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1\.stros -stop
_Reds; Braves
trip Giants
Page4

Pick 3:
964
Pick 4:
1384
Buckeye 5:
4-28-29-31-34

LOw tonight In mid 60s.
Thursday, hlgh in mid-80s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.

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Yo!. 43, No. 42
Copyright~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Wednesday, July 1,1992

·1992

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2 Sectlona, 16 Pages 25 cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Man to .be charged in

storekeep-er's death
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ond •from· right, are
to be working
with the new progr&amp;lll, 1-r, Susie Casto or Gallia!Meigs Community Action Agency, and Debbie Grueser and Sharon Smith, Nutrition Edu·
cators/Cooperative Program Assistants.

· . GRANT AWARDED • Meigs County is the
.,··r~lpje~t l)f a $9,8~ gr~n.t for food and nutri·
: tion education, to be administered by Meigs
· County Cooperative Extension Service and
Agent Cindy Oliveri•.Pictured with Oliveri, sec-

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Donald L. Lindeman of Horse
Cave Road will be charged with
aggravated murder in the alleged
armed robbery and shooting death
of Howard Lawrence, 69, of Long
Bottom.
Lawrence, who died at 8:40 a.m.
on Wednesday, was shot in the
head and apparen~ly robbed on
Thursday evening at the grocery
store he owns near Long Bottom.
, Lawrence was found lying on
the store's floor, bleeding from the
head, by a customer at approximately 8:30 p.m. on Thursday. He
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and later to Grant Medical
Center by Life Flight. He remained
in critical condition there until his
death today.

A~cording to Meigs County
Shenff James M. Soulsby, ·an indepth investigation resulted in the
filing of charges against Lindeman
yesterday.
"Deputy Robert Beegle and I,
Prosecutor's Investigator Mike
Canan and BCI Agent John Perry
have been working really round the-clock on this case," Soul~.
said, "following leads, interviewmg
store .. customers and so forth.
Deputy Harry Lyons, Sr. was the
first officer on the scene."
Soulsby commented that cooperatiOn from local residents aided
in that investigation process.
"This community involvement
indicates the high r~gard that the
residents of the Long Bottom area
pad for Mr. Lawrence," Soulsb,y
said. That investigation will con tin-

ue, according to Soulsby, and an
autopsy will be performed by the
Franklin County Coroner's office.
Lawrence had owned and operated the grocery store, located on
DeWitt's Run, since his dischargt'
from the U.S. Navy in 1947. He
also served as the postmaster at the
Long Bottom Post Office. He was
injured in an armed robbery in •
1991.
Charges of aggravated robbery
and attempted aggravated murder
were filed against Lindeman late
yesterday, but Souls by reported
that the prosecutor's office would
amend the charge to murder in light
of Lawrence's death. Lindeman is
expected to appear in Meigs Coun- .~
ty Court for arraignment sometime
today.

Meigs receives food,
Governor orders $315.7
'!~!'!~~.~"~.~.~.~~,~~'!. ~~~'!:,!,.. ,million in spending cuts

man/Home Economics/CNRD Ch1cag~ •. lll.
.
Agent of the Meigs County Coop· . Nutnuon Ed~cators Cooperauve
. erative Extension Service recently Program AssiStants employed
;announced the award of a $9,800 through the grant to work with the
grant to conduct food and nutrition program are Deborah Grueser of
programming in Meigs County.
Pomer~y ao.d.. Shar~n S_mi!h of
Oliveri wrote the·grant.to pro- ~angsv11le. They wdl d1stnbute
~ educl!rioqal trairting .IUid iOfor- mfonnation '' ~ry stdres and
maiion to food stamp recipients in c~mmodiiY distribution sites and
the areas of nutrition, budgeting, w!ll conduct workshops with WIC
menu planning and food safety. che.nts an~ participants of various
The program was funded by the SOCI81 serv1ce a~nc~ programs.
·
The grant penod IS from June 22

mformation about the program is
available from Oliveri at the extens1on office, 992-6696.
All educational programs and
activities conducted by ·the Ohio
C~perative Extension. Service are
ava1Iable to all poteilual clieruele
on· a nondisCriminatory basis without regard to race, color, creed,
religion, sexual orientationn,
national origin, sex, age, handicap
or Vietnamcera status.

--Local briefs--

DeW-b'UyOUt of(ier

Pool ·reopens
•

London Pool at Syracuse re-opened Tuesday after having been
closed for the past two weeks for equipment repair. The pool will be
opened the.regular hours of noon to 6 p.m., Shannon Slavin, pool
manager, at)nounced.
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To take part in state fair event
Both Meigs and Gallia Counties will compete for the $20,000 in .
cash prizes from the "Ohio's Own" exhibit at the Ohio State Fair.
Billy Inmon, general manager of the Ohio State Fair, said that 56
of Ohio's 88 counties hllve signed up to compete for the prize
money.
The "Ohio's Own" pr:ogram gives each county free display space
in the Science, Industty, Technology and Export Building. The participating counties will have a chance to show what makes them the
best in the state, including displays on tourism, industry, and technology.

)

Appeal issued for help
~

. An appeal has been issued for clothing and household items for a
Ri!dand area family whose home was destroyed by fue Thursday.
Fonda Chadwell and her two children, Jenifer and Roger, resided
in a mobile home owned by Lee and Bea Wood of Rutland. The
family had left the mobile home to visit a relative when the fire
started around the kitchen stove. On the SCC1JC were fll'll departments
from Pomeroy, Rutland arid Scipio. .The structure.and all its contents were destroyed.
The Chadwell family will be moving into another residence but
are in need of a stove, refrigerator, dinette set, living room suite,
bedroom suite, two half beds, and a washer and dryer. The}' also
need clothing Jenifer, size 7, 12 1(2 shoe; Roger, size 8 2 1{2 size
shoe, and Fllonda, misses size 3, size 8 shoe. The family will purchase good used items.

Stone, Stewart to face charges_.__
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that 19 year
old Chester William Stewart of Glenroy was returned to Mei~s
County on 'Monday tQ face charges in Meigs C~ll:lltY Court for falltog to appear on a charge of under-age consumpuon of alcohol and
·contribuung to the delinquency of a .minor.
.On Sunday, Rick: Stone, 32, of Middleport, was arrested by Gallia County deputies on a Meigs County indictment for escape. Stone
had· appeued in Meigs County Cammon Pleas Court ·on a drugrelated charge ~ was sentenced to a state penal institution.- Later,
the court ordered a reduced sentence at SEPTA Center 10 Nel- ;
, sonvUle. While there, Stone allegedly walked away from .his 'work
site in Meigs County' resulting this indiC!'Denl

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Battery
thieves
thwarted

Theft charges are pending a~·ainst two individuals for the
attempted .theft of batteries from a JUnk pile at the Russell Cummins
fa:rm at Plants.
·
Accardi!)~ to· the sheriff's repOrt, the two subjects were. caught
with approxm1ately 40 .used balleries in their ttuck at around 10:30
p.m. on Monday. The batteries were then unloaded, and Cummins .
notified the department on Tuesday.
.
Names are bemg withheld pending filing of charges.
•Continued on page 3

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Star Bane reJ· ects
CINCINNATI (AP) -Fifth
Third Bancorp has given up trying
to acquire Star Bane Corp. after
Star Bane rejected Fifth Third's
second unsolicited buyout offer.
"We're going to go on with our
banking careers," said George
Schaefer Jr., Fifth Third's president
and chief executive officer. "I
think at this time we felt it wasn't
fruitful to do an unfriendly move
further than this.'' ·
. Fifth Third had offered $42 a
share, to be paid in Fifth Third
common snares. Star's board of
directors said it unanimously
rejected the $1.22 billion offer
Tuesday.
Star said Fifth Third's offer
would not have adequately protected Star's shareholders if the market
price {)f Fifth Third's stock were to
decline or grow more slowly than
projected.
"It is our firm belief that Fifth
Third's offer doesn't reflect the
values inherent in Star, or the
futilre prospects of the company,"
said Oliver Waddell, Star Bane's ·
chairman arid chief executive officer. "It's the tough, but friendly,
competition between Fifth Third
and Star Bane that has made both
of us successful and financially
strong. We keep each other on our
toes.''

Waddell said his company has
Continued on pag~ 3

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich began the
state's new budget year today by
ordering $315.7 million in spending cuts to offset part of a projected
$520 J!lilli~ deficit
.
, Vmnov1ch reduced the s1ze of
his cutback from the $370 million
originally anticipated because the
state ended the old fiscal year
'Fuesday with a higher-than-expected balance of $91 million.
.
"Through the good management of our agencies in fiscal year
1992. spending was less than the
Office of Budget and Manag~ment
had estimated by about $60 million" Voinovich told a news confere~ce.

He said revenues in June continued to fluctuate and were about $31
million more than OBM assumed
in its $520 million fiscal year 1993

defic1t ~alys1s.
. attempt to ra1se c1garette and alco. ~e sa1d $53.7 million of the $91 hoi taxes br $123million .
m1lhon balance would be used to
Vomov1ch sa1d he was disapreduce cuts in state subsidies to pomted b~ Riffe, and traced the
colle~es and universities.
Democrauc leader's decision to
H1gher educatiop, whic~ ~ad ele~~10n .year poli~cs.
. . . .
ex~ted to be cut by $224 m1lhon,
. 1 thmk the thmg that 1s dnvmg
w1llm_stead by cut by $170 million. h1m nght now 1s his concern to :
. Vom.ovich defended his deci- ma_mta1n ~1s speakership,''
s1on to 1mplement cuts on the first Vomov1ch srud.
day of the new budget year, and
"And as a result of that, I think
sa1~ the public would support his some of h1s actions recently are not
acuons. .
.
consistent wah what he has done
"BaSICally what they're, saying over the years.~~ term~ of responsito me as I talk to them IS, Gover- ble leadership, he sa1d.
nor, ~eep cutting. We .still think
R1ffe ~on tends there is no budthere s fat down there. And you • get def1c1t at present, and that nei know something? They're right, " thercuts nor tax increases arc needVoinovich said.
ed at presen-t. He recommended
He also criticized House Speak- action be postponed until Decemer Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, for ber, ~hen the magnitude of the
urging delay in imposing the cuts. . potential financial problem may be
Riffe opposed Voinovich's failed determined . ap-cbo-07-01-92
1055cdt

House rejects Senate health care bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A
health care reform bill needed to
help 1.2 million people without
insurance is headed for a conference committee after the House ·
rejected a Senate version of the
measure.
Representatives refused, 62-36,
to go along with what Rep. Wayne
Jones, D-Cuyahoga Falls, said were
extensive changes made by the
Senate.
"My goal today is not to engage
in Senate bashing, although it's one
of my favorite sports," Jones said.
"No, the purpose of my rising is
to allow us to move on to the next
stage of debate in health care
reform for Ohio by allowing a conference committee to begin its
work," he said.
Action on the measure came as
the House wrapped up work Tuesday, and joined the Senate in a
recess that may last 1hrough the
summer.
Rep . Robert Hagan , DYoungstown, said the Senate health

care bill was nothing more than a
cruel joke.
"Since its passage in this chamber, we 'vc come to realize through
a study by the American Medical
Association that Ohio physicians
have the highest salaries in the
U.S.," Hagan said.
"House Bill 478 does nothing
to solve this problem. The cost of
health care for an average family
increased to $7,000 per year, and is
expected to double by the year
2000. House Bi11478 will not slow
this increase," he said.
. The Senate bill would provide
insurance 10 about 345,000 people
without coverage. It also would
create a health program for children under 7 whose families cannot
afford private insurance or qualify
for Medicaid, the federal-state
health care program for the poor.
It would require insurance companies to offer coverage to anyone
who applied, up to 60,000 annually, but would allow the companies
to charge them three times the rate

paid by group plans.
The House had proposed creation of a public insurance program, fmanced partly by premiums
of participants and a I percent tax
on private in surance premium s.
The program would insure people
who could not otherwise obtain
coverage.
Rep . .Raymond Sines, R-Perry,
supported the Senate measure as an
important first step in changing the
health care system, and helping
those without health insurance.
. "Let me say that I believe the
changes the S,enate made ... arc reasonable, and in today's economy,
arc responsible," Sines said .
In other acti on Tuesday, th e
House: .
- Approved 90-6 changes made
by the Senate in a bill thai con forms slate fair housing .laws with
federal anti -discrimination measures. The bill, which now goes to
Gov. George Voinovich, prohibits
discriminating against the disabled,
or people with children. in the sale
and rental of housing.

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Meigs S&amp;WCD participates in· rural fire protection program
The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation 'District has recently
become involved in a rural fire protection program that involves the
installB;tion of dry hydrants.
Dry fire hydrants are non-pres,_surized pipe systems that are
- installe&lt;.l,,tn existing ponds, lakes
and-streams 10 provide suction supply water to fire department tank
uucks.
·
,
Many areas of Meigs County .
are remote from vital "fill up"
points. As a result ru-e depar1ments ·
are often impaired ·in providing .a
contiriuous water supply to the fire
scene. Dry fire hydrants, when ·
placed at accessible locations, will
Pf!l!'id(:_ our volunteer·fire depart.ment with the water supply needed
and thus serve as an alternative
source for rural ~ue protection.
The dry rue hydrant program is

being promoted by the Buckeye SWCD. These two were distributed
Hills 'Resource Conservation and .to the Racine Volunteer Fire
Development (RC &amp; D) council Department and Olive Township
with Robert First the coordinator. Fire Department. Plans arc to
A rural fire proteclion committee establish at least one .per township
was formed in March 1992 consist- by the end of 1993.
ing of volunteer fire department
Each hydrant consists of a
represe11tatives, township trustees, strainer connected to approximateMeigs SWCD supervisor, SCS Dis- ly' 40 feet of six inch· St;hedule 40
irict Con5wationist, and the Meigs PVC and then is brought to the surSWCD District Program Adminis- face using either a 90 degree or a
trator.
.
45 degree elbow, and finally the
The committee has met monthly dry fue hydrant head.
to identify ponds and streams that
Each basic "kit" that includes
would r.nake good accessible ·sites the strainer Jll1d hydrant head, costs
for installing the hydrants. Con- $150 through Buckeye Hills
tracts have been drafted ·to protect RC&amp;D. With the additional cost for
landowners, fire departments, the amount of PVC and elbows and
trustees and Meigs SWCD rights.
construction the estimated cost
Three' bydrant "kits" have would be $1,000 per hydrant
already been purchased: one by the
A demonstration of inslallation
Columbia Township Fire Depart- and operation is being planned for
ment; and two .by the Meip;s

Columbia Township on' Jul y 28 at 4
p.m. Two more are sc hed uled in
August, one in Lebanon township ..
and ~he one in Olive township . . .
Deta1ls w1ll be announced when ·
plans are finalized.
. •• :
Funding is needed for additional ···:
installations throughout the county~ ::, :.
If you or your organization is inter ·::...··
ested in supporting this needed pro-'&gt;:: .
ject, call 992-6647 or just mail a &gt;' '
c·ontribut_ion to Meigs SWCD, ;',
33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, ·.
Ohio "45769 with a note saying for .
dry hydrant projec.t. Any amount of ",
cash, materials (PVC pipe) or labor .;::
may be donated.
.·~
Benefits from installing these -: ·
hydrants include improved fire pro- ·:
tection, conservation of energy and. ;::
travel costs for tanker trucks and :·
the potential for lower insurance :
premiums.
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T4e Dhlly Sentin~l
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By J{/ck Anderson

and

Michael Binstein

}Lawmakers to leave
~ unfinished business

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Syria. Baxter is currently under
Justice investigation in connection
with alleged violations of federal
anti-boycott laws. Fuisz, a former
Baxter executive, asserts that
Youssef oversaw the Syrian ·military official who negotiated the·
deal with Baxter.
According to Kolsenik, it was
not until last November that the
FBI finally sal down and fully
interviewed Fuisz and another
source. In the meantime, the
Kolsenik affidavit says the FBI
mounted a campaign to discredit
both him and Fuisz.
"From October 10 November
16th (die FBO had been attempting
to discredit me and Dr. Fuisz about
this infonnalion, telling everyone
that there was nothing to it. They
kepi telling them ... the guy wasn't
here. They said the same thing to
the press. Now, at no time did they
tell tile that."
Grassley has raised the subject
during the confinnation proceedings of both the Allorne~General
and die deputy Auorney neral in
rec.ent months. On March 24. FBI
officials belatedly visit Grass·
ley's staff and confirmed that
Youssef had indeed been in Wlishington, but they had failed to come
up with any answers on who His
Wasliington tour guide was.
Was this a case of mislaken
identity or a botched effort to
deteive?
Steve Hooks, of the FBI's congressional liaison office 1old us,
"We have confirmed that there
was somebody ... there was a fellow in here by the name of Haidar
Youssef, but that's a common
name and we're not so sure that the
description that we have is the
exael descriptioo !hat the senator's
offite has."
Fuisz claims that the visit was
related 10 the release. of American
hostages from Lebanon last fall, a
deal bn&gt;kered by United Nations
and Syrian officials. He has even
told the FBI thai when Youssef left
the United States to return to
Frankfun, he carried with him three
black uunks - ostensibly laden
with cash.
Jack Aoderfson and Michael
Biitslein are syndlcaled columnists for United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

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~

Are coae~ 's earnings really unfair?
Sarah Overstreet

~ Letters to the editor
Responds to June 29letter

r

..

times the men·s coach ' s salary.
Women's basketball - even
though Burnell's exciting team
went from drawing sparse crowds
at the season•s start 10 packing the
arena by season •s end - brought
in only $98,000, not even !lguble
·Bumeu's new salary of$52,000.
If the school pumped an equal
amount of money into women's
athletic programs, would the
women ever bring in the revenue
the men's teams do? I doubt' it.
Would it improve the women's
programs to a whopping extent,
produce beuer athletes and draw
better crowds? II always does.
But alas, my young friend, reali •
1y. "Is it unequal pay for equal
work if you're the manager in one
division of a company that isn't
very profitable, and the manager in
the division that is profitable makes
more money?" I asked him.
"But a state and federally supported school isn't a business," he
argued.
He had me there.
Sarah Overslreet is a syndicated columnisl for Newspaper
Enlerprise Association.

Rules must be obeyed!

.• Dear Editor
·: This leiter is in response 10
:- Carol Guinther's letter of Junc 29.
~ Please read the following minutes
~ of the uustee meeting of May II,
;. 1972 and then say you have not
; broken any rules. Every cemetery
~ has rules and people ·have to obey
&gt;the rules.
.
Mrs. Don RicMfd (Mary) Hill
•
State Route 338, Racine.
• '[Editor's NO!e: The minutes of
: die special meeting held May II,
: 1972 reads, in pan. as follows: I

~ Today

"The cemetery Situation was
discussed and clerk ordered 10 run
an ad in The Daily Citizen (Sen·
line!) newspaper as follows:
"Owing 10 the high COSI of
mowing, a five dollar per lot per
year charge will be followed as of
May 3, 1971 meeting. Flowers
allowed placed anywhere on ~raves
from one week before unut one
week after Decoration Day and
then two bunches allowed by tomb~
stone 10 facilitate mowing."

in history

:
By The Associlted Press
: . Today is Wednesday, July I, the 183rd day of 1992. There are 183
: days left in the year. This is Canada Day.
~ Today's Highlight in aistory;
~ One hUlldred years ago, on July I, 1892, one of America's mosi violent
~ labor dispuies began ~ the Homestead Steel Mill in Pennsylvania as die
~ workers' contract expirql aftet the COIDpany had refused to negotiate in
~ ~ of _breaking ~ union. In the days that followed, strikers clashed
: w11h special guards hired by Homestead, resulting in more th8n 20 dealhs.
~
On this date: .
: In 1535, Sir Thcmas More went on trial in England, charged with tre.t·
• son for rejecting the Oatli of Sup~eiiiiCy.
.
: In 1863, the Civil War Baale of GetzystJurg began.
· ~ In 1867, Canada became a self-governing dominion of Oreal Britain as
~ the British Nonh America Act united thc provintes of OnlBrio, Quebec
~ New BI'UIIJWict and Nova Scolia.
·
'
: In 1898, aWing the Spanish-Amen~ War, Theodcn Roosevelt and
' ~ hii "Rough Riden" waged a victorious assauh oo San Juan HiU'in Cuba.
~ · In 1916, Dwiabt D. Eisel!hqwer married Mary ("Mamie'') Geneva
• Doad in Denver. tolo.
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Ohto can expect continued
warm and humid weather with
occasional showers and tllundersiOnns through Saturday. forecasters said.
·
. Daytime highs will be in the 80s
'a:nd overnight lows mostly in the

'

WASHINGTON - Haidar flying from London to Tel Aviv, to "Their reSJi&lt;inse was they didn't
Youssef - ~yrian int~lligence an account owned by a Vasser know who Haidar Youssef is, they
·'
official who 'allegedly bankrolls Haider at the International Bank of vehemently denied thai any·J&gt;BI
DBVOTED TO THE ll'ITEU8T8 OP'111E MEIGS-MASON AREA
terrorist activities through narcotics Credit and Commerce in London. agent was esconing him around;
traffickilig -came 10 Washington
and they can assure us that if he
last September. By some aeeounts,
came in the country, that he did not
'he was escorted around town more
meet with any government peolike
a
dignitary
than
an
outlaw
by
a
ple."
t
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member of the FBI's own anti-terDays ,later, Kolesnik says the
ROBERT L WINGETI'
rorism unit
FBI informed him that "there's a
Publisher
Kris J. Kolesnik, an aide Ill Sen.
lot of.Haidar Youssefs, there •sa lot
"
Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, first
of Haidars, there's a lot of
PAT WHITEHEAD
informed the FBI of the mysterious
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Youssefs and we just can't uack
visit. But the FBI's response In anolher incident, terrorists who down the guy you're talking
Asslslant PubUsber/Controlltr
Genenol Manager
proved even more mysterious.
,
kidnapped a Greek businessman about."
•' .
acting
on
the
tip,
Instead
of
reportedly demanded lhat the ranKolesnik !hen put the FBI in
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less lban 300
Kolesnik claims ' the FBI first som be deposited illlo the same touch with his sources. One of
words. All letters ore subject to ediling and must be signed wilb name,
·denied the allegation, then tried to London BCCI bank ~ounl.
addless and relepbone number. No unsigned leUers-will be publisbed. Leum
them was Virginia resident Dr.
discredit him and his sources.
" ' sbould be in good rure, addressing issues, not personalities.
After passing on the .tip, a Richard C. Fuisz, who charges that
Kolesnik had repeatedly come months-ton~ struggle ensued, pit· Youssef personally uied to have
across Youssers name in connec- ting Kolesnik and a Virgil)ia doc- him kidnapped in London. In
tion with his years-long probing lor, who was one of· his original recent years, Fuis~ gained
into international terrorism. sources, against the FBI. utlimate- widespread media auention over
Kolesnik and others became-con- ly. Kolesnik took his case ,to the explosive documents he provided
vinced that. Youssef fit the profile Juslite Depanment, whose public to the Justice Department about
of a "Vasser Haider," widely integrity section is investigating Baxter International, one of the
..... .
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described in press reportS as a ter· whether the FBI properly handled world's.·targest hosJ.Iilal supplietS. .
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roriSt financier.
··
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The decwnerus mdicated that in
the case.
: '
By ROBERT E. MILLER
A 1uly 1991 London Times
In an April 14 interview with the late 1980s Baxler may have
,•
Assod1ted Press Wriler
piece claimed British authorities Justice officials, a ~ranscript of have illegally Uied to evade the
·: : COLUMBUS- State lawmakers hope to adjourn this week for the tracked funds for an aboned 1986 which wa8 obwned by our associ- Arab blacklist by selling its facili: ~mmer but they could be called back in an emergency or if any of sever- plan to blow up an Israeli airliner, ate Dean Boyd, Kolesnik states: ties in Israel in order to lluild one in
~ 81 interim committees can break imvasses on major issues.
·:': : Se1181e-House tonference comrmaees will be worlcing on legislation to
~ make heallh c:are more accessible and to reform campaign finante laws
~ that fostered runaway spending to the embarrassment of bolh political
•
·~ parties. .
.
.
:- House Speaker Ve1;11 Riffe, D- Wheelersburg, said he would call die
:: House back into session to act on either Jllllposal.
:: He also mentioned long-debated reforms in tlie workers' compensation
r system pending in the Senate. They could be put on a fast back this week
; if management, labor and other affected groups can agree on a bill.
1: The Legislature also may have to act on a solution 10 a projected $520
:· million deficit in the state budget for the fiSCal year starling July I.
;: However, after.the House refused last week 10 approve his proposed
~ increase·in tObacco and alcohot .taxes, Gov. George Voinovich said he
•• will order $370 million in spending cuts this week to keep die srate in the
~ black.
;:: Voinovich asked Riffe on Friday for specific suggestions to avoid all
~ or some of the cuts. The speaker said the decision to cut spending could
·: be deferred unlit late this year, allowing for lime to see if the economy ~
:; improves'and makes some reductions unnecessary.
.
:• Senators last week passed !heir version of a health care bill requiring
•: insurante companies to have open enrollment periods, during which they
i: .)YOuld have 10 write poticies for anyone who ap~tied, up to a poinL
The bill has a formula telling companies limit the number of new poll~ tyholders to a small percenrage of all their policyholclers.
.
:
II also would provide money for insurance coverage Cdr prescliool chil·
~ dren of low-income families and would extend proteclioo to 275,000 of
•: an estimated 1.2 million uninsured Ohioans.
·
!: Under an earlier House version, the slate would provide coverage at
:· cut rates for anyone not already insured. The Senate said lhat the House
"President Bush promised he'd help Russia with CHANGE- then he gave me 50
~ proposal was underfunded by as much as $1 biltion a year and that !he
~ swe can't afford it.
.
cents and sent me .on my way. "
:Rep. Wayne Jones, D-Cuyahoga Falls, and Sen. Roben Ney, R-Bar'
~ nesville, the lead sponsors in their respective chambers for die measure,
: wiU lead conference committee efforts·this summer to forge a compro:• mise on that issue.
~ · An agreement on campaign finance reforms, which bolh legislative
,. ¥bambers have approved in different versions, also may be difficult. A
·· Ejoint committee is expected 10 be appointed this week to examine the two "''ll tell you what you ought to It was 1974, I was a ne)V junior- Bears ri&gt;utinely look a bus to out•: reform packages.
;. · The chief stumbling blocks are the Republicans' insistence on bannin~ write abou~ " my 20-year-old male high teacher, and our girlS' basket- of-town games; the Gentlemen
•
:: l~e use of union dues as campaign contributions.and the Democrats friend told. me. "You ought to ball team was wearing the boys • Bears, a chartered jet.
Some
communities
where
we
cast·off
write about the 'raw deal SMSU
unifonns and coming to
~ recurring efforts to add fiX spending limits.
attended gll'mes were different,
(Southwest
Missouri
Slate
Univer·
. Such limits have been ruled unlawful by !he courts, but the House verhowever: They made a huge
sity) gave Cheryl Burnett." .
~ sion calls for volunlarily observance of the limits by candidates.
· wboop,-de-do over their ~.iris'
~
I hope I didn't appear as
teams. Not so ironically. they were
bemused as I was, because a1 the
towns where the girlS' teams had
same lime my heart was slamdunking my rib cage. A 20-year· school at 6 a.m. to practice so the been mopping up with their oppoold male college freshman is boys could have the gymnasium nents for several seasons. Some
day it would be interesling to can•'
steamed because his university's after school.
In
these
20
years
the
numbers
of
vass schools with great girls' spons
women's
basketball
coach,
whose
'r~
•
team made .it 10 the NCAA Final women participating in scholastic programs and find out if die chick" This is in answer to a leuer to three uustees which told caretaker Four, will be paid $18,000 less ·dian spons have grown enonnously, but en or egg came fust: Did the girls•
,. the editor on June 29, "Mother Norris thai if he look from one, the men's coach, who will be in his in a lot of schools female athletes program start 10 flou,rish when you
~ Questions Rules" , by Carol
take from all. Treat everyone equal. first year as head coach of the haven 'I even made it 10 the front of began pumping money into it, or
, Guinther.
Ms. Guinther seems to think that men's team . (While he was an the bus y~t. Dating a man whose did you pul money in it only after
:: At die last Letan Township met- one trustee is to blame and it assistant coach this year, the men's daughter was a high-school adllete the girls Slarted winning and people
·: ing, which I auended, Don R. Hill doesn't work that way. Her grand· team was beaten in the ftrst round showed me a small piece of the came out 10 see them? .
picture - girls at some schools
But for the present, I had my
:- brought to die attention of !he other father Harry Hill was a trustee until of the NCAA tournament.)
~ two trustees thai he had received
last year. They should know that no
II was hard to hide a wry smile traveling long distances in school- young friend's suggestion to
· ~ complaints that flowers were being decisions are made without a vote. seeing my young friend so angry, buses while the boys' ~ teams took respond 10. I'll have 10 admit that
~ taken off of tertain graves and not It doesn't seem fair to single out coming as close as it did to the 20th chartered commercial coaches; no as I've grown older, things look
,. from others. to comply with these one trustee to blame.
anniversary of Title IX, the educa· programs or cheerlet~ders a1 the more complicated than they did
That's what the trustee meetings lion amendment that made it girls' games, and professionally when I was in my early 20s. Now
~ rvtes.
.
~ . The rules have been found and
are for, to air differences, not the unlawful to discriminate on the printed progrums, 12 cheerleaders I'm looking al Burnett's salary
~ will be available at the next meetnewspaper.
· basis of sex in "any education pro· and a pompon dance squad at the from a business 3I)gle, or maybe
. r,ing. They were established in 1973.
Pamela Lutz-Rifne gram or activity receiving federal boys'; little mention of girls' what I'd prefer 10 call a pragmatic
It was not only Mr. Hill, but all
Letan Falls financial assistance. •• It had been a . games in the local newspapers, view: SMSU calculates the men's
while sinte I'd really locked horns copious coverage with photos of basketball program btought in
••
boys· games. The SMSU Ladv $762,907 last Y.ear..or !f?Ughly 10
with anyone over this issue:
~

