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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

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News briefs

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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 ~~
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1.4
1.3

1.2

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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.

�•

.:.o.~

-·

Wednesday, July 17, 1991

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 17, 1991

OHIO Weather
Accu-Weatherz forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON ARE'!\

i.~MULTIMEDIA.INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

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 with
name, add ress and telephone number. No un signed letters will be published . Letlers should be in good taste, address ing Issues, not personali-

ties.

The dangerous pursuit
of zero inflation

~

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J

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By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - While renominated last week to be chairman of the
Federal Reserve Board, Alan Greenspan said it again, that control of inflation is necessary for sustained economic growth.
It is a pillar of his philosophy, a position maintained for decades in
speeches and statements, and demonstrated by official positions and
actions in the administrations of Presidents Ford and Bush.
Fear of inflation almost goes with being an economist, so Greenspan
seems to be on fum ground, safe from political and other critics. Why,
even his critics concede inflation is dangerous.
Some of them contend, however, that an even greater economic danger
exists: that in pursuit of low inflation, Greenspan and like thinkers could
seriously damage the economy. Maybe, they say, the damage is occurring
right now.
It is no secret, for instance, that the White House has been irritated
from time to time by the Fed's pursuit of a tight monetary policy, one
desi,~ned to keep inflation in check. The criticism: It also restrains economiC growth.
At times, in fact, critics have blamed the Fed for the recession, accusing it of being so concerned with restraining inflation that it has forced
industry to underproduce and workers to lose jobs.
. Many economists fear a too-strict reliance on inflation numbers, claiming it is impossible to measure supply, demand and price pressures precisely, and base policy on those measurements, especially when percentages are tiny.
Some even argue that much of inflation today has nothing at all to do
wiih interactions in a free market, such as econontic cycles, or too much
money in circulation - but instead is a consequence of regulations.
Albert T. Sommers, economic counselor of The Conference Board, a
private organization of business, labor and academic representatives, contends !his has been so since !he 1930s, when the system was changed.
During the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, for instance, shortterm economic stability was sought by reducing free-market risks. Regulations were introduced affecting jobs, hank deposits, credit and retirement security.
· " Can we continue to do this and not alter the economic souctures?"
asks Sommers. No, you cannot, he says. "This is the price we must pay.
The price is a moderate degree of inflation.''
Administered pricing also inoudes on the notion of a perfectly free
marketplace, one in which demand rises or falls in relation to price alone.
Products today have become highly defined by brand names and
advertising. One result is that buying preferences are based on impressions regarding quality and design, for example, rather than on price
alone.
"How else," asks Sommers, "can you explain how car companies
raised prices in the worst market in a decade?" While raw material prices
generally are down, he says, prices. of finished products generally are up.
· The point he and others make IS that !he Fed has httle mfluence over
such prices, which made up a large part of last year's 4 percent inflation.
Therefore, Sommers says, rather than attempt the impossible and
maybe ruin the economy in the attempt, perhaps !he Fed should recognize
that a certain level of inflation is not just accep!8ble but entrenched.
Others including Richard W. Rahn, chief economist of the U.S. Chamber of C~merce, have made similar comments about built-in inflation
and the futility of fighting what cannot be defeated by a very restrictive
money supply.
While they too worry about inflation, they also worry that American
jobs, production, and standards of living are needlessly depressed by the
pursuit of zero inflation.

.·

Berry's World

WASHINGTON - The Mexican ambassador to the United
States, Gustavo Petricioli, has
lodged a steaming complaint with
the State Department, because, by
his own account, he was stopped at
Dulles Airport outside Washington
and 10Id by a U.S. Customs worker
that he had no right to be in the
country.
The verbal fisticuffs between
the ambassador and the Customs
inspector took place on June 25 as
Petricioli was standing in a line of
passengers waiting to board a plane
to Frankfurt. He had already
checked his bags and passed
through security when a Customs
inspector took him out of line and
" in a brusque and aggressive man·
ner, and loud voice, asked the
ambassador to show him his passport," according to the account the
Mexican Embassy gave the State
Department.
The report. obtained by our
associate Dean Boyd, says the Customs inspector looked at the diplomatic passport, told Petricioli he
did not have the necessary visa and
"had no right to be in the United

States."
It went downhill from there.
Petricioli said he was the Mexican
ambassador and showed State
Department diplomatic credentials
wh1ch say, in diplomatic terms, that
nobody had beuer mess with the
bearer. The Customs inspector
seemed unimpressed and demanded to know how much money Petricioli was carrying out of the country. Petricioli dug in his heels and
refused to answer, so the inspector
threatened to search him. Then the
ambassador demanded to speak to
the inspector's boss because he
wanted the incident reported all the
way to the top - to Carol Hallett,
the head of !he U.S. Customs Service. According to the Mexican
accounl, "The agent indicated that
he did not know of any Ms. Hallett"
When the inspector refused to
give his name, Petricioli made a
mental note of his badge number.
Then the inspector wisely let the
ruffled diplomat get on his plane
before it took off without him. The
Mexican Embassy later wrote that
the ambassador was "insulted"

and "mistreated" and " placed in
an embarrassing situation which
was humiliating and violated the
spirit of the Vienna Convention of
Diplomatic Relations.''
The Mexican Embassy won't let
the incident die and has demanded
an investigation. An embassy
spokesman told us Petricioli has
received expressions of regret from
the State Departmen 1 and Halleu,
and assurances that the U.S . government will get to the bottom of
the incident.
But Customs isn't showing
much remorse. A spokesman for
the agency said their investigation
showed !hat the incident at DuUes
was "entirely appropriate" and
"routine." Asked about the specific allegations in the complaint. the
Customs spokesman sai d, "We
found them not to be true."
William Green, the head Customs official at Dulles Allport, told
us that Petricioli may not have
heard the announcement that some
passengers leaving the country
could be subject to random searches. The point is to target people
who may be leaving with wads of

I;ON'T Wai?RV,
MRS. SMiTH. iT'S

ST~mpa~

PRacr;ce

Ta M£lNiTot?
PReG~atJqes,

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their colfee, smoking as they typed.
They hadn ·1 changed, the rest of us
did , and they are no longer welcome in our midst in the same way
they used to be.
If you've never smoked, and
especially if you've long had to
endure !he pestilence of inconsiderate smokers, it must seem strange
that someone should feel pity for
someone who made you so uncomfortable. And I totally agree with
' ' no-smoking-in-the- building''
rules because not only is smoking
offensive to non-smokers, we now
know it's dangerous to breathe second-hand smoke.
Yet I also understand the social
importance of a habit like smoking,
especially after it's practiced hour
after hour, day after day, year after
year. My parents were smokers,
many of my older relatives were
smokers, my brother is still a
smoker. I believe they saw their
smoking as as much a part of their
identities as the clothes !hey chose,
the cars they drove and the work
they did. My brother, who has
smoked since he was IS. has a real

:Today In History

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DALLAS (NEA)- In the wake
of massive telephone-service dis ruptions in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Greensboro ,
N.C., and th e Washington- Balli·
more area, th e company that
installed the co mplex computer
network responsible for the outages
has now accepted responsibility for
the catastrophic failures.
However, company sources say
questions about the failures still
remain unanswered. Phone compa·
ny officials, congressional investigators and the FBI have not ruled
out the possibility of sabotage.
DSC Communications Inc. of
Plano, Texas, is one of several
companies producing the advanced
computer switching network called
Signaling System 7 (SS7). It was
DSC systems installed for Bell
Atlantic and Pacific Bell that failed
in all four regions.
Frank PerpigJia, a DSC vice
president. told a House subcommittee that company engineers trac~
the ''root cause'' of the problem to
three lines of instructions contained
in software changes that had been

sent to hve of the seven Bell sys·
tern operating companies using the
SS7.
Perpiglia sa id the n aws were
actually three incorrec t "binary
digits" among tens of thousands
contained in the small so ftware
"patch," which had originally
been requested by Pacific Bell to
make its system run more efficiently. He also admitted that the update
had not gone through ''our normal
four-month process of pretesting"
because the changes were consid·
ered very minor.
The SS7 is central to a phone
company's ability to route calls and
monitor the conditions of its net work. In the old days, when a call
was dialed. a signal went out over a
voice-capable circuit to the receiving phone. If the receiving phone
was already engaged, a busy signal
was sent back to the originating
phone.
Today, however, with demand
for voice-~ng circuits outstripping the abihty of phone companies 10 supply them , the SS7 using a separate non-voice circuit

By Sarah Over street

problem di sti ngui shin g people's
requests that he not smoke from a - - - - - - - - - - - rejection of him. Childish? Perhaps. But we all carry a lot of the
child we were into adulthood.
with a gentler approach to our
A group of smokers in my city reproach.
have organized 10 fight the city' s
.One of my friends, a smoker
proposed " no smoking" ordi· herself, handled it particularly well,
nance. I wonder if their vehement I think. When their baby was born
assertions of their entitlement to she and her husband decided not to
smoke in public places is as much a smoke in their house. When they
concern with their "rights" as it is had parties, instead of putting up
a wish not to be rejected; not to be "No Smoking! " signs all over the
cast out for something they consid- house, she 'd put up a couple that
er so mu ch a part of their se lf- pointed to either the garage in cool
images. And perhaps in part it is a weather or th e patio in warm
backlash resulting from Ote rest of weather, that sa id. "Smokers·
us riding our moral high-horses up Retreat, thi s way! •• In stead of
their backs and treating them like being a place smokers were banthe great unwashed.
ished to, her "smoking allowed"
I hope it won't be long unti l areas became their pleasant. sancsmoking is JUS! naturall y consid- tioned place.
ered something one docs only in
We all have the ri ght to refuse to
places where there is no one who be smoked around, and there will
objects - at home, in personal always be boors who can't take a
ca rs, in smoki ng lounges. But as hint. I. for one, am just a little tired
someone who grew up with parent.s of the Holy Crusade against basiwho were smok ers and has cher- cally decent people who need only
ished relati vcs and friends who a gentle nudge to take it to the
smoke, I'd be more comfortable porch.

· Today is Wednesday, July 17, the !98th day of 1991. There are 167
· days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 17, 1898, during the Spanish-American War, Spain surrendered
to the United States at Santiago, Cuba
In 1938, aViator Douglas Corrigan took off from New York with the
On this date:
stated intention of going to California, but ended up the next day in IreIn 1821, Spain ceded florida to !he United States.
land, earning himself the nickname ''Wrong Way Corrigan."
In 1841, 150 years ago, the British humor magazine Punch was fmt
In 1945, President Truman, Soviel Premier Josef Stalin and British
·published. ·
Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill began meeting at Potsdam in the
In 1917, the British royal family adopted the name Windsor.
final Allied summit of World War II.
In 1935, the entertainment industry publication Variety ran its famous ·
In 1948, southern Democrats opposed to !he nomination of President
headline: "Slicks Nix Hick Pix." (One possible translatioo: "Rural audiTruman met in Binningham, Ala., to endorse South Carolina Gov. Strom
ences react negatively to nlral-themed movies.")
Thurmond for the White House.
'

link - quickly polls the receiving
phone. If the phone is free. the call
is routed; if the line is unavailable,
the SS 7 itself generates a busy signal. In thi s way a voice circuit has
·not been wasted on a call !hat could
not be completed.
The SS7 also allows phone
companies to offer new "intelligent" phon e services such as
"Caller ID" and selective cal l forwarding, as well as maintain an
instant, continuous overview of !he
entire phone system .
Minor failures - such as a circuit board go ing bad - occur constantly within the phone system.
The SS7 is designed to detect these
minor failures, alert repair personnel throu gh a maintenanc e message, and, in the meantime, to route
calls around the trouble spot.
Pcrpiglia said that what caused
the failures was that the SS7 sud denly began generating mass ive
numbers of false maintenance messages, overwhelming the system
and causing it to shut down.
Perpiglia insisted that the company had "no evidence to suggest"
that the bugs had deliberately been
introduced into the system as an
intentional act of sabotage. However, other company sources admit
there are still many unanswered
questions about the failures.
First among them is why the
failures were bunched so closely
together, and at the same lime of
day, and on days when none of the

wl

IMansfield I 90° I•
IND

money.
Green said that witnesses who
were questioned said his inspector
acted " professionally." The witnesses he cited were another Customs employee and some flight •
auendants. And Green admiued
that they may not have seen the
whole imbroglio. Apparently, none
of the passengers in line with Petricioli were questioned.
The Mexican Embassy told us
that it dido 't want to talk about the
Customs investigation until the
State Department had issued its
formal response. But, given the
current chummy negotiations on
free trade and friendship between
the United States and Mexico, the
ambassador had a right to expect
better treatment.
DESPERATE TIMES -There
is troubling news in the classified
intelligence dispatches from
Moscow. The communist hardliners are growing dangerously desperate as they watch their system
ctumble. Democratic reforms are
depriving them of the privileges
they had as the elite class. They
have started to blame the United
States for the breakdown of central
Soviet authority. The KGB has
even produced secret evidence that
the CentrallnteUigence Agency has
been trying to destabilize the Soviet Union. And the Red Army is
spreading the word that the Persian
Gulf War was a deliberate provocation to embarrass and weaken the
Soviet military.
MINI-EDITORIAL - Americans would be wise to keep their
eyes on New York City. As goes
the Big Apple, so goes the fe¢ral
government. New York's government has grown beyond its tax base
and is providing services that it
cannot afford. The city desperately
needs to set priorities, but pressure
groups have formed behind each
service that !he city provides, and
they are not about to let those services go. They are leaning on
Mayor David Dinkins, and he is
bending from the pressure. The
same forces, unhappily, are at work
on !he federal government.

Be gentle with 'decent' smokers
As I passed th e two women
standing on the back steps of the
building where I work, hastily puffing on their cigareues so they could
finish before their break was over, I ·
realized I was probably having
"inappropriate" feelings. as the
new pop psychology vernacular
goes.
I guessed I should have been
relieved that none of us would have
to be breathing their smoke anymore, no.w that we have a "no
smoking" policy. Our work clothes
would no longer carry home the
seem of cigareue smoke to infect
the other thing s hanging in our
closets, and my long hair wouldn't
waft their smoke's dusty stink
toward my nose every time I turned
my head.
Instead, I felt a little pity for
them - both nice women. women
I like. They looked sort of lost, out
of place, anachronisms from a
bygone era when smoking was a
social rite and joy . They'd been
smoking at their desks for years.
smoking as th ey answered their
phones, smoking as they drank

!Toledo!

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

What caused massive phone outages?

"Sorry about getting so aggressive there. 1
guess my testosterone level is a little
elevated. "

•

Mexican diplomat has run-in with customs

Robert]. Wagman
phone systems in volved were opcr·
ating ncar peak capacity.
For in stance, the Los Angeles
outage occurred on June 26, at
cxac~y !he same time as a massive
outage was occurring on the East
Coast from Baltimore to Washington. But the ca ll volume in Los
Angeles was light on that day compared to three day s later, in the
aftermath of an earthquake, when a
hugc.volumc of local and long distance calls pushed the system to the
limit.
Less than I 0 days after these
failures. there were outages in San
Francisco. Piusburgh and Greensboro. N.C.
Computer-tampering expe rts
from the FBI. and technical experts
from the Federal Communications
Commission, arc still investigating
the possibility that the fal se code
was deliberately placed in the program - perhaps by a disgruntled
employee - or introduced into the
affected SS7 systems by a computer hacker.
Congressional investigators
locking into the failure also have
their doubts. Rep. Edward Markey,
D-Mass .. chairman of the House
Telecommunications Subcommittee, said the timing of the outages
" provides powerful circumstantial
evidence" that sabotage was
involved.

W. VA.

~,~,~~~-~;a.
S~o;

~~ - Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Via Associated Press Grapl-i csNet

C1991 Accu-Weather, Inc.

------Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, clear. Low near 70.
Thursday, mostly sunny and more
humid. High 90-95. Chance of rain ·
20 percent.
Extended forecast:

Friday through Sunday:
Fair on Friday and again on
Sunday, but a chance of thunderstorms on Saturday. Lows 65-70.
Highs 90-95 Friday and 85-90 over
the weekend.

r----Local briefs... -.....,
Continued from page 1
The Ohio budget for the next biennium provides funding at the
current level for OVAL which serves 10 Southeastern Ohio Counties and does not change the method of funding local libraries.
It had originally been proposed that $14 million from !he 6.3 percent of income tax monies be used to pay for operating the State
Library. Those operations have for many years been paid out of the
general revenue fund.

Columbus man arrested
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that WiUiam E.
Morehouse of Columbus. wanted by law enforcement officials on a
charge of felonious assault filed by Diane E. Cribb, was arrested in
Licking County yesterday.
The charge, according to Soulsby, stemmed from a July I incident in Reedsville. Morehouse is being housed in the Licking County Jail at Newark.
.
. Morehouse wiU be picked up !here and returned to Me1gs County
to face the charge.

Two calls answered by EMS units
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered two calls
for assistance on Tuesday nightl!fld Wednesday morning.
On Tuesday at 10:59 p.m., Middleport unit went to General
Hartinger Park for Melissa Sisson. She was taken to Veterans.
At 4:02 a.m. on Wednesday, Pomeroy squad went to Crew Road
for
·
George Lemley, who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.

'

Continued from page 1
Kahan of Fuji Securities in Chicago.
.
"We foresee most measures of
housing activity riding a slow,
erratic uptrend through the rest of
1991 ," he wrote in the firm's
weekly newsleuer in advance of
today's report.
Indeed, new home sales, which
also appeared to reach a low in January, bounced back in February
and March before edging down
again !he next two months.
Analysts bel(eve strong demand
must be demonstrated before
builders resume robust construction.
One barometer of future activity
- applications for building permits
-jumped 3.7 percent in June to an
annual rate of 1.0 million. They
have risen each month since Jan uary, the longest string since the
11-month period between August
1982 and July 1983 as the economy
was emerging from the previous
recession.
Single-family starts in June rose
3.8 percent to a 868,000 rate following a 4.4 percent increase a
month earlier.
Multi-family starts rebounded
12.4 percent to a I 72,000 rate ,
nearly wiping out a 13.1 percent
loss the previous month. And starts
of apartments with five or more
units jumped 17.4 percent, erasing
a 16.0 percent decline in May,
which had been the worst showing
since the department began keeping
records in 1963.
Starts in the recently sluggish
Northeast continued their revival,
jumping 29.8 percent to a 148,000
rate following a 22.6 percent gain a
month earlier.
Construction activity surged
17.5 percent in the Midwest to a
255,000 rate, wiping out a 8. I percentloss in May. Starts also rose in
the South, up 6.0 percent to
389.000 and nearly erasing a 7.1
percent decline a month earlier.
But they plunged 14.8 percent to
a 248,000 rate in the West, where
they had risen I 5.0 percent !he previous month.

Clarification

West Virginia ...

In an account of Monday evening's Pomeroy Village Council
meeting, it was reported that Councilman Bryan Shank was opposed
to resolutions maintaining the salary of the vtllage clerk and
increasing the salary of the village mayor. According to Shank, he
is in favor only of a resolution that would set the clerk's salary. He
is opposed 10 raises in the salaries of ·council members and the
mayor. Those increases, 1f approved, would be effecuve 10 1992.
Shank's term ends in December, 1991, and he did not seek reelection to that office.

Continued from page 1
ginia School Boards Association,
and the Broadway Church of the
Nazarene.
Ms. Stewart has a daughter
attending nursing school and a son
who is a senior in high school. She
plans 10 move to Meigs County in
the ncar future.
In commenting on her new job,
Ms. Stewart said that she is excited
about administering a program for
the elderly on the county level noting !hat she felt she had lost some
of her calling when she moved into
the administrative position as director of the Area Agency on Aging in
West Virginia.

Two vehicles damaged in mishap
Two vehicles were damaged in an accident on General Hartinger
Parkway late Tuesday morning. .
.
.
.
According to the repo11 from M1ddleport pol1ce, Ke1th K. Rich mond, Middleport, backed the Valley Lumber and Sup~ly truck he
was driving from Vaughan's parking lot mto !he left s1de of a car
driven by George L. Gardner, Cheshire. There was rear-end damage
to the truck and damage 10 the left side of the car. Neither driver
was injured and there were no citations.

Hospital news

--Area deaths--

Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS on Monday, July IS, 1991, at his Burwell McKinney, Middleport.
Olin D. Boothe
TUESDAY DISCHARGES residence. He was an instrument
James Knighting, Guy Priddy, and
technician
at
the
Phillip
Sporn
Olin D. Boothe, 67, of 116 1/2
Gerald Sellers.
West Main Street in Pomeroy, died Plant.
He was born on April I0, 1924
in Meigs County, the son of the late HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
The Daily Sentinel
Discharges, July 16 - Mrs.
Charles Edward and Pearl Cody
David
Baum and son, Michael
Boothe.
!USPS 14~9601
Beaver, Joyce Blankenship, Larry
Surviving
are
a
daughter,
Resa
"- Dlvl!:lon of Muhlmedla. Inc.
Sawyers, Upper Marlboro, Md.; Brickles, Teresa Bush, James ConPublished pvery aft prnoon . Monday
two sons, Cody Boothe of Crown kle, Belly Crawford. James Hill,
thr ough Friday. 111 Court St., PoCity
and Dennis Boothe of Ger- Travis Hysell, Michelle McWhortmProv. Ohio. by th P Ohio ValiPv Pubmantown, Md.; and 10 grandchil- er, Charles McWilliams, Ruth Murllsh ln.f:! Compa ny !Mul11medla.· Inc ..
ray, Brenda Reynolds, Candus
PomNov. Ohi o 45769. Ph . 992-2156. SE&gt;·
dren.
co nd &lt;' 1 8s.~; postagP paid at PomProy.
Sanders,
Symra Simpkins, Christo·
Besides his parents, he was preOhio .
pher
Skimore,
Mrs. Franklin Taylor
ceded in death by his wife, HenrietMt'mlx'r: ThP Assodate&lt;l Press. In ·
and
daughter
and
Lucy Wilfong
ta Ihle Boothe.
land Dally PrE"Ss Association and the
Births,
July
16
- Mr. and Mrs.
A
veteran
of
World
War
II,
Mr.
Oh io Newspaper Association. National
AdvPrtls ln R Jtt&gt;prE'Sentative, Bran ham
Boothe was a member of Drew Jeff Ferrell, a daughter, GaUipolis.
NPwspa pPr Sal{"S, 733 Third Avenue.
Webster Post #39 of the American Mr. and Mrs . Edwin Fielder, a
New York . Nt&gt;w York 10017.
daugl)ter, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Legion.
POSfMASfER: Sl:t-nd addre-ss changes
There will be no funeral service Mr. and Mrs. William Holcomb, a
to Tht&gt; Dally SentineL 111 COurt St ..
daughter, Albany.
and no calling hours.
Pomeroy, Ohio 1571l!.
Arrangements are under the
SUBSCRIPTION RUES
direction of Ewing Funeral Home
By Carrier or Motor Routt
in Pomeroy.
One Week .... ... ....... ........ ........... .. Sl.lill
OnP Month. .. . .
.. ....$6.95
In lieu of flowers, donations
OnPYPar ..
. .... $83.2{)
may be made to Drew Webster
SINGLE COPY
Post #39 of American Legion in
PRICE
Pomeroy.
.. ...... 25 Cent s
Dally
CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Subscribe-rs not desJrlntt to pa y lhPcarKathryn W~rth
rlf'r may re mit In adva nce dlrPcl to
the selections made Tuesday night
T he Dally Sen tin el on a 3. 6or 12 month
in the Ohio Lottery:
basts . CrNUI will be given carrier each
Kathryn florence Warth, 55, of
WPE'k .
Hartford, died Thesday, July 16, Pick 3 Numbers
2-3-5
No subscript io ns by mall permlttPd In
1991, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
areas where homP carrier s.ervJcl(l Is
(two,
three, five)
Foglesong Funeral Home is in
a\'all.itble .
Pick
4
Numbers
charge of arrangements, which will
3-3-6-9
Mall Subscriptions
be announced later.
lnsWe Melp County
(three, three, six, nine)
13 Weeks .. .. .. .. ....... ... ......... ... 121.84
Cards
~ ~==~:
:!:~~
A (ace) of HeartS
Out81de Melp County
.
S (five) of Clubs
"OUr
Uber\lea
we
prize
and
our
13 Weeks ...... .. .. .. ...... ........ ... · ··. S2Ul
rlpts we will maintain," II the state ,
6 (six) of Diamonds
·25 Weeks ..
·...... ......... 145.150
52 Weeks .. . ... . .. ... .............. $88.46
motto of 1owa.
2 (two) of Spades

.Lottery numbers

: : : . . . . . .: :::: ::.:: ::

;

'

By Tbe Associated Press
An even hotter and more humid
day is being forecast for Ohio on
Thursday with highs in the low
90s.
Very little wind is anticipated,
so an air stagnation advisory issued
by the National Weather Service is
likely to remain in effect.
Forecasters said some isolated
thunderstorms could develop as the
heat and humidity increase. But no
significant rainfall is expected
before Saturday.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

Housing...

Showers T-s torms Rain Flurri;,.

Sentlnei-P~ge-3

Hot, humid day/forecast for Ohio Thursday

Thursday, July 18
MICH .

The Daily Sentinel

The Dally

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I'

station was 100 degrees in 1887.
The record low was 53 in 1989.
Sunrise this morning was at
6:16 a.m. Sunset will be at 8:59
p.m.
Around the nation
Today began warm, if somewhat overcast in pans of the country - a mild start to a summer
scorcher.
Before !he sun even rose in New
Orleans, it was 80 degrees under
cloudy skies. Phoenix was 83 and
partly cloudy while up in Boston
the temperature was 70 degrees

before a partly cloudy dawn .
Hot sunshme was expected over
the Northeast, though thunderstorms were predicted in far northem New England and the northern
Great Lakes.
The southern Appalachians were
in for continuing clouds and rain.
Heat-relieving thunderstorm s
were forecast for much of the
Southeast, pans of !he Dakotas and
the central Plains. Rainshowers
were predicted in pans of !he Pacific Northwest.
Temperatures in the 90s were

torecast to smother almost all of
the nation. Cooler spots wiih temperatures in the 80s were forecast
for the Southeast except Florida,
the Great Lakes region, pans of
California and the Northwest. A
tiny cool patch with readings in the
60s was forecast for the nation's
northwest corner. Temperatures
were to top 100 in the central
Plains and part of Texas.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was 112 degrees at
Borrego Springs, Calif., and Lake
Havasu City, Ariz.

