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                  <text>Page-10- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Students honored during third
annual recognition program
The Third Annual recognition
pro~ram for stud ents in Adult
Baste Education was held recently
at the Meigs Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
John D. Riebel, Sr., program
director, extended the welcome and
recognized Barbara Chapman and
Crestlyn Hill, Department of
Human Services JOBS program;
John D. Cos tan zo, elementary
supervisor, Meigs County Schools;
Bill Quickel and Oris Smith, Meigs
County School Board members.
Guest speaker was David Smith,
consultant with the Stale ABE
Agency. He spoke of the persistence and determination which it
cakes to get ahead in education, and
encouraged the students to not let
anything get in their way,
"If something does get in your
way, and you have to cake a detour
before you reach your goal, don ' t
let it stop you because education is
important," Smith said
Smith encouraged the students
to hang in their and continue working toward their goals even if it
takes longer to achieve than
expected.
Three of the students spoke as a
part of the program. William
Tiemeyer of Pomeroy, expressed
his appreciation noted that while he
has a cenificate in welding, he has
had trouble getting a job because
he doe sn' t have a high school
diploma or a General Equivalency
Deve lopment certificate. His
advice to the other students was to

Reunion held

A reunion of descendants of the
Rev . Lubert Theiss and wife,
Louise Marie Hille, was held
recently at Star Mill Park in
Racine. The last reunion was held
Aug. 6, 1951 at the Meigs County
keep working toward their GED Shirley Mitchell, ABE instructor, Fair Grounds.
goal because "that piece of paper pointed out that ABE is not just
Tom Theiss, president, weldoes make a difference" in the job preparing for the GED tests. "ll's a comed the 162 people present.
~·~to~to~b~b Tamara Theiss gave a brief history
Shirley Finley of Sugar Grove, time, to brush up on reading, math of Rev. Theiss's journey from Ger·
who received her GED through the and other basic skills," she said.
many, how his wtfe came later with
Participating with Mrs. Mitchell two small children; their settling
program here, is now working
toward her licensed practical nurses in giving the awards were Avonell first in Pennsy lvania and subsedegree. She said that "determina· Evans, Meryl Houdashell, and Pat quent coming to Meigs County.
tion is the key" and talked about Need. Students receiving awards
Descendants from Emma Theiss
her hard work and long hours at the for passing the GED were Maria Hoffman, Juliu s Theiss, Henry
Tri-County Vocational Education Pellegrino, Shirley Barber and Bar· Theiss, Herman Theiss and Alben
School.
bara Barber.
Theiss gave brief updates on their
She related deterring circum·
Receiving awards for academic branch of the family tree.
stances including the loss of two gains were Sharon Ward, Donald
Gifts were presented to grand·
relatives in less than a year, but Davidson, Hazel Diles , Richard daughter, Norma Th eiss; oldest
said that she is determined to sue- Ward, Ruth Pullins, Paul Pullins, woman present, Louise Ewing;
ceed. Her advice to the other stu· Maria Pellegrino, Opal Tyree, youngest girl, Hannah Yost;
dents, "s ti ck 10 your studies Penny Hoskins, Carol Klein , youngest boy ,Jimmy Foster; oldest
because it's worth it."
Charles Klein, Jerry Harper, Mary man named Theiss, Blythe Theiss;
Ronald Diles of Middleport, Forester, Debra Krautter, Barbara longest marri ed, Anna and Bill
also a GED recipient, stressed the Stone, Pallicia Thompson, Rebecca Young; traveled the farthes t, Ruth
need to set goals. "You have to set Davidson, Terry Timmons, Edward Jordan. California; most children
a goal and then work for it," he Findley, William Tiemeyer, present, Karla ~ lewbands, si&lt;; most
commented. Diles graduated from Charles Fink, Linda Jarrrell, Bar- recent marriages, Kerrie Myers and
Tri -County as an electrician, an bara Barber, Shirley Barber, Brian and Donna Chapman Cain.
honor roll student completing 850 Christina Gilmore, William Rice,
It was voted to continue with
hours.
Paul Casto, Bonnie Davis, Paul another reunion in 1992 and to
In 1987 he received his eleclli· Brooks, Wayne Leifheit, and Men compile a written family history.
ca l journey man' s license for Kerns.
Famtly pictures were displayed
Athens and in 1990 passed his mas·
Students receiving awards for and group pictures were taken.
ters electrical contractors license completing 200 hours of classroom
for Athens. His latest accomplish· attendance were Jerry Harper,
ment is a certificate of competency Mary Forester, Debra Krauuer. bara, Barbara Barber. williain Rice
as an electrical safety inspector for Barbara Stone, Linda Jarrell, Hazel and Paul Casto.
Oris Smith of Long Bottom had
the state of Ohio.
Diles, and Donald Davidson.
Diles noted that it has caken him
Students receiving awards for the invocation preceding a buffet
three years to achieve his goal and completing 100 hours of classroom supper.
Information on the program can
encoura~ed others to "keep trying, attendance were Sharon Ward,
Ruth Pullins, Paul Pullins, Opal be obtained by calling 992-2222 on
just don t give up."
Before presenting the awards, Tyree, Penny Hoskins, Patricia Tuesday or Friday or 992-5713 on
Thompson, Rebecca Davidson, Wednesday, from 9 a.m. to 3:30
William Tiemeyer, Shirley Bar· p.m.

Tuesday, July 30, 1991

VBS fair
slated
The Vacation Bible School Fair
will be held at the First Southern
Baptist Church on Saturday from
1-3 p.m.
Registration for bible school
will begin Monday from 6:30-9
p.m.
The fair is for all ages.
There will be Rames and contests consisting of "tee-off time,"
international safari, balloon dart
board, popcorn stand, short yard
dash, ring toss. talent contest for
those that can sing, whistle or and
good talent, hotdog and soda stand,
and a movie, "Wild Things" and
"Return of the Wild Turkey."
The movies are provided by the
Ohio Wildlife Division all,d Keith
Woods.
A treat bag will be given to each
child registering. The public is
invited to participate.

Seniors meet :

The Senior Adults of the First
Southern Baptist Church met
recently at the church.
Charles Kuhl and Charles
Aldridge were thanked for the good
job they did on mowing and llimming around lhe church.
. Members expressed their enjoyment from the program presented
by Paul Dailey in June. He spoke
of his experiences in the Dt!sert
Storm Operation.
Get well cards were signed for
Gatha Alvarado and Sadie Carr.
Jack Needs showed the movie
of his trip into the North Eastern
states and Canada.
The next meeting will be held
Aug. 26 at the southside rest park
on Route 33. Bring a covered dish,
hot dogs or hamburgers for a picme.
Refreshments were ~.j!rved by
Frances Hendrix and Bunny Kuhl.
, Others members attending were
Charles and Maxine Aldridge,
Lamar O'Bryant, Mae Lynch and
Josephine Mallory.

CHlLD ASSAULT PREVENTION· New task force members
with the Community Assault Prevention Services or Gallia, Jack·
son and Meigs Counties, recently participated in a child assault
prevention training workshop. Pictured, l·r, are, front, Kay Cooper, Delleta Allmon and Glen Hill. Back, Phyllis Honchul, project
director, Monica Dodrill, executive director, and Becky
Argabright. Not pictured is Keith Honchul.

CAPS meets with new
task force members
Community As-sault Prevention
Services of Gallia, Jackson Hnd
Meigs, held a Child Assault Prevention Training session recently at
the Jackson Office for new task
force members.
Kay Cooper, Becky Argabright
and Delleta Allmon were present to
receive training in various types of
prevention (neglect, sexual, emo·
tiona! and physical). Through this
training the new task force mem-

bers wIn be able to present work·
shops 10 the area schools this fall.
CAPS has several programs that
meet all age groups needs, from
pre-school, elementary, teens,
learning differences to senior citi·
zens.
For further information about
scheduling programs, contact Monica Dodrill or Phyllis Honchul at
286-6611.

MR. AND MRS. RODNEY W. PULLINS

To celebrate 50th anniversary
.Mr. and Mrs. Rodney W. Pullins,
of Point Pleasant, will celebrate
their 50th wedding anmversary
wilh a reception on Sunday, August
4. The event will be held from 2-4
p.m at the Trinity Umted
Methodist Church in Point
Pleasant.

The couple was married at the
Grace United Methodist Church in
Gallipolis. on August 3, 1941 , by
Rev. W. Scott Westerman.
All relatives, friends and
neighbors are invited to attend the' ;
reception.

I

Ohio Lottery

Reds rally to
edge Cubs 6-5
in lOth
~

Pick 3:837
Pick 4: 0184
Cards : 3-H, K-C

J-D; 7-S
Clear tonight. Low tn 60s.
Thursday, mostly su nn y.

Page 7

Vol. 42, No. 61

cenll
AMultimedia Inc. Newopaper

2 Section, 16 Pagea 25

Copyrighted 1991

Leading indicators up
0.5 percent in June

Surprise shower held
A surprise layette shower hosted and Leah Whittekind, Pomeroy.
by Barbara Colmer, Nancy Whit·
Others attending were Shari,
tekmd and Ta!fimy Johnson •. was Amber, Arica, Aja Blackwell,
held recently m honor of Mtckte Jacyln Swartz, Mamie Stephenson
and Ttm Colmer now residing in all of Pomeroy; Mary and Pa~
Savanah, Ga., and were here visit· Walburn, Middleport; Jan and
mg for the July 4 weekend.
Katie Snider, Cheshire· Sharon
Games were played with prizes M_~ows, Pomeroy; Rachel Davis,
gomg to Shan Blackwell, Marnte Vugmta; Tammy, Kimberly and
Stephenson, Jan Sntder with Megan Johnson, Middlepon· Amy
Sharon Meadows winning the door and Shaina Leach, Missy and Ashpnze.
ley Leach, Paulette Farley Millie
A clown cake, baked by Jill Farley, all of Marietta.
'
Johnson, was. served along with
Sending gifts were Madeline
p~nch and mmts . Clo·wn center- McClung, Virginia Smith, Gladys
p•eces were presented 10 the moth- Presley, Vera Woyan Sandy
er-to-be al~ng with other gifts from Wright and Hyllia Eblin. '
those mentioned above and Nancy

An important notice regarding Telephone Service Assistance
GTE Telephone Operations offers assistance
to help certain eligible persons obtain new
telephone service, if they currently do not have
it, by allowing them to sign up for service without
paying the usual upfront charges, such as
deposits and service connection charges. GTE
also offers assistance to eligible persons, once
they have obtained service, by discounting the
monthly access line charges for local service in
the amount of $3.50 and waiving the $3.50
federal subscriber line charge, for a total of $7.00
per month. This assistance is called "Telephone
Service Assistance.''
You are eligible to receive Telephone Service
Assistance, whether you are a new customer or
an existing customer, if you are currently a participant in any one of the following programs:
1) The Ohio Energy Credits Program;
2) Supplemental Security Income if you are
receiving it on the basis of blindness or
disability; or
'
3) Both Medicaid and Medicare.
In order to receive this assistance, you must
complete an application, documenting your
eligibility in one of the above programs, and
return it to GTE's offices. You may obtain an application either from our business office, located
at 100 Executive Drive, Marion, OH 43302, or
from the public agency which administers the
assistance under which you qualify .for
Telephone Service Assistance. Your eligibility will
be reverified no more than once each year..
There are some restrictions on the services
to which you could subscribe if you receive
Telephone Service Assistance. The Telephone
Service Assistance discounts and waivers apply to flat-rate, unlimited calling local service only if Usage Sensitive Service is not available in
your service area. If Usage Sensitive Service is
available in your service area, you must take this
service in order to receive the telephone
assistance discounts and waivers. With this service, you would pay a flat monthly charge for access, plus you pay for usage in the same manner as you pay for long distance service.
A typical Usage Sensitive Service monthly
rate is Band 3, where it is $8.36, plus the federal
subscriber line charge of $3.50, totaling·· $11:86.
Telephone Service Assistance rates would be
only $4.86 per month plus charges for each call
~ade by the customer, .based on time of day,
distance and length of conversation. The nonTelephone Service Assistance flat rate would be
$13.~3 plus $3.50 federal subscriber line charge,
totaling $17.40 per month. (There are six rate
bands, and rates would be higher or lower than
this example, depending on which band the
customer is in.)
If you make a lot of local telephone calls, it
may be cheaper for you to sign up for flat-rate
local service, even though that service would not
be subject to the discounts or waivers.
If Usage Sensitive Service is available in your
area and you try it, but later decide you do not

'•
'
'
•

like the service, for whatever reason, you may
switch to flat-rate service at no charge. If you do
switch, however, you will not get the discounts
and waivers that apply to Telephone Service
Assistance, and you will not be allowed to
change back to Telephone Service Assistance
for one year.
In addition to the restriction on the type of local
service to which you may subscribe, you would
not be permitted to take any other telephone services, except for Touch Calling; 9-1-1 · (where
available); long distance service; 900-blocking,
976-blocking, and toll-blocking services (where
available) and any other service determined by
the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to be
beneficial1 to customers with handicaps or
medical conditions, or in life-threatening
situations. You would not be permitted to receive
any other optional services. Also, you would not
be allowed to have any other telephone lines in
your household.
GTE also offers another type of assistance to
help certain eligible persons obtain new
telephone service. This assistance provides a
waiver of the deposit requirement, a full or partial waiver of the service connection charges,
and a temporary waiver of the $3.50 federal
subscriber line charge for a number of months,
depending on the total amount of the waived
deposit and service connection charges. This
assistance is called "Service Connection
Assistance.''
You are eligible tb receive service connection
assistance if you do not already have telephone ·
service at your household, and if you are currently a participant in any one of the following
programs:
1) The Ohio Energy Credits Program;
2) The Home Energy Assistance Plan
(HEAP);
3) Emergency HEAP;
4) Supplemental Security Income, or
5) Medicaid
In order to receive this assistance, you must
follow the same application procedure as with
Telephone Service Assistance.
Unlike Telephone Service Assistance, there
are no restrictions with Service Connection
Assistance on the grade of service to which you
can subscribe or on the optional telephone services for which you may sign up. You would not,
however, be allowed to have any other telephone
lines in your household.
If you have any questions or would like furl
ther information about this assistance, you may
call GTE's offices at 1-800-232-2544, or you may
call the Public Interest Center of the Public
Utilities Commission at 466-3292 (in the Colum~
bus area) or 1-800-686-PUCO (outside the Columbus area). TIY-TDD hearing-impaire~
customers may reach GTE at 1-800-221-8479, or
the Public Utilities Commission at
1-800-686-1570.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The ended.
was a longer average workweek.
·-' government's chief economic foreThe Bush administration and
Others were an index measuring
casting gauge rose 0.5 percent in many private economists believe consumer confidence, a drop in ini·
June, but the fifth straight advance the economy will continue to grow tial weekly unemployment claims,
was not likely to erase persistent modestly during the remainder of an increase in building {'Crmits, and
concerns about~ durability of the the year, perhaps just half as strong slower delivery times mdicating a
economic recovery.
as the 6 percent growth the econo- pickup in orders.
Five of the II forward-looking my averaged during the previous
Another indicator, stock prices,
components-contributed to the eight recoveries since World War increased slightly but its contribuincrease in the Commerce Depart- II .
Lion rounded to zero, the department's Index of Leading Economic
But some economists point to ment said.
Indicators. Another was virtually recent economic reports as meanIndicators making negative conunchanged. The index is designed ing the recovery could be much tributions were a decline in factory
to forecast economic activity six to weaker than normal - and even orders for consumer goods, fewer
nine months in advance.
dip into the negative column after a unfilled factory orders, a drop in
The department also said the 0.8 period of growth.
the money supply. a decrease in
percent advance in May's index
Since the end of World War II, prices for raw materials indicating
was unchanged, but revised the five of the eight recessions have lagging demand; and a drop in
April gain down from 0.4 percent e&lt;perienced the so-called 'double orders for new plants and equipto 0.3 percent
dip" in which the economy ment
The various changes left the
The department reported last expanded for one quarter before
week the economy grew at a weak resuming its contraction.
index at 143.6 percent of its 1982
0.4 percent annual rate from April
Still, the leading indicators are base of 100. Although the index
through June , the first quarterly projecting continued growth in the dropped 1.8 perce nt from June
1990, it has risen 3.0 percent in the
increase since July-August 1990 months ahead.
arnd_a_n_in_d_ic_a_ti_
on_t_he_r_ece
__ss_io_n_h_a_d__~The--~ ~~~~~~~~~
las~t~s~ix~m~o~n~th~s·--~~~~

1

SPECIAL RECOGNITION • Special recog·
nition was given to these 4-H members for their
participation in a desi¥J~Bted program on Monday evening at the Metgs County Fair Groundll.

Pictured, 1-r, are Jamie-Ord, horse division, and
Rebecca Snowden and Christie Cooper, bunny
division.

. 'I

Voinovich signs discipline bill

)

''

'

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - A school disci·
pline bill that former Gov. Richard
Cel~ste· vetoed last year has been
signed -into .law by Gov. George
Voinovich.
Voinovich on Tuesday signed
the measure that allows local

school officials to extend suspen- school board members and parents
sions or expulsions imposed at the all agree - discipline must be
end of a school year into the next improved in our schools. Senate
Bill 51 is a solid ftrSt step toward
·~.-.(Jftftl'jliiriaiiip;;· of education improved school behavior." .
The new law ..Will take effect in
reform is .getting seriOUB and doing
something'about the lack of disci- 90days.
Sen . Eugene Watts, R-Columpline in bur schools." Voinovich
said. "Teachers, administrators, bus, the bill's sponsor, said students commit more serious viola·
lions at the end of the year because
they know that suspensions and
certain expulsions expire when the
school year ends.
But Celeste saw the issue differ·
ently when he vetoed the bill on
April 24, 1990.
He said the proposal would only
add 10 the state's already serious
school dropout rate. He also said it
would mean that some students
would flunk two semesters instead
of one, diminishing their chances to
graduate.
The Republican-controlled Senate voted last June to override
Celeste's veto, but the Democrat·
controlled House let the veto stand.
Voinovich, then a candidate for
governor, called on the Legislature
to override Celeste's veto.
The governor signed three other
bills into law Tuesday.
One is a bill that requires three
state departments to adopt programs that provide certain benefits
to Ohio reservists and National
Guard members who served in the
Persian Gulf War. The bill cakes
effect immediately.
CAR SEATS AVAILABLE. Through the generous donations
It requires the Department of
or several individuals and organzations, the Meigs County Health
Natural Resources to provide free
Department now bas llO infant and toddler car seats available ror
camping sites for three days at any
rent. The department pointed out that the department's medical
state park. The Ohio Histori cal
director, Dr. James Witherell, provided matching roods for the
Society must give free admission to
seats. For inrormation on rental fees, call Carol Guinther, picContinued on page 3
tured, or Edwina Bell, at 992·6626.

Investigators find bones near Dahmer's home
of Jeffrey Dahmer today to look for him 10 a hitchhiker who Dahmer
more human remains that may link claims was the fusl of his 17 muti·
lation -slaying victims.
Investigators u~ing a map drawn
by Dahmer began going through
debris and brush Tuesday along a
rocky , ivy-covered hillside on 1;7
acres once owned by Dahmer s
parents m !:lath Township.
The theft of a statue from the residence of Marvin Keebaugh on
Teams from the Summit County
State Route 124 in Reedsville has been reported to the Meigs Councoroner's
office, the county sherty Sheriff's Department. The complainant, according to Meigs
iff's
department
and the township
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, saw the subjects mvolved and
police
found
more
than 50 pieces
states that charges will be filed unless the statue ts returned 10 the
of
bones
in
the
heavily
wooded
residence.
area near Akron.
Tim Lawrence of Pomeroy has reported the theft of an ~&amp;R .22
Milwaukee police said Dahmer,
caliber revolver from his residence. The time of that theft ts unde·
in
whose apartment pans of II
termined.
.
bodies
were found July 22, has
Meanwhile Delmas Goff of State Route 325 of Langsvtlle has
confessed
to 17 slayings.
reponed to th~ sheriffs department that his mailbox was ~aged
"
One
is
in Bath. The rest are
by a subject driving a yellow van. Goff was able to tdenu_fy the
here," said Milwaukee police Capt.
driver and passenger in the vehicle and indicated that he will ftle
Donald F. Domagalski.
charges.
Dahmer is in custody in Milwaukee.
As much as 70 percent of the
fragments found near Dahmer's
The Ohio Department of Transportation expects a section of
home are human remains. said
Coroner William A. Cox. He also
Route 33 near Athens to reopen on Monday.
said ·some of the bones appeared to
Continued on page 3
be from a human skull.

BATH, Ohio (AP) - lnvestiga·
tors returned to the boyhood home

,..---Local briefs---,
Thefts, vandalism reported

Rt. 33 to re-open next week

MARIJUA
JUNGLE • Marijuana
plants, ranging from two feet to 12 feet tall, were
conrtSCated in a joint effort by tbe Mason County and Gallia County Sheriff Departments. Pic·

rured, from left, are Lloyd AKI!n.
Watterson and SberiR Dennis· ~a_ll§bury
rounded by marijuana plants.
Michele Carter)

Joint drug raid nets $700,000 worth
of marijuana plants in Mas on County
In a joint effort by the Mason
County Sheriff's Department and
the Gal1ia County Sheriff's Depart·
ment, several hundred marijuana
plants were confiscated Tuesday
night with an estimated $700,000
street value. The plants, found in
the woods near Henderson, varied
in size from two feet to 12 feet tall.
This was the largest find for the
Mason County Sheriff's Depart·
ment under Sheriff Ernie Watterson.
Watterson received a tip Tues·
day and contacted Sheriff Dennis
Salisbury of Gallia County. Salisbury got a helicopter and surveyed
the area from the sky. finding the
patches. Watterson said the
Lawrence County Sheriffs Depart·
ment provided the helicopter.
Watterson, Lloyd Akers, Sgt.
Danny Pearson, Deputy John
McCoy and Salisbury met and
began the search around 7 p.m. Salisbury led the party on a fourwheeler. They sca,red and
searched the area.
Bags of fertilize · Miracle
Grow, and watering utensils were
found near the patches. Chicken
wire fence surrounded the marijua·

na.

At one paech, the male plants
had recently been pulled and were
laying on the fence to die. Accord·
ing to Salisbury, the female plants
are the important plants because
they have the seeds.
All of the plants were pulled,
tied, and loaded into a wagon on
Salisbury's vehicle. They were
then pulled 10 lhe top of the hill and

loaded into the jeep. The plants
were transported to the Mason
County Sheriff's Department
where they will be destroyed
An abandoned trailer near the
patches was searched , and plant
flats, potting soil, fertilizer and
watering buckets were found
inside.
According to Wallerson, th e

sheriff's department has a couple
of suspects in this case, but no
arrests have been made. He advises
anyone with information on marijuana patches to contact the West
Virginia State Police or the sheyiff's office. This will enable them
to follow up on the tips and conf.S·
cate any plants.
·
The investigation is continuing. ·

No progress reported in
Ravenswood negotiations
PITTSBURGH (AP) Talks have collapsed again
between the United Steelworkers of America and the West
Virginia-based Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp.
"No progress was made in
this discussion and the mediator
adjourned the meeting,··
Ravenswood said Tuesday. "No
future talks have been sched·
uled."
Federal mediator Carmon
Newell, who set up lhe bargaining session, canceled a serond
session scheduled for today.
The last meeting was April
25.
"It's obvious the company
came here with no intention to
bargain, " said Jim ·Bowen,
dinector of USW Disllict 23.
The National Labor Relations
Board has accused the company

of bad-faith bargaining and an
unlawful lock-out.
Ravenswood hired non-union
workers Nov. I , when its contract with I, 700 USW members
expired. A month later, the company gave permanent status to
the replacement workers, who
now number 1,100.
"They said they had no
Intention of doing anything
about the replacement workers," Bowen said. "To the contrary. they restated their commitment to them while refusing
10 make any new proposals on
any of the other outstanding
issues.'
The NLRB complaint called
for the company 10 bring back
its union work force and pay
them back wages and benefits
retroactive to Nov. I.
An administrative law judge
will hear the case. .
1

·-

..

�Wednesday, July 31, 1991

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court S&amp;reet

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE

MEIGS-MASON

ARE!\

~MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGE'M'

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

AMEMBERo!The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters shou ld be In good taste, addressing Issues. not personalllles.

Debt is a drag on housing
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - Housing may be even less affordable than indicated
by the popular "affordability indexes" maintained by the real estate and
home- building industries.
The reason is a familiar one: Debt. Many families that might qualify on
the basis of income are carrying a burden of bills that all but eliminates
them from consideration.
The agent of this unpleasant news is the Census Bureau, by means of a
report titled "Wbo Can Affll'll to Buy a House?" The answer, it says, is
that 57 percent of households can't afford the median-priced horne in their
region.
This is a worse portrait of the housing market than that presented by
other indexes, and it has irritated some real estate and building people
who believe they're already facing enough obstacles to recovery.
"Unfortunately, the report text and even the statistical supplement
have a negative orientation," says Glenn E. Crellin, an executive of the
National Associalion of Realtors. The stress, he said, is on who cannot
afford 10 buy.
He comments: "Now we have new government statistics which
emphasize the difficulty of affording housing by the very way they are
consbllcted."
One of the differences between industry and Census Bureau calculations is that the Census Bureau's affordability estimates are based not just
on income but on income minus the burden of existing debts.
Those bwdens grew enormously during the 1980s, when the proportion of debt to one-year's disposable income lea{led to 83.5 percent from
65.4 percent, effectively reducing the value of mcome as a measure of
buying ability.
In malc.ing. its affordability calculations, for example, the Realtors
relate the median-priced single-family home 10 the median family income,
and the ability of that income to cover monthly principal and interest payments.
The figures for May of this year, were $99,700 for the home and
$36,176 for income. The mortgage rate of9.51 percent would have meant
·monthly principal and interest payments of $671, or 22.3 percent of
: income.
- · By this methodology, the median-income family had more than suffi: dent means to buy an existing median-priced single-family home. The
: :Realtors estimate the qualifying income for such a home would have been
:$32,220.
- By the Census Bureau's melhodology, based on 1988 data, more than
- :half of households couldn't afford 10 buy the median price home in their

- area.

: · Of those who couldn't afford to buy, 24 percent were unable 10 pro- duce the downpayment and 8 percent couldn't afford the monthly payments oc had overly high debt levels. Sixty percent failed under two or
moce criteria.
Perhaps even more significantly, while most families could afford a
_ "modestly priced" horne - one priced lower than 75 percent of homes
: in the area- 48 percent of households still couldn't qualify.
Wby? The most frequently encountered single reason for not qualifying was a higher than acceptable debt level.
: The legacy of the 1980s, therefore, may be more of a millstone on
:housing than some in the industry had realized. In the Census Bureau
report, those with the most difficulty qualifying were young people in
rental housing.
It is this segment of the population that provides fluidity to the housing
market, since flfSt-time buyers enable existing owners to move up to bigger or more expensive homes. A wcalc.ened base affects the entire pricing
structure.

t·I
.

