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'-a•

14-The Dally sentinel

Wtdneedlly, JuiW 5,

10 LB.
AT
SALE
'

~TO_RE HOURS
\
Mo~tday fhqt Sunday

,

8 AM-10· PM

•, :

EFFE(TIV~

~·

.
.
.
49&lt;
fryer ·Parts ..... !~ ••••
..
49&lt;
Leg .Quarters ..
RATH
$ .19
Bacon................... 1
~.....

BLACK HAWK . .

.

La. .

ECKRICH
r

'

I

Bologna
..........
!~
••.
US~ A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
$ 99
Rtbey.e Steak •..•••. .4
RAT~ BLACK ·HAWK
.
f$1
W1eners •••••• ~!!'!~'::o2 . . .
La.

PORK

.

Cubed Steak •...•~..
E&lt;KRIC~ BRATWURST OR .

.

ltahan Sausage .~~

$249

CHUCK
10 LB. PACKAGE

$

90

HICKEN
BREASTS
10 LB. P.KG.

$1290
.

DRUMSTICKS

·
$ 99

10 LB. PkG. ·

1

10 LB. PKG.

ASSORTED

Strawberries.•••.• :~· $1 09

PORK CHOPS
10 LB. PKG.

$
90
FLAVORITE
59
CHOPPED
2% Milk .........~••• $1
HAM
10 LB. LOAF

DEW FRESH

Margarine .•••!!~:'.'.,... 99C
DEL MONTE SQUEEZE

.l

·catsup •••••••••••••••••• 89&lt;
Potato Chips •••••••• 99&lt;
320Z.

Tony's Pizza ...... 3/S S

•

.PRINGLES

6-7.5

oz.

GALA TOWELS

2/Sl
. ................ ,.v•,

•.

Gtl4l

011J At ,._.., ....
LIMit 1 ,., Cwl II.

KEMPS

$

90
PORK
.

STEAKS
10 LB. PKG •

Ice Cream ....!~:=~ $299. $14 90
TENDER VITTLES·
12 OL CIN.

69(

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

..... !)illy " ,..•••
liMit 1

s.- ,.

rw Cwt••er

AMERICAN
CHEESE
10 LB. LOAF

$1490

Clear'tonight. Low in
Friday, sunny. High in
mid-70s.

at.
2 S.CIIone, 14 P•gee 25 ...., ..
A lluhiOMCI .. _Inc. '""IJMII*

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.- Thursday, June 6, 1991

Coal
supply
·exceeds
demand

BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE

.CHICKEN

Pick 4:9170

Cards : 4-H, 4-C
6-D; 2-S
Super Lotto
4-15-22-26-34-35
Kicker
448093

•

GROUND
MIXED

Pick 3:430

PageS

Stoek
~o r
freezer

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
'
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JUNE 2 THRU JUNE 8, '1991 .

Ohio Lottery

Bulls
wallop
Lakers

PITTSBURGH (AP) -· U.S.
coal com_Panies face layoffs or
·mine closmgs unless the domestic
demand for coal increases drasti• cally or new overseas markets are
found, an industry linal)'SI said
• Coal companies are looking for: ward 10 what could be a second
- COIISCICutive record year of ~uc­
• lion, but must contend w1th flat
· demand, said Ronald L. McMahan.
: Last year, the U.S. coal industry
....
; produced more than 1 billion tons
~ tor the first time in history. As
·, much coal or more will be mined
· ; this year, McMahan said Monday
.- at the American Mining Congress
: 9oal Convention•in PittsbUillh.
! . "The industry's been liirting
· wrth that number since· 1 can
~ remember. They finally hit i( and
~ it's biild·news," McMahan said.
.
Demand for coal at home falls
: behind the cwrent production level
· by about 100 million tons. The
: answer. in the view of the president
: of the mining organization, is to
,· look oveneas.
. "While production will be at

Documents
are signed for ·
lagoon project

'

CONTRACTS SIGNED • Middleport
Mayor Fred Holl'lllan, left, executed docmnentll
at Wednesday's rea•lar meetlnr o1 the Melp .
County Commissioners which pledge local ·
financial support for tile Middleport sewage

Ia~ prol:d.Tbe colllllllsalotlen wiD admin·
ister araat
wblcll mike up 1 part or the
local share. Also pictured are, rigllt, Corps ol
Eaglneers representative Tim Myers and,
behind Hotrmaa, Corps representative Al1n
Elberfeld.

Change seen in state
:~;~=~i~~ :-developmen.t st_ra.tegy ·

'nle classic econom1cs problem
.
·
of a sap between supply 'and
COLUMBUS.; Ohio (AP)· ~-..clll!ls•i)ut preuure on the :",Tb~ ~(!te buJu~Cjl ill _a IJ~sae;.
roliUtry110 f"llld- ~w •markets or pomttng economl~ perfol'!llance
close m~es and'lliy off workers, ' ~)!Ired ~ growtll natiooally and
Knebel said.
11 may be arne to chan&amp;e. develop. The industry closed most of the · -.ment strategy, economists have
gap between the 1990 production told a panel of legislators. ·
level of and the domestic demand
Economics ~fessors Raben
with ellports, but left 32 million Prem~ of Wright State University,
tons of coal unsold.
and R1chard Vedder and Lowell
. Knebel sees new opponunities · qauawayofOhio~niversity, lr:S'im oveneas markets. Italy is one of . fted before a JDIDt meettng
the biggest buyers of U.S: coal he Wednesday of the House and Sen"said, and Germany is expected 10 a~ Economic Development Com·inaease its purchases.
. .
m1ttees.
.
Although Germany has its own . All three are. members of an
' large coal JeSe~VeS, political condi- informal_ econom•c research group
lions ill .the ne"!ly,.Jellllified counay · fonned II! 1989 at the request of
have made u:s. coal attractive Sen. Charles Horn, R-Kettering, to
Knebel said. Environmental regula: help evaluate the state's economic
lions accompanying the reunifica- development policies.
:tion have forced German factories ''" Vedder said the Ohio Depan;.0 bum clell!er coal. which is plen- ment of Development had under·liful in the United States.
g;one an enonnous expansion diU'Regulations imposed by state tilg the last decade, but the Slate's
.Jcpslalurea and Congress, specifi- economic growth still had fallen
c;ally tbe federal Clean Air Act behind other states.
also are fon:iD&amp; U.S. companies u;
"You politicians are good at
change the way they burn coal, many things, but allocating
Coatinued on pa~ 3
resources. in the private sector is

.
notoneoflhem," Vedder said. ·
ual taxpayu. The taxpa~~ public
~e said Ohio might do betu:r if is lmlled simply as a •
cow"
mo!l(:y· used ·co subSidize foreign lhat should willin~Jy let itself be
com~es that locare in the state mlJke:d with ltiguJarity to feed the
was mstead ~ 10 lower the tax appeares of an ever growing state
burden on bUSIDes&amp;es already he.e.
govemmentllppiDitus," he said.
"The evidence is clear that the
l'lemus said an analysis of job
overwhelming majority of new jobs creation, income growth and other
are created by existing firms, most fac:tas shows the state's economic
of them small. Let us slOp giving perfonnance has been subpar and
the~awaybiddingonbigname will likely continue to lag the
proJects and concenttate on letting nation.
the invisible hand of the market
"When vou look at the period
allocate funds the way it has sue- 1960 to I 990 ... we see that the
cessfully since A~ 1118;de the f111t na~on doubled its levc:J of employm~ukct t~ansacuon With Eve,"
ment, ... whereas Oh1o's employVedder said.
mentlevel today is 54 percent
Gallaway called for curbs on higher than in 1960," Premus said.
growth in government taxation and
Premus and the others suggested
~pending. "The problem is too a change in the state's· economic
m~ch revenue, not too liUie," he
development.strategy from providsaid.
ing financial inducements for
''Typically, those who are in industry to one of improving the
charge of administering various quality of the stale's work force.
types of state activities become the
"An Ohio economic developstrongest proponents of ibcreasing men_t strategy that focuses on sigfunding for their areas," Gallaway nificant enhalicements 10 the qualisaid.
ty of Ohio's work force can have a
"The saddest thing in all this is significantlong-tenn payoff," Prethat no one lobbies for the ibdivid- mus said

Senate may take lead on Clean Air Bill

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS ~ Stare senators
mar wind up taking the lead on a
politically sensitive bill designed 10
help Ohio's coal and utility induslries comply with the federal Clean
·Air AcL
Democmtic S~r Vern Riffe,
after a committee·recommended
passage 10-7 Wednesday, put the
House bill on hold because the
panel's Republicans all voted
a~tiL
.
Riffe. of Wheelersburg, said he
will not schedule a floor vote
unless some Republicans P.romise
support. If necessary, he w1U await

action on a similar bill due for a
vote Tuesday in the GOP-controlled Senate, he said.
The speaker said he asked
Minority Leader Corwin Nixon, RLebanon, to provide some votes but
did not indicate what the response
was. Nixon could not be reached
for comment Wednesday.
. Bo~h bills pr~vide economic
IIICCntives for Oh10's electric utili!ies to install scrubber technology
m order to bum Ohio's high-sulfiU'
coal.
The House had been expected 10
vote on its bill roday. Senate sponsor Raben Ney. R·Bamesville, had
agreed to accept it as the vehicle

tor final consideration.
. That was before Riffe, at an
Impromptu news conference,
accused GOP members of the
House Utilities Committee of playing politics on a biU that asserted!y
could save Ohio's suuggling coal
industry and assure compliance at
the least possible cost to utilities
and consumers.
·
Sponsors said that with or without the bill, sharp rate increases are
in store as a result of the federal
law, which impoS« compliance
costs on Ohio and other states
blamed for acid rain.
.
"This bill is the result of what
they did in Washington, with the

blessing of their (Republicans')
pres idem," Riffe said. "Either 1
have some Republican votes or it
wiU not go 10 the floor.''
Rep. Louis Blessing Jr. of
Cincinnati, and other Republican
members of ~he committee had
objections 10 'the bill, including
protests thai they were not given an
opportunity to study last-minute
amendments.
Minority Whip Randall Gardner, R-Perrysburg, said, "We don't
have a caucus position." He said
the bill might save jobs in the coal
industry but result in higher electricity rates that would cause Jay· ·
offs in manufacturing.

---Local briefs--'·__, Aronoff says proposed
Deer accident investigated

recycling levy is fee, not a ta~

The Meigs County Sheriff's Department took a report of a
deer/cat accident on Wednesday.
According 10 the report, Andy Ward of Pcxtl8nd was westbound
on State Route 124 ncar Bowman's Run at 6:55 a.m. Wednesday
~!(!Jell a large deer ran from the river side of the roadway inro the left
fender llld front door of his 1984 OleVJOlet.
The deer ran away from the scene; moderate damage was listed
10 the vehicle.

Rockhold, Folmer a"ested
Steve Rockhold of ReedsviUe and Gwen Folmer of Flatwoods
Road in Pomeroy .ivere arrested on Wednesday on wanants filed by
th~ MeiJs County Department of Human Services charging each
With two ~~~~~elated counts of theft by deception.
Both appea.ed in Meiss County Court on Wednesday and
entered no contest pleas to the misdemeanor charges. ThCy were
Condnued oa paae 3

'

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
$I 50 million curbside recycling
prognllll has been proposed by top
Senate Republicans as an alrernative to a stalled bill that would
impose deposits on bottles and
cans.
Money for the program would
be raised from cluqes imposed on
the manufact..-e and sale of a vari·
ety of product~, but Senate President Stanley Aronoff said the meas~. was_not ~.tax Increase.
I thmk 11 s an advanced disposal fee," Aronoff, R-cincinnati,
said at a news conf-.ce Wednesday . . ·
.
,
Gov. Georse Votnov1ch, who
camiJIIigned last year in· SUppcllt of
bottle deposits and a11ainst new .

taxes, did not take a siand on the
proposal pendi.n&amp; more det&amp;ils.
Curt Steiner, the governor's
de(luty chief of staff, said
Vo1110vich remained a supporter of
mandatory deposits.
'"However, Senator Aronoff is
tile best vote counter that we've
seen, and he's
the govern«
that the votes aren t there in the
Senate for a bottle bill. That being
the case, the sovemor and the
administration cenainly are willin~
to consider other alternatives '
Steiner siid
'
Labor and Induslry for a Cleaner
Ohio, a sroup opposed to bottle
deposits voiced mitial concern
about the'disposal fees contained in
theOOPpopo:NII.
.

~I

lellin'-

By BRIAN J. REED
SeatineJ News Starr
Documents pledging the local
share of fimds for work at the Mid.'
dleport sewage lagoons we.e executed by the U.S. Anny Corps of
Engineers and Middleport Maror
Fred Hoffman when the Me1gs
County Commissioners met in regular session on Wednesday,
$500,000 of the total project
cost of $74 I ,000 will be borne by
.the Corps, while the remainder will
be paid by the Village of Middlepan. Of this local share. $I 2,000
will he paid from the village treasury, while Federal Imminep!
Threat and Community Development Block Grant Funds will provide another $229,000 for the local
portion.
.
The project is expected 10 elimjltale the threat of nver contamination from the eroded lagoons,
which are located in the Hobson

sewage, qualified the project for
the lmmi11ent Threat money.
Corps officials said that the time
frame for the project depended in
large pan on when .the local funds
were received, but did estimate that
the project could start as early as
August. Construction time is
expected to be approximately folD'
months.
·
The contract has been awarded
to Alan SlOne Construction.
Levy Request Approved :
· Upon the request of the Tuberculosis Board, the commissioners
voted yesterday 10 place a 5/10 mill
levy on the November ballot.
The levy, which is a renewal
request, was approved · and
reviewed by Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Steven L. Story
prior 10 the submission by the com:
missioners yesterday.
·
County Engineer Philip M '.
Roberts and his staff were on han(!
area.
at the meeting 10 discuss activities
According to Commissioner at the Meigs County Highway
Richard Jones, the fear of such Department.
·
Ohio River contamination from the
According to Roberts, the
lagoons, which hold treated
Coadnued on pa~ 3

Toler stands firm on ·
allegations in Smith trial
An Ohio developer held flflll to
his allegations WecMesday that former housing official Carl Smith
extorted bribes from him in 1987
so MaUrice Toler could win a federal building contniCL
The Charleston Gazette reported
during a day-long cross-examina·
tion by Dina Mohler, Smith's
lawyer, Toler insisted that cash,
farm machinery and home remodeling he conveyed 10 Smith were 10
make sure the contract for the
Lemma Village apanments would
be his.
Tuesday, Toler testified for the
prosecution saying he and Smith
agreed on a $50,000 payoff in
1987.
Smith, the former stale ~er
of the U.S. Department of HoUSing
and Urban Development, is
charged with bn'bcry, two counts of
tax l'raud. perjury before a grand
jury and making a false govern·
ment documenL
The story reported Mohler questioned Toler's assertion that he
burned aD docwnents penaining 10
the housing contract in 1989 after

reali~ing fe was under investiga-

tion.
Mohler asked Toler why he did
not burn several documents show- ·
ing transactions between him and
Smith. "We were running around,"
Toler said. ''Obviously, if we were
thinking, we would have burned
everything."
Toler said he burned documentS
relating to his housing contracts
going back 10 eight years.
The Gazette reported as aq
investigation of both men intensified in 1989, Toler and Smith mel
several times, Toler said. "I had
discussions with Smith about how
10 get the heat off," Toler said.
Mohler also had Toler confmn
that the West Virginia Housing and
Development Fund had cut him off
from all fulln'e work with the fund.
Toler has agreed 10 plead. guilty
10 felony countS of filing a false tax
return and filing a -false certificate
of cost relating 10 the Lemma Village project.
The trial resumed at 9:30 Thursday morning.

Festival schedule
HERITAGE WEEKEND
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS for SATURDAY
SPONSORED BY POMEROY MERCHANTS ASSOCIA·
TION
.
10 a.m. - Parade, foUowed by Sandy Butcher singing "God Bless
the
U.S.A."
lito 11:15 a.m.- Lenny Eliason, Introductions
11:1 S 10 noon - Bank One Pioneer Costume Contest
Noon 10 12:30 p.m. · Rainbow Cloggers
12:30 10 12:4S p.m. - Shirley Quickel and The Dance Company
12;45 10 1:45 p.m. - Dee and Dallas
1:45 10 3 p.m.- Civil War DriUs
3 10 4 p.m.- Mud River Band
4 to 4:30 p.m. - The Ohio State University Forinatlon Dance
Team
4 to 6:30p.m. - Mud River Band

All activities will lake place lit tile stage area near the Inter·
section of Court aad Main Streets. Those attending should
brine a la'll'll chair for the day's festivities.
An exblblt, on l011n trom tbe Mary C. Douet Historical Costume aDd Textile CoDectloll, lloued In tile School of Home £co.
nomic• at Olllo Univenlty, will be on dbplay Saturday 11
Clark's Jewelry Store aad II hellif preaented by Sky Coae,
instructor or llome _..lcs 11 Olllo Ualwnlty 1Dd carator or
tile Douee Collection. Senral pieces, locludlne 1 wedding
dress, Marine unllorm, 1920's style dresses aDd ot.ber lte1111, wiU
he featured In the dllplay.
Otller activities duriDI tile day Include ·c ratten oa Court
Street, coiiCtlllou, a turkey slloot In tile ••aU mlnl·pai-k, an
antique allow by R- aDd Hope Moore In the large miDI-park
and a booda of clllldrea'a activities by tM Lelllrt Jualor Girl
Scout Troop. Tile Civil Wir DriU Team will allo llave 11 eam
set up behind tbe Melp Coanty Court House for view by ~­
public.

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The Dally Sentlnei-Paae 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
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Ohio weather perfect through weekend

'

llc wanner on Salurday .

. By The Allodated ,.._
Forecasters say the pattern of
warm, sunny days and clear, cool
nigbts will continue at least
through the weekend. Daytime
1emJlCI1IIURIS willlla't aettin&amp; alit·

'

A huge high prenure system
coverinf. the Great LMes repn is
respable for the nearly JliCiui'O·
perfecl WOIIhcr.
Sldea will remain mostly eleat
throu&amp;h Sunday. Hiahs will be in
the 70s on Friday and in the 80s
over the we"kmd
The JeCOI'd high temperaiUre for
this
date at the Col11111bus weather
Soutb·Central Oblo
station
was 95 degrees in 1925.
Tooight, clear. Low in the midThe
JeCOI'd
low was 39 in 1945.
50s. Friday, sunny with the high
Sunrise·
this morning was at
75-80.
6:03
a.m.
Sunset
will be at 8:57
Extended foreCast
p.m.
.
Saturday throu&amp;b Moliday:
Around
tile
udoll
Fair ~ugh the peood. Highs
The day began under a cloud in
maillly in the 80s. Lows in the SOs
many
parts of the country, includ·
Saturday and Sunday and 60-65
ing
Florida,
North Dakota, Nebras·
Monday.

Weather

WEATHER MAP· The Accu Weather forecast for Friday
callll ror showen In portions or the Pacific Northwest with thunderstorms expected over pordons or the Dakotas, New Mexico,
Texas and Louisiana. Sbowen are expected for portlonl or.Flori·
da. (.u')

Local briefs... :.....--_,

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Continued •from pagel
·
each fined $100 and costs on each charged and were given six
month jail sentences on each cbarge. Restitution was ordered. $100
,. of the fme and jail lime were suspended and both were placed on
one year probation.
The charges were filed by the DHS investigator.

'

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:· EMS units answer six calls
'

•;

Six calls for assistance were answeroo by IJI!its of Meigs County
, Emergency Medica! Services on Wednesday and early Thursday
• morning.
.
·
At 11:29 a.m., Life Flight landed at the helipad and transported
,
Timothy Poston to Riverside Methodist Hospi181.
,
At 12:26 p.m., Pomeroy squsd went to U:S. ROUie 33 for an IICCi.: dent. Teresa Sayre, Stephame PuUins and Norman Price were all
, treated but not lraiiSpOJied. At 1:33 p.m., Rutland squad went tranS, ported Rex Donabue from their station to Ve1eran1 Memorial Hos·
~ pita!.
'
' , At 8:55 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Ann Street. Margaret
O'Donald went to Veterans. At 1:091!-lll.• Middleport squsd went to
·. General Hartinger Parkway. Tracy Ratclirf was treated but not
' . transported. At 6:28 a.m., Middleport unit went to Lincoln Heights.
; Judy King was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
·

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"Beware of itinerant repairmen," warns Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby.
·
The sheriff reports that this is the time of year that itinerant
. repsinnen go door-to-door seeking odd jobs and repair work.
· . Soulsby urges residents to deal only with local people that you
• know or can check on.
"The low price offered by the itinerant repairman might cost you
ma-e in the long run," Soulsby warned.
.
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::Man cited in crash
{·

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Coal
...
C011tinued from page 1

Forty-nine cases processed by O'Brien.

McMahan said. Utilities that usc
coal to generate power can buy
cleaner,low-sulfur coal, he said, or
"scrub" the high-sulfur coal they
have been using.
·
· Adding scrubbers to power
plants and shipping low-sulfur coal
from the West where it is mined
will increase costs for utilities,
,Knebel said.
The effeclll of the Clean Air Act,
the length or the recessi011 and the
relatively low level of exportS all
are hurting tbe market for coal,
Knebel said. But he said the news
is not uniformly bad.
"On balance, there are aome
positive signs," he said. "When ·
you see the ec'onomic recovery,
you see the recession bottom out,
you 'II see the demand for power
generation increase.'' · ·

Meigs County Court Judge pended for 90 days, failure to conPatrick H. O'Brien procesaed 49 trol. $350 and costs, operator's
cases last week.
license suspended for 90 days, fail·
Pined were: James H. Starcher, ure to control, $30 and costs; David
Long Bottom; speed, $21 .and P. Smith, Pomeroy, consuming
costs; Donald E. Myers, Long Bot- alcohol under the age of 21, $50
tom, stop sign, $10 lind cosu; Otis and costs, five days in jail suspendBrown, lson, Ky., overiOIId, $100 ed, probation of one year; Jeanna
and costs; Micblel Taylor, Ermine. K. Connolly, Racine, fishing with·
Ky., overload. SIOO and costs; out license. $25 and costs; Donald
Ralph S. Fr112:ier, Ripley, W.Va., L. Lindeman, Chesler, no operafishing without non-resident tor's 1ic:ense, six months in jail sus·
license, $25 and costs; Patrick W. pelided to 15 days, $150 and costs,
Hudnall, North Pon, Fla., fishing one year probation, no registtation,
without non-resident liccnsc; Pbyl- costs only; Mary R. Harvey,
lis L. Young, Middleport, speeding, Rockville, Md., speed, $24 and
$23 and costs; Guy W. Schuler, costs; Kenneth Brown, Pomeroy,
Middleport, seat belt violation, scat beli violation, $25 and costs,
costs only; Joe J. Brown, Racine, DUI, three days in jail, $350 and
thlee charges or $pelring ftsh, $50 costs, 90 days SuSpended license,
and costs 011 each; fishing without a alcohol assessment; Robert N.
license, $2S arid COSIS.
Washington, Belpre, soed,.$21 nnd
The following ~ere given sus- costs: Mark Russell, Portland,
pended sentences of $SO for elisor· OWl, $300 and costs, 10 days in
detly conduct upon the condition jail, operator's license suspended
that 110 further ~· charges for one year; Estherla M. Powell,
are filed: Randy
, Athens; Long Bottom, OWl, three days in
Maureen WoOten, AI 1y; David jail, $350 and costs, operator's
George, BidweU; ~ A. Davis. license suspended for 90 days,
Sr., Nelsonville; Olristic Dye, Car- upon enrollment and completion of
bondale; Edward Stanley, Albany; RTP school. SISQ of line and jail
Bucky S. Hall, Carbondale: Rly- · lime suspended, failure to control,
mond Bailey, Jr., Athens; Sherry costs only.
Owens, Athens; Tina Pattenon,
Kathy Hetzer, Reedsville, passAlbany; Timothy Pickett, Nel- ing bad checks, $25, cos•s and
sonvillc.
restitution: Jacob E. Schuler,
Also filled w~: Linda Bishop,. Pomeroy. DWI, $50 and costs, six
Albany, driving under suspension, months in jail, suspended to I 0
$100 and costs, three days in jail, days, probation of two years, alcosuspended upon proof of valid hoi assessment, no operator's
license withm 90 days; Robert license, $100 and costs, two years
Darst, Jr., Point Pleasant, W.Va., probation, six months in jail suspassing bad charges (eight counts}, pended to 10 days concurrent with
$100 and costs, Ql days in jail sus- · DWI charges; Louanna M.
pended, three years proba1ion, Leonard, Columbus, safety beh
restitution on each charge; Michael violation, costs only; William Lee
Feuy, Rutland, DUI, three days in Marks, Pomeroy, falsilicalion, six
jail, $350 and costs, license sus- months in jail suspended to 10

No one has winning
ticket in lotto game
CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were 110 lickets sold namin&amp; all six
numbers drawn in the Obio Super
Lotto on Wednesday night, meanin~ the jackpot Jor Slwrday' s game,
will increase to $16 million, the
ll)llery said.

·· Sheriff issues reminder

.

