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Page-DB-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Stich wins
Wimbledon

Meigs County Agent's Corner

Fleas can persist the year round

CHAMPION STEER • Tim Gray, George·

tOWD, Obio, is pictured witb bis champion steer
roUowing tbe recent Southeastern Ohio Angus

Association Open Steer and Heiler Sbow beld on
tbe Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds. Tbe
judge is Rick WUson, Indian Creek Farm, Pa.

..

,,

•

-' -\
I•

\

By JOHN C. RICE
Meigs County
Extension Ageot,
Agriculture
POMEROY - Fleas are very
important pests in Ohio, especially
during the months of July through
October, but can persist the year
round when indoors. Although
bites are rarely felt, it is the resulting irritation caused by the flea
salivary secretions that varies
among individuals. Some may witness a severe reaction (general rash
or inflammation) resulting in secondary infections caused by
scratching the irritated skin area.
Others may show no reaction or
irritation.
Adult fleas are about 1/16-1/8
inch long, dark reddish-brown,
wingless, hard-bodied (difficult to
rush between fingers), have 3 pairs
of legs.
·
There is often a desperate need
for flea control after a family has
returned from a long vacation. The
house has been empty with no cat
or dog around for fleas to feed on.
The cat flea is the most common
flea in Ohio that feeds on a wide
range of hosts.
Medication-Relief from itching can be obtained by applying
carbolated vaseline, menthol, camphor, calamine lotion or ice. Highly
sensitive persons should consult
their physician for advise.
. Repellents-Apply on the outer
clothing and to exposed slcin. Do
not use UNDER clothing. N, NDiethyl-metatoluamide (DEET) is
very effective, but should not be
used carelessly as severe allergies
can develop. Do not apply repellents over cuts, wounds, uritated
skin, around eyes or mouth or to

where resting and steepiJ1g OCC11f5
the hands of young children.
Control Measures-Rca control most frequently. Aea activity I' hot :
is best achieved with a simultane- spots" can be detected by placing
ous, coordinated effort involving white socks over shoes and walkstrict sanitation, pet treatment and ing through the residence into suspremises treatment (both indoors &amp; pected areas. Research has demonstnlted that these areas win contain
outdoors).
Inspection- Before treatment the highest 3IJI.Ount of eggs, larvae
discuss the pet's habits with the and pupae ev~n after vacuuming.
family members to determine

"See me for all
xour family
,
w.surance needs.

"

,.,

"'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio's $27.1 billion, two-year budget apparently will be whipped into
shape and·brought to floor votes in
the Senate and House this week,
with approval expected.
A spokesman for a joint conference committee that worked on the
document until late Saturday said
Sunday that most of the major
issues, including education and
state agency budgets, have been
resolved.
"We feel that most of the things
are done," said Rep. Thomas W.
Johnson, .R-New Concord, one of
the six conferees. He said the rom-

(O&lt;ntr of lhird
An. &amp; Stott St.
Gelipol~. cih.
446-4290

Like a good neighbor, ·
State Farm is there.

State Farm lnsuranceCompantes • HomeOtl tces 8toom tngton . tlltno•s

Grandson of Gallia Countians

Crank to mix economics,
agriculture in doctorate study
By MINDY KEARNS
OVP News Staff
POINT PLEASANT
"Remain focused on education, and
don'tget sidetnlcked... "
That's the philosophy of David
Crank, a Mason County native who
has achieved a BS Agr degree,
majoring in animal scienee, an
MBA, majoring in agribusiness
IIUIIIllgement, and who is now
going on for a PhD in AgEconanics with a specialty in food
and agribusiness management
Crank, a 1986 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School, is the son of
Jack and Betsy Crank, Rt 35,
owners of a large beef farm. His
JU~m(!parents are Max and Mabel
fawney of Gallipolis, and Ray and
Elizabeth Crank of Orlando, Fla.
Crank graduated from West Vrrginia University in December 1989
with a BS Agr degree. He wiU
IUIIduaiC Sunday, June 16, with a
Masters of Business Administnltion
from Santa aara University in
Santa Clara, California In August,
Crank will begin his doctorate
study at the University of Illinois at
U~-Champaign in the fOO&lt;l and
agribusiness management program.
The program develops new, enhanced educational opportunities for
cum:nt and future decision makers
in the food and agribusiness sector,
and creates advances in knowledge
IIUIIIllgers require to adapt 10
change.
Crank said he didn't start out
immediately after high school
knowing what he wanled to do. He
added he began the pre-med
program, but later decided the lifes- .
tyle of a doctor was not what he
wanted. He said he had decided his
choice would be between agriculwn: and Something in the medical
field, but since be liked economics,
he put his likes together and combined them for the field he is pursuing.
Crank emphasized that a person
doesn't have to be a stnlight A student to get a higher education. He
said in high school, he had a B
avense. and when he was accepted
iiiiD the masters PJ'OIP'll"l· 40 to 50
pc:rcel!l of his educauon was gained
with financial aid. "Mostly due to
incerest. not my grades," he said.
·1:fe advises all students to set
their sights on a degree. "If you
WlllliD be successful, you have 10
Pt a JIOSI·hiJJh school education.
Tbcre are no jObS in West Virginia
without it,. he added.
Qan1c is not the only successful
siblinl in ihe family. Brother Bill
from Ohio State with a
v.,mary science and
Jlll ·wortin8 with Dr. Boster
IIClll wcdt in the large animal pracdc:c. The second brother, Daniel,
wiD begin WVU this fall in the pre:

e

!I
,,

medprogram.

.

11tis faH Crank will go into the
doctorate
with If fellow-

Prosnni
'

ship, which means he does not have
to pay anything. He will have to
uphold certain standards required
by the school, however. Crank win
also be worlcing at Agriculture
Education and Consulting.
Crank was involved heavily in
FFA and 4-H while in high school,
adding he showed a few grand and
reserve champion beef caule at the
Mason County Fair. He was a
member of the 4-H junior leaders,
and attended many camps.
Crank said he wants to return to
the area after receiving his PhD,
possibly to teach at a nearby college or university, such as Rio
Grande. Marshall or Ohio State.

DAVID CRANK

Star Bane Corp.,
buys Kentucky
Bancorporation

. Labor Rates for the
Month of July!
It pays to deal with
the best.

STAR KING

..___ __ COOLING OFF self-proclaimed beach bum
Jordan Peden pours a bucket or water over his bead while visiting
tbe Alum Creek Resenoir near Columbus Sunday. Jordan was
with his ramily at the state park trying to beat the 90 degree heal.
(AI' LaserPboto)

BODY SHOP .
127 6 JACKSON PIKE
RIO GRANDE

245-9661

CINCINNATI- Star Bane
Corporation has announced the
completion of the purchase of Kentucky Bancorporation, Inc., Covington, Kentucky.
The announcement was made
jointly last week by Oliver W.
Waddell, Chairman, President and
Chief Executive Officer of Star
Bane CorpOration, and Barry Briggs, President and Chief Executive
Officer of Xentucky Bancorporation,lnc.

;

Pool Care
Products
On Sale Wed., July 10 thru Tues., July·t6

39.88

RIO GRANDE _.:_ Paul Morri·
son, Rio Grande, Modern Woodmen of America representative, has
completed a five-day educational
program at the fralemal life insurance society's home office in Rock
Island, Illinois.
Selected from Modem Woodmen's nationwide agency force,
Morrison was one of 34 life in surance agents who attcn(!ed the program.
The program reinforced the concepts of sound financial planning
for fa01ilies through Modern
Woodmen life insurance plans,
annuities and IRA's. Morrison also
reviewed fraternal benefits and
activities available througll Modem
Woodmen's fralemal program.

HTH granular chlorine in economical 25-lb.' drum. Fast dissolving for effective chlorination. Save!
lll ' l \O,('Iojhl

12.97

Duration chlorine tablets. Large
10-oz .' tablets in 5.25-lb.' pkg.
Each tablet lasts for days. Buy nowl
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14.97

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360 SECOND AVE.

446-0699

At Your Local Kmart

Pages 25 cents
Uulllmodls Inc. Newspaper

A possible drowning of a Point
Pleasant, W.Va., youth turned out
to be a hoax, according to Trooper
Mike Roach of the Point Pleasant
Detachment of the West Virginia
State Police. The mock drowning
was part of a plan for the youth to
get away from home for a while,
Roach said.
Bradiey Blaine. 17. of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., was reported Saturday night as a possible drowning
victim. A river search of more than
15 hours was conducted by local
officials before the state police
called it off. At 6:45 p.m. Sunday
officials conflmled the boy was not
in the water.
Roach told The Register Mooday morning that the boy had not
yet been found. He said Blaine was

executing a plan to get away from
home for a while and that officials
will not continue the investigation
until he returns to Point Pleasant.
Roach fears if a search continues,
Blaine would be driven further
away.
A release, issued by the Mason
County Sheriffs Department Sunday, said Blaine and a companion
were fishing along the Ohio River
bank Satw'day night. The companion went back to the car to get a
flashlight. Blaine supposively went
wading and when the companion
returned he was gone. Blaine's tenContioued on page 3

ees subsequently offered a number
of amendments " in concept" and
that legislative aides fell behind in
drafting the formal language.
The House is tentatively scheduled to vote Wednesday on the
document, which would replace a
one-month, $2.2 billion budget that
was adopted earlier to meet a July
I fiscal deadline.
Senators said they would schedule floor action Wednesday or
Thursday.
Budget Director Greg Browning
has been sining on the deliberations on behalf of Gov. George
Voinovich, who apparently has
signed off on a compromise budget

package announced last week by
House Speake r Vern Riffe. D Wheelersburg, and Senate Pres ident Stanley Aronoff. R-Ci nci nnati.
Sweeney said the committee pnmarily has been worktng to create
language and plugging in figures to
carry out a compromi se that
reflects give and take by both the
House and Senate.
Although some priorities have
been shuffled and figures changed,
spending under ~te plan would be
about the same as proposed by the
Republican governor in the document he submitted to lawmakers in
mid-March.

Another arraigned in
Meigs drug arrests
Another man has been arrested
and arraigned in connection with
Meigs County's largest drug bust
John Ratliffe was arraigned last
week on a charge of aggravated
trafficking in cocaine.
Ratliffe pled not guilty and was
found indigent. He was referred to
the office of the Meigs County
Public Defender for representation.
63 counts against 41 defendants
were handed down in late June by
the Meigs County Grand Jury, and
19 defendants were arraigned within 24 hours after the indictments
were filed.

All indictments riled were secret
indictments, meaning that the
names of those who have not yet
been arrested are being withheld
pending their arres t.
All defendants thu s far hav e
entered pleas of innocent to all
charges. and trial dates have been
set throught the rest of the summer
and into the fall.
The arrests are the result of a
two-year investigation funded by
the SECO Task Force, a multi jurisdictiomil drug task force which
works througout Southeastern
Ohio.

company's
return as economic boost
Wise said Paolucci had received
state assistance several times in the

past, had never defaulted on loans
and had been a good credit customer of the state.
Controllers are being asked by
the department of development to:
-Release $6.7 million in proceeds from the Ohio Enterprise
Bond Fund to Luigino's to acquire
food processing, packaging and
storage equipment The money represents a loan of private money
obtained through a state program
that helps companies borrow at
lower interest rates.
-Approve a $712,500 state
loan to Luigino's to help equip the
plant
-Approve a $787,500 state
loan to Jackson Community
Improvement Corp. to buy and renovate a 172.()00-square-foot building.
- Release a $200,000 state
grant to Jackson Community
Improvement Corp. to help with
building renovation costs.

Wise said the building in Jackson was part of the Jeno's Pizza
operation Paolucci started when
former Gov. James A. Rhodes was
in offtee.
"Jeno had two operations down
there," Wise said. "He started a
food processing operation in Wellston and Jackson. Then he sold
them to Pillsbury, and Pillsbury
consolidated things in Wellston.
"Wellston is still there under
Pillsbury. Now this Pillsbury facility in Jackson is empty," Wise said.
... ' ,/&lt;to:
t
"You might call this the return
' .
of Jeno," he said.
Sunday's negotiations between Yugoslav orriDUST OF WAR- A Slovanian worker
Paolucci also operated an oriencials and EC representatives, life is normalizing
beside a territorial army tank sweeps away the
tal food plant in Jackson before
in Slovenia. (AP LaserPhoto)
dust and dirt after nghtings that happened at
starting the pizza enterprise.
the border crossing Spielreld Monday. After
"Jeno has an excellent track
record in the field .... He's a good,
sound company,'' Wise said.
"What's really driving this project is the excellent work force of
Jackson County . That's what
vehicle acctdcnt on U.S. 6 in Wood 18 , of Wadsworth, in a two -car
By Tbe Associated Press
brought Jcno there in the first
County.
accident on Ohio 57 in Medina
At least 16 people were killed in
place, that's what brought Pillsbury traffic accidents on Ohio highways
PORTSMOUTH - Thomas County.
there, and that's what's bringing during the holiday weekend, the Redoutey, 27. of Portsmouth, a
IRONTON - Charles D. Floyd ,
Jeno back," he said.
passenger,
in
a
one-car
accident
on
29.
of Willow Wood. and Carl R.
State Highway Patrol said.
Ohio
73
in
Scioto
County.
Dillon,
27, of Oak Hill, in a twoThe patrol counted traffic fataliTOLEDO - Larry J. Morris. vehicle accident on Ohio 141 in
ties from 6 p.m. Wednesday to
21. of Toledo, in a one-car accident Lawrence County .
midnight Sunday.
on
a Toledo city street.
LEBANON - James Campbell,
The dead:
THURSDAY
18, of Morrow, in a two-vehicle
MEDINA - Michelle Boley, accident on a Warren County road.
SUNDAY
before new rules required them to
TOLEDO- Michael R. Lewis,
disclose their postal spending.
42. in a one-car accident on a
During the quarter, Hobson Lucas County road.
spent 22.3 percent of his mail alloPAULDING - Everett J.
Sixteen calls for assistance were Knob Road. Lester Richard s was
cation for the year, according to an Akers, 63, of Oakwood, in a two- answered over the weekend by taken to Holzer Medical Center. At
analysis by the National Taxpay- car accident on a Paulding County Meigs County Emergency Medical 10:58 p.m., Rutland un it went to
er's Union.
road.
Services units.
New Lima Road. Harry YarborGillmor used 17.5 percent of his
STEUBENVU..LE- William J.
At 10:19 a.m., Pomeroy squad ough was transported to Holzer. At
postal al'location during the first Jenkins Jr., 31, of Pittsburgh. in a went to Spring Avenue for Audria II: 10 p.m., Syracuse unit went to
quarter, NTU said.
one-car accident on Ohio 646 in Arnold. She was taken to Pleasant Horse Cave Road. Ellen Green was
The bulle of the $29,976 Gill- Jefferson County.
Valley Hospital. At 10:23 a.m ., treated but not transported.
PORT CLINTON - Robert B. Rutland squad and unit went to
mor's office spent went toward
On Sunday at2:27 a.m., Rutland
town meeting notices, spokesman Hryszko, 23, and Michael C. Yerg- State Route 684 at Pageville for an ~uad went to McCumber Road for
er, 23, a passenger, both of Middle- auto accident. Mike Cotterill was tOretta France, who was taken to
Mark lsakowitz said.
"The rest or it was regular burg Heights, in a one-car accident taken 10 Holzer Medical Center.
Veterans. At II :02 a.m. , Tuppers
mail," lsakowitz said. "We answer on Ohio 163 in Ottawa County.
At 3:05 p.m., Syracuse squad Plains squad went to Arbaugh
TOLEDO - Monica Hubbard, went to Bashan Road. Pauline Rose Addition for Clifford McCartney,
everything that comes through.''
Applegate sends out newsleuers, 24, hometown unavailable, in a was taken to Veterans Memorial who was taken to Veterans.
and since his disuict includes part one-car accident on the Ohio Turn- Hospital. At 4:30 p.m., Middleport
At 5:01 p.m ., Pomer.oy unit
of II counties, every news release pike in Lucas County.
squad went to Naylor's Run Road went to Pomeroy Cliff Apartments
WAUSEON- Donald J. Kratz, for Sharon Burdette, who was for Merle Manley. Manley was
requires 300 copies, said Jim Hart,
65, and Donna J. Finn, 62, a pas- taken to Veterans. At 4:37 p.m., transported to Veterans. At 8: II
who beads Applegate's office.
Hart said congressional offices senger, both of Celina, when their Pomeroy unit went to Haning p.m., Pomeroy s~uad went 10 East
routinely use staff time and postage car and a tniin collided at a Fulton Ridge Road for a tnlctor ftre. The. Main Street Waltd Zahran refused
to reply to posu:ard campaigns that County railroad crossing.
owner was listed as Ray Haning. treatment.
SATURDAY
don't seem to be directed at swayAt 4:58 p.m ., Middleport squad
On Monday at 12 :17 a.m.,
LANCASTER - David A. went to State Route 554 in Pomeroy squad went to Second
ing votes. For instance, last week
Applegate got more than 300 post- Spires, 48, of Lancaster, in a Cheshire for Harland Liule. Liule Street for Doris Haynes. She was
cards urging him to co-sponsor a motorcycle accident on a Lancaster was tnlnsported to Holzer. At 7:36 taken to Veterans. At 5:42 a.m.,
bill he signed onto six months ago.
city street
p.m., Pomeoy station went' to Lin- Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine
FRIDAY
"Some of the huge postcard
coln Hill for a small brush fire at 31 for Mike Lambert He was taken
BOWLING GREEN - Jerry L. the Danny Crow property. At 10:58 to Holzer.
campaigns are hard 10 answer, but
we try to," said Thomas Albert. Matheny, 45, of Rudolph, in a two- p.m., Racine u~it went to Bald

16 killed on highways over weekend

Disparities in mail spending among
Ohio Congressional officeholders

,,

~ ""' '9 '"""~

·~stiite''" official sees
By JOHN CHALF,.NT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - A
state official says the return of a
frozen-food company would give
an economic lift to Jackson County.
Entrepreneur Jeno Paolucci is
heading back to the rural county to
start producing Italian menu items.
It's the same region where he once
turned out pizza and oriental
entrees.
The State Controlling Board
was expected to consider today an
$8.4 million financial package to
help Luigino' s Inc., Paulucc·i 's
company based in Duluth, Minn.,
begin an Ohio operation. The company is expected to employ 377
people over the next three years.
Howard Wise, the Ohio Department of Development's deputy
director of industrial development,
says the creation of jobs'' ... is
going to be a real strong economic
shot in the arm for Jackson." The
county has a history of high unemployment.
'

Attends seminar

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mittee, which had planned 10 meet
again Sunday, called off the session
after its staff fell behind in paperwork.
He said the committee planned
to have one more pri9ate session,
either today or Tuesday, then call a
public meeting to announce details
of the record-high budget.
House Finance Chairman
Patrick Sweeney, D-Cieveland,
who heads the Senate-House panel,
had scheduled a Sunday session
when it appeared the negotiations
were progressing slowly on Saturday .
However, Johnson said confer-

Youth plans drowning
hoax to escape home

20°/o Rebate on

Gallia County Junior Fairgrounds. Exhibitors
entered in memory or David Atba. Presenting
trophy to Alba's daughters • Heather and Dana,
and nephew Matthew, Is Kevin Martin, Crown
city; .

A

Vote on budget expected this 'feek

Ho.. 446-4511

INSURANCE

Tonight, partly
cloudy. Low near 65.
Tuesday, partly cloudy.
High near 85.

1 Section, 10

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 8, 1991

I

&lt;AROU SNOWDEJj

~------. . .
STATE FARM

Pick 3:837
Pick 4: 8115
Cards : A-H, 10-C
5-D; 7-S
Super Lotto: 1, 10
18, 19, 28, 30
Kicker:805449

Page4

SUMMER
SPECIAL

SHOWMANSHIP CLASS • Showmanship
Class competition was held ror Gallia County
exhibitor in the recent Southeastern Obio Angus
Association Open Steer and Heirer Sbow on the

Ohio Lottery

July 7, 1991

• Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

t'

By KATHERINE RIZZO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep.
Thomas Sawyer used a pittance of
postage in the first three months of
this year: just $885.
His mailings were the smallest
part of more than $250,000 the
Ohio delegation spent on ftrSt-quarter postage.
The most prolific postal customer was Rep. Davrd Hobson,
who took office Jan. 3 and spent
S39 ,888 by the end of March.
Hobson reported spending more
than the combined postage totals of
Reps. Bob McEwen, Edward
Fetghan, Ralph Regula, Dennis
Eckart, Clarence Miller, Marcy
Kaptur, Louis Stokes, Chalmers
Wylie, John Kasich, Tony Hall,
James Trafteant, John Boehner and
Sawyer.
The next-lowest total was
reported by freshman Boehner at
$1,115; followed by Traficant
($1,460); Hall ($1 ,832); and Kasich
($1,937).
. After Hobson, next-highest
were: Reps. Paul Gillmor
($29,976); Mary Rose Oakar
($28,426); Willis Gradison
($28,131 ); and Douglas Applegate

($28,047).
A Sawyer aide said the delegation's lowest postal total could be
chalked up to a quarter without a
newsletter mailed to every home in
the 14th Congressional Dtstrict.
Sawyer plans to put a newslener
out but Boehner said he won't.
"Sending out unsolicited mail
and sending out newsletters and
questionnaires I think is a waste of
the taxpayers· money," Boehner
said. "This whole franking business is very self-serving and it's
abused."
Franking is the policy that
allows members of Con$ress to
send out mail with their stgnature
instead of a stamp. The House sets
postage budgets, and reimburses
the Post Office.
Spokeswoman Terri Farrell said
Hobson's high postal total reflected
the notices he sent oot to announce
local office hours.
Farrell said Hobson will be
sending out mor~ postcards to let
constituents know when they can
see him in August, and is considering sending out a survey to every.
household. Farrell also pointed out
that members in office last year
were able to send out surveys

Meigs EMS responds to 16 calls

·~

"

1

,.

'

'

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER ofT he Assoelated Press,lnland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .

LETIERSOF OPINION are welco me . They should he less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must he signed wtlh
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published . Letters should be ln good taste, addressing Issues, not persona lilies .

Voinovich overlooked
process; plans defeated
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, - Gov. George Voinovich 's ill-fated plan to transfer
Ohio's liquet stores to private agents was not helped by his decision to
put it in the state budget bilL
His plan would save $41 million in one of the tightest budgets in years.
It apparently made sense to the new governor to use that money in what
hl¥1 been a tough effort to bring his no-new-taxes budget into balance.
He also proposed ending Ohio's General Assistance program and earmarking about $150 million in those savings for other things, as part of
his package. That idea appears dead, too, but there will be a curtailed weifane program that he could claim as a partial victory.
In each instance, Voinovich, a former House member, apparently forgot or overlooked the Legislature's love of the budget process and its
right to determine what gets funded.
Some lawmakers complained that he sought to make arbitrary policy
chan$es by linking them to a precariously balanced budget and in doing
so, rned to shove his plans down their throats.
"That doesn't have any business in the budget," said House Speaker
Vern Rifle, D,Wbeelersburg, upon learning of the plan to close some 260
stores and end the jobs of 1,400 clerks and department employees.
Most of the_$41 million represents the salaries of jobs that would be
losL The state would still control liquor prices, which would stay about
the same as now. There would be 500 instead of 400 stores. Almost 140
in less-populated areas already are run by private operators.
Riffe, although saying the idea might merit srudy, had it removed from
the budget before it passed the House and later persuaded Senate Republicans on the budget conference committee to withdraw their support.
The Semite approved a separate bill making the change, but it was
assigned to a House committee that heard testimony, then placed it on a
back burner. Most of the opposition testimony carne from unions representing store clerks whose jobs are at stake.
A budget agreement announced last week by Riffe and Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, omitted the plan. But the committee
worked over the weekend on final deJails that reportedly included a continuing suuggle to bring the document into balance.
Voinovich, meanwhile, is reported to be taking the setback in stride
and vowing to continue to press for the change.
"It's a good idea, and he's 1101 giving up on it," said Curt Steiner,
Voinovich 's deputy chief of staff.

Letters to the editor
Remember the troops
Dear Editor:
We would like people to
remember that there ane stil ttoops
in Saudia Arabia they ane homesick
and their families are waiting at
home for a celebration of their
own.
We woul!)like everyone to still

remember our families in their
prayers and hope our loved ones
overseas comes home soon.
Thank you,
Sandy Hysell
for the family of
PFC Robert D. Winebrenner

Appreciates sponsors
Dear Reader:

.
· The Ohio Valley Draft Horse &amp;
Mule Association wo11ld like to
thank the sponsors of om last field
day. May 18 &amp; 19.
A special thanks to those who
furnished trophies and those who
made donations of money and merchandise. And of course we give
thanks to Tim Baum of Baum
Lumber for his support and a place
• to hol'd our field day. We are a
~- small group of people who enjoy
·working with horses and showing
them off. We had horses from three
counties, 19 horses in all. There
were six events each day including

2 and 3 horse plowing, walking and
riding. Log pull, wagon astacle,
feed run and this year com planting. The women also had two
events. We had a driving contest
for the kids ages 4 to 18.
It was a lot of fun. Hope more
people will join us for our next
event
Thanks to the Sentinel for taking pictures for us . It takes the
whole communw to make these
events a success.
Mary K. Rose, Sec{fres.
Ohio Vall~ Draft Horse &amp; Mule
.
Assoc.

Berry's World

..

