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                  <text>Page-14-The Daily Semmel

Pomcro 1-Mieldle

.~eonesday,

. Oh•O

July 17 .

Syracuse
tourney
ends

VIETTI
HOTDO·G
STORE HOLIKS

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Monday thru Sunday

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Ohio Lottery

'·

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

Page4

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

8 AM-10 PM

3J$1

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POMEROY, OH

PRICES EFFECnVE JULY 14 THRU JULY 20, 1991

ARMOUR
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Vol. 42, No. 52
Copyrighted 1991

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steak I Roast ••••••l:·~

$

149

HOMEMADE

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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.

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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

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GAL.

.

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• Good July 14 thru Sat. July 20, 1991
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$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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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street

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

~~MULTIMEDIA. INC.
ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD
A•slstant Publisher/ Controller

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publlshers 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, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wtll be pubttshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Excerpts from other
papers around Ohio
By The Associated Press
Following are excerpts of editorials published recently by Ohio newspapers:
THE REPOSITORY, Canton, July 12: There was the common man,
fuming as he waited out a uaffic jam caused by road repairs: "I am mad
as. hell and I'm not going to take tt any more.
"And neither are the citizens of our great state." Hey, wait a minute.
That sounds like a politician tallcing.
It was. For 30 blessed minutes on Interstate 77 Tuesday, exhaust fumes
tainted the nuified air of politics. Gov _George Voinovich was trapped in
a traffic jam that made him half an hour late for a news conference. It also
made him mad as --· well, he has already explained that. The governor had
beetr explaining how mad such things made him even before he got stuck
on 1-77. Earlier in the day, he had met with deputy directors of the Ohio
Department of Tran~rtation and had given them both barrels for making
highway travel in Ohto a nightmare ...
After making the OOOT offictals squirm by relating several of his own
experiences with traffic delays, Voinovich asked them to answer a rockl!lld-hard-place question that has become a part of Ohio folldore: Have
you ever driven through a road repair area and seen one OOOT employee
working and six others standing around?
: By the governor's account, most of the hands in the room went up.
Case closed.
But perhaps a few roads will be open a little sooner as a result
THE PLAIN DEALER, CLEVELAND, July 12: The Cleveland school
district could save untold dollars and serve children much better meals by
prepanng food m the schools.
· This is the essence of the message that Cincinnati's public schools'
food service director will bring to Cleveland Monday. Diane Salanyster is
Scheduled to speak to the board of education, at the request of Superintendent Frank Huml. Cleveland school officials should take good notes.
The frozen trucked-in stuff that is ladled out daily to the district's
70,000 students is terrible; to put it mildly. And the bid process through
which food service companies are awarded contracts to feed students is
even less appetizing ...
While preparing meals at each of the city's schools would require
some initial equipment investments, the costs would no doubt be recouped
in the savings produced by elimmating a layer of l'arasitic vendors and
incompetent food-services bureacrats. And the children would receive
better food, at lower cost.
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH, July 12: Does motive determine
whether a deliberate act of property damage is a crime?
In Chicago the other day a Cook County jury reached the strange conclusion that a defendant who said he smeared red paint over several liquor
and tobacco billboards had committed no crime.
The defendent, a priest, Sllld his motive was to keep children from
drinking and smoking.
: Following acquittal, the Rev. Michael Pfleger proclaimed "a real vtctory for the community.''
: Who lost?
"It was the alcohol and tobacco companies and the billboard companies that were on trial here," Pfleger asserted.
WeD, not really. The companies, after all, are free to contmue adverusing the same products on the same billboards...
The judge in the Pfleger case P.ut it gently:
"Our system of justice isn t perfect," Judge Stuart A. Nudelman
observed. ''It sometimes makes mistakes, and our system may have made
a mistake with Ibis verdict. The jury doesn't believe it has.' '
It surely appears that justice took a holiday.
THE AKRON BEACON JOURNAL, July 11: It can't be, can it, that
we elect and pay our state legislators to enact a $27 billion budget when
almost no one knows what's in the bill?
The conference committee system has its virtues, but not when it
results, as it has in Columbus. with only six or eight of the 132Iawmakers
making all the final s~nding decisions behind closed doors and then
springing a 715-page bill out of the dark for instant approval by their colleagues, who have not time to analyze it.
Surely, there's a better way. Maybe legislators should insist that they
not be asked to vote on a bill until they have time to find out what's really
in it

roday In History
· - Today is Thursday, July 18, the 199th day of 199L There are 166 days
le:ct in the year.
: . On this date:
·: In 1536, the authority of the pope was declared void in England.
·- In 1872, Britain introduced the concept of voting by secret ballot.
: In 1918, during World War I, American and French forces launched a
c'Ounter-offensive against the Germans between the Aisne and Marne
livers in France.
: · In 1927, Ty Cobb hit safely for the 4,000th time in his career.
·. : In 1932, the United States and Canada signed a treaty to develop the
Si. Lawrence Seaway.
: In 1936, the Spanish Civil War began as Gen. Francisco Franco led an
lfprising of army troops based in Spanish North Africa against a socialist
coalition government in Madrid.
: In J940, the Democratic NatiJnal Convention in Chicago nominated
:t'Jesidcnt Franklin D. Roosevelt for an unprecedented third term in office.
In 1947, President Truman signed the Presidential Succession Act,
which designated the Speaker oC the House next in line to the presidency
lifter the vice president, foUowed by the Senate president pro tern, then by
members of the Cabinet
: . In 1969, a car driven by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., plungell off a
~ge on Chappaquiddick Island near Martha's Vineyard. His passenger,
28-year-old Mary Jo Kopechne, drowned.
In 1984, a gulliiUIIl opened ftre at a McDonald's fast food restaurant in
san Ysidro Calif., killing 21 people before being shot dead by police.
. In 1984, Walter Mondale won the Democratic presidential nomination
iii San'Francisco:
• Ten ' years ago: Jack Henry Abbott, whose writings about his life in
;..uoo became a best-selling book, fatally stabbed Richard Adan, an aspirj!Ctilr woi'kjng as a waitt.r, outside a New York City restaurant
. Five years ago: The world got its fust look at the remains of the Titanic as videOtapeS of the British luxury liner, which sank in 1912, were
relei8ed by~ from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
·' One yem; ago: Dr. Karl Menninger, the dominant figure in American
Y'lhialr&gt;'
six de4:ades. died in Topeka, Kan., four days short of his
th' birtJtday. .
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Hot weather continues; no relief in sight

Of 11 0 Weath er
Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 18, 1991

Friday, July 19
Accu-Wea~ forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH

Making the mind and spirit foremost
This friend of mine has an idea
that we should let the "dumbheads" (as he calls them) quit
school when everybody can see
they are not cut out for the academic life. We only tum them into troublemakers by keeping them in
school, says Harry.
Harry also feels that we are losing an awful lot of future plumbers,
cement-finishers and carpenters by
sticking them in classes they hate
when they could be serving their
apprenticeships in some trade.
kre we wrong to encourage all
teen-agers to stay in school or, in
the words of the public-service TV
announcement, ''If you quit, go
back"?
Maybe it depends on what our
idea of happiness is. Two notions
of where happiness lies have been
ingrained in us:
Happiness is gettmg what you
want when you want it - like sex
on the first date and credit cards
with large credit lines. Why wait
until tomorrow for what you can
get today?

Happiness is a quarter-acre of
land, a good job and beer, bowling
and backyard cookouts at night and
on the weekends.
If that is our idea of happiness,
we probably can't blame our teenagers if they want to get an early
start on the fun .
Of course, while these ideas of
happiness may serve us well
enough when we are young, they
start losing their hold on us in middle age and beyond - where we
spend most of our time. Then we
begin to fall back on our inner
resources.
The splendors of the mind don't
have the same appeal for all, but
they can expand everybody's vistas.

I never thought of quitting
school or learning a trade. (I still
have a scar on my left thumb where
the saw slipped in seventh-grade
Home Mechanics.) But I would
gladly have dispensed with Shakespeare if I had been given the
choice. I am glad now I wasn't.
I once wrote an essay for

By George R. Plagenz
English Literature class in high
school in which I defended my own
proposition that if any poet
deserved to be immortalized it was
Edgar Guest, not Shakespeare.
My main line of argument was
that at least you could understand
Edgar. Guest wrote easy-to-follow
sentences like "It takes a heap o'
livin' to make a house a home." I
also mentioned that I wanted to be
a sports writer and what good
would Shakespeare be to someone
covering the Cleveland Indians or
Ohio State's football team?
The only Bill Shakespeare I
cared anything about was at that
time playing halfback for Notre
Dame.
My teacher, Miss Marie Spiess,
must have been as upset with me
then as she was when I referred to
Joyce Kilmer as "she" in a composition about the author of
"Trees."
But she gave me a B on my

Edgar Guest essay and said nothing
more.
Then on e day she came into
class wtth a clipping from the
sports pages. Thornton (Lefty) Lee,
a pllcher for the Indians, was having trouble keeping his weight
down in spring training. The
paper 's baseball writer had
desert bed Lee's predicament by
quoting something Hamlet had
said: "0! that this too too sohd
flesh would melt."
I can still see the gleam in Miss
Spiess' eye as she latd that clipping
on my desk. I was won over. I
never read Edgar Guest again.
The whole issue is, at root, a
religious one. Does a "man's life
constst in the abundance of the
thmgs he possesses"? Religion has
always insisted it does not. But at
the same time it has often failed to
make the things of the mind and
the spirit suffictently attractive so
that we will put them first in our
lives.

Radio China real -fine chance

By Ben Wattenberg

mers are emigres who believe passionately in national freedom, costIy oversight is needed to insure that
broadcasts are informational rather
than inflammatory, factual rather
than factional.
The Radtos have been remarkably successful. Ask Poland's Lech
Walesa and Czechoslovakia's
Vaclav Havel. The Radios have
now been nominated for the Nobel
Peace Prize- by the foreign ministerofEstonia.
Victory in the Cold War may be

China has posed a problem.
China's aged dictators fear the con tag ion of hberty. Dunng the Cold
War 11 was American policy not to
irritate the old men lest they team
up with the Soviets. Things have changed. There is
no Soviet Union left to team up
with.
The Bush admimstration is still
nervous about Chma. They believe
antngonizing a mega-power of
more than a billion people will be
counter-productive.

Consider an idea whose time
may be here: Radio Free China. It
could play a key role in finishing
up the great unfinished business of
our time.
Legislation has been introduced.
Senate co-sponsors include, imagine this, liberal Joe Biden and conservative Jesse Helms. One commission is already studying the
idea, a second is likely.
The concept has been kickmg
around for decades. It involves
"surrogate radio."
America does two kinds of
international radio broadcasting
Our national service, Voice of
America, broadcasts globally in 44
languages. VOA has been an
authentic, often excellent, ''voice
of America" Its editorials express
views. Its professional
government
. d b. .
d
JOUmaI ISIS 0 0 jecllve news an
mteresting features, usually
. keyed
.
to American and global SJtuauons
In a complex way, VOA is part of
the Sta•~ Department
"'
Surrogate radio is different. It
was designed to broadcast to certain "denied" populations. These
are peop Ies w hose governments
· d 1 ...
· t he dark ,
tne
o .. eep th em 10
.
all
bo
t
h
1
· gomg on
espect Y a u w a IS
10 their own tortured counuies
America's principal surrogate services are Radio Free Europe and
Radio Liberty, started in the early
I 95 0 s. The government f unds
"The Radios," but through an
independent board of citizen directors. (I was a member of that board;
I am now a member of the extant
study commission.)
RFE is beamed to Eastern
Europe in nine languages. RL
broadcasts to the Soviet Union in
13 languages. (A newer surrogate,
R di0 Marti b de IS to C b )
• roa as
a
u a.
The Radios tried to produce
what freedom of expression would
yield if a repressed nation had free
expression. As they evolved, the
stations served as local newspapers, town meetings, journals of
opinion, religious mentors, chromclers of culture and global news
·
h l
magazmes. In toug p aces and
tough times, oppressed peoples listened, at their peril, through jamming, and learned the flame was
alive, and that America cared.
Surrogate radio is not cheap. It
takes intensive research to dig out
news from a closed society. (RFE's
Romanian service employs somewhat more staff than VOA's China
service!) Because many program-

Letters to
the editor
Bob Gilmore
praised

r=::::;:::;:::;:::===T-=========-r-==::::=::::::====r=========
Public Notice
Public Notice
PubUc Notice
PubliC Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Th M1 I C
B
quarter of the oouthout
e
ga ounty oard quarter of Section Two (21;
of
acceptingCommiooionero
writlen ooaledilblda
for and tho northaaot quarter of
tho purchaM of certain ,811 tho ooutheaot quarter of
property as deoeribod be- Section Two 121·
lo
Said Real Eotate having
w.
parcel number 16-00394
Haled
bid•Moigl
must
Deed Refaranca: Volume
beWritten
received
in the
County CommllaiOMrl Of- 183, Page 106 and Volume
264, Page 239. Meigo
flee. Moig1 County Coun- County Deed Recorda. Volhouoe, Pomeroy, Ohio,
4&amp;769, no later than Wed- ume B3, Page 674 and Vonuday. Augult 21 , 1991 ,at lume139, Pagel 19, Vinton
4:30P.M. Nobi•·willbeac- County Deed Record•.
w.
madeae
copted poltdated
later than to No
anywarrantieaare
lien•. mongages
or
Augult 21 1991 Tho writ
·
·
- encumbranceo on the above
ten oealed
bido 1hould
in- Real Eotllte.
elude
the bidder'•
name. adBoard of Commisdra11. telephone number, a 1 ioTho
nere may reJ"ect any bid•
de•crlption of the ,...
-o-rty
and ra·aclvertiee thia prop·
t h8 per10n
wiohoa
to bid on. arty until all such property is
, e the t'ndt'vldual Ia
the PriC
bidding on tho doocrlbad oold or leaaod.
pro-rty, and the date the f T1•rm• of payment ora ••
olows: 10% of purchase
bid ,...
to being mailed. Tho raal price
paid immediately by
property will be sold to the cashorbenkcheck.Romainhlgheat
reaponaibla
balance due within thirty
The property
to bebidder.
aold Is: ing
30
Parcel No. 1: Tho follow- 1 1daX:a1~ 1Ad:unty Board
ing deoeribed real o1t11te,
of Commluionero
11tuated in the Townohlp of 171 1B. 2&amp;; (BJ 1, B, 4tc
. · th C
f
C Ium b ••·
'" • of ounty
Meigo and Stete
Ohio, oto 1--':"""~----PubliC Notice
wit:
Tho 1outh-•t corner of
tho oouthweat quarter of Combined Financial Report
Section Number Thirty-Two of the Board of Education
(32)1n Townohlp No. Nine
of the Southern local
(91 of Range No. Fifteen (151
School District,
of the Ohio Company's Meigs County. Ohio. For
PurchaA contlllning Forty
the Fiscal Vear Ending
(40)acro• more or leu. ,
June 30, 1991
Aloo. tho following de- GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
1cribad raal eotate. com- REVENUE RECEIPTSmonclng at tha northweot Taxes ...... ..... 1, 167,241.94
comer of Section No. Thirty- Tuition ............... 6,306.40
one (311 of Townlhip No. Earnings on
Nine (9). Range No. AftHn
tnveatments .. 16,696.46
(16). oftho Ohio Company'• Extracurricular
PurchaA, thence n1t Forty
Activities ....... 74,632.42
(401 rods. thence oouth Mioc.
Forty 1401 rodo; thence weot
Receipta ...... 10,622.41
Grants ·n
'd
Forty (401 rod. . thence
1 A1
north Forty (401 r.;..• to tho State
place of beginning. contllin- Sources ... 2, 140,764.48
ing Ten (10) acrao more or Federal
leu.
Source• . .201,856 17
Excepting
from
tho
Forty
Total
(401 acre tract above deReceipts ... 3.618.118.27
~eribod. ona 111 rod. Six18on DISBURSEMENTS1181 feet wide on tho eaat lnotruction .. 2, 107.831.63
11de. boino a rioht nf wiiV Supporting
now owned by Louis CotServices ... 1.472,640.5B

OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES (USES)
Contrlbutional!t
oonat1ono ........ 3,8 31.37
Totlll Other Fin. Sources
Uses) ........ .... .3,831 .37
Exc. Rcpto./Sources
Ovor/(Under) Disb.l!t Othor Uses/Net ....... 868.50
Beginning Fund Cash
Balance
8 120 71
· .. · .. · ·
Ending Fund Cash
Balance.. .. ...8,989 21
Reserved for Encumbrances ........ ... .. 329.85
Unre
dF d
un 8
8 a1Mrvo
ance .............
659 36
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
0 PERATING RECEIPTSFoOd servtces
·
Sales ............ 86 ·684 06
Class Materials 8t
Fees .............. 20.259.59
M''""·
· ...... 6,317 52
recotpts
Totel
Rae·
eopt..... ... 11326116
·
OPERATING
DISBURSEMENTS:
Emp 1oyeas s alarles
&amp; Wages ...... 109,872.44
Employees Retirement
Benefits ....... 34,079.03

trill and wife.

Extracurricular

Earn1ngs on

ing deacrlbtld real eatlte, li·

Total Oilburl8·

°

1---------

Said Real Eotete having
Activitie1 ... .. .. 98,473.50
parcel number 06-00617.
Dabt
Parcel No. 2: The followServices .... .....28.937.62

tuate In the County of Yinment1 ...... 3. 707,883.23
ton. In tho Townohip of Yin- Exc. Rcpt1. Over/tUnton and in the State of Ohio.
derl Diob ...... (89,764.961
to-wit:
OTHER FINANCING
Being tho Ohio Com- SOURCES (USES)pany's Purch.... end being

ttor·.
Dear Ed
The Village of Middleport
would like to expand on Bob
Gilmore's Jetter to the editor in Frif
day, July 12 issue 0 The Daily
Sentinel.
Bob modestly failed to mention
1 f th
· · g
h ff h
t e e ort e pu or ·orgamzm
the affair and. his time and talent
designing and painting the signs for
the parks.
Alllhe Village degartments did
.
h
an outstanding job an dl mg t e
extra work load and the extra effort
put out by these departments were
ded b th
f th el
rewar
Y e success 0 e c ebration.
We would like to extend a special thanks to the brick layers and
cement finishers Local #32 for
.
finding and supplying the cement
finishers to come out on Sunday
morning to pour and finish the 13
Yards of concrete it took to con-.
struct the stage. We hope to make tt
bigger and better next year.
.BiiiMiller,
De D·
v. If.

seen this way: American power
contained communism. Thus constrained, communism was undermined by Western ideas. The ideas
came through many channels, but
radio was critical. RFE/RL
deserves a prize not just for peace,
but for freedom.
Now China. It is the last important redoubt of oppression. If China
becomes free, that's the ballgame.
The world will be free.
Surrogate programming to

tho oouth half of tho
oouthoaot quaner of Section
No. Two (21 of Aid Townohip No. Nine (91. Ra~ge
Sixteen (18). excepting
Forty (401 ocrea off the we1t
end of Aid pramioea 101d by
E. P. Davie to Leander Cottrill.
At1o tho north half of Aid
ooutheaat quarter of Aid
Section No. Two 121. oxceptlng what E. P. Davia
oold and deeded to Leandor
Cottrill and John Mark, contllining oeventy 1701 acres,
more or ... s.
Atoo Thirty (301 ocreo off
the nonh ond of thuaathalf
of tho ooutheoet quarter of
Section Two 121. Townohlp
Nine (91. Range Slxlllen 1111
in th 1 Ohio Compeny'a
1
PurCII-.
Aloo a 1mllll tract of land
oituatod In theobove named
Townohlp and County, contllinlng a opt'lng of otock watllr de-lbod 11 fottowa, being et the north end of the
e..t one-half of the
oouth-tquanerof Section
No. Two 121 of Townohlp
Nine 111. of Ronge llxtlln
(161. ond In llle Ohio
ComP,.ny'1 Purch-.
The above doocrlbed real
oo18te being the oouth-t

Contributions end

Donatlono ...... 14,684.07
Operoting TranoferJIn ...... ....... 2.483.37
Advonceo -In . . 1.670.00
Operating TranoferoOut ...............12.4B3.371
AdvancesOut ...............(1,570.001
Totlll Other Fin. Sourcoo
(UA•I .. ..........14,8B4.07
Exc. Rcpto/Sourceo Over/
lUnder! Dioburo.l!t Other
Uoeo/Not .....(7&amp;,080.B91
Beginning Fund ca1h
Balance ........ 242,873.43
Ending Fund Caoh
Belence ........ 167,692.64

ReMrve for Encumbrancei ..... 29 ·992 ·B4
UnreArved Fund
Balance ........ 137,599.70
EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUNDS
REVENUE RECEIPTSExtracurricular
Activitlea ........ 23,604.23
Tout
Recelpto ......... 23.8P4.23
EXPENDITURE
DISBURSEMENTS.
lnltructlon .......... 2.&amp;07.B8
Extracurrlculer
Activltleo ........ 24,0&amp;9.24
Totlll Dlobur•mento .... 26,567.10
Exc. Rcpta. Overi(Underl Dlob . ....... (2,982.B7~

Purchaaad

SBI'vices . . . 617.78
Supplies &amp;
Materials ..... 117.206.58
Other Objects ....... 198.00
Total Disbursemonts ......... 261,973.83
Exc. RcDts. Over/tUnder) Disb .... 1148,712.671
NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS IDISBURSE.J
State
Sources ..... ..... 8,847.44
Federal
Sources . ..... 126,902.34
Total Other Fin. Sources
(Uses) ...... .. .136,749.78
Exc. Rcpts/Sources Over/
Under) Diab. and Other
Uoeo/Net ..... (1 2,962.891
Beginning Fund Cash
Balance . . 49,404.48
Ending Fund Caoh
Balance ....... ... 36,441 59
Reoervod for Encumu:~;.~~!d' i:'~~d ..... 204 80
Balance .... .... 36,236.79
TOTALS
RECEIPTS:
Taxes .. ,........ 1,167,241 .94
Tuition .......... .... 6,305.40

Operating Transfers-

Out.. ............ (2.483.371

Advances-

Out .. .... . .. .. . (1,570.001
Total Other Fin. Sources
(Uses) .. .... ... .154,265.22.
Exc. Rcpts/ Sources
Over/(UnderJ Oisb. l!t Other
Uses/Net ..... (87, 175.281
Beg1nntng Fund Cash
Balance ........ 300, 198.62
Ending Fund Cash
Balance ........ 213.023.34
Reserved for Encum·

brances .......... 30,527.49

Unreserved Fund

Balance ....... 182,495.85

Cash in

Banks .