A Pomeroy man was cited for failure to maintain an 8S9ured

The winning !)umbers were 4,
· IS, 22, 26, 34, 35.
The Kicker nu.mber was
448093.
In Pick 3 Numbers, the winning.
number was 430.
·
In Pick 4 Numbers, the winning
number was 9170.
In Cards, the winners were Four
of ·Hearts, Pour of Clubs, Six of
Di11111onds and Two of Spades.
Sales in SU,Per Lotto totaled
$4,530,714. K1cker sales totaled
$645,905.
.

clear distance following an ac:cident on U.S. 33.
Norman L. Price, Jr., 49, was cited afler he failed to stop for
:. another car in Salisbury Township.
·
. According to a report from the Gallia-~gs post o( the Slate
. Highway Patrol, Price was nOithbound when a car in front of him
slowed to make a right turn. Price sauck the car, driven by Sue M.
: Rice, 47, Racine, fOrcing it to spin and slide off the right side of the
.·: roadway.
· , Price and Rice and Rice's passengers, Sarah R. PuUins, two
weeks, Stacy L. Pullins, three, and Stephanie L. Pullins, five, all of
~ Racine, were not injured. A fourth passenger, Teresa L. Pullins, 27,
', was reportedly taken to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens in
. a private vehicle. The hospital had no record of her treatment

•

'

-.:· --Area deaths---Ohio.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today fronl 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
' Wilbert James, Sr., 72, a former to 9 p.m.
Meigs County resident, died Tuesd,ay, June 4, 1991, in Michigan.
Glenn S. Rope
·, Born on May 15, 1920, at Forest
Run, Pomeroy, he was the son of
Funeral services for Glenn S.
tlje late John James and Irene Bul· Rupe, 73, of Cbeshire and Huntinglock James. Besides his parents, he ton, W.Va., will be cOnducted 2:30
was preceded in death by three sis- p.m. Friday at Willis Funeral
ters. Mr. James was a veteran of Home, with Rev. Robert Smith
World War II and the Masonic officiating. Burial will be in Gravel
Lodge.
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Local survivors include his Hill
the funeral home from 3:30-9 p.m.
brother and sister-in-law, John
'
James, Jr. and Barbara James, Thursday.
Pallbearers will be Buck
along with several nieces and Reynolds, Robbie Helms, Joseph
nephew.
White Jr., Charles Tate, Verlin
• Funeral arrangements are being Dunkle, Harold Clark, Rodney
handled by McFall's Funeml Home Spires, and Melvin Cross. Honi.P River Rouse; Mich. His services orary pallbearers will be George
wjll be held at the Mt. Zion Baptist Gardener, B.D. Clarlc, and Larry
Church in Ecorse, Mich.
Booth.

Wilbert
James ·
.,
~

'

.

EstaRoush
.,

: ·She wu rie4od In de8dl by
three SOU, Acrt. Harold IIICl Nell
Roush; and two daugbten, Irene
:AIIclnson and Naomi Teaford.
' Funeral servic:es will be con·
ducted 1 p.m. friday at Snlaht-

ructer
PliMrl1 Home. aar1a1 ww
in Lelart Palls Cemetery, Lellrl,
DC1

1915 !HEY. PICKUP
Auto .•Runa
- -Ill•
- -MW.
· olean.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, June 5 - Mrs.
B~rnard Bay,s and son, William
Bud, Mra. Timothy Cochran and
daughter, Elsie Folmer, Farrell
Houck, Sue Lightfoot, Kamala
Maple, Andrew Rainey, Arnie
Rodriguez, Charles Sanden, Amos
Webb, Tina Wilson and Sonya
WrighL
Births, June 5 - Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Brannen, a daughrer, Gal·
lipolis. Mr. and Mrs. William Kirk·
cr. a daughter, Leon, W.Va.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. 28 3/4

Ashland Oil ......................32 3/8
Bob Evans ....................... .18 7/8
Charming Shop..............:.. 24 1/8
City Holding .................... .14 1/2
Federal Mogul................... 18 S/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .................32 3/8
Key Centurion .................. 13 1\4
Lands' End ....................... 19 7/8
Umited Inc.......................29 3/4
Multimedia Inc .................28 1/2
Rax Restauiant ..................21/32
Robbins&amp;Myers .....;.........26 3/4
Shoney's lnc ..................... l6 3/4
Star Bank ..........................21 1/2
Wendy lnt'l........................9 7!8
Worthington Ind...............25 5!8
Srock rt~portt .,.. 1M 10:30111.111.
quotu pm~iiUd by Blunt, Ellis

and Loewi of Gallipolis.

State Route 124, June 10-15, 7:30
Revival services will be held at p.m. each evening. Theron Durham
the Hysell Run Holiness Church, will be the speaker. Bob Manley,
located on County Road IS off pastor, inviles the public to attend.

depai blltnt has entered into discus·

sions pcnaining to the trade-in of
their four yea- old Massey Fei)Uson lr8Ctor, which has been plagued
with transmission problems.
Roberts, Superintendent Ted
Warner and David Spencer also
discussed the commencement of
the county road program, which is
eltpected 10 be presented to the
board in a short time.
A $20,000 advance from the
general fund was approved for the
highway department as well,
enabling the department to pay for
their new bUCk.
A!l interdepartmental funds
transfer was also approved for the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services.
,Computen Purchued
Meigs County Auditor William
R. Wickline submitted his recom·
mendation of the purchase of a new
computer system for that office,
and the commissioners approved
the purchase .
The only bid received on the
computer system was o~ned last
week and referred to W1ckline for
his approval.
The replacement system from
Aide will cost the county $295.:10
per month, only slighdy more than
the system already in place.
A resolution &amp;!Jclwmg a group to

.18C Ll.

$300

SUIMASSIS

11• or

w.

1/t

COLD MELLON$

MIIGS FUM

Publlthed · ev~ afternoon. Monday

through Friday, 111 Couk·t St ., Po·

meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub· )
llshtng Company / Multtmedla. tnc.,
Polllt'roy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. S.·

con4 clasa postage paid at Pomeroy,
·

land Dally Press AsSOCiation and the

Ohio Newspaper Association . Nlitlonal
Advertising Rf'presentatlve, Branham
Newapaper Sales. 733 Third Avenut-,
New York, Ne-w York 10017.

POSTMAST'ER: Send address chan«t"S
lo The- Dally Sentlrlel, lll Court St ..
Pllmeroy, Ohio 4~7111.
SUII8CRIP110N RATII8

By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week ............ .... ...................ll.60
Onr Month ....... .... .. .... .......... ...... 16.95
OnP Year ............... .................. $8120
SINGLE COPY
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Dally . ................. .............. ... 25 Cents

sUbscribers not deslrln~to pay tMcar·
rter may remit In advance direct to

Th~

Datly ~nttnel on a 3, 6or 12 month

basis. Cl't'dlt will be glvt'n carr!« each

wi!H.
No subScriptions by mall permlttrd In
areas where homP carrier ~rvlce Is

available.
Mall Sublcrlptlon•
IMide lllelp Cooooly
13 Weeks ....................... ........... 121.84
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52 Weeks ....... .. .......... .......... ..... 184.76
Out1Jde MtiKt Coanly
13 WN&gt;ks .................................. 123.40
26 Weeks ............. ................... .. 145.50
52 Weeks .. ...... .. .................. . ..... 188.40

'

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•KNIVES

NEW SHIPMENT OF TOUCH UMPS
ILUIILOCI

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~USPS

A Dlvloloa of Mulllmedlo, Inc.

Mt'mber: The- Assodated Press. In·

perform a Civil War encampmen!
re-enactment on the courthouse
grounds for Heritage Weekend was
passed. The group will camp in the
area between lhe courthouse and
the old Masonic Temple (ncar the
Civil War monument).
Jones rqJOrted on the inspection
by a Motorola representative of the
Meigs County Title Office, where a
computerized title processing system will go into place in the near
future.
According to Jones, the representative reported on what would
be needed m terms of electrical
wiring and set·~· Jones also stated
that the board s concerns over
space restrictions in the current
office were dismissed by the representati vc, as old files from the
office can be placed into storaae. In
addition, the computers and allied
equipment are not expected to take
up a lot of space.
. Also present were Commission·
ers Manning Roush an" David
Koblcntz and Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

99Cu.

s:::

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio.

Documents.. contlnuedrrompaael

HEAD LEnUCE
RED PLUMS
BEGONIAS 01
MARIGOLDS

days, $150 and costs, driving under:
suspension, $100 and costs, six•
months in jail suspended to 10'
days, to be served concurrently
with DWI charge; Gregory Johnson, Racine, 16 hours of communi·
ty service with Meigs Coonty Litter
Control. costs; Jerry A. van Kirk,
Langsville, costs only; James M.
Fridenmaker, Wellston, speed, $24
and costs; Timothy E. Stone, Dexter, seat belt violation, $20 and
costs: Jolm M. Cheeseman, Logan,
speed, $20 and costs; John Jeffers,
DWI, $350 and costs, three days in
jail, operator's license suspended
for 90 days, diiving under suspension, $100 and costs, three days in
jail concurrent with OWl charges,
John V{. Ohlinger, Rolland,
DWI, $30(1 and coslll, three days in
jail, license suspe!)~ for 90 days,
alcohol assessment. failure to control, $25 and costs; purchased alcohol under age, $50 and costs. three
dsys concurrent with OWl charge,
disorderly conduct, $SO and costs; ·
Rodney Klein, Pomeroy, disorderly
conduct, costs, restraining order
issued; Patrick Snider, Racine, disorderly conduct, $100 fine sus. pended; Stephen Tatterson,
Pomeroy, OWl, $300 and costs,
three days in jail, 90 dsy operator's
license suspension, upon enrollment and completion of RTP
school, $150 of fine and jail time
will be suspended, ooe year probation; Thomas Swan, Racine, theft,
$SO and costs, restitution, 10 days
in jail suspended to three, concurrent with no operator's license
charge; Ruth Imboden, Rutland,
passing bad checks, $25 and costs,
restitution.

announcements--

Plan rnlval

HO.GROWN CABBAGE

MAll'S AUTO SAUS
·tft·-11

~. Meigs

'Hospital news

Hospital news

Esta Johnson Roush, 99, of
Veterans Memorial Hospilai
Portland, Ohio, died Wednesday,
THURSDAY ADMISSlONS •
June 4, 1.991 following an exlellded
Tim Polton, Albany; o.oqe, Gcn·
illness.
She was born Jan. 3, 1892 in heimer, Long Bottom; James
. Letart. W.Va., daughter of the late Baker, Pomeroy.
Jacob and Mary Clapman Johnson. . THURSDAY DISCHARGES •
She was member of the Mary Bonecutter and Bertha TUUlc. ·
Methodist Church and a retired
cook for the Portland Board of
Education.
. She was preceded ill death by
.her husband, B,Yf0!1 Roush in 1954.
She is SUCYIVed by four daugh·
ters, Kathryn Price of Johnstown,
,Maxine Deem of Belpre, Audrey
Williams of Port Myers, Fla., IIIII
1ruda Davia of Ral;mc; follf 111111,
Ivan Roulll of GalliPolis, Bill and
'Donald Roush, both of Portland
and Robert Roush of Racine; 23
:grandchildren; and 10veraJ gre&amp;t·
o3pd great-peat-pldcllildnln.

k:aandTexas.
Western Texas and Oklahoma
Frequent rain and thunderstonns could get intense stonns.
were exPec:ted for the Gulf of MexHighs forecast for today ranged
ico and along the south Atlantic from the 70s in mOSt of New EngCout. Pans of Florida. southern land. across to Ohio, Michigan and
Mississippi and Alaban\a were in Wisconsin and down to South Car·
for severe storms.
olina: the 60s from Massachusetts
The Northeast was expected to to New York City and into northstay cool and breezy. Rain was eastern Pennsylvania; the 80s in the
forecast to fall in the Appalachians. Midwest and Southeast; the 70s in
Sun and warmer lempcratures were the Upper Midwest and the Plains
likely in the Ohio Valley and the states; 80s in the Southeast; 90s in
Great Lakes. Thunderstonns were the South from New Orleans west
predicted for the northern and cen- to Southern California; 80s in central Plains.
tral California; and 70s and 60s
Cool temperatures and ovel'cas\ west of the Rockies and up to
skies were forecast in the northern W~ington.
Rockies. Rain is forecast for the
High temperature for the nation
Cascade Mountailis as well as parts Wednesday was 106 degrees at
of Idaho, Montana and Nevada.
Presidio, Texas.
.

PORCH SALEI SATURDAY, JUNE 8

$]11 n.
290
Second
An.

,.rt.

WI
Ohio
I

�'

.,

•

Bulls hammer Lakers 106-87
to even NBA Finals at 1-·1

·The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thu~

June. 6, 1991
Pag&amp;-4

Hatcher's solo homer pushes
Reds to 11-10 win over Mets
Browning captures
1OOth career victory
By DICK BRINSTER
AP 5110118 Writer
It would fipre !hat New York
Mets ace Dw1ght Gooden would
know why be's being sbeUed with
alarming regularity.
But the reason is as evasive as
the fastball and curve were during
the first seven seasoas Gooden ter·
rorized National League hitters
while establishing the best winning
precentage in the history of base-

Paul O'Neill drove in three runs
as Cincinnati piled up a seasonhigh 17 hits, then hung on 10 give
Tom Browning (7-4) his tOOth
career victory.
·
Kevin McReynolds, who had
four hits, had his fourth homer in
the eighth. Then Hubie Broolcs,
who had four RBis, hit a two-run
bomer off Don Carman before Rob
Dibble got the last six outs for his
league-leading 14th save.
But Dibble struggled, retiring
Kevin Elster on a short fly to
O'Neill in right after allowing a
two-run single to Brooks in the

ninth.
O'Neill. the Reds' holieSt hitter,
had a walk and two doubles off
Gooden. Six Reds had at least two
hits each.
The Reds led 10-5 after seven
irulings, but needed Billy Hatcher's
solo homer in the eighth for their
. of victory.
~w~ it was San Diego 3,
Chicago 0; Pittsburgh 7, .S• Francisco 3; Philadelphia 12, Atlanta 11
in 12 innings; MoniiQI 8, Houston
2, and Los Angeles 2, SL Louis 0.
(See NL 011 Page 5)

WATCHING HIS STEP Reds shortstop Barry Larkin,

back in action after being 011 the
disabled list. ·lumPS over the New

Eastern softball team honored
Eastern athletic director and Most Putouis), Gillilan (Most
softball mentor Pam Douthitt RBis. Most Hits, and Most Runs),
reported lhal her 1991 softball club, Golden (Most Stolen Bases), Wilposted.a 12-2 ovmll record, son (Most Sacrifices) and Aeiker
6-2 in the SVAC, held an awards (Best Fielding Pelcentage).
cmmony and picnic recently. The
Other players in aUendance on
Eagles finished second in the the team were Carrie Gillilan
league.
Misty Newell, Sherrie Smith'
• A large turnout of athletes and Mariko Tayama, Nora Eastman'
parents woe ill attendance 10 honor Arnie Friend, Shelly Hendricks and
:the softball team for completing a managers Becky Driggs and Heidi
Nelson.
:fine season.
- Edna Hensley, Lorrie Baker and
Marry Ann Kibble were honored as
four-year seniors.
Receiving leUers were Hensley,
Baker, Lee Gillilan, Mary Jo Reed,
;'\my Well, Lisa Golden, Andrea
Rockhold, . Carrie Morrissey,
· The Wheelersburg Kiwanis
Michelle Donovan, Andrea Dillard, Club is sponsoring the Junior
Jaime Wilson and Penny Aeiker.
Olympics' District 10 track meet,
SVAC awards woe presented 10 which will be held OR· Saturday,
Hensley (MVP and ftrSt 1ea111 All· June 15 at 10 am. at Wheelersburg
SVAC), Gillilan (first team), and High School.
Baker, Well and Golden (each bonThe enlry fee for the meet. for
J&gt;rable mention).
children and youths eight to 18
- Hensley was named fust team ' years old, will be $3 per child.
all-district and all-state honorable
The. meet will have all track
mention. She played in the All-Dis- ~vents m boys' and girls' divisions
lrict game Sunday and will be hon- m five age classes- 8-10, 11-12,
ored at the all-state banquet on · 13-14, 15-16 and 17·18 year-old
June 14.
groups.
Hensley and Well a junior
Participants finishing in the top
received Scholar Athlere Awards ai four will be eligible 10 compete in
the state level.
the state championship meet at
• Team awards were ~nted 10 Bow~ng Green State University in
Hensley (Best Defens•ve Player), Bowling GJ'Ce!l.
.
Gillilan (Best Batting Average),
For more .mformauon, contact
· Baker (Most Improved Infielder) tournament director Glen Queen at
Well and Golden (Most Improved 1-574-8374 (Wbeelenburg).
Outfielder) and Kibble (Coaches
Award).
: Individual awards were present·
ed to Hensley (Most Ass•sts and

York Mets' '\!lace Colemaa after
Coleman steals second base in
tbe first lnalng of Wedaesday
night's slugfest at Claclnnatl's
Rlverlroat Stadium, wbic:b tbe
Reda won 11·10. (AP)

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4574

'

..
,.,,

I

.,.
GET OUTTA THERE!- Chic:ago poiat
.:: auard Michael Jordan (right) objects to tbe
~ • lland·ebecking defense of L.A. Laker guard
...: Byroa Sc:ott, wbo appears to be re~~eblaalnto

The Eastern High School Ath .
letic Boosters will be holding a
four-mao scramble, A·B·C-D, at
the Mason Golf Course in Mason
Basketbail
MIL W .(UKEE (AP) - Del W.VfL, on Sunday,June9 at2 p.m.'
S•gn-up will precede the event
Hanis said he will return for a r.fth
SeaSOn as coach of the Milwaukee at 12:30 _with an enlry fee of $25.
aucks, ending weeks of specula- Door pnzes will be given . For
lion that he would move to the more information please call Bill
riam's front office. Harris, who has Han~um at 985-4244 or Randy
a' 183-145 record with the BuckS Chunlla at Eastern High.School at
since 1987, said he will continue 10 985-3329. All proceeds will go to
serve both as coach and vice presi- the Eastern Athletic Boosters. The
public is invited 10 participate.
dent of basketball operations.

Sports briefs

..

~
'

..... •
·-

I

48
'"""

I

PI'

Clil
r 1 1111

IZIR

:Old. their 32-16 m:ord is the best in
pbe majors, their lead already bas
t)tretched to five games, and no
k!ther NL East contender has
~lelllled forward 10 challenge them.
:1- 'thanks to Bobby aonilla,
-:: aonds Van Slyke, Drabek and
Smith the Pirates figured 10
~~ good. B~tthis good7 They've
~ot been just real good, they've
. been Ullmll.
: After a dreadful start. VanSlyke
"is hitting .400 in his last eight
!lames. Bonds has rocketed his
.avera!!'&gt;. from the .110s 10 .258 'ind has hit five homers - in his
~ast 17 games. Drabek lost more
!iimes - seven - in his first nine
tdecisions than he did list season,
)lien rebounded 10 pitch a one-hit
. :sJ!utoutofSL Louis.
••
·

a.k-

PI 11111111'

ff:ane

•liP

4415 ••• .,

llcl.11 ...

...

Price good wi1tl eiCChlnge

I YR \IIARRAHIY

•Naturalller
•Hush Puppies
•D Myen

Bryn Smith (44) and BCOn:d on a
double play grounder by Chris
Gwynn. Juan Samuel added his
sixth mer in the fourth .
Martinez (9-2) cruised to bis
eighth career sbutout aDd third this
·seuoo 10 tie San Francisco's Bud
•Blaclc for the league leld. Martinez
~suuck out four arid Wlllrcd three.

a•&amp;ez.,
Foom

......... 'J7h..
Ill ......

HOOD
FAMILY
SHOES
211 UST....
991·6254
PO.IOY

..........

249
.......
~

- __
...

'

..... 'IUMII•t

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
- - I:JOLM. to I p.lll. _,_...,Fildey,

·~· l.m. 1D 7 p.m. • • IW)i, end I l .lft. 10 I p.m. lundly

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"'!'~.::,.tl, tW1

MARK'S AUTO SALES
9931·:1U11

Ohio

-June 16th

STIHL

wnHA

lightweight ond dependable. Stihl trimmers ore
groot for culling places
your mower con't reach.
Get one ot o great price

Former ~igs Countian Ronnie .
Myen looked 10 be the sure winner
in the Sprint Car division. laldng
over the lead from Mike Imler on
the seventh lap, however, a right
rear Oat tire put Myers in the puts
and gave Chargin • Charlie Fishyr
of Columbus the lead.
The hard-charginil Fisher held
on for the win over Todd Kane,
CJ. Holley and Rick Holley, both
of NelsonviDe, and Mike Imler.
Riclc Holley and Todd Kane
won heats in the sprints, while
Bobby Davison of Liu!e HOC:king
and Boggs and Houser won the
heats.
··
In the Street Stoclc division,
Barry Bragdon of Jackson defeated
Yauncey Shipley and Roger
French.
Skyline Speedway is located on
Co. Rd. 53 between Coolville and
Athens, with racing every Friday.
K-C Raceway is located between
Waverly and Chillicotbe off Rt. 23
at Alma, with racing every Saturday evening.

.

'

$12995
$219 95

'

FULL LINE OF BRUSH CUnERS IN STOCK
AT

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600 E. MAIN

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992-2094

-- : ST/HJ.:.
VISA

gameS ...

992-2124

UDIES SANDALS
&amp; CASUALS

•

"I knew we'd be good ... but the
question was how good," 1J!811:8jler
Jim Leyland said. "The pitchmg
was there. the hitting was there, I
liked our bullpen and the bench
was good, maybe not as good as
last year, but good. But our 8l!YS
are sman enough to know we ve
barelylakenourjacketsoff,"
So muc:h for the team lha~ supposedly self-destructed dunng a
distracting spring traittin~ lhal featured Bonds' well-pubhcized onfield blowup with Leyland and
Bonilla's laborious contract negoti·
au~!lBI. ·10ld J'1mmy I uouu
.~ .....ghI the..dis •
ttac~ons would be 100 much, SL
Lows IIIIIIIIIP Joe: Tom.
. Just as they d1d last year, the
Pirates have won mostly because of
the Kille[ B's. But it's not been
only BoruUa and Bonds and short·
stop Jay Bell, but the beiiCh, the
bullpen! Buffalo-~~ boss.
Bomlla still hasn t s1gned and almost assuredly won't be trad·

easier

'

By SC01T WOLFE
Sentlel Correspondent
Bob Adams Jr. broke into the
win column last Friday night at
Skyline Speedway in Stewart by
defeating last week's winner Bruce
Dennis, while Jackie Boggs of
Grayson, Ky.. defeated Terry
' Houser and John Lawhorn for the
Late Model crown at KC Raceway
in Chillicothe.
Using a set-up that was success·
ful for them during last year's
championship season, the Doll
brothers set Adams' car to go 10 the
front quickly and there it stayed for
the victory. All season long the
Doll brothers have been experi . menting with different things 10 get
some more speed out of the car.
The. car was fast, usually in the
top three, except for some "bad
luck" mishaps. Friday's set up was
the right one as Bob Adams easily
outdistanced the field in the 25-lap
A main.

1989 .CHEV. S-1 0

14,000 miles. A/ C. Like
new.

.Malee ·Dad's Yardworlc

'Adams A-main winner at
Skyline Speedway Friday

·-beat-J.•m•m-y•Jones-.1(4···3)•.-------------~~
hitter and slump-ridden B~ Bul- 10
1er bad the key hit for Los Angeles. •
Butler, mired in a 2-for-23 slide,
Pomeroy
nipled 10 lead off the pme against

20°/o OFF

I

gwns.

Baseball
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The sale of
the Montreal Expos to a group
headed by team president Claude
Brochu will be presented to owners
for approval next week.

OVER I

r·

7
I II M
....... II;

• 2090

The Bucs are baclc, not that they
ever went away.
. "They're tough, real tough,"
said the Phillies' John Kruk after
the Pirates swept consecutive three·
F.ame series from Philadelphia.
'Without Drabek, they've still got
great pitching. And the everyday
lineup they've got- hey, sticlc
Bonilla into the bean of any lineup,
. and it's a good one. No question
they're the team to beat.".
The next thing you know, Pitis·
burgh fans will finaUy notice the
Stanley Cups finals ll'e ov~r and
· there's another chamJ?IOnship cal·
ill&lt;:t team in town besides the Pen-

ed - but is putting on a one-man
campaign for MVP. He's certainly
been the Most Valuable Buc ,
putting up the kind of· numbers .311, six homers, 34 RBis - that
bave earned him three sttaight trips
to the All-Star Game.

Adams is 'Sponsored by MeDon·
aids of Pomeroy, Stihl Chain saws,
Larry Millhone Trucking, Five
Points Express and J. D. Drilling.
~AT£
Bobby Hill won the Semi-Late
~ ~(ConlinuedfromPage4)
.
main. Racine'sChrisDiddlewas
·
J
26 th da
f hi last running second and biddin$ for the
1::
Pirates 7, Giants 3
smce une • e te 0 s
lead, when a ring-and-piruon gear
~· Jeff Ki?-' s three-run homer complete P,JR~ -has not allowed int be rear end side-lined the Meigs
. ered'
liirst . . g and a run m 19 innmgs.
C I dri
~gg
a •ve-run
!'In~
.
Fernandez's frrst-inning homer
oun Y ver.
:Jiob Walk won for the third ume m at Wrigley Field his second of the
Jackie Boggs was the class of
Pittsburgh's last five games.
hi 42 •d · 4 156 at bats
the field here Saturday at KC Race• Jose Lind had a two-run single year•.was . s n m •
• · · way, where he easily motored to
fn the second.
· . Ble~ 3) gave up five hits the win over an All-Star field of
~-. San r:rancisco ended a ~a~on 10 seven =~• Astros 2
super Late Models.
~1gh -ty1ng three-game wmmng
Delino DeShields had four
Boggs had the hot-set up ,
Stn:ak as ~Uy Do~ (~4) lasted sttaight hits _ including a two-run putting the Chubby Baird car in the
poly two-thirds of an mrung.
and ~ RBis d De
high groove, where he was never
' Walk (3-0) allowed three runs, h!&gt;"'er -:
. our
• an
n- seriously challenged. Jeff Houser
'two earned. two hits; struck out two ms Mart!nez pitched \\leU.
.
finished second, followed by John
and walked two in six innings.
. Marunez &lt;7•4) allowed eight Lawhorn, Joe Meadows, Craig
· Dodlen Z, Cardinals 0
h•ts •.s~k out seven ~!~d y;al:"ed (Fudge) Leist and Ban Hartman in .
Ramon Martinez pildted a four· two 10 e_tght and two-third mrungs the Bob Evans Farms cat.