Thirty-nine court ca·ses processed

'
Meigs County Court Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien processed 39
cases last week.
Fined were: Robert E. Romines,
Elkhorn, Wise ., speed, $22 and
costs; Samuel B. Howlell, Columbus, speed, $26 and costs; Sylvia
Neece, Pomeroy. failure to yield.
$10 and costs; Donald B. Allen, Jr.,
Racine, seat belt violation, costs
only; William R. Capehart, Middleport, speeding, $22 and costs;
Michael DellaviUe, Jr., Alexandria,
Va., DUI, $300 and costs, three
days in jail, operator's license suspended for 90 days, no operator's
license, $75 and costs, three days in
jail, concurrent with DUI charge;
Brian E. Smith, Middleport, speed,
$23 and costs: Douglas L. Hacker,
Oxford, no log book, $50 and
costs; David A. Bates, Pomeroy,
left of center, $10 and costs; Robert
Darst, Jr. , Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
passing bad checks (four counts),
$50 and costs and restitution on
each charge, 10 days in jail, suspended; Richard A. Bowen,
Pomeroy, speed, $24 and costs;

Donald J. Fry, Pomeroy, seat belt
violation, costs only; Freda Ash,
Canton, speed, $25 and costs;
Kelly Hamilton, Rutland . assured
clear distance, $10 and costs; Joe
Bartoe. Pomeroy. stream liltering.
$25 and costs.
Ellen Harbourt, Karen Richards,
Matthew Weaver, Loren Welling,
Rhonda Jones, and Sylvia Mickunas, all of Athens, disorderly conduct, $50 fine, suspended, costs
only; Odrey Reed, DWI, $350 and
costs, three days in jail, 90 days
license suspension, defendant given
residential treatment option, no
driver's license, $100 and costs,
three days in jail and speed, $66
and costs; Paul L. Smith, Jr., Long
Bouom, seat belt violation, costs
only; David E. Jaycox, Wellston,
speeding, $22 and costs; Jeffrey L.
Rake, Parkersburg, W.Va., speeding, $25 and costs; Richard L.
Bells, Maloga, Ohio, speed, $26
and costs; Douglas A. Howard,
Zanesville, insecure load, $25 and
costs; Charles A. Ritchie, Tuppers
Plains, seat belt violation, costs
onlv: Tammie Praytor, Pomeroy,

Middleport Court news
John W. Freeman, Middleport, under the age of 21, $425 and
was fined on four charges when he costs, with a three days jail senappeared in the court of Middleport tence, physical control of a motor
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday vehicle while under the influence
night.
of alcohol or drugs.
He was fined $10 and costs on · Others fined in the court were
operating a motor vehicle without Mary K. Mills, Middleport, $25
tail lights , $50 and costs on a and costs, open container; Gwen
charge of disorderly manner, $100 · Husk, Pomeroy, $!0 and costs, fieand costs on resisting arrest, and titious tags, and $10 find only, fail$200 and costs and five days in jail ure to stop at a stop sign; and
on a charge of assaulting a police David M. Lambert, Rutland, $10
officer.
and costs, squealing tires.
Fined on three charges in the
Forfeiting bonds were Breu L.
mayor's court were Ronald D. Rayburn, Point Pleasant, $50, fail Lemley, Jr., Gallipolis, $100 and ure to stop at a stop sign; and Marcosts, financial risk suspension, vin R. Smith, Bidwell, $52, spccd$25 and costs, consuming alcohol ing.

Pomeroy Court news
speeding; Patricia Smith, Pomeroy,
$45, speeding; Charles Reitmire,
Pomeroy, $63, expired registration;
Debra Stalnaker, Parkersburg, W.
Va., $51, speeding; Jeff Reitmire,
Pomeroy, $350, aggravated menacing threats: Vernon Maxey,
Reedsville, $51, speeding; and Bernice Dudley, Mason, W. Va., $47,
speeding.

Three were fined and seven
other forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night.
Fined were Roger Atkins,
Pomeroy, $4 7 and costs, speeding;
Peggy Davis, Long Bouom, $63
and costs, permitted her vehicle to
be operated by an unlicensed driver; and Shawn Gilmore, Pomeroy,
563 and costs, driving under suspension, $263 and costs, leaving
the scene, and $50 and costs, no
insurance.
Forfeiting bonds were Franklin
White, New Haven, W. Va., $50,

Plants confiscated
Twenty marijuana plants were
confiscated by Pomeroy police
Wednesday morning in a wooded
area in Monkey Run .
Chief of Police Gerald Rought
and Captain Joe Kirby reported !hat
if the plants had been full grown
they would have had about a $1200
street value. No charges have been
filed, it was reported.

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................28 7/8
Ashland Oil ..................... .30 1/2
AT&amp;T............................... .37 7/8
Bob Evans ........................ 19 1/4
Charming Shop.................. 21 7/8
City Holding ..................... 13 1/2
Federal Mogul... ................ l6 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ... .36)/4
Key Centurion .................. IS
Lands' End ................. ...... 20 3/4
Limited Inc ...................... .31 3/8
Multimedia Inc ................ .29 1/2
Rax Restaurant ................ . In
Robbins&amp;Myers ...... ........ .33
Shoney's Inc ..................... 16 1/2
Star Bank ..........................21 3/4
Wendy lnt'l ........................9 3/8
Worthington Ind ............... 26 3/8

DWI. $350 and cos ts, 90 day
license suspension, option of
anending residential program;
Charles Boso, Portland, no valid
operator's license, $100 and costs,
five days in jail , suspended upon
proof of valid operator's li ce nse
within 90 days; Edward Harrington, Columbus, two assault
charges, $150 and costs on each, 10
days in jail suspended. restraining
order issued, di sorderly conduct,
$30 and costs; Paul Parsons, Given,
W.Va., leaving the scene, $100 and
costs, three days in jail, $50 of fine
suspended and jail time suspended
6 months, probation, defendant
ordered to make restitution. stop
sign, $25 and costs.
Vicki Phillips, Pomeroy, failure
to yield, $25 and costs, Mike
Hindy, Syracuse, assault, $500 and
costs,.six months in jail suspended
to 20 days, one year probation;
Lonny Ross, Portland, disorderly
conduct, $25 and costs, reckless
operation. $40 and costs; Gary
Honacker, Mason, W.Va., DWI,
$400 and costs, 10 days in jail, one
year license suspension, left of center, cost only; James Myers,
Reedsville, speed, $100 and costs;
William C. Maddox, Worthington,
speed. $27 and costs: Darren E.
Hayes, Pomeroy, scat belt violation, costs only; Kenneth E. Hayes.
Pomeroy, seat belt violation, costs
only; Leonard H. Koenig, Jr.,
Pomeroy, assured clear distance,
S10 and costs; Thomas H. Collin.
New Matamoras. speed. $22 and
costs.

:l

Meigs Court news
Couples to end marriages
Divorce actions have been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Pamela Laleta Still of
Middleport against Elmer Michael
Still of Middeleport; Paula K.
Blankenship, Pomeroy , against
John Ray Blankenship, Albany;
and by Bonita Jean Smith,
Reedsville, against Harold Eldon
Smiih, Reedsville.
Actions for dissolution of marriage have been filed in the court
by Kenneth Wallbrown, Portland
and Charlene Wallbrown, Ripley,
W.Va.; by Michael A. Willford,
Middleport and Cheryl A. Willford,
Pomeroy; and by Brenda Sue
Woodrow, Racine, and Michael
Robert Wallbrown, Alba, Mich.
A divorce has been granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Coun to Dorothy Mac Sands from
Keith Lee Sands; and to Edie
Grimm Wilkins again st Ronnie
Paul Wilkins.
Case dismissed
A civil case has been dismissed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court in the mauer of Jan Parker
versus Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District

H

And a whole lot more to taste

698 West Main
Pomeroy
614-992·2057

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

~

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Pt. Pleasant
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Sports

Wednesda y, Ju ly 1 i' . 1:~ s

The Daily Sentinel

.1

,l

·'

L

1:

Team
Los An&amp;elca
Atlan\.1

......

6-2, .7!0, 2.66; Viota, New l'oli, U ·5,

W L Pel.
37 .570

STRIKEOUTS- Cone, New York
126; Olavinc. Atlanta, 11 6; Ooodcn, NeV.:
York, 116; G. Maddux, Chicago, 107;
Benes, San Diego, 89; HamiJch, Houston,
86; Rljo, Cincinnati, 86.
SAVES - Lee Smith, St. LolliS, 2S;
Dibble, Cincinnati, 13; Franco, New
York, 21; Mitch Williams, Philadelphia,
16; Dave S mith, Chicago, 16; B. Lin·
d~um , Plllaburah, Ui terren•, Stn
Diego, IS.

M-N

San Diego

41

BATilNG - C. Ripkcn,

.518

4.5

44 41 .Stl

~

........ 42 47 .472

San Frutcisco .... .. 38 49
Howton

... ... .. JS

431

52 .402

American League
Baltimore,

GB

.3~ Molitor, Milwaukee, .329; Palmciro,
Tuas, .326; Puckett, Minneaotl, .324; .
Boua. Docton, .319; Si01r1, TCJW, .318;

&amp;.S

TINbuU. Kansu City, .311.

11 .5
14.5

RUNS- Molitor, Milwaukee, 67 ;
Pllmeiro, Tex11, 6 3; Canscco, Olkland,
62; Siem, Texas, 59; White, Torutto, S9;
C . Ripken, Baltimort~., 59; Fielder, Detroit,

Tuesday's Stores
St. Lou• 8, Clnc:lnnall 7

58.

San Diego 4, Montreal 3
Philadelphia 3, Los Angela: 1
PltUburah 6 1 How;lon 4
Atlanll. 8, Chicago 5
New Yodt 6, San Francisco 4

RBI -Fielder, Detroit, 70; Canseeo,
Oakland, 68; Sicm, Texas, 64; Tan.abuU,
Ktnn• City, 63; Caner, Toronto, 63;
Thoma•. Chicago, 61; Baine~, Oaibnd,

60.
HITS -C. Ripkcn, Baltimore, 116;

Today's games

Molitor, Milwaukee, 114; Palmciro ,
Texaa, 113; Puckett, MinnCiota, 112;
Siena, Teua, 110; Caner, Toronto, 104;
Joyner, Califomil, 102; Su., N"ew York,

Loa Angeles at Philadelphia, 12:35 p.m.
San FranciJco at New Yort., 1:40 p.m.
SL Lou .. at ClndnnaU 1 7:35p.m.
San Diego Montreal, 7:35p.m.

102.

Houslon at Fllbbureh, 7:JS p.m .
Chicago at At.lanll., 7:40 p.m.

DOUBLES - Palmeim, Tex as. 28: R.
Almlar, Tormto, 2"1; Bogg1, Bon&lt;r'l, T1 ;
Cuter, Toronto, 26; Whi~ Toronto. 23;
Brett, Kanau City, 13; Can&amp;CCO, Oaltland,
22: C. Ripkcn. Baltimore, 22
TRIPLES - Molitor, Milwaukee, fl;
White, Toronto, 1; R. Alonar, Trronto, 6;
Polonia, Ca lifornia, 6; McRae, K1nu1
City . 5; Deveruux, Bthimore, 5; Pucken,
MinnesolJ, 5; Raine~, Chietgo, S.
HOME RUNS - Fielder, Detroit, 23;
Canseco, Oakl1nd, 22: Tarubull. Kansas
City, 21; Ca rter, Toronto, 21; C. Dtvil,
Minnesou , _19; C. Riplc.cn, Baltimore, 19;
Deer, Detroit, 18: D. t-lendera«~, Oakland,
18; Winfield. California, \ 8.
STOLEN BA SES - R. Henderson ,
Oakland, 31; R . Alomar. Toronto, 29;
Polcnia, Califomia, 29; Rains, O!ic•ao.
29; White, Toronto, 22; C uyler, Detroit,
20; Franco, Teut, II .
PITOUNG (I decilions)- Langston,
California, 13-3, .812, 3.46: Ericluon,
Minnesota, 12-3 . . 800, 2 13; Hm.neman,
Detroit. 1-2. .778, 2.53: Fin1ey, California, 13-4, .76S, 3.98; Stottlemyre. Torottto, 9-3 . .750, 1.93 ; Klink, Oakbnd, 6-2•
.750, 3. 07; McDowell , Chicago, 1 \.4 ,

Thursday's game
lm An_scl~ (Belc:hcr 7·6) at New York
(Cone 9-5).1.4{) p.m.

Friday's games

Oblinger, Justin Roush, J.T. Humphreys, Grant
Abbott, Ryan Ramsburg, Sean Powell and
Dustin Hul'frnan. Behind them are coaches Gene
Powell, Randy Humphreys, Frank Seth, Robert
Ramsburg and Roger Abbott.

CHESTER TOURNAMENT CHAMPS Pomeroy won the Chester 9·10 Year-Old Base·
ball Tournament, held recently in Chester. In
the front row are (L·R) Ryan Powell, Ben Mold·
en, Ryan Pratt, Adam Thomas, Jerr Brown and
Josh Hooten. In the
row are Clayton

San Francisco 11 Monuul, 7:35p.m.
Clndnnatl at PltU burgh, 7:35p.m.
Los Angele5 at New York, 7:40p.m.
Chicago a t Howton, 8:35p.m.
Atlanll. at St. Louis, 8:35 p.m.
Philadelphia at San Dieao, 10:05 p.m

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Toam
w L Pet. GO
Toronto
... l3 36 .S96
...... 4l 42 .lt7
7
Detroit
.. .. 44 42 .ll2
7.l
Booton
New Yodc
....... 41 43 .488
9.l
...... 39 47 .4l3 12l
Milwaukee
. .... .. 36 so .419
ll.l
Baltimore
C lneland

--- 27

..

.)II

14

.733, 3.06.

West Division
Tc11m

W

Minnesota

L

Pet.

.... 51 38
40
38
46 4Q
.... 46 41

.573

......... 48
........... 45

Oakland
Tex.u
Chicago
California
Scaule

. ......... 45

Kansas Cily

..... 39

.545

2.5

.542

3
3.5

.535

.529

43 .511
47 .453

STRIKEOtrrS - Clemen•. Bouon .
119 : R. Johnson, Seattle. 121; Ryan,
Teul , 123; Finley, Califo mi1, 111 ; Can·
diotti, Toronto, 109; Swindell, Cineland, 106; McDowell, Chic.tgo, 104.
SAVES -Aguilera. Minnesota, 24;
&amp;kersley, OU.llnd , 23; RcardM, Boston,
23; Har\'ey, Califomi1, 12; Olaon , Balti·
more, 19: Thigpen. Chic•go, 19; Henke,
Tormto, 19.

GB

4
5.5
10.5

Tuesday's Stores

Transactions

Seattle 5, New York 0

Oetroit6, Texas 5

Boc:ton 2, Chicago 0

Baseball

Milwaukee 4, Minnesota 3
Kanus City 2, Toronto I, 10 innings
Oakland 7, Cleveland 6, 13lnnlng.s
California

American l..ngue
DETROIT TIGERS - Recalled Scott
Aldted, pi!Cher, from Toledo of the lnta-national Leasuc. Optioned Mike Munoz,
pit.cher, ta Toledo.

2. Baltimore I

Today 's games

Basketball

Texu at Detroit, 1:35 p.m.
C lneland a l Oakland, 3:1§ P-m.

National B a~ k ttball AaJOCiatlon

Boston at CI_Ucago, I :OS p.m.
Seattle at Milwaukee, 8:05p.m.
Baltimore at Kan1u City, 1:35 p.m.

~

~

I

ping to the loser's bracket finals on
Friday evening.
Meigs pounded out 12 hits in
picking up the win, Tim Bissell and ,
Jeff Durst led the way with a single
and a double each, Andy Baer
added two sin~les, Terry McGuire
a triple and Mike Vance and Chris
Stewart a double each. Bruce Lanning led Glouster at the plate with
two doubles and a pair of singles.
Jeremy Phalin picked up the win
for Meigs, the hard throwing
righthander went the first six in·
nings, Jeff Durst and Mike Vance
pitched the final three inning s.
Justin Day was the starter and loser
for Glouster, Ryan Davis came on
to pitched the final two innings.
In other tournament action on
Tuesday evening McArthur elimi·
nated Gallipolis 10-8, Athens defeated Pickerington 6·5 and Lancaster sent Wellston home for the
season defeating the Jackson County squad 15-12.

In other games on Wednesday
evening Lancaster will play
Glouster on the Dalton Field on
West State Street and Pickerington
will play McArthur at Glouster. All
of Wednesday games will start at
5:30.
Score by innings
Meigs
121 303 210-13-12-4
Glouster 020 031 000- 6-12-2
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CAPTURES FOURTH - The Mason Rebels captured fourth
place in the Si~ Bend Pee Wee Girls' Softball Tournament, held
recently in Racme. KneeUng in front are (L·R) Stephanie Stanley,
Kristin OUnger, Nikki Stanley, Crystal Johnson, Rachel Robie and
Sally Roush. Standing tealilmates are April Stewart, Amber Fields,
Natasbia Bennett, Julie Harris, Michelle Pearson, Megan Harrah
and Elisha Jackson. Behind them are coaches Tom Roush, Danny
Fields and John Harrah.

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Prompt delivery. Reliability. Safety. Energy-savings.
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auiatant c:o~ch.
NEW JERSEY NETS - AMounccd
Robctt Cuciola, uocutivc vice praide:ttt
and chief operating olfiCCI", U: lcavin&amp; the
team to bocomc executive d.ircctor of the
National Foolball Foundation and Colleae
Hall of Fame.
l.ITAH JAZZ - Agreed to con tract
teuns wiLh Mike Brown, fonvud.

Senile (H1nson 4-4) at Milwau.k.ec (7-

6), 2:35p.m.
Minnesota (Morri s 12-6) u Boston
(Monon l · l), 7:35p.m.
Bllt.imon: (Milacki 5·3) al Kuuu Cily
(Sabcrl11gen 6-4), 8:35p.m.
Tommo (Wells I~ ) al Texu (R}'&amp;n 5·
4), 8:35 p .m .
New York (Kamieniecki 3- 1) at Oak·
!ami (Show0-1) ,1 0:05 p.m .
C le\'e lt nd (S winde ll 6-7) at Californ l•

Meigs Post 39 tops Glouster 13-6 to advance
in American Legion post-season tournament
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs jumped out to a 7-2 lead
afler four innings and went on to
defeat Glouster 13-6 in Eighth District American Legion tournament
action Tuesday evening.
Meigs will play Athens at 5:30
at Rannow Field at Athens High
School on Wednesday evening.
The defending state champions ad·
vanced to the showdown with
Meigs on the strength ef a 6-5 win
over Pickerington. The winner of
the Meigs-Athen s game will ad·
vance to the final s on Saturday
morning, with the loser of the double elimination tournament drop-

MIAMI HEAT - Named Bob S taak

Thursday's games

are Jeremiah Johnson, Josh Ervin, Troy
Hoback, Jesse Little, Jonathan Evans, Ty John·
son and Joshua Whitley. Behind them are
coaches Gary Norris, Doug Little and John
Manuel.

CAPTURES SECOND -Racine finished the
Chester 9·10 Year·Oid Baseball Tournament in
second place. Kneeling In front are (L·R) Kara
King, Kyle Norris, Steven Boso, Benji Manuel,
J.B. Boso and Josh Rowe. Standing teammates

Football
N1t1onal Football League
NFL- Named John Wooten director

oC player pn&gt;gnma.
CINCINNATI BENOALS Eric Thomu, cornerback.

(Abbott 7· 7),

J0:3l p.m.
Friday's games

:
,
:
.

GREEN BAY PACKERS -

Major league leaders
National League
BAITING - T. Gwynn. Sa n Diego,
.346; Pendleton, Atllntl, .338 ; Morris,
Cl ndnnall, .313; McGee, Stn Francisco,
.323; Jose, S t. Louii, .313; B iggio, Houston, .31(), s.mucl, l...o&amp; Angelu, .310.
RU NS ~ Butler, L o1 Angel ea , 62:
Sandberg, Chicago, 60; John•on, New
York, 56; VanS lyke, PIU•burgh, .5S ;
DeShields, Montreal, 54; 0 . Smith, St.
Louis, SJ; J, Bell, Plttsburah, 52 ; T. Fernandez, San Diego, 52.
RBI - W. C lark, S•n Frtnd•co , 69 ;
Jo hnson, New York , 66; Bond•, Pills burgh, 62; Kruk. , Philadelphia, 57; G .
Bell, Chicago, 57; Daw&amp;On, OUetgo, 57;
McGriff, San Diego, 54.
HITS - T . Gwy nn, San Diego , 123;
Sain uel, Loa Angel ea , !OS ; Butler, Loa
Angeles, 99; JOI!ie, St. Louil, 9 8; G. Bell.
Ch ica go, 98; Ca lderon, Montreal, 96;
Sand berg, Chic1go, 95 .
DOUBLES - Jose, St. Loui1, 26;
M orri s , Clnclnnll l, 24 ; McReynolds,
New York, 24; Bonilla, Plllsbur~th, 22;
T . Gwynn, Sa n Diego, 20: Sandberg,
Chicago, 20; L. Gonzalez, Ho ulton, 19;
Zci\e, Sl. Loui1, 19; Gtnt, Atlanu, 19;
O'Neil l, Clndnnall, 19.
TRIPLES - T . GwyM, San Diego, 8;
Lankford, St. LouiJ, 7; Felder, San F~n ­
ci.sco, 6; L. GonZilCl, HoultOn, S; K.ruk.,
Phil.adelphi1, S; Coleman, New Yotk., 5;
M. Thomfl'on. Sl. Louis, S.
•lOME RUNS - Jotuuon, New York ,
20· Gant Atlanu, 17; W. Clark., Sm F~n­
ci ;co, 17 ; McGriff , Sa n Di_e~o, 17; G .
Bell, C hicago, 17; Matt W JJiia ml, S an
Francisco, 16; O'Neill, Clnd•nt ll, 16;
Mi.tchcll, San Francisco, 16.
STOLEN BASES - Nixon. Atlanta ,
45; Gri uom , MontteJI, 43; DeShielt:l t,
Montreal, 39; Coleman, New York, 33;
Lank.ford, S t. Loui1, 24; BondJ, Pills·
burgh ,l4; Butler, Lol An8elet, 22.
PITCH IN G (8 deciaion1) - Walk,
Pltt.burgh, 7.1, .17S, 3.12; Carpenter, St.
Louia, 7~2, .778, 3.57; Glavme, Atlanta,
13-4, .76S , 1.9 1; R. Mt rtin ct. Lm Angeles , 12-4, . 750, 2.42 ; Palaclo1 , PiltlburMh• 6-2, .751, 3.20; Rljo, Clnclnnall.

Plan softball tourney
There will be a men's Class E
Softball tournament in Rutland on
July 27th and 28th. For information
or to register, call 992· 7307.

-

(ylndlrs I Service
992-2943

Bulk and Senice
992-5097

••A WINNING COMBINATION"

and Parker Ell iott slammed an RBI
single for a 2-0 score.
Coolville's Brian Di~on settled
down to do a great job and hold
Nelsonville scoreless the rest of the
way, but Stalder was still handcuffing the Coolville batters to pick up
the 2·0 win.
York hitt ers we re Wickman
with two sin gles, Dan Carter a single, Ben Rob ey two singles, and
Elliott a single .
In the second game of semi- fmal
round Racine defeated Syracuse g.
I behind the fine pitching of Jesse
Maynard, who fanned nine. includ·
ing twice striking out the side, and
walked just three. while allowin g
just three hits. Maynard's batterymates was Ryan Norris.
Travis Lisle earned the pitching
honors for Syracuse, but showed
some signs of wear despite pitching
well . Jamie Busk irk and Kevin
Fields came on in relief to pitch the
last couple of innings. Bill Sheppard was behind the plate.
Racine scored two runs in th e
first when Joe Kirby doubled , and
mike Bradford singled. followed by
an error and force out by Maynard,
Brandon Floyd, and Adam Roush.
the score 2·0.
Maynard handl ed Syracuse in
order in eac h of the fir st three
innings, striking out the side in the

John Yates Wrestling
Clinic slated for Monday
and All-conference at Glenville
State College.
Areas that will be covered in the
camp include take-downs, reversals
and escapes, rides, pinning combinations. attitude, nutrition. and conditioning.
For more information on th e
camp, call 304 -675 ·5300, 675·
5731 or675-4514.

Point Pleasant Junior High
School will be the the site of the
John Yates Wrestling Camp, which
runs Monday, July 22 to Friday,
July 26, from 9 a. m. to 3 p.m.
daily. The camp is set up for chil·
dren in Kindergarten through the
12th grade and will feature Greg
Pettit, a nationally-ranked Greco·
Roman wrestling champion.
Pettit is currently training for
the 1992 Olympic Trials and has
trained with the All -Army
Wrestling Team for six year. He is
also a past national champion at
various levels.
Cost of the camp is $40 per
child; there will be a late charge of
$50 for those not signed up by July
22; however , families who have
more than one child wanting to
sign up can pay a family fee of
$60.
Paren~ are urged to send a sack
lunch ana a water bottle with their
children each day.
Director of the camp will be
John Yates of Pennsylvania, who
has wrestled for four years at the
University of Pittsburg and is an
All-State Greco-Roman Wrestler in
PA, as well as a state champ and
wrestling coach at Waynesburg
High School in Waynesburg, Pa.
Assi sting Yates will be John
Lipscomb, assistant at Waynesburg
and former All-State Wrestler and
football player at Clarksburg Liber·
ty High

Tourney dates posted
The Wellston Littl e League
Tournament and Pony League girls
tourn ament dates have been
announced for July 20th-27th and
July 27 th -28th respectively. For
further information please ca1161 4·
384·2174 or 384·5546.

