify mat·
ters for his partner, Jefferson jumped
to three hearts. When Hancock pre·
empled to four spades, Jefferson decided to shoot out a slam.
West led the spade 10: jack, queen,
heart two. Declarer drew trumps in
three rounds and cashed dummy's A·K
.of clubs. However, when West discard·
ed on the second round, Jefferson

Nortb Eall
SoulW.ll
JetrenonHancock Adams Franklin
t+
t•(')

SNUFFY!!

Pass
Pass

L---- ----------1
paused, seeing that the club suit was
blocked.
He could play on diamonds, hoping
to have only one loser there - an approach that was destined to fail . But
Instead Jefferson led the spade king
from the dummy and diiCllrded a
blocking club from his hand.
:
East won with the spade ace and
switched to a diamond, but declarer
·•on '!Oitb the ace and then caafled
dummy's three club winners dillcarding his two diamond losers. '
It isn't recorded whether Jefferson
felt happier about this tour de force or
about the earlier signing .
@ 1111. NEWPAP!R llif1'0Ntll Alllrt.

The World Almanac~Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Thin cook II
8 llow1on
llreezt
tt Rnlne
t3 lonolou ftah
t4 Type or cub
15 Iring lftlo

harlllony

18 Spock
17 Belonging to
Ul
1111110 - lung
20 Safalr aiiCf.
22 Airline Info
23 Hold
24 Bronll Mro-

lnl,_-

21 Prilll

28 OYer (poeL)

Ana- to PrMioul PIIIZio

leland
311 Lacquered
molllwaro
40 By birth
42 Geogrophlcal
dlvtalon

44 Ancient

45 Aclr- Woat
48 Rutllltl
village
47 Afternoon

IIIIP

50Titellt«
dlttrlcl
53 liNk protein
54 Wild ptrtllo
55 Workora'

..

'~·
... lltleOfaloglo
ctl doYle•

30Ughl- fntfltr
31G32 Cruln~
33 Qeala et'e
lind

38 Allu1lan

5 Grlln lor
1 RelphEmtraon
2 llolodlc

whlolctr
8 Funnr peraon

4 Lonllllml

8 Gtoo'N41

711ap

Story Homo. Now KHchon,
Bathroom I Corplllng. 17
Acroo. ti14-44W3tlf.
LJOM AddHion In Muon
qullltly bull, 4 -oomo, 3
bltho, CUllom Ill In kHthln,
DR; FR, 2 fl&lt;ei!IICII , CA, 1 acre
:=.,,11..,111 ,$117,1500. 304·'m-

lllecomet

Hagen

21 SUr

23 No....,

Judith25 Electric: lllh

: Aller

27 Blwldertd

211 Dllltln Hoff.

·-mcm.

33~:!.

Rea."""
Brandon and

34 llotllted
31 Pnture land
37 Actrlle Uly

SMajor~aUI
.
Los Angalel
at San

31 UlldMdad
31 itlllan 01111'1
4 t ArollltaCI I t'IIIR

Hilla, 10210
Steve
co-manage a lltllt-IN!Iue
team ol children. (R) Stereo.

bod-··

day~ mailing

lloyo DrM!, Now·Honn, 1101125'
lol, 4
1 112 bathe, 2
IIOf!'i..lll brick, bock click com-

~pile Tonk Pumping .-oLClollla
CO; RON EVANS ENnRPRISESt
Jool&lt;oon, OH 1--6~:0J28.
O.vle
s.w..v~
-hrv&amp;c•,
o-gool c - lid. Porto, ......
~,=kup, ond dotlvory: 814·

plll..,..oorpotod,,i!OWB2·2382.
On.tho rlvor1 ' BR po11lbll 3rd;
gorogo

·.

~"""'·
1.75 · plt.io.
Gli~
Apollo oohooll.
Owntt
looking

for offtn. 211-2311-11285.
Rlducod To Soli: 2 Story 3br
Cornor UJI In Cltnhlre, Ohio.
liliOiftilnl ~ion. ..,....

Wll do r - n v . roottnv
building. tru 11fmmlng an3·

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

NrMYI\ houH pelntlng. For
ffw 11tiM11tM, call Oeorp at 1·

~

114-1112.07112.

Plumbing &amp;

Heatln~

.