Your choice

LADIES
DRESS SHOES

$) 0 OFF ALL RED WINGS

.;

!.; With the season barely a quarter

120'15

30°/o OFF

I

By ALAN ROBINSON
AP Sports Writer
~ PITTSBURGH (AP) - For
1 weeks, the rest of baseball won,:'dered how good the Pittsburgh
" Pirates would be when Barry
.. Bonds started playing like an MVP,
~ Andy Van Slyte began hitting like
'"a $4 million man and Doug Drabek
• started pitching like a Cy Young
~ward winner.
·'Baseball is Jitlally getting its
~ answer And for the Mets, Cubs,
• Cardin~, Phillies and Expos. the
• :news isn't good. ,
:
The Pirates have led the Nation··
;81 League East since~ 27 even
with their stars slumpmg, but a
:!nine-game winning streak that
~ended Tuesday has them on the
:_verge·of turning the race into a
!'rolll

Heritage Weekend
Sale
AT

•Nunemates, All Tennis Shoes,
Men's Tennis Shots by Florsheim
Hush Puppy &amp; CherokH

.

~·

.

HOOD FAMILY SHOES

Jordan's BVDa Ill the tlllrd q~~arter ol Game 2
o1 the NBA FIDaii Wednelday qbt in Cbkqo,
wlllc:b tile Buill woa 107-86 to even the best-of·
seYe&amp; series at 1·1. (AP)

i:Pirate stars break out of slump to
~·help keep Bucs in front in NL East

Junior Olympics
district track meet
slated for June 15

-,

Wednesday night, be made sure
they established early the inside
game that had been missing.
" Once be gets going offensively, he can roU over teams," Chicago coach Phil Jackson said. " He
did a great job getting everybody
involved on the offensive end."
James Worthy led Los Angeles
with 24 points and Vlade Divac
had 16. Johnson, who had a ttiple·
double and was the key 10 the Lak•
ers' opening victory, sank only four
of his 13 shots and added I 0 assists
and seven rebounds.
·
A stuff by. Divac gav e Los
Angeles its last lead,. 37-36, with
4:16 left in the first half. Jordan
had just two points and three sh&lt;P
at that point
But he scored the Bulls· next
four ""''rets in a span of 1:38, gi¥·
ing them a~ lead. They led 41·
43 at halftime, then made 17 of ~
shots 10 go ahead 86-69 after tiuW:
quarten.

briefs-

whidl

Eastern scramble
golf tourney JUDe 9

shooting.
Chicago; shalcing off its opening-pme nervousness, set an NBA
Finals record by hitting 50 of 81
shots. a percentage of 61 .7. The old
mark of 61.5 was set by the Lakers
series.
against
Boston on June 4, 1987.
Michael Jordan staged a spec·
John
,Paxson tUde all eight of
tacular display of tearnworlt. pass·
his
shotllllll
Horace Grant hit I0ing, shooting and aerial artistry.
of-13.
Combined
with Jordan. they
Magic Johnson was stifled by Scot·
connected
on
33
of
39. The entire
tie l&gt;ippen's bump- and~ grind
Los
Angeles
team
hit
only 30 of
defense.
73.
The Chicago Bulls relied on
J 0 rdan, as usual. outdid everysensational shooting and re-awak·
one.
ened aggressiveness to even the
''He can do the impossible, the
best-Of-seven NBA Finals at one
unbelievable,"
said Johnson, who
game apiece Wednesday night with
had
only
14
points.
a 107-86 rout of the Los Angeles
Even Jordan, himself the master
Lakers.
of
the
miraculoUs, was impressed.
"They attacked and we didn't
With
7:46 left in the game, he
attaclc," Johnson said.
made
a
layup
that gave the Bulls
"It was a game that you rarely
their
biggest
lead,
97-71. It was no
see at this time of the season,'' ·Los
ordinary
layup.
.
Angeles' James Worthy said, "a
He
lOOk
a
pass
from
Cliff
Lev·
game wbere nothing ~ tight for
ingston
in
the
lane
and
drove.
one team and evaything perfect for
Encountering the long. arms~{
the other.' '
'(he Lakers will 1ry to reverse Laker' forward Sam Perkins while
that trend Friday nigbt in the fust in midair, Jorda.n shifted the ball
of three games at Los Angeles. AU from his ri~t hand to ~s t~n. as he
they have to do is find a way 10 was de~nding and la1d 11 m off
the backboard.
stop Jordan.
"It's just one of those creative
The Bulls' star made only one
moves."
Jordan said. "Sometimes
of three ·shots in the fast 20 min·
I
don't
know
what's going 10 haputes as he got bis teammates
pen.',
involved. Then he buried his next
He also succeeded on a more
13 aUempts, mostly jumpers, and
human
level. He made excellent
finished with 33 points on 15-of-18
~ 10 set up easy inside b&amp;slcets
m the ftrSI half and hit nomuil mid·
~Sports
range jumpers. He finished wi.th 13
Football
assists and seven rebounds. PiptJCn
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tak; and Horace Qrant added 20 pomts
inJ! issue with other courts, a feder· each for the Bulls. Pippen also had
at Judge held lhal the NFL has been 10 assists
liable for antitruSt violations since ·
In Chicago' s 93-911oss in Sun·
its last agreement with the players day's. opener, his teammates
union expired nearly four years watched as Jordan put on a one. ago.
man show, scoring 36 points. On
In a ruling finding for players
suing over pay for developmental
squad members, U.S. District Court
Judge Royce C. Lamberth wrote
that in his opinion the league's
labor exemption has been void
since Aug 31 , 1987, when the 1982
agreement ran out
·:
By HOWARD ULMAN
AP 5110118 Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - After two
games, the Michael-Magic series
bas become the Magical Michael

ball.

"Today I thought 1 had good
stuff," Gooden said after the
Cincinnati Reds rocked him for
seven runs and II 'hits while beating the Mets 11-10 Wednesday
night.
Gooden (5· 5) finished four
innings and never retired a batter in ·
the fifth. It's the fourth consecutive
game in which he's allowed at least
five earned runs.
The 26-year-old right-hander
has failed 10 last seven irinings in
any outing during that span, allowing 42 hits and 23 earned runs in 22
and one-third innings. 1bose numbers are shocking considering his
11946 career JeCOFd. the best ever
for· a major league pitcher with .
.more 'than IOOdecisions.

The Dally senunei-Page 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Pldnl3, Cube 0

, Tony Fanllldez hit a rare home
run and Dennis Rumussen outdo·
eied Mike Bielecki with a sevenhitter.
The Padres have not al~w~ an
earned run in the last 26 mmngs,
wbilc Rasmussen (2-0) - who ~ot
his founb career shutout and frrsl

Houre:
ll am 10 Mid . Sun.·Thurs.
11 am to 1 am Fri. &amp; Sat.