..213,023.34

Total Fund

Balance .. .. 213,023.34
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS-BONDS
Balance Beginning
of Period ...... 300,000.00
New Issues During

Fiscal Period ......... ... o.oo
Redammed Dunng Fiscal Period ....... 40.000.00
Balance
6-30-91 ....... 260,000.00
I certify this repon to be

correct and true to the best
of my knowledge.

Dennie E. Hill,
Treasurer of the
Board of Education

(7)18, 1tc

614-949-2213

Public Notice
------PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby given
that on Saturday, July 20th.
1991, a110:00a.m .. a public Ale will be held at 105
Union

Avenue, Pomeroy,

Ohio, to All for cash the following collateral:
1987 Ford Tempo
Gl 6 IP, air cond.
S#1 FABP3860HK-1804B4

The Farmers Blink and

Savings

Compeny, Pom-

eroy, Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at thia ule, and

to withdraw the above collateral prior to sale. FUrther,
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company reaervae the
(ight to reject any or all bids

Investments ... 16,696.46 aubmitted.
Further, the above collaFood Service
teral will be sold in the conSales ............. 86,6B4.05 dition
it is in with no exE11tracurricular
pres•d
Activities ........ 98,236.65 tiel given.or implied warrenClan Materials &amp;
Fe01 .............. 20.259.69 17117, 1B, 19, 3tc
Mise
Recoipto ........ 16.939.93
Public Notice
Grants 1n Aid:
State
Sources .... 2. 140.764.48
SOUTHERN LOCAl
Federal
SCHOOL DISTRICT
Sources ....... 201,856.17
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Totlll
.
Combined Statement of
Recelptl .... 3. 754.9B3.68
Revenue
DISBURSEMENTS:
Budget and Actual
Instruction ... 2,110,339 .49 ALL BUDGETARY FUNDS
Supponlng
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR
Services .... 1.472.640.58 ESTIMATED REVENUEExtracurricular
Govarnmentlll Fundt:
Actlvitieo .. .... 122.632.74
General ..... 3,281.208.66
Debt Special
Services ......... 28.937.52
Revenue ....327.220.03
Employees Salarieo
Debt
Service .. .. ... 29,269.110
&amp; Wage• .. .. .109.872.44
Employees Retirement
C.pltlll
Benoflto ........ 34.079 .03
Project• ............... 0.00
PurchaMd
Proprlet"-ry Fundo:
Sorvlcoo .............. 617.78 Entl&lt;prl• ...... 249.01 0.94
Supplies &amp;
lntO&lt;nal Service ....... 0.00
Materials .... .117,206.5B Fiduciary Funda:
Other
Trust end
Objecta .... .... ....... 198.00 Agency ............ 27,436.80
Total DisburATOTAL-All
menu ....... 3,996.424.16
Fundi ....... 3,913.134.82
Exc. Rcpu. Overi(Undor)
ACTUAL REVENUEDisb ...........(241 ,440.1101 Governmental Funda:
Contributions l!t ·
General ..... 3,281,376. 1B
Donetiona ...... 18,&amp;16.44 Special
Revenue ....... 327.220.03
State
Sourceo ........... 8.847.44 Deb!
Federal
Service ....... 28,2119.60
Sources ....... 126.902.34 Capital
Operating TranoforoProject• ............. ..0.00
In ........ ............ 2,4B3.37 Proprietary Fundo:
Advonceo In ................ .. .1.&amp;70.00 (Continued on Page 9)

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 18, 1991

e

PA

IMansfield I 69° I•
IND

•I Columbus I 90°

J

..
~

Forecasters don ' t see much
change in Ohio's weather over the
next few days, except for a small
chance of some rain on Saturday
and a slight cooling on Sunday.
For the most part, 11 will be hot
and humid through the weekend.
Highs will range from 90 to the
mid -90s.
·
A weak cold front passing
through the state on Saturday could
produce some showers and temperatures might be a few degrees cooler in its wake.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 99 degrees m 1887.
The record low was 53 in 1976.
Sunrise this morning was at
6:17 a.m. Sunset will be at 8:58

p.m.
Around the nation
Rain fell in the Southeast early
today, while the overheated northern Plains braced for severe thunderstorms and more record high
temperatures as warm weather
stretched across most of the nation.
It rained in parts of Tennessee
and South Carolina this morning.
Severe thunderstorms were expected in the Dalcotas and Minnesota
later in the day.
Wet weather also was forecast
for Northern California, Nevada,
Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Arizona, New Mexico, Mississippi,
Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina,
Virginia, Michigan, New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine.
'

General's off1ce. It was rev-ealed
that th'\application for those funds
were rqilei ved earlier this week by
County Economic Development
Director Elizabeth Schaad.
The only question that surfaced
regarding that grant (other than
whether the area will qualify for
Showers T·storms Ram Flumes Snow
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
the
funds) is whether the applicaVta AssoCJatfttl Press Grspt;csNet
C1991 Accu·Weather, Inc
tion process will be hindered by
studies conducted by the Department of Interior.
According to Jack Holbrook of
Saturday
through
Monday
South-Central Obio
the
department's Office of Surface
A slight chance of thunderTonight, mostly clear and
muggy. Low 65-70. Friday, mostly storms Saturday. Fair on Sunday
sunny and continued hot and and then a chance of showers and
Continued from page 1
humid. High near 90. Chance of thunderstorms again Monday.
Lows 65-70. Highs near 90 Saturrain 20 percent.
day, 85-90 Sunday and in the low USW A staff representative; Dan
Extended forecast:
Stidham, Local 5668 president; and
90s Monday.
members of the union negotiating
committee.
Meanwhtle, the House passed a
bill
Wednesday by a 247-182 marContinued from page 1
gin that would outlaw strikebreakThe plants, growing in Gallia ~nd Mason Counties, were spotted
ers.
by the Gallia County Sheriff's Department from an Ohio State
But it faced formidable opposiHighway Patrol helicopter. The Mason County Sheriff's Departtion in the Senate and at the White
ment was then notified.
House.
Gallia County Shenff Denms Salisbury said the two sheriffs·
Since the 1930s, federal labor
departments have a "good working relationship."
laws have allowed unions to strike.
A 1938 Supreme Court ruling said
striking workers could not be fued,
/
but they could be "permanently
replaced."
Two calls for assistance were answered by units of the Meigs
"As far as these people are conCounty Emergency Medical Service Wednesday.
cerned,
it wiD not help them one
At 4:34p.m. the Tuppers Plains squad transponed Dave Elkins
bit.
It's
not gomg to be retroacfrom his home of Maple Street to Camden Clark Hospttal. At 6:29
tive,"
said
Jim Bowen, the union's
p.m . the Rutland unit took Ronnie Searles.an~ Dennis S~les to the
District 23 director.
Holzer Medical Center for treatment of mJunes recetved m an autoThe union members have been
mobile accident on New Lima Road.
off the job at the Jackson County
plant since their contract expired
Nov. I. The union has said the
continued from page 1
o)VOrkers were locked out. The company says the workers are on strike.
son tractor that was put out of com- areas;
Ravenswood has hired more
the
board
transferred
the
mission earlier this year due to a
than
1,000 permanent replacements
amount
of
$1,247.26
from
the
1990
faulty transmission.
Roberts stated that the depart- Litter Control fund to the county for them.
Bowen said that even thou~h the
ment was currently in the process general fund;
- discussed the county's cinder bill won't help Ravenswood workof getting rate quotations from the
ers, its passage would boost morale
area's banks with regard to financ- supply for the winter, which within labor.
Roberts
reported
to
be
sufficient.
ing the tractor purchase.
Present, in addition to Roberts
In other business:
and
Jones, were Commtssioners
- Commissioner Richard Jones
Veterans Memorial
David
Koblentz and Manning
reported to Roberts of several areas Roush, and
Comm1ssion Secretary
There
were no admissions to or
where brush is reportedly in need Gloria Kloes.
discharges
from Veterans Memoriof cuttmg in the Bashan and Keno
ai Hospital Wednesday, personnel

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

House ...

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

Squads have two calls

Cincinnati...

Hospital news

there report.

Mining, core drilling and other testing will begin next week to determine if movement in the area has
stopped. He also stated that such
studies could take up to six months
to complete.
Reclamation options are sull
being considered, according to
Holbrook. Draining the mine water
in the area will be a priority, if
pent-up mine water is indeed determmed to be the cause of the proplem.
While agencies discuss cause
and effect, frustration continues to
mount on the part of Pity Me residents. Most of the evacuated residents have been away from their
homes since the cave-m took place
in early May, and the frustration
felt by those displaced residents
was voiced by several of them and
by the local officials who have
attempted to get help.
"It seems to me like this is just
more pass-the-buck time," County
Commissioner Richard Jones said
midway into the meeting. "Isn't
there anything that these people
can ~et from the state? Do we have
to kill 2,500 people to get some
attention? If that's the case, there's
somethmg wrong with the law."
Jones continued by reiterating
what Meigs EMA Director Bob
Bycr has said in the past.
"In my 15 years as a county
commissioner, I have dealt four
times with the Ohio EMA and this
county has yet to get the first
penny."
From the time of the cave-in and
during the ensuing months , the
American Red Cross (along wtth
county officials) has been credited
as being the only agency which has
offered genuine asststance and
hope for those affected by the slide.
Mtke Bitner of the American
Red Cross stated last night that the
agency has spent $10,000 on motel
rooms , restaurant meals and rent
and deposits for temporary housing.
At first, the Red Cross stated
that they would pay the first
month's rent and any deposits
required to relocate Pity Me residents into temporary housing.
Bitner stated last night that the

"

.....__-Area deaths-- __ Meigs announcements __
Kathryn Florence Warth, 55, of
Hartford, died Tuesday, July 16,
1991, at Pleasant Valley HospitaL
A member of the Hartford
Church of Christ in Christian
Union, she was born November 18,
1935 in Hartford, daughter of the
late Charles R. and Sadie Louise
Keams Gibbs.
She was preceded in death by
one son, John Michael Warth, and
three brothers.
Survivors include her husband
David C. Warth; eight daughters,
Linda L. Roush of West Columbia,
Regina S. Crump of New Haven,
Reda F. Spencer of Hartford,
Tammy V. Green of Hartford, Mary
B. Roush of Middleport, Freda L.
Eakins of Middleport, Patricia A.
Reitmire of Jacksonville, Fla., and
Helen (Dee Dee) Warth at horne;

The Daily Sentinel
(lJSPSifll-flll)
A Dlvatlon of Multimedia, Inc.
Published pvery afternoon. Monday
through Friday. 111 Court St . Po·

meroy. Ohio, by lh• Ohio Vallt'V Pub·
Jlshlng Company/Mu ltimedia. Inc.
Pomoroy, Ohio 4~769, Ph. 992-2156 So·
cond class postagp paid at PomE-roy.
Ohio
MPmbeor

Tht' Associated

Press.

In

land Dally PrPSs Assodallon and the

Ohio Nowspapor Association National

Advertising Reopresentattve, Branham

New!paper sales, 733 Third Avenuf',
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POSTMASTER· SPnd address changes

to

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Dally Sentinel,
Ohio 45711!.

Pomeroy,

lll

Court Sl .

SU118CBIPTION BATJ!S
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week.. . . . .. . . .. . . . Sl60
OnP Month .
. ... .. .. . ...... 16.95

One Year ... .. . ......... ...... ... . S83.20
SJNGLECOPV

PBICE

Dally ................. .............. 2~ Cents
SubscriOOs not desiring to pay thecarrtPr may remit 1n advanN dlrt~ct to

The Dally S..ntlnel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
basta. Credit wlll be given carrier each
week.
No subscriptions by mall permttt@d In

areas wherE' home carrier service 11
ava~ble

.

Mall !loltocrlplloes

l•ltle Melp CoiiiiiJ

~ ~:=::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::: :::::~i~

!i2 Weekl.,............... ...... :..... ..... $84-76
Ollllde Melp CttoiiiJ

13 Weekl ..................... ....... ...... $23.40
26 Weeki ................. ....... ......... . 145.110
52 Weeki ..................... ........ .... . 188.40

Falls, Minn., was 94, one degree
over a 1943 record. Lander. Wyo.,
reached 97, breakmg a 1990 record
of95.
Heat in North Dakota was
expected to damage wheat crops.
The high for the nauon Wednesday was 112 degrees al Lake Havasu City, Ariz.
H1gh temperatures in the 90s
were forecast today for most of the
nauon. Excepuon s were northwest
Washington state with highs in the
60s; the Southeas t, 1he northern
Plaws and northern Ne w England
w1th hi ghs 1n th e 80s, and th e
de se rt Southw es t and pan s of
Tex as, Oklahoma, Nebras ka and
Kansas w1th h1ghs toppmg I 00

Grant... Continued from page 1

W VA

Kathryn Warth

On Wednesday, heavy rain and
powerful winds destroyed farm
buildings in Alexandria, Minn.
''We had a big hog barn collapse on a bunch of pigs," said
Douglas County Sheriff's Deputy
Brad BreJcha. He didn 't know how
many pigs were inside or whether
any were killed.
Rainfall in Albany, Ga., reached
50 inches Wednesday - the average amont the ctty gets m a year. It
got only 35.75 last year, when a
drought damaged the south Georg1a
peanut crop.
Record highs were reponed
Wednesday in the Northeast and
the Great Plams. B1smarck , N.D.
reached I 04 degrees, breaking a
1977 record of 103. International

two sons, Floyd L. of Jacksonville,
and David W. of Point Pleasant; Hymn sing
five brothers, Thomas B. Gibbs of
The Fruth Full Gospel Church in
Hartford, Hubert W. Gtbbs of New Long Bottom will have a hymn
Haven, and Denver D.. Gary G. and sing on Friday at 7:30 p.m. featurGarland 0., aU of Hartford; three mg local talent. Pastor Steve Reed
sisters, Virginia M. Patterson of invites the public.
Hartford, Donna R. Neece of Mid- Taylor-Harper reunion
dleport, and Brenda A. Warth of
The Taylor-Harper reumon will
Hartford; 22 grandchildren; and be held July 28 at 1 p.m. at the
one great-grandchild.
home of Bev and Ruby Rife, 39000
Funeral services will be conduc- Leadmg Creed Road, Middleport.
ted Friday at 1 p.m. at the Hartford Bring a covered dish and beverage
Church of Christ in Chrisuan to share and table service.
Union, with the Rev. Mtke Gilkey Hudnall reunion
Thompson officiating. Burial will
Descendants of Tommy Gilkey
follow in the Graham Cemetery.
and Mtlda Jane Hudnall will hold
Friends may call the funeral their annual reunion July 28 at the
home from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 7 roadside park on Route 33 south of
to 9 p.m. Thursday at Foglesong Darwin. A potluck dinner will he
Funeral Home.
served at noon. Those attending are
The body will be taken to the asked to take their own table serchurch one hour prior to the ser- vice and folding chairs.
vice.
Farrar reunion
The 20th annual Farrar reumon
Hospital news
wtll be held at the Miller propeny
on Sternber~er Road (Township
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges · July 17 - Mrs.
Harold Coughenour and son, Mrs.
Marlin Evans and son, Vonda
Geroge, Mrs. Ronald Greathouse
and son, Clyde Morris, Edna Slusher, Lois Stapleton, Gertrude Stewart, Iris Stewart and Elizabeth
Wasch.
Birth Jyly 17 - Mr. and Mrs.
John Henderson, son, Jackson.

Road 601) near Jackson on July 28.
There will be a covered dish
dinner at noon at the family shelter
house.
The Farrars are descendants of
Richard Allen and Margaret
Stropes Farrar who had the followmg children: Angelina, Lycurgus
(Kurg), Reuben, Eunice, Amanda,
Ella; Asa Allen (Allen), Clarinda,
Marintha and Cora.
All Farrars and friends are invited to attend and further information
may be obtained by calling Don
and Juanita Clark at 384-6684.
T -shirt painting
A t-shirt designs with paint class
is being offered by the Middleport
Arts Council on Aug. 5 at I p.m.
w1th Michele Garretson as the
mstructor.
Each child is to bring his or her
own t-shirt and card board to go
under lhe shirt. Cost of the class is
$7.50. Call 742-2157 or 992-2675
to register.

MEETING ORGANIZERS - State Senalor Jan Michael Long
(D·Circleville) and State Representalive Mary Abel (D-Athens)
called a meeting for Hobson residents and state and local officials
on Wednesday to determine the cause and effect of a rock cave-in
at Pity Me that has left at least 25 residents homeless. A small delegation of residents were on hand and officials attempted to share
information and unify relief efforts.
Red Cross had also paid second said. "It would gtve these people
month's rem in certain cases alid decent. safe and sanitary housing
had moved a mobile home from the for the long tenn ."
site to a different location m another case. Bitner also said that the
Red Cross would be m the area
until they were no longer needed.
"We will continue to be here
until all of these people are taken
care of," he said.
On Thursday morning, Schaad
estimated that the application process for Imminent Threat monies
would take about a month after
being mailed to the state.
She cautioned, however, that the
ftrst step at the state level would be
determination by the Adjutant General's office of eligibility. Schaad is
also uncertain at this point of
ANI
whether the applicat1on must wall
for a determination of cause. She
planned to invesugate that maner
on Thursday.
If approved, however, all con cerned feel that those funds could
be the way out for those left homeless by the Pity Me disaster.
"These funds could provide a
truly long-tenn solution," Schaad

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�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, July 18, 1991
Page-4

Transactions

1991 KYGER CREEK LITTLE LEAGUE TOURNAMENT

Baseball

Grttn

Amerlun Leaaue
BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Placed

(1 )FRIOAYI:OO

Bill Ripken, socond baseman, on lhc 15-

-etPLIIod~
"" Hlwen Aids

d•y diubled lin. Purchased \he contract
of Sh1no Turner, infielder, fr()m

(11)SUNOAY4:00

RDChee:tcr of lhe [nton'\ltio,nl Lague.
OAKLAND ATHLETICS ·- Delian•t-

ed Todd Bums. pilChcr, for usianmcnt.
Called up Kevin Dmpbcll, pitcher, from
Tlcom1 of the P•cif1c Coast League.

121FRIDAY7'10 _____.t----------l

GIIIIPOII Red Soa

~ yr. Gr. HouN Ito. 2

WEDNESDAY'S AD SHOULD
HAVE READ

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(22) FRilAY7:30

t1DIIUMDAY 2:011

LOSER GAME (23)

(181 WEONESDA Y7:30

LOSER GAME (24)

:_Nelsonville-York wins
=
H ubbard LL crown
By SCOTI WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Although the score would indi cate otherwise, Nelsonville- York
!'On a hard -fought battle over
Racine by an 11-2 margin to win
. the annual Syracuse Volunteer Fire
·Department sponsored Bill Hubbard Memorial Little Leauge Tournament here Wednesday night at
Syracuse Municipal Park. N-Y
surged from a 3-2 lead in the top
half of the fourth to the 11-2 victory with a six-run sixth inning.
N-Y went ahead 1-0 in the fust
:when Josh Walker walked to lead
off the game, then on an error on
Josh Coen, and ground-outs by
Jason Wickman and Nathan
Stalder, Walkers scored the game's
fll"St run.
Racine made five costly errors
which all led to runs, eventually
leading to their demise. Racine's
Reds out hit the winners 7-5.
Rae ine came back to tie the
score 1-1 in the bottom of the fiiSt
when Mike Bradford reached on an
error, followed by a Jessie Maynard single, and RBI single by
Joltin' Joe Kirby. Adam Roush
followed up with a single, but
Racine stranded two runners on
base in the frame, the score 1-1.
Following a scoreless second

frame, Nelsonville regained the
lead in the third when with two out
Wickman singled and scored when
Nathan Stalder's hard hit ball
resulted in another error, which
allowed both to score; 3-1.
Racine came right back with one
marker on a Maynard single, an
error on Kirby's liner, and two
walks, again stranding two runners
in a 3-2 ballgame.
N-Y added single runs in the 4th
and 5th frames. In the fourth, Ben
Robey reached on an error, Chris
Watkins singled and advanced on
an error, and an RBI groundout by
Elliott added tile run.
In tile next canto, after Coen and
Danny Carter retired tile side, NY's Wickman slammed a home
run, 5-2.
An error and Nathan Stalder
home run led 10 a giant 6-run sixth
inning, which insured the win for
Nelsonville, ll-2.
Wickman had two singles and a
home run, Stalder had a home run,
and Clay Watkins, two singles.
Coen was the winning pitcher
with relief from Carter. They
fanned five and walked just four.
Ryan Norris, who got tile start,
was relieved by Jesse Maynard in
the fiftll, as tlley combined for five
(See NELSONVILLE on Page 5)

In the majors ...

Wat Dlvil:lon

T..m

Loc Angd" .....
.....
Atlanta
ClndnnatJ -·-San Diego
......
San Francisco ......
...

H""'""

w L P&lt;L
31 .563
45 41 .523
44 43 .506
43 47 .478
38 so 432

GB

49

3.5
5
7.5

Ill
13.5

36 52 .409

Wednesday's scores

(llilli-6), 8JS ~m,

Ailladclphia (lJeJa:w 5-4) 11 S111 Diego
(R.umuucnJ -S), 10:05 p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eul Dlvblon
PeL

New York
Milwaukee
Baltimore
Clenland

--- :zl 51 .JJj

GB

6.l
1
9.5
12

16
2.3.5

Wetl Dlvlllon

TMinnel:ou
Oakland

W L Pet.
....... !il 31 .S73
......... 41 41 ..539

California

......... 46 41

T"•

4l 39
Chiaao ......... 46 41
Seallle
........... 4l 44
KanJaa City ....... 40 47

.536
.529
.l29
.506
.450

Friday
Blltimo~

(B1l·

Minnuot.a (Weat 1· 1) at BORon (Hea·
koth 3.1), BS p.m.
Milwaukee (Au&amp;ust 1-4) 11 Chica go

New Yodr: (J. Johnaon 2· 3) at Oakland

·

......... l3 36 .596
........... 46 42 .523
.... 45 42 .m
....... 41 43 .481
...... 40 41 .460
........ 36 ll .414

u.

lml 6-9), J ,3lj&gt;,m.

