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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Training encouraged for inmates
Dear Ann Landers: The other
day you printed a leaer from a reader
in Sunrise, Fla., expressing her
anger over the wasted man-hours of
prison inmates. She suggested they
might at least clean up parks, city
streets, etc.
My husband and I lived in Kenya,
Africa, for 21 years and recently
retired. The Kenyan government
puts prisoners to work cleaning
up the highway roadsides. The
prisoners wear their prison Wlifonns
and have virtually no opportunity
to escape. They are guarded by
policemen with rines. These
prisoners are better off for the
exercise and less inclined to become
repeat offenders. They are also
"paying· for their keep since the
highway department saves the wages
that would otherwise be needed for
these services. The prisoners not
only pick up ttash but also use hand
tools to cut the grass and weeds.
There are doubtless some pecple
who would argue that to subject
prisoners to manual labor violates
their civil rights. Actually, being
senrenced to prison should cancel
many of those SCKalled civil rights.
How about the public's rights to
benefit from the cost of room
and board for a prisoner? These
criminals should be permilled to be
productive members of society, and
the fresh air and exercise would be
beneficial.
Having seen this prison system
worlc so weU in other parts of the
world, we feel it could be ~ to
great advantage here. Will you look

into this, please? -· MRS. H. IN
GAINESVU.LE, FLA.
DEAR GAINESVILLE: Others
have written from time to time and
posed this same question. Here are

some answers:

Report: voluntary testing urged
for AIDS-infected surgeons

Ann
Landers

ANN LANDERS

My office spoke with Greg
Bogdan, public information officer
at the Federal Bureau of Prisons,
who explained thai federal and state
prisons handle prisoners differently.
Each stare has its own rules. Federal
inmates are used in projects dealil)g
with federal agencies. They are not
permitted to work for private
companies because of liability
problems. Federal prisoners living
on or near military bases do
maintenance worlc, such as cuaing
the grass and trimming the hedges.
They also worlc with the National
Parle Service.
Extensive vocational training is
available and encowaged. Inmates
are also trained in mechanics, auto
repair, plumbing and carpentry.
These classet are accredited by
the U.S. Depanment of Labor. In
addition, inmates are offered courses
through local community colleges,
which aUow them to earn associate
degrees in compurer programming
and other subjects.
A company called Federal Prison
Industries employs inmates in its
factories and makes products sold
to the federal govemmenL Of the
current 62,000 federal prisoners,
I 5,000 work at Federal Prison
Indusoies.
This may be more than you
wanted to know, but! have had so

"'1811, Lao ADieiM
11moo S)"IIOicole ud
Crealcln Syadlcole."

many inquiries on this subject I
decided to give you the whole load.

Monday, July 15, 1991

LOS ANGELES (AP)- FederThe guidelines also will suggest
al guidelines for AIDS-infected that those who are infected seek
surgeons are expected to urge them · counseling from a local medical
to volun!Mily undergo testing and review board.
stop practicing if they have the disCritics conrend that such guideease.
lines would push hospitals toward
Details of the guidelines from mandatory testing for doctors alld
the Centers for Disease Control other health-care workers. The critwere reported today in the Los ics also say the guidelines fail to
Angeles Times, which quoted address the fundamental issue of
sources it did not name. The rec- infection conttol.
ommendations are to be released
Guidelines aimed at preventing
Thursday.
infection already are in place and
The Times said the CDC would include sterilizing equipment and
urge voluntary testing of people wearing protective gear.
who perform "seriously invasive"
"Unfonunately, the impact of
procedures - those in which a the recommendations will be driv·
sharp instrument is present inside a en by how the insurance companies
highly confined anatomic site or react, which is not what we would
where visibility is poor.
like to see occur," said Katherine

Dear Ann Landers: I am
glad someone has spoken out on
the subject of piped-in "music"
everywhere. I, too, am tired of
being assaulted on all sides by
the miserable stuff. Like your
cooespondent, I have walked out of
several stores without buying
anything Jw:anse I couldn~ stand the
racket.
Not only is this a sad commentary on people who don't enjoy being
alone with their thoughts, as you
said. it is a shame that some folks
consider this entenainmenL It says
something about our culture. -By JEFF DONN
M.A., BAKERSFIELD
,Associated Press Writer
DEAR M.A.: It certainly does.
BELCHERTOWN, Mass. (AP)
Thanks for writing.
- Pay to go to the library. Pay to
All alcolto/ problem? Hqw can you play sports. Even pay to hire a
help yoUTse/f or SOtMone you love? teacher.
"Alcoholism: How to Recognize It,
Massachusetts residents will
Hqw 10 Deal Witlt It, How to Con- soon pay a host of new fees for serquer It" will gillt! you tire ~J~~SWers. vices that have long been funded
Send a se/f-admessed, long, bu.ri- through local taxes or state or fedIIUS·size e11vt/ope and a check or eral aid. Cities, towns, schools,
libraries and museums are all part
IMMJ ortkr for $3.65 (this illcludes
pos10ge and haiullillg) 10: Alcohol, of the pay-if-you-go trend -which
c/o AM l...aittkrs, P.O. Box 11562, reaches new heights as the MasCilicago, Ill. 6061 J.(J562. (In Call- sachuseus economy bottoms out.
In Belchertown, a rural commuada, send $4.45.)
nity northeast of Springfield, the
school disoict last week sent out
324 letters to parents of fifth-and
sixth·graders aslcing them 10 donate
money to hire an extra teacher or
teacher's aide.
parade.
School officials said they sent
Wedding gifts from the camp
the
letrers at the urging of parents
were presented to Donald and
who
were alarmed by the prospect
Brenda Elliott, Guysville; and
of
more
than 35 students in a class·
Andrew and Terri Hayes,
room.
Coolville. Winners at games and
"Public education is becoming
contests were Amber Gillispe,
a
privilege
- not a right - and
Phillip Mahoney, Ida Livingston,
that
is
a
dangerous
thing," said
Amanda Rood and Calvin Smith,
School
Superintendent
Robert
Coolville.
Byard
of
Belchertown.
"But
this is
Cards and cheer plates were
delivered to shut-in members.

New fees will tax wallets of state residents

Modern Woodmen sponsor festival
The Hocking River Camp·
ground was the scene of the annual
Fourth of July celebration spon ·
sored by the Modem Woodmen of
America Camp 10900.
Being honored and receiving a
plaque for community served was
Tech. Sgt. James E. Ruble, Belpre,
who has returned recently from his
duties in the United States Air
Force Reserves.
The Woodmen Creed Service
was led by Jesr e Brooks, Richard

Smith and Jesse Davis, Coolville;
and Kay Sheridan, Tuppers Plains.
Group singing was lead by Marjorie Malone, Coolville; Jim
Moore, president, was presented an
American flag for the Coolville
Lions Club.
Shannon Breedlove, 1990 "Miss
Flame" for the Coolville Fire
Department, shared patriotic greetings with the group before leaving
to participate in the Coolville

McCarter, associate executive
director of the American Public
Health Association.
The language is more moderate
than earlier drafts and emphasizes
that the scientific evidence of doctor-to-patient transmission of AIDS
"is inadequate," the newspaper
said.
However, the basic message is
that surgeons and others who perform invasive procedures should
know whether they are infecred and
probably should not practice if they
are, the newspaper said.
A Florida dentist whom CDC
investigators believe infected five
patients is the only health care
worker known to have infected
patients during treaunent.

I For fight against grasshoppers,

what happens when taxpayers, led
by the Legislature and the ~over­
nor, wallc out on their obliganons."
The disoict has received more
than $1,500 in conoibutions, but it
must raise about $23,000 to hire a
teacher, Byard said.
Sherman Kinney, director of the
Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic League, said about half of the
state's public school districts are
considering fees for students who
want to play spons. The fees run as
high as hundreds of dollars.
Other communities are taking
similar sreps:
/
- In Springfield, the non-profit
group that operates a public librarymuseum complex plans to charge
an admission fee for the flrst time
in the group's 135-year history.
- In Somerville, outside
Boston, softball leagues are
charged $30 a night to light fields.
- In Holyoke, city officials are
considering ways to dump their 21
trash collectors and turn the job
over to a private company.
Some anti-tax activists said they
support increasing fees and transferring public services to private
operators. They said it appropriate·

ly shifts the financial burden of a
service 10 its users.
Chip Faulkner, associate direc tor of the Boston-based Citizens for
Limited Taxation, said that several
years ago, the costs of many more
services were buried in local property tax bills. He said the fees
prompt residents to take a closer
look at government services.
"Now I think it's good that people are charged a specific fee for a
specific service," he said. "If they
have to shell out I00 or 500 bucks
for something that was formerly
hidden in a high property tax bill,
they might well ask, 'What are we
getting?""
Others believe the trend can be
carried 100 far.
"I would assume that public
education and public safety are
things that benefit the whole community and the whole community
should pay for," said John Robenson, a fiscal officer for the Massachusetts Municipal Association.
"I would assume most people
would agree that if a fireman
comes and puts out a fire at your
house, you should not be charged a

Ohio Lottery
Meigs
Legion
tops Gallia

Pick 3:579
Pick 4: 7098
Cards : 8-H, Q-C

K-D; 10-S

Low tonight in 60w.

Page 4

Wednesday, sunny. High
near 90.

1 Section, 10 Pages

Vot. 42, No. so

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy Village Council members discussed possible funding of
Iiller control programs within the
village when they met in regular
session on Monday evening.
Village Administrator John
Anderson presented information to
council members regarding grants
available 10 Ohio municipalities
from the Ohio Deparunent of Natural Resources for such programs.
According to Anderson, one
grant offers a maximum of
$25,000, with no match required
behalf of the village. That money

could be used for projects such as
litter control and recycling, dump
clean-up projects and the like.
Another, requiring a 50 percent
match, would make a maximum of
$100,000 available to the village.
That program would cover programs such as curb-side recycling
programs, and recycling education
and awareness programs.
Anderson agreed to do the
paperwork and make the necessary
contacts for the grant if council
could decide on an appropriare project on which to spend the grant
money.
Council discussed the possibili-

ty of funding two clean.up weeks
with the grant money, and also
mentioned using the funds to set up
a mandatory trash program like that
adopted recently by Middleport
Village Counci I.
No official action was taken on
the discussions held last night.
Resolutions adopting salaries
for 1992 for the village mayor,
clerk and council members were
discussed last night. The new reso·
lutions, if passed, would set the
mayor's salary at $6,000 per year,
council salaries at $30 per meeting,
that of council president at $40,
and the clerk's salary at $15,000

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Stan'
Completion of a bridge replacement project on State Route 338
near Racine is on schedule, and
some of the controversy that surrounded the project has died down
considerably.
,
The Ohio Department of Trans portation places completion of the
bridge and re-opening the closed
section of the road at August 31.
The bridge and road were closed on
April 17, and work commenced

fee.' '

Paul Newman has a knack for lettuce
By Frank Lovet:e
Yes, of course, Paul Newman is
an acting legend, but don't reU him
that: He's more at home in his role
as a food entrepreneur. The 66year-old star of "The Hustler,"
"Butch Cassidy and the Sundance
Kid," "The Sting," "The Color of
Money" (for which he won an
Academy Award) and 43 other
classic and occasionally not·soclassic films discusses his most
recent feature, "Mr. &amp; Mrs .
Bridge" Uust released on HBO
Video), only grudgingly. But get
him talking about his Newman's
Own brand of p&lt;ipcom, salad dressing and other foodstuffs, and he
suddenly becomes as happy as a
clam sauce.
"I am," he announces proudly,
''the salad king of New England!''
That he is, which isn't to say
Newman isn't equally proud of
"Mr. &amp; Mrs. Bridge," in which he
and Joanne Woodward, his wife of
33 years, play the title roles. It's a
quirky, idiosyncratic film about a
wealthy, well-meaning, but emotionally constricted Midwestern
allorney and his family in the
1930s and '40s, based on two cult
novels by EvanS. ConneU. And as
the Cleveland-born Newman points
out - cheerfully but a little stung
- "Joanne . says I am Mr.
Bridge!"
In what way? "Oh, I dunno,"
Newman casuaUy replies, his ice·
blue eyes shaded by presCription

I

sunglasses. "Stubborn. Pig-headed.
Opinionated." And yet, he says
with admiration, Bridge "is very
defmed. I suppose each person has
priorities in life, and his priorities I
think are very decenl The things he
doesn't much think about" - such
as his blithe ignorance of his secretary's 20-year anniversary with him
- " are things people say are great
deficiencies in his character. But
the fact is, he only has two real prionues, and ther have to do with
ethics and moraltty.
"I understand the guy," Newman continues, "I really do. And 1
think there is something of him something, however small or unintended - in all of us. A sense of
chauvinism, a sense of elitism - it
exists in all of us. And I think it's
repressed. But to sar, it doesn't
exiSt is pretty diffteult. '
Newman, it's clear, identifies
with the man. Far from the HoUywood glitterati, he lives with the
Oscar- and Emmy-winning Woodward in a Westport, Conn., carriage
house that is two centuries old. He
Dies desperately to be an actor and
not a star, with aU the media-image
baggage stardom entails, and so he
has the actorly wherewithal to do
both a "Color of Money" with
Tom Cruise for a big studio, and a
low-budget "Bridge" for directOr
James Ivory ("A Room With a
View").
His interests are all over the
place, from ra~e·car driving to

political causes. In 1978, the year
his son Scott cragically died of an
acctdental overdose of tranquilizers
and alcohol, Newman served as a
U.S. delegare to the U.N. conference on disarmament. Oe took up
racing in the 1970s, and won the
1985 national championship in the
Sports Car Club of America's GT-1
class. He began a food company Salad King Inc., with its Newman's
Own brand - as a lark with Westport neighbor and Hemingway
btographer A.E. Hochner. Committed to channeling its profits to charity, the company has turned over
•,some $20 miUion thai way in nine
years.
The company 's gross revenues
are currently well over that amount
each year. "The (gosh-darned)
salad dressing is outgrossing my
ftlms!" Newman laughs. But there
are headaches: He was sued in
198 8 by a Westport deli owner
Julius Gold, who conoibuted a dis:
puled amount of expertise when the
company was being founded in
1982; Gold claimed to have been
verbally offered a one-tweHth shane
of Salad King and a spinoff
spaghetti-sauce, popcorn and
lemonade company. Newman and
his partners prevailed, hQwever, in
a jury trial.
· ·
•
Wind Cave, s.n, a natioo111 park

comprised of limestone caverns In the
Black Hills, highlights extensive wild·
life, including a herd of bison.

pose of voting.
Increasing algae at the cemetery
pond was discussed at len gth , as
were possible solutions Ill the problem. According to Clerk Brenda
Morris, a resident of the village has
donated six grass·eating carp for
the pond, in the hope that they will
reduce the algae in Lhc pond.
The introduction of copper sulfate into the pond was also discussed, but it was determined that
it could be harmful to the fi sh in
the pond . Mayor Seyler recom mended that council consider pur·
chasing more of the carp. Council
took no action, deciding to await

the res ul ts of the carv now in the
pond .
in other action, council:
- held the second reading on a
fund transfer;
- held the second reading on a
resolution to borrow money from
Bank One for the purchase of a
police cruiser;
. held the second reading on a
resolution regarding the re-paving
of U.S. Route 33 (Main Street)
from the Nye Avenue intersection
to the Pomeroy/Mason bridge;
. approved a change of name on
the liquor license for Super Amen·
Continued on page 3

shortly thereafter.
Work on the project is estimated
to cost ODOT $636,655 , and is
being performed by Alan Stone
Construction Company.
Considerable controversy surrounded the closing in the project's
earliest days. Residents of the
immediate area claimed the road
closing threatened both their immediate mobility and, potentially .
their safety, as it could hamper
emergency services into the area.
Those residents, at the time of

the closing in April, requested the
construction of a temporary bridge.
ODOT, however, explained that
construction of such a temporary
structure would almost double cost
and work time at the site.
ODOT officially detoured the
traffic onto State Route 124. How·
ever, most residents, have pre .
dictably chosen to detour across
several county roads in the area.
Shonly after the mad was closed
and construction on the new bridge
Continued on page 3

Hay show planned during
1991 Meigs County Fair

dirt, use blowers to spray insecti-

cide at 12.0 mph, then plow the soil
under to further disrupt the reproductive cycle.
But the program - expected to
cost up to $500,000 - won't begin
until researchers find the most
effective pesticide.
An unchecked hatching could
result in a doubling or quadrupling
of insects, said John Capinera,
director of the Universily of Florida
entomology department.
That scares Florida's $7-biUiona-yearcitrus industry, with 760,000
acres of groves.
Heavy rain in the area - seven
inches so far this month - has
hampered pesticide testing, but it
also may help rot the grasshopper
eggs, Richard Gaskalla, director of
the state Division of Plant industry.
. The. last major grasshopper
mfestanon began east of Tampa in
Plant City in 1946, spreading
throu~h the citrus belt and then
north 1010 Georgia .before dying off
10 1952.
No one knows for sure what
ended the infestation. Rain may
have promoted the spread of diseases and parasites, Capinera said.

per year. The salary of Mayor
Richard Seyler is $3,400. Council
members are currently paid $25 per
meeting. The clerk's salary would
remain unchanged.
Councilman Bryan Shank
voiced his opposition to the raise in
council members' salaries, but stated that he did support the resolutions setting the salaries of mayor
and clerk. (Shank did not seek
reelection to council, and his term
ends in December.)
It was agreed by council that the
positions of clerk, mayor and council members should all be written
in separate resolutions for the pur-

Work on bridge replacement
project is on schedule

a battle plan without a weapon
proportions.
"It" s never just one, it's clouds
of them ," said Mary Ellen Ergle,
whose plot of Chrisunas 1rees has
so far escaped damage. "If you're
not careful, they can poke your eye
out."
They don't bite humans. But
their gooey excrement covers cars
parked under trees, and some
homeowners say the grasshoppers
have chewed through porch
screens.
"At night! can hear them clickin$ across the roof of my trailer,"
S31d pasture manager Dave Johnson. "I can't help but think they're
trying to get inside. It's like something out of a bad horror movie.''
For the Florida Department of
Agriculture, finding the perfect
pesticide to kill grown grasshoppers has been an exercise in futility.
It's led to a shift in strategy gomg after the next generation.
Researthers have had some success in kiUing young grasshoppers,
so they've launched an ambitious
plan to auack the next big hatching,
expected in August
They plan to pinpoint the dense
woods where the bugs breed in the

25 conte
Inc. Newspaper

Council discusses litter control grant funds

.I

By JAMES MARTINEZ
Associated Press Writer
DADE CITY, Fla. (AP)
Florida's worst grasshopper plague
in four decades has ravaged thousands of acres of farmland while
scientists search for a weapon to
combat the swarming, thumb-sized
terminators.
"I've sprayed everything and
they just keep on eating. You kiU
one and I0,000 more show up for
the funeral," said citrus grower
Bill Jordan, who has watched his
grove of leafy, young orange trees
reduced to naked sticks.
First seen swarming here six
weeks ago, the hardy strain of
American grasshoppers - related
to the African desen locust - has
moved into 52,000 acres of citrus,
com, pecan and hay lands in west·
central Florida
As they mature into adulthood,
the grasshoppers develop a rock·
hard exoskeleton and the ability to
fly the length of a football field.
Nowhere are they thicker than in
this bucolic town 40 miles north.
cast of Tampa, where every
crunchy walk through the fields
becomes an adventure of biblical

A Multimedia

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, July 16, 1991

Copyrighted 199t

NEARING COMPLETION · 'The bridge on
State Route 338 at Yellowhusb iD Sutton Township is expected to be completed by the scheduled date or August 31, at a cost or well over half
a million dollars. Meanwhile, Letart and Sutton

SMITHSONIAN GARDENER - Smithsonian gardener Walter Howell with his 35-root-long
dinosaur topiary creation that startled unsus-

Rosenfeld dies
NEW YORK (AP) - Mark
Allan Rosenfeld, who was taken
prisoner by Iraqi troops in Kuwait
last year and escaped to the American Embassy, died Thursday of
AfDS. He was 54.
Rosenfeld died at New York
University Medical Center, his
family said
Rosenfled, president of New
York-based Car International,
arrived in Kuwait Aug. 2, 1990, the
day Iraq invaded.
He was held three weeks in the
Meridien Hotel in Kuwait City.
When American hostages were
being transferred to Baghdad,
Rosenfeld and seven others
sneaked to the hotel basement.

pectiDg tourists until its ivy nanks began shedding at the Museum of Natural History iD Washington. (AP)

Willing Workers plan for
vacation Bible school
The Willing Workers of SL Paul
There were 41 sick calls reportUnired Methodist Church, Tuppers ed and get well cards were signed
Plains, met recently for an after- for three absent members.
noon at the church social hall.
Birthday cake and ice cream
Repons were given by Evelyn were served to celebrate the birthSpencer, Mildred Brooks and Mae day of Doris Koenig and Bulah
Vineyard.
Maxey.
Hazel Barnhill led the prayer
the group will meet all day on
and had a thank- you card signed Aug. 13 to work on comforters and
for those attending the quilt display will bring sack lunches.
in Athens.
Others attending were Mildred
Plans were made to serve Caldwell, Patricia HaU and Joanna
refreshments to the Daily Vacation Weaver.
Bible School during the week.

------

frj;·rl/!lj!l!!(!tj ..}lnu /1 !I!!!!IJ·· !/;jJfJJJJJS

Township and Meigs County officials are beginning to think about recovery or maintenance
costs to roads used as unofficial detours. (Sentinel Photo by Julie E. DiUon)

A hay show will be held at the
!28th Annual Meigs County Fair,
Aug. 12-17, under sponsorship of
the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District and the Metgs
County Fair Board.
Categories for the hay show will
be 75 percent or more alfalfa, all
grasses, and 49 percent or less
legumes.
Rules for the hay show stare that

exhibitors must bring one whole
bale to the fair and that the hay will
become the property of the fair
board. One slice will be taken from
the middle of the bale for judging.
Hay will be auctioned at the fair
and the hay must be used at the fair
and may not be removed from the
fairgrounds.
According to the rules, there
must be at least 10 exhibits to make

a show. Premums will be $20 for
first place, $15 for second place,
and $10 for third place in each cat·
egory.
The show is open to Meigs
County residents only. The only
entry fee is a Meigs County Fair
membership tickeL
Entries are to be made at the
Meigs County Fair Board office by
4 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 8.

Census Bureau says it will not
revise Ohio's official1990 figures
WASHINGTON (AP) - As far
as the federal government is concerned, 85.885 Ohio residents
aren't really there.
The government has decided not
to include in Ohio's official popu-

lation count the estimated 85,885
people who weren "t counred in the
1990 census.
That makes Ohio's official state
population 10,847,115. The government is scrapping its modified

Deadline for filing petitions
for fall election August 22
The deadline for candidates to
file petitions for the November
elections is August 22 at 4 p.m.
Elections will be held on Novem ber 5.
According to the Meigs County
Board of Elections, all villages in
the county (Middlepon, Pomeroy,
Racine, Rutland and Syracuse) will
elect mayors and other officials.
All three school districts will elect
board members.
Pomeroy and Middleport, being
viUages with more than 2,000 rest·
dents , each held primary elections
in May. The victors in those races
wiU face one another in November.
The Village of Syracuse will
elect a mayor, clerk/treasurer, two
council members, and a member of

the Board of Public Affairs. Racine
will elect a mayor, clerk/treaswcr,
two council members and two
members of the Board of Public
Affairs. Rutland Village will elect a
mayor, a clerk/treasurer and two
council members.
The Eastern Local and Meigs
Local School District will each
elect three board members, while
Southern Local Schools will elect
only two.
The deadline for filing petitions
as a write-in candidate will be
September 26 at 4 p.m. ·
Those petitions may be picked
up and rerumed at the Meigs County Board of Elections office, located on Mechanic Street in Pomeroy.

estimate of 10,933,000.
Commerce Secretary Robert
Mosbacher said he examined all
the arguments for both seiS of figures, and found no reason to break
with tradition.
"Before we take a step of that
magnitude, we must be certain it
would actually make the census
better and the di stribution of the
population more accurate," Mosbacher said at a news conference
Monday. "After thorough review, I
find the evidence inconclusive and
unconvincing.''

That evidence was a statistical
estimate based on surveys taken
after the 1990 Census. Statisticians
estimated the national head count
missed 5.3 million people. The discrepancy was greatest in inner
cities and among blacks, Hispanics
and southerners.
Dozens of federal programs distribute money using formulas based
on census figures. Cleveland esumates that city stand s to lose at
least $1.1 million a year because of
Mosbacher's decision. It could lose
more than that because even the
revised figures were lower than
Continued on page 3

___ Local briefs----. Public meeting is
Georgia man cited in hit-skip

scheduled Wednesday

A Georgia man was cited for hit.·skip and failure to control by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Stare Highway Patrol followmg a onevehicle accident at the intersection of S.R. 681 and S.R. 692 Monday morning.
.
.
According to the report, Patnck Scott Consla, 21 , of Marietta,
Ga., was nonhbound on S.R. 681 when his truck ran off the right
side of the road and struck a power pole. He then left the scene
without stopping.
The patrol was notified of the incident by a witness .
Damage to the right side of Consla's Nonh American Van Lines
1988 Frieghtliner was listed as moderate.
No injuries were reported.
Continued on page 3

A pu bile meeting wiD be held
at 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday In the
Riverboat Room of the Meigs
County Public Library for displaced residents and concerned
citiJens regarding the Hobson
landslide.
Representatives from the
offices of Senator Jan Mlcbael
Long, State Representative Mary
Abel, th.e Oblo Department of
Development and tbe state and
local Emergency Management
Agency will be on band.

-,

TAKING IT EASY - Charles' Snodgrass,
veteran· Ohio Valley Publishing Company
employee, displays special engraving to be
placed on rear of his new rocking chair while co-

.

'

'

workers look on. Snodgrass retired today, ending 40 years or service with the newspaper
industry. Compagy officials presented Snodgrass the rocJdng chair Monday.

Charles Snodgrass, OVP employee,
retires, ending 40 years of service
Charles Snodgrass, 65, veteran
Ohio Valley Publishing Company
employee, retired today.
A platemaker in the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company's pressroom,
Snodgrass was given a retirement
party by fellow workers on July 6.
Monday, he was presented a rocking chair by company offictals.
Snodgrass completed 40 years
of service in the printing industry.
He worked under five publishers
and four publishing fmns, and witnessed the changes from the old
hot-metal type production of newspapers to cold type (offset). He
began his career in the stereotype
department (hot rnetal) at the Point

Pleasant Register in 1951.
He transferred to the stereotype
deparunent of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune in 1953 when Harold W.
Wetherholt was still publisher, and
worked with the r,ressroom crew
on the old "flatbed ' press.
He remained with the Tribune
when Dear Publications assumed
control of the Gallipolis Publishing
Company in the fall of 1953, and
when Ohio Valley Publishing pur·
chased the Tribune in 1959, Snodgrass was one of the platemalcers
and press operators on the more·
modem "rotary" press.
When the Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Company built its new offset
~

'

•••

plant at825 Third Avenue in 1967, ·
Snodgrass assumed hi s current
duties in the new facility.
. Snodgrass and his wife re side
on Rt. 3, Leon, W. Va. "I plan to
fish and wt; would like to do some
traveling, and visit our three chit.
dren and six grandchildren," he
commented as he gently rocked in
his new chair, displaying a special
company engraving to be placed on
the head rest.
He concluded, "My heart is full
with joy for the great sendoff that
the guys and ~iris at OVP have
given me. I wtsh all of them the
best of luck. 1"11 miss them and
would like to thank them all."
'd

�Commentary

Page-2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
1\Jesday, July 16, 1991

•

Haze, heat, In store for Ohioans

Wednesday, July 17
Aceu-Weather• forecast for

conditions and

MICH.

The Daily Sentinel
Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

Ill

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARID\

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press As so·
elation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wtth
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
II shed. Letters should be In good taste. addressing Issues, not persona II ·
ties.

