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simple, even·aged forest. In the
east, yellow poplar would be one
of these species.
GALLIPOLJS - The clearcut ·
There are several different
modifications and• applications
method of harvesting and regen·
of this method. Regeneration is
eratlng a forest Is, wltbout a
dependent upon seed and plant·
doubt, the most recoglnlzed
method..
i)lgs. Whe.n seed Is the primary
It Is the same as the previously
source, the seed Is Usually al., discussed methods In that !I has
ready present In the soli. or the
advantages and disadvantages. clearcuts are spaced 1!1 ·such a
· It Is one more sUvlcultural tool
miuif!er to have the seed wind
\Yben used correctly and within dispersed from the trees sur· ·
the set of circumstances whl~h · · rounding the cut. There are
warrant It's use. ·
·
times In stands when the species
The clearcut method should be composition,.· qllal.!ty and form
applied a, !I states - ·all the· are so poor clearcuttlng, as part
trees, lrregardless of stze, are of a good muttlple·use !oresi
· cut. In a sllvlcultu~ally corr~ct management plan, can be very
cleilrcut this · ts wbat would valuable In making those part!&lt;;'
occur.
ular stands very productive
'file trees of merchantable . again. ,
Advantages ot clearcuttlng ln· · quality are cut and removed
(rom the stand. The remaining · elude (1) logging and other sllvltrees are cut down andlefi laying cultural practices 'a re much
In the ar.ea. By cutting every·
more simplified, (2) there are no ·
thlngthts gives all the ·regenera· · residual trees left that may· be
!lap an equal start from the very .subject- to wind or other natural
beginning.
d;images, and '(3) Umber mark·
· In a "commercial clearcut" lng Is very easy.
The d·lsadvantages of this me·
the trees of merchantable qual·
ity are cut and removed from the thod would lnclud.e (l)regenerastand bl!l the remaining · trees tlon Is provided only ~moe from
are ·Jeft standing. These remain- the previous stand, (2) since the
IDIJ tr.ees ·have no commercial · enure stand· passes through the
vaJue 'and If they are not harv· age classes at thes.a metlme, It Is
ested now their value will proba· more suscepta,ble to the hazards
bly not Increase. In the future. of each age class such as lns~ts
What .Is left is poor quality trees · and disease, (3) reduces the procompetll\g With the new growth . tectlon .from landslides, erosion
for growing space and nutrients. and :water run·off, and (4) tl(e
. This method Is o!ten consl· most aesthetically urideslrable.
dered . against those methods
Much has been said and writ·
wtilch provide a partial cutting : ten about dearcutttng. More lis·
w~n the' r,e malnlng .trees ~ould
tenlng and learning must be dcm¢
not Increase In value, ·they are . to put this method In the perspec- .
not needed .as a seed source or Uve where It belongs. If It Is app·
·protection to new growtl!, or the lied as It should be, It Is not an
stand Is mature or overmature.
easy nor ·an Inexpensive method ·
The clearcut metl\od sbould be to apply. We all must learn about
considered With the specleS'that this method and Wbere:and wben
' can do well In the environment It should be used. It, discussed,
created by clearcuttlng. That en· can continue to supply us with
Ylronment would have full expo· the wood proaucts we count on so
sure to the sun, resulting In a much.

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.,Ernre &amp;;hn, a.ii Iowa farmer
··who has used ridge tillage on his
land for more than 25 years, will
speaker. Behn has
be the

U.S.' pursues

liJ)eral trade rules
COLIJ!&gt;fBUS, Ohio iUPl) ..,.
I.Jberai!Zing agricultural trade'ls
being aggressiVely pursued by
t~e United &amp;tales in the current
negotiations of the General
Alfreement'mi Tariff$ and 'Frade.
r pennls Henderson, agrtcultu·
raJ economist at Ohio State
University s11ys trade llberallza·
IIGn would result In significant
c savings to consumers In most
developed countries and greater
ln.c ome opportunities for
..farmers In developing countries.

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POMEROY &amp;, (iALL!POLIS
LOCATIONS
PH. 446-0699

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Racine ·Park Board· to assist
w-ith July 4 .celebration-.events

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B~HK ONE, A'THEHS, HAlA PAIIT OF THE CARING TEAM ·,
Mohibtt FDIC

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-E MOSAlE
15009R
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" Qr. Gr.!Jv Auto.,
AM!FM Cass.

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During these times of uncertain economic condi·lions, don't overtook your drY cows. They'll help
improve your profits if yo~rcondition them on Freshstart D&amp;H Chow.
Unlike milking. rations, Purin11·s. Freshslart D&amp;H
'C how •. bra~d dry cow ration is especially formulated to meet the critical requirements of your dry ·
cows. Wh111re these requirements are not met metabolic problems may develop, like milk fev~r and
; ketosis. These can cost you ' IPoney, especially in ,
.... ·.. l~t milk. .
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CARS

..R&amp;G .FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.
r·

!lqmeroy, Ohio ·

Thia Store With "All Kinds of Stuff" For Peta. Stables. ·'
Laraa· &amp; Small Animals.
·

Search ·continues for victim·s

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Meigs County's Only Full Line ·
Authori:red Puiina Chow Dealer.

992.2164

w

Court upholds restrictive
abortion laws for minors

.Order your Freshstart D&amp;H today and help your dry '.
co~ store up nutrients for more milk and 111ore in.
come thrbughout the next lactation.

399 W. Main

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. To Make
Your Dry.Cows
.. Pay.

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differ on

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;'THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"

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81 E. State

Athens, Ohio

(614) 59f-8555

SOil.

1 Section: 10 Pogei

25 Cenll

A Multimedia hlc. Newapaper

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A wa,.derlng black bear was
sighted In . Pomeroy yesterday
and slghtlngs· have continued up
until this morning.
According to Ohio Department
of Natural Resources Game
Protector Keith Wood, the first
call reporting the bear was at
1:13 p.m.' yesterday. The bear
was sighted In the Bradbury
Road area,
· ·
Calls continued to come In as
the ' bear moved throughout the
area, Wood said. The bear was
sighted behind the FOodland
grocery store, Monkey Run.
Butternut Avenue and Peacock
Street. Slghtlngs placed the bear
at the Beech Grove Cemetery
later ttits morning.
Wood said the bear was originally captured In Charleston.
W.Va.~ and was released In
Mason County. Tbe' bear crossed
the river · and way sighted In
Gallla, Jackson and VInton Coun·.
ties. ·wood added tllat thiS bear ·
!.racks. The bear came olf the wOOded area of the:
WbKING FOR BEAR TRACKS- Keith Wood,
was
the same one captured June
hill behind the howoe Into .the floral area and dug
gamel . pi'Oteetor, and Rick Blaettnar with
3
lh
McArthur. In that Incident.
up severar plants before being scared away by a
daughter, Je!lslca, look over the terrace l&gt;ellind
state
· wildlife officials and law
crowd ot onlool&lt;ers.
the Blaetlnar home on Bntternut Ave. for bear
enforcement officers cooperated
In using a tranquilizer gl!n to
capture and relocate the bear Ina
remote area of S!JUihern Ohio. He
..
said he was 99 percent certain
· this was the same bear because
of the West VIrginia ear· tag the
·
bear was wearing.
,, Wood stressed th.a t the bear
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1to be leff alone. People
needs
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Plans were made'to I!Ss!stwlth Trophies for flrit and seco~d · at the park wlll be a golpet group
were
chasing
bear and .trytng
actiVIties of the Racine Fire
piace winners In each class will from Gallipolis, the Soul to feed lt. He the
said the bear was
Depar.lment during the July 4 be given. There will be a $1 entrY Searchers. The Country Blend
probably confused and was prob· . ~elebratlon at .Star Mlll Park fee,
!'
Band Will also perfonn. Actlvl- . ably
trying to get back to West
f
U¢s begin at 7:30p.m.
. ·r:
.durlng a ,recent meeting of· the
VIrginia. ,
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Racine VUlaf!e Park BOard.
Aluo on July 4, there wlll be
ThE' board Is accepting dona·
' The board Is Inviting flea . free entertainment at the park • lions of pies or cakes for
market opera!.ors11nd craft mak·
until the time of the fireworks.
Saturday's events as well as the
ers to set up booths at the park.
T.he park board reports also July 4 programs.
Ther&lt;l :. will be 10·fQot sections that a new public address system
All entertainment at the park Is
ava11able Jor $10. To . reserve a · has been purchased f&lt;;~r the park. free of charge and. those attend·
section; contact .,Carroll or Eva Fund raising projects to assist lng should bring lawn chairs.
Teafor.d. at 949-2692 or Bob or . with the costs oi the system are Playground equipment Is avalla·
Jane'·Beegle at ~9·2891. ,
planned fqr the July 4 · ble for chlldren. ,
•
The board reports thll! Ted · celebration. .
This Is the fifth year that free
Smith, of DJ's Tradll)i P,ost, will
According to the park IJoard, entertainment has beenpri&gt;vlded
hold a Kiddie Tractor Pull Denver Rice will be performing at the village owned Star Mtll
. AKRON, Ohio IUPI) - EdUCII·
beginning at 4' p.m. on July 4. at Saturday's program. He per· Park. The programs are ·held
tor.s are against allowing parents
According to Information, there . forms with his commode ring every other weekend during the
to choose the public schools their
will be two classes for the pull, 35 banjo.
·
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summer.
children
attend but Ohioans In
Making their first appaarance
to 55 pounds and 56 to 75 pounds.
general
are
· In favor of the
'
concept.
A University of Akron poll
puqllshed Monday In The Akron
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Beacon Journal said 57 percent of
Ohio
residents favor allOwing
SHADYSIDE, Ohio (UP!)
He said that that when a body ts under debris In the Wegee Creek,
by par\'nts In selecting
choice
Weary search teams using two laken away by floodwaters, It still looking for victims of the
publlc
schools
for their children.
barges With cranes worked this would naturally travel out of the June 14 flash flood that has left
weekend around a dam about 30 creek, head downstream toward several people on the missing
However, 64 percent. ot the
miles downstream for vlctlms .of the Ohio River and the dam list.
educators surveyecj said they
the flash flOOd 10 days earlier at would stop a body from traveling
"Divers decided to go beneath
were against the Idea.
Shadyside.
·
downriver.
the Wegee and through the metal
The Ohio General Assembly
Twenty'· three people are
After an exhaustive search In parts of trailers," said Vogt.
last year passed a law requiring
.known dead In Ohio's 'worst the Wegee and PIpe creeks where "There could be somebody un·
all Ohio public school dlstJ:lcts to
weather disaster since the JUly 4, a wall of water built up and · derneath all that stuff. We're not
have open enrollment In effect by
1969, tornadoc!s and floods . In pushed, away everything In Its leaving anything un~urnlitl."
the 1993-94 school year.
northern Ohio killed 41 people:•
The 23rd victim, found Thurs.
path, the search moved down the
The Omnibus Education ReThe search has concentrated lrt Ohio River where tons of debris day, one week after the disaster,
form Act . mandates school
the: Hannibal area "because backed up at the H;~nnlbal locks was Identified as Mary Gatten,
boards to decide whether they
·
that's the only place that hasn't and dams.
. 26, whose sons Stephen, 9, and
will accept students from all
been totally searched , and Its the
adjacent districts. Ami all dis·
"They've searched the Wegee · Timmy, 6, also died In the
last possibility to find bodies." and Pipe creeks area about 40 flooding. Some famllles . lost · trlcts must erase Internal neigh·
said Charles Vogt,m an lnves.ll· times four," said Richard Quln·
more than one per59n. Several
borhood boundaries to aliow
gator wlth the Belmont County lin, coordinator of disaster servl·
husbands and wives died, as did a
their own students to attend any
l)oroner's of(lce.
school within the system.
ces In Belmont .CoUnty. "We've · brother and , sister, and In' a
"We've searched the river, the exhausted our search. We've couple of Instances. a mother and
More t)lan 20 states ha,ve
creek banks, and this Is It," he been there since day one, and
her cl)lldren.
passed legislation for open enrol·
~ald. "It any body Is to be found,
Mary Gatten's body was found
lment or are considering such
we've gone as far. as we can,
It will,be found there."
·
legislation.
But some divers Sunday went at the Hannibal locks and da,m by
a Marietta finn contacted by the
"Choice Is an idea whose time
Army Corps of Engln~ers.
has not come, •• an OhiO School
American· Red .Cross· workers
Bo~rds Association position
at disaster headqUarters In
paper says. "Above $U.else, open
Wheeling, W.Va., estimate 839
enrollment will deepen the dis·
· hOuses, moplle homes and apart·
parities between the advantaged .
ment buildings · destroyed or
and the dlsadvan tage that now
WASHJNGTON (UP!) - The opinions tak.e the laws further.
exist In our public school
Sup~eme Court upheld · Monday
The courts decision upheld not damaged In Belmont, Je.fferson,
.
system."
the consdtut!onallty of parental only mere notice, but require· and Harrison countle5l
The public apparently
notification laws aimed at res- ments that. Impose a 48-hour · Red Cross workers, who had
disagrees.
trlcllnll a rotnor's access to . waiting period, and a require· operated as many as nine shel·
Asked If they thought student ·
abortion.
ment tliat both parents be noll· ters at one time; still have five
satisfaction In · public schools
· The court, In one 6-3 ruling by· fled as long as there Is a legal open In the tr)·state area of
would bnpro~ If given· the
Justice Anthony Kennedy, up- system In place for minors to eastern Ohio, southwestern Pennsylvania ·and the West VIrginian
opportunity to choose schools, 52
beld an Ohio parental nodflca- bypass tbelr parents.
panhandle.
. lion law. In a second ruling hy
·
percent of tqe general public said
Justice John Paul Stevens·, the
Justice Sandra Day ·O'Connor
A televl~M:d version of Saturday . yes. However, only 36 percent of
COUrt upheld portions of a similar Called the two-parent reqUire· night's radio program JambQree
the educators gave the same
law rrom Minnesota.
.
ment of the Minnesota Jaw USA turned Into a ·Flood Aid .answer.
,
· The court's action ·continues a
:•unreasonable when one ~ld- Jamboree with country stars
And asked If they thought
procetis begun last ·year ·Of ers that only half the mtnors In Randy .Travis and Charley Pride
under the . concept student
. chipping away at the right to · the state of Minnesota r,eslde making ap~als for financial aid
achievement In public schools
abortion guaranteed In the land·
with both biologiC Ill parents."
' for the stricken area. Red Cross
would Improve, 42 percent qf the
mark 1973 Roe vs. Wade ruling.
. Nonetheless, O'Connor, Joined · workers said that broadcast,
11eneral public said It would be
While the court has pJ;evlously
by Chief J.ustlce William Rehn· heard and ~n In 18 states and; . higher, bUt only 21 percent otthe
uphelp both parental notice and
qulst and Justices Byron White, six t;:anadlan provinces,' gener.
educators said .would It would
ated more than $150,000.
. higher.
Contlnu~d on page 1.0
parental consent laws, MondaY's
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Low tol!lght In mid SIB:
Sunny Tuesday. HI en In mid

Black
hear
is
Spotted
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5-23.;33-35-39
137671

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio. Monday, June 26, 1990

Bring Your Folding Chairs For An Evening of 'Relaxation
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and· 8eautHul Sounds.
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Page 3.

The Public Is Invited To This FREE Concert :

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Court Street, .Pomeroy, Ohio ·
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Piek-4
. Super Lotto

Thursday, June 2· 8 ~: ··-- l:oo.e.M.

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Drivers .Education ·
(lasses

lead in NL .
·West Division

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Daily Number
541

are drop·ping
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Ohio Lottery

Reds hike

B.ANK; ONE PROUDLY PRESENTS

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:,:ields," says Raridall,Reeiler, an . .
agricultura-l engineer at Ohio '
State University and'chairman of ··
the event.
'
, · ·
· : In ridge tllla.ge, cro.ps are
planted on 5· t9 8-inc~ high ridges
formed during cultlvat.lori t-Ile '·
previous ' summer. The method •
can reduce soil erosion. lessen
·effects of ·sol! compacticin, ahow
.earlier .pl;lnJi!ili "II · in 'lJian.V. , 1~1"'' ·
cases, ·" reduce ·{he . need fer
.herbicides and feriillzer.
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Ridge TUiage Day will be at the
· Farm Science! ftevlew site near
LQndon. on u.~. Route 40 .. Regis:
tratwn begin.~ at 9 i).m'.!, and the
.program runs from 9:30 a.m: to
3:30p.m. '
Also speaking Wtll be Sam
Parsons, an agrtcultural e~gl·
neer at Purdue U~lversity: ·

STARTING JULY

.,

Ju~ 24, 1990

Fann
, debts

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. COLUMllUS~hio (UPIJ- A
p_IOneer In rjdge tillage practices
Is ·scheduled ta $peak at this.
· ·year's National Ridge Tl'Uage'
Field Day on Wednesday, Aug.

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WOOSTER, Ohio (UP I) Clr~le south to Spain and Turkey, . · Growth of most ·of the 5(,otch were also made at the c.eDter s
. Homeowners flattened by prairie and from Scotland east nearly to pine .varieties was probably the MahoJ1Ing County ~xperlinintal
winds or offended by city squalor the Pacific Ocean In Siberia.
same as or greater than !Jieother Farm. Canfield, . ~cU:~n
can solve the probleJII by plant·
For the study, which began tn pommon wlndbrea.k and screen .' Br!inch, Jackson; and u e n
· ing a llvllli buffer of. Scotch 1970, Scotch pines from 32 EurO.
species.
•
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Branch, Ripley.
pines.
peail seed sources were plartted ,
''There are certain situations
"Qur studies with the ~~ngs
Jim Brown of · Ohio , State at thecenter'sPomereneForest . where Scotch pine might very ·aresortofaconUnuum, .J3rown .
well be used, particularly on wet, ·says. ''Initially we evalualed tlie.
University, associate director of La bora tory at Coshocton. The
the university's Ohio Agrlcultu· trees Included Scandinavian and
dry or higher clay content soUs,"
plantings as Christmas trees.
Now we're looking at tbeT as ·
ral Research ·and Development western, centr$1 · and southern · he says. ''It definitely !)as a
Center, recently , completed a · European varieties.
· place." .
·" .
. windbreaks and ornam~nta s.
. Brown says the .survival of all · Test plantings of SCotch pines
study of the suitablllty ofScotch
pines for windbreaks and urban the varieties was excellent, a key
screens:
.
factor In any mass planung. The
·
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' "scotch pine Isn't as ' good· ' average survival after nine ye'
rooking as Austrian pine or white ars was more than 90 perc11nt on
pbie, but It's very adaptable and both well·dralned bottomland · · COLUMijUS, Olito t•UPI) chases during recent yearsbave·
Farm:oreal estate. debt and total. been made with cash. High
fast-growing," Brown says. . and poorly drained upland test
''That's where It F. 'WS the most sites. ·
·
farm debt ·both continued !hell' . net·cas)llncomesofrecentyears
promise.''
But' some of the sou them
six-year decl!ne last year.
.and farmer .expectations tl)at
He says ·that
• pine can European varieties;. those from
Allan Llnes, agricultural econi c!lrrent levels of lncoJIIe 'a re not
omlst at Ohio State Qnlverslty, · · likely to contlnlll!' have encour·
adapt to a· wld!i! •- /,eo~ .condl· Sp,aln, Greece and Turkey, had
lions, from relatively wet sons to the hEist visual · appearance and . say f8.1'11) debt at ·the end of 1989 ' aged fanners to pay off l!xlstln~ · ..
very dry on~. NorWay spruce; . would be the best-suited for
was abo)lt 29 percent belQw lt,s debt and not borrow any more . ..
arborvitae and ·other trees com· urban plantings.
aiHime hlg!J In 1983. .'
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The debt decline fuels discUs·
monly used for Windbreaks and
Several · of the central EuroCurrent farm debt, Including slon that federal ·farm suppprt.
screen plantiJigs are less tolerant pean varieties were the fastest· '. household debt, stands at less programs could be cut back, bUI
of soU cond!Uons.
growing and wo.Uld be better·
than $145 bllllon, down from $202 · Lines notes that. the decllnt: and
. Scotchplnelsoneohhe.wor,ld's· ·suited .for vylndbreaks, where ' billion In 1983.
.
reiatelj farrri Income IncreaSe .
most widely dlstl'lbuted· tree " rapid growth fs more Important
Land Is traditionallY the high· are directly tie(! to gove~nmenf ,
species. ItrangesfroiptheArctic; . 'than good visual appearance. . , est debt Item, but most pur· S!lpport.
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Ridge ·tillage expert named
field ·day speaker Aug~- 29; .:
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Homeowners should consider Scotch pines for. windbreaks.

By Gall DeGarmo,
.E arth Team Volunteer

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Pom•oy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleaunt, W. Va.

·The clearcutting method

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Under · no circumstances
should the bear be fed, Wood
added.
.
The bear Is a young·l50·pound
black bear. Wood added that the
bear Is a "garbage bear." A
garbage bear lives off garbage
jnstead of finding Its own food .
Juvenile black bears are
searching .tor new territories In
late spring and . early summer
and sometimes enter Ohio from
West Virginia and Pennsylvania.
Bears are totally protected In
Ohio and maynotbeshot. Earlier
this · month, wildlife officials
criticized the actions of East
Liverpool poilce officers who
shot and kHied a bear on May 30.
Bear stghtlngs have been reported several times In Meigs
County, but most of them have
not been verI fled. "This has been
the most • confirmed sighting'·
we've had," Wood said.

Wood expressed. his appreciation for the actions of the
Pomeroy Pollee Department, the
Mll!dleport Pollee Department
and the Meigs County Sheriffs
Department. The law enforcement agencies were heipful In
controlling the crowd cif onlookers· who gathered to look at the
bear. .
·
The Ohio Department of Natural Res·ources urge those \Vho
·may see this or any other bear to
leave It alone. Do ' not chase,
confuse or fe!!!l 11. '•Remember
thai' bears are wild animals and
may attack If confused, fright·
ened or frustrated. Do not shoot
the bear bUt do report slghtlngs
of bears to locallawlenforcement
or wildlife officials," a spokes·
man said.
Wildlife biologists say that
bears pose no threat to people ·If .
they are left alone.

woman says .she

.saw Barry smoke
pot 4 years ago
time he and Barry used drugs
WASHINGTON !UPIJ - A
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woman testified Monday she saw together:
. Mayor . Marton - Barry si'nokl • · LeWis, "' a conv!c te"d -'cff"ugmarijuana on a ship off the dealer, went on .to Implicate
VIrgin Islands four years ago Barry In repeated drug use,
wj!Ue his security gu;1rd Including smoking crack cocaine
. on four different days In Dewatched. ·
JO®tta VIncent. a Washington cember 1988 In a Ramada Inn In
native working · In the VIrgin Washington:
VIncent. a disaster .specialist
Islands since 1981, said she was
on the ship In June 1986 with now working under a federal aid ·
Barry, former city worker Cha· program for victims of Hurri·
rles Lewis and others when cane Hugo, said .she smoked
Barry allegedly smoked marijuana wltll Lewis at the rear
of the boat, and that Le~ls then
marijuana.
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Barry, who faces 14 cocaine carried a llt marijuana cigarette
and perjury counts, Is not to the front of the boat and shared,
It wit!) Barry and a "young lady' '
charged with using marijuana.
•
VIncent was not asked whether she did not IdentifY:
On thr!!e separate occasions
she ever saw Barry possess or
. use cocalpe, But her statements during ci·oss examination, de--.
corroborated testimony last fense attorney R. Kenneth
week from Lewis, who ·said the Mundy Identified the woman as
June 1986 meeting· was the first "Miss MOore." ·
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Nineteen die in Ohio ·
weekend auto mishaps
County.
By Unlled Press International
.J;layton: Robert Cochran, 22,
Nineteen people, Including
three members of an Indiana Trotwood. In a one-car accident
family, were killed In weekend on a Montgomery County road.
Wapakoneta: Wlchelmtne Set·
traffic crashes across Ohio, the
Highway Patrol said early tlage, 71, New Knoxville, when
'her car collided with another
Monday .
The count showed four deaths . atito on Ohio 274 In Auglalze
Friday night, slit Saturday and County .
Eaton: Daniel Wakeley, 17,
nine Sunday, lnclu(llng a Michl·
gan City, Ind., woman and two Camden, In a one-car accident on
men, killed Sunday when thC~Ir a Preble County road.
Ironton: Clarence Mills, 25,
van colUded with a car on the·
Chesapeake, when his car hit a
Ohio Turnpike In LUcas County.
A two-vehicle accident lri Mus- tree along a Lawrence County
ktngum County Friday night left road.
Sunday
.
two men dead. One motorcyclist
Swanton:
Priscilla
Brinker.
58,
and one ·pedestrian were among
!;lana A. Brinker, 28 ..and Thomas
the other victims.
The patrol counts fatalities W. Brinker, 31, all from Michigan
resulting from accidents on the City, Ind., killed w!len their van
state's public roadways each ran off the Ohio Turnpike til
weekend between 6 p.m. Friday Lucas County and hit a parked
velllcle.
·
and mldnlg)lt Sunday.
·
Findlay: John R. Thatcher, 91.
Killed were:
Findlay, when he was struck by a
Friday
St. Clairsville: Richard A . cat on a Findlay street.
.
Cleveland: John Vlccarone, 32,
Bullck, 32, Barton, when his
motorcycle collided with another Cleveian4, when his car collided
vehicle on U.S. 250 In Belmont . with another on a Cleveland
street.
County.
,
,
Cantonl Douglas w . Hertzog1:
ZanesVille: James.P. Mohr,40,
Dresden, and Robert W. Baird, 29, c;:an111 Fulton. when his car b.lt . ·
23, Coshocton, when their cars a pole along Oblo 93 In Stark
·
collided on Ohio 60 In Musklngum ' County,
Lorain: Brian E. Faber, 20,
County.
Bryan: Steven M. Robbins, 22, Avon, when hla car.collided with
Edon, when his truck collided another veblllle · at a Lorain
•
with a tractor trailer on U.S . .6 In County lntehectlon. .
Wellston:
Earl
S.
Norton,
!!8
•.
WU!lams Counly.
•
Wellston,
when
he
fell
from
th'e
· Saturday
'I'l'oy: John E. Charles, 41, Tlpp . paslllllllfr'l aide ol a pickup
City, In ·one-vehicle crash In truck on a Wellston street.
· YOqitown: Johnny W. SteMiami County. ·
wart
25, Berlin Center. In a
Steubenville: Mark Stupelll,
two-car
accident on Ohio 534 In
18, Steubenville, In' a one-car
aecldent on Ohio 213 In Jefferson MalloniDIJ County.