CB

3

3.5
4
4
6

10

Wednesday's scores
Douolt6, Tuu 4, 10 inninp
C1.. abnd 11 Oaldaod 1
Milwaukee o, Seaale 1
s ....., 4, Chiaao 2, 1oiMinp
KanJaa Oty9, Baltltncni,IS iMil&lt;l'

.

~ajorleagueleaders

National League
BAITING - T . Gwynn , S1n Diego,
.345; Pendleton, Atlanta, .331; Morrl1,
Clndnn•ll, .JU; McGee, S1n Francisco,
.323; Jose, St . Louis, .313; Samuel, Los
Angelea, .3 12; Cllderon, Montn:a), .307.
RUN S - Bu~ler, Lo1 Angeles, 63;
SJndbcrg, Otica&amp;o. 60; VanSlyke, Pitts.
burah, 57; Johnaon, New York, 57 ;
DeShields, Montreal, 55; 0 . Smith, St
Louis, 5S; Gant, Atlanta, S4; T. Fernandez, San Diego, S4.
RBI - W. Cluk, San Fnmcisco, 69;
Johnaon, New York, 67 ; Bondi, PIUI·
burah, U ; K.ruk, Ptuladelphia, 57; G.
Bell, Chicago. 51; Dawson, Oticago, 51;

McGriff, San Dieao, 56. '
HITS - T. GwyM, San Dieac, 124;
Samuel, Los Anaela: , 107; Butler, Los
Ansclco. 100; !010, Sc LouU, 98; G. Bell,
Chlcaao. 98; Calderon, Moo~al, 96; T.
Femandez, San Diego, 96.
DOUBLES - Jo•e. St . Louis, 26;
Morrl1, Clnclnn1tl, 24; McReynolds,
New York, 24; Bonilla, Plttlburah,l3:
LOonulez, Houlton, 21; G1nt, Atltnta,
20;_T. Gwynn, San Diego, 20; Sandbcrao
Chiooso,20.

TRIPLES - T. Gwynn, San Dieao, S:
Lankfotd, SL t..ow., 7;· Fcldet, Sa.n Ftan·
ciJco, 6; L Goouloo. H..-, 5: KNit,
Philadelpllla, S; ~ New Y S: ·
M. Thompoon, St. LetU, S.
HOME RUNS- lohnlon. Now Yodt,
20; Gmt, Atlanta, 11; W. Cuk, San Franci•co, 17; M.;Oriff, SAn DieJG, 17; 0 .

1&amp;9
I1P

. ,.. t

m

IST10H

zsa

=
ITPFIII
IST2075

By FRANK CAPEHART
OVP Correspondent
: Re~ular season competition in
. tile Tri-County Junior Tour closed
·Monday at Cliffside Golf Course
:amid anotller day of rousing, close
:scoring by the 40 young golfers on
hand. While a couple age brackets
had already been decided, now all
four groups have determined the
champs for 1991 and look forward
to tile final outing of the year on
July 29 at Hidden Valley, when
tlley all enjoy the play-for-fun day.
Steve Deweese of Point Pleasant
had nailed down tile crown in tile
premier 15- 17 age group, but the
battle for second became a dandy
Monday and no less than eight of
the older lads were within four
strokes of each other. Jay Harris of
Meigs fashioned a 42 to tie Bill
Tawney of Cliffside for top honors
on Monday, add that gave him
enough points to surge into second
spot overall, just behind Deweese.
Jay Cremeans of Meigs and Mark
Georgi of HVCC had gone imo the
round just a point apart in the
standings and it remained that way
as tlley both posted tile second best
score of tile day at 43 and that gave
Cremeans tile needed points to finish third overall. Just a stroke back
of tllese leaders came Deweese and
Jeremy Vickers of Point, tllen Curtis Capehart of HVCC and Tim
Peterson of Meigs, followed by

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Athens scored six runs in the
fifth inning and erased a 5-2 Meigs
lead and pulled away in the last
three innings en route 10 a 13-7 win
over Meigs in the American Legion
Eighth District Tournament
Wednesday evening at Athens
. High School.
The loss was the fiiSt in the dou. ble elimination tournament for
: Meigs, Meigs will play the winner
· of Thursday evening's Lancaster. Pickerington game on Friday
. evening at 5:30 at Athens High
: School for tile championship game
· in the losers bracket Lancaster ad: vanced in tile tournamem by best: ing Glouster 11-0, and Pickering. ton won a Iaugher from McArthur
15-0. The winner of Friday's game
· will play Athens on Saturday
morning at 11:00 a.m. and must
win two games from the defending
state champs to advance to the state
tOli!JilUllent
After spotting Atllens a 2-1 lead
after two innings, Meigs took a 4-2
)ead in tile tllird. Andy Baer and Jason Wright led off tile inning with
a single each, after Shawn Hamon
grounded into a fielders choice to
score Baer, Tim Bissell launched a
two run home run to give Meigs
the lead.
Meigs made it a 5-2 lead in the
fif1h, Baer once again got the in-

STOLEN BASES - Nixon, Atlanta.

45: Oriuom, M011trea1, 43; DeShicldo,
M011...~ 39: Ct&gt;teman, New Yodt, 33:
Ltnkt'ord , St. LouiJ, 24; Bondi, PllU•
bu'Jil, :14) But!•, Lao AnrJoo, U.

left no doubt as to the outcome as
he fired one of tile best scores of
the year in this bracket to nail
down fust for the day and the overall championship by a considerable
margin. Clay Crow of Meigs 1umed
in his best of 1he year 10 grnb runnerup honors for the day, while
J.R. Hysell came back strong to
finish third on the day and second
overall in the sta ndings . Tyson
Evans was fourth on the day with
the other spots going to Adam
Bush, David Anderson , Matt Hill
and Josh Carpenter. In the overall
standings, third spot was a tie
between Anderson and Bush.
The youngest group of 10-and-

under had already decided the behind those lads came Garrett
overall champ, but the final week Karr of Meigs as he finished fourth
was a good battle for placements. on the day and fifth overall in the
Trent Roush of Riverside shot his hotly contested chase. Matt Tarbeu
best of the year and collected top and Drew Bush then finished in
spot for the day, just missing run- order behind these lads.
nerup spo t overall by a single
During the year of 1991, well
point. Radley Faulk of Meigs also over 50 young linkstcrs have parturned in his personal best of the tJicipated on the Junior Tour, and
year to gain a tie for second on the many of them will meet each other
day with Jason Fraley of Riverside, in the quickly approaching hi gh
and that gave Faulk just enough to school season as the competiti on
hold on to runncrup honors in the continues. So far as the 1991 Tour
overall standings. Overall champi- is concerned, all that remains is the
on, Zack Pullin of HVCC, was just annual roundup on Monday, July
behind them to finish fourth on tile 29. This year, the rmating event is
day. but well ahead in the final slated for Hidden Valley Golf
standings for the crown. Close Course and will begin with an 8

a.m. tee-off. On that day, handicap
will be used, and the older groups
will play 18 holes. Swimming is
available afterwards, and food and
awards will join other fun prizes. It
generally will be a fun day after ~1 e
serious competiti on which just concluded. Jointly sponsored by al l
four local courses, it is rousmg
wind up for the fin e circu it , and a
big turnout is anticipaled.
Meantime. there is plcn1 y of
~olf and other acttvitles rema1nin g
m the summer for all ages. so enjoy
it, give thank s 10 th e Lord for all
we arc privileged to share, sm ile a
lo1, hug the kids and have a grca1
day .

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six til.
Coolville hitters were Todd
Trudo with a single, two singles by
Justin Edwards and Aaron Brock,
Brian Dickson a single, and
Tommy Cunis a single.
Syracuse mustered just three
hits; a home run by Buskirk and
singles by Pete Sisson and Michael
Ash.
Curtis was the winning pitcher
with only one strike out and one ·
walk, while Lisle suffered the loss
after pitching several outstanding
games. he fanned six and walked
three.
Special honors went to Tommy
Cunis for Most Valuable Player;
Jesse Maynard waS Best Offensive
Player; Josh Walker, Best Defensive Player; and the Mason Cubs,
team sportsmanship.

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ning started with a single and he
scored on a Wright single.
But then came the disasuous
fiftll inning for Meigs, Athens plated six big runs on four hits, two
Meigs errors, tllree walks, a wild
pitch and a hit batter. Jeff Durst
pulled Meigs to within 8-7 in tile
fiftll inning witll a two run single
but Athens plated three more runs
in the seventh inning witllout tile
benefit of a hit and two nintll inning runs on a single by C.W. Andrews to close out the scoring.
Mike Vance was the losing
pitcher in relief of Baer, Chris
Stewart, Hamon and Terry
McGuire also saw mound action
for Meigs. Meigs pi1ehers limited
Athens to only nine hits, but
walked 13 and hit two batters. Don
Dailey was the winning pitcher for
Atllens.
Bissell led Meigs at the plate
witll tile two run home run, a double and a single. Durst added three
singles and three RBis, Chris Stewan and Baer a double and a single
each, Jason Wright three singles
and Terry Reuter a couple pf singles. Tyler Wooddell led Atllens by
going three for four with three
RBis.
Score by innings
Athens
110 060 302-13- 9-0
Meigs
013 120 000- 7-15-4
WP-Dailey
LP - Vance (in relief of Baer)

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Bell, Chi.caao. 11; Mau Wilfiams, San
FnneUco, 16: O'Nalll, Cladanall, U;
Mitdocll. San Frandaco, 16.

Sam Hamilton, Scott Whitlatch,
Jason Swain, Brent Sang and Rob
Jackson.
The 13-14 division was a two
person battle for the top as they
entered tile fmal nine holes. Adam
Krawsczyn and Meigs teammate
Jason Hart were ahead of the pack
by a bunch, and Hart uailed by
only two points, so it was on the
line. Krawsczyn shot tile best round
of tile day witll a fine four-over 40
to edge Hart and titus win the fiiSt
for the day and seal down first
place overall. Hart finished second
on tile day and second overall in
what had been one of the. best
head-to-head races of the year.
Three lads had been well behind
the two leaders but were tightly
packed in tile race for third. When
the day ended, Scott Hussell of
HVCC had come in with tile only
other score in the forties to grab
third for the day and gain third
overall ahead of Chris Smalley and
Chris Carpenter in tile final standings. Corey Miller of HVCC
grabbed off fourth place on tile day
and finished just behind these lads
in tile overall. Behind them came
Gabe Scott, Brian Anderson, Ja5on
George, Aaron Riley. Jason Collins
and J.D. Holstein.
In the 11-12 division, tile crown
was still on tile line, but the closest
challenger was unable to play tllis
day, and Jason King of Riverside

___ __

walks and live strikoouts.
Maynard had two hits for
Racine, while Bobby Writesel, Joe
Kirby, Adam Roush, Tommy Lane,
and Ryan Norris each singled.
· In the consolation game for
third place, Coolville scored a big
win over Syracuse Hubbard's
Greenhouse.
Following a scoreless opening
two rounds. Coolville scored in tile
third on a Justin Edwards single
and RBI single by Todd Trudo, 10.
Syracuse tied it right back up
with a Jeremy Buskirk home run,
1-1.
While Tommy Cunis was retiring the Syracuse batters on some
fine pi1ching and good defensive
plays, his club gave him an insuranced run in the fifth and two in the

New Yodr. (K.micniecki 3-1) at Oak·
land (Sbow 0.1), !&amp;.OS p.m.
Cleveland (Swlndtll6-7) It c.nrornla
Abbo117-'l), t•.35 p.m.
Seattle (Dd..ucial-5) at

Point's Deweese senior division champ in Tri-County Junior Tour

'
Nelson Vl./le ...

4), s,3lpm.

(MO&lt;XC9-6),!0,3S p.m.

Friday
San Fnnciu:o (Budr.ctt S-S) at Montreal
(Boyd l-8). B5 p.m
Cincinnati (BrownlnalO..') al Pills·
bur&amp;h (SmlleylO·'), 7:35p.m.
Lot AngelCI (R. Mutinc:z 12·6) It New
York (fc!mandcz 0.0), 7:40 _p.m.
Chi_caao (Bic.lc.c:ki 10-6) 11 Hoanon
(llamdch l ·71, Ul p.m.
Athnta (Lc.ibnndt I · 7) at St . Louis

L

Clnl!l~ a
lldll[l.
,,

2:35p.m.
Minne10t1 (Morril 12· 6) at Bolton
(Monoo 1·1), H5 p.m.
Baltimm: (Millcki 5·3) at Kwas City
(Sabcdllgen 6-4), 8'35 p.m.
Toronto (Wells lo-4) at Texas (Ryan 5·

Cleveland (Olio 0·0) 11 Callrorn la
(Finleyl3-4)t UI:J5 p.m.

Tonl&amp;hl
Lot Angel~ (Belcher 7-6) II New York
(Cone: 9-S), 7.40 p .m.

W

.

(Navano 1-6).

(Buficld 4-3), 8JS p.m.

Upcoming attracllons

Team

a••
........

Today
.
Seatde (Hanaon 4-4) u Milwnkce

(McDowell 11 ·4), 8:00p.m.
Detroit (Gullicklon 11 -5) u Kansas
City (Gordon S-1),1 :35 p.m .
Toronto (Stoulemyre 9 -3) at Teus

Philadelphia 4, l..ol Ansdct 2
New York 6, San Fnnciaco S
SL Louis'· Clndnnatl S
San Diego 7, MontreaJ S
lloo11on 10, Ptllsbuf&amp;h 2
Atlanul2, Chi&lt;ago 2

Toronto
Dcuoit
Booton

•

Upcoming attractions

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eul Dlvlllon
w L P&lt;L GB
Tum
PllbbUtJh
M-54 3l .na
Sl 36 .586
New York
3.5
..... 47 41 .534
8
SL UlUis
......... 42 47 .472 !3.5
Chicago
...... 40 49 .449 IS .5
Monueal
Phibdclf'hil ....... 31 Sl .4Z7 17.5

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Athens Post 21 records 13-6
victory over Meigs. Post 39

(251 SUNDAY 5:00

Han11111Traco

Thursday, July 18, 1991

Each

Low Aal15 Per Month•

2-Statlon Wlrele$5 Intercom

25~ Off 29~~ :Is
• Easy-Just Plug Into AC and Talk
• Desk/Wall • Fl',l OperatiOn 143.207

•40·1125

99151~5
Low Ao 111 ,.., Month .

• Hear Police,
Fire, Rail , More
·20·301

Check Your Phone Book for the Radio Shack Store or Dealer Nearest You
8* Endl7/27/91
Exctpl Wilen NQI
I

. "'" . . . ... ..

~--.:..

�Page-6--The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Merchants lnfite You To
Enjoy The
Oldies But Goodies

,._. MISS -rHE EXCI-rENE

t '

t

The Dally Sentlnei- Page- 7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, July 18, 1991

t

IVERDALE
HOMES
.-RE~IS:ER ·.·HAVE
FOR
FREE
DOOR PRIZE

JOINED FORCES FOR

STOP BY THE "OLDIES
BUT GOODIES" CAR
CLUB'S
3rd ANNUAL
CAR SHOW
SATURDAY, JULY 20
9:00 A.M. TO 4:00 P.M.
ON THE PARKING LOT

'

NEW 14' WIDES ON DISPLAY
STARTING AT

'8 995
1

INCLUDES: APPLIANCES
AND DELIVERYTOYOUR LOT

.Atnv

Support These
Fine Pomeroy
Merchants!

* ON ALL HOMES *
COO

"FACTORY REBATES
ON SELECTED HOMES"

AID

l

Anderson's
Bank One
Big Bend Foodland
Brogan Warner Insurance
Dr. Harold Brown
Buttons and Bows
Clark's Jewelry Store
Chapman Shoes
Crow &amp; Crow Attorneys
Crow' s Steak House
Dairy Volley
Davis Quickel Insurance
Downing Childs Mullen
Musser Insurance
Fabric Shop
Farmer's Bank
Holly Hill Inn
K&amp;C Jewelers
Larry's Woodworking
Shop
McDonald's
Meigs Carpet &amp;Decorat·
ing
Meigs County Golf
Course
Mick's Barber &amp; Style
Center
Ohio Valley Publishing
Overbrook Center
PDK Construction
Pleasers Chicken &amp;
Burgers
Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy
Kenneteh Utt
Veterans Memorial
Hospital
WMPO Lite 92

For Scorching Summer Temperatures,

The BRYANT HEATPUMPCoolslnThe
Summer And Hutaln The Winter.
It Literally Pays For ltlllf In
Savlnga On Your Heating Bills.

ALL ELECTRIC KITCHENS
LAUNDRY HOOK·UP AND
HEAT PUMPS

AS LOW AS ..•
TRADE·INS WELCOME

._

:~~~~:~~~~~~~~~S,CARS,

iAFFOR_D_ABLE FINANClNGE

MOTORCYCLES DR ANYTHING THAT
DOESN'T EAT FOR THIS PROMOTION!
****
BRING YOUR CASH, CHECKBOOK, PIGGY
BANK OR TRADE-IN TITLE! THIS IS THE
SALE YOU HAVE BEEN WAITING FORI!
THERE WILL NEVER BE ABmER TIME

•

TO BUY! II

___

__

._

._
._
: SPECIAL FIRST-TIME HOMEBUYERS PROGRAM ._

!-.

:t

:;
•

NEWHOMEPAYMENTS

STARTING
AT \

•
.

104

'It

, 420 PLUS TAX

PER MONTH

DOWN

"110 MONTHS_ IUS% AI'R

t

WHh Special Wnkend
Sale Prices And
After Rebate*
,. "AIIIICI~III

._
._

:
._

•********************..

RIVERDALE HOMES- RIGHT ON RT. 33
BETWEEN LOGAN I NELSONVILLE

'1,496
IT WILL SAVE YOU HUNDREDS I
LITERALLY'i&gt;AY FI!R ITESELFI!
COME AND SEE ONE IN ACTION!

DAVID WHITE
SERVICES, INC •

~

385·4387 OR 1·800-488-7671

8 SECTIONAL HOMES DIS~~y
WITH SPECIAL SHOW FINANCING
....,._ -LOAN ANSWERS IN ABOUT 2 DAYSWe Recommend The
Electric Heat Pump _
With All Our Models

HOURS
THUISOAY TILL 9:00
* * FIIIDAYTILL 9:00 * *
*SATURDAY TILL 9:00 *
CLOSED SUNDAY

**
*

**
*

·t

•Diuover

•layaway

SALE
WE HAVE MOVED TO
THE CORNER OF
COURT ST. AND
EAST MAIN STREET.
STOP IN AND
CHECK OUT OUR
SALES AND SEE OUR
NEWLY REMODELED
STORE.

Stop By The Cor Show In The
Parking Lot This Saturday
From 11 to 4 and Enioy A
Delicious Grilled Hamburger.
AFTER 4:00 P.M.
AND ENJOY OUR CAR SHOW.

Same Great Saflngs and Selection Just A New Location

698 WEST
MAIN ST.

BUTTONS AND BOWS

POMEROY
992-2057

CORNER OF COURT ST. AND EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992·5177

And a whole lot more to tastll

SHOP
LOCALLY/
ALL SINGER AND WHITE
SEWING MACHINES REDUCED
PRICES START AT

$14 9°

0

Ande,ton't

Sidewslk Ssle

FRIDAY 1 JULY 19 and SATURDAY1 JULY 20

SIDEWALK
SALE PRICE

$

REG. 5119.00

COFFEE TABLE.......................................... 59
REG. 5499.00
$
CORNER CABINET.................................... 299
REG. 5879.00

OAK BUFEET/HUTCH .............~~!;C!!~.r.........

$

529
REG.
$
SOFA and LOVE SEAT ............ !~~-~~~............ 56 9
REG.
$
,
BEIGE/NAVY PLAID CHAIR.......................... 99 REG.
$
PRINT CHAIR ............................................... 99
REG.
$
COUNTRY PICTURES .................................... 18
REG.
$
COUNTRY TABLE w/HUTCH TOP............. 395
REG.
$
·oAK PARQUET CHINA............................. 549
REG.
OAK
$
-PARQUET TOP TABLE, 4 CHAIRS ............. 699
REG.
$.
OAK BUFFET /CHINA................................ 649
51139.00
5279.00

5279.00
539.00

5659.00

5939.00

51189.00
S1119.00

ANDERSON'S

FABRIC SHOP

POJAEROY

110 WEST MAIN
992·2284

1'

992-2054

RE-G RAND
OPENING

STOP BY OUR LOCATION

SPECTACULAR * PRICING

113 Court
•VIsa
Pomeroy, Oh. •MIC

FURNITURE, APPLIANCES, TV'S, FLOOR COVERING
992-3671.

DOWNTOWN POMEROY

STORE HOURS: Monday 9:30-8:00; Tueaday-Saturday 9:30-&amp;:00
r ~·•a::aee DELIVERY"
VISA . MA$TERCARD.
CHARGE

·s

�--

....

--,- ---'"'
. , ---,.--~.......,.....-~-----~-------.....-------~--~,..._-

~..----

----

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Page

~The

Dally Sentinel

Ohio

Halar participates in
ODE sponsored meetif!g

Exercise Thwarts Diabetes
Rate of adun diabetes among middle-aged men
in relation to energy expended in leisure-time activities:
All activities
except
vigorous

Vigorous
sports
only

.#
A

s~rts

Calor las burned par week In leisure-time actlvlt141s
Nore: Rate of incidence based on 10,000 years of life
SOurce: New England Joumal of Medicine

AP/Healher Eatman

Men who exercise reduce
their risk of diabetes
BOSTON (AP) - Middle-age
The researchers said that exermen who exercise regularly in their cise should be recommended for
spare time have a dramatically those at high risk of diabetes, just
lower risk of adult diabetes, a dis- as it is for people who are susceptiease that aftl icts an estimated I 0 ble to heart disease.
million Americans, according to a
"It's another disease in which
study.
exercise is clearly beneficial," said
Researchers found that men Dr. Susan P. Helmrich of the Unireduce their risk by 6 percent with versity of California, Berkeley,
every 500 calories they burn up who directed the study.
each week playing sports and getThe research was published in
ting other kinds of exercise.
Thursday's New England Journal
"It seems that the evidence is of Medicine, along with an editoriquite clear that energy expenditure al by Dr. Edward S. Horton of the
rn leisure time has a very suong University of Vermont.
Horton said the work is "conassociation with risk of developing
adult-onset diabetes," said Dr. vincing evidence" that people who
Ralph S. Paffenbarger Jr. of Stan- exercise have less adult-onset diaford University, senior author of betes. That type of the disease is
also known as Type II or nonthe study.
Paffenbargcr said that while the insulin-dependent diabetes melli researchers studied only men, the tus, NIDDM. It usually occurs in
middle age and beyond.
findings probably apply to women.
Physicians routinely urge dia"These findings strongly supbetics to watch their diets, lose port the position that persons who
weight and exercise. But are at substantial risk for NIDDM
researchers said the latest findings should be encouraged to maintain a
are the first to suggest that physical high level of physical activity in
activity also prevents diabetes from their daily lives," Horton wrote.
occurring.