Br Tbe ~iated Press

FBI ignorant 9f Syrian's. link to terrorists

. Ill Coalt Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

'.-

Weather to be warm, sticky and wet next few days:

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy~lddleport, Ohio
· Wedn!tsday, July 1,1992
'

The Supreme Court gets a gold star
Every onte in a while, a govern·
ment entity does something entirely
unexpected and rrofoundly appropriate, and I fee as if my usually
sarcastic hide has been delivered a
comeuppance. This time· it came
from the Supreme Court .in the
form of a present that arriyed just
in time for the nation's birthday
celebratioo.
Fiuingly, it is a gift of freedom.
Unfortunately, it is not one that
will be universally appreciated.
On June 22, the court ruled
unanimously that hate-crime laws
that selectively punish obnoxious
remarks ,concerning race, religiOn
or gender are unconslitulional,' The
case,R.A.V. v. St. PaUl, involved a .
white Minnesota teen=ager who
burned a cross a1 the home of a
black family and, in addition to a
normal assault/charge, :was cited
for a hate-crime violalion·that upon
conviction would result in exua
punishment. ~
The law in·question- similar
10 scores of olhers that ·ha.ve been
. passed by local governments in
retent ylliUS - prohibited the dis- ·
play of offensive symbOls such •
swlistikas and burmng
c~
.
. that
.
'

'

;

could arouse "anger, alarm or belief that burning a cross in someresentment in others on die basis of one's front yard is reprehensible.
race, color, creed, religioo or gen- But SL Paulllas suffacient means at
der."
itS disposal to prevent such behavior withO'ut adding the' First
Amendment 10 the fll'C.' •
I never dreamed I would be saying this about Antonio-the-PressBasher, but what the hey: &lt;&amp;.men,
This, in the eyes of five juslites, Brother Scalial Yes, cross-burning
was the problem: The law did .not is despicable, and yes my heart
forbid general "fighting words," aches for the blackfamily who suronly particular ones. Wrote.Justice fered the unspeakable affronL But
Antonio Scalia: ·'The First Amena- . we must grit our teeth and try to
menl does not permit St. Paul 10 remember thai freedom of speech ·
impose special prohibitions on is 100 J&gt;recious 10 be warered down,
those speakers who ex~reas views even to inhibit ethnic aspersions.
on disfavored subjects.'
Tweaty years ago;-.it was racist
Put another way,.speech restric· whites who iried to sup~ civil
tions must be "content-neutral." rights demOflsblltioris w1th.speech
Put still another way, die right to restriclioos. What if the courtS had
speak freely is our most f~- s~ that oulllgeous ploy?
tal privilege and politicians have no
·Although all justices agreed ·
damn business deciding which with the' end result, ,four did !lOt
speech is acceptable and which is si~ on to Scalia's ringing denunci·
not Moreover, the coon said. there ation of hale-crime statutes. It
are many ways 10 punish such · would have be6n better, they said,
de&amp;picable behawor - arson, 10 rule the SL Paul law unconslilu·
deStructioo of property and other . tional because it was too broadly
laws - that do nO! abUse q~CCCb written. · ·
.
.
.·
Bui the sweeping decision
rights. Declared Justice Scalia:
"Let there be no
~botU our stands and I endorse it whole~•'
. .'I

Joseph Spear ·

mi•

I

-I

edly. I am especially thrilled by the
prospect that colleges across the
land will have to retool the speechcodes t,hat are all the rage among
addle-headed academicians. The
University of Connecticia, for
example, ·attempted to ban "inap·
P.ropriately directed laughter" and
'conspicuous exclusion from conversations." How would you lili:e
to see that language embedded' in
Supreme Court decisions a few
decades iJown die road?
· I had feared the worst in this
case. Sitting on the current court
are justices of African •. Italian ani(
Irish ancestry. Who wouldil'l forgive ·them if they chose this
moment to chastise the bigots who
have lonnented their forebearers
for centuries? That they did not ·
reinforces my faith in them and in
our system of jurisJII'IIIIeliCC.
·
So I thank Your Honors for the
binhday gift I am abashed by my
cynicism, humbled by ybur wisdom, and happy 10 tive in a nation
that cherishes freedom as its foremost priorily.
Josepli Spear Is a s~ndlcaled
columnist for Newspaper Enterprist A~latlon. ·.
,
·

The Dal

'60s.

1988. Sunseqonight will be at9:04 peraturcs .in Texas, where today
The best chance for rain will be p.m . and sunrise Thursday at 6:07 promised to be a scorcher. s1ayed )n
on Saturday when a cold front a.m.
the 70s and 80s.
moves into the state from the west.
Around the nation
Sizzling heat, with highs above
The record-high temperature for
Clouds hung over much of the · 100 degrees, was expected Jo
this date al the Columbus weather natioo early today. Overnight tern- extend from western Texas to the
station was 98 degrees in 1953
Los A~geles desert by afternoon.
while the record low was 44 in
Hot weather was anticipated as far
north as Kansas.
South-Central Ohio
Tonight, variabl e cloudiness
of the numbers listed ~ The center with a slight chance of showers and
provides new infant wear through thunderstorms, mainly early. Low
support of the community and in the mid-60s. Chance of rain 30
percent. Thursday, variable cloudithose who usc the center.
Meigs County's unemployment
ness
with scattered showers and
D of A pic:nic
figures for May jumped 4.7 percent
The Past Councilors Club of thunderstorms. High in the mid- over
May, 1991, according to a
Chester Council No. 323, Daugh· &amp;Os. Chante of rain 50 percent. .
report from the Ohio Bureau of
ters of America, will hold its annu- Courthouse to close
Employment Services released this
al picnic and meeting at Forked
Offices in ihe Meigs County week.
Run State Park in Reedsville on
In May 1991, the figures stood
Wednesday, July 8, at6 p.m. II will Counhouse will be closed Friday in
at
8.1
percent while last month's
be at the first shelter house upon observance of lndependente Day .
Common Pleas Court Judge Rick figures were at 12.8 percent. The
entering the park on the left hand
side. Nomination of officers and Crow announced. Regular hours figures jumped a full per.centage
point from April to May.
installation will be held. Members · will be resumed on Monday.
may bring a guest(s) and are to
bring gift for the games. The hostess commiuee is Belly Young,
SPRING VALLEY .c_IN}.~,A
Erma Cleland; entenainmem com446 ·4524
.. " ,. "''•'
mittee, Charlotte Grant, Sadie ·
Trussell and Mary K. Holter.
.I

_. Meigs announcements __
Plan open house
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
will hold an open house in obser. vance of the 90th birthday of
Norma Lee on Sunday at die HarDONATION MADE • Rutland Emergency Medical Services
risonville Masooic Temple from 2recently received a donation of $600 from Southern Ohio Coal
5 p.m. All friends are invited. It is
Company's Meigs Division, Jim Lathem, left, mine superintendent
requested that gifts be omitted.
for Meigs No. 31 mine, and Mike Kubachka, right, mine superin·
Lodge lo meet
len dent for .Meigs No; 2'mine, presented the cbeck to Marcia
The Harrisonville Masonic
Elliotl, representing EMS. Rutland EJ\'!S provides EMS services lo
Lodge will meet July II instead of
Rutland, Salem, Scipio and Columbia Townships, operating two
Saturday. There will be work in the
squads which are staffed by 21 volunteers.
· E.A. degree.
Bible School dales given
V.aeation Bible School at Hope
Baptist Church will be held July
13·17 from 6:30-9 p.m. nighlly for
Continued from page 1
ages nursery through adult. The
'
theme is "Follow Jesus Wid! Us on
a Fanlastic Journey."
Ice cream social
Three criminal defendants entered guilty pleas before Judge Fred
There will be an "Old Fashioned
· W. Crow 111 on Tuesday. according to Meigs County Ass is rant
Ice Cream Social" at the Long Bot·
Prosecutors Linda R. Warner and George P. Mccarthy.
tom Community Building July II,
Monte Riffle entered a guilty plea to a count of breaking and
not Saturday, as was stated in yesentering and was sentenced 10 a year i.n the Ohio Penitentiary. He
terday's editioo of The Daily Senwas accused of the breilcing and entering at the Carleton Church.
tinel. Several flavors of homemade
· Greg Hicks also pled guilty to a charge of bn:aking and entering
icc
cream, sandwiches, desserts,
and was sentenced to 18 months in an Ohio correctional facility.
drinks,
music and more will be
Both will be tJansponed to Orient Reception Center later this week. ·
available.
He was charged with breaking and entering at the Patrick Cleland
Reunion
residence in Pomeroy.
The annual Leonard and Susan
James Martin pled guilty to the charge of receiving stolen propJane Roush re'union will be Sunday
eny and was scheduled for senwncing in August.
al Star Mill Park in Racine with
lunch at 12:30 p.m. All family and
friends are welcome.
Trustees lo meet
Due to die Independente Day holiday and related activities at the
The Olive Township Trustees
Racine fire s1ation annex, water and refuse bills will be collected at
·will
meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the annex from 9 a.m. to Jp.m. on July 6-10 and 13-17. Bills paid
the
Shade
River Forestry Building.
after July 17 will be charged a $3 late fee~
Racine council to meet
Racine Village Council will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. in die council chambers al Star Mill Park.
Two calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs EmerChapel open
gency Services on Tuesday and early Wednesday . .
Brookside Chapel opens Sunday
On Tuesday al 11 :13 a.m., Rutlalld unit took Velda Cade from
and
will be available for Christian
the slation 10 Holzer Medical Center.
worship services in natural surAt 12:43 a.m. on Wednesday, Racine unit went to Third Street.
Glenn Rizer was taken to Holzer.
roundings every Sunday through
Aug. 16 all0:30 a.m. The chapel is
located just off County Road 3
. South of Lake Hope. Further information may be obtained by calling
Harry
Wynn at 596-5562.
Conlinued from page I
Wilkesville Presbyterian
George Rowley
strong growth prospects, including Church
· I
Graveside memorial servites for the $16 million purchase of 28
Wilkesville
Presbyterian
Church
George C. Rowley. 76, o( Gallipo- Cleveland-area offices from Amerwill
continue
worshiping
in the
lis who died June 22, 1992 at Vet- itrusl Coy cOmpleted on June 19.
evening
on
the
first
Sunday
of
each
erans Memorial Hospital, will be
Waddell said he met with
·month
with
a
service
at
7:30
p.m.
held Friday at II a.m. at tbe Schaefer to discuss the $42 per
There will be no morning worship
Riverview Cemetery in Middleport. share offer.
at
the church on the first Sunday.
On April 14, Star Bane said it
Rev.
Kay Puckeu will preach and
rejected a Fifth Third offer of $38
special
music will include patriotic
10 $40 per share. Star said that offer
Norma Stevens
music
by
the Wilkesville Belles
Norma Jean Stevens, 56, of also was unsolicited, inadequate playing the J.G. Will Memorial
8457-9 Garden Circle, Sarasota, and not in the company's best Handllells.
F1a., died Tuesday, June 30, 1992, interests.
Clothing eenter
Fifth Third has 4,200 employees
at Sarasota.
The
Radcliff Christian Clothing
Born on May 29, 1936, .al and $9.3 billion in assets. Star Bane Center will be closed .during July .
' Racine, she was the daughter of has 3,800 employees and $7.7 bil· A work camp from the Episcopal
Daisy Wolfe Sayre of Racine and lion in asSets, including the Cleve· DiOtese of lligh school and college
the late John Sellers. She was land purchase.
A combination of the two bank youth will be painting and working
employed in food service at a nurs·
holding companies would create an on the tenter next week. For emering home.
~
gency .clothing needs, call 596Besides her mother, she is sur· emity with about $17 billion in 5562 or 669 -7441 and arrange vived by her :husband, Robert assets and more than 400 offices.
In midday trading on the Nas- ments will be made to open the.
(Bob) Stevens. Sarasota, Fla.; a
center. Layeuc applicJ!tions for
daughter, Cindy Morris, Raci!le; a daq national market Tuesday, Fifth those exoectinR a baby may be
daughter 'and son-in-law, April and Third was up 75 tents per share at
Ira Roach, Racine; a son; Kim Hay- $42.50 and S14U' Bane was down 50 made at the VAM offite, 202 West
HiRh. McArthur. or bv callin~ ooe
man, Racin~; a son and daughter· cents al $37.
in-law, Kelly and Teresa Hayman,
Greensboro, N. C.; a brother, Gary
Sellers, Racine; two grandsons,
Velerans Memorial
Christopher Smith, Syracuse, and
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Wendi Swann, 21, of MiddleDanny Hayman, California; and James Anderson, Racine.
port
was reported in fair condition
three granddaughters, Kelly Smith,
TUESDAY DISCHARGES· Wednesday morning at Riverside
Syracuse, and Erin Roach and Mal ~ Nettie Boyer and Rosalie Nichols.
Methodist Hospital, Columbus,
lory Roach, Racine.
Preceding her in death besides HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER where she was flown Monday night
for treatment of a severe arm lacerher father was her stepfather, H.
Discharges,
June
30
Morna
ation.
.
Ward Sayre.
Cox,
Wilma
Devol,
Richard
Gress,
was
taken
by
Life
F1ig~
'Swann
Funeral services will be held at
Lori
Hodge,
Everett
Johnson,
Mrs
.
to
Riverside
from
Veterans
Memo
I p.m. Friday aldie Ewing Funeral
Stone and son.
· rial Hospital where she was tre.t
Home. The Rev . Thomas Gates Kevin
Binhs,
June
30":...
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
in the emergency room following a
will officiate and burial will be in
the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends Ryan Hersman of Bidwell, a son ; dispute which occurred in New
may call at the funeral home Thurs· Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Joos of Haven, W.Va.
Wellston, a son.
A report from the New Haven
day from 5 to 9 p.m.
Police Department indicated that
Swann had attempted to hit
Richard
Long, Jr., of New Haven,
'
The Daily Sentinel
· through a glass storm door.
(UBP81tS.810)
Planned Parenthood of Southgranted
Publi1hed every af\ernoon, Monday
east Ohio Patient Services offices
tluv111h Friday, Ill Court St., Pomon&gt;y, will be closed on Friday in obser,An action for dissolution of
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publi1hins
marriage
has been granted in ~eigs
vance of Independence Day .
Compan_y/Multtmedt• lne., Pomeroy,
Ohio j0769, Ph. 992·21116. Second clUJ
County
Coftlmon
Pleas Court to
Offices will reopen on Monday at
pooloio poid at Pome"'Y, Ohio.
William
R.
Barber
and Rebecca I.
8:30a.m.
Barber.
Member: The Allac:ilted. Pru1, and the

.....--Local briefs... --,
Defendants enter guilty pleas

Racine adjusts bill collection

EMS units anwer two calls

Weather

Unemployment
figures up in Meigs

7

P1a.!tr

Tractor Club
elects officers

~

...

Offiters were elected and plans
for participating in community
events were made when the newly
organized Big Bend Farm Antiques
Club met recently at Southern High
School.
Elected were Larry Hollon,
president; Junior Salser, vice presi·
dent; Tanya Hunter, secretary·trea·
surer; and Dan Smith, publicity
chainnan. Also elected were five
trustees for the group.
Arrangements were made to
participate in the July 4 parade at
Racine, and the Meigs County Fair
antique uactor and engines show.
Anyone with'antique tractors, other
farm equipment or small engines,
are invited 10 join the group in the
July 4 parade.
Membership dues were set at $5
and meetings were scheduled for
the third Monday of each month at
8p:m.

1111. 1 liUMII
&amp;IBfOIII

--~p...i.

[~!!]
~~

Jill ~~~ t 1111 ... ~I" Nllil!l
Jif,Tif~ EES .

9:20 DAilf. NO

SOON I OISNE1 'S "HOMH I BLEil II!'

Area deaths Star Bane...

Middleport woman
in fair condition

Hospital news

&gt;

'

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BR CLO,BIERS
145 NORTH SECOND

992·2351
..

MIDDUPORT ·

�•

·Ohio

~

. ' - ....

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lVIaddu~

. 1992

Ohio

exas outlasts Torontoj nine·
16-13; Indians ~dge White Sox

shines as Cubs top

Mets 3-1; Reds beat~n · S-1
By The Associated Press
·· Greg Maddux and Doug
Drabek, two of tile highest-paid
pitchers in baseball, have had $0lne ·
low moments this season. Billed as
the aces of their staffs, they've
struggled to stay above .500..
On Tuesday night, however,
they looked like a million bucks.
That's about one fourth of their
annual salaries, but 100 percent of
what their teams needed.
Maddux pitched a four-hitter
and matched his career high with
10 strikeouts as the Chig~go Cubs
beat the New York Mets 3-1.
"He gets in a jam in the first
inning and then gets out of it.
Shoot,• he's just a great pitcher,"
· Cubs manager Jim Lefebvre said.
Drabek pitched a three-hitter
and struck out nine as Pittsburgh
blanked St. Lou.is 2-0 in only 2
hours and 13 minutes.
"He pitched well and he pitched
· quick," Pirates manager Jim Leyland said. "You need a performance like Drabek gave us ·when
you're not swinging the bats, and
he gave us one tonight.' 1 ·
Drabek (6·6) struck out Brian
Jordan four times in his second
shuto~t and third complete game or
the season. He gave up a pair of
the seventh inning Tuesday in Houston. The
WILD PITCH • Houston Astros' Steve Finsingles to Felix Jose and a double
Astros won S-1. (AP)
ley scores on a wild pitch as Cincinnati Reds
to Craig Wilson before retiring the
pitcher Dwayne Henry, right, fields the ball in
. last 14 bauers.
''The curve is a key pi~h for me ·
and it was working from the start,''
Drabek said. '"I was able to throw
it for strikes, and when ·! Y,as ahead
in the count I was able to bounce it
in the din."
listen,'' she added.
Maddux (9-7) got his fourth win
ByJIMUTKE
"That's why I asked the umpire,
in
his
last five starts and went all
AP Sports Writer
'Can she scream less during the
the way for the fourth time this seaWIMBLEDON, England (AP) match?'"
son.
- Trying to read this ...
Crymblc promptly relayed the
" He doesn't give in to you and
message, though he did not warn
he changes speeds very well,"
U-n·n··h·h·H·E·E·E-E!!! !!
Seles of any potential penalties if
Mets manager Jeff Torborg said.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The
she failed to comply. Seles, for her
Elsewhere in the National
... gives you some idea ...
part, dropped the decibel level sig- Philadelphia Flyers gave up five League, it was Atlania 4, San Frannificantly in the final game, even if players, a first-round draft pick, cisco 3; Montreal?, Philadelphia 2;
U-n-n-h-h-H-E-E-E-E!!!!!
afterward she refused to divulge future considerations and $15 mil· Houston 5, Cincinnati I; and San
exactly what was said during her lion for Eric Lindros - plus what· Diego 2, Los Angeles I.
... of what it's like to play tennis brief tete-a-tete with officialdom.
ever it takes to sign the 19-year-old Cubs 3, Mets 1
·
·
" I think it's between me and the phenom.
At Chicago, pinch-hitler Luis .
That's just fine by them.
umpire, what he wanted.'' she said.
Salazar drove in the tie·\JTeaking
U-n-n-h-h-H-E-E-E-E!!!!!
"It is a risk,' ' Flyers president run in the eighth with a sacrifice
"He asked me for something. I
said, 'Sure, no probleiJl.' So it was Jay Snider said. " But look·ing at fly.
... against Monica Seles.
the reward, looking at the total
nothing importanL"
Andre Dawson, who homered in
farm
system, knowing we're close
But a few moments later, Seles
Distracting.
conceded, "Maybe it did bother to signin~ some European players,
Frustrating.
we think 1t's worth iL"
her, the grunting.
Nerve-wracking.
Lindros hasn't played a minute
" As I said, I'm not doing it on
" I think all the players are purpose, and if it bothers somebody in the JiiHL, but he's expected 10
agreed with that," said French- - I'm really trying to get rid of iL
take the team to the playoffs next
woman Natalie Tauziat, overpow·
season,
fill a new arena in 1994 and
"You don't know," she added,
ered TueSday 6·1, 6-3 by the Moni- " howltard I'm trying.''
bring to mind a hard-hitting version
ca Sound Machine.
Even so, you get the sense that of Wayn e Gretzky or Mario
"But nobody said something all this noise would be much more Lemieux.
and I think everybody have to say tolerable if Seles were ranked No.
HOUSTON (AP)- A change
" Only once every 10 years does
something. Then maybe the umpire 100 instead of No. I. And to Tauzi- a player like this come along," said of scenery has made a world of dif·
have to do something with her, talk at's credit, like every other member Flyers general manager Russ Far- ference for the Houston Astros.
to her."
After losing three games of a
of the women's circui 1 who ha,s well, who Called the 6-foot-5 center
That. in short, is how "The raised her voice on this matter "a potential superstar, a guy who four-game series to the last-place
Great Grunting Rumpus" at long albeit quietly by comparison- she will change the way the game is Los Angeles Dodgers, the Astros
last spilled out into the open.
, said Seles would have beaten her if played.
returned home and now have a
Since the Wimbledon fortnight she'd
" There has not been a player two-game winning streak after
stra ight to the court
began, the tabloids have been hav- from acome
who hits and moves like this kid," beating the first-place· Cincinnati
Trappist retreaL
,
. ing a field day with Seles' peculiar
Reds 5-l on Tuesday night.
·
.
" I lost because she's better than Farwell said.
habit - "Moaner Monica Is All me," Tauziat said, "that's it. It's
"In Los Angeles, we played bad
The Flyers won the rights to
Quiet On the Western Grunt," The not because she made some noise. Lindros .on Tuesday when an NHL baseball.~' said pitcher Jimmy
who improved his record to
Stilt screamed in one headline But sometimes it disturbs you more arbitrator upheld the deal reached Jones,
4-1
by
shutting the Reds out over
w~.ile the officiating crew simply
between
S'nider
and
Quebec
than another match.''
the first five innings. "Now we're
held its collective breath, hoping
Nordiques
president
Marcel
Aubut
But now that the subject has
playing a pretty much mistake-free
that she would do the same.
finally been broached with a higher the morning of June 20.
game.
Seles, needless to say, could not order, can legislation be far
Arbitrator Larry Bertuzzi said a
" I think when you play against
and did not. And Tuesday, for the behind? Other pros will tell yo u deal Aubut subsequently made with
first time in the three-plus years that the sound of the ball coming the New York Rangers didn't count a team like the first-place Reds,
that she has been braying at oppo- off the racket and rebounding off - so the Flyers -sent goaltender you know you have to play solid.
nents like a mule protecting its the coun is as important as seeing . Ron Hextall, defensemen Steve We didn't play sound baseball in
hard-earned oats, someone actually it.
Duchesne and Kerry Huffman, cen- LA . It was ugly. I think we
after that" said Jones.
tried to do something about it.
"When you can't hear it, that is ters Mike Ricci and Peter Forsberg, regrouped
The Astros played error-free
Already down a set and trailing difficult," said Martina Navratilo· a 1993 first-round draft pick, future
2-S in the sec ond , Tauziat va, who next plays Seles in Thurs· considerations and $15 million to defense and scored runs in. the
thifd, fourth and sixth innings
approached chair umpire David day's semifinal.
Quebec.
against Reds starter Chris HamCrymble and asked him to pass
The opinion here is that the rest
mond (5-4).
along a message. •
'
of
the
women should simply buuon
Rob Murphy and Xavier Her"My complaint," Tauziat their lips
and learn to live with it. Scioto Downs results
nande
z turned in good perforrecalled afterward, ' 'was that as the After all, so mebody will always
mances from the bullpen.
match advanced she screamed a lot, have it worse.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) "We put a solid game together
a lot, a lot.
actor Peter Ustinov said dur- The Gene Riegle Stable's two- tonight," Astros manager Art
" I couldn't really. listen to the ingAs
another bout of Monica-Moan·
ball wllen she hit it. It' s very ing·-Mania last year, "Pity her year-old filly, Private Treasure, Howe said. " When you get good
became one of the leading con- hitting, good pitching and strong
important for me to listen to the neighbors on her wedding nigh!.' '
tenders for ·the upcoming third defense together, that usually spells
vall when she hit it, and I couldn't
renewal of the Pink Bonnet Stake a win.
on July 17 at Scioto Downs.
"The Reds are the first-place
The freshman daughter of Jate team and we're just trying to play
Lobell, driven by Bruce Rielge, them tough. We seem to play the
captured last night's $1 ,800 juve- top teams tough and then we don't
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
nile pace in 1:59 15.
Eaat Dlvl&amp;lol
Eul Dhblon
play well against a 1cam like Los
WLPcLGB
'Private Treasure, who has two Angeles," Howe said.
W L PtL GB
Toromo
......... 45 31 .S92
Pitt.burgh ... ...... 43. 33 .S66
wins and a second in three career
Hammond had a simple explaBaltimore
........ 44 32 .579
I
Chi.cagc
......... 31 31 .SOO
5
starts, defeated Whitchtree and nation for the loss.
Milwaube
...... 39 35 .527
5
S1. Louis .......... 37 31 .493 5 lfl
•
New York
....... l7 39 .4&amp;7
S
"""""'l ········· 35 38 .479 6 1/2
Bread Lady. Private Treasure
"I just think the Astros play
o.."" .......... 35 38 .479 8 112
New York
....... 36 41 .468 7 112
returned $9.80, $4.60 and $3.80 . • really good at home," Hammond
llolroii
.....•..... 35 42 .455 to 112
Phil.tdolpiUI ······· 34 40 .459
8
CJeyeJand • ........ 31 46 .403 141/2
Wat Dhillon
Witchtree paid $2~60 and $2.60 said. "When we played them here
Wes&amp; DMIIon
W L PeL
GB
while Bread Lady paid $5 .80 to earlier, they came from behind
WLP&lt;LCB
Cincinn1ti ......... 44 30 .S95
Minnclw
....... 45 31 .592
show.
Allan~
......... .. 42 33 .560 2 112
three times in the late innings on
Sllll.Diego ........ 41 36 .532 5 1/2
A
crowd
of
3,274
wagered
~:!and . . . . . . ~ ~ : 31/2
us. It's just tough Jo keep them
San Francisco ...... 34 40 .459
10
$238,456.
Chicaaa
......... 3'1 37 .500
7
1-touuon
......... 35 42 .4.55 10 1/2
down
in the Astrodome.''
Kanw City ....... 32 43 .4'Il 121/2

Today's Sports Parade

Flyers pay
big price for
19-year-old

the third, open~d the inning by
drawing a walk off Anthony Young
(2·8). Lee Gueuerman relieved and
gave up a single to Mark Grace and
a bunt single to Derrick May to
load the bases. After Salazar's sac·
rifice fly, Rey Sanchez's su"icide
squ(:Cle brought home an insurance
run.
Pirates 2, Cardinals 0
At St. Louis, the Pirates scored
both of their runs in the fourth off
Rheal Cormier (1-6).
. · With one out, Lloyd McClendon
walked and Don Slaught singled.
McClendon scored on'Cecil Espy's
infield hit after shortstop Tim Jones
allowed the ball to go through to
the outfield for an error. Jose Lind
followed with a run-scoring single.
Braves 4, Giants 3
At San Francisco, Otis Nixon
and Terry Pendleton hit consecu•
tive fifth-inning homers ·and John
Smoltz won his fourth straight
decision.
Nixon' s two-run homer off
Trevor Wilson (5-8) was his second this season.
· Smoi!Z (9-5) gave up eight hits,
including Kevin Bass' ninth-inning
homer, struck out seven and
walked none.
Expos 7, Phillies 2
At Philadelphia, Ken Hill
pitched seven strong innings, got
two hits and scored twice.
Hill (8-4) gave up four hits, ·
struck out two and walked two

·before being replaced by Mel
Rojas , who finished with two
shutout innings. _•
Mike Williams (0·1) took the
loss in his major-league debut, giving up six hits and four runs in 4 23 innings. John Vander Wal drove
in three runs for Montreal w1th a
homer and a double, and Larry
Walker had two RBls with a homer
and a sacrifice fly.
Astros 5, Reds I
At Houston, Jimmy . Jones
pitched ftve solid innings, and Luis
Gonzalez drove in a run and scored
another.
Jones (4-1) gave up one run,
walked three arid struck out two
before leaving in the sixth with a
blister on his right index finger.
Xavier Hernandez wen 1 the ftnal 2
2·3 innings for his third 5ave.
Loser Chris Hammond (5·4)
went six innings, giving up three
runs on six hits.
Padres 2, Dodgers 1
At Los Angeles, Bruce Hurst
won for the seventh time in nine
decisions and sore-thumbed Gary
Sheffield hit a tie-breaking RBI
single.
Sheffield batted for Hurst (8-5)
in the seventh and grounded a sin·
gle under shortstop Jose Offerman's glove to break a 1-1 tie.
Hurst allowed seven hits over
six innings. Loser Ramon Martinez
(4-5) gave up six hits in eight
innings.