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Monday, June 25, 1990

Commentary
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Ill Coqrt Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

~lb .........._...._....,.., ,.,..,...c:~,,.
'qjv

IS!m~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HO,.FLICH
General Manqer

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publlsher/ControUer
A MEMBER or The United Press International, Wand Dally Press
AsSOciation and tbe American Newspaper Publishers Association.

tE'M"ERSOF·OPINION are welcome. They should be less !ban 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters w111 be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.
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The loss or the clubs wW be a
blow to tbe morale of soldiers
who carefully count their perJcs
as Pl!rl of !be reward lor serving
their country. When the pay Is
mediocre and Uncle Sam Is a
hard taskmaster, the benefits
package Is Important.
Military sources told us that
the Navy, Army and Marine
Corps have accepted Congress'
challenge a!)d are using business
sense to put tbelr clubs on an
even keel - raising prices,
charging higher club d11es and
marketing themselves. But the
Air Force may close many of Its
clubs rather tban be the belt It
can be at running a buslneaa.
We have obtained an Internal
memo distributed to wing comltUI!Iders In the Air Force'slarg·
est command- the Strategic Air
.Command headquartered at Of.
futt Air Force. Base. In Omaba, ..
Neb. The memo says "Tbe of·
fleer and NCO club system
within the Strategic Air Com·

WASHINGTON - A timehonored perk of military service
- cbeap food and drinks at NCO
and officers' clubs - Is about to
be relegated to folklore. Congress has ordered tbat as of Oct.
1, 1990, clube on military bases
must operate In the black or sbut '
down. The taxpayers will no
longer be subsidizing the poor
busln~s sense of military b,rass
dabbling In the restaurant
business.
It's too bad Congress didn' t act
before Yokota Air Force Base In
Japan spent $221,600 on an Itnl·
lan restaurant tbat lasted only
two years. Tbe restaurant closed
In fdarch after losing more than
$50,000 last year.
A savvr restaurateur may
bave been able to make an Ital·
ian· restaurant prolitable In Ja·
pan, but military clubs are not
planned, built or run by savvy
restaurateurs. Tbe club managers must answer to base com·
manders skilled In warfare
Instead of culinary arts.

Vom·ovt·ch posture .
Celeb
• fimancmg
•
00 Campaign
·r e
·· z z e ,

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Nobody likes the obscene amounts of money spent
on political campaigns. Everybody wants to do someth"ing abOut It,
especially the candidates. Or do they?
Representatives for Attorney Genera! Anthony Celebrezze Jr. and
former Cleveland Mayor George Volnovlch, the two. major party
c11ndidates for governor, have started voluntary negotiations on
campaign financing reform.
But as or last week, the talks bad bogged down, an'd It )ooks as If the
Issue will become just another excuse for more political posturing.
Volnovlch started It all almost a year ago, calling for an end to
soliciting state employees for donations and saying he would
voluntarily disclose Individual receipts of $10,000 or more.
He also called for the two candidates to negotiate spending limits,
since It was evident no new law on campaign financing will be passed
In time to apply to this·year's festivities.
Easy for Volnovlch to say. Celebrezze was far ahead In fund
raising. Since then, Volnovich caught up In !bat department, and
Celebrezze came calling to negotiate spending limits.
~ This time, Volnovlch's people are being more cautious, because
they have demonstrated an ability to raise money,and a spending
U'mltatlon.mlght hurt them.
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. But Instead ot saying they don't want to negotiate, they are setting
up conditions. For example, any negotiations must Include a ban on ·
soliciting donations from government employees. Who would that
IJurt most? Celebrezze.
.
, "How does that hurt them thts year?" argues Curt Steiner, press
secretary for the Volnovlch campaign. "They've already got the
money from their employees."
.
Celebrezze's people are putting their own spin on the talks. They
want any campaign spending limits to be set Into law and not just
agreed to voluntarily by the campaign personnel. Why? ''I don't trust
them," said Thomas Wlnte~s. director of the Celebrezze campaign.
Winters said the Republicans have a way of laundering money
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through .a variety of committees, Including the Republican Sta.te
Committee, to spend It on candidates so It would not apply to their
limits.
''They've been playing games for so many years," he said. ''We're
supposed to trust these guys to adhere to voluntary lbnlts?"
The feeling Is mutual. Steiner said the Celebrezze campaign wants
spending limits on the two candidates because It now has its own
"front" group - Choice '90.
.
On the otber hand, opponents
EarUer this month the Su·
This Is the pro-chOice abortion group that Democrats claim Is
argue that the 1'\lllng violates tbe
preme Court ruled tbat as long as
~.Independent, but the Republicans say Is clearly pro-Celebrezze. Any
Constitution's requirement that
public schools allow secular
money It spent would not be subject.to the negotiated spending limits,
there be a strict separation of
groups to hold meetings In school
and Celebrezze Is expected to emphaslie the pro-choice Issue.
church and state.
buUdlngs, they must allow rell·
Now, the Volnovlch camp Is baiting Celebrezze by offering to
John Buchanan of People lor
glous groups to do the same. II
voluntarUy disclose Its own campaign receipts and expenses In they don't, says the court, tbey' re · tbe American Way put It this
August and september, as well as In the October report required by
Illegally discriminating.
way: "Tbe court has opened wide
Jaw.
the school-house door to religious
Tbls has been a tough call for
. "This Is a real ruse," said Winters. "Disclosure Is tbe heart of the
study and worship, leaving lm·
citizens who want to see as much
present law that everybody says doesn't work."
presslonable children to assume
encouragement given to the
Nevertheless, the extra disclosure will put pressure on CelebrezZ. search lor spiritual meaning as Is
that such clubs are part and
and the Democrats to do likewise. In fact, It is an attempt to force
parcel of the schOol-approved
given to the football or basketball
them to reveal before October whether there Is a financial link
teams. On one hand It seems sill yo · dally Instructions.''
between them and Choice '90, which they deny.
·
Tbat' s the way It struck my
to deny ·a meeting room to
Steiner said if anything Is to be negotiated Into the law, It should students who want to study the
seventh-grade mind when a
involve all elected statewide offices and-be done by the chairmen of
group called Youth lor Christ
Bible, while just down the hall the
the two parties.
was · holding meetings In the
pom-pom squad Is organizing a
But Winters said ali the posturing by the Republicans Is merely a
choral room of my junior high
bake sale.
smokescreen to cover up the fact that GOP senators kUied a spending
school In 1963. Some of my
"To exclude student religious
limitation plan that was approved In a bipartisan manner by the groups from meeting on' campus
friends urged me to go, and I got
House two weeks ago.
the Impression that anyone who
Is nothing (less than bigoted
loved God and called herself a
discrimination," Beverly La·
Christian should be there. When
Haye, president of Concerned
the assistant principal an Women for America, said oUhe
decision.

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One Internal SAC memo we
mand - and the Air Force as a
have
obtained says tbat 27 of the
whole - Is about to fall."
48
SAC
clubs "need major !lnan·
Between Oct. 1, 1989, and Jim.
clal
change
or !ace restructuring
31, 1990, 30 Air Force restaurants
or
even
closure."
In Europe lost more than $1 mil·
Another memo predicts which
lion. The biggest bleeder was
clubs·
will get the ax unless drasRams teln Air Force Base In Ger·
tic
changes
are made. Expected
many, where. the ~tubs lost
to
lose
either
tbelr otflceror NCO
$45,000 In those lour months.
club
or
both
are
tbeseSAC bases:
Upper Heyford Air Force Base In
Francis
E.
Warren
In Wyomln8,
England lost $41,000.
McConnell
In
Kausas,
Beale In
Tbe SAC clubs alone are being
California,
Eaker
In
Arkansas,
subsldi;z:ed to the tune of $5 mU·
Fairchild In WashlngtOD, Wurll·
lion a year from the taxpayers.
mlth Ill Michigan, Grtaom In In·
. And In lour months, that subsidy
diana,
Vandenberlill California,
·
will be gone.
·
·
Malmstrom·
. In Montana. Cars·
Can a military club survive
well
In
Texu
and Ellsworth Ill
without .tax money and still offer
.
Soutb
Dakota.
There are other
soldiers the responsttlle prices
clubs
operating
In the red, but
they have .c ome to expect? Not
tbey
are
In
remote
areas !bat are
the way tbe system now o~ratl!l!
exempt_trom
.the
·eongresslonal
with dec@ntra)lzed managemerit
manda~. ·
tht~t aliO'!YS military comm$ndAir .Foree ilources tpld us tbat
ers at e'a!!h base to. run the clubs
tbe
situation Is juat as bad out·
like "mom and pop" stores. Tbe
side
of SAC, even at basel abrpad
whim of tbe base commander ·.
where
military perso1111el count
perhaps a yen lor Italian food on
tbe
clubs
to give them a taste
Is the basis on which decisions
of
home
at
a
reasonable price.
are made.

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Be-try's World

YOUR GASOL\NE ·A~D
1:'\EA"t\l-\6 01\.. Bl\.LS
WILL BE. ·H.\GHER NOW.

VJ~TER

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\iOW COME?

OUR
OlL SPlLLS!

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all the byproducts of tbe
and West German counterintellicollapse of communist power In
gence agencies.
Eastern Europe, none Is more
Moreover, as communism '
fascinating, yet lor some reason
slnJcs even deeper Into Its death
less discussed, than tbe fate of agony, It Is Inevitable that many
Westerners who have spied lor,
of the COJllmuntst spymasters
and In some cases defected to,
will want to Ingratiate them·
nations behind the Iron Curtain.
selves with the new powers that
Remember that Moscow has
be ·(and perhaps even get Jobs
not only maintained for 70 years spying for them, as the Nazis'
the most elaborate spy network General Gehlen did) by Telling
on Earth, but that slncetheendof All.
World War II !t has encouraged
Imagine, therefore, the con· ·
Its satellite regimes In Eastern sternatlon that must today be
Europe to build up vast esplon· filling the breasts of Americans
age systems o!thelr own- under and other Westerners whose
the KGB's total control, of spying for the communist powers
course.
has not yet ·been discovered.
Now all of these regimes, and There are undoubtedly others
the Soviet Union as well, have like the Navy's john Walker, and
either disintegration. New go- the Army's Sgt. Clyde Lee
vernments totally dedicated to Conrad, who are not yet susfreedom are already In power In pected. What can · they do now?
East Germany, Poland, Czechos- Tbey can't even defect.
lovakia and Hungary, and the
For, · speaking of defectors,
communists (or In some cases bow would you like to be In the
ex-communists) are hanging on shoes of former CIA agent
by tbelr fingernails In Bucharest, · Edward Lee Howard? Howard
Sofia and Moscow.
spied lor the Soviets for years,
What Is happening to the men then eluded FBI surveillance In
who ran, or are stU! running, the New Mexico In 1985 and Ded, via
communist espionage networks? Mexico and Cuba, to Moscow. No
Perhaps even more Important, doubt Mikhail Gorbacbev Is still
who Is poring over their superse- too much of a communist to turn
cret Illes? We can, I think, be him over to U.S. authorities confident that this whole subject but does that alSo apply to Boris
bu occurred to the CIA and FBI Yeltsln? Or to other Russians
- and also to tbe Brlttsb, French who may come to power soon?
I

Charlton. "It was a clean play all
tbe way and I tblnk Scloscla
would tell ~ou the same thing. I
went In head·flrst, bec.ause man
against shin guards Is not a fair
battle."
Scloscla agreed wltb Chalton.
"Yes, I thought It was a clean
play," be said. "1 had'lloproblem
with that at all because he was
running hard and trying to score.
If I'm going to block the plate
then guys are going to run Into
me, lt'.s as simple as that."
Saba's homer knocked out
Valenzuela, ~-6, ·with one out In
the sixth after he had given up'10
runs on elgbt bits, striking out
two and walking two.
·
"Valenzuela has had my
number most of the time." said
Saba, "and he'd retired me three
straight times. He just made a
mistake, got a curve ball or
screwball up to me, and I was
able to take advantage of it."
Mahler, who allowed lour runs
onflvehltslnslxlnnlngs,fannlng
three and walking none, main· ·
tained be had his best stuff of tbe
year.
''I felt good all day and thought
I pitChed well," he asserted. ''I
threw a slider down to (Cbrls)
Gwynn and he went down and got
It (lor a two-run homer) . I didn't
think It was a bad pitch."
The Reds took a 1·0 lead In the
first, only to have the Dodgers
draw even in the third and move
ahead, 2,1, In tbe fourth. Mariano
Duncan's solo .h omer, his sixth,
made It 2-2, but Gwynn's two-run
shot, his second, staked L.A. to a
short-lived 4-2 lead In the sixth.
The Reds batted around and
scored six times In the last of the
sixth to lead, 8·4, collecting six
hits. The big blows were Sabo's
three-run blast and Larkin's
pinch-hit RBI single.
Cincinnati made it 10-4 with
two In the seventh on Joe Oliver's
two-run double and Charlton's
jarring play at home plate.

3·2 ·In 10 Innings, and Houston
whipped San Francisco 8-2.
Met• 5, PhUlles 4- New York
Mets plnch·hltter Tim Teufel
stepped up to the plate only once
Sunday a Iter noon, guessed
wrong, and still ripped the game
winner
With two outs In the nlntb and
his team trailing Philadelphia
54, Teufel slapped a two-run
bases-loaded single off PhUlles
r~llever Roger McDowell to lilt
the Mets to a 6·5 vlc.tory.
"It was one-on-one versus
Roger," said Teufel. "He has
. been struggling. Maybe In a
different situation he throws a
better pitch. Expecting the
sinker, I kept my hands In and
tried to go the other way and I
was fortunate to make good
contact. When you don't gel that
many at·bats In a week, that
means you are fortunate to do
what I did."
The heat of summer has been
goodtotheboysfromShea .Slnce
June 5th theMetshavegathered
15 victories to only three defeats.
They sit two gaines back from
NL East-leading Pittsburgh and
have started to enjoy themselves
again.
·
"We are playing very well now ,
with great pitching from · everyone, an offense generating five
runs or more a game and I never
sawsomuchfunlnhere,"second
baseman Gregg Jefferies said.
"You would have thought we won
the World Series. We're like little
kids playing for tbe fun of It
again, not worrying about •bus!·
ness or New York pressure or
anything."
McDowell, 2·3, entered the
ninth after Don Carman gave up
consecutive singles to Howard
Johnson and Dave Magadan.
Teufel, batting for winner Jeff
Innis, 1-1. looped his single to

Closing out the scorj.ng, the
Dodgers added twD In tbe eighth
on Murray's ' RBI single . and a
sacrifice fly by HubleBrooks, but
Charlton shut them down In the
ninth to earn bls second save In
relief or Mahler. ,
In otber NL action, New York
edged Philadelphia 54, Pitts·
burgh beat Monlreal5·3, Atlanta
slipped by San Diego 11-10 In 1~
innings, Chicago edged St.
... Louis

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Today in history.

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par'lhree!f~ lnth hole, a spectator
fifth
' ·
cllcked
·a'Camera, forcing her to
Postlewait was tied With Sh~
step·
away.
She then ~It her tee
han after· 54 bOles at 12-llnder,
shot.
~
to
a
bunker
in front of the
two behlnd" third round iea,d er
grei!il,
eventually
making
bogie.
Alcott, bU;t .Postlewait shot 'a '
'
'•r.\vas
so
angry
at
myself
for
four-over 39 on the front n lne and
let
tlng
.
s.e,mebody
get
to
me.
'I
had to ·watch• her playing
bore
dOwn
more
and
tried
to
get
partner~ battle' head-to-head for
back Into-the tournament ," Sheethe title.
Jime G~ddes · finished sixth, han said. ,.
Sheehan then birdied the 379Mtssie McGeorge was seventh,
and Shirley Furlong and Joan yard par-.(our tenth hole, while
Pitcock tied for eighth at 4-under Alcott " '\?ogled.That lwo-shot
284.
r
1
t ·•
swin~ drew .Sheehan within one.
There was another two-shot
Sheehan ·partially credltfd a
spectator for Inspiring her torrid swing on the 129-yard par:three
back nine play . On the 149-yard 15th . .

MiddlettOrt recreation department
offering three trips this summer
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reservations,
contact
Rog~r Williams· at the Middle·
port Recreation Department at
992-67!\2. . .'
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All trips will depart and return
to General 'Hartinger Park.
For

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
~46 4~14

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eSo W. Mmli

Alhland College L.lwary
' 401 Colege AW(IH
Mhlltnd, Ohio 44805

Nellonylll~: Public l,lbrlfY

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20 S. Fifth Str.l
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MOIDAY

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t,tl. Vernon Public Library
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e. Church 81-

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200 Second Street
Pomeroy, 01110 457t!1
Ow~ Ma~ County

e.

0111r1c1 Ubnlry

=

Main

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8INet
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County
Library

1

101 N. Main ~
~. Ohio 43793

K.- ~

Sllllpaoi~

Macglll County Ulnry

3111 E. Main 8tiMt

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MI. OIIMd
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31 E. High · -

' Mt. GIINd, Ohio 43338

Joiln Molnllle Public Library
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IUESDA Y
BAKED CHICbKEN ... '4.76
CHEF SALA ....... '3.76

oen.

Compllte ooplH of Olllo i'9ww ConipM)''I
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s.

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Public: u~mry

The DallY sentlllel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
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Ohio Power ComPIJIY, ....-ctlvely. TheM
1cnca1t ~ GD11!81n lnlurmatlon on the
utlllty'l eMIVY dtiMnd, .. peP lcllil -

. uma, Ohio 4680'!,

i

The Mlddlepori Recreation De· ..
partmen't\' lp conjunction with
Appalachian Coach Tours of
Athens, will be offering three
trips this summer.
,.
'
..' The Djiily' Sentinel
The first trip Includes trans-~
portation to and from Kings
.
' . ·~(USPS 11&amp;-tw)
Island on July 19 . Admission Into
A DivlliliiD of Mulllmedla;lne.
the park Is Included. Cost per
person Is $39 and the deadline for
Published every afterRoon. Moilday
through Friday, 111 Court St .. Po·
reservations Is July 16.
meroy, Ohio, bv tht&gt; 01\16 Valley PubOn July 24, a trip to Scioto
llshln'g ~ Com'(i8.nyl Multlmedla . . Inc..
Downs Racetrack will be offered.
Pomerov. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2156. Se·
cond cl&amp;ss pottage paid at PomerOy,
The tdp Includes transportation
OhiO .
. ~
·~··
'
to and from Scioto Dt)Wns, dinner
MeniJ:;;LUGttect Press Intem~tlonal, at the Pen,thouse (a multl·mUI!on
· Inlaikt DatfY Press Association and the
doUar enclosed restaurant) and
Ohio MewQiapet Association. National
admission. Numerous close• ·A,~ver11sl!1&amp;' Representattve Branham
New·p~ SOI!B. 733 Third Avenue,
circuit televisions · guarantee a
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view of the . action. Cost per
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On August 14, a trip will be
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leaving for sea World In Aurora,
BJ Carrier or Mol« Boule
'Ohio. Transportation and admls·
One Week ................................... $1.40
slob Into the park Is Included.
One Month ............. .................... $6.10
One Year ............................ ..... $72.110
Deadline for reservations Is
SINGLE COPY
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Mall s.hocrlpl- .

'

,...,...., u w.ll u • rMOUICa plan 1M utlllly
.01110 Valley Local Otllrlct
PUIMrlc:ll Public Library
FIM Public Library
200 E. MatQt SliM!
Founh Str.~
Cadiz. Cillo -431107
Mailcheeter, Ohio 45144
Napoleon Pu11J1C Library
uma Public L!bmY
301 w. Clinton SliM!

·'
at 7·unj)er 281.

PRICE

By United Press lnternatlo~
Today Is Monday, June 25, the 176tb day or 1990 with 189 to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of.Cancer. Tbey Include
French composer Gustave Charpentier In 186(), Broadway producer .
George Abbott In 1887 (age 103), English novelist and critic George
Orwell, au thor of "1984," In 1903, movie director Sidney Lumet In 1924
(age 66), actress June Lockhart In 1925 (age 65), civil rights advocate
James Meredith In 1933 (age 57), former Miss America Phyllis
George In 1949 (age 41) , and popslngersCarly Simon In 1945 (age45)
and George Michael In 1963 (age 27).

·

~-

PITISFORD, N.Y. (UPI) Patty Sheehan successfully defended her title with a four-stroke
victory over Amy Alcott Sunday
In the $400;000 LPGA Rochester
International. ·
Sheehan trailed Alcott bY three
stokes after the front nine, but
carded six birdies on the back
nine coinplet!Qg a five· unqer par
67 on the par· 72, 6,162 yard Locust
Hill Country Club course. With
the triumph, she joins Nancy
Lopez, who won In 1980 and 1981,
as the only two players to wln·the
tournament In successive years.
Sheehan also smashed the
to\Jrnament scoring-record with
a 17-under par total of 271. The
old record was 12-under 276 set by
Sandra-Haynie In 1982.
·Lopez shot a final round 68 and
finished third a't 12-under 276,
Tammie Green. was fourth ·at
S-under while Kathy Postlewait
shot fourth· round 77 to finish

William Rusher:

992-7111 or 992-7775
Sponsored by Syracuse Fire Depart•nt

110-e9-EL·FOR and eo-.eo.EL·FOR which
.Involve the 11110 tong.Term Forwcut Report~
of The CllluntbuiiiDIMIIin .._,. Compllny n

Alfredo GrUfln In tbe fourth lnnln.g of Sunday's
game In &lt;;lnclnnaiJ, which the R-eds WOII 1@-8.

a

Finally, con8!der the high·
ranking Western diplomats wbo
may have engaged In espionage
on behalf or communism back In
the days when It seemed safer to not only a communlstbut a Soviet
do so. Felix Bloch, America's spy.
Someplace In Washington, you
former deputy chief of mission In
VIenna, Austria, may be con- can be sure, and perhaps In more
fronted · some day soon with than one. some smootb-faced
evidence not so easily countered bureaucrat wbo hu gotten away
l)y silence.
with espionage for years Is
Herbert Norman, the Cana·
sweating little green poker chips
dian ambassador to Egypt, who • and jumping at every knock on
committed suicide In 1957 rather the door. In tbe words oft he Dies
than lace a renewed probe of his
Irae, the Day of Wrath: "Quldq·
communist record, may well be uld late! adpareblt I NU lnultum
Identified by others (he has
remaneblt." (What was bidden
already been Identified by " the shall appear 1 Nothing shall
Fourth Man," Anthony Blunt~ as
remain unwnlshed.)