$1 .25 plus a igng, ""~ 1111111 tlhollkl be tMtlng end pteaalng In
.add....aed, otilmped envelope to Astro- r~:. to lillf ~ ptojeclt
Graph·, ·c/o thla · newapaper, P..O. Box you're Involved In at IIIIo time that en·
91428, Cleveland. OH 44101·3428. Be hanceyourreolder)ceorworkpleca.
eure to otate your zodiac sign.
AQUARiUS CJM. »Fill. 11) Your sex
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In order to ad· appeal Is quite llrong tOefl)', however
vance J()Ur p8fSOII&amp;I Interests today, not In tM phJiic8l -M. W'*&gt; II
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL you may have to be a trltto asllrtlve. It oomea to , your llemellnor, though,
thlsls required , do ao wtlh a dab ol hu· meri11Mra o1 the oppoelte genclor wll
mor t o - the sting.
lind JOU attractlvl end 111 I tlble.
VIRGO
(Aug.
23-lept.
22)
The
greatest
PISC:I!S C'*-10 lias oil 10) Your ptob·
\
.'
,pleasure you can deriVe today will be In abilities for materllll acqullftlon are Y«"f
spending time with the one you love and good today - If you are ltrongly mot I:
admire. Oon't spoil It by letting others vated. If there Ia .aornethlng you truly
Into what .lhould not be lharad.
want, you'll figure out a way to.get it.
U8RA (..,._ 2S-Oot. 21) You could be AJIIEI C-.11 a1-A;ril 1t) In addition
qutla fortunate 1oday In dMII"'II with to yovr co,taiQm~ eltrtWtel of peroonctubs , or large eroupa. espec:laltf II !lilly, yoil'ft hive M •tre ~~- ol bold·
JOII're toying to pu1 something together .,_ end 1111cll._,t ·1\bout JOU today.
Where you have to draw on the many r• · This wiH ' tnlkt JOU - . ·more
1011r- ol thek mernborl. ,
Chart-tic. . ,
·
Bonds will be strengthened b e t - ~OfiiiiO'(OoL ~.'22) You ..,OUICI TAUIIU,, (o\pl'll
.10) While oth·
you and the one you. love In .the· year . b!t able :to find time today to poriOi1n a •• miOh• igrM!re the. plight o(·an ~or·
ahead. 'Corfvereely, If there has been a · labor of lOve JOII'VII beall puttlrle oft. It tunate friiiKI t~. yovr COIIII;IenCe
;void In JOUr nre. It could aoon be fllled.
might be l~t to ·otherl, but Worl't '"'"""yOU to do the tillml. Admi.C:ANCI!R (.111111 21.-,!llly-22) Butl,... whenMilrtendrillnd,gel,thlnglt8keon reblf, 10!1'"1 l!ltlll'·to do what- JOU
and pteaeure make 'a eompetlble mix Importance.
'
·
can - and wlthout·any lanlml.
today. Taka the Initiative to promote a IAQITTAIIUS (Now. 23-0ec. f!l c.- 01171! CMir 21.,... 8) l!wv•in?I""Of"""te lo
J ight dlverolon as 8 prCIIUde to a oertoua vtllopr1*!ta that "*f be c:hancy lor 8- plrrau ~ con1Pi!"llll11. provided
diiCUNion. Geta)Umponllleby~· ,~ IOGiatll 901*f ·turn CIUt to,be ~ , tfilr'realncere.Soll-ltyou'reGkiMIJ.
.standing the lnfluenCf.!l whiCh -~goY·· lor.YOI!. -~ •YO!' doni IIUth your lnVGMd with, who hla , ~tly done
ernlng JOU In the year ·af&gt;e8d. Send lor g~!Uc!! ~reuonable llrnlta.
~ .notable, Will wetcome comCancer's Aatro-Graph predictions 1o- CAPIIICO!ii (Dec. 22....._ 11) The re- men1a from you.

·»Mer

WDRKf·
.. ,

Upholstery

l'

I•

_, .

nervoua
10 Imbue
t2=dt.
13 Dletanl
1BAclrtll

allbrewlatlon

3 Foamy

lite Stonll Bob Simon travela
to Baghdad and Kuwait City
to report on the aftermath ot
Desert Storm. (1 :00) Stereo.

Flelwooda Arte, Pomeroy. 2

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • 10

transplant (R) Stereo. 1;11

illl ID. 11011

••

p..,

(I) .....
Cll CIJ. K~aport
(I :00) Stereo.

3br Houoo 25 Aero~, 1 milo
From Town, 814-44S..1340.

Clf

w........ (Pt 3

C1J Hanglil' In

Homii for Sale

2 112 ' bam. '

Father Dowling

Stereo. g

MAW II SET UP

K6 3
.H 2

Vulnerable: Nettber
Dealer: North

I

Another Evening Willi
The 8tder llrotlterl Stereo.
8 Larry King L.Nel
1:30 (2) • ll)l W1np Brian and
Joe help Hatan get I
symphonic audition. (R)

I COULD SHORE
GO FER A SPOT
OF TEA,

...

.6+

+AJ9
••o
a

By Plllllip Alder

i

WE'RE SLAP-DAB

EAST
.AQ7S4 2

.AKQ432

The Independence
Day coup

(J).

BARNEY

H tl

SOUTH

IIJl
Frasier and
Ullth worry abOUt the
cleveioprrlellt or their t10rt. (R)
Stereo. D
(I)
Gabftll'l FIN
Josephine lrlas to adopt the
abandoned baby of an
addiCted mother. (R) Stereo.

31

, -3

WEST
.10 9 u 3
• J 10 9
• Q 10 ~ 2

+3

8:00 CD. 0 Colllr Shaw Cliff
acts as a peacemaker
be'twean twO feuding
nalgllbora. (Rl Stereo. Q

9:00 (2) •

1•

•

NORTH

PHILLIP
ALDER

(~) Stereo. Q
131 Arlllrlcali Mullc Shop

14,1500. 814-849·2381.
19711 Skylark 11 Fool Compor,
Vory Good Condllon, 814-4460221.
1m 21ft. Compor, Noodo Worll,
Sl82 Or Boot Oflor. 304-&amp;75242•.
ttell Scamper n. Long Front
Khthon, Air On Roof, Full Slzo
Bedroom Intercom Tfvough
Out, IIUII Soil! Toke OVer
Poymonto. 814-441·1003.
a ft truck camper, tum~ce, tlnk,
IIOVI, leo boX, 1450. 1304-·
3343.
Sl_. In camper, blthlthowtr,
ratrlgonltor, rumoco, double
elnk, etovaloven, tlr tond, $800.
304-571·2321.

_

• 8 74

WhMioiF011uneQ
leaiiWStereo.
IQICrontlre

(J).

•

I I I III

ftereo.

(l)

~

_

.AKQ64

of 4) (2:00)
1:30 (2). G)) DI"-Nnl World
Dwayne ana wnmey resent
being aaktd to boyt:Ott men.

Motor Homes
==-=---:---,-,...:..::..:...
__
1Vl'4 Coochmon Hlgtdond Pork
tamper, 35

•

.KJ

7:30(2),~~~
Q
C1J • Mama'a Femlly

Ill~

C8!1'1pers&amp;

1partm.nt

_

•a n

1191 The legendary Tony
Bennett's 40th year In show
business Is saluted, wltll
tributes by Cab Calloway,
JOII Grey and a taped tribute
by Bill Colby. (1 :30) Stereo.
!Ill ID • Dl-y'a Clreet
American C.labmton Hosts:
Robert Guillaume, Conitla
Sellecc:a, wltll performances
by Barllara Mandrell, 8'-'a
Easton, the Kentucky
Headhunters, Steven Banl&lt;s
and others. (2:00) Stereo. Q
iiJ MOVIE: AI lite
Prealdtnra Men (PGI (3:00)
131 On 8ll1ge Stereo.
8PainMINewa

for Sale

on a twurr nner. 63
Ll
~~:;::V~est~oek:;;:...-.-.,.,.
Holof paid, NO ~:~111. Tlok· ;llogoodt yoor.
·-·
7 lowo, 2 looro,11 Sholto, 11
!!!!"..,·s84Pia, I'•,•.~•!!.. ~IOS,._ol S.t 'tlumn whHit w,lrea, tlta
y """'·
s -•• •1 -·
llullong or Thunderbird, 304·
CIUIDn'ienl
In trailer,
0101111111~
ter4p.rn. 4.foa. '"""""'
8711-4040.
:lo(oQ2•ST.II doplfllr 1:00 PM
.......

r 1• r 1 r 1,

BRIDGE

!D~ rb~:::0;:2..,

I doYI, 4 nlahto, $2HI-DII.

