<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11386" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/11386?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-13T11:19:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42354">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/7f4c47683909921ccfa2249c52327d62.pdf</src>
      <authentication>72e8c52e7d126c18557e5545ddf8f0c8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35877">
                  <text>Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. July 11. 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Powell's Super "a I Summer Fun Fest!!

Ohio Lottery

Ameri :an
League teams
resume play

Daily Number
387
Pick-4
6865
Super Lotto
8-18-27-29-33-40
Kicker 084235

Page 6

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Low lonlghl In lhe mid 60s.
Chance ol rain 70 percent.
Occasional rain Friday . Highs
in the mid 70s . Chance ol rain
80 percent.

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., JULY 8 THRU SAT., JULY 14
Vol.40 , No.29 8
C opvrighted 1990

2 See:Hons. 16 Pages 26 Cents

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, July 12, 1990

A Multimedia In c. Newspaper

Commissioners OK
proposed '91 budget
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BOTTOM

Round Steak ....• ~8

$2 49
Leg Quarters .... !'; .. 49&lt;
$l s9
••

CHICKEN

THORN APPLE VALLEY '12 HAM

Turkey Ham ....•..L:.••
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Roast ..... ;~~. $1 59

1/4

Pork Loin ...•. ~a~. $179

ii.CCIDENT SCENE
- II. 1984 Chevrolet
Cavalit•r driven by Rarlynn Basham. Coolville,
was heavily damaged In an accident Wedn es day
a fternoon . Thf' car was struck at the intersectio n

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

69
Rump Roast ...... !'~. $1
ECK~ICH
$ 29

W1eners .......•..... ;a~.

ROYAL
CROWN COLA
PRODUCTS

1
9
3
logna ............ !'~. $1

ECKRICH

2 LITER BOTTLE

79(
FLAVORITE
CIDER or WHITE

VINEGAR
GALLON

YELLOW

Onions •••••••••••••••••• 79(
FLAVORITE
$ 9
2°I~1o Ml.lk •••••••••••••• 16
GRADE A
$
Med. Eggs ...... ."~!.2 I 1
3 LB. BAG

GAL.

WHITNEY PINK

SALMON
14.7 S OZ. CAN

I
$1
TOMATO
Lotsa Pop ........... 2
Ice Cream ..•....~~:!~. $1 19
JUICE
$ 9
$
2
1
79(
Pmeapple ..... :·.~'oc:: 2I 1 Pops1cles ...••. ~!~~u:! •.
GOLD BON~ FUDGESICLES, CREAMSICLES

3 ~lAMOND

GALA TOWELS
JUMBO
ROLL

2/Sl

Good Only AI Powell 's Suptr Yolu
Good SUn. July 8 thru Sot, July 14

Two Meigs women injured in
car, bus mishap Wednesday
OVP Stall Reports
~·o

Meigs Cou nt y wome n
su f ferPd srri ous in jur irs Wednf' ll
day when thr car thrv wen·
r idi ng in co llid ed with a bus

Rae Lynn Bas ham . 11. Coo l
v ille. was trav Pling sout hbound
o n Township Road 82. a nd wa;
approaching th e intersection of
S kinne r. Eas!man and Wi ckham
Roads in Mrig ~ Cou nt ~· , when a
bu s dr iw'n bv K at hl rrn Morris.
Ci9. Longbo!lom. reariH•cl the
in ter s('Cti on at thf' "amP tim(' .

Th e bus stru ck Hasham's 19&amp;.1

Ch ev rolPt Cava lie r a nd bu ilt
\'fl h lr les slid off the road int o a
d il c h ThP IJU s. owned bv Meigs
Cou n ty Boarrl of \llrnt al Rrtarcla ·
tion. camP tn rf'st on its s ~ c.
according to a report f rom th('
Ga llia MP igs post of !h(' St otr
Hi ghw ay Pat rol and n ' pO r ts
fr om th t" sce nt·
There v.:P rP no "to p s1gn:-. ._II th r
int('rscc t ion
Dasham v.·.1 s tJk{ •n to \ '{' t&lt;·r11ns

MAXWELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND

34.5 oz.
CAN

COFFEE

$3 99

Good Only At Powell's SUptr Yolu
Good S101., July 8 thru Sol., July 14

ROSE'S CHUNK

#8GHK20-03S-08
2 QUART UNSWEETENED

DOG FOOD

KOOL AID

20 LB.
BAG

$249

Good Only At Powell's Super Yolu
Good Sun. July 8 lhru Sal., July 14

S/49(

Good Only At Powell's Super Yolu
Good Sun. July 8 thru Sot., July 14

••

Mrmorial Hospil a l by !he Po me·
E :lo! S squad a nd was a dmit
lrd fo r mullipl e con tu sions . A
hospit a l s pokesperson s tated Ba
tO)

sha m was in stable co nditi on
Thf' pa ssrnger in Ba sham' s car .
Terra Schoonove r . 17. Rutl a nd ,
11·a .1

also

admt lled a nd held

ove rni gh t for observat io n. Shr

wa s t'xpec lr d to be rel eased
toda~·. ~ei th er

was wear i ng srat

be ll s a t lhr lim r of lhr acc ide nt .
MorT i 'i wa s not injurr'd

Strong winds damage property
in Meigs area Wednesday evening
1-!('J\'\ v.-t nd ~ and rainqorm"
took tht•tr toll on Mf'lg" Coun t.'
\Vrd nrsd J\ rvcning .
According to :vlPJ g .. Coun t\
Sh Pr ill .I a mrs M So ul:-.h,·. ttw
Le banon Town ship .1r·cd v.:; t "
PS(X'C'ial lv h&lt;Hd h1t b\ ' thr sturm
Sn ulsb.\ rrpor ts th &lt;ll !h1 · 1.\'lnch
arrivrd at approx1ma trl:. i p.m
an d rl amoged two !r J! II'rs a
vf' hiclr. spveral trt 'PS and u til i ! ~

flO IPS

Th e drpa nmf'nt rPport s tl1 .1:
th~ ' \\'ind ltXlk th i' tops uut of two

trf'{'S o n Still!' Rmllt ' 12t ;rnd

1hnu ~: ht

HidgP Roa d On 1' of
ltH' lrrn iJ&lt;, fr om tllo-;rtrrrs Jandt •d
on a traih·r ownpd b\ Mr and

struc k

HttrTlll f:P l

\1r_&lt;., Car .\ · Coo pt•r of Portland.
iLHnaging tht '. lr ~lilcf s r oof
~ ~· &lt;~r thl ' Coopt_'r ho me . r,p,·r·r ;li
uti lit.\' poll'S Wf"rf" bl own 0\' t'r .
Mcnnwh i lr. on Ea ton Rid gr,
thP r oof of a trailt&gt;r ow nrd b~· Mr .
&lt;HHl Mrs Don Ha sP was dP\·
11'0,\'l ' d hy thc sP\'Pr P w i nd s Mr s.
Host' and hpr d aughtrr R arhr l
Wf'l'l' at honll' at !hi ' ti mf' and

/Q

SACRAMENTO

FLAVORITE

2 LITER BOTTLE

ol Town s hip Roads R2 and 83 1n Meigs County by a
bus driven by Kathleen Morris, Longbottom. No
onr was cited in the accident.

•

I

1h .Jt a tor n; ~ei n
\o fu nn1 •l •·lnud

h.1d
V. il "

~jJOill'd

:vtr.., l tosP rPpor tf'd tha t o., hp
wa:::. "itti ng on hPr porrh whrn \hr
saw thl ' 1r·f'PS bPing brnt ovPr bv
11w -; trong wi nd s A~ stw Pntf'n•d
an a ddition 1u ta'r traiil•r . s hP
hl·a rd 1he roof of 1he t rai le r bC'in g
t()rn o ff A 19X9 Ford Hronro wws
cL!rna gpd by 1hP fa lling dPbri s
1\'o i n j urip~ wP r'P rPpor tPd from
1hP &lt;.;tnrm .

1erms of funds fo r the nexl y~ar
The fin a l 1991 budge! will be
approved a t a bu dget hear ing in

December . Whil e the propose d
bud get Is " in the red " . Jones

~

...;;/

ers IO approve a ba lanced fin al
bud gel. and t hal I his new budget.
loo, woul d be balan ced be fore
bein~ appr oved .
Al so at t his WPPk's rommis ·
s!oner s meeting, MPigs Count y

begin ils a nnua l si gn In ventory .
When as ked how man y signs
wou ld need to b e r r placa d,
Spe ncer indica ted tha t thai f ig·
urp w ould be available only after
thP i nven tory was co mpleted .

Highway Garage Superintende nt

T he board ope ne d a bid from
Ca rd s. In c . of E lida in lhe
a m ou nt of $23.740 . The bid is for

Ted Warn er reportPd that ron·

upgrading of the comput er sys·

tract pave me nl would begin in
the cou nly o n Fn da y.

Warner also annou nced th at
discuss ion s were co nt i nuing be-lwce n lhe Meigs Cou nty F a ir
Board and !he hig hway depart ·
m en I regardin g a proposed fe nce
to su rround l he fa irgro und s. A
fair board s pokesperson h ad
reporl ed 10 1he commlssto ners
several weeks ago lh allheboard
was di scuss in g Ihe possibility of.
erecting suc h a fencP to prevent
fa irgoers fro m e nl e rin g l hr
grounds witho ut pa ying al tht'
gale.
Com m iss 1oners and highway
departme nt offi c ial s have ex ·
pressed co ncern thai s uch a
re nee cou ld inconven ien cP or
in lerf er e wit h I h e acttviliesof I he
hig hway garage War ner indi
caled thai m eelings between th e
1wo groups had bee n held and
lhat a nolher was ·sc hedul ed for
this week.
David Spencer. a lso fro m th e
h ig hway depanm en r, an nou nced
that th e depa rtm ent was ahout lo

Over 200 vo lu nteer s are sc he
dul ed to partic ipat e 10 Meig s
Co unt v's part of the 1990 Ohi o
Ftiver Swepp Saturda-'·, st a r ting

Sanitation Co mmission. the Ohio
Drparm ten t o f Na tural Rrsour
crs , Water cr aft and Liner Prt'\'

at!) a.m.
Thr six ·s ta tr vo lu nt£'Pr river

ention and Recyc lin g. the Ohi u
EPA. th e US Co rps ol E ngi

ban k c lea nup proj ect schedu led
for J une 16 WJS hr ld in mos1
an'a.s, but in Mr igs Coun t\· hi gh
watrr a nd mud dy' banks rHT{'""i

n('{' rs . and in MPi gs Cou nty i s
being coord ina ted bv MPigs
Co unt y LittE'r Co nt rol
Lea der s uf thl' nduntf'r r·
l,!roups an' askt' d to takP ro ld
dr in k i ng wa ter . tl'a or o thrr
brvPragr . Pa rt i c ipant :, ajra '\ kPd
to wra r old c l ot hi ng. long "l; ~e ·k..,
or trousers. boots. and g luvt•o., ll

tatrd the post ponrmPn t
Howr\·r r . K rn ny \Viggm...,. el i
rrrtor oft hf' Mr igs Co unt y Littrr
Co n tr ol P rogram . sayo;;. thr

Sweep wi ll go this Sa turdav
rpgar diPS'- of wp ather or bank
co nditi on s.
Brownir and Girl Scout s, Cub

and Boy Scou t Troo ps. 4· H Club s.
T he Meig s Count y Fi sh a ncl
Gam e. Isaac Walton League,
Forked Run Spomm en" s Club .
Liller Co ntrol Ad visorv Boa rd
Members, e m ployers of Bank
Onr and n umerou s other i nd lvi d·
to he lp c lea n up !he riverban k
The 1990 Sweep is s ponsored b1·

~

the practice of the commission·

trrn at nw Me igs County DPpa rt
m pn t of Humwn Services .

The comm iss ioners agrPrd to

table ac tion o n the bid. !he o nly
one r eceivf:'d for the project.
pend i ng rev lew o f the sa me by

!he

Deparunenl

of

Hum an

Services.
The co mm lssloners au th orizPd

1he cl e rk loa dverlise I he sa le of a
1985 Fo rd LT D. wh ic h had bee n
use d by the county as a s heriff"s
n ui ser. but w hic h was no longPr
being used by lhe deparlment .
T he car wil l be so ld on !he
co urth ouse s le ps on a dal e lobe
a nn ounced by th e board .
A req ues l from Linda Bentz.
Counly Cou rt c le rk. lo atlend an
a ll·d ay sem ina r r ega rding new
DUI law was g ra nted bv l hc
comm iss ionPrs in t he amount of

$:i0
T hP comm iss ionPr s also a p·
proved paymen t of an in voice

fro m Me igs ln du s lri es. a s half of
brus h cu llin g cos ! a ! I he heltport
nea r the EMS office. EMS will
pay rhe othe r ha lf of the blll .

More than 200 expected to
take part in Saturday event

ua ls ha ve vo l u nteerr:d th eir tim r

•

I

~

ZESTA
CRACKERS

99(

en ted a sort of " wi sh list" from
each opera tion . represen t i ng
w ha t eacp would like to have in

a dvised lha t it has a lways bee n

the Oh to River Va llev Wat e r

possi bl e.
Victor Br own wtll din '(' ! tlw
Hac in r clf' anup and will mePI hi ~
groups a t thl' cdd fprry !andicg
par k ncar Third and Vi nf' in
H Jc in r . J.\(' ith Wood wil l rnPet hr "
-''O lu n t eN~ at 1hr ~hPi tl'r Hou se
at thr r nl!.&lt;lnCP ru ~~o rkPd Hun

St ate Park

In HrC'dsvi!il•. vou Jllt't 'rs dfP to
r('pOrt to Davi d Kol.Jirnt z at thr
rntra nc&lt;• to the Hell vil lr Locks
and Dam

\. roup s a,c..s ig nr-d 10

Midd!Ppor·t w ill mPPt with Ro~·
Mill r r a t Da vP !Ji \Ps Par k o n thP
rlvrrfrn nr. and Wig gins will mel't
his gr oup at rhr f&gt;&lt;Hk in g lot stage
an'a nt-•a r thP IPVl'l' in P o me ro~·
In Sy r &lt;1CUSP, vo luniPPrs arp to
rrport to th f' boat ra mp arr a on
t he rlvrrfront.
Th o~c

who own propert y· bo r·

dPrin g ! hP Oh io Hivf'r "uc h as
f ar mland, boa t docks or ramp s,
li s h i n~ cJ m p sliP s nr r pcr ea ·
t io na I facilit iPs, a n ' hf'i ng invited
to join i n thl' c!Panup rf fort.
SP\'Pral of 1hl' vi lli!ges ar p
p roviding pickup a nd ha u ling o f
tras h co liPrtP d. All that ra n not
bP rPcyclPd wll\lJp di sposrd of 1n
Jn r nvir Dnm r n1ally acc€'ptf'd
rnannr r
Do nat ion s of r efres hmrnt s and
ot hrr i t(•m s for the Swee p haV£"
come from Pf'ps i· Cola . Domin o's
Pizza. Pizza Hut, Kroger's of
Pomcr O~' . Powf'!l's Super \'alu.
Plrasrrs H.cstaura nt, Bob Ryrr

of lhe Emergency Mt'di cal Spr
!Con t inued on Page 121

Racine girl found near Stiversville
Li lian r-iakao. a 1.1 yea r old

bC' nrh war r ant fr om !\tli'! W'
Cou nt .\' Cou rt for fai l ing 10

l\a kao w as rrp ortrd a" a
runawa y by thr M rigs Cou nt \'

Arcord ing to rhr Mc1gs Count.\
Sheriff' s Drpar tmrnt. s hl' wa s
r r l&lt;'asrd to thf' cus1ody of hrr
grandmothrr
Orlan Ba-,s . .'\ ~ . of Svrac usf'.
\\'as arrPS tf"d a nd is being held in
thr Mri gs Co un ty Jail on a

S heri ff 's Depar tmen l in Marc h.

cha rge of ch ild s lea ltng . a nd on a

custody

Racl nP girl. wa s loc atr d nPar
Str versv ill e on \t\:ednPsd ay af1Pr
b c lng mi ss ing for srvf'ra\

month s.

com ply.
The departmrnt rPp or·t." th,ll

th e F BI wil l "proba bl y"' dism 1ss
th e fed era l c harges of unl"w ful
fli g ht

sinrf'

Ba ss

i s no••· in

I '

46 OZ. CAN

POUND BOX

By BRIII.N J . REED
Sentine l News Stall
The Me igs Co unly Co mm is ·
sio ners took the first slep In
approv in g a budget for fiscal
year 1991 al th e ir regular m eel ·
lng yesterday .
A p ro posed budge! for nex t
year was a pproved by the com .
missioners totaling over $11
million for all co unl y operat ions.
Th e budget Is as follows:
genera l fund . $2,713,690.44 ; dog
and ke nnel, $15,329.18; public
ass ista nce, $4,441.666; real esl·
a te assessm e nt , $218,934.00; au1o
lice nse a nd gasoli ne t ax.
$2 .055,785.21; e me rg e ncy medi·
cal ser vices opera tions, $400.805:
i ubercu losls. $120.710.88; soU and
wal er, $50,400.00; menial relar·
dallon operallons, $1,338,567 .23;
c hildre n' s se rvl cas $50, $131. 213;
you th se rvices gr a n!. 49 .998.18:
e m ergen cy medical transfer ser·
vice, $45,150: mental relardallon
bo nd retlr e menl. $17,400 .32 ;
c hild s upport e n force m en t .
$227,500; cou nl y home , $141.100;
an d lit ter contro l. $720.000 .
Commissio ner R ich Jones ex ·
p tal ned that !he budget repres -

PINNING CEREMONY - These a r ea women
have completed 80 hours of nurs ing ai de training
and were awarded their pins by Elva Davis, R .N.,
of the /\rea Council on Aging which sponsored the
program. Th e training took place at Overbrook
Ce nter In Middleport and co nsisted of class
tnslrucllon, CPR training, and clinical ex perience . The group will take a test In August In
preparation lor state registry. Mrs. Davis was
a.•slsted wllh th e training by Barbara Caldwe ll,

program coordinator. Tbe classes are open lo th e
public and anoth~r one will be ollered In
September. In th e group receiving pins Wednes·
day were lronl, Mrs. Davis, pbmlng Brenda
Cunningham , Pomeroy, and back, from the left,
Clnda Newman , Wellston; Janet HarUey, Ru·
tland; VIrginia Blain, Racine; Belly Jo Foster,
Middleport; Mary Perdas, Chester; Lori Cald·
well, GaiUpolls; Carolyn Cas to, Pomeroy; Amy
Caldwell, Gu111polls.

Funding for proposed Ohio-W. Va.,
4-lane project clears another hurdle
Fundin g for I he nexl slep of I he
West Vlrglnia ·Ohio four -la ne
highwa y p ro jec t has c leared a n
lmpor lanl hurdle as lh e House
Approprl ailo nn s Co mmIt lee ap ·
prove d $600.000 lor illn lhe Fisca l
Year 1991 Transponallo n Appro·
prlallon s bill.
Re p. Bob W ise !D·W Va . l and
three representallves from Oh io
have been pushing to e ns ure tha i
funds for t he four·lane projecl
are Include d In th e approprla ·
li ons bill. The full House Is
sc heduled to vote on the leglsla ·
lion tom orrow .
"I am pleased lhal my co lleagues on th e Appropriations

Co mmittf'e ha ve SPen the value

of th is pro ject." Wise Said .
· 'Th eir approva l is a vNy irnpor·
la nt step in lh e funding pr ocess.
a nd I a m hope ful lhat lhe r es I ol
th e Congr ess wi ll follow I heir
lead ...
"The money will be div ided
between Wes t VIrginia a nd Ohio
fo r pre limin ary e ngineer ing
work and an en vironme ntal
Im pact sludy ," Wise explained .
"Those are lwo key steps In our
efforts 10 get a new four-lan e
ll)ghway 10 s erve Ma s on
tb unty ."
Wise savs s upport. which ha s

cr osse d sta tr lin es and pa rty
lin es, has bf'r n a key 10 srcu ri n~

fundin g from Co ngn'"· " Co O:
gre ssme n Cla rence Mlllrr . Bob
McEwen, Michael DrWine ta ll
R·O h iot a nd I have lx&gt;•'n worki ng
close ly togelher duri ng the las t
1wo yea rs o n this idea T he ir
e fforts have gone a long way
towa rd m a king this d ream a
re alit y."
"Po int Pleasant Is the largest
c ity In West VIrginia no! served
by s uch a highway," Wl!e
concluded , ·'and the good news Is
we are makin g s teady progress
In fillin g I hal void ."

�Thursday, July 12, 1990

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Ex-Oak, Highlander Ruff lo

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
llEVO'fiCIJ TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS~ MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WIIITEHEAD
As.,istant Publisher/ Co ntroller
A M!-:MBER of The United Press International, Inland Dailv Press
Associa tion a nd the American Newspaper Publishers Associ at i~1n
LETTERS OF OPI NIO N are wel com e Thev shou ld be less than 300
wo rds long . All letters are subjec t tn Pdl t ing and mu st be signed with
namr. ad dr ess and tel ephone numbN. No unsig ned let ter s will be pub
lish('d Le tter s should hr In good ta ste, address ing Iss ues. not pPrsonall·
I If'S.

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 12, 1990

What to do with all those spies
MUNICH - So many East
German spies ar e coming In
from the co ld that Weslern
Intelligen ce agencies are over·
whelmed as they try to sor t out
the Information from these defer·
tors and the flies they bring.
Not th at the West Is complain·
lng about the windfall- It's the
espionage equivalent of stum·
bllng ont o King Solomon's min es.
F'or I he Soviet U nion. whose KGB
worked closely with Ea s t Ger·
man spies , it' s probabl y the
greatest Intelligence loss since
World War II .
ThP Wl'stcrn mood Js "exu ltant ," according to on e Wes t
German Intelligence official. He
and others are preparing for a
hi ghly secret meeting to be held
he1e soon bt'tween top U .S. and
West Ge rman intC'Jlle-ence offi·

cl als. They'll sift th rough ream s
of Information recf'ived so far
f ro m a del uge of hundred s of
East German defectors.
There hav e already been al
most dally meetings be!WN'n the
West German foreign lnielli·
gence service, the BND, and thl'
Cent ral Int elligence Agency her e
and In Washington since lhe
Berlin Wall fell las t Novemtwr.
Both CIA and BND sources
describe I heir current coopera ·
l ion on the "take" as fi rs t rale.
On e Ger ma n so urce noted
there's no point in hoarding data ,
because there' s so much.
He predicted the ··marvelous"
cooperation would get even bel ~
fer In the future. One r eason he
gav e Is what he caiiE'd "the
Inter nationality of Issues" thai

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
will unite th e CI A and th e BND in
their effor ts.
Another. man" com pl'llin g rl'a ·
so n. he sa id. is bollilhP C:IA and
the BND expect rut s in man·
power and budge! as th e Sovl&lt;'l
threa t wan es and the Warsaw
Pact wilhers . "We' ll all have less
personn el and fewer resou rcP s.
so we'll rPall :v need to sha re
t hem, " the German official
added.
The Eas t Ge r man SE'fret sf'rvi·
ces camr unde r the Staff' Sf'rurlty Min is try. D efectors with the
most value to the CIA and the
BND co me fr om !he ministry' s
foreign Intelligence service. or
HVA, by It s German initial s.
Th ev are al so the hardest to

Democrats, GOP made
sweetheart deal on taxes
Hy B U D NEWMAN
WAS III ;-.JGTOI'i 1U PI \ - Alth ough l hPir l ips are sealed on the
~ ub jec t , PrestdC&gt;nt Bush and top rongrPss iona l leader s ap parrnt ly
madr a s\-v rctheart d ea l.Junf' 26, thr day Ru sh br oke hi s "rt&gt;ad m y lips
- no nf'w taxes" c ampaign plPd gro
Th e deal was thi s:
Top D&lt;' mO&lt;.Talic le adl' rs who mel with Hu sh just before he dropped
his tax bombsh&lt;'ll agreed not to glo.tl aboul their stunning political
vi ctory.: or pummel him ror making .1 fiscall y irn-'sponsibl e promise he
co uld not keep .
And Rep ublicans agrrr d not to blam&lt;• Dl'mocrats for forcing Bush
to co ncede "tax revr nuP increases'' wrre needed to t rim the soar ing
budget de fic it. pegged at ,J!Xlul $160 bi ll ion for fi scal vear 1991, which
begins Oc t . 1.
Asked abo ut a no-blame. no-gloat agreement. an a ide to a
De moc ra tic cong ressional leader who met with Bu sh J une 26 said:
"" 11 wouldn ' t boggle m y m ind if it ca me up . Whatever it was. i mplic i t
or explic i t . it certainl y SPPms to ha ve worked "
Although lhP m ore parlisan member s of bo th pa r ll es took turns
makmg polJIIcal po int s aft er B ush 's revPrsal , congrPssionall eader s
took the high road.
Dem oc rat s had evr ry rPason to gloa t. Using worsening economK'
co ndJilons and a rap1dly rising deficit as thei r lev e r, they made Bush
Pat h 1~ most memorablf' promise of th e 19R8 presidential ca mpaign .
In doing do. De mocrat s muddied th e distinction between
themse i H'S and Republ ican s on taxes. forcing a ny blame for new
taxes to be s hared by both parti es.
Du sh· s rr\"C&gt;r sa I wi II a Iso prPven t Republican ca ndidates. inc luding
Bu sh 1n !992. from uSi ng th e tax issue- oft en th e GOP"s mos t potent
~\· rapon- aga i nst lJPmlxTals th e wa y Bush used i t agai nst Michael
Dukak 1s 10 191llland Ronald Reagan used itagainstWa lter Mondalein
19Rl .
And DP moc J·at Jc i £'aders were given every op portunit y to gloat .
At a news ronfeJL'm·e short ly after Bu sh announced his tax fllp·fi op.
House Speakf'r T hom as F'o lev , D-Wa sh , was asked whelher
De mocrat s had a grc r d not to hammer Bu sh politically in exchange
for hJs new posit ion
'"1\o. thf&gt;rr was no ts uchl under takin g," Fo ley sa id . adding that
Dem ocratic lradPr-s would not bell11le Bush for hi s switch .
· 'Wf' d rP not go in g to makP an y rom men ts of th at character,' · Foley
sa1d . "We an• no l here looking for politi cal adva ntag e .... 1 th i nk it"s
important th at neither politica l pnrt} attf'mpt to mak e politic al
ca pi tal nut of '&gt;l' rious bipar tisan rff ort s to reach a bu dget
agrPPmPn t."'
Hr sai d hi' ho pes progress CJn now be madr in Wh 1tr
HoUSl'·t.'Ongrl'ssional def icit rC'duct ion t al ks "'w ith a mmi m um or
po li tical pos tu ri ng oun anybody' s pa rt."
A rPporter askl'd Fu k'Y latpr wh y he wos ··r r yi n g so har·d t o prrt rnd
\! is nut a g rt.'at poilt ical vic tory?"
··t don ' t thin k: 11 is a polit ical vict ory,·· sa ld Fo ley, wh osE' answpr
pro babl y would ha ve S!'nt a polygra ph need le jumping.
R('publican s had f'Vf'ry reason to blam e Democrat s for forcing
Bus h' s reversal 1\ev Democrats had threatenE'd to pull out of budgrl
lalk s unless Bush moved to break a stalemat e.
Rush had rvc n predicted in 1988 what th e Democrat s would do
· Mv opponent 1Dukakis1 wo nt rulr ou t rais ing taxes, bull ~"'&lt;ill ·
Bush sa1d in his Aug . 18, 1988, accepta nce speec h at the Republi ca n
1\"a tion al Co nven ti o n

·A nd the tDc mocra tir -co ntroll ed l Co ngress Will pu sh me to r ai S&lt;'
taxes and I 'll sa~· ·no .· And they' ll pu sh and I'll say ·no.· A nd they'l l
pu &lt;.,h agai n and I' ll say to them ' rpad m y lips- no nPw taxr s.' "
Bu sh"s rPversal sparked a near·r f' bf'!lion in thr COP, w!rh a
maj orit y o f Housr Republ ic ans sign!n g a IPt tPr to Rush say in g ta x
inrrrasrs arc "u nacceptablE'. "
Rut Se nat e Republican leade r Bob Do le of Kansas and HouS&lt;'
Rrpubl!ca n IPJdPr RobPr t Mi C'hf'l or illino is - no st ran gers to th r
parti san wa r s - took no political shots at Df'mocrats fur forcing
Bu s h" s s w1tr h
A ll sr gns point to a polil!r al dea l. But if yo u rrad the lips of
co ng JP &lt;.,s ional l!'adpr s. yo u get denial s Howt.'VPr . if you cou ld rea d
thpir m ind". 11 might bf' a differrnt story .

,\ thou_ght for thf' da_r Author Hpnry Da vid Thorrttu wro tP. " I n
v•r lcln1 '" ·" j.., thr· prpsr natio n of thP wor ld ...

Be~ry's World

get Except for a few lop-notch
HVA de f ectors who ' vp revealed
l'xcellent Informa tion, intelli ·
gc'ncr sourc es concede, no key
pC'OpiP at th e lop of th e serv ice
have come over. To hear a top
West Germa n counter-espionage
offi ci al. they are "fanatic and
ideological about communism"
and unlik ely to defect . Worse. he
added . t hey transferrE'd more
than d tenth of their most
senslllve flies in Moscow last
y£&gt;ar as reformist East German
official s movE'd ln.
Even without their defect ion,
the HVA has changed It s tack .
"Since l as t February," the offl ·
clal sa id, "w e have no sign or
Inform ation that the GDR (F.asl
Germ any tis spying on us. That's
when 1he East Germans stopped
espiona ge and entered Into se·
crpt a gr eements of coopC'ratlon
with us. "
The lion' s share of defectors, so
f ar. have come fr om the Stas i.
t he dreaded secret police that
East Germany usE'd to spy on Its
ow n p eople. Stasi employr•tl
8'&gt;.000 people full ·t Jme and paid a
n et work of 109,000 citizen ·
inform a nt s Som e 2,100 agents'
sole tas k wa s to stea m open mall
while a noth er 1,05 2 lapped
phones. Stasi had a fle et of20,000
veh icl es and an arsenal of 200,000
wrapon s.
Stas i' s fli es on fellow Easl
Germans hav e been measured In
kilomet er s. Our sou r ces esti mated th at the fil es, now In the
sa fe hand s of a lOO~member
ci tizen's commit!€'£'. were kept
on 5 million people. That's ne arly
one-third of E ast Germany's
population of 17 million, or most
or the adult s.
East Germa n officials want to
destro y the fil es: West Germany,
while mindful of privacy Issues .
would first like a peek at them
Th ey could show th e Wes t whom
to trust: th e th icker t he file. the
morr likely It' s on an ant i·
communis t. Negotiatlons on thP
fi les' f a te arf' undPrwa y.

GOP suffers setbacks in California
LOS ANG E LES 1NEAI
Ca liforn i a was supposed to bet he
promi sed l and f or the Republi ·
can Party In 1990. II wa s to s tart
the ground swe l l that would even·
tually le ad to GO P con trol of the
House. whi ch in turn would
gua ran t ee Republ ica n d o ml ·
na ncf' for decades to comP.
HowevC'r, w ith thC' year ha lf
ov er, th e GOP's big plans ha v,e
suffered severe setbacks. Th is Is
wha t's goi ng on:
.~ s a result of thr 1990 U S.
census. California Is expecled to
get from slx to eight new H ousr
seats In 1992. The GOP ts
coun ting on being able to con t rol.
of the red istrict ing that mu sl
take pl ace after !he ce nsus.
Republicans hope to pick up
many of th e new Hou spspa 1s and
undo the Democr at ic gerry ·
mandering from the 19RO cP nsus.
On e in te rn al GOP scPnario
called for pi c k in g up 15 Hou se
seat s from Cal ifornla In 1992
The key for the GOP Is getti ng
Republican Sen . PPle Wil son
electPd govPrno r this November
As govPrnor. he could veto any
gprry mandered plan rrom thl'
legislature. which Is cont ro ll ed
by the DPmocrals Th e GOP
would probahl .v have sufflclrnt
stnm gth in lhP lrglslatur{' to

prevent a vrto override.
How('ver. former San Fran
ci sco Mayor Dianne Feins tein' s
win in the Democratic gubern a·
tor lal primary is a major obst acl e Priva te polls taken b y the
Wil son camp. and by the sr.tr
GOP. show th at Wilson co uld
have beate n Fein stei n ' s primary
oppon ent - sta te attorney gPn·
ora l John Van de 1\amp. H ow PVC'r. thC' polls ind! rat p t ha t
Wil so n i s running brhin rl
F'el nstrln .
Before th r bittrr pr i ma rv
betwr rn F'C'inst ein and Van d('
Kamp, Repub l i can s had h oped
t he Drmocr ats would r mf'rgr
oadl y split and low on fund s.
Instea d, desp it e thP nas ty ca m ·
palgn, th r Dem ocrat s arC' c lea rl y
u nit ed b r hlnd F' e ln s t e in

Furt hr r.

shr ha s shown thr
a blll! y to attra c t fu nds on a
national level and s hould have no
trou bl e m atch ing Wilson' s s iza ·
blr war ches t. which Is current tv
over $3 million.
When I he Dem ocrati c prlm arv
began. the Wil so n camp's per ·
ceptl on was that they would ha vr
a mu ch eas !Pr tlmf' with FPin ·
str l n and her ultr a· llllf'r a l San
Fran cisco imagr th an wit h Van
clr Camp' s t oug h law-and ·ordrr
im .1gr as att orn ey gPnrra l But

t hry wat chPd in g row lng horror

as F r ln str i n ou t· l a w and
ordered Van de Kamp. rffr c
l ive ly r emov in g her past libera l·
ness a s a ca mp a ign issue.
OnE' i ss u£1 tha t Wilson. a f orml'r
mayor of San D iego. hoprcl to
exploit in Nove mber aga in st Van
dr Kamp was 1hP grow in g
hos tilit y in Ca l ifor nia bf'tw cPn
lo ca l and S lil li' gnvPr nmrnt
rJ usrd t)\' tax .1nd spPndin g
li mi tations Wil son had pll'dg ed
to stop thP staff' grlVf'rnmenl
f rn rn dumpin g mort' and morP
funding r·rspon sibilit _
v ont o loc al
govf' rnrn ent. That issuf' mrght
hav P workPd in a gu twrn atorl;ll
racf' ag ai nst Van de Kam p, a
long -tim cs tatrofflcl al But i t is a
no n-ls su l' in thr campaign
aga in st F'l'\n&lt;.;tC'in. a formrr Sa n
Franc isco may·o r
AOOrtlon wil l not bf' an issur i n
the gu bf'rnat or ial rarrsmcr both
Wil so n and FPi nstP in havp sim·
li a r p ro·c holcP posit ions . Bu t thr
i ss ue eouid still hurl. Wi lso n
brca usr hi s runn i ng matr fo r
lirutrnant govrrnor- stair Srn.
Ma r ian 13crgrso n - is a con srrvat!vr w ith a strong a nt \·
abortion positi on .
Th r rr may al so hr a grndrr
ga p that wil l work aga in st
Wil so n Ac co r d i n ~ to seVf•ral rxlt

Robert Wagman
pull s. 20 percent of those w~o
votl'd f or Brrgeson In thp prim
r1ry R m os tl y women - sai d t hey
would s uppo r t F't.' in s te i n in

By MIKE TULLY
Ul'l National Baseball Writer
CHICAGO - Basehall official s
can only hope t he end of the
season will escape the delay s
that h1t spring trainiog and th e
m id-seas on break .
Ba d wea l her in early 0l'toller ,
for E'Xi.imp le, ',1,-0uld pnxluc i..'
twi ce th e normal chaos for
conl ender s. The spring trainin g
loc kout has le fl the• majors with
pr ec ious litt le room for makeup
dates befo re the pla yoffs begin.
Th e proof came Wednesda y.
j ust hours a(ter .Julio Franco's
seven th inning double helped the
Americ an Leag-uP ctown the Na·
ti ona! 2-0 in a snoozP r All-S tar
Gam e. f\jo fewer than four ga mt&gt; s
t oo k pla ce. with the AL trying lo
r e-c laim as many games as
possible from the labor trouble.
Don't eve n ask what might
have happened if show er s hilrl
poslponed the All Star Game
In stead of m ere ly produ cin g I he
lo ngest ra in delay in the mid·
summer cla ssic 's hi story .
Co mmis sioner Fay Vincr nt .
discu ssi ng the mattrr bPfnrP tlw
game, indic a tPd that a rainout
would have madp things vpry .
ver y difficult . Maybe no! as
diffi cult as hillmg the AL
pllrhers.
bu t diffic u lt
nonP! hf' ]PSS
~L play.·rr s managrd just two
hit s, fewest in Al l-St ar hi stor y
Tha t futilit y Pxtrnd ('d a pi.! I H'rn

[l0STOI'i t U PI 1 - Law yers for
tht.' Bos to n Cr itic s a nd Brian
Shaw wrrr bac k in rourt as thr
gua r d appealed a court order to
se\·rr his contract With Ital y'~ II
Mr ssagger o and return to th r
N A .~ team .
flut Wednesday" s court appcarancP may ·havr bf'en an
(' XC'ITi S(' in fuli l t!y. as Italian
basketb all officta ls hav e now
bPrn notified tha t Sha w ls not
e ligtblr t o plav for t hem .
F' ll3A . 1he body I haI go; er ns
i nterna l tonal b as ketball, to ld t he
ll al 1a n Basketball Federation in
a . July~&gt; lrllf'r that Shaw ca nnot
pia,· l or anv FIBA team , includ ·
ing II Messa gero . The Boston
(;l ob e rep orted Thursda y
··we told them that Mr. Shaw
would not be eligible to play fo r
anv FIBA team In the 1990-91
~aso n . " F'IBA"s Florian Wan ·
ninger told thr Globe in a
tr lrphonr intrrview . " And wt&gt;
as ked th r Italian Federation to

stopped defendin g the present
mediocre sy stem and have begun
t o ally thems elves with re·
former s who would stripdlslrlct s
of their suffo ca ting bureaucra ·
cles, fo rce schools to competr
! perhaps even again st private
sc hool s\ , and empower parent s
and t eac hers.
The most potent new advoc ates
for such r est ructuring are J ohn
Chubb and Terry Moe . authors of
"Politi cs. Markets, and Amerl·
ca's Schools," a book just pulJ.
llshed by the liberal Brookings
lnslltution. Chubo and Moe bore
right to the heart of whv
America 's schools have becom~
assembly lines of Intellectual
mE'dlocrlty : "We believe exist·
lng Institutions cannot solve the
problem, because they are the
problem - and that the key to
better schools Is Institutional
reform ."
In other words, none of th e
favored tactics of the past decade
- m erit pay , r evised eurrlcula,
higher salaries, greater accoun·
!ability through regular testing
-will give America the schools
II needs. Incentives must tJf'
changed. The supply and diver·
slty of schools must be Increased
and control over them radically

d Pce nt ral lze d Parrnts (and
teach er s, too) mus t 'Je free to
choose lhr type of sc hool thev
prefer so tha t sc hools will eithe r
s hap e up o r fal l In th e

Scoreboard ...

ma rketplace
Chubb and Moe ou tlin e a series
of s teps th at any s tat e could t ake
to achiev e th ese goals, wh il e
taking speci al care to prev ent
at· rlsk children from f allin g
throu gh the cracks.
Not everyone needs the eloqu ent prompting of Ch ubb and
M oe to get mov ing, of course .
Wi sconsin stal e Rep. Polly Willi·
ams, who halls from Inner-city
Milwaukee and who twice has
chaired Jesse Jackson's cam ·
palgn In Wi sco nsin, persuaded
her legislature lo pass the
nation's fir st experiment In
school voucher s for \ow-Incom e
children .
Naturally , the edu cation estab·
llshment Is ln a frenzy, and a
teachers' union is suing lo have
!he law declared unconstltu
Ilona!. If lhe union wins , It will
crush !he dreams of 1,000 Inn er·
city kids. Bul If II loses, other
parents and children soon will be
clamoring for a better educa tlon ,
too - and not only tn Milwaukee.
Whi c h means this decade 's edu·

Dear Editor:
1 stand as a Chr istian and
Amer ican and as others Chris~
tlans to protect freedom, against
those who are trying to destroy
our moral and spiritual values . I
as well as Christians many
places and American citizens are
against burning the Amerlean
Flag, abortion and other things
that are wrong. For Prayer and
Bible reading In public school for
thin g that are right .
Rev. Charles D . Jones
Dea r Editor:
II look like the Senior C itizens
are left out, accordlngtoFullure.
"Everything done Is for the
young people of the county that Is
I he whole point ol !he fair."
Quality and more to olfer the
young people are the goals
Fullure wants to see In the Junior
Fair.
Ople C. Cobb

to JUI¥' 30: purrh.IW'd t•o•r.• ·t ul
lf"l&lt;·h,..- h ..) Blli lrr from Omahll n! Uw
,\m...-M·.our A... ~oclatlon t A, ,\A 1
Montrf' al - 1\ttiYII.il'd oulfll'l&lt;k-r" Tl1u

Majors
l nlPr~ llol~l

1\1 t nH•· d l'n.,.k
\Mt:R!I \ .'\

t:

l.J-:,\~o\

r .-a.m

" I. P.-t
l;fL
H :16 ., 61 • ~ .lll
a ."l
Ill I t 11\.1&lt; h

1~.-1 1111

l "i&gt;rnolu

111'"\d,on&lt;l

II

It
ll

1\a ltlrnuro•

:1~

.\ 1111'8 U ~·

.c "

o·

..... .. \ fit~

I){~

~'

1.~

~· .

u~

~n

:t;.,

•~

-

" '""'

.i ·~

:n

t.!:

I~

.11

Ml~

.. .. 114' 1.t a HfMnl :t

1111

~ \M

O;tk la m1

,

~· ,

:111

r 1111 ~~ "

~

I ~!!