. HAPPY CAMPER • Cleveland Indians'
Carlos Martinez, center, wears a big gril! after
his line single past the third baseman m the

Nickerson told not to speak
harshly about Steelers
~...

PITTSBURGH {AP)- The mental to ihe
Pittsburgh Steelers • top tackler .
Team president Dan Rooney
from last year says team manage· said Nickerson wouldn't be SUS·
ment is giving him the squeeze pended.
about his comments off the field.
Nickerson signed a one-year
Linebacker Hardy Nickerson renewal on June 15 at 105 percent
said Tuesday that he's been threat· of his old contract after rejecting a
ened with demotion and a fine if he lhree-year proposal from the Steelspeaks too h3lllhly about the Steel· ers that would have paid him abour
ers.
$1.5 miUion. He will earn $268,115
Despite the dispute and contract this season.
troubles, Nickerson reported for a
"The only reason I signe&lt;! the
two-week minicamp that began renewal is because I want to play
Monday at Three Rivers Stadium.
football this year. It was forced .
Coach BiD Cowher told Nicker- They were trying to force me into a
son he would play behind veteran long-term deal. It was either that or
David Little at left inside lineback- sit out the season. The only reason
er. Nickerson, 27, has started next I'm here is for love of the game."
to Liule the past four seasons, but
But Nickerson 's relationship
Cowher moved Pro Bowl outside with the Steelen has hit bottom. He
linebacker Greg Lloyd into that has asked Rooney to trade him and
spot.
ignored the alleged threat of sus·
"I guess I'm backing up David pension he ~d negotiator Dan FerLittle now" Nickerson said. "Last ens made to h1s agent, Steve Baker.
week I was thrl)atened that jf I ' Nickerso.. &lt;ICCUsed members of
cariie here artd ~id certain thingS' '·the"organizllt'ton of·bt.aming .his
I'd be suspended for conduct detri- wife for their recent move from

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Astros look
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over leaders

Hrdina announces retirement

Cali!omil ......... 32 ~ .421
13
SL'..Iultl
........... 31 46 .403 141!2
Tuadly'1 Game~
New YtU 6, Kansu City 0

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director of playe~ persOnnel and
recruiting for the last two years. He
was pressed into service as interim·
coach last October when Bob John·
son died of brain cancer.
Despite his reluctance to coach,
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days before the regular season
started. The players chafed under
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air and also made a ke¥ trade with
Los Angeles and Ph1ladelphia.
After a rough stan in the playoffs,
the Penguins won II consecutive
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26th. Campers may register up to
the ftlllt day of camp. A pizza party
will be held on the last day of
camp, Friday, July 10.
More information is available at
Meigs High Schools' office or by
calling Marauder football coach
Mike Sta~gs at 992-2158.

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Tim Hinton defensive line and
stmtgth a&gt;ach for Ohi~, University
will be one of the guest speakers
during the !992 Meigs Marauder
football camp July 6th-10th at
Meigs High School. The camp will
be held from 8:30a.m. until11:30
a.m. for grades boys in 4-8 at
Meigs High School.
Hinton will be beginning his
third year with the Bobcats. Hinton
is a graduate of Amanda
Clearcreek High School and Wilmington College. He was a graduate
assistant at Ohio S rate in 1985 and
1986 and was head c~tZane
Trace High School and
Wert
High School before joining oach
Tom Lichtenberg's staff at Ohio.
Basic fundamentals will be
taught by the Meigs Marauder football staff on b~ll handling for the
backs, receiving, proper stance for
backs and linemen, kicking, punt·
ing and throwing drills for the
quarterbacks
Cost of the camp is $30 and a
maximum of $50 per family, it
includes 15 hours of instruction
and a camp t·shin to be given out
on the first day of the eamp. To be
guaranteed a camp t-shirt registration should be returned bv June

The 1992.Marauder volleyball
camp will be held July 13·17 at
Meigs High School from 9 until 11
a.m. each day.
The camp is open to all girls
wbu will be entering grades 7 and 8
this fall. The cost is $25 which
includes a camp t-s hirt. All
campers will receive basic instruction in passing, serving, setting,
and defensive techniques. Applica,
tions can be picked up at Meigs
High School and checks can be
sent to Box 126, Syracuse Ohio
45779, or contact Meigs coach
Rick Ash at 992-5960 or reserve
coach Dale Harrison at 992-3004.
Also helping with the camp will
be former junior high coach Rick
Edwards and former Meigs All·
TVC selection Amy Wagner.

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letics planned to put him on the
disabled li st today because of a
sore shoulder, which they want
rested when the second half of the
season resumes.
R'ed Sox 8, Tigers S
Rookie Bob Zupcic hit his ftrst
major league grand slam, a one-out
shot in the ninth inning that rallied
Boston at Fen way Park.
Zupcic connected on a 3-1 pitch
from Mike Henneman (0-3) for his
first home run of the season and
second of his career. Phil Plantier
walked with one out, pinch-hiller
Scott Cooper doubled and Jody
Reed was intentionally walked,
bringing up Zupcic.
Daryl Irvine (1-0) pitched three
innings for the victory.
Orioles 12, Brewers 3
Jeff Tackeu homered, doubled
and drove in five runs as Baltimore
built a 10-0 lead after three innngs
to beat Milwaukee at Camden
Yards.
Brady Anderson, Glenn Davis
and Mike Devereaux also homered
for the Orioles.
Rick Sutcliffe (10-6) won for
the first time in four stans, pitching
seven innings . Ricky Bones (4-4)
was allowed seven runs in two-plus
innings.
Yankees 6, Royals 0
Scou Sanderson controlled ·
Kansas City, pitching a four-hitter ·
at New York.
Sanderson (7-5) walked none
and struck out four in his first
shutout since last July II. He threw
first-pitch strikes to 22 of 31 bat·
ters.

\

Camp dates announced

**·'.

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MULCH ,

Pittsburgh to California and said he
is unhappy that they continue to
berate Baker
''I find ii patronizing, some of
the things they said about my agent
... and comments that the reason
why I moved is that my wife didn't
like Pittsburgh. Because of comments like that and the way things
are being treated, I'm just disheartened. I told them I'd rather not be
here."
Tom Donahoe, the Steelers'
director of football operations, said
nobody in the organization has ever
mentioned anything about Nickerson's wife."! would say if he has a
pr,oblem with us, he should come
see us,'' Donahoe said.
Nickerson was the Steelers'
fifth-round draft pick from the University of California in 1987. He
became a starter in 1988 and ended
Little's four-year reign as the Steel·
ers' Ie~ding tackler \"hen he
recorded 941ast season.
Donahoe said the Stcelers are
not actively trying to trade Nickerson but would consider offers for
him .
·
Also Tuesday, the Steelers
signed tight end Dave Harbour and
wide receiver Johnny Walker,
bringing 10 84 the number of players on the roster.
Harbour, who is also a long
snapper, played for the World
Football League's LQndon Monar·
chs the last two seasons and the
Washington Redskins in 1988 and
1989. Harbour, 26, played college
football at Illinois.

goi!inBr~wn(l2-4)becamethe

top winner in the major leagues
despite allowing eight runs in
seven innings. Reliever G~rald
Alexander allowed the five runs in
the ninth.
An error by third baseman ~Jeff
Kent made eight 'of Texas,. nine
runs unearned in the third inning.
Sierra hit an RBl double and drew
a bases-loaded walk in the big ·
burst, which featured six hits, four
walks and a hit batter against David
Wells (3-3) and Mike Timlin .
Twins 2, Angels 0
Bill Krueger pitched the best
game of his eight-year career, a
two-hitter that led Minnesota to its
fifth straight victory, all on the
road.
Krueger (8·2) struck out six and
walked one in his second lifetime
shutout.
.Kirby Puckeu went 2 for 4 and
scored both runs, on Kent Hrbek' s
double in the seventh inning and
Gene Larkin's single in the ninth.
Julio Valera (4-7) allowed both
runs on seven hits in 8 1-3 innings.
Athletics 4, Mariners 2
Jose Canseco, expected to go on
the disabled list today, hit his 18th
home run and Bob Welch and Dennis Eckersley shut down Seattle on
six hits at the Kin~dome.
Mark McGwire drew a basesloaded walk from Jeff Nelson (0-3)
in the seventh inning for a 3-2lead.
Jerry Browne doubled home an
insurance run in the eighth.
Canseco homered for the third
time in four games. Still, the Ath-

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PITTSBURGH (AP) -The
lhc&gt; Penguins continue to adjust
man who came to Pittsburgh to their personnel and Hrdina's deparhelp Penguins winger Jaromir Jagr ture will intensify their look for
adjust to America is leaving the help at center. They're weak
NHL.
beyond frontliners Mario Lemieux
General manager Craig Patrick and Ron Francis.
said Tuesday that Jiri Hrdina, a
"We're aging there and that 's
member of both Stanley Cup-win- an area w.here we have to improve
ning Penguins teams, has retired.
ourselves," Patrick said. "We
Hrdina, 34, is the fourth player know that Shawn McEachern can
from the Cup teams to leave since play any forward position but our
the season ended less than a month coach.ing staff prefers him to be on
ago. Goalie Wendell Young and the wmg."
defenseman Peter Taglianeui were
Hrdina was a role play~&lt;r who
taken by Tampa Bay in the expan- had three goals and 16 points in 56·
sion draft and defenseman Gord regular season games last year. In
Roberts signed with the Boston 21 playoff games, he had two
Bruins as a free agent.
assists. He told Patrick he will conLike Jagr, Hrdina is a native of tinue playing in his native
Czechoslovakia. The Penguins Czechoslovakia.
obtained him from Calgary in 1990
The Penguins announced three
as a teammate who spfe Jagr's charter members for the team's
language and could in
uce him ,new Hall of Fame. Johnson, Jean
to American culture.
Pronovost and Rick Kehoe will be
Jagr has since learned some formally inducted in October.
English.
·
Johnson coached the team to its
' . Patrick Sliid next season's coach · frrst championship in his only seahas not been chosen, even after dis- son with Pittsburgh. Pron·ovost
cussioits with last season's coach, played in a leafD·record 753 games
Scouy Bowman.
from 1968-78 and was the first
"If it works out, we'd love to Penguin to record a 50&lt;-goal season
have Scally back," Patrick said. in 1976. Kehoe, now an assistant
''We have to weigh everything.''
cooch, had 636 career points, secPatrick said Bowman is the only ond only to Mario Lemieux.
candidate for lhe NHL's last head
coaching vacancy. Bowman did not
attend Tuesday's debut of the
team's highlights video.
Whatever happens, Patrick
would like to have the cOaching sit·
uation resolved as soon as possible.
"I'm not panic,king about it p~t.
a lot of other decisions depend on' '
this decisioh;" 'Patrick said.
"There's a domino effect. This
affects all our other coaching decisions throughout the organization
and some other job descriptions,
' '

43" lAWN
CHIEF LAWN

Scoreboard

l..ol Anselca ...... 31 41
T..ad~J'I Garna

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer
FOr years, Texas Rangelll pitch-·
en used 10 loosen up by lhrewing
footballs. That was pan of coach
Tom House's unique - some said
odd- conditioning program.
The Rangers no longer play
foolhall before baseball games. The ·
scores just look that ·way sometimes.
Texas won by a field goal Tuesday night, outlasting the Toronto
Blue Jays 16-13 in the highest·
scoring game in Rangers' history.
Ruben Sierra went 4 foi 5 with
two doubles and a triple as Texas
set season highs for hits (20) and
runs. Dickie Thon, who homered,
Dean Palmer and Sierra each drove
in lhree runs for the Rangers.
Texas broke it open early with a
touchdown and a safety in the third
inning, scoring nine runs for a 10-1
· lead. Joe Caner and Pat Bordelll hit .
three-run homers for Toronto,
which had 12 hits. Borders' shot
capped a five-run rally that fell
short in the bottom of the ninth
inning.
" We play a lot.of ugly games,"
Texas' Rafael Palmeiro said. "This
ninth inning drove in the wi~ning run. in the
was one of them.''
Indians' 5·4 win over the Cb1cago Wb1te Sox
In other games, Minnesota beat
Tuesday nigh~ in Cleveland. (AP)
California 2-0, Oakland defeated
Seattle 4-2, BostOn downed De1r0ii
8-5, Baltimore bea( Milwaukee 123, New York stOpped Kansas City
6-0 and Cleveland defeated Chica-

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1,1992

Ohio

United States wallops /Panama:
1,12-52ln third tourney.game ,
•
In
addition
to
United
StatesPOR11.AND, Ore. \AP) -: ,We
Ar:gentina
10day,
Panama
played
now know the U.S. basketball team
can come from behind.
Canada, Brazil, already a semifi·
For the first time in its three nalist, met Uruguay .and Venezuela
games in the Tournam-ent of the faced Mexico.
Americas, the Dream Team trailed.
· The United States went outside
Granted, it was 15·13 with 13:53 against Panama's zone, making 10
left in the first half against Panama of 19 3-point attempts led by a
on Tuesday night, but it was still a combined 8 for 9 by .Jordan and
deficit.
Chris Mullin.
A.16-0 run over the next 5:12
"Every time you come down
started the expected rout, but' we you're 'looking at a pretty good
finally knew they know how to shot," said Mullin, who missed
rally. .
'
just one of his five from beyond the
"They were in a mode _of taking intemational 'distance of 20 feet, 6
good care of the baiL and made a inches. "This is a regular shot for
decision to pack in a zone ilnd they us. Everybody on our team can
were able to lceep the score reason- make that shot any tirn'e they want
ably close," U.S. coach Chuck 10 lllke it."
Daly said. "I've said it before and
The United States can aJ.so stop
I'll say it again, once our defensive any shot the opposition is thinking
' inlensity picks up and we get slOps, about taking.
we can get out and run."
Panama (1·2) scored just 22
And run and run and run.
points in the second half and fin.
The United States doubled ished 20- for 59 from the field,
Panama at 48-24 with 4:01 left in
"I think so many peole look at
the half and-it led 64-30 at half- · the U.S. and talk about their
time. The second half was kept offense, but I think their defense is
in~resting in seeing what the final just fabulous," said Panama coach
margm would be. It fell between Jim Baron, who coaches St. Franthe 79-point win over Cuba and the cis, Pa. as a full-time job.
44-point victory over Canada, 112·
The U.S. team was playing its
52.
fltSt game without point guard John
"I was just having a good SIOCk10n, who broke his leg Montime," Michael Jordan said.
day ni~ht against Canada when he
The United States still hasn't was k1cked by Jordan. Forward
officially qualified for the Larry Bird sat out his second
Barcelona Games; it _would with a straight game with a sore back and
viciOry over Argentina tonight in is still day·ID-day.
its fmal qualifying-round game.
Mullin led the United States
In Tuesday's other games, with 19 points, 17 in the fltSt half,
Argentina beat Cuba 73m, Mexi- while Jordan had all of his 15 in the
co downed Uruguay 98 -89 and opening 20 minutes. Magic John·
Puer10 Rico defeated Venezuela son had six points, five rebounds
91-80.
and 11 assists. Eddie Chavez led

Tri~l
,.

TIED UP • Tbe USA's Christian Laettner
gets lied up by Panama's Reginald Grenald dur·
ing Tuesday's game at the Tournament of-the

Portland. Ore. The USA beat Pana·
l ........

~Navratilova

advances to Wimbledon
~ semifinals for 15th time in her career
By STEPHEN WILSON
AP Sports Writer
• WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
-. _Back i.n the Wimbledon scmifi: nals for the 15th time, Martina
:Navratilova is the fii'St 10 admit she
: is defying the laws of aging.
· "Some people are burned out at
25; I'm alive at 35," Navratilova
: said Tuesday after beating Ka1erina
:.Maleeva 6-3,7-6 (7·2) in the quar·; lerfinals of her 20th Wimbledon.
• Navratilova, .the fourth seed,
: was joined in the semifinals by No.
"I Monica Seles' and No. 2 Steffi
:Graf. Seles downed Nathalie
· Tauziat 6-1, 6-3, while Graf
: downed Nathalie Zvereva 6· 3, 6-1.
~
The quarterfinal between No. 3
:Gabriela Sabatini and No. 6 Jen·nifer Capriati was suspended by
:darkness Tuesday evening with the
'Argentine leading 6-1 , 3-6, 5· 3,
: . The men's quarterfinals were
:-scheduled for today, with John
-: McEnroe against Guy Forget, Boris

Becker ~ Andre Agassi, Michael
Stich vs. Pete Sampras and Stefan
Edberg against Goran lvanisevic.
Navratilova is ancient compared
to the rest of the women's pack.
Graf is 23, Sabatini 22, Seles 18
and Capriati 16.
"Age is a state of mind and I'm
defying it as well as I possibly
can," she said. "I'm just thrilled
that I'm here and I'm healthy. I'm
fitter at 35 than most players are in
their 20s."
Navratilova becomes defensive
when it's suggested that she is at
the end of her career.
"Not to compare myself 10 any
great artist, but should Van Gogh
stop painting at a cenain age?" she
said. "While I can still play, why
not? I mean people play golf until
th ey ar; in thetr 50s at the top
levsl./
" If you want to do a competi·
tion on athletic ability, I think I
would be right up there. Because I

. -•"

•

' do it ·rhysically, that
can still
enables me 10 stil be up there."
Navratilova, who has a record
nine Wimbledon singles titles, will
face Seles in the semifinals. Seles
has won five of the last six Grand
Sl•m tournaments she entered and
is halfway to a Grand Slam sweep
this year. The only Grand Slam
event she hasn't won is Wimbledon, which she skipped last-year at
the last minute, blaming an injury.
"I have nothin'll to lose,"
Navratilova said. "I'm the underdog here.... If you go on the last 15
years, I'm the favorite. (But) if you
go on the last year, then she's the
favorite."
Navratilova said she has nothing
lO fear from Seles' punishing
groundsuokes.
"It's not like you're going 10 be
tloxing or anything where you may
get your head knocked off," she
said. "She hits a ball. I don't play
Monica. I play the ball. I have
absolutely nothing 10 be afraid of."
Navratilova will have to cope
with Seles' grunting, th~gh.

Big 10 will gain global

exposure in 1993
CHICAGO (AP) - The Big
Ten will gain global exposure in
1993 when Wisconsin and Michigan State play a conference foot·
ball game in Japan. .
The two schools have agreed to
play in Tokyo on Dec. 5, 1993, in
the Big Ten's fii'St overseas game.
" You can't be a pri soner to
your own campus," Michigan
State coach George Perles said
Monday. " We've got 10 get to the
Far £ast. We'v~ gotiO go 10 places
like Germany and Europe,"
Wisconsin will receive a
$400,000 guarantee plus expenses,
about the same as a normal home
game, university financial officer
AI Fish said.
Michigan State will get less
since the Spartans will be the visi·
tors, but they expect 10 make more
than they took in on their last trip
10 Madison, Perles said.
Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez
said he didn't like giving up a
home conference game because it
would --hun local businesses and
fans . But his players' reaction
changed his mind, he said.
"They were extremely excited," Alvanez said. "You'jllike to
be selfish and not have to give up a
borne game. But we viewed this as
a once in a lifetime opportunity."
The teams will fly over together
ilnd stay five days.
• "This wlll be a great education
for theni," Perlea said. •:Japan is
such an important countrr.. Our
.provost realizes that they will gain
more over there in four or five days
.'
·
than they will in a class." ,
~game originall~ was schedELIMINATED '. Soutb Africa's Wayne Ferrelrs appears
• dejected durialllla men's slnalet rourth round matcb against Ger· . uled for Oct 2 in Madison.
: muy'a Borll Becke_r on Wfmbledon's Centre Court Tuesday, , · Big Ten athletic directors unani ~
Becker Willi to pili die Qlllrterf!Dall. (AP)
·•·
. mously approved the trip.
J

'I

-1

LUCKY LEAF

Panama wth 12 points. Argentina 73, Cuba 71
Argentina kept alive its chanee
!to win Group A when j:steba'n
Perez made a layup with 11 sec·
onds to play.
· "'
Argentina (2·1) took its first
lead of the second half at 71 · 70-on
a free throw by' Diego Osala with
55 seconds left. Cuba tied it on :~ .
free throw by Yudit Abreu 20 seconds later and Perez scored the
winner after Argentina ran the 30·
second shot clock down to 3.
:
Osala led Argentina with 16
points, while Andres Gilbeh
toppedCuba(l·2)with !?points.

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Bengals, as pan of the pretrial process, to provide the records of
James Perry, a Cincinnati at10mey
who represented 10 players who
paid $3,000 each into that settlement
Today, however, the judge
decided that the Bengals could IIQt
be required to provide mo ~e
records because Perry, who has
refused 10 comment on the case, is
not an employee of the club.

SALES DATES: JULY 1 thru 4

21

I 8 AM-10 PM

Puerto Rico 91, Venezuela 80
Puerto Rico (3-1) clinched -a
qu_anerfinal berth and second pia~
in its pool behmd Braz1l. Mano
Morales led Puerto Rico with 15
points, but it was the defense of
Jose Ortiz on Carl Herrera that
made tbe difference.
Herrera, who plays for the
Houston Rockets, was held to 13
points on 5-for-12 shooting by
Ortiz, who played for the Utah Jazz
~ and Herrera also had some foul
- trouble that limited him 10 27 min·
utes . Venezuela (1-2) can still
advance 10 the quar~erfmals with a
viciOry over Mexico (1-2) IOnight.
Mexico 98, Uruguay 89
Mexico rallied from a I7-point
second-half deficit It lOOk the lead
for good at 89-88 with 2:48left and
Uruguay (0-3) didn't score again,
missing four of five free throws,
including the front end of three J.
and-ls.
_
Jose Arroyos led Mexico with
23 points.

tion without waiting for the playersto be identified in court documents,
but the judge indicated he would
allow her lawyers to proceed with
all pretrial discovery necessary to
identify the players frrst.
On June 6 Cou~henour refused
to dismiss the sult because of a
release document that lawyers for
the club said the woman had signed
in exchange for $30,000 last year,
At that time he also directed the

\

Mo.:iday"fhw Sunday

date set in rape ·case

SEATILE (AP) - A lawsuit
filed by a woman against the
Cincinnati Bengals and as many as
15 players she accused of gangraping her will go to trial next
spring, a federal judge has ruled.
After a bri'ef hearing in U.S.
District Court Tuesday, lawyers for
both sides said the players could be ·
identified publicly for the fii'St time
in the case by September.
''We told the court that we want
to move ahead as quickly as pc)ssible," said Victona L. Vreeland.
one of the woman's lawyers.
Judge John C. Coughenour set a
trial date ofJ une 7, 1991
·
The p\;lintiff is a Spokane resi.
d nt idenlified in coun papers on! y
as Vtctoria V,- She has been
described as a mother of four who
, was going through a divorce at th~
time of the alleged episode on Oct.
3, 1990, at the Doubletree Suites in
Tukwila.
The woman believes she can
identify nine players she has
accused of raping her and two others who were present and could be
accused of aidil\8 and abetting,
Vreeland said.
Six more players accused of
rape may be identified through pre·
trial discovery, including testimony
in ·depositions and examination of
hole! records, the NFL club's files
and other material that may be presented in court, Vreeland said ·
She said the suit could be
amended in 30 to 60 days to
include the names of players. Craig
P. Campbell, a lawyer for the Bengals, said that action could come by
August. Both said adding the
names of the players to the list of
defendants in the case W'ould mean
they could be publicly identified,
Currently, the suit lists the play·
crs only as "John Does."
The Bengals have asked that the
woman be ordered 10 give a deposi-

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a· The Dally"""' Sentinel --

Wednesday, July 1, 1992

Porneroy-Middl•port, Ohio

1992 .

U.S. combat.forces ready for Yugoslavia
.
BySUSANNEM:. SCH~FER

•
- FORCES READYThe USS lwo Jima, shown here in a 1990 nte

'photo, is one or six Navy ships carrying 2,200 Marines the Pentagon
:positioned in the Adriatic Sea orr the Yugoslav coast as the United
·:states threatened Tuesday to put combat jets and helicopter gunships
· ov'er Yugoslayia tn protect the international relier errort for Sarajevo
:t'i-om Serbian attack. (AP Photo)
'

..

AP Military Writer
WASHINGTON (-!'J') -;-, U.S..
Marine and Air Force umts are
await{ng a United Nations go·
ahead to mount combat air pattOis
over Yugoslavia and help assure
the safe passage ot relief supplies
into besieged Sarajevo.
·
Backing its threat to use force if
Serbian forces do not adhere to a
cease~fire at the Sarajevo airport,
the Pentagon ordered six Navy
ships carrying '2,200 Marine~ ~o
patrol the waters off Yugo~lavta ~
Adriatic coast.
Defense Secretary Dick Gb.eney
made Clear Tuesday that the use of
force remains an option. He said ·
Washington would work 011ly in
concert with other counlries and at
the behest of the United Nations.
The next move de~ds on the
U.N, Security Council sassessment
of the aid effort, Pentagon
spokeSman Pete Williams said.
Meanwhile, German Foreign
Minister Klaus Kilikel said opening
the ailpon would not be enough to
provide relief and that a lllll!i coni·
dor should be opened to Split, die
Croatian·pon city on the Adriatic.
"We cannot just stand by as
observers, the Americans agreed
with that," the visiting German
official said after meeting with
President Bush, Secretary of Srate
James A. Baker lli and Cheney.
No ground troops would be

involved in a U.S. mtsston,
WilliamS and Cheney ~ .
. . "I' would expect that the U.S.
involvement would be limited to
naval and air support; that we
woQld s~pport other forces that
woulil be mvolved on the ground,"
Cheney told reporterS.
.
CheneY's offer to use forct was
read at ~ news briofing by ·
Williams. The statement was in
stark oonuast to past Pentagon proposals, which envisioned a strict
humanitarian effon with no combat
forces. ·
The spokesman said plans io use
U.S. forces ·weren't complete but
amounted to ''prudent planning.' '
Carrier· or land-based jet fight·
ers could. be brought in to protect
international forces landing relief
supplies at the' Sarajevo airpon or
an overland convoy bringing supplie~ from the p~rt of Split into
SaraJevo, the capttal of breakaway
Bosnia, military officials said.
"We're saying, 'We're ready to
use force/ ... If somebody opens up
on us, it's fair game to go after
them," said one senior officer,
speaking on oondition of anonymi·
ty. , .
. . .
Wtlharns noted the dtfftculltes
of supplying a city of ;lOO,OOO,
even with a multinational effon.
Serbian gunners have rained
anill~ry on the city and its sur·
roun~gs for weeks.
The U.S. Navy would .not be

.Peacekeepers wounded
at
Sar~jevo
airport
'
.

By TERRY LEONARD
Associated Press Writer
• • SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - A shot fired from a Muslun·
.controUed sector struck an armored
;personnel carrier at the Sarajevo
airport Tuesday and slightly injured
.at least three U.N. peacekeepers.
· The United States readied itself
·for possible military action by
announcing it was prepared to put
·u.S. combat air patrols over
,YugQslavia to protect an intema.tionalrelief mission en route to
·Sarajevo.
·
~ Pentagon spokesman Pete
:williams told reponers in Wash·
·iggton.there is no plan to "put U.S.
·fen:es on the ground," but said a
c:OOiingent of 2,200 Marines is no~
the Adriatic Sea off Yugoslavta
•Qil six amphibious ships that eon·
!fin assault helicopters and troop
carriers.
'
· : Williams said a U.S. mission
would pnly take place if the United
!!aliens ~uests U.S. assistance.
• The Umted Nations suffered a
biief setback in its peacekeeping
Offons at the besieged airpon in
•

·m

.

