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                  <text>0-The Dally SenUnel

OhiO

Beat of the Bend.~··

1.......... ·. ·

#~

by Bob H oeflich

As I have mentioned previously.
I am getting some interesting communications from Meigs residents
who have undergone he&amp;Jt procedures or surgeries.
I plan to share some of these
messages with you - and really
there's no time like the present.
Many of you know Mrs. Velsie
Rou sh of Bailey Run Road,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Roush has been
such a good Indian over the years
working hard and so faithfully
on behalf of the Women's Auxiliary
~ney-Bennett Post 128,
American ugilin, in Middleport .
You are familiar, of eourse, with
the expression "God makes the
load to fit the back". It seems to
me ihat Mrs. Roush has had a "mite
much" on her load, but also we
know that we're not supposed to
question these things.
Here's the information on Mrs,
Roush ' s heart problems over the
past couple of years - I have taken
the liberty of omitting the names of
the physicians involved and a litde
bit of other infonnation - bottom
line is that all the pertinent information is included:
"I was first taken to Holzer Hospilal on March 11, 1989 and tests
were run and I was told that I had a
hiatus hernia and angina pains. Got
out on the 15th. Reentered on the
19th with additional pain.
Arrangements were made for me to
go to Ohio State University Hospilals.
"On April 18, 1989, I entered
OSU hosp.itals where tests were
again run. On this visit they had to
do two different heart catherizations and determined that I had two
arteries that were 99 percent closed
and two that were 75 percent
closed. They opened up twO of the
arteries at thiS time with .the bal:
loon surgery. Within two days
they had closed back up and they
again opened them up.
'
"Also on this vistt they told me
that by-pass surgery was out of the
question as the veins had been
siripped from both my legs. They
sent be back home.
"On July 161 reentered Holzer's
and on the 18th they again transfetred me to OSU by squad where
they again did the cathenzation and
balloon surgery on two arteries.
They waited three days this time
and tried to open the other two
wries which was unsuccessful
Told me II this time they had done
all they could and sent me home
with a 10 pe~tent chance of making

&amp;··~·

.

. .P?~. . . . ..
it

Workshop to eye games,
materials for education
A four-day, hands-on wiJ!ts!lop
to help area teachm motivate their
students through the construction
and use of original materials and
games will be given at the University of Rio Grande July 22-26.
The workshop is co-sponsored
by the Rio Grande Council for
Exceptional Children at the University of Rio Grande and the Southeastern Ohio Special Education
Regional Resource Center (SEOSERRC). It will be conducted each
day from 9 a.m. until 3:30p.m. in
·the James A. )'thodes Student Ceoter at Rio Grande.
Presentq is Melanic Braulanan
· of Learnirig Keys Inc. Braulanan is
an assistant to Elsie Earlley, one of
the leading names in workshops on
the effective use of materials and
games.
Research has shown that c~il­
dren learn best through acuve
. hands-on mcth~ds. In addition,
games and matenals foster)earnmg
by doing and allow child_re~ to
·develop thetr !lat~ral cunostty.
Research also tndtcates that any
~pproach invo~ving movin.g, touchmg and explonng tS supenor, especially in ~e early grades. Games
and ~atenal~ have prov~ to be DC?t
only mstructtonal, but highly mouvating.
.
The workshop will feature more
than 600 materials developed by
Earlley, demonstrations of dozens

"Arrangements were made for
me to go $toe a doc!Ol' at Grant Hospital. After a series of tests, this
doc!Ol' said he could do the by-pass
surgery by using the arteries out of
.the chest area. He just I;OIIIdn't do
all the repair that was needed and
that I had a IS percent healing ability because of being a diabetic.
"On August 30, I entered OSU
for the by-pass surgery, found out
they didn't have an ICU available
so
so the morning of the 31st they
moved me to Grant Hospital where
they did the surgery that day. They
were able to do a triple by-pass at
this time. I was in the hospital 10
days this time and sent home.
"Two days after getting home, I
again had severe pain and was
taken to Holzer's At this time I
had tri have a pacc;maker put in my
chest area. Upon putting in the
PA!CGithe doctor found a bubble
on my by-pass incision and burst it
to find that I was full of infection
· clear iiiJO the rib cage. The doctor
had me taken back to Grant Hospilal where I spent another six weeks.
There, they scrnped the rib cage of
all the infected tissue and sewed
me up again. They did stin grafting at thls time to cover the incision.
·
·
"When I went back in two
weeks to have some of the stitches
~moved I again had infection, and
the incision burst open upon the
removal of the stitches. This time,
they si:raped the bad tissue out and
left the incision open.
"With the help of the Home
Health Nurse June Klocs and my
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) family, it took me nine and a half Aimee Aronson, dressed in a white
months to heal.
formal gown, and Vicki Orton, in
"I spent a total of 160 days in pink, sat in the appointed restaurant
· the hospital durinJ 1989. In 1990 I and waited for their dates to the
had two congesbve heart failures senior prom.
and was taken to Holzer's. On
It didn 'I take long for the 18Sept. 1S, 1990, I was taken to year-old North Central Hi~h
Holzer's with pneumonia and Sch~ol seniors to realize they d
seven days later I was to be been stood up.
released. That morning I had a
"They were supposed to .meet
stroke and spent another 10 days us at 8: I 5 p.m.," Miss Aronson
there.
said. "By 9 p.m., we knew they
"I lost a lot of my speech and weren't coming. All we could think
most of my mobility from the of was how we were going 10 get
stroke. I am now mostly confmed out of there without looking totally
to my home and a wheel chair.
stupid."
"And, Bob, I'M STILL SMILThe girls' pligllt touched Beth
ING".
Sayers, dinner manager at ClinkNow what was that you were erdagger's Restaurant where the
saying about having a ltttle sinus girls waited at a table with two
headache? After reading about the emr.ty chairs.
problems of Mrs. Roush, I'm sure
'The entire staff was beanbroyou're going to be able to keep ken for them," she said. "They
smiling too.
were'in this incredible situation and
thev didn't know how to get out of
it.''
'}
.
Sayers asked the girls if they'd
Six scholarships tolaling $2,500 after the sale of township build- mind being escorted to the prom by
have been awarded by the Bedford ing by the Bedford Tow ship two waiters she recruited to be
Scholarship Committee composed Trustees on the May 19, 1981. The Prince Charmings.
Bob Miller, 24, phoned his
of John Redovian, Bruce Reed, scholarship applicants must be residents
of
Bedford
Township
who
mother,
who brought down a spare
Steven L. Story, and Fenton Taytuxedo
shirt and cummerbund.
plan to funher their education
lor.
Bruce Hardie; 29, bad his own
Recipients of $750 scholarships beyond high school.
In making the announcement of tuxedo.
were Amy .Michelle Wagner and
Hardie also had approval from
Brian Randall Corsi.. Terry R. the scholarship recipients, Story
Reutter. David Frymyer, Lori D. said that "it is the committee's sin- his wife of six months, who was
Hayes, and Timothy M. Hall each cere hope that this money will · excited to sec the Australian attend
assist these fine young adults in his fii'S! American prom.
received scholarships of $250.
"We tried to do the right thing
The scholarship fund was set up being as successful in the future as
they clearly have been in the past" . from the word go," Hardie said.
"We had them call their parents to
ask if it was OK."
The restaurant not only supplied
the
dates. but paid for the hors
Three Meigs Countians were
'oeuvres
the guts ate while they
d
atnOng Shawnee State University's
Melanie Jane Beegle, daughter waited. Sayets gave the waiters
305 graduateS Friday.
of Mr. and Mrs. Jeonings Beegle,
Receiving degrees in dental Racine, made the dean's list for the money to pay for picbleS and other
hygiene were Julie Ann Baity and spri!lg semester at Bowling Green expenses at the prom.
''Sure, it was a nice thing, but
Amy Satterfield Ohlinger, both of State University. A sophomore at
what
the girls did was far more
Pomeroy. Headta' Lynn Finlaw of the University, Miss Beegle maincourageous,"
Miller said. "Bruce
Long Bottom received an associate tained a grade point average of 4.
and
I
had
the
easy
part In the face
degree
., in the hwnanities/fine arts. for the semester..
of embarrassment and humiliation,
these girls went to their prom.
"It took a lot of l!UIS, and they

or

Six awarded Bedford Scholarship

Meigs
defeats
Gallipolis

of easy-to-use materials and games,
numerous time-saving games ready.
and easy to color, assemble, laminate and use, and a resource book
for every participant containing
material descriptions, construction
directions, and designs to trace or
use in making materials either in
the workshop or the bome.
Participants are asked to bring
markers, scissors, glue, tape ani!
other necessary supplies. Supplies
for the construction of games and
materials will be available for purcl)ase.
This inservice is available for
university course credit through the
University of Rio Grande. The
inservice registration fee for those
attending the workshop but not tak·
ing the university credit course is
$60. Under&amp;raduate credit for those
living in &lt;rallia, Jackson, Meigs
and Vinton counties is $32.50 per
credit hour. Participants from outside the four&lt;aunty $t.eking undergraduate c.redit will be charged
$38.50 per credit hour, while graduate credit for all participants is
$100 per credit hour.
Pre-registration for the workshop is necessary for all altending.
For more infonnation, contact Dr.
Ralph Shibley at the University of'
Rio Grande, 245-5353, extension
335. The toll-free number in Ohio
is 1-800-282-7201.

Restaurant waiters stand
in for missing prom dates

e
Governor cites coal bill 'conCerns'
'

By STEVE ROBRAHN
Associated Press Writer
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) Kentucky's medical examiner said
tesrs on tissue samples taken from
President Zachary Taylor's crypt
should settle once and for all the
question of whether he was the victim of arsenic poisoning.
The white marble crypt was
opened Monday and a coroner took
samples of the 12th president's
remains.
The exhumation was conducted
at the request of Holder, Fla.,
author Clara Rising, who is
researching a book about Taylor
and theorized he was poisoned by
political foes in 1850 for opposing
the spread or slavery into the
Southwest
Ms. Rising contends the symptoms of Taylor's sudden illness and
death resembled those of atsenic

~Luc amples will be test-

'·

ed at twO 1abcniOrics. and arsenic
poiaonin~J would be clear, even
arter all thiS time, experts said.
"The UJXicolOSY analysis from
what we otuined lhould be defmitive " said Dr. George Nichols,
\tare medical examiner. "The(e
will be a 'no' or •yes• lllber than a

continuinl question mart.".
Findings sbould be out m about

two w1dm he said.
Taylor's death was ascribed at

JOO krn

'TENN •.

By CHRISTINA A. SAMUELS
Associated Press Writer
MIAMI (AP) - Shots were
ftred today near a construction site
where former President Carter was
working with other volunteers,
police said. one volunteer was
grazed in the head.
Investigators believe the shots
were fired between two cars and
were not targeted at the project or
Carter, said Metro-Dade police Lt.
JohnPace. ·
.Carter. about a block away from
the shooting site, was not hurL He
later talked to reporters and dismissed the incident.
"When a former president or
somebody famous comes to a
place, they tty to cause a little disturbance," Carter said before
police said it ~Y have been· stray

gunfJre.

Carter and his wife, Rosalynn,
are working with Habitat for
Humanity, which is building 14
horne8 and a day l3'e center in the
Liberty City neighborhood. Habitat
has built 10,000 homes for lowincome families since 1976.
A witness said three or four
shots were fired from a car that
sped off down a street ncar a volunteer tenL
"It was definitely aimed at us,
no doubt about it," said volunteer
Anita Bjorolt. She said another vol·
untecr was grazed in the bead, but
did not appear seriously hurt.

COMPETES IN MISS OIHO • Bridget PoweD competed as an
Ohio State Finalist In tbe Miss America Teen Pageant at the Obio
Center in Col1mbus. Sbe took part In optional competition as ,reD
as those required. Sbe is the daughter of James and Terri Pnwell,
Micldleport,and Gene Davis, North Carolina.

'·

,·
,•

"'

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Prea Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Gov. George Voinovich said he is
pleased overall with a bill the Sen~
ate has passed to protect jobs in the
state's coal ftelds, but is concerned
about costly tax credits proposed
by the measure.
On another matter, Voinovich
took issue with a labor union claim
that the budget he proposed would
result in the layoff of 7,100 state
employees. He pegged the maximwn number of lost JObS at 3,100.

The governor was questioned
about tltose matters during a news
conference Tuesday, the same day
hundreds of members of the Ohio
Civil Service Employees Association lobbied legislators to retain
funding for state~Voinovich SBid he would work
with the ugislature to address the
cost of tax credits proposed in the
Senate clean air-coal mining bill
now pending in the House. The tax
breaks would be granted 10 utilities
that install anti-poliution
smokestack scrubbers.

selves.''

For a couple of hours, the girls
and their last-minute dates danced
and chatted and had their pictures
taken at a nearby convention ce~
where the prom was held. Then
they retutned to the restaurant and
the girls headed off to a party.
"We had an excellent time,"
Miss Orton said.
Neither girl had much to say
about the dates wbo stood them up.
"We don't really want · to
know," Miss Aronson said.
"They're OK guys, but they've
been jcm lately." .
, As for the waiters-turned-promdates, the girls were most appreciative.
"They were the nicest, sweetest
guys you've ever met," Miss
Aronson said. "Because of them, it
turned out to be the most memorable moment I've ever had.
"It made my high school year."

A list of substitute teachers and
auxiliary staff me~bers was
appro~ at Tuesday mght's regular meeung of the Southern Local
School Board.
Approved as substitute teachers
for the 1991-1992 schoO! year
were: Led.a Krauuer, M!chael
Edwatds, Eileen Buck, Fanrue Lee,
Deborah Davis, Steve Deaver, Cat-.
olyn Robinson, Yinas Lee, Helen
Maa.g, Bryan Ztrkl.e, Roseanne
Jenkin~. Nathan Robinette, Valenv
Hansune, Robyn Pitzer, Shirley

~Five
.

"I had some !rouble witll the tax
credits from the stan," Riffe said.
OCSEA, which represents
35,000 state government employees, sponsored a "Blast the Budget
Lobby Day '' on Tuesday as a
House-Senate conference comf!littee prepared to begin worldng out
differences over a tiew state budget
due July l. ·
.. . 1
•
The union said an estimated
7,100 layoffs, continued understaffing and institutional closings
that would result from budget
reductions were unacceptable.

· Voinovich said. the number was
closer to 3,100, including 1,400
employees projected to lose thei,r
jobs under his proposal to turn state
liquor stores over to private business.
• 'I'm glad they are rallying
.because I think that we have
reduced our budgets for our various
state agencies to the point where
we feel we're pullirig alot of pressure on them ... and I would hate
for us to get irito a conference committee and take more money away
from those agencies," Voinovich
said.

McDonald, CarOl Smith, Lois Ihle,
Substitute cooks hired were:
Rolph Werry, Nancy Basye, Betty Shirley Dugan, Evelyn Foreman,
Hutchinson, Victoria Peavley, Ann Carol Hood, Janet Manqel, Mary
Sisson, Judith Crooks, Karen Smith, Alice Williams, Joan
Lyons, Kelly Rizer, Sue Grace, McClain, Judy Parsons, Nellie
Sherry Hensler, Tom Gates, Betty Floyd, and Gwen Sayre.
Wolfe, Sheryl Roush, Kathy Smith,
The following were approved as
Sharon Edmunds, ~t Smith, . substitute custodians: Ronnie
Sandra Cobb, Jennings Beegle, Grim in, Patricia Brown, Carol
Shelly DuBose, Shelagh Wilson, Hood, Janet Manuel, Mary Smith,
Jeff Baker, Jeffrey Arnold, Amy Alice Williams, Michael- Smith,
YOU!Ig, Kimberlce.Hemphill-Hoocl. Lucille Dill, !oan McClain, ~udy
Daruel Murray, Richatd Coleman, ParsOns, Nelhe Floyd and Shirley
Jodie Harrison.
Continued on page 6

Southeastern Ohio men
'

·dullle~g~ - Oititt·~ockftghti~JgJa,w
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) Five ~theni Ohioans wbo have
pleaded innocent to charges of
watching a cockfight will challenge

an Ohio law at a hearing Thunday
in Portsmouth Municipal Coun, a
lawyer says.
The five argue that the statute

--Local briefs-----.
Four EMS calls answered
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services on Thesday
answered four emergency calls.
At 2:21 p.m., Syracuse squad went to State Route 338. Fred
Stewart was taken to Vetentns Memorial Hospital. At 2:56p.m.,
Racine squad went to Elm Sueet. Linda Demmick was taken to Veterans. At 8:07 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Laurel Cliff Road for ·
Betty ~uire. She was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 10:37
p.m., Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 31 for Jake Rockwell, who
was taken to Holzer.

Equipment th·eft investigated
The theft (If a turbO charger frOm United Consttuction Company
of Patkersburg from a site at Salem Center is being investigated by
the Meigs Co1111ty Sheriff's Department.
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, United Construction
Company is a contrac!Ol' at the Southern Ohio Coal Company site at
Salem Center.
The turbo charger was reported stolen from a D6 dozer parked
on the belt line just off Bowles Road. It is believed that the item
was stolen Friday ni.ltht or early Saturday night as there was no dust
on the e~posed metaf parts.

Deputies probe scout camp theft

THESE DRUGS
DON'T COME IN
CHILDPROOF
BOTTLES.
Cocaine, marijuana, speed,
crack and other common
teenage drugs are passed
around in plastic bags, small
vials or just hand to hand.
They don't come in complicated containers when they're
sold to children for quick use.
The side effects of these drugs
aren't written on bottles, and
your children won't learn the

He said he ulso had problems to c.;mtinue burning Ohio's high- .
with the retruactive application of sulfur coal instead of switching to
such tax credits to utilities that cleaner coal from out of state.
already have installed scrubbers.
Utilities that burn Ohio coal
"r think we're going to be would be granted a $1 per ton tax
working with the Legislature in credit toward the cost of installing
regard to some of the C!lflcerils that scrubbers, which reduce the sulfur
I still have,'' Voinovich said.
content of smokestack emissions.
Neither of the concerns were Sup porters said the tax breaks
contained in a statement Voinovich could cost up to $20 million annu.
released last week endorsing the ally.
Senate bill.
House Speaker Vern Riffe, DThe measure seeks to preserve Whee!ersburg, also ·has questioned
coal mining jobs by encouraging whether the stale could afford the
utilities to install equipment needed proposed tax credits.

Southern board approves list
of teachers, staff members

should be very pr~ud of them·-

dangers from friends. Their
friends may be those who try
to sell drugs to them.
You can't childproof a bottle
when it comes to street drugs.
But you can drug-proof your
children by talking to them
before someone else does.

The Daily
Sentinel

Robert Arms of Pomeroy reponed on Sunday that approximately
1-IJOO feet of copper wire has been stolen from Camp Kiashuta in
Chester. The wire, aecording to the Meigs County Sherifrs Department, was cut down and stolen. The theft is believed to have taken
place since last week.

Deer accidents investigated
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that deputies took two deer/car
accident reports on Saturday.
The ftrst deer accident took place at I :20 a.m. on County Road
20 just south of Hemlock Grove. Decker CuUums, 20, was northbound in a 1983 Honda when he sbllek and lcilled a deer that ran
into his path . .
Heavy damage was sustained to the vehicle.
The second accident occurred at 10: 1.S p.m. on Saturday on
County Road 28 near Bashan. Beretta D. Smith, 25, of Clarington
was northbound and struck a deer that jumped into the path of her
1988 Mercury.

viohites their right to freedom of
association, lawyer James Sheets of
Lebanon said.
"The law is completely unconstitutional," Sheets said.
Sheets represents Robert Brewer, 26, of Lucasville; Howard
Crawford, 72, of Ray; Teresa
Boggs, 27, and Timothy Bo~gs, 36,
both of Lucasville; and Ttmothy
MOVING ALONG • Tbe Obio Department
Jeffrey Baker, 26, of Portsmouth.
or Trausportatioo aoticlpates tbe new intetsec·
The five were among about 100
lion or U.S. Route 33 and State Route ll4 (Nye
pe&lt;!Ple cited May 11 at a cockfight
Avenue) to be completed by July 31. A culvert
m Scioto County that was raided by
which collapsed In 1990 has. been replaced.
the sheriff and the Ohio Depart- .
ment of Agriculture. A simul1811eous raid in Vinton County led to
citations against 300.
•
•
Most of the people charged in
the raids were not charged with
cockfighting but with a section of
the law that makes it iUegal to buy
a ticket to, or be present at, a cockWASHINGTON (AP) - The
fight.
number of violent crjmes grew
Violating the law carries a maxi- faster last year in rural states than
mum penalty of 30 days in jail and in urban ones, even faster in most
a $250 fine. Cockfighting specta- than in the nation· s largest cities,
tors last challenged the law in according to a Senate Judiciary
1983. when the 12th Obio District Committee report released today.
Court of Appeals ovenumed severThe report showed Montana
al convictions on the grounds that with the biggest increase among
Ohio's law is vague and overly the rural ·states in the number of
broad.
violent crimes reported to police
Larry Pontious, enforcement last year, up 23 .4 percent. The
chief for the Ohio Department of report, compiled by the commit·
Agriculture said the law is constitu- tee's Democratic maj~ staff, is
tional.
based on figures provi
by 15 of
"We can prove that they were the country's 19 rural states.
not just innocent bystanders. They
"America's rural towns, vilwere there specifically to engage in lages and small communities are
cockfighting," Pontious said.
suffering a plague of violent crime, ,
Meanwhile, more than 700 drug trafficking and drug abuse,"
roosters confiscated in the raids Committee Chairman Joseph R.
remain at a fonner poultry farm Biden Jr. said in the report, which
near Wheelersburg. A Vinton also announces Biden's Rural
County judge ordered them Crime &amp; Drug Control Act of 1991
deslroyed. but the Ohio Gamcfowl that is intended to combat the probBreeders Association challenged lem.
The largest increases , after
the order, and it is being heard by
the 4th Ohio District Court of Montana's 23,4 percent, were
,Appeals.
Nebraska, 14.7 percent; Wyoming,
-the roosters cannot be 11.3 percent; Arizona, 10.8 perdestroyed until the appeal is cent; Colorado, 10.7 percent, and
resolved , the appeals court has Kansas, 10.5 percent
ruled. Lawyen have until 1une 27
Next were South Dakota, up 9.9
to file motions in the case, said percent; Arkansas, 8.9 percent;
Jolm P. Lavelle, an 11110n1ey repre- Oklahoma, 8.6 percent; Iowa, 8.5
sentiq the gamefowl breeders.
Continued on page 6

When IIDilhtd, lbe "''"' llltnsectlon wiD provide ·
three 12-root laDes in all directions, lucludln1 a
new turnlnalane. Turo stanals wltb arrows Will
direct tramc ~ oo tralllc flow. Tbe work is
being done by AlaJI Stone Constnctlon Company ,11t a cost to the state or $1.4 mUUon.

Rural cri·mes
Increase In
rural states
•

Governor signs speed limit bill into law
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- state's $27 billion budget.
A House committee approved
Motorists will have to wait to drive
faster on 246 miles of interstate its rewritten venion of a bill authohighways even though Oov. rizing living wills and the withGeorge Voinovich signed into law drawal of life-sustaining trealment
an immedialely effccdve bill rais- from certain dying and unconscious
. patients withoUt die documentation.
ing the speed limit to 65 mph.
Molllrists cannot drive the highMeanwhile, the House sent to
the Senate Tuesday budget propos- er speed limit until the Ohio
als for the Bureau of Workers' . Department of Transportation comCompensation and the alalC Indus- pletes the installalim of $34,000 in
trial Commission as lawmakers new signs, Voinovich said.
The new limits, which took
returned from weekend recess to
begin seeking a solution on the

.

'

~t':.l!;.i,!',::~~~!!,:;=.

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio,- Wednesday, June 19, 1991

Jimmy Carter
dismisses slwotin~

the time to gastroenteritis.
"Rumors have been running
through the family for years and
years," said Dabney Taylor, the
president's great-great-great-grandson, who was present when the
remains were laken from the crypt.
l,)abney Taylor said he had no
opinion on the usassination theory.
But he said flmily lore has it that if
anyone did Taylor in, Sen. Henry
Clay of Kentucky, "the Great
Com~... is a prime suspect
Nichols said two aeu of samples
of nails, hair, bone and other tissue
were taken during 1 four-hour
autopsy.
The state medical examiner's
offICC wiD examine one set eX samples. To ensure accuracy. the other
set will go to a lab yet to be chosen,
Nichols said.

Partly cloudy tonight.
Thursday, high in 90s.

•

Named to dean's list .

Samples removed from
President Taylor'~ Crypt

Pick 3:874
Pick 4: 1901
Cards : A-H, K-C ·
4-D; 3-S

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a

SSU Kraduates

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I

a measure allowing townships to
adopt limited powers of self-government.
The Ohio Township Association
said the measure would not be a
good alternative for many of the
1,320 township governments. But it
said the bill could reduce the need
to constantly petition the Lcgisla!ure "? pass ~ial-~ bills dealmg with specific toptes.
House J;linance Chairman
Continued on paRe 7

effect . immediately
upon
Voinovich 's signature, arc expected to be posted by the July 4 holiday.
"I:hc bill authorizes a 65 mph
limit on all sections of interstate
eligible for the increase 1111der fe4eral pop"lation guidelines.
OOOT Direc!Ol' Jerry Wray said
the zones may change as a n~sult of
new urban boundaries determined
by the 1990census.
Voinovich also signed into )aw

.,

'I

TALKS ABOUT SPEED LIMIT LAW • Gov. Georae
Volucmcb talb to reJIOI ten fiadaJ Iller lllpiaa a blllllto In
that wOI nile the speed limit to 65 mpb aloag,portlou or Ohio's
Interstate hlghwiJ system. Standlllg behiud the goverDOr Is ODOT
Director Jerry WriJ. (AP)
i
I
I

�Commentary

Page-2-The Dally SenUnel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.MULTIMEDIA. INC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsloer
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslstaat Publlsher/Coatroller
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspape-\: Publishers Association.
LET!'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should -he less than300

words long. All letters are subject to editing and must he signed with
name, addreu and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues , notpersonall-

tl.,s.