\'110111'~'~ ''

1 111
Ill II

1;~

l !' r

T,·u .•

IU II

1 7~

1!' ,

li. a n..a~tt11

16 IIi

l "ll

1\ 1.

\\ o•dm•.,da._\ H"" u.U •
\llhuuJ.. · o· l"~. l"hlo aro9 l .llnnlnrl\;,olc unur.· j K a nNL• !"I I 1 5
O :ikl:.trlll l l \tlm.-•ota 1

.: t ,oll/nrrtl u I
I hur...;t,, t.arno·~

"&gt;o • o~ut ,

ol' o· t t"l ~ 01 .ol '1,,.,. l uri.
i lh&lt;~ kJn, I , I. ~ lOp rn
T '' \a• 1 llr " " n )U-li 1 Ill 11•·1 roll 1 \In rr1•
~ ~I ~ :1., p Ill
\linn•• • • ~ ·' r T a 1~"'' ~ :,, .o t J\Jt lll rnu n ·
tid, ·'~"

o ll a rnl ~r · h ~5 ·. ;

:l:i pm

" ·'" ""~"I ll&gt; r t. o rthon l61 .tl

l\ll•l on

1t\oddlo~ .· r II I 1 "l .15 1' m
1 klr·lantl l ~"lr.tr-!1 1"&gt; 1 .tl "•· .UII•·
r llnl m an ~~t . IIIO .\ p m

\I l l "'""~' · ·· 1 Hr~ ·m b ·;r a.t tl a kl.tntl

t \l oon·: :, 10 u:,p rn
' \\••11.,

~ ~I

;d

I ,l ifn r rtl,,

1, , ,-c ..... IJ!l ti .)t. 10 -~ 11"'
Fri d ~1 (,a.ll"ll ...
1 IIi, a~" .u , ,.,. \ n r~ . n l ,t:lll
kan.,;•• Il l) aiiW~I o n. nll\llt
\llnl• "•l \ll ,t at l!.alllmnf\' . nl ,t: hl
Tr\a• ;11 \ll"lrnll nl~hl
1 h••••llnd 111 0.,1•&gt;Llll•· nl.(hl
\lllllo"HtrJ..1 ·r ;tl P akl.tnd , nl~ lrl
l"nro.,r1 1, ,11 t alllnrnra. n l~hl

Vincent Carroll

Letters to
the editor

AI IIane·(• and K eith Queener ot
Young stown Woodrow Wil so n
who will play for th e No r lh.
,
Ohio State will have three
rrcr uit s in thP ga me , i ncludi ng
a ll Ohio quarte rba c k Joe
Pickens ofC\rveland St Ignatiu s
on thp Nort h s qu ad ThP o thp r
Buckryes. wide rt 'CPivt..'r .lnpy
&lt;:a l low ay of Hcllairf' !Inti l inf"
man Mikr Dully of Hamilton . w!ll
pla y for lilf' So uth
Mil'higcm St ate, Youngstown
Slalf' , Ashland and Colorado
Stat r&gt; also will have th ree T"f'·
cTult s eac h in thr game.
Co lorad o Sl ale. coac hed by
Iarm er Oh io Statr roac h Earle
Bru ce. dipped mt o to Ohio to
s na rp thP Nort h 's Ki:lreem In ·
gram of Si. Ig natiu s and Pat
Mryf'r of Girard as well as
7.anesville iullback St eve Hodge .

who will be on lite South team .
Miehlga n State' s three player s
in thC' game includP tack le Brian
DPMa reo of Lora in Admir al King
and widr recrivPr Brian Winte rs
of T oledo Macomber from the
Nor th and th e South 's Shane
Hannah of German town Valley
View, also a t ack le
Oak Hill graduate and Ma·
rietla College-bound Josh Rufl,
who spen t his llrsl two years at
Southwestern under the tutelage
of head coach ,Jack James, will
hr the lone S\'AC representative
at the game.
While th e two i&lt;•ams boast
m os t or the top se nio r players in
the stat e. som e dec1d ed to pass
up the game.
Among those not playi ng are
Eucl id's Robert Sm ith , lhe UPI
Divis ion I back of th e year . and

BIG BEND YOUTH FOOTBALL
LEAGUE 1990
SIGN UP DATES
July 14, 21 &amp; 28
10 A.M. until Noon

Pleasers Restaurant

lineman of thf' ycc1 r M&lt;.Jtl Hon
hau s of Cincinnati 1-&lt;:Jdrr . along
with ail-Ohio running back .Jeff
Co thran of Middletown . A l l are
Ohio Stat e rec ru it s.

The Daily Sentim·l
(US I"S U fr900)
,.\ [)lvlslun of Multimedia . lnt .
P utrl lshr'l:l

f'VC'rv

a lt N noon, Mon d.t'.

1111·ough F r ida\;. Ill Co url St . Pu
m Prn\ . O hio. b·v rh(' Oh\::J V;d lev Pub
lish!rr"g

Company Multlm('(tl n

Poml'rm Ohio 45769. Ph

\n (

99 2 - 2 \ ~&gt;h

Sl·

rond cla ~s pus tag(' paid a t r omNo:&gt;
Ohr o

Ml•mlwr Unu('Q Pr rss ln!f•rnatlonal
In land n al lv Prl'Ss A ssoc tcat lon and 1hP

Ohi o N (' wsPa~N As~ ocialion Natlonlll

Ad\·e rtl s ln~ 11f'pr ~s~ntn llvr. Bra nham
~f'"'olo 'SJ&gt;&lt;l PI' r Sai('S. 7.1.1 T hir d Avf'nut' .

Nt•w Y01 k. NPw Yo r k 10017

POSTMAST£H SPnd addwss c hangt~
!o Thf'" Dallv SC'ntlrl r-1 11! Court Sr
Pom Prny. Oll.lo ·1~&gt;7h9
Sl .RS{"HII'TIOr\ H,\TES
By rarrh'r or Mul or IWuh'

On(' WP e k

$1 ·Ill

O!wMun th

Orw Y&lt;•&lt;rr

$. 1;

](I

~", ~

KO

SINGl-E ('01''
I'Kif"E
de s\ rl n~ t 01)..'\ ~' 1he car
nrr mav rem I! In advancf' direct to
ThP Daliv Sf' n[HI ('I o n a .\. l;nr !2 m ont h

Subsrrlbrr s not

ba st!. Cr.f'dl1 wi\IIJI' ~ivP n r&lt;Jr l il'r each

\lo{'l'k .

No o; ubscr lpllo n ~ ln mail prrm ith'd 111
;u pas whf'f"f'" !lumP ea rner Sf•rvlr·f• i'i
a vai la bl&lt;'

Mall SuhM · rlptlon.~
ln!iold1• .'Vlt · l~" Counl.t·

698 West Main Street
Pomeroy

!"\ Y..•' •'k'

SHI ~ 4

2h

'1\- rr lt ~

;,'2

W!'l'b

.. 1.37 9tl
.. . $ "74 l il
( oumy
. $:W .KII
$40 ~i l
S7S ~ ll

Ottl~ldt · M1·1~

Further Information (on Be Obtained At That Time.

\:l W t'i 'k ~
21i

wl'(•b

:1:!

W Pi'k~

' \ l"lfl' \I LEAl I\ F
l"l"lllll

"

l'llt.'ihll ll(h

1~

l'h l ~"l'~

I

phl .1

hlt· ~ ~n

" I

I A1lll'

\\

HO:I
5111

.19 II
:Iii I~

IIIII
. I "U

:!."\

....

.I!

:n

I~
~~

' ''" \ ork
Mnntr1' a.l .

1. l't•l
.11 ~n ~

~~

!!I .6II
!I :1!1 U"l

".UI Fran• · l~n•

lA&gt;• \n£t"lt'•
..,,.,. Ulo·lfl•

:1~

u nli

:1~

u

:1.1 I;

. J:l

llo ml &lt;m

1r

:11 1
~~ ~

\.i
I.\

:.o

l ,,. I notal I

\ll:rnlll

I "••

1, 1\

~ ~~

~

1"! ' ,

111."1 1"11 '
11.1 i"j 11
:I!IK I!I

"'' ctno""da) R.. .,dt ..
' " ~aml'l'i ~ · hf'&lt;llh• d

Thu..day lo~rm~'~&gt;'1'" l o rk t l ;nodPn ~i 1nd UarlnK ! I I
10 \llndnMil j. l a o · Uon 31.ond~1 ilhlnl

:11

! . ~ : l~ pn1

:-i1u' lilt·,ro tllrtlf"~ 6fll ar I'IILIJ"lrrrxh
rsmilf\" 1·3 1, 7 l~pm
\lonlrraJ ,(;anllll't ~- l i HI 1\lllln!H
1Caa•lnr !1 · ~1 . &lt;· ID p m
La • ·\ ntvli"' ( \ ' altnllll' lll 6~1 al C"hl
1 &gt;ltll iHUiw}" 6-31. ~A~ PIll.
S11n t' rrt.ndl'll'll 1G 1urdt~ 5-";\ a t St
l .md~ 1R."mllh 6~ 1. ~ ]5 P m.

Phlllldt•!phlH (Kullln 'XI tlC Jloulllun
tSt•olt i-MI , ~:.UP m.
frldRy llaml'fl
u,. 1\nv!~ .11 rhkaao
Nl"'· l "orlo:. atl"lrrlnnall. n l~ht
san Dlt~ at PIH...tlllrJh. nia:ht
M&lt;1nlrtal .U ,\clllntll , nlf!hl
Sail t ' rillld.'K' O Ill St . !Alli s, llljlhl
Phlladf'lphla at ll ouJI OII. nlrhl

Transactions

K•lnr'!l I rom 15 d ll.Y dlllllblrdi!Kt , omrlrh
tr1l nutfli·ldrt t:rk HuUock t.n lndlanap o
!I" ul lhf' ,\tm•dnUI A.• .. • ·la.l 1011 I ·\ ,\ 1\ l
,,,,.,. York (~1. 1 - Rl't•iilh•d • aU ho•r
l"ndd ltu lll lrv from .1arko;on u I thtTuH•
·~" lll,(""llt" I AI\ I

ll"Tnuh' . .Jtm :\ld'h""'· Tnny

449 .:: ;:, .

gg~.
;I I.

,.

"' • "'

H ar r1~ .

Mlll"hl'll. l.a rn Rohlrr.on and
t o•Dit·r- n a n (u)dft t"ild .t.fld MllllnHil

"ll"llr)

,.,,
1_

-~-_.,

_j

~

,.,....,

,,

Sunoco
10W30, 10W40
or 5W30 Motor Oil
I•'

1 t'

lnterdynamics
Refrigerant 12

899

399

269

Meguiars
crvstal
carnauba Wax

Plastikote
primer

\ ,,~ · · l • j p..... ll"
•IV. • • • "ll...'~'h

-Q) '495

Sylvania
Halogen
Headlamps

.12...,.,..;.
'

249
1
Sylvania
Incandescent
Headlamps

.

lnterdynarnrcs
Air Conditioner
Recharge Ktl
o

277
purolator
Oil Filters

--~•

PurolalO~

I (~""' '' ' ~j·~ ...t·

"''

If'" ."

6499

2699
Rubber Queen
Regent Floor
Mats
... ' ,.,
o f~." '

"377
.Purolator
Air Filters
I '"' q•· •&gt; 11("' "''~1 (

·""

.'

49~~..

1( 1 "

,_

." i\ fllt"d ~u~ nt ""'""" on

t nl~rr 'll} ot T ru.• - ntot Thonu,.
"'""l rnl' d a.' pl l &lt;" h ln~: , -o~&lt;" h
( l rH io~nd Sllll r - Sl~d ha.•k&lt;-th all
'""'It k1 •\ln \1~, kf'y to a "! )'f'rt.t&lt; n nlnt&lt; I
••6ot h all
\llltnta - ~ lp;&gt;d fir"' round ~1111
pk II runnln1 hJK" k S l r \·r Rr ou.,.&gt;o~~rd I " p
.,.., w., nf l· lf'MI o·nnlrrt.rl.._
t lf•\r land - H.~.tr.alnll ha. ·• k r1ln \1 ~~ -~
a~r.·rd 10 a I }'I' at t'Onlrl.l"l
1..-\ ltll/11 ~ - SI(P;Tif"d drall pll"k~. t"l'ntf•r
t:lho·rt fn&gt;.,lol'l . wid,, ..,., r ln r Tron)
IAltT\II rk rt.nd dl'frnKh "t I~• kl•• t\llll:old
hM"t : ' lpd lrr,..a~:c-nt llnf'h a~· k f'r~ f'MJI
nut&lt; h•·r and Tudd llow11rd .
\iFI. - Hf'ltllitall'd ,.,.. nln~~; 11"' ~ Ton.l

"11

' " ' '• ,,, ., .• ' '' 1'&lt;

\1111"![1&amp;0

t n lll'jfr

"·"

.........

299

- ~'

llollt · n~u·lr~•r

111111111• 1\HI/. ' -

--'r=)\

'" •

59 ~ , .

Plastikote
car Colors
Touch-UP
Paint

Armor All
car Wash

zerex
,
Antifreeze/ [
coolant

Kendall
10W40 " 5W30
Motor Oil
(~
~"~
,,

.;lUI f)IP_,I - \n uou1• pd ,,..., l~nalln n ill
.\ 1illllll!'r .ht k ~'II" K..o n. "'ho ... ur 11' 111111 "
\"\I t" prl'"liidrn l O\ h-·hiiJI Ullf'rllliO .....
n11mo•d t·nadl (;r r~ Klddodl mllnlii~M" lo r
..,... I or IW'....,on.
-.an t 'n,n.&lt;l'f.Nl l'la1 ·td p it• h...f''tant j.,.·o Oll~trli• 0 11 I ~ di!.J dl -.a bltd
!ht . a. ol l\slrd plh hPr \tlu Hrt.mmllk rr
~•· lUll •· - At·t hatPd lit101 llrt.."''mlln
'!li n Hrt.\ llo and lnflf'ldn Ml ki' Rrwnh'.\
nil dl ..... hlrd )bl. •c-nl lnfll'llkr Rrl&lt;t.n
j ,t lo ... to I al~ar .1 of 1),.. l'ildll• (or&amp;.~!
I.I' I!. ~Ut&gt; t .\ ,\.\ 1. p\a"'d pitt h•..- Hu'""
Swan on l ~·d!Q· dl..a hif' d ll~l
T1 ·\a' - "-"·' '"'"d pi1 &lt; hi't" t.ar} \li••lko•
iiOd lnflt·id&lt;•r .Jrff Ku.W r l l o Ohl.ah ou1 a
t II~ nllhr ,\mrrka11 -'·' ""'"I!Uinn l·\ t\ t\ 1
1\.,,l.,•thall
~ ·· atll l' - S l(ht&gt;d lrto• a~t;P nl lonurd'
:\1- &lt;lf"l " " t'!'ot. Mlkr III~:Jlnlo , \\alltf' nnkl•·.
l.o· ·· r IUil('hl'll . Ron IJillpt•r . lk-~ U'" r
lloward 11.nd Rill \ IU",...r . ~uard~ .1111 1

269

239

"'' ..... ., 1"'\ '

ll~r

approva l for rpa pportlonment

rat ion al battles could make the
1980s look like a long afternoon
snooze.

tnform II Mrssag gno of th is.
T hf'r(' has bPen no resjX)nS('
from the It alian Baske tb all Fed
rration . Bu t the att or ney re p res ·
r ntin g I I Mess aggero, John J.
M cGover , sa id the FIBA letter
would not throw a monkey
wrPnch into Shaw's plans.
""Had Br ian no t been regi s
trred 1in Ital y 1, then it might be a
pro blfm ." Mc Go vern sa id . " But
Rrian IS rrg isterf'd He alre ady
has his permit. We anti c ipated
thi s. and tha t is why we got the
It al ia n federation to val id ate th e
co nt racl. It 's too lat e...
Me anwh ile, Shaw's at torneys
as ked the U .S. Court of Appeals
in Bo ston Wednesday to overturn
U.S . Dtstri ct Court Judg e A .
David Mazzone's earlier decision Mazzone last month upheld
an NBA abitrator's ruling that
Shaw' s contract with Boston is
,•a I id and or dered Shaw to
tprminatP hi s contrac t with the
Italian team .

. ....

TtH Ofll(l

Mrmo t o publi c-schoo l admln ·
!.stn=
lfOJ s· Betrer brace your·
selvl's . As rough as the 1980s
werr on your reputations and
peacf' of mind , this decade Is
going to lx' worse.
No doubt you hoped tha: the
idea of strengthening schoo ls by
forcing thPm to compete wa s a
passing f ancy, promoted mostl y
by former President Reagan and
a few right -wing enemies of
public sc hool s. No doubt you
chePrPd whPn y our me rciless
critic B ill Bennett resigned as
secrrtary of education of couple
of years ago, to be replaced by
the mliqueloast Lauro Cavazos,
an apparent pushover for the
education establlshmenl.
Even !he election of George
Bush as president must have
tlf'en mildly soothing for you for when had this mild aristocrat
ever promotE'd a rad ical not ion In
his life?
And yet, su rprlse of surprises:
Educational choice an d com pet! ~
tlon are Ideas that justwon'tdie.
Bush has embraced them . Even
Cavazos, ever the obedient bu·
reaucrat, has climbed on board.
Far more ominous lor the
educational establishment. a
r~-rowlng number _
o fllllerals have

in wh ich All St ar power seem s to
wilt befo re t op-notch pitching.
Then again, none of it count s.
"W e had some fun, it doesn't
count, and maybe we can get the
Dodgers on Thursday," said
Cubs short stop Shawon Dunston .
''It's a great experience, and I
look forward to morP," added
Chl sox relievL•r Bobby Thigpen .
"Now I have I o go back to gel ting
thrsP guys out It 's b ack to
bu siness ."
'""' I think a lot of times people
l ak e th e AI I ~St a r Game loo
seri o us ly," sa id Oakland's Jose
Canseco. ''SometimPs thP m an ·
agers do. I ju st camP out to havP
fun . and I did ."
Three of th e four divi sion s offer
the promise of a pennant race.
Boston and Toronto should bat ti e
in the AL East. with Cleveland
and De l roil neaar by . Oakland
may hav e to take th e White Sox
sen ously 1n th e AL West. Pitts
burgh and th e Met s are battling
at op the NL Eas t. With Montrea l
not far away . Even the Gian ts
have r al lied f rom bigge r ho les
than the one that separa tes th em
from Cincinnali now .
Th e teams that come up w tt h
anything resembling the pitching
spen i n Wrigley Field Tue sday
night should hav e no problem s
wmning a divi s ion . ThP Ameri ·
ca n L eague All -Stars certa inl.v
had no problems wllh their
Na t io nal Lr agu r countrrparts .

MASSI LLON, Ohio !UP I I The University of Toledo reaped
the biggest h arvest of player s
taking part in this year' s Di al
N orllt~ South AII~S t ar F'ootba II
Game Saturday nigh t
New Toledo head coach Nick
Saban will be watching ei ght
future Rockf' ts In ac tio n ttl Paul
Brown T iger Stad ium and he
won't ~ve to switch sid es at
llalftlme sin ce all eight will line
up for the North squad
Heading 1he llst arr a trio of
playe rs from Warren WestPrn
Reserve's flnalieam - Hill RPII .
a 6-foot -2, 250-pound defen sive•
lin eman: quarterback Jerma im•
Richard son; and Shawn Yanef'y.
a wide receiver .
T he Toledo contingen t also wil l
inc lude the UPl D ivis ion II ba c k
of the ye ar in Casey McBeth of
F'ostoria , a hard-running o- foot ·
11. 200 -pounder who led hi s team
to the stal e Iitle game las t
November.
The oth er Toledo re cruit s In 1he
4oth annual all -sta r cont es t are
t1ghl end -tackle Bryan Dyser of
Akron M anchester. quarterback
Tom E itniear of Swa nton. lin e·
backer Kyle Mauk of Toledo
WhitmN, and wide rec E'iVC'J"·
saf ely Da nn y Williams of Oregon
Clay.
Toledo will ha v£' twi ce as m a ny·
pla yers i n the ga me as Ak ron.
whose four participants ra nk th e
Zi ps of Gerr y F'aust second and
inc lud e ali-Ohio receiver Chuck
Hyth on of Steubenville and def·
e~sive !Ja ck Elrondo Colson of
Middl etow n, both on th e South
leam . The oth er two Zips-to be
arc linem en Mike Lyons of

Shaw case returns to court

The bottom linl' is I ha t polls are
'\ hawi ng th at a very wide cross
srrtlon of Ca llfo rn la voter s
m pn and women. liberals to
m odr' ratC' co n serva ti ves simpl y like Di ann e Fein ste in
So rnr co mment at ors have taken
to ca llin g her 1990's ·· teflon"
candid at e.
Th e GOP also had hopes for
their rea pportionm ent fall -back
pos itions.
On 1he J une primary b all ot
thrr r werr tw o dlffPrent mea
surf's tha t wou ld have t ak en final

Good marks for choice in education

{!lay

All Major League Dial North-South game has Toledo flavor
return to diamond
following break

Novr mbf'r

out or I h e hands o f I he legis Ia I ur e
- In one ca se by requiring a
rr lrrC' nd um on th e final plan. and
in th r other by creatin g a
co mmi ss ion to do t hf'
red lsi rl c t lng .
E:lther sc heme favored lhf'
GOP. which supported both mea·
s urf's. T hf' GOP, however . wa s
opposPd by Democrat s anrl a
wlc!r c r oss section or lntrrest
gro ups. Roth measu res Wt.' re
drlraled handll v.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Saddle man
Carrera
Seat Covers

ACDelco
voyag_
er
Batte,
~!.~~ , ,
,,,., .. p &lt;

2699

k!~,

,-L- li:'

59~'~'" ~
;;t§$
AC Delco \
oura power
Batteries
!-'" • , ..

. -

· ~"' I "'''",.,, ' ·"" ~ ·

Giant LaWn
and Garden
Batteries
I'

'

I"'!"" ' ' 1'

•t)' . '

'199
STANT
Thermostats

I lllllllfl.
"';tw f)! dilnd - Oif••n , h t llfll'mlln Ron
ld.ool.t•n rrtln-d .
I'IU!iiiiiii"JI:h - Sllll:f"'d 11..-hllfk&lt;'r lh.n
l .rll.}"!&lt;nn and run nln~ h 11.k "ar"' "
\\llllum .
Tsmpu Hay - ,\~n .,.d lo \..r m_.. .,·Uh
flr .;l ·r ..urrd dnrh ph· k . 111.. 1&gt;111 ~ ...... W.o•lth
\ttoC II Ili~ .
llork•·y
IH-lroll - I'TomoU"-dl.rnrral Mrulllltl'r
.11111111)" D•••l"iloinu lu ""nlu r •I •·•·
prt'Midf' nt.
lntr rnatlolll l Hot•kry l,t llflll' - ,\n
noonrl'd Uu.l ron M l.)"flt . Ind .. h\llllrw.,.!l
"'"" SltVP f"l"llnt.• hllli JJurrha.....- d lhr
Flll"ll Spirlh and will movr thl;om lo Fort
\\'Qflf' : announnd lhal t\lhan~ . N \". ,
dU1 wlllllt nl r tinlmrd tilt rhill)p('f N 1nd
For1 \\'.yrrt• l'!uh will h r nlrk1111mt&gt;d lhf'
Knmi'4N

ggc

AC Delco Resistor
Spark Plugs

OA'IS A weeK

I •1'11116

L11~

A.npol t'll - Namt&gt;d "1!1·~ IW"trley
f!f'rK'ral mlllla,Cer. ~lpt'd lor
warda Mlbo ,\lflr!on and Chrbl Ko 111011 and
I!Glltt'ndl'r M ltl"lu Go111111'llntu ttormiRili\t.oll
,.o,.rar-u; Nlllftl'd JI"Oilltf'ndf'r Ron Sootl,
forw a rd~
8!11 O' DW)'f'r. Frant•olll
8rtiW11. StrvP G!1lYI'!I. Tom Martin and
Jim Thom!I-On and delenM'ml'&amp; Sf:tphallf'
Rlt•fwor and Dfonri..'ISmlth; !llpddf'fen·
uman Mu rn.y Bunwf'll 10 r onlrarl 111
plw.yt•r uiiiAt.ant coaf"h rof Ntw HaY!' II ol
tht Amtrlnn LA~ .
~"""' York - :'liamf'd Mark PlaUII
~t~~li¥tani

dll'f'r:tnr of admlnl11nUo n.
Philadelphia - Nanvd Rob Barr vlrc-

presldenllor ll .. nl't', Jill Vo~rl ulll!rt.anl

publlr Rllllo,. dlr.clor and
\hlf&gt;n publk'

ACDelco
Non-Resistor
Spark Plugs
,,.,., ,.,

~uun•

rrlatlom Militant.

MISL
Mani'NIA C'lty - S I~PM:d df'lr ndf' r Kim
Kornt w d 111 1 )'f' ar co nlrlf'i

S~~~~p.m.Mondavth~~~~:.
~
;"unday
Store ~oursm~ S~turday' and 9:00a.m .

OPEN

8:30a.m.- 7.00 P·

GALLIPOLIS

209 upper River Road

(614) 44&amp;3807

~

�_Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 12. 1990

Pomeroy- Middlepon. Ohto

Lake Alma largemouths prefer plugs, weedless lures
l t 1 1fll

rh l'·

O hio

DtYbion

of

\\ lldlrlt ·

Su utht•a...,t
l..tk~· . \!rna- This 7.1-anP lakp
1n \'inr un Count~· oftPr~ an
C.\ t't&gt;llt •n r frc;hing opportunit\· for
l.1r gt'fll iJ U!h bu~ .-. up t o~;, inl.' ht'"'
'.. ·l ·rll-r· n tr .llt' on 31'\'iiS o f cll'flV'

.t nd u -..c· su r·L:H'P IJ I ug"
rHl .,., t't •d I~'' " I u rr·s B lupg il b a nd
::, unlr ·. h arr· t·asil\· C'Jug h! or.
1. 1't.:t : .111 .111

,

1

n

rrt•J]~A·orm..,

d\\ iJI rJh.

',l,(illlh 1:1

ur \\·ax

'- h ,tJ ]oH W tlff't .

Lakt· -

lk lrrrrJil l

Hlra•gilb

·J I!t•r tllf• tw-...r ti sni ng up porrunit\
.trrd t·. rn l)t ' caught I rom s h url'lln~'
&lt;II t '.l " in '-hallow "-...tlt'r using

ll !hhl( ' t :n.\ ll ·r . .; Ch&lt;~nnel c alf tsh
.trt· p lt•nrtful and can bC'st ht•
· .tth.: hl during t'\·rning hour.., on
.td i iHHJ.il l'd lfhh bJih . Otlll'r

good fis hing opportumtiC's exis t
tor largemouth bass. br own
bullheac\s ami rainbow trouL
Suut hwt•st
C .•J. Brown Rr se rvo ir - Chan ·
nl'l c atf1 sh up to 12 pound s a re
bei ng ta kl'il du nng :a te E'\'f' n tn g
and early morning in all an•as of
thC' lakt• . Anglrrs tro lling crank ·
b,lih Jl dc,pth .'i of 10 to lH feet ar e
c. ltC!Hng 1-\· al!t·~·p s up to25 inches
r 1.'-h a ttrJc t or~ prodU C' f' gOod
llLHnbt• r · .~... uf bluPglll"
CH•:-,; 1r cr·(·pk LJkr - Largt"·
muuth bel"'" arC' ·,~.·iclf'ly sca ttered
,111d can be c:IUghl \\ ilh su rf JC('
plug.., and lun·~ u r frum derpt&gt;r
u ~t ng

w.ll t' l

drU ficic~l

worms.

nigh tcr,twil' r .... a nd smil ll j igs
liP !X'd ~, · ith a IJOr k rind BluP gills
fJ n bC' lo und &lt;J lung mo st shorr·
li ne areil:-. in watPr six to 20 fret
df't'P Jnd around deep d ropoff

poinrs and submerged hump;.
Ce ntral
B uck eve Lake- An otcasiona l
musk le 30 inches or longer ha s
bee n taken !n deep water nPa r

Honey Creek by trolling and
casti ng larg-e muskif' lures . Hv·
brid striped bass up to 10 pound s
ma y also be cau ght in deep
open·wal c•r ar eas of j igs tipped
wi th shad In shallow wa ters.
bluegills and ch annel ca tfi sh can
b£• caught on nig ht craw l rr ~
Cra ppies avpraging eight to 12
inch es and largemouth bas s 11t o
~ 0 i nc ht•s are rP a dily ava ilabl e a~

WPII.
Ki sN l.okP - Minnows s hould
bP u sf'd in ofrshon--" br ush p i les to
r &lt;:t tr h cra ppiL•s _ ShorPiine cow·r
conti nurs to prod u ce blueg ills in
til E' six 10 l' igh t-inc h range . T hi~
sa me an•a al so p roduces c atchr.;

o f Lugemouth ba ss cl\ NJ~irlt--, l ~
To l H inches
!\'orthwrst
Ch ar les Mill Re st' rH Jir
Ch ar111 r l catfish a\'rr aging 1'2 to
:2-t inchPs can br ca ught d uring
latP P\'P ning and ear ly m orn ing
hours on tradi tional catfish baits
pl&lt;Jced along thP bottom in two to
10 f crt of watrr . Largrmouth
bass and c r ap pi es arr being
t a k en in wa t ers tw o to 10 lt 1 et
dl'PP nrar su bmerged stru c

l ured. dropofl pom ls and along
shorr lin r areas w ith vegeta t ion .
BraYrrcrPek

Re se r\' oi r

Floallishing and d n ft fishing an•
lhe brsl mel hods used 10 catc h
wallryr.;; aver ag in g 12 to 2-1

hlwg il h o~nd C'hctnrw l calfhh disO
nfft•r good l1 s hmg opportun1t1rs
da _
\ or n rght
l\or lht•ast
~1 o~q u i t o Reser \'Olr So me
wallrye in thf' 1:l - to20-inch rangr

are being takPn by !rolling
deep·diving lures and cra nk·
ba11 s Casting sma ll jigs ti pped
~vi th minnows and float fish ing
lcchnrqucs arc· the best me thod s
to ca tr h black and w hit f' cra p·

r\tgh tcrawlP rs. rrd worm s
and lan·a l bait s arr taking most
of th e bluegills. wh1le an occa
sional nor th ern pike IS brought to
pi r.~ .

the Jnglrr'..: nrt.
Wrst Bra n ch Rcsen·oir Trol11 ng traditional musk ie Jur i's

tnc hes Shorr l in e arpa s are pro·

thr ough weedbcds 1s lhe be st

d ur i ng catches of largemouth

rnrthod

and ;; mallmo uth ba ss for anglers
us1ng .;; mall spt nnrr s_ CrappiE'S.

dH' \.\'allrypo.., J ·. l ·r~~ging four to
f ivr poundo..,

l akt• Erif•
v.:es tern b asin Wil l leye ang lers
arP fi nding thP f ish ing act ion

sluggi sh. bul the seasonal eastward m ovement of wa llrye has
yet to beg i n. The besl reports ar e
s till comin g in fr om the West
Si ster Island a r ra and i n sca t ·
tercd arras around th e isla nds.
In thr cenn·a i basin. anglers are
finding walleye fishmg IS best six
ru r ig ht miles aut between Huron
and Co nnea ul m 35 to 60 feel of
wate r . Anglers shou ld vary their
tac Til'S by· using nightcrawler
harne ~sPs,

weight -forward
spinnr rs tip ped w ith n ight ·
c r awlrrs or minnow s . and trol-

catc hmg musk ies
\\'hlC'h ;rrr aq•rag tng 30 to ~0

l ing dpr•pd 1vin g crankbails us·

111Ches . Striped ba ss up lo 1&gt;

dov.:n riggprs .

of

tn c hrs ;,rl so ar(· lwtn.£: takPn .

ing

p l anrr

boards

or

J"

By Dt\ \1D MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
DULUTH, Ga. 1UPI1 -Pa t ty
Sheehan figu res her U.S. Open
l uck is about to change this week .
The 33-year -o ld Ca lifornian
fin ished j ust a strok e behind
w inner Jan Stephen son in the
1983 Open and wa s second aga i n
!behind Liselott e Neuman n) in

'88. But she was

. . . ....

~~

r~

"'iII
A.ftrr thf' .;;e n tor RobbJr·sct .-•,lth
o n .Jan 7. thf' tru st rf's appoint&lt;'d
thr ir brothrr . :vlikr. PxrcutJ\f'
\·icr prPs tdent. m dklllg him 1 f'

f-' ll .\ B OR(J \-lJ 'i" 1l' Pl 1 f,,rme r· P ,l l ri or ... \\ ·hn lt ·ll
_l! ol /r ):!L' ICr' aftf'r d rug I..C' .Jnd il f..;;
-l ll,J', r,1&gt;.r• ,i ... .rlll r ;If r rrurn1n(! 1o
_T1.•.1

\ , ',\ En g .1nd
].'111 rrw · P,lltJnto., r·unn1n12 t&gt; ;w k
l 111l \ C1dl inc, &lt;...,1\.., ht• ha" nP"
t·ll'f'll cl 1 ·:~rP d 1o l'('join Thr- \ ~t
' IIJn ,l \

).'f illlh; J] \

:1 !11 t ll'". ]t·r\ l fl

)_t 'dgUI'

pf,l\ !flg

dll(\

!11/

\

1'f '\\

· 1 JI)..:L1nd .q.,:,nn
( 'o lltn"

/ll,IC!i-

lh t• n\·t·r tur·p
\\i 'drll'"d .t\ JU&lt;...I !-1 hour' ,l ft t' l
\1·' 1 ( 'nm nll'·,...,l onN l' .1ul T .q:;l1
,diU• I'Jldf'rl hh SU&lt;.;Pt'll'-1011 hf •
: • ( t '\ '. I ·d !IJ)' f J j ]ln .(! ,J drug I (''-f Ill
)' ~ ~ . 1 " 11l·a·

a h1 g ..,r•J g hl h,Hl
1 : lf l,·dr,fful me ' Cn llin'- . \1.
~,d
l ' l1 1r r h.n -r t~lflt l,dwl (If

'w•

"

'J,t::nt d

·., !11!

:r .·

; ~· -

I

I (

,;,~ --..
~ "

') I !

',_:

t r• •rn rhr

rTl '. r 'i'\ p!P;I ... f' rl
II

\f·' l.
,Jnd

c~n 1 ,\, i l' '( ) pl ,1\

rl

pn-.:i\1' tnr 111
· :h ' " ~ ~ J : :n &lt;-: ,I rno~;i \ \ Jlh !hi'
1· :.dn •P ~:~-- 1 t•ll " 1n 1'1:-1:-.. Ht· h.td
~ 1t·il

. ;:- ·,

und•' rgonr d r· u,c rf'hdbilitat 1011 in
l~l&amp;i . ..tf1Pr ht· ·.~·a~ 1d Pnt1fiPd
fo ll o ~1 · ing Th e Pa triots'
Super
Bow ! dcfrdl ,1.._ ht' ing onP of '&gt; IX
\t&gt;lt l·:ngl and playP r s in,·rtl\·r d
\dlh na r\ (l!Jr ~ A ! th ou~ h a Pro
Bow ' ;:wr f urmr·1 ~., · ith \rw Fn g
l:tnd . thr P;1tnot-. c\·r•ntuall\
\\ ;11\' t' d him
('IJI[IIl:'o '- did

ht• h,l' bt •t' n frp f• Of

1\ r U ~" '-.lflt 't' \\.1 \ l ~IX:I
L'ulil ll ' .._ ,tid Il l' h,11.. IJf'l'll JJ\kin~
\\ llh P.1 1n O!'&gt; o ffrcia h dlx.JUI 1he
p o~ o..,ib!lJt\ ol mJk in g h 1 ~ ro m P·
b.ll'k in \Pw En g land . Grnrral
:-.1 .~n&lt;~ g t'r l ' ,il nck Sul\i\·an co uld
n•Jt tw r'f'~Jcllt • d !o r rommrnt on
\\ lir th PI !ht • !Pam ~~·uu!d hr
1\ · illin~ t•t !ctkl · him ha ck.
llmrt '\ J'l . ~ul ll\' .tn d1 ci ~a .\ · tht ·
t•·ctnl ·,\,1'- 1\(•t•p!n .e :1n open m i nd
on thl' ]111'-.'-. I !J i lll '&gt; :tl iliing i ng
h.J('k ].\ ( nrwt~1 Stm!'-1 \t•v. F n~
l.tnd H.il\t•rl t lw rlt'lt•no.,J\t' i' nd
\.1~ 1

!11' 11\l)'

n1 t · r H, ·

•e hi

'· .1'&lt;1 11.._:

llt

\ ~ d"

.111 d ~ttl t t Jt ... h. qw T tlr

C..:.l.TJI)\ \1.'"" 1L'P J, - Th r
•II i)L'-ItJII Clc~:-...,lc '&gt;1 ilr11n g

'j'\illl.._,d, l\

.!'

f'l!' d'-,,101

\ ' a i lP\

rut! 1 ' I lub h.tl.. .1 S~Hl.fMJO
_p ,JI &lt;.. t · hu' It ' \\ , J! lhi" \ ( ',1 1·._ top
1 '

1•·11' p t, J',I'I '-

l lt '" fl ll l ' th 1· ptt ' '-l 'nCP o f two
r.rrw { "' Opt·n 1 h.illl piun Curii '~·:. J n ~,, .111d Hr1l1&lt;..h OJ-wn dl'

', n1:,·r .\!.1rk (',i\c:n i·rc hia . 1h1o..,
, , ,:: " H,1nk Cl l p,1, rnn ha s j u '-.1
· ,1 ·
"r hf• to p .!.l m rmc\' \\'i nnr·r ...
- ~·~ ol

·r:

, ,nf' \l of t he top ](I()
.tdlit(Jr.ci\)\ a Srp rrmbl'r f1x

' t1: 1 rt1.:t

( 1it'

"'JCCPPdrdrlrspilr-diffi
~~1e

bi_ggr sr
n.1mr" 11 r&gt;rr, th(' PC;:\ Tour, th r
:•&gt;IH n.tm f'n t ,,,I._ mo\·f' d to
" IJ : nmt·r drltl'&lt;... t)\ Cn mmi~:-;1 o nrr

I l~·.~n

,JIIIJC ting

Hr ·m. 1n

Thl'

I
I

nf · l.~

dJif'~ .

hO\A'f'\'('f,

- plM ' t•cl thf' R-1n k of Bos to n ju &lt;.. t
.tht •ad qf nr-.xf wrrk·._ Brilish
Opf·n ,t l Sr .- \ndrrw s, Sco tland.
.1nd l hf' f ie ld rP!!Pc t srhrcomprti ·
ttJJil '. \lltl Tllf' Old Coursr .
\\ ,n nf' l.P\'t thr Tour' s on J~ ·

tmt' ,,·inner. wa s rxpPc tf'rl
111 111 , 1r. 1h f' f 1P ld of 1-lli. bu t t h r r\ o
)J•dc!Jng monf'\ w!n nrr with ·
~ rln•v. \\'Pdne:-;da\· bPrau sp of a

: t ' 11 l'f' :

&gt;,
I

lll'l' k 1njur_
\

" I thtnk wr ' ll hP fi nf' ... said
tourn amront c hJ.irman Trd :\'lin -

go lla

'l ;l c-t u.t\1\ dr,n· r knmr I ,; to 20
11! thf • .l:LI'.'- :tui ht •r1 · nm\
o.., cdd
l· ..dCt \t '(Thi.i
F i ·.-t' nr si:-. \I'M"Jgo I v. ,,._ 1n lh t • -..nrH ' plar t'"th oo.,p gu\1, \~I ' ll' 1n You nt·Y~ • t
hno" I n Jlt ~ th.t H 1d; Tocld 1:.' -I J&lt;.r

un lh t•

l l'-l t nr .t '\p,tl
L.-1nco~"H '! · \ r,
14"17 1 r t,uld tw
'-lll tn g \d~t • tt' I .1n1 t(lcl ,J\ lr"
k ine! of ro u~-; h ro 1'1'.1\t/t' ·
Calc.l \1' 11 ·' li, l " I• •UL:h l' "' ' nppo
nt• nt in th · ~ ~· ll1&gt;i1 ' 1'\'1'111 nl t l \ bl'
him ... t •il T,\ -:1 \\·,· r' k" ago ~~t i hP
(;n•at J•r ! LutJJJi d Open ('al r i.l
VPlThi~l ~lu~&gt;d •Jil th£• 70 Th ho le
with il 1wo o.,t1ot \e ;J d ll\'l'r 1.&lt;•\·i.
He f inhhl'd du ublP bogr\·
bogr .\ · for J "har P nf _&lt;;, r•cond ll hr
fif th timP tlli " &lt;.;pac,nn thr :\o. :~
m o nr _
\ · 1\ inn •• r
tl a s
bf' r n
n ltl /l( ' \

runnC'rup
" H ar tf ord ·.._ thf' o nr th a t hu r t
thr mo~;r." said CalrJ\ 'PCc hia .