2 MEDIUM

PIZZAS
·2mMS

$999

WI NOW
HAW
DIET PEPSI

LARGE
PEPPERONI
PIZZA

ICE

Perba~M 7ou've

~~~:::;

offbU)'IDI that new car or truck 70u •o
nee4. Well, now ... Th•nh to a •eriou new PriciDI Pollc7 at Turnpike
Galllpotu. .•• You can buy any new Ford car or truck ror •49 Over lavolce. Tblt.l
I• not a Hie •.. Not a •pedal promotion ... But thl• IS now the nery da7 low
price ••• ODI7 at Tumjdke or O.Wpon.: •49 Over Iavolce oil an7 new Ford car
or truck. Iavoices are po•te4 on aU new can and trucu, 110 •bop Turnpike
Galllpoll• when we're open or clc»ed and check our ezclulve low pricing.
'WilY PAY .MORE .SOMEWHERE ELSE?

*49 Over Invoice ... That's The Price Every Day
At Turnpike Of GaUlpollsl
It's No Wonder 1\Jmplke Undersells Those Who Won't Be Undersold/

LET THE COMPETITION BEWARE! .
AT TURNPIKE OF GALLIPOLIS, WE ARE GOING OUT FOR ALL THE BUSINESS I

•4goo OVER INVOICE, EVERY DAY, EVERY DAY, EVERY DAY!

CAftYOUI o•Y

$699

..
;,

'

.·.

�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, June 6, 1991

. Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

•

. ••
•

Colbnm. RoU call iss uswered .
with ~Favorite Year End School
Activity."
'
Thank you notes were received
from several who aaeoded the District SJ!rinl ConftmJCe.
It waa decided 10 send a dona-

tion 10 the church in BjJJJlecialion
for the use of lhe cbun:h for lhe
meetings.
The nominating committee
made lheir reporr for lhe coming
year, which begins io September.
Officers are Linda Broderick, president; Heled Blacl:ston, vice presi- .
dent; Nancy Morris, secr.etary;
Bonnie Scott, treasurer, Peggy Harris, reporter. Members of the nominating committee were Kitty Darst,
Tammie Mash and Helen Black-

; Th&amp;nday, Junt 8, 1881

~French

The Mlddleport i.iteruy Club
held its fmal meeling of lhe year
recently wilh Riverside Study Club
of Gallipolis at the Stowaway

atsistant director of sraff developmen I in. the Licking Couaty
Schools m Newarlc. She
a
presentation on current childrens'
Restaurant
.
liierature, fiCition, and non-ficli!m. .
Middleport members and six Sh~ 1'!1" a number o~ boob ~
gnests present were Mrs. James she di~played and discussed wtth
Vennari, Mrs. Lee McComas, ~ladies..
.
Sheila Horky Mrs Arthur floyt,
The Middleport Luerary Club ;
=l..,E. Ch~pm~n. and guest will resume its meetings in Octo- •
ber.
:
• Judy Keck.

in~ead::~. ~::J!:~d"'::;

Kect after the luncheon. She is the
·
June 23 rather that the regular
meeting night and will be at the
home of Boonie Scott at 6 p.m.
The traveling prize, donated by
lhe hostesses, was won by Helen
Blackston.
.
Refreshments of pizza and pop
were served by Ann Colburn wilh
·contributing hostess Peggy
ston.
Tbe family picnic will be held. HoudashelL

~

•
•

Scott guest speaker during Club holds final meeting
Middleport CCL meeting
!ftade
Michalea Scott was lhe gnest
speaker when the Middlepcxt Child
Conservation League met recently
at the Rock Sprinis United
Methodist Cborch.
She is a student at Meigs High
School and a member of Teen
Institute. She spoke on drugs and
alcohol in Meigs County at well as
lhe different drugs and lhe effects
!hey have on a person. She spoke
on the effects of cigaretteS, souff,
glue inhalants and white out, and
also on steroid l!SC in. the athletic
program.
. .
Lioda Broderick, vice president,
conducted the business meeting
and led lhe group is the Pledge of
Allegiance and the Mother's
Prayer.
"There's SWJshine In a Smile"
were 1he devotions Y,iven by Ann

~

Ronald D. Grate and Rebecca
Grate, .7S Acres. 10 Brian Armes
and Charlotte Armes, Chesl4r.
. Charley Day Smilh and Naomi
G. Smilh, .80 acre~~, to Naomi Jo
Worley, Salisbury.
.
Ellis a.tley, Jr. and Janet Hart- .
ley, pt lot 12, 10 Hartley, Hartl~y
&amp; Hartley,lnc., Pomeroy V'tllage.
Charles Ross McCloud, dec'd
by executor, lot 1190, 10 Larry B.
H4ynes and Paula J. Hliynes, Mid·
dleport Village.

Open men's semifinals to feature Germans against Americans

:

Br DAVID CRARY
:
~..ted Pr• Wrlllr
• . PARIS CAP)- TJuee or tho
~ men'a aa ll!Nlflll • die PNacb
•
· ·

Property transfers

In the majors...

.
•

~

·

'~

~

~
•

~

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.+19

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2.51.
IIIIIBO~ Now Yoolo, 74:

THE WINNQ • Billie Dorsey rl New Lexington waa tbe win·
ner rl an RCA television set awarded by Benelldal as pm1 or Its .
recent open llouse. Here Tina Morgan, manager, congratnates tbe
winner. Beneficial recently moved into new headquarters loc:ated
on Nortb Second In Pomeroy.

-.Now v-. n:

01mao, ,......._

62; . . _ ... JlioF, 61; lljo,

Ciaala-

JIIIj,60.

-.ca.. ii Loo-:
SAVES Dibltle c· •

14· Dave
St. 'LooU,
. •,, ~. . . Dlop, 1 2 : - . eH

Ylllt,ll.

Veterans assistance topic of
L~wis Manley unit meeting
The Lewis Maniey .Unit 263 served in the. war. It reduces from
American Legion met recently at 180 days to 90 days for veterans to
lhe home of Dorolhy Casey follow- qualify for certaln dental benefits,
ing refreshments at Dale's Restau· counseling, medication for homebound veterans and housing loan
rani in Gallipolis.
A newsletter from Eighlh Dis· benefits to those who served in the
lrict President Maxine Barnes was Persian Gulf War for 90 days or
reatl stating summer convention more.
Mrs. Richards spoke from lhe
will be held Thursday in Lancaster
Firing
Line which gave a sample
with Florence Richards as delegate
resolution
slating that Congress and
and Margaret Bowles, president, as
lhe
Slai!IS
shall have the power to
alternate. Department convention
prohibit
lhe
physical desecration of
wt!l be held July 12-14 in Dayton.
lhe
flag
of
the
United States. A res·
The Chillicolhe veterans birlhday
olution
from
at
least 38 states is
~will be held July 18.
needed
to
ratify
a constitutional
:•t:ula Hampton, legislative chairamendment.
ll1lJI. stated lhe Persian Gulf War
Player for peace and singing of
V~terans Assistance Act of 1991
"America"
closed the meeting.
beclame public law on April 6. This
The
next
meeting will be held at
authorizes money 10 pay for lhe
lhe
home
of
Ada Franklin in Point
Ptltsian Gulf War and to provide
Pleasant,
W.Va.
~ertain benefits for troops who

Robinson named Orioles'
assistant general manager

1 "'

61: .-.,.........,57: -

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seeded Jim Courier,·who upset
Bec:ter, winner of every Grand Edberg on Wednesday.
Slam event ex:,.~is otic, will
Mic!Utel Chang, a loser to Beck·
ii'C"Iive- a I'IIUIII 10 till No. 1 Jeplaco Stefan
uNo. 1 if . er in lhe quanerfinals, expects a
be bc8ll Andre Apui. in a sanifi· bruising ba~ with Agassi.
ul Friday matcliinjl two of lhe
"I'm not maklnf any predic'-dcltbittenintaulis.
tions." Chang.said. 'I'IIJuslwatch
Tile Olber SCIIIifinal also pairs a lhem slug it out"
German and an American - 12111·
Slugfests also were expected io
,....._ Ait.io, 141 Violbk ,....
ll
1
H
Micbacl
Stich
apinst
Dinlh·
the
women's semifinals today, fea·
~
world nnldng.

-.19;

'II' L M

• ...... 29 :at
a- ......... 26:at
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. MDwnbe ...... 23 71
!lew Yodt .. ,... 22 Zl

()pea arc aeelring dlo glory of •
fil1t Oand Slam lille. 1be tourtb,
·B cldakbr. bMhisowapowaful

ltlll-W. a..t,S.Pm , ,..,,,.
lloo,
T. " " - S. lliop,
31; Knk, ......~. 31; Calderila,

AMERICAN LIAGllE
l!utDMIIoa
T-

BALTIMORE (AP) -Former it m~re .specific in terms of job
Baltimore manager Frank Robin- descnpuon and responsibilities ••
'
son lw agreed to become an assis- Keating said.
The Orioles said Robinson will
tant aenaaJ manager for lhe team,
the Orioles and Robinson's agent be involved in trades and acquisi·
iions, planning the team's new
said Tuesday.
"We're obviously pleased lhat Camden Yards stadium and Florida
, Frank wiiiiXllltinue to be an impor- traillin~ facilities, and have oiher,
tant member of lhe Orioles fami- Wlspecified duties.
'
ly," said Roland Hemood, the Orioles' executive vice president and
gencralllllllllier.
Robinson, wbo was ftred May
23, was on vacation and could not
be reached for comment. He will
start his new job Monday.
Ed Keating, his Cleveland-based
agent, said Robinson would take a
pay cut
"I don't want to get into
salaries, but obviously he's not
OFF ALL
going 10 get paid at lhe same level
he was u a manager," Keating
said.
·"That's not to say his responsi·
bililies won't be at great It's sim·
Just In Time for :Father's Day
ply lhalthe compensation levels for
Gift Giving!
baseball executives for lh~ most
pmt at the assistant g~neral manag,er level &lt;!o not match up wilh lhose
that a major league manager
receives."
~
Robinson's contract stipulated
be would become aSsistant gcneml
IJillllllier in case he was removed as
manager. Negotiations between
Robinson and the team focused on
992-5627
N. 2ND AVE.
dcfmin~~::ties more lhan on
money,
· said.
"Basically, we're updating and
streamlining the agreemeotto make

.

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FATHER'S DAY

IS~JUNB16th

20 °/0

MEN'S SHOES

Sports briefs

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s.. Dlo9&gt; ........ 21 15 .521

.

BasebaU
NEW YORK (AP) - The
National League postponed its
expansion vote a week before it
was scheduled to·select two new
franchises for the 1993 season.
The move carne II day after the
~ league ownership committee
was briefed on lhe NL expansion
commiaee's progress by Pittsbw'gh
PUates cbairman Dooglas Danfonh
and Jiven_partnersbip agreem
.
eots

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141: Mollar, 1181WID·
k-, ·"' 1; Harpor. Mi===· .333; M.
Lrewil, a.. h ... .331
RUNs-D..H.d•aa, Oatlmd, 31;
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FoodoaD

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YD..-.. 70: PUoH:I. lf
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6t; 111a:a. T--.111; l'o&amp;aall. e-m ·•
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...

PHARMACY

T--. 17: .
Wldll, T - . ll: C... y......_ 14:
D. lloadonoo, Ooklud, 14: ,,._....._
DOill~ . ,._,

T--.t•.

TOPICS

TalPLIIS-Molitor, Nll,..akoo, 5:
'• S; l:Ju.Mdwldt.l.

. . . . . . . CN:f

HOMIIIUNS-D. llooo- Dot·
lUll, 13: c. - . B&lt;tt.m 1:1: llooi.
Dlb'ott, 12; ~. Di\'ia, Mhm•MI, 11;

BY YOUR

-.-.11.
STCI.8N IA'P' p
Celif'orwl•
,1: I. P t 1, Olki.IDd. J'7i L AJo.
I

SWISHER LOHSE
PHARMACISTS .

'•

..,.,T. .ta, 15; Raiall, cw.ao. lSo
~,1 2.&gt;,

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_g]:
ala, 9-:1, .Ill S.:lll&lt; I" I:1.,

- . 5·1.

1-:1, .1011, IJI: Elf, T - 1-2.

.100.

1.64; C··f'aai, Cllftlu4, 1·2. .111,
2.2.5; len 1 10a, N.. York. 1·2. :nt,
S.12.

Why do Elkimoa have a low heart attack rata? Norwegian rt-rchera credit the monounaaturatN in their high-fat dlat lit In·
cludN blubber!. •• well aa Omeoa·3 olla from flah,

~.-.13:

PWIJ. Oli'
&amp;o. 11;

******
N-. aborter tJeatment gllta ptltlentl with blood clotaln letlveina

a.

T--.~.

', 74; MaiJ ... OdcaJot.ul•, a..aJ.-. 6t; ay~a.

SAVBS-I!obnlor, OoltloU, 16;

out oft he hoapltal flatlll'. In utudy in tht U. S. and Canida, five
dayl of heparin work.cl aa wellaa ten, when warfarin therapy waa
atarted right away.

R-.-. 14: Aetllooo.l'

Mlddle·ag.cl women who burn 1,000 or more caloriN 1 wHk '
through exerclaa can lower thtlr total choleatlll'ot levela whla
raiainglwela of high· denaity lipoproteinl, and lower blood prn·
..,.. and lntutln Ceveta. too. Exercieing away ~.000 calorie• Ia

BATTIIICl (1:16 M bouj:...T.

.I I, 13; Jlomor, c.ut..la, 13: D. Willi,

T - 12; Jtl!.. . _ , T-12.

* * * * • .•

Natloulr...-

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...........
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..,.., bettllr.

l

Clama. muuala, oyatlll'l and crebt may actually help lowlll' cholnttl'oltwelt, npec:lelly the "bad" kind, according to - c h
at the University of Waahlngton in Seettlll. Subjects ate varloua
low·f8t diahel made with lhellfiah.

:JI!I:

Zollo, II.~

••

&amp;UNI-T. Fm•d•, a.DIIa ».
C - . Nn Yoot 1 U: DoltiieiM1

******

1

"

CLEARANCE SALE
THIS WDI ONLY
June 3 tU I

AlL RATS OF
BEDDING PLANTS
IIOW SJOO

lA.
10" HANGING
·
ias1m · SJOO
Opena'!:.·at~~ Sat.
CLOSED SUNDAYS .

HUIIAID'S
GIIINHOUSE

SYRACUSE, OHIO
912·1778

MARKDOWN
WALLPAPER •• $199
(Doublt Rolli

99(
BORDERS.........
LEVELOR BLINDS

1 M:ludlr.IM.-......u;

******

WALLPAPER
and BLIND
SHOP
Rt. 50 at Toll Bridge
PARIDS-G,

15 CU. FT. .

wv.

&amp;UP

WnH TRADE

5 Cu. Ft. tci 23 Cu. Ft.

BRAND NAMES

"Don't Let The Heal Get You Down"
5,000 ITU- 27,000 ITU

THE
BRANCHWOOD
(Behind Meigs Co. Fairgrounds)

RESElW~TlONS

YH:.,H~:nl
l'Cf'..... Us

Before You
Buy That
New Washer

ONLY

RESI!IlVATIONS MUST BE MADE 3 DAYS
IN ADVANCE

-IIIII&amp; R. ...

I'IIQCIII'riONI
' frlondlr ._...

PH. MUIII
Pom•O&gt;f. OJ!.

•

~

:: ! NINJA TURTLES II
~·

•
t

Call 992-2789

' AND

~. TEENAGE MUTANT

N

$24995

•Maytag •Frigidaire •Gibson
•AdMiral •Kelvinator

To Place Your Order and 1.fake Your
Reservation today
PROPER A1TIRE REQUESTED- Sorry, No l••hs
.

SARAH FISHER - OWNER

STilTING

At$ 26 99 5

WE HAVE MAYTAG WASHERS
AND DRYERS - ClOSEOUT
MODELS, PLUS COME SEE OUR
NEW LINE - ·PRICED RIGHT!
GOOD SELECTION OF ALL KIND OF
USED APPLIANCES.

DINING HOUilS: Thursd~y and Saturday
6:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.

Ronold-••·" ·

STilTING AT

AIR CONDITIONERS

.

.... 1:00 . ..... to 1:00 ,....
. - . , 10:00 ...... ..... :00 ,. ...

CHEST
FREEZERS

17 ·19-21 Cu. Ft.
And Side-by-Side

MON.·SAT. 9·9, SUN. 1·5
30~·421·1 065

OPENING JUNE 20th

1. .....

$499 95

STA~NG AT$11 00

"Where Dining's Good"
CREW RD.
POMEROY, OH.

When you doctor pmcribatthe batt, our dependable phamaelata
will do the ~ lit . . .

-

REFRIGERATORS
•

o.r,....

Silt U.o, .351: l•o. II. LooU~M9:
s-.u.
......... .m:o.
II.

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·FINAL

~.

loo. tlciJo.

*.'l'laau. Qlcoao,"' c.
~31.

- Do11 'I ''" '"'"' '''

WALLPAPER

Nllliooal F-.J . _
PHOENIX CARDINALI-Sian..S

H•donoa, OllltH, 43:
JW.W, .,..,.._ 41; WI

.

-

the expansion vote, but said it
expected to make a decision by
Sept 30, the deadline in its original
timetable.

Major league leaders

...

,,.,, '" '""'""' -

.·, · And
o(J·a·l1ay when l,he
NL and ~ commissionei's office
denied reports lbat Miami and Denver already had been selected as lhe
two new teams, which begin play
in 1993 and cost $95 million each.
The other candidates are St Petersburg, Fla.; Buffalo, N.Y.; Orlando,
Fla., and Washington, D.C.
Tile NL didn 'I set a new date for

;:::1-tL 7~~~oet 5-5) oti'!PIIoill"''"lab"
'0

$.,., !•r'"' will bt

•

. !lJifJ fiQIUteiAJ,~.

5. 2::10.P&amp;
NOw Jrorli lolo "1-2) ot Ciricio•oll
fllloQ1' .......

· (0 Y 1%

.Rutland Furni,ure Company
ST.

n. 12~

742·2211

.

about the poclible loa of his ·rank
ing. "My goal was to win here." •
Agassl reached the ftnals of two
Grand Slam tournaments Jut year;·
including the French Open, butlw
yet 10 capture a title. He has won
the last three of his six career:
matches with Becker.
"Andre plays faster, closer tothe line and usuaUy hilS bardu duuL
his opponent," Becker said. "But I
hit bard as weU."
Courier, 20, and Stich, 22, had.
never before reached the quartcrfi-·
naJs of a Grand Slam, let alone the:
semiftnals.
·~
Stich said he would have pre·:
ferred to face E&lt;Jberg, ralher than': •
Courier.
-:

SHOE PLACE

NATIONAL LEAGUE

••
•.
Complled by:
Richard R Stewan and Betty
:: Emmogene Holstein Conao
Stewart, tracts, to Ronald K. FerguRecorder, Meigs County, Ohio
son, Salisbury.
Addie B. Jackson, parcels, to
Home National Bank, parcel, 10
Robert D. Jackson and Betty L. Keith Myers and Judy Myers,
Jackson, Olive.
,- Olive.
Addie B. Jackson, parc.els, to , Southern Ohio Coal Co., 2.46
P,andal M. Jackson and Shirley J. A., to Evan L. Dickinson,
Jll"kson, Olive.
Columbia.
.• Robert R. Eason, Krista Eason,
Roben M. Scarberry and Cathy
flUbert A. Eason, Jeff W8I171tZ and Scarberry, parcel, to family Homes,
Linda W~rner, parcel, to Jeff Inc., Salisbury.
~arner, Lmda Warner and Hubert
Michael E. Ypke and Rebecca
~·Eason, Chester.
Yoke, 5.013A., 10 Stephimie A.
.• Raymond Lee Walblll'll:, Mary Martin and Stephanie A. Yoke,
!Au Walburn, Dana Franklin Wal- Olive.
burn, Beverly Walburn, Dale · Edna Triplett parcel to Howard
Edward Walbum, Marjorie Wal- Jeffers and T~resa i.. Jeffers,
tiiirn, Blaine David Walburn, Pomeroy Village
Vl&gt;nda Walburn,.Ronnie Harrion
Joseph w. ~ters and Barblra
W.;ll!burn, Dennts G. Walburn, F. Masters, 1.000 Acres, to Ronald
Dons .Walburn, Peter E. Walburn, Charles McCrady and Virginia
Rpmame W~bum, Mary Kathryn Rose McCrady, Olive.
1'aylor, Davtd M. Taylor, parcels,
Dale West, clec'd aff'td. to Beutd Mary Edna Walbum, Middleport lab Cornell Sutton. ' • '
~ll
'
• age.

II....

~ llll1le fc:tmer ebampioiq and
Ga!!riela SIJwlinl, who 1111 the best
reconlon the tourtbis ~·
Sabatini wu to face Monica
SoliDI, the top ICIOd and defending
champion, In the f~rst match, followod by Steffi Graf against
Aranxta Sanc:Jw Vicario.
Graf and Sani:hez Vicario did
not lose a aet in the first five
rounds. Sdes and Sabatini lost one
each.
Beck«, despite years o( success
d_a!in$ back 10 his ftrSI Wimbledon
title tn 198S, has held lhe No. I
spot in the ATI\aJIIIputer ranting
for only a three-week period after
!lls Austrialian Open·ebampionllhip
m January. .
·
Edberl! recaptured lhe top spot
after a thigh iniiiiY. forced Becker
to default a sem1final match in
Brussels, Belgium.
·
''It's somelhing thai I can't really do anything about, ' 1 Edberg said

htrita_9t houst,.,..

:rroperty transfers

r.io.... IIIC I ,...

The Dally Senllnei-Page--7

· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1·100-137-1217
IUTLAND, OHIO .

446·1011
.

,.

�Thursday, June 6, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Weekend
fashion
exhibit
s~t .
· An exhibit, on loan from the Clark's Jewelry Stl*
betng

Community calendar
Commualty Caleadar Items
appear two da.JI llelort 1111 eveat
ud die day ol that eYeDt. Items
mlllt be received weD In IIIIY~U~Ce
to -.-e pallllaltloa Ia the caJ•.
ellllar.

THURSDAY
CARPENTER • Bible school at
Mt. Union Baplist ChUidl will held
through Friday.
at 9 a.m.
daily. For transpOrtl&amp;ion call 6983411 or 742-2138.

Cl•-•

MIDDLEPORT • Bible School
at the Heath United Methodist
Cburch will be held through Friday
from 9:~11:45 LUI. dllily. Classes
will be provided for nursery
~ die sixth grade. The public
is iaVJted.
SYRACUSE • Open registration
for swimming lessons at London
Pool wiU be beld from I p.m. to 6
p.m. through Friday. Cost for the
leQons is $20 and there are three
classes: beginner, advanced begin·
ner and iniClhii&lt;:dia~swimmer.
RUTLAND • Revival .al the
Cburch of Jesus Christ Apostolie,
New Lima/Loop Road, Rutland,
will be held through Sunday 81 7
p.m. nigbdy IIICI6 p.m. on Sunday.
Uoyd Hari will be the evangelist.
Tbe public is laviled.
LONG BOTTOM • Jerry CotICiill wiD be at the Mt. Olive Community Church in Long Bottom
thr!lugh Saturday at 7 p.m. fo~
reVIval.
PIONEER CO!io'TUME CONTEST • Bank One in Pomeroy is
MIDDLEPORT · ·The Middlesponsoring a pioneer costume contest in conjunction with lleritage .
port
Lodge No. 363 F and AM will
Weekend which will feature a~Ztlvities sponsored by the Pomeroy
meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. with
Merchants Association. Pictured Is GiDa TOlls, a partidpallt ill last
work
in the mastel' mason degree.
year's contest, wearing an earUer period outfit wltb shawl and llat.
Members
wbo have worked wilh
The public Is encouraged to participate Ia the contest and prbes
the
feUow
craft teams are asked to
and participation ribbons will be aW&amp;rded.
attend. Refreshments will be served
after the meeting.

Pioneer costume contest set
As a pari of lleritage Weekend
activities sponsored by the
Pomeroy Merchants Association,
Bank One in Pomeroy is conduct·
ing a pioneer costume contest on
Saturday at 11 a.m. following the
Heritage Parade, which begins at
lOa.m.
The public is encouraged to participate in this contest and to enter
simply contact any Bank One
employee 81 the Pomeroy offiCe.
Gifts and participation ribbons
will be given to each person who

enters wid judges for die event are
Hope Moore, Becky Bac:r and Mar·
garet Parker.
The contest is open to the public
and' judgin~ will be conducted in
two categones - authentic costuine
and reproduction of costume . for
male and female, child and adult.
Judging wiD be based on appearance, authenticity and uniqUCIIC8S.
To obtain an entry form or for
more infonnation on the costume
contest, contact or stop by Bank
One in Pomeroy.

·Poster contest
winners named
The names of winners in the
- county-wide Law Enforcement
. . . Poster Contest conducted by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department have been announced.
Sponsored br various professional and busmess people, the
contest was open to all fourth, fifth
and sixth grade elementary stu·
dents.
- Sixth Grader Jason Parker of
Tuppers Plains was selected as the
first place winner with a poster
relaung 10 "Crime PreventionM.
Second place winner was Kelli
Bailey, a fifth gmder at Chester, for
her entry in ~e "Just Say No" calcgory.
TYLER CIRCLE
The third place award was presented to Salem Center fourth grader Andrea Dunfee for her poster in
the "Don't Talk to StrangersM cate·
Tyler Circle, son of Jeff and gory.
Sonia Circle, celebrated his second
First, second and third place
birthday recently with a cookout winners were selected from each
and luncll.
Cake and ice cream were served school and all were presented with.
moneyandprizes.Inaddi~.each
to Jeff, Sonia, c~ and Jeffrey erurant
was awarded a parUCIJIIIlion
Circle, Grover and Elsie White, ribbon. 139 entries were received.
Harold and Becky Circle, Lula CirSheriff Souls by extended his
cle, Sheila, Dan, Kin, Danielle and congratulations to the,winners and
Tiffany Spencer, Serena and B.J. expressed his appreciation to the
Robinson, Ralph and Wilma Bal- participan~s, as well as 10 those
lard.
who contnbuted prizes and Jack
Also sending a gift was Sla":in.
at Meigs H!gh School.
Woodrow Fortney.
Slavm Judged the entnes.

Birthday celebration

GoIf news

Twenty girls were in attendance
at the Tuesday Morning Golf
Leque at ·the Meigs County Golf

Course.

Girls were reminded of the
upcoming lavitational that will be

POMEROY • Tlie Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
Tbunday PI 7 p.m. at the home of
die clerk, Sarah Gibbs.
RACINE - Regular meeting of
American Legion Pose 602 wiD be
held on Tbwsday at 7:30p.m.

FuU Gospel Chun:h in Long Bot·
tom will have a hymn sing 011 Friday at 7:30 p.m. featuring lbe Dailey Slagers and other iocll taJent.
Rev. Steve Reed lavileS tbe public.
Refresbments will be~
..

TUPPERS PLAINS ·There wiU
be a round and square dance at lbe
Tuppers Plains VFW BUilding 011
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m with
music by Ramblin Country. The
building is air conditioned and offr:ted by the Middlepon Munici·
remsruneniS wiU be served. Public pal Pool at General Hartinger Pari&lt;
is invited.
mclude three sessions. Leah
Doidge will be the instructor.
SATURDAY
The first session will be held
POMEROY - "Flash the . July 8-12 and July 15-19 f&lt;r beginTeenage Otter" will be shown at ners, age six and up, 11-li:SO a.m.;
the Meigs County Public Libnuy Ia advanced beginner, 10-10:50 a.m.;
Pomeroy on SattJiday 81 2 p.m. and and intermediate, 9-9:50 un. Lifeat the Middleport Lilnry on 'Mon- . guard ll:aining will also be offered
day at 7 p.m.
lor those at IW115 years of age.
The second session wiU be held
REEDSVILLE- There will be a July 22-26 and July 29 through
Class D and E men •s slow pitch Aug 2. Times are the same as the
softball 1ournarnen1 oq ·Saturday first Session.
.
and Sunday. For further infonnaThird session will be held Aug. ·
lion contact Pat Aeiker at 992· 5-9 and Aug. 12·16. Times are the
2576. Awards for first and second same as the ftrsl and second ses. place will Ill} given as will a third sions.
place sponsor award.
. Ffllllily fees are available with

• The Middleport United Pentecostal Church
will have a chicken and noodle
diner on Friday from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. Cali 992-3824 or 985-3558
for eat-in &lt;r delivery. Cost.is $3.50
per person.
LONG BOTTOM • The Faith

meeting will begin Sunday at 7
p.m. at the JTPA office, 117 West
Second SL in Pomeroy.
1UPPERS PLAINS · The annual Vineyard family reunion will be
held Sunday at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School. A basket din·
ner will be held at noon. AU relatives and friends are invited.

991-6657

•DIIIIPOIT

store.

.

The high school moved clear
out of town
Which made some of the older
ones frown.
But now we are all in one big
fold
And turned the purple and white
to IDIIOOIIIIICI gold.
Elberfelds has changed its name
But the frif:ndlinesS remains the

This is our once o year prke event. .
This incredibly low pri&lt;e
is ovoiloble only during
summer vac;otion!

.,

same.

The Civil War soldier still
stands guard
.
All akme Ia the courthouse yard.
The Rose Hill schoOl where we
got our start
A bome now for Don, Frankie
and Art.
The Enterprise Church is still
going .strong
Trying 10 teach us right from

wrong.

.

Much is different here on the
fann
But the old barn has kept her
charm.
,
. The large countl)' dinners are
now "tea f&lt;r two",
. And sugar, fPI and salt are now
taboo. '
We don't raise pigs and we
don't raise com
And we don't get up in the eatly
m&lt;rn.

Athe no
OFFER EXPIRES AUGUST24. 1991
OFf!RED DCUMt:U.IY

R. JOHNS, LTD.

·. TOPS 570 meets m
, Pome~oy
~Y Faulk .was the best loser Virginia Whitlatch and lhe surprise
and Trina Faulk was the runner up gilt was won by Wanda Faulk.
at the recent meeting of Ohio
A funny money 111elion will be
~PS No: 570 held at the Catpen- held at die June 25 meeting.
ter sHall m Pomeroy.
The next meeting wiiJ be held
Pearl Knapp W8S the best KOPS Tuesday 81 the Carpenter's Hall in
loser.
.
·
Pomemy with weigh-in at 5 p.m.
The frutt basket was won by and meeting at6 p.m

FATHER'S DAY JUNE 16
AT THIS PRICE, YOU CAN KEEP YOUR HEAD
ABOVE WATER, TOO.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE ·
GoWttar
S.mtung
Soundepgn
Zlfllth

Funai
Symphonic

Emerson · Sylvania

lTV

Shin tom
Multi Tech

Magna vox
GE

Phiko

Scott

RCA

HoM£
ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
J91 WEST MAIN STRm
POMROY,

OHIO

992-3S24

...,.,..,.....,;.;..,....._.....,.

When Dexter makes a shoe, they go
overboard on everything. Everything,
that is, except the price.

htrifa_gt hott$.t

WE REPAIR ALL MAKES

I

Mrs. Rae Reynolds presented
the program. "Language of Herbs,"
at the May meeting of the Return
Jonathan Meigs &lt;:haplm, Daug~Uei)~
of die American Revolution, helc'l
at the Meigs County Public
Library.
Mn. Reynolds told of the herbal
gardens ~Y which are open to
the publie; Dr. August Shubert's
medicinal garden at Old Salem,
N.C., which was established in
1761 is on11 such garden. He
reoorded the IIICS of each ~t for today's reference. Also m 1816
even niore herbs were inc:luded in
Dr. Johnson's garden at Roscoe
Village in Olsbocton.
Mrs. Reynolds said !hat health
and healing were based on the use
of wild materials which were
grown in the Applachian region.
Tbe Scotch, Irish and English who
settled in this rqion also faithfully
.. followed the signs of the heavenly
bodies. They used, herbs for four
primarily body functions: blood,
Dernm, yellow bile and black bile.

flJe.

SHOE PLACE
N. 2ND AYE.

992-5627
MIDDUPOIT

Many herbs were used in the
following manner: wild greens to
build blood and provide iron; vmous teas IBid wines f&lt;r vinepn and
tlactures; crushed chickweed was
used f&lt;r open wounds; tb~ had
unlimited uses; lavender oil wu
used in bathes f&lt;r tired musclea lind
to dispeU minor mental dqnssion;
ground ivy lea was used for babr
colic and painter's cough bec••se 1t
counter-acts lead in the body; bee·
ba um team or com presses for
wounds, cuts and bruises; comfrey,
cooked and mixed with tallow to
make an ointment for bruising,
itching or burns; bonset boiled
down for broken bOnes; rose hip
tea for viwoin C; sage for sore
throats fever and cold, was also
used to' reduce perspiration. There
were over 1 000 hygiene lids IBid
medicinal c~ made of belbl.
Mrs. Reynolds said 11 was fun to
try a few but reminded members of
the dangers cau~ by insecticides
and contaminatJon today by fuel

and garbage. Modem medicines
and teas made from herbs are.
grown specific:ally for that purpoae
under controlled cultivation.
Mrs. Reynolds gave each 'mem·
ber several sample pactages of various hetballea and recipes naming
tbe more well known herbs. She
also showed samples of herbal
mixes sbe bad made.
It \\'IS Iepotted that Ohio's out·
standing junior member won the
national competition.
Ohio's Wayne Blair is campaigning for lbe office or President
Gencial.
·
. The Point Pleasant Chapter
DAR sent an invitation to their
spring luncheon which was held
S~y PI the Methodist Cbwch.
The hostesses, Phyllis Skinner
and Mrs. Reynolds, served swmy .
silver pie. Contributing hosresses
were Nancy Grueser, Maye Mom
and Helen Hayes.
The next ~eetlag will be held
June 14 at Marietta.

Sacred Heart Catholic Women
announce upcoming activties
used in a fund raising project on
July 28. Get well cards were sent to
several parishioners.
Mrs. Hackett reported on the
spring bi-annual meeting of the
Steubenville Diocesan Council or
Catholic Women. Discussed were
requested contributions to Catholic
Relief for World DisasiCls; a new
ewe unit that was established 81
Christ the King in Athens; and the
illness of past president Toni

An admendment. was read lo
have lodge begin at 7:30 J?.m. in
stJIIIlliCi months and 7 p.m. m winter months at the recent meeting of
the Chester Council No. 313,
Daughters of America. .
· Alta Ballard presided at the
meeting and pledges the Christian
and American flags were given in '
unison. The Lord's Prayer was
given and the first stanZa of the
Star Spangled Banner was sung.
Psalm 118, vases 26-28 were read.
It was reported that Charlotte
Grant's sister, Dreama, fell and
tore ligaments in her le~. Oscar
Weber is in the hospital and
Pearline Lee is OUI of the hospital.- ,
The deaths of Charles Bissell and
· Janice Lawson's father were noted.
Dorothy Ritchie is reportedly feeling beller.
.
At the next meeting birthdays
'Yill be observed and a potluck will
be held at 6:30 p.m. with lodge
meeting at 7:30 p.m. The Past
Councilor's Club will meet at the
borne of Betty Young on Wednes~y 81 7:30p.m.
.
Attending were Esther Smtih,
Ethel Orr, Alta Ballard, Elizabeth
Hayes, Betty Young, Goldie
Fredrick, Erma Cleland, Charlotte
Grant, Virginia Lee. Faye Kirlchart,
Lora Damewood, Opal Hollon,
Bulah Maxey, Mary Holter,
Kathryn Baum, Mary Jo Barringer,
Jean Roush, Thelma White. Betty
Roush, Ada Bissell, Doris Grueser
and Mae McPeek.

Area families
gather
. _

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Herbs topic at recent DAR meeting

Poet's comer

held on June 111.
Poker golf was played and won '
by Elizabeth Lohse; low pulls, J0111
Childs; and chip-in-hole, Shirley
Bumganlner.

tJ.UIDRT

Family fees are $11 for ~e ftrst
child, $10 for th~ ~nd c!U'dand .
$8 for each ~d.dJUonal.chdd. The ·
lifej!u&amp;rd triUDtng fee ts $25 plus
thecostofthebooks.
Pre-registration for the sessions .
should be completed by ~uly 6.
Beginners must be .SIX years of '
age and up. Infants and. pre-schoolers a~e 0-5 should regiSter for the .
aquatic aquatot ~·
,
The ~o!lowmg may also ~e ·
offered tf mteresl war:rants: baste
and emergency water safety for any
interested groups, and night water
aerobics for any age.
F!Jf additional classe~ or informatton contact the Middleport
Recreation Department at 9926782.

MIDDLEPORT . AU area servicemen and women who have
This poem was wrillen by chickens on the ·range
returned from the Persian Gulf are · Dolores
I guess some things really do
Will especially for the
lavited to attend a reception hosted
change.
40th anniversary observance honby Overbrook Center in Middleport oring
Our bodies have aged and our
Genevieve Will and Miles
on Saturday 811:30 p.m.
hair
turned gray
Ml:Faiand of Columbus beld at the
And
now in the yard our grandPOMEROY • A baseball card Will home Sunday.
children
play.
·
CHANGING TIMES
sbow will be held at the Pomeroy
Time marches on, things .don't
What has changed since you
Municival Building on Saturday.
.
Admission is free. Tables are $15 Iivedhetc,
stand stiU
.
No longer a·White Hpuse that
each or 2 for $2S. Call S. Walton at
Except for the river near our
sold beer.
· 992-3314 for more infonnation.
home on the hill.
·
The theater's gone, the Hotel,
JACKSON- Tbe Libelty Moun· too.
By Dolores Will
The Beacon, the freighl station,
l8ineCrs will perform at the Jackson
Pomeroy, Ohio
County Jamboree in Fairplain, to name a few.
W.Va. on Saturday.
The last to come down was . - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Oscar RodeO's
REEDSVILLE · The Eastern
The Pomemy Cement Block is
High School Alumni Banquet and noO'DeUs.
DaiJce will be held Saturday at the
Remember the old Hocking Valhigh school. Dinner is 816:30 p.m. ley Train
,
and dance is at 9 p.m. Admission to
Now, not even the tr!lcks
the dance only is $4. pet person at remain.
the door. Dinner is by reservation
No buses leave our town any
only.
·
more
Tl)c Blue and Grey is a video

·

•Books
•Tapes
•Bibles
•Cards
•Cross Pen and Pencil Sets

~ IS
presented by Sky_ Cone, ~ttuc~r •
of home economtcs at Oh1o Umversity and curator of the Doxsee
CoUection. .
.
.
Several pt~, iliC~ a Wet)·
ding dress, Marine uniform, 1,920 s
slyfe dres&amp;e;S and. ~ther items, will'
be featured m the display·

S!!~!El~~ss!~S~?x~ti~n?!~~g. '

·RUTLAND • The Rutland .
BURLINGHAM - The BurlingTownship Trustees will meet ham Youth Club Modem Wood~
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at die Rut- men of America Camp 7230 will
land F'ue Station. ·
have a bake lind food sale on Saturday from 9-5 p.m. Chicken and
RUTLAND • Pre-homecoming noodles and sandwiches will be
services wiU be held a the Rutland available. There will also be a yard
Community Cburch on New Lima sale.
Road on Tbunclay lind Friday II 7
p.m.
LOTTRIDGE • Country Music
Night will be held at lbe Lottridge
. POMEROY - The Trinity Community Center on Saturday
Cburch or Pomeroy will sponsor an from 6 p.m. to midnight. All bands
ice cream social on Thursday and welcome. Refreshments available.
Friday from 11 a.m. to S p.m.
HQmemacle Ice aeam, sloppy joes,
bot dogs, chicken salad, desserts
SUNDAY
~nd beverages \Viii be served.
BRADBURY • The Bradford
Chicten and DOOdles will be served Church of Christ Camp Can Do
011 Thursday.
Vacation Bible School begins with
a balloon launch on Sunday at 7
FRIDAY
p.m. Classes being Monday 9-·
BASHAN • There will be an ice 11:30 a.m. and contlaue through
cream social at the Bashan Fire Friday. Call Derelc Stump at 992House on Friday at S p.m. spon- 5844 to regislel'.
~ by the Bashan I adies Auxiliary.
.
POMEROY • A 12-step A.A.
~DLEPORT

~C. Douee Historical Cos·
tume and Textile Collection,
houlled Ia the Scbool of Home EcoOOO'Jkl at Ohio University, will be
on dlaplay Saturday as a part of
Herilqe Weetmd festivities spon·
sored by the Pomeroy Merchants
Associltion.
The exhibit will be on display at

Thursday, June 6, 1991

; Mr. and Mrs. Johit Vinson, Vir·
ginia, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King,
Mr. and Mrs. David King and chil·
dren, visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Courtney Williams in
Portsmouth.
, Mrs. Juanita Richard, Dayton,
~sited over the weekend with her
sisters, Virginia Gibson and Gladys
turnings.
: Velma Long, Columbus, visited
this past weekend with Mr. and
P1frs. Millard Christan and Mr. and
Mrs. Woodrow Hannon.
; Mr. and Mrs. Don Updegraff,
Alabama, and Mr. and Mrs. Babe
Vfhaley, Florida, visited Mr. and
¥n· Bob Alkire recently.
• Mr. and Mrs. Willie Nutter,
Marion. were weekend guests of
ller parents, Mr. and Mrs. K.C.
)Velsh.
·
• Diet Knopp, New Catlisle, and
BiD Knopp, Dayton, visited Satur·
&amp;ly with- mends lind relatives and
attended the Scipio Alumni Ban9uet.

Bischoff and long time member

Marie Miller.

11 was noted th.a t the Rosary
Group meets monthly and all
Catholic women are welcome. Mrs.
Sue Jean Raub addressed conlributions for the senior citizens center.
Mrs. Dorothy Thompson presented
the program on "Our Lady of
Silence" Kriock, lreland,l879.
The hostess for the meeting was
Mrs. Marie Johnson.

The Dally Sentlnel-Page-9

Study: Even lifelong elderly
smokers benefit from quitting
By DANIEL Q.llANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON (AP) - A new study
of elderly smokers provides the
strongest evidence yet that it's
never roo late to quit, its authors
say.
.
''I think we have the first data to
show there is clearly no immunity
from the hazards of cigarette smoking .at any age," ~d Dr. Charles
H. Hennekens of Brigham and
Women's Hospital in Boston and a
study co-author.
The researchers said thei( find·
ings are especially important
because of die dramatic increase in
recent years in the number of
women over ,age 65 who smoke.

report

The new
found that over
a five-year period, outwardly
healthy old people who smoke are
twice as likely to die as are those
who never smoked. The risk for
· those wbo gave up cigarettes falls
between the two extremes.
The extra deaths among the
elderly smokers result from cancer
and bean attacks, the major health
hazards of cigareaes.
"Older people who smote can
sliD do their health a lot of good by
quitting," said Dr. Andrea Z.
LaCroix, who directed the study.
"A lot of older people believe that
once you've smoked 40 or 50
years, you have nothing to gain
from quitting. That's clearly not

ttue. ''
While the health advantages of
giving up cigarettes are well
accepted for young and middle-11$l'
people, the notion that those m
their 60s, ·70s and beyond benefit
has been less cleat. In part, this is
. because few studies have concen"
traled on the effects of smolcing on
the elderly, especiaUy women.
. The new work challe11ges the
widely held belief that by the lime
smokers reach old age, their habit
has already taken its toll, and those
who survive this long are somehow
ii_Dmune to the dangers of
CigaretteS.
Three years ago, University of
Washington researchers reponed
that old people with clear signs of
heart disease live longer if they
stop smolcing.
The lateSt work shows that for
healthy folks, too, s111oking is a
killer PI any age. Until now, some
of the strongest evidence of that
has come from the Honolulu Heart
Study, which is limited to Hawaiian men of Japanese heritage. The
new repon is based on a cmss-section of men and women in three
communities, urban and 11U111. ·
"It shows that no matter how
old you are or how long you've
smoked, there are real benefits that
occur when you give up cigare,ttes.
and some of those benefits begm to
appear almost immediately," commented Dr. John Holbrook of the
UniversitY
.
. of Utah.

Soflwere
Appllce•lona

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~Carole Mcl.augblin, Pomeror.
Great grandmotller is Dons
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"' Maternal grandparents are Mr.
pd Mrs. George Neff, Fairborn.
" The couple also has a threep-old daughter, Rachel.
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LaCroix noted that over the past ;
decade, the number of women •
smokers over age 65 has increased •
by about 900,000, while the num- ;
ber or older men smokers has faUen :
140,000.
"I feel strongly that older
women in this country stand a lotto
gain by understanding what we
have found in this 5tudy," she said. ·
LaCroix, a researcher at the ·
Gmup Health Cooperative of Puget
Sound in Seattle, reported the
resuiiS in Thursday's New England .
Journal of Medicine.
.·
Among the findings:
·:
-In both sexes, those who ·
smoked were twice as likely as to ~
die during the five-yeat period as ~
those who ~ver smoked. They had ;
double. the risk or dying from both "
heart dtsease and cancer.
:
-Among men and women, for- •
mer smokers were about as likely ~
as those who never smoked to die ·:
from heart disease. Women who •
had kicked the habit also raced :
about the same cancer risk as those :
who never smoked, while men who
gave up smoking still had about a :
50 percenJ higher risk of dying :
from cancer.
.
·
-Among ·the me.n, the extra ~
risk of cancer largely disappeared if ·
they had given up smoking for
more than 20 years.
-Ev~ among tho~ over age
75, smolcing was associated with a
20 percent increase in the death
mre.

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Page 10-lhe Deily Sentinel

Thui'May, June

Ohio news briefs-----.
· Atlanta outfit buys Ohio firm ·
COLDWATER, Ohio (AP) - The White tractor pioductline of
White-New Idea Farm Equipment Co. has been purehased and will
be moved from one of Mercer County's oldest and largest employen.
.
Deutz-Allis Corp., an Atlanta-based fann equipment manufactur. er and marketec, announced the purchase Tuesday. Tenns of the allcash deal weren't disclosed.
Roben J. Ratliff, Deutz-AIIis president and chief executive officer, said his company plans ID relocate pro(luction of tile White line
10 either Independence, Mo., Topelca, Kan., or Hesston, Kan.
· Jim Hayden, president of White-New Idea, said about 1,000 people cunentlbe:rt at the company's Coldwater plant. About 200
otllers have
laid off.
Although the plant doesn't have a specific number of people
IISSigned .ID tractor production, Hayden said trac!Drs represent about
30 percent o~ the plant's business.

Ambulance driver acquitted
MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) - A Munici~ Court jury has acquitted an ambulance driver who struck and kiDed a man·on the way tD
an accident.
James Odson, 21, was acquitted Wednesday of vehicular homi"
cide in the death of Rick Symsick, 32.
·
Symsick was cleaning an accident site on a city street Jan. 28
when he was suuck.

Willard names superintendent
Wll.LARD, Ohio (AP)- The assistant school superintendent in
this Huron County community has been given the superintendent's
job.
The new superintendent, David Hirschy, will replace Jerry
Stackhouse, who will become superintendent of Marysville schools.
Hirschy on Wednesday signed a three-year contract for $63,000
a year. He wiD be acting superintendent starling July 1 and offiCially wiD take over as superintendent Aug. I.
He has been assistant superintendent Jor six years and has been
employed by the school district for 32 ~·
·
Hirschy, .54, also is a WiUard councilman.
Stackhouse assumes the MarysviUe post Aug. I.

Man found beaten to death
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A man was found bludgeoned 1D
deadl in a bouse that was being renovated, police said.
Tqry Tagg, 52, was found in the house on the city's west side at
about2 a.m. Wednesday, homicide Deteclive·Edward KaUay said.
Tagg's body was discovered by his wife, Peggy, who went!D the
house to check Oli his progress m renovating it, Kallay said. The
couple bought die unfurnished house in April._
A blood-covered sledJehammer was being examined. It may
have been the weapon whtch killed Tagg, Kallay said.
People who knew Tagg said he was always cleaning up the
courtyard of the apartment building where he lived.
Lester Hutchinson, who met Tagg 40 yenrs ago when they lived
in Lawrence Couniy, said he became suspicious when he saw the
Taggs' gamge door open and tools outside !he borne on Wednesday.

e. 1181-

Democrats look for civil rights compromise
By WD..LIAMM. WELCH

1

lhui'May, June 6,1991

Dachshund makes purrrrfect ~
S~l:rob~~~~A ::w:;t~=1~ :a~== motherfior abandoned_k.ittens . :

A.odaled l'reM Writer

man described as a "self-pro- at Brooke Anny Medieal Center The tapes show Westbrook
claimed propllet" set himself on said Capt. Gaston Bathalon a ~~a~: engulfed in 01111ge !lames and nmfue a die: Afamo before more than pita! spokesman.
'
ning toward the front lawn of the
100 SOJnned tourists, two of whom
Westbrook. suffered second- · Alamo shouting, ' 'I've sacrificed
videoalped the incident, thinking it degree burns over 80 percent of his my flesb."
•
was a stunt.
body and third-degree bums over
At least one local television sta· "He looked like a fireball . He. another 10 percent, said Ruben tion broadcast Gomez's videotape ·
was telliDg people to repent. He CevaUos, the fue district chief aide. on its eveaing news~said tD wadi him bum." said Dora

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-215&amp;
MONDAY .thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to. S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

CLOSED SUNDAY

Lottery results
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Ohio Louery will pay out
$466,607.SO 1D wimers in Wednesday's Pick 3 Nwnbers daily game.
: Sales in Piek 3 Numben totaled

WE ARE YOUR STORE FOR
QUALITY WEARING APPAREL
FOI MEN AND WOMEN.

REPUBLICAN RI!'SPONSE • HoliR Mlaor·
. lty Wlllp Newt Glaarlch, (R-Ga.), c:eot•r,
addresses 1 Capitol Hlll aews coaf.e reue
Wedaesday after tile Holllle of Repreteatatlves

piSSed a Demoeratlc c:lvD rlgllts l!IU delplte 1
veto threat by Presldeat Bull. FluldJII GiJI.
IJ'Ic:IJ are Rep. Sa11111 Moi1D1rl, (R-NY;,) left,
. lllld Rep. Hoty Hyde, CR-m.). (AP)

~:

~

•A d •s tflcd &lt;llhl t! rtist! nl t!fll

c:""'

"

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER

~

,uotas.

Ia the two other daily games,
Pick 4 Numbers players wagered
$268,642.SO and will share
$110,000, and Cards players bet
SS7,378111d won $23,990.
.
. Sales in Super Lotio totaled
$4,530,714. Sales in the Kicker
lOIIIed $64S,90!1.

STOP .IN AND SEE OUR
LARGE GIFT
SELECTION FOR DAD.

But their efforts produced little. measure into·dlree bills, one o£5
They managed to reach the 273 which would effectively revers~.
votes only after House Speaker five c.:ourt decisions as die House ~
Thomas Foley, who usually does biD would do.
•
not vote, cast a ballot in favor of
A second biD would dQ&amp;l wim;;
the bill. The Democrats' gain of cases of uilintentional discrimina-:
eight House seats in last Novem- lion, a narrow area of the law
ber's election didn't produce any where Buah contends qUOtas could·
gains for this biD.
arise. It establishes a middle- ·
Only 22 Republicans abandoned ground standard for employers ID .
Bush tD vote w·
·
rats. meet inj~ing hirjng practices,
Nine Repu ·
House m
A third bill dealing with damwho
upported die Democllb a$es for victims of sex and nli-;
ivil rights last year joined Bush· g10us discrimination would deny _
· opposing the bill.
•.:pun.itive
damages,
which .
Only two Democrats switched, ~mocrau want, and establish lim· .
and they canceled each other out. Its on .compensatDry damages that ·
Fifteen mostly Southern Democrats are based on the size of an employ- .,
voted "no."
·
er's business. Lar&amp;er employers .;
Danforth's proposed compro- would be subject ID larger amouats :•
mise would split die civil rights of damages.
::

Aeronautics and Space Administra·tion delayed that attempt and
another one on Saturday because of
equipment problems.
Wednesday's launch was threatened by bad weather. The count-

20°/o

CLASSIFIEDS... .
YP.JJ' Key to Gr~at Ruy•

MMIISICOII
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·.BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
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6-6.'91

HOME PARIS
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of

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DAIWIN, OHIO
.

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143 Pon._d
247 Let•" Fans
949 RIQIII
742 Rullend
667 CootvMe

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41

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55

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VMs S.4WD ' I
Mot01 cvc:l us.
75 Boats &amp; Moton lor s ... e
76 Auto Part s &amp; Acceuor ua
77 Auto Aepa11

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78
79

21
22
23

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57

Busin•s Opportun•tv
Monar 1o L01n
Prot•t~on• $81'vices

81 Homelmp rovemenh
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85
86

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58 Fruits &amp; Vegutables
59

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66 Ptn tor Slle

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.'

71 · Autol forSIII tt
72 Truck s fo r Sitl e

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S76 Apple Grvv•

54

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152 - Spo..ting Poodl

63 Antiques

773
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8915
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64 H ay &amp; G r1m
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.

cmzm

FREE ESTIMATES

992-7130

c_,.,,

915·4473
667-6179

~

-

SIGNS
by tl&amp; '"DI11ttlf

. ·B~~~! .

BULLDOZER 1nd
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
· LANDCLEARING .
WATER 1nd SEWER
LINES

CLA'JSIF IFD

TIUCJONG AYAJI.AILE

~

FREE ESTIMATES

••

992-7458

4-21-tl- 1 mo.

Public 5811
I Auction

Point Pltasanl • 67~9'2' ' ·

8

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
SATURDAY, JUNE 8 -

992-6434
After 5 ~~m.

WILL BE TAKING CONSIGNMENTS FOR T.HIS SALE
011 FRIDAY. JUliE 7 FROM 6 to 9 P.M.

9:00AM TO??
WEATHER PERMITTING
•
:
•

:

•

LAWII AIID GAl DEN: 18 hp Craftsmen garden tractor 12 yrs.
old, exc. shapej, Plows. Discs, Blade, Cultivators .for Cra.ftsmen prden tractor, 5 hp Craftsmen Rota-tiller, lime
sprl!lder, prden tools.
d et .
COUECTABLES: Orll5ser, china closet lglass door1, ov . 111
dresser, oak dovellol dll!k, Singer 2 treldle sew me mach1ne-Marylltld oak. good shape, school de!k, 881~- Rite, Park
Avenue baby buay.
1 k 13"
IISC. NOll ITfiS: 180 gal. kero~ne storage an ,
calor 1V house jack, TV tower- 3 tornts, floor 1ack, 2 tub
rinse tubs, 2 HilS hickory Jdlchen cabinet~ 3 sets bunk
beds exercile equipment Preadmllland staloonary bikes),
metal dumbbell wei ills and bar, 2 8-ft. truck topprs, 3 4·
dro- fillll clbinls. stereo console, Tappan stove lgas). diS·
hwasher, daybed, two 36" stoves (gasl, new paneling, ooe
54" uhiity link and cabinet.

: THIS IS APARTIAl liST.- l£fRESHJI£111S AVAIIAILE
'
CAlli or CHECK 1/Posltl" ID

'

US£D IAiliOAD nES

APPAUCHIAN
WATD
HAULING .
POOlS,
(IMRNS, ETC.
1,625 GAl.-S3S.S4S
lt. 1, ... 71-A

IUUAID,
OHIO 45775·9626

310 last 2nd St.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM IIPING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SID.G CO.
... . _ W t

. "FrM Eatlmllt... ,

Pl. 949·2101
., .... 949-1160

614-992-2321

992·3432 or
992-2403 .

•lnaulltlon

IAMISUESD

614-992-6820

ROOFING
NEW -IEPAII

6

FOI

992-5115 •

555

,...,,OliO

Acnll fl'tlll ,.. Ofllct

. NO SUIIIAY CAW
·
3·11-tln

110 JOB TOO SMALL

FOR ALL MAKES •

MODELS

FREE ESTIMATES

992-7013

CEDAI
CONSYIUcnON

OITCIII. , _

1-110-141...1.1
DAIWII, OliO

ID/10111 Ill

-auY OSIU •liADE
OPEN
Tu..clly lh•u S•tunl•v
10:00 •m-11:00 pm

742·2421
21/J

MI. outsl•
Rutland on Now
111.

u...a

CIIS1D, 0.0

NEW • USED PARTS

tiS-1561

STEWAn'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

Repair, Trophies,
51. . .

Speclolf.... Ill
Custoll ,,... • .,....

., "2·5553

3-14.'91-tln •

CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS

4-5-91·1110. pd.

992·6641 or
691·6164

, 2-31 ·10-tln

1/ 1/'11 / 1 - -

o.-

742-24S1

ACADDIIC
AWAIDS .
GOLF USSONS

Howanl L Wrltonl

LOll$.

lt. 1, lutloool, 011.

639 Bryen Piece
Middleport, Ohio
11-14-tln

P-oy,

•Romodellng and
Home Repair•
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

lEN'S APPliANCE
SEIVKE

•r

992-2772 or
742·2251

WIAUY'S
AUTO PAllS

flilZIIIS-S
11C10 OWIIIS-S7t .,.

oReeoonable Ret"
.Ou ..ltyWo"'
•FrM Eatlmet..
•C•rget Hu flat Dry
Time
•High Glou on Tile
Floo.r Flnltoh .

WlndooRooflng

USD AJIPUAIIGS

•-IS---Su'
.,
us .,

•1111 11U flOOI CAll

•R~IIcement

JOHN T. TEAFORD

H NY WUIAIITY

u•ncw•u

•VInyl Siding

949-2168

WAIIIIS-SIDD.,
DIYIIS-$6t .,
-IUTOIS-SIDD.,

IIDIPIIDINr •

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Co. .loto Grooming
For All Brllds
EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

4-211-81- 1 mo. pd.

. ., . ..., .tift

tO-tt-1110.

GROOM
ROOM

FREE ESTIMATES

992•6641 or
691-6164

Wo Soy Whtl1 Wo Do.
W• Do Whtlt Woaoy.

THE

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

CEDAI
CONSYIUCnON

36 \'oon ExperiMee

614-742·2t04

117/'tl , - -

PubliC Sltll
&amp;AuctiOn

10:00 A.M.

FEUOWSHIP CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Uack Westfall), St. Rt. 124 Arross fram
Forked Run State Part, loedswUio, Ohio

1

992-2269
e-12-10-ttn

PROFESSIONAL
SUNIOOF
INSTALLATION
Contact
STEVE WHnE

Hand Tufting
Cullom Drape•

3

!i-10-'tt-tfa.

Annoulll*lltntl

8lnJII!.o
Choloo
Coi•-*
Wolle: ·
---.P.o
......-.Ooi-NoC Qlonoo.

lpollo, OH 4ilm.

'

--_...._

•

4

Giveaway

,...2""bi-&amp;C'"kIM,_LII&gt;,_~--~...,.~..;.:::.1-o-IOio'",-t :

, _..., 110111 ....... -

.

.......
~~~ae~ ..... 11Wli7-7m.
a- _
__........_,
,.. . .:.,, •• 17M.