Municipal bankruptcy
or privatization?
.
By JOHN CUNNIFF
.
AP Business.Analyst
·
NEW YORK - Th~ concept of impro~ing services to the public by
turning ovct government facilities ;md Sllrvices to private competitive bidders has been slow to catch on in the United States.
·
11at might seem odd in view of the U.S. image as the epitome of freerilarkei entmprisc. Odder still when you consider that the tactic, privatization, is now sweeping through the fonner socialist states of EW'ope.
· And nolhinf! less than strange when you realize that a common impediment to privatJZation is Uncle Sam and his ~encies, which sometimes
provide obstacles to the sale of facilities for wh1ch they provided grants.
In spite of IbiS, some advocates of privatization, such as John P. Giraudo, see the enviromnent lbr their concept as improving. It is improving,
they uy, because of stress on local and state budgets.
·
"Cities are up against the wall," says Giraudo, who was chief counsel
to President Reagan's commission on privatization. They are, he says,
facing limitations on debt and taxes, and federal grant money has run out.
Giraudo, an attorney with Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &amp; Flom,
believes more municipalities and states will be willing to buck the contro- .
vmy that inevitably accompanies privatization talk. They have no olber
choice, he says.
In his opinion, cities simply cannot continue to handle the vast list of
services they offer, and that private contraCting could .be the answer to
providing better service at lower costs. ·
Moreover, he adds, muncipalities have huge amorints of capital sitting
idle in the form of investmenrs in water and sanitation facilities, and ve_rhaps in lir and warer ports. Sold to private operators, such facilities m1ght
release capilli, help resolve budget dilemmas and result in improved services.
.
_ J_l£g!lld have been an : c h taken by Bridgepon, Conn., which
Jta'lftlt'1tlqlft"ft!!let In ~ley laws. "Why didn'tthe mayor of
Bri"""""" consider it?'' he asks, and he suggests privatization is often
poli~·difficult.
·
' I
.
Among·!he im!ICdin)ents he sees are unions, "not so much members as
the lcadenhip. '' He believes privatization is viewed as a threal by leaders.·
Whilo urtion members conceivably could have an equity involvement in a
new competitive company, that company might not be equally friendly
toward the union irself.
·
The federal government is allother impediment. Giraudo cites the
example of Albllny, N.Y., which considered selling its airpon to -tackheed Oxp., only to be thwarted when th!f Federal Aviation Administration declined to give irs apprOval.
.
By their nature, cities aren't geared to making money in a competitive
enviiOIIIDCIIIL In conlrast. private companies survive by being competitive,
which_, being more creative and efficient than other vendors.
Wbilc Americans m-m,~:ve forgotten this, says Giraudo, the lesson is
fresh in die minds of
. Europeans. It is too bad, he says, that we
couldn't have releaq~ed the lesson from them, rather than from the stress
on bud&amp;eiS..

Today in history
By Tbe As&amp;ocilted Press
Tadly is Wednesday. June 19, the I 70th day of 1991. There are 195
days 111ft II~~Tadly'a Hiplipa in~:
Olllllil 19, 19!3,JuUus and Ethel Rosenberg- convicted of passing
U.S. 1111 lc jiili[ICIIIII die Soviet Union ...., were execUied at Sing Sing
1'1'1101118 O.Jning, N.Y.
011 dlil dlla:
Ia 1586, Bnlllth eolonisrs sailed from R011110ke Island, N.C., after failing to ellablisblingllncl's rust pennanent sealement in America.
In 1862, slavay was outlawed in U.S. territories.
.
·
.
In 1910, Father's Day was celebrated for the first time, in Spokane,

Wub.
In 1917,.-m, World Will, King George V ordered 1be British royal
::::;:c~ wilh German titles and surnames. The family took the
Ia 1934, tile Federlll Communications Commission was created,
In -19S2.1bc c:elellrity-panCI game show "I've &lt;lor A Secret'' made its
doblll 01 CBS-TV with 01111')' Moore as host.
·
Ia 1961, 30 years ago, the U.S. Supmne Coon sir!JCit down a provision Ia Mlrylllld's constitution requiring Sl8le offiCeholders to profess a
belief Ia till existenc:e of God.
Ill 1963, Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova retllnied to Earth
aftlr I 1111111 nearlY. three days as the fUSl WOJIIIR in space.
Ia 964, !lit Ov!l Righrs Act of 1964 survived an 83-day filibuster in
the U.S. ,_,., and was approved by a vote of 73-27.
Ia 1917,-lqle Paul VI proclaimed a 19dl-cenwti Philadelphia bishop,
Jolla N
, die fmt male U.S. sainL
. •1917,1M U.S. S~c Court struck down a ~ law requirIIIIMf puiii!C lcllool radling the theory of evolution to leilch creatJon-

r

-..-...well.
'
.
T• 5Ji' The U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted a resoludGII

condemniaa Ismel's lir raid ~ 10 lnlqi nuclear plant

coc••••
fli:JF•
lllil* 01
*""' . . .Millldll
16 .....

110: UniVCISity or Mlwyland be•k"'l-11' Sill Len Bias, die
the BOIIOII Cettica. suffered a fllal cocaine-induced
1
lllelrt recipient Muftay P, Haydon died in Louisville,
01 die Jllllldltle JIIIIIII!.
.
IIIZ Otllllinl•lellllllla wtn preaeatcd In die druJ ancl per·
;., ati1 OlWIIIIIIitoa D.C. MaJor M1rioi1 S. Baay Jr. (Bill)' was later
of a Jia11e count of mildemcanor drug possession and sen·
1 1 am _ .. In prilon: his atlmleys are appealing the verdict and
s;z)
T C ; 'a Jidblllys: Actress Mildred Natwick is 83. Sen. Quentin N.
Bw 1¢, D-N.D~ 1183. Sa:·~ Crlnslon, D-Calif., is 77. Movie critic
r.1J1e Klel il 72. Actor ........., Jounlan is 70. Sen. Howell HeDin, DAll., 11 70. AcaiM N~~~cy Mlrclland is 63. Actress Gena Rowlands is 55.
R.oc:t . . . Ami W'U. 1140. Actreu. Kadtleen Turner is 37. Singerclaii!C«::!k.a&amp; illlllbet Pull Allllul i128.
1'11111111 f« tocmy: "If you use Hollywood as the test tissue for
mlllldll. what could the prognosis be?" - Pauline Kael, American

fiiiC

a; ""

...wl•••

IDGrilcriDt: Cl~f9•).

_ J. _

'··

Lithuania won't be provoked by Soviets
By Jlll:k Alldersoa
aDd Dale Vaa Alta ,
VILNIUS, Lithuania - Soviet
army troops forcefully took over
two Lithuanian airfields here
recently. They said it was a defensive move against a potential
threat. The airfields housed the
only lir force that the independentminded Lithuanians could muster
- crop-dusting planes and gliders.
Mikhail Gorbachev and his soldiers continue to be bully-boys in
this once-independent republic.
They seize a bank here, an airfield
there, always trying to provoke a
response that would justify their
moving in, en masse, to put down a
rebellion.
But Lithuania refuses to play
along . The republic's young
Defense Minister Audrius Butkevicius told us that he recognizes the
game, and he won't be pushed into
playing it by Moscow's rules. As a
result, some of his men are dying.
Bulkevicius, 30, and a doctor in
his civilian life, has 2,500 unanned

Sports

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, June 19, 1991

,.

could serve as an excuse for the
Soviets to usc military force
against Lithuanians.·'
The best Butkevicius can do in
relllm is take a lesson from Martin
Luther King or Mohandas Gandhi
and throw up a human shield of
unarmed people s~ding in front
of building~ before the Soviets
se~e those buildings. ·That dido' l
work last January when Soviet
tanks crushed demonstrators to take
over a television tower in Vilnius.
One of the more secret and·
insidious methods the Soviets have
used to foment discord and fear has
been to allow hardened criminals to
escape from the prisons that the .
Soviets still control. And, according to Lithuania's nascent inteUigence service, the KGB is also
working overtime to set brushfiCCS
across the country.
.
"Their main task is to destabilize and create tension in Lithuania," Butkevicius said, "to destabilize the economy and destroy the
social aid system. They are stoking

men working at 26 Lithlllllian bord~r posts. They are !here to stop
smuggling of high-quality Lithuanian goods into the rest of the Soviet Union, and to make a show of
controlling a border that Lithuani,
ans hope will some day be a line
between separate nations, not
reluctant republics.
Soviet troops have made sporadic attacks on these border
guards, bunting at least a dozen of
their posts, beating lbe guards and
killing at least one of them.
Butkevicius' defense department can muster not more than
10,000 soldiers, most of them
un..-med J!llft-tirners. On the other
side, the Soviets have at least
90,000 heavily armed troops,
including paratroopers and special
forces ready to strike at any time.
"Every day we have to face different provocations which are .
attempted by the Soviets," Butkevicius told us. "The aim of these
provocations is to instigate military
clashes between people which

dissatisfaction within the society.··
Vice Pnesident Ceslovas Stankevicius made the same point to us.
"There's no question they're trying
to incite all kinds of domestic
unrest. They continue to ·bite off
chunks of our Jetritory."
Europeans have seen this ploy
before, JUSl p:ior to World War II.
Adolf Hitler dummied up rumors
of a planned attack on bis own
troops and used that as a pretext to
invade Poland.
Lithuanian leaders expect it will
be a long hot summer tltiJ year, and
they will be working overtime to
keep tempers from boilinjl and to
keep people from organizing massive demonstrations that would be
an invitation for the Soviets to
crush them.
CASH IN ADVANCE- You
know the recession is bad when
advenising aj!encies begin asking
for payment tn advance. Ad agencies nonnally O.P!"''Ite on a credit
basis (except With political candidates). But they are tired of being
stiffed by clients. So now, before
they commit their time and talents
to developing an ad campaign for
anyone, many agencies 11:fe asking
10 see some green. There IS another
·reason for advance payments. The
ad agencies have cash-flow roblems from the clients who can t pay
· or who have declared banlcrupiCy.
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
National Rifle Association is up in· : :
anns - its perpetual State - over
Oticago's decision to forbid public ··.
housing residents from keeping
guns in their ap~rtments. The
Chicago Housing Authority has
already confiscated hundreds of
guns from its tenants this year.
Now the NRA is threatening a suit,
claiming the policy violates the
Constitution. To the NRA's war of
thinlcing, the innocent have a nght
to protect themselves by carrying
guns. But th!lt's not the way it
"\'((rks in the projects. Someone is ·
shot every day in public housing in ·
Chicago. and the victims are usually innocent bystanders caught in
the crossfu-e of drug deals or turf
wllrS. The victims wouldn't have
bad the time, or the skill to grab a
gun if they own¢ one. The NRA is
fond of saying that·if guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have
guns. In this case, if lhe guns are
confiscated from everyone in public housing - the good guys and
the bad guys - fewer people will

The Daily Sentinel ..
Wednesday, June 19, 1991

By·RONALD BLUM
AP Sporq Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -Bud Harrelson tried to sum it all. up in one
word and no one really was sure
whathemeanL
"It was a cliff-dweller," lhc
Mers manager said Tuesday night
after New York's 7-5 victory over
the Cincinnati Reds.
Cliff•dweller'l Who knows.
l:'ut there certainly was enough
exc1temenL
. - Cincinnati staned the game
wJth four consecutive hits off
Wally Wbitesh~
- Howard Johnson hit his sixih
· career grand slam in the third
inning off Tom Browning for a 5-2
New '(orl&lt;leail.
·- The Reds came back on
Barry Larkin's run-scoring single

in the fifth, Bill Doran's RBI single
in the seventh and Chris Sabo's
saaiJic:e n in the eighth.
~inch-hitter Kevin
Me~ hit a tie-breaking single w11h lhc bases loaded in the
eighth off Rob Dibble, who
relieved Randy Mym (3-5).
- Alejandro Pcna (3.{)) struck
out Larkin after three two-strike
fouls, ending the game with two
runners on.
"Wben ~ win gailles like this
and last mghl, you fet charged
up," Johnson said. 'You c.a n't
play 162 games on emotion. You
play the World Series and playoffs
on emption."

Cincinnati won seven of eigbt
before New York's 10-6 victory
Monday night. But with consecutive victories over the World Series

"I was trying to throw it low
champions, the Mets feel like
and
away," said Browning, who
maybe they are starting to turn
things around.
failed to win for onlr the second
"They are very, very important time in seven slar11l smce May 15.
to see what you arc made of," "Mv pitch hung out there for
Johnson said. "To play them when hi m.I,
they're hot and we've been strugJohnson .also started the winning
gling is wonderful. We really need- rally in the .eighth off Myers, who
ed Ibis."
had pitched 11 scoreless innings
Johnson was the key. Cincinnati against his former team. Myers
took a 2-0.Iead in the fllSl, lbe Mets opened the inning by walking
got a nm in the second, and John- Johnson and Rick Cerone hit a one·
son followed Sabo' s two-out .out double. Kevin Elster was
throwing error at third with his walked intentiOiJally.
National League-leading JSth
Then came the strategy.
home nm. Before that, he had been McReynolds batted for Daryl
just 2-for-34 against Browning.
Boston and Dibble relieved.
"Any pitcher you struggle McReynolds, 'in a 3-for-16 slump,
against, it comes down to I hit it followed with a single to right
,and they throw it," Johnson said. ··through the drawn-in infield.
"It's really a mental game at thai
"I threw the ball to
point." .
McReynolds trying to challenge
him," said Dibble, who spent
Monday and· Tuesday at the NL
office for disciplinary appeals. "I
didn't do my job. I felt good, not

Yeltsomania! Future
In the year 2031, in Yeltsingrad,
the old warriors sat in the cafes on
Sakharov Prospekt - half-sad,
half-proud - cupping their hot
glasse~ of bittersweet tea, watching
telev1s1on as returns of the Russian
national elections came in.
The on-screen punditski said
"This is the end of the BNY Coati:
tion." The old folks nodded. It had
been 40 years since Boris N.
Yeltsin (BNY) had been elected.
But now "The Children of
Yeltsin" had aged and were out ot
touch.
The glorious fight for Yellsinite
participatory democracy, the
Yeltsinite commie-bashing, the
cnes for free-market capitalism and
a free press, the turmoil of the
Great Soviet Depression of the
'90s, the splitting apart of the Soviet nationalities, the great emigrations, were, by 2031, ancient history to most Russians.
In 2031 the political talk on television was about the Rumpies
(Russian Upwardly Mobile Professionals). It was said they were only
interested in two-car households

I

and suburban dachas with green
lawnskis.
,
It was said Rumpies were ''selfish," and had lost their Yeltsinite
links to peasants, trade unionists,
intellectuals and the downtrodden,
But, by 2031, most of the fonnerly
downtrodden weren't down. During the Depression, they had
emerged from their dirty villages,
as described in "The Beets of
Wrath." Many of their children
had grown up in suburbs.
The era of renaming was long
over. Lenin had been reburied in
St. Petersburg. The fight over what
to call Red Square had been
instructive. "Democracy Plaza"
had support. "Reagan's Place"
was a lorurshot. But. of course, it
was now '"Sakharov Square."
Throughout .Rassia, there was a
boggling admixture of names:
NATOgrad, Meany-Kirkland
Street, the Solzhenitsyn MOWIIIins,
out-of-the-way statues to Scoop
Jackson, Sharansky and Radio Liberty, a river named Thatcher, cities
named for Srolypin and Kerensky.
The biggeSt naming fights were

progrems while making the latter
subsidy free. In fact, they want to
abolish any means testing for loan
applicants and open eligibility up
to anyone wishing to apply. Furthermore, some in Congress are
proposing that the grant program
be treated as an entitlement program whereby the assistance would
be guaranteed by law and not
subect .to the Congressional budget
allocation process.
·
While I tend to support the
Administration's position in wanting to limit financial grant assistance to tho8e most in need, I do
feel that the Congressional leadership's approach to the loan program is superior. Like my colleagues on the other side of' the
aisle, I too feel full access to educa_tion can best be facilitated by
removing what I feel is an unrealistically low eligibility ceiling. The
cost of higher education is rising at
a much more rapid rare than most
family incomes and if middle
America is to enjoy the fruits of
our educational system, major
modifications need to·be made 10
the current loan program. Anyone
who academically qualifies and
wants to pursue higher education,
should be able to, and one way to
assure this is to open up the loan
program to all.

· TOURNAMENT CHAMPS - TakiDI top
honors In the Big Bead Junior Girls Softball
Tournament beld at New Havea Saturday were
memben of the Chester team. GoiDg Into toUrnament action undeareated they aow have aa
overall record or 15-e. Ia the rroat row are (LR) Meredith Crow, Jessica Radford, Becky
Driggs, Pltsy Aelker 8lld Braud! Reeves. Ia tbe

second row are Lori Eastman, Jessica Chevalier,
Heidi Nelson, Jessica Karr, Nicole Nelson, Crystal Hollllnaer, Lauren Yoang, Michelle Schultz,
bat boy Nalbu Radford and C~h Pat Aeiker.
Ia the back row are assistant coaches Charles
Radford and Kirk «;:hevaller. Tiley are spon·
-ed by Brougbtoa's.

By ERIC FIDLER
Associated Press Writer
CIDCAGO (AP) - Tho!!fl he
led all scorers in the NBA Fmals,
Chicago Bulls star Michael Jordan
said he knows he would not have
become the series MVP without his
teammates. ·
''I'll' think of this as a team ·
award," he said Tuesday as he
accepted the MVP trophy and Jeep
Cherokee that goes wtth iL "But I
don't know if I'll let anyone borrow the Jeep."
If his teammates do want the
keys, lbey may be hard pressed 10
find him. Jordan's summer plans
include travel, and he's not saying
where.
"I'm going to find a street
where no one knows me," he said.
After a Season in the fast lane,
Jordan is ready to visit family and
friends and take it easy.
"I'm just going to relax," he
said. ''I've been playing my golf
every day."
Jordan says he also realizes that
Bulls head coach Phil Jackson may
make some changes in the team's
roster before Jordan returns from
his relaxing summer.
"I realize that this is a business
and cenainly Some changes can be
made." he said. "I don't know the
extent of lhaL I haven't sat down

•

filtroduc·

concrete.
Gone too was the argument
about whether Russia would link
up in "a great European home."
Yeltsin was from the Ural frontier:
be looked to lbe Pacific as well as
the Atlantic. Eastern Russia was
just across the straits from Alaslca,
and not that far from other American states of the Pacific Northwest
- Yukonia, British Columbia and
Washington.
Many Russians believed they
were more like Americans than like
Europeans. In any event, the globally warmed Siberian-AlaskanCanadian plain had become the
most fertile area of the world, and
the northern latirudes had common
interests.
.})

(Of course, if the peaceful reunification of Russia and the nation of
Ukraina - 50 million strong ever came about, that might retilt
the balance toward the Europeans.)
Many Russians Dourished after
Yeltsin' s election. Nobel prizes
went to Russians - most r:l them
living in the U.S.A. From '1996
onward, America won the most
Olympic medals, many going to
Russian emigre athletes.
Some Russians grumbled at lost
greatness. But, by 2031, that was
made easier by the great prosperity
that had, inevitably, washed across
the world.
With Soviets out of the play,
non-freedom was doomed. The m1x
of free politics, free markets, big·
power peace, silr~ing science and a
global market y1elded explosive
growth. The tide could do nothing
but lift all boats. In 2031, die Dow
Jones average reached 60,000.
· And so, in 2031, Russians went
to the polls to throw out the lasl of .
the irrelevant and nost.algic •.
Yelrsinites, old, democratic fools
still talking about freedom and . •
markets long after they hiJ!' arrived. .

a

special place in
Marlboro Coun~

shockski!ByBenWattenberg

about Gorbachev: Build more statues or tear down earlier ones? The
historians laiew that Gorby, the last
socialist unionist, had not only
talked a good game, but had done
somewhat more than that. They
also knew that it wasn't until 1991,
when 3B (Bi~ Bad Boris) landslided the comm1es, that freedom and
self-detennination had been set in

The Expos were outhit 8-4 by
tired. I had a couple days bff. I had the
visiting Astros Tuesday ni~ht,
my best stuff. When I stink, I
but
used two key throws by nght
stink.'
fielder
Dave Martinez in the top of
·New York got an extra run
the
12th
and Tom Foley's RBI sinwhen catcher Jeff Reed dropped
gle
in
the
bottom of the inning fer a
Chris Jones' throw from center on
3-2
victory,
Montreal 's fifth
Keiih Miller's fly and Cerone
win.
·
straight
.crossed the plate. That' s pretty
"I'd
like
to
see
the
offense promuch how the night went for the
duce
a
few
more
runs,"
Runnells
Reds.
after
the
Expos
beat
lbe
Astros
said
•'The last three games, we made
in
extra
innings
for
the
second
errors and didn't get away with it,"
Reds manager Lou Pimella said. straight night despite getting only
half as many hits as the visitors,
"'We can't do that.''
In other NL action, it was Mon-' "But at least the hits are timely."
So were the two throws by Martreal 3, HOuston 2: I.ps Angeles 6,
Chicago 5 in 13 innings; Pittsburgh tinez, who gunned down ~!inch-run­
3, San Diego 1; St. Louis 3, San ncr Mark Ponugal trytng to go
Francisco I: and Philadelphia 8, from first to third on Craig Bi,!!gio's single off Bill Sampen (5-1),
Atlanta4.
lhen ended the inning by gunning
Expos 3, Astrosl
down
Biggio at the plate as be tried
Mo.ntreal manager Tom Run·
to
score
from second on Gerald
nells would be happy it if his club
base
hit.
Young's
could produce more offense. His
Houston counterpllt, Art Howe,
(See NL on Page 4)
would settle for more wins.
f

Jordan named NBA Finals MVP

A program at the crossroads Cong. Clarence Miller
What started as a relatively Y~ extension of the Higher Edumodest program has grown into an cAlion Act expires and it is antici$1~ billion-a-year aid program that pated that between now and then
ass1sts almost half of the nation's major revisions to the Act will be
15 million post-secondary studerits proposed and considered by
to attend lbe educational institution Congress. While everyone agrees
of ~eir choice. Currently some 3.4 that major changes in the student
m1ll10n students receive $5 billion loan program are needed, a consenin grants, which do not have to be · sus has yet to emerge as to how
repaid, while another four million best make those clianges. The
students borrow $10.9 billion in the Administration's recommended
fonn of guaranteed student loans, approach is to limit grant aid to
which carry a below market inter- those that need it most, students
est rate in that they are federally from families at or near the poverty
subsidized. The increaSing volume level. The Administration proposal
of federal dollars being devoted to would also increase the current
the student Joan program has been amount that can be provided in
accompanied by an increasing grants from $3,100 annually to
n~~ber of prob~ms, the most sig- $3,700. At the same time it would
mf1cant of wh1ch, is ·the ever increase the loan limits for those
increasing default rate on the loans participating in the guaranteed stuthat have been extended. In eight dent loan program from $2,625 to
short years loan defaults for all $3,500 for freshman and sophopost-secondary students have mores and from $4,000 to $5,000
mcreased from $445 million in for other undergraduates. Under the
1983 to $2.7 billion in 1991, an Administration's proposal little
increase of over 500%.
change would be anticipated in the
In this time of increasingly tight number of those eligible for guarbudgets, is it any wonder that the anteed loan assistance and it would
Administration and the Congress keep in place the existing family
are seeking to restructure the stu- · earnings ceiling. This ceiling
dent loan program to make it more would vary, however. depending
responsive to changing student on the number of children in that
needs and to a more practical and household getting assistance. The
effective fonn of management and Congresional leadership on the
cost control. In 1992 the present 5- other hand wants to expand eligibility for hoth the j(I'8Rt and loan

Flage 3

•

N.Y. Mets win 7-5 'cliff-dweller' over Cincinnati Thesday

l)ie.

Much of. what the federal government concerns itself with
involves the basic question of equity, particularly with respect to
domestic programs. How should
the taxpayers' money be spent?
Should it be spent to balance perceived economic disparities?
Should it be spent strictly on need
or merit irrespective of the fmancial wherewithal of the intended
beneficiary? Should it be spent on a
prorated basis to roughly reflect the
percentage of taxes that a benefitting state or municipality contributes to the federal trea6ury?
Oftentimes this latter formula
approach is the basis for the distribution of federal dollars. With
many programs, however, such
equation driven outlays are hard to
ustify and equally impractical to
administer. A case· in point is the
ongoing debate as to how best
restructure the student loan program which was initiated as part of
the landmark 1965, Higher Education Act. At the time the student
loan program was staned, it was
strictly a grant program targeted to
specifically ·assist students with
exceptional financial need." Over
the years, however, it has evolved
into both a grant program for our
nation's needier students as well as
a loan program for America's middle class.

·

•

.....-

•

and met with Phil. He's the coach
and · he's going to make the
changes.
"As long as I'm here and my
job's secure, John Paxson's job is
secure, the staning five are here
and some of the key people are
here-I'm happy," Jordan said.
He said he iiSo flans to use his
time to take care o some endorsements ..Jordan said he hopes the
Bulls' championship leads to more
financial opportunities for his
teammates.
"I'm going to fulfill some obligations," he said. "Things won't
change much for me. But it might
for the other fellows.''
One thing Jordan said he wanrs
to do on his summer vacation is
enjoy the Bulls championship, won
in five games over the Los Angeles
Lak:ers, Jordan, 28, averaged 31.2
points in the final series.
"It still hasn't sunk in," he said.
"I can't believe we're the world
champions."
· With the titlc,Jo'rdan said he has
reached all of his basketball '-oats,
bolh team and individual. • Now
it's just a 'matter of duplicating,"
he said.
He's not making any predictions, though. Next season, he said,
"I'm pre!tf sure everyone's going
to be Shootmg fer us."

..

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-HII)
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Malt Sabocrlpllons

· lulole Melp Co•nly
13 Weeks ... .. ..... .... ....... .... ......... 121.114
26 Weeks ............... .. ............ ..... 143.16
52 Weeks .................................. S8U6
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13 Weeks ........... ................... .... $23.10
26 Weeks .................................. $45.!10
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Cllifamia (Abbou 5-S) ll )Swautoe
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ca-.,.,, 1:n ,..,.

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Transactions
BasebliU

.u-lcaaLa...
BALTIMOIIE ORIOL:!,;!f•e4
Shawn CUaan,
aad ·
him
to lhc OrioJor' tetm in tbc OWf Cotat

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S-1 , ,13), 3.13; Cuponw, "'l..oWI, 7-2, .771, 3.16; R. """'""'· Laa
Anc.ta, 10-3, .769, 2.74; Olovioc, Ao-

........
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DETilorr now

Saldeat-I:Cllp.m.

cw.a...
-

pbia, 11; O.~Oiicaao. 11.
S'I'OIZN-BMES-Cm
.I., 33; .c ' ua New YGd., ll; Niao1t.
Atlanta. 32; Dd1Uelds, M•treal, 50;
'-"*ford. So. LoW, II; Caldaoo. .W,J7; 0 . Smllll.St...-,17.