· Thai one I liar ou1 blew
"Not taking anYthing av.·d\
from W a\· nr. but !hal onf' hurt . I
real lv fel l good . I feilln con lrol of
myself and m\ gamr- I j usl
sc rrwrd up ."
Calca v rrchiil
i s opt rmi stl r
Pi•'a sanl \ 'a llry will be a plea·
sant rx prriencr for him a s he

1unrs up fo1 Scot land .
I n thP firS! s ix month.s o f thr

:li iii P bi l bPcausc of lh e British
Open." sai d Ca l cavecc hla. lhe
!988 Bank of Boston winner and a
1hird·place fin rs her here in 1989.
" But there are still a lot of great
plavNs hrrc. You are stil l gorng
ro .'&lt;'I.' a lol of g reat go lf. ..

Timoth _\ \\ 'ill '-f'l'\ t'

as

c hai rman

rlf thP board. Dun !c l v.-111 becomr
pn •o..,ic\rnt. dnd .lanPt Will bPcomr
r'X I 'CU ii \' 1' \ 'lC'r president .

·.J Michae l RobiJiP. formc•1 l\
rx t·cuti\·r \'i CP pre siden t o f Rob

Stddium Co~·p . . no longrrwill
hi' c~ffiliall'd with the stad ium
co m pan Jt '&lt;...
Pfk c t h ·r·
1mmr
diatl' l\ ." 1hr trmwcs sa id in a
prep ~ln 'd rC'If'n sc \\'rdn esday
The- reo rJ,:a ni7ation occ urrrd 1~
cl;n·, a fter ~o u th Fl orida bu si
nes&lt;.;m ;,~n \-\'a_,·nc Huizenga bP·
camr J :)o pt •r ce nr p ~lrtnPr in Jop
bit·

thP tru stPC'S' act ion. T1 m Robbil'

"&lt;.lid "Thosr ar e fa m il\· mat tl'rs
and I ha\'c no commrn t t o makf:'
whatsOC'\'rJ' "

M ichael Robbi e. i1 \\'hu h as
b('('n in tr oublr with tllr law for
substancr abuse in th e past.
cou ld nor be reachrd
for
C'(l mmrnt
" I IOW'f'(ll'h of m~ children . but
it 's limP thr rhrrt' TrusteE's
rpcognizr thr wi .. hf's of all th ei r
brothe r ~ and sis ter s

Cobb~s

dCti o n camr lt) days aftpr S im ~
wa s Jr'rrstrd tn Austin. Tr:"ia s.
a nd c hargPd w1th possessi on ot
cord 1nr
"We're krep1 ng lhc op 11 on of
bnng1 ng h1m back. · Su l li,·a n

:-.rJ'&gt;On hr ha s h ad toconlt ·nd Wi t h
hc~ck

problrm. a broken to('
and. m os t rrcPt1 tl_v. a:1 injurrd
rrncion 1n h l'&gt; lrft shoul df'r .

&lt;., uftr rPd..t t
ll arl ford.

thri r i~hOpt·np rtoJ

quill'

Cord i sc h i sa id. "and the amou nt

p loyees rna:- have bilk ed Hal l of
Fam e thorou g hb red rra1ner
Cha rlie Whilli ngham ou1 of as
mueh as $2 million over the pas I
f ive years, it wa s reported
Thursday .
Whl tling ham's atlornev . Ri ·
chard Cra igo, said lh e ~one)'
was taken from the ii -year -o ld

of money involved is beteween $1
m illion and $2 million. Four
banks an d abou1 eight to 10

pa~-roll

July CLOSE-OUTS!
l JNDER THE BIG-TOP ...

i .~

c1 'vl 'hi lr "

F or S1 rangp t hf' Ba nk. of Ho ~ wn
l'lil ::.sic is a c hance to 1'1' grr:.up
after f;_ li Jing 10 win hi s rhircl
f'OnS('Cll ti VP
Opl' n l as t
month . Aft rr t aking two w eek s
off. St rangl'rPt urned toactional
!ht' An hC'u ser -Busch Classi c las t

u_s

week and fin ished eight h aflrr
C'ntcri ng t hr fi na l round in
s('co nd. three shots back of
eventua l wl nnPr La nny Wadkins .
DP fend ing c hampi on Blaine
McCa llister . rrcovered from a

3 BIG DAYS

accou nt s.

wr re

UP TO

\ r-- r-...A---

$2,500

\ Get A $1,000\

anoth rr s1atP to larr c h argrs

!wo month s CI RO .

of th e

un dersta nd in g
·we l alked on lhe ph on&lt;' in
Chicago &lt;a I l hr Ali ·Star Gamel,
and I told th em that I drf inilel'
lh oug ht , sin ce lhev kn ew I didn't

ca re t o manage nr x t _vear . th a t
we ough t to make a c h ange "

FACTORY CASH
BACK ON
SELECTED MODELS.

1991 S-10
TAHOE

Met s wcrf' fi n•d. and \\'hitr~
HPrzog rrs tgnf'd ta:o; t wf'rk- aI so
i n San D1r~o
from tht •
C' Mdinah .
Ht'r!Og . llkf' :vlci-\Pon . al sn
sr- r~Pd a .... hi s tram·~ g t' neral
McKl•n n. who ~ignrd ,1 .l -\'f'Jr
rontrJcT to ro ntmue as managrr
Sr pl li ~~~ . had a t 't:i Jh1
n·cord with San Dirgo He ,1\ Sil
ma naged Ka n sas Ci t ~· fmm Jq7.l

\ Eighty-Eight
·
Royal!

vt-· V'r--~

ONLY $8999 ••

1991 S-1 0
TRUCK

i s lhe f tflh maJOr·

manaw·r

1975 and Oakland for portion&gt; of
thr 1977 amd 19'iR srasons.

1990 CADilLAC

Air. rally wheels

SEVILLE

ONLY$7995 ••

$21,777

McKeon &lt;;aid last \~ · rt• k hrw ou ld rq •n t uflll~- lra,·r as man
ager . bu t not un til nex 1 ~P a ~o n .

Thai changr•d with lhr Padres
gC"tting rrad _
\ · for J f our g;~mr
· &lt;:.rr ir~ 111 Pir1 sbuq::!h bP c: innmg

ThursdOI
Th i~ .;;erml'd t ht · t 1mP !or ..; uc h

446 ·4524

SEDAN SEVILLES

$20,888
*REBATE TO DEALER

loaded

SALE PRICED AT

$14,999.

1990 CAVALIER
Auto .• air. stereo

$8995

**PRICES INCLUDES : REBATE AND
FIRST TIME BUYER INCENTIVES
BACK TO DEALER

1
I

'

~
~

~

0

~
~
~

from 1R41h on thl' money ! LSI lo

3 BIG DAYS

12:l
·' I 've made $70,000 l he las I [cw
w~ek s, " sa id M cCa lliste r " I feel
physically good and m\· scores

HATS-BALLOONS
AND POPCORN!

a re s tarting to show it "

JIM

COBB

CHEVROLET -OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC-GEO, INC.
992-6614
308 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

~

1:00 ,1,

9·10

~·

t

"DAY S Qr THUifDH " )

RA~[[~D~IP~G~).::=======~

BRUCE WILliS
, D Ol\\l I

TODA~

7 30 .9:45

FR!Did 7 30,9 :4)

SAT l :JO .J ·4,, 7:J0,9

~ ;.

,3 . 45, 1:30, 9 45
THUR 7· 10,9 45

SHOP AND COMPARE
1990 FORD TEMPO

1990 FORD TAURUS

J mo,·e." new Padres managing
pa rt n er Tom \ Vernrr sa id
A member of th e Sa n Di ego

fron t offlcr since July 1980, th e
cig ar-c homp in g McK eon ea rned
I he ni c kname "Trader Jack " for
engi neerin g deals involv i n g big·
nome ~ l ayers. Among those hr
hos acqui red. de alt or s1gned are
Ro lll r Fi ngers , Ozzic Smith.

PREFERRED EQUIPMENT PKG . 204
'MANUAL AIR CONDITONING
'STEREO RADIO W / CASSETTE PLAYER
'ROCKER PANEL MOLDINGS
'SPEED CONTROL
' REAR WINDOW DEFROSTER
' LIGHT GR.OUP
' PAINT STRIPE
'FINNED WHEEL COVERS
'REMOTE FUEL DOOR / DECKLID REL E ASE
'POWER DOOR LOCKS
"SIX -WAY POWER DRIVER 'S SEAT
"POWER SIDE WINDOWS
3 .0L EFI V6 ENGINE
AUTOMATIC OVERDRIVE TRANS
FRONT AND REAR FLOOR MATS
FRONT LICENSE PLATE BRACKET
P205170R 14BSW
CORNERING LAMPS
STYLED ROAD WHEELS

SPECIAL VALUE PKG . 226V
'FLC AUTOMATIC TRANSAXLE
'MANUAL CONTROL AIR CONDITIONING
'POWER LOCK GROUP
'DUAL ELECTRIC CONTROL MIRRORS
'TILT STEERING WHEEL
'POLYCAST WHEELS
'REAR WINDOW DEFROSTER
'LIGHT GROUP
'ElECTR AM/FM STEREO CASS / CLOCK
2.3L EFI HSC 4 CYL. ENGINE
FRONT LICENSE PLATE BRACKET
P185170R14 BSW TIRES

Ga rrv Templf'ton . Bruer H ur st.
.l ark Cl ar k and Joe Carter
R1ddoch. wh o 1urns 15 Turs
day, m a naged in f inrin na!i' s
!arm s\'s tem fr om 1973 81 He
then srrved in Th f' Hrd s' c;;courinR

ONLY

dr panme n1 for fi ve yea rs beforr
joinin g Sa n Die~ o as A ssociatr
Dt rPct or o f !'vtin or Lf'agues and
Scou ti ng

SAVINGS

Ri ddoch took (_~, · rr as Di rrctor
&lt;J! Minor Lra g-Uf' Ins !r uc ti on tn
rt' b 19R6 V.'hPn Sti'\'£' Boro s was
namPrl Sa n Dirgo man agf'r. th r n
brgan a s '-• Pad rf· .., ·coach in 19~'7 .
Hr "tanrd thi s sPason il"- fi rs! ·
bas r coac h brfon• mm·i ng to 1hr

OF $3193

S IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
SAVINGS

1990 FORD THUNDERBIRD

dugout
·' J han• had numProu ~ co nn' r
sati on.;; \d t h t ; r rg thr pJ st fr''
dll _\'S a nd I frrl fo rtun &lt;1 tr to nJml'
him our mJ na):!rr ... Wrrnl·r .;.; aid .
· ·Grrg 1.0.., a leader who ha s some
1dra s that wil l hl'lp ro max1mtzc

OF 53492

3 IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

1990 FORD CROWN VICTORIA

1ht· pO IPn tJ al of our c lub . ·

Aftr•r

McKeon re place d lhr-

firrd Bm~· a . tht' Padres m~ldC' a
rl r JmJtic i ur nar ound . goingb7 -..JH
tu finish thr I~ X8 seaso n in th ird
plarr Th r team sta rtrd slow ly

PREFERRED EQUIPMENT PKG . 151 C
'ELECTRONIC AM / FM STEREO W / CASS
'6-WAY POWER DRIVER ' S SEAT
'REAR WINDOW DEFROSTER
'LUXURY GROUP
'CAST ALUMINUM WHEELS
'P215170R15 BSW TIRES
3 .8L EFI V6 ENGINE
FRONT FLOOR MATS
FRONT LICENSE PLATE BRACKET
AUTOMATIC 0 / D TRANSMISSION
POWER LOCK GROUP

a gain last \C' ar . but wound up
H9-/.1. jus t th rpe ga m es brhi nd
cham p ion San Franc isc o
·· Lr t mr sa_v to ou r grf'al fans
that wr Pxprr! to ha\'f' a stron g
St'ron rl h all. " \\ .f'r nPr s&lt;Jid " Th r
l'adrrs \\C'r r 12 gJ m f'." our last
.lui\ l ~llh . and Wf' illtPJVI 10 riDSl'
thi s gap o..,ho rtl ~

PREFERRED EQUIPMENT PKG 113
"SPEED CONTROL
"FRONT/REAR BUMPER GUARDS
"REAR WINDOW DEFROSTER
"S TEREO RADIO W / CASSETTE PLAYER
"POWER LOCK GROUP
'SEAT 6 -WAY POWER DRIVER ' S
"CORNERING LAMPS
'LEATHER WRAPPED STEERING WH EEL
'CAST ALUMINUM WHEELS
'ILLUMINATED ENTRY SYSTEM
LIGHT TITANIUM
REAR HALF VINYL ROOF
5.0l EFI VB ENGINE
FRONT / REAR CARPETED FLOOR MATS
FRONT LICENSE PLATE BRACK ET
AUTO OVERDRIVE TRANSMI SS ION
P215170RX15 WSW TIRES
CLEARCOAT PAINT

VACATION SPECIAL !
I

1

[B""TIRES
u;r'BRAKES
~FRONT END PARTS

3

ALIGN AND FRONT END

·8

~

~

~

~

0

6

992-2094

•
SAVINGS

OF $430 3

3 IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

See Rick Tolliver, Jay Hill, Pat Hill

1

Pomeroy

OF$3767

2 IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

Couaon

GOOD THRU 7 1 31190

SERVING THE AREA FOR 23 YEARS

SAVINGS

~

~I M~!!r~AE~~RA Sl 9~h 1
L-------------------------------1
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
600 E. Main St.

UC{PI "()[£ HAPD

-DIIHMDtR-

1

1991 CAPRICE

l~

' - - - - - - --

- - COt:POS COL PO"' ('01 POl' COl' PO"' COI:I'O"' COL PO"' _ _,

1990 CADILLAC

"'ROUfE
"""""'Wf.Sl
""

LAST OArr
IIIARR[N BEATTY in "DICK TRAC'!'"

u sed .

tha t o nf· or mon? suspec ts rna)
havf' 10 be rxtradi l ed f rom

sc hf'me. w hic h was discovPrrd

las I month .
Pollee investigator John Cordi
sc h i sa id more than one person
was in vo l \·ed in the sca m and

Braw s and Davrv John son of lhr

1 U.S. Savings
( Band or 1500
\(ash Ba1k on

mance makes her an unlik PI\
ea ndldal e to do well lhis lime
eitll er.
"T here are sti ll some th1ng&gt; 1
wa nt to accomplish. like anot her
Ope n, " sa id Stacy , 36. " But 1
cou ld walk away from 1he game
now and be f ulfilled . I've had a
pre I ty good run ."
While this week' s tournamen1
Is at th e same club as th e 1976
m en 's Open and the 1981 PGA
Championship, It 1s being played
on a dlfferen t course. The m en
played on th e 7.000-yard High land s course and the women will
be playing on the 6,298-yard
Riverside course.
" It does n't have th e recogni
lion of the Highlands course , bu 1
Riverside Is tough too." sa1 dclub
pro Tommy Brannen. " I thmk
th e winner will wind up pretty
close t o par 1288 1...

521~

S275

eARGA I"' MATIN([ S ".&gt; AT ' SUN ~~ED
BA~CJ..!N N! Grl~ TU[SDAV

Wh ill ingh am. who ope raws his
sw bl e o ur of San 1a An lla , Holly ·
wood Pa rk. Del M ar and I he San

!Pagur m anagrr t o lr ;.~\·r thi."
c:.r ason
Bucky Drn t of tht '
Yankrr s. Russ \ix on of thr

TH URSDAY -FRIDAY -SATURDAY

thrC'e-m onth bout with m on o nu clc-o ls. ha s made th P c ut in four
tourn~~ments in a r ow and gone

McKeon. r:ho too k over for
Larry Bowa on May 28, 1988, will
continue as the team's vice
president of baseball operations.
Coach Gr eg Rlddoch was nam ed
Continued on page 5

Crai go and Cord isc hi sa id
payroll checks were i ssurd t o
fi ctit ou s and former Whit ·
ling ham employees and endorse
menrs ap parentl y were forged 10
cash lhe ehecks . Fraudulenl
Soc ial Secu r tly numbers also

Lui s Rev Down s tra i ning center
'" Bonsall. told the Times that
somec ne wa s "padding lhe pay ·
ro l l Th ai 's no1 hard 10 do I' ve
go1 more tha n 100 rmplove es
It'll v.:ork out so mehow ."
SJIIV Stubb! Pfi eld, Wh illtngh ·
:Jm s bookkeeper for I he past
e1gh1 \·e ars. lcfl her pos1 aboul

5~ .

SPRIN&amp; VALLEY CINEMA

&amp; 'N{0~£SOA Y •

acco unt s art&gt; Involv ed. "

m os1l y i n form of pa~che&lt;:ks
issued to non -existen t rm ·
ployees, I he Los Ange les T1me s
repo ned .
The Sierra M adre Po!Jcr De
panmenl and I he DlStrtcl Al tar
ney's Of fice IS investigaling lh&lt;'

McKeen.

Open since and her 1990 pcrtu r

~ A TUIWAr/SU tt OAY

' This is a long paper !rai l."

rm -

tra i n er's

non-existent

division -le ad i ng Ci nci nna ti
" I j u st felt th at tw o jobs wen•
too much." McKeon said lJI a
nrw s con fp r encE' at Jac k MurphY
Sta d ium " I wa s r eill ly gl'ttJng
bu rdPned . I 1al ked to thr o wnn~
And I rPa l lv apprrcia tc Th1•i1·

tu

! hi' h1 ·althil'sl I 'n •
bP1 ·n tn d lo ng t imt'." lw &lt;, (I ida ft1·r
o.,hnn1ing ;1 om• O\'t'r 7'2 i n Wednl'"
d, l\·· . _ ;1m am
·Ont' th i n ~ ur
tlnothl ' l h;1o., borhNed m1 for
· · Thi .~

bu sy

One of the p reseaso n favo rit es

"&lt; Sul li,·an 1 told me the da) of

;t

for

ll[C!Al SLI*EII B.I.IHiAIN fii.ATIN [[S

Page 5

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

bPca usp th P offseason was too

1n 1hc r\L West, Sa n Di ego ha&gt;
playPll poorly this st'ason Th e
Padn• s :n 43, havp lo s t eight of
th eir la stlO game s to tumblP i nto
fourth place. 13 1 -~ ga m e~ beh!fld

It would take a dras tic cha ngt' tn
Krn ·.., pt•rso nall ty ."
Sul!i\·an sa1d Sims would ha\'1'
to losr \n'igh t and becom r morr
dJSClpll nf'd in hi s v;ork habi1 s.

Su l ll\·an hdd not d1scu ssrd thl'
mJttf' r· sincr 1h ~lt t lmr_ Simc,
c'ou ld nor bP rPdChPd fu1 com
mf'nl. hut h(• hJ.., .;,a 1d hr hoPf' S lrJ
pl,l\ l iJ0 1bJ.II ,lgclill. C' ll)lt'r inJ
\pH
EngL nHI or l n1 dllOThr·r
tt•,Jm

was

~ cason

told Th•· Boston Clobr "Gut
f ra nk!\ . I don 1 .\Pe 11 happening

nPi h gol 1n shape. hr would
c on sidrr bringing him ba c k."
.;;a id Sims ' agrnt. W i f1 Strwarl
Hov.:e\-('f. S!Pwar t sa id hr a nd

she won six tourn aments and a
Tour· leading $654.000.
" I wou ld have been surpr ised
lo have I he sa me kind of yea r I
had in 1989," sa id the 34-year·old
Pennsylvanian "I wasn ' t as
prepared when I sta r ted I he year

LOS ANGELES ! l:Pi i - Pa v
c heck s

to man age 1he remaindrr

l--\ r nnr1h '" rele ase tha t if Krn

and says shP hasn ' t

'u ntlnuf' d !rom pag P -l

McKeon resigns Padres post
SAN D IEGO 1UPI1 - .Jack
McKeon followed th ro ugh on his
desire to leave thP dugout Wednesday, resignin g as manager of
l hr Sa n Diego Pad res wi th lhe
tr am m1rrd 10 a deep .s lum p.

tndPr th&lt;· rt'organization w tu c h J fflocl~ Robbir Stadium
Cu rp . Robb iP ConcPssio ns Cot·p
and H o bb1r· ~corPbDard Corp. -

football tram .
On .Junr 2~1. t haT dea l w;1s
c losed aftf' r 11 rrrrin·d a!Jprm·a l
f rom
t ht' .'\ational
Footba ll
Lc&gt;agur . E lizabclh Rabbit• ' aid
th(' sal r 10 HuizPnga v; ~Js madP
o\·r r hCI' objec tions.
Of his mo ther's d rnu ncia t ion of

the LPGA or I he du Mau ri er."
Only four players hav e won
back to-back titl es in the 45-year
histo r y of th e women's Open M ickey Wright 11958-59 1. Donna
Ca poni ! 1969-701 , Susie Berniqg
11972- 73t and Ho lli s Stacy 11977
781
Stacy also won the '84 Open .
bu l ha s not playe d we ll i n the

MCKeon .. · - - -(- - - ' - - - " - - - - -

·Thl' caliber nf golf" 111 bP

grpal
" The tournament got hun a

Turs d a~

R o bbi e Stad i um and 1~ pPrcent
ownrr of the \'1iami Do lphi ns

fou r majors and I haven 't won

played as well as last ye ar when

Winn ing lhP Open thl .; wr c k

\

Bank of Boston field hurt by
=
British Open date this year
Ho~nh

l or- Mirnln l'-ll'nng Rob
St&lt;Jdium Cu rp
Hl' wa s
r·r m O\·r d fr orn th ;1t po&lt;.;t latP
hi~~

Jim

Collins wants to come back;
Patriots may take back Sims

Shore -

Scam may have skimme~
$2 million from L.A. tracks

Janrt . and tv.-n
so ns, Timoth~· and Dan irl. to J\1
ilS trust ers of h1s Pstatr 111 hi s

M cE lroy. Terry McGuire, and Terry Reutt•r .
Seeo nd row : Coac h Bill McElroy , Kevin Taylor.
Chris Stewart . .-\ndy Baer, Hank Cleland, \\ es
Young . . Jeremy Phalln, Malt Finlaw, Eddie
Croo ks and Coach Mike \\right. Absent wlirn
picture was lakrn w r r(' S(:ott McDonald. ,Jason
ll ag••r and l'irn Bisse ll.

more

MIAM I iL'P i t - M1kr Robhie
wa s Firf'd a~ f'xrcutiw" ,·icf'
pres 1den1 of .Joe Robbie Sta d ium
b _,. a sistr r a nd two br othPr&lt;.. w tm
"r n ·r as tru stPf'S of h t ~ f at hr r ·.,
PStatr. p r omptt n g a &lt;.;Jtng ing

hi s dau g htf' r.

LEG IO"' TO OPEN TOl 'R"',\~ E"'T PLAY
Tht· .\1t·i~ Amt•rican Legion tf•am ( 1'! · 15) will
pia.\· lam•a.~ojter r ll -20) in E ighth Dh•trid
l'o urn amt•nt action Frida}' nighl in Athens. Tht•
~ arne will start al 5:30 at Dalton Firld " ·hifh j,
Jlart of Uu- .Jayfr-r- Firld co mplex on " 'rst Stalt·
~tr;u•t. 'fpam mt•mhers indurlt• in lhP fir~ I rm-1- .
!'rom tht• ldt : ,Jason \\-'right, Er it H1·&lt;·k .. Jot·

year; and Ha ll of Farner Nancy
Lopez, w ho. like Sheehan, has
never won t he Open desp ite so
much success el sPwhere.
"That hasn· t bothered me as
much as you might think." said
Lopez , who Includ es three LPGA
Champion ships among her 42
Tour vi ctori es. "Of courst' I'd
lik e to wm lhis w eek , thai 's m y
goal In every tournament. bu 1 if I
don ' t , I won' I dwell on i t."
Al th ough she's won $276,1XKI so
far t his yea r. King has only on&lt;'
victor y to her credit - thp Uin ah

Robbie fired as stadium head
drnunctation f rom thctr m o thrr
1\c dnrsda\ .
Eltza beth Robbw . sn iP bl'n t' fl
r ian· o f hf'r hu &lt;..bd n d's tru st .
c hastised her thrrt • Children whD
Jn' ser \·tn g as tru s trl· s l or
· ·pulling the Robbif' lf'gaCI and
bu sinessPs a t ri sk ·
T hr !a lP Joe Robbie appoinlrrl

., Ff/. 9

Interna tio nal.

"I didn't hav e th at much time
to myself and I'm a little tired.
You can' t turn It on and off. M y
game Is okay, but no I great."
King . who broke out of thai
third -round tie with Shee han with
a closing 68 to wi n las t year's
Open, says she's m ore interested
In winning the LPGA Championship 1wo weeks from now than
I his year' s Open
"Tha i does n't mean I don't
car e about the Open," Kin g sa id.
" ll' s jusl th ai I want to win a ll

also has won three times thi s

d isappoint ed la st vea r wh en she
went into th e fina i round li ed for
lhe lead and co llapsed wilh an
8-over-par 79.
"I'm hitting the bal l well and
my co nfidence le ve l is up, "
Shee han sai d Wedn esdav on lh e
eve of l his year 's Opp~ at th e
A tlanta A thletic Club. " It 's fun 10
show up and pla y when thing s are
goin g great. "
Th ings are goin g gr eat for
Sheehan this yea r She's won
lhree LPGA IOurnam en ts- th e
J amaica Cl assic, the MoDo·
na ld 's Ch ampionship, and lhl'

Roc hester

v

PvPn

won ' t be easy. All of th e lop
women golfer s ar e in th e ]56player field. lnrludlng defending
champion Betsy King; No. 2
money lea der Pat Bradley. who

runnerup in thr f'P others, and
leads th e monr-y list with
$4 ]J. 000 .

~ pon!-ltblr

The Daily Sentuld

Pomeroy Mtddlepon. Ohto

Sheehan expects better fortune in U.S. Open

Ohio fishinK report

B.. l 'nitt&gt;d Prt&gt;ss Inter national
T~w ~\'Prkl _\ !i shmg rl· pon.

Thursday. July 12. 1990

PAT HILL FORD INC.
461 SO. THIRD

992-2196

MIDDLEPORT

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

, 2, 1990

Brewers outlast White Sox
•
m 13 innings; A's top Twins
By United Press International

the game to jlartlhe 1llh, earned
hi s first victory in :IG
appearances.
Orioles 7, Royals 5
Joe Orsulak and Ra ndy Milligan delivered run·scoring sin gles In Ihe seven th innin g to help
Curt Schilling notch hi s firs!
major league victory and lead
lhl' Baltimore Orioles to a 7-5
victory over the Kan sas City
Royals .
Schilling worked two hitles s
innings for the win . Gregg Ol son
pllched ou l of a nlnlh ·inning jam
Io record his 18th save.

Darryl Hamilton bounced a
single to right to score th e
go-ahead run In the 13th inning
Wednesday, helping the Milwau kee Brewers to their first extra·
inning win of !he season, and
spoiling the Chicago White Sox
"Turn Back !he Clock" day with
a 12·9 victory .
Milwaukee !railed 9.3 before
rallying for six runs In the eighth
Inning on four stra ight walks and
three hits to ti e the score.
Hamilton drove In the lying run
to cap the oulbursl.
The Brewers en tered the game
0·6 In extra·lnnlng games and
had been held scoreless in 22

The Orio!Ps tralled 52 afler six
innings before ral lying to lie lh e
score In the fourlh and take lhe
lead In the seventh.
Bi 11 Ripken singl ed off Steve
farr, 6-4, and advanced 10

extra i nnings befort? scoring in

!he 13th. The While Sox have• loSI
three straight and fi ve- or six .
The promotion saw a return to
1917 and the uniforms worn by
"Shoeless" Joe Jackson and I he
World Series winning While Sox,
the last ba se ball champ ions In
Ch icago history . General admis ·
sian llckets at Comiskey Park
were lowered Ia 50 cents, and
some of the 40 ,666 fans in
atte ndance joined the ga la by
dressing in garb from the ear lv
pari of the century.
Dan Plesac. 1-3, who enten•u

st:•cond on Brad Komminsk 's
sCJcrifiee. He moved to lhird on a

Mike Devereux sing le a nd scored
on Orsu lak 's single. Milligan
followed with

a

run -sco ring: sin ·

glc to make il 7·5.
George Breit's had three dou
blcs and notched h1s 2,600th
career hit for the 11oya ls.
Athletic'S II , Twins 7
Jose Ca nseco and Jo sf' F'l'lix
had three hits and lhn't' RBI

each, powering 1he Oakla nd
Ath letics to an ll ·7 viciOry over
the :\llnnesola Twins .
Ca nseco doubled 111 a run in Ihe
fir sI inning and belted a 1wo-run
hom er lo cap a flv e·run fourlh .
Fe lix added a lhrPe·run blast in
the ninth to help the A's open a
lwo-gamt• lead over Chica go in
thP Amt•rican Leagu e Wes t .

11ickev Hender so n doubled,
singled, .scored twice and slole a
base, and Jamie Quirk add ed
lhree hil s for the A's. who
pounded oul 18 hil s.
The Twins, who also had lH
hil s, were led by l&lt;l rby PuckPII 's
Hor-5 performanc e. which in
elud ed two doubles and three
RBI.
Oakland s tarte1· Scott Sa nd er·
son, 10-5 , gained th(l v i c tory .

Allan Anderson. 2·12. los t his
8th s tr aight gamr.

Marint•rs 2,

An~t&gt;ls

I

Er ik Hanson an d two relirvers

co mbined on" four ·hilt Pr . lifting
thP Sealtle Marin ers lo a 21
v ictory ove r thr Ca liforn ia
Angels.
Han son, 10·6, allowed lhr An
ge ls four hil s and one run over 7
J.:J Innings, strik ing out eigh l " nd
walking thrrr.

OUT .'\ 1' 110.\ IE - ~linn&lt;•.,ola's Kt·nlllrhPk ill)
~~des into honw. hut Oakland harkstop .Jamie
Quirk waits with Ihe hall to make lht• out play in

th•• first inning of Wt•dnesday night's game in
Minneapolis, whkh the Athletics won 11-7. (UPI)

Tampa Bay signs 'Barna's McCants
By IRA KAt:l'\1!1.)';

Ul'l Spor~s Wril&lt;•r
TA:'olPA. fla . iL Pl i - .~II Amcr1ca l1nebackrr
Krith McCants, claiming, "I don't want to bP a

Dona ld Trump ... agreed to a fi\·r ·.\ Par contract
wi th th C' Tampa Bay Duccd nf'rrs WPdnPsda _v and
sa id he was un concer nt&gt;d whrlhrr othr r !\ Fl . draft
cho ices evPntually s1gn ro r morT' monP_v
Thr rourth pick in !h(' draft , dtTO rTlpan il'd bv

at:tornry Lance Lurhnick and rl ub nq::ot i atur Phil
Krurger. expressrd rl'l id at rnming to rrrm ~ nim ·
dciys bPforr th r Buf'C'&lt;Hl&lt;-'('rs hqo: in rrain1ng camp .
M'tCa n ts joi ns q uar lt'rba ck Jpff CPorg .. t Ind ian a ·
13Jiis 1 and defPn sin• bach: Mar k CarriPr ICili ·
l"tl.go1 as the thrPP first round choices ""''hO havr
S1gned \JF'L con rr arts Tlw IV.t) pl&lt;J~· ~'l"." sf' l rctrd
&lt;V.reclly.· bl'fon· MrCanh - Blc~ir Th omds of th('
.}('t s and Sra ttl( ' " Cort£'1 f\t · nnt·d~· - rf'main

uns ign ed
''I'm hf'r(• for f1n• ~ t'dr .., ;1nd I 'm rPLtd _\· to grot
~rtPd ... ~;, a i d McCants . whosr rlr~tt stock sl ippPd
iii April with l't'porh hr rt·quirr·d irnmt•ditJtP
rJlaj or knrr surgN_v ''I don twa n t ro hr &lt;l I &gt;ona lcl
Prump . I just w.mt ltJ lw c ~ nnfn rtalllt • I'm not
lOoking lor $1:1 mitliun . I f! dt •st'r\'1' it. J'P get it

latPr ..
Te rm s nl t ht • rontr :1c t wprr undi sc lnscd, bu t tJn
Jl labama nt•wspap('r rPport£'d McCant s wou ld br
J'(lid $7.4 milli1m . inc luding

J $~

;) mil! 1on si gn ing

~nu s
: "Ou r goal frum lht · twginn1ng wa s lor f\ Pit h to
1:7(&gt; in com p this Vt'ar n• ad.v to pl dy, .. h ruL'gPr sa icl .
.'1'1 would likP to commend thr matunt~· &lt;o. hown bv
K{&gt;lth M cCan ts. You alw;1' -. hm· t· t o br c onccrnrd
if·Krith Si$!n{'d hrfor f' thf' .No. 1 and r--.·o. 3 pl&lt;:~ yf•rs.
~h£&gt;thPr that would CJffrct hi~ pt · r~IX'Cti\ ' t ' Hr's
:c surPd rnr ht· doPsn ' t ( ' JI' I ' what thP i r agrPP
fftent s .Hf' . It takrs ;t lit lit• bi t ul CI)U ra g t• to do

-

FRITO LAY

I ha I "

Thr Bucranrprs were burnrd la s t vear whPn

find co mm o n groun d with Krueger before ca mp

Tampa Bay hcau coach 11av Perkin s. who
recru it ed McCan Is to th e Uni vcrsllv of Alabama.

REG.

ignored t hl' p re -draf t innurnd()('S about M f'Ca nt s'

rig ht knee and spec ulation Luchnic k would he a
t ough nPgotJator. McCa n ts had arth rosco pic kner
surgpry a few days after the dra ft to l'orn•ct a
chronic problem Ihat has plagued him since hig h
sc hool .

-

" II 'sa load off." Perkins sa id of McCa nts' earlv
signing _ ·'But wc&gt;vf' still got a lot of oth er guys t.o
sign Kei lh himse lf had as much lo do wilh il as
a nybody. For 8() perc en I of !Ill' pla,vers who come

12 oz. CAN

trai nin g ca mp. !herr's not a high degree of
posSibilily they can bf' in the 20 percent group"
McCan ts Is r xpeclt•d lo tram with Thomas at

j'Of\TLA:O.:D. On· . &lt;l ' l' l &gt; rtrst -round draft pi('k 1\la;J t\h
dilna by has yet lu ~ i gn d c onlri.H'l
~l h

lh r Por lland Trail Bl:&lt;lt·rs

hal accordi ng 111 lt' ii!Tl of f ic ia ls .
thf. Duk(• .-. rar ·,\'ill "ilill att Pnd
rookiP l'amp. which op(·n-.

Mo nda'
;rParn "1--HJkPsman .John Chr i.,

t'1'sc n sa1d Wednesday Abdr l·
nl&gt;by will also partlc&gt;pa le in th r
t~m· s rooh:i1 ' ga mr a wf'f'k fr om

Sqlurda1

A coo kout was held honorin g

JUICE
46 oz.

outs ide lin r bac ker , g iving thr Buccanrrrs a pair
u f vou ng first -round picks wi t h pass-rushing

abili ty. M.-Canls led the Crimson Ti de wilh 11q
tack!Ps as a junior hf'fOH' drc larin g hlm sp lf
t •lig ibiP for th P draft

Adbelnaby to attend Blazers' mini-camp
,\bdrlnabl said WPdnesday ht•
\\'Js a blr to pure hast· ~m in suranrP pu lir.Y th a t would PnabiP
him to practice without h&lt;lVlng to
worry i:l txlul h(' 1ng injun•d
·T m
not worr H'd a bo ut
whPthf'r or nor I havf' a con ·
trf-let ," Abdrlnahy: sa id . ' 'I'm
just look ing toga in t:t n adva n ta gP
by gelling ou1 !herr earlv ...
Blazers off 1c ia Is a l,so an
nounced WC'dnrsday that a!-. sls t
ant coaches .l ark Sch alow a nd

,_ --._.

Earlier Ihi s year, Schalow was
a finalist fort h&lt;' hea d coa ch's job
wit h lh&lt; Atlanta Haw ks . He will
now be entering hi s flflh yrar
Wi th the Blazers.
Wrtzr l, who just finished his
srco nd yra r with Portland, w as
Ihe head coach of Ihe Phocn lx
Su ns for two yea r s brforr joining

Russe ll Cline on his B3rd birlhda y
a1 lhe home of his daughl er .
Gra ce Holsinger of Tu ppers
Plains. He en joye d playing hor·
seshoes all day with his children
and gra ndchild ren.
Attendi ng were Mr and Mr s.
Russell Cline. Sy racuse: Crac e.
J unior , Brad. John and J ay
Holsin ger. Reeds\ille: Jim . Mar
garet. and Darla Cline. Beverly :
Sue. Matthew Andrew. Belhany
and Alyssa Martin, Bever ly,
Seva Cline, Co lumbu s. Paula
and Richard Cl ine: l&lt;all e and
Anthony Morris: An nett c. Ricky .
Raymond and Adam Luc as. New

Leah William s atlendcd lh&lt;
Jpwrll r r unlon Sunday at 1hr

[)eagle Club . where thrr r wrrr
slxtj' prrsr nt

Robert

; ~· .- )

~:s~~f
-

,/-:-':- :- ..!...-

\~0 &lt;~ ~)M-Ec~fu, ~-.
il·

-'- ' S""' .--

'.'(V110

''·' "'"'·\ /J1/.'
J..-~

\

\

I

\

I

·\,' ·'"

Ihe Blazers

Lexington: Damian &lt;Wd Donna

Lang: Ka thy, Doug, and Jos l
Thiem an:

Da ve

and

Glorine

Cline. Waterford: Carl and
Tam"'y Cline. Ma son. W.Va.:
Virgil and Pal Co ll ins. and Bes
Clin e, JohnsiOwn: Lisa Co llins.
Hunl lngton, W Va : Tony Forester , Racine : Earl. Sarah , Tom,
Jay, Mike and Chri slv Baumgar ·
dener. Eas1 Spri ngfield. Pa: Bill
Baumga rdc r er,C olumbu s, Rus
sell. F red:. .nd Crystal Holsln
ger. Chester: Paul and Brenda
Hol singe r: Hea th er Rif fle.
Pomf' roy: and Sama n th a Baile~ · ,

Reed svill e.

Harrisonville happenings

\
• l()o(ll.('f:jo ....., ,,, , ...

.l o hn WctzPl each sig ned new
tw o-yPar con tra c ts with an op·
1ion ypar_ T erm s or t hf' co ntrac t s
\VNP not di sc losPd.