.f

'

''•
'·

I've got da blues.
That's right .. the blues, them
ol' computer-voice over-the-phone
blues.
The sad story begins over a
question, a simple, little question I
had concerning my phone bill. It's
nothing worth going into in great
detail.
The phone bill has a number 10
call if you have a question over
your billing: 1-800-660-2200. I
picked up the phone and dialed the
digits l -8-0-0-6-6-0-2-2-0-0. The
call rang through and was
answered (very promptly I might
add) by this pleasant, very crediblesounding recorded male voice.
The recorded male voice began
by asking me if I had a touch-lOne
phone, and if so to indicate it by
pushing number one (I) on my geewhiz, ultra-fast computerized
10uch-tone telephone.
I complied, pushing the little
button.
BEEP
The result of this was that I was
then required to play a number of
button-pushing games. I played the
phone-computer, patronizing
recorded voice activity until I could
stand it no longer.
"I want to talk to a human," I
screamed into the receiver, "not a
stupid computer!" All the while I
realized how foolish I must loot to
my wife, silently observing from a
distance.
I hung up the phone, ewusted
from my vain attempt to reason
with the soothing, ~ent male
voice that must have
recorded
at the precise level to sound as
smooth and reassuring as possible.
There! In lhe phone boot was
anolhc:r number to cllll concerning
billings.
I called and the same voice
answered with the same buttonpushing demands. I could have

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 31, 1991

For once, good news about the steel industry
WASHINGTON - Most smaU
boys dream of hiUing a grand slam
in the World Series, scoring a
touchdown in the Super Bowl, starring as a movie hero, or soaring to
Mars. Young Joe Cannon wanted
to own a steel mill.
Before he turned 40, he made
his dream come blle, but he took a
strange route - through the Environmental Protection Agency
where he enforced clean-air laws
during the Reagan administration.
Now, as the owner of the Geneva
Steel works m Provo, Utah, Cannon, a Republican, is thinking
about going back 10 Washington,
this time as a senator.
Some might consider working in
the Reagan EPA as good training
for the steel industry, but Cannon is
a certified environmentalist who,
during his tenure at EPA, worked
to clean up the air that steel mills
poUute. As head of the EPA's airquality division in the early 1980s,
he is credited with getting the lead
out of gasoline and tightening the
rules on emissions from industrial
smokestacks.
His success story deserves to be
told in an era of economic bad
news and environmental pes-

simism. We normaijy devote this
space to delivering ·\hat bad news
and pinpointing those who are
respqilsible for it Today we recognize s omeone who is going against
the Ude.
As a steel magnate, Cannon is
striving to remove the pollutants
from his own smokestacks. His
first move after talc.ing over the
Geneva furnaces was to appeal to
his blue-{:ollar wQrkers to help him
clean them up. They showed him
how it could be done, and then
helped h1m do 1t w1th an enthus1asm that he infused.
Not only has Cannon introduced
environmentalism on the factory
floor, he is installing equipment
that will dramatically reduce the
soot billowing out of the plant.
These environmental accommodalions wiU cost more than $80 million - almost double the original
purchase price of the mill.
Yet, Can~ton is transforming an
old smoky plant into an environmental model without short-changing his stockholders. Not only has
Geneva Steel generated a profit
every month since he took over, it
also is swimming against the tide
of imports coming to the United

States from Japan. Cannon sells
steel to the Japanese at cheaper
rates than thev can vroduce it themselves.
The distinguished British publication The Economist wrote of
Cannon 's acquisition of the old
mill , "America' s Geneva Steel (is)
one of the few steel makers in the
world with a good environmental
reputation - and one of the
world's most profitable."
Cannon is nothing like the hardeyed t¥coon that one might expect
to be s1ttmg in the executive offices
of a steel mill. He is an amiable fellow, round-faced, blinking through
glasses, with the knowing look of
an owl. There is also an unpretentious, next-door neighbor quality
about him. He dropped by our
office, unannounced, for a visit.
Because all the chairs were taken,
he sprawled on the floor while we
tallc.ed politics for two hours.
He said he wouldn ' t mind
returning 10 Washington as the next
senator from Utah 10 fiU the spot of
retiring Republican Jake Gam. This
summer he is testing the waters
not by polling, but by biking with
his son from the top to the bcttom
of Utah, thus combining political

.By ./tJCk Anderson
probmg w1th ~hys1cal filness and a
father-son ouung. Last week, Cannon announced . he was steppmg
down from runnmg the day-to-day
operatwns of Geneva wh1le he
explore the Senate race.
LOOSE ENDS - The ~entral
Intelligence Agency 1s trymg to
finish, the job that U.S. troops
weren t allowed 10 fm1sh m Iraq :the overthrow of Saddam Hussem.
Gen. Norman Schwanlc.opf wanted
to close the trap on Saddam' s
Republican G~ards, but was
ordered by Pres1dent Bush to end
the war. The Republican Guards
escaped with most of the1r
weapons, and they used . thos e
weapons to crush. an upnsmg by
the Kurds and Shutes. The Wh1te
House m1stake~ly expec.ted Saddam to fall ~f h1s own we1ght. And
the CIA esll!Dated that he would be
ousted by ~IS ?wn d1sgruntled generals w1thm .s1x months. But they
all underestimated the staym.g
pow.e~ of Saddam. He has used h1s
f~nuliar ruthless methods 10 bghten
h1s hold on the government. The
CIA cannot, under U.S ..policy,
assassmate Saddam, e~en 1 agents
could get close to h1m.

House Bill2l3-------By_s_en_.J_an_.M_._L_on_g
House Bill 213 Ohio is among
the nation's leaders in one grim
statistic. In 1990, nearly 25,000
Ohioans died from cancer, and
another 49,000 were diagnosed
with cancer, according to the
National Cancer institute and the
American Cancer Society.
These statistics place Ohio fifth
in the country in terms of cancer
morality. Despite Ohio's dubious
position, the state gathers no data
that would help discover which
populations or areas of the state are
high rislc. A proposal to change this
deficiency was passed on July 23
by the Ohio Senate.
House Bill 213 would authorize
the Ohio Department of Mental
Health to create the Ohio Cancer
Incidence Surveillance System.
According to testimony given
before the House Select Committee
on Health Care Reform, such a system would provide exceUent benefits.
By compiling statewide statistics, the cancer surveillance system
would allow researchers to establish normal occurrences of the disease, as well as pinpoint abnonnally high occurrences. The Bill
would also encourage a statewide
distribution of information con ceming cancer and other cancerrelated issues. For example, citizens
in some areas of the state may not
be fully aware of preventive measures. By mounting a public education campaign, state and local
health officials could increase
awareness of the risks cancer poses
and encourage individuals to seek
treaunent at an early stage when
intervention is most effective.
According to the Ohio Depanment of Health, most of the necessary information has already has
been computerized at local hospitals. The state computer network
would simply organize this infor-

mation to provide a broader, more
informative picture.
The Ohio State Medical AssociatiO:rt (OSMA) , which supports
HOU11C Bill 213, says Ohio is one of
onl~ six states that lacks such a
statewide network. In addition to
the OSMA, House Bill 213 has

support from the Sierra Club and
the Ohio Division of the American
Cancer Society.
Funds for establishing this system are included in the proposed
state budget. This expenditure is an
investment that will hopefully
result in the saving of lives and

' Public Notice

Public Notice

" PUBliC NOTICE

07-00666.000
DESCRIPTION OF PARCELS SET FORTH IN MAS TER LIST: Sect. 20 1840)
UNO. 1/ 10 OF NE OF NW
't. 49.60 4.96 A.
AMOUNT DEliNQUENT:
0 819.37
LEGAL DESCRIPTION:

Th8 annuel

99QPF for

F(n,t\detion,

report Form

the Kibble

Bernard V.

Fultz. Trustee, ia available
for.publtc inspection at Ber·

nard! V. Fultz law Office.
11·1'r, W. Second Street,
Poi1&gt;eroy. Ohio 46769, during Tegular buainest hours
fori.' eriod of 180deysaub·
seq nt to public;ation of

this otice.
171 , 31 2tc

. Public Notice

A comptete legal deacription

precious health care expenditures.
As always, please feel free 10
call or write me, State Sena10r Jan
Michael Long, if you have any
questions or comments about these
or any other issues. My number is
(614)-466-8156, and my address iS
the Statehouse, Columbus Ohi&lt;t,
43215.

Public NoUce

Public Notice

Public .notica ·i • herebv ai- tho complaint, on or befol8
ven that on .tho 21at day of the date apeclfied 11 tho laat
June, 1991, tho County day fo• filing an ani1N8r, a
Tra11urer 'of Meiga County, judgment of lorecloauN wUI
Ohio filed a complaint in tho be taken by default •• to that
Common Ptaao Court of pa•cot. This judgment ahlll
Maiga County, Ohio. at Po- apply to any parcel 11 tq
meroy, for the forecloaura of
liens for delinquent taxes,
a..eaamenta, charges, penalties, and intereat again at
certain reel property situ-

may be found at tho Meigs
County Recorda•'• Office in
deed book Volume 169, ated in auch county, •• described in that complaint.
Paga211 .
Tho object of the action ia
If purauant to the action in
the pa•col Ia aold, tho sale to obtain from the Court 1
ahell not affect or extinguish
any lien or encumbrance

judgment forecloling the
tax liens againat such real
eatate and ordering the sale

chargea. interest. and penalties for which the lien ilforecloeed and in •tiafection of
which the property i1 eofd.
All other lien a and encumbr-

it.

which a utilfaction of
the
•••s1n1entao
charges, penalties, and in.;

te•••·

toraat. and the colta In:
curred in tho forecloaure
proceeding. which era due
and unpaid.
At any time prior to the fil-

ing of any entry of confirmation of aale. any owner o[

llanholder of, or other parwith raapect to the parcel
aon wHh en lnteraatin, a par'
other than tho lien for .of auch real aatata for the sa- cal tlatod In the complaint
land tiiXII. a1M111111nta. tisfaction of the tax Iiana on may redaem tha parcel by
Such action is brought

againtt the real property
only and no personal judgment shall be entered in if
pursuant to thl action the

ance&amp; .. nh •oapect to tho
parcel shall survive tha Ale. property is sold for en
Any paraon owning or amount that is loaa than tho
claiming anv right title, or in·
tereet in, or lien upon, any
parcel of root property above

IIIIIOd may fila an ani1N81 in
auch action Atting IQrth tho
nature and amount of intereat owned or claimed and
any dafen11 or objection to
the forecloaure. Such an-

amount of the delinquent
taxaa, ••••tmants, charge•. penalties, and intereat
against it. the Court. in sepa ~
rate order, may enter a defi-

ciency judgment against the
ownar of record of a parcel

proceeding, which ore duo
and unpaid.
At any lima prior to tho filing of any entry of confi,...
tion of sale, any owner or
Uenholder of. or other person with an intereatin, a parcel listed in the complaint

may nodaem the parcel by
tendering to tho tNeaurer

the amount of taxa•. aaMIIment•. charge•. penalties,
and interest due and unpaid

on the parcel, together with
all coata incurred in the pro-

caadlng lnatltutad agalnat
tha parcel under Action
6721.18 of tho Raviaed
Coda.
Larry E. Spencer.

Clarlt of Couot,
Melga County, Ohio
(7) 17, 24, 31, 3tc

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
In tho Matter of tho
Foracloaura of Uana For
Delinquent land Tuaa by
Action in REM
HOWARD E. FRANK
Treasurer of Meig1 County

Malgl County Court Hou•
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
PLAINTIFF
vs.
JOHN LEWIS. JR.
No AddNaa Available
DEFENDANT
CASE NO. 91 DLT 0&amp;
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE
PURSUANT TO SECTION
6721 .18 of tho Ohio
REVISED CODE
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND
TAXES, BY ACTION IN
REM BY THE
COUNTY TREASURER,
MEIOS COUNTY, OHIO

on the parcel, together with
all colla incurred In tho pro,

ceedino instituted again ..
the parcel under aection
6721 .18 of the Revill8d

Code.

larry E. Spencer.
Clark of Couot.
Meigs County. Ohio
(71 17, 24, 31 , 3tc

for the amount of the difference; if that owner of record
ia a corporation, the Court
may enter the deficiency

ower shall be flied in the ofIlea of thaundaralgned Clarlt
of the Court. and a copy of judgment againat the stockthe ani1N8r ahall be sar,.d holder holding a majority of
on tha ProMcuting Attor- tho corporation'• atock.
Tho per,.anent parcel
ney, on or before tho 13th
number of each parcel inday of Auguat, 1991.
If no ana-r ia Iliad with cluded in auch action; the
reapect to a parcel lilted In fulotle8t addreuol the partho complaint, on or before cal. if available; a descriptho date &amp;pacified u thalaot tion of tha parcel as 118t forth
day for filing an ani1N8r, a in the euociatod delinquent
judgment of forecloauN wilt tracta; a statement of the
betaken by defaultaa to that amount of the taxe1. •••••·
parcel. Thia judgment ahlll menta, charges, penaltiea,
apply to any parcel aa to and intereat due and unpaid
which a utlafaction - of on the parcel; and the name
the
taXII, IIMIIntiRtl, and address of the last
chargea. penaltie1. and in- known owner of the parcel

terest, and the coata incun-ed in the foNcloaure

tendering to the tntaaurer
the amount of taxes, ••••.;
menta, charge•. penalties.
and interest due and unpaid

11 they appear on the general tax liat, are as followa:

CASE NUMBER:
91 DLT 06
NAME OF LAST KNOWN
LAND OWNERS:
John lawio. Jr.
STREET ADDRESS OF
LAND:
Sondy Desart Road
PERMANENT PARCEL
NUMBERS:
07-00381.000,
07-00382.000.
DESCRIPTION OF PAR CELS SET FORTH IN MASTER LIST: Sect. 8 mid. on a
line of nw 1A of rd . .50A .

AMOUNT DELINQUENT:
'406. 18
LEGAL DESCRIPTION:

A complete legal deacription

may bo found at tho Meigs
County Recorder's Office in

deed book Volume 168,
Page 184.
If pur1uant to the action in

tho parcel is sold. the sale
shall not affect or extinguish
any lien or encumbrance
with reapect to the parcel
other than the lien for
land taxes, ••••.,anta.

charges, intareu, and penaltiaa for vvhich tho lien ia foraclo118d and In satiafactlon of
which the property is 101d.
All o1her lienaand encumbrances wtth respect to the
parcel shall survive the ule.

Any paraon owning or
claiming any right title, or intare•t in. or lien upon. any
parcel of rae! pmperty above
IIIIIOd may lilt on anower In

auch action aettlng forth tho

nature and amount of inter-

oat owned or claimed end
any delen• or objoction to
tho foi8CIOIUN. Such anawar shall be filed in tho offlee of the undaralgned Ctltrlt
of tho Couot, ond a copy of
the an-• sholl be ..,,..d
on the Proll8cutlng Atto•ney, on or bolo,. tho 13th
dey of Augual. 1991 .
If no anawer ia filad with
reapect to a parcel lilted In

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
In the Matter of tho
Foreclotura of Uena For

Delinquent land Ta•oo by
Action In REM
.
HOWARD E. FRANK
Treoourer of Meigs County
Moiga County Couot Hou•
Pomeroy. Ohio 46789
PLAINTIFF

vs.

GEORGE W. LEWIS
No Addreaa Available
DEFENDANT
CASE NO . 91 DLT 08
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE
PURSUANT TO SECTION
6721.18 of tho Ohio .
REVISED CODE
NOTICE OF
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND
TAXES, BY ACTION IN ·
REM BY THE
COUNTY TREASURER . .
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO ·
Public notice Ia horebv oivon !hot on tho 21at day of
June, 1981. tho County
Treasurer of Meig1 CountY.

Ohio filed a complaint in th•
Common Ptaaa Court of
Maiga County, Ohio, ot Po,
meroy, for the fo ..cloiUre Of
Iiana for delinquent taxei.
••••ementa, chergaa, pe·

naltiaa, and lntoNat ogoinit
certain real property ahuatad in auch county. 11 deacribad in that complain(.
The object of the action ia
to obtain from the Court a

judgment foNcloling tha
tax liena egeinlt auch ..al

aotato and ordering tho uta
olauch reot eltlte for thou·tlrfaction of the tax Iiana on

it.

Such action Ia brought
against the real propertY

and no poraonll judgment aholl be entered In If
purauont to tho octlon tile
property Ia aold for on
amount thot Ia leaa thon the
amount of the delinquent
only

taxa,, ••••nent1,

ch•~

goa, penoltleo, ond lntereot
aglinat Ji, thoCouot, In...,._
rete order, moy enter • doftclency judgment ogllnlll tflo
ownar of record of 1 parcill
for tho amount of tho dlffW,
ence; If thlt _,., &lt;11 record
Ia 1 corporation, tho Cou.;t
may enter the doflclancy
judgment •allnlll the atockholdar. hold(ng 1 majority qt
the corporation'• atock.
(Continued on Pogo 131 •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear, low 60 10
65, light west winds; Thursday
'lllostly sunny, highs near 90.
'
Extended forecast:

Friday through Sunday:
Fair Friday and Sunday, a
chance of showers and thunderstorms Saturday, highs in tlie 80s
and lows in the 60s.

Gallia County Fair Schedule
WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1991
6:00p.m_
7:00p.m.
7:30p.m.
9:00p.m.

Market Hog Judging
Garden Tractor Pulling Contest
Holly Dunn
HoUy Dunn

Show Arena
Pulling Track
Main Stage
Main Stage

THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1991
"Kiwanis Youth Day"
9:00a.m. Steer Show
Show Arena
12:30 p.m. Kiwanis Youth Program
Main Stage
Balloon Burstin~. Bubble Gum Blowing,
Watermelon Eaung &amp; many more events
7:00p.m. Youth Project Awards Presentation
Show Arena
Parade of crut:!'Elons
Dairy Sweeps
s
7:30p.m. Pony Pulling Contest
Pulling Track
8:00p.m. Lorrie Morgan·
Main Stage

----Local briefs... --....,
Continued from page 1
According to ODOT Communications Director Karen Pawloslci
bridge replacement that is currently underway on that portion of
road should be completed around August 22. The closed section of
road, however, is expected to be open¢ on or about August 5.

B&amp;E investigated
The brealcing and entering of an unoccupied house on Beech
Grove Road was recently reported to the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department by Harry Yarbrough. Several unidentified Items were
removed from the residence, according 10 the complaint flied with
the department

EMS units make six runs
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered
six calls for assistance on Tuesday and on Wednesday morning.
At 12:17 p.m., Pomeroy fife department went to an auto fife on
Willow Creek Road Phillip Moxley was the car's owner. At 1:17
p.m., Middleport squad went to an au10 accident on South Second
Avenue. Alvin Roush was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
3:28 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to State Route 124 and took Sharon
Meadows to Holzer Medical Center. At 4:23 p.m., Middleport unit
went to State Route 554. Ron Cornelius was transported to Holzer.
At 9:15 p.m., Racine squad wentiO Trouble Creek Road. Mary
Kerns was taken 10 Holzer.
On Wednesday at 7:20 a.m., Rutland squad went to Township
Road 36. Sarah McCarty was taken 10 Veterans.

Man hurt in altercation
An altercation on Court Street in Pomeroy about 11 :30 p.m.
Tuesday resulted in one injury and a broken window in Simon's
Pick-a-Pair.
Charles D. Ellis, Pomeroy, was treated at Veterans Memorial
Hospital for a severe laceration of his left arm. He was kept
overnight for observation. Ellis was taken 10 the hospital by private
vehicle.
According to Pomeroy police, Ellis and another unidentified person were arguing and fighting when Ellis got into the window.
Charges of desbllction of property have been filed against Ellis.

Clear conditions forecast for most of Ohio
By The Associated Press
Clear conditions are forecast for
most of Ohio tonight while slcies
will be partly sunny in the north
and mostly sunny in the south on
Thursday.
There will be an outside chance
of showers and thunderstorms in
northern Ohio Thursday . Lows
tonight will be in the 60s with
highs Thursday ranging from 85 to
near90.
Drought conditions that persisted across the state during the past
week were worsened by a lack of
weekly rain. Rainfall needed to end

Franklin E. "Fliver" Fields, 71,
of New Lexington, Ohio, died
Monday, July 29, 1991, in the
Good Samaritan Hospital in Zanesville.
Born June 23, 1920, in
Clarksburg, he was a son of the late
David Sr. and Laura Ellen (Keams)
Fields.
He was a coal miner, member of
the United Mine Workers, construction worker and painter. He retired
in 1984 after being employed for
22 years with the Peabody Coal Co.
in Zanesville. A U.S. Navy veteran
of World War II, he was a member
·of the New Haven First Church of
God and the American Legion Post
0 188 of Zanesville.
'· Surviving are his wife, Pearl E.
Fields; three daughters, Mrs. Kenneth (Norma A.) Greene of
Hartford, Mrs. Sharon S. Strohl of
New Lexington. and Mrs. Milton
(Beverly K.) Roush of Zanesville;
three sons, Eugene L. Fields of
Cameron Park, Calif., Jack Fields

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS IIH811)
A Dl\'llloa ol Muttlmedla, Inc:.

PublishEd pvery afternoon, Monday

•through Friday, Ill Court Sf .. Po·
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~ ~::: ::::: ::::::: : :: ::::·::::::::: ~:~~
Outold• Melp Coualy

~ ~:E:

:: : : : ·:: ::::w:~

the Ohio drought range from nearly
II inches in the northeast hills area
to around 3 inches in the southwest
where the drought is mild. Six to 8
inches of rain is needed in most
areas 10 return soil moisture to normal levels.
A high will move to the
Appalachians by early Thursday
and the cold front wiU move southeast and weaken. The front will
become nearly stationary from
Quebec across northern Ohio to the
mid-Mississippi Valley on Thursday .
Around the nation

The day began gray and wet in
many cities: Atlanta woke to fog,
skies over Des Moines were cloudy
and Las Vegas was stormy.
Cooler air was in the forecast in
northern New England, while most
of the rest of the region should sec
a break in the clouds and an end to
rain.
Hot, dry weather is ex pected to
continue from interior California 10
the Rocky Mountains, east to the
central and south ern Plain s. In
some places relief may come from
rain or thunderstorm s, with such
activity most likely in ponions of

the southern Roclcies and the southwestern deserts.
Highs will be in the 70s in the
rim of the Great Lakes and along
the California Coast; the 80s in a
wide. U-shaped belt from Boston to
Atlanta on the East, up through
Chicago and Fargo, N.D., on out to
Montana , as well as in much of
Ne w Mex ico and Utah ; the 90s
from the Southeast west, but for
patche s ex ceedin g I 00 in Kan sas
and central Texas.
The hig h temp erat ure in th e
nation Tuesday was 104 degrees at
Hays, Kan .

Jury deliberates in former state official's trial
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) The attorney for a former state official accused of embezzling $1.3
million in hospital refund checks
said in closing arguments that his
client didn't steal money from the
state because the checks belonged
to the hospitals.
A Franklin County Common
Pleas Court jury began deliberating
Tuesday afternoon in the embezzlement trial of Frank Burge, a former
supervisor for the Ohio Department
of Health, who administered a program that handled refund checks
from hospitals across the state.
Deliberations were to resume

this morning. Burge, 47, is charged
with engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity, aggravated theft and
eight counts of theft in office. He
was fired in May and has been
jailed in lieu of $300,000 bond
since his arrest in April.
Burge's attorney James J. Marlin called no witnesses and Burge
did not testify . The prosecution
rested its case Monday.
Prosecutors contend that Burge
spent the money on himself, his
wife and six women. They claim he
oou8hl the six women gifts including JCWelry, cars and homes.
"He saw a real opportunity to

solve his mon ey problem s and
become a big ·man and becom e
everyone' s friend," Assistant Prosecutor Richard Whrtehou se said in
closing argumenls. " He turned a
little comer of the state bureaucracy into his personal baflk account. ''
In his closing argument. Marlin
said that since Burge allegedly
diverted hospital checks into his
own bank account before th e
money reached state coffers, the
jury cannot find that he stole !rom
the state.
"It isn't the state's money that
was taken, it is (the hospitals')
money," Marlin said. "Those

weren ' t the state's checks at Lhat
point. ' '

He contend ed th at Burge ' s
alleged thefts were isolated, unrelated events that do not conslilule
th e "pallern of corrupt activity"
with which he is charged.

Engineers wrapping up Ohio River hearings
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
- The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on Thursday holds the last of
a series of public hearings on what
people want done to the Ohio River
shoreline.
Specifically, the corps says it
wants to hear about flood control,
riverfront development, environmental issues and economic development affecting the 12 West Virgmia counlies that border the Ohio.
The meeting is the last in a

series of seven informal workshops
that began in Weinon on June II.
Parkersburg, New Martinsville,
Paden City and Point Pleasant resi dents have said they want riverfront parks, he said.
Alan Elberfeld of the corps '
planning division, said the corps
will evaluate the public's recom mendations and determine which
ones are feasible, financially possi-

_ _ _ Pomeroy Court news _ _ __
Four were fmed and five others
forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night
Fined were Roger Butcher,
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, disorderI y
conduct on the parking lot of Jeff's
Carry-Out; Thomas Terry, Middleport, $45 and cost, speeding;
Randy Stewart, Middleport, ·
assault, $213 and costs; Tamara
Stone, West Columbia, W. Va ..
$163 and costs, giving false infor-

ble and environmentally acceptable.
Projects which have strong local
support will be more lilc.el y to be
recommended for further study, he
said. Local support includes a local
agency willing 10 pay half the cost
of a benefit-cost study, he said.
Some Parkersburg residents
wanted riverboat gambling, while
some New Martinsville residents
wanted a floating mall, Elberfeld
said. Suggestions outside the corps'
role are forwarded to the appropriate agencies, such as the govemoc's
office, for review, Elberfeld said.

mation to a police officer, and $63
and costs, traffic light violation.
Forfeiting bonds were Terry L.
Brewer, Portland, $43, improper
backing ; Sharon Lee Leffle,
Mason, W. Va., $63, expired registration; Sam Robinson, Gallipolis,
$88, consuming alcohol under age
21; Jeffrey Basham, Coolville, $63,
squealing tires; Richard Cline,
Point Pleasant, W. Va., $88, consuming alcohol under age 21.

--Meigs announcements-

Wildwood Garden Club to
meet
The Wildwood Garden Club
will have its annual picnic tonight
(Wednesday) at 6 p.m. at the horne
of Juanita Will. The hostess will
of Shingle Springs, Calif., and C. furnish the meat, drinks and table
Michael Fields of New Lexington; service.
six brothers, David Fields, Jr., WetMeeting
zen "Doc" Fields, both of New
The Lonridge Community CenHaven, F. Ray Fields, Melvin ter will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
Frelds, and Freddie A. Fields, all of The public is invited. The group
Hanford; and Glenn Fields, Mason; meets the first Thursday of every
a sister, Mrs. Louise London of month.
Syracuse, Ohio; 14 grandchildren
Auxiliary 10 meet
and eight great-grandchildren.
Evelyn Holter will be at the
He was preceded in death by two Tuppers Plains VFW Post No .
brothers, Gerald L. and William C. 9053 for that Auxiliary on ThursFields.
day al 7 p.m. A meeting will follow
The funeral will be Friday, 2 at 7:30p.m. All members are invitp.m., at the New Haven First ed.
Church of God with the Rev.
Smorgasbord dinner
George Hoschar officiating. Burial
There will be a smm. tsbord
will be in the Graham Cemetery.
dinner on Sunday from noon to 2
Friends may call at the church p.m. at the Lottridge Community
Thursday, noon to 8 p.m. Military Center. Cost is $5 for adults and
graveside rites will be held by the $2.50 for children.
Stewart-Johnson V.F.W. Post 9926
Meeting slated
of Mason and American Legion
The regular meeting of the
Post 140 of New Haven.
Hoclcing Valley Community ResiThe Foglesong Funeral Home is dential Center Board scheduled for
in charge of arrangements.
Aug. 14 has been rescheduled for
Wednesday, Aug. 7, at the Quality
Inn Hocking Valley in NelsonviUe
from II a.m. to I p.m. The Board
Continued rrom page 1
meets regularly the second
any o( its mu5euins or sites to each
Wednesday of each month.
veteran and up to four guests.
Rep. Thomas Johnson, R-New
Concord, sponsored the law that
also requires the Ohio Expositions
Commission to develop a veteran
benefits program that will include
free admission to the Ohio State
Fair.
Voinovich also approved a bill
that adds Columbiana County in
eastern Ohio to the 28 counties of
southeastern Ohio that make up
Ohio ' s Appalachia region .

--Area deaths-Franklin Fields

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-3

Voinovich ...

Township trustees to meet
The Olive Township Trustees
will meet on Monday at the
Reedsville Firehouse at7:30 p.m.
To meet
The Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene, Reedsville, will hold
vacation Bible school, Aug. S-9, 6
to 8:30 each evening at the church.
There will be classes for children
up to 13 as well as adult classes.
The public is invited to attend.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
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Hospital news

Cheaper
Than Rent

VeteraDll Memorial
MONDAY ADMISSIONS
Twila Clark, Racine, and Vickie
Boso, Racine.
MONDAY DISCHARGES William F. Smith and Nora Pearson.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, July 30 - Robert
Atwood, Mrs. Jeff Baisden and
soil, James ·contle, Mrs. Mart
Jackson and lOft, Arellie Lee,
Freemon Locke, Spencer Morpn,
Samantha Ranlcin, Mindy Spires,
Jeannine Webster.
Births, July 30 - Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Dummitt. a son, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. David Fisher, a son,
Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Klein,
a daughter, Mason, W.Va.

2 FULL BEDROOMS

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Wednesday, July 31, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Washington Redskins awaiting
knee brace for recovering Mann

Wednesday, July 31, 1991

Page-4

Back-on-track McCaskill leads Angels to 4-2 win over Indians
By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - A quick
two-game sweep in Cleveland went
a long way toward putting the California Angels in the proper frame
of mind for a division race.
After exploding for 10 runs in a
I 0-2 win Monday night, the Angels
got an encouraging stan from Kirk
McCaskill and an overpowering
finish from Bryan Harvey as they
beat the Indians 4-2 Tuesday night

California has won three straight
games and appears to have puUed
out of the slump that dropped it
from first place to sixth in less than
a month. In the tight American
League West, sixth place may still
be close enough to make a run.
"The thing about it is, they
never gave up the ghost. even
though things were going so bad
for us offensively,' ' said manager
Doug Rader, who turned 47 Tues_day. "Most of the guys who .were

Scoreboar(l
t 9; Len'au, San Die&amp;~ 16; ~ali, San
Franciloo, 16; O.vc S'milh. OritaJo, 16.

In the majors ...

American League

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Euten Dlvllton
W L PtL
Team
PITTSBURGH
60 .ll -'ll
New Ya:k
.. ... 55 44 .556
Sl. 1...auis
....... 53 46 .53S
Chicago
. .. 4S S I .48S
Montreal
......... 43 S7 .430
Philadelphil .. ..... 41 58 .414

GB

5.5
1.5
12..5
18
19.5

We:£te:rn Division

W L PeL
...... 51 42 .576
..... 52 46 .531
CINCINNA T1 , 41 49 .495

GB

San Francisco .... .. 48 51

9
9.5

Tum
Los Angeles
Allant.a
San Dieao

4.5

s

.48S

........ 48 52 .480
........ 40 59 .404

Hownon

17

Tuesday's !iCoros
Slll Francisco I 0, Mcmtrctl 3
ClndnntU 6, Chka1Q5,10 lnnlnp
Philadelphi.l 2, San Di'l" I
All1nta 10, PltUbui'Jh 3
Housum 7, St. Louis 5
Loa; Angdct 3, New Yod I

Wednesday's games
Chlcaao (Cu_Ullo 3-1) at Cincinnati
(RijoJ-1), 7&lt;35 p.m.

San Dic:so (Harris 2·2) al Philadclphil
(Roffin 2-3), 7,35 p.m.
Plttt burah (Rud 1-1) at Atluta
(Smollz5-11), 7:46p.m.
. St. LaW. (Tewksbury 7-6) at Houston
(Kilo 3-6),

l oll p.m.