.........
~-·c
. . - .....
111 141 UIL
- · - " " llotilaoo•lol.

'

Y;HURSDAY, JUNE 6 and
FRIDAY, JUNE 7

I

FULLY INSURED
FREE ESTIMATES

Mlddltplrt

8 · 4-'11 -1 mo.

SHRUB &amp; TIEl
TIIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SLACK

crutU.ut

.·- ,

BUY IT.
SELL IT.
FIND IT.

8

... Need

IU•No, Soc•d

PO.IOY
BOWLING

5-31-'10 tin

• . ._'11-1 mo.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

.'

205 N. S.CIMI Sir..
-..orr. OliO
Olflce 614-tft-2116
110111614·tft·56t2
110111
DOnJI s.

.

•Remodeling and
Home Repalra
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

ol MINit,oH
UPHOlSTERY

Open Tuee.. Tlluta.,
Fri., Set. 7:30 p.m.

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

Stop &amp;

Til-COUNTY
SANITATION

SEPTK rANI PUIIIPING
PORT·A·JOHN RENTAl
742-2688

~OWL
POOL ¥1110 MACIIJIIIE

ea.,..

C.K 614-992-7104 for Appt.

-

nul Eatete Wlfded

le••

'

. . . . . . 11111

Prices"
Pl. 949·2101
or les, 949-2160

5111101

Propel1y ilcludes 4,1100 sq. ft farm bid~

''
•'

W.-.tM Yo Do

BISSEll &amp; IIIII
CONSTIUCTION

R~asonal!le

•Slabs
1O"f. DISCOUNT TO

Pao1ia owner finandnfefJ~able. The !lice
has been iiiilured to
. $17,900 and
owner lilan~ng of up to 80% .rJ. pun:hase
amount may be possible for Qill1il'fing ~
tobuyl!!'l nioefarll!ilmeon 3~ ....,.,.,..
Clle. 4BR, 3bal~ 2.&amp;,1ies. renll!d I BR •f!l

786 NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760
'
. (614) 992-6491

1~

lo" 6 Acreage

36

47 Wanted to Rent
·
48 - Equ~ent to• Runt
49 Fo•

KtiDWifltiMI

SituatiOn Went«&lt;
13 IAsurtnce
14 ' lusin•s TraeA ..g
15 Schook • lnslructtOn
16 fbdio, TV • · CB Rep1ur
11 Mesceii..,MOus .

. fo/lowiiiJ{ ll'fl'flhlilll' I'XI'IIRIIJ{I'.~...

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks
•Patios
•Driveways

PRICE REDU CED! ·

PARKING LOT SALE

11
1·2

36

6 1 f • rm Equ1pmont
62 Wannd 10 8 uv
6 3 Llvesto d!.

Mobile Hom• for Rent
Farms lor Rent
44 ~ Ap1nmen1 for Acttu
45 .. Furnished Roonis
46 SPit• for Rent·

Scr v 11.c'
(.'/m.~ijil•tl fla!{l'.~ I'OI 'I'r llu•

Hornn fat
Mobile Homes tor S Olie
f4rms lot Sale
Busin•n Bu il dings

·42
43

Erw.tlll'itrP. nl

7U·U60

Girls clothes, S1ze 4-6x;
Women's Shoes, Size 6, 6 ~. 7:
Games, Toys, Ad ull Clothes.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . .~. .~. . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . .~

Happy Ads .
Losland Found.
Y•d •••~pai d in UYancol
8 PubNc Sale &amp; Auction
9 W.ntMI to Buy

Rat es a.o lot- con•cu t'Ne runs. bro"-nup d.,-s w.tt be dt•g.O
to• e~h dl¥ as S"~Yt'ale Mk .

llonolo
Work
• FREE
''~
ZO YEARS
EXP.t
ES .
Col Now foo ..... u Poico

FRIDAY, JUNE 7-10:00 A.M.
234 MULBERRY AVE., POMEROY

992-2214

GN'IIW~

s••

31 32
:Jl
3I

Business Services

STOREWIDE

110

Annoucem.,-.b

~----------------------------------------------------------~~ -

down clock was slopped as
officials waited for the clouds ID •·
clear.
·
.:
Columbia is scheduled to land a::
Edwards Air Force Base in Califor-:
nia on.June 14.

FABRIC
SHOP
WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OH.

C•d of Thanks
lnMunOty

t
2
3
4
5
6
1

'..

Farm Suplllles
IX Livestock

Rea • Estate

. 20
.30
.42
.60
. 06/ doy

$9 .00

16

388 Vinton
245 Rio G11nde
l&amp;&amp; Guyan Disl.
643 Arabia Diu

2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY

')

R•le

16

367 Ch•hire

DA Y BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM . S ATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 .00 PM TUESDAY

-

TUXEDO RENTAL NOW AT
SPECIAL PRICES.

BAHR CLOTHIERS

111 lh e D a 1ly S aml nl d (II!•

;

(.

That politic:ally loaded word has
re.sonated with an electorate
increasingly suspicious that the
civil rights movement now. seeks
not e9uality but preferences for
minorities.
·
Supporten angrily diaputcd the
quotas charge and aCcused Blish of
exploiting racial divisions for pol,itical J&amp;in. The Democrats wrote
prov1sions into the bill explicitly
probibiting
But they 1eamed that widl Bush
repeating his charge almost daily,
their elaborate explanatibns
weren't enough.
Leaders spent more than two
months revising their bill in an
effort to accommodate conservalive Democrats and moderate
Republicaris.

..

~ l i! C t.'d

dan•hud d!$1JiifV, Busmt$s C;ud .md lt.'1J ilf nottcesl
w11! 11ls.u ap~Hl ill II\ U1c PI Plei*Soml Rll!!nastc r and lhb G alh
pul• • Oa1IV lt1b.•n c. mac: h•ng OVI!I 1~ . 000 homttS

l,-:

Days
1
3
Monlhly

'Ads out&amp;tdc Melg$. Galll a or M ason coimh lft must be pre
... d
~ Aucltftl ~~ $ .60 d1s.count tor adf ~1d m attvml ct!.
"Ftee Mts
Gl~teOiway Rn d f ound ads und t!l' 15 w tnds wtll btl
run 3 d., s at nu ch•gu.
.
"Puce ot ,ad lot aM capit al lette rs IS double puce of ad COl-I
• 7 potnl '-"" tvpu only used
"SHnlllttsl IS nol r es. ponstbl t~ lOt error s dt1 ct l1r st •lilY !Ch t!dl
lor lltUOU l itst d~ ad fii iiS Ill p illpC'r) C;1ll befOre 2 00 pIll
dl¥ Olftfff pubhcOJt ion to mak ~ co rrect ton
'Ads th .. nw sl b e patd 1n ad\lan ce au !
Card of Th ank ~
Hap py Ads
In Mumortow n
Yard SaiL'S

t

$1,309,205.50.

_
: .

RATES

10

POliCIES

SPACE CENTER, Houston
other three crew members,
(AP) -Columbia's asuonauu, including commander Bryan
finally in' space, Ooatcd intD Space- O'Connor, will operate the shuttle
lab to begin NASA's most in-depth and take pan in some experiments.
bioliledieal mission.
As Jl8l! of one experiment, carThe fotl' men and three women, diolopst F. Andrew Gaffney Dew
delayed twice in two weeks !nto ~ with a catheter ~
because of faulty equipment, rode tRill hi~ ann and threaded to a vem
into orbit Wednesday after waiting near bis heart. A fellow astronaut
85 minutes for the weather to ' remov~ the !lla:Ulc tube ~Jb!lul nine
improve at Cape Canaveral, Fla.
hours mto the fl}ght.
About 3 l/2 hours into the
The calhelet s sensors measured
flight, the astronauts started up blood pressure during takeoff and
Spacelab, a pressurized laboratory afterward to detect changes in Ouid
module in Columbia's cargo bay. volume.
Dr. James Bagian, a physician, was
"This is tile first time we've had
the first crew member tD float from measurements made during the inithe cabin, through a tunnel and intD tial ph~e of a mission, ... Huff.
the Spacelab module, which is the stetler Slid
size of a small bus.
The rats will be studied when
As the laboratory came tD life, Columbia returns to Eanb. Scienthe astronauts took blood and urine tisr.s want 10 look at changes in rhe
~p!es and blood pressures read· rodents' muscles, tissues and
mgs 10 the frrst of many experi- bones.
,
ments planned during the nine-day
The gravity-sensing/ organs of
mission.
the tiny jeUyflsh will be dissected
Also aboard are 29 white rau after they return to earth. The studand 2,478 tiny jellyfish. All are ies may provide new jnsight into
~imens in the most extensive . why some astronauu tget motion
b1omedieal study conducted aboard sickness in space and others do not.
· a space shuttle.
1\s the ilslronauts wodted, engiBill Huffstetler, a NASA scien- neers analyzed televiJion pictures
tist at the Marshall Space Flisht beamed to the ground 's hoV.:,t:W
Ceo~. said Wednesday that televi- several white blankets of in
'on
slon views of the labor•torx had come loose in the payload bay.
showed it was "as clean as a pin ' Some weather slripping also came
and suffered no damage during the loose along the edge of one of rhe
launch.
doors that covers the bay during
Four of the astronauts - three launch and IandinJ.
medical doctors and a !=CD biologist
"We don't beheve that's a prob- will spend much of their time in lem," Hight director Randy Stone
the Iabora!Dry conducting tests tD said.
le~r~~ more about how weightlessColumbia had lleen slated to
ness affects humans.
take off May 22, but the National

•lllloo.