ROSTERS •s1 IE IN BY JUNE 27
For more ·Information cal

echildi!iid

'

Sheehan. repeats .at R.ochester ln;
.,_ tern'ational

nounced the meetings over the So opponents, to make their
school Intercom, they seemed point, have always suggested
scenarios where tbese parents'
even more school-sanctioned.
I have no Idea what goes on at kids might be exposed to the
Youth lor Christ meetings today, religious doctrines or groups
and I have no Indication that the · other tban fundamentalist Progroup Is anything other than an testants. What If their children
organization dedicated to win· were drawn to· meetings held by
nlng youth to Christianity. All I Black Muslims, Jews, Catholics,
can speak to Is wbat happened In Jebovab's Witnesses or Mor·
my case.
mons? Yet the argumeht failed to
'l'llere were a couple of their Impress, and supporters con·
larger meetings (or rallies, as tlnued to push for making school
they called tbem) that scared me .facilities available lor religious
to deatb. I went home from one meetings.
Children do need protection
and had nightmares abOu,t hell so
frightening that my mother had froni groups that will use other
to get up With me several times children to entice and cajole
that nlgbt. That kind of fear was them Into organizations tbelr
not what my family's religion parents may not approve ot It
taught, so my mother was not this does happen, or II religious
pleased.
groups that some parents don't
For the most part, · fundamen- approve of start meeting In
talist Protestants have sup- schools, we may hear a much
ported making school facilities dltferent hymn from the churchavailable lor religious meetings. In-school supporters.

STARTS JULY 5

•

The~ Utllhlel Comml-.kln Qj Cillo ....
1 comblntel hllttng In ·Cue - ·

'

BRAGGS NAlLED- The Reds' Glenn Braggs
Is nJ!IIed al·second. base by L.A. Dodl(er shortstop

Sarah Overstreet

SYIACUSE, OHIO

:~ LEGAL NOTICE

.,.,.

.

right.
"I threw Teufel a slider on tbe
first pitch lor a strike. then a
fastball, which I got out over tbe
plate," McDowell said. "He went
the opposite way with It, and won
the ball game."
'
· Plrat.. S, ExpM 3 - At
Montreal, Don Slaugh! got hit by
a pitch with the bases loaded In
the seventh inning, forcing borne
Barry Bonds to lift the Pittsburgh Pirates back Into !ll'st :
place In the NL East former ·
Expo Neal Heaton, 10-2, wentslx ·
Innings for the win, becoming the ·
second 10-game winner In t)le ·
National League. Stan Belinda ,
got the last three outs wltb tbe ·
bases loaded to earn his first ,
save. Dennis Martinl!2, 5-5, ;
worked seven Innings.
Braves 11, PadrM lt U! lu.) ;
- At Atlanta, Andres Thomas :
belted . a lead-off homer In tbe •
12th lnnn!ng to give returning ;
manager Bobby Coxhtsltrstwln. ;
Rick Leucken, 1·2, was the '
wlnner,golngtwolnnlngs,glving :
up two h!ts .a nd striking out one.
Craig Lefferts, 5·2, lasted only
two Innings.
•.
Cubs 3, Cardlnala! ( 10 InD.) - ·
At Chicago, pinch·hltter Hector
VIllanueva lined a two-out single
!bat scored RyneSandberg In the '
lOth Inning. Paul Assenmacher,
2-1, who worked tbe lOth. picked
up the victory. Tom Nledenfuer
fell to ()..3 alter relieving to start
the ninth.
.
Atltros 8, Giants ! - At .
Houston, Bill Gullickson scat- ·
tered · eight hits over eight and
two-third Innings an~ added a
· two-run single and Franklin ·
Stubbs hit a two-run homer. ·
C:ulllckson. 5·5, walked lour and
struck out three. Don Robinson,
2·1, took tbe loss lor tbe Giants,
allowing five runs and e!gbt bits
In five Innings.

BILL HUBBARD MEMORIAL
LlnLE LEAGUE TOURNAMENT .

~

~

Why communist spies are sweating
or

Cincinnati's two-run seventh
Inning.
Charlton, who hurled the final
three Innings to earn his second
save, ran through coach Sam
Perlozzo's stop sign at third base
and bowled over Scloscla, who
dropped the •ball as Charlton
scored.
·
"I tried to hold him up because
l dldn' i want to take a chance on
Norm being hurt," said Perlozzo.
''He's too valuable In the bullpen
and that's why we can't afford to
lose him."
.
"That's the way I play the
game," offered the 205-pound

.

School religion and the ·- family

,I

.

CINCINNATI - The C!ncln· r!ghtnowandplaylngaggresslve
nat! Reds rocked the Los Angeles baseball " said Reds Manager
Dodgers at the plate Sunday Lou Plniella after his team had
overcome a 4·2 deficit to give
night In more ways tban one first with a six-run sixth Inning Rick Mahler his second' win In
rally off starter Fernando Vaien· four decisions.
~uela, then when re)lef pitcher
"I've been wanting to rest
Norm Charlton barreltd over Saba, but then he goes out and
catcher Mike Sc!oscla on a play ~Its another homer," Plnlella
. at the plate In the seventh.
laughed. '~So he stays In there. I
When the dust cleared the Reds rested (Barcy) Larkln tonight,
had a 10·6 victory and a nine· ' but he c;1me In as a plnch·hltter
game lead In the NL West.
and. got a big· hit lor us In' the,
·· The six-run sixtli was hlghllgh·· six-run sixth." ·
ted by Chris Sabo's tbree-run ·
One of the highlights or the
homer, his 16tb. .
contest was the Jarring collision
" We're swinging )he bat well of Charlton and Scloscla In

Monday, June 215. 1990

.
may
.be
shuttered
__
Ja_ck_A_nd_er_so_n.:,_a_nd_D_a_le_Va_n_A_tt_a
The Daily Sentinel " Clubs
.

1.

'

Cincinnati belts Los Angeles, 10-6; Giants, Padres beaten

'

., Page. 2.:._The Oily 81 ttinal
Pomeioy-Midcllll(ll't. Ohio

.-

The Daily Sentinet-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

P1uldlng County
Carnegie Library
201 s. Main Street
Paulding, Ohio 45879
Perry County Dlllrlcl l..lbrary
1 t3 Soulll Main Street
New Lalngtan, Ohio 437114
Pike County
F- Pubac Library
111 N. High Str.t
Wl*ly, Cillo 4511110
Putnam County Dllb1ct Ulnry

1525 N. nunu Street .
P.O. Box 308
oa-. Ohio 45875

Manlfteld Public Library
w. Thltd Street
Manllleld, Olllo 441102
Blrdllld Public Lllraly
of 8andUiky County
423 Cloghan SIIWII ·
F-.0hi043CIO
Poltlmoutll Public Ubrary
1210 Glllla SliM!
Pommouth, 01110 4511112
nrn...s.n.ca Public. Library
n Jell..on 8trwt
Tiffin, Ohio 44883
8lartc County Dlltrlct Library
715 Mlllall AVMH, Nol1h
Canton, OhiO 44702
Akron-SurnmK County
Public Ubraly
Aer.o•a Dlvilion
55 Sollllt Main SliM!
Akron, Ohio 44328
T-1 Mc:ailnty
Public Ullrary
43

12t Fair

A-.

•'

.'
''

N.W.

New F'WrlalpNa. Ohio 4411113
~ Sc:llool DIJirtc:l
Public Ulnry
231 Sollllt Court 8trwt
Matyiolllla, Ohio 43040
The BIUIIIbaak Library
215 W. Main IIINII
VIII Wert. Ohio 4111111
WUIIIngllln County
Public Ulnry
815 Fifth IIINII

..

Marietta. Ohio 48710

Wfi'/M Caunty Public Llll8ry
304N, ...,_8trwt
·.v-. Ohio .weet
Bryan Public Ulnry
107 E. High 8trwt
Bryan, Ohio 431108
Wood County DIJirtc:l
Pubic Llll8ry
251 N. Main 8trwt
Bowling.0..., Ohio 4341111 .
Upplr BendUIIly .

Communlly Llll8ry
301 N. Sail OWly AVI.
Upper Sanlualr), Ohio 43381
ww blaoh Mlmarlal
Public Llll8ry
208 PMy 8llwt
FoiiOrta,

Ohio 44830

~

Alllmllllll d ~ . . be g1vM In ~ Ill tedly at the hilling. Furtller ~1lollllllor1
may be obtlillllil by iMAutlotQ 1111 Qw111 IUIQII.

.

.

""""-··-..... --.-·-:.-----...:.......-.,,-------'- ---..!--'i

�.Page_:4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. June 25. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, June 25. 1990

Chicago one game behind first-place Oak·land:in An West
Dave Stewart over the lett field
By Ji:RIK K. LIEF
UPI Sports Wrljer
wall for his eighth homer of the
The Oakland Athletics have year.
made two World Series appearPasqua hit the game-win.ner
ances since last being swept In a off a pitch he hadn't seen before.
"Stewart threw me a sinking
series at home.
· In a rivalry that bas become fastball on the outer hall of the
baseball's focal point, the Chi· plate - It was a pitch he hadn 't
cago White Sox emerged from showed me before, " Pasqua
Sunday's 3-2 10-lnning victory said. " I knew I !)it It well but I
and three-game sweep of the wasn't sure it was out unttl I saw
defending World Champions as . Rickey · (Henderson) watching
bona· fide challengers for the the ball go over the walt."
Western Division title.
· Stewart gave full credit to the
On the strength of Dan Pas- Pasqua's stroke.
qua's game-winning solo homer,
"I made tbe pitch i wanted to ·
the White Sox closed to within one make," he said. " As long as I've
game of the first-place Athletics been pitching I've been told to
by inflicting the damage on make (the batter) take you deep
enemy turf. In the process, they to the opposite field. If he pulls
demonstrated that they should be the bali, you haven't done your
taken seriously.
job. Youhavetotakeyourcapoff
'.'I don't know about this to Pasqua."
Stewart, 9-6, allowed just six
business of being a contender,"
Chicago MaRager Jeff Torborg hits in 10 innings, but suffered his
said. "Don't forget this Is only fifth Joss in his last eight
June but this club Is not a fluke! ' decisloos. The right bander
Last weekend, Chicago was In struck out a season-high nine and
a similar position to challenge for walked 'none.
.t he division lead, squaring off in
It was the A's first extra-inning
a four-game weekend series at loss this year and the.first While
home.
Sox sweep of the A's since April
But after winning the opener. 1988.
the White Sox lost the final three
Ironically, Stewart had al·
games and some of their confi- ready ·s tarted icing his arm after
dence In the process as the A's the ninth inning because the A's
flexed their championship mus- were trailing . 2-0. But Dave
cle to maintain control of the Henderson hit a two-run, two-out
division.
homer that tied the game and
Pasqua's opposite-field homer sent it into extra innings.
• lloosted the )Vhite Sox to within
"It's nobody's fault but mine,
._ one game of the flrst·plact&gt; sending Stewart out to pitch that
:Of\,thletlcs, · a position they have lOth inning. after he had already
;:held for 72 consecutive days'.·
gone to the c;lubhouse and started .
: ''They outplayed us three days to ice down;" LaRussa said.
•and they. won three," Oakland
Bobby Thigpen, 3·2, picked up ·
·:manager Tony LaRussa said. ''It the victory despite yielding the
: makes us understand now what two A's runs. Barrry Jones
:·we have to do."
retired the A's in orper for his
;: Pasqua, a left-bander, drilled first save.
.·an 0-1 pitch from Oakland starter
Elsewhere in the American

,,

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I

I

.·

Scoreboard ...
I

•

Majors
By lJ11tkttP'ftK~ bl&amp;er..&amp;MMJ
AM'ERIC.\N LEi\GlJE
Eaol
TP.n
W L Pc:t . GB
Toro•o " ................ :.... n 31 .5'77 -

~

a.1110. .........................J,t' a .:m

. Ot'YelaDd ....................U
Mllwu•e .................. .St
o.treii ........................ :J4
•
Baltlmoft' ...........•... .... .JI
•'
N- \ 'ork .... l ..... . . ........tl

w...

r.

~,

S5 ..I'm 7
SS .nR 7
• •47t 7 1&lt;r
II ' •.fO I ll!
-It .JU U

OaW&amp;IMI ................. ..... IJ 25 .1St Clllcqe .......................al !:1 .ltl I
Calllenila ...... ... ..... .. .. ..J7 Jt .5tl 711t:
se.u~~t .........................JJ 11 .411&amp; II
Mlll~~ttoCU

........ ...........33 Jl

.nil

u~

Teu&amp;A ..........................JI J1 .441 IS
.•• 14
SM.ldQ Re•••

lUll- Cilly .................!l •

ToroMo R, New York 4
IoNon ~. ft&amp;IUmDn' I. lllaeinp
,Cbkqo S, Oak1811d 3
MIUHola 1. KaniiM City 1
Sr:aitk! 8, Texas t. lllalllnp ,
MU.,..utee U, Oe.elud·l
Ddrol&amp; t, Callfonda 4

•...

·"

Sullll-.yJht~!llh

..'

.' I

I,

l

Bostoa !, BaiiJmol"f' I

.

T•rolllo II, N~w Vork S
K.aa~ Cllfll. Mlnnrsola :t
Clf'W'lall. t. Mllwulll.u I
Chkap1. OallJUd 2:. II lnllln(IO

•'

Callor.la II, Det.roll t
St-aHle 11, Tf!llU s
Mo .. IQ'

II

'·''•

Gam~

To,_o (SUtb 11-JJatllo•lo• Cli.lt"Ciu!r
UJ,'I':Up.m.

•
•

Tnu (.JeUeoat I·!J 111 MlniiP!Iota
M: l l p.m.

(IErleQ~nl-l),

.

ti~PYelud(faD41otti7..JJ at Mllwauk«
cllosl• &amp;-&amp;J. K:JI p.m .
Detroit (Petry HJ It Oaklud (Welch
11·2) , 11:11 p.m.
•
Chk:a&amp;O (Hibb!IN 5-t) at ( 'IIIHorlllll

(L&amp;IIPlOD -1·7), It: S:l p.m.
TuHII., Gamt'M
Toi'OIIIO al llolltctn. •lpil
Mllwaakft ae N- VoriE, ftl~
Clt'Velaad at Balttmeft. nlpt
Tnu .t MIDRAGI.a, niKN
DetNll at Oaklalld, al-'*
K•n_. Clhal SeaMir, aldll

E••t

L Pet .

Irwin capture~ Buick .Cl~~Jc
.

j,I

I

.&lt;

Lisa Roush of Pomeroy, shoot; 'ing In the woman's compound' aided lingers' class, placed
: ·eighth at the Bowhunters' Inter.; national Nationals, held at Au;.rora, Ill. She also placed i7th in a
;-:competition at Bedford, Ind. .
r: Roush shoots a High Country
'.compound bow. A compound bow
:·uses wheeled cams at the end or
; the bow limbs to increase arrow
•

GB

time, ".Irwin said after shooting a
5-under-par 66 for a two.-shot
victory over Paul Azlnger. "Today
was the tl!De. I don't know if
-41 .-1. II
you'll see. that again."
II .-ltl U:
Irwin accomplished his rare
u .1~ Sa Dl1e................... .. .J4 n .51S I
double despite an extended case
S• FraaciRH .............u :st .m 1
of exhaustion, not getting more
Los Mpfeoa .................,.f ss .au 11 ~
u.......................:.....:a n .... 11~
than 4 hours of sleep any night
Ai ...ta ....... ... ..............!t .fl .M 11'!1
this week. And so his reward is to
SM_.ay ReAulls
.
st. l.Oal1 R. Qk:ap 1
"'
go home and rest.
lloaiiiMI-1; Su,Frud8eo J
. "The mast-obvious thing to say
••
New YorkJ. Pllla4tiiJIIIal
SaaiN~p ,1, AU•ta I
'
· is I'm extremely excited about
Mo•l"t'alt, PK&amp;Ib&amp;ll'llll
the double,'; . Irwin sa\d. "I'm
ClltriR. . II1, Loll Mae!N I
SlaadQ Rt'lluliN
sorry
it won't beat leas tan effort
N~ York 1•. Pldladtll!hla 5
tor a triple, but there are other
Plltft'lhS. Moahul3
Hollllioal, San Franti!K'G !
more 'lmportant, pressing things
Clair.- S. st. Louk t. 11 t,.ainp
to do."
·
A.tlaata II, SIIIIIHf'p 11, 1! l•nlnp
Clacl..ail II, Lea AApiH I
These things, Irwin said, in·
Mond 1Q' GaRtH
Pl'lllltkl,...a IDNf'lllli f.tl al Pltlltclude "going ·home (to Fron..
hul'lh tRHiiNJ, 7:11p.m.
tenac, Mo.), · and being with
Su Frucl&amp;t'o (S.Mt 'HJ a1 Cint·IRutl (A.nnfllrolll 8-JJ, l:JI p.m.
relatives, family al)d friends who
Los An~• tMarlianli..J) Al AIIIIUUa
have been· overwhelming with
(l..eltna• ~) . 1:-llp.m .
••relll (G __..." 3-' ) aa Chlcqo
their congratulations and praise.
t&amp;...ae !-!) , 1:_, p.M.
San Dtl'p ( ll.l'ltftf.f) lltHnlllon(Scott
"Yes, I've proven I can play,
-1·7), A;35 p.m .
yes, I· know I c.a n play, and no,
N_. Yark tCont S4) at l"il. LouM
l'hMklr ""Ill, K: 1:1 p.m.
I'm not going ·to go out al)d kill
Tuettday CarJVM
myself to prove lt." ·
.
Molfrul ~ Clllca«e
Phlladtl phla at PUflbU fi'IL nl1ht
Irwin, 'who tied for third at the
Kemper the first week of June,
saft Flucl~o 111 Ctncl•nall, nl~
said
bls nel(t tournament probaLoll AD plef; Ill 1\tlatua, nl~
bly would be the British Open at
Nl'w Yurt at St. Ltdfl, nlati
r • !'!an Dlt&gt;F 111 Ho..llon. nldll
St Andrews, Scotland, starting
July 19.
Irwin. :calling on the last of his
physical and emotional reserves,
became the . first player since
Billy Casper In 1966 to win a PGA
event tbe week alter capturing
the national championship.
speed; the cams also make it
"You look forward to these
easier to., holll the bow at
days,"
he said. "They're a lot of
lull-draw and tend to shorten the fun at the
time, but they're also a ·
length of the bow.
lot of.work. I'm 'extremely proud
· Roush is shooting at a competiof myself, the way I .r eacted alter
tion at Hocking Technical College, in Nelsonvliie, on July 6,7 winning last week.
''This serves up notice there' a
and 8.
Jot
ofli!e left, there's a lot of fun
a
Roush is sponsored by the
left."
American Legion Post 1288 of
Azinger, who had: only two
Middleport and Is a member of
bogeys
ail week, produced a
the Chester Bowhunters' Club.
sizzling 65 but still had to settle
tH .51!2 iO .571
4
~ .SM 2
3S .H7 I

OUR ,
CARING STAFF
MAKES THE
DIFFERENCE

•

••

•
•

).-

"•

•
•'

lt was &amp;nllounced that the Past

couru;noi's and Deputies picnic-

for second place at 27i.
"I'm very hap
. p•&gt;'
,·" said'AzlnUPI Sports Writer
J
HARRISON, N.Y. -Following ger, who !iiltshed second for the
a jubilant encore performance, . third time this yem: after winning
Hale Irwin has no plaps to exhibit the Tournament of Champions.
his new trademark victory lap in "I did as good asl could. I needed
the near future.
to shoot '63 to lie this· guy, and I
Twice In the space of six days shot 65. My hat's off to Hale
Irwin astounded the golfing fra- Irwin."
ternity with Improbable vlctoIrwin co~ted f~r birdies on
ries. Winless since . 1985, the the front nine, then parred eight '
45-year-oid Irwin beCame the holes in a row before hls final
,
oldest man to .win the U.S. Open birdie.
champiooship by •capturing a
The vtciocy, was:trwln's l~th
playoff last Monday, and he since IO.ining the ..RfiA . Tour in
followed .that up Sunday with a 1968, and brougl!thlm top prize of
victory in the $1 million Buick $180,000.~ Willi' $571,6M in 1990,
Classic.
this is already Irwin's most
Just as he did last Sunday at profitable year.
'·
Medinah, after sinking a 45-!oot ·
Irwin led Azinger by four shots
birdie putt on the 72rid hole to at the turn. but Azinger piccked
create a playoff with Mike up birdies on· the lOth, 13th and
Donald, Irwin jogged part way 15tll holl!s to dose to witliin one
around the green of the West- shot. On the 18th, the easiest
c:hester Country Club following a birdie · bote on !he Westchester
6-foot birdie putt on No. 18, · Country Club' 90Ur~. Azlnger. •,
exchanging higl!-fives · with the" sent his drtve laio the Toug!J oj! ·
gallery.
.
the right .;if . :

••

.. ' felt

..

will ,be at Logan Park on June 30
ape! the djstrlct meeting would be
held on July 21 at Car leton
Scliool.
.
Gretta Rime, member of the
Chester Daughters of ~erica
received a scholarship {rom the
orga!flzailpn a.nd gave 11 ·speech
thanking the Daughters cit AmerIca for the scholarship. She was
the valedictorian of her gradual·
ing class. •·
Those celebrating birthdays at .
the ·m eeting were seated at a

"t':··

·o

'

1

RECEIVES STAND G OVATION
Boatoa deelpated
hitter Dwight Evans a. .wledges the standing ovation from .l he
Red Sox fans after hl&amp;tfflg his eighth homer of the aeasol) In the
. aeventh Inning of Sunday.'a game against the visiting Balllmort!
Orioles. His bomer, the se~nd game-wlnnedn aa many d~Q:a, gave
&amp;heRedSoxaHvlctory. (UPI) ·

s·,.' UMM
. E
,. .•
0

.." ·clal•·

GAWPOLIS
{

t'

100

· Mary Yost: Flag Chairman.
gave two readings !tonoring the

SEu.A
' ' IRATI
&gt;

i

·

'~It@

.

.

.

•

Brenda Hysell, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry L. Bailey, has '
been named to the Dean's List at
Hocking Technical College for
spring quarter. She received a 4.0
grade point 'a verage.

•SyiiChrCII!alanced lriggs &amp; Stratton
WI 12V ahernalor. ;lodol 1239

igniitio1~:

18 HP
4S.INCH
lAWN
TRACTOR

14 HP
45 INCH

LAWN
TRACTOR

~1888
•

·

•Ground ellg89lng deck with ,lee !ric start and lriggs

flag of the United States and
reported the recent verdict of the
U.S. Supreme Court concerning
tl)e flag.
Mrs. Reynolds lntrol!uced t~e
speaker, DaJe. "the Tinker" and
his daughter·. Kathy from St.
Albans, W.Va., who announced
that he will cease travelling to
fairs and special appearances ·
this summer and that he has
started a tin crafting class at
Salem Tlko College in Salem, ·
W.Va. He showed several of his
handcrakted Items and presented a tall&lt; about the tin
Industry.
Assisting hostesses were Mrs.
Heidi Smith, June and Emma
Ashley and Ml)ry Lew Johnson. ·

r

$.1- '188
.

~
$1688i-~·

Dean's list •
includes Hysell

•

12 HP
39 INCH
LAWN
TRACTOR

10 Hit
32 INCH
REAR-ENGINE
RIDING MOWER

~

464800

•flectric stl'rt Briggs &amp; Stratton 1/C engine l!lfith 12V

I~&amp;~Sir!!;a~lt~!lfi~I~/~C~~~-..:·~T--· :::-----~~~~~~~~=------:~-:~:....;....-1

of

Model

Model

514232

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DRIVE
TilER

52

60

516995

516995

•3 112

HP, 22
wiclth maku

Model
. 36-7

Model

35

$24988
521988
5299
..
•3'12 HP 22 inch
•3'h HP 21 inch solf-propellocl,lloll '
.,.,.,. handle far easy sto..,. and
123216

· Ia &lt;hain

514325

dri••·

drivi.