Hayman and Kelly Bailey. Standing teammates
are Angie Wolfe, Jennifer Cline, Jessica Brannon, Lisa Stethem, Michelle Caldwell, Billena
Buchanan, Angela Taylor and Renea Pooler.
Behind them are coaches Teresa Evans, Paul
Brannon and Larry Heines.

EASTERN ALL-STAR CHAMPS- East·
ern's all-star Pee Wee softball team laid claim
on the Middleport All-Star Tournament, held
recently in Middleport. In the front row are (L·
R) bat girls Heather Rockhold and Stephanie
Evans, players Valerie Karr, Alisha Rojas, Juli

Signup dates posted

second.
Racine plated another run in the
seco nd when Paul Smith
wa lk ed,Rya n Norris si ngled,
Bobby Writesel, and Joe Kirby
eac h singled, while Mike Bradfor&lt;j
reac hed on a fielder's choice.
.
A Tommy
Lane doubled
knocked home Adam Roush with a
run in th e third, while Lane scored
on a gro und out for a 5-0 lead .
Racine scored three more times in
the fourth .
Kev in Fields led Syracuse with
a singled and triple, Lisle singled,
and Pete Sisson singled.
Racine hitters were Norris and
Roush with two sin gles, Kirby a
double and single. Maynrad a
tnple, Lane a double a single, and
sing les each by Writescl and Bradford .
The loss by Syracuse marks the
first time in some time th at Sy racuse has nol been the tournament
champion.

THE 1991

The Big Bend Yo.uth Football
League has established its sign-up
dates for the upcoming 1991 sea·
son as Aug.3 and August I0 from
10 a.m. to noon at Pleasers Restau·
rant in Pomeroy.
All players must bring a copy of
their birth certificate. More information can be obtained at the signup. The sign-up applies for both
boys and girls for cheerleading and
football.

flHT
The Tent Is Down!
But We Kept The
Factory Trucks!
All Tent Sale Prices In
Effect Till 7-20-91

\

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MASON, W. YA.

J•

typical of a championship game.
but Nelsonville came away the victor by a narrow 2-0 margin.
Nelsonville scored in the bottom
of the first on an error to Jos h
Walker and an RBI single to Jason
Wickman. Dan Carter also had a
hit in the frame, the score 1·0.
Nathan Stalder held th e
Coolville nine at bay again in the
second inning with the help of batterymate Wickman . Stalder fanned
nine overall and walked five
enroute to the win, while giving up
only two hits ; a single to J.R .
Springer and single to Tommy Curtis.
N· Y scored again in the second
when Ben Robey led off with a
double, Heath McKinney walked,

Four very fine teams met in the
se mi-finals of the Bill Hubbard
Memorial Little League Tournament here Tuesday evening, however, only two advan ced to the
finals to be held tonight at Syracuse
Municiap Park. In the opener Nelsonville· York defeated Coolville 2·
0, while in the nightcap Racine's
Reds defeated Syracuse Hubbard's
Greenhouse # 1, 8-1.
Coolville will meet Syracuse in
the consolation game tonight at 6
p.m. , while Racine meets Nel sonville-York for the championship
in the nightcap immediately fol lowing.
The frrst game was hard-fought,
knock-down drag'em out baseball

2- ·

Termt- Free ~livery- Full Sen!•• ~pl.

..
I

Page 5

IF YOU MISSED THIS SALE, YOU PAID TOO MUCH!

Save Up To

Fe rrellgos

Signed

Walter De~n, runninJ back , and Frank
Blevins, linebacker. AKJ'CC(I to t.crm1 wilh
Anthony Dilweg and Dlair &amp;ial, quanerblck•, on two-year conu.N, and Vinnie
ClaJi:, comaback, to 1 fOIU"-ye&amp;r contnCl
HOUSTON OILERS - Signod Barry
VoorhCea, ti ckle; Mike Kilelak, guud;
John Lewis, corncrb1ck; and Mike
Nonelh, q_uartcrbtdr.. Agreed tO contract
temts Dtnd Rocker, defen11Ve tackle; and
Mutu1 Robenson, comerblct.; and Haywood Jcffira , wide receiver.
INDIANAPOUS COLTS - Placed Ed
Toner, running blck, on the re~erve· did
not repon lin.

FURNITURE

S and R Gas Service

10

DETROIT LIONS - Signed Kevin
Scou, defensive brick, tO a multiyear con·
tnCL

$ oftball tourney is
scheduled July 20-21
A Class D &amp; E softball tournament will be held on July 20th and
21st at liastern High School. Entry
Fee is $65 and you hit your own
ball. Trophies will be given to the
first, second and third place teams.
First and second place team s will
receive individual trophies or
shirts.
For more information call Pat
Aeiker at 992-2576.

Signed

a.EVELAND BROWNS - AJ!"'Cd
tenns with Ed King, guard.

Se_attle•t D1ltimore, 7:35p.m.
Minnesota 11 Boston, 7:35 p.m.
Milwaukee at Chicago, 8:05 p.m.
Detroil at Karuas City, 8 :35p.m .
Toronto at Texas, 8 :35 p .m .
C leveland al Callrornfa. 10:35 p.m.
New Yod 11 Oakland, 10:35 p.m .

Th e Daily Sentinel

Mtdd le port , O hio

Nelsonville, Racine in Hubbard LL finals

.687, 2.78.

49

........... 44

Clndnnall

'!

: FINISHES THIRD - The Pomeroy Cats finished third in the
; Dig Bend Pee Wee Girls' Softball Tournament, held. recently in
· Racine. In the front row 11re (L·R) bat boy Wesley Wr1gbt, players
: Danielle Grueser, Pat Smith, Jessica Wright, Charla Roach, Shan·
: non Jenkins, Jennifer Shrimplin, and Arica and Aja Blackwell.
· Behind them are Coach Benny Wright, Michelle Ramsburg, Sara
: Craig; Wendy Shrimplin, Melissa Werry, Jerica Clark and Candace
:· Miller.

In the majors ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Team
w L Pet. GB
PlltJburah ....... 54 31 .635
New York
....... 50 36 .58 1 4.5
St. Louis
... 46 41 .529
9
.... 42 46 .477 13.5
Chicago
.. ..... &lt;0 48 .455 Jl.l
Montreal
Philadelphia
.... 37 ll .420 18.5
West Division

Mets still chasing Bucs in NL
East; Reds lose eighth straight
lead by los ing six in a row an d pinch shot that snapped a tie. And
By The Associated Press
Given the alternative, Bud Har- eight of 10. But the lead remains Jose Gonzalez, 0-for-spring with
intact because runnerup Cincinnati the Dodgers before being traded to
relson will live with frustration.
the Bucs two weeks ago, contribut·
was
losing eight in a row.
Even with a 10-game wi nnin g
ed
his first homer as a Pirate.
Again,
Tuesday
night
was
typistreak and II victories in the last
Zane
Smith ( 10·6) won his third
cal.
Philadelphia
beat
the
Dodgers
13 games. New York has bee n
unabl e to mak e a dent in Pitts - 3- 1 and St. Louis rallied three consecutive decision, allowing six
hits and one earned run in six
bur gh· s lead in th e Na ti onal times to beat the Reds 8-7.
In the other NL games. Atlanta innings. Stan Belinda went the last
League East.
Tuesday night was typical. New beat Chicago 8-5 and San Diego two and two-third for his eighth
save.
York beat San Francisco 6-4, but beat Montrea1 4-3.
The last-place Astros lost their
' ' It takes eve rybody you've
Pittsburgh, winn ing its 14th in 18
fifth
in a row and starting pitcher
got."
Pittsburgh
manager
Jim
Leystarts, beat Houston 6-4 to retain a
Jim
Deshaies
land
said
in
ex
plaining
why
the
to a bruised arm.
4 1/2-game edge over the Mets.
"You have to look at it opti- Pirates have baseball's best record. Deshaies threw three pitches in the
mi stically," Harrel so n sa id . "That's one of the good signs I' ve first inning, the last of which Gary
" Where would we be if we hadn ' t seen in this club, that everybody Redus rocketed back off the left·
won those 10 games? Certainly, we has con tributed. When a Varsho bander's pitching arm. Deshaies
wouldn 't be talking like thi s. The and a Gonzalez come through in was taken to a hospital, where XPirates are on a roll and have coun- the same game, it takes the heat off rays were negative.
everybody."
Mets 6, Giants 4
tered our streak with their own."
Gary Varsho, who didn 't homer
Dave Magadan and Gregg JefThe Pirates and Mets aren't the
only streaking division leaders. In once in three season with the Cubs, feries each drove in two runs in
the West. the Los Angeles Dodgers hit his third of the year for Pitts- support of Dwight Gooden (9-6},
have tried to give away a five-game burgh Tuesday night, a two-run who gave up eight hits in sevenplus innings.
Jefferies singled in two runs in
the four-run third and Magadan had
a two-run single in the fourth .
Kevin Mitchell and Matt
Williams homered for San Francis·
co..
Phillies 3, Dodgers 1
Terry Mulholland (9-8) won his
third straight start and Wes Cham·
berlain had a two-run homer and a
run·scorin~ single.
Bob Ojeda (7 •7) allowed the
three Phillies runs on seven hits in
six innings.
Cardinals 8, Reds 7
Rob Dibble (0· 1) blew his first
save in 24 opportunities when
Ozzie Smith smgled in two runs in
the top of the ninth . Then St.
Louis ' Lee Smith shut down
Cincinnati in the bottom of the
inning for his NL-Iead ing 25th
BIG BEND CHAMPS - The Syracuse Blasters beat the Tup·
save.
pers Plains in the championship game to win the Big Bend Pee Wee
Willie Fraser (2 -0) won despite
Girls' Softball Tournament, held recently in Racine. In the front
allowing a solo homer to Hal Morrow are (L·R) Trisha Warner, Kim Sayre, Valerie Cundiff, Jenny
ris that gave Cincinnati a 7-6 lead
Friend and Bridget Cross. Behind them are Coach Greg Cundiff,
heading to the ninth.
Carissa Ash, Amy Jo Northup, Cynthia Caldwell, Ashli Davis, Erit:a
Braves 8, Cubs 5
Arnott and Coach Vicki Cundiff.
Ron Gant singled in the goahead run in a three-run seventh
inning.
Mark Lemke scored the tying
run on a wild pitch by Bob Scanlan
(3·4) , and Terry Pendleton came
home on Gant's single up the mid·
die. Gant later scored on an infield
OUltO make it 7-5.
Marvin Freeman (1 -0) retired
the Cubs in the seventh and Juan
Berenguer pitched the final two
innings for his 14th save.
Padres 4, Expos 3
Tony Fernandez doubled home
three runs as San Diego did aU its
scoring in the seventh.
Expos starter Mark Gardner saw ·
a 3-0 start to go away after center
fielder Marquis Grissom misplayed
a single by Tim Teufel, allowing
Benito Santiago to score from first.
One out later, Gardner walked
;_ REDS TAKE SECOND- The Tuppers Plains Reds fell ·to Syra· pinch-hitter Phil Stevenson.
Reliever Mel Rojas (0·1}
· . cuse in the tide game or the Big Bend Pee Wee Girls' Softball Tour·
walked
Bip Roberts to load the
·: nament, held recently in Racine, to capture second in the diamond·
which
were emptied when
bases,
;. rest. Kneeling in front are (L·R) Stephanie Evans, Heather Rock·
Fernandez
grounded
a double
: hold, Sarah Hoffman, Vicki Adams, Betsy Sheets and Christie Mills.
the
bag
at
frrst.
inside
• Behind them are assistant coach Joy Brannon, Juli Hayman, Alisha
Bruce Hurst (10-5) started for
: Rojas, Jessica Brannon, Michelle Caldwell, Billena Buchanan, Jen·
the
Padres and Larry Andersen
: nifer Cline, Sarah Householder and head coach Teresa Evans.
pitched the last two innings for his
fourth save.

Po me: oy

Scoreboard

Wednesday, July 17, 199f. :
Page--4 :

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••

.,....,.
'

'

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

992-2155
''

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

.

.

.

••

'

·.

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�'

-'

cultural honors: a knight in the
Legion of Honor_
Culture Minister Jack Lang
presided at the ceremony. attended
by several top French jazz musicians and members of Davis' band,
which is on a European tour.
Lang described Davis as "the
Picasso of Jazz," and said he had
in sp ired "three or four generations" of great musicians.

CBS continues
winning streak
By DEBORAH HASTINGS
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - CBS
continued its summer winning
streak in the latest ratings race. this
time aided by baseball.
LasL week's Major League
-Baseball All-Star Game was the
No. I show on prime-time televi;sion, according to figures released
Tuesday by the A.C. Nielsen Co.
In overall network standings,
CBS led the week with a 9.8 average rating, followed by ABC with
B.6. NBC was last with 8.4.
Each ratings point represents
!13 1,000 homes.
- The victory marks the fourth
consec utive first-place finish for
CBS. In a prime-time schedule
Jlominated by reruns, the network
.tlas made strong showings with its
}.!onday night comedy lineup real uring "Murphy Brown" and its 10
.m. replacement series "Northern
xposurc."
NBC's longstanding series
favorite "Cheers," was the No. 2
show. In third place was "Designj og Women," CBS' popular come-dy about interior decorators in
Jl.tlanta.
- ABC's newsmagazine "20-20"
;,.as fourth . The wise-cracking ,
working class family of ABC's
., Roseanne" fini shed fifth and
Candice Bergen's smart-aleck TV
reporter on CBS ' "Murphy
;Jlrown" was sixth.
• The offbeat inhabitants of tiny
Z:::ieely, ALiska, in CBS' " Northern
lixposure," ranked seventh. "60
Minutes," the network 's venerable
Sunday news hour, was No. 8.
. ABC's Friday night comedy hit
: 'Family Matters" was the No. 9
$how, followed by NBC's Saturday
night success, "Empty Nest."
- In network news, ABC and
Peter Jennings were No. I with an
8 8 average rating. CBS and Dan
Raiher were second with 7.7 and
NBC and Tom Brokaw averaged
7.5.

By SANDRA SVOBODA
Associated Press Writer
DETROIT (AP) - Call it the
Domino's effect.
A hospital is promising to see its
emergency room patients in 20
minutes or the care will be free.
The offer was inspired by the
Michigan-based pizza company's
claim of delivery within 30 minutes.
During the first three weeks of

the offer, no patients at Doctors
Hospital have been stitched, bandaged, X-myed or splinted free of
charge. But a few carne close.
"It's been down to within five
minutes," director of ambulatory
care Nancy Kinder said Priday,
Administrators say boctors
Hospital was already treating
patients quickly. The reason for the
free -care promotion was that like
many other urban hospitals, the

a

101-bed hospital about mile from
downtown is suffering financially
and searching for ways to boost
revenues.
The emergency department,
which treats 8,000 to I 0,000
patients a year, is an untapped
resource, said Lynn Kelley, chief
operating officer.
" If you walked in ri$ht now
you •d wait just as long as tttook to
register you,'' Kinder said one

-~

., ,

..... '

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..

1)

·~

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....

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recent afternoon.
The hogpital has i~ b~sy spells,
Kelley said. But proJec~ons show
that an increased pauent load
brought on by the free care offer
would generate revenues greater
than what would be lost during
busy time, she said, declining to
give specific figures.
The hospital, which specializes
in industrial medicine, lost about
$1.2 million last year

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, July 17, 1991
Page--7

New arrival

Favorite Perennials:
Wildwood Garden Club

••
•

,.

.. Evelyn Hollon and Dorothy
· Smith were appointed to nominate
. :new officers for the coming year at
•the recent meeting of the Wild" wood Garden Club held at the
~.tlhome of Beny Milhoan.
'!:~~~~~~~..,.:..~-~-..,......-_J.
Kathryn Miller presided at the
""
.
· ' ·· ·
:i;'meeting which opened with devo•
· ·
· · ·. . ·&lt; -. ·.
) tions' by Doris Grueser, "There is
themosiessential·nutrient
many "i;JDJI(ir!antcheill~reae~on~.i~an Answer." "Another Day," and
) Question: On ~TV ~on; !h~t ..~ cons.lfllt,ly ~mg,p~~.cc~~"Our American Aag;,A Symbol of
f.bur local cable health chailjid; one mSide.pl!l' 1loclieL ·
-~~:in ._, Hope." For roll call each member
·of the doctors referred 10 water~ , Q~:. How muqh _....... ~ 1'' named their favorite rose.
Uhe "most essehlial nulrien~." Can '. n~ed •to •.driil \·each ·~ay Co·: be &gt;- Members are to bring ideas to
! y..ater really be called a nlllilerit?- I 'he~!~~~- ·
· · ; ···' ,, next month's meeting for the new
! thought that vitamins, mj!ierlli.and·.t· IUIIIWCr:"111e bOdy reSUJII.es·1IS program books.
• things like that were nutrients.
''need fer water through· the mec;haFor Now is the Time, Pauline
: Answer: I think it would help to ,nism ~f thirst. Wh~n the sodi~m , Eynon noted that due to t~e dry
• start off my answer to yo~ _q!'es- ·~: evelm. the. bl~ nses, the llurst • weather soil should be cultivated,
· tion with a simple ~eftm_ti~n: _l~~m JS triggered. Reprdless · mulched and continually watered,
: According to my medical dtCUO· · ~of thirst, however: the averag~ per· · as well as sprayed and dusted for
• nary, a nubient is a substance_ ~t .~ s~n n~eds to drtnk about.stx to insects. Dead blossoms should be
•:furnishes fiOurishment; that .'S, tt 01 elght·eighi:OtJI!ce ~ses of water a cut from rose bushes and blackber: provides "food or other substariCC! •. y to mam~ his _or ~er health. ries, blueberries and gooseberries
• necessary for life and grow~h. 1~ Clll high·protem ~!I ~hould are ready for picking.
~While mmerals and vitamins ai'.e rake·.in even more as thetr kidneys
~ nubients, so is water.
f 'havo:to flush ~ more waste ~'
: Le"t me explain. Water is t~e Jr:ucts rr'!mthe mcreued protem
• most essential part of 011r .dtcr~t,.. , AlSo, athletes and~
:·because of the vital role it J)lays ill ' ple-Wfi!l _IUc:r !JI dle·IK&gt;tsun ~wre
A picnic at Ravenswood Park
• preserving life. We-ean only lliit a ~ tnere water claily.
.
was enjoyed at the recent meeting
, few days without it, but we ean • The beat ·source of water ts,_ of of the Circle of Helping Hands of
;· make it for a much longer period of ..,ocourse, water. ~or ~«;&gt;se who like the Zion Church of Christ.
' time without consuming additional . , more taste, milk, JUice and soft
Lucille Allen conducted the
drinks are good sources. In addt- meeting and gave devotions ,
. vitamins and minerals.
• The average adult's body con· ~t tion, some foods contain a great "Prayer is Conversation." She stat: tains 40 to 50 quarts of water dC!I' ,of water. ¥ost _fruits and vel!· ed pmyer is the expression of peo, one half to two-thirds of the total ' -etablcs arc pnmartly_ water, and ple s hearts to God and that one
body weight. Where does it all even cooked lean beef IS 60 percent should have a definite place to pray
: hide? Well, the brain and the mus- " wa~r. While coffee, tea and alco- so that when it is seen it will
~ cles are about three-quarters water. -~ hohc beverages are .sou~ces _or remind you to pray.
1Even bone which we think of as : water, they are also mild diurebcs
The Women's Reueat will be at
' dry is mo~ than one-fifth water. "it which increase the amount of water the Ohio Valley Christian Assem• This water performs some very .r eliminated by the kidneys. Drink- bly on Sept. 13 and 14 with the
; important functions in our. bodi~. ... in•lheSe may &amp;e!""'Y increase, not
: An issue of the Tufts Umverslly ,~ satisfy,~ body s need for water.
• Diet &amp; Nutrition Letter listed the :). . Water is one substance that
: following examples of water's . most of us ·don't have to worry
: essential role:
l about · ge.lting too much of. A
· • carries oxygen and nulrients , healthy p_c rson's kidneys are
A work shop was held at the
: throughout" the body via the blood!,,,exaemely- ~~ficie~t at _eliminating Chester United Methodist Church
: and lymphatic srstems .
.
&lt;~~g ~xcess ~~.. So ~hen. m dOubt, f~I by the Chester Garden Club for
.· • plays a majOr pert m the regu_· ~~- YOUl, aiass
~nnk It do_wn. Ir s members to create decomtive fans.
•:Iation of body temperature throug~ -gQod for _you, mexp~nstvc and
Bette Lou Dean, Edna Wood,
:. the cooling effecfof the evapora~ : COI!)Pl~y free ~f ~al~f!es.
Eleanor Knight and Maurita Miller
Famtly Medicmc IS a weekly completed four large fans which
·.lion of sweat
:- • makes posslb~e removal of , column. To.submit questions, write were taken ~or J\'e aqction to ti!e
; wastes in Uiiile'lih!t.sweat ·· ·' • ''i··lo' 1oluf"O.;?N,olf, D.O. ;'Ohi~ Uni~ · annual convention of the Oh10
•: •protects the unborn
'. vcrsity College of Osteopathic Association of Garden Clubs at
' ' Medicme, Grosvene»" Hall, Athens,
; • lubricates the joints •
•provides the medium for the Ohio 45701.

"f;

:,Vater:

Troy and Laura (Hawthorne)
Guthne, Virginia Beac h, Va.,
announce the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Mallory Hope, on
May 23 at Sentara Norfollc Geneml
Hospital, Norfollc. Va.
The infant weighed six pounds
and four ounces and was 20 inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are Dar. rell and Norma Hawthorne,
Chester.
Paternal grandJlarents are Donald and Pamela (Robin) Guthrie,
Coolville, and Darlene (Cookie)
Cassady, Grove City. Paternal great
grandparents are Gerald and Juanita Guthrie, Coolville, and Audrey
Torrence and the late Roland Torrence, Tuppers Plains.
Paternal great-great grandparents are Ethel Guthrie and the late
-Emerson Guthrie, Coolville, and

For the program, Peggy Moore
had "Favorite Perennials." She stated many people prefer perennials
because they take less care when
placed in a well drained, spacious
location. They should be fertilized
every few months and approximately every three years or more,
divided. Favorites mentioned were
peonies, iris and lilies. Mts. Moore
had a game unscrambling names of
favorite perennials. Winners with
the most names listed were Evelyn
· Hollon and Doris Grueser.
For show and tell, Heidi -Elber~
feld had a large lichen which her
husband had dried and painted with
a nature scene for their wedding
anniversary.
Janet Theiss had the arrangement of the month using miniature
pink roses in a basket she had
made.
Refreshments were served at the
close of the meeting by the hostess.
Kathryn Miller won the door prize.

MALLORY GUTHRIE
Bertha and Veri Tuttle, Tuppers
Plains.

Women s retreat Sept. 13 ' 14

lB.

Buy One 12 Oz. Bag Armour

COOKED HAM

ilid

PURESWEET SUGAR
.------,

-

:
Community Calendar lttllis
:. appear tWo clays belort _
I ii evelit
~ and ..the day or that eve~t. ,lft.ma
~ must be received weD in advaii~e
~- to assure publication in the cal·
• endar.
•
WEDNESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The 1991
, Meigs Marauder Volleyball Camp
will be held through Friday at
· Meigs High School, 9 a.m. to noon
each day. All area gids entering
grades 7-12 are eligible to ~ci: 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 enter• ing, and phone number is .needed
: when regtstering.

I
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BAG

$

Calf sets record
on electric total
artificial heart

Community calendar

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e\

4 LB.

theme "Molded by the Master"
with special speaker Marla Creamer,Xenia.
For the program each had a
reading, a game or a contest the
share with the others.
The next meeting will be Aug. I
with Evelyn Thoma as the hostess.
The Bible word wiD be "neighbor''
and Ida Murphy will have the pro.
gram.
Others present were Peggy Bole,
Ida Murphy, Kathryn Johnson, Car- ····
rie Wears, Dorothy Reeves and
Marjorie Purtell.

CGC holds workshop

F

:
•
;
;
·
·
:
•
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t

There were 424 work stoppages
(strik~s), each Involving 1,000 work·
ers or more, in 1974,

,. . , ~ .,.. .

••
i'

PHOENIX (AP) - A lawyer
for former child television star
Danny Bonaduce says he's trying
to negotiati~g a plea bar~ain for _his
client, who IS charged w1th robbmg
and attacking a transvestite prostitute.
Bonaduce had been scheduled to
go on trial Monday. but Maricopa
County Superior Court Judge
Joseph Howe postponed the c~se
until Aug. 12. He also set a heanng
for Friday to consider a possible
change of plea.
Defense lawyer Richard Gierloff
said Bonaduce is eager to reach an
agreement because publicity has
already cost him his job. He was
fired last month as a disc jockey at
Phoenix radio station KKFR.
Bonaduce, 31, is a former cast
member of the 1970s television
series "The Partridge Family." He
is charged with assault, robbery
and fleeing police on March 31 .
A Philadelphia newspaper
reported Tuesday that Bonaduce
plans to start a new career as a
stand-up comedian.
"I know absolutely nothing
about doing stand-up, but that's
never stopped me before," Bonaduce told The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Bonaduce said he expects to be
the opening act Sept. 12 for fellow
"Partridge Family" alumnus
David Cassidy at the Valley Forge
Music Fair in Valley Forge, Pa. A
spokeswoman for the music fair
said discussions were taking place
with Cassidy, but there was no date
or contract.
PARIS (AP)- France honored
jazz trumpet maestro Miles ~avis
on Tuesday with one of 1ts htghest

•

Hospital guarantees emergency attention in 20 minutes, or it's free

People in the news
NEW YORK (AP) - Best-selling auth or Gay Talese has quit
Doubleday and taken his new book
to Alfred A. Knopf because he was
uncomfortable about being publi shed by a com pany where his
wife worked.
. " I saw the situation as a conflic t
of interest,'' Talese said.
"My wife. Nan , would hav e
been sitting in on meetings where
ihcy would have been discuss in g
how many books 10 print, the jacket and so on. It would have been
awkward for her and for me."
Nan Talese is a senior vice president of Doubleday. where she has
worked since 1988.
Her husband had been working
on " Unto the Sons," an account of
his family's migration from southem Italy to the United States, since
1983. He said he chose not to deal
with the conflict until he completed
the 700-page manuscript this year
because he thought the negotiations
would be a distraction.
He has signed a three-book contract with Knopf, negotiated by his
agent Lynn Nesbitt.
The president of Knopf, Sonny
Mehta , sa id after he was
approached by Nesbitt, he read
"Unto the Sons." He called it
" quite wonderful ... the book that
Gay was born to write."