~~ I

by f1lllng in the rrussing words
llop No. 3 bolow .

Common - Midst - Party - Steamy - SYMPTOMS
The man using the automatic teller machine took his
money and began sneezing. Smiling he told his com·
panion, 'Guess I have withdrawal SYMPTOMS."

My...,._ A director II
murdered on the set of his

Slgno: Port- dtlhtld ohongo-

$150. 304-

44

?A'If!

thll ........_,

duotrll~

Hulth Prol&gt;lamo • llull Soli
Vondlng Routo, 17 Popel ma·
chlnn, Golllo I Mlklo, omoilln·
VHimOnt, 3a4-875-Sft2.
l.orgo Locol Voncllnv Routo For
S.to. Will Son An 0&lt; Port.
Ropnt
&lt;Buolnooo
Soourt
Locotlono. Above Avorogo lncorrMJ, , _..113.

f\tl \1\\

!

A$ ' $001-1 A$ "'' FINtiH
(_ THIS pEt:/.AflATION tJf
INPIPINPINeE,

quoted

SCIIAM-LIT$ ANSWERS

Ia:
Edition Q
D ,/IAI1nr

Cincinnati Reds at Atlanta
Braveo (L)

•

ehu~klo

you dovolop lrom

~~scA:~~mmToll

8Moneyilnt
Ill ScliNICIOW and -.. King
7:115()) Major~ ........

~AY

112-32....

tho

at PhHadelphla Phlllies (L)

A CARIIIEAN ILOWOUTI Wo

Good

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

IN THESE

New York Meta at Montreal
Expos or Si. Louis cardinals

4

motOf.

ID Cl H I7 ~---~~mplo,;,

tenus r
1 ,.,NT NUMIUfD
$QUORES
_

g:::= .......

Vans ~ WD's
1116 Chovrotll holt ton truck
414, 35 soa orlglrlll mlln 3oa
V-8 ongfno IIIlO, 17,000. 304·812·

7·112 HP boll
7725.

R

.L.-.L.-.L
.-

L-

laubal Cincinnati Reds at
Atlanta Bra- (L)
·
1D • Madill or Honor (t :001

oYWIIoughl crulool. Florldo lo

uood oppl-, T.v. 1111. Ooon
I 1 .... 1o I p.m. llon..llll. ,,...

I I~ [I

Seattle

Ill Current Aflatr Q ·
illl. Mljor League

... 114-112-!lliM.

home.

Sox
·

NnaHour

Ol.l/l$fLVE$. A

relrfg $71.00 up !Q• Amono
Country lloblll Homo Pille, .._
Radar Ranao 1415.00. 2·H"
Roulo 33, North of P-.oy. llnl1h
cono011. 1·11" RCA
Lote, rentala, p11rt1, Nlea. Cell oolor IIOiot
$110.oti. · Ellctrlc dryer
114-1112-111711.
$88.00 up, Fl-ono, Store llld~
Merchandtse
kid laehlon churoll - · 1'8",
good ohlpo.L..~I 0111 or ol, $10

Will care tor bid patient in my
Ra..onahlt.

~"(00

/..IT'S VOTE

46 Space for Rent

Corpot S4.oa Yard 1 Up. VInyl
$3.19 I 14.11 Yord. POR:h Tuif,
$3.11 I $5.118 Yard. llollollln
C.rpoto, Uppor Rlv• Rood, 114-

.crMned rooma, put up vinyl
•ldlng or traU.r tklrtlng. 614--

~ ~

75 Bo81s &amp; Motors

Household
GOOds

Chicago
Marlnora (L)

~~

7:00~· 0 WhNI ol , _

~=~liZ II $120/mo. Clollla Holol. 114 ... 28H.
8
11810.
·
SIOIPina .foomo wHh coolclng. 54 Miscellaneous
Men:hlncllle
AIIO traller
-·A
ll -·
Coli
after 2:oa
p.m..
304·7731151, Maeon WV.

51

lflU:::£."
White
at
0~

'

I

30
''

1

I I I'

1:05 ([) llewllchld

. . . ([) Andy Orfllllh

"'"PI'

Antiques

UT 5 0 J
We spent days pushing our
1-r-~~· :...:,......1 1 dog 1n and out the special
I 15 ':'.c0 door we cut for him. One night
.
•
•
.
he woke us, went to the door .
., and waited for us to push him

IIJl::.~

tory St.,.a B8CIIlntr, 3Q cpo
lliiH. $8,1100. 388-11082.
' .
1181 GMC auto PS/PB AC
crulu, fill Loll oloxtrao. hntOd
wlndowo, dlonl.l14-448-8044.
11H Dodge 11-50, 21,000 lliln, 5
llplld, BOd Llnor,
Sharp
Truckl $138/mo. 614-446.0751

Dodgo Coravon, 41,000
1 Owner, Auto, Air
st.,.o, Ntw Urea
. 814-441HT51, 814-44&amp;!

0UpCiooe

8 WGIIcl tadar
Ill Our Houoe

(]) 3-2·1 Con*I

Buy · or oil. Rlvorlno Anttq1111,
woruro 3114-112· · 1t:M
E. lloln Sl-, P-.oy.
ZSN.
Houn: ll.t .W. 10:oa o.m. to 1:00
lunckr 1:00 1o l:oa p.m.
Roomo for rent • or month. P."'h-

81...11t2-&amp;1103.
bul~

HAVE FUN ..