''

'

Page-2-The Dally .Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio:
Monday, July a, 1991

Who sold the Iraqis all those arms anyway
WASHINGlDN -The shine is
off the victory in the Persian Gulf
V{p.r as patriotism is eclipsed by the
next inevitable phase - the questions about Washington's role in
arming Saddam Hussein in the
years leading up to the war.
Congressional investigators are
conducting an enormous probe into
allegations that the pro-Iraqi tilt of
the Reagan and Bush administrations allowed Iraq to buy technology that it later used in weapons
turned against U.S. troops.
In one case we examined, it
appears that the Bush administration not only winked at the export
of sensitive technology to Iraq, but
may have stopped legitimate law
enforcement efforts to interdict the
trade.
The case centers around an engineering consultant and petroleum
expert, Bob Bickel, who worked
for about 20 years as an undercover
informant for the U.S. Customs
Service. In the normal course of
Bickel's engineering work, he
would keep Customs informed
about what he thought were suspicious orders ftlled for foreign buyers.

was acting as the broker. The
buyer turned out to be an Iraqi, and
the technology he was shopping for
began to look less like it was made
for the oil business and more like it
was made for the war business.
Bickel was given a shopping list
that the Iraqi wanted filled, including a phased-ray antenna system
that could potentially be used in a
missile tracking and guidance system. Bickel called the contact in
Customf that he had always
worked with and alerted him to
what was going on. The San Antonio Customs office opened an
investigation on the theory that the
materials the Iraqi wanted were
subject to strict export laws.
But the investigation didn't get
very far. The Customs team sent
inquiries to Washington and Bickel
alerted the Houston broker who
had hired him that an investigation
was afoot into the Iraqi client The
response from the broker was
unexpected. He allegedly told
Bickel and the Customs investigators that he was connected to the
U.S. intelligence community. Then
he clammed up.

John Keats .

'

'·

It wasn't long before Bickel got
the word - Customs officials in
Washington had told San Antonio
to cancel the investigation. Bickel' s
contact in Customs called Washington and was told that the State
and Commerce Departments were
behind the decision . Some very
important people didn't want anyone nosing around the technology
deal.

Months later, the case was
raised again in a meeting in May
I990 of Customs officials in Houston. Bickel and his Customs contact gave them a report and urged
them to reopen the investigation.
they reviewed the file and decided
that the case would remain closed.
Today, congressional investigators believe the Iraqi buyer was
working for Ishan Barbouti, an
Iraqi arms dealer. Barbo uti is suspected by U.S. intelli~ence agencies to have been a maJOr player in
the construction of a chemical
weapons plant in Libya. And he
bankrolled at least four businesses
in the United States that w~ producing materials that may have
been sent secretly to Iraq for use in
weapons.

T~~Y'VE FINALLY
C~UGHT ON To lf,
UP THER~.

~rea

and Dale Van Atta
Barbouti died mysteriously in
London last July - some say at the
hands of Israeli agents who were
angry about his success at arming
Iraq. Customs is now investigatin!l ,
the business ventures of hts son,
Haidar Barbouti, who has a base of
operations in Houston where he
owns two shopping centers and a
$1.4 million mansion. Customs is
trying to pinpoint the source of the
younger Barbouti' s wealth to determine if it was gleaned from his
father's arms deals.
COSTLY DELAYS - There
are more p!an 1,400 imown or suspected hazardous contamination
sites on 1,500 U.S. military bases.
At least 96 of them are on the Environmental Protection Agency' s
Superfund list of the most lethal
dumping sites in America. But it
isn't the fault of the military that
they haven't been cleaned up. Budget Director Richard Darman exercises absolute control over which
cleanup jobs will be funded, and
which ones won't. Darman thinks
he can save money by delaying
even serious cleanup operations, so
he .orders his minions to sit on the
regulations ordering those
cleanups. His environmental
stalemating is typical of the shortsighted Bush administration.

Elva M. Grueser, 81, of
· Pomeroy, OH, died Monday, July 8,
1991, in Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy.
Arrangements will be announced
by the Fogleson Funeral Home.

Weather
South Central
Tonight, partly cloudy. Low
near 65. Tuesday, partly cloudy.
High near 85.
Wednesday tbrougb Friday
A chance of showers and thunderstorms through the period.
Highs from the 80s Wednesday to
the low to mid 90s Thur~ay and
Friday . Lows from the 60s
Wednesday to the upper 60s to mid
70s Thursday and Friday.

'""'..._
3&gt; _ _ _

gets a breather after
storms-rip.across states -By The Associated Press

Much of the East, Midwest and
South got a respite early today
from heavy thunderstorms that
blew a tent down on 400 people in
Philadelphia an4 killed at least four
other people elsewhere.
And new storms were brewing.
Violent storms on Sunday
smashed mobile homes in
Delaware, ripped roofs off homes
in Michigan~ and caused flooding
in southeast Ohio. Tens of thousands of homes and businesses in
several states lost electrical power.
A man and a woman died in
Maryland Sunday when they were

In the service----

Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class
Troy D. Guthrie, son of Darlene
Cassady of Tuppers Plains, recently returned to Norfolk, Va., following deployment to the Mediterranean Sea while serving aboard
the guided missile destroyer USS
Dahlgren.
Guthrie participated in a variety
of training exercises and visited
numerous foretgn ports.
A 1984 graduate of Eastern
local High School, Guthrie joined
the Navy in January 1987.

His wife, Cynthia L. Jones, has
recently been appointed a sergeant
in the U.S. Air Force. She completed training in management. leadership, human relations and responsibilities before being awarded this
status.
Cynthia Jones is a special purpose vehicle and equipmept
mechanic at Misawa Air Base,
Japan. She is the daughter of Barbara and Bernard Vos of Allen,
Texas.

SgL Michael L. Jones has graduated from a noncommissioned
officer leadership school having
studied techniques of leadershifl,
management and supervision.
The sergeant is a special purpose vehicle, and equipment
mechanic at Misawa Air Base,
Japan.
Jones is the son of Franklin and
Diane Jones of Reedsville and a
.1984 graduate of Eastern Local
·High School.

Sgt. Jeffrey L. Counts has completed the motor transport operator
course at Fort Dix, Trenton, NJ.
Training included operation of
light and heavy military vehicles in
both on and off-road and blackout
conditions.,Other topics were accident prevention and reporting,
operator maintenance, and motor
marches.
He is the 5on of Victor and Virginia Counts of Syracuse. His wife,
Melind, is the daughter of Alvin
and Mildred Barnett of. Southport,
N.C.

struck by lighming . A woinan in
Iowa and a woman in Michigan
were crushed to death by falling
trees.
After a brief respite early today,
a new series of violent thunderstorms was expected Ill erupt from
the eastern Great Lakes to the
Northeast. Severe thunderstorms
also were likely along the midAtlal'\tic Coast by afternoon.
Widely scattered thunderstorms
were likely from S'outhem California to the Rockies and isolated
thunderstorms were expected in the
northern Plains and the mid-Mis -

arise when two individuals have looi'er be recognized.
lived together and are trying to
The repeal of common law mardetermine if they ane married. The riage by this legislation will not
fact is, common law marriage affect those common law marriage
never required any specific length relationships that have been previof time that a couple must live ously recognfzcd and entered into
together before the doctrine estab- prior to the effective of the legislalisbes such a relationship.
tion. Rather, the repeal will only
Common law mamage applies affect those common law relationto those instances when two parties ships that are purportedly estabhold themselves out in the commu- lished after the law's effect. The
nity as being husband and wife, law will become effective after 60
have had a present Intention in their days of the Governor's signature.
mind to be married, and have
In other action, the House of
cohabitated. Ohio has been one of Representatives approved a bill that
the few states that has recognized had previously been passed by the
the common law marriage doctrine. Senate, known as S.D. 51. This legNow, with the approval of H.B. islation will enable school adminis32, common law marriage will no trators to carry over suspensions

14 cases were processed in
Meigs County Court last week by
Judge Patrick H. O'Brien .
Fined were: Peggy J. Reitmire,
$15, seat belt violation; Timothy
Showalter, Reedsville, speeding,
$20 and costs; Todd Hoschar,
Pomeroy, stream littering, $50 and
costs, three days in jail suspended
upon condition of 40 hours of community service, one year probation,
discarded trash along roadway ,
$50, costs, three days in jail, suspended upon condition of 40 hours
of community service; Angela Tennant, New Haven, W.Va. , passing
bad checks, $25 and costs, restitution; Daniel L. Thomas, Reedsville,
seat belt violation, costs only ;
Leroy Landers, MinersviUe, criminal trespassing, $50 and costs ,
restraining order issued; Mary J.
Michael, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.,

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, July 5 - Christina
Bowyer, Tami Downard, Mrs.

Top court shifts on First Amendment
WASHINGlDN (NEA) - The
Supreme Court decision upholding
Indiana's ban on nude dancing is
revealing. The recent action indi cates that a majority is now willing
to interpret the First Amendment
much differently than in the high
court has in the pasL
The First Amendment specifi .
cally guarantees "Congress shall
make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech."
The Supreme Court had ruled
that the Bill of Rights, generally,
pertains to state and local ~overn­
ment as weU as to the federal government, and its protections extend
to a wide range of governmental
actions and regulations.
As for "speech," almost from
the very beginning, the courts have
effectively substituted "freedom of
expression ." Only a very few
junsts and legal scholars have ever
really taken the absolutist view that
what the Founding Fathers intended to protect was a limited range of
verbalization.
·
No one within the legal establishment really argues that non-verbal communication - be a sign, a
peace chant or a slogan on aT-shin
- is not protected by the Fir'St
Amendment
Historically, however, one of

the Supreme Court's major problems has been whether communication of ideas by non-linguistic
behavior constitutes speech within
the meaning of the First Amendment
In previous decisions, the Court
has devised a continuum. At one
end is pure political speech. The
Court has said this deserves the
highest, most absolute protection.
At the other end is pure conduct.
The Court has conststently ruled
that conduct is subject to regulation
so long as the government can
show some minimal need to regulate.
The problem has been gauging
where a specific activity falls on
the scale from pure speech to pure
conduct. Depending upon where
you place it, the act might be subject to absolute protection, the presumption of protection - unless
the government can show an overriding need to regulate - or the
presumption of very little protection if the government can show
even a minimal need to regulate.
When presented with these
choices in the past, the court has
tended to rule that expressive conduct deserves either absolute protection or that it can be regulated
only if government can show over-

By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Monday, July 8, the !89th day of 1991. There are 176 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 8, 1896, William Jennings Bryan, the presidential nomineeappll(ent of the Democratic national convention in Chicago, captivated
listeners with his famous speech denouncing supporters of the gold standard, saying, "You shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold."
On this date:
.
In 1663, Kin~t Charles II of England granted a charter to Rhode Island.

I

By Robert]. Wagman
riding need.
In the nude-dancing case. which
grew out of an attempt to force
dancers at a South Bend, Ind .. club
to wear a-strings and pasties, the
state argued - without presenting
much proof - that nude dancing
must be regulated because it promotes prostitution, assault and
other criminal activity. The Court
of Appeals, by a 7-4 vote, rejecteil
this argument, saying that nude
dancing is "inherently expressive"
and thus protected, absent a much
greater showing of necessity than
was made by the state.
What the Supreme Court ha s
done, effectively, is to place the
activity of nude dancing at the very
bottom of the pure-speech/pureaction continuum.
Chief Justice William Rehnquist. in writing the plurality decision, said, "Nude dancing of the
kind sought to be performed here is
expressive conduct within the
perimeters of the First Amendment,
though we view it as only
marginally so."
Because it is at the bottom of
the continuum, the state need only
make a marginal showing of need
in order to regulate the activity.
The four justices in the minority
- Byron White, Thurgood Marshall, Harry Blackmun and John
Paul Stevens -ruled that nude
dancing is expressive action worthy
of protection, absent an overriding
need to regulate it. They said' the
state had failed to make the case
for that need.
Justices Sandra Day O'Connor
and Anthony Kennedy joined in
Rehnquist's opinion . Justices
Antonin Scalia and David Souter,
in separate opinions, also agreed.

Scalia, perhaps the most conservative justice on the Court, did not
even see the issue as a First
Amendment case. He believes nude·
dancing is not worthy of any First
Amendment protection whatsoever:
He simply ruled on the basis of
whether a community can outlaw•
public nudity.
.
This nude -dancing dectsion·
should be read in conjunction with:
the flag-burning decision the
Supreme Court rendered in 1990.The conservatives now voting to•
allow the regulation of nude dane-•
ing previously voted to allow flagburning because they said flag -:
burning is an obvious political ·
statement. Nude dancing is not an:
obvious political statement.
Chief Justice Warren Burger,himself conservative, once ruled
that "even communication which
has no other purpose than the·
enriching of the communicator has
some First Amendment protection."

The nude-dancing decision suggests that this court will begin to
seriously limit the kinds of actions
that are deemed worthy of absolute,
or even significant, First Amendment protection.
•
In 1977, the court said,
"whether or not the speech is
'political' does not constitute a critical constitutional inquiry. " The
nude-dancing decision, coupled
with the flag-burning decision of
1990, says exactly the opposite.
It looks like a new era in First
Amendment interpretation has
begun.
(ROBERT WAGMAN is the
author of the recently published
" The First Amendment Book"
from Pharos Books.)

,..
RUN, DON'T WALK - Bulls chase youths
&gt;past a crosswall&lt; in central Pamplona, Spa!n
· Sunday during tbe first day or tbe San Fermm

Fiesta. The twO•minute, IO second run was fast
and clean and mostly minor scrapes and bruises
were reported. (AP LaserPboto)

Man to be tried in slayings after
woman rejected his affection
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - After
the killing was done, Richard Wade
Farley regretted his desperate bid
to gain the atiention of a former coworker who rejected his love,
police say.
·
"I did bad things," Farley told
officers near the end of a 5 1/2Iiour shooting spree and standoff
that claimed seven lives. Three

The Daily Sentinel
tUSI'S 14Hii0t
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.,.

other people were wounded,
including Laura Black, the object
of his obsession.
Farley, a 42-year-old former
Navy seaman who worked as a
software engineer, is charged with
seven counts of murder and three
of attempted murder in the 1988
attack at the offices of a Sunnyvale
defense contractor.
Opening arguments were scheduled today. Prosecutors are seeking
the death penalty.
Farley told authorities on tape
that he staged the attack at ESL
Inc. to get Black's attention. He
was armed with a knife, two shotguns, an assault rifle, four hand guns and about I, 100 rounds of
ammunition, police said.
_
He also said he wanted to darnage equipment at the company that
fired him two years earlier for
harassing Black. who piqued his
interest when she smiled at him in
1984.
After four years of refusing Farley's dates, ignoring love letters
and moving several times because
he followed her home, Black, then
26, won a court onler to keep Farley away. The rampage occurred a
few weeks later.
"I just wanted Laura to imow I
was serious," Farley told a police
negotiato.r who talked him into surrendering.
As for people who got in the
way, Farley told pplice, "They
were a threat to me. ... People just
popped out of comers. I just shot
them.''
After police offered him a Diet
Pepsi and turkey-and-ham sandwich, Farley s"'rrendered, saying,
"It wasn't fun anymore."
Those taped statements are
e~pected to be used in the trial,
which began in April with jury
selection, The trial is e:x.pected tO
last four more months.

Tuesday, July 9
Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

souri and Mississippi valleys .
Thunderstorms also were possible
along the Gulf Coast
Highs were expected to be in the
90s across much of the country,
soaring past 100 in the Washington, D.C. , area and in parts of
Southern California and Arizona.
Highs in the 70s and 80s were forecast across the northernmost part of
the continental United States, with
some highs in the 60s in Northern
California and around the Great
Lakes.
The high for the Lower 48 states
on Sunday was 108 degrees at
Manhattan, Kan., and Salina, Kan.

speed, $20 and costs; Lisa J. Blake,
Ravenswood, W.Va., passing bad
checks, $25 and costs, restitution;
Rick A. Asbury, Hurricane, W.Va.,
disorderly conduct, costs; Donald
R. Lowman, Ironton, speed, $21
and costs. ··
Jack Yates, Long Bottom, nonsupport of dependants, 60 days in
jail, suspended upon payment of
current obligations and payments
per month toward arrearage, costs,
two years probation; Jean Delph,
Rutland, failure to yield, one half
of roadway, $30 and costs, driving
under suspension, $100 anll costs,
three days in jail suspended upon
proof of valid operator's license
within 60 days; Shawna A. Doucet,
Racine, failure to control, $25 and
costs; Tammie Stumbo, Pataskala,
speeding, $31 and COSts.

---Hospital news----

Sen. Jan M. Long .·
and expulsions from one school
year to the next. The measure Was
brought about because sometimes
offenses are committed at the close
of a school year and under current
law schools are not allowed to
carry over such suspensions and
expulsions to the next school year.
If you have any questions on
any of these issues or if you desire
to communicate with me and
express your opinions on other
matters that effect our State, pi~
feel free to contact me,
State Senator Jan Michael Long,
c/o The Ohio Senate - Statehouse,
Columbus, OH 43215 or call me at
(614)466-8156.
.

OH 10 Weather

e

More than I 50 people arc listed
as potential witnesses.

Thomas Figgins and daughter,
Audra Halffelt, Mrs. Robert Halley
and son, Cleveland Howard,
Catherine Hysell, Brittany Johnson,
Patricia Myers, Barbara Oliver,
Elphan Preston, Mrs. Marvin
Pullins and son, Traci Salem, Jane
Smith, Marjorie Stewart, Levina
Swisher, Paul Swisher, Daryl
Ulrich and Michelle Zirkle.
Births, July 5 - Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Bennett, a son, Vinton. Mr.
and Mrs. David Haggy, a daughter,
Middleport. Mr. and Mrs . Mitchell
Harman, a son, Patriot. Mr. and
Mrs. James Hatfield, a son, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. William Jeffers, a son, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Longstreth,
a daughter, Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs.
John Russell , a daughter.
Reedsville. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony
Shamblin, a daughter, Racine. Mr.
and Mrs. Gregory Shelton, a
daughter, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs.
Farron Smith, a daughter Oak HiU.
Discharges, July 6 - Ethel Buttrick. Mrs. Mitchell Harman and
son, Christi Mullins, Mrs. John
Russell and daughter and Gary
Thievener.
Discharges, July 7 - Michael
Cotterill, Mrs. David Haggy and
daughter, Isaac Hardin, Mrs . James
Hatfield alfd son, Gwendolyn
Kirby, Mrs. Wayne Little and
daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Longstreth
and daughter, Ryan O'Conner ,
Kalherine Park, Darlene Perkins
and Mrs. Anthony Shamblin and
daughter.

Call Sentinel

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-----Meigs announcements----Merchants to meet
The Pomeroy Merchants Association will meet Wednesday at
noon in the conference room at
Bank One.
Special meeting
The Southern Local School
Board will hold a special meeting
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the high
school.
T-shirt painting class
The Middleport Arts Coun cil
will offer a children's t-shin painting class on July 17 at 10 a.m . for
children ages 9-13. The cost of the
class is $7.50 and paint supplies
wiU be furnished. Marilyn Meier is
the instructor . Each child is to
bring his or her own t-shirt. Call
992-5983 or 992-2675 for information.
Mop doll class
A mop doll or mini-mop doll
class will be offered by the Middleport Arts Council on Wednesday at
10 a.m. or 6:30p.m. Michele Garretson is the instructor. Call 7422157 or 992-2675 for information.
Family reunion
The Theiss family reunion will
be held Sunday at Star Mill Park in
Racine. A potluck dinner and regis-

Stocks
Am Ele Power .... .. ............ 28 1/2
Ashland Oil ..................... .3 I
AT&amp;T.. ............................. J8 5/8
Bob Evans .......... ......... .... .19 1/8
Charming Shop............... ... 20 3/4
City Holding ............ ......... I 3 1/2
Federal MoguL ............. ... 16 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ ......... 33 3/4
Key Centurion .. ................ 15
Lands' End .. ..... ....... ......... 20 l/8
Limited Inc . ......................28 1/4
Multimedia Inc . ............ .... 27 3/4
Rax Restaurant ................ .3/8
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .33
Shoney's Inc ..................... 15 1/2
Star Bank ............... ...........21
Wendy lnt'L .. ......... ..........9 l/4
Wonhington Ind ...............26

tration wiil be held from noon to
1:30 p.m. A program will follow .
Bring a lawn chair.
Dance scheduled
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053 will sponsor a dance Friday
fro 8-11:30 p.m. at the post home
with music by the Ramblin Country Band. Refreshments will be
served an4 the public is invited.
VFW to meet
The Tuppers Plains VFW Post
No. 9053 wiU meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at the post home. Note the
new time.
Support group to meet
The Diabetes Support Group
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in the
French 500 Room at Holzer Medical Center. John Cunningham,
exercise physiologist, will be the
speaker.
Volleycamp slated
The 1991 Meigs Marauder Volleyball Camp will be held Monday
through Friday , July 15-19, at
Meigs High School, 9 a.m. to 12
noon each day .
T~ camp is open to all area
girls entering grades 7-12. The cost
is $30 with a maximum of $45 per
ramily. To register for the camp,
residents may contact Marauder
Head Coach Riclc. Ash, 992-5960.
Shirt size, grade entering, and
phone number is needed upon registration. The deadline to register is
Thursday, July II.

Stock 'eports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewi of Gallipolis.

992-2156

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MONDAY:
Cabbage Rolls, Scalloped Pota toes
TUESDAY:
Chicken &amp; Dumplings, Mashed
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WEDNESDAY:
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THURSDAY:
Swedish Meatballs, Cole Slaw
FRIDAY:
Hot Roast Beef. Mashed Potatoes
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7 : 00 . ~ · 30 [)AIL~
K£VIN ~OSTNER
sms_u,. "'-"H Nm RoBIN 1-JooD

Snow

Via Associated Press GraphicsNet

Youth ...
Continued from page I
nis shoes and wallet were left on
the bank.
A search of the river bank was
conducted by the Point Pleasant
and Valley Volunteer Fire Departments, but were unsuccessful. A
PPVFD rescue boat arrived and
began searching around I I p.m. At
2:30a.m. the search was called due
to fog. Sunday morning at 8 a.m.
the search resumed with members
of the PPVFD, VVFD, Gallipolis
Fire Deparonent, Valley EMS and
Point Pleasant EMS. The search
continued until approximately 6:45
p.m., a PPVFD spokesman reponed.

PA.

IManstield I 81 I•

Judge O'Brien processes 14 cases

Sen. Long provides update on new laws
During recent weeks of the Genera1 Assembly, a flurry of activity
in both the House and Senate has
brought the enactment of several
new laws.
In this commentary. I would
like to update the residents of the
1"/th District on a couple of those
which I think may be dramatic' ·
changes in what had previously
been the law in the State of Ohio.
One of these laws abolishes
what is known in Ohio as "Common Law Marriage". "How long do
we have to live together before we
are common law married?" or "Is a
common law marriage seven
years?".
These are e often questions that

The Dally Sentlnei-Page---3

deaths N~tion
Elva M. Grueser

By Jack Anderson

MINI-EDITORIAL - George
Bush claims he gave eq~ weight
to women when ht; was tzying to
come up with 'II new Supreme
Court justice nominee, but he said
that his nominee, Clarence
Thomas, simply turned out to be
the "best man for the job." In the
press conference announcing the
nomination of Thomas, Bush corrected himself by saying that he
was really looking for the "best
person" for the job. But then he
again lapsed into his "best man"
description. No wonder Bush
couldn't fmd a woman for the job.
She would not only have to be a
recognized legal scholar of the
appropriate political persuasion,
but she would have had to be the
best man for the job too.