Davis' attend family retreat
Dick. Trina and Amy Jo Davis. parent social events; special activiSyracuse, attended the Family ties for children; child care; and
Retreat Weekend at the Ohio State family activities.
The sixth annual retreat focused
School for the Blind (OSSB)
on the theme "Care to Share."
tecently in Columbus.
Sally Pisarchik, associate direcOSSB sponsors the Family
tor
of the.Cuyahoga Special EducaRetreat Weekend for parents and
families of visually impaired tion Service Center, delivered the
preschool and school age children keynote address, "Retreat to go
Forward."
throughout Ohio.
Also attending were several
Planned activities included ·
other
members of the Southern
workshops for parents, visually
Support
Group for the Blind
Ohio
impaired children, and siblings;
and Deaf.

Sweet Adelines elect officers
The River Magic Chapter of mony chorus, barbershop style, for
Sweet Adelines, International, women of all ages, and is conducted by Paul E. Dempsey Jr.
recently elected new officers.
A candle-light installation cere- Rehearsals are every Tuesday at
mony was held at Johnson Memo- 7:30 p.m. at Johnson Memorial
rial United Methodist Church in United Methodist Church, Fifth
Avenue and Tenth Street in HuntHuntington, W.Va.
ington,
W.Va.
Board members are Donna
For further information, call 1S ydenstricker, president; Pat
Quackenbush, vice president; 304-525-3212, 736-8809 or 586Norma Bossart, corresponding sec- 4635.
retary; Becky Marshall, recording
secretary; Bev Miller, treasurer.
Remaining board members are Jill
Henton, Rose Holbrook, Ginny
Karschnik, Stephanie Gray, Diane
Simpson, Mary Lou Smith and
Bunny Kuhl, Pomeroy, spent
Connie Pappas.
July 4 quilting in Athens at Ohio
River Magic is a four-part har- University's "Quilters' Holiday."
Kuhl learned machine quilting
techniques in a workshop led by
Lois Smith of Rockville, Md .
Smith is a certified teacher and
judge by the National Quilt Association.
"Quilters' Holiday," which lasted from July 4-6, gave quilters an
opportunity to learn various quilting techniques in one or two day
classes. Subjects ranged from
Amish quilting to patchwork quilting and stained-glass applique.
Instructors for the workshop
came from Ohio and surrounding
states. Many are certified teachers
and judges by the National Quilting
Association. and have lectured
across the country.
Participants visited "Quilt
National '91," a juried exhibition
of contemporary quilts from around
the world. The exhibition is being
held
at the Diary Barn, SoutheastSCOTf A. BARTON
ern Ohio's Cultural Arts Center
through July 28.

Kuhl attends July 4
Quilters' Holiday

Completes training

Airman Scott A. Barton recently

gradu~ted from Air Force basic

training at Lackland Air Force
Base, Texas.
During the six weeks of training
the airman studied Air Force mis·sion, organization and customs and
:received special training in human
:relations.
· In addition·, airmen who com :plete basic training earn credits
toward an associate degree through
the Community College of the Air

force.

· He is the son of Bob and Pat
: Barton of 190 Mulberry Ave.,

· Pomeroy.

.

·

The airman is a 1989 graduate
of Meigs High School.
I

Russell is honored
Mandy· Russell was chosen
associate of the store for June at
Fisher's Big Wheel in Pomerox
according to Jon Campbell, stor~
manager.
She works in the mens and boys
department and has been employed
with Big Wheel for two and a half
·
years.
Her name will be added to the
Associate of the Store plaque in the
establishment. .
According to Campbell she
exemplifies an above standat:d level
of ;ob performance and maintains
good customer service skills and a
positive attitude toward the compa-

Wendy Halar, Meigs Local, participated in a meeting, sponsored
by the Ohio Department of Education in Dublin.
The three day meeting focused
on the theme. "The Effective
Schools Process: A Tool for
Improving, Restructuring, and/or
Transforming Education." Almost
300 public school practitioners
attended the meeting.
Featured speakers included Dr.
B. Charles Leonard, Chairman,
Education Policy and Leadership,
Wright State University; Dr.
Sharon RaUis, Vanderbilt University; and Dr. Robert L. Moore, Assistant Superintendent, Ohio Department of Education.
Effective schools use the following seven factors: a sense of
mission; strong building leadership; high expectations for all students and staff; frequent monitoring of student progress; a positive
learning climate; sufficient opportunity for learning; and parent and
community involvement.
The Effective Schools Process

adheres to the following four
assumptions: all children can learn;
increased academic achievement is
the mark of effectiveness; leadership must be building based; and
school improvement plans must be
tailored to the needs of the students, teachers and adminisuators
within the building.
Effective schools initiate this
process by use of the Ohio Building Leadership Model, developed
by tbe Ohio Department of Education, as follows: form the principal
led team, develop and conduct a
needs assessment, share needs
assessment with total staff, develop
and implement tbe action plan, and
do ongoing assessment and evaluation.
Salisbury Elementary received a
grant for $3,800 which was used to
prepare intervention packets in the
area of reading with the Educational Services lnstirute, Inc. in Cincinnati. The grant also paid for the
annual academic awards banquet at
the end of the school year and trophies for tbe students who attended.

Thursday, July 18, 1991

AND ATTEND THE
OLDIES BUT
GOODIES CAR
SHOW,
SAJU,RDAY, JULY 20
CLEAN SWEEP
SIDEWALK SALE

passed to allow the executive committee to vote on approval at their
next meeting on Aug. 6 at 5 p.m.
This will allow time for review of
the budget and any questions. All
board members are welcome to
attend this meeting.
In other business the standards
committee reported that the policy
book had been updated and completed. A copy is available in the
receptionist area.
Many of Easter Seal's programs
have recently been extended to
clients in West Virginia.
A program on the American
Disability Act is in development
stages.
Approval was given to two
orthopedic clinics at the Athens
Health Deparunent. This is in addition to the clients already offered in
Athens.

Bulah Maxey, Tuppers Plains,
and Betty Young traveled to
Wilkesville for inspection of the
Pythian Sisters Temple. Betty is
district deputy for Southeastern
Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Ballard
attended his 1939 class reunion at
Westerville. They were overnight
guests of daughter, Londa Wertman and family, Mt Vemon.
Carl and Geneva Mason.
Pataslda, have been in for a weeks
stay recently.
Mrs. Ada Bissell and Kenny
were visited by Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Miller, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Groeneveld and Tommy,
Worthington; Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Shipkowski, Columbus; Mike, Pat
and Michelle Bissell, James
Howard and friend of Pomeroy.

FINAL CLEAN UP ON
ALL SALE SHOES

Just II tl•eler .... II kllotl
1111 ' 111101

Chapman Shoes
POMEROY'S QUAlln SHOE STORE

OLDIES
Bur

GOODIES

IDEWALK SALES
SATURDAY, JULY 20TH

•Krementz

ONLY

REG. SOC

POP

•14 K Gold
•Sterling
Silver

33c

J2 oz. CANS

ONLY

27 4

SUNGLASSES (COMPLETE STOCK)

1/2 PRICE
CARLETON GREETING CARDS

1/2 P,RICE
NO NONSENSE HOSE

212 ' 1!.

Main - ~meroy

BOARD

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

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

. PubliC Notice
Public Notice
:(ContiliUect from Page 2)
Revenue ...... 62,934.28
·Enterprloo ......249,01 0.94
Oobt
Ser¥ico ......... 1,244.25
Internal Service ......... 0.00
Flduclory Fundo:
ProprioUry Fundo:
Enterprloe ........ 1,432.82
Truat •nd
· Agency ....... 27.435.80 Fiduciary Fundo:
TOTAL-All
Trull •nd
Funda ....... 3,91 3,302.211 TOT:f~"Xr. ................ t. 40
VARlANCE-IFevonobla/
Fund• ............ 90.B20.03
.Unfav.orablel
171 1B. 1tc
Governmental Funda:
Generat ............... 187.13
TOTAL-All
Funda ...... ........... 187.13
PubliC Notice
SOUTHERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
COMBINED FINANCIAL
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
REPORT Qf THE
Combined S-ment of
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Expenclturll ond
OF THE EASTERN LOCAL
Encumbroncea Compored
SCHOOL DISTRICT.
. With Expenditure Authority
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO.
All Budgeury Funda lor
FOR THE FISCAL YEAR
the Flacll Yeor
ENDED
.PRIOR YEAR CARRYJUNE 30, 1991
OVER APPROPRIATIONS
Govemmenul FundaGOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
: Spoclol
REVENUE RECEIPTSRevenue ........ 2.338.25 Taxoa .............. 840~772.18
·Tout-All
Tuition ................... 327 .24
Fundo .............. 2,338.36 E•rnlnga on
1991 APPROPRIATIONSlnvootmonto ... 20.468.33
Governmonut Funda:
Extra Currlculer
:Goneral ........ 3,381,925.12
Actlvltlea ........ 62,077.29
S 'ol
Cion Motorialo &amp;
c~n.......... 416.1151.7B Feoa ............... 15,642.64
Debt
Mtac. Recelpta........ 243.23
Sor¥ice ..........31, 600.00 Grentaln Aid:
Proprteury Funda:
· Enterprioe .... 213,811.46 SUite
Source• .... 1,890.0711.30
Fiduclory Fundo:
Fedoret
Trull and
Sourcea ....... 143.981.84
Agency ....... 28,898.35 Tout
Tout-All
Recaipts .... 2,B83.4!55.911
Fund• :...... 4, 119,488.70 DISBURSEMENTS:
·TOTALlnatructlon ... 1,711,619.82
; Governmonut Fundo:
Supporting
Generol .. .... 3,381,925.17 Ser¥ic11 ..... 1.1117,977.33
Speclol
Revenue ... .417.890. 13 Extrocurrlculor
Acllvttlea ........83.280.83
O.bt
Debt
Servlc11 .... 98, 784.20
Service .......31,500.00 Employees
Solorlea
: Proprteury Fundo:
DloburoeEnterprioo ...... 283.81 1.411 Total
mentl ....... 3,031 ,1141.98
Fiduclory Funda:
Exc. Rcptl. Over/IUndorJ
Trull and
Dlob ........ .... 11 88,088.031
Agency ....... 28,898.311 OTHER
FINANCING
TOTAL- All
SOURCES
Fundi ....... 4. 121,825.06 ContrlbutlonaIUSESI
&amp;
ACTUAL 1991
Donetlona ......39. 196.80
DISBURSEMENTSProc. Fm. Sale &amp; Loss
Governmental Funda:
of Allata .......... 1.707.18
Generat ..... 3.339.16B.87 Proceadl from Bale
Speclol
of Notta ....... 1711,000.00
Revenue .... 342,622.1B Operating TrenaferaO.bt
ln .......... ............... -0Service .... ... 30,265. 711 Relund of Prior Yeer'a
· Proprietory Funda:
Expend .............. 8.438.4 1
: Enttrprioe .... 281,973.B3 Oporetlng Trenafera• Fiduclory Funda:
Out ..............121 ,994.981
• Trullond
Rotund of Prior Year'•
; Agency ....... 28.1187.10 Rocelpto ............11 ,388.941
TOTAL-All
Tout Other Fin. Sourcea
Fundi ....... 4,000.477.53
IUMI) .......... 198.1811.28
ENCUMBRANCESExc. Rcpta/Souocoa Over/
: Governmental Funda:
IUndorl Dlob. &amp; Other
General ............ 7,1189.111
Uoea/Net ........ 31,498.28
· Specie!
Seglnnlng Fund Ceoh
:
R-nue ......22.433.89
·Belonce ........ 217,124.18
· ProprliiUry Funda:
Ending Fund Cosh
'
Entorprloe ........... 204.80
Betenco ........ 283, 194.89
: Fiduclory Funda:
'
Reoerved
Encum- Trull ond
btoncealor
..........
97,081.88
·
Agency ............ 329.811
Rellrvedlor
su'-uent
. TOTAL-All
. Fundi ............30,1127.49
R~":..~ ~~-~~~~~~u
· TOTALUnre11rved Fund
: Goverrvnental Funda:
Betence ........ 1112.337.118
Oeneral .....3,348,717.82
Specie!
·
EXPEN~~:~ TRUST
_ Revenue .... 384,9118.87
- O.bt

Service ....... 30.218.711
: ProprieUry Funda:
. Entorprioe .... 212. 178.83
Flduclery Funda:
Tr.ullond
Agency .......28.8911.911
TOTAL-All
Fundi .. ,;... 4,031 .0011.02
VAR IAP!CE ·,!Favorable
Junl.,..rablel
ao-nm...tat Funda:
Oenentf, .........311.207.30
Speclot

Mon. lhru Sat.
a.m. to 9 :00p.m.
SundiiW' 10~0 e.m. to 4:00p.m. •
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 992-2955
E. Main
Fil.,cly ._.,.
Potn .. oy. OH
Op., Wook Nivhto 'til 9

~~!:::;;-.r

•

•

flfiJ.W-'

l'llt'r•r

t/11•

ll
12
13

:rollowi 11 I{ II•[,. l'h' ;, w '•xr·l11ut J{''·'· ..
Gall•• County

Me•gs County
Area Code 614

Area Code 614

446
367
388
245
256
643
379

M;ason Co. WV

Anu Codf! 304

'

35
36

14

BYSineu Tunmng

Schools &amp; lns.truchon
Radto. TV &amp; CB Rcpom
MllceU;&amp;nllfOus
Wattled To Do

Galh~Johs

992 Mtddleport

Ch•hue
Vinton
Rio Grinde
Guyan D•at
Arabia Dill
w.-nul

985
843
247
949
742
667

Pom"'OV
Chesler
Ponland
le1ar1 hlh

Raetne
Rutl.,-.d
Coolville

675 PI Pltt•anl
468 leon
676 Apple Grove
773

42
43
44
45
46

BB2
895
937

47

48
49

21
22
23

New Hilven

let•n
Buffalo

61

62
63

farm Eqwpmtmt
Want ed l o Buy

64

lt\lt!SIOCk
H&lt;1y &amp; Grotm

6S

Sued 8. Fcn•h1e'

Trans ortation

Houses lor Rent
Mobile Homes lor Rtmt
Farms for Rt!nl
Apanment tor Runl
Furmshed Rooms
Space lor Rent
Warned to Rena
Equ tpm ent for Runt
Forlea&amp;rt

11

Auto• lur Sale

72

Truclu lor So~lt:
Van5&amp;4wo · ~

73
74
75
76
77
78
79

Merchandise

Motor cvc h.os
Boals &amp; Moto n lur S.J io•
Auto Parl i &amp; Accus:.O!tl!!&gt;
Auto R11 p .ur
C;u11pm~J Eq1 nvmcn1
C;tn1per11o So M o tor ti1111 W:o

li§diM4W

Household Goods
62 - Sporting Goods
53 Anhques
54 M1sc Marchand•se
55 BUilding Supplies
56 Pets tot Sale
57 MuSI~:;allntlrumttnl5
58 Fn.uts &amp; Vl!gtflables
S9 For Sale or Trafie

51

lih6JIIM@il

Muon

&amp; LJveslock

Homes tor Sate
Mobtle Homtn tor So~lc
fiiHns. lor Sale
Hus•ness 8UIIdmgs
lots &amp;· Acreage
Real Estate Wanted

I;Qjllfil

Help Winhtd
SIIUittOn Wanled
lnsufance

15
16
17
1~

Bustneu Opportunuy

Money 10 loan
Protes11onal Sl!fvtcL&gt;s

81
82

Home hnprovttrn enl :.
Plumb•ng &amp; H~ clllny
E ac;Nalm!J

83
84
85

Elt!L111Ci11 &amp; Auht!l tttolt •un
Gt:flt:fal Hautonu

86

Mobtll! Home

IJ 7

UpholsttH~

R upo~ u

8 USiness
-services
e

Exc. Rcpto. Over/IUndorJ

e

OTHER
FINANCING
Dl~ ...............
~.~6.97Jt~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SOURCESContrlbutlono &amp;
C:'luttlllt
OWAYE
SPECIALIZING
98 89

o~~:~~Tr~~~~!~
'
In ...................... 1.46B.69

Refund of Prior Yeor'o
o~"!:'i~ii·;-~~~~~;;.::: 1o.oo
out .................11.468.691
Refund of Prior Yoor'o
Rocelpto ................. -0Total Other Ftn. Sourcoa
!Uoeat ................ 4•408 ·89
Exc. Rcpto/Sourcoa Ovo• I
lUnder) Dl~. &amp; Other
Uoea/Not ....... j2,297.201
Beginning Fund C11h
Setence .......... 20. 793.69
Ending Fund Cosh
Setence .......... 18,496.31
Reoerved lor Encumbroncoa ............. .. 194. 76
Unre10rved Fund
Betence .......... 18,301 .611
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
RECEIPTSFood 8er¥ico
Soloe ............. 80,879.83
Extrecurrlculer
Activltlee .......... 1,265.15
Clesa Motorlols S.
Fees ............... 11.360.8B
Mlac.
Receipto ....... 232. 780.86
Total
Receipt&amp; ....... 328.0B8.32
OPERATING
DlSBURSEMENTSEmployHo Solorleo
S. Wogeo .......... 88,038.49
EmployHo Retirement
Senlflta ......... 40.&amp;B9.BB
Purcheoed
Ser¥iceo ....... 197,809.83
Supplteo S.
Motertelo ........ B7,2B0.84
Capttoi·Outtey ..... 3,301 .34
Other Object a......... 433.03
Total Dloburoemento .......... 395.261 .21
Exc. Rcpto. Over/IUndorl
Di~ ............. 119. 184.891
NON-OPERATING
RECEIPTS IDloburo.JContributlono &amp;
,
Donetlono .......... 3,258.00
State
Sourcea ........... 5,003.98
Federal
Sourceo ......... 74.91 2.98
Oporotlng Tranaferaln .................. 21 ,394.98
Refund of Prior Year'o
Receipta .............. j25.32J
Tout Other Fin. Sourceo
IUHII .......... 104,1144.68.
Exc. Rcpts/Sourceo Over/
(Under) Diob. &amp; Other
U-/Net ....... 35,379.69
Beginning Fund Caoh
Selanco .......... 30,0B7.98
Ending Fund Cosh
Balence ........ ,.80,487.87
Rooerved.lor Encumbroncea ............... 1B8.84
Unre10rved Fund
Selances ........85.278.83
TOTALS
RECEIPTSTexll .............. 840. 772.18
TuHion ................... 327.24
Earnlngo on Investmanti ............ 20.458.~3
food Ser¥icoa
Saleo .............80.879.83
Extracurrlcul8r

Ml

SIGNS

OVEN IEPAII

Or

ALL IUDS
Iring H In
Wt
Pick Up.

k

by tlc: moJtJ'tt¥
. B~r by
: ' .,

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

UALITY

PubliC Notice
Other Objecta .. .... ... 433.03
Tout Dloburoementa ....... 3.487 .937.63
Exc. Rcpll. OveniUnderJ
Dlob ........... 1243.958.891
Contrlbutlonl S.
Donetlona ........ 48.8112.29
Proc. Fm. Solo &amp; Loll
of Anoto ........... 1.707.18
ProcHdo from Solo of
Notoo ........... 176,000.00
Stele
Sourcoo ........... 6.003.98
Fodorat
Sourcoa ......... 74,91 2.9B
Operating Tronafonln .................. 22.8113.66
Refund of Prior Y••r' 1

Expend ...... ...... 8,446.4 1
Opereting TronaferaOut ......... .. ... j22,B63.66J
Refund of Prior Year'•

Receipll .........(1,3B4.28J
Totti Other Fin. Sourcea
IUHII .......... 308,639.58
Exc. Rcpt/Soun:oa Over/
!Under) Dlob. &amp; Other
UHo/Not .......84,5B1 .67
Beginning Fund C11h
llelance ..... ... 288,806. 76
Ending Fund Ceah
Selonce ........347. 1118.B7
Reoerved lor Encum·
broncos .......... 97.489.48
Reoerved for Subaoquent
Yur ................ 13,771.46
UnreHrved Fund
8otence .... ....236,91 7.94
Coah in Benko
1"11111 ............ 186,316.69
lnveatmentl .... 1B0.843. 18
Total Fund
Bolonce ......... 347,15B.B7
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
BONDS
Belance Beginning of
Period ............ 80,000.00
New laiUII During
Flocol Period ............ o.oo
Redemmed During Fiacel
Period ............ 10.000.00
Bel. 8-30-92 ..... 70.000.00
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS NOTES
LONG &amp; SHORT TERM
Belonco Beginning of
Period ...... .... ... 130.004.00
Now loauao During Flacel
Period .......... 17&amp;,000.00
Rodemmod Durina Flacal
Period ...... .... .. 74.504.00 •
Bot. 1-30-91 ... 230,500.00
1711B.1tc

1 card or Thanks

Actlvitioo ........87. 780.81
Cteoo Matoriolo S.
Foeo ............... 28.90U2
The Family Of
Mioc.
RONNIE KEITH
Rocetpto ....... 233,023.89
HUBBARD
GRANTS IN AID:'
State
Wish to expreu our
Source• .... 1.990.076.30 sincere thanks to retFederal
atives and friends for
Source• ....... 143,981.84 flowers, cards and to
Tout
· .... 3,223 ,9BO .84 those who gave memReceopto
DISBURSEMENTS:
oriels. Special thanks
lnllructlon ... 1,711,619.82 to Pastor Robert PurSupporting
tell.
Also special
Sor¥icea .... 1.157,977.33 thanks to all the emExtrecurrlcular
ployees and doctors of
104'426 ' 17 Holzer Medical Canter
Actlvttloa
......
Debt Sor¥icea .... 88,784.20
Emptov•• ileterlea S.
for their loving care.
Wegn ............ ll8,031.49
Thanks to everyone
Employ•• Rotiremont
who helped in anyway
Beneflll ......... 40.589.8B with prayers. aymPurchllld
Ser¥icoa ....... 19'7,809.83 pathy and kindne11.
Supplies &amp;
Edith and Addle
Motertela ........87.280.B•
Hubbard
Cepltol Outloy•~-~
...~.3~,3:0:1.:3:4f===:-..;.;,;.;;,;;,;;.;;..~
11

r.