G

1

~&amp;·~Newa8Q

oonllruc:llon

Will blby•lt WMk.nda 1t your
houee or mine. H1ve ref~rencas .
Will

60~NA

r El rLl 1

(]) RHdlng Rainbow Q
till. Andy Grllflth

oc.-E•.,....
601N6 TO CAMP,
HUl-l? '(OU 6U'f5 ARE

'~~

Cll CIJ. Ill 0 .

!Il~~Q

1184 Nlllan Pickup King Cob
elr, cover on beef, S tPMCI, par~
fOCI condhlon, 3CIW7M132. · ·
1185 El Cimino. $31100. 11110 f .
150 4x4 XLT·I.orlol, olr, dull gjoo
toni&lt;, 111, pw1• pb1 12,000 ml
$11,508. 11188 IIIIGI B-2000 LX
$3a00, 114-llt2.0228.
1881 Fold Ranvor, XLT, Air, Foe·

73

EVENING

IIJNewa

luto, new plllnt, low mileage,
$5,500. 114-4851. .
.

114-44&amp;-'le04.

• +1R1Cr r1

THU.. JULY4

1:00 (2) •

Apartmont ovolllblo for 2 or S

Housea for Rent
4tir H - In Rio Granda Atoo.
Avollllbll Augllll 111. 114-441·
58U
•
01129.
Dopondabla non-omokor, wjll do I room howe: 44 Olive St., Go~
houool&lt;ooplng or bobpll In Hpollo. $275/rno. lnqulro ot: 118
Mtlg8 ancl Ma.on Countlaa, call . !locond Avonlll.
814ollt2·3498 An~lmoll
I room holllo, rotaronco and
Goorgn Portoblo Sowmlil, don~ dopoolt
roqulrH, 304-875-1010.
haul your toao to tho mill lull
cai1304-&amp;75·11157.
Small 2 BR/1 8 homo In
Syrocull,
roand
Mill P1ul1'1 01y C.re Center.
-urity dopooH roqulrld, coli
Slife, 1Hordable, chlldclrt. M·f oollocf, 1-1'2So4702 oftor
8 a.m. · 5:3a p.m. Agoo 210-10. 3pm.
Before, 1her .chool. Drop-oint
Chriltlln woman will cart for
eld•ly person In their homa,
rat.renea l'lllllablt, 304-7'TJ-

•

Trucks for Sale

2012.

·773-~.

Wih Rallo.
77-:::-7::-:c-.,.---:--

St.Rt7, Sl-1. Rain Cancels. 614· come. Rexlble Hou,... Excellent
2;;:58=,.0=535~.-,,.,--=-.,.--- CorHr Opportunity. t.aoo-467·

Instruments

,,._'lilt

COUnty

Miscellaneous

112..472
Boaoboll Cordo, And HOoidbGofd J .:.:.:~:;·~===.,.,-Over

Nowii!Southellttm

Television
Viewing

~~--------~

1884 ~-~ Ford 314 ton, i lr,

...M\JJ~II

lloko your choloo . -. No
your-or • -blllll'l1 paid.
quoiN ovtr tho phono . you
mull tltlm. Pllonl "" on
ai&gt;I&gt;Ointmont.
doy,
44H531ovo.

Nt.rMCU, 304-815412.

. 448-4041.

: Now Hovan, 304-162·2234.

Aalraln

full tlmt tuctlonMr, coml)lltt Buslf1on Collogo, Spring Volley
auction Hrvlc.. Llctnaecl Ot11o, Ptua. Coli Todly, 814-4411-436711
Roglllorotlon t-1%74B.
Wnt Virginia, 30H13·578S.

SqulrNI Dogo. lf4.3711-2588.

Found: llolo 811!111 Hound,
Noar Now Compalgn Comotory,
North Of Holur Holpllal. 114-

Business

&amp; Auction

Rick Petl"'on Auction Company,

frM Rtf Ttrrlar Puppln, Good

·

to

a-.

..
Froo~kltt::;::•:::"'~·.:814-=:371-::.:::2:::42B
:::,·-- I 8
=
froo Pupplll to good homo,

ap.~yed, 1\Mdt aooc1
country, 114-N~W7.

~

llfM',...QliiTE ~~~!
'AJ/NM Cll/.ILAIIO!l FlltW.

for ~le

$2,1115.

FOJ L11111: Ccmmorclol eulkllng, 2,000 "'· • • St. Rt. 7,

184, lluolllon, OH ..a48

Autos

t-.

tiel 14110 t - bldroom,
2 lull bathe1 ohlngll 1001, vinyl
&amp;ldlng,
anwtn, carpeted
lh""'rl::· Ill drywall lnlartor
and
~=··. $17,tel00.
Colli-

CHINESE KEIIPO
KARATE
Cia- llortlng - · Loom oolf

Pets for Sale

11

11111 SkYtartl Buick, AT,._Ap, tiH ,
Drsgo &gt;wynd Conery Portion, 4 - 1·1 eortd, $14,-. Ulcl
81..,_ ilnd Hlmolayon klnono. over ...,.....to, :ao4.e75-t378
lnvo-go.
.
114 Uti 1844 oftlt 7 p.m.
111111
loll:
1M4
T·
Binl,
Rid
Filii Tank, 2413 Jookoon Avo.
Point P-nl, SOWTII-2083, WHh lllrl&gt;oJ_!JuniOOf, I Extriol
full Ifni Traplcol IIIII blnfo, Allllnv $3,ow, Boll otter. &amp;14441-31131.
onlmoll ando~IM.
·Bcolty'o Und Coro, Now HI..,,
Hlmayllilt ·,t1IO
111111,
,_
CFA• $271.
lllgl•4 wv, 304-·3752. 1983 Dod~
Canvlltlbla BliCk $3,115. 1
114-441-1104 '"" 4p.m.
Ford Rangor 34,000· 101
Moll lo11t PIIP, AKC, Vol 14,415. 1f87 Ford Rongor
a.oc•ld, Rlldy To .Gol $210,. $3,415.
1987
PlymOIIIh
114 441 IOU.
Truoomoo·$1,195. 1884 Brcnco II
4l4 $3,015. 1117 Oldl CUllin
Supnmo 1oldod 25,000 mlln
14,15. 1117 Dodgo l.oncor
$2,198. 1113 Chevy S-10 four
whoot $1,tlltl. 11186. Daytona

on~lme.

au.