Today in history
"Much have I travel'd in the realms of gold,
And many goodly states and kingdoms seen; .. . "

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, July 8, 1991

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JULY 10, 1991
At 1:00 P.M. AT

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Pomeroy, Ohio

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Becker, a three-time winner who
knows all about the loss of innocence that accompanies a Wim bledon title, embraced his Davis Cup
teammate at the net after the final
point.
"I know how it feels. I know
how important this day can be in a
life," Becker said.
Stich, 22, had won only one
tournament before Sunday. He had
never played in a Grand Slam final.
By the end of the afternoon. that
all had changed. His $384,000 winner's paycheck took him to nearly
$1.2 miUion in career earnings and
boosted him three spots to No. 4 in
the world rankings.
Stich said he hopes he is prepared for his new role.
"What is a star? That 's what

you have to ask. It's tough to say
for myself," said Stich, who
slammed 15 aces past Becker and
repeatedly pounded backhand winners on service relllrns.
" I hope I'm not going to be a
different person to my friends and
to my family. I just hope I can be
like I am now . For sure there are
going to be a couple of things that
change, but I don't know what they

are.'1

Becker cautioned that being a
champion comes at a high cost.
"He's not going to realize it
now, but maybe in a couple of
years' time he' II realize the fact
how much his life has changed and
wiU change," he said.
"But it's up to rum how he can
cope with it. Now he 's a star, but

and rus eighth home run of the year inning with a strained hip. Team
and an error by Biggio in the sixth doctor Frank Jobe examined Marinning allowed the third run to tinez when he relllrned to the clubhouse and advised him not to pitch
score.
With BagweU keying a two-run in Tuesday's AU-Star game.
fifth for the Astros with a leadoff
Mike Morgan allowed an
double, Houston took a 6-1 lead.
unearned run in the eighth but got
Despite the pitching woes and the final seven outs for his first
key injuries to starters Norm Charl- save since 198!!, when he was with
ton and Jose Rijo, the Reds enter Baltimore.
the All-Star break only five games
Mets 8, PhiUies 2
behind first-place Los Angeles in
David Cone allowed five hits
theNL West.
over eight and two-third innings.
"We're still in striking range,
Cone (8-5) struck out eight to
but we need to get Norm and Jose regain the league lead with 113.
back,' ' Doran said.
Kevin McReynolds had three
On the other hand, the young RBis for the Mets. McReynolds
and sometimes maligned Astros had an RBI single off Tommy
enter the break on a positive note. Greene (5-3) in J four-run third and
having won five of six games.
added a two-run double in the
"Our young guys are starting to fourth off Amalio Carreno, making
show they belong," Astros manag- rus major-league debut
er Art Howe said . "They are
Ricky Jordan homered for the
improving in every game."
Phil lies.
When asked about the possibiliGiants 3, Padres 0
ty of beinjl Rookie of the Year.
John Burkell pitched a five-hitBagwell satd, "it is too early in the ter for his first major league
year to think about that. It wiU be shutout and Will Clark homered.
something that happens when the
Burkett (5 -5) struck out nine
season is over.' '
and walked four in his second comIn other NL games, it was Pitts- plete game of the season.
burgh 6, Montreal I; Los Angeles
Clark homered in the sixth off
5, Atlanta 3; New Yorlc 8, Philadel- Dennis Rasmussen (3-4 ). It was his
phia 2; San Francisco 3, San Diego 15th of the season.
San Diego's Tony Gwynn went
3, scoring one run and having 2 0, and St. Louis 8, Chicago 7 in 12
1-for-3, dropping his major leagueRBI's. Others helping the cause at innings.
Pirates ~. Expos 1
leading average 10 .358.
the plate for New Haven were Cory
Earlier this year, Doug Drabek
Cardinals 8, Cubs 7
Fowler, Seth Howard, Chad Ord,
had trouble stopping his own losing
(12 innings)
and Johnny Fields.
Tom Pagnozzi's RBI single over
Sundar the tournament began at streak. Now Drabek is stopping
I p.m. wtth Game #5. This was and Pittsburgh's losing streaks, which a ·drawn-in oufield in the 12th
might end up as the best game of means trouble for the rest of the inning scored Pedro Guerrero as St.
Louis carne from behind.
the coumament. Rutland defeated National League East.
The 1990 Cy Young Award
The Cardinals overcame a 6-1
Peoples Bank 1-0, scoring the lone
run in the bottom of the 6th inning winner, who lost six of his first deficit to force extra innings on
with good execution of a bunt, a seven decisions, improved to 8-8 Guerrero's RBI single in the ninth.
Todd Zeile, who had a careerstolen base and a single by Chris by allowing five hits over seven
innings
on
Sunday
as
the
Pirates
high
four hits, started the winning
Roush. Scouy George continued
with his torrid hitting while picking defeated the visiting Montreal ratly by doubling off Laddie Renup the win working m relief of Sam Expos 6- I. He struck out a season- froe (0-1), Chicago's fourth pitchMcKinney. Travis Price of Peoples high 10 as Pittsburgh avoided its er. Guerrero's single scored Zeilc.
Bank pitched terrific while picking ftrSI four-game losing streak of the Felix Jose singled Guerrero to third
and Renfroe intentionally walked
up a complete game but taking the season.
Drabek, 22-6 last season, was 1- Geronimo Pena to load the bases
heartbreaking loss. He struck out
6 on May I I. But he has lllrned it before Pagnozzi's rut.
12 batters and only gave up 4 hits .
WiUie Fraser (1-0) pitched oneIn Game #6 found two old rivals, around, winning six of his last
the Mason VFW and New Haven seven decisions while lowering his third of an inning for the victory.
Reds provided those watching a ERAto2.94.
"Considering where I was, I'm
very good and exciting game. The
definitely
glad to be at the .500
Mason tean\ survived a 4-1 victory.
mark,"
said
Drabek, who also
They survived a late inning rally by
keyed
a
three-run
fifth with an RBI
the New Haven Reds, but Keith
Cundiff struck out the final batter to single. "When I was I -6, I was tryThe American Legion's Eighth
end the game. Each team had 5 ing to go out and win two or three
hits; New Haven had 5 players with games in one night. The last few District will begin its double-elimione hit each: Cory Fowler, Lori weeks, I've been able to get back nation, post-season tournament on
Monday, July 15 at three locations
Bumgarner, Tommy Fields, Johnny into a groove, get some rhythm."
Ron Hassey gave the Expos a 1- in Athens County.
Fields and David Tennant Mason
had 3 players with the 5 hits: James 0 lead with a home run in the fifth,
July 15 action
See, 2 hits; Keith Cundiff, 2 hits; but Drabek got the run back with
The ftrSI game of the ftrst round
and J. R. Hysell, I hit Mason his bat in the bouom half.
will pit McArthur and Glouster at
Oil Can Boyd (4-8) walked 4:30-J1.m. at the Glouster village
pushed across 3 runs in the ~rd inning which proved to be the needed Mike LaValliere, who moved to park field. The second game will
runs, but, New Haven continued to third on Jose Lind's double. have Athens and Lancaster on tap
threaten in each of the last 3 in- Drabek, who hit.214 with six RBis at 5:30 p.m. at Athens High
last season, scored LaVatliere with School's Rannow Field in The
nings.
In Game #7 ended early when a single up the middle.
Plains, and also at 5:30 p.m., the
Dodgers S, Braves 3
the Hills Indians scored early and
third ~arne will feature Wellston
Breu Butler had three hits to and Ptckerington at Dalton Field,
often in defeating the Apple Grove
Market team, 11-1. S. Stephens ex tend his hitting streak to 21 located on West State Street in
went 2-2 with the lone RBI in the games.
Athens. Gallipolis and Meigs will
Ramon Martinez (12-3) moved play in the fourth game of the day,.
loss for the Apple Grove team.
Alex Reed also had a hit, as did C. into a tie for the NL lead in victo- which will start at 7:30 p.m. at the
Hudnall. The Indians had several ries before leaving in the si,xth Glouster village park field.
hitting stars but, Robbie Woodward
July 16 g81Jles
continue his hot hitting 2-3 with 3
At Glouster, second-round
RBI's. Jimmy Gilmore went 2-2
action will put the winners of the
scoring twice and having 3 RBI's.
McArthur-Glouster and the GalIn Game #8 saw the most scoring
lipolis-Meigs games in Tuesday's
of the tournament with the
The 1991 Meigs Marauder Foot- fmt game, .which will be start at 4
Pomeroy Mustangs outlasting the
ball
Camp will be held from Mon- p.m. The losers of those games will
Pleasant Valley Hospital team, by
toss the ftrSI pitch at 7:30p.m.
9-8. This game had every thing, day, July 22 to Friday, July 26 at
At The Plains, victors of the
scoring early, scoring late, raUies Meigs High School.
Athens-Lancaster
and the WellThe camp is open to boys enterby both teams and good pitching ,
ston-Pickerington
games will
when it was needed. PVH had 7 ing grades 4-8 . The cost of the square off at 5:30p.m., while at
hits with BJ. Grady grabbing two camp is $30 for 15 hours of Dalton Field, the losers of those
of those hits. Pomeroy had a lot of instruction and a maximum of $50 games will face each other.
help, but the real hitting hero of per family.
The losers of the Tuesday games
For late registration and inforSunday was Josh Harris, 4-4, 2
wiU exit the tournament. The home
mation
you
can
contact
Marauder
doubles and a bases loaded inside
teams will be determined b)' coin
the park home run, scoring 3 times head roach Mike Staggs at Meigs flip after the second round.
High
School
at992-2158.
,
with 4 RBI's. Like I said this game
had a linle bit of everything and it
is a shame that the fan 's have to
tate center sta~e from the kids who
are participaung · hard to play
America's favorite pasttime.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

. I

American Legion
tourney dates posted

Marauder football
camp set for July 22

JOHN A. ·WADE, M.D., Inc.

This ended a long weekend of
"great" baseball in Hartford. Play
continues Monday with Game #9,
starting at 5 p.m., Mason County
Bar plays the Peoples Bank and in
the nightcap at 7 p;m., the New
Haven Reds play the Hartford
Braves. See you at the ballfield to
watch the kids play ball!

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

"WE HAVE HEARING A/OS"

.

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I

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1

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1

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1

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I

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

nately we lost. ••
"I was trying to keep it off the plate, hoping that maybe he'd chase
it," Ryan said of the 0-2 pitch that Winfield hit back through the middle.
"But it came in over the plate."
Gary Gaetti, the only starter who didn't strike out against Ryan, led off
the ninth with a double to left-(;enter and Ryan was removed after Donnie
Hill lined out to first.
"I think he was pretty speccacular tonight," Ranj!ers manager Bobby
Valentine said after his club moved into frrst place m the AL West, five
percentage points ahead of Minnesota.
The 44-year-old Ryan, who went 10 a hospital emergency room
Wednesday when he thought pain from a pulled chest muscle might be a
heart auack, had a perfect game until he walked Luis Polonia leading off
the seventh. Polonia was erased when Wally Joyner hit into a double play.
In other games, Kansas City beat Oakland 7-5, Toronto beat Seanle 52, Milwaukee beat Cleveland 10-6, Detroit beat Boston 7-6, Baltimore
beat New York 5-3 and Chicago beat Minnesota 4-3.
Chuck Finley (12-4) gave up six runs and four hits for the Angels.
Royals 7, Athletics 5 - Danny Tartabull hit his fourth home run in
two days.
TartabuU hit his 20th of the season in the seventh, chasing Dave Stewart (6-5), who allowed seven runs and six hitS in six and one-third innings.

Mark Gubicza (4-5) allowed two runs and six hits in hve innings.
Blue Jays 5, Mariners 2- Juan Guzman (3-2) allowed three ruts in
eight innings and John Olerud hit his second home run in two games.
Olerud hit a two-run homer in the second Inning off Erik Hanson (4-4 ).
Brewers 10, Indians 6 - Dame Bichettc drove in five runs with a
two-run, game-tying single off Jeff Shaw (0-2) in the seventh and a ninthinning homer.
Chuck Crim (5-4) pitched two scoreless innings and Dan Plesac got
four outs for his seventh save.
Tigers 7, Red Sox 6 - Bill Gu llickson (11-4) won for the sixth ume
in seven starts and Skeeter Barnes hit a three· run homer
Wade Boggs had four hits for Boston.
Tom Bolton (7·6) allowed five runs and eight hits, but four runs were
unearned. John Cerutti finished for hi s first save.
Orioles 5, Yankees 3- Jeff Ballard (5 -9) allowed four hi ts and two
runs in seven innings, and Mike Devereaux hit a two-run homer.
Gregg Olson finished the seven-hitter for his 17th save in 21 chances.
Wade Taylor (4-3) gave up four nms and II hits in five innings.
White Sox 4, Twins 3 - Dan Pa~qua hit a tic-breaking home run in
the eighth off Mark Guthrie.(5-5).
Ken Patterson (3·0) pitched one and two-third 1nnmgs and Bobhy
Thigpen finished for his I 8th save in 23 chances.

In trying to break up robbery of waitresses,

AL umpire Palermo, Mann shot by thieves

KUHN JOINS RED MEN- Phil Kahn, center, pltcbing notable
ror Oak Hill High Scbool, will play for tbe University of Rio
Grande baseball team. He is nanked by Redmen Coach Dave
Oglesby, left, and Oaks mentor Sc:ott Bartholomew.

Oak Hill's Kuhn to compete
with Redmen baseball team

WUNDERBAR -That's what Germany's Michael Stich is
thinking as be sink!. to his knees in celebration or Sunday's 6-4, 7-6
(7-4), 6-4 victory over reUow countryman Boris Betker in tbe Wimbledon men's singles championship, completing a Deutschland
sweep or the singles titles.

Phil Kuhn, an Oak Hill High
School graduate and the Southern
Valley 1\thletic Conference Most
Valuable Player in baseball for
1990, will attend the University of
Rio Grande in the fall and play for
the Redmen of Coach Dave Oglesby.
"Phil is one of the best pitching
prospects in the area," Oglesby
commented. "He had an outstanding rugh school career at Oak HiU,
and I see e~cellent potential as a
college player."
Kuhn, who was the Oaks' best
senior player, is a left-handed
pitcher and was coached by Scou
Batholomew. His brother, Rob,
was also a pitcher for the Redmen.

Hartford LL Tournament
weekend results posted
The first ever Hartford Linle
League Tournament got off with a
bang on Saturday morning when
the HiUs Indians of Gallipolis.
tangled with the Hartford Braves in
· a pitchers' duel that saw the Indians
: survive a 2-0 victory. Seth Davis of
: the Indians survived a first inning, a
third inning, and a fifth inning
threat by the BJaves IQ slide in the
second round game. Davis pitched
. a complete game, striking out 12
· · Braves and walking four bauers.
- Rob Woodward went 2-3 with an
RBI. The Braves outhit the Indians
4 to 2 but could not find the hit
when they needed it The Braves
left 8 men on base. The hitters for
the Braves saw four young' men
. with a hit each: David Tatterson,
. Steven Greene, Joey Wilson and
· Lane Young.
In Game #2 on Saturday the
Pleasant Valley Hospital team
played another Pt. Pleasant team,
the Mason County Bar Association.
The Mason County Bar put up a
-good fight throughout the game.
: PVH scored two runs in each of the
·following innings, lsi, 3rd, and the
. ·5th, to score the 6-3 win. Johnny
· Stewart of the Mason County Bar
: team was 1-3 and Adam CampbeU
: was 1-1. The PVH team had several
· players who contributed to their
: victory. B.J. Grady led the way
: with three hits and three runs
·scored, Robbie Wilson 2-3 and 3
:runs scored, Vickie Grady 2-3 and
:Mark Oliver 2-3 and 4 RBI's. Robbie Wilson picked up the victory,
. pitching three innings and allowing
· three runs. Mark Oliver received
the save.
· In Game #3 of the tournament
·pitted the Home Care Medical team
against the Rutland Reds. Home
Care struck first in the second inning for their only one of the $ame.
Four walks by the Rutland pncher
Chris Roush gave the Home Care
team the lead. Rutland $01 on track
in the third inning sinking for 2
runs, again in the 4th inning for 4
runs and again for 3 runs in the 5th
inning. Rutland sufficed with the
late rallies to win 9-1. Scotty
George was 3-3, a double and a
triple, scoring 3 runs with 2 RBI's.
Others contributing to the hit
parade for Rutland was Adam Barren, Joe· D' Augustino and Chris
Roush. Speaking of Chris Roush,
other than the four walks in the 2nd
inning, he never gave the oppOnents a hit Chris' pitching performance certainly spurred his team
· to victory as he struck out 13 hat. ters.
: In Game 114 on Saturday evening
:the Federal Order of Pobee of Pt.
·Pleasant played the New Haven
·Reds. New Haven took advanta~e
of several wallks and fielding mtscues to push to an early victory.
The game ended after the 5th in-ning on the mercy rule when Seth
· Howard scored on Chad .Ord's
:single to make the scoo: 11-1. Chad
Ord and Lori Bumgarner combined
for a I hitter. The lone hit came off
the hat of Joey Patterson in the 3rd
inning. The top hitter for New
Haven was Tommy Fields going 2-

'

I

·
··
By The Associated Press
·
Nolan Ryan showed again why he's the most exciting pitcher in baseball.
Ryan took a bid for rus eigllth career no-hitter into the eighth inning
and wound up allowmg two htts in eight and one-third innings as the
Texas Rangers beat the California Angels 7-0 on Sunday night. Ryan (5.4) struck out 14 and walked one, the 2llth double-digit strikeout game of
htscareer.
Dave Winfield, 1-~or-22 with 13 strikeouts lifetime against Ryan,
.ended the nght-hander s btd for his second no-hiuer of the season wtth a
. clean single to center to open the eighth inning.
"I wasn't gomg to get punched out a$ain," Winfield said. " There was
no way I :ovasn'\ going to swing. This IS one of the beuer games you'U
ever see pttched. One of the best games I've ever participated in. Unfortu'

not everything that shines is gold.
Some people can handle it, some
people can't.lt's a fine line."
Despite the loss, Becker
remained No. I in the world - an
honor he claimed two days earlier
when SICfan Edberg lost to Stich in
the semifinals. Becker and Edberg
have been leap-frogging each other
for the top men's ranking au year.
Stich's victory completed a German sweep at Wimbledon. For the
second time in three years, Germans won the men's and women's
singles titles.
Steffi Graf won the women's
title on Saturday by defeating
Gabriela Sabatini 6-4, 3-6, 8-6.
Graf and Becker had accomplished
the ftrSt German double in 1989.

stands in Cincinnati.
"I really like his style of hitting," Reds second baseman Bill
Doran said. ' 'Believe me, not many
people hit them that far in our ballpark."
Singles by Craig Biggio, Bagwell, Luis Gonzales and Ken
Caminiti accounted for two firstinning runs off Browning (10-5),
who was pitching on three days'
rest
Two more runs in the third
chased Browning, giving right-hander Mark Portugal (8-4) all the runs
the Astros would need.
"The key with Tom Browning
is to get ahead early because he
gets better as the game goes on,"
B~weU said.
'He (Browning) has been strug.
gling for a while. Today he got
everything up in the zone," Reds
manager Lou Piniella said.
Leftfielder Glenn Braggs drove
in single runs for the Reds in ftfth
and seventh innings on a double

,-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Astros notch 7-3 wi~ over Reds Sunday
HOUSTON (AP) - All Houston Astros ftrSt baseman Jeff Bagwell wanted to do was reach the
major leagues and stay.
That shouldn't be a problem.
He paced a 13-hit allack Sunday
with two doubles and three runs
scored to lead the Houston Astros
to a 7-3 victory over Tom Browning and the Cincinnati Reds.
BagweU, obtained in a late-season trade in 1990 with the Boston
Red Sox for right-handed reliever
Larry Andersen, raised his season
average to .299 with his performance against the Reds.
"I'm happy. I didn't expect to
do this well in my ftrSt year," Bagwell said. "I'm surprised because
you never know what you will do
in the big leagues. All I really
wanted to do was to get here and
stay here.''
BB$weU has also hit eight horne
runs, mcluding tape-measure shots
in the upper deck and left field in
Pittsburgh and in the center-field

.. 1

Ryan's two-hitter gives Texas 7-0 win over California

Monday, July 8, 1991

Stich beats Becker in Wimbledon finals
By ROB GLOSTER
AP Sports Writer
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
- He's the Wimbledon champion,
a millionaire and one of the top
four players in the world.
However, Michael Stich, the
newest Grand Slam winner, may
have to pay a price for his new
fame and fortune.
"His life isn't going to be the
same anymore, " warned Boris
Becker, the man Stich defeated 6-4,
7-6 (7 -4), 6 -4 on Sunday in the
men's final. "He is the Wimbledon
champion. He is a star now."
Stich was largely unknown outside his native Germany two weeks
ago. But winning Wimbledon
ensures an end to anonymity.

,. r ,

Monday, July 8, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

.

Kuhn said he chose Rio Grande
because of its closeness to home
and his brother's association with
the baseball team, which was 28-16
in the 1991 season and top-seeded
in NAJA District 22 when the postseason began.
In his senior year, Kuhn was
also named All-SVAC and AU-District As a sophomore, he won honorable mention from the league.
During his high school career, he
also played foolbatl.
The son of Bob and Bonnie
Kuhn, Oak Hill, Kuhn plans to
major in business education at Rio
Grande. Oglesby, who has roached
four seasons at Rio Grande, possesses a 79-70 record.

· Scoreboarc1
Di..o.•7.

In the majors...

RBJ - Iohnaort, New York, 63; W.

Cla!lt, Sao Fnn&lt;iaco, l9: Klul&lt;, Pbiladcl·
pltia, 55: M&lt;Oriff, s.. Dicao. l3: Gucr-

NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division

w

Team

ret.

PKIIbul'lh --- 41 Jl .611
... 46 34 .m
New York
. .. .. 44 37 .S43
St l...ou.U
... ..... 38 44 .463
Chicaao
.. ... lS 47 .427
Moottul
.. .. 33 49 .402
Pbihdelphia

PLA VING LEAPFROG - Cincinnati Reds shortstop Barry
Larkin (11) leaps over Houston's Mark Davidson after fordng
Davidson at second base in the third inning or Sunday's game in
Houston, which the Astros won 7-3. (AP)

GB
B
5
11.5
14.5
16.5

West Division

WILL YOU HO§T ME?

.-

"Share your world with my world!
The walls must come cfown!"

-·

American Intercultural
Student Exchange
l

L

non ~olil101 ut"'lll tdu&lt;~ionoll"'ndo11011

Tum

W

1M Angel.. . .....
Chadnnatl ___
......
Atlanu
Son OieJo
.......
San FnnciJco ......
"""'....
.........

49
44
39
40
35
34

L
31
36
40
43
46
47

PeL
.613
.551
.494

.482
.432
.420

GB

5
9.5
I 0.5
14.S
tl.5

Saturday's S&lt;Ores
San Fnncisco 4, San Diq:o I
Now Yom!, Pbihdelphia I
Montrul 2, Plttaburah l
Houllon J, Cincinnati f
Chiaoao tl, St Lollill
U..AnaeJa 7,Atlanu6

Sunday's results

Kathie Schiefer

Yoo proVIIlf&gt; a oe-J

Ohio

l:xxJ love

Now Yom 8. PbihdelphiA 2
Pltbburah ,, Montnall
Houlton ?, Clnelnnalll

Student rn.
" : ~ r )r)(p

12t6) 650-96t9

1 r__, :~'c

or 1-800-SIBLING
•Serving families &amp;
schools for 1 0 years

·o ~' h JI"

loiOfo unp/aced
Jtudtml! of 3 I
countries snxiousJy
I Wilt I ho$f f1m1ly

IOf next AugUJI.

..

PITCHING (8 dcdaion1) - R. Mulillez, Lol Anpl•, 1~3 . .800, 2.l4; Cu·

San Francilco 3, San Dicao 0
Lol AnJel&lt;a5, Atlanu 3
St l.ooll 8, 0\iCIJO 7, 12 inninll

',;Jt"'Cl ~(j

Today's games

No aama: lcllcctulcd

Anna
from
Swaden

Tuesday's game
All·SW Game," T~to. 8 psn.

•Support System Unmatched! •Local Area Representative
•Caring, Active. Experienced!
•CALL NOW! CALL NOWI CALL NOWI

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Team

r ....to

•Exciting! Rewarding! Lifetime!
•NOW URGENT! DEADLINES HERE! DON'T DISAPPOINT!

.·

s .....
o..ro;,

East Dlvtston
W L PeL
...... 49 34 .l90

GB

·········· 42 38 .lll

l .l

········ ..
.......
NcwY.
......
Milw•ube
........
Baltimre

--- :u

Clevela~~d

West
Tum
Tcxu
Minnaou
California
Chiaao

Sometfiing (jooa's %ways Coofjng Ylt

I MASON FAMILY

ChlJand
~...

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

Kar\111 City

RESTAURANTwv

41
31
36
33

40
40
44
47
53

.506
.487
.4l0
.413
.319

7
8.5
I t.l
14.l
11

Division
W
44
47
44
43

L
33
36
37
37

PeL
.571
.566
.S4l
.538

... 44 38 .ll7
··········· 40 42 .488

. ..... 36 44 .450

GB
.5
2

2.:5
ll
6.l
9.5

Saturday's scores
8011011 7, Dctroi' 4
New Yolk 13, Baltimore S
Cle~eland 1, Milwaukee t
Minnetcu S, Oiicaao4
OU1and 9, Kan&amp;u City 1

Located on Rt. 33 beside Mason Exxon and Mason Motel, Mason,

Sunday .lhru Thursday, 6:30 am·10 pm; Friday &amp; SaiUrday, 6:30 am-11 pm

HOMESTYLE LUNCH SPECIALS

Tuu '4, California 3

Tororu.o4, Seaule 3, 10 inninp

Monday·Friday, 11 a.m. to 3 p .m.

Sunday's results
Danrit 7, Ba~tm6
Daltimcrc S, New Yolk l
CbiCIJO 4, Mimmo&amp;a 3
Mllwou .... It, Cle,.lond 6
tc..uu Cily 7, o.t,larod 5

MONDAY - Creamed Chicken over Biscuits
TUESDAY- Beans &amp; Cornbread

Toronto !5, SAW. 2

..

Tcu11, California 0

WEDNESDAY- Liver &amp; Onions,

Today's1ames
No&amp;'""'ldl......,.

Choice of Potato, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
THURSDAY- Spaghetti, Soup &amp; Salad Bar

Tuelday's iame

All-Star OunCill toronw, I p.m.