Legislature creates
bipartisan remap group
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Ohio's new budget creates a task force and gives
it $2.5 million to provide the technical and othe~ inf?rmauo~ the state
needs this year for redrawing congressional and legtslauve distncts.
The six-member panel will provide lawmakers and officials wtth census tracts and demographic data for the creauon of dis~nc.ts that meet
equal population and other requirements of the U.S. Consutuuon. .
. House Speaker Vern Riffe, D· Wheelersburg, and Senate Prest dent
Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, worked out the plan u_nder whtch both parties - even in drawing competitiv_e plans - can avmd legal pttfalls down
the road.
William Pfeiffer Riffe's chief of staff, said redistricting and reapportionment have beco~ exllcting sciences in which courts can spot political
mischief and send mapmakers back to the drawing boards.
The 1964 "one man, one vote" decision of the U.S. Supreme Coun
required districts to be as nearly equal population as poss!ble. Since
then have come more requirements that mclude compact, conuguous districts that do not unnecessarily split subdivisions or sap minority voting
strength.
.
Pfeiffer said the research requires computers and new map-making
technology and that the task force will buy the hardware and software
needed "to enable Ohio to comply with all legal requirements."
Under law, the Legislature is required to draw and maintain congressional districts that meet constitutional muster. This task becomes more
difficult this year. Ohio is l~sing t~o of its 21 seats in the U.S. House
because of national populatton shtfts noted m the 1990 Census. Thts
means that two districts have to be eliminated.
A compromise plan virtually is assured .. ~ocrats control the House
and Republicans, the Senate, and the redistncung btll must pass both
houses in the same form.
.
Ohio's 99 House and 33 Senate districts will be left up to an apporuonment board consisting of the governor, auditor, secretary of state and one
member of each pany from the Legislature.
The board will be controlled 3-2 by Republicans. But their ability to
gerrymander, or draw districts to their own advantage, will be limited
because of the coun mandates.
. .
The budget creates in permanent law the Legtslauve Task Foree on
Redistricting, Reapponionme~ll and qetn~phtc Research. It will be a
repository for past and future mformauon, Pfeiffer S31d.
Three members each "'ould be appointed by the president of the Senate
and the speaker of the House. The bill requires that each leader appoint
one member who is not a legislator.
Under the proposal, the task force is authorized to hire attorneys and
technical expens. It can conduct hearings and co~ect from or proVIde data
to state agencies and Ohio's local government uruts.
Several s!,ll~ ~y ~uoh t~!l' forces;. Ohi~'s is ~~~ after one
"that seems be working wetriii New York, Pfeiffer S31d.

Congress' staff getting bigger and bigger
WASHINGTON - The late
Rep. Silvio Conte, R-Mass., was
fond of saying that he wished he
could pass a law renaming the U.S.
Capitol as the Empire State Building, because it housed a huge
empire - thousands of aides waiting on only 535 lawmakers.
It now costs $2.3 billion a year
to suppon Congress and its ancillary agencies populated with worker bees who hum around the law makers responding to their every
command. In 1960. the legislative
budget was $130 million. Today it
is roughly 20 times bigger. I9 1960,
there were 6,791 employees serving Congress. Today there are
about 20,000.
Some agencies that support
Congress have so many people,
they don't know what to do with
them. This year, the General
Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, took on 172
extra staffers and loaned them to
congressional committees. There
are so many people working in the
Capitol Building that their desks
spill out into waiting areas and cubbyholes.
Newcomers to Congress might
have to scrape and beg for enough

staffers to run their offices, but the
established members accumulate
bigger staffs - big enough to do
personal errands. As one staffer put
it, " You do what you 're asked to
do. If that means walking the dogs,
dropping off laundry or driving to
the airpon, then you do it." Many
of the more menial jobs are foisted
off on interns, just one step up from
the congressional pages at the bottom of the ladder.
Down in the parking garage,
there is a small army of attendants
to guide members every morning to
the same parking spaces they have
occupied for years. All that help
doesn't come cheap. The budget
for staffing the parking garage will
be $1 .6 million next year.
" It's a joke," one Capitol Hill
staffer told our associate Melinda
Maas. "They have nothing to do.
When I drive in in the morning
there are three guys just sitting
around twiddling their fingers."
Some pass the time reading newspapers or playing cards.
In addition to the parking attendants, unifonned officers from the
Capitol Police force stand in the
garages checking identification
cards before turning the cars over

!n

II,

Berry's World

1oNIGtiT
GEJ/Oi&lt;lfl.
~IVSITIVITV

liiTI!. .

-- .

~~
([) 1~ 1
NEA. Inc
-:'."
by

i

&lt;.

Today In History
Today is Tuesday, July 16, the 197th day of 1991. There are 168 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
- On July 16; I945, the United States exploded its ftrst experimental
atomic bomb, in the desert of Alamogordo, N.M.
- On this date:
: In I790, the District of Columbia was established as the seat of the
O.S. government.
. In 1862 David Farragut became the ftrst rear admiral in the U.S. Navy.
· In I9t8' Russia's Czar Nicholas ll, his empress and their five children
iwere exec~ted by the Bolsheviks.
.• In 1935 the fu1t parking meters were installed, in Oldahoma City.
: In 1951' 40 yean ago, the novel "The Catcher in the Rye" by J.D.
Salinger
first published.
:· In 1957 Marine Maj, John Glenn set a transcontinental speed record
when he Oew a jet from California to New York in 3 hours, 23 minutes
ind
8 seconds.
.
ldential
. . . S
·· In 1964 in actepling the Republican pres
nommauon m an
Francisco,
Bany Goldwarer. ~ ''extremlS;ffi in.the. de~ense ~f liht;';tY is no vice' • and that •'moderabOn m the pursutt of JUSltce JS no vtrtue.
·- In 1969, Apollo XI, carryin$ astronauts Jl!eil Arm.strong, Edwin
~'Buzz" Aldrin and Michael Collins, blasted off from Cape Kennedy on
i!Je fttSt manned mission to the surface of the ~.
'· In 1973 during the Senate Watergate heaings, former Whtte House
Side Atexaitder .Butterfield pulilicly revealed the existence of President
Nixon's secret taping system.

wu

Sen.

·I

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to parking lot attendants. It is one
of the manv menial tasks ocrformed by well-paid cops.
Few will argue against the need
for a police force on Capitol Hill.
But a close look at how the Capitol
Police spend their time raises questions. Why should the taxpayers
pay to train and arm a unifonned
police officer so he or she can
spend hours every day checking ID
cards at a congressional cafeteria,
or writing parlcing tickets around
the building?
Three decades ago, there were
216 Capitol Police officers. Now
there are six times that many two cops for every member of
Congress - with an annual budget
of more than S60 million. Even the
police themselves want many of
the jobs to be assumed by civilians
so the cops can devote themselves
to serious police work. The Capitol
Police estimate that as much as
$4.3 million could be saved over
the nellt five years if I 00 positions
were wmed over to non-uniformed
civilians who cost less to train and
keep.
There are people on top of people in the Capitol building. But
when Congress spends money on

CLOSED
WR REPAIRS

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta
the building, it rarely goes toward
better accommodations for the little
people. Instead, Congress will ·
spend $350.000 to redo the congressiorial beauty salon, or $25,000
to study the need for a new House
gym, or $6 million to upgrade the
Senate subway that shuttles the two
blocks between the Senate offices
and the Capitol. or $50,000 in traY·
el expenses for the full-time Capitol arehitecL
Silvio Conte once wore a "Miss
Piggy" mask on the House floor to
denounce the rampant, selfish
spending habits of Congress.
Today, when there are 35 ~illion
Americans without health msurance and 12.6 million hungry children in the country, we wish Conte
had left the mask to someone in his
wilL
BATTLE WEARY - Those
who know retiring Supreme Coun
Justice Thurgood Marshall tell us
that he is troubled over the conservative complexion of the coun. He
no longer has the physical stamina
to cootinue as the liberal warhorse,
so he gave up the fight. He is not
bitter, just frustrated . Marshall
found the aunosphere on the coun
to be congenial, if not politically
correct. Chief Justice William
Rehnquist was an amiable adversary who didn't try to force his
views on the other justices. But
Rehnquist does have a conservative
agenda, and he isn't above forcing
his views on the nation.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Transponation Secretary Samuel Skinner
took $40,000 worth of flying
lessons and charged them to the
taxpayers, according to CBS News.
His excuse was that he is. after all.
the transponation secretary, so he
should know all facets of the business. The next logical step is to
find Skinner in the engine of an
Amtrak train, behind the wheel of a
Greyhound bus or threading an ISwheeler through rush-hour traffic
on the New Jersey Turnpike.
Maybe with enough training at taxpayers' expense, Skinner will be
qualified to take White House
Chief of Staff John Sununu anywhere he needs to go by any mode
of transportation Sununu chooses.

The district that stays in place will maintain its place
This week I'd like to discuss a
subject about which there appears
to be considerable misunderstanding and indifference. The subject is
the redrawing of Congressional
Dislficts as dictated by federal law.
Evety· ten years as a result of the
decennial eensus, the 435 seats in
the U.S. House of Representatives
are subject to reallocation among
the 50 states based on the popula·
lion of those states.
During the past decade, Ohio,
based on its 1980 population of
10.8 million people, was entitled to
21 seats in the U.S. House. Though
Ohio's population increased by
eight-tenths of one percent over the
past decade, the increase was measurably smaller than that experienced by a number of other states,
particular! y those in the sunbelt
regions of the country. Thus, as a
result of the 1990 census, Ohio is
slated to lose two of its present 2I
seats. This reduction in representation will be effective for the
Congress commencing in January
of 1993.
The task of determining how the
state's 21 seats are to be reduced to
19 rests with the Ohio Assembly in
Columbus. This task must be carried out this year, and be done in
such a manner that the boundaries
for each of the 19 Congressional
districts that remain will contain
roughly identical populations of

570,000 people each.
If this task were accomplished
objectively and the reducuons tn
representation made in those areas
of the state experiencing the
bi~est population losses, both of
the seats tel bd'Oiiminated iYollld·
come out of the northeast comer of
the state.
Unfonunately, more often than
not, objectivity is sacrificed to
political considerations. This is true
for the redrawing of new State
Assembly lines as well, which likewise is required every 10 years. At
the state level, the recasting of legislative districts is called reapportionmenL
Reapportionment is not to be
confused with redistricting. They
are two separate procedures. Reapportionment of State Assembly districts is determined by a Reapportionment Board made up of the
Governor, the Secretary of ~~tate,
the State Auditor and a representative from each of the two major
political parties. By design, it is
certain to be more political than the
congressional redistricting process.
In the case of the reapportionment
board, one party normally controls
the board and thereby the process,
by a 3 to 2 majoritv. Redistrictinll:.
on the other hand, is subject to the
legislative approval of the Ohio
House and Senate.
Inasmuch as the control of the

Cong. Clarence Miller
Ohio Assembly is presently divided
between the two major political
parties with the Republicans controlling _,r.he Senate and .the
-nemocratnhe· House, any plan, to
have a chance of approval, must
satisfy the concerns of both. Therefore, though the population falloff
was heaviest in northeastern Ohio,
a region represented almost exclusively by Democratic congressmen,
most anticipate that each party will
be forced to sacrifice one of its
seats.
When push comes to shove as to
which incumbent stands for reelection in 1992, and as to which areas
of Ohio will be asked to sacrifice
their present Congressional districts, the people of the Ohio Valley must be prepared to speak out
in defense of maintaining a district
similar in makeup to the present
lOth Congressional District. This
point is hard to make without
sounding self-serving, but let me
try. As presently constituted, the
lOth District is an amalgam of all
or part of some 12 Ohio counties. It
combines, under its heading, counties with a unique set of social and
economic priorities. counties that
for the best part fall within the
boundaries of Appalachia, counties
that are basically rural in makeup
and laclcing in economic opponuni-

ty. If the I Oth District were to lose
its identity and be divided up
among three or four of the adjacent
Congressional districts, the impact
on out'Ohio Valley region could be
considerable. ·
Instead of having a district consistent in makeup, instead of having a district whose counties share
the same social and economic concerns, parts of the present IOth District could find themselves in districts that are basically suburban in
makeup, in districts that have different legislative priorities, districts
that might view them as an unwanted appendage or stepchild. Instead
of having a district bound together
by common interests and common
concerns, one might find themselves on the periphery of a district
that pays little mind to the concerns
of rural Ohio and to its unique
social arid economic needs.
To paraphrase a popular expression, the district that stays in place
will maintain iiS place in the councils of government. Said another
way, united we stand, divided we
fall. If you share these concerns, I
urge you to take pen in hand and let
the Governor and the leadership of
the Ohio House and Senate in
Columbus know your feelings. The
issue of redistricting is too important to ignore.

Bush is now good for conservatives
Week Two of the Thomas Nomination Drama passed with little to
show for all the strenuous research
into the nominee 's past. It tran spired that a couple of times in college, and perhaps once in law
school. he had puffed on marijuana
cigarettes.
The impact of this disclosure
might have been greater if Thomas
hadn't advised the Senate Judiciary
Committee of these transgressions
two years ago and it hadn't confirmed his nomination to the Circuit Coon of Appeals anyway. For
the senators to go into retroactive
shoek on the subject at this late
date would be unconvincing, to say
the least.
(The case of Judge Douglas
Ginsburg, also of the D.C. Circuit,
who was President Reagan's substitute choice for the Supreme
Coun after the Senate's rejection of
Judge Bork, is distinguishable: His
indulgence in marijuana occurred
while he was on the faculty of Harvard Law School, when he might
have been expected 10 be a more
law-abiding citizen.)

So discussions involving the putting Justice Souter on the
Thomas nomination are drifting, Supreme Coun, where he regularly
for now, to related matters. Conser- votes with the known conservavatives, for elUllllple, are admitting tives. He has warned, in two suc- dents have been fonunate enough
to one another that they may have cessive congressional sessions, that to be identified with the inception
misjudged President Bush.
he will veto any so-called "civil of a brand-new political philosoOnly a year ago, conservative rights bill'' that compels businesses phY.. In this century, only Woodrow
disgust with Mr. Bush was at an to hire by race quotas. He has stood Wilson, Franklin D. Roosevelt and
all-time high. It had just been dis- firm in his opposition to abortion, Ronald Reagan come to mind. The
covered that he had sent National and to government financing of others, good and bad alike, have
Security Council Director abortions, in all but the most had to maneuver within the conScowcroft on a secret mission to extreme cases. And now, by nam- fmes of the policies ftrst enunciated
Peking, where he toasted the butch- ing Judge Thomas to the Supreme by these three.
ers of Tiananmen Square: Secretary Court, he has openly bid to nail
of State Baker was compromising down its conservative majority for
George Bush, inescapabl}' is the
with Moscow on arms reductions decades to come.
and givil)g less than. enthusiastic
These are not the actions o( a political heir of Ronald Reag~. He
suppon to the in(!ependence move- wimp, or of a ''pragmatist" with- could, of course, have repudiated
his heritage, or simply failed to
ments in the Baltic states. And Mr. out principles.
Bush himself had just broken his
It is undoubtedly true that understand and extend it. But he
most memoJ'llble and mosl impor- George Bush is no Ronald Reagan. !tas done neither. Instead, he has tant campaign pledge: "Rea4 my Reagan was a fearless avatar and tn ~eneral, and with exceptions
lips: No new taxes."
superb spokesman of the conserva- attnbutable to his own nature But what a difference a year can tive political philosophy. But )lush nurtured and funhered iL
No doubt he will disappoint us
make! In the past I2 months Mr. is somelhin$ almost as valuable: a
Bush has initiated and carried genuine political leader who is not conservatives again, sometime
thrQugh one of the most succes,sful ashamed to follow through on a between .now and Election Day
and diplomatically significant course of action initially defined by 1992. Bemg the perfectionists we
are, we will moan and gnash our
major military ope111tions ill Ameri- someone else.
can history. He has succeeded in
Historically, not many ptesi- teeth.

William A. Rusher

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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 16, 1991

e
IND.

IMansfield I 90° I•

PA.

91°

•I Columbus I 92• J.

•

a
kll

Rllin

Sunny

W. VA.

Pl. Cloudy

Via Associated Preas GrapNCINtH

Cloudy

et991 Accu·Weether, inc.

------Weather-----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, clear. Low in the mid60s. Wednesday, mostly sunny.
High near 90.
Extended Forecast:

Tbursday tbrougb Saturday:
Fair on Thursday and Friday. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms Saturday. Highs in the
upper 80s and low 90s. Lows in the
upper 60s to low 70s.

Wednesday. Highs on Wednesday
will be around 90.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was I 00 degrees in 1988.
The record low was 52 in 1957.
Sunrise this morning was at
6:16 a.m. Sunset will be at 8:59
p.m.
Around' the nation
Much of the nation awoke today
to fair weather, although rain
dampened parts of the South and
partly cloudy slcies hung over some
Eastern cities.
Sunny skies were expected

Council...

World leaders await Gorbachev

Continued rrom page 1
ca in Pomeroy;
- approved a gospel sing on the
Pomeroy Parking Lot on August 8
at 7 p.m. The group will also be
permitted to use the bandstand and
upper parking lot;
- discussed a proposal from
Police Chief Gerald Rought for
accessories for the new police
cruiser. At present. Rought esti·
mates a cost of $1,716 for a light
bar, radio antenna and trim. Coun·
cil has appropriated only $1 ,500;
- approved a proposed budget
for 1992 with a general fund dcfictt
of $24,000.
Present, in addition to Shank,
Morris and Seyler were council
members Bill Young , Thomas
Werry and Betty Baronick.

Continued from page I

continued rrom page I

began, County Engineer Phil
Roberts reported considerable damage to the county and township
roads.
Eleven accidents were investigated and 84 arrests made during
According to David Spencer of
June, according to Middlepon Chief of Police Sid Little.
the
Meigs County Highway
Parking meter collections totaled $646.50, merchant police colDepartment,
the county and Suuon
lections were $71, and 331 parking tickets were issued during the
and
Letart
Township
trustees have
month.
been working regularly to maintain
the roads affected, and anticipate
recovery of the cost of materials
from the state.
Moderate damage was incurred to two vehiclet in an accident on
Spencer reported Monday that
the Kroger parking lot Monday afternoon.
.
the
townships have been purchasPomeroy police reported that a truck dr_tven Todd Hoschar,
ing
repair
materials from the counPomeroy, backed into the right side of a car driven by Harold Jenks,
ty,
and
that
the county has kept
Louisa, Ky. The right rear of the truck and the nght Side of the car
very
specific
records of these purhad damage. There were no injunes nor cttaUons.
chases for reimbursement purposes.
At the time the construction got
underway , Roberts and his staff
The Meigs County Probate Court has granted marriage licenses
videotaped the roads. After damage
to the following: John Fitzgerald Snyder, 30, Pomeroy, and Peggy
to county and township roads w~
Collins, 28, Pomeroy; Erick Todd Graham, 21, Racine, and Laurie
noticed, Roberts and ODOT EngtJane Black, 21, Racine.
neer Don Johnson met at the road
site and again videotaped the condition of the roads.
Of specific concern to county
and township officials are County
Meigs County Emergency Med- Hartinger Parkway for Heather Road 28 (ApP.Ie Grove -Dorcas
Road), Mile Hill Road, East Letart
ical Services answered 14 calls for Davis. She was taken to Veterans. Road
and Manuel Road, all of
assistance on Monday and Tues- At 10:33 p.m., Middlepon squad
went to Page Street. Ruth Bennett which have sustained considerable
dayOn Monday at 12 :43 p.m., was taken to Veterans. At 10:47 damage due to increased detoured
Pomeroy squad responded to Wehe p.m., Middleport squad we~ I to traffic.
Spencer stated that telephone
Terrace. Marjorie Brown was taken North Second Avenue. Ltnda
calls
regarding the closing had
to Holzer Medical Center. At 4:17 Bosman was taken to Veterans. At
been
an
everyday occurrence at the
p.m., Columbia Township Fire 11:37 p.m.. Rutland squad went to
onset
of
the project in AJ,JTil, but
Department went to a brush ftre at State Route 325. Dorothy Davis
such
restdent complamts had
that
Carpenter Hill Road at the Don was taken to Holzer.
since
ceased
. Another visit by
Manin property. Pomeroy squad
On Tuesday at 12:12 a.m., MidJohnson
to
assess
road damage is
was called for Olin Boothe, who dleport unit went to the police sta- expected around the
time that the
· al . At 4:35 p.m., Lion for John King. King was taken
was dead on amv
bridge
and
road
are
re-opened
to
Scipio Township Volunteer Fire to Veterans. At 12:55 a.m.,
traffic
in
late
AURUSL
Department assisted Columbia on Pomeroy unit went to State Route
· brus h fitre. At6 :12 p. m., 33 for Esther Thaxton. Thaxton Meigs announcements
the Marun
Middleport squad went to Cole was transported to O'Bieness
Meeting date changed
StreeL William Fink was transport- Memorial Hospital. At 1:08 a.m.,
The
Eastern Local Board of
ed to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Middlepon unit .went to North SecEducation
has changed its regularly
At 7:59p.m., Middlepon unit went ond Avenue. Linda Bosman was
10 Pearl Street for Debbie Cretaken to Holzer. At4:51 a.m., Syra- scheduled meeting to Friday at
means, who was taken to Holzer. cuse units went to County Road 34 3:30p.m. in the high school cafeteAt 9:01 p.m., Pomeroy squad went and Salser Road for an accident ria.
to Welchtown Hill. Kevin Klein Sherrie Eblin was taken to VeterJacks reunion
was taken to Holzer. At 9:20 p.m., ans.
The
Jacks
reunion will be held
Middleport unit went to General
July 28 at the Old Jacks Place. All
family and friends arc invited to
Continuedrrom page l
attend.
Cleveland 's own ligures.
figure abandoned by Monday 's
The census counted 505,6I6 decision- but Mayor Michael R.
Recycle day
people in Cleveland.
White said the city believes its real
A recycle day sponsored by the
The bureau later estimated the population is closer to 535,000.
Meigs County Litter Control
"George Bush can wish away Department will be held at Krogcrs
city's population at 513,000 _a
30,000 Clevelanders. I have to in Pomeroy on Saturday from 9
serve them every day," White said. a.m. to noon. Items most commonThe Daily Sentinel
"Using their logic now, we're offi- ly recycled will be included: alu cially saying that 5.3 minion Amer- minum, glass, cardboard, newspatUSP!! llll-9(11)
icans don't ellist. Therefore, pers (tied in bundles) and plasuc
.4. Dl"lllon of Multimedia, Inc.
because they don't eltist, we don't jugs.
to provide hot lunch prohave
Publish«! ('V('ry aft£1rnoon . Monday
Major appliances arc sti II being
through Frida y. 111 O&gt;urt St. . Po·
grams, we don't have to provide recycled at the Little Control
meroy. Ohio. by thf' Ohio Valley Pub·
community development block Office on Union Avenue.
llshlng Company / Multimedia. Inc ..
grants, we don't have to provide
Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769. Ph. 992·2156. Se·
et1nd r!B.ss postage paid at PomE"J'oy.
health care for them.
Star Grange news
Ohto.
"Once again they've pushed
The Star Grange will not be
Member: The Associated Press, Intheir responsibilities off on those having its fun night and potluck
land Dally PrPSs Association and t.he
who can least afford to handle it.''
supper on Saturday du e to the
Ohio Newspaper Association. Natlof\81
Cleveland has joined a lawsuit Salem Center ice cream social.
Advertising Reprt"Sentattve, Branham
New spaper Sal es. 733 Third Avenue.
initiated by New York City to force
Nt&gt;W York, NE"w York 10017.
the government to correct the census numbers.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to T!!P Dally Sentinel. Ill COurt St..
Rep. Thomas Sawyer, D-Ohio.
Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
who heads the House subcommitMONDAY ADMISSIONS
SUJIS(;RJPTJON KAlES
tee .that oversees Lhe census, said
By Carrier or Motor Rout•
Mary Roush , Middleport; Betty
the
government
is
ignoring
scientifOne WPPk .................................. .$1.60
Archer, Middlepon.
ic evidence.
One Month ................................. $6.95
MONDAY DISCHARGES
Ont Year ..
.. ......... ......... 183.20
Mosbacher "chose a deeply
Floyd
Bricldes, Carol Dennis.
STNGLECOPY
flawed census over one that was
PRICE
demonstrably
better.
The
scientific
.... .... . ,............... 25 cents
Dally ..
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
ability to produce a more accurate
Discharges, July 15 - Marlin
SubScribers not desl rlnK to pay the car·
census was there. The political will
rter may rt&gt;mll In ~tdvance direct to
Baker,
Bethany Boyles, Debra
was not," he said:
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 orU month
Bumgarnet,
Mrs . Warren Fields
basts. Credit will be gtvt-n carrier each
The result will leave "millions
and
son,
William
Fraley, Harold
Week .
of people, many of them minorities
Gregory, Mrs. Charles Hanson and
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
and the poor, disenfranchised,"
arl?a&amp; when• home carrier servlctt Is
daughter, Sonja Higginbotham,
Sawyer said.
avallpblE'.
Loren
Howard, Cynthia Hypes,
"The undercount of minorities
Mrs.
Phillip
Jones and son, Angela
Mall Sableflllllolll
is very regrettable and distressIMWe Melp Coolly
Malone,
Bruce
Nibert, Susan Price,
i"g," said Thomas Needles, the
13 Weeks .......... ............., ..... ·· .. · $21.84
and
Daisy
Sayre.
26 Weet&lt;s ....... ............... ...... .... .. $13.16
Washington representative of Ohto
52 Weeks ... .. ........................ ..... $1!4.76
Births, July I5 - Mr. and Mrs.
Gov.
George Voinovich. "It is
OUiotdt MeiP COIIIIIY . ·
Ronald
Greathouse, a son, point
13 Weet&lt;s. :..... ...... .. .. ........ ......... S23.40. . iinperative·that the Census Bureau
· 26 Weet&lt;s ... ......... .. ,... :......... ...,., Sf5..l!/ . devise ·a·better way to avoid these . ~leasant, W.Va Mr. and Mrs. Ray
52 Wefks ...... .. ..................... .... . $88.""
Smith, a daughter, Wellston.
niiscoiUIIS in the future."

Police report 84 June a"ests

Accident reported Monday

Marriage licenses granted

EMS units answer 14 calls

.,. ... . . . . . . . ......._ Vt""'~ -J L .... .... ..... .
'

•·

'

• '

I•

Along those lines. today' s communique said, "We believe that
new thinking in Soviet foreign pol icy ... should be applied on a global
basis."
President Bush also said there
was "strong, strong support "
among the allie s for renewed
bombing of Iraq unless Saddam
Hussein discloses and destroys hts
nuclear program . And he declared
"a breakthrough " in Midea st
peace talks becau se of Syria's
acceptance of a U.S. proposal for
Arab-Israeli talks.
Foreign policy issues commanded center stage on the second day
of the summit, pushing disputes on
trade talks, interest rates and fru:m
subsidies far into the shadows.
Today's communique welcomed
efforts in the Soviet Union to create
a new union ''based on consent not

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Shelby County Sheriff John
Lenhart is the new superintendent
of the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation in
London, Ohio.
His appointment was announced
Monday by Attorney General Lee
Fisher.
Lenhart, who takes over July 31,
succeeds Dan Chilton, who has
been acting superintendent since
January.
Lenhart, 46, is a Shelby County
native now serving his fifth term as
sheriff. He will resign to accept
appointment as head of the 200employee BCL
The new superintendent is a past
president of the Buck~ye State
Sheriffs Assoctauon. Ftsher sa1d
Lenhart is known for establishing
. the nation's first rural crime watch
program and for other accomplishments in the ftght agamst drugs.
Lenhart recently was named
coordinator of Ohio's Interstate
Homicide Task Force, which is
in ves Ligating unsolved murder
along highways in Ohio and several other states.
Lenhart also is an executive
board member of the National
Sheriffs Association. He lives in
Jackson Center. He and his wife, '
Sharon. have three children.

coercion " but acknowl edge d that
·' th e scale of th e und ertakin g is
enor mous. " Th e doc ume nt
end orsed negoti ati ons betw ee n:
Mo scow and th e Baltic states to:
" resolve their future democratical ..
ly and in accordance with the legit· ·
imate aspirations of the people.· '
In a slap at Saddam's grip Ol]
power, the document said the Iraq&gt;
people "deserve the opportunity to
choose their leadership openly anct
democratically . " Moreov er. it
declared there is an "urgent and
overwhelming' ' humanitarian
problem in Iraq "caused by violent
oppression by the government"
and said the international commu·
nity should be prepared to cope
with thaL
Lining up with Bush, the leaders
pledged that they would maintain
sanctions against Iraq until all U.N.
Security Council resolutions are
fully implemented and " the people
of Iraq as well as their neighbors
can live without fear of intimidation, repression or attack."
The communique embraced the
U.S. drive for a Middle East peace
conference, which is based on the·
idea of Israel exchanging land for
Arab recognition. It al so called on
the Arabs to abandon their eco-·
nomic boycott of the Jewish state
and Israel to end its settlements on
former Arab lands.