. "What Sydney ~ ex~
IS ~ false Jl!'Cgnancy, said V~·
nanan Crug Wood, ~ho. ~d h_c
!Jail never seen a case like Jt. . ~
IS not a common occurrence m ammals..... S&gt;:lln~y has fool~ her
body,~ID thinking these babies are
hers.

'

Astronauts begin medical research aboard shuttle ..
1be
launch.;

COLUMBIA LIFI'S OFF • Tile space slluttle Columbia Bill
off lnD KeDaedJ SJIII(e Ceater Wedaesday ia a Jmee.tremlllla1
1'011' Mit carried Its sevea crew members aloft 011 a alae-day sdeadllc:
(AP)

would lay down on ber ,~ide like
abc wanted ID nunc them.
Sure eaough, Sydney ~tarted
lactating and bas been DIDIII!I the
kittens (or lbree weeks.
Ms. RusseU even m,oughl ~
anodlcr a~doned Iuter, gmng
Sydney lltiuena ID nune.

LUFKIN, Texas (AP) _ Hilda
Russell 's only trepidation about
bringing home six ablndoned kit·
tens was her 2-year-old female
dachshund, named Sydney.
"I lried ~ her away from
them, but she JUII lot more curlous," Ms. Rus1ell said. "She

Classifie

dle~und.

ingTheywiUeureiscwhileOOMtbps mixtures and wear intlatcd
collars dlat measure blood pressure. The four will be yteighed and
will draw blood from one another
and monitor each other's hearts,
· lungS and kidneys.

Dally Sentinel-Page 11 ·

Man sets himself afire in front of Alamo

.

WASHINGTON - The failure
of House Democrats ID win more
votes for their ci vii rilhll bill
forces them to accept Republican
cltanaes if they ~t it to become
law tliis year.
·
In die Senate, where die antidiscrimination bill now heads,
there already is talk of compromise.
A group of nine moderate
Republicarui led by Sen. 1o1m Danforth of Missouri have put together
their own version that is an atlenlpt
Io bridge the gulf sepll'8ling l'lesi·
dent Bush and Democrats on job
bias legislation - and in the !~"'·
cess ID reduce the level of parUsan
bickering.
Buah has shown no willingness
ID compromise or ilbandon his con·
tention that the Democrats are
seeking racial hirinJ quotas. In the
aftermath of thetr House vote
Wednesday, Democrats could only
hope that those Senate Republicans
would drag Buah IDWard that mid·

' There is still lime to reach a
civil rights compromise dial will
bring us together, not drive us
apart," said Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mau., whose Labor
and Human Resources Committee
will take up die issue.
Despite months of trying to
broaden suppon, Democrats failed
ID muster any more votes for their
civil righll bill than they did last
year, when Bush's veto kept it
from becoming law.
.
The 273-158 vote Wednesday
was more than a dozen short of the
two-dlilds majority needed tD override the veto the president is
promising ID reapply this 'ftll·
"The lonJ-tenn uend is against
dlis bill,'' S81d a pleased Rep. Newt
Gingrich of Georgia, the House
Republican whip.
The Democratic biD is designed
primarily ID overcome a series of
1989 Supreme Court rulings that
have made it more difficult for
minorities to win job discri'mina'tion suits. Busb proposed his own
bill that would reverse a portion of
those rulings.
Insisting the president's bill
didn't go far enough, Democrats
ran headlong into his eharge their
version would encourage racial hiring quotas..

The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

lOT IIUPOISIIL£ FOI ACCID£111
n01 CCIIOUCTED BY I. 0. lac McCOY

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., JUNE 8, 1991 - 10:00 A.M.
. AT LESTER WISE RESIDENCE
Zuspin Hollow Rd., Middleport, Ohia

DIIIC110NS: ,,..... .....,...,, Ohit, .... 5I 7 s.tlo t•
Stwy's tun!W.; litltt .., S""'y's lull •• z.,llt llllltw:
'-''"' Zatp1n llllllw ••-""' lllt.litM •• .. ,......

TIIS IS OHl Y A SMAll PARTIAl lEI UIJ.I USTIIG

a

COLLfCTABL£S: Winnepeg China Mantle
Clock, Regulator Clock, 1886 Winchll!ler 12 p . lever ICIIIIII,
stooe churn, oil lamps, marbles. .1907 bayonet and scabbard coins plus lots of other antoques.
fMi 1£LAf£D nEll$: D-4 Cal dozer, nea!IY new 6' puN
type IIQsh Hot Simco show Siddle w/matchlnl pad, bndle,
martingJieand spu11, traolers (utilrty and tandem sxlel. plat·
form scales, Homelrte 3 hp water pump, hone-drawn hay
egan !wood spokesl plus lots of misc. and fum rellled items.

AIITIQUES

OWNERS: LESTER &amp; SHaEY WISE
AUCnGNEIR: COL W. lElTH MOLDEN

. 614•742-2041
u...l Ill Oltle - • ..,

YOUNG'S

-0--

CAIPENTEI SRVKE
- IIOMI •

'lluna

-E- ond
--c:--

""'"'""

,.......
-·-lor·- 11.....

(FREE EITIMATEII

V. t YOUNG Ill
992-6215
'

,_.,,ow.

11·14·'90 tin

WE DO

ROOFING

AND EVEIYIIIING UNDERNEATH

TROMM BUILDERS

FlEE ESTIMATES

•20 Y•n Experience
•Quality Home• and
Cuatom Remodeling

742·2321
8/22/tfn

,,,

N•l•;

A&amp;&amp; IIIIlS

1111'S APPUANa
SIIYICI

....._... .....
HI-SJJS or
915·1161

117 L ..... lt.

PO

MY. . .
3/1111/111

All CCINDIIIONEIS -HEAT ,.,.S 111111
FUINAaS FOI MOllE &amp; DOI•EWmE .._S

............ .. .....................
L•

P ; e'

to gh auuuar, ..,. ..

~·-.-·ClOg.

- .... -Plppl . -..... ...,.._111111 T-. -17M410 doo

11tt41'W ~..-'-

Yl" dan
.....
_ ,....
... to
_ ghNWIJ.
_ Qol.

........, ,,

__.. 11i111J T - , 121 Tllllll

I

u• o. ..,.. s•utK

tlflt. 141

1''4144.-t416 w 1. . .-lfi·Stt7 .

..n .tl

Loll &amp; Found

- Olclol1 .......
...
..........
rniMh, •- • •

:mo.
7

=•&amp; -

IIO. . HO.

BENNEn'S

=::.••awiNi•:r P11nt1.

7:01.

•ciOWAYE
OYIN-AII

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

Ono ....... - - .........

YaniS811
Galllpolll

&amp; Vlclnhy

::~::C.':UJ!Iol.:O

.

4 ,...., ,..,. . . Ill. 110, Vlft.

................. '7p.a

�~P=ag=~==1=2=-=T=h=e=O=a=uy1s_e:n~tl~n:el:=~::-:~~-----------r======Po:=m:•:o:y::M~Id;d~le~po=:n:•;O=hlo====~r---------------------------~r:u:~=::•:J:une:='=;198::=1.~, :
Gallipolis
&amp; .VIcinity

32 Mobile Homes
for Sa'e ·

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

JUT 'N' CARLYLE~ by IA!JI'Y Wri&amp;bt71
TJ~AA~IIOII~!to~r_:!'k~'e!.,;.~· &gt;.:
-- -.. Col: .._
• ·
Mf&gt;
.-,.
7fff; U{¢
I .
Condltlaft. JJ,1011. 114-4414111. ' " ::
~G t,.ot/ti6 ~ N•T:
1110 Pontile -.~ Ll, • ...... · , ';:

Apartment

44

for Rent

Em· 1120

Fumllltod
F010th, Goltlpotto,
UUittloo
1111 ~
-~~
~1 Pald. 5M-448-4418o 7p.m.
ca.,
M
urge -Boy ••
....
tloWa,2
oom.~M. FumEtltcloncy,
$150
UtRnloe Potcr, Shiro 1111tt, 101
1tl2 Iuddy moltllo homo, 2 Fourth.
Galllpolhl, 114 441 4411
ot oftor 7p.m.
bodroomo, llr oond ond e.nraa. 31M-a75-8815.
FumEfftcloncy,
AI
UtiiHioo Pol•t. Shoro Both.
$1351rno. 819 Second Avonuo,
514 4413841.
Groclouo living. 1 onc1 2 bod-

4 Family: ' Por1orBrooko Subdlvlalon• On Falrflold Contonary
Road. ~ rldly, June 7th. 9-4.
. Country
Crafla,
Chlldrena
· Cloth•. Toys, Air COnditio.....,

Braldod Rug.

..._ .....

1~rtmen11

room

AC, -

' - Ciooolto, -

. 1'

1571.

!I.Z

1111

a ...,....

Employment Services

379-2942.
Saw, Lown Mowor DlohH, Old
Goorgoo Por1oblo Bawmltl, don1
Oultt, Puoh Plow, Toolo, Flohlng 11
Help Wanted
lor datals.
Equlpmont, Luggogo, llucfl ~::'::'".;..;,:::=;.-.:...:~~-::--:'· hlul your loga to the mill jull
Ml.c.
AVON • All 1r111, C1H Mtrllyn can304-675-1957.
33 Fanns for Sale
Juno 51h • 6th: Rodnoy Vllloge Woavor 304-182-2545,
Mory'o Child Coro: Cortlfllld, At·
· II, Flnt houH ., top of hill. Lola AMERICAS BEST HOME Party fardabll, Mula 81111 ln•PICIH. 1 mile off 144, hunlerl ~,.. . .,
of m,lac:. tt~t~T~a .
plln, Chrlatmas Around the Foncod Aroo, Any Shl~, Any 10 ocroo of lind, good woter
Wortd
11 hiring aupervlalors Ago. Coli Anytlmo: IM-446-2053, plpoo In houoo, geo tlrio on lind,
June 8, 7. &amp; 8. s..s.t On ·Rt.1&amp;0,
next to North u.llla High frH training cl1n, June 7 and llany Rofaroncn, 1 Child, $10; 2 good Umber on lind, OM
• $12; 3 • $15.
onytlmo; cart Glllnor Coolville,
8. 304-675-2885,
School.
"
Poulo'o
Day
Caro
C.ntor.
'
llloo
Juno 71h, 8th, 8-5. Lincoln Pika Anawlr phonll locllly tor Sato, offordoblo, chlldcoro. M.f OH
Notlonwldo
Co.
full
6
port-limo
and 141 In C.nlanary. Homa In·
6 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agea 2~10. 34
Business
••"'!'r
Morol
Bordors or wllllllln, hlri1111 lmmodllloly
Buildings
11tr11mely hlah WIQII, Sit-Sun Blforo, oftor ochoot. Drop-lno
A11101nce.
large Yard Sill : 5 Femlllell.
Flrwl limo In 4 Yooro. Clolhl1111,
All Slzoo. 1/4 IIIIo Out Bulovltlo
Plko In Apto, In Front Of
Bypa11. Watch For Slgn1. June

a, 1, a. g..s.

Movl1111 Salo: St. At. 180, 2nd
rood to right poll North Gllllla
H.S. Morgan Cent1r Ad. Follow

sign..

ChalnNw,

. washer,

mower, tillar, tools, furniture I
much more. 41h, 51h, 8th.

011;1 books, china, antlqu11,
craft auppiiH, dolls, glltawara,
nlca clothing, pllnts. 1108 SUn·
ut Dr. Wed.,-Thur&amp;., &amp; Fri.
Rummage Sale: Rodn~y Grange
Hall. Friday Saturday, Jurie 71h,

8th. 8:30a.m-5:00p.m. Procoodo
To Aodnoy Grange,
Saturday, 8:00, I MIIH Out 218,
112 Milo Up Porklno Rood,
Bedspreads, Curtains, Home In-

terior, Flah,lng Gur Tricycle
Clun To,., Clolhn, 18 mo.
Adun llonol
Yerd Sale: 338 LAGrande Blvd.
Wid., Thure., Fri.

Yard Salo: Frldoy .&amp; Saturday, 4

MIIH Out Bulavlllt Plkl.

Yord Sale: Friday, 71h, Saturday
8th, Jull , Off 141, On Lincoln
Plkt AI C.nllntry. 6th Hame on

Lon, Loto Of Ev~hlng . Too
Much To Llotl Now &amp; Uood

Item I .

Yard Salo: Soturday, Juno llh.
Rockllck Rood off 218, 11-8.
Yard Sale: Thurodoy &amp; Friday. 1
IIIIo Out 218, 8·? llaytog
W11her, Dryer, Slav•.

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VlclnHy
Flm limo Yard Sale, Frl &amp; Sat1
Juno 7·&amp; 8. Shooto, - . , • . .,.,, i oven,
bathlnv suite,
women ciOihM 1nd mora. 203

AndorMR St, lloaon, WY,
Yord lalo, :zeoe Joffto_,. Avo,
Saturday,
8:01).3:00,
boby
clothOI, glrto d - - olD 10.12.

Pomeroy,
·· Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
100 liNch -. Pomeroy, ott Mulberry Ave, J111e J.a 8a,_.pm

welcome. 114-448-8224. New In-

111m·5pm, M·F 9::JO.a :pm, 614·

tantToddlorCoro, 114-44fl.41227.
888·2011.
Apply In poraon ot Country Pllno u-no For Sorlouo
Kitchen In Racine. Cooks, dish· Boglnnw Studonts. Hoi! An
Wllhlrl:,
walterlwaltreu... Hour Loaoon lo : S4.00, 304-451·
Help noodod now, Full ond port· 1917.
Ill?' I.
SUmm1r tutoring In math &amp;
reeding. t&amp; rra. experte~N;e, wtth
POMEROY
Ma.ters in A11dlng Educltlon.
"POSTAL JOBS•
814·245-9154.
$1U8 • $14.110 hr. No oxp.
Olldtd. For e•am end appflca· Summar Tutoring, Carlltlld
lion Info., cell 1·218-967·1537 Tucli1r, grade f-a, 614-94i7Lnt • 10p.m. 7 daya.
2004.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Will Babyah In lly Homa
Excollont
Poy,
BonotHo, Anr.lme.
Aodn.r '
Ar11.
Trtneport1tlon, 407·215--7'800, At .,.ncee Aval..blt. All Shlft1.
Ext. tm, 8a,m,·10p,m. Toll Cal 614-245-'5786,
Rofundod,
Will Bobyalt In Your Homo,
AVON I All Arooo 1 Shlrtoy Elomontory School Toochor, &amp;
Spoora, 304-t75-t4:zt,
NIMy. 114-2511-80118,
Dolrymon poaMion ovaUoble on Will bobyo• -ndo ot your
morlom cltllry lorm, hourly poy, ha ... or mJne. Have releNnCII.
ho•lng IVIIilbloL ~DDIY Tim- 814-992-6903.
Roclt Form, 304-67..,.:1d8,
WUI bubd pmia cavers, decks,
EA/IN I300IS500 PER WEEK scrttned roome, put up vinyl
READING BOOKS AT HOME. otc111111 01 trollor oklrtlng, 614CALLI-615_.73-11140 EXT. Bllt5.
245-5157,
EARN IIONEY Roodlng Bookol Will Do Genen~l HOUMCieanlng.
$30,000/yr.

Income

PatenUal.

Full·tlmo Position Workl1111 With

Public. Accounting Experlance
Nec11ury. Sand Reaume Ta:

P.O. Box 213, Qolflpollo, OH
45631.
Got Paid For Taking Eloy Snep.

-.

;;':

l"'r IOQ, Colt 1.000.230-36:11
ISO.Mimln) or Wrlto: PASE· 33N,
151 S, Llncolnwoy, North AurOfl,
IL 10542,
Local Su~rmarkat Chain I• up.
dltlng emplovment fll• and
IMkl
application•
tor

aut. man1gera1
pnoduoo ond moat dopto. Sano
applkationa and rnumn to
Box 1-5, % Point Pleaunt plete ln.tall1tlon. Phone: 61.a..
ReglMer, 200 Main St., PtMnt 384-6277.
PINunt, WV 25550.
VENDING ROUTE: Gel Rich
Long•tll'l'll Cll'l positions lVIII· Quick? NQ W1yl But We Have A
able full and part-tinw for RN'1 Good, Stoody, Affordable, Bull·
1nd LPN'a. W1o•• co!'Tunen· OHI. Won't llll. 1~0-284·
IUI'Ite With •xperl•nce. Contact VEND,
Bally Gioocknor, AN. OvoContor, lllddloportl14·1192-6472, 22 Money to Loan
man1gtr1,

Now hiring Saln CounHiora,
LOANS BY MAIL
114-1192·11140.
Up to $5,000 Folll Satlolactlon
Retldlnl
Manager: Muon- G1uran11Hd. Immediate Service.
firm

1-iiJ0.468.11127 SUI IM.

Ia

presently ...king an Individual
to manag• and
malnt1ln an 8-unlt apartment
Annual 8tre.t-widl yard ules. projacl. Sallry Ia troo ronl. Coli
Wright Stroot, Pomeroy. Noor 614-863-4514. ll.f 1PII·SPM
BHCh Grove C.mttary. Ju111 EHOIEEO,
llvlngroom lumlturo, houoohoid
nomolmloc.

or couple

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sale

'7.8.

TOURISM DIRECTOR: SOOklng
Antique, collldlbla glauware Enthu1lootlc 1• Crootlvo Parson 3 BR houoo on St. At. 180, wo~h
ond fumHur.quatny clothing, With Good vorbol And Wrltton $32,500. Coli 814-388.a7tt or
.
houo-roo. At. 7, ChHhlro Sklllo Who llooto Tho Public 388-6043.
Juno 7 tltrough 10.
Woll. Bacholoro DoarH With
Background In Tourfam Public 3 lllloo from At. 36 Pliny, Friday 117 133 Butternut Avo. Aolotlono, Salary Aongo•$12,500 · r.nch holM, 1800 . eq. ft ., 5.2
Floh·tonk, bukot1, ook·partor· ta $14,000. D11dlln1 i"Or Ap- aerH, 3 Bedrooms, centrt~lllr 2
atand, ....,4kll wttowa-r:o~•. pllc:atlone June 20. lntarvlewa cor go-L~otl .. orotom, dty
tabiM, lamps, chairs, camp-cot, June 27·28. Stnd Anum• To: wotor, .U'"II 114,000. 304-1137·
h.tgpgt, arnall motor, pmeu,.. Cia 07e, cio Qolllpotlo Dally 3241,
coiioktr, 80 Chevllte (run1 Tribune, 821 Third Av1nu1, &lt;llf·
3 ot 4br Flnl- laOOftM!!I •• CA1
good,, upholat1ry, much mOI'I.
llpotlo, OH 4513t
112 Aero Lol, Gr- City """""'
Gorogo Solo: Juno 7&amp;81FrllSat) Wanted: Experienced S•rvlce Dlotrlct, c._ To T....., &amp;
IIAII Donvor Woller', Clothing, P•rwon
For
Commercial Hoopftot. S4t,OOO. 514-441-4426,
tumiiiA'I, golf cart, •wing ma- Rotrigorotlon, Hooting l Air
chiM,etc.
Conditioning. Apply In Parson 4br, 1 112 st~ Fr Hoe. Full
Booomont, 2 ll.itho• CA, CIJuno 5,7,8 9AM,.PII. .loDDo AI : Yotoo Root11111 6 Cooling, To Town, Dlld ~nd Stroot
211
Wool
Cottogo,
Rio
Grandi,
U.M.W. yard Ull, rlltrHh,._nia.
Prlcod To SoQI 114-448-7822. '
Railing money tor c:._hurch pewa. Ohio.
Gl1dye Dillon'• rMidence, 681 W1nltd; Full-Um• emplovment Flatwoodo Aroo, P-oy. 2
Slory Homo. Now Khchon,
Eall, Roodovllle, OH.
In your own home 11 1 Home Bolhroom a Corpotlng. 17
Servlcu
Worker
with
Buckeye
Sel JUM 8. Llwn tumttura
AcM. 114-4411-23511.
Strvlcn.
W•
wlckot chair, boyllotlm 8-10 Community
provld•
ultry
plue
blnatltaand
In Clty: Sbr, 4 botho, Utllhy
clothing boby Homo, mite,
1 dilly room 1nd board rate. Room, Fomlly ROCMII I living
3221p ,Minorovlllo,
You providl 1 home, guld1nce Room WMh Pocket OOors
Slx·lomlly. Vorloty hllby/OduH In 1 18mlly atmoephire. R•
I lolorol Cornor ol
clothing, Frldoy·Satunfa'J Juno qulrN 1bi1My to t11cl1 personal Fourlh 6 Stole. CIOM To
768. Cotner ot lloln on Dopot living lklll and a commltiMnt . Schools. IM,.48-28511 ohor
lo IM growth 1nd development 7p.m,
Stroll, Rutland.
ot an lndlvldutl with mental
Yard lalo 249 $, Third Mid· rotardatlon. Homo muol bo In Newly buiH 4 bodroom homo,
dlopor1, Saturday f.4p,m., bor· Molgo County, Conllct Cooltll ont acre, city wnttr, NY quell~
galne galore, chlldrana 1nd II f...ac»-531-2302 or wrlla P.O. lor FHA, 30W1154117e.
1dult
clothing,
boob
Box 604, Jackaon, OH 45&amp;10, no
houoohold homo, ond boooboil totor than 1/13191. Equot Oppor· 32 Mobile Homes
~rda .
hmhy Employer.
tor Sale
Y1rd Sale 1t Gene Harrll In
Syracu• on College Road, 17 Miscellaneous
'12 moblll home 12xl5, IXC
guno, blcyctoo, toyo, -ng
cond, $5,000. colt oftor 4:00 304·
JOB TRAINING
machine, clothi1111, ~ Inter.
ltll-3114.
lor, end mlec Items June 7.a Apptlcatlonl Will bo ICCiplod by
Locot
Union
No.
3t?.
Mx10 Holly,.... tm w/14x35
from &amp;am-"""
IBEWIHuntlngton
Dlvlalon tog-o-long onc1 oxpondo. 3 bod·
NECA Joint ApprwtlcHhlp 6 rootlll, 1 112 botho, llllllllyniOIII
Public Sale
8
Trolnl1111 CommMtoo, July I tltru
lnd kite.:,...::,
July 11, tttt. ~~ thru
&amp;
end moro. wfNd tor
Friday 8:ooAM to 4:
, Woot
VIrginia Job S.;lcn otflCa,IM ....ilolrla lllttutlflrl wrop.
- ' $1S,OOO,OQ 114-1112Fifth Avo, H-an, WV lor •
Eloctrtc.ot Apprwntlo-., rror,. 2101.
11111. Aoqulr-: lkrol '141111 moblto- fumlohod,
• mlnurnum ona YMr lnllde uuror cun Rd. ~,~ Whoot,
t.B.E.W. locot Union No, 317 oxc, cond, 814-1112
or 1112·
9 wanted to
-rophicol Jurtodlcllon. High 7114.
Graduoto, ot ·.,..
Uood rnolllte homoo. Colt 514- lohocl
Jllr Atgorllro Crocltt, Dl'*"""" 1t7t Brootdlotd 12x50, fur·
441-G175.
a Tranocrlpto. Age 18 to :zt. nlthod, 14,000. 114-441·1211.
cltlzonohiD. Votoran age
Wontod to buy, stondl1111 11-, . - . , . ., Dotlifo304 l:illo8821. 1172 Wlioloor 14x10, 2 bodlob Wlntomo I Sono ~-· 'ppM a
pre teed without gee lur·
5441.
noco, 7x~,
undlt
, IIOI'Ch,
,.., to rac:o, color, crood Wentod to buy, woohor I ~ tlciilll origin, oox, pot~iclf owntna. - · S4,ooo.
In W«&lt;ttng condition, celt oftor 4 • - or bollota, An oquol il04ollfll.3414 or :104-17t-57tt ·~
tor 5:00PM.
oppartulllty program,
p.m. 114-8112-3,
·

a.-

?.:li=

Auction

Buy

•ton•

;

=

DFfiiCE- 8PACE
FOR LEASE on
C - to
A•••o Ool"pollo
H
•
rt
• 1 room, •
• rootM,
2 roomo, 4 roomo, AU nlooty
docorotod, llr condltlonl1111,
your w•or &amp; oowor btl oro polil.
lloka your cholco now. No
..:-:..:,~PC'".Or~
ooootntmont. 114-441-11118 day,
4411-1538 ovo.
'

::.0::.•

35 Lota &amp; Acreage
tor
new homo conotructlon on

Loll &amp; W.age IVIillbto

R!tybum Rood.

county

P1vod rood,

•••·

- .....
.......... n.ooo.·
104:

rwq-.

11-. . - - iql tp1:CIHI, Galli

46 Space for Rent

514-41f.34M.