992·5335 or
985·3561

1

Poinl Pleasant • 675-692• '

Help Wantad

IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs
10~ DISCOUNT TO
SENIOI ClnZENS

Across ,,... hot OHice
117 I. SeceiNI St.
POMEIOY, 01110
3/6/90/tln

FREE ESTIMATES .

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

W. H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

•IUY •Sill •TIADE
OPEN
Tunday thru Saturdoy
10:00 am-5:00pm

742·2421

MI. outside
Rutl•d on New
Lima Rd.
21ft

5-t0-11-tto.

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006

992-7130

8-4-'91- 1 mo.

If you• re in need
of Mobile Home
Parts or
Accessories...
SEE US FIRST!

992-5800
IT. 33 WEST OF

DAIWIN, OHIO
Howard L

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

7-18-81- 1 mo.

pd.

IIIDEPENHNT •
CAIPU CLIANEIS
and Till FLOOI CAll

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

992-2269

Mill LEWIS. OwiW
Rt. I, lut ..llll, OH.

USED RAilROAD TIES

742·2451

8-1 2-80-tln

•New No-s
•Gara..•

•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Cornpore
frH Estimates

3-14-'91-lfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now IIOIHI luHt
"Free Eatimatea"

985·4473
667-6179

PH. 949·2801
· or Res. 949·2860

A&amp;B

COMPLDE AUTO

LINDA'S
PAINTING

UPHOLSTERY

HniMOI • m11101
FREE ESTIMATES

--

HO SUNDAY CAUS
3-11-tln

5-31-'90 tin

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
&amp;.seat Covera and
Minor Auto Repair.
MAIN ST., IIA$011, WV,

1·(304)·
773-9560

Open Tuea .. Thura.,
Fri., Sat. 7:30 p.m.

experlef!Ce, 3 Of ·whiCh being In . a
POMEROY
supervisory position. Pay and
benefits based upon experience.
BOWliNG
3BO last 2nd St.
Bring resume to Vaughan's cardinal
Supermarket In Middleport, OH.
992·3432 or
992-347.1.
L._::~~~d

NEW TillS SEASON •• POOL
CPU TO 11m PUBUC

* CAIIPI1IG - Beautiful Swroundtngo

RATES- Day, Week, Month, or Season
*PICNIC IIIBLftllaadiTAOI: Por Rent
Rcuntona - Get Togethcn - Parttea
rtiiiDIIQ

*
* CAIIIll a CAIIP!:II POR RENT
* llllACil: ·BAR
*ARCADE

ROOFING

WE DO

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

~ TROMM

BUILDERS

FREE ESTIMATES

•20 Yesra Experience
•Quality Homes and
Custom Remodeling

742-2328

6/ 22/tln

Now fn.
$toe*//

Writ•el

•Reaaoneble Rateo
•Qualhy Work
•Fr" Estimates
•Carpet Has Feat Dry
Time
•High Glooo on Tile
Floor Finiah

BISSELL &amp; BUllE
CONSTRUCTION

Camping II Family Fun

ROOFING

6;6-'91

-----=========------.1 r-------CAREER POSITION AVAILABLE
Front End Manager position IIOOL!2!~HIIU
requires a minimum of 5 years of

Actlvitteo ........ 34.438.37
To:~pg .........34,43 a.37
DIBBuRaEMENTs~xti'liCUrrlcu ler
ActlvtUI8 ........· 41.144.34
TO!ai'DIIIIIlurw·
..
. .menu.:: ...-...:... 41,14'4.3•' 1"'---------~""""~---""\"~_..

. I ""'

ny.

l.'lm.,ifir•d

PUbliC Notice

..

40% OFF

.06 f dav

Services

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 PM TUESDAY
2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 .00 PM THURSDAY
2 00 PM . FRtOAY

BULLETIN

.60

31
32
33
31

Employmenl

Hi1PPY Ads
Ynrd Salus

SPECIAL TENNIS GROUP
20%0FF

CANDY BARS

Plus many
more specials
Inside and
outside the
store.

SUNOAY PAPER

AND RECEIVE THE
SECOND PAIR OF
EQUAL VALUE OR
LESS FOR 110

neckchains.

30%oFF

1-HIOAV PAPER

AT~ PRICE

sensational

SIDEWALK
SALES
SPECIAL

COPY DEADliNE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPEP
WEDNF.SOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

$13.00
S1 .30fday

Card of Th.nks
2 In Memory
3 Annoucttments
4 G•ve.way
5 Happy Ads
6 lo•t and Found
7 Y•d Sale lpa•d •n altvanco)
8 Publl c 5•1 e &amp; Auct tOn
9 W~nted lo Buy

.30
.42

$6.00
$9.00

Farm Supplies

Real Eslale

1

41

"A clitSs•hod adverllsumt!nl pl.accd 111 The Datly Stmhn~ (t!l
Ct!pl
cl&lt;tulhtl&lt;l tl•splay , Busmu:u Card .uHIIt.'!ltli nOIICttil
Will oll$0 itppear Ill lhc Pt Pl t!&lt;a6allt Re!ltSIUf illlld lhe Galh
pults Datly Trlbllnc. lt!aCht1l!l ovm 18 .000 hon1es

OF SALE SHOES

1/2 PRICE

Overlay

C.ud ollhanks
lu Mun\Ortitln

.20

ad1.1ancc

'Ads !hal rnusl be pa•d m advC~ncu ;u• ~

BUY ONE PAIR

stunning&amp;

Monthlv

.·

Rates ate tor conMculrve runs. broken updif!IS w•ll be charged
lor e~eh diiV as separate ads

'Free ads
G•ve..way and Found •d5 um.lltf 15 word1 Will ba:
r1m J d"'I' S ill nu ch•ge
'Puett of ad 1m all CIP•tal h!Utus '' doublu pr•ctt ol ad co~o l
'1 poml lutt! lypu unly ust!d
'St=nl•n..t.o( •s uol respons•bltt lor err01s •flcr lust IIWr' iCtu~ ck
for tmon lusl diiV ad'nms n\ papur) Call bttlore 2 00 p m
d;~W ah,m publ•cation lo rnakt. corrt!chun

STARTS JULY 12

of sleek,

14 K Gold

;~dl p.~td tn'

Partial ow~1 f~ancinfeW~~ The price
has been reauced to
, $n .900 and
owner financing of up lo 110% of purchase
amount may be possiije lor qualifying pefl9l1
to buy V!!'l nia! farll!! home on 3~ acres in 111cme. 4IJI. 3baltis, 2 ~~~~es, l!llll!d I BR apt.
Prllf)erty ndudes 4.800 sq. ft. larm bide
Call 614-992-7104 lot Apfl(.

JEWELRY COMPLETE STOCK

Ina myriad

50 d•scounl tor

PRICE REDUCED!

(All lt.eiiiS Will Be In The Store)

INDULGE •.•

10

Announcemenls

Over 16 Word&amp;

$4.00

15
15
15
15
15

1
3
6

p;ud
$

Rate

Words

Davs

POLICIES
' Adl oulsKic Me•~~ . Galha or Mason coun11es nu1s1 be prfl!
"Rcctttvtt

• ·The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

SIDEWALK
SALES

Long Bottom community notes
The Flame Fellowship meeting
is the second Tuesday of every
month at 7:30p.m. at the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom.
Family and friends of Mrs. Ruth
S tethem helped her celebrate her
88th birthday on Sunday with
phone calls, gifts and cards from
Long Bottom and Reedsville
Churches, organizations and
friends. A birthday dinner was held
in her honor at the Elby •s Restaurant in Belpre. She was also an
invited guest at the combined
Methodist Churches picnic held at
the Bellville Locks and Dam Park
recently. Harold Osborne and Mae
McPeck also called on her.
Ken and Betty Young recently
celebrated their 42nd wedding
anniversary. Their son, Steve, and
two children, Florida, were also in
for the occasion.

Classified

SHOP POMEROY'S
MERCHANTS'

Easter Seal society meets
The regular meeting of the
Board of Trustees of the Eastern
Seal Society of the River Cities
was held recently.
This was the last meeting of the
fiscal year and the next board meeting will be tlle ann~ membership
meeting aboard the Valley Gem on
Sept. II.
The resignation of Dan Wasmund was accepted effective Sept.
I and nominations were approved
for three new board members for
the new fiscal year. Additional
members are being sought from
West Virginia. Approval of nominations will be presented at the
annual membership meeting.
The special events budget of
$68,000 and tlle overali budget of
$270,600 for the next fiscal year
was presented. A motion was

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Tab the pain out of

let

• painting.
me do it lor

you.

VERY REASONAIL!
1
HAVE 1Ef£RENCIS

AIR CONDmONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBilE &amp;DOUBLEWIDE HOMES
••

0

0

•

0

0

0

•

0

•

0

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

., NO SUNDAYCALLS
.

0

0

0

•••••••

0

•••

0

•

MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

UPHOLSTERY
2U·No. Second

Mlddl1port
Hand Tufting
Custom Drapes

CEDAR

CONSTRUCTION
992-6641 or
698-6864

e-14·'81-ttn

USED APPUANCES
tO DAY WAIUNTY

WASIIEIS-$100 up
DITII-ttv up IEFIIGEUTOIS-$100 up
tANG IS- Got-lhc.-$12 S up
IIEIZEII-$125 op
'
· 111(10 OVENS-$19 up

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992-5335 or 985·3561
Acro11 from Post Offict
POMEROY, OHO
I0/30fl9 tin

36 \"eara

Ex.perlen~•

614·992-2328

We Say What We Do.
Wa Do Whet We Say.
10-19-t mo.

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windowa
•Roofing
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or

742-22S1

539 Bryan Place
Middleport. Ohio
lt-t4-tl

THE

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

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

GROOM
ROOM ·

TRUCKING AVAILABLE

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds
EMilEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

FREE ESTIMATES

614-992-6820

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

PH. 949-1801
or a... 949-1860
Day or N~t ­

••

ol Middleport

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

BISSELL
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"" ho~enabll Prien"

0

located On Safford School ld. off lt. 141
(614) 446·9416 or 1·800·872·5967
4·29-91

992-7458

8UILDERS

0

BENNETT'S

91

1614

•

4-21-11- 1 mo.

,....,,,,,,,
30 SESSIONS

Pomeroy,

d.

$30

949·2126
TACDIVIUE ID.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
-ltOO!" Addltlono
-Gutter wortl
- EtoctJical

1ncl

Plumbing

- ConCN1:e work
-Rooting
-tntorior • Extorlor
P•lntlng

IFREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

IAC.E,OH.

,

'•·.

,I

�Page-10

9

18

Wanted to Buy

UM&lt;I llolollt Homtt, Coil 614

448~175
Wont 1o buy picked blockblr·

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

Wanted to Do

GIOfgH Ponololt Sowmlll, don~
haul your logo 10 lht mill )ull
caii304-G75·195l

rill, 814·99H8i5

44
room

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Top PrlciS For All Old us
Coins, Gold Rln~•· Oiamondad
Sllv•r Colna,
terl Ing, Gol
Colnt M TS Coin Shop, 1!11
Second Avenue, Gelllpolla

Employment Services
Thlng~ tlte buu!n ln the

11

WANT ADS

AVON

Weaver 304·882·2145

Announcements

Aocoptlng oppUcotlono lor
cooka, waltr..ua, and dish·
waahera Exr.rlencld prefer·

Help Wanted
All arHa, Call Marilyn

red Full ancl art lima poattlona

avaU1bl1 Mom'• Smorgasbord

3

Announcements

Single sarvlce and newwletter
tor arM alngiH All ag• Con·
tldanllal and atfordtble Wrtla

Bo• 1043,
llpolla, "" 458:11
Slngloo,_,~O

4

Go~

304 273 i038
POMEROY
•POSTAL JOBS•
$1178-$14 90 hr No oxp nttdtd

Excellent

2 kHtel"'l to good home, 304·

675-7153

2 mall puppln part Siberian

Huoky ond CoUit, 30U75-5505
4 Kh1tno, 1 Groy Tiger St~ptd.

3 Gr11y Onn, To QlvNwey To
Good Homa 814-25&amp;-162V

4 llonlh old kllttn 614-!1112·7382
Cats snd long htlred kiltena,

304-675-5419
FIH Pupploo Pon Chow, Pon
Somoyon 614-441-o:J19
FrHI Adorable Kittens, 7 WMkl
Old 12 Popl1r Hill, Point
Ptuunt, WV Phone 304-875-

4621 oftor 5p m
Kltttna, Z btk mtln, 1 dark
calico tamlle, 304-e75-5253

Molt Slomtlt Col Dtclowtd,
Noutorod, 1 Ystr Old, 614-44681111

FJay,

Senatlll

Tronoponollon,
Ext
571
Refunded.

AVON I All Arooo I
Speoro, 304-675-1429

Daniel E NMda, Inc Haa lm
mldlete Opening For OTR
Drlvera Apply In P"eraon At 2300
loekbouma Road, Columbu1

OH Muat Bt 25 Or Oldtr, Willi 3
Y11re bporitnct 1-600.02878:11
Drywall h1n9"rl &amp; finishers
needed In tht Athan1 aree 114·
593-3018 Ilk for Tim attar Bpm

EARN MONEY Rtodlng books!
$30,000/yr

Income

potential

Dtlollo (1) 805-i82·6000 E111 Y·
10189
Exctlllnl Poyl Homtworktro
Nttdtd OVer 400 ComptniH
NM&lt;I Homoworktro/Dittrlbutoro

Shepherd Mix, Father, Boxer
614-446-8634 attar ep m

colnway, North Aurore, IL 80542

HIV Progrom Coordlnotor, Full·
Pupplta, 112 Sprlngor Spaniel, nmo, Flvo-Counly Art1 BINd
Olhtr Hall ? , 7 WHb Old 614· In Alllono Ttko OVer A Gronl·
446-6487
Funded Project Which Roqulrta
Smell meta dog to good homa Duol Skllll Of Communhy
O.velopmtnt!Educetlontl Out·
Nlco pot 614·245-58fl
reach, And Individual Teal·

Will build p,atlo covera, dlcka
Kreened rooms, put up vinyl
siding ot trailer aklrtlng 114-

pickup. about 20125 acrM pill
tuN,
amall
crMk,
rest
woodland, .ome timber, exc

tVIIIIblt Conttct Ocfla, 5 - ·

water, •ptlc, al.ctrtc,

245-RII'l

Will do yord work, coli 304.075ll&amp;eO
Would Uka To CINn Houus,
O.y Or Evanlng 1 Ratereno"

traah

hunting, t.on, sa,ooo 304-458·
1522
Btoutllui·Bulldlng- Sltnl 2·5
Aoroo on Ltadlng CI'Mk Rd with
Ltodlng CrHk Wottr $3000.
$3800 per tcro, 814.fli2·2772
Mlrotr Bottom SuiHIIvlolon,

Avolloblo 614-245'11018

one 1cr1 tots, At 2 frontage,
prtce reduced. chy water, 304·

Fmancial

5711-2338
For S.lt Rlvtr bonk property In
Moton 304-77.1-5851

21

36

Business
Opportunity

INonCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommend• thet you do bual
n•• witt-! peoplt you know:_ end
NOT to ..nd monay througn the
mall until you heve lnvnllgatecl
I tole offering
Arthur't Chain Link Fenca
Realdentlal, Commerciel, lnduetrlal, FrM Eatlmat .. t Com·
plato lnltallallon Phone 614-

Real Estate
Wanted

814-Mil-27113

Rentals

Will Soli An Or Pon

Vending Routt: Fll' Solt. Coth
Bualntst High TroHic Locll
L.octtlono Hotllll Mochlnn On
Morktt 1-600--54

,

Real Estate

31

Homes for Sale

1 milt from city llmllt· 25 ocn1t,
6 room houH, much, much

moro 614-446-1340
2 story, located Point Ptuunt
Hllloricol Dill, lloln St, 9
rooms, 2 112 belhs, renovated,
po1nsalon on c1o1lng Owner

Slatplng roomt whh cooking
Also trailer apace All hook·ups.
Cell a her 2 00 p m, 304-7735651, Mason WV

46 Space for Rent
Country Mobllo Homo Pork,
Roulo 33, North of Pomeroy
Loll, rentals, partt, UIH Clll

614·H2·11179

Trailer lot 90x100 111 utllltlu

llookups 304-675-3216 or 6752418

Trailer lot Hollowly StrMt,
Henderson, $60 month, 304-

675-7332

lng Renl must be conserntlvt
would consider aharing houH
wllh an tlderly woman, parhepa
someone who nMda aomt ••
SIStlnca, yerd work, ate Hevt
no phone call my brother at 1·

51

Household
Goods

Antique ctlln• cabinet buftat,
table and chalra distlla, ate In
terested ? 304-675-1517

8 Roome, Bath &amp;. Beument

Baaulllul Solid

Olk

Dining

Ptrtlolly Fumlthtd, 35 VIne, Room Suitt, 1 Year Old, 614-44&amp;:.
$250/mo 814-446-0838, 614-448· 8000
1214.
County Appllonco, Inc Good
7 room houN Rollinsville, uotd appllancta TV otiS Open
rofwonct ond dopotll, $250 8 am to 6 pm Mon.Sal 614·
month, coli 1Htr 6 30 304-895- 446·1699, 627 3rd Avt Gol·
llpolla,OH
3435.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washera dryers, refrigerators,
42 Mobile Homes
ranges
Skagge Appllancee,
for Rent
Upper Rlvor Rd. Btsldt Slone
14x60 mobile home, 7 ml from Croslllolol Call614·448-739l!
Holzer, 2 BR, AC Utility room
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
be cond S250 mo, 1200 Complete homa furnishings
HCurlly 614-388-8835
Hours Man-Sat, g.s 614-446-

2 bedroom tr.lltr completely
lumllhld1 AIC, Wllhtr, dryer,

Naw/Used
HouMhold tumlehlng 1/Z ml
Jerrlcho Rd Pt PltJNnt, WV,

brown oye, con 814-1112-2224

ThrH Employment RtltroncH

Found

To

man Shtphtrd dog, gn~ylah tan,
wtarlng 2 chocker chelns, no
10, If uan or found ctll 304-4581588

Planned

Parenthood

Of

Southttll Ohio, 3i8 Rlchlond
AvtnU!J Alhtnl, Ohio, 45701
ATTN &lt;udok E 0 EJE S I'
HIV Progrom Coordlnltor, full·
tlmt, live county oroo bostd In
Alhtnt Ttko ovor 1 grenl·lun·
did pro)tct Which roqulrtt dull
okllll of community dovolopo

mentlllducatlonal outreach, and
Individual te8tlnalcounaellng
Bechalor's dtgrH Tn haalth, aocial strvlca m~mtnt 1 or In

rolottd field Soltry 120,000 to
LOST 1m1ll block clog, 28 to 30 122,000 Sond lttttr ond rtiUml
lbl, 2 miiH from Y on Rt 62, nsmlng
thrM
tmpk)yment
ailver choker, 304-&amp;75-6871

referencn to Planned PI,.,..