Sarajevo when at least three men
-a Canadian, Swede and Kenyan
- were injured Tuesday by a stray
bullet.
Maj. Gen. Lewis MacKenzie,
commander ol U.N. troops in Sarajevo, said the soldiers were wound·
ed by fragments and sballered glass
from a bullet thai bit a seam in their
armored personnel carrier.
Shannon Boyd, a spokeswoman
for the United Nations in Belgrade,
said three were wounded. MacKen·
zie said four were wounded. The
differing repons could not be reconciled.
·
Boyd said the victims suffered
"surfa01e wounds and are back at
work.' '

U.N. officials would not pub·
licly speculate on who fired the
bullet. Mackenzie said it came
from the direction of the nearby
suburb Dobrinja, which is controUed by Muslim forces.
In the rest of Sarajevo, small
arms fire could be heard mo~t of
the day. Wimesses reponed five or
six heavy sheUs landed downtown

Tuesday afternoon but there was no
immediate word on damage or
. injuries.
Four French relief· flights
arrived Tuesday carrying plasma
and other medical su~lies, as well
1 as tons of combat rauons an~ mtlk
supplies for the 300,000 restdents
of Sarajevo.
About 15 tons of food and
medicine was brought into central
Sarajevo by U.N. trucks guarded by
an armored personnel earner.
More than 200 international
peacekeepers were en route from
central Croatia in a convoy at
speeds averaging 20 mph to secure
the ailpon. Land mines are a problem in some areas.
In Paris, the Defense Ministry
announced France will dispatch
120 soldiers to reinforce U.N.
troopS at the Sarajevo airpon at the
request of U.N. Secretary-General
Boutros Boutros-Ghali.
0fftCials&lt;Stored-tbe relief.provjsions in a gymnasium 'in the
Slt.enderijil neighborhood and ,
planned to stan.distributing them
.~

.'l....u. ..~-

Air Force ch_anges
ipgistics command
•
·~

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - The
Air Force command that kept
plaites·and missiles poised for com·
bat in Korea, Vieblarn and the Persian Gulf is a thing of the past
; )fhe-Air Force L.ogist1cs ComIiland was deactivated Tuesday in a
~remony at Wright-Patterson Air
~e Base. The change was pan of
tlie biggest reorganization in the
sci-vice's history . The ceremony
alsO marked the retirement of Gen.
Qharles McDonald, commander of

Wednesday to residents suffering
from the three-month Serbian siege
of Sarajevo.
The U.N. High Commissioner
for Refugees is preparing to send
5, 700 tons of food over a one·
month period ,to Sarajevo as soon
as the airpon is deemed safe, the
agency reiJOned in Geneva today.
The at.rport was taken over
Monday when Serll forces left as
the U.N. Security Council voted to
authorize the dispatching of inter·
national troops to the airfield.
As Serb irregulars pulled back,
about 34 U.N. peacekeepers !llised
the U.N. flag over the tarmac to
take symbolic control. U.N. author·
ities said the airfield would not,be
secure for an airlift until reinforce·
ments .arrive.
Despite the presence of about
14,000 U.N. pe;~Cekeepers in neigh·
boring Croatia, fighting there COCI·
tinues.
Four ~le· ttie4 "alid' 12 'W ere·
wounded ·Monday in a six-hour
artille'ry b'tlmbardment of the
ancient port of Dubrovnik, sai~
Croatian ometarr: They'"~IM ih
barrage carne from Serb positions
in neighboring Hercegovina
Capt. Douglas Martin,
spokesman for the Canadian U.N.
peacekeeping battalion, said from
Daruvar, Croatia, that about one·
third of the 840-member force
could reach the Sarajeyo airpon by
Tuesday evening.
The rest of the contingent is to
depan later Tuesday from Sirac·.
Croatia.

used to mounl a blockade, nor
would the Marines srorm ashore to
secure a pon. Williams said: .
. The Marine force, composed of
fo.ur amphibious ships, one destroy·
er and one cruiser, carries assault
helicopters and troop carriers. The
aircraft carrier Saratoga was on a
port visit in France but could put
dozens of U.S. fighter and attack
planes within range within 48
hours.
Williams did not specify

~ ~ ·over

the years. the logistics
cOmmand has taught the world how
tb ·sustain a modern Air Force.: ·
sard Gen. Mernll McPeak, Atr
FOrce chief of staff. "No other Air
Eilrce bas ever had to face the glob·
aJ tesponsibilities and commit·
me~~ts we took on during and after
World War II."
'· ·The ceremony was marked by a
f'J!Ial parade review by McDonald
aj)d a fly-over by a B-52, a plane
McDonald
had riown for nine
·' .

ATHENS
HONDA CARS
81 HONDA CRX Sl

Fled, loaded, one owner....................................................110,995
88ACURA .
.
Rid, 2 door, 5 speed, sunroof,
air, stereo cassette ................................................................'7995
110 CHEVY .CORSICA
Gray, 4 door, alr, stereo. cruise,
one ownar..............~ ...............................................................'7295
88 HONDA ACCORD
.
Gold, 5 speed, 4 door, air, stereo .......................................... '7095
89 DODGE SHADOW
'
Silver, 4 door, automatic, air,
1
stereo .................................................................................... 4995
~MERCURY SABLE
Beige, 4 door, automatic, air,
'
one owner..............................................................................14995
86Z·28
Red, automatic, air, power window~ ,
'
1
T·Tops ................................................................................... 4995
89 HONDA ACCORD DX
.
Gold, automatic, one owner,
1
32,000 miles................................................ .......................... 8995
88 HONDA, CIVIC DX
·
s
Red, 5 speed, stereo cassette ......................................, ....... 6995
86 OLDS DELTA 88
:
Cream, automatic, 4 door,
1
clean car, low miles ......,............................................ ............. 5495
88 BUICK SKYLARK
Blue, automatic, air, stereo,
s
'
On'e owner............................................................................. 5495
· NISSAN SENTRA XE
WMe, 5 speed, air, stereo cassette ..................................... 1 6495
89 TOYOTA CELICA
Blue,.alr, sunrool, 5 speed,
·
.
one ownar............................. .'................................................t"f495
83 BUICK REGAL .
. 1
Red, clean car, automatic ............................................... ,...... -1595
go MERCURY TOPAZ GS
Red, 41ioor. autom1tic, air, cruiSI....................................,, ...'6995

HONDA CARS
810 E. STATE, ATHENS
1·800·772·8993

••~ 'I believe
Y· we have created
. a

$1.29

: Air Fprcc Secretary Donald
Riee announced the reorganization
iJ(Jan..-y 1991:

••

,,

'

2.99 22li.AYG.

1.99 LB. rKG~

ON HUSK)

WHITE SWEET &lt;ORN

FoUrlh ol July .
l1ving1 lpell~eul~r/ ~
ALL Summer Fashions!

12 EARS 5

1.99
lUSH

PORK &amp; BEANS
, 79c 42 •L•
·NESTEA
INSTANT TEA

REDUCED25%

5

..

UCINE.DEPARTMENT
STORE .
,
"

..

...

,)

IN RACINE SINCE 1860

~~ ·
•

~·

PRICES GOOD WHILE SUPPLIES WT

YOU CAN DO THE BEST AT CROSS'

FREE WATEIMELON
~

2.69 3.oL

-. We Reierve The Right To Umit Quantities

949·2642
SHOP SAIUIDIY, JULY 4, 9:30.12:30

C(lfumand that will serve our Air

F~ - acquisition and logistics
. ~ even beuer," McDonald said.

WAnRMELONS
$
..

CHHSE SINGlES

I

I

.

..

'· I

''

•· LIMIT QUAHTn'IE.S. NONE SOLD
TDDEAURS.

weCilactl'(

Accept Your

IDi&amp;t

IIIII PIIICY-bc:h ol -

I(,.,

odoorth 1d "-lo ,.......,.,. bo roodily
8\M" t' for 1111! in - "
Store,
1 -OIIPOCificelly !1010c1 In lhio rd. H
we do run out o f . , - 11om, wo
will you your choico of I
cornpor- 11om, wl)on IVIilrble,
~ lllo -go 01 I roin·

FBOeral FOOQ
Stamps

.._ wlilcllwill

-I!&gt;U

10 .....-

"'" ~ .... 01 "'" price within 3D doyo. Only ... ·eoupon will lio oc ""'" por 11om

U.S. GRADE A PERDUE OR
WAMPLER/LONGACRE

pure'-.

Split
Chicken Breast
Pound

c

ALL STORES

OPEl REGUW HOURS
SATURDAY, JULY 4tiL

LONG BOTTOM - There will
RACINE • The Racine. Ameri·
be
an "old fashioned" ice cream
can Legion Post No. 602 will meet
social
Saturday at 4 p.m. at the
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the post
Long
Bouom
Community Build·
borneo. Refreshments served follow·
ing. Several flavors of homemade
ing the meeting.
ice cream will be available as well
as
sandwiches. desserts, drinks,
LONG BOTTOM · Revival at
music
and more.
Hazel Community Church ,
Dewitt's Run Road, Long Bottom,
RUTLAND - The Scipio Volunwill be Thursday through Sunday.
teer
Fire Department will have a
Pastor Rick Weaver will be the
speaker and Pastor Edsel Hart tractor pull Saturday during Rut·
land Fourth of July festivities.
invites the public.
Weigh-in· is at 11 a.,m. and .Pulls
ROCK SPRINGS • The annual begin at noon. Classes for chtldren
inspection of Rock Springs Grange include 800 and for adults, 900,
will be Thursday at 8 p.m. All 1,000, and 1,100. There is a SO per·
cent payback.
members are urged to attend.

'

•\

f.

RED, RIPE

Whole
Watermelons
Each

••
· ~....

'
u.s. GD'n
f.1IIAIN FED BW

. .\

'Coffee Dunkers' among
America·'s best recipes

GROUND BEEF
Li.

~

SATURDAY
POINT PLEASANT · The Lib·
erty Mountaineers will perform
THURSDAY
POMEROY • The Salisbury Saturday at the Senior Citizens
To"inship Trustees· will meet Center in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the townshtp
POINT PLEASANT · The fami·
building.
ly of Walter and NeUie VanMatre
RUTLAND · The Rutland will bold a reunion Saturday at the
Township Trustees will meet West Virginia Farm Museum. Din·
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Rut· ner will be served at noon. All farn·
ily and friends are welcome.
land Fire Station.

JUL'f'4, 1182, IN

POMEROY
wo RESEIIVE THE IUGHT TO

FRIDAY
SALEM CEN'IER • The Salem'Township Trustees will meet Fri·
day ljt 6 p.m. at the township frrehouse.
ROCK SPRINGS • The Meigs
County Pomona Grange will meet
Friday at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. Athens County will be guests.
Potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. and
meeting at 7:30p.m. Inspection
will be given. Officers are to wear
black and white.

COPYRtGHT 1182 • THE ICAOGER
CO. llJMS ANQ PRICES GOOD
SUND,t.Y, JUNE 21, THftOUGH
SATUAO'~Y .

Ribaye Steak

• RECIPE SELECTED • ''Cotree Dunkers" a recipe submitted by
Racbael Downie, right, for the Ppmeroy sesquicentennial cook·
book, "Treasured Recipes or the Past," was selected to be printed
in the 1992 Hometown Collection of "America's Best Recipes."
Pictured with Mrs. Downie is Mary Powell, chairman of the 1990
·Pomeroy Sesquicentennial Committee.

AI LWT Ill%.LEAN

. . ~4111~

MIDDLEPORT · The Pomeroy
Lodge No . 164 F and AM will
meet Wednesday at7:30 p.m. at the
Middlepon Lodge Halt.

LOT1RIDGE • The regular
of the. Lottridge Communi·
ty Center will be Thursday at 7
p.m. Everyone is welcome.

m~ting

-

'949·2550

s

POMEROY . A young men' s
quartet from Penn View . Bible
Institute will be singing Wednes·
day at 7:30p.m. at Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, Route 143. Rev. Victor
Roush invites the publi ~.

\

Boneless

PEARL STREET
UCINE, OHIO

TREATING WOUND - A United Natioos aolcllef from 1 British
battalion prepares to give an injection to a Serbiaa Soldier wouaded
in his shoulder at the Sarajevo airport Sunday. ~eral Serbian sol·
diers were wounded in a recent Muslim attack oo Sarajevo airport
and treated by the U.N. medical department. (AP Pbotn)

WEDNESDAY
,
CHESTER • Chester. Garden
Club will bold a family -picnic at
the Karr cottage with .Dorothy and
Horace Karr as hosts on Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. Around the t;~ble
discussion wiU be held saving the
earth as weU as an auction of garden related items.

ATHENS

Y~he logistics command

tems.
: The combined unit, which is
b(Sed at Wright-Patterson, wiD be
czled the Air Foret Materiel Com:
· m&amp;nd. More than $80 billion a year
has been earmarked for the new
: command, over half of the Air
FOrce's total budgeL The new oom·
=:heduled to be activated

whether the u.s. coni bat f~rces
would be involved in reconrlais·
sance missions; in flying missions
against Serbian arliUery sites or just
in protective flights for ground
troops.
. "The·U.N. has to decide what is
appropriate for us to do," the Pen'tagon spokesman said.
Earlier, B~er said U.S. relief
supplies were stockpiled and ready.
but will be delivered to SaraJevo
only after the airpon is secure.

WAID CROSS'
SONS

AFLC.

was a
separate unit within the Air Force
for 30 years.
~ The AFLC had operations at '
W~ight - Pauerson and Newark,
Ohio, Tinker Air Force Base in
Oldahoma, Hill in Utall, McClellan
in California, Robins in Georgia
afld Kelly in Texas.
"We proved in Vietnam that
AFLc could sustain large-scale air
combat far from borne oveF a prolonged period ot time," McPeak
said. "More recently, the effectiveness of air power in Desen Storm
. was directly attril)uta~! ~. to our
logistics commun1ty."
The logistics command, which
maintained and provided spare
parts for planes and missiles, was
combinetl with the Air Force SysteJn~ Command, which develops
aqd purchases new weapons sys-

· ~ommunity ~alendar ,·

.

.

The Dally.

Rachael Downie, who submitted
several recipes for the Pomeroy
sesquicentennial cookbook, "Treasured Recipes of the Past," was
selected to have one of those
recipes appear in the cookbook,
"America's Best Recipes."
The cookbook is a oollection of
the very best recipes contained in
charitable cookbooks from commu·
nities across the country.
The sesquicentennial cookbook
was entered in the 1991. Tabasco
Community Cookbook Awards
competition. The book was not the
winning cookbook but a copy of
the book was placed in the Walter
S. Mcilhenny Community Coole·
book Library on Avery Island, La.
This facility is available to people
researching Americans culinary
traditions.
As a result of this com~tition,
Mrs . Downie's recipe ' Coffee
Dunkers" was chosen ,and printed
in "America' s Best Recipes~· pub·
lished by Oxmoor House.
The recipe follows:
1 package dry yeast
1/4 cup warm water
1/3 cup boiling water
2/3 cup shortening
2 to 2 3/4 cups all-purpose
nour, divided
1 tablespoon sugar
314 teaspoon salt

1 egg yolk

314 cup strawberry preserves
1 cup sifted powdered sugar
I tablespoon milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Dissolve yeast in warm water in
a large bowl; let stand five minutes.
Pour boiling water over shonen·
) ng in i!..mlldium mixing bowl; beat
at medium speed of an electric
mixer until shoncning mel15. Add
two cups flour, oqe tablespoon
sugar, and salt; beat until well
blended. Stir in yeast mixture and
egg yolk. GraduaUy stir in enough
remaining 3/4 cup flour to make a
soft dough.
Turn dough out onto a well ·
floured surface. Roll dough into
one-inch balls; place two inches
apan on ungreased baking sheets.
Press thumb into each ball, leaving
an indent.!tion. Spoon one teaspoon
preserves into center of each ball. ,
Cover and let rise in a warm place,
free from dlitft$, one hour or until
doubled in bulk. Bake at375 for 12
to 15 minutes or until lj'ghtly
browned. Let cool slightly on baking sheets; transfer to wire racks. ·
Combine one cup powdered
sugar, milk, and vanilla in a small
bowl; stir with a wire whisk until
smooth. Drizzle glaze over warm
pastties. Yield: three dozen.

Canter's Cave open to public
Canter's Cave Outdoor Educa- used by early·Ohio ·settlers and
, lion center is designed to include Indians as shelter and have become
all types of resident camping, such · landniark$ tQ the people of the area.
' as school cainping programs, band These caves are connected by ·
camps, church retreats, weekend na!UfC tiails wh!ch wind thrOugh a
· W9fkshOps and business seminars, ll!lt9ue and sceruc nawral ~ eon·
as well as lf8dilionai4-H camps.
s1sung. or unus~ geologtcal .rock
· The center is also available for . formations and diverse vegetatron.
banquets and one day group out·
Canter's Cave Out4oor Educa·
ings. Canter's Cave 0utdQ9r Edu· lion CenterJ s lcx:ated in 'Jackson
calion Center is owned and opellll· County about6 mtles west of Jack·
ed by Canter's Cave 4-H Camp son, Ohio. Canter's Cave is easily
Inc., a non-profit organization. ' reached as it is just I mile off U.S .
The Center is a 350 acre site and Route 35.
'
is nestled in a valley surrounded by
For more infQrmation about 4-H
trees, rock formations and.an abun- Camp opportunities, pleas~ contact
• dance of birds and other wildlife. the Metgs County Extenston S~r·
Natural rock overhang caves were vice in Pomeroy. ·
Il' l

'

•

,.

.
·$499
lb.

LIGHT MEAT OR

ggc
..

ASSORTEDFI.AVORS

Polar Pak
Ice Cream .... * ·Gal.

"IN THE DAIRY CASE"

Oscar Mayer t·lb su-r,•
$239
err •• Kroger
Meat Wieners.. Pkg: PREE! Orange Juice .. Gal.
U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED

Genuine
Ground Chuck

REGULAR SCENT

Clorox
Bleach

P•d

Gallon

CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE.
DIET COKE,

Coca Cola Classic
·-or ·Sprite

8

12.Pik 12:JZ. c.

• ••
' lt

'

II ,.
\

.•
'

,,

�~-- ·~

...

··-

-~--

"- ..

. :-.,.~ ..

Ohio
Ohio University
College of Osteajlathic Medicine

r·

John'C. Wolf, D.O.

I

.Imogene M. Knapp, Syracuse,
has joined Ohio's "Saved by the
Belt" Club after being involved in a
collision that occurred late last year
in Meigs County.
According to .official reports,
Ms. Knapp was east bound on
Route 124 when she went off the
left side of the roadway and strock
a guardrail with the driver's side of
the vehicle. There was severe d.am·
age to her vehicle. The safety bell
saved her from what could have
been serious or life-threate~~ing
injury
Knap was
nted with a
"Saved by ~e BeW.Ctub certificate by Lieutenant Robert J. Woodford, commander of the._Oallipolis

I

Associate ,ProfessOr
of Family Medicine
Questloa:

M~,

who is
diagnosed as
~aving Parkinsori:s Di~: Her
· docror mad!: llle diagnosis wilhout
··rimning any - . and lllen he start·
"ed her on medication. Are there
· ~~ny teSlS to veril'y the cliqnosis of
-Palkinson's Disease?
· AnSwer: I'U lake a moment and .
explain a bit about Parkinson's
--DiSease for my otheuaders before
l answer your question. P~tin·
·8on's is a disease of lhe brain lhat
. produces abnormalities of movem·ent and thought. Studies have
·given widely different frequencies
for the occurrence of this disease
- some site as few as 60 per
100,000 population, and some have
~·round as many as 187 suffers per

73 years old, has

''
I

head, tiP,, ton~ue and feet may &amp;Is!'
occur in this disease Mental deten·
oration ofren occurs as the disease
progresses. Depression is quite
common, as is the toss of ability to
think and reason clearly.
Now to address your question.
There II'C other diseases that can
begin with some of the sym~toms
of Parkinson's disease. Idenufying
the ~ific cause of an iodividu·
al's symptolbs - what we call !he
correct di4gnosis - can be. made
from a careful history, and thiS may
require information from the family
if the sufferer has had some loss of
mental skills. and a tlJorou&amp;h physical examination.
·Most of us also order blood tests
and a CAT scan or MRI of the
brain to be certain of the diagnosis.
Qaestloa: My mother doesn't
seem to be much better. AJe there
effective medications to treat
Parkinson's?
Auwer: We have a selection of
medications thB! help control the
symptoms·of Parkinson's, but we
have no medication that ':t~!J:n:·
vent progression to greater · iii·
ty - and we have none that cure
the disease. The selection ol medication and the dose necessary 10
give your mother optimam benefit
is more of an art than a science.
She should see a doctor that
deals with individuals suffering
from Parkinson's on a regular
basis. Her family doctor may "fit
the bill,". or she may need to see a
neurologist for her care.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, GJI)$Venor Hall, Athens,
'45701.

: 100,000.
: There is a slight tendency for
:this illness to run in families.
•About five percent of individuals
:with Parkinson's have others in
:their families with lhe disease. .
• The cause of Parkinson's dis: ease is unclear. Some exferts
1 believe that it is the result o nor'' mal aging and the exposure to enva-.
; ronmental toxins. Others believe it
·occurs only as a consequence of
:brain damage from infection, psy•chotropic drug use, carbon monoxille exposure, ~ther toxins.
-,. The rust s m toms of ParkinSon's disease o ten .occur while the
~ndividual is middle aged, but at
times they may not be apparent
·until the person is older. The most
evident symptoms are that of gen.i!ralized slowness of movement
with rigidity of the limbs, facial
muscles, ~ure and gaiL
:•: The ngidity produced by this
insease appears as a stiff and inex·P,ressive- facial appearance with
'Infrequent blinki,ng. The walk is
: Slow and shuffling. The individual
:liomplains of great fatigue and
.Weakness because of the difficulty
The Third Fn:nch Republic was
be or she has in walking, although proclaimed Sept. 4, 1870, follow·tfle actual Sll'ellgth of the muscles is ing the capture of Napoleon III during the Franco-Prussian War. With
~ · Olher physical signs are typical the fall of the empire in France, a
-or Parkinson's. A tremor of the government or national defense
ihumb is often present that pro- tried to continue the war with Ger·
.duces a movement 'that is often many, but France capitulated the
described as looking like the per- following year.
·son is rolling a pill between his or
The first Boy Scout rally was
her thumb and forefinger. The held in England m 1909.
tremor briefly disappears as the
During World War I, the AmeriJiand is moved, then returns as the can Expedilionary Force in France
hand is held still again.
suffered its rmi casualty on Sept.
·•· ·Tremors of the entire hand, 4, 1917.

News notes

·one.

' Ms:

-- -·

···

.

SAVED BY THE BELT • Imogene M. Kaapp, Syracuse, has
joiDed Ohio's ''Saved by tile Belt'' Club after bemg involved in a
collisioa that occurred late last year in Meigs County. The ''Saved
by the Belt" Club is a joint effort by the Ohio Department or Highway Safety and over 400 police agencies to recognize 'people who
have benefited from tllelr wise decision to wear tbeir seat belts.
Preseatins her certir~CJ~te is Lieutenant Robert J, Woodford, com·
mander of tile GaUipolis post of the Ohio State Highway Patrol.

·post ot ~he Obto State Highway
Pai!'OI, .Sign~ by Gov. Georg~ V.
Vomovtch, Highway Safety D'!CC·
tor Charles I?· S~tpley, and Highway Patrol Supenntende~t Colonel
Thomas. W. Rtc~. and a Saved by
the Bet~. lapel pm.
,
.
-~he S;~ved by tbe.Belt Club IS
a JOIOt effort by t))e OhiO Depart·
ment of Highway .'safety and o~er
400 pollee agencaes to ~ecogmze
people. _wha-have benefited from
theu wtse, deciSion to wear theu
seaMtbei!Sb.
.
db
em ers are nommate y
investigating officers or others with
knowledge of a crash who can state
that the iodividual's use of a safety
b~lt prevented senous or fatal

. Dear Ann Landers: 'Five years A
. nn
ago, it seemed my life was shatlered.
An eye disease robbed me of my
sight. As an active, young college ·
student, I s!ruggled 10 adjust to my
new world of darkness. 1 had never
ANNIA.NDEIS
considered. becoming an eye donor,
"ml, LaoAIJ&amp;tlto
Tlato SJIIdkole IIICI
and now my sight depended on
cnllloio S,Mlale"
someone who had.
A central Florida family,
a
sunset
suffering with the pain of losing a or see a rainbow without the
family member, reached out and generosity of an organ donor. Eye
touched my life. By contributing and organ donation makes a
tbe corneas of a loved one, this difference. ·
special family enabled me to
If you ·would like more informaundergo cornet transplant ~urgery, lion regarding eye, organ and
which miraculously filled my tissue donation, please contact The
worldwithlightandcolor.
Living Bank, P.O. Box 6725,
Today ,I work for lhe Medical Eye Houston, Texas 77265. •· STACY
Bank of Florida in Orlando. I help GOETZE, CORNEAL RECIPIENT,
bring others, like myself, the giftpf ORLANDO, FLA.
sight Currently, 5,000 people across
DEAR STACY: Here's your
the country are waiting for corneal letter wilh an additional word fro(ll
transplants, while another 25,000 me.
wait for olher vital organ transplants.
Please, dear readers, don't let the·
Because of the growing number of sun set on this woman's plea. Send
persons waitingJfor org311s, corneas for your donor card today. And don't
and tissue, I hope you will remind stop a1 corneas only. Go the whole
your readers once again: Sign way and sign up for kidney, heart
an organ donor card and discuss : and lung donation. It costs nothing
your decision with your family to be an organ ilonor, and lhis one
members so they can carry out your act of generoSity can give life to
wishes.
another humWl being when yours has
Though I will never know the ended.
donor or the family who made
Dear Ann Landers: There is a
my miracle possible, each morning lack of education today about simple
as I awake and see the sunrise, hygiene. The days of school nurses
I sm.ile and think of them. I instructing students are long gone.
was one of the lucky ones who With your enonnous readership, you
received a transplant. However, can do what tbey cannot
many others will never gel 8 chance
Please tell your readers that rest

Landers

IDIUIY.

and Butcher families-including
Jeff, Julie, Jessica and Joanna wen:
privileged to auend the first open
house of the Rockport Plant of the
Michigan and Indiana Power Company, a part of the AEP system,
where Butcher is a part of the
supervisory team.

If you can\ work,
we1l help
pay the bills.

Welsh publication written by Syracuse man
The Welsh Chapter of "To
Build in a New Land: The Ethnic
Landscages of North America",
published by John Hopkins University Press, was written by Michael
Suuble of Syracuse.
In the book two chapters are
devoted to the two prominent
immigrant groups in Southern
Ohio, the Welsh and llle Germans.
SD'Uble presents a brief summary of Welsh immigration patterns
in general'ahd in more specific
. instances in Meigs, Gallia and
Jackson Counties. It also deals with
Welsh chureh architecture, culture,
religion and -industry in those areas.
The German chapter is written
by Professor Hubert Wilhelm of
Ohio l.l.niversity. It details the set·
dement patterns of Ohio's largest
immigrant group and the impact of
its cultural traits upon Oho's landscape.
The booiC cllnsists of the works
of 20 authors from across the United States that deal with specific
immigrant as well as native American groups which seltled the American landscape.

John Hopkins University Press
is the oldest university press in tbe
United States. Its oew environmental series covers the creatioo of the
North American landscape. The
books highlights tbe cultural links
between the land and the pioneer

immigrants who shaped the American tan~ as we know it today.
"To Build m a New Land" is the
rust book length work to draw specific attention to tbe different cultural lani:lscapes that a large number of ethnic groups ~reated in
North.America.
·

If 'fO'J ever become disabled
due to accident or ~!ness and
can't m, ~J're going lo need

help paying )'OUr household
"'f"'"leS. Call us lor al the
details about Nationwide's

Eighth birthday celebrated

Paycheck ProtectioR Plan.

Two parties were held recently
honoring Christopher Neece on his
eighth birthday.
The first being at McDonald's
in Pomeroy. Those. attending were
Kris Jenkins, Mark Smith, Charlie
Gilmore, Michael Hoover, Alex
Shuler, Rainy Walker and Christine
Neece.
A pool party was held at the
hom e of his parents, Chris and
Terry Neece. Cake, ice cream.
chipsandpopwereserved. Attend·
ing were Rhonda, Jaclyn and
. Cassie Jus tis, Charles Neece;
· Diana, Lindsey and Josh Smith and
his sister, Christina, and Mandy
Russell.
Sending presents were Deena.
David, Greg, Jennifer and Jessica
Kennedy, Bob, Shelia, Aaron and
Amy• Whaley ; Jody and Barb
Neece and Vicki Carter.
'

•

Dr. Thomas Spencer, D.O.
FAMILY CARE
224 EAST MAll
STREET POMEROY
LOCiftD IIUI DOUIIIIIEUL

JEFF WARNER
INSURANCE
POMEROY, OHIO
992-5479

ICCE"ING NEW PITIEifiS IYIILIILE ON PREMISES
Diabetic, IJpert•n•lon &amp; Cardiac
Evaluation and lrut•int

Ho.n: MH., 't~t~. &amp;Wed. 1-5; """··1G-6; FrL H
(111992·6411 for .,........