Fairfax County, Va., on New Year's
Day in 1982. The young man who
killed her was Kevin Tune!!. He was
17 and intoxicated. The case went
to lhe juvenile coun. Tunell was
convicted of manslaughter and
drunken driving.
The Herzogs filed a suit for $1.5
million but setded for $936 to be ·
paid every Friday, $1 at a time. The
&lt;dea behind lhese weekly payments
was to remind Tunell on a regular
basis, until lhe year 2000, lha1 he
took !his young girl's life
AI his sentencing, Tunell was
ordered 10 spend a year talking 10
gmups aboullhe evils of drunk driv ·
ing . He completed !hat part of his
sentence but seems to have !rouble
w&lt;lh lhe weekly payments, so lhe
Herzogs ~ccp hauling him into coun.
Tunell offered lhe Herzogs a box
of signed checks for $1 each covering the payments_ The Herzo gs
refused to accept !he checks. Tw1ell
said the Herzogs arc being crue l
because they will not allow him to
putlhis incidenl behind him and get
on with his life. (He was recently in
court for the fourth time.)
Mr. Herzog told Tunell, "If you
want 10 get on wilh your life. JUSI
put !hat check for $1 in t11c rna&lt;!
every Friday. Thai's lhe day Susan
was killed."

You can be sure the Herwgs
would be lhnlled 10 send a check
for I 00 umes that amount every Fri·
day to Kevin Tunell if they could
have !heir daughter back. Does !hat
answer your question'
Dear Ann Landers: A gendeman
I met recently paid me a great com·
plimenL He said, "You have clas.s."
When I asked wha1 !hat meant, he
said, "Ann Landers defined class in
a column many years ago. Ask her
to run it again ." So, dear lady, will
you&gt; ·- LOVE IN BLOOM IN
KANSAS
DEAR LOVE : Wilh pleasure .
Here it is:
Class (by Ann Landers)
Class never runs scared. It is surefooled and confident. 11 can handl e
whalever comes along .
Class has a sense of humor. It
knows !hat a good laugh is lhc best
lubricant for oiling lhe machin ery
of human rclauons.
Class never makes excuses. It
takes its lumps and learns from past
mistakes. Class knows !hat good
manners are nothing more !han a
series of peuy sacrifices.
Class bespeaks an anstocmcy !hat
has nolhing to do wilh money. Some
extremely weallhy people have no
class al all wh&lt;le olhers who are
struggling to make ends meet are
loaded wilh it.
Class is real. You can' l fake it.
The person wi1h class make s
everyone feel comfortable because
he IS comfortable w11h himself.
If you have class you've g01 i1
made. If you don't have class. no
mauer what else you have, it docsn'l
make any difference.
Dear Ann Landers: I hvc in lhe
Bronx and went 10 spend Easter wilh
my sister '" Canada. I read a story
in lhe Calgary Herald that rccon·
rmns whall hav e believed for a long
time: Canadians are more honest
!han Americans. Get a load of !his:
A couple of women considered

Cline birthday is observed

PRICE $1 99

'0

Dear Ann Landers: Susan Her-

zog was 18 when she was killed in

Kevin 10 be rcmmded of whal he
did every Friday until the year 2000.

(PLANTERS)

out of colleg:r, it takes a yea r jus t to lear n what it
takes to pla y in !hi s league _F o rp layPrs that miss

Has trouble making weekly $1 payment

once. But Susan 's parents want

FREE

dPCided wr·rr not worril'd a bou t what othrr
at 10rnr.vs do and what other playrrs do ...

Page- 7

There has been a lot of discuss ion

BUY ONE
GET ONE

ope ned .July 10 .
" I t's a fa i r and equilahlt• eo nt rac t ," Luchnick
said · 'Kci lh made a llth• • decisions Both parties

Thursday, July 12. 1990

aboul the punuivc attitude of lhcsc
parents. When is enough enough,
Ann? .. UNDECIDED IN MIS SOURI
DEAR MISSOURI : Kevin Tunell
k.illed Susan Herzog and she is jus I
as dead as if he had shO! her wilh a
gun. Of cour;c it's a nuisance 10 have
to mail a check for $1 every Friday
for IS years . 11 would be much cas·
ier 10 hand over all lhe checks at

CHIPS

lmebacker Broderick Thomas, lh e s i~th playe r
ovrra ll, m issed trainin g: camp in a
con trarl dis pute Thomas did not star! a
regu lar st•aso n game and finish ed wit h ju s I 27
tac kles.
"Looking and see1ng what happened to
Broderick Thomas. I didn ' t wantlhal to happen to
rm•." sa id McCa nt s, who pressured Luchnick to
s~._• Jec tt&gt;d

~·

lj

,"

•

,'

~'

·i
(I

OBIDINAL
SNIK·EII DELUXE
SNICK MIX

'/

The Daily Sentinel}~

By The Bend

Gibson,

r olumbu s.

spent Sunday aftl'rnoon with hi s
parr nt s. Mr . and Mr s. Bob

Alkire
Thr

formrr

Artn('nr

OC'TT\

visi led Slclla Atkms and Leah
William s recentlv
WeekPnd ,·isitors of Mr. and

Mrs . Bob Mahr were thrir son
Fra nc is Fol rv, Columbu ~ . and
Th elma thlrb-PI of St . PL'tN S·

burg, Fla
Mill ard Chrislian re tu rned IO
his home fr om Ho\~:N :vJrdJca l
Ce nt er an d is slow\\· improving .
V irgi n ia G!bson spe nt thP wf'f'·
kPnd in Co lumbus visitin g M r .
and M rs. Al len Gibson and ~ons .
L aur a Cartwri g ht, Zane s villt~ ,

and Gold a Hart. McArrthu r .
\'i si ted l:lf&gt;lt~· Bishop Mondav .

~•c m se lvcs lucky to have found a
Calgary Safeway slore open on
Easter Sunday. They wanted to get
some cold cuts and soft drinks for
un expected guests. The women
didn't see any employees so they
pushed their carts around the siOre,
lhinking lhe clerks were s1ill in the
back (II was early) and would
surface a1 any momenL
As the women were loading up
lhe1r carts, about 15 more custom·
ers came in and began to shop. There
was sti 11 no sign of the clerks. They
called "yoo- hoo, yoo· hoo" but no
one came. They concluded !hat lhe
em ployees who closed the Slore
Salllrday night had forgotlcn 10 IUm
off lhe ligh ts and lock up.
One of lhe shoppers c.alled lhe
police. Several shoppers lefl before
lhe police arrived but lhey did nol
take any groceries wilh them_ One
man took a quart of oil and lefl his
money on lhe coumer.
A spokesperson for Canada
Safcway Lid. later Wid tl&lt;c press lhal
11 was an unfortunate incidcm and
he apologLZed for inconve111 encing
the cus10mers. He concluded by
sa ying, "Nolh in g appeared to be
stolen."
Can you im agine this happening
in New York, Ch&gt;cago or Detroit? I
can't -- AN OBSERVER FROM
THE SIDELINES
DEAR OBSERVER: Neilher can
I, especially after seeing TV shots
of looters having a field day when
there has been a fire, flood or na!U ral disaster.
I don't wantlo hear from any U.S .
citizens telling me to "love it or leave
iL" I DO love it and I am NOT leav ing it, but I wish we were as hones!
as our Canadian neighbors.
Dear Ann Landers: My son (I'll
call him "Steve") is doing hi s
medical residency at one of the
f tncst universities in the country. I
wem to see him las! weekend and
was horrified by lhe way he looked
-- dark cucles under his eyes and
lhin as a rail.
He told me he IS on ducy for 36
hours and off for 12. This goes on
day after day . !p my opinion such a
schedule is nolhin g shon of barbaric.
I asked Steve how he could give
good paticnl care when he is dead
on his feeL He replied, "I'm afmid
sometimes !he care isn'1 as good as I
would like il 10 be ." When I told
him I was going lo call Mike
Wallace on "60 Minutes," he yelled,

Ann
Landers
\\\ LA\O[RS
" IIJRIJ,

Lu ~ -\n~t'l,.,..

Timt-.. &gt;i1culirah· • ncl

( ro·alc.,-. "'~ndl('•lt'

"For Lord's sake, Mom, do you want
to get me kicked out or 1he
program?"
What can be done to help lhcsc
residents? Ann, you've been a good
friend of medicine for many years.
Will you please address !his problem? -· CONCERNED MOM
DEAR MOM: I did several years
ago, and it resulted in internecine
warfare between lhe late Dr. John P.
Merrill of lhe Harvard Uni versicy
Medic.al School, who agrwl wilh
you, and Dr. Norman Shumway of
Stanford University, who said il was
a good way to prepare medi cal slu dents for lhe real world.
Today, many specialties such as
dermatology, ophlhalmology and
proctology do not have such pun·
ishing schedules. However, surgical
residents who intend to specialize
in emergency·room trauma-type
treatmenl must be acquainted wilh
grueling schedules and il's tough.
Tell Steve, "Welcome to lhe world
of heroic medi cine ." (P.S. Las1
mmute updale: The Stale Heallh
Department of New York has issued
new rules limiting lhe hours that resi·
dents and interns can work . I
wouldn 'l be SU!]lriscd if other sla tes
followed.)

Rotary Club hears 4-H program
Dav id Rice of the Counlry
Bumpkins j -H Cl ub Ia Iked about
his recenl trip Ia Wa shington.
D.C. for the Cilizenship Washing·
ton Focus at this week' s meeting
of the Middleport -Pomeroy Ro·
tarv Club.
Rice was selected to represent
this area at the conference . He
joined olher youlh !rom around
th e country to do Sl udles on
Improving loc al surroundings.
He noted thai his long -term
goal is to increa se the percentage
of 18 to 25-year-o ld voters.
11 was announced that th e
regu lar meeting will be held on
Ju lv 16 al which lime member '
wili gear up a golf tournamenl

with the Middleport-Pomeroy
Lions ' Club on July 2J at the
Ja ymar Go lf Clv b.

Winners named
Winner s

in

a

recent

fund

raising projecl of the Racine _
Fire men's Auxiliary were Ro· =
nald Freeman, Clarence Brad· :
ford and Gloria Gibbs.
At a recent meeting presIded
over by Ann Layne. president.
plans were discu ssed for a Labor
Day ce lebration The pledge and
Lord's Prayer opened lhe meet ing

,.----~-

10 Karat Gold
Boys High School
Class Rings.
Sonoe

ro;,\l r ret ron'

1"'1h aoo1v See

Otter ends

"""'"" 1~. 1!1!11.

Feeling pressured lO have sex?
How well·informed are y&lt;Ju? Write
for Ann Larulers' booklet "Sex and
the Teen·ager ." Send a self-addressed, long, busillfSS·Size envelope
arul a check or money order for .,,
$3 .65 (tills includes posrage and
haruiling) to: Teens . cio Ann Lan ·
ders, P.O. Box 11562. Chicago . /fl.
60611-0561 . (In Canada. se nd

$199

00

REGULAR PRICE: 1254•

FREE CUSTOM FEATURESA VALUE OF OVER $50.00.

212 EAST MAIN

THE 1990

Adventist to
attend meeting .
Seve ral m ember s of thP Po me-·
roY Seven th-day Adventist
Churc h and Pa stor Bob Snyder
will join thou sa nds of Adventi sts
from around the world althe199U
General Confere nce Session i n
Ind ia napolis. Ind .. Sat urday .
Approx imatelv ~0.000 people
are expeclrd 10 attend lhr
sPssio n. T hP final Sa bbath sPr\'i ·

res will be ll ig hli ghtrd b1 the
D!vinr Worship SPrvicr se rmon
bv the new lv PlPCIPtl gP neral
cO nf erence p;·ps ident. J mu si c al
program and clos i ng m iss ion
pageant. ThrrC' wil l be nu Sab
ba th sen·JC('S thi s Sat urd ay at th P
Pom er ov Ad\·rntist Church. but
rrgular · se n· wp s will resum r

July 21. at 2 p.m .

- . . "-'
. -d
? ' //'

./

-'---.....---._
' ... '" ' -

~ ..

I

'

- -'

~---= __

1/
/,

jjJ

$1699
~ TN IR•II DIUW1 C ~

Availablo for A Llmiled Time Only!

PRICES GOOD AT
MIDDLEPORT STORE
ONLY
QUANTITIES ARE
LIMITED

•

·"- .
:: PROPOSED NEW HOME - A model of the
fi'eposed new home of the Baltimore Orioles Is
6Jivleletl by the Maryland Stadium Authority

,.
!'·-

.-

Wednesday. The new ball park, to be builtin the
Camden. Yards section of Baltimore, Ill slated to
open In time lor the 1992 season. (UPI)

WHITE CLOUD

BATHROOM

TISSUE

The Meigs County Fair Tab Is
Coming August 10, 1990
Advertising De~dline Is
August 1, 1990

$109

786 North
Second Ave.
Middleport

Phone
992·6491

CY

CALL BRIAN OR DAVE TO PLACE YOUR AD IN THIS
YEAR'S EDITION

992-21 ss
- ·-·- __,. __ - - - - ·-- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 0

�'

I

Thursday. July

Page- 8 - The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. July

BREITENBUSH HOT
SPR INGS, Ore. tUPli - E nvir ·
onmenta lists who have fought for
years to keep roarin g cha in saws
away from the home of th e
northern spotted owl now have
be&lt;&gt;n told their mu sic i s not
welcome in I he woods either.
The Forest Serv ice m oved to
squelch environmentalists ' plans
for a weekend concert next
month at a scenic fores t spot In

- LIMITED QUANTITIES -~ Hurry In While Selection Is Good!

Oq{a nlzational mt•c_•ting
.- \! 1 bo_y..; in gra dPs Sl'Vt'n and
t' !ght thi s fall wh o i:Jrf' interes t£&gt;d
111 p layi ng Junior Hi gh F oo tball
,\1 Sou thr rn Junior High School
' ho ul d report tonig ht Jl ~to thr
high school c afPIPria Informa -

l io n about thf• upcnmi ng st•aso n
will br di scussed Thnsl' who arr
lll1L' rl'S !f&gt;d,

bUt

f'd rlll Ol

~l{!f• nd

should contact Coach D a \·id G au l

"' :192 ob.lG
Plan organizational med

All hn\· s in gradr_.., ~ 1 ~ thi~ fall
\\'hO i ll'l' inrrrestf'd 1n pli:i _
\' i ng
h1g ll sC' hoo l football dl So ut~H'rn

High School s ho uld rrport tonig ht
.11 ~ : :m ro lh(· high . ., chool

PHILADELPHIA t UP I I
When John Dorrance .Jr . died lr f'
wa s one th e richest m en i n
Philadelphi a and left an estBte
wo r th $196,Hl 2, 1126.44, acco rd ing
loa n tnven l or yo fhisassests riiPd
!his w£&gt;ek in Montgomrry County
Orphans Court.
The heir Ia the Ca mpbell Soup
Co ., founded by hi s fath er , .J ohn
Dorrance. diPd April 9, 19R9 after
a he art attack . He was 70 .
BrforP taxes and othrr rx
penses wrre fartored In, Dorran ce's esta te wa s wo rt h $224 7
million. the Phi ladelphia In
quirer and Daily News sa id .
During hi s lifrtlme, hr was
so mC'I imPs rf' frrrr d to as a
billionnaire bu t t hat was not
accuratr, a ccordin g to cou rt
docum Pnts.
Dorrance, who lived in Glad
wync, Pa .left most of his estB te
to h is si x gr andch ildren when
changes in the 1986 t ax code
eliminated the advantage of
set ting up a trust.

1990 TEMPO GL
Stock II 588

Meigs area announcements
Stock II 146

cafe ter ia. Infor mation about the
upcoming season will be di scussed. Those who are interested
but ca nnot at tend shou ld contact
Coach Da v id Ga ul at 992 ~ 563!i .
Ubrary Book Sale
The Meigs County Publ ic Library in Pomeroy w ill havp a
book sa le July 16-20 from q 5 p m .
Pool Party
T he South ern Ba nd will have a
poo l party at London Poo l on
June 19 from 7:30 to 9 10 p.m
Boos ter s meeting
The Sout hern Local Roos ters
wr ll meet on Mondav at 6: 30 All
coa ches and parent s an• to
attend .

•Rear Seat

• 7!70

•Roll Bar

•Sharp!!

Limited Warranty

•Automatic

• Poly cast Wheels

• Air Condition

• Rear Defrost

• Power Locks

•AM/FM Cassette

•ntt Wheel

•Loaded!!

• Power Steering

sgggg*

,1'-.'-.j:-, j(JJ]i ("'

,\ ! ~ 11 a m. Hutland squod
v. .1 c. c al lr&gt;d to PomProv Prkr tor
Wrndrl! Grate. who ~~ as t ra ns

por tf'rl to Holler Medical Ce nter .
r\! X ,' lti a m .!VIi ddl epor!uni t was
r·.Jiio' d tu Bo ne liollow Hill fo r
Ch a r lpo.., Mc(Joud f-l p wa s tr.1ns
port I'd ro Holzrr !VIcdr c aJ Ce n ter
11omPrO\ was called to Main
~rn·er a1 II : 12 . Hr WJS takC' n to
VPlcran s !Vl emorial Hospit a l.
Mrddleport untt was ca lled to
MurTa\ Hil l Road for Richard
M&lt;-~rtin Mardn was treat ed bur
no r t r;J n o;; portrd AI 104 p.m ..
Rurlc~nd wa &lt;., r allrd to Haning
Hn&lt;Jd for- Clara Paning . Shr wa ...,
takPn rn Ho\zrr :vlf'dical Cr nter .
Chc-.tPr FnT' Dcpa r tmf'nl. Porn Pro., F1n' Qpp;1rtment and Pomrrm Squ.td '&gt; Ll f'J' ( ' callPd to
Sk 1nncr Hor1d to ,I m otor ~· PhiclP
.t C'Cld!' nl Jl n rnt·ro\ -.qua d tran o.,

ported Rae Ly nn Ba sha m and
Sc hoonovPr to Vet£•rans
Memorial. Ca thlin e Morri s w
fu sed treat m en t.
At 5:40p.m .. Middleport squad
was di spatched 1o Beech St ree t
for Ba rb ara Bo lin g. She was
taken to Holzer Medic al Center .
At 6 21 p.m .. Syrac use squad
went to Col lege Road for Doug
Eblin He rf'fuscd 1reatmrn 1.
AI o:24p.m .. the Rut land Fire
Departme nt was cal led to the
Stewart residence on H ysell Run
Road to a struct ure f ire. The
department re turned at7: 5op. m
Sa lem Fire Departm ent wa s
cal led to a str uctu re fire at the
Bill Clay rest dcnre at 7:36p.m.
The department ret urned at 9: 05
P m . At 7: 37a.m .. Pom erov F ire
De partment and Chester Fi re
Depar tmen ts were ca lled to a
struc t ure f irP at thl' Da,. id M ann
resi dence at Fi vr_• Poinrs . Th e
departm ent returned at 10 18.

sgggg*

11 b\pa ss in
(, ,d lrd (' i ll!ll\ \~il l br LJkrn
Tut·-.tl.n .lui\ 1; ...t ccording to
.lt Jt ' l.t •, wll. d t'-.!rlc l d e put\· dirf'c
'h i'

l'S

to1 tn1 ttl~&gt; r 111 1n

Drparrmrnt of

Tr,t n ..,po rt,tltnn tODOTI
Two
tllh f•J ph,t-.t'" of thf' pro j{'ct arr
r urtt •nrh
undt ·r rom tru c tion
1\t',lr H1 i) CJ. tndt •

ln( l tnlt•rl 1n r hc rh ml pha\P 1 ~:,
11111'- lrw ' !On r)j ,lpp! DX iffid!('J\
t/11 i'l' Jlll lr ''&gt; rd Jour lo~nf• highw;J\·
!1 •1111 S t.1·~· Ht•u!p :t~:) in RiO

Grande. wes t to !h{' rx isti ng
four -l ane in C' Pnten,111P .
Thr nC'w ro n.o,;rr uction is part of
Govrr nor Ric hard F . Crlrstc's

· Hi ghwav Jobs for the 90s ."
Cr les tP and ODOT Drrector &amp;&gt;r
nard R Hur st . P .F.. , an nouncPd
the proj ect i n Octobrr. !9R9 and
hrokP ground on thf' b_vp&lt;tss on
1\pril 25
A n expec ted ro mp let ion dafl' of
Or t 31. 1991 hos been set fur all
three pha ses of Jhr l ; S 3:&gt;
proj ect

Arguments on bone marrow
donation case are readied
I II I(' AI ;o . L'Pl , - ,\ jud ge
mu .&lt;&gt; t dr•ndt ' wht•!hrr ro makr
:! \ t '.Jt olfl I\I 'I n s dona tP bonl'
mJ rr m,- ! D lhPtr lPukPm il:l "t r ickf'n ha lf hr othPr di"-;piff' obJt' C! Jtln"

In

lhf• t~A' ln'-.

mntht•r,

a
a

l.i'A'\'t ' r " '&gt;: 11d cuuld '&gt;f't
1\ii!i tJnwirlt • rm '(' l'dt'nl
.Jud gt• \ ·lt lnlr': l HP\ nold -; or dt·r r•d for · 1!''-,f Jmnn_\ to begin
Thur &lt;&gt; da \' 1n thr · CJ&lt;.,f• hmu~=:ht b\'
Tama -. Hn&lt;.,J.i · o f Hoff man [s l
:llr·&lt;&gt;. Il l. in .tn d!li'tn j) t to '&gt;dV ('
.fiH' lifr nf hi-. 12 \Par old so n,
t'd "i l '

.l(•J n-PiC'tTi'

Dnrtoro;; hcl\t ' '-.J id thi·vo ungstf' r \\' I ll d1 f' Without a bone

illJl so up and later started the
Campbell Soup Co . in Camden,
N.J .

Family dinner
held recently
Mr. an d M rs. Ronald Davis of
Dex ter hos iPd a fa mlly dlnnrr
rece ntly .
Al!ending wcrr : Mr . and Mrs.
Ern lr .lar k s and Tracie, Kev i n,

Brian. Kelly and Amanda: Mr .
and Mrs. H.onald .Jacks and Rick
J acks of Columbus; M r and Mrs.
Geo rg e Oiler and Jeffrey. Jcn ·
niter and Kimtw r ly nf Pa tas ·
k ala; Mr . and Mr s Randy Jack u
a nd HPather, Amber , Stacy and
.J ohnny o f Rallimore : Mr and
Mrs. t:rnest Gocx:l , Mr and Mrs
Steven Good and StrviP; Mr. und
Mrs. Darre ll Puckett and Mi sty
and Chri st y of H.adc li flc ; G&lt;•ne
Nelson of Columbu s, Ca , and
Giajy s Davis, Pomeroy.

" We' r e tolkrng 1.000 to 1,800
people 1n the coarse of the
co ncert. with associa ted noise
and traffic." Bl ac k said T he
ranger distr ict Is working wi th
co ncer t org anizers l o find
;mother site or rpsrhPdulp fhP
event. he added

COMPLETE
STOCK
OF

Sunglasses
NOW
. ..

. -·--

1/2 PRICE

-- .. ..,.

. .

~

5UJ I SHER L0H5E

Stop In and
Check Out
Our
Complete
Stock!

Pharmacy
~nn•h McCuloup,

n Ph. Ch•l• Atffle. A PI\
Aonlld Hennmg. A Ph

Mon tfvu Set 8 -00 • m to 9 -00 p m
Sund-r 10·00 1m. to 4 00 p.m.

PRESCRIPTIONS

£. M.m

PH . 992 -29S!i

Friendl\r S.nrl(»
Pom•O'f. OH
O!!!en W. . k Night• ' Ill t

Th e Ftr st Presbyterian Church
of Galltpolis 1s sponsorin g an ice
cream sacral Ju ly 15 fr om 5 to 7
p.m . in the chur ch fellowship hal l
at 51 State St.

1990 EAGLE SUMMIT

Community
calendar

1991 ESCORT CT20

Stock II 145

•Automatic

• Power Steering

•Air Condition

• nnted Glass

•1.9L SEFI

•AM/FM Cassette

• Rear Defrost

• Electronic Stereo

•5

•6/60

sgggg*

Speed

Limiled Warranty

87995*

bypass project July 17
flrd -. ftr l· 1/:1• rh1rd and tina!

He had planned 1o set up a t rust
to benefit the Ph iladelphi a Mu ·
seum of Art , and his alm a
mater s. St. George's Sc hoo l in
Newpor t . rt .l .. and Princeton
Universi ty . Instead, the art mu·
seum r eceived f\.Vo large porcelain goa t s valued at $100,000, p lus
$2J million in cash and $3 million
in property.
Dorrance's s ix grand children,
ages 5 to 18. rece ived $26.6
million before federa l inherit ·
ance t axes. Hi s t h ree c hildren
each in herit ed 13.5 m illion shares
of stock in various compa nies,
p lu s guns. jewelry and fi rearm s.
He also lefl abou t $17 million to
21 non profit gr oups. The large st
~)enefac t or was H am piOn U ni ver sit y i n Hampton. Va .. which
received $9 million th e yea r
be fore Dorrance died .
Do rrance. his fou r siblings and
moth er inher it ed a $115 mill ion
es tate when th e elder Dor ran ce
died in 1930. .John Thompson
Dorrance wa s a chemist w ho
inven ted the process for co nd ens-

a case of retribution. '·

blocke-1 l og trucks.
The Fores t Service " finds the
'Sound of Music ' more del rim en
tal to spotted owls th an lhc roar
of chai n saws and cras h of
ancient trees," they sa id .
" !can see where they would be
mak ing thai elaim," Black of the
F ·m"... i ServicP sa id " This i s not

through September to prot ect
nesting owls at trail side.
"Beca use of the listing, we
have to t ake a hard look at these
acllv ltles ." said timber planner
Dave Black.
Forest Service regiona l re creation o fficer Lyl e Leverty
sa id, "Because of the unknowns
about how much activit y can or
can' t take place around a nesti ng
pair, the consensus ls to come
down on the conservative side ."
Jim Farrell, a blologlsl with
the fores t, said guidelines pr o~
hiblt potentially disruptive acliv 111es within a half-mile of ow l
nests during crit ica l Urnes In I he
breeding cycle.
A recent survey, conducted in
res pon se to th e concert plan s.
turned up a breeding pair with
two owl ets abo utl,OOO feet sou th
of the concert site. Farrel l sa i d
he conferred with U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service officials who
thought th e concert m ight cau se
enough disruption to drive the
owl s away .
" Whateve r disturbs the owl Is
not coul ri ght now." he said.
But environm enta list s an grily
ciJ lmed Tuesday the Fore st
Service has schedu led a timber
sa l e next year less tha n a
qu arter -mil e from the si t(' whrre
they hJ VL' held the concert fort he
past four years .
T he Friends of the Brietenbu sh
Cascad es a nd Friends of the
Cathedral For&lt;•st accused the
Forest Servirl' of laking punitive
ac tion agains t them for thP! r
efforts to block timber sale s,
Including protests in which thev
c hained th emselves to t rees and

T ara

Bids to be taken for
pll.t'-.t' rd

ti c concert and the hundreds who
ga ther for It coul d bothe r a
recently d iscovered family of the
owls.
f orest offic ials to ld orga nizers
of the annu al co ncert in the
Breltenbu sh Hot Spri ngs area
they wil l have to move their Aog.
2n6 concert or postpone It until
aftrr th e owl nes tlng season Sep t.

30 .
The owl was declared a threa!e ned species la st month, a move
ex pected to put vast tract s of
Northwes t ancient forests off
limit s to l oggi ng and cost th ousand s of timber j obs in the
region.
The nat ional fores t' s Detroit
distri ct, east of Salem , al so plan s
to close two hiking tra ils Jt least

Ice cream social

EMS squads record II runs
On WPdnr.:;;da)', Mrigs Countv
f&lt;nwrgr nl' y MPdic C! l Srrvicr·._
t ~' ~ pundi•d
to
II
calls for

Jhe Willamette Na tional Forest
near Detroit, claim ing th e acou s·

Campbell Soup heir left 1.96 million

Stop In During The Air Show And Browse
Through Our Air Conditioned Showroom
And Enjoy Our Vantage Point Of The Air Show!
FREE PARKING ON OUR LOT •••• Inquire At Showroom

1990 JEEP WRANGLER
4x4

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 9

Forest Service says 'sound of music' would disturb the northern spotted owl

Tlurrstlas - Fridal' - Saturda31 &amp; Sunday Onll'!

w.

Pomeroy - Middleport, Ohio

12. 1990

Ait· Shou' Weekend Specials At

V;\l'GHAi'i'S. "1NNERS - Winners of the Grill and Float
Govea way al \ aughan's Cardinal reeenUy were Tom 81 9 1
~uldlepor!. and Ca,.i• .Je ffer s, of West Columbia,
~=:
I o&lt;'lurf'd, 1-r. an• Blaine; Wchard Hill, AI Davidson Lar
.'\fcC o rm ide
'
ry

12, 1990

heari ng .

'We 'll have medical experls to
tesd fy on studies done In vo l ving
bo ne marrow donors and the risk
they suffered as a r es ult of the
do nat ion. We expect them to
show that the potenti al risk from
donat ing ca n and has Involved
l i fe-th rea tening complication s
and even deat h," sa id Peka la.
Peka la sa id shp th ought It
would take a ful l two days of
hcorl ngs to com plete the exper t
testimo ny .

" We 1the lawyers for both
mJrr ow tra nspl ant . &lt;~nd lawvrrs sid eS! have no case thai has
for both '&gt; ld f'~ ha\·i' ..,aid th r cO ur-t precedentBI va lue. There Is one
r a"r cnulct bP pn•rt•rkn t o;; ptting . ease at the trial co urt thai wa s
somewhat Si milar." said Pekala .
\rtn C\ Curran nf Flk Crow•
\ ' ill d gc· had twi n_
-, . 1&lt;-~mr s and
In th e Pittsburgh case. a judge
r·e fused to order one cousin to
,\llison Curran out of wrd lock
donate an organ to another
fo.lluwing a Jrngthy r Plationsh ip
""h l lo'Ze. She ha .&gt; opposed on cousin, saying "I he court had no
-. c~(Pt .\ · gro und s hi &lt;; rf'ques t to
power to compel an Individual to
·donate
bod y ti ssue or organs,"
ha \·r thr ir hl ood h'&gt;;tf'd to drtrr
.
s
he
said
.
m 1nf' rf ! h r~· are a suit ablr m a tc h
and to ha ve them donate bone
marrow to Jean -Ptrrrr
Edward Jordan, Bosze's lawCurra n's lawye r , Nancy PPyer . ha s disputed Curran's
kala . won a ro und in cou rt
h eal th ~ sa fety concerns, saying
Monday wh~n the j ud ge refused
th ere Is no great risk to the twins.
to ru le on the blood test Issue unlll
Dr. Martin Tallman of Northw·
al l tes tim ony wa s ln .
es tern University's medical
Peka la sa id Wednesday she
sc hool also said there are lew
Intended to bring at l east three
risks of withdrawing bone
expert w Jt nesses at Thursday's
marrow.

1989 FORD
THUNDERBIRD
Stock II 5821 . 2 doors , sedan , 6 cyl . atr .
auto . PS, PB. power w1nd ows.
seat. power locks. ril t wheel, crutse.
als, AM'FM stereo tape , rear w1n defog

WAS
111,995

1986 CHEVROLET
CAMARO
Stock# 4663. 2 doors. coupe, V-8. a1r, 5
speod stand trans. PS.PB. AMIFM stu-

reo tape. radials. bucket seats , rear w1n
delog

NOW

SJQ,999

Stock • 5671 . 2 doors . hard top . fronr
whee l dnve. V-8. a1r, vinyl root, auto . PS.
PB, power wtndows. power seat. power

locks . ti lt wh eel, crwse. AMIFM stereo
tape , rad1ats

NOW

WAS

55499

'6495

~~-

1984 OLDS
TO RONA DO

• _,,... -

1988 FORD
RANGER
Stock K 4954. 4 cyt . 4 speed.
ra dio, 112 ton p1ckup, short wh eel
gaugus. slidtng rear glass

NOW

WAS
15995

54995

NOW

WAS
1

6495

55495

tl ....

1989 MERCURY
TOPAZ

1987 MAZDAk'
82200-PICKUP

Stock I 13550, 4 doors , sedan. Iron!
wheel ci'we. 4 cyl., arr, auto . PS, PB,
power locks. tilt wheel, crui se . AM/FM
radio, radial s. bucket seal s, rear win

Stock I 9673t. 2 doors. 4 cy f. . 5
stand. trans . PS. PB, 1!2 ron, long
bed, rear step bumper, gauges

1

de log
NIJIV

;_:9~

S8499

1986 FORD EXP
I 4951.

2 doors. coupe.lrontwheel
4 cyl., 5 speed s1and trans , PS,
I
. au1se, AWFM stereo tape,
lracfials bucket seats . rear won. del09.

WAS
13995

NOW

NIIW

WAS
15995

1986 FORD TEMPO
Stock I 9881 2, 4 doors . sedan. front

whooldrive. 4cyl , auto . PS. PB. AMIFM
radio. radials. bucket seats. rear wtn

delog.

7

1978 MERCURY
COUGAR

1980 CHEVROLET
C20 4x4

Stock I 13602. 2 doors, hard top. V-8 , arr,
vinyl mol, auto ., PS,PB, AMIFM ra~o.

Stock I 1373, 2 doors. 4 whool drive.
cyl., 4 speed s1and. tran s . PS.
gauges, AMIFM stereo tape, 314
piCkup long wide bed

radials, white walls .

~WAS

15295

54995

WAS
11495

NOW

5995

S2295

FRIDAY
LO NG BOTIOM- Thero• will
be a hym n sing at the Fa ilh
Gospel Cpurch in Long Bottom on
friday at 7:30 p m with the
Dai ley Fa milies. th e Hand M aid ens. and other local talent.
Refreshments will be served.
Pastor Steve Reed lnvlles the
public.
CH ESHIRE - Ga ll ia -Melgs
Co mmunity Act ion Agency w i II
ho ld its free cl olhong da y at the
old h1gh sc hool build ing in
Cheshire f rom 9 a. m. un til noon.
BURL INGHAM Bedford
and Lodi Township Hi stor y
Gr oup will meet on Fr iday at 7: 30
p.m . al the Modern Woodmen
Hal l in Burlingham . Anyo ne
in terested ca n br ing hi storica l
ltPms and pictures
TUPPERS PLA I NS- A yard
sal e clean up at St. Pau l Unit ed
Methodi st Chu rch at Tupper s
Plain s on Friday from 9 a.m.
until 3 p.m. All clothing itPm S
wil l be priced of 25 ce nt s and
undt•r
SATURDAY
LONC BOTIOM - The Long
Bot~om Commun ity Associa tio n
will have an old ·l ashioned lc&lt;'
cream social on Saturday at thP
Long Bottom Communit y Build
lng. Serving will begin al 4 p.m .
a nd w!l l co ntinue all evrn in g. In
additi on t o sPvPra l l cr crram
f lavors, the r e wi tt lw sa ndwiches
and pir for sa le. Th erP wi l l also
be mu sic and p r izrs du1ing thr
even in g
POM EROY - ThP Seco nd
Annual "Ol di es Bul Good ies"
Ca r Show will be ht'ld on
Sa turday from 9 a m until ·I
p.m . at the Pomeroy Parking
L ot. Registrat io n will be f ro m ~~
a.m until noon. with awards
being given at approxlmalrlv 4
p .m . There wi ll be a $5
registration fee, and the show
will be hpld rain or shine Fn r
further inform ation. please ca ll
992 701J
RA CI NE - T he Charles J nd
F'annir iWolfel Beaver RPunlon
wi ll bf' held Sa turday at the Slar
Mill Park in Ra ci ne Please br ing
a covrred di sh and pl ace sPiti ng
Lunch will be sf'rved at noon.
RUTLAND - The Baby Cody
Spau ld ing Be nefit will be he ld on
Sa turda y from 2 p .m unt i l
midn ight at th r Rutland Civic
Ce nter There wil l be live band s.
a live radio show . dunking booth.
door prizes and refreshments
The event wtll be hosted by the
Wyoming Wo~ Band .
SUNDAY
POMEROY - " Crq from the
Mountain" will be shown on
Sunday al 7:30 at th e F irst
Southern Baptist Churc h, locat ed
nea r &lt;Meigs Hi gh School. Rev.
Lamar O' Bryant. pas tor, Invites
everyone to attend.
RACINE - The Char les and
Alma Hlnzman-Snlder reu nion
will be held on Sunday at the Star
Mill Park In Racine. A basket
lunch will be held at noon . Eac h
family Is to brin g a door prlze l

TANDY~

PC Compatible With
Monitor and Software

lOOOTL/i!

__j

-

Save Now on a Mobile
Cellular Telephone

Save '225 70

Save'400

$299* p.,

Low Ao $15

Reg . Separate

Monlh•

Was $699.00 In

Items 1524.70

Compact Bmm Camcorder Now

1990 Celalog

low A1 $25 Per Month •

286-based computer wrth color
monrt or. MS·DOS'' and
Desk Mat e·' . lncludes Ourcken.
~-::; I RightWrrter. lnstant Pages and
mouse. #25-1602110431104011331

768K
Laptop

Cordless
Telephone

Save
$900

Save
$30

1599

5

Reg . 2499.00
low As S49

Per Month •

69

Cut 40%

Reg . 99 .95

Speed-dialer. auto
secunt y code
#43-557

low At S1S In 1990
Per Mon th.
Cat

Peace of mind for sum mer

trips #22 -1621

Save

Save $50

13995

Low Ao $10
Per Month •

3~;~ 5

Save $70

Low As S15 Per Mo nth

7995

Reg.

189.95

l ow AI S15 Per Mo nth .

Cut 40%

Has 30 walls total power. 12 presets and aut o-reverse #12-t931

39 77

Reg

24 .95

Dolby '• NR
#14- 1071133-1000

portable CD play·
ers #33-1021

4995

Rog

s9 .9s

Complete with CB, mobrle
antenna and case #21 -1500

Reg.
Separate
Items 65 .90

Auto -reverse,

Perfect c ho 1ce tor

Emergency Mobile CB

Remote bRtle t•8S ex1ra

ol 14-dayl6·event tim er. '116·510

48% Off

1295

J::u95

Features easy remote programming

Stereo Cassette
With Heerdpt1om~s

Reg . ""'""'
129.95 e~tre

29%
Off

27995

Lightweight Stereo
Headphones

Hrgh -speed synchro dubbing lor
copyrng personal tap•s. #14 ·756

Save
$50

23995

$120

On-Screen-Programming VCR

Great buy' Has drgotal tu nong. LCD
display and 24 presets. #31 ·3004

Stereo Car Cassette
Was
149.95

100-Watt• Stereo Receiver

Dual-Cassette Portable Stereo

29!!h ~e§s

Radar Detector

9995

,r --

95

9~;u00

So hght you can carry rt anywhere' EnJOY superb video
quality and hr- ti AFM sound. Flyrng era se head provtdes smooth sce ne changes Includes soh case and
accessories. #1 6· 852

away' Includes lull· duplex handsfree. backlit
dosplay and keypad, plus 30 -number memory
#17 ·1 076

PC compatrble woth
3'h" 720K lloppy
drive. #25 ·3505

Only r high, yet they sound BIG'
Blac'. #40 -2030. White . #40·2045

Save
$50

Emerg ency he lp is JUS! an in-car phon e cat!

Bult·ln 20MB
Hard Drive

Die- Cast 2-Way Spteak.ers

s799

Save '200

low Aa $40 Per Month •

20% Off

Baner .es

White Tiger RC Racer

Cut

43%

3995

Reg .

69.95

Turbo power lor off -road
fun I 1160 -4038 Ba t1ftrles A• tra

e~1ra

Multimode LCD Watch

34%

Off

gas

Reg .