·-

Wednesday, July 17, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--6-The Dally Sentinel

..... ,loti.

•
:
'
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:

will-have Ill ic.c cream social on
ll a.m. !O 7 p.m.
· tiFc ,will be ~om~ac!e 'CC1 c~.
pii!ll;,c&amp;kes, saildwiches, saiadS, etc.
En~e~t will be provided by
1be New City Band at I p.m.· and
the Midnight Cloggers at 5:30p.m.
POMEROY. There will be a
tea for all retired teachers on Saturday fro J-4 p.m. at the Grace Episcopal Church hosted by the Meigs
County Retired Teachers Associalion. Members are to bring cookies.
'

Slitlirda1. friim

HERSHEY, Pa. (AP)- A calf
named Holly set a record Tuesday
for surviving on an elecbic artificial hean, researchers said.
The calf has lived 224 days on
the device , which is designed to
serve as a permanent replacement
for some 400 diseased human
hearts a year, said Penn State
researcher Gerson Rosenberg.
The calfs longevity "is an indicati9n that the devices could paten1
,
tially last two years in patients,"
MIDDLEPORT • There will be Rosenberg said at the university's
fre~· tennis clinic at General Milton S. Hershey Medical ~enter.
Hartinger Park in Middleport on
Holly beat the mark setm 1983
Saturday. Sha~n Baker_, w!"' ~- the ' ~X an~thcr Pe~~ State calf ~ed
instructor .and triterestell mdivtdu- ' E.T. -;-for ~Iectnc Total.
a1s may sign up for the lessons at · . Holly shearttsabout30_pereent
that time Times are 11:30-12:30, . hghter than the one used m E.T.,
beginners~ and 1-2 p.m., advanced. ''about the s!~e of an enlarged
POMEROY.- A public m~ling
human heart, Rosenberg sa1d.
HENDERSON _ The Gallia _ Researchers said they don't know
will be held at 5:30p.m. in the
Riverboat Room of the Meigs Twirlers Square Dance Club will , how much long_er Holly w1ll hve
County Public Library for dis· hold a dance Saturday from 8-11 because the devtce does not pump
placed residents and concerned citi- p,m. at the Henderson Community , eno~gh blood to allow for the anizens regarding the Hobson land- Center. Bill Skidmore will be the _mal s growth. . .
d
1
slide. Representatives from the ealler
Penn State scientists are eveoffices of Senator Jan . Michael
·
•· oping an eve~ smaller device\ one
Long, SUite Representative Miry
that could fit m a human, he wd.
Abel, the Ohio Department of 11 . POME~OY - Recycle J?ay at ·
SUB-struck
Development and ·the state .and(•}Krogers tn Pomeroy wtll be ,
local Emergency Manage men ' observed.Saturday frol1'1 9 a.m, to ·• Almost all ofthe more than 600,000
Agency wiD be on hand.
~noon. Items accepted i~clude alu- cases of non-melanoma skin cancer
·~~niinum, glass: cardboard, newsp~- developed each year in the United
THURSDAY
.;pen (tied in bundles) and plas~tc States are considered to be sun-relatPOMEROY - 1be Meigs Coun- ' JUJS- Major appliances are s!III ed. Such exposure is a major factor in
ty Democrat Executive Committee bemg recycled at the Litter Control the de~elopment of melanoma. a_nd
wiD meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday at · Office on Union Avenue.
..
~he mc1dence mcreases for those hY·
the Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
·
mg near the equat~r.

4:0°/o OFF
LADIES ·SHORTS.AND TOPS
',,

40.0/o OFF aovs AND GIRLs
.

.

'

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Man sets self on fire

Tractor pull
winners named

MONROE, Wis. (AP) - A
despondent man who was drinking
set himself on fire, then burst into a
tavern where horrified patrons and
the owner extinguished the flames,
police said.

Winners of the kiddie tractor
pull held during the Fourth of July
festivities in Racine were Jeremey
Roush Macy Rees and Allen
Moore', first class; and Willy
Collins, Gregson Davis and Joe
Manuel, second class.
Trophies for the winners were
furnished by Dr. Douglas Hunter,
J.D. Drilling, Roses' Excavating,
Eber's Gulf, Cross' Store and
Sonya's Country Kitchen.

The 21 -year-old man doused
himself with gasoline and threatened to set himself on fire with a
lighter outside the bar early Tuesday. said police Capt. Tom Ranum.
A witness was trying to stop
him when a spark from the lighter
ignited the gasoline and he ran into
the tavern, Ranum said.
The man was taken to a hospital
in critical condition with burns
over 80 percent of his body,

Ranum said.
The police did not release the

manlsnamc.

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

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

627 3rd Ave., GaUipolis
PH. 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

-

REJOICING LIFE
ELEMIN,.ARY CHRIS,.IAN SCHOOL
GRADES: Kindergarten thru 6th Grade
STATE REGISTERED
MINta all atate minlmWII atandardL

TUJnONFEEt
GRADES 1 THROUGH 61 $1,100 per year
PER MONTH BASISr
.
~
$110 per student· Drlt child ollamlly .
$88 second child ol·landly · ·20% oil tuition
Sss third child ollamlly • so% on

1991-tz Book Fees

AND SUMMER TOPS
.

, PREPARING IllS PUMPKINS- Cody Dill, age four and a half,
Long Bottom, is preparing for the pumpkin contest to be held during the Racine Fall Festival on Oct. 4 and 5. Dill's advice to others
• ''Let the competition beware." There will also be a watermelon
eating contest and entertainment by several gospel groups, country
music groups and clogging groups.

KINDERGARTENr $60 per student· per year
PER MONTH BASIS1
$60 per student • llrlt child ollamlly

'

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Kings Island Inn on July I, 2 and 3
by Mrs. Dean.
Mrs. Dean also entered the convention flower show winning two.
blue ribbons and a "Best of Show"
award.
Altar roses at the Trinity Church
were placed by Pat Holter .during
June. She also provided roses for
fathers of the congregation on
Father's Day, which were given by
the children following the children 's sermon.
The next meeting will be held
Aug. 7 at the home of Dorothy
Karr. Virginia Chadwell will give a
demonstration "Treasures for Her
Table."

Slso.oo Grades 1• 6

'

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$ffs.oo Kindergarten
'

llectstratlon u Testlne Fees
Rectmatlon Fee szs.oo
Teltlftc Fee Slo.oo

. 'r,

For more lnlonnau,n, tree broehure and manual,
Stempa 8nd vm: COUpc)i!~ Acceptlld I Not Rujlontlbll for Typographical 'or Pictor!lll Errore.

·- --· ·--------------r--· --"" -·· - --

-

... --· ........

MIDDLEPORT

·• ·

I

Wl'lte or calla

DJ N.lecond'

. • )pdd1ep0rt, OH. 45160

�. . . .......... ~ · ~···· • • ·~· ..... ,

-------·---- -------.
..

·-·--•-P
+

·-·· 4 - ---·- - ~~-----~--· ·

·«

.. .....

"'

j

·- - ,_, -·- ·-•--·--·-----••••••

Wednesday, July 17, 1991
Page--8-The Daily Senune1

VVeanesoay, July 17, 1991

Rival evangelists square off in court
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Televangelist Jimmy Swaggart is a jealous liar who spread rumors to
desiJOy a rival preacher's growing
ministry, the rival's lawyer charged
Tuesday.
In response, Swaggart's lawyer,
Phillip Wittman, uied to poruay
evangelist Marvin Gorman as a
long-time womanizer who sued
Swaggan for $90 million in damages because his ministry was in
financiaiiJOuble.
Gorman, 58, filed the defamation lawsuit in 1987, claiming
Swaggan and others conspired to
destroy his New Orleans-based
television ministry in 1986 by

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

falsely accusing him of adulterous member of the Mafia.
affairs.
In reality, Lundy said, Gorman
The tables were turned in 1988, was a hard-working, humble
when Gorman helped topple Swag- preacher who in 1985 led "probagar!, 56, by having photographs bl ~ one of the most popular Assemmade of the Baton Rouge evange- blies of God ministries in the
list with a prostitute. Swaggan later nation.··
tearfully confessed to an unspeciGorman oversaw the growth of
fied sin and was ousted from the a small New Orleans church from
Assemblies of God denomination I00 members in 1965 to more than
after refusing to step down from 6,000 in 1985, Lundy said. Gorman
the pulpit for a year.
was arranging financing for the
In the trial's opening arguments purchase of two television stations
Tuesday, Gorman attorney Hunter when Swaggart be~an spreading
Lundy told the jury Swaggart rumors that ruined his minislry, the
helped spread rumors that Gorman lawyer said.
had hundreds of affairs, fathered
Witunan countered with accusaillegitimate children and was a tions against Gorman.

Bishops sidestep decision on whether
homosexuals should be priests
PHOENIX (AI&gt;) - The bishops
of the Episcopal Church have
sidestepped the issue of whether
ho~osexuals can become priests,
saymg that to take a position now
would tear the church apan.
Instead, the bishops adopted a
vaguely worded compromise at
their c.onvention Monday that
leaves mtact the denomination's
current, sometimes unheeded, policy. barring the ordination of gay
pnests.
The compromise also says that
"sexual expression is appropriate

only" within heterosexual marriage, but acknowledges that a
"discontinuity" exists between
that position and the lifestyles of
many church members.
The bishops also asked that the
issues be studied and reported back
on at the group's next convention.
"It was the best way we lcnew
to get through our dilemma without
falling on our own sword," Bishop
Frank K. Allan of Atlanta said of
the action taken after four hours of
debate.
"We are a house divided," said

·

Register To Win A Trip To

The 1991 Charleston, wv
Stf!rnwheel Regatta*
sweepstakes Package For 2 Includes:
•Hotel Accommodations For 2 Nights
•A Ride on A sternwneeler
•VIP seating &amp; Backstage Passes To
The Saturday Kroger Concert.
• one TriP To Be Given Away At Each Participating Kroger store
No purchase
. You neea not be present to win Kroger
employees
families are not eligible to participate.

U.S. Grade~A~~=­

Perdue
Whole Fryers
Wisk Liquid
Laundry Detergent
Gallon

6.4-oz. Tube

18

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Skim Milk
GaUon

88

CAFFEINE FREE

oi~rEciile

or

COLA CLASSIC,
COKE.

Coca Cola Classic

( California
Head Lettuce
Each

18

REGI,JLARLY
LB. $3.99

'

Kroger
Tortilla Chips
11-12-u.

CHEESE POPCORN OR PUFFS,
PARTY OR THIN TWIST PRETZELS

p•••••KROGER COUPON••••••

$2°0

Big Value
Corn ·Chips

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General Merchandise
Purchase Of $10.01 Or More

9-16-oz.

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LIMIT ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER

1DF

I

'.

FIRST BILATERAL - Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev1 lef't, poses for pictures with
French President Francois Mitterrand at the

French president's hotel in London Wednesday
morning. This is the rll'st of a series of meetings
by Gorbacbev with the leaders of the G-7. (AP)

Gorbachev aid request provides
finale for Western Economic Summit
LONDON (AP) - Mikhail
Gorbachev came knocking on the
door of Western capitalism today
as President Bush and America's
rich allies wrapped up a summit
offering limited aid to the beleaguered Soviet Union.
In a dramatic finale to the 17th
annual economic summit of industrialized powers, a hopeful Gorbachev was appealing in person for
assistance from Bush and the leaders of Britain, France, Germany,
Italy, Canada and Japan.
A final communique approved
by the Group of Seven leaders
expressed concern about the deterioration of the Soviet economy, saying that it creates severe hardship
for all the countries of Central and
Eastern Europe.
"We support the moves toward
political and economic transformation in the Soviet Union and are
ready to assist the ·integration of the
Soviet Union into the world economy,'' the document said.
Before seeing the group as a
whole, Gorbachev was lobbying
leaders one-on-one. First, he met
over breakfast with French President Francois Mitterrand, who is
sympathetic to Gorbachev' s hopes
for large-scale assistance.
Next on Gorbachev's appointment calendar were Japanese Prime
Minister Toshiki Kaifu and, later,
BusR. Both Bush and Kaifu oppose
a big bailout.
Economic problems aside, Bush
and Gorbachev also faced the challenge of concluding a nuclear-

KINGS MILLS, Ohio (AP)A federal agency will levy a
$25,000 fine against Kin~s Island
Amusement Park stemmmg from
the electrocution deaths of two
men, according to news reports.
"I don't want to go imo details
about what we have told them until
I get that information out to them,"
William Murphy, Occupational
Safety and Health Adminislfation
regional director in Cincinnati, told
WLWT-TV Tuesday.
Two other Cincinnati television
stations, WCPO and WKRC, said
OSHA planned a news conference
this morning.
WLWT quoted a source it did
not identify as saying that the fine
stems from a June 9 accident in
which a park employee and another
man died in a park pond.
Kings Island security guard Darrell Robertson, 20, of Hamilton,
and William Haithcoat Jr., 21, of
Oakley, were uying to rescue Timothy Binning of Cincinnati, who
had fallen imo a pond next to the
park's beer garden.
The accident was caused when
the men touched the water and
were shocked by a faulty aerator
pump in the pond.
Binning suffered an electrical
shock but survived.
OSHA's investigation found
that the circuit to the pump was not
adequately grounded. The ~rd ~at
powered the pump was miSSing Its
ground prong and the circuit breaker was set to trip at a higher amperage than it should have been,
OSHA said.

DOWNING CHILD1
MUl~N MUSSER-'

INSUIANC • .·
111 S.ollll St.,
Pol~roy

YOUIIIIDEPEN,an
AGENTS

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In tho Matter of the
Foreclosure of Uena For
Dtllnquent Land Taxes by
Action In REM
Case No. 91 DLT 12
HOWARD E. FRANK

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

' IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
.
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
In the Matter of tho

In the Matter of the
Foreclosure of Uens For
Delinquent Land Taxes bv

Action In REM

vs.

Treasurer of Meigs County.
Ohio filed a complaint in the
Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Ohio. at Pomeroy, for the foreclosure of
liens for delinquent taxes,
••••sments, charges, penalties, and interest against

nalties, and interest against
certain real property situated in such county, as de-

scribed in that complaint.

The object of the action is

to obtain from the Court a
judgment foreclosing ttle
tax. liens against such real
estate and ordering tha sale
of such real estate for the sa -

tlllfoctlon of the tax Ilona on
lt.

Such action it brought

Such action is brought ogalnlt the real property
against the real property only and no poraonal judgonly snd no personal judg- ment shall be entered in if

CASE NUMBER:
91 DLT12
NAME OF LAST KNOWN
LAND OWNERS:
Ruth Powell, at al
STREET ADDRESS OF
LAND:
Trouble Creek Road
PERMANENT PARCEL
NUMBERS:
07-00666.000
DESCRIPTION OF PAR CELS SET FORTH IN MASTER LIST: Sect. 20 (640)
UNO. 1/10 OF NE OF NW
•;. 49.60 4.96 A.
AMOUNT DELINQUENT:
'619.37
LEGAL DESCRIPTION:
Acomplete legal description
may be found at tho Meigs
County Recorder'• Office In
dood book Volume 169,
Pogo 211 .

If pursuant to the action in
the parcel it sold, the 11le
shall not affect or extinguillh
any lien or encumbrance
with respect to the parcel
other than the
lien for
land taxes. aSIISIIR'IAnh
charges. interest and penal·

If pursuant to ttle action in
the parcel Ia sold, the sale
shall not affect or extinguish
any lien or encumbranc'l
with respect to the parcel
other than the
lien for
land taxes. asaessments.
charges, interest. and penal·

pursuant to the action the
property is sold for an
amount ttlat is less than ttle
amount of the delinquent
taxea, 1188Saments, charges, penalties, and interest
again It it, the Court, in sepa ·
rate order, may enter 1 deficiency judgment against ttle
owner of record of a parcel
for the amount of the difference; if that owner of record
Ia a corporation, the Court
may enter the deficiency
judgment against the stock·

holder holding a majority of

the corponition'a stock.

Special of the Week!

rc· SHRIMP

11

number of each parcel in-

in the aaeociatad delinqt.~ent
tracta; a atltamant of ttle
amount of the taxes, asaeaa·
menta. charges. penalties.
and interest due and unpaid
on the parcel; and the name

and addreu of tho last

known owner of the parcel

•• they appear on tho general taX list. are as follows:

clo•d and in utisfaction of
w~ich t~e property ia sold.
All other I ten• and encumbrencea with respect to the
parcel shall survive the sale.
Any person owning or
claiming any right title, or interest in, or lien upon, any

WITH FRIES••• $2.24

parcel of real property above

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

........

"At The End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

~;···...

~\

listed may file an "answer in
such action setting forth the
natura and amount of interest owned or claimed and
any defense or objection to
the foreclosure . Such an swer shall be filed in the office of the undersigned Clerk
of the Court. and a copy of

tho answer shall bo sorvtld

on the Prosecuting Attor-

_Sometfiing (jootf's Jl{ways CooK.fng Jlt

I MASON FAMILY
RESTAURANT
LQ~;aled

on Rt 33 beside Masoo Exxon and Mason Motel, Mason,

wv

SUr\!Jay thru Thursday, 6:30 arTJ.-IP pm; Friday &amp; Saturday, 6:30 am-11 pm

HQMESTYLE LUNCH SPECIALS
Monday Friday, 11 a .m. to 3 p.m.

.MQNbAY - BBO with French Fries, Soup
TUESDAX -Chicken Cacciatora with Soup &amp; Salad Bar
WEDNESDAY- Turkey Manhattan
with,Soup &amp; Salad Bar

IHURiDAY- Roast-Beef
. Manhattan, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
.

FRIDAY ;_Rsh Dinner, Soup &amp; Salad Bar
'

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ney, on or before the 13th
doy of August. 1991.
If no answer ia filed with
respect to a parcel listed in
the complaint, on or before
the date specified as the last
day for filing an anawer. a

judgment of foreclooure will
bo taken by default I I to that
parcel. This judgment shell
apply to any parcel •• to
terest. and the costa in·
curred in the foreclosure
proceeding, which are due
and unpaid.
At any time prior to the filing of any entry of-confirmation of sale,' · any owner or

John Lewis, Jr .

Earl 0 . Cowan

County Recorder ' s Office in
deed book Volume 168.

Page 184.

lienholder of, or other oar-

cel listed In the complaint
moy redHm t~e parcel by
tendering to the treasurer
the amount of taxea,
manta, chargee, penalties,
and intereat due and unpaid

••••a-

manta, chorget, perieltieo,

and Interest due and unpaid

ment shall be entered in if
pursuant to the action the
property Ia told for an
amount that is lea• then the
amount of the delinquent
taxes, asieument1, char -

goa, penalties. and Interest

again at it, the Court; in aepe rate order, may enter a defi -

ciency judgment against tho

owner of record o·t a parcel
for the amount of the differ ence; if that owner of record
it a corporation, the Court
may enter the deficiency
judgment against the stock -

holder holding • majority of

the corporation' a atock.
The permanent parcel

number of each parcel Included In ouch action: tho
lull street address of.tho parcal. if available; a description of the parcel as let forth
in the associated delinquent
tracts; a statement of the
amount of the tax ea. a a•••menta, . charges, penaltie1,
and interest due and unpaid
on the parcel; and the name

and addre11 of tho loll

known owner of the parcel

os they appear on tho ge-

neral tall list. are as follows:

County Recorder's Office in

deed book Volumo 168,
Page 440.

If pursuant to the action in
the parcel is sold, the aale
shall not affect or extinguiah
any lien or .encumbrance
with respect to the parcel

other than tho ·lien for

land taxes, ••••aments.
charges, interest. and penalties for which the lien isforecloaed and in aatiafaction of

which tho property Is sold.

All other liens and encumbrancea with reapect to the
parcel shall surVive the ule.
Any person owning or

clelmlng any right title, or In-

terest in, or lien upon, anv

parcel of real property above

listed may file an answer in
such action setting forth the ·
natura and amount of interest owned or claimed and
anv defense or objection to
the foreclosure. Such antwer ahall be filed in the of·
fice of the undersigned Chute

of tho Coun. and a copy of

the answer ahall be served
on the Proaecuting Attor-

ney, on or before tho 13th
day of August. 1991 .

If no answer is filed with
respect to. a parcel listed in
the compltint. on or before
the date specified aa the laat
day for filing an answer, a
judgment of forecloaure will

the
taxes, auesaments.
charges. penalties. and interest. and the costs incurred in the forecloaura
proceeding, whictl are due
and unpaid .
At any time prior to the fil·
ing of any entry of confirma tion of sale, any owner or
lienholder of, or other per son with an interest in, 1 par·

the
taxe1. ••••tmanta,
charges. panaltlea, and interest. and the costa incurTed in the foreclosure
proceeding. which are due
. "
and unpaid.
At any tlmo prior 10 the Ill·

may redeem the parcel bv
tendering to the treasurer
the amount of texes', II Mil·
menta. charges, penalties.
and interett due and unpaid
on the parcel, together with
all cotta incurred in the pro·

may redHm the parcel by
tendering to the treasurer
the amount of taxea, aa. . ..
menta. chargea, penaltie"e,
and Interest due ind unpaid

lng of any entry of confirm a.

tion of sale, any owner or

lienholder of, or other par"'" with an lntereotln. a pareel listed in the complaint cel listed In the camplalnt

son with an interest in. 1 par-

the amount Of taKes. • • - •

Such action Ia brought
against tho real property
only and no paroonal judg-

bo taken by dofaultuto that
parcel. This judgment shall parcel. This judgment shall
applv to any parcel as to spply to any porcel •• to
which a satilfaction
of which • utlllftctlon
of

At any time prior to the fil·
lng of any entry of con firma·
tion of 11le, any owner or

lienholder of. or other porIOn with an interea11n, a parcal listed In the complaint
mov rodHI:ll the percel by
tendarlng to tha treasurer

tisfaction of tho tax llano on

II .

STREET ADDRESS OF
LAND:
State Route 33, Pomeroy,
Ohio 46769
PERMANENT PARCEL
NUMBERS:
01 -00163.000,
DESCRIPTION OF PAR CELS SET FORTH IN MASTER LIST: Sect. 22 NE
COR. OF 16A .60A.
AMOUNT DELINQUENT:
'76.06
LEGAL DESCRIPTION:
A complete legal description Acomplete legal description
may bo found at tho Meigs msy be found at the Meigs

and unpaid.

on tho parcel, together with . on the parcel, together with
all coats inourred In the P!O' oil ooo11 lncurr~ . in the proceedlng lnatltutod agalnot . ceedlng lnltltullld' ogeinlt
tho parcel under · HCtlon the parcel under aectlon
6721.18 of the ReYIMd 6721.18 of the Revll8d
Coda.
C~da .
Larry E. Spencer.
Larry E. Spencer.
Clerk of Court.
. Clerk of Court.
Melgo County. Ohio
Mtlgt County, Ohio
(7) 17, 24. 31, 3tc
(7)17, 24, 31, 3tc

ceodlng instituted against
the parcel under section
5721 .18 of the Reviaed
Code.
Larry E. Spencer.
Clerk of Court,
Mtiga Countv. Ohio
(7) 17, 24, 31 , 3tc

on the parcel, togetl!er with
111 co111 lncul'nld'ln the proceeding .lnatltutod logalnlt
1ha parcat ,. under 1• aection
6721.18 of tho ReviMd
Code.
·
Larry E. Spencer,
Cltrk of Court,
Melgi County, Ohio
17117.24,:11. 3tc "

((Cl,ASSIP,Im iDS •ure to gat taeuiia)):·
'

·' '

Treasurer of Meigs County ,
Ohio flied a complaint in the
Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, at Pomeroy, for the foreclosure of
liens for delinquent tu:es,
assessments, chargea, pe naiUes, and interest against
certain real property aitY·
a ted in such county. as described in that complaint
The object of the action is
to obtain from the Court a
judgment forecloaing tha
tax Iiana against auch real
estate and ordering the aale
of auch real elteta for the sa-

STREET ADDRESS OF
LAND:
Sandy De•ert Rood
PERMANENT PARCEL
NUMBERS:
07-00381.000.
07-00382 .000.
OESCR IPTION OF PAR CELS SET FORTH IN MAS TER LIST: Sect. 8 mid. on s
line of nw 'I• of rd . .50 A.
AMOUNT DELINQUENT:
'405.16
LEGAL DESCRIPTION:

the
taxea. aaaea.-nenta.
charge&amp;, penalties. and interest, and the costs in currad in the foreclosure
proceeding, which are dua

charges. penalties. and in-

DEFENDANT
CASE NO. 91 OLT 05
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE
PURSUANT TO SECTION
6721 .18 of the Ohio
REVISED CODE

CASE NUMBER:
CASE NUMBER :
. 91 DLT06
91 DLT 06
NAME OF LAST KNOWN NAME OF LAST KNOWN
LAND OWNERS:
LAND OWNERS:

apply to any parcel as to
which a utiafaction of

which a aatilfaction
of
the
taxes. as••sment1.