Middleport releases financial
report for end of June
Middleport Village had a bal ·
ance of $177,003.38 in all funds at
the end of June, according to the
repon of Jon Buck, clerk-treasurer.
Receipts for the month totaled
$79,590.63 while disbursements
totaled $23I,2I0.21.
The largest disbursement was
$108,803.67 from the fire truck
fund to pay off the fire truck purchased five years ago. Receipts into
that fund for the month totaled
$1,410.88 and the balance on June
30 was $1,959.90.
In the general fund receipts

totaled $30,800 with disbursements
of $19,480.23 leavinR a balance of.
$28,784.41.
Other funds with receipts, disbursements and balances, listed
respeclively, were as foUows: streei

maintenance,
$4,445 .52,
$11,921.07, deficit balance,
$23,540.54; mini-golf, $1 ,488.35,'
$1.709.35, deficit balance,
$4,800.68; fire equipment, $485,
$11,670.06, $13,265.23.
ODNR waterways safety. no
receigts, no expenditures, balance'
$4,5 0; economic development,
$791.95, $772.13, $4,251.83: public transportation, $7 ,406.80,
$12,396.93, $17,655.14; water system improvement. no receipts, no
disbursements,
balance,
addressing
the
needs
of
the
under$37,209.55;
water
fund,
A mobile healthcare screening
served,
particularly
in
rural
areas.
$14,840.40,
$16,
164.32,
van of the American Osteopathic
Besides Lottridge, the Care-A- $46 ,597.23; sanitary sewer,
Association will be making a stop
at the Lottridge Community Center van wtll make scheduled stops in $11,882.30, $9,529.87, $5,144.09.
Swimming pool: $3881.10,
in Athens County, just three miles Akron, Cleveland, Youngstown ,
from the Meigs County line, on Columbus, Dayton, Marietta and ., $12,625 .80, deftcil balance,
Stockpon.
. . $16,233.78; cemet~ry, $574. 15,
July 27.
.
. .
Major
funding
for
the
project
IS
$2,559.79. deftctt balance,
The emphasis IS on provtdmg
provided
by
the
AOA
and
contribu$7,667. 11; water meter t~usts,
screening for rural and inner-city
residents who may not have access tions from tts members. Sponsors $550,_$1 ,025 , $19 1692.98, arts
include the American Osteopathic counctl, $116, $108.)9, ~efictt halto a physician.
Two Care-A-Vans, 18 wheel Board of General Practice, Ford ance, $326.58; Appalachta Regtonmedical clinics, will be traveling Trucks, Hoechst-Roussel; Holiday al Housmg, no recetpts, $2,374.12
throughout the country "as a gift of Inns Lufkin Industries, SmithKline disbursements, $2177 .69; Issue 2,
service to the nation to celebrate Beecham, the College of Osteo- no receipts, $23.80 disbursement,
osteopathic medicine's centennial", pathic Medicine, Cellular One,ICI $1062.95; r_evolvtn~ loan fund ,
John P. Perrin, AOA executive Pharamaceuticals, and Wyeth - $917.45 recetpts, no disbursements,
Ayerst Labs.
$48,271.07.
director, announced today.
The kick-off for the Care-A-Van
program will be held in Cleveland
on Friday.
.
Perrin noted that Oh10 has the
TRIMMER
third highest number of osteopathic
CLEARANCE
physicians of any state. 2,603, and
the second largest number of AOASALE
accredited osteopathic hospitals,
17. Ohio is also home to one of 15
osteopathic colleges in the country,
the Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine.
.
.
21cc
He said that thts proJeCt ts
TriiiiiBtr
appropriate and consistent with
osteopathic medicine's heritage of

Health care van to stop near
Meigs County line July 27

O'DELLS

•

149'"

Stocks

Hospital news

'.

.

Fisher to head BCI

cenSUS ..•

i I

Today's focus wa s on th e
ielease of a political communique,
giving a verbal boost to Gorbachev,
who is seeking Western aid for hts
beleagured economy. " Our suppon
for the process of fundam ental
reform in the Soviet Union remains
as strong as ever," it said.
Laying the groundwork for his
appeal, Gorbachev told the leaders
that East-We st cooperation had
succeeded "in making a radical
shift from confrontatton to understanding, from suspicion to trust ...

By TERENCE HUNT
AP White House Correspondent
LONDON - Leaders of the
world's richest nations, warily
awaiting Mikhail Gorbachev and
his plea for help, today offered
strong support - but not a bundle
of cash - for economic reforms
and "new thinking " in the Soviet
Union.
Gorbachev, in a letter sent in
advance to the summit heads, said
his meeting with them on Wednesday "may mark a turning point" in
the struggle to transform the Soviet
economy. However, Western officials already have reacted coolly to
the lener, saying it was vague and
did not go far enough in commitments to real reforms.

---Local briefs... - - - Work ...

..

It was hot in Las Vegas, where
the temperature topped 80 this ·
morning , and hot and humid in
Florida with the mercury at 85 10
Key West.
Highs today were expected to be
in the 90s across most of the country, topping 100 in the Plains and
the desert Southwest and reaching
the 80s in New En gland. around
the Great Lakes and pans of the
Southeast and West.
The high temperature for the
nation Monday was 112 d~g rees at
Bullhc..1d City, Ariz.

across the Northeast and much of
the mid-Atlantic states today as hot
air spread from the Midwest to the
East Coast
Thick, humid air draped th e
Southeast, bringing rain early today
to western North Carolina and
Georgia and thunderstorms to parts
of Florida.
San Francisco got some drizzle
early today and rain fell in parts of
Oregon .
The Plains states and the Great
Lakes area were expec ted to ge t
hot. sunny weather. Showers were
likely in the Pacific Northwest.

By The Associated Press
Forecasters said the three H's of
summer - haze, heat and humidity
- will dominate Ohio's weather
picture for the rest of the week.
High pressure which brought
cooling relief this past weekend
was moving off the Eastern
Seabord today and behind it was a
southerly flow of heavy tropical
air.
But no rain is in the forecast
until after a cold front sweep s
across the state late in the week.
Clear skies were forecast for
tonight and sunny conditions on

Am Ele Power ..... ............. 28 7/8
Ashland Oil ...................... 29 5/8
AT&amp;T........................... ... .38 1/8
Bob Evans ........................ 19 1/4
Charming Shop............. ..... 22 1/4
City Holding .... ................ .13 1/2
Federal Mogul.. ................. 17
GoodyearT&amp;R ...... .......... .35 7/8
Key Centurion .................. 15
Lands' End ....................... 20 5/8
Limited Inc . ..................... .30 5/8
Multimedia Inc ................. 29 1/2
Rax Restaurant ................ .l/2
Robbins&amp;Myers .............. .32 1/2
Shoney's Inc ..................... 16 1/8
Star Bank ...................... .... 21 3/4
Wendy lnt'l.. .. .. ................ .. 9 3/8
Worthington Ind . ..............26 1/4

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Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes provided by Blunt, Ellis
and Loewl of Gallipolis. .

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Moa.·Frl. 7·5:10; Sat. 1·5·
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-~

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

~

Tuesday, July 16, 1991

Page--4

Scoreboard
II

HITS - C R1pkcn, D•lumorc, 114,
Molitor, M1lw•ukce, 112, Pdmcllo,
Texas, 110, Stern, Tcus, 110. Puckett,

In the majors ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Dl vision
w L PeL
T~am
fiiUburah --~ 53 31 .63 1
49 36 l76
Ne"" York
4l 41 l2J
SL Louas
42 45 483
Chicasn
40 47 460
M....W
36 ll 414
PhiladclJXn•

Mmnc sot1, 109, Cn\cr, Toronto, 104,
Joyner, Cahfonu.a, 102

GB

45
9
Ill
14l
I8l

West Division

mol'f;, 22

TRIPLES -

Mohtor. Mtlwaukcc, 8.

Whne. Toront o 7 R Alomar, Toromo. 6.
Polorm, Calafom1a , 6, McRae, Kansu
Ctly, 5,-P\Icken, M1nncsola, 5, Runes,

Oucago, 5
HOME RUNS - F• elder, Dctrott, 23,

5

Canscco, Oakland , 2 1, I arubuU, Kansas

San Fnncuco .

II 5
145

38 48
35 51

ll

95

442
407

Monday's scores
San FranCISCO 4, New Yor:k 3
Chicaga 6, Atlanu4
Pltilodclphla 9, Loo Angel01 8

Tonight's games
St. Louil al ClndnnaU 1 7:35p.m.
San Diego at Montretl, 1 35 p m.
Lot Angelel at Philadelphia, "7 35 p.m .
tlooatoo at Plltlbur1h, 7:35p.m.
Chicaso at Allanta, 7 40 p m
SAn FnnQ.ICO al New Yor:k, 1 40 p m.
Wednucb)''l pma
Lot Anscla (Morsan 9-S) at AW.adel-

phia (Greene6-3), 12 35 pm
San Francilco (Black 6-8) at New York
(Violtl J-5). 1:40pm.

St. Loull (8. Smllh 10-6) tl Cincinnati (Arnulrona 6-1), 7:35 p.m.
San Dieg o (Pctcnen 3-2) 11 Montreal
(DcnniJ Mwnez!O.l), 7.3l p m.
Houaton (Portuaal 1-5) at P1lllbur&amp;h
(Dnbek 9-1), 7:35p.m.
Chtcago (Lancaster 5-J) u Atlanta
($mollZ 3-11), 7 40 p.m.

Thursday's game
l...ol AnJClaat New Yodl:, 7.40 p.m

Cleveland

·-· 17 57 .311

Tum
MinnOIOLt

West Division
W 1.. PeL
. ll 37 .580

Teau

14
GB

. 45

37 .549
. 46 39 .541

Chiuso

47

Ooklond
California

......
...... 45

Scaulc
KanJU Ctty

3
35

40 .l-11J
41 .523

3l
S

......... 44 43 .S06

6S
II S

..... 38

47 .447

Monday's scores
Detrou S, Tcxaa 7
Chic:• go 7, Becton 1
Miztnaou II, Milwaukee 7
Toronto S, Ka.n~u Ctty 3, 12 tnrungl
Oakland 6, CJneland 1
Seattle S, New Yor:l. 1
Baltim&lt;n 2. Califonua I

Today's games
New Ycd: at Seattle., 1·35 p.m.

Tuu at Oeuott, 7:35p.m.
801tm at Chicaao. 8:OS p.m.
Minnt~&lt;aa at Milwaukee., 8.0S p.m.
TOIOC&amp;oat ttan.uCily, l :3S p.m.
Cleveland at Oakland, 10·05 p.m.
Balum&lt;n at Califmua, 1O.JS p.m

Wednesday's games
Tu11 (Joao Ouzman 4·4) at Detrott
(fllWII 6-6),1 :3l p.m.
Cleveland (Nkhol1 1-1) al Oakland

(Wekh 11-l~l:ll p.m.
Be. tal (Clemens I 1·6) at Oticago (Fer·
nande:r. 4· 7), 8.OS p.m
Seattle (Johnson 7-6) It Milwaukee
(Wegrnon l · l), i:Ol p.m.
Baltimore (McDonald 4·3) at Kansu
City (Gubicu 4-l), 8'35 p.m.

Thursday's games
Scanle el Mil waukee, 2.35 p.m
MinncmaatBmton, 7·35 pm
Beltunore at K1t1111 Ctly, 8:35 p.m.
ToronLOat Texas, 8 35 p m.
New Ycrt tt OU.Iend, 10 0!1 p.m.
Clenlud at Callrornla, 10:35 p.m.

Major league leaders
National League
BATrlNG - T . Gwynn , San Diego,
.348, Pendleton, Atllnta, 310, McGee,
S•n Fnnctaco, 323; Baqto, Hou.ston.
314, Morrll. ClnclnnaU. .313: Caldcoo,

Montreal . 313. Samuel. Loa A.ngelea,

313

RUNS- Butler, Los Angelca, 62,
Sandbera, Chaca!o, 59, Johnson, New
Yorlr., 56: Vtn S ykt, Plltaburah, 55;
OeSh1cldJ, M.ontrca.l , ~4. T. Fernanda,
San Diego, 52; OSmith, St Louu, 32.
RBI - W. Clark, San Fnnctaco, 69,
Johnson, New York, 65, Bonda, Pitt•·
burah, f:Zi K.ruk, Phtladelphia, S7, G
Bell, Chic.so. 57, DawiO!'I, OUc:ago, 56;
McOri.ff, San Dieso. S4
HITS - T. GwyM, San Diego, 122,
Ssmuel, Lot AnJelll, lOS ; Buller, lot
Anaeles, 99; G. Bell, Chtcago, 9?:
Celderon, Monuul, 96: Joae, St Louia.
9S ;San~. ClU£ago,94

DOUBLES -

Joac, St. Lou11, 26;
McReynolda , New York, 23; Morrh,

Clndnnall, U ; Donllla, PIUaburJh, l2;
T Owynn, San Oieao. 20, Sandbera.
Ch.ie~go, 20, L Oon~cz . HO\Itton, 19,
Zeile, St. Lows, 19, Ganl, Atlante , 19;
O'Neill, Clnclnn•ll, l!l.
TRJPI..ES - T~ynn, San Dic:ao. I;
Lankford, St. Louil, 7; FcJdc:r, San Frat~·
cuco, 6; L OoaPlcz, Houtton, 5; Kruk,
Philadelphia, 5, Colanan, New Yodt, 5;

M. Thompaon, St. l..oula, 5.
HOME RUNS - Johnaon, New Y&lt;&gt;Jit,
20, &lt;Jan• At!onu, 17; W. a..lt, San p..,.
cisco, 17; McOrilf, Sen Di•Jo, 17; 0.
BcU, Chic&amp;JO, 17; O'Neill, Cl1clnutJ,
5 ate tied with J.S.
STOLEN BASES - Niaan, Adanta.
44, Oriuom, Montreal, 40: DeShields,
Montret~l, 39: Colem1n, New Vorl, 33;
Bo~dt, Plttaburah. 2~; Lankford , St.
l.ooit. 22: Bu~er. Loo Anaeleo. 22.
PITCHING (I deds1ona) - W1lk,
PIUJburaht 7·1 .175, 3.12; Cupentc:r, St
Louis, 7-2• .
3.6~: Olawtnc., Atllntt,
13-4, 76l, 1.92; R Mltllnez, Loa Angelo., 12·4, .750, 2 42; Pal1cloa, PIUI·
burp, "'lt .75CI, J.ll; ROO. Cincinnati,
6·1, .751, l.U; Viola, Nc" Yodr., ll ·S,

.,i

778,

617,2.78

STRIKEOliTS -

Cone, New York,
126; Ohvinc, A.~tnt.l, 116; Gooden, Nw
YDrk , 110; 0 Maddu•. Chie•so. 107

Benea, Sen Oiqo,l9: Hanuach. Ho.~aon~

86; Rijo, Clnclnnal~ 16.

SA YES - U. Smith, St. Louia, 24,
Dibble, Clnclnnau, Zl; franc:o , New

Yost. 20; Miu:h Wtllilma, Ptulldelphle
16, One Smith, Chi&lt;:~ao, 16; 8. t..n:
drum, Pllhburah, 15; l..cffertJ, San
Diqo, 15

Amerlcllll League
BA.mNG - C. Ripkcn, Baltunorc,
.33.4; Molitor, Mil":'eukee, .327; 801,11,
Bc.u.a, .32S; Palmei.ro, Tuu• .321; Sier.
ra, Teua, .321 : Bema, OU!tnd, .321;

.;
• Pud&lt;ou. .. !19.
RUNS - Molitor. Milwau.kc.e, 65;
Palmeiro. Tcau. 62; Canacco, Oak..lend,
61; Sian. Teua. 59; White, Tomuo, 59;
RipUn. &amp;llimote. 59; Field«. Deuoi.

c.

57; Fnnco. TOIU, 57.
RBI - FieldOI. Deuoit, 70; Canaoco,
Oakland. 67; Stem, Tew, 63; T...bull,
Kansaa City, 63; C1rter, Toronto, 63;

Thoma•, Chicaao. 61 ; Baanca, OU.land,

• 60.

I

C1ly, 21, Carter, Toronto, 21, C Davu,
Minnesota, 19; C Ripf:cn, B•lumore, 19,
b . Hendenon, Oakla nd, 18, W~nfleld,
California, 18

STOLEN BASES - R Henderson,

01.k.land, 31, Polon1a, Cahfoma, 29,
Rlinca, Ckieago, 29, R Alomar, Toronto,
28, Cuyler, Ocuon, 20; Whttc, Toronto,
20, Franco, T CllU, I a
PITCHING (8 decu1ons) - Encboo,
MinnC£011, 12· 3, 800, 213 , Langston,
Califomu, 12-3. 800. 3 64 . Sanderson,
New Vorl, 10-3, 7@. 3 62, Fmley, Cali·
fornta, 13 ·4, 765, 3 98 , Stottlemvre,
Torooto, 9-3, 750, 2 93; Henneman, De·
lrott, 6-2, 750,257, McDowell, Chic•go,
11·4, 733.306.
STK IK.EO U
Clemen•. Boston,
129 , R Joh naon, Seutle, 128, Ryan,
Teu1, 123, Ftnley , Ca\i fornu, Ill,

rs -

Sw indell, Cleveland, 106; Candwm,
Tormto, 106, McDowell, Oucago,104
SAVES - Aguilen, Minnesota, 24,
Eckcnley, Oakland, 23, Harvc) , Calif6r
n11, 22; Reardon, Bosun, 22, Olson, Bal umorc, 19, Thigpen, Clueago, 19, Henke,
Torcnto, 19

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) -

MAKING THE TURN - Meigs Post 39's Terry Reuter makes
the turn al first base on his way to second for a double that scores
teammate and leadoff man Terry McGuire in the first inning of
Monday's first-round American Legion tournament game against
Gallipolis Post 27 at Glouster. M~igs broke a 9·9 tie in the bottom of
the ninth to win I0-9. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

KEEPING HECK CLOSE is tbe objective of Gallipolis Post 27
first baseman Rusty Neal, who puts the late tag on Meigs Post 39's
Eric Heck in the fifth inning of Monday's first-round American
Legion tournament game, which Meigs won I0-9. Heck, who
reached on a single, scored on a two-RBI double by Jason Wright.
(OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Sc1oto

Dow n• ruul u for Mond1y, Ju ly 15
Weather clear, uack ful

In American Legion tournament play Monday,

F'ust Race-$2,000 Cond1tion TroL

OK Nonnan (R Holton) 8 &amp;0. 4.40.
3 20, Night Play (Herman) 7 40. 3.60,
Conttnental Chief (Croat) 4.00 Tunc·

20il·l.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
GB
T..m
W L P&lt;L
l3 3l .602
Toronto
44 42 .ll2
8
Deuoot
. 43 42 l06 8l
B.....
.. 41 42 494 9l
NCIW Yort
38 47 .447 13l
Milwaukee
...... l6 49 .42A
Ill
Balumcn

I

B o~gJ, BoslOn, 21,
Carter, Toronto, 26, White, Toronto, 23,
Brett. K.ansu Caty , 23, C Ripken, Blitl-

GB

St. LouliS, Clndnnalll
Moruall, Son Dieao o
PIUtburah I, llouston 0

.-

DOUBLES - R. Alomu, Toronto, 27,
Palmeuo, Teua , 27,

Tum
W L Pet.
Loo Angel" . . 49 36 l76
ClndnnaU M-··· 44 41 .518
Atlmu
43 41 li2
San Diego .
41 47 466
H001ta~

..

·

Abo Raced·LJU le Nubb111, Keystone
Sante Fe., A)'UliJ, Home, Bobbte Socks·
Mac:, Spoocly EIVU'I, Scotty Macho
Scntth·Jod.i's Son.

Trilocta (I 0-6-1) $336.80.
Pafcca (10.6) $79 60.

Sccood R.a(;0-$3,000 Cond1uon Pace

White Oak (Crou) 4.40, 3.40, 2 60, Se~~
Sec: (Sholty) 3 40, 2.80; Young Laas

(Hcnnan) 3.20. Tim.e-1:58 1-5
Aho Raced -On Location, Orgtnal
Work. Scntch.Rock Hard.

- (1-3) $11 40
Thild R•ee-$1 ,800 O.aunma Pace.
Heu Tnm Twostcp (Wilder) 24 20,
8 00, 3.60; Wildwood Sun (S12er) S 20,
3&amp;0; Country Traveler (Unguhic:.k) 7 40

Tuno-1:582-l.

AlJo Raced-Down The Road Ag'N,
hck Konardie, Phoenu Gold, Crown
Tune Kni&amp;Jlt, Jakcwtn, Berger Boy, Try

Hud

Trilocu (6-7-10) S2.9l0 60.
Pafcca (6-7) $94 20.

Fowth Rec:c-$2,000 Condtuon Trot
Solar Link (Gillum) 25 00, 8 80, S 40,
G•tcway Ltnd• (Werner) S 60, 3 60,
Smoley'a Pleuun (Morgan) 5 00 T~me·

2 04.
Abo R•OCid ·Sumner School, Ole CaJun
Moon, Amellie, Spud Rambo, Spmt Of
Coleman Scntch-Lanny Bob.
Pafccu (4-3) $203 60
Fifih Raco-$1 ,400 C.uning Ptet~
Bunout Bull (Dv Miller) 4 60, 4 00,
3 00; Thll'a My Boy Rod (R Thorps)

9.40, 5 00; RLB
Tuno-2:00 Z.l.

FeUa

(fhomu) 6.00.

Alao Raced-Cleuwater Clyde, Silent

Weekend, SlOOd Up Alam, Fron's Ad·
vanusc. 'E T Mahone, Brctario, TcgoJ
lathal!Twm Trifcc:LI (5-7·1) $124 90

Pelfcell (l·7) $3l 20

Meigs Post 39 edges Gallipolis Post 27 10-9
Monday's Amencan Legion
Eighth District first-round tournament game between Gallipolis Post
27 and Meigs' Drew Webster Post
39 saw the lead change hands five
times and the creation of two dead·
locks. but when tlle dusl cleared, it
took tllree consecutive walks in the
bottom of tlle ninth inning 10 give
Meigs a 10-9 victory.
Gallipolis drew first blood in the
first when Clinl Dav1s cracked a
one-out solo homer off Post 39
slarter Chris Stewart, but Meigs,
which tied the game in the bottom
of the f1rst when Terry Reuler' s
double scored Terry McGuire, took
a 2-1 lead in the bottom of the
founh when Jason Wright, who
reached on a single and moved to
second on a balk by Post 27 staner
Casey Staton, scored on a double
by Stewart.
The French City crew recap·
tured the lead in the upper half of
the fifth, which started when Chris
Metzger walked. After Brian Hurt
was installed as a pinch-runner for
Metzger and Rod Young popped

out, Hurt stole second dunng Chad
Barnes' at-bat. Barnes later walked,
and Davis followed by flying out to
right field. Meigs nght fielder
Shawn Hamon sailed the return
throw over third baseman Eric
Heck's head, allowing Hun to
score and Barnes to move to tlltrd.
With the game tied at 2-2, Darin
Smith walked, and Rob Skidmore
singled to score Barnes to put Post
27 ahead 3-2. Ryan Young popped
out to second base to end the Gallipolis fifth.
Meigs nosed ahead of Gallipolis
by a 4-3 coum in the bouom of the
fifth when Heck singled and Andy
Baer was intentionally walked, set·
ling the stage for Wright's double
that scored Heck and Baer.
Post 39 padded its lead to 5-3
with a run in the fifth, but Gallipolis lied the game at 5·5 wilh a rally
in tlle sixtll. Meigs responded w1th
a four-run rally in its half of the
sixth to lead 9-5.
The Gallipolis eighth began
when Hurt grounded out to Wright,
who had moved to tlle mound from
second base in relief of Stewart af·

Sixth Racc·S2,200 Cl111runf Pooe
FnlZJc Current (Rtcglc) 7.60, 8.40,
4 20, Dow Wo" (R Holton) 7 00, 4 20,
Clluy C•t (Ruucll) S 80. Tunc- I S8 2-S
Also Rac:cd · C'Mon Ike, St lverl!sh,

Stylish In, Sebuuan Hill,lronkid, Popum.l.ltic, Coaltar's Pride

rnr..... (1-6-l) $1,399 60

Pelf""" (1-6) $97 80
Seventh Raco--$2.()(() ClaLnUng Pace
Deecon Hill (S 1ze.r) 5.20. 4 10. 3 60,
Porky Brian (l..edford) 4.60, 3 20, Hem·
loclr. P11 (Rieole) 3.80 Tuno-i ·l7 3-l
Also Raccd-1empus, Billy Joe Power.
Summer 81d, Lord Tonnagua, Outbrave,
Alert Casey 8, Abbe Wolfe.

Trilecllll·3·6) $118 00
No wmnen Twlft Tnfccu
$3,374.28.

Carryover

E1ghth Racc--$3,000 Condition Pace
Kennedy Clan (Rankm) 2 80, 2 SO,
2.40; B1laleral (Rieg,lc) 5 20, 3 60; Party
Ruler (S1ZCt) 3.00. lime-I :S8 2-S
Abo Rtced -Delmakcr, JoU\ The Cub,
Lu.themeck, Bau.lin 8 G, Ramagtng

(6-1 $13 60

Pclfec~~
I
Nlllth Race-$1,400 Clummg P•ce

C1ptun A (Wilder) 6 00. 3.20. 3 20

Thud Degree (Stockwell) 16 60, 5 60,
Royal Copenhagen (Hc.uous) 4 60 Tunc·

I:l9 4-l.

Alao Raccd -OD'a Fmt Chmce, Bye

Bye Belmont, Duaty'• Doll, Wmrung Ore,
G G'a Mcascnacr, Crownume Mcanhur
DNF·Bobbtn BC.
SupedectJ (1().4·1·2) Sl,lll40

Pclfecta (10-4) 16480.
A.llcndancc-2,758 Handle-$225 ,800

Transactions
Baseball
American Leaaue

MILWAUKEE BREWERS - Plmd
Robm Yount, outfielder, on lhe 15-day

duablcd liu. rel101cuve to July 6
CALlfORNlA ANGELS - Acuvncd
Scot! Bailes, p11cher, hom the 15·dly diSabled liJL Optioned Cliff Young, pilCher,

Kings Royal Sprint race set
for Saturday at Rossburg
By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
The eighth-annual Kings Royal
Sprint car race, the richest spnm
car race in the country, paying
$50,000 to win and $1,000 to start
will be held Saturday a1 Earl
Baltes' famed Eldora Speedway
north of Dayton at Rossburg, Ohio.
Fnday n1ght, the All-Star Circuit of Champions, which played to
an overflow crowd at nearby Sky·
line Speedway, w11l kick off the
event wilh a full program on Friday
night, which pays $4,000 to win.
Saturday's program Will be another
comple1e program with qualifying,
warm-ups, heats, consolation races,
and the 8th annual Kings Royal.
In honor of tlle Kings Royal !he
World of Outlaws and All -Star
Sprint organizations do not sanction eve nt s on the Kings Royal
dale, allowing the finest drivers in
the nation a chance to compete for
the large purse.
Defending Kings Royal champi·
ons Steve Kinser (lwice), eleven

lime King of the Outlaws; Speedweek Champ Sammy Swindell,
Doug Wolfgang (twice), Jac Hau·
denschild, Bobby Davis Jr. and
Donnie Kreitz are already entered
in the event. They will be joining
over sixty of the nauons' finest cars
and drivers.
The Kings Royal is traditionally
one of the most intense races m any
form of motorsports history, gainmg recognition on ESPN as the
richest-paying race per mile in all
of motorsports. Eldora is a 1/2
mile dirt oval.
Representing the AII-Siar contingent will be Ricky Hood, who
has won lhe last four Eldora All·
Star features, along with points
leader Frankie Kerr, Robbie Stan·
ley, Todd Kane, Jack Hewitt, Mark
Chrisman, Bill Bailey , Kelly
Kinser, Dave Blaney, and Charlie
Fisher.
Race time IS Saturday July 20 at
7:30 with warm-ups at 6. Gates
open at 4 p.m. The rain date is
Sunday,July 21 at 12 noon.

lO Edmonton of Ulc Plcifie Coa$1 L.cague

CLEVELAND INDIANS -

Op·

&amp;Jontd Reule Jerrerson, lnndder, Col·
orado Sprlna• or the Peel ric Coul

Leaaue. Reealled Steve Olin, pllchcr,
l'rom Colondo Sprlnl'o

OAKLAND ATIILETICS - DCIIJI!IOI·
ed Todd Bumt, pitcher, for autgnment
Rtcal.led Kevin Cunpbell, pitcher, Taco·
ma d tlle Pacific Coan League.
SEA1"11.1! MAJUNERS - Moved Ken
Griffey Sr., outfielder, from the 15 -day
disabled lilt lO lite 6().day diJabled list.