Major league leaders

FRIDAY- Bacon Burger, French Fries &amp; Soup

National Leaaue

BATfD'IfO - T. OWJM, San Dieao,
.351: Pend!....,, Allanu, .324: McOee,
San F1oncUco, .3714; looo. SL l..caW, .322;
Blgio, Houlton, .315; 0 . Smith, Sl.
. Lollil, .31l; Som..t, Loo An...... .313.
· RUNS - Butler, L01 Aaaolea, !59;
Sand~. tbic~ao. 5!5; l~n1on , New
YOlk, 52; 0. Smidt, SL Lollil,l2: T. fer.
...... loa Di-.. 51: llcStueldo, MonUMl, 41; v~ Sl]kt, PIUiburah, 41;
S11111cl, Loo ......... 47: T. Owym, San

TIJESDAY a: THURSDAY, CHILDREN UNDER 12 EAT FREE
FROM CHILDREN'S MENU. IEXCl.UDES
&amp; DESSER'I1
LIMIT 1 CHILD P£R

(304) 675-1244

""" St Low.. 53: DoWIOII, OUcoao.ll;
Atlant11, S I; Bondi, PIUaburJh ,
51;Munoy,Lo1Ana..... ll.
toTS- T. OwyM, San Diep, 119;
Samuel, 1..01 Anadc.. 91; Buller, Loa An·
acl&lt;o, 94: Jooc, SL Louio, 93: Col""'"',
Monu.ol, 93; SondbeoJ. OU..go, 93; G.
Bcll, OUco 10,110.
DOUBLES - Joac, St. Louia, 2S;
Bonllll, Plcilb•rah, Zl; Mclt.eynolda,
New Yodl. 22; MorrU, Clndnnltl, lOi
T. Gwynn, San Dieso. 20; L Goruale2,
!lou-. 19; Sondq, Ooicogo, 19.
TRIPIJlS - T .. Gwym, Son Dicao, 8;
Lankford, Sl. Louis, 6; fcl!klr, San Fnn·
ciaco, 6; L. Gonzalez, HOUltOn, !5; KN.k,
Philadelphia,!; Coleman, New Yor:k. S;
M. Thompoon, S1. Loui&lt;, 5.
HOME RIINS - lolvuon. New YOlk,
19; Mc:Oriff, S1n Dicao, 16; 0 . Bell,
Chicaao, 16; Gant.. AUanll, IS; W. Clark,
San FrancUco, 1!5; O'Neill, Cladnnat~
15; Dawaon, OUcago. IS .
STOLEN BASES - Ni11.on, Atlanta,
42; Ori110m, Monueal, 38; [Wlhiclda,
Moaucal, 37; Coleman, New York. 33;
Lankford, St. Louia, 21; BondJ, Plttl·
burah, 11; C•lderon, Monueal, 20; 0 .
Smith, St. l..cu.il, 20.
Ju.~tiee,

pauer, 1L LoW, 7-7., .778, J.61 , Olivine,
AllanUI, 12...&amp; • .7SO, 1.98; Rljo, Ch1cln·
naU. '-l, .1st, l."; Portuaal. HOUAOn,
84, .667, 3.81; Brownlna. Cincinnati,
lt-5, .647, 3.,; Viol•, New York, 10-S,
.667, 2.10; Dcnllia Martinez, MonU'Cal,
IO.S, .667. 2.10.
STRIKEOUfS -Cone, New York,
I j 3; Ci1•vine, Atlanll., 108; Gooden, New
York. 101 ; G. Maddu11.., Chic•ao. 100·,
RU~ Clnclnn1t1, 16; Bene~, San Diego,
14; Hatniach, Howton, 81; Belcher. Lo.
.......... 81 , Del..oon. St l.ooio. 81.
SAVES - Dibble, ClnciiWitl, 13; Lee
Smi!h, St. Looil, 23; Franco, New. Yodr.,
19; Dave Smilh, ChieiJO, 16; B. Lan·
dr11m, PIUaburah, 15; Leffert•. S•n
Dieso. 14; Mitch William~, Philadelphia,
13.

American League
BATTING - C. R.ipken, Baltitnore,
.348; Joyner, California, .326; Sicrn,
Tuu, .321; Bogp, 801tm, .J:M; Bainca,
Oakland, .323;-Tarubull, Kan111 City, «'
.320; Palmciro. Tuu, .319; Greenwell, '
80110n, .319; Molitor, Milw1ukee, .319.
RUNS - P.lmc:Uo, Teua, 60; Molitor,
Milw1u.koe, 60; Canacco, OakJ•nd, S8; C
Ripken. Baltimore, S8; White, Toronto,
S6; Sicm, Te~11 . 55: Franco, Teua, SS.
RBI - Fielder, Detroit, 6S; Canseco,
OakJand, 63; Tan.abull, K-11111 City, S9;
Carter, Toronto, S9; Thomu, Chicaao.
SS; Sierra, Teu1, Sl; Baines, Oakland,
li.
.HITS - C. Ripken, ~altimore, Ill ;
S~Cn&amp;, Tc11a, lOS'; PUmaro, Tcu1, 102,
MoUtor, Milwaukee, 102; Puckett, Min ·
neaou, I 01; Jo~ncr . Caliform•. 99:
Carler, TaronLO, 9 .
OOUBLES- R. Alotnar, Toronto, 27;
Palmcito, Tcxa~, 2S; CUICr, Toroato, 25;
Boga, 801lDrl, 25; White, Toror1Lo, 23,
Rood, Bc.tm, 21 ; Canacco, Oillmd, 21 :
C. Riok&lt;n. Bollimoro. l l .
TRlPLES - Molitor. Milwaukee, 7;
Polonia, Califomia, 6; White, Toronto, 6;
McRae, Kanu• Chy, S; R. A1omar,
Toronto, S; Raincl. Chicaao. S; 6 are ucd
with 4.
HOME RUNS - C•naec:o, Oakl•nd,
21; Facld•, Dctroit,ll; Tartabull, Kanw:

City, 20; Cat\cr, Toronto, 19; C. Davia,
MimclcU. 19; C. Ripk.CII, Balt.inun, 18;
D. Hender~on, Oakland, II; Winfield,
Ctlifomia, I I .
STOLEN BASES - R. Henderaon,
Oakland , 30; R. Alomar, Toronto, 27;
Polatia, California, V; Raina, Oticaao,
~ While, Toronto. I~ Cuyle.r, Deuoi.L,
11; Fnnco. Teua, 17.
PITCHINO (8 dcclaiona) - Erid:acr1,
Minneaoll., 12·3, .100, 1.13; lAnplon,
CalifoaUa, 12-3, .aoo, 1.14; Swalan~
T......_ 9·3 . .7so. 3.03; FWcy. clhl.,.
nia 12-4, .1SO, 4.10: Sanderson. New
Y..i:, 9-l, .750, 3.93' Gulliduon. 0ctM;1,
..... .733, 4.00; Md)owcll, Oticoao. 10.
4, .714, 3.20; K.ey, Toronto, to-( .714,

2.23.

STRIUOtrrS - Clemen•. Boaton,
113i R. Johnaon, Scatde, 119; Ryr.n,

Tcua, 116; Finley, California, 1~·

By ARNIE STAPLETON
AP Sports Writer
DALLAS (AP) - Friends of
major league umpire Steve Palermo
say it was in character for him to
forsake his own safety and help
two waitresses who were being
ro~bed in a restaurant parking lot
But Palermo's heroics nearly
cost him his life.
Palermo and former Miami Dolphins defensive lineman Terence
Mann both were shot early Sunday
while trying to break up the robbery.
Palermo was in serious condition late Sunday after surgery after
being shot once in the back, Parkland
Memorial
Hospital
spokeswoman Esther Bauer swd.
Mann suffered a gunshot wound
to the neck and was listed in good
condition late Sunday at Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, hospital
spokeswoman Karen Hartis said.
Durwood Merrill, an American
League umpire who works with
Palermo, said the bullet passed
through Palermo and that Mann
was shot three times. Police, however, wouldn't conftrm that Mann
had been shot more than once.
Merrill said it's in an umpire's
nature to help someone in disness .
"Knowing him, he would just
react and not think about getting
hun." Merrill said. "Our disposition is so fearless that you don ' t
think about what might happen.
"It's in our makeup. We've
been pounded on and beat on to
where we think we' re immune."

was not taking phone calls to hi s
hospital room and requested that no
information about his condition be
released.
Garcia said Palermo and Mann
didn't know each other.
Palermo was at Campisi 's Egyptian Restaurant, a popular hangout
for sports figures, for dinner after
working third base in Saturday
night's game between the California Angels and the Texas Rangers.
Shortly before I a.m., a bartender noticed four men robbing
the women at gunpoint in the
restaurant's parking lot. Palermo.
Mann and an employee rushed to
help.
The robbers escaped with the
purse of a woman who had been
knocked down and punched in the
face, Dallas police spokeswoman
Vicki Hawkins said
Three of the suspects drove off
in a car, and the good samaritans
chased the fourth across a highway
overpass, Hawkins said.
While they tried to make a citizen's arrest- without any weapon
of their own - the suspects
returned in the car and one fired
two shots, striking Palermo and
Mann, Hawkins said.
The identity of the third man
who tried to help wasn't released.
He was notllwt, nor were the rob-

bery victims or suspects.
The quanct, three ad ul ts and a
juvenile, was caught after running a
red light in Highland Park, a suburb.
Kevm Bivens, 2 I , was charged
with two counts of attempted murder and one count of robbery.
Gerry Fuller, 26. a nd Vernon

Myers . 20. were charged with rohbery. The juvenile remained in the
custod y of juvenile authorities.
Hawkins said.
Palermo, 41 , was born in
Wor ces ter , Mass., and liv es tn
Overland Park. Kan. He JOined the
Amencan League umpinng staff in
1977.

Eastern grid camp set for July 15
The first Eastern Eagles Football Camp will be held for grades
5-9 from Monday, July 15 to Friday, July 19 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
at Eastern High School.
The camp will be open to both
residents and non-residents of the
Eastern Local School District. To
secure an application or for more
information please co ntact the
Eastern Athletic Booster Club, in
care of head varsity football coach
Randy Churilla, Eastern High
School, 38900 S.R. 7, Reedsville
OH45772.
The entry fee for the camp is
$20 which should be made payable
to the EHS Athletic Booster C1ub.
Refer to a future edition of The
Daily Sentinel of Sunday-Times
Sentinel for an application or send
the following information and entry
to Churilla: name , grade, age,
home, address, home phone, emer·

gency phone and shirt size along
with a parental/accident release
notice. The application deadline is
July I.
Highlights of the camp will be
non-contact drilling, form and flexibility running techniques, and
movement skills, proper stance and
start-up, instrucuon in centering,
passing, kicking, catching and line
techniques. Campers will be chal lenged to raise your expectations in
play, conduct and sportsmanship, '
and instruction in the mental and
physical aspects of the game will
be given by guest speakers and
films.
Students should bring football
shoes. tennis shoes, gym shorts,
shirtS and socks.
Each camper will receive aTshin, and certificate of attendance
as well as a strong basic knowledge
of the game.

THE 1991

Rich Garcia, Palermo's crew
cruef, spoke with him after the twohour surgery and said there was
concern that Palermo might be paralyzed.
"He has some feeling in both
feet on and off. He's in a lot of pain
from the catheter they put in,''
Garcia said. "He had spasms in his
back from lying still so long. He
had pain in his back and in his buttocks and that's a positive thing at
this point"
But Bauer said Palermo didn't
show any signs of paralysis.
''He has no paralysis at this
point," she said late Sunday.
April Nickleberry, a child care
specialist at Buckner Baptist Children's Home, confmned Mann had
played for the Dolphins (1987-88)
and Southern Methodist from
1983-86.
Mann is a child care specialist at
the home for troubled foster children and abused children. Mann

LEGAL NOnCE
The
Public
Utilities
Commission of Ohio has
scheduled local fublic
hearings in Phase II o Case
Nos. 90-660-fl, FOR and
90-659-EL-FOR to review
the reasonableness and
adequacy of the planning
p1ocess for compliance
with lhe 1990 amendmenls
to lhe Clean Air Act by Ohio
Power
Company,
Columbus Southern Power
Company. and its parent
company,
American
Eleclric Power. Local
public hearings will be held
at the following dates.
limes,
and
places:
Thursday, July tt, t991,
sessions at 2:30 p.m. and
6:30 p.m.. at City Hall
Council Chambers. 3rd
Floor, 8 Easl Washington
Street,
Athens,
Ohio
45701; Wednesday, July
17, 1991, al 9:30a.m.. at
the offices ol the
Commission, 180 East
Broad StJeet, Columbus,
Ohio
43266-0573 ;
Thursday. July 1; .. t99t ,
at 2:30 p.m., at l&gt;ity Hall
Council Chambers, 2t8
Cleveland Avenue S.W.,
Canton, Ohio 44702, All
inlerested members of the
public will be given an
opportunity to be heard at
the local hearings. Further
information
may
be
obtained by contacting the
Commission.

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is
Coming August 9, 1991.
Advertising Deadline Is
August 2, 1991.
CALL DAVE TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

992-2155

:[
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1 · r

• •

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Page

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~The

Dally Sentinel

By Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens
A new law to co mbat mail
scams is expected to provide much
needed protection to Social Securi·ty beneficiaries besieged by various
·sol icitation s under the cover of
·official-looking envelopes. Called
the Deceptive Mailings Prevention
Ac~ the new law gives the United
States Postal Serv ice specific
power 10 SlOP delivery of mail that
gives the impression it is connected
with the Government
The Jaw says that any envelope
.(or the face of any postcard) that
includes a name, seal, insignia.
term , or symbol that could reasonab le cause it to be mistaken for a
. mailmg from the Government will
not be delivered unless there is also
:a prominent "disclaimer." The dis:claimer must appear on the enve·lope (or face of the postcard), and
)nust clearly state that the mailing
1s not made or endorsed by the
·Government
Many companies use Social
Security or Medicare as a come-on
to get people to read their adver-

By FRANCINE PARNES
AP Newsfeatures
t•sements. Even worse, some of
At summ er sun's first rays,
these ads appear to deliberately try thoughts of skin turn to bronze.
to mislead people into thinking This despite warnings of cancer
they have to respond or they might and threats of premature aging.
lose Social Security or Medicare
Be assured. You can have a tan
benefits.
- and healthy skin, too.
Here are the steps you should
with more sunscreen and
take if you receive mail you think lessStart
sun.
Mix with a self-tanning
violates this new law. First, you lotion. Bottled
tans have come a
can go to your local post office, long way since the
when they
ex plain why you're concerned cast a color akin days
to
a
pumpkin
.
about the mailing , and ask the peoThey
now
offer
a
healthy-looking,
ple there to forward the mailing to
sun-kissed hue.
the postal inspector's office.
And you don't have to spend a
lot
of money. D' Anne Kleinsmith,
Second, if you prefer, you can
sent in a complaint directly to the a dermatologist in West Bloomchief postal in spector at thi s field, Mich., says most self-tarming
potions have the same active ingreaddress:
dient
- dihydroxyacetone. The
Chief Post Inspector
a
· 10
· th
di
United States Postal Service
uerence •s
e scent
To create even color, start with
475 L'Enfant Plaza, S.W.
an exfoliant to slough off unwanted
Washington, D.C. 20260-2100
·
d d d k'
11 A 1
Be sure to give the post office hair an ea s 10 ce s. PP Y
everything you received including self-tanning lotion evenly and sparany envelope or wrapper. Also, be ingly. Use le8s'on areas with thicksure to include your name and er skin such as elbows, knees and
address, the nature of your concern, heels. Th ey tend to absorb the
more rapidly, so the color
and the date you ~ot it in the mail. lotion
may
be
da ke After appl ·ng
All that informatiOn will help the
r r.
Y' •
postal inspector take any necessary wash hands thoroughly to avoid
action.
tinted palms.
Some self-tanners on the market
are those from Estee Lauder, Clarins, Coppertone and Max Factor.
Prices generalluange from $1.50
to $4 per ounce. Most manufacrurers recommend using the lotion
DARWIN - The Bedford Town- h ·
kl
Th
ship Trustees will meet Monday at t nee wee Y to start. e color
lasts two to four days, fading grad7 p.m. at the town hall.
ually like a tan.
Just remember that your bottled
TUESDAY
tan
topical. It looks great, but it's
POMEROY - All members of just iscolornot a pigment change.
the Pomeroy ' Merchants Associa- It will do nothing
to protect you
tion are urged to auend a special from the sun's rays.
meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
" No matter how deep (dark) the
office of the Meigs County Cham- th L: · aff ded
1
bet.' of Commerce to discuss the co or; fre s... nul•s . 0 r dano pr~;
process of a revitalization project tecuon om travio1et mage,
with a representative from Buckeye says Dr. Nelson Lee Novick, dermatology professor at New York's
HiUs Development Center.
Mt Sinai School of Medicine.
Apply self-tanning lotion at
LONG BOITOM · The Flame
night,
Novick says, to let it develFellowship Chapter will meet op. Allow
30 minutes 10 dry . as
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Faith most lotions can stain fabric
. Then,
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot- · th
·
h' h SPF
tom with Hazel Life, Little Hock- m e mommg put on a •g •
ing, as guest speaker. The public is sunscreen before going out.
Dr. Mitchell Wortzman, presiinvited.
dent of ("eutrogena·~ dent)atological div.ision, recommends a sunscreen of at least SPF 15, preferWEDNESDAY
RACINE • The Southern Boost- ably without PABA, which can irriers will clean up the booster build- tate the skin.
ings and grounds on Wednesday at
Reapply sunscreen every two
7:30 p.m. All booster parents are
hours,
depending·on your skin type
urged to attend.
and the SPF number, he says.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- "Don't assume that sunscreen is
port Arts Council will offer a mop going to stay on the skin through
doll and mini -mop doll class on exercise and physical activity . A
Wednesday at 10 a.m. or 6:30p.m. single wipe with a terry towel
Michele Garretson in the instructor. between serves during a tennis
Call 742-2157 or 992-2675 for game removes most sun protection,
even from waterproof sunscreens.''
information.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT · Vacation
. Bible School at the Rejoicing Life
Youth Church will be held Monday
. through Friday from 9:30 a.m. to
noon daily. Theme is "Adventures
of Life with Jesus ." All children
ages 3-18 are invited.
RACINE - Vacation Bible
School at the Racine Church of the
Nazarene will be held Monday
Jllrough Friday from 6:30-8 p.m.
nightly. Theme is " Heroes for
:God ." Rev . Thomas Gates II
'invites the public. For information
call 949-2668 or 949-3084.
POMEROY · The Disabled
:American Veterans and Ladies
:Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
:p.m. at the hall , 124 Butternut Ave.
;in Pomeroy.
. SYRACUSE · Vacation Bible
;School will be held at the Syracuse
:Nazarene Church Monday through
:friday from 6-8:30 p.m. for chil•dien ages preschool through sixth
;gtade. The theme is "Heroes for
;God." The public is invited.

f?ival preachers head to court
~over defamation lawsuit
By MARY FOSTER
Associated Press Writer
• NEW ORLEANS (AP)- The
•man who helped bring down rival
·evangelist Jimmy Swaggan in a sex
-scandal finds his own love life in
the spotlight as a $90 million
defamation lawsuit against Swaggan goes to uial.
The trial of the 1987 lawsuit
:was to begin today.
: Marvin Gorman accuses Swag;gart of conspiring to destroy his
•smaller, but successful, New
:orleans television ministry by
:falsely accusing him of numerous
adulterous affairs. He has admitted
to a single "immoral act" with a
woman.
• Gorman says Swaggart wanted
_to take over his congregation.
· · Gorman was dismissed in 1986
: from the Assemblies of God, the
· nation' s largest Pentecostal denomination, after Swaggan and others
confronted him about alleged sexu. aJ indiscreuons. He is no longer on
: television but has established a
: storefront ·church in suburban
· Metairie.
· Swaggart's fall came in 1988,
with his tearful confession to his
Baton Rouge congregation that he
.1\ad sinned. Swaggan did not speci; fy the sin, but his confession, carne
after Gorman gave church officials
~photographs of S~aggan outside a
. motd with a prosutute.
The Assemblies of God expelled
Swaggan after he refused to accept
a one-year suspension from the pul-

pit. Swaggart's ministry has since
dropped in the ratings from No. I
in the nation to about fourth ,
according to Arbitron.
Gorman's lawyers claim there
are more than I00 "disputed facts"
in the case, including whether
Swaggan and others told people
that Gorman had s·ex with 100
women, fathered illegitimate children, was possessed by a demon or
is Satan.
During the trial in Civil Disuict
Coun, Gorman will be barred from
bringing up Swaggan' s sex life although his own is central to the
case. A state appeals coun upheld
Judge Julian Bailes' ruling that

Week's top hits
Best-seUii\g singles of the week:
I. "Rush Rush," Paula Abdul
2. " Unbelievable," EMF
3. "I 'Wanna Sex You Up,"
Color Me Badd
4 . "More Than Words,"
Extreme
5. " Love Is a Wonderful
Thing," Michael Bolton .
6. "Power of Love," Luther
Vandross
7. "Losing My Religion ,"
R.E.M.
8. "Place in This World,"
Michael W. Smith
9. "Here I Am (Come and Take
Me)," UB40
10. "Right Here. Right Now ,"
Jesus Jones

Swagg~s

sexlife is irrelevant.
The photographs of Swaggart
that Gorman supplied to church
officials were broadcast nationwide
and the woman, Debra Murphree,
said Swaggart paid her to pos~
naked and talk dirty to him.
The two television evangelists
have accused each other of sexual
indiscretions for years. Their problems followed the sex scandal that
brought down fellow TV evangelist
and PTI. founder Jim Bakker.
Women who Swa~urt claim•
had sexual encounters with Gorman are among hundreds of witnesses expected to testify.
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Scipio Twp. Tru•• will

hold o public heorlng on Ihe
1992 budget on July 18,
1991 at 8:00P.M. 11 Page·
vMie Township B¥il~ing .
171 7 11c

DOWNING
CHILD~
" .,.
MUlLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
S.OIId

111
St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SEIYING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCI1R68

People below age 18 should be
particularly .vigilant about using
sunscreens. "Seventy~ight percent
of a person's lifetime damage from
ultra-violet rays from the sun are
accrued by age 18," Novick says.
Also avoid frying in the midday
sun. Risk of sunburn is greatest
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., when the
sun is at its strongest.
In the sun, be sure to wear the
right clothing.
"Cloth can be deceptive. If you
can see through it, so can the sun,''
says Dr. Pauicia Agio. Ag_in is sun
care project manager at the Solar

Research Center of the Scherin~Plough HealthCare Products·m
Memphis, Tenn.
A terry cloth beach robe, for
example, has a skin protection factor of about 12, she says.
T -shirts that kids wear in the
water absorb more sun once they
get wet. "But it's still better than
none at all, " she says.
Clothing with a tighter weave
allows fewer rays to penetrate, says
Dr. Nicholas Lowe, clinical professor of dermatology at UCLA.
WcJI a wide-brimmed hat - to
protect your face as well as your

Classified

hair - and a light cover-up when
you're at the beach or on the water.
"The aesthetically hip way of
wearing a baseball cap backwards
won't give maximum protection,"
Novick says.
Shield your eyes, 100.
.
•' Wear wide, UV -protecung
sunglasses- preferably the wraparound type that prevent light from
coming in on the side," Novick
suggests. •'Ultraviolet rays can be
as damaging to the cornea, lens and
retina as to the skin."
UV-approved inexpensive plastic lenses protect just as well as
$100-plus designer eyewear.