ANGELS-Aetiv1tcd
F!D,O B...u-, piodler, Cmm lho 15-&lt;lay
cliaabled lial. Op&lt;ioned Bobby R- 111-

Olklood.-. 7:3! p.m.
C·tJF
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No.Yaok•T-.7:3/p.DL
r . . . . ~.a:O!pa.

~

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71: Glavia.e, Allaata, 74; G. Mldcfa·a ,
Ooico,.,
74; - · San INto. 67; Son ();qo. Iii .
SAVl!S--Dibble, Ciaciaaali, II; Le
Smllh. So. Laoil, 17; Dave Smido, Coioa.,,16; 8. r r"er .Pialbu.qb, 11; n-co, New Yc.t, t:3; ldfcrts, Sm Diep.
13; William&amp;, Pbilldelphil, 11; J. Howdl,
Lac ......... ll.

o...;o 2, Ooldoad 0
No.Yaok4,T-2

Miuelau (ManU 1-5)
(R«&lt;mm U), 1:35 p.m.

.

HOME IlONS-I-. H., Y....
U ; MeGri..ff, :S•n J&gt;i&amp;co, 14; O'Nc:i..U,
l j - •• l l; Bdl. Cllielao. 13; a....
w. Cat. Sao "'-c;,oo,tr;
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STJUKEOlJI'S-...C&lt;&gt;ae, No. Y..t. 'I;
Goodoa. New v.a. n : lli,io. a · ,.;

Tuelllay'o -=ora

•
•

Chicago ekes out 6-5 win over ·Cleveland

FeWer. Sut fn 'wo, ~ L 0
W
u-t.. S; C 'moe NM- Y.... 5; M.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East DIYIIioll
W L ra.

r-

With Ventura's first career grand slam,

I' L' I) ()i.ll'll

In tbe nlajors...

-

Pometoy-Middleport, Ohio

The Deily Sentinel

KANSAS CITY'ROYALS--Plo ...
. Mark Davia, piodler, '"'doe IS-clay diaabledlial. Raoalled-W-,pioclo-

._-Omaha
a t l l o o - -liao.
TEXAS JlANOFRS Sia 1 JGD Pilu,

Cllleha-, SDd ....... -

TOitONTO BWI! JAY'-- Willie
"'-·
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31
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CINCINNATIIIEDS-Si~Jood

Con ; ·an, &amp;bird bdcman, aDd

Yomil

~

him to Princeton of the AppalacFiiao

~~OELI!S

DOilOI!IIS--Pla...t
Dmyl Sonwbary, ouofieldor,., doe Ucla diAWod
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Rccallod o..o
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NEW YORK. JETS-Siped Paul
OJ.oodL, dd.W.. \IoCkie; IAuis Apia,
Madt llayoa, Mart
••· aDd Duals l.oUMt,

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mi!LI!RS-II;ped
oosacwt •'*·DUal rceam.

er, st1d Bob Kulli, auard. NamDd John

Nonria

head--

Scioto Downs results
,'

- Major league leaders
AmertcuLape

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CWCAGO (AP) - Chicago
White Sox mi!Jiga- Jeff Torborg
said it wu IIJoul time IDd Robin
Vmanaid i t - the riaJtt time.
Wbalever, the timinJ wu right
ror tbc Chicago Wh1te Sox on
Tuesday niJbt as Ventura hit his
first cna- IJ'IIId slam, )Jiving tbc
way to a 6-S victory over the

HouJb. It wu the fira lime be bid

bomeaed twil:e in a pme.
"Not even in the minors,"
Baeqasaid.
"lie Ills aood power." McNaIIWllllid. "lmd we llrowed 1001e
power but wben you IOIC, you're

TWt.. 9, Oriola 2
At least lhcrc's one su-eat still
ali~ in M'mnesora.
A daY. after the Twins got their

1S-gamc winning string stopped,

Scott Eric:Uon won his team-record

11th straight decision • Minncsola
beat Ballimme 9-2 Tuesday nlghL

•

•••

.

IICWI'blppy."

Home I1IIIS ba~~e beella poblcm
for the White Sox, especially at
bomc_. They now have lrit 18 at
Cleveland Jncti••. .
home while tbcir opponents bave
Ventura's third homer or the hil3S.
•'We we-n: lillldng about tineyear and tbc filst slam by a .White
Sox player in new Comiskey Park. run homen before the pmc." Torcame in the sixdt inning 8lld wiped borg said. ''But rour-nm homers
arc okay. Big? I~ wbca you
outa4-2'Cic~land ~It was set
uP by an error by shcrts10p Felix say i l - llig it's being mchntan«
Fermin.
.
He rcally conki'J!I iL It wu about
"You mow you're going bad time. I haven't pu1 tbe IJIIId slam
when yom- best ficldcr makes an sign 011100 much Ibis year."
Torllorg was pleased with the
error with two outs and it llll'llS into
a rom--run enor," lndianl11181181er ract dial tach of lhc first two times
John McNIIIJiara said. Cleveland the Indilns scored, the While Sox
Ills loll six in IIOW.
came back 10 score tbenuclvcs.
With two outs in the sixth,
O:r;:r;ie Guillen sinaled and Don
"Coming right back with two
Wakamatsu reached base when runs in the fourth was ,big, too/'
Fermin bobbled bis ground ball. Torborg _
sai&lt;!. "In baseball, when
Tim Raines was hit by a pitch you score, you try 10 keep tbc olhcr
before Vedurll ClllllleC!ed on a 2-0 team rrom comtng right bact to
count orr loser Tom Candioni (7- score. 11 worts tbc other way, 100."
S).
Despite Hough gi .
tlrn:c
"It was a slider. a bad pitch home runs, Tcxtog
·~
selection," said Candiotti, _who did a good job. He's won t1rn:c or
relics on lbc tnucklcball. "When his last four decisions 8lld he seems
tbc count weut 10 2-encW, I had to to go at least seven innings evuy
come in with somclhing. ••
timeout.,
"It rclt good," Ventura said.
"I was a liule Iuclcy tonight,"
HAMON SINGLES - Sha'll'll Hamon of Meigs sin~ for one of
"Anytime you can put your club Hough sale!. "We came bact with
~ two blls as Meigs defeated Gallipolis 12-5 in 8th DIStrld Ameri·
ahead
being down is a good some hits and the grand slam. I
can Legion adion Tuesday evening at Meigs High School.
.
reclinJ. It seemed to come at the would have Iitcd 10 fmish it, but I
rigblllllle. I wasn't trying 10 bit it didn't have my good sturf and I
out. I was just trying to hit it hard." had a liule stiff neck. ••
The Indians did IOIDe bard bitThe Indians caught anolher back
ling their own with tlrn:c home break. Catcher S"andy Alomar,
runs, two by Carlo• Baerga, off mating his lint Sl8rt sinl:e corning
winner Cha1ie HouJb (4-3),1bo a off the disabled list. austained a
Terry McGuire, Shawn Hamon ,
By DAVE HARRIS
bruised index fmgcr in the· second
kl"'ctldJe!In-.
and
Terry Reuter two singles each
Baerp's duee-run bomcr put inning and bad to leave tbc game.
Seadael C01 "'spoudent
and
Eric
Heck a single.
Meigs broke open a tic game
the ~ lheld in t1re roordl but He could be out another rour or
Rob
Skidmore
led Gallipolis at
with
three
unearned
runs
in
the
lbc White Sox came bick with a five days.
the
plate
with
his
home run and a
pair in tire botloill of the roordl on a
In other games, Minnesota fourth inning and went on to defeat
pair
of
doubles,
Smith
and Staton
single by Lance Johnson, a ttiplc topped Baitimorc 9-2, Kansas City Gallipolis 12-5 in 8th Distript
added
a
single
each.
beat Texas 12-S. ScaUie stopped Amencan Legion Baseball action
by Joey Ccn and • infield out
Jason Wright was the winning
Mike Aldrcle honrcred 10 make Boston 2-1, Detroit downed Oak- on Tuesday evening.
pitcher,
Chris Stewan pitched the
Meigs spotted tbc Gallia County
it 4-2 in the mth bcrorc Ventura land 2-0. New York dereated
eight
They
combined to slrikc out
bit his slam. Baerp hit his seventh toronto 4-2, and Milwaukee beat team a run in the ftrSt inning when
I3
and
walk
five while giving up
homer in the eighth to finish off California 10-6.
Darin Smiih singled, and Rob Skidonly
five
hits.
Staton was tbc losing
more doubled before·Larry Howell
pircher,
he
combined
with HoweU
singled to drive in Smith.
· Meigs toot the lead in the sec- to strike out 2 and hit a batter,
ond ·inning, with one out Terry · while waiiring no one.
The Gallia Countr unit of the whose lowest handicap player is 8 Reuter singled, Tim Bissell folWith the win, Meigs is now 7-8
American CIIJC1"!' Society will bold to 16.
lowed with a base bit and Matt Fin- on the year, and 4-3 in the league,
Men's Division III- Teams law came up with a two-out, twa:- Gallipolis drops 10 6-6 and 3-3 in
a 101f championship at Cliffside
Golf Cowie 011 Slllllday, JIIIC 29.
with players having handicaps or at rundouble.
the league. Meigs will host MarietThe w1nnen or Ibis 100mamem least 17.
Gallipolis tied it in the top of the ta on Thursday evening at Meigs
wiD adVIIICC to the divilioa clramEntry forms arc available at third inning when Rocl Young led High School at 6 p.m.
pionahip, which will be held at Cliffside Golf Coone, various golf off the inning with a walk and Score by innings
Firestone COIIItty Club in Akron in clubs in the area. at the C3allipolis scored on a two-out double by
Gallipolis 101 100 02- S- S-6
s~~.
ACS office at 444 Second Ave., Skidmore.
Meigs
020 304 2x- 12-14-4
'The tournament is open to all and rrom golf chairman Bob
Meigs toot the lead for good in
WP--Wright
amateur goirers with verifiable Marchi.
the rounh inning. Tim Bissell was
LP-Sialon
TeDDis tOUJ'IIey to start July li
handicaps. There is no limit to
hit by_• pileh with one out, wad Jahandi
•
The ACS will hold its annual son Hager reached on a error be·
Sin': golfers will be matched tennis tournament from July 6 to fore Mau Finlaw singled to score
with others to rorm rour-player July 14 at Forest Mullins.' tennis Bissell to give Meigs a 3-2 lead.
teams, and teams or rour who coun on Henkle Avenue in Gal- Eric Heck l\3:hed on another ,enor
to load the bases for Shawn Ha=~~ together will be lipolis.
The entty rec is SIS for the first mon. Hamon lined 1 single to left
.in one of tbc three
divisions or competition ror men event and $10 ror each additional that cleared the bases when the ball
and WOIIIen.
C~flL A new can of tennis balls is
got past the Gallipolis Iert rielder.
The aii·IICrlllllblc ronnat or the also requiled. All entries must be Hamon was thrown out at third to
acc:om)llllied by )Jiymem or rees.
tournamen1 wiD run 11 follows:
end tbc iiUiing on the play.
~istration forms can be
Women's Division I - Teams
Arter Gallipolis made it a 5-3
up from tournament chair- game in the fourth inning Meigs
whose lowest handicap player is 11 pic
man Brant Pauley at 446-4608, came back to score rour runs in the
or lower.
Women's Division U- Teams rrom committee members ·f&gt;or!nie sixth inning and two more in the
whose lowest handicap player is Hendricks in Syr1cuse, Jim seventh innin~ to make .it a 12-3
Osborne (446-9284), Danella game. Gallipolis plalcd two runs in
between 12 and 22.
. Women's Division m -Teams Greene a1 the 0.0. Mcintyre Park the eight inninJ to close out the
with playas having handicaps of at District oflic:c in the Gallia County scoring one commg on a Ionj! home
Cowthouse (446-4612, ext. 2S6) or . run orr the bat of Rob Sk1dmore
bst~3. '
.
Men's Division I - Teams at the ACS offic:c (446-7479).
ova- the Ieft-c:cntcr rtekl renc:e. The
All players must report to the game was called after the top of the
wboctc lowest handicap player is 7
or iowa'.
tennis court half an Ito..- bcrore the eighth because of dailcncss.
Men's Division II - Teams start of their flllt mau:h.
The winners pounded out 14
hits orr or losing pitcher Staton and
reliever Howell. Mau Finlaw led
(ContinuedfromPage3&gt;
the way with two doubles and a
''The fust throw was tougher
single.
Jason Hager and Tim BisBill Landrum (1-0). the Pirares'
because I bid 10 go 10 my left and
. sell a double and a single each,
fourth pitcher. got the victory.
throw across my body," Martinez
Cardinals 3, Glanll 1
said. "The second_ play was a
Bob Tewksbury allowed four
Slraight two-~ right at me, so
hits and an unearned run in eight
I just came up lhrowing. ••
innings.
After Mlrtinez preserved the lie,
Tewksbury did not allow a runlhc Expos won the game in the bot- ner past ftrSt base until the eighth,
10m rL the 12th when Mike Fitzgerwhen Robby ThomPson reached on
ald Wilted. aolc sec:ond and scored an error and sccnd 011 Ste~ Deck·
when Tom Foley lined a 2-0 pitch a-'s double. Lee Smith pircbed the
Ferrellgas Specializes In Responsive
. &amp;om Jim Coni (0-4) into right field ninth ror his 17th save.
ror Montreal's fourth hit or the
Customer Service
Felix Jose doubled in a run in
pme.
the fllSt off Trevor Wilson (2-6),
What matters most to you when it comes to propane?
Gerald Young drove in both
PhiDies 8, Braves 4
Prompt delivery. ReliabUity. Safety. Energy-savings.
Hous100 runs.
Wally Backman c:clebrated his
Doqers li, Cubs 5
1,000th major league game with
Knowledge and experience. Friendly, helpful delivery people.
Eddie Murray ended a rour- three doubles and ronner Atlanta
hour, 53-m-inute marathon, the star Dale Murphy hit a two-run
longest NL game by time Ibis sea- homa-.
lOll, with 111 RBI single in the i3tfl.
Backman's first double trigChicago went ahead in the 11th gered a four-run ftr5t inning as Pete
on Sbawon Dunston's RBI single Smith (1:1) managed only one ouL
IIIII again in tbc 12th on a run-scar- Murphy hit his I I th homer of the
ina infield bit by Ryne Sandberg, season in lhc ftfth inning, tying him
only to hive the Dodgers rally each with Johnny Bench ror 26th on the
time.
all-time list with 389.
The Dod&amp;ss scored duec limes
Jose DeJesus (4-2) coasted to
Ia !be ICCOIIil. but Sandberg lied the the win, allowing roue runs and
pme in lbc sixth with a tlrn:c-run seven hilS in seven and one-third
innings.
bomtt.
Mike Hanley (1-0) pilched two
ICQI'Oicss • ·
tor lhc win. Mike
Bielecki
Chicago's sixth
GOOD USED
pitdter,IOOk lbc loss.
WASHEIS, DIYEIS,
Plrata 3, Padres 1
Jay Bell's tie-breaking two-run
IEFIIGEIATOIS, TVs,
sinale in the top or the ninth gave
GAS &amp; EUC. IANGES
the l'inllllllbcir seconct atmight win
laS.~
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A l a - Slid idinda peserved 1 1-1 lie by llritiDa out the
side with the ballel loadCd. Jose
Cy. . .n I Stnla
... •1111 Service
Lind singled and Orlando Merced
627 W An., ldp rlla
992·2941
992·1097
doubled off Crail wrens (0-3).
...
446·1'"
loll's broken-bat lingle 10 left
••A WINNING COMBINATION"
"'HOUI-scored bach I Ullllel'l.

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~- (S-6) $207.00.
Anendance - 3,115. Randle _

A17,102.

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'

,.

GUEST WINNERS - Goat wbmen' Ia the
Ladles Leape IDvltatlnnal Golf ToUI'iialileat at
the Melp County Golf' Coune on Tnesday were
(L·R) Jeu Jewell, low net; Deule Smith, low

IJ'GIII Mary lqels, low &amp;n*l NOI"'U StQiey,
low net; Pea 'fhoinaa, low 1ro11; and Lucy
Caruthers, low net.

TAKING SECOND PLACE •o,n ors In t~e
Big lead Ju.lor Girls Sortball Tournament
were members or the Syraaue team. Pictured Ia
the froat row are (L·R) Jessica ChlpmiD,
Amber Tbomas, Jennifer Lawrence, Kellle
Colllas, Trlcla Richards, Fruccs Adkins aad
Jeaslca Couats. In the hack row are Bea Lisle,

Kerl Caldwell, Aqdrea Moore, Samml Sisson,
Amy Weaver and Lisa Wllet. The coaches are
· Jim Lawrence, Howle Caldwell and Larry
WOes. 1bey have a 4-3 record with two weeb or
.league play yet to go. Tire leam is spoDSOred by
Thomas-Do-lt-Center.

TOURNAMENT WINNERS - Wianen In
tile Llldles L~g11e lnltatloul Golf Tournament 1t the Melp_ CoUDty Gcilf Course na Tues·
da1were (LoR) -Marpret Follrod, low grO&amp;S for
home player; Joan Childs, low net for home

player; Cyndl Barker, longest drive for guest
player; Tanya Hunter, longest drive for home
piByer; Ada Nease, closest to the pia for home
player; and Becky Triplett, closest to the pin ror
guest player.

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Meigs AL nine pounds Post
27 in 12-5 decision Thesday

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ACS to sponsor tournaments

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APPUAICES

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James, Heather Weaver and Jessica Weaver. In
the back row are Coach John Grate, Carrie
Zerkle, Beth McDermitt, Tessa VanMeter,
Whlmey Roush, Missy Smith and Coaclles Rick
Slartord and Clyde Weaver. Not pictured Is
player Kintln Black.
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COUNn .

TIDRD PLACE WINNERS In tbe Big lend
Junior ' Girls Softball Tournament lleld at New
Havea were members of tbe New Haven team,
tbe Little Falcons. Final pmes were piByed Saturda,.. Ia the front row are (L·R) Erica VanMeier, Brittany Roush, Tamara Grate, Christi

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6 The Dally Sentinel

Acaa-Wcatbc~ forecast for

conditions and

MICH.

a
Mansfield

PA.

I e1•le

·•I Columbus I 87° I

C1991 Aceu-Weathet, Inc.

------Weather-'!'"---•

Friday through Sunday:
Wann and dry most of the time
through the period. There will be a
chance of mainly afternoon thun:
derstorms statewide Friday, in the
south Saturday and a slight chance
again statewide Sunday. Highs in
mid-80s to around 90, except low
to mid-80s north Saturday and Sunday. Lows in the 60s.

: Tonight, partly cloudy with a
slQjht chance of showers and thundetstonns. Low 6S-70. Chance of
rain 30 percent. Thursday, partly
sunny with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. High around
90. OJance of rain 50 percent.
Extended forecast:

Pomeroy Court news
. Kimberly Bailey, Pomeroy, was
fined $213 and costs on each of
two charges, menacing threats and
trespassing, when she appeared in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday nighL
Others fined in the court were
Scou Carr. Cutler, $51 and costs,

speeding; and Carl Davidson,
Pomeroy. $63 and costs, open container.
Forfeiting bonds in the court
were Patrick Hammack, Kisor, W.
Va., $63, no valid registration; and
Charles Caudill, McArthur, $52,
speeding.

Middleport Court news
·:Six wen; fmed alld two forfeited bonds in the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday
nighL
Fined were Alice L. Eads, Gallipolis,$16, speeding; Timothy S.
Pridemore, Middleport, $50 and
COSII and restitution on a criminal
miachief
and

•

port, $25 alld costs, open container;
Charles Walker, Jr .. Middleport,
$25 and costs, disorderly manner.
Forfeiting bonds were G~ E.
Jenkins, Syracuse, Physical control
of a motor vehicle while under the
influence of alcohol or drugs; and
Robert F. Lawson, Mineral WeUs,
$60, expired license tags.
Eric Priddy, Rutland, made a
plea of innocent to two charges of
assault in mayor's cour-t and his
case was transferred to county
court.

m

and five days in jail, disordlerllv manner; Shirley Cole,
Pomeroy, $2S and costs, disorderly
manner; Robert Scarberry. Middle-

--Area deaths-Willard Mohler
Word has been received of the
death of Willard D. Mohler, 69, of
Piney Flats, Tenn. (formerly of
Middleport), who died on Sunday,
June 9, 1991 following an extended
illness.
He was born on March 9, 1922,
the son of the late Isaac and Anna
Mohler.
He is survived by his wife,
Marie Mohler; three sons, Willard
Henry Mohler and Isaac N.
Mohler, both of Piney Flats, and
Roger D. Mohler of Elizabethton;
one daughter, Mrs. Carson (Ann)
Trailer, Wedorwee, Ala.; three

brothers, John, James and Kenneth
Mohler of Middleport; two sisterS,
Mrs. Carl (Wanda) Findling of
Sumner and Mrs. Earl (Patty)
Mossman of Rutland; 11 grandchildren and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his brother, Dale;
two infant brothers; and two infant
sisters.
Services were held on June 11 at
Tetrick's Bluff City Chapel with
Rev . Jimmy. Epperson and Rev.
Richard Bawgus officiating. Burial
was in St. Paul's Cemetery in
Piney Flats.