Nallon•t Leaaue
CINCINNATI REDS- Opllontd
Chrll Jones, outnelder, w Nashville or
lhe Amerltan A11oclallon. Acllwaled
Gino Mlnutelll, pitcher, rrom lhe 15day db:eblcd IIJt.
NEW YORK METS - Traded Ron
Darlins •nd Mi.kc Thomu, p1lchen, lO the
Mootte~l E11.poe; for Tun Burke, pitcher
PHI.LADEl.PHlA PHILUES - Act1·
vated Len Dykltra , outfielder, from lhe
60-day diubled lisL Signed Steve Searcy,
pitcher. Sent Ttm Mauser and Amaho
Ca rreno, pttchctl, to Scranton-WilkesBam: or the lntcmetional League.

Football
Natlon•l FOOiblll Leaaue
BUFFALO BILLS - S1gned hmte
Mueller,lullback.
CHICAGO BliARS - Signed Cap
Boto, up md, to a two-year contnct;
and AnthGny Moraan. widt recc.wcr, Paul

J~Mtin, q\lU\clibtek; Michael Stoncbreak·

Cl',

linebacker; and Tom Beclr.ct, ddcnuve

-----Sports briefs:---game week shortened by the All Star break.. Clark hit .529 wilh two
home runs, including a grand slam,
and 10 RBis . Bonds hit .437 with
three homers and II RB Is.
Tennis
MAHWAH, N.J. (AP) - Seveneth-seeded Debbie Graham, !he
1990 NCAA champion from Stan·
ford, defeated Vincenza Procacci
6-3, 6-0 in !he first round of !he
Pathmark Classic.
Monica Selcs, the No. I seed
who has been inactive for the past
five weeks since winning the
French Open, has drawn a firstround bye. She's scheduled to play
Thursday agains1 lhe winner of
tonight's match between Andrea
Leand and Pam Casale· Telford.
Seles plans to hold a news conference Wednesday to clarify her
statements that a combina1ion of
shin splints and a left leg stress
fracture forced her to withdraw
from Wimbledon.
Tennis
WASHINGTON (AP) -Ninthseeded Peter Lundgren defealed
Jamie Morgan 6-4, 6-2, and 14thseeded Scott Davis beat Daniel
Orsanic 6-4, 7-6 (7 -6) in the fust
round of lhe Sovran Bank Tennis
Classic. The top eight seeds
receive&lt;! fii'St-round byes.

Baseball
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Mels traded nght -handed
PilCher Ron Darling and minor leaguer Mike Thomas to the Montreal
Expos for right-handed reliever
Tim Burke. Darlmg, 30. was 5-6
with a 3.87 ERA in 17 start s.
Burke, 32, was 3-4 with 4.11 ERA
and five saves in 37 appearances.
Baseball
·
NEW YORK (AP)- Seattle's
Edgar Martinez was name&lt;! American League player of 1he week and
Will Clark of San Francisco and
Barry Bonds of Pittburgh shared
the National League honor. •
Maninez had a triple, two
homers and five RBis in the four-

Softball tournament
set for July 20 at EHS

ond.

CINCINNATI BENGAL$ - S1ancd
l...amu RD.JMI llftd Bob Dahl, deienuve
cnda; and Donald HoU.s, quarterback.
DALLAS COWBOYS -A greed to
terlm with God!n:y My\ca, linebacker and
Mike Sullivan, offensive lineman.
DETROIT UONS - Stgned Rich An·
drewt,licker, to a two-year contt1ct

GREEN BAY PACKERS - S&gt;gncd
Don MaJkowak.i, quarterback, tnd Jeff

Ftte, puntCir. Aarecd to contrlct tenna
with Jeff Query, W1dc receiver.

A Class D &amp; E softball tournament will be held on Saturday, July
20th and Sunday, July 21st at East·
em High School.
The entry fee is $65 and you hit
your own ball. Trophies will be
given to the first-, second- and
tllud-place teams. First and second
place learns will receive individual
trophies or shirts.

\

ter the Iauer 's seven mnings of
work. Phil Bradbury, who had replaced Rod Young behind the plate
for Post 27, walked, as did Barnes.
Davis singled to lead tlle bases, setting up Smith's RBI single that
scored Bradbury and Barnes. Skidmore was intentionally wallced to
l9ad the bases. Ryan Young hila
hard grounder to shortstop Jeff
Dursl that Durst fielded, but hi s
off-larger throw to first allowed
Smith and Davis to score and tie
!he game at 9-9. On the play, Skidmore lried to score, but he was
thrown out. Stalon si ngled, but
Rusty Neal s1ruck out to end !he
rally.
Afler Meigs was held scoreless
10 the bottom of the eighth and Post
39 returned the favor in the lop of
the mnth, Drew Webster started ilS
half of !he ninth when Wright singled and moved to second on Bradbury's off.!Jlrget throw lo fir,;l in an
auempt to pick off Wright. Hamon
and Durst were intentionally
walked to create a force oul a! any
base, but S!cwart, who stayed 10
th e game . walked to for ce 1n
Wnght with the winning run .

Baer, who relieved Wnght in
the eighth, pitched one and onethird innmgs to collect lhe win. He
comt!ined With Wright (two-tllirds
of an inning) and Stewart to strike
out 10 and surrender as many tickets to first base. Staton (six in·
nings) and reliever Ryan Young
combined to strike out six and wallc
as many.
Post 39's offense was driven by
Wright (4 -5), Reuter and Stewart
(both 3-4). and Baer and Hamon
(both 1-4). Post 27's hit collectors
were Skidmore (3-4), Staton (2-4),
Davis (2-5), Smith (1-3) and Ryan
Young (1-5).
Meigs will play Glouster's McCann-Frederick Post414 in today's
second-round game at 4 p.m . at
Glouster, while Gallipolis will face
McArthur's Robert Wycoff Post
303 10 the losers ' brackel at 7:30
p.m. (limes approximate)
Score by innings
Gallipolis 100 020240- 9· 9-2
Meigs
100 121401 -10-14-2
WP- Baer (in relief of Stewart
and Wrighl)
LP- Ryan Young (in relief of
Staton)

Dates for sports physicals for
Soutllern, Meigs athletes set
Sports phy sicals for all sports
for the 1991 -92 sc hool year at
Southern Loca l Junior High and
High Schools will be done on
Wednesday, July 17, at the office
of Dr. Douglas Hunter in Racine.
The schedule for tllc physicals will
be as follows:
9 a.m.-noon - all studcm-ath·
letes m grades 7-9
1-5 p.m.- all studen!-a!hletcs
in grades 10-12
There will be no charge for the
physicals on thi s day . However,
tllere will be no makeup day for !he
physicals . If unable attend on
Wednesday, other arrangements
should be made to have tlle physical done. There will be a fcc of $15
for patients wishing to sc hedule
w1ih Dr. Hunter after July 17.
Children should wear shorts or
loose comfortable clothmg on !he
day of th e physical and bring a
completed physical card wiih them.
The cards can be oblaincd at !he
office at Southern H1gh School. If
!he student cannot come during !he
time alloued for their age group,
they should go ahead and come at
another time throughout the day.
For further infonnation call How1c
Caldwell at 949-2611 or Dr.
Huntcr's office at 949-2683.
Meigs athletes
At Middleport, student physicals
for all sports for the 1991-92
school year at Meigs Junior High

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

"/,.")· ':,'.:'

$3 .00 W:GAIN MATINEES SATU~Y ' SIJIIIOA'I'
SJ 00 BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDrt~

1.__

JILY 12 lhno II

fRIOI\'1' thru THURSrAY I

___j

and Meigs High Schools will be
conducted on July 20 a1 Holzer
Clinic, Middleport Branch. The
Holzer Clinic staff of eight doctors
plus nursing assistants will conduct
!he physicals for Meigs alhletes.
The schedule for physicals will
be as follows:
7-9 a.m. -all athletcs in grades
10-12
9-11 a.m . - all student-athletes
in grades 7·9
SIUdent athletes should wear
shorts or loose comfortable clothing on tlle day of the physicals and
bnng a completed physical card
with them. The cards can be
obtained in the office at Meigs
H1gh School. If a student cannot
come during their allotted lime for
their age group, they should go
ahead and come during the Olher
morning time slot.
There Will be no charge for
sport physicals during 1h1s day .
However, there will be no make -up
day for tlle physicals. If unable to
attend on Saturday, other arrangements w1ll have to be made at lhe
expense of the parenlS.

buliMa 1n1U,.nce PKk·
age. tlllt is. lt"a SERIES
ONE. a b!OMI-c:-rage,
c:ompetiti....,·priced
plen
for retail no,.a.. oftlcta.
c:llurc:llea. apllftmet\11 and

dfu9atores. Call uaforapro·

1•20 DAlLY

posal end quotation.

SAT/SU!I MATIN(E5

1.00 ,3 20

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julia
9·10 DAIU
HO MATINEES .

-

Campbell
Scott '

,.,

Dyingfulg

7· 10,11:40 DAllY

SCHWARZENEGG ER

SAT! SU!I lt'olTIMW
1.10,3· 40

JU DG M-E NT

7:00 ,11:30 MJLY
SAT/SUN MnTNE£5

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TERMINr&gt;.TDR 2

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KEVJNC()gNER
RDBIN· "r·~~

....,,.,..,.
nuuD

,. '.-5:1($ . 1:1 ......,1111 IUIIT.

OOIIIIIG SOOIII

"l lLL • TtC.'S IOGUS JOJRII:T"

1

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992~6687

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-0

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, July 16, 1991

Cardinals down Reds 5-2 to extend Cincy's losing streak
LilLie consolation for Minutelli.
'.'When you've got a six-game
losmg slreak. wh ether you're
relaxed or not, you're pressing a
little bit," Minutelli said. "Six
games - that's a lot."
Pena' s third homer and his second in two ga mes put St. LouiS
ahead 1-0 in the second. Perry dou·
bled and Lankford tripled for a run
in the 1h1rd, and Perry h11 a solo
homer m the fourth.
St. Lo ui s added two run s off
Ted Power in the seventh on Pena's
RBI double and a sacrifice fl y by
Bernard Gilkey.
Perry's contribution was encour·
aging for the Cardinals. who arc
trying to ge t by wl!hout Pedro
Guerrero, disabled last week by a
broken bone m his left leg. Perry is
8-for-21 since the All-Star break.
· 'I' II play umil he gets back,"
Perry said. "Hopefully I'll be able
to do the same ihmg to help us until
he 's back in the lmeup."
The Reds are wondering when
they 'II ge l back in form . The
offense has gone stagnant, the staning pitchers have a 6.14 earned run
average since the All-Star break,
and the bullpen is even worse at
8.04.
" We need a couple of games
when everything goe s nght, · ·
Power said. "Right now. I detcct a
fee ling of anger on th e team .
"It's very fru strating because Th1ngs are happening that
you can't point a finger at one shouldn't be happening. "
Most of the Reds didn't want 10
lhing. It's no1 only the pnching, it's
talk
about 11 Monday night. Managlhe hitting right now, too."
er
Lou
Piniella refused to mee1
Mainly the pilching. And that
Players dressed
wilh
reporters.
was the deciding point Monday
quickly and left.
night.
" What can you say?" Winning Omar Olivares (3· 1) allowed
one run on six hilS over six innings ham sa1d. "What is it, six games?
to end a slump by the Cardinals' Seven games? Who 's countmg?
starters. Their rotation hadn · t won It's very frustrating."
Tale of two divisions
a game smce July 3, a span of eight
In
a
tale of two divisions, 1t's
games. The last winning starter:
difficult
to understand why Jim
Olivares.
"You have to piiCh well to keep Le yland - whose Piusburgh
yourself in !he game," Torre said. Pirates are on a roll in !he Nauonal
League East - sho uld be so
"Olivares gave us a good outing."
Minutelli didn't do the same for stressed out.
Tom Lasorda and Lou Pimclla
the Reds.
arc
managers with real problems m
The left-bander had been on the
the
NL
West.
disabled list recovering from a
"I'm fine ... butllhoughtl was
groin pull suffered in h1 s f1rst
major-league stan June 29. He was going to d1c," Leyland said Mon·
activated Monday and looked rusty day n1ght before the Pirates won
their sixth straight game.
in stan No. 2.
Leyland thought he was having
He ~ave up 10 hits and three
walks 10 just 4 2-3 inning s. bul a heart attack Sunday night while
only Ihree run s. The Cardinals re!Urning to Pittsburgh from
stranded 10 baserunners in the first Cincinnau, where the Pirates clob·
five innings, six of them in scoring bered the Reds in sweepmg a four·
position. Twice they loaded the game series. So greal were the
bases but failed to score.

By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - The St.
Louis Cardinals' longe st losing
streak of the season stopped at
four. The Cincinnau Reds' Just
goes on and on.
The Cardinals rolled up 12 hilS
- three ap1ece by Gerald Perry
and Ray Lankford - 10 beat !he
Reds 5·2 Monday night in a
matchup of teams !hal hadn't won
since lhe AU-Star break.
"We're two clubs preuy much
going in the same direction," Cardinals manager Joe Torre said.
"We'd lost four m a row, they'd
lost six. In a game like that, the key
is to get ahead."
Geronimo Pena's solo homer off
Gino Minutelll (0-1) put the Cardinals ahead in the second inning,
and the defending World Series
champions never caught !hem.
The Reds' season-high seventh
straight loss left them adrift in their
effort to catch Los Angeles. The
Dodgers also have lost their five
games since the AU-Star break, but
the Reds' slide has kept them five
games back in lhe Nauonal League
West.
"We're not the only team that's
doing !his," outfielder Henn Win·
ningham said. "When you look at
il, if we could have won one or two

chest pains that the Pirates' US Air
flight made an unscheduled landing
in Columbus.
But tests showed no heart irregularity, and Leyland was back in
!he dugoul Monday night when !he
Pira1es routed lhe Houston AS!ros
8-0 to increase their lead to 4 1/2
games over tllc New York MeiS.
Meanwhile, in the West, Lasorda's Los Angeles Dodgers maintained lhe five -game they had at the
Ali-S!Jlr break. lhe hard way - by
losing !heir fifth straight.
"At least everybody else lost,"
La sorda said after the Dodgers
blew a 6-1 lead in a 9-8 defeat at
Philadelphia.
Pm1clla may have said that, too,
after his Reds kept pace with the
Dodgers in 5-2 loss to St. Louis.
Exactly what Piniella said is
unknown . He wasn't talking after
Cincinnati's seventh straight loss.
The Atlanta Braves, third in tlle
Wes t, 5 1/2 games behind the
Dodgers , dropped a 6-4 decision to
the Chicago Cubs. Elsewhere, it
was San Francisco 4, New York 3,
and Montreal 3. San Diego 0.
The Pirates made sure Leyland
was able to relax ; they took a 6-0
lead in tlle second inning.
Relieved tllat their manager was
healthy agam, several players pre·
senled him w1th a gold statue
named the "Sammy" m honor of
Sammy Khalifa, their error-prone
shortstop of a few years ago . The
statue is given after a victory in
honor of a bungled play or boneheaded error.
" Wha!' s this for ?" Leyland
sa1d as Bobby Bomlla presen1ed
!he Oscar-like statue to him.
" Thai 's for giving all of us a
heart attack ," Lloyd McClendon
srud .

" I' m jus! glad I'm here to gel
i!," Leyland said.
Pirates 8, Astros 0
Randy Tomlin had his first
career shutout, and Andy Van
Slyke and Bonilla combined for
seven RBis.
Tomlin (4-3) pitched a five -hitICr.
Van Slyke had four RBis to lie
h1s career high . Bonilla has lhree
run-scoring singles.
J1mmy Jones (5-6) allowed six
runs and eight hilS in two innings.
Phillies 9, Dodgers 8
Darren Daullon had his first
career grand slam and five RBis,
and Lenny Dykstra , back after
m1ssmg 61 games follwing an auto·
mobile accidem in which both were

,.

home run in two games.
Robinson (S-6) allowed one run
and four hits in seven innings.
Wally Whitehurst (5·5) allowed
four runs and six hitS in seven
innings.
Expos 3, Padres 0
Rookie Chris Haney go! his first
major league victory and Larry
Walker hit a two-run homer.
Haney ( 1-3) allowed seven hits
in six and one· ihird 10nings. Jeff
Fassero earned his third save.
Andy Benes (4-10) gave up six
hilS m six innings.

Hubbard's Greenhouse #1 win
in Hubbard Memorial Tournament
"

By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Several great games and fine
mdividual performances highlighled Monday night' s action in !he
Syracuse-Bill Hubbard Memorial
Little League Tournament.
Although the scores would indicate
otherwise, two of the games were
not decided until the latter innings
as Coolville, Nelsonville, and Syracuse Hubbard' s Greenhouse #I
advanced Syracuse #2 15-0, Nel sonville blanked Middleport's A' s
10·0, and Syracuse #I defeated
D.O. Blake Construction 10-2.
Nelsonville meets Coolville in
tonight's opener in lhe semi-finals
at 6 p.m., while Syracuse meets
Racine's Reds #I in the nightcap.
Racine advanced from first round
play lhrough a bye, which resulted
from two teams in the second
round forfeiting. This left a void in
the quarterfmal bracket, thus
advancing R.acine to !he Semifinals.
In the opening game Jason
Ashcraft scattered four hits and
walked none with three K's enroute
to leading Coolville to a 15-0 win
over Syracuse Hubbard's Greenhouse #2. Jack Day suffered the
loss despite a good efforl. He
allowed ten hits, only five walks,
and fanned none.
Coolville took advumagc of a
huge first inning and never looked
back. J.R. Springer and Todd
Trudo reached via errors. while
Slick Chapman slammed an RBI
smgle and Aaron Brock ripped a
two-run double. Brian D1xon,

Tommy Cunis, Jason Ashcraft,
Sprmger,and Jusun Edwards each
walked and Trudo returned to !he
plate for a two run single, followed
by an error. and a Chapman double.
Before the dust had settled m 1he
first Coolville led 11·0.
Trudo had a home run and smgle, Chapman a double and single,
Cecil Atlunson a smgle, Brock a
double and smgle, D1xon two Sin gles, and Ashcraft a smgle.
For Syracuse Matt Dill smglcd,
Jack Day had two smgl cs. and
Ryan Nease smgled.
Nelsonville 10ok a 2-0 lead 10
the first after thw pitcher Jo sh
Coen fanned the side for Middleport in tlle top of the first enroute to
a no-hitter.
Shawn Schultz walked, Josh
Walker reached on an error, Jason
Wickman reached on an error.
Natllan Stalder walked home a run ,
and Coen walked to fol'l:e home !he
second run.
Coen fanned two of !hree batters
in lhe second inning, while Nel·
sonville scored four more runs .
Wickman and Stalder had the big
blows: a single and double respectively .
As Nelsonville marched on,
Coen stymied the Middleport
oilcnse. He fanned none of I 5 baiters, walked none, and gave up no
hits.
•
M1ke Franckowiak suffered the
loss desp11e a nice effon, givi ng up
six hits , 13 walks, and four strikeouts.
Nelsonville hillers were Wick-

man, two singles; Sialder a double,
Cocn a double, Ben Robey a dou bl e. and C. Wat.kms a smgle.
After a scoreless baule in !he
f1r st be1ween two good lea rn s,
Syracuse took a 4-0 lead 10 the second. Thai came af1er Scou Yonker
had a good f1rst mnmg for D.O.
Blake, while TraviS Li sle fa nned
the f1rs1 six batters he faced. Overall , Lisle p11ehed superbly fannm g
12 of IS battcrs he faced
In !he seco nd 1nntng Jeremy
Buskirk s10gled. MJCk Barr singled,
Jar red Clay s1ngled. and Jami e
Busk1rk hi! a home run, a three-run
shot. Kevin Fields doubled , the
score now 4-0.
Syracuse was held scorele ss
unlil the fifih when tlley got some
brea!hing room and a 9-0 lead.
They added an insurance run in !he
SIXth.
D.D. Blake scored two run s off
Kevm F1clds 10 the sixth, but it was
nm enough and Fields went on to
post an impressive effort.
Lisle, in recording th e win,
fanned 12 and walked JU St two.
while Fields walked four and
fanned three.
F1elds doubled, Lisle smgled.
Pete Sisson had two singles, while
Jeremy Buskirk had three singles.
Barr smgled twice. Clay smgled,
Matt R1ffle singled Iwice, and
Jamie Buskirk smgled.
For D.O. Blake Dana Gillespie.
Aaron Vickers and Chns Brinker
singled.
The senli -fmals arc tonight and
the finals set for Wednesday.

THE 1991

Gallego's bat leads Athletics
to 6-1 triumph over Indians
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Boucher (0-6) . He hit hi s fifth
While Mike Gallego's .258 batting homer of lhe season in the sixth off
average and five homers this sea- reliever Jeff Shaw to make it 6-0.
son are suprising nearly everyone,
Terry Steinbach singled and
Oakland Athletics manager Ton y Vance Law wallccd wuh one out in
La Russa believes his best is yet to the fourth, and both runners scored
on Gallego's double down the left
come.
"I don't think this IS his hmil," fJCid line for a 2-0 Oakland lead.
Four consecutive opposite-field
LaRussa said. " He' s hungry. I
smglcs
to nght by Mike Bordick,
thmk he can do more."
Gallego went 3-for-4 with a Rickey Henderson , Wlilic Wilson
two-run double and home run to and Jose Ca nseco scored three
lead Oakland over Cleveland 6-1 more runs and put Oakland up 5-0.
" I was trymg 10 come ms1dc,
on Monday night. While sluggers
like Mark McGw!fe (7-for-60) and and they took 11 to right fi eld by
Dave Henderson (4- for-53) contin· h1tting ms1dc out." sa1d Boucher,
ue to slump, Gallego is doing his who is st ill looki ng for h1s f~r s l
best to absorb the spmlight wh1le major league victory.
The Indians scored their only
he has a chance.
"I knew if I had the opportunily run in tlle scven!h when Glenallcn
to play every day, I could do some- Hill' s bases-loaded sacrifice fly 10
thing," said Gallego , who's done center scored Carlos Bacrga.
In other games, Mmnesota beat
his best to shed the part-ume
image. He cred!ls the offensive Milwauke e 11 · 7, Toron10 beal
surge in part to a stable role at the Kan sas C1ty S-3 in 12 innings,
De trail downed Texas 8-7, Chicago
second base.
"Now that I'm playmg second defeated Bo sto n 7-1, Seaulc
base, I can concenlrale more on slopped New York S-1 and Balli·
offense and go out there and do more ralhcd past Cal1fornia 2- 1.
Twins II, Brewers 7
what's natural," Gallego said.
The Minn eso ta Twins d1d no!
Gallego wa s fo rced inlo
increased playing time a! shortstop need Scou Enckson to be a1 hi s
when Walt We1ss lDJured hi s leg, best to beat the Milwaukee Brewbut now Mike Bordick has seen ers. They will need him to bea t !he
rest of !he American League West.
more playing time a1 shortstop.
Enckson. makmg his first start
Cleveland manager M1ke Hargrove said the A's have the lype of since returning from the disabled
lineup that can afford a few slump· !1st, pitched the same way he did
nght before the-Ali-Star break ing sluggers.
. "They have guys who can take not too well. He struggled for four
borderline pitches and do some· innings, but the first-place Twm s
lhing with them; pul them in play," still wen! on to wm 11 -7 Monday
Hargrove said. "They make !he night.
·'I' m not upset. II was a terrible
necessary adjusunenlS."
As for his own team , !he lnd1ans effort on my part. The guys d1d a
~ave yet to make an_y adjustments good job and I did terrible . Now I
againsl Andy Hawkms, no matter have a two-game awful streak ,"
~ho he pitches for. Hawkins Erickson said.
Erickson, baseball' s hottest
J!iWhed a four-hitter, his first complete game since beating the Indi- pitcher in the firs! half, took a 12·3
ans last July, while he was still record and a major league-leading
P.itching for !he New York Yan- 1.83 ERA into the game. In his previous S!Jlrt on June 29, the Chicago
Iiees.
While
Sox hit him hard and
Hawkins, 4-5 overall and 4-3
since joining the A's on May 18, stopped hi s 12-game winning
has not allowed more than three sll'eak; then he went on !he IS-day
earned runs in any of his last seven disabled list witll a sore elbow.
Against lhe Brewers, he gave up
s1arts. He's 6-1 with a 1.20 ERA
four hilS, including a grand slam by
lifetime against Cleveland.
"These ~uys come to the ball· Franklin Stubbs and a solo home
park expecung to win every day," run by Greg Vaughn. He walked
-said Hawkins, who is 2-0 with an four, hit a baiter and left with an 8·
0.63 ERA Ibis season against the 51ead.
"He was too pumped up and he
Indians. "It's a good aunosphere.
I;m happy tlley lhoughl en~ugh of was rushing iL It was a long layoff
me to give me the opportumty lhat and he was a lilLie out of whack.
Jhey did. I went from lhe outhouse That's to be expected," Twins
manager Tom Kelly said.
to the penlhouse. ·'
Greg Gagne hil a lhree-run
Gallego drove in the game's
fust two runs in lhe fourth wilh a homer and Shane Mack hit a two4ouble, ·sparking a five-l'l!n A's run shot as the Twins gave Erick·
rally off losing pitcher qenis son an early 7-llead. Bul Vaughn

Greg Maddux won hi s fust
game since June 9 and Chico
Walker had ihrec hits, tllree RBls
and scored 1wice.
Walker had a two-run doubl e
and Luis Salazar homered us the
Cubs chased Pete Smith (l-3) m
the second inning.
Maddux (7 ·6) allowed SIX hu s
and struck out five in s1x and one·
ihird innings.
Giants 4, Mets 3
Don Robinson won at Shea Stadium for the first time in nine years
and Mall Wilham s hi! hi s Ihird

seriously injured, had a productive
night.
Aboard on the second of his two
singles to start the seventh inning,
Dykstra stole second and scored on
Dale Mwphy's RBI single to break
a 7-71ie.
Steve Searcy (1-0) pitched two
inmngs. Mitch Williams got hi s
16th save.
Orel Hershiser was staked to a
6·1 lead after three innings, but
allowed two more runs and left in
tlle fourth.
Cubs 6, Braves 4

\

led off the third inning with his
17th home run and Slubbs hil his
second career slam in !he fourth .
Mark Guthrie (6·5) pioched 1wo
innings for the V!Ciory and Steve
Bedrosian gol his fourth save.
Jim Hun!Cr (0-3) was the loser.
Blue Jays 5, Royals 3
Kelly Gruber singloo home the
go-ahead run m the 12th inning.
Tied at 2, the Blue Jays escaped
a bases- loaded, no-out jam in the
ll!h. In the 12th, Joe Carter drew a
leadoff wallc from Sieve Crawford
(2-1), John Olcrud doubled and
Rance Mullimks was mtcntJonally
walked 10 load th e bases.
Gru be r smgled past a drawn-in
ml 1cld. Pal Borders was hil by a
p11ch to force home another run and
Cory Snyder added an RBI
grounder.
Mike T1mlin (9-4) p1tched two
mnings for the vicmry.
Tigers 8, Rangers 7
Tony Phillips led off !he bo!Iom
of 1he nmth inning wilh a home
run .
MICkey Te!tleton, Lloyd Moseby and Lou Whuaker also homered Ruben Sierra and Jeff Huson
connccJCd for the Rangers.
Philhps hit h1s eighth home run
on a full-count pitch from Mike
Jeffcoal (3-2). Mike Henneman (6·
2) pitched a perfect ninth.
Orioles 2, Angels 1
RQOkie slugger Chilo Marlinez
rescued Baltimore w1th a two-out,
two-run homer in the mmh inning.
Kirk McCaskill shu! oul Balli·
more on lhrce smglcs for e1ght
mn ings before Bryan Harvey ( 1-3)
relieved to start the ninth . Randy
Milligan smgled wnh two outs.
pmch-runner Brady Anderson stole
second and Martinez h1t his second
home run.
Je ff Ballard (6- 9) gave up 10
hits and one run in eighl innings.
White Sox 7, Red Sox I
Frank Thomas hi! 1wo home
runs in a game for !he firs! lime in
his career.
Thomas made it 1-all with a
homer in !he third inning and pul
tllc host White Sox ahead w1tll his
16th home run in lhe fifth.
Ramon Garcia (1 ·3) lll\Y.C up a
home run to Wade Boggs 10 start
the game, then shut out the Red
Sox for !he next five and one-third
mnings.
Mike Gardiner (3 -3) took !he
loss.
Mariners 5, Yankees I
Edgar Martinez tripled, doubled
and singled.
Bill Krueger (6·3) pioched seven
innin~s and ~ave up six hits,
includmg rookie Bernie Williams '
second h&lt;;&gt;me run.