.

:' As a Fellow, Evans will be an
· adviser to the Board of Trustees
, and to the president; will become
j a Universl~y Community Emeri. • Ius member, enabling him to use
: the university facilities and par• tlclpatlon In commeacement ac: tlvltll!s with tbe trustees: will
: have his llllme engraved on tbe
: holl&lt;ir roll of Ff.liOw• to be
, Ciisplayed prom•tly on the
· campus; IUid will receive a
; cerdtlcate and ~lloa notlag
: the I! ate of the conferment of tbe
: Fellow upon .him.·
·
• · Born In the nortbweltern Ohio
: town of Sugar Rldp, Evans
: moved with ht. family to Gallla
County, where his father became

5 HP
FRONT TINE
TILLER •
29277.1
i.andle odj111tsto
r

'

$399

•lttavr duty drive chains, !lrlggs &amp; Stratton engine,

~~.!'!=.=~whetltii!!o.'!!!!"-"!!!!'!

UWN
Vine St. &amp; Third Ave.
Galfiipoli~I,-. Ohio

~

•

.GAIDIN CENTER
15 0 Uppei- River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH.
446-7826

.

634 East Main St.
Pom1troy, OH.
I'

'·'

Dear Ann Landers: The problem of "Cynthia in Atlania," who
wanted to marry her boyfriend of
1wo- years but maintain separate
homes because both of lhem were
loners, inlereSted me. My boyfriend
ANN LANDER~
and I are al$0 loners, and when
""1919.1.- .......
fi~ll"'l Sjn,diNI• lltd
discussing · the m~uer of living
I•.,.. . . SyiMih• ...,.
logether, we realized lhat being a
couple doesn' mean you must spend before you get
of
every minute in each other.'s your. car. Haven't we been through
presence,
.
enough?- WAPAKONETA. OHIO
I come from a highly intrusive
DEAR OHIO: I hope your leuer
family. There was no privacy, no makes a solid impact on those who
respect for solitude, and no need to be reminded that alcohol and
boundaries of any kind when I was driving can be a deadly combinagrowing up. When I got my own tion. Thanks for saying it so well.
apartment aiu1 learned to'rclish the My heartfelt condolences to you and
quiet and privacy, I couldn't your family .
imagine givipg it up to live with a
Gem of tlie Day; If you want to
man.
teach your children the value of a
There are imponam· skills devel· · dollar, you had beutr hurry up .
oped in any form of communal
Do you hav~ qru!SiioiiS about sa,
I i'ving, from sharing ari apartment to but no oile to talk to? A1111 Landus'
sharing a planet This territory is booklet,' '1Sex Olld the T~en-Ager, ''
mine: thallCITirory is yours: the other is franlc allfi to t~ point. s~llfi a
is ours. I respect your need for self-addr~sud, long, business-size
privacy, and I expect you to respect envelope Olld a c~ck or money ormine.
tkr for $3.65 (this Includes postage
My suggestion to Cynthia would Olld handling} 10: Teens, c/o Ann
be to explore, perhaps with a Lartders, P.O. Box ll562, Chicago,
professional couqselor, ways to Ill. 606/J-0562. (In Canada, send
share a life while respecting your $4.45.)
partner's nee4 to be alone. Establish
rules lhat include specifac guidelines
slating when you can and when you
cannot be interrupted. Make clear
what you consider private (such as
desks', diaries or closets) and the
labdr in shared areas. If .
division
possible, get a new apanment,
neither yours nor his, but "ours."
~ certain that it is large enough
1o have private rooms for bobbies, ·
solitude and a feeling of your own
space. If all this is done before you
move in together, the chances for a
successful relationship are infmitely
better.-- NEW BRITAIN, CONN.
. DEAR NEW BRIT.: Thanks for
the blueprint it makes a lot of sense
for those who have decided to ftU\ITY
or live together without marriage
even though I never did think living
together was a good idea -- and I
still don't.
Dear Ann Landers: Please print
this as a personal plea to all your
readers who might drinlc and drive.
Dear Friend: 'I'm 29 years old.
When I was 4, my grandfather was
lcilled in a car accident on New
Yeats Eve. He was struck by a drunk
driver. My' only memory of him is
his funeral.
When I . was 10 years old, my
broth~r was killed while coming
home afler serving in Vietnam. He
was within a few miles of home
when the car he was riding in
swerved to avoid a car driven by a
drunk driver.
Yeslerday we buried my father,
who was killad in a head-on collision while going to work. That driver
was also drunk. Dad was 57. He had
never'touched alcohol. He and Mom
were married 39 years and had five
children and 15 grandchildren. My
children will never know their
woriderful grandfather because they
were too young when he died. This
is a ~mendous loss. He was such a
terrific person.
Please, dear readers of AM Landers' column, if you drink I'm begging you to think about my family
•

Ann
Landers

shut-Ins were noted.
Peggy Harris, using the bibll·
cal account of the Good Samaritan, read of people who had often
helped others in distress even If
at great inconvenience to themselves. The thought brought out
em phasized the only . way to
repay was to pass the good deed
onto others. A general discussion
gave answers to the qw!stion,
' 'What Can We Do to Be a Good
Sama ritan."
Mrs. Perrin gave Ihi' offertory
prayer and Mrs. Harris closed
with a prayer poem, "Everyday
Thanksgiving." ·
Diane Hawley and Alice Globokar served refreshments to IS
members. The centerpiece was a
basket collection of annual bed·
ding plants. Favors were hand
crafted bookmarks by Mrs.
Hawley.

•

Macrame dass set in .Middleport
MIDDLEPORT - A series of
macrame chair classes will be
offered by the Middleport Arts
Council beginning july 5 at 6: 30
p.m. The classes will continue on
July 12. 19, and 26.
The Instructor will be Twila
Childs who will teach how to
weave a seat and back onto a

lawn chair frame.
Eac h student must furnish a
clean aluminum lawn chair with
ail webbing removed. All other
material will be furnished and
the cost of the classes Is $25.
To register call Sue Baker at
992-7733 or Margie Blake at
992-7117 .

~

Is_Introducing A New.
Servic:e Now Available.
11

YOU CAN PLACE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
FOR AS LOW AS SS.OO PER-·INCH.
EXAMPLE: 111

S5.00 PER DAY
112 S1 0.00 PER DAY
113 S15.00 PER DAY

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

·BULLETI

BOARD

.
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
.4:30P.M. DAY BEFOR'EPUBLICATIO~

Quirks in ·
the news...
I do; Play ball
SPANAWAY, Wash. (UP!) The bride wore summer cotton
dress, the . groom a softball
uniform. The wedding "chapel'.'
was at home plate.
That was thesc.eneSaturdayas
Todd Harris, ' ~. of Puyallup,
Wash., and Melgan Stacey, 24 , of
Mercer Island said their "I

a

FOR SALE

do'~: :

•

The couple choae to be married
on · home plate at Sprinker
Recreation Center in Spanaway
just before Harris 's softball
tearn, the.Golden Intruders,'took
the field.
·
. Both Harris and · Stacey play
softball and figured their shared
passion should be the starting
point tor their marriage. .

FRESH PEACHES,
JOMATOES, BANANAS,
WATERMELONS

NOTICE
There will be a meeting
held on Thurs., June 12
to elect officers at .
John's Restaurant.

MOBILE HOME .

3 BR, Kitchen, OR, LR. Must
sell now. Best offer.

000-0000

,,

RAIN OR SHINE
909 ABERGALE LANE
FRI., JUNE 6 &amp;

. SAT, JUNE 7

1982 ENGLAND

The Eagles Class of tbe Asbury
United Methodist Church met at
the church social room with
Irene Parker, President, leading
the meeting. Devotlt)ll$ were by .
Donna Frank.
It was announced that that a

3-FAMILY YARD SALE

000·0000

000·0000

Asbtiry .UMC class
holds recent meeting

. Marcia ' Karr, a long-time
te•cher of the clan.
The group discussed a bake
sale set for August and a
Christmas Bazaar which Is scheduled for November.
Mary Lisle served refresh·
menta to Karr, Smith, Parker,
Bill Winebrenner, Bob Smith,
Martha Moore, Wanda Rber,
Helen Teaford and Henrietta
Sinclair.

·

1983 DODGE TRUCK
LOADED

: ·~~~h!~t~l~:::::'edh:~

BOB EVANS

Plans were completed for
serving the American Red Cross
Bloodmobile on Wednesday
when the Friendly Circle of
Trinity Church met Tuesday
,
evening.
Plans also were made for the
annual picnic on July 17 at 6:30
p.m. at tbe home of Allee
Globokar. Guest night will be
observed and each one will
contribute ·a thought to the
program.
·
Gay Perrin, president. opened
tile meeting with a thought on the
meaninjl; of words and welcomed
Nonga Roberts , a former
member.
Thank you notes from Norma
Louise Jewell and Mickey
Werner, Missouri. Baptist Hospital, St. Louis, Mo., were read.
Cards were signed for Mrs.
Jewell and Marvin Burt and the

Th8 Daily Sentinel

or

&amp;

Friendly Circle meets

"The Bulletin Bostd

The University of Rio Grande a farmer and grocery store
· Board of Trustees, acting its operator. He worked on the farm
· recent summer meeting. named with his father and helped out in
the store.
Robert L. "Bob" Evans a Fellow
In 1946, Evans entered the
· ~ of the university.
· Evans, well-known Gallia business world when he opened a
· County busines~man and res tau- ~2-stool restaurant In Gallipolis.
,' ranteur, was cited for the honor During that lime, he ~eyeloped
the sausage recipe that bears his
• for being a citizen of note who has
name today . Ev11ns and a group
, contributed significantly to the
·• community through his vocation. of his friends formed a partner·
ship In 1957 and opened a sausage
•• In addition, Evans was hoplant on his farm near Bidwell.
; nored for his "long and sustained
The
new company bought a
•· interest" in the university and
,• his support of the Institution. , second pac~ing plant in Xenia
i Evans. was presented the honor the same year, and in 1963, the
privately-held Bob Evans Farms
r by Dr, Paul C. Hayes, president
went
public. 1Today, lt Is one of
pf Rioprande, after a unanimous
the
most.recognlzed
names in the
l vote by the boar(! to make Evans
restaurant
and
sausage
business
· a fellow.
throughout the midwest and
• "Withourquestion, Mr. Evans'
;- continued support of Rio Grande southwestern U.S.
Evans has been active In many
·I has been a key to its growth and
success," Hayes said. . "The community activities and has
received awards from the 4-H
between the institu••• connection
Club
·of Ohio. the Ohio Wildlife
lion and the Evans family has
Council,
Easter Seals, theAmeri·
~ · been a long one, and as a member
can
·Quarter
House Association
of the Ohio Board of Regents, Mr.
•• Evans has championed the inter· and the Conservation Club of
Ohio.
r es1s of this un,Iversity in its
For his contribution to the
• mission to help the people of
he received the Governor's
state,
' southeastern Ohio.
Award
and . Wildlife Council
· "For this long record of supAward,
in
addition to being made
' port and assistance to Rio
a
member
of the State Fair Hail
{ Grande, it Is a particular plea·
i · sure to name Mr. Evans a fellow of Fame.
His long association with Rio
' of the Institution," Hayes added.
~
Evans said he's proud to have Grande has included member·
ship on the Board Trustees and
~ had . a part in Rio Grande's
, growth, but added that the credit its Executive Committee, and ,
; belongs to a number of people support lor the community col' who·' have contributed to the · lege and the university through
'his membership on the Board of
~ unlversl ty,
'. · "I've been trying for 12 years Regents, where he was instru! to see that Rio Grande gets what mental in obtaining funding for
• it deserves, and maybe more," the proposed annex to the physi·
Evans noted, referring to his cal education center. He was also
term on the Ohio Board of responsibleforthecreationofthe~~
! .Regents. "I'm glad that the school athletic field, named in' ·
• university has grown and has honor of his father. Stanley L. .
·~
: become ·the most progressive Evans.
He continues to improve the
: ·thlrig I've seen In southeastern
athletic complex, and in 1981 .he
:. Ohio.. " ,
; The· 'u niversity Is moving tor- es.tabUshed an endowment for
,
:. ward, Evans added, and he the field's maintenance.
Evans and his wife Jewell
' · ple!Jged to continue helping the
recently celebrated their 50th
~ Institution meet its mission of
: educating and reaching out to the wedding anniversary.
• regt,on:
: ''There'salotofworktodo,but
• it's amazing to see what has been
: accomplished,"
he remarked.
.

••

12V Alternator.

$899.,
.•Magnetron electro(lic

table with their birthday cake
and included Ritne, Iva Powell,
Ethel Orr, Erma Cleland, Eva
Robson, Goldie Fredrick and
Betty Young.
Those attending were Marjorie
Fetty, Jean Fredrick, Betty
Roush, Betty Young, Ada Bissen,
Marcia· Keller, Doris Grueser,
Iva Powell, Mae McPeek, Lora
Damewood, Thelma White,
Sandy White, Dorotlly Ritchie,
Bulah Maxey, Elizabeth Hayes,
Erma Cleland, Helen Wolf, Ge·
J!leve Ward, Eva Robson, Faye
Kirkhart, Opal Hollon, Charlotte'
Grant, Gretta Rltne, Mary Hoi·
ter, Kathryn Baum, Ethel Ort,
Nta Ballard, Goldie Fredrick,
Lillian Demosky and Betty
Denny.

Evans named .Fellow·
of local university

292664
.

446-7112

~ · ~~

.I

2HP 36 IN. LAWN TRACTOR .
with synchrobalanced Briggs &amp; Stratton engine -

stNideck,

is the caring and
dedication of fNerJ
single member of
our staff. ,
'
You're invited to stop
in anytime to observe
these eiceptional
people at work, ask
questions of
them and our
. residents, and .
discover for
yourseHthe
very best in
nursing
home care.

...· i

Ji'--•lll!'il!i!!!il!'!!'il!!f!l!ll"'~!ll"'---------------,-,-..,;,-------..
I
j
s'
o· ·'·N·.

•l'lt HP, 20 inch cut, one piece

What sets tJs apart .

Mrs. Anna Circle Cleland was
elected as vice regent to fill the
position vacated by Mary Tuttle
Rose when the Return Jonathan
Metgs Chapter of Daughters of
the Averlean Revolution held
their annual family picnic and
meeting at the riverSide cottage
of George and Ppyllis Hackett.
The chapter participated In the
Sons of the American Revolution
grave marking ceremonies at the
Chester Cemetery for Peter
Grow. Rae Reynolds, June. Ash·
ley and Anna Cleland ~)!tended
DAR luncheons at Chillicothe.
Athens and Point Pleasant.

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Set up 'our place'
and set up the rules

DAR officer elected

I
~~. I

'

:
TROPHY WINNER - U.a
• Rolllh, Pomeroy, dllplays
: tropby llle woa shooting In
• natleaal llowhunter competl~ tloa. U.. abool8 In the wom;~ aa'l eempoUDCI-alded fingers'

hits over seven innings to power
the Angels to their seventh win in
their last eight games. McCaskill, 6-3, earned the victory and
Frank Tanana fell to 5-5.

By MARTiN LADER

bowhunter competition recently

': Ask anyone who shoots bow
• and arrow and they'lltell you it
.: usually takes years of practice'to
..: become a top-notch archer. How:j ever, a local woman who has
· •, beep shoottng for only 3'h years
';has managed a goOd 'showing in
.• national. archery competlon.

Bulah Maxey presided over the
Tuesday meetiag of the Chester
CouncU :123 Daughters of America, which was beid at the hall.
The meeting opened with the
pledges to the Chris lian and
Americ~ nags. The group also
joined In the Lord's Prayer and
the Star Spangled Banner.
It was announced that Mary
Showalter was in St. Joseph's
Hospital wi.t h a broken leg and
Sallie Trussell bad undergone .·
c;atheterlzatlon at a . Columbus
hospital, but was now home.
tbe ·charter was draped for
Henrietta. Booth, and wm· stay
draped for a period of 30 days.

.

.

'

~Lisa Roush, Pome~y, places eighth in
~patioital

Angels 10, Tigers 2 - At
Anaheim, Calif., Cbill Davis,
Kent Anderson and Lance Parrish ail blasted home runs and
Kirk McCaskill scattered four

Chester Council meets

, r.,.

beenitwanting
it "Everybody
ail week, but'has
I said
wasn't

NATIONAL lEAGUE

TE-MYI
W
PltUhuiJh ........ ............
Mo•re-' .....................-11
New \ ' orii. ....................J6
Plllladelplia ................a-1
St. Lo-. ....... ...............11
Clllleqo ................... .....
· WMt
a.:tn•U ....................Q

League, Toronto ripped New · which keyed a four-run second
inning. John Cerruti, 6-3. went
York 8·3, Boston baslled Baltl·
five inning.s, allowing seven hits.
more 2·0, Kansas City crushed
Minnesota 11 -2, Cleveland Chuck Cary, 4-3, pitched two
clipped Milwaukee 9-5, Califor· erratic innings and suffere the
loss.
nia clubbed Detroit 10·2 and
Royals 11, Twins 2 - At
Seattle edged Texas 11-5.
Minneapolis, Dal)ny Tartabuii
Red Sox Z, Orioles 0 - At
Boston, Pwight Evans smacked · homered and drove in 1our runs
and Jim Elsenreich collected
a leadoff home run In the seventh
live hits to lead Kansas City's
inning, his third In two games,
23-hlt attack. Storm Davis,' 2-5,
lifting Boston to a three-game
sweep. Baltimore has dropped 10 · returned from the disabled list
and pitched six strong innings.
of Its last i2 games. Greg Harris,
Allan Anderson, 2·10, was rocked
7-3, allowed five hils and fanned
lor 10 hits and seven runs In two
seven In eight hmings and Jeff
.
Gray notChed his first save. Bob Innings.
lndllllls •; Brewera . 5 - At
Mllacki, 3-4, went seven and
MllwaJikee,'.Chris ' James belted
one-third innings and took the
four hitS and drove In fdur runs
loss.
and Jerry Bro1!fne_scored 'three
Blue Jays 8, Yankees 3 - At
Toronto. George Bell went3 for 4 runs to paee .Cleveland. John
Farrell, 4·4; gave up one run and
with two home runs and four ~I
three' I! its In five innings. Mark
to power the Blue Jays. Bell's
Knudson, 5-4, took thii.Jaas . . .:.
first homer was a solo blast

Porneroy-Midcleport. Ohio

THANK YOU
For All the Flowers, Cards
and Gifts I Receilled While
I Was Ill.
SARAH

NO MATrEI WHAT THE lEASON MAY IE •••
"YAID SAil", "AUTO FOI SALE", ."PUIUC
NoncE", "MEEnNGS" 01 ·"JUST TO sa'
SOMETHING SPECIAL"USE THE DAILY
BULLETIN IOAID •
STOP IN TODAY AND HAVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT
PLACED IN THE IULLmN BOARD.

�...... . ..

.
The Daily Sentinel- Page 7

By The Bend

•

The Daily·Sentinel .
.

-

•

'

.

Monday, June
. . .26. 1990

!'age 6·

;•

•

Rutland Friendly Gardeners'
.focus
1s
o.
n
trees
.
· Marj~rli Davis hosted the
recent meeting of the Rutland
F.rlendly Gardeners, focusing on
trees .
·
·
For roll call, rnzmbers named
their favorite trees, Including
weeping cherry, dogwood, magnoua, red bud and various others.
Marie B!rch!!eld discussed
how to !dent!!y different oaks, of
which there are sixteen types !n
Ohio alone.
: Janet BoUn shared some pamphlets from the USDA and the
American ForestrY Association
about the uses, benefits, types,
care and growth of trees. Mrs.

•

Birchfield displayed a number of
brown In the falll , crabapple,
oak leaves for members ·to
forsynthia , peony and any broad
Identify.
leaf evergreens. English Ivy
'Joanne Fetty, president, disworks better In a half-and-half
cussed how to glycerine leaves in
solution.
a one-part glycerine to two-parts
Marjorie Davis displayed a
water solution. It is best to do this fresh flower arrangement of Ir is
in the heat of the day, cutting the and members were reminded to
desired stems, cleaning and
mulch newlY planted trees and
trimming any damaged areas.
shrubs .
Keep any unused solu lion for
· The club agreed to table a
other stems later.
· decision on the response to Lilly
Some types of plants that
Kennedy 's request that the club
glycerine well Include Magnolia
enter a !loatin the Fourht of July
(which turns brown), barberry
Parade as It has been done many
(which turns red in the spring or years In th~ past.

Plans lor garden th erapy with
the e1&lt;tended care unit of Vete·
rans Memorial Hospt\ai were
suspended over the summer
months to resume in the fall .·
Club members furnished vases
of flowers for the Rutland High
School Alumni Banquet, and
Marie"Birchfleid and Suzy Carpenter furnished arrangements
for the Ru t!and Post Office. Mrs.
Carpenter. also made floral designs for .111splay at the Middleport, Bradbury and Rutland
Churches of Christ. Tickets for
the quilt being used as a fund

Mikki Cas10's Country Clog-

gers will sponsor a summer dance/·
party on Tuesday, June 26, from
5:3G-8:30 p.m. atlhe Point Pleasant
Youlh Cen1er. This dance is for
children in grades kinlkirganen lhru
sixlh. Admissilll is $2, ..Fun is in s~pre for each child

MONDAY

· LECTA - Christian Union
Church vacation Bible school wil!
begin Monday, ,fune 25, from 6 to
8 p.m., continuing through the
l'{eek. Bus transportation !s
available, call 256-6575.

'

; POMEROY -The Pomeroy
Church of Christ will have bible
'i(:hoolthrough June 29 from 6:30
p.m. to 8: 30 p.m. nightly. Direcfors are Barbara Fields and Pat
'J'homas.

TO HOST DANCE • Mikkl Casto's Country Cloners Will be sponsorial a chiace 011 Tuesday, June
26 from 5:30-8:30 p.m. at tbe Point Ple1151Dt Youlb Center. All student, kiaderprteu tbril sixth grade, can
attend the event. Admlssloa Is S2 and the proceeds wiU go to tbe pun:lwe of a a~ portable stage for lbe
. I"'OIP·

.

Dance recital held at Southern

Rock Springs
Grange meets
.

'

1

.