New Yodr. (Femande2 0--1) at Los An ·

gel" (Honhiler 3-2), I Oo3S p.m.

Thursday's games

p.m.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Dl•lllon
TW'II
W L PtL
Toronto
......... S1 44 .$64
Detroit
........... SO 49 .SOl
New Yom
....... 46 50 .479
B~ton
.......... 47 52 .473
Milwaukee
...... 43 56 .434
Baltimore
........ 39 60 .394
:CLEVELAND
33 15 .337

GB
6
8.5
9
13
17

ll.l

Wetlr:rn Dhillon·
.............. W L PeL
M.innucu
.. ..... 60 41 .S94
Chi.caao
......... 56 43 J66
Oaklmd
......... 56 4.5 554

TC:UJ

70:

STOLEN BASES -

San Franda~o (MtCiellan 1-0) al
C!ndnn1tl (Grou 4-1), 7:35p.m.
Philadelphia (Mulholland 9-1 0) at Montrul (GudnerS-7), 7:35l.m.
Plttsbur&amp;h (fomlln 3) at SL Loull
(OIInre:~ 3-3),1:35

BATIINO - Pallmiro, Texas, .334;
Tarubull, Kansu Chy, .332; Pu ckeu,
Minnetota, .332; C. Ripken, B~ ltimo~,
.329; BOUJ, ~· . 3~; Molitor, Mil••u.kcc. .)27; 8&amp;Jncs, Oakland, .325.
RUNS - c.,_., Oakland, 75; Molitor Milwaube., 15; Palmeiro, TeK.u, 71:
white. Toronto, 71}, C. Ripken. Baltimore,
68; Thomu. OUcaso. 67: Franco, Teus.
67: D. Ha&gt;d"'""· Oallind. 67.
RBI - Fielder, Detroit, 13; C1nseco,
Otihnd.. It; Thomu, Chi cag o, 71;
Cucr, Tmuuo. 71; Gonulez, Texas,
Siczn, Telu, 70; TUtlbull, Kwas Clty,
68; C. DaviJ, Mimesoll, 68.
HITS - Puckett, Minne1ota, 131;
Palmeiro, Teu1, 130; C. Ripken, Balti ·
more, 130; Molhor, Milwau..i.c:c:, 130:
SiCIJI, Texu, Ill; Fnnoo, Tc:xu, 121; R.
Alanu, Taromo, 117.
DOUBLES- R. Alomar, Toi'Ul.to, 31;
Palmciro, Tcxu, 29; Caner, Toronto, 29;
80SJ,1, lkwton, 21; White, Torooto, 26; C.
Ripkcn, Baltimore, 26; Ken Griffey Jr.,
Se~nle, 2S .
TRIPLES - Molilor, Milwau..i.ee, 9:
Polonia, Calif'omia, 7; While, Toronto, 7;
R. Alomar, Toronto, 6: Pucl:cn, Minneso·
ll, 6: Knobltuch, Minnesota, S: McRae.
Kusu City. 5; Whiten, Cleveland, S;
Devereaux, Baltimore, 5; Raines, Chica·
go, 5.
HOME RUNS - Canseco, Oakland,
28; Fielder, Detroit, Il; Carter, Toront o,
23; TaruDull, Kanus City, 22; C. Davis,
Minnesoll, 22; C. Ripkcn, Baltimore, 22;
Deer, Dctroil, 20; Tettlc:t.on, Detroil, 20.

52 44 .542
........... S4 47 .lll
... ..

. Seot~.
. California ......... 52 47 .S2S
!Unsu City ....... 41 SO .490

GB

3
4

5.5
6
1
I 0.5

Tuesday's !iCOres
8 01l0rl 11. Tew 6

Minne&amp;OU 9, Detroit 1
Oilland 6, New YaD. S
Califomis 4, Qovcland 2
Chicaao s, Toronto 7
Milwau.kcc 9, Kantu City 3
Se~ttle 8, Baltimore 2
,

Tonlgbl's games
Minnetola [fap11ni 1·1) at New Yorlt
(Sandmon JQ-6), 7 30 p.m .
Oakland (Stewan 1·.5) at Boslon
(Kioci.cr 2-2), 7o3l p.m
.
California (lAngston 14-4) al Deuo1l
(T....U &amp;-9), Dl p.m.
Cleveland (Kina4-5) at Toronto (key
10.,), 7:35 p.m.
Te_.u (Brown 7-1) at Ch.icaao (Feman·
dez S-7), 8:0:5 p.m.

KaMas Cily (Aquino 4-2) at Milwau.koe
(BosiCJ 7-7), 8:05p.m.
Baltimore (Robinson 4·9) al Se.aulc:
(DcLuci• 9-6), Jo,os p.m.

Thursday's games
Cleveland (Naay 6-10) at Toronto
(Guman 3-l), U:Jl p.m.
MiMesota (undecided) at New York
(Cad"" 3-4), I p.m.
California (F..... o- I) at Detroit (Lcit" 2-2), I ,35 p.m.
Wsu City (Boddickcr 8-7) at Milwau·
tee (Wegman6-S), 2:3.5 p.m.
Oakland (Siuu.nki 3--4) at BOJt.On (Gar·
diner 3-S), 7:3.5 p.m
Teua (Win 3· 3) ll OUcago (GarCia 2·
3), 8:0S p.m.

Major league leaders
National League
BATIING - Pendkton. AU•nu . .341 o
Nilon, Atlanla, .l35 ; T . Gwynn, San
Diego, .331; Morris, Clndnnatl, .327 ;
Jose, St. Louia, .312; Biggio, Houllon ,
.310; c.tderon, Monuu.l, .309.
RUNS - Buller, Los Angeles, 69;
Johnson, New York, 68; Sandbcra. Olica·
go, 61; J. Bell , Pllllburlth 1 '~: Van
Slyk.e, Plllabur1h, 63; 0 . Smath, St.
Lou.i1, 63; Gun, ALiama, 62; Pendleton,
AllanLI, 62.
RBI - W. Clark, San Francisco, 74;
Bond•, Pltt•burah, 11i Johnaon, New
Yotk, 10; Dawson, Olicago, 68; G . Bell;
Chieago, fi5; Bonilla, PlltJburah, U;
. Mau Williarru , San Francisco, 62.
HITS - T. Owynn, San Dieso. 132;
Samuel, Lot Anaelca, 114; Butler, loa
Anaeles, 114; Jose , St. LoUis. 110:
PcndlCUJn, AtlanLI, 110; Caldetoo, Mon·

tral. 109: SltldborR, ClUcago, 109.
DOUBLES -Jose , St. Loui1, 30;

Mon11, Cincinnati, 15; Bonilla, Plltl·
buraht 15; McReynolds, New York, 25;
Oant. Allarlta, 23; Pendlc:tor!, Atlant.l, 23;
T. Owynn, San Dieao, 22; SandDerg,
Chicaao, 22
TRIPW - T. Gwynn, S111 Dic:Jo, 9;
Lankford, Sa . Louia , 8; L. Gonzalez.
H&lt;Ntwm, 6; K.nak., Philad.c:lphia, 6; ~an ·

R . Hender son,

Oakland, 34; Rainca. Chicago, 33; R. Alomar, Toronlo, 32; Polonia, California, 30;
Cuyler, Det.roit, 24; While, Toronlo, 23;
Franco, TeAu, 21.
PITCHING (9 decision1) - Erid.•oo.
Minnesota, 14-3, .81A, 234; Henneman ,
Dcuoi~ 8-2 •. 800, 2.66: Klink. Oallind.
7-2, .778, 2.63: Lanpl&lt;ln, c..tilomia, 144, .778, 3.49; Ktuogu, Scaale, 9-3, .750,
277: Finloy, c..tilomil, 14-l, .737, 3.91:
McDowell, Oticlao. 13-l, .TD.. 3.08.
STRIK.EOlfi'S - R. Johnlon, SeatUe,
148; Ryan, TCJ.u, 145; Oemau, BOltOn,
142; McDowell, OUcaao, 122; Swindell,
Clnellnd, 122i Finley, Califcxnia, 122;
Lan,non, Califomia, 116.
SAVES -

Aauilc:n, Minncaota, 27;

Eckcnley, o.kland, 27; Harvey, California, 25; Thiapen, Chic•ao, 24: Roardon,
Boaton, 24; Ol1on, Baltimore, 21; Jeff
IWuell, Tsus, 20; Henke, Tororno, 20.

Transactions
Baseball
American Leaaue

BALTIMORE ORIOLES - Sontl.Cf
Ballard, Jeff Robinaon and Paul K.ilgua,
pitc:hcn, to Rochc.ter of the ln'Ctn~tional
League. Call6d up Suey Jonea, Mike
Mwaina and Jim Poole:, pilchcn, from
Rothcalet.

CLEVELAND INDIANS - ROCI!Iod
Eric Kina, pllehe:r, from Colorado
Sprlftll d lbt PaeJne Cout Luaue.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS - Actival·
ed. Robin Younr.. outf!eldet, fn:m the ISday di11bled. lin. Placed J.mea Austin,
pitt.he:r, on the tS-day diaabled lirt..

MINNESOTA TWINS -

Rocallod

Willie Bankl, pitcher, from Portbnd of
the Pacif'lC Cout Loape. Placed Denny
Nea&amp;J.e, _pitcher, on the 15-day diubled
list. Acuvated Pedro Munoz. outfielder.
from the IS-day diJablcd lilt
SEATTl..E MARINERS - Sent Alon·
to Powell, outfielder, Calgary of lhe Pa·
cific Coasl League . Rec11led Calvin
Jona, piu:hCJ, from Calgary.
N1donal Uaaue
SAN DI EGO PADRES - Acqu1red
Jack Howell, third buem.an, frcm the Cal ·
ifomia Angels for Shawn Abner, outli.eld·
er. Sent Seou Coolbau~. third bueman,
to l..u Vea11 of the Pacific Coast League.
Called up Kevin Ward, oulfielder, from

l..at Vegaa.
SAN FRANCISCO OIANTS - Optioned Steve Dec.ker, catcher, and Mark

Leonarcl, oulliddcr, to Phoenix of the P•·
cifie Coart League.

Baskethall
National B11ketball Allodatlon
NEW YORK KNICKS - Signed Anthony M11on, foiWu~.

Foothall
N•tlonal Foolball Leaaue
DALLAS COWBOYS - Waived BaDe
Laufenbcq, quartcroack.
DETR01T UONS - Agrc:c:d lo lc:rms
wilh Lawrence: Pete, nose: ucklc:, on a
ooc:·ycar conlttct.
GREEN BAY PACKERS - Signed
Mall Brock , defensive end. Pl aced Ra y
Porter, tight end, on injured waiven.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFS - An nounced lhe ruignalion of Mike Webste1,

ISsiallnl cotch..

·

NEW ORLEANS SAINTS - Wai&gt;O&lt;I
John Fcur&lt;~c!J,uarwbaclt . SignO&lt;I Lon-

nie F'anc:h,
act.
NEW YORK GIANTS - Waived
Kicnn Clair and Larry Wanke, quarterbac.b; Tony Gilbert, wide receiver; and
Ocmeui.w Hill, defensive lineman.
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS - Signed
David Riclwdl, guud, to a one-year con·
l.nct, and Shane Elliou., uck.le.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEER~ ­
Waived Hyland Hickson, rurmmg back.
Placed Robert Martz, defensive: lineman,
on illjured waivers.

Hockey
Nallonal Hockey Leaaue
TORONCO MAPLE LEAFS - SiwoO&lt;I
Joc:l Quenneville, deferacma.n, 1nd Brad
AiLiten. David Tomlison, Mike Eanwoo&lt;l,
and Mike ~flcWillliam , forwards.

struggling were feeling guilty or
disappointed . But they hung in
there really well , when it would
have been easy to fold the tent.·'
McCaskill (8-13) ended a personal five-game losing streak, winning for the first time since June
25. Though he had pitched well
during much of that span, the losing was getting a bit annoying.
" It'd be even more frustrating if
you were pitching poorly and losing," he said. "I think when you
give your team a chance to win,
you've done your job, and I think
I've been doing that."
McCaskill, though, was careful
not to overstate his case.
" Pitchers and players have a
way of rationalizing their numbers," he said. "When you're winning, you always say you're pitching well, and when you're losing,
you tend to rationalize that you're
pitching well enough to win. The
bottom line is, did you win or did
you lose?"
McCaskill lasted seven innings,
allowing two runs and six hits.
Bryan Harvey, who struggled for a
week in mid-July, struck ou.t all
four Indians he faced and got his
25th save, tying his career high.
The team record of 3 I saves was
set in I985 by Donnie Moore.
"I've thought about the record a
time or two. It would be nice, "
Harvey said.
Loser Dave Otto (0-1) registered
his first major-league decision, in
his 16th appearance since he was
fust caUed up by Oakland in 1987.
He went se ven and two-third
innings. a career high, and gave up
four runs, one of them unearned ,
and eight hilS.
With the score lied 2-2. Bobby
Rose led off the eighth with a single, went to second on a passed ball
by Jeff Manto and to third on Dick
Schofield's single. Rose got tagged
out in a rundown between third and
home on Luis Sojo's grounder to
the mound, but Rose avoided the
tag long enough to advance the
runners to second and third.
Wally Joyner then grounded out
on a high bouncer to second that let
Schofield score, and Dave Parker's
single scored Soja.
"We told Otto not to give Joyner anything good to hit," Cleveland
manager Mike Hargrove said. ·'We
tried to get him to go after a bad
pitch. He did , but he bounced it
into the ground and up about 40
feet.
"He (Otto) feU behind too many
hitters, but he seemed to pitch out
of it. The encouraging thing is, he
still had good stuff after 110-115
pitches."
Manto staned the game at third
base but moved behind !he plate in
the eighth inning because starting
catcher Joel Skinner was hurt when
the two collided on a foul ball in
the sixth. Skinner, who tried to
continue playing, finally left
because of a bloody lip and blurry
vision. Sandy Alomar, the usual
starter, is sidelined by a strained
hip flexor.
California scored two runs in
the second on an RBI single by
Dave Gallagher and a sacrifice fly ·
by Rose. Cleveland tied it in the
third, scoring a run on Alex Cole's
single and another on a double-play
grounder by Felix Fermin.
The Indians' Carlos Martinez

had a single in the third, extending
his hitting streak to 13 games, currently the longest in the AL.
In other games, Oakland beat
New Yorlc 6-5. Boston beat Texas
11 -6, Seattle beat Baltimore 8-2,
Chicago beat Toronto 8-7, Milwaukee tiiat Kansas City 9-3 and Minnesotl beat Detroit 9-7.
-iAthleticS 6, Yankees 5
When Jose Canseco comes to
New York, baseball seems to
become secondary at Yankee Stadium.
The Oakland Athletics right
fielder becomes the center of attention. Especially since his late-night
visit to Madonna's building earlier
this season.
He was the focus again Tuesday
night, this time for his two-run
homer in the seventh inning, which
gave Oakland a 6-5 victory over
New York and a five -game win ning streak.
"The crowd here is the worst,"
Canseco said.
He should know . Fans threw
trash and an inflatable doll at him
in right field Monday night and
continued to taunt him Tuesday,
when he was Oakland's designated
hitter.
"I didn't miss it," Canseco said
after someone asked if he would
rather have been in the outfield.
He may have had the night off
on defense, but he made the difference on offense. With Oakland
trailing 5-4, Dave Henderson sil\gled off Wade Taylor (5-6) and
Canseco followed with his major
league-leading 28th home run. He
also leads the big leagues with 81
RBis.
Curt Young (3-2), the second of
five Oakland pitchers, was the winner and Denrus Eckersley pitched a
hitless ninth for his 27th save in 32
chances.
Red Sox 11, Rangers 6
Carlos Quintana tied a major
league record by driving in six runs
in one inning.
Quintana hit his first career
grand slam off Oil Can Boyd (0-2)
and a two-run double off Wayne
Rosenthal as the Red Sox scored 10
runs in the third.
Quintana became the II th player in major league history to drive
in six runs in one inning, the first
since Atlanta's Dale Murphy in
1989. He is the first American Leaguer to do il since Washington's
Jinn Lemon in 1959.
Rookie Kevin Morton (2-2)
allowed four runs and eight hits in
six and one-third innings.
Mariners 8, Orioles 2
Ken Griffey Jr. hit his second
grand slam in eight games.
Griffey, who hit his fust career
grand slam in a 6-1 victory at Yankee Stadium on July 24, hit his
12th home run this year in a six-run
second against Roy Smith (5-3).
Bill Krueger (9-3) won his fifth
consecutive decision, allowing both
runs and eight hits in six and onethird innings.
White Sox 8, Blue Jays 7
Frank Thomas broke a 6-6 tic in
the seventh with a two-run homer
off Bob MacDonald (2-1),
Thomas' 19th home run this season.
The White Sox took a 5-0 lead
in the first on home runs by Dan
Pasqua and Ron Karlcovicc. Toronto came back to lie with a run in

Ken Griffey Sr. facing surgery
on neck as well as Father Time
B)'JIMCOUR
AP Sports Writer
SEATILE (AP)- The 19-year
major league career of Ken Griffey
Sr. is in jeopardy.
Griffey said he wants to continue playing with his AU -S Jar center
fielder son, Ken Jr .. in Seattle, but
he is battling a bulging disk in his
neck that will require surgery as
well as his age. He will be 42 next
ApriL
''I'll be back," he sa1d with a
smile Tues day night when he
announced his 1m pending surgery.
"if only to see Junior play."
Griffey, a career .296 hitter used
in left field arid as designated hiuer
as well as a pinch-hitter by the
Mariners, said he didn't want to
announce his retirement. He said he
wants to play with the Mariners
next season if-he's healthy.
"Junior hasn ' t said anything

about this yet, but what can he
say," the 19-year veteran said.
The operation will be performed
by Dr. John Tew. a Cincinnati neurosurgeon, in late August or early
September.
"Any surgery scares me,"
admitted Griffey, who was injured
in a traffic accident during spring
training.
"I can't turn my head to the
right without pain," Griffey said
before Tuesday night's game
between the Mariners and the Baltimore Orioles. "I don't have the
mobility in my neck. I'm in a lot of
pain when I turn my head to the

the fourth and four in the fifth.
Scott Radinsky (3-3) pitched
two scoreless innings and Bobby
Thigpen pitched a perfect ninth for
his 24th save in 30 chances.
Brewers 9, Royals 3
Paul Molitor, who came up to
the majors in 1978, got his 2,000th
career hit and Darryl Hamilton
drove in four runs.
Don August (8-5) allowed three
runs and seven hits in six innings
and Dan Plesac finished with onehit relief for his eighth save.
Bret Saberhagen (7 --5) gave up

seven runs and ·eight hits in five
innings.
Twins 9, Tigers 7
Shane Mack had the fust fourhit game of his career and Carl
Willis (6-2) pitched four and onethird innin~s of shutout, three-hit
relief.
Minnesota, 13-5 since the AllStar break, got 17 hits off five
pitchers, but starter Scott Ericlcson
gave up five runs and seven hits in
three innings.
John Cerutti (1-3} allowed four
runs and-six hilS in two innings.

:
·
·

• FOOTBALL CAMPERS - There were 55
:campers taklug part ill last weeks 1991 MeiKS

GIVING CHASE- California first baseman WaUy Joyner (21)
gives chase as the Indians' Mike Aldrete is caught between first and
second on a rundown play in the seventh inning or Tuesday night's
game in Cleveland, wbkh the Angels woo 4-2. (AP)

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By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - She was
America's tweetheart, a blonde
Californian fresh from the 1964
· Olympics, where she had won two
swimming gold medals.
He was a black teen-ager from
· the inner city of South Jamaica.
N.Y., always, it seemed, just one
· step away from II'Ouble.
When Donna de Varona and
Bob Beamon crossed paths one day
. back in the II'OUbled 1960s, it was
. an· encounter that would change
Olympic history.
· De Varona was on a postOlympic tour of inner city schools,
' addressing the students, trying to
· relate 10 them just what it meant 10
: be an Olympian. In the audience.
Beamon listened and something
inside him clicked. "Maybe," he
' thought, "maybe that's something
I could do."
It was at that moment that Bea. moo began his journey to the 1968
' Olympics and the historic 29-foot,
2 1/2-inch long jump that still
• stands as the world record. There
· was help along the way from
Olympians like Wilma Rudolph
' and Ralph Boston. But it all began,
· Beamon said, with de Varona.
"'I was on the way to other
· areas," Beamon said Tuesday as he
: accepted a Clairol Personal Best
: Award for his work with children
in the Miami area. "I was engaged
in socially una:ceptable behavior. I
was runnmg in the streets, involved
in png figh!S, culling school. One
time, the cops picked me up after
there had been a murder around the
· comer. I was in the wrong place at
the wrong time."
Then. along came de Varona.

,Griffey ...

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Griffey was sig ned by the
Mariners as a free agent last Aug.
29 after he was released by the
Cincinnati Reds. He hit .377 in 21
games with three home runs and 18
· (See GRJ,FFEY on Page 5)

(Continued from Page 4)
• RBis for Seattle last season as the
: Griffeys became the fust father-son
· combination 10 play together in the
. major leagues.
Griffey Sr. signed a $700,000
contraCt with the Mariners after the
-season. He has been on the dis:abled list since June L
: He played in 30 ga~e~ in his
•19th big league season, hl!tmg .282
:with one homer and nine RBis.
:After Tuesday night's ~arne, Grif;fey Jr. is hilling .312 wtth 12 home
runs and 56 RBis.
: Mariners doctors have attempted
:to solve the neck pain by placing
:Griffey in ttaction for the past two
:weeks. They also tried to cure his
•ailment with rest
• Dr. Mitch Storey, one of the
~Mariners· club physicians, was
;optimistic. He said tM..rec~very
't'llte for this type of surgery ts 95
~~ and that he expects Griffey
:Sr. to be able to play in 1992.
· "lfi want to play again, this has
to be done," Griffey said. "This is
·the only alternative. The doctors
llave tried everything else. I don't
··want to go out this way. Hopefully,
if the Mariners give me an opportunity 10play next year, I"d like to try
to play again .... It's something I'm
looking forward to." _
Griffey began h1s baseball
career in 1969 and has played wnh
four major league clubs: Cincinnali, the Mariners. Atlanta and the
New York Yankees. He has 152
career home runs and 859 RBls.
Another Griffey son. 20-yearold Craig, signed a minor league
contract with the Mariners th1s
year.

Almost 30 years later, she still
remembers the schools tour.
·'Those kids taught me a lot about
hope and compassion," she said.

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ON CAMP STAFF- Former Meigs quarterback and Marshall
football player Mike Bartrum is shown helping out at last week's
Meigs Marauder football camp. Bartrum, wbo was on the camp
sta". is comillg orr a severe knee injury that caused him to miss all
or l~t season. He is expected to replace aU-American Eric Ihnat at
tight end for the 1991 Thundering Herd.

acter. not color."

Beamon, who jumped 24 feet,
14 inches at age 14, went to work
on his specialty. By 1968, he was a
world class athlete at Texas ElPaso. But he spent the months
before the Olympics without a
coach after being suspended for
refusing to compete against
Brigham Young, protesting what
he considered to be racist policies
of the Monnon Church.
Still. he set a world record that
has survived for nearly a quarter
He return to UTEP after the
Games, completing his degree in
sociology and then earned a Masters in psychology and counseling
from San Diego State. For the last
I0 years, he has worked for the
Dade County Parks and Recreation
department, He currently runs the
county's Youth SportS Motivational Program, encouraging kids.
'"We face a lost generation."
Beamon said. "We've aot co·get it
back. Reading comprehension is so
low, it's a signal we're in II'Ouble
from an academic point of view.
Every day, you pick up the paper
and read that we've lost another
child. That's most distressing."
Beamon continues the battle,
largely. he said. because of de
Varona. '"I had no inspiration at all
until then," he said. "She passed
the torch to me. I'm passing it to
the next generation."

back Gerald Riggs to thump on if
the knee brace ~hows uP- Riggs
skipped practice Tuesday because
of a sprained ankle and it wasn't
certain whether the oft-injured
Ri~gs would be available for
torught' s intrasquad scrimmage.
A knee injury to rookie Ray
Porter gave the Green Bay Packers
the opponunity to fmd room on the
roster for defensive end Matt
Brock.
When Brock signed a contract
and reported to training camp,
Green Bay's roster was already at
the maximum of 80 players. But
the Packers said they would assign
Porter, a lOth-round draft choice,
to injured reserve because of knee
surgery scheduled today.
The Packers still have seven
conn-act holdouts with the season
fast approaching. The eighth veteran holdinj! out. Carl Bland, signed
instead wtth Calgary of the Canadian Football League.
Speaking of holdouts, the
Kansas City Chiefs haven't seen
their starting quarterback, Steve
DeBerg, for three weeks and may
not for another two while a new
contraCt is being hammered ouL
Three days after ending a 10day holdout, wide receiver Jeff
Chadwick is back on the sidelines
again. This lime he faces I 0 days
or so off to rest a strained hamsuing.
Seahawk president Tom Aores.
who is still negotiating with four
holdouts, used Chadwick as an
example of how a late arrival can
hun players.
''These guys come in and go
right into two-a-day practices, right

into a different level, and try to
catch up and it hap~ns. Now he's
sitting out 10 days 1f it's a normal
hamstting injury. '
Denver Broncos offensive tackle
Jim Juriga sat out Tuesday's practice, still bothered by a lower-back
ailment J uriga, hospitalized with a
bulging disc early in ttaining camp,
stiffiened up after practice Monday. Coach Dan Reeves indicated
on Sunday that if Juriga was unable
to rejoin workouts this week, he
probably wouldn't count on Juriga
for the regular season.
Minnesota Vikings defen sive
tackle Keith MiUard had an expensive run-in with a planter at a fastfood store near the team's Mankato, Minn., camp. Three minutes
before Monday night's 11 p.m. curfew, Millard's spor!S car • just kind
of got out from under me" and hit
the planter outside the restaurant.
He dashed off on foot to camp to
avoid the $1,500 fine for being out
after curfew. Later. he learned his
car received an estimated $7,500 in
damage and caused about $700
damage to the planter. Millard
wasn't ticketed.

-Sports briefsTenniJ
LOS ANGELES (Al&gt;) - Topseeded Stefan Edberg defeated
Ramesh Krishnan 64, 6-3 and second-seeded Pete Sampras beat
Gilad Bloom 6-0, 6-2 in the first
round of the Volvo tournament.
In other first-round matches,
third-seeded Michael Chang
defeated Mikael Perilfors 2-6, 6-1,
7-6 (7-0) and fourth-steded Brad
Gilbert beat Javier Frana 6-3. 7-5.

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Marauder football
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The 1991 Meigs Marauder football was held July 22-26 at Meigs
High School. There were 55 boys
at this year's camp, which was was
open for boys in grades 4-8.
The campers learned fundamentals in the game from Marauder
head football coach Mike Staggs,
assistant coaches Darryl Owens,
Bill Ross and John Amott, and former Marauder stars Bob Ashley,
Mike Bartrum and Dennis Booth.
Current Marauders helping out at
the camp include Bill Harless,
Danny Lewis. Eric Wagner, Kevin
Musser, Matt Haynes, Frank Blake
and Mike Cremeans.
The hi&amp;hJight of the camp came
on Wednesday morning when Marshall University defensive coordinator Mickey Mathews was the
quest speaker.

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AUGUST 24. 1991

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REJOICING LIFE
ELEMENtARY CHRIStiAN SCHOOL
GRADES: Kindergarten thru 6th Grade
STATE RECIITERED

Me.U au nata mlnlal- naadard..
GUEST SPEAKER - Marshall University defensive coordinator Mickey Mathews (left) was the featured speaker for tbe 1991
Marauder rootbaU camp held last week. Mathews is shown talking
to Marauder head coach Mike Staggs. Staggs was an all·Southern
Conference JlDemaa
tbe Thuudering Herd in tbe early 1980s.

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-Sports briefs-Hockey
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St.
Louis Blues and Boston Bruins
solved their differences over right
wing Dave Christian, with Christian going 10 St LooiJ u compen·
sation for the Bruins' free-agent
signings of defen~eman Glen
Featherstone and left wing Dave
TbomlinJon. .
'
.
• Tbe agreement also gives the
Blues a thitd·iotmd draft ·pick in
"1992 and ~lthlr tbe Jlruins' sevCiidl·roood cboico in"1992 or sixthround choil:e in 1993. ·
llbe-Bltaes hid ~aidered the

How could a black street kid
relate to a white woman swimmer?
'"Spor!S has no color," Beamon
said. "We I~ at ability and char·

century •

·-::.

51; Ori11om, MonliUl, 47; DeShicldJ,
Mantrul, 41; Coleman, New York, 34;
1o1cb, Pllllburatl, JJ i Lankford , St.
U&gt;uil, 29: Bulll:t,Loo AnceJa. :16.
PITCHINO (9 dceisiont) - W•lk,
Pl............ 7-l, .771, 3.15; R. Mattinoz,
1.01 Anadca, 14-5, .737, 2.25; Olavine,
Adana., 1-4·5, .737, 2.25; Hun1 , San
Di-Jo, 12-S, .706, 3.15; Carperner, Sl.
LotU. 7-3, .700, 4.72; Avwy, Adanl.o,ll 5, .617, 3-'11; a.-. - --6-3, .667,
2.22: ·T -,I'II!JIIu.... '-1, .U.7,l.l3.

STRIXEOUTS - Cone. New Yorlt ,
t ..; Good..,, New Yom, 12&amp;: Otnino.