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

992-2155
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

il

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Classified

The Daily Sentinel!

By The Bend

..

,.

Tuesday, July 16, 199i

Page-e.

MCHD cancer screening CDC recommends testing
for many doctors, dentists
clinic slated July 24

Consider this ...
By Brian J, Reed

Fair lime ...is approaching.
How can I teU? Judging of fair
projects is getting underway. Girl
Scout projec ts were judged over
the weekend and other judging
takes place in the nex t couple of
weeks.
It's always encouraging to see
ho w much time and effort th e
area. s youngsters put into their projects, and aU are to be congratulat·
ed.
And, incidentally, fair fans can
take heart - the Meigs County Fair
gets underway on Monday, August
12, instead of a Tuesday, adding
another day to fair week.
Yeah!
Outing slated ...Ducks Unlimit·
ed's Eastern Ohio Valley Chapter
will hold their Second Annual Golf
Outing at Riverside Golf Course in
Mason, W.Va. on Thursday . A
shotgun start is slated for I p.m.
The tournament will observe the
A·B·C·D Player Handicap. The pro
at the course will chose the foursomes and ladies are invited to par·
ticipate.
A charcoal-broiled steak dinner
wiU be served following the outing.
All proceeds will go to Ducks
Unlimited.
Roy Jones is handling the out·
in g, and he can be contacted at
992-7626 if you would like to participate or need more information.
Hey ... How does lying around in
an air-conditioned room sound to
YOU this summer? The American
Red Cross is looking for blood

donors to do just that on August 21,
when the bloodmobile visits the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. The bloodmobile gets started at
I p.m. and lasts until 5:30.
Summertime is tough at the
American Red Cross. People are
busy and tend to forget to give.
Therefore, blood centers nation wide experience a critical shonage.
The regular demand for blood (due
to surgeries, trauma care and blood
disorder and cancer treatment) continues in the summer, and is
increased due to summer accidents
and the like.
Any citizen of Meigs County
between 17 and 70, wei~hing at
least II 0 pounds and tn good
health can help make sure this supply is on hand by donating that day.
If you haven't donated for a
while, get back into the habit. If
you have never given blood, it is
easy, quick and painless.
Trust me.
So write that date down now,
before you plan something else that
day . Then, show up and donate
blood. You' Ulove yourself for it!
Outstanding scouts .. .If you're
a part of a boy scout or cub scout
troop in Meigs County and would
like to nominate a troop of the year,
pack of the year or scout of the
year, you are encouraged to contact
Lisa Roush before the 22nd. Lisa
can be reached at 992-3486 after
4:30 p.m. and can get an application to you.
Take care!

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 calendar.
TUESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS · The 1991
Meigs Marauder Volleyball Camp
will be held through Friday at
Meigs High School, 9 am. to noon
each day. All area girls entering
grades 7- 12 are eligible to partici ·
pate. Cost is $30 with a maximum
of $45 per family . Registration
deadline is Thursday . Contact
Marauder Head Coach Rick Ash,
9920-5960. Shirt size, grade entering, and phone number is needed
when registering.
POMEROY · The American
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. for a
steak dinner followed by meeting
at 8 p.m. Membership kick-off for
(he new year will be discussed and
Boys State attendees honored. All
inembers urged to attend and bring
prospective members.
MIDDLEPORT · The Pomeroy
Lodge No. 164 F and AM will hold
a special meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m.
at the Middleport Lodge Hall .
:.Vork in the M.M. degree.
: HARRISONVILLE · The Harrisonville Past Matrons will have
iheir annual picnic Tuesday at 6:30
p.m. at the home of Pauline Atkins.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Arts Council will offer a chi!-

dren's !-shirt painting class on
Wednesday at 10 a.m. for ages 9·
13 years. Cost is $7.50 and paint
supplies will be furnished. Marilyn
Meier is the instructor. Each child
bring his or her own !-shirt. Call
992-5983 or 992-2675.
POMEROY • A public meeting
will be held at 5:30 p.m . in the
Riverboat Room of the Meigs
County Public Library for displaced residents and concerned citizens regarding the Hobson land·
slide. Representatives from the
offices of Senator Jan Michael
Long, State Representative Mary
Abel, the Ohio Department of
Development and the state and
local Emergency Management
Agency will be on hand.
THURSDAY
POMEROY . The Meigs County Democrat Executive Committee
wiU meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
the Carpenter's HaU in Pomeroy.
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
group of AA will meet at 7 p.m. at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. For
more information, caU 992-5763.

i
I

·II

•

Th e Ameri can Osteopathic
Association's "Care-A-Van" will
be at the Lottridge Community
Center on July 27 from 10 a.m. 10 3
p.m.
The van will be staffed by volunteer osteopathic physicians, stu·
dents and nurses to provide health
screening in underserved areas.
Health screening will include
height and weight, blood pressure,
pulonary function, vision and hearing, total cholesterol and nutrition

By F.N. D' ALESSIO
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - Pay phones
in two drug-ravaged neighborhoods
no longer take coins at night as Illinois BeU tries to disconnect dealers
from their buyers.
"Illinois Bell is trying to take
the phones out of the hands of
criminals and make them available
to our customers when they need
them," said Sam Foster, the company 's public communications
· manager.
Foster said !'1onday that for the
next three months, between 6 p.m.
and 6 a.m., more than 50 phones in
the two neighborhoods will work
onl y for emergency, operatorassisted or credit card calls.
" We don ' t think many drug
dealers will want 10 use those
options because then there will be
records of their calls,'' said Illinois
Bell spokesman Geoff Potter.
He said residents of the South
and West Chicago neighborhoods
complained that drug dealers tied
up phones taking orders.
Jay Miller, who heads the Illinois chapter of the American Civil
Liberties Union, said the plan dis·

Auxiliary to meet

A Children's Playhouse wiD be
sponsored by the Lottridge Community Center on Saturday from 10
a.m. to noon. There will be clowns
a skit. safety information distribut~
ed. Children will have the opportu·
nity to speak with a sheriff and
children also may be ftnger printed
and have a photo taken to place in
the ProteCtion Handbook.

Hymn sing slated
There wiU be a hymn sing at the
Racine FeUowship Church on Saturday at 7 p.m. featuring the
Gabriel Quartet. Pastor Charles
Bush invites the public.
·I

criminates against poor people and
invades callers' privacy.
"There are other reasons than
drug dealing why someone might
want to make a telephone call with·
out having a record made of it," he
said.
''They're trying it in areas
where many people don't have
phones of their own and are more
dependent on pay phones than people in richer neighborhoods. ''
But ACLU officials had no
immediate plans to file a lawsuit.
"We don't think it's going to work
at all, anyway," Miller said.
Alderman Percy Giles said he
welcomed the experiment in his
West Side neighborhood, even
though it might make legitimate
pay-phone use more inconvenient.
"We've been looking for a solution to this problem for a long time,
and this restriction is the best idea
I've heard of so far," Giles said.
In addition to 911, nighttime
callers will still be able to dial
information and phone repair
directly.
Potter said the no-coins experiment suits Chicago.

__ How hot is it?--

RACINE · The Racine Ameri can Legion will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. Membership fees are
due.

Children's Playhouse

education.
The Lottridge Community Center will sponsor a flea market and
bake sale on that day from 9 a.m. to
2p.m.
For transportation call 6676124.
Further information on the
health care screening may be
obtained by calling the Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicince at 593-2292.

Chicago phones reject coins in
effort to hang up drug dealers

TUPPERS PLAINS · The
Ladies Auxiliary of the Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
hold a special meeting Thursday at
7:30 p.m. to discuss the sale on
July 27. Donations of cakes, pies
and cookies for the sale may be
gtven. For further information contact June E. Smith at 667-3374.

wrongful death law would have
given the child the right to sue had
his father died in the car accident.
Children conceived after an
injury have no right to sue, even
though they may also lose companionship or support, Liacos said.
The case was sent back to Superior Court for hearings on the type
of support, Jeremy could have
anticipated from his father.

and Mrs. Phyllis Bearhs, Women's
Health Care Technician will be
coordinating services at the clinic.
At this time cancer is the second
cause of death in Meigs County,
according to Ms. Torres. It is on
the rise, nationwide, but it is' one of
the most curable of all major diseases if it is diagnosed in time, she
says.
Early deteCtion of cancer is one
of the aims of the Meigs County
Health Department Cancer Screening Clinic.
Ms. Torres states there are seven
warning signals of cancer: change
in bowel or bladder habits, a sore
that does not heal, unusual bleeding
or discharge, thickening or lump in
·breast or elsewhere, indigestion or
difficulty in swallowing, obvious
change in wart or mole, or a nag.
ging cough or hoarseness.

Care-A-Van arrives July 27

BAKER, Calif. (AP) - Not that
travelers between Las Vegas and
Southern California need to be
reminded of the heat, but a restau·
rant in this tiny town is building a
134-foot-high t~ermometer.
The height was selected because
134 degrees is the highest temperature ever recorded in nearby Death
Valley.
Baker, which considers itself the

Fetus has right to sue
over father's injuries
By DANIEL DEEGAN
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - A fetus has
the right to be represented in a law~ uit about the loss of its father' s
companionship, the state's highest
court ruled Monday.
: The ruling reversed a decision in
Superior Court in Bristol County
against Jerem y Michael Angelini ,
·~&lt;.OAII' ho was not yet born when his
.father, Leo LePage, was injured
Sept. 29, 1985, in a car crash.
The father was a passenger in a
car that hit a light pole.
: The lawsuit was filed on behalf
of Jeremy against the bar where the
driver of the car bought drinks.
The iss ue before the Massachusetts Supreme 1udicial Court
focused on whether the child had a
right to sue.
· In a unanimou s decision, the
·court said the viability of the fetus
was not a valid Standard to deter·
mine the right to sue.
.
The two standards to be applied
are whether conception ·occurred
before the injury and whether the
~aby is born alive, Chief Justice
.faul Liacos wrote.
• Liacos also noted that the state's

A cancer screening clinic will be
offered by th e Meigs County
Health Department on July 24 from
9 a.m. to noon at its offices in the
multi-purpose building at Mulberry
Heights in Pomeroy. Cost of the
clinic is $5 per client.
According to Norma Torres.
Nursing Director, the clinic is lacking only four patient at this time.
County residents who arc interested
in making an appointment should
call the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626 as soon as
possible. Appointments are made
on a fm;t caU, first serve basis.
The department is attempting 10
provide these clinic services (pap
smear, hemocults, urinaly sis,
height and weight, blood pressures,
and a generalized health exam).
Dr. James Witherell will be
donating his services at the clinic

gateway to Death Valley and is
known to travelers for its toasty
temperatures, is located between
Las Vega s and Los Angeles on
Interstate 15.
It is a frequent stopping point
for travelers making the 280-milc
trek, much of it across desert.
The thermometer is expected to
cost $700,000 and will be built by
Young Electric Sign Co. of Las
Vegas, company spokesman Mike
Vantuyl said Monday.
Construction is expected to take
about three months.

By ROBERT BYRD
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP) - Federal
health officials recommended
Monday that doctors and dentists
performing surgery or pulling teeth
get AIDS tests and stop such procedures if they're infected.
.
The recommendations could
. affect tens of thousands of dentists
and surgeons nationwide.
The guidelines, drafted by the
federal Centers for Disease Control, urge infected doctors and dentists to refrain from invasive procedures involving blood exposure
unless an expert panel concurs and
patients are informed.
''Exposure-prone procedures' '
are defined as those in which a
health worker could be injured and
bleed into an opening in a patient,
not just on skin.
Examples include abdominal,
gynecological or heart surgeries.
tooth extractions and root canals.
Health-care workers limited to perfanning simple tasks such as cleaning teeth or giving injections are
not covered.
The CDC stopped short of recommending mandatory AIDS testing for health-care workers, saying,
"The current assessment of the risk
... does not support the diversion of
resources that would be required 10
implement mandatory testing.''
"The risk for doctor-to-patient
infection is low. For most procedures, it's absolutely zero," said
Dr. William Roper, director of the
CDC. "If all these precautions are
followed , the American public can
be confident in the safety of its
medical care system.··
The CDC has reported just one
case of AIDS tran smission from
doctor to patients: a Florida dentist,

now dead of AIDS , who is believed:
to have infected five patients witlt
the AIDS virus.
Subsequent concern over the
risk of doctor-to-patient transmis:
sion prompted the new guidelines,
as well as efforts in several cities to
notify thousands of patients that
their surgeons or dentists had
AIDS.
:
"Patients deserv e accurate
information, and they deserve the
best measures to proteCt them fronl
disease transmission," Health and
Human Services Secretary' Louis
Sullivan said in a statement Mon:
day.
The guidelines do not have the
force of law, since states regulate
the practice of medicine. But CDC
officials said they expect the guidelines to strongly influence professional standards and requirements. '.
·The American Medical Associa· ~
tion and the American Dental •
Association, the nation 's largest ;
physicians' and dentists' groups, ;
already recommend that AIDS -':
infected doctors refrain from inva-'•
sive procedures unless their ~
patients are informed and approve .,
Those policies helped the CDC:
Conn its offlcial recommendations,·
Ropet said.
CDC researchers continue to
believe the risk of AIDS transmis·:·
sion from doctor to patient is quite··
small.
Earlier this year, CDC statisti &lt;
cians estimated that the nation hasabout 300 infected surgeons and~
1,200 infected dentists.
The CDC recommendations also;
apply to a virulent, potentially fatal.
fonn of hepatitis B virus. which is·
up to I00 times as infectious as the •
AIDS virus and can be transmiued .
by blood._
•

Roum No. 1 24. in line with
the etot line of George
Rouoh' a lot; thence north 78
deg. 21' eeot 16 feet along
the center of oald State
Roubl; thence north 4 deg.
20" aaot281 .82 feet; thence
lOUth 72 dig. 1 6 ' Wilt 16
feet to the northaaat comer
of George Rouoh' o lot;
thence oouth 4 deg. 20'
woat 281 .1 1 feet along the
aaot line of tho oaid Rouoh
lot to tho place of beginning,
conuining .09 acre, more or

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
The State of Ohio,
Melgo County
No. 91 -CV-38
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY, N. A.
Plaintiff
- VI-

JOAN M. ESHELMAN.
at al

Defendanto
In pursuance of an Order

of Sale in the above entitted
action, I will offer for aele at
public auction, at tf'te door of

.....

Excepting and reaerving

the Court Hou• in Pom-

the coal in and under uid
real eotate, which haa been
heretofore conveyed, and
further excepting and reoarving all oil, gao and other
mlnerela in and under the
oald real estate. thlo reaervation of mineral• appllea to
both Parcela Noa. 1 and 2

eroy, in the above named

County. on the 20th day of
August, 1991, II 10:00 a.
m .. the following deocrlbed
real eotate, oituated in Sutton Townlll!ip. Maigo County. Ohio:
PARCEL NO. 1 : Bogin·
1

point in the north

herein.

line of the State Road It the
aoutheaet cor"ner of Grind·

Deed Reference: Volume

23B, Page 377, Meigo
County Deed Recordo .
Tract No. 2: Situated in
Vil.. go of Syracu•. County
of Mel;., and State of Ohio.
Property Addreoo: 3000
Third Street. Syrecu•. Ohio
46n9.
Said premi•o located at
3000 Third St .. Syrecu•.
Ohio 411n9.
Seid Premi•• 1ppr1ieed
at UO,OOO.OO end cannot
be aold for leu than twothirda of th1t •mount.
Jameo M. Souloby, Sheriff
Meiga County, Oh.
LERNER, SAMPSON 8o
ROTHFUSS. Altorneyo
Francia J. DiCaoare,
Attorney et lew
171 9. 16. 23. 3tc

lay' a lot, aame comer being

115 feet from the weot line
of 100 Acre Lot No. 290 ao
meaoured on the north oide
of the road. Thence north 76
deg. 21' eaot 50 feet to an
iron otake at the north oide of
the road: thence north 4
deg. 21 ' oaot 286 feet to on
iron stake: thence in aaouth·
weaterly direction 60 feat to

a stake eat in the ean line of
Grindley'aland; which ateke

io north 4 dog. 20" eaot 219
feet from the place of begin·
nin~; thence oouth 4 deg.
20' weot 269 feet to the
place of beginning.
PARCEL NO. 2 : Begin·
ning in the center of State

GRAVELY.

The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
9053 will hold a special meeting
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. to discuss
Rev. Eddie Buffington of Galthe sale on July 27. Donations of lipolis
will speak at the Naomi
cakes, pies and cookies for the sale
Baptist
Church
in Pomeroy on Sunmay be given. ·For further inforntaday
at
II
am.
The
public is invited
tion contact June E. Smith at 667- to attend.
3374.

'·

IArtliW ...,Ctllliooolelo.t I ' ' lor

FJ......;

__

. ... A.ericu
A-lodaa.O.r ........ lo ......

.,.w...o....._,.......,
.......... ....

HAIR
REMOVAL

l 0'?'• DiocoiUit oa I" olllco
vlolt.

•

Electro~ysis is the process of removing hair permanently by
destrDymg the hair growing cells (Papilla) with an electric
current. This must be done to stop any more hair from growing.
If you are tweezing or waxing STOP, this only breaks the hair
off, tender the skin and irritates the skin. It will eventually cause
darker, coarser, ingrown hair, or scarring to the face. If you don't
have Electrolysis shave only. Shaving will cause no permanent
damage. We do Electrolysis anywhere on the body except in the

ears &amp; nose.
15 Min. -

1

10

30Min.-

1

20

Hr. -

9 a.m.-9 p.m. Thn.-Fri.
Sat.-Sun.-Mon. appoinlmenta available upon requeat ••
Setulfor free broclu.re Free Con.Watlon · 295-4533
•,

Model 1238

. S400 ~

List $2799

to~~~

Gravely-builds the 1200 Senes Lawn Tractors
homeowner who wants professional results. Choose:
•1 2 . HP Brlggo and Stratton air·
coiled, 4-cycle alngle cylinder en·
, gina
•Electric Ignition
•Bait to gear drlvetranamlaalon.
•Forward and reveroe Infinite r1111(11
0 to &amp; 'm ph

~
~

;;,,

. ........ .

5-Year limited wa,ranly,

Detatls on request

30

600 Grand Central Ave., Suite 1, Vienna, WV.

II •

$2399

1

CANDY'S ELECTROLYSIS

8

O'DELLS
UO UPPD IIVD
IAcron

ID.

fr•• lllllrt) '

LAWN AND GA .
CENTER
446-7126
MON.·SAI. 1-5 ·

GAWPIJUS, ON•

'

....

.

RATES

992-2156
8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

CAll

MONDAY thru FRIDAY

Days

CLOSED SUttDAY
POliCIES

16
15
16
t5
t5

3
6

10
Monthly

.

'Ads oullldv Mtugi , Gallia or Malon counlles mu st be pre

RltH arotor con•cutwe runs. broktnUtUfi'W'tW.Wttech~

pa•d
·
'RtH.::entt: $50 diiCOYRI lor a df plld 10. a~atiCI!
'f ree ads
Gt'4eaway and found ads und8f 15words Will be

Announcent en ls

Ov' ' 1 5 Wordo
.
.20
$4.00
:30
$6.00
.42
$9.00
.60
$ 13.00
.05/ dav
$1.30/ doy

Rate

Words

1

A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

lor uc:h dl'f as separete ad s

-·

·

....

·

1
2

Card of lh1M1kl
In Memory

3 Annoucemen u
4 Gtve.way
5
6

'Pr •c-= ol ad lor all caprtalletter tl5 doubl c ·p11ce ot ad cos t
'71'0 1111 lut e typu untv used
·Sc ntm.d IS nol respOtiSible to r euors ;ahcr lu st day !Ctl ec*
to r e nun hr st day ad 'rum m papurl Call b ufor e 2 .00 p m
d~ a h .ttr p11bhc:ation to m akM cOIJechon
' Ads that must b e patd '" ad~tllnct! au!
' Card of Th 11n ks
He~ppy Ad~
In Mumortillfll
Y atd Sides

H appy Ads
loll lf)d Fouf1d

,(11/1 IIWitl!{ I t•/ 1'/)hlllll' I' XI'll Ull !{I'.L

·A cl itSstf•od advenisenlltll pliiCL't.l 111 lhe OittiV Smlltn .. l•-'
cepl
t las ..hW th'lplll'f . 8usmtJ5s C;nd ;unti~'U II nottcusl
wtll ;tlsu ;tpp ew tn thu Pt Plu ~it nl Aennthu ;~nd the Gallt
.,uhs D outy Tr't~ttt t:. mucfun g ovur 18.000 honuts
COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

WEDNESDAV PAPER
THURSOAV PAPER
.. HIOAY PAPER

SUNOAV PAPER

•

•

Galh a County
AreaCode614

Me1gs Count"
Area Code 614

446 GaH.pohs
367 Ch•Me
388 Vinton

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 A.M SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 .00 PM tUESDAY
2 .00 PM WEDNE~OAV
2 ·00 PM THURSDAY
2 00 PM . FRIDAY

992 M•ddleport
Pome~oy

985
843
247
949

24&amp; Ato Grande

2&amp;6 CuYin Oiat.

64) Are~aOist
379 w•nut

Ch•te•
Portl.nd
letart f•Us
Rec•ne

742 Rutland

6&amp;7 Coolv1Ur:

11

12
13

.

14

15
16
17

M•son Co. WV
Aru Code 304

l!J

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

I""•·

er••

or 1111.

jcnown 11 No. 8 or Pomeroy
vain, lying under uid obow
deocribed proml11o.
Excepting one acro ond a
right of way 12 1111 wldo
which w11 heretofore con·
\rayed to Herm1111 E. MooN
't oaed Book 118. Page 32).
Reltrence Deed: Dlld
Book 193, Paga 191. Malgo
County Dead R-rda.
. Excepdng ono aare and a
:right of way 1 Z fHt wldo
"Which waa horetollre eon:wyed to Harman E. MooN
'(Dead Book 1118. Page 32) .
. . Reltr-• Dead: Deed
·Book 113. P111 111, Mtltp
C011nty Dead ltaoorda.
· OEED REFERENCE: Vo·
) uma 201, Por. 13, Mal;.
'County Deed ocordo.
The above d-lbad real
:eotate lo idantHied In the II·
oorda of the Molt• County
.~udltqr by Parcel No. 11 ·
'()0810.
EXCEPTING from the
abOve daocrlbld pramt••
·2 .472 acr11 conwyed to
'Gary L. Priddy and Araki A.
Priddy. huaben4 and wit..
by deed recorded In Mtlgo
:C'ol!ntv Deod A-rda 1111d
~·....... followa:
\ ' 11M .... , . . . . . .....
~ ... "' Awll •

t..,.

.... --CeurllY......
~. in

"hotlon 2. T_.

PLUG IN .. .
to Great

Buya... ·
Shop

li]

ln suranc•

fiouMI fer Re nt
Mo!Mi e Hom es for ~ ent
Farms tor thnt
Apartment fo r Runt
Furnith.cl Roonts
Space tor fllent

47
48

Wanted to Rent
Equtpmtnl tor Runt

49

For Lellt

lt'IIVSIOt;k

64

Hey S.

66

Sued &amp; flftll•nr

Transportalion
71 Autos tor Stitt
72 Tr ucks tor Sille
73
7,.

Mer chandise

Radio. TV S. CB R e p;m
Mts cel lanttOu s

Ynns . 4WO ' s

MutOfc, cl•
1$ B ut~~ll &amp; Mol on lor S•hr

Busmtss Trammo

Schools a. lnstrut hon

l\iijhi441

51 Household Goods
152 - Sportine .Goods

WantedToOo

56
56
21

Busin • • Opporlun•l 'l'

57

22
2l

Money to loan
Proi MSIOn.ll Ser-..lttn

58
S9

Gr~in

Auto P• r1 1 &amp; Ac::ces•o11~a&gt;
A"to Aep a11
C• mp•no Equtpm..ot
79 Campet5 &amp; Motor H on u~s

Apple Grove

Oufhlio

63

76
77
78

Anuques

Hom e IR11HO ~ tnent ~
Plumbm ii &amp; H e lll u\y

81
Bl

8l E ACI¥1hng
84

Electuc .. &amp; Re fngttulllon

85

G un tlfal H•u tm\J

86
87

Mobll 111 Hu n1e
Upholstery

R t~ p an

BUsiness Services
ctuttll!t

MICROWAVE

SIGNS

OVEN REPAIR

I

992·5135 tr
985-3561

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs
1oar. DISCOUNT YO
SINIOI CJnZENS

lG'GII f..- Past Office

FREE ESTIMATES

!17 I. Slcelld St.

992-7130

POMIIOY, 01110

W.

STEWART'S

&amp;

HOME PARTS
If you're in need

OPEN
Tuesday thru Saturday
10:00 am- 6:00 pm

of Mobile Home

2111

MI. outsldt

lutland on • •
Lima ld.
l · tO-'It-1111.

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696·1
&amp; TREE
TRIM and

SHRUB

REMOVAL

•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD nES
1 · 1 2·10-tln

BISSELL

&amp;lURlE

CONSTIUCTION
eNtw H011111
•Garaps
•C•mplttt
lemotWing
Stap I Comport
FrH Eltlmattl

5-31-'90 !In

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

n., USOII, WY.
1·(304)·
773-9560

Ulll

· BOWL
POOLTVIHO MACIIINI
Open Tutt .. Thure .•
Fri., S1t. 7:30 p.m.

773·15785

·P.O.A.:.

POMEROY
BOWLING

JUCJIABD SWACKHAMER

'liliii;OIIII•c:llllk.. . LD. .
....
. ' nq ,.. n •Dr'-11~

992-3432.,

·~·__.. . . . . .,Of .... Will

992~2403

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

.

,.~'11-.t

!lumnlnd""'

CAIIIII

.m..

tt CIIIIPIII POR IUIIT

MM:IIIIAII
AIICADit

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

Parts or

.TROMM BUILDERS

Accessories ...
SEE US FIRST!

PREI ESTIMATES
Ex!Mritnc•
•Ouellty Hamu end
Cuetom Remodeling

992-5800
IT. 13

ROOFING

WE DO

•20 Ytlrt

WEST OF

DAIWIN OHIO

742-2328
l / 22/tfn

Now /fl.
Stook/1

L

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR

and
&amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES

AIR CONDmONERS • IIIAT PUFII'S

Gutters
Downspouts

FURNACES FOil MOBilE
0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1

0

0

0

I

1

0

0

0

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168
1-11-g1 . 1 mo.
•Remodeling and
Homt Rtpelrt
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting
FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

•DINIHIIT •
CAIPIT CIIANIIS
anti Till FLOOI CAlf
•Reaeonable Reteo
•Quality Work
•Frtl Eetlm1te1
•Carpet Hea Fall Dry
Time ·
•High Olou on Tile
Floor Flnleh
Mill liWIS, Owner
lt. I, lutlanol, OH.

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

992-6641 or
691·6864

742-2451

1-14-'1 -tfn

3-14-'91-tfn

USD IPPUAJlCIS

•VINYL IIDINO
•ALUMINUM SIDINO
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

tiDAYWAIUITY

WASHIIS-S 100 .,
DIYIS-l".,
IIFIIIIIATOIS-$100 .,
IINGES-Ciao·Boc.-$1 U ., ·
FBWIS-$125.,
'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

MICIO OYI!IS-S7t .,

...........ullt

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIIYICE

"Frn Eetlmetea"

992-SUS or 915·3561
Acrots Fr1111 Pet! Offlco
POMIIOY, OMO

NO SUNDAY CAUS

10130flt !In

3-ll-tln

.