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
a.f
&lt;LOSED SUnDAY

An

~rdln~nce

10

Epstablish ad.VITIIags• Trahsh
lckup an
o at t e
Rates for this Service.
Be 11. ordained by the
council of the VIllage of
Middleport as follows:
Sec. 1. Definitions.
The
following
definitions are hereby

:~~&amp;~:~s

'~;

~~~=

ordinance:
(a)
"Garbage"
includes all putresclble
waste, except sewage
and body waste, and
Includes vegetable and
animal
offal,
but
excludes recognizable
·Industrial by-products.
(b) "Refuse" or
"rubbish "
Includes
n 0 n p u 1 res c 1b le ,
non liquid wastes such
as ashes, cinders, tin
cans, glass, bottles
rags, wastepaper, wood
and paper boxes, graas,
tree
and
shrub
trimmings. Dead trees,
tree limbs, trucks or
stumps, large household
objects,
bricks,
concrete, plaster or
other refuse from
c o n s t r u c t Io n '
remodeling or repairing
of buildings or ground,
are not considered to be
rubbish of the type to be
collected under this
ordinance.
(b)
"Subscriber"
means any householder
within the VIllage except
an owner, tenant or
occupant
of
an
apartment house or
other type of residence
which has bttn granted
an exemption by the
Mayor.
(c)
"Subscriber "
means the head of a
family
or
one
maintaining his or her
separate llvlng room or
quarters In the VIllage,
and Includes owners,
tenants and occupants
of all residential premles
from which garbage or
refuse, or both are
generated.
Section 2: Residential
Collection Authorized.
No person, firm or
corporation other than
the Mayor or his
authorlzed agent who
holds a lawful contract
within this VIllage, shall
collect refuse within the
VIllage.
Section
3:
Commercial or Industrial
Collection;
Truck
License Fee.
No person, firm or
corporation shall collect,
remove or transport
residential, commercial
or Industrial garbage
and re'f use within the
VIllage without a license
therefor Issued by the
Mayor
upon
recommendation by the
Village Council. the
mayor shall Inspect, or
cause to be Inspected,
each vehicle for which a
d
II
I8
hi

d~:~rs~ln e soul~ 'ah~s

satisfaction that the
vehicle Is In good
operating condition, that
It Is so constructed as to
prevent the littering of
the streets In the evant
of rubbish collections,
and that It Ia constructea
to prevent spillage or
dripping In the avant of
1

card of Thanks

AFTERGLOW '
DISTRIIUTJNG
Would like to thank
IYirJOIII who
pur chasttl any
Glow:ln· Tht·Dark
it11111 at Dan Dilts
Park on Julr 4. A
lpl(ial thanks goes to
loll G~111ore 11114 the
exCIIIent ant•ttin1111nt
!hot
provklttl.

was

garbage collections. exceed thlrty-flva gallon Location and Pickup:
Every such license shall capacity anCI except as
Refuse and garbage
expire at the end of each provided
by
the collection shall be ITllde
calendar year. A fee of contractural carrier and from one point of pickup
twenty-five ($25.00) shall approved by Council. for each residence, that
be levied for each Paper bag a or plastic point of pickup being at
license.
bags designed for refuse the curb or edge of the
Section
4: pickup may be usad. alley.
A c c u m u I at I on s ; Plastic bag a of a mil
Section 9: PenaHy
Nuisance Declared.
thlclcness of at least1 .5
Whoever violates any
No owner, tenant or and maximum capacity provision of this chapter
occupant of any dwelling of thirty gallons or Is guilty of a minor
or place of business eleven pounds are misdemeanor for each
shall allow garbage acceptablv as are paper violation. Each day's
and/or
refuse
to bags designed lor refuse continued violation ahall
accumulate In or on his pickup . having
a constitute a separate
premises lor a period In thickness of at least 1.5 olfenae.
excess of seven days . mila and a maxlum
Section 10: Fees for
Fermenting, putrefying capacity of thirty gallons Service
or odorllerous garbage or fifteen pounds. Such
The lee lor this
and/or
refuse
In plastic or paper bags are collection service shall
containers uncollected to be securely cloaed be $10.00 per month for
or dumped In the open and placed at the each ruldentlal unit,
shall be deemed a location specified In this. other than a residence
nuisance and the person ordinance. The Mayor or which quallllts lor a
responsible shall be his authorized agent handicapped or Senior
liable to prosecution.
may refuse to accept for Citizen discount under
Section 5: Weekly collection
all the
present ruin
Residential Collection; unauthorized containers regulating water and
Rules and Regulations. such as paper bags not sewage cuatomera. The
The mayor shall designed for refuse or lee
for
rtsldenta
provide for the collection cardboard boxes when qualifying
for
a
of residential garbage the same are uaed as handicapped or Senior
and refuse at least every receptacles lor garbage, Citizen dlecount ehall be
week. He Is hereby refuse, rubbish and $8.00 par month. Thl fn
authorized and directed other waste materials. for this collection
to make such rules and Containers are not . service Js due and
regulations
with required for slicks, payable by the 10th day
reference
to
the branches and .boilas but of each month In
handling, collection and such materials shall be conjunction with watlr
disposal of garbage and broken down and tied and sewage bllle. If the
refuse as may be Into bundles no more fee Is not paid by the
necessary, proper or than lour feet long and lOth of each month, 1
convenient to facilitate no more than eighteen ten percent (10%)
their collection and Inches In diameter. penalty . shill
be
disposal.
Refuse of a commercial charged. If the fn Ia not
All residents of the nature
such
as paid by the 15th of eech
VIllage are hereby automobile parts, tr.. month the 1ubecrlber
required to subscribe to trunks and construction shall bt subject to th1
this weekly residential material such as broken termination of water,
collection aervlce. The concrete and lumber, sewage, and traeh
charge lor this service stones and dirt shall not collection MrYioee at hla
will be billed monthly In be picked up except for resldvnce.
advance by the VIllage small quantities of
Section 11: Th1t any
along with their monthly Incidental magnitude. ordln&amp;I"!CII, or portion of
water and sewage bills Containers shall be · ordinances In conflict
and the due date of this placed at the curb or with this ordinance are
collection service shall edge of the alley no hereby repealed.
be the same as lor the sooner than twenly·four
Section 12: Thla
water and sewage bills. hours prior ta_the start Ordinance ehall take
Section 6 : Duty to of the collection period effect and be In force
Provide Containers
and shall be removed from and after Auguet 1,
h shall be the duty of within twenty-lour hours 1991.
the owner, tenant, following the end of the
Passed the 24th day
occupant,
agent, collection period. For of June 1991
manager or person In purposes of this section,
Attest:
chwge of every dl'o(elllngl collection period shall
Jon P. Buc~1 Clerk
apertment or place o be between the hours of
Dewey M. ttarton,
business
wh lch 7:00A.M. and 6:oo-P.M.
President of Council
accumulates or permits
Section 8: Container (7) 8, 1991
the accumulation of
garbage and/or refuse,
to provide or cause to be 1------R_e_a_I_E_st_at_e_G_e_n_era_l_ _ _ __
provided at all limes'~"'--=-=--­
suitable containers as"
hereinafter prescribed.
No owner, tenant or
occupant of any dwelling
who Is a subscriber to
the refuse and garbage
collection
services
provided for herein shall
any
permit
nonsubscriber to share
or otherwise use the
allowance or portion of
OFFICE 992·2888
the allowanee specified
under this ordinance nor
HOME 992.' 5892
shall any nonsubscriber
to such services attempt
to place his containers
at the collection point of
a subscriber or to place
his garbage or refuse In
the .tfOntalners of a
subscriber.
NEED ASMALL BUSINESS BUILDING- Tg start your own
Sectlcin 7: Container
business in Langsville? It's a nice building on approx. I acre
lot. Has water , sewage, and restroom. Builllo state regula·
Requirements:
lions.
$30.000
The quantHy of refuse
and garbage shall not be
FlATWOODS ROAD- Agrowing area. Approx. 3 acres wilh
limited
except
great layifl£ building site or mobile home srte. TPC water
containers shall not
available. Electric lines across the property. Farmers Home
Approved Almost ready to go, just needs you.
$8,000
2
In Memory
_ _ _ _ _....:,_ _
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER - Pomeroy - 5 lots wrh a 2
story home. Home has 4 bedroom~ dinrng room, ond a lull
IN MEMORY OF
basement. Newer gas lurnace and a big one car garage.
PRICE WAS $17,900.
REDUCED TO $15,000
WALTER (Bill) WHITE
ON HIS BIRTHDAY
DEXTER - Corner Lot - Approx. one acre fairly level.
Aa years go by and
Cculd
be a mobile home sile. Electric available. $1500
time goes on;
It -m• you're near al·
DARWIN- Farm- 151 'h acres olland with an older 2
though you're gone.
story home. Has ~x rooms. 3 bedrooms. 2 barns. and free
Each thing we do.
gas to heal your home. Approx. 20 acres tillable. $85,000
each place wa go;
POMEROY - No down P1yment - Owners wrll carry 2nd
We aeem to feel your
mortgage on this lwo story home on a good street. Has a large
preaence ao.
fam ily room, some hardwood floor~ 3 bedrooms, and a din·
Sadly miaaed by
ing room. Has vinyl siding for a low maintenance.
Wlla lit Family
ONLY $24,000

1------------------

11

Help Wanted

In Memory

NURSES
FuH ami Part Time

IN LOVING
MEMORY OF
f»EARL H. ·
VAN COONEY
DIED JULY 8,

COMPETITIVE SALARY ·
FLEXIBLE SCHEDUUNG
VARIED SHIFT&amp;
SHIFT DlFFERENnAL
BENEFITS

Posit~

1988

Sadly Mlaecl By
Children, Gl'lnd·
chlldr.,, Brother•
and Slatwa

Contact•
SaHr Glotdlntr, IN DON
o...broolt cant ..
Mid.eport, Ohio
992-6472
EOE

ROUTE 124 - Have you ever dreamed ol owning your own
business - Well now's the time lo buy. This bu~ness is
equrpped with shake machine. 4 fr~ezers, ice cream
machine, deep lryer, rce machine, grill and lOTS more. Sit·
tmg on approx. one acre corner lot along a state r.oute,
ONLY $60,500.
AlYEA FRONT PROPERTY- Approx. l acre beautiful grassy
lot wrth water lap already installed. Great for camping or
boaling- near Racine.
PRICED AT DillY $7,000
POMEROY- uurel Cliff Rd.- For a lowpriceyoucanown
yoor own home. This I II story 2 bedroom home is sitting on
approx. a '.4 acre lot wrth a small bam.
$7,900
BRENDA JEFFERS ............. ;............................ 992·3056
DARLINE STEWART ........................................992,&amp;~5
SANDY. BUTCHER ..:...................................:.... 992:5371
SHERYL WAlERS ............................................ 367-0421

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES
Days

Word•
15
15
15
1s

1

3
6

10

0

Rate

$4.00
s6 oo
$9.00
$1J.oo

~~· 16 wo_•d&amp;
20

. 30
. 42
.6o

Ann ouncements
~ ~·:::::.:.~... , ,
J Annouc:emenu
• a .......,

3 1 Ho nl es tot Sale
Mol&gt;tl e H on1 e~ lor S... l.,
ftrms lor S otl e
Busmeu 8UIIdt1uJ~

12

JJ
3I

Monthly
15
$1 .30/ day
.06 / day
~ H1ppy Ads
~i.t;:_f\• -J,-•...:--·"''·' r •·h·•···"'f'···
':T." , .••
_ -.~ ....... _. ... - - ............. ~ ·· ·~- ..... -,
-· -- ~"' _ .s., 6.. ..LGJtlnctfound' Ad) ou l ~!;&lt;l c . C! ~..}iA_llQ~J\:~MaatJt.~~t ~ :;. - 8m:a.* ,------'il!l .~ , Jlb&lt;tfld. rrit..ti';dlliii\iPft.,sWtttbeuT• .,.-- - ~·~&gt;-...........,..,•.l'ird StlejjNuf .n nfha•~t:el
patc1
TOf""eM::h d., IS sep1r11e I s
8 Pubh c Sale &amp; Auc hon
' A1 ~C tlfVt ! $!tO d1scoum lor ad( p;ud m attvdncc

41

11111 3

'A c: l .ll!is•lu~l luht er ii!Umh!tlt ~ l.t co!tlln lht! O .ouly S i!nhnt!t (t!~

c eyt
cl;tss•l• ud d•spt...,. _ Bt oS. m~J~~;~ Ca•d ,tnd h ..-u..l noltcnl
w 1ll o~ho ·•~P t!M Hl I he Pt Plcf!Sollll At!91Sic r anc1 lh~ Galli
\.ll l h ~ Oaoly T11btm t:. I C&lt;1Chm9 oon:r 18 .000 houu:-~

DAY BHORE PUBli C ATION
11 OOA.M SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 P M lUESDAY
2 00 PM WEDN ESD AY
2 00 PM lHURSOAY
1 ')0 P M FRIDAY

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PA.PER
TU ESDAY PAPER
WlONFSDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAP ER
~HIUAY PAPER
SUNOAY PAPER

BUlLETIN BOARD
BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
Big Kids and Baby Program
lor 2 to 12 year olds who are
going to become big brothers or
big sisters.
Tuesday, July 91h, 6:30P.M.
al Plmsant Vally Hospital
downstairs conference room.

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT ss.OO PER DAY

Services

Me•ga County
Aru Code 614

M.son Co . WV
Arl!il Code 304

446
167
388
245
256
&amp;43
379

GOllllpohs
Ch•hlfe

992 M1ddletp(lt1

Ymton

985 Ch•ter
84] Portl.,d

675
458
576
773
882
895
937

Rio Grinde
(iuv-n Otsl
Ar•btaD111

w•nul

Pom.,.oy
. 247

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Molgo County Board

of Commiulon•• ill accept ~
ing bido lor tho purcheH of

certain real property 11 do·
scribed below .

Bids oholl bt .ecoived in
the Meta• County Commie·
1ionara
Office.
Meiga
County
CourthouH,
Pomoroy, Ohio, 4.15719, untM
July 18,1,91, at 4:30PM .
· The reo! property wAl be aold
to tile hlgheot reopon.-

l e t•rt F•II&amp;

949 R•cKle
742 RuU1nd
667 Cooi•11Ue

21

Busin as Opp011umty

Montry to lo1n

23

Prola11onal Ser~tc~

l»i::'n~~::o'P&lt;fr:~=i

•Roofing
•lnaullltlon
JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742-2251
639 Brvan Piece
Middleport. Ohio
11-14-tfn

GUNS &amp; SUPPliES
eiUY eSIU eTIADI
OPEN
Tueadoy thru Saturday
10:00 om-15:00 pm
742-2421
1
2 12 MI. ouhl•
Rutland on New
Lima ld.

wit:
The southweat comer of
the eouthweat quart• of"

Section Number Thirty-Two
1321 in Townohlp No. Nino
191 of Rongo No. FiiiHn 11 ~~ .

of the Ohio Company !t
' Purchue containing For1y
: {40) acres more or leea.

1-10-,1-trn.

· Aloo the following do-

"At learonablt Pric""
PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS
4-16-16-tln

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING
$11111,, $,14/tll
30 SESSIONS S30

949-2826
TACKERYIUE ID.
IACINE, OH.
6/ 121'91/1 mo.

scribed rMI eetete, com-

mencing at the nor1hWeiJ
comer of Stctlon No. Thirty·
-one 131). of To-ohlp No.
•Nino 19), Ronge No. fiftoen
116). oft he Ohio Compeny'o
· PurchaH: t~enco Hll FOrty .
t401 .1-odo: thence aouth
•Forty (401 rode: thence welt
:Forty 1401 rode: thence
, north Forty 1401 rode to the
place of beginning, contain·

.side, heing

1

right of woy.

now owned by Louis Cottrll
·and wife.

llewartl L W!'itHal

will embrace you with that WELCOME
HOME feeling lhe minute you step in the door! This new bi·
level horne is in great conditiln, includes basement, 2 car
garage, 3 to 4 bedroom~ equipped krtcheo, basketball court.
central heat &amp; arr. 3\\ acres located in one of Meigs Ccunty's
most desirable areas. Asking $69,900. Any reasonable offer
wrll be considered.

PARCEl NO . 2: Tho fol-

lowing deacrtbed rHieatate.

'ton and In the Stet~t of Ohio,
to· wit:

the Ohio Com-

southe11t quartrofeeid S.c-

,tion No. Two 121. excepting
•what E. P. Oovlo told ond
'deeded lo Leondor CottrMl
,and John Meark, containing

.....

seventy (701 octto. more or

Aloo Thirty 130) ecroo off
tho north end of the toot hell

of the 10uthe11t quarter of

Soclion Two 12), Townohip
Nine t9}, Range Si.teont11)
In the Ohio Compony'o
PurcheH.

• Aloo 1 omoll troct of lond
)lluotod In the obove nemed
·Township end Coumy, con'talnlng I spring of IIOCk WI·
.ter dncrlbod eo followo, he:ing ot tile north ond of the
ono-holf of the
1eelt
•oouthealt quon• of Section
iNo. T- 121. of Townahlp
oNin 0 191. of Ronge 81•-n
[f18}. ond In the Ohio
.Compony'o Purch-.
, The obovo deocrlbed -1
elteto being the eouthult
·quortar of the aouthelll
:quartO&lt; of Section Two 121:
~and

ttte northe11t quarter of

IOUthHI! qUirtl&lt; of
.Section Two (2}.

~ho
1

DNd Reference: Volume

: sAVINGs-.
in the Classlfieds!

''

Merchandise

11§fiiK41
8 1 Home lmprovvm en l !)
6 2 Plumbmg &amp; H e• • n~J
83 E a.CfYilll09
84 Eledrrcal &amp; RHIII!Jffl&lt;t lo on
85 Go!lltlfa l Hau loll !J
86 Mo b•l tl Humc R t:potu
B 7 Upho ls te r,

RACINE- NEW liSTING- Acreage 26.11 acres. ASKING
$11,900.
NEW liSTING- Trailer only. 1976 14x60 5 rooms, 3 brs,, 2
balhs. Total electric. Needs some repairs ASKING $6.500.
NEW liSTING- H1ppy Hollow- 2 story home with 3 bedrooms, nice interior rncludes all furnishings plus new range
and refrigerator. Situated on 15+ acres. ASKING $32,900.
lOTS OF lAID! II yoo're looking lor vacant groond , small or
large, come in and check what we have listed.
WE'RE CETliiiG IIEW llmNGSI BUT WE WANT MORE! IF
YOU WANT TO S!ll COME SEE US, WE HAVE BUYERS!
WAIITTO IUY, COlE SEE US, WE HAVE liSTIIICSI THIS IS
THE PlACE TO BE If YOU WANT TO MOVE PIOPERTY! GIVE
US A CALU
HENRY E. CLEIAND ....................................... 992-6191
TRACY BRINMER ..............., .... ...................... 949-Z439
JEAN TRUSSEll.......................... ................... 949-2660
JO Hlll .................................. ........ ..............9•tm~
OFFICE ,.......... :.......................... ..... .............. 99

1'---------------..

BISSEll &amp; BUllE
CONSTIUCTION
•New Homes
eGaf'CII81
e(empllte
Remedellng
Stop &amp; Co•pare
' ' " Eltllllatel
985·4473
667-6179
5-31-'90 lin

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs
I 0% DIKOUNT TO
SENIOR Cln!ENS
FREE ESTIMATES

•Remodeling end
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED

YOUNG'S

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Poillt Pleasant · 67~9~ ' ·

NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

UPHOLSTERY
IU·No. Secend
Middle pert
Hand Tufting
Cuatom Drapes

-Eioctrlcal end Plumbing

FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
1-t4-'et ·1 mo. pd .

Ufl

•cao OYINS-S7t up

POMEROY- Here is a home wilh an income! You can'l beal
this! Anrce large home and a garage apartment to use lor a
renlal. With the renlal ilcome mt would be like livin glor free 1
This price can't be be beal either' ONLY $20.000 You've gol
to see this fo believe it!

LANDCLEARING,
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TRUCKING AVAilAILE
FREE ESTIMATES
992-7458
4-28·91· 1 mo. pd.

CARPENTER SERVICE

1AIItES-..,_n...-SI2S• "' ·

MAiliNG YOU SIZZLE? Ccrne to where the
Ccoiingcountry breezes wisp alonglhedeck
and
I II story remodeled home with the look of a
log
IOO'x200' lot. 3 bedrooms. carpet,
equipped krtchen. Cooling country com Iori - Prrced at only
$29,900.

· B~~~~

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYICE
992·5335 or
915-3561
&amp;creu ,,... PMt OHice
117 I. S.CoMI St.
POMIIOT, 01110
3/6/90/tln

ol Mllil''"'

FIIEIEIS- SUS

pany's Purchase, and being
tho oouth hell of lhe
southeeat-quen• of Sectton

No. Two 121•of oald forty
1401 oc•o• off the welt end
of oald promloaa oold byE . P.
.Davie to Leonder Cottrll.
Atoo tho north hell of uid

Trans ortalion

51 Household Goods
52 - Sporting Goods
53 AnllqUII
&amp;C Mile Merchandtse
5~
Bu1lding Supplil!ll
56 Pets Ia' SM e
57 Mu1o1cal !n s lrum ttnts
5 8 Fruttl &amp; Vegt111 bl es
59 For Sal e or Tnr1e

ROOFING

USED APPUAJICIS
tOD&amp;TWAIUtm
WASIIIIS-$100 Ufl
Dll.IS-tn Ufl
IIFitGIUTOIS-$100 "'

·sltuoteln the Countv of Vln.ton. in the township of Vln·
Being

Auto s f 01 Se~ l ' r
Twck ) lu r S.t ll:
\f11m r. 4 wo · ~
M u torcyc ltlS
Bo&lt;tls &amp; Motors l m Sotlt!
Aulo Pari~ &amp; A ccM~mul!l.
Auto Ae p .ur
C• n•p ong Eq111pm cnt
Cd mpen &amp; MOBil Hun re:.

,.,~

r~~--------:-r========T--------~-========:lr;:::=======::;
MICIOWAYE
HOWARD
t;;tt4tlllt
J&amp;L
BISSELL
/ OVEN IIPAII
EXCAVATING
INSULATION
ALL IUDS
BUILDERS
SIGNS
BULLDOZER and
•VInyl Siding
Irina It In Or W.
BACKHOE WORK.
CUSTOM IUILT
•Replacement
1J y ttclc HIOI"'ltlf
Pick Up.
HOME SITES.
Wlndowa
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

STEW liT'S

· Columblo. ln tho County of
Meigs end Stolt of Ohio, to

(401 acre tract above described, one(11 rod. Sb1teen
11 8} foot wldo on the Nil

.,....,..
7 'l
l3
74
75
76
77
78
79

F@rti'm!i~)·

B us 1n
• e 88 se rvt•c e s

llelga County, Ohio, In the
c..• of The Fldetel Home

lowtng deacrlbed realelhte,
situated in the Townahlp ol

Excepting from the forty

49

leon

22

St1M &amp;

g° •

sold io:
PARCEl NO. 1: Tho fol·

ing Ten f1 0) acrea more or

48

12 SitualtOn Wanted
13 •lnsuranc11
1• But m•• framm g
16 Schools &amp; ln 11ruc t mn
16 Rad10, TV &amp; CB Rt:tpiln
17 MtiCI!tl.nuou s
1~ Wanted To Do

PI Pltt•an l
Appltt Gtove
M•5on
New H1v en
lelarl
Bullilfo

ft!i

Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
The · Boord of CommioThe following rHIHllte, hell of tht northweat
In the weot port of the nineteen (18) roda to 1 ulgned the lottowlng
alonera m.oy rajtct any bids a.ltuoie In the Townahlp of quarltr of Section eight; eut hell of the northweat ataka In the Athena rood; Auditor'• Porcel Numbon:
ond re-oclvertiM thlo prop- "·tl1 b
1 11 lga thence with tho line R«th 2 quortor of Section number thence olong the Athena 14·00448 ond 14-Q0449 .
ury, c oun
erty untH all ouch property io ...,
and Sllte
of hlo, and 1/2" eeel 283 leal lo the eight (&amp;rot Town number roed north thirty-live (35)
Property Addreu 42195
'told or IIIMCI.
bounded ond deocrlbld •• Kerr'a Run Road to I point two (2) of Renge number degrtH weat to tho ploce of Enltrprloe Rood, Pomeroy,
Termo of poy,.nt ere H lollowo:
on Korr'e Run Road which thirteen (13) beginning on beginning, the tome bolng Ohio 45769.
followo: 10" of purcheH
Sltuete
In
the
wool
hall
Ia oouth 11 314" ••t12 112 whet le or whet w.. One (1) acl'81, more or teu.
Sold real 111ate hod
price peid lmllledlotely by of the northweat quarter of feet
Being tho .. m• reol aublect to occrued reo!
from tho point of Montague'• teat line thirty·
cuh or bonk chiCk. Remain· Section eight (8), Town two beginning;
!henot with uld two (32) rode aouth from ealllta oonvayed to Chartea eatolt ta1e1 lor 1991.
lng belonce- within thirtv
ond Ronga thirteen (13) In road north 11 314" weot 12 the northe..l corner of E. and Maxine Griffith by
REAL
ESTATE
1301 deyo of 11lo.
·
Melga Coumv Boord Melgo County, Ohio, ond 112 lilt 10 the ploce of whet lo or whot weo Margaret A. end Chartae R. APPRAISED AT: $30,000.00.
of Commluionen beglnnln~ olthe Junction of begAin n1n'g. I hi
llontogua'a lot end In the McCormeck by deed Tho reol eotate cannot bt
110
11117, 24; f711, I . 4tc
center of the Athene Road; reoordld In Deed Book 164, oold lor teoa thon two-third•
W ll H ll A....·- oncl tho
Y yo
d..~rlbod reol ealole,
thenoa aouth on whet Ia or Page 4150 of the Melga 1he eppraiMCI votuo.
Karr'a Run Road; thanoa wit·. Sltllllteln the County
TERMS OF SALE: Cuh
South 3g 3/4" weet olong Melga, In the State 01 Ohio, whet woa llontogue'o •••t County Deed Recordo .
PubliC Notice
Relel'IIICtl Deed: Volume on delivery of dHd.
the ooulherly line of aold ond In the Townehlp of line twenty (20) rodo to e
Jamea M. Soutaby
Avenue 230 feet; thenoe
alike; thtncv eouth 277, Page 403, Melgo
Shorllt of Melgo County
NOTICE OF SALE
oouth 50 1/4" 1111 135 foal Sollobury and bounded ond aevanty-lhrM (73) degree• County Deed Recorda.
By vlr1ua of an Order of to the aouth line of the weal deacrlbad •• lollowa:
and ol1 (I) mlnutao,
Slid re11 ntate hae boon (e)24, (7)1,8
outCourt
of the
Sole
leaued
Common
Pte..
of ~--------.l..--------..1.--------.....L--------.....J~--------

bidder. The property to be

1811.

46
47

HelD W1n1tld

...... ,. ____,__ "

PubliC NOtice

upon I Judgment
therein
Genu-,
rendered,atel.,
beingDefenclonto,
co.. No.
11.CV..S31n aakl Court, I will
offer lor 1111 11 the front
door of the CourthouM In
Pomeroy, llelga County,
Public Notice .
Ohio, on the 28th dey of
July, 1H1, 11 tO:QCI Lm., tha
1011 end Volume fallowing Ianda and
239. Meiga tenemonte, locltad et 421115
Recordo. Vo- EnterpriM Road, Pomeroy,
I Coum
1174 ondVo- Ohio 4571111. A complete
11 VInton legll deoorlpllon of the reel
Hlllte le I I lollOWt:
1------R-e_a_I_Est_at_e_Ge_n_e_ra_l_ _ _ __
1-----.....;.;,;;.;;.:..;:;.;;.;.;.;.;....;;..;.__ _ _ _ __

Public Notice

43
44
45

Employmenl

Afl!riiCOde614

. t'""n ~~

8'4 Hiy &amp; -Grltn

HouMI fllr Rent
Mobile Homes lor R ent
Farms lot Rt~nl
Apartment IOf Runt
Futnts.hed Rooms
Space for Renl
Wante d to R1m1
EqtHpmenl tor R ulli
For leMt

41

G•ll1• Co unt-,

sJ

l;ttillll

' fret~

11

t) 1 ft~rnt t:qwp nwn l
62 W,mt t:-d to Buy

JS ·lOti • ·Aq.teeu
1
36 Re-w 'f'"si.~'i' Wint lto

9 · Wanttld 10 Buy

onb
Gr.~e;,wJy Alld Found ads under 1!) wmds w1ll b ~
&lt;lavsal noch• ge
' P11w o l act lor all CIPII.iiill~lers 1s tloubl1! pu r£ ol a1l cos.t
• 7 pu1•1t lm e lyt.t&lt;! only u u'd
'ScuiUld IS otot Ul'l; ponslble lor l!lfofs dhcr ftr ~ l 1lcry IC ... cck
!m eflun lin t day ad fun s tn paper) Ci! ll ht:lort! 2 DO pm /
l1ifi aftm pubh cauon to ntilll.., c:orreciKJn
..
'Ads th at must be pa•d tn ad\l;~ncc ;tfl!
C&lt;1r d o l lha11 k ~
H•PP'I Ad ~
In Mum o n~Jtt
Y ,ud Sdlt..os

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

POUCl~~ ...

r=========:-r=========t=========t=====:=:===
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
ORDINANCE
N 1241 91

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

8, 1991

Tanning tips for a safe and sun-filled summer

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the cal'endar.

Monday, July 8, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

New protection against
misleading advertisements

.,

'

~

KEN'S APPLIANCE.
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915·3561
Auotl from Pool Office
POMEIOY, OHO
10/30/11 tin

-··-

36

"e•rt Experlenee

614-992-2321
We Sey Wltlt We Oo.
We Oo W!llt WI Soy.

10·19·1 ....

POOL~~~~HINI
Open Tuea., Thurs.,
Fri .• Sat. 7 :30p.m .

POMEROY
BOWLING
310 East 2nd St.
992·3432 or
992·2403 .
.a-4-'81 -t mo.

- ftoom Addhkmt
- Gutter wort.:

- Concrete work ·
- Aooflng
- Interior • Euerlof
lt1lntlna

!FREE ESTIMATES}

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
P-or, Ohio

11·14-'90 lin

INDI"NDINT •
CAIIPIT CLIANIRS
and nll FLOOI CAll
•Reoaonebla Retea
•Ouellty Work
•Free EltllTlltel
•Carpat H.. Foat Dry
Time
•High Gloaa on Tile
Floor Flnlah
MilE LEWIS, Owow
II. 1, lutltllllll, OH.
742-2451
3-14-'91-tln

992-7130
8·4· '91·1 mo.

IN111101 • WIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
·painting.
lei me da it for you.
YEIY HA50NAilE
HA YE REFfiENm
(614) 915-4110
1·10·'91- 1'mo. pd.

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
·woRK

(614)
696·1006
6-6-'91

FREE ESTIMATES
CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992-6648 or
698·6864
l · t4-'91-lfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New 11-•lullf
"Free Eatlmatea"
PH. 949·2101
or Res. 949·2160 .
NO SUNDAY CAUS
3-lt-ttn
SHRUB
TRIM

W. H. MOBILE

COMPLETE AUTO

HOME PARTS
If you're in nHd
· of Mobile Hame
Parts or
Accessories...
SfE US FIRST!

UPHOLSTJRY
Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
8o. Seat Covers and
Minor Auto Repair.
IUIN ST., IIASOII, WV.
1-(3041·
773-9560

· ~i·' ILII&lt;NLitlc ';

992·5100
at. 33 WEST OF
DAIWIN, OHIO

WE DO

•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAilROAD TIES
1-12-90-tfn

N•w ltr-

THE

GROOM
.ROOM
Co~~~plete Grooming

For All lreeds
EMILEE MERINAR .
Owner &amp; Operator

Stllll/1
All CONDmONERS • HE4T PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBIL£ &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

···· ···· ·· ············· ············

614-992-6820
PMntroy, Ohio

2-tl-11-lltt

ROOFING

C•plngls ~amlly Fun
ra:w THIS II:MON .• POOL
oP&amp;N TO TBI rvauc

20fN. $aciM Str•t
aiDOUPOIT, OliO 4S76t .
· Office 614-992·2116
· HOllE 614.992-5692

DOniE S.

IIOIEI

• CAKPIIIO •

AND EYDYTH,NG UNDDNEATH

Beautiful SurroundlllQ&gt;

RATES· Doy, Week. Month , or Seuon
PJCNie IIID.Taland ITAOE ror Rent
Raantont · Oct Togclhcra • Partie~
riiiUIIQ

.TROMM ·BUILDERS
FREE IStllUTES

~NOWOPt:N

•20 YMra Experience
•Quality Hom•• 111d
Cu•tom Remodeling

and

REMOVAL

-- -· ·

A&amp;B

&amp; TREE

Se!vti1&amp; Breakful. Meals. and Snaeks
742-2328
5122/tfn

'.

'

I
i

~

�.~

.

Monday, July
Page

~The Dally Sentinel

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements
3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Real Estate
31

Announcements

Homes for Sale

Marykay:
lndependant
Skin
Care And Btaury Consultant.

Carla C.H, Phone : 814-4411228. F« Fr.. Skin C.rt Consultltion, Interview, Or Product
lnfOfmatlon.

5 bedroom, 2 112

bath, lg.
kltchtn,
family
room,
w/tlreplace, llwlng rm, dining rm,
double gerage anachld, 4 1/3
acrn, $65,000 Firm, call 614·
985·3514.

Single service and newslttltr
lor arN alngiH . All agta. Confidential tnd tftorda blt. Write :
Slnglta, P.O. Box 1043, Gal ·
llpolll, OH 451i31.

4

Reduced To StU : 2 Story 3br
Comer Lot In Chnhlro, Ohio.
E1cellent Condition. For FinancIng, Five Sta_1 Mortgage, VIckie
Hauldrtn. 61'1446-4042, Seller
Will Poy Poln1a. 904·932-6959,
904·932·7170.

Giveaway

1 fret killen 614-949-2'Tn.
2 t hMtl pan-'lng to giva away,
304-675-38~1.

4 beautiful pupplel, 304-6756633·
•
oo • 12 · h
11
"'pprox. 2 II. 0 -me
plasllc pipe, 614·985·424 .
FrM 2·Ftmale Puppies, ca ll 614·
1tt2-2470.

Flatwooda AreaL Pomeroy. 2
Story Home. New Kitchen,
Bathroom &amp; carpeting. 17
Ac:rts. 614·446-2359.

1.. "'
' 'I'm in charge of making sure all the
driver 's li c ense pictures come out lousy.''

Frn kittens, 304~75-3481.

Mort
junk on Bethel Road.
~~~~~~~~~--Rog'd
Boogie
houn&lt;J
to
glvoow•y to good homt In
country. 614-446-1692.
Winnit nHdl 1 home. TWo
month old tamale
puppy