·Meigs announcements
Bible ~tbool
The Asbury United Methodist
Church will hold Vacation Bible
School Monday through I une 28
from 9 a.m. to noon daily. This
ye.'s. theme is ''Jesus and You 81
Cwnp Can Do." Classes range from
age two year through junior high.
The public is invited.
Jlible IChool
VIC•tion Bible Schoollcick-off
at the MiM!eport Chun:h of Ouist
will be held Saturday at 11 a.m.
Visitors from the Far East will be
there ..cl the public is invited.
• Bible IChool will begin Monday
1hrough June 28 from 9:30-11:30
a.m. daily.
Bible ~tbool
The Bradbury Church of Christ
will hold Vacation Bible School
Monday through June 18 from 911:30 a.m. daily. The theme is
"Jesus and You at Camp Can Do."
Todd Runyon, minister, invites the

~~~-t
The Meigs County Veterans

morning along the Ohio River in
southeast Ohio.
The record high tem)lelllture for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 95 degrees in 1933.
The record low was 47 in 1959.
Sunrise this morning was at
6:02 a.m. Sunset will be at 9:03
p.m.
Arouad the aadon ·
Thunderstorms blanketed the
East and South again today, wilh
rain.e~rending from New Jersey to
Lou•SIIftl

Rain was also forecast in Idaho,
Montana and Wyoming, with partly cloudy skies expected to prevail
elsewhere in the West. Thunderstorms were forecast in the Dakotas, Nebraska and Iowa.

Class D rules will be followed.
Further information may be
obtained by calling Fred Cross at 1304-464-5469 or Ken Oflenberger
at1-374-2943.
Only the fusi 42 reams will be
accepted. Additional awards for the
top four reams will be presented.
Hymn sing ·
The Zion Community Church,
Route 682 Lower Plains Rood, The
Plains, will have a h)'mn sing wilh
the Old Time Religion Singers on
Saturday at 7 p.m. Rev. Eddie
Boyer invites the public.
Water board luues request
The Water Board of Syracuse is
requesting that the customers of
Syracuse Water cut down on the
usage of waier. The wells are
pumping 23 hours out of 24 hours
and the board states this is a dangerous situation in case there
should be a fire. The board is
requesting that ouiSide watering be
cut down at this time.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The House has passed a one-year
Bureau of Workers' Compensation
budget that makes some of its
future funding conditional on
progress toward ending case hacklogs.
Representatives also sent to the
Seaare 92-2 on Tuesday a less controversial, two-year hnrl- for the
Ohio Industrial eonui.~;, which
hears af!!!als from decisions in
workers compensation cases.
The ·package is separate from
the state's $27 billion General
Fund budget, passed by both cham-

Eld~rly

bers but in different form, which is
ex~led to be referred today tO a .
Senate" House conference committee.
.
All three bills face a July 1
deadline. ·
Hou.se Finance Chairman
Patriclr; Sweeney, D-Cleveland,
said the bureau was given a oneyear budget because of continuing
complaints from constituents about
long delays in processing and paying claims. The measure passed 6927.
.
The Legislature restructured the
$1.6 billion-a-year insurance opera-

tion in 1989 and so111ht reforms
that Sweeney and others said are
being implemented ·over several
years.
In its budget request, the bureau
sought an $84 mUiion funding
increase to continue the reforms
over the next two years. When the
House decided to scale down the
amOIDit and pass·a one-year budget,
Administrator Patrick Mihm submitred a one-year, $28.2 million
request
The House reduced that request
to $17.3 million, but placed in the
Slale Controlling Board $15.3 mil-

fear physical harln

CINCINNATI (AP)- One of
the biggest fears elderly people
have is that they are 'omg to be
ripped off by con arusts, says a
spo!tesman for the American AssoCiation of Retired Persons.
· "Older people are very frightened of crime," said John Bordenet
of the AARP's criminal justice services division. ''Many of them see
themselves as being vulnerable
physically, but most get nailed in
fraud."
Bordenet spoke Tuesday at a
seminar by the Talbert House Victim Services Cenrer, which started
a senior citizens crime victim program last year.
Gloria Stewart, ~e program's
director, said she organized the
seminar because law officers in

Stocks
Am Ele Power ..................28 1/8
Ashland Oi1 ..................... .31 118
AT&amp;T............ :.................. .37 5/8
Bob Evans ........................ 18 i/4
Charming Shop................. 21 718
City Holding .....................14 If}.
Federal Mogul................... 18 3/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ .33 5!8
Key Centurion .................. 13 3/4
Lands' End .......................21 3/8
Limited Inc...................... .28 7!8
Multimedia Inc. ................28 3/4
Rax Resraurant .................. 3/4
Robbins&amp;Myers ...............29 3/4
Shoney's Inc. .................... 16 1{1.
Scar Bank ............... ~ •......... 21 1/4
Wendy Int'l........................9 518
Worthington Ind...............25 3/4

Swclc reports or~ th~ 10~30 a.m.
f/IIOt~s pro~ldtd by Blunt, Ellis
and LMwi of Gallipolis.

·Rural...
Continued rrom page 1
percent; Utah, 7.6 percent; Idaho,
7.2 percent, and Maine, 4.1 percenL
Only two rursl states showed
declines in the number of violent
crimes: Vermont, down 4.8 percent, and Oregon, down 1.S percent.
The rural states that could not
provide the violent crime figures
were Alaska. Nevada: New Mexico
and North Dalcota, said the report,
which based its calculations on the
number of reported murders, rapes,
robberies and aggravated assaults
in 1989 and 1990.
Most of the rural slates' violent
crime increases dwarfed the hikes
in the nation's two m~ populous
slales- ~ifomia, up 9.8 pen:ent,
and New York, up 1.4 percent and in the nation's two most populoua cities- New YOrk City, up 3
percent, and Los Angeles, up 8.4
pereenL

Cincinnati wanted to find out
where to refer elderly victims.
"The idea is for social worlcers
and police officers to worlc together," Ms. Stewart said.
She said the most common

Southern ...

Continued rrom page 1
Schultz.
Hired as substitute bus drivers
were: C.T. Chapman, William
Powney, Don Sm1th, Dale Teaford,
Tom Theiss, Dale Hill, Jr.
Jimmy O'Brien was hired as a
pelll!anent bus driver and Scott
Wicldine was hired as a reacher at
Portland Elementary and as junior
high football coach and assistant
basketball coach at Southern High
School.
· Barbara Lawrence was hired as
the junior high cheerleading advisor.
In other action, the board
accepted the resignations of Larry
Wolfe and Delores Wolfe reachers
due to retirement.
The board entered into a contract with Tri-County Joint Vocational School for education media
resource center for library products
and supplies and with Educational
Technology Services for educational television. The cost is SS cents
per pupil.
Board members agreed to enter
into a contract with AAA of South
Central Ohio for driver's education
for 1991-1992 school year at a cost
of $100 per student. The students
will be required to pay balf or the
cost
Approved Southern High
School and Southern Junior High
School to become members of the
Ohio High School Athletic Association for the 1991-1992 school
year.
Entered into an agreement with
Southeastern Ohio Special Education Regional, Resource Center for
the 1991-1992 school year. Such a.
contract will provide information
and service for the district. The
program is $765.60,
In other action, the board:
- Approved Shirk Insurance
Company to carry student accident
insurance for the 1991-1992 school·
year;
· - increased the contract of Barbara Lawrence to an all-day teacher
in Chapter I Reading from half-day
slatus;
- approved Paul and Jessica
Chapman as tuition students;
- approved Pedro Costello as a
foreign exchange student;
- aPpOinted Grace Grlffm as an
Educauonal Management Information System coolact person,
Present at the meeting were
Board Vice-President Scott Wolfe;
members Charlie Norris, Sue
Orueser, and Gary Willford; Treasurer Dennie Hill and Superintendant Bobby Ord.

AA•edaa

A 12-step AA meeting will
be1in SWIIIIy at 1 e.m. 11. the J1PA
otrice, 117 West~ Street in

crimes against the elderly are insurance·fraud, home care and house
repair scams, phony credit card
offers and made-up charities.
Norris Beckley of the Kentucky
attorney general's office said he
came to the seminar because he
sees a need for training about the
elderly and crime prevention in his
State.
"Law enforcement is the vehicle we see that works best because
in a small community, most older
people know the law enforcement
officers," Beckley said. "Also,
police can identify with problems
of the elderly because they see
them on a regular basis.
"Our goal is to increase reponing of these crimes," he said.
"Often, they don't report crime
because the perpetrs10r is someone
they depend on for their survival."

The Fifth Annual Worl Class D
and B Mea 'a SoftiJa1l Tournament
aponiORd bY. Wilaon and Zides
Span S11op will be held July 20 llld
21 It Mlrillla. Tlae will be one
world "D" berth, four state "D"
benll: two world "E" berth; and

·Mohair
referendum
ballots .mailed ,
'

The U.S. Department of Agri- '

culture has scheduled a referendum
for June 17-28 for mohair producers to decide whether to continue a .
market promotion and improvement prognun.
·
If the referendum is approved by
a majority of the producers voting,
or by a majority of the tolal volume
of P,roduction represented in the
referendum, 'deductions from
mohair price support payments
would be at a rate of up to 4 1{1. ,
cents per pound for marketing ·
years 1991 through 1995, the .
. ASCS office reports.
. . To be eligible to vote a person ..
must have owned Angora goats six
months old or older for at least 30
consecutive days in 1990.
.
Ballots have been mailed out to
all knnwn mohair producers by the
ASCS office. Those eligible voters •
who did not receive a ballot are
asked to conlaCt the ASCS office.

•

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
TUESDA '( ADMISSIONS Louis Laudermilt, Pomeroy, and
Burwell McKinney, Middleport
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Ethel Orueser, Kristi Rizer and
. Helen Williams.

Court
news

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•

Divorce granted,
dissolution sought
A divorce action has been grant- '
ed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Shirley A. Roush from
Bobby Roush.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER .
An action for dissolution of"
Discharges, June 18 - John marriage has been filed in the coun
Ambrose, Ruby Dray, Mrs. Roben by George J. Vincent of Rutland
Galloway and son, Hershel Gilbert, and Christy M. Vincent of ·
Mrs. Mike Gillies and son, Tayna Pomeroy.
Halley, William · Hawk, Traci
Hedrick, Slaesha Kennedy, I acob
Lawrence, Darrell Livin$ston,
SPRING VAllEY CINfMA
Roddy Moore and Mrs. Leshe Sra446 4514
pleton and son.
SJ ,OO UIIMII MTJII([S SITMIAY I SI.IDl
Births. June 18 - .Mr. and Mrs:
SUIO IAIUIII llllll'r MSMl
Julian Mentz, a daughter, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Doran Rees, a
FltiiMY thru TIIIISD\YI
son, Albany, Ohio.

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I

Trustees to meet
The Rutland Township Trustees
will hold a public hellhng on the
budget for Rutland Township, July
II at 6:30 p.m at the fire station.
The regular meting of the trustees
will be held following the budget
hearing instead of on July 4 as regularly scbedulecl

7:00,j :JO .-ILY

KEYI~~ER
RoBIN
J-looo

LN~Ul

• MSSU . • .-a11 11 .....

SAT/SUI ~TUIEES
1:00,3 : 30

7:00,1 :15 DAILY
SAT/Sill MTJIIEES
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(P$.1))

.-ct&lt;J'ntMS

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SttCktRS

Dr. Susan Bishop Casto
Family Practice Physician
I

Pediatrics and Adult Medicine

"'
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•

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Call273-8199

. .

Tile tea111 finishing first will
recei.e 1 paid world berth. Bnuy
fee $125. Balls will be furnished.

BACK ON MAINLAND - After a two-day
trek by boat and aircraft, military dependents ·
driven out of the Philippines by a raging volcano

,,
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,

.

arrived late Tuesday night at McChord AFB in
Tacoma, Wash. Some 347 dependents and a
dozen pets arrived on a charter aircraft. (AP)

u. s..military dependents

fleeing volcano reach mainland
McCHORD AIR FORCE
BASE, Wash. (AP) - The first
wave of the 20,000 soldiers and
family members fleeing the PhiliP"
pines' Mount Pinatubo volcano
arrived in the continental United
Srates overnight after a 2 1/2-day
journey by air and sea.
A chartered jumbo jet.carrying
. 357 evacuees, mostly spouses and
children of soldiers at Clark Air
Base, ariived from Hawaii late
Tuesday. They went through cus,
toms and were given commercial
airline ticlccts to their hometowns.
They are among 20,000 U.S. ·

mililary personnel and dependents
evacuated from Clark and from
Subic Naval Base in the Philip-.
pines after Mount Pinatubo began a
series of eruptions on June 9 that
have·killed 169 people.
Some of the early arrivals told
harrowini stories of seeing collapsed buildings and a countryside
covered in white volcanic ash.
Some said they had to flee with no
more than the clothes on their
backs.
"I've never been in an earthquake, a volcano and a typhoon at
the same .ti'!!ll before," said Air

S&amp;L loan chief asking for
$80 billion more for bailout
WASHINGTON (AP) - The cient
''The Qriginal structure made
head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. says he may ask sense when we got staned but now
Congress for an additional $60 bil- its time to move on to the next
lion to $80 billion to mop up the .step, "he S8l'd•
Seidman said the ideas are consavings and loan industry rescue.
L. William Seidman also says tained in a draft of testimony he
he wants to merge the two boards will present later and cautioned that
details are still being discussed and
that oversee the bailout effort.
In testimOI)y being prepared for may well change by the time he ·
delivery to the Senate Banking delivers the testimony.
Commiuee on Thursday, Seidman
estimated how much would be
required to finish the job by the end
.
.
of September 1992. The bailout
a"ncy, the Resolution Trust Corp.,
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- A
has already had $80 billion appropriated to 1t to cover losses in failed bill au!horizing living wills and the
withdrawal of life-sustaining treatsavings and loans.
The additional appropriation ment from certain dying and
would bring the tolal cost to $.140 unconscious patients w•thout the
billion to $160 billion, wbich Seid- documents has been recommended
man said was the equivalent of the by a House panel.
administration's year-old estimate
The House Civil and Commerof $130 billion, adjusted for infla- cial Law Committee on Tuesday
tion.
·
unanimously approved its rewritten
Seidman said in a telephone version of the measure, which
interview Tuesday night that he cleared the Senate in February.
Chairman Robert Hickey, Dalso believes the agCnc:y will need
to borrow $30 billion 10 $40 .bil- Dayton, said a vote by the full
lion, short term, until it can sell the . House was expected Thursday.
Sponsoring Sen. Betty Mont·assets of the failed thrifts. The
agency had previously planned to gomery, R-Perrysburg, said the
borrow more than $100 billion in · revamped measure was a balanced
such short-term funds, which it pro~al.
'I'm very pleased with the bill.
refers to as worlcing capilal. '
Separately, Seidman said he ... There are plenty of safeguards,"
may propose to create a single, Ms. Monlgolnery said
The bill would give legal standnine-member board to run the
bailout agency. That would elimi- ing to documents known as living
nate the dual board StruCture which wills in which adults specify
many members of Congress have whether they want life-susraining
criticized as awkward and ineffi- treatment used in the event they

Patrick ·Sweeney, D-C1eveland,
said the Bureau of Workers' Compensation was given a one-year
budget after constituents complained about long delays in procesainl and paying claims.
The House reduced a $28.2 million bureau request to $17.3 mil- '
lion but placed in the State ControUing Bo.ard $1S.3 million that
the bureau could claim by Feb. 1,
1992.
However, the bureau first must
demonstrate progress in cutting
bacldogs and meetin~ certain other
"performance levels ' specified by
the House.
· The bill puts a temporary freeze
on rates the bureau may charge
employers for administrative costs;
but dissolves it upon the release of
the $15.3 million. There would be a
ceiling of $33.1 million a year on
any rare increase approved at that
time.
The House Civil and Commercial Law Committee unanimously
gave legal standing to living wills.
In the documents, adu!IS specify
whether they want Iife-suslaining
treall!lent used in the event they
become terminally ill or permanently unconscious and are no
longer able to make informed decisions about their treaunent
It also would eslablish a procedure in which certain family members or a guardian could consent in
writing to the withdrawal of treatment for people without living ·
wills.

Attorney General Lee Fisher ments and would allow cerlain day!
asked the Legislature for more Cat'C ceiuers and homes to be closed
authority to crack down on shoddy without a bearing in an emergei!Cy
child ":ar-care centers, including threatening the safety of children.
the. ablluy to put the operators · Ambs said Fisher particularly
endorsed a provision that allows
behind bars.
Todd Ambs, the attorney goner- the attorney general to initiate
a!'s Jl?licy director, _testified .on criminal investigations fince, under
FISher s behalf for a bill llght~ung current law, he is limited to civil
state regulation. The measure actions that can lead to license suswould strengthen licensing require· pensions and revocations.

Athens judge limits
number: of strikers

SPEED CHECK - Martin Coyne, standing next to speed limit
signs, checks a maf. for proposed speed limit Increases along portions of the state's nterstate highway system after a Statehouse biU
signing Tuesday. The new Ohio law raises the speed limit to 65
mph on an extra 246 miles of interstate highway. (AP)

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) ' - A
judge has issued a temporary
reslraining order limiting the number of striking workers picketing
O'Bieness Memoripl Hospilal.
Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Frederick Crow on Tuesday
limited to five the number of pickets at each of two street entrances
to the hospital. Crow is sitting in
for a vacationing Athens County
judge.
A union official said he saw no
need for the court order. Bob Turner, regional director of the Ameri. can Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees, said
Local 1252 alrendy had taken steps
to ensure its strike activities were
peaceful.
Athens County Common Pleas
Judge Alan Goldsberry scheduled a
hearing for July I to determine if
tbe restraining order should be
made permanent.
New lalks haven't been scheduled .

'

1

'

~- -.~~
Special of the Week!

Force Capt l:liff .l!reier, who managed to get his Doberman dog on
, the evacuation plane.
."You could see the hills in the
distance. It looked like the Alps.
Everything was ash gray or white,"
said Air Force Capt. Scott Werant.
Air Force Master Sgt BenJamin
Reese. said he and his family weie
moved twice at Subic because the
1.
weight of the ash was too much for
-·
base buildings.
''The fire station I know was
totally collapsed on its trucks," he
"At Tht Elld of the , _ , . ,•._n lrldg•"
said.
Air Force secl!l'ity policeman
POMEIOY, OHIO
PH. 992-2556
..
Joseph Callahan said he and his
colleagues worked_l4-hour shifts to
keep loorers away from Clark.
As many as 5,000 of the soldiers
and their relalives are expected to
'•
arrive at McChord in the next few
~------~~----------------------------~
days, said Sgt. Jim Davis, base
.'
spokesman.
The fttst arrivals were offered
medical care, travel expenses and
money for clothing and other
needs. Dozens of phOnes were provided so they could call home.
"Some people got out with literally no shoes, nothing, because
buildings were collapsing on
them," said Holly Erickson, wife
•
of an Air Force c3lllain.

HAM

CH

F·RIES........................ 2.. 9.

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

~~

~~~:

..

.

Panel recommends living will bill
become terminally ill or permanently unconscious and are no
longer able to make informed decisions about their treatment
It also would esrablish a procedure in which certain family members or a guardian could consent in
writing to the withdrawal of treatment•for people without living
wills.
The measure · would apply to
patients who were in a "terminal
condition" or who have been in a
"permanently unconscious slate"
for at least one year. Family members also could consent to the withholding of nutrition and water from
patients considered to be permanently unconscious.
Guardians or relatives of
patients with or without living wills
could object in county probate
courts to the planned use or discontinuance ·of life-sustaining treatment. Objections would have to be
filed within 48 hours.

..
,..

•

•

SIRM IS ON THE MOVE!!
;

·THE
HOLZER
CLINIC
Sport1, ladu1trlal aad lt.. billtative
Groap
the
Mala Cllaic oa Jackloa Pike to the SycaMore Cllalc at Fourth
aad
SycaMore StrHt.
·
MORE SPICE - DPINDED SERVICES - IDDinONil STIFF
, .. lEST lu•t ..,•• IEmll
Plly1kal aad Occupatloaal TlttraPJ - Cardiac ••• PuiMOaary Rtllalt
Worll Hanleal11- lllck LUll - Spttch TlltraPJ

lv••••

Holzer Clinic SIRM Department
Now Located at the Sy'eamore Clinic In Gallipolis

for an appointment

(,

''

lion that the bureau could claim by
Feb. I, 1992. But first it must -.
demonstrate progress in cutting
backlogs and meet certain other
"performance levels" specified by
the House.
The bill puts a temporary freeze
on rates the btireau may charge
employers for administtabve costs, •
but dissolves it upon the release of
the $15.3 million by controllers.

ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS .~

::liounameat

I

Barbecue-shack stood in 8 feet of
warer.
"If you had a canoe. you could
get served," said Mark Fulton,
whose father owns the resJauranL
In South Carolina, about 4 feet
of water covered Roule 183 on the
West side of Greenville.
Temperatures were expected to
top I 00 in the Southwest roday and
to reach the 70s, 80s and 90s in
California; the 70s in the Pacific .
Northwe$t; the 90s in the Midwest
and South; the 80s in the Northeast ·
and mid-Atlantic states; and the
80s in the Great Lakes region.
Three Arizona cities Phoenix, Tucson and Yuma reached 110 degrees Tuesday, the
high for the nation.

606 Professional Circle
Ravenswood

Service Commission will meet
Monday It 7:30 p.m. in the voterana II!IYice off'ICC in Pomet07.

,_..., "!"berth.

TDnlllloM 'OIK'bed down Tuesday in Nebrub and Oklahoma,
but lhele ~ no reports of injuries
or major damage.
On Tuesday night, rain was
scauered from coast to coast. Thunderstorms brought powerful winds,
heavy rain and hail to the Northeast, South and parts of the Midwest.
Heavier rainfall Tuesday
evening included 3.S inches in
Atlan.la and 1.5 inches at Meridian,
Miss.
There was widespread flooding
in Atlanta. and other parts of
DeKalb County. Peachtree Creek
·~~ past Oood stage at 17 feet No
m1unes ~ ICI)OI1Cd.
In. Hapeville, the Flying Pig

Continued from page 1
•
Govern Or.···-------=-=----,.----------:.

Senate gets workers comp, other state budgets

W. VA.

· South-Central Ohio

By Tbe Aslodated Press
A cold front pushing down
through Ohio. on Thunclay could
produce some showers and thunderstorms in the southern balf of
the slate. Warm and humid Conditions will continue with highs in
the upper 80s and low 90s.
Forecasas say a period of wann
and .mostly dry weather should
begin on Friday and extend through
the weekend.
Some slow-moving thutrderstorma .Tuesday night caused some
minor floodiilg prOblems in eastern
Ohio. More than two incbes of rain
fell in McArthur in Vinton County
in lesa than an hour. TollliiiO, near
Steubenville, ~perienced some
street flooding during a downpour.
Dense fog was reported this

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-i ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

More thunderstorms possible in Ohio

Thursday, June 20

J

VVednelda~June19,1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

44..SZ44
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Wednelday, June 19,

Ohio

~neada~June19,1991

FLAYORITE SHREDDED

CHEDDAR
CHEESE

STORE HOURS
Monday thcu Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

8 OZ. PACKAGE

89&lt;

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE juNE 16 THRU JUNE 22, 1991

FLAYORITE SHREDDED

MOZZARELLA

CHEESE
8 OZ. PACKAGE

99&lt;
Leg .Quarters •••••••• 49&lt;

CHICKEN '

LB.

MIXED

. .

·

(

Fryer Parts ........ ~... 49
FRESH PORK BUTT
. ·' s·
139
Steak/Roast ...•.. ~. ·
HOMEMADE .
$ .

USDA CHOICE BEEF

.

29
Sandwich Spread ..'.". 1

$

.

Round Steak .•..!B•··
.

La

•

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99&lt;
32 OZ. BOrnE

89&lt;

•.

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STOKELY
CATSUP

$l3 9
Turkey Ham.........
·
'
1/4 PCJrk to1n ........ $169 ~
ECKmCH
$·
39
Bologna ..••••:.••..• ~·· 1
THORN APPLE VALLEY ROUND

ZEST A
CRACKERS

'lB'

Desert Storn1 vet says tha* you
Dear Au Lludera: America'
can never lruly appreciate tbe
gratiheclr felt by us service members
u wo ~ fJOm tho Pmian Gulf.
'The llalleodous amount of )ll1lile
llld encourqement we received
over lllt4 prqJIItd .. emocionally
for what was 10 come. but when il
ICIUIIIy bappened, it IIUI'pBSIICd Ill
Cl~
CA)1ekiUOU.

'

The mailllld pacliJaea people 111111
'(often to total .llrlftFn) kept us
JOin&amp;. And when we 1J1t home, thole
btautiful yellow ribbon&amp;, tho F-81
1011p llld tho cheering crowds at
the airpons w~ u much a pan of
thil victuy as tho heroism of any
101dier.
·
Since my return to the United
Slllel, I "-~ been tined, hugged,
~ to, applauded and thanked.
Now comes my UU1I to say tlttutk
)1011, Americ:a. We could not have
done the jab without the sllpp(ll't of
our families; good friends, kind
neiah!lors. generous bQaes and, yes,
a lot of bighearted stnmgm.
When 10meone tells me how
prou4 they ~ of what we did, I
want them to understand how proud
we are that we had 10 moch lo~
and Sbellgth behind us. It is an honor
to be a 101dier serving lbc grealeSt
COURtly on Earth. Thank you again,
America. -- CW2 JEFFREY A.
DUNCAN,ELPASO, T£XAS
DEAR JEFFREY: You expressed
the senlimenlS of thousands and
I can cenainly understand your
euphoria. And now, here's a different kind of letter that has ~ do with

a comrade in ~m~~:
Qear Au Luders: rm

tOIJ!·

~ycaofuledudl..t•­
ID. a

burry. I wroe 10 yoa llwral
moatbs qo to aay tban\:s for
•»&gt;a •i.. IIIII yo.: reldln write
10 •AIJ.y Sefik• .... Ia the l'lniln
Gulf. r~ bceo c:weipO'icliftl wilb
• lienaM-t IinCe . . OciOIIer. He
is bome now and we are bod!
anxious to pt IDS !her,
. .
"Steve" mviled me to come see
him in Nord~ Carolina bull!Okl him
rd be 10o nervous IIIII as\:ed him if
he'd lite to visit me in New Yen.
He said he'd love to. Now the big
queaion: AnD, lhould 1 invu him
to 11ay wllll me?
rm 29, not eucdy a tid, and I've
been living on my own for apt
years. Steve is 2S and single.
Through our leuen and phone
conversations, I can tell be is
a gentlemln. rve made it clear. that
I don't sleep IIIOWIIl and I don't
believe in OIIC-IIight IIIIRds. He let
me \:now early in our conespoildence ·that he respects girls wlth
higll .morals and WOUld 1ilce to settle
down.
I have a one-bedroom ~nt,
but tho sofa is -r cooafOIIable and
au my guestS who have slept on it
say it's as good u a bed. I feel u if
I'm lll8lUre cnoup 10 handle Steve's
staying ~. bull don't -t10 give
him the impression that rm ready 10
jump in10 bed with bim just because
I invited him 10 lily wlth me.
I'm very grateful to you for
bringing this wonderful penon i!t.to

!Ann

'Landers
ANN LANDBII&amp;
111l, IMAIIIII•
It I_.
er..Mn 8) I t "
41

.

~IJ

my life. I've had • ucitina lime
wriling 10 bim llld I don't want to
louse thinp up. What do you Sly?
- K.P~BROOKLYN, N.Y.
DEAR K.: If S~ cannot afford
a motel perlllpl you Cia put bim up
It the home of a friead or relalive.
you de6nilely ftoJid not inville bim
to ay ill your .... tmalt. It would
send tho wrong llipal and ~ the
relationship off 10 a t.s 1111rt
Please let me blow bow thiiiWRS
out rm keeping my finsen crossed.
Gem of the Day: Now that we
have automatic Idler machines we
no longer ha~ 10 teD our children
that money does not grow on
trees. They lhink it comes out of a
waD • .
An alcohol problem? How can
yo11 lr.elp JIOW'#If or someone you
l01&gt;e? "Alcoholism: How 10 .R~cog­
llizt It, How to Deal With It, How to
Conquer It" will give you the an-

winner

swers. ~nd 11 se/f-Mdrtssed, long.
biUiness-siu t1t11tlope and a check
or mDMY ortkr for $3.65 (this includes postage and handli11g) to: Alcohol, c/o AM l.aNJers, P.O. Bo;c
II562, Chicago, Ill. 60611-0562. (In
Canadtz, send $4.45.)

...

-Community calendar
· Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and tbe day of tbat event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication In tbe calendar.

nightly. Public is i11vited.
POMEROY - Bible school at
the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route
143, Pomeroy, will be held through
Friday from 6:30.8:30 p.m. nightly.
Rev. Victor Roush inviteS the public. Call 992-2952 for infonnauon.

NEW HAVEN - Wahama Hi(!h
School Alumni Association w1ll
hold an organizational for the 1992
reunion on Thursday at 7:30p.m. at
lhe New Haven LibJlll'}'.

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School classes for preschoolers
through teens will be held at Mt.
Hermon Church through Friday
from 9:30-11:30 a.m . daily. Call
Julia Will at 985-43~ 10 register.

FRIDAY
TIJPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a round and square dance at the
· THURSDAY
TuppetS Plains VFW Building on
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun- Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. with
ty Democratic Executive Commit- music by the Alvin Chutes Band.
tee will rn~ Thursday at 7:30p.m.' Air conditioned building. Public
at the Carpenters Hall .in Pomeroy.
invited.

COOLVILLE- "Jesus and You
at Camp Can-Do" is the theme for
Vacation Bible School al the
Coolville United Methodist Church
held through Friday at, 6:30 p.m.
nightly.

RACINE - The Racine American Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 7:30p.m. RefreshmeniS wiD be served foUowing the
meeting.

..

FATHER OF THE YEAR- George Wright,
center, was presented a plaque after being
named "Fatber of tbe Year" by the Pomeroy
United Methodist Churdt Sunday. Making tbe
presentation is Allen Downie, chairman of the
church's administrative council. Also pictured is

REEDSVIllE - "Super Weekend" will be held at Eastern High
School on Friday, Saturday and
Sunday. Featured will be baseball
and softball games, yard sales and
bake sales, drafl horse field day

A

'sp~~~~~~th·~~:bR:~,~ ~~~:"b~b~~:o;it:rJ~yar.:a · ..

,. RUTLAND -.:Vacation Bible
• School at the Rutland Freewill meet ~PI a Jlicnlc Th~y at the
Baptist Church will be held horne of Frances GQcglem at noon.
through Friday from 6-8 p.m.

Sunday at 11:30 a.m. and country
music show on Saturday at 6 p.m.
Public i$ invite&lt;!.
·

GRAPE
JELLY

REGULAR SJ.49

'

FLAVORITE IND.

•

Cheese Shces~ ..• ~!:!. 99

(

$ 49 KEMP
.
s Ice Cream •••••••••••• $2.99
Dog Food ••••••••••••••

SUNSHINE

.

.

40 LB. BAG

ARMOUR LUNCH MEAT

5 QUART PAIL

GROUND
BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE

14 oz.
Armour Treet ••••••• ft
7 9( Cream Pies
•••••••••••
BANQUET

director aad cbalrman Ill tbe Derby, atcepts a
check from Dick Warner, Kroger manager,
Heary Tbnpp, Pepsi area maJIIIger and DoJIIIld
Chalfant, AtheDli, Pepsi operations manger, left
to right.