14.95

Stopwatch, calendar and
12124 hr. modes #63-5057

CREATINt: NII!W STANDARDS
EXPERIENCED SALES TEAM
Knowledg eable and tr1 endly to help you make the smartest buytng decrstons

Hobodr Compar••
PRODUCT EXCLUSIVITY
15.000 eleclronrc products preselected for ease of use. relia b1hty and vafue

Hobodr Compa,.•
GUARANTEED SATISFACTION
Over 35,000 ,000 cus!omers benefit from our Satisfaction Guaran1ee Putting
you first has made us 11 m electronics

Nobodr Compa,.•
Check Your Phone Book for the Radio Shack Stare or Dealer Nearest

You

SWITCHABLE TOUCH -TONE/PULSE piiOOu won. on bothmne aocr pu~ hnes TherefOr&amp; , tn areas Mvmo onry pul st~ (rotary dial) lmes. 10\1 eaA strl use serv~es reQwrnq tones 1tk~ a11ematrve
lnno -drslance svstems ~n~ co mputeuzed serv1ces ICC tt!lr5tered Not lot party 11nes We serva whal we WI MS-OOS IK:ftMell from Mleroson Corp Dolby~ l aboratones llcenstnij Corp
•Sll'll~talllnCe requues ne.,., a" t~~ tton and mrmmum ~e !V IC !I commrlment w~ h authOnte&lt;l Ra!llll Sl'lac~ CArnflr (S599 WlltlOut ac11vat10n) See s10rn

·Power rflt&amp;d per FTC r u le~

ma!laiJ!lr fm delatiS

*Radio Shack'ValuePius&lt;! revolving credit . Payment may vary depending upon your purchases. PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALERS

Most M-.Jor Credit
C•rd• Welcome

•

�Thursday, July 12, 1990

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

•

Closing arguments start tn treasure hunt
NORFOLK. Va. {UP!) - A
lawyer for an Ohio research
group Wednesday argued that
Insurance companies and other
parties seeking $1 billion In gold
from a 19th century shipwreck let
his clients do all the work and
then swooped In to stakea claim.
The charge was made by
Richard Robol, a lawyer for the
Co lumbu s-America Discovery
group of Columbus. Ohio, as
closing arguments began In U.S.
District Court on who legal ly
owns the bounty.
"They sa t on the sidelines, they
let Columbus-America do all the
work and then they came In and
made the claims," Robol said.
Robol said the insurers who
claim to have paid for the losses
when the S.S. Ce ntral America
went down In 1857 laden with gold
from California could not substantiate their payments, and
that claims from a California
treasure hunter and Columbia
University researchPr werf'
based on "smoke and mirror s.
Robot also argued the insu-

rance companies had aba nd oned
claims to the gold by falling to

make salvage efforts for more
than 13() years- a key legal point
In whet her the doctrine of
finders-keepers applies.
Lawyers for the insurance

believed to be stil l aboard the

Co lumbus-America, a groupo!
Investors led by researcher Tho·
mas Thompson, developed a
high -tech underwater robot
dubbed Nemo to bring up the
gold. Si nce it was brought ashore
last October, the gold has been
under heavy guard in an undis
closed location .
The exact site of the shipwreck
has been kept secret to prevent
modern-day pirates from swoopIng In and making ott with gold it
took more than 130 years to find.
The Central America was
carrying gold from California to
banks In New York when It went
down . More than 400 people were
lost at sea . Only about 150

wreck .

survived.

Robol sa id the 18.'i7 va lue of the
gold was estimated at $1 2
million to $2 million. When first
found, the Co lumbus-America
believed the treasure to be worth
a few hundred millton, bu I the

Robo l said he had a hard time
believing some of the world's
largest Insurance companies
co uld not find salvage teams to
locate the treasure. He said they
"c laim they can' I do what a
group of people from Columbus America, working With Radio
Shack parts and K-:'Aart part s,
could do."
To get all or a share of the

companies and other treasure
hunters will present their final
arguments later Wednesday .
U.S. District Judge Richard
Kellam Is not expected to rule
until the end of the summer.
The steamship sank about 160
miles off the South Carolina coast
during a hurricane, and while
close to a ton In gold bricks and
coins was brought up from the
depths of the Atlantic last

summer. another two tons is

value skyrocke ted after a new

process res to red I he gold coins to
mint co ndition, which put them
into the pricey rare coin collec·
tors market, not the gold bullion
market .

"I was out of that pool so much

faster than I thought I could,"
she sa id .
She revealed the Incident in
recalling some of her best and

worst memories si nce she moved
Into the While House.

and sports - tying tn to the
Goodwill Games' gatheri ng of
3,000 ath letes from ar ou nd the
glob e.
Just under 60 percent of the
responden ts named mini-sklrts
as No. I on the " in " fashion list,
and 51 percent pu tlledyed and

critics, said she has been "des
I royed' ' by the at tacks, and ma y

percent .

quit.
"To be honest with you. I'm
leaving Thursday for an inter -

Sneakers and spor ts shoes are
not as likel y to be in demand, the
survey found. More t han half. ;,6
percent . classified these as exer ·
cise Items and ''out."

Despite

the

cool

Pacifi c

Northwest evenings, few Sov iets

t31 percent) are expected to buy
sheepskin coats. co nsidered fa
shlonable last wintf'r i n America.
and a majority t58 percenll sa id
the "biker" look of leather pant s

but sneakers , s he~?pskln coats

ment

and leather jac kets are "out," a

lear ned a lesson Tuesday : Never
spea k in to an open mike.
Aft er reporters had left the

ThE' Sov i et fa sh ion "i n and oul''

ltsl was based on telephone
intC' r viPws with 400 you ng Muscovites. ages 18-39, which also
asked quf'!';lions about exerc i se

stories could not be used as proof
of payment, and Robol argues
those clippings are the primary
basis of the claim.
In addition to the insurance
companies, Harry John, a trea -

view in Phoenix and Friday for
an interview in Austin." Rey -

Co mmi ss ion

&lt;:Jnyom~

commission's met"tJng, the pan ·

day to requlre

a United Stares flag to obta in a
$100 permit before doing so
Without the permit, the burner
co uld be hit wit h a 90 -day jail
se ntence and a $500 fine .
"I dectded if they want to
desecrate the flag , let them pay
for it ," St:J id Cal lahan, a veteran
of World War II and the Korean
War. "I feel very strongly abo ut
the protect ion of the flag . "
A public heari ng on hi s proposal will be held at the Aug r~

media
The commissioners werr op ·
parently unawa re t hat thP meet

ing was st ill being broadcast
throughout the Capitol on closed

People in the news---,
By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
FA:'\IOUS LAST WORDS : Mel Blanc's filling epitaph ha s
bee n unveiled at Beth Oiam Ceml' tcry in Hollywood . The man of
a thousand voices. in cluding those of Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck
and Porky Pig, is comm emora ted with a tombsto ne that
features thf' words that ended so man .v Loony Toons cartoons "That' s All Folks ." Blanc dted a year ago Tuesday and
cemetery director R.H. Walker said he had to shoo away a lot of
people with cameras at Monda y's unveiling because '"we don't
allow photograp hs here. "
SICK SINGERS: Ella Fitzgerald is hospitalized in the
Netherlands. sufferi ng from exhaustion and dehydration Thl'
72 -year-o ld jazz singer became ill at her hotel in The Hague
Monday and had to cancE- l the rest of her European tour, w hich
wa s to havf' included a stop a r the jazz festival in Monlr€aux,

Switzerla nd Doctors at the Bronovo Hospital say Fitzgerald,
whose heart has a pacemak er . Is not serio usly ill but they
ordered total rest tor the nex t few day s. When she's stronger,
Fitzgera ld wtll head back to the United Stat es . Country music
si nger Tammy Wynette , 4R, is In a Nashville. Tenn .. hospital
with bronchitis . She was admitted Sunday after a show in
Branson . Mo. , but a spokes man says it s a minor case. He sal d

Wynette was hospitalized as a precaution and should be
released In a few days ... Pearl Bailey, 72. will undergo surgery
in Philadelphia Wednesday to rep lace an arthritic left knee .
Bailev's knee has deteriorated severe ly and causes her pain
dally. She will be hospitalized for about two weeks .
PRESIDENTS OF THE PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE?:
Ronald Reagan has been added to the marquee at the Goodwill
Games in Seattle. Organizers of the al hletlc meet say the
former president "will play a prom lnent role" when the games
begin .July 21. Actor Arnold Schwarzenegger, rap star Young
M.C. and the Soviet rock group Gorky Park also will appear ...
First la dy Barbara Bush says President Bush came to her
rescue severa l months ago when she came across a rat paddling
In the White House pool. In an Interview with the Houston Post,
Mrs . Bush sa id she was in the pool wearing a swimming mask
when the rat "just went by In fron t of me. Fortunately, George
Bush was there . It was horrible. I was out of that pool so much
taster than I thought I could" ... Vice President Dan Quayle did
some manual labor Tuesday. helping plant sea grass at a newly
renovated park In Tampa. Fla . " I was told as I was planting
grass that I did an OK job." Quayle said. "There' sa job after the
vice presidency."
MUSICAL NOTES: Blues guitarls t Stevie Ray Vaughan had a
musical disaster Saturday night In Hoimd~l, N.J. He had just
finished up a show and put aside his favorite guitar, a battered
1959 Fender Stratocaster, and was exiti ng the stage with his
band when a scaffold fell, cr ushing the guitar and five others .
Fortunately. the Fender company had recently made Vaughan
a copy of the No. I guitar ... Paul McCarmey may preach
vegetarianism but the crowd at his concert In Ames, Iowa, next
week stili will be able to munch a hotdog or a bratwurst.Jeaane
Hartig, a spokeswoman for the Iowa State Ce nter, said there
will be no change In the concession stand menu to accommodate
the former Beatie's dietary likes ... Elvis Presley has finally
made It big In the Soviet Union. The newly formed All -U nion
Association of Rock 'n' Roll Fans will concentrate on Presley.
·We plan to celebrate Elvis's birthday with a special concert on
Jan. 8, 1991." Kostya ShnJrlov, the club's president, says. " We
are negotiating with the authorities to open a c:lub entirely
devoted to rock 'n' roll, to be ca lled Memphis."

Chamorro sa id at a joint news

people from going to work, while
UNO supporters formed their
own neighborhood mobs and
attacked Sandinlstas and raided
their properties.
"To raise barricades to a
legitimate government that has
given no just motive to justify
suc h aggression against the
people is an act of cowardice,"
Chamorro sa id, adding she would
wait until morning for a true sign
that the violence would stop.
Ortega urged citizens to slor
the violence and pledged that the
Sandinista army and police force
would continue to back the

Atta cks continued Wednesda y
when a group of maskl'd mt.•n
drPsscd as members of thP
military blew up the generator
and antenna of the private Radio

conference with Ortega.
Chamorro sa id the dialogue
could begin as ear ly as Thursday
morning, bu td ld not say whether
the talks would address the main
demands of the Sandinlsta
workers - a volcP In set ting the
co untry' s economic policies and

a review of plans to privatize

whrlhE'r

the

gu nfire,

•
•

Six people were killed and
more th an 150 Injured In a wave
of vio lence that began Sunday
night and turned the streets of
Managua into a battlefield be
tween str ikin g Sandinis tas and
supporters of Chamorro's Na tiona l Opposlt ion Union, or UNO

governm en t and maintain order .

Bu t Ortega warned Chamorro.

..

Woodland BDU'S

-...:

GENUINE
ISSUE

summa

•
•
•

BEIJIN G iUP il - Chtncsc
Premier Ll PPng ch idPd Wrstrr n
na tions Wednesday for failing at
their sumrnil ffil'l'llng to drop

•
•
•

8

a::::t~ C0M~~

SOCKS
·- 199

FLAG KIT
3x5 all weather
cotton flag .

sa nction s a~ a ins t China imposed
after la st .vrar 's crackdow n on

••'
'••

dissent.
The official

••

agency. meanwhil e. cr iticized
1hP summ it polit ica l dPr la rat ion,
sayi ng lt indicat E'd lhl' leading
indu strial d emoc racies would

••
•
•
•

•

SUNBURN

BOYS
6 POCKET
PANTS

CREAM

1495

PANTS

95 ~~~GOV'T~
.

7

BOONIE HAT

I ~

STAINLESS

ISSUE

STEEL

••

••
•

••
••
•
••
•
•

2 TAGS • 1 CHAIN

395

Prrsidrnr

MACHETIE

•
•

NSN 8465-01 -119-8699

595

••

&gt;.-·

•

TWO DIE IN CRASH - A dump truck-car
co llision claimed two lives on the Seven Mile
Bridg•· near Marathon, Fla., Wednesday. Traffic
WIL"i halted most of the day on US I, only traftic·
artery in the Florida K eys. i\ passenger wa."i

•
••

••
~

l

••
•

SHEATH

•• LOS ANCf:LES iUPII- The
• number of tl'achers )Pcwing thf'
•

I

..
:
:
:

PISTOL BELTS

•

GENUINE ISSUE

•

WWII SHOVEL COVER

Genume tssue

WING
STOVE

179

over The Soviet U nion now has
mo.st
n o n·
something that
communist nations ha ve had for
years - an E l v i s fan club.

of Rock 'n' Roil Fans in Moscow .
Alt hough Elvis, who died Aug .
16, 1977. is not in the name of th e
club. president Kostya Shnirlov
wrote that they c oncPnlratP on
Elvis .

AMMO

6 COMPAATMENT

MESS
TRAYS
(t;Y~~ 295
~\Of
A&gt;!~
•
•

"Wr plan to celebrate Elvis's

Army

199
COMPASS
CASE

STAINLESS

BOX

295

INSu~CT

188

REPELLENT
Gl
2 FOR
SHELTER
HALVES
Gl
FOOT
LOCKERS

1sss

ij ,;

\~I

...__.;__ __ J

COVER

495

SLE~~ING349~
BAG
·-.-_
.--·· .-•.•

NEW l.lSUE

',
'

'

HELMET

TONGUE ZI'P£RS

BAG

FLYERs

0

•

0

•

0

•

0

TROUSER
BLOUSING

GARTERS

. ,.;.,

......_. ,'

__

,._

•

•

247~

CANTEEN

WEB BEL

WH, KHAKI, 00,
BLACK, BLUE

up

profrssio n ra rl.v could bf.' rl'\'
ersr-d if state governm ent s es ta bI i sh onf'-yP ar pa id int ernsh ips for
a s p1ring in st ruc tors. accord i ng
• to a n• port rrlease d WrdnPsday
•• bv a leadi ng thi nk lilnk .
:
· Univer siti es and &lt;;tate and
: local govf' rnmrnt s havr pa id
allrntion to hf'lp ing student
•• lilllr
n
tPar hl?rS makP thf' Ofl r n hrwil ·
: dering transition to profrss ional
: tPdr hin g. t hr HAND Corp . s tud~·
: sa id .
•
· 'Ttw t_v pical messagP to a nrw
•• tf'Jchrr is. "Figure it out .vo ur ; sp l f. tin it a ll yourse lf and kPPP tl
: to vou r self."" thr RAND rr·
a. sr ai·r her s . Li nd a Darling ·
• Hammond. Tamar Gend lt.'r and
: Arthur Wise. wrotr in their
: rPport. · 'Thf' Tf'arhing Intrrn
• '-' hip: Practical Prrpar&lt;ltion fora
f
Licrnsrd Prof ession ··
t
Morrow' r. t hr most inPX!X' : r irnrrd tr ac her:-. usual[\' an•
: r_~ssig nrd to big ri t_,. schools,
lurnO\'f'l" h highest and
••• whnt'
t hf're arr kv.: sr n ior tf'arhrrs to
- act as m(' ntors. !hP n'S('&lt;uT iw rs
: said
:
About a third of all ni'H.
: tC&gt;achrrs quit lhr profPssion in
; thC' first fi vf' ye ars. they noled.

•

®

LEATHER
BELT CASE

reported killed in wret•kt•d car, abovl' t•entrr, on
bridge, and the driver was l'l.'poriRd trappcd in tlw
dump truck that went into the -.a off the bridge on
the lett, near boat. I UPil

;• Suggest state-paid internships for teachers

199

·.

Gl
CANTEEN
CUP

~

••
•
••
••
••

part of thr rrrde ntiallng proc·&lt;•s s.
to undrrgo a onr -year ir.ternship
in which they would rece ivrgu idancr and tra ining . whiiP

Thr Minneso ta Board !Jlan c., to

tPcted fr om unsupcrvisPd. in·
\ompct c nt instruction
T hr cos t of the inte mship ~

•••
•

wou ld

wou ld he h1gh. ranging fr om
$.1,,1111 tn $ti. ~J00 jll'r intern. th&lt;•
rrsP~Hc h c rs

acknowlrdg ed.
.. Rralistically, most of !hi'
ri'spor.s ibility for finan1·in~
!~ '~tellin g intrrnships must fall on
th1• :-. t.ttr.·· thr st ud y's authors

said
Two o f thl' rf'SParc hers ha \"f'
back gro und s in r· du r Jti on .
Darli ng Hamm ond is an c•Uuca
l ion pr of('ssor at Trachers Col
!Pgl'. ('olumbi a lJniw•rsi t ~·. and a
HA t\() co nsul tant Wisf' ts di rP C'·
tor of th e RAt\D C&lt;'niPr tor the
Stud\' of th r Teac hing Prufps
sion ." and will bf'come president
this month of the National
Council for thr 1\rcrrditati on of
Tf' ac her E ducJtion. Gendler is a
11AND consultanl
f1,\t\fJ Corp .. based in San ta
Monica. is a priv a tE&gt;, non -profit
org aniza ti on rngagpd in rf'search and anal:v si s of the
nation 's p rohlPms .
Thr studv v.-as f i nancPd br and

Summer Clearance
SUMMER WEAR
REDUCED

••t

WEAPONS OIL

119

•

88'

i••
:••

*

AND PANTS
LADIES PURSES
SALE PRICED $400 TO $12BO
VALUES TO '15.99

E

••

I

RT. 33

SOUTH OF

LANCASTER

•
!:&amp;.........................~......................
••!T:

Sandlnista workers in govern
ment mini st ries and state-run
i nd ustries, urged all strikers

Wednesday "to create conditions
that favor the beginning of
negotiations. permit the free
circu lation of citizens and vehicles and obey th e orders of the
Sandlnista police."
The ca l l was an apparent
roncesslon by Ihe union to bring
the govPrnm.ent to the negotiating ta blc, although union officials
maint ained Wedn esday their
agenda for the talks had not
c hanged
The government had previously refused to tal k about
anything bul sa lary and jobre lated issue.-; 1.vhil e t hr union
had demanded talks about Chamorro' s economic po licies and
plan s to privatizr government ·
run indu str ies .

The bloodshed Tuesday night
was the worst of the strikc, which

entered Its lO th da y Wednesday .
T he main battlrfleld was in the
Ciudad Jardin &lt;Garden C!ty l
neighborhood surrounding the
Radio Corp. studios.
Hundreds of CNO supporters
includ i ng tJ.rmPd former
mrmlX'rs of thl' Contra rebPi s

station. "The Sandlnistas W&lt;' re
atta cking and the UNO were
ready to defend it ."
Ot her witnesses said the UNO
supporters near the station were
attacking Sandinlsta str ik ers
who were erectin g barricades
nearby, and several police officers said they were shot at by the
UNO supporters.
"We are fighting the Conlrasthe Guardia," sa id one police
officer as he crouched with his
assau lt rifle behind a wall in
Ciudad Jardin .
The Guardia, or National
Guard, was the name of the
military force that served under
dictator Anastasio Sornoza, who
wa s ous ted by the Sandin is tas II
years ago.

Bernard Aronson. U.S. assist ant secretary of state for inter American affairs. sa id tn El
Salvador thai the Sandinistas
wPrP t rylng to make it impossible
for Cllamorro t o govern
"'T he Sandinis ta deml:' nts who
are involved in this deser ve t o be

condemned," Aronson sa id .
"They lost the elec ti ons and they
are not going to regain their
powPr through strPrt violencP.
and I dan·t think thr Nicaraguan
people an~ going to tolrrate it and
neith er will the democratic
comm uni ty ."
The violenC(' was co nstant all

night Tuesday in many parts of
the clly as gun ftrc. bomb explo
sion s ancl
unaba lf' d.

sirens

ron tinuPd

AIR CONDITIONER

'-&gt;aid its rxPrutl \·r :-.rcrr t ; 11 · ~ · .
Ktnm•th PP alross
Thr n 'Sf'&lt;l!ThPrs :--.&lt;tid I'Ll ""
room s kill." can not br learrwd
r ffecti\"f'ly from forrn~.tl rrarlwr
rducdtion or t ri al and Prror
durin~ tlti' lir st ~·rJrsoftf'Jrhin g .

notl'd t hr summit nJtions indi
l'&lt;l tl'd wh at hC' l 'tll lrd "wi l ling
n(•ss
to loosl'n th{· sanctiono..;
against ( 'hinJ .·· ;tc·cording ro a
X1n huJ dis patch. ·· !J owr\·f'r,
1h(' ir stPp is not ~' l'l big f'n ough _··
l.i rf'i!!•ra trd gow'r nmPnt \ "0\\"~
th:tt C tlm;1 would not ''y irlcl to
out side pa•s s urr. ·· S&lt;l~· ing that
"' if an\' cuuntr _
v attrmpt.s to
iso!:t tPCh tn:.t. it would no tunlyUo
harm t o Chlna but al so to it sf:' i f."
Xinhua noH~d th&lt;Jt rtw Sf'Vf'll
nations. in thpi r polilil'aldPcl arll tion. rP&lt;tffirmPd their r·nmm it
mPnt to hum an right'- and
drm ()('l ac .\ a.'- w('!l c~ s markPt
(lriP ntPd f'CIIn om ir J'f• form
"'TiH' docurn rnt
indica!!'~
th at 11 11• &lt;, ( ' \ "I'll i ndu str ial na t ton s
w i ll contin w' In rnl•ddll ' i n t hr
i ntn na l :lf f. 1i 1"'- of ot lwr c'oun t ril's
hv cl i nt of lhl ·i r own sr nsP nt
,-: lluP ~. &lt;1rtd II" \' 1rl imposp th1•
poll t ic, il ,Hld f'l '(lnornic rnodt·s !J f
ttll' \\'t· ~ l ()11 n,llrv ns in lh (' rl' st of
ttw wn r ld . ·X inhua '&gt;:.tirl
·· wi t tl n 'ga r·d ltl tlil' '&gt;it uat inn in
Chin.t, 1lH •dt•CI J I"&lt;Jlion hukh (In Ill
th( • poo., it i(Jrt of intt&gt;r frrin g in ih
inll'rn.tl affa 1r s. ·· Xinhu:.~ sai d

SALE
Whirlpool and Airtemp
In ltock -

5,000 BTU .... !.'.~~....... SALE 1299
9,500 BTU .... !.'.~~....... SALE 14 79
12,000 BTU .... ! .1• 1 ~....... SALE 15 39
14,000 8TU .... 1 • 1.!~...... :SAL£ 1679
I 8,000 8TU .... !?.!~....... SAL£ 1579

GLIDER ROCKERS
Solid ook or solid AldPr
&lt;onstru&lt;lion. Assor!Pd styles
ond upholstPry.

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

\AlE PRICE\

liAR! Al
ONt Y

$199° 0

CARPET SALE

JUST A REMINDER THAT WE ARE
NOW IN OUR NEW BUILDING AND
INVITE YOU TO STOP IN.

REG . 'lb.OO

S( ULPTUREO ( ARPET
- 100% Continuous
filament Nylon
- 15 Colors

Plenty of
Convenient Parking
on the Side
Parking Lot

10 . YO

Includes 9 / 18 " Pad rmrt LHbor

. •noo

PLUSH CARPET

STORE HOURS •
Monday thru Friday
9 A.M. -8 P.M .
Saturday
9 A .M.-3 P.M.

- 100 % Nylon Saxony
- Hoot Sot Yarn
- Anli-ltati&lt;
- 13 (olor~

WE INVITE YOU TO STOP IN
TODAY AND OPEN YOUR OWN
PERSONAL CHARGE ACCOUNT.

froe Delimy

EXTRA THICK

PLUSH CARPET
~ 13'6 "

wid1h

for !!Omtrt! HI

molf room,

- IV Tron SuH!On hto 1 tl'l
yont

- S ytor wtor wononrw

$14 99

\ AlE
SO. YO
Includes 9 / 16" PAd &amp; labor

_ ''On Guorrf" l imn proof

\All

$19 99

10 !0
l"dudtl 9{)6 .. l'nd nnd Lnbmr

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

.

IN THE LS SHOPPING CENTER

investigating

REG . '1 b.OO

••.

664~663

were

the allack, which caused an
cs Umated $200,000 In damage.
Lily Soto. spokeswoman for the
Na tional Workers Front tFNTt.
which represents some 400.000

sa id Roberto Gomez, who lives
across the street from the radio

announced

SHORTS, TOPS

••

••
••

Conrad Hilton Foundation

as k it s s tate' s Lcgi slaturf' for
ptlot fund ing of the tn tr rnshi p,_

••
•••
•

conduc trd at thr request of rtw
MinnPsota Board of Tc arhin g
and wi t h gran ts from Sou lhwrsl
C'r n Bcll Foundation and thP

be pro-

sc hoo lchildH•n

GIRLS &amp; BOYS

t

USA

Thr resea rchers proposed thai

d!:lpiring trac her s be required. as

•

i
•

authorities

Cast il lo Osejo that

Chin ;.l ' s Cabi nr t . said llf'ljing ha~

~

·BAG, DUFFLE, TYPE II,

Interior M in ister Car los Hur-

tado told

gathered in

front of the ~tation to prntPcl it
from being taken over by
Sandlnistas.
" It was a very tense situation,"

Wcdn&lt;'stla y of thr Sta te Council.

••
•

MADE WHILE YOU WAIT

TIGER STRIPE

Bu sh

of the military . They held up the
guards and dynamited the tacili ·
ties," Radio Corp. owner Jose
Castil lo Osejo sa id in a statPmPnt
on Radio Mlnuto.

who recently comp leted a di sarmam ent process -

against China would s tc~y in plaC('
hrcausr B('ljing' s hum an r ight s
n•cord ha_.., not imprnvPd sutfi
c icnrly, ('\'f' n lhuugh J a pan is
l'&lt;t.'-ii ng its stanc( ·
l.i . SIX' &lt;.tkin g at a sf'Sslon

••
•

••'

the

''The assailan!s were masked,
with guns, dressed as members

Wednesday' tha t US polit ical.
m il it ary and r ro nomic s;J nr rions

••
••

PRINTED

COMBINATION
PICK &amp; SHOVEL

••'
•
•
•

•

BY OUR
ARMED
FORCES

news

intrrna l affai r s" of Ch ina and
oth rr nat ions.
WrsiE'rn nations - lf'd by lhr
Group of Si'VPII indu str iill it.f'rl
nntions that wrap!Jf•d up thL·ir
annual f'conom ir summit Wed ·
Jl('Sda~· imposrd sa nc tion s
aftN th r Chinesr army fired on
unarmr·d pro-clf'mO&lt;.T&lt;h·y protrs
tf'rs in Rriji ng in .Junr 19H9 . La .'&gt; l
yp;n's s ummit tonk a strnng
posi tion againstlhf' crac kdow n

••

AS USED

Xinhua

"continue to meddl e in

••
••"

GENUINE ISSUE

Li Peng
criticizes
•

••

GENUINE
,.. GOVERNMENT ISSUE!
. \ CUSHION SOLE

Co rp., which were located 8 miles
outside Managua.
The station' s stud ios inside the
capital were the site of much of
the fighting between Sandinistas
and suwor ters or the ruling
Natio nal Opposi tio n Union , or
UNO !a lP Tuesday

••

LARGE SELECTION

Elvis mania reaches So\1el
Union
MEMPHIS. Tenn. 1UPI1 The Cold War must reallv be

birthday with a specia l concer t
on Jan . R, 1991, " Shnlrlov wrote.
"'We arc negotiating wtth the
authorities to open a club entire ly
devoted to rock 'n ' ro ll, to be
ca lled Memphis "
Shnlrlov sent along photos,
Incl uding one of her standi ng
beside a wall hanging in Russian
and English - · 'Elvis d1Pd . Rock
' n' roil is li ving."
The club president said tha t
Soviet E!vls fans have some
ca tching up t o do with their
co unt erparts across the world.
"Recent ly, a recording of
Elvis's music was Issued by
Melodya Records ca lled 'Elvis
Presley.' We have a collection of
ar ti cles about E lvis which have
appea red in the Soviet press, as
we ll as local concert posters and
programs . We have tapes of
Elvis's music, but unfortunately
have never seen any of his
films," she said.

"The cos t of a democracy is to
have strikes . The cos t of tyranny
i s a violent responsP ."

government-run industries.

and highobstacles,
:government properties are in the
: hands of civi lian aut hor ities, and

counci l meeting .

tion of thrAll -Union Assoc iation

Sandinista workers erected
barricades and stoiP and burned
vehicles In the stref'ts to piT'vent

:heed the cal l and most residents
• remained behind locked doors.

'"When the streets
••• ways
are cleared of

who burns

Graceland offic ials say they
havP bePn notifif&gt;d of thP forma -

the services of the state have
been plainly restored, I will call
for a renewal of the dialogue,"

: gover nment rio ters appeared to

t were over.

WOODLAND

cl"s top staff member, Betty
Reynolds, satd she may quit , and
commissioners sharply c ritic Ized the Lcglslat ure and the new s

and Sandlnista army com ·mander Gen. ·Humberto Ortega
ca lled Wednesday for an end to
I hree days of via lenc&lt;•, and
•.{:hamorro agreed to negotiate
~ with strikers on('e order is

; bombs, arso n and mob fights

Councilman proposes UOO flag

Ethics

Presiden t Violeta Chamorro

; unsure

and jackets is out.

SLIDELL, La . tlJ PII - Ci ty
Council President Bob Callahan
has decided if f lag burning
ca nnot be ou tl awed, it should be
taxed.
Callahan planned to propose a
Cr iminal Code am€ndme nt Tues

MANAGUA, Niearagua tUPII
-

• quiet Wednesday night as most
~ Sand inista strikers and pro-

nolds told the panel. " I probably
won't be with you much longer ."
Members of the panel also
sharply criticized the press. and
discussed whether they should
la unc h a campaig n to conv ince
journalLsts the commission is
doing a good job.

humer perm Its

:Strike violence subsides; Chamorro, Ortega call for calm

sure hunter who now lives In
California, his partner Jack
Grimm, and a Co lumbia University research team are seeking a
share of the gold. Ali contend
their earlier research led the
team to the shipwreck site.

:: fPS!Ored .
,. The streets uf Managua werf'

execuUve director who has bPen
a frequent targPI of the panel's

faded jeans i n th£' sa m e cate-

Closed circuit TV catches
et hics panel off guard
SALEM. Ore. tll Pi t
Members or the Oregon Govern -

The survey commtss ioned by
Stolic hnaya Russian vodka found
Soviet shoppers who will be In
Seallle from July 2lto Aug. 5 will
follow the buying patterns of the
avrrage America n you ng adult .

she wa s go ing ou t of state tor job
Interviews later in th e week.
Reynolds. th e co mmission's

gor y Bikinis were favored by 53

Soviet visitors looking lor
bikinis, mini-skirts, blue jeans
SEATTLE tUPl l Mim ·
skirt s. blue jeans and bikinis top
the lists of Soviet shopper s
visiting for t he Goodw ill Games.

recent survey showed.

circuit telev is ion. Reynolds rP fused later to discuss her re
marks, which seemed to lndicatP

accounts . Kellam has ruled news

treasure, the Insurance com pan
les must prove they fully Insured
the gold and paid out claim s after
the ship went down.
Si nce most shipping docu ments no longer exis t, the firms
relied largely on newspaper

Quirks in the news_______
President saved wife from rat
HOUSTON I UP! I - First lady
Barbara Bush has rPVPalPd a rat
was swimming in the White
House pool with her severa l
months ago, but the president
came to her rescue .
Mrs. Bush said in an intervi ew
with the Houston Post the rat
"just wen1 by in front or me"
while she was swimm ing in the
pool weari ng a swimming mask .
"Fortunately. George Bush
was there." she added . "It was
horrible.·'

Thursday, July 12, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992-6669
253 North Second Ave.

Middleport, OH.

SIOM HOURS

A -j

I

.~:o
n/fae!"IOK
I
Tu..day-Saturday r--. Al'f'IIANCII, TY'I, flOOI

COYIIING

9:30 -5:00

992-31171
DOWNTOWN I'OIIIIOY, OliO

�Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. July 1 2. 1990

U. S. Air Force Band to perfonn in Gallipolis Saturday
Starti ng uff the first evening of
t lw Rirentl'nnial Airshow wPe-

kPnd , "' part of the Old Frenc h
Ctlv's 200111 birihday . the U.S. Air

Fo rr P

Log ist ics

Co mmand

"Band of Flight" wi ll present an

open air concert, Saturday, July
H at 8 p.m . on the riverfront
across from the Gallipolis City
Pa rk
Prior to t he band 's performance. the Ga llia·Meigs Re·

glonal Airpo rt Airs how begins al
10 a.m. Saturday with the air
rally starting at 11 a.m.
Provid ing an appropriate ob
serva nce of Bastille Day. a

significant occasion in French

dignit a ries. and imponant na
tiona! Jnd n.•g ional ev ents _

history, the 38 piece concert band
is the largest ensem ble wit hin t hP
66Jst Air Force Band and pl'r

del. co ncert coordi na tor on bl'

forms fo r civilia n and military

hal f of the Gallipolis Bieentcn·

Accord ing to William J

Shon~

n ia\ Commission, and Sgt. Randy

Frisby, USAF area recru i ter and
even t coordinator on behalf of the
band. this performan ce gives
area residents the opportun it y to
enjoy a free concert presented by
a band that has ber n awarded
three A1r Force Ou !standing Un 11
Award citations. and numer ous

"" ~

civ ilian honors.
The band 's miss ion. pas t and
presen t. is to support military
com ma nder s in en ha ncing espr it
de corps th rough the long·
standing ceremoni al traditions
or the se r vices . T he band has the
criti cal ly impor tant respons ibil·
it y or bu ilding and susta ining
pride rn th e nation, and patriot

.

ism i n the men and women of th r
armed ser ivce s as well as thE'

American public .
Stat i oned at Wrtght ·Pa tt erson

has led various mu sical

groups on internatio na l goodwill
tour s.

Accordi ng to Shondel. requests
for the band's appeara nce were

made more th an

year in
advanc e . to be sure that a visit to
&lt;J

Ga iU polis cou ld be worked into
their busy sc hedule. PPrformlng
over 800 'concerts per year, the
"Band of Fligh t" Is coming to
Gai Upolls following a Canad ian
tour .

Bo th Shondel and Fri sby ex pressed their en thu si as m about
thr opport unit y fo r area resi ·
drnts to ('x per ience the variety of

music. se ldon ava ilable in a
co mmuni tv the size of Ga llipolis
Those ai tending are as ked to
bring

th eir

own

cha irs

for

com fort .

POND EROS~
STEllKHOUSE

CONCERT 81\ND rERFORMER - M/ SGT Clifford W. Allen, a
member of the 3S piece concert band, " Band of Flight " will be
performing at 8 p.m.•luly 14 as the citizens ol GaiUpolls observ.
Basdtle Day as a part of their French history .

ROANOKE. Va . iUPi i
Lawyers for the defunct Kim ·
Sta n landfill prepared for an
Alleghany County Clrcuil Co urt
hearing Thursday on a sta te•
motion alleging the dump is in
co ntempt of court for nol obeying
clea nup orders.
Judge Duncan By rd issued the
orders when he closed lhe dump
in the Alleghany community of
Selma In M ay .
The sta te attorney general's
office moti on wants Kim -Stan
fined and held In contempt for
failing to stop polluting runoff,
for not clear ing a ditch designed
to catch the runoff and for
refusing to provide grou nd water
da ta to the stal e.
Fi nes could ru n as high as
$10,000 per da y .
On Wednesday in Roanoke, a
landfill altornPy told a federa l
bankruptcy judge tha t cred i tors
saying the dump owes them
$746 ,000 for ha uling away pol ·
l uted waters should be chas ing
onP of Kim ~ Sta n 's partners

I'I\0\1DES PATRIOTISM 1\ND PRIDE - Lt. Colonel Ri&lt;'hard
\ . Sht.•l to n, tommandt•r and fo nducto r of thP I ·.s. Ai r Fnn_·t_• ''Ban d
11f Highl ", will h(' pt&gt;rfonnin~ on ttu· Hin•rfrunt ano~:-. lrom lht•
(it _\- Park -l ul l U at H p .m .

Pomeroy Court news
Li ~ lltl ' r ' n cJ.-,ps wrrc prorPSSt'd
!1.'· \ILl\ r ~t· Ri('hard SP_
\ ·lrr tn
P1!1 llt 'rm \ll.n·or\ Court on Tu r s

d;n 111gh1

L11wP ('h dJ.lm &lt;Jn . Pom!'r oy.
to rff•itf'll S:{i:1 DL' I. .John R
Br ow n. \\'il!ia rn,pvrr. Pa. forfritl'd $tih PL'l'O I' IOI"t' on: Ed
~~- d i d St;rnb&lt;Jugh, Cal!rttsburg.

Fn Wrst Co lumb iJ .
for ·fr •il t' d $-11. '-p&lt;'f'd, Pdulinf'
1\.v . Pl;co \iOiatio n. f1ned $bh
\·1 111 ~ ' 1
Cook, ·tl k . Tenn .. forf f' - J nrl I 'U"L": Ja c kiJus t is. M i nt.' r s
lft •d S-U . ii'-'\Urf'U cle ar di sta nrf': • Iil lo •.
s:J;, and COstS, DU I:
H"cl"• HJtf i"ld . Hut land. forfp. Caroly n Casto. Pomrroy, $315
t!t •d Sn. ~J',&lt;.;U J"Pd C]Par di s taf1Cf' .
&lt;! tid cost s D U I : .Jo hn R. Ward.
Pn nwroy, assau lt. $2U and
ru:-. ts. r-\llt' n Eas 1rr, Ironton. $ ~0
and cos ts. no insurancr, Dway ne
Qu .1 !Js. Ponw r o.Y. $2J:l a nd coSts.
trr.&lt;., pa ssrng .. Lrmil' Ha rris. d is
\ l(lcl r·r: tlt · clctma gf' w ~t-" 1n
o rde-r!~- conclu rt. S1U t~nd costs:
tl! l it ' d !11 l hr 1"t''"i id pf1('t D f lhf'
La .J o nna LJrgP. $11.'\ Jnd ro q-.,
l I, J\ 1cl \Ltnn fJmll\ J l Ft\'1' d r~.;o rdf • il _\
1·n ndu rt.
l. orit·
V 1tlll" '"&gt; W ]\(· fl li~ htf'ntn g &lt;.,l itH" k
C arnc'.'-. P tllll f 'l 11\·. ~ 1 L1 and
!Itt· . t 11l t tlrl .i 10\\'t'r d u nn g ht•a1·_\· l '(hh, dl:--urd t ·r l_\ co nducr : D&lt;t\'id
l.tl ll ...,,.11·rn.., \.\'(·dnrsdJ\ 11 ig ht
CiH' n '-. ~11ddlqJo rT $f.:l and
.t !HI "' '' ! h( · roo f a nd .llt i r o l th t· cos h : no up{'r; l lor 's l icf'nsf':
'-litH I Uit 'I Jn fll t '
Shan!' Ln ~-: lP . \1 idd lq Jorr. S:{)and
\t 'lln~..: I ' m • t'hll'f .Jr ft ~h ank
cu-.; 1:--. " P. ' t 'dl t l~. 1-' lo\·d McCI P1t p1H tl'd rh ctl lh(• P gmN(t _\ Fin •
Lt n. l 'ullll'IIJ_\. Sli : ~ a nd cost s.
f )t ·p.t! lnH·Il l ~~- d " ('J[ h'ci to I hi'
di ...,t) I'Ck rl \ ('II ! H lw 1 aftrr bPin g
·. t ~ · rJt · .tl ""; 27 p m Thn•t• truc k"
\~ .u · nt ·d . Sll.\ drtll l 'thts . public
.ll ld 1:-.. nli'n Wt ' l•' o n th r .-..cr nt • fu r
inl oxtrd ll o tl.
HohPrt Ta\'lor ,
l!lt li t ' UL tn dn lHIU I Thl' Chr ...., l!'l
l'o mt·rov. S:\7:1 ;r nd co""'· Ol '1.
] )t · p , l r·•nw nt ,iJ,u brought in ;1
[)Pcll1f' IIP

Damage said
moderate in wreck
1

l&gt;o~mdgt · '.A,J '-

ro• l
p11

co nt ;nn(·(j 1n Tilt•
c~ r t ·. l

di JJ(

.111d

tht ·

ot

lw mt · . tllh l!u~h
H ,J! , ·t d. tmJE! t' 111 tht ·

t.dJrlc.th'd

l htrf ·

,,-,1,

Ji\l fl~

d t o\ \l hl d ll\

ij Udl l t' l&lt;.; _

.lt '••nrltng !11 .....;h, tni-; Th c•rt· "' '"
nn •• fli' &lt;ll hnnJI-, 11 l ht· ll!lW11f 1 h 1·
~h.t n ~: '-,lJ d I hal lht•

I il l'

h;trl no

.\'l. tllll '&gt;

lll'"&gt;Ul. tll c t·

Stocks
Hail~·

"'tndt prh

t'"'

( ,.\_.,; uf IO ::HJ a. m . 1
Hryn· and .\ brk Smith
M Hlunt. FIJI..,~- Lnt·~\- i

.- \n .