·
:
:
.

56

Sale

Booutlful , , . Holly """' 1417D
Tog Along, and 1417 Elpondo,
llrWploco, control AC, S.BR, loll
""'"'· $15,000, 814-tl85-4171

Announcements

CHINESE KEIIPO
KARATE
aullartlng - · Loom oolf
do,.,.. wtilo you lllopo up ond
wort out. I"'Pf0'4• your mental
I phpk:ol obiiHin, for lntor·
vllw con Joy 11-10 p.m. 814-1112·

.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Lilly Wrtallt

32 Moblle.Homes
for

3

.)lORN LOSER

4, '1 991

Th1,Jrsday, July

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~The Dally Sentinel

Diego tfadrel or HouetDtt

.au-

Giants (L)

........ plant

41Loll at

AstrOI at San l'l•lCIIOO

11 T111gey.
12long-

Ql World Newt
Ill 700 Club With Pat

RobefttOn

to:JG(]) Mr..,rlRumpolt Ia
aaked to delencl •

nawapeper ldltor. (PI 2 oil)

i

Croalllfltl

11:00 !21.

(I)

101 NIWI

a-

'

CIJ • S ID.

(I)Twlllgh1ZCD MyNryl Rumpole II
aaked to delencl a
· newtpej)et ~· (PI 2

or 11
i AIMIIIO~~a~b..o. a
H~ Qelf Cantil 'Nalbnl'
Open, tat rouncl trom
lAmOnt l!lroolt,IM. (R)

8..,...,....IIIN.Kinl

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Cetttlrity CiphtJ cryp1 ogr~ •• CtMTed trom QWOtiiiOftl ttr ,.,.,. PIQPNI. puT 1ne1 Pl'tMnl
Etdl lttter on ltlt ciptw tllndiiOf MOINr_ r~ .. CIW' V . . C.
.

'LIAIP
LIP

RIA

PDJPVL

DYPIIHWMI

AC-

LA

UPB.t

CUPPMAZ

.gn,.....

ZT I L,

D lnrl»Nind
0 WI!• lit dan

liP

· Cil~

HL ." ·
LBAZBI
GPCCPUIAW.
PREVIOUS SOlUTION: "I'm really a YM'f humble man Not a d
that I don't thank God for my lool&lt;o and my llllnt': - Ty H:dc,e- ,

11:311 (2) •

lllgltllll111i

.

i~-Q
SIMO. Cl

........

1.:.11 N1g111
.AineiUnllullc . .

YHFP

ZPW,

CILHMT. PI

AC

TWMPUNA
ITJ.tAULHWM

Cl 1911 by NEA, Inc

·4 ·

•·

�~

Ohio Lottery

The Daily Sentinel

, By The Bend

Reds bomb
Braves 10-4

Thursday, July 4,,1991

Pag&amp;-10

Kearns family Ax/ Rose touches off riot
reunion held
·
·

'i

dan
scen IS and guests of John
and Nora ,Pobnson) Kearns held
theJI reumon recently at Kroedel
Park in PQint Pleasant w v
A d·
AI' · ~I
C tten. mg were . ICC . ake.r,
D::.~! Cf:Ier, Con~le Da~IS, Enc
John ~ndaiF~~i~v~~~:sve=~
and Sheryl Little, Justin Little
Lora Cleland, Charles and Paule~
Cundiff, April Cundiff Corey
Mayes Ashley Mayes AD&amp;ic Cun·
diff, Brandon Shull Mark Shull
Joy Cundiff Chuck jacks Rhond!i
Gibbs, Michelle Gibbs and David,
Mary Ruth Kearns, Scott Thomas,
Eugene and Tina Kearns, Michael
Kearns, Gerald and Emmalee
Kearns, Pernice Smith, Jerry Walk~~ C~arles and Rosalie Kearns,
gpmaneam,Cs,barLolraesChKearnapmans, s' Gonreyga
Cha
Higginbottom, Dusty VanMeter;
Tessa Van Meter, Harry and Francs
Keams, Gary and Shelby Matheny,
Timmy Matheny, tommy Matheny,
Donna Russell, Amy Russell,
Dwayne Russell, Greg Russell and
Nancy Kearns and boyfriend.
De

NEW OFFICERS ELECTED • New olf'ICers
for the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club are, J.
r, Gene Triplett, treasurer; Richard Vaughan,
president; Gene Riggs, vice president; and Karl

•

Keebler, secretary. Tbe club is an organization
or business people striving to make M~igs County a better community in wbicb to live.

By RANDOLPH PICHT
Associated Press Writer
MARYLAND HEIGHTS Mo
. '
·
(AP) - Ax I Rose, lead smger of
the heavy metal rock &amp;roup Guns
N' Roses yelled at securiiy guards
to take a ~amera from a fan before
leaping into !he crowd and touc~1ng off a not, Witnesses sa1d
Wednesday.
. .
. About 60 peo~Ie we~e IDJUred,
mcludmg 15 pohce off1cers, and
the new Riverport Amphitheater

suslained $200,000 in damage during the hour-long riot Tuesday
night Police Chief Neil Kurlander
· '
said at a n~ws conferen~.
An estunated 3,000 notcrs rampaged at the concert attended by
15 ,400 people, Kurlander said ·
K~rland.cr said 13 adults and
two Juvemles were arrested on
charges m.ct.udmg assaulung .an
officer, resiSUng ~est, de~cuon
of pro~y and failure to disperse.
. Pohce also were considering fiJ.
mg charges agatnst Ro~, who left

THURSD{\Y
POMEROY · Various activities
and games are planned for the
Fourth of July at the Hillside Baptist Church. Activities will begin at
5 p.m. followed by an outdoor
hymn sing at 7 p.m. Rev. James R.
Acree Sr. invites the public.
MIDDLEPORT · There will be
a fish fry on Thursday, July 4,
sponsored by the Middleport Fire
Department, beginning at 11 a.m.
· at the fJie station. Fireworks begin
at 9:30 p.m. at the Dave Diles park..

be performed. A special deaf pro·
gram will precede the meetmg.
Hemlock Grange will be the hosts.
HARRISONVILLE • Harrisonville Patriotic Blast will be
held Friday from 7-10 p.m. at the
Harrisonville Elementary School.
Admission is $1. Music will be
provided by a disc jockey. The
dance is sponsored by the Harrisonville PTO.
SATURDAY
POINT PLEASANT - The Liberty Mountaineers will perfonn at
the Point Pleasant Senior Citizens
Center on SaturdaS'.