DERBY DONATION· The Pomeroy Kroger
Store and Pepsi teamed up Tuesday to make a
· . large donalion to tbe First Anuual Soapbox
Derby to be staged tbill weekend at Middleport.
Here Roger Williams, Middleport's retreation

Hocking College announces dean's list
The following Meigs Countians
have been .named to the spring
quarter Dean's List at Hocking
CoUege.
·
Rita Bailey, James Durst ,
Angela Kelly , Thomas Kelly· Jr.,
Rhonda Koehler, and Terri Roush
Patterson, all of Middleport; Marcia Barrett and Laurie Shenefield,
Langsville; Kenneth Brown Jr. ,
Annett Cardone, Janis Carnahan
King, Christina Cooper, Michael
Deem, Kimberly Follrod, Angela
Grueser, S hery I Johnson, Julia
Murphy, Arthur Roush, Brian

Shuler, Tina Sloter, Donette Talbon and Lewis Johnson, all of
Racine; Karen Caner, Ruth Foley
and Cora Putnam, Reedsville;
Angela Donohue, Jean Durst, Harriet Friend, Diana Harrison, Brenda
Hysell, Penni Jeffers, Lori ~ay­
nard, Lisa Pooler, AmaJida S1sson,
Dorothy Smith and Donald Lewis,
all of Pomeroy: John Dress and
Cindy Warden, Dexter; Shawn
Fetty, Rutland; Donna Lacomb,
Tuppers Plains; Christine Lamben,
Coolville; Howard Lawrence and
Peggy Marcinko, Long Bottom;

and Barbara Lisle, Syracuse.
To be named to the list each has
achieved at least a 3.3 quarterly
grade point average and completed
I 2 or more credit hours.

Officers were nominated at lhe
recent meeting of lhe Past Coon·
cilors Club of Chester 323 Daughters of America held at the home of
Betty Young.
Nominated were Bulah Maxey,
president: Betty Young, vice president; Mary Jo Barringer, secretary;
Joan Baum, areasurer; and Faye
Kirkhart, Sentinel.
Esther Smith presided at the
meeting which opened with the
reading of Psalm 118. The Lord's
Prayer and Pledge of Allegiance
were given in unison.
Readings included "A Father"
by Erma Cleland and "l)le Flag"
by Eslher Smilh.
The club picnic and potluck will
be held July 10 at 6:30 p.m. at lhe
home of Joan Baum.
Refreshments were served by

9 LIVES CAT FOOD
6oz.

PURE SWEET SUGAR

4/$1

4 Ll.

BAG

Gilly At ,._ ••• S.. Valu
'-' " ..... - 22, , .. ,
~

CLOROX BLEACH

$119

GALLON

GoOil Ooly At Pew••• S.. Valu
Geed .... 16 .... Ju.. 22, ' " '

00111 Oily At ,..••• Sup. . .
00111 ..... 16 ......... 22, ""
Unlit 1 Pw

c.t•••r

..,.. 1 Perc... _

111111 4 "' C.tt••

!\

89(

1\

WHITE CLOUD

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROll
PAK
~

89(

Olllr AI ,._••• S.,. Valu
GM11 Me 16 thru .Ill 22, 1991
l.il!llt I l'lr Cw•d-ir

.GROUND
CHUCK
10 LB. PACKAGE

$1690

ORLANDO , Fla. (AP) Chuckey Ivey was II when his
vacationing family 's van was
struck head-on ~y a car near Walt
D'
w ld
lSney or .
His parents and sister were

A "Garden Pany" poduck dinner was held when the Philathea
Women gathered for their June
meeting. Nancy Freeman gave the
blessing.
Donna Hartson presided over
the mee1ing which opened with
prayer by Maryln Wilcox. Nancy
Freeman gave the secretary's
repon, Faire Cole the lrCISurer's
repM. and Ella Mae Daugble'Zy the
cards and flowers repon. ·
Name• on tho prayer list were
Clyda Allensworth, Georgia
Wehrung, Lesley Roush and Presley Roush.
Devotions included a memorial
service ror lhe deceased members.
~ theme was "Friendship" with

scripture from the book of
Proverbs. Poems, "Gift of Friendship" by Kathy WiJron$ and
"Golden Chain of Friendsh•p'' by
Nancy Freeman . A moment of
silent praver wQ observed for the
deceased r'friends."
Attending were Maryln Wilcox,
Kathy Wilfong, Mildred Riley,
Kathy lhlc, Donna Hartson, Angie
Gilkey, Nancy Freeman, Kathy
Baker and Dorothy Bater. OucsiS
were Geneva Tuttle and Debbie
Carder.
Hosteua fur the evening were
the officers and the group thanked
Mike and Debbie Gerlach for the
use or their pool.
(~ )

Betty Young and Bulah Mllltey to
Opal Hollon, Inzy NeweU, Marcia
Keller, Lora Damewood, Betty
Young, Betty Roush, Pauline Ride·
nour, Faye Kirldlan, Eslher Smilh,
Joan Baum, Alia Ballard, Etizabcth
Hayes, Erma Cleland, Goldie Fred·
erick, Margaret Amberger, Laura
Mae Nice, Bulah Maxey, Mary Jo
Barringer and Thelma White.
Games were condocled by Opal
Hollon and Cota Beegle. Door
prizes were won by Betty Roush
and Lora Damewood.

,
e wascriticallyhurt.
Doctors at Orlando Regional
Medical Center's emergency room
expected him to die. When he survived, the hospital s•· rr called h1'm
"'
a miracle child.
On Monday, Chuckey, now 13,
walked up to a group or doctors
and nurses atlhe hospitai ..Grinning
broadly, he thanked lhem for savinghislifeinJulyl989.

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FRIPAY • Hamburger, French Fries &amp; Soup

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DOWNING CHilDS

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12 OZ. CAN

Philathea Women gather

Wellston; Ralph and Gladys Blosser, Groveport; Walter Ray and Pat
Nelson and Bryan Benca, Lancaster; Jack and Cheryl Nelson, Barry
Nelson and Sheri Cooper, Lisa Nelson and ~an Grimmett, all of Proc- •
torviUe.

Mary[and teen returns to
•
•
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•
:
say thanks for savzng
hzs
life
'
kiUed. and h

Pa.st Counct'lor 's Club. of
•
ff'
.
ester
nominates
o
tcers
Ch

YELLOW

FLAVORITE

h [d • R , [ d

son reunzon e zn _ut an .

Smith, Calhy and Cortney Scarberry, Brandy Snyder, Bobby and
Linda Foster, Bobby and Becky
Foster, Missy Foster and Keilh
Stout, Ryan Foster an d ·J enny
Deem, Betty E. Dill, Darren, Linda
and Martha Nelson, Junie Yost,

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The annual Nelson reumon was Ben, Tina, Tasha and Jonathan were Frank and Evelyn Leach,

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3 LB. BAG

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Wright's wife;Nellie. A resident of 259 Union
Ave., Pomeroy, Wright bas been active witb the
youib In tbe churdt for many years. Also he is
active in the church's scouting program. The
plaques reads: "A Special Thanks for being a
father to so many youngsters in our cbun:h for
so many years."

held recendy at Forest Acres Park Cotterill, Lany, Redia. Linnea and
in Rudand.
Kelsey Gibbs, Jessica Yost, Peggy,
Walter Ray Nelson had grace Donald Jr. and Dawn Marie Yost,
before the dinner..
Rick, Debbie, Rickie and Joshua
Following the dinner, pictures Yost, Yvonne Wh!Uington, Jim and
were lalcen.
Darlene Vanaman, Carla Smith,
Local residents attending were Ronald Smith and AMe Hatfield.
Bonnie Miller, Julia Ingels, Bob
Auendinll: from out-of-town
and Judy Miller, John Miller,
TammyJOMiller,DickandSharon
Folmer, Ed and Judy Nelson, .
.

SMUCKERS

'

a l'rff night's stay at the Clarion Hotel, donated
by WMPO Radio. Pictured presenting tbe winning certiftcates to Grate Is Lenny Ella.&amp;o
. n, left,
WMPO Radio, JoAnn Williams, Farmers Bank,
and Susan· Clark, pr,sldent or tbe Pomeroy
Merchants Asloclatlpn. .
·

WINNER· Jolin Gnte, New Haven,.W.Va.,
Is tbe
of the Pomeroy Merchants Association Father's Day promotion. As tbe winner,
Gnte receives free tickets to a Cincinnati Reds
basebaU game, donated by Farmer's Bank, aDd

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Prgr 10-The Dally Sentinel

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Wednesday, June ,19, 1991

Wednesday, June 19, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medidne

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of

FIRST PINS , Tbree members
tile
Women's Auxiliary or Veterani Memorial H01o
pital received tbelr first service piDt-180-lloar
service pins--wben tbe AuxUlary met at tile J1o1.
pital Tuesday arternooa. ReceiWI&amp; plu, Jell to
rigbt, from Scott Luau,
••!od!ltlll,

Regular or Low Salt

•

ICe

are Mandy itousb, Evelyn Warner and Grace
Warner. Also beiag awarded ber first service
. pin as a member or tbe local auxiliary will be
Jeanette Lawrence wbo was unable to be present ·
Tuesday.

Great For
BLT's

Oscar Mayer

aeon
f)r Yei'IW . ,. ·
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.\

Crispy Fresh

California

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17,500 HOURS· Tbese ronr members or tbe
Women's Auxiliary or Veterans Memorial Hospital tepresent over 17,500 bOtirs or volunteer
service to the Pomeroy H11spltal. Hospital
Administrator Scott LIIUI Tuesday p~nted

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[ I I' I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ·I

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.• .

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By DEBORAH MESCE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Children in n9n-smolting househOlds
are likely to be healthier than children who live with smokers ,
according to a government study
releaSed Tuesday.
Tbe new data shows-tiiildren
living with cigarette smokers are at
nearly twice the risk of being in
fair or poor health than lhose who
were never exposed to smoke,
either before or after birth.
Health and Human Services
Secretary Louis SuUivan said this
was "a compelling reason for l'lll'·
ents
to quit smolting. ''
DISTRICT OFFICIAL •
The
new data also "will malce it
Abbie Stratton, Pomeroy, was
more
difficult
for the profiteers of
selected as secretary of tbe Cen·
parental
puffinJ
to poob·poob the
tral District Volunteers of tbe
danger
of
pass~ve cigareue smoke
Oblo Hospital Assodatioll II tbe
district meetina beld last week Ia on children," Sullivan told an audi·
Cbillicotbe. Mrs. Stratton lias ence in Research Triangle Park,
been a member or tbe Women's · N.C.
Tbe Tobacco Institute, which
Auxiliary at Vetenns Memorial
represents
the tobacco industry,
Hospital in Pomeroy since
dismissed
the
study.
August. Before returniog to
"It's
no
surprise
that if you
Pomeroy to make ber bome, Mrs.
were
to
ask
people
about
their chil·
Stratton was a member or tbe
dren
it
would
cilrrelale
to
income.
Women's Auxiliary at tbe Deft·
There
were
no
measures
of
envi·
ance Hospital In Defiance for 11
ronmental
smoke.
This
is
about
years. She will take ber district
office in October wben tbe next asking people bow they assess their
district meeting is beld at Cbil· kids' bcaltb," Tobacco Institute
spokesman B~ennan Dawson said.
dreo's Hospital iD Colnmbus.
Dawson also noted that the
study itself says the ~esults should
be interpreted "with caution"
because they do not take i nlo
IICCOWlt possible variations in sampling and ~ived heallh status.
Hi~ risk of poor heallh "has to
The Letart Falls Elementary do w1tb poverty and bow people
PTO elected new officers recently view tbiDgs and not smoking and
for the upcoming school year.
· it's misleading to say otherwise."
Elected were Bill Downie,~­ Dawson said.
dent; Ruth Shain, vice presulent;
But Sullivan said, "I would
Linda Turley, secretary; and Anna hope that the tobacco companies
Nonnan, ~re~SU~er.
would assume some role of corpoOutgoing preaident, Theresa llle respoosillility here ••• and siop
Wilson thanked tbe teachers and targeting their products to young
PTO member for tbeir help and people, poor people, to minorities
cooperalion during die past year.
and to women.'·
the PTO voted to sponsor the
The study by lbe National Censchool's trip to tbe high school ters b Health Slalillica fouod that
variety show and to buy trea11 for 4.1· percent of youna childten in
ltoulebolds witb current smokers
field day.
Also discussed was the levy on ·- • iD fair to poor health, com·
the May 7 ballot, the school pared wltb 2.4 percent of children
board's decision to eliminate oever exposed to tobacco smoke
insuumemal m•lc from lbe district and 3.5 percent of children in
bousebofds where smokers had
and tlie scbool pieD~.
Plans di&amp;Mlld for tbe UJICOC!I·
The smdy llddrelled lbe bealth
ing year were participation tn quiL
of
cbildren
5 yea old or younlfZ.
Racine's Fill Ftidrlll• Dinner .
and the Santa'l Secret Sltop in About Judf of lheae cbildren have
been Cli)IOied to cipelte smoke,
December.
The next meetitla will be beld ucl more tltiD a quarter of tbem
Sept. 3 and every fiist Monday of eqxrt to smdre both before
and after binh, the IIUd)' said.
the mondl dlemlfler.

Letart PTO
elects officers

•''

Welch's Fruit Juice
Pack Bars

Hot and Ready To Serve. Big Bear's Famous

Fried Chicken

99
Box
of 12

..

8 Pieces

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Jon1·bour service pins to tbe group wbicb
includes, left to rigbt, Abbie Stratton, 500 boun;
Carrie Kenoedy, 2,000 hours; Betty Sayre, 4,000
· boun, and Jessie White, Auxiliary president,
11,000 bours.

·. Study says children of
·· nonsmokers likely healthier

~·

ettuce

Ea.

News briefs

The first hljlli8D bean transplant
was perfonned in 1967 on Louis
WashkaoSicy by a team of sure
in Cape Town, South Africa,
ed by Dr. Christiaan Barnard.
Washkansky lived 18 days with his
new bean.
Oberlin College in Obio - the
fust
truly coeducational school of
John C. Wolf, D.O.
higher Imming in tbe United States
J\ssociateProfessor
- opened its doors in 1833.
of Family Medicine
Author Robert Louis Slevenson
died in 1894 in Samoa.
Qaestlon:
to the tiny hair cells inside the
" Concerto in F," by George
with a constant buzzing sound in inoer ear. Once these cells are dam· Gershwin, had its world premiere
my ears. My doctor called this tin· . aged, nolhing wiil repair them.
in 1925 at New York's Carnegie
· ni\IJS and tried to explain it to me..
It is critical to proteCt against Hall, with Gershwin himself at the
l)ut without success. Would you further dama~, however. Avoidil!g piano.
try?
· ·
noises assoclllted with loud m!Bic,
Police arrested some 800 stu· Aoswer: Tinnitus describes the power tools,. firearms and lawn dents
at tbe University of Califorsound you hear - often described mowers will be very belpful. You .nia at Berkeley in 1948, ooe dRy
as eilher a "buzzing" or "ringing" should eitber avoid tbe situations
sound - but not the cause of the where the noise is produced, or after the students stormed the
symptoms. For some individuals malce swe your ears are adequately administration building and SIIRed
this sound is relatively mild and protected. When working with a massive sit-in.
only bothers lhem when lheir sur· noisy equippl"ent be sure to wear
roundings are very quiet. In more ear plUj!S or ear muffs tbat have a
severe cases, lhough, the buzzing 25 decibel or better sound·reduc·
and ringing can be quite annoying, tioo ratim!. There are manv stvles
particul!lrlY when it is accompanied of these available at your local
by heanng loss.
.
hardware or sporting goods store.
Exposure to loud noiSeS at work · Caffeine - found in coffee tea,
or ~Uri~g leisure activities can lead many cola drinks, chocolate' and
!0 unmtu.s. Other common causes · some non-p~escription medications
mclude h~gh blood JlleSSlUC, byper· -can malce tinnitus a little worse.
lhyroidism, blood vessel blockage, The nicotine from tobacco can also
muscl~ spasm, and drug reaction.
aggravate tinnitus. Caffeine should
Smokmg and alcohol use tend to be consumed infrequently, and
malce tin!'itus from any of these nicotine should be totally avoided.
causes a littlc mo~e severe.
Tinnitus can be loud and aggr&amp;·
. Y~Ur doctor's task is to ~IP _you vating enough that it interferes wilh
Identify the cans:e of your tuuutus. sleep. Providing soft background
Someumes th1s IS qu1ck and easy, noise from a radio may help
but it can be very difficult and .talce "drown out'' the tinnitus and malce
huge amounts of time. The search it easier to fall asleep. A hearing
starts with your doctor obtainin~ a aid lillY also belp if there is bearing
detailed histay of lhe way tbe un· impairment associated wilh the tin·
nitus began, what malces it better, nilll$. Wben tinnitus is caused by
and what malces it wwe.
blockago of arteries, muscle spasm
Often, tinnitus results from or lhyroid problems, specific treat·
something as simple as taking too ment of lbe underlying problem is
many aspirin -· an example that necessary. Talk to your doctor fits in lhe "drug reaction" category tbe deteCtive - to find the "cui·
I mentioned earlier, If the histay prit" and get the proper treabnent
doesn't indicale an obvious cause, for your tinnitus.
specialized tests may be called for.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
Ouestioo: What should I do f&lt;r column. To submit questions, wrile
my tinnitus?
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio Uni·
Ans,ver: Your doctor must be versity College of Osteopatliic
an investigator in charse of the .Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
"Case of The Ringing Ears." He &lt;r Ohio 45701.
she will ask many questions, lben
call on the special talents of an
audiologist (hearing specialist) to
uncover important clues. Other
assistants will perform blood leSIS
and MRI scans to gatber all the
facts so that your doctor can figure
out "Who Done It." Once lbe cause
of the tinnitus is identified, treatment can be started.
If the problem is tbe result of
medication sucb as aspirin, stopping the medication will eliminate
the tinnitus. But often lbe ~=
is lbe result of JIGI1nane1111 Ill

Family
Medicine

"'

One lh
Pkg.

The Dally sentlnei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The study was based on a 1988
smoking survey that Included a
question about the health status of
children 5 years of age and younger
in the houSehold. The survey sample included 5.356 children in that
age .group, and the child's heallh
was reported by the household
respondent, usually a parent.
Smoking is more prevalent in
low-income households and among
·JORDAN BUCK
the less educated, so children in
these homes are more likely to be
at rtsk ·of poor he3Ith, according to
the study. Black children also were
more likely to have ever been
Jordan Buck recenlly celebrated
exposed to smoke lhan while chil- his third birthday at the home of his
dren.
pareniS, Jon and Tami Buck.
A similar study, to be published
A Ninja Turtles Theme was car.
soon by University of_North Car- ried OUI.
olina researchers, suggests that
. Those auending and sending
children of smokers score lower on g~fiS were h1s parents, his brother,
staildardized tests, Sullivan said.
Trevor; grandparents, Fred and
" As the evidence on second- Pauline Hoffman, Addie Buck;
hand smoke continues to build, par- great-grandparents, Fred and Ellen
ents, in good conscience, must Smilh; Mike and Vicki Hoffman
weigh the health risks of smoking Bev Hoffman, David, Kathie arui
not only for themselves, but for Lian Hoffman, Rhoda and Justin
their children as well," Sullivan Duckworth, Tyler Bullion Dolly
said.
and Ted Spiles.
·'

Women'• ••- 6·10.
Aloo omlallle In
ol- 5, SV. and II
at many .aore..

Glrla' ol... IV.-3•

Jordan Buck
Celebrates birthday

Women'• oljtn 6-10..
Al10o..U.W.In
ol101 5, 5¥a onol II
at many .t.oret.

'

DINNER
SPECIALS ....
Smart aavings on aummer's most popular styles! Choose
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for women and glrla. In 1110rted colora and printa.
Reg. 3.99 each, _,Je 3 pain ror 110.

WfDNfSOlY: ..., Kabalts
THURSDAY: CHicken Cordon lltu
FIIDAY &amp; Sl'IUIDAY: lroileclllaskan Pollock, I.I.Q.

SALB

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1 :00 a.m.-2:00p.m.
Wedneadly • Thu11dlly - II p.m.·l p.m.
Friday • Saturday - II p.m.·l p.m.
CLOSED lUNDAY. MONDAY

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Women'• aiiH 8-t0,1Jir41' t0-4.

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--~~~-·~·

�.•.
Paige 12-The Dally Sentinel

-~- - Study
1

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Wednelday,
June 19, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

turns up low rate of AIDS Revelry lands wedding party in jail
among ~ealth care work~rs
··
car.
By FRANCES D'EMILIO
FLORENCE, lraly (AP) -Two
studies indicate a relatively low
number of AIDS victims among
u.s. bcalth care workers and suggest that the chances of the infected
workers passing the virus to
patients is extremely remote.
The reportS, prcse~ted Monday
at the annual Intcmanonal Conference on Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome. could ease growil!g fears of AIDS transmission
from doctors, dentists and nurses.
A survey of approximately

33,600 health care workers who demiologist who conducted the
gave blood !ast year at 20 facilities ' SIUdy. ·
around the United States f011111142
Anodler IUidy by a New York
were carrying the human immun- researcher=~ mathematical
odeficiency virus, or mv. which probability Ill
concluded that
can lead to AIDS.
Of 27 milfion opt'llllons performed
Of the infected srout'• 20 people every year in the United Stales
reported behavior trails that put "four or five patients might acquire
them 1;1 risk for cootracling AIDS,
post~ve IDV infection."
accoo!ing_ to the study by the cen- . "The risk closely resembles the
ters for Disease Control in Atlalua.
risk of a vehicular fatality during
''It shows that there is a low Tille ttansporalion to and from the bosof occupationally acquired AIDS pital," said the study's author,
atnong, health care workers," said Albert B. Lowellfels of New York
Mary Chamberland, a CDC epi- Medical College in Valhalli, N.Y.

HARBOR SPRINGS, Mlcb.
(1,1') - What lrind of a wedding
party was it? Some peats were
nude. One s10le a polke
AJili
the bride- and groom-to·be ended
up in jaiL
.
The afternoon after the predawn revelry Satnrday, Charles
Von Wiese, 27, of Oates Mills,
Ohio and Ann Souder, 27 , of
Boston were married as ached~
"It was a little summer wedding," the groom's grandlno~r,
who WQUidn 't Jive her name, said
Tuesday.
,
•
Aboot 30 celebtlnts, some with'out clothes on, were reveling on the
Lak~ Michigan beach in Harbor
Springs eany Saturday when city

Classifie

p0~ were cal1od to retum J1C1Ce

orficer and tried to push another
to the nortllcra Michlgaa resqtt into the water. Off~ were so
town.
outnumbered they decided to leave,
Emmel County Sheriff Jeff said Bodzick.
Bodzick laid police !Old the crowd ·
On the way out they am:sled the
to put 011 dleir clalbes, lhen !limed
groom on a chu:ge _of ~esisting
around to fiDd IOIIICQIIe bad driven arrest andobsln!cnngjiiSIJCC.
off in dleir ;.rot car. A gun1 at
A carload of five. paniers folone «;~f lfllbor Springs' exclushe Iowedpolice,IDthejaiLOntbe~ay
ltouain&amp; enclaves, whe!e IDIDY of Petoskey police arrested the driver
tbe ~
. . : : - lived, wiylald ~ a drunk .drivin' eharse. A1 the
the !lriver
IOOitllle keys.
JBII, the bnde JOIRed her groom
While ~bor Springs police when she and three other w~en
were arreiWig Thomas A. Dunne were arrested on crut,rges of disorof Cambrillge, Maas., to face car derly conduct and reSisting ~
tbeft 11111 drunk driving charges, the
"Our people liD not have to subparty went on. Sherifrs deputies
jdct tliemselv~ to that kind or v_erllld 11a1e police were called in.
bal an&lt;! phySical abuse," Bodz1ck
· Police said partiers lricked one said.

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TO PLA(( AN AD CALL 992-215~
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

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2 :00PM . WEDNESDAY

2 00 PM . THURSDAY
2 00 PM . FRIDAY

A'I II ,1 ,llll:e Ill e II IS
1 Clt'd ot TtlenM
2 In Memory

Ra1esare tot c:onseeuhve run•. broUnupd.,• wtll bech•ged
lor e.:f"t d~ .s separ•te ad• .

388 Vinton

11 00 A .M . SATURDAY
2.00 PM . MOt;OAY
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THURSDAY PAPER
1-HIOAV PAPER
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441 Galhpolis
367 Ch•twe

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER

o •., 15Wor•
Rete
.
.20
$4.00
.30
t&amp;.OO .
.42
S9.00
.60
$13.00
.06/ doy
s~ 3D/day

Wordi

1
J
6

Monthly

• Ads ouiPiu Metgs. G.llta or Malun counties n1us1 btl pre·
...d
"Rttc-.vtt $.50 diSCOUnt lor edf plud 1n 01dvomi:u.
"free ,.cis Give•way and found ads undllf 1Swtnds w1ll be ·
1 · • run l d~s el no ch•ge.
,
"P.ncu of •d fot aH upltalltllten 11 double pr1cil: ol ad cosl .
"7 po1nt hn11typw onty und .
"Serutntll ts not tMpon.ibltt tm euon ~her firs"t difY (Chuck
tOt eno" tint d• ad ums '" papurl . Call bulou~ 2 :00p.m .
d-. alter publtc.C1on lo m•k u c on eel ion
• Ads that must be pa1d •n advancll ar•:
Card of lhanks
Ht~PPY . Ad10
In Mtlmofl.vll
Yatd Sales

..•

l'

Days

POLICIES
;

•· The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

CLOSED SUNDAY

.

Senti

643 Ar1bia Dist.
379 w..,_,.

Mason Co., WV

Me•gs County

Area Code I 14

Area Code 304

992

675
458

MuldltpD11
Pomwoy
985 Ch••r
843 Pon'-'d
247 Let1r1 fills
949 Redne
742 Rutl.ml
66 7 Coolville.