1- l c\ I IJt

2q \\

1'' '" ' '1

r:- \

X f' ,\-T
,\ &lt;..ll l, tnd I I] )
n oh l :\ t il'

'\fi

Ch.t r nt 1r1t.: \IJt'PP' '"

J(l " ~

!-h ol d ill).! ( ' (I
F NliTd l :'- lii !.!Ul
(~ (lPth ( ' I] 'L\:H

1I) 1 I
1~ I ~

!-\( ", ( t·lltUI ')II[l

12 1 ,

LarHl&lt; f·,ntl
1.-imit vd lr.1·

It) I H

Jl 1 ~

( ' iJ \

2:1 1l
t;q 1 '

:vlulrimPdl. l l1J c
Ra .x Ht''-L ttll,tn h
Robh1n ~

'1 ~

8.- \h t'[

'2 l,R

~~

...,

Attorney Joe Roberts said
Vertay Industries of Troy, Mich.,
was Klm ~ S t an's mark e tin g
partn er and hand led the money
involved in the opera ti on or the
Al leg hanv Co un ty pr i va te
landfill.

StJr Hank
\\'r ndy '" ln rl
\\'ort hm gton lnd

Plan f'wnt July 14
.- \ Pun t Prrss &amp; Kick co mp&lt;&gt;li

li on wi lllw held on Sa turdav Ju l1
14. 1~90 .11 Maraude r Stadi.um i.n
1-'omrrm . Th e competi tion wi ll
br OJX' II to kids In grades 4-8 and
e\wy kid I ll !he Melgs -Gal ll a·
~la s on

ar ra

is

invited

to

comj)f'!f•

Regiq rati on

is $2 &lt;rnd thr

competiti on u·iil bf'gm at 10 a .m .

I;&lt;- -&lt; Trophies Wi ll be award ed to the
Wi nners in each gradr.

Plan car wash
A car wash will be held
Sa tud ay from I a.m. to 3 p.m. a l
the New Ll feCove nant Churchof
(;oct. Ches ter.
.•

I

wa s 86.

From 19'0 until 1974. he op&lt;•r
Jtl'd the hospital at -!Ill J:&gt;th St .
\.

nrar

sitr of

ltl r

~ ·l orida

Hospit al of St. Petersburg Aftr•r
leaving lhr hos pilal. Dr . KPrg,"
ct'rtifird obstetri cian an d g_v nl'
eulog is t. prac ti ced prrvarC'l .v in
an offi ce acr oss from the hospital

until 1982
He was bo rn in WPst l.Jn ion.
Iowa. and wau Pdu rJtf'd at I owa
Sta t r lJ nin' rsl ty and Still Colll'gt'

Vacat ion Bible scpoo l will hP

held Monda y thro ugh Fnda\ " '
ih&lt;' "ie\\' Life Covena nt Cpurch of
God. Chesd te r Therr w&gt;ll bi'
!' las s('s fo r chi ldrrn . &lt;Jg('s thrf'r
t hr o ug h trP ns from I to~ p .m
rac h ('\'E"nin g . G arq Hinr\. p.t ~
tor. in vites thf' public.
Enterta inme nt s la led

The 1\ew Life Singrrs of Pom t
PIPa san t and Ja n and Ka thy will
lJf' entertai ning at thf' Star M 1•1
Park in Ra ci ne a t i : JO Salurda _
v

nig ht .
Physicals scheduled
E as tnn sports ph~·s ical s will
ill• held Sa turda\' a! the high

"\&lt;tH I-OLr; . 1·.,

rl l'lr - ,\
!n r runt · 1n ~un k f'n tr r asurl' from
&lt;~ Flth ('t'n lu n "hlp~1Teck a r th r
C' Plll &lt;T of , ! 1: tnle n ~ t' lPg al strug
J-:] t'
m:t .\
. Jl( lucl r
twicp thr
.11n oun t ul go ld prt ' \ · t ouo;;J~- rsr i
ll1Jt('d. a nwrnbrr 11 f &lt;.~n O hio
rrsc·&lt;Hdt tc·am ";i\·_...,
!tnT _
\· SC' hJ I ! of 1/l(• Co lumbu s
.-\nwn c, t Di ... co n ·ry Croup rr ·
' t' d iPd \\.pdnf':-.da _
\ · tha t rr
&lt;.;t'dJC h N ... nov.· hl'lit•\P t hr S.S
(&lt;' n 1ra l r\ mt&gt;r' ic a r o u ld ha \ 'f' brrn
c· c~ rJ -.\· rn~ up to " '-' to n.&lt;- of gold
Prr\·iou .., l'~ t irn dl t '" had put thf'
lOJd ;JI)(),lrfl tlw '&gt;hip at thr f'r
ton" .
Thf' \J iuP tlf ! h(' gold has be('n
r . . tim,tt r d d'&gt; high a:; $1 billion .
\11 o n.-· h .t.'&gt; o~ v. t ' '&gt; S C'd u·hat the
trrJ!-. un· hau l wou ld br worth if it

Weather
South ('Pntral Ohio - l{a in like lv
Thu r &lt;.&gt;day nig ht , with a low i n thf'
mid hfls C han c P of ra i n Is 70
JX" r rc nt Occ as1o n£r l rai n F'ri da v
with h igh s in thr mid 70s . Chan C.~
of ra in is 80 prrcf'n t
t: &lt;tended Foreca.•l
Sat urda.v through Monday
A c han rr of showers and
thunderstorm s Sa turday and
Su nday·. wi t h fair weat.her o n
Monda.v Highs wil l range from
the 70s to the low 80s Saturday,
and i n the RO s Sunday and
Monda\ . Over night lows wil l
range from th e upper 50s Jo th e
t1Us through thf' pN iod .

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Admissions Vicki Ellis.
Ga iUpolls: Rae Ly nn Bas ham ,
Coo lville .
D I SC HAR GES
Harl ey
McDona ld

wrerr six tons . A nt·w e s timate
would have to tak.t' into account

the co ndllion of any gold fou nd
Sc hatz said t hP nrw estimate is
base d on historiral assrssment s

th at tndicale a large amou nt of
go ld ma:v havp been car ried bv
ind iv i dual prosprctors who
nrH •r r eg istr r Pd their find s
Thr Cr ntral Amrric a was
hra ding to 1'\pw Yo r k ca rr~· in g
gold from Ca l i fo rn ia when it Wf'n t
dow n i nah urr i cam• i n 1R~i.abou r
160 m i lps Pas t of South Ca rolina

Morp lhan

cha ncr to g ivr so meth in g in
re turn ,·· sai d Wiggins ln Pncou
ragi ng res idents to gl'l i nvolv1.•d

in the cleanup pro ject

Collection change
Hac ine Village Clerk Jane
Beeg le reports that she wil l be
co ll ecting the Racine Village
Hefu se and water bills at the
Ha ci ne Department Store
through Monda y After that date
the bills ar e to be mailed t o the
cler k at P 0. Box 375, Ra ci ne.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete

but he has been unable t o contact
Vertay's officers since March .
A clerk at the Michigan De~
partmenl of Com merce sa id
Vertay and two related compan ·
les were dissolved recently be
cause they failed to file required
annual reports for thP past two
years.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Ross
Kr umm set Sept. 19 to hear th e
creditors ' arguments on their
dem ands Kim-Stan be forced Into
bankruptcy.

Remodeling
&amp; Compare

Stop

Free Estlmat11
985-4473
667-6179

Bot h sid es agreed t o go back to
the bargain ing ta ble Wednesday
aft er loca l offic ia ls. f earing the
loss In revenues. Intervened . a
Cl evPia nd radio sta tion reported.

or

1

C•rd ol Thanh
In Memor1;1rn

~

SIDELINES
SPORT CARDS
Buy · Sell
Trade

00
S6 00
S9. 00
S13 00
$4

51 30

Announcemenls

Merchandise

1 Card o l Thanks

S 1 - Hou1eho ld Good11
52 - 5r:~o t llng Goodt

In

~

H.tpp~ A.a ~

H•PPV Arh

6
7
8

LD51 and Faun~
Yard Sate (P&lt;t •ll on allvan cel
Pubtoc S•le &amp; A u LI•on

Y ~rd Sal e!&gt;

9

Wanted to

Ml!m n•~

A nn oucemen t ~

53 - Antiques

4 - G•~eaw~..-

S 4 - Mosc Mt!t CI'11nd1te
5&amp; • Burt dong Supplil!ll
56 Peu lor Sa iP
57 - M ui •Ctl ln 11 rum en 11
56 Fru &lt;!l &amp; Vegtl'la biM
59 - f or Sale or T rade

B u~

Farm Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

11 Help Wanted

..foU flu in I' 1I' II' ph on&lt; ' '·xc It 111 t f!' '·'

Monda y through Fnda\ fr om 9

G8 1h a Coun l y

Me'lf' C ou m~

AruC ode61 4

A1ea Code 614

DAY RHORE PUBLICAT IO N

DEAD liN E

MONDAY PAP ER

- 11 00 AM SATURDAY
200PM MON::JAY
2 00 PM TUESDAY

TUESDAY PAPE~
WEDNESDA Y PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

- 2 00 PM WEDMSOAY
'] 00 PM
200PM

FRIOAl PAPER
S UNDAY PAPER

THURSDAY
~A l DAY

C/a.1.1ificd pap• .1 co t..r fit• ·

a. m . to noo n. ThP c ards mu s t br

fi llPd out and signed pr ior to th r
limf' when ph ys ical s arr g i \·rn
Or Mark. Br own and Dr . Douglas
Hunll'r t.vill br thr ph~ ·s ican s
gi\'l n g rhr physica ls .

992

M, dd lepun
Pomero y
Ches ler

.4.46 - Gell ipOI&lt;I
367 -+ C he.h"e
388 - Vonto...,
245 - Ato G ra ndt

B4J - Portla n d

256 - Guyan D•ST

24 7 -letart

98~

6• 3

Arab , . o ...

9 49

379

Wetnut

742

667

Fall~

R ac111e
R u tl 8n O
Coolw ,ll e

Mu on Co WV
Area Code 304

675

Pt

Pleuo~~ nl

458 - le on
576
773

882
895
937

Appl11 G r nv P
M unn
N~ H,..·en

la.s r
summer brought up morr th.1n a
ton of go Jct· fro m the Ce ntral
America las t yrar .

•••••••••••••••
HURRY/ Coupon Exprres 7122190
CHARBROILED

Kansas City Strip

Steak Dinner

toast plus Ponderosa s
AII•You.Con· Eat Grand Buffet '"

garlt c

"92 6621.
Servi ces to all three cou nties
will con tinue out of the Athen s
office with representa tives of the
age ncy to come to Me igs Cou nty

PONDEROSA~

'•• "&lt;·'·'"'W('(l

············-··
•••••••••••••••

Mt,cellaneous

65

Public Notice

NOTI CE TO BIDOERS
Sealed propouf• will be
received by the Coundt ol
tha Village o f Syracuse in
their offi ce. Syracu1e Mun icipal Building. Third St .. Sv ·
recuae. Ohio. 46779 until
12 noon on July 26 . 1990
and opened and read aloud
at 2 p.m .. July 26. 1990. for
the furni1hing of materials,
performing labor. ate . for
the following projec1 s ·
ADDITION TO SYRACUSE
FIRE DEPT . BUilOING
SPECIFICATIONS
Size: 32'0" long by 40 'o··

wide by 14 ' 0 " eavfl height .
Fram ing: Rigid lram fl
loadings : 26 P S .F roof
tin e load; 90 M P .H wind
lo111d
R oof : 26 g11 . met a l panels
to mat c h existing.
Wall1 : Match
ex isting
Varco Pruden insulated pa nels No . VP102 . Re -use &amp;X ·
isting end w1111 panels.
Floor : 6" conc rme, 3500
P .S .I. strength. reinfor ced
w ith 6 ga. wire mesh.
Insulation : 6" viny l faced
in roof .

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

HURRY! Coupon Ex ries 7122190 ...-------,

CHARBRO IL ED

Kansas City Strip

71

Home, lo t Sate

32

M obole Hom e s fo r SaiP
33 - Farm' !or Salf
34 - Buuneu B wld111g~
J!i l o is &amp; A c r l!lttgP
36 ~ eat ElUte Wanted

PONDEROSA~
••••••••••••••••••
CO..POn gOO&lt;IIo• "" ~ ~ ·Ty •111 C•n&lt;IO' ill'

u\f'&lt;l '" C O"'f.&gt;on~I O" ~" "· I"~ Ol ~~ r OY DC"' .,
&lt;lo...-OV'!O I!~, IM""' ''' -''-"""' V"'-r'l ~'
1),1 &lt;1 &lt;; 'f&gt;~I"'Q 'O(~I ")nl

"' &lt;t • "' ftl

C 1990 Poni1erOSII Inc

GALLIPOLIS
UPPER RIVER RD.

(Across from the Airport)

·~· ~

7J

Ve n J~ 4~Ds

74
75
76 77
78

M O lOICVCI~

l;tmfNAI

48

Ea u•omen• lor Re nt

49

~o 1

Lr. ..\e

door~ ·

81

H om e

82

Ptumb on g &amp; He•tng

l mp&lt;o~ m!lr'\ 11

8J- E•CIY!Itng

I

84 ElttcH•c •l &amp; Al!frtg81'111on
85 - Gl'lnera l Haultng
86 - M obt l e Home R ep111

I 87 - Uphol11ery

Public Notice

Public Notice
Overload

8 0111!. Mo1 o rs l o r S8te
Auto Parts &amp; Acc,.so,,.
Auto ~IPI"
C 1mp tng Equ&lt;om&amp;nt
Campers &amp; Motor H om~:s

Services

2

12 '0"x12 ' 0 "

fiberglass
doors with electric opera tors by Ctopsy Door Co . or
equal.
Walk doors :: ln 1talled new
3070 H.M door in new end
wall. Relo cate ~ulisting door
Plumbing
2'0"x2 ' 0"
trench drain between bay1.
Electric : By owner
Plana and ParmiU : SucCMsful bidder 1hall prep11e
a complete set of building
plans and obtain ltatll ap proval o l same. AU neces IBry permits and permit f&amp;es
are to be included in the bid .
All propo1afs are to be accompanied by a bid security
in the form of a 100% Bid
Bond compl~ing with Section 163.671 of th11 Ohio
Revised Code. or a Ca1hier's
Check. Certified Check. or
le1ter of Credit property 18cured in the amount o f not
le11 than 10% of th e total
sum or sum• bid.
Upon aw11rd of contract
100'11 Bondi aubminod by
succe~sful bidder mu1t automlllically conven to a Perfor-

sum.
No bidder mav withdraw

THIS SPACE
AVAILABLE FOR
ONLY ss.OO A DAY!

Au t os foo S•l e
lru ck1 loo S• l e

Hou$~5 for R ent

Payment Bond given in the
name of the Vilt1Q8 of Syrecun in a 1pedfic amount
equatto 100% oftheComrect

Includes potato and
garlic toast plus Ponderosa 's
AII·You•Con•Eat Gra nd Bu~t'"

72

79 -

mance. L.bor and Materiel

Steak Dinner

,:-ertil • ~er

eo

their bid within
day• alter
the actual date of the open ing thereof.

Contractor• and lub-con tratofl muat adhera to and
pay Davi1-Bacon prevailing
w1ge1 applicabte to thil pro·
jtct.
The Village of Syracul8 ia
vitally internted In bid pro·
pol811 from Minority and f•
male contrac tors.
The Village of SyrcuM rNet'VN the right 10 waive anv

PUBli C NOTICE
NOTIC E is hereby given
that on Saturday, J~ly 14,
1990. at 10 A.M .. .a publi c
uie will be h&amp;ld a1 106
Union Avenue,
Pomeroy ,
Ohio, to 1ell for caah, the fol lowing c ollateral ·
1986 Ford
Etcort S#
1 FA8PD769FW119781
The Farmers Bank &amp; Sav ings Company , Pomer oy,
Ohio, reurvet the right to
reject any and all bi ds tub ·
mi"ed.
Further, thft above colla teral will be 1old in the con dition it i1 in, with no U ·
preued or implied wlrran t ies given .
(7111 , 12. 13 Jtc

304-en.

Small bi1ck female hoUM dog.
Good watch dog. 81ol-992-2887.
Two blk &amp; whht long haired kit·
11n1, 7 wke old, 304-875-5456.

Lost &amp; Found

6

$100. rtWird lor uft return Aid
tamtlt Dtthund, 304-87!-2798.
Found : Bic ycle In area ot Mill
Ck. and Eltltm Ave. Conla~
Galllpoll1 Pollett Dtpl. 814-446tltl.

Poodle.

Gravl•h-btown

" Ptp~ "-

Lot1 In
Chllhlr•Roulh lane and 554
1111. II found call 814-Mi-2915.

SEARS

Lost : Malt Bailiff Hound (red

collar) Trt.cotor. Over ...kend ,

788 N. 2nd

Kanauga
Drtv.-tn
Reward. 814--446-8128.

MIDDLEPORT

vicinity.

992-2
USED APPLIANCES

•o

DU

WAliA lilY

WI.SHERS....IIOO up
ORYERS....$69 up
REFRIGERATORS....SIOO up
RANGES- Gn·Elet.-SI2S up
fREUERS....$115 up
MICRO OVENS... 179 up

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SERVICE

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Board of Education of
Eutern local School District desires to
receive
ae11tled bidl on the following :
Dairy Product.: Bakery
Products; Gasoline; Dies~
Fuel; Fuel Oil: Oil &amp; Greue;
Tir" &amp; Tubet .
Specification sheets are
&amp;\l&amp;ilable at the Treasu,e r '•
Office.
In order to be conaider ed
&amp;11 1uled bid• shall be received in the Treasurer's o ffic e by 12 o'clock noo n on
July 24. 1990
The bida will be lor the
1990· 91 fi scal year . Said
Board ol Education rel8fV81
th11 right to accept or reject
&amp;ny and all par11 of any and
all bid1
Etoile Barton, Treasurer
Eutern lo c al School
Di1t rict
38900 SR . 7
Reedsville. Ohio 46772
PH 614 -986-4331
171 5, 12. 19. 26 . 4tc

2

1

~=TRAVEL

PURSUIT
Airline

Resorvation/ Tickots
Ask for Ken do
"Your

992 ·5 335 or 985 -351&gt;1
Arrou From Post Offiu
POMEROY, OHIO

Types of

10/ 30/'89 tin

All

-·

o.n .t mo.
&amp;

ECHO

OUTDOOR POWER

PRODUCTS

Repa11 All lbkes &amp; Models of
Chai n saws and lawn MO'ftl's
Saw Chains for Sah~
PJ(KUP &amp; DELIVERY

PAT HILL FORD

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

992 -2196

742·2455
RUTLAND, OHIO

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and

REMOVAl
·uGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992-2269
8-12-90 tfn

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; llARAGES
" At Rtosonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
Day

or

Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS

SALE
Push Mowers &amp;

Riding Mowers-Twin (vt

6-29.'9().1 mo.

liNDA'S
PAINTING
&amp; co.

111111101 EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

Toke lhe pain aut of
pain ling.
let us do it for you .

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

(614)

985-4180

SALES

AND SERVICE
fa&lt;tary Authoriud
Service (enter for Most
Makes and Models
Fast

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK
•Mobile Hom e

P.art s
•Mobile Hom e
RPrttals
•Lot• Renlals

Rt.

1·12· 88-rtn

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESTER, OHIO

TANNING

ALL MAKES

MOW OPEN

Bring It In Or We
Pick Up.

Appointment

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

30

Seuions - 530
Co. Rd. 28
Wal&lt;h Far !igm

Help Wanted

992 · 5335 or 985 -351&gt;1
A&lt;rou From Post Offico
21/ [. Soc. P-oroy
POMEIOY, OHIO
316/'90/rtn

6-21 .' 1110- 1 mo.

Do you need extra income but
still want to be at home?

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

We are looking for people in
Meigs County who are willing to
share their home and provide
friendship to two adults with
learning limitations. We train you
and can add up to $18,000 a year
to your income and still work at
home. High school degree, valid
driver's license and good driving
reCOrd required·

SALES &amp; SERVICE

For more information ca II

mllH 10uth ol Galllpolla. RIGht
on Raccoon Creti: Road, 41h
hoUII, CINr vtew Subdlvtlfon.
High chalr, btdroom 1uh1, exarciH bike.
Giant Garage Sale-234 Jlekson
Plk• i -? lhUI'Iday I Ft-tdlty.
Boy to Adun Cl~hes. curtain•,
dlshn, Toy~,lot1 ot Anlklv.t
Do1t1. rocM•. lamp &amp; etc.
M ov in~ Sale In AIIIY BehiNd

Garage.

llyton 1

li uly

12-

13F'urni1uf'll, Houuhotd goode,
Clothing.

Sat. July 14th, 3 mil•• S. of o...
llpolls on Rt. 7. loti of llam1. 9--5

Pf. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity
3 Family Yard Sele, Friday Ju ly
14 , JeHarson Ave., 8:001111 7.
Garage 9al4, 4 tamlll11, rain or
thina, Friday and Satwday.
OlahH, ••erclll blkH, c:ouc.h,
ch1ir. 7 Manln Sl., Muon.

New Yard Sslt, 2'110 Madlaon
Ave , Thu,. and Fri. boya and
girt• ctoUw1. Much mors.

Pomeroy,
Mlddtepon
&amp;

VIcinity

S..tamlly yard n le. 121h·13th141h. Rain o r ahlne. 3 mll11 out
New Lima Rd., Rutland . Watch
tor
Bea Wood 614-142·

•91•-

:mo.

Big garage aale. OH 143 lust out
ot Harrl•onvllll on Cotterill Rd.
4th dwelling on the len. Jetla
Bollna. Evary1hlng nk-1 1nd
Moving uta. La rge Broyhill
dlningroom let , wash1r/dryer1
retrig, trHzlr, slr eomp. ana

MICROWAVE
O~EN REPAIR

SPECIAL

Garaga S111/oSa1. July 14th. 184
Ann Orh•e, llow route 7 for 8

•LIMESTONE

FOREVER BRONI

949-2794

Community Yerd S11t : July 13th
and 14th _Anything you nNd. 112
mi. out Neighborhood Rd ., on
Hilnop Drl\11.

clean.

985-4422

Coli Now To Mak e

Big Yard Salt 120112 Tuu Ad .
Thuraday July 12lh thru Juty
141" 0.?

•GRAVEL

1-11 - 90tln

Monserrate a nd Anita
Cordero
Mary, John Jr . and
Alicio Jacoba
Maria and Joseph
Delgado
Norma and Kriatin
Torres

All Yard Salts Mull 81 Pakt In
Advanc•. OEAOUNE : 2:00 p.m.
tl'te day befoN the ad Ia to Nft .
Sunday tdhion • 2:00 p.m.
Frida y. Mondly edltkKt • 2:00
p.m. Seturday.

Pomeroy, Ohio

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

191 9 · 1 988

clolt'tu

33 Nerth of

In Loving
Memory of
DANNY
CORDERO

344 LA Granda. Slturday, July
14th. Lot• b«by &amp; chlldran'a

992-7479

•FILL DIRT

In Memory

12! Klneon. Clothe1, fumllure,
toy•, •orne toddler c6othea,
dre...., men'• clolhtng. Frt.Sat. 9-5.

6 - 18 ' 90· 1 mo . d

41

-VCR-

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

-

We 'an repoir and re·
(ore radiators and
heater 1ores. We 1an
also tKid boil und rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanlts .

Middleport , Ohio
1·13-rtc

Yard Sale

7

Q

Travel"

YARDMAN

SER~ICE

Whoevef'
borrowed
ScDtl
WoU1'1 RICing Hefmet piNM
r.tum lt.

(6141 742 -2027
connection
To

RACINE, OHIO
11

Black P•rlian kitten,
242i.

Loat:

PubliC ~Ice

Transporl alion

Real Eslale

4]
Mohtle Ho m f!&lt;l l or RP nl
4] fsu m\ lor R11n1
44 A par1me nt l o r Rent
4 5 - F u rnoshed R oo,.,,
46 Sp ac e tor Rent
41 - Wanledl o R" nt

Public Notice

Seed &amp;

6 Ft . Cl'\. .1 Fr. .atr. NMd1

minor rep~~lr 614-446·7266

Anawtr. to

USED RAILROAD TIES

WentedT oDo

' irEJH4fll
31

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On June 28. 1990, in the
Meig•
County
Probate
Coun. C11e No . 26677.
Ethel F. Bentz . 33944 Bentz
Road. Racine . OH . 45771 .
w11 appointed hecutor o1
the e1tate of Michae4 An drew Bentz . Jr .. deceased.
tate o f 33944 Bentz Road ,
Racin e. OH . 46771 .
Rober1 E. Buck.
Probate Judge
lena K . Neuelroad . Clerk
1716. 12 . 19. Jtc

63 - l o11estoc k

21 - Bu1oness Opporlunot t
21 - M oney 10 Loan
13 Pro hi!U&gt;Onttl Se,; oc e s

41

BULLETIN BOARD
Coupon ~00&lt;1 IO! •n~ Pl• ly lllf ( dr"'I t&gt;P
•'&gt;&lt;'II '" &lt;W""Itl&lt;~ _, (lr "'" ' ..... n• ,.. CO&lt;.&lt;PO'" o)'
,..,..,._,n• u "~ '
~ao(T •I
1 Jol• l ~ ~~ 81; '&lt;] 10( Mo1n , .., , . ~, ...,~
1 01111

6 4 - H•v &amp; G rl " '

8uff11t O

Includes potato and

the new telrphonr number i s

S c hool s &amp; lna t ruo" l 1nn
R~d•o . TV&amp; C BR epaor

mope!

Public Notice

6 1 - Farm Equopmenl
I 62
Wanted ro Buy

I 4 - B us 1n 86! T ratn tng

let/HI

-· Cet

ro lumbu s -Amrrica

1 2 S1lullloon W anl11d
1 ] - lnl'-"ti" CI!

15
16
17
18

Over 15 Words
.
.20
30
42
60
05 / day
day

separa t e nth

e PJrh rtiN 1n

'A c lauoi&lt;M adl.en osement Jllllt&lt;:ed m The 01oly S11ntrnet Ill•
cept
c l&amp;SStfted diSpt.., Bu s.ne:n C•rd •nd l&lt;&amp;g&lt;ll n oloC f!~ t
woll etso lppe•• '" 1he P1 Pta•am A•g•lle• •nd !he Gatl•
polls D111v Tnbune. reachmgover 18 .000 Mmes
CO~¥

~ - 11 - ' 90-1

Ra1e

15
1S
15

'3

school.
This in cludc&gt;s athlet es and
r hPPrlPa dr rs Thp sr hrdulf' for
'-f' nio r s and jun iors is R to ~ :.'!0
d . m . fo r -.ophomo r cs &lt;t ncl frrs h
mcn .Y · .'l f!w ll a m andforjunior
high . 11 a m to I ~ :10 p.m Those
to rl'f'Pi\'r ph\ '\ ical~ :rrf' to W(' Jr
'-lho rts
P hy "ic al ra r d\ c an br pickrd
up &lt;..r t t h{ ' ill tll r t i c d i rrr tor'" off irr

367 -0588

BIM e&lt;e lo• co ns.ecull\/&lt;1! run1 broN.er·, updl!l'o' ! w ol l be.;hi&lt; Qed

tn•

Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY UUS
4-16-!t&gt;Hn

10
Monlhlv

'Ad1 OUII •de Me•qs Gallo &amp; o• Mason co un/195 m us t hf! p•t•
Pltd
' Re cliNe$ 50 dos c ounl !0 1 ads fHitod •n advan ce
' Free ads
Gweeway and Fou nd ads und&amp; 1 5 w0rd ~ noll bf'
run 3 dl'(5 ill no ch•ge
"Pro ce o le d tor e l l c •P•Iel tll!'ltl!f~ &lt;\ rt oLJb le nro c r o l ~d &lt;:O~I
' 7 po1n1 lm e l~pe ooty u!&lt;4!o.l
'S&amp;ntmel t5 no1 1esponstbl t for f!lt n tsllttfH l11 s1 dlfy !C he ck
for l!lrrors l us t u,., a d &lt;un ~ on P¥P4H I C81 1 boai () rP '2 00 p m
d l'( alt!l'f publoco~~to on 10 makf! co ., ecloon
'Ad ' lh l1 m u ll be Pil &lt;d 111 ildViiO CI! illf'

grand Chi ldren

Call After 5 P.M.

FREE
ESTIMATES

PH. 949-2801

Words
15
15

3
6

POliCI£5

th r F lor ida an d Amrric-an Ostro pa thic Mrdt cal Assocait rons and
a mrmbcr of thr Mas1mic Lodgt•
in Ma son
Survi\·or s in cludr hi s wifP. ol h:\
\'Cars, Al ice L. M adrilra BParh,
a so n. Dr . Harn F. . !-\Pig .
Made i ra Bea ch : a sistr•r. E di th
M e:vr r . Vi nt om . low;t and twn

992-6991

Days

CLOSED SUNDAY

Or l\eig v..·as a l ifr mrmbrr ol

BEAUTICIAN
NEEDED

111CTOIS &amp; LOADERS

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. lo 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

Middleport.

ASCS office now loc ated on
Hiland Road on the first and thi rd
Wednesday of each mo nth from
10 to 12 noon to meet wilh
residents .
For the past six month s th e
of fice has been l ocated in th e
form er Pomeroy Library build ·
in g. Pr ior to that the offi ce was in
the Ric hard Sey ler building on
Butternut and before that in the
Farmers Bank building.

FENCING

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

\'a . w hrrr hr wa s thr town 's
may·o r and f i re chif'f a nd a
member of thr school board He
S('rvPd as ph _
\ 'Si('ian for rhildrrn
in sc hool athlrtic s at M ason ;Jnd

twice a month .
FmH.~ per sonnel will be at the

ZOOR

Giveaway

4

6-29.'90 I mo.

Classifie

Be for p m o,· i nl:? to St . Pf'trrs -

Thf' Farmpr s Homr Admin '- ::·:ltion which has had a fulltimr
o ili er i n MPi g~ County for man_
\
_
\ ·r ar '- srn·ing :'vl c tgs . AlhPn s and
\ '1nt o n Cou n t lf''-'. mm·rd t his
week to AthP n ~ Co unt \
Th e offi ce is now ·locatPd at

3 -11- ' 90-tfn

PICKUP &amp; DELIVERY
MORRIS EQUIPMENT
742-2455
IDnAND, OHIO

bun:: In 1950. he lived in Mason. W.

Offfice relocated

WE BUY All NON FERROUS SCRAP. BATTER IES.
STARTERS. TRANSMISSIONS . ALTERNAT ORS. ETC .

AND TEDDERS

agreemenL

way of say ing ga rba gl' juice ru nnin g i nt o nearby waterw&lt;Jys,

PAYING AS OF TODAY . MAY 29 . 1990
#1 Copper 90C per lb .:
Clean Dry Aluminum Cans. 35¢ per lb .
Clean Auto Radiators. 40¢ per lb .

Repair All Makes &amp;
Models of Farm
Machinery

CLEVELAND I UP!J - The
Po rt of Clevela nd averl€d a
l oc k -out and l on gshorem en
l ayoffs T hu rsday after union
workers and port operators
agreed to resume negotiations
and try to hammer out an

flow of leachate - t ha t's a nict'

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 &amp; S.R . 143
ALBANY , OHIO : Rt. 50 &amp; S.R. 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY : 9 a.m. -7 p.m . 7 Day s
ALBANY: 10 a.m .- 5 p .m. 6 Days, Closod Sunday

MOWEIS, IAIIES

resume

th e dump May 10 Mort• was
spe nlln vai n atte mpts to update
pollution controls and to stop the

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING

S-31 -'90 lin

Port negotiations

Singles Information and a dlgnlll&amp;d option tor finding a
partner. Heart ..arch: P. 0 . Boa
1043, Galllpo1l1, OM 45631.

OFFERS 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU •••.

" Free Estimates"

of Osteopa thv 1n Drs M o1nrs.
Iowa . He did post graduate wo rk
at Hotunda Hospital. Dublm .
Irela nd

1023.1 Albany Road , Athens. and

1Can t lnu ed from Page 11
\'iCP. and Con tinuity of Care
";\ II of us enj oy thp Beautiful
Ohio in so many ways. here's our

or the money went ,

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
· CONSTRUCTION

Now H - loilt

----Meigs announcements--Bible Sc hool

where some

13
3 Announcements

Roberts said.
Roberts sa id he al so has been
pushing to find out from Vertay

part in a cour t-ordered cl osure of

" Kim -Stan has never rece ived

Gold fortune may be more
valuable than first thought

\

1J l,7
'2 01 I
fl ; H
1.1 1,

S h Oilt'\ ... j /ll

D r_ Eugenp R . Keig. an os tPo
pa thi c physicia n wh o wa s thl'
ow ner and dirE'r tor of Doc tor 's
Hospital in St. Petersb urg. Fl.1 .
and for many yPars twforr that
pra c ticed in t hP :'vlaso n-MPigs
J n•a. dif'd on Ju nr 19 at hi "
:vl adf' i r a Bf'ach rrstdrnc-f' HP

a bill." sa id Robert s, who ha s
es tlmated the company is at least
$1.5 million In debt.
Despite that debt, Kim -Sta n is
tr ying to avoid be ing forced Into
bankruptcy by creditors Chern
Serv Environmental Co. of Co·
lumbus, Ohio: Environmental
Chemical Assoc iates of Farm·
lngdaie, N.J. : and Gu ndleL lnlng
Co nstruction Corp. of Houston.
ChemServ alleges Kim -Stan
owes II $500,869, Environmental
Chemica l Is c,ta lm ing $232,671
and Gundle says il is owed
$12,801. All th ree are attempting
t o force the dump int o bank ·
ruptcy to open it s books In an
attempt to trace the m illions the
landfill allegedl y took in during
it s 18 mo nths of accepti ng truck·
loads of OU I·Of·Siate tras h.
"What happened to the m it·
lions of dollars they took In from
the truckers?" asked Bill Terry,
attorney for Envlroment a l
Chem ica l Assoc iates .
Roberts ha s sa id in the past
that pari of th e money went to
hauling away the polluting runoff
th ai eventually played a large

i nstead.

--Area deaths- - Dr. E. R. Keig

The Daily

Ohio

Landfill keeps courts busy

Arr Fm·ce Base. Dayton. Ohio,
thr comma nder and conductor of
the band is Lieu tenant Co lonel
Ric hard A Shelton He was
select ed as one the Outstanding
You ng Men in America in 1983,
and

Thursday, July 12, 1990

Naw Lomtian:
161 North !t&lt;ond
Middloporl, Ohio 45760

morw. Eagle Ridge. July 14-15.
814-~la-29611 .

Sofa 1nd love ~eat cottH
lable, table and chair~, bed
lpraad• cur1aln1.l.ehNtt, clothIng and misc. n5 Swcamore,
July 111h-141h. g..5_ No cheekli.
July 13&amp; M at 1~ . 11h Strut,
Point Piel8ant. Mlle. ttem~ too

numaroua to mention.
Yard aal•. RockJtpt1ng1 Rd .
ThutMiey and Frklay. July 12·13.
Cloa.to nut"llng home.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auction Comp.any
now booking auctlone,
,-n.nce makee 1M diHerenc:e.
llcanud Ohio, Kentucky, w...
VIrginia, 304-m-51'8!.

e.--

CALL - BOGGS AUCTION SER·

VICE.

AUCTIONEER '
BOGGS. 814-446-7750.

OAVIO

Caato'1 Auction Service, Buffalo, WV. llcanud Ohio and
WHI VIrginia. 30 YNfl ••·
perlane.. For your ula call ua.
Golden Cuto 304-137·2276 or
J u per Cuto l04-U37·2128.

9

wanted

to Buy

Family tooklrlg tor 1mall farm lo

rent or buy on LAnd Contract.
!M· DQ2-2463.

Quine
Antique
bcell.nt oordtlon only. Prompl paymant. 814-

or"""·

tn-5651.

Employmenl Services
Announcemenls
3 Announcements

11

Help Wanted

An lm!Ndlala opening •xtst• In
rwnent

OOLD
CREDIT
CARD • Qaltla
Vlaa/Mntarcard guarantMd, no office for

aocurnr ~n.l-11()0.083-!noo.
tel, co. bill• $41.50

r.a.

•uco...tul

County eo••

1n office derk. TM

1pplklant muat : 1.

haw 1M atMilty to . , . . . a
computer or word PI
1 • 2.
&lt;Mol with 1ho public ln I polltO

ond pn&gt;looolonol . .1'111&lt;. s. ...
an accW'att typa.. c. be

and all i'regul•itiel and/ or
informafit Mtl and to accept 01
reject any or ell bidl and / or
any part ther.of.
Village of Syracu1e
Janice llw1on.

motlnted to lelm .,.. lkllll
-and arerdH good Judgsmeut.
Thlo lo on ontry toni Poohlon
and houl'l wilt vory, tlond

Cterk·Tre11.

lpollo, Ohio Uatt. No ;t1ono
colto wilt bo

17J1 2. t 92tc

rooumo to P.O. lox 4:11,

._,od.

Qol.

•

�Page11

14-

Pomeroy-

The Daily Sentinel

LAFF A-DAY

Help Wanted

44

Middleport.

51

Apartment

conJunction

2 Apt. 11ch 4 room• I Hth. 1
tum, 1 unlwn. Ref. I Sec. Dap.
No pelt. 114-446-0444.

with

IIOCJNlAINEER
TECHNICAl
SCHOOL on THURSDAY JULY
12, 18i0 lrom 1:OOpm to 5:00pm
and 7:00 pm to 9:00_pm at
tho:ECONOLODGE
389 Jaekaon Pike
Goltlpotlo, Ohio
Whether you ' ' an experl•ncltd

2 BA a.-rtmem, stan &amp; ,.,,
tumlahtd. Upattlre. Water I
trath tumithed. Upper Rt. 7,
Upper Rlwr Rd. ~1-3140.

2 furnlah.d efflclenc._. All
utiiHiet rid. Share bath. Ia) or
$150. i1 Socond Avo. 114-4483845.

driver or have no axperlanc. at

all, we tncouraga you to
ruponcl. Tn~nspo,allon Ia h~r•

tpact f1001mo. 111 utBitln ln.
cludod ~~~otto Moll, 114-448-

7733, I 14

AVON - AJI arna, C.ll Marilyn

w..v., 304-882·264S.

All· Star Waterbed1 Is now
hiring tor h's n. . at011 In Ohio

Plaza.

No

•

I (

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

L-

with ,_aple. Stlary plus Com-

mlulon.
Appty
at:AU-S!ar
Watem.d1J. Ohio River Piau,
Galllpolls,uh.

Amat1ur photographart wanltd! No
11. Up lo $1,800
dally:
Call
1-900-230-3638
($.99/min.]
or ..-~o: PASE-5170, 161 S. Uncolnwoy, N. AuiOtl, 111 soso2.
A...mtMe produeta at home

Nrn up lo $400 w..kly, no Ill•
perlenea, Mty worit For more
lntorm~~tion ctll 1-504-863-6114
Ert 1150.