.

wilh games. pril.CS, 08IICIIIJ, great ;
music and relialunents. Thl! dlllce
will be chaperoaed by lhe l*eRIS ~
of lb; Mikti CasiO Country Clof!· ·
.gers. Ploc:ee!ls from lhe dlilce WJU
go IQWIIl1 lhe cloggers nc~ port·
able Slage.
'

Performing a fast tap routine were Anna Chapman, Linda
to "Puttln' on the Ritz" and a jazz Chapman, Jessica Chapman,
routine to "Escapade" were 12 Meredith Crow, and Heidi Legar.
Stacie Reed received a trophy
and 13-year olds Jessica Chapman , Rayan Young, Jennifer for eight years: Spelly Winebrenner, nine years; and RaLawrence, and Kelley Grueser.
ber !a Caldwell and Jennifer
A blackllghi number to "A
Color . Sympnony" was per- Lawrence, ten years.
The students preseqted their
formed by Heather Dailey, Stacy
ins b'uctor a bOuquet of pink and
Wilson, Sandy Smith. Morgan
Mathews. Dena Sayre, Autumn white silk roses,, a wall plaque,
Thomas, Carly . Crow, Molly and a gift cer-tificate. Shelly
Winebrenner was presented yel·
Heines, Kenda Smith, and Maglow roses.
gie Smith. DreSsed like cats, they
The dancers will be perform·
later returned to do·a jazzroutlne
ing at the )Vleigs County Fair in
to "Alley Car."
August.
Tract Heines, Tara Grueser,
Meredlth Crow, Stacie Reed,
Erin Krawsczyn, and Whitney
Haptonstall, 11 and 12 year olds,
Pub,llc Notice
Public Not!ce
performed advanced tap rou·
Viii ago of Pomor()y .
NOTICE OF AUCTION
tines to '·'Treat Me Right" and
320 Main Stroot
'
Notice
ia
hereby
given
that
"Ain't She Sweet."
Pomeroy, Ohio 411789
the board of education of the
In white sequin costumes, Meigs Local School Dittrict.
a.._. • Niple. Umitod
Linda Chapman . Heather Meigo County, Ohio. will of44Z4 Emnon AVWKOe
Franckowiak, Anna Chapman, fer for sale at public auction
Perkoraburg. - • Virgin·
Ia 21104
Meigs High School.
and Kelly Satterfield performed at
42091 Pomeroy Pika, PoCoplw ott he co NTRAcr
two fast tap routines to "In the meroy, Ohio. commencing DOCUMENTS m"Y bo pur·
•
Mood" and "Ain't Misbehavln' ." at 8:00 P.M. on July 12, ,1ch•.t at:
B ..gau. Nlple. Llmltod
Shelly Winebrenner, assistant 1990, the following ~a­
penonal property:
4424 Em. .on A-uo
dance teacher, performed an scribed
Several Seu of Fiaeta
Parkoraburg. ~ Virginadvanced tap routine to " I Can Ware Glauware
Ia 28104
·
Do Anything" and to "Showtime
Three (31 Electric Rlngao
13041 486-81541
ThrH (3) Gao Rangeo
upon paym- of *211.00,
Medley."
Termo of the sole shall be
NONE Of WHICH WILL BE
All dancers returned to the cash
REFUNDEp.
in thefonn ofc11h, ora
stage and performed a finale to certified or caahier's check
1'1-oopao:tlila BIDDERS m"Y
"The Wind Beneath My Wings." payable to tho board of edu- - - roqulrl• to l u r Each studen t'was given a certlfl· cation of the Meigs Locel • Niple.L-od.
School Diatrft which is reBy order of the VIII ago of
cate and a pink rose. .
quired at the time of the publ'omeroy.
Special recognitlen Wils given lic auc;tion from the higheat Thil11thdayofJuno,1980
for students who had da.!tced five bidder.
John A. Andlrlon
Information
concerning
the
VII
agO&gt; Adminiltrotor
oi' more years.
'
(8112,
18.
21 3tc
l•uc~ion
•lo
shall
be
I
nod
Receiving five year trophies
offioo of the Principal, ·
were Cwr.ly Crow, Molly Heines,
PUbliC Notice
Morgan Mathews, Tracl Heines,
~:-~Hig~~h Pike.
~s~~choo:;Pom'orov.
1. 't209t
.
814-992Erin Krawsczyn, Rayan Yourig ,
IN THE '
.lodl Roush, and Amber. Hayes.
C.OMMON PLEAS COURT
board reurvea the
Si1&lt; year trophies went to . righl to reject any or all bida.
OF MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
Heather Franckowiak, Christy (81 11. 18, 26; l7l 2 4tc
BANK
ONE,
Hawkins, Leann Cundiff, and
ATHENS. N.A .. Plaintiff
Public Notice
Melody Lawrence .
-VIReceiving seven year trophies
MOM FARM CITY, INC ..

~

El' AL .. Defandanll
Cooo No. B!I·CV-302
LEGAt NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL .ESTATE
Ao Shorlft of
Molgs
County, Ohio, I horeb¥ offer
for' oolo tt 10:00 A.M. on
Frtdey, Augullt 3, tg80, A.
D... on the front iitapa of the
Moigo County Courthouao,
PO"'"'l'Y. Qhlo, tho following daOcrlbad real wtato:
• Tho addrooo of Hid r•l n t~ II 1540 Eaat Main Street,
Pomllloy, Ohio. Said roolaototo io more fuRy ducribod

DOWNING .CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

Ill Second St., Pomeroy
YO~R

INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

TUESDAY
NIGHT
SPECIAL

10

•• follows:

PARCEL 1: 'Tract 1. baing
porto of Loto No. 10. 11, 12,
13.14,11, 18and17inoaid
Village. locoted botwMn
Condor ond Moin Strwto in
ih• VRiage of Pomorov. and
~•arllled 11 followa:
Beginning It the lower lnlerllction, cor"er of Cherry
Stroot ond Moln Stroot;
thonco witll '· Main ltreat
lOUth 70 cltg. 1 I' W..t
374.7
to a tum: a.nco
South
dog . . 10' W..t
1H.1
to 1 otaki 1.1
flol
of
of
No. 10;
11
09'

•

FOR JIST

$~ 25

_

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

J.
NER ROLL

co""

twa 02'
m lW.).
- Woot
IS. 71· dog.
ona
hlftldrod nlftOlV·four and no
tonthl (184.01 1wt. South
thirty~ dogr- no mi.._
t (S. ·31 dog. 00'
WJ. 0110 hundrod ninety-lour
and no tantlla (184.01 fHI.
South thlrty-olght - no mlnutaa (S. 38 doa.
oo· W.l. ono hundred 11001
fo,t, moro or lo01, to point
on tho dividing Uno batwHn
Lata Ton (101 Md Eleven
(1 11, Mid point OliO baing I
corner of pro.,.-ty convoyed
by Tho N- Pltt....,.g Cool
Company toW. I. Finlaw at
data of May 1 1, 1828:
lhonco along ..ld dividing
line, No'rth Fou..-. degrflva 'mlnu• w.. (N. 14
dog. 01' W.l. aiahtwn .,d
th-·tantloi '11.)1 fill to a
comer of'ltMt. d11arlt:1d In
followlnor,lo-t....,h. North
fourtaon .lMij,_ flvo mi·
nutM (N. 14 dog. 01' W.l.
forty·flvo Olld no -he
(41.01 foot to a POint on Mid
dlvidlngllno, wid point illo
balnoco...,.y...
• --"'~~~'*rDP·
ertv
II¥ 101 Tho

a.._

IESTAUIANT

POMEROY, OH.

--

acre~

~urg Coal Com•
pony to iehl Plnlaw. north .
fctu..-. ....,_ llvo mi·
• ..,.. w.t ~~- 14 . . . 01'
W.l. nlnaty·nlno (Ill feet to
• point Dll the olouthetly ....
· of Condor
Aid point
oloo ~"II - - oarnmon
to ~Dia Ten (101 and Eleven
(11 I; lhonco
lklno the
~lnoofC­

...... "" llllltvd:y Frllcl CllickH ..

---·-· ._..,.

contllnlng 1.89

""Yed by A. W. Vorhaa Eo·
toto to tho Martin Ebar-h
Company by dHd dated Oc·
tobal' 14. 1920; thence
along ..ld pr-"'f and
through Loto E - (11) to
Soventeon (17), lndu-. of
Which tlio h - - .. tr8ct II a port, the foiOwing
four cour•• end dllt8nCII.
vii:
South
-nty-ona
degr- two mlnutta (S. 71 deg. 02' W.l. thrM
hundrod
- . ond 1111
tenthl (3 12.11 lwt. lOuth
-aig-n dear- fifty-ol,hl
mlnutoo E. (1. 11 dag.ll8 E.
1. forty and no tonthl. (40.01
fill.
South oounty·ono

•••••rfhr•

~ North'
dagr-ten mlnu• Eoot(N.

·----

I

··-

-•tv·

...,. '

pralaod
at Two Hu!'l"ed
levonty·Fiv• Thou....a .,d
0!)/100 Dolloro r-271,000.

·001.

laio of Mid,...- to
... for not .... than twothirilo {2/11 tho aforwold '
approloed value. cw~ 1n
t.riol on tho dote of aato.
Sold oolo lo oubjo~ fo ap.
PI'DVIII by tho ComCourt, Malgo Counly, Ohio.
Jamw M. louloby,
lhorlff,
. MetgaCounty, Ohio

"to•

Appro.-:

z.•.

e13.oo

16

$1 .30/ day

In Memoriam

Yard

NO SUNDAY

.eo

.05/ daV '

Set•

992·6110

2531 West llllln, ·
,_,.,, Oh.
.
PARTS AND' SERVICE .
For Molt 2 and 4-cyclo
en gin•
Stock Pan• for Homelite.
Weede.ter. Tecumuh,
Briggo l Strotton.
'-~'19-no

-

Area Code 304

31-Homn for Stlt

446-Gallipolit
317- Ch•hire

992-Middlepon

17&amp;-Pt. Pl ..unt

388 - Vinton
245 .....- Rio Grande~

98! - ctt .. ter '

843-Portlend

33 - Farms tor Slle
34-Busin•s But! dings
35 - lots &amp; Ac, ..g,

Tr onspu rt.1l10n
71 - Autol far I lie

"256-GuYJn Oisl.

-247-lettrt" Fells

458-Leon
576 - Apple Grove
773- M.. on
882-N.W Heven

.~~ ·•;mnma .

937 --,Buftelo

SEARS
718 N. 2ntl

iiiDDLEPOIT

· COUNTRY
.
MOilLE
HOME PARK

8l-E•c~etinl

14-Eiei:lric::el Fte"igerstion
85-Genlfel Heulint

47-Win1ed to Rent

raided at Rto. #1, Rutland,
Ohio. wlltokenotlcethaton
tho 12th dayofJ.une.1990,

E. Mail......

POMEROY, D .

1192-2259 .

eo

-co-

rodo: - . . so
100 rodo to
t h e - of the rood; thonoo
in a north w••tv clrealon
atono the cent• of tho road to

the plooo of beginning. conialnlng 30
more or lolL
E'"'= .,d r - g • 2
.....
COIWI'/od ·.to
~idoy R. and Rachal HuttOn
.,.. doocrlbad in Volum• 289,
Pogo 621 of the Deed R•
cordi, Melgoo County, Ohio.
REFERENCE OEED: Volumo 178, Pogo 308. Deed
Recordo, ' Meigs County,
Ohio.
••
PARCEL NO. 2: The fo~
- g 'Cfeoalbad I'HI Mtoto
alluatod in Froction 18, Town
8, " - 14, Rutland Townohlp, Malgo County, Ohio,
ond bou- and dlocriMd
eo followe:

ou:r•.

•

IIDD~EPORT- 1978 Mod-

ular Home si\ling on 21ots in
town. 2 car garage. NGF.A
heat. garden area. Also
self · contained AJC unft.
Many other nice features. All
appliances go wih house.
$39,50!l •
SYRACUSE - R U S TI C
HILLS - A home to be
proud of! 3 bedroom raneh,
I!lz nath~ family room, totmal dining room, garage.
electric 88 heat, fireplace.
on a I 12'.99' lot. Vry nicf.
REDUCED TO $39,500.00.
POIERO.Y - Approx. 31!
acres, vacant ground. Good
bui)din g sfte. Close in. Watr
may be available. $7,500.

WCIN £- 50 acres ofva·
cant land. TPC water llllilable. Gas well. Southern District
' - Ra nc h
MIDDLEPORT
home w~h 3 bedrOCJ!IlS, 1
bath, elec. 88 heat. carpet.
.Washer and dryer plus a
lOx 12 shed.
. $22.900.

..

.

MIDDL EPO RT - II+ story
frame hom~ wilh 4 bedrooms, separate 2 car garage wnh room above and
extra tot satell~e dish, and
more. $~7.000.

CHESTER - N" HOPE
ROAD - A newer double
wide, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath
over an acre lot
heat. rural water
TV. Call for ap~T:~~~~tto see this one.

FIXED RATE 7.711%
1 at yr.. 8.211%

we·

a .quelilled home
from aur olltlnt
U,v8ntory.

Pllbll!: Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilitlet
Commission of Ohio
hea
aqheduled a
combined hea,tng lri
C11e Noe. 90·669·
EL-FOR
and 90·
660-EL-FOR which
involve · tha 1 990
long-term For8c..t
Report1 of The Col·
umbua
Southern
Power. Company
and Ohio Po-r
Company,

rHpaC·

tively. Th- forecut reporta contain
lnfonntt11on af t h -e
utllty'• energy de·
mend, ita ,_. load
and lUI,_, aa Weft
ssa~pllnthe

utllty can implement
1D I1IMt andclpelld
demand. · the com·
binild hetuing will begin at 10:00 a.m On
July 1 1 990.1tthe
olficetl o f the Com·
million. 1eo E a 1t
B!Oid Stnlet, Colum·
bua, 0 h i ci 43268-

o.

86- Mobile Home R~eir
·87 - Upttols..ry

Complete copie1
af Columbu1 South·
em Po-r Com·
pany'• foricelt ,..
port · may
be re·
viewed ~· the following OOunty pub·
He llbrery:
Meigll l..oclll School
Diltrict . Pubic I.IJ.
rwy, 200 Ea1t Main
StNet.
"-oy,

Ohio 48789. .
AllntiiUiad Plf'IOIII
will beglwnan

.

lfalltelLI•tl•t•l.

opportunity 1D lliltlly
It . 1he
'-rhlg.

Fll'ther lnfotmdon

'

I'IIIIV be oblllnecl- by
cuntaclltlg the Com-

million.

I __
j

,.

•

,..

.P.IrJI .

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

Begkwling et tM Sou-.e.t
corner of Froction 11. at a
t,_loech Grove
Rood .lntanecto the -.th.llno
of Fraction 1 8: thenao north
following the '-l*ft boundr t line of Froction tB, ...,.
proximately 4llo feat to ·t!Je
-boundary Ina of.,
.88 ..... paraal of -•
.or formortr bot
Roclnort E. and Di_Wol._,
• claocribad in Volume 2118,
Pogo 819 of the Deed Roccwdo. Malgoo County, Ohio;
thence ·following the ·
-'hom boundary ... of IOid
!0101... 88 .............. .....
..mta ta the . , . . of the
loech Grove Rood; tt.ooo in-

NOTICE TO '
CONTRACTORS ,
The Village of Racine,
Ohio Ia accepting bldl for
milling, paving end certain
adjultmonto of the ourflica
including water boK, menhole covert end catch' ba•ln•. A "teb •heet'i
forth, in detoll. ouch mlllng,
paving Md adjuotmontl to·
liethar with atreet location•
end n•m• of tho• involved.
.
Tho IUCCMoful bidder wMI
ba requirod to provide proof
of payment o f - · approved
_.tling wago rot•., omplaya. IUociatod with the

point·- ·

'

•MoblliiHomol'

wori&lt;.

•

Rttnllla
•Lot-Renttal•

. 992-7479

992-2

(6141 992-7143 .

SPRIII8 SPECIAL .

CLEAN, LUBE &amp;TEST
$1886
OPEN : MON .-FRI .
10 A:M.-6 P .M.
Or By Appointment

6 · 1· 1 mo . d .•

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
AU MAKES
Brini It In Or We
Pick Up.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-SllS or 98S-3S61
Acroto. From Pott Office
2·1 7 E. Soc;, Pomeroy
POMEROY, OIQO
3/ 61'90/ tln

FOREVER BRONZ:
TANNING

OPENINO SOON
Call Now To M1ke
Appointment

949-2794

SPECIAL

ROWE
POWEIWASH
SERVICE

.

BULLETIN BOARD

..

to" our lOth Anniver~ary

celebretlon
el•o for tile

qttt., · card•. flow-

·ere, and a .,_.al
thilnkl to MelOdy
Roberti · . for the
bellutlful cekea.
The,John Henlley
Family

A
PI.UMIING &amp; HEATING
Now IAcation:

161NerthSicond
Middleport. Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE .~
We Cl¥'\' Fl•hing l'fPPII•

Pay Your Phon•
and qabla Bills 'Here
.
· IUSIHESS PilON(
16141 H2·6SSO '
llSIDIN(( PHOiff
' 16141 992-lr54
1"/ 28/ tt'o

.'

a·. .

evlryone who came

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 1990
#1 Copper 90¢ per lb.;
Clean D Aluminum Cans, 36¢ per lb.

1·12·'18-tfn

PURSUIT

We went to thank

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R. 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 60 &amp; S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: 9 a.m. -7 p.m . 7 Days
ALBANY: 10 a.m . .'&amp; p .m . 8 Day1, Clooed Sunday

of ,
P0111eroy, Ohio.

equal to ono hundred pejcont
Cu. Rd. 28
(100%1 of the controct price
Watch For Signs
will be roquhd of the. ouc·
RACINE, OHIO
cuoful bidder whNn tan
5··11·'90·1 mo. ._
dayo(10 do. I ofterthe-~­
lng of the contract.
A pro-bid meeting will be
hold Wodnwdoy, ~une 27,
1990, at the time 10:00 A.
M. in th~ ~fflce l!f the Mayor
of Racine Village. At the
tlrna. ofor~~&amp;ld, a thorough
walk·through of the entire
581 S. F-th An.
projoct will bo parlonned. ·
Middleport, Ohio
Copla of opaclficationa
RESIDENTIAL and
may ba obtained by contactCOMMERCIAL SIDING
ing Jane .G. Beagle. Village
HouiH. Mobile, Homee
Clork. Sixth Strut, P. 0.
· Transport Vehidw '•
Box 376. Recine. Ohio,
Far!" Equipment 41771' or by calling &amp;1 4·
Heavy Equipment, Etc.
949-2891. ' •
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR. SERVICE
Bldo ohell be r!OCOived in
the offloo of ..ld Village
614-992
·6242
Records, ' Melp CountY.
Clorto at Sixth Stroot or in P.
5-21-'90-1 mo.
Ohio.
0. Box 376. Racine. Ohio
All three paroolo are oub- 411771 until 12:00 Noon on
lo any toao01, righto-of- Seturdoy, June 30, 1990.
••ementa, ree.-va.
The Racine VIII- Coun·
lnd r•trictiona on r8- ~ ell reNrVH tho right to reject
ony and' ell bids.
Plaintiff ollag01' it 11 ·' Tho Village of Racine II an
neceuary to sell eald r811 EqOIIII Opportunity Em·
Airline
- · i n o - to payfortho plover end ltrongly encourReslll'llltlon/Ticltllla
oupport of Aid Word anll to ' agoo minority contrectoro to
Alk for Kanda
pay tho debto of tho oal4 bid on thio project.
w.nt: you oro a party ~-.
(6141 742-2027
oholl be opaned in the'
in tt. oubjoct mattar Village Council Chambarut
''Yolft'
of tho comploint bacauao 7 :00 P.M . on July 2, 1990.
you oro tho next of kin of oaid (&amp;111, 18, 26, 3tc
con'¥':tion
VlfllloR. Burford, an incom·
petent par10n. You are herAll ,
eby not- to app- at tho.
Typee af
hoaring, ochedulod for the
Travel" .. ,,_,
31at day of July, 1880 at,
1:30 P.M. ot tho Office of·
tho Probo!ta Dlvlolon. Co,....
mon Pleu Court. Pomeroy,
Moigo County. Ohio. ,...
-oily, or by oou!'HI. to.
lflow COUll why uld _....l '
'
- • shoult! not be told
and why ony other judgoo- .
rnent or order • the Coun
ctoom• propor ond which of·
fecto your clolort ond rtghto in
matter should not be enBULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
tered. H you fail to appand doland, judgment by d•
&lt;1:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
fa~lt . will ba randarod
PUBLICATION
agalnot you and tho relief do·
mondod in t~o complaint
wll ba grlnted.
Judga Robort E. lucll
III1 •• 21:(7)23TC
-

1 can~ ot Thllnka

TII·COUNTY RECYCLING

OFFEIS 2 LOCAnONS TO SERVE YOU ....

lt. 33 Nwt•

30 Sessions-$30

Grove Rued to the
baalnnlng. contain.. -.moreorlool.
a dncrlption of aald
parcel of real 01t1ta, refer·
MICO II medo to Parcel
#017, Pagoo 21 of the Rut1.00 Townohip Plat Map. ,
REFERENCE DEED: Vo-.
lum.e 289. Page 3Q8. Deed
Rocordo,
Meigs County,
Ohio.
. .
,
PARCEL NO. 3: All right,
title and interoot of the ward
in and to tho parcel of real
aotate dwcribad ao baing
~016, (Pilge 211 Fraction.'
~B. Tewn 8, Rongo14. Rul·
Meigs
land Towno~ip,
County, Ohio. contolning
1.20 acres, more or leaa.
REFERENCE OEE 0: VoluOM 168, Pogoo 626, Dead

and

1~·· ,_til sr. Midol....,,

•et•

• _ . . . . , • - fol.
A auraty company controct
1-..,.ving the c:ent• ·Uno of bond for the ful iniount

0673.

MAINTENANCE &amp; REPAIR,

81 - -Home Improvement a

46-Furni•t-.ed Rooms
46 - Sp•c• for R•nt

"·

INSTALLATION

6·31 · 1 mo.

82- Piumbing &amp; Huling

43- Ftrms
fer Rent
44A,-rtment
for 'Rent

the underatgned, · u guar·
dlanoftheootataofVirgloR.
incompetant
.Burford•. an
peroon. filed a complaint in
the Probate Court. Molgo
·County, Ohio, to All the fol·
lowing daocrlbad-lutato:
Baing in Froction 31. Town
8, Rangoo14, Rutland Township, Maigl County, Ohio. •
PARCEL NO. 1::11ogin00ti
at the ooutheoot ..,_ of
Fnoction No. 18. Town 8,
Range 14. ,of the Ohio Compony'o Purchalc -oo-woot

==§~§ff PROFESSIO,...,...LI

:::

949•2969

------------------4·
Public Notice

FREE
ESTIMATES

HO•s: •·• 9-7
Sat. 9·5
Closotl Sun.

Scr VIces

41-Houstl'for Rent
42 - MobileHomft for Rent

....

FENCING

MOVING!

· 38'-At~ ht.t• WMttecl

895.- Let•r•

5·16-'90·1 mo.

OUT

75 - Boats 6 Motors for S1le
76-Auto Peru • Acc•aori•
77-·AU1o Aepeir
78~ C•mping Equipment
79- Ctmpers &amp; Motor Home~

992-6421

I

SELLING

72 - nuckt for Sele
73 - VInl 6 4 \'YO '!

32 - Mobile Hoft'l• for Sale

CHRYSLER·PLYMOUTH
DODGE
'
399 S. Third, Middleport

\

MIDDLEPORT
VCR CLINIC

· (Au., frem H.IIWS Thfiff Stort)

PAT HILL

EAGLE RIDGE .
SMAU ENGINE
CENIER

'

74-MatorcvciM

Area Code 114

742 - Rutland
66 7 ;- Coolville

.

21-Butin•• Opponunicy
22· -Mon~ to Loen
·· 23-Prof•lional S•vices

Muon Co. . WV

949 ~ R•cine

10/:I0/'191fil

63-lNntoclt
~- ~ H..- • Gflin
65-Se.t &amp; Fertili.ter

1?-Milcelleneaus

Meigs County

379- Welnut

Acroa p,.. Pllt Offici
POMIIOY, 01110 .. ·

Ll'll'. \&gt;Jt:~

18 - WtntH To Do

AT

992-5335 or tiS-3561

e 1- Ferm Equ'Pm"•n
62 - Wanted to Buv '

1.t.-Busin•• Treining
15- Sc:hoo• S. Instruction
16 - Radio. TV. Cl ReP,eir

2 :00 P:M . FRIDAY

Poi'nltay

t;

DALLAS SAYRE....

Uti'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

~o/IIJ '\1:ppi1PS

11-Help Went:M
12 ~ SitU.tiOn W1nted,
13 - lnlurance

telephone exchanges...

tOtlntclng

· Stop In and SH

·IEFRIIEIATIIIIS--SIOO u'p •
IIAIIG~-IIoe.-Sl25 up
Fll1Zt15-SI25 op
IICIO OVENS--179 up

l.t-Misc. M.,ctl.ndiN
11- •uildinl SuPPii•
11- l'ott for Solo
5?- Muliclllnstrumenu ·
11- frultl a Y.. llebl•
58-For Slit 01 Tredt

~rrv11:1~'

-, 11 ,oo A .M . SIITURDAY
-1 2,00 P.M . MONDAY
:Z :OO P.M. TUESDAY
- 2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
- 2 :00P.M . THURSDAY

through 30th yr. C•ll
Cieltllld fiNity todiiV.
will help yoa find

''

DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR

PH.• 992-3922 ·

' DllftiS-SM op

r flllii"Y"''''I'

pa!{es cot·er the

'

WE GO THE EXTIA MILE.....

. . NY WAIIAIIYY
.ASHEIS--$100 ~P

12-I,... ... G _
63-AmiquH

IS - HIPPY, Ada ,·
1-LOIIInd f~K~nd ·
7 - Y•d Sale (paid in a4vat.~ce)
1 - Pubtic S•l• &amp; Auction
9-Wantllll IO luy

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAP.ER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

l1illio Now Available.