11

48 · Equtpm.nt tor Aunt

Mer chand ise

Me~cetiM'Utous

51

Busin•s Oppottuntty
Mon.,. to loan
Ptof•sional Stf\lict"J

Misc. MerchandiSe
5_5 Bu•lding Supplies
56 PelS tor Sale
57 · Musl cal lnstrumflt11S
58 ffuils &amp; Vegu.ab\81
19 For Sale or Tr•rte

New Haven
letafl

9~7

Buttllo

Aut o Repalt
Camptng Eqmpment

79

CMmpeu &amp; Mo•or

81
82 ·
83
84
. '8&amp;
86

54

21
·'' 22
23

77
78

Hon'~

Servi ces

Household Goods
52 - Sporling.Goodt
53 Antiques

57e
773 Muon
882
895

73 V~tnl. 4 WO ' s
7.4 Mutor cycl ..
75 Boats &amp; IV'olou lor Silllt!
76 Auto Paris &amp; Act•IOf•"'-

49 For Le•e

1!J Wanted To Oo

Pt. Pler...,.t
leon
Apple Grove

71 · Autos tor Saltt
72 lwcki fo• S•le

Ho"'e lnlpiO"VIllenl 1
Plumbing • He•llt(l
E ltCIIVitUng

Electncal &amp; RetugerMhon
Gtmural H.uling ,
·
Mobile Home Flep•n
87" Upholstu•y

I

·'

11

Jlllll•...ct ,..
r~tQUW«i to

....,_Each

u1

tn-

be reldilv 1 •"•t'l

tcw

....,_....,._ems

..a.

i•

lmmtdilll openi111s for
reaistelld nurses to
wort in ledicai·Surai·
cal .or Specill C.rt Unit
-full and Plrt·time positions. Salery commtn·
liiiTIII Witll experience.
Excellent frilllt bene·

c:omp..,..,.. Mem, wn ... iv--.. ••f~ lhe ..,.,...

.

•'

,...,dllck which ..,.... ..,titte you

to purch. . .

•• u• 1dwna..d prtce,w•tNn 30 ~· ·
coupon Will be

Kcepted ~

11Nn

...,.,__
.
S •ND
COPYRIGHT 1111 • THE KROGER 'CO. ITEM . ~
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. JUNE .18, THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, JUNE 22. 1881, IN Pomeroy
.
wt! ....... VITHIRIGHTTOUMITQUANTITIES. NONE'

SOLD TO

DEA~III.

~

fits.

Contlct

. Rhondl Dailey,

Rll, RSII,

, Dlrtetor of Nursina
Veterans ._orial

Hospital
115 E. ltmoriel Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

614-992-2104. txt. 213

8

ACADEMIC ·
AWAllS
GOLF USSONS

Public Notice

IEGISTEIED
IUISES

in eedl K1Q9e"
SIOie , 1acewx . . IIIICific:lll¥ noaed WI the.i M . If .,.. do run
CNI of .,. actwniMd k.m. we wt1 off• you .our c:hotce of •
~ or •
the ectven•.... •t•m
Onty one 'olendcN

Help Wanted

EARLY PUILIC NOTICE
FLOOD PLAIN
DEVELOPMENT
The VII._ of Middleport,
Ohio le conolderlng o D•
porlmont of Notutol R•
eou"'" Jlrllject to conlti'IHII
o r - - · complex ot the
Rallro.od ltrHt boot !lunchIng foctllty. Tho 11r11Jeat lo In
lho100yeorftoodploln. The
v.._ lo lnterHtld In dl•
culling olternotlvu to thlo
Jlrllject ond ...,ring public
-tlono of poulblo odvlmpocto thot could ro.,lt from tho projoct ond
poalble mlnlmlzotlon ,....
au,... lend wwlttwn comto Fred Hoffmen.
Moyor, VIII- Holl, Mldd•
port; Ohio 41780. Cornmonto wll be rocelvld untH
1 I doyo from cloto of pubiJ.
cotlon.
Fred Holfmon
Moyor
181 19 ttc

"'-'bile Sale

6 POl S55
CUSTOM GOLF
CLUBS
Repair, Trophl11,
SlgnCifll

JOHN T. TEAFORD
54 MIICIIIIIIIOUS
Merchandise

Public Notice

-=======~

NOTICE
· ThoPUBLIC
8011rd of
Tru-1 of •
Letart Townohlp wll hold
tholr Budget meeting for
propond ludfet for 1892
ot the office bulclng July 1. ·
1981 1t 7 :00 p.m. All viii·
tora ere welcome.
Joyce While, Clerk
Lotort Town1hlp
247-3126
18) 19, tic

26 CONCIIm
PARKING LOT CIIIIS
and 111 FT. CHAIN
UNI FENCE, 6 FT.
TAU WITH GATE.
CCIITACT

VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL
405 PIAaST.
MIIMIPOIIr

•R .modeling end
Home R~p~lrs
•Roofing
•Siding
•Pelntlng

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
coNnRucnoN
992·6641 or
691-6164

y

s

CARPENTEI SERVICE
-ltoom • , "111M•

-G-wOrlo

- E - oiMf Plumbing

-con... work
-llooflntl

,_....

.

-lm.lor • Exe.lor

!FREE ESTIMATES)

I

· V. C. YOUNG Ill

I

99~·6215

•

NETWT5LB2.27

With Low Prices. And More ...
992-2259

MAIN

.

.

FREE ESTIMATES

•

LINDA'S
PAINTING
11111101 • UIILDI

•

FREE ESTIMATES

.

Tab the Jilin eut of
• pelnlli4.

Let me do !t for you.
YEIY IEASONAIU

.
•

•.

HAVE llftiENCES

OFFICE 992·2886

(6

purchase necessarv. You need not be present to win.
Kroger employees and tnetr families are not eligible
to participate.

•ciOWAYE
OVEN BPAII

206 NORTH SECOND AVE •

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

AUIWIS
..... It .. Or

OOTTIE.S. TURNER, BROKER

U.S. GRADE A CHICKEN

Holly Farms
Breast Quarters
·o

..
..

-

California
Peaches·

JUST IE LOW RACINE DAM - You'lllovs the VIEW ol the
GREAT FISHING ·lion&amp; the beaul~ul Oh10 River 11 you own
this 3.6 acre camp srte w~h 786 II. ot river fTontage It's ap·
' prox. 1/3 cleared and has~~ own gravel driveway and elec·
tricity IVIIIable.
fOR ONLY $10,000

Pound

IIDDlfPORT - Rutllnd Slrttl - You need to see this
one! trs a nice 3 bedroom 11nch st~le home with a lull base·
men1,.2 tireplaces. caretree vmyl sidma. tully cupeted.and
a I car praae all oo a 2 acre lot.
PRICED AT JUST $39,500

I

\.,_

II IWA t
lUCID FREE

FAIIIVIEW SUIDIVISION - Unullllll· Uaiqlt - Dlfftllll
- Dact1bes tins oclot11111 lhaped houee that has 3 bed·
raomslllll DPifiiOibeouldaon. HIS 10 llllelsllllinUIMI
docn 11111 OPIII onlll.lillllr en UIIPII dick orllwlr dtel Tilt
Mlllds in back •• cool &amp; pr111111 in tile se-. Hila lui
basement and 2 baths.
RrDUC£D, SM,IOO

KROG!llll \'OUR
SIW'OOD
HEADOUARTIIIS

CONDITIONER OR

Rave
Shampoo
11&amp;

.$1.00
THE

REGULAR RETAIL OF

Kellogg's

•19-oz. Bite Size Frosted

COCA \#UI.A CLASSIC,

FREE DIET COKE,

,

Coke or
Coca Cola

IAUI ADDffiON - Beeuliful lsyinal78x117 !olin n~e.
subdivision. TPC water and Columbus Southllft EleCtric
nlillble. No mobile homes permdled. Grill bulldin11111.

A.MG

IIDDLEPOIT - 11Hc11 StiHI- A I~ Story lr11111 home
with 2 bldro.a. Newly r1111odeled. Comes with new washer,
diJ.'f, rtnll 111d lllr~lllor. Also, 1 9 piece llvinK r:oom
suilll, 3 blill. and 2 nitllt stencil.
JUST Sll,ilio .

Mini Wh81t8
•20.4-oz. Regular Frosted
Mini Wh81t8
•12.3-oz. Crilpix
•18-oz. Bran Flakes
•8.38-oz. Snack Pack

POIEICIY -IT. 7- ~x.IBacree ot llnd,LCCD water
I 111c1riC millblt. U SEU ON LAND CONJ:Jj

w.

PldU,.

RUTI.NID- HyMII hn 101111- Jusl what yau're looking
tor! It has approx. 38 ICres with a good buikhn&amp; s4e. It has
water, ellctric~y, and tree gas. And is priced just nsht.
$21,000

PGIIIII

110

HOME 992-6892

• No

4 -23·1 mo. pd.

Point PleaSant • &amp;7~92o I

of

GROOM
ROOM

WASIIIIS-$100.,
IIYIS-$6t "

llfiiGRAfOIS-S 100 up

Complete Grooming
For All Breeds

IAIIIIS-...a...--SUS

flliMS-$125 .,
'
• CIO OVINS-579 .,.

EMILEE MERINAR .

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

ON'S AfllUAIIICE

snv1a

991·5335 or

------

SHIUI &amp; TREE
111M and
RAINIIOW IID8E - 16.82+ acres with mobile home. Furn·.
ture, woodburner, shed. Property IS located in Eastern
School Distrlcl ASKING $16,000.
PIIIIIIO\'- Avery nice comfolllble home has 2 to 4 bed·
1001111, 2 blths, Clrpel end lull besemenland nice yard.
ASKING $27,000.
LETAIT - I ftoor trame cozy home, 4 rooms, I\\ bath, !!hats,
prden space and riwr lriJlblp &amp;real tor summer &amp;ellwey,
lishina cabin or comfoltlble home. ASKING $7,900.

CLOSE TO TOWII- COUIITRY SETTliiQI Recently remode·
lid I ftoor plen home. 3 bedrooms.extrelerpslltmadeckfor
enjoyinalhe summer eveninp -areal lor entertain ina! This
home can be yours tor $29,totl,

IEMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
BILL SUCI
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

•YINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIPlNG
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now . . . . . hllt
"Free E11tim8te1"'

PH. 949·2801
or les. 949·1160
NO SUNDAY
I

and nu FLOOI CAH

•Reuonable Ret••
oQuellty Work

•F,.. Estimate•

Mlclclls,-t
Hand Tufting
· Cultom Drapes
36\'.... Es...........

61.·992·1311
Wo Soy What W. Do .
Wo Do Whit Wo loy.

10·19-t MO.

Pomeroy,

,

POOL~Vl~!~CHIJIII
Open Tues ..

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•VInyl Siding

•ReplscomM!t
Window•

Thurs.,
Fri., Sat. 7:30 p.m .

•Roofing

•lnoulatlon

POMEROY ·

JAMES DESIE
992-2772 or

BOWLING

742-2251

310 East lncl St.

538 BryMI
Mlddlepon,

992-3432 or
992-2403
1·4-'11·1 mo.

FOREVER
BRONZE
TANNING

''"'""' ,,,.,,
$30

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES
"At R1010nsblt Prius"

•High Gtou on Tile

949-2826

PH. 949·1101
or ln. 9•9·1160
· Day or Nitht

MilE tnm. Owner

TlCIEIVIlll ID.

NO SUNDAY CALLS

•Carael Haa ·felt Dry

Time

Floor Flnlah

30 SESSIONS

4-l&amp;·M·

lt. I, 1111..1111, OH.

IACIIE, OH.

lewarcl L WrlttHI

STEWAIT'S
GUNS &amp; SUPPLIES

ROOFING
NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting ,
FREE ESTIMATES
949-2168
8·14-'11·1

•IUY •SIU •TIADE
OPEN
Tuucloy thru Soturdoy
10:00 om-5:00pm

742·2421

BOB JONES
EXCAVATING
DOZER and
BACKHOE
WORK
(614)
696-1006
,.,..,,
•Remod•llng end
Hom• Repelre
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

FULLY INSURED

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTIUmON
992·6641 or
691·6164

...........

._....

•Gauges
*Co•plete

st., &amp; C•••••

11/J MI. outside
lutltRCI on New
lima ld.
!-10·,1·111! .

FrM lstl•ate•

915•4473
667·6179
S.31-'IO Hn

, _ '11011 BEASOI'I·· POOL
OftN TO 1'RJ: PUBUC

CAKPIIIO • Beautiful 5uiTOundlll(!S

RliiEI • Doy. Week. Month . or Scuon
PICIIIC UID.TD. ud STA.O&amp; Por Rent
Reunion• • Get Togethcrs • Partlea

rtJIDIIG
XITCIIII:R NOll' OPEN
9ervt.q1 Dreakfut, Meals. and Snacks

AltCADII:

_

. .....
111181fllllf.
AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUNPS and
FURNACES FOI MOillE &amp;DOUILEWIDE HOMES

.. . . ... .. ... .... .......... . .......
MOIIll HOME

BENNETT'S ..COOUNG
AIIIIG I

lociltH On SaHercl Sell ... lei. •ff lt. 141

(6141446-94W.., 1·100-171·1967
4 · H·t1

1·14·'11-tlft

SPECIALIZING
IN CONCRETE
•Sidewalks

•Patios
•Driveways

•Slabs

, ......1.10

1-4-'11·1 mo.

WE DO

ROOFING

A. IYDYTIIING 111-FJUIII

.TROMM BUILDERS
...
ar.m
•20 VwN lxperlonce

•au.lhy Homea encl
Cuetom "•modeling

1

BISSEll &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUCnON

mo. pd.

992-7130

.~....~ .r _ . . . . . .. ~ .

21 I• Jlle. Secane!

614-992-6820

POMiiiOY, OHO

a11• CIIII-

'

Mllll•'"'

Owner &amp; Operator

"2-5335 .. 915-3561
Acnlfi frMI P'lllt Olfico

IIRU IITIMATU
I

742-21168

. ·· ·~UALITY

HDAYWSIUlnT

Raal Estate General

one Trip To Be Given Away At Each
Participating Kroger Store.

SEPn( TANII'UMPIHG
PORT ·A· JOHN RENfAl

· o~rby

992-7458 .

sweepstakes Package For 2 lndudes:
•Hotel Accommodations For 2 Nights .
•A Ride on A sternwheeler
•VIP. seating &amp; Backstage Passes To The
saturday Kroger concert.
.

•
•

, OHIO

IULLDOZER end
BACKHOE WORK,
HOME SITES,
LANDCLEARING.
WATER Mid SEWER
LINES

TlUCICING AYAIWLE

The 1991
Sternwheel
Regatta*

by 'ilck htDMtl(

USED APPUANCIS

CAIIPIT CUAIIIIS

EXCAVAnNG

. .'

SIGNS

TII·COUNTY
SAMITAIION

UPHOLSTERY

.......

HOWARD

Register To Win
A Trip To

If you're in n11d
of Mobile Home
Parts or
AClessories...
SEE US FIRST!
992-5800
II. 33 WEST OF

CttA.tlllt

CMIII, OliO

SAVE STEPS!
Shop the
~ want Ads
first!

&amp;Auction

W. H. MOBILE
HOME PARTS

742·2311
1/22/tflt

�.'
Pege

14-The Dally Sentinel

Anno ur1c e111e 'lb

Pomeroy-Middleport,

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

44

32 Mobile Homes

Announcementa

72 lftllblle hame 12161,

..

Ohio

Wednesday,_June 19, 1991

KIT IN' CARLYLE~ b)' tarry W.....t

KAMrE

IIC

aII--.,......_
~ -· LNm...,
.......

-·

- ' . .. . 8 . . . . . , . . . ........

• ....,. · - . l o r - ·
... Joy S.10 p.ftl. 114-'IQ.

-_.......,_,2_
-

Condition!

n.-. .,...

1112 Co e:m:adar IIDblt ..._, 2
IR. 011- TIID, • II.

'ld~llumolfFot-You

BORN LOSER

1910 Chov-1 Lumlno, Euro
SpOrt, ~do,~, .... ~iono,, Ell·
~lint \OOnCIIIIOn, Hu 3 , .,

fell. Woll."':

=:r:"
for
AIC,
polo, ~
. ....:::.~

10,000 P-r Troln wor•
ronly. $235llno. Coli 114-4461111, IM~46-'1104.

·~
DowMIIiro Fumlohod
~ WOI ,...., ......,

1110

~

~K,~!

'rsii:RIBI..'(

At
•

lAM I

0

00~4·~~~~"
Alii
5 (I-) -~~.
r
~ •••--•
·~
Cody.

- -*Jor,:tD4.f'll.llln.

AD06

,.., ....._,, 1170 Chlmpkin,

....,..~

4

Giveaway
Z Qny ond White Klltono, I
Woollo Old To Good R,.OI Homo

-· M

Clnlfi114-4Q.GI7.

II I

1~

3

ond llolho, Ill .....

-

I I I

I

.,

II
I

-·

SIJTRY

'IWC rnnPD.I1t•ID30.

-FIUih .Phonnocy.
iJU 01'1\L A - At:

I1I
2

1

ol&gt;luo
....ndInt.,olfocts,
adod. A....,. - ·

-D I II ·~-~
No Polo. II Coclor
81-. IIUIIIID.

-d•.

COPHON

EVENING

""""with...,..

...

Riorron;o lonors of lho
four JCromblod word1 below 10 form fou r ~mple

WED., JUNE 19 · •

SUptri~Crt

lundnl

The Dally Senllnei-Page-15 • •.

Television
Viewing

t ~AIJ , t~T

IALWA~e6T

I HA"re 1V FL'(!
I{ 'KIJOW WH'n

441-fllt

J.oOI'6
""' [
~(IC!f 10 ~
"Sfif
Nnl, - - .

111'1 .,..... a ... 21nllroolft.

Autos for Sale

1114 T· Bird, Ex_, lion, Bhorp, 12,'IUO. 080 114-

oond, 15,000. CllloR• 4:00 3041113114.
·.

a•IE•E KEMPO

71

....

Pomeroy--Middle~rt, ~hlo _

~neada~June19,1991

Apartment
fQI'Rtnt

tor Sale

3

.

HERE ~0 WANTS

1HI . . _ Mllll, 2_!1!, 2 lllho,
PI• Don, N,uw. Fronch
Molollo Homoio, .,._.

:r..

T UL I 0

NOT ''A" 006 ...
~TJ.IE" 006!

TO COME IN ..

s

16 . I

I I. I. .

r

..

~.I!

o

1..

I.....

.

T A0 C L y

-T,O-,.:.:,1. ;,':..1;.,..:.;-l...:..yl--j Q

vov

Compl01e lho 'chuckle quoted
by liillne In lho milling -d•
dovolop lrom IIIP No. 3 below.

A Pi iNT NUMBEiED
~ LETTEiS IN SQUARES

Notlh 3td It, MlddlapDrt, Ohio. 1

bedroom fumlohod opl, , . . _ . 54 Miscellaneous
-

and

112-2111.

~n

Merchandise '

required. 304-

North 4thluM= Jrl, Ohio. 2
ml
opl, clopoolt
and,....,_ NquiNd, 304-182bedroom

:::O~:::•='g:~; . 11 Help Wanted
Cll!lo on log,,._ Cll 304-fll- $300.00 A DoJI - · phone

4012.
.......,., E" 0 1 - on M, . U... lholllr. lily So Soon
AI· Tho 0
Dolly Trf&amp;uno
Olloe, 121
Av.nue, Gal·

·=

order• 11 home.&amp;. to~ detaUs Mnd
12.00 lo Pam UOU1hlll, SR 811,
11-vlllo, OH 45772

Will do bobpllllna In Choohlro
Addloon oroo. p,.fir lnlonlo and
ToddiWI. Hon rof-1.
(114)317·7011.
Will Do lob\'lflllr~gln My Homo.
MII'!,'!,.R-noltilo, AduH. 114-

ZMI.

34

Business
BUilding I

441-..-.

II30GIDAY
PROCESSING
PHONE, Ordera At Home. Would Like To BobyoH In My
.........
Pooplo Coli You To Ordw. For Homo, E-lonl Clulllllcollonol
114 .4410104.
ftiund: .._ Rl¥or • AI. Info 1-.73Wit7 Ext. 1522.
Ton F - Doa
t3SOIDAY PROCESSING
In Rlahl Eyo, Clrongo C.W: PHONE ORDER81 PEOPLE
Fmancial

2111-.-

llr,l14 4~a aft•lp.m.
.,_ &amp; ~

-

~'CUm

.... ~~·

CALL VOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.

1-.255-0242 EXTENSION p.
· - · _ , . 8ponlol, blond,
27:12A

-lor•r
.,._County.

LOST, - k •
Col· AVON • All arua, call Marilyn
1101 ~,..,, ~.- lily 24 Woovor 304-882-28:45.
~ -JO,•n,-beln
If you ..., Anowor phonH l-Ily lor
lnluoriill!on ...... canloct lho 11111onw1• Co. full I poil·llmo
or will lroln, hiring lmmoclololy
..,_ CoouriiY~AAO.
........... - · · IXI,.moly hlah wogoo, Soi.SUn
104:47M411.
11om-5pm, rl·F 1::10-a:pm, 114LGol: full llodc I lr"'"n, IN-201t
, _ Air-. ~- Red Col·
... _ , Loty. Lcfot Vlelnhy:
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

_....,_

I'*•••ArN.IM-4..-.
,_,

_...,...._t:omouflago-

..;='llolrill! ol 110. I
11W11-1311.
7

Hoid Rd.

Excelll,.

Pay,

Beneftta,

.... Olllllpollo Dlllt Tribune,

AU. Y... - - It Pold In
.....- . DIADIM: 1:00 p.m.
1M.,. .,....,,. od lo 10 Nn.

441-2142.

,...:-,.

10!81.

=.r-,.~=--=~
'

Over :150

EASY WORKI EXCELLENT Poyl

•-PMII• •muJna-

homo

worlloroldlolrlbuloro NOW! COli
- . """h !-Ugh for
tnllllgo.
..-.~.~~. · - a::tD to 5::tll.
0111 pold hm homo! 114-432·

_ , . _ , 'l'hlndoJ, Friday, ll'lll. Ext. GOT. '
lotunliJ. Inion! C.., .... loll, EASY WORK! EXCELLENT poyl
--.Fwnii-.Top,Pic-

310 compan'-• nMd
nkl... ,......_ 422 ttdgnood 0¥.homewarUN/
dl8trlbulara

•

HOWl Colt lor lmiZing rocordod

Qol PAID FROM
HOMErt14-432.fl'llloll.
TDS1.
El!porflncod Pwoon In Cor
II.,.. lnotollltlon And SIIIIIHo
--

Pt.P...sant
&amp; VIcinity

••rr·

t'udad. AI Shifts Available.

Co11114:441:PART.

.

MEDICAL HELP: AN or LPN lor

Pomeroy,
Middleport

&amp; VIcinity

chart audit for Pomlrov area
lloft..Frt, no ...uncia or
holkllyo,
PIO"-·

&amp;Auction

II

to Buy

-

occopllna oppllcotiono for
o poll-limo LPN and 1 port·tlllll
RH lor 1 100 bed okllod nu ...ng
flciiHy. Muot bo lllldbio I Iicon'
ood In 11111 of Ohio. Apply In
ol Sconlc Hilla Nu,..ng
Cont.,, 311 Buduidp Rd., Bid'
won, OH. No phono 01111 ploooo.
Ownorloponlar wnh troctor,
m~ Mve Wit line, we au~~~»~r

ltvtlll Wontod: I.Noo Slllfon
With No Money Down. 81 Your
OWn Boee, Have Your OWn

Hou,.l Sulllllloo Fumlohod AI
MY Caot liol Locollon In Gil·
llpollo. Conloot Clrol AI: IM·

Wonlod:

I

- - - ...,, lllllldlniJtllllbor,
lolt Wl7 - I ..Molfl2.

.....

.

El!~rlonood

T-lolon.

to ..... - · · · S.141-ll

_...,.,.,..,

Largo Locll V-ng For
Solo. Will SoU All Or Pill.
llopool

·-

......

LMMiono.
- · .r..orooo Incomo.
1-IOO-MO.aea.
'
. .
Loco! 1'•1 Phone Roulo. Mull
Rontol P,_.y, -

mobile ttam.~
good oondnlon,

I 4
on one Parcel.

toad -llono,

·
11100 "
"'-h
WillNIUm
lnv.lfMIII
In d

....,..2411

y•ra, New Haven
VENDING ROUTI: 0111 Rich
Qulak? No Way! But Wo Novo A
Good, Stoodv, Affonlllblo, luolnooo. Woni Lilt. 1-.284-

1313.

22

..llllfnl- •••1•
rlaltti·-·

3br -

Dl"rlcl,

lp.m.

3br, 2 Full Balhl, Grut Room,

Holt Pwnp, a Millo From Holzor'o, ,..,_ '""" North Golllo
H.S., 11!.110,._
41 ocroo, . - . , 4 bedroom
homo, froo goo, 115.000 llrm.

lo

MilOt

R111111r
Ell·

...,..,_ In Rlfrfgorotlon leo
Mochlnoo, Chll..,., And HVAC

-J...

~lpmont.

.......

Send

llilumo Or Worfl H"'ory To:
CLI fill. C1o Clollpollo Doily
1;21 Third Avonuo, Gof·
llpollo, "" 45131.

4br, I 1-1 St&lt;&gt;ry Fr Hoo. FuA
......,., 2 lolhotr:· a...

~:~"ro's.llr'e!..&amp;-~~-·

Blclwoll Ohio: 3 Bo*ooo" Houoo
1 AcN More Or LIM. 111,000.
304~51330.

Modular, 1M

·our

New

Dloplly. Fronch CHy Mobile
· Oilllpollo; OH 114-4461340.
FrM Blodl Foundollon Wilh
Elich Crwol Modullr 13,100

Votua. Llmftod limo. FNnch CHy
Mobile Homoo, Golllpolla, OH

IM-44f.1340.

r2 Milo F,_ Cfly
noo+ Bocuilly
114 411 8111 after

!,lmno,
oepo.a.

W.nlld: llofloblo 1o In-Alhonl,lv..._:
,_ ruol onlf14.44t.TI2t
- · In
orl1+8124173:

14

446-2342
992-2156
675-1333

PHIPPSn~

T-=·r 4117R

- I gl ......
· Clfl
II

111111.
- -'1 Doy C.. Clnlor.
11:11, IIIMdMII, ohl1111rc• .,.
I Lm. • 1:10 ~-:.:::;
WIIJJ IIW. Itt 111 alt. Nlilr ln-

......,_

.

.... T - Coro, .,......,.227.

Froo Dlll..ry.
·
PICKENS FURNITURE

o-ood ,._,. ..... tor
all mok-, - · Tho -hor
Dryer llhoppo. 114 4• atM.

Fann Equipment
4000 Font TriCior With 5ft. Bulh
~
,,.., ·~;~• .._..

..._

N--·

0

~M.F.

;':-io~.l'=:l

-.., M

'--~- • 711 WilKo,

'*

SUbdlololon.

. . . . . - . . . . ·-·-·1

....,... dilllllng f3. por ""'"
mM!).- ............ - Oflloo. Frl, Ill,
Sun. ~:00 PM olhor dlyo,
houri coli beloro 11:00 AM. 304-

·-

_uri!,

14 lunlollo Addn, IVIIIablo July
101. dopolll NIIUINd. Ch11- Ill'

2'/S.flll,

.

llonol . . . . :104.f71.4410 Ill.