Baby.IHer nMded In mv hom. 3
'varNngt 1 w.. k. Oeeass lof\111~
Sat. Mornings. 614-441o08'11
COOK , multt t&gt;. avallablt tor tU
houra.L. apply In pt~raon Holiday
Inn. ualllpolls, Ohio. 450 Plkt
St, Kanauga, Otllo.
Elm monty by the wetk. Join
the numbln to dtmonll ratt
"Chrlstmtt-Around-Tht-Wor1d" .
July-O.Cembtr. ~ave name
lddrw•. and phone numbir o~
answering strvlce. 614-992·6319.
EARN MONEY Reading books!
$30,000/yr. Income potent ial.
Now hiring. (1) 805-667-6000
Ext. Y-4562 .
EISy work! Exctllent pay! As•mble productt at hom•. Call
lor lnformalion. 1-504-641-8003
. , , 311
Exp. MNt Cutter. Johnson "!
Supermarkal. lnt trvlew or contfct : Mr. Johnson , 85 Vlnt , Gal lipolis.
Experienced
hardwart
saltsperson to wort&lt; In local
retail hardware. Send resumt to
Box Cia 038 cJo Ga llipolis Dally
Tribune, 825 Third Ave. Gallipolit, OH 45631. Experienced
,.apt• onlv pitas.!
Full-lime
dietary
ass is1anl .
Rannswood Cart Canter. Call
304-213.-5893 ..k lor Phylllt.
HNrtland ol Jackaon LPN/RN
lull-time posiHon
a11allabla
100%. luihon rtlnburstmant .
$eM ,.aumH or eall lor an ap~nlmenl . EOE . Gall Rawlins,
boN, 8668 St Rl. 93, Jackson,
Ohio 45640. 6'14 -286-5026 .
Holldtiy Inn at Galllpoll• now
tcceptlng application• lor front
d"k cltrlt. Apply In person. NO
PMONE CALLS PLEASE.
Hourty Clinic Aida nMCMd partlihlt In tamlty planning offlcta
In Meigs, Gt llia and Lawrtnca
counllaa. MuJt hut high
act'lool diploma equlvaltney;
good communlcallon •kills; accuracy with tlguraa; mtdleal
ortlea experltnc. helpful; will
train maturt Individual who It
Nnalllva Ia raproduetlva hu llh
natda of clltnta. Looking tor
tomaaN wha It tall -motlvattd
and can grow In tht poaltlon aa
nMd ariMt. Pottllon requlret
rellab.. tnnsportatlon; will lngn... to trntl to othe r
PPSEO oHicn. w.. kday, avtnlng and Saturd11y hour~ are to
bt txpeclltd . S.nd ~nar of lnruuma
tnd
!Wo
tar.st ,
employment
refertnclt
to
Pianned
Paran!hood
ol
SouthNst Ohio, 396 Richland
Avenue , Athans, Ohio 45701, by
July 16, 1990. EOEJESP.
lmrntdlata opening for par1-timt
nursing a"l1tant . Muat be !lexlbla and willing to work all
thltta. p,..f., ctrtlll.d but will
train. Apply In perton at
Arnarleartl
Pomtroy
36751
Rock1prlngs
.
Road Pomeroy,
Ohio. EO£
0J*llng tor tlderty cara In my
hornt . Good rtftrtncet. 304173-5248 .
Part-time Pat ltnl S.rvicn Aatlllant to wort In family planning eantlfS In Malga, Gallla,
and Ulwrence count its. Must bl
experlencltd In m.dleal ortlca
pracllc H and ctlant rtlatlon1.
Rasponslbla posit ion tor a m•
lura lndl~dual wit h good
judgam.m and Hnalli11ity to
reproductl111 h.. nh need• ot
women •nd flmlliH . Must b4l
wall
organi zed;
ha111
dtmonat,.t-&lt;1 competenet with
llgur•
and rtcordkMplng.
..-ull be able to wort&lt; under
guktllllna with minimal SUPif·
wlslon and havt 1uptrlor 11•rbal
communieallon skillt. R~ulrH
rallabl• tnnsportallon ; flt•l·
billly of Hme and ablllty to tra11al
to ottt.r agency offlcea at
needed . Ev.,lnv, Saturdty and
wMI&amp;day hours are tc ba axpee!ld. Send rwuma and two
tmployment
rtfer.ncat
to
Ptan.-d
Parenthood
of
SouthNIIt ONo, 31&amp; Richland
lwenu., Athen1, Ohio 45701, by
July te, tHO. EOEIESP.
Phlabotomlll
or
Medically
Tr1lnad Per.anntl To Complalt
Mobl.. Insurance Enm•, Pt r1Tlma In GaiUa County. Call 1·
~56-0416 In Dunblr, WVt.
POSTAl JOBS 518,392-$67,
125/yf. Now hi~ng . Coil (11 80S.
887-tOOO Ext. P~S62 f« cu,..,t
1111.
READ BOOKS FOR PAYI 5100 o
THia.
Call
1-900-847-7878
(10.89/mlnl or wrttt: PASE -3JE ,
161 S. llnco4nway. N. ALKon, II .
605.2
South.-mam
Commun ity
Council, Inc. It accapllng tppllcatlont tor po11tlant child
and
t..mlfy
dtvtlopmental
prog,.m tor; 2 HNd Star1
iMe"h.,. M1 . Flawera School
and Polnl Plaaunt. Mutt havt
degi'N or COA eredenllals plus
5 yr1 pra ~ehool uperienct.
Mutt have car and val ld drt11ert
Hcanae. r .. ehtr aatlant lor MI.
FtoMr echool araa, mu.t ha111
Mtgh School diploma or GED
1nd ear with valid drl11trt
lletnse. Famll~ MrVIca woril:tr
Mt. ROWM" ec:hool aer81, must
have High Sehool diploma or
GED. Muet be ablt to drivt mini
school
but,
havt
valid
chauffeur llcanH, be willing lo
obtain • COL. For appllcatron•
apply .. 540 Fifth Ave, Muntlngl"" WY bofaro 5:00 PM July

Si('k, 111(111, .J OS(' pII ill&lt;' II•• do('Sill 1hi11k lu•'s

" lll''s a

VPry

~~~~~~:;;;:;::;===-J-==========~

=

1 1

providing quality Plllitnt cart.
Dental and Computer uperitnct prtferred. Pltaat Mnd
r•aumt to Dr. l.any Kennsdy,
441 General Hartinger Parkway,
Middleport , OH 45760.
Wandy'a now hiring tor all
Shifts. Appty In PlfiOn. Sun.
Thura Barw..n 2&amp;4 E.O.E.
-

12

Situation
wanted

Ca ra lor ald•rly In my homa
Man or woman . Muat bt am bulalory.
Also
acc•pt
Al zhelmers patients. 614-6616183.
Cer1111ed Day Cart Provldll' ha
3 o~nings tor children of any
ag1. If you 11111 In Melg1 or
Alhans Counlllt you mar, bo
atlg lbl• tor tru babys ttlng
through tht O.partmant ol
Human S•rvlctt. C1nlfied In
First Aid 1nd CPR . SA 7, Tuppers Plains, Oh. 614-ti67~329 or
614-667-6183.
Roommata for naw houN. For 6
montht Furnlth.cl, Neat, NonSmokar !ntarv l•w Required .
614-446-366-4

15

18

Muti Stll: 2BR Log Homt
Newly carpeted, atoned hllrth
wood-bumtr
10'124' Dick,
12•112. building. Rllltrvlew.
Makt 0Herll14-446-4909 or 814256 _1962.

32

45

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Rooms

12x60 with room addition. 3
aertt m!i. Will eontlder land
contract. 814·"2·2914 1111nlngt.

Roomt tor rtnt • we•k ar month.
St1r1lng at $120/mo. Glllla Hotel.
614--«6-1580.

1974 Kirilwood 12160 2BR, " '·
cond. $6800. 61........,.182.

SiHplng rocmt whh caoking.
Also tnlllr •~a.- All hook-upt.
Call slier 2.00 p.m., 304-77'l56St, Mason WV.

1975 12x70 3 Bedroom Mobilt
Homt, Nlca Trallar $2500.00
080. SM 1t 31~5 Wtlchtown
Rd . Mlnntrnllla, OH or eatt 61._

46

446-6217.

2 loCI, tor r.m, Call 814-311-X3a.

1983 14.:70, good cond., 3 Br.,

CA., deck, urKJerplnnlng , con-

Country Mobile Homt P1rk,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Lots, rtnlall, JM.rta, MIM. Call
614-Qi2.")179.

tider trtdt-lnt. 614-446-0038.

47

SPECIAL Factory to you1911, 2
or 3 bldroom14x7U modelt at
th• unbtllanble price of
$12,900 dallvlfed and Ht up.
Call 1-800-129-4045 tor data itt.

Would llka to rent hoUH In
LlngsvllltJ1&gt;tJ1er or Saltm Center area. 114-i1l2·2339 Of' 614-

Care tor tldtrly In my homa,
304-m -S246.
CuMam-m-,~..
~Co
~u-n~t-~ -.-u-n~o1~
with 1 Of 2 ruHIH, FHtoo"l
Flag• &amp; Cucadea, ypholsler.d
Cornlc11. Any liZt, any fabric.
614-g.c9-2202.
Custom Molding . O.sk and Hot
Tubs . Call E11tnlngs. Bob Oavlt
614-4-\6-3641 Bob
Formar Klndargar1tn l ..chtr offering chltdcara In my homa. FT
or PT. Structured acti..-HI. .. C.nlenary 614-446-0230.

Geor9n Po r1 able Sawm ill, don 't
htul fuat call 304-675-1957.
Magie Yaart Day Care Canltr
rea sonable,
dapeodabla,
llc1nae, qu.11ll1~ ct'llld cart1 . Mon day thru Frtday, 7:30 till 5:30 .
For mort lntormatlon or to
register Jll4-67 ~S347.
Mitt Paula's Day C.a,.. Ctntar.
Sale , af1ordablt, chlldcart. M-F
6 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Agee 2-10
Oalort, al11r t.chool Orop-htl
wtlcoma. 614-446-8 22 4.
TMnage girt wants to do
babysitting. L11111 In Long Bottom area. Good with kids . 614949-2564

35

Lots

669--1008.

49

&amp; Acreage

sm'

County AppUanca, 1~. Good
uaed tppllanc••, T.V. ttts. Open
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon ...Sat . 614446-1899, 627 3rd. A.v1. Gallipolis, OH
G•rdntr'a Variety I Fumltura
Shop, 1415 Eatttm A.vt. Buy,
S.ll and Tradt. Low prlcn. 614-

Rentals

Will do gonerat cleaning of
home, ortke or buslnau . l·h'o'e 41 Houses for Rent
arpar lanct
Retaranc11. 6144 room hous• with blth tor ,.nl,
992-7639.
a304-675=3220 tfttr 5:00PM.
Will do Interior and nlarlor
painting. Proleulonal wort~; tor Burkhart Lana, Galllpalls. 3 BR,
amatuar pay Erptrltnca 10 $300/mo. plus depo•lt. 614-446yea ra. 614-"1'12-2127.
4222 bttwttn I &amp; 11am.
Will
pour
drlvt
weyt,
palloalslabl , all typet concr~ tt
work and lt.d 101:1, •ldt walk l .
151 ... 742-2127.

Fumlshtd hou . .. 1 BA, loca•.ed
ns Raar, Third Alit. t1501mo.
$75/dap. lt.-441-3870 or 614-446· 1340.

Will wash &amp; wu your car and
eltan lnaldt. 614-388·9g74.

HouH tor tala or IIlii.. with oplion lo buy: 3 OR, 1 112 blthl, 2
car unalllllchtd gar.gt. A•
1umabte mortgtQI. Apptlc.anc•
Refii90C•
I
furnished.
oocurh, ,..,... roqulrod. 37
Porttmouti'l Raed, Qalllpoll._
614-446-025-4.

Business
Opportunity

INOTI CE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
racommendt that you do busl natl with people you know, and
NOT to 11nd money ltvough tha
mall until you h1va lnvestrgattd
the offering.

Th,.. Bedroom, unfuml1hed
kouat In Pomeroy. 61._t82-22ll
a her 6 p.m.
Unfurnished 3-bedraoml, tuH
b..•mtnl, two etortgt building.
Pomaroy, Nyt Avt. $250 per-month . Reieroneo ond dopoolt
requ ired . 614-94~3027.

42

3 bedrooms, 2 full bath•. 24x3e
g•raga, 1112 acrn. Prlca
reductd. 614-444-4248, ..a0385, 44H127.
3 Br. nnch, g11 furnace, CA,
garaga, 1\.111 basement. Prtce
Rtduetd. 6M-446..03SIO or 388-

11852.

:•em

Mobllt home for rent
Gentleman. 61._992·3181.

Upright frMZif' 18.3 cubic ft.
Frottl.... Good Condition $325.
Uklrow~v•, medium ltze, TipPI" 1150. ZtnHh Color, floor
m~ l .V. 215 ... ttll. 814-U&amp;4418.

8

446~226 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahtn, dryers, ratrigeratora,
" " ' " Skll!ilO Appiloncoo,
Upper River Rd. Bnlda Slone
Crtat Mota!. Ce ll 8'1~6-TlaB .
LIYtng
room
c~lr
uphollttry, 614-4.6-1163'.

new

PICKENS FURNJTURE
Ntw/Uted
HouMhold tumlthlng. 112 mi .
J•nieho Rd. Pt. Pt11san1, wv
call 304-675-1450.
'

~

RENT TO OWN
I14-4U-315a
8 pc. wood grvup S1•.01 par
wNk. • poettr bedroom aulta,
complete $15.20 par n~k,
dlnolto wfth 4 tholro $7.50 por
wHic. Magic Chef 14 eu. ft.
Retrtgarstor 112.15 per watk, 15
c
" trMHr ..0 110
u.
·
• •• ·
par
wMk.VI'Aa Furnhurs. At 141, 4
mu. . on At . 7.C.ntenary.Optn 7

McCormick Q
Ill (l) IICID II (I) 1111
~~~~

Dl~lt

(I) Club Connect
(!) Anding A o l - Q
1D 11J1 Andy Grtfllth
~ World Today
ill He· Men
ID I Dream OI.Jelnnle

SURE. AND
T~EN AFTER
YOU ii.ETIRE.
YOU CAN 60
ON TV LIKE
JOE 6MAGIOLA

BROWN ,

l COULD 14AVE
A CAREER AS

~

letttrl of
0 Reorronge
four sc rambled warda

IAMI

the

be-

low to form four simple words

I

GROLED

I

CUEJI

I

RAGF T

I

.

_

_

_

.

man

called

the

bar

owner at home and asked,
"What time do you open up? I

_.-

. - - - - - - ' - - - - - , d o n ' t need to get in . I need to

6:05 (I) Beverly Hlllblllloa
6:30 Ill (l)

I
-r,A:. . :.-V,. :.l. , ~,.- -,Y~_:;S-,1--11 ~--~l:mplete
r
The

~-r,---,1-,.1-,.1'~ =·

l8l NBC Nlghtiy Nowa

~Sportolook

NtWI I;J
(I) Body Electric
(f) 3-2-1 Contact 1;1
1111 ID ~ CBS Nowo Q
ID IIJI Three' a Company
®Top Cal'(!
ID Newhart

Cl Qll Ill (J) ABC

_

.

.

_V

the chuckle quoted

by ld l1ng 1n the missing words

you develop fr om step No 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Gusher- Fling - Heavy - Ending- LAUGHING

i

54

(l) PM Mogozlnt
(!) SportoCenter
CIIID lnolde Edition
(I) Ill MecNelllehrer
NewaHour
Ill (J) Cumtnt AHolr

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1!D1 1D ~ l8l -

12 hp whMI horN lllwn t ntCtor.
42 Inch mow11, Hldrostat
tnn~mi.. ion . New, comptataty
rabultt •nglne, turltlf• price to
Mil. IM-8D2·2201.

Fortune

® Muolc Row VIdeo
ID Andy GriHhh

18'71 Ford pick-up. RtbuiR tnglna. Heavy dut:y 11'1nsmlaslon,
roU btr. Alao cut off NW, new
motor. 61'-lll2-3180.
1888 Honda Xl250A, 3000 mlltt,
$1,000. 26 Inch men• bkycle
$25. 241nch Ladl11 bicycle $25.
~£11 Gym Pac 2000 Hri11 $150.
;MJII-e1S-6182.

7:05 (I) JoHeraono
Slberiln MUiky pup. 11 months
old. Spaytd. 614·992·•76.

1983 Olda. All po11111r, In good
ahapa . &amp;14-092-n17.

Squlr,_. Doo• ma.. Cur, 2yra
old, good $aGO. M1le Mountain
Flnt 1 12 t111rted. Female
Mounttln Flul
1 11arttd.
Female Mountain F ... t 8 month.
304-87W132.

1984 Chryal•r E SDs, air, tin
whMI, crul11, low mlltagt, no
rual . good worfl. ear. 614-44&amp;73110.

57

Musical
Instruments

Regular JIM Cuttoman always
3 place porch MI. Whtte wf1h r.eeiva mora than tl'ley'ra charrough! [ron. Turquol11. S75. gtd for. JIM Plano S.rvlct. 8111
Large Blreh gu Ur apia~ IOQS. Ward 304-882-2325. Alit ma
11bout "JUt".
sso. 11«14~2367.

30 Inch Coppertont QH ranga. Studio Pl1no by Baldwin. Good
condition. $400 Or bttt offer.
614-446-4335.
614-1192-7062 after 7p.m .
6 His ol Shutttrl. If lntarnttd
call 614-446a2968.
VCR $100. Guitar tnd amplifier
s.to, eelllng fan f15 , t.taytag
Air Condtlloner 22,500 BTU 1 Wringer Wllhtr 150 , rin11 tube
ynr old . Under Wananty. Uka 120. 61of.949-2526.
new. 614-446-4606.
Fruits &amp;
Blue !lower coueh and chair tor 58
..11. Reaaonablt. Tablt. $25.
Vegetables
Eledrte nnge. Niea hld•a-Md,
llka new. 114· 992-T.l:44.
Dunrowin Fruit Farm. Jua1 ort ot
Couch, chair, eotfH, 1nd tabln Sr 681 E11t ol Albany. 614-698lamp. Wooden dinette ~~~~ hid• 6291. Wt accept food atamps.
away bed and dtylf. 11o11ing Amlah produeta, atrawblrrltt,
peache!l gmn bun•. t-1 dilly.
Sa le. 614,..4&amp;.-3224.
Cloetd Mondaw and July • ·
End of s... on et.. nnce til
l1wn mowa,. and ttrlng trimmen In atoek no raatonablt atFarm Supplies
1• ratuted.. Sldert Eql.liprnent
Company, 304-675-7C21.
&amp; Livestock
K~mor. dryer. Excellent condJ.
tlon. Almond color. f14·112-T175.
Lumber -oonod ond ptoin, 310 61 Farm Equipment
to1112 Inch. R.ct and black 0111:,
wild chtrry, walnul , poplar, 11•h, 11H) AlliN Chalmtr XT with 4
and maple alto baseboard, Bottom plow• and gf"lln drill.
eating, jama, etc. 614.-«6--8038. $83!5&gt;0. 014 AC wide fronl 3 pt
Mhch wlbuah hog $2550. 8N
Plano $15., Artltlclll Chrla1maa Ford wlbu1h hog 12295. Owner
lrM l10., Old sofa UO., Nice will fln.~nca . 814-28&amp;-6522.
Ia,. doghouse $50., Por1•blt ;,c.c:::~=~-==-==~--,-,­
NWing machln• $60., Rolv-«lller Jim's Farm Equipment, SA. 35,
$85., Washer/dryer $200., CaH Wtst Qalllpolil, 614-446-8777;
614-992-1'551 or 614-0t2-3o.4t.
W1de eeltctlon ntw a uNd farm
lraelo,. I lmpltmenta. Buy,
Portable lighted marquM tign Mil, trade, 8:00..5:00 wHkdaya,
Wl1tllln sm. FrH delivery. S.t. Ull Noon.
PtaJflc IIIII,. $37.50 box. AAA
tlgnt 1-800-533-3453. Anytime.
Lilt modt4 IIOI-IP JO dlt..t IrK·
tor $6150, 241 lnl:'l round baler
Salallhe dish &amp; dt--serambler. $2385, 165 MF tractor $3950, 520
614-25&amp;-1822.
WF round biter 12•95. Ownar
Slnglt b.d with box spring and wlllllnancl. 614-86-e$22.
matlrHJ . 4 tlrH P185·'B-R1• Ntw Holland 273 Baler. New Hol$50. 198' Ford Tempt XL. 304- land &amp;e Baler. John DMrt Rake,
882-278e after 5:30.
manure tprtadars, mowert cuitinton/ Ollwtr com plckart,
Tlrt chang•~oalt 3G-30A fac- other ltld raadv equlpmant.
tory rac:ondltlontd ne11ar uNCI. Hown Farm Machinery, Rt . 124
Wa.rnriy. $100. &amp;1~4S- 51l1.
1 M1 yh•w Ad., Jackeon. 614Upright piono, 1250. good 28&amp;--1844.
cond.,
Harlequin
romance
booko: witt Mit cholp, 114-4441- 62 Wanted to Buy
0643.
Wanted to Buy uNCI Uobllt
Warm Morning Wood Burner Hom. .. CaiiiM-446-0175
614-446-2445 Ask lor P11ul
Want.d W11ttr SUet. for Small
Chrltdern. 814-446-244~ Ask lor
55
Building
Poui
Supplies
63
Livestock
Bloc:k, brick, plpoo, win - ...:,_ _...:....:,;.:..:;___ __,_
dowa, llnttlt, ate. Claud• Win- Purtbred Slmmtnlll eowt I
lart, Rio Glandl, OH Call 614- Cllt. wfth rtgllllrallon paptl'l. 2
245-6121.
VNr old Slmmtntal bull. Flechllk:h breeding. 814-357-0483.
56 Pets for Sale
R~tgl11ertd polled Hereford Bull,
3 AKC Reg . Baaglt gun doga. 1 2yearw old, 1900. 30t\-ln.3gaa.
maie, :z ftmala . • moe. old, $50
oach. It lntlfootod coli 614-245- 64
Hay &amp; Gral n
9578.
QIIn wheal Jtraw, S1.50 per
AKC a...., puppl•. Shoes blla. 11•·;8W011.
11tr1ad. $125. each. Franc•
Hay lor Salt. Cio111r I Timothy.
Ventdum 614-617-38SI.
Round Baln In the Fl•ld. 114AKC Rtg. Mlnllltu,. Sehntullr 245-5598
pupo, (llh • poppor) 5 wk.o. old.
3 flmale,1 m•l•. 814-44&amp;-3.tlil3.

:::---:-=----:-=-

AKC Aegla1ar.d BHgll pupa. 7
wkl. old. 2 ramal.. taft . Hurry
coli 614-ll62--1302.
AKC
IW•Ioto!Od
:,upplll,
•

Daahundl, Cocktr
penlele,
Pam.ranlllne, 304-675-2113.
Blue Tlek hound pupt. Out of
good lrta dogs.
NCh. ....

w

.:da:yo
~o=-====-====::.J..:2::45-9::264:::·=======~
SNAFU@ b B
Be '
y ruce &amp;tile

Transportation

_71..;_...;..Aut::.;,o:.s.:...lo:.r~Sa.::_le.:..._
'83 ReNult Rlllanc•, 4 door,
luto, _,..,. cond, 54,&amp;00 mWif,
..,.._...
t1,350. 31)4..171-4585.
1f70 Ford FIINnt 500, lf'IQIM
302, two
mlt ..
11,1112,
alterdoor,
11:00 actu•l
PM 304-475-"·:::Ita::.~:--,--,:=-------,
-:111711 Pontloc 112,000 oetuol
milts , good running cond $600.
13 ft Amana dttp treeu. 304a
171-1586.
1978 Che11y Nova. 31,000 uay
mO., new tlr•, • • ahoc:ka,
complete brak11, alignment,
new AM-FU c.t._..,te with
I cyl,, PS, Groot goo
mlloogo. S301lo ftnn _ 814-1192·

_k,..,

5857.

1177 Chevrolet Eleeamlno V-&amp;
Automotlc 114-441-2441 Alrk for

bodroom

u~nltioo.

" I used lhe lasl of 1110 write this reminder ."

a85~418 .

1985 Chryt.ltr New "''ortl.lr. 4
door S.dan. Enry option.
36,000 actual mlttt. S.mt at
n.w. $6,t00. 6t4-H2-6710.
1985 Renaun Alllanc• OL, 1.7
engine, $1,275. 304-382-3793.
1987 Buick Century CuJtom.
Many trtrll, clean lnsida 1nd
out. Aaklng $5100 . 81,....46-4525.
1987 Z-28 lroc C1maro. l.otdtd

511,000. 114-!192-2427.
1988 Oodg• Coh. Elctiitnt con dition $39.50 . 614~46-2359 .
1988 Ford Tempo, au1 o., air, tu lly
load.ct. l!,OOO mi. $5200. 614441-0411.

76

Auto

1181 Chtvy Blazer. Approx
28,500, AJC , running board1,
custom tlr. .. 6,.·'1112-2803 attar
5p.m
1981 Plymouth Ralio~nt, 2 dr.,
20,000 mi. Good conditlon . 614371·2126.
1988 ThundiHblrd tor salt. To1ka
ov.r payrunta. 6M-247-n;3.
85 Ptymou1h CoR lllifY good

condition . GrNt MPO. Stereo.
$2,000 090. 61 '-"6-MlO.
Salt or T,.dt 2 '89
C.rneroe. $3,000. 61•·388-tnO.

FOf

GOVERNMENT SEIZED vehlel•
tram $100. Fordt. Mtrcedea.
Corvett11. Chtvyt. Surplus.
Your af'lla. (1) BOS-687-6000 £xt.
S-t01ai .
Wraekld t984 Aero Ponllac. All
p~~r1a lor tall, motor, trans-axle,
doan, ate. Phon• 614-992-3242 .

72

Trucks lor Sale

10M Che~rolat 3/4 ton Running
Gtan and Frame 6 14~46-2445
Atk for Paul
1981 Chevy Stepaldt $2500 .
53,000 mllet Graat Cond . 61._

446--1704
1987 Chevy 3/4 lon Sll11arado
4x4 loaded. 1984 Prowler camper 24' with air, awning, T.V. an·
tenn1, carpet call ahar 7 p.m.
614-25&amp;-1117.

73

Vans

&amp; 4 wo·s

..

&amp;

Parts

Accessories

79

campers

1i88 Ford tull till convtnlon
v1n. 12,700 mlln. f15,000 . 614•~&amp;-2700.

74

Motorcycles

-.....,,.,..-----=---117V KZ-tOOO. Full drHa , AM -FM
llltreo, new Ur" 1nd batlary,
runo aooct 51500 080. Will
1r~da for good rtdlng mawtt.
814-H2~77S.
1881 1M Yamaha Exc. Cond.
5~30 Ac:t ... l mlloo sna. 114:IIY-2114
1882 Yamaha 750 Maxim. Red .
exc. cond. $1,000. E~• · • 81._37g..

2111.

1883 Hondo CBXIO, fully oqulp-

1111 ThunclortlinS Exc. Cond.

lirm. 304-f75--20T.l: evenlnga.

1883 Suzuki Tempter. Exetllent
1f71 Oldo Cull- WogM IO&lt; aondhkln. 1400 mil•. Alto Inpol41o; onglno tockod up·
tl'lftlmlnlon, rNr end 11nd dudes htlmet. C.ll aft• 7:30
mony o4hor porto good- $500. H P-"'- 114-892· 1175
lnt.,..ted lesve
on 1885 Honda 7'00 Magna Naw
ln....-lng rnachln. 304-675- 11-.
uont cMdllion. Ao32711_
king $1200. Call 114-448-,.61
117'8 Plymouth 2 dr. Run• good. bettften 11:30 &amp; \1 :00pm.
$500. Oli0. 114..14H071.
75 iOO Kaw. Mog rlmo, Good
1Gtl Cadln~e~ a..n Utvrlla. 11m, allc:tronle ~~~in.l Newer
Good -lion, !!!,_ 1114, cruioo, c.orbo. S825. 1149&lt;.
Au.FM cauane. taOO. 814-387Kaw1ukl 1D87 KDX 8(1, Excel 7815.
lanl condition. 814-446~173.

e. ..

/

'

\

IN

Tt'ff FA~T LAI"f,
B:uT Tt-lfRE
VIA.$

A

tv11NIMUM

ALL RI G HT, KALI&gt;.,"I'OU TAK E
THE MIDDLE AJ..I' PUT YOUR
FEET ON JAR~S SHOULDERS!
I ' L..L PQSIT10N MYSELF ON
THI S E ND! ~~~

1183 Toyota Dolphin Motor
homa. Eaty on gat, low mltagt,
ac,
contained. $11,500. 614985-4418.

Show Rudy
and Olivia take tap dancing
lessons from Sandman Sims .

WHEN I SAY GO ,
EVERYBDDV PUSH
AN ' LET'S SEE IF
WE CAN 'T POP TH '
TOP ON THIS BASY .1

••II

Comr,lng trailer tor 1111 or rant,
McC ana"han'a Trall•r Court
Hendtrson. WV. 304-713-5248.

~P~meNowo

ill

Mul'(ler, She Wrote
® American Music Shop
123 Molor League lleoeball

EEK AND MEEK
(XIRlfJG 1\J.£ Kti'GAIJ Y£MO
n\[ IJET \l()R11-\ a' 11-\£ lCf'

~IPLE.O~

400 Wf.Aln\lm AMt.RrANS .

VXU, 1tXJ CMJ'T
) AY A!Jf IJ'OIJ£.Y
1RICKLlD [.U.U/J
lD l1-1t- P(X)R

m.
'T{XJ

SURE
CA~ 'T

Y+/IT\IJl)
MO~

446-ll221.
HENRYS ROOF PAINTING , 3046Th-68J1 or 304-576-7740.
Ho u11hokt
Malnlananct :
Roofing, newlrep.alr, aiding ,
new/repair, c1r~ntry, odd lobt .
eatlmatn . 6141-379-2Q20, aU lor
Mitch.
Ron ·, TV Serviee, aptelallllng
In ltnlth also Hl"'lclng most
other brenda. Hou .. catlt, t !to
oorno oppl ionco !Wpol.w. WV
304 ~7&amp;-2j98 Ohio 614-44&amp;-2454 .

t

!'

•
I'M AN AUD ITOR
Fa( 11-iE INIE&lt;W&lt;L
RE:VENLlE

WELCOMF:iTO
'6f'li-J fO/- (XX:.6H ~
WHATC:OYClJ
DO, 6 1R":1

I

Rotary or cable tool drilling
Most nllt completed aamt dty.
Pump utat and Nrvlce, 304895-38(12.
Sapllc Tank Pumping $90 , Gal !Ia
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jackson, OH 1·80tM37-Q~ .

ROLL OVER AN'

AN' ['LL GIVE YOU

A BOWL OF MY

PLAY DEAD,

BOOACIOIJS
STEW H

OL' BULLET--

GIVE HIM
TH' STEW FUST
AN' HE WON'T BE

PLAYINr I!

Commtrelat and Rttldentlal
wiring, ntw ttrvlct or repalra.
LICtfllld Eltctrlclanl. PuqUIIa
Electric Service. 814-446-2716.

10:30 (I) Mootorpleca Thoetre TM
12 young pilots of the Hornet
Squadron como ol age (PI 1

ASTRO-GRAPH

Retldlntlal
ar
commerc ial
wiring , new Hl"'lct or repair~ .
UcanMd tlte1rlcian. Ridenour
Eloctrlcal, 304-li7H78&amp;.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

General Hauling

1111 8htnlndoah, :JO n. lnvtl
tt11lltr. Full liz• bed, AC, n6ct &amp;
dean . $.5200. 614-446-0643.

\

A&amp;A Wllar Delivery. 2,000 gat
.. pochy. 114-3117-7301.
R I R Water Service. Pools, cl•
t•ms, '"lis. lmmedlet•1,000 or
2,000 gallant dllllvery. C.tl J04..
17W37V.
Wantraon'l
Water Hauling,
r. .tonab~ r11tn, volume dl..
counts, 2,000 ta •.ooo capacity, •
clttarnt, poola, wtlla, etc . CaU
304--1711-21119
D"7

Uph Isle

I ::"=r-=7:..::::7°=.::.:..:rv:...........,..
Mowrey'• Uphd•artng 1tfY1oo
lng trl county arN 25 )'llrl. Tlw
bMI In tumllurt upho111ertn&amp;

Coli 304-11711-41114 for tno oil
Umat•.

9:30 D (l) l8l Grand Jan ice
learns that her es tranged
hu sband is com1ng to visit
(A) I;J
10:00 (l) 700 Club With Pot
Robartoon
(l) l8l L.A. Law Si tuentos
takes a personal interest in
eonvict~n a rap1 st. (A)
S tereo .
CIIID
(J) Prlmttime Live
S tereo. Q
(I) Newowolch
(J) Worid Wllhout Wolla The
e•pansion ot globsl
communk:ations threatens
cultures .
1111 ID 1121 Northam Expoaure
A New Yark doctor goes Into
cultural shOCk when he
moves to Ala6kB Stereo. Q
ID IIJI Now Twilight Zone
~ Evening Nowo
10:20 (I) MOVIE: Tho Killer Elite

IPGI (2:30)

&amp;

Refrigeration

85

9:00 D (l) l8l Choen Fras1er
tries to prove he can be a
bad boy like Sa m (A) C
0 Qll Ill(]) Young Aiclora
After an argument w1th
Teaspoon, HickoK quits the
Pon)'_Express. (A) 1;1
(I) Ill Myoloryl A wo man
receives a 'faluable and
enonymou~lft e~ery year .
(PI t Of 2)
~ II) (121
oeguy A political
candidate threatens to
expose Vinn1e .
Q
~ Lorry King L vel ·
ill MOVIE : The Horiem
Globatronen On Clltllgan'a
loland (2:00)
® Noohvllle Now

a

C.rter's Plumblnv
tnd HNtlng
Fourth and Plnt
Golllpoilo, Ohio
61.-441&amp;-3888
Electrical

8:30 D (l) l8l DlHoiWr11 World
Whitley Is charmed by Julian.
tf'\e leader of a s tudent
t&gt;oycon . Q
(I) Sneak PYeviewa Ooea
VIdeo
(J) Wild Amo~eo Sibling
rivalries in the anima l
kmgdom are frequent and
may be total. Q
®On Stege

\AI

SERVICE.

Roofing and Siding. Tralllr
roofs po~inttd . Frta astlmalaa.
Frod Mork.o , 304-Tn-il!S.

84

Hometime The hosts
focus on lawn mam tenance
techniQues such as planting
sod .
(J) HomeHme Hometime
hosts reveal the advantages
ol seeded lawns.
1!D1 II) ~ 48 Houn Stereo
The
lf.venQII(PG13) (2:00)

Services

Gardntr'• Homa Improvement
R"- &amp; Com., Rooting, Pllint l ~ ,
gun•, patio dtcka, and ate . 8"14--

g

2IIJI MOVIE: Jaw a:

Hunter Special fuld out campti'
••e•P• 1. s.eso. 614-44&amp;-1571

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfttlmt guaranIM. Local retertACH tumlan.d
FrM t11lmat11. Call colltct 1
6t ... 237..o488, day Of night
Rogtrt BaMment Waltrptoc
flng.

Waohinglon (PI 4

Myateriea Father Dowling 's
help is sought by a dying
man . (PI 2 Of 2) (A) Stereo .

lnternttlonal ~ehool but,
sldt doer tnd llh , Ida I tor earn~
lng or band bus .. partly conlltr•
t.a, JCM-675-32411

Improvements

George

0 Qll Ill(]) Fot11or Dowling

tm

Home

8;00 (l)

(AI

1974 Starcf'llft po~up c.~ mptr.
SIHpl 1. Good condition . 6M84i-24110.

61

a

014)(140)
D (l) a ColbY

-=-·

Motor Homes

7:30111 (l) Fomlly Feud
(!) U.S. Olympic Footlvol
Ill Qll Enten.lnment Tonight
Ill(]) Mome'o Fomlly
1111 ., (121
Jeopardy! Q
1D IIJI M'A'S'H
~ Crooonre
ID Bewitched
7:35 (I) Molor League Booeblll

SPEfP LIMij.

&amp;

1981 Ford 4x4 4 tp, F-150 351
tng, $3,500. 1978 Chew. snverado, 4x•1 auto ttane, 350
.t.a..Q2'1M.
eng , $2,500. ;,04~~1131 .
UobUt
Hornt
1883 Chtlly BNuvllla 7 paattn- Ramodlllng:
ger van, cutom Interior loaded, rtpair1 roollng , concrata wort,
ea,ooo mu.., 15,400. 304-882- ...ctrteal, plumbing experience.
ReftraneH lnturanct claim~
llOa.
accepted. 614 -256-1611.
1883 Ford Cargo Van. $3,000.
614·4•6-5188. Befort !5 p.m. or 82
Plumbing &amp;
contact Gtnarat Strvlc•• Otpt .,
Holztr Clinic.
Heating

1887 ford Aerot1ar Yin, IXCellent condition. l.Oided. $8900.
1888 Ford 150, 4 whHI drtvt
tf\lck. Ercellent condition. Moat
options. St!KIO. 614-446-6630 at·
ter 5pm.

:t T!(lfP LIVING LIFE

Want to buy radiator lor 1Q18
Ford pick up 302 tngine, J(W.
675--5165

01'111
Sew-Vac
Servtct,
Georg" Crtak Rd . Parta, suppi~ . pickup, and dallvery. 114-

1985 Toyola
4x4 pickup,
wr'topper1 ezc cond, no rust ,
15,000 fT'MWIY mUll, motor
portoct, $5,500. 304-59$-3006.

'

Budgtt
Tranamllllont;
All
Types, Uaad &amp; Rabuitt , 30 day.
to 1 yNr warranty, owner: Bill
Flow.rt.. 614-245-S671 or 614·
379-2263.

1988 Ford Tempo, auto., tlr, fully
load.d. l5,000 mi. $5200. 114441-G418.

ped, 1,200 tciUII mllat, $'1,600.

,.m•

w.v.

198S Chevy Cavalier. Auto., AM FM tltrao c••Httt. $2800. 614-

Poll

Low mltoogo. l14-317-71111.

lor Rent

1184
Pontiac
Aero
SE
automatlc1 35,000 miiH . Black,
sunroof aeluu flaeclltueda ln ltrfor, AMIFM1Cut.1 EFI, till, AC,
crulu, pwr. Mnaowt , 1ium.
whtats, limited edition, wtry
tharp. $4350. 614-«6-0152, Eva.
«6-2020.

FRANK

i-

Qnham Upholatery Center, 301
HIIHop Or. Clll tor appotnlmlflll
• Hllmat•. Call 814-441 3438.

July 13, 1990
A sJow . but s teady growth p attern IS
likely in the year ahead where your material interests are concerned . If you try
to hurry up the process, you may stall II
instead.
CANCEA (Junt 21-.luly 22) Your judgment IS reasonably good today , but you
might tack Jalth In your decisions and let
others do your thinking tor you who
can't think lor themselves. Gel a jump
on life by undmstandtng the Influences
which are governing you in the year

a head . Send lor your Aslro-Graph p re dictions today by mailing $1 .25 lo AsIre-Graph. c/o this newspaper , P .O
Box 91428, Cleveland , OH 44101 -3 428
Be sure to state your zodiac sig n .
LEO (July 23· Aug. 22) Today il you
blurt out something that would b e better lefl unsaid , d on 't c all auenllon to
your blunder . Trying to clarity your
comments could make things worse .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Someone
who likes you will be a bit pul out today
if you Ignore this person and fawn over
a new acquaintance who has yet to
prove loya11y .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0et. 23) Mot ivai1on
and initiati~e could break down rather
early fo r you today . This is why you
might not achieve a n objeclive Ihat ac·
tually was within your reach .
SCORPIO (Oct. 2'-Nov. 22) Someone
might ask you lor an exp lana tion today
pertaining to something you pre tend to
comprehend but really don ' t. The probe
cot.~ld be embarrassing .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec- 211 Try
not to be the underwriter ol unworthy
causes today. There Is a possibility you
might make a loan to a person who is an
e~&lt;tremely poor credit risk
CAPRICORN (Dec. :d·Jon. 19) J us t because someone talks lo uder or longer

th an you do , it doesn 't mean this rer so n·s JU dgment 1s better than yours
S tand your grou nd if yo u think you 're
ngh t.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fob. 19) II you do
little and e:w.pec1 a lot . disappointment is
likely today . Reward s you receive will be
commensurate to the se rvices you ren der or the work you perform
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20) Today
might innately sense you'll fit more
comfortably in a small group than you
will in a large one. There is a chance you
may be right , so avoid crowded gather ings II possible .
ARIES (March 21·Aprll1g) II you 're entertaining at your place 1oday be rnetl c·
ulous regarding tho guest list. Mat c hing
up the wrong dinner partners or In viting
one who doesn't fit could make tor an
uncomfort .... even1 .
TAUAUS (April 20-Mif liO) You might
not be 100 well attuned to your listeners
today. Be careful you don't gore a sac red cow or dominate conversations
with topic&amp; only of Interest to you .
QEMINI (Moy 21-June 20) Do not
snatch defeat from the hands of success today In your commeretallnvolve·
menls. Guard against Inclinations to
oversell or change a good deal Into a
bummer

..

g:~~

l

®Crook I Chaoo
11 :00

A lamous comic sa ys you can tell people almost anything o nce you get them LAUGHING .

.--------------,

BRIDGE

NORTH

(!)~ler

~&amp;.~o9
e (J) Nlgltllltte 1;1
~ lrigllt Court

T~l
e11J1 aSpolta
'Stingily CBS Lite
Night Stingray poses es an
&amp;Yingtllol to lnvoellgale a
group of murdtrt- (A)
1D Magnum, P .l.

12:00 (!) 11190 AMA Su,.n:roll
From San Jose. CA (T)

EAST

WEST

+K 7 3

+84

.J9 32

'A 10 6
t A 10 5
+&amp;76 32

tJ 74
+J9

Place yourself m lh e E a s l pos ition.
delendmg agamst four s pa des . If you
like a problem , don't look a t the d e cla rer's cards or your par tner 's. The
deuce of hea rts IS led. and you win the
ace when d ec larer plays the kmg from
dummy . What now '
One easy way to sel the contrac t
would be to find West v01d in clubs . A
c lub back would be r uffed . West woul d

2

.,

SOUTH
+AQI0962
• 81
• 9 86

+K 4
Vulnerable Both
Dealer: North
Sou&amp;b

4•

return a diamond to your ace, and an -

Wts t

N_.,.