LOST· a Bible In 1 novy blue
zipper c111 from Longovlllt Rt
124 to Pomoroy-Middltpon trol,
614-992-e&amp;3l
LOST- Block-groy-whh• mixed
Autlrlon thoop type dog In tht
JHH CrHk oru II lound
piOIII clll814-742·2805 or 446-

thood of Soulhtlll Ohio, 3i&amp;
Rlchlond Avenue, AthtntLO~_lo,
45701
ATTN
oWOIIt.
E 0 EJE.S I'
Immediate Clptnlngo Avolloblt
For Ful~nmo Ana Port·Timt
L.P.N.'I. Com~hlvt Wl!l'l,

3575
Lost Female Pug Puppy Family
Pet Gerftald HeTghtt &amp; Avenue
Ar•• 614-446-0110, Rewerdl

Contad The Dlrecfor of Nu,..
lng, fltnecrut Cara Center, 170
PlnecrHit Drive. O.lllpolle. Ohio
4!831 8'14...t46·7112 lquel 0po

Loot

VIcinity

Bldwtll

2

Beaglee, Male l Female Bleck,
Brown &amp; Whht,114-381H749

~~~::lt~..\'lngE=I"::•

ponunKy Employer

ln11rnl1d In Hlllng or want to

buy Avon lroo glh, coli Koy 014992·7180
LOST,Mala Brittany Spaniel,
orengt ond whito, wllh collor, JOBS IN ALASKA-Hiring. Entry
REWARD, 30Wl5o641i
Llvtl $800 00 + -kfy. Con·
llructlon, Clnntrltl, Oil Fltldo
CALL NOW 1·208·736-7000 E111
Yard Sale
7
161788
LPN part-Umt rallet, tlexlbla
houra, contact Dorothy Harper

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity
Rummtge Selt, Burdine Addn,
9 oo-5 00, Fri &amp; Sll, Home lnl,
Wtter hiller, Tupperware, toola,
glaatWirt, t:IOihH, western•
Yard Sill, 3202 Howerd Ava,
Point
Pl1111nt,
Thuradsy,
Frldty, Saturdty

Yord Sail, Fri &amp; Sot 123 Por~
Dr 4 lom!IIH, Iooby bed, tolld

• ma'pie table, Home Interior,
large women clothing, big
stltcllon boys 6 glr1s clothing
what-nots

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

614-446-7148
Need bebyalttar In my homa
Mon-Frl After Gpm cell 614-4462215
NHCI 10meona to dlak &amp; sow 1

~~

In Pllrlot ortt 014-3711-

Part.tlme permanat Pharmatllt,
av1r101 20 hours • WHk, no
holiday• or Sunday1, retail an·
vlronmtnl for Athena area, und
r11umt to PO Box 72t-P

Pomoroy, OH 457159

Secretary,

Llw

Firm,

good

HCrttorioloklll roqulrtdl typing,
dlctollon, word procttl ng• llc.
Wrltt Bo• P·2 Olrt ~olnl
PI taunt Rtgloi~!L .200 lloln St,
Point PL.Iaunt, wv 25550

Town of Me.on now aectptlng
epplleetlons tor pollee pa.trorman, application available at

2-Fomlly Yard Solt Soi·Sun,
July 20·21, ll-dork, 242 Botch St
Middleport

City Bldg
Wonted OTR Truck Drlvtr 2

2-Yerd Sele July 18-10, I 00 til
?? 1 Wagner Lana, Jet Rt 7 &amp;

qulrtd,

Cheur.r

Llcenu,

And

143

8 Family Yerd Sale Nur11
uniforms clottln, all alz11,
chUdren 1: edulta, bible thlnga,
uaed hom• diiCor, TuppetWere,
Etc Thurodoy &amp; FrldlyL10 00.

5 OOpm~ Crouroodt tl H1 124,
Bolley HUn Rotd
All Ytrd Sola IIU11 Bo Pold In
AdVInct Dtodllnt 1 OOpm tho

day Mfore the ad Is to Nn,
Sundey edition 1 OOpm Frldey,
10 00• m
Monday
edition

Soturdly
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
2 Fomlly Ytrd Solt Fridoy, July
lith 1·7 eontenory Rood. Kldo
ClothM And Monll
ALL Yord Soltt Mull Bo Plld In
Advonct DEADLINE: 2.00 P m
lht dty btloM lht 1d Ia lo run
Sundly tdhlon • 2.00 p m
F~dty. Mondoy tdHion · 2 00
p.m. Stturdty.
Friday, JulY teth 2 112 ml on
lloddl- Plkt Wordt Trelltr
Ptrk. loll.
Friday, s.turdoy, ,,e,_m !~
7320 Slott Rt 7, 112 Milt 8
Junction Rt. 211. Wlcktr Chtol,
Room Divider. Somt Antlq-.

Yeara Verlnab'- Experlanoe R•
0&lt;

Clun

CDL

Driving

Record. Coli Mornlngo, 814-44f·

0021
Wented Service Technician for
Hullng &amp; Air Condltlonlng!Rafrlgeretlon E•perltnced
Sind Aasuma Cl1 071, Clo Gat-

0706

2 bedroom unfurnished 12x6(1

5 bedroom, 2 112 loolh, lg

112 milt peal Holzor DeposR
ond Rtloronct Roqulrtd 614·
448..C389 or 304.075-2330

kltctlen1
family
room
wfflraplece, living rm, dining rm
double garage tdeehed, 4 113

ocroo, su,ooo Firm, coli 814985-3574
Rtductd To Soli 2 Story Sbr
Comar Lot In Chuhlre, Ohio
Excellent Condition For Finane·
lng, Five Sta4 ~4er1laga, VIckie

Houldron 81
042 Soller
Will Poy Polnlo i04-i32-Gi59,
904-'132·7870
For Sole By OWner. Oulllty
Brick Ronch Clott To Hollar
Hospital

4br, Full Ra.. manl

Lorgo Shldtd Lot 814-446.0647
ofttr 5p.m
GOVERNMENT HOMES form $1
(U ropolr). Delinquent 111
propertf Repoaanlone Your

Retrain

Business
Training
NowiiiSouthMetem

3 bedroom double wide prlvall

lot,

AIC,

2

botho,

porch

W/awnlng, tlec, walk-In CIOHtl,

nlct ntlghborhood, Gtlllpollo
Ferry, 132$. 304-G75-308l
3 bedroom,14K70, largtlol, Bud
Chlltln Rood, S225 month, 304·
675-350hfttr 5 00

Mobile home, fum, 2-BR, view
of river, 614·992-5949

Mobila hom.. for rent or aala ,

10180 for current repo 1111

Excelltn1
Condition. tumlohtd,l14·992·111111
Dtalrololt L.octllon Quality
Apartment
Buill Pt~lal Flnonelng 614·256- 44
8855
for Rent
Lyona Addition In Moton, 1 Efficiency Apartment, Private
qudly built, 4 bldroomo, 3
In

bathl, cua10m 111 In kitchen,
DR, FA, 2 flreplacn, CA, 1 acre
lot , Morelli $117,500 304·77315881

Beth1 All Utllltlas Peld, Aero••
From Univertlty of Rio Grande,

$200/mo 814-388-9946

"f.:•

1-3 Room
tal ftoor, nlc~
MII-dd,l':.f'ctn
llldd-51oRpooo;
1~~!m
lot, 4 bedroomo, 1 112 bolho, 2 I
2nd floor, Pomeroy 1
otory, 111 brick, bock dtck com· Apt,
Duplex 5-Room, lllddlepon,
pllllly Clrptttd, 304·882·2382
Mayo Drivt, N•w Haven, eox125'

Reatorad home for
aala.
Hardwood floors and carpet,
heat pump-central 1lr, V2 acre
lend, gorogo (1 112 coro), 2-out

allo 2-houMI for salt, tsnd
contract
avaiiJble
wl$1000

down, 614"62"2403

-·

Aht Aid Pharmacy

Plftoburgh Point Interior flot woll
point $10.4i gtl, ln1trior Hml·
gloto $13 99 .got,_ oll1trior flat
fioutt point Sf3 n 2415 Jock·
;:,t{t4::lnt Plttunl, Pt Pll

Phont 814-388-i630
Rodlo Controlled Alrplont,
Complott, 5ft Wing Span, $240
Cllll14·245-1125t.
Rtcandhlontd Woahtre, Dryoro
Guorentood prompt strvlct lor
Ill moktt, modtlt Tht W11htr
Dryer Shoppe. 014-441-2M4.
Bush Hog Floll .,_._,, 50" punblh!!'_!'J ,$1400 now, NOW 1550,
614-.......36g,

Wizard
cut, 3

Rockor, S3 83 WHk.Bunk Bid
Complete sa 41 WHk, 4 Dro-r
Chill, $3 :ze WHk; Pol1or Bidroom Suitt, 7 pc., St5 17 Wttk,
lncludH Bidding Country Plno
Dlnetto With Bench &amp; 4 Cholro,
$10 118 WHk OPEN llondoy
Thru SIIUrdly, i l m to 5p m'
Sundey 12 Noon Till 5p m 4
Mlln Oft Route 7 On Route 141,
In Cantanary
Singer tough &amp; stw aewlng m•·

clllnt In coblnll 1125 COuch
and choir SSO Dtok $20 304·
675-6822.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ollvt St 'Golllpollo Now &amp; Ultd
furniture, h11t1r1, Watem &amp;
Work boola 814-448-:119
Vary nice couch &amp; chair, $150 00
814 002-2135
814-446-3158

LIVING ROOM Solo l Choir,
$199 00
Rtcllntr, S14D.OO,
Swivel Rocker, $99 00, CoHN &amp;
End Tololu, $89 00 Stl DINING
ROOM Tobit Wllh 4 Ptddtd
Choirs, $149 00, Country Pint
Dlnottt With Btnch And 3
Chalro, 1299 00, llotc~lng 2
Door HMcl!,. $34i, Or $589 00
Sol, Ook 11blt, 42x52 Willi 6
Bow

Back

Chaire.

$829 00 BEDROOM Polltr Btdroom Sullt (5 po ), S341 00, 4
Drower Cht11, 144 95, Bunk
Bod, S22i Compltla Full lion
Stt $105 00 Sit, 7 pc Coder
Bodroom Sullt $899 00 OPEN
Mondoy Thru Solurdly, h m to
6p m , Sunday 12 Noon Till
5p m , 4 Mllll on Routt 7 On

r

304-67~

55

mower, 6 hp&lt; 30"
• elec 111n, ,215
111 lfter 5 00
Building
Supplies

ttrl 1 Hlo Grande, OH Clll 514·

Knox 1U1, 1-owner, 2 bedroom,

centre! hilt, air, reference ,..
Ired 11~.0338

56

Pets for Sale

-,:_.:_;~;.::~::::;~:'::"':::':

nd s
Sh p1 t
Groom 1
upply
opGrooming All brstdt, 11yloo
llmt Ptl Food Dttltr Julio
Wtlob Coli 814-440~:11. 1-600352.0231
~

Attrteverw Shot1 and wormed

grooming, 12 yrs experience,

304.075-0332
Dog Obedlanca Claaaea, Stert·

e14-446-3844 lfler 7 p m

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

8 n utility bed, for amall pick·
up, 111 alum &amp; tully tnlcOHd

Atfor·

1W.Z 14.SO throt btclroom,
2 lull bl1hot ahklgle -t, vinyl
lldlng,
tnllttrt,
Clrptttd
throuGhout, oil drywoll Interior
tnd :1-bty window. 117,1W.OO
18 wanted to Do
CIII1-I00-721l-4041.
Will Bobyell In My Homo Trallor For Salt: 1411?0 Willi
Anf.lmt
Rodnoy
Artt.
At ortnettl Avtioblo. An 1111ttt. 10xt0 Add On, Willi 2 LolL AICoil f14-24W'IM.
~"'.000 ~1117. ,
Buoh Hog Stri!CI At1tonablt 34
Bullntn
RtiH No Job To Smolll 114Buildings
3711·2942
Chrlotlon llolhtr will bobytlt In 0FFlCE SPACE FOR LEASE on
her home, Flatrock area, 3Q.t.. 2nd AVL, Gtlllpoi(L ~ to
8i5-380t or 304-t75-3t11 bolort Court Houst. 1 - · 2 - · ·
1 roornt, 4 r - . All nlctly
IOOPM
Public Sale
8
- t t d , olr -.c!Hionlng,
bill oro ptld.
&amp; Auction
Interior ond tllttrlor polntlngi 10 your wttor &amp; lllokt fOil' - · No
Rloll ,..,_. Auatlon Contpony, yre nperltni:t Roof ptlnfi ng
Hind WHhlng -~.:~:·•
lull tlmo ouct-r. oomllltlt w1-.
Odd Jobt Rt
t
UDOintmont. 114-441-7188 dty,
auction eorvtce. Lk:onltd Otllo, Frot t111mlloo
304-875-27UI
44t-111131ove.
Wtlt VIrginia, 304·17W715.
BuolnHI Collt!l', Sprlna Vllloy
PIIZI Coli Todiy, fM-441..C3t7!1
Regllltrlllon 1190-CS-121118

.•

3M5.

Fumlthld Efllcltnoy,
$150
Utlllllto Pold, Shiro Both, 7111
Fourth, Golllpollt, 814-4411-4410
oHtr 7p.m.

-a --

Loflylltt Mal: 3br, 2 Botht, All
Utllltltl lncludta. 14251mo
!It-" Rtqulrtd. No Ptto 014447733, 114-448-4222.
ll&lt;iw
fur·

=-.""iitllr
Comptotty

Pumltliod

$800 814-371).2964

Air Condlllonor, $150, Electric
Stove, $100, Twin Bod, $150;
Choll Drowtre, Drttltr, $100,
Couch. 814 ue 3224

Lhaaa AJMO pupa for .. ,. and
Miniature Schnauzer pupplte
AKC, "" &amp; pipper, Reductd,

014·992·5Mi
PoOdlt pupplto, toyo tnd 111
cupe, AKC Cllomplon iloodllnt,
Coolville 814~7-3404.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

;..:-~~..;_~~':::""::::":=::

For your hoy, llfolfl, or grooo
neacf.. call Morgan Farms on AI
35 304·937·2018.

Transportation

1973 Cadillac, 4-dr Stdan
Otvllle, 87,000 actual miles,
good cond, $800 obo 614·992·

6525
1i77 Dodge Aopon SW, 8 cyl,
runo good. $300 814·367-7904
1977 F·150, Body Groat Shape,
Naw Motor &amp; Tir" $1,300 614·

Vln $1 1195 814-245-5152

1982 CJ7 Lortdo, 4 opaod, llaht
bor, hlrd top, cllroml rlml, n,.
ted gl111, txt roo, 304-882-33i7.
1983 Ford Conversion van, 304-

875-5843.

74
Motorcycles
1980 Honda CB goo Cuttom,
8,800 Orlglnll Mlltt Col 014367-7321 Btloro 2p m
18118 Modllltd Suzuki 250 Quod
Racer, axo cond, $1,400 nago-tloblo, 304-075-1585
81 Suzuki RM60, 2 llrokt, runo
good. 014-448-4253.
Hondo 450 Elllro olun, 3,000
mlln. 1500. 814-245-M63

Myoterlea Father Dowhng s
hie os put on danger because
of a pllotograph (R) Stereo

g

446-6121

1978 Olda Cutlass Supreme
coup1 Slit or tradt 614-448-

3419

1079 Oldamohlle Cutlaaa, Good
814-44~40,

1981 B••• Toummtnt Flolltr·
man 18' olumn BShp Chryoltr
motor, wltlh lreiltr, motor guide
motor, many extrll8,

S2,00Cf. 304-875-2884
1188 Boho, lllnt cond, w/350
Chevy mel or, $13 750.00. Sltvo
ond Ptggy Dovlo 8088 Rodlord
Ad, Alhtno, OH, Sf4·5i2-4241 or
014-992·252i
Connally 8T Slolom grophllt tkl

turbo SS propJnow), 304.07511135 IHtr I:OOP .

1980 Olda Cullaso Supremo,
loaded, runs good 304-458·
1880
1981 Buick LeSabre Umlted Air,
lUI, CruiH, Smell V 8, Naw

Pontoon Boat, Staal 50 HorH
Johnaon New Deck, Cai'J)II 1

Oklamoblle
Cutlass
Clerr~,V.e eng, A·1 condition,

$3800, 614-H2-31114
1987 Chivy CIVIIIt!, Z·24,
12,000 111111 5 Spaod Uctlltnt
Condhlon 614-2511-1414
1188 Lincoln Town Cor l.otdtd,
42,000 Mlloo, 1 OWntr, EXctlllnt
Cond~lon, 614-448-e157 Aher
5p.m.
1i88 Pontloc GTA'- Trano Am,
Mint Condition 10right Rid,
l.otdtd, Mull Stol 81of.446-6751,
614-446-7804
1988 RS Clmtro, Sitek Ell1
Groy Int. All - " · Optt TP V·
I, Auto ODt :16,000 lllln, EC,
$8,200 Or rod• 814-448-0381,
614-448-IIIM

Accessories

6125 lftor 5 00

79

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1977 19ft Ford Motor Homa1

42,000 MIIH Fully Stlf Con·

lalned Roof, Air, Extra Storege

Artl On Top And In Bock Plua
Hhch
bcollonl Condltlonl
15.500. 614·388-9081, 614·3886230.

81

811 Cllovy Clltbrlty, 4 DR V-G,
2.8, outo crulst control, AC,
AMIFII rodlo, 54,000 mllt1
$4250. 114-440-6343 or 814-448'
5313

g 11J

Myoteryl A reverend
needs defense agaonst a
charge of adultery (PI 4 or 6)

EVI:P.Y TIME A alt.~ IS I!C!RN,
1M ~INca 10 ENRa.L. HIM IN

Services
Home
Improvements

BE:T~

GOEr

es~e~~S~ eHccT
OF~.

I

Rogers Baument Waterproo-

Complete Mobile Home S.t-Upa,
Rt~ire, Commarlcal, Rnldan-

tlol lmprovomonto

Including

Pl..,blng, Eltclrlcel Insurance

Clolmt ACctpttd 114·258·1611

Curtla Home Improvement•
Yaara Experience On Older &amp;
Nawer Homas Room Additions,

Foundotlon Work, Roofing,
Wlndowa &amp; Siding Frtt Et·
Umotoal Rtlortncoo, No Job To
Big Or Smlll' 614..C41.0225
JET

CROSS YORE HEART
AN' HOPE TO DIE YOU
WON'T BREATHE A
WORD TO ARY A SOUL!!

BE
SHUT-MOUTH
AS ARY
A CLAM!!
I'LL

EVANS, JACKSON, OH 1-600537·1528
Ron't TV Service, spaclallzJng
In Zenith alao Hrvlclng most
othtr branda. Houaa catla, elso
aome appll1nca repair• WV

304-&amp;111·23118 Ohio 614..C46-2454
Soptlc Tonk Pumping $90cGolllo
Co RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jockton, OH 1-800·537-9528
Stw·Vac

Service,

ASTRO-GRAPH

Will do rtmodollng, roollng1
building, lrot lrlmmlng ona
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

114·ii2·5752

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

tl

Upholstery
Mowrey't Uphollltring torvlclng trl county arst a yttre. Tht
In lumlturo uphollltrlng
Col 304-075-4154 lor lrtt H·

tlmatu

--- - - - - ---

apprecoale oppor1un111es as they occur
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jen 19) Try to
partiCipate'" a fun act1v1ty w1th fnends

thos newspaper P 0 Box 91428 Cleveland OH 44101 3428 Be sure to slate
your zod1ac s1gn

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. 19) Accelerated progres$ IS hkely Ieday 1n an endea\4or thai has been extremely slug·
gosh of late II looks hke you II tonally be

You llllave lo respond quockly however m order lo take advantage ot ot
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) II you ve
been contemplating getting onvolved 1n
a soc1al act•v•ty with a new group of

July 19, 1991
It looks hke you should be rather lucky
botll tlnancoally and romantically on the
year allead Heed thos warnong, however. regarding the management ol your
resources

CANCER (Junt 21-July 22) You may
encounter someone you know only ca-

sually today If the two of you woll take
time to really talk, you'll discover you
have numerous things on common Get

today The more the memer too be·
cause you II blend comfortably '" a
group compnsed of a vanety of
personal1t1es

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You may denve

people, thos os a good day to make ~our

oommorclll

17811

fluences whiCh are govern1ng you 1n the

some type of umque beneftt today trom
an unusual chain of Circumstances

Coner'o Plumbing
ondHullng

or

but you must be able to recogmze and

year ahead Send lor Cancer s AstroGraph predoctlons today by maolmg
$1 25 plus a long self-addressed

I

~~

HELWI
4

L.....J..I---~...I. . . .~. .-1

....1....-Jis

]

~l
--'16_l7-ll..._l-l: !
.
.
.
.
L .
WE A K 0

"Don t throw away the old

bucket· lectured the old
Iarmer to h1s new netghbors
. - - - - - - - - - - , "Know for sure the new one
0 RI B T
Will ·-·- ···-- ..
l-_.;l:...:;,.,8..:...1;,.....:,..1..:....,19::--1 Q Complele the chuckle quoted
_
.
•
•
_
by l1llmg 1n the m1ssmg words
0

u

I

L...-L-...L...-L-....L-.L-....1 you develop from step No 3 below

ll:'ll PRINT NUMBERED
~ lETTERS

I'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

1-

able lo make up lor lost lome
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Make an
effort today to assoctate wtth fnend s
who st1mulat e your lhmkmg An active
conversationa l exchange could sttr up
several useful tdeas

move It could prove both e)CCittng and

ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) Your 1n·

Interesting
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Shop wosely
today, especially lor Items that can be
used on your llousehold 11 you look
around a little you'll have good probabolltles tor makong some real buys
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov 22) The race
goes to the swolt today, soot behooves
you 10 be both a sell-starter and a gogetter Take the 1nltlatlve 1n arrangements wllere you're not pleased with
lhe pace others have set
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec:. 21) Your
posslbolltles tor tonanc1a1 gain are much
better at this lime than you may realize

stmcts tn ma1ters ot a matenal nature

are sharper than usual loday People
you II have dealings with are likely to be
ompressed by your onqenoous tactics
TAURUS (Aprii20-Moy 20) A constructive odea moghl pop onto ~our head today
regarding someth•ng you can do to tm·
prove upon a relat1onsh1p wtth someone

you (Ike It' II be worth a try
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Substantial
progress where your work IS concerned
can be made today lhrough the use ol
Innovative technoques Don t be reluctant to lake a chance

7

B1shop- Rebus- Drunk - Magp1e - BIG ONES
Mother to leen "We are all proud of mak1ng little mts·
takes It g1ves us the feeling we don't make BIG

ONES"

BRIDGE

NORTH

+K 6 3 2

718 91

• AQ1

I B 54
• Q 10 6

PHILLIP
ALDER

WEST

EAST

+10 5

+4

•to 83 2

• KJ95
• J 10 9 3
K872

• Q6 2

+

+A 9 54

SOUTH

•s

+AQJ987
4

Your contract
is on the line

I AK7

+JJ

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South

By Pbllllp Alder

West

South
There are ttmes when the opponents
could be armed wtth a Scud but you
wtll sttll make your contract - 1t ts
mtsstle-proof At other limes, a paper
atrplane ts enough to slloot you down
In between, there are the occaswns
when the opponents have darts that
can poerce your armor - unless you
work out how to blunt them
Look at the North South cards (The
dealts from B1ll Roots book "How to
Play a Bndge Hand ") You are m four
spades and West has Jed the heart two
What os your hne of play'
When playmg m a sutt contract al
ways count your potenllallosers Here
you have two club losers for sure and
potenttal losers m both red su1ts
At first glance from the low-heart
lead, ot looks as though the fmesse wtll
wtn leavmg the contract safe And
even of the heart fmesse loses you can
sttll estabhsh a club tnck to dtscard
your dtamond lose r

I+
4+

Pass
Pass

Nortb

East

Pass

Pass
Pass

3+

Opemng lead • 2

But ot tsn t as easy as that Constder
the sequence of plays If the heart
nesse loses, East (of he ts m mtd·season
form) wtll swttch to a doamond Then
you won't have the tome to set up a
club tnck The defense wtll defeat you
esta bhshmg a dtamond tnck before
you establish a club tnck
However suppose you put up the
heart ace at tnck one draw trumps
usmg the spade honors m your ha nd
and lead the club Jack How can they
l hurt you' They cant you have lime on
1 your stde They wtll get one heart and
two club tncks but you wtll d1scard
your doamond loser on dummy s club
queen
Were you a dart board or a shoeld '

r.

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

36 Resin·
producing
tree
37 Housellold
god
38 Monkeys
40 Football's Rozelle
4 t Actor Ron 42 Magna44 Danger color
4S Rocky crag
46 Eve's origin
48 Syetem of
moral
principles
51 Refugee
55 Spring back
56 More
uncanny
57 Black tea
58 Bank
employee

1 Explosoona
7 Injured wltll