•

A Great Combinotion"Quality anti Reasonable Prices"

Duy or Night

11 - HouHflold" Goo•

2 - ln Memory
3 - Annoucements
4 - Givuwly

•A classified ectvenisement plac~ In The Daily Senttnelllll: ·
c~pt -:- cl•tified ditpl-v . Busin•• Clfd and legal notices)
wll! elto epl)~lf in the P;t. PleMant Regts1er and the Galli·
P0111 Oaity Tr~bune, reeching over 18,000 he.m.. .
·

1 990 Ohio HouoinO
:

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

, USED APPUANCIS

•tt•

unknown end who formerty

I. Caroon Crow,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
. . . 0 • Atfl- N.A.
(II 21: 171
Ita

.42

1- C1rd of Thanks

·Pnce of1ed fof ell c•il•l '•'•• i• doubt.- prit:e of ad cost
·
•Sentiqt!l it not '"Ponsible for enor1aftir first diY . IChedl;
for ett~s fitSt d~ •d runs in J)eperl. Cell before 2 :00pm
d.V
publlcttion to m•e carreelion .
J
•Ads: that mutt be peld In ·edvance are
Card of Th .. ks
HapJ)y Ads -

VIRGIE R. BURFORD,
an Incompetent per•on.
Et AI. ·
•
Defendant•
•
· Cue No. 2184$
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
JAMES
E. MAJORS,
who.-'l'lllco· otrNidenoo II

.

$9.00

or hi. 949·2160 ·

.30

GREG BAILEY

MIIOINelll
NEW LOCATIOII

broken upd..,swili bech•ged

•7 point lint type only ultd .

VI

--- __

15

1s

10

Monthly

,

•

71 dog. to• E.l olx hundred
(8001 - . mo,. or laoo. to
tho pia... ol beginning.
PARCEL Ill: Part of Lot
TM (1 Ill bounded and d•
acrlaod u foli-o: BEGINNING It 1 point on Hno of
tract. delcrlllect 1ft . , .•••,
_ . p h , Aid point al~ ,
baing on line clivkllnll loto ·
Tan (I Oland EleYen (t;fl and ,
dlltant
'Iouth toudegr- flvo ·mlnutoo lut
(S. 14 Oag. 01' E.l Jllnaty. ;
nino (Ill foot frOfit tho •
Norlhoutarly-- Ql Lot 0
TM (101 of which t h e - ·
d•arlbad l"'flt II .• part;
thoo!co II¥ Uno tlwouth Aid ~
Lot Ten (101. 8.o uth
alx dagr- ttw mlnutai ,
Wwt (8. 21 Dog. Ol'1W.l
olxty and -an--hi
(10. 7I feet. thenoo by a Uno
curving to tho rtght. having o
-·ofth_hu.....,.flftyono (3111 INt. one hUndred
11001 fwt. mDN or laoa, 10 • "
point in tho Northerly ... of ;
Main Strwl, oaid point balngJ
dlolont _ . -anty-fhla,
d o - tan min- Eaat (N.I
?I dog. 10' E.l nino Md alx·
_._ (8.1) fool from the',
---of-dl.ot•
Number TM (101; Thonoo '
along the -thwtv h of
Malr~ Strwt. North _ . , .
flvo daarwo.., minutia Eoot;•
(N. 71' doa. 10' E.l thirty. ·
th,.. ond 10u..-he (33.41 "
~ thenoo byallnothrough
Mid lot Tan (101 NDrlhthlrtyolght . . . _forty rnlft11111
Eaat (N. 38 dog, 40' E.) 0110
hundrod (fOil fool to I
point on a. Hno dlvfolngloto ·
Tan (101• ond Elovon (11): .
tt.ooo by otaid olvldlng lno
lklnglnoof-olaoerlbod .
In
_ ... ng _...,..,
North l o u - d..,_ flvo
mlnutoo w.. (N . 14 dog. ,
01; W.l fortv·flva (411 hot
to a. pi- of baginning.
Aloo lnchodlng • troota and

..........

• r~n 3 d..,ut no· ch•g~.

• IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
' PROBATE DIVISION
R~CHEL HUTTON,
guardian ,
of the utete bl
VIRGIE BURFORD, eke
YIR(!IE R. BURFORD. an
ancompetent person
Plaintiff

P&amp;jbllc NattCe

o,..,

t6.00

Ov,r 111 Wordl
.
. 20

I and J· CONSTRUCTION

_..

Public Notice

(304) 675-1244
wavet, to Ill rtatoto theroln
of, · and control thoroof by.
Lalcoa Cool Mining
Tho
Company, doted Juno 1,
1120. and -dad In Volu.,.1S, Pogo 33&amp; to 341.
of the lawo R-rdo of
Melgo County: Ohio.
PARCEL II: Pert of Lots
numbered · Elov., (1 11.
Twalva (121. Thirteen (131.
Fourtoon t141. Flftwn (111.
SixtHn ( 181, and Soventwn
(1'71. boun- .ond dloertbad
eo follow11 BEGINNING at
the North oaot -•or of Lot
s.v..i _ (171 whera the
Southerly Nne of Condor
Stroot if!to,_to the Ww·
terly line of Cherry Stroot:
thonco ilong Cherry Stroot
South Sovon dagr... fifty·
one minu ... e... (S. 07 dog.
151 • E.) thirty and thtentho (30.31 fill to a point
Aid
point being the
Northewt corner of o troct

6

16

u .oo

.•Mobile llome

\\WE HAVE HEARINS AID$"
Public Notice

3

Rite

48 - Eauipment for Atnt
48 - For L•••

EAR, NO$E &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE Dl

Pl. 992·5432 '

:
•
'\

Words
15

PH. 949-2801

:Aec.We 1 .150. discount for adt paid in•l4h'lnu.
Free ad1 - Gtveeway -..d Found lett under 16 wotdtwill be

143- Ar•bi J Din

'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

Servad wllh wlljppecl IJOI8tOM, chicken
gravy, cola olew, hot roll and """-'·
Sony, no oubstll- •IUMPt IMvorago
with adclllonol prlcM.

CROW'S F

Sara Beth were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Ronald.
A family reunion was heid
recently at ·t he home-of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Bailey, Sr. Twenty
four people were present, coming
from Connecticut, West Vlrgll\la.
Ohio and North Carolina. They
enjoyed a picnic lunch at noon
and visiting and games afterward.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D•., Inc.

ONLY
(Dining loam Only)

-------~~

.

..

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Reeves of
Georgia departed on Thursday
after a visit with Mrs. Dorothy
Reeves an~ famUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summerfield and Crystal of Medina and
Don and Carol Russell of Harrisonville were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rus'!;eil and
families .
Mr. and Mrs. LesUe Frank and.

,

Qavs

~eigs. Glllia Qf' M•son c:ounti.i. mu1t be pre·

paid.

"At .... Mnable Prku"

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
'

'

_ _ _ _.,..Wolf Pen notes _ _ _ __

f
--. HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonv!Ue Chapter 255, Order ofthe
A crowd of approximately 400
tastern Star, will have inspecattended the recent dance recital
~on Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
at Southern High School, preshall. June Svott, deputy grand
ented by students from Barbamatron, will be the Inspecting
ra's School of Dance, Syracuse.
officer. Members are to take ·
"Move to the Music" was
desserts and sandwiches.
theme of the lOth annual recital
j
and all 75 dancers were on stage
~ P-OMEROY - Summer pracmoving to the music of "Vogue. "
tice for Meigs High School
Bridget Barnes, Cqerlssa
M:arching Band will begin MonBarnes, Rachel Chapman, Ash&lt;Jlly from 10 a.m. to noon in' the
ley Hoschar, Shauna Manuel,
high school band room. Call
Jessica Nance, Elizabeth Rus'toney Dingess at 992-7141 of
sell, Lori Sayre, ·Jennifer
304-675·7770 for Information. ·
Walker; Tiffany WiUlams, and
Stephanie Wilson tapped and
ANTIQUITY - There wiU be
sang to the songs "PoUy Wolly
an emergency meeting on MonDoodle" and ' 'Rockln'
day at 7 p.m. for the Ll!lart
Tambourine."
· Township organizations at D &amp; R
Dressing In shiny silver cosTackle Box in Antiquity.
•
tumes, nine .and ten year olds
Heidi Legar, AmberiHayes, Car·
TUESDAY
.CHESHIRE - Gall!a -Melgs rie Hartson, Raenl Wood, Tricia
Community Action w!ll hold its Davis, Melody Lawrence Da·
f.ree clothing day for low income nlelie Grueser, and Jodi Roush
people on Tuesday, 9 a.m. to performed a jazz routine to
rloon. The clothing bank is "Angel" and tapped to "Dance,
lpcated in the old school building It Makes You Happy."
Roberta Caldwell performed a ·
at Cheshire.
tap routine to "Hey, Look Me
Over".
and a jazz routine to "One
· VINTON - American Legion
or
the
Other."
161 meets at the Vinton Legion
The youngest group of dancers ,
grove, Tu_e sday, 6:30p.m.
!our and five year olds, Jaynee
' RUTLAND - The. Rutland Davis, Jeri Hall, Lucy Howerton,
Garden Club will meet Tuesday Amber Mills, Erica Poole, Beth .
a1 6 p.m. for. carl-y-in potluck Wilfoqg, Chelsey Wood sang and
tapped to the song, "Guess
dinner at the home of Mrs.
What,"
and performed with
Robert Kennedy on Hysell Run
costumed
dolls to the song,
Rbad. The ·program will be on·
"Dolly,
Won't
You Dance With
wlidflowers and didlas. AU
Me."
lJlembers are urged to attend.
·
In fluorescent orange costumes, Melissa Maynard, Jen·
••'
I
nlfer Barnhart, and Leann Cundiff did a jazz dance to "Love
Shack" and a tap dance to
"Opposites Attract."
Five and six year olds. Marian
El Dabaja, Sara Mansfield, Whit·
• The Rock Springs Grange was n~y Karr, Carrie Crow, Holly
host to 13 members fi'Qillthe Star Broderick, De lana Eichinger,
Gra-nge during a rec~t meeting. Erin Hartson. Krystal Penning·
· A potluck dinner preceded the ton, .and Amanda Fetty permeeting with grace given by formed a tap dance to ''I'm So
. Glad I'm Me" and " A Tlsket, A
William Radford, master.
. . Opal Grueser gave a legis! a- Tasket."
Christy Hawkins tap danced to
live report on several issues that
''1·2-3"
and performed a jazz
·haye been passed In the
routine
to
"Sunshine."
legislature.
Wearing red costumes, Erin
Struble, Amber Snowden, Alison
ijays, Misty Sellers, Tiffany
Barnes, Cara Ash, Abby Harris,
: BarbaraFry,CWA,announced
Sarah
Ball, and Andrea Krawsctji'at members may submit rezyn
performed
tap routines to
Gipes to the state grange for use
"Dixieland
Dlckory
Dock' ' and
I!Uhe state baking contest. She
"Cabbage
Patch
Parade."
&lt;!fso pointed out to continue
eq,Uectlng eyeglasses.
-It was announced that the Rock
Springs Grange ·will :.-lsll the
Har,lsonvllie Grange.
.; One appeal for aid was
lmswered.
•..Kathryn Riley, Star Grange
IeJ;turer, presented a program on
J;lag Day with readings, "You're
a Grand Old Flag," by Frances
~glein; a hlst~ry of the flag .
was given by P~t Holter, Neva
~lcholson, Nancy Radford,
Sarah Caldwell and Barbara
Fry: "Tiie Flag . Speaks" by
Patty Dyer; "Old Glory" contest
by all members; the American
&lt;;reed by Opal . Dyer; and . a
Flathers Day contest by all
members.
.
:Members reported Ill Include
LQuJse Radford and NancY Mor·
AI. Sympathy was extended to
Genevleye Burdette.

.,

Kimberly Wlllkord (llld Lorrl
Barnes discussed theil't!scellane. '
&lt;)Us sale held by mel!lberB of the .
club, with some proceeds ~It· 1
ling the gardenclt~b. A bus tour to ,
Kelton House, a ViciOrlan· ex·
hiblt, Is being s!ion.tOred by ·
Region 11 of OAGC &lt;)n July 19,
and til!! annual convent101,1 will be ,
July 31 to Aug. 2 at Avon 'i&amp;ke1 ~
with several members atten~lng.
Janet BoOn won the travei!Dg ·•
prize brought by Lorp Bar1J8S, ·
and classes for.the Meigs County
Fa.lr ' Flower Show .were ;·
discussed.

c

CUSTOM IUI.T
HO.S &amp; GARAGES

j

Cloggers to host;dance ·:.

._Community .
calendar
.

ra iser by the Ohio Association of
,Garden Clubs were purchased by
the club
A sign noting the club's affiliation with the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, and welcoming
those entering, was placed at the
town entrance near the Church of
Christ.
. The need to replace one of the
trees at the c;tvic Center -plant·
lng; due to vandalism, was
discussed. Joe and Janet Bolin
and Margaret Edwards planted
cannas and marigold seeds In the
circular bed at the Civic Center.

BISSELL·
BUILDERS

• The Area's Number 1: Marketplace

•

.

.

Bu tness Services

ClasSified

I

'

MEIGS COUNTY
HUMANE AGENT
NEEDED

Must love animals, work
flexible hours and provide
own transportation. .
Call for Interview ·
992-5427 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

992-6505 5 p.m. · 9 p.m.

FOR SALE
One Of Racirw's Nicest Homes
Includes 4 bedrooms, b!g kitchen, huge
family room, 2 garages, 3 baths; rented
3-room apartment, 40' x 120' farm build·
lng, pond, over 40 acres fenced pasture
land and r~nted mobile home.

CaD 1-814'·1·7104
aftllr • p.m. 8-6-1 mo. pd.
EUM HOME

lo- &amp;

Senior Cltl1- and

&amp;

co.

IN111101 .11111101

Good Ratn
T.L.C .
27Yro. E•P·
Raferences

FREE ESTIMATES

Take lht pain out of

painting.
let us do il for you.

992-5042

VERY REASONABlE
HAVE REFERENCES

· 209 South 4th St.
(lliddi'I'O't, Oh.
"LOW INCOME 110111"

3-H-"90-tfn

(61

985·4180

HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Heating, Cooling,
lefrlge~tion

Sen ice

Residential lo
Commerciel

~

PH. 949·2801
or lis. U9-2860

CALl:
992-5589

5-11-'90-1 mo.

BISSRL &amp; B11t1E
CONSTRUCTION
. ...w Htme~

·--h·

ll-t2-90 tin

ANGIE'S
GREENHOUSE
Paulin's Hillletween ·
Rutland untl Rt. 554
OPEN MON.-S.U. I 0 to 5

STRAWFlOWERS: Dwarf
&amp; Toll; PAMPAS GRASS:
Pink &amp; White; FUSCHIA,
IASKETS, HEllS and
MORE.

614-742-2772
5 29. 1 mo.-

SER~ICE

We run ••r.'ir ciiltl rt·
cart rlllliu'lors
htoltr core. We can
ulso arid boil and
aut rlllliutors. We
repair Gos Tunlu.

PAT HILL

NO SUNDAY

I. L
TRUCKING
CHESRI, OHIO

•Gar~~g~~

SAlES AND SERYKl

f•fory Authariull
Sonia Cantor F.- Mot!
Mcku
Motlols

Fast

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT.
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

•Cotnplete

c_,..,,

Stop &amp;
Fr11 Estl-tn
915·4473
667·6179
ll-3t-t

New._.hlt
. ..Fr• Eatimatn.,

mo.

How.-d L. Wrlt...a

ROOFING

NEW- REPAII
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
· Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

, I

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

SIDING

CONTROl

985-4422
. 1
FOIEVER BIONZ:
lANNlNG

IIOif OPEN

Call Now 'l;o Moke
Appointment

949-1)94
SPEOIAL
30 S.ssions-$30

Co. Rd. 28 ·
Woldt For Slgnl

RACINl, OliO

&amp;-5-'IG-1••- ....

.., ...... t ....

Buy· Sell

VIC'S
IODY SHOP

Trade

FLATWOODS, ROAD

CAIDS

982·6603

367-0511

~--~---·--""""----'
1.1'----:..:
S.WM-I ...
..,

pd.

' l!

LINDA'S
PAINIING

loord For

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

POMEROY, OHIO
1/1/ 1 -

- - - . ...
GOLD

CRIOIT

CAIIO •

..ourtty tit~ ath~,

til, co. 'bllllt41.ouloo.

. .

�Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

LAFF·A·OAY

3 Announcements
CRED~

GOLD

.

Monday. June 25. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
35 Loti &amp; Acnage

~

73

· KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ lly Larry Wrlaht

wanted to Rent

CARD

Television
Viewing

VlsatMaattrCird guaranteed na

security _dlpa.h 1~800-813 1100 ·
ltl. co. ~lila 4D.50 1...

___

,.,pon-

White mal•, late 30'1,
slbll,
~orwfdl~
e.curw
employment, rMtlum •11ure.
tradlllonal YIIUII. 8Hka urne

ent•·

toom..n

lng the work force or ct.nglng

career•. You are lnvtttd to af..
tend thl Summer W.I.N. s.mlr-.r
at Hocking TECHNICAL
JUNE 21, 1:30-12 :00~ OUAUfY

Cot-.

··-·--

INN, Netunvlne. ,.OCUli on
employment fleld• not lnM:II·•
tlonal lor tho aondor of ,.,. .,...

-":J
~~.:'to:! ·~:bo-oncl
c:laltroome. Semlnlir oftlired It
no
Inc..,._ contplimencontlnentll bNakflllll. Full

·

M

O.uiLfl L .....

11,000.111 Ml
Wllnt to,....,._. 11-11 • - ol ..,
lind within • of Oolllpoflo. "'
-bo-lor40-.
• ""'"·
~ ...
bo, In
ftOOih~n.Coll
Luo
1-

WINNING CAREER OPOATUNITIES ...SinQio
po-1,
homtmak.,., or anyon.

~001

HoUHhOICI
Goods

EVENINO
1:00(1) l•dcartle And

·

=:c:.Q.(J)

-

(J)

lr. ......., 111. · 7,
N11/mo., . . . MO. -.., no
peta. 1~1.. or t . . .lll

~

-

(J) R-.g Rliltllaw Q

·

"I· suppose you're
old enough
.
•
tn
"' know the tru th . I'm not
·
YOUf ffiOthef...I'ffi the ffial"d."

; ;.; .:.:.;.; ; . ._

70t 1Mo11 ltnll. 1111* pat1.
,umlohod. Rot. 111\d doPoolt.

104olll2 2111.

. .

For-· P -.. 2 ~.~-.

~· ""!ii1
. !!~~if....~

- . - Need
...-3 olr.
reuar
,...,...i.

~

'n

II menl:, . ....._

tur-

MW

to

·...
·~- -~··

_,._,....._j--------...,.-------~ Wtlo-niLololllo-1.