East

I NT

PaS5

All pa$5

other club ruff would set the contract.
Openmg lead : • 2
Is that realistic? lf West were void in
cl ubs . the opemng lea d would proba bly be from West 's long diamond suit L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ;

It's better to picture a combination of
htgh cards in West 's hand tbat wi ll
lead to decl a r er's de fea t. How a bou t a
trump tn c k plus the jack o f di a-

10 -8-x ot dtamona.s, it tow 01amorii:l
bac k fro m A-J -5 might s till win, s ince
dec larer would possibly put in the
eighl -spot Wesl's rune then would
force an honor from dummy. Wherr
Wes t got back on lead. he would play
d1amond through the honor-small left
m the North h a nd

monds? You ca n lead a low diamond
back at trick two: when West wins the
king o( spades. another diam on d gives
you lwo diamond tricks and sets th e
co ntr ac t. This play ts the winner
Note that playin g a d ia mon d mto
the K-Q-3 in dummy woul d al so be
nght if 1-:ast be ld A-J -5 of d1amonds .
Then East would need to fmd West
with the 10-spot plus the nee ded t rump
entry In fact. t£ declarer South held

a

JatMS Jacoby 's boob ·J•Niby 011 Brldlf"' aod
•Jilrob_v on Cs rd GatnH· (wrJ tU!n Willi h1J f•tl!H.
the /see Osw11/d JICOby) •~ oow ,.,,,,,.bit&gt; Ill
boollsto~s Both Mn pubiiJIH:d by Ph.llros Bootl
@ 1110, Nf:WIPAP£111 lN'T£RPttlll USN

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

DOWN

1 Buddy

t Dog

5
9

Pulsale

or load

Asian
ca pila l

11

Boundary

12

Hunt e r
c onslel ·
la lion

13

B r o adway
money m an

15 M o 1s 1e n
16 S lannurn
18 .Jap anese
verse

19
21

I sa yl
Allow

22 Writ e

23
24

Au n a lur el

2 Se ragl 1o
3 Oneness
4 B yr e so und lc'ol-~
5 ln s 1pid
6 O n e (Ger )
7 Fork ed
8 U ns labl e
Yesterday's Answer
10 C hanl
14 R ecc nl
25 W1nd 32 Airm a n s
17 Exasre r aiP
fl o w er
"0 K "
20 Alar
26 Prey
36 S w1 ss
a p pendage 27 H e roic
c 11y
23 ln clin
narrative 38 Lilmh km s
a lion
28 Tiny
c ry
24 W a le r ga l e. 30 r iny
40 W ilh
lor o ne
31 Oecla1rn
(Ger I

C h ap l1n
pr op

26 Par1 o f
V H F

27
28
29

Ariella
Gain
Ca ligul a s
greeling

30

Zo 11e

33 1 ype
o l rn u ff1n

34
35
37

Carne upon
Fil c h
O lfa c lo ry
sensa li o n

39
41

P1clure
S1ng le

42 B1shop ·s
he a ddress

43

R esound

44

Aquatic b ird

DAILY CR VPTOQU&lt;YTES - llert's how to work it :
AXYDI.BAAXR

1D a 1D l8l

a

+A Q 10 5

By James Jacoby

Ill Botman

11 :30 (l) Goorve Wolhlng10n (PI 4
014) (1 :40)
G (})
Tonight Show
Stereo.

'K Q 54
t KQ 3

What does
partner need?

a rn 111 a 111 (]) 1111
Nowo
(!) Benball Tonlghl
tD 11J1 Areonlo Halt
~ Moneyllne
ill Mloml Vlc:e
® Colun Country Jo-El
Sonnier, Jimmy C. Newman,
and Doug Kershaw return to
their Louisiana roots for an
hour of music and
celebration.

1-I!-,.

+ !5

01

QIIIJI Night Court
&lt;Hl Moneyllne
ill Miami Vice

14K Gold ladlet Melding band.
Llkl new. $50. 614--IXI2-23n.

Apartment

2528.

r::~;~:~' '0©\l..clllA-~t.trs·

WOlD

- - - - - - - ldHed b1 CLAY I. ,OLLAN

7:00 (lJ Scarecrow &amp; Mrs. King

:MOOor:J04.882-3821.

lu&lt;nlohod. All
bolutlful ~vor v~ow. sao
wk., or $300 por month. 1-11-

Paga-15

6:35 (I) Andy GriHith

Mobllo homo lor 1111 « '""'·
1D74 8chun1. 3 bedroom, turnlohed. 614-112·1'179.
Two ,,...,,., rat.rwtea required,
lor lppointmtnt Clll 304-IU.

TMph9nl SollcHor. E11enlng e room houM, 3 mt from tawn,
flrepfact, full b...mtnt,
houtt. Hourly piUI generout
commialon. Strfout lnquirH eHy tchoolt. 81~. 8,.._
•441-1456.
only. ll4-t02·771t

18lNewo

(!) Budwelnr Thoroughbred

DO YOV T~INK

Ont

1 bedroom apt. Stove., retrlg.,
ntc.. Contlder Humtn Btrvlen
or HUD. 402·112 24th 94., Pt.
Pt-nt.
814-892·5858.

8

Daily Sentinei-

6:00 (lJ Hardcaalle And

19'78 Sea9tar 15 V2 ft . trt-haul 70
hp, Mere., All equip. Call after 7
p .. m. 614-446--9243.

· I

3BR, 1112 b.o1ho, FR, LA, fully oqulpped kitchen wl dining ' " '·
2 car garage, ln-grouncf pool.
814-446-"7231.

THURS.. JULY 12
EVENING

(~ARLIE

2 Br unfurnished mobl.. hom11.
No polo. $171. P1f month. $100
... _ • . 114-448-3817.

1

Television
Viewing

1977 Baas Boat, 16 ft wltrall•,
40 hp electrk: ttt rt "'"amaha
motot", ltll than 18 h,., live
wtll, trolling motor, lie. $4,000.
304-li9S.300ii .

st.

The

Ohio

1976 Glaatron 17 ft . tri-llull,
190hp, In board outborad, nc
&lt;:and, $3,895. 304-175--6470.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Olivo 94., QoUipoi~ . N- &amp; Uood
tumllwe, ~~4'te
&amp;

lor Rent

44

w.a.

Middleoort

1m Naut•llnt house boll!. ,.
h. Ex. eond. 614-U&amp;-4108 or 61437"9·2'NO.

Root I houM painting, thlngllng roofa, hou•a r.pi.lr. lt4388,;g'76a after 5 p.m.

I[

Mobile Homes

Real Estate
Homes for Sale

For Lease

Unfurnl1hld,
ona-badroom
.87 acrtl. 1 milt from Ctrunery' apar1m.nt Second floor, torNr
on clicker Rd . Wallr, el.c. &amp; Second and PIM, Gallipolis.
Nptlc tank on lot. $10,000 firm. Slove and refrigerator. Water
Call 614-446-1468 bttwaen 5:30 provkt.d. No pelt. Rater~ncu
&amp; 9:00pm.
required. $225 per month. 814lots &amp; acreage available for 446--4241, 81.-446a2l25 01 61...
new home eonltruetlon an 446-4425.
Raybum Roed. Pawtd road,
eounty
w1tar,
rtuonabla
Merchandise
ra8trlctlona. Information malltd
on rwqutat. 304-675-5253, Jottn
0 . Gtrtach, no tlnga.-wldl
lra~llan, piiiM.
Household
51
2 Iota. Vaunt and h.. datonn al
Goods
Malga
t.ltmorlll
GlllrdanaVtterans Stctlon. 41A Lofs 3&amp;4.
LAYNE 'S FURNJTURE
$3,000 lor all. 614-'53-8464.
Soflll tnd ehaiP'I priced trom
38 aera1 2 mlitl from Vinton. $385 lo $995. Tablet UO and up
Good building sltH. No MlntJII to $125. Hkl.... bedl $390 to
$595. Racllntf'll $225 to $375.
rtghtt. 614..-46-0231.
Lamp• Ill to $125. Oinatt•
$'109 and up to $495. Wood tabla
50 acrn Latar1 , 35 pa1tur1 with
tencl ng, plenty waler, J04-67S- w-6 chairw $285 to $7'85. O.tb
$'1•5 up to $375. Hulehaa $400 &amp;
na3.
up, bunk beds eomplllt wtth
68 112 1cre1 Tribble Road , L..on 1 mattr"' 1285 and up to $315.
Maaon County. RtmodeiiKl
baby blda $110 Manrt .... or
hous1, drilled well, vary Net , box apringt lull or twin $78, finn
304-ID-3845.
' "· lind 198. Quean Mts
up, King 1350. 4 drawer chHt
7Sx120 Lot on Flagllf Beach Fla
Walking dlattnct 1o btach. S69. Gun Ctbinttl 8, 8, l 10
gun. Btby matlru... $35 &amp;
Between Ormond Btech &amp; St
Augustine. Owner 904-991-5652, $45. B.ct trim" S25, Ou•n
Slu $35 l king frame $50. Good
Local No. 814-«6~325 .
Mltdlon of brtdroom euhta
For u lt . Comer lot with 2 t,..il., metal cablnllt, h.. dbolrds sJO
hook upa In Ulddlepol1. $8000. and up to S65.i0 d11yt ..,.,, at
caeh with approved credit 3 mi.
614-1}92-31g4.
out BuitviUe Rd. Open g A.M. to
One acrt lrallar lol with watar 5 P.M. Mon, thru Sat . C.ll 614and ••pUc •rstem, $3,900. 304- 448-(1322.

1

Financial

Wanted to Rent

Want.d to Rent : a houtt wUhln
about 15 mlltl of Rio Ortndt.
Pretenbly rural . 8M""'87-1262.

Will Baby sit In my l'lorna H1111
675-2722 .
Good Releren ctt . !14-388-81 14
~,-:h-:-t~o n~.~,:-:-"-,.--:-l-o:t-,-::3
Will Baby Sit In my Home near Routt 2?-:
Jackson Pik• Bulavil!t Rd. E1 · mlln south Gal11polla LDc1.a,
per•ncas And Reterance 614- public wtler, no rattrtcllona,
~&lt;tme wl1h rfv., frontage, 3044462646
57&amp;-2331.
WUI ca rt for lldarty In your
homa or mln1 , 30 yearw u ptrlenca, good rtlarancea, 304675-4102.

31

Space for Rent

Down p.aymenta on used or
rapoutsstd mobil• homn as
low 11 1500 down to qualltltd
boytl'l. Calll.Q00-58i-6711.

Wanted to Do

Pomeroy-

1972 17 fl. Starctaft Tri·Hull
Boat. 12!1 HP, Evlnrudl Eng ine,
complltt top, ntw upholtltry.
Call 614-286-1318 after 7:00 p.m.

Ou•n
alr.a
water
bed,
hndbolrd padded aida rallt,
$200. 3o.t:&amp;7S-3117, II na aniWtlr
IN,wm••eoe

Wort. booto. 5

12, 1990

&amp; Motors

for Sale

18,000 BTU Amtna alr~on ­
dhlonlr $200.Aito Unlco large
chest haztr $125. 614--li92-370'1
an..- 5 p.m. ._...daya..

Furnished

lnstruC11on

Car &amp; lawn mowar rapairs , pickup and da ll11a ry . Mobllt homn
unbtoc ked &amp; reblock.O, roots
painted. JO.t-.576-2818

21

J:'"lll or..

cour-.

Pritt Rtducldf Porter Brook
Subd l11l slon, 38~ 1 112 Bath,
F.R. Scruntd· in-t'ot'Ch, 3/4 acra
tot, City School. 614-446-1965.

lBR In CMshlre. c.nt,.l Air,
new carpal and~pi11ncts,
batamtnt tnd e•
. $36,000.
614-441H26116t4--l 5-0063.

23. EOE.

Racine. 2 bedroom, al)l)tlancaa.
0" ltratt partdng. · l11allable
Augulf 1. Dar 114-812-2151
Evenlnge/Weekendl
61...11t2·
2072 ·
Unturniohod 2eR
1275. R1l. Aaqulr . kftal or
No plla. Call 114-446233 ·

&amp;

Boo- knrln glAce o u nli n g,
HolaUMota
managemanl,
Airline tra11el , Nurses Aid , Tfllclor Tralltr training , Rltident!Homa study. Financial aid•
avallablt If qualllltd. Placement
astlttanca. Counly Schools locti oftlce 2307 Camden A111,
Parkaraburg, WV 1-800-648-61111.

Boats

Homes for Sale

1986 Flnlwood14xT2, 3br, total
IIIC:. 614·245-5900

Schools

75

In city.Rtf.CA.IO.p
Suitable
tor 1 614person.
Required

448-(1338
~'-'-'--,--,-----Nicely furnished mobllt home, 1
mile btlow town, ovartooking
7 roomt 1 112 balh1, country rtvar, CA, heal, Ref. 114-446-living but cioH to Melg• School D338.
1nd town . Rl. 33_.. lant,
Townlhlp Road 21 First road to One bedroom JPIS- tor rent .
right. Clllll 614 _oe 2•7118 or 1_384_ S225 month. Depoatt: required.
209'7.
114--H%·2218 after I p.m.

31

Wright

Groclouo living_ 1 ond 2 bod·
room aptr1menlll 111 VIllage
Monor
ond
Rivorolao
Apa11manta In Middleport. From
$11141. eou614-m-m7. EDH.
Nicely Fumlthed Mobllt Home

Nap() 1(' 0 II."
11
Help Wanted
--:---:--'----::----..
Wanted. Dental Receptionlll.
Pr~~·~~:vt' nd Dental J:.racllct
~ 9 orn 'th~rr· daa~t~l tngoam~n-

KIT ' N' CARL YU:® by Larry

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
eUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 538 Jackaan Pike
from $191tmo. Walk to shop 1
moviH. Call614-44&amp;-2581. EOH .

Expertance

nece... ry. Mullf tM en1rgellc
hard worldng I 1njoy working

--12Zt

2BR, turn'tcl, centralty located.
Adutt1 prafen.d. ~o p.t:a.
$225/mo. plltl ..eurtty depottt,
refartncn. 614-44&amp;-2238 01 614448-2561.

North Arnetleut Van LlnH.EOE

Rlv•r

orne.

2 roomt I blth $175/mo.

to lltay and COMTRAN9 CAN
GET YOU STARlEOIFOR MORE
INFORMATION CALL;t-to0-4561092
COIITRANS
G.nwai Freight dl¥-lslon ol

Household
Goods

for Rent
''DRIVER SEMINAR"
COM TRANS, INC will bo hold Ing •n open houM aemlnar In

12. 1990

Thursday, July

Ohio

Is 1.0 N G I' E 1.1.0 W

One letter stands lor another. lu this somple A 1s used
lor the three I.'s, X lor the two O's, etc. Sm~le letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words arc all
hints . Each day the code letters are different.
CRyp:fOQUOTE

7-12
K Z G Q

G

AGESMRURA
LGBX

KUQl

WGR
~I

G

R M M S I

U R

fi,:· &amp;G~ Q - U E F R

ZURAM

UR

UQ .

- BZGEYMI
SDSYMC
KGERME
Ye•lerd•v'• Cryploq•ol•: I HAVE DISCOVERED
THE PIULOSOPHER'S STONE, THAT TURNS
EVERYTHING WE DO INTO GOLD: IT IS. "PAY AS
YOU GO." - SOURCE OBSCURE
![) 1990 by f&lt;•ng Felltures Syndicate. Inc

�Page~ 16- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Heavy stonns cause
flooding in Ohio Valley
By United Press International
Heavy showers soaked

the

Ohio Va lif')' and mid Atlanti c
sta tes ea rly Thursday, swelling
streams from India na to Pen·
nsv lvania, while clouds blan·
ket ed 1\ew England and heat
bak ed the Southwest.
Th e Kat ional Weather Service
sa id nea rlv thrPe inches of ra in

frll ove r Dayton between H p.m.
v.:edn esdav and~ a m . Thursdav

TorrC'nria l· rains caused sca' ttPr Pd flooding ovrrnig ht in manv

areas of er ntral and sou thPrn
Ohio
Forecasrrr-; pn-~d icted mo re
downpo urs Thur sday , Increasi ng

th&lt;' flood threat for most of the
"i&lt;tl(' _ i\ flood wa tch was posted

for oil of Ohio Pxcep t for the
&lt;.;ta l(•'" northwl'&lt;:;t co rne r, which
v-d c,
PXJJI'cting
l ighte r
rain
Thur&lt;&gt;d &lt;l\
H,• ;Jv_v thundcrstorm s in
:-, uuth\H'SI l nd li.Jfla ['i1USl'd flood inc: ! hilt l'losrd t•.v·o state high wavs nr cn E\ansviiiP. Light Pr
:-. hov.·r r s covrred muc- h of wpst t•rn r.:~ · ntur·k\ bPtwPrn Paducah.
(hn·n~ bo ro and Bowl i ng Grrf' n.
1-"l ood watr hPs Wf'rt' po stPd
O\·,·r ni gh t lor wes tP rn Pr nnsy l\ - ~ln 1.1 .1 nd p.trts ol We st \ 'i rginia
,~ -. " t·ol cl front sta llr d O\'P f thr
,\l"l'd \Par i\ two tnrhr s of rain
'-,(hlk t·d p&lt;.~rl\ of \.\'ps t Virgmi a.
pu..,ht ng \l r ·(· t~ m .'-. oq•r thrir
tJJ nk o.,. ctnd _
c. torm s dumj)(•d up to
d ll trH · h of rain o vrr we ste r n
Pt·nn _
...,\·1\ o~ :J1;1
Slwv-.('1''-. Jl so d.Jmprnt&gt;rl parts
ot Mdr :·.- ldnd and ~rw .Jrrsr!'Tt•mpf'r atun· '-' throug hout thr
mtd -A t !Jntt c p•gton droppPd tnto
!hP up(WI" j){)s 0\TTnight
Clou d .'-. -" PI" Pa cl acros s !\r\.1.
Fn gl&lt;:~ nd
P&lt;t r]\'
Th ur '-'dJy d"
. . r or m ~ ;tpproarhpd from !lw
u-P\1 TPmpNat ures i n northe rn
;\PH' Eng la nd dipp&lt;Pd i n to thr ~O s
o\·rrn ig hr. whilP humidit _v in
\\'ind :;.,o r Locks . Co nn , cltm t)(' d
to ~12 pcrcPn l
ThundNshowrr s 1n t he Sou tt--.
rapr rPCl olf 0\'Prmght
Jllf't
brr aking rhr swf'ltcring twa t in
thr n 'gion. Tr mpPraturPs rarh
TI1Urr;;da\ rangPd from X2 i~

('h ,l ri&lt;'&gt;IOn, S.C .. to RO in \1iam1
dnd 7~ in Atlanta a nd Knox v ille.
Tf'nn
Sho wt'r-" and thund ers torm s
mO\'t·d through J wid{' a r C'a ol
T( 'Xa•-.. \p w :vtf'xico, Ok la homa .
Arkan:.,a~ and L o u is i&lt;~na Thur s·
da\', whi lr a cold f ro nt m ovin g
r;;o uth\.\'&lt;J rd th ro ugh thr r rg lon
d ropp0 d rrrnprr(;l r urrs and proclucPd some spvere storm s.
W{'dnP-;dav aftPrnoon high s
hr ·ld in thr .-&lt;Os in northern
Ok laho ma . whilt· the mercu r~·
r·t·dc hrd 100 &lt;JhE'ad of !llP fr ont
Trl't '" d nd sign s w p n• blown down
durin g h Pa \'V thundnstorms in
.lackso m ·i lJP . Ark
.- \ t ropical \.1.-' 3 \'L' m m· pd ashorr
from thC' Culf of MPxico WednC'scla\·. triggl'rin g widl•ly sc att f're U
o; howf'rs and an w·casional thun
clt• r-; to rm ilcross much of sou th
an cl o.,o u t hc a~t Tpxas
Thundrrs tonns with hrav y
rain rol iPd through Ari?o nd's
crn tr ;_ll basin ~pawning flilsh
flnodin g
nl';Jr
SupNiD r and
Cl ohf• Hig h '.\·ind .c,_ lightnin g.
rw·r·;.J&lt;.;i orul IH•; J\ ' \ rain &lt;Jnd hail

N.Y. police
•
question
man
in ~nartman'
•
•
•
mvestigation
By LESLIE \\1NES
f'ii:: W YORK 'UP! I - De l ee·
ti\.('s Thursda _
1.· quesUonrd a man
who surrf'nderrd to polic f' im·r sltga tin g morr than JO blo"·gun
rLnt .JltJ rk.., 1111 ~.~ · o mrn . a ulhori ll f'~ .... . 1 id
Po!Jcf' ' a1d rh ~ · ma n su rrf'n df'rt' cl 'A Pdnl•.. ., da: but no r hargrs
had bee n f1 i&lt;·d bv early
T hu r&lt;;da v .
· 'SP\'Pral o,~ tt nPssrs a nd v ict im s madP rf'rtain idPntifira rion s . .. sald poli c P spokesman
Ca p t StP ph1•n Davis
Da vis clrrlinf'd to givr details
of the wltnrsse.s' remarks and
said no warrant had hren issued

to search tn r unid entified man's
apartment .
Thr s uspect could facPcharges
of rrckiPs s Pnda ngerment. as saul t. o r - If a se riou s injury
occu rs - frlon y assault

DR. WESTMORLAND
POMEROY OFFICE

DIET CLINIC
PRIVATE COUNSEliNG
CALL 992 -5052
ASK FOR JOANN

MOVING SALE
JULY 14 &amp; 15
3 HP air compressor, antique
wheel horse, new 4 hp Kohler
eng. wI de&lt;k, I 968 Yardman
new eng. oil drums, chains,
casters, kerosene heater, push
mower !N/R), tools, many
other items.

471 59 EAGLE RIDGE
949·2969

were expPCterl
Thursday .

NATIONAl WEATHER FORECA.ST TO 7 AM EDT 7-13-90

Thursday. July 12, 1990

Lotto jackpot grows to $12 million
CLE\'ELAN D t UP! I - 1\o one
clatmed the $9 mlllton jackpot In
Ohio's Super Lotto drawmg Wed·

nesday night. ooosting the top
prize to at lea st $12 million for
Saturday' s game .

lhrough

SUMMER CLEARANCE

A wes tern heat wJve gripped

Ca liforn ia, Nevada and Oregon.
High temperatures were ex·
peeled to climb to 106 degrees In
Las Vegas
In Sou ther n California, persist
ent tempera! ures in the 90s and
IOOs with humidity over 50
percent were making outdoor
activities extremely uncomforta·
ble. Death Valley recorded a hlgh
of 123 degrees Wednesday .
Thund e rstorms marched
acrQ&gt;S central Oregon. touching
off dozens of fires on fares t and
g ras sla nd s. Temperatures
reached the 80s and 90s In the
Willam ettc Valley Wednesday
and near 100 in the so uthwest
va lleys

AT DAN'S

25°/o
OFF
ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE

Ohio Lottery

Mets, Reds
split pair;
Giants win

Oail\

t21
Pick-4
9837

EMPIRE
FURNITURE
842 SECOND AVE.

a=

290 H. 2ND

•
Vot.40, No .299
Copyrighted 1990

992-3684

MIDDLEPORT, i.l);.

Voinovich tells council

SEO neglected area
,.. . ., --:"
'

RIVERSIDE

CORNER TV-VCR CABINET

NOT 1249.9S

ONlY $11

UNIQUE BURGUNDY

CHERRY FINISH

VINYL RECLINER

CHEVAL MIRROR

NOT 1399.95

ONlY$213 13

LOVESEAT

-

NOT 1199.95

ONlY S11313

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR

GREEN COUNTRY
NOT 1549.95

COUNTRY BLUE DOG
NOT 1899.95

ONlY $213 13

ONlY $51313

flEXSTEEt LOVESEAT
B£1GE-GREEN-RUST
NOT 11199.95
ONlY $51313

COUNTRY w/UTI TRIM-IlAl BLUE

1 ONLY -

KING SIZE

MATTRESS SET
NOT 1499.95

ONlY $213 13

SOFA &amp; CHAIR &amp;
112 OTTOMAN

RECLINER

CHERRY FINISH
NOT •snqs

ONlY $243 13

CONTEMPORART PA!TR FlORAl

BROWN VINYL

SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR
NOT

11999.9!

ONLY $1 31

313

FIRST COME
FIRST SERVED

Mitch

Friday the 13th's
Bod luck but not
of Empire. Skip's
out of town and
Cosby Jr. and
Mitch will make
Friday the 13th
your lucky Day
with the best
Furniture Deals.

ONlY$81313

ONLY $31313

HUTCH, MIRROR, DRESSER
S DV'fR. CHEST, FRAME

ROUND TABLE

; NOT '69US

4 DR. BROWN SWIVEL CHAIRS
NOT 1499.95

ON(Y $41313

ONlY$213 13
1 ONlY

SAN CARLOS

TAUPE WING CHAIR

WATERBED

NOT 124q,q5

QUEEN OR KING, COMPLETE
DELIVERED

ONlY$313 13

-&gt;ft

~

/

•

BLU£ FlOCK NYLON
EARlY AMERICAN
NOT 179q,qs

BOOK(ASE, HEADBOARD

&lt;f

QUEEN SLEEP SOFA

NOT '1499.9!

ONlY S113 13

2 Sections. 14 Pagea 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspapet

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, July 13. 1990

FRIDAY, JULY 13th - 8 A.M.-9 P.M.
SATURDAY, JULY 14th
8 A.M.-5 P.M.
MONDAY, JULY 16th-8 A.M.-5 P.M.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
(614) 446-1405

Low In mid &amp;es. Cba- of
rain tlO percent. Saturday,
hiJh near 80. Chance of rain Ill
percent.

Page4

BOYS. GIRLS, MEN &amp; WOMEN

WEATHER MAP - Precipitation should be confined to the
southeastern third of the nation today along a stationary front
stretching from southwest Texas to Washington, D.C. High
pressure wlU Invade the northern Plains from Canada, bringing
wllh It clearing skies and cooler temperatures. The western states
will l!e hot and dry. (UPI)

~umber

MEIGS COUI\'TY En~lneer PhU Roberl5. left,
confers wllh GOP KOvernor hopeful Georte
Volnovlch following Thursda~ night's summer

Southeastern Ohio Regional Council
Jaclcson.

m~tlng

at

Apling resigns Eastern post
Dr . Dan ApUng, superintend·
ent of the Eastern Local School
District for the past three years.
has resigned and accepted em·
ployment as superintendent In
another Ohio school district .
His resignation Is effective
July 31.
During a special meeting of the
Eautern Local Board of Educa·
lion thts week Dr. Apllng''
resignation was accepted and
plans made to advertise for
applicants for the position. Quali
fled candidates should contact
John Rleb€1. Meigs County

Superintendent.
At the mt'f'ting the superin·
tendent was authorized to hire a
head football coach for the
district contingent upon fonnal
approval by the board at the July
25 regular mt'f'tlng .
Employed on supplemental
contracts tor the 1990·91 school
year were Pam Douthl11. athlellc
dlrE'ctorand head volleyball
coach; Ron Hill. assistant foot ·
ball roach ; Don Eichmger. as
sistant football coach ; C. D
Mcintyre . assistant football
coach; Bill Hall marchin g band

director: Ruth Brooks, varsity
and junior varsity cheerleader
advisor: Don Jackson. assistant
volleyball coach, and Carolyn
Ritchie, lunchroom coordinator
Attending the meeting were
Ray Karr, president and
members. Bill Hannum . 1. 0 .
McCoy . and Jim Smith.
To 80! Honored
Dr. ApUng will be honored at a
farewell dinner party to be held
on July 19.6 p.m ., at the HoUda v
Inn. Reservations are to be made
with Debbie Rose. 985-4292 or
Eloise Boston, 985-4331.

Wheat crop third largest ever
WASHI:-;GTO!\ 1 L:PI1
Farmers wtll han·rst 1 7 billion
bushels ot wheat this vrar . thP
third · largest crop rver ·despite a
sour turn for wintPr whrat. thr
government said Thursda,v . fore

casting a second ~ear ol sharp
recovery from the 198!! drought
In its first estimate of the year
for OVE'ral! wheat production . the
Agrlcuitu"' Department esti
mated farmers would har vest a
record 549 million bushels of
spring wheat , I H million bushe ls
of durum wheat and 2.04 bi Ilion
bushels of winter wheat. In all.
the wheat crop would be 33
percE'nt larger than last vear and
the largest slnre 1982 ·
The winter wheat figure was
down 3 percent from Jun&lt;'
beocause of wet weathl•r di.lmag('
In the central statrs Evl'n so. it
would be thr largest winter

wheat crop since 1981
In a companion report . the
department projected U.S gra in
production would n•ach 307.6
m Ullon metric tons this vrar. up 8
percent from 1989 . Thrcrippling
1988 drought slashedgrainoutput
to204 million tons .
The projection was highlv
tentative because som(' major

crops. such as corn. sorghum and

soybeans. are a long wa.v !rom
maturity . The go,·rrnment will
no1 makP ('stima l es on th osP

Kansas wa s experted to refiZaJn

crops until August .
The July crop report ts one of
the most signilicant of th r vear
bt'Cause it presents the ·first
official est imate of L.S . wheat
output. Including spring and
durum wheat . as well as the fi rst
cs tlmate of the oat and barley
crops .
U.S. wheat production totaled
2.04 billion bushels la st year- an
amount that should be matched
just by this year's winter wheat
crop. Durum production wa s
forecast up 24 percent and spring
wheat was forecast to rise 12
percent
Growers were predicted to
average 38.6 bushels of wheat an
acre. o.8 bushels better than last
year, based on conditions at the
start of this month .
\\inter wheat. which is plantPd
in the fall and harvested the
fojlowlng year. accounts for
three-fourths of U.S. production.
With nearly three-fourths of
the wmter wheat crop in the bin.
the government estimate of that
crop was the most accurate yet
The expected yield was lowered
0.6 bushE'Is an acre because of

the rank as the :\o 1 wheat ·
producmg state with a corp of ~60
million bu shels . :-;orth Dakota.
"&gt;o. I last year. would be second
with J50 .9 million bushels.
The government encouraged
farmers to grow more wheat this
vear to offset two yea rs of
drought. Farmers expanded
wheat acreage by only I percent
but with less weather damage,
ha rvested acreage should be up
13 percent to 70 million acres .
"That would be the largPS1
harvested 1wheat1 acreage since
1982," the department said when
It announced the figures June 28.
Oat and barley acreage is down
from last year but per acre yield
should b€ up sharply . the govern·

Moscow, Leningrad
mayors exit Party
MOSCOW tUPI I - The may ·
ors of Moscow and Leningrad
announced Friday thev are lea'' ·
log the Communist Party. join·
ing Boris Yeltsin In the exodus
from the party that has ruled the
Soviet Union for seven dt'Cades
Moscow Mayor Gavrtll Popov
and his counterpart In LE'nln·
grad. Anatoly Sobchak, dlstrlb·
uted a joint statement, dt'Clarlng
that the 28th Communist Party
Congress did not undertake the
democratic reforms they
expected.
"Recognizing our obllgallons
before the people and before
history and In view or the present
1polltlcaH conditions, we have
decided to leave the Communl.st
Party of the Soviet Union In order
to help create a multiparty

dam age tn the soft red wintN
wheat region .

svstem and have greater oppor ·
tunlty to work as the IE'aders of
our two cities." the statement
said.
Popov, a leading economist.
and Sobchak, a lawyer, said they
were disappointed that the Parry
Congress, which Is ending Frl·
day, rejected the formation of
poUtical factions, which have
been banned since 1921.
The defections of the popular
and nationally known mayors of
the two largest cities followed
Yeltsln 's dramatic announcement Thunday that he was
leaving the party and portends
the emergence of a new gellt!ration of Influential Independent
politicians.
Sobchak burst onto lhe pollti·
Continued on page 10

mrnt sa id

Th e department es tlmatrd the
oat crop would tota\3745 million
bushels, compared to 373.8 m II·
lion bushels last year. Barley
production was estimated as U4
million bushels, compared to 403
million bushels in 1989. Oat yield
was forecast for 60.1 bushels an
acre, up 5.7 bushels . The barley
yield, forecast lor 53.5 bushels an
acre. would be up 4.9 bushels.
With the upturn In wheat
production. prices were expected
to fall. The government forecast
an average price of $2 .80 to $3.20
a bushel - down lO cents from
last month- for this year's crop.
Average pri ce for the 1989 crop
was S3.72.

Analysts sa id lower prices
would make wheat morE' attrac·
t!ve on the world market and
could encourage buyers to purchase wheat, rather than feed
grains, to feed to livestock.

Due do curreat weather conditions, the U.S. Air Force Baad of
F1i«hl Concert will be beld at tile
F1ne and PerlonniDr Ares Center
bulldlll( a&amp; the Ualvenlty of Rio
Grude Sa&amp;UI'day evealllc laatead ef tile Gllllpolll parlt freolt,
Seallar ClfiiCltJ at llle eealer
Ia IN )letlllle. Doon wlllopn a&amp; 1

p.m. TlleireeceecertwtUbe(lal
p.m.

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Slafl
Pledging to help "forgotten
Ohio," George Voinovich ad·
dressed the Southeas I Ohio Regional Council Thursday night In
Jackson. Voinovlch. a Republl·
can, Is running lor governor of
the state.
Southeast Ohio has been forgot ·
ten, Volnovich said. noting It
needed special attention due to
the poor Infrastructure and high
unemployment levels.
This region Is due highway
funding. he said. noting the area
has been neglected In the past.
The SEORC has developed an
Agenda 2000 lor highways, and
Volnovich said that Is the first
step to success In getting the
funding .
"I don't see whv It can't be
done ." he told members of the
SEORC Highway Committe£'
Spending the highway dollars
In an efficient and e!lt&gt;Ctlve
man!K'r Is Volnovich's goal.
With Issue 2 and the Local
Transportation Improvement
Program money. the state has
more dollars than ever for
highway repair and construe·
tion. "We need to get a bigger
bang out of our dollar," he said.
Another way to help get the
funding, Volnovlch said, Is a
method he employed as Ch&gt;ve·
land mayor - paying for some
things yourSelves, IIJ&lt;e teastblllly
studies and engineering.
Volnovlch blasted the Ohio
Department of Transportation
and Its director Bernard Hurst ,
saying things need to change.
Highway construction needs to
be user·orlented . He said there
needs to be convenience for the
driver. temporary bridges to
limit Inconvenience. establish·
ment of well·marked detours
better relationships with co n·
tractors - lllce paving them on

This region is the poorest in the
state. but the fanner mavor of
CIE"vela nd sa ld the problems herE"
are not that different than he saw
In the Inner city .
Povert;·. joblessness and
poorly·educated people are the
same constraints to growth. he
noted.
The method to break the
poverty cycle In Southeast Ohio
is education .
"Educate. educatE'. educate."
Vo1novich said If you check in
the state's prison system. ap·
proximately 80 percent of thE'
Inmates are functionally 111\ter ·
ate. he sa id .
· 'Wp have ro intervene early. ··
he said of teaching children His
goal is to have every at risk child
In Ohio enrollE"d In Head Starr by
1995. Volnovich said Corrections ·
Department Dlrt'Ctor George W.
Wilson will say the need is for
more prisons. but admits Head
Start would have helped early on.
possibly keeping some prisoners
out of the systE"m.
Volnovlch has two priorities
for the state- first to reinstitute
family values and secondly lm·
prove the educational system In
Ohio.
" Educatio n is the best Invest ·
ment" on several levels. he
noted It breaks the poverty
cycle. reduces the welfare rolls
and de&lt;rea•e• the prison popula·
lion. ~· hich is already at 150
percf'nt capacity
·' We need to makf' sure

WP

don't " 'aste anothflr gPnPration

of Ohioans." he said
Another Voinovich plan to help
education is rewarding the good
teac her s and wE"f'ding out the
bad
First. parent.s would rPrPi vP a
card

on thPir school
systrm. and see how it stacks up
against tht• rest of the s late
Sf'Condl _
, . hf• wants to gin• th£&gt;
rPport

upper 25 percent of teachers
rewards - grants. scholarships
and time a !I to gel s peclalized
instruct ton.
Volnovlch proposes pumping
$50 million int o the poorest school
systems. those lacking sufficient
tax bases . and get them up to
average. From there. they can be
Improved.
The candidate for governor
also sa id he doesn't Intend to
raise taxes .
So. how will the $50 million be
fu nded ~ By streamlining the
existing departments in govern·
ment. he said .
In a IO·year period. the state
budget increased 180 percent. as
opposed to Cleveland 's 50 per
ce nt . ·•You have to live within
your mean s," he said .
Volnovlch plans to look Into
each and gel rid of thE' excessto hold down budget lnllalionand
eliminate what he calls the
corruption and mismanagement
tax .
"We have to e nd governmPnt

shakedown ." hP said. referring
to thE' "buy thE' lickets, get the
promotion" theory of political
offices .
The Department of Develop·
ment . which he referred to as tile
"Dea th of Development" needs
to assist potential investors. not
forget them .
For example. \ 'oinovichciteda
friend of his wantlng to locate
buslnPSs In Ohio or South Carol·
1na. The Investor sent letters to
each deparcment of development
and the next day was called by
South Carolina. After six weeks ,
Me had not heard from Ohio's
DOD
Th e "ate needs to be aggres ·
sh:p tn serklng bu sines s Inves-

tor&gt; . not leavi ng them han~lng
Ohio needs to "catc h up . go
ahead and be a leader ." Vomo·
vlch said

limP .

Damaged ceiling is repaired
at Harrisonville Elementary
B~

JIM FREEMAN
Sentinel News Stall
In the Meigs Local School
District's first bout with asbestos
Insulation. parr of the ceiling In
the Harrisonville Elementary
was repaired where water leak·
age onto asbestos plaster created
potential problems.
Tuesday and Wednesday .
workers for Industrial Fireproof·
lng of Belpre removed thr
damaged plaster, then repai "'d
and painted the ceilings at a cost
of $4,500 to the Meigs Local
School Board.
According to Meigs Local
Superintendent James Ca rpen ·
ter , the school had somE' pro!&gt;
!ems with the flashing around the
roof which allowed water to leak
Into one of the classrooms . The
water damaged some of the
plaster.
Under ordinary cll't'umstance.
asbestos plaster Is not danger
ous. But wet asbestos plaster
becomes friable when It dries:
this means that some of the
asbestos !lbers may be released
Into the air.
Friable asbestos Is not accep·
table to the EPA's safety
standards.
The leakage damage Is con·
fined to only a lew rooms . WhE"re
the plaster has bubbled, It has
been removed and replaced to
prevent the asbestos from be·
coming !rtable.
Tes tlng performed by the
Glauuer Company of Sl. Albans,
W.Va., failed to reveal any
asbeStos present In tlte air Inside
the schOOl. The tesdng apparatus
has a smallpumpwhlch Is used to
draw air Into a lUter, the !titer Is
lhen examiDed In the labboratory
for tra~ of ubestosllbers. Tbe
air wiU be tested •Jain for
rontamlnatlon followlllll repair
of the ceiUIIJ, acall'dltlf to the

superintendent.

Carpenter said there Ia onlY

one room whPrr thr company IS
actually· removing as bestos . In
~he

other rooms , where the
bubbles are, the y are removing
thE' lath coat which does not
contain asbestos.
The asbrstos rpmoval 'IS a
complicated process. According
to Don Grapes of Industrial
F~reprooflng of Belpre. thr arE'a
has to be sealed off with plastic
sheeting Once the area Is sealed
off. a negat i,·e·alr machine is
used to help keep the air clean .
Workers wear protective clothing and masks and enter the
work area through a series of
chambers The first chamber Is
called the clean room. from there

workers go through a shower
area. Into the dirt room and then
on Into the main work area. To
leave the work area. the process
Is reversed : the workers shower
before leaving 10 avoid bringing
out contaminants.
Grapes said the work was to
have been done by Thursday.
Asbestos was widely used In
the past as an Insulating mate·
rial. Its flre·reslstant nature
made It Ideal for wire insulation
and fire protective suit s. In th e
last several years. however.
asbeStos .caused concern among
health and safety officials when
It was discovered asbestos fib€&lt;&gt;
were dangerous when Inhaled.

P.\T(;BJNG liP - Jet McOtdre, lelfn, re,lllala ,_,. II tile
...._.tllel!ll!lllftWJIIelllllerlhl•llerwaterle..IIIIIIIMe
II aeer •trr te n:plaee....., ul!111lll ..._,..,._.

,,

·'

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="299">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9572">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35879">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35878">
              <text>July 12, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3433">
      <name>keig</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