- - ... .

YIIY IIIASONAILI
HAW iEPIIINCIS

SUUDOZER and
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES.
LANDCLEARINQ,
WATER end SEWER
LINES
Till CIIING AVAIL AILE
FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 915-4110

992-7458

BISSELL
BUILDERS

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

•m•g• • m11101
FREE ESTIMATES
Tab the pain out of
•painting.
ltf 1111 do it for you.

ll- 211·11. 1 mo. d.

8· 10-'11· t'mo. pd.

CUSTOM

IUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"41 learonallll Prien"

.............
·

tly " Nltht
Nq SUtiiAY

'' Mill!•'"'

UPHOLSTERY

tU·•· Stconll
MkNJt,.rt
Hand Tufting
Cuatom Dr111411
36 Yearo Experlente

614·992-2321
Wo lay What Wo Do.
Wo Do What We Say.
IO-U-I mo.

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInvt Siding
•Replacement
Wlndowa
•Roofing
•Ineuletlon
JAMIS KEESEE
992-2772 or

742-2251
638 Bryan PIICI
MlddlepoM. Ohio
11 -lt-tln

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Pl. t49•1HI . ;

310 hltln4St.

.

OPM TO 'ID Pni..IC

CAIDIJIO • lleoutlful
RATBS ·Day. Week. Month. or Scuon
nanc IIIIIII.TD u4 e'll\G&amp; hr a.at
Ratmtona • Oet 'facl&lt;therw -Portia
1'111111'10

'"· t49-2101
· or les. t49-2160

985-4473
667-6179

RICK PEARSON
AUCTIOt-fCO.

ra:w 1mS S&amp;WON ··POOL

H. MOBILE

GUNS
SUPPLIES
•IUY •SELL •RADI

742·2Ul

l:alaplag II Family Fun

8-4·'91·1 mo.

3/6/90/lfn

lm.L BJ: MID:D BOTH

- ~I ....... Oitll,llj.ll¥ . .

Pick Up.

APPLIANCE
SEIYICE

I

MASON, 'WV

AU IUDS
Iring It 1ft Or Wt
lEN'S

ANtiQUE
AUCftON

l'llllir

HelD Want«&lt;
SituatiOn Wantad

41
42
43
44
45
46

Misc. Merch andiS e
Building Supph•
Pet s tur s~ II
Musicel lnstrum eo t s
F"utt &amp; Ytgetl bl a.
For S•le 01 Tncte

LIRII .I-DIY

.

W~nt ed

54

Mason
N.,.. Hevtm
l etMt l

6 1 Far rfl Equtpmunt

62 wamed t o Buy

!iJ

in the Plat •• Loto
Poil\t Pleasant : 675-691' ·
(one) and 2 (two) ex·
20 feet front and 50
f - ~- of Lot No. 2 on
Public Notice
the oouth corner.
· Al10 the following real eaMoiga County Died Ro·
tata altuatad In the County
COrda.
Melta. In the State of
DEED REFERENCE: Vol·
and In tho Towntthlp of
ume 300, Paga 887, Molgo
~:;::~wand bounded ond
County Deed Rocordo.
II·
11 followa, vio:
The above deocrlbld real
Beginning at the oouth_ , oorner of Lot No. 2 In ootatt io identified In the rethe Town of Mlnerovllla, cord• of tho Moigo County
County of Mol;., and State Auditor by Parcel Noo.: 18of Ohio; thence in a weoterly 00723 and 18-00724.
Said reol eotate woo op·
dlrwc:tllln 22 foet; thence In a
northelltarly direction 60 preiMd lit 18,710.00.
Termo of Sole: Caoh
feet; thence ln a aouthaaa·
Real oobltl cannot bo oold
tarly direction 22 flat;
thence 10 feet to tha place for leu than two-thlrdo of
the apprelaad value.
of betlnnlng.
Public Notice
Jamoa M. Souloby,
Ralerance Doada: Certlll·
Sheriff of Meiga
of Trenlfer recorded in
ohlp I , Range 14 of the Ohio oeta
County, Ohio
Volume 2g3, Poge 8115, and
Company Purch-. btintl a Volumo 291. Paae 486.
171 9. 18, 23. 3tc
portion ottha DeleL. and/or
Shirley Jean Priddy property
(Volume 201. page 083
8
Public Sale
Mtlgo County Dead Aa·
&amp; Auction
corda) bounded and d•
ocrlbtd aa foWcw.:
Beginning on 1111 north
llno of •ld Priddy propertv
In tho center of Hyaoll Run
Road (County Road ;1),
llid 119lnt of beginning be·
lnt 817.11' South 21 clog.
17 mln. 32 110. Eat from
tha center of the lnteraac·
tlon of Hyllll Run R01d anll
Rutland Towntthlp RICNI
171; thence following tha
FRID"'Y, JULY 19 &amp;
oantar of Hyaoll Run R01d
tho following th'" coureoa:
SATURDAY, JULY 20
South I dag. 8 mln . 47
oeo. Eaat UO. 18 It;
10:00 A.M. EACH DAY
South 7 dog. 34 mln. 53
••· Walt 84.96 It;
LOCATED AT IS08 2ND STREET
South 13 cflt. 29 mln. 10
ON RT. SS IN MASON, WV
. .. Walt 103.12 It;
to the north line of 1 oanlorWATCH FOR SIGNS
adjoinlng 12ft. rigltt of way
MRS. SWACKHAMER liAS MOVED TO A
conwaytd to Herman E.
Moore by deed recorded In
SIIALL APARTMENT AND WILL BE
Volume 1 IB, Page 032
SELLING THE FOLLOWING:
Molga County Dead A•
cordo; thence l-Ing Hyotll
ANTIQUES ACOWCTIILES: Super Dlkhigh boy flncy claw 1881, early
Run Road and tonowtng tho
QIPiltllld, I pc. Dunclrt Phyft dining 1110111 suite, 2pc. O~a~ ~nne
north line of oald 12 ft . rltlht
ta0r11 ouita, 3ollckmlhogany bookcaJe, flncyclawfoot Morrilc:halr,
of way North 89 deg. l min.
CIIVed muaic cabinet, large clawfeot oval lall'f&gt; lillie, laney oak
4 7 ••· Woat 372.80 ft. to
Dlk halttee be...tad mirror, VootoriM mlllllla inMr1
on iron pin •t on tho ••t
line of the •nlor·adlolnlntl
Richard and/or Lola llo•n·
baum property (Voltimt
288, Page 129 Malga
County Dead Recordo). Jill·
olngan Iron pin 1111121.12
ft.; thence leaving tho north
11111 of oaid right of way and
lolowing the 1111 llno of
oald Ro•nl!eum property
North ~i.i.43 ft. to an Iron
pin Ntlnl blrbed,..refence
on the north llnoo Of 11ld Ro•nblum and Priddy proper·
tift: thence leaving tha eaot
line of oald Roaanbaum
property and following the
hrbad wlra fence and tho
north line of . oald Priddy
property Eaet 400.00 ft . to
tho point Of bealnnlnt. paa·
olng an Iron prn Ill In tho
fence at 373.84 ft ., conialn·
lng 2.472 acreo. Subjact to
all legal oeHmenta.
The above daocrlptiOn wao
mede In tooordenca with an
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: Mrs. SwadlllamGr was a
aciual lurwy oonductad by
Eu(llna Triplett RS 1711 on
laacher for many y181S, sevllllll g~ions ol ooUeelibles are
1/28/91.
2/B/91 an•
in her 3 tl«y V'ICioriln home. Parlial isling, house is loaded
2/12/11 .
Bearlnga are
from lop to~. AIIams musl be paid tor each day before
b-.1 on an aaMimM -1·
/weal diraatlon of tha north
ltlllOYtd hm premises. Anyone wanting 10 buy good qual~y
line of the Dole and/ or lhlr·
antiques,
should plan to anend this auction bolh days. Bring
ley Joan Priddy proflllty
your own lawn c:hairl. Nolhinll Shown llelore Day Of Sale.
(Voflrma 201. ..... 013
Meip C.unty Dead R•
oonlll) and are Intended to
AL1JTDIS UITED TO SELL
den-* ~~ttiH only.
Bald real aelllte wao opDAYS
prallad at 114,121.00.
Tarma of Sale: Caah.
AVCROHCOHDV~BY
Real aollltl cannot be aold
for 1111 !flail tw•thlrda of
tho appraloeil Vo!lue.
.
JamH M. Soullby. Shlllfl
Mllill Coliitty, Oh;
(7) 9; ,., 23. 310

PubliC

Real Estate

So~le

Pt Pl eM11nt

by tlck HIOIIJ'lt~ : I

LUNCH

Fi'rms far Sale
Bustn•• BUIIdtngs
l ots &amp; Acre19t

Loon

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
s·PACE AVAILABLE
AP5.00 PER DAY

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of en Order of
Sale ioMied out of the Common Pleao Court of Chilli
County, Ohlo,ln tho caM of
Oole l. Priddy, Plaintiff,
egainot Shirley J. Priddy,
Defendant, upon' o
ment therein rendered, b•
ing Caea No. 82·CL·34i In
oald Court, I will offlr for
oala, at the front door of the
Court Hou• In Pomeroy,
Maiga County, Ohio, on the
19th uy of Augun. 11111.
at 1D:30 o'clock A.M.. the
following Ianda. tonomenta
end peraanal property. towit:
Situate ln tho Townllilp of
Rutland, County of Melgo
and State of Ohio, and
bounded and deocrlbed ao
followo:
Being in Soctlon No. 2,
Town No. 8, Ranga No. 14
of the Ohio Compeny'a PurcheN 11rtd beginning 232
rodo and 1 2 Iinke Welt and
711'h rodo South from tho
Northeaot comer of 11ld
Soction No. 2; thence South ·
90 roda; thence Eaot18 rodo
and 1 2 liriko; thence North
311 roda and 1 1 llnko; t h Eaat to tha center of the old
road; thence In a Northerly
direction loUowtitg tha center of 11ld road; thence In a
Northerly direction follow·
ing the center of oald road to
where formerly D. F. McNaughton' a South line lnteroeoto and cro'IMI •ld road;
thence Eaotto tha center of
Hy•ll Run; thence North 1 I
degrMa Eoat 12 rodo and 4
llnko; thence North .22 do·
Waot 3~ roclo: thence
Walt 1 23 roclo and 411nkoto
the place of beginning.
· Save and except2~ urea
in the Southwell part bl•
longing to Georg a Haley,
j:ontainlng 42V. acreo. moN

3)
3l

tor Sale

458
576
173
882
89&amp;
937

. .~~~~~

Public Notice

Mobtht Homes for

67~

Public Notice

BUlLETIN BOARD

Hon~ es

32

l;tldll

Se&lt;Vi l,l'S

/J(I!{I' ~ I'OI'I'r 1/11•

31

35
36

.
:.:-...d.,_, · ., 'f11JI Cillelpald '" 01ftol n u1
8 Publi c Sale &amp; AuctiOn
9 Wanted t O Buy

Emp loymr.nl

( _' /n.~.~ifit•t/

Farm Supplies
&amp; Ltveslock

Rea l fslale

run 3 d., s at nu ch•ge

· Seve end except the coal

Special speaker

PERMANENT

AD

Public Notice

Public Notice

ning at

TO PlACE AN

• The Area's Number 1 Marketpla'e

.

,,,,, '"'"''
$30

30 SESSIONS

····1126

.,
01.
~~~=~~*··

1..

L__--------~--------------------~--~--------~--~--~--~------------ 6------------------------------------------------------~~r.~

THE

GROOM
ROOM
'I

Complete Grooming
fgr All lretds
EMILU MERINAR
Owner I Operator

614-992-6820
Pomeroy,

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE ·
- ffoom Addition•
-Qwftllr wort!
-Electrical •nd ptymblng

- CenCNte worll
- Roofing
- 1-iof • Eattriot

Patntone

iFRIE EITIMATEIJ

V. C. YOUNG HI
H2-6215
r-oy, Ohio

· . 11·14-'90.tin

'

�. ...-~§~..•iiiJI.. ~IIIIIIIIIIIIIII...........................................~---------

~~~~·~
· --~·~.~
~ ~
~~~~~~--~--~~~.~~~~~. .~&amp;i~J~I~I~~;~;•.~.~
..~
, ,j'-·~.i~

p~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~-:~~------------r:::::~;;·;r;;~::A;Idr-d~le~p~o~rt~O~hl~o=====r~::~~;:;:;:~::::::~----Tulf:e~s:da~y~,=Ju~ly~16~,;.1~99:1~,r:

~age

~The Dally

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements
3

46

---------~~
41

Announcements

Houses tor Rent
tbr Fumlohod Houoa, In City.
No Pato. SIIIO/mo. Pluo Ulltltllo.

Stngll "'"'let ond nowoiiUor
tor aru alngiM. All agn. Con·
tjdontlot ond lffordoblo. Write:
Stnall•.... p.o . Bo• 1043, Gil·
Upollo, "" ~5631.

4

2 klnlno to good homo, 304·
175.7153.
2 port Boogie hunting dogs,
304-182·3210.
3 month old female Beagle, 814·

' . • ~.
....

Jl..

1118~065.

...

..11' -,~(..,.t,_

,

3 ~ppiH, 2 ma'-1, 1 female,

304 ..7H633.

Z bedroom home, nice location,
304-871-7373.
3 bedroom Qaillpotla Ferry,
304-871-31SO, 7:30 tlll ~ :00 wook
days only.
3 BA homo, oily oclooolo, $375
month pius dapooll. 11•-4480385.
4Br, 2 Batha, Houu Nllr
Unlvanlly 01 Rio Granda WHh
Acroava. S380, Month, S350
Dopolil. 114-3'11-2628.

,.,

Free KHtena, Yellow Striped &amp;.

. 'What precautions do we take against
s ha rks? We make you pay In advance."

~=========li:::==iiiTSitA:iN'
11 _ Help
Wanted _
~ BARGAINS · ..
_:_,;_
_;_:...______

cot
leo ..,.11,
304-175-5253.
Lovable
pupplol,
pori huoky,l
7 wka old, 2
port
ahlpord.
-~1 ~ malo, S14-1149-2321 at·
t• 5:vupm
Pupptaa, 11111d. 15om• Dobor·
~.:,.
5r. About s-e

EARN MONEY ANding bookll
130,000/yr. tncomo potont11t.
'?;;~.· · 11) 805-1182-BOOO Ext. y.

Sm. dirt II'IY &amp; b&lt;own poodle,

Excellent

..:=J

trlendty, 012-2791.

Pay! Homeworker•
Nlodod. Over 400 Componloa
Need Homeworkera1Dl8tributorl
Now. C•ll For Amazing Recor-

mala dog to good home.

Nice pot. st•~&lt;B-5617.

ded M..oago, 614-89&amp;.2882 Ext.
110.

Lost &amp; Found

6

Found l·tg Female dog In lront HIV Program Coorclnatorl. Fullof Foodland. Hat 1-blua and 1· Time, Ffv~ounty Area BIMd
brown oys, coli 814-1112-2224.
In Athen1. Take Over A Gr•nt-

:..o.t:

Vicinity Bidwell. 2
Moll l Fomolo. Block,
Brown I While, 814-381J.ml.

B~~gllo,

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

. •r ., "
' ' .,

· the

m
CLASSIFIEDS

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

I room houH, much, much
more. I1~S.1340.

2·BA houao w/3 acr11, 614-8813820.
07UO.

Athene, ONo, 45701.

the dly betor. the ad Ia to Nn.

HIV Program Coordlnetor, full·

SUnder octnton • 2:00 p.m. tim_., five county lrN bleed In
Friday. Monday octnton · 2:00 Athens. Take OVIII' a grant.fun.
dod pro)acl which roqUir11 duel
p.m. Saturdllr.

tkllle of eommunlty devel~
Friday, July 1tttl. 2 112 mt on menVeducatlonal outruch, and
Addl.on Pika. Wardl Trallar lndivklual tntlnalcounullng.
Bachelor'• degrM Tn haahh, aoPark. I-I.
cial Hrvlce management, or In

PB. AC .AIIIFII ...... ....
uHt 37,30o mUM, IXCtllent

PS

Household
Goods

Car Glrago, $57,500. 114-44&amp;.

Vert Cl11n, $8, ·
88 Chivy Catob~ty,

Boautllul Solid Dlk ~~'ll

5 bedroom, 2 11:1 both, lg.
kitchen,
family
room,
wlfl,.piKe, living rm, dlninr rm,
dpublo garogo aHachad,
1/3
ecrM, $65,000 Firm, call 114·

1185-351'1.
Aoducod To Sail: 2 Story 311&lt;
Comor Lot In Choohlro~ Ohio.
Eacotloril CondHion. For •I~·
lng, Flvo Star llortgaga, Vlckll
Hauidron. 81~ 448 ~2. Sailor
Will Poy Poinls. 804-1132-1851,
104-132·'1870.
For Sail By Ownor: Oua!Hy
Brick Ranch ~ To Hoil.or

Hoepltal. 4br, Filii B111menl
Largo Shadod Lot. S14-448-0M7
arterlp.m.

~-•• •

~

Car!&gt;at $4.00 Ylrd &amp; Up. Vln~
$3.01 ·a sug Yord. Porch Turf,
$3.11 l $5.11 Yord. lloltollan
Carpoll, Uppor Rim Rood, 1144441·1'144.

mepte 1able, Hom• Interior,
lerge women clothing, big
aaloction boyo &amp; glrlo clothing,
whlt·not•.

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

NMCI babyallter In my home.
Mon-Frl. Aher 6pm c•ll 81 • .446.

DR, FR, 2 flrapt. . ., CA, 1 acre
lot, Morslll $117,500. :lool-m588'1.

14

Mobile Homes

tor Sale

$600 Down On Sollct ·

Sacrwtary, Law Firm, good
IICFIIarial oklll roqulrodl typ!ng,
Alcll Palroon Auction Compony, dlclllion, word procns ng~ llc.
lull lima auctlonMr, complllo Wrllo Boo P·2 cora Point
1uction lllfYic:l. Llcanood Ohio, Pt-nt Roglst•!1 .z00 llaln sr,
W_, Vlrglnlo, 304·773-Bl'U.
Point Pla-nt, YfV 25!50.
wamedto Buy

bathe c..-tom •t In khchen,

2215.
32
Nood 101111000 to dlok &amp; oow a
yard In Potrlot aroa. 114·3'112884.

Business
Training

Uood Mobile Homao, Coli 614·
4441-0175.
Nowii!SouthNitlm
Wonlad lo buy, Standing limber, Retrain
Bob Wlllloms &amp; Sono 014-182· Buslnaso Colllgo, Spring Vo!lay
Plua. Call Today, 814-441-4311711
Top Prtcaa For: Ail Old u.s. Roglllorallon 1110-01-l:lliiB.
Colno, 0o1c1 Ringo, Diamond•,
18 Wanted to 00
Sllvar Cotna, Starn~. Gola
:::::--::::-::::::--::~;:::--:;:=
151
Colna. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
Will Bobyo~ In lly Homo
Sacond Av111uo, Galllpolll.
Anf.lmo.
Rodney
Aroa.
Ao oroncoo Av1llabto. All Shlfto.
Employment Services Calll14-241-5788.
BUih Hog So,...,k:l. Aoaoonobll
AIIOI. No Job To Smolll S1437V-21142.
Help wanted
llothar will babysit In
AVON · All .,..., Call llorllyn Chrlatlln
har homo, Ralrock aroa1 304Woavar304-182·2M5.
815-3801 or 304-175.3111 DOiora
Acr:ajlllng 1pplk:ltion1 tor g:OOPM.
cooka, waHr-•, 1nd dllh· ~ Portobll Sawmill, don't
waohart. EJ:Darloncad prolor· haul
loa• to the mill Ju..
rod. Full 1nd Pa~ lima pooHtonl coli
75·1157.
ovolllbll. Mom'o S:norgubord,
Havo a worry troa Vaclllonl Eli·
304~--

~··

11

J::

R.,.....

-Md Mobile Homoa. Fr11 Sat

Up And Dollvory. Financing
Avoliablo. llld Ohio Rnonco, 1·
800~811-5711.

10155 ShuHz, 2-BA mobile homo
w/underplnnlng

porch,

end

$3500, S14·1112o:!lll4.
12lll0 mobllo homo. Panly lur·
nlohod. Extro clun. $5700. 614·
245-1463.
19&amp;7-12x50 Skyllno, 2·BR houN
tn~Uor,

can 014--112·2115.

1970 Champion mobl~ home,

304-171-7453 or S75.111~7.
1182 Commador lloblll Homo1 2
BA1 Gordan Tub, 88 Paa~ ~t.
Mlodloport
$'11011. S14-182-5030.
11M Wlndoor 2BA, 141711, AC,
woohar/dryor. Houulidlng. I14448.J113 or 614~37.
1165 Rodman 14x70, 2b~ · 2
bmhl, ManY" Ex1r81, Muat ~HI
$1~,100. 0.11.0., 014-1182·11171, loS
z And 3 Bedroom Mobile

' '.

Shop
the

CUISSIFIEDS
a-JOed.... y.,... at

CaD for complete details
on placing
ads to sell for you.

COuntry,

Depo.ll,

ReferencH, 114-388-9581.

Knol 1881, 1~ner, 2 bldroom,

ali olaclrlc, celt 814-912·3021 or
114-182·1107.
~~~~~~~~
Now 11180'1, Now On Dtsplly At
El... Home Center, Afto,.
dabllltr, Luxury, a Quality. CaU

1-800.5811-5110.

New 1ev1 14x80 three bedroom,

2 lull bathoh shingle roof, vinyl

aktlng,
1 utters,
carpeted
throughout, all dryw~ll Interior

Business
Buildings

OFACE SPACE FOil LEASE on
2nd Ave., Gallipollo. c- IO
Court HouH. 1

room, 2

rooma,

3 roomo, 4 rooms. Ali nicely
dacorolld, olr conditioning,

water,

reasonable

25 acroo, nnt wllar avollabll,
tocllod on Brood Run Rood,
Naw lllvon. S21,500. 304-77311111.

36

·

World Todar
OOurHOUII
1:05 (J] Bewltcllld
1:30 (J)
tDI NIC New1 Q

'f'WRE VERY
WEIRD, SIR

() ei:e

Andy Qrflfttlt

a:

ill IDle Current Aflllr Q
aJI
Court Q

~~

1180 Chivy Truck, 305 Auto,
New Rima, &amp; Tlrea. Many Ex·

IFill 614-448-4412.
111185 Ford F·150 4x4, two tone

,·
red, loedrldl Muat ... to ap. · • "'.

praclstl. S14-44.o385.
:.
19M Toyoto, 1 Ton, Pick-Up, 5 ;·
Spood. $3,000. St4-441-4782.
·- .,:
1118 GIIC auto PSIPB AC (:
crutu,lllt. Loti olo11rao. 'hntld. - ·.
wlndowl, dllaal. St&lt;l-446-8044.
'·

.•
..
pwe"J:, ,.•'
12,DGO ml,"$'11,500. i'M-182·! 5.

For Salo: Ford Truck1 Wi1h
Covarod Bod. o- For
Dollvert. Can Bo Soon 449
Jac"-Pikl.

Real Estate
wanted

W.nlod, 3-IA homo, Raclna
to ,.,c or wloplion,
814-148-27U.

vm.J.., Ttli P/ZEI'IP~N.,. SA_!_I&gt; 11t't&gt;
po fOMET'flNG

"

AIOVT A'lt

Alk:l Chamblro Troclor, Auno 73
&amp;4 WD's
•
Goo:!· S800. 114-388-8880.
:~
Sa~ : 1986 Ford R•nger, 4x4, ::
Jlm'o Farm Equlprnarw1.SA. 35, -For
V-8, Auto• Air, T-r. llag •
Will Galllpotil, 114....1777; WhHie,
ucellenl Condition. :.
Wldo aalactlon now I Ulld torm $4,800. 614-«1-0419, ahar 5p.m.
troctoro &amp; lmptomonlo. Buy,
Mil, trade, I :QOoS:OO WMkd•y•,
74 Motorcycles
.a .t. ll!l-.

new

Cow 1nd celt thow han.,. for
1111, Pelnl Ph•, 2415 Jackton
Ave, Poln1 PINunt, WV.

Vert nk:l couch &amp; chair, $150.00
814·192·2135.

=~-.lhp30"
cut,
3
, ollc llart, His.
Jollnoon 2 holM troller, good
altar 1;00.
condMion1 $1000 or lrodo lor
stock trolror, 814·182-8e!5.
Building
55
Pinto maro wHh uddlo 1nd
Supplies
brldll1 _vary ganllo, $425, phona
b&lt;lck, _., 111t&gt;11. win· 304..1111-3381'.
clowe, llntele, etc. CliUcle- WI,... IJaacl gooaanock 4 horM traitor,
toro, Rio Granda, OH Call S14- $2388; 3 yNr old AQHA W1110m
245-8121.
Pt-uro galdlngha brothar to
WOikl Pllaouro C mplon. 11+
56 Pats tor Sale
211-8522.

a-.

G.- and lklppty ~~

ORom~
Pal

~
Food Doollr.
All

•·

uNo
w-. Call 111 411 D23~ 1-.
352-0m.
.C black rraWaM Ldnclaor
Allrlovwa.
Sfiato ilnd - -·
tl50.
114-14S.2124.

.
=

31140.

HI Third A.,.,.uo, Galllpollo,

53

AKC Femoll Catllo Pup, 3
Monlllo Old, 1110. 81 Bladon
Road, 8ICond HouM Righi 011
Al. l
AKC
Aoglltorad
Gorman

Antiques

Buy or aell. Alverlrw Antlquee,

1124 E. . Moln Stroot, Pomaroy.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 1:00 p.m.
B14·182·252S.
Ook Buflal, Ll&gt;w Bock WHh lllr·
ror, Aollnlohad. $225. 114-4413884 Evonlnga.

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1951 John Doaro Modll a
AobuiH, Exctlllnl CondHion1
Hyllor 4 Staga Fork Lift, Dock
Ptsto, 3 Trolllr Axlla, I Trolllr
Bod. 114-441-2359.
19110 vw Dotrhar -Dioaal, 1871
Chivy w~. 1111 Ko-kl
KX·125 Dirt Blka, OV• lha Cab
Truck Campar, 2-Campar Silo
Rafrlgoratoro. 114-812-3010. ·

&gt;MI.o3l8.
No~h

oon, OH 1-800-537~521.

town, over·
-lng rivar. No Pall, CA. 1143rd Sl, lliddloport, Ohio, 1

w-.

Shapftord
.........
Shott,
Hol~flio:304-I'IW113.
AKC Aogllllorod Got;an All~var

puiiDioa; $250. -h, 114-448iiOi4 or ~1-1387.
AKC W e t - Pupo, ChamIlion -Mna, S260 and $300,
.14-192·'1201.
Dog onc1 Cat groomlna an
~ opocllllrid In POodll
g.-(na. . 12 yn arportanco,
304-8714332.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

c~~~~~~~~~=
iOof
Round Balla Novor Bun

Wat. Qoocl Mlrad Hay, $15 E1ch.
114-3'11-2711 Evanlngo.
For your htly, alfalfa, or greaa

nMIIIt callllorr.n Farm• on Rt.
38. 304-137-201 .

Transportation

lire~ ,

chain &amp; eprockale,

Honda 450 Extra ctNn, 3,000

m1!01. S50CJ , S14-241-1483.

·,

~....:....-----

Furnished
Roorris
Apa:tmonl avolllbll"lor 2 or 3
ccinllruction _ , . 304-112·
2511.

Country Mobile Homo Park,
Rout• 33, North ol Pomaroy.
LAM, rwntlll, partl, utn. Cell
01+192·11171.

.J.-..J.'--..J.L-....1

PRINT NUMS FRED I'
tEllER S
•
UNS(R,O..MSLE FORI
ANSWER
•

the chuckle quoled

by f illing in the mi u ing word1
you develop from stap No. 3 below.

I' 1 I' I' I' 1 I' I' I
II I I I I I II
7

3

~CRAM-lETS

ANSWERS

Alkali - Groom - Raven - Proper - OVERLOOK
Old gent to newly wedded chap, " The art of being
married is the art of knowing what to OVERLOOK."

75

Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

13ft. 2 S.•t Boat Motor, NMde
Little Wort, Boat TraUtr, $275. · _. ..

814·3118-8890.

'

1988 Baha, Mint cond, w/350

-

Chevy motor,

113 ,~,00.