Marauder Football Camp, which was open for
ruture Marauders in grades 4-8.

·beVarona's speech gave Beamon Olympic aspirations

W. Cla.t:l, San Frenciaco. 19: McGriff,
San Dieao. 19: Mitchell, Sen Fn.ncitco,
19.
.
STOLEN BASES - Nixon, Atianu,

I

By The Associated Press
Many NFL teams arc awaiting
the return of the holdouu and the
hurting. The WashingtOn Redskins
are looking forward to the arrival
of a piece of plastic with suaps on
it
It is the specially made knee
brace that, if it filS, will allow the
Redskins to have defensive end
Charles Mann on the field for the
fust time this summer. He underwent arthroscopic surgery in February . .
"My understandinJ is if it"s a
special-made deal. it takes a few
days 10 get that," coach Joe Gibbs
said Tuesday. '"But that thing
ought to be here. I know they make
special ones where they take a east
(of the knee). and that takes about
eight days. That's my understanding of why it has taken awhile."
Mann may not have running

·

dac.lc, HouS\011, 6; Fcld•, S'an Francuc:o,
6; V.a n Slyb, Pltttburth, 6.
HOME RUNS - Johmon,. New Yorlr..
12; Matt William•, Sn Francisco, 21:
Oan~ Atlattu, 20: G. Bdl. Chicaao. 20:

t

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Wednesday, July 31, 1991
Page 6-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Homers by·O'Neill, ·Doran lift Reds to 6-5 win over Cubs
By JOE KAY
AP Sports Writer
CINCINNATI (AP)- How did
the Cincinnati Reds feel after
pulling off a rare, last-inning.victory?
Joyous? Confident? Cocky?
Try thankful.
Paul O'Neill and Bill Doran hit
solo homers in the lOth inning
Tuesday for a 6-5 victory over the
Chicago Cubs . It was only the
fourth victory in 19 games for the
defending World Series champions,
who saw their weaknesses on display again Tuesday !lVen though
the resuk was good.
They could have easily lost this
one, too, and lhey knew it.
"We fought hard all night and
were three outs away from losing
the game. I'm relieved," Doran
said. "Things just haven't worked
out for us. In the last few weeks, it
seems that even when we do good
things, they backfire:·
Things blew up in their faces
again Tuesday, but Doran's rare
homer allowed the Reds to win a
game of solo homers.
Cincinnati scored two-out runs
in four of the first five innings off
Greg Maddux, who allowed nine
hits over eight innings. Barry
Larkin led the offense with a pair
of doubles and two runs scored.
The Cubs caught up with four
solo homers - two by George
Bell, who now has 20, and consecutive homers in the seventh by Luis
Salazar and Shawon Dunston. All
were off Tom Browning, who has
given up 25 homers in 23 starts.
"l made four mistakes, and it
cost me four home runs," he said.
•'!let them back into the game.''
They seemed destined to take it
away. Maddux pitched out of a
bases-loaded jam in the eighth to
preserve the 4-4 tie, and Chuck
McElroy pitched out of a basesloaded, one-out threat in the ninth
to give the Reds that uneasy feeling
again.
The Cubs loaded the bases in
the lOth off Rob Dibble (I· I).
Chico Walker doubled off the
right-field wall and Ryne Sandberg
and Andre Dawson had one.out
singles to bring up Bell, who had
emerged from a 2-for-22 slump
with the two homers.
Bell hit the first pitch from Dibble to deep cen1er field for a sacrifice fly and 5-4 lead. And the Cubs
had one of their honest relievers on
the mound to protect it- McElroy
(5·1) had allowed a total of just
two earned runs in his last 15
appearances.
J.
He gave up thll many runs in
just 10 pitches in the lOth. O'Neill
pulled a frrst-pitch fastball over the
right-field wall to tie it, and Doran
hit a 3-1 fastball into the seats in
left field one out later for the game
winner.
" Paul's homer was a big
boost," Doran said. " They got that
one-run lead and it looks like it's
another long evening.''
The homers- O'Neill's 17th,
Doran's ftfth - came on fastballs.
McElroy had decided to challenge both hitters; both correctly
~:uessed the fastball would be commg.
"They found the pitches they
wanted. There's nothin~ you can
do about it," McElroy S81d.
His teammates comfoned him
while the Reds celebrated the end
of a seven-game home losing
streak.
"They said, 'Just keep your
head up. Don't worry. You've
pitched good all year,' " McElroy
said "The only thing l hate is we
battled hard to get that run (in the
lOth), and then that happens.
That's the only bad lhing."
The victory opened an important
homestand for the Reds, who trail
Los Angeles hy eight games in the
National League West. The homesland includes four games apiece
against the San Francisco Giants
and the Dodgers, a chance to eilher
make up ground or lose precious
time.
· ·
"Time isn't on our side,"
Doran said. "We've got to have a
good homestand to put ourselves in
position to make a comeback. It
would be difficult to finish the
homestand in the same position and
be very optimistic."
Elsewhere in the NL it was
Atlanta 10. Pittsburgh 3; San Francisco 10, Montreal 3; Philadelphia
2. San Diego 1; Houston 7, St.
Louis 5; and Los Angeles 3, New
York 1.
Braves 10, Pirates 3
There's something about the
Atlanta Braves ,that is bringing out
the worst in the Pittsburgh Pirates
this season.
Terry Pendleton and Lonnie
Smith keyed a 13-hit attack as the
Braves rallied for four runs .in the
sixth inning and six in the sevenlh
to pound Pittsburgh 10-3 Tuesday
night.

GPOD USED
WASHERS, .DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS ·&amp; ELEC. UNGES

COUNTY.
APPLIANCES

627 2rtl Awe., Gallpell•
.... "'·1699
HOUISi 8 A.M!·6 P.M.

The Braves hold an 8-3 series
edge on lhe fll11·place Pirates.
''We've playelf pretty gqod
against them," manager Bobby
Cox said. "We've gott~n decenl .
pitchinpnd hit a littlo•bit. 'Thftbl·s· •
no magtc."
•
The Pirates were coasting 3-0
behind Paul Miller, making his
major league debut, when theri$ht·
bander lost his control in the SJXth
inning, loading the bases with none
out on two walks and a single to
bring on reliever Bill Landrum.
Landrum ( 1-2) walked Ron
Gant to force in a run and Lonnie
Smith followed with an RBI single.
Jeff Blauser then hit a sacrifice fly
before Brian Hunrer sin~~:led for the
fourth run of the inning.
"I was going alright until the
last inning," Miller said. "I just
choked in the sixth and it hiut us."

The Braves blew it open in the
seventh off Landrum, getting six
hits and scoring six runs, including
a bunt single by Otis Nixon, who
extended his hitting streak to 19
games. · . • · ' ·
Smith and Hunter each had RBI
hits in the two big innings, while
Pendleton had a walk and RBI single and scored twice.
Nixon stole his league-leading
58th base of the season in the seventh.
Jeff Parren (1-2) got the victory
with one scoreless inning of relief.
Ken Merker picked up his sixth
save with lhree scoreless innings.
Giants 10, Expos 3
Will Clark and Matt Williams
each homered twice off Ron Darling (5·8).
.
There were s1x homers among
the 19 hits in the game, including

two by the ExP.Os' Ivan Calderon.
Trevor Wilson (7 -9) survived
the two homers! by Calderon to get
the victory. He allo~ed five hits
and three runs in s~ven innings.
Francisco Oliveras anil · Bryan
Hickerson finished.
Dlldgen 3, Mets 1
Ramon Ma,rtinez pitched a sixhitter for his 14th victory, retiring
20 of the fina121 batters.
Maninez ( 14-6) walked one and
struck out six.
Ka1 Daniels homered on a 3-2
pitch from Pete Schourek (2-1)
with two on and two out in th e
first.
Schourek pitched six innings,
giving up four hits while walking
two and striking out eight. Alllhree
runs were unearned.
Astros 7, Cardinals 5
Mark Davidson. hit a two-run

homer in the eighth inning.
Casey Candaele walked and
scored on Davidson 's second
homer of the season on a 2- 1 pitch
from Cris Carpenter (7-3). Al

Osuna (6-3) got the victory with
two innings of relief.
Felix Jose's two-run homer in
the eighth inning, St. Louis' third
of the game. tied the score 5-5 with
two out.

Meigs sports briefs____,
Golf tourney slated for Thursday
The American Cancer Society's Meigs County unit will sponsor
a golf tournament at the newly remodeled Meigs County Golf
Course on Thursday, Aug. I . All area golfers are invited to participate and the tournament is open to the public.
The entry fee will $50 for non-members and $42 for members.
In addition to cash and merchandise prizes. the ftrstlhree teams
win the opportunity to play in the Ohio state finals at Firestone
Country Club in Akron. All proceeds will go the Meigs County
ACS unit.
For further information, caU the Meigs County ACS unit or the
Meigs County Golf Course.

Youth football sign up dates posted
The Big Bend Youth Football League will have signups for foot- ~
ball players and cheerleaders on Saturday, Aug. 3 and Aug. 10 from
10 a.m. until noon at Pleaser's Restaurant in Pomeroy.
You must be in grades 5 or 6 and you cannot be 13 prior to Sept.
I, 1991. You must bring a copy of each child's birth certifica te.
More information can be obtained at the sign-ups.

Coaches' clinic set for Friday
A Southeast Ohio District Coaches Association clinic will be
held in the Gallia Academy High School gym on Friday, Aug. 2,
from 9 a.m. until noon .
All area basketball coaches are invited to participate.
Following the clinic, a golf outing will be held at Cliffside Golf
Course.
For more information, contact GAHS boys· mentor Jim Osborne
at446-9284.

Volleyball open gym announced
Open gym for volleyball wiU be held at Meigs High School from
Monday, Aug. 5 to Thursday Aug. 8 from 9:30 to 11 a.m. Practice
will begin on Friday, Aug. 9. All girls in grades 9-12 interested in
playing are encouraged to anend.

~
'

·,"._·-

Sports medicine update
scheduled for August 8

\;

' ". '

DORAN SCORES - The Reds' Bill Doran
(19) slides home to score past Chicago Cubs

catcher Rick Wilkins in the second inning of

The Spons Clinic of Lancaster-Fairfield Communtty Hospital
wiU be having a three-hour spons medicine update at Meigs High
School on Thursday. Aug. 8 from 5:45 to 9 p.m.
There will be a $2 registration fee and lhe update will include
on-the-field assessment of athletic injuries, acute care of athletic
injuries, injury to the shoulder, care and rehabilitation of shoulder
injuries and a taping lab.

..

Tuesday night's game in Cincinnati, which the
Reds won 6-5 in 10 innings. Doran got home on
a sin&amp;le by Jeff Reed. (AP)

~PONDEROSI\---..

8~

Americas Steakhouse.'·

Grand Buffet™
Taco Bar

Pasta Bar
Sundae Bar

$4 99(Somuch,
·
•

so good, for
so little.)

Fresh salad. fresh fruit, hot appetizers.
pastas, make-your-own tacos, sundles
and more. A!. much as you want

VOLLEYBALL CAMP CONCLUDEDThere were 23 campers taking part in this year's
1991 Meigs Marauder VolleybaU Camp, which
· was open to girls in grades 7·12 and was con·

dueled by Marauder bead coach Rick Ash,
reserve coach Dale Harrison, junior high coach
Rick Edwards and former Marauder star Amy
Wagner.

Meigs Marauder Volleyball Camp concluded
The 1991 Meigs Marauder Vol·
leyball Camp was held recently
with 23 girls taking part. Marauder
head coach Rick Ash was in charge
of the camp with help from reserve
coach Dale Harrison, junior high
coach Rick Edwards and former
Marauder star Amy Wagner.
Competetion 'winners in the seventh-grade division were: Serving
Overhand - Jenny Clifford; Serving Overhand - Heather McClain;
Target Passing - Amanda Mil·

hoan; Floor Spike - Erin McClure's in Middleport, Meigs
Krawsczyn; Third Hit - Amber Carpet Center, Dairy Valley and
Thomas; and Obstacle Course Big Wheel.
Martie Holter.
In grades 8- 12, the winners
were: Serving Overhand and Target
Serving - Cynthia Cotterill. Tar·
get Passing - Bobbi Butcher,
Floor Spike - Billi Butcher,
Serve/Receive - Lee Henderson
and Obstacle Course - Yevette
Young.
Camp sponsors were Pleaser' s,
McDonalds, Pizza Hut, Subway.

Special of the Week!

FISH TAIL

•1.:5)1

2·11x14s
4· 5 x 71

4 • Bx10s
32• WALLETS

16 ·GIANT WALLETS
.,,

'

I

I

FREE

........,

WITH FRIES•••• ~'2.24

iUT1'0NS AIID lOWS

..

100 L .... liMit,

.

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

.;,, n.. lnd of the , ......, ................
~;OY,o•o
P&amp;992·2~\

.,..., ......, 2.
2,.•••

u,...

Ptrtrllts Dlllwt,..

'". .,, ...... 27,
2p.•.tDIJ1••

GALLIPOLIS
215 Upper River Rd.- Rt. 7
(across from tht airport)

�I
Page ~The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

Wednesday, July 31, 199~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SUNSHINE

DOG
FOOD

LET VAUG·HAN'S

HELP YOU

10 LB.

STORE HOLIKS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

$149

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH

ZESTA
CRACKERS

\\

PRICES EFFECTIVE JULY 28 THRU AUGUST ~ 1991

POUND

YOUR FOOD DOLLARS

99&lt;
'

, IM TilEt~gffll

"~

ROYAL CROWN
COLA
PRODUCTS

f

CHICKEN

,

ro ,8

24 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

WHI'iE

SCJ

Lea ·Quarters ....~ •• 49&lt;
CHIClt'EN
$
Breasts ••.••.....•• ~~. 139 $499
PORK
$
TENDER
Spare Ribs •••••••.~. 179
LEAF
LO~GHORN
$
TEA BAGS
9
Colby Cheese...:.. 18 ·

29

$

USDA CHOICE BEEF BOTTOM

Ribe e Steak ••••L!. 499
Round Steak •••.L!. 249
CORN KING BONELESS
$
189
Hams ••••••••••••••••••

· G~R.OUND,~ IE EF-

100 COUNT

$199
MAXWELL HOUSE

MASTER
BLEND
oz .
34.5

LB

1. c.

$

ICELANDIC BREADED

$349

Perch Fillets •.•••~. 159

LB.

R.C.
PRODUCTS

10 LBS. OR MORE

2 LITER

89&lt;

FREESTONE

Peaches ........... ~~ •• 4 9 &lt; CHATEAU
FLAVORITE
BLEACH
2°/o Milk ••••••••••:!'o$169
GALLON

DEW FRESH

Margarine .......:t-99&lt; 69&lt;
KEMP
MR. BEE
$299
----Potato Chips.~~·-·:.69&lt; Ice Cream •.....•.~~~.
VAN CAMP'S
BANQUET
STOKELY
Tomato Juice .:::;.69&lt; TV Dinners ....·:·~~~•• 99&lt; PORK &amp;
5QT.

Middle_port, Ohio

9~2·34t1
Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.
and Pearl St.

l

•
A :. I" " ( OM·~,'(I .1'0 ~/J!l'tJ lwDt&gt;•n .JrtoPI
o'lp,,ng t'le CJe!-tcl .~t&gt;r.·~. Q.,J 1, :,

ro ofc~ lo ~,. IH'CIJil ol our C(J(flm ~ '~t
It ,....,rl'tin~l ... 4fflfl~fAI'f
~

o •. .................._.

UN MIT~D DOUBLE COUPONS EVERYDAY
UP TO 50¢ • SEE STORE FOR DETAILS
STORE HOURS: DAILY6 am-12 ,;idnight • Sunday a.am-10 pm

THURSDAY IS
SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY
. .5% QISCOUNT ON
ALL PURCHASES
. (Excluding C.lgarettes}

MUST PROVIDE.GOLDEN t:IUCKEYE ·
CARD OR DRIVERS LICENSE

.••..............
.
'''COUPON'.··'··

••

e •

I

,

e

I

I

I

I

VELVET

I

I

•

•

: PAPER TOWELS

:

~Rou

~

:

0

o

3/Sl

Good Only At l'owlll's Sup• Valu
Good July 21 thru Aog. 3, 1991
limit 3 Ptr Custom•

BEANS

••

:
•
•

KOOL AID

99(
:
12 I
.

2 qt. unswNt111td
:

••

,

"P-17 .096-I·GNUl

.u.
.26 oz.

Good Only At Powtlt's Sup• Valu
God July 21 tlvu Aug. 3, 1991
limit 12 Ptr Custom•

•

16 OZ. CANS

3/Sl

·~··· ·················
•I

I

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 31, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..
I

Notice of Application to
The Public Util~ies Commission of Ohio
For an Increase in Electric Rates
To whom it may concern:

Load Managemeni Clem!

N/A

1.9592c

Per Month:

Present

Availability:

Cuslomer cnarve

N/A

All KWH On-peak

N/A

13.9592e per KWH

AN KWH Off-peak

N/A

t.1289C per KWH

$7.50

Present
Per Month:

The following clause. is included under the Billing and Bills Payable Section of
the Temns and Conditions of Service:

~

Customer Charge

If the Consumer fails to pay !n full any final bill for service rendered and said
Consumer rece~v~s like seMce at another location, the Company may
transfer the unp~d bala~ce or the final bill to the service account for any such
other locatiOn. L1ke ~rv1ce refers to an end use within the following broad
categones: residential, commercial, or industrial. Such amount shall be
designated as a pa;St-due aii)Ount o.n the account at such location and subject
to collec'!On and ~1sconnect1on action In accordance with Chapter 4901 :1-18
of th~ Oh1o Admm.lstranve Code and the Company's filed tariffs. terms and
condtt1ons of seMce. provided that such transfer of a final bill shall not be
used to disconnect service to a residential consumer who is not responsible
for such bill.
The .following clause is included under the Temporary and Special Service
sect1on of the Temns and Conditions of Service:

$3.50

Low Price

Intermediate Price

Proposed .,

s

s

Reconnection Charge
Normal Business Hours
Reconnect al Meier
Reconnect al Pole
Remove and Reset Meier
Install locking DeVice

3.50

8.00
50.00
17.00
17.00

ON Shift
Reconnect at Meter
Reconnect at Pole

55.00
200.00

1.0372C

105.00
230.00

Non-credit disconnect
Non-credit reconnect

N/A
N/A

30.00
30.00

3.3417C

5.996«

5.1860c 7.8751C per KWH

10.6935C

19.1886c

16.5952i 25.2003i per KWH

16.04034

28.782911

24.8928c

N/A

25.00 plus additional
costs incurred

Customer Charge

All Addrtionat KWH

I

563~

Winter

Summer

$4.75

$4.75

7.7737e

7.n37CperKWH

UOOOc 5 6356C

2.8366t 7.n37t per KWH

Storage Water Heating KWH 1.7000c 1.7000c

1.1289C 1.1289C per KWH

SMAll USE- LOAO MANAGEMENT -SCHEDULE R-R-1
Present

Proposed

Per Month:
Customer Charge

$3.50

$3.50

Fim400KWH'

7.6254C

700 KWH

4.8714C

4 8714C

Next 100 KWH

t8714c

N/A

Over 800 KWH

1 7000C

Storage Waler Heating KWH N/ A

4.0300C

Minimum Charge

...llliolaL

.5ummat

$4.75

$4.75

N/A

Rates available to ciJS!ome~ who
use energy slorage ~ with
time dlfferentialed load
characteristics approved by the
Cllmpany, such as electric thermal
slorage space heating and/or
COOling systems and water heaters
which consume electrical energy
ooly during off-peak hou~. and
slore energy for use during
on-peak hou~ .

N/A

6.7880C

NIA per KWH

N/A

2.8366c

N/A per KWH

N/A

1128!1C 1.1289C per KWH

Per MOnlh:
Cuslomer Charge

$5.50

·$5.50

$7.50

6 437!1C

6.437!1C

0.~

Qualifying GS-1

$4.10

5.5000C

5.5406c per KWH

Proposed

I

For al KWH used durino
the off-peak billng perlilel

N/A

1.03neJKWH

General Service Serondary and
Primary with low load lactor and
maximum demands or 10.KW or
greater
Secondary

N/A

Presenl

Proposed

$24,500.00

$36,339.00

Over:nxiKVAo!
Maximum Demand

S3R54/KVA

$6.121/KVA

Slandard
Siandard
Slandard
Slandanl
Slandanl

$121 .20

NIA per~

$ 6.15

6.95
9.00
9.60'
11.85

s 7.40

$ 7.43
8.40
10.85
1160'
14.28

11.15
13.00

Posl Top
Post Top

100
150

11 .40
12.20

15.50
16.55

Cut·Off
Cut-11ff
Cut·Off

100
250
400

9.53
11.85
11 .85

17.60

The descendants of William
Attending were Leah and Ethel
Janey Matlack and Lydia E. Turban Arbaugh, Tuppers Plains; Charles
Mauack and James and Mary Jane and Louise Brooks , Mansfield;
Chaney_ Osborne, Long Bottom and Howard and Sharon Matlack,
Reedsville,.held their annual family Slewart; Lola Mauack Taylor, Lanreunion at the Lancaster Fair- casler; William Mauack, Pomeroy;
grounds shelter house recently. The .Marion Kim, Marietta; Virginia
blessing was given by Beity Mat- Kim Campbell, Guysville; Virgil
lack Roush . A picnic dinner was and Betty Matlack Roush, Chester;
Sara Kim, Marietta; Iretta Arbaugh
served.

The Sutton Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the Syracuse Municipal Building.

Posl Top

Excess KVA

$1 .32/KVA

N/A

N/A

Off-peak Excess Demand

$2.15/KW

$.311/KW

$.301/KW

$564.00

N/A

1.t833c/KWH

N/A

N/A

Availabiity:

N/A

Standard
Standard

Greater lhan 100 KW: Customer
Charge i' Product o! lhe
Oemand Charge and minimum
monthly billing demand +
Applicable Ride~
Customer Charge+ 13C/KWH
+ Applicable Ride~

Rales available lo custome~ who use
energy storage devices with time
!jfferentialed load characleristics
approved by lhe Cllmpany, such as
electnc thermal storage space heating
and/or cooling systems and water
heale~ which consume electrical
energy only during off.peak hou~.
and store energy for use during onpeak hou~ .
$30.10

On-peak

N!A

11 .0511C/KWH

Off-peak

N/A

1.20884/KWH

N/A

s 8.15
1350
17.65

11 .00

General service secondary with MaxImum dernancls between 10 KW and
100 KW. (limited to first 1CXXl

$30.10

100
175
400
175

5.70"
6.13
9.75

7.75'
8.30"
13.25"

10.20

13.as· ·

250
400

11.15
13.00

For each additional wood pole
For each aluminum pole
For each fiberQiass pole
For each additional150 foot 0/H span
For mounting other than standard bracket
Bfoot mastarm
12 foot mastarm
16 foot mastarm
20 foot mastarm
For each additional riser pole connection
For each underground w1re lateral (50 foot)

14.35
17.65

Present

ProPOSed

$ 1.85
N/A
19.91-22.64
.60

$ 2.50
13.90
20.65
.80

11.0511CikwH

N/A

1.2086c/KWH

N/A

CIJS!omer Charge

N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
.86

1.15
1.55
2.70
4.05
1.20

13.90
20.65
.80

.50
.85
1.15
2.00
N/A
.90

N/A

4.10

Energy Charge:

N/A

4.302WKWH

Per Month:

Presenl

Proposed

Service Charge

$750 00

$750.00

$2.6870/KW

$3.801/KVA

Excess KVA Demand Charge

$.71/KVA

N/A

For all energy consumed

.604t/KWH

1.0502C/KWH

COGENERATION AND/OR SMAll POWER PRODUCTION SERVICE - SCHEDULE COGEN/SPP

Meter Charge:
Option 2(a)
Primary Service or
Secondary Service
Over 200 Amps

Rate per lamp ~er Month
Present
roposed

High Pressure Sodium (HPS)
100
150
200
250
400

$ 570
6.45
8.25
9.15"
10.35

Cut-oN
Cut-off
Cut-off

100
250
400

22.40(A!
24.35(A
24.35(A

Secondary Service
of 200 Amps or Less

$ 7.77
8.80
11.32
12.50" .
14.10

11.~8!
17.8
8
22.75 8

5.05'
5.65
9.15

The River Valley Herbalists will
meet at the home of Glenna Tucker, Millwood, W.Va•• on Tuesday,
Aug. 6, at 7 p.m.

Option 3(b)
Primary Service or
Secondary Service
Over 200 Amps Using
Metering Current leads

!

'No new installations after January 1, 1980
'*No new installations after October 1, 1982
• • *No new Installations pending approval of proposed tariffs

·,

N/A

N/A

38.42

N/A

N/A

24.35

42.70

N/A

N/A

D.03

12.31

N/A

N/A

Secondary Service of
200 Amps or Less Using
Metering Current Leads 27.39

21.21

N/A

N/A

Secondary Serviu of
200 Amps or less Using
Totalized OUtput Leads

I

$14.65

27.01

2011-

8 Includes the cost of the lumlnaire fixture'onty

$11 .32

N/A

Mltlr'o~ig Cuirent Leads

13.25** .

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
an outdoor gospel sing at the Meigs
Junior High Football Stadium on
Wednesday from 7:30-9:30 p.m.
sponsored by the Middleport Ministerial Association. Featured
groups include the Clark Family
from Gallia County and Destiny
from Kentucky Christian College.
The public is invited. In case of
rain the event will be held in the
auditorium.
THURSDAY
RACINE - The Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. for installation of officers. Guests will be
Mick Williams, representing the
Veterans Service Office, and Jason
Amott, Buckeye Boys State Representative. Refreshmenls will be
served after the meeting.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Group of AA and At -Anon will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church. Call
992-5763 for infonnation.
POMEROY - Meigs County
PERI Group will meet Thursday at
I p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center. All members are urged to
anend.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter No. 172 Order of the Easlem Star, Middleport, will have its
regular meeting Thursday at 7:30
p.m. Members are to bring a sack

6.37

19.50

N/A

N/A

lunch for refreshments. Officers
wear street dresses.
RACINE - Southern Local
Schools Kindergarten will hold a
meeting on Aug. I for the parents
of students entering the kinder~arten program this fall. The meetmg will be held in Southern High
School cafeteria at 7 p.m. If any
student has not been registered for
kindergarten this fall, parents must
bring a birth certificate, irnmunizalion record and social securily
number.
POMEROY - The next meeting
of the Mei£s County Law Enforcement Explorers Post will be held
Thursday at I p.m. at the Meigs
County Court House on the third
floor.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Township Trustees will meet Fri day at 6:30p.m. at the fire house in
Rutland ins lead of Thursday at regularly scheduled.
LONG BOITOM - There will
be a hymn sing at the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom on
Friday at 7:30 p.m. featuring local
talent. Pastor Steve Reed invites
the public. Refreshments will be
served.
RACINE - There will be a meeting at Southern High School on
Friday at 10:30 a.m. for aU girls in
grades 7-12 in the disurict who will
be trying out for volleyball this fall.
SATURDAY
BASHAN - Denver Hill, Foster,
W.Va., will be the guest speaker at
the Red Brush Church of Chris! on
Bashan Road on Saturday at 7:30
p.m. and Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6
p.m. The public is invited to attend.
TIJPPERS PLAINS - Car wash
at the Tuppers Plains Gulf S1ation
on Sarurday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Cost is free. Proceeds 10 benefit the
Eastern Varsity Basketball Pro gram.
HARRISONVll..LE - There will
be a chicken barbecue at the Scipio
Volunteer Fire Department on Sat-

urday from II a.m. to 5 p.m. Cost
is $4 for adults and $2 for children
and includes chicken , col e slaw ,
roll, baked beans. There will al so
be homemade ice cream. Tracwr
pull al 6 p.m. wilh weigh-in at 5
p.m.
RUTLAND - Th ere will be a
men ' s softball tournament a1 the
Rutland Ballfield on Saturday and
Sunday sponsored by the Locomotion Teen Center. Cost is $60 plus
two balls. Slow pitch. Call John
Harrison, 992-754(), Bob Johnson ,
992-6890 or Bob Sisson, 742-2 187
for information.
REEDSVILLE - The sec ond
annual Cundiff family reunion will
be held Saturday at Forked Run
State Park . All relalives and
descendams of the late John R.
Cundiff are welcome. Bring a pic nic lunch. Call 742-2573 for information.
DORCAS · Th ere will be a
square dance at the home of Ronnie
and Leanna Beegle in Dorcas on
Saturday beginning at 8 p.m. All
Beegle family members and friends
are welcome.
POMEROY - Vacation Bible
School fair will be held at the First
Southern Baptist Church on Saturday from 1-3 p.m. There will be
games and aclivilies for all ages.
The public is invited.
SALEM CENTER · Star
Grange will meet Saturday at 8
p.m. at the grange hall on County
Road I ncar Salem Center. Election
of officers will be held and all
members arc urged to attend. A
potluck supper will follow th e
m eetin~.