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

College student regains her· Meigs County 4-H meetings held :.
sight thanks to al1 an donor

· Couple attends graduation

Mr. !Uid Mts. Charles Blakeslee
and Mrs . Ira Butcher recently
attended the eighth grade gradualion of their granddaughter, Julie
Butcher, at the South Spencer
School in Rockport, Ind. She was
named top girl in her c.tass, both
· · academically and all-around. She is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
Butcher.
The Blakeslees went on to
Wichita, Kan., 10 visit tbeir daughter, Patricia Circle who is recovering from major surgery. They were
joined· there by Patty's children,
Marianne Circle of Kansas City
and Mark of Wichita.
.
On the n:tum trip the Blakeslees

•'

Wednesday, July 1, Hi92

yracuse woman IS
saved by-the belt .

.1

Medicine
'

1992

.

FamilY.
\:."

'

,

CHRISTOPHER NEECE

rooms have sinks with soap because
good maintenance of health_includes
washing your harids after using the
toilet and before eating.
Please bring this to tbe public's
attention. Small children are
growing up without any idea of the
importance of washing their hands.
I heard a man who owns a
company which does commercial
cleaning say that the dirtiest things
in houses are doorknobs and that no
one ever thinks of washing them. I
was quite startled, but I remember
thatyearsagolsawtheschoolnurse
hold the door of the women's rest
room open with her foot so she
wouldn'thaveiOtouchthedoorknob
after washing her hands. I guess this
idea isn't a new one.
I hope you will address this issue
i~ your column. It's far mon: important than it sounds. If we can't have
national Jtealth insurance, at least we
can educate everyone in the nation
about the benefit of hand-washing.
·• C.S., ORLEANS, MASS.
DEAR C.S.: Thanks for preveoting a lot of colds, heaven knows
how many cases of flu and an
assonment of other illnesses.
Is life passing you by? Want to
improve your social skills? Write for
Ann Landers' new booklet, "How to
Make Friends and Stop Being
Lonely." Send a se/f-&lt;lddressed, long,
businus-size envelope and a checl:
or money order for $4.15 (rhis
includes postage and handling) 10:
Friends. c/o AM Landers, P.O. Bo.r
11562, Chicago,///. 6()6] ].{)562. (In

The Meigs County Shepherds
club met on June 15, at the Meigs
County Public Library with 18
members and 3 advisors present.
Business discussed included:
Secretary and Treasurer repon, had
10 name a tool for roll call. Project
lesson was on detecting and treating hoof rot.
Demonstrations were given by
Hal Knecn who introduced himself
as tbe new Agriculture Extension
Agent. He offered himself for
assistance for 4-H project questions.
Refreshm ents were served by
Matt Evans, and Michael and
Michelle O'Nail. The next meeting
will be on July 20, at 8 p.m. in the
Pomeroy Library.
Joshua Ervin, News Reporter

The Meigs Creek 4-H club met
recently at Tuppers Plains, with IS
members. 5 parents and I adviso r
present.
A discussion was held about the
4-H kick off dinner, tbe Ohio Live·
stock Youth Copference and Hog
and Sheep Registration and Weigh·
in dates. Project lessons on steer.
sheep. hogs. rabbits, beef breeding,
sheep breeding, and feeder calves
were presented.
A safety report was given by
Bryan Cowdery on Bus Safety. A
ftealth repon was given on Keeping
Your Steer Healthy by David
Rankin.
Demonstration on proper Showmanship, different parts and How
to Treat Rabbit Diseases was given
by Robert Hoffman and Jerem y
Cowdery.
Timmy Epling, News Reporter.
The Busy Beavers 4-H club met

~;~~- ~s-auxili;;; ~~~;Kf~;ome
July, 21 'day On the town '
Meigs County's new promotion·
al'vidco "Hearl of the Valley" was
presented when lhe Women's Aux·
iliary of Veterans Memorial Hospi·
tal met recently ~t the conference
room at the hospilh
Jessie White presided and Libby
Fisher had the auxiliary prayer.
Minutes of the previous meeting
were read by Mildred Well and
Jessie White gave the treasurer's
report in the absence of Abby Strat·
ton.
Toys for the emergency room
are being bought by tbe auxiliary .
If anyone would like to donate,
they arc encouraged to do so.
The final report was given by
the scholarship committee and lhis
year's comminec was asked to

serve in that capaci ty again nex t
year. Carrie Kennedy was added to
the committee.
The "day on the town" will be
July 2l with ~lace and time 10 be
posted m the g1ft shop at the hospiIal. There will be no July mceong._
Mrs. White appointed a. nominating committee of Beuy Sayre.
chairman , Mildred Fry , Grace
Warner, Helen Hill and Clara Bur·
ris.
Scott Lucas, hospital administrator, announced the hospital picnic will be Juiy 25 at Royal Oak
Resort.
Snacks and a salad course were
the refreshm ents brought by each
member. ·

wi~ ·10 .members, I visitor an~ 4
advisors presen(. The group dec1ded to do a club proJect, plant flowers around the Ash SL Chwth and
gotoC.O.S.I. .
Projects lesson were given by
Beck_y Karr on _How To Care· For
Gerbils and Odte Karr did a com·
parison on Gerbils Care and Care
for Fee~ mg of Hamsters. Female
members of the club are takmg
"Let's Begin Cooking" for a pro·
jecl.
.
RecreatiOn leader, Russell
Robinson, led the group in a game
of "Hot Potato". Refreshments
were served by Jessica Hamilton
and Amanda Neece.
. Becky Karr. News Reporter.

PrOJeCts were picked out and
dues _were patd. .
.
A ~emonstrau_on on cookl_ng
was given by San Putman wh1ch
mcluded makmjl s~uffed mushrooms and brownte ptzza.
.
Indoor basketball was played
and San Putm~n served re~resh·
me~ts . Plans were made to dtscuss
a tnp to ~.O.S.I.
_
Joshua Hager, News Reporter.

The Meigs County 4-H Dairy
club met at the Meigs County Public Library, there were 5 members
and I advisor present. The group
elected officers and a tour of the
Broughton Dairy Factory at Marietta was discu.ssed. Also, colors for
the sweepstakes cards were dis·
The Kountry Kids 4-H club met cussed.
Officers elected were: President,
recently, at the home of Donna
Smith, with 7 members and 3 advi- Charles Parker; Vice President,
sors present. The group discussed David Smi th ; Secretary, Vic,l&lt;i
selling cookbooks, helping older Warn er; Treasurer, Paul Smith;
people and picking up trash.
News Reporter, Tricia Davis; SafeThere were no demonstrations ty Leader, Chris Parker; Health
or project lessons. Recreation for Leader, Christy Warner and Recrethe meeting included playing ball. ation Leader; Patty Nally.
Refre-shments were served by SherTricia Davis, News Reporter.
ry Jacks and Belh Reynolds.
Chastity Jude, News Reporter.
DOWNING CHILDS

MULLEN MUSSER

The Triple "R" 4-H club recently
met at Sari Putman's home. with 5
members and 2 advisors present.
The group elected officers which
included Sari Putman, Presi den t;
Josh Hager , Vice President;
Jonathan Douglas, Sccrcuuy·Trea·
surer; Mall Putnam, Recreation
Leader ; Nicole Parker , Safety
Leader; and Chip Sullie, Health
Leader.

INSUUNCE
111 Second St., P011eroy:
YOUR INDEPENDENT ·
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

·~~~A~~~AAAA~~~AA~~~A~~~~~~~~~A~~AAA•

rdh l\"'-iff

sirE.EI

a3oohs

93 Mill Srret&gt;t ·

(614} 992-6657

Middleport , Ohio 45160

lnde-endence Da· Sale
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and
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Credit Cards May Be Used
For All Purchases Excluding
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We ~eserve The Right
To Limit Quantltl~s
SUBSIDIARY OF ASHLAND OIL, INC.

,

�Ohio

The

Harrisonville
area happenings

,. . BROTHERS GRADUATE· Terry Aadrew
' : Newsome, len, graduated recently from the Uni·
_ versity or Rio Grande while his younger brother,
,..... Rodenck Franklin Newsome, riabt, graduated
'

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Price
Portsmouth, vi site,&lt;!' her rnothei.
· Luabell Eshelman on Sunday.
Stella Atkins recently returned
from a trip JO Stillwater, Minn.,
where she attended the wedding of
her grandson, Michael Atkins and
Angelia Swanson.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gibson and
daughter, ColurnbQs, were dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
~ttended t.he national square dancmg convention at Cincinnati over
the weekend.
· Mr . and Mrs. Bob Mah·r and
Gary Foley were recent guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Foley
Columbus.
·
'
Allan Gibson and sons, Colum·
bus, visited Mrs. Virginia Gibson
over the weekend.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Marty Foley and
family, Texas, and Sandra Foley
and family, Milwaukee, and Chad
Gauss, Rutland, were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. ~ob Mahr. ·

from Eastern High School. They are the sons of
Frank and JoAnn Newsome, Five Points. They
enjoyed an old-fashioned pig roast and open
house at the home of their parents.
·

..

Birchfieldfamily
reunion held

Praduation party held for brothers
I

•

Terry Andiew Newsome gradu. ·~ted recently from the University
1') )f Rio Grande while his younger
.. ·brother, Roderick Franklin New• ·some, graduated from Eastern High
: School.
·
They arc the sons of Frank and

DEVONBAUM

:Birth is announced

The annuaf Birchfield family
reunion was held Sunday at the
Youth Center Building at Harrnen
Park in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Attending were Charlotte Grant,
Michael Grant, Shayne Davis ,
Racine; Howard and Marie Birchfield, Jamitha Willford, Eugene,
Janey, and Randy Birchfield, Rutland; Drearna and Gail Blankenship, Proctorville; Jimmy and Jean
Smith, Charleston, W.va.; Alva and
Velma Luckeydoo, Le~art, W.Va.;
Ric~y. Gina and Andrew Birchfield, Rutland; Tim Knotts,
Pomeroy; Hattie and Bill Dudding,
Logan, W.Va.; Mae and Frances
Luckeydoo, Mrs. Roben Hunnell,
Freda Bass, Stilla Leport, Henderson, W.Va.

Po.meroy; Brian Bailey and Lind·
JoAnn Newsome, Five Points.
say,
Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Mike
They enjoyed·an old-fashioned
pig roast and open house at the Johnson , Mr. and Mrs. Pat Aeiker
and Penny, Tim, Patsy and Patrick,
horne of their parents.
all
of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Attending were Mrs. Katheryn
Mills
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
S tewan and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy
· Joe Mills and -son,
Brian Stewart and Lindsay and
Crooksville;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Alex, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Stewan
and Robbie and Katie, all of Har- Hoffman and family, Chester; and
risonville, W.Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Chris Lance, Ms. ViCkie Moses,
Auston Newsome, Syracuse; Mr. _Richard Roberts and family.
Others presenting gifts were Mr.
and Mrs. Bennie Spears and Stacie
and
Mrs. Bobb»Joe Adams and
and Corey, Middleport; Mr. and
family,
Mr. and Mrs. Martin BrodMrs. Ronnie Dalton and Chris and ·
Stevie, Hans, W.Va.; Lowell Perry, erick, Mr. and Mrs. Hershel White
Mr. and Mrs. Thorn as Perry, Mr. and Tim, Tom , Mr. and Mrs. Rayand Mrs. Tommy Perry and Cody. mond Blankenship and sons, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Richards and and Mrs, Jerry Eplin and sons,
Erica, all of Chapmanville, W.Va.; Chapmanville, W.Va. ; Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Raben Redfern, Illi- Mrs. Dorset Randolph, Mr. and
nois; Mrs. Mary Salling, Detroit, MrS. John Evans and son, Mr. and
Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Cor- Mrs. Horner Anderson, Mr. and
bitt and Denise, Taylor, Mich.; Ms. Mrs. Randy Cross and daughters,
Tammy Roberts, Belpre; Dan Cook Mr. and Mrs . Bob Murphy . and
and Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Sloan, Gal- Tracy and Amy.
Special graduation cakes were
lipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Wilson
Wolfe , Ms. Wendy Wolfe and baked by Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reit·
Brett, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Joey mire. Pies were baked by Mrs. Ann
Wolfe, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.. Wolfe. Large chocolate chip coo~e
Bill Wood, Litde Hocking; Mr. and cakes were baked by Tammy
Mrs: Cralg,Yeno_y and: Megan, Roberts.

Tim and Martie (Caldwell)
Baurn, Chester, announce the birth
of their second son, Devon Gra·
ham, on May 13 at Charles ton
: Women's and Children's Hospital.
The infant weighed five pounds
and I0 ounces and was 19 and one·
. half inches long.
· : The couple has another son,
: Derek, age five and one-half.
_ Maternal grandparents are
. Howard ·and Marvene Caldwell,
· Tuppers Plains.
Maternal great-grandparent is
• Rubal Caldwell, Tuppers Plains.
• .. Pau:rnal grandparents are Del• 'fnar and Kathryn Baurn, Chester.

Anr1ouncements

NE
4:30 P. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICAnON .

JULY 4TH HYMN

A t.hree-church Vacation Bible
School will be held July 6-10 at t.he
Pomeroy United Met.hodist Church
from 6:30-8:30 daily. Participants
from Pomeroy UMC, St. Paul
Lutheran Church and 'IJinity
Church are encouraged to attend.

~****~~***~ ~,.
! The Following Financial :
i Institutions Will Be Closed On i
i SATURDAY, JULY 4, 1992 i
!
In Observance Of
i
i INDEPENDENCE DAY i
,..

!:

[F8]Farmers Bank

:

.... · "" Your Bank {Mt/e..

..
-

MEMBER FDIC

,..

!

.

::~New

"

arrival

.
Ed and Chastity (Oiler) Parker, .
•· Worthingtoo, announce the birth of
: their daughter, Victoria Renee
. ~arker, on June 26 at Riverside
Methodist Hospital.
.• She weighed seven pounds and
• two ounces.
.
Grandparents are Allen Oiler.
· .'Middlcporl, Becky Carroll, Rut·
• .land, Billie Parker and Jack Parker,
Worthington.
· •' Great-grandparents are Marilyn
- Oil~ r. Middleporl, and the late
Marvin Oiler, Mae Carroll, Rut::·land, and lhe late Tom Carroll, Bob
and Betty Wes~ Worthington, and
~-. Betty Parker, ML Vernlin, and t.he
' ' ..·late Gale Parker.

Top Fresh
California

Servlcoo, $411,700.00.
t I. Youth Servlceo Grant,
$41,605.16
tl. Emorgoncy Medical
Servlou
TrM1foro
$46,~86.18.
'
20. Community Dovllop.
ment Block Granl

Clwk

466111 Gulu1e Ad.
Coolvllo, Olllo 45o'23

8lc

,..

,..

!
:

•

!

:

~

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!
:************************************:

Each

Sweet &amp; Juicy

Fresh Georgto

Peaches
Or California
Nectarines

•
.
.
•

'

NOTICE
PUBLIC HEARING ON THE
MEIGS COUNTY BUDGET
FOR 11113
A budget hearing lor tho
nut eucolldlng nocol Y""'
ending Docomblr'3t, 11113,
wiH be hold on July 15,
tavt, at the Melgo County
Commt..ton. .• 0 Ill co,
Courtho..,, Pomoray, Ohio
from 2 PM lo 3 PM. The
reoldenll of Melg1 County
oro lnvlled lo provide
wrlllen and oral comm111•
and · aek queollono concorning loe budgol lor tho
cu"enl llocol yoor. Senior
oldllflll ore encourogod lo
...- thle moetlng.
Below 11 a e~mmory ol
the enllre budget which to
ovolloblo lor public In·
opecllon ot lho Melgo
County Auclloo'o Olllco
from July 2 to July 15, 1882,
beiWoon the houro ol 8:30
AM lo 4:30 PM, Mondoy
lorough Fridoy:
·Genorol
Fund
S2,188,271.16.
2. Dog ond Konnol,
$13,021.34.
3." Public . Autl•nco,

. S2,510,~11J3.00.
4. Real Eolate Auooomen~ $132,353.00.
5. Aulo
Gaoollno To, S2,015,111.00.

Lie•••• •

1. Mentol Aeterdollon

Bond
' Aellremenl,
$16,010.24.
7. Child Support Enlorcomonl
Agoncy,
'

INM

S261 ,550.00.
1. Humon

Service• Docllood.
Unleae IICiplionl •re
Building Bond Rellromonl,
lilod
lhorolo, ookl eccounll
SI3V,OOUI.
1.
Counly Home, will bo lor hNI'Ing belore
oold Court on loo 3rd cloy of
S130,f02.72
10. Sail ond Walor Aug111~ lllt2, 11 which dme
oald occou nlo wIll bo
$55,108.00.
.
11. Stole loouo II . canoldorod ond continued
lrom cloy lo cloy unlllllnolly
S270,443.12
12. · Montol Rotudo· dltpoood ol.
Any poroon lnleroolod
llon/Developmenlol Dlo•moy
file wrlllon ucopllono
bllltlu
Operotlon,
occ6unto or lo
lo
11ld
1684,1180.00.
13. Chlldron'o Sorvlcoo molloro perllintng lo the
uocutlon of the lruol, not
tso, $123,031.00.
I 4•
T ublrculoolo, le11 thin ftvo doyo prior to
the dolo ut lor hearing.
SI25,41U8
Robert E. Buok, Judge
15. Emorgoncy Manoge·
Common Plool Court
monl Agoncy, $5,100.00.
Problll Dlvlelon
16. llllor Control,
Meigo County, Ohio
S72,000.00.
11. Emorgency Medical fTll, ltc

Seedless
Grapes

Great On
The Grilli

1!fU

You- 0.00:.
of~

20 1&gt;. Bog

fiaYOn•

JUt

Yt Gal.
Ctn.

lb.

be'

Store For De~ll•

,

S....

lk&gt;n.

TUII.

Wed: TlVs.

Fri.

I

AUTO REN

$19.95

INC.

A D.I\Y AND UP

Brochu,.: 1

·5653.

REDUCE; Burn Oft Fat Whllt
'lou SIHPt Takt OPAL Available

At ; Fruth Phlrmacy.

Tlm1
Shirt
Unitt
And
Campground Mtmbershlps. 01•
lrHI 91 ..., ChHell Worldwide

264 UPPER RIVER ROAD

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

Offer Good Thru
July 31, 1892

992·7553

Call lor Appointment

IIOMEIOY, ON.

Bas•• Rd.,Radle

6-28-'92-1 mo

New Ho•es e Vinyl Siding
Hew Garages • Replacement Wildows
Room Additions • Roofing
COMMERCI,\(. and RF..SmENTI.U
lllEE F..S11M,\'II'.S

•No Sunday Call•l

ltk~

Plumbing
Polnd'E\
(FREE TIMATESI

V. C. YOUNG Ill

21121112

lcro11 ,,.. hot Office
217 E. Stce.. St.
POMEIOY, OliO

•992-6215

Pomtroy, Ohio

month

to

Seller

.,...

ll-18·1fn

Lost &amp; Found

SATELLITE T.V.

Mala BuQit, Bltck,
Brown, &amp; WhHt. VICinHy: Har·

Found :

ritburg_ Rood And Aodnoy Plko,

H00.637-6508

Dealers hr.

0

Reeldentlll· Commercii!
Direct Pollc1-Firt Connect.
_ence
24 Y.. r• .Exnart
,..Stele Llceneed
Eetlriultee -'Coneulllltion

CONS0 UDATED SECURITY SysnMS

.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 loll, and a one otor1 homo will! _..,

Loot : Block And WMo Huoky,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

514-388-,..8.

With Blut EyH, Blue Collar, In
Addlaon Bulavll'- Ar•. 114-387-

l'V47.
loel : camtfl, bttwMn 1130 E.
Main SlrMt/Big Wt-1111 , 111m Important, S5 rtwtrd, Mae Cottrill,

RtNrd,
Of Small Brown Ba_.g Left M1.
ttbnly Cln S.A. 35 OVOfpltl AI
Rto Grandt, Wllh Cont•nlt:

I

Plptrl, Ptrsontl ArUcln, Photo
A,lbumt Of Robert P. Evant,

Four t.mlly yard ••'-· Juty 2, 3,
4, on St. AI. 331 aolna to

Gruner

Evant

.......

·

A.... l-llhkfo "lhoo
change cok&gt;r, crtfts, and ...,.,
othlrll.mt.

7

F... flmlly, July 1-3, 10-49m.
7'.12 srcomor11 st., llkldlopot"

Yard Sale

•

Four lonolly, July 1-4, Hpm
Homt Interior, ctothle a ~~

mora.

1 l . 3rd. 4867 Aocfnoy Plko,
Bklwoll, Everything Chotpl 9
Till?
3 Fomllr Corpo" Solo: 202
Klneon Orin, Thursday, Ffld•y,
1-4, Sllurdoy Till Noon. AduH

112111. our lMdlng
ft9hi,I14-JII2-22'1!.
Oorogo tolo1 823 112 Rutooll
StrOll boftlna Hoi..,., July 1·2·
I

Cretk Rd. · otf At . 7, 11'111« on

1, tow, low jtricee.

Clothing, Boys 0-4, Toyt, Sltrto

Oorogo oolo, July 2 I 3, t-!Spm
Collogo Avonw, Autlond.
..

3 Family Vard S1l1 : July 1tt,

Gartge ..... July 2-3, New Lim•
Rood; Autlond. Dorm tilt
30 Gllton-. . . rlum

2·41t'l. AnUquts, All
Slzt
Clolhtt, Furnlturt, Htndmade
StuH, Ceramics, Misc.
5 Family: Subdlvlllon Bthlnd

Old Bidwell S&lt;hool, 9-5. Jutr 1,
2nd. Children• Clothn I Mort!

Bock Porch: 3 Fomitr

,.,..,..Of'

extrciH b'ki~ 3 tMcyc•

·~·

mttc:

l

Oorogo Nlo, July 2-311:00-4:00.
Above Eoet. ._ Hlgn School
AlgQKrnt

Recliner,

lJeryl
Well'•'
tnowtlltlltlchltnt
..- . • ..._ .

-·
d•ybod

ctoltt., boob, prlfe ~

Hub- Glrtge H._, rtln or ahlnt
Wll!-.y tnd lhurodtly. Nln:
·~ Oil"'"
Homo lnlorlor,
lhurtdoy, Frldoy, July 2nd, 3rd. t-otrr.
grm, bobr owing, boby
413

bird Avenue, (I&lt;INIUQI) . CIOih·
lng,
Homt Interior. Mis c.

WnHichllr,

clothell, ctolhlng or'" -'a" .nd
othtr mltcelltneoua

II'"'•·
2ml
llchool.

Ntl at Souohom High

T0111 ll*ae Ntldence.
Kld1

'

I, 2, 3rd.
230 Linwood Orl¥t, G1lllpofie.

Gtrtge ..... rMn or ttwne

dly, Rodney In AI. 35.

olgno.

Clothoo, Plclurn, Julr

l¥1rylhlng n\utl go, ...... July
1~2nd, ond :Jrcf. 47111 Eogto
()orogo Sill: Frldor And Sltur- A Rood on Route 7, 1o110oJ

Oorogo Solo: Frldor, Jutl.3rd
And "Sot. Jutr 4th, e~. rgo
stu Clothoo, Croho, Rolled
Aool Van Lola Of Dltter.nt
Homo~..lum t.on on 35 At Jar.
dono
oottlo On.'Steond - "
on Lon .

Oorogo Silo- July 112· lrond
n- ~. Juno, nu"" unllormo
10 opood blkoil ....._ · I
- ooet
· "ol-~oclno,
lngSt.-nco
1rnl.
ill. 124, '
Glgontlc oklowoik oolo, Supoo
10, Pomeroy, Ohio. ~uly 2, 3, 4
Orohtm School Rood, 1 IIIIo Slvoupto-.
Paet Jumbo, c....... ry. lhwo, Hyooll rooldonct, 36l10 Rock·
Fn, t-5, Bobr Clothoa, Curtolno,
oprlngo Rd., July 2·3. 1-!lpm.
Mloc.

T-.

tllo

Wty HI.EfflciHcy Ai'

RtlnorMIM.

.

0

F11~&amp;Now

Wattr Htottn.
•

8e1111etta MobUe
139l SaHord School Rd.

=

Cal(614) &amp;&amp;6·vtl6

.,

grltl, homo lnlirlor, """"'"

· milo. Allin '
loyo4o
Roii·Awoy ltdf rnchedulrl.
Bon Clothts, Nlnt-. Man
SAh4
Hotlwtr
Bolw- July 2·3, ..!lpm, 2 ........
chlidnn · ' tdull ololhlo)g'
Chtthlrt/Porltrl~-317-.
Syrocutt-Awtlc Hlllo.
'
.hlly 2nd, !lrd. Ad&lt;lloan
lawnhouoo, w. Lot• Bolly ~lom,tt:..::V ~
Clot'*, llortl
Witch tor o~g,., l'lnl 111 ....0
July 3/a In Mon:orvlllo On yoorw, quollty lllrfll tl ••~'t•
Rt.211, Mini lroll Hondo 70,
illlllc. clolllloll ........ · - ·
· ,And
a,....ot
YlfDoor, 11o~
And """"
Monl July 3nl ond 4111, Ctow Rood,
114-2M-1117.
Pon• OJ'. a.ehie.
c101hool114-ta--.
July 3n!o Flrocroclw 01 A Solo:
Cnift1, oummtf CklthH. ttame
y1rd lntoriof, Eto. lldwoll ltoidnoy !Argo
loulhorn High School, , Hill, Nul. Donl llloo lhll
'lllondoy, Frllloy, ond

Co..'*trs,Heat

IIDDLEPORT- II you want privocy n•i town with 1
graat vlow then wo Mvo .tho place lor you, On 1111 t.n
acrao you con build your dream home. Thltt II Wllt.r·
11\d otiCIIIc avlilebll.
.
$17,10G.
DOTT~E TURNER Broker...............................;..lh-5882
BRENDA JEFFERS ............: ............................... t02-305e
DARLINEBTEWART ...........................................882-e315
SANDY BUTCHER ..............................................882·5371
SHERYL WALTERS.J.ChMhlro............................3t7-o421
JERRY SPRADUNu ...............................13041812-3418

,.

Frjdoy, Jutr 3rd, 12-ljlrn.

Grondo, 814·245-52le.

July2,3nl. 11-4. Cuotom Modo

3" acrea with eloctricS4,2GO.
on

POMEROY- SL RL 124 ~
and Wllllr ond gao ovlilablo.

Sol• til s. Thlnl, Wod.
ThUf'l., Jul- 1·2, 10-4pm

carpor~

1111 A"ldonco).
July 1-2, t-? AI . 143, eoa :13111,
July 1 2, 3td, Four Fomlly: 1001 clothle, btdlf)I'Mdt toott,
matororclo, etc. 814-Jii!.nn
lhlrd Av•nue, G11Upoll1, Ohio.
July
1·!.. ._ ltrnlly, ......
July 1~th. Atln /Shine,_ w.
Patrtol · Cln Ctgo Rood, uump Oontkl ,.nch I'MkMnc., .....W
lruck, Boot, 11rot, Clolhoo, Etc. Ad., ~~~- Wll9hl-. ...

RUTLAND - BL RL 124 - A beautiful. brio~ nlnc:lo, 3
bodroomt, 1¥.- both home. Hae lull battmtnl ond
l,otllched 2 cor gorogo.
ASTEAL AT JUST PI,IOO

TRAIN FOR FOOD SERVICE JOBS
Cook1, workerl, and ntl~ nulled for.
,..tlul'llntl, lchool1, hoepll•ll, nuttlng .ltomH, .

Ju111, 2, ond 3nl.
All Yord Sl'" -

lo Pilei In
Advtnce. Druclh•: 1:OOpm tht
day btltore the .d t. to Nn

lng llems, Mofwl ll•rblra Rut·

ctEtTER - Co. Rd. 25 - On 2L acre• thio homo alto
wllo 2 being ftol the olhor 23 timbN. Hou11io gotgoOUt
with 3.bodroomo, big kilchln, dining room, and largo
livlnn room . Recently romodotod o111d lull baHI!IMI.

42% MORE COOKS NEEDED BY 2006

548 Grant Sti'Mt, Mkldt.port ,

Sl. RL 681 Weel • Gttlllpolll, OH
Baby 1111'111, . chlklr.n I """
clolhto, mloc.
\,,;,.....:,P.:;h;;:O;;;n:;e.;:4:4;8,.:8;5;85:;.,;ro:.r
,;.1.l:;::.:!.;:;31;.;5-;..;;12;;.;28;;..
_
_.~
Julr
1,
2.
3.
At:
17e3
Butovlllo
1,
Plko, ;.s. Chlldron'o, AduH
1
Clotnlng, ooby Bod, Ploy Pon, July 1·3, 324 ·-h Sl., llkl·
Slrallar, Walk•, C.U 0.CCNII· dloporl. Kklo clolhoo, mloc

roomo, Hu 3-4 bodroomo,' hugo llvtng room, big~
100m, front pon:h, newer garage and lo partly lo
.
Wei $30,000. .
Now $21,100:

•..

c1-.