~="ss.~ ~~on:,: HD1 Tub, 1h11, Ulld 1
Lolol....rontoto, par~o, ootoe. Coli S15008t4-112-~tlll,

Hnter 4 S - II Volt Fork Uft,
Eicelle,. COndllon. Ellctrlc
Chotn Holol I 12 YoM 57!! Amp.
Chorvor· 114-4411-23511.
Llrae Fuot Oil Fu,_ a 275
51
HousehOld
Qolfon Tonk. $100, 11 You Toka b
Goods
Out; New lltnate ·Shot
Gun, Box o1 Shotlo 110. Flrod
9x12 Corpot rom.
lnd up. . . . Thon I lox Of Shot)o. ....
Corpat 14.00 &amp; yp. Mollohan _,m:::-2233~::::...·
Fumlutr1. 114-441-71t44.
Lumber: Walnut 1 Chany.
County A~ me. Good 8oMonod 1 p11nec1.- .,._
uood opptloncoo, T.'v. oolo.
boMI, ooolntj, -114 44i 1031.
I o.m. to 5 p.m . .._.S.t •14- - _ , 11 hp town- 441·15f!.1 , 127 3rd. Avo. Go~ wtghlo,. In oholnl, mi.oo or
llpo..,""
onor, 114-112-7113
Eloctrlc
1um1crt
1
. 14- 0no PIS R:.r.:; ..._.ol,
1'"•••~••-range, goo
,....,
-~~.
·
-plot01 Brtow;aout-otic
_
GOOD USED APPUAHCES
MW,
·~1m or 171Woohors, dryen, rofrlgerllon, 4235,
'"1111"· Skitggo ApPtllncoo, R-ltlonod Wuhoro, Dryoro.
Uppor Ahror Rd. Booldo Slone Guorontood prompt oorvloo lor
Crollll!llol. Coii114-441-7HI.
01 11111.... _,.111_ Tho woshor
Konmoro w . - ·• ~- Dryer Shoppa. l14-4411-2144.
WI- noodo - . Dtyor Tlmbor For SolO. Coli 304-273-•
~."5:!.'~~: bolh. ~'/1- 4011.
Two ,...1nor chet,. 110 1 $1 5,
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
, fino cancltlon, bench to motch
Comptoto homo fumlohlngo.
Hourw: Mon-S1t, N. 114-441- &amp;31, olter 7:00p.m. 814-M2·2111
0322, 3 m... out BUII¥1111 Rd, Utlllly contlbucUon trailer, trail
Froo DoiiYory.
rnobllo 10x30 $100.00 or trildo
lor 1mol :iO\Wi boa~ 514-'IQo
PICKENS FURNITURE
2101.

=================== '
sao.

==:-:=-==

o-

'

•

LIVING ROOII : 8o1a &amp; Choir,
Roellnor;,_ $141.0Q;:·
Swivel "ockor, llt."!i ~liM
End Tobtoo, $11.00' -.DININO
ROOM: Table With 4 Pocldod
Chalro, JMI.OO;
Pine
Dlnotlo With Bonch
nd 3
Cholro, 12111.00; Matching 2
Door Hhch $349·
S5ft.OQ
Sot; Dok Tabto1 42x52 a
Bow
aCholro,
SI29.00.BEDROOM: _ . , Bod·
room suno (I po~~. 134t.OQ; 4
Dnww ChNe, ~.II; lunll.
Bod, 1221i.Complote FuH lion
Sot. $10I.t01 Sol; 7 po, Co*r
Bod- Suho, SIM.OO.OPEN:
Monday TJvu Bolurdoy, tl.m. IO
tlp.m., tkrndoy 12 Tll
tlp.m., 4 llltoo 011 Aouto 7 On
Routo 141 In Centenary.

Count'I

3
Bedroom•
2
B1ths,
Rlfrlaerator a Stovt Fumlehed .

Or

Coli f"14-44JI.7208.
3 bldrooma, cloeld sunroom
ol)4'ns lo t•nced backyard, attached g•rag•, quJtt countly
Mttlna. avefllbl• now. $355
mont~. $200 dopoolt. 304-17114:11,
I roomo, both, 2110 No~h Moln
St, Point Ploooont, 304-458·187!1.
Bend lrN 3 bedroom homa,

booomont, good · nolghborhood,
HomHioad Roony, 304-182·
2405,

52 Sporting Goods
Stop In Tho GWI 8Mt&gt; And 9oo

Rlntila: Hau... • Apia. Mkldl•part-Pomeroy·NIW
Haven.
1$100.·$150,) lt4-M2·751t

Tho Shlomont Df CotJec.
tori Knlv•. Grut For F.tt.ra
Doyt ... - · · 814-4487059.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Antiques .

53

I br Tralltr, Fumlohod. Dopooh l
AelerenCM Required. No P1t1.
2br TrOller, Etllocloncy Aport·

Buy 01 toll. IIIYwlno Antlquoo,
1124 E, Moln -.Pomeroy.
Hours: II.T.W, 10:00 o.m, to 5:00
r:1e2~ 1:00 to 8:0Q p.m.

mant. 114""41-4171.
2 bodroom, good elton condl·
tlon, no pets, above New Haven
At. 33, 304-182-2411onytlmo,
For 1111 or rant: Moblll home

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

ewnlng and underpinned. 114M2.Sb.

1 whho Wood cobtriot: hoo
onomot lop, about 40 ln. tong.
26 In, wtdo. fl14.0i2·St35,

Mobile Hor-Ma For A1n1, phone
514-448-0508 or 44JI.8321.

to

Nlco 2br, lg. yord, Konougo. 814·
441·7473,

mond rolrigorotoro, 11 cu. "iii
both run go&lt;!d, $1503.ro
........
nbbM cogo $10. 114I. .

44

30" Gonoral Eloctrta Goo Rongo,

12X50,

2bdrm

furnished,

women'• ro~dma... r
bicycle, 1xc. cond., SUi 2 ll·

Apartment
for Rent

2br Aportmont For Ront. In
Clown City, 514-2!!1-1415,
2br partially fum~, 107 112
Sacond AWinuo. Utltltloo, Dop.
Aoq. $230/mo. No polo, 114-3792171.

1pd.

Eloctronlc Pilot, Purcltooed Niw
Fobnrory '91, E - Cantillion, MOving ond Connol ~_.j
Mtcrowavt Table i D0U11C1
Doolgn Coblnol iilodit Stenoo,
Cooootto, 8-Troclt. A.loiJII:Iol.
Rodlo,. 514--W-ont.

4 yr. old almond OE rohtgrolor,
oxorcloo btko, twin bod,
14 locuot 91root~ 3 Room Fur· boxopringo, Jl.log owing MI.
nlehod, Utlihloo ~otcr. a--. 514-:117·7134.
$10Q DopooM. 114-448-1340, 114- 750 Tobooco Stlcko, MO. 1f78
441-3110.
.
·Chryaltr Newport, $5!0. 114BEAUTIFUL APARTIIINTI AT 441-6007.
BUDGET PRICEI AT I*CI'ION
ESTATES. ttH - . . , Pille Bla 4 Bodroom Daltoto Home
BUIH On Your Lol. $27,115 oiid
tram S11timo. Willi to ...... I
rnovloo. CoU 114 448 :1111.1011. up. S14olll-73tt,

=·

Comptotlly
. tor 1

Of 2 paopto. No
$225 ptue utllltiiL • -

Coltogo

tor ,.nt

Migllbclri;o;, ,.;
Pte-,
WV t:3ci4:

oorpoiL aood

~

lumlo'-' AJC

•
For ront, 1 bod100111 IIPirtiiiOIII
$225 utiiMioo lnctutteT."j,jiD;;il
no pota, IM.fiM2ii".
Fum- 4 -..,. 1 Bolh.
Cloon. No PolL 111181•101 l
Dopoolt Roqulrod. 114-448-1111. '

-lrod.

t

yNr,

114--·111'1'1,

$191.00~·

tlcotho Rood, $250/mo. $100
DopooH, 814-448-1340, 514-44f.
3670.

Ngllten I other.

Ento-.

Concrolo I pio1tlo ooptlo tenllo
Ron E•ano
Joe..:
oon, DH 1~37-t528.
Drnamorlt Rtdlna Lnm Rldo II lnoh Cut; S4IO; Yomotti
K.,-rd $150; Soora Rowing
Mochlno, bO.8M-24f.NM.
Drnalolllk rldlna llwn - .
OE wllhor In good - ( o n ;
:,*;.;.;-t75-:,:.;.,;;'311;;;.:._ _ _ _ __
-Ultra - -~ Pwld JIO.
torR, wt1 toke ollw, Uoocl
""""'xlmotlly 8 - . Clti
114-241'2491 or 114-14N413,

WATER WELLS DRIUED: toot,
rw•oneble ..me.. 114-1....7311.
Willie llu,... olorm • · - · . Uood ton corpat 10x18'
l loT. Swing oot, ,- I t
prloo1. 3114-875-1224.

55

Building
Supplies

::.24;;;5oi.;;812;;;.;:~--:--:-:----­

-::c

1 row toblcco uner, ooocl
cond, rront tank, $250. or DH1
- · 304-l'le-2719 01 304-1715329.
11!1 John De.,. Model I,
Aobuln, bcollont i!oriditton~~
Ho Cholm•o Dl Dozor1 _.·~
Good Condhlon. 1114-448-ZIOII.

1852 Ford 8N troctot, gordon
bladt, a It lawn mower, dl1c,
otow1 ...!_rollor. 4 hp rotto tllllr,
~41J41:·3321.

p

56
i,;;~et;;s~f~opjr~S::alsle;i~

•

7030 Alllo Chol...,. Dlooot y,...
tor
DloMI ::;
5040 AC
Buoh 1 ,
Grodor Blodo, a Co_,. lollxor,
S4,410; 110 AC With Loodor,
S4,160. OWner Will Flnonco, 814-

S7,310;,:::.f

se

288 8522.

For SolO: lntomotlonol Two Row
CuMtvlloro FOf Formal H, II, I
300. 5~2310 ottor lp.m.

63

AICC rwglol- lrtttony Sponllt
pup, • ..... old. $150. 304-488-

1557.

·- j·

1181 Suzuki OS 450L, low mi....' "' ; :
new tlrM, aaH afttr I, 1'14-446J ,,

..••

lllt1.

11112 Hondl Gotdwlng 814-1112;
7714.
• -

Ill. l!otMrtalntll8n
Tlllllghl Stereo. Q

1m. ,._.,

~

oond, 11,700. 304-175-1=-,. •

111-4231.

..

.

Uood 4 Horao -nock
Dotuxo Trollor $2,11M; Uood
15ft. a Stock Wllh Taek
Comportment, $1,211, ,... 1211
Nanoo I stocll Whn DIY-.
$1,7111. OWner Will Flnonco. 514218oll22.

Hay&amp; Grain

For Salo: Hoy At Rodney, 814288-6491
Hoy, cut In May, Hu no1 wot. w~~ Roush 313118
Boohon Rd. Aaclno, OH 114-Mf.
2213,

4411-3419.

tm Plymouth s - . llolor
o-Mutod, Runo ~Good, $500.
514-245-11142.

18Ct011flre
7:31 (J) Major League laHIMIH

UIIIIL

Plliladlll)llla Philllee

HD IJttrl Clooolc, $11,500 or
0 .1.0., ..... Than 1,000 ......
81111 Undor
HD,
JUII AIr' ..._ 114 ~~ 1117.

Atlanta llrave1 (L)

pupa, l'odlgrood I tomlly
-llllod, .rlody now, IM-4413177.
AKC R,lll- Aoro WitHe
a - n hophord Pupo. Dam
Exollo ()pan Coot Slro Snow 1880 Sunblrd noodo ... lroCloud 8roodl1111, 2nd Ofdoot 1968 c.noro. 304ol7!1411311.
Llno In Tho Unftlld Stotool 814- Wit Sulek Sltyllrlt, 2 dooro, 2.5
448-8351.
4 cyt., mony now po•o. $100 or
boot otlor. 304-17!1-11118,
pupptoe, $100,00, roody
- 114-1192-6544.
1981 Ford T·Bird, 2 door, AU.FII
ttlfWO, I~O, AJC, 1100. 304-17$.
loogte - · 304-871-2718,
31117,
118'1 Vttl .. 8,300 MIIH. While,

.
e

DeniM and Martin dlelde rt 's

flmt to look lor an

~tereo 1;11
f
Dowlllig
Father Dowling Ia
tramtd by hie evil llrOiher lor
a blnk llelat (R) Stereo. Q

75 Boats &amp; Motors

tor Sllle

e tltt WI&amp;\. lllc.

(I)On.,.Watetwarl
(!) lradalllw on

McS~,:~na

,_... trom ·a burning car.
(A) Stereo, C

(I]) • The lhJIIOM Homer
buys • llllr11rowlh product
and climbs the corporate

.,.......

~J:ISterto.C
• 8lle Wnllt

Ill

0 MOYlE:

76

Auto Parte &amp;
Acceeaorlea
·- :~
::,m=-=Oklo~;;:c:.;-~~eu:;;;,:;_-:tor,_
. ~ ::
f:lL Vol, Col~ ...: ;i
••·run.
,.
79
Campara &amp;
-::
Motor
&gt;

i

AtltlriC8n Mutic Shop
1:00 C2le IDl
C&amp;rta's
mother IlkS her to tuHIII I
family traditiOn. (R) Stereo.

.·

-rio·-·,_- '·..

to confront a serla! killer•
(%) (!) Mr 111 ,, The cricket
players have more than
cricket on their mind, (PI 2 of

-·=!'·-"12.
.&amp;..... •. . :

,.~.

' 0: ~

~.

owning. otoop 4,
11171 .-par 27 ...... - . ~.'

~0o.llnlk.., .....

lie, T V
- nw - . ootl
............
304-t'IWII1
.• •'.''

•

Stenlay lOins a video dating

- . toodod. f t '
Coli 114 1112 !1177 lor ..... .... •
rom.tlon.
' ...
271 Tltln -

'',,

...

Serv 1ces
S1

MNICI to help catch I Nrtal
klller. s - . c
(1]). lleviiiJ Fllllt.I0210
The gang likes a break from
schOOl to go to Palm
fulrjngl . (R) Stert10, Q
Ill MOYIE: IIH1 lltliriRl
(2:00) .
.
.N&amp;Ih.... Now

I

..,,

Home

•

u--..

••••

Improvements

.,•

BASEIENT

a

Lany ICfnl uv.1
t-.30 C2le a •••~~t~et Jerry
lindl that trying to and an old
lriendiii!P. is not easy. (R)

WATERPROOFING '
.•
lmo gueron- .•
.... Locot .... - ·
... - ... Cltl 1·
~14-Z37-lit ........
,::.- a-mont woo~ . ::·

Stwto.Q
10:00 C2le GJ LA. Law KIIMY .
dllendll
man'a right to

llue Ribbon DrvwaiL AMidlft&gt;o ::·
till Com-cilt llllpotra to p .... . ..
Drywol, Do~ or . •

:.0

~-:..:r~::~: .

'"Th. a... 114 441 2117.

-----.:.
•.

Cwtte im~~No-nto; : .
Yoon lltperlooMM On Dklor I
:

,__....
I

IIIJ

.ff.E':

BARNEY
THAT'LL BE TWO
DOLLERS!!

J~ST

ALLOVER
WHAR
MY WHOLE
DOES IT ITCH,
DADBURN ·
SI\IUFFY?
'' _,...._ SACK!!

(Dilate

~

llldl"fi.

-···

Po-p ......

-~

=::.. . .

1NI Rod Pontloc Lellono SE,

Aut-Io,.~ PI, PI, Roor
Dofog, A-• T11pa, 41,000
llunnwln ,..,., Juot on 1111-. 11• t41 lin.
BR Nl o1 Alllnr 114-ti8UII. llrei-II111IAII-1PII. Fnoh 19811 CheVY 8-1~1_.~4, ltuer,
Block ond Sir- wnn Rod BlrtooFru• oncl
Amloh lng.
23,000 llllol. ......... Wllh
pnoducto, • Apjlloo.
opt1ort1 lnctutllna T MOUNT'S GREENHOUSE. 112
l:andtton. ,...
$18,000. Colt ~7231
mite Ill' loll. Otlw Rd, Bootcro
A.A. In 114-- Of ~~llorlp.m.
·
Potol-,
14.00
ono 19811 lloroury
• - ·•
Hundrlld; I , : _ T-oooJ
Imp r -.
,
and an A1M'111 Cooootte.- PW. PL. MJ,
_ , . S.7!1 doL Othor Pilnto !:',!.loo.n.EW'./:."e~~
Alduo•dt HanGing pate, 13.10. ., •~I Cleo
.-

Vegetablea

Vegol•-·

s-

P-

84

=".,
,•
1rclal ·

, '
, ·:

Eioclrtaa~ ~;._:-:-----.:.:
• ~~
Rldm1711.

lr7

Upholllery
•' .•'
1===~~~~~--.-· :

t- · ,·
.....,
.. Upllolol!!!ng ....... "',
Jnalrt_.,_.FSThe
in - - - · " •

Colt IOWJI.41I4

filr:l;· '·
~

~:·

Earlier this year an audio cassette , 4 NT
Paa
Paa
Paa
of bridge Instruction was published by &amp; NT
Pass
Paa
Paa
Edith SeUaman, a well·known teacher 6 •
atld player at the prestigious Caveit·
Opening lead: • 4
dllll Club in New York. It is titled
"How to Bid Your Best in Bridge." In ·
101 mlautes you learn how to bid card-play Isn't touched on. Mrs. Selig·
11111181Vet the Instruction, with two of
her stuclenll repeating the key points ·the queen. y011 make the slam whenand uklng questions about them.
ever East bas the heart kin&amp;, or when
Tile caaette comes with a 142-page West started with king doubleton.
Rule Book, wblcll rou can follow as
But that plan overloob the power of
you lilten, It contatns example hands the heart spots. Mrs. Seli1J111n won the
atld allo qWDeS, a g~ossary, and ...Ide- diamond lead in bud, drew trumptl
lines for rubber bndge and Chtcago. · and cashed the remaining mlnor..ult
The metbodl ta~t are a ~t1ture of wlnne11 endlna lD the dummy. Sbe
old and new: forcmaJump ra~~es. a 16- didn't touch the heart ace. Now eame
18 fiOotrump, and weak two-bl";',
the lead of a low beari, declarer COY·
Mn. Seligman played today s hand erlng East's card. West wu bopeleuly
!Jerfectly. At lint &amp;lance! It loob right endplayed. Either he returned a heart
to win the openln1lead m band, draw into South's tenace or he ~ a
trumps, casb the heart ace and the
11 and discard
three club wtnnen, lead a diamond to ru ® ,.,, ........ u 1a u u -.
the king and then play a heart toward
·

L-------------'

The World Almanac" Crossword Puzzle
ACROIS
1 Somatlllng

romarttallll

(at.)

5

Statui-

a 11au11

t 2 lntormallon

13 :r.f"tolllx.
14~

State
15llftlterHorne
11 Comparauve
ltllftl
17 Whale
11

tontar·

lttiiMd
20 Htldl•t
2111awt

22

:::1''

2311M-

36 llelrle weight
(abbr.)
37 AecUnlng
31 Glftl
41 Boxingvictory

abbr•

42 Frenzied
43 Wntern
hemiiPIIef•
org.
45 Criminal
48 Obllaclll
52 Story .

fabricator

53 Relative ot un
54 Charter
55 lcollleflo

GeeiiC

5I Dlkola
Indian

non

2t Cotftplnlon

-e

31 Dtatrnl

33 Type

34 Conaltllelklll

57

1m~

5I ()wMr'l

1 Short period
otcalm

doc-t
"Navy lltlp
poet.
eo Fnt.,•te

2 Plallllllf

3 Hutlilr
4 ComiiiOtl

(2 wdt.)

5 ~~:e
..

...IIIII

31 -

,AftiWet to Ptatlllll,....

DOWIIII

.... !JIIGle

8 Addle!

,_

his agent' a murder. Stereo.

B
• ..,T...,
18WOI'IdNewl

Ill 700 Club Wit!' Pat

ASTRO·GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Gemini's Astra-Graph predictions to·
day by maUing S 1.25 plus a long, sell·
addressed, stamped enveloPe tO Astro·
Graph, c/o this IIOMP&amp;par, P .O. Box
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101· 3428. Be
sure to state your zodlltC sign.
CANCIR (J- 21-.luly 221 Your
mate's Ideas may not be 81 utute 81
yours In financial matters today. Be
careful how you hlrtdle things, though ;
you want your panner' s endorsement,
not enmity.
LIO (.IIIIJ 21-Atlll. 22) II there llaapeclallype Of MMce you need performed
at thla dme, who your lrlendl recommend tor tile [Ob. Thon chiCk tile
reftrencel ol thlo firm or lndlvtdull.

VIRGO (Aifa. 11-lapL 22) Hyou haw to

Refrlgemlon

RMidlnlill
or 0011
,
_
.!!Iring,
Uw 1d •-

Pall

a-

,,

Electrical &amp;

E:aot
Pus

Wool

lpaacll and lite UnMrlltY
The iuua ot hate IPMCh on
univerllty carnpuMI II
dlsc:uslld by panelists Andy
Rooney. Benno Sclvnldt, Not
HentoH and otherS. (1 :00)
(!)Undari'IN
Ill • •
Mr Deed
llodr MIX enllata Nlkkl'l
help atw being framed tor

Aaaft'!1r. •
Froo Ei' •
dmlt•t Ret,.. Cll No Job To
lltg
114-44i-.
E I R TREE SERVICE. l~, ,
T~ TrM Aemoull,
• ·
Trtmmlni. Froo Elthnohrol 1 ' · 1

Or·-

...I.

.KQ2

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

By Plollllp Alder

Qebrlll'l Fire
biCk 10 prlaon

.

tr.ller,

ca-rs

"~

Learn bridge
by listening

iGabriel
1m.goes

111111 CllllpOf 22 II, ... . . . :
tolnod,
t.,,
30MI2-ZMI. ~.. ~:~
travel

FMnd 1111111

Qoea WHI (:1";00)
1:30 C2le GJ DllleNnl World
Whitley oaells • quiatptace
to a!Udy, (R) Sterto. 1;11 .
II) • Iabeii The Be!Mia'
mother vtllts and surprises
them by dating. (R) Stereo,

.

Fruits &amp;

.,.Mr

.Onlt8gtSw.o. •

...- . SSI. ond up. 304- Rod tntor"'!,__~. ~
17H041
Kept, fM,wv. ~.
Dog onc1 Col grDOmll!l oA Evonlngo or Woollondo.
~~
- · -Jotlzjd In POodle 11112 Camero, $1000 01 bMI or.
C"~:U: y.- oxportonco, for. 814-448-2271.
JET
Aonlllon IICIIoro, ropolrod. Cuolluo Sutir-, a -IM motoroln olock, RON
Drago awyncl Clttery Persian, 1982 Otdo
cond, Sar- eolia only, EYAHI, JACKSON, OH. 1 . - st1mooo and HlmlilyM kntono. good
l14-448otlUt.
514-441-3144 ofter 7 p.m.
1883 Chrtotto Scootor, 1880.
l'loh Tonk, 2413 Jockao~ Avo. 304·773-5011,
Point Ploeoont, 304-171-2013,
IIIII line T"'ffloo!l floh 1 ~blrda, 1814 Comaro._excolltnt cond~
--IIndO--.
tlon, 4opoocl, .. mpg, wotl oorod
lor, ohotp 8310Q. I14'94t-2021,
For lite: 112 -rtaan Eotdmo
'112 a- a - ,........ 1814 Comoro 221, ott - · · T·
Topo, 304-17!14354 ot171-44&gt;1.
looutJM
I Dog, 140 Eoch.
11184 T·Bird, a-d Condition,
114 •• 4 •
114 441 IIIlEY. ..
C 1a . . Creek Ad. Pille.
•
Drmo
-•·
lnd ........,. 114tuneno. -I Wko,- - trllnod.
11-3 1885 Oklo Dono II Royale. 4dr
, lothor-?.
11m It I 2 $1.10410.0Q to oodon\ booutltut tomlty oor. A·l
good only, 114-1192-5402 condH on. AU tho -io&gt;morll. 82
Plumbing &amp;
308 Vol 127M. 1514-.tl'lt.
IJCOOp trying).
Haatlng
llllbblto, m•t ootl mov11111, 304- 1885 Tron1 Am, 41,000 mltoo, T·
topa, olr, PW, Original OWner,
IN :110:1
Excotlent CondHiori, 11110. 114441-0m
Roalol·
ldiiIIGO..JI_oglot
. • - Hlrnatoyon kit·
ton--~" Sllmoooternotoo 11111 ThUndo- Elln.- v.a,
Loodlld, 14,MI. DoW*: ...........
c.oh. Celt 114-lta-1107.
0404, Evonlngo: 114 411 4m.

58

at

1:00 C2le iiJ CoiiiY .._

Wonontl" ,..

...,

AKC reglatared cocktt apanlal

.AQ?

(game 12) (L)

1988- 200 sx, 4 - ·
$1,2110. ~~- CondMion. 114-

laaety

.

SOUTH

.KJfl3

Series from Omaha, Neb.

1114 XL-1008, Good Concllon1 r
$3011 Flml, 114:211'-1'131.
. ',•

1IJII

.JU73
.IOU7

.QI064

.JU4

.·

lllealhaoStereo.

. ,'

avena,.

EAST

WF.tt

Ill Co81g1 ........ World

4 _. ... '

Homea

•a s:
•w

.76
.KJ5

ALDER

Family

II). M'A'S*H

NORTH
....,
.AQIOU
. . . 43
• K2

PHILLIP

S WIIMI O f F - Q

,-...
-c--.,.Hor
c,...-,-,.v-45-=--=s.""'bn-.:...-•-•""'
• : ::

I I I I· I

.A!

(J)

•

I I I

BRIDGE

Cleveland lndianl (l)

2 yoor old wltlte loving hono,
110c ooch. 304-8112-34110,

1

Ooc"•tletl, extra tlll'll, hand

Hondo 380 CB, - . ,,._,; :-::

Livestock

-273-

$150. 114-3JWSII.