(mlxld). 614·245-5539.

6

Lost

.
Wanted to Buy

9

Wanted to buy, Standing limber,
Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614-9925449.
Wan1td lo buy, washer &amp; dryer
In working condhlon, cell aher 4
p.m. 614·11!12.&amp;903.

&amp; Found

FOUND: Polaroid eyeglnns-gold tram11 , In caM. 614-4460429.
LOST: pair of ment glasses &amp;
dark cast (says: Snodgrass
Opt.) If found, caii614-446-:J951.

1

r==========:r==========:l
Wan11d To Buy: Stondlng Tim·
ber, Top Prien Paid For Whitt
Ook &amp; Ash. C.ll oftor 7p.m. 614·
361-7518.

Employment Services

Yard Sale

11
Gallipolis

&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yord S.too Mull Bo Pold In
Ad¥1nco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
IM dty btfore Hit ad It to nm.
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition - 2:00
p.m. Satur~y.
Big Yard Sale: Today thru July
13. t to 5. 424 Rand Avt.,
Kanauga, OH.
Flr~t

llmt: Antiques, housthold.
You name It, we 've got it. 6 mi.
S. of Gallipolis on Rt . 7. Across
Raccoon Ck. Bridge, Immediate
right . July 8-10.
Sl. At. 160, Karr. July 8th, 9th,
10th. &amp;to 5.

Help Wanted

$2,500 CREDIT CAROl
Guaranteed Nmt day approval!
Alao qualify tor NO dtpotll
VISAIMC end cash advances. 1800·279-2000 Ext. 2524.
AVON - All ar..., C.ll Marilyn
WMver 304-882-2845.
Antwer phon• locally tor
Notlonwidt Co, lull &amp; port·timo
or will train\ hiring Immediately
extremaly h gh W.QII, sat-Sun
ttom-5f)m, li-F 11:Q0.5:00pm,
6t4-liii8-2CM11.
POMEROY
'ASSEMBLERS NEEDED'
Immediate openings. No experience nt~ed . Full/Part·tlmt.
CoQ TOLL FREE 1-800-743-5921,
O.m·10pm 7 day•.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Euellent
Pay,
Benefits,
407·292·4Jit7,
Tronsportotton,
Ext 571. 9a.m.-10p.m. Toll
RotUfldtcL

Yard Sale: Iota of msda. Sunday,
Monday &amp; Tu.. day. 2018·112
Rear, Eastern Avenue.
Pomeroy,

AVON I All Arou I
Spuro, 304.&amp;7&amp;-1429.

Middleport

Shl~oy

&amp; VIcinity

Baby sltttrl days 1 WHk In our
home, rettrencH;, 814448.6561.

10 Femity, July 8·9, corner of
Gen. Hartinger and Art Lewis,
Mlddllport , 9·??

Domino'• Pizza of Pomeroy now
taking application•.

Yard Salt, July 9, 10, 11, 12 at
4th &amp; Crooks Street In
Syracuse.

EARN MONEY ANding bookll
$BO,OOOiyr. Income potential.
O.tolla. (1) 805·962-8000 Ext. y.
10189.

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

CI.I\~SIFIF:IlS .

·Rick PNrson Auction Company,
full lima auetlonHr, complete
auction Hrvlc.. Llctnud Ohio,
w..t VIrginia , 304·773-578"5.

lJo vou hctve
house that

Your

K ~'y

tn

Cn~nl Bu y~

an~·thin~ in , our

can turn intf•

· mane~ · ?

ADVEIU'ISE IT

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

CA0H?!!

11

H

elp Wanted

Fltsta Hair Salons , Inc; NHds
Taltnttd Stylists &amp; Managers
Immediately. Top Hourly "Pay
Plut
Commission,
Paid
Vacations, Health Insurance,
Credit Union. FrH Educations I
Incentive Programs Availablt.
Join Thl Filstest ' Growing
Fomlty ot Hair S.tono In Tho
Mldwelt &amp; Share Their Success.
For A Fantaltlc Career Future
Witt1 No Limits, Call 1-800-8256363 Ask For Myma.
Full time, 7-3, openlnga tor cer·
tU18d nuraing aaslstanta, competltiYe wage ecalt, flexlb..
iehadullng and blnetltt avail·
ablt. Contact : Karla Hunter,
ADON Overbrook Center 614992-li472.
KUWAIT, SAUDI WORKERS
NEEDED: $35.00 &amp; Up Per Hour.
Tax FrM. Both Skilled &amp; Unekll18d For Into. Call 815·77'9-5505
Ext. K~99.
LPN, X-Ray technician tor local
physician office. Write Bo1 C-2
Clo Point Pllasanl Register, 200
Main StrHI, Point Pleasant, WV
25550.
Now accepting apDiicallona tar
part time cashler. Must bt 18 yr
ok:t Apply In parson between
9AM-5PM. No phone calla
piOIOO. Crowlordo Grocory,
Hendoroon, wv.
Seeking hard working L.P.N. to
work physician's office, full
time. Apply in parson with
r1sumt lo Dr. M.C. Shah's
office, 3009 Jackson Avenue,
Point Pleatant.
Service RtprHentative: Ptr·
manent part-time , whoiHale
distributor Neks mature, ~ II·
able Individual to aervlcil chain
acc:ounta I ~ICI re-ordtrl In
vour local area . One d1y per
WMk. Good wage &amp; paid
mllaag.. Interview• will be held
In your area, Send written
retponH to: R. Gasper, P.O.
Box 1813, Kent, OH 44240.

4. _ ___:. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

5. __________________

6~----------7._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
8 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
9 .._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
10·~~--------11
. __________________
12~------------13
. ________________

14·~------------

15~-----------

On the rlver1 2 BR poselble 3rd,
2 112 bttn. 3 car garage
w/carpor1. 1.75 acrea plus. Gallipolis schools. Owner looking
tor ott.re. 216-235-9295.
Ranch t1ouee for 1111, double
car driYI In g1ragt, outekle
thtd, all modtm convenlencta.
new dlahwaahar, axtra lg
kHchen, kncttlo pine, living
room with rock llrtplact, 2-lg
bldroomo down tttlro, nice
bath, natural gal and elec:tric, ·
no sttpa comlng In or going
out, 11t1 on 3:tota, betw11n
HIIHop Rntaurant and nursing
t1oma, 614-667-6629 Winifred
Harmon.
Stcluded~unttra Drum, 31
wooded acrea with 3 BR, balh,
all modem cotwenltncea. Only
15 minute• tor Ravens wood and
2 112 milts from Aaelnt, c:all614·
949 ·2381.
M bll H
0
e ames
lor Sale

32

$500 Down On Select Repoa·
Htlld UobUt Homu. FrH Set
Up And DeiiYery. Financing
Available. Mid Ohro Ananct, 1·
800-589-571 t.

Proteulonal
painting
ur·
vice."Have brush, will travel."
614-446-0608.

Will Clean Houses, Apartment•
or Otficaa. Also, Will Clean For
Hou11 St1owln91 &amp; Partl18.
Referenc:H Available. 814-4463388 Anytime, Lnn Measage.

Financial
21

Buelness
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING' CO.
recommends that you do busl·
nooo with people you know1 a~d
NOT to send money throuon tt11
mail until yoU have invHtrgated ,
the oHtrlng.
Amerlctn Fr .. doml
Flnonclal Froodom?
Amerlun
FrH
Entarpri11
Works! Our system and train·
lng, plul your hard work, will
htl p you live Wllllt. Ihi 10'1 and
beyond. No oblgotlon. Colt
Today! American Dream• Conouttanto 8t4·992·7119.

Lots

&amp; Acreage

lots &amp; acreage available tor
new home construction on
Raybum R..d. Povld rood,
county
water,
reasonable
reatrlctlone. Compltta fntormation malted on rwqueat . 304-8751213, John D. Gerlach, no
olngt.wldl troltoro, ploiH.
2 ecre lot, Aahtan, complete
Hptic eyllam l!nd water. Call
304.&amp;7~91111 or 304-578-2057.
25 acrea, rural water IYIIIeble,
locatad on Braad Run Road,
• Now Hoven, $28,500. 304·7'1311881.
Loto &amp; Actlroge For Salo. Land
Contract. 814-.,.7-3044 aher
ep.m.
Mercer Bottom Sub-division,
one acre kMa, At. 2 frontage,
price reduced, city water, 304878-2336.
'
Ohio Rlvtr tot 205• trontogo,
comer let wlold troller baarfng
tn.n ''""· garden, $17,000 304'882-3425
For Solo: River bani&lt; proporty In
Mason. 304-773-YSI.

Rentals
'.I

41

Houses for Rent

A~hur'o Chain 1.1nk Ftnct. 3 ·aA homo lor lito or rant 2
Ruldtntlol, Commercial, Jn. · miiH from Holztr Hoophal. Rtf.
duatrial, Fr11 Eatimatn! Com·
• d 14 •• ••111
plete Installation. Phona: &amp;14- req e · 1 ""~ ·
364-Sm.
3 BR unlumllhod hou.., no
Hootth Problem• • Muot Sell
$210 montlt. $100 dopoolt.
Vondlng Route, 17 Popll ma· ::.:.:14...;4...;41:..31::.:17.::.• ...:·..,..,.=--::-~
chlnto, Gollla &amp; Molgo, omallln· 5 - houoo: •4 OIIYO St., GatHpqllo. $2711/mo. lnqutro at: 1118
vottmtn1, 304-675-5162.

=1.

Loeal Vending Route Cath
ButlnHt For. S"ale. Sell Quickly.
1-BOG-344·5185.

Y-:.:1

loeal
Chllp. 1

Routt. For Stle,
95·1119.

VENDING ROUTE: Gtt Rich
Quick? No Woyl But We Hove A
Good, StNdy, AHordoblt, Buol·
nna. Won't Last. l..SOD-284·
VEND.

:S~=:..
ocond A::.•onuo
::..:.::...·------- Four bedroom home on MI. VII·
non Ave, central air, bnement,
corport, kitchen applllrlcOI,
MOO/month. H......Nd Auny
Broker, :iOW7U&amp;IO.
Point ·Pie111nt aNa, 4 bldroom
homt, 2 car gara~ge In ground
pod1 $610. month .. depooh,
5128.
:lo4475-t361 or t·

72

Trucks for Sale

2 bedroom Inlier all utllltes
fum, $80 week, 614-MG-2526.
2br Air, Furnished Or UnfurnlsMd. Very Nice Ancl Beautiful
Aivar View ln Kanauga. Fotttre
Mobile Homo Pork. 614-440-1602.

1980 Chevy truck, 305 auto, new
rima, tim, dualtl txhault.
Runa, looks good. J2,500. 614446-4462.

2br Mobile Home On Bob
McCOimlck Aoacl For Rtnt, 814·
446-lltitii. .

44

Apartment
lor Rent

1 BR epartn-..nt: living room,
tum'td kitchen, atove, retrlg.,
dishwasher, g~~rblge dlapoeal,
show.- In biith, ga1 hlat , air
cond. Quill neighborhood,
Rotoroncu end dopooH, 614446·1370 oHor 5 p.m.
1br Aportmont, Appliance• Fur·
nlshtd,
1
Block
From
Down1own. Cell 614-446-4639.
2br Apartment. Water, Trash,
Stove, &amp; Rotrlgerotor Fumlollod.
614-440-3940.
Apt lor ron! B-h Stroll Mid·
dfoport, Ohio, 2 badroom fur·
nia~.l. dtpoeh and reference,
304-....-2568.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, . 1136 Jocklon Pike
trom $19..,o. Wotk to ohop 6
movtn , C.ll 614-446.;zs&amp;~. EDit.
B-h Stroot, Mtddtopon, 01110.
Ono r00111 oHicloncy apt,
retlrencea and dapoalt, 304·
882-2588.
Cottoge lor rant, tumlohed, AIC,
carpet, g!)Od neighborhood, no
pats, Pf. Pleasant, WV 1·304·
675.&amp;200.

All
Fumlehed
Efficiency,
Utllltllli Paid, Share Bath,
$125/mo. 919 Second Avenue,
Golllpolla, 614-446-3945.
Et11ciency,
$150
Furnished
Utllltlts Paid, Share Bath, 701
Fourth, Galtipolle, 114-446-44te
after 7p.m.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bad·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Rlvertlc1e
Apartments In Middleport. From
$196. C.ll 614·992·1787. EOH.
New Haven, 2 bedroom fur·
nlthtd apartmtn1, deposit end
ret.rtnce, 304-882-2568.
Complttly Fumlshtd mobile
home, 1 milt below town, overlooking riYer. No Pets, CA. 614·
4464338.