No Address Available

Treasurer of Meigs County ,
Ohio filed a complaint in the
Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, at Po meroy. for the foreclosure of
liens for delinquent taxes.
assessments. charges, pe ·
nalties, and interest against
certain reel property situ ·
ated in such county. es de·
scribed in that complaint .
The object of 1he action is
to obtain from the Court a
judgment foreclosing the
tax liens against such real
estate and ordering the aale
of sue~ real estate for the sa·
tisfaction of the tax liens on
it .
Sue~ action is brought
against the real property
only and no personal judg ·
ment shall be entered in if
purauant to the action the
ia sold for an
property
amount that is lass then the
amount of the delinquent
ta~~:es. assessments. char·
ges. penalties. and interest
against it, the Court, in sepa ·
rate order, may enter a deficiency judgment against the
owner of record of a parcel
for the amount of the difference; if that owner of record
is a corporation. the Court
may enter the deficiency
judgment against the stock·
holder holding a majoritv of
the corporation ' s stock .
The permanent parcel
number of each parcel included in such action; the
full street address of the parcel. if avBilable; a description of the parcel as set forth
in the aaaociated delinquent
tracts; a statement of the
amount of the ta"es, asaess·
ments, charges, penalties,
and interest due and unpaid
on the parcel; and the name
and address of t~e last
known owner of the parcel
as they appear on the general tax list. are as follows:

If pursuant to the action in
the parcel is sold, the sale
shall not affect or extinguish
any lien or encumbrance
with respect to the parcel
other than the
lien for
land tues, assessments.
tloa for which tho lien is fore- charges. interest, and penal·
clo•d and in satisfaction of ties for which the lien is forawhich the property is sold .· clo!l8d and in satisfaction of
All other liens and ancumbr - which the property is sold .
ancea with respect to the All other Iiana and encumbr parcel shall survive the sale. ances wit~ respect to the
Any person owning or parcel shall survive the sale.
Any person owning or
claiming any right title, or in terest in, or lien upon. any claiming any right title. or in ·
parcel of real property above terest in, or lien upon, any
litted may file an answer in parcel of real property above
ouch action setting forth tho listed may file an answer in
nature and amount of inter· such action setting forth the
eat owned or claimed and nature and amount of inter·
any defanaa or objection to est owned or claimed and
the foreclosure. Such an - any defense or objection to
twer shall be filed in the of- the foreclosure . Such an flee of the undersigned Clerk swer shall be filed in the of of the Coun, and a copy of fice of the undersigned Clerk
the answer shall be served of the Court. and a copy of
the answer shall be served
on the Prosecuting Attorney, on or before tho 13th on the Prosecuting Attor ·
nev. on or before the 13th
day of August. 1991 .
If no anawer ia filed with day of August. 1991 .
If no answer is filed with
respect to ' parcet listed in
the complaint, on or before respect to a parcel listed in
the date specified as the last the complaint, on or before
day for filing an answer, a the date specified as the last
judgment of foreclooure will day for filing an answer, a
be ukan by default as to that judgment of foreclosure will
porcel. This judgment shall be taken by default as to that

tioo for which tho lien 11 fore-

1.54

parcel

cluded In such action; tho
full1treot oddreuofthe parcel, If avollablo: a description of tho parcel as oot forth

~~·

vs .

EARL 0 . COWAN

NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND
TAXES. BY ACTION IN
REM BY THE
COUNTY TREASURER.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Public notice is httrnhv ni Public notice is horebv a Ivon that on tho 21st day of van that on the 2 ht day of
June. 1991. the County Juno. 1991 , the County

••••aments. chergea. pe-

The parmonont

Pomeroy. Ohio 46769
PLAINTIFF

NOTIC.E OF
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND
TAXES, BY ACTION IN
REM BY THE
COUNTY TREASURER.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

liens for delinquent taxes,

weapons treat~_clearing the way has undertaken in the Soviel
ment shall be entered in H
for a superpolr"r summit. They Union."
pursuant to the action the
also were likely to discuss staging a
The Soviets were as sured of property
ia sold for an
Mideast peace conference for Israel being granted observer status in the amount that is lass than the
and its Arab neighbors.
World Bank and International amount of the delinquent
Gorbachev told Mitterrand that Monetary Fund, entiUing Moscow taxes, aaaeaamenta, charges, penalties, and interest
the Soviet Union doesn't want its to expert technical assistance for its again
It it, the Court, in aepa·
reform efforts to be a burden on economic overhaul.
rate order, may enter 1 defi·
The pa ckage was to contain ciency judgment against the
other nations. But he suggested that
Western help could allow him to details when it was to be released owner of record of a parcel
for the amount of the differmake progress faster, according to at an evening news conference by ence;
if that owner of record
Philippe Morel, a diplomatic advi- Gorbachev and British Prime Min - is a corporation, the Court
ister John Major.
sor to Mitterrand.
may enter the deficiency
One of Gorbachcv's advisers,
Today's appointment with Gor- judgment against the atockholder holding a majority of
Stephan Sitaryan, said the Soviets bachcv transform ed the Group of the
corporation's stock.
hoped for creation of an interna- Seven meeting into the world's
The permanent parcel
tionally backed currency stabiliza- mightiest political gathering number of each parcel inbringing together the two military cluded in ouch action; the
tion fund for the ruble.
fullstreotoddreuoflhe parIntent on sparing Gorbachev superpowers and leaders of the cel.
if available; a deacrip·
political embarrassment in his world's largest economies.
tion of the parcel as •t forth
quest for assistance, Bush promised
It also overshadowed Western in the auociated delinquent
that the Soviet leader would not go di sputes over interest rates, eco- tracts; a statement of the
amount of thetaxea, 111811·
home empty-handed.
nomic growth and global trade.
menta. charge•. penaltiea,
Gorbachev said in advance that
In the summit-closing commu- and interest due and unpaid
the meeting "may mark a turning nique, the leaders agreed on the on the parcel; and the name
point" in his campaign to save his shared economic objectives of "a and addreu of the la1t
owner of the parcel
economy.
suslaincd recovery and price slabil- known
01 they appear on tho gaYet, it appeared almost certain ity." They reiterated past promises neral tax list. are 11 follows:
that Gorbachev would not get a lot to lower budget deficits. And they CASE NUMBER:
ofWestem cash.
called anew·upon all the nations of 91 DLT 08
NAME OF LAST KNOWN
Instead, leaders were stitching the world to resolve trade fights .
LAND OWNERS:
together a package offering training
Over the opposition of Soviet George W. Lewis
and advice for energy production, hardliners worried about Russian STREET ADDRESS OF
banking, uansportation and conver- pride, Gorbachev sought and won LAND:
Route 338
sion of defense induslfies to civil - an invilation to London to explain State
PERMANENT PARCEL
plans
for
transforming
his
failing
ian production.
NUMBERS:
Secrelary of State James A. economy into a Western-style free- 07-00380.000,
DESCRIPTION OF PAR Baker III said Gorbachev was not market system.
Soviet supporters have floalcd CELS SET FORTH IN MASseeking "cash grants." He said the
TER LIST: Sect. 9 SW comor
summ it partners were anxious to the idea of $25 billion to $35 bil- SA
assist "the very courageous reform lion a year for the Soviet Union in AMOUNT DELINQUENT:
'284.86
efforts that President Gorbachev a "grand bargain" to prevent a
LEGAL OESCR IPTION:
chaotic collapse of the counuy.
Acomplete lagal description
may bo found at tho Meigs
County Recorder's Office in
deed book Volume 82, Page
26.

HOWARD E. FRANK
Treasurer of Meigs County
Meigs County Court HouM

DEFENDANT
CASE NO. 91 DLT 06
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE
PURSUANT TO SECTION
5721 .18 of the Ohio
REVISED CODE

meroy, for the foreclosure of

ated in such county, 11 described in that complaint.
The object of the action Ia
to obtain from the Court a
judgment forecloaing the
tax Iiana against iuch reel
aatete and ordering the Ale
of such real aatate for the ua
tisfaction of the tax Ilene on
it.

Oollnquant Land Toxoo by
Action in REM

HOWARD E. FRANK

No Address Available

Ohio filed a complaint in the
Common Pleaa Court of
Meiga County, Ohio, at Po -

corlllin real property situ-

Foreclo1ure of Uen1 For

Treasurer of Meigs County
Meigs County Court Houl8

Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
PLAINTIFF
vs .
JOHN LEWIS. JR .

SDYIMG ·

MEIG$ CO"r(JY __
SINCE 11161

,_,

'

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
In the Matter of the

vs.

COUPoN GOOD SUN. JULY 1'-SAT. JULY 21. IBI •

•••••••••••••••••

Public Notice

GEORGE W. LEWIS
RUTH POWELL. ET AL
No Addreu Available
No Add;ou Available
DEFENDANT
DEFENDANT
CASE NO. 91 DLT 08
NOTICE OF
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE
FORECLOSURE
PURSUANT TO SECTION
PURSUANTTO SECTION
6721.18 of the Ohio
5721.18 of tho Ohio
REVISED CODE
REVISED CODE
NOTICE OF
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS FOR DELINQUENT LAND
FOR DELINQUENT LAND
TAXES. BY ACTION IN
TAXES, BY ACTION IN
REM BY THE
REM BY THE
COUNTY TREASURER.
COUNTY TREASURER,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Public notice Ia hereby gi Public notice is herebv at- ven that on tho 21st day of
van that on the 21st dey of Juno, 1991 , tho County
June. 1991. the County Treasurer of Meigs County,

OSHA may fine
amusement park

Crest
Toothpaste
'

~

Public Notice

HOWARD E. FRANK
Treasurer of Meigs County Treasurer of Meigs County
Meigs County Court Houoo Malga County Court Hou•
Pomeroy. Ohio 46789
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
PLAINTIFF
PLAINTIFF

sale m. He~ Kroger St~re, except as specifically noted in this ad. If we do run out of an
advert!sed Item, we ~ill offer you your choice of a comparable item. when available

11om purchased.

Public Notice

Delinquent Land Tuea by
Action In REM

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES NONE
•
SOLO TO DEALERS.
.
AIIVIIITIIID mM POliCY-Each of these advenised items is required to be raadily available for
~eflectmg the sa~ sav11ps or .a r~incheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised
~tem at the advertised prtce wrth1n 30 days. Onl~ one vendor coupon will be accepted per

Public Notice

Forecloaure of Uena For

Bishop Maurice M. Benitez of Dallas. "The whole church·is divided.
There are lots of cracks in the walls
and fragmentation among many
who are confused and in pain."
Retired Bishop Paul Moore Jr.
of New York said that if the bishops had ei ther flatly accepted or
rejected a church commission proposal allowing homosexuals as
priests and looking into establishing rituals for same-sex marriages,
"the church would lose hundreds
of thousands of people.''

COPYRIGHT 1991 - THE KROGER CO. ITEMS ANO
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, JULY 14, THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, JULY20, 1991, IN Pomeroy

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

.

..

I

I
,j

�...
,•

Page--10-The Dally Sentinel

1ll!t Dally Sentinel-Page-

Wednesday, July 17,1991 :·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·.•

\ •.

Classified

• •••

;.

. TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992 -2156

RATES

MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Days

Monthly

"RecttNti $ !&gt;0 diSCount lor otrtll!r.itllltn ,utv,m cc
··Free ads
G111ei1WiiiY and Found ad s ulllh!f 1 ~ wo•ds woll be

'

1

Card of Thanks

2

In Me mory

5

I !&gt;

41

Employment
Serv1ces
Clfl.~-~i.fi I'd /lfrl{f'.~ t'fll'f'r llrr•

Hd~~ y Ad ~

followitll{

• A cl,..; ~o;•hud .-. ,tv ~ n• su• n L'ltt 1Jio.~ t.:cl l 111 1 t.,: o ... ly s,:,, 1,., t.-1 l .:•
Ctr~l
clctSiilltud ti• '&gt; IJI.ty _ Bu :;. ltl c::.'&gt; Catd .mtllt.~Jdi noto c.::;. l
Will itbo ·•IJp t';tf "' lhll Pt Plc.l$illl l Rc tjt '&gt; ICI ollld the Gall !
pul•s D;uly Tuhu•w •e o~cl utHI ovw l B.o'oo hlJmc'&gt;

COPY DEADLIN E
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
W£0NF.SOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
tHIOAV PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

~

•

Area Cod e 614

2 00 PM WEDNESDAY

!

,

I

,.

BOARD

of Tru11tee1

1 card of Thanks

":: .

..
-

Tile Racine Vol. Fire
DepL - l d Ike to thank
the following bueln11141 lndlvklulla lor their
contribution• to 1111ble
l"'tlllr IU-IIIul July
4111: J.D. Drlllna;' Nltlonll
Gla I 011 Corp., Weld
Croaa Sona, Sonla'a
Country Khohen, Racine
Gun Club, Racine
American
Legion,
Wagoner Hardware,

'

Red Ripe Whole

Sweet Corn

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25 (

Watermelon

Ea.

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True Valul, lhnka ConaL

Co.,

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Sweet &amp; Juicy .

Gra es

Enjoy These
Crispy Flavorful
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lh

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McDanald'a, o.lry Valley,
Pleaaera, '!Win City
Machine Shop, Saara,
·.;• Subway, City Loan, Ken'a
Appliance,
T11fonl
llellty,
• Beneficial
Flna1101, Do-Ing Cllllda
Mullen Muaaer Ina.,
Davia-Quickel Ina., Crow

1 Crow, Jilt wa,_ Ina.,

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Fresh Home Grown

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s.Mce Centlr, Plzu Hut,

·~· ~

Egg Plant Green Beans
~
49~
..-,

Dave'a SMall Engine
Repelr, Super Amerlcl,
Home Entertainment
Cenllr, Rlvlrllde Moton,
Crow'a
Steakhouae,
Hood Family Sh-, J'a

Plums

Lb.

Cabbage

Peaches

Cenllr, Tile Pool ........

·- ·.,

California

Zucchini
~

Pomeroy Flower Shop,
Fabric Shop, Clerk'•
Jewelry, Bank One,
8wleher • Lohll, Gllllry
Heir Arta, Mlck'a Barber
Shop, Gllmoret; Brogan·
Werner Ina., Chap1111n'a
Sh-, Farmer• Bank,
AnderHna, Lambert Ina.,
Porter Uttle, Sh11ta I
Valley
Lent&amp;, Ohio
Plumbing, Steven L.
Slory, Atty., Powellll
Super Value, Pomeroy
Home I Auto., O'Dell
L.u.-., Exoalalor Salt
Worka, Pomeroy Food
Shop, JIR Sport Shop,
Valerena
Memorial
Hoapltel, Cleland Realty,
Gravely Tractor Salea,
Contlnully of Care,
Gaorva Buah, Ed lhll, Pat
O'Brian, Bill I Lillian

California

Cauliflower
Snow
White

¢
Each

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Food Club
Cottage Cheese

Split Frying
Chickens

i
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*II

,:'•...,.,..,_.
' '.
...

..

Public Notice

On The
GriD

the

SIGNS

All IUDS

Iring It tn

Boill s &amp; Mot oH tur S.th :
Auto Pafl 5 &amp; Ac ccm!Oun u=.
Aulo Rupo~"
Ci! mp•n!J EqultJilltl'lll
C.t mpltl!O 8o Mul or Hnlllll\'

Hous.uho ld Good!~
Spor1ing Goods
8 1 Home ltnp•ovtt•1HN1t s
82 Pl umUwg &amp; Ht!allllH
83 E ..Cillld iUIIJ
84 El e(;tr •cal &amp;. R trh•q• ~.t hun
85 Gm11.'fill H ,.uhuy .
86 M ob•lu Home Rtlpil"
87 Uph ols tmy

An1tquu1
M1sc Mer c h a nd•sc

BUilding Supphus
Pets tor Sale
Mus. cal lnsmun tlfli S
fru•ls &amp; Ve9t11ilblus
For Salt: ur Tra•l t!

by tick mo1tJ'lt~

8~~~!

•Sidewalks

Or We

I

Point Pleasant . 675-691 ~ ·

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or
985-3561
Acrooo Fro111 Peot OHico
217 I.
St•

PubliC Notice
eroy. Ohio, raHrves the
right to bid at this Hie, and
to withdrew the above collateral prior to sate. Further.
Tha Farmers 81nk and Saving• Company reserves the
right to reject any or·all bids

oubmltted.
Further, the above colla·
tarat will be sold in the condition it is in with no expresMd or implied warren·
ties given.

17117,18.19. 3tc

S.C.""
POMEIOT, 01110

NEW TBJS SEASON·· POOL

•Patios

Pick Up.

OPM TO Till: PUBLIC

•Driveways

•Slabs
1O"'o DISCOUNT TO
SENIOR CITIZENS
FREE ESTIMATES

PICIIIC IIJW.TD ud ITAQ&amp; hr Rent

Reunions - Get Togethcn - Parttca
n81DIIG

CAIIIJII a CoUIPitR POR REliT

6· 4· '91 ·1 mo.

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DOTTIE.S. TURNER. BROKER

may submit comments and/ or a meeting regarding any

MIDDLEPORT- Vine St.- An1ce area to live on.This home
could have 3 to 4 bedrooms. Al l room s are nice sized. Has
dishwasher, stove, refrigerator. disposal, and fueplace. What
more co uld you want. Sits on two lenced llat lots. Plenty ol
playroom for kids.
TAKE A LOOK AT $38,900.

draft action within 30 days
of the date indicated. "Action", a• uaed · above doea
not include receipt of e verified compleint. If significant
pub Iic intorelt oxilts, 1 pub·
lie meeting may be held. As

POMEROY- Laultl Cliff- Se1t1ngon a liltle less lhan I
acre oflevelland is thos3 bedroom house wilh an open stauway, lirepla ce, and maintenance free sid1ng
$23.000.

to any action. includinq receipt of ve1ified compleonll,
any person may obtain nottce of further action•. and
additional information. Unless otherwise provided in
notice of particular actions,
all communications .tlall be

CHEST£R- Sandridge- Want some acreage' Love on lhe
clean country au on lh1s noce 33 acre small farm, w1th some
tomber. free gas, 40x32 pole barn (could use as a 3 ca r gar·
age) . Also a lovely 3 bedroom. 2 balh hom e, wolh afinished
basemen! and patio. ALL THIS PRICED AT JUST 159,000

sent to:
Hearing Clerk,
OEPA, P.O. Box 1049, Col·
umbus, OH . 43266-0149
Ph. 16141 644-2115. Conau~ ORC Chap. 3746 end
OAC Chapo. 3746-47 and

RUTLAND - Salem St~eet - Somelhong lor Mom A spilt
level home with an open raosed hallway that has beautilul
oak railings. Hall of a cathedral ceihng goves th1s home analmosphere of roomines~ Has 3 bedrooms, alargebalh, uhloty
room. and a kolchen loaded woth cabinet~ Something for
Dad: Adelached 2'h car garage with aworkshop, a concrete
dr~veway, and mainlenance free sidi ng Somthong for the
kods: A 1.8 acre yard with a tree hcuse. ALL OF THIS FOR $47,900.

for requirements.

FINAL ISSUANCE OF NOTICE OF REGISTRATION:
Racine Hydroelectric:: Plant

P. 0 . Box 33B
Recine, OH.
Effective Date : 7f 1 2f 9 1
Appliecation
No. 0663000066 TOOl
171 17. 1tc

POMEROY - WHAT A VIEW!- Lounge on the sunroom and
en joy the sight sof the beautiful Ohoo RIVet . W1th th1s 3 bed ·
room home is also a huge living room with a lovelyslone f~re·
place. Has an equipped kotchen. part1al basemenl. and a
lenced backyard. Al so apaved driveway and two car carport
Don'l moss the two old g1gantic fascinalong trees.
YOU GOTIA TAKE A LOOK FOR '49,000.

Public Notice

SYRACUSE- Collqe St~eet- Hate pa1nlong your hou se '
II won't be necessary with this mainlenance free s1dong on
both lhe hou se and slorage buolding. The house has 3 bed ·
rooms, U·shaped kitchen, lull basemen!, and formal donong
room.
FOR THE LOW PRICE OF $34,500.
GRANT ST. -Middleport- Aonestory home with 5 rooms,
2·3 bedroom~ some new carpetingand some new plumbing.
lmmediale possession.
$8,500
RUTLAND-Nice lenced backyard and a2story Irame home
wilh 41o 5 bedrooms, dining room, and b1g hvong room, car·
port, playhouse, and storage building. Assumableloan avail·
able with $3 000 down payment and assume the loan of
$24.441.99. The monthly payment os $3 10.00 which includes principal, interest, taxes, and onsurance. there is 24
yrs. lef1 to pay and the inlerest rate is 12.5%.

Help Wanted

·

ROOFING

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

6-6-'91

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.

FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION - Unusual · Unique · Oifferenl
describes this octagon shaped house that has 3 bedrooms
·. that opens lo the outdoors. Has 10 sets ol slidingglass doors
&gt;- that~opens .onto either an upper deck or lower deck. The
·. woods in the back are cool and private in lhe summer. Has a
full basemen!,. and 2 baths.
·
REDUCED FROM $59,900.10 154,900.
.
.
BRENDA JEFFERS ..........................................992-3056
DARLINE STEWART ........................................ 992·6365
SAND~ BUTCH£1 ...........................................992-5371
.SHERYL WAT£RS;..............~ ............,............... 361-04H
(

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

Now /11Stodl/

L. Writesel

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

(614)
696-1006

OFFICE 992-2886

How•d

NEW- REPAIR

WORK

within 30 days of the iosuance dete: or the director
reviHs / withdrews the propooed action. Any per10n

. . . . : 99~-;3471·

Mot01 c yc i !Jli

75

\lotus&amp;4WO '~

Business Services.

DOZER and
BACKHOE

Front End Man$ger position
require$ a minimum of 5 years of

F,

2 1 Bu!O ifl tliS Opporlumty
2 2 Money IIJ loan
21 Pr~Jfest~onal St!rv •ces

BOB JONES
EXCAVADNG

actlonawill become final unlell a written adjudication
heering request ia submitted

·
.3 _of:' ,which being In , a
supervlt~ry ·. ,.po~.ltl'on. .Pay and
benefits •: b,aed, upon experience.
Bring .rt~~ to Va~gh&amp;n'l .cardinal
Superma~t In Mlddlep~rt, OH.

ljh6UIH6JI

74

Real Estate General

CAREER POSITION AYAIWLE

lb.

52

5-10·'91-tfn.

__ ___
1t

re~&amp;rvea

PUBLIC NOTICE
The following wore received/ prepared by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency IOEPAI 1111 week.
Effective dotoo of final ••·
tiona and iaauance datal of
propoMd action• and .Qf
draft action1 are atatad. Finalactiona may be appealed,
In writing, within 30 doyaot
the date of thla notice, to tho
Environmenttl Board of Re·
view, Rm. 300, 236 E.
Town St .. Columbus. Oh ..
43216. Notice of any appeal
shall bo filed with tho director within 3 dayo. Propo•d

3746 ~ 6

Merchandise
ft3
54
'55
56
'57
58
!i9

Autos tor Sith l
Tnu;ks lm S&lt;il t!

76
77
78
79

Fur lease

51

/1
72
73

t;:=======r:;::======::;r;=======:;-r;:=;;:;;;;;.;,;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;::=;
SPECIALIZING
MICROWAVE
G'ltAtlllt
IN CONCRETE
OVEN REPAIR
Camping Ia Famllr Fun

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE io hereby given
that on Saturday, July 20th.
1991. at 10:00 a. m .. a pub·
lie Hit will be held at 106
Union Avenue. Pomeroy,
Ohio, to Hll tor caoh the following collateral:
1987 Ford Tempo
GL 5 ap, air concl.
S#1FABP3B50HK·180484
The Farmers Bank and
Sevlngo Comp~~ny , Pom-

IIOIISUVERFLOWINC?
ClEAN WITH ,
CI.As....,. ADS

l:tiJod Cl utJ 1

AIR CONDinONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBIL£ &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
••••••••••••••

INDEPENDENT •
•Reaaonable Ratea
•Ouality Work
•Free Eatlmetes
•Carpet Hea Fest Dry
Time
•High Glosa on Tile
Floor Finieh

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

FREE ESTIMATES

USED RAILROAD TIES

Rt I , lulbnd, OH.

742·2451

698-6864

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
Fru Estimates

985-4473
667·6179

Now II-• lullt
"Free Eatimatea"

PH. 949-2801
· or Res. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY CAUS

3-11-Hn

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

111!11101 • UTIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
of

Take the pain out
• painting.
Let

me do it for you.
VEIY RI&amp;SONliL(

•

••

••

••

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

ol Mldd/1,.H
UPHOLSTERY
2U•No. Secend

Mltldleport
Hand Tufting
Custom Drapea
36 Vean

E.perlenc:t~

614·992-2328
We Soy What We Do.
Wa Oo Whot Wo Say.

10·19-1 mo.

OSED APPUANCES
90 DAY WAII&amp;Nn

WASHEIS-fiOO liP
up
IIFIIGIIAIOIS-$100 UJ1
RANGES- Gol-lloc.-$12 S UJ1
DIYI5-~o•

FIIIZIIS-$ 125 UJ1

'

MICRO OVIN5-$79 up

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915 -3561
Acrost From Post Office
POMEROY, OHO
I0/30fl9 Hn

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Wlnclowo
•Roofing
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251
63S Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

11-14-Hn

THE

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

LINDA'S
PAINTING

0

a -14· '11-trn

3-14-'91 -tfn
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIOING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•

4 -29-91

992-2269

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

0

School ld. off lt. 141
(6141446-9416 or 1-100-172-5967

MIKE LEWIS, Ownor

6-1 2-90-tfn

•

Loca ..d On Safford

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992·6648 or

BILL SLACK

••••••••

BENNETT'S

7 -18-91 - 1 mo. pd.

CAIPET CLIANEIS
and TIU FLOOI CAIE

0

GROOM
ROOM

BULLDOZER end
BACKHOE WORK .
HOME SITES.
LANDCLEARING ,
WATER and SEWER
LINES

Complete Grooming
for All Bretcls
EMILE£ MERINAR

TRUCKING 'AVAILABLE

Owner &amp; Operator

1-(304)·
773-9560

HAVE REFERENCES

FREE ESTIMATES

(614) 915·4180

992-7458

614-992-6820

POOL~2~~(HINE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Fri .. Sat. 7:30 p.m.

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

MAIN ST., MASON, WY.

4·21· 11 · 1 mo.

e-10·'91 · 1 'mo. pd.

Open Tuea:. Thurs.,

POMEROY
BOWLING

380 last 2nd St. ·

992-3432 or
992-2403
'
,_,.. ..,_,mo.

"4t laoHnlblt PricH"
PH. 949•1101
or Res. 949-1160
Day or· Night
NO SUNDA HALJ.S
· •·II.IS-H"

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING
,,,.,, ,,toltll
30 SESSIONS S3Q
949~2826
TAC~RVIW ID.

RACIIII, OH.
.

&amp;/1ZJ'91/1110;

Pomeroy,

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVKE ·
- ltoom Adolltlono
- Gutter work

-Eioatriool ood

- Concrete worll
- Roollnt

Ptu...,i,.