RENT I OWN

-.i.t.,.to,:r

,.,
.......
- I 11bedroon~
-CIII IU
1tl
1. ·

Mobile Homes
for Rent
a bedroom. good deln condla
lion, 1200 por morth Hovan
304-112-2411onytl011.
Fuml- 1 Milt p..., CHy
LI10Mo. On urvo Prfvota Lol.
12101...
Dopoolt,
Atfwel CII 8
-2231,
114-

'":4"':.

44

Livestock

=,....,.,.,...,.,..;.;:..;;,;:,;:.;,:.,..,...,_.
1HI 1411. I llook Trlllor,

11.•: Uood a Troller
liONS: P«11blo litNod mlr· lf.iiiH· ~ 11ft, &amp;look Trlllor,
q - wllon.,. I2K , _ Ill·
-· -· · · NowiiJiod
- .. ~-·
· ·~~Houllholtl fumlolllng. 112 mi. ,l.,.,doiVIrJ.
147.50 bol. 1-.53S:34113.
Y~lod HMolord bull
Jonloho Ad. Pt. P I - , WV,
wolgfi
I
. 1310 1111. El•
coil :104.fl&amp;:1450.
llool plpo - 1 for oulwort, oil IN nloo.
114 441 4013.
llloo, coli fnlrn 1:00 10 1:00PM.
Collllgovllil, WV -:6101.
'
Transport at iOn

-

--

WATER WELLS DRILLED: 11111,
..oorvlco. ttWIII-7311.
Vl'roFwnluro
·~
Solo I Choir, 111.10 Wllk; · WhlriiiOCif Rolrlgorllar, Uke
-llnw, 11.47 _.., lwl¥01
A-r, SUI Wook.lunk lod ""'!r lluno - . $250. 114-24S.
Cornploto 11.41 Willi, 4 Or-r 1420.
Chool, 53.21 Wllk; -or Bod- Wltfrtpoof NlriGIIIIOJ, 110 oond,
luH_!, ! _po., tl1.17 Wool!, 1300. 304-1711ofl171 or 1711-4235.
lnol- !IOd!!lfii.Counlry Plno
Dlnotll Whh • 4 Chlll'll, 55
Building
. tiO.II Wllk.OPEN: Mondly
Thru lltunlllr. ll.m. to lp.m.,
Supplies
-~ 12 Noon TIU lp.m. 4
MIIH 011 R - 7 On R - 141, lllocll, brloll, DIDIO. MnIn Conlonory.
. _ .... Cloildo Win..... ~lo Grinde, ON Coli 114I WAIN
AUCTION i FUIINII'URE. 12
Ofh.- 11·• Oolllpollo. -~ ~ 56
Pets for Sale
::,:,_,;,:~~;,;;,;;;;,;;;,__

_,

71
1111

Autos for Sale
~

8S 311, 321 hp,

warfl, ti,IOO. 304-11551'13• .
1171 ¥W ..., ...., Good,
11311.Coll 1 _ _ , ollor I or
on t • NIL
1173 Font otlllon wogon,_!OI
Jonoolt, Alll D, 304-171-f11'111 - • ant 11178 Ch..,,
llallbu, llolh oood oond, 418-1811 er 30(.f7J.t211.
1rll Ford Torino, -lnlum

=:.:~~ion,

1111 ~Cut'-, 304.f714141.
1111 Cld'"ee AMI n d, aooc:1

----1-orT111do
,., - ... ol ..... ilolul. 114-

251-1441,lilom. I o.m. • t p.ot.
1111 c..,_ Cordobo . 310,
........... GOOd robul.
lrono, _ . lnt;t.;, ..... cor,
Worll boala. 11t 441 II..
11100. Dlyo IM-4«WWII. Allor
VI'IIA FURNITURI
ond......., 1~ I:IIDPM, ... :104.f'IS-fil5.
114 . . . . .
.lli!ldo.
1110 Ponlloo Sol8rf SIIUon
UYINO 110011: I Ctlllr, -W.... Cd -114 Ulo..w.
lo W.p, I Plw·npr, Auna
0211. ,.-.,
~~~~Air Condltl-. Cioon.
Cit....'!...,~~· ~, :lfii:Om.

tum..... ........ ....... •

0.=+1: ....

End - · Ai:oo iloi.DNNO
ROOM: Tlblo 4 ,.-

•

2124.

1141.00: Counlrw Plno
Dlnotto Wilh linoh And 3
Chllro. 1111.00: llllohlnll a
Ooor HH"!, 1141;_ ~ ..... 00
101; Ool&lt; ....., .....2 I
Cholra,

Apanment
for Rent

-=

IMoh ....... MlddiJparl, Ohio.

Ono roomlnd
.....
112-2111.

'

opl,
304!

1987 Dodge Rlilder 4x4, ere.

oond, 15,5110. 3~5-5117 ond
lunmea•ge.
1181 Aolro von, 3114-1'1!5-2331.

74

w• Mimi'• Flillllya

~

In Ute Air A danng atunl pilOt
finda an ••penmental rocket
pack w~ICII ellbwe tum to fly
bUI olher people aieo wanl
the device. (0:30)
Ill II a atar Stereo.
Major LNgue llllball

448-18211.

'

liD • lloclllllltr: EICilalili..-•nntt

(~I

1183 Hondo Shodow. 5,800
Mlloo. Like Now! Aoklng 11,1110. ,

Mtlll let Tilt FBI -rch88

tor 1 atate employee

'

acculed of murder. (R)

~

75 Boats &amp; Motors

,.

•

..

~~

-

""&lt;..
2'
_____(?~~

9
\HAIIe5

()) MOVII!l: 1'111 l.onlll' Guy

•{, " I

(R)

Kevin Is II'ICked Into running
lor ntudent olfloo. (R)
Stereo.

(!)

Prllante Stereo.

search team combtllhrough
lhe mounllilns lor a lost
child. !Rl Slereo.
illl. MOVII: 'Sotda of
Trl(lldf FOX Night II the
Movte,:,f001 Stereo. Q_

a ·

IIJM
,lllleW~I;I
Ill ContiCiy Conclrt HoUr II

.•

111,500. Flnonclng Avolloblo.
PrOCiorvlll, Ohio . - n a a. •

76

a
(J) M'allopolltan 'Opera

liD IDle Rncue: 11 I A

• 13,711; 110 9X • U,on; 510 SX ;.
• S3.?.!1. Uoad Jot Sklo Starting 1
At: -5. 1110 1111 lolto,
210 ESS 350 lllpm 111,500; '
11.6
V6 ()pori -112.500;
IHI SVR
~ IU Cuddv Cobin,

(2:001

Ill ()) • Tilt Wonclllr VNn

1181 Rink• Y.205, V-1 full cori- •·
vas lop, 111,100. oxc cond, with
lrollor, 304-875-1578 or 1'1!5-4235.
1il0 Boytlnor V.f, wnh cubby "';.
cabin, toodod, 117,000. ., llko •
ov• paymenta. 30•475-5815.
'
HAMILTON WATER SPORTS . ;•
SUMMER SPECIALS
.,'
1191 Klw-kl Jot ~" 8!10 X2

Comedlana Fred Travolena,
Henry Clio, Jeff Dunham and
oiMro are loatured. (1 :00)

Auto Pans &amp;
-·"
Accessories

Stereo:

Gil l'lllllaNawl
(I)) 8IIOgun (PI 3 of II (2:001
1:05 ()) MOVII: Mal'ltltoll Man (R)

• - Tronomloolono, Uood I '
rebuln, lhlrtlna • SID; AUio ~
Porto. 114·24S:.SS77, &amp;14-379- ,
2283. '

12:30)

'

,,.

79 · Campefl&amp;

e

1:30 (i) ()) Growing Plln1 The
Seivert! spend Hallowaen
night lelllng ghost stories. (PI

Motor Homes
1m Conolr, 22 h. tro\101 lrollor.
Uke now. 2 alo, fully oolf-con·
tolnod, ownlno, doubll olnko.
$~ OBO.I14-44fl.0204.
1183 ·Toyo~o , _ homo, HI~ '
contaJned, awing, , ...., hitch,

~ii\
'it Family Man Jacf&lt;
beta Stevt he can'l htndle .
being 1M hted otlhe

houHhOfd.
8:00 ())
0 Nlalll Court An

e

men II brought to

... ~ ongaa, loW m...-, $10,200

llcltrfy

114-18! ""
Pop-Up C.mpw Sholl 72 Modo!,
StarCI'II•, with C.nv.a t, 1150, ,
O.B.D. 114-25&amp;-1114.
"

presldonl. ~~la::-"· 1;1

court for robbing a bank

Ill

Services

HAILING
TAXICABS!

e

Home
Improvements
All lypoo ol mooonory, brick,
block and

.tone. Fret • •

llmoloo. 304-773-1550.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Uncondhlonol lllollmo guorontoo. LoCII rol-ncll fumllhod .
F,.. ootl-•. eon colloct t·
114-237:04111, dot or night.
Aogera IHiment Waterproc&gt;

ling.

CUrtla

Home

BARNEY

lmprov.,..nta:

Yooro El!por- On OkW l
Now• lfornoo. Room Addllono, ·..
Foundltlon Worfl, Roofl"'l,

AUNT L.OWEEZY
IS PAYIN' ME
A QUARTER TO
SWEEP OUT
TH' HOUSE!!

WI- i

Siding. Froo Ei- ''
tllftiiMI Refelet : 11 No Job To

llg Or SmoHIIM-Mi.-5.

.

E I R TREE SERVICE. l~,
Trimming, T- -vat.
0
Trimming. Froo Elllmotnl 5

1;1

DNLYDNI
MEASLY '
LITTLE OL'
QUARTER?

YOU GO SWIMMIN' AN'
WHEN DL' lnN•Y 61TS
HOME--I'LL MAKE HER
SWEETEN TH' POT!!

JET

blllhi'OOifta, ,

82

ASTRO-GRAPH

..

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
C.rtor'o Plumbing
end Hilling
Fourth ant Prno
Golllpollo, Dlllo

81~-4:46-3111

84

broken romance? The Attro-Graph
Malchmaker can help you understand
what 10 do 10 PNita lhe rtl8tlonllllp
worf&lt;. Mall $2 plul a long, Mil·~·
dressed, sla"'ped ~ to Malch·
maker, c/o lhll newtpaper, P.O. Bo1
BERNICE
91428, Clewfllnd, OH 44101-3428.
CANC:n(.lune21......,11)HyourbudBEDE OSOL
gelhM lllk• a lew lumpolalely, don't
point lhe ftnger of bl.,.oofely at your
mata. Each of you II eccoun...,._ for a
dallc:lt polltlon.
I.EO(olulrD-Aua.D)You'llwantpropor acf&lt;nowteCigm4lnt and prllll loday
lor lltlnga thai (10 well. H - . you
may lelllltlngllhlll go wrong IIIOUid be
blamed Olllhem,
VJ11Q0 ( - D IIPL :12) Your lfnancfal could be Ilea the WfH o' the
wlop tl)day. Wha1 you pin on the Cine
fly out lhl window
hand mlgltt
on the wlnp of MOihlr ventur8.
You fillY baC01I1e lnvohoed In oorne type ~C..... • 0111. •llt'a belt not to
ol unique enterprfM wfth a , _ . , In In- yalnlllln •odll 011 that n
the ya. lllaed. n COUld prove to be mu- too umutMIIflllng today. You're •
tually benaiiCial, provided both portia~ goocl 11104_. wlliil your tnlhullllm
111111. llullllllelttunllal n rn1g111 not be
do what Mch p!ontiUI .
Gal Ill •. . , 21....... . , 11'1 bid of lonO dur811an.
enougi!IO IIIII fOOIIIItjrllkl wllh your ICiOIIIO COIL ........, "you dlon't
own
today, 11ut H II ~ _ . 10 be lla liDplo of Oilier 1*11)18'1
- a o n t today, lt'a bel1 you dlon't
able to gernble on lhlrl(ll lhat COUld
negatiVely dwcl otlwL Be bollt careful pua on • g111pa1 lllfonnatlon thll
anC1 COMidereta. Trying to PIICII 1111 I . you'WI Ollllk1811 tllrough ... gOIIIp Ina.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

...,.11

~rlllnl ..... '"·
~ ....... 0.,.:114-441114 t41 4m or

:n.z..........:

---2

~
-----:o--~

,_noaa

I. .

I

il

h

IAGIT'tAIIIUI (Nov. ~ 211 Make
· II a point 10 draw a flne Ina today be;
bullneu and pleasuf8. Dell• you
anernptlo make whllo socializing aren't
likely to Jell .
CAJitiCOIIN (liN. 22-Jen. 11111 negotlallng . a commerdll mo«er today,
carefully evllualll your olfar, Don't dlIIlia your own poiiUon jull beCaUie
you're an•loullo make a dMI.
AQUAIIIUI (.1111. . . ,. . 111· Pittner·
lhlpo- both aclvanlagea and dlud·
vanlll(llll today. An enlarprllln; ally
COUld llelp uporade your InitiatiVe willie
elmuiiMIOUIIy IIMffng you down a
blind alley.

PilCH (M. • M1rall Ill) You could

ACROSS
1 Chopa
5 Supplements
12 Damon of
Arabian lore
13 Bombard·
mtnt by '
plane (2
wda.)
14 E•lromltl
15 Rtlellated for
16 Type at
ohtop
18 Boln debito
10 ly birth
20 Mokolace
221udge
26 Routine
28 Eared ttal
211 Sino - non
32 Condition•
34 Fllghttoll
bird
35 E•plo!l
36 Bay W!ndow
37 Actrn•
Sol horn
38 N.. t

1 Singer Roddy
2 - nouo
3 More agile
4 Actor Colln•rr
5 Molor111a'

()) Twllgh1 z..

l&amp;::r'V:. HIM Slereo. l;l
II Comad) Conclrt Hour II

Comedlllll Freel TravOiena,
Henry Clio, Jeff Dunhtm and
OllltrS art laafurecl. (1 :00)
(IJ Ill IGIDW and Mra. KlnQ

J

'

'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

e 4J TonlghiiiiiiW
Stno.

C"Mtbflly Clf&gt;t* &lt;:ryptogrlft'll •r• Ct. .Md from quottiiOnl by lflt!'IOU' peopfll, put ~ pr-.m.
Ea.ch 11H1tln tM ~pMr • tl!ndt iCII' anonw, r~ ·· au.·A -.qwtt. L.

()) llllgnum. p.l.

'

I

DtllnM

I

K

MJ:•al

='=L.~;~
LMI !!IIIII

org.
6 Lump of oarlh
on lhe
lalrway
7 Sktlch•d
8 - 8orgnlne
9 Horoo (ol.)
10 Do or -

. · 11 Find aum ol . •
12 Mouth part · '
17 Flth-aollng. ..
mammal
. .,
21 Anttnna
'
23 Writer "v
Jonowllz
, ,
24 SlttiiOurco
_"'''''....,..,.,.'IT""T'Tr-nii'"M,., 25 BoHbllllor
Nol•n.,....+-1-+-1-+-1-1 27 Pllln1 Indian "
28 Eurap11n
·
copllll
29 Campuo orta:
3D Cu11omor
•
31 Ohlrcrall ,
33 TIXIIIckor •·
30 Mldlclnol •
roo I
41 A llala
copltol
43 Kalt 1nd - ·
45 WilloW
- ..
48 Aolldonl oi ' :·
HaYinl
48 Ltln
10 lullon
.. ·•
fotlonor
•
51 -c..... "
52 Kind of
lattuca
53 Oroma
dlvtllon
54- for two
55 Vaulll
• •

&lt;D .........,.,

===-·

•

DOWN

a•

............s-.
U
........ .,.,....

.,

~

Pass
All pass

AniWet to Pr•YIIDUI PUIIIe

40 Over
42 Let 1111
43 Fermonled
drink
.
44 Olympic org.
47 Building
ad dillon
49 - monkey
52 Sound of
dlaapproval
56 Small
antelope
57 Pacific
lalanda
58 Mounlaln
ntmph
59 In neallarer•
60 Compo•••
J•rome -

m

(!)~·a

z•

Eas&amp;

--------------~------------~ .
The World Almanac~Crossword Puzzle :·,:
•• •
····-

11:30 IJ)

be qullll lucky today In lllt118tlono lhat
have material a-~-. bul you may
not lara 8qudy u well where peroonll
refatlonlhlpa .,. concamed. Try to bu
liar In boll! .,.._
, _ s C....,. 21-Api(IW) Where your
II COIJC811111d, dOn't ntlka My
type 01....-.1 today w111e1t you fillY
Iller have to ,.,.... A bnlkan PI 0111111
. coulcltlka alol of IUIII.f 011 your I!Mga.
·TAl .US (Aplll • " 1 II) Ewrt
lhOugll you'.. IPI to be .... IIIIa and
lfllerprlalll(lloday, you lfllllhln't aftln..
nel II In way1 111111 produoa produatlft
f811Uita . Don'l Ill mllft8PI rwpl•-.
method.

Norlb

West

Pass
Pass

,.

GllllbeiTOIIWtl
10:31 (J) Cllah of Ute Cltlmplonl
From Kno•vHio, Tenn.

11:00 Ill • l1l 111 It llll
.
ONewl

..

.'

3 NT
2+
•·
Sometimes at top bridge . tourna·
ments there is an auditorium in which
Opening lead: t 6
spectators may follow the play at one
featured, table. The hands are dis- il....- - - - - - - - -- -.;J
· ~
played on a screen, the bidding and .
.
play are relayed through from the
playing room, and expert commentators describe the action, often making Declarer wins and cashes the hear• '
predictions.
. •,
If you have ever been to one of these jack, seeing the 10 drop . Only now
·
k
th
does he turn his attention to clubs,
at occa- cashing the · ace and finessing dum-:
presen t allons, you now
sionally the players diagnose a deal my's jack. East wins with the queen•·
better when looking at only 26 cards
·
than the commentators do looking at and switches to a low spade.
Here is the second key play: South
. all 52. Sometimes it is hard to see the
h
should
put up the spade king. He ·
proverbiaI forest f or t e equa 11 Y pro- knows West holds two winning dia·
verbialtrees .
How well can you analyze a full monds and must therefore be kept offdeal? Examine today 's hand and de- lead if possible. That makes the spade
cide the fate of declarer's contract of king the righl play. True, now the con·
'
tract goes down three (was that your
three no-trump, west 1ead tng
a 1ow answer?) instead of only two. But at ·
diamond .
The first key play comes at trick the table West really had the spa~e.:,
one: South should duck East's diamond quef.'n and East the spade · ace , Whenking. He wins the second diamond and declarer put up the spade king, it won "
" •
· and he made an overtrick.
takes the heart finesse. East wins with
© '"'· NEWSPA,.R ENTro,.111 AI&amp;N. , : :
the kin~ and returns his last diamond.

Raberllon
10:30. Crook and Cltlll

Ron'o TV Sorvlco, -lolldna
In Z.nllh 11ao owvlclng ....-.
..... ....
olhw ......... --llnooNIIIIro.wv
304-1714ttfl Ohio 114-446-2454.
Sopllc Tonk Pulltlllna SIOL.OIIIIIo
Co. RON EVANS IHTERP1118ES
Joe klan, OH 1~37-1521.

-

Sootb
I NT

By Phillip Alder

8es11rTm
Gil Woold Nawl
(I)) 700 Clull With Pat

mau.-..,
room addltkNtl ,
roollrtt, ~lng, lnollllltlono 1il '
yr1 oljlorlonco, Mllmot11, 3o4: •
115-2:140. .

-~

"

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Communities deal with
chlfd-abuH ocandell and lito
damage lhey cause. Stereo.

1137-1121.

-Yoc

t K 10 t
.Q9 3

SOUTH
t K J 10 7
.QJ 5
t A Q8
.A 8 6

GIJ)@ . . . Houra

Aorollon Moloro, -Ired. l-Ift - I n Mock, RON
EVANS, JACK-, OH. 1-.
kllchln.,

a

10:00 ()) • 4J Oulnlunl L.Np
Sam leapa into thl Nla ot a
magician and single Iaiiier.
(RI Stereo. 1;1
()) NIWI
Ill ()) • lqual Ju111C1
EugeM Rogan announces
hll rallgnatlon 10 run for
dlalrtct attorney. Sloreo. 1;1

38l'7115T.

....

How-.

we

M.D. Oelth blcOmll
personal fOr Doogle altar
someone cloHis stricken.
{R) Stereo.
91 i1J Jak. .nd the
Fabttln Jake attampta 10
rescue the kldniiXIId child of
an attomay. (R) Siereo. 1;1
i1J MOVII: Thti Lookalllta
·(2:00) Slereo. Q
8 Nalwlle NOw Stereo.
IBLMJKIIIQU..I
8:30 ()). 4J Dear John John IS
a member of 1 band
echecluled 10 play at
Ce~le Hall. (R) Stereo. !;I
Ill (I) • Man In .... l'amiiY
(Praml8re) A man' I promise
to hlo dying lalher 11
hindered by friends. Stereo.

81

Dlwo

- · luncllt
ThN 8iturdo~·~""
lp.m.,
12
Til ..... pupelorNio,l100oo,
MUlling 11 II, 304-115ID.m., 4 Mllol 01 7 On 114 112 1514.
1347.
Routo MllnContonory.

•

"

i

for Sale .

stereo. a

'

•Ka 6 2

.,0 5
Analyzing
the full deal

Gil Croutlra
7:35(JIIob Nawllllrt
1:00 ()) • 4J Unaolvecl

2113.

IS14-37t-2127 ahar 7p.m.

ALDER

-

EAST
tQ 9 ~

WEST

t A864
•lot
.J976 3

a

•'

1181 H - 100
M:~-:r:• EICIIIInt Condition.
4

•

PHILLIP

!Ill Wheal o f , _

11'111 Yomoho 200 • - blko,
IXC running cond, $350. 614-

1-11-11

• A973
• 52
tKJ 74 2

....

Motorcycles

7p.m.

NORTH
• 52

e lnlerlllnmlnl
TOIIIgld Stereo. 1;1

Otorgee Creek Ad. P.te. aup.
pliol, piollup, ond dlllv.,. 11444H214.

11113 ~ .. Condition,
High Mfln, 11;,oii. 114-111-1171.

-..'

Ill 0

I

· - -·BodChlfro,
SIZt.OO.IEDROOJI:
luHo (I fl'!:), 1141:00; 4
Dnlwor
- · 144.•: lunll
lod, 122tr _Co11tploto Fill 11on
lol 1105.00 SOl: 7 po. Co*r
iidroom lulu, sa•.oo.CIPIN:

"

BRIDGE

4:30 ~M.

by Joseph Farris

Buslneas
Training

llllnlln
.....
.....
_0,"-'"..,_
........ ,_

or 114-

61

=:

Sondvvtllo -

movlle. Calllt4 UIIUI. EOH.

0111-,1-·1121.

58

::.-::=~i:'::i
;::_.~_:oo-s:oo -•r•.
R--.!HioMd _hi,.,- D.,.... &amp;3

41R-for-orooll.

Excollonl Condnlon. 1104-t32·
1161,104-132·71111.
SchuR 14x111 Wilh 1120 Ell· IEAUTII'UL APARTMENTS AT
pondo,_2br1 2 lllho, CA. Elcol- IUDOn PIIICU AT JACKBON
lont ......,nlon. FiwWI CHJ UTATII. 1131 Jockoon Pike
INm 11m-. Weill lo o11oo I
Mobile Hornet. 114 111 1340.
Would yau IIIIo lo 1
.. ,821 .. a.room Mull, belutltul
IOCI!Ion 5I ooroo, AI. IS North

114-44~235

..-- .......

441:8111.

Roducocl To Soli: 2 llory 3br
Comer l.ol In Choohl,., Ohio.

• -Goods

Complolo ...,_ fumlohln;o.
Hou,.: IIDn 1 .., N . 114-4410322, 3 ""'"" 0111 BuiiYiilo lid.

42

c....

Household

51

30d. Qoocl

441-4112.
For Solo: Com- lot 01 lunk
llod8, Llcldor, M - And lo•
llllrlnaiJ Condlllon; II
lric/l
Good
lion·, lllrlo
Pony Blko,
and -Brldlo,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Rentn',

3«4brFinl- a.-.~
1-1 ....... Lol, ClroiJn Clly ..
To T"'"", I

•II,

c - - - eou 1f14.441.73tl.

LMMod 13 Whlo
· I llofllgorator
Fumlohod,
tm/mo,
f100
Dopoofl. 814 448 31111.

Hoopnol. MI,OOO. 114-441-44a.

245-111147.

Pot_,

2br -

31 Homes for Sale

mon..,, tloc

1114-44&amp;-11777;

41 Houses for Rent .

Red I Est •tc·

Commodore M

Power: ,....

I.Oo\NS IY IWL
Up 10 SS,OOO Footl SOIIoflctlon
GlurantMCI. lmMIIf'lle SeMel.

1-100 411 1U7 ........

Hammond Splnnot Churoh Or·
gon. COndition, 1100. 814311'1214.
.

l:i'f'•Ownor w .. - ·
0.15 AIHI Cho- ll'lclor
C.rpot M.OO Yonl i Up. V1nvt
wflh -,._.. lnd 13•• I M.H Yonl. Pari:h Tuot,
_., miMI 1111 0000.. "L
ooo runo
114U.H I N.H Vonl. Mollohan o - Concltlont eon :101-4111- 112-'lllll
bola- a.7 pm
1117.
~~-Upper R~ flood, 814-lon 5100 R - lo.!!!, For Soio « Tr... E"Uipn!Or!l
Courtlt
Appllo- Inc:. - "" 1210:
- loorocvAklna
for Cub ........ 2 ...... """ •
UMd tppllan 011, T.~. HtL ODin illolcircyolo,
loft; loy olf plow; ~ - ;
a o.m. Ia I p.m. Mon.-811.•,... Llwn 1171
I.
ti
grllfor· Drow2
~~~ 0 blr, 1Di50'
houM trailer tnme,
. :.:.'~ m 3111. A... IJol. HorM
Rlna
ond
.looll
111111.
Orootor
UIIII23S.
304-IJII.2M7.
111. M w.-1 n ... 1o1. tta.ooo: •
111,0110; 1-rlotod). GOOD USED APPLIANCES lloclo fo lnoluclod:_Prlco: 1200. .llm'l F-~pmon11 _SR. 35,
814-31'1·7230 ollor op.tll.
Go
,
- · T-.('14111411141.
· illlilll!ll
!fryoro, re_frfoo!rotoro,
..__
Appl-..
-1.-lllrm
Rh.-r- poop'"' In
l-oro
1 lmpfomonto.
Buy,
u- Rl¥or Ril. loot.- ltono Lumbor: Wolnul i Cherry. -

--77WI51.