t·f

lltBll
Ul'li/1111

~~~~;;~;;;;~====="'='"="'~".~.· "'~~
51

Household

GOOD

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers, drytrt, retrigeratore,
ranges. Skaggt Appllancll,
Uppor River Ad. Bnldt Stone
Crost Motel. Coll614-446-7398.
RENT20WN
814-44e-3158
Vl'ra Fumhure
Sola I Cllllr, $11.10 WMk;
Rocllnor, 15.47 WMk, Swlvot
Rocktr, $3.63 WMk.Bunk Bed
Complete $8.41 W11k, 4 Drawer
Choll, $3.28 WHk; Poottr Bodroom Suit I, 7, pc., SIU7 WHk,
lncludn Blddlng.C...ntry Pine
Dlnotto WHh Bench &amp; 4 Chllro,
$10.118 -k.OPEN: llondly
Thru Saturday, la.m. to &amp;p.m.,
Sundoy 12 Noon Till !p.m. •
Mlln Off Route 7 On Route 141,
In C.ntanery.

1986 T~ota, 4 wh . dr., 60,000
mi., PS B, stereo. Good cond .
5 apd., 614-388-1934.

245-5121.

1986112 Nl111n, 4dr, hord body,
klng·&lt;:eb, rol~bar, bruoh guard ,
togllghto, rod wtbtack trim
$3200.00 304-1182·3425.
1888 GMC outo PSIPB AC,
cruise, lUI. Lotl·of tx1ru. flnted
wlndowo. dluet. 614-446-11044.
t989 Dodge IJ.SO, 21,000 Mlln. 5
Spood, Bod Liner, Supor Sharp
Truck! $135/mo. 614-446.&amp;751,
et4-446-7104.
l990 Chevy $-10 Tahoe, $9,500.
tully l01dtd, cell before 1:30 or
"""' 5:00, 3114-1182-2010.

56

Pets for Sale

Groom ond Supply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All fWMdt, stylet.
lomo Pol Fiiod Outer. Julio
Webb. c.n 614-4 46.(1231 , 1.aoo.
Js2.(1231.
6 WMk old Boogie pupo. $25.
•t• ••• 11421 .
• ~AKC Englllh MastiH pupo, atoo
; : _L .hlll A~o pup, 304-6758
AKC Roglllorld Golden Rllrivor
puppies, $250. 01ch, 614-4468064 or 446-1387.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olivo St., Galllpolll. Now &amp; UHCI
tumhura, hlltera, Wntem I
Work booto. 6t4-44e-3159.

AKC regllltred mala Cocker
Spaniel, 1 months old, butt, all
ahots and wormed S75, 614·992·
6406.

VI"RA FURNITURE
6t4-44e-31!8
LIVING ROOM: Soft &amp; Choir,
$1gt,OO;
Recliner,
$148.00;
Swlvtl Rocker, SH.OO; CoffH I
End Tobin, $19.00 Stt.DINING
ROOM : Tobie Wlth 4 Paddod
Cholro, $149.00; C...nt'I Pine
nd 3
Dtnotto With Bench
Cholro, $299.00; lllte&gt;hlng 2
Door Hitch, $349; Ot $589.00
Sot; Ook Tobie, 42r82 WHh 6
Bow
lack
Chairs,
$62UO.BEDROOM: Pooler Bod·
room Suitt (5 pc.~, $341.00; 4
Drawer Ct1nt, $44.85; Bunk
Bod, $229; Camploto Full Man
Sot $105.00 Sot; 7 pc. Codlr
BOdroom SuHo, $199.00.0PEN:
Monday Thru SttU(dty, ta.m. to
&amp;p.m., Sundoy 12 Noon Till
Sp.m .• 4 Mlln OH Route 1 On
Routt 141 In Centenary.

broodo, opoclallred In POO:dto
aroomlna. 12 yra experience,

Dog and Cal grooming all
:104-87~332.

DOG BOARDING. Going on
vacation! Laavt~ your dog with
mel Lovlnt GIN. Pleau book
11rly, Rav1n1wood, WY, 304273-5572.

73

vans

&amp; 4 WD 's

1983 Dodge Ram Charger, Lock
In, I Locl&lt; OUt Hub, 4 Wheel
Drive, Sharpl6t4-446·9780.
1986 Dodge Caravan, 49,000
MIIH, 1 O.Vntr, Auto, Air,
Crul11, Stereo, New !Ires,
$&amp;,500. 614-448-6751, 614·4467604.

74

6:oo m a tiJ
1121 Newa

Poodle pupploa, toy•• ond 111
cup1, AKC Chsmplon ttloodllne,
Coolville 614-667-3404.

57

Musical

75

Boats

F or m

Supplies

&amp; Ltvestock

Miscellaneous

Accessories

Merchandise

North 4th, Mlddltport , Ohio. 2
bedroom furnish~ apt, deposit
and. reference required, 304-8822566.

4· rolrlg $7S.OO up 30" Amono
Rldar Rongo s-95.00. 2-25"
Zonlth color console. 1-19" RCA
color SttO.OO. Electric dryor
$65.00 up, Flrnlono, Storo Mid·
die port

4 grave tpaces at Ohio Valley
Memory Gardene. 614-44G l1004.

Why Ront? Homn tor $1.00,
Rapes.
Gov't
Giveaway
Programs! For Information, 504·
641·8003 Ext. R-313.

A CARIBBE"N BLOWOUT!
We Over BOught CruiHs,
Florida to The Bahamaa, On a
Luxury Uner, 5 oar, 4 Nlthts,
$229/coupto. Hoto Pold, No
Gimmicks. Tlckttl Good t Year.
404-451·9860.

45

Appro•lmotoly 9olardo beige
carpot, like now. 3 -t75-6588.

Rooms
Beauty Shop. 3 ttottono oil ..
Apartment available tor 2 or 3 qulpment In trailer, mov1abla,
eon1truction workera 304·882· 304-882-3738 ~yt. after 1:00 PM
2566.
882-3246.
Rooms tor rent • week or month. Slade I chaine tor riding
Starting st $120/mo. Gallla Hotel. gr11vlly, 114-185-43:11.
614-446'· 9580.
Concleto &amp; ptotic ooptlc II'*•·
SIHPing rooms with cooking. Ron IE.YMt Enterpriila. Jack·
Also traller sp~~ce. AU hook-ulj;: eon, OH 1..aoo.e37-t1a,
C.ll 1ft1r 2:00 p.m., 304 •7
Hougon picnic IIIIIM tor Hie.
~51i;;5;;:1 ·~M;;•;;;s.;.on~WV..;..,.
Made out of trootod lumber.
46 Space for Rent
t17S. ll&lt;t-388-8103.
--...!.....,-.,..,--.,.,---::-::·1 John O..ro 2010 Bulldozer.
Country Mobile Home Park, R.cantly- overha ..ld diHII en.
Route 33, North of Pomtroy.
e way blade, $4,100. 304-Lots, rentals, pane, Wilts. Call 75-3121.
614·992·11479.
Now Horiron, Hontord, WV.
Flnloh your ftowor - · planta
now roducad, $4.. per !lot on
Merchandise
moot pllhto, Mondly thru
Soturdty, 9:00 till 6:00,
RocondHionod Wlohero, Dryoro.
51
Household
Guarantlld prompt ..vice tor
Goods
ell makn, modela. The Waehtr
--...,..,..,.,...,.,.....,..~~=-:I Dryer Sh-. 114-446·21144.
Carpot $4.00 Yord &amp; Up. Vlnyl
$3.99 &amp; $4.19 Yard. Porch Tur1, Romlngton
ltOO
Shotgun,
$3.99 1 $5.99 Ylrd. Mottohon $:1900,114-985~368.
Corpots, Uppor Rlvor Rood, 614- ~~~:...:::..=.::...~-446-7444.
Slgno: Portable li!lhtod chang•
able ttttor 11(111 $299. (Poy ~111
County Appliance, Inc. Good balance 30 days). FrM Ill·
used appliancn, T.V. 1111. Open ters/dellvtry. Plastic letters
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon ...Sat. 814- $47.50
box. 1.a00--533-3453
446·16M, 627 3rd. Ave. Gal- anytime.
SIMI pipe Ideal for culvalt, all
llpolls, Oti
alzu, caM from 5:00 to 8:00 PM.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Cottagevlllo, WV 304-372·6405.
Complete home tumllhlngs.
Surptus army origln•l luuea,
Hours: Mon-Sat, D-5. 814-446- collectabin, (rental surplu1 $3.
0322, 3 mllu out Bulavllle Rd. garment). sam Somervlne'l,
Fru Delivery,
Booldt S.nctyvlllo oHico.
PICKENS FURNITURE
F~. Sll, Sun; Noon-11:00 PM.
Ntw/Uold
Othar doyo, hoUro call 304-213HouHhold tumlohlng . 112 mi. I,565;;:.:;;;5..:be.;.I;;;Of0;..;.,1:.:1:.::00:::..A::M::.
. .,......,......,.
Jerrfcho Rd. Pt. PfNNnt, WY, Wather &amp; Drytr, Worb Good,
cai130W7&amp;-t450.
$175. 814-446-1751.
Rotrtgorotoro, $125; outomatlc I:W:;.:.:.o::
m.:•no
.:..:..~To::n~S:.::..poo-d::-B;;Icy
:-c-:-lo:-;-6
wuhoro, Sill; lloetrtc d~trl, Mano tO S~d Bicycle, Both,
$75; 11M drytrlz $50; 11M ron- Now CondH I 614-317-0531 o~
g-. 17!1; wnH' Klilmoro
itoctr!t rongo, t.l u ,_, St50; tor 5:30p.m, ·
.
otoctrti range, $71; I' ohott.lrJIO WOO!ion kltchOn totoio I ~

61

Farm Equipment

11100 Oliver tractor wHh big
vormeor, · $411115. 1115 llluoy
Fergu11011 troctor with Kotty
ln&gt;rit end toador., $1550. 5040
AC dloNt $3150. tN Ford WHh
Ilk&gt;!', cunlv:~it.P'"dor
blldt,
$2180. Late
40 HP Long
_ , , $31150. Owner wttt tin·
ance. 6t4-28H522.
1iat Long 4 Wh. dr. tractor
$11111; Lalo model 454 ln1.
diHal tractor wllh buth hog,
$3195; •ooo Font, $2195; 3010
JD dle111, aharp, $4850; 7030
AC $6095. Owner will finance.
6:.t;.:4..:
·2..:11H:..:;5::2:.:2:..-,--,---,,--,--1
424 lnttma1ional tractor, 7 toot
ptck·up dtoc I grader blado, stt
of plowa and fiay wagon. Call
614-446-tOO..
FifliUIOn ha~llr tor porto
..,._ negotiable Woodoator
whh ltrlng &amp; eaw blade, I.H. en·
ktadtr 20011, OllvW-60 haybaler,
John Dterw wheal rake, &amp;14_992•

511U,

• llock troltor·1991, 16 n.
$23111. 5 yr. old AQHA Big Fancy
Rod Rome gliding. Shown w...
tom ptoaouro, Big Silver Royal
Show uddto. 814-28~522.

79-up Chevrolet truck hood
$50.00, 79-up Chevrolet bod·
side, passangtr side, SSO.OO
614·992-6t25 aftor 5:00.

fOfltGifT'~

Tt&gt;Ptc •

\

/.

"''*'••••·

gu build tn - n wfth diOP In 55
Building
l&gt;urntr, $75; 2 oloctrtc dfOP In
bumoro $50 toeh; 5 hood tano
Supplies
whh ttgldo, $20 Nch; t SIIHCI 1--_;::.::::;::;.:,::,:__ _
Ouoon wringer wuhe!\ 175. All Pool dlcko, In-ground I lboVe.
or
m'- I~ Country
·
~chu, open &amp;
klndo
ho..ohold
Homo.
DIIOWI
Dr'-1 t do•'•no.
c r - n.
'"na
""'
Swiohar'o UHd Ap~l.,..., o
Froo Mtlmotu. Ro,_,. ..
Comer Rand, and Pore Stroot, ovollobto. ·eontiCI Odie, 6t4-446·
Konouga, 814-446·1147.1.
.
1751

t

-;..A:...l;,-R.,U
. I• I=--,Tr-11:.~
I _.•~-•~
1

,

Expect people to be betrer
than they are, it helps them to
become better. Don 't be dts·
appointed when ·they're no( it
helps them to keep ...... .

I

r-----:--:----,

RUNJOI
1-.....,;:..1...;,~~~5;--:..1..:...,.,..16-1 Q

I
.

.

.

.

.

_

Complete lhe chuckle quoled
by ldl1ng in the m1ssing words

.

you develop from step No. 3 below .

e

PRINT NUM BE RED lETTERS IN
l HESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMB lE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GEl ANSWER

(!)) WhHI ot Fortune

a

-

fvfZE . :J:'p HATf'(b THINfC

8:00 (}) D 11)) Freah Prince of
Bel Air Will tries to smooth
relations when Phillip's
parenls visit. (R) Stereo. 1;1
I!) MOVIE: Sunbum (PG)

:r

TU~Nfl&gt; OIIT L.t~E

THI$ ,feAI.IJ'f OF
,S'OMfTtltNG

(2:00)

:r

t'fA~ CONT/tol- oV~ I
-

-

(11. . 1b,NlA. Int.

,

a

1IJ W
MacGyvor
MacGyver helps an
archaeologist search tor a
lost tomb. (R) Stereo. 1;1
ffi Scientific Amortc:an
Frontltra Roller coasters;
Hurricane Hugo; facial
expressions . Stereo. Q
(!) Adventure John and Paul
begin their search lor the
mighty mahseer. Stereo. 0
am 1121111 Major Dad Casey
goes to extremes to gel the
Major's attention. (R ) Stereo .

811

MOVIE: 'Pink
Llllhtnlng' FOX Nigh\ at Ute
Movlea (2:00) Stereo. 1;1
1!J Murder, She Wrote
12!1 On Stage Stereo.
@ Major League lleaeball'o
AII· Star Salute From Toronto
(L)

S
0

(M.O()m:S HAV£

e

kn!R£0. ..

• ""'tXJ HA\11: A ~
SeNSE

a= TIMINe ...

PrimoNowa

BOIUty and tho - · · Q
8:05 (I) MOVIE: llengkok HIHon
(PI 1 of 2) (3:00)

IT SUMS U~ A1.L11-£ ~
CEA1XI(ITIK mE:SIGnrriAL

"AND A TENDENCY "10

CCWJ: UP WITH lliOCO
IDEA5 100 L.AIE .

IHE HIGH A::liNra::Y~
L..IF'E&lt; 'MLL. ~'( e6

IINVI:IIIllt.la TI-E ~TY !Wa~

Slldl In camper, bath/shower,
retrlgtrator, furnace , double
sink, atovlioYen. 1ir cond, $800.
304-576-2321.

11)) Sunday In Pario A
8:30 (})
New York actress. worried
abOut har tamity·s values.
gives up her career and
moves to a farm in Texas.
(0:30) Stereo. D
am 1121111 Famlfy Miln Jack
has problems when his
mother comes 10 vis~ and
takes over. Stereo. Q
12!1 On Stage Stereo.
9:00 (}) D 11)) 'Noble Houaa (PI 2
of 4)' NBC Monday Night It
the Movlta (2:00) Stereo. 1;1
(I) W II) MOVIE': 'Evllln
Clear River' ABC Monday
Night Movie (2:00) Stereo. Q
(I) (!) American Maotoro
The history and impact ot
America 's most influential
acting school. D
am 1121111 Murp~y Brown
Corky and Will throw lheir
first dinner party. (R) Stereo.

g

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Nausea - Badly - Quota - Nicely - CAN DO
College professor to class, " We don 't k(I~W who w e
really are until we see what we CAN DO." •· ·

NORTH

BRIDGE

Services

a

61

BARNEY
SHE'S WEARIN'
A NEW HAT
WITH SOME
FEATHERS
ON

IT!!

"4

PHILLIP

WEST

...

+74

ALDER

" AQJ9865

-

+J 8 4 3

+Q
"10 72
ti\QJ9832
+ 12

A pro-am
charity event

Vulnerable: East -Wesl
Dea ler: West

By Phillip Alder

South

Bridge Today 1s a n inde pe nd e nt
magazine publishe d by Pamela a nd .
Matthew Granovetter in Ba lls ton
Lake. N.Y. They ran a poll ea rli e r this
year, asking subscribers to vote for
their favorites among 20 players. The
top f9ur wome n a nd four m en will be
invite d to join four other experts to
compete in a 12- player individual
tournament. It will be preceded by a
pro-am event. in whic h anyone may
" purchase" a top pla y e r as a partner.
the proceed s being donated to the Mai·
monides Hebrew Day School of Alba·
ny. Details of the eve nt , which takes
place August 20 -22 near Saratoga,
N .Y., may be obtaine d from the G ran ·
ovetters at 518-899 -6670
Today 's deal involved two pl a ye rs
expected to attend - Bob Hamma n .
the top-ranked American player, a nd
Zia Mahmood . the Pakistani. who ha d
the passive rol e of dummy .
The spirited auction led to a sound
s lam that look e d des tin e d to s ucceed.

5t
6t

West

4"
Pass
Pass

-----------1
-=,_-..,...,...--,..,.,..-I
1981 Bulc:k Skylark, 2 doora.l. 2.5
four cyt, many new paltl. a900
or belt offw. 304-67So4168.
tt82 Pontloc T·1000, Runo
OOOdl $27S, 61-4-256-6251.
1883 Ford Ranger, rune good,
no rutt, nMds some body work
$1300, 814·742-2838 attor 5:oO
pm.
1983 Rollon1, 77,000 mi., PS/PB,
AC, exc. cond., $1500. 614-4461552.
1113 Toyota c,...lda, load~ ,
• -.
__,_ ond
....... - 1C ' 30....-u''"'132·
1981 Chevy 5-10, 4 cyt., ·e7,000
mi.
Chevy
rolly
-II,
AlWM-., 5 opd., $3100. 8t4·
37W421.

~:Diftillt... hiiO, IM't92•
" " Lalaron ConY. u, Awo,
Crul~t, Tin, All Power, AC,
~000 MI1~1 _Rod, Black, Mog
,.,..,.. Sl,ow. 814-44&amp;--. of.
tor Sp.m.
11110 Ptrii\Oulh Sundance; s,ooo
Actual !111M. Air Conditioned,
Alltomatlc Tronoml11lon, Roar
Dllrolt, IJko Now, Alklng

se,soo. 8~7720.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Davis
Sew-Vee
Strvic:e,
Georges Creek Rd . Parts, sup·
piles, pickup, and delivery. 614446.0294.
Wilt do remodeling, roollng ,
building, tr11 trimming and
removal, hou se painting. For
tree estimat1a, call Gtorgt at 1614-992·5752.

62

Plumbing

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

rl

&amp;

Heating
Carter's Plumbing
and HtaUno
Fourth and PTna
Goltlpollo, Ohio
:..61_;4-4_:..46:.·388::.:.8:..__ _ _ _ ____
:84
Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
R•ldtnUal
or
commercial
w.Iring, new urvlee or repairl.
Maater Lleenaed electrician.
Ridenour Eltctrlcal, ~-875 17116.

87

Upholstery

Mowrty'l Uphdlltrlng urvlclng trl county area 25 years. Tht
beat In furniture upholstering.
Coli 30H75·4154 lor lrH H·
tlmales.
\

July 9, 11111
Happy finan c ial surprises could be in
lhe oiling tor you in the year aheed,
when Lady Luck s tarts maslermtndtng
your mate rial atlairs. She m•ght put together situations you would have never
had the courage to attempl.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Someone
involved with you in a jolnl endeavor
needsreassurancetodaythateveryone
will get a lair share when this venture
comes 10 truitton . Clarity your )nten·

lions. Know where to look lor romance
and you ' ll lind it . The Astro· Graph
Matchmaker inslantly reveals which
signs are romantically perfect for you .
Mail $2 ptus a tong, sell-addressed.
stamped envelope to Matchmaker, c /o
this newspaper , P .O . Box 9t428, Cleve·
tand. OH 44101·34 28.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) You are in a
hopeful cycle where expectations can
be achieved. even an important one
where the control is in the hands of another. Don 'l, disturb the arrangement .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lapt. 22) Several lm·
porlant objectives are attainable In this
cycle: you have all the right factors go·
ing tor you: ambition , motivation. tenacIty and tuck . 1
LIBRA (Sept.' 23-0ct. 23) You could be
in tor some pleasant surprises in three
or more situations at this lime. Your
chart indicates that you may be given
second chances to succeed Where you
previously tailed.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Joint •en·
l ures look especially promising lor you
today. Devote your ettorts to tho coalitions that oHer you the greatest poten·
tlal tor reward .
SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) Your
greatesl asset today Is your ability to
bring divergent Interests logether tor
beneficial purpose•. When you make
the arrangements, everyone Involved
wilt gain In some manner.

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. t9) Thzs is
the right limo to begin Implementing
changes that you teet could improve
working conditions or your profit pic ture . What you have in mind is certainly
worth a try .
•
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO..Fob. 19) Partner·
ships could work out very fortunately
for you a.t this lime. provided the common objective is given prominence over
the secondary inlerests ol either party .
PISCES (Fob. :ZO..Morch 20 End results
are " Iffy, .. bul it looks like you could be
luckier at finalizing important matters
today than you will be tomorrow. To be
on the sale side, don't teave any loose
threads hanging.
,.
ARIES (March 21· Aprll 11) This could .
turn out to be a rather lorlunate day tor
you . thanks to your social involvements.
Somelhing helpful might develop tor
you through an old trlend . such a 9 mak ·
ing a new contact.
TAURUS (April :ZO..MIJ 20) Oon 't lower
your expectations today In regard to
something ol a material nature that
you 've been hoping to get. Condlllons
ere more favorable than you credit
them lobe.
GEMINI (Mey 21..Juno 20) An Idea
you·ve recently conceived that Is grand
In scope has a good chance at becom·
tng a reality. You may have tomodity It a
bit, but this won't change 116 character
tor the sake of promise.

·'

Ea!lt

5•
Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass

But East, Hamman. found a g rea t play
that de fl ected the declarer, Matt
Granovetter, from a winning course.
West led the heart ace , a nd Ham·
m a n dropped the king . When West con ·
tinued with the hearl queen, declarer
ruffed w tth dummy 's diamond ace t o
prevenl East from overruffing dum·
my 's diamond s1x.
Whe n East un e xpec t e dly followed
with th e hea rt thr ee, dec la r er paused
for thought. Why ha d Eas t false ·
carde d? Did he have all four trumps,
or was he jus t bluffmg because h e
thought the slam was going to make?
Eventually dec larer led dummy 's
diamond six and went up with his king .
Whe n West discarded , South had to
lose a trump tri c k for one down .

&lt;!I

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
I
5
tI
13
t4
I5
16
t8
19
20

24
26
2g
31
33
35
36
37
39

-Mawr
Defend
Korean city
Actress Weld
Actress
Dickinson
Dre88 part
Flimsy paper
Custard
apple
RaQue&amp;t
Family
member
Ask lor pay·
men! from
Dutch cheese
Gl•e name to
RaquelNeedle·
shaped
Talk bllterty
Stair posl
IcedGame played
with clubs
Those in
otllce

40 Electrical
unll
41 E•cavate
43 Mineral tar
46 Hitchcock
movie
49 Auto eKecu·
tlva Lae52 Household
appliance
54 Graylsh·red
(2 wds.)
55 Old·
womanish
56 Deteriorated
57 Singer Marvin

DOWN
t Youth org.
2 Lease
payment
3 Baseballer
Berra
4 Pest
5 Short tor
Su&amp;an
6 -and haw

1 Mohammed·

gauntlet
17 Hawaiian
Instrument
20 Fleetwood

an religion
8 Improve lan·
guage ot
g Alloy
tO Tints
12 Not so much
13 Run -

2t Portent
22 Sand hill :
Brit.
23 Edible
seaweed
25 Actresa
Arlene 26 Break ot day
27 Southwest·
ern Indians
28 Barbara Geddes
29 Humorist
30 - school
32 Ruling
34 Sticky atutt
38 Drug agcy .
40 A Polynesian
42 - La Douce
43 Favoritism
•• Coaroe tile
45 Resound
46 Actron West
47 Corn lily
48 Slippery
50 Mountain

13]) 700 Club With Pat
Roblrtoon

t0:30t2!1 Crook and Chill
@ Major League lle11ball
Magazine

1t :oo m a

North
Dbl

Opening lead: • A

a World Newa

Ron's TV Strvlct, specializing
In Zenith also servicing most
otntr brands. House calfs, also
some oppllonco repairo. WV
71 Autos for sale
304-576·2398 Ohio 614-445·24!14.
t947 Plymouth Coupo; 1966 Fot. S.pttc Tonk Pumplnf $90, Gattlo
con, Both $3,200. 114-446-2911 Co. RON EVANS EN ERPRISES,
•:..tt..cor_:..7P::.·:.m:..
. ----~------ I J1ckson, OH 1·800·537-t528.

EAST
+9 8632
"K 3
• 10 1 5 4
+K 9

SOUTH

ali Ill Star Trek
Transportation

1· K·91

+A K J 10 5

t A6
+A Q 10 6 5

22

WWF Prime Time
WreatHng
I2D Na1hvlllo Now Stereo . 1;1
Larry King Llvol
0 Beauty and the Ileal! Q
9:30 ®I 1121111 Dlllgnlng Woman
Julia 's strange behavior has
everyone at the Sugarbakers
battled. (R) Stereo. D
@ aaaaball Upper Deck
Old· Timers Game trom
Toronto (T)
10:00 (!) Nawo
(I) (!) Calle Lana An
upstate New York cottee
house receives a tribute for
its 30 years of quality
muszcallare. (1 :00)
@I 1121111 Nor1hem Expoouro
Holling reconsiders his
marnage propose) 10
~egnant Shelly. (R) Stereo .

I'"'·

:Om"paot"":'~;25~ 0731
and a ~
d...,. oven rongoa, IN aiCh, 1;;;..:::;.·-----,{1--

I

VI E I

..._t........
EP N__,_j__.FI--Jij

a

7:30 (}) D im Jeopardy! 1;1
® Andy Griffith
IIJ 1121111 Ent-lnmont
Tonight Stereo .
W llJ ll/leme's Family
®I WhHI of Fortune 1;1
I!]) 18 M'A'S'H
t2!111e 1 Star Stereo.
@ Major L11guo Boaoball'o
Gre1ta11 H~• (0:30)
Croastlre
7:35 (]) Andy GriiiHh

Po you ~LtfVt IN FATf ?

fflft&gt;f/'fiNATICJN

-----1

-------'---·1

i

7:05 (]) The Jellnona

Motor Ho.mes
14' 111t contalntd camper In
good condHton, oiHpo 6, $700
call614-992-6855.
1m Dodge 300 eamjMir van ,
otovo, rot., potty holding tonk,
$3,500. Call 614-367.0172 atler 5
p.m.
1977 zstt. Camper, Needs Work,
$100 Or Btsl Otter. 304.&amp;752425.

G

L-.1

(I) (!) MocHel/Lehrer
NewaHour 1;1
am 1121111 Current AHalr 1;1
I!]) tD Night Court· 1;1
I!J MocGyver 1;1
0 Sport1Centor
8 Moneyllne
0 Scarecrow and Mro. King

&amp;

Campers

the

be-

am 1121111

!i\

Budget Transmissions, Used &amp;
robuln, otortlng ot $99: AUto
Porto. 614·245-5677, " 614-379·
2263.

19

.,I· I~ AI

Night Court t;!
IIJ W llJ lnalde Edition 1;1

&amp;

Auto Parts

•

I!) Andy Griffith
Club Connect
(!) Reading Rainbow 1;1
l!ll tD Andy Grtllltlt
I!J Cartoon Expre11
@ Star Shot Clay Target
ShOOting Game
Wortd Today
0 Our Houae
6:05 (I) Bewitched

7:00 (}) D

12 h . Stmi-V alum. boat witt1
lith founder, 3 fold down
removable seats. Take guns as
partial trade. Phone 304-6751564.

76

wa

::::

low ro term lour simple words .

11)) NBC Newo 1;1
®.1 Dream of Jeannie
IIJ W llJ ABC Ntwa 1;1
(I) WHd America Stereo. 1;1
(!) 3·2· 1 Contact Q
®I 112111 CIS Newo 1;1
I!]) tD WKRP In Cincinnati
0 Up Cloae
·
6 :35 (I) Andy Grllllth

for Sale

Mutt Sail: ski boat, 16ft, new
motor, coyer, sahey acceseorill, ready to go, 304-6752864 ohyllmo.

Reorrono• letters of
0 four
scrambled words

6 :30 (}) D

&amp; Motors

Glboon J46 Guitar with cue.
3114.C7&amp;-t11M.

1988 4x8 Utility Trolltr, 304-li'IS·
1564.

Spoooooooky!

1982 XA 100, good condition,
runs treat. $240 . 614-44&amp;-8®3.

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Strttt, Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to e:oo
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
614-!192·2526.

19:11 John Dltro Modi! B
Rebuilt, EKCottont Condition!
Hyllor • Stogo Fork LIH, Doell
Pfata, 3 Trallar Axtes, &amp; Trailer
Bod. 614-446-2359.

How spooky
was he?

1982 Honda Goldwlng, 1100 cc.
614-992·7794.

7•112 HP bo11 motor. 614-446 n25.

19'' Lawn Boy, $125. 8 track
tapes, 45, 78, l3 recorda, 2
smott ctottoyo. 614-446·2857.

and 'stormy night.

Suddenly, out of the
mist a spooky
figure appeared.

--,.,-..,...,.~.,...-=­

Instruments

54

!twas a dark

1990 Honda XR 200. New. $1990.
614-245-9880.
Flah Tank,413 Jackson An.
Point PINUnt, 304-67&amp;-2063,
lull line Tropical llohl blrdo,
small animals and supplll.

PUUlU

- - - - - - 141to4 ~r CLAY I , I'OUAN

m

MotorcycleS

Antiques

53

2 Pistole, 44 Mangum, g MM,
both axc cond, 304-882·2010.

Furnished

Block, brick, aewer ptpes, windowa, lintela, ttc. Claude Win·
lere, Rio Grandt, OH Call 614 •

Building

8

s~~&lt;Al~-~t.tfs·

TIIAT DAllY

EVENING

1964 Ntoaon Pickup King C•b,
air, cover on btd, 5 spaed, per·

Supplies

55

Goods

North 3rd St, Mlddltport, Ohio, 1
bedroom furnis hed apt , teteren·
ces and deposit required. 304·
882·2566.

Vary nlct 1 baclroom apt , beautiful country Httlng , frH laundry
&amp; water, air concf, tocatad Park
Rd Darwin OH1 coli C.R. Prott,
614·594-5322, S•7S month.

• "'

1984 Diesel Ford 314 ton, air,
auto, new paint, low mileage,
$S,500. 814-446·2957.

tact
304-675-6132.
1985condition,
El Camino
$3900. 1990 F150 4x4 XL:T-Lari!llt, air, duel gas
tank. po. pw, pb, 12.000 mt ,
$11,500. 1986 Mazda 8 ·2000 L X
S3000, 614-992-5225 .

The Dally Sentlnei-Page- 9

Ohio

MON .. JULY

to n True... J'"PI tor $44
Through Tho U.S. Gov 't? Call
For Fac111 504-649-5)15 Ext. S.
313.

197'1 Toyota Land Cruiser, EKcelltnt 4•4 copobiiHy, $750.00. t·
614.JI85-436D.

Total Electric Mobile Home For
Rent. No pets. l514·317·1'138.

lHA~ AAHT~liC.
l:O~! WIIAT AAe

Autos for Sale

•¥--- ·-.

Television
Viewing

Iiiii Skylork Buick, AT, AC, 1111,
4 tech A·1 cond, $14,566. ta ke
oYer payments, 304-875-1376
taave mueage.

10x55 2 bedroom moblte home.
Racine area. 814-9;2-5858.

O.DHit And
RetarancH
R•
$2!50/mo.
lneludn
qufred.
Water. Phone: 114-44&amp;-1217.
Mobil• Hom•• For Ront .
Reference And Deposit Requtrld. 614-44t.(l52l

BORN LOSER

4,400 MHto, Aaklng $9,500 or
Beat otter. 814· 256-1252, 614·
25e·t7311.

12x60 mobile home for rtnl. Par·
tiolly lumlohed. 614-367458S.

FOR RENT • Ponty Fumlohld, 2
Bedroom Mobllt Homa. Stcurlty

Pomeroy-Middle~rtl
.
• . . - •r

19111 Eogto Talon Block 5opd,

for Rent

Nicety Fumlohld Aportmont,
1br, nort to Ubrary. perking,
central hut, 1lr, raf•renc• raqulrld . 6t4-4464338.

35

8, 1991

•

1V1V Mon11 Carlo, runs good,
$100. 364.&amp;75-6712.

Mobile Homes

1971 Mador 3 BR, 2 full baths,
completely remodeled Inside,
new plumbing, muet move. 6144464132 or 6f4-446·47S7.

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Ave., Gallipolis. Close to
Court J.4oute. 1 room,t-2 rooms,
3 rooms, 4 rooms. All nicely
decortled, air conditioning,
your water I Hwar bill are pakl
Makt your choice now. No
quottt over tht phone, you
must ... them. Phone for an
tppolntmont. 614-446-1699 day,
446 -9539 lVI.

6 o.m.• 8:30 p.m. Age• 2~10.
Befort, 1tter school. Drop.lna
welcome. &amp;14446-8224. New Infant Toddler Care, 814-446-6227.

42

For rent, 1 bedroom 1p1r1ment,
$225 utllltiu lnctudld, dtpoott
roqutrld, no poll, 814-192-2218.

Mill Paula'• Day Care Center.

Sat., affordable, chlldcare. M·F

11

Throo badroom comptototy
remoc:ltltd home on Marquette
Ave, $400/month. HomHIMd
Rtolty, Broker, 30W75-5540.

191'1 3brs, 12x7'0, 2 porches,
$4,500. 614-368-11770.

Buildings

Wri11bt

Smoll 2 BR/1 B ho""' In
Syracuu,
refr8ncee
and
MCurfty dopoolt roqulrld, call
collect, 1-408-723-4'702 after
3pm.

EHiclency
Apartment,
Furnished, DtpoaH, &amp; Reference
Roqulrocl No Polo, 614-446-41111.

Business

KIT 'N' CAIU,YLE® by Lany

Houses for Rent

12ll60
SChullr,
2-bldroom
mobllt homt w/under penning
and porch, aood concU!ion,
$3500, 614-992-3194.

34

Will care for bed paliant in my
home.
Raasonabla.
Above
Racine on 124. 614·949-2393.

1---------------------

GOVERNMENT HOMES hlrm St
(U ropolr). Delinquent tu
property. A1 pou111lons. Your
arH (1} aos-96 2 -aooo. Ext. GH·
10188 for current repo list
Lyone Addition In Mason,
quattiy built, 4 bedrooms, 3
bltha cUllom ut In kitchen,
OR, F'R, 2 UrepiiCII, CA. 1 ac:rt
lot, Morelli $117,500. 304·7735881.

GtorgH Portable Sawmill, don't
houl your logo to lht mill luot
call 304.S7S·1157.

Will buitd patiO COVtra, decka,
scrMned rooms, put up vinyl
siding or tra iler ski11lng. 614·
245-5657.

2 . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
3., ____________________

large St1adtd
LDt. 814-446..0647
;a"~·~r;5;P·=
m~·~~~~~--~

Telephone Sollcltoro Noodld. · 1872 Kirkwood mobile home, 2
E•perlenct Preftrrad. Senior BR, good condition, $5500. 614·
Cltlzene Welcome! Call 1·759· 446·2235.
9754, Mr. Hundley.
1875 double wldl, sttup on 3/4
Wanted: Service Technician tor ocro, ooktng $15,000. 304-li75Healing &amp; Air Condition· 3138.
lngJAafrlgeratlon. £xperltneod.
S.:nd Reaume: Cia 07i, c/o Gal· 1982 14r70 2 BR, 1 both, CA,
llpolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third ;7ttx28h. expando. O.Ck &amp; un·
derplnnlng . Very nlea. 614-2454venue, Gallipolis, OH 45631.
9020.
Wtll groomed Individual tor
dignified sales position. No ex· 1984 Mans ion 14x60, all electric,
perienct requlr8d. Call Mr. Prts· 2 bedroom, 2 lull baths, AC,
ton bltwHn 10 I 5, Mon-W8d. WID. 304.&amp;75·7677.
6t4·446·3014.
2 and 3 bedroom mobile homea
on rented lol, 304-675·3812.
14
Business
Ba1utltul 1879 Holly Park 14x70
Training
Trailar, with 14x3&amp; T1g Along,
and 14x7 Expando, fireplace,
Retrain
Now!!!SouthHstarn central AC, 3·BR, lots mora,
Business Collagt, Spring Valley $15.000, 614·985-4116onytlmo.
Ptazo. Call Today, 6t4-446-43671!
Knox 1i81, 1-owner, 2 bedroom,
RagistaraUon 190-05-1274 E!.
all ellctrlc, call 814-H2-3021 or
614-992·1107.
18 Wanted to Do
Will Bobyolt In My Homo New 16x80'e, Now On Display At
Anr.ime.
Rodney
Arta. Eltn Home Canter, AfforRo oroncoo Avallablt. All Shlftl. debillty, Luxury, &amp; Quality. Call
1-800.589-5110.
C.ll 814-245-5786.
Ntw
1991 14180 thrH bedroom,
Boby oHtlng In my homo, 3042 full balhsh ehlnglt root, vinyl
7'13-5846.
siding,
1 uttara,
carpeted
Babyalttlng In my home, across tt1rougt1oul , all drywall lntarior
from Nortn Point School, Mve and ~·bay window. $17,997.00.
Colt 1-8Q0.729-4045.
references, 304-6754612.

Will babytlt WMken~a ot your
house or mine. Have rlterencta.
614-992.&amp;903.

Tum your clutter into cash,
Sell it the easy way ... by ghone,
no need to lea~e your home.
Place your classified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 days,
3 papers, $5.40 paid in advance.

For Sale By Owner: Quality
Bztck Ronch Ctoso To Holzer
Hotpltat 4br, Full BaHmtnt

41

Monday, July

8, 1991

m m a o 1121111

11)) Now•
I!) Twilight Zone
New•watch
I!D tD Araenlo Hall
1!J Crime ·story
12!1 OrrStago Stereo.
@ aa11ball Tonight
Sports Tonight
0 Scarecrow and Mro. King

m

Pill
51 Tex. time
53 Female
nndplpar

a

tt :05 (I) MOVIE: Right to Kill?

(2:00)
t1:30(})D 11)) Ton)ght Show
Stereo.
(!) Magnum, p .i.
ffi European Journal
W llJ Nightllne Q
®I Araenlo Hall
(!))(II 'Swelling Bulltll' CBS
uta Night Stereo. 1;1
12!1 On S'tage Stereo .
0 SportaCanter
Monaylno
tt :351IJ Chllrt 1;1
12:00W llJ Into the Night Stereo.
liD 111 Party Maclllne WHh
N11 Peeples
I!J The Hitchhiker
® Nuhvlla Now Stereo.
NewiNight

a

a

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celebrrt 1 C•pher cryptograms are cre• tltd !rom Quotahons tly ramous people. pesl and present
Each leTter m !he cipher Sl&amp;nds tor •nother Today ·J clue E eQu•lsl

GEWPFNEDW

J 0 A A

F J

JESDAEPB

F J

Z N D

Y F N D

DUZYLADW

F J

JNEDHSW

SF R W

F J

PGD

P G Z H

Z ADUZ HS D N

l F L D.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "My whole lite re•olves a round deSS4! rl ."
Marvin Hamllsch.

•'

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Monday, July 8, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Eclipse not much from Ohio

LIVING ROOM FURNITURE

CINCI NNATI (AP) - The
solar eclipse on Thursday won't be
much of a sight in Ohio, a physicist
said.
Don, even think about looking directly at the eclipse. During the one In
For most viewers. !he sun will
1970, about 14.5 cases of retinal bums wera reported In the U.S. Viewing
look like "a large piece of fruit
the sun diractly can burn the retina, causing total or partial blindness.
with a child-sized bite out of it,"
You won1 know tt's happening because the
said Douglas Marcum, Miami Uniburns
ara painless. Here's one safe way of
versity physics professor and
viewing
the eclipse.
astronomy club adviser.
Marcum sa id mo st of North
America will be in the same boat,
though it will be a total eclipse for
those in Hawaii, Mexico and Baja,
Calif.
The solar eclipse, caused when
the moon's orbit takes it directlr 1 Get two sheets of
white cardboard,
between the Eanh and the sun, w·
a foot square
be the best in 141 years for Wes '
or larger.
Coast scientists, who will have
almost seven minutes to peer at a 2 Cut a haHsun completely obscured by the
Inch circle
moon's shadow.
In one sheet.
Tape a piece of
The moon's shadow will begin
aluminum foil over the
passing in front of the sun in southhole and poke a pinhole in it.
west Ohio at 2:34 p.m . EDT and
partly obscure the sun until 4:12
let the sunlight fall through the
p.m. About 25 percent of the sun
hole onto the second sheet of
will be shaded about 3:20 p.m.,
cardboard. An inverted image
acc ording to the University of
of the sun will appear.
Cincinnati Observatory in Hyde
Park.
But at the eclipse's midpoint
TIP: Extend the sheets further
near the west coast of Mexico, the
apart for a larger image, closer
sun will be completely obscured
for a sharper and brighter image.
for 6 minutes and 58 seconds, making this eclipse the fourth longest in
APIT Oean Gaple
the 20th century and the longest SOurce: Wei/ness Lener. UC Berkeley: Totality, UniV. of Hawaii
until the year 2132.
out proper protection can result offer enqugh protection . A
Marcum is saving his excite- very quick! y in burned retinas, irre- welder's dark green glass filter is
ment for the year 2017. when an versible eye damage or even blind- the only sufficient protection for
eclipse will leave the sun complete· ness. With the extra power of looking directly at the eclipse.
ly in shadow in southern Ohio.
binoculars or a telescope, burning
The use of a pin-hole camera,
Experts discourage looking occurs even faster.
which projects the image of !he sun
directly at the sun. Doing so withExperts said sunglasses do not onto paper, is recommended.

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Principals from the Eastern
Local High School and the Syracuse Elementary School in the
Southern Local School District will
participate in the Ohio Department
of Education's Tenth Annual Ohio
Academy of School Improvement
Strategies (OASIS) to be held in
Columbus this month.
The two local principals wiU be
among 300 participating in !he pro·
gram to be held at Capital University, July 22-26. Theme will be
"The Principal's Leadership Role
in School Improvement in the 90's:
Celebrate the Challenge."
Accordin!! to State Superinten·
dent of Public Instruction Franklin
B. Walter, OASIS provides leadership for school building teams by
helping them develop a mission
and action plan that ensures that all
studnets receive the best possible
education, providing a forum for

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HOUSTON (AP) - Clarence current nominee is really a twofold
Thomas, the black conservative approach," Hooks said. "First of
nominated to the U.S . Supreme all, we were sure that we wanted
Court, has been criticized harshly the president to appoint an Africanby the NAACP but may win its American. On the other hand, we
endorsement anyway.
wanted him to appoint a nominee
Benjamin Hooks, executive who embraced at least a pan of the
director of the civil rights organiza- philosophy of Justice Marshall.''
tion , said whether to endorse
Thurgood Marshall, a liberal, is
Thomas is a major concern of the . the only black to serve on !he high
12.000 delegates at the 841h annual coun. Hooks said he was uncertain
convention of the National Associ- whether Thomas shared enough of
ation for the Advancement of Col- Marshall's views to help American
ored People . The convention blacks. Thomas opposes affirmsopened Sunday.
live action and has written articles
"The problem I have wilh !he against abortion.
"We're not going to let race

blind us· to the totality of !he siruation," Hooks said.
Gentry Trotter, NAACP national press secretary, said late Sunday
he did not k~ow when delegates
would vote on whether to endorse
Thomas.
"I think NAACP, in some
degree, is a microcosm of America
as a whole," Hooks said. "I lhink
there's a debate in the black community. However, that will not be
solved easily."
President Bush nominated
Thomas, 43. last week to succeed
Marshall, who is retiring at the age
of 83.

Probe targets Shaker Heights court
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio
(AP) - The Cuyahoga County
Prosecutor 's office has confinned
'that three officials of the Shaker
Heights Municipal Court are under
investigation.
Deputy Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Win ston Grays, who is
heading !he investigation, said !hat
Judge Paul R. Donaldson and his
wife, chief bailiff Kathleen Lei_~h,
man-Donaldson, are under scrutiny, The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer
reported Sunday.
The newspaper said that the
court's chief deputy bailiff,
William J. DiGiovanni, also is
under investigation.
.
The newspaper, quoung sources
it did not name, said the probe
involves Search Concepts Inc., a
private investigation service owned
by Ms. teishman-Don~dson. The
fllll1 is not registered wath !he Oh10
Department of Commerte to conduct investigations. State law

2 49

APff . Dean Caple

NAACP criticizes Thomas
but may endorse anyway

requires such finns be registered.
Ms . Leishman-Donaldson is
registered as a private investigator
for NCH Investigations Inc., a fllll1
owned by Norman C. Hadad, a
deputy bailiff for the Shaker
Heights coun.
The sources told the newspaper
that prosecutors are investigating
allegations that Ms. LeishmanDonaldson used court employees to
conduct investigations for the two
f~m~s during their regular working
hours at the court.
They also alleged that court personnel illegally used law enforcement computer systems to gather
information for private investigations.
The Donaldsons were in Ari·
zona and were unavailable for
comment Sunday. A court employee who would not give her name
said they were expected back in
town sometime litis week.
DiGiovanni has no telephone

t

listing and could not be reached for
comment Sunday night.
In Donaldson's most recent
Ohio Ethics Commission financial
disclosure statement, filed March
20, he listed Search Concepts as a
source of more than SSOO in
income last year. But sources told
the newspaper that Donaldson had
received thousands of dollars from
the f1m1.
Ohio Department of Commerce
spokeswoman Ruth Ann Wright
said the department was investigating Search Concepts.
The Donaldsons have been at
odds with city officials in the past,
partly over requests that he dismiss
his wife of two years because her
employment violates Shaker
Heights nepotism rules.
Donaldson has maintained,
however, that the court is a separate legal entity frOm the city. The
city pays 60 percent of her
$42,447-a-year salary.

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A proposed budget of
$1,664.160 for village operations in
1992 was adopted by Middleport
Village Council at its regular meet·
ing Monday night.
Included in that budget are estimated receip ts for 1992 of
$1,549,700 and fund balances at
1991's end of $53,972, for a total
of estimated funds available for
operations in 1992 of $1,603,672.
The bud~el shows an overall
budget deficll of $60,488. While in
some of the funds there appears a

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Federal group to probe
Hobson landslide cause
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff

principals to learn from each oth·
ers' experiences, and offering specific strategies and techniques for
improving schools and student
achievement.
The Academies will emphasize
the following seven OASIS principals: a sense of mission, strong
building leadership, high expectations for all students and staff, frequent monitoring of student
progress, a positive school climate,
sufficient opportunity for learning,
and parent and community involvement, Walter explained.
Keynote speakers will include
Dr. Robert W. Evans, executive
director, School Effectiveness Services, Inc., who will stress the need
for strong team leadership to take
Ohio Education into !he 21st Century; Dr. Thomas Matczynski, College of Educational Administration,
University of Dayton, who will talk
on selling up a roadmap for educa-

lion and assessing needs and developing a mission; Rose Baublitz,
Educational Service Center consul·
tanl, whose topic will be "Using
Assessment Data for School
Improvemen~ Dr. Ronald Walker,
Ashland Uoiversity who will present "Developing Realistic Goals
and Establishing An Action Plan
for School Improvement"; and R.
Hazel P. Flowers, Ohio Department
of Education who will explain how
"Effective Schools Process Can
Lead to School Reform through
Expanding Leadership Roles."
Participants will discuss the
principal s leadership role, the
Effective Schools Process, teacher
empowerment and decision mak ·
ing, effective teaching, staff devel opment, parenting, community
involvement, and school marketing
in small group sessions lead by
their peers.

Middleport council reviews
$1.6 million budget for 1992

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A geotechnical investigation of
the area below Hobson where a
rock and landslide occurred on
May 3 will get underway within the
next three weeks.
According to Jack Holbrook of
the U.S. Department of !he Interior,
Office of Surface Mining in Ashland, Ky., approval has now been
received to proceed with the technical investigation.
Tllis means. Holbrook said, that
a number of studies will be per·
formed on the land to make a determination as to the relation of the
abandoned mines back of the cliff
base to the slide.
He said that !he most prominent
of the studies will be a drillin g
investigation. That, he explained,
means that a drill will be used to
take some core samples, essentially

a small cross section of the entire
Asked about the ca use of th e
column of eanh and rock beneath landslide. Holbrook said that "it is
the damaged structures, which will ultimately related to the di scharge
be evaluated to determine soil and of water from !hose old abandoned
mines; at least, that is part of !he
water content.
Representatives of the Office of problem, but may not be all of !he
Surface Mining will be returning 10 problem."
Meigs County within !he next week
The Office of Surface Mining
to complete right-o f-entry form s has had representatives on th e
with the property owners, Hol- scene several times since !he slide
brook said. Once those rights of occurred in early May .
entry have been obtained, the actu·
Holbrook said that stabilizing
al drillings will begin.
the land is !he role of his office. He
The results of those soil and emphasized that even if structure
water studies , according to Hol - damages arc mine related , there is
brook, will assist his department in nothing !he Office of Surface Mmdetermining the cause of the land- mg can do to assist the owners.
slide and its extent, and provide
Ten families were evac uated
the infonnation needed for possible from the area immediately after !he
remedial work.
rock slid e and mo st have bee n
He said there is still some ques- unable to return to their home s.
tion as to whether the land has Large cracks spread from !he slide
stopped moving. The geotechnical site to the Ohio River causing
investigation will go a long way house found ation s to shift and
toward answering !hat question, he doing extensive damage to State
said.
Route 7.

Eastern, Syracuse principals
to participate in symposium

$499°

Programming

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cents

9, 1991

A partial solar eclipse should be
visible in the Bend area mid-after·
noon Thursday.
An eclipse occurs when the
moon passes between the sun and
the earth. With the moon partly
covering the sun, the sky wiU dark·
en. Unfortunately some mistakenly
assume that they can watch an
eclipse unaware the invisible rays
from the sun can painlessly burn
!he retinas in their eyes.
These burns, known as solar
retinopathy or retinal scarring, can
result in permanent vision loss and
even blindness.
THINK SAFETY • Looking directly at tbe sun, or its reflecAny vision loss incurred is nontion,
with the naked eye, even if the sun is partially eclipsed by tbe
treatable and irreversible, accordmoon
during a solar eclipse, is extremely dangerous and can cause
ing to the National Society to Prepermanent
eye damage. Here six-year-old Nickolas McLaughlin
vent Blindness, Ohio Affiliate. The
tries on the solar glasses be will wear Thursday when he observes a
Society advises !hat at no time dur·
partial solar eclipse as the moon passes between the sun and tbe
ing the eclipse will it be safe to
earth. A lesson on the danger of direct viewing is being given by
observe the sun with the naked eye.
his mother, Terri McLaughlin, Middleport.
There are two primary methods
for safely viewing a solar eclipse.
Indirect viewing and direct viewing
thrcugh a safe solar ftlter.
standing with your back to !he sun glasses wnh so lar filters are also
Indirect viewing requires con - and your head in the box to observe safe, but perhaps the safest way to
structing a viewing box and then a projected image. Cardboard watch an eclipse is on television.

We've just received another ship·
ment of quality sofas. loveseats and
recliners. Brand new styles and fob·
rics.