-•-••E••'"'

'""'""

CFREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. ~QUNG ltr
992-6215

POIItll'oy, Ohio '
1).14-'90 lfn

Gel Quick Hesultst PlacE A S5 Per Day Bulletin Bo;nrl Ailvl:rltSl!llli~Ill In Th1~ O;Jtly Sl~lllltll ~ l ClassilrErl Sl~i:lton.

,, .

'.·•

Rutl110d
Coohtllle

Public Notice

PUBLIC SALE
Olive Townohip Board of
Truateea haa certain per10·
nal propertY that it no longer
needed. The property it 11
follows:
11 I 1978 F 700 Ford
Hayman.
lMANKYOU.
Dump T1uck, end
121 1967 Box Van
The vehiclu are to bo oold
"eo Ia". No warrontils art
modo 11 uo the condition of
If
tho vohlclu. TheH vehlclea
! · __:. will btl avalleble for lnopec·
1111'0:11
• '
tlon at therealdence of Paul

I

Great

Funeral

Tate Chevrolet, Pomeroy
BowUng, McClure'• 3 In
1, Francia F.lorlat,
Auoclatad Fabrlcatora,
HIR Block, Melga nre

Sweet &amp; Juicy

'r Fresh Southern

California Seedless Red Flame

Ewing

·/· Horne, Eber'a Gulf, ·Don

Full
Of
Flavor

Ponl_.d
letar1 F•lis
Rac•n•

right to reject ony and ell
bldo.
171 1 o. 17, 24, 3tc

~

Fresh Home Grown Yellow

cn•te•

Tho truckAuguot
a will be
on
S.turdoy,
10,oold
1991
at 9 :00 A.M., to the hlghtot
reoponolblo bidder, The ve·
hlcleo ere to be aold by pub·
lie auction et 39080, Sue·
caoo Road, RHdavllll, Ohio.
Payment lo due In full by
noon on the clay of oele. Poymentloto be by caah or bank
ohick. Upon the p11ymant of
the full price, title will be

•'

Ice Cold Cut
Halves and
Quarter Melons...lb.

6 75 Pt Pluaitnt
4ft8 luon
!.76 Appl u Gro11e
773 Muon
88 2 New Haven
896 lehul
937 Buffalo

Areil Cude 104

Mutdleport
Pomtfoy

Ute, located ot 390110 Succeoo Road, Reedovllll, Ohio.

.

-. •

Helo Wiinlud
S•tuallon Wanted
1 3 Insurance
14 Busm eu Trttmnu1
1'5 Schools 8o lnsln;c lloo
16 Rad1o . TV &amp; CB Rcp.m
17 M•s c~la noou s

Public Notice

THIS l"xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY

(

20-22 lb. Average Size

992

The Olivo Townohip Board

..

'-~·'

Muo n Co . 'WV

tranaferred.

.t

....

Me1gs County
Area Code 6U

98ft
843
2 47
949
742
667

2 00 PM THURSDAY

'j

.,

Galhpoh s
Che1h1re
V1nton
Rio Grandtt
Guyan D111
Ar•bi•D•st
Wo11nut

7 ll OPM FRIOI\Y

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

....,
..
.

46
47
48
49

Hay &amp; G ra on
Sutid &amp; hrllllltll

Trans orlation
Rt·••l

Fauns lor Rtml
Apartmoot lor Run I
Furmshod Rooms
Spacu lor R ent
Wantud to Renl
Eq111pmun1 fo r Ren t

44
45

1_8 Want ttd To Do
446
367
188
245
256
643
379

DAY BEFO RE PUBUCAJIQN
11 0 0 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 PM TUESDAY

BULLETIN

43

11
12

tf'if'plttillt' t•xdtllll/{1'.~ ...

Galhil County

·--~----------......

-

l;t1DE11
Houst~K lor RY••I
M o lMI ~ Hotn ~5 lur

41

diiV tth.l!f pubh c aiiOII t n makt: CtHrt:c l um
'Ads that rnust be paHim ad vo~ n cc •"'!

64
65

RttOII Estalu Wintud

Pubh c Stle &amp; Auctm11
9 Waotud to Buv

" St!II(IIU~ IS 1101 resp011S ibl t lm Ill lOI S .t lh:r !11 ~ 1 11..., (Cht!Ck
tm eHurs ltrsl dav ild runs 111 papml C &lt;~llllcl•~r e 2 00 p m

h11 m E. qwpmunl
62 Wlltlltid lo Buy
63 ll\l t!Uock

61

Fduns lor Salt!
Bu11nes s 6wldmus
lot&amp; 6 Act eage

8

llnuhh! \.Hi o• of ;111 co~ I

CouLl ol lh ,111k -.
lu MtH1lOit oN11

Humt!S lor Sale
MoiHh: Ho •ne&amp;lo r S,,lu

Jft
36

Yard Salelpa1d 1n oJdv&lt;~••ct!l

c h ar~u~

"PtiCC ol itd lor all ca p!lall ~ t e r s
. ~ 7 po1nl luu: type only u st.'tl

: -~
-'~; ,;'

31
31
JJ
JI

Happy Ads
loll and found

6
7

Farm Suppltes
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

3 Annoucemenl$
4 G•vteway

RillltStlfC l or COn5eCUUVeruns. brokenupd~SWIIIb ech aged
lor e..:h d~ iiS sep~ra1e ads

pa1d
run J def\IS at no

Rate

15
15
15
15
16

3
6
10

Announcen1ents

OveJ 15 Word5
.
.20
$4.00
.30
$6.00
.42
$9.00
.60
$13.00
.06 ! day
S1 . 30f day

Words

1

-POLICII:S
•A:ds oulstdc Mc•ys _ Gillll.;. m M a'i.t~ n co unll~ mu :;l bt: pre

I

· • The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

.,

.

ii . .

\

_ ___ ·-

-· ~ .. ......

.. ~ -~-- -- ---

-

_,

_ ---· _____ ______._.._
"""':'"

~---

__ __;.

____ ______......_____
,.

__ ------ ---· --

�1

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1982 Commador Mobllo HomoJ. 2
BR Gardan Tub, 88 Petri ::JI.
Mlddllpon $7900. 614-992·5030.
1984 Windsor 2BR, 14x70, AC,
waahtrldrytr. Houu tiding. 614·
446-3183 or 614-446.0337.
Naw 19~ 14x80 three bedroom,
2 full bathshahlngla root, vinyl
aiding,
1 ulle,.,
carpeted
throughout , all drywall Interior
and 3-boy window. $17,997.00
Colt t-800-729-4045.
Trailer For Salt: Mx7U With
10x60 Add On, WHh 2 Lots. Asking $18,000. 614-387·1117.

"" 6-2342
992-2 1:;r,

675- 1:rn

34

Business
Buildings

rhlng&lt; are buuln In the

WANT ADS
• 1,

'I

s always easier to painl

landscapes
on a really foggy day."

t

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Ave., Gllllpolla. CloH to
Coun Houae. 1 room, 2 room1,
3 room•, 4 roomt. All nicely
docorotod, olr condHionlng,
your water &amp; uwar bill ere paid.
Uakt your choice now. No
quotH ovor tho phone, you
must ... thom. Phon• lor on

44

11
Help Wanted
Accepting
oppllcallona

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
tor

18

Wanted to Do

cooks, nltreuea, and dlth ·

waahara. Exr.rienctd prefer·

rtd. Ful l and art time poaltlont
available. Mom'a Smorgasbord,

3

Announcements

~ngle

..rvlce and newt:letter

tor area alnglaa. All ages. Con·
tldentlal and affordable. Write:
Slngl.., P.O. Bo• 1043, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

4

Giveaway

2 kittens to good homa, 304·
87$.7153.

Tho Clock. 514-446-7721.
304-273-9038.
Mlat Paull't Day Care Center.
AUSTRAUA WANTS YOU
Safl, ettordable, chlldctre. M·F
Excellent
Pay,
Btnalltt, 5 a.m. - ~ : 30 p.m. Agu 2~10 .
Tranapor1a11on,
407-292-4"*7, • Before, atter .chool. Drop-Ina
Ext. 571. 9a.mAOp.m. Toll welcome. 614.-446-1224. New In·
Refunded.
lant Toddler Cara, 614-446~227.
AVON I All Areas I Shirley Pool decks, ln-grcund &amp; above.
Spean1, 304.e75--1429.
Country porches, open &amp;
Oanltl E. NMda, Inc. Hu lm· acrMned ln. Original designs.
mtdlala Opening For OTR Fr" esllmalet. Referenc ..
Orlvtrw. Apply In Par1on At 2300 avallabla. Contact Odlt, 614-446·
Lockboumt Road, Columbut, 1756.
OH. Must Bo 25 Or otdlr, With 3 Will build patio covers, deckl,
Years Experlanct 1-BOG-628- eerHntd rooma, put up vinyl
7831.
aiding or trailer skirting. 614·
Domlno'a Plzu ol Pomtroy now 245 ·5&amp;~7.
laking applications.

2 malt pu~l .. part SIMrlan
ky and
flo :104-675-5505 Drywall hangora &amp; llnlshtra
nHdad In tha Athena arta. 614·
2 piil't Beagle hunting dogs, 593~016 aak for Tim after Spm.
304-882-3210.
EARN MONEY Raadlng booksl
4 Kltton•..t I Gray Tiger Striped, $30,000/yr. lncoma potential.
3 Gray unae, To Givuway To Dotalla. 11) 805-962-8000 Ext. YGood Homo. 614-2511-1529.
10189.
FrH Klttone, Yellow Striped &amp; Excellent Pay! Homtworkttt
Ntedtd. Over 400 Companlaa
Gray Striped. 614-256-1136.
Need Homaworkaf'11DI81rlbulors
FrH Puppies: Part Chow, Part Now. Call For Amazing Recor·
Samoytn , 614-441..031D.
dod Moa11go, 614·691-2882 Ext.
Freel Adorable Kllttns, 7 Wnks 110.
Old. 12 Poplar Hill, Point GET PAID lor Compiling Malting
Pleasant, WV. Phona: 304-675- Lilla. $500 per 1,000. Cl!l 1·9004621 after 5p.m.
246-3131 150.99/mln) or Wrlto:
PASSE • 33R 161 South · UnKltttna, 2 blk malta, 1 dark colnway,
North Aurora, IL 10542
calico female, 3()4.676--5253.
HIV Program Coordinator~.. Full·
Mala S.amaN Cal, Dtclawed, nma,
Ffve.County Area tsaltd
Neutered, 1 Year Old, 814-445· In
Ath1n1. Take Ovar A Grant·
8611.
Fundad Project Which Requirtl
Puppies Frn To Good Homa Dual Skills Of Community
Have Bten Wormed. Hat Shots, O.velopmentiEducatlonal Out·
8 Wookl Old. Mother Ia Chow raach, And Individual Test·
Shephard Mix, Father, Boxtr. lngteounsellng. Bachelor's 0.
grM In Ht•tlh, Social Service
614-448·6634 after &amp;p.m.
Mangomont Or In Rotalod Flold.
Small malt dog to good home. Sotary $20,000 To $22,000. Sind
Nlco pol. 614-245-5617.
Ltttar And Ratumt Naming
ThrH Employment Aeleranctl
To Planned Paranthood 01
6 Lost &amp; Found
Southeast Ohio, 396 Rlc:hland
Found 1-tg Famala dog In front Avenue, Athens, Ohio, 45701.
of Foodland. Has 1-blua and 1· AnN: Zudak. E.O.EJE.S.P.
brown eye, call614-)12-2224.
HIV Program Coordinator, full·
LOST leon II'N, 2 yr Old Gtr· lima, five caunty area based In
man Shaphard dog, groylah ton, Athans. Take ovar a grant-fun·
waartng 2 chocker chains, no dod project which roqulroa dual
10, If sean or found call 304-458- skills of community davtlopmenlfedunllonal outreach, and
1588.
Individual tattlngJcounullng.
LOST small black dog, 28 to 30 Bachalor's dagret Tn health, solba, 2 miles trom Y on At. 62, cial 11rvlct management, or In
silver choker, 304-875--8871.
ralattd lltkl. Salary $20,000 to
Send ltnar and ruuma
LOST· Black-gray-whit• mixed $22,000.
Aust rian sheep type dog In the naming lhrM employmtnt
Jtsae Cretk ,,.a. II found ret.rencn to Planned Paranpleast call 614·742·2805 or 440. thood of Southoast Onlo, 396
Richland Av1nue, AthonsLOhio,
3575.
45701.
AnN:
Ludak.
Lost: Vlclnhy
Bidwell. 2 E.O.E.tE.S.P.
Beagles, Male I Female. Black,
lmmtdlata Opening• Available
Brown 6 Whit a, 614-386-874i.
For Full-nma Ani~ Par1·Timt
L.~. N .' a . Competltlva Wa~gae,
1
Yard Sale
DIHerantlal wtlh Experience,
Floxlbto Schodullng Avallabla.
Contact The Director ot NursIng, Pinecrest Care Center, 170
Pinecrest Drive, Galllpotle, Ohio
Gallipolis
45631 614-446-7112. Equal Oppor1unlty Employor.
&amp; VIcinity
Hu.
:.=:2-=::..::=.::•c:,:.:.,:.:.::...::..::::.·

ALL Yard Silos Must Ba Pold In
Advonca. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day betora lha ad 11 to run.
Sunday odltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00
p.m. Saturday.
Friday, July 19th. 2 112 mi. on
Addison Pike. Warde Trailer
Pork. 9-5.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
2-Famlly Yard Sale, Sat-Sun,
July 20-21, 9-dark, 242 Beech St.
Middlepon .
2-Yard Salt July 18·19, 9 00 til
?1, Wagner Lana, JC1 AI. 7 &amp;
143.
4-Famlly Garage Sale, Bailay
Run, Johnson's. Rain or Shine,
Wed-T hurs, 9-5.
6 Family Yard Salt Nuraa
uniforms clolhaa, all alzte,
children • aduhl, babla things,
used homt decor, Tupperwara,
Etc. ThUraday &amp; Friday tO:oos ·oopm, Crouroada II Rt. 124,
8JIIay Aun Road.
Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
Yard Salt; 3202 Howard Avt,
Point
Pleasant,
Thurtday,
Friday, Saturday.
Yard Salt, Fri &amp; Sat. 123 Park
Or., 4 tamlllas, baby bed, tolid
maple table, Homt Interior,
large woman clothing, big
llltcllon boys &amp; girls crothlng,
what-nots.

8

Public· Sale
&amp; Auction

I•
I.

Interested In soiling or want to
buy Avon, frH gift, call Kay 614992-7180.
JOSS IN ALASKA-Hiring. Entry
level. $600.00 • wMkry. Con·
11ructlon, Canntrles, Oil Atlds.
CALL NOW 1·2015·738-7000 Ext.
1617B8.
LPN pon-tlmo rotlot, lle1lbto
hourt, cont•ct Dorothy Harper.
614-446-7148.

Have Oponl~ For Eldarly Par.
eon At Gwinn 1 Care Home, St.
AI. 218, Crown City, lt4·2566509.
14

Business
Training

Interior and exterior palnUnQ, 10
yra o1porlonco. Root polnllng.
Hand walhlng hov111, tralllril,
AVON • All or-, Coli lllrf!Yn windows. Odd jobl. R•tarancaa.
w..... 304-882·21145.
FI'M Ollim&amp;IH. 304-475-2708.
Help Wanted

Will do housecleaning, havt

raftrancn. 304-675-7185:
Will do yard work, Clll 304-675-

new homa con.tructlon on
Rayburn Ro.d. Pavad road,
county
water,
raaaonable
ra.tricUons. Complete lnforma·
tlon mailed on request. 304-6755253, John D. Gonach, no
alngle-wldt trailers, pleaH.
25 aeraa, rural water available,
located on Broad Run Road,

New Haven, $28,!00. 304·7735881.
Uercar Bottom Sub-division,
one aert Iota, At. 2 frontage,
price reduced, city watar, 304·
576-2336.
For Sale: Rlvar baNe proper1y In
Mason. 304-713-56!1.

36

Wantld, 3-BR homa, Racine
1rn lo rent or tun wlol)tlon,
lt4-11411-2763.
Renta ls

Financial
41 Houses for Rent
21

Business
Opportunity

INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do buli·
nus with peopla you know, and
NOT to 11nd monty through the
mall until you have lnv11tfgated
the offering.
Arthur'l Chain Link Fanct.
Rasidantlal, Commercial, In·
duatrlal, Free Eatlmaltsl Com·
platt Installation. Phone: 614·
38Hm
Ulrga Local Vending Routt For
Sail. Will Soli An Or Pon.
Rapeat
Busln111
Secure
Loc•tlons. Above Average lncomt. 1-80()..940-8883.

1br Furnlshad HouH, In City.
No Pel,. $160/mo. Plus Utll ltltl.
614-446-0893.
2
bedroom
hOUII, 2302
Modlaon AVo, 304~75·2535.
2 bedroom home, nice location ,
304~75-1373.

Complslfy Fumlohtd mobile
homa, 1 mile below town , ovor·
looking river. No Pete, CA. 614·
446.0338.
- - -·---- - --

Furnished
Rooms

614-44~-9580.

Slooplng rooml with cooking.
Alto trallar s~aca . All hook-ups
Call oftar 2.00 p.m., 304-7135651, Mason WV.
46 Space for Rent
Country Moblla Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Lota, rtntall, parts, aaln. C.ll
614-992-'11179.
Trailer lot 90x100, all utlllllaa
hookups. 304~76-3215 or 6752418.
Merchandise

51

Household
Goods

Bnulltul Solid Oak Dining
Aoom Suite, 1 Vear Old, 614-44S:.
6000.
Carpal $4.00 Yard &amp; Up. Vinyl
$3.119 &amp; $4.99 Yard. Porch Tun,
$3.99 6 $5.99 Yard. Mollohon
CarpeW., Upper River Roacl, 814•
445·11144.
County Appllanca, Inc. Good
used appliances, T.V. s.tl. Op111
6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon ..Sot. 614·
446-1699, 627 3rd. Avo. Galtlpollo, OH

0706

32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

$500 Down On Soloct RopoaHIIad Mobile Homaa. Free S.t
Up And Dallvtry. Financing
Available. Mid Ohfo Finance, 1·
800-589-5111.
10 Acrtt, 1080 Bayvl.w, 14JI70,
7x21 Expando, 2 Full Baths,
New Carptt Throughout , 19120
2 Car Garage, $18,000, No Land
Contract&amp;. 614·3111-2948.
101~5 Shultz, 2-BR mobile homo
wlundarplnnlng •nd porch,
$3500, 614-1192'3194.
12x&amp;O mobile home Partly fur·
nlshed Ertra clun. $!700. 614·
245-9463.
1917-12150 Skyllno, 2-BR houao
trallar, call t14·D02·2115.

Mlddtopon. 1-5 Room Apt 2na
tloor, nice Middleport. 1·5 Room
Apt, 2nd lloor, Pomaroy. 1·
Duplex 5-Room, Middleport,
aleo 2-houSH for tale, land
contract
available wl$1000
down, 614·992-2403.
1br Apartment, Appllancas Fur·
1
Block
From
Downtown. Call614-446-4639.
nlah~.

2 BR furnished apartment. Rent,
$285 par month. Some utilllill.

614-446-2404.

661 Third Avenua, Gallipolis,
2br, Refrigerator, Stove, Months
Daposlt .
Outside
Storage
$250/mo. 614-245-9595
Apo11mtnl In Clifton,
3216 0&lt; 675-2418.

~04-675-

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Plko
from $1D2Jmo. Walk to ahop &amp;
movlaa. Call 514-446·2568. EOH.
Beech Street, Mlddlsport, Ohio.
One room efficiency apt
rtltrencas and d•posit, 304~
882-2566.
Efficiency Apartme,n,- F~r·
nlshed, Deposit, &amp; Ralarenca
Roqulrod. No Poll, 614-446-4879.
For rant , 1 bedroom apar1mtnt
$225 ulllilloo Included, dopoo;i
roqulrod, no pota, 614-i92-2218.
Fumlahod Apartmont For Rent
In Down Town. Call 614..t4&amp;.-1423
Atltr 7p.m
Furnl1hed Apartment, 1br, $235
UtllttiH Paid. 020 Fourth Ava,
Galllpotla. 114-446-4416 aftor
7p.m.

Nicely Fumlehed Apartment,
Booulllut 111711-Holloypark, 3-SR, 1br, ntlt lo Ubfary, ,..rktng,
central AC, 14130 tagalong, 14x7 cenltlll heat, air, rtftrtnca ,...
axpendo, moro, $15,000.00, 614- qulrod. l14-441.0338.
985-4171.
Furnlahed etfJcltncy w/atova •
Knox 1981, 1&lt;»wnar, 2 badrGom, retrlgtrttor. Share bath. 810 2nd
all oloctrlc, cell 114-992-3021 or Ave. S100 por month. 814-44631145.
614-1192·1107.
Haw 18x80'1, Now On Dleplay At
Et111 Homo Clntor, Allor·
doblllty, Lux6ry, &amp; Qualify. Coli
1-800-5811-5710,

Fumlahod
Enlclency, $150
UIIIMI" Ptld, Sharo Bath, 701
Fourth, Gatllpotla, 614-446-4411
ollor7p.m.

rI~~=~======::=r.::::::::~"'~'~"~'§~§~~ 72

Apan(llont ava ilable tor 2 or 3
con11ruct1on workara 304-8&amp;2- 54
2566.
Roome tor rent ·weak or month.
Starting at $120/mo. GoUla Holll.

Vory nk:• couch &amp; chair, $150.00
614-992-2135.

!he Dally Sentlnei-Page-13
WHAT l'oOl.O l 00 WITH ouT YOUR FRIEilOSfliP,

Miscellaneous

59

YOO'vt: ALWAYS flEEll RIGHT
THERE: WHeJ I tJEECW

LE ~'( ?

YOU ... NO Q.Jt:STIO'-IS

I

A5K£D ...

I

Pittsburgh Paint Interior tlat wall
p1int $10.49 gal, Interior 11ml·
glosa $13.99 gal, exterior fl•t
fiou11 paint $f3.99. 2415 Jack·
son Ava, Point Pleasant, Pt. Pit.
304-675-4084
Priced To 5111: 4 Grovo Spocas
In Ohio Vallay Mamory GardWI.
Phone: 614·388-0630.
Bush Hog Flail mower, 50" pull·
behind, $1400 new, Now $550,
614-985-4369.
Sanyo "Beta" VCR. Remote
control, like new condition,
aoma Ia pea. St25. 614-379-2768.
Solid mahogany twin bod&amp;
complala, some baby furniture,
bumpar pool table, roM lac•
canopy bad ttl with cur1ains.
30H75-4548.
Surplue army original ltautl,
collecla~ ... (rental eurplul n .
garment). Sam Somerville's,
B1alde Sandyville Post offk:t.
Frl, S•t, Sun; Noon.e:OO PM.
Other days, hourw call 304·2735655 botoro 11 :00 AM.
Taylor
Batch
Freazer,
Manltawoc let &amp; Vand Machine,
Moster Built 16 Hold Dipping.
Cablnot Hobart Upright, 2dr,
Frtazar; 7ft . ChHI Type Dlaplay
Freezer. All Items Uaad For Only
1 Year! 614-446-2t07.
··
Wizard riding mower, 8 hpl 30"
cut, 3 speed, alec start, J275.
304-675-2161 attar 6:00.
B lldl
55
U
ng
Supplies
Block, brJck, MWer pipet, win-

dows, llntala, etc. Claude Win·

foro, Rio Grandt, OH Coli 514·
24~-5121.

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pat
Grooming. All brMda, atylta.
lam• Pet Food ONitr. Julie
Webb. Colt 014-446.0231, 1-800352.0231.
AkC black ragtatered Labradcor
Ratrieval"'. Shott and wormed.
$150. 614-643-2824.
At&lt;C Famolo cotuo Pup, 3
Month&amp; Old, $150. 69 Blodan
Road, Socond Houu Right OH
At 7

VI'RA FURNITURE
614-446-3158
LIVING ROOM . Sofa &amp; Chair,
$199.00;
Roctlnor,
$149.00;
Swivet Rocker, $99.00; CoHoe •
End Tablaa, $89.00 Sot.DINING
ROOM: Tabla With 4 Paddod
Chairs, $149.00; Country Plno
Dinette With Banch And 3
Roglatorod
Gannan
Chairs, $299.00; Matching 2 At&lt;C
puppltl. Shots,
Door Hitch, $349; Or $589&gt;00 Shepherd
511; Oak Toblo, 42&gt;62 With 5 Wormod, Healthy. 304~75-2193 .
Bow
Back
Chalrt, AKC Registered Golden Ret river
$829.00.BEDROOM: Postor Bod· puppltl, $250. each, 614-44&amp;.
room Sullo 15 pc.l, $349.00; 4 8064 or 446·1387.
Drawer Chaat, $44 95; Bunk
Bod, $229; Complete Full Malt AKC W•lmaranar Pups, Cham·
Set, $105.00 Sot; 7 pc. Ctdar pion Bloodline, $250 and $300,
Bedroom Sullo, $899.00 .0PEN: 614-992-7201.
Monday Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to
6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till Dog and Cal grooming all
5p.m., 4 Milas Oft Routa 7 On bretds, IJH!Ciallzad In Poodle
grooming, 12 yrs axparltnca,
Route 141 In Centenary.
:104-675-6332.
Antiques
53
Dog Obadlanct, ClaiHI, Start·
lng: 7120/il For lnlormatlon Call
Antique Furniture Repaired; 61~-445-1854 , Sharry Robona,
Lampa Rewlrtd. (25 Year~ Ex· Clrtlllod Trainor.
porlancal W. White, 614-2459448.
Doa Obeditnct Clasua, bask:
ancJ advancodl stantng July 20.
Buy or uti. Rlvorlno Anl1quoa, For Informal on c•~ Sherry
1124 E. Main Streat, Pameroy. RoMrta Certified Trainer, 614Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 446-1864.
p.m., Sunday 1.00 to 1.00 p.m.
Dragonwynd Cattery Persian,
614-1192·2520.
Slameae and Himalayan kittans.
Ook Sunil, l&lt;lw Sack With Mir- 614--446-3844 aHer 1 p.m.
ror, Rollnlahod, $225. 114-446Flah Tank, 2413 Jackson Ava.
3864 Evontngo.
Point Pleasant, 304-875-2083,
lull llno Troplcot fish, blrda,
54 Miscellaneous
sm•ll animals and supplln.
Merchandise
HAPPY
JACK
DROPDEAD
1i89 Valley - k holM FLEA-TICK MIST: Advanced
trailer, $2800, 114-742·202.
formula kllla quickar, lltll
longer. For dog1 •nd cats!! Con·
I ft . utility bod, tor amoll pick- talna no olcoliot RAG FEED &amp;
up, all olum. l tully anlcoood. SUPPLY 614-992·2154.
$800. f'l4-31'fo2tl4.
Minlalura Schnauzer pupplel.
8 ft ell~in
door, exc AKC, salt &amp; pepper, Raduetd,
614-1192-5949.
cond '
.
•3812 .
8'-h'-.- a""r:...INI.caw
_ lc_k_ at...:at.co.::.t...:
ob'-1-o,- bo
- 11-a I PC&gt;odto puppteo, toyo and too
lllcko tnctucll, SUS. WhHo'a cupa, At&lt;C Champion Btoodttno,
1000 Olpro mlllt detoclor, uMd Coolvltto114-te7-3404.
IMtto, $350. Sharp 6-1 zoom ROflstorod At&lt;C, Poodla Pup:oroo~r.=iori~50~1~"3 ploo. Will lo Raody To S.ll: ...tuty
looozor, 42'' , wide $80. Luxor 29th,
tMt.
114-386-9811
"'""'"" not . uud In 2 yro, ? Anytlmo.
worldnlt cond, 1250. Boat oqutp,
FruitS &amp;
lito jocllota, okta, tubot, oto., 58
614-1192·7341.
Vegetables

f::_::,no

vm

Aldlo Controlled Airplane, Cennlng
tomatoe,
slread.,
Co rltt 8ft WI 8
1240
'
ml
t•24''
"11.2!1.ng
pan,
,
plck•d.
M
bUihel.
Baughman
Clt ¥ ~
ltrm. T 112 mlllo south ol Galllpotle, St. Rt.7. 114-2116-8535.
Rocondltlonod Waohora, Drytro.
Ouonntood prompt aorvlct lor lwMt Corn Stivor o-n, AI·
oll, moklo, modotl. Tho Waohlr ' borl Rouoh Form, 3 mlln North
OrYor S h -. 114-441-21144.
of Naw Hovon on Rt. 33.