Yord ttlo. Antlq-.
lur nhurt, !ott rnoN.. Firlt lime
2400 Ill. vornon Avt. Juno 2-3. ·

Don't Ml' t 'Ttt/1 Ontl Somtthlng
For Everyone. Frkt1y, July 3rcf,

Gallipolis, OH.

BURGUR FIRE
CLOSED CIRCUIT T.v.

PORTLAND - 8orrlngor Rldgo Rolli • Hoov'o a nice 3
bedroom homo with 2 full bathe with a whirlpool lUll In
one of them . a.autiful ook cabinet• In the kitchen ond a
vory largo living room . This homo hu lroe goa ond Iilii
on 2 acovs of all lt~~ol land.
For juol $50,000.

g -111,

l011 : Black IWhllt Cow Rtady
To C.ll, Morg~n C.ntlf, &amp;-17.
Roy Splret A01d Ar. . , VInton.

r--------~---"'!"'---...,1 Drlptlet,

IIDDLEPORT- Look altho prlco on thit 3 bedroom, 2
story home on a nice street. Has maintananco free aiding
and a st011go building.
Sti,OOO•

t•.·
3 d1j1.
to c11oooo

Glr~ge S.l1. Wtd.
Ooll colloclors, IOit
lrom.
Lofllllll,

lloworo. Only """" kklt
Fot.Htd: Sony rtdlo-cttMUt clolhoo. 2211-.., ""· 1-?
record•r el Tu-Endlt-W~ Ptrk lhuro. I Fri. I rnlln N. AI. 2.
Fridoy night. 304-178-2:110 ook Anllq• bodo, mtdlcl,. boclloo
tor Rfck.
old tlne, lott morw.
'

8:00A.M. To?

205 Norlh Second llvt.
Ml~dl~port, OH

400

Gorogo Solo. July 2, 3, 14 et
Mtplo Avo. Kwottno
At: Oolllpollo Dolly Tribune, 825 21121
hoolw,
bodopr-. dropoo &amp;
Third Avtnut, Glllipollt, Ohio.
1011 ot mlec.

5 Family: Sl.14t In Gtgt i-1 July

St. Rt. 588 West
446· 2411 or 1·800-3&amp;5·1221

Jli•

Block, Fourth Avenue, lnquht

2nd. 13 Wh ite Avtnut, 1-4.
Clotho, Odds, Ends, Toy•.

Toshiba • Drake • .
Unldtn • Panasonic
Soles·Service-Eilinlates

OFFICE 192·2886

stone

Found: Eyt Glan• On 700

AMIFII 8 Trock, Mil&lt;.

A•~

tnlklutot,

ltptt, cauntry • gHpM.
HCh. MMy ltMM to nurMrOUt
to mtnUon . W1tch fw e~g,.. .

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

lefen1ce Anil••le

1--..,....-----------Real Estate General

2110 Madison Av1.

Ohio.

"S•tllftttl•• Ouer11t"•"
20 Yrs. bp.

miiH aut 141 or 1e1 houst, right
fro"\Gagt Store.

Big, Hugo 4 fomlly gorogo oolo.
1, 2, 3, 4, 8. Dllferont . . . - h
Sit puppiH, mixed brMd, 3 aoy. 3 mlloo 0111 o4 llorldooltmtlt, 3 malt, &amp;14-940.2420.
on AI. 35. 3 milo Cnolo Rd.
10:00.1:00. Wolch lor olgns.
Smtll Bo11111o Dog, 814·367-o!OO. Clotoil liz•, boob, H Int.
looo-t, TW Woiahlo I
UIM'Icht frMltr to glvtawty
tneh-$50. Some .. fiwnllure,
nHd"s tome rep1lr, Donald B

Famltltt. College Inn Motel, Rio

Tromm Builder• 614·742·2321

Read the

okt puppiH
QIVIIWiy. 304-111·1814. ""
2

JNntH•

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING

985·3561

5 family : July 1·3rd lot• aood
thl~t. ek&gt;lh", ehtklran, llYMt.
ditht., tnitlquee, crane, 11

Sundor odHion- 1:oo,m Frldo)\
r odHion 10:00t.m.
Slturdly.

IREE ESTIMATE$

KEN'S IP IlNCE
SERVICE . '
992·5335 or

llpollo.

3 fomlly ytrd Nlo. J..y 1, 2, 13.

81H92·350f.

AU MAliS
lri•J II l1 Or We

Vtrd Salt: Reccoon Cra•k
Tr~lltr P""· 1M-4th. On RI.M1
Appro• . g 112 Mil" From Ga._

736-11250 or 305-5116-2203. Froo
Rental lntormetlon 305-5835588.

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

MICROWAVE OVEN
and VCR REPAIR

Yard S.lt: &amp;28 Fourth, Gil·

llpollo, Thuro I Fri, J,.y 2nd 1
3td.

Selections. CaH tciUon Ntl·
wortl U.S. And Ctntdt 1~

H11 C&lt;ltltr. 814-245·5112.

KENNY'S AUTO CENTER

30 VISITS FOR '30

CARPENTER SERVKE

'E LECTRONIC TECHNICIAN
CQMPUTER REPAIR TECHNICIAN
COMMUNICATION ELECTRONICS
TECHNICIAN

•

~L,

RACIIIE

YOUNG'S

Tri.County VOcational School

I

Poolt

GoU Packa!t:, :::lla"btt. Frn

6

FOREVER BRONZ
TANNING

6-2f.'e2·tln

The Adult Education Center

28 • 29 • 30 • 1 • '2 • 3 • 4.

In·

Fitch, call 814-08S.387l

6-30-1 mo. pd.

RWONAilr RMES '

coal ·

Sot.

.......

I

Grandpa 8188111

SMALL DOZER
WORK. DRIVEWAY
WORK !IIIII
LIMESTONE
DEliVERY SERVKE

CATERING .
: ,11.er1 yoitr own buetr-1 wllh wolnllllllln-btw.•l ond

PrlcaaGeell7~a
.
. J II Jitr ' ' "
.

IItie IWit W
BISSELL &amp; BURKE IF...., (lj!HJ
PARTS &amp; SERVKE
CONSTRUCTION
Mowers e Cllail Saws
...ew Homes ·
•Garages
e Weedeaters
•CoMplete
614·949-2804
Remodeling
"
Stop &amp; Compare •
• '"".
FllEE ESTIM4YES
!,
I
985·4473
G•
••
.
N·,
667·6.179
•
•

4ndy &amp; Chris,
I love you.
They took IW&amp;y
my home; they took
away my mon1y;
And they took ME
away from YOU. But
they can't take aw1y
my love for you.
Love,

CHARLIE'S

unlveralllH.

Moat Stores Open 24
'Holll'l Check Your

IACJII, OHIO

CALL (614) 446-9971 (KELLY)

JOB OPPORTUNITIES

set

RACINE MOWER
CUNIC

........... Mer

992·3838

Calli

12 oz. ·Cans

doarfO~.~tdoor

Included

Ttnnlli Court1, Puttlna Gretnt.

UCINE, OH.

ond TRACicHciE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES ond
TRAILER SITE~
LANOCLeARIN
DRIVEWAYBINSTAilED
UME810NE-TRUCKING
ffiEE ESTIMATES

BE JOB READY IN 12·18 MONTHS
ELECTRONIC SERVICING
nie Adult Education Center
· Tri-Counw Vocational School

12 Podt

OcMntront Condot,

Whlrlpoalo, Soun11, LlghiOd

949~2671

BULLDOZER BACKHOE

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
lceCrea~~~ ·

Rtntalt,

HouHk. .plng

WIIIUr Alii'!'

Tri.County Vocational School

Ground

DARWIN, OHIO

Rnldontloll Comlnon&gt;lol
FrM EltlmltH

'MORE EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
'HIGHER PAY
'MORE SECURITY

Call

Myr11t Stach Rnol1 Yac1lfon

USED RAilROAD TIES

Trimming &amp; Removal

The Adult Education Center

Fresh Beef

992-2269

992-5553

BROADEN YOUR.HORIZONS
ADD WELDING TO YOUR CURRENT
SKILLS I

--------

•FIREWOOD

OR TOLL rRU
J.800·841·007D

Shrub 1nd Tr•

PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OliO
IN THE MATER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounte 111d vouoho111
of the !allowing nomod
llduclarleo hove been ·ftlod
In lhe Probttll Court, Mlip
County, Ohio, lor approvll
ond MlllotnMt
ESTATE NO. 21275
Faurt_,th Annuli Aooaunl
of Wllllom J. Hobeteller,
Truo!M ollhe Truol Croot.d
by 118M Eighth of lhe Loot
Will Md Too lamoni of Unnle
B. Toylor, Doc1oood.
'ESTATE NO. 27221 Final ond Dle!rlbuUve
Accounl ol Rolph E.
Dougloo, Exoculor of _Jhe
Eolote ol Marth• M.
Dougl•, 01CIIIId
ESTATE NO. 26151 •
Flnol ond Dlotrlbullve
Account of Heleno F.
Googloln, Exoculrll of the
E11111 of Gordon H.
Coldwoll, Docuted.
ESTATE NO. 21312 •
Fino! oncl •. Diotr.lbu,Jivo
Acoounl ·or Delor• FrMk,
Exoculrlx ol the Eotele of
Harllo E. Fronk, Docutod.
ESTATE NO. 27322 • Final
ond DlotrlbudVI Account af
U.ry E. Ollull, El-lrlx of
'the Eotate of Cor! Jennlngo
Ollull, Docllllod.
ESTATE NO. 21211 Fino! ond Dillrlbullve
Account of Kennolh C.
Woloh, ExicoHor of ;lhl
E1tote of Adrienne Fronch,

•LIGHT HAULING

BILL SLACK

Lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.

Public Notice

.

NIW&amp;
FOR
•
&amp;MODUS
992•7013 or

949·2627 or
1·100·837·1460

(7) I, tb:

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
llEMOYAL

KERWOOD$
HOME

lEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

'

.JOB OPPORTUNITIES

Cahfornia Red

304-273-5555

114112111M.

COMMON PLEAB COURT

Public Notice

TUPPERS PLAINS :

JRII ESTIMATES
HAY£ RIJERIIKIS
lefor• 6 , ... Lono MtsMp
lhor 6 ,..i. 614-915-4110

Mory Hobto..tter, Clerk
Mligoi County
Commlulonwa

.
18t~l885414il)
(6128, 21, 30; (7) I, 2, 3, 5, 6

:

Whatever ft takes.

Ca•loupe

·• Russeil Cline will celebrate his
.:: 8~t.h birthday Sawrday Bl t.he home
• of his daullhter, Grace Holsin$er,
. .success Road, near~ PlainS, '
•. o There will be a
uct in·
1.. ::'niJ!i at noon. Prien and retauves
arc invited to help him celebrate.

I

PUBUCNOncE
The Boord ol Truot- "'
Oronge Townohlp will hoi&lt;J o
. Public Hearing July 6 al
6:30 p.m. ollhe home olthl
clork, Patricio Calowoy lor
tho Budget of Orongo
Townahlp lor 163. Aegulor
milling will aloo bo conducted al thle time.
Plltrlcla.t:olawoy,

,.,..

BANKEONE.

:~85th ~irthday
.iCelebration
..

Public Notice

SliO,OOO.OO.

,.,..,I
r..•

INTERIOR &amp; EXTERIOR

Public Notice

i

&amp; Savings Company

:·Family gathers
- · Larry Badgley, Bend, Oregon,
: :spent Father's Day weekend with
.. his parents, Ralph and Dorothy
Badgley and a family picnic was
· ·held Sunday at Star Mill Park in
· Racine.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
· Ralph Badgley. Mr. and Mrs. Bill
. Hill Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hill Jr.,
~ Matthew, Mr. and Mrs.' Jeff Hill,
.. Jordan and Kevin, Mr. and Mrs.
'Tim Hill, Jeremy and Jt.\5ica, Mrs.
• Ora Hill, all of Racine; Mr. and
· Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner, East Letart,
• W.Va., Mr. and Mrs . Robert
: Hysell, Syracuse; Mrs. Catherine
· Hysell, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Simpson, Baltimore; Mr. and
Mrs. Darin Makarius and Kellie,
·Amanda; Mr. and Mrs. Steve Bad·
~ · glcy. Amy and a friend, Columbus;
•: .Mrs. Pam Trammel and Tracy,
· ·Columbus.

- 111 u, Do 11 for

•

4'h OF JU·LY
OUT SPECIALS

•

&amp;CO.
"T"'• n..,. 0.1 01

being named Most Dedicated Student in marketing education at
Meigs High School for the 1991·92 year.

: POMEROY

Millwood, W.Va.

right, r~cei.ves congratula·

CONGRATULATED • Josh

lions from Dick Warner, store manager or Kroger m Pomeroy, for

,..

Rt. 2

Call 614-992-6637
St. Rt.7
Cheshire, OH.

11141112-2411
16141 112-6575

LEGION ANNEX
MIDDLEPORT. OH .
FREE TO PUBLIC

:

VBS slated

SING

12 NOON

,.

Qu.allty
Stone Co.
SIZEO\UMESTONE
FOR SALE

Truck•
T111ctor ·TI'IIIIere
HoUIII
Mobile Hoinle
Equipment Cl81ned &amp;
Degreeeed
FREE ES71MATES
45765 Flatwoodo RDIICI
Pomoray, Ohio 457U

r.

\.

*""

�.:

'

·14-The Dan Sentinel

MiddlepOrt .

w dnesday, Jul

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· SNAFU® by Bruce
. . Beattie

Pomeroy,

.

•

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Furnished
.Rooms

KIT 'N' CARLYLE®.by Larry Wrlg t

Motorcycles ·

Wanted to Rent
or 3 bodroorn

Public Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

8

Full-nmt Babytlllor Noodod,
Rtl«tnc" ·Atqulrtd. 614--446-

Rick Poarsan Auction Company,

8i24.

full time •uct1on11r, ~omplltt
JOBS AVAILABLE
1ucUon
"rv~t.
UcenHd (Salt rill r1ng11 bel:wun · $50-

IJ66,011io 1 Will Vlrglnlo, 304- $385 WHkly) Full or Po~·Timo.
Duo lo lht high coot ol factory

• nwm.
9

lpactl,

Wanted to Buy

Boou: Rollgio.., ~lllrolcol, &amp;
Novo!. llou9ht """ Sold. No
Poparboc:ko. Prompt .Ropty;
SAS£ .Thoophlluo, lox 731, Gil·
llpollo, Ollio 4531.
Old mtrbltl, top, comic booll.t,
llntll'nli, plcturn and fumltutl,
Ooby llo~ln , 114-912.11141.
Stondlng nmtlor, C.n Stort lm·
modlltofy.lt+:JII.IIIO&amp;.
Slondlng tlmbor, wiU pay lair
priceo, coli Jony Runyon, 614992-2117.
Uoed llollill Homoo, Coli 6144441-41171.
Uoed oalol, good cond, oponod
or unoponocl, 304-162-2079.
WaNed To Buy: JWik Aut01

With or WHhout Motoro. C.tt
Lorry U¥1fy. l14o316-9303.
Top Prlcll Pold: All Old U.S.
· COint. Gotd Rings, Sliver Colna.
' Gold Colno. II.T.S. Coin ShOji,
' 15111cond Avenue, Galllpollt.

Employment Services
11

iniiM'Inct,

PI"'• can ave thouundl of
dolloro In prcduc:llon "'"" wllh

F.!

IIHmbllng very tlmplt
tor thlm.

Uct• .. dtorril

pee: I skill• '\r experience not
nMdld becauM lnetructloM
and mMerialt ,,. Mnt to you.

Af1or you complo1t work, oond
It bock lor payment. The mort
wortc you do, the mora you tam.
Jull 20-45 mlnul11 o doy WOft&lt;.
lng II home, you CM Mm 101M

Y1fJ lmproulvo · Kroger
Publlthing hal 1 · Hating of 1
vtrlety or dttt.rent worlc. thtt

suha bOth men and women.
of Ill, you work whon IOU
wtnt. !Ont compony It paying
$342.00 por lo - b t i
olmplo pllnt ~-1 For moro
lnlor-lon ond o FREE lilting
o f - 10 c0111ponkll-ntty
hiring, writt to: Krogor Publlol!!!lg, 309 Lo4hrop· 11. OHIIH,
Tounton, MA. 02110. K~r
Publlthlng noqul,. $UO
1or pootoao ond hlftdltna 1or
llo41ng. Orilo10 con nat bo lHIId
without - · ond handling.
-3-Cdlyo.
Phormoclot, . Wotl VI'IJinll or
Oltlo
- . Locollon:
-·
WY. 1
Hou,.;
4NO, Moncfoy.

Frkloy. Solory: tao,OOO P!U1 2111o

Help Wanted

net pfoftl of tM air 111 Aell*'tllbllhloo: porlorm oH dulloo,
cuotomorlty porl .. mod lw ant
In ouch poolllon. . Pringo
bontllto: hoooMol ...~,
- pafcl vocot!on, pa10
holldoyo, dlyo paid lor continuoducotlon. ContiCI: Kim
'AYOI4' ALLAAEAS!SIIIroyour Ing
Willmonlo'ld.
limo lrilh ... You'll iovo tho :104-TIU333. 304-713-11515 or
company.,.., 112-6351.
Phlrmoclal· WVA or Ollio
AU8TRAUA WANTS YOU
ncenee. Locltlon-M1eon, WV.
Exce81nt
Ply,
lantfits, 4NO houro llon..fri. tao,ooo
Tro,._tlllon, · 4VT·U2-41'17,
Ell. m. lll.m.·IGfl.m. Toll Ptr!onn
piUI 25% oil
notdullol
""''" of
- - ··
cuttomorlty
Rolu.-.
porlomtod by ono In ouch pollAYOI4 I Aft A101o I Shlnor lion. Fllngo bontlf1o: holpltol
IMUranca, 2 weeka pelcf VICI•
Spooro, ~~1421.
lion, paid holldlyo, doyo paid
Bobyolllor
ond
light lor continuing odueollon. Conh0U1ei!Mper tar a 8 and 12"yr. loci Kim Wlllmonioncl. 304old. R - roqulrod, 816· TI3otlll ... 304·7l'W233.
_ , ofter e:OOpm.
Port-Timo RN'o And LPN'o: It lnBobyolltor For Shift Work, t.,..ttd In A Polttlon Ta Utlllzt
RoiOI- Roqulnd. 114-441· Bolh Clinical And •n. .ment
Sklllt, Pltolt Slop By: Sctnlc
1545.
Hlllt Nurti~C.nter. Thlo
lobyotnlng In my home, .... OuoiRy Nu
Centor It
titled, reltrencM, 614-Mg..2610.
Lcc.ttod At
1 Buc:krtdgo
Rood, Bldwoll, Ohio, or Colli~
CoV1111ntTronoparl :
441-7150.
'School + llloo. OTR
"Min. Ago 23
Rlloclll And Mokl Excollonl
Pari Contiruc:tlon Workoro
"foam Poy 27-21 Coni•
-..For A l l -· 8onut,
!'ly 1~ Conlo
Pold Living And Tro ... ElopanMlloagl Bonuo Mllft
ooo. Colt tfowl 4117-414$-2140 Ext
"'I II Lo,ov.
1100, 11-8 EST.
~ng IUnloodlng IDoadhood
'Poldlno.
Rto Grande Pollee o..rtment
lo Accopllng Appllootfona For
; Ololodc
·-~Toclmlclln: Chollonglng Po~,Timt Rtlp, MUll Hovt:
' And Aowardlng Position AI Onlo Po- Olllcerl Trolnlll(l.
: h~·Timo Clinical Dlo4 Tach· Appllcollono llor 11 Plckod lfp
. nlclln In l.ong Tl&lt;n Coro. DutiH From W llondoy ThN Frldoy,
lncludo: Ooviloplng Nutritlonol AI Tho Rio Qronclo Munlclpol
Aooftlmonhl And Coro Plona. Building.
8omo Trovol Moy Bo Roqulrod.
Polonllll For Ful~nmo. Apply In Sot Tho Country And Gil Pold
Ptraon Or Send Rnumt To: For HI Pllriol 0111&lt;8 Ouollty
Scenic Hlllt Nunlng C.nttr,l11 Truck Drl- Trolnlng In Only 8
Buck Ridge Rood, Bldwall, OH WHkll C.H 1.-.:116-1150.
Flntne111
Alliltance
For
. 45814.
Ouolltlod Appllconto.

i"

Drlvera Qo To Work lmmeditttty

Roodnmner Olotribullon S.r·
vk:ll, Inc. TN-1.eoo.444-6147.

TX·1o800-285-8287 11-800-&amp;77·
5o411 Compollllvo Poy Now Con·
v.ntkMullt
Ntc~tlon

EO£.
·; 1Jo1Woa

lledlc1l
IDtntal
Etc.. Sign On Bonut

Toldng oppllcollona lor cortlllod
nur~lng aultttnt 11 1M Chamber ol CommorcaiEconomlc
Oov. Olllco, 306 Moln St. Wod
July 1 !rom 1:00PM 1111 5:00PM.
Apptr In poroon wl...tl!lcollon
l kflntillcllion. Plea• dlrKt
phon~

ctlll ta Rodney 1•11 at

SituatiOn
Wanted

-

Rllroln
Now!IISoUihlilltm
luolnMO Colllgo, Sor!na Vollor 4 bodroom, 2 bal
Pl-. Coli Todly, 114-441-431711 St, 1350. MO, rat l
Roglolttttlon -~2MB.
1728,

For ron!, 2 IR houoo, bki yord,
nlco nolghbol'hood. 304'41~
.
WIH lobyllt In My Homo. Fon- 1213.
ced l.n Ploy Aroo. Rtloroncot
Avlltoble. Roclnor AIM. Coli -42 Mobile Homes
81+241887.
-·
Gootgeo P~oblt S.wmlll, dan~
hiU4 your toao to tho mill lull

coii:IOW~It57.

10 Trlolt Ploy Ytndlng llochlnoo

With locations, lnnatment R•
12
Column SAlek Machln11 Whh

qulrod $4,023. 10 Mini

Locollont. lnvootmont Roqulrod
se,023. For lnlonnotlon C.ll 1·
800 151 8018.
Arnerlcl'a Finnl Lag Homt

llonuloclurt&lt; Ouollty
Wholloallll. Elm Eloctlllnt
Profit. Full Dr Port·Timt.
Lllollmo WoOTtnty. C.ll llr.
.!onto For Froo Ooolor Into. 1·
1100-321-5647 Old Tlmtr Log
· IlL Julltl, TN
Homt

IMpedort

Making

$1~1 000 In Your Aroo. Slo~
lloOI~Ioy Nowl own Your

lnopocllan BuolLow Cool Trolnlng And
Supplleo , Appro1lmo1tly $2,500.
Sl•r!·Up. 1-100.775-IJNET.
Mokl
$1,500
Wooklyl
.. Houttwlthing.. ln11Ncilonal
Yldto And Bualn011 Pion Avail·
lb ... Fr.. lntormaUon. Power·
wath, 1011 Bayview O¥tr1ook,
Stallard, VA225.14, 703-7:10-3581.
Vending Route: Local. We H.v1
The Newtl1 Machine~, M1klng A
Nice St..dy Cuh Income. 1800o853o8363.
Wont T1nnlng Btdt, Ntw Com.
mericti·Home Unit•
From
$199.00. Limps, Lotlont, Accneorltt. Monthly P1yment1 Low
AI $18.00 C.ll Todly Now Frot
ColorCololog.1.1Q0.22842112.
Own

noa

Real Estate

31 Homes lor Sale
297 Kottoy Dr., Golllpollo, Ohio

45831, Tolophont: 114-441-~1,
PriQ: $52,000.00. U¥1ng Room,
J hdroomt, Ftmlly Room, 1
And 112 Bathroom•

1 C.r

r.

=

=rr~m ~ "rt...~~~

,

for Rent

12 1 15, 2 bedroom, CA 1nd
heat, dl1n and quilt, In
.countrr. Lorge lot, S250/mc. Rol.

lllot Pouto'o Doy eo.. C.nltr. ond dip. roqulrod, 814 14W288.
S.fl, aHordable, chlldcalw. ~
I o.m. • '1 :30 p.m. Agoo 2llo10. 14d0 2 lr, 1 mil• Soulh ol
llfoN, 1ft11 IChool. Drop..lnt Eurokl, on SL 111.7. No polo,
wolcomo. 114-446-8224. Now In· !Oior-. 114-ZIHOII.
fanl Toddle.: Cart, 114-44M227.
2 lodroom Fum-. · AC,
$210111onlh. Roloronoo, Oopotlt
Roqukod. No Polo, Wolor Sowor
Ftnancial
Pold, In Chy. 814 441 31ft Anor
8:00p.m.
2 8 A lurnlohtd or unlumlthod.
21
Business
Coblo, olr. Ovtriooltlng Ohio
River, Ktnauga. Clean I quilt.
Opponunlty
Fottl&lt;'t Mobllo Homt park. 614·
INOTlCEI
441-1102.
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHINQ CO.
r.commenda that you do butJ. 2 BA 11'1111• In country. · 1200
wllh pooplt you knowL ond month. 5200 dlpotlt. 2 mllll
NOT to""" m-r 1"'-n tht !rom Point Pl-nl. 304-137·
mill until yau hava lnvntTgated 2010.
tho oHorlng.
For Rent-2 BR trailer on 588.
$$ Dill For Dott110 $$ Rocolvlng Hou..-412 Lewla St. Pt Pl•a ..nt.
Poymonll 01 RHI Eliott? Wo 2 rooma, 1200 OhJo St. 304-475Poy lion For Canlroctollruot 5'1011.
Ooodo. Coli Now!! Sldp Fou El
AI1-I00-637-36n
44
Apanment

•ort.

Colli--·

e14 Vllnd
p. 304-451-

18 Wanted to Do

KIMBERLY QUALITY CARE . 1·
800-4:17-1811 ONLY:
Tho untmoto Monty Moklng Mochlno. Tho Ultlmoto Fundrololng
Tool lo Crolllng HllftC!iodJ 01
Now Opponunftlot ~_!f · In·
crodlbly
High
lnNotlonWidt. Wo A10 Swompad.

-On •.

-.