Money to Loan

~

hli'lllng,
~a.

2048

,or
awnlna,
oondltlon.

,....._ AlbonJ, PH Molp Co,

•

•
Cullom, Low

Flboralool C1m1&gt;or Top• E~
.... COndition, aeo er - Of.
tor. Ill. Polio Doar, 1150. 114-

r.lerchandiSe

11011.

1111 .loop Chlrokoo, 4 whool
drfvoL 4 crl. 304-175-3715 ollor

,r:':l 11145.
1200
Eocll, Nogolloblo..
Eloctrlo Guloro:

I

11178 Chovy Von GC, 114-445·

11m Y111111ho 400, How TlrooL I
S.ttary, $350. 114·379-2927 aner .::

·-8.

FruHs &amp;
drlvo, Oklmllo 2o COlor prlntor
vegetables .
w/OEOS ,.mo ooftworo. $275.
Dunrovln FNH Form: Juot olf
114-311 ·~1.
SR
881 of Albany 114418Comploto Knchon: 20ft. 01 8211.
TIMo-lun IAII-7PM.
X Sldo T -............... lflpiH
IIMita wHh cooldng. KHchon C.blnoll, Alootrollor · All -.upo. Rofrlgorolor, DW, Ooo Range ·-produoll.
Coli oft• .aoo p...., 104·773- Wilh ~ Llvol Mlcr-vo,
Truh ~ctor, All Horvoot
11181,MooonWV.
a-tM-4411-41111.
f :nrn SuppltPS
46 Space for Rent
c:ona.•• fl!ullc: lljlllo .......
&amp; [iVCSfOCk
RGI1 Enno lnlo....-, Jock·
eon, OH 1_..37..521. -

-onCon
..... 104-111lnformo.
lion mollod
_.,.,
uaa,
John D. - · no
olng-lroiloro,ploooo.

Form S3001mo. Ky111r
CJooll
w ...
ludao Goo.
•• ..
-T 814-4*3'110, 814-317:7124'.

IJIJe .. ..., - . . .
J alwa I .,.,._ Wllktpoof. 441-IOZI.
K - , Ill. Holp I ~. Moytog.

.,........

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

ollllon ottond, Pomeroy.
Wrflo of oppllcoUon lo
OIDDIIIy Sontlnol 801 rnP,

trailer, 1..ecJ0.171.187' uk · lor
Bill.

wanted

-·~

10ar53.

a, POI"'emouth, e»t 41112.

Public Sale

,.....7111 d•y,

~~~- . . . - - - fo J.... IM-t41-1112.
lomyL 421 Ch-Ilo II., lu..

Pomeror, OH 41711.

8

384-4277.

In PIIIHn At Bob"1 Eleatronlaa,

1::110,
~--12-·

,..,.. nalabta, Rakt or 8hkw.

lnollillllon. Phone: 114-

Sorvfco And lnotdlllon. Apply

QoiHpollo.
Nolp Wonlod, No aporlThuro ond l'rl, n
lome up.rt. . .
........ ol -fling 10 hlltlful. Apply onytlllll 11tor
_. • oent ule. Lawnma=:, 12:00 -~,.. Dull• c - .
1M locond ...... Ollllpollo.
lj#Wi... ...,.. bench (
a ... otol OMftPUI•, - · pol· - - A n d - y P o - .

...,.,-.--.-

p1oto

SoiiOullliiJ.I~.

EARN MONEY Roodlng Bookoi
......, ..,., • 2:00 p.m. 130,000/yr. Income Potontlll .
.........., odltlon • 2:00 Dotolil, (1) 80S.II82-8000 EXI. Y·

-

old lntomollonol' _,.
pony OIJIOndlna _,ly, ..-.ng
lor Mollvatlllf,' Eno;gollo ln-

21 -

COmmlrdal, I•
dllllrfll, F- ElllmaiMI Como

.... 11 ~ old, hplnddla
ond -like IO 11m your -n
oponcllng money, ... to .....
your nome pul on ow corrfor

&amp; VIcinity

=·ntment..

tho olforlnil.

RMidl,.lll,

, Tho Dolly
Tribune lo bulldlna o llol ol
IOOionllol . . , _, If you oro 11

Gallipolis

NOI' IO
"""""'
t.niiiihiho
lillll
unJII,....
hon lnVootl'golod

--·nd•
HAPPY JACK FLEA GARD: All
motol polonllt · - -'""'
..... In tho
- "'"- TICIIEI
or "
EXT£RMfNATOIII.

4 WD's

· ovomlaht.
MENTALLY
SAFll R aENVIRON0 FEED
I
SUPPLY
114:HZ.ziM.
2 Clloloo kilo In Ohio VoAOJ
........, Gltdln, vaub In- S l u d - - . , Malo
· CoR morning Ill ,_. OOcUr WllhPo...,., 114-4484005.
1000 ITU air oonMusical
dHionor, a 112 I 10" toblo - . fi1
12" bend eaw, 114-112-1411 or
Instruments

Now ICCopllng opplleollono lor
M10on Aporllnonlo. E'!"'l-.
lng Clflp., lfr cond., llundry
room, liM lnoh plek~p, • to 11«11 A JJChooll. 304·7735521.
.
Upllolro Unlwnllhod Aport- 112-7113.
mM!. UIIIHioo Pold. No Poto.
!IOOFouriiAn....
- l i l A - : 4 Inch Go~
vonflod Plpo, 114-4-..283.
Furnished
Com-lot
,_
LAiwnnwww,
I
Dh.
•lf-DnMIII
Rooms
loci, .......... tt11.oo l't4-Mt-

Business
3 4 All nlt:oly
Opportunity
-......
llr -ionlntl,
,.,.., .... ~-billa.. pota.
IIIOilCEI
lloomo for ronl·- ar - h.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Make your cholco now. No llortlna
II . -. Qollll Holll.
- tho phone, you
rwc:ommondo lhot ,.... do buol- q
nooo with pooplo you k,_ ond - - - . P h o n e ,.,n .,. '411180.

Tronsporlotlon, 407·215-1800, · ~lvkWIIo. Ftlll ond port-111111 Loll I IYiillblo for
,_ ...,_ -ruollon
on
Exl. m. to.m.·10p.m. ;ron IVIIIIbll. PhMIIM 1123111.
fllrburn
Rood.
Povod
rood,
Rofundocl.
Arlllufo Choln Llnll ,_._ county
Wit.,
NIIGftlblt
Corrloro _

Yard Sale

OFfiCE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd An., Olllllpolio. ~ lo
Court Houoo. 1 room, a roomo.

21

Floh Tonk, 2413 .loollaon Avo.
Point P-nl, 304-fll-2063,
ful 11no Tn&gt;plell ~'::lublrds,

"

ICUM:LITS ANSWIIll
' · r&amp;
· Befall - Newly - Knife - Jovial - WELL OFF
,J A wealthy friend was co-signer for my loan.She filled
out the necessary paper work. Where it asked the per.
son's position she wrote, "WELL OFF."

'
Vans &amp;

o

1 called a friend who had
moved to the southeast. She
sotinded blue. "It's nothing,"
she sighed, "I'm just having a
depression ."

L-L.-L-L....L.-.L-__,

73

I

K

J

PZDAJ

~.

1;1

11:31(1) a-a 1;1

12:0011=.-=.:~eo.

L Z

za ·L

N

e

E 0

FUEL
oa zF
lAX&amp;
J z
NDL
MHILIGJ
EPLZH .

I A 8 P
•

TDKaaexx .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "Jealousy, lhal dragon whiCh lllya 1ovt under the
protonoe of koeplng It all\18... - HavelOCk Ellis.

=-~--

(I

-~ ,

19

1H 1 by "'"' Inc.

•

'I

''
I'
'.
I

•

I

I

I

I

�1

~~;-~&amp;--:~Th~·~~Se~nu~ne~,==iiiiiiiiii;;!;iiiiiiii;;---:'N';"'o-ev-,~.d~e~n~c!!:e:!o~if~m!!!e~c~h~~~~~~i~ca-l';"'fl-;:;aw~-.~fi=-o-u-nd-;-:in-a-m-u_s_e_m_e...!n!!t~p!!a~r!!;k~J;-~i~d~e.!!!! •
Beat of the Bend....
. h.
by
Bob H0 eftlC
.
Everything old is new again.
About 30 friends and relatives
revived the old fashioned belling
for newlyweds, Harry Stobart and
Mary Sigman, Sunday night at the
couple's home in Racine. Not
eltllcdy being teen-agers, Harry and
Mary knew just how to react - it
was soft drinks and candy treats for
an of the panicipants. Harry and
Mary were married on Saturday

s

KINGS MILLS . Ohio (AP) tale examiners say they haven' t
found any moc:b~ flaws on lbe
Fliabt Commander ride from which
a Toledo woman fell to her death
last week.
Ohio Department or Agricuiiiii'C
memories thai I bold dear. You'll spokeswoman Carla Moore said
alwavs be my Father of the Year, Tuesday tbll investigatcn Sli11 are
Dad.'
.
...nn
-,-..,.. to delenninc the cause of the
June 9 acciclmt II the Kings Island
Nicely put, Nancy. And Dwight amusement (JIIIk. ·
Wallace, you keep smiling.
''If there was something that

Community Minded·
Supermarket

Meigs County young people 15 and under - are inviled to take
part in the annual fishing derby of
the Meigs County Fish and Game
Association this Saturday.
The annual event will be Sllged
at the association's clubhouse on
the Texas Road. Signs will be
posted and young people are to
provide their own fishing poles and
bait. Do nole, however, that minnows are not allowed for bait in the
derby. The derby will be from
8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. and lunch will
be served to an of the participating
young people. Best of all, there
will be prizes awarded winners in
designaled categories of the derby.

DL

I

•

Reds edge
Mets 7~6;
return home

Pick 3:641
Pick 4: 5742
Cards: 4-H, 7-C

3-D; 5-S
Super Lotto:

Page 41

16-19-23-27-33-42
Kicker:658013

'

•

31

OPEN
MON.-SAT.
7 AM-11 PM
OHIO VAlLEY FOODUND OPEN 24 HOUIS

Vol. 42, No. 32

2 Socllonl, 12 Pogeo 25 cen11

Coprrtghled1881

A Uuldmedll Inc. Nowopaper

Conlinissioners
hear county
budget con~erns

Prices plunged becauae of lhe

warm wlnler and a supply glut.
Pric9 P"' 1, 000 cubic fsat
$1 .50 ~c:::::;:n-

SUNDAY 11 AM·7 PM

By BRIAN J. REEDS
Sentinel News Staff

1.40

. euvery

Ast-llldtJd
: "" ftlll N.Y.
• Mercan~/s

•: Exchsnge
May

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE
BEEF CHUCK

June

Sou..,: Bloomberg Flnlndol Mlrketa

AP

·columbia
:facing
·financial
•
t
'
t
d
•
·
fi•
een
CQP('I
en
ern
z
·
n
zr('lt
Th
l
.: problems
,
'
l
M
•
S
b
D
,J..
or
OX eTtJ"
annua . ezgs oan
Y
J

BONELESS

Chuck .Roas.t

ADDING FINISHING TOUCHES • Riek
Ramsburg, lefl, and Frank Smith, take Clll'e or
some finish work on their sons' .raeers ror this

'

p
I

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) One the nation's biggest suppli: ers of natural fas says it could lose
· up to $1 bil ion over the next
decade and might be forced into
banlauptcy court as a resu!L
Columbia Gas Syslem Inc. said
Weclne8day illl probletns stem.from
'contracts it claimed require the
company to pay excessively high
prices for gas.
Company offici&amp;ls said unless
they are able to buy out the contracts and convince banks to
restructure their credit, Columbia
Gas will face a major financial

LB.

I

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
After weeks of planning and
work, the starting ramps are ready,
the finishl.lt~ 'toue!Jes are being
made on die cars, and details of
conductinl the F'trst Annual Meigs
County SOilpbox Derby are almost
completed:
· The event will take place this
we·ekcmd~n General Hartinger

•

I .,

weekeud's First Annual Meigs Couuty Soapbox
Derby to be beld on Gen;Hartlnger Parkway in
Middleport.

I

~

Parlcway in Middleport.
Derby Director Roger Williams
advises that the Parkway will be
blocked off from Broadway to
·Beeeh·Street with Broadway closed
from Ash to Hartinger where
enttants in the IBCe will assemble in
preparation for going down the
ramps. Some bleacher sealiilg will
be available although those auending are advised to take lawn chairs.

.

I ., .

Several food concessions will be
operating in lhe park area.
Thirteen cars have been entered
in the race. The drivers and their
sponsors arc Amber Thomas by
Thomas Do-It Center, Adam
Triplett by lhe Meigs County Bilecrs, Stacy Gilmore and Justin
Roush by Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Le 111 ion . Josh
Continued on page 3

catastrophe.

•

•

'

:
•

IPRIMDAiE .

Fruit
Drinks

KEEBLER
TOWN HOUSE
CRACKERS
-·--

IM•I •HIM •HER

~· HUGGIES

').:...:.•.,
r. •

~

'·· - DIAPERS

$
BOX

$

BOX

9

99

PAPER
TOWELS

ROU

MT•.DEW, PEPSI-FREE
DIET OR REGULAR

Pepsi-Cola
12 PA(I(

$

.12 OZ. CANS

The company, which supplies
gas to more than 8 million homes
and businesses in 15 staleS including Ohio, already has suspended its
dividend on cOmmon stock to cooserve cash.
The news sent the company's
stock phmging $13.75, or nearly 40
percent, to $20.75, afler a trading
halt thatlasled until early~
Wednesday. It was the most active
New York Stock Exchange 'iSsue
with 4.4 million shares changing
hands.
· The financial problems lie wilh
Columbia's principal pipeline subsidiary, Columbia Transmission
Corp. The subsidiary's contracts
wilh natural gas suppliers require it
to pay prices far exceeding the current spot market.
Gas prices have plunged recent·
ly because of the warm winter and
a IJlut or supplies. the company
Slid.
Tbe company said narura1 gas is
selling on the spot delivery marlcet
for S1.30 per 1,000 cubic feet,
while Columbia Transmission is
paying as much as $6.70.
Columbia Gas System, the par·
ent company, has given Columbia
Transmission until Oct. 1 to buy
out the contracts for about $600
million. Columbia Syslem offteials
were in New Yodc on Wednesday,
attempting to restore credit lines
Continued on page 3

99

program's equipmenl budget.
"It is conceivable," Dana's let·
ter stated, " that if this funding
·Members or the Meigs County shortfall occurs, the multi-county
Parks District presenled their goals program will not continue and you
· and budget expectations for 1992 at (the commissioners) will be forced
. Wednesday's regular meeting of to revert to your previous indigent
the Meigs County Commissioners.
defense system."
, Parks District Board Members
According to Jones, such a
Lloyd Blackwood, Jim Pape and reversion to old systems would nor
Charlie B&lt;UTCtt, along with District · affect services on the local level, as
Director Mary Powell reponed !hat the commissioners had directl y
during 1991, the district had paid Public Defender Charles
acquired two pieces of real estate- . Knight in 1990 before the multi·
the Sugar Run School property and county office was set up.
Jl8l:l of the former Foster propeny
. Engineer Reports
10 Minersville - and that thts acqui·
· Meigs County Engineer Philip
sition was expecled to jlelform well M. Robens and County Garage
as collateral for fmancmg of furure Superintendent Ted Warner were
ParkS District projects.
on hand to discuss the pending pur"We 're moving forward on our chase of a new tractor for the high·
projects," Barrett said, referring way depanment.
SJ?.CCifically to the completion of
The purchase is necessary
hilcing trails at Camp Kiashuta and because of difficullies with the
the planned construction of 20 existing Massey Ferguson tractor,
miles of trails elsewhere in the which has logged 5,900 hours in
county.
the field.
,
Barrett also told the commisA Case International and a·
sioners that the parks dist(ict Massey Ferguson tiactoi arc being
planned to increase their promotion considered for purchase by the
of Meigs County in other areas. A department. No recommendation
videotaped presentation has now was maae at the meeting and no
been compleled arid the exhibition action was taken on the purchase,
of this tape will begin at trade
Roberts ~ranted permission to
shows in 1993.
Pomeroy res1denl George Wright to
In a rclaled area, the commis· install a gas line under Leading
· sioners approved a transfer from Creek Road.
·
the district's.salary accounlto-lhe ·
According 10 Roberts, lhc sumgeneral expense account to cover mer job program at the depanmem
repairs on the Sugar Run School. is now employing three students
The funds were made available due for lhe summer, but he said that the
to the iUness and .pending resigna· futw:e of the program this year may
tion of the depanment's secretary.
be affected by the tiactor purchase.
PD Budget threatened
In other business, lhe commisln other business yesterday, sioners:
.
\...Ommissioner Richard Jones intro·
• appointed Susie Karr lO serve
duced a letrcr received earlier in the on the Meigs Board of Mental~
week from Ohio Public Defender Retardation and Developmental
Randall Dana. In the letter, Dana Disabilities to replace Beti.C Hoff.·
indicaleS that the Fiscal Year 1992· man, who has been appointed as
1993 budget for the Ohio Public interim superintendent of the pro-.
Defender program will be under- gram;
funded in lhe area of the multi• authorized Meigs Emergency:
county program by $34,271 in Medical Services to refurbish Mid1992and$79,383 in 1993.
dlepon'ssquad II;
·
Such cuts in the multi-county
• announced that a rally will be'
program .(which serves several held on Sunday al I p.m. in GalSoutheastern Ohio counties, includ- lipolis Cily Parle regarding thcing Meigs County, with local pub- Clean Air Act;
lie defender services) could result
Present were: Commissioners:
in the ultimale elimination of up to Manning K. Roush; Richard E.:
four contract attorneys, two assis· Jones, David Koblentz and Com:
tant public defenders and/or the mission Secretary Gloria· Kloos.

OSHA inspections will
begin next week at RAC

NICE ~ BRIGHT • Ten-year-eld David . blue ftnllb or bls racer in preparation ror • nn.
ish coat before this weekend's race. David's
Ramsburg under the Wltebrul eye of bls v•nd·
sponsor Is Wett Virginia VFW Post 9926.
rathef, Cliarlet Neulzllna, wllo Is act1¥e wltb tbe
local SoapbOK Derby committee, sands tbe dark

r---Local briefs
3 hurt in wreck

HI-DRI

Partly cloudy tonight.
Friday, high in mid-80s.

•

·. Weekly '
·. price for
· · July
1.30 . d

Nancy Wallace Woolard had an
impressive entry in a Father of the
Year tribute contest held by a
Huntington newspaper. Nancy
didn't win first place but she did
get honorable mention and her
entry published. Her father,
Dwi~ht, knows she's a winner.
Here s her entry:
"Dwight Wallace is better
known as 'Wally' to those of us
who know and love him.
My dad was 46 when I was
born. He was much older than the
other fathers but we still had a
close and loving relationship.
"My dad is the kindest, most
unselfish and truly humble man
I've ever known. He always
stressed honesty, integrity and
respect for others and was always
willing to listen and give advice, or
flelp someone less fonunate than
himself.
"He never stopped believing in
me when lie didn't agree with or
understand the choices I made. He
was never too busy or too tired to
rub my aching legs after a track
meet or massage my pounding
head when I had a migraine.
"My dad has suffered from dia·
beteS since 1948 and has lost both
legs and the sight of one eye
because or this illness. NevcrtheICSI!, be has overcome tbcse obstacles and even though he sees very
little he walkS every day with the
help of the two prostheses he
wears. He has remained cheerful
and optimistic throughout it all,
which is why he is respecled and
admired by many.
"Today, at the age of 73. he is
still willing to listen or even help
me balance my checkbook. I am
most fortunale to have the wonderful parents that I do and I thank my
dad especially for all of the fond

Dedication held

iion of the mechanical system, ;
el.eclric syiteql and pneumatic sys1em, and at Ieist as far as I'm concemed, ~ wasn't any obvious •
type of problem with those sys- :!
~ems,'' Rogers said.
~ : ·
The ride is shut down. After
state investigators and the ride •
manufacturer, lntamin AG of :
Sw,...._...,
"--'-" re.....,..
•--- ........
W&lt;al •~~o..o•-...,....., J
the park will decide whether tQ •
keep the ride.

Chiquita "Bananas

If you are not impressed at the
routing that you are being given on
getting to Athens these days what
with bridge repairs that are taking
place on Route 33, I have been
asked to remind you or an alternate
route · Roule 7 and then Roule 50
into Athens - and or course, reverse
the order to get back. A couple of
big trucks have ovenumed on lbe
recommended route - you might
just be interesled in the RouleS 7
and 50 alterilative.

I

D

related to a ride in the oatk's 2()..
year history. Kings Isfand is 20
miles nonheast of Cincinnati.
Two men were elecll'OCuled in
an Ulllelated accident the same day.
That accident also remains under
investlgatiOIL
George Roiers. a lawyer representing the woman's family, said
hC Watcuou
~--· Wui.o
~"- the Flight Commander capsule was taken apart.
"I'm not an engineer, but I was
present throughout an the examina-

Ohio Lottery

GOLD~N RIPE

A huge Thank You from Margaret Bailey, E. Main SL, Pomeroy
resident.
Marj!aret left her pocketbook ·
comainmg money and all of those
good papers that we an carry in a
shoppmg cart on the Kroger Store
lot Monday. Realizing when she
got home that she must have left
her purse in the cart, Margaret
immediately returned to the store.
It was her luclcy day - someone had
turned ber purse in at the offiCe and
she was able to recover it - much to
her relief. No name was given on
who was honest enough to tum the
poclcelbook in · but a big thanks
from Margaret whoever you are.

I

failed, we haven't found what
Caused it yet," said Leonard Cavalier, chief inspector ror the depart·
ment's amusement ride safety division.
The capsules have lap and
shoulder restraints that rau:bet into
place. Shoulder restraints have
mechanical backups, and the lap
restraint has two "-"'-.
-.1'• Cavalier
said.
It was the first fatality directly ·

BIG BEND ··· Your Locally Owned

af~emoon.

I .

199 1

0

Three Meigs County residents suffered minor injuries Wednesday after the truck they were riding in struck an embankment ,
Patriot T. Willbragel, 2, of Penland, Linda G. Lewis, 15, of
Syracuse. and Brian Wolfe, 18, of Syracuse were all transported 10
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Meigs County EMS. All three
were trealed for minor injuries and laler released.
According to a report from the Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway P.atrol, Willbr8gel, Lewis and Wolfe were passengers of ·
Diane M. BUller, 19, of f&gt;ortland. Buder was westbound on Meigs
County Road 3~ when she IIJIIl8feDdy lost conttol of her vehicle and
went off the right side or the roadwar. Her 1979 Ford Ranger then
struck an cmbankmcntllld turned on tiS side.
Butler reponed to the state patrQI that a deer had run ·out in front
of her just prior to the accident
Sbe was cited for fallure to wear a safety belt and failure to use
child .restrainL

Country Music Night planned
A Country Music Band Show will be held at Eas1ern High
School on SllUI'day ~ • 6 p.m.
The event Ia IPOO'Ind bj the Balem Athletic Boosters in conCJM!I!arsdoa
3

· By Associated Press
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.Ravenswood Aluminum Corp. willlet federal safety inspectors into its
Jackson County plant. company
off~eials said Wednesday.
·
Neither Ravenswood Aluminum
spokesmen nor officials at the U.S.
Occupational Safety and Health
Administiation would reveal the
terms of an agreement allowing the
inspections.
On May 23, Ravenswood Aluminum · officials barred OSHA

Jobs, education key to eliminate
poverty ··n southern Oh•·o.· Abel
Abel Said that children in Ohio's
"Poverty in Southeast Ohio will
continue lon11 after lhe publicitr, rural counties make up the largest
generated th1s week subsides,' portion of the stale's poor populaStale Representative Mary Abel tion and that new programs and
(D-Atbcns) said earlier this week less bureaucratic red tape are nee·
lrom Columbus, "and It must be a essary to help alleviarc the siruation
major part of a national domestic in the Appalachian region.
program u well u state reform."
"Jobs and education are key
The legislator was referring to a components to parents and children
Tuesday tolecast of ABC's "World · rising out of poverty." Abel said.
News Tonight,• which originated "otherwise the cycle Conti~."
Abel said, "II amazes me that
from Athens County. A sqmtnt of
the show focused on "Children of this nation ean pour billlons of dol·
Poverty."
Iars into the pentagon and have
. "It is a national disgrace tllll5.S every citizen pay lhousands or dol'
milllon childml in America, that's Iars for the Savi~ and Loan deba·
one out of eight, are livini in cle, but we can t find money to
poverty and hwiger, according to a help create jobllllld fund education
national survey by Community to end povcny," Abel said.
"I have lried to instltule innovaChildhood Ha:;r Identification
Project," Abel
. tive welfare reform," Abel said.

inspectors who were answering
complaint filed by the union and
company employees.
. The company said il feared lhe
agency was being manipulated by
United· Steelworkers Local 5668,
whose more than I ,700 members
are involved in a 7 1/2 monlh-old
labor dispute with Ravenswood
Aluminum.
The Stee! workers then a$ked
Congress to investigate lhe plant A
U.S. House labor subcommittee is
looking at the plant's safety and
health records, officials have said.
Under the agreement, OSHA
inspeCtors accompanied by a Steel
workers representative will conduct
a "limited mspection'' of lhc . ·
plant, said Donald Worlled~e. president of Ravenswood Alununum.
The inspections will probably
begin nexl week, said Kate Dugan,
a spokeswoman for OSHA in
Philadelphia.

pointing out that her House Bill
224 allows recipients to earn
income and ~ till receive enough
assistance to meet their minimum
standartl of need.
Proposed bill would
. "This rule change will be a great
benefit to many people who close hospital records
already receive assistance but need
to supplement those benefits. Pan
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) of the plan hits already been includ- Publicly owned hospitals would be
ed in the House version of the bud· able to close most of their financial
get bill," Abel said.
records to the public under a bill
Since unemplQyment and pover- lhe Legislature has approved, rep·
ty rates are higher in the Southeast- re~ntatives of Ohio news organiern rural communities than any· zations say.
·
where in the stale, including urban · Media groups Wednesday said
counties, Abel said the needs of the they opposed what the Ohio Newsrural population must be llddressed paper AsiOCiadon dclcribed as "an
if progress is to be made in com- lllh·hour amendment" to stop
bllinl poverty.
public oversight or city- and county-l'un medical facilities.

'

,

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