~~~~~
~I
Tonight, showers and
thunderstorms likely,
With heavy rain possible. Low 65-70.

1991

rf•l The view from down here
1
1 The percentage of the sun's diameter covered at maximum eclipse :
80-99".4 ®#HI 60-79%

7-D; 7-S

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Pick 4: 2815
Cards : 9-H, K-C

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surplus, the general operating fund
which includes the village's safety
fund has a projected deficit of
$94,075.
The budget will be filed witfl the
Meigs County Budget Commission
this month. Actual appropriations
for 1992 are made in January.
Estimated receipts in 1992 are
$22 1,800 less than the 1991 esti·
mated receipts, according to the
budget figures. Proposed approprialions for 1991 totaled $1,885,960.
Council voted to place a lhree
mill renewal levy for current
expenses on the November ballot.
According to Mayor Fred Hoff.

man, th e levy generates about
$24,000 with most of that go•ng
into streetlight operation.
Mayor Hoffman was aulhorized
to advertise for bids on two projects - the levee improvement and
the Pearl Street project. The
$11 2,500 levee project is expected
to gel underway in early August.
To date the Pearl Street engmeering has not been completed but
aulhorization to advertise for bids
was give n to the mayor so that
once it is ready. advertising can
stan immediately. Cost of !hat proContinued on page 3

--Local briefs-____, Johnston
Middleport man cited in accident
..

A Middleport man was cited following a two-car acc1dent Monday morning on County Road 3 in Rutland Township.
According to a repon ftled by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Kevin Manley, 21, of Middleport, was cited for
failure to yield after !he 1984 Oldsmobile he was driving went left
of center in a turn sideswiping a 1978 Oldsmqbile driven by Marisa
Gray, 23, also of Middleport.
Manley's car then went off the right side of the roadway, coming
to rest in a ditch.
According to the pauol repon, Manley and Gray both refused
treatment and were wearing lap and shoulder belts at the time of the
accident.
Damage to both vehicles was listed as moderate.
Rain-slick pavement was listed as !he cause of an unrelated accident Monday morning on State Route 143.
The repon from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol states Angela R. Russell, 17, of Dexter, was southbound on
S.R. 143 when she lost control of the 1983 Toyota pickup she was
Continued on page 3

COST SAVINGS- Gov. George Voinovicb'
gestures as be talks to reporters during bis news
conference Monday in Columbus. The governor,
seen with his chief of staff Paul Mifsud, said his

efforts to make state government work harder
and smarter bave saved taxpayers $1.5 million
on two agency service contracts. (AP LaserPho·
to)

Governor calls budget decent work
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich has yield·
ed on some pet issues but says
Ohio's two-year budget was the
result of concessions by all sides in
order to ' 'get somelhing done.'·
He commented Monday on the
$27.1 billion budget that was
expected to be released today by a
conference committee !hat has been
working behind closed doors for
several weeks.
But House Speaker Vern Riffe.
D-Wheelersburg, and Senate Presi·
dent Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati , announced last week the
major elements of a budget agreement that omitted key proposals by
the governor.
The commiucc recently has

been plugging in figures and drafting language for a fmal repon that
is tentatively sc heduled for noor
votes in the House and Senate later
this week.
The budget "1s a fairly decent
package to get us lhrough the next
couple of years," Voinovich said,
adding that he JS not happy with the
agreement and believes that no one
is.
"We had to compromise to ge t
something done.' ' he saJd.
The House stripped the budget
of Voinovich's plan to turn Ohio's
liquor stores over to private operators and eliminate a taX discount
for retailers.
The liquor plan, eliminating
1,400 state jobs, would have saved

$41 million.over two years, he said.
"People arc going to be asking
candidates for the Legislature next
year 'Why didn't you give that
money to the sc hool s?' I mi~ht
even ask that, myself," Voinov1ch
said.
The gove rnor brushed aside
reponers' suggest ions that in the
negotiations with the leaders of !he
House and Senate, he got lillie in
relllm for his concessions.
"I lhink we are getting quite a
lot When it's all done, we can talk
some more about it," he said.
Voinovich, on another matler,
said his effons to mak.e state government work harder and smancr
have saved taxpayers $1.5 million
on two agency service contracts.

still missing Teen found after faked drowning
Navy Fireman Recruit C. Dale
Johnston, so n of Cecil E. and
Becky G. Johnston of langsville, is
still missin~. !he family reports.
The Me1gs High School gradu·
ate of 1990 who went into the
Navy in June, 1990, has not been
seen since May 25. The Naval
Investigating Service continues its
search, Mrs. Johnston said Mon day.
.
A release from the U. S. Navy
published in the Sunday TimesSentinel said that Johnston had
reponed for duty aboard the guided
missile destroyer U.S.S . Mahan,
homeported in Charleston , S. C.
That was in March before h1s diSappearance, Mrs. Johnston said.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. {AP)
- Authorities searched for 24
hours for !he victim of an alleged
drowning, only to learn the teenager faked his disappearance,
officials said.
No charges were filed against
Bradley Blaine, 17, of Point
Pleasant, who was spoiled about I 0
p.m. Sunday by a person who !hen
called Blaine's father, said Bruce
Forshee, a Mason County corrections officer.
" It kind of bolheted.us, but then
again it kind of made us happy he
wasn't (in the river)," said Richard
Rainey, assistant chief of the Point
Pleasant Volunteer Fire Depanment. "Saturday night was very

unpleasant. His molher was highly
upset and was crying her eyes out. "
State police are investigating !he
incident, a dispatcher at the sheriff's department said.
Forshee said Blaine told his
friend, David Ebben. 17, to run and
tell his falher he was m1ssing
Saturday evening and had apparently drowned in !he Ohio River
near Gallipolis Ferry.
"He left his wallet and his towel
on the beach, waited a while and
had his friend tell his father." Forshee said . "They had worked 11
out. n

Ebben told police he and Blaine
were fishing about 10 p.m. Satur-

day, when he decided to go to their
car to get a Oashlight.
While he was gone, he said,
Blaine waded into the river and had
disappeared by the time Ebben
returned.
Point Pleasant volunteer fire
officials began searching for Blaine
at II :30 p.m. Saturday. They stopped at 2:30a.m. Sunday because of
fog and resumed the search later
that morning.
Forshee said volunteer divers
from Galhpolis. Ohio. and Putnam
County were brought in to help
with the search.
Rainey said businesses provided
food for the search.

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