Pontoon Bolt, Steel 50 Hor..-

71

Autos tor Sale

:::--::-.~-;;-::;-:::;--:::ood::;

'82 Malibu, S.W., ml g
ahapo, loaded, naw porto,
$1,800. Sot lull length ruMing
boarda tor pick-up $50. 304-175'
11048 onytlmo.
1150 Packard Auno Good, Body
Noodl Lntll Wort, $800. S14·
3l8.aetO.
1887.CIIoi Cornaro ss, 350
""P,·
44 , alum whuil, naw
.,. nt, e 1112-mt
.
tm Cadillac, 4-dr Sadon

I

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

CD

Chovrotll truck hood
$50.00, 73.-. Cltovrotll bldlldo,
pooaongar oldo, $50.00 814·182·
1125 anor 5:00.
Budget Tranemlaalona, Uaed "\:~
,.bullt, 1t1rtlng al $99; Aul q, _;.
Parte. 614·24S.5617. 614-371--~ .-, •
2213.
~ -

7·11:&gt;

&gt;'.

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

79

14' Mlf-contelned camper pull

Services
B1

Home

Improvements
BARNEY
IS

Cunls

Home

MY COFF
REMEDY READY,
SNUFFY?

lmprowemema:

Yuro E1porl1nct On Otdar 6 .
Nawar Homoo. Room Addlllono,
Foundallon Wort, Aoottng,
WlndoWI &amp; Siding. FrM E•
limlllll Aotoroncll, No Job To
Big Or Smolll 614-441.Q22!.
'

Alr~~tlon

Ron Evena Enterbrt.... Jack·

For Sala: SlrlltO Loun~r, ISOi

Rooon llom...,.hlp,
1810 Evanlnga.

01~

Garago Do« WHh Tracki:'A' ~I
- " " h .m. To 8p.m. I
11118.
Ilona 27 Inch Concord 10 ~
blkl, naw lirll, sao. 304-175~188 .

(I)

WHAR'S YORE
PERSCRIPTION,
DOC?

ALL I NEED IS
SOMETHIN' TO
WRITE IT ON!!

7-!6·11

•Qa 6

t A9 74
.10 5 3 2

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST
.KJ8 43

EAST
.Q7
. J 53 2
• Q J 10 8
• 764

•to 9 1
• 6 52
•As

SOUTH
. 9 6 52
.AK4

Hold up
the holdup

tK 3

.KQJ 9

Vulnerable: Both
Dea ler: South

By Phillip Alder
We continue our look at deals frQm
Biii Root's book "How to Play a
Bridge Hand." Every day you may test
yourself by cover ing the East· West
cards and seieeling your line of play
before reading on . Today's contrac t is
three no-trump. West leading lhe
spade four.
Start by counting your lop tricks.
Here you have six: one spade. three
hearts and two diamonds. The extra
tricks you need will obviously come
from the club suit.
Everything looks rosy. but if the op·
ponents can get one club and four
s pade tricks. they will defeat you .
Consider the spade suit and its pos·
sible distributions. if the opponents'
cards are dividing 4·3. you are always
sale. The opponents will get at most
one club trick and three spade tricks.
You need fear only a :;.2 split.
Given that the suit is 5·2 and West
has Jed from length, how will the hon·

South

Wes t

North

East

I NT

Pass

3 NT

All pass

Opening lead: • 4

ors divide' West won't have the K·Q·J
(he would have Jed the king). So East
wiii have a doubleton honor.
if that :s so and you duck the fi rst
Irick, East will win with his honor and
return his second spade. Then if West
has the club ace, you will go down ,
since he will cash three more spade
lr:cks. The answer is to win the first
Irick with dummy's spade ace.
You continue with a club. Wha t can
West do when in with the ace' 11 he
leads a tow spade , East will win the
Irick but won't have anolher s pade to
play. If West cashes the spade king
swa llowing his partner's queen, you~
nine becomes a second stopper.

National Aud11bon

Society lpaclala Stereo. Q
llll tDie •s~ep~~~n King'•
Golden YH,..' Cll Tllllday
Movie (Premiere) An accident
al a aecret govermentlab
creates havoc. Stereo. Q
0 Tueodly Night Fight&amp;
NABF MlddlewelltJI
Championship: Fabian
Williams (1 2·2· 1. 10 KOs) vs.
lsmael Negron (14·11- 1. 8
KOs), 12 rounds, lrom
Lansing, Mich. (l)
Nlallvllll Now Stereo.
Larry King Uvel
8:30 (I) Clle Colch Hayden
attends a charily ball where
Christine is C&lt;Hiost. (R)
Stereo. Q
10:00 (J) G t!J) Law I Order A
murder weapon Is traced to
a murdered dirty cop. (R)
Stereo. !;I
(I) Cll8 China Belch In
1985, Colleen seeks therapy
when aha begins to have
llashback8. Slereo. C
CD inflnltl Vorage Stereo. Q
(I) P.O.V. C
cestartrak
world Newo
1D 700 Clull Willi Pll
Aoblrtlon
10:20 (J] MOVIE: Sunbum IPGi
(2:00)
10:301)) Newl
Crook and ChiM
ID Mljor Leegue BIHball

a
a

bahlnd compor good condition, · 1•
raclucad to $6SO must oail S14- ,.•'
192-8155.

mil••·

7:35(J] Major Loague BaHbaU
Chicago Cubs at Atlanta
Braves (L!
8:00 (J) 8 tDI MaUock An
assistant district attorney is
murdered. JPI 1 of 2) (R)
Stereo. l;l
(I) Cll8 Who'• the Bou?
Tony Is forced into revealing
a long-hidden fear. (A)
Stereo. Q
(I) (I) NOva Whether or not
birds are lha descendants of
dinosaurs. Stereo. C
Ill) tDie Aeocrw. f'11 A
non-swimmer fall&amp; Into a
river and Is saved by
kayakera. (A) Stereo. Q
aile MOlliE: TIM: MeChanic
(PO) (2:00)
0 Murder, She Wrote Q
On Slitgl Stereo.
aPnrneNIWI
0 MOVIE: Copper Conyon
(2:00)
8:30 (I) (1)8 Davit RUiel Love
may develop after Davis
hires a teacher to tutor his
son. (R) StereO. ·~;~·
Cliurch Strlll SteUon
Stereo.
8:00 (J)
tDIIn the Hilt ollhe
Nlgh1 Gillespie Investigates
the murder ol a peroled
convict (R) Stereo. Q
(I) (I)
"-nne A
neighbor complains that D.J .
Is a bad Influence on their
son. (Rl Stereo, Q

e

I

NORTH
• A 10

a Cro111tra

e

II

'·

4043.

76

BRIDGE

(L)

a

~

Steve_ · '-r

and Paggy Davil, 8llli8 Radford ' ~ •
Ad, Alloiono, OH, S14-582-4241 or •·
614-192·2521.
. .
Joltnoon. Naw Dock, Carpel,
Siding, $2,000 Firm. 614-446-

ID Sclrecrow and M,... King
7:05(J] TIM: Jefttrtanl
7:30 (J) • tDI Joop~~rdyl Q
()) Mtjor LllgUI 8o:Hball
Chicago Cubs at AUanta
Braves (l)
(I) tDI• Entertlllnrnenl
Tonight Stereo. Q
Cll• Marne' • Family
Ill) Willi! of Fortune 1;1
aile M*A*S*H
Be 1 Stitr Stereo.
D Mljor LHgue Ba11bal

a

73-81

J:::

a

l
The World Almanact~ Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Technical
unlv.
4 Somewhal, In
mutlc
8 Type of tear
12 Pay ponally
for
13 Bauballer
Nolon14 Tennis player
Arthur 15 Ru111an
vllego
16 Actre1o
Ch111
17 Cut
18 Lon to

I XCIII

20 ActorGould
22 Tlmbar lrH
24 - Cf)lney
25 Dllcourlged
29 Large artery
33 Sllcl Of lOIII
34 McNally'•
p1rtnor
36 Roman

Anewer to Prewloue Puzale

bronze
37 Con1umed
food
38 Stance
39 Evergreen
I reo
40 Tol1graph
lnvonlor
42 Hallolujah
44 Ptrlod In
hl1torr
46 Author Analo

•

. .,

47 Lilting 24
hOUri
51 Port OVtr
55 Uvlng56 Clump
58 1002, Romon
59 C1llfornll
county
60 Tonnl1 pleyor
- N11t1H
61 Punch Ill.)
62 Llboror
83 Copycot
64 BIUiitl, o.g.

I
I
1

I Papo'o wife
2 In lhe ..me
plece(abbr.J
3 Rookie
4 llembar ol
lite cler~y
5 PO!MYO I
lrlond Olive

DOWN

a

JET

Moeo,., repaired. New
6 ,..built motore In 11ock, RON

(L)
11:00 (J) e

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800- ...
!37·9528.

&lt;ll CllG llll 1121e

tDINeWI
()) Twilight Zone
CD Nowowetch
liD Araenlo Hell Stereo. Q
0 Crime Slory l;l
On Slalll Stereo.
Sportllonlgllt
ID Sclrecrow and Mrs. King
11:30 (J)
iiJl Tonight Show
Stereo.

e

er. involvements with individuals who

59

For Sale
or Trade

Commorlorl M Computar, WHh
Dodga llldal Motor - · Air Dloc Orlva, Prlntar Tapo Cal- and dopooil required. 304· · Condnlonlng,
Glnalll"!! Ll&gt;w
182·2568.
ll!taago;, . _1880 GMC Picllup, Mitt, Taltpl'loM Modifti, Whh
North ~lhl lllddloport, Ohio. 2 Good """dnion; 1180 Suzuki Many 0.11101 &amp; Pr·-· WIN
cam Conlar.
bedroom umlahod apt, dapoall AM, 250.CC, Excalllnl Cond~ Tiada Fo&lt; end reference r.qulred, 30•-882· lion; Quaon Slu Walorbad, 114- 114 3. IZU, IM 3M lt1S.
3118-8358.
2511.

45

•

'

$750 S"·l82-5.565.
81 SUzuki AMBO, 2 llroka, run•
good. 114-448-8253.

'

bedroom f\lmlehed ept , referen-

Ono llodroom apo~m1111 In Mid·
dloporl, llovo 1nd 11frlgorotor,
AC, $225.00 • DoPMII, 1-814·
112-3817 or 182-3312.

'i

Concept 30 Remote Control

Hollcoplar All Ace-~...
$1,000; INS Honda CR125, Mini
CondMion, "~~~; 11183 Yomahl
850 llaxlm
. 014-371-2112
Anytlma.
ConcFIIa a pllotlc saptlc llnko,

home, 1 mill beloW

~

No
INHAr..ING

1980 Kawaeakl LTD, 304-175--

contract ovollabll w/$1000
down, 114·182-2403.
tbr Aportmonl, Appliance• Fur·
nlohad,
1
Block
From
Downl-n. Caiii14-4U-4131.
2 BA turnl- oportmant. Aont,
$285 par month. Somo utlillill.
814-448-:MOC.
2b&lt; Aport:nanl. W11or, Tra1h,
~:~V R1trtgarotor Fumtohod.

nlohod oportmonl, d1poolt and
rotwr111ca, 304-882-25M.
Comptotly Fumlahod moblla

I

......
i

6536.
1188 KX·25, VIH'Y good cond,

Middtaport

ms

~
I

,.

alto 2-hou... lor .. le, land

182~SM.

8
8

..L.-

a

1110 Font F-150 414 XLT Lariat,
air, dUOI gu tonk. po,

Apt, 2nd floor, Pomeroy. 1·

EHidonct Al'"rtmanl, Fur·
nlahed, oeposn, I Reference
Aequlrocl. No Palo,l14-448-4871.

L.-.1..-

a Moneyllne

From Unlver.hy ot Rio Grande,
$200/mo. S14--1141.

Zbr, Refrigerator, Stove, Montha
Outalda
Storago
mo. SM-:MI-8815.
A111rtmont Fo&lt; Aont, Oalllpollo
&amp; Point -101. 814-441-1:12:.
Aport:nant In Clifton, 304-1753211.or 171-2411.
BEAIITIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDOEl PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 530 Jackaon Pika
1rom "82/mo. W1tk to ohop 6
movlll. Callll4-448·2511. EOH.
B-h Stroot, Middleport, Ohio.
Ona room olllcllncy opt,
roloroncoo and dapoo~. 304-

'

1--f-IF_.;.Ri-I...;Y-ril\rVn;lg:"E-~r--11 O·~=~lete

NowaHourQ

Bllh, All Utliltloo Pold, Acr001

I

i

A lawyer friend and his son
were
walking through the mali
t-r.-p
6 _Er-N-,:r-1
when they saw a woman with
1 I
I :
a cervical collar. "Look!"
,..--- ----......., exclaimed the boy, "There's a

(I) (I) MacNeil~

1 EfOc'-ncy Ap~rtment, Private

1-Aoom,

e

i&lt;ll Clle lntldl ec1111on Q

dtohwUhor, garblgo dllpoaal,
ehoWtr In bith, gal heat, air
cond. Qulat nalghborhood.
Rataroncoo and dlj&gt;ollt. 014441-1370 1ftor 5 p.m.

Duplex

Court c

(I)
AIC N'ewt Q
(I)
Allllllcl Stereo. Q
(I) 3-2-1 Conlact Q

e

New Haven, 2 bedroom fur·

Refrigerator,

Paid~.ln
Vinton Ar•, NO t'IUI

rallrlctiono. Complolo lnformo•
lion mallad on roquoll. 304-175.
5253, John D. Oorlach, no
olngla-wlda trolloro, pilau.

home ohopplnf center.
Find put buy• on pell,
pet ac.euoriet, and
aenicet.