Training

Qorogo, lrlck Front Wfth Codor
Siding . .
Team Pay 2f V2 C.nta Per Mlle.
Attention Vlttl'llnt: Home Loant
Medk:tVLife IMurance. lllad·
To
Purdtooo Or Rollnonco • lngNnloldlng
Poy.
Purehtooo- Rotlnoncoo Up
Layover/Slop Pay. Stltllitt
to 1144,000.00 Phon• Cllrenct
eommunle1tlona.
Exct lltnl
Phllllpo Mo~gogo Compony, 1·
BonoiN I Bon.. Pocklgo.ll You
81H84-102t.
Haw. 1 Ynr OTA Experltnct,
Wt
Urgently
HMcl
lntllll;tnt,
Cloln IIVR &amp; Ago 23. Call Oodlcotod Poopll With A Hood BEAUTIFUL HOUS£ FOR SALE
Historical A.ru Corn., lo1 · ·8'16
Todoylt.IQ0.321·2084.
To lloko A Lot 01 Monty. Mlln St Pl. ~unt, W. Vt.
Foderlt M"'lc 1.1Q0.318o8U5 24 Compleltly Reno.,.ted: 2 Full
~voro Wantod. U.S. Xprall,
Inc. Starting T11m Pay 28 1!2 Hour Info.
Bolho, 3 Lorge lodrocmo, Now
Ctnt Per MOt. All Conventlont l
HVAC, Ntw C.rt&gt;OI. Avolloblo
Truck
Drlvlf"',
U
JOOO
Slgn..On
f._., S.t~lltt Communications. Bonut For Sam, Outlllitd Junt 15 114~5.
MeclatW.IIt
Insurance.
With I Montht OTR Ex· Colllol NC, 5 IIIIH to OcNn,
Loyovorllroakdown Poy. Aoolg· Drivtrt
nod Troc1oro. If You Hovo 1 Yoor porllnco. Tultlon.frM Trolnlng at!r Condoo, $125,000 With
For lntxporllncoCI Elovotor
8ooutllul Goi!W\g
OTR Exporltnct. Claan MVR &amp; Avolllbll
~vtn. Coli Todlyl Com Trono Community.
Membership
Minimum Ago 23. Coil Vanguard Inc.
loi00-7511-8180,
Oopl.
A-361.
Country Club, Low Par.mtnta.
Maneaement Service Todtyl 1·
1100-321-2084.
Wattreu mu.. be expetltnctd, Uu Vaurnlt Or Rtnl Br ckllnd•
opplr
In po,..., Mooon Fomlly lng 1-800-438-3006.
·: ·· Orlvtrl Wtntlld: F11tbed Ex·
Rill,
Mooon,
WV.
ooritnco
Pold
WHkll
FORECLOSED ' REPO Homot.
loododii!mply Milot, Llfo/HtoHh W1nl:ed: man or couple Ia tlay Solow lllrlcot Valut. Fontoollc
ln...,.nct,
Bom.tl;.
Alder full tlmt every-other WMII with Sllvlngt. Your ArM. 1-805-062·
Progrtm. Advanced Ol'tlrlbutlon &amp;a roo• old mon, 114-141-2308 8000 '&amp;t. H-1105 For Curr1nt
Ull.
SyoltmL 1.1Q0.3e4·1047, 24 or 114-115-3151ofter 2pm,
Hou,., , Oor• WHk.
WANTEO: PI~·Time Potlllono Rt. 110 North, 3 BR, llkt ntW
Drivers: Do You' "Wtnl Bttttr AvaUable At A Community condition, 138,000. Call tOf IP"
Poy~ Do You Wont Moro 111111?
Group Homl Far P.raons With polnlmtnt 114416-11115 or 311Thin Coli J.B, Hunt 1o800.2JB· Oovolopmonlol otoobllllloo In 8711.
'
HUNT EOE/8ubjtcl To Drug lldwoll. Houro' 22 Hrs /Wk, Two Story Whitt Frame, 3 Br, All'
SCrotn.
lo.rn-41p.m., . Or
10:301.m.· AppllancH, Mulbtrry Stroot,
8:30p.m,, (AotaiHI Sol; ll.m.• Ch""lro, 114-317-7237.
~v.,.: KLL!o', Inc. Clnclnnall
Terminal ll AGdlng Equipment lfl.m. Or 1·11r,.m. (Rolllit I Sun;
Wolk y Stoll -lng; Dr 32 Mobile Homes
And Long HI.ul Drlmo · Wllh Z-Hour
Recent lrKIOf Trailer Ex• AI OlhoiWitt SCheclulld. High
porienco. c.il 1.1Q0.1125-855f, School Oogroo, Votld Orlvt&lt;'t
lor Sale
L - And Qood Driving
llondoy·Mdly,
Rocont, Good Comrnunlcollon 1ZX61 On 1.&amp;25 Acrot Addllon
£Jperltnctil41111 bod drlvoro tO&lt; And
.orgonlullon
Sldllt, Plkl, Nowly Rtmcdtlod, Tolol
lnl-llt -Ilion,. oppro1 Punctuot And Ablo To Wolf1 AI Eltclllc, $1&amp;,500, Nogotlonoblt,
soo mill rldln, ...ay h1ul, Poll 01 A loam Aoqulrod; Ex· 81+448-3088 Anor &amp;p.m.
home mo.t weektndt, lop PlY • ........, Woll1l!'fl With Porsano
gocd oqul_,., Mull be 25rro Wlllt llontol Rot..-dotlon And 14JI10 1i14 Kerwood 3br Under·
13,800 Good ConciUon
of ago wllh 3 111 vorlllobto OTR Dlutlapmtnlal
Dlublllll• olnnlng
NOoclo Somo Ropolr. 11+
01porltnca wllh COL llconoo, ...........,. Bollry: $4.50 IHr, To •ut
245-8171. ... ~
ootid driving roconl l work hlo·
Bond R-me To Cocllll
torr. Mull patt rood toot and laller, P.O. Bo1 104, Jacbon,
drug ocr-. C.l 100-2:28-5851 OH -l...f!!odllnt For Ai&gt;' 14x70 exc cond, :a bldroomt on
or!vott ..,., mo;:e~llnctO,
lor illllllt.
Qrcwa,
pllconlo: Equol Opporo loti of txt~
tun11y
Entjlloyor.
$14,500.
:ICM.f'll
.
llp~rlenoad technic lin Mldtd,
roovmo to: lo1 1113, Wonltd: To Aldo &amp; 'l'nlln 118:1 Wlndoor 141711, 2 botf.
,..,_, Ohio or coli 8-2· OuMor
Horooo, Po~·llmo l
21JIIIor tppolnlmtnl.
CIA, Ioiii - · undtr~. Mutt Hl'lll roornt,
nnlng, mra by Zlmmor eor..
11
........
114
211
1122.
120
IIWall&lt;f
wood porch, IJ120
Frllndty Por11eo Hot
Op uJxis Hr Demonetrltcn. WI'LL MY YOU TolYpt No- llumn owning a
AM. •ddrnnn PM Homtl
NO
No
- 1100.00
Chollll.
.....,. CornmAnd
Por IGOO. C.U 1 - Ill
.......... Two Cllllloai. 111M !tt.ll
llln/llvrul 0&lt; wood, -ry1folng ... concl,
0¥11 100 ...... C.tl '--*' Wrll•: PASSE • 331. 11111 • . Un- muol . ult lmmOdlltlly, ono
4171.
•
awl'lll', 304.f.l75-1148.
·
DOinwl'- ..\ N. Aui'Ortl, 1L 10142.
WoniOCI. ·SOuthWIII
llalor FroiGIII. Inc. Stoning

.

Household
Goods

Rentals

Roooonllbio Aoomalt Noodod: 41 Houses for Rent
Atnl $150/llo, PIUI 112 Ulllltllt,
~1droom
In PomtroY,
614-3118-~, BtiOIO 1:30p.m. 2
$250/mo. piUI Ulllhlll; dtpotH
814-3118-11831 Afttr 1:30p.m.
ond ,.,.,..... roqulrod, 614992-7503.
14
Business

Worklr'l

compenuUon, and ou,., compa~nv
tXpel"llM, m1ny com·

51

.

3 Pc. Ll¥fng Room Suitt, Couch,
Choir, Collto T-, Ch111mon
lvo B-n Ttngorlno, 11+44601111.
.
0000 US£0 APPLIANCES
Woohlro•. d,.,.... rtlllgoroton,
rongoo. ""IIIII" Appllonctt, 18
Vlno Stroot, Coli 814-44t-73N, 1·
800..-34- ·
~l~.f.ryor, 810tn. $71.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Compltlt homt lu~e:
Hou10: M~i&gt;ollal, 1-1. 61
0322, s mllot out lullvtllo Rd.
Froo Dotlvtry.

AUCTION :w~~NITURE. 12
Olivo St., Qolllpotlo. Now l Uoed
lumlturo, hloloro, Wtotom &amp;
Wolf1 boolt. 814-441-3181.
VI'RA FURNITURE
.

114-441-31511

Rtni·2.0Wn
Woohor And Oryor $17.611 W•lc.
Bunk Bod Complo4t, se.21
WHk, 4 Dftwor Clttol 13.12
WHk, Rocllnt&lt; 11.24 Wttk.
Solo And Choir $10.38 Wuk.
CASH
AND
CARRY
•
Aolrlatrolo10 Slortlna A1 nee,
R~~eUO.ra $141, 2d funk Beda,
Ill, Dlntllo Sot With 4 Pilddod
Cholro $121. OPEN: llondoy
ThrU Soturdly tA.M. To IIP.II.
~ On 8uildoy. LOCATED: 4
Mlloo Oft ROUit 7 On Routo 141,
In Conttntry, 114 Milt On Un·
cotn Plkl.

1112 BA unlumlohld opanmont,
downtown QoiUpollt. Ak con·
dlt-,
wllor~rooh
paid.
0.0.11 &amp; ,.fartncn required.
Coli 114-441-3302 or 114-4418077 lftl&lt; tpm.
1 bodroom opt, gooCt locollon,
101 Sixth a lloln St. Nowly
ramoc:lt"d with new tppHanell.

2 ltdrooma, Upatalra Apart·
m•nl, Unft.lmlst.d, No Pels.

11+441-21113.
2 IR apartmtn11 In Mlddltport,
newly remodeled, low utllltlu,
no J*t: -' S220 per month,

depoalt req1.1lr.d, 614-992-23&amp;1
do yo
2bdrm. oplo., Ioiii tloclrlc, II&gt;'
plltnctt lumlthod, loundry
room locllltllo, clott to ochool
In town. AppUcatlona IVIillblt
11: Vlllogo Grotn Aptt. 140 or
coll614.f82o37tt EOH.
2br Upttalra Duplex, Vine
Street, Htu River, GalllpoUt,
01110111, Good Nolghborhood, fl.
8 Wo1or Pold, 114-440·24te, 114441-3114i .
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Sooro 30' 1nc1t holo lin
vorl~~:t•tclo $100'. or boo1 of.
lao 1
-2 .

Suppllea
Block, brick, olpto, wl""
llnloll, tic. Cloiodl Win·
ton, 'Rio GrMdt, OH Coli 41+
241-1121.

'&lt;ELLIN6 FOR ?

Ford Tltundorblrcl Good
Condition, 1500. 11+3ej:0,31.

1m Ford :114 ton' truck. utltny
body, f'IOOOi 1180 CUIIUI,
10bUift tnglnt, ohlpo,
$1100; INI Nltoan Sontro, IX•
ctlltnt condition, $2100; 11+
9924111 . .

;.

Merchandise

Ll ~WJ

...'"

ro fH£ oru~ .·

7:00

-go.

Farm Suppltrs
&amp; Ltvestock

Required.

814-441-t51e.
Gl'ttciout living. 1 1nd 2 bedroom ape.rtmen\1 11 Village
Manor ·
and
RIYtrlldt
AparlrMn1t In Mkldlepon. From

61 Farm Equlpl)1ent

$11111. Coli 414-m -7787. EOH.

1•

a•

Toron110, t'f4.446.

1NI,I14 Ul 1070.

-

saoo

Iuick R11ill. Uko , _,
mlllo. 304-471-3713,

INII Grond Am, Mlllt,
2dr, Laodtd, Ex..riOnt Condition, 114-448-4421.
1112 MO, b1oc1t1 c~mol
leolhor lntorlor, oN op11ono,
1,1114MI., rlaill lido clo111190,
$11,210; 1llllnflnMI 0.20, btlg.o
bolge itothlr lnlorlor, Ill op~~ 18,530111., front clomoge,
- ~ INS c-to, tiiYOW ill. . lollher lntorlor, 43,4111MI.,
minor right front clomogo,
1161011: 114-1141-2800 ilnlll llpln,
114-141-21144 oftorlpm.
For 8111: tm lntornotlonol
1100 TNCic, 404 l!!'fllno,
17,000 Mllla1 Wllh A ZO Cci. Fl.
Cobor Troon Compoolor, COltliCit :

Harokf GIOrae, 'Holzer

- 1 1 Cenlor, I~ 8341.

12 Trucks for Sale
1NJ Cl1o¥y Picfi.UII SlOp Sldt,

400 lmoll Btoa, 4 Sptid Ell·

co111n1 Condnton.
114 441100.

u,ooo. oao,

1111 c~ 414, l!odio 811ck,
R - T10no, I Hubo. $1,7115.
114-4*4141 Aftor I P.M. Or

Lwxury . Oceantrontl0cun¥1tw

ConciOio a Plolllc Soptlc
..,on•·, J.- Atrltlon Ttnkt. Ron
" EVIM Ent"Prl.-, Jackson, OH
to800-137·H21.
·
Couch, choir, coltot lobio, 2
llmpo, portob4o typowrllor,
Smltlt-Coronl. An11QUt -ng
mochlnt-01k
coblnot-Wftltt.
....., •ocd condition. 304-4~
....... r, •
4038.
Eloctrlc 3 - o d SCoolt10 I""
lii:..:..:.:IS;;/1:;=_::=-;_.:;;21-t:;:::IIZI
:;:ZI~.
I .._/Outdoor,
Ntw • Uoocl. Uk
;;- Th
Cltllro. lowmon't - r o
H.
lnl Mlddltport, Ohio, 1 614-441-7213, 1 - 4118144.
bod,_ lurnlohod ljl, dip "
rol, 304-112.:11H.
FREE INSTALLATION
Now Novtn 2 bodroom lurSWIIIIIING POOLS
nllhtd opt, clop a 111, S04-812· Only $711.00 INulllul Allovo
Ground 11ll31x4 Pool lncludot:
25611.
Flftt&lt; Docie, Fonot, Llddlro,
Etc. Don~ ltilovoll? Coli BPI
1o100+,11-1t23

$8000 llrm,114-112o34711.

roomJBalh,

Formol II ond Formoll H lroctoro. 11?'11 hoM ton Chivy
pickup. 304-I7fi.MI2.
Solo: forg- 2 lollam12"
Inch Plow, 1:121. 114-24WI50.
Itt CUir Troe101 Wllh Cui.........
l lllowr, .,, 3111110 After I
P.ll.
JO 3010 Troator Mowing llochlno Rokll lolorlll,7111; 100
Font With Qrtdor I odo I
Ollc, 13.310. • - edi
.
KUBOTA
. Soloo.Porlo lorvlao
HURST tRACTOR U.LU
21HP 4WO-; ZOHP4WD
11,111 A-7 N-, - f t L
1144'JIIoi1SI
~...

--

11112 GIIC lholl bod, dltooiU I
....
4 tpd.ltlltCI
4 ·-~
.... Good
coftdltloil.
good. $181.
304-

ia-3711

.,'

_,.truck.

1117 Ford R~r XLT, V-1,
IUto.L ~.PI, AC, llmfh ater.o,

:r..~c.m.=-·duol

SO-'oo·

S.IO truck.
~uol
-·
mlloo.,lhllp INCk.
• 304;1?1;-:;;;":::
.::::-:=::----;:-:-:-:--::-1
.
72 Clto¥y plcl1up. Y-1 IUio. Ex·
aoliorrt ...
*"7H0111.

r

;[:~

;•

(J).

7:3&amp;(1) Ianford. Son
1:00
IIJ.UniOIYid
Myater1t1 A lotllry tiCket con
game: a prisoner tries to
his Innocence. Stereo.

pr.ave

- ~ MOVIE: Flatcl1 (PG) (2:00)
11lG
Wonder YHII

(J).
Kevin contused by ltl8
Ia

did's reaction to the Plell!ar
' Bums tracelthe Statue of
mval In America.

.I

•ton.

l~e..~:"E;I

1r:J llg
P1,tioNewe C
lloiMr Jika Stereo.
1:01 !J) MOVIE: U1tle " - an
thl Prallle (2:00)
•·.

,

1111:1 fuH• lloo lluor, hlah
miioogo, , _ (IOOCI, 11700, 114-

Jo1l Too_ llg Or
¥Mit ct11n~

-1 . Any Kind! I
I7N27I Anytlmo.

87 Upholttary
===:::-=:::::::'!:::::::::-::~~
1117 Doclat Ia&amp; Y-1, lhorlbtd -..,·o Upholtt!!!ng oorvtc.
AT, P8 11'8, AM.fll ltoroo, ii !nt 111 CCMinly 1101 21 ,.ltro. Tho
112-1077.

/Roar Window, Bodllnor, R..,.
I .... ... Ec .. 300

~';1.

J

•••.

:

· ~-

on hand 10 o..,_ the

:a~!!I L

bM4 ill llln\llu,. UpiiOioltr!ng.
Coli 304-171-4154 lor lroo ..
llrnotot.

8

+AK

Vulnerable: North-South
·Dealer: South
Soutb

We, 1.

Nortb

Eon

Kenneth Konstam - known to his 1 1•
friends as "Konnie" - was a top Brit· • 4 NT
ish player who died in 1968. His major i 6 •

Pass
Pass
Pass

,.
5.
Pass

Pass
Pw
Pw

tournament victory was in the 1955
Opening lead: +Q
World Team Championship.
Konstam was also a successful rub- ·
ber-bridge player, as today's deal ·
shows. North's four-heart response is
normally treated as pre-emptive, ruffed the spade queen in hand. The di·
showing a good offensive hand lor amond
king was ruffed in the dummy
hearts but with liltle defense. Howev- and the club live was ruffed in hand.
er, Konstam clearly knew his part· That reduced everyone to lhree.cards;
ner's style.
North, East and South had only
West led the club queen. T~e normal trumps.
'
line Of play in SiK hearts is to lead the
Konstam
the heart jack. East
heart jack at trick two, planning to fi. won with theranqueen
had to lead
nesse if West plays low. As you see, away from his heart but
king.
slam
this line would not have worked. East and the lwo-game rubber The
had been
would have won two trump tricks.
Konstam, though , didn 't lead a won.
Why did Konstam play (ike this? Betrump at trick two. Instead, he cashed cause as soon as the dummy was ta·
his second top club. Next, declarer bled, East chuckled, "This is 1111e slam
played-off his A·K of spades; then -he you won't make, Konnle." At lhe end,
led a low diamond and finessed dum· though, . it was Konnie who was
my's jack. When that worked, Kon·
stam ruffed lhe spade jack in hand, smiling.
@.a, . . . .AIUI&amp;IIId ilL Ulk
played a diamond to dummy's ace and

'--- ----------J

Tbe World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

1:00 (2). IIJ lllnltkl Jerry
feels gul((y about keeping the
host otro up late. (R)

1 ldtal place
7 Eltrome

e Dootil Noww,
M.D. Doogle rHIIztlthe

13 MoaT painful
14 EYenlng .

Stereo.

Ill•

truth about btluty wlien he
IJirlllllbrarlan. IR) Stereo.

:~:·M.~RTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I-ON MANY T!Me5 '/(ERE YOLI

CALJ.ED 10 ~E PRINCH'li-L~

NINE TIMES.

(l5 1!J Hue, Long One ot

MY, A~'T 'We THE LITTU:.
600D'r" rv.o-eHCJ5e:i

Louisiana's most
controversial poiHical ligures
II profiled. (1 :30) 1J

OFFICl:iH~TE0A.

m• ~ . . •

tai~.:=,IPremtere) A
martla!-ar11 man SHkl

Information about his missing
son. Stereo.
0 MOVIE: IntO the
~00) Stereo. E;1

g

SNa

NOw

8

.

La"' KJng Uvtl
Sea~ and ~rs. lOng

•

11J Nlgllt Court Mac
tr111 to um extra money by
posing lor ~n underwear ad.
(R) Stereo. IJ
(I). (])
thevisHs
lou? Mona's mother

1:30 (2) •

'..·

TH' WEATHERMAN
SAYS WE GOT A
20 PERCENT
CHANCE
OF RAIN
TODAY,
MAW

THEN I BETTER GIT OUT
IDD rERCENT OF MY
POTS AN' PANS II

· 31 BetwHn
· C1n. end
llu
32 Rectnt(prel.)
33 Occupied a
banch
34 Origin
37 Lacerate
40 Hoi dog

d1111rH

15

Anowerto Pmloort Pturzll

unit

r.'~d

quarterbdck

Johnny-

holdtrt

16 Leoo
attrectiye
17 Long18 Eternally
(abbr.)
20 llldem't
counterpart
21 Something
1emerk1blt
(tl.)
2 3 - - my

41 Aclrttl
Frencla
43 Couplfl
45 Llka!y
46 WWIIIIU
47 Legendary
bird
48 Keyboard
lnsbumlftl
51 Lt~1syllable
or word
54 Thriller writer

brother' a
keeper?
24- llde
25 Architect Surlnllt
27 Ttalype
28 Eltctllcal

-Leonard

55 Put makeup
·on
56 Appeertd
57 lmpl,.t

r-

.DOWN

6 Befuddled

1 Frequent

12 Wdl•)
7 Ot high Inter·

2 Shoe part
3 Crow't
coulin
4 Fondle
.5 A roM- -

••t rat..

8 Drtsaup
8 ThOusand

10 Prayet
11 ObHflll1g
12 -cotta
18 Co!Mdlen
PhiHpt
22 Distant
planot
24 Silled
26 Blbllctl

·WIMJ··

and trlea to llbolltll Angela

f!rl Tony's plans.IA) Stereo.
iDIYklad
. 24Hoats
" - ' A Houte
Penny Moore
aild Jerry Ravlth nlustrate
the Tlltout or today' a
pranures and changes on
family l(fe. (0:30)
10:00 (J). IIJ Quantum Lup
Sam IMps Into the Ku KIUK
Klilr1 In an eflorllo S\!!P I
(R) Stereo. ~

w-+--f-+--f-+-~

leek at
34llmber

35 Punctual
{2 wds.)
36 Hare a moat

e

• • • • 41

.

38 CQ~~tlelaUon
38 Lodger

40

~ r::r••

11110unt
48 - .dt plume
50 Befort
52 Cut oil
53 Btloro Wtd.

illlfldt-9
With

.•...

a an ....

n.oo&lt;Jie·

1•

~~~-'=-

Ae
il'

I
B:ronlglt_t

··.

aonome

42 Belonging to

The

dressed , stamped envelope to Match· ate complications In a Significant
tradltlona and Changes or lite
BERNICE
maker , c/ o this newspaper, P.O. Box l tlonshlp. Don't do anything that ___.. _ 1
senior, Ppf" In lite '90s.
lhrow another Into a Iizzy.
BEDEOSOL 91428, Cleveland, OH 441D1-342B.
Stereoli.Itar
LEO (July 23-A"'• 22) Thta might not . AQUAIIIUS (hn. 20-Foll. 1111:1~~~~:~~~
be one of your more productive daya. Influences may hamper the cc
There's a chance you'll yield to your ollhlngl'yclll have your hellrt sot
Ill 7110 C1ub
Pat
Robllllan
concerns lor comfort rather 1han your ling donaloday. Find a place whlro
Inclinations toward lnduatrloulnOis. • can work In privata.
10:01 !J) MOVIE:' Llale Nou1t an
VtRQO (A"'. 23-ltpl. 22) You're not PISC:EI (FIIr. »MMrth
the Prairie: 11le Lui
likely lo create problems with trlcrr1ds appr-ont about a
I lnVIolvol-1
, ....... (2:00)
today, but, neverthelloa, dllll(lr... ) menttoday, It might be wise to
10:301!) (J) OIMII4MMnta and
menta are poiSible. Ktep your guard up · Instead at ]lfl'tiCIPIIIng. Use
Mr1lll A1ootc at ligends ·
In aoelal ancounttrl today.
ludgmerr\.
lurroundlng
the D!ltr1ct of
LIIIIA (Sept. 2J.0ct. D) Conii!'Uity AIIIIS (...,_11·April1el Strive to
Columbla'l11111itu11onl ll(vel
and perslstonc81re required lltCiort lor rtepOnllble todlty, l!tq!luH, 1!.you
.,.
a unlqua tour of the na1fon's
achieving objecllveatoctay. 11 you try to honor your c:ommttmonta, your stature ·
.
capftal. (0:30)
.'
take lhortcuts, the r-Ill C0U19 be In the IIYII of lhOH wllo love you could
: · ~artnershlpt which are hiSIIIy formed diHPpolnllng. •
be dlmlnllhetl.
·
0 lallllal Tortlgltt
lgllt not 1 tand the tnt ol time I~ the SC:OIIPIO (Ool, llol-floot. D) Although TAUIIUI (April..., 101 Poor Judg·
year ahead. However, you could be very you are Ultially qUite prltCIIcal , today'a mentor VIlli- on your beltiH could
!I&gt;• • •
- .$1CCH&amp;Iulln .Oio ollorlt.
tdeu aren't apt to bt ot muclt use to . couH yOtrr pla111 to go .wry today.
M .. .CANCER (JUM 21..1uiJ 221 Basically,
you· they might be predicated upon lr· Tftlntc thlngo through carefully, and be
(%) ...........
•
• 1 you're not a belligerent lndl¥1dual, but' rall~nallhlnklng.
explicit reloylng Information to
; " an emotional situation might get lhl SAQITTAIIIUI (Not. D-Ote. 21) In • oltten.
ArseniQ
Hal
Stereo.
.
·
'
belt of you todl)'. and you may let purchaMt you make today, you mlghl Ql. . . !Mer 21.,.,. :10) In order to
Mew ...........
- ·aomeone toavelt. Trying to patch up a · iuccumb to the lutlon ra1her thin lite gratify lmpulotwe dlalrte toefl)', there's
Cnolr
and ChaM
brolcen romonce? The Astra-Graph substance. Don't be dazzled by lite a ehanct you might go ovetbOard and
lparllCI""r •
_,Matchmaker can help you understand piCkaglng. Find out *hll'l .ln i~ boK. acqulrt tomllhlng tlt•t could cause
;·•;;what 10 ~ 0 to make the · relatlonthlp CAPRICOIIM (Dec. 22......._ 11) Erratic buyer'a remone l•ter.
· ~· work. Mall $2 plus 1 long, self·ad• behavior 01! your part toefl)' could ere-

.28 mtiiUrl
Fulura

U .Bs.'·aum

(I)
Clvtl Wara Ell
Lavlnlon lnnount:ll hll
tntent1ort1 10 tnl!l)'~
q_-.,. (R) Stereo.

..

-

30 Pu11nalde

=(J).

'E ,

PEMD

YOSJVAJZKSIPO,

YOHZDLESKitf'O

EK

GUDO

E

liN ."

KUEOTR

f'EMD

TJ
~

GZ ·.IOT . '
LDOOER
VIPf'OZ .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The hipplool mloor on oa~h It the man who
I t - up every !rttnd hi can make." - Robert Emmet ShetWOQd.

e om "NEA. ....

1

'.

)

·.

By Phillip Alder

.

.Jl09 7 51
tK62

ManiaC Mlinllon Stereo.

. \

'

SO)JTH

+AK

Ruin

The Olivia'T.'Itify m,et1
Ski11111(LMW glrlfrllnd. (A)
Stereo. ~
•.

·--·
Do¥1o
Sow- voc
~let,
Ota~ Cretlri Rd. Partt, lup-

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
~. No
'tia fiord Eoollnt Van 1..110, Tao Uttte. In

..... *'f~2211.

1:30(1)• !l&gt;e Orow'!.l! Palnl
The ghost of Maggio I did II

Sollie Tonic Pumping SliDeallllo
Co. ROM EVANS EHTERP•IS£8,
Jtoklon, OH t-.a37-ela.

85 General HauR'ng
, w. eo lill!4l!tl Artytt...,

E: Racing With

the Moon (PG) (2:00)

'Exports~~ltlWork
me.

::-::--"':'":'~':""-'""

Howle (0:30)

!I)).

Rolllblo Wollpoptring, CommtrCIII And Rotldonllol.
'Froo Ellimoloo

~.Jr'rlcll, WVGOO;IOt,

C
I!J &amp;1Atue or Ulfetly Ken

family. (A) Stereo.
II)

JET
·
Alrotlon lloloro, ropolrod. Now
• I'Mulll motoro In lloclc, RON
EVAHS, JACKSON, OH. 1 137oN21.

R_.dtnllol or OOhhhotolll
wlrh., MW llrVIce or f'IPIIra.
Motltr •U - ofocl~cltn.

tQ97U
+QJI098

aa.allerstereo.

lnlorlor Pii'ntlll(l. Will Glvo t:pw
Bid. UcoMod.lll-245-51114.

Electrical' &amp; .
Refrigeration

...

EAST
+tOB2
.KQ6
+ 10 s 5
+762

'I Fllldly

.........."

1

diUont, Roofl, Dlckt, Skiing
And All 01 Ellorlor ~nd

84

ALDER

WEST

+984

slam
1:=r!t-r:;1 . The
that couldn't make

J.W. Conotruc:tlon. Room Ad·

'448-3888

• A832
t AJ
+ 5 43

TOitlgllt

(J)!&gt;tereo.
•

odhlorit 1nd lnlortor romcdol
lng,114-112-2111.

Fourth ond Pint
~:~Ohio

PHILLIP

Ill.

~1-tl

NORTH

• QJ 7 3

7:30~~
iiiJ~nlyl E;l

Home repair tnd ft1111nttn.nct,
roollng, oldlng, gutttiO, room

Co~or't Plumbing

BRIDGE

IJITiteWallona

44Hat.

•

111• 11J Wheel OIFottuno

7:05(1) Bevetly 1m lin

H- Romodoltni, VInyl Slcll!!g,
And Ov-ng. 30 YNro EJ.
porllncod. Froo Eollmotql 814-

: ...
Club Cob, PBI
PSI Alii Fll, fSIIO.
wl
llghttd'
boonto, now
tOol boll, w/ tnrckl I
1-2041 ·or 114Ml-2m.

$CRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Velure · Thumb · Party · Gentle · BETTER
Ahyp&lt;?Chondriac woman announced to her daughter,
"I'm thtnking ol changing doctors. I've been with the
same one for 40 years and I'm not a bit BETIER!"

::z::::-r

Phono:814-~ .

t;;t:..':a.::'ton~~ -82--P-Iu-m'""b-1-ng_&amp;_ _
Ford-~
Heating
crun:lIll-, .... -

Complete the chuckle quoted

by f 1lling in the min ing wor ds
I I 1
,__,__..._...__...__.__. you develop from step No . 3 b elo w.

E~rntTonlgM

lmprovtmtnta:

10!'-

_r.,..-;1 Q

I I

5

LT··With
!l::t='E;I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondMionol Mlttlmo · guoron·
Itt. Local rtftrtncM tumllhtd.
FIH olllmolll. Coli cotloct 1·
114-237-048t, doy or • night.
Rogoro Booomont Wolorproollng,

plleo, pickup, ond dollvory. 1141114 Ford lhollbod, 4 . 441.0214.
dllvo pickup. 8hitrp I oolld. ;;WII;;;;I:-;bulld~;-:pll::;;:lo:-:c=ovoro=-.doc
= k::t,
laltl. IPI C!tnY ~ 4
roomo, pul up vinyl
driYo =.Roo!
ld. oldlng or troltor tklntng. 81+
1114.
24Hl12.

I" I

NeWIHour1f

Home
Improvements

Ron't TV Sorvlco, opoclollllng
In Zonllh otto oorvlclltii motl
olhlr brondt. Houoo ctllt, olio
oomo opollonco rtoolro. WV
:104-118-2:111 Ohloll4-441-2414.

luta(J)~=-'!

r

· i\~=t:,9

•

Servtces

Yooro E-ltnca On Oldor 1
Nowor - ··Wolf1,
Room Addltlono,
Foundation
Aootl!lfl,
Kltchona And lolht. Froo EillmiiHI Rtltroncoa, No &lt;lob
Too Big Or Smolll ·l14-311'-4518.
Hlck't Roollna: Froo Elllmototl

I I .I

8:3&amp; !J) Altdy Qriffttl1

Trllnoct Sorylco. 814-25M16CI:

oh.irp. ~~-•1tl7 Morna Clr1o, tow mJ111ga,

Wllfld

DUpC!oM
IJINiw z- Stereo. E;l

AcCIIIorJM In Stock, FICiory

Homt

I had offered to baby sit a
friend's 3 children. When I
I her horne she
~ amh'ved "Tha
'-·__,_..__,___,__,_ • stg ed,
ere never was a
r-:---:-:--:--::---, child so lovely that.his mother
....,.s......,urc-r.C"""TA
wasn't glad to get him .. ...." •

0 kaobr Dao

llkt now. Trolling molor &amp; ox·
tru. Woll klpt, 304-4f75.1616.

Curtll

I

.

·aa• bO.t, 511 Y1maha outboard,

Bt

y ABEM

t-~-r-"'T.:--r-1

l ==~--r:;l

Boot lor oalt: 11111 lnvodtr Elllo
17 ft. opon bow run+bout 1ri·
bul With 110 hp Cltrytltr ....
boorcl WIN - · £11111, qnt
ow"!.~t tlorld each winter, rrilnl
•
1180 Oldto OoNo II Royolt 2 conamon. 304-f71.1814.
door coupe, one owntr, e•~ ~
BOATERS
toni c:OndMion, ,_ 11ioo, 307 V·
J.S. llorint Sorvlco fllor·
8, $1500, 114-iiiH71e.
curr Engl- In Stock. Plllt I

1111 Chov- Stlrlnt Pluo, 4
door, 1utomaUc, 4$ mlltalo the
Elocotllnt 1 - Cit Choc:o!Ott gellon, $12M, 114-992-1718.
Lob Putlllkoo. o-tt lloldt
OldoC1tobllo
Royoll
Your aialce C.U 'Terry Htwlc: till
53
Antiques
lrougltom V4, AC,_ P8il PI, PW,
114-441-11117.
Powtii' s..tt1 A•JJ" at.reo
"B-ur-or-.-,""n.""A"'tv.:.o..,rlno_A,..n""llq-.-.,
.
' 1124 E. Utln St,.tl, PomtrDJ. Fllh Tonlc,_2413 olockton Avt. . CMHflt. Laododl All Bilek,
Hour.: M.T.W. 10:00 1.111. to 1:00 Point Pltoltll, 304-4~2083, . 111,000 1111-. se,tOO. CoH Pot
_ tM-441-11171, 114-441p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 1:00 p.m. lull llno Troplcol lllh blrclo, Soror
omoll onlmolt oncltupplloi.
4223.
814-112-2121.
Malt Rail.., for . . . 1110, lo INl' Chovy Covotllr, 2 door, 4
54 Miscellaneous
o good homt only, 114-112-11480. cvl. 4 -ct. A10t1 (IOOCI. Looka

SAYET

. . .... One TV Stereo.

ltlll&lt;lw.
Jot Sij 650-2,
Good
Condition,
Coli $1,500,
Afttr

tiN Chovtllt CS. 1 owner.
Laodod. Aoal nlct cor. Cuto.
:104-111-1114.

I
I I
1-r.-1,r-1
. r-1r--tl

(J) •••

Qllnlllde
POATour
til
Today
IJIIII1mlln .
1:30(2). 11J Nie Newa IJ
®NoWlt Can Be ToliT

moo.s04-f7s-143'1. .

Fumllhod: 21.3, 4 Rooma, Both,
Downottlro, up, Cltln, No Poto,

:-:=-=

I DON'T KNOW .: W~ I CJ.l
TEAM AM I ON?

WHICH TEAM ARE YOU

llf-.

loon·-

Condomlnuma.
2
Bod·
Prtv1tt Balcony,
CCTYIHBO, Kltchlnt, Poolo.
EJietllent Rltll. Oceanfront
Vocotlon Ronlllt. Frso Brochuro
Collloi00-247-649.
u.. Ill···• llot
~ ••
~~~
.
tlo n-• ..e.,
Condomlnlumo From 1711.
Octonlront, Octonvlow Aoomo,
SUftll, Condomlnlurnt, Indoor
.out- Poott, W~l~poolt,
~ Am-o, 1-100-331·