GiveaWay ·

4

112 Englloh ~n;or ·spontot :-11-::--::H~e...:IP:.....W:.:;a.:.:nt:-:ed;::
· ~,.pupploo, P.,_ ~782.
Fl\llh Pliol'mOCY of W AKC IUffdlle, lomolo boon -ko on •xporlotiCid ftont oncl
••• -..•""'
llonogor. EapMioMICI - ·
In
spayod•·•·'t • hot •·-~'
tctolrNM_,_,Iilcludtna

~~~~n~,P!"a::a7:.• ••" 304- -·~

-

21

r"o

•

I
•
·
PI-nt, WY 1151110, Ann: .....
:Moving: glv.owo~~ moll colo. Clrpontor~ Cl":! no
~;::~· fo good
.. 114-441- ~~":"=IHIB. M at thl ore.
•_;_.:.,.._______
•Robblto to atv-oy. Lody Rl.
to ..,. lor mobllllldorly
:z.1and and DuiCh. 1'14-112·1201.
a.ctY,
17 . ., ,...,... re-

11

's
'

Lst&amp;F
d
0
OUn

qulred, 11t

ue 1121.

LPNMA for ln-.'lot• care ol

•.:....=;;.;.;;.;..;;;..;,...;.;;,;.:.;;..,..._ fomolo

potllnl - . Iaiii
core. Soncl llttor -~: U·
.....
,....,_,
·
, . - utory - . d-c/o
Box CLA031. OoiUpolll boltv
Trlbuno...~l tl!lnl Aft-. Go~
llpolla,"" 411nt
MoH....,. .......,, Full ot port
~ and black cOllar w"h bnlu 111M: u.n and wotMn n.cNd
'name plat•. Re•rd. I~ to _.. our PI:Oibbf• Nne of
6498.
Cit-ro, pont ondociVortlllng

'FOUND: dog, " - " mlnloltn
rma.. Dachehund .. VInton
••• -·2.
. lEI omenIory. •••
·~'Loot: 2 !'I'" Foa Tor-.:
'Fomaloo. A....,.,. to noinoo ol
:crystal end Tippy. _ , , wiiKI
•with block end ton.,.... Oloy

l
-

1

a1111 to - · - -

·

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
:ALL Yotd Soln Muot Bl ...... ln
IAdvonco. DEADLINE: 2:110 p.m.
&gt;tho dly blfon tho ocl to·to run.

.... ......... p........

1n """

-old

23

·serviCes

Middleport

I VIcinity

II]) Tlti'M'a Comperiy

aiTopC.rd

ONewhatt
6:35 Ill Andy Orlffttlt
7:00 ~ Sea- 1 M,.. tong

pold. .,..._

(J)~

71
-

e (J) eun.nt Aftlllr
a •111 a Wheal or

. Conw&amp;· 402 ... lloaiL
'

F-

e o Night eoutt
iiJI ,._,..,.
Ill Mleml VICe Crockett

Apartment
tor Rent ·

becOmes obleasect with
finding an etualve cat burglar
Stereo.
iii 'Mitllc Raw VICiaO

0 Abbott And COIIeiiO
7:01 Cli JelhfiOna
..

.....ttso.lllll--·2
. . . . . --All

7:10

pllcon1o. Col I1MI2-17t1 ECH.

ReJI Estate

.ucc,... ......

Dill Enlel'UIInmant Tonight

e (J) Mllml'l Fllltlty

_7wllo.

otd,t~-·-. . . . . . . . 111..
.

2....oblo
-Ap
t , lum.,
.. ·
lo0r1.
c:toeit,·~Dop
I Aol.
-loto. -273-2001 or 301- lloq'd. No ptl&amp; 11+4*1111.
1711-1271.
.
2-1111111~­
2 Br ~•. Iorge living , _ I
kitchen. ........... on 1 . _. ··
- •• 1111111111
.L
o...........
- ....
Junction teo • K.., Ad. 11, 7.731,1,.......222.
mlnutoo 11om Holzor Noopltol,
.
'
$21,000. 1~-807 or 114- IEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
441-41511.
IUDOn PilCH AT JACKSON
ESTATES. · AI .locban ..... 11t2hbo: Wall&lt;'~o .• ...., •
- · Cllll14. ~II 2511. EOH.
Fumlohod .lp!. ~ Ulflllll

--

calnperil &amp;

79

M9torHomas

__. ,.....

IIIA'"HJaopenlrJ Q

~

.. .

11ft. C~IIIMian C..per, ......

~. 1 NIIIId d, ..... .. . . . and
~Unt;tJjiiiO. M301~11S-IIIU20.

.... . Mit ,

IIJI~
0 Night Coutt
7:35 (J) Malar League BaMbeU
1:00 (I) MOVIE: Tomaltawl&lt; (2:00)
eCil 8 MOVIE: 'Going To

• The CMpal' NIC Mondlor

Night AI Thl MoVIM (2:00)
Stereo.Q
(J) Woman'• P10 Inch
VollerbeH From Hermosa
Beach, CA (T)
·
Dill • (J) MICOyver Mac

I

1171 · - · 11
~

... good~

,,

"""'P'l
....,,......,_,
.
..._ .. "'· · - • MniHI

!,'!t]d,_1_11oj_'!!f - . Oolllpoflo,

1171 - · 14 II.

.. ... -

ttetpa a yooog woman aaercl1

for lncan treasure In the
Anda&amp;.(R)=
&lt;Zl Cll Thl
For

............ In ..... .

wMII .. In,.._, II lahlln Fur-.

""'"'-11144.
IWAIN

.,

-~-An

PatriCk Watson travels to
Eastern Europa and the

Servtces

Soviet Union where

AUCTION I FURIITUIII. a ,
OU..II. Gollpollo.- I Uoocl

democrecy In undergoing 1
chaotic and uncertafn rablrth.

Home
rnprovamints
wm.,~

ALL Of AliA
MAY&amp;...

52 Sponlng Gopds

.,

180~.

.c::,...-~= co:

1117 '4:111vy 5-10, tow -

~

yoorbocll. t.aGD-122~75.

1-80D-122~1$ .

yeo-•·

Top CUll plld. Old 1\imntn
.............
qullla,
. . -...
pllntlngo,
or onlf,. oolite
One Br., . ·unfwnllhed ~.,
Aongt oncl - " · . prooklocl.

882-.a367 1fllr 7 p.m. evenlnge.
Bedroo"' eutte In Whtte for girl.
814-14&amp;-1'11!:

11695.
Junk Clrli with or without

motora.

Rlclllnl. . Goorao..,..

Sunday aat.. pleau. fli1'-3889095.

15

Wlltor,a:,:?•· ond gotbogo
pold,
.
roq'ocl. c:.H 114i141-11141.
Rio Qronclo, . Ntco 2 .R,
SZU/mO. No pita. 111 118 1031.

- -· ....

Schools &amp;
Instructlon

~""'_,-lor 11.oot

Book k •• ping/ A ceo unt I no,
Hot.uMolel
"*:~'
AJrllne tnlnl, Nu,...
, TfM..

.......

tor

Troller

trolnlng,

i92·5157.

18

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

-

-otudv.Finiilclololclo
aniS.btllf ~led. rlii
TIMI
QuiKo
_ ...nee.
lloh .....
Antique or n.w. Elcelln condition. only. Prompt poymont. 114- col
230?
Avo.
Pll~rg. WV1~ 111 1'111.

Wantocl Hondo V.SS llogno,
Phone 30W78-1581.

Wlnll!d to Do ·

ollplnd, s bod,_., 2 bollia. pump, undlrponnlng oncl - - tlopo,
304olll-2222.
, . . Schult -

lloby lilting In "'I' homo, -

Employment Services
11

':.J:•5211-32711, 01-

call colloot

Acrnrp wll:h 1trlp or cory
ponda, or lakH. Call collect 21S-

Home 1h1 or acru.ge In
Southwe...m SchOOl Dlatrid:.
Call Wllll•m MHke .. 814-245-

..

54 Mlsc811aneous

Merchan&lt;IJaa
.
'
'

15 ft • . lbove ground pool. IX.

concl, Sill :llllm;HMI.

For ...., 27llflllan lutl oil tri
wKh ftltlr 1111111p t121, pickup
......
of lppiOtao.
- CeltIn 111
-•tor n.....ooct
•

:I:.W:..~r;;;.'~ Ad. or ... on f+llghborh a.ad
Wti.:M.
.
310 Cue """"-"· wtth

45

0116

Fumllhed
Rooms

114 3U 1481

1M7 Fft ...

--

1:00 (J) Wofld Wlller8ltl Tour

From Oenver, CO (T)
(J) All-Iller Pro
11porta Awerdl H01t1: Pierce

1 F ¥M1 UO.

-...........
tMMI.IOewM.-,

Cot-.t Ouolltr Tuning. thO oaititdl Jllr Plono

-.IIIIWMI--2t21.

D a1
Houethold .

llalntWnoe:

=~i=r,
=-::;~~~
.IM4l
•• ""
IIMoh.

..

A*~a~"'J&amp;M".

Fruita a

58

· M/4Df: MY·NeN FRieND
FOR~.

= .....

a ....,.r
Allen NatiOn
Iand«J1•SikeS
flnd tttem181vet

Vegllttlblel

.,.,_ ..... ,_,..._.,.A

George

111 EM! of
pradlrDta. Mil~ bla
ltlll111 I l l \ . - p o l - oniJ
pttcr...
·~ food

....
r

-tor~ - - o r month.

·caught In a Federel
tnvaatlgatlon.(R) Stereo. Q ·
iiJI !.My Klntl Uvel
Ill Prime Tlma W-Iling
Jaka Robarts va Akaem

~·-?

i11Nelh-Now

·;uppltt',

Ji '11
,1

I :~.·t•·,tnrk

1:30 (J) llllebong Pro SUtftng

BARNEY

From Oahu, HI (T)

'

YOU NEED TO CUT DOWN
ON YORI CARD PLAY IN' II

HOW DID MY

X-RAY PITCHER
TURN OUT,

Help Wanted

72 Truc:ka for Sill
"11 ..._ lnllk. •a Clelt Itt&amp;

AVON I All Amo I Shl~oy
Spoaff, 304-675-1429.
Babyaln.ar nudld In ~ horne.

' DOC?

Mobile

.._.. ~

............... 1:10PM.

Rw adtH..:

. . Ford ton ...... .,., .....
~ ......, tloDr In W. IOIId

...._lOt til~

tltc:t-. ,....... . ....,.__,,
Rskzwaa• IMurinoli ola••
eactp'J d.IIWII-1111.
:

1171
Fonl . """"'· .... tla0.114.ft111JII.

82

1177 QJIC - . . •
ft :
llod wlllliwlllloul
bod. 1171 ..._ trollor,
10 II. . Allor 1:00 p.m. ·t 14-a5'
tiUI.
'

Be 16 yHra o~ ega. 12 hOur thlft
worker. AettrMcH. 114-812·
3354.

e

Broanan; Tony Danza
Stereo.
(lJ (J) Flrlitg Une lpeclll
Debate William F. BUCkley,
Jr: Ia joined by loreiQn pollql
e•perta lor a roundtable
Clltcutalon on Europa's
reunllleltlon. (2:00)
1rown Q

~ I'VE AL.!&lt;EAoY

HI! I'D UKE:

TO 6E: 'fOOR..
FRIEND. '

Starttlf t1 ft20imo, o.nto Hotoi.
IM 4 1110.

11711-1111

..,._

gov•nmlllll

1231114

Mulk:el .
Instruments

Jump .-.lioff
suapects a teenager Ia being
abused by his lather. (R) Q
iiJI PrlmeNewa
IIJ Mulder, lha
Moumlng Among The
Wyal8rtal
• Oolpel Jultlll

0 Mlllor LHgue BaMbell
1:30 till • a srdner Q
al0nlt8ge

-...1141111181.
.
.,.., Conll .... Tlllaadld. Mint
oon-.an. 114 411 Of7J.
,

1975 &amp; 1979 Glllll County year·
book. Aleo, 1m Metgs COunty

iII «JJ•a
MitiOr Did a
21
w-

o..r
• ·· 12
- gougo,
223 .........
3"
moanum
:IOU711-

1!17t oncl 1177 Mlltlf High
School yMrbooka. 1115 1nd
1!179 Golllo County

e (2) Femlly flltld

CJ) llatorwaek ltluatall,.artttediCI

lllllltloo ookL .._llolh. $10 or

---?p.m.

clllnl-r~t~~

sate. June 21-2l 241 Uncofn,
.Middleport. Btd•P'Mda. curli:lna, tlocka, d'-htrl. clothM,
Mlall oboy'a, mt.c.

..........

(lJ (J)IIuNeM~

Autos tor Sale

..........

-'&lt;Lf!'Oflnl, _ ...... - .,

! • a oaa~gn~ng w10:00 (I) ~ Club WHit Pll
Robarleon
• (2) • a . - Leap
Sam leapa Into the IHa of a
gorgeo~~a secretary In 1961.
(R)Stereo. D
dl Tlma To tara I Pledge
AllegllltCe

. • «J)New Twilight

0 !venlntl Newt
• • Newltlrl

PIUII!blng &amp; .
Hlllllng · '·

z-

10:20 (J) MOVII: lhaleko (PG)
(2:30)
10:10 (J) lurfw MegaiiM (0:30)
Deve Thontl•

&amp;,:Jill

e «J1 ~nny HHIIhOW

·111 Crook I CMM

CAPIJICOAN (Oec. Z!-.len. 11) People
which signa are romantically perfect lor upon wttom you can ullUIIIIy depend .
you. Mal $2 to Matchmaker, c/o this might not be all that reliable today. II
newspaper, P .O. Box 91428, Cleveland. you pau out uatgnmen1s, It's beat to
OH 44101-3428
progrtiSI reports.
BERNICE
LEO (.lUI, a-Ai.g_ Zl) There could be AQUAIIIUS (...... 20-FIIIt.11) You might
financial opportunity around you today, be able to do IIOJMihlng conalruetlve
. BEDEOSOL
but yO.. might fall to rec:ogniM It or leern today that could begin to ;enerete
\ ol It too,... to capltaiiM on It properly. ·wnlnga from a MCond aource. Be pa·
Be alert at allllmet.
. tlont, I10wevel', end allow 1111ple lime lor 1
VIIIGO (Atlg. 21-lepl. 22) Your lrtendt · thlngt to~.
wll - t It todly II they ,_. you are PIICII (Feb. 211 "r ell 211) Someone
trying to menlpuletetlwn lor aomuell· who hes been treating you rattler
lilt pllrpoee. Try not to put your Inter· thoughtleMiy lately might be In need o1
estl end ntlllds above .-yone
you today. Instead of pl.ylng tha game,
LIIIIA (lepl. 21o0ct. II) Lat wlter just p.-.cl nothing ever happened.
heada prevail today, tll*lalty regard· 1Alltll (.._. 21-~ 11) You·rallkely
lr\g car- matters. You . miQht rltal&lt;e to keep your promlla todey only up to
..
,.,.. 11, 'lttiO
ludgmentaiNIMd on emotiOna, while en 1,, a Clrletn point and thla could diHP,
' auoclata will mike declllona beNd on point per10n1 to whom you've mede :
Alllencea you establlolt In the year hard pPertenoe.
commitments. Go all the way.
· ~lorpurelyiOCialpurpoNIIhould ICOIII'IO (0111. l4ollft. Zl) Optlmlom TAUIIUI (April 211 111r 211) Your &gt;
. •_.. out rather wei. ~. the..,. haa Ill dra~bealta wtten predlceted lrlencla could loll reepeot lor you todey
\ 01111ght 1101 be true lor partnertlltlpa 1n upon purely Wloltlullhlnklng. Be expec· II you glwl tlwn .......... to think you'ra
oomrnerclal ventures.
tant and ltopelul. but don't let your I'M· a little too material minded. Worldly
~IR (June 21-.lulr 22) You might son~ you.
lhlnga hawtltalr piKe, but 10 do bellu'
· ·IIOibeabletorelyonpraml-medeby IACIITTAIIUI (Now. 22 Dec 21) Be
andgenerllllty.
1 Clllr 21.,... 211) E-. thOUgll
· a .fltend todly. Ywr pert Intent m1g111 eahemtly Nleellw 01 comp8lllelnlto- , •
bt Qood, but mey 1101 be In the polltlon t dey, bee: Mile you wlft be jUdged by tile you're 8 goodlailllllroon and prontot• 1
' to illlllwr. Know where to lOOk lor ro- , i c:ompany you keeP. II your -oclatee er atthll time, It'a bill you do nollell oi ;
1
end you'll find 11. The Altro- 1 h - a bad reputatiOn, you might be promote enytlllng In wltlcll you do not ·
Sincerely lpalllauacm .
Gtapn Matchmal&lt;er - t l y - ' 1; !.placed In the same category. .

get,,..._,,

-·a.

Ftnanctal

--1'1111,4 ............

.....
_,......_
..........
-

&amp; ... - ...... tOIIM ·

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINQ CO. I 112 + ~ :~=~:;=
,.commondo thol YOU do buol~~-with - ' • rou::.;,.and

C:::

-·

_Iii, -

::r:..~-= .!.-rg~:: ' - lilt
t~ - · ~ IM on

:.:.•-::..:::.::.:.::·~~----- - · :IOU71-2031.

. 7

---··~at"

-h

iCoMUgo,

·'

J,

,.

I

l

•'

"

.

.... ,

'

'

I

lintc;-

"'

. ..

bel-.

''

'

· 11:00 (I) Balmln
.(2) • • • (1)

e111 o a,.....

~mplo wordt .

c0 T

R0 D

~-nA:;..;tr-:-L
.y;.L...;o,__,l3
5

~.

. 1 1. I I .
T HUCH

Quote frOm a wise man:
"When yo. u finally get bad&lt; to
I I I 1
~~·~~·==~·
~-~~'!~
old the
hOmetown,
you find
r.. your
wasn't
old home
youIt
I N KP A D
missed but your------.'

. 16

I
·

I'

.

•

19•

o

::;

I

I

I

•

•

_

I
_

G Complete
.the chu&lt;kle quoted
by ftll•ng
the m•JSing words
1ft

I' I' I' I' I' I

.no PRINT NUMB FRED I'
V

LETTERS

12 I,

•

UNSCRAMBLE FORI
ANSWER
•

111111111

•

I"

. SCI AM LnS ANSWEIS
' ·• t
Touchy- Macaw- l'Wil)e- t_aunch- WHATJ!'!!. WANT
"I've found out what experience realty is. sighed the
teen to h8l' friend. "It's wt)at you get when you Qor1't get
WHAT you WANTI"

BRIDGE

m

Precise biddin&amp; can assist a part·
EAST
nenlllp In getting to the belt coatract. .
53
+J1017
But there II a price to ·be paid, In that • 10 1 8
.JI
the defenden ere liltenlng to the bid· • K 1 7 2
.AJ 10
ding allo. Knowing wllat the declarer + 10 1
+75H
bas will .usually result In the best
SOUTH
defense.
Look at today's deaL South opened
.AK7542
with one heart, rebid two clubl; and
uu
then, when North invited aame In no+AJU
trump, confirmed distribution of six
Vulner~ble: Both
hearts IIDd four clubs by bidding three
Dealer: South
hearts. With fillen in both of opener's
suits, North elected the 10-trick heart
game.
When the two of dlaiiiOIIda was led,
East won the 10-spot, coatlntied with
the diamond ace and led the jack to
West's king. That wu three tricks In
Opening lead: t 2
for the defe1111e, and West "u looking
at the ace of spades. But a review of
the bidding Indicated that there was no
chance that the ace of spades would
cash '
trumps· and then plar K-Q of clubs;
Where was the setting trick to come i when West. followed with 8·10, South
rrom•lf declarer beldA·K·J of hearts could lineae with the A·»·) If declarer
anci A·J of club&amp;, there was no defense was missing the jack of hearta, tbere
that would work. But what if declarer was a sure way to defeat the coati'IIC!t.
was missln&amp; either the heart jack or So West played back the fDI!l'th dla..
the club jack? If East held the club mood. East ruffed with the jack of
jack, be would also need the club nine. hearts, and West's 10-V-1 of trumps
(Oibenrile declarer could draw were promoted for the aetttnc trick.
·•

••••

·CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSIEI'H
'

ACROSS
41 Osseous
material
1 Lummox
4 Scrivener's 42 Chef's need
need
43 Wonder
· 7 French
DOWN
priest
1 External
8 Guide
2 "When
10 Dilute
Lights
11 Dido
- Low"
13 Before
3 Zealous
Yaatardey'a Anaww
14 Large
4 FashiOn
barrel
or home 15 Black
27 ·-Day
16 - Merkel 5 Berch
cuckoo
at Black
17 Earthly
adverb
18 Small one
Rock"
19 U.S. House 8 Dice
21 Merry
29 Serva~t
member
throw
22 Gat losll
30 Witless
(abbr.)
7 Solicitude 23 Resantment31 Location
20 Etruscan
9 Money 24 Be gullible 32 Laughing
Juoo.
(Sp.)
(sl.)
sound
21 Au natural 10 Moisten 25 Spanish
37 Convnotlon ·
22 Per1ume 12 Escapade clly
39 Quarrel
·
25 MIS·
represent
26 Tete-a·
tate
27 Sound
from the
grandsl!lnd
28 Nonsense!
•
29 Furniture
finish
33 Muslim
name

34Say
further
35 Never
•. (Ger.)
36"FuiiJacket•
(1987 mm)
38 Speechlly
40Vulgar

DAILYCRYP'I'OQU(n'E8-Here'l bew to work It:
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II LONGFELLOW

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for the Une L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Single lelten,
apoab ophea, the lencth IIICI formation of the words are a~l ,
~Ia. Each dtty the code letters are different.

a1 Goapel JubiiM

11:10 ~ MOVII: T--..wk (2:00)

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law to lorm four

aC2l PM Magazine

TransporldtOII

s;y;

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eacesNewaQ

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lfl111na, loundty
lllcoiii ....... I-.W«k Dtlod.
loaltl11n ...a.blo. Ftnl _,hi
--ovlltobii...,HMhocl
gourolltlld.· -·
ttmo to -lllld op.

1ho Woohor I

Nlglttly New•

!U~c:? Newt Q

fof Rerit

dooooltk Wllter

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O four
Roorronge letters of
xramblocl words

1--1.-'--I.-L-..L.-" you develop !rom 11tp Nt&gt;. 3 below.

0 c:Mrt.. In Charge
1:01 Ill Bevartr na1111ea
1:10

13dlt"' l.ooatell on - . Ji."MIIel
out. 2 Ill, ltC, all pt..

44

ProfHIIOnal

--

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31 Homes tor Sale

roqultocl. -

.

42 Mobile Homes

---- £:::7"

-oompany.
.....
AAA·i
No11 lieU ...IAWII.
No
COIIectlona. Previa t11 ..... ex·

~

1n
Untu-.
homo

1011, 4411 aDa
tng -~·r
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COIM or .....,,110 ~ YMf, Reo
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qu"- . -.lhOuropor
- . YoU will 118 000
.
lor oqulptfllnl Cllt .1:te»: ...... 21r., In
147.,..1 ut. 11Rt on~'-·, ~chi.... ICIDI,Cad I~
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Cho~11 MeN-, Mig.
Co., llo!ll· J1-. 1116-112-1121.
: Sunda~\ edJtlon - 2:00 p.m. Oponlna lor _ . , .... In ..,
•Friday. Mondoy oclftlon • 2:00. hOme. "bood ......... ~II 30477So152411.
p.m. Saturday.
.
Port~lmo • - prollt. Own
houn. FrH gltt. Avon.' 114-1112: , · Pomeroy,
7110.
•l " I ,

Yoorly ho-

.....:==:

............,. ....... llondllng
Frtt•Loy, Eoato, Nobl-, 111.-;
a 81mlllr toad ~ S~tY-

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•alvoawou
homo. 114- 1o: Frut' •n, no.,
'367-058'1' til •ood
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II eta &gt;ofld Holt l.erry

gl- c:omprehenllve
co-age ol aH 110811 ol
motorcycle racing. (0:30)
(lJ Wid Ameflce The
whlte-lallld ca.r epitOmiZII
the the ltlltory Of gtme
management. D

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41 HOUIII tor Rent

Information wNI be ctftiiNd Dn
what K· - tooct ..lly orvollln
1 WINNING CAREER progrom ol
Hocktng
••
kn- Toclvltcot
YOU... ~
..,
calling Barbar1 Martin, 1
282-4183 or 514-'ISWIII, nton1lon 2e51.

M

MQN.. JUNE 25

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aon "''"'""·"""""'

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11M Nidi¥.

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In fam1le from mkl 20'8 to IM:a
30's. No hype. Reply box 45lil.
0654 Golllpolle, OH-11trictly confidential.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

Pomel
- oy-MicklePort
- -··- -- Ohio..

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,.

�•

Ponwoy-Midcleport. Ohio

Ptgr. 1o-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. June 26, 1990:

~eigs

have
.

..

'

"'"

EMS squads ·
Rain gives way to sunshine in Buckeye State
12 weekend calls

. .U.atls ,, of tbe MeigS County
E:mtqency Medical service re- ,
·~to 12 calls for assistance
~ tile weekend.
·
, ..Qa. Satilfday at 12:59 a.m. the
Ml~ unit was called to
Soutb TliJrcl Street for Rich Hally
wllci was'' treated but not

'?.. .rfld.., ,

:At- 'l ' p.m: the Pomeroy urllt
went to Buttern!lt .Ave11ue for
· Maey1Garqes .-who was taken to
Homer Medical Center, At l! 10
li..m; the· unit went to the Beacon
Stat.IQn · ~Of Tlni Herdman who
" • treated but not transported
and . for !Celth Musser who was
JMn~ to Veterans MemorlaUkiapltaL
. ·
.
, 'lllle Pomeroy · unit, at 2:22
a.m., was called to Route 143 for
~· Gramm who was taken
to Veterus, and at 8: 56 a.m. the ·
lllilt went to EastMatn !or Teresa
Budett~

,:· . .

, :.M U:Ot.a.m. the Pomeroy was ·

e.ue.i to East Main on a

motpr

' velltcle acddeilt In which Clla·
rlft .. Ne!!Cf, Michael Swisher,

-. ;•..

.

·

By U•lletl P.rea hterlllltloul
gan Tuesday afternoon.
'l'beralnyweekendgavewayto
Temperature-wise things are
sunny skieo! across most of Ohio
looking good. for Ohio !or much of
. the week, with afterliOOn highs
Kenny Ramsey , Duane Flsber, · Monday morning.
and
dl'lzzle
over
norreaching the 801; Tuesday.
Showers
· Shelly Wol!e, Jean King, and
t!Jeast
parts
or
the
state
ended
tor
On the early morning we!lther
Mike King were all treated but
tbe
mdsl
part
at
about
midntabt.
map,
iow. pressure was over the
not transported.
National
Weather
Service
,
eastern
Canadian maritimes. A
'l'be
At 10:32 p.m. the Middleport ·
said
sunshine
would
be
the
the
·
·
rather
large
area of high presunit raponded to a call on Oliver
rule
over
Ohio
Monday,
with
fair
sure
occupied
the eastern half of
Street for Christina Steinmetz
who was 'taken l!l Veterans. At .
weather
bigh pressure
..
weather
feature being
over the .
11: 47 p.m. the. unit wentto Beech main
eastern
halt
of
the
country.
Street for Barb Boling who was
Lower pressure that was over
transported to .Holzer Medical
eastern
Canada puUed ott to the
Center.
·
. . '
enough to allow condi·
northeast
On Sunday . at 12: 53 a.m. the
lions
to
clear
over Ohio, and the ·
Mlddlepi&gt;rt unit went to River;
weather
seJ;'vlce
said high presside Apartments for Tina Hensure should keep things In gOod
dricks who · was taken to
. shape (or all the state.
Veter!lns.
The weather will_remain dry
The Pomeroy unit, at 2:50
Monday . night and probably
a.m., was called to Route 33 for
through Tuesday. On Tuaday,
Marsha Orrick and Wayne Orrick w))o were taken to Veterans . however, the high pressure will
be sliding off to the east and weltk
Memorial Hospital.
low
pressure will be inovlng
At 1: 30 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
toward
the area-from the west.
went to Wetziall Street for NelUe
.
At
that
time it still looks. as .
Morris who was taken · to
though
the
air won't have enough
Veterans.
·
moisture
to
suppori showers, but
.Finally, at 4: 51 p.m. · the
they'll
probably
.be close by Syrac;use unit responded to a call
over
parts
of
Indiana
and Michlon. Welshtown . Hill for William ·
Wilson w~refused treatment.

Low pressure wlll become moJ:e ;
organized on Tuesday and will ·
move east Just .to the north of
lakes Superior and Huron. The '
low pressure will tral) a coler
front into the northern tier or&lt;
Plains and Great Lakes states•:
with lower pres,Surea -also mov-'·tng Into . the mld-Millslsslppl''
Valley.
.,

the .nation with centers over
KentuckyandMisslsslppt.Broad
but weak low pressure was (rom
south central. Canada and the
Dakotas Into Arizona and New ·
Mexico. .
Ori Tuaday, the high will still
occupy mos!'of the eastern third
ot the nation broadly centered
over the VIrgin las and:Carolinas.

Ohio ·Lottery

Cincinnati .
downs Giants
to up lead

' Daily N~mber

482
Pick-4

Page4

~;;;;;;;;-. iiii~illiltJiftf!r.ll~l'i~~

•