horns
12 Prior to
t 3 In arrears
14 More like a
decorative
fabric
IS Farthest from
the surface
16 Author
Tolstoy
t7 Thing In law
18 Sine- non
2 t Beac~ hills
23 BarbaraGeddes
26 Entity
28 Freight trailer
29 Language
sulllx
30 Land
measure
3 t Having made
a will
33 Jewish
tongue

DOWN
1 Barrel (abbr.)
2 Pasture land
3 F ootbeU dlv.

An1war to Previous Puzzle

4 Dirt
5 In a dlltltult
poaltlon
6 Thin end
watery
7 Beginning
8 Unlta of
reslatance

a

a Jump on life oy understandong the on-

stamped envelope to Astro.Graph cJo

removal, hou11 painting For
frel ntlmattt, call Gtorga 11 1·

82

!12)11) Triala ot Roale
O'Neill Rosoe defends a man
accused ot kolhng hos
AIDS-ravaged lover (R)
Stereo O
illiiD Beverly HIUI, 90210
Brandon S jOb at a beech
club hurts hos relatoonsllop
woth hos lather Stereo C
11J MOVIE: The Shining (A)
(3 00)
a!) Heahvllle Now Stereo
U.S Olympic Feetlvel
Boxong, tonals from Los
Angeles (T)
Larry King Llv61
9.30 (II It II)) Wlnga Joe loses
hos polot s hcense alter his
blood pressure soars (R)
Stereo 0
10·00 IIlD OJ L A Law Abby
talks about gun control on
lhe Phil Donahue Show (R)
Stareo 0
(!) NaWI
Cll Ill Ill P~metlma Live
Stereo C
ClJ 11J ARve From OH Canter
Stereo. C
Ill) !12llll Stephen King' a
Golden Yearo Harlan begons
10 undergo physocal changes
whocll place hom on danger
Stereo 0
illl m Star Trek
Worid Nawe
1D 700 Club With Pet
Roberta on
10 30 ClJ (f) New Televltlon 0
a!) Crook end Clleee
1t 00 (II . . (}) Ill Ill ill) OJ II)
OJ Newa
(!) Twilight Zone
ClJ Nlwtwatch
I!]) m ArHnlo HoU Slereo 1:;1
a!) On Stage Stereo
Blnblll Tonight
Sporto Tonight
IU Scarecrow ond Mre. King
1 t.OS &lt;ll MOVIE: How the Weet
Wet Won (310)
11:30(1Jit OJ Tonight Show
Stereo
(!) Magnum, p.l.
(Z) Alrlctn·Americon Joumal
Ill It NlahUine C
(II) Ai'Htilo Holl Stereo 0
!12)11) 'Fly b, Night' CBS
Late Night Stereo C
a!) Amertctn Mutlc lhop

a

BARNEY

Aeration Motora, repaired Naw
&amp; r•bulh motoro In llock, RON

Davll

i

az

wiring, new Hf'Vice or rlpiln
M11tar Uctnsed electrlc:len

tom11ot,
olrstdy
picked. S8 buthtl Boughman
lorm 7 112 mlltl touth of Gal·
llpollt, Sl. Rt. l .14-25U535.

eVERY '24 Hct.IRS.

THE I=RleNDeHIPCUJS.

I'D
A

fing

-•ntltl

Conning

TH~ ARE I'E."RLY 2.00
~D !!S4&amp;16S ~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Uncondltlonol llflllmt guoron·
IH l.ocol rtltrtncH lumltlltd
FIH t111matH Ctll colltct 1·
614·237.0486, doy or night

Gtorgto Crook Ad Ptno, ouppiiH, pickup, ond dollvtry 114·
446.02M
198i lroc Comtro~ Totally
l.otdtd, EKcollont 1,;0ndlllonl
48,000 IIIIH 304-075-3331

AIJD -H£ l&lt;fQJti&lt;E5
A MALL

&amp;

1'3-81 Chovrolll truck hood
$50 00, 73-81 Chavroltt bldalde,
pautnger aida, $50 00 814·992-

1981 Olda Cutlas!t, Very Sharp

1986

Auto Parts

On the Watlrwaya
Stereo
11J eredahew on
Homecoming C
Ill) !12)11) Top Cope An
ollocer goes undercover to
stop organozed w1!dlole
poachong (R) Slereo 0
illl m Tlie Slmpaona
Homer s plans 10 get Sk1nner
on!erested on Marge s soster
backtore (R) Stereo C
11J Murder, Slle Wro(a 0
a!) On Stage Stareo
PrimeNewo
1U MOVIE: Forty Guns (2 00)
8.0S (l) MOVIE: The Alamo: 13
Daya to Glory (3 00)
8:30 (2) It OJ Different World
Freddie tnes to fond an
adoptive home lor an
orphan (R) Stereo Q
illiiD ,.rue Colore Katie and
Terry doscover tlley llave
different tastes In dates (R)
Stereo C
a!) Amerfcan Mualc Shop
Stereo
9:00 (II D lUI Chnre Robon hores
Bobby Hatloeld to sing to
Rebecca at theor wedd1ng
(RJ Stereo 1;1
(I) Ill Ill Gabriel'• Fire An
accodental shoollng leaves
Bird near death (R) Stereo

a

w/nylon cover 24p precision

-~

•

(}) Ill Ill Father Dowling

bt·

II

a

(200)

lAM I

tna

T A0 EEL
2
3
1 1 I I

az

1i71 Ski Boot, 15 Sol Star 711
HI' Motor, Nlct Troller, $1,500
61ol-446-10i2.

Ridenour Eltctricol, 304.075-

1nd rtltronct required, 304-882·
2511.

az
a

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

614-

cr.::.:

NewoHour 0
@Ill Current AHalr 0
illl m Night Court 0
IIJ MacGY'Ier 0
SportaCenter
Mone,llne
ID Scarecrow end Mrs King
7.OS (l) The JeHertona
7.30 (II D OJ Jeopardy I 0
(!) Andy Griffith
(}) @II) Entertainment
Tonight Stereo 1:;1
Ill Ill Mama'• Fomlly
Ill) Whnl of Fortune 1:;1
I!]) m M'A'S•H
a!) ee I Star Stereo
Senior PeA Bowling AMF
Cobra Classoc from St
Charles, Mo (L)
Croutlre
7-35 (l) Andy GrlHith
8:00 (II D lUI Coab, Show
Theo s plan to prepare a
donner tor his gorllnend goes
awry (R/ Stereo g
ill MOV E. V (PI 2 of 2)

1m Dodge von, 4 new tl roa,
new botttry, body good, motor
nttdo -rfc, $400. 304-075-!1169
ther 5 oo
::
:::..:::Go::o::.o_d..,E,..111-,-no""lo-n-:Dod:-:-go1979

trolling

m

Ill)

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'S

tnd

Nonh 3rd St, llklclopon, Ohio, 1
bedroom tumlahtd opt, rtftroncoo ond " - " required 304182-25A.

~:."-~tw!hlpc:-;.,r::: =~:h~u:!'=r.':i.

Cow end celf ahow haltera for
sale, Pelnt Plus, 2415 Jackson
Avt, Point Pluunt, WV

CI-HJCK, YOU 6LOCKHEAD!

az
a

WOlD

low To form four slmplt words ·

~ Nlgllt Court 1;1
(}) Ill Ill Inside Edition 0
Cll I1J MacNtii/Lehrer

Golllpollo, Ohio
114-446-3818

mobile

CA

2 year old Quarter horN, mart,

oorrtl $450 814-448·1458
225 lb Yorklhlro hog, $125 304882-37113

•

6:00 (II . . Cll Ill Ill ill) @Ill
OJ Ntowe
(!) Andy GriHith
ClJ Club Connect
11J Reeding Rainbow 1:;1
I!]) 18 Andy GriHith
11J Cartoon Expren
Thoroughbnld Digest
Worid Today
IU Our House
6 OS (l) Bewitched
6:30 (2) It OJ NBC Newa 1:;1
(!)I Dream ot Jeannie
Cll Ill Ill ABC Newa 1:;1
Cll Wild America Stereo 1:;1
I1J 3·2·1 Contact 1:;1
!lll @Ill CBS News 1:;1
I!])
WKRP In Cincinnati
Up Cloee
6 3S (l) Andy Grllflth
7'00 (II D OJ Wheel ot Fortune

az

Founh 1nd PTna

home, 1 mi._ below town over..

looking river No Ptlo,
448.0338

.:.6.:.3_ _;;L,_Iv...e...st
...o,_ck____

1150 814-043-2824
SIK 816 • 5 8 Ply moa 614-446AKC
Chlhuolluo
pupplto, 3496
roductdl 1 long holr molo, $7!1,
Rogoncy,
1 thort cott lom111, StOO 614· 1962 Olda 98
Brougham, 4~r sedan, every
367·792tl
option, llka new, new tires, ~50,
AKC Ftmolt Collll Pur., 3 V·B S2100, 614·992-6719
llontht Old, $150 6i 8 tdon
Rood, Second Houst Right On 1983 Dodgt 600 Interior, Ex·
larlor, Exctlllnt
Condluon
At. 7.
Nudo Englna 614·256·1211 AI·
AKC
Rtglatortd
Gtnntn ter &amp;p m
Shoto,
Shopherd pupploo
1984 Lincoln Mork VII all opo
Wormed, Htohhy 304-G75·21i3
tlons lllgh mlloogt, very good
AKC Rogllltrtd Golden Rotrivor cond 1tlon, musl 111 to appupplta, $250. uch, 614-448- preciate Price reductd to
11084 or 446-138l
$3200 614-441.0131
AKC
Rtgllltrod
lllnlaturo 1985 S·10 BllltrJI.-6 1.5 apd, Air,
Schnouzor, Vtry Smoll 614-441· Tilt Ctultt, AMt•M, very Cloon,
0152
$5,300 814·387·0122 Allor 5p m
AKC Wtlmeraner Pupa, Cham· 19811 Chovy Rolly sr.n Comaro,
pion Bloodllno, $250 ond 1300, T·Tops Air, PSIP , TIH, Naw
114-62-7201
AWL 'flrtt, 14,495 Coli Doyo
304-675-3331, E\lanlng• 614·367·
Doberman Plntchtr Pupo, AKC 7311
Rtglllortd black/tan mtlt, alto
txtro lll'llt doghoust lor $30 oo, 1986 Mercury Lynx, 4-cyl, 4-spd,
114-1112·3004
AC, AMIFM caaseltt, bllck
Dog and Cot grooming 111 w/rtd Interior, txc shape runs
brHdl, opaclollztd In Poodle groat' $2000 114·949·2388.

dtblllly, Lu•ury, &amp; Quollty. Coli
1-800-IIH-1710.

Center,

=::..::::..:.:::::.::~-----1

TlrH $1,500 0 8 0 614-446·
1692
AKC black registered Llbradcor 1981 Momo Carlo, 304-675-1506

1989 Volley Goo... neck hortt oloo 220-1 B Boor, 614·742·1103
trailer, $2800, 814·742·2552

Home

Sot till Noon

I WONDER W~AT WE COlJLD
SAV TO LET ~1M KNOW ~OW
TI-IAT MADE lJS FEEL ... TO
LET HIM KNOW WE'RE SENSITIVE

Coverld
Btd
Gooa
For
Dtllvary Can 81 Sten 449
Jackaon Pike

76

all tltctrlc, coli 114-!1112·3021 or qu ·
814-11!12-7111!
Fumlthtd enlclency wlltovt &amp;
rolrlgtrelor Slltnl ~olh era 2nd
Ntw 16•80'1, Now On Dloploy At Avt 1100 per month 614-448EI...

troctoro
Buy,
Mil,
trodt,&amp;8 lmplomtnll
oo- 5 00 wHkdoya,

dltlonl 014-446·11552
1985 Ford F·150 4•4. two tone
rod, lotdtd! Mull Ill IO If&gt;"
preclatt 814-4411-0355
19811 Toyo11, 1 Ton, Plck.Up, 5
SpMd $3,000 814·446~7i2
1985 Ford F-250, 314 ton, loaded,
16000 814·992-7070
1988 GIIC oulo PSIPB AC
crulto, 1111 L.oto ol till roo hnltd
wlndowo, dlootl 614~41-8044
1990 Ford F·150 414 XLT l.lrill,
air, duel gat tenk. pe 1 pw, pb,
12,000 ml, $11,500 814·iU2 5225
For Salt Ford Truck1 Wltll

evenings

1124 E Main Stroll, Pomoroy Floh Tonk 2413 Jockton Avo
Houro IITW 1000om loOOO Point Pluunl, 304.07!1·2063,
p m , Sundly 1 00 to 6 00 p m lull llno Tropical IIIII! blrda,
614·992·2528
small animals and suppl 11
Oak Bur.t, Low Bock With Mlr·
ror, Rtllnlahtd, S225 614-4463664 Evtnlngt
54

1980 International Truck, 404

Motor, 5 &amp; 2, 17 h Bid Wllh Log
Bunke 614·258·1i22
1982 5-10, 4 Speed, 4 Cyllndor,

3541.

Dog Oblldltncl CIIIHI blale

7

Wide aatectlon ntw I used fann

Raarranga lt»trt of
0 four
~eromoltd wordo

EVENING

2803
1i78 Ford 4 wll dr, V-8, S500 or
btll .,., 614·387·7904

Siding, 12,000 Firm 814-4464043

Antique OreaHr, With Merbla

3br, 1 112 Both l.ocaltd Pint 1~p;:m::::C--:==-:;---;:=:=::;­
Sirttt, Ntll1 To Holrhut 814-245- Nicely Fumlohtd Apartment,
M40
1br, nollt lo Ubrory, perking,

1178 F·100 Ford truck, f1lr cond,
PS, $1000 00, 614-H2-

tntronct, trtcttd. S384i 00 hlultd 1111 year $450 00, 614·
Prtclolon Poll Bulldtre 114-ii2· 843·524e daya or 843-5211

1
Top, And Condlo Holdtro 814- ancl' odvonctd otortlng July
20
245·5152
For lntorm1t1on can Sharry
Antique Furniture Repaired, Roberto Conllltd Trolnor, 814'
Lampa Rewired. {25 v.. ,. Ex· 446-18114
perlenco) W While, 814-245- Ongonwynd canery Persian,
9448
SlamiM end Hlmelayan kltttne

ohor

grou plu olao 16-loof llock
trollor nc cond, 614-992-&amp;114,
1970 Chovy 1·Ton, 12·fool 11111
lltl bed, ••• cond,l14-992·5114
Jlm'o Ftrm EQulpmont1 _SR 35,
Wt11 Gollloollt, 614~6-11777,

THU., JULY 18

IUIO,

1979-Ford Felrmont Eng. ovtr·

lng 7120/t'l For Information Cell

014-4411-4410

•

Power StMring, Excellent Con·

lntemetlonal Modll-720 Fol'lge
chopper, 2·row, com head and

r::~:t~~' S@~JllA -l£ t.~s·
_..;_;;.;.;,;...__,:;.,..:: I~ Itt~ ~y CIAY I POLLAN

1011 Toyote Land CruiNr, Excel·

ltnl 4•4 copeblllly, S750 00, 1·
814·9l!5-4389.

245-612~

014-448-1854( Shorry Roblrlo,
Ctrtllltd Tro ntr

Utllhln Paid 920 Founh Ave,

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

Television
Viewing

4i99.

Speclel 24X24XI, 2 car garage,
2·8&gt;7 OVIrh-,
1-3 ft

Antiques

Golllpollo

BORN LOSER

72 Trucks for Sale

19'19 Plymouth Voiarl, sltnt 6,
low miiH, 304-675-SOGO

reflrtncH ond dopooh, 304882·2588

Wllher/drytr Houu aiding 614·

Trod• For Vldto Cim Corder
514·388-8253, 814·388-81113

Condition, S&amp;OO
814·448-87112

10lc55 ShuHz, 2-8A mobllo home
wlundtrplnnlng ond porch,
moo. 814-W.Z-31114
121110 mobltt hcmt. Portly fur·
nlthld. Ell1ro olton. $81110. 1142454413
11187·121150 Skyllnt, 2·BR houst
trollor, colll14-992·2it5

Fumlthtd Apanmtnl, 1br, 1235

Dltc Drive, Printo,r1 'Tape Col·

11tta, Telephone Modtm With
Mony Gomot &amp; Pr!&gt;IJromo, Will

Block, brick, _ . , plpoo, win·
dowo._ llnttlo, tic Cloudt Win·

Colltrtetl 114-3111-21148

Buy or 1111 Rlvtrlr. Antiques,

Pomeroy-Middlep~rt, Ohio

torltl $2,000 614·258-4490

Frost FrH, $150, Refrigerator,

Vi're Furniture
Sola 6 Chair, 11110 Wttk,
Recliner, SS 47 WMk, Swivet

a, 1991

Rune Good, S 11, Tube, Accn-

CoWtr1on. Frol1 Frtt, Ukt
Ntw $250, Rtfrlg-lor Horvtlt
G E Copperlont, Hotvy Duty,
$95, Dryer Konmoro Sl5&gt;
Eltctric R1n111, 30 Inch, SN,
Smoll Rtlrlgtrotor, Sulloblt For
Dorm Or Cilmpor, Sl5, Frttler,
Upright, $1501 Portoblt Drytr,
175, Sktggt Applllnctl,
Upper
Rlvor Rood, 114-446-73118, All
Sold Wllh AGourontttl
RENTZ OWN
614-448-:1158

1985 Ford bp, oun roof, AIC, 5
opaod, $2,700 304·937·2031

Thursday, July 1

16 Foot V-Hullk90 HP, Morcury,

Two 28 lncll 10 SPttd Blcycltl
S25 00 Eocll 814-446-21111
Wheal Chalra, Uke New, 1100
Eoch. 014-245-5152

Qol~. Froet FrM, $150, Wuher

Autos for Sale

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

8MCh Street, Middleport, Ohio
Routt 141 In Centenary
One room efficiency ept, 1 ;.:..::.:.:..::.:~.;..;....;..;..._.:._
__

1182 Commador Mobile Homa, 2
BR1 Gtrdtn Tub, 88 Purl Sl

Commodore 04 Computer, With

1885 Pontllc 8,000i

For Salt

1m 4•4 GIIC PU; L.ongobtr111r
Botktlt,_ Dlohto, BoiJY homo,
814-446-nH
For Solt O" Jointer 48" Bid, 7
PI- Golf Clubt, With Bog, $30
Ot4-446-11:11
For Solt. Stroto l.ounll'r, 150,
RHOrt Mtmbtrohlp, 814-4461810 Evtnlnll'.
Frog Skin Pocket Bookt, Ukt
Thoto AI Moll, Up To S25, 614446·71113
Hoovy duty Ford bruoh h'!9, 8'
llblrglou plck-oJp topper, Dovld
YDII 1 Racine, 814-Mt-2853
Moving Salt Wtthtr &amp; Dryor
Nt Bid I bol Springe. 114-441·
1210
llutclt Building ond Wolght
Rtduclng Prodilctt • Amfno
Aoklt, Cioldon-1 Cope, Super
Fit Bumtre Now Avalltblt II

71

1987 Chtvy PU, $300 B14-446For Sale
or Trade

59

S125, 814·992-5152

caii30W75-1450
Rtlrlgerllor, Whht Froat Frot,
$125, Rtlrlll'rotor, Copponono,

VI'RA FURNITURE

1br Apartment, Appliances Fur·

nlahtd,
1
Block
From
bulldlngo, lui - - lnd Downtown Coll614-448-4839
ctllor, llorm w~ ond
door1l Smoll down poymont ond 2 BR furnlahtd lptrtmtnt Ronl,
llkt OVtr ptyrntnlt, 014-247· $285 per monlh Somt utilities
814-448-2404
881 Third Avenue, Golllpollo,
32 Mobile Homes
21or, Rolrigtrolor, Slovo, Monlho
Dtpooll
Outoldl
Slongo
for Sale
1250/mo 814-245-i595
$500 Down On Stltct RoApenmtnt In CIIHon, 304.075-ltd Mobllt H - . Froo Sot 3216
or 875-2418
Up And Dtllvtry. Flnonclng
Avalltblt Mid Ohfo Flnonct, f. BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
600-68i-5711.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
10 Acrtt, 11180 Blyvltw, 14K711, ESTATES, 538 Jockson Plkt
7x21 Expenclo, 2 Full Bothe, from $192/mo Wolk lo shop &amp;
Now Clrptt Throughoit tV.20 moviH Clll614-446·2588 EOH
2 Cor Gortgt, 118,000, ii'o Lind

440-3183 or 614-448~3'1

14

4088

In Gollloollo, Nlct Older Home

12

AI 218, Crown City, 614·2568509

Ftrry, S250 mo plua ut!lltlta,
$100 dtpooll, no polo, 304.075-

Mobllt Homto For Rolli, phone
014-446-0508 or 446·8321

Mladltport S7900 814-992·5030
1154 Wlndaor 28R, 14x711, AC,

Have Optnl~ For Elderly Pereon At Gwinn 1 Care Home, St

3 bldroom 111 alec, Galllpolla

ortt (1 805-i82-8000 E111 GH·

llpollo Dolly Trlbunt 1,825 Third
Avtnuo, Goll!pollt, On 458:11
Situation
Wanted

2 mobile homH for rt:nt or ..111
Glenwood ar11, 304-576·2848

SWill Com Silver Ouotn, A~
bin Rouoh ~orm, 3 mlltl Nonll
of Ntw Hoven on Rt 33

0322, 3 miles out BUIIYIIIe Rd

or 875·7580

304·7'7.1-5•58

parto,

In Ohio Valley Mamory Garden

304-675-7373
3 BR h01J11, chy ochoolt, 1375
month plut dtpooll 614-4480385

Cor Gorogo, $57,500 614-448-

frHztr1 42' wide, $60 Luxor
SaHellte, not uatd In 2 yrs, ?

Priced To Soli: 4 Grove SptcH

3br 2 Full Batha, Greet Room, 2

Naming

Bh Brunowlck tlott loblt, bello
lllcke lncludo, 15N Whllo's
6000 D)r,ro mlltl dttoctor, ultd
vory 1111 t, $350 Shlrp 8-1 zoom

AduH Trike, Mleml Sun, All new

Found 1·1g Ftmllt dog In front So lory $20,000 To 122 000 Sond
Rtsumt

1$.3812

Rooms tor rent ·week or month

Stanlng 11 $120/mo Golllo Holtl
814·446-9580

dopooll, no ptll, 304-675-4088

Litter And

IXC

2566

Merchandise

2 bedroom home, nice locellon,

pltiO door,

working cond S250 Bool equip,
lift Jacktto, aklt, tubll, tic,
614·992-7341

41 Houses for Rent

Lerga Local V1ndlng Route For

Repeat
BuelnHa
Secure
locttlons Above Average In·
come 1~140~883

Apartment avaUable for 2 or 3
construction workers 304-882·

800-633-1302

2 bedroom houtt, 2302
Mocllton AVt, :JOW'IS-2535

t:..:

charll'r, 2-botltrlH, $580 Small

Young family, molllor ond llvo
elllldron, urganlly nttd houo·

Wanted, 3-BR home, Raelne
aru to rant or laa.u w/optlon,

8 ft afldlnQ
cond, $125.

FruHs&amp;
vegetables

VHS camera, ACIDC battery

Furnished
Rooms

47 Wanted tD Rent

384-6277
Sole

45

lng/Counaellng. Bachelor'• 0.

Old, Vory Frltndly. VIcinity Con
IIIII Rood 614-245-5163
Found Molt Bugle Hunting
Coli 61of.
~ Wllh 0 ron;•
or
•
4 -3!186
LOST Leon trtl, 2 yr old Gor·

I

1758

10 plul acrn with nice ltvll
ro~~dalde tot about 1 acre City

llonor
tnd
Rlvtrtldt
Aptnmtntt In MlddltPOrt From
l1i8 Coil 814·992-7787. EOH

FrH Delivery
PICKENS FURNITURE

Femelt
Glrman
Shophord Block &amp; Ton 1 Yur

l

Now Htvtn, $28,500 304·7'7.1-

15881

living. 1 and 2 bedapartment• 1t VIllage

lnKIOUI lo ltll Aoctpllng btl1
or.r over $55,000 bllort July
31 To lnopect c111 304.075·1348

or Foodlend Haa 1-blue and 1·

II

Country porchH, open &amp;
ecr•ntd In Original dlslgna
FfM estlmat11 Retarenc•

Merchandise

2 bedroom Ashton Ueland Ad,
$185 mo plua utlllt as, $100

d
In Htoltn, Soclol Sorvlct
:6-.,.Lo:.:.st==-&amp;;:.....F:-o-::u::-n:-::-:::::: I grot
Mtngemant Or In Related Field

l

25 acree, rurll water available,
located on Broad Run R01d,

Now Call For Am11lng Rac:or·

did Mtlllgt, 014.098-2882 Ell1
Puppl" and mother dog, ~rt 110
Brittonty Spenlol, 304-675'5419
GET PAID lor Compiling Moiling
Pupplto Froo To Good Homo Lillo $500 per 1,000 Clll 1·900'
Have Bten Wormed H11 Shots, 246·3131 ($0 99/mln) or Writt
8 WHkl Old llolher II Chow PASSE • 33R 181 South Un·

road,

lint TOddler Core, 614-446-622l
Pool dteko, In-ground &amp; tbovt

Toll
Shl~ty

Paved

county
wetar,
rea.onabla
rootrlctlont Complllt Inform•·
tlon moiled on roquoll 304-8755253, John D Gtltoch, no
olnglt-wldt trolltre, plttlt

407·292-41117,

91 m ·10p m

R01d.

Ptula's Day Clr11 Center
etfordsbll, chlldcare M-F
. 5 30 p m Alii• 21'&gt;-tO
Btloro, after school Drop-lnl
1
welcome 614-446-8224 Ntw n·

For 111m and applicallon Info
call 1·216·967-6699 7a m ·10p m
7 days

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

Giveaway

Raybum

58

54 Miscellaneous

Apartment
for Rent

Qr~~cloua

Lola • acreage available tor
n.w home conatructlon on

116-2342
992-2156
675-1333

Thursday, July 18, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel

az
a

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10 AnnapoHs
grad
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t 3 Anclent a hlp
t 8 VIce pretldent Dan19 Written In old
acrlpt
2D Remove
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from
22 Lower
23 Carrier
24 Reolagent
25 Ogled
27 Spread to llrY
32 Gentle blow
34 Auto executive Lee35 Thinly
scattered
39 Road
43 Actren
Anouk 45 Prong
47 Revolve (a
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48 Recede
4g Beoldeo
50 Ou11tlonlng
oound
52 Baoeballer
Hodgeo
53 Famale
undplptr
5o( e. wrong

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Celeb,ty C pher cr yptograms 1r1 cre1tfld lrom QuOIIhOns by famous people PIISI •no preUf'lt
Each leiter 1n the ctpher stand s tor another Tot:111y f clutl v equals D

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Stereo

az SportaCenter
a Moneyllnt
11:35 (I) Chllrl t:;l
12:00 IIJD Into the Night Stereo
llll• Porty Mochlne With
Nil Pelplea
11J The Hftchhlktr
121 Nathvllle Now Stereo

WYHGCHMC
C F H

C 0 H J C D H C F

LGYMFGII
PREVIOUS SOLUTION
at tt aga1n

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BHJCZYA

LBIZFGJ.
Once l'~e done a film It s finished I never look

Alec Gumness

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Know your parks