REEDSVILLE • The Olive
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment is sponsoring the Reedsville
Com Festival on Saturday begin·
FRIDAY
ning at noon and continuing until 6
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- p.m. Fresh corn on the cob, charpers Plains VFW Post 9053 will coal grilled pork and other dishes
sponsor a dance Friday from 8· will be available. Three bands will
11:30 p.m. at the post home. Music perform on stage and there will be
will be provided ·by the Country several games.
Grass Band. The public is invited
to attend.
SALEM CENTER • The Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange will
ROCK SPRINGS · The Meigs meet Saturday at 8 p.m . at the
County Pomona Grange will meet grange hall located on County
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at tbe Rock Road 1 near Salem Center. Judging
Springs Grange Hall. Inspection of all photography and art contest
will be held and degree work will will be held as well as aU junior
crafts. A poduclc supper will follow
the meeting.

D of A meets

The Chester Council No. 323,
Daughters of America, met recent.
ly at the ball with Alta Ballard as
councilor.
Pledges to the Christian and
American flag were given and
scripture was read from the book of
Psalms. The Lord's Prayer was
recited and the first stanza of the
Star Spangled Banner was sung.
The deaths of Virginia Lee ' s
father and Ruth Smith's brother-inlaw were noted.
Members were reminded to forget items for the tables at state ses·
sion.
Ethel Orr read the audit report
and Erma Cleland reported on the
rally and read "Friendship.fl
The District meeting will be
July 13 at I p.m. at the hall for
practice for State Session.
THe Past Councilors Club will
meet at the home of JoAnn Baum
for a picnic and potluck at 6:30
p.m.
Attending were Marcia Keller,
Mary Holter, Bulah Maxey, Everett
Graill, Betty Young, Esther Smith,
Alta Ballard, Faye Kirkhart, Erma
Cleland, Lora Damewood, Doris
Grueser, Ada - Bissell, Mae
McPeek, Doris Koenig, Thelma
White, Jean Fredrick, Ethel Orr,
Charlotte Grant, Elizabeth Hayes
and Opal Hollon.

annual

PORlLAND ·The
VanMeter Reunion will be held Satur·

Golf news
A scramble was played by the
Ladies Tuesday Morning Golf
League at the Meigs County Golf
Course.
Tied as winners were Joan
Childs, Debbie Sayre, Mary Pickens and Donna Nease with Mary
Frougbt, Margaret Follrod, Nellie
Wright and Julia Hysell.
A starting time has been
changed due to the warm weather.
Business meetings will be held at
8: 15 a.m. with play beginning at
8:30 a.m. These new times will
take effect Tuesday.

Middleport notes
An informal get-together was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight Haley, Middleport, on Sat·
urday evening.
Guests of honor were Dr. and
Mrs. John Ridgway, Nalcrest, Fla.
Attending were Mona and Ike
Neal, Jeff, Janet, Ryan and Katie
Russell, Louisa Johnson, Dianne
Hawley, Mary and Nonie Hoffman,
Mrs. Ocel Sears.
Refreshments of finger foods
and desserts were served.

Pick 3:850
Pick 4: 3233
Cards : Q-H, 3-C

Page4

Vol. 42, No. 43
Copyrighled 11191

lJ ·-' .)

jJ ?

July 5th
Julylth
July 8th

RACINE · The annual Leonard
and Susan Jane Roush reunion will
be Sunday at the Star Mill Park in
Racine. Dinner will be held at
12:30 p.m. AJ,1 family and friends
are welcome to attend.
POMEROY . There will be a
12-step A.A. meetiflg on Sunday

,

7 p.m. at the J.T.P.A. office in
Pomeroy.
SYRACUSE • The First Qlurch
of God in Syracuse will have spe·
cial services Sunday at 10 a.m.
with David Russell, New Haven,
W.Va. as the speaker.

TOPS names winners
Ka"y Morris was the best loser
and Trina and Wanda Faulk the
runners-up at Tuesday's meeting of
Ohio TOPS Club No. 570 held at
the Carpenter's Hall.
The best KOPS loser was Linnie
Belle Aleshire and the best teen
loset was Calesta Searls.
Secret pals were revealed and it
was announced that a white elephant sale will be held July 16.
The groul' meets every Tuesday
at with we1gh-in at 5 p.m. and
meeting at 6 p.m.

Fantastic Bu)'ine Opportunit)' For You!
Frankly. we·re In a tlght spot. Our warehouse Is big, but not big enough for the deluge of merchandise
that Is pouring In on ust Like nearly everyone else In tbis business we bought more than we should
have and now we can't do anything about ttl We can't stop load after load of merchandise now coming
tn. We're bulging at tbe scams ... and more shipments arc arriving daJly1 We've crammed our Ooors
more than full, and cut prices to the Umit for quick sale! we;re counting on your abiUty to recogniZe
real bargains and to help yourself to fabuloussavtnga ... and help us get out oftbts real jam! This After·
The-4tb-Of.July Sell·A·Bmtlon lasta for 3 days only so hurry In and help us make some elbow room!

SFD yard sale set
The Scipio Fire Department will
have a yard sale on SaturdaY. from
9 am. to 6 p.m. at Harrisonville.