Vo!.40,' No.287

EACH , ·•
VHIONLV
PIIE-Y •·
. VIEWED :-

-Meigs announcements---- Weather·

Riverbank .erosion project ·will Cost $752,
provide $500,000 for the project.
As 'for the balance of the {unding,
the Ohio Departme~t of Development's brea~down Is $200.000 In
funds from that agency, another
$30,000 from another ·unnamed
state SOI!rce, and $12,000 in local
fuMing.
Atlast night's meeting, council
vote(! to provide from village
funds the $12,000 needed In IOC{II
monies.
It was emphasized by Mayor
Fred Hoffman that funding for
the project has not yet been

COUrt. ••

-- ..

I'I.ASIX :'

Dlllllt:·

... CUI'S ·'•

'

Area d'e at.h s

.

70Z.-- ~

.

.

_)_

Reed

.RITEAID
DRY

IIIIASfED

I'EAIIII7S
11 oz.

_ , , ,.

'I

'

.
~ $1,1!00 DONATION - Chldy Forbes, lelt, 1111soclate
dlreetor oUhe Grant Development Fouaitatlon In Columbus, gives
her lliPPrectatlon to .Freer C. Zlrlcle, admlnlstriWve manJer lor
Solitheril.OliiQ Coal Company's Meti!S\Divlslon, for a donation the
· com~)j 1aye i'lle Llfefllght helicopter service. .Forbes and other

Two players share ·

Hospital news

The · Pomeroy PoUc~ Depart-ment Investigate!\ a five-car
. accident on East Main Street a!
the Intersection of Spring Avenue
at 11:03 Saturday morning. No
one was seriously InJured. The
accident was not reported until
today.
A 1982 Volkswagen driven by
· Ml_chael Swisher of Syracuse
struck the end of a line of cars
stopped to allow Shelly Wolfe,
Pomeroy, to turn left onto Spring

m

t,~$129

.-

IIISI'II!JAaE

'

.RITE AID
SIII'EII
HEIR'$

POTATO

CHIPS

6.5 OZ. UG

_ , JV UIIIT tlll4n118 • :

Dissolution fded

sa.

RITE ,AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
POMEROY

306 EAST MAIN .STREET
PHONE: 992-2586

'

~.....

---,-·- -·-·- .... -- I-

.
'

.

I

-~·--- ~~- .... __._•. . ··--·-- -· --- •. _I_._

E~. ·E.
U feFllght representatives traveled to the Meigs Division office on
one of the re~~eue helicopters to accept a $1,000'donation lrom·the
company. The money will be used for general operations ami
maintenance of a LifeFilght based In Wellston which services ·
southeaslerll Ohio communlllas.

Avenue.
The first car struck a 1986
Dodge driven by Charles Neece,
Middleport, was driven forward
and Into the rear of a 1981 Dodge
driven by_Michael King, Pomeroy. King's car was then pushed
Into the rear of a 1975 Honda
driven by Dewalne Fisher, Middleport. Fisher's car then struck
the 1985 Nlssan dr(v~il by Wolfe.
Damaga to Wolfe's car was
moderate. Fisher's car sustained

'
light damage. The cars driven
by
King ·and Neece both had heavy
damage and Swisher's car received heavy damage on ·the
front and driver's ·side.
SWisher was cited to failure to maintain assured clear distance.
Another accident Investigated
by Pomeroy police Involved the
1987 Ford truck owned by Melvin
Va!lMeter Sr., Pomeroy, which
was struck by another 1987 Ford
truck driven by Robert Jeffers,

Pomeroy.
The truck driven by Jeffers
failed to make the turn off of West
Second Street and struck VanMeter's truck parked at 106 Butternut. Jeffers left the scene and
was apprehended. He was cited
for hit-skip and failure to con trot.
VanMeter's truck received
moderate damage front and
rear. Jeffers'- truck had moderate damage to the front and
Continued on page 3

Mandela denounced by five Florida mayors

' . llllllt;llf ~~~

.

Marriage license

approved. Theurge_n cyofgettlng $64,569 in state funds. The mayor share.
.
. .
· payment and . make a $10,000
the corrective . work done was
was authoriZed to proceed wit~
Mayor Hoffman said that It · appralued iot available to prosempl;iasiZed and It was noted that . --the application.
appears there will have to be an pectlve buyers for $5,000, giving ·
the co11dltlon of the f(verbank is
Those funds do not cover the increase In·rates sometime In the · them a $15,000 equity in the home
deteriorating and could threaten iota! subsidized operation pf the near future. The rates have not going In, milking the home
the sewage lagoons,
cab company. Both Middleport been changed since the cab available at an affordable
· Asapartofthecouncilmeeting ' and the Meigs County Commls- company began operation in monthly payment ·
a public hearing was held on the stoners contribute annually. . 1985, Before ·s uch a change can
Mayor Hoffman reported that
application to the Ohio Depart- Pomeroy, it. was note&lt;!. has never take . place, however, a public restrooms at the park will get
ment of Transportation for.1991 contributed a share to the local hearing will be required.
under construction soon. The
funding for the public transit operating c0sts of public ·transit,
Mayor Hoffman reported that project is now being advertised.
system, The Blue Streak Cab. although requests have been bids will be opened on the Issue 2
As for business In town, It was
The application is due by July 31 · repeatedly inade . . Again village street repair projects in the noted that the Prescription
1\nd the amount being appliad for.· officials will ask for Pomeroy village on July 9. The repair work Shoppe has moved .Into the new
Is $49,809 ln. federal funds and Village Council to pay a lair will take place on Park Street, bJ,llldlng of Mitch Meadows on
Cottage Drive, and Mill Street.
North Second, and thatt another
Mayor Hoffman gave a ·brief building Is undergoing renova,
report on a proposed housing- . tton in preparation tor a real
,...
program through the Ohio De- estate and upholstery business.
·partment of Pevelopment . The
Rod Raymond 1"ho operates
village has not as yet made the . Cedar Bar and Lounge on
application for furids through North Second and Race advised
that agency since It Is required council that he plans to close of! a
that a public hearing be held.
.section of the building and open a
The project, according to Infor- supervised youth center with
matlon provided by Mayor Hof- video and arcade games. He
fman, relates not only to the area noted . that the facility will be
off ·Hartinger Parkwaq but to drll)k and drug free and that
private lots . within the village,,. loitering In front will not be
and is designed to make afforda- permitted.' He .also advised that
ble new homes available to low he plans to abide by .the village
and middle Income families wpo. curfew, operating during school
are able to secure private months from 3 p.m to an hour
be.fore curfew , and during the
financing.
A contractor, it was reported.
summer (rom noon to 10 p.m.
has made available a three
He said ihat there wllllbe no
bedroom pre-fabricated home access from .the youth center to
which Is both .FHA and private
the bar. Raymond asked for a
lending institution available to ' !:l'illver of the village amusement
the village at a special cost to low
ta)!: ft;lr tw.o months, Council voted
and middle purchasers for
to waive the charge tor that
$39,272. The houses are comperiod with everyone voting ln
·pleted within six week from the · favor with _ the exception · o'r
time construction begins. ·
Councitli1an Paul Gerard.
The proposed plan -and It was
Dav.e and E;ddte RQS1! ~re
emphasized 'tnat no fuDdlng has
again, at the meeting to diScuss
been approved,. nor hau ·the' traveling with empty trucks
v_lllage yet made applicationthrough 'the village. Tlie two are
WO\lld be to grant a $10,000 down
Continued on page 3

Nel~~one setiou~·ly ·hurt. in .5"-car accident

~~lf~

Stocks

'

···r;.. · ~·,""r

$9 million jackpo• ·

,.
I

1 S ...ion, 10 Pogu 26 Cents
A Mu~lmodlt Inc. Ne..;opeper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, .June 26, 1990

Copyrighted 1890

· By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·
Sentinel News Start
Anptl)er step toward securing
. funding to correct the riverbank
erosion at the sewage lagpon site
below· Hobson was taken by
Middleport VIllage. Council Monday night.
·
·The project cost has been set at
$752;000 aild the Ohio Departmen! of Devel()pment has suggested a division of . funding
.through several agencies.
The U.~. Corps of Engineers
has Indicated that agency will

'!""
" ....
.. ·.,..
·

celehrailons Is Jnvlted to attend
South Central Ol!IQ
' · ~ ~-~~~· .Bible School
and
.
bring
a
covered
dish.
The
·
Clear
Monday night, with a low
, )VKatlo~ Bible School will
piCnic
will
bj!gtn
ai
6:
30
p.m.
In
the
mid 50s. Mostly sunny
l!eJ!D,I~ay I!Jd.continue th.rough
sm,...asbord
silpper
Tuesday,
with highs In the mid
FtlclaY'fi~. 9toll:30dally at the
There· will be a smorgasbord
80s.
·
1111:, .,Q~IDII .Church located . bit
supper on Saturday from .~ to 7
· Extende4 Forecast ,
Jtilll~ 143 on County Road 14, two
at
the
Wilkesville
PythUin
Wednesday
tbnaJ~ Friday ·
p.m.
)II"" '.OUth ot Carpenter. ConA chance of shoWers and
~ai!t 1MIIdl'ed _Workman at '742- · Hall. Cost is $5 for adults and .
2i85 i!r, Nancy White at 698-3411 $2.50 tor children. The public Is . thunderstorms each day: Highs ·
will be In the 80s each day; wlth
Invited to attend.
Jci~ tliHhet' lntotmatton.
Square
dance
overnight
~ "- , .:; Park bel!rd lo meet . . ·
. . lows In the 60s.
. ·'lbi! Star MIU Park Board wtU The Bells and Bows Square ·
me_et toaight at 7 p.m. In the Dance Club wJII sponsor a dance ·
. ·...:,_ ~aeln~e VIllage Council oil Saturday at the senior citizens ·
center from 8-llp.m. Caller will
Continued from 'page 1
ella~.•· . ·.
be Dale Eddy and the dance Is
,, .. ~!*tee picnic .
Antonln Scalia and Anthony ·
: Tile J•onieroy Saqulcenten- · open to all western dancers.
Gardea
club
lo
meet
Kennedy,
said a two-parent nodial ~lttee wiD meet TuesThe
Wildwood
Garden
Club
lice
requirement
with a Judicial
dly ~~~ at Grace EpisCopal
bypass satlstla the Constitution.
Qaurch ,-ror a po,lluclc picnic. wUI meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
at the home of Katbl'yn MIUer.
Justice, SaJIIIra. Day ,O'(;oMor
~
- whohasslsted . with the
.. '
called the tWo-parent tequlre.:..
"''.,.
1'.,
' ..
••..
· _.._ _
ment ot the Minnesota. law .
..,
"unreasonable when one cosld_. ~-' ~
ers that only half the minors In
~
many y~ars. She also was past
the state of Mlnnosota reside
president of the St. Mary's
with both biological parents."
Hospital Guild, now Doctor's
Nonetheless, O'CoMor, joined
'''MIIIirlce v. Reed. 65, of Reeds· Hospital. .
by Chief Justice William Rebnvliif,:d~ unexpectedly SUJiday
Mrs. Rogers Is survived by her
qulst and Justlca .Byron While,
atrtll residence.
husband, Robert, two daughters, · A,ntonln Scalia and Anthony.
· ' Bon ·tn Port Homer; Ohio, he . J~net RogeFS&gt; Arlington, Va.;
Kennedy, said a two-parent no- ·tile - ot the late Alvin and · and Mrs. Paul (Nancy) Wells, lice requirement with a judicial
Rale Kibble Reed. He was a Belpre; two sisters, Mrs. Pierce . bypass satlstleo! lbe 'Constltulipn.
l'tllred merchant and a w. W. n (Marilyn) Rice, Arlington, Va.;
'Justice Thurgood Marshall,
oU- J'urce veteran.
·
and · Mrs. Edgar (Leah
Joined by Justiceo! William Bren' He II IIII'Yived by his wjfe;
Je8.llllelte) Altmayer, Long ]snan and Harry Bllckrilun, noted
Fl 1il ,. ....,-tteed;-one daugh- land,
N.Y.;
and
two-grandchild,
·
tn
the MlnMBotaciiB" trult "Roe ·
.• , a..mary Young, Ractne, ren, Jodi Lynn .and Michael remains
the law ofthe land." and
f.liiQ - · Tom (Regina) Reel!, . Wells, Belpre. ,
weni ·sO' tar as to say the ruling
n4 Brtu Reed, both of ReedsServlca will be beld Wednes"reaffirms the vitality of Roe"· .r
Yillr, Jl~ brothers, Marvin, l)ohday
at
11
a.m.
the
Church
of
.
because
·nve members 'ot the I
1'111111,' •Gary_ and David, all of ~plpbany In Nelsonville wl.th court voted
1
to strike down some /
Rtld!l\'tlll; .. Robert of Jackson
William Lyle o!ticlatlng.
portions of the law.
•!Ill DeJu1!s of Ferndale, Fla.; Rev.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
However, Scalia took the court'
two alltera, lila Jean Weaver, of Cemetery.
to task for not overturning Roe.
~~ · aJI!I Maxine Dupree,
Friends may call at the
Flilrbom; and one granddaugh·
Johnson-Souers
Funeral Home
.ter; Lauren Young.
·
--•-He was pJ'I!Ceded In death by on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m. .
Memorial contrtbuttoils may
h!l perenll, one siSter, Kathleen
be
made to the Athens CountY
-Smltll, and a brother, Alvin
Hospice,
P.O. Box 873; Athens,
ftltt4, ~Jr.... .
45701,
,;, F\IDef&amp;l,, services will be held
·QII' Wedlleiday at 1 p.m at the
CLEVELAND (UPI) -'- Two
Wllltt F,uileral Home In Coolville Kathryn Fisher
tickets from Saturday night's
with t,h~ , ~. Charles Eaton
Super Lotto gam!! have the six
Kathryn Elizabeth Fisher, 88,
~iJ!a; ·surtal will be In the
numbers puUed In-the 'drawing,
~VJIIe Cemetery. There will · Middleport, died Sunday evening
me11ning the holders will share
at Veterans Memorial Extended
be ~·~ling liours~
the
$9 million jackpot;
Care Unit.
are 13, 15. 23, 33, 35,
Numbers
Born Au~. 20, 1901 In-Middle- '
and
39.
·
port, she was a daughter of the
Holders
can
redeem
their
·~;::,uJUi'''J: '" Keck, 72, ot 522 late . Wlllam and Mary Eunice
tickets
and
become
eligible
tor
..illlien'y · Heights, . Pomeroy, Crary Davis. She was a home$172,125
a
year
for
20
years.
· , j(led ·"'-~Y at St. Joseph Hospt- maker and · 11 member. of· the
, , ~ fo~ng a brief IUness. ·
Heath United Methodist Church. · Ohio Lotterr. officials said
· ... ,,Borii ' on 'Aug. 18, 1917 at
She Is survived by cousins, Sunday_that out of the $5,305,286
worth of tickets sold for Super
'CJI!))fi!c!'1Jie, ' he was a retired nieces and nephews.'
~ llfaettcal nurse having
In addition to.her parents she Lotto,158 of them have five of the
numbers, · good tor $1,000.
'Wdt,~ . at Veterans Memorial was preceded In death by a son,
Another 7,424 have four.ot them,
~pltMI ,tor 22 years.
John Clinton Fisher III, who was
good
for $75 each.
He·Wasil ve.t eran of World War killed In France in Wo~ld War II,
The
Klclcer game produced the
. II.,aoill..a member of the Mason three brothers, Robert, Crary,
number 1376n and two of the
Dllallled · American Veterans and - Charles Davis, and two
$896,863 worth ot tickets have
and tile Sacred Heart Catholic sisters, Margaret O'Donnell and
that number. Each ticket holder
Cllurcb. He Is survived by his Eunice Mae Dawson.
·
will receive $100,000.
· Wile, Leola , Keck, Pomeroy; a
SerVIces will be held WedftesLottery officials said 10 more
' nteee; C&amp;ptaln Mark (Linda day at 1 Jl.m. at the Rawlings
have
the first !lve!or$!1,000eaeh; ·
!.tewalltl Brooks, Franklin, Coats Fisher Funeral Home with
82
have
the first four ,f or S1.QOO;
·Tea,n.,and a sister, Clara Evelyn Rev. Frank Smith officiating.
790
have
the first tliree ·tor $100;
' ()!Ilion, Dayton.
Burial. will be In Riverview
and
7,989
have the first two tor ·
·
'' 'He was preceded In death by . Cemetery.
$10.
'
"hll perell(f.
.
Friends inay call at the funeral
,Funeralaervlca will bj! held at home on Wednaday from 11 a.m.
i la.m. Wednedsay at the Sacred until the tii;J)e of the.Service. '
Heart Catholic Church. The Rev.
,f't; Robe_rt. Borer will officiate
Dally stock prices
alld llurJal will be In Pine Grove
(As ofl0:30 a;m.) ' ,
Cemetery. Wake servlca will be
Veterana Memorial
Bryce
ud Mark Smtah
JMtld at the ru·n eral home on
Saturday admissions - None.
of
Blua&amp;,
Elllll A Loewl
, Tllelday at 7:30 p.m. Friends
Saturday dlscharga -None.
/
RillY ·c~ll at the funeral home
Sund11y admissions- Eber W.
'l'uelday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Pickens, Racine; Citf!ord Jac- Am Electric Power .............. 29
p.m. '
obs, Pomeroy; and· Ella Daugh· AT&amp;T, ........... ,........ , .. ......... 42~
Ashland 011 .... :.............. ,,, .. 36~
erty, Middleport.
,
F.IQe 'ROger8
Bo.
b Evans ........................... l4
Sunday discharges - Grace
,.
Charming Shoppes :.. ...........10.*
CalL
.,,,Elaine .M. Rogers, 62, NelsonCity Holding Co .................. 14~
~Uf!. ,died Sunday morning at
Federal Mogul. ................... 18~ .
q·m,~ ~orlal Hospital In
Goodyear T&amp;R .... :.. , . ~ .... , ....31%
· ~.._ ',foUowlng and extended
Heck's ...................... .. ......... 3%
Susan A. Mlller, Coolville, and
,._, l"lth pancreatic cancer,.
Key Centurion .................... 12~
. B.oni hi Pomeroy, she was the · Paul Joseph Miller, Coolville; Lands' End .......... :..... ,........ 16%
have flied tor a dissolution In the Limited Inc ...... ;,, ............. 22%
~ter of ihe late thomas and
Meigs
County CouJ1 of Common Multimedia Inc ... ,........ , .. :.. ,.SO
Geraldine Davis Young.
Pleas.
·
With ber husband, she owned
Rax Restaurants .................·. 2%
Robbins &amp;.Myers ................ 22%
iililil· ~ R.D. Rogers JeSboney's Inc ...... ,................ 14~
!~1 iii' Nellonvllle. Sbe .w as a
Star Bank ............................. 23
te •. of Pomeroy High
Clue of 1945. She was a
A marriage license has been Wendy'slnd ................ :....... 6~
' 61 the Church of Epl- Issued In Meigs Probate Court to Worthington Ind .................24~
Bank are ex
·
Iii Nellonvllte where she · John Mark Haggerty, 31, and · (ATAT and
dl\'lclenii todq.)
: · M ... . oil the altar guild tor ·&lt;April Yvette Clark,21.
1.. _, ')
. ,,.
.,.' • • ,,

Partly cloudy Tue!iday
night, with a low In the low 80s. ·
· Partly · cloudy Wed~ay . ~
with hlp;hs In the mid 80s.·
Chance of rain Is %II ·
:

1992

. MIAMI CUP!) - Five CubanAmerlcl!n mayors In Florida,
including the mayor of Miami,
jointly denounced Nelson MandeJa fo~ · refusing to condemn
human-rights violations In Cuba.
The South African antlapart)Jeld leader Is to arrive In
Miami , Wednesday evening,
speaking Thursday to a Miami
Beach convPntion of the American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees. '
The mayors of Miami, Hialeah,
West Miami, Sweetwater and
Hialeah Gardens released a
four-paragraph declaration Monday denouncing Mandela.
"We, Cuban Americans, find It
beyond reasonable comprehension that Mr. Nelson Mandela, a
victim of oppression ,by his own
government. not only · falls to
condemn the Cuban government
for Its human-rights violations
but rather praises 'virtues of the
tyrannical Castro regime," It
said.
The declaration came amid a
growing political rift over
whether co111muntty leaders
should applaud Mandela's work
against apartheid or rebUke him
for his support of Cuban President Fidel Castro, Palestine
Liberation Organization leader
Yasser Ararat and Libyan Presl·dent Moammar Gadhafl.
Miami city commissioners
said last week they were reconsidering a . controversial Julie 7
_resolution offlclaliy welcoming

Mandela. The resoJuuon was
originally signed by Mayor Xavier Suarez and all but one of the
commissioners, Miriam Alonso.

It remained In limbo because
Suarez and Commissioner Victor
De Yurre withdrew their support
after Mandela 11ppeared on na-

tiona! television last week and
defended his support for Castro,
Gadhafl and Arafat.
Continued on page 3

.... td\ ••• ,._,

MANDELA TAKE8 i:ARLY MORNING
STROLL- Amid security penonnel and wearhlp;
a New York· Yukees cap and jack~, South

N

African black leader Nel.On Mandela takea an
e..-Iy morn1n1 lltroD through the slreeta ol
dowatown Wasblagton.

Evans, prominent·area
busines8_m an, 80, dies today

LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Staff
Emersan E. Evans, regarded
for his commitment to Gallia
County and Southeast Ohio, died
Tuesday morning at his home In
Ga!Upolls. He was 80.
,The first chairman ofthe board
of Bob Evans Farms, Evans was
al,so a director, president and
chairman of Ohio Valley Bank in
GaiUpolls.
·
A man committed to education, he was Instrumental In the
formation of Rio Grande Community College, and the then Rio ,
Grande College named Its business management school In his
honor.'
''Mr. Evans was a man of great
vision for southeast Ohio," Dr.
Paul. C. Hayes, president of the
EMERSON E. EVAN!!
University of Rio Grande said _
today.
"He was deeply interested In dent said. Smith is just one of
improving the standard of living ,nany in the community who
for the people of the region, and credit Evans with "prodding us
through the college of business to do more," through his Interest;
Companies like Bob Evans
management, named In Ills honor, hls commitment was clearly Farms and Ohio Valley Bank are
demonstrated."
full of young people he motl:
According to some community vated," Smith added.
leaders, there's not enough room
But that Inspiration and motl·
· in a newspaper to say how much vaUon went 'beyond those com. Evans c.o ntrlbuted to the welfare panies - II Includes the Hotze~
Hospital Foundation and the
ofthe ar~a.
.
Morris Haskins, Ohio Valley health care industry, the Gallla
Bank Chairman of' the Board, Is County Soli and Water Conservation District, Future Farmers of
one of them.
·
He credits his s~ccess In life to America, the Gallla County JunEmerson E. Evans and their IOT Fair and 4-H Clubs and Boy
Scouts, · all of which he was
association. ''He was a Wonder•
ful man and I miss him."
Involved with.
Haskins said Evans was a man
A modest man, Evans would
of his word - and that word was
say "I'm Just an old country boy
trying to help," when praised,
everything. A written . contract
was Inconsequential- Emerson
according to a March 21, 1976
column by Hobart Wilson Jr. In
Evans' word was his
the Ga!Upolis Dally Tribune.
.commitment
''Ga!Ua County Is a better
That "old country boy." as he
place because of Emerson. I ." 'as
called himself was a nationallyblessed to have had the opportun- . re~ognlzed Charolals steer
'tty to work with him," current
breeder, and also actively bred,
OVB President and Chief Execuresearched and promoted vartive Officer James L. Dally said.
Ious cattle, like Brahman, AnEmerson Evans exhibited a
gus, Herelord, Cahrolals and
commitment to the young people
Anklna.
of Ga!Ua County , and there are,
Evans Is survl11ed by his wife,
many In the areas of agriculture,
Evelyn Tope Evans, and three
health care, banking and bustsons, MerrUI, of Ga!Upolls, Dan
ness who eonslder hlrn an
or Canal Winchester and Larry In
Inspiration.
.
Citra, Fla. He has13 grandchU~
"He had an amazing ability to
ren and four great
take young people and motivate
grandchildren.
them to do more than they ever .
Funeral arrangements are
though they oould do," Jeffrey E. · pending at Willis' Funeral Home
Smith, OVB executive vice prestIn Gallipolis. ,

'.f

~

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