This is the final article in a
series written about Meigs County Parks by Mary Powell, Park
District Director. Emphasis or
her articles has been on the various parks in tbe county, bow they
were established and the racilities
available.
Ge neral Hartinger Park was
named for the 1943 graduate of
Middleport High School who was
an outstanding football player for
the Yellow Jackets and then went
on to a distinguished service career.
It was in the early 1950's that a
gro up of res1dents recognized the
need for a swimming pool, banned
together and worked w1th all their
might to pass a bond issue. Judge
Ccdrick Clark provided the leader·
ship for the group which successfully passed the levy and saw a vii·
!age sw1mmmg pool become a real.
ity.
After the pool was built, local
volunteers cleared the area around
it and built baseball diamonds and
a playground with several pieces of

Thursday, July 18, 1991

Community calendar

Community Calendar items
equipment.
appear
two days berore an event
Today the Middleport Youth
and
the
day or that event. Items
League has approxin'lately 250
must
be
received weU in advance
boys and girls involved in its base·
to
assure
publication in tbe calball and softball programs.
endar.
Over the years, much has been
added to the municipal park which
THURSDAY
operates under the direction of the
ROCK
SPRINGS - The 1991
Middl eport Recreation Department.
Meigs
Marauder
Volleyball Camp
There are three lighted diamonds,
will
be
held
through
Friday at
miniature golf, two hghted basketMeigs
High
School,
9
a.m.
to noon
ball courts, lighted tennis courts, a
well equipped playground, and each day. All area girls entering
shelter house ~ . along with the grades 7-12 are eligible to participate. Cost is $30 with a maximum
swimming pool.
of
$45 per family . Registration
The lights at the park were the
deadline
is Thursday . Contact
result of a combined effon of the
Marauder
Head Coach Rick Ash,
Southern Ohio Coal Co., American
9920-5960.
Shirt size, grade enterElectric Power, and the local Uniting, and phone number is needed
ed Mine Workers of America.
Future plans call for the an out- when registering.
door stage and a volleyball coun.
POMEROY - The Meigs CounThe pool is open through Labor
ty
Democrat
Executive Committee
Day. For more information on the
will
meet
at
7:30
p.m. Thursday at
parks and recreational programs,
the
Carpenter's
HaU
in Pomeroy. ·
restdents may contract Roger
Williams, recreation director at
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
992-5782.
group of AA will meet at 7 p.m. at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. For
more information, caU 992·5763.

Local School Board will meet Friday at .3:30 p.ni. at lhe high school
cafeten a.

Charles Bush invites the public.

POMEROY - Recycle Day at
Krogers in Pomeroy will be
TUPPERS PLAINS - The TuP.- observed Saturday from 9 a.m. to
pes Plains YFW Post No. 9053 will noon. Items accepted include alusponsor a dance Friday from 8- minum, glass, cardboard, newspa11:30 p.m. at the post home. Music pers (tied in bundles) and plastic
will be by D.J. and the Country jugs. Major appliances are still
Gentlemen. Public invited.

Ohio Lottery

Indians lose
5-4 tilt in
ninth inning

being recycled at the Litter Control
Office on Union Avenue.
DANVILLE - Weekend services
at the Danville Church of Christ
will be held Saturday at 7:30p.m.
and Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va.,
will be the speaker. Public invited.

Pick 3:303
Pick 4: 6735
Cards : SH, 2-C
2-D; Q-S

Low tonight near 70.
Saturday, hot, humid.
High in mid-90s.

Page4

SATURDAY
SALEM CENI'ER - The Salem
Center Volunteer Fire Department
will have an ice cream social on
Saturday from II a.m. to 7 p.m.
There will be homemade ice cream
pies, cakes, sandwiches, salads, etc:
Entertainment will be provided by
The 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 Saiurday fro 14 p.m. at the Grace Epis·
copal Church hosted by the Meigs
County Retired Teachers Associa·
tion. Members are to bring cookies.

Vol. 42, No. 53

Missing python found dead...

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
free tennis clinic at General
Hartinger Park in Middleport on
Saturday. Shawn Baker will be the
instructor and interested individuals may sign up for the lessons at
that time. Times are 11:30-12:30,
beginners; and 1-2 p.m., advanced.

TUPPERS PLAINS • The
Ladies Auxiliary of the Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
hold a special meeting Thursday at
7:30 p.m. to discuss the sale on
July 27. Donations of cakes, pies
and cookies for the sale may be
HENDERSON - The Gallia
given. For funher information con- Twirlers Square Dance Club will
tact June E. Smith at667-3374.
hold a dance Saturday from g. 11
p.m. at the Henderson Community
RACINE - The Racine Ameri- Center. Bill Skidmore will be the
can Legion will meet Thursday at caller.
7:30p.m. Membership fees are
due.
RACINE - There will be a hymn
sing at the Racine Fellowship
FRIDAY
Church on Saturday at 7 p.m. reaREEDSVILLE - The Eastern turing the Gabriel Quanet. Pastor

Don Roger Smith Jr., Rutland,
will graduate from Bowling Green
State University on Aug. 10 with a
bachelor's degree in arts and communications and inte~J~ersonal and
public communications with an
emphasis on public relations and
advertising.
He attended Rio Grande College
his first two years and has spent the
last three years at Bowling Green.
He is the son of Roger and
Sandy Smith, Rutland.
He is the grandson of Kathleen
Tillis, Rutland, and Lucille Smith,
Gallipolis.

There will be an open house for
Smith at the home of parents on
Main Street in Rutland.
Cards may be sent to him at
P.O . Box 421, Rutland , Ohio
45775.

IS SIMPLY YOUR BEST BUY
ON A NEW CAR OR TRUCK!

Square dance set

Weekend services at the
Danville Church of Christ will be
The Belles and Beaus Western
held Saturday at 7:30 p.m . and Square Dance Club will hold a
Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. dance July 27 from 8-11 p.m. at the
Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va., will be Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center
the speaker. The public is invited to with Dale Eddy from Marietta as
the caller.
attend.

TIRE
NOW!

EVERY
WE SEL

Tarestone
SUPREME·®

FALLS
ROADMASTER
RADIAL IV

Meets or e•ceeds carmaker standards 1n
14 performance areas A quJet runnmg
all·season. steel

radtal

SOUDA BAY, Greece (AP)· President Bush 'toured a· strategic
U.S. naval facility in the Mediterranean today, then offered Greece
frigates, fighter planes and other
military hardware to thank a "key
member of our coalition" in the
Persian Gulf War.
"Greece stood with us from lhe
very fust moment of Desen Shield
to the final victory in Desert
Storm," Bush said.
The president began the final
day of his visit to Greece, the first
by an American president since
1959, by touring the ancient temples on the Acropolis, and g~ving a
speech to the Greek-American
Chamber of Commerce.
After a flight to the Souda Bay
naval base on the island of Crete,
Bush toured the U.S.S . De Wert
and the Greek frigate Limnos and
paid tribute to Greek and American
sailors who he said played a key
backstage role in the Persian Gulf
War.
,
"Day after day, Souda Bay was
called upon to keep the supply hoes
moving. And day after day, Souda
Bay did its duty with distinction,"
the president said in recognizmg
one of the major supply facilities
for the Persian Gulf War.
Bush also praised Greece's
wartime contribution. To show his
appreciation, the president

A Burmese python, measuring over 13 and a half reel,
was discovered along State
Route 7 on Thursday arternoon. Tim Davidson and Martin Woodard, both or
Pomeroy, (pictured right)
were working ror the Meigs
County Department or Liller
Control when they discovered
this large snake in a ditch near
the intersection of Leading
Creek Road. The dead snake,
estimated to be as big around
as a basketball, bas now been
identified as being the property or Cathy Elias or Leading
Creek Road. According to
Meigs County Sheriff James
M. Soulsby, the snake was a
gift to Elias from a rriend in
Cleveland, and is believed to
have crawled rrom a second
floor window. Tbe snake bas
been missing ror approximately 10 days. Above, tbe litter
control crew loaded the dead
creature onto the litter control
van ror proper disposal. Trarfic came to a crawl when
passersby realized what was
causing the commotion and
sheriff's deputies directed
traffic at the scene.

All Season

$39.!!13

Congress
gives Piketon
facility boost

176/80R13 .... .... .. ... .... .. ...... '41.00
186/80R13 ...... .. ...... ........... '43.00
186/76R14 ...... ........ .. ......... '44.00
196/76R14 ...... .. .... .. .. .. ....... '46.00
205/75R14 .... ..... ..... .. ........ . '47.00
225/ 79R16 .... ............ .. ... .... '60.00
215175R1 &amp;.. ....................... '51.00
226/76R16 .. ............ .. .. ....... '63.00
236175R16 .. .. .......... .. ..... .. .. '66.00

CALL US BEFORE YOU BUY!
6/76R16
6/70R16
6/76R16
P226176R16
IP236/76R16

63.00

N/ A

66.00
68 .00
70.00

WE SERVICE THE
TIRES WE SELL

Many More Sizes And Styles
· Available. ·
If we sell out of your size before
the sale is over - No Problem We restock twice weekly.
BUY NUIIY - SAlE ENDS AUG. 5, 1991

We Wanl Your Tire Busmess!

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
600 E. Main St.

992-2094
Serving The Area For 25 Years

Pomeroy, OH.

tions where there seems little evidence to determine the grower or
make a case against the grower,
samples are taken and the plants
burned.
"There has been significant
change here in marijuana cultiva.
tion," commented Sheriff Soulsby.
He said lhat it is not being grown in
the amounts it used to be, and that
it is hidden better.
"It used to be that we would get
a thousand or two lhousand plants
in a day in search or seizure, but
now we only get a few hundred ,"
the sheriff said.
When marijuana was cultivated
in large quantities here, he said that
it was almost poss ible to step off
any county road and find row after
row of the plant growing . "It' s
more scattered now," he said.
He recalled that the first year of
the marijuana eradication program
ten years ago, lots of cases were
taken to the grand jury . But , he
said, the growers have become
more crafty and its more difficult to

get the ev1dence to prosecute.
Wednesday 's tak e wa s 560
plants with 192 of those coming
out of one place, Sheriff Soulsby
reported. He said that more money
is being put into eradication by
both the state and fed eral government.
As for getting together enough
evidence to prosecute, the sheriff
said that a couple of searches have
been conducted, but lhat it ·s up to
the prosecutor to determine where
there is adequate evidence to take
the cases to the grand jury.
Sheriff Soulsby said that there is
a possibility that many of the growers may be gomg indoors. However, he said that drug enforcement
agencies are coming up. with a
method to combat that.
Meigs County' s mari j uana
hasn't lost its luster, according to
the sheriff, who sa1d that it is still
rated as some of the bes t in th e
country. He said that when the
plants are mature. each one w1ll
bring from one to two thou sand
dollars on the street.

Bush visits U. S. Naval base in Crete

FISHING DERBY WINNERS - Winners or the Racine Gun
Club's F~sbin~ Derby held. recently were, 1-r, Larry Ritchie, Tuppers Plams, rtrst place, b1ggest fish; Josie Jarrell, Racine and
Larry Ritchie, both or Racine,. tied for second place with Ritchie
for biggest rtSb; and Nikki Robinson and Tommy Smith tied ror
third place ror most fish caught.
'

Weekend services

Meigs lawmen, BCI
and guard continue
search for marijuana
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
About I ,600 marijuana plants in
Meigs County have been eradicated
so far this summer in the annual
cooperative eradication program of
the Meigs County Sheriffs Department, the Bureau of Criminal
Investigation, and the National
Guard.
Meigs County Sheriff James
Soulsby reported today that the
search for marijuana will continue
for several weeks in an effort to
destroy as many plants as IXlSsible
before they reach matunty and
move to the streets.
Searches began in late June,
Sheriff Soulsby said. A helicopter
secured by the BCI through the
Governor's Office of Criminal Justice is used in locating the plants
which the sheriff said are being
grown in smaller plots and more
obscure places.
Once the location has been
found by plane, the ground crews
move in to take the plants, Sheriff
Soulsby said. He said that in situa-

Open house slated for
Bowling Green graduate

FISfnNG DERBY - These children participated in the Racine
Gun Club's Fishing Derby held recently at the gun club.

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, July 19, 1991

Copyrighted 1991

Summer smog causing
problem in Southwest Ohio
1991 FORD FESTIVA "L"

1991 AEROSTAR "SPORT"

Manufacture1·'s Suggested Retail...........'7,503.00
lnvo·lce............................................................7,143.50
Tank Of Gas..............................................o.oo

Manu1acture1r's Suggested Retall.........'18,920.00
lnvolice.....................................................17,084.3~.
Tank 01 Gas..............................................o.oo

By The Associated Press
The hot, humid weather has
made the air hard to breathe for the
elderly and those with chronic res·
piratory and heart ailments in
southwest Ohio.

Air pollution watch ers on
Thursday said the recent heat,
humidity and declining winds have
created dirty air in southwest Ohio.
Air quality remained at nonmal lev·
els across the rest of the state.

---Local.briefs-___,
Syracuse assault investigated
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that his
deputies took a report from a Syracuse resident that he had been
assaulted.
·
According to the report, the subject and a friend had been
~oundhog huntirJg. After they had shot, they reportedly got back
mto the vehicle and continued down the road where they were
stopped by an individual. The individual began ass.a~lting the'occupant of the vehicle and grabbed lhe nfle and threw 1t mto lhc creek.
Continued on pa~:e 3
•. )lj .

I,

By The Associated Press .
An effort to put a new urantum
fuel enrichment facility at the
Portsmouth Gaseous Diffusion
Plant in Piketon has gotten a big
boost from a government report
presented to Congress.
The U.S. Department of Energy
The ozone level pushed Cincinstudy
found it would be cheaper
nati 's pollution reading to 94 at 4
and
cause
less environmental dam ·
p.m. Wednesday and then to 105 at
6 p.m. before it dropped Wednes- age to situate the AVLIS project at
day night, Harry St. Clair of the Piketon than at sites in Oak Ridge,
Southwestern Ohio Air Pollution Tenn., or Paducah, Ky.
At Piketon, uranium is enriched
Control Agency said Thursday.
A reading of 100 or more IS for use in civilian nuclear power
plants. The plant is operated by
considered unhealthful.
·'We just kissed the unhealthful Martin Marietta Energy Systems
level and dropped back down," for the Energy Department.
AVLIS, which stands for Atom·
said. St. Clair, the Cincinnati agency 's acting director. "If you're ic Vapor Laser Isotope Project, is a
healthy, a number like 105 is not simpler, ch~aper method . for
enriching uramum fuel for CIVIUan
going to hurt you."
But in Toledo, Cleveland and nuclear reactors than the gaseous
Columbus through Thursday, air diffusion process. The r.echnology
quality readings were at moderate was developed to help the United
to good levels, air quality monitors States recapture nuclear reactor
fuel enrichment business.
said.
Energy Secretary James D.
A steady southwest wind in
Watkins
will recommend a plant
recent days has helped clean out
site.
President
Bush will choose a
Toledo's auriosphere, said William
Continued
on page 3
Continued on page 3

announced that the United States
Greek Prime Mm1ster Constan·
was leasing two U.S . frigates to tine Mitsoutakis said his country 's
Greece, stepping up delivery on 10 military drew on a long tradition of
F4E fighter planes and transferring defending freedom .
"Throughout our hi story we
to the country surplus tanks and
artillery from NATO stock.
Continued on page 3

Some senators to give
pay raises to charity
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sena·
tors who face re·election cha l·
lenges next year already are trying
to distance themselves from a
$23,200 pay increase the Senate
voted itself.
A day after the rai se was
approved by a 53.45 vote on a sur·
prise amendment brought to the
Senate floor by Democratic and
Republican leaders in the dead of
mght. at least five members whose
terms expue m 1993 said they will
refuse all or some of the money or
g1ve it to charity.
"The majonty of senators have
st1ffed the American people and
this time the voters will rcmem·
ber. " consumer advocate Ralph
Nader pred1cted Thursday. "People
can be pushed around by crooked
and greedy poltt1c1ans only to a
certatn limit ... and then a simmer·
tng revolt erupts.' '
The measure attac hed to an
appropriations b1ll would close the
gap between the $125,100 annual
salaries of the House' s 43 5 mem·
bers and the $101,900 that se nators
now get.
In exchange, senators would be
banned from pocketing thousands
of dollars in speaking fees that
more than half of them now accept
each year from special interest
groups seeking to influence legisla·
tion. The House renounced such

honorana tn boosting its salaries by
$28,500 last January.
However, some frequent per· ·
formers on the rubber chicken
speaking circUit actually could get
an honoraria windfall this year.
Those who already have pocket· :
cd the $23,068 limit on honorana .
thi s year could make a total of
$134,364 in pay and speaking fees.
in 1991 if the legislatiOn 1s fini shed
and signed by P1 esident Bu sh
before Congress goes on vacauon
next month.
Of the 33 senators who face rc·
election in the next two years, 25
opposed the pay increase and on ly
eight supported it. Three of those
e1ght - Republican Leader Bob
Dole of Kansa s and Sens Tim
Wirth, D·Colo., and John Breaux,
D·La., explained !heir votes.
"Maybe we 're all overpaid ."
sa1d Dole . " But we can ' t cut
House salaries and I bel1cve most
people in my state will understand
... there ought to be parity."
Breaux complained that many of
his colleagues "too often arc eager
to vote against a pay mise but all
too willing to accept the money.··
Wirth defended his vote as a
way to rid the Senate of honoraria
and encourage more non-milltonaire candidates with familie s to
seck seats in it. But he said he was
Continued on page 3

_j

199 1

House
' $125,100
~

eo,CX?O

60,01?0
40.01?0

Sena te
$101,900

Congressional
Salaries
1935-1991

voled
Wednesdey

to rncrease
10 S t 2~

From 1935 to 1987.
House and Senate
salaries wsrs the same

. . . . . Senate
~ House

0
1935 '40

'45

·so ·5s

·eo

·e5

199 1

70

75

·eo '65 ·oo

- . ... .

- --

100

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