DOWNING CHILD1
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

111 S.OIId St., POIIIIfOy

YOUI INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MDGSCOUNTY
SliCE 1R68

If the rate increase granted is phased-in by the Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio in Case No. 91 -418-El-AIR. the Monthly Rate in all applicable
schedules shall be multiplied by the following factors:
24.73

36.14

N/A

N/A

Secondary Service of
200 Amps or less Using
Metering Currenlleads 43.08

44.98

N/A

N/A

Secondary Service of
200 Amps or less Using
Totali2ed Output Leads 22.06

For the billing period starting January 1, 1993 and ending
December 31, 1993
0.9044

43.27

N/A

N/A

For the billing period starting January 1, 1994 and ending
December 31, 1994
0.9820

COGENERATION AND/OR SMALL POWER PROOUCTION SERVICE SCHEDULE COGEN/SPP (continued)
Proposed

Single
Phase

Polyphase

Single
Phase

Polyphase

Standard

N/A

N/A

$ 8.40

$15.85

TOO

N/A

N/A

21 .25

28.65

Options 2 and 3:

Customer Charge

Present

Proposed

$5.00

N/A

Energy Credit:
Standard

141t/KWH

1.58t/KWH

On-peak
ON-peak

1.68t/KWH
1.41t/KWH

1.73t/KWH
141t/KWH

$1.50/KW

$ .90/KW

$3 00/KW
$1 .50/KW

$2.tO/KW
N/A

On.peak
Off-peak

For the billing period starting January 1, 1992 and ending
December 31, 1992
0.8318

For the billing period starting January 1, 1995 and ending
December 31, 2001
10651

SPECIAL PROVISIONS APPLICABLE UNDER SPECIFIED CONDITIONS TO SPECIFIED
SCHEDULES- SUPPLEMENT NO. 14 AND OPTIONAL UNMETERED COMMERCIAL
SERVICE SCHEDULE FOR SMALL FIXED LOADS- SUPPLEMENT NO. 16
The proposed schedules have incorporated applicable portions of Supplement No.
14 and Supplemenl No. 16, lhereby eliminating the present schedule supplements.
CHURCH AND SCHOOL SERVICE - OPTION - SUPPLEMENT NO. 18

18.92

Option 3(a)
Prtinary SeMel or
liiC!IIIdiiY Slrllce
Ovtr
Uling

7.10"

Procosed
Single
Phase Polyphase

8.65

Secondary Service
ot 200 Amps or Less

s.os···

Present
Single
Phase Polyphase

N/A

Option 2(b)
Primary Service or
Secondary Service
Over 200 Amps

Mercury Vapor
100
175
400

Herbalists to meet

Capacity Credit:
Standard

The annual anachmenl charge for CATV and all others increased from $2.34 to
$3.50 per anachmenl per pole per year.

.65
1.15
1.55
2.70
4.05
1.20

Standard
Standard
Standard
Standard
Standard

release, bow hunters womens fin gers, bowhunters women release,
junior women bowhunters recurve
male, recurve female, a'nd cubs
male and female.
Food, door prizes and novelty
shoots will be featured throughout
the day. The winner of a six-day
bear hunt will also be announced.
For more information call 9854461.

POMEROY - The Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the home
of clerk, Sarah Gibbs. Ball Run
Road.

Presenl

POLE ATTACHMENT TARIFF

AI Includes the cost of the luminaire fixture pole and base

N/A

$ 1.35

INTERRUPTIBLE POWER- SCHEDULE 1-P

STREET LIGHTING SERVICE (Proposed Schedule SL includes presenl SL·1 and SL-2)

. Standard
Standard
Slandard

N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A

Cuslomer Charge:

Per Monlh

Nominal lamp
Wattage

Parker, Coal Grove; Tyler Scott
and Josh Collins, Coal Grove; John
and Susan Bailey, Ryan and J.J.,
Belleville, Ky.; Dave and Mary Jo
Barringer, Pomeroy ; Joe and
Yvonne Barkie, )'ldgwood, Ky .;
Jeff and Marie Roush, Chester;
Lily Arbaugh Schultz, Columbus;
and Frank Peterson, Columbus.

In the event a customer owns and maintains
their own street lighting system and the
Company lurnishes eleclric energy, only the
following charges apply:

For all KW/KVA of Billing Demand

Type ot Lamp

Proposed

Present

22.45

OTHER EQUIPMENT CHARGES PER MONTH

Propose!!

customers applying for service under
this schedule)

N/A

Cards or letlers may be sent to
Ellajane McDaniel, a patient at
Grant Medical Center, at Room
909. Grant Medical Center, 111
South Grant Avenue, Columbus,
43215.

For each dedicated wood pole
For each aluminum pole
for each fiberQiass pole
For each additl0nal150' 0/H span
For mounting other than standard brackel
12 toot mastarm
16 toot mastarm
20 toot mastarm
For each pole riser connection
for each underground wire lateral (50 fool)

'No new installatklns after October 1, 1982
••No new installatklns pending approval o1 proposed tariffs

100 KW and less: Customer
Charge

N/A

Present

CaTid shower

OTHER EQUIPMENT CHARGES PER MONTH

M&amp;tal Haljdp

5.0183c/KWH 4.8627e/KWH

Product of the Applicable
Oemand Cl!arge and Max•mumOemand

Maximum Charge:

compele free of charge.
Medallions will be awarded to
the top three shooters in all classes.
Classes include I.B.O. mens fmgers, I.B.O . mens release,
bowhunters
mens
fingers,
bowhunters mens release, junior
men bowhunters, peewee. I.B.O.
womens fingers, I.B.O. womens

STREET LIGHTING SERVICE (continued)

Mercurv Vaoor

$3.058/KW

Off-peak

100
150
200
250
400

Elizabeth VesciHca, Buster Weaver and Oscar
Casto. Back, Roscoe Calhoun, Mark Ward, Barbara Vickers, Robert :Vickers, AnDBbelle Hudnall, Irene Weaver, Cherrie West, Beverly Pickens, Clill'ord West, Lenora West, Andrea West,
Mike VuciUda, Velma and Alva Luckadoo, Nellie Casto, Ralph Sayre, BUI Ward, Etta Richardson.

Matlack descendants hold reunion

Rale per lamp per Mon!h
Nomin~ lamp
Presem .
Prooosed
Tvoe or Lamp .IUllm Luminajre
flood!ght
Lymjnaire
Flaodliaht

$4.026/KW

On-peak

HONORED - The West Family of the New
Haven United Methodist Church was honored
recently with a dinner at Dales Restaurant In
Gallipolis by members and friends or New
Haven. The family now is serving in Westore at
that United Methodist Church. Pictured, J.r;
are, front, Alice Calhoun, Survilla Gilliand,
Leota Dingy, Ruth Pickens, Venus Ward,
Dorothy Roush, Patrick West, Mary HolTman,

The Chester Bowhunters and
Archery Club will hosl a 30 target
full body McKenzie Shoot on Sunday at the club in Chester.
Registration time IS 9 a.m. 10 3
p.m. with all proceeds 10 be donated to the Bowhunters Defense
Fund. Registration fee is $5 for
•. participants age 17 and up, $5 for
Juniors age 13-16, S4 for cubs age
9-12, and peewee participants may

PRIVATE AREA LIGHTING (Proposed Schedule Al includes presenl schedules Al-1and Al-21

Primary

$9.50

N/A

per KWH

ProPOSed

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School will be held at the New Life
Covenant Chester Church of God
on Riebel Road Monday through
Friday from 7-9 p.m. nightly for
ages 3-18.

McKert'zie Shoot slated Sunday Aug. 4

Other schedules have been modified and increase as follows:

GENERAl SERVICE TIME-OF-DAY - SCHEDULE GS-2 TOO

I

8.4810C/KWH

N/A

Availability

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

High Pressure
Sodium !HPSl

General Service Secondary

All KW

.__AII_KWH_Off_-peak
_ _ _ _ _ _ _2_
.558e
_____NI_A_oer_KWH
...._ _ _ _ _:::M:Inl:m~:m
u Charge:

l

N/A

N/A

Energy Charge:

7.035c

for ai KWH used during
lhe on-peak biijno perlilel

N/A

Per Month:

All KWH On-peak

$114.35

$ 10.0029/KW

Customer Charge

$8.00

N/A

Arst:nxiKVAor
less ot Maximum
Demand

commercial purposes consistinG of small fixed loads
o110l&lt;W or less.

Proposed

Over 50 KW

RESIDENTIAL LOAD MANAGEMENt TIME Of MY- SCHEDULE RS-LM-TOO

Cuslomer Charve

Available to custome~ who use
energy storage devices with
time differentiated lOad
characteristics approved by the
Cllmpany, such as electric
thermal slorage space heating
and/or cooling systems and
water heate~ which consume
electrical energy ooly during
off-peak hours and store energy
lor use during on-peak hours.

cuslome~

N/A

Per Month:
prnenl

Sum ol the Customer Charge -t13C/KWH -t- Applicable Ride~

Demand Charge:

who use the service lor

Presenl

Arst 50 KW

1.12891 1.1289c per KWH

1.176c

N/A

Customer Charge

Siandard
Standard
Standard

Minimum Charge:

Community calendar

Trustees to meet

Cllrnmercial service
for small fixed
electric loads served
under Supplement
No. 16.

CIJS!omer Charge

••

Sum of the Customer Charge,
product of the demand charge
and lhe minimum monthly
billing demand -t- Applicable
Riders

N/A

Per Month:

$15.t5

Per Month:

N/A

Comervatlon and load
Mwgement Credit

Product of lhe Applicable
Oemand and the
Maximum Demand

GENERAL SERVICE- LARGE- SCHEDULE GS-4

GENERAL SERVICE - SCHEDULE GS-2

N/A

1.1289C per KWH

1.5506c/KWH

1.05021/KWH

Energy Charge:

t.n6c

1.60113C/KWH

.86c/KWH

187591 3 3445c per KWH

All KWH Off-peak

.90C/KWH

Energy Charge:

2.0800C

13.969U per KWH

$1 .278/KW

1.4328C per KWH

1000C

7.7884

$1.321/KW

N/A

Customer Charge

All KWH On-peak

$1 .47/I(W

Off-peak

2.8276c 7.3274C per KWH

$7.50

Off-peak Excess Demand

$1.459/KVA

5.6356c

$5.50

$1.030/KVA

$.90/KVA

1.700C

Customer Charge

$1 .065/KVA

Off-peak Excess Oemand

8.3701W 8.37061 per KWH

RESIDENTIAL ENERGY STORAGE - SCHEDULE AS-ES

'

$1 .03/KVA

16.4971e per KWH

Energy Charge:

Present

ExC1!SS KVA

N/A

$7.50

Per Month:

$12.!194/KW

On-peak

6.7880C 6.7880c per KWH

Proposed
Winter
Summer

Storage Waler Healing KWH

$14.300/KW

Per Mont11:

$6.80

$6.00 per KW in
excess of 6 KW
Oplionalload Management Provision:

Energy Charge:

Presenl
Winter Summer

All Additional KWH

N/A

Availability:

5.6716C per KWH

OPTIONAL DEMAND RATE- SCHEDULE RlM

150 KWH per KW in
excess ol 5KW
Biling Oemand

N/A

OptiOnal load Management rUIIB or Cay:

8.6717C per KWH

Optional load Management ProviSion:

Firsl 750 KWH

N/A

N/A

'Plus 140 KWH per
KW in exC1!SS o! 6KW
maximum demand
N/A

Nl Additional KWH

Energy Charge.
fi~l

$8.7842/KW

Minimum Charge:

" Demand Charge:
563~

N/A

Energy Charue:

$680

Proposed

Energy Charge:
First 800 KWH

N/A

Maximum Charge:

$7.00

RESIDENTIAL SERVICE -SCHEDULE R-R

$3.50

$725.00

50 KW

Energy Charge:

Availability:

$3.50

$278.9()

Per Month:

The residential rates have been modified and increased as follows:

Customer Charge

$125.15

All KW

per KWH

Maximum Demand less than 10 KW

Energy Charge:

Tampering/Investigation

Summer

37.~

Secondary General Service

Cuslomer Charge

28.00

Winler

N/A

OptiOnal Unmetered Service Provision:

N/A

Per Month:

Primary

Fi~t

Energy Charge:

Meter test charge

Present

Secondary

Wednesday, July 31, 1991
Page-11

Oemand Charge:

1.5750C per KWH

Proposed

Availability
70.00
250.00

$4.75

Present

Cuslomer Charge

80.00
180.00

Sunday
Reconnect at Meter
Reconnect at Pole

$475

1.1993f

8.00

11.30
60.00
28.00
38.00

summer

.66834

The following Miscellaneous Charges have been modified and increased as follows:
Present

.rll!!aL.

The General SeNice rates have been modfied and Increased as follows:

Availability:

All rate schedules are system-wide.

General Service Serondary
and Primary with high klid
tactor with maximum
demands greater lhan 50
KW

Over 50 KW

Fi~t 1000~

In t~e Guarantee of Revenue Section of the Rural Line Extension Plan,
Oefinrt1ons, Rules and Regulations, the monthly payment charged to the
customer for Rural line EXtension has been increased from one to two
percent of the total "Construction Cost" of the line extension. Also, the
m1mmum monthly charge has been increased from one to two percent of the
" Construction Cost. "

Strmrner
$3.50

Energy Charve:

Availability

General Serv~e Primary

Customer Charue

Proposed

GENERAL SERVICE • SMALL- SCHEDULE GS-1

The Company shall not be required to construct general distribution tines
undergroun~ unless the cost of such special construction for general
d1stnbu'!On l!nes and/or the cost of any change of existing overhead general
dJstnbut1on lines to underpround which is required or specified by a
mumc1pality or other ,PUblic authority (to the extent that such cost exceeds
the cost of ~onst~ction of !he Company's standard lacil~ies) shall be paid for
by tl)at mumc1paltty or public authority. The "cost of any chan~e" as used
here1n. shall .~ the cost to the Company of such change. The cost of special
construction as used herein, shall be the actual cost to the Company in
excess of the cost of standard construction. When a change is to be based on
the excess cost, the Company and municipaley or other public authority shall
negotiate the amount thereof.

Proposed

Per Monlh:

RESIDENTIAL VARIABLE SPOT PRICE - SCHEDULE RVSP
The substance of the rate revisions proposed in the Application filed on April
2, 1991, 1s as follows:

Present

PrOPOsed

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

RESIDENTIAL TIME Of MY- SCHEDULE AS-TOO

Pursuant to the requirements of Section 4909:19 of the Revised Code of Ohio
the Colu'!lbus Southern P~wer .~mpany h~re~y gives notice that on April 2, •
1991, 11 filed witll the Public Utilities CommiSSIOn of Ohio, an Application for
authonty to amend and Increase ~s rate schedules which are under the
IUnsdlction of the PubliC Utilities Commission of Ohio.

Colleclion trip charge

•

GENERAL SERVICE - SCHEDULE GS-3

Presently the Supplement No. 18 Maximum Oemand calculalion for churches
whose maximum load reQuirements are during off-peak hours is lhe result of
metered demand mulliplied by 112. The proposed provision under Ihis supplement
will result in this calculation being performed tor churches. public and parochial
schools and recreation centers who operate mainly during the oN-peak period. The
present supplement waives the ratchet in determining the maximum demand for
public and parochial schools and this provision has been deleted under the proposed
Supplement No. 18.
•

As of January 1. 20021his Rider shall no longer be applicable .
' The rates, charQeS and other provisions proposed above are subject to
changes. includmg changes as to amount and form by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio following its hearing on the filed application.
ANY PERSON, FIRM, CORPORATION, OR ASSOCIATION MAY FILE,
PURSUANT TO SECTION 4909.19 OF THE REVISED CODE, AN OBJECTION
TO THE INCREASE OR INCREASES PROPOSED BY THE COMPANY WHICH
MAY AllEGE THAT THE COMPANY'S APPLICATION CONTAINS
PROPOSALS THAT ARE UNJUST AND DISCRIMINATORY OR
UNREASONABLE.
The Company's Application is for authority to amend and to increase certain
electric rates and charges and amend certain terms and conditions of
service.
The Company's Application states that the rates presently authorized by the
Commission and the rate of return on the value of the property affected is
inadequate, unjust, unreasonable and insufficient to yield just compensation
and that the rates proposed will not produce more than a fair return on such
property and are necessary for the assurance of adequate service,
Improvement of earnings and financial soundness.
The Company prays that the Commission (1) find that the Application ,
Exhibits and Schedules are filed in accordance with Section 4909.16, Ohio
Revised Code, and the rules of the Commission; (2) approve the proposed
Notice for Newspaper Publication; (3) fix a date for a hearing; (4) find that
the present rates, prices. charges and other provisions of !he schedules
affected by such Application are unjust and unreasonable and insufficient
to yield just compensation lor the service rendered thereunder: \5) find and
determine that the rates, prices, charges and other provisions o the
schedules tendered for filing are just and reasonable, and approve such
schedules in the form tendered and make such schedules effective as soon
as it is practicable to do so: and (6) grant to the Company such other and
further relief to which it may be entitled.
A copy of the Application and all attached Exhibits and Schedules are
available for inspection during normal business hours at the office of the
Public Utililies Commission of Ohio, 180 East Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio 43215 and at the office of the Applicant, 215 North Front Street,
Columbus, Ohio 43215.

Percentage Increase
The increase for each customer class is as follows: Residential 31 %;
Commercial24%; Industrial 3D%; and Public Street and Highway Lighting
27%.

In CSP's notice of intent to seek a traditional one-step rate increase, the
Company presented an example of a four-year phase-in plan that would
lessen the Initial impact on customers, recognizing that the Commission has
adopted phase-in plans in similar proceedings.
The following are the proposed factors to be applied monthly to base rate
changes to accommodate a four-year phase-in:

COLUMBUS SOUTHERN POWER COMPANY

T. R. McCaffrey, President and Chief Operating Officer

�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

- .-_Annual Miller family reunion held

AU etght children of the late J.
Doyle and Gertrude (Russell)
Miller were present when the family gathered for its lith annual
reunion at the Miller homeplace in
Middleport on July 14 with 64
attending.
Preceding the dinner a friendship circ le was formed and the
Lord's Prayer given by aU.
Dale Miller was emcee for the
day and also conducted games
throughout the afternoon.
"PoPo and Sweeti," professional
clowns from Columbus, presented
a clown show and balloon sculptures were made for those attending.
One marriage was noted this
past year - Darin Roach 10 Donna

Curtis.
Three babies were born into the
family circle - a fourth generation
baby, Jacob Carl Roach, and five
generation babies, Davis Louis
Holtgrc:veandChelseaMiller.
Attending were Jack Miller,
Johnnie Miller, Melissa and Jason
Davis, Mike, Jackie and Kevin
Lenox, Viclci, Annette, Shawn and
Brent Lacey: Karen Dugger, aU of
Columbus.
Louis and Mary (Miller) Smith,
Pam Smith, John, Wanda, Jason
and Mary Lou Abshire, all of
Columbus.
Eugene and Della Miller, Ronnie and Bonnie Miller, Denni s
Roberts, Larry and Tina Bruer, aU
ofTuscon, Ariz.

Dorothy (Miller) Roac h,
Pomeroy: Tom, Faith and Bmndan
Roach and Brawn Herman, Racine·
Raymond Roach, Pomeroy; PaRi
Walburn , Middleport; Darin ,
Donna, Jacob Roach, Pomeroy;
Trudy Roach, Pomeroy: Joe Anthony, Middleport.
Elmer and Paula Miller, La
Gmn~e. Ga
Willard and Judy Miller, Wooster.
Ronald Miller, Angie and Justin
Robinson, Richard and Stephanie
Phillips, Richard, Ronda and David
Ayres, Steven Miller, Tammy Harter, Mary Trevine, aU of Columbus.
Dale Miller, Sandy and Julie
Bonar, Friendsville, Tenn.; Clyda
Allensworth, Bill and Flo Grueser

Wednesday, July 31, 1991

,

and Carl and Jessa Mae Bmnnan,
Middleport: Bob and Edythe Jay,
Columbus: Don Grueser, Worchester, Mass.
·
Next year's reunion will again
be held the second Sunday in July
at the Miller homeplace.

Receives degrees
Kristina Kim Adams and Todd
Anthony Adams, both of Syracuse,
recetved degrees 81 The Ohio Srate
University Spring Quarter commencement exercises on June 14 ill
the Ohio Stadium.
She received a Bachelor of Scienc~ in Human Ecology and he
recetved a Bachelor of Science in
Electrical Engineering.

31, 1991

FGLC meets
A covered dish dinner was
enjoyed when the Faith Gospel
Ladies Circle met recently at
Forked Run State Parle. Prayer was
given by Debbie Dailey.
Vivian Humphrey had the opening prayer and read a poem "All
Growth Demands Change."
Devotions were by Sandy Cowdery on praising God.
There was singing was Mary
and Debbie Dailey.
There were 89 shut-i n calls
reponed.
cards were sent 10 George Cremeans, Chester W!)IIS, Margaret
Raguel, Joe and Ellen Wells, Forrest VanMeter, ·Amanda Scyoc ,
Linda Putman.
The next meeting will be at the

:

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

Harrisonville news .
..
Lawrence ·couerill, Killeen,
Texas recently visited his parents,
.. .•
Raym~nd and Letha Cotterill.
·.
::

LOOK AT THIS I
1979 Yamaha 650 Special.
Only 5,800 miles and ~arage
kept. Excellent cond1lion.
Must see - $500.00.

'.

992-7114

•••
••

''

..
-·-·

.-.··

POOU,
OmiNS,EIC.

COMPLm
AUTO UPHOLSTERY
MINOI AUTO IEPAII
Ma-, W.Va •

1,625 IlL- SU·S4S

304-773-9560

lt. I, loa 71·A

Headliners,
Convertible Tops.
Custom Carpets.
Custom Seat
Covers

IUIUND,
OHIO 45775·9626
614-742·2904

7-24 tmo

..

lfltfl•rL

........,. -..............
.=·---. . . --..ba_par_
-,..ID...---=----·-~

-ot't-lnN
... IMdoMI
...
• • ·
...- . .
. . ...., vauyourcN~o~of•

--

llllft., ............. flftlcllng ... .,.,.

Only.._
N
a ~~~wid_
.._. • _
N 1dl. .dwd prlll wMftillD dlyl.

~ 1tl1 · TilE KIIOOIII CO.

ITEMS

AND

1.1. 1NPOJneroy

'111111101-t'T TO LIMIT auANTITlU. NONE

Register TO Win A Trip TO

The 1991 Charleston wv.
stemwheel Regatta·.
sweepstakes Package For 2 Includes:
•Hotel Accommodations For 1 Night
•A Ride on A Stemwheeler
•VIP seating &amp; Backstage Passes To The
saturoav Kroger concert.
one Tnp ro Be Clven Away At eacn PartiCIPating Kroger store.
'No purcnaso necess.rt. rou need not oe present .to w1n. Kroger
employees ana thetr families are not e11g101e to partiCIPate.

.·'

..

,

••
'

100!~~oE

'

.. '

s£Le:ct ~o

NUMBERS:
07-00380.000.
DESCRIPTION OF PARCEL8 SET FORTH IN MASTEA LIST: Sact.9SWcomer
&amp;A
AMOUNT DELINQUENT:
'284.86
LEGAL DESCRIPTION:
Acompfela legal daacrlption
may ba found 11 the Mal1111
County Racorder'o Office In
deed bool! Volume 82, P198
25.

If - n t to the action In
the parcel il oold. tho lila
ohelt not affect oraxtlngulah
any lien or ancumbrance
with reopact to tho parcel
other than the lien for
••••omenta.
Glo~
w.
Lewll
lc~~.,:~;Ji:l~~~
lnd
~·tSTI.nr ;·~oDIIESS OF It
flelllilfO,._.
J,A~' :~· "'-". · ••
· ·
1111 In oatlof10tton of
State Route 338
which tho property lo oold.
PERMANENT PARCEL
All other llano ond enoumbr·
enoeo with reopact to the
1 C8rd Of Thanks
parcel lhelt IIIMva the lila.
Any per- owning or
. - - - - - - - . . , 1claiming any right title, orin·
.....,, to~-"' and teraot In, or lien upon, any
1,...,, .....,,,..,N
parcel af real property above
thank lht CIOCtol'l and fllllld ....., fila In on- In
. ouch ectton Hnlng tonh tho
nu1111 II V.M.H. lor the nature and omount of Inter·
ltrYICt and car11 I eot ownad or cllimed and
any deflln• or objaction to
1'1C81Yed lltel'l.
tho lorocloouro. Such onTo my many ltlencla ahatl be filed 1n tho of·
......,. Stnt floWtl'l and floe of tho undenignad Cliff&lt;
wrrv
of the Court. ond 1 copy Of
cards and words of the aniWir lhllll be ......a
on the Prooocuting Attor·
encouragemenl, I think nay. on or before tho 13th
day of Auguat. 1·991.
If no on__, Ia filed with
Floyd L BI1Cides reapact to o p•rcot lllllld In
L,.._ _..;._ _ __. the compillnt, on or before

I'IIICD 0000 SUNDAY, JULY 21, TIIIIOUGH SATUR·
DAY, AUG. 3,

(Continued from Pogo 2)
The permanent parcel
number of tech parcel In·
dlldod In ouch octlon: the
Iuht-llddreuoflhepar·
oel, If aV8IIeble: a deocrlp·
lien of the pilrcet 11 . . forth
in the IIIOailted delinquent
treetl: a oUtement of the
11111oun1 of thatex... uaaotmll)tl. chi~Jel, penaltleo,
ond lnt81eot due and unpoid
on the parcel: and tho nome
end eclctrwo of the lut
known o-r of the parcel
•• they eppaar on the gonarot taxllat. era u foNowo:
CASE NUM BEA:
91 DLT OS
NAME OF LAST KNOWN
LAND OWNERS:

tiXtl, •••all'ftenta,

chargM, paneltlaa, ond. lnteraot. and tho com In·
cumocl tn the to""'to.,r:e
pr-lng, which are due
ond ·unpetd.
At anytime prior to the flf.
lng of any entry of conflrmo-

5·10-''Hfn.

tlon of aale, any owner or

lienholder of. or other perwith on lntarootln, 1 parcel tlowd In the complaint ,,-~~---'--­
mey reclaom tho percel by 1
. , Gtt4tlltt
teflll.' "!t(. ~.~. l,b! ~!·~r.
the'MI-Iv•IIXII,Oiaaltmento. ohergao, poneltiea,
end lntereat due ond unpeid
on the parcel, togl1her with
by tick mol\!'l.:¥
lilt com incurred In the proceeding lnotltutad ogeinot

:.f~

HOME 992-6692

. ~Ulloa

Split

.• B~rby

6721 .18 of the Revlaad
Code.
urry E. Spencer, •
Cliff&lt; of Court.
Maigo County. Ohio
(7) 17. 24. 31 . 3tc

~UALITY

1-lt.Pkg.

c.

'

Bi K
Soft ~rinks

IIINCEI NIUARTII COUNTRY nME
IEMOIWIE MIX 2HZ. •. WI
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOIGE
· G.RAIN FED BEEF,
"UNTRIMMED WHOLESALE
CUT"I10.14-LB. AVG.I

~

Whole

f

IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE
.75-LB. AVG. AFTER COOKINGI

Whole BBQ
Chicken

Kroger Premium
Orange Juice

Whole
Watermelons

64-oz.

Each

Z4C. . .

CUT HALVEIIIIIIUARTERILB. • • 1M

SALAD DRESSING

FROZEN ASSORTED VARIETIES

Kraft
Miracle "Vhip
32-oz.

88

Far

J

Ll.

'

IIOI.f TJIIIIICAL FRUIT SAlAD
1SJI.OZ. •• 1lt

I

...

---

----··

White Rain
Shampoo

·I I

NOT FROM
COIJCEITRATEI
IIWL CURD OR LOWFAT WESTOVER

.$

~

8

Fox .De Luxe
Pizzas
....7.kz.

c

u...._

ICOOL..qlllllil MIX
PACIETI IMUB 2-IITSII Fill t1M

.

.

-··-

I

EMILEE MERINAR .
Owner &amp; Operator

PotMroy,

Real Est11e General

c·

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE ' FREE DIET PEPSI,
CAFFEINE FREE PEPSI,

CAIPIT CUA.IS
and nu PLOOI CAIE

NEW
NGdescribes this home' luxury is what it offers1This 2 story con·
temporary home has 4 bedrooms. 2'h baths. equipped
k1tchen, den, family room, large livm g room w1th firepla ce
and large bay windows to invite the "out~de" 1n Beaul1lul
p10e walls throughout. central air. full basement, 3\? lovely
acres. ASKING $110.000. Make an offer - Only se r~ou s 1n·
quires please'

.'' 'i'•'
'

Diet Pepsi ·
or
Cola ·

I

MALLOON'S RUN - The Quiei Lilt - S1t on on ~ of the
porchts and feel the peacefulness This 130 acre farm w~h
large bottom s. a 2 story house with 3-4 bedroom s, barn,
other outbuildings, and free gas. Could be yours '~6~~~

PORTLAI'iD - On e floor, 2 bedroom. 1 bath w1lh full base ·
· ment. Gara ge and. metal shed S11t1ng on I• acre. FREE GAS'
ASKING $29.500

I

DARLIIIE STEWART ................................... ·m:~m
SANDY BUTCHER ......................................... -:367-0421

'i

c

. I

!
I
•'·
i

_, ::.

2-Ltr•.

~mb'A,~m:1

'

~"-;,

12.PM 124Z. CAll .. ; WI

·~ tI

__..__ - ~~ J
'

. . . .. . . . :--:--::::::::::::::::::::992·3056

~Its'
•
•
•
•

NEW LISTING - Trailer Only - I980 Skylme 14•70 w1th 3
bedrooms, 'front porch , large bay wmdow. You movel As ~n g
$11.500 MAKE OFFER'

MINI-FARM - Comfort of country. conven1ence of town . 2
story fram e home. 3 bed1 ooms. eq UJp ped k1tchen. garage &amp;
barn. 3.88 acres ASKING $29.900 MAKE AN OFFER'

I

';.