Meeting slated

,.IUS G.~P IHIU SATURDAY, JULY 6

BY THE WAY GROCERY
742-2170

Patriotism showers July 4th
celebrations around nation

By KAREN SCHWARTZ
AssodatedPressWriter
The nation's .2 15th Indepen· dence Day was as much about the
Persian Gulf War as the Revolu· ti~ War, as t_r:O!&gt;pS marched and

lion 1,500.
In Buffalo, N.Y ., Army Sgt.
Elaine Decker, a Gulf War medic.
said '~the Fourth has ,a new, special
meamng when you ve been m a
war."
.
, ~~;4PI.Iid0!1-JD.~;~~.of ,.., .;- Th~ -~~e beaches 'aad parks •
ied ""'" ~ yellow bows.
·
In communities large and small, ·
..1
'
July Fourth was celebrated with a
In
fervor unseen in years.
A small aircraft, believed to be
"I've never seen so many peo· carrying two persons, went down
pte in a little cow town like this. in a field on Leading Creek Road
Everybody must have turned out, orr State Route 7 by-pass at 11:53
. plus the dogs and cats," said Ray a.m. Friday.
DeArton, of Cando, N.D., popula-

Mezgs
' COUn ty

In Stock

LARGE SELECTION.Sizes·

Hundreds of people turned out
for Fourth of July festivities in
Racine on Thursday.
The day began with a parade
and winners in three categories
were as follOws. In the Best Float
division the winners were Racine
Girl Scout Troop 1042, first ;
Racine United Methodist Church,
second; and the. Racine Baptist
Church, third. Winners of the Best
Marching Unit category were the
Twirlers on Parade, fJISt; Midnight
Cloggers, second; and .the Racine
American Legion, third. Winners in
the Best Bicycle division were

Jeremy Lyons, fJISt; Tyson Evans,
secoild; and JasQn Writesel, third.
' The always popular "Anything
That Floats But A Boat Race" was
held at the levee in Racine and
winners of that race were Fred
Thompson and Ralph Fisher, fJISt;
and Zane Beegle and Brian Diehl,
third.
Kiddie tractor puUs, held at Star
Mill Park under the direction of
Ted Smith and Dan Smith, featured
two classes according to the weight
of the participants. Trophies were
awarded in each class. The Racine
Park Board sponsored the puUs.

Those attending Thursday's fes·
tivities at Star Mill Park were also
treated to a skydiving exhibition
even though there was a mix-up on
the time the divers were to per·
form.
Another highlight of the day's
activities included mud wresding
sponsored by the Racine Fire
Department and Women's Mud
Wresding Federation. The winner
of the Cincinnati Reds tickets was
announced as Danny Davis of Rutland.
The day concluded with enter·
tainment at the park and a fire works display.

Bring Your Window
' Measurements In Today

-&lt;

2 hurt in accident

IIEMORIAI. BRIDGE" .PPROACH ON
GARFIELD AVL NUEpBUiiO
'Mon.•Frf; 9-8;

Two passengers in a car driven by Thomas E, Anderson, Rudand, ·
were taJ(en to Veterans Memorial HQ¥ital for treatment of injuries
Continued on page 3

Sun. 1·!1

428·1065
f i

'•

•

I

I

I

Sunn)

Desert Storm . Une trom each
branch of the service was escorted
to the slal!e to participate "in the

finale whkh included pauiotic
vocals bY R~ard . and Sandy
Continued on page 3

the Racine United Methodist Church. Honor of
God and country was stressed in the numerous
entries or tbe parade.

Junior fair queen,
king crowned July 4

The caption for a photo in The Daily Sentinel on Wednosday
identified one of two subjects arrested following a high-speed chase
as "Bailey". Arrested were Tommy Phillips and Rick Asbury. Rex
Bailey was the owner of the home damaged in the accident. The
Daily Stntinel regrets the error.

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND 'SHOP ·

I

IIIII

BEST OVERALl. FLOAT • Flags and servicemen were featured
on this patriotic float which won two trophies for Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion in Middleport's Fourth of July parade.
The entry took trophies for tbe best overall float and the best
patriotic float.

EARNS SECOND PLACE AWARQ •
Receiving second place in the Best Float catego·
ry in the Fourth or July parade in Racine was

Correction .

Slarting at 17" wide lhru 73" wide ·

I

Hunderds turn out for Racine
activities on July Fourth

· Meigs County Sherin James M. Soulsby reports !hat deputies
investigated an accident on Wednesday and an accident on Thursday.
On Wednesday at 4 p.m., Robert K. Lute of Bashan Road was at
Cline's Fruit Farm on State Route 7 when he started to leave and
backed into a vehicle driven by Wendy Hill of Bashan Road.
Light damage was suslained to Mrs. HiD's 1988 Nissan. No dam·
age was listed to Lute's 1983 Ford truck. No injuries or citations
were reported.
On Thursday evening at 9:30 p.m., Alvin D. Tripp of Pomeroy
was southbound on State Route 7 when he struck a deer that ran into
his path. Moderate damage was listed to the vehicle.

Every Levolor Aluminum
Ready Made Blind

· · I• •

Tbe plane bas a Virginia regis·
!ration. Meigs County Sberirrs
deputies and the county emergency medical service were on
the scene at press time.

Sheriff's office investigates accidents

LEVOLOR

Sat. 9-5:30

closed by state budget cuts, and a
scattering of arrests and protests,
but overall. Americans celebrated
Thursday with parades and picnics.
barbecues and carnivals.
The festivities· included rubber
.
. Conti11ued on page 3 .

Lonny Ross of Portland was arrested on Wednesday and cited to
Meigs County Court on reckless operation and disorderly conduct
charges.
The reckless operation occurred from an incident in which he
skidded off the road and nearly struck a trailer in Portland. The disorderly conduct charge resulted from an incident at his residence.

The annual Leonard and Susan
Jane Roush reunion will be held
Sunday at Star Mill Park in Racine.
Dinner will be at 12:30 p.m and all
family and friends are invited.

.

ute to
wbo served in the Persian Gult and
stressed tbe value or technology in winning wars.
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman, ri~bt seated,
introduced Gen. Hartinger. Cbuck K1tcben was
emceed ror the celebration.