L£tJI,l'( 2

N!J..£ 10 PAY YOU I?Kit.
YET FOR TJ-IE l.J6T TIME I
BUT .. ,

I

•

I

DID YOU

REALLY
MISS PATRIC IA

W~O WROTE YOLI

I SENT

MORE TtlAN YOU
M155E(;' ME?

Ti-1E LETTERS
~ROM CAMP,

'I'OLI SOME
COOKIES,
DIDN'T I?

Cl-lARLES? I
DID, TIIAT'5 WfiO!

614-24~-9~2~.

WED.. JULY 17

8:00 (2) • Cil (J). 1111 @ •
@Newl
Cil Andy Grlfftth
CD Club Connect
(!) Reldlng Rllnbow 1;1
IDI8 Andy Orlffltlt
0 C1rtoon Expre11
D lnllde 1M POA Tour
18 WOitd Todlly
OOurHOUH
1:05 (I) lewitched
1:30 (2) 8 @ NBC Nawai;J
Cil fllrMm of Jeannie
(I) 8 ABC NeWI 1;1
Wild AIMIICI Stereo. 1;1

~a a • cas NeW11;J
1;1

iiJ 8 WKRP In Clncln..U
DUpCioH

or Trade

:,~-=2 ~nor

wilt ttnanco.

Evano llotora, 15:10 Eollam
Avanua, Galllpoll1, Otdo; Jutt
Tradod Uaod 2011. Gooaonock
Flat TraUer $1,800j New Tralltre
In Stock By Ponderoea, 10' 2
HorN TraUer, Bum~r Hitch
Llvntoc:k Tralla.n 10 Thru 18';
Also •·x18' Goouneck; Naw
Htuoboro Tratlora In Stock 121
6x16 Bumper Hllch, Gooaonock
Modoto In 6x16, 7x16, 7x18,
7x20, Also 24' GOOHnock Flat
Troltor; ·e 112 Stool Ftatboda For
Pickups &amp; Ton Trucks, $795
WtUght Kit. Good Sotoctlon oF
TraUtr P•r1s &amp; Truck k ·
ctsaaorlaa. Bad Mat1, Bed
Liners, Bug Shlalda, Running
Board&amp;, Etc. Phono, 514-44685i2 Opon M·f 6-5, Soturdoy, 8-3
tntomotlonll ModiH20. Forlf&amp;
chopper, 2-row, com hoad and
grass plu alto 16-tool 81ock
trolloiJ. oxc cond, 614-992·5114,
1D10 t,;havy 1·lon, 12·foot etaal
flat bed, axe cond, 814-992·5114.
Jim'• Farm Equipment, SR. 35,
\Yost Galtlpotla, 114-446-9777;
Wlda aeltctlon new &amp; uaed farm
tractors &amp; lmplemante. Buy,
sell, trade, a:oo-5:00 waakdaye,
Sst. till Noon. ·
63

Livestock

2 y.. r old Ouar1ar horH, mart,

aorrol. $450. 614-446-1456.

Cow and calf ahow hailers for
salt, Paint Plus, 2415 Jackson
Ava, Point Pla..ant, Yfl.
Pinto m•re with uddle and
brlclla, very gentle, $425, phone
304-895-3386".
UHd goo11ntck 4 hol'll trallar,
$2395; 3 yoar old AOHA Waotorn
PIIIIUrt gelding, brother to
Wortd Pleasure Champion 614·
286~522.

64

For your h•y, alfalfa, or grase
nMda, c•ll Morgan F•rms on AI.
35. 304-937-2018.
Transportation

71

Autos for Sale

l(

7:30 (2) • 1!)1 JIOPIIIIIJI r;l
Cil Andy Otttflth
Cil D 8 En-lnment
Tonlllht Stereo. 1;1
(I) 8 Mama'o Family
1111 W1teel of Fortune r;1
IDI. M"A"S"H
Ill le 1 Stir Stereo.
!ZIIIIcycle Racing Tour de
France (T)
Cro11flre
7:35 (I) Andy Ortlftth
1:00 (2) 8 1!)1 Unoolved
Myatertta New evidence
about Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid 1a revealed. (R)
Stereo. C
Cil MOVII!: V (PI1 of 2)

(2:00)

Cil (J) 8 The Wonder Yeara
Kevin wornes about making
a loot ol himself at the
dentist. (RI Stereo. r;1

() '"' bot NtA tnt
iHA~E'.S 7·17

CD

lhlilonltl Oeogrepltlc
Speclltl Stereo !;I

9

MOVIE: Amerlcln
NlnjiiRI (2:00)
liZ 8 Hog111 FamiiJ The
lamlly learns Michael's girl1s
young enough to be his
daughter. Stereo r;1

0 Murder, 111M Wroll

Ql FUMy lualnelo Wl1h
Chlrlle ChiM VII Country
music stars Alan Jackson
and Restless Heart become
objK!s ot practiCal jol&lt;ea.

(1:110)

ra PrlmeNewl

0

__

'82 Malibu, S W., real good
shape, loadad, new parts,
$1,600. 511 lull length running
boards lor pick-up $50 304-675'

1:05 (I) MOVIE: Raid on Entebbe
(3:00)

8:30 (I) (J) 8 Orowtng P1ln1

s::Jivi£TIM£S I li-IINK I
IUliLD HAVf. MAD£ A .-J----..J
GRU\T Ftll./TI(If\A.J
/U.U

Trouble arises afler Ben and
Jason manaQe a rap group.
(RI C
•
Ill D 8 Family Mlln Jack
dates the commissioner's
daughter 1n order to secure a
ll'omollon. Sttreo. r;1
D Major League leNINIH
ILl
9:00 (2) 8 @ Night Court Harry
decides to pop the question
to Marg!r~ ~~Stereo. r;1
(I) (I) •
HowMr,
M.D. Katherine's parents
arrive lor the holidays. (R)
Stereo. C
CD Clvtl IJI/ar Slavery, the
causes ol the war and
States' Rights are examined

Accessories
13-81 Chovrolot truck hood
$50.00, 73..a-t Chevrolet bldeldt,
paaHngor oldo, $!o.oo 614-9926125 oftor 5:00.
Budget Tranemleelons, UMCI &amp;

0

rebultt, starting at $H; Auto

514·379-

5048 ·~~lmo

1973 Cadillac, 4-dr Sedan
Deville, 87,000 actual miln,
good cond, $800 obo 614-9926525.

1!l77 Dodge Aopen SW, 6 cyl,
runt good. $300. 614-367-7904.
1977 F-150, Body Groat Shape,
New Motor, &amp; Tires. $1,300. 614·
446-6127.
---:-------t978 Otds Cutlass Supreme
Cfoupe. Salt or trade 614-446·
3419.
1979 ~lymouth Volari, slant 6,
low mites, 304~75- 5090 .
t97g..ford Fairmont. Eng. over·
hauled last year. $450.00, · 614·
843-6246 days or 84~-5211
evenings.
·
- - - - - - -·
.
1960 otds Cutlass Suproma,
loadad, runs good. 304-458·
1880.
1981 Monte Carlo, 304-575-1506
Old&amp; Cutlnsi'i Vary Sha~.
s1981
·•
'' 816 • 5 8 Ply. roo. 614-446349t.
1983 Dodae 600 Interior Ex·
terlor, fieellent Condition
Nooda Englno. BIC-256-1211 At1" 5p.m.
1984 Lincoln Mark VII, all optlonol high mllngo, very good
cond tlon, must " ' to apprec:latt. Price raductd to
·':..:3.::.200
=.6.: .1-4---4_45._;6--1_3l.::..- - •.
191~ S·10 Sinor, V-8, ~ apd, Air,
Tilt, Cruloo, AMIFII, Vary Ctoon,
$5,:100. 114·3111-0122 Ahor 5p m.
t988 Chovy Ratty Srrt Clmoni,
T-Top~r, PSIP , Tth, Naw
RW!.
, $4,415. Coli Oayo:
304-875-3331, Evontngo: 614-311773l7.
19M Ford hp, aun root, AIC, 5
apood, 52,700. 304-937-203t
19aa Mareury Lynx, 4..cyl, 4.apd,
AC, AUJFM CIIIHite, black
w/rad Interior, txc
runa
1-ooo 11,._~
groat ~o
·
l91f
Otdomoblto
Cutlou

llh=,

Ctorro,V-8 ong, A·l condition,
$3800, l14-ll92-31ll4.

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Servtces

AND NON,
HERS:SYCUR
H05T,.JOHN

Comptllo MobMo Homo 511-Upa,
Repairs; Commerlcal, Rnklan·
llal Improvements. Including:
Plumbing, Eloctrk:at. tnauropot
Ctalmo ACcoptod. 114-256-1111;
Curt11 Home lmprovamerits:
YHra Exparlence On Older •
Ntwar Homes. Room Additions,
Foundation Work, Rooting,
Windows I Siding. Frao El·
tlmotoot Roloroncoo, No Job To
Big Or Smattl 514-441-0225.

JET

~YIDSON!

15WA"TCHIN6

, HOU.Yv.o:::&gt;D

ANDNOi
RE:C:O:SNIZJN!'t
ANY OF THE

eQtJARE!!3'!..

GEl EeRinEe.

6£TTINGOLD

/
BARNEY
CALL IT,
MAW!!

BEST TWO OUT
OF THilEEtl

HEADS OR
TAILS?

Ron'a TV Strvlce, specializing
In :Z.nlth 1110 Mrvlclng moll
other brenda. HouM calfa, aiR
.ama eppllanot rapalra. WV
304-676·2398 Ohio 114-446-2454.

'·

82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

84

Electrical &amp;
, , Refrigeration

Roaidentlet or comman:lot
wiring, now or repelro.
lllllor Uconoed -riclon.
Ridenour Etoctrlcot, ~751781.

f17

Upholstery

-roy·o Upholstaring IIII'Viclng 1rl county 1r11 25 yooro."Tho
In fumKuro uflllolllortng·
Coli 304-875-ttl54 lor !roo
tlmstoo.

I

stand what to do to make the re la tlonsh' P work Ma&gt;l $2 plus a long. selladdressed. s1amped envelope 10
Ma tchmaker. c/o thi S newspaper . P 0
Box 91428, Clevela nd, OH 4410 1,3428
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) You may make a
BERNICE
comm•tment today regarding something about which you 're not too senBEDE OSOL
ous. However. the rec1p1e nt ot th1s
promise IS hkely to assume you are
deadly earnest.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Do not treat
financial dealings indilterently tOday,
even those with close lriends. This is a
rather shaky area to r you: it a toss OC·
curs. it might not be recovered .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0cl. 23) In order to
ac ll1eve an important obtect!ve today.
you must enlist the cooperation of others. II you·re too insistent upon doing
th1ngs your way. you may be left to fend
JUIJ 18, 1891
lor yourself
Op)lortumtles In the year ahead could SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Beware ol
be a bit larger and more frequent than tooling your own horn a little too loudly
usual. However. If you take th ings lor today. What rings like golden notes to
you could be like sounding brass In the
gra nted now' you could be sorry later.
CANCER (Junt 21.July 22) Your luck ears ol another.
could be a bH spoiiY today: Dame For· .SAGinARIUS (Nov•. 23-Dec:. 21) Be·
tune IS occasionally liekta. Since you lore making any financial investments
may not be on her preferred list, tread at this lime. be absolutely certain you
carefully In chancy areas. Trying to h.ave the,finest counsel available to pro·
patch 1411 a broken romance? The Astra- vide you with advice. as wall aa facts '
I
Graph Matcnmaker can help you undar· and ligures.

ASTRO-GRAPH

•l

Carter'• PlumiMng
and Healing
Fourth and Plno
Golllpolla, Ohio
614-446-3888

0.:

~ Fire on the Rim Riches

draw people to the
diaastai
- lagued Pacific nm.
Stereo.
1111 liZ Ja•e and ...
Folmln Jake 's lather who
has been absent lor 27 years
relurna home. (Rl Stereo. !;I
0 MOVIE: Thla Oun for lfiN
12:00) Stereo. !;I
Nlllltvtlle How Stereo.
Larry King Uvel
11:30 (2)
@ Setnflld Jerry
,
leela guilty about keeping the
host ollarty up late.
Stereo.
Cil (I) Man In the Flmily
Sal arranges a date lor Annie
w~h a mobster. Stereo. r;1
10:00 (2) 8 1!)1 Quentum Leap
Sam leaps into the tile of a
black student during me
Watts riots. (R) Stereo. r;1
Cil Newa
Cil (I) • EQull JUIIIc:e
Christopher batttea Peter In
court. (II) Stereo. C
(!) ScientifiC Amariclln
Frontllrt ROller coasters:
Hurricane Hugo; facial
expressiOns. Stereo. 1;1
Ill D 8 48 Houra Thib
&amp;vents that turn a battered
wile Into a killer ars
explored. (R) Stereo. 1;1
l!ll8111rTNk
8WOitdNewa
1D 700 Clull Wl1h Pll

a
ra

Aeratlan Mo4ore, rapalred. Na.w
6 ro-bulh motora In &amp;lock, ROll
EVANS, JACKSON, OH. 1-800537-9528.
-

Slptlc Tonk Pumping $110,_Galli•
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPHISES,
Jockaon, OH 1-800-537-1521.
Davia
S.W·Vac
Sarvlca,
Georg•• CrMk Rd. Par1a, aupptloo, pickup, and dlllvory. 614446.0294.
Will do romodallng, roofing
building, troo trimming an3
removal, houM fainting . . For
free eatlmatH, cal George let 1·
514-1192-5752.
..

MOVIE: Flaming Feather

(2:00)

(.OM£'?

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lltttlme guaranIM. Local raferencn furnished .
FrH ntlmat ... Call cotlact 1·
614·237-o480, day or night.
Rogers BaHmtnt Wllarproollng.

24 Houri In Drug Alley

i1J •

AU1o Pans&amp;

Improvements

(!)

10:30)

•

Home

PRINl NUMBERED lETTERS
IN lHES E SQUARES

SCilAM-I.m ANSWIIS
1 - 1&amp;
Florid - Natal - Inept - Verify - PLAINTIFF
A lawyer friend and his son were walking through the
mall when they saw a woman with a cervical collar.
"Look!" eKclaimed the boy, "There's a PLAINTIFF!"

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. t8) Be
hopeful tod ay, but also be pragmauc
and reahsl•c Don ' t think you can turn
every lemon mto lemonade. because
you may not have enough sugar to do
the tob
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 1t) You may
teet that you are ollenng constructive
cnt1C1sm today but the recipient might
think you ' re tust betng too doggone
c nt•cal It's a toss-up neither can
resolve
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Usually,
you ' re a reasonable and easygoing individual, but today you may step out of
character and be posseS6lve and demanding I lhtnk your friends will like
you better the other way.
ARIES (March 21·April 18) It Will be
easy to make prom1ses today 1n order to
expedite a matter that Involves you anll
another Unfortunately, you may make
some concess1ons that won't serve your
best Interests.
TAURUS (AprM 20-MIY 20) There Is a
possi bility you'll rely too much on the
other guy today and vice -aa. This
could create a situation where both of
you fail td adequately lulflll your rolet.
GEMINI (MIJ 21"&gt;1une 20) Play II play
and work Is work, and they lltouldn't be
permitted to overlap tOday. Reeponli·
bltltift not treated Mrloully witt -ttually hllvti to be riiCkoned wflh. ,

BRIDGE

e

+e ~ 4

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST

+J 9
• 73
tKQJ96

• Q 10 8 6

·~

+8143 2
+QJ9

+K 8 7 3

SOUTH
• ~ 3

Will you find
the right play?

.AQJ10 9 86
+7
.... 10 2
Vulnerable East-West
Dealer· South

By Pbillip Alder
To the casual observer. thts deal
from Bill Root's "How to Play a
Bridge Hand" looks easy - but tt tsn't
However, if you think of the right play,
you wtll realize you have found the solution. And 1f you don't think of it, how
can you possibly make the contract'
How would you, South, play to bring
home your SIX·hearl contract against
the lead of the diamond king'
This ts a difficult slam to bid, North South hav1ng mmimum high-card values and a perfect fit. In the given auction. South's use of Blackwood appears
aggress1ve, but he has a hand stronger
than hts poml-count suggests. He has
controls in both minor suits and extra
trump length. Oppostte a strong JUmp
shill w1th a heart fit, he should have a
play for slam .
You have two club losers; you must
discard one of them on a spade winner.
But it 1sn't easy to establish a long
spade if the su1t is breakmg 4-2, smce
the diamond lead has removed a vital

t•

West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pas.'l

Soulh

3•
4 NT
6•

a Crook and CNIM

11:00 (2). Cil (J). 1111
ONewa

Pass
Pass
Piss

dummy entry
The "ght play ts lo draw trumps
wtth the heart ace and queen. and then
to duck a spa de .
The opponents probably wtll try to
cash a d1amond Irick, but you ruff,
play a spade to dummy's king, cash
the spade ace, discarding a club, and
ruff a spade. You cross to dummy with
a trump lo the king and then discard
your last club loser on the spade seven.
Thts ts an unusual application of the
prmc1ple that if the opponents must
gel a trtck 1n a suit, you should Rive it
to them as quickly as possible.

The World Almanace Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Afrlcln l1nd

6 Hound'a
quarry
10 Up-lo-dalo
lal.)

12 Stttr

14 llalleloualy
15 Frozen wotor
column
16 Wool flbtr
17 South ol Nab.
10- farrier
20 Moat
profound
23 Fiend
26 Graval ridge
27 Be In debt to

30 Bandit
32 Conftlled
34 lnternaUonol
org.
35 Giving ntoney
36 Pollick lloh
37 Hlghlandar'a
cap
30 Actraoo

A•awarto Prtwloua Puule

Jelllca-

40 AHempled

42 LlrOt 1111'11 of
1 leather
45 Nautical rope
46 Mil. Khool
411 InCompetent
51 Nun'a
headclrtlf
54 =lllklnlat
nter
55 artiUon
56 Prepar11
(lhiiDikln,
e.g.)
570ura-to r1110n
why

DOWN
1 Danctr
Verdon
2 ...'I home
3 At an angle
4 HocktY org.
5 Slcktn
6 What drink·

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l!lr.Jlll.!ll!ll.J(1 UkJl!.JI.!lU
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Ul.Jlll!l UL!JULJ Ul!li.J

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IJI ::tt•li:l

rJIJI ;.fl;l

[•JI;lli

13 Famele
llndpfper
18 Gl'1 addrtoo

7 Tlllad
8 Pile ol grain
8 Slippery
11 Pllrtul cltlld
12 Vlrlttr of
apple

20Namt~

21 ChOOIII
22 Sflld

23 CoMte..llon
24 Slllrpen
25 Collply With
comrolnda
27 TV actor Ken

28- one'oway
20 Shortlltllpered

31 O.an

33 GrOIIP of two
3$ II permlttecl
to

40 Arm joint
41 Hedge ptanta
42 8tn43 Dill~
44 0111111 Of

48

@.

~=:c

47 Nile qwen,
lor 11tor1

... Dllpatc:hed
IOFltur-de--

CD Newawllefl

R!t.:"lo "t/ Stereo. r;l
Clllrlle

East

Pa"

.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___J

(t)TwlflghtZ-

a,..,...~...

Nortb
2+
4•
5•
Pass

Opening lead t K

Roberllon

10:30

7- l~tl

NORTH
+AK742

• K42
t A 10

ra

}

Connolly &amp;r Slalom graphlto okl
w/nylon cover. 24p preclalon
turbo 95 propJn•w), 304-1176.,.38 after C:OOP .

81

3 batow.

1!)1 WhMI ol Fortune

~~

1981 Baas Toummtnl Flehtr·
man 18' alumn, 55hp Chrysler
motor, wttlh trailer, motor guida
trotting motor, many oxtn(O,
$2,000. 304-8711-2884.
'
1988 Blho, Mint cond, w/3~
Chevy motor, $13,750.00. Stare
and Poggy Dovli, 6086 Rodlbrd
Rd, Athortl, OH, 614-592-4241 u
514·1192-2529.
.

Wot. Good Mllod Hoy, $15 Each.
614-379-2768 Evenings.

you dt¥elop from step No.

11!1 Scerecrow and Mn. King
7:05 (I) Tile Jelf...ona

Hondo 450 Extra ctoon, 3,000
mil". $500, 614-245-11463.

9001 Round Balta, Naver BMn

8

iiJ • Nlaht Court r;l
0 Mac&lt;Jyvar r;1

2213.

Hay &amp; Grain

r

(I) 8 lnalde Edition r;1
(!) MacNeii/Lehm
NewaHow r;1
1111 liZ • Current Allllr r;1

81 Suzuki RMIO, 2 strokl, runo
good. 114-445-6253.

614-245-5677,

IJ/ 8

0

Mother to teen : ·we are all
proud of making little mistakes It gives us the feeling

-,:G.;.;A~P+I..;.M:,..=.E"'T"""~~ we don't make--·····."
6 I
17 I
G Complete tno chu&lt;klo quotod
I _.J.-..L.
1 -.J.-.J.L-.J
L-...1..
bY' filling in the missing words

Cil
CD

1988 Modlllld Suzuki 250 Quod
Rac.r, exc conc:l, $1,400. ne;otlobto, 304-4711-IIH.

Pontoon Boat, Steal 50 Hor•
Johnoon. Now Dock, ~rpot,
Siding, $2,000 Finn. 61~4&amp;r
4043.

~

. - rJN__U;,.I.;_.;R. ;JD_;. s.:.;KI...--lJ·;
_ p~J

(1\ Night Court Q

we.

Porta.

=~~-..,.-,_-...;,.

7:00

1980 Hondo CB 900 Cullom,
6,600 Ortatnot Mttoa. eon 814·
387·7321 lfotoro 2p.m.
1980 Kawoaokt LTD, )04-1176-

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

~IT:-pR;.;,.,. ;u:...,:;r...:.,s
,~ ,---l, J

1:35 (I) Andy Orilfl1h

~74~~M;.;o:.;to~rc;,:y.,::c;le:.:s;,.._

76

•

3-2·1 Contact

1970 Dodge 1 ton flatbed, ,318
anglnt, 57,000 actual mll11,
Commodore 84 Compi.Atr, Wllh $1600 coli ahor 4:00. 814·1112·
Cab oxtandor lilt small pick up Dlec Drive, Prlnle! Tapa Ca• 21541.
1
$50. 304~15-4961 .
utta, Telephone Modem, With 1911 Toyota Land Crutur, ExcolConcrela I plastic septic tanke, Many Gamel &amp; Pr~rama, Will tont 414 capability, $750.00, -1·
Ron Ev•ns Enterprlus, Jack· Tracft For Video cam Corder. 614-885-4369.
' .
614-386-82.!3, 614-388-8113.
aon, OH 1-800-537-9528.
11118 F-100 Ford truc:k, lair cond,
Dodge Mldaa Motor Homo, Air
tUIO, PS, $1000.00, 614-9!122803.
'
Conditioning, GenaraiD!t_ LDw
Farm
Supplies
Mileage; 1080 GMC "'lckup
1t78
Ford
4
wh
dr,
V-8,
SSOO
or
Good Condition; 1990 Suzuki
&amp; Lives tock
bOll ott.r. 614-387-N04.
AM, 250.CC, Excellent Condition; Qu n Size Wattrbtd, 614·
1978 Food F-150, Good Co~l­
388-8358.
tlon, $1,500. 614-4-46-7638.
.
For Sala: 6" olnler 48" Bed, 7 61 Farm Equipment
1V65 Ford F-150 4x4, two Ioria
Ploco Golf Ct ba, With Bag, $30. 165 MF Troclor With Loader, rod, toodldl Must 111 to ap614-446-8131.
$4,9~; 1030 Forguoon Jt,988: pr..:lolo. IIC-445-0385.
For Sale: Strato Loungar, $50; Loll MOaot 135 MF $4,550; 100 1988 Toyota, 1 Ton, Plc:k-Up,•5
Roaon Momborahlp, 614-446- Ford $2,195; WD 45 AC Now Spood. $3,000. 614-446-4782.
Rubbor $995; 111111 Horse I
1810 Evenings.
Stock Trllllr, 14ft. $1,t95i OWner 1988 GMC auto PSIPB AC,
Frog Skin Pocket Books, Uko WIN Finance. 114·286-6522.
crulao, till. Lola olaxtrao. i'tntod
Thosa AI Mall, Up To $25; 614·
wlndowo, dloaot. 514-446-8044."'
1i85
Chivy
314
Ton,
$14,000
446-7913.
Miln $8,000; t990 Small Trac- 19110 Ford F-150 4x4 KLT Loti,
Mons 27 Inch Concord 10 apood tor Wlth Mower, $4,8CO. 614-446- air, duel gu tank, ,-, pw; ,
bike, now tires, S50. 304~76- 4266.
12,000 ml, $11,500. 614-192· 5.
4966.
•1991 Long 4 Wh. dr. tractor For Salt: Farcl Truck, With
Muaclo Building and Woip,ht $81195; Loll modot 454 Int. Covered Bed. Good For
Reducing Products • Am no dleMI tractor with buth hog, Delivery. Can Be Seen 449
Acids, a-otdenau.t Caps, Super $3995;
4000 Ford, $219~; 30f0 Jackson Pikt.
Fat Bumers Now Available at JO dllllt,
&amp;harp, $4850; 7030
Alta Aid Pharmacy.