·
· - Located in Riggs Crest Subidivision
- a newer. quiet. ·residential ne1ghbortlood. Home has 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. and atta ched 2 car garage. Th1s ISa N1re
Home' ASKING $42,500

RUTLAND- ST. RT. 124- Bu1ldmg lot. 81g2 acre lot that
is level and has a lot of fronta ge Publ1c water and electnc
available.
JUSt $7.000

MIDDLEPORT - Rutla,nd Stilet .:.. You need I~ see this
one' It's a nice 3 bedroom ranch st~eho.me w1th a full basement, 2 fireplaces, carefree vinyl SldinL lully~rpeted, and
1 1 car garage al_
f on a 2 acre I~RICED AT JUST $)i.SOO

•

·.

PldCIJ

As:)

•Reooonable Ratea
•Ou11fty Work
•FrH Eatlrnfteo
•Car~ Hoo FM! Dry
lme ·
•High Glou on Tile
Floor Flnleh
lliiiE LEWIS, OwlW
II. 1. lutla-. OM.

o

0

0

0

0

0

o

o

o

0

o

o

0

o

0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

o

0

o

0

o

o

o

0

o

Announcements

MOBILE HOME

BENNETT'S

HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

Lecatsd On Safford School Rd. off lt. 141
(6141 4"'-9416 or 1-100-172-5967
4-29·91

3 Announcements

SIMp, fako OPAL Avallablo AI:

Fruth Ph1rm1cy.

Single ttrvlce 1nd ntwtlltttr
tor .,.. llngln. All qH. Con·

Camping Is Family Fun

fldan11al and anontabla. Wrha:
Slnglao... ~.o. Box 1043, Gal·
llpoila, ..,.. 4H31.

N1:W mrs SEASON -- POOL
OPII'I TO Till: PIJIII,IC

4

CAIIJIUIQ' - Beautiful SwTOwxllnjpl

RII'IBS · Day. Week, Month, or Scuon
PICIQC SIISI.TI:R Ud 8TAOII: J'or aeat
Reunlol!o • Get TOf!&lt;then • Parties
J'IIIIIRO
CAIIIR I&lt;~ l"'OIJUtNT

Giveaway

1-Froa e mo. old, flmala 1 T•·
nariPoodla mlxacl pup, &amp;1o-6118·
20115.
Cola And Kh1ana To Good
Home. 3 White Fema ..., 1 Bt1ck
• 2 Qroy Maille'- 1 Gray TIIJ"r
Female. Good nunten. Lhttr
Tralnad. lnqulrw A1: 101 Sac011d
Awanua, Qalllpoila.

AllCo\DII:

INUM -SlOING .
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

IIITIIIOI • DTIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•pointing.
let me do it for you.

llaw ....... ltollt
" FrN E8tlmotao"
PH. 949·1801
· Dr l1s. 949·1860

VIRY HASONAIL£
HAVE REFERIN((S

(614

180

POMEROY - Country Bungalow - Close to Chesler Re
cenlly remodeled. 2 to 3 bedr oom ~ equipped kitchen and
garage for ONLY $14.900.
.'
WE NEED LISTINGS!
ITS SUIIIIEATIME AND THE MOVING IS EASY. If YOU'VE
BEEN THINKING Of SELLING YOUR HOllE. THIS IS THE
TillE TO DO IT! NOW IS WHEN PROSPECTS COllE AND
LOOK. AND BUY!.:BEFORE BAD WEATHER SETS IN. CALL
US JIOW AND LET US GET CRACKING ON THAT LISTING
FORYO.U!
.
,
.
I
HENRY .E. CLELAND ....................................... 992-619
TRACY BRINAGER ................................. ......... 949·2439
JEll TRUSSELL............................................. 949·2660
.JO HILL ..................... ,.................................. =~-m'
O.FFICE ........ ,........,.............:.. "·''·'""'"" '""""

Pl!f Ody Bulletin Bo;ml'

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS
Speclallaln\111

Custa. Fro•• •l!alr
IIW &amp; UIID PAITS fOI
AU IIlllS &amp; fiODELS

992·7013

or 992-5,553

01 TOLL FREE
1·100441.0070
DAIWJI, OliO
7/Wifa

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"v leasonabie Prien"
PH. 949·2101
or Its. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
II· 12·80-tfn

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways
•Slabs
I O'fo DISCOUNT TO
SENIOI ClnZENS
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7130

8-4· '91 ·1 mo.

4-16-16-tln

PARKER
CONSTRUCTION
Roofiag, Viayl
sldlag, Palatiag,
· aad HolM Npalrs

POMEROY- Agood home at a greal pnce 1floor plan home
w1lh full basement &amp; garage, 2 bedroom s. 1 bath. Owner •s
movmg aQd anXIOUS to ·sell1 AS KING $12.500

LONG BOTIOM - fantastic River View- Th1s one story, 3
bedroom home is almoslm the middle of two bends of the
-beautiful Ohid River. Has n~ carpetinathroughout. tmmed·
iate possession and comes w1th all furnilure.
$
.
.
. MUST SEE 28 •000

'

0

NO SUNDAY CAllS

A&amp;B
COMPLnE AUTO
UPHOLSTDY

LAUREL CLIFF- Sectional Only - NO LAND- Athree
ear old 24x52 home th~l has a fam1ly room w1lh a.hreplace,
~bedrooms. 2 baths. cathedral ce1hng, skylight. extra msula·
lion , heal pump. and more eKiras
$30.000

0

0

Tiger c.t 1nd

khten,

lhter

1rolnad and • ..., playful, 304875-8187.

6
Lost &amp; Found
FOUND, F-ill Collie and mala
Cocker Spaniol, 304-6711-1018.
loll: Black PH Bull Kamper Hoi·
low Am. It Anyone s- PlaaH
Call Rob, &amp;14-441-11101.
loll: BIOIWn And WhHa Walker
Coon Hound, No Colilr. loll In
Roclnay Aru. 114-441-3401.

··...

EASY LIVING - In thls4 year old 14•60 Sunnybrookmob1le
home. II has a cathedral ce1ling ford1men s1on and a laundry
room with shelves for storage, equ1pped kitchen. two bed·
rooms and l'h baths. It is beautiful and 10 new cond1110n.
Pnce was $14.000
NOW $12,500

CONDITIONER OR

11-oz.

GROOM
.ROOM

614-992-6820

.·

MIDDLEPORT - Pearl Street- Amce 2 story home with 3
bedrooms. l'h baths, VInyl sidi ng. new wmdows. lu ll basement Hou se is on a GOOD smm Pnce was $39.700.
.
NOW $37,000

0

SIDING

Completa Grooming
For All Breeds

• 675-692&lt; '

MIDDLEPORT- North Second- Ever dreamed of ownmg
· your own business' Here's your chance. Abar that1s well
equipped and stocked. AOS liquor license. Has 2 apartments
(furnished) and I sleep1ng r()j)m. Buymg bUIIdmg, bugness,
and license
ALL FOR JUST $55,9()0

lb.

AIR CONDJnONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBlEWIDE HOMES

Ftm•l• p8r1 Border Collie, S04·

·sroNs ·

N. 2nd- MIDDLEPORT - Look at th1s one II can be RESIDENTIAL OR COMMERCIAL- whatever way you want to use,.
it. Great location
CAN BE YOURS FOR ONLY '26.900

U~S. GRADE A ••-•v

$to6k/l

458-1863 .,.., 4:00.

1-(304)773-9560

" MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
DOTTIE.S. TURNER , BROKER
POMEROY- WHAT AVIEW! - Lounge in the sunroom and
· enjoy the sight of the beautiful Ohio River. W1th lh1s 3 bed·
room is a huge living room w1th a lovely stone fireplace. Has
an eQuipped kitchen. oart1al basement. and a fence~
backyard. Also a paved driveway and two car carport. Don I
m1ss the two giganti c fascmatmg trees. REDUCED FROM
$49.000.
·
TO $45,000

Gwaltney
Great Dogs

KEN'S APPliANCE
SERVICE
992-SS35 " 91S-U61
Acroa F...,. Post Offlco
I'OMOOY, OHO
t0/30119 tfn

LIIIIO ld.

-.

RED, RIPE

IIEEIIIS-$ 125 .,
'
•uo OVIIIS-S7t .,

742·2421

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .

"IN THE DAIRY CASE"
CHILLED

IANGIS-...IIK.-$1U., ·

21ft MI. outside
lutland on New

.. •
CJUeWttWIN;;.•~

OR DIET WITH
NUTRASWEET

DIYIS-to• op
HIIIGUATOIS-S 100 .,

•BUY eSEU •TilDE
OPEN
Tueodoy thru Seturdoy
10:00 om-11:00 pm

With Low Prices. And More ...

Chicken Breasts..

90 DAY WAIIUm.
WASIIEIS-$100 .,

GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

Convertible Tops,
Carpets, Headliner
8r Seat Covars and
Minor Auto Rapeir.
IUIN n ~ tuSOII, WY.

OFFICE 992-2886

Now Jn.

USID APPUMCIS

STEWART'S

Reel Estate General

NETWT5LB2.27kG

_.,
......
IIR8RfBI.

·

992·3432 or
992-2403
1·4·'11 -1 mo.

6/ 22 / tfn

Atduc•· Bum ott Fat While You

tho dolo apaciflacl 11 tho llat
doy for filing on onower, o
judgment of fo...,ro.,ro will
betekenby defoultao tolhl1
parcel. Thlo jlldgmont ohetl
oppty to any parcel •• to
which o 01tlofactton of

the parcel under 18ction

742-2328

•Quality Homes and
Cuatom Remodeling

380 East 2nd St.

Public Notice

the

FlEE ESTIMATES

POMEROY
BOWLING

01 TOll Fill
1-800-841·0070
DAIWIN OliO
7131/ '91 tin

BUILDERS

•20 Yeara Experience

Open To.... Thurs ••
Fri .• Sat. 7:30 p.m .

992-7013
or 992·5S53

742·2656

~ TROMM

7-1&amp;·91 · 1 mo.

POOL~~!!~HIE

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Wlndowa
•Roofing
•fneulltfon
JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742 -2251
639 Bryan Place
Middleport. 0

AND EVERYTHING UNDERNEATH

949-2168

Custom Frame lepalr
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAlES &amp;
MODELS

F111Edlntas

REPAIR

J&amp;L
I-NSULATION

ROOFING.

WE DO

Gutters
Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Sl*lallzl1111 In

On Slitlnstalatlan

Public Notice

~EW-

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

lnstalllaa Celltlar
PHies, (• Stereos
or Radios, CB's

Public Notice

ROOFING

7 / 31 / 1 mo. pd .

DAVE'S
ELECTRONIC
SERVICE

Road behind Skale-away. Baby clothes,
boys jeans &amp; doChing, toys, desk, misc.,
Nintando tapes, child's rocking chairs .
Electric stove.

L

A&amp;B

WATER
HAULING

GARAGE SALE
AUG. 1-2-3, 9 AM-?

..

The

Business Services

BULLETIN BOARD

church given by Debbie Dailey, : •
Kate Evans, Aida VanMeter, Mary
:
Dailey and Mary Greer.
•
Tammy Cowdery won the door
prize.

Nellie Lowe spent last week
with her sister, Helen Young, in
West Virginia
Mr. and Mrs. John Dill, Michigan spent a week here with her sister, Becky Foley and fam~y.
Chester King, Zanesville, spent
a day with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles King.

Ohio

667·6611'•
After 7:00p.m.
7-lH mope!.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE ·
- R"oom AcldhJon•

-~·--"'and

-Eiactrioal

- c011-• worfl
- Roofing .

Plumtllng

- lnt•lor • bterior
P-Ing

!FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG· Ill
992-6215

PomwDy, Ohio
11·14-'90 lin

FOREVER
BIONII
TANNING

,,..,, ,,.,.,,

30 SESSIONS S30

949-2126
TACDIVIW RD.
IA(.I, GIL

ArlVI!riiSI~Illl!fll

W. H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

801 JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and

If you're in nHd
of Mobile Home
Parts or

BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006

A((essories ...

SEE US FIRST!

992-5800
IT. 33 WEST OF
DAIWIN, OHIO

6-6-'9t

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

•Remodeling and
Home Repairs
•Roofing

•New Homes
•GarOtt•
•Complate

•Painting

•Siding

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

lltMdt,ing
Stop I Co•para

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992-6641 or

FrH Estimates

985i4473
667-6179

5-] 1-'90

tin

HOWARD

OVEN REPAIR

EXCAVATING
BULLDbtER and
BACKHOE WORK.
HOME SITI!S.
.
LANDCLEARING.
WATER and SEWER
LINES
TIUCIONG AVAilAILI
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7458

4-21·11· 1 mo.

691-6164

AU IUDS
Bring ft IROr We
Plclt Up.

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIYICE
992-SJJS or
985·3561
Acren ''"' Pelt OHice
217 •• . _ . lt.
PO•IOY,

.

IJI Ill!! ILIIIy S!JiltinP.I ClilSSIIJerl Sectlllll

•

R-anfll f1000 for 1ha ralurn of
Bible and cont.me tolt bMwMn
ungavllla Co. Rd.10 and

Pomeroy

MlckUepor1

are•

belonging to Woody C1U Jr. II

found,

piHH

0111 814·71t2·2148

or 742-11'144 or H:Z-6837.

7

YardSele

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
12&amp; Third Ava., Roar. (Behind
Tabor'o Fl- Cowalfng), Frl,
Sol
3 flmlllao: Aug. \2,_3. Ciothao,
Avon, crafta, f~? "io Grande
Ellllll, Apt. 2.
3 Famllr.. QaroiJ" Sale: X-LO
Mana C hH, llabr,. Clolhaa,
Fumhuro~.Pianla, Dla a1 Toole.

44 OUve:ttrMt, 11t,2nd. ::~rd. M.

family garoiJ" aala: Bill larCox lla,..,llla Ad., Mtr·
COI'IIila. Aug. 1,2,3. 11-1.
3 Family Yard Soia: Auguat 111.
2nd, 3rd. 1:00-6:00, OJ\ 1110 In
VlniOII, Prom D -..
ALL Yard S.laa llulll Ba Paid In
Advonco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.01.
tho day
1ha ad Ia lo run.
Sunday aclhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday: llonday aclhlon • 2:00
3

nM,

ba"'"'

p.m. Saturdar.

Auguol 2nd I lint. 8-1. Ciolhaa,
Dlahaa~ Toya, MIOj:. 430 LAlka
Dnva, Hlo Orondo.
Big Big e Family Solo: A!ltluat
:Znill 3rd.-K"dlan Slova, Tooiaf
Quno, Collaclablae, Much Moro
112 Milt From lirlavllla Road, On
Oaorgn Craall Rood.
.110 Yard Sola: Frl, Sal. t-1. 1141
Fourth
Ava.
,Clothing,
hounwaroa, Barbie . ..._
oor101, 111111 drumo, loola,
oowlngmachlna. .
Carport Soia: Rain Or Shine.
Auguol 2nd And Snf. 204 Kl,_

I

Drtve.

O.IOIJ" Sale: Aug. :lrd, 430
Hodgawood II&lt;., W:
Qaraga Sola: auguot 2, ~ 3rd.
Fumfturt, lola CrotMt "'"'
Korr: llclwoll Rodney PI~, Follow Signa. HIIIINNI.
Qaroge Sola: Thuroday, Friday. 3
MIIM Oul141, H .

or

,

Evarythlng
C'-pl 424 Rana 4vonua,
Kanauga. Thurodoy, Frldoy,
S.tunfiy.
Mowing 8aia: Fwnlure, Applla-a,
Klda
Clolhao,
BlcyoiM, Toya. barythlng Haa .
t..o1

S..aoil:

a-: Gaa Fumaca1 FIN'piaca.

To Col308 OrMn Terraoe Court,
111•, 114-441-~

S.turday" Auguat S, 1111. 411
Jacklon l'l&lt;a, t-? AlliiN Cloth·
lng, SmaN ~,._,Mile .

Pt. Pleaaant
&amp; VIcinity
I family yard Mia 403 Hendar·
0011 Ill. AUf. 1,2,,, 6:00 1111 ? .
(:amfl Qrounol Yard Ilia Sat.
..... 3. 1:00..:11, 10 ,..,.fotPi ••
lng lamltlaa, hourly . . , llllza .
drnlngl.

lhady

Wotar

C."'"ro-1, OIIHpalla F""Y.

10 niiiM IOUih of llotm
Pl....nl, AI. 2.

u..,.

Yard 8ole, Aug I 1111'11 ?,
below IW.. Jea.,..,_, QaJ..
,,... Fany, -

tooll, wMt nolL

.... tlollrlng,

Rumrnate lata, 1..111 one IIIIa
yoar, LOCI of .,_ lnd U1ac1
•-· e millie 0111 .-.yo Run
- ·4. Appla
Aug.

anw.. JUly 11

to

.I

�'

Pt.

Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

SNAFU® by Bruce ~ttie

32

44

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Apanment
for Rent

: Wedneada ,

.. . .., ...

.~

'

Jul 31 1991

. ... ..

. ~

.

Poineroy~tddlepo_rt.~..Q.IiJo

- BORN LOSER

KIT ' N' CARLYLEtl by Larry Wri&amp;bt

11

Autos for Sale

~I

N:DI~110t-l

~.

Tltd 5110 Frklay, Ill. Ano top of
1.111111 HRI, boby clolhoo,
pllypon, wolklr, olroller, chlldo
top, tompo, mloc.
Tltd Salt, Thuro ond Friday,
1:00 liM ? . Todo, lumtluro, loll
ol mloc. 2815111. Vernon Avo.

8

i'S M'(

.-.11.

Television
Viewing

...~1611~ t7 ~

...14:p 1M', IIJ

00~1~!

EVENING

8:00 III D Cll
liZ News

hardw.,., kitchen Wllrw. nlk-nu:,
eome clothing, email ap-

plloncoo.

Groclouo living. 1 ond 2 bod·
room oportmlnll II Vliiogo
Menor
and
Alnraldt
Aporlmonlo In Middleport. Frcm
81INI. Coll614·fl2·7787. EOH.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

33

112 Booc:h St., Mlddloport. lela
of everyU11ng, 1:30-??? Ra in·

cancela.
11l Yard aal.. 2 miiH South ot

Horrtoonvlllo, on 143 Big vorloty,
Aug. 1,2,3
"He'l be a lawyer v.tlllll he grows ~- Didn't you
2 mlloo N. o1 Chlotor on Rt. ~
see the way he --.1 rlgtrt lo the SllBices?"
Sal
Aug
3rd, clothing, antiquo
lurnhwo. d l -. curtolno, r
jowolry, mloc, roln concola.
18 Wanted to Do
Homily lord Soli Sll Aug 3, e.
5Pm ONLY. 18tl Uncoln Holghto Employment Services
POmeroy, range, camtnt,
locel Truck Driving or Farm
blcyelo, popotbO&lt;:ko, morom~y.
Work. Call 614-388-SI1Qg.
nowbom, blby, gl~o ond dnlg·
Ml11 Pauta'a Day Care Center.
nor olalhlng, curtllno, bidding, 11
Help Wanted
........... inloc:.
-=-~==,....,.-_,::..~- Sate, affordable, chlldcart. M-F
$35010AY PROCESSING
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2,.10.
HMIIIy yord lila, Aug 1·2, PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE Before, after echool. Drop-Ina
Crow Subdlvlolon.
CALL YOU.
welcome. G14-441-8224. New In·
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. fant Toddl•r Care, 114-44M227.
fiG So. 2nd Sl., lllddloport, July 1-800.255-0242 EXTENSION P.
:11""'e 7th. Loll ol mloc.
Polnllng lnoldo l ouloldo,
6193.
reaaonablt rat•a, 114-182·2503
AI Yltd SalOl MUll Bo Pold In
Advance. Dorlrllno: 1:00pm tho AVON • All 1r101, Call Marilyn Wlil BobyoH In lly Homo, Juot
. cloy boiON tho ad lo to nm, Woover
Oft 160, On Bulavllll. Have Ex304-882·2e45.
· Sundoy odlllon- 1:OOpm Frldoy,
perience And Rtf'lf'ltlcll. 114· lhndoy
odh!Gn
IO:OOo.m.
441·2540.
POMEROY
: Saturdly.
'POSTAL JOBS"
$1 t 78414.110 hr. No liP. nMdod. Will build plllo cov.,., docko,
· AI Ch!M Clolond, 3-Fomlly, Moln For 111m tnd tppllclltlon Info., tcrHntd room•, put up vinyl
: Slrlll Rullond, Aug..l 1,2,3
coli 1.:116-1187-418!1i 7o.m.·IOp.m. oldlng or troller lklrtlng. 014·
245-6657.
AI Dave and lllcky Kucama'1 7daya.
· IClOI8 !rom Soulhorn High
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
· School, N. Augull 1-2·3. Excellent
Financial
Pay,
Benefits
: Clolhoo, gomeo, lumhuro, tl"~ Transportation,
407-282-4:117.
. q-.RIInconcelo.
Exl
571. Ol.m.-10p.m. Toll
Aug I.Z, Anno Roulll mldonco Rofundld.
21
Business
In
~yroc._
booldo tho AVON I All Arou I Shlrioy
Opportunity
Nalerene Church, alof of nice Spoo,., 304-1175-1428.
CANNERY WORKERS ALASKA
INOTICEI
Aug 2-3, 5 Polnll ,,... Shoolo, Hiring Mon Woman. Up lo $600 OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
Weokly. Trtnlpcr1eUonJ....,!iou• rtcomrnenda that you do butl·
" " ' - · lcnlck·knockl, cloth- lng.
CALL NOW 1·206·TJ0-7000 nuo wllh pooplo you know, ond
~. women'• 5-10, men'a large
Ell.
1594B3.
NOT to und money through tho
llu, bop clothing, curtalna,

-

....

mall until you ht'll lnveetlgated

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hiring Mor&gt;Womon. Up to $600

Ina, mene cloUwe. We have It
· olft I:ON:OO Aug 1·2.
"'Clothing, oome billY homo

wdo, iniM, lop of lllddloport

Hll, IIQno """"Aut 1·2·3
DlpN•Ion Glue Sale. 300 plul
llvo oolON, Aug 3,
OOim. Wer StrMI:, SyracuH.

=
-

0.,... 1111 Aug 2-3 1:00-5:00,
baby ctothee, llw11 fumltura,

6 womena, clothla 341

IIMJM

Arthur'•

bt 181783.