·==-

0 lc&amp;IKIOW and MIL King
7:01 (J) The Jelladons
7:30 (J). g "-"'YI Q
(J) Mlljor Lniue ......,.
ChiCago White Sox 11

Wllntod: 10 to 15 II. tondam IXIO
llttbod trollor. 114-2114712.
Wllntod: Old ttmbor troitte blm
In good cond, lor , _ I &amp;
-ubcRon. 51WIIJI.2712.

Groom ond . _ Shop Pot
G100111lng. All IWeido, ot)'leo. 65 Seed &amp; Fertllzer
limo Pel Food Diller. Julie
Wobb. Cell 514 416 023~ 1 . - Toblcco tor - : 1tltl0 tb.
352.0231.
.
II $.3GIIb. 514-:J7t.:IISO,
AICC Clttnooo Pug pup, Coromlc
Transportation
ohop equipment, ~7.
AICC Oomoon Shophonl, malo,
19 mo old, llrge tyr.', gontle .,..
--mont,
$12! ,
tlrm, , , Autos for Sale
oorloue tnqulroo, ror-ncn :::-:::::::-:~~~~"::"":=:::::='
ovollblt. :104471-2188.
tm vw B•: body aood. 1400.
Coil 114-441-4141 otiOr e · or on
M.C Poln*a.nl1ne mill pup. w1akende.
Dloo.oll "'9ftlho. old, $200. ooch.
304~ 7H47t
tm - · eo~o. Good Conti~
lion. Runo Good, 114-44J1.2tfl9,
AICC rog-d Akho pupploo,
1f78 cto.. L.T.D. ~ Tr..
ohomDIOn btoodllnoo,
Or Sole For Smollor Cor. 114SJI3. AIY•nawood, WY.
AICC Roglttorod Block Chow
Puppy, lllte, Con Soo Poronto.

ae~fl8~Q

..
..
..·•,.

I

~~~:-EFOR

•

1

SCUM LIT$ ANSWaS
N ..
Climax - Essay - Usurp - Anchor - YOUR SMILE
: Our tour guide gave us several hours of free time.
" Knowing we mklht be neiVOUS she confided, "'ne
thing that Is understood around the world Is YOUR
, SMilE."
---.;.....,

l~·~=-=Q

Jim'o F.., Equi_.. :R. 35,
Qollootll, 114 44 . , ;
Wldo elfoctlon nw I uood form
troctoro 6 lmptornonto. Buy,
olll, troda, 8:00.5:00 -kdoyo,
Ill till Noon,

64

Bloelt. brick. - e r plpoo, win•
- · llntoto, otc. Cloirdo Win·
t-, Rio Grande, OH Coli 114-

IIi I Dream of Jaannta

,74~_Moto.,...,,rcyc..;,.le~·~~· ~:~
-

4

7:00IJI• iiJ Wheal ol Fortune

XL.

MS4~7.

• m~:~~~~~RES 11r r 1 I' r r I"

MldiiiMQ
1:31 (J) Andy Grtffttlt

Loodlld, 118,000 Elootilnl
Condltlonii7,1C10.111 , . 1032• •

61 Fann Equipment

-L.-L.-..L.-..t.-..1...,....1 you develop from step No. 3 bolow.

I..

D

'•

1 1 1

Granny
to
teenage
grandson, 'You may find lhat

1-~-.i~~...· .:;EI,...;;.E.,t;_L;,.IIrl--rl--il ~~~~;;~ ~~~h~~~ ~d!

0
11~~
DUpCioM

••
·:
;.

~~

.

"'~·==·~-::::·~"'-o::., the
virtuesmostly
of. hardbyworil
are
,.
extolled
people

!t}:t-2·1=8

•

1117 Fent ,_. - ·

I

.

UPS L H
1--,lti-g
~...:...n,r:;-. t...t

)i(i1,AICNewiQ

..

---toW .:

F;1rrn SiipDIIcs
&amp; L1ve~tock

D Thoraualllnd Dlgelt
18 World fodey

u;...;.j;..;.,HI-IIJ

.;:...t-Tel'

1:3CI!IJU'= :::H

,,

1114 ClleVy S.10- 4 drlvw,
..,....ool H .
hW.
- oJ.
.
$26011-.,
.,.,.,

j~r-,

1:01 (J) lewllohed

1I

vans &amp; 4-.WD'S

73

-lng.

~~

3 Bedroom Houu, 52 Chll-

.•
,,

1714'111.

room aultl, tabllll, bedroom
~11:.;4_;-148-.::.;1:.;88:;0:.:.---,,--:-;-- 1uho, oloro, topao, pllno, 2
Stooping roomo whh cooking. gu..,. Wiomp. 304o678o44141.
Allo troller opoco. Att hook·upo.
Cell aftor 2:00 p.m., 304·77.1- - . . . 24 II. .....
g&lt;ICI!I
good cond.; ....
5151, llooon WV,

I

41 Houses for Rent

,' 1

ca....... cawg. Q
o......
1;11

D Madallnil Q

Ir~~~;~~~~~:::;;;;;~~;;;~~ 1117
CheVJ
mloo, duOI llr, ~ root, 4
54 Miscellaneous
58
FruH8 &amp;
::.'t..":::'"....!.,"i\tJrc::::\:
Merchandise
Vegetablea
s. 441-11171, lifter I oill -mu , .
Apartm•nt lvallablt. tor 2 or 3 b:48 mobile home 1100. 8x20
or 44&amp;-7181.
•·..,
conllnretlon .worttoro 304-882· lilt bod trt oxtoflly trolllr MOO. Slrowborrloo: Pick Your OWn. 1117 CltoYy Yin lull llzl Pll
2set,
. 304-77WIIIO.
Coli Clouda Wlnt . ., 114-248- A1C - - r , \ibR, TV, AM:i=ii .,'
Roome tor rent- watk or month. :.:.:.:.:.:,;:..:=:.:.,;=...,.,=-=="' 1121,
.........
- · 21,000 .,
mltoo, 304-175-1101.
starting at $120/lno, GJ!IIIo HotOI. Ford Eoeort 1888 112, living

·-

reuonable

"

ittt &amp;lodte -

-

IS TI-IAT
WHAT l-IE
15 '?

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tor • -'1'113.

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reolrlctlono. Complete tnro,..
lion moiled on
304-1711213, John D. Gootoolt, no ·
otng'-ldo trolienl, pllloo.
Hoe
...... fu!nle!tlnl. 112 ml,
Rd. Pl. ... wv,
2 loCI ot Molgo - . . 1 COlt 304ol"fl.-.
Votoronooddhlon.The vouft and
, _ _ tnciUdocl. 304RENf20YIN
n:lo~
••
lf4.441.3188
$4.50 Per Hour. GIIHpolla A,.l.
Vl'ro
Fumtturo
514-448o8401.
Loto u low u $1,100, onlloble
Solo
a
Choir,
$11JO -~~·
In loloodowhlll Subctlvlll011 u
$5.47 Wooll, Swtv
mn.. u
S1ndhill Hoed, Recllnor,
Rockor, 11.83 Wooll,lunk loci
F1nancial
RESTRICTED BUILDING, - 304· Complolo
11.41 Wook, 4 Dnwwr
1711-4100,
Chell, 13.2t - ; - .......
LOTS FOR SALE In !Jolllpotlo room luno, 7 po., $15.87 -it.
21
Business
Farry. WIU accept. trtllars, chw lnctudoo Boddlng.Country Plno
I 4 Choiro.
w1t1r available. Jlhon1 304-17$o Dlnott1 OpportunHy
2722.
$10,N -ILOPEN: - y
Thru
to.m, to tlp.m.1.
INOTICE I
One acre building loll, nNr
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO, town, tor ~our tingle-wide. 304- ...._
12 Noon
TlllRoute
ep.m.141,•
.... Olllloutl
7 On
,.comnwnda lhll you do bull· 8711-4100,
In Conlonoty.
""" with poopto you know and
NOT to oond monoy tlvoug~ tho For Salo: Rlvor bonk .,_ny In
SWAIN
malt until you have lnvntlgattd Muon. 304-n:lo!I8St.
AUCTION l FURNITURE. 83
lha offering.
0flvo Sl., QoNipollo. Now a Uood
tvmlt~ MM.,., w..ern •
Ar1hur's Choln Link Fenco.
Rentals
Work booto. &amp;M-441-:nllt.
Rooldontltl, Commorclol, I,.
VI'RA FURNITURE
dultrlal, fi'M Eatlmatnl Com-

Dotalto. 11) 105-9e2-8000 Ell, Y·
10188,

Columbus

Building For Ront: 80dO ~
To Town, Concnrte ...., : El~' Wltllj~ 114-44
12
~
Bohn 1p.m., 514-44JI.
8713
lntio.

=
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ton lholt ~ ~ ·

bod truolt. - - - -

1 room tor ront, -llont tor 1
lingle lady pralorrod. KM-n &amp;
both taciiKy, r o i t - , .
qulrod. &amp;t4-lll2oiiiOII.

Bu1h Hog Service. Aeaaonabll
AIIH. NO Job To Small! 81._

hill

1m. Ill Ill.

1."00 (J). (J)
GJNewl

'.
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72 Trucks lor Sale

Furnished
Rooms

Frldly, Saturd1y, Jun• 71h, 8th.
9-5. 160 Sande,. Drive. Chain

EVENING

• •• . ;:

C 0 R V I T T E S : , ' • ' :·
=:72,73,111,'1'1,11,17
...... ' ; :

Fum- rnallll homo, ' milt
bolow IO!Wn, ov..-tng rtvor,
Not SuHable tor Chltdron, Pota,
CA. 514 441 0338.
Now occoptlng oppt!cetlone ior
llooon Aportmonto. Equll Houoo
lng Qr&gt;p., olr cond., leu..,
room, lioo tnoh pickup, • to ltortt &amp; KhoaiL 304-773!1529;

18 wanted to Do

..,_e!t,WI'O'JA .
.-.~- ·

INI lroo z.:zt. 11,300 or 0.1.0., ' '"•
Sill Undlt Villltrlntyl 114-245:' ·

ADorl...,..ln loltddloDOrt. p....,
lilll. Colt 81Wn.rll1. 1011.

Mull 1011 1100 ooctlonot homo,
3bdrm, 2 both, 814-385·7871. Aok
for Bronda 01 Art.
SPECIAL toctory to you. 1911
two Of throo bodroom 14X70
modoto, c-plototy oot up 1,.
ctudl1111 oklrtl1111, 110 dnno1 ~
topo ond olepa. S13,w.:oo
~at cotonl) Coli , . -

tF IT's. MlCIItl

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You could be extremely lucky In dealing
with groupa, ctubl or large corporatlonl
In the year ahead . BOth oodal and me·
tertii benellla are Indicated.
Ql. . ,.., 21 ....... . , Don't lOOk
tor griiHicttiOn In materlallltlngltocMJ.
The fulftllmlnt you're~ 0111 be
IOUnd.ellher In .-n1
I le lrlendl or In 011t1r Yllula tMt
be
rnetaOred· Get. Jump 1111 ... by under•
llandtng lite I~ wllltlh IN govetnlt'Q Y\"' In tile v-' 1111111111. 8andlor

-·t

make Mil' ohangea thai attect otllerl •
welt u you...tl today, be aura to alert
._yorJe InvOlved ot your lntentlona.
Surpno. could beCkftre.
LIIRA (a.pL 21-Gct. 23) Someotl8
cloM to you may make a promiM today
thai you know cannot potllbly be kept.
11'1 bell not to make an IIIUe 01 H; Jual
be rwdl' to forgive thlo peraon

IIIII. '

'

.

IAOmAIIUI ( - . :D-Deo. 211 Over·
al! condltlono loo4olavorable today, with
the exception 01 1Huatlon1 that ere
speculative. Be C8telul operating
lnt_ar_,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 111 H your
upectallonl are not within r - . b l e
bounds today, dl._tntmentls ~
ble. Be lOgical and rMI- mak·

l n g - 1 1.
AOUARIU8(..., • feb. 11) You're on
the right treck and tltlngl a~Q~Id work
out •you erMIIon, but your pl-. need
time to mature end lleJalop. Don't treat
thlngt that ere atiM In the tormaiNe
stage uflnlllzed ,

P18CI8 (l'eb.ll.t-!MIIitll'rctlll •1 You're lUll
In a lucky trend where your
and
comnwclallnler•t• . . COIJCerMtl. Be
111ert lor opportunhlel and capitaliZe on
them .. !hay arlit,
ARIII (llaroll Z1·Aprll11) 8'*- Ia
lllcely tOday' prcMded you - · t liWitGh
your olljeCl- on Jmpulae. Sttclt to
your original
lllltlngt
get a trtlle u..-tllln.
tAURUI (April. IIIII 10) Y- inlllll
InclinatiOn today may be to gel DIIWI

PfiCio.:t·

11:00(2). (J)

ONiwl

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by doing what need~ to be 110M on your

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D Ia acoow and MN.ICing

11:311

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on One

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you .... tw _ , time and tllort on lhlnGt that . How-, you'll 11M IIIUCII beMr riiUIIa
0111'1 contribute to your atatu1 or mattrill Wlll·belng. You're In a cycllwhtre
apportunllill .,.

Ro-•10:20 (J) MOYIE: The Honl)lftiDDII
Mecllilta (1 :55)
10:30 I]) Ntwl
()) WHI Vlr1lfnla llapOrt
• Croolt and Clllu
D luohl Tonight

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.tlbrlly Clphw erypiOfi'IFM ... ~ from quoltllf•llr ~ ~ ~ 1nC1
Etch Wtler In IM CCIMr tt-*IOf MOtftlr. TOdWJI cMr. f . . . . ~-

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myself to ... undlratood II I -.ut

,..,..... In • drab world." - ' Enol Flynn.

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Thul'ldey, June I, 181-t:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

14-The o.lly Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Reds stage
rally to defeat
Mets 6-3

.•

Pick 3:930
Pick 4: 5738

Cards : 3-H, Q~C

Q-D; 4-S
Clear tonight. Low in
mid-50s. Saturday, sunny.
'High in 80s.

Page4

•
VoL 4#, No. 24
CaPJulgblld 111111

41 5 WEST MAIN

r----"'-----

POMEROY, OHIO

'

Weekend displays-~

'

992-6477

'

Pizza Hut"
De ·vers
To Your Door.
CALL 992·6477

Herltaae Wed:ead displays at lbe Mel11 Coualy
MDSeum Include addltloDS to
the faiUty's MIUtary Room,
au antique toy dllplay and au
ellblblt of model tralna. Spedll deear..... laolaoi~- eraas of the Gulf.'Wa~ ave
been placed In the sec:oadlloor MIUtary Room. Oa left
below, museum whm~r Rev.
William Mlddlenvarth pall'
RaishiDI touebes oa tile room.
Top, Sherri Hart or the mwum wa&amp; busy preparl•l the
aiitlque toy d~lay. The doll
Sberrl Is pictured wllh Ia
propert/ or the museum.
Many o the toys, bowenr,
are oa loan from RaJ 1nd
Bobbi Karr. The exblblts wll
be open to lbe public be&amp;ID·
olng at 1 p.m. oa Saturda7
aad wiD remala open throu&amp;JI
Suaday afteraooo. A slide
·show and several otbft' aetlvl·
tielue also plauoed.

CALL 992-6477

UMmDDIUVRY
•,

~ep This Number Handy.

LIIIII'ED DIUVRY

'.
'

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ULiiVLHY

• ! ' i r~ r 1N r 1\ H 1~ ,. (l 1 ' 1
lllliVlllY

MUSEUM DISPLAY • All extellllve diiDiaJ
. or model tralna hu been plleed I• the Melp
Couty Mldeum by the Melas Dlvllloa or the
: SoutbellterD Oblo Rllllroad Club for tbe eqjoy.· ment or Herltlae Weekend 'rillton. Sevea sizes
or IIIOCiel tralu are lllc:luded Ia the eUiblt. Loell

mem ben or the 'allroad Club, left to rlgllt,
Mathew Justice, Brian Justice, Nalhaa Robiaette, Gen1ld Shuster, aad David Robinette, will
be on b11d to operate the tralaa a•d explala
about the v•rloU&amp; sizes aad klads oa exblblt.

The Meigs County Sheriff's Department investigaled two accidents 00 Thursday.
. The f111t accident lOOk place oo privale property in Letart Town·
ship. According 10 lhe repon, SIC)lhen E . Cooper, driving for the
Grumpy Guy Trucking Com)JIIIy ofLancastm was deliverin$ a load
of IOI1WD baskets 10 Eugeae Davis of Rowe Road in Racme and
backed lhe ll'llil« iniO lhe bam door.
1'bere - 110 damage 10 lhe II'UCk.
The ICCOOd accident occ:uned on County Road 35 a1 Old Towne.
16 year old Corey Hstfield of Hoback Road was eastbound on
County Road 35 and lost conaol of his 1986 NW. IIUCk when he
met IDOiher vehicle. Hatfield's II1ICk went off lhe roadway on the
rl&amp;bt lllrikla.llhe emblllkment, a mailbox aDd two eleclric company
poles. The bcine Emcqency Squad lrlln8porttd Halficld 10 Veter·
- Memorial Hcluilll far examination aoclll'eallllenL He wa ciled
10 Meip County luWIIIile Court on a cbqe olfailins 10 maintain
conuol The II'UCk wu beavily damaged.
·
Colltlnlled 011 , . . 3

tt.lf 'IOPPIItl COVIll 101M PIZZAS

•

''

•

'(

.

By Kathrya Crow
SealiDel CorrelpOIIdeat
The resignalion of Teresa
Tyson-Drummer as a member of
Syracuse Village Couacil was
accepted during a regular meeting
of Council Thursday nlgbt.
In a leuer 10 Mayor Bber Pickens and Council, Ty110n-Drummer
expressed her lpp'CCialion for havlog bad the oppor1Ullily 10 &amp;erie on
Council and wilh tbe other village
olflclals. Her recent move 10 Rulland ~ her ineligible 10 continue semng.
The problem of IUegal parkioa
in lhe village was discussOd widi
Council by Police Chief 1im ConnoUy. He advised~~ he W!ll. ·

A Multi

....

25 .,...
Inc. New p•per

Alabama.firm cancels
July 11 public hearing;
proposed·mill on hold ·
A public bearinf tentatively
scheduled for 1uly 1. regarding
Apple Grove Pulp's water discharge permit, bas apparemly been
canceled at lhe company's request.
According 10 a Jeport in IOday's
Huntington Herald-Dispatch,
developers of lhe proposed pulp
mill -bave put lheir plans on hold
again when lhey asked to stale 10
dela~ hearing. Alabama Pulp
and
Co. requested lhe Waler
Resources Secuon of the state
Division of Natuml Resources suspend lhe application il filed for lhe
federal permit necessary to discbarxe lhe {~~ant's waslewater iniO
lhe Ohio Rtver, iccording to 1im
Waycasler. water resources
spokesman.
"1be compaay is not ~ng
wilb its plans righlnow, WayCBSIer told the Herald-Dispaldt. "They
ha'i'en't withdrawn thetr pennit, but
I don't know at Ibis point why lhey
h~ve decided 10 suspend lhc perrna"
·
The newspaper reporled an
Alabama Pulp official ssid plans
for lhe 1,400-1011-pcr-day pulp and
paper planl are movinl forward.
Kea Goddsrd, vice president -of
Alabama Pulp, !Old the Huntington
paper lhe fact tbat the Stale Wa1er
ltesoun:e1 Bolnl ia reviewi•a·
wastewiler 'dl*chsrge standards
atalewlde is lhe main ftiBSOII for the
suspension, allhough he called it a
difficult question.
"We felt it would be in&amp;ppwptille for Ul 10 be going through lhe
process wlllle lhe Waler R~

Board is doing its review," Goddard told the newspaper, later
adding tJ:!e com)JIIIy is IJIICI_lmfortable wilh lhe media attenlion lhe
I)I'OJ)OSal has drawn.
·
· Charles Lanham, president of
the Mason County Development
Authority, recenlly staled to The
Register that he is sure Apple
Grove
will be "aood corporate
neighbors and wilf comply with
all slatldards set by lhe stale. The
mill will provide approximately
1,000 jobs 10 lhe - .
Local environmentalists who are
opposed 10 lhe project sre optimistic aboul lhe lalest development. Brian Hagenbuch of the
Wesr Virginia Environmentlrl
Council IOid tile Huntington newspaper, "I only look at lhat as a posiu.ve. "
Members of MACE, which
opposes the mill, say the latest
delay will help lhem galber more
information about the planl from
stale and federal officaals. "This

Pule

pennit process has been on and off
several times. I don't understand
it." MACE member Bill Beard of
Gallipolis staled 10 the Dispaleh.
Beard said he is concemcd, even
though the mill is proposed for
West Virginia, because "lhe stale
line doesn't. SlOp anything when it ·
comes to environmental damage."
He reported he had attended a
hearing before the state Waler
Resources Board last month in
Charleston, where Alabama Pulp
officials pmposed raising the stan- ·
danl for dioxin emissions by a fac-tor of 100, or above suggesled federal guidelines. Dioxins are a byproduct of lhe pulp manufaclllring ·
process.

.

.

There will be a public hearing ·
before lhe comjlany can be Issued .
its waslewaler discharge permit, so
residents can voice their opinions.
The next Waler Resources Board
public hearing on dioxin limits in
June 20 in Charles10n.
'

'

Witness admits
padding bills
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- An office manager for a conb'ICIOr uys he helped raise lhe consuuction cost of a Kanawha County housing project in an alleged
bribery scheme involving a federal
off'teial.
..
Donald Browning, office nianaser for M&amp;:T ConSIIUction, leSti·
fled ~~trsday be forged accountants stgnatures and got subcontrsctors 10 pad lheir bills, all 10 be
~an inflated price by lhe U.S.
DepllliiiCIII of Housing and Urban
Developmenl.
Fonner stale HUD Director Carl
Smith is on trial for allegedly
receivins a $50,000 bribe from
MelT in ex~hange for helping the
company wm a federal conlract 10
build Lemma Villagc Aparlinents
inNiuo:
Bro~~g lestified Thursday in
U.S. Distric:l Court that money for
Smilh was to come from IRJD payments far lbe projccL He said he
also OIJC!'llled at lhe direction of lhe
construction company's owner,
Maurice Toler.
"Maurice told me that we
would have 10 make lhe cost eslillllleS high enough so lbat we could
pay Carl out of it and lbat we could
make all the money we could out
of it." Brownlnglestified.
Browning bas signed an agreement 10 plead guilly 10 felony tax
flaud and 10 signing a false document
·

,__Local briefs--- Tyson-Drummer resigns
from Syracuse Cl)uncil post
Two accidents investigated

$6.99
NE
$8.99 FOR TWO

2' ~:.!•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, june 7, 1991

i~_suiJ!J tickets to thOse who park
illegaiJy on Sli'eets, alleys and sidewalks.
.Councilmu Minier Frysr told
Council dial some oflhe new Sli'eel
signa bave been erecled and lhat
lhe worlt will continue until all of
lhe poles have been straigblened
and the alps are in place. It was
noted by Council Member Kalhryn
CroYi dw a Slreet sign at lhe inlersection of Water and Apple had
been tom dowa and lbrown over
lhe riverbaak. However, lbe sign
wu II!CCMied and will be put bact
in place.
Crow also reported lhat 1he
Syracuse Cemetery is in need of
Coadaued oa pap J

APPALACHIAN CRAJIT HOUSE • The Appalachlu Cnft
Houae, located at 119 Butteraat A-ne In l'ullleroy, 11 opeallpia
to Ibe pabllc. The house Is opea oa Jlrldlysand Slturdayllroli 11
a.m. to 4 p.m. with atellded h011n (11 to I) Air Herltaae Weekelld.
1D addition to J111ow1na eraflen to sell tbelr IIJOds, the ~ppaiKhlan
Craft House plaas to offer cl• s IDd other lldivlllel • time IJOII
oa. Plc:tured I&amp; oae of tbe eraften, Joyce GIIHI•a n- IDierested
Ia partlclpJitiDIIa tbe house am caD GUiilaa at !185-4348.

Museum schedule

'.

HERITAGE WEEKEND
Schedule of Events for Saturday lad Suoday
Eveats spoasored by tbe Melp County Museum
Saturday
I p.m. - All Exhibits and displays in place

DemonstJations on slale:
Spinning and Weaving by Nancy Schul in lhe Sewing Room
Quilting by R.S.V.P. volunleetS upslairs
CrochetiQg by Yada and Jane Haze liOn upslairs
.
IU,g Basket Making by June Ashley upslairs
.
Blacbmilbing by Herman Schul across lbe slreel
Slide Show:" A Retrospective Of Meigs CoUIII)'"
Compliments of Fanners Bank and Savings Company (at various times
from 1:30 p.m.
Exhibits and Displays:
Model Trains by Southeastern Ohio Railroad Club, Meigs Di vision
Soapbolt Derby Car
Township and Villa&amp;e History • Hislory Wall
Toy Vehicles· CoD~Iion ofRsy and Bobbi Karr and Family
Salule 10 Desert Storm soldien In the Military Room upsllirs
Essays from "Yesteryear" participants (Winners 10 be

BMO!JIIced)

.

Suaday
1 p.m. - Demonstrations and ellhibils continue
Civil Wsr Drill Team
The Counliy Kin Bl!ld will perfoim throughout the aflelliOOn
2 p.m. - Middleport Chun:h of Christ poup

Food wiD be a~dable aci'OII the lllreet by Melp Couaty J11o.

aeer md Hlstork:al Society:

Publlatlou ud cOIDmemoradve cups ror sale Ia tbe mua·
urn.

,

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