STRIKE THI5 6UY OU~
CEMENT ~EAD ! YOU CAN
IT; MUD f-IE AD !

Condition, Porto For Evonrudt
l Joltnoon 10-10 HP After lp.m.
114-311 1120.

•m

I

;=-tt:~~t£.
ai!~~1/E;I

21 HP Evonrudl, Soli Still A·l

71 AUtos for Sale

•

a• o ......

1113 Oldt Dono 611 Royolo 4 · Ru- Roll Wllh SmoH Ovl·
56 Pets for Sale
rlocW otdln, lull llkt now, ant baird Motor, f14.441.0131.
ownt~_!lll lht oqulomont, 307 V•
1 yoor old molo Hlmaloyon kll· I,
Two 1110 Yomohl Jo1 Sltl'o And
$21oo,l14-i82~e.
ton, no paporo, StiC!, 114-112·
Htlculleo Trollor, In Elocolllnt
11tl0, MIIVI me ge MUll 1111.
11154 Buick Four Ooor, FrCOII Condhlonll1+316-fJIII.
'
aroom ond Supply lftop Pot Ortvo. ~14-38N73•.
76 Auto Pans&amp;
Grooming. AM
tlyloo. te&amp;l Oodgo Slttlbv Chtrgor
limo Pol Food Dooior. Julio turbo. 1 q, rtdlollvtr, g0oc1
Accastorles
Wobb. CoM 114-441-G231.
mpg • lhoip. Aolllng $2400.
ludgot Tro1101111otlono, Uoed •
Alrodoll P - AKC Rogltltrod, :104't'IU308.
10bull, o1o~lng II llli.,)rant
4 llontho Old, Excllltnl 1gu Fonl Etco~. Groot Goa whto1
drive oto~lng ot .-..o.oo
Btooclllno, $150.11+251-1413.
MHoagt, Runo Qrllll 1800. 114- 114-241 5877, 114-371,2ZN.
AKC Cockor Soonltl - . Rod- 441-1138.
Now goo tonkl, body pant, ono
dllh Biondo. i wb. old. Wor· IW F~ Ttmll!r 4 Door ton
truck wt.r., r1clltOn,
mod. Vory aontll po-o. $180 AulomoiiC,"&gt;.Now ,,.., Gooa1
mo'!'1 otc. 0 I A Auto,
-h.-38.
Condition, 11,800. 114-4,....38.
Rlplly, WY. 304-372·:1033 0&lt; I·
.·
AKC PtttlngoM pupo. 304-57&amp;- 1tll Mercury Coupr, PSI PW, ~-~581.
2207.
•
AC, Cng1r tpUf'l tlutNnum
campers&amp;
wh-. vorr Shlrpl Amilml V-1, 79
AKC Rt~~lolorod loooolt 7 12371.
114-MIIo2045 or '114-141Motor Homes
cild, hlo hod llro! oholo,
axtra nk:e, t'121, 114-117-llf7 or ~711.
t1+117-38111.
compor,
. . . AudiiOOD 9 1 Owner, Ellrl 1VIp Ston:rsft ol..po 1, good condition, l14Cloln,
Fully
Laodod,
All
Auolrolloit Sittphord 1111, Smoll
143-a250.
.
To llodltrm Slzod. bcollonl Pol llolniOIIInct, Aocordt. 11+311or Witch Oog, 111 Sholl, Wor· lleO, 81+381-8:140.
21.FI. '-&gt;bro Chevy Motor Homo,
mod. IM-241-1533.
LNclld.
SO,OOOj 1t11700 Hond1
INI Comoro. 8.opd lrono. AC. Ji,400, 0.1.0.
814 3111101•.'
306 4 blrNI arburwtor. Nic. car

Mootlll pupplit. 1o1 ohoto. &amp;
wormed. I old. 304-1~
12X12 buiR on room. Pontlld, 3631.
corpotod, tiding, c - with
llldlna louvOr dOonl. 5 monlha Poodll pupploo, loya ond
old. bclllonl condhlon. 304- tMCupa, AKC, lito mlnllhn
1~1828.
ScltnlttllOI' tnd oduH doge, 114H'Jo:MCI4. !
1917 Original Wolff Tonnlng
Bod, 20 l.ilmpt, 30 Min. Dkihol 57
Musical
nmor, Salt Kty Lock Spfom.
Homo Dr Common:lll Uot. EJ.
lns1ruments
clllonl
Condhlon. Alklng:
$4,000. It Vou U• Tht But, C llut..IW Iundy. Good oond~
This Tinning Bed It Far You. tlon. $1110. 010. :104475-4147.
For Moro lnlonmollon Coli 11+ lily lt4ivt
ESTATES, 531 J•ckson Plitt .WU822.
1.1111 Now Conn. TNmpol, And
from $1D2Jmo. W1lk to ahop &amp;
movlll. C.lll14-44f·25611. £011 , 'U' Ztnlth Color T.V. Romo1t Co• Elocolllnt Condition, Coli
eon.rot, 1300, o.a.o., Kef. 11+248-1417
~ BOoch St. IQddllport, OH. 2 BR ¥1notor
IU
Cubic
Ft.
lumlohod oportmont. · U111~1H Rolrlatrllor, Froll FIH, 130,!1, 58
Frulti &amp;
paid. OopooM l roloronco. 304· O.B.O., lor Stt, 3 Stoolo, $too
O.B.O., An• 8:00 P.ll. 41+251882-2581.
Vegetables
11357.
Fumlr;hod Apt . lb~ f235/Mo.
Ntw
Clbbtgo, 15
Ulllltlll Pofcl, 801 Socond 5000 BTU Coclllor Wlndoor, CA, croft,
1111nt own contolnor,
114-I
A.,.,ue, G1lllpoUa. 114~11 0niJ UOid 3 Mont~, Excolllnl 247-42a.
Coridhlon, 114-387.... 2.
.
Aftor7p.m.
Refertnce, Depoeh

Transportation

WED.. JULY .1

8:00 (2). (I).

lng ~or. $2,500. 11+441-4138.
17' Trl-flull boo~ llborgluo, 111
HP J""noon oullroorij motor, ·
with trolllr ond equl,..,.nt.
$2000, 114-NS-380tl.
IHI Alllo okl booU lrolllr, 'ISliP
motor, 17 ft. llborglloo, 814-11154258.

sp.m., 114-44f·7017.
Merchandise
INS 811 N,..,h Floh N' Sid,
- - - - - - - - - - Hoy lor oalt, Aooclo¥fllo 1101, 70HP Evlnrudl With Trollor,
plclcod up tn_ lllld, 11 por bolo, II,500 And 2l' INS Chria eron
Got Hoolor For In-Ground Pool. 114-311-831 1
Cotallno With 230 Twin
C.ll ti+:JII.t71e.
Hoy lor lllt, round btlll $20. llorcNioero, MO,OOO 114-313·
Now Whlripooi olr condl11ontr, ~~uoro , _ $2. up. 304- 1017.
7800 BTU, Avory Cloogloln, 114-6,;;;.;::.:;;;,·-.,,....,-:::----::- 1881 18 112' ltrllnor Boot a
992-6830.
Proml
Allollo/Q
11
trolltr. Low houro. 125 HP llor·
um
ron,_ ro o outboord. Wolk41vi7.h
Ploollc •nd - 1 CUI- •inch 125. Moman Finn, Rt. », 304- -·,
ThN 114 Inch In ~· Ron 137-2018:•
wlndlhllld. FullY oQUippad. . or
~~.:-- Qhlo. • ~~~~on 304-17U114g, 114·

Solid wood chino hutch, gloM
dcori. King tlzo woltrbod. 304Mthog•n~~n bedt, compt.ta, e75-1771.
.
.
llkt now,
15-2010.
Tondorn PCX-20, 21M Com·
PICKENS FURNITURE
plllblo, WHh Monitor And Prlnl·
· Ntwi\Jtod
or; Ap~r!C WHh Ace-riot.
Houothold lumlt!tlng. 112 mi. 111'~4~44~..,~-~~·:':"':':---.Jorrlcho Rd. Pl. PINNnl, WV, co11304-8711-t480.
55
.Building

for Rent

Ulllhleo no1 lncludod, dlpoolt
roqulrod, 304-1'15·'1131 ,.. 8755036.
1bdrm. apt, for rent, $22!Jmo.,
tocurity dtpotll, no polo, 614·
992-2211.
2 Roome I Balh, DoWnslalra,
Clean,
No
Pete,
Quill,
Roltronct And" Do~lt R"'
qutrod. l14-446-151i .

r:~~;::;=====r:;:~=~~=~~
54 Miscellaneous
64 Hay &amp; Grain

•

EVENING

· 11 Ft. Slln:roft Boll .BOO!, 61
HSP Motor, 27 Lb. Thruol 1roll·

Merchandtse
12

•

•

75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

=.-.:z.:;tr,.::-:..:na:,,l
no-.
Help Wanted

c.cW&lt;lRTABl£ ~T$
~ So'.T IJ.I !/'--..;,'-.,-,.,

;t.ow.

Country lloblit Homo Pi"- Ill.
J3N., undlr ,.... manlgtmMII.
Lota, ~i homl rentata, •231;
814-1112-2117
ROIIH Or Olllce Stioco Avollobll.
LlloJ111tll111.114-441-4222.

11

Television
•
••
VIewing

•

5TE~~. Til£$
AA£ TilE ~T Ull•

INO Hondo CR ID R Good
llhlpo, Prlcod To Soli. Coli Btl·
U. 114-3l'WIIII4.
,
1111 Yomohl 150 F..., Shift
0rt3 Somo Accooocirlto,
... -. 114-44U111. • •
1051 Yomohl 150 Spoclll,
MIINgo, 1150 Or Bill Ollor. 81+
381-1721, 114-38W811.
te82 Yomohl 750 CC, loll Of·
.... 11+441-0712.

46 Space for ReJII ··· ·

'

r:r '

'I!"_JiOOO" 1111110,
$1200, • ...-.....t••• ~- .

f!looplng with -nO·
Atao lrolltf · AI hook-upa.
Coli oft1&lt; 2:00 p.m., :104·713o
1151, llooon WV. .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio·

1, 1992

1t77 Ocdao

74

Nlco; c1t1n · 2

1992

.J3 Ylns &amp; 4 WD't

&amp; VICinity

c

•

'·

•

•

�,.,_
,.• ,

· Sentinel '

1992

Ohio

Astros ~UT.:u:~~
Reds;Braves
beaten 2-1

BIG
FRESH LEAN

Sports 4-5

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:
590
Pick 4:
3439 .
Super Lotto:
10-21-24-28-29-44
Kicker:
180769

..

GROUND

Low tonight near 75. Friday,
high neur 90. Chance or rain 70
percent.

BEEF·
Vol. 43, No. 43

Copyrighted 1992

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Thursday, July 2, 1992

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Officials discuss projected '93 general fund deficit
311S.
OR
MORE

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
A projected 1993 general fund
deficit nearing a half·million dol·
Iars was discussed when the Meigs
County Commissioners met on
Wednesday morning.
The deficit projection was
revealed at the same time a hearing
on next year's budge! was set for
July 15 at 2 p.m.

LB.

Projected 1993 neceipts for the
general fund are estimated by
County Auditor William R. Wick·
line at $2,570,47~.03. Meanwhile,
county officeholders and depart·
ment heads who receive funding
through the county's general fund
have submitted budget requests for
next year totaling $2,988,271.86,
resulting in a projected deficit of
$4 17,796.83.
Put sim-

general fund has tone a great con·
cern to this board, since we have
the responsibility to balance the
budget by the year's end," Jones
told his fellow board members.
"We have to cut over $400,000
from various county offices and
departments, which we will. It's
clear that (funding for) all offices
will have to be cut in a manner
!hat's fair to everyone concerned."

ply, the commissioners must shave
that much from the department's
budget requests between now and
January , since state law requires ·
adoption of a balanced budgeL
Commissioner Richard Jones
said that the projected deficit was
"the largest projected deficit that I
can recall," calling it a "great con-

cern."
"This (deficit projection) in the

Jones also said !hat the budge!
requests submitted by lhe various
offices were not unreasonabl e,
which will make it more difficult to
cut spending.
"Naturally lhese budgets arc just
' wi sh li sts' ;" Jones said , "but
they're really not oui of line."
The entire county budget for
1992 has been submitted as fo l·.
low s:
General
Fund ,

$2 ,988,271.86; Dog and Kennel,
$ 13,029. 34; Public Ass istance,
$2,510,493; Real Estate Assess·
ment ,
$ 132.353;
Auto
License/Gasoline Tax , $2,01 5,91 8;
Mental Retardation Bond Relire·
ment, $16,050.24 ; Child Support
Enforcement Agency, $261,550;
Human Services Building Bond
Retirement, $139,002.48; County
Continued on page 3

Meigs board ratifies teachers contract

• CI'IIYII·ll II.

aar·. a••

WillERS
IUYDII
lftOII

LINDEMAN ARRAIGNED - Accused mur·
. dere~ Doaald Lindeman was arraign. cd befqre · .
.~ €outyl CO)Irl ~udge Patrk:Jt..H. ·O'Brten
· on ednesday mormng. He Is accused of laSt
week's robbing and shooting of Long_ Bottom
. RJ'OCer/postmaster Howard Lawrence. Lawrence

died yesterday at Grant Medical Center in
.Columbus: j..indeman is pictuted with bis wife
antflbelr·lnrant dllld at WedneSday's hearing.
Also pictured, far right, is Lindeman's attorney,
Public Defender Charles Knight (Sentinel Photo
by Brian J. Reed)

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
· A contract with the' Meigs Local
Teachers Association (MLTA) w3!
ratified by the Meigs Local Board
of Education Wednesday night.
Meeting in special session the
Board approved what was termed a
· "tentative agreement", the terms of
which were arrived at by the bar·
gaining teams of lhe MLTA and
tile Boanl.
It was called "tentative" because
implementation is subject to
· approval by the State Department
of Education. That agency's
approval is required because the
district is in the State Lo,an Fund
having alreadY. borrowed $250,000
for general operating expenses,
Presumably the two year contract- the contents of which were
not revealed at the meeting - will
increase the current deficit thereby
requiring State Depanment of Edu·
cation approval.

. The motion to ratify the agree·
ment, specified that the contracl
contents will be disclosed "some·
time· in the future" in a joint state·
ment from the Board of Education
and the MLTA.
When questioned about rumors
which have persisted tllat $570,000
is involved in additional expenses,
including buyouts of contracts of
21 long-time teachers, the board
members denied tile validity of tile
figure. They, however, refused to
release the actual cost at !his time
noting that everything will be con·
tained in the joint statement.
Action by tile board to ratify the
negotiated contract came after Jane
Fry, treasurer, made a contact with
the Ohio School Boards Associa·
tion legal counsel for his recommendation. Carol Ohlinger, president of lhe MLTA, was also contacted to confirm action by that
association's members earlier til is
week to accept the negotiated

agreement.
Junior High Sale
Questions about the proposed
sale of the form er Pomeroy Junior
Htgh School building in Pomeroy
were asked by Charlene Hoeflich,
general manager of The Daily Sentinel.
Hoeflich commented that' she
had read in Tuesday 's edition of
The Daily Sentinel that Pomeroy
Village Council had "accepted an
offer from the Meigs Local School
Board to purchase" the
building.JHer questions revolved
around when ·the board had taken
action to sell the building and at
what cost, and whether the action .
had been taken in executive session '
instead of open session .
President Bob Barton said that
"everytlling had been done in executive session" and tllat a meeting
had been held with Pomeroy
Mayor Bruce Reed. When asked
Continued on page 3

.

Lindeman is arraigned on
aggrayated murd'er charge ·
A Racine man could face.Ohio's
electric chair if convicted of the
shooting which ultimately killed
Long Bottom storekeeper Howard
Lawrence. .
Donald Lindeman of Horse
Cave Road, was arraigned Wednes·
day morning on a charge of aggra·
vated murder, which carries a pos·
sible death penalty, or a sentence
of life in prison. He is also accused
of aggravated robbery, a felony of
the fust degree.
Lawrence was found in his
DeWitt's Run store by a customer
on the evening or June 25, bleeding
from what was later revealed to be

MAPlE RIVER

Leg

Quarters
CALIFORNIA

·cantaloupes

,,

Orange Jui'e

Potato Chips

$ 49

.$ 9

lA.

·'

'
"

101

.·

MEADOW GOLD

Ice Cream

With its decision to uphold services to those women who are miles to the nearest clinic for an
Pennsylvania's restrictive abortion affluent enough , or determined abortion- only to be told that
law, the U.S. Supreme Coun is no enough, to overcome the obstacles there is a 24-hour waiting period
longer chipping away at Roe v. it creates.
and that she must make tile arduous
Wade- it has battered the foundaWhile the court rejected the trip again lhe next day; and physition of that landmark decision, says law's provision that requires mar- clans must disseminate state-script·
Kay Atkins, ~~ecutive director of ried women to notify their hus- ed propaganda designated to coerce
Planned Parenthood of Southeast bands before obtaining an abortion, women into continuing an unwantOhio, an agency serving eight the Pennsylvania Abortion Control ed pregnancy.
counties, including Meigs and Gal- Act nonetheless remains a gro~s
The court's sanction of these
lia.
.. , . ,
violation of privacy and personal blatantly discriminatory provisions
, · Monday's ruling empowers libeny,
.
.
threatens to hurl American women
other oppressive restriclions that
Atkins says tllat u~der tile Penn· back to lhe dark days of ~ack·alley
create roadbloclcs for wotlten seek- sylvania provisiOns; ·a confused and and self-induced abortions. Women
fng abortion. It clearly shows that frightened pregnantleen seeking an will once again be subject to the
the court does not have·to ovenurn abortion may be forced to choose whims of state legislatures, and
Roe .outright to deny women access between facing an ab~sive parent will be victims of a patchwork of
to abortion.
or an impersonal coun proceeding; state laws. How long before des·
According to Atkins, the Penn- a poor woman in a rural area may perate women are driven back
sylvania Abortion Control Act lim- have to travel several hundred underground to be maime&lt;l and
its access to safe, legal abortion
killed, asked Atkins.
~
"American women - and men
- .will rum toourelecledrepresentauvcs. Congress must act now to
pass the FreedOm of Choice Act
'J
w.ithout restrictive amendments to
Leslie Stonns of Albany wiU face Dial by jury in Meigs County
insure thtit !he protections of Roe
Common Pleas Court, begiMing on Thursday QlOming.
are codified inm federal legislation.
~tonns is accused of breaking and entering into an unoccupied
We will not go back," concluded
structure belonging to George Stout of Albany last October, and
Atkins. - · ...
·
stealing electrical wire, two saws and a garden hose. Botll charges
are fourth-degree felonies.
.
Storms is represented by lhe Meigs County PUblic Defender's
Office. Judge Fred W. Crow III will preside.
'
.
~ bu~ness office of The Daily
Sennnel
will be clo~ Saturday so '.
Meigs Em~ency Services units answfred calls for assistance on
that emf.loyees mTy enjoy the
·
(Coatlnued on Page 3) . ~
.
Fourth o July holiday.
•

B&amp;E trial underwav

c

FIOIII
.
MEADOW GOLD JR. POPS

late Tuesday attemoon.
After Lawrence's death, Assistant Prosecuting Attorney George
P. McCarlhy withdtew the attempt· ,
ed ,aggravated murder charge and
filed an aggravated murder charge
in its place.
At Wednesday's hearing, County Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
set bond at $250,000 cash on each
cotlnt, to be concurrent, and set a
preliminary hearing for Monday.
Lindeman has be'en deemed
indigent and is represented by Public Defender Charles H. Knight.
Lindeman remains in the Meigs
County Jail.

Kay Atkins, area Planned Parenthood
~irector, comments on atiortion ruling

• fs.
----L ocaJ brte

Napkins

.a.

,

SLI.

IOitHIRN

120

st•

J

$ 99

16.0L
lAG

~
~

..

Ll.

·ROUS

.99

Herr. .-1

y.
GAL

..

s

TEN
1ll.

10 LIS. OR MORE

. 100"

Pork Sausage Meat Patties

(

u.

JTM

a gunshot wound to the head. Upon
his arrival at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, it was determined that his
wallet had been taken, as well.
After spending nearly a wee!( in
a semi -comatose condition,
Lawrence died Wednesday morning at Grant Medical Center in
Columbus, where he was taken by
Life Right shortly after tile incident
took place.
·
Meanwhile, Lindeman, 28, was
amsted and jailed this weekend on
a bench warrant for old fines and
costs in Meigs County Court. He
was still in jail when he was
charged with aggravated robbery
and attempted aggravated murder

( .;

Closed Saturday

Ll. SJ19
·]

EMS units answer calls ·

OLD JAIL CELLS • Meigs County Sheriff
Jim Soulsby stands by tbe entrance to second
noor jail cells in tbe Meigs County Jail. The cells

are no longer in use and bave not changed much
since the late 19th Century.
..

Meigs County Jail has changed over
the years, but antiquity
still evident
.
By JIM GLAUNER
Sentinel News Slaff
For nearly a century, the current
Meigs County Jail has stood on E.
Second Street in Pomeroy .
Through the years, the jail has
changed; but its antiquity is still
evident.
The jail probably came to
Pomeroy in 1844, when the county
courthouse was buil~ tllough there
is no mention of the jail in existing
newspapers of the period. Pomeroy
became the Meigs .&lt;;ounty seat in
1841, when Samuel Wyllys
Pomeroy u.sed his business and
political connections to move the
site of the courthouse to Pomeroy
from Chester in 1841. A county jail .
is first mentioned in the June 5,
1851 Meigs County times. Being
lhe county sea~ Pomeroy was like·
Iy its location.
The history of Pomeroy's first
jailhouse end~ on Feb. 4, 1894, ·
when it was guned by fire, lilong
with the Ql&lt;I:,Pomeroy Opera House
and the Meigs Counry Telegraph,
where lhe conflagration began.
· According .to the Feb. 7, 1894,

I

since 1894, bu ~ lhe exterior of tile
jailhouse is much the same as it
was in the late 19Ch Century. The
towers on either side of tile jail are
st1ll 55 feet h•gh, and the brickworlc
and general structure of the jail
appear the same as they did I00
years ago.
However, a trip inside the jail
belies its modernity and the great
change a century can bring .
Inmates are no. longer.charged with
barn burning or adultery, but are
commonly interred for driving
whtle tnto ~tcated, domeslic violence or anempted murder, according to Meigs County Sheriff Jim
Soulsby.
·
A soda machine, television
microwave and police radios at~
ob.vious signs of progress, and !he
inside of the first floor has bCen
well -maintained and modified.
Soulsby said the County .Commissioners make sure the jail is always
up to current standards.
The second noor of lhe jail, now
unused, is more indicative of the·
'Yay the jail used to . be. It was a
(Continued o'n Page 3)

issue of tile Meigs County Tribune,
a young worker at the Telegraph
left hot embers in the ashpan of a
machine . The ashes heated the
machine, which ignited the oil·
soaked floor. During a fierce.,..all·
night snowstorm, the fire spread to
the opera ~ouse· and the jail , but
stQpped shan of the county court·
house.
No one was killed in lhe fire,
but seven Meigs County prisoners
had to be transferred to tile county
courthouse. A few were jailed for
offenses like bastardy, adultery and
barn burning,.and none escaped
during the blaze.
The Tribune said the nne was a
good opportunity "for the County .
Commtssioners to pull down the
waUs of the old jail and build a new
one." W~ began on lhe new jail
thlit spring, and it was completed in
1895 at a cost of about $24,000.
The jail lhen consisted qf 16
cells, eight on the first floor and
eight on the second. The adjoining
sherifrs quarters consisted of four
bedrooms and a bathroom.
Times have changed drastically

'

'

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