a

WKAP In .Cinclnnad
DUpCioll
1:35 (J] Andy Grlttllh
7:00 (J)
tDI Wheel of Fortune

34

Stove,

Water, Trosh

county

~~~

NO, :.IE ONLY SAID IT WHEN
:.IE WAS SAV'IN6 :.IE SAID
W~AT :.IE WAS SAV'IN6
WHEN HE SAID IT~

a :De cu Nlwa Q

and S.bay win.._. $17,91700.
Call 1-800-'1211-4045.
Mobile homo and throo toll.
Prk:o roducocl. Phona 304-882·
3857.
Tranor For Sate: 141711 WHh
10150 Add On, WHh 2 LOti. A•
king $18,000. S14-387·1117.

Homea,

Benefit•· Send Allum• To:
your wat• a .ewer bUt .,. pakl.
"Tochnlclln" P.O. Box 506, Will do housecl..nlng, have lloko your choice now. No
rotoroncll. 304-675·1185.
Jac"-, Ololo 4 -.
quotn over the phone, you
Will do yard wort, c111 304-6]5. mulll - tham. Phona lor an
W.ntad: Soovlce Tochnlclln lor 8860.
1ppolntmonl. 614-448-'1811 dly,
-Int. a Air Conctnion44t-t539 ova.
JnWI!O!IIIarx11on. Exparlancocl.
...,. 111...-: Cia 071, c/o Ga~
Financial
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
....... DoilY T~buno i25 Third
A - . Gl)!lpolll, OH 45831.
Lolo I acro1g1 IValilbll lor
new homt conltruetlon on
Business
21
A1ybum Road. Povod road,

Looking for a Pet?

HI. MARCIE .. [ JUST TALKED
10 CHUCK . J.1E SAID WHEN 'fOU
AND I WER.E AWAV AT CAMP,
l-IE MISSED ME MORE TJ.lAN
HE MISSED

II])

Dragonwynd Caftert Paralln,
81..,_ ilnd Hlrnlillran killona. OntHI, 17.000 ectual
For rent, 1 bedroom apartment,
cond, $800 obo S14·182·
114-446-3844 aftar 7 p.m.
utl!n:.. lncludad, diPOI~
roqulrad, no pato, SM-182·2218.
Filh Tank, ~13 Jac"- Avo.
Point PlaNanl, 304-171-20113, tm Dodge Aopan SW, 8 cyl,
Fumlahod Aportmonl For Aonl
lull Hna Troplcol IIIII lllrda, Nna good: $300. 814-387·7104.
In Down Town. C.ll B14.ol*1423
omall anlmola and ouppll.i.
Aftor7p.m.
1m F-150, Body Groll Shape,
HAPPY lACK DROPD£AD Haw Motor, &amp; Tlr11. S1,300. 014·
Fumlohad Arrtmont, tbr, $238
FLEA·T1CK MIST: Advanoad 441-8127.
Utllnlaa Pol . 120 Fourth Avo,
tonnull kllll qulckar, Into
Golllpollo. 81~-446-441S """ 5 ft. utility bid, tor pick· longar. For doillond elloll eon.
7p.m.
up, 111 Ilium. a tully ont-. Iaino no alcofiol. RIO FEED &amp;
Nk:lty Fumlohocl Aponrnont, $800.114-3'11-2114.
SUPPLY 114-112:2114.
1b&lt;, naxl to Ub&lt;ory, porting, 8". Brunawlcll lil!t-fobill, 111111
central hlat, elr1 _-:_atannc• , . atlcka lnctuda, $518. Whko'o Poodlo puDDIH.= lnd IU
B-llna,
qulrod. 514-441-GJall.
·
8000 Dlpro mataldoloclor, Ulld cupo. AKC 'CIIoni
Coolville m-ae~ 04.
Vert
iitllo,
$350.
Sharp
8-1
100111
Fumlahod oftlcloncy w/otovo 6
VHS corna&lt;a, AC:,OO balllrY Poodto puDDIH. top and 111
rolrlgorllor. Shiro bath. 911 2nd chargar,
$550. 8moll cupo, AKC 'Citanipion B-ilno,
Ava. $100 par month. 614-441- lrlozor, 2-0oltarioo,
42" wldo 180. Luxor Cootvlll m-4117-3404.
31145.
Sanotllo, nol uMd In 2 Yfl, ?
Fumlahod EHicllncy, $150 wortlng cond, $250. Boat equip, 58
Fruits &amp;
UII!MIIa Paid, Sharo Both, 7111 lite Jlcllett, aide, tubee, Me.,
Fourth, Oal!lpollo, 014-441-4418 014-lt:l·7341.
Vegetables
atter7p.m.
Adu" Triko• Mllml Sun, All now
Graclou• living. 1 and 2 bed· porto, S12o, 114-182-8182 NQ
-=~~"'":--:::-'-::-;;:-::--1
room apirtmente at VIllage lltar than 9 :0~
Menor
and
Rlverlltle Cab oxtondar 1111 omol! pick up
Aportmanta In Mtddlaport. From $50. 304-8711.ol1811.
$1118. Cali 81~·182-m?. EOH.

Boaulllut 1871-Holtaypart, 3-BR,
contra! AC. 14x3111agalong, 14x7
oxpando, moro, $15,000.00, 81~·
perienctd houM altter, excel· 985-41711.
lanl rat. 814-1149·22~1.
'

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
EJ:calllnl
Pay,
llenalil!,
Tronoportallon,
407-212-41117, Havo room lor -ny poroon In
EJtt. m. lla.m.-10p.m, Toll nooct ot good homo, 114-8e7·
nn.
Aolundad.
AVON I Ali AIM1 I Shlrlay Interior end exterior ~lntlna , 10
yre expeMnce. Root palnilng.
Spaoro, 304-175.1421.
Hand welhlng houHI , tralera,
Don:.t E. Naoda, Inc. Hao lm· wlndowa. Odd Jobl . Aeferenc...
moctllll Opening FoJ OTA Free eatlmatee. 304-675-2708.
Drtv.,.. Appty_ln iJenon At 2300
Lockboooma Road, Cotumbuo, . Llcenoad Procilc1! Nurso, Will
OH. Mull Be 25 Or Oldar, WHh 3 Babyth In My Horne, Around
Y11rs Exporlonco. 1-800-628- Thl Clock. 614-448-7727.
7131.
MISI P1ula'o Day Carl Canllr.
Domino'• Plua ol Pomaroy ,_ Salo, aHordablo, chttdcoro. II·F
6 1.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agao 2~10.
toking applk:ltlono.
Boloro, aftor achool. Drop-In•
Drywoli hlngaro &amp; ttnlllhorl walcomo. 114-441-1224. Naw I~·
naldad In lhl Ali11111 aroa. 114- lint Toddler Coro, 814-448-822l
513-3011 u-lor Tim oftor lpm.
Pool decke, In-ground &amp; above.
GEl PAID lor Compiling Mailing Country porch••· open &amp;
Llall. $500 por 1,000. COil I·I00- scrMnod ln. Orlglnol daolgns.
248.J131 1$0.111/mln) or Wrlto: Frw ntlmata. Rtterwoc:n
PloSSE • 33A 1S1 South Un· available. Contact Odlt, 814.... 46·
colnwey, North Aurore, IL 10542. 1756.
G,_lng s&lt;wthaaatorn Ohio wm build patio covere, decka,
HVAC Contro- In Noad 01 An terHn~ rooma, put up vinyl
Eaporloncod llervlc• Tech· tldlha or trtller eklrting. 61._
nlclln. Good Pav, ExceU.nt 245-R57.

D Running and Atclng

,.

tum'ld khchen, atovt, retrig.,

n-.

I

wordo.

..,T~I=
·
~
I'

o canaon Expren

Vans

11-.

Andy Qrflfttlt

II]) •

' "

tuml1hed, 814-112·'11UI.

1·3 Room Apl, 1st
nlco,
lllddtaport. 1·5 Room Alii 2nd
nlc• lllddllport. 1-&amp; iloom

~mple

IJ) Andy Ortfftth
(I)Ciubc-t
(I) RHdlng Rainbow Q

Conditioner. Good Condlilonl .

w/awnlng, "::~,:':~k-In el-l,
ntoa naloh
, Galllpollo
F.orry, 1321. 304-171-301'7.
3 bedroom, 14170, largo lol, Bud
ChiHin Road, S221. month, 304l'll-3501aftar 5:00.
Mobile homo-'-tum, 2·BA, vllw
of ~var, 114._-51141.
Mobile hom• tor nnt or .....

1 BA aponmarw: !lYing room,

GOVERNMENT HOMES lorm $1
IU -lrl. Dol,::,-• tax
proportr. Rapon
one. Your
thood ol Southon! Ohio, 318 .,.. 11 801-1182-. Ext. GHRichland Avonuo, Athano~Ohio, 10181 tor cu,.,t !lot.
.5'101.
ATTN'
&lt;udalL
Houu lor Froall Mulll movo oft
4-Fomlly Glroga Sill, Ballay E.O.E.IE.S.P.
1o1 In lllckllport. Fill In buaRun, Jollnoon'o, Rain or Shlna,
lnternted In Mlllng or want to monl, oood and llrow. llull olgn
Wad-Thurs. I-S.
buy Avon, tru gift, call Kay 114- contractl 2·BA, Largo LA, Dll,
115 Cion. Hart Parkwoy Mid- 182·1180.
Bath, haa now raol ilnd gu«ar,
d - . July 15·1•17, clothing,
now coppar and PVC plumbing,
curtalne, ..._.., Home Int. • JOBS IN ALASKA-+ttrlng. Entry naod ...,. work. You PlY for
Iliac.
Lavol. $600.00 • -kty. Con· tha moving! · Only aarlouo
11ructlon, Cllnnerln, 011 Reidt. collorol Call 114-112·2071 aftar
CALL NOW 1-200·7'38-11100 Ext. 7:00pm.
Pt. Pleasant
1617BB.
Lyon• Addnion in Maoon,
&amp; VIcinity
LPN perNime relief, flexible quattly buln, 4 bedrooma, 3

low to form four

WOlD

aJNiwa

Engine, Special Order, New
,
Transmission, Anti Haw Air ~ .
$3,300. 614-245·9525.

M

....

1:00 (J) e Cll Ill e llll IDle

DR. V-5,

AMIFII radio, 54,000 mllao.··
$4250. 81~-448-1~3 or 814-441- ,.
8393.
1985 Calato Suproma, 3.0, V-6 .._

Room Suite, 1 Yur Old, I
1000.

3 bedroom double wide, private
lot, AIC, 2 blthe, porch

44

TUE •• JULY 18

_'*
_,._~_:_:~'.....;.s_cr;_.~~~ -,!:t~s·
Roorrango iolltra of tho
0 four
oeramblod wordo b.

..··-

EVENING

2.8, auto. cruiM control, AC,

4041.

naming
lhrM
employment
ret.rencH to Planned Per8n•

houra, conlect Dorothy Harper.

8

ExHI500
tont 814b?!'~~02'!•' · •, :

Crulee,

3 bedroom ell ettc, O.IIIPGII•
Ferry, 1250. mo . plue utllitlea,
$100. deposit, no pete, 304-875-

$22,000. Send letter and r•ume

Yard Sail, F~ &amp; Sal. 123 Park 014-4*1148.
Dr., 4 fomltln, baby bod, ootid

.•

:•

.r::

18,000 BTU Air Condlltonar,
$185. IM.ol-3, 11~-4~·
83i3.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Television
Viewing

condHion. I14-«1.0n9.
•'
1181 lroc . Comoro
Totally ::
loldad Excotllnt Condlilonl _ ·
48,ooo ill:~~a. 304-871-3331.
: • .·
1189 Morcury Sabto. PSIPB,'
AMrf'll Caaolllo, PW PL AC, · .

or 304-875.2330.
2-BA, loll of yard ond llowiFI,
no pat~, ~bovo Naw Havon, 1200
mo, 1·,..-882·2481.
2br moblla homo In vllllga ol
Bidwell, cl- to lloro 6 poll
oHic!L_wlll acctpl H.U.D. 114388""'"'·

Apartment
for Rent

rotated liold. Salory $20,000 to

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

9

1111 Cltavy Catobrtty, 4 dr, dark : !

tor Rent
14x80 moblll ...,. 7 mi. lrom
Holzar, 2 BA, AC. UUIIty room.
Elc. cond. $250 mo, $200
IICurily. 114418-8835.
2 bedroom Aatrton UDiand Ad,
S185. mo. pluo utiiHioll, $100.
dopooll, no pala, 304-1~088 .
2 bedroom traMar compllloly
tum:-,.AIC, wallhar, dryer,
304·773-5oo8.
2 bedroom unturnlohod 12xt0,
112 mill put Holur. DopooH

1 mill lrom city llmHo: 2! acr11,

O.velopmenti£duutlonel Out·
reach, And. lndlvldu•l Tulln~untellng. Bethtlor"a 0.
grM tn· Heatth, Social Service
Mangemenl Or in R1lated Field.
Satory $20,000 To $22,000. Sand
Letter And R.. ume Naming
ThrM Employment Referencn
To Pllnnod Poronlhood 01
Avenue

BORN LOSER

~;

~.ol38i

3br 2 Full Bathl, Gr..t Room, 2

ALL Yord lluol Be Pold In ATTN: Zudai. E.O.EJE.S.P.
Advlrnco. D£ADUNE: 2:00 p.m.

8

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

end Aefer.nce Required. l14-

Fundod Pro)acl Which Requlrn
Dual Sklill Of CommunHy

Soulhllll Ohio, 318 Rlchlond

Tuesday, July 16, 1991

.•:

blul WIY ~tlour Interior, V-1, • ':

Merchand: se
51

Autos tor Sale

42 Mobile Homes

7 Wook BOlton Torrtar Puppy,
C.il Aftor 5p.m. 014-448-3722.

9rn~ll

71

Traitor 1o1 101100, au utiiHioo
,_...,._ 304-871-32111 or 8712411.

7 ldtlant and 1 am black dog,
liM to good homo, 61~-6116-12QO

~ery

KIT 'N' CARL~ •Y Larry WriJI)at

Space tor Rem

Sl~ ~·~ 08113.

Giveaway

Gray Striped. 814-258·1138.
Klltono, 2 lllk matn, 1 dark

/

nt ne

Supp11f'S
&amp; Livestock

Farm

ASTRO-GRAPH

11111111""'11rJ Lrnx. 4-cyl, &gt;Mpcl,
AC,

Altllfll

ca8111tte,

Wlr'M tfUrlor, IIICI llhllpe,
SrMti taOIIOI-WMI.

black

ru,_

1111 lluol'!"ll m; 30Z. S BliNd,
Excotllnl CoitdMrort. Good Qaa
1111-. Muet stlu 114--

IIOICI.

1111
Oldomoblll
Cutlla
,cllrro,v.a •na. A•t . condition,
$3800, ·-~114.

WHI do romodallng, rooting,
bullcllng, lroa l~mmlng ona
Nmoval, houaa pointing. For
fNI Mtlmatll, Clll Georp It 1·
814-192-17112 .

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL
. ~ t..

_ , . . , Uphollllortng H&lt;Vtc-· .
lng lrl caunty ara 26 Y"'f'l. Thl ··'
boiOI In tumhuro uphoilloring.
Call 304-875-4154 lor ~" 01 • , ,,

"i

your zodiac sign.

LEO (July 23-AUD. 22) Your ability to
comprehend new information could be

Cartor'o Plumbing
&gt;· ond Haatlng
· Fowllund Plna
Oalllpollo, Ohio
114-448-3111

Umat11.

Cancer. treat yoursellto a birthday gill.
Send lor Cancer's Aslro-Graph predictions for the year ahead by mailing
$1 .25 plus a long, sell-addresSed,
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph. c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Bo• 91428. Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. Be sure to stale

«l

a bil better than that of your co-workers
today. llthefe is something you have to
repeat In order tor tnem to grasp it, be
patient.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Owing to un.

call the shots could turn out lucky
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan. 11) II look s
like you may be m01e fortunate today in
a situation where you play a secondary
role than where you arelhe initiator. It's
results, not the llmellghl . that count.
AOUARIUB (Jan. •Feb. 11) II you are
presently working on a plan that's a bit
unusual and complicated. it's best not
to discuss it with frie nd s - it it' s out of
their k!a gue. Their input could prove
counterproductive.

PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) Where you
previously had difficulty getting others
to comply, you may lind willing cooper·

usual conditions. this could turn out to

ation today. ln fact . it will come from the

be a prolllable day lor you. Be on the

very people who rejected your recent
request.
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 1t) II you have
thoughtfully arrived at a particular plan
ol action. stay the course today. Some
obstrucllons are likely. bul &gt;lctory is
within your grasp.
TAURUS (Aprii•Mar 20) Take pride
In your work today, even It those you Ia·
bor with do not. A surprise form ot com·
pensatlon COUld be In lhe ofllng - If the
job is well dOne.
GEMINI (MI:y 21-.lune 20) In a joint
venture today, II might be up to you to
sor! things out lhat were fouled up by
others. II can be handled In a way so
that they won't make the same mistake
twice.

lookout for a financial opportunity that
might come through a lriend who holds
you in high esteem.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You are in a
lucky cycle tor the f\llflllment ot your
July 17, 111111
hopes and expectations. However. you
You will be on a track toward success in could sllll have some sell-doubts with
.
the year ahead regarding linanclally which to contend.
meanlnglul matters. Your train might .SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No¥. 22) Something
have. to Make a lew stops on the way, in which Y01J are pr88611lly involved has
but 11 will eventually reach lis much greater. potential than you first
1
believed. There 11 a possibility you will
destination.
CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) II you have . begin to percet•e Its true worth today.
to negotiate a matter. today to g~t BAGmAAIUS '""· 23-DR, 21) Hav·
something you're ent:Hed lo. don I lng to deal with middle m'nagement or
make needless concessions. II you leel intermedliries today may leeve you with
you'fe right, hold to your boltom l•ne. results thai aren't very lrulllul. Howev-

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CD Adam Smltll'o Money
World

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Stereo. :::;J
aNlg!lt
Church SlrHt SII:Uon

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11:3&amp; &lt;ll en..... Q
12:00 IJ)
Into the Night Stereo.
liD PMy Mlcltlne Willi
NlaPII;Diet
0 The llitchfllker
8 Neallvllfl Now Stereo.
NeWINitlltl
1D MOVIE: coppe, C.nron
(2:00)
12:05 (I) Nl{lllllltll Q
12:20 (J] MOYIE: • (Ooll8ra) lA)
(2:30)
12:30 (J)
tD1 Lltl Night Wltlt
David L.elleriMn
()) MOVIE: Ailllllft Fon:e
lPG! (2:00)
ill Perty Machine Wltlt Nil
Peepleo

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celftbtlty Ciphef CfYPIQOiatnllle Cl'lltld from QOOIIIionl b y lemot,tl PIOO!t. OU t lind Ptelenl
Eactl .,II If in the dphef t llndllor anolhet' . Today'• cW: E kJUM M.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Every man Is on omnibus In which his ancestors
ride." - Oliver WendeH Holmes.

I

�.'

&lt;

~·

.,

•

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=-

Page--10-The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, July 16, 1991

Names in
the news

Beat of the Bend ....
by Bob Hoeflich
Staff members of the Meigs March 14, 1991.
Eleanor Werry, Pomeroy ,
Co unty Health Department - busy
quadruple
bypass surgery April 16,
as they arc with numerous progra ms - are gearing up for th e 1991 at Riverside Methodist HospiMeigs Co unt y Fa ir which ge ts tal, Columbus.
Bob Black, Rutland, single
underway on Aug. 12. Can you
imagi ne? Less than a month away. bypass surgery at University HosThe departm ent wt ll have a pital on July 7, 1979.
Willard Boyer, 1683 Lincoln
booth at the fai r again this year.
Heights,
Pomeroy, quadrupl e
Among the favors will be colorful
bypass
at
University
Hospital and a
growth charts for your children you know to sec how much they graft, June 27, 1983.
Nett ie Boyer, 1683 Lincoln
grow from time to time. The charts
will make it posstble to avoid mak- Heights, Pomeroy, double bypass
ing marks on the door or the wall at Riverside Methodist Hospital on
where you nonnally keep a record June 12, 1989.
of your child's growth.
Gene Grate. Middleport,
quadruple bypass in 1984 at Mount
Harold Will advises th at th e Carmel West.
Mi ssissippi Queen will probably be
Don Lanning, 33160 SR 33,
pass ing our river communities Pomeroy, on April 25, 1989 had an
about July 29 in case you want to automatic implantable cardioveter
keep an eye out. The Mississippi ddibrillator implant - a medical
Queen . a much newer boat than device used to treat abnonnally fast
th e Delta Queen - make s fewer heart rhythm, this method of treattrips past us than !he Delta Queen.
ment decided upon after a major
Harold lov es to watch both heart attack and numerous tests at
boats particularly since he and Mrs. University Hospital.
Will had the experience last OctoDavid B. Sayre, 47958 SR 338,
ber of cruising on the Delta Queen. Racine. In the past 27 years David
He still musters a lot of enthusiasm has had a heart attack, seven heart
about the trip which was a gift to catherizations including two balMr. and Mrs. Will from their loon procedures, two bypass surggranddaughter. The staff on the eries, cataract surgery, and two
Delta Queen is fantastic and the broken ankles, the last broken
trip was really one of those high- ankle on April 30, this year. The
lights of a lifetime, Harold reports. April surgery was his 23rd trip to
hospitals since 1948. He has been
And here are some more names in !he old Meigs General, six times;
of your friends and neighbors who the old Holzer Hospital, six times;
have undergone heart surgery or University Hospital, six times; Vetheart procedures - there are many erans Memorial, one time and the
of them:
present Holz er Medical Center,
Gladys Fife, 711 S. Third, Mid- four times. His first bypass surgery
dleport, catherization, Sept. 28, was at University Hospital in 1972;
1990 at University Hospital , balloon procedure in 1988; a secColumbus.
ond balloon procedure in 1989 and
Paul Hauber, 36630 TR 275, the second bypass operation in
Long Bottom, bypass surgery Dec. 1989.
9, 1986 at Mt. Carmel West Hospi This is the second published
tal, Columbus.
li sting of Meigs residents having
Elmo F. Smith, 40428 Devenny undergone heart surgeries or other
Road, Pomeroy, at University Hos- heart procedures . Believe me ,
pital, July 24, 1985, through Aug. there are many more and !hose will
6, 1985, quadruple bypass.
be forthcoming.
Bill Matlack, 34 784 SR 7,
Pomeroy, angioplasty on May 16,
'Twas once said that the work
1990 at Grant Hospital in Colum - will wait while you take time to
bus; returned to Grant ijospital admire !he rainbow - but !he· rainJune 12 for second angiop~ty pro- bow won't wait while you work. I
think today we are advised to take
cedure.
Steve Houchins, Middleport, time to smell the roses. Good idea!
five bypass surgery at Riverside Do keep smiling.
Methodist Hospital in Columbus,

NEW YORK (AP) - Despite
earlier indications, Marla Maples
may have to sign on the dotted line
before Donald Trump says " I do."
Asked if she would sign a
prenuptial agreement - as did
Trump's frrst wife, Ivana, Maples
told People magazine: "I don' t
think we're doing it that way" and
"This relationship is going to be
built on trust - and that's it. "
But Maples backed orr some on
Monday. "My statement in People
was not conclusive as to !he issue
of prenuptials, nor at this time is it
of any great significance and rates
little thought," she said in a statement.
Trump, in a statement of his
own, said: "When and if a premljltial is considered by us, it will be
our mutual decision , considered
highly personal and Strictly our
business.''
Ivana and Donald Trump
divorced in December.

SWAGGART TRIAL CONTINUES. Evangelist Jimmy Swaggart and his wife, Frances,
arrive at Civil Court in New Orleans Monday
afternoon. Swaggart is being sued by fellow

evangelist Marvin Gorman in a $90 million
ddamation suit The trial is in the jury selection
stage with opening arguments expected shortly.
(AP)

Girl's English paper leads to
charges against ex-boyfriend
By LAURA MYERS
Associated Press Writer
SAN JOSE, Calif. {AP) - At
fu~t. school officials dismissed !he
girl's complaints against her
boyfriend as another case of young
love gone wrong. But that was
before she turned in her English
class assignment.
In April, the 17-year-old girl
chose assault on women as the
topic for an essay. She used herself
as an example, describing alleged
physical and mental abuse by her
ex- boyfriend, also 17, during a 2
1/2-year relationship.
She wrote that he had raped her.
hit her, terrorized her. Her teacher
gave the essay 10 police.
On Monday, the popular football player was charged with
assault for allegedly using his truck
to try to run down the girl in the
Santa Teresa High School parking
lot and battery for allegedly hitting
her. There was insufficient evidence for a rape charge, said police
spokeswoman Veronica Damon.
The on-again, off-again relation-

I

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Rubber-faced Jim Varney is shooting another "Ernest " movie in
Nashville but has his sights set on
other characters.
Varney said he 'd like to play a
vampire in the film version of
Anne Rice's "The Vampire Chronicles.''
"Ernest Scared Stupid " will
feature Varney as the ever-meddling rube Ernest battling a neighborhood troll with help from a
group of children. Eartha Kilt plays
a soothsayer.
Varney recently starred with
former porn star Traci Lord s in
"Fast Food," an independent film
in which he portrays "a skinny
Boss Hogg."
And if he's not cast in Rice's
film? "Maybe," he said," 'Ernest
meets Dracula."'

ERMINATOR II
SOLDIER

I

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~

News briefs

I.

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&gt;I

•

i

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:t
Jl
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l

THEY'RE HAVING A BABY • Actor Warren Beatty and
actress Annette Bening announced Monday that they are having a
baby, his press agent said. Beatty and Miss Benlng are working on
the mo:vie "Bugsy." The child is expected early next year. (AP)

Vanity Fair won't be
sold at grocery chain

SECURITY MEASURES • Police officer
John Roulo talks with an unidentified motorist
entering the Halsted Twin Outdoor Theater
Monday night in Riverdale, Ill. The Riverdale
police stationed five officers outside the drive-in

after it resumed showing the inner·city drama
"Boyz N the Hood." Showings of the movie were
canceled after a man was shot to death outside
the theater early Saturday morning. (AP)

Free Will Baptists holding
convention in Charleston

CHARL ES TON , W.Va. (AP)
- West Virginia will host its second major religious convention this
summer when 7,000 delegates to
" But I also can't think of a the Free Will Baptists' annual
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) - A
central Ohio grocery store chain magazine that used that kind of a meeting gather next week at the
will not sell the August issue of cover," she said.
Charleston Civic Center.
She said !he IJ!agazine will be
Vanity Fair magazine that features
When the American Baptist
nude photos of pregnant actress back on store shelves next month.
Churches held its biennial convenMost looal stores that sell the tion last month ·in Charleston, the
DemiMoore.
"After looking at !he magazine, magazine, including Rite Aid Dis- 4,500 delegates approved a nonwe thought pictures of nud e count Pharmacies and B. Dalton binding statement condemning
women would be offensive to ow Bookseller at Columbus City Cen- homosexuality as a sin and also .
customers," Karen Be~netl, direc· ter, are keeping it on their shelves.
dealt with the issue of abOrtion.
But Nick Rees, senior advertistor of consumer affaus for Btg
The Jufy 21-25 meeting of the
ing assistant for Kroger's Colum- Free Will Baptists promises to be
Bear Supennarkets, said Monday.
Ms. Bennett said corporate man- bus division, said the issue will be less co.ntroversial because deleagers reviewed the issue before not be sold from check-out line gates won't djscuss such inflammaracks. The issue will be placed in a tory issues as homosexuality and
!hey decided to cancel deltvery.
She said she does not recall any less public rack in !he store.
its place in the church, said con" We moved it so not everyone vention coordinator Jack Williams.
other instance in which !he grocery
store chain· removed a magazine · has to look at it if they don't want
"We won't be re-examining the
to," Recs said.
issue of sexuality," WiUiams said. .
from its shelves.

" We are a very conservative, fundamental group theologically, and
we have never had to discuss it.
"Free Will Baptists view homosexuality as a sin, not as a
lifestyle," he said.
There are about 200,000 Free
Will Baptists in 2,500 churches
across the nation. In West Virginia,
there are 11,000 members in 185
churches.
·
West Virginia last hosted the
Free Will Baptists convention in
1956 in Huntington.
This year's gathering "looks
like !he largest in the history of our
denomination. It has been a monumental task for us, " said !he Rev. ·
J.L. Varney, the convention's state
chainnan and moderator.
Free Will Baptists are marked
by their evangelical and fundamental approach to religion.

Mt. McKinle y in Al aska, at
20,320 feet, is the highest point in
North America.
There are 218,720 people in the
city of Aurora, Colo.
The chief pon in Algeria in El
Djazair.
The speed of sound is generally
placed at 1,088 feet per second at
sea level at 32 degrees Fahrenheit.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT
IS SPAGHETTI NIGHT
AT
CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

$]5 0

SPAGHETT '
SALAD
ROLL

Reds lose

page 7

eighth in

Cards : A-H, 5-C

row 8-7

Meigs Leg ion advances

ONLY
··---"----'

CROW'S

FAMilY RESTAURANT
228 WEH MAIN

POMEROY
992-5432

6-D; 2-S
Low tonight near 70.

Page 4

Page4

Thursday, humid . High
in mid-90s.

2 Secllone, 14 Pages

Vol. 42, No. 51

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, July 17, 1991

Copyrighted 1991

Housing starts
up 5.2 percent
during June

'Remember When'

HORSE-DRAWN BUS • A far cry from the modern school
buses of today is this horse-drawn bus which in 1921 transported
students from their homes to the Portland Schools. At that time
Andrew H. Pullens was the driver. Among the students who rode
the bus were left to right, standing, Alice Jewett, Hazel Birch,
Georgia Johnson, Henry Johnson, Pauline Morehead, Mary
Louise McDade and Erma Birch; and seated, Augusta Johnson,

Luella Cornell, Belinda Blosser, Lydia Talbolt, and Raymond
Johnson. This picture is being donated to the Meigs County Historical Society in memory of Lon J. Morehead Family, Lock 20
USED, Portland, by Thelma Morehead, John Morehead, and
Pauline Morehead. Note • "Remember When" will feature early
photographs of area scenes and people. Readers who would like to
have a photo considered for publication should bring it to The
Daily Sentinel. Photos will be handled carefully and returned.

-Racine Council approves 1991 budget
- ... ·-

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:235
Pick 4: 3369

MOSCOW (AP)- Vladimir
Pozner, the Soviet spokesman who
helped erase Americans' view of
Russians as crude and boorish. has
quit Soviet television and plans to
be co-host of a U.S. TV show with
Phil Donahue.
In !he past year, Pozner wrote a
best seller saying his loyalties were
misguided and then resigned from
the Communist Party.
Now the 57-year-old journalist
has quit his highly popular monthly
show on Soviet television, spurned
a tentative offer from Russian Federation President Boris Yeltsin to
be his press secretary, and signed a
contract with Multimedi a Entertainment to appear with Donahue
on a talk: show beginning in October.
Pozner, who speaks flawl ess
English, is best known in the United States for his appearances on
ABC's "Nightline" and other
news shows.

ship began in the teen-agers' school administrators that her exsophomore year. Damon said !he boyfriend harassed and hit her.
students told very different tales of Principal Mike Welch said that at
how their romance soured.
ftrst he treated the case as a typical
The girl claims he raped her last boyfriend-girlfriend dispute.
August while showing her his new
"It seemed like it was just two
NEW YORK (AP) - Mi chael
people
who were in a relationship
home. Despite the alleged attack
Milken
has hired lawyer Alan Derthat
was
no
longer
working
and
and. two subsequent bre.akups, she
they were saying and doing things showitz for help in getting hi s
continued to see him.
" I stayed with him because I to try and hun each other," Welch. prison sentence reduced and in battling a rash of lawsuits.
felt it was my fault," she told the said.
Dershowitz , a Harvard Law
When the girl accused the boy
San Jose Mercury News. " He told
School
professor, gained an acquitme !hat if I broke up with him or of bothering her in the American
tal
for
Claus
von Bulow, who was
told anyone that he'd make it government class th ey shared,
accused
of
trying to kill his
impossible for me with any other school officials made her, rather
socialite
wife.
and helped win disboy."
than him , switch classes.
missal
of
some
tax evasion charges
The boy's auorney , Dennis
against
hotel
queen
Leona HelmsThe
girl's
mother
said
she
did
Lempert, denied the allegations.
ley.
not
learn
of
the
alleged
rape
until
"The closest he came to hurting
Milken was the biggest fish nether was when he grabbed her wrist she read the essay. "First she was
ted
in the government's campaign
one time after she told him, 'By the victimized by that boy and !hen she
against
securities fraud in the
way, 1 thinlc I' m pregnant,' then was victimized by the school and
1980s.
He
helped build the nowlaughed and walked away," he some friends who didn ' t believe
collapsed
Drexel
Burnham Lamher. either," the woman said.
said.
bert
Inc.
investment
bank: into a
The tee n-agers' parents had
trading
powerhouse
for
junk bonds.
ordered them not to see each other,
The girl is seeing a rape crisis
Earlier
this
year,
Milken
began
but they met secretly until a final counselor and failed to graduate in
serving
a
10-year
sentence
for
six
breakup in March.
June. The boy graduated on sched·
most
securities-related
felonies,
The girl had complained to ule.
involving Ivan Boesky.

-BOYZ N THE HOOD
AGAINST THE WALL

Family Medicine

·~

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A budget of $29 1,908.17 for
1992 was approved by Racine Village Council following a public
hearing at a meeting Monday night
in chambers at Star Mill Park.
The breakdown of anticipated
receipts plus carryover balances
include $33,692.91, general fund ;
$70,436.91,
water
fund;
$37,788.54, fire fund; $23,802,
refuse fund, $26,686 .4 9 street
maintenance and repair, $3,959.73,
state highway , $5 ,401.05, ceme·
tery, and $79,088.54, debt service.
The budget will now be submitted to the Mei gs County Budget

''

Commission. Actual appropriations
are made in January. It was noted
during the hearing that the debt service fund is high due to the purchase of a ftre truck. There is also
money in the debt service fund for
payment on a loan for water meters
should !he village install !hem.
Mayor Frank: Cleland stressed
during the budget hearing that the
water fund .and also the fire fund
are "bare bone budgets" and purchasing will have to be watched
carefully.
A socond reading was given on
the ordinance which will raise
water rates by 20 percent effective
Oct. I. Village residents now pay
$10 per month and that figure will

increase to $12 a month. There is
no limit on the amount of water
used.
Council also voted to place a
two mill renewal levy for operating
expenses on !he November ballot.
It will be for current expenses
including streetlights.
Council went on record as
endorsing the one-half mill renewal
levy for the Meigs County Tuberculosis Fund.
Mayor Cleland reported that the
Shelly Company will be in the village Monday to begin hot mix
paving. The township grader will
be used to prepare for the work.
Approval was given to the purchase of 12 street name signs for

By JOHN D. McCLAIN
ssociated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Housing
starts shot ahead 5.2 percent in
June, the third straight in crease,
boosting the annual rate of new
construction over th e I million
mark for the first time in seve n
months, !he government said today.
All regions of !he country post·
ed strong gain s except the West,
where the housing industry has
been weak in recent month s.
Analysts contend the housing
rece ss ion hit bollom with an
847,000 annual rate in January but
believe the recovery will be slow
and bumpy, compared to the brisk
pace followin g mos t other reces·
sions.
. The Commerce Department said
new construction or houses and
apartments totaled a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 1.04 million
in June, up from a revised 989,000
in May. The May rate fir st was
estimated at 981,000.
The number of starts in June
was the highest since a 1.13 million
rate last November. And it was the
longest stretch or increases since
the four-month period of October
1989-January 1990.
Starts rose in February but fell
again in March before climbing the
foUowing two month s. The number
of starts during the fi rst six months

Patrons credited for turnaround
Ruth Powers, librarian for the Meigs County Library, credits the
strong support of patrons for reversing !he state's proposal to discontinue fundin g for the Ohio Valley Area Libraries (OVAL) and
decreasi ng fund s for local library operations.
Continued on pa~e 3

LONDON (AP) -Soviet Presi·
dent Mikhail Gorbachev made an
unprecedented appeal to the heads
of the world 's leading democracies
today for help to save his country
from economic collapse. Wrapping
up their summit, the leaders of the
ca pitali st world offered him
encouragement and tec hnical assis·
tance.
French President Francois Mit·
terrand said the summit countries
agreed that "we must, really must,
reach out" to assure that the Sovi-

Housing ~~
Starts ~ ~ Vlll
~ V'

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SooSQ{Iol/y adjusrod
onnuafrato.
~

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miMions Of units
1.5
1.4
1.3

1.2

T1

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---·;; ;

JASONDJFMAMJ
t991
1990

June'90

11.1s II

May "9 1

o.99

June '91

111.o4 1

Sourm: U.S. Or!lpf. ol Commerce

Both defend ants were deter mined to be indi ge nt and were
referred to the Meigs County Pub·
lie Defender's Office for represen·
tation.
Bond was se t at $75,000 for
Dent and $25,000 for Swartz, with
10 percent cash authorized on each
defendant.
Meanwhile, Dann y Robson of
Cherry Ridge Road near Pomeroy
is expected to be arraigned today
before Judge Fred W. Crow Ill.
According to Sheriff Soul sby ,
Robson was arrested by S ECO
agents on Tuesday on charges or
trafficking in cocaine.
Robson and Dent are housed in
the Meigs County Jail. Swartz is
incarcerated in the Gallia Co unty
Jail.
The arrest of Robson makes him
the 31st defendant to be arrested
since the "bust" began on June 25.
Two more defendants, Menford
Jewell and Joyce Jewell , arc currently imwisoned on other dru g
charges. and are ex pected to be
return ed to Meigs County and
arraigned in the near future.
The nam es of oth er indi cted
individuals have not been released,
pending !heir arresL~. Story reponed earlier that it is believed many '
of those who have not yet bee n
arrested have since ncct tltc area.

West Virginia woman appointed to
Meigs County Senior Citizens's post
Susan
L.
Stewart
of state levels.
Currently Ms. Stewart serves as
Williamstown, W. Va. has been
hired as the new executi ve director Area Aging Director for a regional
·ror the Meigs County Senior Citi· office in West Virginia. Prior to her
present position, Mrs. Stewart was
zens Center.
Cindy Oliveri, president of the the assistant director of the Area
Meigs Co un ty Council on Aging, Agency, and also served as a proannounced today that Ms. Stewart gram coordinator for the Mid-Ohio
will take over the position held by Vall ey Re gio nal Coundl and
Eleanor Thomas since the program Development Corporation.
Dunng her time with the Area
bega n in 1974. Mrs. Th omas is
Agency, Ms. Stewart initiated sevreuring on August 2.
· Selection of Mrs. Ste\lfarl for the eral new programs. She implement·
job came after several weeks of cd !he ·Gatekeeper Program which
application review and interviews is geared to serve as a security
by !he personn el committee. The watch "for elderly in need, and ProCouncil pres ident said that the ject Lean, a training program for
comm ittce and the Board of cooks and senior citizens on low Trustees were impressed With her fat eating and proper diet, financed
credentials, background and previ- through a Kellogg Foundation
ous work with grants and founda- Grant.
She has also had extensive
tions. They further noted that she
has had a wide variety of experi- experience in grants writing.
Ms. Stewart will receive a bachence working with !he elderly popIllation at the local, county and elor of arts degree from Glenville

State College in December, 1991.
She has had additional training at
the Parkersburg Community College, Marshall University where
she took classes in finance, and
West Virg inia University where her
class emphasis was on law enforcement.
She was a member of the West
Virginia Association of Area Agencies on Aging, lhe National Associ ation of Area Agencies on Aging,
the Greater Parkersburg Hospice
Association, the Mid -Ohio Valley
Health Department Home Care
Board of Directors, the Advocates
Senior Alert Process, and the
Cranace Project at the Gerentology
Center at West Virginia University.
Active in civic affairs in the
Williamstown area, she is a past
president of the Women 's Club, a
member of the Wood County
Board of Education, the West VirContinued on page 3

AP

Two more arraigned
on drug charges

intersections along the state highways. Plans call for additional
signs to be purchased each year
until all the village streets have
stgns.
Attending besides Mayor Cleland were Clerk Jane Beegle and
By BRIAN J, REED
Council members Robert Beegle,
Sentinel News Staff
Henry Bentz, Carroll Teaford, and
Two
more defendants were
Larry Wolfe . Also present were
arraigned
Tuesday in Meigs CounGlenn Rizer, street commissioner,
ty
Common
Pleas Court as a result
John Holman, fire chief, Scott Hill,
of
a
drug
investigation
that harvest·
a fireman , Bill Cozart, a citizen,
ed
41
sec
ret
indictments.
A third
and Board of PUblic Affairs mem subject
is
expected
to
be
arraigned
bers, I van Powell, Bob Roy, and
on Wedensday.
James Snodgrass.
Roger Dent and Trudy
Next meeting wiU be held Aug. Schwartz,
both of Middleport,
5 at7 p.m.
turned themse lves in to Middlepon
Police Chief Sid Little yesterday.
Both are charged with trafficking
in LSD.
According to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story, Dent and Schwanz have
been in Michigan for the past three
we eks, following the announce ets accelerate th eir move away ment by Story and Sheriff James
from communism and toward a M. Soulsby that 41 Meigs Counmarket economy. But there was no tians were indicted by the Meigs
immediate suggestion of any large County Grand Jury on drug counts.
The indi ctment against Dent
cash tran sfer to keep th e Soviet
charges
him with two counts of
economy afloat.
L S~· r c l a ted traffick ing . He is
Before siltin g down with the
Group of Seven lea ders, Gor- charged with selling three times the
bachev, beaming, stood in the front bulk amount of LSD, a first degree
row between President Bush and felony, and with selling the bulk
British Prime Minister John Major amount of LSD , a felony of the
and took hi s place in the sunshine second degree.
Swartz is accused of se lling
outside Lanc as ter Hou se for a
more
than the bulk amount, but less
"class picture."
than three times the bulk amount of
LSD, a socond degree felon y.

......---Local briefs----. Gorbachev makes
Hobson meeting this evening
personal plea for help
A public meeting will be held at 5:30p.m. on Wednesday in the
Riverboat Room of the Meigs County Public l.,ibrary for displaced
residents and concerned citizens regarding the Hobson landslide.
Representatives from the offices of Senator Jan Michael Long, State
Represe ntative Mary Abel, the Ohio Department of Development
and the state and local Emergency Management Agency will be on
hand.

of the year was 25 percent below
that of the same period or 1990.
"The residential housing sector
obviously is enjoyin g a cyc li ca l
recovery , but !his docs not guaran·
tee smooth increase from month to
month ," said economist Samuel D.
Continued on page 3

NEW DIRECTOR • Susan L. Stewart or
Williamstown, W.Va., center, bas been hired as
tile new Meigs County Senior Citizens, effective
Aug. 5. Here sbe reviews some or the responsi·

bilities or the position with Eleanor Thomas
retiring director, and Joe Struble, vice president
or the Council on Aging and chairman of the
personnel commit&amp;ee.

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