dustrial, FrH Eltlmat.. l Com·
plett lntlallatlon, Phone: 614·

lng. CALL NOW 1-2011-7'36-1000

~~~- oll&gt;ovo Eootom

I attachrneR•, men,
lliamln l chlld1'1111 clothing
~

......

TIIUNdly Aug. \ 1:00o4:00, Jr.
llllor.. Rl. 124, Rlclno, ron
-11. lumHuro, toto g~lo
olalhlng.
Tltd lolootll7 Union Avo., Aug

Commorcloi,

or Write: PASSE 31 W, 181 South

Llncolnwty, Nonh AurOI'I, IL

110542.
GOVERNMENT JOBS! Now
Hlrlna In Your-· Both Sklllod
And '\Jnokillod. For A Curnnl
Uot 01 Joba And Appllcltlono,
Cali 1-B00-800-1813 Ext. 11.e10.
lndopondont ogonto noodld.
Compony trolno. $350. o doy. No
txperlenct nec...ary. Work
from home or offlet. l.S00-835-

2842 oxt. 1216.
Pomeroy Nuralng and Rthtb

Center Ia accepl:lng tppllcttlons

for full-time LPN. "M~t be will·

perlence.
xceUent
benl llt
ptckage. Carol Ktntwalaky, AN,

D.O.N., 614·ti2.S606 or opply In
rc~on II 36758 Rockopnngo
d., Pomeroy, E.O.E.
SCHOOL BUS OPERATOR, I

Aug.l-2-3,t-l.
Yltd lole. Wodnoodoy ond

8

Public Sale
· &amp;Auction

Rick Pllroon Auction Compony,
fuM time eucUonMr, complete
ouctlon oorvlco. llconlld Ohio,
w• Vlrglrio, 304-773-5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

h... ·-:H311
lmplr

lolom ond Conill
pocklgH oloo omply
Aidmln choWing lobocco
F
Ul ...
. Any omount
11'1111 ;Jon, 1tl2. IM-1112·1QI31
~

1124111'-

. - ..., couDIO whh tomliy
IOOidntl fo buy form on fond
OOIIIIIill.
ot 14e.

PIM ....., llcAnhtW Lumbor

..... ...... CO. InC, ~au~~~~~• wv

="""

Yri t:JO til 4:00, 30W78-M,

...

Wl;r'.::
.

.. ICrop mol•

Wlnlelllo ·bUy. ltondlng rtm!&gt;or,
lob Wllllonw ' Sonl. t14-tl2·

.....

=

T,... PrieM Polrl: All Old U.S.

~llllfreittna~
Co1nL ILT.I. Coin Sliop, . UI
leoond Avenue, O•lllpolla

Mercer Bottom Sub-division,
one acre Iota, Rt. 2 frontage,
price reduced, city water, 304·

578-2338.
For Solo: Rivor bonk proporty In
M01on. 304-773-11651.

Real Estate
wanted

must meet certlflcadon ,..
qulremen11 of Ohlo for eportt
m.cllclne and CPR. Pe,.Ofll In·
ttrnted ehould contad Jim
Carpenter, SuiHII'Intendent of

Nolgo lccol SchoOio, ol P.O.
Box 272, 320 Elll lloln St- In

Pomeroy, Ohio.

WANTED: Pori-limo Uconood
Practical Nurse (20 hra/Wk) tor
two community group homu
fo r person with developmental
dl•abUitl.. In Oallla County

munlcaUon and organization
1klll1, punctu.t, and able to
work 11 part or a team requlredi
tr:parlenc• working with pereona with mental re1atdatlon

Hlwlorfcal Diet, Main St, G
rooms, 2 112 betha, Nno"attd,
poa...tlon on cloll~ Owntr
anlloua to Hll. Aoctpllng bnt

olltr over 555,000. blloro July
31. To lnopoct coli 304-875·1348
or 675·7580.
2!5 Acm, 3br Home, Ash Pond,
ldHI For Horst&amp; 1 Mile From

City Llmilo. 014-448-1340.

0706.

41

Houses for Rent

hill pump, ~tod Rt. 02
Rood, ,..,_ low, 304-

a.nl

GOVERNMENT HOliES lorm $1
IU ropolr).
tu
propertr. Re
•. Your
ora (I 805- 2..000. Ext. GH·
10188 lor cu"ont ropo 1111.
HOUSE FOR FREEII Mull movo
oH lol In llldrlopott. Fill In
blumtnt, alld and ltraw. Mu81
algn contract! 2-BR, Large LA,

DR, Both, hll now rool ond gut·

ter, new copper and PVC plumbIng, nlld tome work. You pay
tor the moving! Only arloua

collorol Call 8!4-112·2071 oftor
7:oopm.
Vory nlco 3·BR flinch, brtck
front, carport, 112 blumant,
hardwood 11001"11 J10 ICI'II, 3-

ml lrom Holzer Hoopltol, SR 110,
614-742·2721.

1 BR hOUM : lOIII tlec., tcrOII
!rom Unlvorolty ot Rio Orondo.

Avollobio Aug. 8th. 014-388-

9948.

1 houM, 3-bdrm In Recine, 2
houae1 4--bdrm In Pomeroy, 614·

Rllroin
NowiiiSoulhoollom
Buolnon Cotlogo, Sf~~~ Volley
Ploza. Call Todriy, 81
o4387tl
Reglateratlon t00-06-12'MB.

18 Wanted to Do
,_...,....;..;;.;.;;.;;...;.;:..;;;..:;___
Will BlbyoH In lly Homo
Anr.lmo.
Rodney
.llroo.
Ao oroncu Avoiloblo. All Shifto.
Cali 814-24&amp;-5788.
Buill Hog SIIVIco. A-oblo
Rltoo. NO Job To SmoUI a14379-2142.
Ooorgoo Portable Sowmlll don,
houi:JL": Iorio to tho mitt juot
coli
75·tl57.
Houllng ond pointing 11
rouonoblo rotoo, 114-992·2482.
I Will Bobylh In Your Hotn~ On
Wnkona, Lito Aftornoono,
And Evonlngo. Golllpollo ANo.
Coli 814-44a.tiiNI.

Furnished
Rooms

IFroo Porch) Buy 1 Now _Skyllno
28152 Soctlonol And Got A
10IIx11ft. An1chld Porch Frool
Fronch City Noblio Homu, 614446-1340. Umllod Time Oftorl
14170 3br, total electrlc, central

21122
1~

Kont 12x58 both lor 12500, SR
124 p11t Mother Cupboard 11t
rd. on lett 1 milt out Portland
Road Racine, watch for tigns

on right.
1810 Wlndoor, 12x85 wnlpooul,
refrigerator and llovt. NHdt

814-446-1580.
Stooping roomo wHh cooking.
Aloo troller · -· All hook-upo.

46 Space for Rent
Country lloblio Homo Pork,
Routt 33, North of Pomeroy.
LotaJ_!_ent•le, parta, aiM. C.:ll
114·8R·i't71,
I

1192-302l

Merchandise

3 bedroom house, reference ,..

ment for rent, &amp;14-m-2554.
Nice Houuln Country For Rent,

1250/mo. 814-379-2744.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

'14 Now Moo~.._ 2 bldroom,
$3,500. 3Q4.17&amp;--5.

2 bldroom Allllon ur,llnd Rd,
$165. mo. PIUI utllll 10, $100.
dlpooll, no polo, 304.S75o4088.
2 BR mobllo homo noor
Evorgroon. 814-379-21178.

51

Household
Goods

18 cubic IDOl chill lroozor.
Good cond. Call ofter 8 p.m.,

814-446-2048.

II pc ch«ry bedroom auttt, 40
yrt old, chllt, drNMr end mlr·
row, 2 night 1t1nda, bed with
aprtnge and mau,... , 304-882·
2382.

ALL WOOD KITCHEN CABS
Now &amp; Ulld. fNo Eot-Trodo
ln1. Mayo KHchlrw, 114-880-

8210.
Captlono bod whh droo- $350.
304-4175-JeM.
County Appilonco Inc. Good
uMd appllancn, T.'v. 1111. Open
8 l.m. to e p.m. llon,.Sat. 614-

448-169!.\. 627 3rd. Avo. Gal·
llpollo,""
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahel"', dryera, refrig•atore,

rongoo.

Sltlggo

Appillncoo,

Upper Al"tr Ail. B•lde Stone

2br Furnlthtd or Untumishtd,

Rettrence. 614-256-6408, 614·

Complete home fumlshlnge.
t-loura: Mon-Sat, ~a. 114-4480322, 3 miiH out Bulllvillt Ad.

Cloy Chopol Rood, $250 Root,
$250 Dopooll, Pluo Ulllllloo,
258-&amp;TIS.
3-BR, lumiohld, woohorldryor
AC, 114-1112·5800.
'
Nlco 2 bedrooms, l1rgo yard

44

Apanment
for Rent

I·BR,

lurnlohod

brlumont

2526.
Apt~rtmtn1.

Fumlehld.

Living Room

KHchtn,

F,.. DJI[va,ry.
PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/U11d

t-louHhold fumlthlng. 112 mi.

Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. Pioooonl, WV,
coli 304-0715-1450.
RENT20WN
614o448-3158
' Vl'rl Fumhure

apartment , all utllltln paid, $200
month, 614·02·5603 or SM9-

1br

- - - --

Transmlalon,

Stove,

Rolrigerolor, Dlshwoohor, Oor·

bag• Dllpoal, Shower In Bath;
Hut Air Cond., AIIO,

a..

Woohor, bryor. Good Ouiot
Nolghborllood. Roloronco, &amp;
Dopooh. 114-446-1370 After
5p.m.
2 BR turnl1htd apartment. Rent,
$285 per month. Some utllltl••·

Sola &amp; Choir, . $1UO Wook;
Roclinor, $5.47 Wook, Swlvol
Roehr, $3.63 WooltBunk Bod
Complete $$.41 WMk, 4 Drawer

7""il

worll In bothroom, $2500, 814;
192·7121.
One room
1m B•yvllw 14x70, 2br, Don, 812-2568.
Now Corpot, Blockl Skirting,
8X18 Porch, 18,000. 614·2581231.
1111 ., .. riot, :1111', 2 , ... ......
CA,
In - After 7p.m.
Porte.Alieodv
814-44il.,flll,

~

"

Air

llll liZ 1D

51

Household
Goods

32 cu ft Upright dlop lrHZo,
vory good oond, 1200, 114-tBZ·
6594
Whlripod woohor, u 5; Konmoro dryer, $75; Konmoro dryer,
$15!' goo dryer, $ 15; Cold Spot
rolr g., H, 1125: CoP"Prtono Afl.
mire! rolrlg, H, 8150.;· Whl~ppol
rolrlg, 8121; . _, upright,

$150; White lite. ~e. JltSi
Maytag wring« wuhlr, aqua"

tub, 8150. Bkogao Acpllncu,
Uppor Rlvor Rd. f14.44 ..?311.

52

Sporting Goods

Broonr Hondlo ~~~- liS p..,
t-•
11""
000i..
Spri liold
~.
Automorlc
:a Sro;
- .ng'"
AK4l
I Boxoo 01 Shollo, S300; Porklr
lrothlro Double 1 81 OOO·
LIFovor Double - · oeOO. AI
Guno Nloo Condhlonl For Solo
ot Trodo. 814-256-1279.

53 .

Antiques

Antiquo llrll-, With lllrblo
Top, And Candle Hokloro. 114245-8152.
Antiquo FumHIWI RopoiNd;
Llmpo Rowlrod. 125 Yoo,. Ex·
pllllonco) W. WIIHo, 114-2450«8.
Bur or 1111. Riverine Antlque1,

1124 E. lloln St-, P-roy.
Hou,.: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m,_~undroy I :00 to 1:00 p.m.
614-W2·2528.

72 Trucks for Sale
Pets for Sale
.:..:._....,;_:_:....,;:.,::..:..__ _ 1 !~ J:"~3,'•;s:,e~.~t~
Poodlo pu~oo, to- ond 111 cond -··· 81" ••• ·~
cupo, AKC 'Chomptoriloodtlno,
·•• ~~Coolvlllo 814,..7-34 04.
1m Fotd Rongor, ,..1oo Truck
Cub Clip With 1m V.a -~.:~lno.
R-llllrld
AKC, Poodll Pu~
~
• 112 Ton, PS, PB, Ant. '!Wo"""I
DOoro
plio. Will lo Rlldy To Soli: July With Lly Down Bock llot. Folr
21th,
lttl.
114-388-11811 Condillon, Cali Anytime. 3fltlAnytime.
458-1818.
.
1977
Ford
F-100,
11,500.
614-446Fruits &amp;
58
3813.
Vegetables
1882 GMC Shortbld, Auto, 350
Clnnlng
tomaot• elrNdy Englno. 114-388-8183.
picked or pick your own 11 1165 louzu Dlckup, 4 cyl, 4
Johnoon'o linn, 814-2Q-2811.
opood, now rlmo muddoro ond
Canning Tomotoooll Iring con- hoodoro, hood I1noro, roll bor
lllnor. $3-YOU PICKI ~~ WE lnd loa liahlo, $2,500 . .. boot
PICKI ~~~- Adorno, !.Mort ott.r. ReuDna tral..,, lx11 It,
now wood.!..."l!MVJ duly bod,
Folio, 814.:147-2015.
1309. 304-a,....MI.
Conning Tomot-11 Plckld $4 o
buohll. Plckod own $3. Sllvor 1188 GMC outof PIWBJ.. AC:1
OUMn Com, liking ordoro tor cruiH, tUL Loti o txlru. llnl.a
IIIII -k. Rlymonil Rowo, 114- wlndowa, diiMI. 814 441 1044.:
24Yo4212.
1989 Dodgo D-110, 21,000 Mlioo.'l
SPMd, "Excollont Condllton.
For Sale
59
Shorp Truckl tMtlmo. 814-44&amp;0751.
or Trade
1181 Fotd Ranger XLT, 4 Whlol
1115 Ford 2110 8uoorCab, 4 wd,
Drive
Pickup, With Com~ ~:G·
o- 1,500 GVW, XLT Llrlll With Eocoltont
Condhlon
1 ,
troller towing pockogo, 1.1 2~ f!OO IIIia. SIO,iii6. 014-«f·
1
d-~ 4 new lllcholln tlroo, 2
,_ bin-. crulll 4 N; , P.
Sooll, w t - , AlliFII!Storoo,
Clio. Thlo truck II llkl now. ~:.dl"f.h;-"? ~:::··l~
Only 31,000 mlloo. Aloe: 32 ft . MIIH. lkl Nowll14-258·15ou.
Kolinlly Air Compor troller, olr,
owning, both 811,000 or will For Sole IIIII Dodao Rim truck.
lrodo lloth unlll lot motothomo 1700, coli 814-2Q-322
ol oquol voluo. a14o441-17e8.
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

.

Farm Supp ltes
&amp; Livestock

Merchandise
10110 Low Choln Uno Fonco,
Dog Lot. 514-288·1880.
24'x4' Above Ground Pool.
Hoyword Pu~p :Her. 4 looro
Old, 1100. a 44 -3222 Ext.51,
llonrloy • Frldoy, 8-3:30.
2.!121 Choln Link Fonco With
Olio. Good Condh!Gnl $200.
114-388-8113.
3M Coplor Modo! !18. Prtcod To
Soil! French City llobllo Homoo.
814-448-1340.

Shomo Bloll, lun cruloo./lotol

package, Florida to 8aham11,

$219. por couple, 5 dln-4

nlghle. Quality hotel, llmlttd

ouppty, good lor I yr. 404-9283781.

eon, OH 1-600-837-11528.
For Sail: Fuol 011 FIWnoco Tonk
&amp; 011. Call 814-448-0041.
Good Flbrlrgloll Cap For Chov.
Luv. 614-448-3121.
Hlo ond h.,. old otylo blcyclu,
$30. ooch, 304-075-5418.
Kenmore Wathtr I Dryer UHd,

Good Condition! 1250. 014-4411-

1340.

Lira•

off!M ate on rolllfl,

tumblor oomblnotlon, 5450. coli
ohor8:00 PM. 304-075-1201.
Now Hull)' Seoul 10 opood, &amp;
llurroy Sobftng 10 opood. 014448..013.
Now Joon•oll olloo 18.00,
Coverollo, Bibbo, Denim Jock·
Ill, Worlt Ponto 10o4, 132 Bul·
lomut Pomeroy.
Plnoburgh Polnl inllrtot 1111wotl
point $1~.48 gol, inllrt« ooml·
glou l13.tt _gil elllorlor llol
~.... point 113.09. 2415 Jock·
oon Avo, Point PIOooon~ Pt. PH.
304-4175-4014.
Potloblo lighted chongooblo Ill·
ter
elan
$280.
FrH

dellvtrylltltera. Ptutlc lttltrt

547.50 bol. l.aoo.l33-3453.
Ulld Rl5 · rltchiilrch tnlnchlr
wlblckhoe ttltchment, diHII

onglno ond John Doll,. 300
brlckhoo. 614-4114-7842.
Rocondhlonod Wuho,., Dryoro.
Ouorontlld prompt MrVIco lot
111 makn, modele. The W18hlr
Dryor Shoppo. 814-«f-2144.
I'd' Ovol Rugo. Shod11 01 Biuo
And Sind. Wiohoblo. Ukl Now,
014-«l-o515.

5110 On All Carpot I VInyl Floor

Supplies

Farm Equipment

1100 011- Troctor With Bla

v'""'""
Round •••" 54,1scr:
1459
Oliver ~. p,j50; n30

lltl Stock Trello'i 14!!1$1,11!15: 2
Y•r Old AQHA F lly whh I Hoitor Polnt, ·10 Big UHd Show
Soddlol, Hood Sfollo, &amp; lrooll
Stropo. Call Exllno'o Dlocounl
Soddlory, 114-!181-1522.
Jlm'o F'rrn Equipment, SR. 35,
Will Golllllolll, 814-448-11777;
Wldt eellct:Jon new &amp; uMd farm
Sot. dll Noon.

63

I

.

~HE J'AIP .fHf WAf ·
t.OO/CI NCi fOR

o ,., """'·""

64

Wont to bur 2 llrgo round brllu
011 hoy, 304.e82-2111l

Transportation
71

Autos for Sale

=-::--:---:,..-.,...=..,:.-'13 Dodge Omnl, AT, PS, PI,
AMIFM cUMtt, txc cond,

M,OOO mU•, $1,500. 304-e?S-

4371.
11171 Dodge Swlngo•il2 dr., good
cond.1 _i!uto., PS1P , 318. 11438H- oftor 7 p.m.
111?3 Cadllloc, 4-dr Sidon
Deville,

87,000

~~A

EAJTI1Y.. .

actuel

mlltt,

good oond, 11100 obo 114-192·
4825.

1m Buick 2dr Hord
ErnacuJite Condition

Top,

eo,OOO

Mllll. All Ortalnol. Loodod,
~om Car, Q,ooo. 114-448lm Buick Ll Sobnl, 53 000 oc·
lull mlloo, now llk!!'1 ~lr, $800.
or boll oHor, 304-e,_&amp;o,
1m Corvoi, now point ond llroo,
robuiH motor, motchlng numboro, T~opo, 304-17fi.S332 or
114-tl2-348a.

.'

All typoo ot onuonry, bflcl(,
block ond otono. F,.. ,..:.
llmotu. 3a4-773oll50.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
•
UncondHionol . Ullllmo guoro.,.
111. .._, roooncoo lumio~
fiN ootlmllll. Call COIIICI 1·
114·237o0188, doy or nl~t.
Rogoro looomont Wolerprciollng.
·.
Carpontry ond romodollng ol ill
oorto. Auoonoblo l'llu. Call
onyllmo, 114-'N2-1400 or tl2·
,..0,
Comp!Mo Mobllo Homo Soi.Upo,
Rorlro; Commoricol, Aoolljop110 lmprovomonto. including:

ATa.R 5CClJT MEETIN6' I~
'1£ NEMORIZE::D L-INCOL.NS

I HEW:! HE
DieD,

Eii:TT'159LIR&amp; ADDRE56.

.BARNEY
ONE MORE
MOUTHFUL
AN' I'D BUST

HOW ABOUT ANOTHER
HELPIN' OF CHICKEN
AN' DUMPLIN'S,
JUGHAID?

WIDI

THEN RUN
THIS CHAWICLET
CAICE OVER TO
ELVINEY!!

OPEN It

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. l.lOQ.

531'1828.

111711 Plymouth Vclorl, otonl I,

low mlloo, 304-1~ .

1810 Pinto Slollon Wogan $1200.
1178 Lincoln 81100, 114-14e.
2804.

1111 Cadllllc Sidon Sovillo,
New tires, Brt~kll, Battery,
10c~- Mlloo. 12,000. Firm. 11431r-vooa.

stand what to do to make the relation -

82

ship work . Mall $2 plus a long, sell· '
addressed ,

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

.

Aug. 1, 1981
develop lor you In the year ahead that
could be of benelil to you both In your
~reel and in your linances . They may

1115 Votklwogon Fox, 4 d~1}

111

Upholstery

.......
.....AF~a;ooo "''""•~-304~~w;m,oltor 4:00PM.

,..--..,.-=:,-,..,...~:.__..,

lllli

lnt trt -ny - 25 }llrL Tho
In tumau,. upllolotortng
ean
304of78'4154 1or 1roo ..:
tlmotoo.

Chlvoft~

Condh'--~
~~·
81,150..........e.am.

'dhlonlAir

-.or·• Upholotortng · oorvlc-

envelope

to

s omeone you recently met whom yo u

would like to know beller. stop was11ng
time on reasons why you shouldn 't get
together . Take positive measures to set

day. Strive to llow with the tide ol
events rather than go against them.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You will

Some very unu sual .opportunilies might

1118S Comoro ~-47loodod, oxc
oonct, $4,100. 3
wt21.

stamped

Matchmaker, cto this newspaper, P.O.
Box 914 28. Cleveland, OH 44101 -3428 .
VIIIGO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) II there is

up a rendezvous.
LIIIIA (Sopl. 23-0ct. 23) Things tell to
their own devices could have a way of
work ing out to your ultimate benefit to-

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

tEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Something In
_which you're presently involved has a
greater prolil potential than you may realize. Re-examine this. endeavor to determine its true worth. Trying 10 patch
up a broken romance? The AstroGraph Matchmaker can help you under-

.L.-

.J.-

Compielo rho chuckle quored
by ftll 1ng in the missing words

..J.L -..J.L--1..
. .-l~

you deve lop from step No. 3 below.

A PRI NT NUMBERED 11
W l ETTER S

i

[!) • Night Court Q
(I) (I) D lnolde Edition Q
(lJ (f) MecNeK/Lihrer

1 -30
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Grotto - Avoid - Truck - Killer - REGULAR
One co-worker lo another, " II you can accomplish
the impossible. lhe boss will only add il lo your
REGULAR duties!"

NowoHourQ
(II) IIZID Current AHalr Q
IIJ Mac:Qyver Q
sponecenter
a Moneyllno
0 Scarecrow end Mro. King
7:05 (I) The Jofleroono
7:30 III D liZ JIOPifrdyl Q
(!) Andy GriHfth
(I) liZ ID Etttertrrlnmonl
Tonight Stereo. Q
(J) II Mame'l Family
(II) WhMI ot Fortune Q
IIJ). M•A•S"H
8 Be 1 Star Stereo.
U Malor LHgue Baeeball
a Cronflre
7:35 (I) Andy GriHith
8:00 III D OJ Unoolved
My1terlee A lamily claims the
hit-and·run death ot their son
was murder . (R) Stereo . C
(!) MOVIE: lnveolon U.S.A.
IA)(2:00)
(l) (J) D The Woncllr Teare
Kevin is devastated when his
mom accepts a job at his
school. lR} Stereo. Q
(lJ (f) Netlorull Geographic
Spec:lol Stereo. t1
(II) liZ ID Pollee Squad
Orebln goes undercover altar
a boxer commits suicide. (R)
Stereo. C
liD • M&lt;IVIE: Eocape From
Alcalrlz IPGI (2:00)
IIJ Murdlr, She Wrote C
8 Tho Gottlno: Short Sforieo
Larry Gatlin and the Gatlin
Brothers present home video
lootage from their music
tours. (1 :00)
a PrlmeNewa
0 MOVIE: Father Murphy
[2:00)
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Perry Moaon: Tho
CaM of the Shoottng Stir
[2:00)
8:30 (l) (J) fl Growing Paino
Maggie and Jason go on

Stereo. 1:;J
a Wor In the Gulf: A Look
Beck
9:00 III D iiJI NIQhl Court Oan's
Insomnia causes problems
before he Is due to give a
speech . (R.los:;•eo. Q
CiJ (J) D
le HowHr,
M.D. Ooogla agrees to play a
game ol basketball. (R}
Stereo. C
(lJ Civil W• Lee docidas to
invade the North; Lincoln
tells what's happening. Q
(f) Fire on the Rim SOciellas
seek to predict earthquakes
and volcanic eruptions.
Stereo. C
1111 liZ aJ Fifteenth Amual
Cltcul of the Stare Mora
than 20 calebrllles join
ringmasters Joan Van Ark,
RIChard Crenna, Whoop!
Goldberg and Robert Urich
under the big top. (R) (2 :00)
11J MOVIE: Deodly C.olre
(2:00) Stereo. 1:;J
Nelhlfllle Now Stereo.
a Ltrrry Kint Llvet
9:30 IIID 0 Selnletd Jerry
!eels responsible lor an
elderly woman's death. IR)
Stereo. Q
(l) (J) D Mon In the F•mlly
Sal meddles in Tina 's love
llfe;··cau6ing a surprising
revelation. Stereo. Q
10:00 liiii iiJ QUIIntum Leap
Sam leaps Into the lila ol a
Now Orleans brothel owner .
(R) Stereo. Q
f]) New•
(l) (I) D Bey City Story A
television reporter and his
assistant pursue the link
between the murder ot
another reporter and a
prostitute. (1 :00) Stereo. Q
(f) !lclentlflc Amerlcen
Frontiers Domestic ants that
enslave other ant colonies;
brain tumors. Stereo. Q
[!) 1D Star Trek
aworldNowa
CO 700 Club With Pat

a

come from least expet;ted sources.

•

WRITINI!i 10 HIM •••

Plurnbl~, Electrical. lnaurance

114 441 3111,_, •

pu.......,

weu.,. t:ON'r BOTHER

Clolmo kcoptod. 114-250-1811,
Curtle Home lmprovemenla:
Yoore Eoportonco On Oldor -1
Nowor Hotnoo. Room AddHiono,
Foundot!Gn Worlr, Rooll~
W l - l Siding. FIN
llmot•l Rollroncu, No Job o
Big Or SmoUI 114-441-G225.
JET
Alrellon MotON, ropoiNd. Now
I r•l!uiH motON In olock. RON

Ron'o TV SIIVIco, opoclollzlng
In Zonhh oloo oorvlclng moo1
olhor bnlndo. - · olio
o~llnoo I'IDIIro. wv
304-57e-2SN Ohio ll4o448-2454.
Sopllc Tonk Pumping $80, Grlllio
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
.locklon, OH 1-l00-837-1128. '
Dovlo
Saw·VIIC
Sorvlc:o
~ CI'Mk Rd. Parte, au~
pll0o1 pickup, ond dollvory. 114448-o2114.

L

iiUl @Ill Morton I Hayeo

OOfl£0, 11GtrLY·WT

for Sale

Home
Improvements

IIZD CBS Newt Q

Carol in charge. (R) C

75 Boats &amp; Motors

81

-

vacation, kiaving Mike and

Ukl NIWI 814-250-1880.
500 Shodow1 1,000 IIIIH, 81,500,
Nogotloblo. o14-«f-4ll38.

Hay &amp; Grain

,_....,.~;;..;;.~-­

tffleleney tpt,
dtposh, 304-

Jloiodlo!
top ond too
cupo, AKC "Chlrriplon ~llno,
lllo Mlnlotu.. Schnluroro,
,Coolvlllo 814.ea7-3404.

1'&gt;-1 AIIE5 1- 31

1112 Kowoookl 750-iJ.uM o...
lid. 81,300. 114-367·
,
llot~o 125
11181 S·-·••
••• u
St- Or Dill Blkl. I,
Mloo:

Services

,.,.,.nc.. and

pro1 l Aero. &amp;14-44W545.
Now ltl2 14xl0 lh,.e bldroom
2 lull brlthoh ohlnglo rool, vinyl
olrllng, o Ulloro,
corpotod
throuatrout, Ill drywoll tnrorlor
ond 3-bay window. JI7.81ZOO.
Call1oi00-721..4Q45.

.foME-rt'fiNG A
J..ITTI.E HIGtli~ vp
T1'tl FOOP C/'IAIN.

'

Canor'o Plumbing
ondHoollng
Fourth ond Plno
01111""'11 Ohio

3Br, Mobllt Home 2 B1the
Uvlng Room, In Centenary. A~

f-0(( A C&gt;AT£, ~UT

11,100. ~:zm.
1814 Torotl PlcltUp, I lplld,
4x4, 72,000 mlloo, $4,200. 304875-3375 ohor 4:00PM.

I ... 1012.
.
Livestock
~-=-~~;.;:.;;;.:.;;,.-...,1·Aogllllrod ANblln Horoo lor 76
Auto Parts &amp;
..••• 814-1112-8802.
.
Accessories
Cow ond coH . - hllloro tor
Nil, PaiN Ph•, 2418 Jtcbon l'3o8l Chovrolot truck · hood
An, Polnt PIMNnt, WY.
$50.00, 73-81 Chovrolll bod-.
po-ngor lido, $50.00 814-tBZ·
Jorooy Cow, 814-1185-3541.
11251ftor 5:00.
Roglotorld Anguo or&gt;tlng holt.ro Budall Tronomlulono, UHd 1
ond buill lor uta. !lroot brood· ,.buln,
ollrting ot $89; AUio
1nt olock ond vory tomo. Prlcod Plrtt. 114-245-5677,
614-379upon lnopoct!Gn, 814-'lll2-3033;
2263.
Roglitorld Llm... lno Collio
Y11~lngo, 014.fl2-41190.

Pets for Sale

AKC Lha11 Apoo, 2 yr old
ttmlll, brMCflr1 t111111 avel..
obio to riuhl poNOO, 304-8753831.

AI/CEP THE l&gt;lfTICIAf'J

I

18ft. Tr~HoUI 50 Chryolor
~lno I Troller, Good Bhlpel

24B-4121.

S52~:131.

FRANK AND ERNEST

'

tracto,. • Implements. Bu"t,
Hll, trade, 8;00..5;00 wMkdays,

r I I I I 19 O
B

Q

make the same mistakes twice.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) It's set·
dom that inside information can be relied on , but today might be an excepti on. If you get a tip fro m a reliable
in sider. a t least c heck it o ut before di smissing it.

PISCES (Feb. :ZO..M•rch 20) One of
your friends may not h ave been comp letely hones t with you la tely . Howeve r .
you 'll get the truth you're seeking

through another pal who may spontaneo usly volunteer the info rmation .

ARIES (Morch 21· April 19) Ambitious
ob)ectives can be achieved today, pro·
vided yo~ use your Ingenuity and re·
sourcefulness. Don' t be afraid to take a

have a strong influe nce on individuals chance - il the stakes warrant it.
you'll be Involved with and they, in turn, . T AUAUS (April 20-M•y 20) II things
will leave their mark on you. It's impe r a~ have been a bit dull lor you socially of
live you associate with upbeat people late. break away lrom your usual rou·
tines today. Do something dlllerenl with
today .
fres
h faces rather than familiar ones.
SAGtn AAIUS (No¥. 23-Dec. 21) There
c ould be a window of opportunity for GEMINI (MIY 21-June 20) The real
you today thai will allect your llnances !acts could surface today in a developas well as your career . You must capi· ment that has kept you confused. Once
talize on 11 promptly, though, because it you understand the underlying ele·.
ments, il can be deal! with effectively.
will be ol a lieeling nature.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jin. 11) You CANCER (June 21-July 22) Quick decl·
may have 10 deal with a situation today sions cannot always be relied on, bul
that Is similar to one you didn't handle this might not be true today. Vour lirsl
too skillfully recently. You've learned thoughts and impulses could be your
from this eKperience, and you won 't best ones.

1-31-tl

NORTH

BRIDGE

+K 6 S

.JI0 7
•K Q 98a

tQ6

PHILLIP
ALDER

(L)

•-Y. S3.tso: T030 Forguoon ...
Motorcycles
Wllh Turf Tlroo. Ow- Will '"'
Flnlco. 114-2195"
::=::=-::-.:..:.':":"'~:.;,;..:.._,__

dowa, llntete. ttc. Ciaudt WinIt,., Rio Grana, OH Call B14-

Groom ond Supply ShopoPot
Grooming. All brMdo, olyloo.
lome Pol Food Dorllor. Julio
Wobb. Call 114-«f-4231, I-IOQ..

·''

1m Jolp, 3114 onglno, 3 IPIId
4 whlll rlrlvo, work good, •7:000

Block. brick, _ . , Dlpoo, win·

56

·'

ml511, Nnl lnd IOOU good,

61

I 1 I 1 I' f

a

..

54 Miscellaneous

"Push this button and a lighl
will go on in lhe hall lor lhe
6
e nurse," the old man was
.
.
.
.
instructed. " II the nurse
.-- - - - - - -...., needs a lighl," he barked,
-iPT-ArW-iOrNrE-r.-1\ "she can turn it .. -------!"

UUpCioH
6:35 (I) Andy GriHith
7:00 IIID OJ Wheel of Fortune
1· )I

~

AFTEL
1---..,.-.--"T"-..--1;
!ii

[!) 1D WKRP In Clnclnnoll

¥-··

1=.

T""j-...F

....

OOurHouHQ
6:05 (I) Bewitched
6:30 III D (])) NBC New1 Q
(!) I Dream ol Joannle
(I) (I) D ABC NIWI Q
(lJ Wild Am.nc. Q
~

II ft Truo... Joopo lor $44
Through 1hl U.S. Gov't? Clll
~"3. FICIII 51J4.4MN'lll5 Ext. 8-

56

1~ 11' ru1s 1 1
0 0

~--1 f_,o1,. . ~R ~~-~II

a WOI'Id Today

(f) 3-2·1 ContiCI

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

room Sub, 7 pc., $11.17 WHk,

014-448-2404.
Singer Touch and Sew machine,
2-BR lurnlohod oponmonl $300 $125. 304-4175-8122.
· 1 month, all utllltln paid, 814Solid Olk bod room IUIIO, 304·
tBZ-8003 ot 14e.2528.
675-3431 ofter 6:00 Pll.
2nd St. lliddllport, 2·BR, living
SWAIN
room, dining room, k~chln ond AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
both, lot 11-. nowly docorotod. Olivo St., Galli polio. Now I Ulld
Coli t14-11!12·2403 ot 812·2780.
tumhurt, htattl"', Wtlltm &amp;
Work boolo. 114-446-:1151.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON Twtn bod with moHr110, 175.
ESTATE~,. 638 Jocbon Plkl
304-417&amp;-1111!1.
lrom 81.-umo. Woik to ohop &amp;
maviN. Cali 114-448-2588. EOH.
Booch St..ot, llldditport, Ohio.

UIJ&amp;1

NAI'a""" ·~ CM, WQU~T•N "

lnciudu Boddlng.Country Plno
DlnoHo With Bench I 4 Cholro, Tondy Cll-6 Color Computer
810.18 W111tOPEN: Mondoy MonHor. $150. 0-8-7231 After
Thru Saturday, te.m. to ep.m., &amp;p.m.
Sundoy 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
Milu Oft Roull 7 On Roulo 141, 55
Building
In Conlonory.
Covorlng In Stock! Mollohon
Corpoll, Rl. 7 North, 614o446'lll44.

11: I' D f.IAD IT [
WOULDN'T HAVE MISSED IT!

Condhlonor. Good Condh!Gnl
$3,300. 614-245-11525.

N. . utln wtddlng drta, tlzt
71'8, wom In June wedding, exc.
cond, $250. obo, 304-078-2128.

ChHI, $3.211 Wllk; Pooler Bod·

New

low to form f our simple

2

U lnakle the POA Tour

-----

And

O four
Rearrange l•"•rs of
scrambled words

IIJ Clrtoon ExpNn

11811 Z-24 CavoU" loodod,
$8300. 18tl Cavolior, 4-oyi, outo,
$1000,
614-112·2812
ofter
4:00pm.
-:=:~:-:"-:-::----::-:--,1165 Coiolo Supro'!'o, 3.0, V.f
Englno, Spociol 11111er, Now

Concrete &amp; plaetlo Hptlc tank•,
Ron Evant EntarprfHI, Jack-

Crool Motel. Cail814-4411-?318. ·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

210 Perch St. Kanauga 614-44S:
111?3.
'

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1888 Perknt1t1 t2x60,

45

5651, Maeon WV.

Houu and 3-btdroom apart-

awMr, nice 4 bedroom

14x70 Trailer with tundroom,
deck, carport, 3 outbuilding•
one with callar under It, over 32
112 IC:r.. Whh SJII Will 814-247-

Business
Training

Why Rent? Hom.. for SI.OO,
A•poa.
Gov't
Glveawar
Progr•mal For Information, 504-

Cell lhlf 2:00 p.m., 304·'773-

Garage, AC, Nawly Painted,

well

14

5:00.

Roome for rent • wetk or month.
St1rtlng 11 $120/mo. Gelll• Hotel.

quiNd, $350. month, 304-11753881.
3 bedroom hoUM Oft 3 ICrll, 1
milo oul Boulohvlilo Ro1d, 3-BR houoo lor root In Pomoroy,
SSS,OOO. axe cond,l~-1568. $225 per mo, dtpo•ll required.
No polo, 614-192-41558.
3br 2 Full lolho._Groot Room, 2
Car Gorago, $of,500. 814o4•8- 3br Houoo Wilh Attochod

1lr, carport on approx 1-acre,
overlocldng """ 11....,992·5'787
after Sp.m.
,

groomed,
experienced
S.JM p1,..on the Melgt Co.
arta, 1114-tt2·3273.

Polnf Pleaaant, no pel:ttJ and 2
btdrooma, 3~~20n after

2568.

Roc~'- OH, 817,000. Call 814192-nuo or 141-2784.
2 otory, locllod Point Ploooonl

Baker, P.O. Box 604, Jackaon,
OH 45140. 0.1dllnt for apotlconll: 8/&amp;IVI. Equol Oppor-

lunhy Employer.

Available Aug. 3. Coli 614·tl2·
2403 or 192·2780.
Wodgo Apto, 101 BIWdlllo St,

Apartment '"allabl• tor 2 or 3
conltructlon workere 3()4..882.

12 yr old, 3-BA, 2-Uih homo.
Doylighl brlolllllnl, I•ICII,

dHirablt location, new root,
new 3-car ~rage,lnlarlor nHda
flnlahlng, 28851 Bahan Ad,

32

epartmenl, 2-BR, ll"lng room,
dining room, kJtchen. bath.

84loll003 Ext. R-313.

IAGrondo Blvd. 614~46-137l
Rlducod To Soli: 2 Story 3br
Comer Lot In Chllhlro Ohio. 4th St. Mlddloport. Smoll houoo,
Excollonl CondHion. FM ~lnonc­ 3-BR, living room, kilchon, both,
month position, $8.15 per hour, . lng, FIYO Stir Mortgogo, Vlcklo nlee lot. Rant or sail. Needs a
Contract basla only. Prefer Houldron. 611 141 4042, Soller little work, cell 614-092-2403 or
aomeon• In the Rio Grand1, Wlli Poy Polnro. 104-132-11959, 992·2780.
Vinton aru. Mu.. poasau •I&gt; 804-1132·7610.
proprlttt tchool bua vthlclt

ond dovolopmonlol dloobliilioo
T"hurrday, t-3, R1clne, corntr of prolorrld. Solory: 18.00/hour, to
1tart. Send ruumt to Ceellla
and Wolnul.

-•Y

Unlurnlohod oportmont, 2nd
!lOot, Pomoroy. 4-Roomo, both.
No polo. RoIoronco ond dopooh,
12 .lcr• Parcll Plut Lot, Rt l5 814-192·2275 olllr 5:30pm.
Frontege. Unreatricttd l Ttrma.
Upllolro opt, 5 roomllbolh,
814-245-1448.
privoll ontronco, utlilllll pold,
304-875-1618
level Late For Sale 100x150, unlurnlohod,
ovonlngo.
Dibble Drive, $8,500; Call 614446-7231 Aftor 6p.m.
WotnUI Sr. lllddioport, Dupl11

Rentals

-·"0- _,.,_.,_

Hun Rd,

r an

tlon mailed on requelt. 304-6755253, John 0 . Gerlach, no
llngl•wlde trtlllre, pleau.

31 Homes for Sale

-_..

lord Sail. Rldgowow''!! RT. ?,

North 41hl Middleport, Ohio. 2
bldroom umllllod opt, dlpooh
oppoinlmont. 614o448-7898 day, ond roloronco roquiNd, 304-882·
2566.
446-1153hvo.
Ono bldroom ... In Point
PI
'"
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
taunt, txtra cleln and
roomy,
wtth
washlr
• dryer
LoC8 I ICrllgl IYIIilbll for
new home conetrucUon on hookup, no polo, 304.a75-1388,
Roybum R,.d. Povod I'Oid, Unlurnlohod 3 room oportmont,
county
wat.-,
rwaaon~blt
104 Spring '"'n~, Pomeroy.
rootrlcllono. Comploto lnlormo· ean 814-192-58011.
must ... them. Phone

ar11 to rent or UH w/optlon,

$500 Down On SoiiCI Ropo•
Iliff meltlngi on.hour wHkly 11010d Nobllo Homeo. Froo Sol
LPN moiling; ot 11 othorwtoo Up And Dollvory. Flnonolng
lord Solo, Aug 1-2. 1:00.? Cor· ochldulod.
Current
LPN Avoltobll. Mid Ohio Anonco, I·
- of F-1 Run Aold I t, roln Llconoo, llnlorlm PormH Accopo IIOO.S&amp;e-6711,
loblo),
OOPNESINAPNESior 4800
S1ate Board approved tralnlng
Yord Salo, ~ 1-2-3 II 4th ond valid driver'• nee.... and gooa1 18WI -~
Cnloll SL, Syrocuoo. Roln con· drlvl~ record, good com-

· ecr011 lram ~Of'Mt

Make your choice now. No

quotH ovor tho phonolo you

814-14e.:z?63.

license or wllll~ to obtain. Fot
more Information call 814-3677371 or write to the Gallla
County Board of MRIOO. P.O.

nlehtd apartment, deposit and

or 11111 on .115 ac:re, 304-875- Complolly Fumlohod mobil•
5332 or I.SD0-'1!2·7116.
homo, r milo billow tow!', ovorOFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on ~~~';t,~vor. No Poll, ""· '""
2nd Avo., Gollipollo. Clooo to
Court Hou11. 1 room, 2 roome, Nonh 3rd Sl, Mlddioport, Olllo, 1
3 roome, 4 rooma. All nicely bldroom lumiohod opt, roloren·
decorated, tlr conditioning, coo ond dopooH roquirod. 304your water a HWtr bUI are pala. 882-2568.

In· Trail• Lot· For Rent, 10 Ull11
From Grllllpolll, IRI. 141) 614379-2501.

Real Estate

\IO:GCilrn-4:00pm.
~Goliipoii ii Bidwoll). Houro: 3:3Q.
lltd lllo Aug ll2 llrlm·5pm 10. .30p.m., Fri, a..m.•ep.m., Sat;
Spring Avo. Pomoroy, Miocol· 6-9p.m., Sun; 2·hour WHkty

.....

ret.renee, 304-882-2511.

501100 lloolo building lor uto

Wanted, 3-BR home, Racine

:....,.1 '"""'""

High SChool Aut 1·3, I :D0-5pm
ctilr, 1111'10, new Blalell

Fene•.

Now Hovon, 2 bldroom lur-

Gil pold lor compiling nomoo

...._ - • M Hugo gorogo
- . :ttl St., ~omoroy. Boxl4, Chlohill, Ohio 45620.
AujUII 1-2-1
Tho Molgo lccol School Dlolrlc
HOking opo
• Mftlng lolel Evaty~hlng gooo, 11 curronrty
· fumllure 1nd mlac., Troy -aullt plicoliono from coniiiOd lfl'
•liiW, 12...rt oproyor, loolo. Dli· plicon!o lor 1 Guldonco
,...... At. Ill, lnoWvlllo, Augl-5. Coublolot 11 Molgo Hlah School
ond Glrto' Junior High '\lotioyboll
lot lho lttl-1992 11Chool
yord oolo, Cooch
. Tlllndly Aut· 1 lroodwoy year. Applicant. muet hold a
11-. Rlclrio, nlco kldo volid Ohio INching cortlllcoto
ond lor coochin8 poohiGno
olalhot,lOIIoc.

11ort1n1

Rooldontlal,

Link

(

'-

8:00pm.

.B usiness
Buildings

36

11 pm. Sala'l biHd on ta:·

garage aale, range, mini·
biU, rldlng mower, toys, etc.
Augl-3, lull on Llu,.l Clift.
Lllgo Yord Salol Aug 1·2-3. Paul
1.111 r~~~•nco. lkiccoa Rd.,
- h o f T - Ptalno, OH.
Aug 24, a:OOo4:00, Lit Circlo,
Ruollc Hlill Sync._, cllltdron'o
ond ldull .. clalhlng,'towo, omoll
billa, . _ fulHjlgo corrlor,
12'11' owlrnmlna pool, knick·
~ motlll{.gt2.7812.

Chain

l

Llloyotto Moll : 3br12 Bolh! 1 All
lnciudoa, 5420/mo.
1&amp;3 acre betf farm, home, Ulilltloo
Dopooh RoquiNd. No Poll. 814bamt, outbuilding•, and etc. 448-7733, 614-446-4222.
814-192-?384.
Modom 2-BR oportmonl In Mid·
Lion Dunham Road fum, dloport.
Corpot,
oqulppod
houae, bam, teqctd, pond1, kltchtn, daposlt, rete,.nce ,...
304o458-1tl8 or 458·1755.
quiNd,
614·185-444' ollor

EARN MONEY Roodlng bookll 384-11277.
$30,0001rr. lncomo potonliat. 1 .:.::.:..:::-:;~---,:---­
Dolollo. 1) 80&amp;-862-8000 Ell. y. .._, Poy Phono Route. Polcod
10188.
For Quick Solo. 1.aoo-zlii.I086.

Rullond II. Middleport, roln or lng to work 11am-7am and 3pm~

tho offering.

WMklr. Tran1portatlon, Mou•

ond oddrOUH, $500. por 1 000
Big l elton, 143 ouloldo Hor· Call 1·1100·248-3131 I$O.II!IIintni
rtMnvl.. to conorm Rd 112 milo, or wrho: PASSE, 517 W 161
. OfOihloo, houll Will croft IUfl' South
Llncotnwar,
North
111111, lllctrlc olovo, liko now, AurotO, Ill 80542.
· :IIHII oloVIfYihlng Aug. 1·2·3.
GET PAID IM Compiling Nomn
lla 2·tlmlly yord oolo Aug 1·2·3 ond Addro-. l$00 por 1,000.
"11113 ln&gt;Odwoy SL Mlddloport. Call
1·1100.:148-:11:11 1$0.19/mln)
Loll ol clothing ond houoohold
M-.
. lla yon! .... .. 482i5 Eoglo
Aklgo Ad. Co. Ad. 32. Shoolo,
. ..,._, • - • · pluoolzo cloth-

•

(lJ Club Connect
(!) RHdlng Rainbow Q
[!) • Andy Orffllth

11181 Ponlloc Sunblrd LE, 2
dOot, 5 opood, A£, 24,000 mlioo,
31,1100.
304-afo-3375
oftor
4:00PM.

Farms for Sale

"----------..,..----------134

~Roodo,N.

(I) D

TIIAT DAILY d.. /1Q
PUJILII \:)\!Q

(!) Andy Grffllth

llpollo Forry. Fumhure,

4:00, wolch lot olgno, 814-192·
12111.
Auauol 1·2, Now Umo Rd., Rut·
lani:l. Clothing, toya, c111fl1,
home klt.not, filler, much m018.
Auguol
1·2-3.
Antlquoo,
. . - . , Allorln Iampo, rongo
fiood, olothlng •nd mftc. Inter·
oocllon ol 124 ond Co. 5 11

WED.. JULY 31

'7TVD!Il0

mU11up

loll of other mlec Heme, 10:00.

The Dall Sentlnei-Pa e-15

. ..

EAST

WEST
• Q J 10 8
• s4
• A 10 6 4
+to 8 2

.732
• A8 2

.32
+A9 754

SOUTH
tA94
.KQ963
.J 7
+K J 3

Kaos
combats Control

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
Weal
Pass
Pass
Pass

Soutb

By Phillip Alder

••
••

2 NT

Early in 1970, Control and Kaos,
those well-known spy orga mzations,
had to forgo operations afler !inanclat
cutbacks. lnslead of spying, they continued their fight - goodness and
niceness vs. evil - al the bridge table.
The first rubber began well lor Con·
trol. Maxwell Smart , Agent 86,
brought home a grand slam on deal
two. Kaos had a chance to recover
ground on hand three, Shtarker becoming the declarer in four hearts a!·
ter a straighl!orward auction. (The positioos have been shifted so decla rer
can be South.}
Max, West, led the spade queen.
Shtarker won in hand and detached a
low heart, but then he spotted the
problem . If he led a trump immediately, the defense would win that trick
and lead a nother spade. Then when he
lost the lead in either minor, they
would be able to cash a spade trick . In·
stead he led the club three, Max signaling wilh the two and dummy playing the queen.
The Chief paused to consider his

Eal l
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

+Q

.__ __ __ _ _ _ _ _--.J

pla y. II looked right 10 win with the
ace and return a spade, bul perhaps
Shtarker had K-J-3 of clubs. In thai
case he would get a spade discard. As·
sessing the situation correclly, the
Chief played the club four.
Shtarker led another club, but the
Chief won with the ~ce and return~ a
. spade to dummy s krng. Shtarker
called for the heart jack, but the Chief
put up h•s ace and ted a thrrd spade.
Max won that tnck and cas hed the dill·
m~nd ace to de!eat the ~a me.
. Yo~ tdrot, Shtarker, cned SlegI n ed . Eel only you vtn zee ltrst trick
rn zee dummy, you hal an entry to
your hand VIZ zee _spade a~ to prtch
your loser on zee z1rd club.
@ ' 11 '· . . .,..,.. •NTE-. . ASSN.

®

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Antwer to

producing

PN•iou• Puule

••••

I Electrical
unit
4 ReUgloua
po'm
9 Crtof
aurprloe
12 French yeo
13 Ballroom
dance
14 Alley15 Poverty
17 Oppoolte ol

37 Inert gao
39 SUtch
40- go!
41 Chivalry
43 TV ICCIIIOry
45 Language
oulllx
46 Lively
49 Choreogr•
phorTherp
53 Edible tuber
54 Account
58 Seo mammal
59 Vlnos
60 Edgar Allan

POll

18 Donkeya
19- B.
Anthony
21 Quarrel
23 Comparallve
oufflx
24 Doing gym
exorcioe
28 Joyful
· 32 Simpleton
33 Looked al
34 Root
onmang
35 Aesln-

61 Lay
62 Slop
63 Superlative
ouffll

DOWN
111r•. Cherlea
Chaplin
2 Shode•

3 Archllec:l nn dtr Rohe
4 Jolla
5 - V1lley,
ldeho
6 Soul (Fr.)
7 Many oz.
8 eiiHard llhot

Aobe10:05 (I) MOVIE: Perry Maaon: The
CIH of the LOll LOVI (2:00)
Croolr and CIIIH
10:30
tD BIHbell Tonight

a

11 :oo rn e Cll

(J) 11

1111

az 111

ONewo
Twlitght
® • ArHIIIo Hall Stereo. Q
11J Crime Story
a The Getllno: Short Storlao
Lorry Gatlin and the Gatlin
Brothers present noma video
lootage lrom their mus ic
tours. [I :OO)
Sponlcertt•
8 Sponl Tonight
0 Scarecrow ond Mrs. King
11:30IIID 0 Tonlghl Show
Stereo.
(!) Mlg!UII; p.l.
(lJ Newawlleh
(J)
Nlahtllne C
~ A...,.lo Hell Stereo. Q
tl2l.D 'Scene ot the Crime'
CBS Ltrte Nlghl Stereo. Q

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·--yllne

, , :3511) CIIHre Q
12:00il)Din10 the Nlqht Stereo.

®D

Perty M.clilne With
Nlll Peepleo
IIJ Ttte Hitchhiker

CELEBRITY CIPHER

C...brlty Cll)h« cryptograms ar• CIUIId !rom QUOtatlonl bV llmOul peoplt, paat and
Each ltttllf In the cipher l landl tor lftQtt.r. T«»y-. Clue: 1t1 .,._It

K Z J F

'G T X

DVIIXOD
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Never lay you know a man until you have
divided on lnherlla11C41 with him." - Johann Caspar Llvoler.
II 19G1 by NEA .Ine.

31

�'.
Page-16-The Dally Sentinel

BIG BEND

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

000

Reds win
second game
in row 5-1

Pick 3:375
Pick 4: 0485
Cards : 2-H, 2-C
9-D; 9-S
Super Lotto:

PageS

LARGE

ASSORTED FLAVORS
VELVET

SOUTHERN
PEACHES

Vol. 42, No. 62
Copyrighted 1991

By BRIAN J . REED
Sentinel News Staff
A fast-approaching deadline and
a loggerhead situation between
officials at lhe Ohio Department of
Development and the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers made for a
tense meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners on Wednesday
afternoon.
The deadline at hand is one
established by the Corps for bids
on work at the Middleport sewage
lagoon. Contracts on the project are

scheduled to awarded next week,
and corps regulations require any
matching local funds to be in the
hands of their office before the
award is made.
However, lhe Ohio Department
of Development, which has awarded $199,000 in Imminent Threat
monies toward the project, refused
to forward the money to the county
until the work was completed.
At the commencement of yesterday' s meeting, the future of the
projec t stood threatened because

DOVER, Del. (AP) - The fail ure to win concessions on credit
and costly natural gas contracts left
Columbia Gas System Inc. and iiS
pipeline subsidiary little choice but
to ftle
analysts say.

NEEDED

they've had," Paul R. Ferritti said
Wednesday. Ferritti is senior vice
president at Dillon Read &amp; Co. Inc.
in New York.
He said the other option was to
negotiate with bankers and natural
suvvue:rs and that apparently

r.------------------------------~-----,

PURE CANE

"

\b Ol; ••••••

FREE HOT DOG, ............... ..

Domino Sugar

qq(

ARMOUR FAT
Limit One With Coupon
and $10.00 Additional
Purchase
___________
j

S LB.
~h~s.

BAG

---------------------ANGEL SOFT

Bathroom

4 ROLL

PKG.
ASSORTED

Brawny
Paper Towels

ROLL

$

SPRITE • DIET or

Coca-Cola
Classic 12 PACK

SPORTSWEAR - Jackie Brooks, seated, listens carefully as
Cyrstal Vaughan explains her sportswear outfit that she made for
her 4-H project for the Meigs County Fair. The judging was conducted at Pomeroy Village Hall.

99oz.

Roy Sprague named to
BREC Board of Trustees

12
CANS

People attending the 38th annual
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc. opened their meeting with
a moment of silence in memory of
former board of trustees member
Clyde Walker, of Thurman, who
died July 25.
Roy D. Sprague, of Gallipolis,
was selected to fill Walker's post
as the board's secretary-treasurer
during a board session July 29.
More than 250 consumers and
guesiS were on hand at lhe July 26
meeting at the Buckeye Hills
Career Center near Rio Grande.
The Rev. Dirk Elliott provided

"
( .'' ·; ~··~ : . SPRINGDALE
.,.

'

1

·:s:l
\ -~~.·~n't "' 1.1
.:."'.... ·: J
1

~~·
·1•/1
,.,. . ,..
.• '···

POWDER-32 OZ.

Chocolate
Dr .• nk GALLON

. ,... . :_ t .

DUNCAN HINES-18 OZ.

,

~:~..................... 79(