Portland man arrested

Roush reunion held

~

INDEPENDENCE
SPEAKER • Gen.
James Hartinger or Colorado Springs returned
to bis native Middleport Thursday to participate
In tbe Fourth of July celebration. Speaking at
tbe evening program, Gen. Hartinger paid trib·

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Starr
Patriotic salutes, a parade and a
gigantic fireworks display combined to make a memorable "For
God and Country" Fourth of July
celebration in Middleport.
Several hundred people packed
Dave Diles Park Thursday evening
to hear Gen. James Hartinger talk
about the war in the Persian Gulf
and the value which technology in
space played in bringing about a
successful conclusion.
"Put smart weapons in the hands
of smart people and you can win
wars," commented the retired gen·
eral as he detailed the ability to
shoot down missiles with missiles.
He spoke of the importance of
space technology in the defense of
the United States and concluded by
catting on the crowd to support the
military. its personnel and its pro·
jccts.
Gen. Hartinger, a native of Middleport, was introduced by Mayor
Fred Hoffman who detailed his ser·
vice career from a private to a
sergeant to a four-star general.
Following his talk an impressive
patriotic show was presented by the
Shady River Shuffiers. In attractive
red, white and blue costuming, the
cloggers had a fast moving show
featuring a patriotic finale which
brought the audience to their feet.
The standing ovation wa.s in
response to a salute to the service·
men who served ~n the_Operation

--Local briefs-----.

·There will be a 12-step AA
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
p.m. at the J.T.P.A. offiCe, 117 W.
Second Street in Pomeroy.
·

1

Technology important
in defense: Hartinger

Plane goeS uOWn

WHILE THEY LAST

BOILED HAM ....................................s2.49 lb.
COLBY LONGHORN ..........................Sl.99 lb.
PEPSI PRODUCTS..................$2.99 12 Pale CCIIII
2 Lit• 99&lt;,
UTTLE DEBBIE CAKES ........................... 5/Sl

Langs¥illt, Ohio

d(~\ -~1(

1-

2 Socllono, 14 Pages 25 cenle
A Multimedia Inc. Newopapilt

Ohio, Friday, July 5, 1IJ91

After The

SUNDAY
SYRACUSE • Pomeroy Chapter
186, Order of the Eastern Star, will
have a picnic at the home of Nial
and Virginia Salser, Syracuse, Sunday at 6 p.m. Members and their
families are invited to atttnd.

11

Clear tonight. Low in
mid 60s. High Saturday
in 90s.

~:i!~~~e~~~~3n~s!!!~b:;

- ~
.~(
d
·('\( ,. ( 'J

j

9-D; 10-S

ON FURNITURE'S

day at 7:30 p.m. at the Melvin
Lawrence Farm on Stiversvillc
Road in Portland. Hot dogs will be
served. Bring a salad or dessert,
tableware and soft drinks.

I ..
•

Sbow to be presented
ha h
.
r:The George Jones Show will be on w I~ arg,es, If any, .m1ght be
presented Sunday, July 21, at Pos- sought. 'W_e re nmgmng. t~ be
ton Lake in Guysville. _
~=~~::d makmg cnmmal
Also appearing will be Two
Conflicting re"ports said it was
Lane Highway and Kansas City either a vl.·deo camera or a still
Southern. Music will begin at 1:30
"
p.m. and George Jones begins at 4 camera wllh flash that angered
p.m. Advanced tickets are $15 and Rose. All cameras are banned at
may be obtained at Poston's Carry- the theater.
out in Stewart, AMVETS Post 76 - - - - - - - - - - in Athens, or tickets may be pur·
The 71,134 acres of Sleeping Bear
chased at the gate for $17.50.
Dunes In Michigan comprise one of
America's lour nationallakeshores.

1/2 Price

Watch For Oood Buyc
In Langt~illef ·

--

I

Community calendar

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day or tbat event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in tbe cal·
endar.
·

I

KING AND QUEEN • Brent ROse and Michelle Friend were
crowned Meigs County Junior Fair Klnl!'.and Queen in Rutland on
Thursday. Rose, or Racine, Is, the son of Maxine and tbe late
Chester Rose. Friend Is tbe daugbter of Richard and Linda Friend
or Syracuse. Tbe tiara presented to Friend was donated by Jewel·
ers or America tbrougb K&amp;C Jewelers of Pomeroy.

,.

Michelle Friend and Brent Rose
were crowned Meigs County Junior
Fair Queen and King at the Rutland
Fourth of July cele bralion on
Thursday.
Other queen candidates were
Sherry Johnson, Christine Shultz
(second runner-up) and Michelle
Laughery (first runner-up). Michael
Hoffman 'was mimed first runnerup in the king contest.
Friend, 16. is the daughter of
Richard and Linda Friend of Syracuse. This year , Friend serves as
Vice President of the Racine Future
Farmers of America. She has par·
ticipated in public speaking contests, soil judging and officer training sessions. She has received the
Star Greenhand and Chapter
Degree.
Friend's other activities include
Ohio University 's Upward Bound
program, Teens in Action, church
choir, Teen Institute, Drama Club,
Marching Band and National
Honor Society,
Brent Rose, 17, is the son of
Maxine Rose and the late Chester
Rose of Racine. He is active in
both 4-H and FFA. He is a member
of Sutton United Methodist
Church.
A three-year member of Junior
Fair Board, Rose now serves as the
I

president of that group. He has also
served as Sludent Ad visor of the
FFA, received the Star Grccnhand
Award, Star Chapter Farmer and
the Ohio State Farmer Degree. Two
years ago, he recei.ved the award
for Outstanding Meigs County
Boy.
Mike Hoffman, 18, is the son of
Roger and Pamela Hoffman of
Pomeroy. He has been a member of
the Country Bumpkins 4- H Club
for nine years, and currently serves
as Vice PrcsidenL He has also been
in Boy Scouts for four years.
Active in his church, Hoffman
also has participated in sports and
the National Honor Society a1 Eastem High School. He is a member
of the 4-H Junior Leaders.
Michelle Laughery , 17, is the
daughter of Vic and Denise Laugh·
ery of ReedsviUe. She is currendy
the president of her 4-H club,
which she has been a member for
nine years. She serves on the 4-H
Fashion Board and the Junior
Leaders.
Laughery has participated in
activities at church, softball, Student Council, Varsity "E" Clul!.,
Prom Committee and class play at
Eastern High School. She has been
listed in "Who's Who Among
Continued on page 3
'I·

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