NSA Walor Purifier you now
hav• ehanca to buy SOC below
wholesalt prlca $94 304-875·
4906.

Television
Viewing

awl

$3.300.
Trucks for Sale '

For Sale

Merchandise

I KNOW I

EVENINO

1989 troc Camoro Totally
Loodod, E•cattont Condlllcirll
48,000 Millo. ~04-675-3331 .
80 Chovy Cltobrlty, 4 DR. V-6,
2.8, auto. crul.. control, AC,
AMIFM radio, 154,000 ml!oo.
$4250. 614-440-8343 or 614-44683113.
19a.5 Calais Supreme, 3.0, V-1
Engine, Special Order, N~w
Tranamlnlon, And Naw Air
Condlttonar. Good Condllfonl

Nortll 3rd 51, Middleport, Olllo, 1
bedroom furnished apt, retertn·
coa and dlpoolt raqulrod. 304·
882-2566.
North 4th, Mtddtopon, Ohio. 2
bodroom fumlshod apt, deposit
and releranct required, :104-882·
2566.
45

Autos for Sale

1987 Pty~h Horizon, 1110,
PS, PB, AC, otoro, low ml, IJ4·
'1112·:1020 oftor 5:00pm.
1988 LIOCGin Town Car Loocl+d.
42,000 Mll11, I Owner, E1colltnl
Condhlon, 114-4-411-1157 Aftor
&amp;p.m.
1988 RS Clmero, Bleck' Ext.
Groy tnt. All Power, Opta. TP VI , Auto OOt 35,000 MIIH, ~C,
$8,200 or redo. 814-446-03)11,
114-446-8194.
19&amp;9 Chovy Calobnty, 4 dr, dark
blue~., grey velour Interior, V..e,
PS, ~a. AC, AMIFM storoo Cll·
••tt•lt 31,300 miiH, exctllent
cond ion. 814·441.0719.
•

New Haven, 2 bedroom fur·
nlshtd apartment, deposll and
reteranct, 304-882-2566.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
month plus dlpoatt. 614-446- Wuh.,.., dryers, rotrlgtralors,
0365.
rang••· Skaggs Appllancaa,
Uppar River Rd. Baslda Stone
7 room houaa Rollinsville, Craet
Motel. Call 614·446·7398.
rtflrtnce snd dtpoalt, $250.
month, colt aftor 6:30 304-895lAYNE'S FURNITURE
3435.
Compl•l• home tuml1hlngs.
Houra: Mon-Sat , a.-5. 614·4460322, 3 mllea out Bulavlllt Rd.
42 Mobile Homes
Free Delivery.
for Rent
PICKENS FURNITURE
14x60 mobile tloma, 1 mi. from
NewtUaad
Own your own apparel or shoe Holzer, 2 BR, AC. Utility room. Household twnlshlng. 112 mi.
store, choou: Jatn/Spor1ewur, Exc. cond. $250 mo, $200 Jorricho Rd. Pt. Plaasant, WV,
call 304~75 -1450 .
ladlu, Men's, lnfantiPratMn, oocurlty. 114-388-8835.
Large Slzt~, Petitt or Maternity 2 bedroom Ashton Upllnd Rd,
Dept, OancawtariAtroblc, Bridal $16~. mo. ptua utllltila, $100. Rotrigorator, Whits Frost Froo,
$125; Aafrigarator, Coppartona,
Llnglri~ Sock Shop or Accoodopooh, no pota, 304~75-4018.
Froet FrH, $150; Refrigerator,
aorfaa ~tare. Over 2000 name
Copparton, Froat FrH, Uka
brand&amp;. $21,1100 to $33,1100: In- 2 bedroom .trailer complataly New $250; Ralrlgarator Harvest
ventory, tnlnl~, fldurn, grand furnished, AIC, washtr, dryer, Gola,1 Froet FrM, $150; WasMr
opening, etc. Can open 15 days. 304-713-5958.
G.E. Copper1one, Heavy Duty,
llr. Loughlin 15121886-4228.
2 bedroom unfurnished 12x60, $95i Dryer Kenmore, $75;
Vending Aouta: For Salt. Caah 112 milt paet Holzer. Daposlt Etoctrlc Rango, 30 Inch, $9~;
Bualnau. High TraHic Local and R1farence Requlrtd. 614· Small Rafrigarator, Sulloblt For
Dorm Or Camper, S75; FrHzar.
locltlona. Ho11eat Machlnn On 446-4369 or 304-875-2330.
Upright, $150· Portable Dryer,
Market. 1-800-155-0354.
\ 3 bedroom all alae, Gallipolis $75; Skogga Apptlancoo, Upper
Farry, $250 mo. plus ulilltlaa, River Road, 614-445-1398, All
$100. doposit, no pols, 304-675- Sold With A GaurantMI
Real Estate
4088.
RENT 2 OWN
614·446·3158
3 bedroom doubla wida, prlv1t1
Vl'ra Furniture
lot, AIC, 2 baths, porch
31 Homes for Sale
w/awning, elec\ Wl lk·ln cloMit, Sofa &amp; Chair, $11.10 Weak;
$5.47 WHk, Swivel
1 mUe from city limite: 2! acrtt, nlco nolghbornood, Gallipolis Racllnar,
Rocklr, $3.53 Wook.Bunk Bod
e room houH, much, much Forry, $325. 304-875-3087.
Complata $8.41 WMk, 4 Drawer
mo,... 614-446-1340.
3 bedroom, 14x70, largo lot, Bud Chasr, $3.28 WMk; Poster Bad2 story, located Point Pleasant Chattin Road, $225. month, 304- room Sullo, 7 pc., $16.67 Wook,
Historical 0181, Main St, 9 676-35011ahor 5:00.
Includes Boddlng.Country Plno
rooma, 2 112 baths, renovated,
Dlnotll With Bench • 4 Choirs,
Mobile
home,
tum,
2-BR,
view
potHaalon on cloalng. Owner
$10.98 Wook.OPEN: Monday
anxious to ull. Accepting batt of rivar, 614·Di2-5940.
Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to &amp;p.m.,
offlr over $55,000. before July Uoblla Homes For Rant, phone Sunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
31. To Inspect call 304~75-1348 614-446-0508 or 446-8321.
Miles Oft Routa 7 On Routa 141.
or 675-7580.
In Centenary.
Mobile hornaa tor f'8nt or tala,
2·BR hOUII w/3 acr81, 614-985· tumlshod, 614-992-11179.
SWAIN
3920
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Oliva Sl., GaUipolll Now &amp; Used
3br 2 Full Balhl, Groot Room, 2 44
Apanment
tumlture, heattre, Waetern &amp;
Car Garaga, S57,500. 614-445Work boots. 614-446-3159.
for Rent

1-3 Room Apt, 111 floor, nlco,

71

Loloyotta Mall: 3br1 2 Both&amp;, All
Ulllltl11 lncludea. $425/mo.
Deposit Raqulrtd. No ~ata . 614·
446-7733, 614-446-4222

3 BR tloma, clly schools, $375

1 BA apartment: living room
tum'ed kitchen, elova, refrig.:
dlehwaaher, garbaga dlspoaal,
ahower In blth, gaa haat, air
cond. Oulat neighborhood.
Rtferii1CII ancl deposit . 614·
446·137V ahor 5 p.m.
1 EHiclancy Apanmant, Private
Bath, AU Utllltltl Paid, Across
From University of Rio Grandt,
S200fmo. 614-388-i946.

KIT 'N' 'CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlabt

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom ap1rtmenta at Vlllaga
Manor
and
Rlvaralde
Apartmants In Mlddlaport. From
$196 Colt 614-992-7787. EOH.

Real Estate
Wanted

8860.

5 bodroom, 2 112 balh, lg.
kitchen,
lamlly
room,
wlllrtplaca, living rm, dining rm,
double garage attached, 4 113
acraa, $65,000 Firm, call 614·
MAJOR TELEPHONE COMPANY 985-3574.
----Now Hiring Taehnlelant, In· Reduced
To Sell: 2 Story 3br
atsllere, Account Servlct Rop., Corner Lot ln Chaahlre Ohio.
Optrators. No
Exparlonca Exc•Uem Condition. For FinancNec11aary. For lotormatlon Call Ing, Flva Star Mortg•g•, Vlckla
1·219·735·9807 Ext . T6432 9a.m. Hauldren. 6t4-448-4042, SeUar
~o 9 p.m., 7 Days.
Will Poy Polnll 904-i32-6959,
Need babytiUtr In my home. 904-932-7870.
Mon·Frl. Aller 6pm call 614-446- For Salt By OWnor Ouatlty
2215.
Brick Ranch Clost To Holzer
Natd eomeona to disk &amp; eow a Hospital 4br, Full Bas1ment
large Shadecl Lot. 614-4464647
ya~rd in Patriot aru. 614-37g..
a her 5p.m.
2984.
Sacr•tary, Law Firm, good GOVERNMENT HOMES lo1m $1
HCratarfat tklll required, typing, (U repair). Dallnquant tax
dictation, word proctulngL ate. proptr1y. Raposstssions. Your
Write Box P·2 care t-"oln1 aroa 111 605-962-8000. Ext . GHPluunl ROflat~1 ,200 Main St, 10189 tor current rapo 1111.
Point Plaaaanr, wv 25550.
Lyona Addition In Mason,
Wanlod: Sarvlce Tachnlc:lan lor quoltly built, 4 bedrooms, 3
Heating &amp; Air Condlllon- b•ths, custom ••t In kitchen,
ln!JRafrlgeratlon. Experienced. DR, FA, 2 fireplacn, tA, 1 acra
Sand Resume: Cl• 079, c/o GaJ.. lot, Moral!! $117,500 304-773tlpotla Dally Tribune~, 625 Third 5881.
Avenue, G•lllpolls, OH 45631.
Mayo Drive, New Haven, 90x125'
lot, 4 bedroom•, 1 112 baths, 2
12
Situation
story, all brick, back clack complototy carpotod, 304-882·2382.
Wanted

Retrain
Now!!!Southaastern
Rick Pearson Auction Company, Bualnoaa Collage, Spring Valley
full lima auctionMr, complati Plaza. Call Today, 614-446-4367[&gt;
auction IDrvlea. Lleanud Ohio, Raglstar•tion 190-0S..1274B.
Wool Vlrglnlo, 304-773-5785.
18 Wanted to Do
9
wanted to Buy
Will Babysit In My Homa
UMd llobllo Homos, Call 614· Anr.lmt.
Rodney
Araa.
Ae arencu Available All Shift e.
446.0175.
Coli 614-245-5786.
Wantod to buy, Standing tlmbor,
Bob Wlttlamo &amp; Sono &amp;IC-992· Bush HC)Q Service Raaaonablt
Ratn. No Job To Small! 614·
644i.
379·2942.
Top Prtcoo For: All Old US
eGins, Gold Rlnaa, Diamonds, Chrlatlan Motkar wlll babysit In
Sllvar Colne, St•lina, Gold her homa, Flatrock area, 304·
Cotno. II.T.S. C&lt;&gt;ln Sllop, 151 895-3801 or ~76-3911 boloro
9.00 PM.
Socond Avon .., Glttlpotl&amp;
Gaorgu Portable Sawmill, don't
Employment Servtces htul your loga to tha mill Jull
call 304-875-1957.
11

Licensed Practical Nurse, Will
· Babytlt In My Home, Around

loti &amp; aereag• available for

Apartment
for Rent

===========1-----------!•ppolntmonl.
446-1539 eva. 614-446-71199 day,

Announcements

Wednesday, July 17,1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12- The Dally Sentinel

\. ' •

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111'1 title

VII Country

music allra Alan Jackson
and Restleaa Heart become
obiiCis of pr1ct1cat jokes.
(1 :00)

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ID Scarecrow IIICI Mrl. King
11:01(1) MOVIE: Tile Dirty Donn:
The Nail MilliOn (2:00)

11:30 (2) 8 I(J Tonlglll .,_
Stereo.

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CELEBRITY CIPHER

C4110n!y CIPMI' c;ryptograrN •• o-11tecf from quotetlonl br lwnoue P'"l* P&lt;tll ltld
E..:n IIIII!' In thl clpnll' tlendl lor ano1har Tr)dq 'l Qw I" arcp&amp;IM F

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "America Is a tune. It mull be sung together."
Glrlld Stanley Lee.
,

�Page-14-The Daily Semmel

Pomcro 1-Mieldle

.~eonesday,

. Oh•O

July 17 .

Syracuse
tourney
ends

VIETTI
HOTDO·G
STORE HOLIKS

SAUCE

Monday thru Sunday

10 OZ. CAN.

Ohio Lottery

'·

Pick 3:774
Pick 4: 2850
Cards: A·H, 7-C
Q-D; 2-S
Super Lotto:
3-6-10-20-30-44
Kicker:771543

Page4

Low tonight in mid 60s.
Friday, hot and sunny.
High in 90s.

8 AM-10 PM

3J$1

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH

PRICES EFFECnVE JULY 14 THRU JULY 20, 1991

ARMOUR
TREET

Vol. 42, No. 52
Copyrighted 1991

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steak I Roast ••••••l:·~

$

149

HOMEMADE

Sandwich Spread ••~~ $129

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 18, 1991

House passes job rights bill, 247-182

12 OZ. CAN

Chicken Breast .i~. $139

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)
- The United Steelworkers of
America Local 5668 was expecting
good news today, even though a
bill that would outlaw strikebreak·
ers, if passed, won't help the more
than 1,700 United Steelworkers out
of work at Ravenswood Aluminum
Corp., union officials said.
The USWA scheduled a conference for this morning to announce

99&lt;
DORITO'S

a ruling by the National Labor
Relations Board on the lockout of
the union members at RAC since
Nov. I, !990.
The conference was planned at
the USWA Local 5668 Hall in
Ravenswood at Nu Chance Drive.
Jim Bowen, director, USWA District 23, was expected to make the
announcement. with Joe Chapman,
Continued on page 3

NLRB says RAC guilty of unfair labor practices
Editor's note • Tbis message
was on the United Steelworkers
or America Ravenswood lockout
hotline at noon Thursday regarding the National Labor Relation's
Board decision regarding the
current labor situation at the
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. A

6.5 OZ. PKG.

79&lt;

Bologna ••••••••••• !~.. $1 59 STOKELY

BUCKET

$

BOnOM

$

32

Cubed Steak ••••• ~·.. 249

KAH~'S

,

Wieners •••••••••••••~·••

oz.

79&lt;

Round Steak .....~.. 249

LIBERTY GOLD

$

PINEAPPLE··
20 OZ. CAN

2/S1
Lettuce •••••••••••~:~. 2/$1
'

FLAVORITE

VAN CAMP

PORK &amp;
BEANS .

2°/o Milk ••••••••~'!~:.. $159
39&lt;
SU~NY DELIGHT
$ 19
C1trus Punch ••• ::.o~~ 1
GROUND
j
l

••
p
.
Hawauan unc

h460Z.

!!~..

Ice Cream ••••••••••••• 99&lt;
12 GAl.

1

69&lt;
·

KEMP'S

Asst.
Pops
•••••••
!::~.
99(
.BBQ Sauce •••••••••••• 79~
/

HEINZ

18

.

FlAVORitE

. 'MAC. &amp; CHEESE
.

•

7'14

.

oz.

GeH CW, At Pewtl's Sup• v.tu
. • GeH "" 14 tflnl Sat. J~ 20, '"'
•: •
lilllt 6
c..,_ ,
0 .

•••••

.

''h oz.

2
/S'
l
a,

Good Only hwtl's Sup• Vitlu
• Good lily 14 tin Sat. July 20, 1991
lilltlt 2 Ptr CtlllomiF

PURESWEET SUGAR •
4 LIS.
•

9.9&lt;

Good Onlr AI Powtl's $up• Vatu
Good .lulr 14 thru Sat. Jut, 20, 1991
Unlit I hr Cult-

HEINZ CIDER or WHITE

VINEGAR·

.9
4
2

17·08·060.s •

mary elections held in the county in
May and has been highly recom mended by the election board.
Action on the bid was tabled
pending review by the board of
commissioners and the board of
elections.
Bids were also opened for the
refurbishing of the Middleport
emergency squad. Bids were
received from two finns. with the
apparent low bidder being Southern
Ambulance Builders of LaGrange,
Ga. Bob Byer, Director of the
Meigs Emergency Medical Ser·
vices program, was on hand for the
opening . Southern Ambulance
Builders' bid was submitted at
$49,618, a bid considerably lower
than that of Horton Emergency
Vehicles of Columbus. who sub·
mitted a bid in the amount of
$55,287.
Action on that work was also

tabled pending review. Action is
expected to be taken at next week's
meeting on both the elections
equipment and the ambulance
improvements.
In other business, the commissioners moved to advertise for the
sale of 45.5 acres of property in
Meigs County belonging to Victor
Perry.
According to a letter from
Meigs County Prosecutor Steven L.
Story, that property was seized by
the county and forfeited by Perry as
part of a drug conviction again~ t
Perry in 1990. Story said that the
proceeds of the sale were to go to
the Law Enforcement Trust Fund.
Meigs County Engineer Philip
Roberts reported that a new tractor
wa.s now on site at the county
garage. The Case International
machine replaces a Massey FerguContinued on page 3

10 LB. PACKAGE

$1490

GAL.

.

Good Onlr At Pow.U's Sup• Valu
• Good July 14 thru Sat. July 20, 1991
'.lill!it I Ptr Custom•

10 LB.

'.

P~CKAGE

$1690,

Ohio Emergency Management
Agency, at least 2,500 people must
be affected before the President
will declare a disaster area, qualify·
ing those applicants for federal
relief dollars. Beck stated that
5.000 people were affected in last
summer's flooding in Ohio, which
included the Shadyside area.
However, the prospect of recciv·
ing imminent threat money from
the state quickly became a topic at
th e meeting. Those funds are
administered by the Ohio Adiutant
Continued on page 3

Cincinnati firm only bidder for
new electronic voting system

BEEF

GROUND
CHUCK

tmpasse in bargaining and permanently replacing bargaining unit
members on Dec. 3, !990.
Word of the action was relayed
to local union members by District
23 Director Jim Bowen at local
union hall. Bowen again called on
the company to return to the negotiating table for jtood faith bargainmg. Bowen pomted out that th e
union has said repeatedly that the
dispute can be settled if the company comes to the table with an open
mind."

bis frustration witb lack or help from the state at
last night's public meeting. "It's been a 'roundrobin' ever since the evacuation,',' Byer said.

oz.

STARKIST TUNA

6/s1

LOCAL DIRECTOR • Robert Byer, right,
standing, Director or the Meigs Emergency
Management Agency, related to a group of Pity
Me residents and state officials his efforts and

The Meigs County Commissioners opened and examined a bid
submitted for a new electronic ballot counter and voter registration
system when they met in regular
session on Wednesday afternoon.
The only bid received for the
equipment was submitted by Business Records Corporation, Cincinnati, at a cost of $37,781. Hardware
for the system was priced at
$5,032, software at $29,549, and
training, installation and support at
$3,200. Financing the cost of the
system is proposed over a three
year period.
The new system will replace a
ballot tabulator that has been
deemed outmoded and nearly
irreparable by the election board.
The cost of the new system reflects
a $500 trade-in on that system.
A system like that the one to be
purchased was used during the pri-

16 OZ. CAN

FLAVORITE

"The National Labor Relations
Board has confirmed what the
union has long contended, that the
company is guilty of unfair labor
practices. The NLRB says that it
will issue a formal complaint
against the company and it has
informed both the union and the
company of its decision.
To remedy the company's conduct. the complaint will seek an

order requiring that all union members be returned to their jobs, with
full back pay for any lost wages
and benefits, retroactive to Nov. I,
1990.
The complaint will allege that
RAC violated the National Labor
Relations Act by bargaining in bad
faith, by locking out 1700 members
of USWA Local 5668 on Nov. I,
1990, in support or its bad faith
bargaining unilaterally implementing its final contract offer on Nov.
29, !990, in the absence of a lawful

night at the Meigs County Pubiic
By BRIAN J. REED
Library.
The meeting was orgaSentinel News Staff
nized
and
moderated by Senator
Imminent Threat Grant monies
Jan
Michael
Long (D-Circleville)
from the State of Ohio may be the
only glimmer of hope from the and State Representative Mary
government for the estimated 25 Abel (D-Athens).
The meeting was called by Long
people displaced by a cave-in the
last
week in an anempt to organize
"Pity Me" area in May, and those
and
unify the local and state-level
funds are not guaranteed.
agencies
involved in the relief
Representatives from several
effort.
state agencies, the U.S. Department
At the onset of the meeting, any
of Interior's Division of Surface
Mining, and a director from the possibility of receiving federal
American Red Cross were present assistance was dismissed.
According to Pat Beck. of the
at a meeting held on Wednesday

KETCHUP

T-Bone Steak ••••!~. $449

rormal release from tbe National
Labor Relation's Board was not
available at press time.

Grant funds possible, but not
guaranteed for Pity Me residents

ECKRICH

USDA CHOICE BEEF

2 Sections, 12 Pageo 25 cents
A Mulllmodla Inc. Newopaper

CAPTURES SECOND - Racine posted a
great tournament trail to finish second. In the
front row are (L-R) Bobby Writesel, Tommy
Lane, Ryan Norris, Adam Roush and Michael
Bradford. In tbe middle row are Matt Brad-

ford, Joe Kirby Jr., Jessie Maynard, Brandon
Floyd, Paul Smith and David Milliron. In the
back row are sponsor Carson Crow, assistant
coach Lee Floyd .and Mike Kloes, bead coach
'Joe Kirby Sr. Absent was Kenny Guinther .

,..

··,

·~

ENGULFED BY FLAMES -This house,
owned by James Patterson, was destroyed by
fire Wednesday afternoon on Route l, West
Columbia, W.Va. Both the Mason and New

Haven Volunteer Fire Departments responded
to the call, but the house was already engulfed
upon their arrival. The cause or the blaze is
unkno'IV11.

Train derails, --Local briefs--no one hurt
Repair work slated for road
Dama~e to a switching station
was credited for the derailment of
two engines and four coal cars at
Carpenter early Thursday morning.
The State Highway Patrol,
Meigs County Sheriff's Department and Conrail officials were
still on the scene late this morning
although it was reported that the
area would be cleared for traffic
before noon.
According to a report from the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department, a bolt on the switching station had been cut off causing the
track to guide the train onto a short
spur.
The Conrail train of two engines
pulling 77 cars was beading north
on the traclc when the brakeman
observed that the switch flag was
gone. The train went onto the spur
at a reported 5P¢ed of 30 miles per
hour, Sheriff's Deputy Scott
Trussell reported, ran off the spur
and traveled several hundred feet
before stopping in some trees.
There reportedly was little dam!lge to the engines, m~erate dam·
age to two of the deralled cars, and
heavy damage to the third by the
impact from the other two. There
were no personal injuries.
An employee advised the sher·
ifrs deputy that the bolt had been
cut sometime after 8 p.m. when
another train went through Carpen-

ter .

.•

State Route 124 just north of Hockingport will close Monday for
construction work, John D. Dowler, District 10 Deputy Director for
the Ohio Department of Transponation announced today.
The closure, according to Dowler, is to allow construction crews
from Maiden and Jenkins to excavate overhanging rock and widen
the road. Rock from the cliff will be used for erosion protection
along the banks of the Ohio River. Cost of the project is $1 ,940,00 1.
That section of Route 124 is expected to be closed for no more
than 270 days, Dowler said. He listed the project's completion date
as Aug. 15, 1992. Detour for the closure is State Route 144 to U. S.
50/State Route 7, back to State Route 124.

Middleport man cited in accident
A Middleport man was cited following a two-car accident on
C.R. 19 in Salisbury Township Wednesday afternoon.
According to a report by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State high·
way Patrol. Charles L Harmon, 22, of Middleport, and Sheryl S.
Wilson, 31, of Pomeroy, were both eastbound on C.R. 19.
Wilson slowed to make a left tum, Harmon was unable 10 stop
and attempted to pass Wilson on the left, striking Wilson's 1983
Plymouth Reliant on the left side resulting in light damage to the
automobile.
Harmon. Wilson, and her passenger Abigail Wilson, I 0, of
Pomeroy, were uninjured according to the report.
Damage to Harmon's 1978 Chevrolet Malibu was listed as light.
Harmon was cited by the patrol for assured clear di stance.

Gallia, Mason sheriffs seize pot
Working in conjunction, the Gallia County Sherifrs Deparunent
and the Mason County, West Virginia, Sheriff's Department pulled
307 marijuana. plants in raids held Wednesday afternoon and
evening.
Continued on pa~e 3

.

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