~~~~:GENT ............ 99(

9
9
(
SHORTENING .......... .

BUMBlE BEE.

SWIFT'NING-42 OZ .

TUNA

-~! ;~tAr~$ 79
.~~\i::~ CHIPS ..................... .]

b.s oz ........ .

ASSORTED VARIETIES

11 oz.

BANQUET

POT PIES

7 oz. box

s9(
59

(

'\~, !~~~ ....................Sl 29
We

•

•

-

Quantities o Prices Effective Thru Sat .,

CLOROX
BLEACH

YUBI 8 oz. CTN.3
YOGURT

I $1 09

~SHEDD'S-3LB.

e

~~g~~~~ ..............$..199

GAILON ....

99(

the in vocation. Board presidcn1
Gene Nance and interim manager
Tom McElroy delivered !heir annual reports. Guest speakers included
Richard K. Byrne, presidcn~ Ohio
Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc.,
and Amy Jackson of Gallipolis, the
winner of the co-op's annual scholarship competition and secondplace finisher in the statewide contest.
The cooperative is headquartered in Gallipolis and serves
15,000 member-consumers in Gallia, Jackson, Vinton, Ross, Meigs,
Pike, Scioto, Lawrence and Alhens
Counties.

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

. . . . . . . . $.199
~~~:Ls . . . . . . . . 79(

JIF- 18 OZ.

Water to be off Tuesday

:~~~T

On Tuesday the TupP!lrS Plains-Chester Water District wiU have

the water off for approximately six hours in the Tuppers Plains area.

BOUNTY

\~ MEADOW GOLD-12 CT.

•

both agencies refused to make tering the funds for the village of
exceptions to their policies.
Middleport at the request of th e
However, after several phone state. In addition to those Imminent
calls between Commissioner Threat monies, the village itself
Richard Jones, officials at the will front $12,000 and the county
Department of Development and (through state-issued Community
Alan Elberfeld of the Corps of Development Block Grant funds)
Engineers, it was agreed that a let- wiD contribute $30,000 in order to
ter of credit would be issued to lhe make the local contribution to the
county commissioners, who in turn project. The corps will provide
would endorse it and forward it to $50,000 of the total cost.
lhe corps so that lhe project could
The corps had agreed to perform
get underway as scheduled.
the erosion-repair projec t in
The commissioners are adminis- December, 1990.

In other business. the commissioners agreed to apply for Litter
Control grant monies for 1992, and
voted to continue a $16,000 local
match for lhat program in the year
ahead.
Meigs County Highway Department Superintendent Ted Warner
reported that Issue 2 funded road
paving projects are now completed.
Warner also said that the department is mowing in areas lhroughout the county.
The commissioners also:

Columbia Gas files for
bankruptcy protection
NO
COUPON

c

2 Socllon, 12 Pagea 25 cenlo
AMulllmedlo Inc. Newapapor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 1,1991

Project appeared to be in jeopardy at start of commissioners meeting

'h Gal.·
Ctn. ·

•

High today In 90s. Friday,

sunny and bot.

Sewage lagoon project will start on schedule

Super Dip
Ice Cream

LB.

1-2-18-29-34-42
Kicker:l02822

The effected areas will be on Route 7 going North beginning 300
feet before the Gulf Station on the East side until Vanderhoof Road;
both sides to the Route 50 interchange; from Route 7 East on Route
681 up to and including Rice Run Road; and the Arbaugh Subdivision will also be affected.
'
The TP-C Water District will be removing and replacing a main
line regulator. Rain will postpone the work.
Continued on page 3

. 1. •USDA Food Stamps and WlC Coupons Accepted • Not Responsible for Typographical or Pictorial Errors

.'

failed.
For more than a month.
Columbia tried to negotiate settlements with its natural gas suppliers
who have Columbia Transmission
locked into long-term contracts that
force it to pay above-market prices
for natural gas. At the same time,
Columbia Gas System had been
meeting with its bankers to reestablish a line of credit
Ferritti said Columbia probably
felt it was running out of time and
could not reach agreements before
cold weather set in.
"I guess it's not all that surprisbut nevertheless, it's disapp~inting . You would have thought
would have avoided bankruptcy, the producers would have
agreed to settlements and the
bankers would have agreed to
extend credit to existing loans." he
said.
Columbia Gas System, one of
the nation's largest natural gas suppliers, and its primary subsidiary.
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.,
both filed Wednesday for reorganization under Chapter I I in U.S.
Bankruptcy Court in Wilmington.
Columbia Gas System is headquartered in Wilmington, while
Columbia Gas Transmission is
based in Charleston, W.Va.
Lawrence Crowley. natural gas
analyst with Rauscher Pierce Refsnes in Houston, said he couldn't
speculate on why the producers
would not negotiate a settlement
with the contraciS.
"The only lhing I would say IS I
think Columbia is going to come
out of (bankruptcy) in form and
substance much different than
when they went into it. It's too
early to say what the format will
be, but I suspect it's goin~ to be
quite different," Crowley saJd.
For example, he said bankrupiCy
Continued on page 3

Columbia Gas Files
for Chapter 11
Columbia Gas System Inc.'s
bankruptcy stems In part lrom
depressed prtces fo r natural gas.
The company Is engaged in
long-term nalural gas contracts,
paying an average of $2.70 per
f ,000 cubic feet, with some
co ntraC1s as high as $6. The
average on lhe spot market is
$1.20.

PRACTICING FOR REVUE • Jennifer
Mora gives some pointers to Melissa Francis and
Christy Drake as they practice for the 4-H Style
Revue during tbe Meigs County Fair on Au~. 14

- appropriated $1,500 to the
Com mon Pleas Court's assigned
counsel fees budget;
- accepted the only bid submitted for bituminous products for
August from Asphalt Materials.
Inc .;
- approved an interdepamnental
transfer in Meigs County Court •s
budget in the amount of $607.
Present, in addition to Warner
Jones and Elberfeld, were Commis:
sioners Manning Roush and David
Koblentz and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

at 2 p.m. The girls practiced as they waited io be
judged on Wednesday for their clothing projects.

State, union job loss forecasts vary
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) State officials say 675 government
employees could be laid off over
the next two years, but a union
spokesman says job losses by attrilion and other means could reach
4,000.
Elimination of the jobs would
occur as a result of the state's new,
$27.2 billion budget.
Gregory Browning. director of
the Offiee of Budget and Management, forecast the layoff of 675
full -time employees during the
two-year•life of the budget that
took effect Friday. The figure did
not reflect attrition or the elimination of unfilled jobs.
No extra money was provided in
the measure to cover the cost of a 4
percent pay raise lhal took effect
July I, or for an increase in heallh
insurance premiums. State agencies
will have to cover the extra
expense out of their existing bud-

gets.
"They all know they have to
absorb that 4 percent cost. There's
a relationship between lhat number
and the pressures on individual
agency budgets," Browning said.
In addition , negotiations are
ex pected later this y,ear on a new
contract with the Ohio Civil Service Employees Association to
replace one that expires Dec. 31.
" There arc all these variables
out there. I'm saying, given what
we know right now, given the fact
that we have a 4 percent pay raise
that just went into effect four
weeks ago and that we have to pay
for ... we know how much is funded for 1992 and 1993, put it all
together and you get the 67 5,"
Browning said Wednesday.
Peter Wray, public affairs director for OCSEA, said an agency-byagency analysis of potential job
losses still was being prepared for

the union.
"If most of our numbers hold
together. we still think there's
going to be 4,000 positions elirninated whether through actual layoffs or other attrition forms," Wray
said.
''We anticipate that vacancies
will go unfilled, other types of
attrition will be used to leave positions open, departments wiU irnplement early retirement incentive
programs ... and fmally there will
be outright layoffs, " he said.
Wray said an unofficial union
tally showed there ha':'e been 132
employee layoffs thts year. No
comparable fi~ure was available
from the Oh•o Department of
Administrative Services.
However, the DAS said as of
Jan . I, 1991, there were 59,318
full -ume and permanent part-time
stale government employees. As or
June 29 there were 59,179.

Ohio competing for new postal hub

Price per 1,000 cubic feet on last
day of month for near-term
delivery on the New Yor1&lt;
Mercantile Exchange.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Postal Service's attempt to get
more room for its planes already
has
Ohio competing with other
$1 .50
states, and Ohio cities competing
with each other.
On Wednesday . the airline
industry added a new element to
the competition.
The airlines told Congress
1.00
they're concerned the bigger facilities will inspire the Postal Serviee
to buy more planes and then fill
them with first-class mail that now
flies on commercial carriers.
.50
"We question the need for such
a large hub proposal," Nestor
Pylypec of the Air Transport Assocl8tion of America, told a congressional subcommittee.
The Postal Service wants to put
.00
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun
a permanent regional air hub in
'
either Kentucky,lndiana. Illinois or
1991
'-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Ohio.
It is currently considerinl! bids
AP
SOurce NYI.£X

..

from 13 airportS that believe they
can meet the Postal Service's
requirements for sorting equipment, runway length and more.
Deputy Postmaster General
Michael Coughlin said the list of
requirements 1\'as compiled with an

138th Ohio
fair begins
this evening
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Three Ohio governors will put
aside politics when they gather to
officially open the 138th Ohio
State Fair.
The fair, one of the nation 's
largest, opens tonight It ends Aug.
18.
Continued on page 3

eye toward future expansion. But
that list raised red flags for the
commercial airlines, which now
carry nearly 2 billion pounds of
mail for the Postal Service each
year.
Coughlin said the extra sr.ace at
the proposed new hub docsn t automatically translate into a loss of
business for the commercial airlines.
For instance, lhe Postal Service
could use the extta space for a
spare parts depot to accommodate
the planned addition of thousands
of pieces of automated mail-handling equipment, he said.
Assistant Postmaster General
Allen Kane told the House Subcommittee on Postal Operations
that the extra space would give the
Postal Service more flexibility in
dealing, for instance, with security
problems and expanded Express
Mail service a few years hence.

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